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The Brussels Post, 1910-10-20, Page 2n3 Ifa+ f-4+4• # 4+++++ +++t+ + e++++++++++++++ 0 MAC ii MISERY I I BANISHED BY "HISIT-A-TIBGS°' I .1i ril i 4 ' '4 4 f I I Or, A TRUE NEVER OLD. 1+++++++44-4-+++++++++4+f4+--felef'stet t4+4+++ +-t- 4 CHAPTER 'PITT,— )es !'t ea is a duality wo eanrese rata "". pat too highly in so imperfect a• world. It is better than seems everything mt . f en noir, surely?" says B anfc i "Ifwe mak© people what we think them, as optimists say, it is best to bo optimistic." "I dislike optimism, ' she, says, ourtly, "It is absurd and untrue. Our Dostoievsky is a wiser novelist than your Dickens, One must be- lieve something," she .says. "It is pretty for a woman to think," says Blanford, "but my- self I have never seen why. I may hope, -I may wish, I may regret, I may—if I am very sangunt't-Uvea expect; but believe—no!" "Perhaps I should like to believe in a woman," he adds, more softly, with that inflection of his voi o which has always had at all events the effect of making women believe in him. Mme. Sabaroff is not so easily touched as many. She pauses moment, than says, with a certain weariness. "Anybody who can be- lieve can love; that is nothing new." "What would be new T ;pee and disbelieve in what we love? It would bo very painful," "It would be a test," says his companion. Gervase meanwhile has sunk in- to a chair by the side of Nina Cur- zon a,nd is saying in •a whisper, "Who is that lady The one with her hack to us, to whom Lord Blan- ford is so empresse? I thought I knew all the L:sk's people." "Look in your Russian memories, and you will probably find that you know her, too," replies Mrs. Cur- zon. "Oil, she is aRussian?" says Ger- vase, then adds, negligently, "I think, now you tell me that, 1 have seen her before. Is she not the Princess Sabaroff?" "Why slid you pretend not to know her?" thinks Nina Curzon as the answers: "Yes, that is her name. You must have met her in Petersburg." "Petersburg is very dim in my `1 k7P w the one is opportunism; ate other O 1ttimateism. "Perhaps," says Blanford, with a le, m a i anti thinks meantime, "she knows something about him. What is it?" ,Uces site know Gervase; de- spite her denial?" he wonders. He hats an impression that she does. There was a look of 'recognition in her eyes when she gave that vague, bland gesture in answer to her host. All trifles in her interest him, as they always do interest a man in a woman whom ho admires and is not sure that he understands; and Gervase, he is aware, has been a gond deal in Russia. He himself has known the sub- ject of their discourse ever since they were boys, and had that sort of intimacy with him which 'exists .between men who live in the same 'sets .said belong to the same clubs. But to him Gervase seems a petit maitre, a poseur, a man artificial, conventional, .ambitions in small things; and to Gervase he himself seems as muoh as he does to Lady. Usk, a perverse and lawless Bo- hemian, only saved from the; outer darkness by the fact of hiis aristo- cratic terth. Meanwhile, in her own room, Xenia Sabaroff is persuing her own reflections while her maid disrobes her. "it .will be better to see him once and fur all," she muses. "1 cannot go on forever avoiding him in every city in Europe. Very like- ly he will not even remember my face or my name." A haughty flush passes over her face at her own reflections. After all, to have any emotion at, all about it, pleasurable or painful, is humiliating. She is a Proud wo- man, as well as .a courageous one. There are memories associated with this coming guest which are bitter and hateful. Every one is indoors that day, for a .summer rain is falling without, and has been falling since noon. All the house party are in the library, and the children are there also; the windows are open, and the sweet [memories," he replies, evasively. smell from the damp gardens and 1 "It's baccarat is what made the wet grass fills the air. deepest impression on my remem- E•vcry one is laughing and talk- prance and my fortunes. Now I ing; Usk is drinking a glass of kum- think of it, however, I recollect her mel, and Blanford is playing -with quite well; her husband was Ana- tlee dog; conversing with Nino Our- tole Sabaroff, and Lcitnitz shot son and the mistress of the house, him in a duel about her. Am I and standing in front of them, is a right?" tall, fair man, irreproachable in "So charming far her," says Ni- ienue and extremely distinguished na Curzon ; "English women never in appearance. He is Lord Ger- have anything happen for them vase. His back is toward the door, picturesque like that ; our men al - and he: does not see or hear her en- ways din of indigestion, or going ter,but as the Baba rushes to- after a fox." wad her; toppling over a stool and "It is very curious." treading mercilessly on the trains "What is? Dyspepsia?. Hunt - of tea -gowns in the wind of his go- ing?" ing, the noise made by the child "How one comes across people." makes him turn his head, and an " 'After long years.' " quotes expression of recognition, mingled Mrs. Curzon, with mock romance with amazement, passes over his in her tones. "Generally, I think," usually impassive features. she adds with alittle yawn, wo "Is that not Princess Saharoff 1" can never got rid of our people, the he• asks of his hostess, with a car- world is so small, and there is real- twin breathless astonishment be- ly only one set in it that is decent, trayed at his voice. so we can't ever get out of it. It Lady Usk assents. "One of my meet have been very nice in Romeo dearest friends," she adds. "I and Juliet's days when a little drive think you don't know her? I will to Mantua took you into realms present you in a moment. She wholly inaccessible to your Verona is as clever as site is beautiful. The acquaintanoo. Nowadays> if you children adore her. Look at run away from anybody in London, Babe." you are sure to rue against them The Babe has dragged his prin- in Yeddo or Yucatan." eess to a conch and climbed up on "Constancy made easy, like the it himself, kneeling half on her lap three It's," says Gervase. "Unfor- and half on it, with no respect for tunetely, despite our improved fa - the maize satin, while his impatient cilities, we are not constant. little feet beat the devil's tattoo "He paeans to imply that be threw among the point d'Alencon. over the Saharoff," thhilcs Mrs, "My dear Bebe, do not be such Curzon, "but he is such a boaster a monopolist," said Blanford, as of his bonnes fortunes that one can he approaches with a cup of tea never know whether he is ly-ing." and a valor of caviare bread and "Pray let are make you known butter. "Your shoes have seven- to Madame Saharoft " says Lady teenth century buckles to he wrap- Usk to him a little. latera "Site is ped up in a lady's chess," such a very dear friend of mine, The Babe grins saucily, tossing and I see you have been looking his hair of of his eyes: but with at her eves' since the entered the unwonted obedience he disentangles room. his feet with some care out of the "She is a very handsome person; lace. any one would look at her,', replies Xenia Sabaroff does not take as her cousin. Were he not so perfect - much notice of him as usual. She ly wall bred and impassive, ive, it might is reserved and prcoeeupiee, Bien- almost bo said that the suggested ford, like the chilli, fails in awaken- presentation fills him with some ing her interest or attention. She vague nervousness> has seated herself almost w'th her Nina Curzon watches him inqui- baek to where Gervase is standing, sitively els he is led up and pre - but every now and thea she looks sentecd to Mme. Sabaroff. half round es by an'irresistable, un- "1 think I haze had the honer eonseious impulse of cm'.orsty. before, now, in Petersburg," ulna Blanford notes the geetura, as her inure Uervaee, She looks at him actions have an interest for hien very coldly, which grows daily in its fusclnation,, "I think not," elm replies; the "There is Dorothy Usl>'s phoenix," words are of the simplest, but e'est he says to her in a low tone when le ten qui fait la mauve, and for the Babe has scampered off alter the solitary time in his exdsteeec bonbons --ho indicates C;er,'ase Lord Gervase is embarrassed. with a Blanca Her eycb eats cost- Iilanfbrtl, playing with the eollay tract slightly as if in some dieplea, clog near at hand, listens and (h- aute or constraint. serves. "Lady lisle is veru satin satis- Ludy -Cak is not so observant. lied," she replies coats, "Tier "11 is a long time sine° Ise was id rain anetalaility mikes her arse peryl�l!uasia," she says tit her friend; "1 fvY iis"t OCdrywbt�re,,,', .... `dare say you, havo forgotten l itis MR. ALCIDE HEBERT Stratford Centre, Wolfe Co„ Que. "I have been completely cored of a frightful condition of say . Stomach through the wonderful frait euedietue 'I;ruit-a-tives'. I could not eat anytltiug but what I suffered awful pain from Indigestion, 141y head ached incessantly. I was told to try 'Punta -Lives' mai sent for six boxes. Now I gut entirely well, can eat any ordinary food and never have a Iieadaehe." At,Ci'Di IIEBURT. 5oc. a box, 6 for $2.5o, or trial box, e5c. At all dealers or from b'tui.-a• tives Limited, Ottawa. father was alive and his name was Baird then, you know." Xenia Sabaroff makes a little po- lite gesture expressive of entire in- difference to the ohahge in these titles. With an action which would be rude in any woman less high bred, she turns away her head and speaks to Blanford, ignoring the ac- quaintance and the presence of Gervase. "A snub direct!" whispers Law- rence Hamilton to Mr. Wootton. "Or .a cut direct--wbieht" says that far-sighted gentleman. "Anyhow, it's delightful to see him Jet its for it," reflects Usk, who has also observed the incident from where Ise stands by the liquors. "Mme. Sabaroff is eclipsing the black woman, says that lady. . "What bleak woman?" asks Ger- vase, very inattentive and bored. Site tells him the story of the Hin- doe harem and he hears no ,word of it. Elan says. hand on the is lea ing at "Se heave site is then; hands Het under he til of rub Xeu his w had d made her; is to her ders, thougl ,Vr ford is always se odd," ho indifferently, watching the of Xenia Sabaroff as it rests shoulder of the Babe, who ning against her knees gaz- her adoringly. pele- ven The bee's business end strikes years!" he thinks. "Good real by a practice, would adopt such ee is, what an eternity! And eidal practice, but it is probably 'every one forcibly. No product, now handsomer than she was followed by speculators who have nd wasted eau be more easily saved very handsome, wonderfully and heen igh laices. bycted t it is at- into Vane ar which bees work up nine." y ooks at her all the while from his half-closed 'eyelids, while ks he knows not what kind bish to Lady Dawlish. is Sabaroff does not once look ay. 'Inc moment which she readed passed, andait has no impression whatever upon et indifference reconciles her self. Is it possible, she won - that she ever loved or ever it that site loved, this train? hy, will you always treat me stranger, Mme. Sabaroff?" urs Gervase to her that night for a moment he is alone near while the cotillion overture ences, is are a stranger—to me." re - Xenia Sabaroff, and as she s she looks full at him. colors with discomfiture. "Pee - in the due course of nature succeeded to my father's you seem to consider that 1 changed my whole ;dent ty," says, with great irritati you will put it so, aud who would atone bus it, would you allow hint," "Atonel Do you suppose that you owe tete reparetiolstt It is I who owe you thanks for a momentary oblivion which did inc immeasurable service," "That is a very heath doctrine. Tito Princess Xenia whom I know was neither so stern nor so skep- tical." "Tile Princess Xenia, who you knew was a child, a foolish child; she is dead, quite as muoh dead as though site were under so many sol- id square foci of Baltic ioc, Put her from your thoughts; you will: never ewake.her ." Then she rises and leaves Uim and goes out of the ball -room. Throughout that've does • unh,ouL 1 J'hio not venture to approach liter .again, and he endeavors to throw himself with some show of warmth into a flirtation with Nina Curzon. "Why do you pretend not to know heel" says Mrs. Curzon to him. He seniles the fatuous smile with whrieh a man ingeniously expresses what he would be thought a brute to put into words. "She does net deign to know me now," ho says, modestly, and to the experienced comprehension of Ni- na Curzon the weeds, although so modest, tell her as much as tho loudest boast could do. (To bo continued.) ellevve eRwal✓ •e.stoavetAasve lie On the �m AXLE AS is she turning•point to economy in wear and tear .of wagons, Try a bex. Every dealer everywhere, The @mportal Ott Co..Lt'd. maul. P„geetn an Queen tilt 011 05, L14, A eavorl used the MSa10 ns lemon .or vnuill by deeming rran lete4 auger in water ca adding Asn fonts, a deidoleas a cup lc tot, 541 pai a strap better than maple. Asa 4dngds svhd bp grocers, IS net Rend 50e 1.e 5 s Atatic5ud FCC/PO Look, breeds than anywhere oleo, sitllp y •. beoause they have been milked' aud have been bred and fed for milk. Let the breeders stop milking or stop keeping records and the value will safe Inche of thein cattle i Y rapidlydioline. The more fact that the cow is a Jersey, or Holstein,, or Guernsey, .or Ayrshiro, does not mean that she is always a profit- able cow. She is much more like- ly to be than if she is Hereford, or Angus, or Shorthorn. Bust there are thousands of dairy -bred cows that are not worth their keep, and there will be thousands more in a very short time if the dairy breed- ers do not milk and test and eli- minate the poor ones and breed from the best.—Wnllaeo's Farmer. FARM NOTES. A garden hoe -plow will prevent backache and do'three times as. muoh work as the common hoe. In saving. potatoes for seed keep ARSENIC POISONING. --- Tho Torture That uhnsues Before Death. Brings Relief.. When a sluhle' dose of arsenic in suf. e hn been be f !t s ba adept quantity to taken colic y pains• bowel disorder and perhaps- nausea. result. In the course of an. hour after u poisonous dose has been taken an Intense burn. Ing peel is felt in the esophagus and stotneb• This spreads to tile entire anterior portion of the lower part of the trunk. A sense of coustrictlon at the throat and an Acrid, metallic taste accompany the pain. Then vomiting, and relaxation of the bowels begin. As the oltse progresses the symptoms Increase la intensity. 'Then comes a thirst that water will not eltay, al- though It'apparently Increases the stomach disturbance. The victim groans and writhes. Now he implores the doctor to sere' him. Thea be begs to be killed and put out of pain. The extremities become icy- The pulse Is small, feeble and Ere - only those that ata perfect in form. (bent, and the breathing is labored. Take none from poor Mlle. embarrassed and palnfut because of Much valuable manure is lost in aladoiilinaI tenderness. The surface et poorly arranged stables, where it is the body becomes dark and of that re weyen,,®, ��,,e, � ,vyp impossible to save or recover the bluish color that medical emu call cy- liquids. auosod. Vloleilt cramps add their tor - ion MAKES MILKERS. Almost any one can make a bee tore, esUaustion becomes collapse, con - Ls reticent ears the demand for hive but the best ones are factory vulslons or coma ensues, and death y made and may ba had from any ends the aFoay. The torture lasts cows of the special dairy breeds reliable supply house. sometimes from eve to twenty uours" has so increased that breeders have The depth of a tile drain should net been able to fully meet the de- be between three and 'four feet, de- mand. This is bringing about a pendinga ou the character of the condition which is not good for the oil and the laud to be drained. future of these breeds. Many Fruit culture cannot bo carried breeders are not keeping'They sof ou successfully without bees to ef- their individual cows. records earl- feet fertilization through carrying not give the production records of pollen from one blossom to another. the dams and grltnd-dams o£ the Experimouts leave been carried. animals they are offering for sale on on a considerable scale in treat - unless there be in the pedigree ing dandelions with chemicals, but some cow which has made a fine as yet the results are not satisfac- record. In some cases it is oven. tory. whispored that the cows are not The farmer tubo remembers the milked for any length of time, but past winter and how he longed for are permitted to suckle their calves. silage to help out tbe high-priced We would hesitate to believe that feed will bo a silo builder this year. edly true that the milking qualities of many special-purpose dairy herds are being neglected at the present time. The admirers of the special pur- pose dairy eow should not fall into a sense. of security because of past recons and present demand. The dairy cow has made her way by performance at the pail. She pro- duces the milk. But she will not go on producing ,milk unless she is milked. The best diry herd in the world can be ruined in a very few years by letting the Calves run with the cows. Milkers make milkers, Breeding from the best produces a better. Tho scales and the Bab- cock test determine the value of the cow. There are more good dairy cows in the special. dairy All bee keepers know that the bees of a queenless colony are quite liable to bo irritable -when handled, and are greatly inclined to follow the operator about the apiary and .annoy him. HOW HE DID IT. A lawyer once asked a man who had at various times sat on several ]arses: "Woso inttuenced you most —tile lawyers, the witnesses, or the judge?" He expected to get ,some useful and interesting information from so experienced a juryman. This was the man's reply : "1'11 tell yer, si1', 'ow 1 makes up my mind. I'm a plain man, and a reasanin' man, and I ain't in- fluenced by anything the lawyers say; no, nor hy what the Judge as a murm when her, comm 'Ye plies speak He cause I hays title have he She is silent; she looks down- en the white ostrich feathers of her fan. ' He is vaguely encouraged by that silence. "Strangers! That is surely a very cold and cruel word between those who once were friends 1" Tho direct appeal to her maker her look up once more with great hauteur in the coldness of her fa,'c. "Sir, I think when people have forgelten that each other exist it is as though they had never met. They are perhaps something m rs distant still than strangers, for, to strangers, friendship ail the future is possible; but those who have b separated by oblivion on the one hand and by contempt on the other aro parted as surely and aerially 5115 though death had cllvid el them." Ueryese gathers some solace from the very strength of the words. She would not, he thinks, feel so strong- ly unless she felt more than heallows; he gazes at her with feigned humility and unfeigned adtalrati";s and regret. "If 7;fmo. Sabaroff," be ecu Inure, "can doubt her own powers of com- pelling remembrance she is the .,';e person on earth only wheeau o0 00." She is stung to anger. "1 am really at •a loss to deelde whether you axe intention fitly in- solent or unintentionally insincere. You are possibly both.' "1 am neither! 1 and nt,ly it TIM who pessionalely and nselescty re- bels against his 'fate." "Who regrets his own 'intima, you mean to say. That is nilthiiig ttneomnlen.'' "Well, who regrets the past, if says. I just looks at the man in the ducks 3 , there?' is he le� CU wll i �hi not n , F +i3O/ and I says: 'If he ain't qulekYy stops colas. cures colds, heal done g y l6a atsroat and IOU 28 cdata, And I brings stn all in .guilty.,, __. ...- ..__. ._... hioMCu etutekly slaps coedits. crudes coed., hosts the throb, eo,t'nnda • 23 con," I In some eases these symptoms occur, but in a modified form. and the doctor will apparently get the better of the disease. ,The remission will he but for n day or two. Then the abdomen will swell. and try coldness will perrede the frame. Shivering will become pro- nounced trembling, then cramps, con- vulsions anti death. ;•,. Great Scheme. "What do you do," asked the one who had been married only a few months, "when your husband comes home Rite at eight?" "I pretend not to'notice that it's late, aud pretty soon lie asps tile 111 wouldn't like to go to the theater or somewhere tomorrow afternoon." Startling -Encouragement, "Was Amelias father eneuuraging when you went to him to ask him for her hand??" "Not very. Be asked me to put the proposal in writing, so t couldn't back out. as all the others did." llQpl{�'tt�tl l�gll.-.�....-,.1/����;jaj-...tttt��{,f_ l"�j��,¢�p1l�j''tI�1] II IY qS S G Mall N'+'•a F1 WA• It Enabled Him to Loll in Luxury With Not a Vent of Cost. #art CRUSHING A HOTEL. KEEPER. The Beau Was of gent In Prose and Exquisite to His Bluffing and Played His Part' Wall—Never Known tel Pay a 05111 Under Any Ciroumetanoesr "Misery levee company" gaited Mr. Iabb, an old time Vlh•rteen gentle- teen, entle men, the other night. "There's a great Id saying. ' o that dealoft cath In "Some forty or fifty yellrs ago, there was, a celebrated alrg!uli& character, well,ltnown' fu Washington, Baltimore and 'Philadelphia, 'whom I obeli call Beau Smith, because Smith wasn't hie real name. Beau Smith was not y. noted for the elegance of Iris dress, but' also for his absolute disregard of alt, eueneial obligations, lie was never known to pity a bill under any circum- stances. '"Beau entered the Oleo of the old. MonumeUtttl hotel, in Baltimore, ono night, registered, and upon. hell as- signed to ono of the best suits oil moms In the house, for he would be satisfied only with the best, lie proceeded to make himself thoroughly at borne and settled down for a long stay. fie or- dered champagne r-deredchampagne by the case and ci- gars by the box for the eutertatament of such friends as might visit him la his apartments and, in short,-Il'ved as though be had millions behind The proprietor of the hetet, Mr. Guyer,; had heard of Beau, but he could not' believe that lie would deliberately run upsucha large bill 1f he had no 1ii1eu- tion of paying it, and he hesitated about speaking to such an elegautgen- tleman about such an inelegant thing as money, but after Beau had been a guest at the Monumental for more than a month and had said nothing about paying bis hill Mr. Guyer summoned up his courage and had Beau's hill made out aud sent up to him. In a few moments Mr. Guyer received a polite but urgent message from Beau, asking him to come to his apartments at wise. "'1 sent for you, Mr. Guyer,' said the inpecunlous beau, 'to show you a most remarkable document which has been sent up to me from your office. 1 don't wish tq complain of your clerks. sir, but 1 dislike being annoyed in this way. Will you kindly look at y that and tell me what it ds?' "'lbat is a bill. Mr. Smith: said Guyer as soon as be recovered his breath. "'So I observe: responded Beau. 'but, air. Guyer, it is made out against me.' "'Certainty,' replied the hotel man. 'It is our account agninst you for board and lodging. wines, cigars and otter extras; for the last month, aud l would be glad if you'— '' 'Why. my dear sir; interrupted Beau, laughing, 'you surely never ex- pected me to pay this bill?' •'1 most certainly did and do ex- pect you to pay It,' answered Mr. Guy- er Urmly. "'But, dear sir; said Beau gently. 'you knew who 1 was when 1. came to y0Ur house.' "Mr. Guyer admitted that be did. 'Then, you know; continued Bean, 'that 1 have never been known to pay a bill to any one, rind no one in his senses ever expected that 1 would. Now, my dear sir, t beg of you to de- stroy this ridiculous document aud see that 1 nm not annoyed again with socb foolishness.' "'Do you intend to pay this bill or not?' demanded the hotel proprietoe sternly. "'I do not,' replied the Beau quietly.. "'Very well, then, I will sue you,, sit.' "'That is your privilege. air.' "'And 1 will get a judgment, ten; said Guyer angrily. "'You will get more than that, Mr. Guyer. responded Beau calmly. 'You will get yourself laughed at by the en- tire country for being so foolish as to imagine that you could collect a bill from Beau Smith. Pray do not sub- ject yourself to snob ridicule.' "Guyer hesitated; he knew he would be laughed itt unmercifully by every one, and. thee, too, be could not help but d'dmire the eolossut check of Smile, so he sat down again and ilt n fresh cigar. N;', Smith; said he, 'i (1 tell yeti •wbat 1 will do, !f yeu will move over to the City hotel and piny this sumo game on old man Barnum I'll give you a receipt to full for all that you owe nae and say no more about it. "`Becetpt the bill, Mr. Guyer; an- swered Smith coolly. '1 had bceu stop- ping with Mr. Barnum for a month prior to cowing to your house, and ha also promised to give me a receipt in full for what I dived him if I would move icer here and play the sante trlek on you: "—PUUudelphie Ledger, Dry' Gleaned Them. --' "Why Is your graudpn's Mee bantl- ngosi1" asi:s the Indy next done'. "lie was sleeping In lids big chair," explains tbe ilttlo girl, "and Willie turned the nozzle of the raenum clean el' against his wtstsltsirs "—Life, ..*" And Pools Web Silent, T'i 'e reek'-1 really thibk, my dear, flet Miss Brown wiil make our son a good w11e, , Mrs, l'ectt (saappity) -• And what see do you know client good wives?•—Deaton Transcript. '.i'wo•thirds of life are spent in beet Mug end the oth;x titins le repeat ing,—tloitimetra • Home 'MING 10 the way to ; et.O Money Dressand Weal Try it I Simple as Washing with ONE WWEfon AL KIN DSoverlo: JUST Ttna1K OP IT riyoa Wool. Cnuan. Silk or Mixed Goode Perfectly with the SAXE llye--Ido chance of mintokes. not 0041ihoantnul Coloro le cent., from your Druggist or Dealer. Send for Color e:ord und STOV.Y D000ll. 76 Which is Your Coke ? Sloppy, leaky wooden troughs, or clean, durable Concrete ? Wooden drinking troughs are about as reliable as the weather. They are short-lived and require re- placing every few years—not to mention continual patching to keep them in repair. The best of wood cannot withstand, for long, constant dampness and soaking. Its tendency to rapid decay soon shows itself in leaks and stagnant pools of water around trough. Contrast with this the durability cleanliness and well -ordered appearance of Concrete. • The dampness which destroys lumber only intensifies the strength and hardness of Concrete. You can impair a wooden trough with comparatively little use; but it takes a powerful explosive to put a Concrete water tank out of business. • Which is your choice--expense-producing Wood, or money -saving Concrete? We'd be glad to send a copy of our book, "What the Farmer Can Do With Concrete,"—Free—if you'll ask for it. It tells the many uses of Concrete in plain, simple language—tells how to make Earns Hens' Nests Stables Cisterns Hitching Posts Stairs Dairies Horse Stocks Stalls Dipping Tanks Houses Steps Foundations Poultry Houton Tanks Fenco Posts Root Cellars Trona ho Feeding- Floors Silos Walks putter° Shelter Walls Well Curio Ca da Ce ne t Co. 15511(04 30-35 National Batik Building, Montreal ,..ra ossa aar.tsauannaa ltepas) 1