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Durham Review (1897), 16 Sep 1915, p. 6

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ii it) "A very nice arrangement." Da Souza drawled witha devilish smile. "Me is old and weak. You were with him up at Bekwando where there are no white men-no one to watch you. You gave him brandy to drink-You watch the fever cone, end you mg on the concession if one should die 1 to the survivor. And you [an :2.an in the bush where the fever is, and-behold you . return alone! When people know this they 1y. "l lent.“ t: "Perhaps it is." D- Sonia answer- ed, perhaps it is not. Perhaps it is worth nothing at all. Perhaps, in- land of being 3 millionaire, you your- self are a swindler and an adven- turn!" 'ur you don't speak out in half a moment." Trent said in. a low tone, "I'll twist the tonne out M vom- N came down from Elmina to deal with you," Da Souza continued. “I had made mono; trading in Ashanti for palm-oil an mahogany. I had money to invest-and you needed it. You had land. a concession to work gold-mines. and build a road to the coast. It was speculative, but we did business. I cam-a with you to Eng- land. I found more money." "You made our fortune." Trent said drily. " and to have the money and on ground a share out of me 'ITU is worth a quarter of a million to you!” fPertye it is." D- Sonia answer- to remember, my meeting. Trent nodded. "Neyer likely to Trent rose up with titusttintt eyes. N Souza shrank back from his out- stretched hands. The two men stood facing one another. DI Soul. Wu "raid, but the ugly look of determin- ation remained u n his white (we. Trent felt dimly trait there was somev thing which must he explained be- tween them. There had been hints of this sort before from Do Sousa. It was time the whole thing was cleared up. Ths- lion was ready to throw aside the jackal. were Then Du Souza crinzed no longer, and there shot from his black eyes the Venomous twinkle of the serpent whose fangs are out. He lenned over the table, and dropped his voice. "I speak," he said, "for my 1Wer,rnr dunghter. and myself, and I assure yo” that we decline to so!” “You are not in earnest.' You do not mean it!" "I can ensure you," Trent replied grinning. "that l do!” “But do you mean," Da Soon splat- tered, "that we are to go like thitr- to be turned out-the lautthintt-irtoek of your servants, after we have come hack, too. all the way?----", it is non: dense! It's not to be endured."' "You can go to the devil."' Trent‘ answered coolly. "There is not onel of you whom I cure a " to see unin. You thnuxht that l was ruined, and) you studded like rots from a sinking, ship. Well, I found you out, nod a? Jolly good thing too. All I have tol say is now, be on, and the quicker the! better.'" I Id open the gate T' Trent helped himself to Mac, und leaned back in his chair, stirring it thoughtfully. "My dear friend."' I). Sousa ex' chimed, depositing hie silk hat upon the table, "it in a very excellent joke of yours. You see. we have entered into the spirit of it-oh, you. we heve done an. indeed! We have taken a lit- tle drive before breakfast, but we have returned. You know, of course. that we .would not dream of leaving you in such a manner. Do you not think, my dear friend, that the joke was carried now far enough? The; ladies are hungry; will you send word to the lodge-keeper that he may li CHAPTER Xt.-Aumt'dt are right. DI Bonn,” he said. n excellent joke. The cream of Ir, that I am in earnest; neither r any of those ladies whom I there will sit at my table THE GOLDEN KEY 'tl mg 'ct-EE 'ti2iiiii, Cr) ms: MII ' V tii?,?-,,,') _iiliil Edwardsburg hang; i , ‘Crown Brand’Cc td," Trent said. "I'm anx- " what you've got to say. here! I'm a bit tshort-tmir. morning, and I shouldn't to play with your words." no play at all," Da Souls with a user. “I ask on er, my friend. our In! CHAPTER XII nun VUU' CINE.-.“ l, C. " I'D " I... TI". The CMMCO. Limited. Montreal "-r'"'--rs-oa-as,,iiidLil" is so economical and no good. that " in little wonder that of pounds are eaten every year in the homesol Canada. from: Brad '--the children's favorite-U equally good " all cooking purposes and candy making. ' 1.”. Y WHITE” is an" while (on SW. a. no! so Jtrcnrtmmced i'Oiwor a: from: Bra '. You my - it. III vow: .IMlI-IN 3.. u thirty seconds," he said, l If you haven't come to then, you'll be sorry for Or "The Adventures of “and." By the Author of “What He Coot Her." nd my friend. It will be Afterwards you will Land in. a low tone, man out of your forget " .v . Syrup and the childfcn'; tlliPrif,,ie, . >craving for "can will be t" tet . completely "tistied. V lire-d and ‘Crm Brand" KllL l t"/,rll,r, 3W3 m In t e emu Edwardsburg 33g; 313,231.” tststrdy, c ' Crown Brand Corn Syrup io mg enough," me to tell Better listen It will be it he an cest ban-re?" Da Souls shrugged his shoulders. "it was not necessary," he said. "Our interests were the same, it was better for on not to know." 'rd',' remembers nothing. then?" Da Souza hesitated. "Oom Bam," he said, "my .ltalf-hrother, keeps an eye on him. Sometimes he gets reat- less, he talks, but what matter? He has no money. Soon he must die. He is getting an old man!" "I shall send for him," Trent said slo'wly. “He shall, have his share.'" “Supposing that this were true," he said, "what is he doing all this time? IN hy does he not come and claim his share t" Da Souza hesitated. He would have liked to have invented another reason, tgt, it was not safe. The truth wu st. Attra." Wm" rm--- ..- . 'ldrul.yhr have you not told me this Trent thought of the night when he had crept back into the bush and had found no trace of Monty, and gradual- ly there rose up before him a lurid gossibility Da Souza'., story was true. he very thought of it worked like madness in his brains. When he spoke he strove hard to steady his voice, and even to himself it sounded like the voice of one speaking a long way off. "He is helf-witted, and has lost his memory. He is working now at one of tht. Basle mission-places near “There's no old woman’s story about what I've told you," Da Bouatt snarl- ed. "The man's alive and I can prove it a dozen times over. You were a fog! and g bupttler." Trent stood for a moment like a man' turned to stone. Alive! Monty alive! The impossibility of the thing came like a 1Utrh of relief to him. Thr man was surely on the threshold of death when he had left him, and the aged)! miracle! was gut. “You’re ttuiGir-ifG" a fool, Da Sousa. Do you mean to take me in withuan tld woman’s story like thet.'" "Your Emmet was no corpse when you left im," he hissed out. "You were a fool and a bungler not to make sure of it. The natives from Bek- wando found him, and carried him bound to the King, and Four English explorer, Captain Francis, rescued him. He's alive now!" Du Souza slunk away before the fire in Trent's eyes, but he had no idea of going. He stood in safety near the door, and as he leaned for- ward, speaking now in a hoarse whin- per, he reminded Trent momentarily of one of those hideous fetish gods in thegacred grove at Bekwando. "it is a lie! I carried him on my hack for twenty hours with a pack of yelling niggers behind. We were lost and I myself was nigh upon a dead, man. Who would have cumbered him- self with a corpse? Curse you and your vile hints, you mongrel, you hanger-on you scurrilous beast! Out, and spreaé your stories, before my tln- neg get on your throatl Out!” "You had a partner whom you de- serted.” Da Souza pulled himself together. "Yes," he said; "what I have said is as nothing. It is scandalous, and it would make talk, but it is nothing. There is something else.” "Well?" pleasant to look upon :Anxthing else} ' He stopped, out of breath, for the veins were standing out upon his forehead, and he remembered what the English doctor " Cape Coast Castle had told him. Bo he was silent for a moment, wiping the perspiration away and struggling against the fear which was turning the blood to ice in his veins. For Trent's face was not, will Bar, 'Oh, yes, it is the way mil- lionaires are made.' " Ie'ttt “Crown _ Con Spread the Bread millions "Say, Subbubs, I understand you have Wombat's rake." "I have." "If you'll lend it me occasion- ally I'll let you use Dingbat's kn- mower when“. you lib." Inaintiir-certiinsr. {331} here to be detached. Judge (of divorce eourtV-Aren't WI', tttathed to your husbnnd? T Beginning with writing puper, the (order says: "The instruction already given that in petty cash notes and L suchlike communications which can be I put up in single page only half-sheets ’of paper are to be used is still often idisregarded. The cases, however, in Ewhich a half, or even a quarter sheet -of paper will traffiee can be consider- }ably increased, for example, notices Special attention is given to steel pens, which the municipality declares should be made to lut at least a week. Care is also enjoined with respect to ink, which is to be properly pro- tected against dust and evaporation. Inkpots are always to be covered over after use, even if only with a sheet of thick paper. Regarding envelopes, the order says: "Envelopes, if carefully opened, can be used again and again. In suitable cases also they can be turned inside out and the paper used again. Sealing wax is only to be used on communications for outside address- es." Next comes pencils, regarding which the order reads: "in future, however, pencil holders are to be given out for holding short stumps, in which way the life of pencils can be considerably prolonged." of meetings. 70! eourae,Wr tan}; notes, making ealeulations, and " on, only scraps of paper are to be used." Teutons Now Instructed to Be Careful of Pens and Paper. A series of orders have just been issued by the Berlin municipality to its employees regarding the necessity of econorny in writing materials. - ‘_ -.__. “we” It is well known that the slightest organic impurity in sugar will start fermentation in the jam, and St. Law- rence Sugar which tests over 90% pure has never failed the housewife. Grocers everywhere can fill orders for this sugar. The beat way to buy it is in the original refinery sealed packages 2 or 5 lbs. cartons, 10, 20, 25, and 100 lbs. bags. ”V ____..., v- - AIIVEU But" cessful makers of preserves have for years insisted on securing from their grocers the St. Lawrence Extra Gran- ula,tet) leer, (Pure Cane). THE CANADIAN GOVERNMENT OFFERS SUGGESTIONS FOR FRUIT PRESERVING. In an advice circulated throughout Canada, the Fruit Branch Dept. at Ottawa suggests as being best for preserving purposes, certain brands of peaches: St. Johns, Elbertas, Craw- fords and Smocks, and for lums Bradshaws, Gages, Lombards, Tdll", Claude. The advice is timeiy and to it may be added that ma_ny of the most sue-l "I knew," Da Souza murmured, "that my friend would be reasonable." "And the young ladies?" "Bend them to----" "I will send them back to where they Samg‘from," Da Souza interrupted blandly. -- . ,,,__ “mum, ... u. "I will think it over, at least," he said in ' low tone. "Bring back our wife and daughter, and leave me gone for a while." "ff you send for him," Da Banzai said slowly, "you will be absolutely] ruined. It will be a triumph for thosel whom you have made jealous, who, have measured their wits with yours) and gone under. Oh! but the news-, papers will enjoy it-that is very cer-’ tain. Our latest millionaire, his rise and fall! Cannot you see it in tel placards? And for what? To give‘ wealth to an old man tg past the: enjoyment of it-ay, imbeei 9 already! You will not be a madman, Trent t" Trent winced perceptibly. Da Souza saw it and rejoiced. There was an- other awkward silence. Trent lit a cigar and miffed. furiously at it. i most imagining thinilwhich had enter-I ed into is life? e looked across? the lawn into the ine grove with) steadfast eyes and Il'n'l'ltu brows, and) Da Souza watched him, ghastly and) nervous. At least he must have time; to decide! I religion CO mm, and whose sprain only a ftw. hoy.ry agq had can luv-v, eve eww-vu -- . - H- . ye of wealth. Montr elive, penni- .llp,l.litl-Tl't,'t'h,t'.t'lTr.;i't'k'l"l',t ill-paid missionaries, toiling ell dey for e living, perheps Bqhinq with the natives, or digging, e sieve still, with- out hope or understanding, with the end of his days well in View! Surely it were better to risk ell aim, to have him beck et may cost? n e thought more terri e yet than my rose up before him like e spectre, there was e sudden cetch " his heert- strin , he wes cold with fear. What won]:I she think of the men who de- serted his partner, tut old men, while life wes yet in him, end safety close at hand? Was it possible that he could ever escape the everlesting stig- me of Cgrfett,-iin and before him in greet red letters e sew written in the air that fatal dense in the agree- ment, to which she and ell others! would point with bitter scorn, indubit~l able, overwhelming evidence sgeinst. him. He gesped for breath and walk- ed restlessli up and down the room. Other thoug ts came crowding in upon him. He was conscious of a new ele- ment in himself. The lest few years had left their mark upon him. With the handling of greet sums of money and. the eequisition of wealth hed grown something of the f1muteier's fever. He had become a power, solid- ly end steadfastly he hed hewn his way into e little circle whose fascina- tion had begun to tell in his blood. Was he to fall without a struggle! from amongst the high places, to be! stripped of his wealt , shunned as a man who was morally, if not in iii) a murderer, to be looked upon with I never-ending scorn by the woman; whose picture for years had been a " religion to hip, and whose appearance _ I latches breaks up that. Brstdiri- slaashes it into tiny atoms; for you have sold what m not yours to th tg2hgMtg'dgp for that, At This; call it f I . e paused, out of breath, and Trent remained silent; he know very well thath? was ftusetofneewithatrreat crisis. Of all things . this was the moat fatal which could have happen- esrto him. Monty alive! He roman- bered the old man’s passionate cry for life, for pleasure, to taste ones Tore, for h9srverr_tshort airtime, the: Bah! don’t you he that lanty’l ex- GERMANY'S NEW CARE, Why She Was There. (To be cqntinued.) the A little piece of cotton-wool in glove-tips prevents holes being rubbed by the finger-nails. To remove fat from soup, pour the soup through a cloth saturated with cold water. Powdered alum added to ordinary stove-polish increase: the latter's brilliancy. A pinch of chrbonate of soda added to goup will 1(er it from turning your. A warmed" knifeboard palishes knives quicker, better, and with less labor. A pan of charcoal in the larder keeps everything sweet and whole- some. A paste of chloride of une and water will remove ink-stains from sil- vet. Brown boot polish as-excellent for polishhtg dark varnished doors. Blue will not streak linen if a little soda is mixed in the blueing water. Artificial flowers can be restored by being held in steam. Tussore silk should be washed in bran water, and no soap used. Suede shoes can be freshened by be- ing rubbed with sandpaper. Tinhed and bottled fruits should be kept in the dark. Pine cotton is better than silk for mending gloves. The best iron-cleaner is a piece of wire gauze. in about twice as much cold water as beans. Change water after first five Ptinuty' boiling, using hot water for lsecond cooking; add pinch of baking lsoda as large as bean and one-half teaspoon finely chopped onion, and lcook two hours slowly. Add one- ifourth pound sliced bacon to soup and cook until beans are tender. Skim bacon out, crisp it in frying pan and fry one-half cup stale bread cut into cubes in hot bacon fat, browning them well. Keep them dry and hot in oven until time to serve soup, then place a 1 few in each soup plate. i Mutton Stew with Salt Pork.--Buy) lone or one and one-half pounds of!‘ {diced salt pork to every four pounds iof shoulder of mutton. Have mutton 'cut in small pieces for stewing, and 5 roll pieces in flour. Remove fat from 3mutton, put salt pork on to fry, add i mutton and saute until slightly brown l 1 brown. Have ready one onion, peeled 1and diced, one green pepper with seeds removed and diced, two peeled carrots, sliced lengthwise, and peeled potatoes, enough for family's needs. Add onion, pepper, carrots and one potato, diced, to contents of pot, sea- son, cover with boiling water and let cook slowly until mutton is almost done; add remaining potatoes and cook until potatoes are done, adding more boiling water if necessary. Serve with mutton heaped in middle of dish, surrounded by potatoes, carrots and rim of parsley, and pass gravy in separate bowl. Those who do not like mutton will find this way of making the stew gives new turn to an old dish. New tinware will never rust if rub. Bean ismur.--waih, pick over and put _beans on to cook over a slow fire Scalloped 'ronttue.--one cup chop- ped cold tongue, one and one-half cups cream sauce, three hard boiled eggs, one-half cup boiled rice, one tablespoon melted butter. Butter bak- ing dish, put in alternate layers of tongue mixed with cream sauce, chop- ped eggs and a little rice, seasoning to taste. Sprinkle bread crumbs and grated cheese on top and bake until light brown. Ham may be used to advantage this way. f Peach Fritters--skin three or four "small peaches and cut into small pieces. Mix and sift one cup fiour, one and one-half teaspoons baking powder, three tablespoons powdered sugar and one-fourth teaspoon salt. Add one-third cup milk gradually, stirring constantly, and one egg well beaten; then stir in prepared peaches. Drop by spoonfuls into hot deep fat and fry a delicate brown. Drain on Brown paper, sprinkle with powdered) sugar and serve on napkin with ac) on or vanilla sauce. Steamed Blueberry Pudding-One cupful milk, two eggs, one cupful blueberries, rolled crackers or lifted graham bread, one teaspoonful salt, one-half cupful sugar, two table.. spoonfuls melted butter. Beat eggs and add milk, with salt and sugar. Stir in berries and enough crumbs for drop batter. Steam one hour. Serve, with pudding sauce. About one pound of bread crumbs will be needed. Celery and Onion &Uad.-Diee crisp stalks of celery and mix with same amount of diced Spanish onion (or less, depending on which you prefer uppermost, celery or onion), and toss lightly in cooked salad dressing, after seasoning with salt and paprika. Dis- pose salad portions on crisp lettuce leaves, tuck a radish rose or two to one side of celery and onion mixture, and serve. Peach Ba1tuL--seald and peel large, ripe fruit. Cool and remove stones, and fill with blanched almonds, or stick full of shredded almonds. Cover with French dressing made with lem- on, then with whipped cream or cream mayonnaise. solely through its delicious flavour and down-right all-round goodness. Tea out-rivals and out-sells all others, "SAMBA? The World’s Magi Ted Useful Hints. About the Household SOISOIIIMO Duh... . "gsm,' "_-cus'", C', Lt w. i, a _ '.'a% m.- ij), Jijuu"aai'iiit'a StrsTFf:ct: ', war-Kw _ '8 MN a; _ sr ca Her,” ‘ - 'ttti" tia'tic',si TORONTO It's useless to be good unless you're good for somehing. "Not always. It frequently lands one in Jail or the hospital.” "The beauty of automobiling is that it keeps one out of doors." Knieker--is Jones up to his ears in debt? Boeker--Worto ; other people'ss ears, "I think I made a mistake in argu- ing the question of expense with my wife." "What do you mean t" "She wanted an automobile, and I inadvertently told her that I couldn't afford it." "Wellt" "Now she wants it worse than be- fore." Green wallpapers should never be used in a nursery, as some contain ar- senic. If a piece, on being burnt, smells of garlic, arsenic is present. Mothers in Greece, before putting their children in the cradle, turn round three times. This is to ward of? evil spirits. Swedish mother; Jil" money into their child's thnst bath, believing that this brings future wealth. Children would a be hotter adults-the temperature shou fren i81.ti to 99 degrees. Feeding-bottles with long tubes are so dangerous that in France they may not be sold or used. No child should sleep on the floor, as all heavy, impure air sinks to the floor level. An insect in the ear may be i1oated out by putting in a few drops of warm olive-oil. Tea is poison to s baby. No meat should be given to . child under four years of age. _ Pieces of raw potatoes clean an in- fant's feeding-bottle better than any- thing else. Caught At It. "What's become of Bill?" "Oh, he opened a store." "Doing wellt" "Naw; doin' time," Herbs for drying should be picked early in the morning, and just before the buds open. Cedarwood scattered on the range gives a pleasant odor, and nuilitu. cooking smells. bed with fresh lard end baked in the oven before use. All white garments should be hung in the sunlight; ell colored articles in the shade. Up to the Wrong Ears. Silence in Golden. F (11/0171? Jugaé‘g‘xi: £72243ng th, 2lii'i?fii"l'. Also in Debt. For Mothers. it has come to otter than should be C"AnAsut1artrmrmmaat,outermr, L Husund-u"Weu, Jane, I never knew you to throw anything away yet that was worth over a nickel." Wife---" threw myself away when I Itarried you!" Ahe Wise Buyer Is the One Who Saves. Benjamin Franklin, the great apostle of thrift, was not a mere penny-saver. Few men have given their money more generously than he gave his, even when each cent he got was earned only by industry which even his hard-working neighbors thought prodigious. He saved when saving was necessary, but for that very reason he had money for his friends as well as for himself when the need for money arose. He was just " strong in advising wise spend- I ing as he was in advocating timely; ‘saving. The wise buyer is the true) 1economist, for he saves his money by using it. The trtorekeeper who knows his business and has s true regard for it desires the custom of the thrifty. His business, is to give service, and a man ftnds more pleasure in serving those who can appreciate what he does than in serving those who have; so little regard for their own interest ‘ that they know not whether they are served well or ill. The merchant who advertised his goods thereby calls up- on the public to judge his work and declares his willingness to be reward- ed strictly according to his merits. Patterns, 15 cents each, can be pur- chased at your local Ladies' Home Journal Pattern dealer or from The Home Pattern Company, 188-n George Street, Toronto. inch chiffon for sleeves, and 1% yard 24-inch net. Ieturnnihttam, Na. 9042, shove not only has this delightful future. but it ui.verv-Amrwuirtorteniy iorontvGdadeerhirrtuintrirdN style. he lower part of the Ikirt in extentudineaoeadeefteet. Item-in size- 82 to 42 inches but measure, requiring in size M, 6% yurds of 86- inch material, with 1% yards of 86- oily.A1 hoiikathnt FALL FASHIONS HAVE MANY Dual-11m. woman. may have boon the bullion - u this season. South-v0 been good, SAVING BY SPEN DING. Be Know Her. lecture chimn- mac-ye. No. 9042. These completed a code. of individual 'raeue--2 and 5 h. Cartons and 10, 20, so and 100 lb. Cloth 3.3... ,h.ithpmtea,tuiuiiiiii'iit ti ' toPantmandensas' yourceum' “he ”may ' m Original Packages. l A Londoner who was showing some country relative the nights of Lon- don one day recently, and was point- in: out a 'rasiptituertt old residence. built years ago by a famous and ra- ther unscrupulous lawyer of his time. "And," the Londoner was asked, "was he able to build a house like that by his practice.'" "Yea," was the reply, "br his practice and his practices." On coming home from the ottiee the father met Jock and Dick. "What have you been doing to-dny, boys?" he questioned. "Pightin'," replied Dick. “Fighting, eh? Who licked?" “Momma did," anewered Jack. "Tommy," laid the Sunday school teacher who had been giving loam on the baptismal covenant, “can you tell me the two things nooeuary to baptiam t" "Yes'm," said Tommy. "water and a baby." Cleopatr- wu the daughter of a brother Ind sister, and married her younger brother-the custom of the Ptolemiel. The receipts from the tttttt day held ,in Paisley, in connection with the hos- pital, Saturday, mounted to over $2,860, leaving a balance after all ex- penses had been paid, of over $2,646. Propoeale to establleh canteenl in chipyardl and engineering shops and docks in the Clyde area were under discus-ion at a conference of the Cen- tral Board of Control, and represen- tatives of the employers end workmen in Glugow. The King’s Scottish Borderers are the only regiment: privileged to march through Edinburgh with fixed bnyonets. Other regiments are ap- plying for the right to be equally favored. An appeal for men for the my by Archbishop Maguire, I!“ read in the Roman Cutholic Church in the Areh- diocese of Glugow. The Ayr Parish Council he. invest- ed $1,600 in the War Loan, and we trying to get the sanction of the ulter- ik' I? die; than!» Invent a further 86,000 belonging tol bsqugst. Sone 6,000 Scottish “when luvs volunteered to spend their holidays on wet work. The roll of honor of the Edinburgh University on active service now con- tsins 4,007 mes. There are now 670 women noting u conductors on Glasgow Corporation trsmwsy an or training for the du- nrhntutaeawororosrrrleatd' unwind-aw FROM OLD SCOTLAND umormmmmlm manuals. 130 to tl " " rc on cold nighl ther, ond a entmnro of 1 we: of cold moving the and allowing " to enter. neither do th In the sumn the bark of t Air enters tl the studding hood above This allows c allowing the the summer chickens' hon - the I tween three F Viable to m other device The is vet tight front air,--- the fo strum plenty In determining the six consider the number of f, to be kept in one pen. fowl; are too crowded fe production. A ttoek of MN “Bunny be lllowe mum feet of floor up: Where the attendant i: keep the house clean a heavily littered with um use: will be nmnwry. it is far better to nllow u - nther than too lit! Ber the pen the less mu or be required per lens will thrive it that is four equa- per hen, but one in a pen 2 x 2 a each one has a eh, the entire floor 1 more exercise. A fhtek become less. - per hen mun one keeping eight allow at least ten - per hen. ur, to give special m and bedding the condition in a p Iponsible on man: winter egg prodo larger hens should be inches. In the winter close together, but in there should be plenty allow them to spread should be twelve inch: not closer than fifteen ml or ceiling. Show b Ir Leghorn. or similar be hm It s greater 1 Wills Ind ceilings. It in spoiled by brushin against the walls. made In such a , smallest number I heres, with ole! lakes Ind other we rule, sin-ll hens six inches of per. larger hens shoal Mandi thou] link w " tix Th par pa In th, kw p01 th, (row, and she find lots of e) keep them ev, hustle. Perch for the. u so a little lite. OM they Beet avoid: crowdln enusine them t In the cool of t Ut the er the: hr quartet to keep th coop. and and do I! moved to M is th 'sek of troubles. Overcl "In Item, and ova “dolled eggs, and e " follow". Overcrowc M clouly toRethst "out. leaving them in condition, resulting in & Min; Also produce, Hou- become mischievo the disgusting vice of f h the result. Brlu'r r beaith and egg [whim-11 loch that Man pin room." m DANCERS OF' l INC BEN Dun " " ttttr venti “PI but one her 2 x 2 feet, bu I chum a floor Ipu rein. At th In Ion, the hen must ir In; eight or hit ten Iql. ' hen. unless If LOUL' n Br A. P. Mm wt " tmple h hid "

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