Exeter Advocate, 1902-7-10, Page 6fancied I've seen, an affection Spring-
• : ing up lietweeo you, and my .3 truov."
-L isitlield, may I be frank witlt
1 4
e• •
F.ti. ld's
, ,..a"u1 say I love your
; with uty heart?" "light"
"SorrY for IL SOrrY, Mere thou
serry, that she'e fond of you. A
maiTiage between you, is absolutely
impossible."
Secret....
o',14
ON,
;t •:* tt. .• I 6:00 ti 4:1 ttil• •.:4 klr) :1 C't tR,
The general epin en in V4110 W I itY
•Isitileld'e tongue suggested vale- re-
gret; he showed no oriOer, but his
wanner was very Onto,
-rill:ago was. ow air, Fitheid, had -lumosoible? Why, size?" Clem 110 weut Pot straight to the 4:arm.
Made a small fortuno in business. demotic:led. '•If Mies Jill/1y and and =pit -Linea to clot), that he might
awl retired. Ile heel the sober, re- love each other, and I can make her be nwaY longer thau ustiaL Woold
;erectable appearance of a tradeSman a good bottle- Look round my 9eitt give clionY a, look ht ollee
Uh0 Utd clooe sal-Rebel:oh; well in his farm', It is unencumbered - uaY for Illue 41M,I See that she was
'line' to retire at the age of beteeit't borrowed a ren'. but I've all rigtt?
'ern Ono '
to come out .soorier or later, and her
life will he ruined - she might tura
against me in horror; and he might.
desert her and leave ber el -aimed ton
fore every one who knew her. Cheri
could greet bee every wish ho
would be good to her. , „Tinny,"
he said, aloud, "'Yoe miglit
put the usual things to-
gether io bag for mo,
goime away for a day or two
to-ozorrow." •
FDEP1NG CALVES,
Prof, D. H. °tie of: the Kansas
Agriculteral College ably discosseS
many features pertaining to.profit-
able dairying in the recent biennial
report ot the bowel. What he has
to say concernieo the Ouportant
problem of reeriog :calves uPeu skim
milk fOliONVS; in part;
When calves six mootlas old are
forty -flee. of eouree, Fonowtay. , 101-t very matey pounds. Ask the t ••
heat's helot I- I e int ) i . worth from, OS to $219 per heath
like almost every other village, had bonLers how 1 stand with them. As mouth precluded him from answering, and when the profits from o moil
1 to chat•aeter, .aSk the rector or Aire. but the handehake he geeve Fitlield
its scandaeomougers, and the Fal- milk cow are $o greatly enhanced by
lowlay branth of this huge corpora-, Chionners, who have known me ell eneldiaticallY ,i'lettilt. "Yee." raising the calf on skim milk, it is
vou Nvere wont to that mr. Fite: my life, if For e, dt mom to talee Clem. saw Fitheld to the gate. VerY , vastly important that ose know
lield'e "line" could hardly lutt'e been I Mies dhow for my wife. Point to few wards messed bets eeu them, for bow, firstto .use A No. 1 eau, and
r
evellhor in his happiness to • seconO espectable sine.; he was so extremely! 4 shabby spot in my jaeket. and I'll (me was r (espeeially te the men with
roticent ftt, tO vhat, it was, I undertoke never to speak to dimly come and the other Wee- weighing limited capital on htg 1-• i •
priced hold),
And
it must be frales
ly adai
mitted °gn' "Mt )11.-F l'erl'itte's Sound. alld his pleaeures past. Men caunot $ay how to
, .
to accomplish this result
Fa, lowlaytia
lian scanlouoregere bad ,
my character is eounder; and Ivm
loe,och at such tunes through the medium of skim milk
.
so little eectree T. for lying -ste-pielousi rtne-`•- with all lay heart and 1U n- hitheld liegelvd at the gate mooch -
:b111 lent ou the 'Wit bar and Intiii&TaiQvrtlifeni)°gillet:uoell ifereoatuAlgactuial
of Mr. Fit;ield. eor he was something hood i and 1 worh. adatit th.we's ly. 1
this world to he a bar ilidgeted with the ketch, Ile was exeerienee toai
con honing coves
e. .
of a, mystery. His poet. Ids maw:- i anYthl'ug lil
4. . e , - - •
etween beginning to feel the awkwardness The young i3 ntay either te
°^'StsVOtoestorssourcco; revenuetals-
sPoken. Air, Clements; I like of the total look of eympathy beel en from the cow o few hours after
were all alik.e mysterious. All that i
oae enown of hen ono that imd to bear a. man boast. tha„et. his repo- etween hoe, and jianees father. !birth.. or left until its mother's milk
ihed 1)1 att., croeverechni cottage tatioit'e eennol. But- ,Mr. "Clem," said Pallet& at last,' is fit for use. Whelio the cow's lel-
ext to Sexton's for three yea; ; • foie' Molted deeply, looked eat the :speaking in a hearse voice, "I don't der is in good shape, it, is easier to
be arrived there worn some un. grottlei tetwo Ids feet, at Cienee ,waut Jiany to Ituow. but lie jourel teach the calf to drink when it is
ieeeo that he was wedowe:, l'ogin !es. pot °writ littgrr 1. m going to mot.o entails somee,taiten awar before suching at all. xa
something -the matter with the man
It is not the plant, or the field, or
the businees which is at foult. For
ever and ever, so long as the world
holds men, there will be a demand
for feod. and every particle of it
meet come out of the earth or the
eeo,• Anti every mince •of food ie,••
first of all,- a plant. Forever and
ever, then, there will be it denutod
it •eo. nicely that the vansmieited
ulaz dePerted,. Vowing he was
Tim Bsr.r FELLOW ALIVE.
Ono of the elief occasions when
Mr. Stoith put hie pet maxim. into
elIcet WAS witeo, leis 'workmen in the
great Blau Valley ceal pits were re-
duced by mae-hali in numbers., on leis
instIlling the labor -sae -Mg plant,
, winch caused so much trouble a. few
for plents. The grott•ing 1.02" yearsleack. This is out a the most
Plants earl never cease to be Pr0"“12- ticklish performances in the world
ble if the right roan aud correct of husineso,, for naturally worming
naanagentent are at the holm. mon t '
no app e o mac oneter
which„ as far as they cap, eee, IS 90
to d0 away with teeir 3)511
SHORT OPTS, booth 2ixid nothing has caused se
There is not euough. study given matey strikes nod riots as this, Most
by the average farmer to shorteniog employer$ let such thiegs settle
farm work, writes e, farmer: A themselves as best tliey can, nod .
great many steps ceuld be soled by lose half their profits Through
the proper eilanning of farm ate strikes; but George Smith mode It
eangements, I have seen eo his businele to see that every Irak_
badly arranged that to attire access of the two butuired who were die,
to the rerilote once twit; or three charged were given as good a berth
fields hod to be crossed and the fen- somewhere else. whether on his owe
ces Jet dewn and out up again each properties or other people's, for he
time to keep out stock, This lathed emilees influence. And it ie
very inconvenient if you have to' said that,. true to hie text. he 101
0r058very often. as eviler* drawing er hart on eocroy.
hay or grain. ma -winter when Very differeut is the powerful war-
ry of Mr. Rockefeller, betut of the
fatuous Standard 011 Trust, whose
oil you will probably born tootight,
and who has practically the world's
oil market to hinteelf. Hie eetoto
lisiked watchword is; "Ne rivets!"
and he lives up to it thoroughly -
boy I hod to sit all -day out in the
Reid and watch the gap to keep
stock where tt belonged. In those
days a Loy was kept gut of school
foe such purposes. Ills time Was
considered more valuable nt the gait
han in school- Mono a tilne have
er. voth sat 't nuenelly pretty daugbee -„ trisiss sorne denger, 19 anything no.ture, the egle, goo its drink of- I Fat in the hot silo. a -01014M hogs, Of all the thirty or to) bush
t•I11141
tor of
L2 &» utoued .31) 11 51311) s,13)11)1..'.4" 0 1" '03'• ,t•itotad haPPen -- if anything should ten, but in small quautities, nod al. and have gone to sleoP and MA Wens of importance that hove tried
etas the upPlie of his e.,ye; that he was' ..,7 ,eurt•.., .1prevent me returning, you would ways at blood temperature, sn this woke UP till the tealn CaLle baek, to oppoey him, or eell oil in the
a highly reepeetaide looteog aud -44 :V"- weren't *ter att,t•ortr 4'" Mat Ty tny watathet you, atoll respect we should bnitnto nature as and then I would get a thorough countries he bite power over, every
12.13 !far as noosibio At first tbe etof waking up, hove oleo been kept one has mecum, rd to this Motto.
weill-!•Tolielt titan; that hie. ere-:Ltmek d""." tbati eried be good to her? Elera
dit was gotta ot the Foliate -lay gen-• Clem* In0 1204 •"Mn. leiereed; you may stalw your ht•hould rot be fed ,(YYQI, 10 poueds out of sehool to walk aloegside the He allows oo competitor at nth and
rat !eerie'. and that he madfairly -1*'e" •Y" ""dersl"" meilife on it!" Clem replied. ohnost !daily (one quart equals about two Plow doe's at a time. just to keeir his mahorb
ethod is to ethe
w competie
the plofrom choking. Those days tor into hie own hot iness: Mid if he
e ,
riever should bay° been, and fathers declines to be ebeorbed,
haw learned better thinge.
teoineent journeys in. 1oulost every (to woo t. owe. •
row •pounde in the morning. two
Mr. Eitet.hl womb3 very probably ; not tell You. 'thirty's the best girl 3. *11111(1
:10(itled arealliS`
•
iteve eeeeeed '.11 1)314(10 if he had not 1 that ever lived. anti tvw mon 105-0 waive, are you going to fat:tole:M.11de at WW»,. and four pounels
resolutely„ though tacitly, deciin,,,, It
datnatters even when. as in Claoger? What • dangeroo ohm eseel night. After two weeliff the ntilk
F; 11 eh- reit 41 tit woman for au honest Juan, iel,1 You - of CoOrSe. I'll get back, eueet. • lf nupossi le to hoee t le Just how much rough feed is re. tt Holbert ileinnd 1.nossn 3431
bier in whielt ••
eeet, 14, es; rart.,_ from him the mosl 1., co, ,.„‘„e__Leealwe „yr., daligs-ue toot ghl u Out lest swe,?t, the time, 'then It sgtItuitc•leiedd. 4tot thronalivnytottugav,Ixtopre71.3nweN 03e0Vstengloetateoratio1Y0
'shouldn't. X should like you to Onow :should be
'tr;hote. At of too:motion re; to his ter. -
:Pounds), divided mtor three aneseest
redion earitating iront 3,•01,Nclay, draw out of tue what, I c:41180f. win fiereflY"
hi 'to talk &lout himself. Though7 1:4'"I'• they're* all they have to ed. a telfla SitsPirkm$1:7,, Way bo given only twice daily. Calf
vela 14111:001,00y or taco- • • •
But • "I cannot. tell You, Cletee ueedleto eitould always be fed warm and
1.-•••••=111[.
HE IS `13ROXION."
• Wherever the rival sets up bie
RATIO.N FOR HORSES. trace wbellier he is a lino:Wier with
, Station, where it was Taunt/ that for senell tradesman. he ends OA sell.
I 141.4.1e ahilit.13,, 4.I) S(IIIII. EIIY '117" 1.4 idle horses 1poonde of alfalio izti;' ull 13 lm11°''sible" fUr the Ill/
ete he toile,' eheaeing Fittield front me t , eaelt QUO of the tbings
'ellen:. eteee e striteg,z„ 141 -et of wi.ich 9 ril"'i 1);'.. 1 13.e% 1111418 Clem and trod tlii...4 fools or this village biat. a'a as It is possible to rale() geed COINTS hay and 2e 31 Tempos of oat, straw 'Villa agents *-ell it at a, penny or a,
1 ,1,101,04c tad not mch ay. ihndest tot" it. wartn.cast %au the powo. ing all ep ana ion O3 ss hat t ite , on eour milkbut it is impoes h e daho wes eu'ineient, to %cep a horse314133i4uv a qllOLt. 1 c• Hee until the,
twelerstand is -woorige-false4 to raise good calves anti have sweet weighieg Lou° hound% on this ill. smaller man glees ut and 4'34 4)15
•••'.09aion - Om Juno; w4As a•• ig-'011. 114' titw* Ilk i"ee w"s whit(' s ''''"n"
telliPtS AO OltderSt414 the Trust. lithe
'i• 9 9 inia;'•, ifi% unit,••..y ,anal mliat tooi+: It woo; re"' 1""iii i tihtiti h mon." ' ' 114 na nle' %%bell t''"13 4:Jr 'three weeks* uld we' meat etation nutintained their
• ,interly and abondllubly larte ono meal and sour the itext. Loan from the neighborhood,• If he ate
• st,rfiiie, 406- aux ttnos ;IR to bew eer„ Foe d 0111. the four lonees in the expert.-
.
• 'r I • • co cant* lin • 'sic, -
1;3,4 ta-,,t.v.. f :um bonim from thee to a', hie words that held Clem epeeeltel fel Pest behind trtn no..--.. • lie entay begin to feed shim milk. The weight with \that little exercise ,, away gratis. and within the Wet,
3. n; Mee -1,01.e4. dinny la:Nov her
. 's'
_. h." 1P,, b„rol44 O.(133 tr soddenly*2ow f:,o•rh0 6..104• 3.Ch, Of a Cali iS ttslicate tehtaee oowoe i'nel•rel ttk'
ThehnWar.s the True,.t :lu, te:3scu :a"w'ItsofOr
14A1/(1 444 t1t V:ish hetto jte- seer; t bout ow.3.001I-Ilg 13. elem.„eo 1esiy ,ensIttee)u-4d cue c enee of feedtbeilevesthlrsise"itsnIIi:°3.44ut,(3liiift
ter;thited 31514 the facts4who",r;ClnzeeFiteeld Faith IremliOg 'Mirebrried awashould be made geelualiyDo not Onlyberaaintaenerupotthisbltle:it IIristit0oe0e1tlo
r
owe- were, eneteieg as good a eiri ./ delen ;outlier Nloorm-;.act. **.e•hich if 1 Clem 100ked around about expect- , change from wholo milk to skim that the ration is suflicient for light Fiends". Motto eoon telis on the
9.:;14 ono She me -peeled her 21)11444 1)24* 11114e ia Faillowlay ogarust sue and 1139010, to suddenly cease speaking ifoul 000 -half per doer; 1. e„, n the /trerIN4eirttl ollgreseeitilfansetaNtPieorniTeirs'eeaast PrIldeclire.niblmill1111Yrastigli:sreelrldriettirtrot 11°A.Itir!•
ee, :Ow vc..ts pretty, Ate never 114053 lo '.;evaitic kleown would Vara everfoling to .see 80111008o who hind Caused ; milk faster titan a pound iv a ,hound°
to.re,t, aq ;;Ige loved himand in Atone -Wed 5011 Ntotiid be °Ito ;if the raid derart, But thero WAS 149 one Calf le getting 12 pounds of whole i
found that there Was a. higher digeee .Iturkelelivr.s "gents* 01' begin " war
• .e. r ti a i o d the, sieloot m von,' first to elven us. dhow does , in eight, and after a fcw minuirs he ,ntilh Per daY. 010 first day of the' mime; of carbohydratee when ra., which can only end In his OW11 ruin.
. , 1 1 et I d eveloerles Of
n1103 lazow the tecieteoleeen 1. even returned to the house to think over chanlee feed 11 potent 5 of 'it to
tor her though -Is.
oalleet, was, be mane Jan '9;v9WI'1 it. anti 1 pray Ileitven ehe all the strangeness and mystery into Lunt 0110 Pound Of Skint milk; the sec:-
Cie/items. Clem as he wee tnown, 210 1) nulY. You love hee You'll the triit'St of which Ws lere had , ond Oily 10 pounds of obeli; milk
lecally. NVO,5 a young fOrMCV - a me to /ion) her limn,. stispeete'plunged him, and to count the and twO Pounds of sRho milk: end
et evtiOlte lilted. ;Mg 103, .1 11111y. Alr. t'lements, for You give him a right to eau upon einny It boa been found by experience
float hearted, hottest yeoman. whom ing. cannot let you go on eonrt-;utes tin the morrow wlach would 80 On, the change ls complete.
them felt in lov,e wRit. (trimaran Iterfr mime' her "" WOUld „its her protector. that the, starch and fat contained In
tow ohen he was on, the way to ane title t %must mon so long me Three weekii passed; mid yeliewley
114111Th ill WS blaCk Ct/ot mid siM hot, 31 r felber bees. couldn't, let 'saw nothing, beard /10 t ing of Air.
31 1 AO WO6 gatherlog carnations, in: +note' Inarre" a man with it etill ,Fitlield. Clem was a. great support
1h. front garden- Clem nwt' secret- to he,"*.ed •`.111°0 414-e2 fool comforter to dimly during those
Air, Meld Oltet, or twiee ere that PO 1111 rum livr naiiinno's ono, wcary metis waithig„ He went to
toed the two -awn had got ou very her ilt.:41,011(r SI. And if e0111(1.11Sed see tam °wry tiny, bet, he mover
% • -tt 19 1 le t,011‘01 8441011 11:1
won togeeher, but until that sun.. the t.ocret it Wouitt Maize ow man moiled to he. t) ,
look twice at Fielield's cattuge or , the Po -11. osk eon lo refrain
(lay Clem hied never trouleel to . t • ihett,inl..1.1adh,steltelitlber fatireo,the night nosh. we end that coves tour
t arav, ]very word,
ofter 111 14 sendity. how_ o out lope!, ing ate 1 o eay 11101T. MA •
3, 1441(211 spolien to him that- tbree-fou
weeks old will eat from oneehalf to
r•ths of a pound per day;
ever, Clem had looted well into the to I elieve roe o hen eey that for ;3;(1111.1"11, 'nu!
time be p,;91.7.4.41 Ur, cottage. which ; tel for ory prac.. or mind you bad .18 kal nc. mei at the end of the three one-fourth to one and one-han
• en. cen be made to take the place
of fat removed from tlw 21)3134.
Calves will begin 'to oat grain when
from 1*) days to t,WQ W001:8 old. At
first, put a little meal in their
nultoths.: after delultiog their mint,
anti in a :Omit time they Will go
to their feed boxee and pet with a
1.1,.(rden and Up at the uhrlows every eo r o‘tri good., r -linnY's good. 1"velel" 1*14(1 sun"eeP int° when eight weeks' old, front one and
N‘let" 8 he felt sure .linny's father pounds Dor day.
lie Ct!rtainly did much more tter ete. etre* /ittle of her in fu- 5'.() 11(1
11054*, 104.4)141
return. 110 gently nt.g.,
ly than he had ;my (44511 5,1121 10 do, tbre.. Olney to nowt' hitt Calves will begin to nibble at hay
0(1 Y I, d linallY about the stone time that they come
Athutever point of the contra.. 4'Tinny mid I ;we avotte,
bent euell 1•;,. eostientiim, lee. re. Mr. Filliettli" Clem cried. h eensonted to iix a day, far she mence to eat grain. When from six
somehow it itiWit!,s ecenied that the al 111,e ull'411'rtonding an ho luta J11`•t•';‘8 '(IiielayalaneirisleVfletillre"iiill,;!:silliarett0 14101 to eight wed& old, the calves un-
ehorteet way lay along* the broad, h. vt d. der exneriment OUr agricultural
white, th1Sty rOad Fitilelins cote. Footed imam roma quickly, mid ,Lit'itluslievileeintsre,dthiehehegli,),stsifiplstisofittiVitT:et neOnlelegpeo-luctodnsumed from oneehalf to
lag,e. And he alweys walked oil 124 t Ids 1 rows. per head. Mixed orch-
Ilitiield's side of the road, beeanee „ "I've b en 0, fool.',110,, sot
to wOric to find out What t,„120-eltignrasg s and prairie hay are best.'
it was the shorter curve. A thou- t eou two 1 my won ere eecaree but clean, bright hay
sand surveyors could not have cone' sew it made jinny happy. And !ha(' blenenOtlenteincigt.nrttit.olitelicd.n9011.)elz )zrat.:::sliould be 11S011,
Weed Iii111 that there was not ' %NV...1,141.111r; ti01‘).1.<1.sril ,)•;(1).201 ,t1 her 1( 10 UTE. .ca,tEATEsT DIFFICULTY
two -strides differeuce between the • .1 d to a town forty milet. away, .
h. 't and, there the thread snapped. in raising calves is undoubted lY
scours. Here, as elsewhere, an
ouuce of prevention is worth a
pound of • cure." ' The principal
causes are overfeeding, feeding sour
milk, feeding cold milk, feeding grain
With the milk, dirty milk pails, un-
wholesome feed boxes and ireegular-
ity of feeding. An intelligent and
observatut feeder -will notice the
symptoine'of this disease as soon as
it appears, in which 'ease the ration
of milk should be cut down one-half
or mere, and gradually increased
agaio ass the calf is ablc. to stand
5S. Successful feeder will do his
'hest to keep the milk sweet.
Heating milk seenee-to produce
thenncal changes' that help to pre-
vent scours. -There is probably no
more effective Way of opsetting the
system. of the young calf than by
feeding it cold milk. So hnportant
is it always to feed the milk at
blood temperature (95 degrees, to
ipo degrees F.), that a careful feed-
er will test, the temperately with et,
thermometer. No .one can exPeet,,
successfully raise skim milk calves
without . giving close attention. "to
the -temperature of the milk fed.
Calf buckets may be kept clean by
rinsing and scalding after each feed.
No more ' grain( or hay should be
given than the calves •will ' eat • up
clean. ' Should any remain uneaten
it should be retrieved before giving
any freele feed. Calves like salt the
same as any other animals.
To suminarize, wenn, sweet milk,
given in buckets with access, to corn-
meal, bright haY, fresh, clea4 Wa-
ter, Salt, plenty of .sunlight,'isbelter
beetliiig in cold weethee, shade
in summe'r,. regularity atid.tindness
in. treatment will ,, usuatly ineere
go.od, tlitefte calves thitt .will egain
frem .pound and one -1-41 to two
pounds daily. .
t.V.0 moue, 11 141 1 et .o
circumstances sometimes odapt theme' 3(1. 3d melded slowly lend Sighed liefIlvezdadyeadthe ocobitttet-iliciteidonatsittat
it -
selves to people; Clem fell in with Is.
ger
Mr. Fitfield muck moro frequently' will slit•alt to her to -night," he hold upon Clem, and one day he
after than before that memorable' said. °Aril I will come over in the started to hunt the truth, workitig
Sunday when he first set eyes tot o.t ruine to Lee you." on t.his hypothesis. Ile made all
•ret.te Olney Ire held out his Irene. Clem look- his inquiries himself, because he fear -
The two men met at all sorts of el at it and heotated.
unlikely places. and Clem laid him- "It's a clean hand, Clew," said
.eelf out to win golden opinions. Ilut Fitted, reproachfully; "it never did
somehow, Mr. Fitileld proved him- any teen en injustiee conottitted
self to be a. difficult man to handle.
Ile was pleasant, cheer,,, and friend-
-1y, but not sufficiently so to sat,isfy
Clem, who, failing to draw Mr. Fit -
field over to his farm, began to de-
spair of ever getting an invitation
to it at table with Tinny. Clem
tried prize cattle, line crepe, poul-
try, and pigs to allure Jinny's fath-
er to the farm, arid got ;deeper and
deeper into the slough of despond as
be discovered that none of them had
any magnetic powers over Mr. Fit -
field.
One bright, victorious day Clem
discovered Mr. Fiteeld "fancied"
carnations. 'Until that moment he
had not known the difference between
a carnation and a pink; but in. one
wild swoop there passed over him a
pasedenate regard for carnations
such as none but a grower cOulcl en-
tertain. Ire received an invitation
to inspect Mr. Fitlield's earnations
on. the followiug day. Tie parted
•from the strange man to go straight
off to the neighboring town, wbere
he bought a trumber ef -the most
ihowy carnations he the possession
of the local florist. 'the pick of
these found their way into Mr. Fit-
, field's gardea a, few days- later, for
the latter Went OVer to the farin to
inspect the flowers which Clem. art-
fully desk:a-teed to him while bending
over Mr. Fitfield's flowers aid steal -
819 looks .Iinny. .And poor Clem
gave binifeIf many a headache Pead,
ed to employ professional agents lest
Fitneld's secret should be Stumbled
epon.
After malty weeke of wasted energy'
an enlawful deed. You don t know Clem found himself inquiring into
the seeret; you only know one to-- the identity of everer corpse • upon
handl whom a. coroner's jury had sat eince
isto and yet you refuse my
I can aSk for no greater proof, that the time Of 1;itfleld's disappearance:,
yon would turn aWay from. ',finny eelitige task-, but Clem,had o
and me if you knew what I know." sort of instinctive feeling that . it
"No, Mr. Ifitfield," Cried Clem, would lead him right in the end„ It
eagerly. "I don't tetra away from die,
either of you; I was only weeelere One day Clem stood in_Waltrow
Police Station iequiring into the
iner."
They shook hands heartily, but rieath of a; num who had been run
over on the line ,between Waitron.
and Braysleigh on the night follow -
1119 Fit:field's disappea.rance. -Clem
had read up the i•eport the-, •fro
quest. The body had not been iden-
sadly, as men over a grave, and,
without a word; separated.
The saute evening Fitneld Spoke
of Clem to - Ile 'had gone so
often, bet en this Pat 1.14.12101. even,
big his 'serious thoughts gave hine tined, but the evidence adotitted Of
a graee tone anO: manner in Spite no other verdict than, the+, of
rho cleecerption of the body
seemeO to Olein very like the: an-
pearance of Fitfield:
oYes; we've got, a photo: Of him,
of himself, and Jinny blushed most
becomingey.
"I don't think he'll be coming here
quite so often toter what I said to
hlin this evening," said leitlield, taken after death," said the inspec-
awkivardly. tor whom Clent saw. "Dat dorel
°Not coming here? Why, father, think you can throw any light on
what did you say to him?" she ex- the matter. The identity has been
claimed, with undisguised astonish- 0911-1)11 110(1 since the inmost. That's
molt. e pilot° .
He went to where she sat sewing Clem took it, and started.. It was
and, leanieg on the table, looked Fiteeld, Without a doubt. , •
earnestly into her eager face.. Clem tried to hide his agitation.
"Jinny, do you 'truly 10 ye him?
Ise asked. `'Don't hide anything
from me." -.• .•
"Why, Sather, if he never eame
again-" the little .h2' 111), sound
in her voice told her heart inueh
ing hiee into the niget books about more truly than her added, "I should
miss him more than I can say." tor asked, kindly.
c a rnati o ns an their cul tnrc.TTc
did 110f, mean to le eftiletht TtarTing Fitfield raised iihnsell irlDm the tas Clem gmgled something and left.
In this way Clem e.new thny love ble and walked ever to tile te indow. He went straight home to Fall ow -
"What Was his name?" Ise asked.. "
'Well, we had an official , to
say nothing about it; bbt tetween
you 011(14 12)0 the poor .fellow was Mr.
Masters, tile, public liaTIginan.''
(Own tooled cold went pale.
onid you know him?" the inspee-
.
ed her. arul taught her how to love. His glarice passe,d over the **eat
In a short thee Sinne- knew more little garden, over the thicb:. privet -
.t lova than morn_ i"Tis wo- hedge, anci fixed itself on some vague
lnae's whole existence," point in the line of bine in the dis-
Coe deening Fitfield di•cl a• strange tance. face was Nvhite and hag -
thing -- strange for him. Be went gard.
over to the farin and searched for "Why should I stand between a
Clam 1,111 til he found him, mall and my .1" lolly, who depe,nd for
Clem was pleased. P.t this until he their happthess upon a union to
130'e 1 the strange light in Mr. Fit- which I ain. an absolute 'bar?" be
roj d's vlien he felt uneasy, won- thought to, himself. 'ef went Ile toot. her in 11154 arnis. .lieny, return half so great a profit per an-
der;r sol`at Was coming. aWay or died :the secret woul(1 never my " he sai I, he num, on an investment? The growth
• .or. oiements,'' said Fitfleid, af- be lt"110\YY1. • She 'would miss .1.1W. bOtil rather and 11 11(21(1, and we'll of Vegetation pa,e-s' natnre,--s316 grows
ter a haLIOCi -110005r as the suramer • • she wbuld ' mise me; but how lem'e Fall0W1nY, SO it WM be easier vide And if a' field of cc)en, increase
w ey had exhausted or- does a father conloare to a b.0 sb n d ? for you to learn can bo ho Ili and ing at itS mar e] rn d 0 es not
- topis f've 11 0 tieed or uve °mob 0 01 otlier truth is shy, r,o,e 10 vOfi Lai d t pay the owner there ,rorely mu St be
lay, straight to
"..liuny," lie said, it is :is T fear-
ed."
"Ile is dead," she whispered.
"'Pie met with an accident. Ele
.0014 a, strange nian, and you and
nIust respect his wish not to at-
teinpt to SO1 t'e his, secret.
We Can l'eSpeet iliS inein()ry at the
sanie tinee.''
tions rich in earely digestible , •
protein were submitted for expert-1nel", 19 that Of MI% IfvurY
[34*41-
Ment. The protein from alfalfa, hay urtuger the' biggest. of all lirithb
Itlity Blum the Ramo conditions, en coutrivetors to the Government and
PSIO1C131111.4 Ca 8:3 t
eh
aerbr
e
Oltyld;Pautlets1 154 324(24-41 1 31110 a‘s..A.11°Itnolese.ver P:matriorr -14::111*
fromtho straw in the above rotten 'lla1)3 " ito-.4i the 0110 wOrd "Loye
1tIndeotrIrmeespeonniedijns
itfiel.; istitaib,setanseted.eewould 013.3.'." Whomever he 4240.1300.ite$ tow
)o
trnet With, he dOCS his very heel
for, and refuses to lieten to the raost
tempting offer front arty Me UN, OM
the
DEAL IS ENTERED UPON,
"Loyalty" IS in Itself such a good
busirtese aseet that Mr. Bainbridge
has never yet liad trouble with OOP
er the War Ogice - which he liat
oupplled with record quautitiee ol
woollen goodo. and practieally• telieloo
erything it asks for - or any ol
the Colonial Governments. At the
outset of the South African war,
Genitally, who get» a good deal 01
goods for her forces front us, opplied
to biro kw $2,500,000 worth of
S alreadyl:ui
)d lle‘tvbelileattoll-
hot
stages of business with Britain for
her needsoantl as be considered he -
could not do both as well as if he
gave his attention to one alone, be
refused Germany's offer t once, and
took the - at the time -- much -
smaller order of his Oft colintry.
4. -
• MILERS' CROWNS.
PROFIT.
Do -iron know, brother farmer, that
no other legitimate business in the
world presents greater °pool -Utilities
for profit than. oars?. Take the pos-
sibilities of a 1:e1 -15e1 of corn for il-
lustration. Planted on a piece of
c•arth two by two feet, and it will
11100111.0 tWO ears, each containing
four hundred 1(e141.e124, or an increase
of eight hundred per cent in four
months' time. Wbere is the tra,cle
ov business in any city which. will
otfter.ommea...+*r•w000pownrea
'KEEP YOUR, 1115 Ent"
MILLIONS ARE SAID TO ZE
DUB TO MOTTOES.
Tittle Phrases as the Colmer
Stones of Some Great
Careers.
Mr. Plerpont A.Torgan writes down
his many millions and his position
as the most powerful civilian in the
world as the result of one watch-
word which be has sworn by all his
life. Ile puts it in plain English:
"Keep your lips tight!" anti every-
thing he -does, big and small, Is
worked out on that basis. Ile is the
most silent of alFfamous men. No
inkling- of any of his huge schemes
ever looks out till the whole thing
Is ready, and ,,it is too late for riv-
als or enemieV to get their spoke in
his wheel, %be smartest newspaper
can get nothing out of him; and even
the Thitish/Goe-ernment, in spite of
its secret 'service, knew nothing of
the great # shipping trust which is
scaring so hnany people until it
wAsi.ALt ARRANGED..
While Some Nonatehs Zaire
Crowns, Others nave Several.
In the matter of costlineos th0.
crown of Portugal taltes the, lead of
all others. 'It is computed to be.
'rghdollars. *),,4 ewotheit
--
,11m
• where there are plen- is not the most imposing of Euro-
ty of smart business men, woke up
onemorinng• to find its entire teel
trade xi his hande. Other' trust -
makers /talk and fail, because their
rivals are able to get ready for
thenoOleut Pierpont Morgan "keeps
his lios tight, and the first thing
he does 'before opening a deal with
Onobody to buy their business for
a million or so -is to ensure that
theyodo the same. And he pays his
right-hand man--Oharles Schwab --a
fortune annually to do the same.
.4' The late Mr. Cyrus White, Who-,•
-shared with Sir Ounliffe, Brookes the
'title of "the Morgan 'of Britain,"
was so, enainoured of his favorite
trade war -cry that he carried it en-
graved on *the seal at his watch -
chain -- "Always one day -ahead."
This, Ise said, was the first Coin in
his fortune, and the,lak. He meant
that he was always careful to be
just in front of the needs of )the pub-
lic, and that when they wanted' a
pro•ticular thing, he found out that
want beforehand, and Was 1e21137
with it. I -Te hoUght more patents,
awl ,controlied 11101e sources of mer-
chandise, than any other man liv-
ing, except for 'the business hiS
heirs carry on -
"UNDER TI -IE SAME MOTTO.
Bre was the first 1,0reap the cycle
boom profits, on the same principle,
and he had most of the interest in
motor cars in his hailds before he
died. He was practically able to
fix his own rtes for shipping and
carriage, and his income reached
'nearly $3,000,000 a year.
, Mr. aeorge Smith, the richest Man
Who has died within the last five
years, and probably the 'smartest
financier., had a unique watchword,
as millionaires' War -cries go. 1 -lis
motto was: "Don't make enemies,"
and it was the law of his life. It
is -practically inmossible for a man
to make less than one enemy for
every $50,000 he wins, according to
Mr. ilocIcefeller, but George Smith
11154 1, it all in his dealings. Per-
son -trio, he was the pink of court-
esy, and even if he "broke" a rival
81 the way of business, he would do
pean croWns. 1.'he 3.ron Crown of
Lombardy is said to bo, 1130 oldest'
and stateliest of menarche' crOWns.
It is gravely dezlared to be made.
out of the nails of the .original
Cross, and is Said to be 1,500 years
old.
Xing OSear of Sweden has not only
two crowns, but, although ,Sweden
and Norway are now one kingdoen
the Swedish Xing receives two core
°11Tahlielcrown°1shas no part in the- in-
augural ceremony of the King 03 the
Belgians, who merely swears to pre-
serve the Constitution and to ob-
serve the laws.
While some monarchs have no
crowns, others have '$everal. The -
Czar of Russia, has a large aseort-
ment. Among the headpieces of the
Czar are.the crowns of Xiev, Kasen,
Siberia, Astrachan, Poland, Finland,
and the Crimea. 2
Spain originally had no crown,
end there 19 no actual coronation
nOW, the ' Monarch only taking an
oath eirailar to thaV of the Xing -
of the 13elgians. nut though 1-5i444."
actually invested with the round and
top of royalty, a Spanish King has
a crown of a very costly and elabor- '
ate design, tho1 gh. it originally was
only it plain band of gold:
The Sultan of Turkey 1105 no
crown, and noillihg, of the 1:111(1 18
employed in his investiture with des-
potic power. _His authority is frank-
13,- the power of the sword. Instead
of c,oronation, the Sultan is girt
with the slyer& of Othman. 'Take
it with faith,''' is the injunction,
"for you receive it from God.".
4 -
TEA -DRINKING NATION.
It is rather remarkable that tit(
conSumption of tea in Glreat 1111 13
sumption of beer. We learn ' from
..11e eDti.
increases side by side ill -I
the latest Board of Trade return!,
that over six pounds of t:Q;A, per heaW
is drunk annually, and_ that the to-
tal consumption' exceeds that of
the other European countries and
the United States put together.