HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1921-8-11, Page 2The Kitigdorei G
The Blind
By E. mums OPPENHEIM. --••""*"7"!'""
kCeoy-Aightecl)
Synopsis of Later Chapters.
Capteen Granet calls mien Monsieer
hiURSES
The Toronto Hospital for Ineur-
ables. in a.fiiiiathn Hwith Bellevue, lool
A1kospitals,. New "York "City.
offers e. three yearsCourse of Train-
: !rig to young women, having the re -
(mired edueailon, and desirQun of be-
coming nurses. This Hospital halt
I, adopted the eight-hour system. Tho
) pupils rev e uniforms of the Sehool,
t Q. 3114Illth1Y allowance and travellime
expenses to and from New York, For
further information ;Lindy to the
, Superintendent.
. Forest Reserves Belong to
the People.
The Deminion forest reserves in the
Prairie Provinces and Railway Belt of
British Columbia are located on lands
unsuited to farming. The idea he that .!
they shall be so handled as to provide t
timber for fuel and, building, both now
and in the feture, for settlements on A T.alk Abaut Teeth. I The germs hiele the•reh the acids are,
the fertile lands eurrotinding themsu th t f u es hel made there. Indeed, the germs them-
ppose a a g,aree e ev
t env:elves .at the gateway ef a city
H w are we to get at theee danger-
felves help to make the acids.
These forest area.% are not reserved h
from the settler or held, out of use,but
are reserved from the slasher, who and poisoned all the food goieg in by,
myself, though, that a girl with her would pick trees all over the area mid - ' -- • '
the gate quonose acrtin that the'
tl• R is not easy arra it. requirea
pointe end drive the enemy out of
aprearanee eught to clo better." ' (qty. grew ill and was weakened so • =nut
etalewa.er gam thus caus•e the destruction a warty have pictured to ziairsif the' as shaving.amazing . g .
bon' Thorrs-ne somewhere" he said
•
Seems to mt‘ I've heard sot -teething that :UR eherrriee r ----- e Ye it ie net neer'Y eo
oment leave a slash behind, vrhich at the arst
1 a • moving, object ,rh c
l•fl tdf
. A.
enatiml againet tt.,
thin is
u rigs an), e ,c) one ie e a Int •
hhir the rime's, of N'CrIt 4,41107 call a e
hint of fire would burn like tinder and ,
Gu 4.t at the 111,17:;.r. liet-.‘1 mei goyee ale to himself. "By -the -bye, who IS' times mere trees than the s -
ewers state a the *nen ve*h bed teeib The
. that men who would stet degam of go -
tem pnie girl with the wonderful eyes, wculd cut in several years, The um.' thieves at the" gat; tak.e et;;;y.thin; jug. nnshnved will go °13t el-elrY day
,h„ al,, sc. s .,... . , .
him a timmetent from. the Kaiser of- "Dia that eeme from report:. . _.
losing Freeur a seearate peace. The GIT•rd't •slc•cd 4-'-^gerlY, e
pen e.., rgeueseeeee geneers eines two ••It ai i," Sir Alfree sie7,a. "Farther ta,whum Year nephew is meking him, her is corn...ere-ea by first satragiug all , sohner or later. At first t ee Quo •
:large workshop erected en his estate in Sir Mesnodie Werth. the grent seen- and cut -over forests time to grow and of the indigestion, the Ima.selt.a, the mg to bed, the mouth should be welsh-
ed cut carefully with a little water
, t with the epages beeween their tee,th
choked with deeay and dareeer.
eueenar;e0e, Greets. eleee, woe els than that. the main part of the instru- sed Fo agreeable? ' • : (level timber and then by restricting gcod tken they take eiotal tem-
tnue„. se: ghhedd edhsehnan, at a gee; molt ni being, made under tile surer- :"That 1' be Worth," Lady An the cutting to mature trees in certaini per,. end at the last good Irealth. Tho. best plate is nlght to start a kind of
:vieieri. of Sir aiervire AN'Orth, a se•"1..'In rePited. "MIg. 01.2 clenghteanareas, thus•aBowing th•e- e-aung forests.: 'Net -half, 'but want) meee ittaTk het( °°14'.°141 EV°I7 -1)Pf°re
CHAPTER XVI.-cd'ent'd.)village near Braneaster
dull thne, poor girl. Her father lives tt°. feeupe.ra4te. The poesibilities of rheumatism, the heart trouble which _ pinch of halting hada has
wincil a
in Nor.. tist. I am afraid ehe leas, rather a.
in an out-of-the-way af Nor. im ter plc uction under properly re- i speil useful end happy lives, are due 1.,,-60.1 die Thou take a rdeed of
Sir Alfred :3W p fer erne:eel mo- a < . • -
facets as th mgh it were the best! take It back." Grenet remarked: h h_ gitlated cuttinvaided by fire prevete •• to teeth. It is the poleon. from the
• • . -The pihnS of the leetrament evoine Idha, seends all his time trylng se clean linen or cotton rag ani work it
mecover things, end forgets tha's he tion are very grent. On the reserves 1 roots of the techh which day tee day
werth cc r iiderateen. Then he laid . s' ir . . - up between the teeth. Pull it hack -
soup •,-,n eart," ae,i not ..ng iise was de wc .. . , . .., .. , , h. ,,, huais.,,
tin t mungee tnosuan 1
has a daugh.ter nt all. She hes been tee. over one hundred thousand head . eorrupts the whcle system.
dawn leis Stuon. Alireleontinued eahrily. k:"If that .
ir Lorden f ) a of smelt -cattle horses anal sheep-- • The reason is simple eneugh. A had
aunt, but I don't 'oelleve that the old graze every s.unnuer. rhese are own- teeth is a tooth whieh has lost the wards and forwas•ds so ns to remove
'...s;' -`v 'I's" lig; lie - - zed be the next eonsid-
Indy ire able to do mueh for her." : ed by eettrers in the surrounding dis- battle that every single sera? a our Pieees of food that may here been
„,, ie hi:mosse, the elestruetion of the - - tr a few days with a . . ..
tag•---t.a:eFt• ." :.-.77,r.:' r:rzt:i.-.. he:ere was a drath.d. „ :eft after eating. Finally, Ese a beneh
-e pea.. wo . .
, stauelyeint of timber reductionel''s alwaYs fighting against the. and t°Gtit-Paste or P.owder,,
troves picees of food, aral the brush
retuning all right," her mightier °li-
tho tricte who are thus enabled to ritiee bode-
Tatt;'"' c''''' "'''' h'Ir"-' c'n't 1 ean teL • rflo I come in ?acre?" Grat2et in- "Bonnie seres to be making
intaeh mere steel; than if reetrietea to, germs a disease. In other words it'. The IreaS,C.n for tiers eat:see el thill
176,Ya. S :!1,...•.:`S.'n'''' sa'Sea . ......• . . .1„,,u.
- ' -.` .h, kded-Uhr • •
,z.,:,,s.s, Beth titush ..The dome hf the eidage where sle• , asked him spegialle. to look after.
` ' their GAM land. The lughest develop- es a gr.eze of
anent of theee Dominion foreets from , has taken, grouna womb the enemy
' as that the soda kills mei& the rag re-
*rA-1. "Yen dm. Rennie." his allele rephed. sena- •
here are
cong-tws in ,
s'abreavines
,
sr• -;t:':' "='-hd'r vt"ter' "...dreyvIlle Werth levee ts Market Burn- A-, a lw, • w • • I. .. • • tu , w
'
'.I 1.,474E -F'''‘'', ...W., 1, w.,--.. --t t.'4•L -2 " ". .tstre V.i.k.:„%, ae • . ,..t.e. .
, . ._ e e quite ecmpetible with timdir use for E,!tabliehea. inside the 1:,ad tnete„ He lit , 1,,
ty, -.1 ese eery .z-,1,6,,,,,,;0^1: t eame within. e few miles of . Braroaster„ what :Le is told. .
veev rear thc key .ef ',lac wiaCe thing.''• t;eparty, at my in,:tigatik,s, has ar- !diver Berried) leaned across thre. reernatire PIDrpose.s• Oa mane re • at work thee pu.tu g eut e.hat can" 15'.-1'lle vknxt.b 3,, .leenitnehirntf6:111' ex47:,::/n°Tni.;
-. • ,Ing. ----a •ere .. 4 • . . • •.-• W w Vt.-
A WW1'.n."4" •'41-''Pt%..4w'''14i Wr'.0.7. 114C 9. ext ra,11‘4417, a hurait.+Sel HttIe golf parte' to talle t''''tvards theft • .;f-'erves smuntor Vert% have heett Ps.". be likened t•> his "poieoned gas," Iso ...., . ..,. . ,.. „ .0 „ ,
, ,,,, • • was not weather wnen. Reties o: e, ers,
'''.4°-"''`•'•--.." '-'; l'‘';'-' '"w1rd ese *e Prerseer ,r the illy efter to "Didn't I 1.v.n.r you reentien Thome' tatittehed. where under proper ream -AS to Win more victoees
"•st Vie teeth A pere wha ear -
P h enemy (the germs) is now es- ric„.5 hat this drill every
"' C-"" /- -"-- h • I eh; I t veo is tctonn!r is &mars emit a dear at doing e
Y ., , and seiZe • • • •
el•Try.:".•"..: -.'!"7..:ilr•E':..fr.e. Sir NI memos. iaeu win tieeempeny *hem. self e Lame just new?' he inquired. "I batons eitizens may hold piceics, clesernet:on grow so castly and so pre-
r.e.:.-a, t arpreeeng.e. In the nateinfirne, Miss Worth, Slr saw him the other clay in Boulogne. camp out, or erect cottagee la whieh • - - - " • ' fuselly.
tmi euP1' more Pie'•05 ef tbe both; -
"'Jest tear Mir .:,tes In the iee." he Meyvilie 1,Veeth'e faith- daughter, is Awful swell he wae about something,: to .,,,ocini tue hot menthe .11 . • ' Tb° "1""1 gll" in th9 eaSe iS a i N t cif tit t, but it will he a
ir,s1;":"••-•ei• "re-: '4' r4zvr- 11)1";,-: Pm- eteeeirg in leseelon urall Weelnesday. tea. A destroyer brought him across,; • ' -' - - le • ealng fluid which doetors speak a as ai 0 'I 4 ' ' n
reserves In'Or,e4 te'r • "toxin." It is a subtle essenee, en-, easy matter in the morning 1,1 l•rush
aside of forest
made some waitleg at the quay to rush him un to. gam° proteetion aill the forest alit- ermouely peisonous, which is it very; the tteth cleau, ready for the tlae's
work.
tt•".1 imc :,',,,-.•It va:, s.:zamp4zgne druntrY She ie' lanchir.g with your taint at the and a Goverrnmeat motor -car was
ie. I reuet eeefess, a relief.' he ad.ied, Ritz teemorrew,, I have
Hone, (*ere teroperate in enforcing the pro• unlike the venom snakes injeet fromi
terr.:eg I. th.-eren "It nu e ma rated. ether erreelgemente in too/lege:en the Frt.nt. We all thought at
!ad ir'n'ha he hddoh. st'••.t re'nh'nhr I 'te- eath year %deg to Norfells. witieh will logne that reyalty lane coming. at Neawr, tht= fnge -nto the•r v• c-is' ThISISneugh if he v.: At? out
ittalgamel. etIiitm.
its' • " •
- d thorougnier But at as no t:Fe r)Phltrd ogee -
There was a slight frown on Gran- .;:rle.l's'ee;ves,INZ) thcav't" theeillePUtpliulel•eof.gba:1,1 tilit,yrdstese.fre3.% nn the bTnin ning tooth -drill with a mouth fall of
• •'^e, na',•';,zer keen der the preeent. I eee that SOItle lea,,sst."
eir::der'rt.te-xers have teetered the room. Tell
A rug n ea' glezee :e erems... -emu weee,o Tee your fs,et,•• the benelit of the eeople of the caner- mouth an mixes ctii the fcha some; dtleet:sar slgtusntaupsilr.ThNe'41OliargcrWii,!: et1,1:31nn
••'- rohier vou cense by the QZ's f_oreleead. He glanced half harge ar.d small game increeise_:1,,,for
L mein •• . I.._ • . Some a it cemee direetly into the;
.113C;,eusoy towards Geraldine.
' * - If he
• , •,, , the Grate: zurned a littl•?' around.' "llys_terious...s,nit ese fellow, Thom- era proviuees. The (tweet reserve:e re. more of it goes into the blood as it' le -nn go to a der-. 2t
.a• e. v •
wiN 3 ges-er ea.:Winne are franded with ,a view to
• • : r.-TorrE rnv, . .1.„ sr a in lee feee son elajor tiaras:el continned, n
4AVA roum. the teotteeeeleet Thus 4i".'s ne"°ns 41""t "°':Pf-r ti'a:' vt '311
ignoraace of the peculiar sa.g.. var., m.,4ha ,riaLei„ 11,,,,h
i•E':'•••-h• as he looked 1..aela at his uncle,
If 1 •n,ay :,e •
r
"• "wt.', :Mt' 4M; '"wi''gW: 1 w.
th
7..t,‘..».•;31.
e t • • , remember that the pain he may ar
"Do yo3 know the man at that ef hie eed e. ee
- ; wgeee within the reeervee, arel the 't •
-p01140114.ng 4.41 Paris •Ane day, you hear a ham at "
4 But it is all so gerstle, so much en the 711--niV.Itedis,1101,c7,1!:(..':ItIrer4.'1,allfftic.r.r,11,1w•lh-
••" c•rner table?" he asked.
1r .4freil gee:skim the rem,' the farthermost point a the French l'I.-"F,.'70.!3'rheeirs th3"he
i n nt 3;,,,r, IA. 4. •
re,„ • .,a "serre these reweeit, Mee, systena ef "little by little." that the • „ •ti /or,,,er
not teag cemparei
tree :aettemz
f,4 h due ,,,,,erger fel- teat sateenetse. lie le the ell',(1 inspeetor
InOratzen wiehis a mar. Leair 'ago. gaereek.a nee fee sone perts at headquarters within a fee' • • • • meet te-apdelgree to hien, He eeys.
sine for ,„„i• et a back doer of the Wtir Offlee, s t.14no, of driftir:g raemie• , • , ;
maize is."
r'sery elight,:y. I :Take to ttn •
they or two later:*
houre, end ;eve meet hint slipning out awl bernset over ruthleesly, be ' "
, Vre't‘l '1,1•144.111 if cm laVv4
eurreiending dietriets. un- tr4g tne e•41.1rtlg*" g° 'and get their teeth Italf the 61:•41a!7'.*; whieli end
•.
chvvriuliy• "I have a. laud tooth- I litkb:
* c -^1t 4.'e4.ng pc. . • le
eently ttlet if peeple teal; ware ,,f
e •
great he81efe lit '.1 grid re -
et in ga In ••ree, ype ;rapper to say ;but, el,•cs' "Inspector ef Fle:a IT( spitat 'IS a rt- the re:pree
in it eirgelaelen v 1d
zort,¼ ne a:ang v. rpeed!peet whieh I 'think must 'have beer,4.114. 114. *411 anti eznufert el au If reaoy unaerstocit wnat ole was
C lenel Grev re- t ,117.;r••• -about he weal'il say• "I am. pear . The same tiaine• is tree of hid-
Aifre,i rt•ilt..z•te4 fr a, moment. er"z4tvd htn-h" - tap eeeep::0 :led :deo to eirevide sport " • new dieettee, and, itereed. ef most of
za:a. -I; teave th:43 rneritioa it," ,marked. ..te's imperietratee sort - add recre,,tien, jakIng " $"1"11 thIse " Pnisnn "ell' these &cadet affilath*lis to willed) the
, day. Alai I am feolhardy enough not t1t-h' ut.t.unzia. 18I1 .outly
been given.
Tips to Housewives
;ewers tre ether
14. 1, r'rhe nee who ,:0111.'
menaged to
tati•n val to Portsrn•eth
hc.ve idea n his ship..
I wieet •-lown_ with his sister aral the
yeereg !els; lie i"; ki'rgagei to marry.
Or khen, there wee struettere some
er oovereal up. tr.el to make ;at-
olt....ies about i•, '•alt they 64.4.'.0 .1 me
tersoty quielt. There was even 14.
se•ntry staL•iing on gnarl before
let nae even fil-•1 the shape
of it. However. I hadn't given up hop. -
'N r. there i',U111e Wireless -no
guests to be aliewel (on-
.
yees had te reek tie all eft heelt to
the head. witheut s..vi.11 fog
From the aceel 1 i.:;;t tea.-
• , ' 1 sa''' '1 eineege tehd)
rieimsen 'ger/meet. na i a plat who
• e • ••.1 -!1.1.'- r, ee
lehel. Thee sdesee. to 7,-ee completing
the 1-.,:yastbaci.ts oa' c•rso aloe !neve ef
needier:is-re. Then they eneethw.. ;ovay
teet er. eight ef
"A i•-isy y••iirs. Ronnie," Sir
renzari,A, after a MenIent's
eloet it esev?
tav: •aa•g,-.1.1" frien Verl„:1
this 1:Lori:intr." '
"It's r•ritty iliftioult," Granet
eekg.whehesi. "Seerpion"s out
t' N.,,rth Set. .:•r.)
Ani I don't believe
's /iestreyer yet fitted
ev''' aeptgetee, whetever it may
••"1-ney mest. ise ieakhze: them eoine-
weage. tOweeh.'.5.ii• Alfred rernerked.
ne teuy merles:.
'dr * - reetterte.
t.V1 Wan M(T. sfrri.`W! 4 -fat
Ty:- , I Pt ger. s rieut ,
arse 1T,,t, one t11#.'111 thie!
A of spies, riceee:
L.rele."
"Not altogether that," the benher
replicd. "We have some reports, al-
though they don't go far enough. I
can put you on th.e track of the thing.
Tat, apparatus you eaw is semethieg
Ir. the nature of an hi -versed teltse.eepe,
with various extraordinary lenses
treated by a. new process. You can
see forty feet down under the surface
of the water for a distance of a mile,
and we believe that attached to the
same apparatus is an instrument
y
tlranet strogg4el for a1t0114.C11t "Was Maker Thomson wing, or me,
with an idea ittel rejeetcal 'it. He turning frd'eni 1 vuilee 'when
drained his glees :ALI ietined acrees hint la't?' Gem -4414;e „ tichr(11 ioo.•ing,
the table. woroes the table.
"Ile'S a dun enough person really," . "Coming each. When we left Bou-
'tk palpitation of the heart. T
he remarked, a little under his breeth,,logne. the drstrhYer whielr' brought WLh14 ;• boY gets hl tit•F•1 ineeoase Then .enutto j111.-..0 will remove lith reloe
hi
"inn 1 stern tO 140 *'l% 4..- rtuanieg up nt over 11 18 awnitinv' in thl in"rhor• i4 1• 11Y• be thir•b".111h) 1:duh4441 1) 4.14.0 ht win VO to SitietaUFt$ in great MIN' fr44k11 finger;
twfiSnie,stewi ... smiled. c'
a It paeeCed ius inti:1-Cle.ainel..chiing fle,thweed is Ins'rhe st'nektienkeysandaima•gine.e'that h•e ha,s, luei the i':S•h\sette.r •
in which tot -e, litivedntham&1114. 4.1' twie heegiven ehout thirty knets to our eighteenatslotauhoarim,gravii.mifottune14.1•01 vi,titut0 ti- 14.4' 11 1,4.01101 will clean flat 4.s 1' veryiel:ther:,„tztrt.Ileitred thepri was rather Siegrxe 1188 y 4.4.4.4. *4. byAndirws Carnegie.t1V•IIii14tSU*1tllTVtniInIievt*1ir A.fardanponl to hs bringing 44."4.' 4.14.4.1* lot n" cm se04.104 710 invident hi my meeeenger life h,1ssilliiy1erie1 14.14.1*,. 4.' 14rpreizT
iuni Inoistureprra vim-
r.:.•phew's gleas. to haVe iliPliFIlt l.f proviaing a de- thet at ouee ltftea me to the eeventh , Th, I, i i I 4-, A
CP: ttr, ng o ,i.,, Weill is bad teiners S110111.1 he Med II) lltO"e eulTe .
11." L. 1 A s ' MIT, " .
^ lugtven lie ease in hie Autolviogrephy, , , '1
"The I,est thing in the werld, he: • ••• f ' 1 .:”
being pourvil out, ,ng very um., oceurred One Saturday evettieg when
'rents." "Inr PremIti- ; mnraell...eediril"ptortritntstlitTal 1 our hospitals.t'olonel Glavc• lath; 4.444. N1 the ho.V8
• 1 The eenversation drifted away from their month's wages. WP Si004 LI ,s, , tir ehhereee 48 thf.' vsm aary, are in place; pan ill a pen of et)!.1 water,
CHAPTER XVII. ;self very agreeable indeed te Is •bel paid each in turn. i Witii at the head i'. robised ef its most nouriehing part,' It may be nezessary to remelt treat -
Andrew Carnegie's First
Raise.
eare."
Becauve the poleon, eller er later,
will Weak la'an up. llo w:11 Lee Lis
olor, he win get haven% he will
ruther, urong filed. It Is a ourot To remove iron rust from a tie:wade
us fact that native races have, as a: fahrie, spread it with ereare of tartar.
le. goo.1 teoth. They eat naturallie.' Twist cloth to keep ereapt ef teeter
observed drily. es he watched the wine! "After lila
34.
ThOMSell• Granet Wag making lem- row before the counter. and Mr• Glass given brigsa bleasheti white, and so' ene heet pragluany iloilhle; p.thu.
Lady Ai•••eitran stood on more in Worth. Ther' MIS a little more ',slew and reached out my hand for the first
cthd ehfeorYer eoftsthe Rwitz sBietem! aenledr edairnty- min enhterofehluenekche eothna, nanait htehre ncaotrffin.e.l,
nheaed_ elevenptand a qtuabrte.rIrd. olllars . as they thee: nghus1k/.1 V dI, na tthi eamhui-t
ne
ke, iVs.'the life,
using any eanne,1 meat Or 14.4144.'thoitW
gus.ItatslptAeeOTeIPrerahl i4. ts way leDS- erelehedcuy)GasTo 144 ones
the '
muIItIt.
are '-.oft 31U V0.4 Weak.
And our ehildren :ire g:ven segari ttti-; '
,-11;11,,\•:)trneitis ztntiliwahslintirTivetiir if file,
lin?.u:,,,hed rine. There Were couple "T(.11 me about the village •:.;•.• re s02.1"1'se he 11u$11ed them paSt Me and
of officers, frientle Granes,'s, haelt you live?" he inguiddhe_gmarket paid the next boy. I theught it wee e, wo t e he ere
front the Front on leave; Lady Cone ,Burnhtim. isn't it?" . mistake, for I had lierotofcre bt-en ;-t 43dge' 1441.'4'442 the' using', tho vontents quiehly w,:shol
yers, with Geraldine und Olive.; Gran-' -"When We first went there," :?1,,t. re-' paid first, but it followed in turn with t,'ieth 1'311 ft'enlent. eold water en 1 the fleh -theroughly
: • ..
ISSUE No. 32-'21.
. trie mut:. rut the Ail rave cf the teeth, drained. Then eXiliI60 V) the 0'4.t 4.4,5
te himasdin and a tall, dark girl with-, plied, "1 thought that lt Nlas simply, well of the other boes. My heart be- the delicate ('41 4114.4.! ns it is 0:Wish air fer twenty• minutes en 1 Olin in
pallid eomplexion and brilliant e,yesh Paradiee. That was four years :Igoe gan to sink witpin ine. Disgrace seem- ethich is the firet line of trenehee. the iee box. if the 1,i11111 Of 11:11 is a
who hail come with leadY Anselman though, and 1 seareebe rouhted upon . et' coming. W hat had I done or not . .
against. the germs. reliable one and it is treatei in this
and who W3S standing now by her, spendir,g the winters there. , done? I was about t.o be told that
' side. . there was no more work for me.
I "You find it loneIg, then?" Orme }wive have been made in the way it can hardly be kr) y.n froth the
I
• -I euppoev you know everyluely, my: She shivered a little, half elesing enamel the batt'e iB 10St. The
was to disgrace the family That wee e gtrals fresh commodity.
dear?" Lady A.neelman asked her gen- her eyes ae though to shut out eome • *" eet in arid Legin their poisonous work.
' the keenest pang of all. When all had '-
lolly. ;unpleasant memory.
Very soon the whole tcloth will break .
been alel and the hove were one lir.
The girl shook her head a little dist--; 'The house," she explained. "is on I), g . down Waehing Vegetables.
eonsolately. a sort of e RWe tongue of land, with a tidal' Glass took me behind the counter and must if W.* 11-ound tee•
; "We ere so little in London, Ladyl river on either side and the sea not said that 1 ‚8.114 werth more than the
give theni chit/ice.. We' must feellii prf2tchitierecnf 1,13chais'ulilidr.gbefrullirtisitillslinvegv:.4,.se-
Ansehnan," she mrm
uured. "Youlfifty yarde away from our drawing- other boys, aud he had rewired to pay
our teeth or they will step feeding table:, 'before etiting. All market pro•
Imnee• how difecult father is. end just' room windew. When there are 112 1i me thirteen and a half dollars a
the They nec 1 the find wh'e.1-1 is tien- duce needs 4.4. 1-14.14(4. yeamve dirt
now he is WOrSe 4.1 4J t -ver. In factotidee. we are simply eut °ff fr°111 the. month,
tained in brown bread. and they need and dust, baeteria and edit:felines par -
if he weren't so hard at work I don't mainland altogether unless 'lye goi My head swam; I doubted whether
heoeve he o nave let me eome even eterose it farm cart."
i to be sated againet the ts:•uis., winch
' I had heard him correctly. He count-
noev." 1 (To he continued.)
i
"These eelentifie men," Lady Ansel - ad out the money. I don't know are ro fated to them.
! I .
! whether 1 thauked him; I don't believe Brushing, is not enough. The lirtieh
man declared. are great boons to the ' Arl Eternal Peace. reaches the surface of the teeth on1y.
country, but as parents I am afraicU I did. I took it and made one bound
i
they are just. a little tla
houghtlessel In spallata Pass, in the snow -clad for the door aThat s never where the danger lies.
and scarcely stopped un -
Major Harrison end Colonel Grey, let: height e of the Andes, the point where
, til I got home. I remember distinctly The real danger-pcint is the narrow
me present you to my young charge' the railway crosses the border line ! running or rather boundiug from end space between one tooth and another,
-for the day only, unfortunetely-, between Argentina and Chile, stands to end of the bridge across the Alleg-
Miss Worth. Now, Ronnie, if you can. the famous Christos statue, the sym- heny River -inside on the wagon
track because the footwalk -was too
narrow. It was Saturday night. I
handed over to mother, who was the
be permaded to let Miss Conyers have bol of eternal peace between the two
a moment's peace perhaps you will.
i countries. The icy, merciless blasts
show us t -he way in to lunch."
! Granet promptly on abandoned his: f winter have bent the bronze cross
vihisperecl
but at the base of -the statue are these treasurer of the family, the eleven
conversatiwith Geral - 1
cline. The little company moved in and weeds: dollars and a quarter and said nothing
took their places at t e round tableSooner shall these mountains crum- about the remaining two dollars and
which was usually reserved for Lady; ble into dust than shall the people of a quarter in my pocket-wortle more
Anselman on Tuesdays. 1 Argentina and Chili break the peace to me then than all the millions I have
i "Some pe•ople," the latter remark -1 to which they have pledged them- made since.
ed, as she seated herself, "find fault! selves at the feet of Christ the Re- Tom, a little boy of nine, and I slept
with me for going on with my lunch -I deemerin the attic together, and after we
eons this season. Even Alfred evon'tj
were safely in bed I whispered the
tome except now and then. Personal -1 - an ----C'--
i inard's Liniment for Burns, etc.
ly, I have very strong VieWS about it. I secret to my dear little brother. Even
think We ought to keep on doing sustlimitating Daniel, at his early age he knew what it
of course. There is no reason why we A well-known actor was called upon,
rt was then, for the first time, that I
meant, and we talked over the future.
the eame as usual -to a certain extent,
without any warning, to make an af-
should bring the hotel proprietors and: ,. a. sketched. to him how we would go into
shopkeepees to the brink of ruin be- I ter•ainner speecu,
business together; that the firni of
cause we are all feeling more or less! "Gentlemen," said he, "I feel like
miserable." i Daniel in the lions' den." Tho guests Carnegie Brothers would be a great
"Quite right," her neighbor, Colonel i were all attention. "Now whoneat did , and that father and mother
.
Grey, assented. "I am sure it wgildn't' Daniel say when he found him,self in should yet ride in iheir carriageAt.
do -us any good out there to fed that the den of lions? Hthe tune that seemed to us to embracee just said: Well
you were all sitting in sackclo-i and. whoever's going to do the after-dinner everything known as wealth and most
ashes. Besides, think how pl, 'sant speaking, it on t be met of what was worth striving fo2.
this is to come home to, he : ddedd '"
' On Sunday morning with father,
looking around the little table. ' Jove! i a ze mother and Tom at breakfast, I pro -
What a good-looking girl Miss Con- duced the extra two dollars and a
yers is!" I There never has been de- q,uarter. The surprise was great
her, and
Lady Anselman nodded and lowered: vised and there never will it took ,some moments for them to
"She has just broken her engage -1 . Then father's glance
voice a little . be devised, any law which grasp the situation, but it soon dawn
mwill enable a rnan to suc- ed upon them
-
ent to Surgeon -Major Thomson. I
wonder whether you knew hirn?". I oeed save by the exercise of of loving pride and mr3thees blazing
"Inspector of Field Hospitals or these qualities which have eye soon wet with tears told their
something, isn't he?" the other re-' always been the prerequisi- feeling. It was their .boy's first
marked carelessly. "I came across lihn triumph and proof positive that he
once at 33ou1
ogne. Rathee a dull sort tes of success, the qualities
of hard work, of keen intel-
was worthy of promotion. No subse-
of fellow he seemed."
Lady Anselman sighed. ligence, of gniiinebing willquent success or recognition of any -
"I am afraid Geraldine found him . 4, •
kind ever thi•illed me as this did. I
so," she agreed. "Her mother is very .-Theodore Roosevelt. -cannot even imagine one that could.
disappointed. I can't help thinking %,„_.--e---
Hero- was heaven upon .earth. My
tielea of soray mettle. rflie best of
fruits and usually the best-Ineking
fruits are those from treewhieh have
been properly sprayed while the fruit
was in its early stages, aril sometimes
the spray may not have Weathered
off the fruit before 'harvest.
•
, .
'Whole world was moved to tears of
joy.
PAInard's Liniment for Dandruff.
Benefits of Tree Plantations
on Prairie Farms.
There are several ways in which
plantations of trees benefit the prairie
settler, the most important of which
are the following: -
1. They afford shelter from the wind
to crops, buildings, and stack.
2. They collect and Lola the snow
during the winter, preventing it from
banking up around buildings.
3. They preserve and retain the
moisture in the soil by breaking the
force of the hot winds in summer, thus
retarding evaporation. The snow also
held by them in the winter, melting
in the spring, furnishes a great deal
of moisture to the land -in the immedi-
ate vicinity whin otherwise it would
no4t. plaitaretain.i
Plantations will supply fuel, fenc-
ing material, and Wood for repairs. If
settlers would only realize that they
can grow their own fuel and fencing
material, as they undoubtedly can,
many more plantations would be set
out, ae this would me -an to them a
great saving in time and labor.
5. They are of testhetic value,
beaatifying the landscape and making
life on the peatrie mucb mare pleasant
and less monotonous.
6. They greatly add to the money
value of the farm. There is not the
slightest doubt that a farm which had
o11 it a well managed and productive
woodlot of a few acres would, otsier
conditions considered equal, sell for
far more than one without trees, -
Norman M. Ross, Dominion Forest
Nursery Station, India Head, Sask.
Buying Antiques.
Spurious "antique" furniture may be
of any one of three 'kinds; a piece
made up of bits of antique carving,
panels and so forth: a real antique to
which carvings or inlays have been
added: or a piece that is only a copy.
It is extremely difficult ror an emateur
to detect a clever imitation, espectally
if it belongs to one of the first two
classes. Then why buy antiques? It
is all a raatter of taste; many old
things have a beauty that time alone
can give, though new thtegs of good
design and construction are just as
useful and sonletheee just as attrac-
tive. Perhaps the greatest pleasure
for the ordinary person in buying
tuitiques is that he hoe to buy one e'
piece at a, time and that one only af-
ter thinking it over Carefully.
sed 4utob
:11-4 rtE.A.ICEY- SELLS TEEM; USED
.IL, care of all types; all care sold sub -
eat to deliverry up to 800 miles, .04. test
run of same distance if you wish, in es
gorA order -as, pttrchased, or purchase
• rice retunded.
ta4
RING mechanic of your own choice
to look them over, or ask us to
. e any car to city repreaente.tive for
inspection. 'Very large stock always ost
band.
Breakey's Used Car Market
!.02 Tango Street, . Wm-oncta