Milverton Sun, 25 Mar 1909, p. 2

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Love Kept Or, The Girl With the Nut Brown Hair and Dreamy Eyes. Its Faith “Miss Margery, you're hurtin’ me. ePatatye. on he pleaded, but! Sa Leelee ofa 0, Tm growing fearful curi- told him. Told him ie Micueie thet hed oomasio her on the heights and amid th Lm Mabey 4 CHAPTER XX.—(Cont’d). “As for tho rest,”” Margery was speaking again—‘T know it is only too true, but—why, my, why? rd isn’t David’s way: m the little that I’ve learned a poet Le will tell me if Spe know,’” ed by the Beckside, that stre elie hangs on the edge of the tin gery, their ion’s But Tinion, scared by ghosts ets lin the waters. To-night a she passes erty to his side, her dager secur x an aoe eld thera gee = yon help me to u Ne has ee nA vee young, is boy Da et, and all his days are before] pleases di ith joy; and if it please you, you imay weigh every one with woe. And why should he psd Surely, you canno! kn ES = 5 & te = & < $ Pe 5 6 = eS a = 8 sake, then, if not for er knees on the filthy nly a girl, Mr. unless he have no sorrow of which I may not bear a part. For my sake, then, I ask, won’t se of you, and I’ll —pray—for—you—on — every—oro —of—the — days—that — God—has —yet—to—give—me.”” Do you hear that, man? Margery Manesty, kneels to you, Margery e a god in. He steps to Margery’s side, aad fostihers thas ietsp-bulaing with into », the; he message that unknown and has sent them— “ASK—TOM—TINION.’ Overhead there is scuttering of The Captain’s shoeless feet, but his message has dulled their ears, so that they hear it not. In that mo- ment re is nothing for either of them in the whole world but that aig of paper. Only that, until from the note 1 ang’s flashes to the writer, to the hand that eae it through the window ; ized into life, he darts up the sta airs, q eure son a furious hunt among e litter of the deck pecatihes in the gloom Tice pid the railway cross- ing he falls in with the Sleddle- mere brougham, John Curthbert on the box and with Nanny Manesty, ewaiting in a fever of impatience and ae the return of her niece. Ere the o called the ee hour he encoun- ters it again. This time it has halt- ong an find him in the narrows of the my oF Sill holding his hand she|had e jing, an’ if only one goes down with Clyde, an emigrant in search of a home, a transgressor flying from his transgression. ‘ CHAPTER XXI In all her activity, Margery made no show of unreasoning, inconclu- inter, spent its wrath, and tho ps all won thr “We must gel bim back to the old way, Missy, Tetore another, winter comes round,” Cap'n Dan pleaded ; tnd then once more he vaited the dread that = $5 a £ 8 a boats’lt not pad another batter- men aboar niest of Allerdale’s triple streams, Ned Michael Strang’s FEBIE: his poel ichael irsoe Meat, haa become & fugitive iny boat curvets across the Firth, and, rope him ashere on the rocks be- morro’ design whose daring had stagger- ed her and = - harmed and again cast down in timorous ot | uncertainty, told the “hin -jed_of him and thos sailed the seas on eS; Pi ships. And then she ares herself to meet the storm of opposin| in-|test, bub instead bee: acefully conscious of a of | Bteat calm. janny Manesty ad 7g tribute to her genius and pronounc- a benediction upon her project. an, he was re- duced to a condition of limp inepti- ‘tude, his eebone was as that of a sea-soaked c: en, after a © |pericd of wai is as g; Maree begged An the time I’ve been building up |; drifting on a lee sh got my bear | and-by tim: The red duster’s enough for me an’ I’ve been proud of enigss an ma: x broke off sharp. They rea- lized in all its ee completeness | ¢ the coauingonsy ry “With aboard.’” sonted the final catastrophe, cala- mity converted into crime. black blot OF sham might be feed eg never the crimson stain o! lood. mee must get him saved hetore another winter, Missy. we could lay hands on nak Tinion “Yes—but as we oan ’t we must. manage without hia.” “Ay, rk aaa is sete Bravaly ae tried to meet them, tried and ietered: Only a@ matter of seconds an “You cos is help me, Cap'n Dan.” “Tm here, Missy; say the word.”’ “You etn think that David’s in the dark, that he isn’t conscious of all that’ s pene: pe in his name and won't inves “Sure ai acdeath ! ae shall need a it you're more help than urs. ey many of David’s men ems yo do just what they’ id biden and care for no con- sequen tow rari Well, I don’t think there’s any more Tinions left. I can’t say I grad any of them, but—anyway, those I'd want an affydavy with, ‘woulda! t man one of David’s brigs.’ “And you yourself, Cop's n Dant wesceses I ask you'll not refuse me, not turn back, you'll not call ms. es nor my scheme a on ae “Tt simply caps everything, this; does, Miss ’m lost, can’t tell whether I’ve got sea room or ore; can’t say 2 ey bys -an’-by, when I’ve ste so that she might have his chi but. jhe ‘is arrangement she| x eae vei “No, no, rca aden Cameron, n, this and es is your place He sit bebidas tet I may.” as a pain, her pitying contempt, the glance of blighting ridicule. asy, Missy, easy; we're all frisnds here.”’ This from Cap’n “Ay, all of us.’ This from Cam- ‘Tve a lassie of my oan a an’ I'd take it kindly if iesnbiiady be wantin’ to explain why fashion, but there’s not a bit o” need for that. We ken it for S selves. Cap’n Dan there has given a few on us, them you see around you, a glint of the way you’ve stood by Maister Davie, an’ you've ut us all to shame. the laddie, we all ie him whether I’m hove-to or runnin’ oul ade Su ohisges erent ee with stun’sails an’ royals set. By-|an’ after that thought o’ little bub ed caulking an’ His bearings « obtained i oraculasly— “Mi ‘iss Margery,”’ he said—sure- bit ly ASree had the face of the little b skipper worn low—‘‘to- ata De sailing under a new flag. always been noo it, but now I’ve hoisted a new 7s broken the Manesty e fore, and I’m taking me Rake ots Sue n Margery.” CHAPTER XXII. There ae oe of them, sons|— the some short, | t of sea, e tall, but all of a bronzed, brawny, ANG ee a a im Cameron, cf ‘ight that none would question, at the head of the fable the others Dea upon the settee to right left. All except the sepost ei the Daniel—entered in the log- book and the Family Bible as Har- ry Casson, but known to the world as ‘‘Goliath’’—whose height an girth banished him to the alleyway, where he couched cross-legged sats and almost filled up the gap. Standing room in the cabin he might have had, but he would ave paid for it in extreme personal tneonvenienee, whilst considera- ions of economy forbade him a ee on Into this little conclave, then, as at the last of the tw elve melan- choly Siecked trailed away from the old church tower, came Margery common impulse thrust every man to his feet and pulled the cap from every he: You" Il lot me come in, won’t ‘ou, Captain Cameron?’ she. in- quired, with a wan smile, and ex- tomate her wee across the table to the skipper, who responded with words of kindly welcome. “The cabin of an Allerdale brig’s not exactly the proper place for a leddy, but you’re mair welcome Shia Tecan voll you; m my ship’s at your service. An I think I can say t’ same aboard at t’ present moment.’ eleven bass bl n endersement, and with a queenly lit nod, Margery ac- aoe their homage. She turned again to Cameron to his wriggling away from the pvthesbsstoe ean delivorst bluselt| 2 T’m going to ship as| pom Ik, a derelict, without a chan “There's cas eisiee I'd like put myself an’ the mates Arie on. Right from the varra start 0’ this cruise we'd our pers on Tinion, an’ perhaps when you ake note of ivvery entry in the log book it’s not surprisin’ that we should have thought him in Maister Davie’s ow— we're not so sure about it. Cap’n Dan’s told us about Michael Strang, an’ e’re sure o’ nothing. drifted until t’ middle o’ : s you that’s hung it there A sound that might have been a sob beat upon the Malachi’s wood- en walls “I just want to say one thing more,” Cameron continued. “I’m =PeskiGe for ayadlls Mid Marery: an’ +’ others mun do ¢’ same. I'd do anything begin | life ower agen an’ ship a ast if I could pease Shae aie gitave that David Graham Bei dropped to the level of a money-grubbing, ship- wrecking ned ‘An too, Miss, ” Sam Hodg: son roared from eyrie. ‘An’ And so the cry went spice raised her head and now she was smiling, smiling through tears, and this time there was no doubt eee. the’ sol ess you for that,’ ” she amet “T knew it all ‘the ae but es good to 5 You’ve given me courage, Captain wot oH, deinen all my foolish fears away ai me confident in the request I’m going to Ae se ot troubling so much abou the ae of the Habakkuk’s ee Da now,” she went on, “‘it’s himself, not his name, that you must help me to rescue. He’s ss ing rine nha aeandsaue ing to help him to ae right. That is the object eet has towered be- fore me and made me ask you to meet me here, ee no one can overlock us, at this hour, when no you've called us in this by-ordinary | Sem! shamed us, Miss Margery, you’ve dwit ‘e all sek can spy upon our coming and ing.’ eee yer pardin, Me Ritson interrupted, “but divven’t you think that if you axed him ij your oan way oud bring him too? Just you try him, Miss Margery; go till him an’ tell him as how you want him to throw that manager chap owerboard an’ clear aw t’ Bill a HE do it, faix bit he will. Dash my bui it if you axed bin for Jwohn the Baptisy s head o1 slates he’d nut be able to ie it. ‘Try hi do.” 5 (Zo be continued.) —— WEDDING SUPERSTITION. Bride Believes Waxing Moon Will Be ng Happiness. instance, ing, neither at the full nor on the|{ wane, for a waning moon foretells at marriage, love and luck will lle, while a full moon dunes bring an increase of nu} piness, alae and Sees says ‘om n’s Life. Neither will Any Sonae bride rod pe watever tank; wear parenior cereee oh eae Se she firmly believos in the forbidden Gactue Bice: i ald adage) elie mor peo ‘day, |_,1¢ i8 not food alone we must sup-| bi the moro tears she sheds in after phe ngs poeta ae 1 | tak pounds Lee ite Hetiarlend, ont daily, even when fed on a succulent : bride will wisely look upon the best | tation: | Too much wate # | side of the matter, and regard the glistening raindrops—not as her English sister does—as prophetic of tears, but ‘‘showers of blessing ;’’, 5 while if she weeps at her marriage, she laughs after, saying she has spent her tears beforehand, so that she will have none to shed in her new home. et SENTENCE SERMONS. Short prayers often last longest. Friends do not freeze to a frozen ear! Easy times often account for hard habi Nothing i is really sacred until all things a. the Blane Be: not balance small perio: Short ee ‘to fortune are often bottomless cuts. If wishes were wings good works would soon ceai That soul is Hey lost that ga- ae ee of the ligh saw Bis, “Fainer by eae over hi brot! Your rank amongst men depends on how you help tnem to rise. ie faint hearted are those who think oul of feeding themselves. think they are going for- wad ‘Deavely because they fear to go ‘the ere mee sorrow without selfish: ness, but never. selfishness without Poor Kind of piety that seeks all the pleasures and dodge: the pains, The significance of sins against ourselves is that they are sins abit of our minds never to think ot ‘thorns until we are pay- It often eae that the ae who talks much about going rel] glory has neighbors who wish he'd make a star! ¥ In the United States there nis thirty towns or villages pete se lin, twenty-one named ge twenty-three named d Paris, peas teen named Lon: B erererrey REt+tsetettetertet ete About the Fam EPRI FES edoesege vee powewwwe a owe HOW TO OBTAIN pene. MILK ty There is no one fees feed ane ‘eed her carefully, increasing the oe Tf she is slow in ‘taking hold” s! ix getting too muely that a a ihe leaves cen Uhing but hay o: aw. The cow can do her best Baa a when all the organs work in har- mony. The importance of this will be readily understood when we con- aw that there i is in the intestines of the & Fay Ee a 3 $ after eating. Water should be fore her at: all times. Food bud water are important, but there are other things to be considered. We know that we can take two cows, feed them just ayy same, and produce more than times from her own bod, then there are cases factor does not account for t) erence in aaa It is generally said cne.cow has the milk-giving funo- tion to a set degree than the other. What is “function?” Wi might define it as a nice sounding word that we use when ‘‘stuck;” ix a similar case the untutored In- uae gi Where does it come from. Some- Y. eo irae from whi increased amount of milk then she performs a miracle. THE PART OF PURE AIR. There is still another element that is too often not considered, and that is air. Sen of animal life as it is to plan man can go for a long oni ‘without food. Som fasted forty. days and nights, But, deprived of air 40 minutes we would in Proportion air, wo reduce the efcieney of the whole syste e air taken into tye dune iii 1Be blood, pro- motes circulation, aids a ables the animal to accomplish w to be a good one must have great lung capacity. ‘To pro- duce well she must have suificient pure air to fill her lungs. else her superior lungs are of no. benefit. to] The oxygen that she breathes goes centres, stimulating | ¥ them to greater effort. Just ex- pla: ver, I will.give you an eine ‘that fe mea in my work, ‘wo years ago I had two cows of the same age, same io hised, calved on the same date. were in about as equal condition as it would WILLIE WESTINGHOUSE RAKES OFF THE MINISTER'S COAT TAILS ‘imes in two or even|a breathe out cannot g . | perly, 5 ed over and over again, enetep for cows when tl a|have done big wor! Aisin aycoital tothe actly how, it is a little hard to ex-| <== 5¢ possible to have em I tested hem for a manne at save right al si This dairy had a very bad reputation with ua cow men. ‘VENTILATION. The air in there is never good. Se t i very bad. The Part of it ue be Rete It is bad al eaving We had better “follow this lungs ithat when it is too hot, it raises the temperature of the body too much, @ perve centres aro not stimulati EES ERESHEN IN WINTER ting two cows in Juno, The upeiee had been nice and tho air Satulaeating and the two cows well. Along came e have | W2"! , and ne ering the aay of water the cow ara aie the air she uses. not milking in- the winter wil a BREN so much water. But, if cows are to give a large amount of milk the follogine eum: the heavy dem made upon ay strength. Pure vee he quite as od cow kept in an ill-venti- lated stable at abies turned out in the raw cold air all day, will noe attain . TURKISH HOTEL RULES, What You Must a and Must Not Do in These Places. interesting study of the ave basing the researches: wholly on hotel regulations. “The rail” Frederick _ear Tommy —Jim has co work awfully hard at this seasun of the year He has about three acres of lawn to clean up I concluded it would be easier if the rake was experimenting with. were attached to che electric wagon Yithen ie broke the controller. ‘That fattled him, and He coulda’: steer the .¥ s amachine. “Then it orade a quick tara and the rake caught in the Miniater’s coms —>- voyagers who ‘descend upon tho hotel are request- ed to hand over to the management ny money or articles of value they may *. Those “ have no baggage must pay every day, whereas those ie have it ey: do so only oncepa “. Political discussion and play: ing musical instruments are for; ida, also all noisy- converaas 8 Bre is permitted neither to play at cards nor at any other game of hazard, 5. Children of families and their servants should not walk about the rohibited to present one- self outside one’s room in a dress- ing-+ Meonh or other negligent cos- om , tea and other culinary os may nob be prepared — in the rooms be procured from outs hotel furnishes every 10, Voyagers to take their rea, descend to the dining-room, wit! the exception of epee who may, do so in aie son. It is, grins forbidden to! sleep on the floo: sae Fe ‘You seem lee nd of 8 marked a lan yee nes

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