Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1890-5-16, Page 2Captithaiiss King. U. S. A. Author of eDtealtarell Ramon," "TIMcoiows DAUGHTER "M•ItIoN'S FAITH, Erie [Copyright, by J. ft Lippincott Company, Pelladelphia, publithed 1/ special with Limn& Nut. ae Capt. Rayner buried his bat- tered face in his hands at tine juncture, tee rest of the erutence was inaudible. Mies Travers had heard quite enough, however. She stood there one nionwot, impelled, dropped upon tbe fioor the bandage she had been making, turned and sought her room, and was seen no more that night. Over the day or two that followed this *GMT the veil of silence may beet be drawn. in order to give time for the sede went of trutb to settle through the whirlpool of storiee in violent circulation. The colonel cense back on the first train after the adjournment of the court, and otrald hardly wait for that formality. ekettrary to his custom of ••sleeping on" LI question, he wee in his office within 1*11 an hour after his return to the poet, and from that time until near tattoo was the sett pi!rttaking ipants in the affair. This busily etithe statementof * 111111 three dayafter its . ; and Omit. Rayner, though up and able to be about. had not left his quarters. Mrs. Rayner had abandoned her trip to the teat, for the present at least. Mr. Bayne still lay weak and proetrate in his darkened room, attended htiurly by Dr. l'ease, who feareti brain fever, and nursed aesiduously by Mrs. Hurley. for whom Mrs. Waldron. Met Stannard. and many other lattice in the garrietin could not do enough to cement them - wives. Mr. Hurley's wrist war badly retrained and in a sling: but the colonel went purpomely to call upon him and to shake his other hand. and he begged to be permitted to 162412 Mrs. Hurley. who came in pale and soft eyed. and with a gentle elertwanor that touched thecokmel more than he could tell. Her check Bushed for a moment as he bent low over her hand, and told her how bitterly he regretted that his abeenee from the post had remulted in so grievous an ex- perience; it was not the welcome he and his regiment wouhl have given her had they known .1 her intended vitae To Mr. Hurley he briefly said that he need not fear but that full justice would be meted eut eriehe instigator or instigators of the assault; but. as a something to snake partial amends for their suffering. he said that nothing now could cheek the turn ef the tide in their brother's favor. All tlie cavalry officers except Buxton. all the infantry officers except Rayner. had already been to call upon him siren the night of the occurrent*. anti had striven to show hew distreamed they were ovt•r the outrageous blunders of tlwir temporary commander. • Buxton had ‘written a note expressive of a desire to seehim and -explain." but was informed that explanations from Dim simply aggravated the injury; and Rayner. crushed anti humiliated, was fairly in -hiding in his Omen. too sick at heart to want te. ewe antioely. and wait- ing for the action of the authorities in the confident expectatien that nothing less than court martial anti disgrace • would be his share of the outcome.. He would gladly have resigned and gone at enc... but that wouhl have been nagning ender Virtual charges: he had to stay. arid hie. wife had to stay with him. and let•Ilie with her. By tkis time Nellie Travers did not want to go Silo had but one thought now -to ruake amends to Mr. Bayne for the wrong her theughts had done him. It was tine. fer Mr. Van Antwerp to come to tht• w We were and look after Isis interests, but Mrs. Rayner had ceased to urge. while he eontinued te implore her to bring Nellie. east at once. Almost any mati at: rich and in- dependent as Steven Van .tntwerp would have gone to the wosie and settled mat- ters for Iniuself. Singularly enough, this one selution of the problem seemed never to occur to hien as feasible. Meant • the. relent.' had patiently un- raveled the thr. ads and had brought to light tlic a liele truth and nothing but the truth. It inade a singularly simple meets after all: but that was No much the were- for Ituaten. The only near rela- tion tfr. Bayne had in the world ass this one younger mister, who six year, before had married a inanly, energetic fellow. a civil engineer in the enopley of an eastern railway. During Ilayne's 'mountain dation" exile Hurley had brought his wife te Denver. vrhere far better prospects awaited hini. Ile won promotion in him profession. and was now one of the pritwipal engineers em- ployed by a rued .running new lines through the Celorailt. litickimi. Journey- ing to Salt Lake. he came around hy way of Warrener. is, that big wife and he might have a hoe at the brother she had riot erten in years. Their train was dise giber, early in the afternoon. but e as elected by drifts and .11.1 net reach the station until late at night. There they found a note from him begging tlwm take a earria,ge they %amid fiii.1 waiting for them :tied (1 .me right out and 'spend the night at hie quarters: he would send them tack in abundant time to cateli the woo word train in the morning. lele eesild not come in. because that involved t lie neereet y01 making his captaires perinea sem and they knew hie relatemo n ith that ..aptain. it was her Rhode+ lkixten hila 'wen en the winglew armee anti as 11011P ef ltsii ton.a heti f2VP, 014211ti41/14P11 *bat Ilayne had any relatiotre. aria aa 'Bayne, in fart, hal had no .me tor t ear, to talk ta elitist hie pereenal atTair. netwey brit himmelf an.1 the telegraph operator at the poet really knew ef their emitters •reit. Mix tem, being an lanmitilettesi .-ad, heti pm the word I on hie disesovery. and. in his eagerness to clinch Vaseeideno. of oombeet nabgbiageo gg Ionsuer anti a gentteman upon Mr. Dayne. had taken no wise head into his mini - &nem Never dreaming that the shadow toted be that of • blood relation, never doubting that a fair, frail companion front the frontier town was the el plane - taw of Mr. Ilayne's , . for that out of the way house and late hours, he stated his discovery to Rayner as a posi- tive fact, going au far as to say that his sentries hail recognized her as ghe drove away in the carriage. If he had not been an am as well as a cad, he would have interviewed the driver of the carriage: but he had jumped at hie theory.and his sudden elevation to the oomma.nd of the poet gave him opportunity to carry out his virtuous determination that no such goings ou should diegrace his adminis- tration. He gave instructions to certain soldier clerks and "daily duty" men employed in the quartermaster, eommissary and ordnance offices along Prairie avenue to keep their eyee open and let him know of any visitors coining out to Ilayne's by night. and if a lady came in a car- riage be was to be called at once. Mr. Hurley promised that on their return trent Salt lake they would come hack by way of Warrener and spend two days with Bayne, since only an hour or cwi. Isa.! they enjoyed of his conipany on their way west; and the very day that the °filters went off to the court came the telegram saying the Hurley,' would arrive that evening. Bayne had already talked over their prospective vent with Maj. Waldron. anti the latter had told hie wife: but all intercourse of a friendly rharat•ter was at an end between them and the Rayners and Burtons; there were no inore goesipy chats among the ladies. Indeed, it so happened that only to one or two peopk had Mrs. Waldron hail time to mention that Mr. Ilayne's sister wim coming. and neither the Ray - nem nor liuxtons had heard of it; neither Isa.! Nellie Travers, for it was after the evening of her last visit that Mrs. Wal- dron was told. Bayne ran with his telegram to the major. and the latter had introduced himself an.I Maj. Stannard to Mrs. Hurley, when, after a weary wait 4 seine 'mum the train arrived. Blake. 010, was there, on the lookout for mule friends, and he was presented to Mrs. Hurley while her husband was attend- ing I,. some matters about the baggage. The tram went on eastward, carrying the field officers with it. Blake had to go with his friends hack to the post. and Mr. and Mrs. Hurley. after the for- mer hail attended to some business and teen some railway associates (if his at : the hotel. took the carriage they had hue • before and drove out to the garrison. where Private Schweinkopf saw the lady rapturously welcomed' by Lieut. Hayne and escorted into the house. while Mr. Hurley remained settling with the driver out in the darknesti. It was not long before the commanding tifficer pro tem. was called froin the hop room. where the dance was going on delight- fully. and notilka that the mysterious visitor had again appearee. with evi- dent intention of spending the night. as the carnage had returned to town. ••Wilt , t enainky." reasoned Buxton. -It's the very night he would choose, since everybody will be at the hop; no one wiil be apt to interfere., and every- body vs la be unusually drowsy and 1eas ire•linst t. i take notice in the morning." Here was ample opportunity for a brill- iant strel.e of work. Ile would first satisfy hiteself she was there, then sur- round the house with sentries so that obe could not escape, while he, with the °M- eer .1 the day and the corporal of the guard. entered the house and confronted him and her. That would wind up Mr. Haynes career beyond question: nothing short of dismissal would result. Over he went. full .1 his project. listened at Bayne... like the eavesdropping sneak he was, env again the shadow of the graceful form and heard the eilve•ry. happy laugh. and then it was he gent for Rayner. It was near midnight when be hel hie forces to the attack. A light was now hurning in the necond eatery, which he thought must be SI11114.: 1.112 the lights had been turned hav it, the parlor and the aertipante bad thetapto•ar- ed from sight and hearime Itv meter% be had afteertaineil that Ilayn..... bed- room I% ae just back of the parlor. A man nes stationell at the buck &or. others at the sithe. with orders to arreet any "tie who attettestel t., escape. then softly he estepp sl to the front deer, til- ing Rayner ti follow him. anti the c.o.- pora I of the guard 111 follow loth. 'I'.. his sage's... the thew was unlocked. ami a light was burning in the hall. Nee a knot- k nig, lie %nine, I es in:relied through the hall mum the ti:J1-r. v. hicti was mem t . anti. signaling .e. 'gene On- e. kis f . ell...vers. f • r, os.., I 11. par S .e sea frivol the k11.4. of the balreem door. It was. 1..a.-.1. earner, I...Ling white and worried stasl just behind hint, arid the ciepiral but a st.•p farther bark. I Weer Britten ...mid Lies•k are! action.] 11.11104- P14/11.6116'11 'rut his intentien, quick foet-', steps s'10114. 111 Ina do* n the eitairro (rem: the ..voild pita.ry. . and the Ino wheoled 1 I atone in surprim to find Mr. Ilayne. , dreamt' in his fatigue uniform, standing at the threetwild anti *taring at then' with ' gled . incredulity and indignatren. A stelden light seemed 1.. dire n tipen hien as be clam -est (net- ene te t he .4 her. W it Is a leap like a cal he threw limmelf upset Boaters hurled him hack. and amid at the . lawel .)eas elmfrenting them with leasing ..yrit and clinching Bete "(Jaen that deer. sire- cried Iltireen. THE HURON SIGNAL "Tea lisare a wastes biddes there. Op. ar @Mad aside." "Yen housids1 ru kW the first maxi 1031111darell eater!" we the furious an Men read Herm hadseatobed hem the w s longinfantry ward and lashed Ilhe Wads la the lantediettRaynes - Wide ti Sep forward, half irresolute Bayne leaped 01, him like • timer. "Fire Quieke shouted intalose wild *edge- wise. Reim! was ehs terbium, arid tee huI erailhed ISe011811 ib. Pieekv "w- helk& emit emits* gleanung Steel id his superior's threat, the corporal had sent the heavy butt crashing upon the lieutenant's skull only just in tinie; then would have been murder in &outlier sec mid. The next instant he was sthading on his own head in the corner, mewing s multitade ot twinkling, whirling stars from the midst of which Capt. Haynes wan reeling backward over a chair and • number of soldiers were rushing upon a powerful picture of furious manhood -se stranger in shirt sleeves, who had leaped from the bedroom. Told as it wae-as it had to be-all over the department, there stewed to le but one thing to say, and that referree 10 Buxton: "Well! isn't he a phenome- nal trait" CHAPTER XVL She seised « srap wed stepped to the door - int y. Mr. Ilayne 1/2114 up and around again. The .pringtitne was coining. and the prairie roads were good anti dry, and the doctor had told I he must live in the open air awhile and ride and walk and drive. Ile stood in no want ef "mounts.- for three or four .1 hio cav- alry friends were ready to lend him a saddle herse nay day. Mr. and Mrs. Hurley, after making many pleas:Lie ac- quaintances, had gene on te Denver. and Capt. Buxton was congratulating biutself that he, at least, had me run foul of the engineer's powerful thee Buxten was not in arrest. for the CHAO had proved a singular ••peser." It oc- curred during the, teenporary absence of the colonel; he could not ss•ell place the captain under arrest for things he had done when acting as post comman- der. In obedienee to his orders from department headquarter.., he made his report of the affair. and indicated that Capt. Buxton's cenduct had been inex- cusable. Rayner bad done nothing but, as was proved, reluctantly obey the rap - tains order's so he could not be tried. Haynes who bad conimitted one of the most serious crime* in the military rata- logue-that of drawing and raking a weapon against an officer who was in discharge of his duty i Rat ners had the sympathy of the whole ttttt mend, and nobody would prefer charge. against him. The general decided to have the report go up to division headquarters. and thence it went with its varieti cone menta and indorsements to Washington: and now a court of inquiry was talked of. Meantime poor bewildered Buxton was let severely:thine. What ;mule him utterly miserable was the fact that in his own regiment, the -th. nobody spoke of it except as something that everybody knew was sure to happen the moment he got ia reunite:el. If it had- n't been that 1. would have been tcsmetl,i,me else. Ti,e gertainty a as that Bux- ton would never lose *chance of niaking an airs of himeelf. Instead of being furious with him, tlw whole regiment-otlicens and inen-sitie ply ridiculed and laughtel sit i • . talke.1 of preferring eliarges against Blake for insubordiriatien. and asked de adjutant what he thought of it. It was the first time he had spoken te the adju- tant for weets. and the adjutant rushed out of the .A.11. 1, • 1.421/ 111P Cr, ,a-.1 to es .mt re and ••lieer Illixteres latest.- It began to hoe an though I.. 4 king serious e ever cenie th.• atTair. until Itayre.r re- am-war...I and leeiple saw how very ill he was. Dr. l'emse had heen ceneulted: and it was settled that he as well as his wife must go away for ,several months and bevy complete net and change. It was decreed that they would lea v.• hy the Id of Mai. Ail thio Mr. Ilayne heard through his kind friend. Mrs Wulf inin. (hu. day a hen he first began to sit up. and Neon, he had been mu at all. she came and ant with him in him sunshiny parlor. There had been a milence for is moment as ehe looked amend upon the few pictures and upon that hareneet and eoldness lie•Ii. do what he will. no titan ran erade•iste from his abeding place un- til lie calls in the deft an.' dainty hand of amulet. "1 shal be so glad when you have wife. Mi. Ilayme- arta her quiet com- mute. • so shall I. Mrs. Waldron- was the reep011ele. "And isn't it Melt time we were begin - /deg -kb hear of a choice? Forgive my . • but that was the %loyalist- *, s( which the major and I were talk- ing am h.. hnoight me over." "There is something to he done find. N'aldren.- he anseremet "I cannot ram any woman a clouded name. 1( 1.' not enough that people ihould tw.gin to helieve that I was innoeent an.I my per welder utterly in erre, if not perjured. I mita Isp ahle in show who was the real ,teprit. 161111111111 in not may. The deetor and I thonght ere claw • way not lerig ago; but it proved delusive... Arid be FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1890. sigma creepy. et bad expected to um the nmajor about it the very day he got back !min the mean; but we have had no chance to talk." ••ttr. Hayne," she mid. "a wommes intuition is not always at task. Tell we if you believe that any one on the poet bas any inkling of the truth- I have a reason for asking." --I did think it possible, Mira. Waldron. I cannot be oertain now; end it's too late, any way." "How, too late? What's twister He paused a moment, a deeper shadow than uesusJ on his face; then lie lifted his head and looked fairly at her. "1 should not have said that, Mrs. Weidner.. It can never he too late. But what I MOLD is that -Mat now I spike of offering no wonian a clouded name. Even if it were unclouded, 1 vould not offer it where I would." "Became you have heard of the en- gageguentr was the quick, eager guess - thin. 'There was no irustant of doubt in the woman as to where thr offering would be made, if it only amid. ••1 knew of the engagement only a day ago," lie answered, with stern effort at *elf content. "Blake was speaking of her. and it came out ell Of a sudden." He turned his head away again. It was more than Mrs. Waldron could 'stand. She leaned impetuously toward, him, anti put her hand on line. "Mr. Bayne, that is 00 engageinent of heart to heart. It is entirely a thing of Mrs. Rayner's doing: and I know it. She is puor-tlepeirdent -and has been sokl into bondage. - "And you think elle cares nothing for the patiitaxi. the wealth and rincial ad- vantages this weulti give her? Ah. )Ins. Waldron. consider. - ••1 have .. . .1. Mr. }Jayne. if 1 were a man. like you. that child aliould never go back es him. And they are go- ing next week. You must get well." It was remarked that Mr. Bayne was out surprisingly quick for a fellow who had been Ai, recently threatened with brain fever. The Rayners were to go ear,t at once. so it wam .said. though the captain's leave of absence had not yet been ordered. The colonel could grant him seven days at &Ey time. and be Isa.! telegraphic notification that there would be 110 objection when the formal application reached the war department. Rayner called at the colonel's office and asked that lie might be permitted to start with his vrife and sister. His ewe - tend lieutenant would move in and oc- cupy his quarters and take care of all his pereonal effects during their ab- sence; and Lieut. Ilayne was a most thonsugh officer, anti he felt that in turning over his company to him he left it in excellent hands. The colonel saw the misery in the captain's face, and he was touched by both looks and words: "You must not take this laet affair ton much to heart. Capt. Rayner. We in the -th have known Capt. Buxton tio many years that a ith us there is no question ait to where all the blame lies. It seems. too, to be clearly understood by Mr. Bayne. As for your previous ideas of that officer, I consider it too delicate a matter to speak of. You must Nee, however, how entirely beyond reproach hie general character appears to have been. But here's another matter: Clan- cy's discharge has arrived. Does the old fellow know you had requested ite. "No, sir, answered Rayner. with hesi- tation and emharrassitnent. "We wanted to keep him straight. as I told you we would. and be would probably get on a big tear if he knew his 'service days were nutule•red. I didn't look for its being granted (se eat y -eight hours yet" "Well, lie will know it before night: and no doubt, he will be badly cut up. Clancy wae a tine 'soldier before he mar- ried that harridan of a woman." -She has made him a good wife since they came into the lettere, colonel. and has taken mighty good are of the old f.11.7wi t.s.11311P2 than she di.1 in the -th. sir. She was a handsome, showy wirrn. an when I first haw her-lefore my pro- motion to the regiment -and Clancy was one of the finest 'soldiers in the bri- gade the eta year of the war. She ran through all 1116 tuoney though. and in the -th we Itesk.s1 upon her tut the real CaU1142 Of Isis lir.ett .lown, especially after hey affair with that sergeant who de- serted. limeye heard of hint pnenbly. 11...irsap1saree after the Battle Butte teimpuigii. 111141 We leesisi 11441 run sif with Mr,s. 5 lancts but he hadn't. Shy wes there when we got hack. big as ever and gneving eleo you mean that Mrs. Clancy had a lover when she was in the -the. "Certainly, Capt. Rayner, W42 Mir - posed it was coinnitaily known. lie was a fin.• boking, black eyed. dark haired, dashing fellow, of geod tsluca- teen. a great ,swell among the men the sleet time lio W1114 With us, anti Ifni. CLency tnade it dead net at Min from the mart. lie never storued to care for her very ruur h." "This ies something I never bean' of." said Rayner. with grave faee. "and it will be it ental deal of a shock to my wife, for she hell arranged to take her east with Clancy and Kate, and they were to invest their money in some little businem at their old krone." "Yee: it IVOR mainly on the woman* aceount we wonhina re-enlist (Utley in the --et We retied s.tansi him, but she eat5 est much for us- ana for the. other sergeant. too. Heaviside.' her before we started "Ti the campaign. I fancy. Odd! T cane think Of his. name-- Billings. what was the IMMO Of that howling swell .1a sergeant who ii -no in Hull's troop at Battle ilutte-time Hull wan killed/ I mean the man that Mra. Clancy was said to have eloped w "Reert. Chewer, sir," said the adjutant, without looking up from his work. He del look up. however. when a mornent after the captain hurriedly left the oare. arid tw maw that Rayner's face was death- ly whitp. it wa• rheetle. TO RR cowrie RP Livia. who 111r6 tronhled with rough nese of the akin or cracked, should leap a Is. ttle (1 Paranan Hahn in the hew 11 1. deliehtfully perfumed end soften., Wait mid beatetties the skin. 1. 00011 ANODIC& • Wile INNISIMIANI. Sew sed Thee. le Mr Meted by the Was. at Mee As ars aid to hawed remedies "wain dowse Dv Law's 8slphur Bopp previa very valeable. lin The men who site down asid waiter to be spprecisted witl God hamlet limos' tbe uncalled foe baggage, later the limited taproot heis mese by. ---- -Can you show see the grub that makes the butterfly r. she eitraiirei sweetly. "Buckwheat's the aria), but t'sint in seamea." auewered the hornd, ignorant farmer --Baltimore News. - - The red color .4 the bleed is caused be the nun it examine. Supply the iron * bee lacking by smug eliibure's Beef, leen mid W11112. les A pretty Kensington girl rattles this off like luuch ; "Six silver neves of sifted thistles mid • sieve a uneitted thistlee 1 ern a sifted thistle sifter and an undated thistle sifter with • pima of sifted thistle. end • sieve of unsalted thistles. '-l'headelphis Record. Never bed a praperstion • more sp mimeos name than Ayer's Heir Vigor. Whoa the cspillary glands become en- feebled by disease, age or itiliglser, this dressing imparts renewed life to the scalp. so that the hair sesames much of nil youthful fullneas and beauty. - _ When I was Joined to Minnie, she, like many of her sex. Was prone lo talk so maseleeely my pentium she would ,pi: But I lia•e trained ber to he still wheelie/4.1 crook my thumb I've got her fund of speech reduced clear to the Minnie -mum. To rut Erase& . - Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above owed disease. By its timely use thousauds of hopeless came bare been permanently mired. I shall be glad tc send two bailee of my remedy FUR to any of your renders who have orinsuarptim If tLay will mud axe their Express end P. 0. address. Re1100C/f11117, DK T. A. SLOCUM, ly 184 W. Adelaide se, Toronto, Out. -- - General Sherman recently set the measure of sea that is to be allowed to war recital when the hero is himself holding forth Me Inv,: "I have met 200,000 men in the lee three years, on • hem turned the tam of the war. When you listen to old Doh:hers it is well to make gond allowance. Teo per cent. ie not too little. I do not except nay•elf from that calendar. ' Lauer Seek fared. "Seven years ago 1 was troubled with lame beck and could scarcely m i.e. Sev- eral remedies faded, but an trying Hag - yard • Yellow Oil I found inaniediete re- lief, end tee bottles effected a complete MasHmentr, 3 Corbett P.O., Ont, wby ise was Worried. "You look worried. '• "Yee,- replied Charlie Cashgo. "Do you bud that you cant get otit of debt c Well. that imo t the trouble exactly. My tailor has moored me that I can't get In my further. -Washington Post. --- Wen Adapted. The effective action on the glandular system 6011 the blood, and the general regulating tonic and purifying aciion sf B. B teaepecially adapt at for the biliqUe, D ervoUS, coetive or scrofulous. Frorti 3 to 6 bottles will cure all blood diseases from.. common pimple to the worst scro- fulous sore. 3 - - wertereature. Flossy in the , -Now show o. yt.ur rum tree. Mr Rubytip. Mr R. (surprised -My rum tree f What de you wean, child . Flossy -Why, me said you were raising an elegant rum blossem, so I thought Lawrence American. The Fees of Whareb. "Last March mother caught a severe cold, terminating in a very bed cough. Everything we could hear of was tried without avail. Hagyard's Pectoral Bal- sam was at lest . led and pro- cured. The tirst dose relievedand one bottle entirely cured her.- 3 )10414 E. A. STARNAMAN, Hespeler, Ont. Gold Leaf swaiiag. There is • firm in Cincanisati which each year bests 21,000 teed dollars into gold leaf , end as each dollar cen be beat into • sheet that mil carpet two rooms 164 feet square, Dome ides may he formed of its tenuity. It requires 1.400 sheets of gold leaf to meal in thich-ness • s'eeett of writing paper, and takes 280,000 of them, piled one upon the other, to equal an etch in thickness. everyone ah•eld fry T., secure Komi health. The great specific for all diseases arising from dis- ordered stomach, such as overflow of bile, sick headache, lose of appetite, nausea, palpitation, indigestioa, consti- pation and all blood aiseases, is Burdock Blood Bitters. Hundreds of people owe their health to B. B. B., naturea regu• lame end tonic. 3 reamer's same. ctn. The sIbum preeented se an Easter gift to M. Pasteur by his Enithsh and Ameri- can admirers ie deseribed as • siagnifi cent volume. The first page beers the signature of the Prince st Wales. Among the other signatures ars thole of the prole/wore of the tint...mitres of 01 ford, Cambridge, Edinburgh, Olsegow, Anerdeen, San Francisco, Telenet° mid Montreal. There are also the Umiak n res ef Professor Hexley, 14, Ohiestone, Pro- fessor Max Moller. Jr Oliver Woodall Holmes and others • Sees se Ilealtsed. forThrheeugmai:tkieltil unlearesiniliniesed lembiltagoresiall, saws Hornet, soreness and laseenem. is Hag yard's 'fellow Oil. It quickly cures sprains, twinges, bores, freitletes. chil- blains, Ma For emelt. snide quinsy, ette., take 10 to 30 drop, on sugar, and apply the oil externelly shim whets ismeediate relief will remit. 3 GEM OF THOUGHT. If th xe art wise there Meowed thee 01511 1110511501111 arel thou art ligaurimed thou knower* nee thyself. titabbure aildril• noddy tak• Ite Love'. Wiwi. 8yrup. It pleame the thild sad deetroys the worms. Affectation) is say part of our carries le Imbuing op • useidle to oar defects se/ newer 1.1. 50 woke us team sotto* tf, either ea wanting seam or sincerity. --Many mese way minis." but men and ell minds egre• as to ib.,. of Burdock Pills, small aud auger- laa There is nothing of *bleb emu int -re liberal then their need advice, their stook of it over to small ; became it wins tee carry in it 641 iatimation of their own influence, . or worth. Anger is an effected wisdoms epee pounded tit prtde mid hilly, aad sa in• Mediu° to da otenniouly some mischief than It alu bring to pass; and, without °manor, all pessions which naturally dis- turb the mind of man it is innet in oer power io ezminguish, at 1011111t to suppress aud correct Jur auger. Dyspepsia einem depraved blood, w hale isa tune, effect. every organ and function of the bud, As • remedy he t h eee troubles, nothing eau • pproscit Ayer's Sarsaparilla It vitalizer the blaod, etresigthera the stomach, and cor- rects all disorders of the liver aud kid- n ey.. Disobedient children, if preserved from the gallows, are reserved for the rack, to be tortured by their own positerity. complained that never hither had a. dutiful child as be had. Yes, said h ten, with leas grace than trutb, my grand father hod. We are apt to mistake our vocation by looking out tef the way for occasions to exercise great and rare virtues, and by stepping over the ordinary ones that he directly in th• road Metre us. Whim we read we fancy we cauld be martyrs; .ben we c woe to act, we cannot bear provoking word. It is certain that either 1110111 bearing or ignorant carnage is caught, as men take chemise one of anethere therefore, let them tek• heed of their company. • learvellees Itenereey. 1 was so ill with infiammatery rheum's teen 10 1882 that I was given up, and had all my earthly business put in order. Ooe of my eons begged me tc get Bur- dock Blood Bitters. After the third bottle I could en up alone and est • good 'nes'. and in six weeks I wem out of bed feeling better than 1 ever felt1 take three bottles every Spring. and two every toll. Mao M. N. D. BIII•RD. 3 Mainaw, Wiest:pee, Wm. Ilneaseed The latest ebeindity to reach this country from the foreign monde is to have bits of dianisnd est in tbe gold plug- . ging of one's carious teeth. If anythi much more disagreeable to eeneit nerves and eyes can be insecined than lot of little rajs popping out of a per- son's mouth and emphasizing inevitably the fact that repairs hare been neosesary there, it has yet to be mentioned. The old-fashioned conjurers, who met marks, were pleasant creatures beside the fool- ish people who thus beepanale their de- caying boom. --N Y. San. teem se Were. Vour cough flaky lead to disease of the lunite herefere do net neglect it. W. eon's Wild Cherry will cure it quick and effectually. For coldecrim p, w hooe- ing coueh, bronchitis, heis tif voice, etc-. es. tnedsc,cs,equalsWileon's Wild Cherry, es thousands testify. Sold by ell drug- gists. I . • reel Seseswee. on the pnnciple that the average tem - tarsier. for • whole year will not differ greatly from that of ioniser years, it is predicted that the corning summer will bean animosity cool one. As a matter f fact, st is said that since weather records first beaten to be kept with anything like their present accuracy and completeness the range .4 variation, , • , one year soth another, has been not quite five degrees. The coldest year recteded y the weather bureau was 1875, the average tempemture of which wa• 48.6 degrees; the warmest, 1889, which avenured 53 6 degrees. But from Jan- uary I, 1690, to the. present date, the average temperature has been nearly 7 degrees higher then the recorded •verege for that period in fernier years: and the inference is drawn, with apparently very good reason, that the eurnmer now ap preaching will he one of relatively lowl temperature. There is no such thing as certainty in weather predictioisebet there is in this ease a degree of probability which im et leoset entitled to teepee*. The wise man, taking note thereof, will sot tm in haste to forsake his flannel*. Mresao C. C. RICHARD* & Co. Geste-Having seed Minanla Liai- anent for severs' years in my amble, I attest to ite being the best thing I know of for horse dab. In the family. we have used it for every purpose that • liniment is adapted for, it being reemn- mended to us by the late Dr 4. L. R. Webster. Pereonally 1 find it the beet & layer of neuralgic pen I have ORO! med. R. T1,1214. I Proprietor Yarmouth Livery Stable. PtIG FM "rim in she ('5.0515." In a lame window of • St Login clothing store is a "pig in -the -clever - puzzle that a attracting • creed of peopie every day. The window is transformed into a sentitlanes of the puzzle. the parti- tions being low fences, and running alined in the passages are four small pip 1.110 bows of delicately color- ed ribbnna A little bny is the Iroise of • farmer endeavors to drive them into the perewhile the erowd pimple weteh mit- side. Jest es he sseeseile is omens, them intn the inner ring mei or two of them will iemp the railings and trot leanorely in the ePtessite tilireetion, after the empteenary perverse sissear of pip. Me mew hastie- st seep all the pigs ia the pee at once. Mliassee Ilmismest Ceres Ileadeett. EINEM -NEWS OF THE WORL Dolma beg 1.110 maims& • Geeee hes arrived at Whideor TIN Deelle railway strike is aided. The Fremb spew& Oriels, edged The praPert la AY dem* he abellehed Oev. 018 of $ew Terk, bee sip bays reknit sesseme. Ur. William (Mho will merre 11 ltaillswiete at the mid et Jima 0.a. Dembrear seism that he has 1.805 01 retereng to France at prin ?be nmehme et the inessimed i». interred at Odvary essestery, 7. nty Tresererer J. IL Merry, al short in his accounts from 11 ike of salsas througbout Use Di Wines coal itekts bas to eke on. A feature of May day hi Paris e ef way Italian agitators be workstea. TM United States titipreene Co aellegton bas admitted az-Presidsal to practice. Clews workmen appointed 1,01U0 u mber to act es marshals and on May day. Bev. Wm. Harass wbo preached the of Daniel Weimer, died at J. ill., Ill, aged 74. Bebop Bargees. ot Kalamazoo, Micl as etsicken with paralysis on Ap 1.4 on Saturday. It is estimated that there bee bee creme of 111,70111,001.1 in the United bier debt Woe April 1. A NIL PeSersburg despatch says t '*04Ramperer William's vat La over three wawa. ere Wag taken to bring the ler within the jurisdiction 01 tee States Supreme Court. Hyland T. Brown, one 01 t owu ecientises in Indiana, died vs Indianapolis in his nard year. It is reported that Me Wells ',ergo .easuger on a Southern Pacific ti ibbed Thursday night of WAD al ills, Tex. Enda Podia claims be hes been . at the bands t y from the munieut the latter Zanzibar. Senator James B. Beck, ot Ke dropped deed in the Beithnore and I railroad station at Wahiawa& oa :1 afternoon. The Minnesota lessefiefet *Risme a proposal to Whim for t toba fanners at illesessee per pound I the mita' Kea. Eight thoussiod coke workers 10 10 dale, Pa. region thresteu to strike au of an alleged grievance &gamma U Coke Company. Meese Fraley, this St. Lona gran wbo failed • taw weeks aim, t promised with his creditors sos mum oo the 4oliar. The fact that Balkan money is Is ployed to foruent disorder among th twee in Paris 1. 111017 to sow bitter tweas the two satiate& A special cominittee 01 10. Clams et Trade hes reported, reemusien tramediste of a teem Tort ter board purpow lersrozged 50, 01 Moscow em y mewled him wi SS and tem blew Isis own brains other day because bis hie wife urged go to work. Helen Dativray Ward, the seines, holstered, John Ward, at New Yoe articles of separatism on tenni smut soli and in a mint ot friendlines other. This as final esperatios. The expedition under Yr. Jacksa flew of the East Africa Company, rived at Uganda and concluded h Manage aud other dash, lipla exclusively under British Now York mead jury hes • pe Pultiare John H. Cockern Cbambeas and James F. IGT1111111111 World, fcr criminal libel in manse the Stewart estate. Ex -Judge Hen is the complainant. Warden Darman, of Auburn, N. that be had made . kommler executed on Tuesday Wednesday morning, and had tee arrived when it did the arrangenat have been carried out. A email despateh froen Wilshire evidence was given before the her Committee to the effect that in New the Canadians have taken Utopians rant, ard that at Gloucester 75 pe the fithermen are Canadians. Tb. Bank of America of lehlade clamed its doors. Twelve brunches i ante parts of the city were shut up , eously. The beard is closely allied t surance Company a America at other financial institutions of Planta 10 110 United Status Senate, a a reeniution was reported requesting midget to negotiate with Great Br Mexico with a view of Necuriag Watkins for , . , the entry liitted States of Chinese from Cai 41eitle Lower Romeo( the Prom the bill authorising the Go111111106 tain the revenues which bare thrmigh the st-ppage of BOW pay Cateolie pras14 and to pay the inter oe to es. Catholic church, was rah compete. composed a twentysix Tbe Supreme Court of Michiger elided the entire liquor law, am an the Isat Ligialatur• nos year am owing to a trimi teehnicality. ratted tee taz of retail Maim in liquors from etiOU tn $1$nO. and Mho more stringent rearictioris os ef druggists. Another new I 'Avendian enterprie sounced in LaMar, Msg., flatuni the Lake Superior Queen Silver Mi. pany. Its object 1. 10 acquire an aiming property is the Thunder Be The capital im e176el00. The Rog a fairly goort. Mr John Itelional ming is 54,. (rely 'anadian mime& toad swanagizag beard_ The wvulthiest convict who 4 stripes there wow discharged hues prison, and left for New York t switseriana He (*need • roll lasagnes( In 11,0100, efter givi several Itundred dollen to eremite has fallen heir to over halt in it Muer teed. Se was ea Island for one year ler teeter despite* be Mmes. Lee, 111. "t Semen. 7, 81. Oseedim 11 logy proposes to ewe 010.000.(se reg. 1551054. 05 the Dukith. Booth • "Mastic ead the Marquette. Hon Oldoemgou reads and to enemata. Taal will retire all the M H. end and stork, Mavis( °sly Use Deni Shrew and Atiestie lime ahead M Tbey will ese tem additional ninewy ..o. .04 saute ewer mileage i.t mera