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The Exeter Advocate, 1916-6-22, Page 2;',..,...,•0s,,-..x.,*-As••,:r.••••0•;'•a'.... -‘ ••gatk`••471%4 SP' is packed by automatic machin• ery in strong -white cotton bags and cartons at the refinery. This is far safer and more sanitary thax. suer packed by hand in a weal:paper bag which breaks at a toueh. 1%To hand totich.es A "NTIC SUGAR until yott open it your- self, Jus$ cut off the corner of the earton and pour out the eager as yea need ft. aee-eiee • 2 and 54b Cartons a nen aet late - Tea 10 and 20 -lb Bap "The AU -Purpose Sugar eeneenene nee' 2 1 CHAPTER IV. THE LAPSE OF 7 NOCH WENTWORM Liy ISABEL GORDON CURTIS, Author o 'Woman from Wolvertons " land it is so different from anything you know." Dorcas spoke impatiently "Enoch said that. If I should go on Lite stage I -would be no different from whet 1 am -to -day." "Let us go home. There's, Mrs. Thetchins' supper horn." They walked on in silence. That evening Merry sat for half an hour will an idle pen in his hand. At last ' he pulled a sheet of paper toward him and wrote in feverish haste: pear old Enoch—Send me $100 to i the Broadway to -day, please. Don't ask teeestione, don't try to find me; I'll turn up when I've flnielted some work. Your, slave, Merry. e IEnoch Wentworth at before a table Uttered with sheets of manuscript, - • 'when a knock sounded on -the library door. I "In a seconi!" he cried. Then he tried to gather the pages together in numerical order. "All right," cried a cheerful voice. "Lord, P's Merry!" whispered Eneeh. He swept the sheets of paper into the drawer of his desk, then he stepped into the room. with a dancing! Merry rose and opened the door. light-hearted gaiety that Enoch had even hira den with his stage garb. Still it was aecomponied by a dignity of manner (41 to the coniealare a dignie ty which had self-respect behind it. CHAPTER ' people. The girl and leer father are , Wentwor.h put an 'arm about him af- livirg on a little farm. Her lover . feetionately. enen I weeth the trouble?" be inter- cemes, heeing eearehed for her every- 'Have yen come into a fortune, where. She telle him the story. He boy?" he asked with a Weigh. cucumber flea beetle are the =ninon- "-Wordi the tronhle! I don't believe inerriee her and takes the father home "Better then that—I'm on the verge est insects which injure the potato enow y. tan& yet. Yon Irene aaeh • of making a fortunt." . tops. The former eau be readily kill- werelerful imeginat ion and euth knowl- hleN•ry The .un had droppee • "Good!" Enoeh pnehed him into a ed with Paris green in the proportion *Mgt, of human nature. Yoe write a el een e,ow the hozchair izon and the western comfortable chand stood looking 'of eight ounee.; to 12 ounces. to a 40 a great Play, many thm PO e'l • I '11 1 er le down at him. "Let's have the news, gallon barrel of water, or with arsen- Yoa have laid bare the enele ef a. me 'eWhen," eriee Dorcas in a flush of IT MAKES ROUGH HANDS SMOOTH There is no better remedy for chapped hands and lips than Laseline Trade Mark 'Carnahlk e Keeps the Skin Emooth and soft. ten it:bac...ay Instal boast and tiritebes at chene.; is and general stores esetywhege. Refuse Substitutes. Deeklet cn re- curs: CHESEBROUGH. MFG. CO. teeeennleo esso Chabot Ave., Montreal flax meal so that,. by the end of the :Muth month it is receiving a heap- ing tablespoonful of flax meal and ten pints of milk twice a day. After the ; firat month it has access to a little early -cut hay awl a little whole oats, 1 or a mixture of whole oats and bran Ior shorts, The important points are strict re - i gularity in time of feeding, quantity and temperature of milk„ which should be from 98 to 100 degrees F. From the first of June the skim -milk should Ibe pasteurized so it will not get sour. It lean been the general opinion 'among farmers that separator shim - milk was not strong or nutritious i feed and that a large mess znust be 1 given to make up in quantity what they supposed it lacked in quality, and the result was that calves were over- fed and indigestion was produced, bloat. which was followed by scours and e Feed the Young Peal. Are you giving that young foal the proper care? To become a strong, sound horse when matured the foal : must be well nourished and given every advantage possible. ---- At this time of the year rnares and ON FARM Of Course You Need Ice Cream comes out of the freezer with a velvety smoothness—ad a nowdellcleamess--when it le made with BENSON'S, nd it Is pretty hard to a.sk for any- thing more deli:Ione t han a Chorclat e Blanc M1L'iffe or Crown Custard with Fruit, made of Benson's CornStarcb. '• Our new Recipe Book "Desooris and Candies' tells how and houttnuoit to use. Write for acor.ty to ourliontreal Office—and he sure to tell yourpretter to send BENSON S. the standby in Canada for more than half s century. THE OMAHA STROH CO. LIMITE0 MONILCAL, CARDIN At, esenereno. 216 FORT WILLIAM. 710.nwtmcr colts are allowed to *end at /east from 48% to 705' with all average of Pet - foal should be taught to eat grain \kith an average of 48q.—W. H. Pet- 535-, and for sheep from 44% to 50% a part of the time in the pasture. The North Dakota. Experiment Shi- very early. By placing the feed box erse low, the foal, at about two menthe of don. -- from which the dam eate her grain WORK FOR WAR CRIPPLE& ege, will begin nibbling with tbe mo- , ther and will soon acquire a taste for the grain. German Government Providing Tasks Spra,ye for Potatoes. A pen built in one corner of the for Them. The Colorado potato beetle and the field made high enough to keep the Germany'e prompt and continuing, mare out and allow the colt to pass efforts to care for her war cripples are under will make it possible to feed • described in the Medical Record by the foal grain with very little (Mil- Douglas C. MoMurtrie, editor of the culty. Allow the mare 111 the en- American Journal of Care for Crip- closure with the fetal for a few times, pies. Mr. MeMurtnie says that the and it will soon learn to go in itself. manner in which the problem is be - ate of lead in the proportion of two Keep a liberal supply or grain, pre- ing met is unquestionably sound. "I will," answered Merry slowly. to three pounds or 40 gallows of ferably oats and bran, and perhaps Care of the wounded was not difs a thou wils;?1,1 yolt tarkrA with. me.. maim:d:am, "when will you begin ng geI've got to—I want your advice and water. Paris green kilts quicker than some cracked corn, in the feed box. ficult to organize on an adequate Afeer yeti theme heing into life, write?" .ad. To induce the dam to loiter about scale. The other part of the work was ; help. I need it as I never needed it arsenate of lead but the latter siblv. Yeti know mer. end wernen. ' t" • thinle hew you eettlel ratii;e him live "At once, teemoi•row. go awaY • with the colt-, have the inn near a harder and a careful publicity cam - in my life befere. Only—I'm ,not goe heres better than Paris green, hence a . tigairl on the etego!" somewhere; I can't do it here." ing to trot out a word of it until eve mixture •of shar:e tree or the salt boxboth in the nroportion of paign was made throughout the coun- In reee jumpee te her fee t. "An- ' "Go to Enoeh," she said. "He will are sure of a couple of hours clear. 1 eight ounce.; of Paris green and one By -weaning time the foal w:11 have try to rld people of the idea that a .11-0;1.• eh/ ty, ge n. week! Slear them be delighte•:. He has such faith in can't stand a eolitary interruption--- arid a half pound; of ars.mate of lead become thoroughly accuetemed to crippled man was uselees. Employers r ''' h 1.1 f A h..' 1. r neteSe, '• and -et ,you he loves you. Besidee, ye:ell to -day." to 40 gallons of water will kill (4111;:kly , eating grain and will wn eavery easily, woreurged for patriotic reasons to kt.‘tan te Iiai th.in to Ple;Ase mi' and Prove tmt 1 have his sympathY. Poor Enoch, the Went,vorth shire and loehed the door. and ieniere well to the foliage beside being in better condition as a re-employ all crippled men possible. heeeen made e. inc eke." one embition of his life is to be *1 then he epened a small cupboard. The poisons mentioned till, to some : . • • - f *;; - 1+ f I ^.; IdT 1 I The government is setting the example "What'll you have?" he ask (1, lia- extent, ("beck the cucumber flea beetle. . . n le r ti Alyou by retaining cripples in the service of fam.41A dramatist" Try thee Ian this •' a r t "Nor said Merry incredulonelying down a couple of glasees. but in addition to them, a better pre- ' , will beatm ris-‘ tin] to a sie •- • P ‘. i eln fat: the State owntel railways. **Don't tell him you know it. I die- "Nothing.' Andrew Pulled a large ventive is a covering of Bordeaux , we g e. n a mt..—C. It has been pointed out that the 11- rown colt at w 1 ing t; • • • • ercelo e from his pocket end at minture, on the foliage. The Bordeaux ! S. Anderson, in Farm and Dairy. t government can go further and, in . Miee Peneae, &woe" 1 he girl leeheel at her companion "Let me shake kande on a bargain," Ivegegel. "That's a foolish little roe met it ie atm l zeremoey Itteti to go through with le e one ae• enhlier when I was a boy. If I prom- mennecript. There were dramas, faced him with an expectant Joel?. upon trill the early and late blights o sed faithfully I would do anything, I comedies, tragadies, even comic face. potatoes, the latter disease causing 4neok hands on it." operas. He has been writing that "You never guessed, I suppose, that rot: These are two of the eommon- Dorcas heti out her hand cordially, sort of thing for years and yeare," I'm an incipient playwright?" est diseasee. Ilei• at* was magnetic. "Queer 1e never told rne! What "Never!" Enochte tone was em- To control the early and lete blight • do-vn beeide the fire. Wentworth mixture Amid also be wed to con- • et' of potatoes Is waying with Bordeaux ••••••••=•••••11.1. placing orders or awarding contracts, Dressing Percentage. insist that a proportion of the work, - The average dressing percentage of ers employed be war cripples.. hogs is 75, while of cattle it is 53, The segregation of cripples is dis- and of sheep 48. Part of this differ- couraged. They are returned as far ence is due to the method of figuring. as possible to their own communities In the case of the hog the hide, head and their own.jobs. Where the crip- "Sit down agtlin and listen," he were they like . .. "Well," Merry laernhed hilttriously, mixture howl be begun before the and feet are included in the carcass piing has unfitted a man for the same bagged. "For years and years and "Don't think me di:goy:a, but they ' gata ewell, I am, I'm the toming drannit. disease aPPeare and the Intuits kept weight, while in the case oteattle and task he is trained for one as near like years I've had a. play crystallizing in are awful! Some day, when he covered until autumn. It is safer to sheep the head, hide and feet are not it as he can perform, the idea being to my mind. It's all blocked out. Let me a great plot, he things he will sue— iste" s ra in with Bordeaux mix- '' you. hey,'" start p Y g included. Then the hog is very thick utilize the training he already has as tell you about it." ceerl. He won't. It was cruel to tell "I take off my hat to hen s ri inn. for the tett bee- fleshed and has a small digestive far as is possible. Mr. Murtrie cites elely hero is cashier in a bank, a him so. He's nothing but an expert , Enoch swept him a pant( to irae bow. tare w P . Y e po,... o I "Wait a minute." The eemedian's ties. The poison of the latter may be sistern, Cattle and sheep have large several examples. 16 " : face grew imusuallv reeolute. weenie* mixed with the Bordeaux. From three paunches and disgestive systems. A young paperhanger, who had lost ' ' 5,1,1,1•1fi• felines-, of good ftimily joyial, newspaper man." happy-golucky, generous, democratic,• • ie eerie to four sprayings or more will be n- ear, goou, generouso He has married the bank president's "You will never tell him—never?" 1old inan, you've got to take th ed, the number depending on the daughter, who is exactly his opposite "I won't," said Merry. lousIy, or I won't tell you a bleseed quir weather. Taking the average of —cold blooded, haughty, selfish and They sat for a few minutes in ' WOD . about -it." three years, the increase of yield from fond of luXury. There is a sweet, silence. The flush of the sunset began Merry rose and laid his hand on spraying with Bordeaux mixture was tender little daughter. The love be- to fade from the sky, Seagulls wheeled! Enoch's shoulder with an imploring at the rate of 94 bushels an acre. In ;tween the father and the child is above their heads. ,gesture. "Dear old man, I want your sorne years it is much larger. beautiful. The man, trusting to luck! "We must go home;" said Andrew. 'help and guidance. I'm such a blamed The importance of keeping plants to see him through, steals for years, , "Crossing these rocks in the dusk .unbusiness -like chump. If you hadn't growing as late as possible is well 11- ' h • d and ‘' ht hand and imam erest way. He had to get money,1 Dorcas rose and followed him, clasp- ! father and brother to me for years, as covering his defelcations in the Uv- - would be perilous. for his wife denies herself nothing. ing his outstrtched hand. When they , well as the truest friend a man ever 'd h b in the guttte lustrated in an experiment where the total crop of marketable potatoes per acre when dug on September 1st The father-in-law discovers the crime, leaped down from the sea wall to the , was 234 bushels per acre, whereas in expoecs it to his daughter, then drops beach, the girl asked: "This is our Enoch," Merry's face flushed, "if I win the same field the same variety yield - dead. She gives her husband up to , last evening here?" 1 ' out,it means more to me than fame or ed 353 bushels marketable potatoes uleic, justice. His trial comes off 1 "I imagine so. You go to New ; wealth—it means the happiness of a . . per acre when left undug until Sep- tember 22nd, or in three weeks the crops had increased by 119 bushels per acre of marketable potatoes. Bordeaux mixtm•e is made in the pro - and he is sentenced to twenty years. !Haven next week, don't you?" 1 lifetime. The child is told that she is father_! Dorcas noddei. : "Andrew! A woman at last." less. The wife takes her father's i "Think of me working with all the The actor nodded gravely. "Yes, a fortune and goes West. When the courage and energy you have awak- • woman at last." second act, opens she has divorced the . ened. When the play is written I willI "Not rusi a ?" portion of.six pounds bluestone, four husbanal and married again. The , bring it straight to you." 1 "Oh, curb your curiosity," he pounds. lime. and 40 gallons of water. child is a lovely, true -hearted woman.1 There was eager anticipation in her , laughed lightli; "you can't have evry- Spraying mixtures should be used at She is engage: to the young mayor of ' eyes. "When you come I will ask a ' thing at once.Now I'm going to read." the proper time and thoroughly, if the city, and preparations are afoot , favor. May I play the daughter of ' Wentworth lit a cigar, leaned back good results are to be expected.—W. for the wedding, when she receives a the convict?" I in a leather chair, and turned his eyes T. Macoun, Dominion Horticulturist, letter from the one man who remain -1 "You " Andrew stopped and looked , steadfastly upon the man opposite ' ed loyal to hr father—an old janitor down at her intently, "You—you— him. Merry was a singularly dram- Ottawa. at the bank. He tells her the story! dear child, you sweet, gracious wo-1atic reader. Across his face flashed ' Separator Milk For Calves. which had been hidden from her. The! man!" leach .human emotion as he put it into 1 In writing of his experience in calf father, penniless, broken down, hope- less, is to leave prison in a few weeks. She confronts her mother, who denies Dorcas lifter her cool hands to her wor se e outer rearing and the value of separator "Listen! You don't think I could dal words with -which he had clothed a blazing cheeks. world when Merry leaped into the skim -milk as calf food, in the "Jersey t Bulletin," Prof. T. L. fraeciter of! the the story, but later confesses. The it I could. I have loved Shakespeare daughter's glee ing to ner Minnesota experiment station says: girl breaks her engagement, leaves since I was a little girl. I know Juliet ! father—a father disqualified, hopeless,' I have made calf rearing my leasi- home, and goes East. The old janitor and Deseemona and Rosalind, ;Net I've I timid, stunnal, dumb after the long' Iness for over twenty years, and dur- takes her to live near the prison until lived with Cordelia, I've loved her I've , separation from his fellows. ing the last fifteen have placed try her father is released. Every day seen into her soul. Your girl is Cor -i Wentworth's cigar went out and he ' reliance on skimanilk. For growing sit watches the convicts at thier lock- delia. I could play the part even if , forgot to light another. He sat in calves I consider separator skim -milk step tramp and sees her father. The I have never been on the stage. Be- , utter silence, a silence which was half at least equal to hole milk, though closing of that act, when she meets sides I can work; oh, you ought to see' critical, although at moments he was I . . I calves will not lay on as much fat as him leaving prison, can be tremendous in human interest." He turtle!. to look at Dorcbs. "Go on," she said. "The last act is laid in a New Eng- land village, among simple country how I can work when I ha ee to!" "It is not that," Andrew protested. "You could play Cordelia—we'll call the girl `Cordelia' now—as no one I knove. It is not that. It is such a had cost one man a month s labor. use in building .body tissue. Butter hard life—the one you would choose, He remembered the years of ardent land body fat, and nutriment for this toil he had spent on what, as he re - deeply stirred, partly by surprise, they will when whole milk is fed; but partly by unconscious emotion. He they will make as good growth and breathed a half -stifled sigh. This be as thrifty on skim -milk. There is task, such a splendid 'achievement, , nothing in butter fat that a calf can Sheep dress out lowest, due to the his leg, showed artistic ability and is wool and the rather light fleshing of in a trade school studying to be a de - the carcas,s. corative artist. His former employer The dressing percentage of animals will re-engage him. of each class varies widely. This is A baker, whose left foot was crush - due to the amount of flesh, especial- ed, is being instructed in bookkeeping ly fat present on the carcass, and and commercial arithmetic that he somewhat to the thickness of the hide may enter the grain trade and man - and size of the heals and legs, and age the bakery of a dead relative. to the amount of fill or the amount of A young farmer, who lost one arm, feed and water present in the diges- is studying agricultural science and tive tract at the time of slaughtering. learning to write with his left hand. For the hogs the dressing percentage It has been arranged that he shall varies from 65% to 85% with an aver- look after the business end of his bro. age of '75e/ai. For cattle, it ranges ther's farm. octo Tells How Tx Strengthen Eyesight 50 per cent In One Week's Tirne In livhny fnstcmc A Free Prescreptioa Sou can Have Pilled and Use at Home. Philadelphia,' I'a. Ho you wear glasses? Are you 0 victim of eye.strain: or other eye weaknesses? If- no you will be glad to know that ttoeording to Er.. Lewis there is real hope.for you. Many whose eyes were failing gay they have- had.. their eyes re- stored threugh the principle of this won- derful free proscription. One man says, rfter trying if 1 wits almost blind; nOt see read et all Now I can rend everything without' any glasses and my eye:4 do not water any more. • At night they wtrIt;i1 Will dreadfully; now they feel fine allthe time. It was like a miracle to mi" s Indy who ti5tql. It says: "The at- mesphere seeme11 hazy with or without but after using thift preseription for lifleeo +Jaya everything seems clear. ram • ss ; 7:•:“1 -lin, 1)/a witbegit. t I, thousands who Wear ;••,r'nr,1 them' in a' tersoni. ,3,blz tine nn•I 1titudes:inore•Will he 'able s to strengthen their eyes so as to be spared the trouble and expense of ever gettirtg glasses,' Eye troubles of many deserip-' tions may be wonderfully benefited by fol- lowing the simple rules. Here is the pre- scription: Go to any active drug store and get a bottle of Bon-Opto tablets, Drop one Bon-Opto tablet in a fourth of a glass of water and allow to dissolve. With this liquid bathe the eyes two to four times daily. You should notice your eyes clear trp perceptibly right from the start and in- flammation will quickly disappear. If your' eyes are bothering you, oven a little, tate stops to save them now before it is too, late, Many hopeleSsly blind might have been saved if they had cared for their eyes' in time. Neter Another prominctit Phyiielan to whom the above article w . as sumitted, said: • ton -Onto is a very remarkable remedy. Its constituent ingredients are well known to eminent eye specialists and widely prescribed by. them, 'The manufac- turers guarantee JP`to strengthen eyesight 50 per cad In one week's time itkriany instances orrefund the money. It can be 'obtained bole any good druggist and N one of Die very few Preparations T (col should be kept on hand far regular use in almostestry family." . • ' it is sold in Toronto by Valmas Drug Co, alized sadly, was poor. It was worse i purpose can be supplied more cheaply with flax meal, which contains from than poor—it was futile. Even' 30 to 35 per cent, oil. Dorcas had sadly but truthfully ac- My system of fee ding is verguni- knowledged its impossibility, fona" 1 When the calf is dropped I When Wary spoke the last wond let it suck once and then remove it and the curtain fell, he looked up with , from the dam. If it is.removed in the triumph and joy shining in his eyes. miming I give it no feed until the Then he waited in silence, as if for following morning. I give from ardent hands to clasp his own. It was three or four pints of its mother's an actor's pause for the thunder when' milk twice a day, immediately after he knows he has won his audien„eel,inna ce. I the dam. A small calf gets ,Enoch's fingers lay clasped together ' ' three pints and a large calf four pints. on his knees, his eyes bent on the , This I continue for about one -week. glowing caves of the doe]; fire. As the ' Then for one week I give it whole, When your digestion is faulty, weakness and si ••••••••..... GOOD DIGESTION path are certain and diaease ii invitc,. • FOR 40YEARS itlE STUMM REMEDY • Mother Seigel's Syrup corrects and stimulates the digestive organs, and banishei the usanY ailments which arise froth indigestion.. F R STOIVIACH AND LIVER Tf101113I.E •. At all Druggists, or direct on receipt of pric. 50c. and M.00. The latle bottle contains three times as S1 much as tho crueller. A. 3. Warm .1 Co. LIMITED. Craig Street West Montreal. actor spoke his voice had a chill, shiv- ering note in it. "Say; old man, isn't it, good? Tell me—don't you like it?" "Like it?" echoed Wentworth.-- He milk a teaspooafue of ground flax. I turned his eyes straight on Merry's gradually increase \the skim -milk and questionieg face, "Why, boy, it's megnificent. You'll pull Broadway • to its feet with that Merry, you've my heart. You can't imagine how done a tremendous piece of work e hard it was to wait for your verdict." That will live for—it ought to if for "It"s wonderful," mused Wentworth, years." "it's a corker!" "Thanks old man, thanks with all (To be con env.. milk half and skim -milk half twice a .day, giving it only from three to four pints. The third week I feed all separated skim -Milk, but pit in the enap.a..F1 KNITTERS, LOOPERS, PAIRERS, EX &MINERS Good Positions in our Hosiery, Sweater, and Underwear Departments. Steady work. Eight hours daily. Operators with experience guaranteed $9.00 and up- wards weekly. Write us. RELIANCE KNITTING CO., LTD., Ring and Bathurst Streets, Toronto. 1,149030.."..."13"71V.4.3615 V. ' mmm • wa% F-A7-/Rpzird Contain no acid and thus keep the leather soft, protecting it against cracking. They combine liquid and paste in a paste form and require only half the effort for a brilliant lasting shine. Easy to use for all the family—children and adalts. Shine your shoes at home and \ keep them neat. • • F. F. DALLEY CO. 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