HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1916-3-30, Page 6• TIMMSDAT Mantel 30, 1910
THE SIGNAL GODERICH ONTARIO
KIDM[Y$s
How They Cure
1'1 r -.r.. 111,. t't.
"1 muttered from K,dney 1aouble for
ae.waal years, and u.ed nume.,.u1 rente.L,
and doctor.' pre.. nptoon• without ((remanent
reelrt, my tare twin thrum. After seeing
ets.ut (:,n Pdls, and a. It is • well known
fa. t that Jumper, without alcohol, .s es. elicit
art the Kidney., I deciles/ to try Gm fill..
On • single pill gave use great rebel. 1 have
mow taken four boars of Lon Palls anal find
my.Mt completely tend. No nu.re tad
B onuw -increase in weight ilea, eyes Ire.h
tints mums strength and v.f;or. This I.
what Gm Pills have dont for raw•.
H. POWIS IIFRHFR7.
Your druggists walls Gin Pdl. es. a ho
tr s hoses 1.i so. %Yrue for bee .ample t..
National Drug & Chemical Co.
of Canada, LUnited, Toronto.
Who Started the War
The Ge.,nan Crown Prince. whilo
bevies a'little chat with his Lather,
said: "Fidler, wbestart.d thews'?" ' • I
know." the father rrpliea, "but 1 bate
to te11.'
U.P.-Was it Serbia
eater -No. r.
t'.P. --Was it Cousin Nicholas!.
Kaiser -Nu
C. P. -Was it (`.rosin George!,
Ka'.er 1110.
C . I' -i ne it old hones, FranzJesefP
Kane. -No.
U,P.-Well, then, father, do please
tell me. who'' 1 Or v
Kaiser --'•Naw, 1 will tell _gu, sonO7,
You nineiu . r Teddy Roosevelt.
When he came Mitt of Africa several
yews ago he called on me, and 1
showed dim • magnificent at my, our
great and glut ions navy, our Zeppelins.
submarines, Krupp* and Ram bags.
Teddy slapped me on the back, and
said: '•Bu Iy,Billy.my old boy, you can
lick the wbole world!' and I, like a
d -n fool. thought 1 could."
Set nut with a fit no determination to
to unknown tether tban ill known,
and to rise honestly, if you tine at all.
-Sydney Smith.
REPLENISH
YOUR BLOOD
iN THE SPRING.
Just now you are feeling "out of
sort.," --not your usual self-. Quite ex-
baueted at tante.' &nd cannit devote
real energy to your work. Sleep does
not rest you and you wake up feeling
"all tired out.' Petb.pe rheumatism
• is flying, through your muscles and
joints, or may, be your akin is dis-
figured by rookies, boils, or pimples.
1%adeeflee, twinges' of nertedgta, ltcw
of nervousness, iriitability of temper
at
and a dieordeced- esmacil often in-
crea.e' your discomfort in the spring.
The cause -winter hs.s left its mark
on you. Trieste troubles are signs that
your blood is poor and watery. thot
your nerves are exhausted. .You wn.t.
renew and enrich your blood at' once
and restore tone to your tired nerves,
or there may be. a complete break-
down. The wost.powerful remedy for
three spring aiIuu nts in , men, "menet'
and --children is Ur. \Pilliaw," Pink
Pill. for Pale People, because these
Pills cleanse bad blood and strengthen
weak nerves.
New, rich, red hlnod--your greatest
need Jit opt info -is plentifully "treated
b Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, 'and with
by
reed, purr blood hi your veins you
quickly regain. health and increase
your strength. Then your skin be-
comes clear. your eyes bright, your
wives strong. and you feel better, eat
better,' sleep letter, and are tilde to
doour wank.
Begin your opting tonic treatment
today for the Hood and nerves with
Dr, Willman. Pink Pills -the Pills that
strengthen.
Throe Pills are *uld by most dealers.
but do not be per+uxted to take "some-
thing lust the came." If you can't get
tbe grbuine Pini* from your dealer.
they will He rent yuu by mail, post
Paid, at :+` cents a Mix or six boxes for
farm r.11 by wilting The Dr. N Illisttl.
Medicine Co., Brockville,
Spring Styles
In Footwear
(loth fashion and good taste
ticmatrd sttit.ihle shoes -for
every oeca,h,n.
The -new slims she.'. for spring
enable \ou to indulge this
taste without cxttavagancc.
And with the charm of ear
iety and. correct st) le they
combine moderate price.
\Vc want ) on to see the
bl:antiftil Creations wc• are
now showing.
REPAIRING
Geo. Mac Vicar
X .tth tide !.1tun. (;01iI lt 14 '11
1
STAT/0110. ONT.
Yes G. Secure a Peskin
If yen take t course w.i)I u. The dr.
Mind upon ns for trained help es many
WJE the number graduating. Stu
dente are entering each wee& Yon
may enter al any time. Write al .,ice
for OUT free cataingee.
Q A. tltoLAC1i1.Ah, rt'Ie•Ieal
The house of the
Whispering
Pines
D
By ANNA
KATHARINE
GREEN
C•sretaat. Ifle,
.y An.. mar►art.. Reline
fled the voice issued from Litho iso-
lated
ialated paint of deftness? 1 went back
to ens A pitiful ngure was erouchlag
there, a frail, agitated Utile being.
"Ella Irrultonr l exclaimed. •YOe
wlab to .peak to mer
"Baabr ab. prayed, with a Mgbte.-
d gesture toward this house. "No orae
knows 1 am here. Mamma thinks the
to bed, and papa, who is oat, may
tome home any minute. U4 Mr.
RaDetagh. I'm in such misery. mad ne
elle but yen can give me any help I
have watched you go b7 tight after
DIght and 1 have wanted to can out
and beg you to come In and see me
or let me go and meet you somewhere.
and 1 have not dared, 1t was so lat.
Tonight you hare come earlier, and I
have slipped out and -oh, Elwood, you
Won't think badly of me? It's all about
Arthur, and I shall die if some one
dos net help me and tell me hew I
can ,'each Dim with a message.'
She was a giri of puny pbyadgne and
nervous manner -the last sort of per-
son
arson you would expect Arthur C.mhe►
land to admire or even to have Wised
with and the very last sort wbo steal/
be expected to endure his rough woe
Or Ind aa,ything congenial to bend; t.
Its disdp.tsd and purposeless Iles. film.
'G,._ 1M�tR
'so owe OOWS r alt mat"
the [leaks of youthful position ere end -
Lem, and tt was evident that they loved
each otber sincerely.
Reassuringly pressing bur hand I
ttraa startled to end a small piece of
paper clutched convulslvet7 within it
"For Arthur," one explained under
her breath. "1 thought you might end
some way of getting to him Father
and mother are so prejudiced. They
have never Uked him, and now they
believe the very wont '/bey would
lock me up if tbey knew I was speak-
ing to you about him Mother is very
stern and says that ala this nonsense
between Arthur and myself mast step;
that we moat never, no matter wheth-
er be is cleared ori'- Silence, thea
a kale gasp.
1 hardly Memel tbe mother.
"1-1 ave Arthur i don't think him
guilty. ■nd I would gladly stand by
Olin 11 they would let me. I want
him 10 know this 1 want tint to get
sorb comfort as he Syn oat of my be-
lief and my deter, to serve him 1
want to sarrinee mveelf. bat 1 can't
I can't" she morined "You don't
know bow mutter fnrhten. Inc When
she looks at me the words tatter cm
m7 tongue and 1 feel as If 1t would
be easier to die than to acknowledge
what is to m7 been"
1 could believe her lira Fulton wee
a strong woman. wbom many men
shrank from encountering needlessly.
"Yet your mother 1. your very best
friend." I ventured gently
"Not In this not In this," she ob-
jected •'I must get a word to Arthur
-I mu•t
AFTER GRIPPE
ire. Findley Bade Strong By pmol
Srvery, dans.-" The Grippe left me
in • weak. nervous, run-down condition.
1 w•* tomo weak to do my homework and
could nookellep After trying different
medicine• ith out benefitVinol restored
myhram-e trength and appetite. Vinol
le • graoo medicine and every wcaif.
nervous'. n n -down woman ahoald take+
it" -Mrs .Fo. Flint -fir. . I
Vino! • - delicious end liver and iron
Seek, el, • thele; • •tite, aids diges-
tion, et tie 1 . and builds up
..Lirai gth aril energy.
11
•
1 saw tbat she had some deeper rem
son than appeared for desiring cow
muolcatlon with him. I was debating
bow best to mast
the situation •ed
set her right a
to my ability
ber wlthou
breaking down
her spirit too se -
reedy when I
felt her feverish
hand pressfag
her little note
Into my unwilling
lam
"Don't read It,"
ate whispered, in-
nocent of all or-
fense and only
anxious to secure
my good offices'.
"1C. for Arthur.
I've used the thin-
nest paper, sohin
that you can secrete it in sometoo.b• will be ante to get Don't disap-
point me. 1 was sorry for you. to
and glad when they let you out. Botb
re
Of you aold playmates of mise, bat
Arthur"-
1ae '-
1 bad to Lbee. I bed to dash bee
mean bells to the Ermine.
e tin
"7otglse. Kilo," I said "bat I
eased earry hiss this message or eves
get ht to film secretly. i am seededseededm7sssit There is a man wbo sees biro
emeti 1y and may be induced to se
see Arthur of your heart mod con-
fined interest in him. That man le
kis lawyer, Mr. Moffat. ill
Any one w
tell yen hi
bow to reach m."
"Ne. nu" she disclaimed hurriedly,
breetbimety. "My last bops was in
you. You wouldn't think the worse,of
me for -for what I've done. or let
mother knew. 1 couldn't tell a stranger
even if be trent right to Arthur with
it" Shen, seyehmew mT atbeshe-
whispered in my ear. here is some-
thing I could say wblrh might"-
I stopped her. Right or wrong, Issesse
stopped ber. She pod evidence.
or thought she did, which might help clear ear Arthur. Evidence of what?
Evldmte which would Implicate Car
melt The very thought unnerved me.
"I bad rather not be the recipient
of the confidence It it Is all important
or at all 1n the floe of testimony. Re-
member the man I mentioned. He will
be glad to hear of anything helpful to
his client."
Her dlstrera mounted to passion.
"it's -it's something that will de-
-Croy my mother's confidence in me
I disobeyed ter. 1 did what she
would never hare let me do 11 she bad
known. I-1 used to meet Artbur In
the driveway back by the barns. I
had a key made 'to the little side door
so that I could do IL i used to meet
him late. I would get up out of bed
when mother was asleep and dress
myself and sit at the window until I
heard him come up the Wee.. Then
I would steal down and catch him on
his way to the stable& 1-I bad a
good reason for this. Elwood- Be
knew i would be there. and it brought
biro home earlier and not quite so-
lo full of Liquor. If be was very bad
he would come up the other way, and
I would .it waiting and crying till 3
o'clock struck. then creep into my bed ?Betts try to sleep. gbts and nights
I have done this. Nothing else in life
seemed so Important, for It did bold
him back a tittle, but not so mach Ss
If be had loved me more. Re loved
me some, but be couldn't have loved
me very moat or he would have seat
roe some word or seen me, if but for
a minute, since Adelaide's death And
he haan't-be hasn't -and that makes
It harder for me to acknowledge the
watch I kept on him and bow i know
he never went through our remade
for the second time that night Us
went orae'., shoot 9. but not Tater. I
am certain of this, for 1 was looking
out for him till 3 in the morning. If
he came back and then returned aft-
erward to town it was through his
own street, and that taken so long
he would never have been able to get
to the Mae. they said be did at the
time they bare agreed upon. 1 know
that he needs some one to come eat
boldly in his cause. and i want to be
that some one. and 1 will be, too,
whatever happens to me. if -If I mint"
she faintly added.
1 was dumb. but not from lack of In-
terest or from oneympatbetic feeling
for this breve be rtrd girl. Macabre
dieanof the situation was what
toe e .peeehtess Hen was b.hp for
Arthur without my braving W the
boners of Carmel'• downfall by any
impulsive set of my owe For • tea
brenew-
inghope is nett erning and rene
tag nam. s"sre0 high In sty breast i
was willing to aee
ccept my rale.r
t04a way 1 w•. *11,10* to NIR the
bed froth my ..we.s flank to the de*
•beotd►r. of '01" .hrinklea bet ardent
girl Then .awe% reiterated 11 meta
oration hap,"t *.,d 1 a•. ed fa yes•?!
`Ret 1* ret t•••t••••••-., .war ..Iter., •rf ane prac-
tical wort* • .s ,..,.d n... .1tuM et.
d.'n
name 1renri• ",s .a ripe .as Mweee
Wire her .d h.-' ewrew/a nod new drelee
•
IS wars the I.w.. .tae 1n.ry1 wrsk f.
10. 111111111,..111111111,..111111111,...M .ete.aet of
"CSWT GLAD IT."
You may be deceived
some day by as imitation of
B 114
and possibly you will not detect this imitation until
the tea-pot reveals it. Demand always the genuine
"Salida" in the sealed aluminum packet, and see
that you get it, if you want that unique flavour of
fresh, clean leaves properly prepared and packed.
cumulated by cbe district attorneyt"
It seemed doubtful. She would not
be bellowed. and I should have to back
up her statement with my own hither
to suppremrd testimony -n woman to
he sacrificed whichever course 1 took.
Such native chivalry as remained to
me urged tae to span tbi• little friend
of mine. Then Carmel's image row be-
fore mal gleams, impassioned, driven
by the fierce onrush ot some mighty
mhsreat force Into violent deeds us -
beamed of by most women. but when
hits undrlven, gentle in manner. ele-
vated
lmvated In thought, refined as only a few
rare characters are refined, and my
heart stood still again with doubt and
I could not say: "It 13 your duty to
save him at an hazard& Brave your
father, brave your mother. brave pub-
lic opinion and possibly the wrecking
of your wbols future, bot tell the
truth and rid your days of doubt, your
nights of remorse." I cluld not say
this. So many things m1`Ot happen to
save Arthur, to save Carmel, to save
the little woman before me. I would
trust that future, temporize a bit and
give ouch advice as would relieve ua
both from Immediate fear without
compromlaing Arthur's undoubted
rights to justice.
Meanwhile something must be said
at once. As soon as she looked my
way again I spoke:
"13.a, the is no easy problem you
have offered me. i ran sympathize
with you. possibly as no one else can,
but i cannot reach Arthur either by
word or by message. Your father L
the man to appeal to In case interfer-
ence becomes necessary and you must
speak You have not quite the same
fear of him that you have of your
mother. He's a just man. You may
shock his fatherly susceptibilities, you
may even lose some of his regard, but
he- will do the eight nisei he.-7ser.md
Arthur. Will you:"
"I will try. 1 could only tell father
on my knees, but 1 will do it if -If I
mast Now I mast go. Ton have
been good, only I aaled too much-"
And with no other farewell she left
me and disappeared up the walk.
I lingered 1111 1 heard the faint clkk
of her key in the door she hod secret-
ly made her own: then I mored on.
Al I did -so I heard a n:stle some-
where about me on street or lawn. I
never knew whence it tome, but i felt
assured that neither her Pare nor mins
had been quite unfounded -that a Lis-
tener had been posted somewhere near
as and that a part if not all we had
said had been overheard I was
furious for an Instant; then the sooth-
ing thought came that possibly Provi-
dence bad ordained that the Gordian
knot should be eat 1n just this way.
Bat the event bore no ostensible
fruit The week ended. and the case
of the people agaMat Arthur Cumber-
land
amberland was moved for trial
CRAFTER ]CTB
ALL Tram 51000.
ISHALL spare you the melting
details of the trial. also meets d
preliminary testimony. Enough
that at the close of the sixth day
the outlook waa a serious one for Ar-
thur Cumberland. The prosecution ap-
peared to be making good Its claims.
The quiet and unexpectedly dignified
way In which at the beginning the
defendant bad faced the whole •ntag-
onletIe courtroom with the simple
pies of "Not entity" was being slowly
but sorely forgotten In the accumulat-
ed proofs of 111. discontented life under
his Mistier'* dominating Influence. his
desire for Independence and a tree own
of the money held In trust for him by
this sister under their fatbers will,
the quarrels which such • situation
would naturally evoke between charm --
tiers cast In suet different molds and
actuated by sure opposing teethe and
principles and the final culmination
of the same at tbe dinner table wheel
Adelaide forret him. as It were, to sub-
seribe to bar prohibition of all further
ase of tfgaor In tbor boas. Foilo-
Ibg this evident. of motive ram. wtb.
still mon damaging one of oppor-
tunity. Be was shown to have beet
to the clubhouse at or tear the time of
Adelaide's doetk The metter of the
bottles was gone into and the event la
Cuthbert road Then 1 was celled to
the stand and my testimony ted for.
1 had prepared myself for ordeal
and faced It unflinchingly. That 1
infest keep intact the one point neva
eery to Carmers safety f m• my is-
mtisitors new, .s before, with the nt-
caodor In all ether respect& Is-
la
ala ease particular 1 was eves
evict is my detain than at all
pA'vtaee eternisation. 1 erknowiedged
What I bad mtne to coacosted. that ts
en ere Peltrfare Into the elabbosse 1
lee came epos a San's derby hat oaf
coat hanging In the lower hall, and
when questioned more minutely on the
subject allowed 1t to appear that 1t
was owing to the disappearance of
these articles daring my stay upstairs
that 1 bad been led, into saying that
some one bad driven away from the
Whispering Pines before the coming
of lb* ponce.
This. as you will see, was to open
contradiction of my former statements
that I had seen an unknown party
thus attired driving away through the
upper gateway Jost as I entered by
the lower. But 1t was a contradiction
which, while noted by Mr. Moffat,
Arthur's lawyer, failed to injure me
with the jury end much less with the
spectators. That I should prevaricate
even to my own detriment at a per
lIminary examination only to tell the
truth openly and like a man when 1n
court and tinder the sanctity of an
oath was, 1n the popular estimation.
something to my credit, and Mr. Mof-
fat whose chief reeommeudatlon as
counsel lay in his quick appreciation
of the exigencies of the moment, did
not press me too sharply on this point
when be came to his cross examina-
tion.
But in other respects he drove me
bard. An effort we.. made by him
first of all to discredit me as a wit-
ness. Sty lack of appreciation for
Adelaide and my secret but absorbing
lore for Carmel were inexorably
brought out; also the ee.y, happy-go-
lucky. tenor of my life and my dogged
per.t.tenee in any course I thought
ronsistent with my happiness My
character was well known in this
town of my birth. acid It would bare
been folly for we to attempt to gloat
It over. I bad not even the desire to
do so. If m7 ai:;s exacted penance 1
would pay it bete and now and to the
Pali. Only Carmel should not suffer.
1 repwsuisee adages that -•aka kid giver
any evidences of returning my reck-
less passion. My tongue would Dot
speak the necessary words, and it was
not made to It wail not her cbarac
ter. but mine, which Mr. Moffat was
endeavoring to amen.
Bot tbough I was thea abown up
for what 1 was. In a manner most
public and undesirable. neither the
rulings of the court nor the ■ttitude
of the jury betrayed any loss ot con-
fidence in me all a credible witness,
and, seeing this. the wily lawyer shift-
ed his ground and confined himself to
an eodeavor to shake me on certain
definite and important points concern-
ing my finding of the body. Then he
branched oft' Into a leas harrowing
topic and cross examined me in m-
gard to the ring. I bad said that 1t
was on beg band when I bade good0y
to her in her own house and that it
was not then when 1 came upon her
dead. Bad the tact made me curious
to examine the band? No. Then I
could not ten whether the finger on
which she won It gave any evidence
of this ring having been pulled off
with violence? No. I could Dot meter I
that in my opinion it was/ I could
net
The small flask of cordial and the
three Owen, one clean and the oth-
ers showing signs of having been used,
were next taken bp, but with no re
suit for the defense. 1 bad told all I
knew about these in my direct exami-
nation; also about such matters as the
bottles found on the kitchen table, the
leaving of my keys at the Cumberland
house and the fact, watt known. that
Gm two bottles of wine left in the wine
vault and tabulated by the steward u
so left in the list f000d In m7 apart -
meets were of an exclusive brand un-
likely to be Lound •nywbeere else to
town_ 1 could add nothing more, and,
having spoken the exact truth con-
cerning them from the very first I ran
no chance of contradicting myself.
even under the close Ore of the oppos
Ing counsel
But then was a matter I dreaded to
see blot approach rod which. I was
equally sure. with ■n Insight nnshared.
I believe. by any our else In tbe wbole
courtroom. was equally dreaded by the
prisoner
This was the prew.o.o In the slob -
bones. rhinoter of the '.alt barred ,et
ter 1 bad long ago been compelled elled In
my own defense to n• 1.now l.dge b*v
Ing written to the •1.. n, • young Me-
ter.
ntier- Carm.S l'It n,l*•r • I Aa 1 aaw
Mwtrlrt Arbor -11e% F••I •••'01 to enter
aeon this toper 1 g•. 1 -.1 myself to
menet In 'twos tn. •light. for e
this MA tiff 1 rv,n.r1 •. 1. strictly
trrothfnl *butt rn.. . , • .IIP nn my
pert mlrhl w" ...n •, • ..n., word to
the ham !hal n .on • rate. roma.
(Mr. ,tarmac 114. * n o1 (•a rine.
h.r.e f
33 MF 51 .n.
• i10 a v. Mgswt I
• . .eh t" ,
•w , •
+r•I of 11
he prlm.n
1 I.Irel 0004
e.r toter
min n
. ane Ih.
u nook,
.1 11.•
; ; •
trust..
b..
th.f ibe atmi waif i aegif the ftMis
el peneseal cupidity aad draokes eplte.
And f. tYs as wan sight It did
weaken il-weekend it to the poll
of collapse. If the counsel for the de-
fense had fully acted up to 01e Oppee"
malty. But something witbhald him.
Just at the moment when I hared the
troth must come out be !leafleted and
veered gradually away from tills sub-
ject In hie nervous parings to and
fro before the witness stand his eye
bad rested for a moment on Arthur's,
and with this result: The situation
was saved, but at a great loss to the
defendant
I began to cherish softened feelings
toward Arthur Cumberland from this
moment Was It than or later that
be began to his tarn to cherish new
and less booth• feelings toward m7 -
self? Ile bad bated me and vowed
my death 11 I escaped the fate be could
now dimly IMO opening oat before bim-
self, yet 1 could see that be was glad
to see me slip from my tormentor's
bands with my story unimpeacbed sed
that be drew his breath more deeply
and with much more evidence of free -
dont now that my testimony bad been
thoroughly sifted and nothing bad
come to light ImpUcatlag Carmel 1
even thought I caught a kindly gleam
m his eye as it met mine at this Brit'
ical juncture, and by its light i under-
stood
nderstood m7 man and what he hoped from
me. Be wished me, at any risk to hila -
self, to unite with him In saving Car
mel's good name. That I sboald ac-
cede to this, that i should respect his
generone wishes and let him go to
unmerited destruction for even so im-
perative an obligation as we both lay
under. was a question for the morrow.
Several abort examinations followed
mine. •11 telling In their nature, all cal-
culated to de In the minds of the jar?
10. toliowing facts:
First -That Arthur, swayed by cu-
pidity and moved to rage by the scene
at the dinner table. bnd by some un-
known means of a more or less violent
character prevailed upon Adelaide to
accompany bim to the Whispering
Pines In the small cutter to which, in
the absence of erery ..rennt about
tbe glare. be blm.eif hot harnessed
the gray mere.
leea•o nd -That In preparation for this
71.11 rn * spot remote from otr•erva-
tiot. and ctn•M ars Inst .II vtdtors
they. .1111 for •nm. t/•nknnwn re.anm.
Mit r.rrled between 10.•, • - candle
stick and candle, a Task of cordial,
three glasses and a small bottle
marked "Poison;" also some papers,
letters or scraps of correspondence,
among them the compromising line I
had written to Carmel.
Third.-Thht . while In t ,lo btkil
''t an hour not yet settled, a second
altercation had risen between them
or some attempt been made by the
brother white bad alarmed Adelaide
and sent her flying to the telephone
In great agitation with an appeal to
the police for help. This telephone
was In a front room. aad the jury was.
led to judge that she bad gained ac-
cess to it while her companion ran-
sacked the wine vault and brougbt the
six bottles of spirit up from the cellar.
Fourth. -That ter outcry had alarm•
ed the prtaoaer 1n he turn. causing
him to leave most of the bottles bar
Ma Dow= wean or m.rr roams.
low, and hasten up to the room• where
be completed the deed with which he
What AilaYou?
Nave vnu heroine rue -down, weak
emaciated, pole after a long liege of
colds? Dor. the skin show that the
blood is titin and watery? Spring I,
the time when vitality ix at its lowest
ebb -clean house woe-hy ridding the
body of ita accumulated poisons. Re-
fresh the blood with a stimulating tonic.
Dr. Piro'. (:olden Medical Dis-
covery, fret from atenlol or nem:Airs and
estraeted from mote and barba with
pun glyexrine. haniabre' l,n, the blond
all poisons and impure matter. It dis-
msivrs the impure dcponits and tarries
then out, as it dere all impurities
through the Liver, Bowels, Kidneys aad
Skin.
1f yon have indigestion, alth liver,
nasal or other ratarrb, unsteady nerves or
unsightly .kin, get Ir. dace's Golden
Medical iAarovery to -day and mart at
once td replace your impure blood with
the (rind that putt energy and ambi-
tion into you and lila. hark youth
and vigorous' action.
All medlein
deeiere
in either liquid' or let (oral nary s awed
10 rents for trial bet d tablet' to pr.
Mime, Invafida' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y.
AS[ YOUR NEIGHBOR.
Poefda B. C.---"1 am so glad of an
!'P' = Ay to nwommend Or Pierce's
((�l.a�sld�ee�b Medical 1 Im'overy; it hoe cured
me d indigestion Ind constipation which
I bad very bad. A hired gave me a
bottleful and 1 took it. it helped tee so
mtseb lent i bnswjht more and continued
using it." -Ma. C. Wnacatvaa, Omelet
iselbrer7.
Dr. Piseee'e Tisanes. Pelee are the
-*Wel little I reppins, fast put op MItamaek iter bowot&� 'sesame
WILL WE EYER
WALK ON AIR?
Troia 01 Tbesght Inspired By • Letter
Attest ',reit-a-gene"
en. O. MCLLAN
Orillia, Ont., Noy. 211th, 1914•
"For over two year., 1 was troubled
with Coasts/whoa, /)roa•slwrss, lark of
Apprfite ami IIeada(kes. I tried several
medicines, but got no results and my
Headaches became more severe. One
da) I saw your sign which read 'Fruit-
s -tyres' make you feel like walking on
air. This appealed to me, so I derided
to try a box. In a very short tune, I
lw•gan to feel tetter,aultw<1s /jrrlfer.
Now 1 have a good appetite, relish
es,•ntlung 1 eat, anal the Ilra.faches
arc gone calla -0y. I C311n111 say loo
much for ' fruit -a tiles', and mime -
mend /his p/rnsawIjroi/rwrdr.inetoall
my fncn.6". I),t\ lIcl.E:.IN.
"1 ltt'IT- A-TIVES' is daily proving
its 11rin•I1•s. value in relieving roar•, of
Stomach, Liver end Kidney Trouble-
(;eneral \t 1•aknen, and Skin Diseases.
0r. a Iu. s , 6 for fj_".50, trial size, ^So.
.,t all .I..slers or sent postpaid by
Fruit a-tittm Limited, Ottawa.
bad previously threatened her.
Fifth. -That poison having failed, be
resorted to strangulation, atter which.
or before, came the robbery of her
ring, the piling up of the cushions
over the body In a vain endeavor to
bide the deed or to prolong the search
for the victim, tben the departure,
the locking of the front door behind
the perpetrator, the fllgbt of the gray
horse and cutter through 10. blinding
storm. the blowing off of the driver's
hat the }CssYlestknreof elm set ssr-by
means of the -flour mark lett on Ira
brim by the mechanic's w1fe, the pres-
ence of • portion of one of the two
abstracted bottles in the stable where
tbe bores was put up and the ap-
premisee of Arthur with the other
bottle at the door of the inn in Cuth-
bert road just as the clock was strike
tag halt put 11.
This latter fact might have been
regarded a, proving an alibi, owing
to the length of road between the
Cumberland house end the place just
mentioned, if there had not been •
abort cat to town open to him by
means of a door In the wall separat-
ing the Cumberland and Pelton
g rounds -a door which was found un-
locked and wltb else key In 1t by
Zadok Brown. the coachman, when be
came home about 8 next morning.
All this stood Not an Item of this
testimony could be shaken. Most of
It was true, some of It false. bet what
was false *o on•aaallable by *07 or
dlnary means that. as I have already
said. the clouds seemed settling heav-
ily over Arthur Cumberland when. at
the end of the teeth day, the proceed-,
Ings clotted.
I was early to my seat My find
slates around the courtroom was un-
ptodoctive. I saw only the usual
pablte, such as had confronted us
tbe whole week, with curious and
increasing interest Bat as 1 search-
ed further 1 discerned in an In-
conspicuous corner the bowed bead,
veiled almost beyond recognition, or
Ella Fulton. It was her first appear
once in court With her were her
father and bet cold and dominating
mother. and beholding ber thus amen -
pealed I fancied I uoder.tood an agi-
tation manifested by Mr. Moffat But
another glance at Mrs. Felton •sere!
me that 1 wits mistaken In the hasty
surmise. No such serious purpose so t
feared lay bark of their promise* bore
toddy.' Curb -lefty alone explained :t
and as I realized what this meant and
bow tittle undeewtaeding It betokened
of the fierce struggle then going on in
the timid breast of their detracted
ebfld a sleekening sense of my own mw-
spondbQlty drove Carnet's beauty
and Carmel', maims temporarily from
m7 mind andfollowing the direction
of Mina thought.. If not ber glances.
i Soagbt in the rare of the primmer a
recognition of tier presence, if not of
tbo protnee MI* presence brought him.
ills eye Md Juin fallen on ter. I
was assured of the by the sodden
softening of hl* erlresafoo-the that
real softening I Md firer seen In It It
was but a nrnmeotary flask but It was
unmistakable to its ebanetor, as was
Ma speedy return to bio former OOtid-
Tho opening testimony of rho day.
while not rit.1 was favorable to the
proescetlee In that It showed Arthur's
conduct *Inge rhe murder to have been
incesseistent with pehsct Moot -anew
May farts were bresg•t ferward d
grim array anise, the prbsser• with
but little opp.wtttee fres W eeemeel
and smell het ray l of feeling OR the
part of ArtOor einem/ File Meld (leer
bad nmateed •mild eves wets as.
ring which had wino out d kis s!
10 . sem et was. *tows to flea jw'y aad
the ....new.. mad. b.twes. 11. ger
41.16"1111".81b..":111.&'",
nett r.e awe '0. lkaed.. et W
�111rlltt 1h. e�aea
1 To Bs' 1 N. e1 Week