Milverton Sun, 3 Dec 1908, p. 7

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

Love Kept CSSOSSOO Or, The Girl With the Nat Brown Hair and Dreamy Eyes. its Faith CHAPTER VI.—(Cont’d). Only | half Soar: a boy hesitatingly obe, in the ie expenditure heed a dignity aiehe drove old flourish of his handkerchief Pe Pr asieions blast of his ese brief intervals. oe hm “aid the boy dwell in the s © wi maze of ihe woods until they seo ed the madcap river, wher silvery salmon were lurking and the white trout were the feed in shoals, or else the sea would call, way’s fearsom Finally, thie pe ponte a the early nship, hag otle less bedroom, ere a tired boy ‘hugged between whitest of w ects, the i of boyish a the old man’s neck, a mk that oaraht have satisfied a father’s heart, an ex- change of bonedttions “God bless ,”? “God bless n away back imed by the ni baile they stilled Bas some’ hin fro feers ani hi fe anal for the who had neit! summer serenely sped, Beaune. “the wound, turmag grief int Miss Manesty . between the | No: then descended upon he manner of the meeting was ertain volcanic ele- is » fo. Bella a shock by the revela- tio an ascent to the crosstrees, and scandalize her by a show of tar on hands and clothes; but inste a be discovered that which showed she wished him well. There was also a second stranger tic own tresses, long and welds such e sun loves to play Awkwardly, he bac! Red towards the ae colliding’ violently with C: as he reached it. eae, hele; my laddie!’? the Captain roared, and then, “beg a pardon, ‘ma’am——why, if it De Bowing and bobbing merrily, as him aside and called for Shvty the boy advanced, holding eae: guyecsa him to an embar- pis serw ea he icaked at length, id strain ; there’s no mistak- fa ther will never be yw me?’ she continued, ans ae of Nanny Manesty! I = David, an 'T liked S ~ boy’s heart went out with a bosnd she quaint o) ly. ati fied ‘and: ae ‘out his stb it = time Temembered the rr: Sbat, om Sager Miss Manesty, Le | days, ther kith nor kin, | wi the last of his line; so the hours|he: o a}ble I'd the void; and] in, Hon: ‘never mind’ the dirt; that'll ash off. Dirt’s all right till it den into a along, shake hande, fo sake. or then, you can go and shake s with Margery. Oh, she’s no more afraid of dirt than I am. You ig | Should see her grubbing for ground} sco: bait and shinning. a8 the Sleddle- mere trees. And while Bella’s mak- he: Little ukipper had meanwhile been working himself up into a con- leranciiar great excitement, the outward and visible signs of this eing an incessant twirling a his cap an expression of his cheeks to a degree ele dae caused Mar- gery no small a t of concern. iss Menccty: 8 behest ue eaten himself on the edge of a chair by her sido, and when ay sug- gested wonder on his part as to the no, ma’am—no wonder at all—not a bit Os it—pot a ie no- thing to won GREE? SET aaiischient passed over Miss’ anesty’s face, kut as she cast about for another opening an proceeded to up the ae irritating m vement of cap, her brow Roce od Ae She had seen much of an in the yester- and she realized that conver- salient so violently punctuated was impossible. The cap must he got “Where’s your pipe, Cap'n?” Down went cap upon the floor; two hands went the depths of two capacicus pock- Set one of them flourished a disre- le, briar. She reached a spill from the man- tel-shelf, lit it at the grate, and it to him. n of THRESH E smoke coiled Somers the ce: t ang. "Now then, 1 ih explain why I’ve ingers es sorrowing hea £ want no 0 comfort ers worry- e just been giving used to his loss. mong us to put bit of life into him and make him d|the man his father would have him some things, the la couldn’t have been left in better rae Sauk Uliseek. pen cpinialy: Cap'n Dan;—would you like David ar be atthe b man as yourself when he’s grown “Lord deliver him, ma’am,’ ejaculated, bouncing to his feet, “you don’t think there’s any chance of that aad you wouldn’t like bim to have very many of Bella’s ways?’ i} ing tea, Ti have @ talk eith Cop's threa Dan. cause of her visit, he twirled his! i | cap and stammere¢ * Dan] value on “Haul up, meat haul up and let’s go about on another tack. ho’d ever ee dreamed there’ d be such ugly breakers ahead?’ “Oh, it isn’t all that bad yet. I only mean that if things go on as they’ve started, if he’s boxed up through all his youth with just you two, there’s a danger of seed end- ing with a bit too much and a bit too much Bella MMackit- terick in his make-up, and he’ll be none the worse for a little variety in the mixture. So wha’ if I come into. the partnership? Shall we make it, Cap'n for business—Bella for meat ana eink and me for polish ¥ “Paix, but it’s a grand Dan exultantly declared, nervousness us the three of us we should turn him out a full-rigged, copper sheathed craft. Why’’—Dan lay back in his gti and admiringly regarded the old lady—!‘why you'll teach him the raises of an admiral.’ “Manners,” Miss Manesty re- peated reflectively, an apefleenon of in her tone— t they : 5 B & idea,”” all his. reckoned very much on oad poor s of speech and be- ch folk oo should know better set such store. They’re bad extra for a gentleman to have by him, but it’s bad when they’re mistaken for the whole. of a gentleman’s: outfit, and when a woman depends most of all on her company graces, it’s pitiful beyond a speck of dust on its shoes, and Dan, there are scores of farm folk about| > the fells who could no more uncover their heads than they could jump over Latrigg; but when they smile and pass the weather it like of sunshine stealing into your Hea and—if trouble came wou aldn’t need to ask there as 1 we ee the sort of manners Td like a6 leah the laddie, to lift his heart to a woman when he rais- es his hat, to mean the thing says as well as say it in the proper way ; to care little about “ts hing ple think, but much about ie tl ning he does, sel r ing a gentleman but eae of oie plump into} ing a maa.’ Launched upon one of her favor- ite themes, Miss eee would Brobally have treated Dan to a my points oat abun- dat illustrations, but at this junc- ture Margery impetuously applied a perio Her face aflush with excitement, her cheeks aglow, the child danced es ee room an h, do come and look, auntie; you Soa saw such a house as this, come ie I want to help you with | it’s a won! erful place. Why, David the has some real 1 da stuf- “phe boy? You mean Davie?” _ |fed monkey andes oie: tah and Yes, I’ve had it in my mind| chopsticks “ind lovely’ Japanese iv: to come ever since Jacob went; and/ories, and whalebone and if I'd thought that Bella and you| shark's teoth, _——" tweren? trusted, Pd hav top, stop, Miss Tempestuous !’? Feen here long ago; but I knew you} Miss Mane oral, clapping her], hoth, and I guessed the laddie|hands to her ears in affected ais ouldn’t want. a stranger pol may; “it’s not a house you mew but a: museum.’ _“Oh, better than a museum, aun- to knick- Knacks knocking about the house,” Dan interposed ; “but nothing out of the ordinary. You'll find the same sort of thin; a huni ven houses. in ‘Allerdale, "re all seafarin’ folkecasd cur nah Shines gay lock of funny things back with ’em. But in at Bassenthwaite now you'll n see such like things in any quantity but here in Allerdale w then gods an’ birds 0’ paradise seattered all over 't set. so much|ne the place —- consequently, we’ve come to look upon them as varra common pot. “The main spe ae e is on account 0’ trought them; if it wasn’t for that Tl warrant the women would nev- €r put up w ella yammerin’ oat ime: Only half accepting the old sai- lor’s tes little later was discovered seate: on the back of a crocodile from Af- rica, with the yellow j. Chinese mandarin abou her 8; an an tnforgt sble offence eee ee doors of life had suddenly been thrown wide, wide open, the prattle of a romantic child the golden key wherewith the. miracle had been wrought. For the first moreover, he was roalininre ‘of possession. Hitherto, his es ied made little appeal te ‘sentiment. e treasures it contained had, it is gear aroused his interest, be- cause they stood for a life, wild, rbarous—a life outside % his father had never in his hearing made any beast" of them; the men his pes discovered as others—that it occuped a high above the commonplace, ea of its roo) breathed the breath of life, the Rones reclothed with ema che this girl with the aut brown hair an reamy eyes—had done this cdiniow Gis vanes qierent catia only mildly wondered, stood before im as riches o} golden orient Shae critme aad oEanE west— and they were his own. Oh, it was a glorious thing to have! (To be Continued.) pesca EEE, SENTENCE SERMONS. _ You cannot find truth by trimm- ng A hot head makes friendships. The poorest life is the one that has no love for the poor. Greatness is Beige by our response to high appea Ve never seg our selaboes un- til we mest ow Leaders of men never wa't to feed on popular appreciation. No one finds happiness without often turning his back on pleas o heart is happier than the one aie love leads to take a drudgery no warm He who snears at enthusiasm is past the dead line of any great use- fulness. The uncommon opportunities for often in the common Every time the pulpit makes it’ weakens its message. ‘A pause feaahay hepa on t enthusiasm is better eae ane most correct faith packed 1 They who fatten o: Sasa ies of others are eon feeding Hae own eternal ad When a man Etat, for his religion the world usually answers that it is too small a matter to men- tion. It takes more than ss eeane of the w heaven to mal he. save earth -and yet it never wil without them, The world always sees something cal in painting a pump than in Spantying the water down out of sight. ~ ed f THF Hee tte teste re tey : About the Farm :!: des FHFFH PF Pst eee eee POULTRY POINTERS. with the feed, # 7 + + + beeen + + whee Mix some ‘‘brains’’ d {and you will get better results than carelessly. ss in feeding is essential kind of stock. The amount n the laying heus, or if Cantu mix their feed al yy | the hens that should lay, is an im- portant matter. d amount de ee given, but it must be govern- judgment of the caer acne the poultry business is like any other. enterpri starts small and grows big If} a you start on a large scale to gain losses will be harder experience, discouragement is likely felt. and i A e of the main essentials of every pout -house is that it must be Dainp houses cause diarrhoea, eae sore eyes, rheu- matism ana oa r troubles that all animals, a: ell as poultry, are heir to. Th © hese way to keep the house dry is to give it plenty. of fresh air by opening the doors and windows during the day. Supply fresh litter often. id the house ill eee WP tiodiendh ae rms and the eggs that hateh them Beiter! grain occasi-) 5 onally to encourage scratching. One of the reasons why a small flock of hens does better than a large one is because table scraps form a large part, of, the small flock’s and are eae Ted ration Af si Crooked breastbones in chickers fue couse by thesheaey binds roost- ing on poles and fences. The bon al is polnethirds averuohcnad ace turned to one si the roosts. AMPLE DIGESTIVE APPARATUS A good deal of i aera a argu- is. occasionally anced to the effect that heef cattle Se be economically raised and fed unless the e very low-set, com- pact, cubical beef type, and of a special-purpose beef breed. As a Selle of fact, these Bilge ot type always: prove pro- ftatle feeders. The big- Baer el yteer frequently makes the best. gains, and, an excess o paunchiness moans an extra pro- portion of cheap meat and offal, still the cattle feeder’s interest de- man trim- bellied, tion which constitutes the butcher’s or the packer’s ideal. An experi- enced feeder remarked to us one day that he never liked to buy @4ma steet that lacked a good middle. Other things being equal, the barrelled steer made the best. use of his feed. rse, hé was Be: speaking of thoes pot- bellied runts which are walking barnyard evi- ‘ig- 2 4. | dence of insufficient Fe eras str one assertion on an uncertainity |, good thrift right up to the finishing stage. TEACHING COLTS TO FOLLOW. RIG the “many devices con- hasten for teaching colts or horses ‘0 le oe ehind a rig, perhaps the dented and one of the most ef- fageva: ee ees by taking a long ope, ot heavy plow line, and ex- tending it farogeR the halter ring over the back, having a loop crupper. epee hee ait bled and one race made about the middle of the back, and another side by pressing on| qt peace back, to form a crupper. By passing one end on each side of the neck through the halter ring, Ree will enka in When the rope Gvhioh e axle or rear part of the wagon) tightens, and the rope device pulling under the tail brings his plac two poll reeneraly) cures any ten- dency to rus! The same j ‘reatient will ae a halter- puller in the stal WHAT court UNIFORMS co! s x A Complete eS Will Cost Ane thin From £180 to £210. most democratic of monarchs, ‘pa Majesty always insists that his isters must FARM NOTES. Certified milk is largely a matter certified. cle: pools and there is nothing to binder any dairyman | we sansa from getting the hal i Board had to conform to Court re; No potato is popular which has} ations before deep eyes. Whatever te excellence | ; * in other respects, this defect makes, There is not only dress 4 his case. however, w spite of his high pase the Presi- ie eaey were not as as they should be. the farmer was a fixture on his land to a great extent manufacturers more o trust him shee men. of lasses; and the farm-|the as anxiou: sate meet- ing the obligations he Sd oe was also tempted to Shanes he could er erent simp because he coul etloes dit. thorough same material, and splendidly embroidered. To make outfit ver buckles, hat and a sword worn by the side, produce, which habit complete the orthodox Court suit. has been engendered by cheap lands| More than 6,000 yards of th arms. Intensive farming ig not something to be taken up| POD nifo is and put into Sees at once by This is prol eel any m nan Sa ost luxurious suit for tion can be guinea by attending [weary eon costs the Earl Marshal ust unifort and, more th from the, start ance, silk, exclusively woven for this pur- and that is Sa SOUND ADVICE. Some Noted Men and Women on Important Matters. Mark Twain. All education is th preparatory. It is life that give the nals, oe college. | th ame: Hull. My heart goes) out to the man who does his See n his boss is away as well as when he is at home. garments vary in color, according ese, as on other Cou ‘there is always bestowed plenty of ‘gold thread, and ne range price from £160 to £21 President ©. M. Hays, of a er eG Grand Trunk Pacific: ‘The $ who does his work so well that he THE BEST FOOT. needs no supervision has already succeeded. Why a Person Always Tends to Mrs. Cynthia Westover Alden: Walk in a Cirele. Fae for some lover of spay | Which foot walks faster? You tho collapsible gocart, the spring- ;may think this a. very, silly aues- less lumber waggon in miniature, in | ¥407 00 ASK, OUL 2b isl b, bhi! ‘simple demonstrable fact, which which the unthinking mother jolts ple demons ae her helpless infant over the jagged YoU Cam prove to your cwn satisfac: pavements and uneven sidewalks to |{0 im a very few min Hiss peril of the spine and its little colsar ee Sanh ‘thers edt barely interference, and walk briskly “Riser Corey: athe a st ite gentre, you will nd that Veleie ease, is as ignoble for a nation as You he : ae. for an individual, is ot veers very much to one side. a poor father who teaches his sons ™USt no i tat date Bed pleagure should be Sours, to keep in the contre but theirchief objects in. life; the. wo-|i.you: Will think of ere he and man who is a mere petted toy, in- |Cmdeavor to wall geet you c= cannot ieee a direct li capable of serious -puspore, shrin! planation ee rgnie tes ing from effort a uty is more pitsble th than the veriest overwork: the pectin Cpe ou aS ; takes a longer stride than the oth- er, causing one to walk to one side, You can an experiment in a “What's that pi ni e of twine tied | id you post | 60 hee blindfold yourself, and en- “Nos she forgot to give it to deavor to w: | will find it almost impossible. te THRE pyaetly HOLL renemine tat wen fiexPactEs to TRY W' 6) FERRY. 1FWe nal i MUGGSY BLOSSOMS OUT IN FULL BLOOM AS A MUCK-RAKER GEE, DE BLOKES) ICOATIS KETCHED} IN DB_RAKEY ig goal MGINNld PE Ss: . i divining Hie cause of the retrac- | AM, PEST rue at's ROHSRY JIM gi Wi HEY, 1 bi ’ AOS. HY, 1Was QUT WAMTIH’ DONT THRO. ANY Boscuss ar ly YOURSELF SLEVIN Youd SAEED IE FIATRID ADT SLEUTW'S PKKIN’| Hid WISKERS OFF PRULLIGAT Y Although King Edward is the to dispense with Court Government. These, with a cocked is what makes it a let, while the collars of some other ls Th yon giliakeuaspaveineee tare You in alk between them. You

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy