HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1906-11-1, Page 7(:)
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OR, A SAD LIFE STORY
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CILU'I'EIR ill.
"Do you know that \VIlly has been
sent down again?"
Six weeks have passed since Bur-
gnyne's eye followed his quondam
friends down Mesopotamia, and to is
not in Oxford now. lie left it, indeed,
twenty-four flours utter the 1'e -encounter
described; left It with something of a
determination never to revisit 1l. This,
too, In spite of the good Brown's voci-
ferously reiterated invitation to him to
run down for another Sunday when-
ever be should feel inclined, and which
be accepted civilly, knowing that ho
should never feel inclined.
AL the present moment he is pacing
up and down the still wintry, north -
wind -swept walk of a maths' -house
garden in Shropshire, in the company
of a lady whom ho has (mown as long
as he can remember; a lady who
would have been a friend of chrum-
stance, even if siro had not, been one of
cliche°, since Iter home has• been in the
immediate neighborhood of the only
one he Inas ever had; a lady whose
friendship he has tested by letters on
thin paper from New Guinea and Cen-
tral Africa all about hlmsell; al whose
feel he has laid on his return more
heads, and skits, and claws than she
has web known what. 10 do with; whose
husband he thought a very good fellow,
and to whom he wrote a very nlco let-
ter on that husband's death; lastly, con-
cernitlg whose only atilt has been made
the communication that opens this
chaplet.- "Do you know that Willy has
been sent down again?"
"I did not know it; but I am very
sorer now that 1 do know'."
"You need not, bo," returns she cheer -
Mill, "he does not mind it in the least;
indeed, happily for hint, most of his
friends have been sent down loo."
"What las he been doing this lime?
Putting the porter Into the fountain ?
or screwing up the dean? or what other
pinyfui litho pleasantry?"'
"You need not speak in that nasty
sarcastic voice," says she, half laughing
aul half vexed, "After all, you must
know that young men will be young
sten. pr, at least, of you do ,not know
it, now, you must have known it once."
"If you take that tone to me," retorts
Burgoyne, smiling, "I shall have to
souse your gardener In your fountain, to
prove my juvenility; but conte, what
has he done?"
"Absolutely nothing, as far os I can
make out," replies she, spreading out
her hands as if to emphasize rho state-
ment,
"Do you mean to say that the authori-
ties have sent him awn do gaile de
coeur without, any provocation at all?"
asks Burgoyne, In a tone out of which
he is unable to keep a shade of Mete-
dulity.
"1 )Wean to say," replies she, nettled,
"that he had a few Wren to supper, and
1 suppose they wore making a little
nolle; dirt you ever In your day hear of
an undergruduates supper where there
wens not noise? however, to this case,
from what he tells me, \Nilly was lak
ing positively no part in 11.."
1(e was sitting to a corner, with
cotton -wool in his cars, reading Aris-
totle," suggests Burgoyne, teasingly.
"And - it seems," continued she, not
deigning to notice. the interruption,
"that the proctor came in, and was very
rude, and Willy was told to go to the
dean next morning, and he either was
a (thio late, or. mistook the hour, • or
some trifle of that sort; and when he did
got that he was sent down.
t 11
he was to c
i
[]nlvever"-wiLh sOtno triumph ft her
volae -"it did not matter In the least -
he did not mind; in fact lie was rather
glad, as he las long 'wenlea to go to
Italy in time spring:"
"To Italy? Then perhaps we shall
meet; I, too, nm going to liely."
"Ara you?" she says, "Why should
yeti go to Italy? There Is nothing to
hill there, is there? Is not it at Naples
that they, go out in full chalssour uni-
form to shoot tomtits?" Which speech
is her revenge for his sarcasms Upon her
SOI.
But Burgoyne's face has taken on a
rather careworn toot
•
and her little ne-
ves, 1niSSeS its meek,
"You see Amelia is at Florence," he
says explanatorily; "her father, air,
Wilson, had a clergyman's throat it the
autumn, and was obliged to give up
duly, so They all went abroad. They
have been almond all tate winter; you
'know 'that 1 have not, seen her since J
ceme'back Isom the Rockies,"
They aro now walk(ng in a winding
shrubbery path, whose laurels protect
them from the pinching wind. They
have turned several corners, old tea-
' versed half a quarter of a toile before
,either agent breaks silence, 11 is the
lady who tines so finally.
",him, stow long have you been engaged
40 Amelia?" '
There is a sigh mixed with his
• ,ansWar.
"Eight years -eight Years tits next
Stine; 11 •was the s00on11 smmuer term
after' 1 tome up:"
"And lis flan as y011 call SOe, you are
likely to bo ?ngaged for another eight
years?"
"As far as 1 can See -yes; butthen 1
cannot see far," ,
Perhaps lits anmpnnlon •is n fencifut
•wnnlnn but site notices that this lime.ie
:does not sigh,
"Poor Amelia," she says, half under
her breath, •
"Poor Amalie," repeats he sharply;
"why poor -Tor being engaged to oto?
'You aro net very complimonlory, Mrs.
Byng"
She Ionise ftp fr(endlty nl him. "For
:being engaged to at
t or b°ing only
1.111.
gaged to you ?-wtmlch? 1 leave your a
,ehotce of filler'protatlon."
8
•
•
•
•
BM either Jiin is loo ruffled b3' the
pity expressed in Icor tone, Inwards his
betrothed, or her reulneke have provoked
In him a (rale of thought, which dors not
lend inwards loquacity. The loud conks,
bnlanchlg themselves on improbably
small twigs above their heads, and,
hoarsely melodious, calling out Oleic.
miry vernal news to each other, are for
some time the only suu11d that breaks
the silence of the cold spring afternoon.
It is again Ahs. Byng who at last In-
fringes 11.
"If you end Willy are both going to
Italy, why should not you go to-
gether?"
Tin dors not Immediately 000wCr; the
project Is sprung upon tin with such
suddenness that, he does not at once
(mow whether it Is agreeable to hint or
the reverse.
"You do not ince the idea?" continued
the mother, trying, not very successful-
ly, to keep out of her Lone the surprise
sho feels at his not having jumped at a
plan so obviously to his own advan-
tage.
I did not say so. I did not even think
so.'
"Willy Is an ideal fellow-traveller,"
-f3uitignol-„fort' ems i ! e111atiound
o ,lal(nur 011( ur flu((daaxa„ 'acts sees
that you would always have to drug
hint out of bed."
"But," suggests Jim, slowly, "even
supposing that I embraced your design
with the warmth which I see you think
It deserves, how can you tell that it
would meet with his appl'obation11 Ile
has probably made up a party with some
of the other innocent victInis of a cor-
rupt University system:'
"No, he has not; the friend with whom
he was to have gone tins thrown him
over; at least, poor man, that is hardly
the way to express it, for he has broken
his leg; but anyhow he is hors de com-
bat. If you went with Willy," she adds,
after a pause, and with a rather wistful
air, "I should bo stere of knowing if
anything went wrong."
"I am to dry -nurse him, In fact, only
I stipulate that, If ire bring, you hoot,:, a
Contadina daughter-in-law, or 'com-
mits himself with a countess', lila the
commercial gentleman et Todgers', you
are not to hold inc responsible."
And so 1t conies l0 pass that a fort-
night later, while April is still young,
Burgoyne. en Croute to his Amelia, is
standing at a window of the hotel do
Genes at Genoa, noisiest of hotels,
though, to be sure, that is its only fault.
He is looking out al the gay market they
Is held in the piazza below -the gay
market that Is over and gone by nine
o'clock.
1t seems odd that so many women, so
many umbrellas, so many baskets, so
many oranges and leptons -cacti lemon
with a glossy green leaf stili adhering
to its inch of stalk -so. many fresh vege-
tables, can be swept away In so short
a trine. But they aro; all the gay ker-
chiefs are fled, and have been replaced
by a row of (lures with sad droop -
headed horses, a good -hour before Byng
appears -appears radiantly well washed
and apologetic.
"How nanny morning chapels did you
attend last term?" asks Burgoyne with
some dryness,
"IL is a vile habit,' replies the other,
sweetly, silting down at a little label,
and unfolding his breakfast, napkin.
"I do not mean going to chapel, but be-
ing so tate; however, I really an Im-
proving. I ant n quarter ,of an hour -
twenty mioutes earlier limnn L was yes-
terday, and, thank -God e
Y. 1v have no
traitCalc , o r
l to -day."
."
Burgoyne is rather inclined to echo
iho thanksgiving a little later In the day,
us they shall wilt the pleasant vague-
ness with which one strays about a
little-known foreign town, not exactly
knowing whither, through the sh'eels of
the queenly city, with which neither of
them has much acquaintance; 13yng's
twenty-two years of school end college,
of cricket end grouse, and stnllting.
have left not notch margin for aught
else; and Burgoyne 'being 'in the case of
some widely wandered shots and ex-
plorers,' to whom the Nyanza Lake and
the r\ I lin
us r t u
a t Bush more le fnmt
Ilttr
than GiotIo's Canrpa1110 or the Lagoons.'
Theo is a greyish -looking English sky,
with now and then 111110 sprays of rein,(
and now and then flashes of harm 81n.
Neither of the young 111011 know touch
Italian, and such as they possess they
are ashamed to air before each other in
asking theietway, so they wander wher-
ever chance or fancy lends (tical. They
leek' curiously into churches, limey walk
down deep narrow streets, whose
houses have for three centuries been
tltlenlening to embrace each other
across the slrnighl sky strip far, fat
above their treads. They glance at Itte •
polite° fronts, and wonder at the sculp-
tured porinis where fresco and full
garland and fine u'ooery speak of a
time at amore leisure for [lancet° work
that 'hes no end but beauty, than this
breathless one. Everywhere in the gar-
dens they see budding green, to trained
roses malting bowers, ripe, owmges
hanging over 1110 wilts. They jnsllo
agonist women, each made charming,
evert ((16 ugliest of them, by the Muck
teen kerchief lied aboid her head.
"Henry• Janes says 111111 an English.'
crowd is tho best -looking in the world,'
says liyng, in a:tone al elrong ,dissent,)
following with his eyes a ll(Ila tripping
figure, and with en •cxpress(on Of profit
nnunced epin•obarilcnt in Alton eyes,
which gives lllrgnyne a moment/less
e vin tis
misgiving 10 illschaperon..
iwiilge of 1 g g
ship„ "I should put 11 the olhor.wey t)p;
and any, shot they are the Ugliest.'
"All errnvds nee ugly, and mast in-
di\ktit1115Yreplies tal o Burgoyne, Yts
n
11u'nileOty, looking lees front his guide-
book,
They are saunt)rtug down the Via
Garibaldi, street of palaces inlet deserves
an antiquee mune than lint of lie
sarmewhnt shoddy and rloenl here who
has golfulhered 1t. Noblest Vin, dawn
whose stalely length greet towering
balls succeed each other in build tuaJvs-
ty nn eithee hand; bulks on whose high
fronts, lofty 'metaled, o'errun with fres-
co, glorified by brush and chisel,
hleenglh and beauty lake Invade in un-
ending wedlock. Into the nobleet of all,
op the echoing stone Maine, down which
the fret of the nlnslers hove forever
ceased to tread, they elder. As we all
lmoty, it hos been given to the city of
Genoa -lovely queen -oily meriting so
great a gift -thy, the dying hand of it
latest possnssor, the last ul that high
and beautiful race --if wit may judge of
lite dead by (holt' plclurne-wile paced
US floors, and went forth In float fune-
1id pomp through Its worthy -iv -be -Im-
perial portals.
litteguyno enrl Ryng are standing be-
[ the t, Vandyke. I The l le
UN THE FARMJ
GARB Ole POULTRY Putt EGGS.
Fall months relieve the poultry -raiser
of (tinny cares and Muse nlservolion,
'1'lte chicks do not require the care and
close attention tlml they need curler 'n
the season. Iniolrbnlnrs 8nd brunder:e
aro cleunl.d and stored away until un-
o(her 80118011, but there are 11 great many
[hinge that must terve otie's undivided
allrnlLun.
The pullets [het we, expert fur w•1111er
layers must be kept growing and to
geet health- WA! 5110u1d see that they
are not overcrowded.
The fall of the your Is the worst lime
ler roup. It is generally brought on
"re Il grey nor y 11. onus ,1r by letting the veld wiuct strike the
opening a shutter, and throwing widen' n (acyls or by
letting Them const in damp
door, mists a brighter ray of 11(.1111 10? (rouses, Durrtp weather is a breeder of
the staring Britons -several others have the disease,
An aftli,elerl bird should he set -misled
flout the rest of the fleck, ns roup
spreads rapidly. Drinking vessels
juiod themselves to our friends -to
gape al it by. What dors the stalely
gentlemen on his great while horse,
whom Vandyke has made able In set at should he kept elven. have pnulh'y
nought death's effacement, thltlk of houses in a dry spun and keep dry, cleun
limon, as the cestode slowly swings him and well yenta/tied, Slacked lisle
ought to be sprinkled on the floor to
absorb moisture,
With ]Roper care roup can be pre-
vented, It Is a dtllcult rilseas0 to cure
when It once makes its attack. Begin
in time and depend upon the prevention
and nal 1110 cure.
11 Is Inlpnt•Initt to push the pullet:e,
bemuse if they hegtn to lay during the
fall before welter sets in they will keep
Probably not a better w'm'id Ilan ours, nn laying. Should they not lay bee
but surely,. surely a handsomer cite, fere winter begins they will not tit}• al
After awhile the other tourists drift a 1 mall spring, but will begin early.
away, but the two men still bland and
mac. Into Burgoyne's mind has enure
a sense of disgust with tine present, a
forward on his hinges, so that the day -
beams may t:rtng out mere clearly still
the arresting charm of his serious race,
1118 outstretched men, and grave, gallant
bearing? Looking at him, whose hear(
among us is not besieged 1>,v an actin of
'longing [hal that "young old princely"
gentleman on the brave white charger
should Tido down to us out of his home.
and bring back his world with hila?
Liberal feeding assists in overcoming
ennui of the dilrlrulties. Cull out 1111
inferior stock and select only early,
revolt against, steam (runts and the strong active pullets. One nmst have
'Cromwell Road -most perfect symbol of en intelligent interest in the case and
that bald, unending, vulgar uglincs.e,
which, in 501110 11100110, must seem to
everyone the dominant note of nine-
teenth century life, The light -tweeted
Lyng, who always takes his dolor from
his surroundings, is hushed tido silence
that Is almost reverent loo.
"What a difference there is between
his flatten and his English pictures,"
he says, presently. "1)o you temenlitrr
the Marchese 13albt, and those divine
Balbi children In Iite Grosvenor, last
year'? Olt, no I by -Me -bye, yott were in
Amerien. The fog seemed to get into his
brush whenever he painted an English-
Woman,
nglishtonal, always excepting Henrietta
Maria, who was not an Englishwoman,
and whom he was obviously rather in
lave with."
"Is that a piece of scandal of your
own invention, or is 11 founded on
fact?" asks Burgoyne, rousing himself,
and looking over his shoulder towards
the entrance to the next frescoed, mir-
rored pictured room, whence he bears
the sound of approaching voices. in his
eye Is an kilo and mechanical curiosity,
mixed with vexation that his short re-
spite from his fellow -countrymen is
ended, for the tones that are nearing
acro 111080 of a woman, 11 WOna1 who rs
saying in a key of satisfaction, "0h,
here it is 1 I thought I remembered that
tt was in this room."
At the same moment the speaker, as
well es the person addressed, cane into
bight ; and in an intent out of Bur-
goyne's eye has raced away the lack-
lustre curiosity, and has given away to
an expression of something beyond sur-
prise, of something more nearly verg-
ing on consternation; and yet, atter nil,
there is nothing very astonishing in the
fact that it is Slits. Le Merchant who Is
the woman in search of the Vondyke.
There Is nothing more surprising in her
being at Genoa than his being there
himself. At that mere of nations IL can
never be matter• for wonder to meet
anyone; hat who Is this to whom her
observation is addressed? it is not
Ate. Lc Merchant, it is not a man at all;
11 is a slight, woman -
"White as a lily, and small as a
wand" -
like Loner's sister, dressed with !het
neat, light, grey -tinted simplicity, se -
veto, t
vete, yet smart, which marks
iho well-
bred Englishn•oman on her travels. is
IL one of the younger ones who has
grown up so startliugly like hler? Mir -
tam? Rose? or is it, can IL be, the dead
Elizabeth ?
(To be continued).
A Large elm tree at Newport Parson-
age nem has been attacked and )tilted
by au army of wasps.
Throat Coughs
A tickling in the throat;
hoarseness at times; adeep
breath irritates it; ---these
are features of a throat
cough. They're very de-
ceptive and a cough mix-
ture won't cure them.
You want something that
will heal the inflamed
membranes, enrich the
blood and tone up the
system .. .. . .er
Scott' Emulsion
is just such a remedy.
it has wonderful healing
and nourishing power.
Removes the cause of
the cough and the whole
system isgiven new
strength and vigor . , .•.
Bowl far frta Joispte
SCOTT & EQ1VN1, cit,,,,.iir
r
c. D,'fa Cir
b'Jt`,
7 r
r
;goo. HarlsOxe0, r4!Jdrrggias
a
fouling of fowls to get best results.
Green fond and a constant supply ni
auinmrfond are essentials lint thirst
be present to obtain a large number of
eggs. One pound of cut bone Ler a rinz-
en hens nnee a day, which stetted not
cost over a rent n pound, will produce
more eggs then flee times as hunch grain
because the cul hone is complete in egg
smtl,Slaltree, while the grain is largely
deficient 111 many respects. The cost r'f
n bone cutter soon comes back to rte
poultry man in the increased egg yield
of his flock.
The fall eggs are always advancing
In price, and will continue In do s0. Do
not feed, loo much fresh Inept and bone.
Remember a hen would have to run a
lung way to catch enough bugs lo sup-
ply Iwo ounces of fresh meat. Gut
bone lessensthe grain bill, cheapens
cost of fond and gives larger profits on
[owls end eggs.
The egg yield during the fell months
10 usually not one halt whet it might
be, and you can get the results i do.
You will bo pleased with the increased
profit for a very 111110 extra labor.
SHEEP NOTES.
Size Is but (thio edvantnge, unless Se-
enmpnnird by guiltily.
Heavy sheep are sometimes leggy and
coarse, and not nearly as desirable as
lighter sheep.
It is not the number of pounds (hal
you put on 11101 makes the profit; it
ie the flesh they are in that makes them
sen woll 1n the market.
1f the raising of early lambs for mar-
ket fs to be undertaken at all, plan to
ruIse good noes,
in uuderinking to raise early lambs
for market, the ewes must be of good,
healthy stock, fair size. and in good
condition. Ewes bred first week in
October should have lambs list week
In February. If bred first, week in Sep-
tember, they should produce lest w'0e1C
in January, or 21 leeks after scrvlce..
The average farmer will do better to
have his lambs come In April.
Putting a fine int of fleeces on Ito
market once n year is by no means in-
compatible with, at the stole time, (hav-
ing a prime lot of mutton ready to help
out lin income.
In raising early lambs, select at the
eeriest
possible linin the kind and num-
ber of owns needed. and purchase 111
good season the right 10(11d of ram to
Irate with thelia.
Tho some sheep will vary froin year
to year in the amount of oil secretion,
and they era liable to vary, not only by
a change of weather, but by a change
of welt.
Irl wlfondeuasning lite 1010115, they will worry
less if left to the fields they are (wetss-
Inmod to end iho owes removed, rather
than to rhnnge the pastures of tine
metas.
The sllcep, of whatever breed, whe-
ther we will IL or not, is a general -pee.
,lose 111111)101. It furnishes both food
and lninerit to wear.
• Valuable 11111111s will nhweys pay for
the hest passillo feeding and attntion,
and it is of the uhnnsl importance that
very •detail be thoughtfully understood
and attended 10.
As greener of smell Crops, n sever
of 111110 wastes, the sheep is 118 110ces-
Snry to the fa•nt ns the cow nr hog.
Now is the line to arrange for lambs
next spring, because you must select
good strong breeding owes to carry
.ancl feed thein through fall anal winter,
It 1s unite too soon to deckle the kind
of a run you will use ns a sire.
The principle et selection, "that it
enables the breeder not only to •modify
Iho chancier of his Cloak, but to change
11 altogether, If desired."
A wenitenell conetilaliOn predisposes
to dlscaso of any kind, but !here is no
evident that, clocking affects sheep in
that way.
Cleat, dry pastae, pure venter, whole.'
Some feed and intelligent, Iniltvidual els
lenl.bon to the, wants of the flock nee iii
(lest requisites for successful tloolt mat-
agemcnt. •
Sheep, grain -fed and well prolceted
front Iho rigorism wintry steins; \w
ill
furnish wool or much stronger fibre,
malting a more durable fabric than
wool 'blipped from sheep with less core,
A Sl,NS1E1.E EGG CARRIER.
A ehorelale, or broken candy pet,
ihot can be lad far len cents et any
grocer Share, mokee an sixeclicnt c
E Yegg
1 whew . Wonted le 1110. I'nit
cal a c 0 c nwulg
manner,• --Talcs n sheet of lila corrugot•
est brown paper board used hs Wrap.
efresning Stimulant
ry,n-,••„•.•,a77'ars ua rc•3wlx n .r••*•,zn :•t ccr c cvnna
That is perfectly harnniess,
because tis absolutely pure,
CBI LON GREEN TEA,
A Perfect Luxury to Japan Te
Read paeaet0 only. 400, sec and Goo per Ib.
Drinkers
et all grocers.
stem fou' itissastItle arliels mid :lite the
81,10.4 nl,d b•,11 ,n of tit'' hail,
Then cal cir'•b•s from other rivets, of
the same nitttcri11 10 u.- • '',;w•,'' enr•h
layer of eggs, smaller e:r,les
bottom, iur•reasbtg Olt size us lis:' lop
is apprn.tebed. leggy ran lm gether'•'1 of only
fermi tine 'wets lit such n pat!, and ear- '. cllracb i1 re t, an ti t th'nti n, It y
rie,1 lo martial. wills 1'e:n'.'::il:Ia oes:u•- 1 t Toro111', 1111.1.0 t was delivered, but
ane, (hal few i[ any I r ••ilug• s I (l:r"uglrnut Emg!aud, n' 10.0 1t [vas
14111 1'N"E'A!i IIORSLEY.
Au English Pen Picture o[ fir` Great
Surgeon.
Sir \'iel„r ilmtstly, whose address an
Carne of tilt ',hot in medicine recent -
occur, Tim cost of te• whole will be (sit;:rely reeorled, enjoys the distine"
bur n Vitt Tho ccrru•t,'rI Wand run ism of braid one of the greatest aullnant-
WASTE OF HUMAN LIFE
EMINENT ENGLISII , 11111VIEfA1. AiEN
DE14,0118, i'T.
Sir 1anles Crichton Bsowle and 1111.
A, T. Srltolield Speak 10
(IludonIs,
The appalling waste of lire and ttnw
huudrrds of Ihulsands of needless
Maths and mililuns of needless ilhte e -
e, Wright have been prevented every
year 11•0re [iu subjects 's
t io entilt.eltl nledtral 10of011diseuutof 1.and03cby1
the other day. Sir James Crichton
blown, while delivering an impressive
v:alnhrg ti su1d0111s against the materi-
alist school of philosuphy, quoted sono
Minting statistics regarding the haste
of llunlan life by deaths fromprevent-
able diseases, and prcdieted. that in an-
urher forty or fifty years mortality from
preventable disease would have dtsap-
110111.171,
The whole address wits a plea for
idealism in medical panelier, which was
summed up in the concluding phrase
when Sir James declared that the medi-
cal student of to -day wt1S a [night er-
he obtained in fr.nn gr„err lie, un L:r,iu surgery in the world, it rant of science.
•
to whom it Ir,s emir passed ebeetlw•as, m, ,i•,wa. m large measure for hie "The aim of many modern physiolo-
6re'ukni!e goods. we; en that :;utjrcl that h0 was Octnigbt- ,sly is Lo bring lllefr science info line
7•III1 POWER OF TUE PRESS.
ca
Mr, Dooley Disrutrrw'" on lie Croat In-
fluence of Pt inters Ink.
"No, sir, ns 1[ogen miss. I care not
wh•t w:dcrs Ili tars 'In
111 memo } iw n 1'0,11[ sfldy 0f Urs, and[y sonic w hen tt denies the existence of life and
1 i 11' 1 fir i drew• ull•'r,ion ht
other 11ay, 'There uie't ennyt,itng like wltiel1 le dilated In his recent publict nC o t t ° p
11 an' 111"))• niter was,' .,ut lir, 'All tit' 11'leratin'-Ile little lees thein (selector-
,11 01: int Itis ,1:,. ase lies - liter ,reach lit d nary way in wltir'lt milk wits being INORG:INIG NATURE.
about. a Imwiteted h„ueinei ,.mile 0ci:ahi'uled for liquor 111 the theraputic "Determining (hole laws and measur- .
l 1 ` r:: n,nnL of ,rioeasc ld Ih^ dilnspituis,[n Ing (heir ethods,ts by physical and
1111.0.1 a islet ani ; m,• ;.•iyy, 'alt ti'lt11 11 t 01lem1001 methods, the mew noLerinitsls
pees preach lu lbrce n il,ceu 1::m,;t rt to;11 ae '0 1 1'i,m!or p i hos ell, even
Iuve dlssipaied the phantom of vital •
-
day, nye, (whey lima; n ,lay: lie . ays. i u: UI•: fa .., London tulspiill13 sp l- fly. Lni a left us plants and animals
'1\'e e ye hell en r~unduhs 1211' Ihry 4s , ll, rat mill: and leer i1:F.11i0 on al ns morn ur Jays coulrilcalrd a•range-
give Ye hell all Ili time,' he s:.} s. "'!'is call,!, while four year:, ago the rmnunt 1
a 1vm1dherfnl thing; he says., '1 see a seer, on 1:111 reached the suns which • 1louls of prid shslmtcos respondhtg
bad ,reef 'usty 1c 'n exendetl mt liquue in n very sitllpl0 way to the ordinary
I 1 steal• farces that We 500 around 118.
1'cra•aluily, sir 1'irinr is n roil man, 1?tY
cd to 1111. 11•:, htwet•er, by no means with alter material sciences," he sold,
ai•e0lutir.'s im intim surgery, fur, a5 1111 ,qty showing (hat all physiological phe-
of the surge e 10 t'n.verstty eoll•g:h nnmenn arc but temples problems of
I tel, where1he rrroivc•c! his 'lrufes- physical and chemical nature. But In
84,11101 rducutinn. lir las, !mice all other order la do this they have to deprive
turn+i er.: of the
stun', to 1,0(101111 "'lila-, their 8110nc0 of its distinctive charec-
tnus of all s'.rls. Tile subject of nMee- ter, Lir if physiology is the sural of set-
Ise and its effr,.ed nu the humin body emtiUe Lino wlcl e concerning 1[ving be-
fit Meadia and disease bus long been u in]is It ruusl cease !n be physiology
cerin ,uy 811 ang as rut I 111-•8:0.0. yrive s:al ,c s reduces what hitherto has been regard-
liar
egard-
Fnth••r telly 1170.4 talkie' ul:.al f1 Iii 1u•!17n1: al. on evrnis, to the mnl(or cit 0„',1,„c,„5, a vi al fu tin o b honomlr
liar'[ tv printers ink wen into a'news-
paper ollie: au' it 1,01;e 'seamen etiougit.
A ber'1 Iv printers ink, a tar I iv linseed
ltd un' lemplilick, with a smell to it
that's tali slink un' 111111 prrhnue. 11111 1. n., tum t. , crawl hY waves of physical forces, and
I leiltsa 11 all lit' dinnvmil, !y,idito, tor- t,(1}•. (hough there is little that betokens nnthn more.
ilio, un' gall cotton in ill' wmrulri wits nlirld',=sp.' about [lint. Indeed to he l ,• g
melte:N Ito miabout
0111:1181 ! e said Tnosy Irnge us a man -an automobile
hid behind emu loops thee, wuddeut Young 11111 tut the extraordinary
man, self-made and self -started, with
h" ns melt d' lll.':uieee tri 1!111 betel as 11 • tg. he 11013 behind him. His lair no passengers old no chauffeur, mored
there is lit Ile nosy slut( 1!r,d Ii:olc exi'eli,11 eby n Berns of explosions or the redis-
lice a mulch ttu': he su s. '1'tinL•r;; nt 11011 LroWft and he has a tairish t 't t' gj and rushing on to
J n 1 a h brewer,
a nchr cued pert e1"
Ink! A dhrop iv it on wen Mlle wines]
in
13(70.' be says. `wi11 hla,rkom Olt' tate- than they incl. al butt
est name in c:hr,slvulou) 01.' he say.,
'stake a .star t) Agile unite lolvileel
Tufty !vet h,',, ft Doi n shade over they leave us for a brain a MOSS of
t o to late o e•t1 wi111 a little phosphorus thrown In, Ira-
e still ml the rielll side c t 1 I
n J• 10113 t, gluelike sot/Menne nine -tenths water,
1lo is a turn inti 1 I J C 11 r e g
brow,' he says. 'lt'evill find it's way
into ndllyons iv teems tel' h'a'ts an'
memories. it will r•, (trough iron duct'.'
tin' slnt,n Willis nu' will carry s,me nns-
,snge that luny turn the curent i1 ivey
life it meek, hem Iii hmperc'r iv 1311113•
to Ili tatty in Ile cradle (0 Iimstn'g,nn's
[let,' he sere '11 may undo a thenean.1
prayers or shtiarl. a millyen. 11 cute(
bo escaped. 1t cull,[ dittos me out iv
tae parish tease Lu-nmrruh un' make tak.
ns well-known in 1'eldn ns I aur ht 11ul-
sloud sthrot't; an' 1101 ns ft''0 1.13. To-
day tit' P0p0 may giro etc no 11 l'0
Ihnugllt thin he give. folly Ili Melee
\hill Ilan. '1'o-m,rrm,t he may be roadie'
about how (neat or bmf 1 ant in 1h'
Popylo ilonuu171, It's got Death bout u
mile in let-elit 1 111.4:
"'Yes. sir; ours Oto, 'lh' bend tial
rocks fie fountain pone c.4 tli hand that
miles hi wtu•r'uld, 'Om' press is f'r (11'
whole universe What hhUligau was Cr
his heal, Be was Ili heal pnlislunnn a1'
lli worst 1 1181' Micev. He was a terror
in evil dams 111,(11 lie was bolter at' a
tureen' 10 iveylwdy whin he Was
dhrunk, hinrtn, dhrittk to Ih' (mads all
ever' 111' wnrruld lytta 1180 hi primers
111k. \ley they not put too ma011 1v Ili
r -red sideff in It an: any 11 nivor go to
thole heads; "'-.ltllerican elugezine.
or sit , 3.sc.1 nr mit o otter
which have the indefinable c(unlity ct inevitable destruction. The speculations
ac -
seeing more t of the nen-materialists are not in ac-
s , ecrdance with the soht•iety of medical
curiously ena1111 instead of tltr, shoal tri en h as hitherto understood.
s, caro low' and Iiue chin wiui oil is nl- i 1 to p y - hvt-
i , "1 aur oiled and nim will be "10 a
wit's associated w'tllt Arent et purr I ale the tendency to death. In 7901, the
tlt:nnrter and r lane
of purpose, last year far which returns are avatl-
lhe chin is seta lillle hack sit lint the 01110, (here Were G•411.i5S deaths In Eng -
lower part of the ince sugge,•ts aelicne} land. Of these, o very ennsideru1110
tmlher Minn Urn s:rrnrlh whirl the floc »o onion we0e what might be called
bring indicates. t ponder there is no- it
thrown away. In fact, the debt
neein the least pondercid, about his to nature is overpaid curl year 10 the
lathe He is alert, vigil, and mite's e0tenl of 200,000 lives. The unnecessary
In the very tips of his lingers! while his leakage is still going on in all three -
mei
tar work Is simply enormous, limns.
mud voracious is probably the only ad- Of ever } 000 barn, 1.55 perish with-
jc•elive which adnqunlnly suggests [.tis } +
impolite for it. Opposed to alcohol as in the first year of life. Mothers Its well
10' Is on scientific prowuis for his pati- as infants are needlessly sacrificed. Up-
eats. bo i5 equally opposed in its use to ward of 1,000 nt them die every year.
hr•ntll, and he neva (mires [t. On the
T'uber0utnsis still carries off 60,000 vic-
tims annually, hit the mortality frees
it has fallen steedily
eller hand, he hes no dtctohe horrors
or hobbies, and his habits ere those et
the ordinary mortal, with perhaps a
bine towards tea, of which ho is cer-
tainly fond.
-s,--t
TIIE
-a', _--
TiIE WOMAN'S PRIVILEGE.
"What are you looking so glum
about ?"
"Uhl my fiancee has clanged hor
nand." td Kingdom every ycm. As iho ratio
"Still worrying over that? It was al illness to deaths Was about thirty Inn
fully two weeks ago since you (old me one, there must he some 11,000 unneces-
she had broken 111f the cngngemcnt." sore, preventable sick belts in the Acne
Ohl it's Leen on and off again twice limo. Worry and •anxiety (1110(11 hea1111
striae then:
DU111NG TILE LAST TIIREE YEARS.
And there are gond grounds for hoping
I! will be stamped out in another forty
years."
Taking ns his text lint prevention 's
(sitter then cure. Dr. A. T. $ehofield,
at the opening series of the Gresham
lectures, also referred to the enormous
number of premature deaths in the 'Unite
were the surest way 111 disease. 'l'he
great rule for the average men was,
"Keep up your weight and don't worry."
Palpitations and pain in or neon the
heart, might ,safely be ignored, at least
1`l the 1.L mit] cases. • e 'drily of
That n
organ was most dilticult to injure. It
could stand any rensonnble strain. Re-
f geed health, ire advised with wise in-
difference, and never "diet."
htndernlion mrd variety in fond Is ail
that is needed, not "munching clubs,'
where forty bites per mouthful must he
actuated, hostesses did thele guests
poor servlee when they pressed pleat
to eat once they were satisfied. Ho
was happy in think that hr, had in the
cases of sm'rrel families stopped the by
telernble blunder of sp;•lug upon Iho
guest's plate,
„rte-,. ' , ,'^ f•Y
_ , .1 6:041 rit la
x0
Se
Y Y ', NEW
rPOR AN 1.11s q
e .1,8'11: COVER 4 SONG,
Cit DC'V11 ANG.
"it Is not mine 11) sing the sluice y grace,
Tho great soul beaming In my lady's fade,"
EVE AS PROTOTYPE.
Willi Woman Gingered, Ent Set Fite
in the Woods.
The Ainynr of the French commune of
Sclemtrier, a few miles from Genera
across the frontier, nornmpnnied by
maty gentleu'nhes, entered the forest
near the village the other day In search
tit a "wild" woman who hes been living
. for the past few months In 0..savoge.
;state.
Sin is n mystery to the French vif.
Angers, She done not remember her
',name, Int calls herself Eve, end lives
`111 the Tante Way as her original awes.
ler. She is 01Ynul lltiy years of age, is
well built, and of more HUM everega
height, ener'les herself like a soidler end
Ens beautiful while flowing stair. '
She Mos on (alts, berries' and rooks
Chet she ltnd5 in 1110 (erect, and has n
sleeping place merle of branches and
(wigs in .n tree. She has 011 111011y 110.
rasions refused tread and 011151, and ale
'so shelter' and clothes, of which she 10
111000M,
"!Eve" 111(15, lite n (1000, marl the gend-
armes bad a long chase before they
I were /thin in su('round her and bring
her before the mayor, who -rather em•
llmrrasscdly--questn(led (1110 (or half 011
• hour without tieing able (e obtain any
intornntinn as to her identity,
"I hnvo always been relied live, and
have always lived In the forest," she
repealed teeny times. The mayor VOW.
sklered the wdmar a 'harmless creature
and allowed her to relurn to the ferret,
aniter tG 111e warkil u
srr la n s
refit i q
g
OP iuflntic asylum.