HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1910-04-28, Page 71
April t1, 1910
Clinton Nitws*Record
G. D. 114 A•OM1OAAIIT
W. IX Mer,f400,411T'
NicTaggatt Bros
A EENERAT;1 '03AIQKIN(J BUST'
NOTES
SS �TRAl+PSACTER). A
OISCOUNTI I}.. DIi AFTS ISSUED
ET' ALLQWED' QN ` IiIE.
iNTI�X..S
POSITS. SALE NOTES PUR011-
*SEP.
- -- H. T. RANCE.- =-
NOTARY PUBLIC, CONVEY-
ANCER, , FINANCIAL, REAL
ATE AND FIRE INSUR' .
ANCE AGENT. REPRESEN-
TING 1;# FIRE -INSURANCE
COMPANIES.
bIVISION COURT_
CLINTON.
OFFICE,
W. BRYDONE,
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR
NOTARY, PUBLIC. ETC.
OFFICE -Sloane Bleck-Cr INTt3N.
CHARLES B. HALE .
REAL ESTATE
and
INSURANCE
OFFICE - - - HURON ST.
440.44,44.4.400.444.
At 4
• You will regret yon •did riot
Iattend one of Canadla's High -
Grade Business ()tilled;eel Roe
tatted at
1 PETEROORDUDH`WELLAND
IALERORANDEVILLE WINDNAM
T
CLINTON W K UN
Dae gredtla•tes
ifitilsreceive from
er:annun .
to I p 500:
31i4i1 :Ooutse$ in 100 different
-sub. 7ec. t
.
`�.
� ..• Write tor kaarticulars,:
1 r cs
mommom
CLINTON
Business College
GEO.SPOTTON, PRiN.
Ns►•t'••ONNMN arHNN••
DR. W. GUNN
L. R. C. P., L. R. C. S.
Now isa good time to enter.
Edinburg
Office -Ontario street, Clinton. Night
calls at front door of office or at
residence on Rattenbury street.
,--DR. J. W. SHAW
Author e
"Let Not .Min rid
Aavnder." «ig6t Steps
of Renor,' Ere.
Copyright, 1906, by
Harper & Brothers.
„ D, N. WATSON
CLINTON, - - ONT..
-LICENSED AUCTIONEER
for the County gf Huron, Corres-
pondence promptly answered. Charg-
es moderate and satisfaction guaran-
teed. Immediate arrangements for
sale dates may be made, by calling
at The News -Record Offloe er cm -
Frank Watson at McRwan's groc-
ery. 4 •,.17
1. 0FFICE-
RATTEN,BTJRY ST.-EAST,
--CLINTON —
DR. C. W. . OMPSON.
AL, SURGEON, ETC.
Special attention g'ven to dis-
eases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and
Throat.
Eyes carefully examined and suitable
glasses prescribed.
Office and residence : 2 doors west ot
the Commercial Hotel. Huron St.
a
'E•IOMAS BROWN, LICENSED AUC-
tioneer for the counties of Huron
and Perth. Correspondence prompt-
ly answered. . I'mufediate arrange-
ments can bemade for sale dates at
Tho News -Record, . Clinton, or by
calling .phone 97, Seaforth. Charges
aoderate and satisfaction guaran-
teed.
-DR. F. A. AXON. -
(Successor to Dr. Holmes.)
Specialist in frown and Bridge
work.
Graduate of the Royal College of
Dental Surgeons of Ontario. Honor
graduate of University of Toronto
Dental Department. Graduate of the
Chicago College of Dental Surgery
Chicago.
Will be at the Commercial hotel,
Bayfield, every Monday from 10 a. m.
to 5 p. m.
DR. OVENS, • M. D., I. R. C. P.,
Etc., Specialist 'iti Diseases- of the
Eye, Ear, Nose and. Throat,
will be at Holmes' Drug Store,
Clinton, on Tuesday, March .. est,
29th, April 26th, May 24th, ,June
21st. If you require .Glasses don't
fail to see Dr. Ovens.
-TIME TABLE
Trains will arrive at and depart
'from Clinton Station as follows :
AND GODERICH DIV.
7.35 a. m.
3.07 p.m.
5.15 p. m.
11.07 a. in.
1.25 p. m.
6.40 1 p.m.
11.28 p. m.
LONDON, HURON & BRUCE DIV.
Going South 7.50 a. m.
11 1 t 4.23 p. in.
Going North 11.00 a. m.
11 1t' 6.35 p. m.
'BUFFALO
;doing East
1t 11
11 L,
Going West
11 1t
t1 11
It It
The IIIcKiliop Mutual Fire
Insurance CompanU:
firdels44,11it 1.01e!' 1!'ti A
tt wlI$ Maraw vonnhfp, °who ppoke in ' era;., r`1 gale ; we engin to MK!, :;;r
c a i ,..Feelingthe Dr, Marler. the specialist for menial
a sharp tone ot jt i cage eases:'
s
attack. Paula facer! about to meet it. t diseases."
does she mean?" Tire. Traf-
ford
It was the sort of situationth at called .ford demanded, turning With an air of
to her courage, and made bee spring distres$ ta�ward airs. George. Laura
to her own defense. e
miss ei t .
» arched. her elle eybbrows and looked
agoingto sa Id � trsh p
I wa y.
she replied; lookingcalmat Paula wonderingly.
calmly into lug- "It isn't a question of what she
rah's snapping eyes. "that. as for in- Ie but f what ,we mean," Traf'
injustice, all of us have to bear it. -all m an o
of ns. There are no exceptions. If it ford exelainied. "We ought to invetlt.
or her
hurts you.in, one way it hurts me in !some mild corm of atraltjack et fo 1.
It Isn't to have
her
going ingareun
around
another,' but .none of us escapes.' loose"
"Suet as none of us escapes the win- •
• •-
ter's storm," 11'Iarah returned hardly, i ,"Cheap. witticism isn't $t'gument.
thing to Snatch it from George,"Paula reminded him.
"only it's oner Cheap? be retorted. "No witticism:
the window and another tbtug to shit, -that turns on throwing away a million
ser in its blast" dollars can be cheap."
Paulo, did not reply, but she did ilei "A million dollars Isn't much," Paula
immediately turn her eyes away. She deciftred warmly.
met elarah's scintillating gaze, without
1 flinching. but she'grew aware of the „Try to earn it and you'll see," Tref-
hbstiiity behind 1t. ford threw back at her.
Vs', mean it isn't much for us.
"There's only one prayer for
1
dear. t n we feel we're • unjustly •- elally if it were div„ided,up emoni,• us
x -
%
treated,” Mrs. Winshipsaid in her &11. We should never miss
high, trembling
voice. "It's 'Father. "We skull never try;' be laughed
forgive them, for they know not what grainy.
they' do.' If we did know we'd 'be
"Paula, dear, do keep your senses, at
gentler with otic another." any rateir
while yo - father, is away,"
"I't:i sure 111r. 'Winship doesn't know
how be wounds me in not accepting
my conditions," Paula said, -with a
faint smile, turning again toward the
mouser and -the son, .
"Nor, Miss Trafford how she offends
me by contesting mine," Winship
•
•
"i do contest them," Paula insist-
ed. "I not- only contest them, but
I reject them." •
"Then;" said Winship., speaking with
sudc'.en gravity, "there's nothing more
to be 'said. If we • enn't agree we tau
only cry our narguln z ff."
Paula was not expecting so abrupt
a termination to the discussion. Her
'Wee eyes clouded, end the deepening
of .the 2 ,crow between her brows be:
ttayed'her distress.
"Do you mean' that- you won't paint •
. my 'portrait at ail?"
. "Only at my own price." '
•"I3ut since I can't accept it?" •
"That's entirely for you to decide. 1
at least.must abide bee it."
"My son, shall paint your portrait."
Mrs. Winship said in a toile of author-
ity. "I shall act es arbitrator between
you, for I understand you both. .Be
shall paint it. for 'a price that 1 shall •
fix. pit shall. be .higher , thaw his and
lower than yours." '
Se after further talk it was' settled,
and presently. Paularose to go away.
;tie felt less assurance than when she
arrived, but sale said her goodbys with-
ottt••v.isible'embitrressinent. As Win.
F•hlp held:the door open for ber to pass
out she turned to him on the threshold..
"Qnr discussion strikes me as a little
gild, • she .observed, her brows. con-
tracting , with her .characteristic ;,ex-
t+ression of perplexity. "I've always
understood• that mon wanted to make.
- money. ",; lady it was as if I saw you, mother.
"So they do -`When they have. time.
"And you?" • '.dear,. old . and . blind. and bl
feee and
"I shalhbaye money some day."
"Why some day? Why not now?". •
."Because now I'm too busy with ley.
art." V?ben I've 'mattered theft a little
queziefe '
"I'w not trying to argue him guilty.
1 know he Wasn't guilty, I'm try1w
only to protect hila from •being thought
so, And when we could do that with
Au Insignificant million dollars" -
"Mit could you?" Laura edited, look-
ing up from her work and speaking
for the first time. "If you eonetitnte
y,oin'self a judge of your father's do-
lugs,._„
"A. kind of holy office of the Inquisi.
tion, consisting of one infallible mem-
*. her," Trafford threw in.
"You couldn't stop at •one isolated
ease," isLrs George went on. "You'd
find yourself led further than you ex -
petted.". '
a everything -Do you mean that e , 8 was
wrong??" Paula demanded, stopiiiug iu
her walk and looking haughtily down
at Laura. ra. '
'•I";verytbtng could be made to seen
wrong. I've no doubt," Laura replied
+•went we went lin the tests you
5tem determined to apply. There'd
he no end to the extent to which you'd
become in'rolved. One million wouldn't
be enough. nor two, nor three."
"I 4'.umidn't care for that," Paula
:lung out, turning toward the door.
"Bather than feel that we've become
rih
by grinding other peoplele tato nov-
elly
n -erry l'U give away everything we
dare." ;
"It's lucky for us that you Can't."
afford laughed: •'"it'solucky for you
too Paula!" he called •after her as
die was leaving the room. "Come
lnWI I've got.sotnething -more to say
to ,ton."
She turned at the door and con-
.tronted: him. Iger blue eyes were shin.
in„ with 'tears, and the defer in her
,'peeks had coutritetec into two hectic
spots of scarlet. �-
"As far as. I tiro see," he wend on,
with smiling sarcasm. •"the only .way
to help Cour painter man .1s to marry
Wee" .
"I would," she returned, !folding her
Lend high -"I would if 1. ceuldlt't do
him justice - in any other way.". '
Trafford laughed "Aloud;
"IIo, ho! •Well done, Paula!" he cried
after her as she went proudly and hi.
dtgnantly •up the..fireat stairway.
•But ?its. Trafford Was voted,
"Why •on earth should You put that
notion . into her. heed. George?" 'she
com.pialned fretfully. "Yon know as
well as. I do •that sit'e's quite capable
of doing it." .
-Farm and Isolated .Town Property-
-Only . Insured
• OFFICERS
J. B. McLean, President, Seafortlt �<
M. HcEwen, Vice -President,
Brucefield P. 0. ; T. E. Hays, ..Sec.-
Treasurer, Seafortb P. 0:
-Directors- •
William Chesney, Seafoeth John
Grieve, Winthrop.;: - George. Dale, Sea -
forth John ' Watt, Harlock-; ,'. 'John
Bennewies, Brodhaggan ; James Evans,
Beechwood ; James Connolly,
Goderich. ,
--AGENTS-
Robert Smith, Harlock ; E. . Hin
chley, Seaforth ; James ;C'immings,
Egmondville ; , J. W. Yeo; Holmes-
Ville: •
Any money to'be. paid in may be•
paid• to Tozer &'•Brown, Clinton, .'or
at Cutt's grocery, Goderich. . '
Parties ' desirous' to. elect insurance
or transact . dtber business ' will . be,
prcmintly attended to on' application
to any of the above.ofiicete addressed
to their respective postoffices. Losses
inspected by the • director who .lives
nearest the scene.
OVER 65 YEARS*
EXPERIENCE
TRADE *MARKS
DESIGNS
COPYRIGHTS &C.
Anyone ,eliding a sketch and description may
(wieldt ascertain our opinion free whether an
HonestrlotlyQo fldedntIaitHIANDBOOKonPatent
scat tents owed
tl*rongltor Muti securing .d receive
spectral/once, without onarge, lathe
$ciefttifkc American.
,t handsomely illustrated Weekly. Largest cir-
catatton of any ear, pOstagooprepaid, l. Terms
by
('gratia, $3.iG a year. B
all neWvadealaT& ��� York
MUNN & Co 2618roadtvay,
granau omco. c25 F St.. Washington. D. C.
1
LJPPthCOTT'
MONTHLY MAGAZINE
A rod! LIBRARY
The Best in Current literature
12 001014.21c NovtLe YeAnLv
MANY BHOF Y s'p011i ES AND
PAPERS ON TIMELY ToPECo
$2,lso pstt YEAR i 2s CIL A COPY;
*NO' CONTINUSC s'ronEE:sifi:
EVtIiY' 1VtIMMItti CONIwI.E7'C IN l''i'tikLF
H
OMESEKERS
EXCIIRSIONS
TO
WESTERN
CANADA
LOW ROUND TRIP RATES
GOING DATS
Apr. 5, 19 • Jane 14, 28 A ag. !'i; 23
Med 3, 17, 31 July 12, 26 Sept. 6, 20
TlieoUciete $I'ECIM.'RAINS
OnoteTO To WINNIPEG AND W.EST
Leave Toronto 2.00 p.m.
ou above da,5
otandsIie Second
Class Coaches,
eb
Through
eur.tS,
Anonn'ogot or write
n.LThnip , b.PA.,Tor
�•tQ.ion Hl)IIESE]al{1 i' PAMPHLET 4
•
W. JACKSON
•
IVIash.4p. '
Mrs. Trafi'oid •pleaded. "If you go on
like .this you'll get nervous prostration.
or you'll give it to me,” i
"Mother, if •: you'd seen those • people
asI saw them today"-
"I :want: to. •I• (161217 want to
know about them'. When .1 remember
Whit. they did to your father"-
"Well,they're punished for It now.
They • live in such a poor place -a soft
of old, ' half ruined convent. And, ev-
erything about them is so comfortless"
so bare, so lacking in all that we call
essential. Wlien :Y- looked at that poor
,Clinton Islews-Record
More the Money , will come. of its own
niton!."
sweet and saintlike"-
"Oh, fed mercy's sake; steer Mrs.
Trafford cried. "You're enough to give
"And .e million' dollars worth' Mean,
so mach to them.", Paula elided
•
.seeeld • have only •one: te•asop fee . "That's the.. firsil'Podint 'teti
He- nodded . bankivard toward
'mother's clatir„ over which: Mande wes
"Bet sif yen refuse to serze your' op.
' "1- shall not refuse.: bet there are
epportueities and opportunities. There
Tertns of suhseriptten-$1 per year in
advance $1.50 May he charged it
not so paid. No paper discotitinue
until all enters are paid, unIOSS
the opinion of the publisher. 'P. :
date to `.which every sUbseriptiOrt
paid is denoted on the label. •
•
and -there are Others which; no honor- .
able man. couldtehe without losing hie
"AO yOu think my•offer of today" -
'.'Was meant kindfsed he. flaishea bed
dere she could end her sentenee.
shre of that. -And I'm :equally -sere
that when you've reflected well yotell
see that my. refesal to itecept it is Mit
incompatible with the•futleet apptecitt-
She dared .net question him •furthee.
.She understood •thet he had read her
•in all its .blundering •benevo-
lent tutility. She toad it so. herself
and subjected to sere tiny.- but she read drafford commented as Paula brought
pow that it had been put into words ,
it 'with a curious teleapprehensioe ot, her 'narrative to. a close.. -Weil, 1
characters and everts. don't• blame him. No doebt -he could
e4 Million (tellers' means. a good. deol
to meet, peopte. Bet look here: I'll tell
fte(1 humor yen,' il give deei .110
ing. tuft:Sett 50,000 'crated from die
this eerY afternoon"
the •low. slew' emphasis of. incredulity. ,
Thee .gaula told the story of the
silence, her eyes heed on her work ••
Tratterd drew up his armehitir clase to
where 'Paula sat by • a smell bible.
temeging. her hot blushes, in' 'the 'red .
suffocation, :
Atlee many questions: When had eh*
conte? 'Where was she staying? Bow
long Was she to reuaaln? Ile showed
Ws 5ul'!n•bre and pleasure at seeing her
"I'm especially glad on account or
that." he said, with a gesture toward
the portrait, wlteu they had iinisbed
the first prellntinary topics of meet-
ing. "How do you like let Sit down
there -hist there. 'That's ;the best light.
Now tell me what you think of it.
"There's ao one whose opinion ,I'd ratb•
er have than yours. Is it she? That's
the thlug i eare.for most. You know
her better than l de."
'•And yet you seem to know her pret.
ty wei. "
• 'l do i divine her."
"it's it very -pleasant form, of epeenia
tion, isn:'t It'- You've painted with a
gaod deal of euthusfasue t: oar see
that:
-"It takes enthusiasm to transfer a
lirtng personality to the setuvas." he.
- i
said' evasively. "Pott can paint teethes
and features by mere skill, but it's
only sympathy with your subject that
will put the Whole character into 0
single look."
"And you Ifnd that she inspires it -
the synipathy.you speak of?'"
"1f slle didn't her situation would."
.,gtum o eau„_,
Si
CHAPTER VIII.
E'LL never be the same again,
seen any one More changed
thap he -since the first day . he begap
to paint her."
shotildn't bother about that," leadY
•Alice returned in her bluff. heertY
way, "so long:as the -change Is for the
"Certainly, if you judge from hie
work. That Neter° is a trian's work.
not boyhe . It'S got the two. things
:he'S: locked hithette-lusteration mei
and' color. I glYe -you my word. 'Nit; ;
from him.. That womantS .Paeln Tref
Lady' In A.msterdate is Elisabetb•Basd
"If it had only been.atise•one &se. le
the wOrld rather then a Trafford!"
' "I call that -stuff and nth:teepee anti
eying in dhe face. Of: Prohiclence. The.
. boy's 'buelness is to paint pretty. We
Adm.' And where 'could he have; ftion,1
a better gubject? You'd .feel the saw
about any one, else whits had good looki.
thite them on canvas. On- yee, i know
all aboet the past! But: good. graciene,
Meath, you're not g .t.o emery
ea N'eucle.tta'' from deeeratiett to': goo,
:oration le I sbOuld say that If. they've
"You didn't waht- your own brether
lieed end foot with •Stuties end with .0
whole load oti family • traditions' emelt-.
lug "Wm hewn, He 'can't emery the
dtirst pretty 'face heetakes, a fancy to.
Ile's got ea keep in the pletare; eo to
;amens In my opinlou than an English
duke with it rich Ateericau duchess.
Ids out of drawing and. off the back-
ground... It leaps at you from the
'.'We have oiir family pridt. as well
as you,' hiarah observed, With ellen)
eyes snapping,, 'send' we were driven
.Out tier own' fatelly hnd liveeon• the
tame Med in New dlempshlre toe
•They Set in the leng studio before
Mice in her black cleth gown. Tyrolese
hot nad etout leather boots was a
(lac type of the English:wornati who is .•
so sure of her means and position that.
.she Sean dress .as she pleattese Aboye
the Iwo women Mule Traefora sat as •
If enthroned. She. had been painted
attieh as •Winship had- soggested in the..
nrst moment of Inspiration.
-Stiehl have the mouay." Lady Mice
continued, unfoleing the plan "awl ;
he'll -Mee the fame. The one. wilt not
1 -abetter awereil than the.other. This
bit of work means- that he is going to .
the gate of the temple with good ••
sharp rap. They'll let him le quieklet
enough. this time. It's marvelous how .
he's managed so much detail with
such simplicity. And yet," slie went
on In her :summary, "nothing takes
your attention away from the girl her-
tellf. IIe*s caught the meaning of her •
face with nothing shoet of power. I've
eetsu her look just like that. In fact,
It's her charaeterietic expressioa.
Don't yon notice it, Marah?" •
"I can see Ids very well painted."
"Tiien it's a pity yon can't see more.
That rather pathetic kind of lovolinese
Is nunstuti In itself, but when. you add
her wondering, gees:Wining expression
you .tuake it positively significant.
Hero you've got not only a pretty wo-
man. but a human soul. Any one
might think that with her puzzled,
ranging gaze she was asking the eter.
nal 'what end why of earthly existence.
The grating of a latchkey in the lock
of the door mit short Lady Alice's Ole
servatiotis, and Winthip himself en-
tered. During the greetings that fol-
lowed Mamie, untrmerIng something
about teeing to her me:tiler. aliffited
from the room. Winshin asked 1,0.4.1Y
1 ;non that for me elle beings to
the group of women overwhelmed by
the fatality of circumstances. the reP-
reseututive eirenmstancee ot' their
time. liech gee has its own types,
which often be7eoine its own vietims.
In one- age it may be au lphigenia.
another Lady Jane Grey and In ate
other a Mme, Royale, !they, are stn.
born 'greatness of any kind. hut the
y 'lone of forces coniTotrates arid
oursts above them. There she sits •as
I, see her, the type and the vietlot 'of
•
people. All the rights. and wrongs of
IndustrY -Alia finance ere foreed Into
her hands -their lunieet gales, their
pitiless competitions, their brutal rob-
beries, their sordid tricheries and'eheir
moral etssassinatiens, She slime them •
up and represeuts them"
"Yes." .Lady Alice assented, with' a
grim smne, • "just about to the same
extent es •1: . sum up the history and
privileges. of.the house of heels." • '
"Oh, more than dual Yorere.one ot
year class. She stands alone in hers
She ,can't be other than representative
Destiny has shigled her out for :tee
"And' ,she's spell a sweet., gentle
It comes in. Do you remember lp the
eathedral: at Ghent the tomb of Slain
de body. with dled at twenty:fenr? She.'
vae nothing but a .gire little Geiser than
Nliss 'Trafford there. hut the storm
"orces of her:time centered towed her,
..essitig her into n place in history et-
terly oot of keeping -with. her personal
importance. in the :United States to.
\lay women don't inherit duchies, like..
(TO BE CONTINUED,)
I Clean Within
k.Itirses Roil PIN P.
�the: .
, r Tf ttiRtGlA it
telligent cure Ware
given to keeping the
body clean gad pure
within as well a
without we would
= see More healthy,.
vigorousoidmen and
woolen.. The daily
bath does its part by
kteepingthe pores of
the skin open so that
they throw e r offm
ncls
of thebody'simpuri-
tias, but it is even
more important that
VIgoM9r �twlra or ro the bowels and kid -
o cl k
due to Or.. t[lors�'e nG .e •h should. be, ,epi
Y
leuau *O,t PSN+• regular and fictive..
If the bowels fail, as tlisy often dw
late in life, to move regularly at ]east
once a day, the waste matter from the
food accumulates, decays, poisons the
system and upsets the stomach.
If the kidneys are sluggish the impur.
from which they should filter the
blood remain and cause rheumatism.
Dr, Morse's Indian Root Trills
regulate the bowels, stimulate the kidneys
'and open up the pores .orthe skin. The
result is a body clean withine-pure, red
blood. -.good digestion—and a hale ands
hearty old aged„
Three generations have proved the
value of Dr, Morse's Indian Root Pills,
and their sale is steadily increasing all
ver the world. •
zgc. at all dealers' or from W. It.
Coms;tec1F Co.,, Ltd., Brockville, Ont. a
eldo wonder he 'refused id" she said.
tet heeself as she drove homeward.
"Fifty thousand frenesi Five hundred
thousand Would be bet a trifle ot' whet
we owe theme It it was five million-
-well, perimpe tint might have been
Five million felines; Tile sum ar,-
ponied alike to her imagination end to
her sense of justice. Thal would be a
dollers•-£200,000. • She knew
nothing about the matter, but it Nene
nroximately the .value of the Devlin
mines. At leaet it was 0 With
Willa one Might offer restitutioh with.
laughed at her. She wee suee of dint
now. The, eery thouget me& het
cheeks. burn in the semiobscurity of
the carriage. She dld not blame bine
She did •eot reeent his derision, She
accepted °vets Marales hostility with
confused feeling Of reeking some
atonement. But there was en atone-
ment more practietti end adequate than
that of sentiment, and with the ;three -
setting tenneity of her nature she grew
molt firmly convinced. that her family
ought to 'offer R.
*She spoke of it in the evening at
home :during that laet hour befoye
parting when the string of the tongue
(Met loosed and the mied expresses
haelf boldly. She thing her opinion
like 'bomb into the family circle mid
Waited to be blown up herself by the
At first there was uelther expostuire
Advertising ratea--Tra.nsient Adver-
tisements, 10 Cents pet notipatiel
• line for first, insertion and 3 cents
ion. Small advertisements nOt to
exceed One inch; such as "Lost,"
"Strayed," or "Stolen," etc., In-
serted °nee for -85 cents and each
subsequent insertion. 10 Cents.
'Conithunications intended for publica-
. of the Writer. -"d tion nor direct reply.
"Aunt Julia," George TtliteOrti re- "'Voile father can't be Mule responsi-
ble for inY expressions any more than
'see that if he left you alone you d ,•
bring him intek the Whole Devihi
property." e
"Why sheuldn't wer demand-
ed. with cheeks "It was.
theirs. :We took it from them. Yotd
said -yourself the night We talked of it
that pane had laid out hie plen in ruin
them five or sie years ahead.- Why
shouldn't 'we• do justice to them now;
"I never said ytfilr father had laid
out bi4 plan to ruin tImm. I said he
eIt's the same thing."
"Pardon ine, but it isn't the same,
thing.. Your father's operatious Were
in the way of business. not of seolith
"That's the mere jargon. of the mar-
ket," peula eried, springing to bee feet
caul beginning to move restlessly abopt,
"I've heard it till Vat sick of its sound.
Business, business: It's the only pass-
word of our world. It's our only toot -
tee our only standard of right. So long
es -We eau say that any action. however
base, IS 111 the way of business, we
think the triekery, the meanness, the
AlSl10110r, Is excused. We make our
plot of business cover a greater multi.
tilde AIIIS t batty. What's the
good of our ehilanthroples and our
Mimics and our One plans for the ole.
vation of mankind when we get the
allee by etubbing other people down?
1 Ilse your own expression, George
It's What you said patet did to this
poor. baud :Mrs. Winship"-, •
faith, be accompanied bY the flute
-melted trona tile aunties Of 1115 tit be rot% ntgued giduy by your odd
Editot and Proprietor. ,
•
Profane etistory.
-Weil, what is it now? If Ide fool-
ish question No. 9,b9? 1'11 spank yout
nud put you to ben"
"No, pop; I just want to 'know what
Is protein. history."
"Profane bistory, eh? Weild.it's-
sacred history."
"But why is it called profane, pop?" •
"How the -that is, bow do I knowt
L suppose it -say, you know when lit-
tle George Washingten cut down Igo
father's pet cherry tree?"
"Web, what little Georgie's father
said to little Georgie is profane his-
• tory, I should think you could get
your lessons without bothering me
with your fool questions." -New Yort
Wind and temper.
There is a eloser connection between
wind and temper than at arst sight tip
pears., A 'coldish wind hes, u breeing
effect and, On, the whole, is temente:Is
In countries wbere hot wines oceur
periodically. on the other nun, these
are regarded as n mite:ince, if not a
••curee. Every one almost gets cross:
weary aad done up and has a head-
ache daily. In Egypt tee seasou wnen
crimee are commonest ie when the not
kithmseed blows.. Nearly always dur-
ing a severe sirocco the Arabs iu ,A1-
geria were restless. if they did aot at-
tempt an actual rising. The soiano.
which now and then rushes acress the
Afriea, upsets every one ip Spain and
is :the werst wind In that conetty.
And evee in the Pearl of the Ae-.
titles. the fierce hot wind Is such a
pest that it is recorded of a family
living in Havana that they made it a
rule in the household to preserve ale-
solate silence until. the wind disap-
peared. 4; was the only plan they
could think of to avoid family quar-
In an outward bound poston car the
other evening there enot not a seat
left:- A lady entered, and not a man
noticed her standing; apparently. Fin-
ally one man rose from his seat and
offered it to the iady. She 'thanked
hive adding, "You are the only gentle-
. She was startled by the answer,
, Established 1879
FOR OTHOOPINO COUGH. CROtad
Vaporized Creselene stops the paroxysms of
Whooping Cough. Ever dreaded Croup can.
not exist where Cresolene is used. It acts
directly. on. nose t. nd throat, making breathing
easy in the case of cold% soothes the sore
tsburre.rogi eltsothparettlir cough.. 1t is a boon to
las a curctive and a preventive in contagious
diseases. Cresolene's beet recommendation is
•
Send Postal for De-
ser;ptive Beata
Cresolene Antiseptic
'Throat Tablets eicaple
and soothing 'for the
irritated throat. Me.
treat, Canule. 308
A Canadian farmer noted for his
absentmindedness. wend to. town one
day and transacted his business,- with
the utmost precision. He started en
hi$ way home, hOwevee, with the firm
conviction that he had forgotren spine -
thing, but what it was he could. not
recall. As he fteared hom'e the convic-
tion increased, and ,thtee times he
stopped his horse rind went carefully
throegh his pocketbook in a. vain en-
deavor to discover what he had tier -
gotten. In due course he reach:al
home and• was met by his daughter'e
who. looked at him in surprase and
exclainied, "Why, father, where have
von left mother?"
ee that:.'Your Flo:ter is
oity,i(1,and Dry
Then, Madam, the cookbOok says : Sift Your Flour.
To beware Of flour that's"soft anti sticky, coining out Of the sack
with difficulty ; flour that's lumpy,. Musty, woolly, soft ; flour' that
To guard -against the stuff, you can press into a ball neat solid
falling into several dieces When broken, not into that fine granular'
dust which FIVE ROSES is.
Decause, Mistress Housewife, all this means "stuffy!' quality
plus Excessive Moisture.
Very nasty thing is excess
Of course, Madam, flour
Expensive too, yell know,
Sines the bread -yielding and OlttRolao, (like all good foodstuffst•
of many loaves per barrel, CAN.Aoti -,ti.
turn -
ivater absorbing' properties must oontain some rnols-
mgoaoddyiesr.olls, and pies And 11/1axilnuin, you know.
But there's Minimum and
And you pay for water And wtten the moisturedan-
instead of good flour, FIVE NOS ger mark is orossed say
iness go together, don't elee. 13% thenlook out for molds
Since Strength end Thirst-
* 4 * e''' sound flour that wont keep,
musty, unwholesome, un -
But when steer flour is drPst-and I.our that makes "rututy" dough
and bad tempers.
FiyE ROSES is driest of all -Just Yet, FIVE ROSES, Madam, has a
see what happens*, clean hill of health.
It's granular, free, heavy, nothing Oround frotn thte plump, well filled
FIVE ROSES being lively, even, Rod Fif3 kortens sun ripened on
the sun kissed westere prairies.
remains in your eider, no waste.
and free, each t article absorbs a Made from soundest wheat In the
maximum Amount of water, etc, bast way, peeked right, fully dried
stored in well ventilated ,suriny
Safer, easier to work, you see; fer-
menting uniforsoly,working soundly warehouses, shipped right.
in the dough, And it's guaranteed me/oohed
And when the dough id done, it's Why don't,YOLI use FIVE ROSES.
LAKE OF OR WOODS MILLING' CO.. ITIO.• IMMORAL