Exeter Advocate, 1915-3-11, Page 2Moncy Makcs Moncy;
Or* A Str
e Stipulation.
FTE.11," XXV.-
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re til 4ht ew lizirre..
we eerie wee eh Iezily evetee teet •„'ir
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Dry let Mr. Dreent reel tht
to- • :1:44 ,.1 4*
0 e'er "a -7 "%-
Lai. eelee . e'er:pee etei "al ' 7 k?" "he h
, 3 3,44 ; n4ti ^ ;:i4/1 !,,'A met:tory,
i; .4 Ile lee 434 31 t • re tlk her,
' Deeilv eel meet- ‘."1,141"" b eels.
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Lure 341
Litt I rem .neeee., 1 d reit 4 1111 41* 2111
neve ere 1 he a the 4' 541 ••, exc.. •..^.4`
, n h Ara 37 48 • Tile .t.Ure. are
' It it Very .. mph. rea.•rne ..t'i • .41. "
4)1314 14 44411e5. elle lees .t wife alroetiv• A
w:fk. 1 p7ts4 y guiee. .14 '2•L': i'" 34411 74U 41'.1r a LSI ""'u'
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vire .1-er t trim. rii44.4oUglt Are. 1 -if 4. .41 Ottv:‘,..11":C' Ell tt444 44
"ZIP latittItsr$ 189 84 to get eeperet- 4.11<" eitaL '151...iee Foe
*'I1 44 •m ewe "heei" • 1. w.
A'e.er. "'51 .,
1144311 Elea' ,1'131.111 '.4". I 01. N.«,. 1. her e ,thmwo
'e' a rd. ana :bee
4 6 "
Leri 4.*F 41434. "1 3'1'4' l`tVi111 41 3 after her up the -.4,* 4*
43444'- 441 her 1.4e She exec • 14 1444 eeiu „ et the eeot ot tee. roma. Enid turned -
:tad 33.4.7+1. 8411 344,44 t.itteal las .•.ent. into • nee teueute tee,,„..e," 44/10
'141 LI:" h" 4s1' Sh0. let! him • *7 • 4444 the landlng,
4s4e441,4,..11 ,nragitie nst• .041 wylit reem, eiceing the door
it weein 3 4 114 r.elit 1 I never ..114.14141 atic? 14 breath '-4 I, ng
Lave n •eini 1 tlie• Me. Beeeirt meet neie?nge Lon ler live ;tee eme
Lave tirtle o 1 '11. 4 li.tg ▪ "4: tt. •tiri 12 11 aft":,%ttk Ti* 2* was a, eeld
`11. ti : /no that then'e ate :llgt(StIttatS'aZ op er,„e.„ tete reenter.
1 114 Ltn.e 1'.°1 ""4 lo hel;ev" ;•el ,-114. would letve the terength
Innel 114"."'r ;,* ge t4" 5414411 an eitirview wi:14 him.
judge eue anotive• un'eee we have 44)111
girl wee sitting 15'414the lee-enette•
greeted foe our judgment.The great sew eeet up 41.44414'saw pee reletreer.
thee; te 14 1414*-' end 1.4 rei•I'e'e /Pr ie pins beautifully,' she said.
thee Yen 443441241.4 12141414' 1144. ' moved 4443' 1141 hour:
hippy about thee • -I have 11* epeali to eomeone ort5334444.
-I ant very surpr'eed,' .11.1 Letly Ell..e; • nee,,, Th„.„,ee, you van come eneNo
et len I
"alai ;VC% elte added in the e tine breath.' rime..
deti"t htle'W. 31.1747, aiSV ty..; felt that 4) 444 away, looking half (me
i2*4422, 1 411444,414 '44115 34(5 144344)4(1tite.ly at Julian aa ebe 4 -5j1 -.(d -out; and
then Enid opened the door.
me, tall 11e. A' 1114 3'*t"."111,S 110 4144144 1111. ••it,mo 111. teeeee, - see eau,
114
441, and 3"'*"."'S la' kat Ilidt 1 She had 444 '.411 5)37 her fur cap and had
ttl+.7 4.311147 itrytt:
ar7+ yetz nehapity?" 43'3144411 Adrian. 4inned out of her %shabby coat; 114 he
"Ohl I letiow, I know, he added; "there came into the room the man preeeed one
Itoeitonkd::;*1111,1..re, eves. He felt .-o ieshamed to
were bee in the peet-to melte you wrotele.
ed but the past Is oeer and •done with. -Now tell me what you have to say,"
Nell; ard youare ea venue. and you have, ,slid Enid.
130 tuneh. 'Why ehould you be miliellieVF 'Ile let hie hand fall, but his eyes were
'*u -t- I can't get what I wanI t,
supecee." eaid Lady Ellen, a lade reek-- closed *3341, and he leaned half ancon-
seloutO
rrly agnet the door.
The man looked down on her. named an "I want you to come hack to me," he
said: and Feed enevered him with pare
instant, awl then he ...aid- recut--
"Of ceuree--X underetand why yea drew are, mud!
back from the thought of marrying Bre, You Lave come here to
insult me to hurt me and to make roy
aut. It is herevnee there e. another man life harder than it ie"; and he answered
in your life. Neil. 11701 7011 oinfide in her hoarsely -
me? Won't 4442.1 toll me something about e
I want you to come haek. I have been
this other min? In the letter you wrote mad; but now I am sane. I love you -I
me this morning, yon eseid you look upon love you --I can't live without you!"
8114 a•s your brether. You asketi me to ace Before she had realized what he wits do-
ter you 1144 a brother. I love you very
dearly, and I want to do all in my ca
power ing, he bad fallen en ifes kneis, and he
ught her hand in both el hie.
to leen you to adviee you. "Enid. for goodneee sake," he r:.aid,
Lady Ellen got up and snapped her fin- ..don't send me. away."
fires in his ewe. S'he was teembling in every linth. There
"I don't want your advice," t4 -be 44141' was a burning in her throat, a-nd her eyes
"and there ion't another man. at last, ' were 'blinded with tepee.
ebe amended ".there, is; but you can t do -You have been too long in coming,"
anything with him.' she eaid. "I don't -believe in your love!
"Why not?" a•eked. colonel DawneY a There is something 'behind this some
little hurriedly.trick, eomething-whieh ineene-grett
'There 'wee a little nervous 4141114 run. thing,i3 to you-an•d so you, play your
1
etatieeireent with eire. Bryant. Th's thing
.ennot go on. Let me have youis ecete tie s
,een leberge -what you 1'
:edited iMpetiently: "that doesn't -mat- I
•e,r, • .
44 1)urr'.4..*;11y, oartlt.:.i: -of
Altat wast tlicaglit or s.1-.41, °43).1(4
44-311.- 711141 7_,te 21'111t 71'.. to 141:F. bowe- .
r14.n1.. 13e gist, t
c of 414,, 3-.4.47 4.1411 214 feteh. -
hi -
a.4 14e4F.7 eeele rairpoel ler a lepg
me.' lee ...ail: .-;:4.1* 1. shall stay There Or
elext 11. day,.- •
1141 3,1^.. W." V:, a(' hi. -Fat dewn tend ,
4.C'tQl... .4 4 Mr. Pleydell. 7(4
"1.i. 17e:or:re41 1454' lawyers .tIvit -be
1 (,4'4e 44.144414.44y •ehangt-41 Arrange.
) 14(4. ar....4e,1 41.441t 1444.41
74354 '4'.:'-fe .11 .-!4' • il;s4 .1111121444
..,1.7.1 1 would 1:144 'her
4,..,l4.411 1. 1:4144e de,.. -re. for
1 -,-.44irt R:ve you 34317
1'5 14...4 has. eotee th-111.1.
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- 114.,4F2•14:" .41141
nnt'?
II g • F.e. ter eee.tee
Claude Grahame -White. English Aviator.
ency of cream, stir well -and add
one -pound of alum, -twelve ounces
of commereial potash, -and about
one pound of salt. Stir again, and
apply while hot, Two or three coats
will keep wood fieeproof for many
months.
11 I: S SI 01. HATES , GERMANY,
Fine Opportunity Is Offered to Dri•
bolt 'Manufacturers.
.An English, -correspondent in Pet-,
rograd writes a,e follows concerning
the Russian hatred of everything
Geeman:
German used to be spoken here
a good deal, and in Mnecow among
business people a great deal. Now
it. is dangerous to speak it any-
where., In almost eyery shop hangs
o. large placard asking people not
o. Sereet car -conductors will not
allow them to. Qften in the streets
English people are stared at with
dislike and suepirion liveatiee their
English loos been mistaken for Ger-
mei, I hear of several altercations
which have arisen in tide. way. A
lady 1 know was told by an officer
not to speak German. She retort-
od Freneb. "Yun ought to learn
3r1/45 reeitelliz4‘ the larignage of Eng-
land, your ally." Eng,lishinan
whe speake perfect Russian was
abused rudely in a street car
(1411)544*
-
eause he was talking English with
his wife. 1.14 turned the laugh by
saying in Russian "If you had been
better edueated yon would be able
to dietinguish between German and
English." The man collapSed.In
seltools the teaelling 7teeiman has
been suspended. A C•lerman news-
paper which has been published
here for a century and a half is to
he suppreseed at the eud of the
year. Thousands of firms evhich had
Ouse relations with German indus-
try have resolved to send their o
ders elsewhere. Great Britain
might step in and get them if our
businees men oared to do businese
on Russian lines, But that means
etudying Russian requiremente and
giving long eredits. Which few Bri-
tish firms care to do.
A fine opportunity is offered to
foresight and enteepriee. "Thexe is
no sacrifice which- wo are not will-
ing to suffer in order to throw off
the evonoinieal yoke, of Gerrnany
and to .attain our independence."
So says the organ of the Chambers
of Commerce and Induetry through-
out the land. And the members of
these bodies mean it „ now. If
British firms were to employ agents
or to ,send out representatives who
speak Russian and who understand
the people they would hear about
plenty of openings for business. All
the cutlery hare noticed here is
Germa.n, from Solingen or Essen,
Is Sheffield so prosperous that it
needs no fresh market During the
next half -century Russia wil.1 spend
millions every year on agrieultural
machinery. Are our makers going
to stand aside and let others sup-
ply it ,
STRAY HINTS AT PEACE.
Signilleant Referenees From Lon-
don and Paris Rankers.
While diplumatic and ufficial pro-
nouncements by belliger nts are
still fairly unaromous un the point
that the war will be prolonged, the
observant follower of current fin-
ancial events may sense a, feeling
in the foreign capitals th,at peace is
nearer than is generally supposed.
There may be no authority for this.
Once before, since the war began,
financiers thought they deteeted
signs of faltering which, they im-
agined, presaged early peace ne-
gotiations. They were wrongthen
-or rather the signs that were evi-
dent to them did not work out. But
some day the financiers will be
right, and if history repeats itself,
when the news does come, the mar-
kets will have it first. For this
reason the financial cables sent
from London and Paris to New
York bankers during the past few
days, beoasise of their significant
references to a possible pretext for
peace overtures, have been of
gre,at interest. Some of those cor-
respondents who usually *rite with
a, good deal of a,uthority have talc
en the view that the United States
protest against th-e Gerraan war
zone may yet be used as a, pretext
to terminate with dignity a war in]
which, most intern ation al finan-
ciers admit, it is• no longer possible
for Germany to gain a lasting ad-
vantage. The reports of aoute
eoonormic difficulties in Germany
and Austria may be exaggerated,
but financial commentators, even
as close to the scene as Holla,nd,
apparently do not think so.
Even the statesmen are making
eomewhat frequent references to a
inore speedy conclusion of . hostili-
ties as witness the threat of- Brit-
ain'e First 'Lord. of the Adrairalty
that the- p.a,ralyzing foros of the
pressure now being exerted up -on
Germany through the -navy may
itself d'eoide the ,ifietle of 'the war.
"Charlie says I grow more beau-
tiful every time be ee.ea Me." "If
that'e the case- you ought to make
hirn twice a clay,," crime the, eq-
PlY•
7 ',V tna , 4149 l're 1343
tiSe • w'th 4411412
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34, .41 04, .7„4r'i 484 4,74. ,
•
Perhape the beet known of all English birdmen. He partivipated in
the !odd of 31 131 1t4' aeroplanes on (littered and other.' German -141)
1411(11144? leases last Friday. Falling into the Sea near Nieuport en the
return trip, Mr. Graharne-White had a narrow escape, from death.
Ile was pleked up by a French boat,
1 7.- si.,1:4 I to lull
I at' -++ All::11 11,14
4.0.1 443-4444444
711; E14144.1
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41.91 '1'3
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falel,194'
",‘ 44 444" 441 .14
Zi .4 1'0.41 bee.
ning through him. part.
"Whv not -Nell?" Julian Bryant- got up and stood looking
She stood in front of 11123 very pale, and
she tried to laughat her.
"I am not," he gid, "I am telling you
e•Beetteese-beeause he ie the etupiderit- the truth. I want nothing but you -you
blindeeteeleareet ereaiture in all -the _and work. Everything ie hideous to me
world." Then she covered her face with e -without yon."
her hands. "Oh, Adrian," she laid, "Don't Enidlooked at him and then looked
you underetand?" away. There was a slight enovernent in,
He stood very etill, and ihen he said- the little cot; instinctively the mother
"Nell-- The word was a 'whisper. but
in her responded to that. She moved
it was hill of amazement and of some. across the room and stood beside her
thing elee, an exquisite tenderness which °had.
lield it confeesion. • "Please don't epeale too loudly," she
Be took the two small trembling latnds
e'rom her face and Ire held them in his
julian stared at her; then a great cry
one ctrong hand. Then he cirevr her near- broke Irene his lips. lee took two strides
ee 1t cl3i
.nd nearer till her heed was resting
on. ;s breast. "Ohl' he ea.id. "There is a child, and
and swept the white curtain on one side.
e a.n'e be true, Nell," he said. '0
.-11' I never knew! A child -my child! Our
me' deer, it ten't be true." Child; and you have been in -want, whilst
She released herself a little from his
hold, end stood looking up at'him flash. He could not finish his epeech, but stag-
ing and paling, with tears in Lee eyes. gered to the ehaer elose by, and Telling
But it is true; it has alwayo been
to St he burst into tears.
true. Ohl how I have despaired of letting in.tnid stood -with trembling lips; then
You. 1434.41114. I have dome my beet, Adrian.
I ant sure nobody could have accueed me elle knelt beside him.
'Don. rhe „said., "Oh, don't Julian.
of not trying to make you see. Why at yAv.
vales x have felt Quite eelepe_r_ned lleMizete,„
tee
I have flung Myself at your heed, to 41*ri; *'14714y*'14714y did you. go away?" he said. "Why
,qui
Ere eaucs. ore menet!) .
gh1 her to him and lie kissed her.
4441 geld you have never eeen me conanwent wan be,,attee x ita‘trn bonn blin /,did. you leave me? It was cruel."
e
the man anvererl her. "blind and stupid I went t4-oa:use 1 Joved you, becauee I
all the time -I have been ea , 'ting out any knew that you ware having a, terrible
..hePfight. 3: wanted you to have anoney and
elt• Tor 7044."
-Neaee of mind.' I knew that you would
...0•11. ekta. L44dy Yellen, in her bright, never get them through me or 'with me."
bird-leke way, "now that can't be true."
"It was 1117114111" he repeated; hut he kiss -
"It .is absolutely 'truer'
her with maesion, azid. he held her
"Pherk- "427 alava 701-1' never let ed. 331eso tightly - tEat she could hardly
know.' [breathe. "lent I have come bade': lie.
Be.fore he could epeak ishe had stood on
tried exultantly. "You are not geing to
tip -too and put her. hand on his lip.
. drive„ me alway. You are not going to
he said buffiedly. 'Don'. inwe me a,gain, trete. 4 have *43421 good.
tiell me. 111-4 undeestande
,She Poent 'forward and ki7th e emptY bye to the money, and all that money
;means. You are all I want -and my boy.
sleeve at* sho spoke, and then "the terms Oh, deareet, -why did you,not let me know
ca,9.',.a! I am too 1434444)7," e '
sue eiiid; uch r . • what you have suffered, I see it in Your
'vimi
.
face. You have grown so thin-ycei hove
too barepy." ehe repeated 'brokenly. ••
had so much sorrow. - Enid, you are -not
Tile =all 'W11.0. loved her bent over and gn•ng. 0 sen • me wa 7,
1 / a a 7.
kissed away 414141 1,041,1184. ''Oh, we anuatn't decide anything. in a
cHAITER Exv.r. hurry" Enid seed brokenly. ' "Think -
, think 'hoe' difficult, it wilt be for eon,
Frani .f.adv 10ion'S aliYUs8 311"n 'wen° much worse- now ehan in the old etays„ be-
steeight to the 'lawyers in, Lincoln's inn. canoe You 'have had eo muchl"
3.-..e throw a, banabehell into their midst. "10 '4* let tie 114' 14 about elie. money, '
- I --I evaile eveeething to he stOPPed," he amatvered. her, "only' oureelvee, we two,
t;.1.irr. -1. shall .put, anyeelT into eon- we three. There 13 going to be money in
eitether direetten. I'll tell yrou all. shout
Cielhole•el. eireteesetuee.ite•qteete -re.e'sera
bat !,41.)"
0
He War.. thinking of Bill Ketelt and his
-Now all I Walll 40 (10 16 1101(1 FOU
my arm,, to yi:u you, to hear you
say, .1(11 4i14„ I 4017444444" 501). I am glad ta
hate
-110x et I 1 siV !licit?" lin h1 'whit-Dere&
"44 1411004 that all o."1: -.'”:114.e iv; 141 4444.1112
ow 1 37e44 you of tsVelsYlii.ttft. IlaCQ you
targetien shut we r.e.iTe..eit tagother, when
you treed te get work?'"
"1 UPI airail of that kind of .suffer.
iree," Julian 11517,4444481(7. "Wha'llit
t Irtens
Me feenteal1 heart:trite yea:A)re. Do
von thee% I have bad cue, reetiy happy
Itottr eitice you left me? De you know
1443)3' I 4114 nut HO Yea ;1' w.es beeaue
1
(4.441* 11 13earl
Enid gave little ere. and held hem I
e'1. y d -ed "
mine elerely lo ker.
lee. I war* etre' all, so ill that I darnet
know anything that was het -Telling, and
when 1 oanu. lever to eoneteoueneee it
wee to And tiltIt many 14ee14-1 hea gone,
that you lied rUeappeared, and that I
was a rivet man! It we. not of my Call
fret. will that 1 leek thee meney Enke
I did we .vant it fought agalnet it for
yee4 to give it to lent. 7444 but to take
it for 111Y...e4f. no: en4 you mutat hove
thought :earth hea•d things ef 1110*--3SOt4
muot have eirid to youreelf eine 1140114.
by, 'now email he lets. forgotten: Oh, my
wife! It W.IS a great in eeke. I know
that you 41±44 it from the bort. the sweet.
est, and the pureet of ree.eme, but it tt'a
a great meet:the, We hive hiet a year 13
our levee toeether. 'We can never put
back that mt.; bute" he added, with a
ring in voite which ipoke of etrength
and eourage. "we are goings to have ninny
other yearsewe three Ened. God bleier
e,„•ou.-"Streteh out your arme and take me
heck."
SlowlY oluyeil him, and when they
WET(' close to one another, he eel&
"Now we that you love nue love me
just as you teed to love -me -end forgive
nue"
'I love eon." ratid Enid, "I love Yon
better than I ueeti to. There is no que,e
tion of forgiveneSs, beeause 4 love you!"
ao be vontinued.)
THE KAISER FEARS DRAT'''.
If Ile Catches Cold He Goes to Red
Immediately.
Whilst travelling in the rear of
his troops the Kaiser has in con-
stant attendance a, number of court
physicians. He fears the attack of
disease almost as much as he dreads
the assassin's knife. If Wilhelm
catches as much as a cold he im-
mediately retires to bed and can-
cels all his engagements. Unhappy
eourt officials who suffer from chills
have to earefully hid -a their s3,-mp•
toms from the Kaiser, otherwise
they will be at once banished. They
have to use their own handkerchiefs
behind the shelter of a friendly
palm or slip through a window on
to a terrace, where they can sneeze
out of the range of his Majesty's
observance.
In Berlin the Kaiser used to ex-
ercise in a covered tennis °mut,
which" was frightfully overheated,
acoording to Wilhelra's orders. In
this oppressive atmosphere he play-
ed tennis with perspiring officer.
Rather than run bhe risk of develop-
ing a, chill, the Kaiser would disport
himself in this building with it,s hot-
house interior. It was the same
with his riding school. The Master
of the Horse was always finding his
charges developing -coughs owing to
the heated atmosphere in which
they were exercised by the Kaiser.
Miss Anne Topham, at one time
governess to the Kaiser's daughter,
tells in her "Memories of the Kai-
ser's Court" how the Emperor was
always making panic-stricken exits
from one palace to another to avoid
disease. On one occasion the Em-
peror 'an4 eourt were eomfort-
ably installed at tIie Belre Vue Pal-
ace when Prince ()soar developed
chiaen-pox. So all the luggage was
repacked and a fewohours later the
Kaiser was Scurrying off to another
palace. This occurrence happened
just prior to the German Emperor's,
visit to England, so that he spent
an apprehensive week in the latter'
cOuntey, always on the alert for
symptoms of the disease which he
feared had infected him,
Pat Sees Wonders.
Mike--Phwat do yez t'ink av the
way Fthey have oow ay sindin' 111.8S --
sages widout -wires or poles?
Pat --Sure, it're a great invintion
xp e eb wan air these days they'll
foired a way t' travel widout
home.
On the Farrn
St+
Plowiug in the Fall.
Plowing early in the fall liberates
more Plant food for the epring crop
and conserves more meisture.
looseniwe the urfoce soil thus al-
.
lowing the air to penetrate. toe SIM;
paitieles which 'contain phosphor-
ous, potassium, and lime are 'caus-
ed to oxidize, which sets free these
elements for the plant, writes Mr.
IV. H. Frazer. The soil einnpounds
originally are very oomplex and are
practically of no benefit to the crop
until they aye acted upon by the
air, the solutions in the soil, and
plant juices, su as to lecoropose
them trod make them much eimpler.
Fall plowing has a tentlency to let -
the rains percolate into the soil bet-
ter, which tends to dissulve and
break up the compounds fur the tree'
of the spring crop.
Bacteria, which are found in the
soil in countless numbere generally
work better where oxygen from the
air is readily available, and these
in turn break up the organic mat-
ter of the soil into similar com-
pounds, liberating nitrates or ni-
trogen food for the plant. This is
one of the most essential elements
for the early -growth of the plant. It
is often noticed. that spring plow-
ing will not cause orops to lodge so
badly as fall plowing. This is ex-
plained by nitrogen being set free
to a large extent in the loose, por-
ous, fall -plowed than.in the more
compact, soil.
The moisture problem is also a
valuable one from the standpoint
of productiveness of the soil. As
stated above, by opening up the soil
the fall rains percolate much more
rapidly into the soil, while there is
a mulch formed on the 'surface
which tends to prevent the water
from the subsoil going directly to
the surface an41 being evaporated,
Early fall plowing makes a reser-
voir of the subsoil, 'storing the wa-
ter for the crop in the spring. Often
where -the ground is a flittle
the water will run off before it has
time to soak in when the soil is
compact and hard. Those who have
praotised summer fallowing know
that it in.oreasee chances for a good
yield the following season, and this
1-44 largely- due to the 'liberation of
plant food in the soil -arid conserva-
tion of moisture. Fall plorwing 1,s
very similar', only the soil' has not
quite so long to bring about these
changes is in case of Ammer fel-
lo-wing. Where possible it is near-
ly itlevaFys advisable to plow as ear-
ly in' the fall as possible.
A. Wise's Eleven Requests.
Firsts -Don't pou:nd or heat me.
Second -Co -ver me when I am too
warm or too cold.
Tlhird-Don't 'Stand me in a, draft.
Fourth --Don't ,oVerload 114e7
Fifth -Don't compel me to work
when I'm sick.
Sixth -Don't cut my feet too
much when I'M -shod.
' Severeth - Don't overdrive and
underfeed me, -
Eighth -Remember that ,T have
feelin '
'Xiath-Don't water me, , -when I
have been driven a long distance,
*until I am ,co,ol. •
Tentil----T.alk to me kindly,
Mee-eat...I-Treat me as you would
liketo be. treated if you -svere a.
hosse•
Fireproof Wood.
To make wood fireproof, ;Jake a
small quantity of fresh lim3 and
aidi water Until it has the consist -
Learn to Play
The Pi no
in Ile Evenli
•
You Can !
Here's the PROOF
"My boy, who could never pluy.anoce. sat down!.
and played three pieces first night.' -Mrs, 13.4
Findorer, Baits Bridge, Ont.
*1 certainly think Easy Method Music wonder -I
ful, my Grand -daughter. 11 yeare old never had,
4* lesson, now she eau play several pierce quite)
correctly.' Tars. (Rev.) 7413. Omuta.% Ingle,'
wood, Ont.
' 'I could play the first piece in 40 minutes and;
never tried a 11040 014 the piano before." -Mrs.
Seet :Luang, 40.0 Bournan Ave., Winelpee. Mean -
"My nephew, 8 years old, in etiminutee learned
to Play 'Cod Save the Hinge' -Earle Luciere
Burton City B.C.
'e7ezTe) Ate e'Per "'"e "
J!.
're*\0 Jae) C
\ * 4523
4' Ju t Thiukt I Never leenclied a
Piano Before...
As Simple as &B.0. becanee it is nothing but
the/net 7 letteree.e.D.C.leleeeeleprintea in the;
31:110..V. instea(1 it the 1'U '43114' eiterzieters :owe
ipassfinualir.erd'1int.ry A, d'art end guide;3110443-4 f11411Xritsc1Plirta11vry441?ttti1iger
both lends. Anyone
eau leara to play the
pitteo or organ in efew minutes.
l'he Easy Form Music Method Is e genuine
Wessell.; to those who truly love muse', but who
have never before bee11 able to express thenee
la melody.
Try it FREE in Your Home
In order to 4140440 4*) yeti ilia all 140 8-417 is !zee,'
we wan you the entire method end 1t10
s f usi fo 7 lees' lent% Trial ,Keep
t 7 413173 10 prove to 4705437 4)1431 eatIsfeetion that
every word. we say' is trne-then send tie $1.00
as a first payment, and e1.(10 a month mow
$e.eo in all is„pald, If you are not delighted,
send it back 111 7 tlaYe owe 119 nothing.:
niters fair, isn't it? If it is not all we elate:LI
could we afford to Make:etch It fele square offer?
When writiug. give your houw. teldre,re and.
Post Office. simply - accept'
your 7 day Free'Trial Otter as anneueeed in•
tbie paper. State how many Lees on
Nutty pm.. or organ? Addrtes EA$Y
lue el( • CO., •.; ea Wilson I taildine, Throat°, ('1411.
WEED SEEDS 1N S
Tile presence of weed eeeds 444
soils under different systems of eul-
ture and cropping shoulki be sug-
gestive to fanners. An investiga-
tion being conducted by the Seed
'Branch, Ottawa, shows a evil field
which had been in hay or pasture
for six years to contain 19,183 weed
seeds in a surface square yard <mei
inch deep, 8,915 in the same volOme,
of soil at depth from two to three
inches, and 4,309 at a depth five to
seven inehes. Another field which
had been under a good eyeteen of
cultivation and rotation eiontained:
4,984 weed 'seeds in the surface soil'
and 3,020 in each of the otheie
depths. The toneentratiori of Feeds,
in the surfaee laver of the sod field
may be explained by weeds being;
allowed to reprodu-ce theinselvee;
from year to year. Information as;
the percentage vitality of weed:
seeds at the different depths is not
yet eomplete, but a large number
of the surfate seeds in the ease of
the sod field are'vital. This inves-i
tigation indicates the importance of
short rotations, good cultivation;
and prevention of weeds ,going to:
seed. Other important methods of:
weed eontrol are summer ploughing;
of sod lands followed by frequent,
autumn -cultivation to destroy grow-.
ing weeds, thorough. eultivation
during the growing season of hoed
'crops and after -harvest cultivation
of cereal erops which have not been,
seeded down.
British Tactics.
Officer -How did he get into that
condit'ion'?
Private -41e captured a bottle f
whiskey, sir.
Officer -Yes, yes; but how did he
manage to do that -1
Private -I think he must 'aye
surrounded it, sir.
Many a great man is never heard
of twenty mileFr from home.
este. oetereete
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IR;,IN
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Blade from very finest
She4%, oihs1ey fre
from defeots.
Each ;sheet Is pressed, nq
rolled, oorrugations therefore,
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Any desired size or getage, '
straight or curved; ' ' '
LOW PRICES --PROMPT SHIPMENT
Metallic-Roof4g Co.,
UMITED
Manufacturers • ' •
TORONTO &
I1NFLUENZ Catarrhal Fever
Pine Elm Shit:1131M,-
Fever, Eizootle.
•
And- aild ..itseoees 01 'the ihorse affeeting hie 4hroa4, speedilY
cured; goks end horsee in issume stable kept, from havinit
them by using SP oh n's Distemper Compgtsnl3, 3 to 6 et eeea
ellen care; ono bottle guaranteed It cure one ease. 8ate for
.„..bluraocildufamet juar:l.haiby etallions. 1117241 and conditiono.
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Most eltieleul geientille c423234)44)1044.". Write abiefree •boolelet en
•
' *P011184 teElitICAL, COe. Cesesene lade,. U.4 14,