Exeter Advocate, 1909-06-10, Page 6 (2)•
• Oincwhat $terflI3r,t. aLhtugti
tle ii‘
3‘tlie girls* wiki insallle10 her
tr&ng snd ineolierent -lenguege,
"get „up from this iloor at once, and
st sston'tliis 0140., There. I" ae
ber- •• ',ming -servant obeyed hre
ihoeked nto stembleneeeif eompo-
sure by her mietreia* unneiiel ton
"now coliects_your, thought* end
11 me what all this exeited plumbs
Jing means. What is that you
owl Why were you 'itto startled
when 1 spoke of ,Mr. lissbbsitol
What is it thet you are going to
telt, evert at thesupposed risjc of
your life 7" •.
• "Oh, it ts * queer story, large
and 1didn't underetind whist it all
meant at the Lune; but now 1 sco!
now _seer!.
Bromley"Do You know
.tfutittardi
",t)on't 1 know hint! 1 'Mould
hit* so; he kicked me once," said
the girl vindictively.
"Sicked you" •
* 1 Wets letting bim in one
day, and not meaning to, 1 knocked
bi2 hat, and it ot jainnted. Theu
4 I uswero tt" tea' *n-
a
'tame
• „"Well, he .said, tteim •1ve
got everything fixed just ii X 4011414
lt,Ati 10144 end you can chauge. your
natine• and position just z oori es
you ehooseis-that is, if thistle
yon'Vegot grit enoinrh• to carry out
this plan et mine.,
41"ve got grit enough for so,oys.
thing on earth that will get me lea
of thi* terrible grind,' said Aunt
us *Mars you been to X.eir J1-
venyet, to look at thole recorder
els,' he %aid, *end, as tuck
would have it, 1. found them exactly
you Oreweter was male
the samestley you were; how
did youhappen to
'Why wata,on
• 7,4
13re*stcr well; ad
when he went
or our Iieense, he rnet the ie*ell just
-coming out of the city eltrkia *t-
ikes He thought Imo queer, but
the book Was lying open, on the
desk, and he saw nit name and hi*
girl's --Miriam Barrie -and under-
stood what WWI up,' Aunt Isti ex -
inert. at as he was a rich chap
and not throukh college, Alan leriiir
he had -done it-tin-the•-iilYs and thst
-i'wou[d be for hiiiiitereatsto keesp
• into our house.' -
• ”What was . he doing at you
• houxel Was he in the habit of cat
ling there? _1 thought your stun
was very poor."
"Yes, so she was; but we ism
in a, tenement that belonged to M• r
nubbard, and be used totom
every Month for his rent. After
• it. while he and aunt Lu got very
thick over eomething they were
planning between them 1 Coukinf!
make heed not tail out of it, though
uset to listen 'when I eouts1,-
'said Ellen, 44 innocently -as iflietss
ening were the meet proper ' thing
; he didn'ttell even me unt
✓ yeare afterward. Sow queer thing*
do .eome about; she said; Iknew
t Miriam Harris, and ehe wean any
better off than 1,, even if hrfather
was a musicien,send mine alourne
. man .tailor; they were, primas
e 'Lucifer, and se poor as church
mice, and nowhere you propose
that 1 etep right into the shoes that
were intended, for herr.
" 'roir think youcart keep
tipper hp 7' 'laid Mr. Jlubbard
* " *You bets" said Aunt Lu.
"'Wehl, get'ine your tertilieete,"
he told her, *and 1.11 fix it up for
•in the -world to de. "But one 4fikY
1 heart himtell ker that if *he'd
he/plant ont hed make her_a rich
woman, and d never have to
another tifiah* for he-Tirliiiing
said he'd come the. next -night
explain the whole thing to her'.
Ele thought of being rich almost
o _my breath, away- I got *11
stirred up over it. .1 thought of no-
thing else alt that day and next,
and finally made up n* mind that
. 1 would knowwhat was going on
if 1 eould.
told -fashioned sofa in our..atting-
room ; it had a volanee oround it,
• to hide the legs, and it popped into
my head that ill could ship ueders
lneeth it, I owed easily hear all
that was said. „So 1 pretended to
have a toothache, so I eauld make
en excuse to go td bedright after
supper------" •
T
tiff
"Aunt Lu took a paper from her
t,andhanded: t to him.
couldn't See what at was, but it rat
; tled
4 4 iktit 1, heard him laugh, it
a. piece of 'real luck to have every-
thing turn out so -cleverly; when
1- found, out •--„,thott,‘ your husband
name was Alan rown, it *truck
me that it might very easily be made.
over into Adam Brewster.'
" *1 don't eels- hoar you are going
ts do -its' said Aunt- Lu nervous
"s•
$$
•
'Oh, Ellen r said Lad; Brom-
ley regretfully, at this point.
„ ._40h, of course, -1 know -that a,
• lady -like you, oresher," \glanciog
at Allison's picture, "wotildn't do
anything like that; but you $
-try being as poor and abused as
• rye, been, and. less if you wouldn't
good tie or liars," said the, giri
half4elistiatly. "Well," • she re -
mimed,' "1 jutit'svatched .chimee,
• Otte Aunt Lit was in the bedr,00m,
• clisingiog • her dress. Anne had gone
"Stop • a moment, Ellen," 'her
ladyship here interrupted; "Who is
noel"
• "She's cousin; Aunt Lies
. daughter." ' . .„.
-,:l4ye$,, yes, 1 see; now go ion,"
aid.her nuStress eagerly, and
.#t otre itiette 43 'Aft _began
• rasp- vertions fikeportent- point*
12, this reinarkeble story.
• "As* I. was saying," tiler; resum-
ed, **,1 watched my chance, trawled
Under the *04 and lay fiat on the
nor. It water very comfortable%
perially after that man came*nd
lumpcd 'Intratelf • down rights o'er
Me; ..for 1 didn't dare, to imote .40
much as 'a, linger-e,hardy to breithe:
'loll and etrong."
"Now, *ate jutiV a minutes ,
ieeisr:* tidy 1;ireinlity bete interPo$
• .1 "When wet , thiesehow /04
ago * it when 11r. 'Hubbard pat
,thirsit our altar
'let me $ee„" *aid the girI
ivelY; "it must have been
*where *about the leet of Jti
It -s• Tuesday night -the next
day 1 went to 'Doctor Ashmore tor
hae the splints taken t)lt arm.
lhat was the time fainted, a
be told me A might go t olive witit
bim t wait the es.conti'dity afte
that 1 tnt. and I )tavo never seen.,
tither Aunt L* or Anna s *kite."
ut if there was 4 prospect of
at becOirting 'rich, why did
It to run sooty I on might
ed bettor if • you had ,res
her," her ladyship oh-,
4.1 don't want to get caught in any
law serape.' '
'1' 'See here; he said, and ' then
he 'showed her how he ectilel nutke
an tir into a V,' ends -oh, 1 eatal
remember .01 the_ rests but when
he got -thiongh explaining, she
seemed satisfied and well pleased.
'Yes, yes,' she said, .',1„ believe
you can' do it;*and it 1 do my part,
you swear thalsyou will hand over
a lot of money -4o most'
• "'Mrs. Brown,' he said, apeak-
in
very slow end positive, ".youli
ever need to 'do.. ;another 'dere
work as hong u •yo
" *Ohl *hat a blessed relief that
,
ready to cry, 'I don't think Leonid
have mid it mueh tenger without
going md. rv,li been Morten hills
, tempted to jump off the 'Brooklyn
Bridge into the test River many *
tune,-gueis 1 shouki if it hadn-i
been for Anna; 1 thought:it woukl,
bo truel to .10We ller te'' struggle
on alone.'
• !VW" here breathed Lady Brent-
ity, with a shiver, "what misery
there is in the world! TO what des-
perate deeds PotertY dries -Maw
kinin"
Said Mr. ffubbard,R-
etlittrit, on, Without heethng the
interruption of her niesttess„ 'An
tie is too ,fine 'a girl to be left to
hot her own row alone; , What hoe
you to say to that other plan whieh.
1 hinted -et * few days *tor
'What I About your marrying
Said Aunt Lu, when my
helot gevissiech* jump Met 1 tame
nesecrying, out, 1 was so ;stirred
up. But I' caught- Myself ',flat i
time, and shut My fAetbi. togetne
hard. .„ • • I.
• "Yes," that man said, as if he
Wight he was the Greet, Mogul,
'don't you, think it would be* rare
them* for beer
"1 knowits would,
he .stritiwered„ 'but 1 ea
he' may feel about its1 ha
id anything to her yet'
of the opinion Met shell be
ahnott anything that
pro*e her eel:Within.",
"*Well, it strikes Me that
had better, all reet out lots
rrnet hex together, end hare *
time for the rest of ,our lpcs' he
w ent on... *1 will *erne a bercleonie
ine on you the day the 'tarries,
me, then 1 will take her ell over
The roridand desh**Ilba
.7.• ; 'At.' 7
3
r to see her wearini
aexnth Aunt Lu
in.
the
'!b
1.441
„
aged with _ yea, r
;nee her mod *h.srply. 14 marry sJtu
it to pr d other dried-up, o'lit bz�helur
it ;le taY sake of getting out of sue
•Iyets and as this, and having all"the Money
almst 1 want tO .sperui. &ood greceiousi t
•1 it seamselinetet too .good to- be true
. 4:17
" went
w3t„i h
'•'it tkL no right
o
*
kke mnt any niceof inn
tei harebeen rnightyg1*d.
get Thr other hong ago,if / hula"
needed florin the kitchen; she told
hint, ,ixra *lade' Way that medense
just itehe to _strangle hers"
' "Ohs hush! Eller'," reprovingly
breathed her tompanions
**1 knowwicked," said the
girt stoieelly, "but poverty is the
devil's training-admoi,, and firt-
4slies 6 mote devilthen anything
s•
ild, you must not talk so
solid mistress authoritatively.
"But it stirs up all the had there
in me, Whenever, I look bacleand
think .of howlt woman *red
ss I • e
lop.
444
t,
1,
t p :*
ver ut zt,
heOug
rough, . et; hen I
. ea ell the drudgery in the
rin 1yin still so,
u 1"�t
anis lv
.uide
et
hofOr .Yekre; Aunt" lin 11. o
notion of of letting Me share the tits
time and good things that were
towing to her. I'd have beenselad
• j 1 could have etopped their genie
then -end. there, jut out of spite,
ut 1 dichift- understand itvery
well, so didn't know *St how to $0
t°"w"Irek.inost I eould g !oh
my brain Was that by some kind of
trick they wero goingIts get a lot
of money, but Mr. Hubbard WAS
great lawyer, and 1 thought nobedy
would believe -me if 1 tried to give
them avow, and 1 might only get
myself put in jail for •rnedelling..:.
, suppozO 1_
then we wihl try to tind soinetluug
better to think about," respondecl
Lady Bromley, in a gentles tone.
"You were saying that Mrs, lirOwn
wanted to get rid of yell."
"Yee, and he IttlAW0t04, sharp
and Viet, *We niust'get rid of her
now; , she'd make , it very hot tor
U$4f ,44,43keiWiteron-:thesetriereeue
would be sure to blurt out, some
day, that yourliallie was uneo
ic in the re." '
4or Lu. what
°an 4° with
be"'
Au
‘.t think 1 know of a-4,sellool
a certain town out West, where
she could be sent, and **Mad neVer
be likely to trouble Os again," Ur.
Hubbard told, her, in st, voice that
made .ms creep all over. But X said
to myself that neither of them
would have a chance to work me on
in way—that 1 should light out
all of * sodden, and then, if I ever
saw my way clear to give them toe
grand bounce for their,golden etas
Vet do it At first I. thought 141 go
that very night, after the house got
quiet; bur* few minutes afterward
lie told her that it -might take
• vedaysle fist -things up beforeh
ould-bring-sthomstosa
°Vivra I" suggested. her ladyship
e, Ellen appeared unable to thinl
ethe word she wanted:
_.,.."Yeessthatsaraesit.- -§o
self that I. needn't be in any great
hurry, 1 eoulki. look about a bit .i.or
a place. 1 had that ten dollars that
she," with another fond look at the
Photograph *otos* the room, "gave
to/ I -needn't stater;
• do.
t
;1 M.', t •
mtrtivs,
ticiug Mrs. 'Brewster, if 1 had wait-
ed
until they sprang their trap but
1. Was lifted of them new
they'd , be. just about ready to kilt
rue if they shoultfind out all t
1 had learned of what _these were
up to. At any rate, it wis pieta
enough that they meant to get rixt
.ot-nwity-stuelittunity-off-to.•-some,
horrid plate, so when 1 faiote4 that
next-dsi._.`,..mt-isetoisssUhrristree-teso
`ce, and he said 1 might go to live
with him, 1 made up my mindright
olf what 1 'would do. 1 med. 'up my
bundle that night and skipped out
the next morning, as I've told you.
"And you lave never seen either
your aunt or cousin silver in-
quired Isttely Bromley.
• "No, ;and 1 don't Want to," said
Ellen sharply; 44 want ,to give
tlieM 4 wide berth, and hope they'll
do the eitttit by MO.",
(To be continued.)
'
ltf+Stseeeese++.4-4,+++++++
e
4.1
I
A Cent ke care of thyself for a
while, even -if 1 ran away before
found anything to do. -Before Yr.
Oubhard left hie told Aunt Lu teat
-a a week or sos be should want
!her and Anna to move into a bet-
ter
lace, and they must have EWE*
g s clothes to wear—they mustn't
get anything swell or showy at first,
but a few nice things to Make them
look litAviike end respectable. He
WAS going to New Raven the next
day, *to tile the records,' and when
h Wit he'd be ready to push
and would give her tisane
n points, and what.
0 hare to *Ay AWL itiek to in
tour ts expected -there might
be some tough fighting, As there
was somebody gat who would tr
to 'get the Brewster Airtime." .
Did he *ay vslu-elmi he men-
tion any nemeel". inquire° tad
Bromley.,
*Ifei;send he didn't talk as if be
had any fear of them. Aunt L
said sherd do whatever he told her
--she was ready to *wear to anys
thing, for the sake of having an,
tail time for the rest of her IdeT
Ile went' awa/ then, arid & Iittle
while after Anna came in. Aunt
u told. her alt-ibout Mr; limb -
ails said when the tamest*
e had laid about marrying
er-sAnnas-she leughed until
h,ought theid, burst a blood -ye*.
lel,"
"'Oh, hes a clever one, mother*
,she said, when she took" get her
breaths , •
"'What do; you meant' Arta Lis
ads • / '0"
Mean to nen. everything
so ore will be no fear of ever los-
ing his grip on thist Money," a aid
Anne.
"'L don't understand y her
Mother told .hers
4 4 Why, I should think you'd
eon through his gastie from the g This ,
rst,'• Anne enappect,, *tX .course, s tsar 'estelieli. Awl, railer
oho.' itiabbard trent to have the hut. ItiOre slifiteult with ellsi
_
osirtitiltktrtio,A,co
In Iloard's 'Dairyman, Burtoft W.
Potter gives his idea on the method
eck4Ming the cot' of keeping a
COW 'per ,years Mrs Potter produces
eome very good ,arguments in, iiip-
port Of his views, but 1 believe that
his method of eilenlation is not the
beet one to follow.
By his spht.lk the. profit or toss of
the entire farm _is carried clown
arl. placed to t e a40,0011 0 0
•
dairy herd. It is a fact that on no
farm *re profits the tante. on the
various 'Inez of work. 'Perhaps
there are not 4144Y farms so oPnr-
*04 .ss. -not to have a losssoii .801110.
things. Ily the an outlined by
Ilfis Potter, it is impossible to know
exactly *fah things, are producing
profit and which loss.
A Man nowbet s
4 . ,,,,e lc4.14;1t..
.....„, s s
glowers erops
and yet a poor dairynsan. Ilis term
operations Okii a -*hole oily be
•iekling a profit, bat the dairy herd
-ay notbe contributing to that
goat. On 'the other hand, the
rd may be the source efsprotit,
nd the other operations of the
arm; of loss. .1Ienee it is tesentiel
_know, at least aPproximately,
the cost of produeing the irstriou.s
products that make up' theoutput
of e dairy farni. No line of animal
husbandry that ' will. Mit
market value for the foot tonsiun
ed should he follower's- Eisential a
js 0%411re JO Maint nonce of soil
i
ertility,We should 40t ,b6 obliged
i
te take t into &coon t in order to
et Market price for our grain a',
nd
..-
The auto* CI (lair
0 o bros4 goat
• be as 'skillful at
fertility of his soil
• bounteous eropa o
Ito is at„ breeding, fee
for 0 dairy 'herd?, „T i /mete*
it neklessartfor hint to i be * ottident
,of all the *various branches of
farming; and the best incentive to
Wady' is *.ealenlation of profit and
Iosas lIeneet the test nietIKKI is;to
darge the cow- for , What she
04,103MOS at inerket price.
°rage •
Irrtiltrie:rg• tttil ritt
producing
tuffs as
r caring
T
lioo
ihowin
len!
will u
1 .pioguf
*34 lo
0 tic*,
t t t
t,i
tett out
ivity"alt atong ti
u erre or.
r
Otie
(ah ea
'o
not•.•t hittle careful Agars
ins wili demomtrate thc„fade, of
farrn tionesin snot' * way a
t,o,be z reveletion to the ordirter
fiirniers To fail tollgate, On tiles
peratktus is 4"penny--seise'and
pound foollSit,i” 'Take time enough
to count the cot. '
FEEDING Tag OMAN FOAL.
In the event of the death of the
dam at foaling time, the youngster
may, byintlielous management, be
Sueeeklitullp i:ah4e4 by hand. The
best Substitute for .mare's milk is
cow*e inilk, butlk
it mut be he 4rveormaeonts.
In
neh-eieher-in,1at than that
the niilk of a I o
should be used; a t 1! milk of
the sante cow, and, if practieable,
of a cow whose l milk is not rich in
ifat, and, to this add one-fifth of
warm water, adding to each pint
of that *. heaping tablespoon of
wlute rinulated.ssigerisand.-
• sure ses
Tho colt should be fed itt e-anel
o
with its niother, we Will And that it
sucks' from ten to it dozen times a
day. Thereto* give him half a
teacupful every hour at 'first, and
gradually increase the quantity,
while-feedingles frequently, until
he is fed six times a day, and then
tour tunes. The best way to teach
the fetal to drink IS by Mean* of
rubber nipple on the spout of
teapot: lf scours occura little
lime -writer, warbled, should be lid-
ded to the milks To prepare, lime -
water, elake 4 lump of lime hie pont-
ng a. little water tin it; then add
water And stir. Let tins -settle for
et'veral hours, and the clear water
on top is tim lime -water to be, used,
The foal should be kept in a loose
hose-- well . bedded, and May he
usbt_ttLdritik.hote_xvail-schen
month old, and to eat ground este
and bran. When let out topa'.
ture, it should be; stabled at nights
'----protected-froze
GREAT TREASURE U
SYMOICATE T$ -4:11)-431tT
OVEll, 4.40 000,,t4 '
64tIlions toid in Bay of Vigo In
1802, "fare Been Located
by the ilydroscope.
Tales *of bidden .hoards of pir-
ates and of. treature cargoes stored
far 'beneath the waves in sunken,
galleons have in. all ages had pe.
,ettliar faseination for S.nien, and
litany a life has been lost and ma
4 dollar sexpoiderisin the seao
for-siesissilthstlat .uever eXist
has renittined,.hOligeverl for :Mon of
the tweutieth century to plecotreas
saire-hunting .04 *Wand business
basis, and to equip it with thelnic-
chinery. necessary, to its suOtess.
Withill'a (OW weeks thesbgreatest
treasure hunt ever organized will
begin the Bay of Vigo Where it
is estimated that within a' compftra
tively sznall area, minted ,gold and
silver to the value, .of lietwetes
twenty and • thirsty Million pound*
sterriog, rw;
E
In the golden age 0 Spain's his
tory she drew from her mines in
the West Indies god and sliver
worth more blot' 49,000,1Y -Al a year.
In 170 a fleet of galleollo brought
heMe the sieeumulitted tresssire 'of 1
three years, amountirie, to tomvii
428,000,09p, together with precious f
mercItitnclts6 almost 'equally vitt/.
able. Arrived safely at Vigo, t
altat ed by the combined British
sev'eiteenth Spanish galleons wer*
and uteh iletts„ "under litbniral
8ir4 George Iit6Oke. The ealleons
which were "men-otorar, tarrying
from\ twenty to forty guns apiece,
were *Nile -tett in the engagement by
$t rrenth ships of the line. The
others. were erronger, and
gained an Overwitelthing itittory. It
te Sate the treasure falling in.
40 their. kends that the gelleonsi•
re wank. It is provisl beyond it
ubt that only * *very emelt part
o the treasure beloriging to the
Ins WAS landed htforo the • belt'.
nterperery oftehtl documents
show it to have }ellen ril.01,01, and
the allies secured as booty no mere
than 44414,M Some, of this'
EKI silver wei pasted to the aa
tioaI turnpike, and
t
priv
•
sine
C • n
•Vemte
ut • r, ea 4
Stk
t 0 bs
s. esti•
.e •• 1
0 p roivitiloNvveet 4eirerrieen .
d other
•
•
r 0 year, arra eileceeded /
lifting one of the $bips, which,
tollieees-before reseh.
ed h urfave, as. it had not been
o sttength'etred.1
THE HADItOSCIOPE.
No other eoncessions were grants
'est until the present concessionaire*
*yam" the scene,. and sesestred
r' the Spanish Government the
ote right of working in Vigo Bay'
until 1915,. The Spanish Govern.
moot is to, receive per eent. of
thisoalue of the objects recovered.
I)r. C. L. Iberti is ,at the bead ot
!.1 en14,epttterisesinow,hline: th.:Thmengifixeei r
s:sno
4.01,r
,
strunnial
speeiaIly Ida finding.On
s the los galleon*. Chief of \-
I inventions is . the hydroseope,
whieh imsy be described as a tele-
.seope for use under water. Through -
the hydroseope objects can be seen
under water a,lmost 45 clearly 43
ideotasiresstAes-sidesIssane-Ae-steenses
ugh -Bela glasses. The top of the
apparatus elosting platfmn, „ors_
• weottmen can stand. From
it .ctestie detieeWe vosfOttirteles---
*cos& steel tube. at the end of
which is an optical .chainber„ a kind
of collier*, provided with methane.
/cal arms, and containing powerful
lenses. The 'system of lenses and .
refleetoris is so arranged thet• ob.
iects sureounding the base may be
seen front above to a distant* of
about . 2,000 square eyards. •The
hydroseopes is provided , *leo •itzlitli.
electrice lamps of great power. •
PNEtrlilATIO ELEVATORS.
Another of the clever Italian's in.
ventions is a tubrnarine boat, whiell
was used by the Jepaneee to raise
the sunken Bussian warships a,t
Port skrthar. ashaped like -a .
torpedo, and is screw -driven; le
also fitted• with wheels; and can
• eralettr thessesslosetriesseen-rett' -
immovables= ,the...-seatersAt:•-sAy
Ott ett4 has inechanietil arms
wbjch may besseorkeel. with a precis..
ion_almos_4t, equaltoto that of hureate',
hands. Among the-OtheiTinVentione
e the elevators, consisting Of ey.„,
tinders. madee rubbeied. -canvas,
into which compressed air is pumP-
Each cylinder is eapable-', of
r t mg 40' tons Out of the weters
so that it is only *Attention of mul-
tiplying the number of cylinders,
whatever the weight may be„ The
elevatorhas. Meclianicat arms to
embrace the which to be
salved, or tables may be pasted be-
neath a keel where wreck is
weak,
tlft GstiLtiVOINTS LOCATED,
The bed of Vigollay has eireitdr
beer! examinee.' with the hydroseone
and the ships, -ciettkh for more than
two centuries had rested peaceful., :•.-
y in the depth of the ocean, halve
beeu locatcd. By way Of exp.sil;"-
nient several 6 s
P47 -r -c -
-a
t
wood was ()voted, o we r
serarcd as o resemble stone. The,
wood of• which . the sunken gelln-*
t pspent uuklitsb:uirrietotell$11'eatyl°37eart tottz7Ii..ourTI:
The genoral,,cargo brought home •
by the transports included pearls,
meralds and 'atietliyits, ember and
precialls from the -SOU ,
Alizeriebart forests .- Als, known thiitt
there( were nUmerouti works' art \ ‘`
in silver and bronze, say
nothing earmonoos4 14, ,
numerable artieles of Value, belongs
int to offieere eta stionen.
When, few ' Welke 'Uri**
WOtk bEittft in Vigo Bay* attempts
will first be made . the Sante,
Crilt, one Of the largest of the
eons which curried guns: It is
ho that'she Win it0#1.6 11 whole,
or, romappearanees, she has been
wonderfully preset std.
• 1,
hon's share id this toast, under any
”reunisteritet; but he wile keen
Cfl0U%1 to see that it wouldn't do
leave any loophole for us to go
beek on him; to if he married me,
cur interest* would 1140 .106 mixtti zip
flowerers by making an estimate
'of the veld of cern per aro, one
ea* come reesonehly close to the
value of the crop.
Coot of production* should
ideteminnes1 for *II farm product
hi* tbst we onddlet blow onli It ie not "moue* to know tut w.
ia 't be iriodlex more Monty out hay. a matai. of • prott on our
un ell the:time,' faro -work ske * Te, rtkOitt
'Yes,1 tee,' said her mo we *tumidknow what
she stout On Anxious I
Is not. 4tt is t
34'• I ma
entist's chair,
fues;
niy•2uek tars 'PIM IA
baggs, detitioy
not rave 'and rant.
• tillY say I'Mglad
An elephatit.
shoes sire heed ,and tzgb
"dully:impede
smile end this* "tie
well
404,
t••
1 fill
kfil,
i•44
441:
.•04,
*Nap,