HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1914-9-17, Page 6elle o Claw Season.
(`1UAP`Pt�'Ifi XXV`;-4CPntiv ledl;
Thea. ehe opened . , a ,
it, t,1a a„a., as Jznger-
. J
l
S t.
had u
looked � it: kt n �
b_.
� a ka
0
.m:
il,ca r
e, tl.r. delight 3chit�h,tay before
her r ir. the' perusal of her tlrst love-letter.1
St z ,l . r feet upon the Alit -fashioned
, z , ', her drooping as if them' liars
o u.•
Ems' -.i
S a c
i. roti e
Rt. bE. e,^ blushes, -5�.. e
3 b
V,
i
1".;:',41 tic ;atter; and t in .tPt We rtiiRcla'
to ne that 2t _a'el,se oho failed'xttteelp to
grasp an e .urar, in , 'With, in brnssra arid,
a aiig
u laz k-+
, e read.t kia W a
4147,411)7 .4114 $ts teigzae£tcance Mtg., RO 'a4
ea.00 . forced upon hest thea her arttaan
rcla lbzlpt' to her tides, azo the looked
rafight iiefore Aer• to a .alazc , tbeaaaatuleed
fashion. every word burning iteClf 11001201
her bras.. and tearing lues heart.
The blow bad fagl��+r, a ll saddeitIF. do its}^
-red ,y, lti<e a Ik4a9C' from Rina hiat�
flatting the happiness of her y'r,uat IIi£o
sapling r
a..,,tpaJan i . mn t
g s s e lot»
t ahv,� c i .
turuuk ,
tiler., that fine tint moment ,vitt, licit ,lata
vain, nothing bat, the benumbing. oft hit
her facult;co; so that odic did not see the
portrait at the dead and gone l ern u,aon
which her evira a +rted.' �IId not Clear .torr
#aitller s' voice eaaiint to her tram the
asitr;ax Itiva 2uann,ti�iPaaa ,of nothing but ;.
t3hcr a aerril�le -word hieb were minima g
bra fihe the boar;inzeft of a
IlreTe.iely rhe =end i.. low i
sed.
be Lead W b her bowl,.
Roc out the eauaDd of the jai.*ril:,
eali� Aer,
•rale-- tt could_ xnot
or tl x:Dd tme written it $t
- a, very Craaeit 3tCs„
P.ae - 'bo hated ak
taariIIA' triezete3 aka
IIl 'kltrt-ea^7ni be;the o;.,.
Fteetz eartae act written eu'.#
.a1
at
moo t,a Fritozn $
he ha+J Kitten leer liearb,
a1ie Qranz .rhll s tau d have• beezl si lndzng +:, sad-wa,ed av2F, th,, Crag of tvxue
l,dzn er Ik a r t moment zc oYn Zvi t h > e o
bevide ]` rax e, g h t . his rota�i!t i .
strong agzus.. Aarfort.ng her' trtlt �sorda "' atCV s' toucl. 3vic I,, taz d aft .eine
of pita ,�nid- loyc+, The double. 1- b L are total; zbriteinere. `i'hore who ft to
Ile so suddenly so une<nette�ity apt , tlto 1\tne-^lR1 in Moments of tribulation
f u _ tit reed
a- n of L Jou been dulled and t. atmsl srzef Tear. 00 e arcite.. re
the p..t t d
blulRt ed. -which
e
i F
i
ere n,•
ed, l,ba ralaliCaty 4f _Canine n:t,n.ta KO,: '�k,all I? � 11 hand- trait yo
a
o u F drt TE. t '
su#f:ea"ng IN, ,wftez: a11. n L nlzirared. -hod
says',, ten P'.lye,e0,4 'Pant. uaztl xmeaititl ltai amu• -y e3; ely.c u ca,, not -such,,, she
sato*. ''Tl do far and to farther; -.MA vel., •,. vasuatt cud _E ardsno ham -with
*[ Paved Ida from utter a 'dull conger; for elle he
t13is. IItak aCiara 1.a4r4 t Too d never neon
i
' S. i ! 1 :A �
t e
l.eo
i
a
4e,
fr
P-
d+
?ifr.15` r t
�'l.en„ ��ai2t: smae� Tti3A: '.aAat fgr� tta itt o . c. pJurGci oR• �. RS%, of _wine.
d3gEt is .doer grief, i~a the 'ItL3aaey a# agoaa and" in silent .udagaation, heeded !t to
n z . lice; :;ted. ureOzlSCto►l,rx 4g ,e heavy ecce;,.
the reit bn..- t' had fitl.2 to ie runt . r,
t 1+ run.
rat �h..
In ell ,�Ir, za
t 1D e
o. re
to
regarded
A d , � .. p, .. a her,
>: er a
ur li lac, � . e a
tQ tJko .
a b '*d, A r
d � aa. i. � a ,
# DD
, l
ut
.�.r
e ,.a
a la h �eetta, acne .r
pit
#e1 t
� � a_
lag, flea..
D
a4
. A -
A flat is
a !{tlg^ .. , bad ;Dligg
the eheaso na xaClitb.. rth, ani4er"r« AML tea �ta,�w t6pe. if! Ilio Ald he yr a^- a ,a.
e
lac tserm tan tztnd ehe �d;d it, and..�vent r , e�pecaal-
zitrough it, ail, with entward ,cnida, nus• 13R 3viteza le„ r vie. aliearin Zai; little
A as e,
f '' s e p. .a,. by roitb,e. Try and drink a 3izG1e 3uo£
. ra . b that ll r zt a t mho
f�1 elk dt sp f, h t'3.24^ my dour.
ie escribed as dig Z01,00g or tier ,class--- ••at ae a ,„,,atter int ,r,,nian
Q"ab e a oblige Je e1e :lad Wept- 1out119 tine. of pretaeiele,'" 4+1id },1c.'jam € c e
#laxe#xagit the lactate ever eince the death.. i rite if a : lie
r, , , an Ace were t ,rt tb m
Caine; eoaxPd twee n .o td1 s, R oat, ik A P .Unit,
!A ,.s wept . 9 ? wz?st be guided #'�t+ light
ids lned ;;arty team she vee t art the eflentee - ,a , yield
of our
�t,ez!ees, we �tuak. o - e
rlaett s of her owe room, and 120' a treatra to the
a dicta aAail:orerae of creature : • n
ms hen aatrttar a, ;pea*. •.Tu s.lt#'ser a l e, are told Oat stro sal.
a strzxCag' < ae #ha ?hatigt QF lug -°, drink is
;tae sore t svzeln giltet rPk Ba Yeats rarer amor
Canis; ;gond. an .£r e #1~; inet the 15`A.e
a •axe. ad Aa curet 0a ' Eugeled M John
v y real in tale T Cc
', f"fT ,F liar Floras to tau ar1? 4o
or t e Tienthat
tetx btrf to le lza*art etra'4A
as fad
td fol sp.!k�atlzy And etiteudzng a cold,gd
tla r9 Jt:.r_d �vhiclz ie mated an ehtreme 3}.
ly 2znnv shoulder of r,.tttion, ,aid.
rasping. meianehola• voice
DEFENCES Of PARIS
• ILow do you do, Ida? I trust yqu are
heal nu^- your burden as hE't ome., a Christ.
ia,e Vie ay. born. to sOrroak The train
was three-eu .ern of an hour late." S RO G -EST FORP1FIC .PIONS
'I ant soar said Ida, iu her 1owr voice
leaving him to ,iudee whether she ea,
pressed regret for our birthright of min.•
Pry or the lateness of the train.; "will
you have some lunch-eecene gine?' e1 e
milted, a bun. Vague ,voider rising in her
Mind that, t1i e grim, middle-class peon :Itanit a Minion Nen Necessatry.
e}lpu1d be of kith and kin with her dead
gather-
Teaub You; no. 1had an abernethy
3a spiaiL at the st tiom, lie cir,}v bac
Capital.
P=#all,
d
fill WORLD.
Invest the .Freoc1R
0
While details of the defences of
i Faris are.Rap , c
�R dem with strict �ecre-
ev bythe French ,
non
�nxlt#.a,x t sR•£zthozx-
.. t�
do S
�e 1
: yet theirA
general character
ti
E tpptl faz'ixi t able x G
e s relpgtlp are well
known to military n ,l
nxz#
at y tap(arts; who re,=
;' cognize ,hem as tong the strong-
est, fortifications i*world,
The he for i
cs_f
lZ .n � < .
a � l� r
t # art:
distinct r sweeping
ea c
i
eS
az at d
�.n t e
; cl y,,,, -first„ the sol . wall o_ -tri;:-..,on
1f`i
feet x' ;
t 1 pgdz, 2atenc �s3g _ yr )� a22.1
• around e ; ,,
the old �cE.s z.s
5. of rn
1
a
second, the system <if 1, detach.
i•lC-
a AA, forts arranged at intervals, gals t,
"We, miles beyond a
o! y �' y xtd E.3e t .i.,, awl Making
r a ;, , >li
se eine nit the ,' ,
,, , of tdR< c3i�a° ,3.< miles Ion
fort,': and, third,
nn
�•3�.;,, r_ outer girdle of tor
75 5 miltes low" o ,1. e,.
u x a heights tete.
ate' �nan,, ing the vafiey tri the Seine.
M%' .Ea circles
,
� eu in of then, cxxc�elr of tr#psaaxaly
ma •Clad Steel is "Valxalitlete do fer400 am
zm �. 3t�elf, the fe:arts beinglinked ito ,
al ey' mit a. ke
In r$dQltlDts, :.wnQ� ba5ti
std vac s,, Which permits a; ora-
ge ai st u ilk'. 3t: f
Dl? �e,..es from gut d
recttou. film Tuet,;•i ude c1f thio
gent is shown b 1t5, area., taMelt e
tto re miles.
ud,
There is never a tide when the skill, ex-
- .erience and, resource back of W€a,terman's:
Ideal is;
s at rest..... Can anything more Y � re b
done for its users?-'
silo,
constant
ro
i,le
(12
-the aim ofP
itS makers. Users ofe
:Water
-
man's Ila17, S IdealS have world's s _
e the � otlix to -
day.
best tf3
da
to -morrow
If mor
Q I'Q�'P° can improve r'tx
Ott''
the
I
S 1 I1t
1?'eS '
C
detail, they'll have i'
Y 11 e 1t,
Try Them at Your Deo% ,
$2.50 to
a"00
'Waterman ev , l.' lciip
Limited,?4t
a
v treat.
93 Count, von 'Moltke �Ea tl�e a
e n ph Si t ,.
d t
P that
ea5
other _le
s-. D
z than 1.
G,
ala e
rnaa•i
1, ��, e
t ,.p, •..I P
b p £
s
a £ra .�
f , oz
epxtoaf
f l
d
a
a
t
ed i ,� _, e R as p pttart; x of fact have
aD . r:.
t
ixtp a o
lxe
� f
n : na
f^ S
dR2
, C
21
,�.o, . ,. , y ch,,.�ed very dxflerent z•esa s -
di ie It i t impossible, k by
� Rx f r.
not, ,ztiq-. a/
most ,ael1' 0.l
1 h
i less the invader r. ,: , , -„ nn aCJ C011rsU Y fan that
s a?fdt tttIIy t? a& F1ae D.e rs �f s < Ccs ely got hoots* whech lata lied prepared for rt
,np mn.,s8n„°c
laevond
tolloain
genie to
ot04 bloc W t Ys s
up the one 1 e
ne ig4he --tn
ales,:' and the
adaIIat a engh tee e1,,,
nt
beta, tinny, cauhl _
fi.ai?t.wts :,aa ;oaely tai
sad tzxetx-ragairnw arta 1
"w=ind see no one b
anela;ixe
rrl;e�
sCeeats
leei4y t rE+ lana d4. _.
"anal°t°�l• Czor as hfr:ra
1a d r sis4. aafr
aaiecDses Citi
be'att"� ':ttrxtt f
x as t Ai ;xau
it
4$"
lk
f tine e. a tstalT e[i
� a ord had �old lawyer touted atIda r,r 5 ear:. tare Q£ diem y ads wa.lq
ed , A#, a-ee•---,p4rtisanlaar1 bees u!
cel z;emra4 trezaSaza, my tear; ,hut ua doeilit,
• Jtann. Ire -s4 i� a tremety c stony
Azad r--goethea .
eai iid� n .at
t tri,; tniatte�, 'rQ
hnaaal �r y,,;,t to enttae so f, ? ter -oto
added. -Er .,night .
Sor I deal %birch,, rayfart
1 never 1at+;axi of liaa
f the er.•tled. itt a,14m c
er roaata to p#lt cant". in Ardt
eah, 'tha hamlet with
�. is Ycltxla oda Wit; ren
to tl t1, grave; for in
k� � r.�mao;bPtra>ice$, viae
cit Tact^ r« sok "tea oec #sa
sic
amousu".
trot-
Alt{.}• "
ltaysri tt+ride 4Ot} sq '1
fat
vas master f
.ex o itis' s;llteh hw� nit to .followed,g> 'i - xmu.,.y a
£
coarse which , 1
12
x.e zed r x
e. a aD -
t r re-
petition.
cn
z
petition. of the effort made
Lze
ter, Di
nd buts Wo;dley, and tits• ;wide
tYnec h4VI.x asoma and intimate, fate'atd0
hr. i',rorlDal�* ?eft reluctantly nod sit _
tell over, the gena lg Viven apuAaaz Q,
avast•Rei wonder .S. at 'Would become of tie
augixter cit tiara• eceP tr:c man vho, bad
t>;t,t'the life G•t a.r'eeluse t ct f4 .
yir+. 5Voyd.ey; *aid mase latex to' have paaa
e mos aged ;pet to t�:r'40'• caf the 'Aome4 ztei
hac4 baareged ti► ties' to eiinafort• hart crttxwrxa, a °
tt ire 'heave that attYa2.temine :tx 5kcir nae' syte firet`t '
ort would have. licca ba %Ala. that het , Abe .4 ''SIE
FPittet not 1u been ahreo to break dem/ jj', a t' at'
,as, bay x �r � � the tr r .. sat to s�c,
_ttiat s of waterways !railways r ter
n,ivs
by which
h
heavy vie e. t• Were, ` a
8 h � � � art niton s could he
brought lap in full qua:zt te'. Re,
expfaiaus the failureto 'bombard
;aa%nt- ,ht the outset ..of the siege ' by
B'Dn 9 would -}
a. � .t ou.cf Ita,�e required �0�
hear ,guns with 500 rounds for each
aktl. :Cho r.QV rae?lt forward
s caf
tixso heavy ;guns tk st , ld wave
xnir 4,00,0 ••fol?r,Wlaeele+i,
' fOlici 1O,tif horses, }Melt T� eremma
Thhird ilio , amts*t•1,
tarsi',
ort•{ The wall ar oed Pet$ aid i
Apia �1etatrhed t
tc3, waf is were
sh The sustained I t
tt Q t ?t! -d ; 1, unci flat+
„ since been g1rea 1,
i'ite third linekf
of St. trxm1ain,4tatitles raid
,ties, are of mod Div tnettos
a.ith the latest tyns caf lx
au d. heavy glans.
• The inner wall ddtta
rands the ;nest, known
Ott • pc►rt s4#, nta'`etiOl1 oa the _.
0s the11�11Vuess s�fetitatas
tf 311ti hettlev; s, the s d;....
ictus t the north sand': west
at urlcl'the Latin in ar rails.. ,....m-
of the left' bank o 'tile
°alcsdci of tiie
;rlis eiteh,da for none anile._
ng `ouilly, Argenteuil, Vei-
1
der
�lifel, Vincennes mind man.! others.
" r faf the second and third
+f ltAlio e ;arodotted Amon
l*burbs, llrrctt ctinag thein and
e approaches t+ the oapital.', The
to,all �c�(Dntuius 93 bastitous raid 0,
•nmaw. Some of theta have been
x,4 t Abandoned owing to the pressure of
rallamdern construction and trade.
or But recent advices ;received here
it from Paris /;tate' that; all the gates
• p still existilag�, are now, thised at 8
as aleloc`3e at night. with f�xghf regi
tions ugrlaust< rlpuveixtent:s front wftb-
l� 111 {rr 'tr Thou ti,
tt 4 ! The second : line of forts aancihac1
x.t the fa -mous fortress 0
t; la,pn, which was the tae;
it' in the German sieges,,
tl l strengthened by two' , grau
�*ctrks.=,Pautes 11rn eres amici the
• (Thatillon fort and ba.ttei1t (South
Df the rite is the row of fonts vitt;
1ietrt, Mont Bongo, Valives:
rt,ud Issy. forth and cast of the
a rpit,v are three,groat forts around
• ; tat,.:<Iaenis,'and two others at, Fort,
i` .lu pervillers and Fort Ohurenton,
eo nniar:ding the approaches from
; the great, wood of Bondy,
Defences` Require 170,O60 Men.
Tho cuter circle of forts, which'
• are of the mcst modern type, have
from y - to 60 heavy guns, and G00 to:..
1,200 men, In all the three lines c,f
a clefezlees rem -ore 170,•000 . men to
opesa.te then, nat counting troops
assembled within the city. AeoOl-d-'
ing to military, experts it would re-
, a fora of 500,000 men to in-
', vett, these defences,
General Count. von Moltke, field
marshal of t-kt German forces t the
time oT'the siege 'of 'Paris of 1810 -ii,
stated in a report on that siege that
the Frenmh artillery- armament con-
sisted of more than 2,600°pieces in -
eluding �00 of the largest calibre of
naval ordnance.' There were 500
rounds for eacah gun, and a reserve
of 8,000,000 kilograms, of powder.
et PY e., r iii ale , t r ti 1 .1Rdd •, ,
etiaeiy a eoteti. rte zM-u hiee soft'tr ° fou;id it •eter
etrai aGzti the world. 11;;s heart ached . thy
@rC ee} �
,riot
at . t'l1adcRdlsr4entat orry h =An ‘011114 aiai.+tlt;u t
o@ very' T'sttle Om; he ,rtzttlt '''cordo 4f hinge nota
c5 rztc arrtutein .tan ttk a s et•z^,E;tt;,y q 6t acct an
li
for t, e fianera4, dawn the dee of toll a ct atet+ctr
ixPtaglrt was tri :l:ct re, a;;se t beet• opo :zarl anoitate;Q,
t 9tt7t hwheal ha, ea 01~poa to Ido.
d �#fersiit be3un g8 t
a a D pppa glt be bore tin. name imentou Novi the, end of tho
. mare �thaan raWddlrs sl Out ,et
t W a a d new a5
who bad rim,: ley. who oupeete him et iateatIou,
fovea of 'o,ther Itajtartt ft in the tout. tar saying:
tilt at that nth you. ;we rgUr 41.1118, tit Atig$
tile Mena" Ur. IlerottF I want to et 1,let. buh
'd not be- whom were representative@ flt
od, mat teat dal@ famillee; all bent
ads with 4 respectrattrattr and
thy go the, young trir. goade ber
wa the narrow punt, About bolt
en versonet hod been mixed to gn
'loll tor the funeral Limb, vh.t5
weal:led. It woo n. melanelto
el orphan girl in her her @poke' in lowered volerw
,raan and ot the great and when the meal to bud arrived for the rem
lonbed round gravel
be legal adv:aer of my late clien
troy Ilerou. I have to inform ro
tbat there -le Ale 'win. My Otos
id TANI
time -cleaved -
f,
t7
surer ,rage t;1xe Uexxxxaas:
tight up -their, big 1iie e gat.
,-aelenite Atli ports, a sd
til: to 40f4 15-4e
the heart of tin
Mn the'idly of
chs, Faris whilsto
l0) days. Since thexx
e e ntxrely. ala aid outer third litre.
defbuee b lneoxa erected. and
ibtar3 o; xt ay the fortifzea-
7'f'x far n1' re S.,o1',
nixie tilr€At tf[n,wse w iic? ?'e'as.. d.
ie ff' e 'FA ,71,
fatiterr
117 the meat
a, alte
DO °lager
ry early
jeTo 'murder
at Kiel. his
ined "to see
see 'it throng)
'the Berlin
London
orn the
:Majesty t
stetted lam?
himself
out the
Phealth
la
ll pa
poor man, o
e. have pity o
lippetl, 'by steer
rid fell into the a
er krees, her arms
eiroked, and ed
11.1t4 that tNAlteht'd and shoo
t her horror We stony eyes gre
Vtleant. hie jaw dropped. ;vial h
e still lower in the chair,
rushed in. For A space they .tood aghast
And unItelpfal from fright, then Jason
tried to lift his raest•er from the heap
11 you y deer, tha
line. the heed of the
ill eon ehe ritieitig an
ting ,e by the heavy ears
the gre t chair.
nor' he 8311. dgicn
ring goeo to bis
'Vile est: v tellfled, bis
not eatailed, as Yon
Lord Benne and my elleut.
iltey drew a oath ot, relict. and nod
'dad asses:tingly; Tai presently they mad
a general movement of.departure. 3Ie did not want her to 130a e g,rett behind the athert.
th7 tread of the -undertaker's limn. eI won't, aek the 43oer child to tee ine
nd. rueet the cofftli which they -tvere go- Mr. 'Wordier." he taid. ,vou. there
ing ta bring downetalre and /dace. in the fore be ,good enough te give her Lady
hall. 'a will bring him in here, 16 there nattnerdaiois love, aud 10 tell her time,
anyt.hing Toil 'would like me to eaY uo Lady liannerdale has written to her
erte.in hesitancy; for its yet Ile nail roome to us at thiLs court. ,S.be is to con
spoken of her future. feeling that lier elder it her home for Just as long as the
ef was too recent, too nacred, to per, 6bould please; and we fbali feel • it a,
or ilia orlwInn oE lunter.1.21 and 1i:eater° and an honor to have her
amongst us es OOP or our own Of i'ettl'ea
ad. The old lkwyee bowed,
Ye,'," sa'a 'I 41"t1 X "I will give her Your hind message, for
ther you had formed eny hilt' ,r e f, xard
Pght going--oli paying a visit, --- to will elo; 'Ivhere she will go; at present
30 relations of Toms. Ile lives in the eliehe not in a condition to disoues any
danghter, ati ou know.' - expressed a tiestra to sere/tin at the Hail,"
da passed her and acrost„,iter lire-tv. Ile unused far a moment. before lie adtl-
"Ali, yes," els said at le'st. "I'remera, so."
ber 'you told me about theta. I never "My cousin is youiag, and a mere ehild,
'heard of them before-ribtil holy. AVIIY and she intuit .folltrw the advice of her el -
should. I go to them? bo they -want me? dere and her guardian f
Ilave,they ask ?" evon the sparrow is in higher 'hands than
Mr. NVordley,infil,fAH'Iati disereetly. Osarg,, and we know not what da.y may
eertainly Lade' kedlr ut lie felt bring forth," said MC. Jaila Heron, grim -
reputation. fere
-ty et
could not, hese nt, in te:e, to "Quite so," said Lord Bannertiale, who
refuse. a, honie ,ieephateit " ...had taken a great dislike for the saneti-
,heviention yet, e , , e, 4telitess, a ehutider as he 'shook lir. John
'ad 1 When'vl.hay had gone, Mr. WordleY
at any r
e".`15„OtttliffiKrIlionld lilfe73t7"-sa.icl "We bad 'begil.,T, go to the libra.ry arid
indifterentlY. as if tile --question, talk 'ma.tters„..9,2,t,eti'a 11011 send for Miss
moinenti4-lifithtliteFe is no help Mr
or.-Wordley poliShed hie glasses very
"Yeu speak „as lie ytiti' loul!iliad tidings,
44'..."I's.an. afraid you'd find it very lonely WurdleY, WA -it sh'id lir., John
'a:Mlle-I:Tall, my dear," he said, tact, Heron.
X- diett't think you could remain here' by ain a freed I have,'-'' respond -ed the ohl
y,ourself," he added, eva•ding the .0_,..66t_ lawyer, slinking his grey'.head`'Sdly. •
gEtz"er bf the great, sad eyes. , .(TO be contimited.)
.should. feel fionely anywhere," she
Shiel, "More Ihnely with people I don't
v, probeb y, than I should ,feel here,
ell, well, we can't discuss the' 9.11e8'
now. and win endeavor to aet for
beet, inty dear,'" said the old ;men,'
totent upon hig glasSes, "I hear the.
age. 1 will bring Mr. John in."
retmrned tn. a minute or thin, ac -
,ho, in hie black clothes and white
-tie, looked ,a" cross between a super- e
t.re, 'were etrongly marked, ante, the
ssioe 9f his countenance was :both
e and melancholy, and, judging by.
apreselon and his voice, Ithich
11 and lachrynacee. his particular
of religion did not. 'appear te afford
either amusement, or consolation.
1g your coriette Mr. Jelin Heron, I
`Mg frern the effect -a. of his few' min -
John Heron surveYed the sliglib
Times.
throne 'to
• "opened u
they cause
his %Ilea.
ztarrel with
not attend. His
on his northern eruise,
tuned to Beolirt suddenly on
:20, to the ope
fo0y 120,9 to hurrohate
and led straight to on ounce sa
and immoral war with Franee and
it "land. Against France Ger,
ao shadow of a Vase,
erely 'unmasked her contempt-
DION
Or the iron Cross.
York Stasts-Zeitung furnishes
* sting history, of this covete
_I distinction whieh awn
solely for the performance
rick
413 reN"
0
Far
T ealting Cnttie for Aorta 1k:I1es.'
The horzz fly 12as so many pecu-
iarities that, he is selentif eal�l , in-
terestm . In e
g the .natter of color
lze. is a st;iel ie
z
for -
t r
dark shades.:
eaxce., i as attacks a �e chiefly made
[E y
, ,
on dark cattle; �vri es. 'k€r. �'zn H.
( nmol t^
10
od
,se
have e
i
been noted iii which
� z,
two cows. one White and the other
dark, standing sire b-- side; were
enveloped in . e,
pa: a
�riax � of horn flies
which .zttacked onl.. the dark row
'leaving
tile other entirely un-
lxoleseed,
It x� eiazitned that the flies eall,
even gauge the thickness of the
skis
42
and
makediscrimination,
lc
iv-
giv-
ing preferenee "to the titin -skinned
animals,
The e
lx flies
;sxe-
�Qthe blood from _ cat-
tle tie. Droducin r �"
$ irritation p andworry
stat vlZ at o v
o £ w
to s s.la
R an
extent as to cense �. cHe-
crease in the anillc flow from one
third to one half.
titan r ru. edie l . s
� an � s n��^'e, of G�Iptr e,
n devised enhic'h have been mare
less 'effective and no doubt there
e plenty of newly discovered
;,,mares GG►...'. e market, re -
are
h � . t, 'tatz't ]Rei'
ilot ttlwa*'a the hest..
fabllnsim�'as' a 'nthel Chid
axed` ;le 1114 +, but it 11te s- st0Otl
:b test akf tlu4e, than which IVO bt pt;
er. recjRxixa4xtefxrt0ttickaa coltld ll
rlIci,i'iillefetf':liet44:1);111'spe:er
king ume 'means of
paints 4brash. Applted In
nner it fakes but nhout half
11 tO itv nOw, making the cost
plication but a small
fish
ra
hi
being d
into Willa he Riad. collapsed, The rild not
man's eYes 'closed, 'hei_ struggled for gri
breath, and when he had gained it. he mit
looked from one to the mite vith Wor
erode, whielt added to Ida's grief and "
'It's all right!" he whispered, haAins, eta
part -tingly- "It's all right; they don't h
know. They don e guess. Then his man. ,tehe
her thang,ed to one or lateinie and vete
„IllymaY. 'Lest! Lest!" he gasped. *Thu no
ruined, ruined! Martindale gonh, the
'Pother!" broke from Ida's white lips. and
"Mather, I am here, Look at me, speak
to me. 1 am here -everything is not loet.
Ala line twisted into a smile, a smile
of cupuing, almostof glee; then he. groan..
ed. and the erg rose again.
"I can't remember -all is lost! Ruined!
d$.6 she clung to him, supporting him as
6he clung, she felt a alauddaromn through
him, and be fell a life -lees heap on her
',The nainutes-were' they minutes or
yeare?-paesed, arid were broken into
'141%1 Idat Mies Ida! lie's -the math
- Ida raised her father's head Trom
' ehoulder and looked into his face,..41
know that the girl had spoken the tru
He was dead. She had ,lost both- fat;
and lover in one day.
CHAPTER, XXVI.
Ida sat in the library oe IN morning,
of the funeral. pelting rain beat twit
the wiedows, over evlieebe,,,the"bliiide had
reigned in 'the' chamber alitheseein
the dead master of Heron layrlerhoded
ever the evhole house, and seetned•iti: 'rib noi
part of it more intense tha ,in this great with
hook -lined T-00al, in which ebdfrey rieren ,Lw
had spent eo =melee:eh his ;.life. Ida 1,,ty
back in the great anmehail whieb lite the
sat, her small brown hamele,IyingetiimPly
in her lap, her eye.,s fixed abeeirteee upon eerie
the open "book which lay on -the' table es efe
he had left it. The pallor of• her. fate, comp
inereased hy her sorrow, was accentuated .al,
by the black dress, almost , ass. plainey Leek
made as that Whielt the red-eyeil" j:eseie !or
were in her ititelteia. Though nearly a feati
week 1;ad elapsed since liar father hhael" exa)ye
flied to her young s.rme, ;hid notwith- 'sever
standing her capacity for s,•elf-relionce, his e
Ida, had not fet recovered, from the StaBdr haus
of the shock. form
She was acaxe,ely thinking as elle lay • itim,
back in hie cha,it- ns eked at the ,a le ,9-th
Over which he had. bent...for so lnally
lie heti paeeed out of her life. and that ufee,
Gorlid may be the key to •,s,'teciieitYi
but poverty is the strongest bar
she --was aione in the evorld; and she wae
e anti -white face "With it8 earl, etar:
eyeS--surveVed. it 'with grim kind
verity,, which ,swaie probably intend-
ona,v vaguely conscious that, her sorrow figur
had, co tO EiDeak, a do -able edge; that ai,k.0 „
she h.a.ti lost not only her father, bet the of Ee
and send it along with 10c n
stampS or coin to P. 0. Box 1240,
Montreal, Que. You will recei.'tre
and one of the best household
Specialties on the market, and
at Christmas time a handsonae
12 color Calendar. Thief .18 the
appear. Don't nriss it, If ybii do,
you will only have yourself to
t of
Office as e
I made soma inquiries about the
Emperor's earlier frame of mind,
and was told on excellent author -
that for the first time he had
a andoned the part of "keeper of
peace." There were in fact to
be no more German newspapev,
articles in the press such as ap-
peared during the Morocco crisis
under the heading "Guillaume le
Poltron." 1 do net mean that the
Emperor, was determined upon
war, but he had removed his
straining hand, and Germany drt
d slowly but surely through the
Oross-eurrents tO the Russian ulti-
matum and to war. The more sin -
ere the efforts. made for peace, the
more futile they were. Instead of
drawing bock from the 'abyss,"
Germany tumbled into it.
the only justification, if it is a
justification, that can be offered of
the Emperor's attitude is that he
was deeply moved by the Serajeve
murders and believed that their ini-
quity would unite Western Europe
even at the cost of the, obligations,
and -interests of the Western pow -
The e arks upo
three leaves ha the cent 1
1,41,nd the date
the ease of y
NV two clasps a (
ter twne,
pormanen
Wati 'tying fixed
u ors of t,he
r.
of
hue
be the do,' has
ge
n way injure tin
tt choose, it AS it safe
ace when not engaged i
Ries lay their eggs it '1±
(1AVIVed by the auir hey
k. Moist 'weather, by of
this pest; beau, a wet summer
Imtbably produce' more ilie
a very (Try stnnmer.
Billeieney on the Farm,
The of the most frequent, snure
ss on the farm is on insuf-
I return from' work lior:,es.
ave you satit5led yourself on
It costs 8300 annually to keep the
a erage horse, but this horse works
only a little more tlian three hourS
each svorking day. This makes Jibe
I labial. cost approximately ten
e an hour.
1.-/o you handle„the horse labor on
our farm so that .the Itnnual eost
of keeping your horses is less than
the average, or so that the number
hours worked is greater I Both
thod.s will reduce the cost of
'se labor, but the latter offers by
far. the greatest, opportunity.
Can you revise your cropping
system- so ,t'hat (fewer ‘wark horses
will be needed, or so that the work
will be more equally distributed
and thus make it possitble em -
Ploy there more hours each year ? ,
Can you raise colts and thus re-
duce the cost of keeping your
horses 7
Can you arrange to use your
work horses for outside work when'
not busy on the farm I
Can you reduce the cost of keep-
ing_each horse by feeding less feed
or cheaper feed and still give a
proper ration?
Farm work done with fewer
horses means a, saving ,of $100
year for each horse no+t neeeited.
Sufficient Reason.
I July 10, 670, the day that
ce again declared war on Pros -
la, the order was revived by Kin
Villiarn I. on the same condition
originally instituted. At. the
the three onk leaves were drop
zed, and the letter W, the crown,
nd the date 1870 were substituted
the original mmrks, but the
leaves were restored by au
order of ,the Imperial Council in
1895. -The decoration as revised in
has heel. bestowed on 48,57.1
erman warriors of all -classes, in -
lug those coming from German
States ouWde of Prussia.
The Grand Cress is conferred
only -on commanding officers Nal
have won a. decisive battle followed
by the forded retirament of an
Donny, for the capture, of an im-
portant fort, or for ,suecessfully de-
fending- a fort against the enemy's
capture." addthon to the soldierS
who have won the cross for indiyi-
dual acts of distingtifshed valor, it "'"'
has been granted to all members of
regiments that have performed es-
pecially meritorious service, There
is no decoration for a German mill-
,tiary man that carries with it a
greater glory than the „Iron OrosS,
ond it is significant that the thou-
sandal'of veterans '‘Yho possess this
priceless decoration have nieva•ye
been looked upon with _the tinoit pr,o-
found respect by the entire"Germian
ee
el ti g Sights en
on oot and in All Kinds Of Yeltones.
'Why don't you' bru.h - your
hair ?I' asked the man. ,of the boy
with the ,frowsy head.
il3eqity-TPapa informed me that he
was very mach onnosed to Jack.
veni,ion mean war,
The a,verao.e amount of sickness. .
in in:Lenart Life i nine days out of