Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Northern Advance, 20 Apr 1905, p. 7

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vvwv From the Freridh of That iellow Yves had neye; '_klI_0VV`l`~';. what it was to have a mother or. 0.. mther. much less a _ s_i'ngleU.-frignd. with himthe most importgnt Igot; was that he was strong; his` two a,~m.~; were all he _h_ad to keepihigni from starvation. "He was handsome...` tu: me did not know it.` nor would he have cared if he hadknown it; has regular features _and proud car- gngc told of noble blood. rrn,,. v...,... :.. um nzlnam. hnfoci m... In the Kitchen CUT Fl.OVVERS-R~scs. Carnations, Violas. ' etc., fresh every dav. B0uqnet.-Butt n- hole. Hand or Corsage. Funeral Tokensin any designs V VEGETABLES- Celery, Crisp and Tender; Letiuce, Cabbage, Parsnips. Beets,'Carrots. etc. ` SEE DS-Flowt r `Seeds, Vegetable Seeds,Plan ts and bulbs. WM. TAYLOR MONKMAN S onus STURE UOIIU 52116. Dr. -Caldwell s experience in the woods taught him long ago the wis- dom of conservative forest manage- ment. Thirty years ago, when he came into possession of a tract about 700 acres near Paducah, he sold a` quantity of timber for wagon stock. At that time forestry in that coun- try .was virtually unknown. Dr. - Caldwell. however, was sufficiently foresighted to allow no trees to be out except those which he selected. {He went about in the woods and {picked out trees whose tops and gen- geral ape earance_ showed they had passed t eir period of greatest vigor, and trees which interfered with pro- mising young growth. His `forest I has =been culled a number of times in the past thirty years. but so wise- {ly has the cuttings been done that _ the land will average from 110.000 to 15.000 board feet per acre. 'I`hn snag an nvnnrinnmq in fnranfriv SEED s"roI=2E: E Telephone 15. the privilege` of removing what he wanted and leaving what he did not "want. He took the choice trees, but left a considerable amount standing. -In 1870 I sold `the timber from the same tract. and -got Ifor it $2 a tree. The purchaser removed an average of three trees per acre. In 1884 I sold the timber from the same tract for the third time. and got for it as much as I had received at the se- cond sale." 'l\.. I`..IJ..u-`I19.-n nnnn v-Innnn :n .``\n \ TRADE Mums Dasnous COPYRIGHTS &c Anyone sending a sketch and descri tion may quickly ascertain our opinion free w ether an invention is probably patentable. Communion. lions strictlycondentml. Handbook on Patent sent free. Olest acency for securing patents. Patents taken through Muna & Co. rece1vt Ipecial notice. without. charge, in the Q -9 4 AAASQZ A. 'l"AAAAAA:A.AAA 1U,UUU 110 .lD,UUU uuaru LUUL 1101. (1011:. This was an experience in forestry which has amply justified itself. and shows how a shrewd. far-sightefl man may. even without technical.ad- vice. secure good `returns from his woodland without xmpairmg. `its .p_ro- dslotixe: Y,a1I3.:I:und. W.hl.!!B p`x:ttngz`=-hIm- ". ` ` J. 01:12, suxnmcr afternoon Margar~itQn.. L-M` pitcher .-poised. upon her ` bread, \'.;1~` 1'u1lowi11g Lhe ,narrow path that 14:0. to the spring, when` she heard WUVUVV-C4-V w ----v- A handsomely llluatrated "weekly. izlnzlaat: c::. cnlatloxr of any scientic ournnl. Terms. 83 a year: four months. 8]. 80 d by all newadealen nnnun 1| 1|. __-_ . , ||____ |'__; cunauuu u; an; -.~ - .....- -..-.__..- (our man Hi. 51. So'ld nibdide URN & 0u.36w~=-v- New jgri Branch Oice. 625 F St.. Washington. . An admirable food, with all its natural qualities intact, tted to build up and maintain robust health, and to resist winter's extreme cold. It is a valuable diet for children. EPPS S COCOA pecuu nonce. wxmout. cuarlwo in MN cjentic Hmerican. . _ _ _ . ......\.. n1....o-mom-I -u-naklv Ln I-cant. 9-- VANILLA. for ice cream, for instance BAKING Pownuz. for cakes. ARE INEEDED EVERY DAY FLORIST AND SEEDSMAN. oz DUNLOP-ST. BARRXE. No Breakfast Table complete without The Most Nutritious and Economical. GO TO THE NEW /.AND-I 155 Dunlap-St. Barri }1(:!dT!_:},_', his [valet bI'1..lSh0S, ; (2I'.l`(IA;' I . ._ ' `1 Yuuu;.r `ludyf I beg` and entre-at you to r<:muiu.just, where you are,1 mxhoux moving, it only for an in-. . m . I In `Ul::dl~_\', ysaid Mar;;ari_t0n, `blush-1 11.; 1'o. . . '`h<- pzplntcr immediately `disappear-` rd n-mm his canvas, and thqbrushg ~ z"e<-w ms: as he worked; Halfan. J.-uur lzatcr he "asked his model to in- >141`. his first sketch. = : .'\I;n`g';1x`it0I1 hastened to his side. hm` stronger 'tha,nV he!` J<.1r. A; the sight of `the canvas" on the easel she stopped short.iI} I(r(n~'.;zcy, without `a word to expI`G88 1:421` mgnurous admiration. ._ Ah, my beautiful stranger! This -xumns ahe salon _for me, cried.the zH'ti*.~t, enthusiastically. Tell me.- will you come back to-zbnorrow at this saxnc time?_ `And what is your- '1:.'uu(e 3" I V T ' . The next day Mar.garitonV was Mompt at the meeting.` She had not -"Amid anythirig `to Yves of-her'oha'nce vncounter with the _stranger, nor of her promise. Not that she 1_feflt that she had done wrong. but from fa Quick. instinct of prudence. as if it l - - 4irl[' I\I.-n'i__ar1ton.. rP11d- -the 8 ' _ % din .,-1..Vl,V'. as she nodded he hea c (m >11-n t . -~. . A-mun`. `articles which last so MUCH Loncm for pry- ]F - , portiomtely was Momsvgj W ':Wf3V". ,vou'are we"do-1' to the old `Ity.le...'ao'gg'y 1 9 Pal`. Wgnahuve one with n. hoops. \_vhiqh..i_u_e. - ` ```1 ` COYDB 03. when you own, (0; t11_s'.da;*nei.`. m,6xiey._W Drucu e . __ T -_ 1|; _ J, |_,. H. _I I `Y ' - ,_ ELECTRIC WELDED STEEL- _;1R1s1.iHo9pes1..;A-VP ~ and TUBS, \\ hich are gixql-1_1f;_Agg',,.:FIRM~n6d't`:: l`if;nnL9 - -uBv Luvs: ..- ~-.- The "men in t'l'1;:"vil~lage"hated. um 'l;cc;1u5e he was a stranger,_andb.f muse \his courage was greater than tl{e1r own. and they were jeAaloua;, uuu .lUl' ditions? % ALWAYS AND EVERY `gum Em CATCH ON! ~wHv` Bu ckeu an A TALE or sAoit11-'1c_E; ~ WHY` BUY Wonnx Bucket: and Tubs when you can get: - - ' A E- 3. unvjs_ were a presentimeut_ of` the pain "she ~_migh`:oause -her brother. vlt '-was ethe'fir_s't~-secret there` had ever been between them.- 7._' | A week passed. and` still a.-xknxithex-._!` week. and if the portrait had not' advanced` it was d_ii fere1_1tewith th,e .; friendship `between the artist and_`_, his model. Friendship? Nay. Jean .j Vermeuil knew `well enough it was ` no mere feeling -of friendship that `made-his heart. beat so'har.d at the sight of the -beautifultgirl. .. | `I1 - I___-j I , `iii; .1'&e1"13e}'CvEH.1{u'}'i;S stream ` @ of his being. and `resolved that.'; _qould he win her love. he would ` marry .hcr. But what` oi herbro-? the_r Yves.- to . .whom -,Margarviton `: owed such a debt of gratitude ? What ._would he Tsayf ` mu. __2|| _ _ . _ ._ _._x__- 1...: u_@._'-_-_ 1: n uauvuu yves .lived in a stone cabin i.thb.t` -he had built himself. -]_)urVi ng._=_t.h`eT w;nu_-r, when the fishing season was .__..I Ln nnvuuvnai I:in' hannu nun] -- q--wv -_v- w--- -.v _u-vyva I The viUa.ger's. who" had known_ from the - first. of the meetings at the spring. -took care -that Yves" should. not be left in ignorance.` What terrible vengeanoe would the `_ hated Ywes. they asked one another. take .upon the .,`pa'inter9- They did not know. but they awaited the out- burst-of his wrath with a cruel anxiety. . | 'I'I-_L LI____- But therewwas no signfon his face. whatever ._he` may have felt; Only that night. after-he h-ad kissed Margariton good.-night. the young girl heard `him {toss uneasily upon? his rouigh eoueh before she went happily to sleep. ' t ` '- 'The next `d-ayhis mindpwas made. up.` In the .afternoon. .when' the. young girl went singing `to yethe. trysting place. Yves.` hididen among` the "rocks. was present.` at the meet- ing.` Not a detail of the pretty eouxttship escaped his jealous eye- `the warm hand-olaspsan-d the tender- glances which. `better than words, lb!ei'.l'8'yOd their passion. L_.J __ -.;.. L'.-__I .'_\_- I_!LL_... _!,._\. Wwrv --v w-- w.--.. Arid no one hg;;`:iw:i:.l'J9 -bit.1 ;e.r.sigh when Margariton. radiant in the "wonderful. happiness of fbeinngn loved dise. to her. cried: by v`the manwho made earth` a para- Is our \' "I must tell my brother Yves that you want to marry me; me. a poor girl. penniless and without educa- tion! He _w_i|l be glad. for. he loves me. and I love him, too. but not as tl love you, Jean. my beloved! `T__.... I_._.I -L-___-.I ____..sI-. J--_`_.. 7 .res isharigeriv greatly vduringi the last weeks. He no longer ate or slept. and his eyes burned strange : ly in his pale face. M-argariton. in her happihess, did not` see the change. nor `did she :notice, when she took her `brother's hand in hers, and told 3-him her secret, that he "braced `himself against the waiito keep himself from falling. "You _ love him. and you `ask. my] consent. Margari-ton ?" Yves `asked, ~hoarscly. "You are free, li'tt\l:a one, to do as you will. but I am t'gmti'- lied that -you did not forzget me ut- f;seArly.i- You are the one being` on earth `_that.I love; you know it well, and your happiness is `all I seek.', Marry st_heA man you love. little one;` be nhappy lalwaysf . ` ' ` 7,,.__ ,I_...] A` 'I,___. ,1 ._,IJ '__ H1.-- w`-`.'1:.1-xis is`I'o_r your wedtiing dre-ss,` "he qsaid. "1 have had it ready for I you :a long time. T ' fI'\`l..._- L A I-_... l_!..... ._ ..L.I_;` `Sitting proudly erect in_h'is boat: balancing easily with` the rise a.-ndi `fall of the waves. a single fisher- d mail was darkly outlined against the sunset`-colored waters of the bay. Alone upon the beach. Jean Verm- cuil watched him in admiration. -_ 1 I "What a splendid fellow. he cried.i `I must ask him to post; for` xpe some day. . . , ./ I-In umrnhnrl fha Tlwnaf n-Hdn nnslv ._v ...--`-`v`, _ -v. w. Yves .p}acedwz;bag of `gold in her hand. - A` -`sun - signals of farewell. `l'lJ` , _, __ __JI_, .,--- -. ---- Then. `\\'iaLh""z'1"long kiss on girl's-L;f=o`rehead,' Yves went. out, this "time he did not turn to -___L '-_ 'I,"..>I_ v],; yyg; V - o - x - - - w g . -v `at an end, he {carved li_l;'t;le iJ:8:l:-:'i"a:!`1't;; playthings that -he sold during the n-:<'a.~iobn to the tourists; And because .1, never spent his money in` getting drunk at the tavern. the villagers called `him stingy. V . One evening, it was three years after .1110 rescue of the scho6ner,_e.. -Yves `was alone in his ea"bin. when :he heard feeble -cries outside his door. It was in winter. and a cruel nur;h wind was making the snow- Afligkrgs dance in great white` swirls on the cold -beach. __........J Lin A4.Am- -sauna uuy. _ -. /- e watched the boat glide easily upon the surface of the water. car- ried by the` current out [toward [the open sea and to the heart o-i.the ; golden sun. Soon the man was but` `a black dot on `the horizon. Then !he disappeared forever. , I is one to be nfrald of-;.-thwdro in danger in it. Yu can cure it quickly with Sh!- `A'- - .'A--____._-A.I'g f--_.- `l'Si' 'E:$'t:'2T:'x}3I>u'6x3"2:T:}'. tho_ Lung Tonic`. .. Your money back it It doom : cur , YOU. ` an A Cough that .25 cm. so comma $1.00 Hangs-On % ' A ._ % An I :)`1,)'e;1e:1wl;i"s' V door. Crmljdhedl upon the sill he saw a womanwaud a little girl huddled closely together and moaning pitifully. Yves carried them into the house and. piling the wood upon the fire. prepared-a great \ bed of seaxvegd for them in one cor-1 nu`. ' l I _ _-_-_....... 1.-.! ..-.l-`C--....I` J.-- .-t-he but - her | LI-IV .ll.|lI'.lI. WU! AIDE. . ` .|f He was the first Marquis of Laris- gdowne. and hedied in. 1.805; of him [ our Di_zzy"wro".e fifty` years later ` that `:He was the first great_mu_1i,s- _ter who comprehended the rising i__m- l portanoe oi `the (middle olasse.s.'.?, ; : Beizxveen himand our -Foreign Minis- mter comes. of-`course. the Lord L_ans- Iidowne. who was Chancellor of the _'jExo~hequer at the age of 26.,and was ` ,- _for 50 years onewot` the most prom; ,: -inent W-big statesmen of his time; . He was grandfather -of the present I peer ;, and with the abolition oi. slav- , erjy. of acivil _and religious _d.sa:bi._l-' titles, `of arinding protection. his name will a ways tbehonoraoly asso-V c-iaxed. _Bo much for the ereditary 1 tendencies of the Foneiga Minister _iot to-`day. . - - . - ; Thar nu }\'n frulninrr 'l`hn.ra in psvapui. jI.u.uu. -, . o_ . . .V. '1`:-u_e atategmaqshrp as ajblend of henednty and; tramme`: it rs nexther |an'msunct nor a trzck. Lord Lana- downe, cam clanm a. rare pedrgroe I01` gthe `qualities which are now at the ghsposal dofrthe nation. A statesman" _ In mg day (1057) was that Frtz-0cho._ who crossed from ormandy_ and gamed the ear or E wardthe Con- -Ie_ssor. `From him descended _a ~ arr or grandsons who sailed to he and w:1'c-`h "Stron bow." and there1 -ound- ed 1!. he 1`-am: ies of Fitzgerald and Fatzmaurxce. A statesman. too. was |'hat. F1tzmaurice.awho' succeeded as second Earl of shelburne. and who held the "offzces of Secretary of State and Prxme Minis-zer "when George `the Third'was- King. ~ -' "Q was I--he Hy-at Mnrnnuiu nf T.a_ ' few men 'ire irr~pl4acemble in \kth.i;sw,orld; ;hut I verily rieliev that Lord Lana-downe is one or` the three men inqispensable zo1En.gland at the present `Mme. ` - 'I`wI'In drntanrnnndhin {as a `Hand `hf on `cu-may. .. _ _- ' - -' [I What 01 ha` training? There IS 5 not `roomto s` ak of his career at -: 'E':on andat alliol College. where 1 !h':s scholarship. and-- -his popularity 1 `were equally. remarkable. Au . -the age of 21 (he succeeded to the riches 5 J and responsilbilizies of his house. and three years later joined. Mr.` Glad-I [stone's Government as a junior lord. ` got the treasury. In 1872 he .was ' promoted to the Under Secretary for War; in 1880' he became Under _See- I retary for India. for a short time; i but reqigned his office on the in- -troduction of a somewhat revolu- tionary. measure `connected _wi_th .Irish administration.` For th_.s m-i dependence of judgm-en-t he did not sut'er-few men do suffer ior it. 1:. they would only `believe it--and Mr; Gladstone. appointed him as Viceroy or C-anada_-to -succeed the M-arqu.s` of Lorne. in 1883. ` _ To vthis da that viceroyalty IS -I..4._!..`I..4..I -..:.-. ~l!....I2........ All ..l.p.n... nvl` U! IJULLIV. In 1000. vthis day` cherished wit "feelings of dee fection for -both Lord and Lady downe. who won their way tar into at- the hearts of the warm-souled, people Nor was his tenure ofv 01` Canada. otfice without its historical land- marks. for it saw the completion of the Canadian Pacific Railway. and the crushing of Riel s rebellion, in which campaign Lord Minto .(just_re- turned from Canada himself as vice- roy) played an important role. ing `these years of his first great responsibility another` changes took place at, home-lthe introduction of the home rule scheme--which must have added to thelperplexities of so grave a charge as the government of Canada. But Lord Launsdowne did not hesitate to let it -be known that he dissociated himself from the home rule movemenz. and in 1888 he re- turned (on, the. comple.tior.i Off his term) as :1 Liberal Unionist to Eng- land._ At this point it may be said that his training ceased. though no- body who knows Lord Lansdowue s intinite caacity for taking paizns will expect im to admit it. Tho name nan-r ha urns: nnnninfnd hv is ' 8318- ` Dur- l V111 ULRUUU LIILLI LU ilullllla I`-0. . ` The same year he was appomted by of Viceroy of India, the most pre- cious -that the crown can offer. and the east fell prostrate before the double "charm to which the west had: already succumbed. His administra- tion will -be remembered as a time of comparative rest in _that distant empire..as a period of wise and bene- ficial. reform. and as the inaugura- tion-pf a policy of closer. relations `with the frontier tribes, which has borne tgood fnuit in the yaars since I'\IE'.` . Lord Salisbury `to the grand position . past. ` I .How few vloeroys have returnd home tohold o;{f.ce at.all com ar- able to that which they occupie as director _of the Indian empire! Yet such has (been Lord Lansdow-ne s qualification, and after a period of two years repose he once more ac-. cepted office in 1895. as Secretary of State for oWar in the first Un.iq-.m- ist. coalition ministry. To- this I` have alread alluded; and to he sue.- oessionto ord Salisbury as Foreign Minister. 1:11 this office .he has. ma truth. 1'ulfrlled a. mission of peace; and. whatever f_ault may be laid to thecharge of the present ministry. the whole country unites in prais-_ ing the conduct of our foreign air.` airs. , ' 1 \7:.J- neg-nlu 1' Arm` `Wanna-Inunrnn nnu-nu} PS. Yet surel Lord Lansdowne must`. sometimes. ream of repose. after 35 years of public life. ofwhich the last 20 have beenstrenuous emough to` satisfy even President Roosevelt. He must sometimes long for leisure to dwell undisturbed amid the art trea- . sures and books at Lansdowne House, 1 to Tish once more at his Scottish L--A Am Ll-Inns fl`:-nus `IL incur` 1-An 3oooooooooo6o5oo` on I E 'II,, V 1 Knows mm._ `iulmg auu. UUUK5 ut. IJIluf\_lWLlU ..QUU;'5U_. ' more has home on_`the Tay. to tend his'beauti- tul troygwal vgaxjden at Derreen. and to shoo the `s ant; woodcock ior which Count err_y 15 famous. ~~ 1 T.nv-A `Lona nunmn In a nnnv-l>annnn nu. VVLIIULI uuuxu. 1301.1; ID J.au.IUuu- Lord Lans owne 18 a sportsman as. well as a statesman. and an enthusi- 4 astic amateur of art and gardening ' ;to ?boot. Few men are so.popular__` ,and few `so able; both virtues. are. linimioal to any chance of retirement `into the repose of private life. Pro- lgheoy is `always dangerous; but. as. hings are going now. it would not| be outside the region of possibility if ' a. central party of moderates" were lsomeday formed; and in it I seem ' tosee -the dual o_ontrol of two states- -men. fboth residean-ts in Berkeley 8 uare. whose olitical ._sa.1on is [pre- sl ed over by t e, beautifulmnd; gra-- cious. lady _of ' La`_nsdowne House.-' % London Daily Mail. ' ~ I {Grizzly Bears and Panthers} . "In the mountains of Wyomin -g._.` where I have hunted for years. `you can find almost an`y,'l:ind~of savage animal 'that`you get in America ex- cept alligators. Grizzlies, black bears . and mountain lions. are `commonly killed there. says Hugh Sniverly. of Sheridan. `Wyo. "Some of the men that .go out there to hunt think that izithey stir one hundred yards awayfrom cam they must` be_ armed ito `the. teeth` or -fear of being at-. itaoked by a . beargor a- `painter and i 1 killed. 'I`h_er_e's a, heap more danger `1 t of getVti`n'g;,k1,lled,on account -of leav;-i: inst`! an at hom.j"W.hn.y0\1.s9:r; `:i:`.d(__)%E `er et.rri'B.t:re1;~ .1-n;.a lbig cityu i *i" =si ' it hat;..asihngE you 11 less you unvu nun LU u.. . ` rI'v.e untedx through - t.he-`be_st _.d_is- .gme.. Jan ,th_e; gountgy. . `i ti, - :r`izz11ea..E; he go ,~::.=-t rigotpg 5! j m:mEaN'AmAxoE 1 =a'.e`r` a.mah. unless he was cgirnred . Ex1"iz`fz"l(;"1I':>` ayfgnelgf unlaon '%11 - ear.a vgrunf. something Bike that pf I %emam1_nol ;.h hog. pd thfn tlaert wxlli a mzg `y cras mg 0' un_ erh rus %_s he mafkeksi off 11111 the oppos1tXltllinec- ! xon as `gas as e _oa.~n_ go, "you- .*:?:e:: :emn:::::**;f's:t*%,.:::;:1:z i , -singed; If 'he has any idea _of-; : gomg afier you it mu_st be his m-`A: ' textltlllon to go atxilou-nd the `worhlh _and : ca c_ you m e rear. or 1 you I are sianding `to the east `of him he I is sure to go `due west`. ' .| I/I'nnnfnn Iinna ha `Han winter f'mn. Uh.` ` '-*5 :i_ .' T `1-. 5 6- "' " " ' '.:`~.A :-,2?-` 3 l:` `f""';; 51. . _._.r `-;' ("` fr, " :1-. y~{` ~ .~"' '1`. P .`=` `A ' ' we - `- =- ' V G Il'Q\III OWEC . ,. -I I . $2 -- ` 1 ..oiod% % O '..' W . H ' _ " ' >'. _ 0,! H % and then he would lift him up and? i Louisville Herald. y - WEB u_1`iv!_:u LU, UV5 crauuu. . I "Grizzlies are t e best game in t- e world. When you once get their d nder up they are savage fighters. `and the "hunterls life is in danger every minute unless he is a good shot and has a~steady nerve. If you ever get within reach of the %izzly s_ paw you` are a dead one.l _ese _8'L`0!`le8_ of men killing them! with knives in hand-to-hand fights` are about as unreasonable as 'it_ would. be to talk of stopping a loco-' t- b - - v`Areputation_-.for_ its toy industry, and '?:.:i;xeAIfv gt %igg. nfet ($vvlvag5'et`; trade, while in the Saxon 'Erzge- chance to -deliver one blow it is alliibirgey la diS';rit mParatiV`y 99" over. There was a r- l in naturahproductfs, the manuiac- way that the cow-bgylgzcballelg %1'u-"Wm 9: H3315 Elms likewise tgrl-sol?-e Ben, who killed about 150 steers be-' gm *"-"he `` 5`9 0. h`V," fore. he was finally "shot. He would: `I a -`t e . - -ants. . break a steers neck at one blown The toys made at Nuremberg and .Fur'.h are chieily of the metal vari- ety, made either .of tin. tinned sheet iron, or of tin and lead alloys. Of the more than 200 toy factor- ies .es_taiblished in both o:'i these ytowns. about `150 are devoted exclus- LL.. ....I.. has the world. for its toy dustry. and German toys. wherever made. still go in many countries by the name of Nuremberg. toys. `At Furth, which is close to Nurem- berg. a flourishing trade and in- du_stry has likewise sprung up since about the end of the eighteenth cen- tury. Next to Nuremberg and Furth the town and district oi So.ineberg long oeen Known Lu.l'UuguUuL trade and in- to thousands oi its carry _him off to some secluded place. G1_'izzlies_look awkward. but they are. m:ghty light on their feet. andythev can beat any man in a foot race. ...,...L I\` has for many years enjoyed the best` ID EH10 LU EU "HUB Wl53_L. _Mountain lions in the winter time wil_l_follow sleighs at a distance. wailing as they go. but there is no- thing in that to ins ire terror. for I don't think they ave ever bee-.1 known to close in on anybody. Their terror of human beings is the thing which makes them hard to shoot. In all the time that I h-ave been in the dmountains I have never heard of any one being attacked by, a wild animal that had been left strictly alo e. But I`ve known men to be kiled even by deer .when the brute was driven to, desgeration. I nl`!_!__.I!..... A..- L Irnn ronunnn :r\ i VVfMing to th Frnnns Advocate -about the ventation of ls stablem . . says: A . . _ _ _ . _.L..... ..t ...4-..-.4-`.lnl>3nn :u noixr .,. _...,... Our system of `ventilation is very simple, cosisting of ten hventilat-or shafts running from the ceiling of the istabie up to the peak and out through the root from five vents. The -shafts run up nearly to the pur- line plates._one on th'north s_ide and o_rie opposite on_ the south, crossing and joining to go out through the` roof. This is. a very simple system; of `taking off the foul,a'ir, and we` have found it to be entirely satisfac- .L..-... \Xf.n Lana nnwnr vat. had ant] Simple, CU-`iltlllg .UL lull _VUllLll_(l-L'\.I\L [homes . , IL ` ' ' '3 9 ~ the o1_ The Success of we Nuremberg and Stable P Furih metal toy manufacturers IS ve mainly attributable -to the skillful {manner in which the materials have `been employed and in which the ma- Rhine,-y and toms used .1'o.,~ um one opposite work have been adapted and gra'({ix- a'nd the $1135 imD!`0Vd `by the toy manuit . - . . . lturers themselves. thus enablng r' ,Th3 '82? -m,P3 .sy5'em l them to produce large quantities of 0 the f0111.aiI`. We/articles within a comparatively short time and to reduce the expenses of ftory. We -have `never yet- had any production, and in consequence. also _d0W draft. and-never haV8 We fa`-l_d.. the sale price of the articles manu- to I ind_' that a strong current; was `matured -by -them, running up. u u ` __..-m..----- `X711 rlnnnn nnhmlv nn Hm wmdmvs: i running up. . We depend entirely on the windows for the inlets. Besides the regular windows in `the wall, we have a w."m- down in e ch Idoor. Our doors are all on roller and "the window slides al- so. The windows in the wall are hinged in the centre. the top falling backward, -so `that we can allow them to be only `slightly opened. or we can put them back and allow an open window can 'a warm day. In cold weather we find that by having a few windows partly opened we get = plenty of fresh air. and also with th's draft is upward. style of window the to drive on the and has no tendency banks of the cattle. .-n...+ Hun anion!-ifin wnv .'In.n|:4\u-its `Backs 01 [Be cauw. I (believe -`that the scientific way would :be `to close the windows, and have -some. complicated intake that would su ply each cow with so many cubic .fee of air in a given time. I 'would'just say about this system ,that it works," and does it well. and-that if properly regulated our staale is very me from foul airs` and bad odors. With our shorthorn ;cattle .we do not desire tokeen the : stable so warm asesome of the dairy.-,! men would [wish for their milking` am. ` Ventilating Stables Red eatherl Ceylon Tea-.--the 20th centiary tga- lsells always at one price--_4oc. `per pound. `In the 17th century, tea, not `nearly so good, sold in England at 40 shillings a pound. ' 15-1 'I'.`-_-L-.. f`-_-1_.._ T`-_ 2- .'L. ._...g. ----- ..----1.J .--.....a. After this winter night .a new life? "megan for the lonely Yves. To him; Margariton became a- whole; family. 1 She was society, she was his dau.gh- % -tor, `his sister, his companion. his friend, she. was his idol, before whom M he pI`o.~'trated himself in perpetuat adoration ' o UH . . _ u .. ..v..o r\t\"`\!r\(I- inn n-nor` Fnv Recisyeaither eylon Tea is the sort you would want at any price. Blended by experts, it is put up in germ- proof parchment` packg.ges--never in lead. D1-_I__ F ____ Ann `N-:cvrsl1` t\d`I\ o\t\h mac d\I\CQI\lJ_4 AI'\t\ 40 Shillings for 40 Cents .....,.--..-..._.- r-.---f. -_ -_--- _ .__. Green or Mixgd,` one pri_cc- pound-440C. Get Red Feather in your cup. Some interesting particulars of lthe toy industry of Germanyhave {teen published by the British Consul .at Hamburg.` Toys constitute one of {the "most dmportant branches of |German manuiacture. In the year _1903 the amount oi` to s exported itrom all parts of the erman Em- l ire was 34,717 ions. yalued .at 13.931.370. ' Though there is hardly any 001131-` try in the world to which German` toys are not exported. the most :In-` nnn`anl- l!'l1`l n1'hO.T` nf Germanv `.18 C0yS 8115 HUI. UXIJUILUU. Luc u4uaL zuu-| Qortant customer of .Germany is treat" Britain, which. in v`the year under review. recpived 12.218 -tons. The second most xmportant market for German sioys us. `the United States. the exports to which am- ounted in 1903 to 11,055 tons, valu- ed at $4,093,135. Tho man} irnnnrfanf ' onnfrns I01`. ed at $v.uua,1ao. I ` The most important'centres for the manufacture of ,toys in \G.er- mauy are -Nuremberg and Furth. in Batavia, Sonneberg and some other parts 01 Thuringin and the Saxon Erz'eb.r::e. Nuremberg. above all, has ong `been known throughout - Ac. n....+1n mhinh in close. fn Nnram-I ants. toys VFurLh lety, gither .of.tin, `iron, 0: (`I5 LEA vv\t\v\n fhon fnv fnnfnr- e_iron,, 0'; tin and lead alloys. toy iies established both these ;`towns`. about 150 exclus- Vively to metal togs, the only part of them worked bx and nelng the final `painting, .while all the rest is manu- factured by- machinery. In this re- `-spect :this toy industry oi two .1)........:nn rnu.-nu nnnnnioq :2 rather gspect {IBIS toy 1uuua|.1__y U.L`L.ux: Lvvu 'B_avar1ap tovg'n_s occupxes a rather dziterent p_os1tx.on from that of all `the other parts of Germany, where it is almost exclusively carried on by manual labor-that is to say, by lworkmen and women in. their own" 1 homes. "I'\L..n nuunnnlsa l'\'F %]'\n N'nrnrnh0.rQ` and {J1/lg . But_thc woman had sufferedto long from the lack_ of food and the cold. Early the next.day she died. Then that fellow Yyos adoptedthe little gin). a frail figure of thirteen.` with big. pleading. brown eyes._- Her name was -Margariton. ` The present war between Russia and Japan seems to have demonstrat- ed that the old proverb Old man {for bouxisel, young men for war, does not hold good in these dayu, if it did decades and centuries ago. Von Moltke_was 66 years old when he overthrew the Austrians at Sa- daowa. and 70 when his genius tri- umphed in the Franco-Prussian war. Nogi is'54. Kuroki is 62, and Oyama. whose brilliant gene1`alsh,ip has over- whelmed the Russians in Manchuria, is 64; ' ' Dou-btless the great changes that` have come in the methods oi war- . `fare within the past half centuryi ` have tended to render the experience 1 and ripe jtidgment` of older men- more valuable than the dash of young men.` Alexander's f.irst great victory over Darius was won at the age of 24; Hannibal was commander- in-chief of the icarthaginian army at 26; Frederick the Great triumphed at Hohenfriedlburg at 33; Napoleon had conquered Italy -when 28. and won Austerlitz at 36. but lost Water- loo at. 46. Grantwas 42 when he - -`neoame lieutenant-general of the `Union armies; Lee was 51 at the time of the seven days battles be- .fore Richmond. which he directed. But on both sides. in the present war in" the East operations have been di- `rented by men past.-"middle age. ! An Early Experiment in For-: ` estry. 1 _ . (Canadian Lum-berman.) A - An interesting example of the pro- `_fit ,;of_' ognservative forest manage- =.,z_n-e'nt is furnished b `Dr. S. B. cald- m*ell.z-ofv_Pa'ducah'..L .._ who has dealt the 'southwesfern r Iic, B,t`gt.e. ztor` i3ft_ y-,:e.ight` World : Toy Factory. Old Men to The Front ;AQ&ll\dJ- ~x;s_ee.- ft1iEs%*[..p han; Drugs and Chemicals` One is a drug, of course ; the other as `ch mica] an` ther. a'e still others-- SPICES of all kinds. cream of tartar. etc. The best %!ace to get drugs is at a DRUG STOR . The druggiot kn'ows more about them than other people. We keep a good drug store. Come and ask us about kntchen drugs. i(l0I'illlUH. .. - There was nothzng too good for her, and the money he -had earned so pui`nfully- was scattered (gladly 101` the {most stuffs for her dress- (-.~' and 7 beautifull lace Aand chulxxs. ` . ` . ' N701 ~1`:u' from their cabin the rocky cllifs, sloping gently on either side], 1uud(- room tor a tiny lbeach of fin-` wt ,-and, where--in one-cornrexj rose a .~.rc;:1u of purc.~;1I water.`

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