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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-04-22, Page 24 Woman Against Woman ,N4 i I ai Art 111111111.1111,11111111111r% . 7.77. • .t or or Terrible Accusation« a Li Consider Parity in Paint • in Preference to Price. You wouldn't pay the regular price for Sugar that analyzed 10% of sand; You wouldn't j)ay "all woor prices for cotton -and -wool clothing. Why should, you pay. your -good money for impure Paint, when' you can get "100%:MARTIN -SENOUR We guarantee lVfartin.Senour "ioog Pure" Paint (except , ' a few dark shades that cannot be prepared from pure Lead and Zinc alone) to he /00% pure White. Lead, pure Oxide of Zinc, pure Linseed, Oil. pure Colors, and Turpentine Dryer; and to be entirely free front adulteration or substitution; and , sold subject to chemical analysis. , . ,. very experienced Painter knows that the above formula .right. It is the standard of the paint world. f. ' You get absolute purity .--=' extreme -fineness — uniform quality -when you insist on "100% Pure" Paint. SENOUR'S FLOOR PAINT RED SCHOOL HOUSE PAINT Theoid reliable. . . . for the barn and sheds• . IVIARTlat-SittNiOUR foWrwAiGgoOnt too!., :cm, ampagENT PAINT _ Well Band you, free; "Farmer's Color Set" *Mt our fine hook. "Town and ' COentrt...lietees". it You write for the name 01 QUO nearest •dealer -agent. v ADDRESS ALI,-t BMA/IBMS TO ' I he, MARTIN.SENOUR Go. . stsi , towrED. . ,....„ , 6..5 Dnotem STREVy, MoNrseAL: ki* k,\• ,,-., PAINT szt., .. \ \ ,,,,, .... \ 6( VAIiisi.'..)11t :"." . -...0.#' :XX\ "'\..\‘-\\;••••.;,.....-.. ,,,,, .......• . __ • ' OIEAPTEM X. "Ansa!" The telt, bulky, brutal form bent abois the girl 171Pg upon, zaboarAble aelablaneo of abed in cue corner of * wretchedly furnished reom. Init So ,soUnilly wee Jibe sleeping, that she Tailed to beer* "Ailear lie- bawled" the name out angrily, but even theivit might have met with like re. sults; but that he emphasised with a' kick 'from tha toe of his heavy boot. She groaned, and sat eV rubbing her ere like a tired ebild, and blinked Up at It was a face that Would. have touched one lege ba,r4enedkl/han Dowd' Yalworth--, a lovely Wan faeff, surrOunded with curl. jug hair ' Oiinnteriain darkness, greet liquid dark eYee that would Imo been the glory of 40Y oWner, a clear, olive 'vont- plexion which not OYOU etarvatiOn. and ex•• Damara to an lands of -weather had power to ruin. But if he. slaw only an- gered " 6 "Did 704 Want Whir," she stain. tnered, eleepily. "I'M so tired!" ' "Yee. I *anted you—father!" ericee, ed, fib if in iraitation Of her Oink 'When. did any ene ever see: you when You, were net tired! It is your Chronic etate. •Oet up!" She staggered fromi• the wretched pile of etr.aw with its one covering, and shivered. '• "I didn't go to bed until-" began, apoknretiOallyi but he interrupted her with a vile oath. ,,"Who earee what time, you went to WI uoti 14P' and get mo some 'breakfast, and be spry about it!' ' She went -wearily toward- an old cup -- board, se broken and ferlorn that no pawnbroker would advanee- a cent -noon, it, and opened the deem There was not a thing in it but 'few broken, cliebee -- not even a enlist of -bread.. She turned to him deeper?, 9, III ladyih 0*. but it is done now. 1 thought you %QUO, have eeutie (monk to see Ow advantageormarring him. but yOu only which see that you want to see. Telt know that I ion not a man to be tempt- ed. Money is utato me, and if yen can not '13K11111Y It Ono way, you obeli an- other. To pleaee your, ladyehip, X have • lived in thie foul penury, tleoping upon ,straw„ living upon the vox* of food;. but I shall continue it no longer. Refuse to become Nathan Sizeonsoa's wife. and , Promise Yon that you shall regret it in sackcloth and izelnu •to the last day of your life. Now get Return bore in half an hour With: money enough for a good , breaktest.and aglessii of Something warm • to give a fellow an appetite. or You'll get the worst licking yen ever bad iu your lite. And mark You thisI give you litt.• til to.niglitto make up your mind about old Nathan. If -you refuee-Well. Yon 9,100 1010W that giver fail to, 1140 ai plot KITCHENER, THE SILENT, Interesting Continent Rade by at Authority. "He s Mr, A. G. Gar- diner; in writing of lord KitehenelCo' "in deeds, not words. No one, of his. time has at once said so % little and done so much. or has any one of his time gonesofar with so entire reliance on his own inerits and so complete a scorn of the arts of advertisement.* There is about him something of the quality of , General Eleber, of whom it ivas said that it made men brave to look at him. If he does not make you feel brave, at least he makes you. 'feel strong, But he has not the inagic that Napoleon exerciSed over -the minds of men, nor the apocalpy- tic fervor with which Cromwell used them,- nor the swift instinct by • which Charles XII,. assured them of Victory. His mind is slow, and iion- derous lint it nibies with the ma's and the certainty of the Nasmyth hammer. Perhaps the man of\ gen- ius would crack the nut without the hammer. But at all events Kitchen- er does crack the nut. He belongs to 'the school of Wellington or -Grant' more thanl,15` the -of' Napoleon or Lee. He will "fight' it out en that line if it takes all sum- mer.' He has the patience of Tor- res Vedras rather than the swift inspiration of Austerlitz. His merit, in short, is for organization rather than for battle.- ae is net a great -warrior but, like Carnof Or Moltke, a great organizer of vietory. Both in E g'Vnt and in South Africa, his avratigoilfia _ Made. from Voil ,St: iikeet$, absolutely 1000'; • IfirOili,d0eiett., tech' sheet prieefid, not Oeffrod#- oeiilioallenie therefore .fit ikeegeratilr without waste. /44,, - OP glop°, ° Att011ith,t or °Ovid* towolictstoortsosENT ' Metallic Roofin Co., .Limmtb. Tonoi4-%0 :St WINNIPEG " .„. • . record was that of the engineer, slowly 'sapping and mining the fastnesses of the enemy, here build- ing a railway to penetrate the de tort, there, ezvrying out a • vast scheme of blockhouses to round up the Boers -'-•striking 'only'. when, his schemes were complete and the, hour had -struck.' - "His -probity...is splendid,. NA army, ever had such a, cleaning fire. Corruption, jobbery, intrigue flee before him. While he was in Send' Africa the contractor was was held in an iron grasp. It was only when he left for India that the infamous talc; of plunder. exposed' by the War Stores Commission, began. In In- dia he found the Army overrun with the friends of some powerful per- Sonage-not, infrequently a. lady. He swept the stables'clettri. It Used to be said that the home -coming ships were,. filled with rubbish that he had, ruthlessly ,discarded. He has only one tett for men. It is no-. use pointing out that the candidate is geed at Polo,- t his Uncle is the timely derelSe. Prevail/ over -his p - Duke of Blankshire, e that he Was at Eton. is test is Napole- on' s-cWhat has he done If he doesn't Answer that successfully he -has no use for him. even though he Were his own brother. His fidelity to the public interest has. made him 'the most economical general of his time After his conquest of the Soudan, Lord Salisbury said of him that. he, WAS the Only general Who had fought a, campaign for 4'ss '- X300,000 less -than- he promised to fight, it for. And Lord Cromer do - 'eared that -if he had not been one un - Life Insuranee. It is secretly and by stealth, and also with. trepidation, that a man goes about the business of iniuring 'his life. Intuition tells him that his wife, if he gave her his confidence, would denounce the project and be grieved by it; and for his ow.)1 Parti he cannot help --shrinking at the thought of the stops that it -de- Inands.- -*He-contemplates- thel-an- nual Or semiannual payment that the engagement imposes on hini with 'less concern than offering self to the medical examiner for approval or rejection. Unaware of any serious „physical disabilities, he yet does not know what fatal defects the skilled investigator may discover and if he has indeedonly a preearious Nord upon life, he would mu -oh rather not be told of But the Tersuasions of the life - insurance agent and his own un- easy conscience, which reminds him that he has net made prevision for his family in the event of his un - ItneW WW1 a Mail to.tbreatert but you 'and. sweeu. revenge,' lietitre* lier.aeroes the hell 'and out the door ilaf be, finished ispeaking.,,closing and lockieg, It inure her.. She lemma „againet the -well for 7.1, moment to get _etrength ettipeient to deepond PIO nlekety staire., then made her •Avey Out the tenement. The stinging, air' a the street Seemed to put new vitality., into her eteg- gering limbo, and she walked Alen; more quickly. the deepening, misery—of • her. countenange deoeelting,•if that were no0 Sible, • • "lie will °keep hie Word!" she groaned, "MI will keep his word it refuse, ?rat -how Op. t over •eonsent?• can " She etopped suddenly with a little gasp, for there in her path .ctoed Nathan Simon - on cbaree",,heavY,-Ibiek-lipped. _brute. his long Jewih: nose .flattened out -over Iliaface, hisAnnelle beady; restless eyes fixed hungrily upon her. It seemed to .her that .ehe waslooking into the eyes of some faMiehed, beast, which. was , "You homy- time is nothing ,lierel" she ready to Wing upon us long withheld cried out, defying his Anger, o GA "Never mind what I know!" he cried, shaking bier heavy- tee. in lier.daest,...."/19w, dare you speak to ihe like that? Do you want to be carried to the hospital again? 111 break every beim in your liod/lx you take care. Get me, something .to ,-prelielaSion, and he presents him- self for medical inspection. Let Us assume that he finds it a, less fear - fill ordeal than lt ha*anticipated, and that the doctor, instead of *looking- gsa,ve-and-keeping--an-omi-- home silence, congratulates hint on his large chest- expansion and.„vig- "(arena heart action -gives him, in short, a clean bill of „health, He emerges from the interview a happy man, in a glow of kindliness for all the world and of particular esteem for himself. It has been, he thinks, worth: his while -to be thoroughly overhauled by a physician; if only prey. - She uttered a :Atte err and steed there as' if faeotnated, unable to =eye, "X was juet gohig to - see papaw' he said emiling at her in, hateful -way peculiar to himself. "and, hoped for the -pleasure of meeting his charming daughter there. Are you going out au early in ,thio morn- ing for a, eopstitutienal?" There are no words to cleseribe the gut,. IN B (MING YEAST 'OAKES E CAREFUL 70 SPECIFY ROYAL, YEAST' MOLINE SIIOSTITIlia , A.AGILLETT TORQN,ro. • MONTO0At. ••fr- be asked, vvitlx a ohort Soil are 4 knoViii" one, for, YOUr use. Come .tlien,'...Kou ought to be vont to the care of the.%ctelety to the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, nfetead; "of ,the Is-, . land." • c. • • .f!Whete?" -gaened_Alleo., '' • 'The Island Pear little-inti9centi Ain'I. never. heard of Audi; e Vete, have yoU Just celue threUrsli, the 'deorsf Of a Salldalr soma didn't Come aleniri reckon the ilt4get,will.ttlnko ellort,:worlt of YOU. Mho' modo 311x It seemed to her that it muttered little where she -was Gent. ejo long as she cseaped from the bondage vhiehi had bottl, her soul; and body. lice heed as aching .ee*tliat it was. with dif- ficulty that • She followed the policeman, even held up and harried oil bi• him as she was. She glanced about her as She , was thruet Into the prisoners' pen, noting the eedden pees, the leering eye, and sinking back her corner With. a shiver repuldort and horror even, III' "I gave ,all The -moneY .X ha a:t turai beotiatuty ot, arowe, or,,tho ae. night, Yo have, gambled enfl drunk + • •spicable intonation of. the .iaefteueive words She Would , have turned and: fild; but that she could not have removed her eyes 'from hie. it her lite had depended 111'41e:ih-iher`el.." she gasped. ."I Was in;s1 1 "et enough -ber4oureranho_t-I_Ivor4.thth_yroetle.." y. be ur ,said,der;'aapndo,' lie tho found, it ---,duet going- for- eonie-breakfast. eat for htel,:' lore. , p . 44y okomin.g:. but ,i swea. to you, 14 , siallubb,cjqoliag:t:tivarr 0,Elvaelincoem. eitrohmor the yell:Ira!, respectability: :and H011ie ,l.ttw- itioatdiobneedt.rtouched- a,- drop, that .I.mciyer pretty -daughter," . - . . .Not that Ailea, took Ingo thueli el .her ,she was touched-". agdin, •Iler exeitem,ent riz. '• .. A"Dilesq,ar, ,s1iputuldaer4dittsvay.s pr4pctisimi,,;114., a• 30iitort jiroinuon!dihngasictOlawati4114!";rhaPts'a.dl'illte 19:two T-ihjid4le4siotrt,eitnrgengetrh..a.tgoari::. 'moment', , beat it - warm -welcome from her,'? he continued, ,tho chair toward whieli the policeman led vasOnca more.,Leelie 011nYwvel.t. etiughtTher ofi she -was silent; "but it never comes, her, and heard only the low-epoken Ivor& -ind held her up,. going to ask him—' • • • ' - id:- ..;!.Dvunk and -disorderly," ' answered the -:gotl‘-113.t5e.;0°ataeo.ai,44.6c17,,lo'IY11:!ilvatvAnelliesf.1°yroituildi.!.°,aent:detil-Iy4v16°Ilinn".(loicFl.'' 1 tWolleYo'riPlIr-tmettlhirweFerdiatils!mtinogrli.rnga:sk.I114111 *'°'!"11vilhealtullieti(LtIll'esbehree.-a'fosirlr' - j--- - He had taken h° hand, but eu4(le 7; neliceman. "I fOund lier0Ying ecreee'tho froz,eni, top. liere, Cabby, drive us to ---7 given 'a Pewe'l IvIli°11 would have been in]- Sidewalk , early,_ yesterday =0004g. I,t; . i,Te be Continued.) possible to her.,, a - moment ' before, B 0 has taken her all this time to got sober, .wrenehea it .fromaisbimarndirtnifd ''kt.rpngtlitile tiv.,p71.:etrnliia.57.43 you to lio,3,7, oehod the jee., away', and now Before abe could finish the sentence_ 4 heavy blow from DoWd Valworth't fist sent her spinning into corner. where chit fell and lay etill, etunned for a moment into ineensibility, When alio, did, mevb, he walked over to her and touched. her -with his foot again, noting that, she replied with a groan. It told him that ehe etill lived -lived to suffer. _ • • ' • nod' no ,bueinese geading , me to it!" exclaimed, sullenly.. "You alwaye make zio hit „Yen; whether want to or not, by youtinferrial taunts. Suppose ,did gamble! Neon% there just as much chance of MY :Winning as losing? And could ask my friends here to Play out offering them some kind - refrealt ment? You are the most _inooteiderato Person I ever knew. Allem! Why the deuce don't, you get up? ,What are you lying there groaning for? ' Are you trying to tempt' me to hit you again r' ' She sat"up..both hands pressed upon her breast, her face aehen, her 'beautiful eyes dull and deadened with suffering. •„..yon,will1.10l1 Me eortip day, father," ehe•gasped., "If 1.40, 'You. 'will be to Marne' for iti" he aaswered.. brutally. ...."I,alwaye thought you would tend .ine' to gallews_....aooner or later. Go and get. me edmetlung- to eat. tell Yin/ •• • •„... She • looked up helplessly. . -rne scene Wati new-biie to her. -They had gone through it on an average of five times a week ;for the last year, but,thatdid not help her to bear it better. She •wae worn out, prematurely old, under the suffering, and a, hopeless misery had eettled about her Elt-eet mouth i hat was influitely ,path- of the first generals of the. Woe i to be told that he s • a, right, let,wotiId have been one of the *first otherwise, he.rnight have done a lot o needless- worrying • about- his health. Now he need never give it a -moment's -thought. What, . bless' - 'ousness that he has done his duty -by, his family is eleVating; feeling that he Chancellors of of the Exchequer. 'Egypt, the land of mysteries over which the Sphinx, lOoks out with inscrutable and-inraternrial calm; istheproper home of this si- lent *phinx-like man. It was thore that lie got his font on the ladder. „Ile left Palestine, w been working ,for the 'ExplO4tion e. need no lunger leave seeret from 'his Wife, and expectant of praise and gratitude,. e 'goes home. arid tells- her what he has Pund, and offered. himself for the done new new Egyptian eavalty; -00e3if „. 1,0444 she 1.0,,ard„. him a he thinlittle -ironies of. hi°t°1'Y that he anticipates hut it is quite as likely was nearly rejeeted because he rode that, :rphe will be distressed and dis- co badly, .nut rex a complacent e„„.1.!.. tuthed, and feel that lie 4/0111d fle- a -miner he would have renlailled in ver have insured life if he had the •babkwatet of , the Engineers', het been gqing to die., Even after waiting for a pension. .• It is a he has striven to remove this con- eoinrnent' on the futility of Aittle vietiell trout, her• tests.-,' And it inEgyptthat: his brobahly, declare that that:Ali-Ade& 43 most enduring enduring-work,rhasateel„amo., i• revolting to her. Ile found the Egyptian troops ,that She does net want; to be finan- ISPIendid ;13Mtli#Itif 4617.thor would emily compens9,ted, for „his ;death, tiot run wurey2 He taught them not and that she wishes he had, arraliff- to: vityravay. With thew:rho', iyon: ,t/d- Make O.Onle -other.- use of. his back the Soudan and 43rought peace • changea in time; and the wife as 0,,nti the railwaot intO the defert," But this 'disconcerting attitude' PEERLESS lor mar% , PER 11.1P:41C-21 ter jiliminono • noplees to ,etir Poultryypielng JUSt , tight. It IWO your thickens ethane-. audtiteir enmM ities out. elt inteiscalfat„ '-Eilk.11 tettirely locked -the Riad, thisi at tiYif ''Filts', N P°otitis's Poultry .Fence : , II **a* if the her! apint Mirth the!Tnee utra,r‘totatitr etattio JIM Ifilngr*sfild Will Ott Iniip Pt lit0slitnelci muld'int thatka crept& iriontesene thentne, eweowthwa iSt eitifilniting Ototont* tuo lindwia I trot title, yea or rhir, «e., The lo!ets are eethiVitt towl, *WI - limner ret rioted pin,, Fence can he aerial Oflthtt,TITOSt MO '"P000161/0 141147 *Molt trat wandena Si same otethe sea $00*111011 Ana nothe ineue teithene blatant, irretVeg• er kliflattf.Tho holt' , fty1170$11614pyrAtalionitis AM. Ogialob. Oily Out Litriki =my .."04 Ol cow foto.. ?to 001141.11 Iwo ige4Offilialaistai haelriSsta OW. Willa tom** &MCI'S VI (3,4,1 lt'INAIIWP1141011111r WINK IfIVICIK Cil I A.1 1N1Mil illt litho, if Oil14 Olt WEANtlt ,7vILIIIMittliat ' 1,1V/i Anzwis %%tarn IN 11,70,85p0/3 T/HltiT01136 THY, , _ , • 10111411',...911l1l1,111111 -7-Niuster - voliir- -giftli *Wag the husband comes " to recog- nize the :iiiiportance*of life itisur-, ante. Aid what preportiOte Of savings should 'be invested in it is question. that 'each Man Mitt de- cide for himself.; hut that; sonie ,prObrtion should be So applied is desirable in in the. case of , almost everyone.. .„The.yhrtue of sacrifice 1G ,united to that of thrift, an th.o, home that i he moVe pride upon arMete I *CUM found at .eiVatithin Cofilpanion • etic, • ' "Father," she panted, holding her hands 'upon -upon her breast as it the pain were alniost unbearable, :"when ifit this to end? Twice "already I have been arreeted for begging in the streets. The judge assur- ed me the hiet time that if I came 'before him again he would 'send hie to the 16 -- land: You will, not let me work. Four timet have, secured. a Place,. and 'be- cauee my employer would not advance You money, you have forced me to leave. You know perfectly yell that -there but one way for me to obtain money, and not to save my ,own life will I 'do that!" . "You are always thinking of your own life, and neer.of that of any one else!" he -whined, as if he were the most cruelly treated person upon earth. "You never think of me at all. I may stiffer every- " net, deaden.* ' TWice ibefore he Abort. life elle had for begging in the streets forced to it hi qbeen that both times 4%1'4'000 by her weetched father; thilt .nonr-e,be- had, WIlElicampAR* 4ahlietery. I'D Pay the They shall Vetere oltoeould-lind *words to re0:7 not Punish /on this tinle: he IAMB *NOR t and A* Ohs strained her stream. inn eyes *4 look After hiree-ohe beard two Alen slitting at table remark; ':111e0.11e. Oltilritaren :bor line. Wonder be knows her? •TifiS is a Sen- . sutiolt for the Panel's. Dot.* get, at hiut,.."' And theii‘their convereation. woe last, as pthoeirceininzed,temP,,w4ar,r ,str atnpettortii:eari, .011!)- "iie b,oriles, to diaticeffees a tenant, 4nd.'„e., rays. the fine of 4 drUnk nod' ilisersierlYl•,' Thereain't never any knewin" What these Melte willdo before they leare the court' I wonder how it would seem to „have - money .enough to (squander in that wee Darned pretty girl, thowrill I ;Wonder. What VY lady will say when olie nears of • O. get the Story. and I,aM equally aumoue 14 24I 7: 1 1. It allonce,rciegieirasimjterde, 4:11'110.10M4 Bat Ailtui. ben 110 time Jo, taint 0,.; what t- almost. at .oiic ribuentroluveer. tikir - Then both Alen langbed. that they II Uld no been-trona/it there its a "drunk R114,416, „ 0--t) orderly," and ,as she glanced . ao..k oaf'. taken. her by the arm and.WaS 'muting lior from the court...rem% She found. herself ielently awakened to the horrpre of life to -It/ender If )tesf face. 'looked those opera which -she, saw about, her. - one, or -,trfo-,Of:,,ItOt.-7,40.-11.„Prtniolillkilnaue' lewd. Jeete her -expense;, but; iarad was as clean • •its that Of an infant, in enite of her former surroundings, and she, :Paid no imea; through innoceeee. She wee Mo.:" faint, too to consider and had no knowledge of how Tong it was until the policoMan who hnd, brought her there returned to. take lief out, The remin was, titled with 'these not pile - .tiners-',Seme wretelied-loOking 0000:10 •inoned for ejectment, .with crying OWL tears -Were dried emidenly, and as phe reachefi'the door and realized that ael 'would -probably newer see thie Man aga411 one..humodt being, who had beau ,ltincr- to' her:7.4A- irreSietible_ ,-desire for reelmeti Wok poeseLeion Der, • She caught his arm and looked up ap- Toatingly into his Sam "It hull -true that I was:drunk!" she Unlined.; "I swear it 40 7011, r know bow I came there. I only know that X. ran • away from -him -the' mat my father „ would force Me to' marrY÷the num wheni I detest abhor! I was frightener} 3. had-. eaten nothing' for two days, and I ran awaY, As I ran I fell. That ).$ the lost 1 ittletw. I wakened un eml:fetindniyeelf in • officer 'Bald 1- had heron druelekgrice yeettir, , dren dragging, at their.eideo;,soine,iliteh. .1,1y -put Inonpy dressed •womee, who eared little hart. tliey, -Out stvala%pluoe. 1.tloo't know ,*rae. street tle rapidly as ,would cattY her. waen't-drunk.".' elle'. answered. • ber singularly 'white teeth gleaming "ander fa" flu'''11111 wrirl°t" a5 g116 8e°'"a to realize fol.! the first time the ,a'wfal charge Ile. turned and looked after, • her, his his bueby black Ifeard, his 'beady eves -- that had been brciught iagaina her. **I taking on at flerce-gleam‘ that would .110;": ,never touched a drop in my life,. I--,''1 can comnmet • eae. 1.nta`vie7thil-haeatrui4:ht:,‘ ehmabn.shetrterati°-) 'yghaoeenv_e 11:46. familiartt"t 06eemm me. Watt° :re° htallvaet a seen 10 -'put that, of Dowd Valwerth to the blush. .1,4*.von,t you ,Lbeert hor6 borore?„ asIted But Ailsa sentence 'hut ..be. the -Tieter,• " the elrikeetIbIgnad!Could get no further, Still. it 'AntSekhe*sapriled'nnWard=enward, Striv_ing :woes enough ;'he remein4ver..ed_ all.her.Might to shut out..the Ognt,.0.1 to her before, , hateful face, to Shut out the solltntek,,, „ to have avaned her nothing deepicable ,voice, until at last 14 e 401", "Ten dollars op ten days! a from sheer exhavetiOn across estreet._,nounc Ofonrete, wtwaaice,frsuhietiter6i6e4d taon-arieteh,bnu_4t atrhkeneeile. ailea groaned, What was 6116' to do? She turned away, with the bitterness of and irazensibility came to her relief,.. an awful despair In her heart, and Orli* CHAPTER IT, gled from the chair. She had no idea. of making a, plea to him for sympathy. She knew JuSt how tuselees it ivould , place. - and Ailsa had completely last trace of time She mast go to that awful when she awakened from her long swoon. heave it with the , odor , of the workhouse Not' knowing *what had lianIkroled ,to her,"upon'her--leave it with. a blight 'upon her, she lifted' herself up and looked. about.. ,life that noting under henven, could ever her: .She was quite alone. There; -was no., ' • thing in the room to tell her -where elle 'She tottered. and would have fallen was. In one corner was ,an old bencli, down the one, step leading to the court. the only furniture the room contained: room, but that she was suddenly caught but the, stone floor, the barred 'window's by strong hand ayid,,held not unkindly.' and' doer, told her plainly „enough where It Was .not the touch of the policeman. she wee. • She glanced up haetily.- - • - was in prison, but ...the ache in her. head, glance pito the, face of him Who is to. be She stared up as she realized that she fth,W01.1,rauthWngeitivaoilvi ehraeofevbe:rfe;hgoote,tentatthere4filfrost? pain. She groaned 'aloud. She had no What wohaan has ever teased to rinnembbr. eatised her to eitik butit" in exerumating ,the firm, ex pres sion of min who ;u1(ie, alor future for good or nry ' eoonfruehreto4::toahl wusku°4'1111(tho'criaglienSgh-oiv thee' awboatiet the witiCitehirsaslotanigl.anldithIle4,ndgg°raniceefaii81 limbs and magnificent physique. nis hair was....abortancindmed..,,to curl and of that strangelY, beautiful reaaiLii Thrown To Travei.in Comfol.t. Arrange, -if 4possibl 'a) , have $ingle'artiele bf baggage to, lo•ux after. ' 71) --res substaritiall Botter, :he AinOrt than be for -the s7, 01-the-twenty4bui.„-L.., __Arrange, under, all. oirmunstances to be at the viap-t'0''''starring - ot tWellt.f. minutes' before ' thus allowing'fOr tinaVbdahle`• unanticibajted 40,ention by the way Do not commence a, `Aa',•eI• before breakfast-,' o.ven if it has to be' eaten at daybreak: Dinner Nathan Sinionson'is-only too,. anxious to idea. of the ,reason of her arrest,Se rt. thing and much you (nue on ake you he Niite. Ile is rich -so rich any remembrance of the events that had preceded it; and the terrible 'misery in her heart, aside from, her pliyelea, a guish; Caused her to, care little either for - what had or :what might happen,- , .., As she 'became more tonschnis of lier' ehrreuridiligST1die-heard swearing -in -the room adjoining. the grating'of keys, the noise, of rough voice e of policemeri,-, but fain lay there Upon the horribly --Cold stene floor until.sheheard the sound Of, a key in the lock of herowndoor. 'SIM sat, up, and with wildly ataring eyes' looked up • at the man who entered., • ."011!" he exclaimed,."So you've ,come round at last, have youOne more drunk like that, all,dit would bathe end el Yob. Ain't you -ashamed Of Yourself, and, you soar;,,ely more, -than-a -kid? _Do' 'you, hno- h°"INv ol°011 :9.6106.130Seetaninutherreedr: lifting her, hand to, her, ?Ching head. • , "Don't. eh? Well, I don't wonder. Yoleve been here- here since, yesterday morning, Yes- terdaY tiorning-think- of that! Ana' rn filivear you ain't sillier yet! " Is this ymir lirat She waY,al lookedf41 li antetheirde''ittil'vtit:tioreetiy117,2:r!:-__ °71' ."Don't want to give yourself 'away, eh?" "that he hoe Promised to give me all the money I want of My own if yeti will only become his wife, and yet you are hard- hearted enough to refuse." Shetottered upandtook-a-worn, -dilapi-- datedbat down from a, peg, then wrapped n shawl about her, a little, thin, ofealed thing that -would not have protected- her from a zephyr. ' • • , There was nob in her throat which she could scareelyxeetrain, and yet liarvoice was bravo as she turned to bini, • "The wife of that odious creature!" she exclaimed. "X had rather be the wife of any wild beast, in the forests tif Africa-!" There was such loathing., each disgust , in the tone,- that there could be no miS- taking her meaning, and -with an oath Dowd Valworth placed- himself betvreen her and the door. ,liig,hroWe Were drawn together in a -heaVY), frown, his eyee „glearned_liereely, his 'breath, hot and foul .with the fumes of aea-a-biek; iTirotitzeWk- eniegly ttOtC103 her 'face. His fernier. ill : temper teemed to be only play eorapared With _ _filly the powers! you,ehall 'behiswife. or CiritiVolr-the reason wIty1-1--lutve. fooled away time enough catering to your , • that one so rarely sees upon a man. Ifie eyes w_ere a dark -violetr_almost a Velvety black in contain lights., and shaded by leehee, that 'swePt his cheek like thoee ,of girl. Ms mouth was.as sweet' and ern - pathetic as that of a child, and yet from brow -to throat there was not a,weak, line in the strangely handsome face. It was _a combination of strength and ,beautY that had puztled phySiognemiSt and . art- ist alike. Mtve you hurt your' ankie?"'he asked, ,gently, still holding her. • - Ailoa tould find no voice in which, to re; Sho.tried to say 6 oroething, to draw herself from 'him; but her efforts Were -*Jab, -rtryarded--by.a. piteous „which she Could not restrain, -. ° He Lcrew her even More closely to him. "Poor oblar ilie,..heara him ,titorloor- - L-1104:-Llitor4_41ffic'ett-reervie4-4-;:i-tob.barI,it,;-.4tontd., boading-._ for 'an ingrovarepronth suppexi or both,. can be inor;:„. healthily .dispensed with than ,g004,:warm b-,reakfti,st. A.'sandwichl eaten leisurely in the ears is' better than. whole dinUer* bolted`at a railway station. Take with you niOnth's suPplY" of patience, and always think teen times before you l'e,ply 'Ow 1.4 any supposed rudeness, insult qtr. inattention. , Do not Suppose Yourself ;speially., ,and. designedly neglected if ,, wait, ers:at hotels do not bring, 'whit you-. all for in double-quick- N110.. thingaiso distiuotly 'Marks the v‘,..„-..111, bred as waiting- on-siich -Oneasio's4s: Comply cheerfully and graeerItIly with the customs and , conveyances in which you travel and of the tdoes where 3.).0 stop. Tra„tel is, a greatievej4; take the - peSitipitAthiCh. ethos aswILT you - f ram- - your .contittet, 'rather.. t your pretOnsicriih, It --- ' liar to make'a-livntrat--it; - Hard 1,Vorkriilthe,011Iy _ ab.ovaiiaimiams010, olgereorl; .t1•10M ..:*ghtiVe 9thoL,intiiter.4 and - intretinal It-Otehdr 'Cu, on, *ittd. thlt dihirelft0t. ' COW /ow '160.-441101i 104 litt. 146k M6,4106401. POttil dihrort - Oa, to 4641111...° 40ortri't cot rfirittistet the Avernts, bevroto us 101•Velfte, .4444006 'cou to +MI , round, and ..,don't .."011101(V • hoot OA glands and blood. littirdikotiongOrfitth otoli'hOutik . *Ad 604 COX All; 401046* . • ••• orsait mebioAti.'46' ososit., owl.* Istr4 U.S.A. Toothache that is caused by some acid pitvity. may ire. guently,he veltomil (by tinging the Atolith with tij little hiearbonate oi ,tunti water; ' : • ineeent expefiniento have .ehown' hat the .endurance 'of the thin peo- ple ig.much greatbr than .60 of the stoat; This is atie ecitcra) causes. The eirculation: Of thin peo- ple better, lieatt tietiert us. natiy. 'better AiiiT,they toore eagily eliminate the. waste *ASO: Oin the ,vatem. PAGE HEAVY FENCE.: NO, of Stay44 gnat -Mg of. hare, Height -Inches [Inert. " horizontals 'Price 6 - .46 22 61/2, .1, 81/2;:9. 5. 5½i__..• .r411.7.17:::22 6,-61,4,'7177:;-4,10-,•tlkf--...'*i';*;-.;----c.26-. 8 42 • 22 6,-6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6 .. • ,42` • 181,'2 6, -6, 6014 60: tr .. 6 47' ' 4, 6, sy,.z Op, .30 c 47- ,-1-18.1i4',11; Sr B'/ 7,/2, 42". O. 48 228, 6, 66,6; 8,:6, 6, . ,".•; . ,34 48° 'iatk ef 6.4,- ,.; .86- • 62 22 41, 4, 8,:81/2,,/, 8t/2, 0,4 ..,.. .34, 9 52 ' 16144, 4, 6, 6yg, ayg, a, '0 . ..86" 16 . 46- 101/2 3, 3,3, 4.'5½, 7, 7, 7/2, 10 40 0 So Si Si 4i 514., 7, 7. 71/g,. 8' 10 . 52 161/2 3, 3. :2, 40 6112t s i 8112f .22 14: 65, 16Vg .3* So S* O 4• WA* 7* 01/2; SPECIAL POULTFiki.PENCE.. • ' Not Painted. No. 9 top and bottom.' Balance No. 13. 1.1nrights '• ". inches aPart, *** • ' 20 -Bar '60 -Inch VI k, 4. V...* 814:per rod 160a1407ineh:00.,....0.... 460 per rdd *mot PeRAILROAD ....7.4,4womr.4.....44.to=r44.x==sca GATE 1 or4)...1.4-_,,mo 1M1.. sr" owl 8 4t. .112.30 „ ft, 44:105 °re. it.°P 14 ft. *4 4.66 l3AGE: LAWN'FENCE. Not Wight Painted: Painted 12 ,..,4.,1; 4.* 00 c. Itt-----17 .4 1.0 ' a' • 91/2c. Sc. 46 ' ;12 IN' • 100. ' PAGE POULTRY NETTIN541,. eet 24 inch .-.S2,61 r50 fo 3.00- At•;•••77-0 • 48 440,. " 72 .. '.,',t60 fli•."At4f)A R GAtE. gm* • Tole *lath . 36 Inch 4 nth 48 Inch 3 4140 . 0.10 $2.36' WA 44 2.16, ' 2,68 4 4 .44.041 a II d QAPJ1 3.20 " a 45, • .. Aiiiiit 6t061 Poitli 1 ft. 4 ids. g 112'x 1 ill init., 4 . 0.31 6,, 4i-, to 4,40 I AP 4 , Ott tools ....Sam coutd Wire 0 Mc). 2.40 is all uk* 'is 44;466 ' 6.00 thrk atapite, 0A0 **ea vitro515 44111,01.60**110°- " WM* too bony 6P4114. bid etitaions,„ Noilloa 080 tliffiront *bamboo* dif Perm4.80 Paha. Ants Oftte•fit, /00 Well Skfel* ,e/NeriO 8,08001 fectil0 80000 -010,00 artithadt prIoli# .60 . 4.66 6,20 11, of 4...0 4.6., „„.. .66 12:ir,,••••••• i•oi 14.68 , 110 13 • .•....* 40,4 , 'fillif .88 i' 14 41 ill'i*.1111' OOkit ' 4$01 0616 , , 'thole Mien. for Old Chitirrie only. iftlog,s. for NiisActont6e100 Cluebec. MAK ti fid Wed on re On i ' ' IRECT :tete ,are the lowest rics on die.best.t. Nearing Fence and Gates, More PAGE Fence afld ;Oates, are ;§old thartAitifTAlide: 8ingle' brand.' So our anufacturing cost must be low. ,. nintat.Ireni 'factery t farm "(freight paid.) So ours.Sellinkeost must be low, • • PAM raile6 0nd Gates, are maile:Oftha e -87e17 best 'materials -4y theploneeifenee. nyike0 with 23 ,,yeara), experience in building fitiS fenee.!, Verypart of every : P4OP., Vence and: Gate ,is made. fait size, Sven our Farm Vence loc6 are Wire; So that Mgt ranee And Gates list r 'reioens PA.GE.• rtkon' ' Ant 4,41\ts . to ' the nearest PAr116 are Th� BP 664 CiltA.VIIST Mall Wiat order,, cash,ahogna, bank draft, Postal or. elOrentr, Ott Immediate .abiontant from oen6. by stockerelght paid 64 )16 • Ok • over. rageWire knee Comoany timitcd bUtot. ""1412441; ""t tittraPalt • IO Nottigaitmostit4 Wot tr,ajtattitti.