Exeter Advocate, 1907-04-04, Page 6i
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1
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c,
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+o+o+o+o+o+o+o+o+o+o+o+o+o+o.' 'CHRONIC CATARRH
NOSE AND THROAT
DARE 1113?
C:2, A
SAD LIFE STOrY
•GQ'O♦'!+04-0+O+°+o+o+O+O•o+O+O+O♦O+O-+(e.-000+0•M♦
. I1API'Elt XXV.--(Conenuedi. stood At,nunziatu---i1. is really- mon-
de le out of the roost and out of the sit -oils to be so helplessly ignorant of the
hotel before his companions can take language •.>f We country• you are living
exception to his disappearance, For In—or site has lost her was, or-- Ile
Ik>tre time he walks along aimlessly, his had thought the room empty, but as he
mind a jumble of misery,and dull, re- advances a step further into it, he dis-
voi'sefuanxiety about melia; inloler- covets that he is not the sole occulennl,
elle comparisons between his own lot that lying stretched upon the floor, with
and his friend's; sharp knives of jeal- his fair head buried in a little pillow,
gluey as often as—which is almost inter- against which heel 'nen have often seen
Prit:enlly—his imagination wings its Clizabelh's small while cheek resting, is
Cruel way to the f iazzo d'Azeglfo—
eh ye whose
riotous.,
i
pso-
nopulent
is zelppinesshhadoubtedhisown
Al this mome-ils moment,
him !t -Atte witnessing
itne splendid tt h without
thoof murdering
it l
own leaden tett are treading goalless the he has been so bitterly laying beside his ,
hot flags that for hire lead nowhere— own destiny—the Byng whom he had %N B. BAOIJL PILON, 114 Rue Notre
Byng Is enthroned with her in the tea. ��i Cap.,
von of the mean little salon. Ile (1110011- been gnashing his teeth at the thought. of Dame, tLachiue, [ . Q.,
sciousl • shows his teeth in a stern smile --at the Ihoug--- of him lying in Eliza- writes:—"I write you a few words to .ex -
"At
less to younny satisfaction
":1t the Attire of Friends 1 Tried Pe-
ru-na and the Results (lave Been
Mild) Satisfactory."—Su N'riles Mr.
Pilon.
10 the surprised pressers -by. Ile had
jeered Ilyng for his hyperboles, and now
tie Ls out-hyperboling him. What a de-
testable verb he has invt nled 1 Ile
laughs out bud. Are they sitting at the
window, looking out al the Judas tee,
and the I'aulownia? Not they 1 The
window is commanded to a certain ex-
tent by the roadway. The window is
far acquaintances, banal acquaintances,
-tike intro -Oe -no place for the permitted
freedoms of exquisite new love. Are
they then on the sofa, the vulgar walnut
sofa, over which Elizabeth has thrown
her blue Neapolitan lablo-cloth? 1l is a
little sofa, scarcely room for two upon
it, oli f plenty of roost for them 1 Or are
they at the piano? Is she singing him
some sugared dilly "lovely well'' until
he breaks into her song with the storm
of his kisses, and her little white hails
drop from the keys, and they lie sob-
bing with ecstasy in each other's arms?
1l is quite certain that Ilyng will sob.
Il: is always delighted at having an op-
portunity for turning on the water-
works. Is there a bare possibility that
Mrs. Le elarchont may carry her disap-
pwbation to the pitch of impeding by
her presence their tele -a -tete ? The idea
gives him a momentary alleviulion.
Why should not he go and see for him-
self whether it is so? It will be a method
el passing the tedious interval before he
can hear the doctor's verdict on Aurelia.
Ile must at some limo or other comply
with llyng's pressing prayer to him to
offer his congratulations to Elizabeth,
and he may as well have a day of co'n-
pleto and perfect pain—pain of various
flavors and essences mixed into one con-
summate draught—a day of which not
one hour shall be without its ache.
(laving come to this conclusion, his
aimless walk quickens, and changes into
a purposeAil striding through filreete
mei piazzas, till he finds himself stand-
ing at the door of 12a. Ile looks up at
the enlresol windows—they aro all open,
but no one Is either silting in or looking
out. al Them. It is as he had thought. The
window Is too public for them ; neither
can they be at the piano, for not a
sound of either voice or instrument is
wafted down to him. ile runs up the
stone stairs, and rings the lectric bell.
The standing befero the unopened por-
tal and the trembling jar of the bell,
bring hack to him with a vividness he
could do without. (hose other long -ago
day3---they seem to him long ago—when
lie stood there last, with no cnsy heart
even then, but yet with how different
anticipations. Ile has found it hard
enc,ugh to bear the brunt of Byng's
furious inhuman joy when alone with.
hint. flow will he stand it when he sees
then together?
Ile is recants(' from these reflections by
the evening of the door, and the appear.
puce in it of the ministering angel who
lin:, usually admitted hull into hi% Eden—
Annuli/Ala. 11 strikes him that Annun-
zlnto looks older and more disheveled
than ever, and is without that benevolent
smile of welcoming radiance which her
lined -featured face generally Wears. Nor
(does she. as has been her wont, stand
(Hack to lel hum pass in almost before he
has put his question, ps If she multi not
mime hien quickly enough. But to -day
she stands, on the contrnry. in the door-
way without n smile. In second the
idea Nelms across Jim's mind that Ilyng
has forbidden anyone to be let in. It
turns hint half sick for the moment, and
it Is with an unsteady voice That he
stammers :
"The Signorina? The Signorina?"
Annunzinla lifts her shoulders in a
dismal shrug, and slretches out her
hands :
"Gone 1"
"Gone? You mean gone nut driving?"
Then remembering that her English is as
minus n quantity as his Italian, he adds
in eager explanation. "en Iacre?"
She shakes her bend, and then nods
vaguely en lite direction of the whole of
the rest of the world --the whole, that Le,
Met is not 12 Bis.
"No. gone T'
"Ilut where? Dove?" cries he, frantic
with irritation al hie own powerlclsneees
either to understand or be understood.
ognin ser snakes her head.
"I do not know ; they del not say."
Ile gnthcrs this to be for meanini, and
hurriedly puts another' qu. ry.
"%Viten7 Vmnndo?"
Intl her answer tering longer met more
'. 1111le, he can't take in its eiri(t, seeing
which she relrents a step, end. motion-
ing him with her lintel to enter. points
demi the pasenge. Ile d,i', not require
ie We the dome -sheets• of invitation
twice repeated. but rushing pnst her
hurries deny n Ike' welsh/wean little eons.
belies arms 1
CI1.1P1'ER XXVI.
"What does this mean?"
The question has to be twice - repeated
before the person to whom it is address-
ed gives any sign of having heard it.
Iles ears must bo so deeply embeuded in
the pillow that the passage to his hear-
ing is blocked. It is not till the interro-
gation, is put a second time, in a louder
key, end accompanied by a riot very
gentle shake of the shoulder, that he at
length looks up,'and reveals what Jim
knows to be, and yet has some diJ11-
cully in recognizing, as the features of
Ilyng-ng—features so altered, so distorted,
so swollen by excessive weeping, that no
one less intimately acquainted with them
than the person who has been already
contemplating ---cin under the influence
of a variety of circumstances for a couple
of months, could possibly put the
owner's name to them. Jinn has expected
that his young friend would spend some
pertion .,f this dny in crying, knowing
well both his powers of, and his taste
for, "turning on the water -works," as he
but lately cruelly and uncivilly phrased
it to his own mind. But the warm tears
of emotion, few and undisfiguring, with
which he had credited him, have not
much kinship with the scakluhg torrents
that have made his handsome young
eyes mere red blurs on his ashen face,
That have furrowed his checks and
dampened his disordered curls, and
taken all the starch out of his immacu-
late "masher" collar. They have wetted,
too, into a state of almost pulp, a chimp -
led sheet of note paper, which his head
seems to have been burrowing to, upon
the pillow.
"What does it mean?" repeals Bur-
goyne, for the third time, a hideous fear
assailing hint, al Inc sight of the young
man's anguish, that he himself may
have mistaken Annunziala's meaning;
teal her "gone" may have stood for the
final one; that some instant stroke may
have snatched lovely Elizabeth away,
out of the world. Surely no catastrophe
less than death can account for such a
metamorphosis as that wrought in Byng.
"Why do you look like that'" he goes
on, his voice taking that accent of rage
which extreme fear sometimes gives.
"Why do net you speak 7'
Tho other, thus nbjured, plainly makes
n violent effort for nrticulalion ; bub his
dry throat will let pass nothing but a
senseless sob.
"What does that paper mean?'' goes on
Burgoyne, realizing the impotence of his
friend to obey his behest, and rendered
doubly ferruled by it; "what is ill what
does it say? Does it—does it—explain
anything?''
Ile points as he speaks to the blurred
and rumphd billet, and Byng catcher it
u;, convuleively, and thrusts it into his
hand.
"It is the first letter 1 ever had from
her," he says. the words rushing out
broken and scarcely intelligible upon a
storm of sobs, and so flings his head
violently down upon the floor ognin in a
new access of furious weeping.
Burgoyne holds the paper in his fin-
gers, but for a moment or two he is un-
able to read I1. 'Then' is an ugly mint -
ming before his eyes for one thing; for
nnothecr, Ilyng's treatment has not im-
proved it as a specimen of caligraphy ;
but it never In its best day could have
been a very legible document. And yet
it is not long. Its few words, when at
length he ttuukes them out, run thus :
"Good-bye, 1 was mad yesterday. 1
shall never marry you ; 1 have no right
to marry' any one. For God's .'eke do
not ask Inc whet i mean ; and oh ! don't,
don't, don't come after me 1"
There is neither dal' nor signnitire.
As Jim stands staring at the five
crooked, straggling sentences. a great
swelling eontpaa(ie11 fills his heart. Del
ever poor little scribble make it so easy
he construct the small slinking hand. find
the lender breaking heart that penned
it? An innnense pity fills his soul ; yet
dneq it quite fill it ? Is there room bee -
shies. in one corner. for a small pinch
of devilish joy' 7
dor to the sah,n d-,cr. It e( open. and he
stands within. At the first glance It
set m.' to hunt to wear much its weed
111, There is sten a score of tnusit'
standing on the pinna. the copper pa's
are hill of nose brain _. end the :teal-
dint
cab
dint l anent ng with Firctnze' s own lilies,
Ittr Int •,f rr.l venetian 1',"'.l,'• with the
•eleafier,R ' n a '�c •r
id. Jr erld tensa Mill h rel, e (
the arm -chair I v the' Cine -.Ince. and the
Nceixeltlan table -cover still (belittlers the
etalgaeruly ref the r.,fn. Ile has mi.i,der•
p . at being
cure]. 1 was afflicted with catarrh of
the throat and nose and suffered much.
1 was greatly discouraged. I had a bad
breath and bud taste Jn my 'noutlt in
the morning.
"I took treatment for 501110 tune with-
out obtaining relief. At the advice tf
friends 1 tried 'Wenn and the results
have been highly satisfactory. At the
end of four months 1 was completely
cared."
Neg'eeted catarrh becomes chronic.
(laving developed into the chronic stage,
a longer and more persistent treatment
will be required to cure it than If the
disease were treated at the onset.
However, I crena will bring relief,
whether the catarrh is acute or chronic:
If you are wise you will keep reruns
on hand and take a few doses at the
first appearance of a cold or cough, and
thus save yourself both suffering and
exl:ense.
Patients have the privilege of writing
to Dr. ilartman for free advice. A took
on "Chronic Catarrh" will be s ret upon
request.
all love and burning. she that is lender
over drowning (lies, would have put too
to this horrible pain 7-0 God, you do
not know what pain it is 1" ("Do not I?"
aside—"of her own free will."
"1 do not know ; as you say, 1 do not
know her well."
"'Then tell. oh tell! how Zhou
didst murder me?'" -
says Byng, beginning to walk up and
down the room with the tears still roll-
ing down his cheeks, but in his spout-
ing voice—a voice which nt once as-
sures 71►n of an nmelhoration in his
friend's condition and hardens his heart
against him. As a broad rule, indeed,
it may be laid down that that sorrow
which courses through one of the num-
berless channels cut by the poets for it
will not bring its owner to \\'aterloo
Bridge.
"But what am 1 saying?" lapsing out
of his quotation into [woken -hearted
prose again. "It was not she! If I
thought it were she, could 1 lice a mo-
ment? it is her mother; no sane per-
son can doubt that It is her another's do-
ing 1 She was always so sweetly docile,
and her mother has conceived sottte pre-
judiee against me. Did not 1 tell you
how barbarously she sled the door upon
me last night ?—shut the cher of my
heaven in my face just as 1 thought. I
had worn the right to enter it. \\'Ito
would not have thought that it was won
who had e';een us together in the wood Y"
Jim writhes.
"Oh, never mind the ev.t ,el now'"
"Some one has prejudvc,•el her agninsl
me, but who? I did not knew that 1 end
nn enemy in the world. Some one lei -
told her about --about Oxford—about my
being sent down.'
Jim is silent.
"If i1 i3 only that--" n tearful huny-
army beginning to pierce through his
de'.pnir.
"I1 is not that."
'.Sante one tin` put a spoke in my
wheel. but who? You are the only per-
sor. who could, and you. dear old chap.
are the Inst person who moused, though
you were not very- encouraging to me
Ins! night ! You did not 7'
There Is no direct an interrogation hi
the Inst wards, nrrompanicd by so con -
tiding n kink of affection. Iho{, yet line an
uneasy touch of doubt in i1, that Jin► is
obliged to answer. ' -
"No, 1 did not put n spoke in your
wheel ; but"— his honesty forcing the ad-
niission--"I ant not at all so muni that 1
am the Inst person who would have done
so. if I could.'
Byng line wiped his eyes to clear his
vLsinn of the blinding tears. and line
ognin directed them to the note. which
he hes all the while been alternately
pressing ngninst his beer!. laying upon
his forehead, and crushing ngnin;l his
mouth.
elf seem' beeeptiemr to say en of nny-
thing that came from her hand.' i!e says.
poring for the hundredth tune over each
oloccum. wont. "hut it remit like non•
settle. does not it? '1 shall never mary
you! I have no right to merry any ono r
No right " what does she mean?"
Jun shakes hes heed sadly.
"Bow can I tell?"
"Do you think it i' Ixeaihle'"--Ilttint~
his disfigured eyes in horrified appeal to
lee friend --"i1 i' a drendltl hypothesis.
tut 1 can think of no ether --that that
bright inteingene•.` was cW►ntel--thel---
that her dear 1i111ee wits were toweled
when she erste this?"
"N,,. I do not think so."
"You you are not keeping anything
fermi me T ---coming a stop ncnrcr, end
convulsively Mulching his friend'( nrtn--
"yoau- poi d', nit know nny'1111ng--any-
1lting that could throw light upon ---upon
lies' 1 do nil know whether you are
cans"ieeu< el 11. tut 1ti're Is semething in
ye ur nruutei dont ret+lift lead me to that
r.•nettt i•,n, I1., e.i'1 kine. - have you
beer., ail\ theit:7--
"1 knew s 1ltirig!.-- rept...-. Jim, sbewly.
uted looking »Hcenrf.,rtably away from
"There's many a ell))
'Twilit the cup and the hp."
Ills own worth( of ill-natured creaking,
uttered not ati hour ngo, lo Cecilia Wil-
son. recur to his mind New little ho
thought that That prophecy week' so
soon le fulfilled. Ile remains so long
motionless and silent. his fingers still
Melding the paper. tl boe° contents he
hate ktug ague run.terctl. that 11)ng-- the
tinlettce of his paroxysm of grief at
length exhausted--stnuggles I.) his feel
end spenks---s;;c;tks as well as Ilse' catch
in his sobbing terenth and his quavering
ups w ill let ems.
"It 18 net her doing ! You nney think
it le her tleaiutit. but I know it is not ! 1
know her totter than you do."
"1 never tante ane. pretcnekete to
knotting htrr Weil replies the o'twr
sadly, and rclimpeeieng as he sl"•ak'
the nntee-to its owner.
"1. 11 likely. 1 n.k you 7. ear- Bine
reeileelle . "1 put :t 1, 3,11i faeriy. is 11
jinrly
teat elle, tt itt' iter eeratih mature,
the questioner, "but 1 conjecture, 1 fear,
I believe Thal- Iluit---"
"That what ? For God's bake, be a
little quicker 1"
"fent- that- there is a—a—a some-
thing in her piLet."
Ityng fall, back a pace or two, and
puts up his hand to his head.
"1\'Itat- -\hat do you menu? what
are you talking about? 11cr past?
ee'liar —soaring 11110 ext►'nvagauco again
"what can there he written on that
whsle page? -so white that it bethink*:
the eyes of earn the angels who mad it."
"1 do not know what there is," replies
Jen miserably. irritated almost beyond
eudurunco by this poetic flight, and ren-
dere.d even more wretched Than Ito was
l,r•fore by the rola that seems to bo forced
upon him, of conjecturally blackening
I:ezabellt.s character. "Ilow many limes
Hetet Ile 11 pin that 1 liuow no more limn
y:,u, only from --from various indica-
liots I have been led to beliee, that sho
hate sump thing --stale great sorrow W-
hine
a1►in l Iter f"
(lo be continued).
MI NI(:Ir.t . FINER MS.
icnna Ratepayers A'Ssured They Will
Ile Well Buried.
' The newest form of municipal Trading
which the City of Vienna intends to en -
let on is the undertakers' business.
Five years ago, the mayor, Dr. Lue-
ger, expressed himself in favor of the
municipilizalion of all That belongs to
burial, on the ground that the best the
municipality could do for a citizen who
had paid rates all his life was to see
that he was well buried.
Arrangements have been made by the
municipality to lake over the business
and stock -in -trade of the largest under-
takers in Vienna, and. Me civic authori-
ties claim that the cost of municipal
funerals will be less than the under-
takers charged, while they hope a profit
will bo made, which will go to the relief
of the rates.
1
DEED OP A GALLANT NOBODY.
11 is not always the information car-
ried by the recognized aides-de-camp to
and front the commanding officer in
battle which is of highest value. 'There
was a supremo moment during the bat-
tle of Waterloo when the Duke of \Vel-
lington was left absolutely alone—and
that not when he was running the risk
of capture by sailing through the
enemy's lines. it sinr,ly n►eant that
etery.galloper had gone his way, each
with his message. Al this moment a
stranger 'ode up to the Duke and quietly
asked : "Can 1 bo of any use, sir?" The
Duke look one glance at him, and un-
hesitatingly answered : "Yos, take This
11 t t the commanding °(liter "
The, Nappy Medium`
" Cheap" paint is the kind you DON'T
want. je High price" paints cost more than they
are worth, because you can buy better for less.si
Rasnsay's Points are the happy mcdinrn. All
the goodness of the most expensive kinds—with none
of the faults of the "cheap." They are mixed just
right—always the same—and hold their surface and their
:olor through zero snows and torrid suns.
Write Us for Yost Card Series " C,'' showing how sours
houses are painted.
A. RAMSAY a SON C0.. Paint Taken since 1842, M0\TREAl.
rs
4
+++++++++++t++•••++♦ and not touch it. Fix around bier some
false partite ns just outside the nest,
• + red the heat of the body of the sow,
and her breath, will soon warm it so
' �� + that it will be like stir:inter time in there.
About sowa + Do not be in a hairy to feed the sow
+ grain lite day following the arrival of
• the pigs. If she is warm and cornfor-
♦ table she will wont some drink and tato
••e
Fe++++++++++4++++++++++ or three quarts of sloppy feed, li e
milk and dish water. given warts will
These busy days, when all the stock eatisfv her. Feed lightly at first, and
on the tarn must receive its share of
attention, when corn is the handiest
feed to throw to the hogs, and linen get
away from them, there is loo often an
inclination on the part of many to feed
the brood sows corn and abandon them
to their fate. Such treatment is not
good practioe for several reasons, writes
Mr. N. A. Clapp.
In the first place, the Logs are bring-
ing n 'good paying price and going
higher. They pay the best and make
the quickest returns of any of the stock
cn lite farm. One cannot afford to lake
many chances. 11 is safer to treat lee
sets more in harmony with the laws that
govern the reproductive process.
1f the sows are eating corn, and no-
thing else, there is nothing to induce
them to roam around. As they cannot
gather feed from the fields at this time
or the year, they ore likely to spend too
much lime in the lusts. They will not
exercise enough to work tate muscles
and bones to keep them strong and
pencil note o henllhy. The circuln'Ion of blood is sol
pointing to n regiment in the hoot of the as lively as it should be and the whole
battle. Tho stranger look the note end system becomes ton sluggish. They
galloped away with it. through the thick may be laying on flesh, which snakes
of the fight. 110 delivered It, but what Them look some better, but they are not
keeping up n healthy action of the whole
system, which is n(cessary to transmit
life and vigor to the filter of pigs which
they will deliver In the spring.
happened to him no man knows. The
Duke always declared That to be one of
the most gallant deed, that had ever
come under his notice. I1 was done
without prospect of acknowledgement or
reward, ant,neitfuer attended its success-
ful accomplishment.
NO SINECURE.
The directors of a•bank had engaged
the services of a watchman, who came
Sows that do not get a proper amount
of exercise through the winter are Mie -
Ie to give birth to some pigs that do
not have life and strength enough to
get around to the teals and begin life
at they should. If whole litler,s are not
lost In that way, one may consider
himself fortunate. I have noticed that
well recommended. but did not seem such things occur frequently at the end
Of a steady, cold winter.
It is ley far safel' and lecher to nrrange
se that the sows will lie compelled to
"James, this is your lint job of this gr some di.tanc( for their feed, which
kind. isn't it?"' will Insure their gelling exercise rept-
"Yes, sir." Italy. Some roughnge. like clover hay
rand corn stalks, if it is sweet corn nil
the teener. should be given them In
moderate quantities to chew on and eat.
t• mix in with the grain. If the rough-
age is given they will not need so much
e.! the grain to keep then in good con-
dition.
Ito:lend of giving all corn for the sows
to eat. n little mill feed, like bran, ship
sluff and middlings, can be mixed in
with their sloppy feed. whicth they
swat have twice each day. If some
mots. which they will eat, are avail-
able. a few given ueensionelly in mod-
erate weather will he very bene(iciel.
by keeping the system ncnrcr what the
Ideal condition would be if they were
running to groves.
As the farrowing lime nppronches,
each sow should be given their pen a
little while before hind, thnl they may
brcnnto accustomed 10 them, and feel at
home when the important event arrives.
A moderate amount of fine litter should
be given. but never a large amount, er
(,t a coarse kind to interfere with free-
dom of the little pigs when ihcy arrive.
If the SOWS am handled In n kindly
over -experienced. The chairman, there -
fere, sent for him to post hint up a bit,
and began:
"Your duty roust be to exercise vig-
ilance."
"Yes, sir."
"Ile careful how strangers approach
you."
"I will. sir."
"And our manager; he is a good man,
honest, reliable, and trustworthy; but it
will be your duly to keep your eye on
mint."
"But it will Le hard to watch two Hien
and the bank at the same line."
"Two teen—how?"
"Why. tor, it was only yesterday that
the Hettinger called In for a talk, and
he said you were one of the best men
In London, hut it would be just as well
In keep both eyes on youe and lel the
!directors know if you hung around after
jtoure."
AIIOUT '1'IIE i(:I F:\MII.V.
Whenever a polar expedition is in
progrese we hear of Ice floes, pack ice,
sailing ice. and other things of which
Pie reader in tuts temperate clime has
only a hazy ides. which ntnkes him miss
Pie interest of the news. An "ice field" manner they do nett object to the one
ie no nrea of frozen snow or water, so who has been their attendant being
large that the limits are invisible and around at farrowing lime. 11 the wen -
unknown. On the other hand, a "floe" titer is cold. all possibility of cold drafts
i• n mass of ice. perhaps very large, but nr nir should be avoided, by stopping
w•hoee Ixnmdsrios me seen by the ex- al' cracks and crevices where nir can
ple>rere. when such noes become fro- come
h sohix the eon.Mille
recovering
sten Ijusi hwigh
ken. and the pieces are wedged together g
1.y the wind and the currents, they fora
"pack ice," the teeter of the Arctic voy-
ager. When a ship gels caught in a
mass of pack ice. there 11 remains left
until contrnry winds or currents break
up the pack, and lien we have "sailing
ice."
SAFI \LAN.
"Are you aware That the man you
have challenged is an expert swords-
man?' said one Parisian.
'Certainly.' answered the other. "The
feet gives rep confiekence. Ile is nal
likely to do anyt:ting clumsy and unex-
pected that might result in serious in-
jury."
"(locker. 1 want to thunk you for your
splendid n•dieine. it las helped nie
wonderfully." "Delighted to hear 11,"
replied the deter. "How many bottle's
did yen find 11 necessary to lake?" "(►h.
1 didn't take any of it. My uncle toe::
one 1oltle, and i_tn his role heir."
suppo'e that young idiot
Smith has prnpeoed to you a dozen
tunes?" She "VI. Once was enough
rime and see u.s when we g i settled."
Ranks --"Sausages always keep me
intake at night." Jinks—"Trey don't
trouble me •ft's prewlinU cafe." Rink-
"V1'c'.f, y.•0 s; i t`L,Cat eels."
increase the amount gla(h'nlly for a
week, when she can be worked up to a
given ration of both slop and grain.
Do not feed all corn as a grain ration; It
is too healing.
If the sow hes been properly handled
and fed on a variety of feeds, roots and
waste fruit, site Is not liable to be con-
sttpaled and have n desire to cat the
figs. if site has been neglected and
Fuck conditions mere, give some warm
salt brine nt once, then give laxative
food, and'keep the pigs away until the
fever lit has passed by, when We pigs
can be returned.
WHAT A GOOD BED MEANS.
Did you eve_• stop to think, at night
when you are lying in your soft. warm
bed resting after being out in the cold
al• day, that stuck ai>ptebinte the spine
ec,iifurls as much and must have them
es suffer? If you never thought of it
and don't believe it, just try one night
sleeping in the wontl.shed on some corn-
cobs with a dump horsebinnket for a
cover, and Then you are gelling just.
as many of the comforts of life, as much;
n. the stock do. They may live through
51 and not complain, but they have their.
way of paying you back and it will not
be, in growth ger the full milk pail. Com-
fort means Ihr fl and pmduclkin. 111
comfort and suffering means poor stock
arid no money in the business.
4
SEED GRAIN AND SEEDS.
Really firs! -class seed oats, when!,
barley or corn are always scarce and
hard to buy. Any nniount of the me-
dium kind can usually be had, but the
really first guiltily is a different matter.
If you' have this of your own raising
rine have taken such care of it as lo
Jusure good germination you are a Lucky
termer. Yee hear every spring tam e
about poor seed corn and corn 1' e
failed to grow. but very 11111e' is s 1
concerning the small e ain.e er
seeds. I fully believe 1h• -n• ,- 0re.et
n per cent. of such Hint hal to mature
Q cmp ns of the corn but we hear Iris.;
about Ihrin simply because we seed
bro•tdcnsl or th`eker In the drill and do
eel notice when they fail 11.
Grain of any 1:111(1 that wens put in
the bin damp and allowed to heat
nunkee very poor. seed even if n portion
of 11 grows. Wq wan/ !1 to more than
simply grpw. II should make n str':11
and vigorous growth the some as
(mired of corn if we nee to teen n f',"
harvest next wagon. The same ' '
er clover eve!. Where clover e.
lowed fo lie in the swath last fee.
weeks and mush of it sprout it s
means that it will not sprout
Feed that ling hewn Thus handled
will look bright end can he dele•h-1
Jit• dead co'or. . If yen have not •
grain or seed seemed for sprint! sect
Ing It I' time flint you were on the e
out. Soon clout one-half the fere
enmmmnily well be in quest 01 11 nn l
then It will be next to inq",s,ible to
eut•ure any.
In 1601 four men were Inken nlivc deet
of a mine in England after having 1.. e n
21 days without food.
Nursing baby?
It's a heavy strain on mother.
Her system is called upon to supply
nourishment for two.
Some form of nourishment that will
be easily taken up by mother's system
is nded.
Seecott's Emulsion contains tho
greatest possible amount of nourish-
ment in easily digested form.
Mother and ba! aro wonderfully
' -3 by its •.
Cr
4
0
c.
ALL t;t T' .(„'TS1 SOe. 1ND $1.06
44444 �' , -
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