Ontario Community Newspapers

Milverton Sun, 26 Nov 1896, p. 4

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

ieee She stairs ; AS GOOD AS Sears ee Well Bete t Zriend of mine, and Lm dat’ sheeeey aon of of his—or these words causes our mouths to water, he he to moment like * “2 fanaa. fa, ons proper mothoda of serving an elaborate di me eS 58 ie m have a ae with him now—at fa fair lench: terness; like Pore anes. oe vandered sect that ay Dona, Rarfrae’s mans Pisrvies business as ee as one 2 home atinosobere, the a so “ His re of fa Corporation did nof. ae “iy "ear Stas: ‘they bad vot ene dow1 v There came a niet which ties been they fe pederng profited by this (ee as pease be prepared before Thanksgiv- i fel But there nothing is ee yates aoe they! i feta cas aus ur Be cam burnt a “Hight 3 ‘all Diane. Ina ba or ly the | pest ae, when every mom- eo int. iting oe too es and oan eee lave the Anat coat the pudding chop- per Bue ise? ey ie feast bit beyond er aad ce “No. r have promised him nothing.” “Good. I peers wish you not to see ne : wise jee a ps htfal Tipeet too— ah . thougk it and then said, Patio if you mae, wish oa a or ighiteen Yeats of silence on your wife's ay ede fone usage and - ‘method i in| er near “So ti | 2. Sree those letters eS eee (An apron Bblkablo tor aready’ botmsions | One would almost have supposed Hen- Soe Ot oe Porn son oe et te souls, don’ t Metres ieee fort sshoulda't nd chat je S [ay a noe pee ae 3 sheerfal as you can for my aiabothe sS the Mayor’ all domestic finesse of that kind he was ttling articles belonging 5 me, shpule. fe h|is merely a square press with the full- hea forgetfulness, ‘To this eat ma ay of SDpEr, a sons, takers ywritten in the first abandon-| oj on a spe ing. e lower edge of the said peed. nich | An ete Experts iment on Three Dogs ly. relati I hope wa Mae something Ton me. e Tshall see wi retuin through ceases and Bud-| across the top of ae sliouta be 4 ese dis vorder 6 sic vag buy a trai was senate as large, and vith his wae ‘Well, poor soul; she’s helpless to hinder that sh anything, now,” answer the Saree erry oi the. blossoms ae I tee Title Mente me ways al be y the Boral “design, © conventional pat- ‘or! ‘But most probably luck fea Hee el ly oa effectively. Reet pate the Gaetan Character i: tones nd dark y being, who pe a ‘of vulgar’ ‘men without light ve a _|have looked in vain for a Profitable i otis ao Z pert feat ‘he young nce own. ake no ae ae to ait that in "that only is ot who Tait to find a Bad ioe thew ussians opened a aol dance wedding- tie Zoological ae of the South rare the wat Hee in. Ellzabeth’s ear ear ‘oaly > A the Pee ueyeaiat © ae is adapt- Sie cenenieenren ce counted for = it one's CHILDREN’S GOSSIP. Most children, unless constantly re- may ers encourage it by Bae their children to do so, or in listening to If the little ones were told that mother does not care to hear what Mrs. md-So said di ble al , hoi o ho acl who would otherwise st is a perfect huisance to its mother’s friends and nei It listens to conversation hich is mé t for it al when it finds eas has ready lis' “Ss if » fragments of gossip, Seats eens eae ed is reache A fle should discourage before any edibles are served. If there if are girls or boys in the house, get them to cut branches of red and Shes a if Age a thing etn exists. y beat utiful its ae a ee ie Hig the ib ed on the teas eo tes rnside: think adds fo the friend- ly feeling of a family din WAY TO BRUSH THE HAIR. “The proper way to brush the hair,” onda of the hair, if it is long enough, and simply scrub the scalp with the brush. This process promotes the elx- beer poe te ae brushed in this tyres | it should be then finished.” with a Fancy | vigorous strokes lengthwise of the y sai air. DON'T ATTEND BARGAIN SALES. The royal family never shops. The daug ea Si mater- ials ae es from samples and water- color dra From these _pietures POWER ke HABIT. it Habit Really & By way Meee Si ease 5| Vestigator recently placed in seperate and specially prepared kennels a num- ber of dogs which were just old en- | ough to care for themselves. For each) dog he chose a single occu- jeep. ae oes Hoge number eemeg re killed and their brai sabe S gla“ eseaaation, In thi which had been Be é his | bark, tat Ses of the brain was found to be most developed he agency of which the special act re- quired bes the dog had been perform- If for no other reason, the above ex- periment is interesting because it helps @ what habit is, how it is formed, and better still, how it may be broken or at least in check. 1 repetition enabled the log: e proficient in some one act. Continually working in a ceri direction and dwelling upon a given line | Tittle by | ttt a ee stron Yinolble habit is formed, which ats jomina’ be to rout. But what if he will is and the habit deeply. in hed? Tf w Mar ts experiment Sea apeaore san perceive that re ther way in which we can work, a way which promises better re; sults. If ‘brain can be developed e ion, it can be in another. i ible, by continued and diligent application in another, and as far as possible, oppo tion, to counteract, the influence ce already : lished in alg rain by a given uae able habit. PRACTICAL FARMING. EARLY PLOWING. ‘We always make it a point to plow for spring; crops as soon as the frost is out of the Beas a it is ats enoug! writes O. J. Vine our well- Salas w can edin very early. We aie e “pave our fields half plowed or more before the neigh- bors begin. Last spring we commenc- ed plowing a clover sod for ensilage to plow again ae March 1 SL. The tefore preparation for planting besin: ‘he freezing will make it more friable re planting, as ad- voeate and practice. By being plowed early, ain will settle and compaci and the 2 easier. Plowed thus Ane it will usu- ally be sufficiently firmed without the teams—a fact which we as well as the teams appreciate. It is also cooler early easier than ae Another advantage in early plowing tillage, With the first crop destre ‘oyed there is usually but little eae in it with a Kemp manure spreader, the remainder with a slea wnen the ground is covered with snow. In the latter One vantage in soiling 3s ed in the field in which 1 plowed thus early last spring. A crop of clover ha: have. Vetncially with cattle or horses. We gradually drifted into the soiling dull c always aid aampan attention, “If. is Gnatter of time nd a comparatively short time, too w When the maj jority of farmers 4 Star ing: ing is reduced to a greatest difficulty is ing ers to try it, Doe continue in it until accustomed to it. ‘There is a great deal in being ae seamed > anyenl ing. It nul ne: takes a few years to get the fu orn, that by soiling, + shoe poegie never gets so hard that it cannot ee. be ot gets | of no difference how dry it may be, they ill ‘in to think i fsa Aas overestimated. ae der or circumstances. only “ orts from the cattle’s cribs, net ae ABOUT SOME RICH BABIES — |: as the cattle would not eat, Coy shat LITTLE FOLKS WITH SLATHERS OF GOOD MONEY. ful sources of weed-sowing, aod ee From ey as wee Per Year Necessary mnt Ohio F ae te nS Kind of bedding that one ay ing fa somenbet upon the. thaterials that 2 are ials many, and, witha so very common, ane fasidentay, on how much money 10 or ite id proportion o of from ee to $25 per week. access well satisfied vith the sum total of a. be- hind the cattle sben iain stalls. “have leaned Ww: sverything and Seek out, es stable, wore as Pose is hig sien ta they sles ae ie with mably ind? Happily, it is not.bard to answer the question, for ae important cases vor! lee one state” ie pees “eveling 6 of rou hb Courts, bya? throw y aeaterab's tight ‘Ar amen fey Mastonald § oe Stable is concerned, Dut. itis very ge ‘a ory ist he, land. owing to acids con- v : t it af is pled to the sol ond where sw oneal Ss dente was cs mnie to , Bliss ae ‘There < ree Rete oe favor of PROMISES oa Bae SUPPORT. eee to d| WILL HELP BON aS TO KEEP AWAKE. |* Drowsy Worsnipners rs Bese Over ‘a New |Goi esti ott i “other te “ute fellow, Wi Siam at, “enole ae Great Mar- ine WAL THE LAST BLAST peda AR. fier the death of the chit ee Bd i Revealed the cngees sue the World 2 i ias Ever floor the rae are oe. by hot air anette side chambers, the alesis, 22 ee Dire thecal in ah coma article in the world of its a the paths searretes oe the currents o! the fami | biasts were workmen sources oe heat “be, ie Sees surfaces | ? tus glol re lus, all wor-| ordered to prepare to blow a corner off on in one's conservatory, the gigantic body of rock in which the dia ap an. te neiehboashoad oft abencaols lee acetal wean tnreior ‘home, Another lovely hardy foliage plant is the taurea ragusina, ee silver} the mine over to NADA aUENES ily utify their rooms in} Pathette het = the ne Deacation of Rider winter with foliage [ngs sere # rr canaries, = Latext or| Rider ead dedicates tits latest children, palms require a| novel, “The Wizard,” to “Nada Burn« time for becoming naturalized and ie? who ‘bound all to her,’ and while ler father of the Ingabo regiment, perished of tha’ pat Pa AIARS, of war at Bulawayo, May. will often enough droop| 2%, 1 jickness On this dedication hangs one of the home-si and like young animals or birds, plants | most pathetic stories of South Afri ily i others |iife. Fred Burnham, the American advisable | Scout who killed the salabele pripet told this story recently to a-| Mlimo, with | friends in Pasadena, Cal, where he a ‘The ca selection is | Now staying. rubber tree,| Nada Burnham was the first aus Fiscus elasticus, is Maat “tho florists ee born ea ‘alowayo, pear an big pot of mites el ‘Oh Aa died | Base eo hard-~ zebra, (plan Hulalia japonica zebrina), | Ships when the town was besieged by. ees you can tell by its ae lovely | BAtives. ‘The Burnhams were in Mat- savas that |abeteland, the country described in Gi ily, be-| When that work appeared. Mrs. Burn~ a 2 be are hardy, easily kept hs ham was so impressed with the beauty a & 5 the nam y where |in the native tongue, that she named burned, Where an occasional pipe beby. etter, and where there | &4F4's novet urn for so much sturdy | Little ‘Nada, having this romantic die: t have not only| tinetion, naturally qeae 2 s spe! ‘ter the heroine in cae ° a large frame structure in center of the town, while the men y defended e | the haager. sami these| All fad to live on beef, meal and we , and many fell il umonias Use ese was bab} da. am succeeded i hing Bulu- ‘them, on oat Orie rough tele | ats tose with oxvaues oo. the ridden chill often blasts an other- Neath, ‘he fittle one was already too : Ww, nig] the ees ‘and cover the portieres, when that Burnham was tne oe Senos ot ‘he should be of some pat heavy dark stuff to keep out the light, da that the Burnhams renewed ac- t z obacco. smoke. Crecteneat ith Rider Haggard. The laggal the for the night novelist ‘affected by. tant as possible from | fate of the 2 chi soca ts dedicated Ta ar es ee to her cast fatest novel of African life, The see ARE is the most: size. Eight years ago, about the time -room, | the ps ‘Trust was formed, oy is sup-| me leased a diamond mine awart Runbertey. On the day the peg {iia| minaied an Engiish nobleman visited the mine. In order to show him how a he wi re Work had practically been stopped, and the sy) cherie is ready to, turn successors, w! the hibition to please the is hose cee above are en-| After the blast was fired the men clambered over the shattered pieces. of ” stone to see the effect of the explosion. was the plowing easier, but the prepar, noi ation for planting also. Ib did reak up 3 peace today. On toe contrary it was fine oe friable. THE BEDDING SUPPLY. Coat stabled.. Such a sup} not a little to the comfort of the stock, ‘and therefore to its thrift pier ee tot and eos a little to the re heap, for while ee in ie very great deal of in Your sgh paper “Hour taal reet, and 3 of fo ano hese chidren are about 9 Seen ot he: its its being: led eee to ae sete of heat, pie, is generally ‘A correspondent of the Trish + more open than the other, and Sete difference is in the field. He noticed ay wana hiro apertures in the lantern that ‘crowns the edifice. ; to reach the end Eausaested is to draw aS of-straw now and then if he ; Awful Fate Sometimes Met by Travellers in Manga an skeicton has been found in one of the fissures of the Ademeilo glacier, in ht fers 1 a aerarat it ee eave Se i int * b — i Ka hardiy| ‘The edible white snail is ecientiiclly Mrs. Comehome: You ad Bis are a yw do you} known ie ag fas Teng length low? Then the largest brilliant In the world was ‘The next day other men took posses- sion of the mine, and it has has been work eds dnd ever since, but it, has “ie duced no more exceptionally | ar ‘The diamond was 7s gi the body, ecstsior, and peice to eapet the ears are proiay Os alike ‘han any other. Stif a differen oad Bo. it ie -yathe othel. parts of ie the Piven aber oe in. the rumors were untrue. The s has ae pu it, and no offer has mate for it soho fede ‘no- a eee ae value of a dia~ Tae will or weigh is gen ond ie ie “They aT. that Steet ee 9T1 carat hab-| pound, at esent—after | some years foodie was, much 1a) NANSEN'S WIFE. hand) ‘Mrs. Nansen, wife of the famous Arc- ae Tread ot ot the land before See

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy