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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1890-4-25, Page 2M.% 2 • THE HURON SIGNAL FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 1890. !Is TO* aGood ? • Ifyou do,reid ,The Doerter i slit -r !LxT LT`tlt, Tun smut. SPLENDID WTORT, By Capt. Charles King. PUBLISHED IN THIS PAPER- THE APER THE DESERTER By Oapt. CHARLES SING, U.S. A. idxthor of "Dimmers Rauch." "The Colo - net a otometa Liatrgaiter,' "Marion s FoitA,' Lite., l�tc•. Ili .1 B Lippincott nom any. radar published by special Ce.IAPTER XII. 74e little /crone rap rev retard with emir - /eons grace. There was an unusual scene at the matinee the following morning. When Capt. Ray relieved ('apt. Gregg as officer of the day, and the two were visiting the guard house and turning over pris- oners. they came upon the last name on the list -Clancy -and Gregg turned to his d comrade and said: • "No charges are preferred against (Clancy, at least none as yet, (apt. Ray: nut his company . requests that he be held here until he can -talk (Ter his ease with the colonel." "What's he in for?" demanded Capt. Ray. • •Getting drunk and raising a row and beating his wife," answered Gregg. where's& there was a titter among the soldiers. "I never .thrui k a woman in me life, air." said poor Clancy. "Silence, (fancy!" ordered the ser- geant of the guard. "No. I'm blexeed if I believe that part of it, Clancy. drunk or no drunk." said the new officer of the day. "Take charge of hem for the present, sergeant. ' And away they went to the office. Capt. Rayner was in with the commanding officer as they en- tered, and the rolouel was saying: "It is not the proper way to handle the cane. captain. If he has been guilty of d and disorderly conduct he should be brought to triad at once." "I admit that. dr; but the case is pe- culiar. It was Mew. Clancy that made all the noise. I feel sure that after he is perfectly weber i can give him Foch a talking to as will put a etop.to this trou- ble.- -Very well. sir. I am willing to let company commander t at haat once or twice on their theories. so you can try the .chemo; hut eve of the -th have had some years of with the ('lancye. And were not a little amused when they turned tip attain in our midst as accredited members of your company." "Then, a. I I you. colonel. (lance is not to be brought to trial for this affair," suddenly !poke the post Fur - germ. Everybody looked up in neer-prise. "Pills" was the last man. ordinarily, to take a hand in the "shop alk" at the morning meetings. "No, doctor. His captain thinks it un- to prefer (-bargee." "So do 1. sir; and, as I saw the man l oh before and after hie confinement last night, I do not think it was neoeneary to confine him." "The oflker of the Jay soya there was great disorder," said the colonel, in sur- "Ay. For. en tbere w•a•: and the thing reminds me of the @lodes they used to tell on the New York polka. It looked to meas though all the row sus raised be Mrs. Clancy, s (kyt lkayawr tnya: lint the man wee arresesd. That being tel case I 'maid sok the saga& tux what specifics offense he adwrd (,}oc-y ID Meowed hones." dfip age* was psis at, Meth, lb .1 the :h this Dai S dultty, wM.*A a kis lOtatsou and Weft *0 .inrptisn h Imo the mien* thee thews he the mese. "Capt. 114raer bed sbpn+mat season, detour. h wee ahoy taps, only jam after, and, whether otudagy the trouble or Dot, the Maar is the rap--.- S the party, nut the woman. The captain was tight in causing his arrest." Itryncr looked up gratefully. •'1 submit to your decision, sir." said the Burgeon, "and I apologise for any thing 1 may have asked that was beyond any provisos- Nome wish to ask a ques- tion for my own guWasce." -Go on, doctor." "1n came an enlisted man of this coin mond desire to see an officer of hie nom parry -or any other officer, for that mat- ter -is it a violation of any military regulation for him to got* his quarters for that purposes Again was Rayner fearfully white and aged kxoking. His lips moved as though he would interrupt; but discipline pre- vailed. ''No, doctor, and yet we have certain customs of service to prevent the men going at all manner of hours and on friv- olous errands. A soldier maks his first ser- geant's er- geants permission firut. and if denied by him, and he have what be considers good reason. he can report the whole caw." ..But suppose a man is not on orom- peny duty. must he hunt up his first ser- geant ane sat 10 go and see some officer with whom hee has busi- neeer ••Well, hardly. in that case." '•That's all, sir." And the doctor suer sided. Among all the officer,, as the meeting adjourned, the question was, "What do you suppose •Pills' was driving at?' There were two or three who knew. ('apt. Rayner went first to his quarters. where he had a few moments' hurried consultation with his wife; then they left the house together; he to have a low toned and very stern talk to rather than with the abashed Clancy, who lis- tened, cap in hand and with hanging bead: she to visit the sick child of Ira Flanigan. of Company K, whose quar- ters adjoined -those to which the (lancys had recently been assigned. When that Hibernian culprit returned to his roof tree. released from durance vile, he was surprised to receive a kindly and sym- pathetic welcome from his captain's wife, who with her own hand had 'nixed him some comforting drink and was plan- ning with Mrs. (_'lancp for their greater comfort. "11 Clancy will only promise to quit entirely!" i , . 1 the partner of his joys and sorrows. Later that day, when the doctor had a little talk with Clancy. the ex -dragoon declared he was going to reform for all be ase worth. lie was only a distress to when he drank. "All right. Clancy. And wlsen you tivenaky welcomedleen •t any dia.-the w�o�s I y her •@hardy ham rba,ber. Mrs. layeer is her gear- ed tbdared war ttoiliat the (*vias - h" 110w. s �MpssHisR 0 �weleoew Nellie tsarist& ewe asistper ream et b(t•O& Sys. WaWr a who watt kind mid motherly 1e *. giri and limed to have, bar wilt barons se emberrawad by Mgt.Althriel ishl/imiN.d mash@ that the har'dyknew how to treat the mat- ter. abe would no longer visit Mrs. Rayner informally, as had been her cus- tom, yet else wanted the girl to come to bar. 1f she went, Miss Travers well knew that cm her return to the house she would be received by a vulk•y of ear - canoe Ghost her preference fur tis. - society of peopiewbo were the avowed - enemies of her bendaotow. If she re - amused in the home, it was to become in person the target for her sister's undo - served sneers and censure. The situa- tion was becoming amply unbearable. Twice she began and twice she taro to r fragment* tiro letter for which Mr. Van Antwerp was daily imploring, and this evening she once more turned and slowly sought her room, threw ori bar wraps, and took up her writing desk. It was not yet dark. There was still light enough for her purpose, if she went close to the window. Every nerve was tingling with the sense of wrong and ignominy; every throb of her heart but. intensifed the longing for relief from the thralldom of her position. She maw only one paths to lead her from such crushing . . Then was hi► Last tetter, received only that day, urg- ing, imploring her to leave Warremer forthwith. Mrs. Rayner had declared to him her readiness to bring her east pro- vided ervided she would fix an early date for the wedding. Was it not a future many a girl might envy? Was he not tender, faithful, p©tient,devoted es man could be? Riad he ts,t social position and compe- tence? Was he not high bred, courteous. refined, a gentleman in all his acts and words? Why could she not love him and be content? There on the desk lay a little scrap of note paper; there lay her pen; a dozen words only were necessary. One mo- ment she gazed longingly, wistfully, at the far away, darkening heights of the Rockies, watching the last rose tinted gleams on the snowy peaks; then with sudden impulse she seized her pen and drew the portfolio to the window seat. As she did so, a soldierly figure came briskly down the walk; a pale. clear cut face glanced up at her casement; a quick light of recognition and pleasure (lashed in dein eyes; the little forage cap was raised with .. grace, though the step never slackened, and Miss Trav- ers felt that her cheek. too, was flushing again, as Mr. Bayne strode rapidly by. else stood there another moment, and then -it had grown too dark to write. When Mrs. Rayner. after calliug twice from the bottom of the stairs, finally are perfectly yout•eelf• you can come- went up into her room and impatiently and see Lieut. Hayne as soon as you like." pushed open the door, all was darkness "Loot'nant Ilayne is it, air? Shure I'd except theglimmer from the hearth: be beggin' his pardon for the vexation I "Nellie, whirr are vow?" gave him last night." "Here," answered Mies Travers, start- -But you have something you wanted ! ing up from Use sofa. "I think I trust to speak with him about. You said sc • lave been asleep.” last night, Clancy," said the doctor, look- .. ing him squarely in the eye. sister, laying her firm white hand upon "Shure I was dbrunk, sir. I didn't the burning forehead. el suppose you Tour head is hot as fire," said her mane it." he , but be shrank are going to le downright ill, by way of and cowered. diversion. Just 1 ono thing, The doctor turned and left him. Kellie, that doctor does not come into "If it's only when he's drunk that con- mo house." science pricks hum and the truth will ; •'What doctor -not that I want one," 1 out, then we muat have him drunk ap,k,,d Rise Traver@, wearily. again," quoth this d practi- • "Dr. Pease. the post surgeon. 1 mean. ttoner. Of course you have heard haw he mix - That same afternoon Mies Travers ung himself in my hue/wad's affairs and found that a headache was the result of making trouble with various people." confinement t, an atmosphere somewhat . ••I have heard nothing, Kate." heavily charged with electricity. Mrs. „1 don't wonder your friends are Rayner seemed to bristle every time she ashamed to tell you. Things have come 1 her sister. Possibly it was • to a pretty pass, when oficers are going the heart, more than the head, that around holding private' meetings will ached, hut in either case she needed re- enlisted men!" lief from the exposed position she had ••i hardly know the doctor at ail, Kati. occupied ever since Kate's return from and can't imagine the ('Iancys'in the morning. She had what affairs of your hu.teand's he ran interfere with." been too long under fire, and • 1. "It was he that put up Clancy to mak- Even the cheery visits of the garrison ing the d; ... . . at Ilayne s last night gallants had proved of little avail, fur and getting into the guard house, and Mrs. Rayner was in very ill tempe:, and tried to prove that he had a right to go made snappish remarks to them which there and that the captain had no right two of them resented and speedily took to arrest him." themeel vee df. Later Mise Travers went • • Wps team try ing to see Mr. HayncY to her morn and wrote a letter, and then aakmd Mim Travers, quickly. the sunset gun shook the window, and "How should I know?' said her Pis - twilight settled down upon the still ter, pettishly. "lie was drunk, and psi - frozen earth. She bathed her heated ably didn't know what he was doing." forehead and flushed cheeks, threw a.. ..And ( _yner arresefsL Ihim warm cloak cloak over tier shoulders!. and for trying to see Mr. Mayne?" came slowly down the stain. Mrs. Ray- "Capt. Rayner arrested him for bring ser met her at the parlor door. drunk and creating a disturbance, as it 'Kate, 1 am going for a walk and shall ; was hie duty to arrest any soldier under • op and see Mrs. '. aldron. Ruch • ," replied her Pieter, "Quite ail . , piece of infer- with majestic wrath, "and I will not tot- ation. I Raw him as well as you. Ile , erste it that you should criticise his cos - has just gone there." duct " • Miss Travers flushed hot with indigna- "I have made no criticism. Kate. 1 tion. n. have 'empty made ingnit-. hut I have learnei what no one else cowed have made me believe." '•Neill,• Travers, be careful what you say or whet you insinuate. What do "•I h are seen no one; and if yon mean that Mr. ilayne has gone to Maj. Wal- drnn's. i shall not" "No; I'd meet him on the walk; it would only be a trifle more public." "You have no right to accuse me of the faintest expectation of meeting him anywhere. I repeat, I had not thought of such a thing." "You might just as well do it. You • cannot snake your to my husband much more pointed than you have already. And aa for meeting Mr. Mayne, the only advice I presume to give@ now, ix that for your own sake you keep your blushes under better ronunl than you did the last time you met -that 1 know of." And, with this t insult as a parting shot. Mrs. Rayner wheeled and marched off through the parlor. What was • girl todo? Nellie Travers was not of the crying kind, and was de- fied a vest amount of comfort in Conee- quinsy . She skied a few momenta quiv- ering under the lash of inotetiea and in- sult to which she hail been subjected. Rho longed for a breath of pare fresh ale; Mit thew would be no enjoyment omen in that now. She needed sympathy .7 and betp if ever I ltd ha was is to find its 'Bnr "'trine" who 1 iced that her , • baby Nell" had the mast attracted her and who would have "1 mean. Kate. that it ea my belief that there is wxnothingat the bottom of them stories "1 Ctancy's strange talk when in the htsapetal. 1 believe he thinks h. knows something whio•h would turn all 'suspicion from Mr. ilavne to a totally different man. 1 believe that, for reasons which i venue( fathom, you are deter- mines! Mr. Haynes shall not an him or hear of it I- was you that sent (apt Mit nee -:ver the Ind night. Mrs. ('lencv came herr at tattoo, amt. from the time mho left. you were at the fret doer ce• window. You were the first to hoar her cries and came running in to tell the captain to ggo at once. Kate. why did yowl stand there listening from the time Pie' left the kitchen unless you expected to hear just what happened over there be- hind the ronipeny barracks?' Met Rayn.t would give no answer. Anger. rage, retaliation. all in turn were pictured ern her furlong /acv,, hut died away halon the eaten and unconquera- ble gaa. in her .ieter'..y... For the a gtir t , t where first time in iter life Kate Rayner real - etireyar will el the two. Foe one in- dent she oomezred vwsgisaaas. A sem US Ant lime fishable epi- thets applied to bur sheer or her riser' wade. then, "Bee 11 Mr. Vas. Antwerp will IolesaM sash essislet. I'll write this wry day," was She leepoteb throat that followed; and A..liy, utterly de faatsd, tboeoaghly oosvitmsd that she was powerims against her @Mer's reck- less love a "falr play at any price," she felt that bee wee* was giving way to dismay, and termed and Aed, last Nellie . should see the Dag of surrender on her poling cheeks. . saes one a tams made hiss pilot up his ran. He heard the piano crisply trillklg a responds to lit, NUMMI Angara He asg.d Air • pomp within, and esgretted that he W dropped Mr. ',tweak's lbs Rat of las aoqualtataume. He Mybm as'.• bedew Dnultly *Ern by the hemp epos the cast.lwsd wiedo.r, sad wished that Ms visitor would mime altloilarly into view. U. b@u.d tel Walt orf glanm sad maw the shadow raise • wine glass to the ups, and Hams Moo- shapm fatted acrom the screen, a tray with similar suggeative objects. What meant file unheard of conviviality on the part of the ascetic, Use herutit, the midnight dl burner Use scholarly recluse of the garrison? Btu- t'IiAPTER 1111. tun stand with all his eyes and Retested with all hie ears, starting guidon, when be heard a martial footstep Doming quickly up the path, and (aced the in- truder rather unsteadily. It was only the corporal of the guard and he glanced mn,00 on their bead. They aye baag ht at his superior, brought his fur gauntlet- ower the bask o' a °hair." ed bend in salute to the rifle on bis shoul- der and panned on. The next moment Buxtou fairly gasped with amaze; he stared an instant at the window as though transfixed, then ran after the corporal, called to him in low, stealthy tone to come back noimeIesaly, drew him by the skive to the front of tiayne's quarters, sad pointed to the parlor window. Two shadows were there now -one easily recognizable as that of the young officer in his snugly fitting undress uniform, the other dea- der, graceful, feminine, "What do you make that other shadow to be, corporate' be whispered, hoarsely and hurriedly. "Look!- And with that exclamation a shadowed arm seemed to encircle the slender form, the mustached • treats@ avenue image to bend low and mingle with the Cumene euwumption is (newt& 1 outlined luxuriance of trees that decked + by a hacking hough Melt sweats, pain "Weil, sir. 1 doeld say it was a young woman." Two nights after this, as (apt. Buxton was sulkily going the rounds of the sen- tries, he made a discovery which greatly enlivened an otherwise tour as officer of the day. It had been his general custom on such occasions to take the shortest way acmes the parade Wilts guard house, make brief and inspection there, then go on down the hill to the creek valley and visit the sentries around the stables. If the night were wet or coW, he went back the mine way, ignoring the sentries at the coal and store sheds eking Prairie avenue. This was a sharply cold night and very dark, but equally still. It was between 12 and 1 o'clock -nearer 1 than It -♦s he climbed the hill on his home- ward way, and, instead of taking the short cut, turned northward and struck for the gloomy mass of sheds dimly dis- cernible some forty yards from the crest. Ile bad loam other officers speak of the fact that Mr. Ilayne's lights were burn- ing until long after midnight, and that dropping in there. they had found hitn vested at his desk with a green shade over his eyes, studying by the aid of two student lumps; "boning to be a general, probably," was the comment of captains of Buxton's caliber, who, having grown old in the service and in their own igno- rance, were fiercely intolerant of lieu- tenants who strove to improve in pro- fessional rofrsional reading instead of spending their time making out the conipany mus- ter rolls and clothing accounts, as they should do. B . , 1 tosem for himself what the night lights meant. and was plunging heavily ahead through the darkness. when erud'Ienly brought to a stand by the sharp challenge of the sentry at the coal shed. Ile whispered the mystic ' , over the leveled bayonet of the i , , swearing to himself at the regulation which puts an officer in such a "stand -and -deliver" attitude for the time being, and then, by way of get- ting square with the soldier for the sharply military way in which his duty as sentry had been I. the cap- tain proceeded to catechise him as to his .,orders. The seedier had been well taught. and knew all his ' " by rote -far better than Buxton, for that *natter. as the latter was anything but an exemplar of in tactics or sen• try duty; but this did not prevent Bux- ton's lenappiehly telling him he was wrong in several points and .. - onsly inquiring where he hail learned such trash. The moodier promptly but reapectfuily responded that those were the exact instructions he had received at the adjutant's school. and Buxton knew from experience that he was getting on dangerous ground. Ile would have stuck to his point. however. in default of some- thing else to find fault with, hut that tho crack of a whip, the crunching of hoofs and a rattieof wheels out in the darkness quickly diverted his attention. "What a that, sentry?" he sharply in- quired. "•A carriage. sir. Iwastwiee, I think it must be." "Why @don't you know, sir? it must ha%e been on your post." No, sir; it was 'way off my post. It drove up to Lieut. Hayne's about half an hour ago." -Where'd it come from from?' asked captain. eagerly. •'From town, air, i suppose." And, leaving the sentry to his own reflections, which, on the whole, were not oomplj• toentary to his superior chine, Capt. Ifuxton strode rapidly through the dark- ness to Lieut. Ilayne's quarters. Bright light@ were still burning within, both nn the grounel floor and in a room above. The sentries were jinn beginning the call of 1 to'dork when he reached the gate and halted, gazing inquisitively at the hoose front. Then he turned and listened to the rattle cif wheeb growing fain/ in the distance an the team dare away towards the prairie town. If Mayne had gone to town at that hour of the night it was a most unusual proceeding, and he had not the colonel's permiwaion to ale sent hisa•eU from the poet; of that the otlgour of the day was certain. Then, again, he would not have gone and left all his lights ba.Mi No; that vehicle, w hater it wan, had brought somebody out to Gas Wm-esaasbedy who proposed to remain ameeal hone; otherwise the carriage would sot have drives away. in cwnlrmatioe of this theory he heard voices, cheery ,does, in laughing talk. borne shad Mei•ga to At ksu•rove rs...,g ales voisSION of a w mworks Mskeyees+ lawaed �he eehjest t s seemialit . as aiming bald. r.sdaa: bialtirdestanal sbaia tspaalrt►a his plays. Mist the needsg led d� pawed, s teilrt • the deetar end restarted, "Ye- think . Ise l youpl jt, .' shaalguan, do, was tee erephatae reply. "ay ye t►iuk he wee their stir* thaw ear Rah. but Berea r "Why, there's so sem perinea between them !" said medias tadMlasatiy. "Maybe nu," the tool respoa. ; "hat ye telt se the t that it was Shakespeare who wrote these w tent Iioes, "(Tammy lies the head ween a crown." Nuo Rabbit, w Dever low written suis immerses as that r "Nooses•. sir T" theodered the iodic sant doctor. "ay, pia *sees.. ! Rabbi* wud keel fine that a Ilia, , or • quos• either, dans gape to bed .1' the A g Aresie teases and Cotes And all Diseases of the Throat and Lungs can A• cured Ly the as of Scott's Emulsion, as it ooetains the hmsUng vir- tues of Cod Liver Oil and Hypophes. ttse in their fullest form. See what W. 8. Meer, II. D. , L R C.P., rte., Truro, N. 8., says : "After three years' experisos I consider Soott's Emulsion ore of the very best in the market Very eacsllent in Throat affections." Sold by all Druggists, boo, and $1, 4 •iter tee Leasee. Visitor -Non, James, what makes the apple fall from the trim i James-- %'cans. -Tune. the other's head, and then, together, with • to the chest, eta Arrest its wearies et clasping arms, the shadowy moved trona. mat by taking Rewards Pectoral Bal - view. sem, welch Dever fins to oure coughs, What was the other, corporal?^ be I colds, broochitia, hoareeneev, eta, and repeated. oven in confirms.' consumH rd '-Wehl, sir, I dsould say it w -a a young woman." ODDS AND ENDS. • tamr Slew %e@@, New and Tara. 1. Re- I/abed by Is.r O Ise Walesa en. • Care Per Ise I sun d H•gyard's Yellow Oil se • sure cure for 1 I had it tor some time, and was cured by wing part 01 one bottle. I ern also re- commend it for chilblains, burns, frost bites, sprains, bruises, etc Max H. PaOI Dunk, Glen Almund, Que. etas■l anew "Doctah told me that I must nut walk wapidly or dwiok ice estate- said Gm De Joy confidingly to Mies Pepper- ten. epper- twbee' "Ya -as; be said I might get congest- ion .o the beat's. you know.- "Dear me ! Hut little these doctors seem to kboe Cam Tee de aeu .v. ee'hen attacked by croup, sore thrust, colds, , neuralgia, sprains, bruises, bursa or any kine of pain or can n you do better than use Yel- low Ori 1 It is a medicine which never fads to give satisfaction. It is magical in its power over pain, and a the safest and best remedy where *unlooses and ire dammatto0 exist. dint to Please Iglus. Mother --"Tummy, I hear you got a thrashing in school today." Tommy - "Ye., ma, the teacher weipped me, but be is getting so old and weak that it did'. t hurt much ' "Did you cry 1" "Oh, yes, I bawled so you culd have heard it on the nest block.'' "Why did you do that i' "I wanted to make the old man feel happy once more.' Mhoe er w.man. A Jia* achsetta wife is heart -broken because the count won't give her a di- vorce. Her grounds were that bar bus - band refused to pass her the bread at the supper able, yet ran over to a neighbors I sod helped put out a fire, -thee show- ing that be loved others better than hie own wife." A lawyer who would take case such a re ought to be stood up fee mules to kick at. -Detroit Free Press. Living to a /.N's Paradise. Many neglect slight symptoms of dis- ease, hoping that nature will restore health. True, nature will aid, but she must also be aided by using Burdock Blood Bitten, from 1 to 2 bottler of which is sufficient to con any ordinary case of impure blood, constipation, dys- pepsia, liver complaint, kidney com- plaint, debility, eta 2 Tee Mob ver the •peel.[ etsd. A young w',mse began a song, "Ten Thousand Leaves Are Falling.' She pitched it too high, screeched and atop - "Start her at five thousand," cried an auctioneer. - Brit ash -American, mew Nr e.p.a t. Cnrei 1 suffered from dyspepsia, and was weak and miserable with what the doc- tor said w.s nervous debility. Seetog Burdock Blood Bitters odvertised I tried it, and after taking three bottles feel perfectly restored to health. Meg J. H. Seim, 2 Kleinburg, Ont. • t'beerrrl SI•peellaa. Winks -Has your wife a cheerful dis- position 1 Fink -Oh, very. Let night when 1 wa (mooing round the room o0 one foot, after baying ,t on • tack she ptuoa • o e grateful relief. Collars in Queen Elizabeth's time were ruff uo the neck. The most agreeable, restorative took and mild stimulant is Milburn's Beef. n Inand Wme. lm The reason why massy persons Dever meet with modem in life u that there ars too many ban in their way. Dr Lees Worm Syrcp has remuvei tape worms from 13 k 30 feet long It also destroys all other kinds of worms. Imm Excited Boy -Coe on, quick '.The cold man u baa' the meld woman amis.Police Otheer-Why don't she come bit . self if she wants to make a oomplaist efthave him arrested i Excited Boy-abds too busy. She has rut hum down, and is e umpin' hie head on the lure. Nature has lav iably provided cores f D. all the 41...... flesh is heir to, but tl proper preparation of many of them had not yet been discovered. In Wilienes Wild Cherry we have • 0015 for Coughs. Colds, Whooping Cough, Cr.up and kindred ailments, prepared from vide - table drugs, m a pleasant and 000eeo- tested form, and which invariably gives prompt relief and effects • speedy cure. Sold by all druggists. lea First Young Lady in a Chestnut Street Car -How do you come on with your china painting 1 Semosd Yong Lady modestly) -Oh, I don't know. I rime' think i do well, but they say I do splen- didly. I painted a bug on • butter disk last week, and imbed squirted iobe powder all over it. TO vas EDrroc .-Please inform your readers that I here • positive remedy , for the above named diems. By iso+ timely use thousands of hopeless maws - have been permanently eured. I shall be glad tc send two betties of my remedy 111.1 to any of your readers who have consumption if they will tread me their Express and P. O. address. Respectfully, Da T. A. Sox-ro, ly 164 W. Adelaide st., Tomato, Ont. risme. •boil •dveral.lra. Mr John Wanaivaker says : "I in mth y life used such s thing as • ;meter, or dodger, or handbill. My plan for W- teeo years has been to boy so much space in a Iewspaper and fill it up with what I wanted. I would not give an advertise- ment in • of 500 circulation edemafor 6,000 dodge rs or posters. 11 I want- ed to sell cheap jewellery nr run • ramb- ling edema I might use peters, but I would not insult a decent reading public with handbills. The class of people who rad such things are poor material to look to for support in mercantile affair. I deal directly with the publisher. 1 my to him, 'How long will you let me run a oolmmn of matter through your paper for `100 or $6001' u the once may be. 1 tet him do tel figuring, and if 1 think he is not treeing to take more than Isis share, i give him the ropy. I lay aide the profits on • particular lint. of goods sa for advertising porpra. The first year i laid aide $3,000 ; lest year 1 laid aside and spent $40,000. I have dose bettor this year, and shall increase that sum as the profits warrant it. I owe my manes to the newspapers, and to them I shall freely give • certain profit of my yearly business," - India' Rubber Word. Len aha ...Last a... Last winter left a legacy of impure blood to many people, causing tared feel - f b i ing, last of energy, indigestion, alma- laughed rite. From 1 to 4 laughed till her a' se ached. sMtNs el Burdock Blood Bitters t fails to eers any of the foregoing disease@ Have you . Cough ? Take Wslsos'r by saleable the secretions and rearm, - Wild Cherry. log all impurities from the system, 2 Have you a Cold 1 Take Wiktor'@ Wild Cs FARM AND GARDEN. twee. We advise dairymen to now elu w t we poor wheat, rye, barbl w it aaywkms that it will g we yes • @rep of hay. No mal kind of fed yea have, perm have et it, dyes s.. b early -eat and w hay yes an este of he oesdelies eta ratios awn or lea to what the rest of ft of. Besides is an dry, lover eat 'sees tot feedbag is one et the best moiling crops • bate sever tried it for sari who have say it makes g. it aim, more iu proportion 1 the silo than corn does Io its vales as lead for stock the • clover plans make one of oddment for other crops N ill go wrong is mowing slower, row on his farm; but it is too p t+, sell off the farm, as it c uch of the fertility of the 1 at. mlaard'a Ltatmeat glare. Name' Tins /ewer Camara. It is well kaolin that the ms mousse would he much stronger y were they out more in the and of no dais of women is e than of the housewives, many u not go cot oftener than ,.n011 t is impossible for any one to un6aed to the boom w dloml, e not to be wondered at whoa implaias of feeling ill, for the weirdly be traced to bee close neat. During the warm we uld endeavor to spend some day in the open air, and the Inure this a to have son for outside. There are en who would go tee actually nenemary ; there y way to help such people u necessity for them to go ou If you have a yard at all. res of it for • dower warden. how poor the soil there • plant will grow to it, at soil is required it is very see days of tertilizers to prel r soil into a medium guide last. Then are • numbs al Hewers that may be gr , with but little care, and I bloom the greater part .4 t a. By following the me en each pack.„• of only those plants that tfsip small space of ground v lied of plosion, also t Me few things as bealtbf' .�osg 6 eer. If you Ears ao unsightly abt the yard Dover it with vi bine nasturtium, wsrroing runner beans will grow y soil, providing they can to of the day, and when eke a brilliant show. The Dry little care, outside of a di in dry weather, or a we a while, rod strings for thei will repay any labor spa portulaea will grow in , the sandier it it the bent@ sizer scarcely any care ional weeding. A bed looks beautiful when Bich is mentally a long tumi in very early and keep is frost. Seed alyssum w1I inary soil, but requires ars than the portulaat d war f are in a bed, and will gt here where there is t -me-cots flt,urtah in s h -old be kept gaits moi res ults. Termte, ramal a. Le Work ineffectively perform lected at lbs time it ghoul -managed feeding ; poor, u k ; dew -heads which Dost as profitable animals ; ill -arranged buildings, much in labor ; waste of 1-ouge of tools ; exposure c bad weather; want of prop the animals ; depredations ant of drainage ; lose of ous ways ; neglect to pr 'sot fertilizers fur the croi -like marketing of crops Molex* and instability of • (arm t ; wee t fences ; lose of time ; rode ; neatest which lee s ; credit purchame, wbi sad t0eo0rage extraval tion to personal comfort i hies use loss of time a n' bills and these, mays the Times, and might be meetioned, to to loss, and make farms Roel New Yorker. Hata Data. Wit water mates milt -our rd and ',ugh. Rinse nen, pari., sena, sae- 0 b raid water as sown as a drying wish them in we the band will bear, using e most nada or saler•tus After this washing,' hot water, and est to dry art. Use On pails fi erne ase wooden pail oral. "Do you know of • boy • siteatioo r asked a Harmon another. "Why, I thought yo boy.' "Well, he gat along bet whom 1 told Dim to go c the best sow sad he damped into the peep 1 Moneta it et, to let kin go. -Field and 1 A preetisa) tem will e dairyman that hie eons an eoesesin g nod digestiag me t ea the seem a lowaseo. will soon denote whit* of t by antis( whether tl s 'converted Leto Merz st�k or into finch. -Drell A most diegtstisy pietue that of a dirty dairyman, hands, mulkkiiass a dirty ear bereysad, and •atsbiag th dirty pail, where it is left 1 dirty odors el a dirty atm. mirror. Vosigbily pimples, Motel all Nib( beepers at the moved by naiad Dr L Sesp. gHave yoi Broechita 1 Take Waime'• Wild Cherry. Have yes Inst your Voles 1 Take Wilson's Wild Cherry. Have you Asthma 1 Take Wilson's Wild Cherry. Hare you a Cold is the Hied 1 Take W ilsom'n Wild Cheer The Old Bribable Car. for all dews. of the Throat, Obese and Lustra, Sold by all dragxtsta 1. idleness is the greatest curse of the see--- from it rank en troy of iia crimes of today. Int the father keep his sen at employment ow in school until he s.!1 tears, sad we are willing to go that yearns eau's Ssaurity that he will bs.wne an bootee. sprteht, truthful (dime. Bet at the age of 16 glee his all the speed - hut mosey he wants, • shot gen, a paint ow dung. • baseball outfit complete, and the devil will have a merman', us kise hetore he le Il