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The Brussels Post, 1907-7-11, Page 2d n a kl s ai 0 p h a o h a p it Ot St 01 n 11 h + +O4.o4.a+Q+.o.4-o+o+q+ 0 omen acting mind's i rehenion eel ep0010 •fs1 Insure act ever Ilhough Was ray nixed hock alt, iAe +a -. , . l am not but he- as put- re• of and of time her • ; that 00- over now or es- with he a a I is a P it- only her not. in- with slid be- of that in that' and you it I Jin ha a the sure it you, Y Al- eL ob- are to do- eye that be of so The dark that at as the, -aro the wind's lash,' The fan palm, before Mrs, Le Marchant's window, with its: tans all pinohed and bent, is staggering before the gale. One cannot eUl. vo 4Yhal that un1uC1<y tropical pcoduot ean.l)o doing ill lhrt of reason and will to resist the effort galley, and 1t will os skix,ngf can vicllon that the oranges and' lemma are lied upon the shivering trees instead of growing naturally thereIt.. And this 1sAfrle's hurngard'I'flUL�5p�D says Jim to himself, over his breakfast In the salle a manger, through whose shut windows the mad Iain forces itself; and the blast, coming lo his .wot sistei•'p aid, bursts them open now and again, The clay scents enormously long, tie gats Through the marring tolerably moll with inter -writing, and after the. twelva o'clock' dejeuner he faces the gale in a determined walk down 10 the lewn, Sel. dont in the course of his wide wander- mgs has he felt the furious scourge of; _mere tremendous rain, '1.110 Side- Mb Is whdened with it hailstones rod Ion rents tear w11h throe s eed ail6 e P dgvto• fence down ttatsteep incline. 'Phe Sleet acanthus -leaves; and all the plentiful under- ro\vkh are dripping and re 1 g pp g ju 0 in • 6. Through the blind!ng white dela a he g gels forlorn peeps mf the villus that land shone yesterday with lie white splendor one anode with the city of the saint3 of God; and instead of, as yesterday, "laced with heaven's own tinct, the Mediterranean Is u'hitanin the ba s Y'• rounded curve with its angry breakers, and the snow is sprinkling the Atlas b oresls. A few Arabs are sitting en the ground under the Pont d'lsly, packed up whitish woollen parcels, knees to nose, and arms and hands all with. drawn into the protection of the shelter- ing burnous. 13ut no one else, who can help it, is abroad, It seems to Jim as if ants disagreeable tussle with the elements had lasted a long time, and yet, on his return to the hotel, ho finds that !t is only eaelOCIEL two, He thinks at flrsl that the clocks must have stopped, but finds, on exam- enation, that they are all licking, and all at beimous, Ills drenched condition is ac least a resource, necessitating an en- tire` and fundameulal chenga o1 raiment ; but even this expedient, though dragged out to its utmost possible limit, docs not carry him further than three. How is he to dispose of the seven or eight hours that must elapse before he can seek re- huge in bed? He has exhousted his oar- respondence, which is never a large one, and he has seldom in his life been so shore of leaks, He melees his way through 11 hall, which is crammed with youngpeople playing battledore, and noisily cunting; with elder persons, dreadfully short of a job, looking on and applauding; tor..and khe salon, in hopes of there finding a Tauchnitz novel, or even a superan- Hosted Pall Mall or World. But half a dozen other weather-bound sufferers have been before `him, and the tables are swept clean of all literature save a lhr e -months old Court Sournal. Miss Strutt and the pert votary of 1 and 4vith Whiteley are seting Shaw ed, a their heads close together, By their tit-" 8 tars, and the fregsnents he catches of their talk, they seem to be concocting a- practical joke of some litre. The widow Wadman, shawied too, and her valetu- dinarian in a comforter, are stooping aver a wood Ilse, which refuses to burn, the couches bein wren in wet. Jimlir r er in'udiciou�l a)groaohes them alk J s y 1 p and offers his assistance in piling the dente logs ; but he is so evidently de Y trop, that he retires discomfited. On the other hand, the invitation in Miss Slrult's and her coalulors eye is so a y P parent that he beats a hasty retreat out 0r the room, in dread lest he should be drawn into their mysterious pleasantry. never is quite clear afterwards how he els over the hours that intervene be- g fore dinner-whelhr sleep comes to his aid, or whether he is after all reduced to perusing in the Court Journal the narrative of which direction the Queen and Princess Henryf Baitenbur look Y g their walk in, in October. But at length the welcome bell rings, drowning even, for two minutes, the banging of the wind, and the whole hotel, unwontedly Punctual; rushes in answer to 4 mons. People who have hitherto scarce- ly exchanged words, have eyed each other with hardly veiled dinhust, now show a feverish•desire to enter con- versahon, to detain one another atter droner on the steps of the sotto airon- get' As the evening advances, Jim sees an intention among the younger portion of the company to launch out into noisy, romping games, to institute a Dumb Crambo. He feels it far from impossible that he himself may fall so low as to be drawn into it. Miss Sirutt's eye is on him, but before he succumbs ho will make one effort on his own behalf, He embraces a desperate resolution. iae has seen the Le Merchant's eating their din- net' near, and yet hopelessly far from• him. Elizabeth had given him one fur- five smile, and her mother a hurried bow ; this is, to tell the truth, all (he encotrr'agement he has to go upon -all that he can find to keep his courage up 11e ]'noels at their door, telling hint- self that his excuse -that of asking them lo lend hire a book -is a quite sufficient and legitimate one. He knocks, and Elizabeth's voice at once answers : "Herein 1" It Is clear that site takes him for the German waiter, Fritz, She remains in this belief even teller i e has opened the door, since she dues not al first look up. She is alone -not in the pretty flowered room in which she had yesterday re- calved him, but in the first and less adorned of the little sorles-one that he had on his former visit, cursorily sup - posed to be chiefly used as an antarooln --silting alone at a table, and before her an spread writing-maleria(s, 0vee Which she is stooping. An odious and riclicu- taus thought darts, v lth a prick, across his hind. Ts she silting here, all alone, in order' to write to Lyng? he begins; and the F1' g1nwe at the shut door; "I nm ufratel that they ere all in there."' "Ori, it Is of n<l consequence 1" rejoins 13ui oyue hastily, unwittingly quoting'HNR thG avoids of Iltp kminortal Afr. '1'Uots; "it does not mber fn the least.' it'o be oontlnuedL 3' Descriptio� Tl10 'tossed Nett In Ila beim el ipi Biggest era' unto Well 'orated conunodalion, hi do gree Stu) vie. flag, litho the company was regarded creation, successor a sorry Iwcen ing which chi few Adriatic of 0f feel and center breadth the whereas provided In their hove 01 4cntion which while importance finest the Atlantic York. Nesiless Ilse new \White sploruiid mammoth completed uildieg Iirnl 01 411 fitted with for . enhancing of those lhrougiiout attain that -perfection, •is not the •hue •sailed •'thirty -III• Ail, T. ll. world-wide has launched That rat ibm but of to figure. iho hum an illustration have taken world that PTherefore, figures; was the isl vgross. tie oidev vessel (i inches; depth 30 ora; Len 75 feet total number first Adriatic acoommodation AL30ARD THE designing fleet the followed thoroughness. 11.as been can make a number have steamer by of British every on the Adriatic reputedly filet under o years Imlay reputation over at Belfast vessel, time if placed -dap lndeed, teals wa The tonnage 3387 breadth feet. gth 6 0 inches; of could PRESENT the White their The paid for of been F d _ ' . . Steamship benenlh frkze $Witzcrhuld, 'end and the pfd-tashioued rrslaurnnll. Inc been should ui' oees P P auk P laced m'i'tin Adriatl° -saloon 6nure of ideal weed leather. events of stained of being and en as 'Lha is airy in dight," clad Paris;Scatter melee graceful have something of nomenclalnre above, Dovecote" apartment reading the studiously . the of pltlnthl the Yellow adopted, , lend and a 11alatrl in this g acmenls will - we events, apartment Its famous HISTORY. glass, mahogun one the,same Is an apartment Lounge."this far loo ronin, mut 1 through 1 ample in the of the elation figures a scene it •the we should and y � bottom gs de - b 11111y, lupe inti slslemgt do greatly greliter hmtdsonir, wills lure saloon, do not carr' a come, i to the for walls urs. and inlet in the and 6 y, the of mellow deck prosaic. partnellad taste, "stoned it with Infest hrr m,d a mere nutrl with afore- whish more ro- then aright say would lie on the writing -inclined F��p1AJ cose %smitten- that 1 ting the farm slide, bo same eltretully place sorbent the• era RUL ilptlt lioalale made, for •is allow tvinln1 pruvelt ling theca 111 1110 under desirable, aero liquids, of the t es eolall 1 where Okra yard cluu'aoler•, amend a n lid ltl'el'C1111017 's so sem iennsnito same lion in It P rthclico o:' dine thoroughly [hot does of ammonia. Pliosjihoric n7nnuro now preserve form ordinary makes'a the that It culled called may mina soluble the But the manure tion do this L•'hosp!talie hu[nit materially boll 'hal is acts, tains, as well But the animals the stalls and every cleaned t p manure mooning] another Out in by all cover the fields. spread the effect navel' oI floats The htli,yg, animal you ie promised et the Incl lite come fishes, then boon Is do through ishment, v; eek L)eing would. going and brutes, The colt -p000Ials [elion' will, follow \When wider ;\ colt [tits When conlidehce must not to you work mess, 1l does unli:l has no pat and tall' ko yolir 110 patient pull ns habit in that not vary Tho ing of can and induced reward-klndneSs, compelled fear Gf case 'hod ihtst. again, trfenhod, There • ?e�eury6kwsa q`� �q 111E I MM A0SAL1 who have rre through the 1 have htvaelably of the manurial out, on the the writes `SAr,• F. AIw loss !n munun it Is 1) w01'vel for it Js ou :the sc power of the so `! )s, i6 is also h ua Lha h1 i seoty jt is seri 10 got 1110 nuuw The ground, c not always In ex hauling aver Eh g •g n suux s in tv no tllls'cleshablp •iiia minlure. Or is bat' causer fol barn -,Valid Or a covered manus is not as collude This is asp( has let been take for it is to the I animals that tire: bash • urp 1 Y poi the bast carp is and iho mixed mai aro largely nitro and it is this, Not end also needed as Of Ions Of Ih abundant an ingri where It is arils wepsCry 1 time its emanate] of the nlatertnls v in a defleient a was to mix P !n iho inanur'e nloLslened 1 uglily .al notion c hove some effect 1 But still 1 acid and espeetaliy need is"hoe hss. P' " we use the mated the almnonia l hon A would 1 Y fermentation, balanced relic manure, by addle are in de0aicitt qu naturally, has leen revise 1110 pulverized "dents," in eget have the effect of and at ih0same for plants tiara manure. This is IVF can better eve: still more • when applied to 11 by adding t rock an or, crude potash aid the 1101 of ammonia both in iL nllrncltng of the sulphate and we will also as phosphoric 1 we would not but in th abnndanll y, the Koine, In eq morning when out the nlixltu and beton with il. Th thick coot to I the Santa way Be means 'keep Eli till you have a 0 will we maraca made 1i manure will be such hereafter bo wit and ruing" lr •�9 4¢ - LIFE STORY _ ., .+ ' - of�� Finest y q�� in the World. �HUNGER __ _ EARL CARRINGTON SHOWS ROW IT IS BEING ME's. Young Ilion Cannot Marry Dement They Cannot Got a Decent Koine. The mot Of all Creel social advance- meal was to *et iho pro ke back Ptum p ui to lcee the lawns to the country a d p Ore people at present, on the land from going * lo the towns. 'rhos spoke Earl l:err,ngton, i'restdent of the Board c t Agriculture, at an open-air dammnsh'a- lion at Barkingside, England, it one f village Of Gonhbrldgeslltre, ile said, he knew of forty-two young neon who would be glad to et marrlcd, but could not because they could not got a checnt home to lake a woman 1010, or proper' Wed for their little chIldre4l, That def- Realty could be overcome if they could gel a small 1eee of land et a fah• reraL lit, hoped the small holdings and allot- Pregarded melts bill would cause A PEACEFUL REVOLUTION - in the country. Sir henry Campbell -Bannerman had entrusted, him with 62,000 acres cf Chown ]ands, and when he look over the work there were only forty-four small holders on all Ilia land. During' the ver brief period in which he had25,000Lille Y P i:'ean Conmiisslonor of these Clown lends there had been s ontaneous a telt-in P 1 cations foi' small holdings from eleven rut of the fourteen diifprent counties in which the lands were situated. From South Lincolnshire he had re -The calved eighty-seven written applications for 2,800 acres of land. The majority of these applications lied only allctnlenls' or small holdings et present, bol. they owned 497 head of cattle and stock, in addition to cash which anmunind alto- gether to £3,340. They staled that they could invest £10 per acro, and could produce bank books to show the as curacy of their statement. "I trust," added Lord Carrington, "be- fore the end of this year to have salts- Led fifty per cent. •. of the present de- in this locality without deprive ing a_ single ferns tenant of his land or his liberty.' From Yorkshire (the President of the rd of A rieullura cont[gued), he had Board g -received from residents IN ONE PARISH ALONE, fifteen applications for .5 00 acres. He was i• nforrned that in this pmtieular parish (hero were 3.000 acres, of which 000 were formed by Pour farmers, three of whom warp non-residents, Fav- ing farms in other parishes. In. this case, also, the majority o! the tennis j Y applicants had cash in addition to experience: Lord Carrington ave other Instances g g of the "land hunger' and how it Is be ing mel. In Cambridgeshire) a farm of 17 acres had been unlet for two years° because a tenant could not be found. Now it has 1)eei7 lyd to eighty -hyo ten- ants for allotments and small holdings. g There was still an unsatisfied demand, and he could easty let 500 acres more land. In Yorkshire be it he had then had let to the local authority 4,500s4? acres for further development as small holdings and allotments, g OR, A SAD . that has aver re'enll arrived In Y to say wo rater Slar Lllaor AdrlaIle wlltiell has just wegreat Belfast Harland and Wolff. twin-screw steam- possible canhiv- the comfort and board, superbly de- 11p1 passetgn ae- may be said unadleanable , ship of her name the While Star ago, when the tuns building up which t us since enjoyed, them the premier no doubt, was as a wonderful alongside her. she would cut but the contrast be: affords so sfrik- of the developments place in the Stearal- will venture mit" 5 of the grid gross; that of the 'Tile dimensions 'yore:-Longgih 4.39 40 tem' 0 Inchae; diose of the new- 725 feet 0 inches depth 50 feet.' passengers which carry wee 809, for 3,000 is LINTR. latest, add°:don to Star management well-known policy most minute at to every detail additional comfort, new features of high introduced. For ice. Immediately of the dome is a pirlitig scenes l},e Lih!nelauds, i'srlc. Uislead of fables the a )da•dale 1 cf small rabies I Innovation tvllleh towards lose "starcltiuess" .convivaltly at aneuletinier, har rrereailve plane, encased In woods has been but lite musical end here, for the .her own orehestra. From the often the mutton sequence smoke room, an i'atnrlcs of the eloLdled wall figured. with pictures of annals of 13RITISIi NAVAL I'he windows are ilhe seals. and tables whole effect crened 110(01esS, Not tar away, as the smoke room, known on hoard , We c0nslder, a , I i. e a la. Band oak, furnished with the light filtering `vg!ndows, richly graceful flares, g,<) front "creations"f1 , there a few specimens genius engugcd in 1110 owners of the said, and you will sterns to call for mantic in the way that chrmlicled venture on a suggestion, that "The Turtle more in leaping. A 4hird luxurious boat deck is the room, wherein „_____ 0 o+c*+P"?-O-+-o^f•04,04.04, CHAP'lEll "Poor fly ,wncompassionate ent, At the l 1 unjust kes "It was Y s austerely Y that fact, is Lyour She tad meekly "I did 1 spar;.. h er down 'et of 1119; gees ay. new ft had Ing mown h i 0 tensity vhat Never ness as happy her does,there It is lildhood to Le,. If herself "hardl"? ne else-momeons 'lousy ague can rrogation, "Ilardly But reading,and g her 'amination )rears "Talking i unhappiness, now She LI; Lo sounding t is eye, ubious are; ed ending path "We elleve expected ruin She "en confessingto nether he would e feats ectility as she Iced to 91 seemed ld not h 110 ‘king DU, he wish untie f said ere is And; :8110, sr walking look, :ensure, s representing 'osses _•• XXX1V.-(Conllnued). bo I poor bo i" she says, " LWICO 'moving her head up unit move, with 4,litllp cai»passona it pity expressed by her gesture, e p 1 1 Y g .r and nesslo tllable herd eager harsh possession of trim, a pity you let itgo so fat',^' he y' "you must allow nae to much but 1 suppose, n point t was he ball once set rolling, it power to slop i4." listens it Ith her is ons to his pl Itppic, w lent. not try," she answers in a half-. o y'pause,t1' k then, after a raising -dropped i[ with a blue eyes,t Iexcitement;dto diest i have "I said to Myself; 'I1 1 kava anysuper11 I shall'die before the smashinto ;' and I just lived on from day to jmind I had not theheartto stop it; 1 would stopof itself before lora • never l har -hardl ever" -cog- d y Y herself, as ft seems, with nmods- afterthought- in emya ][[e before what happiness meant • and oh 1 1"-withlP gro4 f de deepening t a groan o ep g at each repeated interjection- a big word it is!" g -Hardly ever- known what hap meant before 1 Why,surelyshe at the Afoot I and before his eye dere rises an imago of her riotous rosy gaiety• but oven- as flasheupon. him a cone- of her speech. not the careless merriment of tie whieh'4s11e 4s aliudung; it the happiness, excellence of ppin parModern this 1s the case, whydid silence and modifyher negative with A `jealos Meting of some beside B a yng; none the less keen for being -for not knowingon what object lay hold-sharpes his lone as he aloud, and with an accent of hi- her qualifying adverb: ever, that implies—" she breaks in hurriedly, as if at the same time doubt- own, power of baffling, cross- upon that abject on whose they are continually hovering. of happiness makes one lhlnle does not 1t? We both something about that, do not we?" pauses, and he sees she is all - P ttd his own sorrow, and that her eye his to see whether he would her approach e to app o ch it. more nearly. in answer, must give but a berm since he himself isquite of what his Wishes on the sub- and she goes on with the haste yet unsteadiness 01 one who is on swampy ground, that gives his feet. saw it in the papers; I could not it at these It was the last thing I to happen. T thought of i pP g to you, but I did not." g Y"Quite! looks at him rather wistfully, and but two minutes ago she had him her passion for man, e saes that she is anx- should tell her that For s m a- Y P have been precious to him. the same sensation as before of anger and fascination at iho of her nature. What business to care whether he would have hear from her or not? such a pity that it was she, I I" her eye interrogates his, as if for acquiescence in this sugges- bu L ha cannot give it. With a of surprise; nay horror -at him- finds that he is unable to eche that Elizabeth had died and ]type• so to mammy at the time. Ah, mammy 1" indeed, as she speaks the door and Mrs. Le Marchant enders in dress. At the sight of Jim, which certainly does not, betoken though good breeding prevents the opposite emotion, her handennle worn face, Mr. Burgoyne in here," In what looms ranter pre- explanation, "because we could comfortably out on the terrace; to ever -thing we say; they long ears tie Widow Wad- Miss Strut i not know what State secrets you Burgoyne can have to discuss," the mother, with a sotto that, courteous, but 111 disguisesthe anxiety. Yes, dear child, 1 be very much obliged ifyou will g bonnet upstairs forme" -this in to flute tender overtures from overtures than remind Sim of Piazza d'Azegto. "I do not know you haws yet found it so" (to "hut this is a slack place," sooner has 010 door closed upon than her tone changes. have you been talking shout to sho Inquires rapidly; "not, I hope flint t" not belie it; she netted me." Le btarahnnt strikes her hands and gives utterance lo that short arid' shapeless [las a presurielive hall• "Til 1 lel" 1 sure you will mean to imply it is unlucky palledto pleat it all back to Bbming to pluck "Did she -did inquires J1111, awed concern but a gnarlier ling nearly the gard to Byng," "Did she Mrs, Lo Merchant, one to whom us inquiry course she did that she would 1" No one can and yet his tips resist the impulse n' a gloomy And I thought gene out of his As he speaks, ory that one have fmmeri count for the Elizabeth's past mad; and doned the idea, recurs to him bkltty. Might emotional mind the blow either of a long wearing caped --evidently Will it escape His' heart goes to her at the little lunatic she an oblivion of which is generous, says compassionately: It seems a "A pity !" repeats sort of wrath, broad stria P should think weals word 1 ecus 1 her whole knew—" She brealcs He is silent, that impulse P will go any she has evidently Minion, and herself for ha "They were other, continues generously. comes more less is the plea it. "Is it -I do your confidence, my friend you much -is it quite quite!" painful excitement; is not out of has anygood that -that mora have any mercy into her head "1f it is not could not ravel "but gravely;p I will not." As he speaks, the corners of reflects how ply with a request suit upon its character for times be bought. "That is very poor woman when you say you for it; was unluckyour yet you need though 11 is not out of mind' she is ver Y jests around gone -I dare make a long where there fs foe a man like She breaks invites him to a speedy day But magnanimity 0100 ft that and Jim's silence be is not going seduced into CHAPTER The next morning Strult's green here in weather changes has fallen. A slumbers are somebody's outside and noisy all the top of the and groans. can be seen trees eucalypWs, all cowering ��'� 4> d o � o o monosyllable which rigid l0 express vexa- A moment, .later, "I m understand that I do any ill -will to you ; that we should have hap- you there; it has brought her, and she was just up Fpr spirals n lfllio." she iako It so la heart'?" hi -4 lone 0t 6111109E as Elizabeth had employed of an hour before in soma question with take it to heart?" repeats with the irritation a erieetl senseless P Y „ !e put; why, .1 I thought at one have. Bona out o[ feel less merry than Jim at this juncture cannot, P to frame themselves snlfle, that he would have mind," he rejoins. it flashes olhe his mem- of the hypotheoses J • occurred to him to mystery that hangs was that she longad been though he had alma- her losing her wits with a shock as a posse- not that changeful, mobile, lose its balance under of a sudden Calamity sorrow? It hes but barely the first, the second, too? out in a great yearning thought of what a touching would make; but, his own personal feelings, if not very lasting, pity -a great pity! the mother, with down which he detects of agony running; it was a pity l Pity The whole thing is history! If you off. wailing to see whether towards confidence in further; but it sloes gone beyond her is vexed Ing done so. so well suited to each Jim slowly, but Possibly its generosity easy as he sees how hope upon which he employs not wish to Intrude upon but in the interest will allow me to say out of the question?" replies the mother, "what, poor soul, the question for her or happiness in it? PPHe than anything 1 If in you, do not put that it is not !" in her head already, put it there," replies 1 win not -I promiseyou a slight, smile touches his serious mouth as entirelyeasy it is to comm not to urge Byng's object, and how cheaply magnanimity may some- kind of you!" replies gratefull; "and I am y a thing I can depend upon and though, of course, happening to meet PP g not see much of her. 10 the least 'out of sight, with her" -sI kin -" much influenced tie by her; and when you say you do not mean slay; this is not a place much for a man to you—" Y oft, and her Imploring reassure her by naming for his own departure. may 'lave calls made exceed els power to •answer, sufficient] proves to allow himself to a promise to go. •as uy, ;, i • l .. ' `' �` n e r t, -> , „-•:Ra ,�y:;s a, ? } : •� �, t - " r,trNt• r •" • g -,ti ",1 ^ t ., y., v: ,' , 'x° ? � c 1[ F. ig° "' t ' -a Q„ rg u r •.. {� . v.r ! - ", r • }, �k , > y s ., Ml•-, ,.... Y•e.s •� '. -.. ., , y �" f,a, gars xol ( ss `.^ " ' tt ' It ; , r`: r"r n 4 1' >: ' . " r ,a ' 1F lrly J 3r r* ,r, i' �` ^rr +�n s' ` r x`` o `� "" #� fS . .n h` ( r* i , x.<' fie i �f t � fila 7 v?c g� .. � _ , 3.•h tr ti" v�4:' . i?4� a ;• rt ;e "r 7� ". = t �,x . c' F; s t+ •c f ` - v , , � �� r 1 ;, § ,', . iJ 1. +" ` `w ` ' " °' S L ` ^ t ve .. et ' 8 M ' r k �' ` is.• o. w k c t 1 r 14x. why ra K ,r • .41., t % ti to ,st x9 ..: < i i , . „ ,.:: s ,, ik i yssee r • ',e, • 1 �, w .-r I Y .v., :. a _ '' _ ,. o `? ' ; t = ,: �r. , . +. , s �, �, rr 4• �, » 1 '`'' �f`r, .,,, ,°' �,tttsc ?` + , et - aP c e. SHEEP NOTES. Sheep will pay upon land that will not P Y po afford sulfcient glazing for cattle. lGeep II lambs in.clerin quarters and lve them clean food and clean troughs. Sheep010 profitable stock only when male manner. Sheep w1111e 'leering the hued of foul growth fit it for better growth by fes- teething it. Regular feeding with poor reed ie .Preferable to give feed given hn n slip- shod way, Cho voidings, both liquid and solid of g ' y and evenly thh sheep are more easel scattered over the ground. Sheep have this advantage of involy- in less planning, less maph[nery, less labor and less expense when intelligent- g le followed, Sheep keeping should be largely a matter of dollars and earls, and the nim should be to receive the Largest pro- fits Sheep will work up the litter given them mtaoh liner than will cows, thus making their manure:more easily hand- led. The lots with sheep is less end of a much cleaner and pleasanter kind than with hogs or eatele or even horses. The proLFs of snoop husbandry come rather from steady conditions of the pock than from the rice at which woolFURNISHED P Is sold in the markets. THE "ADRIATIC." example, there are Turkish baths en board the Adriatic, luxuries which now make their a earance afloat, for the pP that time. • temper- ate, and cooling rooms, shanhpoolng rooms, plunge bath, and massage couches. They will certainly not suf- ter. From lack of patronage. It is aim- cult, indeed, to imagine anything that could more materially assist towards relieving (he monotony of a sea voy- age, For more strenuous natures, for those who prefer a life of aolion to one of the Ileum cum 'di mitale ordar, thereable b is n lavishly-fltied gymnasium. From the dining saloon on the lower deck an e;ec'lrkc lift runs up to the boat deck, calling at the promenade decks en g ratte, A "dark roman" for amateur has not been overlooked; photographers p whilst the usual barber's she with all the latest improvements, Le duly h1 evl- dence. Ono great feadure of the Adriatic's passenger accommodation throughout Ts its roominess. The great breadth of the ship, coupled with the exceptional height between the various decks, has rendered et possible to provide slole• rooms of a size lar hi advance of any- Io wench the ocean voyager has InUlerlm been accustomed. he the case hitherto of the Adriatic they 41•e lofty, well- lighted, g hoed, and 'perfectly vent[101ed; and there is, moreover, the additional et traction that no less than seventy-six of them are SNGLC•BCRTFI ROOYfS, a condition w}delt every steamship traveller will appeeclalo to the full. We know of no other vessel which has any- thing like se large a number. When we come to deal with the decorative scheme of the new While Star liner we ale confronted by a serious difiioul•ly, because, in order to give any really tide- gene impression of the richness and etc once 'of the. a 4rlanenls on board g P alis grand vessel, eve should require he nsststence of colored illustrations. Nothing at the way el pbnplctures or of mere black-and-whlte pliuuootographa can convoy any true Idea of the sump- linens manner• in which the task of •)r namenting the asaenger quarters on p bbo rd the Adriatio has been carried We will. however, do our best 50 sketch out the sallerit toaturea. rhe first-class dining saloon, Waled OA the upper dent and exlanding woes the Full width Of the 'ship,lap !mat 1p fuer -white. Ovorhelid eft !s veal y dome, fhe leaded gie;la those a be(Aq ip sllmrn.ate .panes of white and pais passenger may beguile the llme with d book or bring his correspondence up to date. Dain1'1 deeal'ulyd, )mle11ad Y t with paintings utter the styli's a[ Burro- visited in a fashion which is at once elegant and comfortable, this delight - Yui retreat, we should inagile, would I;e the very 'spot wherein n jx)rtically minded traveller alight ihvoko his \luso to great acivaninge. Special athullion,.•ihaL by the way, has been pall to the light_ jag nr bringngep00 id, auo\ the c l fit of lamps provided for the benefit G[ those who like to seek out quiet cog- crags for lhamsrives, The second-class accommodation int board the Adriatic is situated unnledf- alely abaft the first-class quarter, 1t includes n handsome dhting faloon, w[t[1 seating accommorellon for e0 prosmts''lhie deco aliveitsehem tthrou *h' t otlt these apartments is of an order which, not ninny years ago, would have been regarded as exceptionally fine in the fled -clots division of an ocean lit- er. The ladies' rooms, for example. is cn[iingpd with Lincrusle 11<xired with parquetry panelled with jhlatd satin- wood, and p IN MAI IOGANY; the smoke ronin Is frruucd 11' oak. wllh 0 walnut dada and leather upholstevy; while the saloon Ls decorated In while and o;d. Moreover, those little extra g ecmveniences which were once regnrdod es the special pretogut[va of the first class .passenger are Isere found malting their appearance in the second -011'8s quarters, such, for instance, as a bar• bergs shop. The third-class nceolmnodalfon aboard the Adriatic is situated, part of it abaft the second -plots and porn forward, 11 is specious, airy, and thoroughly eons- Melee in every way. And now, leaving dealt with individe. a1 details in Lha arrengement of this tri *111 vessel let us regard her for u A y g moment as a whole. (olnssa1 In her proportions, yet graceful in appear- ance, strong enough to defy the ole- manta in their most terrible moods', yet filled with the most delicate and !n• tt'loah) nlaohlnery, she roptiesente khe vary llighemt roduot of bralna, money, anut 1014 ex erlanoo, Her p angers, q Ld Aq: k ova► file side, neat! idly know that they are afloat. The aSMsli a rotas keo P ps t>}o)aa in son- lOsooms 1011 wtt11 the AS 04 the world, 811d they oat, with a very slight stretch f . fn nl ado pp 1t h elve4 /ea' t'isMY'a In donne plan ply of 'u1'tire, whsro all is bright, cheerful and r fin..'. —kindkept TRAINING 'fel colt should be I and the secret is in letting it. 1 are not going dominion field, It is net to flea from tinder hls do 4o tench the bird that hp 0(1 no their fear of hint able to train ail his bidding. Th. Kopp of ueu'arc usually the t old which lies ne wjll flee from h Mb must corn 10 hurt 11. 111) being one of lh i,s soon taught enjoys eaten' attention,- 11,y lie becomas You to be the Icon tenches your control ai,d should be tamed fashion 1)etol0 11 you troch him that you in) going to lulrt h for protection, by offering the tlavo you notircr a colt after he he is tired acid pe friends to go 1u• rub him phot him? Jie scr111i every weed rind e: and leech I a h0(111 Ile \ at w0rlc ng well, kalif he will reliable to ch same priniiples a a cell as 1.1 1 he persuaded 10 to do sin an( to do some punishment, of a colt is to h' If it don't before Using ,P.. aro 168 'peeks -.a «.1 vi.i.e. i "I brought 'ys Elizabeth, p11010 of talk LayTloten ave such en and I do ad Mr. Tiled Lough r'derlyileg )ail ileo my weer 1lizabeth, ! bis, :healer tee; No el' daughter "What er ," bout "I could etre. tgether, XXXV.q pk•oves the truth words that "we are not Algiers for homing," some time after nighty wind arises. Jim's broken by the tact shutters bang, loose. nigllk. The great sign hotel swings and creaks In the morning, as far through blurred panes, ilex, stone -pimp and stooping before DEFENCE.COMPLE'T'EB ..we ro ose to show, gentlemen of the ur ," said counsel for the 'defence "that it impossible for the defendant to have committed this crime. "In the first Inco wo \v111. prove that the defendant was' nowhere near iho scene of the crime at the lime' the Grime WETS commit Led. "Next, wo will offer'tnb indisputable lesklmony of persons Who saw defend- ant, on the spt, old who 'did not see defendant commit, the crime, " 'm will show that no poison was Mend ire the body of the deceased. Y "Not only that, taut we will prove that it was put there by the prosecution in his case. "4Wo will furthermore sh.aw that the dreoased committed snioide. "And last, but not, least, we will prone, beyond ilia shadow of e, doubt, that Ila deceased is not dead, Tn view of all which corroborative feels, gentlemen of the jury, we respect- fully ask for an acquittal, , 411 "�° 0 ID ,�q� `L „004 " ee; •901,00) , 0 :r0 ,,y 0 '�" 611 a� 0 .A New Orleans woman was thin. r. Because she did not extract sufficient "� - n$ from her food. nourishment r ere She took SC®t�` $ �° 18ti111 S�iG3s ,e, . i�z .eauIt. • _. She gained a pound a day in. weight to 011, ALL DlUJGGISTe8 two: AND IMOD e n ,?r ,1� q,,p�,,'I1,,A,,A ,I� eh,1�,1�,1� ,I1, JR..11t,,A,,A, a , °li�Or+Y°Sit"d�9fi'�f �l'� "tlP•1P'IPY 'N• 1!"1e"gli'N'°t� 1 cattle—" at expected voice she looks up WWI a skirt: "Oil, it is you l" she says in a tory key, glancing rather apprehenntvely aL the clnsed door, which se, prates themg f font the inner room, in a manner which tells him that her parents are wilhin. "I came' -his voice, almost encore sciously sinking Io the Mimi hers has art- dicaled to aim --"to tisk yon to kill me a. book." 4\ book !" shr repent, doubtfully, Wills anoticr'and 91111 mere nervous Site -"You said you Were going to marc an: artist, and note you're engag- Y Y g g tx to n dentist." Flo -"Wall, isn't, he ca nrlist? He draws from real Ciel MANURE, l what I have est years know favored the get-, rcumulallons of tl 08 fast as pos. espy. 'Peer( will , no matter 110W , and Ilse safest 11, where the ab - 1 will hold 1t f01' L while this is all fon' always prec- ra out as fast as speolally in win ,nditton that will fields raid the lh will generally method of hand - the oilier hand keeping manure Stables, or better e sited, The ma- le a fertilizer as ecially !rue when n to preserve the squid evacuations mtnerul elements, meld. But even used stable Ina - aures of the barn- genous in their of advantage to is this essential, a means for the 3 ammonia wltl'h adient in manure. desirable to pre. lel adopt the bee( alion and at the enl by the eddi: 111011 are present amunt. The old aster or sulphate Where thus is 1 the mnure, so un Mee place, it n preventing loss L does not add the potash LltaL the )hanged line, and als that mol only in a less volatile assume If left to but which also n for the land of g these elements entity in the ma - 1 to mix in the phosphatic rock, !r that the floats retaining the am- tinle be rendered lgh the action of a good practice. a this and make if a balanced te- te soli. \\'e can o the pulverized equal amopnl of salts. This will Is 1n the reMn- thraugh the snit mestere and 1110 of Wade 1t con - ie adding potash cid. put these under e gullets behind mixing the floats ual parts, and the stables ore o will go out in to completely in- n al, once apply he gutters to go next day. 'then e immure under 'lance l0 10114 up grunt Lied if you t the usual way, tl:at you will Mout the mixture t the stables. 's COLT. rained very cnre- in training any, 1000!, in els way, to hurl it. Alan over the beasts heal for all 'mi- nion until they nMien. Man is s, end even the t hurt then', and subsides, 110 has kinds of 001015ts 060 animals obey 1 or fear of pen- man.. A colt a ver soon a human. tin as a harm ince IL he is not as "horse sense," e most docile of 101 to be afraid. ng, end tv111 ap- palling the litho your friend, and your a nnponion. 11181 glage Iso is easily n'a0000d. something nflee Lolling him up, ail, snit hold Ids e his friend and in, Ile will look Teach hihn 10 reward of kind. 1 how much good has leen Waked v)matey thinks he 111151)1 to him and 1 the bend awl ngly unelereiawl.> icks rap 001)11ga, inn to work end vi11 soon gel 1110 rite 1111111 h,' f"'ls 1 • 5wkword and raw heavy loads. )111' in the train- of a child. 'l'heY dm y011' bidding for the Hope of 1 they ran be linngs from 1110 A4y advice ie the y lila former me - meted, ley, try, the marc stern of foxtlotee r" 10