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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1916-3-30, Page 2''tY t �I t'Ii l3 CABLEMAN AN EXCITING PRESENT-DAY ROMANCE BY WEATHEREY C HESNEY gat CHAPTER VI. (Cont'd.) Scarborough did not know how to answer her. There was, so far as he --could see, only one explanation which vas even plausible; but he shrank .:from sugesting it to Elsa yet. The doctor Who was coming would no .doubt be able to say whether or uo the dead man had really suffered from tag ?TSS avenge her father not worthy?" she asked hotly. "I am glad to know that it was not Phil Varney, because now I need not waste time in following a false clue. There is another clue which I mean to follow, and I meant could meet sorrow without Weak to He had expected that she would o fee objections, perhaps that ehe \you beeenee hysterical, and cry oat th the dead man must not be desecrate Instead of that, she had the strong to acquiesce in the inevitable. Per- haps this was only an indication of the unemotional English tempera- ment; but the Portuguese doctor, ac- customed to something,different from his oW11 womankind, admired it. He exl leased his admiration and hi sympathy in a few graceful phrase and then weld out to his carriag Scarborough followed him, arui as was opening his ('arriage door, ask "Can you tell me whether the de ars. i • REMORSE. i' - Id I killed a aelttirrel, Tile little cheap at Had ventured forth frons Itis wleter d.: nap th To nibble a twig and tate the sap. s I flung a stone as he chattered tin re, I only meant to give him a secure, - But ort it went -and it hit him square, A little quiver, ---a little ery, Then on the ground I saw burn lie. a , I diet not think he was going to die. i e, But as I watched him oulel stye i Ile never would frisk for you and m actj Any more un a branch of the tell fir 1 ti's•(' to ask you to help me." man brad :suffered recently ;'um "I will help you," said Scarborough. gout?" "Then," said Elsa quickly, "find out The doctor turned to him quickly, what the girl who calls herself I1Iona • a nbeen made? an acute attack of guru yesterday. de la Mar was doing between yester- Ilan that suggestion Scarborough' resolved that he wouldhe asked, try to see the doctor before Elsa did; day afternoon ani this morning. I, eyes„ and if the suspicion which was being told yc,u I recognized another person; "1 don't think it likely." driven upon him now should be con- besides Phil Varney. It was she. Her : you sure?" Scarboroug real name is.- ?, i "But iii fir, firmed, he would steep the knowledge insisted. "If he had suffered from a of the truth from Elsa as long 'as he " Mtu•garet Ryan,"said Scarborough bad attack of gout a few hours before coast, if her father wee what Phil quickly. "Yes, I know."�� the time of his death—so bad hen at - 'Varney had said he was, she would „ "You know that, too! said Elsa. "What else d k about her?" tack that the slightest movement gave Never more in his tree.. top flight,. Never more in the sunshine bright "} Seast'rring us cheer in his :wild delight. t 1 dreamt that night of his death-c*.im• - med eye, h1 Of the sun -warmed woert'ti he had bill good-bye, And in my dream 1 heaved a sigh, And l think, and think every eelamer a e o you novo a otl er . snow 1 soon enough, 11leanwhile he, Sc arborou h aot a and aced the him agony—you would be able to say (flay, farted her sorrow. .road back and forth. Then he halted c no estroy t is faith which eon ,. g ' P p` that it was so?" Mow never, never can I repay ' Cleanliness at 'linking Time. Twice each day dairymen draw from their cows a finished product, a foo otv • "I shsa.ould." The sweet little life I took away. "What was rthe danger which your `hemi only i know what Phil told me," he "Thegunmistak- able?" f ,I- E.T,S. signs would be unmistak- Adapted—E.T.S. father feared?" ha asked. able , ,� said. "But though for her salve I hope „ „ "Not ins pr. ut LrC Not Tei, Leaves intermixed with u t :art and Stems but all fe n Leaves. has the reputation. n ea being the e1cas21•esw",p.9 and most perfect tea a�aida. I;147 lt4LltCIt:, Grtitl� l t. T MINED WJ +i1,1C2.3 5,�"i4" _5, ,r 4r71es7' yc jr ( `a ligJ -j:i, t: tit<ftsT){ =e"•"• .,}t wa "He did not tell me." Quite. t GODSEND. : your suspicion wrongs her, I cannot , SARAJEVO MURDER f,f?I)51.:�1), "But you know it?" 'say that I know it does. A carriage rYou did not see them?"— "No. I want you to help me to tires had just driven up to the C'hinelas. Is I did not, Senhor. He has had no Dr. Liebknecht Speaks taut. in German out what it was." i it the doctor?" such an attack. I don't think he had Parliament. gout at all; but certainly not to the "Tell me how, and I will try," I "Yes," said Elsa. "Tell me what extent your question would indicate." The Cologne Gazette„g:fves the fol - Elsa hesitated, and then she said inion know of Margaret Ryan, , "Thank you,” said Scarborough, and lowing account of the turbulent scene a low tone: "Not vet," said Scarborough fil tizly. g i i He knew now that his suspicion had moralizing effects of the war: "Do you understand what your soar- I �;tti Elsa, after a brief hesitation, „ gestion implies?" ;irl which she seemed inclined to insist,' been correct, and that the gout was a Dr. Liebknecht, discussing' the "Yes," said Elsa readily, "It eon- gave way, and followed him to the lie. He believed moreover, that Rieh- educational budget, said: "Education necfs him, perhaps, with my father's house. and Carrington's whole life had been to -day ay serves to strengthen militarism death. No, don't speak; let me ex- of a piece with that lie, and that for and capitalism. You act as if you plain what I mean. I think that my i the last two years he had imposer wish to throw opelr to the people the father had got together proofs :which' CHAPTER \ II. upon his daughter as he had imposed road to education, but that is only would clear his Ilame, and that dan- The Portuguese doctor had said that upon the world before the world had because capitalism requires soldiers. ger which threatened him was the lees • he wee not sure, but that as far as:found him out. The guilty man had The teaching of history is systtezn- tieally distorted for the urpose of Phil Varney is your friend." "We don't know yet that murder has `etulned to the room where Elsa was which occurred in the Greenan Reich- • "You think it carne from him ?" been done at all. We will go and hear i wait ng for him. stag recently while Dr. Karl I..ieb- erie(1 Scarborough in a startled sauce. ,what he doctor says." He had a difficult task before him. knecht, Socialist, denouncers the de - of those proofs. Now who are the he was able to judge there had been played upon her credulity, and tricked people in whose interest it would be; no rnurder. He was inclined, indeed, her of her love by deceit; and Scar - that the proofs should be destroyed, with all necessary reservations in borough, pitying him, hardly blamed if loot those whose guilt would be: ease the facts should afterwards prove !him for so doing, But Varney's esti- made plain? The son of the man who ; to be otherwise, to think that the; nate of him was right, and Elsa's was ruined him might wish to get those, death, though lamentably sudden, was :wrong. She must know some time, proof. in his own hands. I thank' due to natural causes. A further ex=: and yet Scarborough shrank from the children to be war machines. With' heaven that, though murder has been . amination would be necessary to de- ; necessity of deceiving her. To destroy; regard to war, their ideals seem to be done. I belive that the documents `. cide the question. All that he could `.• a daughter's trust in her father, when: embodied in poisoned gas boinbs, which will vindicate my father's hon-' say, at present, was that there were; that father was dead, and beyond the "`In the schools it should be taught or are still safe." I no external marks of violence. i power of sinning further—surely it; not only that the murder of Arch- "Ard I," said Scarborough. in great! "But poison?" Elsa had suggested. was a cruel thing to do! duke Franz Ferdinand of Austria at ' agitation, "thank heaven that 1 can , "The fumes from the Caldeira?" ; He did not know what to say to her; Sarajevo was an incident which should' account for every minute of my chum; The doctor shook his head. I but he had to say something, and no inspire horror, but it should also be Phil Varney's time, from Yesterday , "The fumes from the Caldeira de; time was given to him for considering t taught that there were wide circles afternen till an hour age, when I,Morte are mainly carbon dioxide," he what it should be. For she met him! in Germany and Austria in which this ' said. "Death was not due to them. as regarded as a veritable came to zee you. introducing certain political conic tions into the schools, and also hatre against England. The militarizing o schools converbs them .into trainin stables for war, ion educate y ready for use, or capable of bein further manufactured into other vain able food - products, No article o human diet is more susceptible to un desirable changes, due to the delicat nature of the milk itself and to con ditions naturally surrounding its pro duction and -handling. Milk is read ily affected by bacteria, found on the body of the cow and on hay, bedding or dust -laden atmosphere falling into the freshly -drawn milk. The extent of this source of contamination de- pends on the care cows receive, the ' carelessness of the milker and the utensils used. Unless the udder is diseased, it is claimed that there will be few bacteria in the milk when first drawn, but it is subject to contamina- tion -from the moment it is drawn until removed from the stable to a (s' place that is free from odors or dirt. f 'The aim of the dairyman should be g;to reduce the sources of c.ontamina- r tion to a minimum. This may be done with a degree of success through a little extra exertion. If the side of the cow and the udder are wiped with a damp cloth just previous to milking, the clanger of bacteria get- ting into the milk from this source is lessened. In some stables the chores are not planned so that the stable will be free from dust at milking time, but just previous to milking, or while the milking is being done, the feeder puts straw or hay down from the barn and proceeds to feed the cows, thus filling the air with duet and - making it impossible to keep the milk clean. By a little planning of the work, the stable c_ag be kept prac- tically free from dust for a short time morning and evening. After the milk is removed from the stable, feeds which cause a dust or strong odor may be fed. In stables where certi- fied milk is produced every effort is made to keep the cows' bodies clean and the air free from dust while the milk is being drawn. There is clan- ger of bacteria lodging and growing in cracks or crevices of pails or cans that are difficult to wash. The pail with an open seam may be the cause of serious trouble. Few milkers take the time to put on a special coat and apron for milking, but apart from be- ing more sanitary, they protect the everyday _clothes from becoming spot- ted with milk. ' to retrain customers, The man supply- ; ing milk to a cheese factory or cream d' to a creamery is not affected directly, g but indirectly he suffers sooner or _ later if poor quality milk or cream e i is delivered. The cheese maker cannot - make first-class cheese from second - e grade milk, arid the quantity of milk' _I to make a pound of cheese is in- I _!creased, Likewise with the creamery- _ i man—it requires good milk to pro-; ;duce good cream, and the proper care, must be taken of the cream if the i i highest -priced butter is to be made. i 1 There: is need for a uniform method' of caring for milk and cream in order that a uniform product may be rnanu-! .; factured that will compete favorably ; ! with the products of other countries i on any market. The solution begins , with taking every precaution at milk- ! ing time.—Farmer's Advocate. I Care of the Colt's Feet. 1 The care of a horse's feet should commence when he is a colt, that is, i before he is weaned. Untrimmed hoofs usually grow long and uneven,l and a crooked foot, or worse, a crook -1 ed leg is the result. Failure to re-! gulate the length and bearing of the 'foot may make a straight leg crooked'; or a crooked leg worse, while intel-! ligent care during the growing per- iod can gradually improve a leg that is crooked at birth. When picking up ! a colt's 1,e t, teach him to stand on; three leg's,. ;,ttd not depend on the one holding up his foot for the fourth! point of support, The handling of a! them.", at once with a question: I Wunder w el "Tell me what you know of Mar- t Godsend: "How can you 'lo that?" she asked. i "How can you be sure of that? "Because he spent the time in my 'Scarborough asked. "Carbon dioxide' garet Ryan." i "At these words, a wild uproar ; company. He came back with me from; is a poison, is it not?" ; "I know only what Phil Varney told. arose in the House, the president; Ponta Delgada, dined with me, anti ; "Certainly, Senhor, if it is breathed' me," he said. I vigorously ringing his bell. Dr. Lieb» 1 slept at the Cable station, in the bed-; in excess for any length of time." • j "That is what I want to hear." ! knecht shouted: 'It is the truth; it 1 room next to mine. I can a::count fort "The dead body waa found a few' Scarborough thought for a moment.; is the whole truth.' Ttke,, president' him fortunately." feet from the edge of the Caldefra." j How could he tell her? To gain time,! thereupon called him ITS' order and "I am glad," said Elsa, simply. t "So I understand. But none the' he asked her to tell him first :chat she ° the majority of they members left the "I think you ought to be," lie an- less, Senhor, I am confident that the knew. I Chamber. f swered sternly, `The knowledge has fumes from the Caldeira de Morte; "Very little," she answered. "When' :• • "Dr. Liebknecht went on: `Just as m ie from t saved y war, th p beet me, a horrible accusation against from carbon dioxide is a form of suf-! yesterday, I thought at once that I ent war has a demoralizing and bane-' an inno_srt man." focation. The appearance of the body; ful effect on education. As long as knew the face; but I couldn't re - "Oh don't misunderstand nue!" she negatives your theory:" ' member at first where I had seen it.i our educational ideal centres in a "Can you explain to me how?" t Just before your friend, the Revolver; death struggle, the liberation sof. the' broke out. "That's not why I'm glad.; My peer father has been murdered! , Certainly, Senhor. If the young; King, came into the ring, I saw him :working classes cannot come. The ! Do you think I am going to throw : lady's father had been suffocated by; standing in the gangway speaking to president for the second time called away a chance of finding his mur- ` the fumes from the Caldeira, his vein her, and she looked up into his face the speaker to order, but he con-', 4 deter because I may perhaps throw' would be congested, the skin would; with a laugh, and a curious shake of tinued: 'The workers themselves ' �,-atispieinn on an innocent man? I ; be dark, and the lips would be almost; the head. Then I remembered in a I must tackle the job of education. The want to find the guilty. The innocent ' purple. I observed, on the other' flash where I had seen that laugh, with ! troops must not fight merely in the! will be able to prove their innocence!" hand, the exact opposite of all this.. its accompanying jerk of the head be- trenches; they ought to sower their I "Your father found it hard to do The lips were bloodless, the veins were fore. It was at a tennis party at the; arms and direct them against the so," Scarborough retorted, and almost! flaccid, and the face was white. I Varney's, three or four years ago, ands common enemy.' t before the words had left his lips, was; am confident that, in this point at • I remembered that Phil Varney and; "The president again rang his heal, ashamed of them. S least, I shall prove to be right." Margaret Ryan had played together Elsa drew herself up proudly, ; "Then you are unable to tell us: most of the afternoon. They are "I have told you that the proofs still' what did cause death?" asked Elsa. : cousins, I think. That is all I know." exist," she said. "The tnurderer did! "Unhappily, yes, Senhora." ! "There is something in all this to not destroy them." Then hurriedly, as: "But you have a theory --a guess??" snake you suspect her," said Scarbor- though she had said more than she' "If I have I do not feel justified in ough. meant to say, the went on: "I said! stating it, until I have made the closer; "She is one of Varney's, I sus - that I was glad that you could prove, examination to be made public. It pect them all." Phil Varney to be innocent, and I; grieves me deeply to have to si•y so,: "She is not," -said Scarborough. am. But you misunderstand my realbut there must be an autousy." ' "You are wrong in thinking that Phil son." Elsa shivered and then said quietiy • ' and she are cousins. He told me that "At any rate I credited you with; "Very well. Let it take place as there is no relationship between them. one that was worthy," said Scarbor-i soon as possible." ; His father and your were her joint ongh. 1 The pompous little doctor looked at' guardians; that lean." "And is a daughter's desire to � her admiringly. Here was a girl who i "Oh, what does it matter?" cried I Elsa. "She is in the circus, and my r mother warned us of danger from the Whr ± e r Ione 9 11. Here is a testimonial unsolicited "If I had my will it would be advertised on every street corner. The man or woman that has rheumatism and fails to keep and use Sloan's Lini- mentis Iike a drowning man refusing a rope,"—A. J. ran .Dyke, Lakewood, N. J. S1oai' hthnent 11 Cr .p.uM f./ r C RE WS moo m or .,, • .x are Liebknecht tried to continue, but the president kept on ringing and said, : addressing the members, 'I beg that all those present who still wish to hear Dr. Liebknecht will stand up.' As only Socialists stood up Lich- knecht was forbidden to speak fur-; ther, the majority present loudly ap- plauding this decision. Liebknecht, however, continued in his efforts to speak, but could not make himself heard owing to the terrific commo- `, tido, As he was leaving the rostrum there were loud shouts of 'Out with , him.' " That'll Do. circus! Tell me what you learned A man was walking along the! about her." !street and he saw a house afire. He Scarborough paced the room once or rushed across the way and rang the twice. Then he sat down beside Elsa.' bell, After some time a lady, who "She is an orphan," he said, and,` proved to be slightly deaf, appeared she was an heiress. Her father had; at the door. I made his money as a stockman, in the; "Madam your house in on fire." States, in the days before the West; "What did you say?" was fenced with wire, and opened out! The man began dancing up and: with railways. Her childhood had down. He pointed above. "I said been spent in the saddle, and she often your house is afire! Flames bursting'. knew what it was to sleep under the out! No time to lose!" stars. When her father had made i "What did you say?" what he considered was a big enough I "House afire! Quick!" land and brought ?Margaret with him. she said, sweetly. She was fourteen then, and the next; "Well," replied the man, hopeless three or fouryears she spent at school `: h-, "that's all .l can think of just note." pile to leave to a girl, he came to Eng- The lady smiled, "Is that all?" getting the education for which there had been no time in her wild life out: West. When she was nearly twenty„ Might. Have Been Worse. her father died, and for a year she The elderly Miss Charitee settled traveled with an elderly governess, down among the rural inhabitants, whom your father and Mr. Varney en-, and soon made herself conspicuous by gaged fpr her. At the end of that' the kindly interest she manifested in colt's feet begins with the near front; foot. Tie a rope around the postern,' grasp the rope close to the foot, push! gently against the shoulder, and quick-' ' ly lift the foot. The lifting of the foot must be simultaneous with the; weight shifting to the other feet.; Gentle the foot and leg and let it; down, Repeat several times and then ! • trim and level the hoof, To raise as on the front foot and draw the: foot forward. To put a rope on the! hind foot of a wild horse, tie up a! ' :front foot, have the assistant hold his hand over the eye on the same side as the foot to be lifted, or take the headstall in one hand, the tail in the ,' 1 other, and whirl • the horse until he i becomes dizzy. While in this condi- { tion he may be handled with safety.! ! Lift the foot forward two or three! 1 times and gentle it. As soon as the horse gives in, carry the foot back -I s Iward into a shoeing pot:;it.ion and trim' t the hoof. To handle the feet of a horse that t will not stand still, or that kicks, a! halter twitch is a great aid. '.!.hie twitch is easily applied and Leeds on-! e ly the ordinary halter and tie rope.' 1 Pass the rope over the horse's Natl.!just behind the ears; raise the upper' r Iip and put the ropeacro:ss the gums' above the teeth; run the Tope through the loop made by passing the rope; i over the horse's head. The rope t should be tight from the halter ring, over the head, under the lip, and through the loop. A few good pulls on this rope should make the horse stand quietly.se a hind foot, put on a rope ; ANY FAMOUS EN WERE " 'OL " f IEEE ARE A FEW INTERESTING EXAAl['LES. Men of Brilliant Attainments ire Dullards Private. Life. W A genius very often is far from im- pressive in private life. Maly famous men—apart from their wo,•ks • have been hard to distinguish from fools. La Fontaine, celebrated f'o" lila :witty fables; Ilescartes, 'the famous_,� malhematieian and philu,o her; iaetcl litlflot, the naturalist, were nil r•x- ceedingly dull in.convcreation. montei, the novelist, wan so kering that a friend once said, ;after an in- terview: "1 must go and read his taloa to re- compense myself for the weariness of heating him." Schubert, the great composer, was in character extremely modest and retiring; hence, to some extent, his failure to obtain any permanent ap- pointment by which he might have been delivered from his sadly precari- ous mode of existence. His friend, Lacher, describes him as "looking like a cabman"! l chumann's Sad End. Then, again, the famous musician Schumann, was subject to most curi- ous delusions, and devoted himself largely to the art of spiritre. On - ' One of his delusions was that the spirits: of Schubert and Mendelssohn visited him. Once he even jumped up dur- ing the night to note down a theme , given him, as he imagined, by Schu- bert. Finally, he became insane, rates spent the last two years of his life in a private asylum. The conversation of Socratetr, the ancient philosopher, turned generally upon the subject of carpeittcrs rend weavers and shoemakers. ,Samuel Johnson inherited from his father "a vile melancholy," a terrible tendency to depression and despair, which never wholly ceased to domin- ate him. He also was prone to super- stition, and had himself "tout hed" for the "king's evil," being afflicted with scrofula. All through life he was of indolent habits, but never Iearned how to control his temper. "He has the character," we read, "of being a very haughty, ill-natured gentleman; and that he. has such a way of distorting his face—which, though, he can't help—the gentlemen think it may affect some young lads." His manlier was rough and savage; he was slovenly in dress, and Inane strange gesticulations. Failed As a Student In the year 1818 Lord Macaulay, essayist and historian, went into re- sidence at Trinity College, but he sig- nally failed to distinguish himself as a student. Yet he twice won the Chancellor's medal for English verse, Another interesting example of a `famous fool" is seen in Leigh hunt, poet and essayist, and friend of Byron and Coleridge. His life was one of ceaseless activity, and as cease- ess embarrassment, for he "never knew his multiplication table"! Washington Irving, the Ameriean writer, was a great dunce also. His brothers were sent to college, but Washington showed no inclination to tudy, being "a dreamer and a sain- er•er." Charles Lamb was prevented 'trent entering a university because of his insurmountable stammer. His t•.ity less and impediment of speech pr'ov- d to be a great drawback to him in ifo. As to Corneille, the great dvamatirt ,f France, he was completely snit in Society—so absent and embarrassed that he wrote a witty couplet, imply - ng that he was never intelligible buthrough the mouth of another. His Majesty's Comment. Wit, on paper, seems to be s'."ne- hing widely different from that lay of words in conversation, "which while it sparkles, dies"; for Charles I., the wittiest of menarche, was so harmed with the humor of -"Hi-01- )ms" "Iligdf- ,ras" that he caused himself In he iitr'oducecl in the character of 0 pri- attc gentleman to• Butler, its nether. he witty King found the author a cry dull companion, and was of pinion, with many others, that so tupid a fellow could never have written so clever a book. Addison, whose works have long Oen considered Models of English tyle, was shy and absent in warty, reserving even before a single stran- er formal and embarrassing silence In conversation Dante WOO taciturn rid satirical. Gray and Alfieri sel- dom talked, and never smiled. Rous - Besides bacteria, there are taints • and odors which affect the quality of milk alad its products. These odors I are absorbed by the milk after it is , drawn from the cow. If milk is ex-, posed to any strong odor, or foil air, resulting from lack of ventilation in; the stable at milking time, these' odors will be taken up quite rapidly.! Or, if milk is being cooled by use of an aerator, it is liable to absorb any; strong odor from the atmosphere. These "off" flavors are strongest when the milk is warns and are less pronounced as milk becomes older, especially if subjected to some form' of aeration in a fresh, clean atmo- 1 sphere. Taints and bacteria affect al] railk,' more or less, and every dairyman should endeavor to lessen the sources of contamination, by taking extra! care at milking time and in cooling; the milk properly after it is removed' from the stable. The market demand_ a high-class product, whether in the! form of milk, cheese or butter. The man selling milk direct to customers! in a town or city is' obliged to keep! the milk up to the standard in order THREE ViTAL, QUEST/ONS Arc you full of enor�''y vital torte., and general food Itc5,}th r Do poo tino,v that yrood dt e,tion e thefooad,,;,, of,trod health; Pains and op. AFTER TAKE 8015 Saving the Treee. I e The cementing of holes in trees is 1. now quite common. On old estates, i where trees have been showing holes! v in their trunks for years, they are: T now being cemented, both to add t., v the stability of the trunks and to i o arrest further decay. Huge trees with, s holes in thein trunks largo enough for a man to stand upright in are now! filled with cement, the cement being I) painted the rolor of the bark. 5 pression in stomach and chest atter oating, tvlth constipation, headsctto dizziness, aro sure sign, of Ind,geation, Motbarl3cigol's Syrup, the throat ' a herba(retnedy and tame, ~,vlll core you It .M3 MOTHER A DANISH STO�'t�sAlC•oI MORES Beau was remarkably trite in convex- sation, not a wort} of eloquence ever passing his lips. Milton was unsociable, and even ir- rit•able when much pressed by the talk of others, ---Landon Answers. n • • with the Verneye welfare. time shewent to : t theirai A f n te ( ydays ago she revel g for a month or two. The firm of. Car- met Mrs Flanagan, whose right eye ringten and Varney :'ailed when she was as black a5 it was Erosible for was within three weeks of the time a human fist t l "t Sy pathetic oninker. m when, by her father's will, she would to a degree, the lady expressed the be of age. On her twenty-first'birth- hope than •her unfortunate friend day she was to have been given the! would soon be able to • see things in absolute and unfettered control of her, a lnucli better Iight. "After all, fortune of twenty thousand pounds,! Mrs. Flanagan," • she went 00, "your Ilet' father believed that, with the trouble might have been worse." traning she had had, she would be tapable of controlling it wisely. But she Was never put to the test. (To be Continued.) " ::Shure your right," .. scrod the IC , an •c woman, philosophieaIly'. "I• might be like yourself, miPS, with no husl,ancl at all." Atall D+r Druggists, or direct receipt a of price, co's(1G sad 100 Thu (arta sntufts three dines a1111.11C11 r the mailer. A. J. WHiTE4,o. LdMtrYp, Craig Street bottle i b ontroal. �,.-.»»+.'.......... _.. _ _.. .. • , 11 Distemper • ri!AErtEAL &EYEit t nSIZIPkIN, rEvEia al% I1PL1a r 00x's rxcI3,05Y) Sure carp a"d i,ra\ontit r, no neater .how. ttorst:c ,et any ugi erre ,ifi eter( or '• nsir, e,l." Tdihtid. F,ivrtn 011 ; W the tongue: sets on the blood and r'i tads, c;:q' 1s the Poisonous germs from thea body Cate~ D,utrtnper In Dogs tont Silent, and Cholera 1n 1 .alit, 1.o rg:e.-'t :_i11. y frig live 141cn + re ntr•dy. r'urt,-$ i ra tlt•ipp among retinae beings, and is a true Kidney remedy. Ly the homy or dozen. ( tt Liti nnt. Keep it. .c ,hc .0 to our druggist, k who will get it for you. Free 1?on?.tet, "1)Istctnlaer, Causes and Car's." t3pocial agents wante•t1, f le sportrn' ract'f3J9To!!.7i, CO., 'r a. ohomista dna Eacieriologiatu, t ot,hcn, Znai„ 17.3.41. tl Man may fall in a dozen different nes of activity, and then succeed rilliantly in a phase wherein he was nconscious of any ability. A pessimist `says that the surest ey to avoid trouble, escape -hard- hips and dodge calamities is to die oun , g • Lossie had left: the toys about the itchen, Mother•—"Sussic, if yod• ave these things .about the kitchen gain 1'II box your ears and throw 'ism in the eshpit." •