b] " ¥ 8 4 Bo Boden] Lb Extra Granulated SUGAR : | . Bell went back to Boston CAN tig wir INI NT. . his idea fermenting 'in his ADA SUGAR R G CO. | ee | weer this Ho = EE . > v - isted by ann. MANY STUDENT SUICIDES. |sible positions with mercantile ian, Thomas -A. W. Watson. | o en firms, and they are, of course, de- Oni, the afternoc une '2, 1876, | hoolboys of Berlin, Germany, |barred from entering the learned Watson and Gr ing-up" End Their Lives. professions. It is not altogether k : of the spring instruments.. The recent examinations at the |strange that the German youth is Scksony and gorinese knows | Watson was plucking away at the | German schools were again, as each disposed to take a grave view of ro. dece ou. And |transmitter spring, making it. buzz, | year, accompanied with numerous his failure. w= ; x ir. rather, whine, while Bell was instances of boys killing themselves, It is not only students in the djusting the transmitter spring either through fear that they would | schools who kill themselves before * "that it would give a whine of ex-| not pass or because of mortification [or after examinations. A man of , | atly the same pitch as the other. at failure. : 22, who had been studying legal 'and | Giiddenly the spring of Watson's On a single day three suicides of procedure, reached the point where ! Raloen: instrument, stuck. He kept pluck- students, all less than 18 years old, | he was to take his examination for od my neck, 0 thint dt a | Bey and locks you, you was | iia it without avail. He bent | were reported, and the body of one | advancement to court clerk. He beyond. my gua nly. self con 4 house: a ant heal overto examine it. The make and |who had drowned himself some days | repeatedly told his friends that he He salonately, and; thosss Dr oe for | shen she a roe a ary! break points. were fused. There earlier. was recovered. These in-|was sure he should not pass the je fone briet second a inst her Rushe | ine and sobblag, But Voy sem, and.' T{was no interruption of the current. | stances were in Greater Berlin |examinations. In an instant she had started up, ful- locks the Soon, Gnd opel it at elght| The circuit was unbroken. Yet the | alone. The night before the examination ly awake, and laughing rather neryouss after ® at Sout, nde d whi Boner pring continued to vi-| One of the boys threw himself in he threw himself from the window AE DON a ate. er sof 8] n 3 ; 8 } fe : , a Sreature, hose sar} raining "as ny hy. 1. declare 1 have been, oa ht Todos he steel 'vibrating over jou of a-train because he had not |of his third story room and was er hardly. anythi t not | tire you? You will take me Sat to-mors Fd do a 8 eal; but a yo " n promoted to a higher class. crushed to death. ' x Who! hal; | len 3 e: | Tow, 100 won't you, before 1 am packed family gro U0 all - en oo A suicide by drowning was that of pe 'me irresistib 1 the re had Hervey. i oad a okt Aovely a fd haps and, my Anna A sd | |a 17-year-old boy who was shortly Stops to Listen. 'taken tow 8 So 1 drove home to. my Jonely 0, "(To be contifiued:) y i | to try the examination entitling him , : : letting myself in with my lateh-k 0) : j I | to discharge his military duties with| A farmer was having trouble with h | Wrenshaw did not expect me, LL eee | g ) 3 i i 1 1d valk drew TM EH Ra ET bf one year's service. According to | his horse. It wou start, wa LEX, GRAHAM BELL. | | ¥: » en first Visited a F x his teachers there was no doubt that | twenty yards or so, then stop for Ho, and took from my desk cholas | : 3 : f 2 ei "seaain the | Invented the Telephone at the Agel. | | unusually capable and intelligent. | repeat 'the performance. After Miri he would have passed, as he was|a few seconds and start again, to nt wh ¢ S : : . Terps ht anced Detore me inthe sunset TR he it of Twenty-five. ' | 34 The fixed bureaucratic scheme of | watching this exhibition for come ) t ! 1 ; i Ih go t Tr WN hd and: Crown" rather Lor Ii ao oy 3nd : : At of life for the average German, while [time a friend overtook the farmer at jana so eat 'Forly years ago, on the porch o not explaining such suicides, throws | during one of the horses's long almos e cou! : he 8 an unpretentious' little house in | {EE BN | come light on the youths' actions. | waits. "What's the matter? Is it foam a Thee "tho i : gi Branton, 3wa § ed A. sat jak: | | Failure to be graduated from school lame?" he asked. 'Not as I know [LE A HAE Sh ne Owipass dessin | gong th nll, he fame, et to exorcise her witchltke. ence': zone IWR. 10 his DeIEIBOIe: a8: Bh irl 1 To become & "Beamter,'" that is, | 'Then what's wrong with "ib from oy alt ase Tetter, nish, deeply interested in | a 'public official, is the goal of a| 'Oh, he's so afeard I'll say Tae ope deaf "mutes communicate great percentage of young Ger- "Whoa!" and he won't heap~ me,' e's. unopen letter, and tried to forget Lilith's Jaughing| Be : 1 § the chronicie of Madge's | with each 'other. | The 'other was a} for the official enjoys many replied the farmer, "he stops ever ONUeRtE tr ; th 1 Took i mans, for the official enjoy 3 ; st y Ser per oe tan my mite | (3S or" Physiology privieges nos granted bo the pon now aud then o linen seemed to me in those o u « \ ¢ i i > i Sere «Bristol | fore the dawn as 1 vainly tried to trate batver 'that ' was, in Boston| | a oficial German. He has a contain Mother Looks the Part A tora A om 3 n {on paper the features of that other one . igh ,, : 3 ; ; tenure, a retiring pension, an , y ». ik alarming disregard of veracity, fo Oye Te University, Neignbor n gin he : vy y other material advantages, and en-| How pale and wortied: your mos resently 1 observed coldly: ~~ 'hours' Neh sleep and |r fed dreamy. and down the street heard snatches | | joys especial protection under the | ther looks. Is she sick?" rive sa ror nt OR POtees of their conversation, and passed law of insults, it being a much| "No, ma'am, but pa's got the 2d 2 Pe SE Rl SEE | oh mentor 08 na Meurveat BH | over crime to insult an oficial | grip." : Sn unother " Sha. AnoW ord from and. [race 'was laying the breakfast table ou | interrupters,' and "induction : k Ry | 3D. 2 private clbigen tailed 3 And 3, she siraid that he won'k ease don't speak So. cold : RY uy must real ot] cofls, "meant. =. NF A PFs Alexander Graham Bell.) | But for those who have 'a od get we ha - X ; eo ou cous, > fig ' their school work there is no chance| 'Oh, no, but whenever pa's sick Jately, and now I'm enjoying myself 2 {ted t Y The young man was explaining a to become state officials. he worries her so that she always rather--rather a hard | much. it seems too bad to Epo 0 the magnate was. making the steel| «Even in private life they find it looks as though she had what was Yelock, I'm hungry: And it's no good|new invention he'had been working being cold and nasty to me. Presently | your frowning at me now, for I'm grow : i + you will be married, and Lady Margaret ty nd Font mind a bity a" EXOVR on, a multiple telegraph instru- | ver the other magnet vibrate. The | almost impossible to secure respon- ailing him." To ae Se iy ta BE | Seid of Wiad omer, ana the ment, which could send a number electrical waves were setting UP 4 hope] Shall see vou again, and | "MRualiey forione orto. sire: | of GREER, CFOS ingle wire, o¢|somdiwaves COLT DISTEMPER "iY haven't been very anxious about | That dtd I "tell your: Lith asked worked on § e. principle -- . i.e The First Telephone. Can be handled very easily. The sick aro dured, and all others © to' now, have ou? aT was 80 | nim in triumph, 8s. with a backward | brio buzzer, with springs that al- v. : tu h : " cod." v 3 : : 1 (1 ble, tter how "exposed," kept from havin yJtserable Nhen x irs Kot Jo Morland look. of extreme disgust, Wrenshaw left| ternately made and broke a circuit. Bell rushed over to Watson's in- \ {0 sgme slab shiny 'SPONN'S LiguiD DISTEMPER CURE: + * two months looking out of ihe wi io the room, } The way in which these si rings vi- strument: with a shout. 'What ) Give on the tongue or in feed. Acts on the blood and expelyg or vol, hoping you'd come." : Re a joe, and held on brated at the gending end was re did you do then? Don't change Hoy erms of all Tore o disiempet, i Tqmedy ever, Juovn ~ 3 x . : Jad a mares in foal, Druggista and harncsa dealers, Our ; HY a ee Woaint: ing and blushing a dle, t behaved produced at the receiving end. anything. Let me see." A few wo Booklet va everything. Largest selling horse remedy in 1 ni put, of England. en : ET fo be, she Heid prouaiy. JT Only, "and this was the important days before he had remarked: "If 2 existences, Jar Distributore= ALL : VioLesaLs DRUG nl 'Oh, 1 know 'all 'about it" she sald ; J ' awit yi 2 , % i : , » , : interrupting me. da wire "In he 2 oa Tar ou Mr. Wrenshaw.'| ¢.ofure, the single * wire would | I could make a current of electri ' sons inde. Ur 8 Ar that rich 'young Js axe |. You may do the latter it you wish | carry the six different kinds of | city vary in intensity, precisely as Ql Y Ye differ i the air variés in intensity during "But T don't, 1 know better now," i | Waves from the six different vibrat- 1 y "if you knew very much etter, my ing. springs, without blending | the production of a sound, I should 4 it dear child, you would have waited at 18 2? be able to transmit speech tele- t differ: to , ; ; } | . ch receiving spring had : P coud Tot way one word to defend Yee, Jadisons o on LS ish Set Shem, Lr pee re the. message graphically." That was rexactly not i her how Wrensha = (Hed t wonder) ol nthe corresponding gonding | What had just happened. The steel A oy y isl 1 g. '"Ican produce musical | SDFG, vibrating across the' poles lady. s, | father,'" declared: "the of the magnet, was generating a marsh: gipsy at the #7 lyoung man in oor lusion. o current: of electricity that varied t Fly fr ame a Jou 3 77 gaid th older man, puf- in intensity precisely as the air was i ed abe {Lilith : red and en pale. | fag thoughtfully at his § pipe. | VAT¥INR 'In intensity within hearing the ally Bolorea ballet enchained her | murmured odio ie, Sackson she What about the voice he 1 distance of the spring. The sound piterly, to-the exclusion of sll remem. ire enough, Wrenshaw's 'tap The young man considered for a| "a8 being electrically transmitted, ane OT Oy Ie Oo |e oy, That Hie. slator few Tanne hen looked up with| the telephone was possible. The oF nop di. § rank 1h Shier Suing rs ackson, from Battersea, humbly shining eyees' hy first crude telephone was in oper- ies SLABS pk in th Ing | begged a moment's private conversation, TE oy # rn) 3 ation. eit as all over, hy van ona lor | 23 she hag thing "most "particutar| ¢'If the air vibrations of the voice ea, ° 3 of | to tell me. 4 sal on . electrical vibrations Bell and Watson immediately set ui > . o dear! i i i ae ele iy 1% CHAPTER XVI. ; «on beg AAR nL to, work to construct an Intra men' Build a Better Silo drew, her Sina hr be 7 4d As Boon. as Wrenshaw had left the «You'd have it.'" declared the suitable for transmitting the. hu- ; y theo the > os : hansom sab, 3 thé "0 4 begin all ov able : Se : "nd | As goon as Wrenshaw Red JOft thal CC ositively. man voice. To get the delicate vi: "2d and Save Money a_hanso "Phat is the geo her in the hail below, Lilith sprang ; y nice thi 80 gr Ss nd gain. the young man relapsed brations of "speech they arranged . . me to Benow oacani tabla; and. abproscheds me in Wi Ry xr BE oer up| ® membrane of gold-beater's skin UILD the kind that will keep 3 excitems o & Aha a } 3 prev ' : ; over the springs of the instruments X our ensilage always at its at seventeen! | . "Don't believe a word she says!" she eagerly. [= ; Rh 4A = y , €ns > a ays SEAS sth SECA BC OBE Trerbape he pid wih +) BO Sa rae d best. Build the kind of silo that ; hat; da susg . jembrane I might.' 1 or ) . ovaly han. me Just pecaune am me, sng weichen| membre | 5 E00 Noment. brations. does not have to be repaired or 3 | | you won't listen to her tales about me." Dr. Bell describes the first con- #8 painted every other vear. Youi ¥ us : : as nearly as can be deter-|yersation over the 'phone on July "was the moment that thelr, 1875, as follows: "We had only ; dairy herd will show its appre- | telephone was invented, The mid-| one membrane telephone, and the d ciation in the additional quantity dle-aged man was Alexander Mel-| receiver was one of the old tuned Si of milk it gives. The best silo, by keep- ville L famous 'elocutionist, and{ reed receivers. It was held up to AM ing ensilage perfect, increases output and ng ma & ; 'me, fol A eta hath She you ia som, was Alex: the er. Jou crammed the arms soon pays for itself. * oun aer Deir, © | ture Lin: e r dampen 2 x » ih t at you ] ord 1 5 rations. I was listening at that he : A Concrete Silo what Th 3 ham | afmature, while Watson was down ee 2s y aa Pa -- : the. basement of Charles Wil- ! : is the dairyman § surest dividend payer. 's building at 109 Court It keeps ensilage in just the right condi ting into the end of a tion and does not permit it to dry out or and then we changed a | get mouldy. A concrete silo cannot leak, may say that 1 hedrd no- $7 rot, rust or dry out. It has no hoops to Then r. Watson went © BAY replace. Requires no paint and needs to listen, and I went up-| . no repairs during an ordinary lifetime. kp ard while 1 was { Send to-day for this free book " What Watson came rush- j the Farmer Can do With. Concrete." in a state of great ex: © © Tt tells how to build a concrete silo and nd saying: 'Why, Mr. many other things on the farm that will ur. voice very dis- a4. 8 save you many dollars. could. almost under- Ay ; Farms' Information Duress said. Canada Cement Company an i 509 Herald Building, oniresl