HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1924-11-27, Page 2v eTAGGART BROS
BANKERS
ete general Banking Enslriess transact,
ed. Notes Discounted. l)rafts Issued.
interest, Allowed on Deposits. Sale
Notes Purchased.
H. T. RANCE
Notary Public Conveyancer.
--Financial, Ifeal, Estate , and Fire In-
aurance Agent, . Representing 14 Fire
insurance 'ComPanies.
Divisiori Court Office, Clinton.,
• W. BRYDONE.,
oarrister, solleitor, No,tery 'Public, ,ett.
° Office:
81.-,OAN DLOGPC CLINTON
' DR., J. C. CANDLER
'Office Hours: -1.50 to 3.e0. p.in., 7.30
to- 9.0(./ pJ Sundayeele.30 to 1,85 Pm
' Other' hours by, appointment only,
Office eind 'Residence e--- Victoria St.
DR, METCALF
EtAYFIELD, ONT.
Ofilce Hours ---2 to 4, 7 to 8. ,
Other hours by arinomtmeeei
DR. H. S. BROWN, L.M.C.C.
Office Hours '
1.30 to .3.30 p.m.. 7.30 ,th 9,00 p.m.
Surereaya. 1.00 to 2.0.0 p.m."
Other houre by appointment
- Phonea
Office, 218W.. lieeldence, 2183
DR. PERCIVAL HEARN
°moo and Residence':
Huron Street Clinton, One,
Phone 69
(PorniellY occupied by the late Lir.
C. W. Thompson),
Eyes Examined and Classee Fitted.
Dr. A Newton Brady Bayfield
• Graduate Dublin leiniversitye Ireland.
Late Extern Assiatant Master, Ro-
tunda Hospital for Women and Child-
ren, Dublin. • '
Office at residenee lately occupied by
Mrs. Pampas.
elourste--9 to 10 a.m., 6 to 7 p.m.
.
Sundays -i- to 2 pen,
DR:. A. M. HEIST
•• Opteepethetic Physician.
• Liceutiate Iowa and Michigan State
Boatcls or Medical Exareinere. Acute
and chronic diseasee treated. Spinal
. adjustments given to remove the brume
of, disease. At the Graham House,
Clinton, every, Tuesday forenoon. .
80-3MP.
DR. 1V1cINNES .
or winghaia,;w111 be at.the Conn/Jere-
Chiropractor.
WI' Inn, CliitiPie on Monday -and
Thursclay forenoons eeth week.
'Diseases ot all leinde succeesfully
handled. '
CHARLES B. HALE
Conveyancer, Notary Public, Commis -
skitter, etc.'
REAL ESTATE AND INSERANCLI
HURON STREET . CLINTON
M. T. CORLESS
CLINTON; 'ONT,
District Agent
The Ontario and Equitable Life
and Accident Instrance
West Wamianosh. Mutual Fire
•
Insurance Co.
netabuelied 1878,
President, Sohn A. McKenzie, Kincar-
dine; leice•President, R. L. Salkeld,
Goderich; Secretettee Titos, G. Allen,
Dungannoe. Total amount of Mein'.
• anee nearly ;12,000,000. . In ten years
' number of policies have Increased
from 2.700 to- 4,500. Viet rate ot $2,
per $1000. Cash on hand $26,000.
H. L. Salkeld Goderieh, Ont.
Wes. Stevens, Clinton, Local Agent,
GEORGE P.).1 JOTT
Licensed Auctioneer for the County
of Huron. ".
Correspondence proMptly answered.
Immediate arrangements can be made
for Sales Date at The News -Recent.
Clinton, or by catling Phone 203.
Charges Moderate and Satiefaction
' Guarariteed. •
B. R. HIGGINS
centore Ont,
General Fire Land Life bareiranee. Agent
for Ilartferd Wiadstortn, Live Stock,
Automobile end Sickness mid Accidetit
Insurance. Rueoh and Erie and Cana -
ea Trust 13onds, Appointnieuts' mane
to meet parties at Bruce/laid, Varna
and Ilayileld. 'Phoue 67,
• The McKillop Mutual
Fire Insurance Company
Head. Office Seaforth Ont.
DIRECTORY:
Presid ent, Seines Coriaolly, Go tieriee
Viee, Ames Eyans, Beechwood;
• Treasur,er, Thos. E. Hays, Searorth,
Directors: George IdeCartney, Sea -
forth; D..9'. McGregor, Seaforth; 3. G.
Grieve, Walton -' Wm. Ring, Seaforth;
113, Ilitelheen, Clinten; Robert "Peeress,'
Ilerlock:, JO/74 Bentieweir, Bredhagen;
:nee. Connolly,- Goderieh.
- Agorae.: Alex, Latch, Clinton; J. W.
Yeti, Gederich; Ed. Hinehray, Sea -
forth; W. Ohe,sney, Egthendylile; 11,
G. Jarreuth, Broelhagen. •
Any, ineney to be paid lia rna.y be
paid to Moorieli Clothing Co., Clinton,
or at Cutt's,Grocery, Goderich, ,
Parties deeeriag to affect Insurance
or transact other business will be
promptly 'attended to on application to
any Of the OboVe officers addreSsed to
theiterespectivo post office. Losses
inepeoted. by the Director who 1ive3
nearest the scene. "
• ,
A 'ffAig
TIME TABLE
irealne will arrive at and depart froni
, Clinton as followe; '
'Buffalo and Oodeeich
GoingEast, depart , • 0:25 teen,'
doing West,, ay. 11.10 e.m"
ae, 5.08 dp. feel" p.m.
er. 10.04 p.m
London,'. Huron 8, Bruce ph,. •
Going Sotttliar. 7.50 dp. -7.56
Going North, depart. 0.59 pa,
" 11.05 11.15 aat,
The chances,are, taidng any planet
at random, that it in • unlikely we
shoeld iind on it anything altin to Pe
uinan life. --Sir Oliver Lodge, , pe
NEW
' N, ONTARIO
Terms of Subscription -12.00 P'0 Y0
atitance, to Canadian addresses;
y1,aO lo the U.S., or other' foreign
,counir.es, No paper gliscontinlied
until all arrears rre paid unless at
the option of the publisher ' The
date to which every subscription is
paid is denoted on the label,
Advertising Rates -Transient adver.
tisements, 10 cents per 'nonpareil
line for first Insertion and 5 cents
per line For eacit subsequent inse
don. 0ma1l advertisements not to
exceed one -inch, such as
"Strayed," or "Stolen," etc„ inserted
once for 35ceuts, and each subs,e-
quent insertion 15 cents.
Communications Intended for puble
tion must as a guarantee of good
faith, be accompanied by the name of
the writer. ,
G. E. HALL, M. It. CLABE,
Proprietor, • Editor.
BEAT SUGAR IN "
WESTERN CANADA
There ha- been considerable intereet
eviaced in Western. Canada sincethe
conelusion of the wax over the grow-
ing of sugar beets and the possibility
of reviving the sugar industry which
had such a .brier existence anti came
to an. end in 1912,..In the, opinion of ex-
perts, due to, lack of experience and
mismanagement, There is new a
fairly definite certainty that this area
is now to see the, establishment of a
new plant- under more favorable aus-
pices and another activity .potentially.
of great profit -added to the varied ag-
ricultural anel industrial' phases' of
West -ern Canada. -
There has -never existed any doubt
as to the possibilities of the beet sugar
indestry in Western Canada trona the
agricultural point of view, Climate
and sof/ have leng been demenstrated
to be eminently suitable. It was long
ago predicted that the irrigated 'blocks
of Southern Alberta would beemerie one
of the greatest -beet sugar growing dice
tficts on the -American emetinent. Ex-
periments' carried on at .Lethbriclge,
Gleicheu, and other points in the area,
have iedicated an excess both in ton-
nage and sugar content over beet pro-
duction in the Western•Ilnited Statetx,
United States interests, keenly
aware ef these possibilities, have‘had
tht;ir eyes up Southern Alberta for
,sonae time, and it haa been evident that
it was merelyea matter of laying a ire -
cure foundatioa before a ylant was
erected and suanufaeturiag -wise coni-
meneed, In the sieving oe the prepent
year the farmersof the Remanti die.
trict were organized for the grewing
of test plots, onee"intedred and fifty-
two' fathers euthurilastically enlisting,
a total of 8,119 acres being planted in
con.sequence, -about seven "Southern
Alberta towns and au additional acre-
age of 2,345 put under preparetion.
Probable Erection of Plant,
•
All gummier a lied expert of the
promoting company was in the area
superintending the planting and other
operations, ad aiding the farmers 'With
advice, ' Recently representatives oe
the company made a survey of these
plots and declared themselves entirely
satiated 'with the prospects, As a re -
milt it is understood that a sugar beet
plant will definitely be erected in
Southern Alberta some time next year,
merely the location of this establish.
ment being in atiestien, though the
city of Lethbridge is thougbt 90 be
favored.
At the seine One attention has been
directed to otbei• areas in the some
regard. Itxperiments carried on for
years have establisbee the fact diet a
sugar beet ot unsurpaesed mtality can
be produced. in Maniteba, the soil of
the Red River erolley, similar to that
about Grand Forks in North Dakota,
where the culture bas been success -
established., being particularly
well adapted to beet production. In-
vestigations have been carried en In
this area all summer by two repre-
sentatives 'ot an Aamerican -concert,
and it le coasidered a distinct, proba-
bility that in the near future a plant
fer the naanefacture of beet sugar will
be 'established at Winnipeg. Platte
hate already been made to line up:the
thrillers to preduce a .sufficient quan-
tity ot beete ana an erideavor is being
made to interest local capital in the
eetablishment of such a plant.
Mush & Plays a Great Part in
Lik. of Frenth-Canadian.
Here is a Seethe -inns of the musical
proclivities oe the great French ,Cana-
dian -0500, as told by one who anent
sev.eral 'years SlUdYlng the enetome
clewn. in Quebec and the IVIaritime Pro-
vInce8:
"In French-Canadian homes," Ulla
authority siatea, "children are rocloed
with a. song frOm their birth;' ivinten
they are old enough to attend school,
they receive singing or histrumental
musie freni either -their school teach-
ers or' private teachers, ,At -*home,
music lia,s its Place of honor; and der-
ing the day piano, violin, mandolin or
accordion is not left idle; but above
-all singing is the favorite pastime of
the Irrench•Qapadian, and above all
songs the ones he "prefers. are the old. -
time melodies' which last; old French
sohge , from the :XIV.; XV. and XEI.
centuries, Which, he inherited from his
fore -fathers, are also his favorites-.
And 'oft you "will lthar theefarmer, wbile
blowing' In his Pole, •or the shepherd
bee geardieg his flock, sing one
those old songs Which they love. Dur-
ing the evenings, itfter their meal, ansi.
while taking el rest in the. garden, on
,the verandah or Within their hoines,
the Freeen-Canacliapp fanilly, where
children are many 'and happiness'
abides„ sing together eome of those
nil ecings of. UnTlying sentimentality
and tenderness, wet)] oosoltde e.neeeltY,
If you are aepasseaby you will stop
and listen. Yon will remember home
and mother, .and you will thank elextv,
en fee siele,g, resisie to tho world."
4!),
Real Wisdom.
'WI. se men profit by their own e
rieire,e; the still Iviser by the ,c
ric-ace of ()there.
a
ber'orni aiLed iq hcr ard 'tid her on
' bits of bread and Sugar, she too
A black pody, 'esautifu coal- acit , , , , _ , ,
with arching neck, Militant eye, „ley_
mowou pteasate at, nu: appreacc, ami,
400 long, f",wcening 'tan. Never was otV,i`teevt,'-iuonbi,,in to 1-801111t, her without,
,),Treototiezin.07.L'eabiZeuti:,,f171.1 • .ode er elm t the "rounds and
s'ow in my li-re,'Eatbm'VP'°21"Yiedi Ferd r' tthhef:nr,;figellitand Pathir euP carc-fu-Y
Lar
Fenton, 'Standing transfixed -on the, Is. ins mo-rning 'he ran out before
skievvalk beside the hitching poor, school to give her an apple, and laugh -
where Vixen stood, her brightey..e,; ed th hear 1)81--youriy,y et his au,.
looking ,eut from under the silky leclis preach. ,•
sfboulitclh' her asmaeaiiihtatele: aHge was ainb°1Wils,"inbgt ; At recess' Larry Delison with his
a
boy of twelve,. and' almost -too pretty,' us.u,y'aleebiuellYeienega"telirrheinaemeyoutiptc'
r builsiiiTnte.ss;
perhapS, with his regular features, round after my 1-,14ny " he said. "What
and .close -curling, gold -colored hair, right have y,ou'urith hey?"
and .natty costunge--evidentlY mot eery futhenbought her, said Feld.
er's -darling, but none the less honest,' "He'tl better have been doing sortie -
and frank for that, perhaps. Ford ,thi,ng else then. Loolc here! the'first
Penton was not 'zPOiled. "Did Ymni time I:Bee y ere t r
revaetrhers?e,e such. a handsome (meet give you a licpltuirtglng i4PP11,
' •Ferd made no reply. IIe was afeaid
"No," said 141r. Penton. "I don't of Larry, for he Was big and ugly,
know that 1 e'ver d'id, Ferdinand."- while he, was light for his years, and
"So fat an_d glossy' and with such did not 'like :fighting. But he did not
a mite look!" cried Fere. ' int,end to give up riding' Vixen.
pony'8 side arid the animal responded' should meet Larry. But the latter:
He die not think it likely that he
He put his hand gently on the
rtdher emitimeed to annoy end threaten him
at. every opportunity -calling him
by a low,
delighted F2e°Irdt.wilerirellylr which
au a ou
her"01,,he Father, ,Yeish I could eavellnn4mM, eie81; tthofr°ws eihnogo 1 sth6onnerss, aanndd sand
ditinagt
Mr. Fenton did bet reply, but stood himself as disagreeable es' possible.
watching Perel as he' stepped back ad dllreeasdooton bFeecar, ewhaosrardc'eseonfsec°Lst;ouaguht
forth, eyeilig the pony from head to -
foot with increasing and deepening to despise as well as fear hiro.
delight. .
"I wish you could buy her for me"
he said.
"Probably he is toot for sale, Ferd.
Besides, buying a horse 'is a risky
/natter fox Otte not versed in horse-
flesh, as I certainly am not. Perhaps
thiSS pony is not sound, or has some
serious fault," ,
With many a long, lingering look
cast, behind, on Perd's part, the tivo
mght, Ins dreams were all of the black
pony which, however, he did riot see
for some 'weeks. , • -
But it chanced that Mr. Fenton- gee,
Ile bullies me because I'm smaller
than he ie. He goes around swelled
op like a toad, he feels so big. If I
were only large enough, I'd take the
conceit out of hirre, though I hate
fighting," he Raid to his school -mates.
"It's lew and brutal."
Ferd continued to' ride Vixen.
Though she Vasa trifle fractious at
being- saddled and, bridled, evidently
fearing rough handling, by careful
passed down the street; and that soothing and gentleness Ferd soon had
little trouble with her, She grew
'daily quieter and milder, arid, having
nothing to fear, soon became loving
and grateful for the kind care she
mg into the village again a fortnight received, She veould lay her head on
later, saw the animal again hitched Ferd's shoulder, and put her noee in
to the post before the stere. As he his pocket after sugar.
I A week of vacation eame, and he
made an involuntary pause, Mr. 'r ;d An
Dobson came out of the postofficerode around upon Vixen a great deal.
unfastened the halter. She seemed to enjoy the gallops along
the country roads as well as he did.
A nice pony that`of yours I think
Mr. Dobson," said Mr. Fetton.
"She looks well enough -yes, she
looks well," responded Mr, Dobson,
tightening the girth. "Whoa, Vixen!"
as the animal turned her heed and
made a soap at his hands. "Looks 4,
confounded sight better than she is,
I expect to get eny head bitten offi
some time with her.'
"Tricky?"
"Yes; bites and kicks if things don't
go just to suit. But Larry'e been
rough with 'her. She's his, and he's
just about spoiled her. She was peace-
able enough," an, the fath'er's brow
darkened at thoughts of his head-
strong son.
Larry Dobeen • was known all
through town j a short, thick -set bully,
Self -conceited and -tyrannical to all
,weaker creatures, disliked by older
people, feared by younger ones. Ie
spite of his father's frequent correc-
tions and his mother's soerow, he was
a thoroughly bad boy, and at this time
annorentlY growing 'into a worse one.
"Larry isn't fit .to have a hone,"
added Mr, Dobson. "I've half a mind,
eennetimee to sell this one." -
With that he vaulted into the sad-
dle arid rode ,away, and, though a large
man, Vixela carried his -weight very
easily and gracefully.
That eveningtlr. Penton mentioned
to Ferd ,that he had again seen the
black,pony and found out to whom she
belonged, but said nothing further
But one day, as he was riding slow-
ly horaeward, having been on an er-
rand or his father, he met it trio of
boys who had been nutting, among
them Larry Dobson. Ferd started in
alarm, for he ware alone, and Larry
WU accompanied by two bon as /ergo.
and nearly as vicious as was. They
began whooping. and vaulting over a
wall, and Perd involuntarily drew he
Vixen, and tried to wheel about, se
the boys, in cruel glee at his alarm,
approached him. But Vixen pricked
up her ears and would not stir, Per -
hope, as Ferd did, she recognized in
Larry Dobson an enemy; but, as the
stone Larry hurled at Perd's head
xnissed its mark, and etruck her di-
rectly between the eyes, she snorted,
plunged, reared, and rushed madly
upon her foe, catching him in her
mouth and shaking him, while strik-
ing out furiously evith her feet.
' The other bays screamed in terror
and fied, 'while Ferd flung hienaeIe
upon the ground and tried to seize the
bit. When he had done so and obtained
control over the furious animal, Larry
lay still and senseiess under her feet.
In vain he called namee the cruel
boy was inseesible, if not dead.
Me. Penton evae in the yard, wait-
ing for his son's returii, when Ferd,
With a,pele face, tode up to the gate.
• "Oh, Father! afraid Larry Dob-
son is killed I" -
A few =meets brought assistance
although Ferd xemarked that"h to the peostrate lad. His shoulder was
should not like to be. Larry Dobson4, dislocated, his leg ,broken, and in
horae.tv , long oonvaleseence he had plenty of
time to Consi.eer lip past career. IIe
The next day as the famil • •
e Economy o
ood's 'Selma*
pvea18 to every fu8ilyn thesd
Frent no other inedicine _
• so inn011 real medicinal difee.it as' '
this. It is a highly concentrated
extiaci" Of several valuable medicinal
ingrodients, Plire and wholesome.
The dorie is small, only a teaspoonful
three tlines a day. ,
Hood's Sarsaparilla is a wonderful
tonic rinedicioe for the blood stom-
ach, liverand ltitimeys,, prompt int
giving relief. It is pleasant to take,
agreeable to the stomach, gives a
thrill of new life. Why not try It 0,
these who hoard it: 'Come quickly or
I perish,'
"Tho 009 morning at the Sorbonne
i was the ,most inattentive of listeners
and with my classmates the most ab-
sent-minded of companion. As soon as
1 Unistaed dinner 1 hurried back to my
room ,and posteol myself at the win-
- "Many minutes passed. Finally, the
my,sterions "voice rose above the otreee,
,as pure, as moving as the evening bo -
1000: I was intoxicated with it and,
, when ti/E) thud' of the closing ',5Tano
, 'Miss Martha Osteno, the twent3iifouriyeac-old scnoc1 551221,00 et ..nanttoba , put 'au end to the melody I was 0h, '
Whe won a $13,500 .prize tor, a story: recently, portraying the romance ,of a., I iiged to recognize this absurd and fan.
'western farmer, 'is 'shown being presented with the ' cheque. .1 tc.stie. fact: I was in love with my in.'
1 Vi
s
i
yb
l
se iv
e
-uel,gsa
hb°sr.in .
love , as on
.... e is at
; eighteen,, wlien the heft has never
beaten excitedly beeare, when the
brain whirls with a thousand dreams.
"In the days which folloswed I tried
to find out sameihing about my un-
known. I ,interroeated various people
in the neighborhood, Nobody could
give me ' any into:Illation. The old
mansion was hidden behind a modern
ee i house: • The park which inclosed 'it -
.. "Men are wrong, When they are mar,
d
ried, to evoke memories of ..the past.
,
Icvonuilon le, we arseakept
td Lloonollytetith. roufliwaas gnaotet
but .for once, since youw11T:his ty,o- In Piii. dile).- ferierrdetasheoeliiov..aesanetilpoeata:Itgps oopranui isehhreathytteyolokitnatolnouni.roy,
make the confeesion
mand. You cannot be Jealous of niy
first love -jealous of the onlY woman' nnid'Aguodtneic;
tiunitihosd.iiineorlkor,sedfolwitagtho ttput idr pal ie.
before you, my, dear, who .made my,1
ready the rude blasts of October were '
heaurtw, inepsalloyigthlitreoebn.
'and had waived, in 'stripping the trees, • The leaves fel),
Paris to take a Course at ehe Sor- tehnoe bonyi,:ottlitien. bIetwtvaotecihiemd,othoenindeatillio, It!
bonne. My family,- concerned tor my
I (
A man who Is The unhappy possessor 1
of a black eye is likely to be ashamed
of it and ardently, to wish for seine ,
means either of diegeising or of speed-
ily cereng it. But nine timas. out of tan
a black eye is nothing.to be 'ashamed
of. In Mest eases it, is esquire& in:
nocenely enough- by bunaping against
a door in the dark or ea the result of
any one of a doten other accidents;
end even if Redoes eorne from contact
with the ilea of anotner, to Eget may
be the only course when the °epee is
just. In. that case .a black eye ie. an
ha°oWne°nertaus4salidw";°°(putiunnudd,"a°bri.Uais' bel'aecrk-theeYetliss-
sues beneatb. the akin with rupture of
tee bleor3, vessels and the consequeat
escape • of blood. This dlooloration
.may, however, be the result of leakage comfort, had found msra suitable lodg-
.
known became less dense my impate
' 4
ot blood from n other causes thaa ing in a flare,* street in the Faubourg
:once became more unbearable. 1 was
blow; severe straining or Coughing Saint Germain. was on tee top ifionvaellygitonio going rolntienenehoe:Tepathsoelobne.eng 5 '
may cause such an effusion, especially floor of an -old house -a suite :etmd*
-s
all '
into the eyelids or under the conunc-moms', well lighted, clean and almost"One morning I saw her Side was
!
Acress the ,web ,of half bare branchea
five, on the ball of the eye; discolora- elegant. No noises penetreted to this walking along 'one ot 990 gardee petite,
don May even occur spontaneteusly as retreat. Through the windows I could
a symptom of scurvy or of purpura or see only the sky and the tell trees she appeared to me, no longer in a.
ol
in a case of arteriosclerosis.. In fact a garden -the remalas of a Peek which dream, but as site was -bent, broken,
there isno difference except of OM. once inclosed a fashionable mansion, trembling, ter face wrinkled and her
tion between a black eye and the ef- of 'long ago.•
hair snON'ir white) -
fusion of blood beneatbethe skin in any
I wept aE day like a child. I
part ref the body. • roul'IvidnagsreatlY sgpleased with My sin' th
, wept over my first dead illusion, over
The clanger to health or life) of a home in the tountry. I love
Whiell imilimie6 me of my
my III•st love, blasted by the cold
blar ck eye oother braise is virtually tide. I drew from it an ardor .for WOrk
d its soli- autumh winds.,,
negligible so long ae tbe skin is an. Which kept nie bent all evening over
"-------e—
broken, and treatment 10 called for 1117 notebooks without exPerMtne
ionoing SU. o the
e English Coast.
only to prevent discoloration or to ani- sense of fatigue. This- ardor eon- "
cause the blood to abserb as rapidly as Unite/ ell winter and into the first Tevieight has taken soleran shore '
possible. lereseure Is the ftest thing e. Weeks of spring. , But pree'entlY tee And humble street, but all the sea
physician Or a first-aid graduate thinks mild breath of the twilight and the Ts brinemed with, coloe jewel -pure;
of to retrain bleeding, 'whether it is odors of its ewers' and the verdure be -
external or Subcutaneous. But pros- gam te trouble me. I fell into the habit Jasper and tose 'of pearl afar,
sure is not feasible In the ease of a, of sitting by the open window and Long rifts of broken amethyst
awaiting the night, a book on ray lap, And beryl at the harbor bar,
a book whose pages I forgot to turn
-
my eyes -wandering across the Wined The fishing fleets are come to rest,
azure' of the sky, In which the ewe'. Anchored of droame, their fallen sails
A Black Eye.
MY NEIGHBOR
INVISIBLE
ay Roger Regis
Tranelatee be
William L. McPherson
blow near the eye, and so resort must
be had to hot or cold application,
either of which will be more or less
effective if applied promptly. If hot
elndieations are preferred, they sheuld lows dashed to and feo, or ever the Olean °Weed agitent the amber west.
be not merely warm but really hot mid tops of the trees undulating at my feet
e,
should not be kept on too long, since like a greenish oeetin. - . No wind; but where the ebb Udhien!
they would then cause the CMOs to "Cite evening as I was In this sort
ry
relax and thus increase the bleeding. at halt conscious eestaeY 5 was stir- Sing
gnetalstnpooyolwanomei
shthren
itertinuwn:y
aets,
be renewed frequently and not be ale which seemed to come from the near -
lowed to bourne 0001 or lukewarm. by mansion, a voi,e which smelled Thrust out a little from the land.
Ice-cold applications are usually more Prised to her a voice singing in thle
Miele trembles over wave aud stetted
Convenient and efficient; they should great silence. It was it votaan's vie,
And gathers on a single boat
They will not ere of Mach 050 after the me softened by the distence, but pure,
effusien of blood has occlurred; that ie.
'
light, aerial and slightly hesitant Where, as the shadows overwhelm, like .
tbree or four hours after the accident, the voices of young girls'. It sitng ea A loweset light shines steadfastly
When ne much time as • that has old air whose words I could net disi 13eteeeee the masthead and the helm.
elapsedand all danger et further tinguish but 'wiles° rhYthill, archalCal.- , .
bleeding is past absorption of the Ily melodious, at gime caugbt my fancy. 1l lonely, clear, unwavering light,
blood may We hastened by warm or , Trembling With a deliciolle' sensation,
night.
Fair as a star but tenderer,
hot applicatiolis made 'intermittently, ' / listened to the notes of this invisible • Pure as a Presence in the.
eintei
aerftlernatinnylt,.
ourat a tithe three or four ; singers aceompattled by the.faint eounncl
t
; of a piano gently topched.
Sudde1yEarth has lee home et myater •
she broke oft. - There 'was a dull thud, • The eges fall away; dark- toldY;
,` , silence agaih. • ilelancy Byrd Turner 15 Youth's Coon -
"She
an was As deep as love on Galilee.
A Poen] You Ought to Know , that of a piano's e:using.
Was a Phantom of Delight." 1 "That evening I 'was long le getting ' Pardcin• . '
When. William Worasworth and his to sleep. Afterwards I thought I saw
Slater were touring the elighlimas of leY mysteriatis unknown he ray dreams. ' .7'F------4'.-amotle Tree Dying -
Scotland the poet saw- a' girl whoee "She was hardly tweietye She was , Mexico's most famous tree that un -
sitting innocence, ame therm med. a .biond, Pale and slender, Pretty, like 19 der which -Cortez is .supposed to have
W
realmed that people had little pity for
sitting down ta dinner, Feed eueaea • h
, . . . lasting mpreesion on his mind, if not too frail fiewer, and ha her eyes -those sought shelter 400 erSars ago when
into the house, exclaiming: m; he was hated and feered by'ii,
"Here's Mr Dolmen ' '
. , riding into the nearly all; and be knew tha', he nee;
, e: upon his heart. • of a melaneholy recluse -there were driven from- the tee eapital, Is sloWly
met with hut a init. 1)11.11110httl' It for e i Otte of his Most beautiful Poems, gleams of fever, prayer and revelt. -The dying and ell efforts of the tree sue'
yard on Vixen. Oh; Father, can't you long - - , - ' . e . "The Highland Girl," 'was the reeult, '. most romantie visions haunted me un- geons to arrest the progress of decay
buy h,ssle . course af crtiseity and unkindness; , ,
• and the ihst two of the' foltowing three til daylight. Thlei young woman I have been futile.
Mr. Fenton went out He t need 90 6thers. .. ' . atm:mita. The last Was added after his
with his visitor eor. a long time, ' • a -- ' At th nd f si -h •
e e o , ,x. weeks e emie . . .. .
mareiage, and tide wnole poem Is thus imagined to be, an orplien kept in se-; •
two men apparently conversing about front his sick lied ,,a quieter mid more elusion by some jealous guardian. In 1 _a -a,
to hes wile, who was her prison she languielled ami awaited
The Olelest Hymn 1 *
the ponsi; for Ford watched them from discreet, boy. But to the end of his made to refer
the window, as his mother forbade hie dayhe limped, and the story was told no"s ae„ sahrssi (”,e es' „
ighhual girl' the toming of a eavion She called for ee.semeeene hymn, 4,000 years1
Mr. Dobsoti might have called to offer '1" old,
He eras. obliged to eat Ws dinner -;'-13y Eathir Serie Xenneth. She was a.Pitantom of delight Went song,
him elrery eveeing byeeinging the an. believed to be the oldest musical COM-
W/1Ch/ projeoted 500055 (he ' position In the ivorld, has been trans,
geingeout. ' . a how Vixen avelnged herself.
with eagerness to know Whether thee° When flret she gleximed mien- DIY sight, trees. 51 the mirk, was meant to Say to 1 lated by -a bieeotiati In Germany.
, -
and go to school,' although burning .A lovely Appaeition, eet ---.
. . . , . . COMpiaSers arta Old Elastria- To be a Moment's ornameati ,
was anything in his suspicion that , • relents, Her eyee as stets of Twilight fairl"
Like •Twiliglit, too, her duisky hair;
Vixen for sale, Tim marvel of the classic sonatas Btit ail things else -about her drawn
him a pony, end he believed he should we ''
prOin'ised for the Piano is increased Lor us when
remember the dereetrve instru,
written, From May -time an cl th e cheeefill
Long ago bit tether had
neVer see another "so juat right" as neleete ler which theY. Wore . ,
A 'lancing Shape, an Image gaY,
Vixen. ' • and 80 which they wore nest elaeed. To Maine to startle, and waylay.
Oh, if Mr. Debsen, would sell her
, In ,Beethloven's day, for example, ,the
'
and his father would buy her! "/ti ,-.Piane had ,a .eemPaas 09 eelY "6 end I satv her 'Ilion nearer view
,
fact, the pony Was 50 010011 in his li.sad
that his spelling lesson couldn't get in. a half octaVet and but little tone. M -o- A spirit, Yet a woman too!
art's piano was an oCtave Shorter than Her 1,011801,0m .matia„, light a„d free,
He wag ,conseqpeirely obliged to 're- that. 19 13 siirprising vvhat these two •
"rain after School t ' 't 't, 1. h
- o 'eel 0 1 , NNE 11C great nien did with the piano which "83111 steps of v'irgin-libertYi •
A countenance in m'hich did xneet
was a new experience with Ferd, and 'iv" all they-glad.'Sim y
earl it cannot
Swoet records, promises as sweet;
89 very unnleaSant that he came home be dOubted tha,t the eetremedhlarY de- A Creature, eat top bright er good
at last with rather a dispirited air. velopment of ptaricionu2sie beatity made For human nature's daily folarf
With what a Sh0C1 Cf joy he saw bY Chapin was d"e in 6,°Inn
° 'eneure For transient sorretts, simple wiles,
the pony feeding on the lavvn before_ to thosem
improvements., Po the instill'
thehuse. She had 'been turned into Praise, Wattle, love, kisses, tears, and
merit during. the nineteenth century, ewillea
the aftermath end was without sad- of which he was able to take advant- '
1
Ole or bridle ' - "Oh, I'm sure Father' has bought • - e Eige. And' now N .
see vial eye r.mrene
'lee u was , - Dig Huntee
Ferd's sanguine thought, . , The very pulee of thmachine; .
,., A Being breathing thoughteel breath,
as iie bounde'd into the' house. ..... O'Grady had 808 8011'8.1 8' gr88g8 A Traveler betweeu lite and eeath;
"Father/ The pony -have .yeu?" he agalleet 0C'n,'000, and eatighl for a 'Phe reason Wm, the, temileraie will,
cried. incoherently. • , ,. . waY to PaY 3],nn eal,', ,•lEacturance, foresight, strength and '
• "Yes, Ferdinand, answered . Mr.
.. "I say, O'Connor, ' he said, '3'000 re- • skill'
Penton more 'quietly. "Mr.• pobsen meMber you told ine you had hunted ,
, A 'Perfect Weman, nobly planned,
has seed me Vixen,. because leereee111- tigers in eirest Africa'? Well, Captain To warn, to comfort, and conimand;
treated her 80. He has made' 90s' a Filip.th tellmethere are no tigers
little lame, but we think she will soon there." ' - ' With something of angelilight.
And yet a Spirit still, and bright
eet over ,it. It is a great pity she has "Quite right, quiterileht," said O'Con-
. . c
nor, blandly, "I killed them all."
for 1 seppose she is not quite snte; 4. -------
but I an a great believer in kindeeesi "Wheee did the ear hit hen?" asked
. .
With Vixen, we cannot cure her of her
Let ns see if by beieg very gentle
bad habits of. kicking and biting." "lodge (to victim of hold-up)a-
"While you were being relieved of
Steong Language.
eervioal vertebrae," repliee the medi,
cal witnese• • ' '
the coroter.. '
At the junction of the dorsal and
rerd V. q•CS. a, very happy boy that your valuables, did you call the
Aed theeburly theemate roee from his
afternoon. , „ "
00019.
Vika:, showed 110 aversion to being Vietine-eleis, your Honer, every:
thing I couid thbilt of," "Man and boy, I've lived in these
handled bY straegers. She allowed parts for fifty years," he pretested,
heeeelf to he led' about in a perfectly The dant-let makes eppiovision for fell- poneerously, "an' I never lecerd oe the
doelep mart -tor, and, as Feed petted
No ,Suele Placa.
peen made so nervous and imitable,
ing aol echiree voice
place,
raprood:T.
There isn't a member of the familineed suffer from indigestion, Sick
headaches, biliousness, fermented stomach, etc., if he or she will take
Cbamberlaih'e Stomach arid Liver Tabletd. They cleanse the stomach
and bowels and stimulate the liver to healthy activity and tone upethe
whole system. Take Inc at night and you're RIGHT in the morning.
An artnhtt, 0,ysnallitals Chamberlain Medicine Company, Toronto. 16
oesse It vitt
. ,
what.these !lion have don°, you can dof 95 v, out enure Ulna
'at home you 000 easily master the•seefeta of selllas that make
Star Salesmen. Whatever your erperithee has heen—whatever
you nue, he eielnnew-,..whether or not Yott think yOu can Sell— '
ju,tnoowor eeestion; Are ysh ambitioes ts lern 110,000 A
year'? Then get In tototh with me at onrol iavli prove te 55,
withent, test or obligation that You con &silty become a SW.
Sateeman, I will sera, yee hoe the SnIntuan$14-Traiiiin5 And
Fro,EmPlornient Servial of the A, Nvh,1 holp yOu to gaol(
- Luttao le SoIllpg,
-
,*a $i0 000 'A Year SeilinF Secrets
/The Swat of Stu 5,1orn/me/11y nt hulgtt 1,9 the 10. 0 01 A. has
eulUnd thautanWawa/ overnight, to leave behind ter ever the du‘ditory
01,0001,00de, hop nt ban11.1111eY tope Ord lead noWI)hr. No mutton ',that you
nr) nolv doing, the fUld ot o001 '00 a 5)5 tante, Cut the fed,
Natlenel Salesmen's Trotinipg Aeseciatiot.
Canadian Peer. Bee 362, &onto. artf,