HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1904-06-02, Page 3raise+++ 344.4fleileteeefeeet+++44444eifieteffiffele • eee
The T
ewriter.
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111; It wale a Mild epring daY, rae ,in byPew,riting 2" he aolted.
!
IlltY had a Pleasing wetrillth 110.4 tile I illec girl ItteglIod, and it WWI
stir a rt4reshing flavor. 'Ito ;Mese 1Y' a delightful Weigle It eeemed to
doore were opee and many or ttio Ocerfroy.that here was a girl who
0:weer(' by earried 'their light.coate cOuld apPreciato what a good Iii.ugh
O1 'Serape instead of Woarleg them Ieelant*
Geoffrey Deuce, loitering devout the what they: all- stale uni," ehe
buey, otreet, faintly recognized the said, "I felt mire '.Y1011.1t1 •aide It, toe.
clintatie change, mime was too But I really. beam bad experience.
Much engaged to permit of a inil rep- 4 °11'n't glitu ^Y*u )"'""ene°8' ox"
aireemeloa or taws oax 000looma cep!, Mr. itoe'enainin. Ile lite,e a shop in
leg. Da was aaaeaseea, ae woo aloe the Meat bleelo. arid
couraged, comes all the way', here keit to get
e000 bolo, ,my poriotiaao romod,,, Me to write a, few lett'era for Idea
the doctor field to Lain, "you aro Ana /11/1311i .tb"k IUrn 11° eaY:5' Ut3
playing a reeoleess oe,see, aommao y04 comes hecauee I don't -charge Iiim
Coln fame and iloso liessith—whates quite es? meoh ao the others), but I
the goad of It? Go sloes.' Give Your know it's bee -ease he wants to belp
eonfuse4 brain a Wet Tell • „time* • Pea along. Pee been writiug or masa
fidgety publisher to cool his heels 7'..yrxese- 11;7•Ittehlr'1721r...a816.1"nieneonIllrebiAtied4
the ante-chamber—or to warm them a gouge, and Aometimes Qiet°-
in a piano won't Moil:MM."- •tors will etick, but there's a very
, Geoffrey turned tei, him. • ' nice young, boy across the road wile
"Is thie Advice or le it a lecture?" works in a pattern whop, and he
11
11 winoi tho .oss,r Part of the Werigs PAINI111.' RHEUMATISM.
Welted up eagerly. "Would. it be Pea.
leg too melt," she 40.sid, "for you tO
lot ;no read the first chaptelee."
Geoffrey wool greatly plertied.
".E will bring them with the other.
typrovadter to-211orrow morning." he
mad; loanorrow. juerning at 9
oseloek, RealeMber that sseur time Is
seine ever.ylUtsy frora 9 to Li, T,hat's
,tenito long enough tie devote to tee
eitory at one elttIng. And here," lie
tiliesped hie hand into hie pooket and
drew out three' halt dollaree end laid
them ie. her, hand, "title le about
right I, think for the morning'S,
work."
.• She drew longefluttering breath,.
"Itee like fairy, money," eho ealdo
"Anti 'Yon aro reellY Coming back to,
morrow morning 'it°
"Of Otsurse X ains'' lie cried,* "and
don't eveu dare oell any or the time,
on'voesst aside tor fme, Goodbys Altos
The girl gaaped again, t
"Goodley, Mr. FairY Pidnee." '
Ile woe, whistllog merrily aa he
strode uP the Street. How bine the
ay! evae aud how delightful' the Run -
'shine( , .•
Two Weeless later Ile met the buey:
man, the Oodtor. frit& latter eared
at him, 1 •
"Whe's Geoff, my,,boye ivbeat'a eonee
over teats r 1 • I • :
e "What do you mean" • •
'You don't look like the Same mon.
-Took VolYl 'edvice, r , t
Geoffrey: laughed, , •
"Part of le, you •ohl Infuebug. I took
the 6-uggo9tioa abent a typewriter
girl."
IThe dootor adored eaid evidetled. .
alhe omet he decidedly' attractive.
I'd like to eee
"You Giusti.- Ii'or orrice iss In Jerm'on.
Street," •
- ",Tormon *area?? I :have a VLit
to Ray there thia afternooe. Wbat'a
the 'number?"
Geoffrey told and the dootor
oetor a %hod. •--Ile had dealt comee la every: little while and
lesith nervous pationtst end many ,eleans.,It and olle It, and I've got so
Ovalaellese • •. • now, that I undorseancl ate ways
• "Yell need the lecture roore thrill Pretty well, arid if you liumor it a
yea do •tho adviee. Perhape it ". little it does Isere.; tgood work. I oev-
ivisouldn't look m4 welt in the bill, < er eaw anyllsotlY ran a typewriter,
however. So here'e, the advice. Get but I'm quick enough, I plasm' —Air.
,. full eight liours' ;deep leak° a little Rosenstein eitYe I'M real fast —and
—
tr walk before breakfast, and snuef upi I've Studied up the forme ia a book
the pure .air. [feat heartily anti there I have here, and 1 geZ another to
read the morning PaPere for n, half hold the bookivhile I spell the word
hour. After. 'this you may work at. Of couree, 'you can't become a real
your story for just three houra and expert with quell arre old typeWriter,
aot a nsinute longer. When the tine buteI ll'aPc1 ''::":11e aa'S t'5 1147"' Inew
tie aD, a,00 are to dismiss it from, yoar oneeaa oleos clean, shiny, nese one,
that will alinoet ran iteelf —and titen
Mimi until .the next morning. I guess baelness will boom. What
"That sounds simple." raid Goof- kind of work Is iroers?"
Troy, grimly. "I suppose Yana can. put
Gootfrar dhl not answer. , •
your patient& aside in the. same easty
"Ara soil lone here 2" be asked.
"Yee," Raid the girl. 00:Mother goes
-The doctor ;laughed again. • '
"1 sni)ght if it wasnt for the tele- outeeewleg, you know—when ehe can
phone,' lie eald. "But you haye no get work—anel 1 keep house while
such excuse. You con turn the key elm's. gone,- I ain't exaotly alone."
011 o,00r, .poramtoo sato that ,yctu . do Sho-lifted a tin whistle that was
fastened to a cord around her neek.
: Geoffrey's exliiieVelon- ehingeI3- I "Ali I ltavetbolo ifs to blow. tide 'and
Mira. Galyin—et 0.'n a very kind lady
"Oh, coma doe," be Fiald, "give me . who -lives in the next rooms- comae
smoothing that will brace me .11,12 ' right In and does 'whatever 1 cOant."
until I con weitry through 'tills ; Geosfrey's glance roamed around
story, I've.half protuisect to finish the teems
s
to do it, etin't you ?" -. . . - I. tip typeiVrifibg ?" - ' e
It before the first ofMee% Irelp. "And LOW (Ed you heaven to take
"Not in that way," growled the Yon know.," critic]. tb'e
doctor: rAed I wouldn't if 1- cold. girl with her guick smile, "that
It would make as 'pretty. 0,eadline, ! was •Tiernmy Larkin's: idea. I had to
Wouldn't itae‘Collapsecl in the /lour do something, you see, and too
of Triumph." No, my boy, ,yon've much sewing hurt, my eyes, and .
got to helP Yourself, ilirn4 ilet• old hadn't the taste Tor artifielal flow- :A HINT TO .MOTHERS.
It'e smell iseoutiful atory." She 000moo•
This. Trouble to Caused by an esole te
the Oleo d and Ca is Only be urtel
Tlorougle the Olood.
Rheumatism is ceused by an acid
tho bleed. ',Viet is inedical truth
every sufferer from this trouble should
beer in mind. Liniments and outward
opplications cannot cure what hi rooted
m the blood—the disease niust,be cured
through the bloo4. Thet is the reason
rheumatism yielde ehnost like magic
to Dr. Williains' Pink Pills. This new
blood • conquers the painful poison,
sweeps out the aching acid, soothes the
nerves, loosene the remota; and ban
•
ishes rheumatism, Mr. Robert Mor-
risoe, one of the beslit know) and
most esteemed residento of Guelph.
Ont., gives striking • testimony to the
truth of the statements made above.
Ife says: "My, trouble mine pule-
allb and wee .Inenieuneed mu:wider
themnetism, end 'wen looted eldelly
lo my neck and. ,shouldero. I can
herdly tell yea bow emelt suffered.
I was confined to ijay, bed for, fifteen
months. A. great nianYfriencla came
to see me during that time, and I
think I am safe in saying that most
of them had very few hopes that I
would get better. I tried a great
many remedies, without any lasting
benefit, Then r tried Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills,..and am thankful to say
that through the IMO, ,of thee° pills
and the indefatigable nursiug of my
wife, am. again on my feet, My neck
is still somewhat stiff, but the pain
is gone. I am now in my 19th year.,
and I feel that I owe much. to Dr.
Williania' Pink Pills,"
These pills'. have cured thousands of
the very -worst casee of • neuralgia,
rheumatism, sciatice, -lumbago and
backaelies, and they can aa tha stone for.
you, Sold by ail medicine dealers or
sent by mail at 50 cents. a box or six
boxes for $2.50, by writing the Dr. Wil-
liams.' Medicine Co., Ont.
WM IT IS OILED
• .
•
'Jotted ItUou.- • ,
"No entanglomentR" be muttered.
"Slhe'e mist a child," aahl Geeffreeq
gravelly!.
Thal evening bo loan across the
doetor alt the club.
,.
The doctor it out his band. .-
"1 mew your typewritee girl," he
Paid Geoiff rely. 1
T•I . ... 14 1 I
.
"I think 1 undereitaiscl," Said the
doctor. "aratda a lemon, far the sel-
fleif and an 01141; ' Tor tbe deePone
dent. I'm going to sag . her agabe."
"Aro , your . .o. . ,.
"Yee. rin going to lake Bemilker
with me. The speeialicit, &km know"'
"Ye. :1 bave a dine hope that We
can dee pomething to dst,raigliten that
poor b "—IW
, • • . B. Roe.In Cleyelau(1
Plain !Dealer. 1 1 i 1
, .
'nature take a hand in It. Remember ors, and then one day Tommy said,
easahat. I've saida-hoth warning and ' 'I'll bet you ceuld run a typewriter
—advice," Ile picked up his bat. "By., good and easy,' and so lie hunted up
the way, you still persist In doing this One and rented•it—trie 86 cents
your own ewritings kee,"; • n. week --and it seemed to COMB ease'
"You know I've tried to find stmee- to nee from the start. And, oh, I
one that would Shit me," Geoffrey tell you 1 wasproad when I print..
said, "but they've all bothered .me cal out that card you saw on tile
more than they weep worth." door! Is your work copying ?" •
"A nice irritable !disposition •you • Geoffrey ,clrewi a loug breath. •
are cultivating," said tile doctor. "And aren't you ever tired, and
"I'd like to work under your diree- • —and diecoufaged ?" he'atsked.
Male, 1 don't think. But there, you Again the gal laughed. • '
get out and find a tYlieWriter girl "No, Indeed," she slid. "Itow could
right a.wn,y.. Find ono, that's .pretty I ba? Teere's always the window'
enough to -distraint youreattention to look out of, and—customers to
occasionally front that dreary roe expect. And then 1 (like to watch
mance. Get one that can do.a•little tor MotItexe. And esometiusee Mrs.
fliseing herself, It she ban't espell, Galvin lets the baby come in and
so Much, the_ letter—aa long as play with me, and kellonainy runs
oho, &atop •., es. , „ . %across real .often, and I've ...1gOt the
4 Men the sitectier went his, way and type.writee. „Oh, don't Lave 'any*
hit Geoffrey' *fuming. • • time to feel discouraged. -
i ‘.Everytiarig and everybody is Geoffrey drew, his alliair a little
against me," - groiviecto and -mat, Closer... 4
• back to Ws story again ,and fen • "I ain waitiag a story,' he said,
I asleep over It and dreamed dreams "and I Wink 1 egen •use your sers
of such. Unpleasantness that I e fi- vlaes." • • • '
Malty awoke Witte a, siaet ao;rafif-
• fled cry. , • ,
, alien he' beleterecl".Iiitefsele with" a,
cup of strong coffee and tried again,
• but even the coffee falledato fix.
• his attention. Ho threw down his Pen -
"It's 11'61 use," -he 'half . gobbed, "tlice,
inspiratioe's gene. I've mistaken my.
- leaning ;' r ougitt 4.:o slicelfelline'on
streets,". •t,
And he 'passed e. Meet tuipleasalit
evening.• • _
• But he 'Was tip ebetinsee the 'next
morning, Laving elope very ;anemia
fortably, and after a 'exerted break -
:est went beset to tee treadmill.
But it Was nO use. •
Again, he flung the peoelleeside said
slasomisig, the cover down 'on stile
eyriewriter picked up 'IA bat and
etalked Into the street. ,
Ile .Walkete on aimlessly; 'tie had
Ito purpose Ireview. He. was. diseeart-
eried, he 'wee tulgry 'aterlamself—
angry at the armed. There was ,80
excuse for any allele breakdown. Ile
wwo youog, Heetvae: in good health.
Be was full of desire for work. Con-
found the dootor with his eroaking.
But porbeas the doptok well right.;
Perhaps., 'Worst of all, lie, Geoffrey, 1
bad xercelied his mental 'and
had, as the eying was, written
himself Snit
He stalked on angrily, lieddless of
• elte smiling .sunelene, of the tette
skies, of the bustling highway, of
,the pleasant faces of 'the ptesseree
And then all at once he found
lehneelt in meet eide street, wbore
the modest teems .evere close' to tlie
,Walk, and 'atom the tar Of poverty
seemed to be Leary, and tie he looked
up he became aware of face at a
window.
et quittastartled bite at Was the"
r Sae° of a gel, a thin, pole face with
P. in. teazle of eight hair, a face, with a
Wowed baeltgroued, a face fame
seemed with Re leek of • color to be
almost visionary. But even au ,he
looked tee thin lips patted In a
Pant
, Geoffrey's glance Was a, leurrlea
One, but it took the front of the
ectuse as well no the 'fade at • the
!selector, end then lie notlood tL
Mail, white eard on the tcloOr. lio
swung In a little closer and read
1
eetise Elinor Beetle typewritinge,
; Geoffrey's irrIptilse was, sndden
MD. Ile knocked on tbe,sloor.
W0.2 reeponse, Ile knotked again.
I 0,Conto cried ebildish Volta
' Geoffrey 'embed open the doer.
i "You nntst pleura MY not Keine,"
Deed the *Voice. "1 Woold it X neuld.
mY emcee you ttreow, 'May
tronele you to step around Whore
Pan FICA you 1" • •
, Geoffrey obeyed the request. The
elm might baste been sixteen,
she might have been twenty, was
proppod up in a big elialr,
:With molly pleOwe. She looked- at
lam enraestly with her clear, grey
eyes, and the sena) little smile !lev-
ered About her month, 1
"I saw the card 011 the door," paid
Geoff ivy,
And then 110 noticed, flint On a
little shelf acroSS the arnat of the
leerier, n, typewriter reeted,
I "Don't toll me 'that Ton are it env.
!term% and eo earlyi in tho morning,"
tried the pea "But, tle yesi know, -
.1 spenput gfteee it when eon twee -
led by the window. That was why
llmtled. Won't you take ft, Chair?"
(kettle? Prated iiinieelf, and laid
like hat end vane on the floor hee
rede him. Ile wal at a loss what to.
koy..
Nliai'Ve aeon bed nalell TexperiOnee In
Mee girl chipped her bands. •
• "A story," • lehe oried." tF "That's
-loVelY. Do yOu knoar said to mer
self the roloute I (oars. (you,
semebodY Inore , "tiro common.'
Mat's right. And, oh, I . do hope
you'll fled me competent. it
copyleg '
• "No;"'Gnotrrey replied.. "ria going
to dictate: to you,." •
,"Out of your head 2" etre cried.
"illy, isn't that wonderful : I'll kbe
roady In just a minute." , •
(there was a drawer Ise:teeth the
little shelf on wbieh the , type-
writer rested—evidently the work of
the ingenius Mammy—and [Korn this
the e.K drew her paper and set It,
and then looked up at hint in eer
eager way.
"len quite ready," ehe said. ,
"You doo't mind my walking sup
a'nd down 2" Geoffrey 'asked, . "I
seem to thiale en.sier that way.e
"I shan't pay attention to any-
tlang except your voice," she an-
swered.
• So Geoffrey began on the chapter
that had bothered him no. Ile began
slowly, but a little later he seemed
to warm. up,.. WaS strange how
fast the ideals came to him. It was
steange- how hie cenfidenee came
back.
aVeat, pieneee" .taild the girl. "Tho
page mid you met look et It."
It was well weitten, surprisingly
Well written. She saw approval in
hie face.
"I wee a little .flurried at first,"
.siuy-explained. "This is new] werk to
ine, but I think enech on to it,
all right."
"The tally evitleisai I have to
make, he said, refers to the type-
weltele You shailla have a better erie.
have two at home. I will bring,
one of them to.nuirrow morning."
13, wal.outte eager about it.
"AllercY," cried the girt, "hoW, fast
things do happen. And hoes, much
will tho rent be ?"
Geoffrey laughed.
"1 ha,ven't thought that over," he
said, abut I'll tell you ,tallat We tan
do. Wo den let the rental 'be de-
dncted from the. cost of no Ntork.
;A:84 you eau tell %loamy es semi) its
you Wane to return the old Ma-
chine,"
"That's fille," ettld the girl. "That
will bo Mt so much, easier time
pa:ving 85 eehte MO aitell right
out or yonr itocket."
And then the ',clic-attach went oh.
Ones) the girl stopped MM.
"You J'etve a beautiful style," elm
erlect "Do ,vou know, What It re.
min& me of Of the otory called
eTee Lode Way Ittinnd," Tommy not
it tor me at tlio bit:tech librarya And
I read it through three thnes. It'o
lovole book."
And Geoffrey, eieeleg to the tar
end of tho room, 61118110d likn girl.
It was really Alio eweetent praiee,. it
wined to hien, tbat hie story Mut
over rocelVed. And, abmoboW14 to a
Av. And matt, unAcconntalAn Way,
it veented to inspire 111m.
Presently he stoepsd and looked at
hin wateli.
"Thatet mato enougli for to-eaSe"
he wad. "We Innettet try to do tee
mnali nt owe It miglit cheapen the
Weft for both of es,"
/le laughed inerriev as If thio Wee
a Nat, but tile gill nactes no humor
in It.
Ile laughed merrily au If thiS wee
a kat, bat the girl aftWi lumen'
"I roally hate 1.0 atop," else naid,
"`" ain't tIred, bet, of cour9N.
If you heel.° a child that is sickly,
fretful, nervous, restless at night,
or, suffers from any storeach .' or
bowel troubles of any sort, give It _
Baby's. LOwn • illablets, Don't be'
armed of this inedicine; it is guar,
anteed to contain .no opiate or harni-
ful drug. Give- the -tablets to the flick
child andswatch tho quick relief and
rapid restoration to Ilealth and
Strength. Thousands ef Mothers; are
using this medicine for their little
ones., ,and. they all praise It. What
stronger . evidence can you want?
Mrs. D. A. MeDairmid, Sandringham,
Ont., says: "Baby's Own ;Tablets
certainly fill allotee claim you make
fer them so far as my experience
goes. consider them.a perfect media
clue for children aiid always keep,
them in the house," You pan get
the Tablete, from any dealer in medi-
cine, or if You write tee Dr. Williaille
Meclicinca•Co., Brookville, Ont., they
will send you ale,ox by mail, post paid
for 25, centre . ; •
.--,,--
°Agin of Name by %Vlach toe smiths
Popularly IC neWn.
"Dixie" Dixie'e land—tlieres is the
eliggeetion Is the weeds. of romance
Of war and peens, of love and blood -
relied, of cbarging mehemere and the
(lulling haSf-frontier life o'f the an-
tebellum Boutli of the Miesissipi riv-
er days. Throagh pear three gen-
erations, it 'has Meant all• this to
the natives of the ,sciatif, .aed Mewl
the stirring etrains of "Dixie" are
played to cheering audiences, cel A.M.-
ericans in every part o/ the Whole
United Stoste.s. It heap played at the
battle of Manila; at. tthe: battle .cil
Santiago, .and Its rhathne • nolw
Warehes the soldiers of the nation
ais proudly beneath the stars and
*tries as ever strode the S,olutha'
ern legiona beneotle the .stars and
pa0p, And In the song there is a
estory of moment leo Nese Orleans.
Mite weaning of !the terra, holm It
er,r gna e , sotw, grew o a. ,
ile a question paten 'mooted and neve
or( yet 'settled/ to the general sat-
iisAaletion of all those, investigators
or the unique and, !anti:alai ;who, delve
into ;the (mine Of tradition and lege
end., "Dixie" (ivies! a negro minstrel
tong, sung la Strusic halls of Nesa
YOrk in late ,sp,s, ibellorwecl lustily
to Mark , Trealnesque audiences
erohni the "floating palaces" of the
anteleeram Mississippi by burnt -cork
artists and artisans, Who ha,ve long
since f011aiened" the echoes of their
songs Into silence and oblivion. •
And the wing telolc.',AY .1859 if
!WAR whistledg and' le,ting from: the
lanes to the recesses, from Bich -
need te. NOW' prleans. Peculiarly
vete it the favorite acing of the jolly
gentry. wbo, thronged( -the .stea,me
bloats fapou •the aid liegliway of "Ise
Mississippi, wad all through the
abates tributary toothe streausethe
;song spread wfutle a irapidiey strange
in [that day of restricted Li:apeman-
itqation fand eloavl travel.
When the twa.ze °lame, and peed
Wade lonecions the .suggestion o,f the
Song, and the .song itself became'
a Part df that (wile.* It suggested.
Yolung PIPS sang the steerg at parting,
Went ;forth to deaths and died. In
istrieken helnales the strains have
tiAroufght, thee:ugh: all the ,years
gone, ?memories and dayedreame of
that tesshieh might Ita,ve peen' or that
,whicli was. Gra.elbfearde of to -day,
through tate mist of decacide, hear
in the applaling .. Cadences; voices
Opole long ago) blended sweet. no-
ptrano fireth their bees.
And the song itself I Nothing in.
itl rw rets be ond gill do r I
bete a Silly doggerel which Clough -
ugly ,referred . to all. the 'Southerner'
held dear. Tho allele catchy' saltir
a Sspark of the ,Vital dire in the lilt
and cistern of the dashing !phrases,
t -iti ' - ' 'di ' ' '1lavery
-
istener balling faceied the "land of
ootton." , , 5 1 e 1 , ,, ,
A.nd the otigin :of the song? There
. •
— BROWN SEASON...
•
Choice Fonlardp or This thee le
Large fins Sir.!Ing.
Is It to be a broWn oeneon?•, It looks
liko it, judging from the very euneer-
ous spocimens Of brown tintel gowns
witioli are elieWn • reasly-adde • as
rnoeol castsones, 008)3 .01 them being,
hoporteri and. °Ultra being fair cop-
ies- of the sty.loh, originals. .
Brown CON'OnS is wide range tif
ehatles.alre have brosize,enoleskta col-
or -and peals brown; then there is
Havaste, rich cigar or tabaccoe
leaf 'color. Peeliape the most ate L
tractive khade seen is a rich golden'
brown,. Isonatiful Alike IrC taffeta,
veiling, mohair, Louisine or ,eollenne,
Nerci have dark brown grenathnes,
quite opee mesh, and handsemely-
gernisheerfor atternoon gowns,
Tho brown fealards are leeion, ,
great ,surprlse to those who are acs 1
onalomea to ..200 Ouly two tones of
the color, ,Charnang are the patterns
ti f 1
o blown cm erste; one could ff
wrete an satire artists on -them alone.
We have tire barley -grain pattern,
a, elongated rain -drop, opo.eecl some -
What irregularly On a golden -brown
foulard. It tho pattern - were 'very .
,innall and appled with teatbeiriatien1
regularity over the glistening sur-
face it would produce a "calleo" ef-
fect too .theelianital Lo bo pleasing
10 ft islet geom. The sante . elect and
shape and tolov of etittern if AP -
piled comewliat irregnierly pro.
duces quite a. different effect. Two, ,
of the barley corns are nearee to-
gether here, or perleip; out'ot line.
This mama up a gown without the
Atif Noss observable in email "set",
patterns, whleb linee tho lock ef
old-fashioted wall paper'. •
MoOtts in omen* ate vieible on'
some lengths of ebbing silk, They
mot not be, confound,ed with, the
ooin'ePot: Ot the emetic) east or the
largo polka dot. Welt° ring,f4 Of
Medlum size aro our pretty mono,
neelteornetates a few steal stersr axe
Obeerve1 hear the moon, ; •
'Galaxe patterns and Cohstolla-'
tions of little, pointed stars aro
eleposeel on tile siteatee ot navy blue,
*Molt and brown ifoulardel in irre-
eistiele fttehion. •
Very wide brown foulartLe With
dell Mien ebew inoignifiennt pat-
torntreposea at; wide le torvels.
Theee are for tho beeetit cte those
who desire a egreat deal of body
eolor and ai very email allowaneo
or pattern pratting,
01166110 patterns, irregular sig -
sago of white and elnek wender
over tbe eurface or earn° brown silks.
Foe an unknown reneon the brown
silks figured with! "svelte are very
nritoh more protty than those ohoWe
ing &seam in blank, ,
Ilandoome reversible silks are
plaited In white, the bare poIng
»strrosr enea There are three tease
of • those pittele, the bele half -Inch
n.nef tetarter-inea design. An there
he 1)0 111) end down to them, and beta
HAI* aro equally brilliant ,these
goo(let eut to great aehantego.
Geldrinehrowet poegeri Is ono of our
pretty fairing heirless. at comae In
antooth, relate end else in one slight*
ty rouglional to the toitell,
,Tapan elks, cool OS eool can be,
and 13 lnehoe are noel at
medftI 111 and bow prices, either 201143
eolora er printed with 'White, i
The propellere of the 1921 auto boats
revolve 1,20 time a minute, giving
epeed of 2a mlIoa (14 bout,
The case of Miss Frankie
Orseri of Boston, Mass., is in»
teresting to all womend,
14 DSAB 151II.1:1Th11)5Alt 1-1 seffered
Misorytor severalyearil. Mybaeltaehed
and I had bearing -down pame, ana frt.
queat headaches. I wottla often wake
emit a restful sleep in suds pain and
euleery that It would be /Mors before
doled close My eyes agaie. 1 dreaded
the long nights Iota weary clays. 1.
could do tao work, 1 consulted di/er.
ent physieiano hoping td got' relief,
but, ending that thole mediellete
not trete me, X teled Ude% E.
banes Vegetable eoitipeand., as
It Was highly reedretnended tome. I Mtn
glad that I did so, for I Mori found
that it 'as the reedieine for my ease.
Very tette 1 was rid of <leery athe end
pflifluna restored to perfec1 health.
tool splendid, have a fine appetite,
end have galeed in weight a lot."
Miss Vakinelit Onsnil, 14 W'arreutoti.
St.,,Poston, Mass. aedeeit forfeit If WOO
of oboe* Otter point gonoMerass eannot 131pew
dukard,
Sitter you eannot 'wish to xe*
main weakish* and discouraged, '
and exhatutted with each day's
work* Some derangement of 'the
brgalie IS teeponsiblec
for thle .46%131'1%4ton, following
any kind of vrork or effort.
Lydia V. Ibinkham's Vegetable
Compound wfil help you just os
It hob thoutailds of other Women* '
• aro several expla,natieris.
body knows the name of, the Jolly
Issaroxibio, LEIninet, Wiee hamar-
talized the ballad, but few eknow
snore he got the phrase. One
theeeee long since expluded, wee teat
the expression "Dixieei lend" Mane
from the phraeo eel/teen and Dixon
line." [be other was teat a cer-
tain farmer down in New genial',
just before tto war,' ran lee Beide
with, negro labor and aseunuel tlie
mannere and the bearing of a south.
ern planter. Ilis nanio -117D,S
and topleal songe or the period re-
ferred to his eirtate as a tuatiature
eotatilana Audieneee wills* del
not know the Weal reference took
the Bang as referring to the real
south, and lemma in his famous bal-
lad, so used the expression. .
However, theee in anotliee story
and one which, brings the subjeet
home to New Orleene. For twenty
years prior to the glee war 01 e
enigma Bane of Loulaatia was tile
great Connote' institution of the
south, end ranked Among. the one
or two lergest in the land. Ito
Aetna. ;Was , as 'alien tile
Peals bourse taut the London ex,
elianges as is now the name of the
Cite Netional J3ank or Now ixoric.
In ale cleys of "e'en Nesters!' awl
dor:rotated state bane currency the
issues or' the 'Citizens' Dank passed
at par all over the land.
!Dee best-known Issue was e, ten -
:dollar note aerie in roe urea ono -Odle
and bias* and rea upon the other.
The feature of title denomination
W0.8 that the most conspauous pert
of tee engraving was the lerencli
word "Dix." Upon the river steams
era on the fillips bound for New York,
ors the stage (machos welch 'went
\vest !roux Galveston, flies° beta
wore termed "Dixies," Not one mac
of aey twenty that handled there
knew that dies meot ten.
Upon the Upper Mississippi and the
Ohio people began to speak or the
south as Dixle's land, acid as the
years passed they forgot wlIY- the
name wee applied. 'Ithe gamblers
who won luse'qus rolls of the
les eat poker played with the root
removed, victims who gave up
their rightful wallettuls of red and
bleak currency, the Irish deek-
bands nevi the, negro roustabouts—
, all spoke of Melees land. ,
alio viva. war came on, Menthe
passed and Butler's army ocenPied
the city. Butler ordered the Citizen&
• Dank to pay , back all deposits to
Private italividuals In confederate
bllts and ordered that all RUMS due'
to officers or representatives of the
oonfederstey should be paid to the
United States Government in Unit-
ed tates °coin. Afore than $225,000
was thus confiseated and trio bank
lute now pending in Congress a war
claim for this amount. Iester Gen-
eral Butler made the Citizens' Bank.
the United States depository and
distributing centre for tile terri-
tory under hie charge, ,
I
444-44-44444-Hr+++++4+44+++4,4444+44+4-44+4444
EGO PRODUCTION.
Pullets for Winter Laying The Freak
Egg Trade—Exporting Eggs.
4 ++4-4+++++++44±4-44+++++++++++4-444-4,44-444+++44++444-4-fi
lair all fanners, te mast
branch of the poultry bueiness ii the
proiltahle ' halo ettention or extra fefal, the meet
i taps Mr. X. 0. Hare, oLlef of t 1
proatletion ot eggs awing the winto, months. Alter that on the test of feed
prefitable age for marketing is four
there 12.0.great lamina eor new-Inia -.When the pullets are forced tem win' VerIllptI7En:INofegyai0TheelneVlilleveMNIVEelligileelt 1YE.aPilatISy
.
try division, Ottawa Evexy
t 0 Voe ''' ma:cases.
. citiee strictly fresh :eggs sold. eeedllY
at.neeplitigitileeprieeleisppalyre ipssillwr thisietifatie,gdes tart segdagitpisrondugoireathertherbereeettlwdpbeekePott
1 euring the past winter at from, 40 to CleiliCketsmi. Ahwein5
ea cents per dozen. Some farmem are. to Jay in the -spring eell at that tilaa
ofrreAulevtiliteilltattocomrenalte' ntelems
1 so situated that they can maintein 4 produce stronger genital eggs for hatch -
icity treat) in fresh eggs throughout the big than wiii another that has had ber
year, A prelnium of eeveral Mee le ' vitality iMptered by winter Jaya.
deem cae, esuelly ba obtained, for nor.'
' is' a growing preference oa the liente
. of pullets ten or twelve of the best
wiuter le,yero, placing n regular leg band
' 'rhe farneer Bhould Soled from a flock
1 Jaid eggs. slapped weekly te the city
MARKET lurotramtsrBNTS.—Prileto
reercliant, . ,
seals; of the eggs famed bewmeta eleen
vie. 05 0. p.loce of wire around the Ieg of
if twee ssary, and the eggs graded in (then yearling. hefts} elioulcl be separated
The next 'winter- these pullets
markets for brawn sbelled eggs,.
tstzseye ,s;1.110'ouri d s lab ei p trnseenkte all) 4, rases
e smellio'Cillaia•inigt .41.)01e7t)lyttinhateen:14Yinfteg§IL41)Fga.einnilds kbpeuePetts enth:et'yg°4044r
palatable slinuld be °taco in a strictly March they seoulcl be mated, with a
12 dozeu or 30 doeeu each, Eggs, to be
feesh condition; therefore, they snits:We cockerel, and their ratioes in,
vary delay. This remiiree (1) that the
seam creased so tie to bring thou into laying
elm tnne ;alien tam eggs are regimes:I
%
wadt the consulner without mums,. at
eggs be eeileetea regularly evei7 , aay .,f9r tiptoeing, Such' a, process of nice -
and stored in a cool mom (temperature •
tum would. peon produce A .pneticularly
fine' strain of winter layers. '
40 to 50 degrees F.), (2) Una the deal- EXPORTING EGGS,— The expert
er forward the eggs to the merthant at strede carries ofe the surplus eggs pro-
lenst once a week, and, (3) that the dueed during the sunnner months, when.
mordant protect the eggs Stem deter- prices aro low„ but bus little or uo effect
matelots wbile in his possession. on the prin. of new -laid eggs in win -
PULLETS FOR WINTER LAYING.--' 'ter. Marts to increase our export
As a general rule pullets hatelied (luring trade in eggs need not, thereforeecilerm
May or early June will prove inost pro- consumers m cities or towns. Eggs that
atahle for winter laying. Farmers who are placed in /old storage from April till
expeet to- make a speeialty of high.' July are shipped to Great Brawn for
I paced new -laid eggs next 'winter should the September end October trade; those
I at tile present tMte. be luttelattg mit a that go into cold storage in tee fall aro
1 good lumber of chicks from witich to expottecl during the winter months. .A.11
select euitabie „pullets, The cockerels these are sold in Britain as "Cazadian
ehoold be sold in the early fall. Unless fresh eggs." Yours very truly, W. A.
they are housal in the fieles.and require Clemons, Publication Clerke
....ea....
t• : • - -. • •
.' 611‘;19,1twItiorqi.-^Sa.,12..'tt/t117:111,16.,"tribelpelkliwilVd•Vpe4SiriliAllib,illerillirl
do - . • ,, . , $
•
ut Out of Antarctic Jct.!
DETAILS OF TliE RESCUE OF TI -IE $
After the war came new 1:sanitize ; 71,:vitt'etic 4bee:107ring s7sip 1 171scove7y n7-' day7s, 1)7e7116;v:rk7g7Ing o7, :11.0
I ',Auckland, New Zealana—The . ants. ship, after an absence, of elglayt
Jaws, new customs, new ways and
'. 0,*e'llti. 1 ,w, t'11( erne the c anges naugur-
&tee immediately before the eive war
thought. .lie D xie' in.
e end of that etrtiggle and
tbe' notional banking law of the late
'60's the once -famous currency was
imooregroutttritar-New Orleans Times -De-
• • DISCOVERY. .0 .
INSTINCT SAVUS FROM DRATII.
Few Animals Will Bet Peisonous rood,
Unless Well Disguised.
That animals of every species can de-
tect poison in feed is a well-known fact.
.Disguised though. it may be, the deleter-
ious matter ie discovered end instantly
rejected unless disguised by artificid
means. As a rule dumb brutes seem to
have very MOS:nose of taste upon the
palate. ,13n5 carnivorous animals have
a kind of "half -way" -sense, between
taste and stonsachaehe, which 'very soon
'tells them Wheri they have taken poison
or anything likely to disagree with
tbem, and nature has kindly arranged
, that they can get rid of ithy the throat
with very great ease.
• Wolvesotigers, leopards mid ocher caro
nivora are ditliciat to poison because of
the power which they have of rapidly
gating rid of :the drug.. Lions, on the
other hand, are very frequently poison-
ed, as they eat voraciously and muckly,
more like a dog than the other large
felidae. It is said that a good many lion
skins, eepeeitilly those brought back by
foreign counts and others from Somali-
land, were obtained by tho unsportsman-
like inethod of poisoning carcasses and
leaving them for the lions to devour.
Cattle, which have no less than four
stomachs, axe hopelessly poisoned if once
they have swallowed a dose, wbother 18
a toxic plant or otherwise, It is this
•
, =sous arrangament of their interiors
winch makes it such a difficult matter to
I, give cattle medicine at all.
In common with human beings, ani-
mals seem to be affected by poison in
tertain forms when in a particular con-
dition of health. At other Unica they
can eat the same plant or shrub with
impunity. In certain stake 01 114391111 it
man can eatOpork, lobstere, cockles, scal-
lops, and other somewhat risky foods
without bad effect. At other times the
alma edibles would produce on him the
effect of ptomaine poisoning. Two per-
sons may eat of the same food 'et the
Same time, and, white one 18 perfectly
weil afterward, the other may become
• violently ill. The envious: eases of yew
poisoning among eattle or horses seem
lo' bo somewhat analogeue. Tbey will
sometimes browse on shoots of yew tine
tnke no harm whatever. At other times
they are obviously made very ill or din
'from eating the leaves. They have even
been found dead with the yew fresh
and undigested in their stomacbs, Where
.poisonous plants arc preeent Any ,
great numbers in herbage ,it seems quite r
impossible to prevent eattle from eating ;
them. The "poison veld" of parts of the!
Trenevaal has a partieularly bad repu-
talon caused by plants—one of which. is
oda to be a species of tulip, which
comes into Iasi in the spring.
In addition to the poisons mentioned
above, the deaths or illness of English
cattle have beets traced to eating the
leaves of bench common erowfoot and .
various other plants of the rautinettlee
frtinily, wild parsnipe tool acorns, which
ave very aetringent, and Also, it, is be.
lima& to their Wine woody nightshade
The keeping of a goat with -cattle May -
poesibly be benelicial, because pate eat
by &owe and with impunity plantn'.
vslith an injurious to cows.
Male seam to lieve no diecriminetion
Whatever sn regard to poisons, *peobably
beettuse they have almost no sense of
smell rind ewellow their food without
mastleating it, They are terrified to
paralysis by the oapeartoice of a nOISOn.-
082 MUNI (UniPq I to
dread of the appearance of the serpent .
rather than to an inherited knowledge.
of its venomous power), but melt intern- •
gent birds; as rooks will pick up tout eat
poisoned grain, and same aiel ravens
readily at miscued eggs or meat.
Chickens will eet the poisohnile seats of
the laburnum and 4ie from the effeets.
Whether birds suth tee tite and green. ,
linehes do flO does not amen to be '
krestva, llUt biras ere frequently'
1 0u111(1 aeing in gardoes, though appar-
alley they "had been in good health a
few hours before., nna their bath may ,
probably' be due to the tonsumption of
VOlsOriOus' Seeds,
rived at 1.,,ytteltou on Good Friday, crow attempting to free the ship
after an absence of over two -years. from icei by sawing. be was seven-
' During the last year some anxiety teen miles !from open wa,tere and in
Wati felt about her, :and atter a lit-
tle delay two relief ships wets fit-
ted out at great expense. ,
These vessels, the Morning and the
Tierra Nova, found. the Discovery on
Jan, 5 firmly imbedded in the lee.
Be:plosives were used to free her, and
lee sawing Was tried with 'no re-
sult. Then the relief ships ,tried but-
ting the lee. , , .
rite Way Or it was thus: The ship
had to niake waye astern 300 or
full 61*ml—welch, with the - Terra;
41e0,00i ya,r, (1,s.;,'1.1lien, she would come up
at
Nova, Is 8 knots—and butt at the
The Discovery, it meet be remem-
bered, had been no less then seven-
teen milers front the open seas so
that there was a. leg mass of solid
Me to get, through before reaching
heri
ale 'result's of the butting _were
various with. the Terra Nova. Some-
times hoar a, ship's length would
break. away, , other thues not
three yards, . , • •
Some da,vs intervened before the
experiment was made, again, and the
, operation was helped' by tour more
at the wheel ratline tho ship as site
cameo on. 'alien the pier little Morn-
ing tried, but as the Discovery's men
esise c;ito.not butt a • match
But at last only a quarter of a
mile was left, and by sheer deter-
mination the eaattain got nee
throttle). The Discovery's men, who
were watehing from the hill, -declare
that her last shot was a fine sight.
She broke the lee like paper.
' Of the work done (luring -the year
the reports have e, good deal to say,
For the first few weeks the crew
caught enough fish ,to supply them,
but as the winter began to close in
rapidly they occupied themselves
With catebing seals and gulls for ,
waiter food. - , • ,.
When Apra showed no chance of
breaking up the ice, preparations
wore made to ensure a certain
amount of cote:fort dprieg the bong
meths to come. The ship was dice
mantled and tee serious work of
exploring began. 1.
The longest tour ,wtas that under.
taken by Gapt. Scott, .solici led his
party to the lies/ahem:nest land
yet touichee. They ited 'the most se-
vere weather to 'contend with, al-
most lost sevoral livers by men step'.
plug over a preapiee Into soft
'gnaw& tele finally were brought to
a staridetill by a terrible blizzard.
The driving enowi whielt t11 ent
into the (toga ;where it toadied It.
„When the men kleased- 'walking the
contractirse of the Iykin eaused it
to split and trIve sorer° pain.
They had taken \light folding tents
of silk, six feet In dintiVetOr, in and
out of whaili 'they •crawled by means
Of a boric, evtinele when they were
In, was kept eloteed. They warmed
them:solve% and toOked itheir food by
means of Prima lamps, and the
brews of tea, said esteem, were lintit-
ed, A11100 ftrel had to to carried.
• The eiteigee Were, hauled by the
10011, ;1111,9 wae found mOst arduous.
After evetting to a •Illelabt el 7,200
feet on elle .glacier, Capt. Stott and •
Itis men, la the tooth of a driving
biz4r(r9eeIriztl'leuti'uerl•-
vTrld. Tt rfcneMassNvasloiot-
et reached in ;the history Of the
world. Then the e,01ep009Watt point-
ing exactly the Avirdng way,
Pa 'the :wleather (now be)1amo AO
,severe that tho party WAS oblige:1
to ote,'0, and the captain picked out
tevp ot las strongest men, and they
areeeetled aletne 011 itheir SourneSe
For nine days thoy kept op, making
latitmle '77o ,50' eolith told longl-
tudtt litio ,311' east, to the summit
of Victoria Land, leshissis they aster -
tallied to ba a plain of Milform
height, 0,000 (NIG ahave assn level.
The geologist of alto party made
Steno impOrtant diecoverlee in the
Wee' of Mall alant Me, and eeb,-
, ee, senvi o lt IV Va.
POMO 'limn the elimatie eosulltione
of title great erten of laud Were
;cleated ealey more temperat then et
Preeent. (They nro prcesehly the '
only treadle yet round in the A.ntar-
title vontingeut.
Thee were Wired on a eantletOnei
helfse 112 41, tarb;mited band, appar-
ently tarried there by torrential
etream rudoutted glacier marks
Were toiled at enneldertiale height,
met Merainen Were folund on tape
11 13,48 at a licight;oir 1,rfii0 feet.
Moott roturaod to the
.leo eight Toot thick. The beet .-cut
ad as 8oon cat wore made
mtade w.a.eofoszass ifieset in four houre;
i
they were Trozen again, ea that at
lest tho 'wore bad tebe abandenea
alO useless. •
, Meantime another expedition had
net out under Lieut. Royde and 'Mr.
Diernacchi. They wisbed to aseer.
tale the extent .of tbe ice ebeet and
to eee it any land were in eight. The
meteorological conditioes' prevail.
.ing over the ice siteet were to be as-
certained and magnetic observe-
striosolekI
e states. nspl• ace free from
T,helr effoits were crowned'with
great elieeees. Theyt suffered severe-
ly, from frostbito and from a stor.t-
age oe food, which eventualla com-
pelled them -to turn bank.
It was 'necessary to `carry light
- loads, but -their appetites inereaseds
and in tile Mei thee suffered fromi
hanger' tos.suolt an eXbent that they
eituld think of nothing else. One of
the men describee his longing for a
glass of beer. They dreamed borrible
'nightmares of food being tantaliz-
ingly, near, of eplendid banquetst
rdabed5erry°arteloactieing'eveTe taken, which
will ho found most valuable In deter.,
mining the position of the. smith
magnetic pole, and there will be In-,
creasingly, lens risk of sailors get-,
ting out of their course, owing to
Saute inaccuracy! in their eompa.ssees
mho ice plain evue found, to be afloate
no land Was to be even and 'the parte;
wore at length forced to return on
account of the need for procuring
food. In ull 'those travelled 155 maw,
finding a perfeetlyi level ourface„
without undulations of anyi klnd
or animal Ilfe. in the Antareelq
eeem to eonstitute the fauna, of the
incoot. truuch information le given, The
penguin, the petrel and the eeal
it ,
Dr. Hodson boa brought back tk
number of specimens of o, ten leggea
spidor. Eight le* the usual number oe
legs allotted to this. inseot.
When It wpm to the matter of
requiring them for good seals were
not by any means abundant. Four
kinds were met with, that known
as Weddel's being the best eating.
The Antarctic fur is not of the
marketable kind. ,
ZoologIste have for Womb time
Zbeen puzzled to account for the
scare, old a.nd recent, so frequent-
ly feabd On the smaller teals. Thu
Discovery expedition is allele to
terow a light on tile matter.
When 0 large *ea I opar.1, a varatte
of seal, was eut open, the remains
of en ordinary veal were found In
the animates stomaele As he pose
OSSeti an- unusually fierce set of
teetl,, it is supposed that the sea
leoparil is in the haat ,of acting
tho oannibal toward the smaller
brethren.
The slam gulls are the scavengers
et the frigid regions, T,hey aro not
tined, and will oome tip in numbere
itansetsosotritniagsh taaws114,4,,albehgaisn begins
eecelnkgil loend
the earease. .
ata giant petrel i31iares *the ale
tinetion. Ibs feeds till he le too
gorged to fly and then rune In a,
Pt/cellar WAY when chaealspreading
his wings as sails. It the chasing
tomes to his reeette and he suddenly
raises 'himself and flies off.
The /violins went' to have rovided
the explorers svith a certain amount
of ntinmoinent. They used to prod
the 'emperor pernertin (a great fellow
standing three feet and weighing GO
or 70 pounds) with the end of it old
Stick, when he would give :It tn-
usentloas smacks which made the
Land tingle, at the same thee emit-
tbig eurionn guttural erles.
adellee, a Mueller kind, are
inoet inquisitive customers 0115ay9
waling to see w;14tt 19 ioing on,
scra,mbling along the leo oe their
85)111(2, wiling the flIppsrs lk canoe
paddles 'the pangulit ttves and sten.
plechascs and Mope etraight out of
the vatier On to the ice, faite flat
Mid goes through the funniesit
rentmetieres. Large roonbere Of pens
gains mime along like reginiente iit
Indian file, wjael and turn and
generally act as ti,migh oft I par+
ado.
`The divoreeR 10 the rnited States lures
averaged bout 17,000 for the Met ea
teen yeare. Titis amounts toitbout 044
Iter eerie Of the marries*. 0010.
11.