The Brussels Post, 1913-9-25, Page 2A Dark Shadow;
Or, A Coshing Vengeance
I army More beautiful also, with the deli. POET LAUREA'.m ON HYMNS..
n whtW
sato i0telinece of Lha lily and til
roan, The eager game of c a t crit fed Dr. Robert Bridges, the new poet
b h ed fuel of manic anti culture ,
quivered an the [.areae o Chuteil mltsie, His latt�it41oI1
7 she tt a ted attontton as 5`•m
ehouerinathe 'wonderful grey .eyes, and laureate, is a great autthoi'Ity on
P the delicately
out live.
n a r r
prsard through the crowded stretitb. anal Hymnal originated in his attempts,
stem meneene wouseee gipped to look when preceptor of 4 village chow,
atter her; but alta wee all ua(wnbeious of
their notice and admiration; for she to provide better settings to the
waited as one in the efoude, ,rit31 liar hymns than those til use. His views
ease fixed. before her as one pressing to.
��
water the me k: in mute and rapt e'er -tail congregational singing were set
ship et het • hero.
forth in an article for the Journal
of Theological Students, published
CHAPTER E, in 188e, It was entitled "A Practl-
her, on Sum e I11ine] 1C
e r moa" books and! ter . .!
CHAPTEIi; IE. and with an air of modest triumph. which 3fina was rotting one g Cal DlScoitlre p s
clues, her .r u a _
evenflr from
Three mornin 9 after -Eads IlalrymPle,e tele her that all had glare well. ural and wife Prising n tt orkmeu B .11 of Hymn-aingleg, and was after
, g. rlittle living , "If I wan t.. try and tail you. all I've0- - "ri wards issued as a. pamphlet. It,
bail. -o l�llk+ha came into the r g, weir an' gnus through 9r!u'd sr;urrh b al !u a the quiet street when- rhe d c
was 1.1n, for the utgh was rn .ry-_Kh-.
h •"d the wive t of m mat tpettku,g to-; opened With St. „trig 8t•ille s words
i6 earlybreakfast, 1 ' ; nw h0 dror me in o a chair a t , ,led dead 1 tv lie 1
where Tibby and Mina were having j{leve mr• 'Mina:^ he erdeioued eelc.nn1
he lie-
:
their 1 a Tibby [brew a let d t , and mopped PPd "'
ter nc u s the Cable Ther letters were h h tiff handkerchiep sit• • t st i i on happiness 1 1 1 1
dl.rt.•d t
new tie him red they v op . and
andi sable to his new and lofty Inpslnun. "Boat ,raw "
Ael'VOUx1y opened the envelope. and Allyn . leer a moment sbe st<,ed, her heart beat- "The emotional power of our
started when he lewked u;, llu"hed and { 110agnne a room op music a scene at n , 3ng lewdly', then the calor faded, and a t -•.t
a fluted, and uttered a cry of amaze- 1 mania s1 1 n tip top 0! se .µll. Nat ono i si lied I t was only fancy, 0i !wvrs the ; chttr1 m0 great
wl'dite 11X. Bridges,
,
g u them while aa,,gold ones hat you see. wze always teaming or nun, hop ie tai „is nOt SO great a5 that, described
•meat. 1 in a pada• but an -•all t u!et an' sub•'
"la Is it? Somebody left you a far• 1 doled; with silk theirs and eases,
ae' I any y 11 meat�had ehenmietakee some figura'. by St. Angusti:ese fifteen hundred
tune, father}" demanded Tibby rharyly. pirturss an ornaments lake what you s eears a o_. He dieenssed the opin-
"Or is it the rates? Rates! Aa if the in She beet kind o' pa-tvnbrolcere' winders.i for -tit'',to lad In nearer view and with a
Xing couldn't get along without our as- , A footman in a black snit with gold but pang 1;1.1 tl:.aPtiointmeut [kat she had beau' ? g
sistanee. tier that I've got anything tone- I'm Pretty nigh surd they ,van gold m-' when! ton of \� llliam Law, that even the
a ainat 'tui; xad I dataay not a orf of I mean real gold -took me up to this. She
*Toad b3- the doer of the hal{ till ;
what'° collected goes into h' pocket." i room --and he wasn't one o' the mases' Lift •t to aPptauEe started bur on neem!
"•It's from the gentleman --31r. Clive!" i kind Yell see on the stage, but quite pleas- ° bat after a yard or two she mused, went
gasped Elieha, breaking in upon leer.; ant au' civil ern:ken-an' he gtvee me a, beck, and rvudly leaked talo u Ultue.
He's got ma some ruPils-•-two! He 11g. i h chair quite yerfltr; and• not a lilt .0110 t). tt war ['weeded almost to the ea!re, and
i1 the men near the entr,nice were s andmg
their names and adflteases mal 5welt he =avec up, s that she could not see the :ilt.lker.
Otte of 'em, real guinea --leeeonnd-I'm t ••L;tdy Emily 'all bo down a? -moat dir. Seat'orty come:ions of her movements, stte
have half a guinea a le'-oen! half •i ; cx•t73.' Ate' I says, '1),n't 'tiny 'ee lady stole in, aid creeping to one side. ,was
gnineat Phew!' Ile laughed gvavrringlY _hip; for I know what manners 1s, Mita:' abSe t0 ser rhe platform.
and wiped the perspiration from tie fate ..Yee, dear," murmured Mina, leaning Fier heart gave a great Leap in her bo-
as he looked from one to the other in al froward eagerly with her hands clasped. sem, and thea nearly seabed neat°nt,: Lor
kind of stupor."An'I while I woe lectin' it was he. She leant a�•unst the „ill far
"F it what they cad a practical!
fate zed and- the .m d g
T a etwrt, ills color rite $la i oen Wit
Igo few and infrequent that both eerie I hu+ face wit t e s : new ro•,. to her fate, and .bar eYee
whtrA 7ibhy had drtilared t! lx• indlspul th tette of ter hero.
as he ' i tened to the psalmody of his day.
"Aeeme too gond to be trete" e,..0 '1 bby.: presently w - es. !rile
fl ,ming
ora ain't round—did I tell you there ,vac a grand ss ul erin ex -
juke, same as some of the etre at the piano, a regular no gr_
laetory are fond oft And if it Ma t, it 01.L10000-. Ilan an' a Indy an' a )tale girl ci1-ement ai ilia audienve, and, above all,
ought to be: for how also you go a -teach- came. ne. 'You are 31r. Burrell, whom ber emotion, made her faint and giddy, e�o
ing real swell� in them togs?" • Lady Edith Chesterleigh recommended?' that at fires she could not hear what lie
"He's thought of hat:' replied Raba; she 0010E quite sweet like, like the footman er sand easing;
es but
tt p eselle grew to fat•[."
"he's enrlosad a Ienat.tl note for two guund.+. ••Lady Edith Clteeterleigh?" murmured hhrari t reath a `et �a it tin rap'di,', au<L rr
ru !pareshould want : .;Sona r - meeting of a
euptrort and shut her e9
gag -Jere, the ileac, the
certain
1 h Id i Did vat ever section of
li h kind h d f It 1 as a g
ear ni Fadh a Rettig, au,• a al t :nhe , e. Le see; don't 11010 see. a tr:en o
'['ilius sbauk Ler head, anti Par: ad her � me. ['liver, u sourest'. the extreme Socialist Party, which called
I ere. Well, dear?" itself b3
• the rather high-faluiin' name
•'• s
"If you w•,- to aek me I sh,,rdd Lav he f "WPM. then she took up same hunting, aF the h rad of Br, -010 imed Some of the
h d mea bur here wurkiug men who were
leas one ui Ili -,. rrank , oat. ut the art. 5n'. emit '1n' s11 down at the other
en reany entitled to the de ignaton, while
that chu L then murrey abet.. Le "; e• the roam --St e 1 so b.g that sole didn't others were so o called by courtesy. Of
look at the -rest Yee;:t looks a,. riga: "seem to be there ,u understand what I scums, it Was an "advanced Society. but
she admitted grurigmiy. But i b!ea d' mean'- -An' the little girl, Lady Emriy, the majunt0 of the members were not
gg weigh :, the Pact it001,0ch atter break.; i thou knew. I euy, !lies, I didn't know aware. how tar "advanced' a few of their
fast. and r and gr. `t shake a. ]010: that they ?---Wee ladies so quite
in �an- body were: and certatee Mr. Graham was
hair ehow h-, letter if they make any bib ny, isn't t.?- Weil she was au :e utc•e lake ignorant of the fact that the Bend of
fel: • about leIt's J1•st as ,esti w n0 ,.are 1e rest and n ,bet 'mighty; and she
Sul:' seemed VO P`Pa'rd an so will nn' to learn, Brotherhood contained some members abs
'•Two pounds -and half a guinea a 7 - that atter r b ; I get 000r me ellakin au'. secretly adv!x [ted Anarchist principle:•,
eon t,r eo a We,'li. 111,11:e rico gu,acau a' au' hie la on may bclie,e m0 or not.- and a c re Sc rccommendtd dynam.te
week_ -" but I feign: everything. cern that I want- or, atired"sears ter all politicacnu o /r+
"You alar forget year •r:thmc•::c. - ed ber t3 1t•aru, as if my lite depended vu have asked (1,00 ;p adtlreer a meeting of;
1 d " the newly.
L ncieretand'''
father.'
! Mina uedded. -Yes, dear, I understand." -
wlotte-Why, we tined be qua" daze the ntJe"t war Clive's favorite one, the
n" !„ked round true room with a 4.0110 She was smiling her n!e11 with Adel_ and bousiag of the poor, one on wr,ieh ne
• 'Adan hankering
0 able t0 go to tnc•m pleasure, in her eagersee and delighted never failed to grow eloquent, for he.
c ,;n:es she's hank r n6 after. and you ,:a
n 0atdsi action.
^I fur of en remPlete'y that I didn'toke from his heart: and to -night w•a.<,
spoke r
! re sic nett0 than us n1, ie
With get some new eta see; ami we moat.. g perhaps. more q
g„ .eau better r ,vree 1 notice how the time was paeeing till the pe, remembrance of I'ar..dlse Garden: and
'At. the carriage dei .•pair hall you. other lady, the old one, got In 510' said, his ttremb angers he had reen thews in
buy that thi:, afternoon of wait till to- '1 tank ghat will do for this moraine. Mr.
morrow?' eon! ribby. "Keep your ',or : Burrell' ..Acuter Burrell. toga, 'be rink! ke mpany with 11*1,1t0u woe still fresh and
an, Sather. ti'e'd tatter wart Ll1 we e'e' -Oh, that 'Ycev be a k chap
apioL but r. 1•e ['live was a horn orator, and respalded
0.•
long tills Manu 1 m h or ! 1. mane an' the i
ieh a moon Nor Park Line or Grecv.0.0 eht geed manners, o oureyourmust1e]be withfervoraudience; theicleawhich
, d ep,emareel-
voked
these* Not but that Alma e «an , t to I she eaye.n'Aub I'm s
there [emery,; though,id what elm ,shout with -sed, and will be glad 10 a'gmae1 of wine. Small hall, bandcYetewaa Fommea Through0 10 v
mere rrh'„eon it and why should get dear -Run ” aAAt, the little girl -1 bag her pal'' -ae when he told the ,,.'ry of the raluel -
1her r. 11 0 making family in their n0-snme 'den—
you'll
e't-
you 11 Have you read it, thank -0r, deal It forge tun my manatee, Arian, that it stole upon the breathless ,.lance
you'll have e. write and thank him -fn ori that want. els nice
nlr—Ledo Emily, like a whisper, a whiayer fraught with
father's name. o' course, rho added sharp- the gives n rung a etlittle }low, and
lr the iaotmau brings me a silver tray with tremendous sigmflcanee. And as low, but
✓ in10 had not spoken, but had sat with a decanter—nal a.. common bottlb_s wins! as Mendicant was „oten ththe
ap lac} W, the e,
her large eyes fixed ou bitehas face; her
own woe very pale.
She took the letter ae if St were some-
thing that must be delicately handled,
and read it, noting the firm, bold hand
writing.- the thick, nice -feeling paper;
then, without raising her eyes, she said
in a low, soft voice:
•'There ie no address, It isn't even
but a decanter, x10' e. p ate n i,
them expensive ones you. 000 at pthe � ani, 1011100 ngrout and setovthe seas nflarts
swaying.
confec't:nuere 111 the _ _ _-da,-ilio lady
he poured me out a glace,
talked quite friendly like, an' asked me
questions --like where -did I learn to play
---I was just gotn' to say that I'd played
in the streets, but I pulled myself up, and
pretended 5x a bit o' biscuit ad gone
down the wrong way. • She slipped same.
(To be continued.)
SCHOOL TRAINS WOMEN.
signed.”
' into my 'and -rt was the half -
I -told -you -so tone: elle meant a counter- guinea} -half a guinea, think of it! -And Lally Wolseley's EPfotts to Educate
A stunner!" commented Tibby In an thin
fait cheque. then the footman comes; and shows me Horticulturists. -No, no; We genuine enough," Elieha out. 'Shall I order a cab, sir?' he ask0
hastened to secure her. "Ire -eta his gen- me. Yea, he said 'Sir!' Mona; taint like- Lady Wolseley, who since 180G has
to be y way u dein it. Hu didn't want ly as I should be mistaken' 11 was 'Sir'
been conducting a school at Glyn de,
to be thanked. That's ii," lain as plain could be; an' 1 puts on a
Irina ebot him a glance of comma -hen- little side, but says quite pleaeaut Siker. jn ,Sussex. England, for training
Mon and sympathy 'No, thank you. I prefer to walk after g
"Same game as he played with the pian- m 1 --l'" women horticulturists, has twelve
nor, • said Tilrby, "Well, 1 dont snow
us it ain't the proper way o' Juin' it; it's
the way I should do it, anyhow. -Mina,
you go with father, anti change the her•
der, end help him W (Amuse hie rigut.
It'll have to be ]dark, +i sou sr, all bock;
•M
-•eu
•Minae eyes were dancing. and. she OAP- ittidents this summer, all of whom
ped her bands softly.
-Bravo, Elishit!" are rapidly becoming expert. garden -
"res." he beamed up at her. "'I prefer el
•e
to walk after my or an' I says, a. b w, The opportunity for women ex-
dda open the t10or, an' gives me a bow,.
al.
e•xme as swell profess+ionua. }rear; and 1 nn' I come away!" He ma, tip and Paced arts in gardening is manifest from
''No ! Byrn' ie p• g g
euppux0:' doubtfully, -he aught to have
the room exa•itedl9• o .
a fnPpar. the a•tr0ets an' the colo all wet for you." letters which entre at the school
"No, no, Tibby," pat in Elieha hastily, -Or for Sou, dear!"n' I'm strong. asking, "Will y- stand. a lady
"]ant, a not [het bf,wlcr; it 00110 as f1 I eoh well. I'm used t0 11, a gardener to look after my roses 1•'
<011a one of them foreigners with long But's ft. over for both of no, please God.
burn" Mina! And you l! be orf to that 'wheel or, "(:'an I have a lady for three
^I dessay you'llhave n r n Hurn itis all
1•.
l• aft, of em ill t.a ing• an God bless hint m all I can t
or -
Mum wit 01 ' waver, e When LadyWelloelev heean her
o,, t to find out what° proper. I must gnlina'
go t0 work now. If the Prince o' wales Mina's lips moved: but an sound came , work the lace in question was a
I li t t¢ him and put p q
h t let 1` grow. this 010011 evening, An -- t .
said Tibby, eyeing him with tier head on through this gentleman's,Mr. Clr,te, d tnont-hs to get my garden in u
0100 side. d 'Tee sear purr - nook
e. •O y pi 11 01x101 be of tr say'" he wound nP with eel!-reder
0
should drop in while I'm out u.i11 Ivo gone from them; and she
wet
'1 thenu he s of Iettieeat Leve her arm round lite neck and soothed him,' poor cornfield badly i11fe?ted by
tar en. on
c s
and that I shan't be in 4111 L,rome h+ak• betiding over hint Eo what lin could nut, wi
A. New Photograph of the Poet -
Laureate, Dr. Robert Bridges.
unmusical should 'sing in church,
and confessed that "Law's potion
is in the main sound." ".111 will
agree," says the Laureate, "that
hymns are that part of the church
music 1111 which it is most desirable
that the eongregatien should join
in," bus he notes that "when peo-
ple are musical they would rather
listen, and when they are unmusi-
ea1 they would father sing."
Dr. Bridges thinks it safer to hold
with Law that "'singing is a general
talent" than to reserve the music
of the sanctuary for professional
performers. The author of "A
Serious Call" used these words:
"If a person were to forbear pray-
ing because he hart an odd tone in
his voice, he would have as good an
excuse as he. that -forbears from
singing because he has but little
management of his voice."
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Ideals are smooth and of any character your hand requires.` The
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L. E. 'Waterman Company, Limited, Montreal
$ter Vt+. 03
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0
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Fine Grain (red label) :
In this every grain from top
to bottom is about the sire of
a ppin ppoint, blue label
Like • sm Grsin ( )
Luke small seed pearls, even
and white and 15/0110015 of
ewcetueez.
Coarse Genie ( label)
Like smldl diamonds and
elmoOt as brilliant, but
qn tckly me;tcd.
®rder The Size You
Prefer.
Every grain, no [natter its
size, ie finest extra granulated
pure cave sugar, ebown by
analysts e9.90!l00 to too,? pure.
The weight G puarneteed se
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nags woo lbs., es lbs., ao lbs,
Cartons Sibs., a lbs.
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terns eemi ale and supply ed. 3[9 uywith pictures a to Gience eier. which yon roturne 10 Preemie Goodd
prices paid promptly by the week or month. No canvassing or solliug-aur trav-
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pleasant work the year round for whole or spare time, write us and. we will send
you oontraot and the prices we pay.
COMMERCIAL ART WORKS, 315 OOLLEGE STREET, TORONTO, ONT.
Ontario
Aailiated with the University of Re
�®��
��®Fbt?„ryg �® Toronto and under the aontrolof �b``�� a
the Department of AIrlculture
lo. A 1 for standar.
Veteri▪ nary
I tai [. 8 G W a ry E. Ant A. GRANGE,P
Principal.
to V.B., Mae., •gOCTOBER
a�8���� Toronto, Canada tfsts 1913
®ii,•e✓i✓6 ♦'mti b4s ®Ran�•O�6've✓tD a
0
Young Folks
When Little. Bear Went Sailing.
Once upon a time, when Father
Bear was dozing in hie big chain,
and Mather Bettie was piolring the
garden blackberries. Little Bear
[ furled towards the river, which
ran hack of the lwuse, c
"Were are yen going? asked
Mother Bear, as Little Bear opeued
the oaten gate.
"l'm going swimming,r" answer-
ed Baby Bear. Wading round in
the shallow water near the shore
was what he called swimming.
Mother Bear smiled, and kept on
picking blackberries. Little Bear
ran, Bopping and skipping, down
the garden path, toward the river.
Suddenly ha stopped short and+'
peeped through the bushes, because •
Bretlter Blue Jay called, in shrill
tones, "Jay ! Jay ! Jay!" Crows,
likewise, warned him nob to go far-.
"What can he the matter?" whis-
pered Baby Bear.
Upside -Down Bat, who has won-
derful ears, cautioned him to be
quiet. ""Hush!" said he. "There
is a man tying a boat too the wil-
lows!"
"Why, Uppy," exclaimed' Little
Bear, "are you awake in the day-
time?" He spoke like that to 'Up-
side -Down Bat because they were
old friends.
"Hush, Cubby, I tell 'you—
hush !"
The bat called Little Bear "Cub-
by" to tease him.
Out in the path danced Baby
Bear, ready for a pleasant funs with
his friend.
"Oh. ho, Ito ! What have we
here a" exclaimed the young man,
when tic+ saw Little Bear.
Little Bear stood still and stared,
He was nut afraid,
'";how see here, sir," said the
young man, as Ire stepped on shore,
"'you tell your father and your tno�
tiler that I am a butterfly -collector,
and I do not want ''on. But, sir—•
don't you go near my boat!"
Baby Bear did not answer. After
being told not to go near that boat
he should have kept out of it; bel.
after the young man was gone, o
baby Red -Head flew to the willowe
and• began talking woodpecker non-
sense to Little Bear, Suddenly the
wind snatched a feather from B,ed-
Head's new cap and sent it floating
down the river.
"Don't cry, Baby Red -Head 1"•
called Little Bear. "I'll get your
leather 1"
if you will believe it, he untied
that boat; jumped in, and away he
sailed. One oar fell overboard,
but Little Bear tried to paddle with
the ether. He thought that he
knew all about boats because he
had heard Father Bear tell the
Beaver children many boat stories.
Little Bear could not turn that
boat. The wind was blowing down-
stream. By the time Little Bear
knew that he could nob get back,
1t was useless to shout for help.
Little Bear became terribly
frightened, but he remembered Fa-
ther Bear's advice: "`If ewer you
find yourself adrift in an open boat,
keep your head."
So Little Bear kept his head, and
sure enough help came. Father
Kingfisher, saarehing the river for
fish, saw Little Bear sitting exact-
ly in the middle of the boat, hold
ing an unraisecl oar. Father King-
fisher knew that a little way beyond
was the wide, wide ocean, and the
river travelled fast. So does news.
Father Kingfisher flew along, and
told all the wild -wood folks ho met
that dear Little Bear was'floating
out to sea in a rowboat.
Immediately on learning such
dreadful news, all the best swim-
mers along the. rive rstarted in pur-
suit of the drifting boat: - rather
Beaver and all his brothers, Father
Otter and his folks, the -Mink fate -
and the Muskrat tribe left their
work and swam into the middle of
the stream, caught the boat, turn-
ed it round, and tied a grape -vine
rope to the bow and towed btlm'up
the river.
Several ]tours passed `before Fa-
ther Bear and Mother Bear saw the
unusual procession,
.. What do you suppose were the
first words Little Bear said to his
Mother Bear
'"Here's the, leather I went after
---it is frit you to give to Mrs. Red -
Head," '
What de you suppose Mother
Bear did then? She took that lit-
tle feather and cried over it—nor
would she allow it to be replaced in
Baby Red -Head's cap; And to thin;
day, it you care •lo visit the - three
bears, yon may nee that very feather
under a glass tumbler on the ewe
tel above' the fireplace.—Youths
G'ompanion.
1� A light feeder may digest her food EAT GART,IC AND T.IV1; LONG.
perfectly and hei an economical pro-
ec rd of 1 'sea '
-ee a1 0
k
f� arm 'e, should Health Cuiumoner or
�'�r .+. � T1 dater. \\ p no
'al He . t
� 1
each cow's feed one day each week Croatia Discoverer.
leaba ��,,� , ® and its market value, in connection
with weighing and testing of the Do you want to be a centen-
arian?
Keep Only the looney Makers. milk. Chen eat taeheschnaltova
The man who has malt two blades, This will show what a pound of and teeh'esehnakova tschorba. This
of grass grow where but one grewi mi the herd.k or tter costs from each cow the ltaydiscoal very
of Dr. nissionert of
before has been looked upon as a i Sell the cows that iodate batter
public benefactor. But the man; p' Croatia. The .strange words simply
1 fol. 26 cents per pound and keep al] mean garlic and garlic soup.
Dr. Gundrum, who is a specialist
on food values, has reached, after
many years of study and experi-
ment, the firm conclusion that gar -
lie is an unrivalled life preserva-
tive.
Dr. Gundrum takes direct ilgsue
with Prof. Metcltnikoff's claims
that the well-known longevity of
the Bulgarians is due to their feed-
ing on sour milk. The Croatian
specialist disputes the assertion
that the Bulgarians take much sora'
milk, but aunts they devour enor-
Lnows quantities of garlic. :Ur.
Gundrnnt in his report satyrs-:
"The Bulgarians Bnlg.arians eat; lat'ge quan-
tities of garlic three times a day,
especially garlic noup, which is pre-
pared with grated garlic, water,
vinegar, and paprika. The Bulgar-
ians are strictly orthodox, and have
many long periods of fasting, when
they must nob thuds any , animal
food, ineluding milli. '.lineae facts
are rigidly obi:served, and garlic
soap is practically their sts,ff of
li:fe,"
Dr. Guild -rum, after five years of
invetigatdon, is convinced that dh.e
health and longevity of the 13nlgai'-
ians are clue to their use of garlic.
�13e attributes this to its dlsinfeet-
ing properties, its aid to digestion,
and its action on the iittestin,al
tracts.
reworms. It wens fittinglJ theta-
who has succeeded in producing one;that produce a pound for fifteen
mina, when you've dente s11100g at the see the there m u eye,. toned Ragged Lando, but after blade at less cost has worked out a
wall, you might get ruin• thongs on Two She started at the evening eleso that m problem.cents. The scales, the Babcock
rounds in a week--. an lords au' ladled! night, the headmistress. One 0P those-
1 ! wear themselvre thin iu seven years of work—and all but. the Increased does not al test and paper I
ore complex pencil and1 a er will as -
reel
family's tremor
0n the bend!" Their t. xactti who
1 a ei•tn -ears of work—and all but the ncrease production
in a tremor or excitement, F, iib inn thew exacting but beloved tenrx, rec•rived' S I list in weedieg out the unpeofitable
wird to the nr:u'r.st Post Office ws.h Mina hes' with au pager =ivy, _ severer manual labor lifts b(vn clone ways bring increased profit. ln_I cows from the herd.
by itis skis; he walked sa fast ant she I ••I w•us+ wore send come bath to us, � creased profits from the dairy bust _�
with him if h T• "rot are ave 0i these' be the women students—the places �.
Wildmaid Mustard.
Tt reduce the cost of production Wild mustard is most common in
Si li Lava s.05, Intervale
kept u ' 1 , dear. e. a sa.t ,
he had not at innt•o vo ewpl„•d dead : who always tomo bank• who
ee And, , is a, reen and icture. lie arden. "38 mita[, ]ll a lneaSllre, CUlnt' lUm
Olmrt and gazed ileo u Y In, ,ik he; manage 't s<mrhow or wilier? And, eh,. g picturesque g more ecouumlcal production
I ! v a d Ie ash
vara 0 , ane e 1
;aro P ring to persuade h.mseif ; how I wish there were more o• yol y - looking anything but lenge
'MMMPSr0
Ili ,w:ra lint n. fall's 31 tllas eagerness was as }reen
that the whole th g
story. 'rhe order proved to be autheuile,;
and, with the money eluteehed in hie 100od,
Elieha went to the tailor s a few dc' is
higher ep. Two pounds go a. long 11.3 3• in
src•,.ond-hand .1,11111, -he wo.thl not have
dreamt f the extravagance of new 01108'
and when he had bargained and hag.0
glee with the Jew until both were net !
and breathless he came oat with n blank i
salt, .and fifteen shillings t, the good.;
tyfth the balane-e he wanted to buy a drr.� ,
irI°• but alma ellootude
for each of the R
in restraining him. '
"Tibby •would be angry, Midis,” she
said, with the wSFdom of the thri1iy pour.
"She would ration' have the 'tomer."
"that° 00, Y deeley." he assented re.
lui•t•Lrltly• "but you'll want :L proper rig•
out for dm echouL ,Hina.
"No, no; I am e11 right." She said
quickly,. •I have my best clreex and hat,
arid. its too wa0m for a jacket;" then,
seeing his dioappointment eho added,
"but Tibbywants a pair of bnote, and I':1
like a collar' or two and 5,m0 mfrs; no-
thing else; indeed, I've got. everything
else; beefdes, I m5Y want some hanks, bid
I can get. them at. the eacnnd-hand stall in
hfarket Street. I'm sure I've often aeon I
them:'
"And longed for them, I ileseey." hal
said wietfutly, "Mina, I'd like to be rich.'
b}tope 1011all get on, for your mid Tlb•
yes sakes.
'Anti for Mr. Olive's," she eaggeeted, In 1
a. low 00300.
' An' for his. o' enure°. I e�hnrrle .like to i
do ham credit. Its the, that makee m0:
SO 11e1'renx. I'm all of n• ehalt0: feel my
hand[ -•-Why, you're trembling ton Mita!
Well, 1t MIA to be surprleed at; Two
guineas a.:week, Phew! 1 ain't sure tube•
ther I'm :on my 'end or my 0010. Bat
what a .swell 'e intuit be to • 'ave eurh
friends, ctrl Mlual and to think of his
Rgode out o his way Le be so kind to the
Ilkeo of tel And yet that !chap that
Weals In Tdo Perk on Sunday m01010 a
SAYS AS the wish are all rotten and bad
ate eelflshi It's pretty plain ns 'e ain't
Mike our Mr. Oliver
et anybody n y the
"Of aouivle, you will pay hfm Hark
auee slur-
t.-:v0«loth O she acidafterAp
in will& Elieha kept murmuring:
nal/ a guinea a lesson --two guineas a
va0'1
"G" teursel" he assented et/eerie. "The
worm of it is he Ain`t Riven no address
did it o u3•po0e shouldn't wonder! Iittt.
5,'0'0100 he'll leek lit tq. see '0w Ten getting.
00. rh?- Ilya. [trial[ hs vfiii?
!0Ii0 color rem t0 her Mee, ter an M-
e bane, and she turned it away from the
eager eyes raised to here.
don't know; perhaps," she said al•
vomit InaudiblY•
01isi,t'e firm appointment wen tar 1110
fo1101011g .Vmerning, and Mina awaited hie
return, with a ner00u1 expeotet'.Oh which
eliuoxt prevented her practising; and she
O 0ln.rtel up ue the door 'opDeneedi and ho
embed in *11 0.41110 t with excitoneet,
mistrers'e, It seemed tie 0 the girl were
actually thirsting, with it fe,eri.,ll, insa-
tiable thirst, for knowledge; with her it
was a quick gait to echonl, and a Lagging
0110 from it. She wag intelligent as well
na eager, extraordinarily s0, and 1110 UM -
treed found that ellehad to e3leek rather
than urge her iv.vorit0 pupol on the road
•which the young usually rind paved with
flints. Ilar rapid1,roerc:,s was only egnal-
led by her implication and pereeter.tnrj.
I Y
muter' • SL was 130011S, honks, b0"ke, from
morning to night. tier v r:ce wan 1100 neg.
Ireton., .tot' tater a time I litha, whose f1v0
Penile had increased to five, dioe:overed
an old singingmuster, who, after he had
heard Mina eine, was enthueiuetie in his
belief in her future, and more than will -
log to give her lessons at a cheap rate.
Of course, the hard work, the mental
wear and tear, told upon her, She grew
thinner, and the Blear pallor of her face
was now indeed like ivory; but, es F.Ifsha
ihb declared that when it waen t p
h+ad a!d'
, she woe strongerthan elm
looked, and elle had 011 incentive of which
Tibby and 11{sha were ignorant: the.. long-
ing ((coir: to earn the 100ney to pay Mr,
Clive for the piano.
010 thought of him at all times, when
she was not at school; she thnugbt of
him as. she weal to and fro, and even
while she was going through the drudgery
of practising. fo Mina he reprei.euted all
that wee good and generous and noble.
Ono day her mletrree had glomi her a
00115' of Carlyle's "Hero Worship;•,end
before shelled read a dozen puttee she. had
been able to define Clivc's position in her
mind. lie wee a here; and, in simple
words, she worshipped him. life very
name sang through the songs she learnt
of her master.
14he was Senrerly eonsO10ue of the ash•
ing desire eo see her hero again; she only
knew than with al! Ililel good fortune which
had came from his hands there was still
something wanting, and that for this
vitae! something she longed with an nn•
speakable longing. Every time elle re-
turned r wtt
n .r Y,
wondered, n h
v d ed
11 home
she
r tln
cur rd
n'�hut she never
Relied;
whether he had come again,
+iinha's face would
heltedo a . glance at L
tang 1111<1 her; and as rtes days new by-
gniy the prurient, the artist ebeorbed in
hie warp, can kaon how qu{ak}y time
flies --oho gave up fill bolo of seeing him,
Tibby did not menalon h 9 name, tad not
Sold Mina i f otften,, endie prom sMinw would brit lis-
sha
ten in
of him
torrenin eilen0n, with downonBt two ,
she ohmtl0 probably; rover so0 tum again,
It was more than. 150 0tblo. it wee unto
lit 1 ( that.1o'bad. forgotten her --Betalin
ant 111xbY.'s a meant? an phn meat wait
until 011'0 hat} ear)led and saved enough to
nay ;hint • Of &1<001011, ho did not want fo
b6 Data, and that wap why he had net put
arise address to hie letter, but nlre Weide'
end out where to pend the money when
the time (1100140, what{ the time, 6am6!
Allo grew paler and still thinner; but sire
student has iter own - set of tools,
which site mint keep clear. Each
sees her 101,0k for the day posted
on the office wall and keeps a. diary
of her labors.
Lady Wolseley Supervises every-
thing, but the organization and
dire -et management is in the hands
of an expert, Mies More, who has
found that new students are fre-
quently so ignorant of first princi-
ples that it is necessary to allow
$500 a year for crops spoiled by be-
ginners.
The stoking of the greenhouse
fires in winter is done by the stu-
dents, while as pleasanter diver-
sions they edit. a magazine called
the Ragged llanlhler, have a chorus
and keep rip a team which plays the
old Sussex game of stoolball.
Fruit, flowers and vegetables
from Ragged Lands find many pri-
vate customers in London, Brighton
and Eastbourne.
1I!
Brown—"Stout people., they say,
are rarely guilty of meanness or
crime." Jones—"Well, you see,
it's So difficult for them to Stoop t0
anything low,"
the must have cows that by their;fields that are detoted to g
breeding and individuality are act - growing and disappears when a ro-
wed to our needs. For the uutter 1 tation with grass or cultivated
and cream producing dairy, tliecrops is Used. 11 scattering plaints
Jersey and Guernsey cows have a appear in the grain, they should be
pulled by hand. If the field is badly
Infested the plants may be sprayed
while in blossom with a solution of
iron, in the proportion of from 75
to 100 pounds of iron sulphate to 50
gallons of 'water.
After the grain is harvested, the
land should be worked up with a
disk or spring -tooth harrow to cover
the seed and induce germination.
Some of the plants can be destroy-
ed by late fall plowing. Early oriti•
nation hefere seeding in the spring
will destroy more of them. It the
field is still badly lnfe:t':d the treat-
ment should be repeated..
Sime Dairy Leek..
tr a e�
yiq�y,,
1Va^Hy
H'91it0
Laxatives
accomplish their purpose
with maximum efficiency
and minimum discomfort,
Increasing closes are not
needed.
z5c. a box at your
Druggist's. : 174
f`^I' NaftonaODruasnd1hemleal
nut" rcf Co, ofCansda,1lLMllod..
certain advantage because of the
character of their milk, which con-
tains a higher percentage of butter
fat.
The Holstein and ?Ayrshire cows
are compelled to elaborate more
solids to produce the same amount
of. fat. This is a breed characteris-
tic. -
• On the other hand the Holstein
and Ayrshire cows can produce milk
solids more economically and are
better fitted for the production .of
cheese and market milk.
Within the dairy breeds we find a
greater difference between indivi-
dual cows than between the breeds.
We are keeping too many cows. We
do not know what they produce nor
how mush they eat, Some pay a
profit and some are eating up the
profits made by the others. It' takes
the profits from the good cotes to
balance the loss from the poor cows,
The first step toward reducing the
cost of production is weighing and
testing of milk from each cow in
the herd often enough to keep a
good line on what :the is producing.
Weighing the milk for one day
o
each week and testing it cane each
month will i e rect
al
]Y
the
same resulte as weighing
and test-
ing'each milking.
By taking these weekly and
monthly records and making a year-
ly average, it is easy to determine
how much milk and butter each cow
hag produced for the year.
?This is bout one half the- question.
Some eteve are fairly large produc-
ers,- but not economical producers.
Others may produce less mills or
butter, yet be more ecoilpr11ioa1 pro-
ducers,
Dairying is not only a cash busi-
ness, but profitable when properly
handled;
1f the calf is to grow into a show
cow, it will be wise tr.- teach it to
lead before it gets too large.
Butter making on the f tem is pro-
fitable it good butter is reads, hut
the indiffet'eet kind will bring a
poor price, Learn to make geed
butter.
Don't strip the sow with the
thumb and finger, e1 but milk with
hand and
as
you
e whole ha
the 1
can, if you want to .make a good
cow of her. Get all the milk each
time or she will gradually dry up.
Little . Minnie "Oh, Mamma,
what's that dreaclhtl noise'!" Mam-
ma "Hush, darling, papa's trying
to save the price of a shave."
The real and enduring ing
greatness
of a nation always tins ltd eunreo in
the home; patriotism dwells within
the home that is haply.
kwfotthoadeohes-•-neuralgto headaches—eplitling,
Winding headaches -all wealth when you take
Na4trop•Co Ueaalatche Waters
'they do not contain phenaoofln, aoetanilld,
rhino, opium or any' other dangerous drug.
a box at your Druggist's, 120
NArlo00Lbmia a earllIICAL Co. or nausea. Warren.... ,0
1 et rFriendship.
Got( :C s o
"Are you good frlonde of the
Browns 7" •
!rI sheltie think •s0, We're takind
r
earn of their'•°cmnunl, bulldog g an
goldfish while they aro ' °,way en
their vacation."
;tionesty Ingalls ,what a Innis
nil/Ike 115 Well 410 what lie does. And...
ft, Iran is 'rot -hint 111ort of a Pool
now-a-(lotyt Milo '4t( apt. ithlteiufely,' +-
honest. -