The Brussels Post, 1907-3-7, Page 21A
4
mrs. Bora B. filthier
13
OR, A SAD LIFE STOU
1.1-04-04.-0+04-0+0+0+0-0-0-O40$0.0+O-4-0-4-0+04-0+04-0-1-0+
GlIAPTER XXII.
"Weleome eyes, smiles; und Fare-
well goes out sighing.'
Thle last eleuse ie -not always time.
For exainro, thew is v„ey owe sfghtlig
jo fh,,, forme'', mode '0 moo Bang by
ihe two young men who eee het' oft at
lite Florence Railway Stati,in. And Mrs,
Byng herself haS licen ton much occupied
in manoeuvring, lo get a few last orient':
lyardS with catch of Iler escort, to lulytt
-mall lime for sighing eithink
She WoUld have been wounded if l'ier
old friend Jim had not come lo see the
lest of her; mut she; would limo been
brOken-hearted if her eon had 111,1 paid
her Illis final atteolibm; loth yet each
necessarily destroys Uh" 1-11-!o!.'sin' I',
hurtling to have 33-111) the other, It is
indelicate 10 implore your adored child
not to go to the devil in the presence ef
. en intimate friend,.and it weuld give a
not unnatural umbrage to that child if
you urged the guardian friend to //heck
.ths downward tendency while he Willson
is standing by. Nor do her two compan-
ions at all aid her in her strategy; ra-
ther, they show a 'tendency la unite M
baffling her, hanging together round her
like a hodgguard, and effectually hinder-
ing the last, words which she is pining
to administer. Only nnee for a Very few
minutes does slie-sucee.xl 10 outwitting
.them, when she despatches Willy to the
bookstall to buy papers' for her—an er-
rand from which he returftS Wilh en ex-
asperating celerity. The instant IMO his
back is turned, Mrs. Byrig :Maros: 's
her ennthanion 111 au eager volts: of hur-
ry and prayer:
"You will keep an eye upon Win 7"
Si/
enee.
"YOU 3%111 keep an eye upon him—pro•
m i se 7"
'I do not know what 'kei.ping en eye
upon him' means in your vocabulary;
otten you awl I do not use the same die-
tionary : until I know, I Will not pro -
"You will look aft -T hii do, Jim?"
"My dear mathini"—with irritation—
"let Inc go anil buy yoor papers; and
meanwhile urge him lo look after nte;
I assure you that it is guile as neces-
sary." •
"Fidd/csticks. with your unimagina-
tive. unemotional- nalurc---"
"Inn 3"
"Your head will always take. care of
your heart."
"Will IL?"
"While he—promiee, rue at leest that,
if you see hint rushing to his inin, you
telegraph to me?"
"Certainly, if you wish it: I will tele-
. graph 'Willy rushing Bolo.' At five -and -
twenty centinies a, word, it will cost you
seven -pence halfpenny; not dear at the
price, is IL?"
The mother reddens.
"You have beeome a very men/vats
piens/Int of Inte,.Jim; oh, dear me! here
It I is hark again, tiresome boy I" • .
1lAs with feelings tied into a knot of
eomplications, which he scarcely seeks
to unravel, thitt Burgoyne walks away
from the station, and from the good
natured stiumeh womanwhose last few
moments In fair Firenze/ he has clone his
hest la embitter, Ile Is glad that she is
gone, and he is sorry that she is gone.
Ile is remorseful at his gladness, and he
is ashamed of his sorrow. knowing !Ind
neknowledging that it results Irern no
, , -so unreasonable, that Sybilla—
regret for in' COMParli°I1ShiP. Wilkth 'lel for the first time in her life reallv a little
had been wool to prize; but to the con-
selousnese that she had stood like (irk
angel with a drawn sword between her
son and the Piazza d'Azeglio. Both an-
gel and drawn sword nre steaming away
now, eovered by a handsome travelling
cloak down to their heels in a eoupe
thilette, and the road Le the Piazza lies
naked and undefended, open to the light
feet that are so buoyantly tveading the
lings beside him.
The step of yotith Is nlways light, but
there 10 something aggressively springy
.le Byrig's this morning; and though he
41009 not say anything offensively cheer-
fut, there is a ring in his voice thin
makes his kind friend long to lin him.
Ile, the. kind friend, is thankful when
their Way0 11/11i, W11110111 1110 timing done
him any.bodily violence.
"Yoit are kite to -day," $ays Cecilia; nS
h enters the salon, giving him a nod of
indifferent friendliness, while Sybilla
crossly asks him to shut lite door more
quietly. and Arnelia lays her hand lin-
geringly In his, with a silent smile .01
rapture; "we began to think you had had
a relapse. I Was just telling Antelin 1110
the pace had been t00 good to les(—
bit, hal"
13iirgoyne has always fe'ind it (11111-
te lough Cecilia's jokes. and hist
ritew perfect. intimacy with bee relieves
him from the nece.ssily of et -en feigning
to do so.
"I have boon seeing Mrs, pyng off," 110
1.1,010s, with that, stigy shwa, or awk„
wardness in 1110 Mee which Ime 1(3111101 110 bis every mention of the mother
Or Sort sineti hiS explanation • with his
be rented.
" let her go without gelling thn1.
wedding present out et her, after all
00100 Cecilia, who is ih ayether tryingly
playful „mood.-
•"Golle, .15 snye Sybilln, with a
emnewhett tistentalious siglt of 'resentful
relief; "well; I, lor one, shell not cry.
.1 am afraid thnt she was not very sym-
pathetic. to 'Me, she \vas se thendfolly
tolerst., Peri/nos, now that she is no
longer here to monopolize Mtn, we shall
be allowed losee something 01009 of that
Moe boy."
NO Ono answers.' Not 0119 al her three
tistenera is at the moinent disposed lo
Chant or even echo _praises of 1110."nice
boYee" Sybilla perversely plarsues the
SUbjeet,
• "I dare soy that he has a. delicacy • Ono day—air nearer exctirsions .13eing
Vent .06111111g wfthout a .speel I •InVitet-. 'exhausted-e•they- drive:le Mbrile-Senartiet
Makes a Fortune
Started a Pew Years Ago vt lib NO
Capital, and Now hniplays Nearly
•Olie Winifred Clerks and
• Ste/loom/A/yrs.
rail n ftwe years ago MVO, (lora II.
lived i i mauves similar to that
, Of thousands of other very poor woolen
of the averrge small town aud village.
sh, How reso1430 lit her Own palatial
brewmstene residence, elld u von0ide1ell
nue of Lon moo. 8taves:4W n11011n3013 11•04
Inen in tbe Vatted gtates.
Ad. says, "where !lame is an in-
valid, lot you temle tell line 111111 On 1113'
good 11•Ay1 oo .1110 1.1 01,1•0 nict,;,1 1/1 stto
thoir fehome thee 1;!! does mt. even. eend
lemparatimo ap; you might, tell hint
thot on my good days Dr. Coldstream
says it docs not even send my tentpera-
Itme up
Again no one answers,
'-you go not ssien to by ILI/sting to
what 1 mil saying,' cries Mae.
liously-; "will you please tell hint. Jim?"
Jim lifts Ms heavy ,eyes from the ugly
carpet en whieit they have been resting.
and looks iiistasteintly 14101 ill. ht,r,
"1(10 not that I Syldita," (10
replies eaglet :401113% "I do 1101 hr
cores tt slrnw whether your lcruperalure
tie or down. I think Ilial lin (Weir
1101 c,-100 here Feenuse- hecails, lit. tiag,
rccold 111,:-.3111 111tUk1 1I1 Iriletire elsewhere.'
nialica 111113 11101enient for un direr
rt,ason 111,111 1.001115e it is so intensely
impleasaut to hint. bomose 1113 realizes
that he must have to face the feet il
ellikalics, and present: it not only to
himself. Put to others. And &oil day
that pa..ses proves to Mtn mere and
move eenteasively that, it is a fact, Ile
asks iing no queStions as in ihe dis-
poeition of his dity. Ile sees hut Mlle of
hlin, having, indeed, changed the hourS.
(.1 his mit hrettkiits1 and dinner in order
P2 avoid having, his appetite evoill
the sight 4.1 so rnueli Unnecessary rattl-
e/leo cpposite WM: but ho knocks up
ilgainst flawerdadmi, ot the Sirozzi
slope; 11./ noles the splendor of his lies
1111I1 Wat0t.toal0; he grows to know the
EiilrIh •k,olt on his lithe. when lie
,rtalics singing haute at evening, 110 0110
baloWS the h,o'x of Ili,, Western 01011,131
that the sons red lips have only just
eeased to hiss, though 00 sun is any
bonger in sight; and yet lie dee:: not in-
terfere. Ile has receive," fr/on the young
nauis mother a hasty letter,
toe train, not an hear after she hat
quilted him; another mo/re leis/70,1y. ye
anximts, front Tlirifi; a third from
Paris, and lastly a telegram fr0111 (liar
fog Greiss, All beer the seine tqwport,
nveile; keep an 0ye upon him !"
"Write; keep an eye upon him 1 Write!"
Mrs. Miller's New Residence, Earned In
Less Than Ono Year.
several years age Mrs, Ifiller learaea
mild and simple I:reparation that
gred herself and several ir.ends of female
'tvealtness and piles. She rves besieged J.*,
so many women needing treatment that
she dceided to furnish 51 to those who
11111 igteht, eVitiafio6r, piStkio sat liettettew titralry,
possessing true and wondorful merit, pro
-
clueing many cures wbeu doctors and
other remedies failed, the demand grew so
(151(1017 lialliel„.;119017,79rrai,1 re,o, mdled
to noolt pies 13 0(3111
one of the city's largest bond.
Fleur tst Etiongtlimailfoor0,,t
d 'ed 1 '
(salved te assist in this great business.
Witten Women uta
More than a million women httve need
/Ars. rewedy, and no matter whero
0011 1e slie o�u own lomallty rwelfg cya'onn at.% lawilltat,iirt
51117 sufferer that this marvellous remeilY
really mires women. Despite the fact that
Mrs. Miller's business is very excen,ivo,
she is always willow to give aid ancl ad-
vice to every sufferiog woman who writes
.ton e11 ),:;„ SdIgi diesd a t og eprilevri3O uns1.(agyootd130111(21o
who have never used her medieine $10,.
00 17,0 ,(0(lerlyv r„st...1 imitate luutrieel
Yriarg1171 ith pains in
the head, baek and bowels, bearing.down 1
feelings, nervousnesti,:hcileipp6lirs;ntosatiorns 11
ugt till'aestrT,4eammenhle 11 frorct an
001**0.1.
1, ON THE FARM.
wk,vw,e„,vvvvv—
CARE OF 1101ISES DURING \\INTEL).
thest secure gond barn. I say a
goo1 bion fuel by this I do not mean
cosity, falai 0110, but one that is
etmliertable, writes Nth. 111. 'Water.
!.,h.ipe. No 11010111 1 Will 110 .011tree.
(0.,111 exposures of cold and damp
lade under the doer and then you can
li'ose up the eracks, flx Ilint
req. assured HIM your bore win have
v goed place for the night, Fix the
stable so thoiv will be no draft, for that
is What 1,111•20.
11 Is tilicest Uselcs.: to suy that the
sisudard groin for the horse IS 011 15,
InIt a variety Wellhl Ite heller, What
1 like to fey..1 Li sheaf outs 1.nce
twiec a day, according 1,1 the timeunt
hovo. AL the other ineal giv,e good
timothy iind elever hay and a little
COrti• This will keep horses in good
shape and. they feel 1111e work, You
w,11 Mom in good condition When
5pring comes and aide to do a full
season's wcrli. Oats give the horse. life
whielt 00 other feed does. By feed-
ig sheaf oats the horst,, will eat the
hest and leave little for bedding,
winch Is Ills1 Wind I want.
Then we want a method. 1 lilte le
do all the feeding at night early and
Ilion, to be sure, the horse does not
want to waft Lin 7 o'clock in the morn-
ing or later. lIave a gond lantern and
while you are there make some us
gel out early and feed the 110rSe /11%1
of the curry coloh. When feeding hay
I let the horses eat a little while. el
first and then give the 1orn or grain.
believe that is 111,3 way tigethorse pre -
tis it. I know 1 do not want choco-
late pie first and then have to eat emu
bread. I like to give the sheaf oats
u' night, for the. horses have Inore
getileli) loth give 11 11 lilvd'er. corn111 iVghrlen-
bJie cold limes. The hest roughage for
the horse is clover and timothy hay
if It is of good thiality.
Do not think beenuse it is eold the
iserses do not nozd water, for water
There Is a difference in opinion as tr;
s necessary lo all • stock every clay
when is the hest tilne 10 miler horses
think the latest report. is that Altera
s no difference, MR I prefer watering
)efore feeding and not until al least
we hours lifter. I know it, is not good
or n num to lake a' large quantity of
voter in his sionineh soon after eat -
ng and a herse has a SIlle11 stomach,
the horse gets used in drinking he -
.113 Paling it will be better for hini,
0 sleek need bedding. Threshed cloy -
r is the Lost and it is not good feed
or any stock, Yes, it pays to use bed-
ing of stone kind and it pays to use
1.11.11obersTisilYthat gland in the stable should
have exercise daily. 11 well be well to
have light W0191 fOr them to do. lf
you have no work turn into it let and
lel them exercise each day no matter
how cold it is. They will enjoy it un -
loo stormy and extra had. The colts
should have the same kind of exercise
as they need museular demi -potent. it
will ba convenient to have a lot next
3110 barn for this and many other pur-
poses. When driving during cold wee -
thee do not let the horse Stand in a
cold wind when warm. Get a good
blanket. and 001er 111111 when slonding.
, cause, sit right down and. senYd
1 her name and address to Mrs. Cora B.
t Miller, Box 4183, Kolcomo, Xnd., and receive 1
by mail (free of charge in plain wrapper)
a 50.cent box ot her marvellous medicine;
also her valuable boels, which. every wo.
man should. have. A
Remember this ofrer will not last long,
for thousands and thousands of women r
who are suffering will take advantage of
this generous moans of getth30 cured. U
if you itre ailing, do not suger another 1
day, but 00114 your name and address to
Mrs. Miller for the book and medicine be-
fore the $10.000.00 worth is all gone.
And yet, though a full week has pass-
ed. though he sees fire son of his old ally
drifting, faster than ever autumn leaf
drifted on a flush Oetober river, to the
whirlpool ,sho had dreaded for him, yet.
ha Sends her mever a word. lie writes
her long letters, it, is true, covers tele-
gram forms with pregnant messages,
big they all nod their ultimate home in
the wood fire. Whim the moment comes,
he finds it impoesible to send them,
since, open searching his heart for the
motives thid dictated them, he finds
those nodives to bo no fidelite to all
aladent friendship, no earo for the boy's
welfare. but, simply and nakedly, ihe
setisfaction of his OW11 spite, the easing
of Ins own biller 10001my.
So the Florentine post pee -oot daily,
bearing no tale of Byng's haekslidings to
his native kind. nini brgshing past
him, answering him eurlly, never going
nearer to the Piazza d'Azeglio than the
Initecenb—a good long sheet off—de-
-01es himself to the frantic prosecuthin
of a suit. long shire Mon, to the conquest
of a heart for eight weary years hope-
lessly, nreeoverahly, piliably his. Ins
presenee at the AnglosAmericain go
ineessanl, nod his monopolizing of
neglected—ullernately runs up her pulse
31 170 end drops it to 40.
"Anti then you tyeinder that 1 ani
oflx-
ir,no in he married," says Cecilia, necorn-
ponying her future brother -In-law lo the
door, on the day on whieh the latter
phenomenon has occurred, and, wiping
the angry Mars from her pinny eheeks.
"111(0100 no secret of it, I am madly anx-
ious. 1 would marry anyone, I am des-
perate. 31151. Minh what nty life will be
when Amelia is gone, and though, of
course I shall be a greet deal with her—
she has promised that I shall be almost
elways with her" Vim whires)—"yet
remise It can't he the seme thing as hey-
ing a home of your own."
''113,' will do our best for you," replies
he, with 11 ruttier rueful smile and
sense of degradation; "bill you know, my
dear Cis, anybody ran 111011 11 11010(1 lo
lite water, hut 11 is not so easy lo make
him dienit."
"Thet le (mite irne," replies Cecilia, one
of whom most salient onsets is ei» ex-
treme utireadiness In be affronted. wip-
ing her eyes as slie epee/lee, "end 3 have
111 illek; stleh promising things torn up,
nod Hum eolith tr, liolliing. New, that
clergyman the other day. whom we 11101
nl. 1he 1311111 Cereggi—suelt a pleasant
gthillemonlike inati—he 113115 011 1110 10011
out for a wife, he Icild nth eo himself, and
1 know so much Mont the working of a
parish, and next day lie was Mr, !leaven
knows whetter,
Jim gives a slight shudder.
"I do liot think you hail any great loss
in him," lie hays, hastily; Men, seeing
hot slu'lloised air, "I mean, you know,
(lint it is always sauri thet a man is it
hatter judge: of another num than it wo-
man is, end I did not like les looks; give
ns time. and We Will de Wier tor you
Hum limb"
Geeilla min no longer menet/ her fu-
ture reletifori of any /.1(tekcies, hi the mat.
ter of axprAilions, There is seinelliing of
10131 11, the wily in which lie turivoe Neel
1nOr1111g, nrIntql 21iIIl 00111n 1113 Hall rio
the any, giving 110 one ally pettee 110 3(3
his project i4 en000q1 oil. 11 seems es 11
3(1 111114 ProWd into 111(' Iasi ferthight ni
Ametia's stay in Florothe fill ton siolth
seeing. 611 the junitels, all the re/ley/nom
whinh c,ughl o linve 110111 temperately
spread (wee the eight years of their en-
gagement.
that sweet and silent spa, lumpily too
far from Florence for the swarm of
tourists to Invade, where earth -weepy
Inen hare .set up a resi scarcely less C111111b
than the 3(r1110' In 11 lonely monastery of
the Order of La Trappe, Through the
Pmen San Gallo, nlong the Bologna
Read they go. It is a soft, summer
morning, with nol 11111011 SIM. Up, 00.51
11113 Villeg 1111(1 gart10115, where the 3311i1k-
5115 and WitslarhiS fire rioting over
wall, and hereeau and pergolnclimbing
even the tall Imes. Round the very head
of one young poplar two rose Ir3e9—a
yellow and a white one—are flinging
their firms; flowered so lavishly 1111(1
hardly a piit's point. (mold be put between
(lie thossoars. Up and up, a white wall
on eilhey huntl. The dus1 lies a foot
thick on the mad; ihick too on 1110
monthly roses, Just breuking 1111.0 full
pink flush; thick on themselves as the
//tones, imilemnris come jingling down
Ito hitt with bells and red tassels, and a
general air of what would be jollity
here not that feeling given the lie to by
the poor jaded, suffering beasts. Up and
up, 1111 they leave stone walls and p
a
PUTTING 1,1P \VIM FPINC.E.S.
Many Wire reneeS fall bees:tete they
aro not, properly put op, It is a sheer
waste of money to hang a good fence
on posle Mat are too weak to support
15 too short to keep 11 stretched to ils
full w:dth, or that, will decay end fall
over In a few years. A fence stretched
so loosely' either way that it wul sap.
or buckle cannot be expected to last
as long es one that is put up with every
wile taut and in Its place. Staples
are cheaper than fencing; and the man
who fastens only half the wires to (nel)
est Is saving at. the spigot and wasting
the hung.
Undue distance between the posts
will work havoc. The claims Of Sonlc
manufacturer:3 as to the number
posts remilred are very misleading,
The bracing of the posts al the end
and Illeli• anchoring in sharp depres.
5;0118, ore other matters often neglected
white 1111 1115111111.1011 1 sire' cher 00011
costs 1.11e farmer much more than .the
difteremm between Ils price and that of
a good eine, Some wire fences are
made of poor material, 10( 11 good.posts,
yvell braeed, weve universally owl,
mut all thnotes were stretched as tight-
ly both ways as could be done without
undue strninIng, the average the of the
woven (vie) fence would be increased
at least 10 per cent. and very likely 20
lo '25 per cent.
and olive -yards behind them, and are
away lielong the mountains. Al a vet y
lionthle little house that has no eir ef 011
inn they leave lite carriage. and climb up
O 11511)33 road, and through a perfumed
pine -wood, lo where the Trappist Mon-
astery stands, in 115 perfect silence and
Isolation, its, hill -top, looking over (10
fir -woods al the lunges 01 (110 Appenines,
lying one behind the alley in the still-
ness of the summer -clay; looking to dis-
trait Florence, misty and indletinet in her
Arno Wein; 101/king 10 Fiesole, dwarfed
to 0 molehill's dinicosions.
"I ant told that one of the brothers fs
an Englishman; 1 did not hens his name,
but he is certainly English," Says oe_
cilia, as they mount the shallow, grass -
grown sloes to the 11101i0stev7' door. "If
I semi up word that I DM a fellow-calm-
irr,voillan. perhaps he will come out end
speak to ow; Teen sore that 11 would lie
a very Mee change for him, poor followo."
And it is the measure of the amount of
Geeitio's arqualirlance with the rules of
1110 orM,r, 13831 1! 10 only half In jest lhot
She ninlies Ilie suggeslitm, For she does 01
not repeal it, lo the lay -brother who
stands. civil yet prohibitory, et the fop
01 111,2 flight. mid who, i1, answer to Bur- 1 a
3(117 (1121 hulling queskon 1 lo where they
rosy go, pornely answers noo. "hey "noy
go a iyo here-, n oyWhere, hien en tenth),
outside, So {hey wander aimlessly envoy.
They posli opal a rickety mile, and pass-
ing ne old ,log, harking angry Pillions -
frames M. thew from the retirement of
barrel. step along a grossy path that
leads they know not \thither. 1:Wo niore
youog loy.brolliere meet, them. with
11 lair haolis full :et leoparo's-linne 11
flower:, Whirl! 111113 1111 been Wintering,
ornidarly to (leek their allne tio
(To bo emilinu(d). 111)
LIVE STOCK NOTES.
If farmers only recognized the inmort,
alum of keeping young stock growiag,
there would be fewer runts and misfits
the market, and mere 1,1011 1.
Dora innla, 11,3 mistelte of feeding
ound vain nod whole grain logethee.
indiums swellowing the whole grain
without chewing, As a rule ,feed horses
whole grain. A thorough mixing of the
selhat yvith the food Is essential 10 elle
health of the horse.
One must learn (o handle bees; pima -
bee must be combined with theory. As
lthormation is gained, the npiary must
L'e ollniged to e boll 1)11)10 size. As
010i2113.0 or fics culture can be obinim
mare ispidly by the eye than by any
we means, n few deys spent irr some
It eonditeli 4 aplar;o, under the diree,
11 or no expert apiarist, would be or
11.91150
Wila her Wilh hens nr ineubnlers. it
Mit 1 l'o 110s1 Octal rullien 1 Method 10
tell Ihe 'gL's of Meeks teal hens 10-
1/111 110' 1,g1.10 reellirr ft11111 Week.,
!bey nre pot in with toms' agg,,, Hwy
1st 1,0 11111 in 11 Week ahead or it Walek
er, Tha animal ht al iner.u.ses as the
icks grove ht the shells. consemmolly
.. egg- of ducks and hens will not (0
the "awe lomparatto eL 1 is, there.
.e, 1(2(0)' 10 haleh 111011 separately,
eeie i•ggi 3%4311i10 1)11)11 111. Imehs'
rgcli should fake ;IA days. All eggs,
wholitt"0 om
f ace, tluaks, lark,a3.9 I'
ter,e119, 1,191111 at 103 cleurtthS.
0
STILL is
ViS1101`1 "HOW is If, that trielimen 118
111111:e 1(1011,2ir
Pat "Minh, an 01 think In 1/10 ,„,
Tor of 0111t1 Oireland, nod (SI daresny 11 ""
Foglishotrin were Leiria liere they'd de
the same,"
NOT Fl (:010!'.APPlioliai "What 11", a
1(1(101 cost 1"
Clerk: "WPM, really It's be/ref:do len
1111 '-21151' trietbone for 17 nr pulls " 311
aft
rbi
fa:
Address,
31E.SX:TherICI:BWC13,351T
01-17e.A.5J7I3
Inauhaters and Brooders.
awarded Ifiebesb Ilenern at Exhibitions. llave won
Mit In every Lest, and ere PaitaLted. The BANIT,TON
Irealnitor reaidates iis own heat, It requires onlr ID
reburies of youi time (wire a tiny to opornto 1 'It
takes only ft1 rel'eca nr ,it rn Emelt holcI1 The HAM.
9113807 hatches big healt(y', HMV), end the
MAMMON BittitiliOlt will take care of every chick.
Write us to -day for our big free entalogne, price list
and easy terms,
Tin FM11113011 INCUBATOR COMPANY, Limited,
MOr-cragZIC,tove:swar, .1.41-
. CHF:AMERY BUTrEll 7IAION(1.
As soon as ereare Is reeeived et car
creamery, a sumple is taken of il for
testing and as A0011 ne weighed, the
hulk of 111e creti(1) poured into 1310 11011(0
\Ill, writes Nir. S1101111 00p, The 101111111r114
lure of the amorn is between. 75 sod 05
deg -roes, which, loge -Mar with fl starter,
will 11 erly ripen ((le cream iit eix cr
511, 1,1 hours. I then allow it to Lo
cooled to 55 to GO degrees hy evening
and 1111 it ripens fully during the
euglil. One hour's cooling in the 1nern•
Ing will usually bring it lo churning
term: era lure,
For cooling WO 115e ioo directly in
the cream. We crush it flue and keep
the cream stirred until. We lee Is all
meltedtireimi is stirred eVel'y hair
ham hil, the first Ihree or f011r hours.
In the evening, before Icrolog for inn
night, I. tette the lemperainre of the
cream and room and the acidity of the
cream and if necessary, raise Or lower
the temperature SI ns to have it right
foe the next morning.
It is hard le toll - with printer's ink
when cream is just right lo churn,
IL should have a dean, pleasant, acid
taste anti :smell and be of ernoolh eon-
sbieney like 57'114), so that a w111 rico
from the stirring kettle with a Mossy
surface. Just htfore churning, we rinse
the churn with hot and cold water and
finally veld with boiling lime walev
and then pour In pure, boiling water.
The cream is strained before it is put
111 Ihe chm11 and .the coloring matter
calculated, according to the bulicr ex -
peeled.
When the granules of butler are
about the size of wheat grains, wo draw
011 1113 buttermilk end replace with the
same amount of water 111 50 to 55 de.
gie.s. If the butler granules 000111 SOIL,
We use water al 45 degrees. The churn
13 then turned a few times nod the
writer removed. Salt is added at the
111(1 of 7 lbs. for 100 lbs. butler and the
eliurn is again, turnel for seven or eight
minutes. Then, after a praise of a fow
minttles lt Is turned again. We waleh
carefully not to oveework the butler to
destroy, the grain.
in pit/paring tubs, first wash them
thoroughly, then place OVer a steam
jot arid scald until heated through. This
makes them water tight and removes
all odor and taste from the wood, Agee
this they are filled with water and the
covers are put on and th eyare allow-
ed to soak four or five heurs. These
are prepared the previous evening, so
that they are ready for use when the
butler is churned.
Before putting in the butler, the lube
are lined with parchment paper, which
keeps the butter cleaner and prevents
the A/sorption nf flavors. We pack
Miller while it, is pliable, taking 4
5 lbs. at a time, packing 11 (1) careful-
ly. Where tubs hold 00 his., the butler
1111104 be packed solidly, se as lo 011 13)0
tub and have no air spaces.
DOTI' SIDES OF TIIE STORY.
t wee so strong, she used to sny—
With sixth a tine, commanding way.
sho always kW, when I was near,
That there WM nothing she need fear.
She felt so safe, so confident,
It didn't matter where we went.
She wondered, too, what I could see
To like in. "lipild little nth."
When COWS would make her hold her
Urea th,
And mice would scan her hnost to
death.
She was the vine and I the oak,
She said—and didn't mean to joke,
My part lo cherish and protect,
And more sluff lo the same cacti.
11111 7(0183487' she fired the cook—
lrenitiled at her very look.
She took a broom stick to a tramp,
You should have seen the inan decamp!
At certnin hours, pulled "wee and small,"
I lake my shoes off in the hall.
f 1en0w-1 do 1101 1129(1(1 to slur—
A t limes 1 don't feet safe with her.
KING EDWARD'S HOSPITAL
sANATainl:t1 cONspIPTIVHS
. 7113103'3110'J', ENGLAND. •
Not Meant In be n Ifomo for the Dy-
ing .4,ort3' Per Cent. Should
he Cured.
'rho new King Edward VII. Sanator-
lum for Consumptives at illtleurst, Sus -
59x, England, rocenlly opened by tho
Ring, is to lave l313e distinct depart -
/Rents of at:likely lal),walory and
/ the hospitel. Iteseoe111 will go hend
111 hand with the treatment of patients,
it is lilol that experience and experi-
ment will place increasingly effective
weapons hi the hoods of medical nom
woo wow'," 10 wage war against, een.
sung/119M
Dr. Bradsley, the surgeoll-inellierge
was the first medthal man to adv(teatt;
the 0,-.511 air treatment of the (lis,mso.
His seccial knowledge of consumption
bee been meognIzed by the Royal So-
efely—of which he is a fellow—by vot-
ing 111111 a rk,:ieurcii grant.
Be holds the op:nlon, based on his
wide exPerienee, trot at least forty per
eent. of the patients should be cured,
It the casts are treated at a sufficiently
taidy Stage, the cures ‘vould Ith some
thirty per cord. more.
AIM TO GIME.
'The' averege slay of • a patient will
be four months," said Dr, 130:3001ey be
O London Express representative, "We
shalt aim to cure our patients. Thie,
is ncit intended to be .a home for the
dying, and WO Shall endeavor to ndmil
only mon end women who are suffering
from the early stages of the disease.
"The diet of each patient will le
carefully regulated, and a clip on his
or her plate will indicate 1110 peril/oiler
regimen preterilmil. During the root nn
the balcony absolute silence will be
enjoined.
"I shall encourage each one to do
some definite work. Gardening W111
Pt the most goneral occupation. Cer-
tain wallm merited out on charts, are
to be recommended, The extent will
very from, say, four 10 even twenty
nthes a day. 1 shall have to prohibit
cyeling, however.
"Of course all the patients may not
be cured _when they leave the, inetilth
lion. Nly aim is to leach them how to
elthe themselves. They van curry an
Ilia treatment even anrid the smoke of
London itself."
Al Dr. Bardsley's NItindesley samo
tortoni Ith. -treated working men at a
the of 18s a week. Ninety per cent. of
these are now engeged ta active work,
rind are apparently cured.
TYPICAL DAY. -
A lYpical patient's day, as outlined
by Dr. Bardsley, Is as follows: -
7.35 a.m.—Rises and dresses.
8 ani,—Gars down to the bathroom,
has a douche, and Is massaged by et
tendant.
2,31-0 a.m. — Breakfast. Then seen
by an assistant doctor.
10-13 a.111.--Excrelse or wink.
12-1 pan, — Best i11 bed ehates 011
open balcony.
.1.15 p.m.—Lunelleon.
2-5 p.m.—Games, reading, or nnisle.
3-5 p.m.—Exercise Or work.
5 p.m.—Tea.
5--G p.m.—Recreation (outdoor),
(1-7 p.m.—Rest On balcony.
7.15 min.—Dinner.
8.15-300 p.m.—Recreation, such as
!;ridge end other card games.
From 11 n.m. to 1 p.m. Dr. BardSley
will sce 11a115010 in his consulting rimm.
A medical man who is to devote
himself to resetu•ell has been appoint-
ed. Under the direction of Dr. 13ava-
sley he will work in the laboratory
rind experiment, with cultures of the
tuberculosis germ. Ilere the real bat-
tle will be waged, and neither tinte nor
expense is to be spared in discovering
remedies that destroy the - dreaded
bacilli.
ta/
!leaven will poesess smell attraelien
foe some 110111011 11 112010 are no bargain
counlees,
• _
410
0.409430. 1444244e., dp 044000
Most people know that if they have
been sick they need Scoe Emul-
sion to Awing back health and strength.
But the strongest point about S'cott°
Emulsion is that you don't have to be
sick to get results from it.
It keeps up the athlete's strength, puts fat
on thin people, makes a fretful baby happy,
brings color to a pale girl's cheeks, and pre.
vents coughs, colds and consumption.
Food in concentrated form for sick and ,
well,- young and old, r and poor.
And it contains no drugs and no alcohol.
ALL bRUGGISt8: 50o. A14t1 $1.06.
cop
.404440.44110141*Pq!OPitgt+41411
.........
• .A.L
4:4
•:4
‘04.6.00430:.04.1,-3:p 43-fee.,341,4?3030•24:4•D
EXAMINATION ot '11 1111 111.001).
Tho Ittirrosctlpical o2illnilittli011 of the
11134,11 1,lo 1i.1.11111/1 in reepill years a Very
(amnia -in priieedure In many C110140 of
1 11
1 "11.1:7;n
otteit btains volual.to assistance I
11 1.1ifti
o
the disease which lie is called open to
iri:1111:-/ blood 3, eSatitilled \Oh 1 viet13
chiefly to ascertain 1110 1111111her,11100)1(10
mid relalire, of the red and \elide vor
'quotes, tual the jammed:Igo of hemo-
globin, or coloring-malter, of the
1,1111 li ctdor. sleovhIg a
in one cubic millimetre of blood, Of
etes is markedly cleereaseclo end they aro-
The red ilIontnorpu6eles are vastly noire
eetioliag the number in ft detellithlelf
corpti,•105, of which [hero are from gym.
millimeter of blood.
course one 1011111 not 01111)1 so many, Put
method is followed in counting 1310 whet)
imillimmeroom 1111111 the wilily, about liva0
on, speaking generally, being fouti
the approximate rc.1111 is obtained. by
fraction of 111112 millimeter. The same
thousand to ten 1l1111011114 11) a eldito
111 ilneniitl lhe Tuanber of red corpus.
diminullen (21
111.1 tonoutit of hemoglobin,' hi 1110 dis-
ease Immo' us perniekals anernia, 1110
atttrage SIVA' I)1 he reel corpuscles 15
greatly Inc ((1, and there is also a
various irregularity 111 size, some being
twice the norninl size while others aro
10111211 113)1 131010 1(101) 1(1111 us barge as
11sill1,0;11i1th
It is in the /natter of the actual mut the'
proportionate number of the white rore
puselee that the most valuable informa-
tion 15 flirnislivil blOod es1litinitt10115.
11110 Lieen foUnd thin the while rolls
aro not all of the same kinit. tits Or
SeVen VitrielleS are (OU1111 11) Ma blood
in 110111111 mid several olhere in eertalo
meotteee, These rarione kinds are dis-
linguisinal by their size, 1;y their peculb
mines of coloration when treated with
various dyes, and ly differeimes thole
granular contettls,
When the white corpuscles are in-
jerruecutli;d1,1,1slis11:1 i110111;,i;irwlpiti; c19lllg (10 ulatlitt
or tho whila hioaikimposole Lciumo7'-
10,is occurs in health during digestion,
offer exercise or hauling, ilia found lit
inflammatory conditions, In certain in-
feetimis diseases, in eases of poisonIng,
la cancer, and in some forms Of nnenlin.
The relative f./wpertion 01 3311, different,
sorts of leutmeytes also varies in these
affections, and it is by n study of tiase
that the physician is Mien enabled lo
decide as to whieh of iwo or three possi-
Ino disenses, he has to do with in the case
hstneo of bica.a osarahialloo is.
siiii in its infancy, hut it prontiseS 111 bo
of gntat value to the physician aS ex-
perience and knowledge increase.—
Gonmenion.
TI1E NEED OF P1015511 AIR.
111 Jorge am] small MOMS alike the air
needs to be changed frequently hy being
kept in perpetual motion. Fresh air
from outside should elways Iic [eking
the place of the used -up air inside, and
menns should be provided for the one to
gel in end the other to get out. ,People
eomplain of draughts been doors, 01)00.
1., 11 11173' opened a wind/ov, the draught
would cease to exist. In the same way
draught from a window' which LS.
slightly opened can be stopped by open-
infininl‘olftit'111.1%/3 best means of ventilating
O room is the fireplaee. For this renson
a fireplace should never be stopped up,
as is often the ease In summer, with fire -
screens and such. If you do place 0.
screen or ornament, place It a Rifle for-
ward, so that the tile can gel behind 11.
1,913(e ferns put, into a largo jar look as
wen as anything, and the air can venti-
late through them. On no account, shut
down the ventilators.
Beds need fresh nir also, and it fh for
this reason that they should be well
opened every morolog. The fresh air
_must play ail mound them, and the 1101
air given off by the body at, night, be el -
lowed to escape.
The 100011 air craze may, of course, be
carried Imo far ; but even so, it Is much
holler to have too much fres!) lhan
too tittle; mul if only people would re-
aternber this when they give crowded 11-
11-omes and pm ties in overheated and in -
ventilated rooms a good deal of dis-
comfort and ill-he_alth might be aVoitled•
EAT FRUIT AND KEEP WELL.
To spite of what 1110 doctors have been
telling us, and are 1101301 11104 01 10110111'
ing rtboot the invalunble medicinal pro-
perties of every kind of fruit, nthriy
people continue to neglect this delightful
remedy for the Ills that flesh is heir 1 0.
Here are a few of the virtues to be found
in the best kr own of fruits.
Grimes come first, more especially
black grapes, which ore 'nutritious nod
purifying to the blood. Peaches are oleo
exceedingly wholesome, bot they should
nover be, eaten over -ripe. Theyt-may be
enten either at meals or between roents,
hut, breakfast is probably the best lime.
All orange or apple eaten before breule.
rust Is seid to he the 11001 eure for dyst„
oepsla, anti (1. 1,0 eertainly 111.66best 20111'
'11', for the multitude of skin troubles,'
which come with the, spring. The j111C11
itf mops find lemone is invaloable in
eases 0( 10083', 011110 tomatoes aro excel-
lent renthelles for south Ilvev end gasn'ia
complain's, Pigs, raspberrles, &raw -
berries, currants, and el/eyries aye all
C-
ooling and purl -
OLIVE Cri„
Olive oil, though inimpuble of support-
ing 1110, 11 take» alone, ileverthelessi
1314105 11 well-known physielan, lends
Itself to s clir54nishe0 mem diel, arid it
letvonts waste of tissue elements, and
111115 renders loss naoessary a maal of
P101014 diet, which would otheivise lie
inerensed find harmful, 11 tends lo pro -
111010 1111 C1i3(e51459 proomias, and keeps
human fat at a Ininonl standurd of com-
positlen. And ns fat is 1130 100401 1110
skin, It follows that the more pure 11114
perfect 1110 foOd the hotter the condilion
°r 115 511121. DO 051911, 121:' complexion
ef 1 110 IlaPtin and Sicilinn women is due
lo the freo 11039, of olive oil ns 1311.1011qm to
tilo ajr and (Almelo of their country.
teroni one or livo tablc...s,venfuls of olive
all spread ovp the day 111 diacrent way0
34 4a115 SullIOTent,
E-
T