Milverton Sun, 22 Feb 1900, p. 2

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a quarter of a mile apart, and near the ; to a with, r don’t propose to THE FOUNDERED opposite shore a blue cloud rising froin ‘Eureka wit ch of tall grass showed whi "i with the ! too much t captain was Tom Jell _By WEATHERLY eRLY CHYSNEY AND j ona Howie and ‘fanning himself with is cap, and, ex ® pat a) tain Colepepper way ( ALLEQN ao of smoke-an unequal war hae Pa and i ALICK MUN KO. (Copyright, 1899, by the Authors.) ing thing in eight Yes, sir and miss, I do,” said Mra aa ot Sites was the calm blue Jelly. water of } took her advice and struck up thera with Fooiate of fi {nto the country, but they id going v ble, for the ground t fer the most part covered with @ horizon. 1 idee ‘ornaments | People made patches in the solitude, the Bete no doubt, | Place was di an English drawi hae aticn they are Siegen to a thick and £ alike tered by ected heat| ‘‘Nosign of the anyw! ‘they forma npleasant medium Prouganre? oe a, ‘or portage through Mehich to to be Pexscrpelied to press | Jong and away. Tho stalk of each fan leat is furnished on either side with sharp | thing rig ails which puzzles me— hooks, which point down the hill, and | down on the beach near that Bie! pa these have a way of taking toll from | bowlder. the flesh peeeratas which is, to say the least, irri- * ee aw: for cia of the island which they | Caters wade ae wera now exploring was made up of | to avoid the blinding gle from above, low hillocks and shallow gullies, and on | and fared for wll the upper ground this rank scrub wih hada attracted Dal 8 attention: bsiag) luxuriantly. In the hollows “Tt I declar: there was less of it, and its place was | present! hit ch | erhays exactly, Wak Bs cee pose taken by a tall, coarse grass wi eften grew shoulder high. To force a replied the eit ‘pessage through this and through the | er and meke scrub, Whose gr made it necessary was at the Geant / abun, when at last etter waine out tn danger of cine: dtsttactly un- | on to the ope “An trate them barren rock, so amooth that the 10 fa id at such found that they could get a refreshing | ever bre : i al air. <*There doesn't seem to be much in | fresh blood the way of sport for friend Cain,” ob- | think it’s allowable to suppose that a served Guthrie ane one of the breath- | boat bi bi ing halts. “Barring sea gulls and small | circumstances we migh' parrots, Wi for granted th green, Hcy seen a living thing.” Dolly nave her cheek a hasty smack. eal. Can't we get out of this place of torment?” “Té seems all much of a mu ae ess,” said Guthrie, hes Be there, to the yards of, se law al jnst mm lef a bit, what one may ju a om here, should ne be about the ppheaty point of the island. eas or the ioe of. a keel or Tvote we go up there and prospect. We | som i y find, at leases a ‘parade moderate- neo guess about a boat, ear ap sey ‘The Tadeeoeth eiinbea a little as | distance along the it hey neared this slight ee pose oiee from the oar, they found nothing- er ‘the soil were poorer ani s rt such rank herbage as site oe rine wavelets had completely washed them. nits ‘the crest their way was impeded yy nothing worse than sparse tufts of ass which rarely reached to the knee. “‘Hello!’’ exclaimed Guthrie, fying in the cover just below the top- | most curveof thesummit. ‘‘What have . thing BD ey at ne ene of the qinescne in we bere?” ta ‘A fine brown dust which had spurted ‘Ther eut under the influence of the young stant Pipe 8 ee which mated ae man’s involuntary kick said ‘‘wood," * end a fo ie examination showed that the ting ol “Ifa a spar of some kind,” pro- | land, and, now mcancel: Henrietta, who had come up cross this “agi sie that we bebind b may have call By ‘They pemaees it carionsly. Tt.was, | Presently, Teonfess Talonld like to have they found, several spars, fished togeth- | ome ati ee to fee honesty before @ into one piece, qeniehiGoala ust have. © mak reat with been less than 100 feet in length, At OPED the end of it were the remainsof a plat- | 829 reasoi for. their presence form or “‘top.”” Evidently the thing had al, or rather there's no r aaodiiie and) aint thes ee iy obvious and lawful. ext “ation, erbans belonging ak tbe aysterious Piper, perhaps even Slices the Wiest Niinecit. ot “There bave ed from the top of: this before it | sen | sort, “Well, if Cain's ea eae we: eee mit that Inone the less doubt its hon- aught ‘to see him if we hard enough.” “So we ought, miss!” exclaimed Benrietta, ‘‘and if we do, payee we possible that poo meedn’t trai p through any more _ @eaviction. +) Dey set themselves down there- settled ioocna ae press and commenced | with the blist: ecrutinizi below care- | said dryly. “auite righ He may be all si could be seen dale Spiedernichel and the way. ean doctor tolling through the the scrub about; eller what wort of poople we aball have b = Jouger. The £5,000 worth of Spas- board is the man’s fool coough for tnhing Tes lying some- a I nd ‘i will ihe 3 care ee e ste on oe bl acratch it with my nail rain fallen on this " sy and we hadrain t him, too,”” th they came across a projecting ell ot only two days a agon see $00 aad kbp i a “Oar LIGHT. The undergraduate and the manlike sailor woman started off briskly enough for the rock gully which Dr. Tring had hidden them oe But very soon the “Tt looks like ib certainly, bids “You forget the mosquitoes,” she | on earth coulda aid. “Best call ae ee hadn’ t you, alive bios with them and the sand | sirt’’ suggested Mrs. Jelly. flies and the other abominations, I’m | tain said as how we rewas to give tongue ste being walked away with piece- | if we found anything.” ee mal to ae shingle: then small much attached to yellow le to a sailor as that fellow Cain,” replace the one he had lost the dearer for being ised. was therfore that the sae plain tale to the aeeetluee bowlders at their best pac E (To be continued.) HOME IS WOMAN’S CREATION- ane and Fair. religion prevail, is not made es termined its character, wolf the trouble of climbing oe groun fever in his blood couldn't work such ch I don’t think oe 'd do ‘ete om: show! ene Ttath zou iat Soune yess I don’t ba! bape The es 8. ‘were pi reading. The wearer ve the seer so bad as that,” replied { 28 ee Und ue formed the psi of the ledge d once been dressed by cut- | ae Tri lo had scaled off clean and sharp like a “land id ‘he summit had been a a eee friend Cain a ie. “Looks shld ‘iis qs ae 't it?” was some rum sights | the answi jer 2” or Be fact that the fever. should fai foot- h the oh Seals attire in which i any t panting ‘awards a still overtop] busi xeon. 8 gaiters, aly overcoat} ‘“Hae, hae com- d, e bow piste Whe this tnseemanice rig out have my decks Knocked into ret Cae ecient Gallen, toe tata tony : them nasty broken his arm? The people a “If it does that, it’s worth the ef- TALBtTiet may baverescned him and ma: Get,” declared the undergraduate with , be ee after bi ring jannel But to the reat of his Ges ee stuck like ria me ought, use going wie at a home in its activities and plea: is love, and joy, and gaiters that he fees iene slept in ree at night. With these trifies, however, the captain did not interfere **Might mae try to make a sewing machine | What an a Should Be and be It So. declared resignedly. ‘So let him stick to. his rig, and Sarge n wow in him in oe pr landsm en if he get n there. "" — "int the niggas from those inch touched him, for it was ke losing a ® part himself. .And so, as he was not allowed to wear them instigation of Zusan Pierce. Such attire in such a climate was provocative of ef the uncouth habiliments. Likea chil# 2 headless and armless ex they were ** _ has it pper streak and the parallel scorinss It Springs From Her Own Jdeal of What | th t een at happy in her home life, sh t inevitably regard her work enthusiasm,” writes Katharine Roich ‘The Ladies’ Home Jour: f College-Bred Wo: in Her Home. “Let her know, before she enters | upon it, that it must for years occu- ni reign, and sweet influences of indus- try and education, of cow segs aad chance. The woman’s thought, Sey, | | | Pure and Wholesome o Make ‘To produce pure and wholesome milk the first thing to be done is to procure a of food from an unh La ond, to make pure and wholesome milk it it to have un Fae se he adulterated food and pure water for the cow, for it is one of the impossibilt- ties to make a pure and wholesome milk out of impure food and water, as they do not Bae any manner of purification a! are taken into the stomach sat aaa converted into milk. As milk is a secretion and no milk in a great measure, if not alto- gether, partakes of the nature of the food and water. ela is Sa, With a dirty cow and a dirty, badly lighted and ill Faunatad De you need not expect e annot have chine especially adapted to the work is a new invention in American éairy- ing. say right here that | ever , live, wid ake, DEO- ing wheat @ milk aerator ae ae oa w it is “extremely diffi mae the ordinary 4: irda he it ‘o to his interest to use an aerator and ‘of | cooler without an appeal to direct ex- praise is due, first, to the woman, | gestible wife, and mother, and mis- | children and will keep nearly two daye ted. *) pleasure to rule her kingdom dili- | | gently, with intelligence and love. | 6 b | careful cheesemaker who has studied le d who as | tress, and housekesoer, and home| jonver than milk not so treat mak ik dealer hi b; itself in oe: It is a work factory manipulation entirely a thus | remedy any defective milk a’ ac +r rded her sor at home she would | tory, mil alers know that this to it without that | must be done at the farm re are Conldnte shut Hie U os ‘The time when auneaagy ‘spall be | nervous conditions. A mother’s bosom afforded only by the rich is still with-| will fill with milk at the thought of. in the memory or the treat ition When umbrellas first came into mote Scotch neighborhood lairerove, it says, they were sport- | éléments necessary for the construc tion of the various tissues of the bod: mmon_| yet when carelessly treated it is liable class es perfect phenomena. One day | to undergo certain subtle chem went Coli es higher than usual, \ that. take it in. My verra door winna take it in.” Telephone Wire Thieves, enza, and eed o turbance caused by the Api i pad tor 5 ‘a shower a er the dlonal ‘poltels “ofered promene ee Re cee faery an of an , which was _po- Telspace, aromited, aod Des jel with his head two or three inch- off. ‘When r the (oonas and cenutnal indifference often practiced tn Daniel | they furnish should become aoat for ped | a widespread diffusion of diseases’ ld Clean Milk. Kurnel! ‘This will nev- | er do: there's no door in alll my house Ge. of the BE: leaia ane Geaiers Fe barn- cently stated in an ‘interview, says Hoard’s Dairyman, that what were wan insure clean, healthy ie were “clean cow stalls, For some time past Parisians have | the cattle and scrupulously clean rail had occasion to complain of defects | ing utensils.” Simple enough, isn’t it? {n the telephone service. Blame was Yet, simple as it is, every milk dealer, | own first on the influ- - levery creamery and. cheese factory, ev- ery buyer of butter and cheese knows that it is a condition sah hard to se cure. If every producer of milk would ga steal-|comply with this simple condition, ing telephone wires for months. Their there would be scarcely any poor milk, uy RELIGION AND HEALTH “With Long Life Will | Satisfy Hi THE GOSPEL OF EVERYDAY LIFE Rev. Dr. Talmage Shows What It Does ff Karthly Ex- How te Make Its Devetees eaten: Feb. 18. — This ser- mon of Dr. sorspean la resents @ gos- pel for this d shows ‘hat Soiicn. does for prolongation of earthly existence Faalm xsi, 16, “With long life vi I satisfy ‘Through tho Diane Gt tts sian religion has been chiefly associat with sickbeds and graveyards. The le canno word eal ion atone rand i 4 Bess beeing chisel of the time for ears, good for een, geod for the digestion, good for the nerves, good for the 11U n Promises longevity to the pious, say- ing, “With long life will I satisty im.” a ee ee @ie too soon. It is high time iat man_ longevity dam lived 9: ye Methuselah lived 969 ‘As late in the history of the “world ligion will ever take the race back to antediluvian longevity, but I di way that the len life di child is to be dy 1d, may not the men and women reach to 800 and 400 and 500? The fact is that we are mere dwarfs and ske! etons, compared with some of the generations that are to come. ke r a chance and they develop a Tor int l’Ouverture. he hite race shall be brought out from the serfdom of sin t be the body? What eee be the goul? Religion has only just touch- ed our world. Give it fall power for few > rit design is to show that practi- eal religion is the friend of longe- tity: I prove tt, iret, from the fact that he care of our health « a postive Christian duty. Whether ly 01 > whet re shall take food digesti. ble or indigestible, whether there shall rough or incomplete m: at oe questions very often re- e realm binsicality, DHt the Carlatian man's tna anole problem of into the account- He say! od as given me a wonderful body for Roba purposes.’ ‘The Christian man says to himself, t night ery God’ protection while at time t the Suns of his "bed room tight shut against fresh air He would 80 go- of icality, or to the 5 iasy we 3 is or to the butcher, or a | Sentraieion Why do you not make or to the eee or to font clo- ii is~ resence—it is God’s ear. His nial potence—it is God’s arm. Soistex of the midnight fest the work of God's reeds His the | life giv of the Almighty. ‘is dominion— “the government shall be upon his shoulder.”’ A body so Gillen | hon- ored and so divinely constructed—e feu noe tolaiee te it becomes a Christian duty care of our health, is not the up any time of day or night I hap- pen to think of it and Totten tt down while you are th wi will last the long m= mon sense answers. Now, the bu- man body is God’s watch. You see f - Oh, be careful and do not re tt practical t re- uses, ie a “triedd ‘of Jongetitg ta tie fact that it is a protest against dis- i ry pee et oe Only this and nothing more. ere are aged people who would hhave been dead 25 years ago but for the defenses and the equipoise of re- ligton. You have no more natural resistance than hundreds of people by their own vices. The doctors ee t seemed to crawl LS Tao iend of longevity. “With long isty him.” Again, religion is « friend of Jon- : takes th Worry out of temporalities. It a Whar 0 apecsaee a ° His affections, but his siness, his pip dastaedel cy Lod * te mind, his ing. is exigency. our could fall bac #4 100,01 can foresee a panic ten seer I hold the Cooling stock tn 80 of ‘Alie Dest: monetary: institutions of this untry; whenever you are in any Eepislehean canteen ania *E lll help you; you can have oney and you can have my influence; here is bay eda piaiee of ses Haw iatieh would you ‘worry about business? Why, you would say, Tn do the best the wheels go one way?’’ ‘‘Well he says, “I made them to go in op- | at? Is there aa Tanger ie thatt en: my ‘religion “teaches at the bad and tl aE a ts rm of dis- sipation, en is an illustrious life longe: tru Religion is suing! that is health. Possible 6 Ex plaration. “I believe,” said the fond mother, so,”” returned the prac- tical father, ‘‘and then again it may be nothing but a case of indigestion. A man looks just siete as doleful in ‘one case as.in the io ONLY AWOMANSSTORY BUT IT WILL BRING HOPE TO MANY SLLENT SUFFERERS. Nervous Prostra’ en ee as the Life of Mrs. Thos, a Burde Just a woman’s story. Not strange because it happens every day; not romantic or thrilling, a ‘or years ‘Thomas Sears, off st sell felt her ill- ness gradually but surely gaining a hold upon her system, and ultimately she almost dispaired recoverv. Toa ea mee called upon her, Mrs, Sear ‘What I have eatterod ts is almos yond description. My As ie been gradually growing upon me, and eighteen months ago I found my- self almost helpless. My nerves were most breathless, and my heart w palpitate violently. Thad nd desire for food of any kind, and yet I had to force myself to eat to maintain life, Itreated with three different @ condition bordering on de- spair. I was ur; try Dr. Wil- liams’ Pink Pills, and in ‘ is for the better, and I then. another half dozen boxes. Before these were all used I was again en- plat) the blessing of good health. ere can be no doubt of my cure be- fe months have spe since I dis- pee eee . Williams’ Pink Pills, and di that time I have never oe oe nights symptom of the I cheerfully and ei feeling eae res it baa oure them, as it did m . Williams’ Pink Pills are 2 spe- pills that their fame has spread to the far ends of civilization. ‘Wherev you go you will find the most import- ant article in every a Dr. Williams’ Pink Pi Horse Radish Paste. Mix Shoroaehly togeth them pte each slice up and tie in ae Lay th a dripping pan wit Abstr of butter and roast for an hour, iting fre- mently. Remove the Sees just be- fore serving. People who Cipla ast and hl ick energy as a result of overwork, anxiety will recover quickly by paiig ‘Miller’s Compound Iro: pound ij furectly up upon the Sisod sal tacos ny all Pg Ammonia Gas Motor. ere is a new se car that by its own motion com ammonia gas to liquid, rhiols, i in fei? through the pipes, expands and oa the necessary co) coldness in the aii Minard’s Lintment Relieves Neuralgia, Proof Against Plague, Several of the ante bapa Bora- to bay are now urging their readers resort to inoculation ae precaution against the plague. vey edi ‘Worm Powders for sallow sking old or He Women Bootblacks. pidly in France. They we ara not unlike that of the nuns. pr INGE Til-fitting boots and shoes eat Holloway’s Corn Cureis oe ite co name ey < Geta porte at once and c1 Fxehiner of Shore, . Wedd (spitefully)—You look as if you had been rubbing your face alk of the Heartless Wan, Tok “Wer is an article on sige Right Kind of a Wife,’ "’ she said, locking up from her p: ; paper. “I suppose,” returned the heartless man, nit refers to the one a fellow 't get.” Sponges Made to Order. Artificial sponges are now made om a mi in Germany mixture of pure cellulose with zinc chloride and sodi- um chloride. These sponges will ab- sorb water in the same way as genuine article, and when allowed te dry they become just as firm in smb- stance. ‘New life for a quarter. Miller's Come Tron Pills. i Work. i Man is not exceptional in the fact stantly in motion. ther Graves’ Worm Extermini as the largést sale of any similar pre] ation sold gt Canada. Tt_ always satiat we ad yy restoring health to she folks. ‘ little folks. Hane This! offerOne Hundred Dollars Reward We for any case of Catarrh cannot Be cured’ by ind financial Were! ‘ace ae ts, Toledo,0, % 4 agi Warpivo, famax & Manvin, Olesale Droge wets Cateirh Care ts internally, sob ig Turn into a: buttered. dish and ale ten minutes. More.—There are thousands Being easy tb take and are most efficacious Jn their action. A trial of them will prove Sauerkraut. For one-half barrel, 125 pounds of of warm Weight it with a two gallon dug filled with water ; let it ferment for 20 days, then use. Minard’s Linimeat Cures Dandruff, ‘London's House Servants, It is estimated that there are 246,- 000 women domestic servants in Lon- don, and that 10,000 are ‘always ont of situations or Health for the children, Alera Worm : AS Powders.

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