Cape May Herald, 23 March 1901 IIIF issue link — Page 5

m

FIELD FLOWERS. Tfe* klmplr. liltlo wcj-klde roa* To nir U «wo#ter far. And tuorr Ix-nirt with crarr. than thow From abrllrrrd gardrnt aro: And vagrant ahrvda of bomrlraa noag Maj krvni-r idraaurra hold Thau lo (h<- grandi-r bard> brlong. Tbougb bound in >llk and gold. Nixon Watrrman. k of Vonwa."

, From "A Kook e

* A Brave J Little Woman, f

A hr I.OTTIt BROWT*. a She came into the world like other babies—u tiny red aton^devoM of ideas, yet surrounded with a multiplicity of reaponal! Illlics.,. She was a twci t. 4c»". darling creature. and made ihgt dull old plat heaven lo her possessors. She brot with her the natural accompaniments of colic, spasms, teething, etc., and the usual appetite for buttons, marbles, anything hard and indigestible that could or could not be swallowed. While she was her mother's pride and joy she was a corresponding care and mls-

Her natural and religious sponsors christened her Lillian, but the name was softened into Lily, and spoken always with a sort of tenderness that made It seem unlike other names. Just as Its petted owner grew up to

be unlike other women.

She was a very pretty girl, with a pale, dear skin, soft brown eyes, a gentle mouth, and a sweet womanly ex- « which made hers a lovely and

attractive face; and she grew up among the quiet people of the village where she was born, beloved ft all. She was quite a woman when her fret lover came and those who know and loviM her best had set her down as a confirmed old maid. But after Dwight English came back from his long labors In France, there sprang Into the colorless face the old story of

an awakened heart, and the soft

in the love -everybody

him. and everybody said, “What a pair

t eyes

found a new beauty In the Jove light they wore. Dwight English—everybody knew

they will make; be so full of noble ambition. sp wise and strong; and she so gentle, loving and true.” Thus, with the benediction of all about them, they were betrothed. V «l'

; in

nothing odd In his, only their quiet walks together into the old church, where they had both been Sunday school children, and Dwight sitting In' the Raynor pew. and reading the services from her book. These and other simple tokens, were all they gave to announce their betrothal. And when people laughingly questioned them, they said: ITss. we are engaged, and when the convenient time comes we shall be married." It was a terrible year in which all this came about—a year when the great cities were shaken from their foundations by financial movements—when rich men became poor, and poor men rich—when mighty fortune-* changed hands in Ihe twinkling of sn eye. and dire misery and trouble reigned throughout the land. Old Mr. Raynor was not rich. All his life he had been tolling and savlnj

d buildings, end the well kept stock, and had a little In the bank, yet be was only well-to-do, not rich. . All her life Lilyvhad been taught this, and with those teachings ever before her, had grown up the thoughtful, prudent girl that she was. always remem-

bering the rainy day.

' Her fathers careful life bad been her 'example^ aud In the latter days of her mother's life! that patient, hard-

worked woman had said:

"God. In His great Indulgence may

■o order your life that It shall be o Jong day of perpetual sunshine:

never be Idle <

careless, lest these

and find yon unprepared. So Lily understood and was prepared. though she looked such a tender little creature, all unfit for anything bnt fair weather. U Was in the days when Lily's heart was lightest, and her face the happiest. and her home duties a pleasure because of the brightness In her life, that the clouds first came. Dwight .had gon*'’away for a month on a business trip, and Lily had planned out a month's work to make the time pas* quickly. One morning she had been busy at hfr work, singing blithely, and moving about with a merry heart and light . steps, when there came a cry from the Hbrary.and hurrying in. she found her father-sluing there with a white face and trembling hands. “Father! what is Itr the asked, as gktcaugbt tb« stiffening fingers In her “The rainy day!" he murmured, and • then a purple shadow crept across his face, and be fell forward. They carried him-up to his chamber. and laid him—so lately a great. Strong man—upon the bed. as helpless as as Infant: and then, out of Us hopeless, horrible silence. Lily heard a aay. "Paralysis!" and s'he knew

f the rainy day of which he

Tb*-*«* financial crash had car-

[E

t ev-ui save the hoaee la which lived so kmg—«ad aha was

At first It came like a horrjble dream wherein she stood helpless, and be sieged by terrors loo horrible to en dure: but through It all one recollection came to strengthen her: Dwlghl eras left—Dwight, with his strength and love, and he would oome to hei when he knew. She wrote, just as pny woman would have written, from the depths of breaking heart. "Come to me. Dwight. Father Is sick—dying, perhaps, and 1 am alone and so unhappy. Please come to me

darling!"

And then she waited. Did you ever wait for help, for a

r waited, watched, hoped, de-

message. or needed somebody or some

thing. «

f pal rod for something, without which It seemed impossible for life to go on?

If you have, you know hoW she waited for the message that should bring her comfort, and save her from de-

Yet It came noL Morning after morning. a^iale. troubled face looked from the window as the mall carriage passed, and day after day tired feet climbed the hill leading to the postofflee. and white Ups asked for the hoped-for letter. The farm, the stable, and all the well-fed stock, hay and farming Implements, were sold; and then someone came and told her that the house was sold, and the owner must move into 1L There was a little place to rent In the village; kind hands transferred the few things left the broken family to the small, low rooms, and Lily uncomplainingly took uo her life there. But she said, with that sad smile oi hers:

faith In him for worlds!” And then she went on working, patiently. perseveringly and hopefully. Everybody wondered. Such a petted, happy, ordinary little thing she nud looked all. her life, without a grain of heroism In her composition, or anything but her tender little ways to distinguish her from other women, that It seemed Incredible she should pos-

woman who knows she must be never flagging, never losing heart, but keeping steadily on and hoping. "I feel such a sense of coming rest,” she said one day to a friend who had comforted her all through this trial. "Something good will come to me. 1 have worked so long and uncomplainingly. that I cannot think that God win forget me la the distribution of His Jbys. Walt, and yon will see."

And It did come.

Right in the midst ot her greatest sorrows, when life seemed the darkest and hope seemed the furthest away, there came a message. It said: "Uly—My own little girl, what can I say to you after this long silence? How can I atone for the anxiety I must have caused you? I feel, little one. tMt an atonement is impossible; fotj'Uly. after weeks of terrible 111nees. I come back to life and strength,

"sea cucumber" group were long believed to be vegetable, and tn%n>' blue water sailors think so to tfils day. There are animals that seem to blossom as freely as do flowering plant*. The rea anemone Is one of the commonest of these. It Is found dinging to rocks In sheltered places along shore In practically every part of the world, for It Is not confined to any special region. It grows only In comparatively shallow water, that Is In depths of less than 600 fathoms, although there Is -one species that lives In the open but wherever found It Is essentl the same In structure. It Is a tough, leathery tube, spread out below Into a "base" that fastens It to a rock or other foundation, and expanding sibove Into the flower like "disk" with the mouth in Abe centre. All around the opening of the mouth are curling tentacles. not unllVe the petals of modern chrysanthemum. Some varieties arealmost or entirety colorless, while in some others the tehtacles are gorgeously tinted ap.d rival the flowers of the field; but in all lurks]death In a certain and horrible form. Watrh some little creature touch the curving arms and they will be teen to curl inward and wrap the intruder In their folds as they push It toward the mouth. The Inner

yet totally, hopelenly blind. Think

of It—blind, dearest, with i

. dearest, with nothing to

hope for so long as I shall live—and I may live to be an old man—with only the memory of the beautiful world, of which henceforth I must know nothing! And you—almost my little wife— what can I say to yon? Nothing, bnt tell you of my broket) life, and give a.back your.freedom: for I am poor.

ly a little more added to her burden. and It did not alarm her. Even this was better than to know she had forever lost him. So she wrote; "Oome to me. 1 will be ycur eyes.

"ULY."

He came, helpless and blind, as he said, and-Lily took up ber'wofk and was happy. Two men. strong In their Ives is men are ever, now like little children lean npoathls one frail woman, whose trust In yfod and love for

them alonesnpporther: and-those who know and lore her, look upon her as one who has merited the greatest reward that heaven can give—a patient, loving woman.—Saturday Nlrbt.

PrslrU Dags WMtarn Pests.

The destructive prairie dog is hhnself to be destroyed by an act of con-

Hundreds of acres of cattle

range In western Kansas are being

ruined by these little creatures.

And now Representative Cone of Haskell county, has Introduced a bill asking for 110,000 to buy poison with which to klU'pff the entire prairie dog^ population, in/many western counties the mounds* In which the dogs lire

are scattered by hundreds

the

prairies, and these mounds are the of countless thousands of the

The dogs burrow into the ground and gnaw tbe-roota of buffalo grass, the Incipal food ot the great cattle herds

Jack

lion of the graaa that the people go i and make Jack rab-

e killed la thaaa drives, but still the

ll Ks. A rdlnal pc a of the ai

our ralea of arithmetic.' four suits or ards, four quarters io the hour. We hare tour Uttar* and four eada* Utah, and our forks hare lour •wage. The »tolls, greatest of all

FREAKS OF NATURE.

ANIMALS THAT BLOOM AND PLANTS THAT EAT MEAT.

BpwlM la Each Klasdota That An a Law fata Thaaaaelva* — Tka Caeamb.r Oraap Spraad Thalr Palal BasuIl.s for Victim.—--North Carollaa Hy.cmiehar." In general, animals move about to seek food, while plants are fixed to one spot and get their nourishment from the earth In which their rqots are imbedded and the air that surrounds their leaves, bt/t there are species In each "kingdom" that do not follow the rule. Botanists know of plants that have neither roots nor leaves, of others that have one but not the other, and of others still that are undoubtedly vegetable, yet move about as freely as animals would do. On the other hand there are animals that never leave the spot on which they first took up their habitation, and that seem lo trust to luck for food. The oyster and clam have thus lost the power of locomotion, writes Dr. Charles Minor Blsckford. Jr.. In the Scientific American. There are many that have - been separated from the plants only by the

corals, i

xmges, whole

■Idea of the tentacles are covered by poison glands that sting the prey to Insensibility or death and so stop the

struggles that might prove disastrous to the anemone. When the mouth Is reached the captive Is pushed Into the hollow interior, and the anemone shuU up Into a reddish brown ball until Its meal Is digested, when It spreads Us

fatal beauties for another victim. Another great family of flowering

animals Is that Including the "sea cucumbers.” These animals have long, flattened bodies of a dark color that ranges from brown to reddish purple, and their most active movement Is a Slow creeping along the bottom: At

Is the mouth, surrounded by

:le«. t _

It the mud and sand on which the' ilsm lives. The mud of the bottom

belnj

jt It appears to sub-

sist on the Inoreanlc mud Itself. The most carious thing about the “cuchm-

_J end _ the petal like tentacles, that push

furnish the food, bnt It

her" Is that It takes lodgers In s way.

body

that Is filled with water, and Into this

It has a large cavity within Its t

cavity a little fish called the fiersisfer rorks Us way. and then HP^withln the helpless host It Is not a parasite, for it leaves Us lodgteg to seek fopd. bnt It merely lodges In the holothnrikn for shelter, as the power of stinging that sea cucumbers possess.to a high degree renders them fairly safe from molestation. The little lodgers do not to -do any harm to their landlords. except when several take quarIn the same one, and then they may Inflict damage by overcrowding. The whole class of coral-forming animals resemble plants so closely as to deceive all but skilled observers. Few sights In. nature are more beautiful than the "coral gardens" in the West Indies, where the gorgeously Colored vegetation Is almost entirely animal In character. The sea bottom near Nassau is formed of while coral sand and the debris of broken down shells, and covering this la water of such transparency that the boat aeemgjo float In air. *tA plate of glaas la lefMnto the

boat

the 1

the sunlight from the white sand below Illuminates the scene so that its smallest detail U visible. The sheet of glittering white sand is broken by dark masees of coral rock from which d ahead of “fan coral.” that naturalists call gorgffhlma. brilliant In vivid reds, yellows and pnrThe darker masses of rock are spangled with anemones that equal the tints of a tropical forest, while the waving plumes of the sea feathers and tha fantastic shapes of the glads a add the charm of variety .of Clumps of bright hoed aea that bear little resemblance to the dirty, faded green ones common on our coasts, are tbk only rspri—■taltm of real vegetation that greet the eye. AU the rest Is animal, but the eye-Is deceived by a mimicry of blent Ufa so perfect as to make the efforts of our human players crude Indeed. The vivid Harm of richest crimson that look like, blooms on the hrancM of the coral are really the ends of boring ascot Into the stony tksmsstvm la tha

violate the rules of nature, yet the violation Is apparent rather than real, for many' plants absorb-animal matter as part of their food. In general this Is taken In only after decomposition has rendered the "tissues soluble, but there are come blood thirsty plants that kill and eat small animals as ruthlessly as do besuils of prey. Among these the little sun-dew Is most widely known for Us fame spread over the world by the work of Darwin, who gave an elaborate description of It In his "Insectivorous Plants.” The leaves of the snn-dew are studded with little projections on whose summits are drops of a clear, sticky liquid that glisten In the sun. as doee dew. and from this the name is derived- The liquid. attracts insects, either by Its appearance or Us odor; but when the unfortunate visitor seeks to sip the tempting draught, the leaf begins to coll inward and form a cup from -which escape Is impossible. The liquor runs down Into the hollow and collects Into a pool. In which the Insect Is drowned before being digested. In the neighborhood of Wilmington there grows the "North Carolina fly catcher.” a plant that Linnaeus called "the miracle of nature." This plant has leaves divided Into two lobes that

tiny splkea. The upper side of each lobe Is covered with minute glands that secrete a purple fluid and also has a number of sensitive filaments arranged in a triangle. If an Insect touch these filaments the lobes shut up like the leaves of a book, the two parts turning on the midrib as a hinge, and the Intruder Is captured. If It be very small It can escape through the spaces between the Interlocking spikes, but oth-

BOXES OF EVERY KIND.

c that h

numbe the pa

porsry stomach in which digestion proceeds The glands that were dry before begin to secrete an acid liquid of a purple color, containing an enzyme like pepsin, In which the soft parts of the victim are disintegrated, and as this proceeds the pressure!* Increased until all of the digestible matter Is absorbed. when the leaf gradually opens and the dry husk la extruded. The leaf will close on a bit of glass or stone as readily as on a fly. but the fraud is quickly discovered, and the indigestible matter rejected. The leaf Is then read; to close again, even before it Is opened, whereas, when digesting food material It stays closed for several days and Is very sluggish In shutting again. The most vigorous leaves seem to be able to digest only two or three times In a lifetime, and the botanist Lindsay fed some specimens with such quantities of meat that they died from

Indigestion.

try people bang up branches of It for this purpose. It secretes a gummy, sticky fluid that entangle^ Insects and kills them. The common bladderwort Is a foe to many small animals It captures great numbers of waterbugs. and has been known to catch and kill small fishes. From time to time the attention of fish cnlturists Is called to this plant as a foe. bnt It Is not regarded as

MIIUob* Tarnrd Oat M ••Itly by An ran VaciartM—Umm to \% I1U I1 Tlioy An fat-MatorlaU I ted la Tbolr M.nnl.tIum—All Sorts of 1 tilnx« Aboal 1 bora. Millions of paper boxes are turned out every week In New Haven from imon cigarette bolder to the

* ftO creation of s milFhere are half a dozen town, and the greater

her of operatives are women. Until paper box syndicate got control of the New HaVen box factories the concerns were run by different people, but the laixest here are now owned by the National Folding Box an<rPa-

per company.

If you buy a hat It Is sent to your home In a paper box; If you order a dross cult it comes to your borne In a paper box; you get your cuffs, your collars, your sbirU and tics In paper boxes; your shoes, your cuff buttons, your Jewelry In paper boxes; droeses, shirtwaists, bonnets, hose, underwear, luncheons, cereals, oysters, milk, codfish. fruit, candles, perfumeries, soaps and sausage; almost everything but boilers and engines are packed In pa-

per boxes nowadays.

The variety and size of paper boxes Is almost without limit, and modern machinery to make them Is capable of anything In that way that It may be called on to do. About the only hand work, now In making paper boxes Is putting on the labels, and this could, if necessary, be done by machim In the factories. An ordinary

ilzcs and shapes and usually carries about 200 samples in stock. The foundation and body of a paper box Is

rtrawboard.

Strawboard Is a hard, thick, yellow-ish-brown paper, commonly called cardboard by the consumer. It Is made of straw—usually wheat straw. The straw used In this elate, which has some of the largest and best known factor!™ in the-country. Is usually hauled to the factories by nearby farmcrs. or the factories buy the straw on ready | the farms and do their own hauling, fully j If at too great a hauling distance the ‘ straw Is shipped In by bales. It Is tumbled Into huge pots of lime water

and boiled to

fed betw

-in-ir. m n I . imv WW1- WelleHrle* the leaf fTr^MUriTtaloTtem- j •? nlpp * d < f “f tarT m * k ” Hundreds of

'Great A gm of tho Moaataln Bad Cadara. Of all the hardy creatures of the vegetable kingdom the red cedar is perhaps the most enduring, for It dwells and thrives for centuries where hardly any other form of vegetation exists. On the tops of granite mountains, 10,000 feet high It frequently makes, its reeling place, and there, in .the midst of snow beneath and sunshine above and flimsy air about. It

rocks. With hardly a bit of soil to feed upon. the. red cedar of the higher altitudes lives to an age ot 2000 years' of hardy strength, some of the larger trees reaching a dlametei* of nearly 10 feet. These giant trees that were old before the beginning of the Christian

overturned through

away of the mqtmtalnslde or by

fierce power of tilt

ling the

te avalanche, but still

they live, dinging to the rocks and putting forth fresh leaves and'sending out new branches, pointing upward. The age of these patriarchs of the wilder-

thieh show annual increase In. diameter, each circle representing a year.

Bor* Laarnlag Laomtry Work. The Church Armv In England, which has more than'100 homes for men. women and children whom It Is trying to save from lives of crime, has settled the problem of employment for

launi

teaching the inmates to wash and Iron. The bays were at first Inclined to resent the idea of doing girls* work, but

they have gradoall;

and find it

wood sawing and chopping,

they have done no fine or women** work, bat are doing the coarser pieces better th»a the average laundress. Two or three of the boys have risen from the ranks and become assistant

o a pulpy mass, drained, web cloths wblcb flatten

it and carry It to machines with many hot rollers, which gradually compress

make It smooth, unt emerges at the other side,

board 4n a continuous sheet of a certain width. It passes through a cutter. which makes It into sheets 26x38 Inches. This is the regulation size agreed upon by the strawboard manufacturer of the United States, apparently because It Is the most handy size and the one that can be made Into most of the other sizes ordinarily used. Unless othervriae speflfiedj |t U always shipped In thie'sUe to piaper box makers and other people who use strawboard. It cut* to great advantage for many sizes of boxes and with the It waste. If lined strawboard la wanted, that la. board with. aay. white paper cover on one aide of It, the paper from a large roll la made to meet the strawboard as It passes through the rollers, and la pressed on the board before the latter la completely dried by the Jast rollers. Strairboard comes altogether In 60-pound bundles, no matter what the size of the sheets. Some of it Is so thick that there ore only eight eheets of the regulation size In a 60pound bundle: others thin em give U0 sheets to the bundle

weight -

The boxmaker first cuts the larger sheets into the sizes he needs to make the kind of boxes wanted. Then theee sheets of proper size arc fed Into a machine that scores them, that Is. cuts half way through them In the right places so that the sheet may be folded and be In shape of a box with bottom, two *1<W and two ends. Before be-

ners off. The stay machine next gets the folded shape and puts gummed paper over the corners to hold together the sides and ends. The next machlae lines and. covers the boxes with paper In whatever color Is wanted. The paper has bine on one side, like postage stamp*, and la In rolls on an axle. The naked strawboard box Is bang on another machine which turns the box np and down and over while tha operator guides the paper over the box, outside and liL The Hd la lined and completed in the same manner, being, of courye, slightly larger than the box. so aa to fit over it There is a little machine to make the thumb hole, the little semi-circular opening at the middle of the bottom of each aids of the lid.

.which makes box while the

Then girls, by hand, deftly and. quickly put on thy labels. The box baa

of the factory,, going

receiving room, where the

strawboard is stored, to the shipping room, awaiting the wagons which take

them to merchant or railroad.

plred to fine work and even lace cur-

Aa fair Sytdta.

ere la a spider In the London 100. aed from somewhere In lb* Southat Is the fiercest beast of his kM that ever spread out his tags In a menagerie The ordinary spider has only ftmr^ega on a sida Thia creat-

or* hake five se* thee* wl hlaa ffaM hM M—iTfiari hit “Avttfiah" described

We “**«••*" ffae^bed by Victor MM» Jn. -TriMta ^ the fiem" The ST* i-mr * < * > ~

a place to gut held of the e Ud la being pulled off.

y h

lly become Interested ly, pot on thy to their Ukfng than L^ade the round 1 chopping. Aa yet 'from the receiv

oMa factories are those for shirtwaist*. 26x16x10 inches; the smallest. IxlxM Inches. The latter are used by dental supply companies to aead samples of false teeth to their dentist eawtomers. The little round pill tfexee are not mafia In this city, and are said to be the product of only two factories tm this country. The Indiana poba factories make pill boxea. bat they are square. The wall boxea In whtah qulaln* capaulca and aeidllta powders are

of Uhl kind.

ha aa angple eObe^

ef paper hotfm. • saw maaefnetnrer af

bixm i

month. In 90 tlzee, from one of the local paper box factories. A wedding box la another product. It contains ffrcacnui for the ushers—usually a collar. tie and a pair of gloves. The box la 14 inches long, 2 inch™ wide and 1 Inch deep. It la lined and covered with fine glazed paper. Little dainty box™ for wedding cake are In different abap™. heart-shaped. triangular, square and oblong. Boxes are also

made for funeral shrouds.

e glazed paper for covering the s comw In every color, shade and quality. Some of it costa nearly fl a sheet. The expensive kinds of box™ have pretty and delicate designs In several colors. Jewelry boxes are lined with velvet and satin. Leatherette la an expensive covering for paper boxes. Book cloth la used for sample cares, telescopes and desk files. Silver and gold paper Is used for borders and trimmings, and candy. The prices of paper boxes vary from 60 cent* a hun-

dred to FIDO a hundred.

The old-fashioned bandbox™, the standby of our forefathers, with their black and sometimes white paper coverings, are seldom seen now, and are not made In any of the local factories. Hat boxes that are made here are squat**, following the modern fashion. Boxes are not all made of strawboard. Wood board is also used—a strong paper that is made of wood pulp. This board Is white In color.—

New Haven Register.

QUAINT AND CURIOUS. Vegetables are usually sold in pll« In Buenos Ayres so that you ha-o to

by the chunk rather than by weight. A wire fence weaving machine has been devised which enabi™ a strong, serviceable fence to be constructed In position with rapidity and economy. The machine carries a number of pools of wire and tl snee progresses rapidly. One indlvdual. who narrowly escaped prosecution for counterfeiting rare eggs and selling the bogus specimens to museums has recently turned np with exquisitely lifelike photographs of birds, which. In reality, are produced by the help of stuffed specimens. artistically attitudinized. While Mrs. P. T. Bulger of Portland. Or., was traveling on a train toward Spokane. Wash, the other day. ehe gat a birth to twins. The elder, a boy. was bom in Oregon, and the other a girl. In the state of Washington, r.n hour

silver guns. There are four guns, two of gold and two of silver. The gold

five years. They weigh 400 pounds each. and. except for the steel lining, are of solid gold. There yet remain in London of the old taverns seven Adam and Evm, five Noah's Arks ana naturally connected with that, as many Olive Branches. There are two Jacob's WeU'a. one Job's Castle and one Samson's Castle. Oldest of all, but not the least appropriate. Is a Simon the Tanner, in Long lane. Bermondsey. the seat of the tanning Indnetry In South London. Among those marked for destruction, too. one not™ the sign of the Two Spi™. a reference, of course, to those advance Israelites who returned from the Promised Land with their burden of grapes.

Shav* Ttivtr Head*.

One part of Egypt shows where the outward and visible evldenc™ of the aboriginal have been softened down with a veneer which the softeners fondly Imagine Is Indicative of Inwlrd and spiritual grace. This Is along, a seOrmile stretch of the Whit* NUe. where the Shilluks live and move and have their being. Now. the Shilluks a picturesque and a promising peo-. They have their Fashoda for a capital and their memories of Lord Kitchener of Khartoum, which no man may take from them. Wherefore, what matters It that they have lost their original lawlessness, their former turbulence and their cheerful specialty roasting the enemy on the point of

the spit?

hiew the Shilluks are so civilized they carry short wooden dubs, after the fashion ot the Broadway policeman and occasionally brandish a long apear to true light opera style. They lead an enviable life, theee Shlllnka; nothlng*to do all the livelong day bnt Me on the moasy bank and spear the hor-ny-hided hippopotamus as he glides

are a

pie.

of a live o

_ hlri^ through hla vitals.

As for work, that la for woman, and

Agriculture Is yet an undeveloped Industry. and what little developing baa idy taken place has been at tha mca and hand* of the'wlvee. The Shllluk country Is not the birthplace of

dust floor te a lively roagh and tumble

loa. He pried them apart and the a >ed that the cuatoeaar had aoea* to ehateatiy asked "Do yea wish tt fcae* at shall l wta» * wT

EH?