The Brussels Post, 1907-3-14, Page 77
'
.
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my
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had
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te 11
the
the
a
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the
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he
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in
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in
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.
Mrs Cora 13. Miller
Makes a Foft one
"#'00vwwwvvwwwvv". . .
1.• ON T111 FARE
Ne • •
WWWWAANYVVVVVYWN#40
SANITATION OF TIM DAIRY BARN.
11, 1 have come to believe firmly and
honestly that the great, Uplifting in the
d i i I 1 i, 1, f • abella
a IY ng. les go p come rom p ,
writes Me, John Gcnild. I believe teat
when, the patron understands Iliat a
cheap thing.is not the best thIng, then he
will ea
rlize :as never 000000 what good
dairying 10,. And mat a good barn is one
Of the greateet thInge In connection with
gond dalrYIng, The Mee of •a good barn
is to make the whole thing level and
g Ivo the man on the farm 365 day,s ' of
summer' and make the cow a PaYnig
animal ten inonths of the year instead of
seven.
I was down in Georgia one winter and
ti dairymen took me to see his barn and
a herd of Jerseys'. Ile was an up -date
dairYman who said he ilad one ef Ille
most complete barns in Georgia. I did
not see anything lacking. It WaS,11 log-
barn without chinking, With a lean,to
around it. Two logs NVere taken out, on
three sides and pegs driven in, and the
COWS' standing on•the outside of the nem
putting their heads through where the
logo should be and eating hay. That was
In MS idea of a barn. He was making bIll-
ler, and selling it for 35 cents a potald
in Georgia. That 'barn would hardly do
Pi Canada, but 11 was all right there.
° Not long since I was in the tion, .1'. Stem-
1 NI e '• $ 000 b • 1 N Y .1.
ing • oi on s , 75, iii n n Now re s
stale. It was the other extreme.: : 'I'ller,u
\vette 60 cows freezing to dentli in 1". 11
4.Y sanitarY, OnlYelarlernuch
00. yentas.
1 .get between 'these .two ext -
so 001 down to .the Coleman farmer •and
.
make that common farmer the average
farmer' and then that average fernier filewhen
,. ' .The
WV '-' p -lo -date farmer, and set him clean
.110 10 the sky. I want a barn SO alleaP
1 11'1 1 011 V' man can build it.
' - . . . . .
A barn is so 11111011 inetosed outen-
doors, \l'halt is out-of-doors? Pleasant
sunshine, uniform temperature, dry
r und tepid water in brooies succulent
g 0 , , ' „ , '
foods ana pure air. That is June. Now
ir I nut. all four of the.se into the stable
1. hac,, a„mm„. tho.,,e. whti, 1 admire a
. , f., .ti i • i 0
great ninny MIMS I OM la 011 Slt. 0,
111150 very rarely seen one of these great
barns that was In really fit, condition in
whin. to keep a dairy COw tied up..
ear y e‘ety on- i 1 y
N I ' • 0 's 01111 • and &Min,
dark and unventilated, and smells clear
up to heaven. A cow does better in sum-
mer than winter, because she has better
'
anitary conditions. Some men getaway
B. rani na ure an urn
r t d t • 1.1 1 i t
le r cows o 1 on
a cold day to frebze and put them back
in, the barn to thaw out.
li .1 I, d • il t 11
I want my barn Ught an so la . le
air can be controlled. It must be made
especially DS a dairy stable nnd not part
of . of 'the general barn. It may he in the ell
10 the barn which is to be used as a feed
barrel and go to the south as the ell part
with a straw mow'over It. 1 have -great
, . . f • I. 1stone.. A 1.01 of
teepeet et eemen an<
men are building •stene barns and Stone
batements, but there was never so per-
•
Addressi
'----
, .,...,_ 4.0„, Itli—ketk..11VII3La
r
0F0•000•0****Qq`
YOUNG
FOLKS
1:00043.00.0-0-003:e.P00032•09,0**
TRIP.
% had a habit of brineng Ito
Swum-.
stray and forlorn dogs. . Ito 111(
alliKed ugly and starving they were 1
. ,
better, The old woodhouso was the '0
II
Asylum, d • et a
•where beds of cal ortiP 1 P
of things to eat, and bottles of "deal
stuff," made one think of a. regular 04
pita'. Trip Was n spotted dog, black a
white ; one ear cut off, and two tow
the rigid front foot missing,
Part of his tail was gime, and Johni
saki that he had been in a railway ac
dent for lie SW a siewmoveng freig
,
Main go tight over him. "Dr. johnn
Picked him ltP, used hls new expre
wagon for an • ambulance, mad broug
, ,
101-11 home. • ' .
"Trip" ---he got that name•from the wi
he 'walked -was a clever dog, and us,
13 surprise Johnny and all lala family 1
"Midis," which some one had taug
Mtn, One of 1.11000.was to Ile down 01
cry with one paw •lield up to his ey
0 uld Imitate a child's voice, 00 1
..0 co .
emcee liket art old man takti
could 's ,
snuff ; and could turn a sonaersault th
made solemn people laugh until tit
cried.
Johnny's grandpa eyed an a farm no1
town ; a•PreitY Mace where all landa •
fruit and meions grew in nbundane
,
Grandpa bad taken eeveral "patients" •
, , ,
' tch dogs," le
JananTS be act as 1Wa . ,
only ono had been of any service.. No
" n Johnn we:
Ile WaS dead, so "Trip a d y
fainted to pass tha summer at grandpa
and assist 10 watching the fruit,
, .
'trip persisted in eleeping in the b.
lumber rooni with Christian Von ilo
stick the Swedish hired hand. It was 0
• • .- .
out of doors • lie woe]
use to chain him ,
find some way to break loose, or mal
such ell outcry. that Johnny or Christie
, s glad to t u and let him in.
NI-, ,,eta, ge
d 13 ' that do lufs me
1 itus le t dog, an _ g
cl Christian in his droll broke
words. "That a very wise dog, you se
maybe." . Christian's nose was a. funn
shape ; Joenny tried hard not to laug
when he looked at 11; that nose and Tri
served a very good purpose. Christie
lead carried a blue coverlid, which h
mother had woven, across the sea. N
matter how .warm the weather, he rolk
himself in this in such a manner tin
only his eyes nose. mouth and chi
could bo 81015.
One night, a hot July night it wa.s, 'fri
heard a noise. fie barked a little; 10
did not waleen Christian, so he ran m
stairs and scratched at the door 1
Jewel .ts grand mis room.
3. 1 111 d I' d ' d
Grandpa A u en hear um an crie
"Go and lie down, sir ! Johnny is not i
here." •
Poor Trip! He shrunk down stait
whining back to the foot of Christian
bed. There some one has gone throug
the kitchen and ea the back stair:
, , . 1 i
Semelhine must he done. 'rip ump
u D and bites- Christian, just a nip, on the
beautiful nose of his. Christian leap
. .
clear out of bed,. seizes the old squaw(
out Into the hall with Tri
gun, ,
following.
Pe, • the housemaid is screaming
e . ,egY , , .
nee gob 51,1,ss In as
li ' 'watch and In
silver spoons.
'Then the •burglar rushed downstate
and right hito Lheistian's strong 0.0101
where ho was held fast until grandp
came an alarm raised, and he wa
,
turned over to justice.
"I Luis that dog ten times as more a
, ,
v e" said Christian , in back to be
e e t s , gi g
and. wrapping Trip up in the blue covet
„ r, with wine.;
Ilo
e
......______orx-xese—.............
4301‘11-
X. -iia -X -X (B1`..Xf.4.1=11E1
and Brooders
fr hest 'tenors at Elthibit101111, MIMI Wee
Oat, and ere Patented, The iletetIrirell
regulates its own boat, It requires ouly le
your Maio twice a day to operate it. It
tie gallons Of oil to Mud, hatch. The IIAM.
big, healthy, fluffy chickens, and the
ille00Dille will take oars of every 010.
to.day tor our big free Oatalegae. print, lig
. .
COMPA NY Llitinteti,
I
CD /NT UV.
.
E ft ., 4,„
. . •r•
' 41)
.
iff 0541
IIIIIIIIIII°111 SI
... ...
i
THE
incubators
7 Awerded 111
,011t 10 ovorY
Incubator
minutes of ,
takes onie
name hatches
1 114.M11/0010
/ Write no
And easy terms,
HAMILTON INCUBATOR
,
aerera,reearareme•ceree
Started a •Pew Years Atle with
CaPhal, and Now IWploys Nearly
Ono Bend 'ea Clerks and
Stenographers. '
,
, —
tintii a few years ago, Alva, eore
miller lived in a manner similar to One
_,..„,
of thousands Of other very poor woo.,"
the average small town and village,
She leer .residee in hes own palatial
bro'weetono ',astatine°, and. is oonaidered
one of the Moat auccessful buatuess wo,
mon ln the United Staten,
sn,
e
e
.e1.4. 411:
• i ' '4 '
0, 4- l' tit, •
. .
' b
4 to te •
ell)1
, t` r .f:
"
• •ef
• .
OR, A SAO LIFE STORY .
failed
On one
this feeder
years
Cleared
place,
Inge
feed
lelees
To
been
sav that
,
ilionilien
ago there
Irt Uamilion
ectuntry
'
The
United
year
Another
the consumer
yam°
of waste
jamb,
to Iteds.
- :During
sheep
an !manikin
do 1 10W
things,
while
ill consequence.
Ihe best
now-
TREPROGRESSOF
t
Nom
Imniense
From
Ontario
tills sPill
estate
seen
Fort .William,
gine,
111W,
Victoria
irecting
1
p aces
veloped
building
Nor
1,\,_
ondeeed
known.
of Manitoba,
there
known
entire
lion.
less than
800,000
.. ,
SO ell
they
grain,
many
when
ams
along
timber
is what,
basisI
reason
'The
Was
'Tribune
ing that
on every).
terest
population
but a
Northwest
many
Northwest,
Fraser,
betwep
the Arctic
arable
are now
the advantages
and well
traverses
le the
extends
basal
001'3'10
ivorthern
its
.3
El 01
may be
only once to make a good profit.
double -decked carload last year
made a profit of 8175. In 15
with the halo of lambs ho had
' '
a mortgage of $5 000 from ho • '"
besides Improving his farm build-
to the extent of $2,700. He can
three lots of lambs in the time it
to finish one lot of bullocks.
drew attention to how sheep 'mem
discarded In this country, 1 may,
recently I had a. letter from a
firm staling that a Iew years
was as much wool marketed
ns there is now in the whole
between Detroit end Niagara
' '
price of wool has advaneed in the
States by 10 per cent. in the last
and it has 5(1 1111,1Ced hem also.
point in favor of sheep Is that
is beginning to learn the
of mutton. There is a geed deal
In beef cattle and swine, The
ItOwever, 13 etiible meal froin neck
' - '
my 25 years' experience in
raising I hove never seen so clear
of what was.corning ap 1
. ,
Many, although they see these
hesitate to lake hold. After a
they get faith enough to dip in just
11 .
the I rn isooming and lose money
Thoee who want to get
.
end of um business must start
.13
-
sertion, but It Is confirmed bY indialmt.
able facts."
SOAlE OF THE SIGNS.
Some of „the many signs and proofs of
this development upon W111011 the In-
i 1 t t et et .ed may
'reaS og pea es a e values a u
t,
, . .
1 he recem census gives the' population
.
of Mani o a as , , ..
1 b 36(1(100 $askatchewan
Pul n 0 d All t 18r 000 The total of
....,...0 , nn mr a ,,,, ,
Li e e three nrovinces in 1001 was 410,512,
i e- • p. 0 • ' wir 000 • ,, -,e
The total in ,S1 is a, , an motel.
in five years of 365,488;
All this has been accomplished with-
out what one might call a boom, Busb
.
ness and production have kept pace with
the advance of kinds and other real es-
tate. While Mere has no doubt been
1 lion It a actual settler. has
some speeu a , 1
established himself on the son and by
,
actual work brought, values up to and
beyond the expectation of the most san-
•
guine
'
Winnipeg is now e ur c y n
th it ' d it i
Canada, not only in size, but in business
iranseeted. The revenue collected at
Winnipeg last year from customs and
. Inland revenue, and the returns from
the posboffice amounted allege lher to
.
15i ishow 00 $4,025,1. . The back e ear ngs
increase of over 25 per cent. over. 1005.
r rye 00 and
assessment, is over 86,1,0 ,0 ,
the building permits issued were $1 0,-
820,300. Winnipeg is the centre of the
• de
grain trade and of the distributing ha
in the •Wesi. Electrical power will he
available during the coming summer,
-,, vhieh will make it also a manufacturing
cen tre.
11.1aLWAY CONSTRUCTION.
Bet Winnipeg could not grow solidly
unless the whole country were grovang
and this is proved, not only* by Mc
enormous number of immigrants pour-
ing into the country', but by the rapid
construction of railways by four great
coMpanies, the Canadian Paelfle, Cana-
dian Northern and Grand Trani(' Paciflc
of Cariada, and by the Great Northern
Railway, Mr. J. J. Hill's great United
States road. It is stated 11100.60,00Q men
will be required for railway construction
.
a Canada this summer, and of these the
' , l' Ill be at work west of
major pm ion w
Lake Superior. , __
. PROGRESS EVERIWILERE,
A glance at the newspapers ot Western
Canada shows how general is the ectivily
in the work of laying the foundations ? f
this great country. Portage la Prairie
and Brandon are points on the Great
.
Northern and the completion of these
Mies just entering these towns, along
with the general prosperity, has given - -
them renewed activity. Regina leas
be.
grown by leaps and bounds, both „
cause of railway construelioa and by
reason of being definitely made the ca.pl-
tal of Saskatchewan. Saskatoon and
Prince Albert; to the north, are rapidly
tat . -I 1' d 1 obits New rail -
ung on et y a is an 1 . .
di . 1
ways and immense SIII.T000 ng meas o
re, • 1 t e 'deo e
elle terrl ory are ne anus . s
e e t I t I
aw, a great rat way On re, ma n a ns
its position as the largest place In the
,
province, Calgary end Edmonton ate
•
racing for the commercial supremacy of
Alberta. Lethbridge, Nlacteed, Strath.
efedt 'ne Mt, Ilay•mond and a
cone, t et
score of other places are forging ahead.
IN BRITISH COLUMBIA.
ls rui
Over tlie Rockies, Ne „on and the f I
. lands 01 1110 interior valleys are the cen-
t. f great attention. Vancouver is ex-
re ce g
la
pandit,' on a sides, an p ns are
"whereby tl .h 1 1 V n-
under way le w o e o a
'1-
couver Island will be opened up by rat
way and made tributary as never before
to the capital, Victoria. Tho work of
, , .
tl l'
'n Prinee Ru rt on le Ines
developi g it f • i.
and plans of a red cay goes steadily
11 g II West. there is
torward. A over ie
activity, business and steady advance-
ment.
4o4 -04-o-4. 04-0+04- 0+04-04-0+0,
CHAPTER XXII.--(Continued).
Amelia has pessed ini. eeed through
•
in'es arm-eine° his late increased kind-
e,ss to her she has been led to many
ilera little freedoms with him Than she
loci •ffitheelia pointed herself -a nd
eough she is very eatteful no I. to lean
t
eavily or troublesomely upon Inin, Ye.
ha slight canted of hoe lingers keeps
im imminded that slid Is Mere. P et,
ems It Is as well, since to -clay he Is
onscious of suell a strange tendency to
argot everything, past, present, an d to
oine. lias one of the monle's nuenb
e to lull
ands been. laid upon his.. hem ,
„,,. he
t loto so fc'azen a 0111all? To -a"' -
yels as 1110 were absolutely Impossible
a him to experience eiffier pleasure or
inn, as if to hold Elizabeth- in his own.
ems, or see her in Byng's, would be to
lin equally indifferent. His apathy 111
t
his latter respect is to be put to the test
[loner than he expects. Not irideed that
.lizabeth is lying in, Byng's arnes-it
rould be a .gross misrepresentation toa
ay SO, site heing, on the.contrary, most
ecorolisly poised on a cainp-stool-least
3manlie of human resting -places -when
ley come suddenly upon her and him
1 the C011re..0 Of their prowl round the
.
thospitable walls. She. is silting 011 nee
ace -s 1 ' '
p tool, and he a lying on his face
1 the grass, just not touching her slim
mt. •
The advancing party perceives the
%pie advanced upon before the latter
e of their nearness. ton enot h
115 (mar • • g g,
ir tho former to realize how ver 3' mtma
a trap they will be, ybl, not long
lough to enable them to escape un-
oliced. Jim becomes aware of the very
:toad at which Amelia recognizes the
nconscious pair, by an involuntary
Inch of her iln rs u on I yin i h
ge p lis a , 'wit c
moment later she hastily drops. Ills
,vn feeling on catching sight of them-
D, not his very first -his very first is as
some one had run a darning -needle
.to hie heart -but .- t almost his first is to
lout out to them in loud warning:
"130
. on your guard f We are close to
Lie will never forgive either himself
• them 11 11107 ignorantly Induge in any
tdearment • under his very eyes, ' I3u1
ley do not. There are no interlacit g
•ms to disengage; nothing to make
,em spring apart, when at length theY
ale up arid take In the faot-an •un-
eiconto fact it must needs be --of their
yasiome
'
On bearing approachin footsie s
g P ,
yng rolIs over on his back in the grass;
1 perceiving that most of the foot-
eps are thoee of ladies, he eprings to
3 feet. Elizabeth remains sitting on her
imp -stoat. •
"What a coincidence I" 1
cr es ,cecilla,
•eaking into alaugh.
'I'l '
ley are all grateful to her for the re-
ark, though 11 13 rather a silly one, as
ere is no particular coincidence in tho
se. Burgoyne is irritably conscious
at Amelia is covertly observing him,
Id before 110 can check himself he has
rown over his shoulder at her ono ofquestion
ose. snubbing glances from which, for
a last ten days .he
, has painstakinglY
Id remorsefully refrained. It
ippy moment to look at • is not a
poet Amelia,
she has not yet cowed down from the
en of her climb through the fit. wood-
heat that translates itself into patchy
miles all over her face,• not sparing
•en her forehead. Elizabeth is flushed,
0. She has not met Miss Wilson since
le had declined Burgoyne's offer of
Mging his betrothed to see her, and in
tr deprecating eyes there is a guilty and
emulous recollection of this fact. 13ut
thaw the guilt cuid the deprecation and
O tremor, ‘vhat else is there in •Eliza-
ales' eyes? What of splendid and
1 in and th
ara g, at conles hut once in a
'Mime? Rather than be obliged to give
name to that vulgat' radiance, Jim
tins his beak upon his own too glowing
tar one. •
d you come ere9 v
"DI y h alt atone . ,-oll
ro ail alone? What fun 1" risks Ce-
ea, with aft air of delighted curiosity.
Again • her companions inwardly'
aril: her. IL is the question that both-
ough with different degrees of eager-
iss-have been thirsting to ask. •
"Alone 2 -oh, no t" replies Elizabeth,
itli thab unenty, frightened look that
irgoyne has always noticed on he'r face
hen she has been brought Into mew'''.
g telation with strangers. "My mother
here -she came with us ; why, where
she ?"-loOking around with a. startled.
it -"she was here a moment ago,"
A. grim smile curves Jim's mouth. It
eVident that the unhappy Mrs. Le Mar.
[ant, wern 011i with her role of duenna,
is slipped away without being missed
•- either of her companions. Would
ey have even discovered her absence
it for Cecilia's query? • .
'Mrs. Le Merchant was here a moment
to," echoes ilyng, addressing the 00111-
my generitily; "but,"-dodglitg his
lend's eyes --"she said she W0.3 a llttlo
iv from sitting s0. long; she must he
illetlese by."
q will .go „and. look lor her," saYs
Mabel), cenfused, riod.rising from her
3leety sent tis she speaks; 001 1 Amelia,'
ho is nearest to her, puts out a friendly
Ind in prohibition, • .
"O"' do rie1 Mir 1" elle erl"r elillillig
naly inid admiringly. "You look so
Infortable. Let 111,Q go mid search for
Le Marehant ; 1 -1 --should• be
raid " to sit down, I 5111' 00" ha I
auk" like to find her; Cecilia 'will. holp
6, and Nir. Byng will show Us the
v.11 ••
II, is not elways 'that Onerous actions
eeli their rimed of gratitude from those
i''Wil°Se 0"k° 11107 arePetterillrfl l
, '
ith though Burgoyne recognizes the
niemeimily of his flancee's ilive of
thansfulness o her fr it 'Is
11 the imperfiost 010111114 In his mind
ton, a fV 11101101115 11000, 110 111,01'
60 riding ill 1010057 1010-11-10to
I 3zoieo.
ter the sealed 111alnl.
"Vill not you slt dow?" she ests,
080111 nettle g. will( low. linld
truh. "I dt1101 know v.to 1 04;,1(1 Ili'
.04-0-4,-2+0-0-o+o420-4,-0+04-0+0.4,
Ylte you, as if "-glancing round at
sun -steeped patioraina-"this were
cirawine-room."
e ..
lie complies taking Care 10 OCCUPY
. , t , .
Una different six feet of herba e from
q 1 , . g
Mat whin still bears tile imprint
, _ e
Byngs lengthy limbs, the grass grows
cool and fresh, full of buttercuos and
,.,,.. ,.... .. ; . . ,. .. t.
P_U;le 'tegie out ot mem me gimy menus-
hey wall rises, In Rs uttee • lifeleSs
„ n w,..1 ea amen barred wn ...0‘
en,cit
Ne s. ever any building, 0 1 1 l'i
wieim mile,.
ntman e, so unu eit» y still?•
I lit tt • I I As
Lea his elbow among tileittrig.eups
• t I If 11 t II I ..
.11111 saes o limse la te pvels
c losen lee. place we an WISO y--
t tl '11 d ' 1 Li
the consciousness of the austere denied
'
11VOS going on so close' behind them,
their entire joylessness, -t ha m el
, me' i ' ‘
an det '
. a ed point, a keeter edge to
polgrumay of their owil enje nent, of
sweet summer day outside Y'l
e You. have not been t .' I long
. e r 0 °°° 11° (1r a
time, says Llizabeth presently in
small and diffidentvoice,aft having
er
vatted until the probability of his•speak-
'Ing first had become a mere ossiblilly,
and even that a fa' t. ' P
m one. "
He replies b Idl "N "
a • y, t o.
HIS 100k IS fleed on a knoll, whence
monks .must have ff ii led limit 100-iirgEls.
., . a re elk le' - . .
pares Dane. el ney cannot have gathered
much, so bounteously do the gay yellow
flowers still th '
wave on e hillock. Nearer
stands a colony of purple °ratites, and
r
from them •the eye travels away to
slierit flr-wood, to the range of - misty
hills and the distant plain, touched now
and again by a vague hint of sunshine,
that makes one for the moment feel sure
that. one has detected duomo or cam-
panne. flow many hill 'ranges there
are I One can count six or seven, like
the ridges in a gigantic ploughed field,
one behind another -all . selemr4
beautiful on this windless day of erke
..---,-
and ungeudy sweetness. ilas the young
man been reckoning the ranks of the
Appeilines, that it is so long before
adds a low -voiced, mocking question
his monqa ji bl •
y a e? •by
"Have you missed me very much?"
The
The woman addressed seems in
to answer. She has drawn her
narrow.hrown• brows. togeeher, . as if
the effort to hit truth in her nicest shade
In her answer. Then she speaks with
sort of soft self -remonstrance :
"Oh, surely le I must have missed you
- ' • • -
-you were so extraordinarily, so un-
. accountably kind to tis 1"
There is not one of tia who would not
rather be loved for what, wo are than
for what we do; so it is perhaps no won-
der if the young woman's reply strikes
with an unreasonable chill u ' thepan
asker's heart.
"You must have been very , Mlle used
te kindness all .your life," he says, with
some brusqueness, "to be so dispropor-
tionately grateful for, m t •
civilities," • y trumpery
She hesitates a moment, then :
• "You are right," she r 11 • "1
not recetved reny- - -cP es, have
great ldndness in my
ilfe-justice, well, yes, 1 suppose S
but, no, not very much mercy."
Her candid .and com d d '1 '
pose a m mon
of a need for mercy whets yet farther.
that pained curiosity which has always
been one of the strongest elements
his uncomfortable interest in her. But,
the very sharpness of that interest
makes him shy away awkwaiell f
y rent
Lim subject of her past.
"1 always think," he says, 'that there
is something fatuous in a man's apolo-
gizing to a lady for not having been
see her, as if the losswere hers and not
his. • ,
"Is there? All th I
. e same, am sorry
Mal you 'did net•oome."
te
...his sim le -anti unsonhislicaled. 1
• P -
plication of a liking for him would have
warmed ageln the uneasy heart that
her former speech had chilled had 'not
he under the superfleial thoti iv 1
i ' • ' ' g genii
mgtet of her race, scene sun shining
.
with steady lustre, that radience Which
has as little been called lorth by, as
can be- dimmed by hien or anything re-
eating to him. And so ho passes by
silence 'the expression of that sewrow
which Ito bitterly knows. to be s o sun.
por a e.
t bl '
'Otto 4111 spirit of 'the day seems
have touched the very birds. They sing
a feW low notes in veiled, chastened
voices from the tir-wood, and again are
silent. The clock tells the hours In guar-
tors to the doomed lives inside the
monastery, self -doomed to suffering and
, , t
penance and incluemation, even ,Will1 the
winning .blue of the Tuscan sky above
their tonsured heads, with the forget -me-
nobs pressing their feet, and the night-
ingales singiug endless love -songs
them 1'1'010 0.10 little dark forest near
hand. . •
"1 suppose," strya .Elizabeth presently,
in a reflective tonee"Mat the fact is
when people are , in your posttion-i
mean bn the„brink of a great deep hap-
piness-s-they And all lesser things ?"
Ile snatches a hasty glance of suspi-
don at her. Is this her revenge fDr his
neglect, of her? But nothieg can ,look
more innocent 01. lase ironical than her
smolt profile, bent towards the gigantic
•
forget-me-nots and the pulnionatm,
azure 55 gentians.
•
"rei'll"PS'"
"Tito big fish"- -her little face brealelitg
" ,11 by
inlo one of her lovely smiles, whit, ,
a turn of hoe 'head rime) .siele to full, she
Offers 'In 110 completeness to les goze-
ti liw ,,tile gu r
"swalloivs np a. ("goons
1" 1
perm Mite gialgront; ,,
"Pude. Mile gudgeoes 1 he 01 11)(15.
1
slimicile, end Men begins to laugh al hi
own .wool-gaihoring,
"A"d "w 1 "111)<)s° 7054 Will ha going
directly -going home?' /Mystics she,
Itoleing at him rind lile 11111g11011'11111g11011' with
n son surprise
"I hope so' and--ami-you too 7"
80 gleS semi, mithe ley-eolored
nregny in he1111hill drops Into bee hp,
"We -we? 11 hy 811011111 we go home?
`l
We have no'Iluf pirnonl n go to, ond"
-lookng round 151111 n nArlonale relish
111 innen!ntn, end bummed ter ,Intl,. end
m mut • N R Id E mod
rs• or a OW es once, a
Less Than Ono 5050. .
Several years ago Mrs, Miller Jearned
of, a mild and simple preparationeit.hattt
cured herself and several friencts oif f
weakness and piles. She was ea egad bit
0 rettllY W0111011 needing treatment that
',decided to furnish ft to those who•
ole
Miglit COI for it. .She started .with only
few dollarat aaRital, pout .th rpuleali,
ponsessing true and wonderful, merit, pro.
diming many 0=00 When deetere and
dies failed the demand grow
other reme , „ t.
r iteitily, alio was several hues compelled
to seek larger quarters. Sho now eocu•
pios one of the eity's largest °Mee build.
which she owns, and almost one hut).
area clerks and stenographers are re.
d t assist In this great business.
clutre to
W 11 -
emen . se It.
More that'. million women have used
Urn. Males remedy, and no matter where
you live, 'alio can refer you to ladies in
your 01V11 looality who eon and will tell
a frorer that tans marvellous remedy
raoniillyueures women, Despite the fact that
lvIrs. Miller's business is very extensive,
she is alwaya willing to give aid and ad.
vice tro ovgiry IT Holing woman who writes
ho I a generous, good woman,
ta°00" :
°bus decided to give awaY to Women
we°, have never used her morlibine Sia,
000.00 worth absollil. r115th i . •,,
pa ,
illeyfferad.wrierkn aenud l'irgfes.,whearing.ndown
liellelings, nervousness, creeping sensation°
up tho spine, melancholy dosiro to orY,
hot flashes, weariness, or piles from anY
cause, should sit right down and send
m and address to Urn. Cora
keifiern,aseex 0008 Kokomo. Ind., and receive
man (free of eharge in plain wrapper)
a 60..cont box of her marvellous medioine;
also her vgluable book, which everY wo-
a
b uld have
mra*Bem°ber this 'offer will not last long,
for thousands. and thousands of. women.
who aro suffering will take advantage
this genereoilnutznedoorngettnir s
et ft ect,araendOth ecr
1drayr,eLr send yogi' name sod address to,
Kra. Miller for the book 'find medicine be.
r th 810 000 00
ore e . . worth is all gone.
CANADA
.
.........
1NG LIKE IT IN TUE HISTORY
OF TIIE COUNTRY.
•
Resommes Being Peveloped-
•
Rapid Railway Building
_0
eies lid Progress.
every' part of the West, from '
to the Pacific, comes one story
ng the stoi.y of activities in real
, ..
the late of which has never been
before. It is not only Port Arthur,
Winnipeg, Brandon, fie-
.Saskatoon, Prince Albert, Moose-
Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver,
and Prince Rupert that are at.-
attention, but a hundred smaller
th 1, • b I e e Intsh d or de-.
e are e ne es a e
va
by the unprecedented rail\ y
now in progress there. •
-
TUE CAUSE OF IT ALL.runs
.
• • . . . _
is this Immense progress bo De
at when certain fuels are
In the three prairie Provinces
Saskatchewan and Alberta,
are roughly 300.000,000 acres
to be fit for cultivation, and the
population is less than ono mil-
These people cultivated last year
7,250,000 acres. Now, if, say,
people cultivating a little over
MI acres could modem as
m on I •
did last year, 102,000,000 bushels of
What will the product be and how
homes will there be in the West
,,.,
the whole three hundred minion
tea under eu LW ion. 1 ,
I al' T1 Is
c°15 • t 1 1 mi lin
with the .gi ea rant 1 ng, 1 gt
and fishery resottrces of the West
is back of all this progress, the
It LI e development and the
o a 1,11d
for all the optimism of the West.
AS OTHERS SEE US.
' 1.,
room for. immense developmen
pain led out by the Detroit News-
recently, when'it said : "Assum-
It were possible to place a family
surveyed homestead in the
• • I II 11
in the meet 'we v0 mon ts, ve
thus matud would usops,
hinge of Western Canticle, for the
would still be available to as
more. That vast expanse -the true
the Northwest of MacKenzie,
Franklin and Cempbell, lying
the North Saskatchewan and
Ocean, contains quite as much
land as the eouthern plains which
being peopled, Mid possesses
i -timbered
of being well
weltered. The feettle belt, which
the West from Lake Superior
foothills of the Rocky Mountains
northward, einbracing the Atha -
Pence end MacKenzie valleys and
tim farmer and stockman in its
• d • t
expansion as many a Ann ages
11 I 1. l 11 ' llayS ot
sou 'tern c up Ica a, le No
1 111 mut and Mississippi. This
1 or i ss - -
d
regarded as a somewhat wit as-
sappy spring gress-"we aro so well-
so infinitely well herer Then, pulling
. • • d 1.1 • in more
herself logelliet, an spea , ng a
composed key, "but, yes, of -course, wo
too shall go by -by ; this cannot last
forever -nothing lasts forever, 'That
the ono ihotight that has•kept me alive
11 but
feat a stable for •a cow' to eland in as
wooden walls rnade on 6 -inch -scantling
tongued and grooved side, with tar
n er on both sides. In that cvay We
P P ,
. I I Id d that,
bave a wall tummy ous 0 co an
Th in
controls the heat. e only other th a
-
is WC 11050 10 (10 iS 10 get light into it. It
has been demonstrated that .each cow
needs 3 feet square of glass, and the
windows put as high as possible, SO aS
te.get the longest slatt of sunshine in.
1 want the stable made so small that,
, , -the air in which she
the cow can wan% ,
stands. It has been found that a COW
room contaleing 6.00 cubic
can warm a r that
feet and maintain - the tempevature,
is 16 feet long, 5 feet wide, and 8 feet
•
d hi iti If the walls are made so the air
ir, .
w I not get through, 'sho will maintain
I the heat inside tIvat space with the
te • 20 de 'ems below zero ; but
theemome t Isi
e and
she will smellier befere merelli'' -
therefore we must, Itave ventilation, A
stable 32 feet wide is wide enoug h for
two rows of cotys and if we 10150 40
cows WO want eair stable 60 feet long and
3e wide. After having made these boxes
Dx4x16 •feet for each cow, we have to
provide for ventilation.
I want the ventilators at least, 40 Mot
• d carried .aboye the ridge of tho
long an
h th ill 1 a a draft alt the
arn so e w 1 ye
• Y
I, • in
time. They niust be a foo quote -
side and ene air shaft for each ten COWS.
'Fresh air is admitted at the cornet's by
1 • 5 -inch stove pipes with tie elbow
out
extending through the wall. The main
• .
tube is parallel to the wall. These fur-
nish !tall as much entrance air as there
is exit ale The air comes in at the lop
of the loom where il, warms, and in that
way it equalizes the temperature; it then
1 t tl • le these ventilators at
asses ou uoug
P , ., ,
the bottom.
a i lose years; now—"
1
She breaks off. •
'Elul now?" •
"fetches her pulling teas
I3ven as he a .
echoed inteerogetion, he sees the radi-
n e breakin linen el the cloud his
a e -g . & ••'
had gathered, as a eery strong
si in breaks through a very translucent
evbelation.
'"Elul" I I 1
now? s le repea s vague y, an
• t i If f • If 1 1 ' isell
smiling o lerse , mge u o n very
' beside II r -"But now'? Did
presence e
SEW 'But now?' Ah, hereethey eve back
neein te 0
-9---
go be eentintted).
NEW-BORN LOUTISH ISLAND.
— .
Volcanic Phenomenon 011 Burma-Arakai
Cdast.
.
It is announced in the London Gazell
that the Admiralty have received Men
minion dated December 27, 1006, fror
,
the officer in charge of the Marine Sit
vey of India that ft volcanic eruplio:
has rn a »roue
appeared in the norilie 1 i
1 Ch lobe strait off the Burrna-kraka
3 et , , . .
coast.
The height of the island, which wa
fl L i n December 15 has been ea
rs sten 0 , ,
timated at fifteen feet above high watel
and its diameter at about 300 yards.
The port °Meer at Aleyab has lande
on it, and it is to be examined by th
oflicer in charge of the Indian survey..
There ere numerous Islands off 111
coast of Lower Burma, extending alort
the east side of the Bay of 13engal, an
ta the north-west of Chedulet islet
there is a so-called volcano; which' i
1 d' I ; of Inflammable ga3
yea ly a Ise mi ge ,
Two other islands-Ramri and Easter
Boronga-are noted tor the preclude:1i
oi .excellent petroleum.
Numerous instances aro reported c
; mace and • dist' earance 13
the eppeat pp
volcanic islands. An island 3,000 fee
long • and 1,800 feet wide, which cam
inlet 6xistenee off the south coast a
7 r d 11 t Slit
japan in November, 1001, g a tin y .
sIded, end in seven mon ths had' alms
disappeared; while in July last year 1
submarine eruption threw up an Islam
of seven acres near lioroslar island
amtaci,,,,71;:pharlvapsreslimilerly thrown m
qously. .
Nearer home, Graham island Wn.
; in I 831. in the Mectiterrnneat
'thrown up .
some Thirty miles from Sielly. It tra,
rodooeo 10 n SlibnlOrgN1 reef in MU
more than six months.
1,-------
-----.1.- —
CANADIAN RAILWAYS.
-•••
1Number of Mites in Operation June 301h,
1900, Was 21,353. •
According to the report of rallaelY
statistics in Caneda for the year ending
lim 30, 1006, the total number of miles
' 6 • i • Von foe 1006 is placed
of railway n opera . ,
4
at 21,353, Els compared with 26, 87, for
1005. But seventy-four miles of iron
t ' 11 f I' •
;ails now remain as a re c o oimer
days: As indieative of ilio expansion in
freneportation faculties it is pointed out
ti t 3 On 'les of railway were under
0 1 t com'
construction on June 3 lasI, as c m
pared with 1,006 on the same date of the
pree'eding year, ,
The total number of loconItitives
plaeed st .2,031 ; first-class cars, 2,2Di
second-class cars, 718; ea ttle . and box,
cars, 61,020,
The grand total of cars of all classes
in use is 00,874. Of these, 01,015 WM
filled with autornatic couplere and 85010
:-..,,tn,
with air braltee.- ee nee aa„
-Statistics of ,teerall,lee $eiele„1,v """'"'"
n e g and 57 666
• ass li-ere elirr- -fl"" J'''''''' ' •."
713 tons of freight. The number of pas-
sengers increased by over two and 000.
half millions, and the number of tons of
freight by ovey seven millions, as ecen-
pared with the preceding year, The total
earnings of railweys for the last year
•were 10125,322,0115,its compared with
r 1005 The capital in
$106,467,105 -0c ' .., -- , - , ,
vested in.Cenarlian callWaYs [las teacnea
m or $1 832 498 704. • ro Ibis
1110,1acgo Su. i i • • • ,.
(nitration the following contillel-
calm „. token 1 e • Dominion
liens Ilave .Ptaa.,... , . ,.
Goveenment, $104,188?s, ; t i
key mem
2 (8 022' mimicipalities,
Governments., $43, '''' ,, ,,
$17 125 164 row, $2,t4001,770.
4 , . , •
The record of falai accidents last year
ehows a death list of sixteen passengers,
• 4 1 • anti 200 others leilled in
13.) 0111P cIes ., , ,,,,,
varions weys, a • veal of eta, fts 00111.
pored with 468 in 1005. Only. onopas.
4
1 ' d.
senger In 1.,7,0,301. was fa ally injure
111 reSpea I, 10 1108Senger Ulna 0E11.11.
, , „ ,
ings the ranort snows. Mau •earrungs ei
'03' 30.' 188 f ' total 1 een, Mileage of
m. 3,, , ,-, , 01 a . ' 1
4-; 071 64$ giving earnings pee train
-, , ,
oille ef $1,150. .
The 10101 mileage of electric railways
" i
la ts 813 miles. ihe net earn-
in Com ., .
ings for the year ever o $1,°01.,834.t'
4
--lt
MEN-OF-WAR ON PAPER.
Each man-of-war is built (Mon peper
before a single plate of steel is forged.
y are the length and breadth
Net shle
'
of a tship decided upon, but the naval
constrector can tell to nn ounce how
, t • I ell d'. Mice when her
much 11.a. el s le le l 451
eller and guns aro mounted upon her,
a' - ••
11 N man times her propellors will re-
-0'
volvo In a it nu e m a g vell piesstne
t. Y 1 I .Ith I ' • ' .
n. gleam,. end how many tons of coal
an hour must be consumed to attain
a certain rale of speed,
is
SHEEP FOR EVERY FARM,
'
The percentage of farms in this pro-
vince on Whiell 6hoop raising cannot be
made a profitable industry is very 17%11
indeed, says Mr. John Campbell. Dam
ing leis chnnged wonderfully during 100
last 15 years. We then sold our raw
- products direct- Now we have become
; manufacturers as well as farmers and
are Rutting 0 more finished product. on
the market. Ten years ago I ventured
the statement that we could double the.
annual value of .our fary products by
sellingoue grain in the form of live•stock
rail= than la the raw state. Whnt I
las come te xtss • our
then predioted I i , I .1,00 .9
-
, output. has doubled. behove ti,e R111,
no anhytai Met can do more towaid e 11
f 'tiler increasing the wealth-produein
ut . F.
loo of farms than 1110 511001).
va ' ' • t I. I handled
, No class of lite s oet can m 0 t
with so little labor; and • one 0 ,I3o
, greatest difficulties on the farm durtng
16 last' five years has been the question
11 lool; . ,
of Mime. 'There is no class of ineel-pro-
(hieing- sleek that can be prepared so
TI • st r uhduelng mutton
e"ePIY' • 11°.°91 i° I '•'• It 1.1 .. I
as ,00mparect With ice( I,. a oge let n
raver of mutton. I ton satisfied, that one
1 1 h l a,
can pimdece 100 potunts o . am • a
cast of $1 to $2..less (hen 10 costs to put
„ , , , , „.
1,00 pounds of .weight ea a swop erten
t • II 1 I i ig I 1 rnelleed and at the
Win et 11 s 1 t s ) , , ,
steno lime; the average selling price of
well finished lambs.. in February and
March has been from 75 C010.8 10 .$.1. per
• • 1 ffil 'I r •-
otet. more than he st, ng pi ea o ee
ci '15 t
port cattle in Aptil nn A y .
The hood buyee of elarge Chtengo
packing house is predicting a mch im-
tmvaf°I11eokfele8,1ratfIts1ties.
AiOW ennel,Io11:nu 1ha0 ie had
been nine years in thcatte feeding
ea' • , , s
business and In only elm yar In Thal
'time hd he ninde a good po01. 11 n
subsnuent idne 500154 In Innths he heti
_
Magistrate ; "Did the prisoner resist ?"
Arresting Constable ; "No, your worsht11,
d 1 tin eome alone Voluntary,"
I ma e I . .
--zee:es.--
....
• '-' 6000048 • '000 liet) 4010V° • 0 00044
-
'
. Rapid changes of temperature are hard ,
,...-on the toughest constitution.
Cgs
,A. .The conductor passing from, the heated A,
. .
1.14 inside of a trolley car to the ieir temperature 3:
4
da of the platform—the canvasser spending an a
'
&axe or so in a heated building and then
••
.walking against a biting wind—know the
difficulty. of avoiding cold.
.
'
e
Emulsion itrengthens the . .
at body so that it can better withstand the .
-9'.
elp danger of cold from changes of temperature. 11)
.
It will help you to avoid taking coldv
4 40 120.
ALL bRUDDISTS1 SOoAND Ik00.
4' 1044•
wkrEn ON BATTLESHIP.
(Ae ninny • fl.q 8,000 ' galione of Mal
water are used' in a large hattleehil
daily. About two-thirds of this is tee
en ttp by the boilers, and the remain
der Ls used for drinking, washing, erholi
ing, etc, . Whenelhe sore which shelia
taken ced. With liMv 11'0111 port has beet
used up, a vessel has te depend upoi
her condensers for further sunpiteS
Every modern warship is Mei will
e‘aporating machinery to distil the sal
a -water • .
se •
-4.
. CYNICAL
.
"Permit, Me to ask you, Madam," ettk
theA lawyer, who vaae a rieend of
family, "your real reason for wantingivl'lalt0(1101.
diVot0 foM your lmband"
m'Ile Istet•the Man I thought 1 wl
arrying," explained the fair calle,llsolf
"My dear madam," rejoined he lo
t (•
t"Me applbatien 01 thaPrInolol
w0*( *rook up 0051'y bathe In tare 10081*
..-
,
peefrieee PATECINALISM. ;
"Sip, 1 went your daughleton WV'
eVou ninv hoVe 11 with the greaest
pleasure, tenboy( if 011,II take the one
(hes always in My pocket.,
0
r0
10
11
11
18
11
1