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Durham Review (1897), 23 Jan 1908, p. 3

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no ill- _ Ty Letty Hunter at-miillmniml them, to help take care of the childrm. she said. Rad lttty only consulted her mm mm fort. "onveuietwe and liuppiim» "lu- u uuhl certainly have preferred to remain with her throat adored brother and hin be. loved wife and daughter at llowli-t "all; for, though of all hli nistcrn and Math on. Letty. in churnctcr and llldeQltlnn. bait rmmblml Daniel Hunter. <he had the true" appreciation and Mullen: " ulation of his character. and the warm- " amputhy with his thoughts. feelings and purposes. and she was always hap- mhn forming one of his blamed Id. But from her youth up Letty Hunter had been tho cheerful little Cin, doveN---tho singing little goody-tmr in! of her family-und had always my“, "signed her own intern“ and Inclination! to the newuitk-s or the ox- utlonl of others. in if inch self sacrifice hi been the most mturnl thing in the would. with {inst fun "alive." I Mrsted before that Vtty, like everybody in In the world. had had her own par- ticular trial, and it was briefly this: M the tin. that Mr. Love] came aottrtirqt her "ter Lucy. Letty also had . beer. in my! way mm: worthy of While the Much winds were still pipiq, Niel Hunter and his family out more nought their too often lor- Ioken home It Howlet Hall. Mr. [Run to! Wkly turned his attention to. md it!“ earryirtg an of those incom- IS:' Work» of improvement that yrs” ' and" his favorable, ttu/es, Ind has “Danced in that section of country. The - wmmga. assigned and built by Mr. Hunter at the Summit for the latch. was now eompietely finished and oomlortsbly furnished. and ready to re- civo its tenants. Ard o-urly in May the you». pair, with their infant brood, ligand thither. In her hta.ttaast1-ttten til the joys of her life will be multiplied, and all the non-owl of her life will be comforted. And I feel confident my child will be _ I he! nut-h faith in Dlniel Hun- ter, that I All Bure he will convert and roan-c- her Falmm-r, and make him worthy to be his non. My darling, hope and be contorted!" best actions ascribed to the worst mu- tivu; our mt “meat purposes often “Wind, our brightest hopes often &trtrenmt. And We have had domestic. .orrow.--erusrtting, heart-breaking sor- town. Your loan was such an one. Yet, Mill, still I have been an blessed in him, “and! so bios-ed in him. That is the ransom I want my darling to be blessed , he! u.trams--ttten .11 the joys of Then after a little while, she said; "We have had trials 3nd sorrows, loud; who has ever msetstred them? We have had bitter political enemies; we Paw been envied, hated, ulnndorr-d; our "And the peanut. blaming only Father ban given us, I "t..rrthV “that" "Yes, “and! Yes. love, for there in lone like him in the world. Donia] Hutu was alwnys good nnd great be- “ other Inn. And every ndvancing R'.' he has grown better and greater. we were young Maud, I loved him " Inch u I thought it was possible for It!" to love. And every advancing LOO! I have loved him better and bet- r. And now that we are growing old, 1 love, him but of all!" said Augusto, with turn ot deep joy Welling up in her ere.. "He will not.' Your father, love, Inn-he- over him with the “notional: More»! of 5 parent. Your father will tree his coal to evil, and ensure mull. to '02:" "My dun-t, dearest father'. Oh'. Par-a., my undivided heart-my whole life, devoted solely to him, would not "er Major nil we owe blunt” ti “Huh, love!“ iririririiirious, even q ta of repaying him. Can w. 1'er 'Ill,', Handy Father for all We owe u!" "My dun: child but not move in this t's,", nt nil. It does not become her no. new ' it would do no good, I, love; it would do harm. Falconer at in left to nutter none of the pain- 'o""qumaees of his own and pnssions Old not neu, baton he will ever think it meant, to bring than into subjec- tion to It xenon nnd 'sonaeirner. It will not do always to interfere to coun- Wt the wholesome discipline of an!- loving." "But, oh, mus-ma! is not this u dam ri,',"': thing? He in w wracked! What in his . int and den-pair he should min 'lllat"lt t have heard of others “in? What if he should be loot to u louver?" CHAPTER It. designpd trnd built l the low the Summit for the ‘us in in opletely finished and Ho: Let ed, and ready to re. “shame; ml NIH" in May the not y their infant brood, wagon.) him, ex nmpauic-d them, to Inge to he ehildrem she said. I thrivi mulled her own com. prospen XXVI“ Ming our Heav- us, mammu. u cry, and durtutce years pa maid. tmitor--t tween them. So Letty, against all cir- eumstantial evidence to the contrary, and against her own reason and judg- ment, felt that her old friend cherished her memory still. But if Bo, why had he not sought her.' Ah.' there was some 'nineoneeption, some misunderstanding. And sometimes, when the desire to lee him again became an strong, so impor- tumste, such a silent cry wrung from her heart, she would feel an almost irre. resintible impulse to write to him. But something would always restrain her; something would always oblige her to crush down the impulse, to stifle the cry, and no on in silent, cheerful en- durum-e as before. And so the weary years would, and Letty became an old maid. Yet she was never without a. suitor» the prment one being Mr. Bil? that the intellect Ind the proud scam the simple until time. the f tween them. tio that had many ye: have [my to spend with him morning- During all these years and since her parents' death, Letty had had seven] very eligible offers of marriugo, but she had politely end thankfully declined them all. “Her heart still clung to the mouldering put." Many loved Letty, mac her. Letty WM now thirty-three your; ot age. and looking older and dres. ~iug old". yet not fueling older than that, The love of her youth still lived in hm” heart. and kept it young. That is scum-times a blesaing. but oftener a our” to its suth't. " " a bleuing when joined with I strong mind-m cur-e when linked with a weak one. In the former cane it will make its subject sympathec ti" and nttrttetive--in the latter it will make him or her only affected and rid- ieulous. It made Letty wiser. more lov. ing. more Armpathir.ing with the young, while it misled her into no youthful " feetiona. much u ever, though for I time she grew thin and pale; and when they pre- scribed hoth and wild cherry u a good nervous tonic, she laughed and took it. For yous no one ever knew the ac. rifiee that Letty had made. And to the by of their death. her and parents never limpet-ted it. And when the ven- erable pair were gathered to their fath. ers. Letty found great comfort in the thought that she had remained with them, and had cherished and supported them to the very int. and tue they never had imagined how much " had the love which die gave him without meaeure. He in a poor and struggling son of the people. That did not matter to Letty, except that it made her love him ell the more. Hie email businen lay in e distant western vitlnge--tb" did not matter. either: Letty would have gone with him to Kameehatka or Terra-del- fuego. But, nine, all her brothers and sisters were married and gone except Lucy and heme”, and if they alao mar- ried. their old parents would be un alone: and as the idea of making a aar- rifice for others h:ul p.ever once entered the brain of the potted beauty. Lucy. nothing remained but for Letty to re. sign her lover, which she Ttttt did. And. disappointed and dejeeted. e de. parted for his western home. while she remained the light and warmth and coin- fort of her father's and her mother's fireside. And she jeeted and sang fa grave. To at him talk, t had kept t y years. tha , [mum] tags pond the no l him she h: 00ml the noon him she had jng- this was nity caught he 'ru State election for representatives to Congres- waa approaching ,and thin My question was shaking the Cal- monwulth to its very centre. Com- Daniel Hunter's old party wu split by the maddest of radical faction, who dubbed themselves the "Out and Gators,” while the conservative Ulf were hon- ored with the home of the "Oid Gnu-do." And now a new question of national policy arose. of a nature so important and exciting. comprising in itself sonny bitterly conflicting interests, that the two great political parties of the coun- try were shivered into helium, and the old boundary lines of politics destroyed in the new Itom. I These were delightful days to the three. rTo be thus laboring for the welfare of ! their neighborhood, and actively employ- ied out doors during all the beautiful 1 spring and summer weather, brought I them vigorous health and elteerfulnese. Yes! this was a delightful regenerating I life for him; would it might have lasted longer! But Daniel Hunter was, above all things. a stun-smun and politician, and he could not by any possibility divide himself from tho political interests of his ootmtry--they attracted him with In irresistible: force. "You! this active, useful life of 3 country genrletuan it madly what he needs now it is exactly the life that will unbend and refresh and recreate his health and energies." Mrs. Hunter was happier than ever before-GPI/ser in herself, and happiest in her huslmnd and daughter. Even Daniel Hunter had lost that hab- itually pondering, ('nreworn, anxious ex- pression that seemed to have permanent- ly settled on his countenance. And he now looked younger, stronger, and in better health than for years before. And his wif" thanked God in her heart u ghe aid: Maud found herself full of hope and joy, for she had perfect faith in her iatltvr's power to bring her early trials to a happy issue, and through him Ibo often heard that Falconer was still at Donzoni's studio, and in a fair way of doing well. coma not he perteeted in a year., Daniel Hunter, with his constitution- ally affectionate though unimpassioned nature. and with his habitual endeavor to unite and harmonize his publie, social, domestic life had drawn his wife nnd daughter deeply into all his wishes Ind purposes for the good of the neighbor- hood. Ind Mrs. llunter and Maud, when no urgent household duty compelled their presence at home, were ever to be found with him upon his scene of labor. And very often he appealed to the taste and judgment of wife and daughter to em- bellish the design of some building, or decide the bend of some road. And Daniel Hunter continued to occu- " himself with the improvement of his neighborhood. New stone-quarries were opened in the Barrier, and new con] and iron mines were searched for and discovered in the Ridge. A woollen factory, and an iron foundry, and saw-mills were erected at the Sum- mit. And good and reliable inducements were held out to meehanics and laborers, from the over-stocked city, to come and settle there. A county paper was estab- lished, and a high school for boys pro- jroted. And private buildings went up rapidly at the Summit. And new roads were out, and a railroad was contem- plated. But these plans of improvement required time to realize them. Even with Daniel Hunted "to the fore" .and his strong "shoulder to the wheel," they could not be perfected in a year., be, and yet he passed the whole of his time in attendance upon Hanoi-in! It is difficult to explain exactly how this hair. pened. It might hove been necessity, habit or fatality-the compulsion of sur- rounding circumstances and of people's expectations-the obligation enforced upon him by his tutteeedents--the tyr- anny of the past over the present; or it might have been only the young lady’s own exaction, which in common gal- luntry the young gentleman could not resist. At all Manta, they were always together--in their early morning ride, in their forenoon readings in the library, in the afternoon drive. in the evening lounge in the drawing-room, everywhere, at all hours of the day, they were toge- ther. And the Hunters looked upon their engagement as a settled thing, and won- dered how anyone could have been so mistaken as to have given him Maud--- Maud, who was now the inseparable com- panion of her parents. Sir Henry Percivaf was eerttcuUrG dvvply smitten with the beautiful Maud Hunter as it was pqssjble for him to 'Not where I should be happiest, dear brother Dan, but where I should be most. useful, must I live." And no she departed. And Mr. and Mrs. Hunter, with their daughters, and their relntive, Sir Henry Perfivtl, remained together at the Hall. L more than of tG.riro1iy else. She Inlighell at him, and said that she menu: to be (pay, whotu but)“; blended character“ tics of fun, frolic, wisdom And goodneu had amused, Rammed and completely won. But Letty would none of bins, an; """""-ea- a and hew coal and ' searched for in the Ridge. Ilpl flow into every channel of business. and holy to lay the ghost of hard tiam., v.1: eh politicians have conjured up. Where the Money Coulee from. (London Advertiser.) Atty million dollars Are to be [pd this year in Cemdu by the three great rnilrm companies. Most of the come. L',',',',' the old countr_y_, top. 'm Estate of the gross value of £350,737, with net personality £168,139, has been left by. Mr. Thomas Berry, of Parklands, Dunham Elms”; Cheshire, and of Black- pool, who died on August am. Mr. Berry Wu head of the firm of Meats. w. Berry. Limited, Hacking 1nd boot-polish manufacturers, of 525 Roch. dale road, llarpurhey, Manchester, and of Homerton, London. He left £4,000 for charitable put-pages. including dlic 000 to the Salton! Royal Hospital. No sane mother would wish herself treated under the conditions of medicine or surgery of half a century ago. Why then should she give her little one the old-fashioned medicines of half a een. tury ago, which more likely than not contain poisonous opiates'that cannot cure the child, but merely drugs it into temporary inscnsibility. Baby's Own Tablets is a modern medicine prepared with all the cure and skill of modern medical seience. And the mother who gives this medicine to her child has the guarantee of a Government analyst that it does not contain one particle of opi- ate or poisonous soothing stuff. This medicine cures all the minor ailments of little ones, and makes baby a healthy, laughing, happy child. Sold by all medi- cine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from tho Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. in the state-who has been years in the Seante-who has been resident Minister at the highest courts of Eutope-has been in the Cabinet at Washing- ion-who has been twice the Governor of M---; I say now just think of the mortification it is to me to have him come down from that position. to run against a village stone-ttutter. and take his seat in the House of Representatives by the side of the newest men there-- village moohanieq, too lazy to W rk, though not to make slump species. and country potiifogging lawyers. too worthless for their legitimate business, and who have taken to politics.” Mrs. Lovel eoineided entirely with Miss Honoriu's sentiments. sympathized with her foelinwe, and said she wished her brother wore not so-vis/r." (To be continued.) "My father can win no new fame from an eleetiomrerirrg victory over tv-villages stone-eutter--who is. as I am informed, the nominee of the Out and Outers. And hen onl to think of a man like m yin- ther, wig has fine} the highest. attic-Q This determination of Mr. Hunter wu excessively distasteful to all his family; but it was from vttriotrq and opposite reasons that they disliked it. Miss Honoriu {ms extremoly vexed, be. cause, as she confded to her friend, Mrs hovel: Thus argued, Daniel Iluntar tscv.,vv,',rvl once more to enter the arena of pwliziml strife. And the committee departed with his nmwer. It is not to be supposed that Daniel Hunter was forgotten in this contest. Borne time before the electioneering war had reached in. highest point of exam- ment, Mr. Hunter had been repstedly, and by my voices, summoned to the rescue of the Old Guards. He was called to the field of political action by appeals made to him through the columns of newspapers. by letters from personal and political friends, and finally by ll oom- mittee from the Old Guard Convention, who travelled from the distant city in which it was in session to soliet Mr. Hun. ter to become their candidate for the House of Representatives and to show him the opinion of the convention that he was the only man certain to win over the votes of the majority of the faction, and thus reunite and comwlidste the party. The simple fact was this: At the very first note of alarm, " the first sound of the trumpet heralding a fierce, political strife, Falconer had thrown down chin-I and hammer, model and copy, rushed from the studio, and hurled himself. body and soul, pell- mell into the very thiekeet of the fight. And when gentle Maud was weep- Ind over M1 disappearance. Dom" Hun- ter soon heard of him. stumping the district from one end to the other, and attracting to him all the fierce, politi- cal ineendiariee and maddened tutucott. tents that comprised the. radical faction of the old party. According to the State Constitution. Falconer O'Leary was as yet not of an age to become the condi- date for their Representative in ' Con. grows; but as there is no statute of lim. itation to the combined power of a re- wlute will, fierce passion: and over- whelming eloquenee, Falconer O’Leary wan certainly the most powerful ohnm. plan they had in the field-the very Achilles of the Out and Outen. . tions were called end then violently broken up. Mass meetings Vere illlll- . loaned to deliberate, but met only to fight. Stump (utters went abroad, and, sometimes got praised and fund. and mrried in triumph, and sometimes mot" . bed and half murdered. And the Old' Mlsl% Guards and the Out and Outers never', V )?rt' met singly. or in numbers. without pitch. ',, 'rl r Rt" ing into tl battle of words or blows- a , 'l' ', _ rl J' nutrunce. This desperate state of: , ' tl amnirs. with his party divided ngainstl A , itself, as well as against all other parties, , gave Daniel Hunter the greatest pain: and anxiety-trouble that was soon augmented by a letter from Donzoni. in- i The agrieultural wealth " the Unit. forming him that his protege, Mr. Fai. 1 ed States. brought, to public notice re- coner O'Leary. hnd left his studio. left _ vently through statistics "owing figures inmmpletc two or three very promising running into many hundred million dol- works of art. and that he had gone "to i lam. and covering the various sources parts unknown.” , that the farmer has at his command. The simple fact was this: At the very I reveals a progress during the punt de. first note of alarm, at the first sound ' eade that is little short of marvelous. of the trumpet horalding a fiereo, l That for a runsldernlile number of years political strife. Falconer had thrown the World ha, tu4otowltulgod the suprem- down chine-l and hammer, model and I flex of thi, mum”) on a uln-nt producer WP."- rushed from the studio, and in an established favt. In the matter of hurled himself. body and soul, pell- i Ebony other food produets America is in FORTUNES FROM BLACKI NO MODERN MEDICINES. Jr eytiiitAftity -Eiiieiiii7Eii TORONTO The churning room in esaily one od the moot interesting features of the - lUhment. From here the buttermilk in pumped to the respective “ah end From the pasteurizing apparatuses the cream is carried over cooling machines and then pused into the curdling mm, Close by are located the great rem n- tors for the manufacturing of ice. gem in Men the wonderful attention paid to hygienic utters. The tiled floor and walls, the high ceiling, the many win. dows admiLting tht' trir, everythre it is sanitation w id: is given chief con- t,ideration. ennl in which the milk reached the 11airy um. ttoo placed "n uummatic car- riers that take them to the rinsing room, where they are immediately wash. ed and scalded. As the cans pus slow- ly to their destination, with tops point- iU downward, every drop of cream remaining drops into a trench that run- beneath the carrying chain. Many than. and pounds of the richest cream Ire thus saved annually to the dairy. In the separamr hall the milk is one more weighed and then begin the skimming process, the six mluunoth up- new“ capable of taking care of 30,- 000 pounds of milk an hour. From here the skim milk is eonveyed partly to the rsmuteurizeru mud to tlt" 0119mm vats. The J”. Up to the moment when the. milk at- rises at the dairy the respective farm. era may be said to work independently of each other. The profit-sharing but man begins with the mun in charge tak- ing account of the various receptacle. containing milk and arriving by the hun. deeds. In this matter of oo-operation the owner of the great ostate, as well as the farmer, with his limited acres, stand shoulder to shoulder. Into the cooper- su've dairy, the management of which is in the hands of men chosen from among the big and little suppliers of place u guide, the secret of. butter- mnking will soon be an open one to you. More than one successful dairymnn in the United States bu had the benefit of a. visit to 'rTritolium," where the " ?ehls in charge ere at all times glad o explain the 1"1,1,"It in use. "Tri. folium" is located in t It very heart of tho "butter country.'" All around the cattle show the reéults of such feeding as can only come where the an'rig a. cilities are the bed. The 'dr/d,') fields extend for miles without a break. Farm after farm give evidence of a. prosper- ity that has made the Danish tiller of the soil the wealthiest class of their kind in the world. . At the International Congress of Agri- culture, held at Rome, the honors of distinguished representation went by acclaim to Denmark because of this country's contributions to the science of butter-making. It Wu generally con- ceded that the co-operative plan in effect among the Danish farmers lent itself admirably to the most successful re- sults. Wherever you travel in Den- mark, these cooperative dairies form rallying points for the farmlng interests that concern themselves with butter prev duction. Throughout Jutland. the sev- eral smaller islands and in Zeslsnd where Copenhagen is located. this phase of agriculture is the most conspicuous to the eye, " it is the country's greatest money bring". . . . . There ia nothing at all mysterious about the manner in which Donia}; but. ter is evolved from the fluid stage of croam into the solid product. Not far from Copenhagen the eo-operative dairy, "Ttitolium." is the uxnmple which has found a number of no less striking roun- terparts throughout Denmark. Here the process of butter-making reaches its highest point of perfection. Successful (Bo-Operation. But with all the ingenuity mnking for superior quality whether it applies to the grains of the field. the raising of live stock or the manufacturing of the innu- morahle produets for the sustaining of human life, there is one branch where one of the smallest nntionn in the world easily leads the rent. Danish butter has attained to at promirtenee that today extends throughout the entire world. Not only in England and Germany, with their own advanvml dairy systems, but in Africa. in South America. in Aus- tmiin. in fact. everywhere. the quality of the butter that Ihmuark sends abroad is considered the chief reuon why such a demand uxkts for this pro- duct of the Danish dairy. the very front talk from the standpoint of exportation. Through skill and hard work the lmsbtndmun has made the nat. ive soil yield him "unsure: that foreign consumers readily accept in exehange for golden coin. $16?” WAWN The Churning Noam In the Separator Hill. $33 'ditiiiitrs ttverAbrowded. I w Nasty half . million‘in New Yuk i .n live in tenement homes and can“ T11 There is a no? of an inspector who ‘ found four fmi fen living in one room, 1 ol chdk “as being drawn moron in such . If manner” to mrk out: quaint " lil each family. "How do you get an. l - inquired the inmctor. “Vary l well,” n. the reply, "only the In: E l III the (“that corner keeps boardeea." I H Fortune Teller-Ind now. sir. must beware of a tall, ' My. with blue eye.- '%; with blue G',',7 him-And tt ins dress and with. in}: Yes, yes, I know; shit my _ An Aluyao‘nlnn Hotel. ( A hotel has been built It Addie Abba 1 by the Empress of Abyuinie, end to h. ‘nufunte it the Emperor Menellk him- eel presided st 5 benquet given to the diplomatic body, sitting for the ttmt time u e Europun at 3 European meal. This ll pumps one of the moat Antoni-hing dung: m Ill numbing world, and shows how things but chem even lint-e Lord Napier, of MAgdnlu, went up to the town from which he took his title just forty you. ago. Not so very long ago we and to hetrr of the banqueta which the Abyw siniuu made of rsw flesh, and there we. 5 woodcut in on old book which represents the chief: sitting around . cow and carving Iteekl off the placid animal, which ngtrently walked shout from table to ta le for the pure- London Globe pletely cured and once more able to go shout my work with eue. Dr. Williunl' Pink Pills ere oerrtainir worthy of I11 the praise I con give them." Thousands write giving just u strong proof of the vdue of Dr. Willi-mi Pink Pille~not only u . cure for rheumo- tion, but as a cure for all the ailment. finding their root in bad blood, such on Anemia, heart palpitatiom indigestion, kidney trouble, headnehe and lucky-he, disordered nerves, etc. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills on sold by medicine dealer. or by mil It BO cents A box or six bores for $2.50 iron the Dr. Willioml Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. islands have the Danish grade. whic] I price. It is my to make the statement that n medicine will cure rheumtiun, but the rheumatic sufferer must have more than mere Matomenta--he mult he" both reasons and roof. Dr. William. Ahik {ills cure ttll for“ of rheumatisttt. Here Is the ”590%: it.,"',','.',',"),:',":"' ll, , disease of the bloo . 'ivery dose of Dr. Williams' Pink Pilla aetually make n01 rich, red blood This new blood drag out the poisonous acid, loosen: the . ing joints, and rheurmstism in banished. Thousands have teatified to the truth ':of these statements, and here is further fresh proof. Mr. Race) Montigny, od St. Jerome, Que., says: "For may years " was a victim of rheumatism and wu almout a. cripple. My work made it ne- cessary for me to be on my feet I good bit of the day, but my limbs became so swollen and the ain so agonizing that I wu forced to Il work, I tried remy edy utter remedy, but nothing gave me relief, and I began to think I would never get better. At lat 1 Wu Per- ouuled to try Dr. William! Pink Pills. In leu than a month I noted I slight change in my condition. I continued the Pills for three months and ut the end of this time the "veiling had diuppetr- ed, every pain and ache had left me and l I felt better in every my. I was com» pletely cured _and“once “01.31:“? E l The {not that Siberia is now row-g- nized I factor in 1"tttetottakitttt is Urge- ly due to the Danish dairymen who have gone to that country to act the teach. eta. Since the war between Russin and Japan agriculture has nude rapid strides in this part of the Cal". empire . Be, fore long Siberian butter will become an active competitor for the world's tub. A ghnce at the business end of this, probably the world'. most perfect dairy, shows A no less thorough orgauizatiou than that which makes the product. the acme of perfection. Dina-torn of many agricultural colleges in this country, to- gether with leading officials of the De. partment of Agrieulture at Washington, who have paid "Trifoh'um" a visit, speak in the highest pnine of this part of the business. But from every part of tho world there have come at one time or another to this model dairy men with the let purpose to learn the secret of Dan. ish succm in thin domain. France, Russia, Japan have had their dairy ox- pert/s It "Trifolium." no Waning to andiraid -tiUCiiiiir' Prosperity depends on and: oimillr meth- od. u prevail in Denmark. Without, the txr-operative success of this dairying induptry in Dean it in not probable that such exception“ ro- Iulta could have been obtained. The farmers of the United sum, especinlly throughout the West and Northwoat, __.‘ L.._!__,! A . - - Every Form of the Disease Yields to This Blood Buildmg then transferred to the elm-”making departnwut. in the butter packing room you gain an insight into what in - by the nutneu of a Danish dniry. Dressed in Apotleu white. the men and women engaged " this work are select. ed boom of their appearance, which denotes careful “mention to details in persons] ttttttters. Here the butter is placed in those hermetic cams that soon an- to have for England or for plur- thousands of miles distant. The British islands have long held a monopoly on the Danish iroduct because of the high grade, whiril, however, exacts a high PINK plus KN EW HER. Wlll CURE RHEUMAIISM. Remedy. When he goes into his house l. Jun. for fear of a moune, In. Then he (Wish; and he turns all the way, rho way. may; 3., Oh he hacks into " shell--- h g " you look at him walla " You will jun see his horns, so they lay, "I "r. "r. .AU ‘alu‘und. But he of the pigtail has noon {what his little neighbor can do, and signs or" not lacking that he has begun I to think for himself. A leader hm, sprung ‘up in his midst, too, who mo has sob- wrved what is going on in the world. That the yellow mm in his native loud in capable of doing more than his open- tions in the white man's country would indicate is admitted by those who hum studied him omit closely. When he nukes to the full mliution of what he out do something in going to happen. When European Ind American religion, nod European end Almeria]: dviliution have done for the Chine» people what they aim to do, what wilt the million- upon millions of Chinese do in return? Will they expect to be trotted in other land- n the people of other land- expect to be trotted in theirs.' Will they de. mend bounty for bounty; tax for tax; privilege for privilege! Pedupl time will work out the Iolution of the pro- blem; undoubtedly It will, but the lwakening of Chin is bound to tax tho brain. of the beat smear-en the world can produce. And Quit And Thruv'n slow. glow. And he winds him " about Till he draws himself out--- You will Cmd it you look. this is no, so, M", ,u... ago. sue "(we Island lim- pire was supposed to be as closely locked up against European civilization " its Emperor was shut up from his people, but when the awakening came the little Jap made strides which made the world sit up. Within the past few years Japan has taken a place among the nations, and has even been said, by some writers, to hold a position on the Pacific side of the [two continents similar to that held by Britain on the Atlantic side. And while all this was going on China was looked upon " a country to he para-Hod out in zones of influence among the great I nations, and " a people to be legislated 'otgsitrst when they desired to enter an- other land, and exploited for trade pur- poses when the chose to rqnain at home. John Chimiman must maintain the open door at home, and find the closed door abroad. But he of the pigtail has seen With And he But the mil in very 'hr, When he think no one is um He wiR my! from his cell , -Etira1seath Rheem Stout now. . ' 1 i Wise men of the nations are beginning } to “k what in going to happen when the great Celestial Empire has its awaken- I in. It has become a habit to refer to I China an centuries behind tio, M...“ “A They claim that theoe plopooiu‘ona; are in ("or of " per cent. ot the working- grtaet-thnt only five pet can. is union- ined. But the five per cent, if that be the oormet proportion, have views dip metrically can“ to the above, and - in may on. to lave the power to enforce their demands. Inc-mule of being aroused lo a true sense of its poassibilitiets. That name idet prevailed in regard to hm not so very many yarn ago. The little Inland Em. pire wan auppoood to be u closely locked up against European civilization an its Emperor was shut up from his manl- No radiation In to the number of up- when and helper: when of proper The [that oHieHt “auction of the British Volunteer Infantry Force show that there are about 190,000 om-rt men from whom (provided they accept the conditions of service) to form the fourteen divisions of 12.0% and; or 106.- not: to m mica; No Mien In to the use of tools, Ieerrr or Wrigl- emept such " The United Shh. National Am- tion of mm bu col-pruned its - with Men-nee to the labor -tioat into A alien of negative pro- with“, a follow: No hymn No dosed shop; No sympathetic strike; No thnttatittag of output; No cal-film the of the union label; - Ho‘uqlfice 9f the indepwdom work, OHS This it the kind of want‘Jo-r tttat phort m up the winter, I a funny little and! h . head an O tail, I lives in a house that in round, round, round; P unis ltd"; hack a qua" ll pack. 'd? CliT right along the ground, you ,pound. "iiiiiii'."fj1taiiiif, El8?lllgirtiii,i5i. aturin behind the times, and The Snail ceiverr now, in

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