Exeter Advocate, 1908-04-16, Page 6Cl!RRtiNT '1.013ICS. X40....*. .4.4.14oao4o4.004 ►
• .'.c•..'ue .411.1 f":: • : l: y r e-
t '
• . Thus at I. . • seas •..
,aunt I'. Brous, 1 %sly
?::.other lays :,L. :t 111,-
11.• •
tYrl.(xx, • : • , • f 1' one hatching. 1' cse
4 gs al'd ca't forth !u tho spawiOng
a u.,4,u um' drift Ethel and thither
.tlh the tides until they aro imine: !-
hated. 'Then the life of the young ey-
lt&-r starts, If the spawn of a single
oyster mother weIe ;ill fertilized, grew
Io maturity, and reproduced themselves
without any perishing, and this con-
tinued until the fiftlt generation, the
alescendnnls of that first oyster 'nether
ss.•uld be greater in bulk than 0,:814
worlds. Fortunately for other folks,
from the tune of spuwuing the oyster
le besot with dangers So great that each
one has one chance in 10,145.000 of
reaching maturely. So no niattcr hOw
fertile the oyster may be thele is 1itCe
danger of the bivalve ever blockading
our harbors, but on the contrary, if
their were no artificial cultivation of
tree favurile Morsels there would not
De nearly enough to supply the demand
for our tables. The oyster is a seden-
tary auroral, never leaving his home
after affixing himself to some rock, log,
or shell. For the right valve must be
free to remain open or the mollusk
mill be smothered and die. From the
tater which flows over hint he secures
everylhtng in the world he desires,
fwd, air, drink, and building material
for tho stony house which he erects
around himself as a habitation. Ile
must secure alt of these things, and in
the peoportion necessary, it he would
live. The first need is an anchorage
place, some shell or rock upon which
ha may erect his flat dwelling. It is
the abence of such n foothold, or, ra-
ther, shellhoi.l, that causes the greater
number of the young which spawned
to fail to develop to Maturity.
4'
Two sage savant, 44 the fntherland
ilio something recenLy. They made a
mushroom. They Mel a galvanic etc -
stent of carbon and iron and immersed
a in a solution • f sails of uranium.
:When various other inetalli: salts were
added queer objects began to form on
Iles carton. They gr.:st• swiftly until
at last they clung like veritable 1mI.it-
teem growths. Al first they air trans-
parent. ''leen they begin to color beau-
tifully, so that some become bright red
en top, while the sten is pale yellow
and the under part of the head is pale
roue. "Inorganic mushrooms." the cre-
ators have named thein. But with the
microscope can be seen fine canals ex-
tending front the top de)wn through the
peen like veins. Are these mushroorll
fcrnie. Then. born of tee :frical acl.ir.11
tre.m nu lana salts, d. s! ,:•' 1 lo leach
us something • f the i .:'!. • f life? Some
years as.. l':• !. 1 • . !. .. , the unferti-
lized egg- • 1 ti o ;t ein and laid
l.h.'in inb !.• 11_ :.,:\lure, of which
•• eater part. There
! !do. a tr:;!acR.
'J ti'• eels.; avowal. f. ...e.
N :t w nt.'r w.. ' 1.
It -Ill led nt 11:11 - .
HEALTH
!CRIMINAL WAS A GENIUS
"FLL•T(a Ililt jC\I."
This is the word which has Iccn
coined to d,>nolt' a peculiar dalarY
idea originated anal adveeated by \!r.
Ilorace Pletcher. It is a 5)5(411 of
u.etetics wl►i•'h differs from all others
in that it takes little or no account o1
Ink nature of the 1(.4„1, but concerns
Itself entirely with the manner of eating.
It is simple in loran, but tedk,us in the
extreme—at least to those who do not.
practise it c-)nstantly—in its execute.e.
Mr. Fletcher Ls an avowed enemy 4 t
the universal habit of silUng down to
three meals a day as a routine prac-
tice, and insists Loon 11* necessity of
eating only when cue is hungry. But
this is only by the tiny, for the essence
of his system is thorough n)nslicution—
not thorough only, but absolutely com-
plete. One must chew and chew and
chew again every morsel of food taken
Into the mount until it is reduced 10
ail impalpable and tasteless fluid. which
Then slips- down without any 'conscious
act of swallowing.
Grand results in the way 01 bodily
and amental vigor are claimed for this
system. 'Those who practise 11 are said
lo enjoy absolute health .and ter pos-
sess great strength and powers of en-
durance. \Ir. Fletcher himself, who is
now nearly sixty years old, is gauging
pi'odigiiously in muscular power and
in the ability to endure great physical
strain, although he asserts That lie is
not In training and that 1►e takes no
regular and systematic exercise.
In a series of tests scienlill ally ap-
plied at the gymnasium of Yale Uni-
versity, he recently made a record one
hundred, per cent. better than any
previously made by trained athletes of
half his years. Naturally he and .Itis
followers assert that this is tho direct
mutt of his system of mastication.
\t\\ \\It1► 11 I4 T111: nit%I'e ill'
Driven to Crime by 111%iroinnent--Prin•
eipals of t:riniinuleay Told by
Il, ahl Expert.
A r, urukable address on the cause
and .. • 1 crime was given by Dr.
A:141; \\ .! ou, the brain specialist,
tiering .t eritol debate at the ::sante
C1111 .1 l . •n, ton, England, recently.
11:-. \\ ,.-• 1 had promised to bring
. rl.• • 1 te.• most Ilotorio1Ls cracksua9l
1 the V.• t• lean era—now a reformed
character- 1 , explain tho impulses
which led heal to crime. To the dis-
appointment of everyone present 1110
ex -burglar apparently did not carr to
face the ordeal, for ho failed to attend.
Ihr. Wilson announced that in the
CGllIS6 of a special study of the psy-
chology of crime he had examined more
Itmn 201) criminals. including murder-
ers, pickpockets, highwaymen and burg-
lnrs.
"Of ail the causes of crime," he said,
" p•erhaps the most. remnrkable is that
of Multiple personality. 1 had a strik-
ing case in a girl of thirteen a few
years age.
"In one personality she became a
simple child of two. who could not un-
dershoot words and did not know her
own name. in another peNonalily she
became blind and lmbectle.
"1 took her to Sir John Tweedy, the
eye specialist, who pronounced her
totally blind. Sir Thomas Barlow also
dtelaved her a hopeless imbecile, and
said that she should be put in an asy-
lum as soon as possible.
MANY PERSONALITIES.
"A curious fact was that in her blind
personality she could draw pictures
which she could not draw normally.
In the third personality she was a
criminal. Once while out for a- walk
Others explain it differently. Ills re- she stole an orange, and when rebulc-
ccrd in this respect Ls so far ahead of
that made by any other person, whe-
ther an athlete or a follower of his
system. That the most ler souable ex-
planation is that it Ls due to a personal
pcculiarily—that he is a physical geni-
us, as Mozart was in inuste, or Napole-
on in war, or Shakespeare in literature.
and that his Dietary system has only
served to develop his already surpass-
ing powers of endurance.
alis eNce—.t. ., location makes him
very abst. .. • !• r in slow eating
i ! , :i much smaller
hen one bolts
cat far too
, (., d 1.1,15
hanger is a; !
almond of f• .
his food. \I•
much, awl ,+ •
lax upon n
MastiCaliutl ,s es • :1. ! :: • se. - -
ticalien (10141'.. - '..,• d I:%0 f
their stimulus, :ue15•) is an err,i.Mod-
eration is what -should be praclisetl—
inederation in the: amount of foo.( and
nwderalien in its u►astical»n.—Youths
Companion.
BE C.1REFUL OF SPRING.
Spring is a very beautiful season of
11,' year, but it is al the sante dine a
very trying one. and nearly everyone
in spring experiences such unpk•asant
sensations as lassilude, headache, and
ether disagreeable, though perhaps loo
trivial ' n)l,lainl 4) call in a medical
man, 1: s 41,• y nlu-t not be ncglecled.
7! the, . •, slight, the remedies
air :11 . • 1,1 effectual.
1), t , . , • • • '.J adage. which
ease. • 0 4. ' • Ill 1i11 \lay is of the fire. and go away b'fo►•0 10,rtt-
out." 111,1 1 51 ( yourself many 1111.• w.lhnul doing any real misehie'.
a ct►io ot►t1:o .•. • f ,.euralghl. 1 p,,. (other of tri man." said Dr.peso,:r cf e • • 1 ve'gelables. whether \Verson. "ryas one c1 the most flourish-
's
. . , . ., IO(l• are valuable aids 1111; men in Iho city. Ile made .C3.O(>)
1•:sole, L., n • : ' Ala' s; filial 1114 ), is to :, year. Lal when he diet he left no
1e much 14 • :emended -ed- 'I1 -10). -ie who thong. Thal was a form of crime in
\ J ! :.e a .1. i, !, -a•us0 114' !'''s r!.:• !,...1 i .. nsnes. giddiness. and itself,
r, \I• ', ' ..tit . 1•'1:.1. A 1 i of ,i..r a - r! o4 lake a g!ass of hot 'The burglnrs mother else was n
4, •„ . ee Ps s :1t• .: 14:.' i•'• near (hi' ,.:,Ica' tti.h a few drops of lemon in :1 t•e,y neur•,lie wmmnn. Of the six chit-
3'1
-.-• . . ' •,•. h •• •...:e, 1 u), before breakfast.
one of the Is sl spring nle:licin, s
' sulphur but if 11111011 Wed precaub.:;,.
c I replied in the typical phraseology
of a criminal, '1f you can get an
orange, why, nick il.'
"On anther occasion in her crimin-
al personality she pushed her sister in-
to the lire. and only the sudden arrival
of her 'neither in the room prevented
a dreadful tragedy."
Dr. Wilson divided criminals into two
classes;—
I) Perverts.
(2) Inverts.
"\We hove to thank our present sps-
bin cd telecetien," Dr. \Vilsen said,
"for the recruiting of the inverts. Poor
children with starved bruins and bad
heredity are forced to learn a lot of
tuff al school quite useless kr their
cnt'i10 llll•'n 1.
"The result is That by thirteen or
fourteen, when they leave school, they
have no pluck or stamina in Item."
The four chief divisions of crinlinais
Dr. \Wilson declared be: --
A', insane.
2) Unstable.
1) Sports (in io.Ianical sense --one
varying •feting normal type).
't) Criminals from cnrronment or
surroundings.
t'nstnble criminals were Hesse i 1.
yielded to impulse, he said,
10 power of arguing out 55 Ile.
alter• -effects of their actions alight : t.
"SPORTS."
Spmis. Dr. Wilson said, were hnrm-
less types of criminals. such as n bur-
glar ho knew 5th) would dip the kilefG'n
window catch, warm himself in front
met ..• ,.:l u:e \1 ;•gol•an 1. , !, In
the rn: iseely 41 c::-• this kid runs
elbeipiely 14455,0,1 an'1 tkncnw•ard from
the upper lid es) that 1!-e inner corner
r1 t:•• ry0 ;s no( 14-,1411.1 as in white
O.., WI: - 4 thefold is large
it ,1„, ,„1„ 1.. tar' it:ser• part of the lower
1,14, !n wl' el► ease ll:c upper 101 docs
ncr cross the corner. the Iranspnrent.
(sternal cent if the eyeball. horizon•
tally but obliquely, giving to the eve
the dietinetite (spressiorl met stall in
11r1 Japanese. Another peculiarity of
the upper lel in the Mong(aians is tlyc
lie k 4 f development el the gnoote be.
1.'W the eyebre ws. The akin covering
t,•. 141.7'1' 11,1 is sc, that when the
'age is raised the skin is ihrown
lid a 1. 1.1. \\hen Ili1< fol( is well 41e.
e l .i drops slightly over the mar-
t• e • 1 the 1:.1. T!•i< interferes with the
( • ,1• 41.r(51.ng decal downwari in•
I. )• i•
--o•
TllliN rum*: \\ .tS
t •
• t,
-
(1. 4e 4
4 . . •
4
'1 • !
(r' 4
y•., is
4.
•:+-
..1
: • 51.. i,' .4
1• •
1.1
1..:• y
.:
n m•1
Li o a !, i' ..-y 1. ace 1,d
(1 ltinst cold Must be taken. as it ren-
ders the pores of Ihc skin very open.
Ilere is a eery ger')d spring medicine:
Two ounces of Ets..,111 sales, half all
ounce of milk of sulphur. one 1111d n
half ounces 01 cream • l tartar, the jute
and part of the ie. .1 :, se,. n, ere
Iwo quru•Is of le, e ; . .. ;
nIl. A winegkeofel etisad l !atoll
twice a Jay.
I10\I1: CLRI:3.
wart Remedy.—Apply oil of c:nnnmon
often as possible. A cannel's thnir Li•uah
may be used. but is net necessary. 1
5 cent viol bins 1)0(41 found suflicieiit to
remove a large well wart.
For Sleeplessness. ---11 you are troubled
with insonln.a bathe bet for nixed ten
minutes in water ae hot as possible
first before retiring. This will drew
Iho blool beim 4(0' lined brain. Dread
and apprehensions smush and you will
er.lov a good night's rest.
.!r. n • f n,e marriage the daughter and
l , ,, 1 leers went to the asylum.
"a- regards the effect • 1 • u‘ r.
Mint on cringe. 1 Invite,( . .
eenn)p1c to come here to -night. 1 suit
sorry he has nol come. 1 must say he
was the most daring criminal ct the
Victorian era.
"11e was so clever rind intelligent
'lee h•' might well have been News.
el ,ler or a Cabinet \linister. -\
ext"" t eracksman never lived. 11e
w..:.1 .t. n evening dress to perpxelrih'e
!. • •• and. pnssing himself .eff as
a I'• 1. e\• :!d mix in the best society.
"ao d: log and desperate a criminal
w:- • ! e t I the Ilome 011ie(+ gave or -
d., 1 • was never to be (10011 will'
sees:.-freeled. two policemen. heavily
armed. being always conunissiened for
the purpose.
"Itis Rest senten^e was for Seven
years, nod his seeOn•! •for 1416. I1' was
reienscd when the King came 10 the
Ih1,ne. and has knee refermcd.
"The father . 1 Ike elan was n f:le.a
bailiff in Slaff•erdchire. Ilio parent.,
41;ed. and he came under the control
Keep Lungs \\'arae.—'Iso prevent Ink- 01 1'c grnndfnther. who was a drank: a
i')tt colt un lungs peke• three or four wretch.
Ihickne''04 of newspaper and wear -lee treatment he received w:.: .,
(.ter the lungs or chest under the cl•,lh- V ; Ihal one day he nttnckei his
g . 14 1.'0I1ter with a poker. )went him nn.
I1
wag nearly (lead. rind then 4.:,, .,
(41 with his grandfather's thatch ar4.1
.C75 which pie leak from a safe. '1 h•,s
when M' was thirteen years old his
career of diene began.
Inf.(' a teaspoonful onful from lini0 "It is or* (•1 the most striking! cn
e' crinle ns Iho' result of ent•ir )nrncrit
\au'6n Rcllef.—Fn cases of violent Ihnl 1 Ince mel.
nausea. when 1)11 other M1110(1ies hate "floe .4y••l -rn el denting .• -r.
i 1' 'e'l. the skin of a perfe1ly fresh etii• ;_ , stir• ly t, este." ill. \\','-• •: - „•••1 4.
:,n ahno"t immediate relief. 1I c)441 e.'. "\\( want to !I"' •n .w.rp
en with milk e r water and sh•.,utd r f 4,:Ir• whole legal n. ': 1 - . 1'1.1 bete
reelii.1 up MI.) ns small a dose as it (nit In fresh. inch it .: a ,')•vat„
Kr r+'• ene n Reyn• .h.—.\Trend stiffer-
, )': tin.( great ret of in applying a
C. 1'1 '.titrate.' in mel oil to Iho cheat.
:nt.'.
F4•r llnarsenecs..—\\'h4I) lb., voice t5
;t 114:111 the effects 1,1 n cold try no.,
s ,ul'1.• and plea -ant remedy; Pcut up
.1 •• . 1 .enc egg. add to it the Juicer'
, , , ,t• n. sweeten with while super
1 ir'i hisputent—"Then 1111 n Lar?'
n t h
11'• -"(alt 'h•e r. Weary, ray
.:,•n,• 44',.4.45; y4 a Ir.\.' to -1 bp4., en the
t•
per,Ct. .1.• ly r.,1.s: ['.4 t!•y
u'ts, ':y t. 1y
iisOe• !ease them.
1 •'riliarily of 10 1:,.4, nerds
54,0:14 cnns1Derell n \I prevent we
.5444)) to aim al ten C• . not reform
"\tv burglar friend --• that the only
11: -.- 1. r ! me is the indeterminate
)' revs'
a.1 - , • the 4L,0 4 1e'rls (1 a 111051
•:' ,. 1 at. et.,4 nc animate.
4-' -.
I
tow it.
.111=1• 0..1111111
5 1, .•: 11 • Is alr;vc slot.
two men be-
THIEVES
e -
THIEVES WERE IMPUDENT
',Wit; HMI j• 1\Ill& 111,1 -.1:•: IN
14114) \U 1/%1114.111.
Three 1111es in the (,'•uud \\ere all the
Goner Veiled \Shen Ib- Looked
al Ilia Properly.
"Lost, strayed of sl.len—Itlrce fine
cottages have myet: i ' usly disappear -
(0 from Ihr' pro:•.•1ts. \,-. 290, 24J and
;J00 High 11• a.l, \\..i.-'4. 41recn, boo.
don, while 111.• 4 %%„e • w;uiS•t looking.
Folder will please r.•;ern to Goodwin,
kV., etc.
1t has often been said that properly
is mere secure in England than human
life. The above advertisement, which
d:d not, but which might very easily
have appeared in the London papers
docs not Lenr out the statement, writes
a London corresi ondent. John Morris
Goodwin of London, who awned the
eeltages when Ificy stood on the P"° -
July, is 51111 looking for his posses-
sions. Ile desn't expect to recover them
but he believes he has the thieves and
has haled them into court. The mag-
istrate could hardly believe the as'ound-
Ing tale of impudence and remanded
the defendants until he had lisle to
make personal inquiries, \\'ith such
men al larger, the said, Buckingham
Palace itself was not safe, mid English-
men would wake up some morning to
P.nd that They had no place to house
TILE ROYAL FAMILY
\Ir. Goodwin usually kept a very good
weather eye on his snug little property -
that -was. The owners of property in
.England are limited, and when one gels
his hand on a choice piece he is hardly
blamed if he lakes a grip that only
death can break and holds it. \Ir.
Goodwin used to run out from his hnn►c
every fete days to see that fits three
cettnges were still intact. On those
occasions he walked up and down the
street in front of the cottages, approach-
ing them from all sides to see how they
iceked and then went home and smoked
h.s pito and a'e his dinner in a peace
and contentment kn•jwn only to those
who are secured against the howl •:1
the wolf at the door.
But Mr. Goodwin reckoned without
the influenza germ. Alm-st everylxxly
in London, from the prime 11:nisler
down, has received a visit tae :. that
14411e husrlsotly. Those who lir:•. • 11 -1.
pretend they have. for it is fa -1, • „ .
to have the "flu." !11r. Goodwin. !see -
over, was one of those who was n•.!
lout to it 10 do any pretending. Al. .t
six weeks ago he surrendered and 1: • ..
to his bed. 'lite influenza—and the doe-
ter—kept him on his back for a month
rind during all that time he worried
ineessnnty about his collages. Bal
though he worried about them it Is safe
le say that he never considered the
pcssihl'ty of anyone
RUNNING OFF \\•i•T11 THEM.
Finally, when the ammoniated tinc-
+ure of quinine had (lone its dea.l'y
v:olrk, the influenza geniis were hors
de combat and the d(1(11 r uuleeked the
front door and told him he was free.
.Ir. Goodwin lost no time In Inking a
Isis to \\illesden Green fondly to gaze
(Ilan his properly. Ile alighted near
1 nn:l turned into 4Iigh Road with n
! step and a still lighter heart. Ills
( • • van ahng the familiar row of
leading to les and then his
l:• sr t. as is usual with hearts upon such
stood still. There. where
his three pretty II1L'e cottages had stood,
were three deep holes in which the
foundations had tx'en sunk. Mr. Good-
win very nearly (spited without fur-
ther ado.
\\(ren he had sufficiently recovered
himself the erstwhile properly -owner
laughed n rather A,o'is11 laugh. and de-
cided that he had (tome to II►e wrong
street. His prolonged illness.' he fig-
ured. had made hint guilty of a menial
lapse. ile slowly strolled up to 114e cor-
ner smiling over this J'.ke on himself
and glanced at the ln►np post to find
mal just emelt) where was w':1$. IlEs
,.•'art had another attack when h•' found
that he really was In !1igg1. It
went brick Io the Three h 1• .1) the
ground and began kicking over the
debris. Ile was thus engaged When
A POLICEMAN (:AME ALONG.
"\\lial's the ninller? • nskrd that func-
Lonery. "Ilave you lost nnylhi4?
'Lost anylleng?' exclaimed( Goodwin,
sarcasm struggling will' sorrow in h's
voice. "1 'hould think 1 have. Fre
bet three houses."
The folicernan smiled pod naturedly
at what he decided was a poll attempt
:1 being funny. Ile leaned ngninst the
knee in front of the properly and kilt -
ti. the mud from Ws NO. 10 boots.
"1 don't suppose year know whnt has
becmne of the three buildings which
used to stand on (hese lots. do you?'
asked C'oodwin, Ignoring the amusc-
n10nt his previous tenlark h4J Induced
n Il►e representative o1 the law.
"Sure." nne'tcr(d the policeman care -
4 ssh-. "The owner had them remov-
(, i.
"iteiii ved, OddIestieksl i rn e. h.' a-wn-
c,• and 7 never had there leneoved,
•
de •tared (101lw'n.
-Well, all I knew," said the pelisses
nr•n, "s that 1 sawn (hap ladling the
house; down about n month ago and
1 said 10 hire. 'Are you clearing Them
nil away, old chap?' The lana answer-
ed. '\-es, f have enters to shift 'em.'
Si. if they were taken away without
veal• order; yeti had better re)or1 i1
at the station."
The Life Beyond
How Hard and Unfair the Lot of
Maty If There Be No Hereaiterr•
11 a man d:e, 511011 he live o , LId--
1rb, x:t., 14.
The Man it 4:1,01 141 11411:1 aiJ heal•
11,1• iu god) hs•. 1.fe. Only lnisan-
thise.s and iii.cc1:i11 .‘411!1111-111111..-1S af-
irct at►x.,1) t} ": h'.Illr c tt Hiss
11, Men, ids be such u trcusarc in t11.'.
( ur bricd .pun of it, what n j••y to
lite forever, to have eternal life.' Who
41)45 not yearn for .t war, un .ue•\pr0.:-
t :b'e long.ng'. \lint me,tt •th the
Stabs, b4e'1 our !..,;'t' t. iptitt:og th,
banquet 4'1.41► our 5141111!.. 1: - . !all': 55 111,
a final for. -wt -f:? (11 i,5 1-1,4,114,1
ground for r:el'e e! a fete ! f••'
Selene.', :s Lord K.. • . • tt .!.
buds to supl•ol1 the feel ,•f .. ... .. .
This it does by the. i;at - , ! : h.• , ei •
stru^_ti ibty ..f matter end
vvtion of force. Not a pails:. - . I : •!-
ter has ever been lost, nor 7411- ! 1 ere
final force in 11►e world ever love di.
minisheJ. T):e:•e has been change, but
loo tics or deslr•ucli•m. If. then. elet-
Ice be indestructible. 1• (1111011 1, • : ••
shall nu!- the spirit t•f ,• 1: • ': r: ;.1!•
is but the «t van( and -..,..• i• :...1 -
stractibleiii( etoteelai.
Nature agan a a syli:l, .1 . 1 '41 - t:• . t
hope. She, too, In 1s this
Pi IE\O\lENON OF 414E.'n 1! f.
flee flowers fall, her beauty fades una
winter wraps her to an icy Shlv'uel o5
apparently lifee as the mausoleums
o,' our dead. But wait a few short
months and what do so. s•''' \v ser-
mon (:n earth was ever pr.•,v'tted mole
untulstt•erable, than that p:o.l:Mittel by
the fading and renting of liked, tercet
anal (lower.
The being 44 roan is r n-olli'r arta►-
nr•nt. Why sh.uld h:s Ilsiti ;!,1' go .out
in the 1111:11 quest for a future life? \\ 1:•,
plaided within 1115 heart this inter
Longing?? \\'helhcr God or 11;0;110, it
was not meant to taunt us wills
A MAIN BEASOV.
"lk.n't yeti hate the dentist's drill?"
"Indeed 1 dol 1t g4'is sc cn my
note_."
AT FI)W T 11.1ND.
\vele:--"The man who Ira* to change
a w• mans v:(VS is a foe."
\\ .ioss_allow do )'('u kno\\i'
;►14.4.10—"My wife toter me 80.1
ll•ncsIy is 1`10 (xcus0 lots 01 men
Q,ve for long Fahr.
Another phot arises fr-oin 1114, nature
of human love. It is tit un^e the tend-
erest and most p•)w•erful of our !acid
+•••s. And tove is stronger Dian watt:.
t,' •!i, 411‘.!411‘.!last pre,si44( •f 111•
141,1 . 1 '! .' g pi. 1;root 1411:1114.>tl-
••, 11 :r I o• i:i ni.l
t•dnal 111,.*, !: 0 1 es aro seseied f=.irevcr•.
They cry • Ea.ust s, cruel ua& tin -
natural a fate. \\o k•lbov our depart-
ed l+yol,J the "Great t)ic:de," and our
unbiol.cu love forbids us to (1141174 that
they, lo), d.) net love 44.5 still.
To Phu -c el u- w I:v Ir'licve in revela-
144,41, who teed teet a Father would not
l:enr all nese a''e, 4h- 1_cy c:f Ilia .
(1re1 and r•, a..• '•r bean Ills in -
h•• :1 I!.,• •:.,c Mates abso- t'
':;!• e • .114•1:
r • .• •,f immortality is the
• 54' :t:., ..;, . f unfinisttcrl lives.
!low lou)) 4 • a+e harken oft like u
•.'144::'1 41 ,1,1! 1n t!:e very centre?.
1. a thousand
i.!i, family. sociely,
! ~at. , '. t4..t.s ly la..d plans
1!!1.1 \\!11:-t:l)DI:.NI.Y SUMMONED,
n:, ! .' ail. Are such live3 frag-
ile + '' •: . •il• y a failure? No. not.
! • _!.1 ..1 owl r:aiily. flu( (hero
'es r ,Ir . , n.! 511 -ley ,;1'.• 1110
:.1, .. , , :rl l,:i,:l- tv1.ceiV(SI here
.•ul to s g:vrs,us per-
t, 1 .
\�• :. the life bcy.uul is u rcassur-
:.uee those doomed to Crosses, fct-
rs and inlirmities here.
\\'v) can i:+•' ••N that n righteous.
(Ind has Mad. is. -• children of sorrow
MO to sadly'? .\ • ••. 144) justie0 as well as
!(t<' dcuutnd 1. •• riliuui,y- of. life be-
t.anl the present- allele fettered nh.nds
nt ill be freed. , :..,,en hearts will be
heal...I and t-: , :ode-, marl., perfect.
e:,.4 what ' 1• I uifort
ft' • (..'h in .. 1 ,- grieve -
1.:. . . 1, I 4 . They
iii• ;' ,I •• . bel -
e • . l .• . i,rt.• u 1 1•s, es !t• it. but
1e.. ,. ., :, • ' •.• re. \'t, -hall mise (hens
'n in 1 •" ,al•tun 0- clasp,
nnbrvken f• : ,
lata .,h• +•. (4 t the
'! . ll•., 4 n,ak..
rq f,•
!I• 1;11:14"1.
1 4. such.
l i• tl:' life be-
t;urt. • f •l, -
y ettel,
40•00-00.450004,000‘34:1000004
YOUNG
FOLKS
/O000000O cs0000a0000041
TEDUl' ANI) TIIE SQL111144:1.. ..
Teddy is a little black -third I: 'e
riel, with the stiii,W •st of 1:1,:- st. ,.
•
the fe.i-1, i, l ! 1' g', hoinse
l!s tit his 1 :;:1,•!cr.-1•-,u:lhs (.c:44)41n-
41.
11.5'1'11:1) lif\I 1')'
.114nt., is.t . y r:-•;"•!1 :1
(14 i11. l:ap/n [. i1:.•t . .1 1.:4 -un-,
h • r. 4 14 • • ..:: i •„
b.'! 1414 erre' . • u. !.:1!1;
L0111 a ,, L• r 11:1.4'
+ 1) s ay. 11• ' • ', . r,' i l ighl. her
nt; ‘‘nuit 411,0
straight up into the a:r. as it i1 , 5114.1 uo 1!;.'! f.•-: 1,.• t� ,,r::ed
were trying to ne e't h .; s?.:'' I' t,:tl.
.`:.r- that slick a k••,. IL 1 �• - !n :,
tug yard, with a le:ls•• :u ••00 • : I •
;1, where his Ina -1.•:• ':s••-. 1,1,,1 , ,
loartl fence all re :n 1 .t. l-
running along Li'' w II,.• 1•'fe • 41 11"0
fence -posts, for the boards lo 1• :'aii..1*
to. Teddy cannot get over tial fence
rlillx;ugh he w.,uld like (n, •141'1 has
!140(1 to uuuiy tunes, for •'1 Ila:
G4 xl yard lives his best play - !ere).
D+xdo is no dig at uli. tea
pray squirrel. with n hugo bl:- y
that flirts and quivers when'•''
moves. Dodo lives in a 1,11:,• : •
ix use up on the branch (:f ' • .
pins n wife and a whole fat:
squirrels up there with hill l
run lip and down tt,•,t I.: •
Its you ens cJintb the -1 1 -
sery', 011(1 146 111)5 done .! I
011041 when Teddy ts•as t • :
hill hint, for although he •
ing with 'Teddy. the fears
fnvorile t'n►1I0 is to watch fn):: ! -
,rnlit Teddy is looking the otlr•1' ,'1c!•.
then climb over the fence. run up
behind Teddy one chatter s!il•iily et
him just a second.
Bul (1)6 day Iho' lnug1i w•0s on 11144
.,later side. 'Teddy knows ‘‘.51•10).s.
hy Ile is un
the big yore.. ile is there to watch toe
he)lsc and see that no one comers in 14)
steal or b) hurt anything. Perhaps that
's svhy he will not pet 7464o slay there.
Ora day, tvh+'n Trudy wag affray doe n
al the end of the yard, Dole came over
and thought he would go in and sec
what Them was in the house. Ile task-
ed up the 51(q,.e and 1141.) the pantry
window. The pantry was n \tender••
fu: place. Ile tested nil the kinds or
crumbs. and at in1l decided that hell
n loaf .,f Craton') luend was the t'•y
ni^est thing there. TIh111 tens e. Men
easy' witch of the w:ndow . s he
..:eight hold c1 i1 one dragged it t0 the
till. and then tumbled i1 nut.
But climloing it now was 0 differonl
matter. 11e eased go up the (on•-" (demo
but he could not take the I-n'nd with
hint. And to make it work. T.••ldy hurl
storied up that way.
Dodo keekeil up and detn•n Ih(' fence,
and nt last saw n sloping board that
!Tattled to the beam. Ile dragged tho
;oaf I.; this. rind found he could go up:
1111 that took hien only to the beam. nip
th' 4.1 the boards was a fent higher.
it • ! and Reset to get otcr, but the
t : '-' • a ton heavy. .11 last he grew
, • .. • •7 he chattered al the head.
it for Pring s, obstinate. Anil.-
••-
p. '•: • 1 . arra h r,.
Ju ' -•• •,ler T. ' 1. 'arno w 1h
P•
,:'.,
a 'f•: •, , • ' ''!1 hitt(, and
ft ghten• •: 1 l!.e bread and
eciarn1,1. •! 1•• n "••• fence hp.
FI: went q.• , !t.-, 4. knocked
4bo bread e(f. and .' ' . " around
(n Te.ldt•'.s side. a • ! rind
turned to see what 4t 's:, ; .•
fed. Teddy liked Grahan: i • • -•isr
much, so he sal d :•tt-n and al• . • : f.
leaf greedily. And as kr I1 .-• ',.'
ceord only s.t en the fence mai scream.
"Ilene, sock!" h•' seem'd fn say'. "Inp
this deg! ile i.+ eating yew" bread!"
But ewe: was 4tt1 Of the kitchen as
bt ahould have 1 a:wn, 80 Teddy had
4, :.�.
.1, a+',' :e'! for melt: ,. .,\.
;':.,' i:ng 111:1"'rt::nt. 1 n,_. •
h •.
Olaf i• or. 55 . re t•. • ie ye:u, c ,
1.1!
. 1
\t Il: (teas':.., . All.l. 0 it ..I1..er,
\\'alter • -'. l at 1 happi•d him
No so le o t 1'1 .,net• 111 and then
t! • 4 :)4 , . 1 had 4.) harpy her
111'• ' • •1' •'.I 041 Itl•'
t 1 4...;11g Io Imp, -
1 1•• , . . )• ;, ,:,'led me.
..• I,:,:• . •i , te-41. "5511y. what
• • :tot; •• ' hat' 1t !oust
;.. a l:a!• -• '1 e, h; .,f,y 1(4
04;.I i ' • . • 1 .. :.r
3 v., .•,.,: n' !1'•.
.1141 Ibis . 1 1..• ry
10 Make 0111••:•, L-44.7. • 111.. i:.•pp:: fe
clu,'1 I.• euisclte:. Then put : y
flow us and pc,uti:,g lips. 'I -'y r "4, :ir-
pt• op- II$,'e 5544, :11'' 11. ,4.,• .
1 4',-) tial your l;.,e w.:. •:;••"'‘ 0.'111
sou..•: s.
}
FEAT 11)11 FEAT.
\ladanie Ade::nn 1',114 q,ucen . f s
stere, 1)14.4, in the course of tier
pief4's-`onal career. fleet wills Many ad -
y ntures—some amts ng, some olhrr-
w•i3e.
On e.ne occasion. ninny tears ago.
she attended a supper -party aper n con -
el rt. one of her f,•1:ew-gurst9 being are
eminent 1:,t:yrr. After supper, the lat•
ler prei,- "l the 'citta in sing, brit for
a weer she refilled.
"Fs ng. and 1 1! do anything fou hkel"
ie finally p lcndr•1•
So Madame Patti asap' "Home, Sweet
171.nte."
''New. \ir. \i.." she wile -else& at Ih-r
close of her song. "please Aland on
y-4110 head,•.
"(;nrsl greck.us. el,i1.1. y•1r'r0 J.,kngl"'
was thesaslonishe*l reply.
"x;,,t at all'' re'oi'b d the snger. 't
bargain is a bargain."
eyes i1 is." agrs- d the lnwy. r-1;c�isn•••1-
ly. " Ilere goes!'
And up In 1114' air went his fox• wet.
anti wildly to preserve h:F inlneee, am 4
general applause.
r,n(►f) AM'!, 1: 4'(11..' !' \\•fa)NO.
p•. !4 5 - •LurElah:_.
.log ye lir
'\ VS, hat
cou''I hate
ii:,l'i 'd ). i. I t,(nt. f. r n ried. ,,roll
• '• • f• se-
: nb.
(te4):, f•telh'hate.
ful [•uteshm,•nt sh4 •1 .1 ! ,, •.
ries) f fc'.•m (tern a the igi.! • ! , '
age inn?"
I.,nvict--".111. madam. it w: + :le. in -
(hence of a precept inught ue in "m-
ony S••.•l::.ni.•.
D. \.--"In Smiley Se.ty o.4 flee a-
I'• las , t. -."Nay, meelt:n. risen 1 ,w 1
Ivor I. as 11 were the loins of .d'rt►ory
Wong me hack to rr)x .l,v.yboeod: 'If at
firs( you don't succeed, try, Lit. Pry
/y:•in. "
1