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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1910-10-6, Page 7OUTE O,.'DAY, Urn or 'tie for I.ondun, Ont. . t Alf1t(04,1 WARRANTS, paid: Write 00 for War, r, Stook WOW% 0001;t FOlt Meer at and epeeist twists 1QS ,174b4 elle And pralines em. It. IC Alotlarroy, 10 at, Toronto. Lumpoto, laternot once wis, thout pain br 1. Write us before too Diediotil Co., Limited, AVE 6 DAILY SIDLLINCL Braulte voinent. Monde Pots end Pass, Uraoitowere, Mende ln Ore minutes, go, Hest senor. OverlOOX astisount, ems .sedien mien- New 4 pmotire—eareful Instrua• opiate wave—tools froo, to eighteen dollarsyr.00k. au, (dolor Barber Oollogo. Ito. MS —.STUDENTS — wsiti of Plano, Vocal, Vella, Pip' to large and well rialooted, lotto a opeelalty. Correa, .mhdown's Motile Mem DNA R DYEING aud 1114 Mores cleaned. nt by poet, to per oz, est pions le !MAN !NEMO 00. galthAr., • ME YOUR FURS you aro looking ftm G FIFATT - - ONTARIO ECRAPHY dins Agents' work In all tile aro ineluded In the a training iTIreit 3. The Telegraph &heel, 0Ger. 10., Toronto, Correspond - Nod. '1'. J. Johnston, Prin. haw, President. '1' THE HAND. i the Woman's EX-. the woman 7" Then I guess I'll Pill.—To clear •the owels of impuritiea is necessary when areguL'ar. The pills is work thoreughly s Vegetable Pills, ild in action but Ie. They purge pain- itively, and work a . They can he used the most delicately, there are no pain.- eeeling their gentle ,ST ORDER. dull season, and the ollingealesinen wero a. 'I had just five bhe month of Jaly," le anyway," said hia only three orders, le was from the firm one home." Co.. Limited. or Of 01.1re cured P. r0r7 Assam' 310 a valuable AlIN.ARD'S LINT/L(0NT. Co truly, VILANDIE BlIBBBB. .4 Y MISTAKEN. • n thinks she is hay - y when her husband and permits her to salting. " LI eg in Midsummer URO 31101)017 home, Bs- 41., barna, flaming or for diarrhoea and dr• bstitutes, there is but orry D0i/10.-20e. auditkr. .4'ar realizes how unim- ly is until he has a • 11 to cast his first f*r/ ER POWER: or. A TRUTH NEVER OLD. rity of Mothec . Exterminator is s• pod effects on the hese a bottle and MPROVEMENT. 11.ei:14 tt (of Lonleyville)-- 1 lad o' you people in Ve've sprinkled clue troleutn. Gosh--Mighly glad • • r town's been need-• 11 its smells for of 1-1° • e • s Root Pills ;St medicine for the 1 they arctonstipaled„ Ineys are out of order ; mdulgence in some yes them indigestion ndian Root Pills will rely put them right. s they neither gielten. lilOt harsh purgatives. bildrea's health by v. box of Dr, Morse's s in 13. house. ;rho; oWidren Wei 444., •,, • CHAPTER VII. Dodo, if you will give me petrans- • eion to educate her.1' "How do you like Lord Blera- "Dodo will stover be educated out tom . oar Lady 'Usk, when slue el flirting; she is born for it," sttys can BUY 80 unobserved. her father, "erel she will be a hand - "I like very much)" replies Ltd when ehe gets into society. I'm saheassta "Ile is what one afraid you would return her to us .4 • would ex.•)eet him to be Isom 1118 and sigh for your high -8i050 Hin- beoks; and that is so agreeable— cloo.". • and so rare.," "Pray, how would you ethicate Dorothy usk is not pltased. SII her; ,whali is missing in her present does not -want her Russian phoenix education '1" asks Lady Usk,• some - to admire Mulford, She bas ar. what Piqued at what he implies. ranged an alliance in her own mind would leb her see a (;,,,a3. deal between the Princess Sabaroff and mom (d hes soothor than she is ais her own Cousin Alan, Lord Ger- lowed to du," says Blanford vase, whom she is daily expecting "where could she take a, better at Surrenden. model 1" he adds, with a bow of "Why don't you ever marry, Lord much grace. lanford asks Dorothy Usk, Her mother is not sure whether "Why have you never married' she ought to be flattered or of - "Because Ise's much too sensi- fended. Blanford has a way of ble," growls her husband, but add& mingling graceful compliments and with infinite compassion: "He'll -implied censure with so much skill have to, some clay, or the name will and intricacy that to disentangle (lie out 7" ' "Yes, I shall have ta, some day, p.Foet your „very gramraatical ex- ' assents 331anford. "I ' don't wish the name to die out, , and there's nobody to come after .me except the Southesk-Nranes, who detest me, as I detest them." "Well, thee, why not make some marriage at once 7" says Lady Uek. • "I know sra many Manley& arrests the sentence with a clepi•ecatory gesture. Deal Lady Usk. please! I like 3, au so ranee, 1 wouldn'e for workls have you mixed up in anything which would probably, or .at least very possibls, make me so mach dislike you in the years to come." Usk eisee a laugh of much en• Nye -tent. His wile i•s slightly annoyed. She does not, like this sort of 3esting. 1 "You said moment ago that you est marry:" she observes, with ome impatience. •. '011, there is no positive 'must' about it," says 3310310141, dubioue- Iy. "The name doesn't matter grea. fly atter all it is only that 1 don't lika the'place to go to the liontleak-V fines; they are iny „oott- 1' ins tra- knows how many times they have mostslun.rible melancholy of the Russian peasant. fel 'they are such tirad- black women. "Isn't it horrid? He ; She ceases abruptly, and walks ic people that I am sere actually has numbers ,of thera down back to her mat; her diamonds eleetroy my gardens, in Warwickshire, just as he keeps gleam in the light like so many eyes ralian boasts, strangle the Indian animals and the African of fire. Blanford has listened in birds, turn eny old ser- birda.” silence, conscious of a troubled aft, and make the coma- "How very shocking! says Lady pleasure within. himself, which is hideous with farming." Dawlish. "But I dare say it is verY invariably the herald of one of those "Mal ry, then. and put an end to economical; they only eat a spoon- attacl3nients which have so oftenat says 1)w:4)- 'Ea ef• rise and ,01'0a1 a yard of ea- once 'embellished and 'disturbed his anstheig drea " thy Ssa. !lice, you know, and as he is so existence. lilanford gets up and walks pool' that must suit hini." ''Ancl I know nothing at all about Lady Dawlish tells this fact to this lady, except that oho has a about toe roont. ia a dilemma which hae (mon been present to his voice like Albani's, big jewels, and Nina. Curzon, adding verious laded in curious epochs of his ex- bellishments of her fancy. Hrs. a Russian name!" he thinks with ietenee. s Curzon thinks toe notion new and some derision of himself; the amok - amusing ; she -writes of it that ers do nob find him arousing, while oll F;rt1, My clear people," ilb says, v. it 11 allectionate eonfidencs, morning to a journal of society his companions seem to him insuf- 'the lee! truth of the matter .15 which she occasionally honors with fora' bly tiresome, He Inane the this : A tassel Wurnan LS 4d1111r- new8 •of her world, siot from waist echo of Mme. SabaroffSs grave, low able ereadon ut Providenee for cer- tain uses in her geueration; but she 131 tirosoine. A naughty woman is ; hitt then she; is, if you -Merry tea, eteepromising. Which um 1 to take of the two? I should be lee col ;sr death by whet Renee calls la femme pnree, and. against lo femme t, -"e 'as a wife. I have a 1grrj,t ?yr . ho 10013330who would uthil10 101, would not marry if 333,11111, a,,11 as, if I were bored I clulent, very contemptuous, and he lehould leave ins' wife entieelY aiss1 never by any chance reads a news- ': 0 tO the equator or the, pule, it paper, raitil not be honest in me to sac- "An extremely interesting wo- 41 1 irein to 1 he mere, demands man," muses Blanford that evening as he dresses for dinner, "Inter- esting, and moreover with some- thing original, something mysteri- ous ,and suggestive in her. Despite Lady Usk, there is a difference still in different nationalities. I could stull ewea,r to 1111 -English woman anywhere, if 3 only saw the back of her shonlders. No English wo- man could have the delicious lan- guor of- lane. aliaroit's rateve- off's movements." She interests him ; he decides to ,etay on at Surrenden. When he sees her at dinner, he is still itioee far impressed, .1.Ier figure is superb, and her sleeveleee gown shows the beauty of her beet, and arms-; she has a fiat hand of diamonds w,orn between the elbow and shoulder of the right; arm. citect is singular, 3.1101 good, "ft la to (thrill, that she has the muscle above the elhow,`,1 ,say e old Sir Adolphus, who is learned in sculpture zed Anatomy. "You know, not one woman in ten thou- saed has it. and for want of it, their ' arms fall in above the el- bow. T have heard sculptors, say so a, auldred times. She has it, end &calm wears thee; flat -brace- let to enphasizo the feet." . Blenieel feels annoyed. There :is no rrisen in life why he should Doomed to Suffering RESCUED AY !'fflUIT-A41YES!! CflARtES BARRETT. Eso. Harbor au Bouche, March. es, seoe, "4 suffered terribly from Biliousness and Dyspepsia for fifteen years, ems treated by physicians and took many remedies hut got no relief. Then I teat "Fruit-a-tives", and this medicine completely cured me when everything else failed. To all, sufferers front Indi- gestion, Biliousness and Constipation, I strongly advise them to try this fruit medicine". Charles Barrett. soc a box, 6 for $2,50—or trial boor, a/C. At ell dealers or from rniit-e-tives Limited, Ottawa. 111.10.1014010,10644/0,106112v* On the Farm steeAvnia..e.s.la.v. BEATyry AN)) UTILITY. A large number of prominent men in all four of the dairy breeds aro very fond of saying something like this "In our efforts to promote the dairy quality in Our cows we meet not lose sight of beauty." It is the candid opinion of Hoard's Dairyman that no one thing heti hindered so Irma the progress of malting large pro - clueing cows as this vain etruggle after so-called beauty, We say "go -called" for the reason that no two , men will agree on what they mean by "'beauty." Some think delicacy of form, a ceetain refinement of head, body rod legs, constitute "beauty.' Others look for impressiveneas, that something that goes with size, am- plitude of form, making what they would call a, "grand looking cow.' But the majority consider beauty to be a certain refined feminity el both facts. At dinner Xenia Saba,roff does not -speak much ; she has 41 dreamy look—almost a fatigued one. Blanford is opposite to her. As, them is difficult for those whom he there are no tenements or ihrwers would at once flatter and reueff. 011 the table higher than eight "Ono never quite knows what he inehes, he can contemplate her a menus," she thinks, irritably. "I his leisure across the field of shed do believe he intends to imply that I neglect my children." Blanforcl seems to her an implea- sant man, eecenteic, discourteous; and immoral. She cannot imagine what George the world sees to admire and like so much inshira. "Lent Blanford actually declares that black women have much bet - tee figure § than we have," she says an hour later to Lelia, Faversham. - "Black women!" exelaimed that lady, in unspeakable horror. "Well, Hindoos, it's the same thing," says Lady Usk, with that ignorance of her Indian yellow -sub- jects which is characteristic of Eng- lish Society, from the highest strata to the lowest. . • "Ch he is always so odd, you know," says Mrs. Faversham, as of a person whom it is hopeless even to discuss. Blanford is indeed so odd that he has never perceived hee Otell attractions. What can seem odder to a pretty woman than that 7 Lelia Faversham tells Lady Davr- lieh ten minutes later thee Blanford has confessed that he only likes rose leaves which is between them. Finding that she is so silent, he talks in his best fashion—in his most reckless, antithetical, .pictur- esque manner, He perceives he gains her attention, though he nev- er directly addresses her. "Blanford is so amusing when he likes," says Lady Arthur Audley, incautiously, to this suppressed and sullen victim. "A monologist, a monologist 1" replies Mr. Wootton, -with depre- catory accent. Dinner over, Blanford finds & pleasant seat on 'a, low chair be- hind the bigger chair on. which Mme. Sabaroit is reclining; other men, devoted to other Women, look longingly at her; some approach Blanford comprehends why she is not beloved in her generation by her own sex. After a time she is induced to sing; she has a very sweet yoke of great pewer, with much pathos in. it; she sings volkslieder of her OW.11. country—strange, yearning, wistful songs, full of the vague, mystical is the turning in weal and tea a bee. Every dt Theilmperial 014000 saves: fee {Mee 0,310)0.3053041 the 58MO 4510 137 aluoalyiea speauluttd ous.t ;iodine ill arloine, a dialcionktrre 51011p holler than manic. sultan grocero. If not ,end 50e for es. nett:oho*, cre.oadalfre.po.. etudy well the limitations for na I A SEVENTINTII a,s nature preseribes them in the Psalm 103: 4, 5. ' best specimens of the breed. Iffieneath these fair Canadian 613 N must remember alwaye that This monmer day we nieet vrepannot go beyond the nature of anYthing. All there is to brood. Thtevheil jieulyeett iNgvieft;lactollyreveentiz.e, ing improved animals of any kind ' Attraction prompts your friends ie to amplify ur increase the rune- , soy, tion we eo much desire. s With heart and voice &Ski To do that Wa MilSt lorik for the May gladness mem your oat natural form of such function,. ,If At three score years and t we inject artifice of the main ma - tions of outline, of beauty or of Those whoza you lo, ed long fancy of any kind, we will do so at ago the sacrifice orthe main purpose the animal body is a mechanical wo are after. Consider, first that Their lives, while shadows lei Are grow,it:dand cherished .„ '3,.......L.. contrivance. Everywhere in int - Yon never will forget. chorales the machine must have a • , They all have passed beyond os land bred type of Jerseys and form suited to its function, e great ruling idea of nature is func- tion. With the sewing machine it form, which we see more in the Is- Guern is sewing, with the mowing macsie it is mowing. Each machine must have form suited to its purpose, its function. Here is the bed rock idea in nature. In animal machinery the law is the same. We are after the production of milk making mach- ines that shall work most harmoni- ously and enduringly to the end of milk production. Keep breeding to the best milk producers, the most ample mother, and nature will take care of the form. She will give us the form best suited to that pur- pose if we keep our false artificial notions of beauty out of the way. But we must be obedient first of all to the physiological laws nature es- tablishes for the accomplishment of hepurposes.oBeyond nature we eaarnotgo. Fortunately for the Holstein breed, and conaiderably so among the Ayrshires these notions of at- tenuated refinement do not exist to any great degree; Consequently the breeders of these cattle, especi- ally the Holsteins, have followed the teachings a natere, with only one dominating idea,:-snice they got rid of the, dual-purpose notion, —that of breeding for large pro- ducing animal alone. But among the Jerseys and Guernseys serious danger exists to- day of being led away from the final goal in a vain pursuit after beauty of form. Hence the show -ring and its attendant ideas of outline keep i crowdng in upon us in every effort to breed large producing animals with strong, enduring. constitution, 'We he-ar a great deal said about, the "straight bask" when if we look at the great cows in any breed that have given name fame to their breed, the straight back rarely pr - veil. Why is it that .breeders and judges are so unwilling to be guid- ed by nature in her effort to fash- ion a eow that shall be a largo pro- ducer? Delicacv of outline means too of- ten lack of ability to endure the strain, of large production. In seventy-five per cent. of the great producers in my breed, we find a certain rugged, angularity of form. The large paunch—a big basket—almost always aecompana les the powei to produce heavily. And yet the large paunch and the rugged outline do not suit the pre- vailing notions of beauty. We believe breeders should look after 'two things in their breeding: a constantly increasing power to produce well and strong, enduring constitution. Now, the latter too frequently does not accompany the refined beauty type. We must study mare the phy- sioSogy of dairy breeding. That will teach us that certain things do not harmonize well, such, for in- stance, as beauty of form and con- stitution; beauty of form and large capacity for production. Let the chief aim and end of breeding he the production of bulls of strong constitution and prepot- ency and COWS of a vigurons, ample type of body. To this end we must of 'editor's fees, -but from the amuse- melodious voice., and as not in tem- -meet it affords her to destroy the per for the somewhat scabreu:e characters of her acquaintances, jests qf the smoking -room. He The journal will immediately, she thinks that it is all very well for knows, produce a mysterious but boys to like that sort of salacious sensational paragraph regarding talk, but it seems to him intoter- the black women in Warwickshire ably absurd that men ofhis age, or S01110 article headed "A Here- and older, 'should find any kind of ditary Legislator at Home." Blan- savor in it. . fora is a -Pesseil whom it is 130- They tease him about the bleak footle' ,sere to libel; be is very je- women, inoreever; and for once he is not easy enough to be good tem- pered .aed indifferent. He an - Mere contemptuously and irritably, and of eourse.all his friends sup - Pose, whith they had not supposed before, there is, after all, some truth in Mrs. Curzonss anecdote. " What stupid stories that old blagneur Wootton has told in the •srnoking-room, and what beastly ones Fred Ormond has related, and all as if they were something new, too 1 as if the one weren't taken out of the manuscript at Butehonse, and the othev out of lost week's Fig- aro! If men wen't,be original, or can'ts be, why don't they hold their tongues?" "What fools wo aro 'seo sit shut eis with gaslights and iobacco on such a night as this a sight for Lorenzo and Jessica, ior RoSsito and Jaliet," he thinks as im '13t -ands awhile at the epee window 01,.. hid 00131 bedroom, ' (To be continited.) I of 1/13' titiiii.14.11 Lody feeleNslipeked, but she aeret litto to shwait, because it Id-iaeitioned and prudish and lyre now -a -days, to be shocked ela•thing. • ''1 hot \ thought, about it very of - en 1 ashttre: 3 -on," con Gnu es )311m - Ione "lied etenetimee I have really 4.11o,..glit. kart I would maery a high - east e Wanton.. They are • hattaiftil, anti their tonne far mete exquisite than futy European's- vb, Ity imeramped as they are by any :1013 e, and a(L'us( 011) 0(1 tp.aaling Madly hours on it'll kinds .11 arts Jt 1,4. embellishMent of the O en." "I don't thee, ;ou knew," Lady Usk ileareleee• esstily, to repress - more reinseiseeetas. "Oh, bud that is odious," said st. "The girls ef r is toil'SAee, n to them; they smo they gamble, they flirt without dec- ries,' 43 Y eruct.; their one idea is to Marry tor the mike et position that will let thew g as wild as they (.11.eas, and for the bake of heaps of moi.ey which will sustain toscoescionohle extravagance, Isceel \ ei. um from Ally of them! would :moter see fit, .FIlubert,'s Lea cut tip inim allotment, groundS .1 Southesk. 01 11 11 ...ANC It [loll , , ifi'.,, ,',' nAavrYillg, kl, kx0011,t1]13to object tsaime. Sabaroff having any ing herself, end her yoatilf\11 mem., .i.om, tsr N in, hilet sut.0,...,i313:i aulvtillilnoe4d;i0.1,116dab;:, arlethiroill.11:7.144Fri Willi itor mint] fixed on e..taiiits11-,t ,httilldraftectas it , van \ eeiee airoatly tell (If cleafl-andsgouc, ass this esesomou,seee fOrteSieue. No' Let, MO wait ior eus thertllili v.) Much In Little. Tormey-Rop, what does thulium in PAM mean? Tonmay's Fop-Multum In porn is Latin. my son, It means- er-well, haven't you over soon n fat woman in a bathing su1t7-P11iladel, phi* Record. Distinction. Muly-Th Cite Moore lite your ler her? Tilly -Of course not, silly! It Is like fathet when he htte his plettlre taken. -ruck. Orel heels :ID ;nests. A Woman', Wit. The husband of Lydia Childs was an Invalid for many years. Be was not well off in this world's goods, and much of the support of the family was earned by the wife. Thinking of this and of his wile's many sacrifices for bis comfort, Mr. Childs once said to her regretfully, "My dear, I wish I were Croesus,” Whereupon Mrs. Childs, with ready wit and gracious Met, responded, "You are Croesus, for you are king of Lydia." -Los Angeles Times. The Roman Tribune. Tbe tribunes In ancient Rome repre- sented the people in much the same way that the house of common does In England and the house of repre- sentatives in thls country. Por a long time the patricians or aristocrats of Boom had everetlehg their owu way. But when the plebeians (or. as we would say, the "plain peolee") got their tribune the reckless tyranny of 'the patricians ceased. The tribune bed great power. Ile could veto almost any act and nullify almost any law passed by the Romans. Liberty among the Romans dates from the time they first secured their tribunes. -New York American. Freedom. There err limitations to ovary man's ireedqui. For one who is unwilling to recognize this the world is not a good place to Witt in. Which marks the lives of na But you are here by grace d At three scoxe years and ter With those you loted your 1, raise Who .journeyed with you her; They' now with songs of en praise Before the throne appear. You think of their ealilted And hail its glories then, While you this birthday cele At three 8001,0 years axid From lasting good aiacl pass_ You have not failed ±0 gle Those treasures which are me fill The heart with joy ser To us 7.011 speak with voice Of things beyond our ken While in your birthday we At three score years andsl And while you calmly home' move, Meg you rejoice to see That guid.ed by unfailing love The best is yet to be. May you enjoy through CQI miles Of mountaie, vale and glen That lore which now upon smiles At three score years and ten T. WATS() es...C.Sranthurst, Ont., 1910. 1. A Matter of Taste. At a party in the country la ing games were played. A you who was present saye the girls. now as they used to. But we'd T kiss a lighting country girl Oa fighting town girl. When a gid rests a man usually hisses her and there's a sort of dead jute that you don't notice in r Healthy England. We have much to learn land in the way of hygien owes her great superiority- spect to special laws and' reg and also to the cheapness of sexy" food.—Paris Hygiene. quickly stops coodlos. cures co) the throat Dud bands. .• • , --vs'er'et&r's17;;•:\r .„•"twffeW4,;::, 011.01.45 Og',14414' Which of These Pictures :Rest Represents Tour Stable ? 1.4,4,4.0V1=8. ryour Stab's Interior Is Of 1WoOd, you'll do TF you would know something. of the possi- well to tear ;down those old, Unsightly Witted of Conerete,Ilii out the coupon and stalls and anangers—and IbUild naw ones mind•it to as. BY return mate we wilt send of Conerote. 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This is the modern material—it has the thing 7011 can think of, ±0 the way ot Diem merlin of sightliness, endurance, and economy buildings, goers, vats, troughs, etc., etc. —and is ettnItary, 'N'owadays, for a farmer not to know mote to mix aro uric concrete, de to Confess The farmer himself can, by Its Use, make anueinrets 1thhaet, elvinipthloollnnyenottheert 34ilitefitrATFeryrribteGrliCinaan Dthoe TtfijnitheBC. caterers" will ininalinterriluit,tiewioinup ldr6vrale eltlIled labor, not only Inform you --it will also interest you. g•P "What the Farmer Can Do With Cortatete7, Tolls you how-to Out concrete In constructing; . • Hens, Neste Stables !tarns °Hitching Posts Stair, piklreens 0)41)105l T ' a Mta Houses Foundations Poultry HOUsee reee'eltletePti"Floore .8111oleost C"are clutters • 'sinner W4116 • Horse Macke alai'', Step* • 'reeks Troughs Walks r Well Curbs Etc., ete.., eto. Canada Cement Co., MANI 30.35 Notional Book ShilUling tmoNntria, eIsa of 14 Iho Fnatot4r .1.0 With Cone, Address 4 44 4.4. • t t1 14 •