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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1894-1-25, Page 3-f �r A LIFE I OF SACRIFICE. lie ":The Glasgow `'Scottish Reformer's" ca First Prue Story. ti P1 CHAPTER I. I to ii "Load Thou me oil." In RE short December a a',bornoon was draw- , Ing to a close as a n ��i .)� young girl hurriedly 6 u�`�t'vpv- a to ad Umport sta- . : °.i ' bleu. iL'he London bl a ,� express had just ar- ,` f, 4 . rived, Bad eagerly tF she acanned the few passengerswho ,loin e1 ' it. Sha wen on the b' - 1i point of burntegaway al when she noticed a d figure, mnflied in a B ;, large cloak and carry- !71 "d' !ng m email Gladstone tl t bag, coming towards h her. Iname,tiabelc ohe went forward. fE 11 Oh, LWle ! I'm as glad you've come. t' I was beginning to think --"and she n stepped. " Think what, dear?" queried Leslie. 1' That you might diamppolnb me." a II Me!ly, how could you! Does Mrs. Merton know I aux coming?,) „ 11 Yes, Leslie ; I told her." And the two b ,walked on. Mary Merton was the younger of the two fi daughters of a widow lady. Her husband, Mr. Merton, had practised as a lawyer In 9 the town of Ltr•porb, and on his death had V left money enough to keep his wife and I daughters in comfortable ofrcnmatmnoee. .Mary, however, more enterprising than her I sister Slbyll, wag now qualifying In Edin- burgh Universiny an an M. D. Here she a formed an intimate Hendship with Lilian a Drysdale, a feil�w etudmnt, and a still more Intimabo friendship anti Min Llltan'd brother Leslie, whom she has just met at o Linport Station. i Loupe Drysdale wan an orphan. His t brobhar, fifteen years his senior, had 1 amassed great wealth no a city merchant, I and eduoated Leslie at the Univorsiby of g the metropolis. He had just pascal his I 11 final" with fall benare, and had come ' to sae her whom one day he hoped to call ' wife. * * * * I Ili was evening and Mary mndLeelle were I sauntering on the sands. t 11 Can yeu bear the soparatlon, dear?" he I asks. r III think so, Lealfe," and Robbing, "God I have meroy on you!" II Amen 1 On, Molly I I have tried to c hard to overcems the temptation, but it has been too sbreng for me. When I see a Ines of that fatal wine I must have ib. Asa r ph alolan I know its ravages on the oyetem, and yet I cannot conquer that awful army. I Ing. Away from my frolicsome companions, 1 twlbh this Dr. Buohan for my friend, I hope I an the island of Barbadose to renounce for- ever and keep at a diebanoe.thls determined 1 .enemy of my soul. It psina me bo leave you I here darling, but I dare not mak you yob r bs share the lif.• and home," and btu voice ' -died be a tremulous whisper, "of a dfuuk- I .ard." 1 i1 Oh, Laelfe 1 Leslie ! I was so happy in your love," she moaned. /1 Mast you go? " t1 Mary," he said solemnly, 11 would you I have nae stay I » 11 O a, me I no 1 Forgive me I I did nob I know what I was saying. But—" 1 t1 Molly I think how painful it is for we e to leave you 1 Oh, God ! that is hardest of I .'11.11 I But new, with a wommn's instinct, one s divined the keenness of hie pain, and turned L -comforter. 11 Lselie, deareeb, you must ga. My leve for you and my faith to my Father will ane- -tatn me, I bava my studies ; you your duties ag pbystalan, and all ! for my sake, for His sake, remember that God will net tempt a man above that he in able, but will, with the tempawtlon, provide a means of escape." " Molly, I will go, If you can be brave, .shall I be a coward I" And he went. CHAPTER It. -i1 Remember not past years." Thede -years had passed elute Leslie Drys- dale sailed fer Bsrbadoes. Mmry Merton sat In her ledgIngo in Edinburgh, a letter In .her hand, and her face radlanb, Why I In s -the first place -aa she not Dr. Mary Mer- ton'? Yes ; her labors had had their reward, and now she was qualified to do noble work, to alleviating the sufferings of ;.her fellow mertals. Bub then, joy of joys I �Leslie'a kuc,,ems ebread bad been very en- vauraglsg. The demon Drink had net an- tiroij loosed hie grip Gn that young anal, put lie had bean compelled to slacken it. Who fight was abarp but manful, and Rtghb is cure of vlobery in the end. Mrry Merton's happy thoughts were in- torraptod by her landiady R tap at the door. At her 61 come in " ohe handed her a card. As she read the name " Francis Orycdale," her face flushed, then a sudden ;:IpaIlGr spread ever bar countenance. It was some time before she could form words to Jiall Mro. Brown to show him in- What � id Frmnols D'ysdale, Lealle'd stern baother, want wive her ? Was Lilian ill ? or, worse, was it Lealte-? 'I Mias Marton, I believe t" uttered a hare, deep Rob vales, and this recalled her -to her seals. =1 I am mics Morton. Will you take a Raeat, Mr. Drysdale ?" she raid. ,t.P,c%roOly Werth while," with a short, ,chayp langh. "I don'b believe in Oireamlo• cutfon,'M'.gs Merton, and as no doubt you will be wondering what the object of my alndorosit it, I shall 00-0 to tt and there was Dome he elsort of nt at once. I ente6uglement between yen and mg brothbi Leslie" and-" Mary Merbou roea from her chair. Her face flushed and her eyes kindled as ate rat• pilea am gc,urbbroth© 's promised Wife." /1 Sir, ] 11 Sorry I'll never have the pleasure a , having you %a R sloter-iia-law," he encored ,..11 Calm yacraelf, yen must know all. Llliw warn engaged to the eon of a wealthy Soottis laird - they wero'to be married in Rutumr Shen dying of typhus oenUraobad in s om aboard misafon school. My buatncss 1 . dying also. Leslie must coma home, jol me Ir+ partnership, and marry a wealtb womar, not a ear- s+ You neod not trouble finlehing yet sontenos, stir. In plain Eoglisb, yon wGp are to give him, up., ' It Well, that's about it, I should say," 1 am td. flinching a very little under her oto.( gaze. She sank on her chair, and covered h face with how hands. He could sea is slander form bramble under the weighb P, 110 had laid on her young shouldoi Mitt bile iron had entered his soul ; he h Via pitye . At lasb she stood erect and faced hl but her voice wan do firm, at she replie 11 I `(aro not canocal from YOU the eyl you heave given leo to -night. If L oslic Consented, Of will oongenb, to your P Ronal�)be assured 18'aall not aband In ' M ay. 11 Thanks. Lealle dare not. He (aged to marry Miss Buohan, the doo- let 's sirber," and he turned and left the OW ter. What made Francis Drysdale add that an to bis Insulbing spsoob, he, himself, ald toaroely bell. Bub ]clary Merton ye ither screamed nor fainted. -She locked sl!e's Totter in her desk, and souk down I think--nobhiug but think, When she do eyed long and earnestly ; the battle was bh light and won, and oven me the words all Thy will be done " trembled on her lips, be orning broke, and she rose from her kaoes br! aadd n.ed woman. en * * io. It was Chrlatmas Eve, and the snow was bi [ling silently, as the two young girls knelt , the bedside of a dying man. m "Will he talk again, Mary, do you at Ink V le 11 Huth I toe, he trios to rifle," and very re ad.arly tour slender arms raised the now bt actelated farm of Francis Drysdale an hie A, Yes I the cloy merchant Is rained, at id by drink. He says It is pecuniary leases d ib, strove him to his worst army. 1I ah twl,ab drove his poor younger brotber ill it, and wherefore the crimson flush on h, Lab beautiful, pale girl's face ? Sarely aaveu Ilrso visaed the in!qulby of the ther on the children here, for, ead truth I la teir father -he, who should have been an T s rs,mple 6f truth and purity -fills a drank. A Wo grave. at 11 Llltan I Mary i you love me," he said,le oarmely, 11you have forgiven. Oh God ! fe elve hint away, quick I" w 11 What ? Franele, dear," Bald his sister, fi uothinK ,will harm yon," and she hold hlaa ands. He shivered. f6 Do yon not see Death standing by the W et? See I he comes nearer. He holds a is lass filled with beautiful, ruby, sparkling ice. He effers it me. Yee, I come I illan, loava me I Ah !" hl He sank exhausted. The girls' eyes met. b b was clear to bothhewao seen to be called. 0. 11 Pray," muttered the dying man. And b clear, young voice ascended to heaven, O eking her Father to grant meroy to him t, ,ho had blasted her life's happiness. t 11 Mary," he said very faintly, " tell me ace more You forgive me, and tell Loslls p ow, in my last hours, my -heart -was-- 1 ern -with -remorse." Lilian thought he T las gene, lut Mary silenced her weeping 11 y a mobian of the hand. She bookimed b nd as they bent over the dying man they a .card him murmur, 11 God-meroy-min• er." They did not stir, but each heart v res full of prayer for that blitsted life. r 11 Do you hear the any.ola singing, girls?" t ,owhispered. 11 Now I am happy. Safe a the arms of Janus I" His coal had fled d o his Maker, and a fervent "Thank God I" � all fram the lips of both girls when they 1 aw their prayers had boon answered and . 1s end was peace. i1 Shall we writo to Leslie to -night, Mary?' I neried U1 an, presently. "I think me, dear, The sooner the better, t nd will you tell him Francia'story-it vould ba too painful for me." t II Poor dear I how you have suffered," she t aid, as she ktsged her friend affeoblenately. i ' You will be my friend, won't you, Mary? ! aething muaboome between no now." (And I or eyes wandered unconsciously to the face r I her dexd brother.) " Franeia is dead and r rrslie is abroad, and I have no one to save ( as from -from the awful temptation vhich conquered Francis, and ma iercely threatened Leslie," and the t ear girl sank on a chair sobbing very 6 utterly. Her friend was shocked, pained. I 11therto the had but watched the dytog r ,rather, all forgetful et the wean girl who 1 Lad watched with her. Now when she 1 coked into that face she seid the ravages I I drink already began. That flash, that I eatleseneos, that artificial strength, whenoe sme they? tabs gazed on the girl with a ook of mingled horror and compassion. So Irra st I p°u® a lit I a eb a vi cbim to I nk amu i tie cilli po and- " Mary, Mary, why don't you speak! ire you afraid to help one so wicked )h I I o3uld rich help It. I saw my father and I said, I Why should not I ?' I saw Francis and I veld, 1 Why should nab I ?' Ind the evil spirit within me eoheed,' Why lot? And J -eucorambed to the tempter ; sow," she meaued, " what would I net do, where would I not go to rid myself of my craving for Its?" The dret check of surprise over, Mary Merton was herself again. She knelt be - gids her friend, mud pasting her arm round the girl's shoulders said : " Lilian dear, I shall always be your friend, but remember there to one greater than I • to whom you muat appeal for aid. We will ask for His help, and cynquer. Come I be a woman, and a brave one, and we will fight the battlo together." 111wo moubho later a letter came from Barbadoes, bub not from Leslie. Dr. Buahan wrote to Lilian saying the shook of his brother's death, and the revelatianr in her letter to him, had nearly killed him, and he wvao reoevss•!ng bub ale wly. He had dreoped mince he received Francis' letter telling him of Dr. Mary Morten'e death, 1' cad, I he added, 11 he efsen looked toward the rays of the setting sun, and wondered how soon he would be with her and his mister Lilian. Consumption has fetbored him now. He may recover ; the only hope for him is another change of climate, Would it be too mach to pray you to bring Dr. Mary .cub with you ? IIs has been very Ill since your letter, cots- Rtantly murmuring her name mud, calling for hsr." When Mary maw that letter, her pentup grief egoaped, and a torrent of tears flowed from her oyes. Lilian wept too, and both girin1.., friendless and 110111010132 (for Mrs. erton bad fallen aoleep tea, and Stbyll wits marrled), camel to the conclusion that they were called to 90 to him, and early in epriug they loft their native land, and truawd bhoir. faturo to their God - CHAPTER III- 'Tis II. oved and leek Than never to r to have loved at All - da Will they be long new, Mrs. Buchan, do you think V . It wag Limits Deyedale who epoko, but me different from the Leslie of former days, _. . ___ ..r.,..,.t, e,•,.nstnarent In its I bald iu 's tale of sufroring. A wearie r oxprenalon larked In the o,ce-laabroas Oy6 *and the band that toyed with the GOvcrIG a wan painfully a;aeiabad. „ I "They are corning now, L�osllo. a With au effort he rmiaed himself. Mr y Baohmn ejaculated a area of alarm, xx went swifbly to the bedside, .r It You mush keep still, YOU know," s it oaid, "else thodoorborb® iill scald Hememf r n watobing nay Pat le COMO. What 4, 1 must r will to lMoliytronthink Y `aha salt en t1b y mused sr Just boon Dr. Buchan ontored wi er Lilian and Mary. 0^he Farmer waits of quickly up to her brother and hissod 1 p, pails forehead without a word. ,d 16 M011y," he csid. 41 whore is Mol ,, i an ? Milan , date Ire h an si b i Lille m, Dr. Buchan teak y A . motioning to his wife, whispered, " Lab ,tat them." as Mary w6ab Rlnwiy to her levees side s fo- ornbraced him affeotionately, then pevtua ;he him to lie d1myfuil 1, thmuy`urheruherartoI pilin Said p_ y ys it is filled with a grant ooreoty, .for her ext no told her death was soap to claim on - ser vlobirn. Is You dust obeyy Ise." " Oh I Molly 1 we have anHered much, I all through a brother's treachery." 11 Hush I dear. I forgave, send so must 01.11 " I do forgive, but oh I I cannot forget. (hall seen be free from pain, but ;fou, rling, must leek forward to meet me in a great beyond. Falu would T live to told you, but 1t is His will that It should othorwise.i' Her faith was sorely ed. Why was he whom she loved beat L eato to suatobed from her ! After ig years of reparation they had met b to part. So the days passed slowly on. In a II mth the end came. Mary, the devoted rae, was wibh 'him to the Nab. She had 'b the room for a few minutes, and, on burning, ho had rimon from his couch by e window. " Leslie I ob, Leslie 1 " she orled, as he j zggered forward iso meat liar. " Molly, I am called," he whispered. Loh ane die -in -your -arm -s." The life % sod flowed from his moubh, and aWnsd er dress. Leslie Dryedale way dead. * • i, * a w * I In one of our Went Afrlcan Mission, 1 bar a medical mlesionary and her friend. a hey aro Mary Merton and Lilian n Dr Rdale. u nd often, in the cool of the evening, they f, b together and talk of frim they both I vad so well, and whose body roots in a 5 r•off land„ of him whom they hops to meet t hen 11 the day breaks, and the shadows It ce away." TESTING COi.16 a I Doea Not Follow That Becarue Coal is 6 Low -Priced it is Cheap, t Some weake age a test of bwo weeks' dura- b on vvad made at the Richard Bsreu Mills P , End out if a saving could be effected by n iangIng the kind of coal used under their allose. The were uatng a standard grade e f ca,sl, but the toot atiowed very clearly 1; lab all good Cealm are not economical, says r as .Fall River Herald. , In this particular case it was found that, a ound for pound, one teal would evaperato I D percent. more water than the other. 'hat moans one coal gave 10 per cent. Lore power, or to shote more clearly as s eiug a matter of dollars and cents, tan ton o f the same coal did the same amount of t ,ork as eleven tone of the othercoal. i Hove Is an important point for every I aanafaoturer using abeam power, and when we standard grades of coal show as large a 1t ifflrenoe an this what wauld a best show t rare a poaror grade of coal compared with a r sod one? The result given above is garb• r ng when a little figuring Is done. Merely r ssumlog that the poorer grade of coal costs S a ton, the bobber coal would be oheapar 6 y five cents as ton if offered at $3 25. If one salesman could have offered thoas we coals to him trade, mying that one coal t vould arab $3 par ben mad the other $3 215 a i on, ninety-nine out of ovary one hundred I could have taken the coal coat- L ng $.4 a ton. The man buying the coal E would have figured on saving 25 cents a ton i n all the coal he would use, while as a 1 aitber of fact his coal bills for e6 year wou'd I mount to more than had he tarson the Coal 1 asAng $3.25 a ton. . There are oases without number where It L vould be money in paekeb to figure out the , cal bills far a parsed of three be six months, i end make a change In the source of coal i apply and see how the Coal bills far an , goat p3riod would oomparo with the L ,rlgisal. The actual amount spent In such ,erioda are otters so large that even a email ,arceM5 age represents a conalderable Paving. Apples Good for Sedentary Folks. The remedial use of apples is thus on. urged upon by the North Anseri=n Prue. 1f vagetablo -fibre, al6itmen,- sugar, gum, shlsrophyl, msblia geld, 11me and -nab vater, Furthe,, more the Gtr man an al ate ray that the apple contains a;larger percimt, Igo of phompharens than any, other fruit or vegetable. The phosphorous f9 admtrably sdspted for renewing the essential nervous natter-leaithin-of the brain and spinal lard. Ib is, perhaps for bhe name reasea,. rndely understood, that old Soamdinmvlan braditlons represent the apple am the Feed at the gads, who, whon they felt bhemsolvco tri, be grow1mg feeble and in- firm, resorted to this fruit, remewing bhoir powers of mind and body. Alan, the aelds of the apple are of singular time far men of aedentary habits, whose livers are eluggleh In motion, bhoaa mcide serving to 011mtnate from the body noxious matters, which, If ret%fned, would make the brain heavy and dnll, or bring %boat jaundice or shin crupb',ons and other allied troubles. Some each experience meat have led to the custem of taking Ripple ISlluee witkl react park rich goose and other like dlohos. The ;alto acid of rlpa apples, either raw or oeoked, will neutralise any excess of chalky matter engendered by eating tee much momt. It to also the fact that mach rtgee fruits as the apple, the Paas and the plum, when taken rlpa and without sugar, 111 dimiukh acidity is the mtommoh rather thaw provoke ib. Their vegetable ssuoev and jniaea are converted into alkaline ambon- abes, which hand to countormob acidity. Glasgow"ts Growth. For long Glasgow was nob a place ofmma lh aans,quenas outside the EPU00pal intoreat. In 1350 it had only zema 1,500 inhabitamts, and every one hundred gears 1mum, when tho University was est.bilshed (1450) by PAP111 Bull, the p apulatfon did n )t exceed 2,OW. The prova,etm ware appotntcd by the prelates. In 1,600 bl.o population was weakened at 7,000, wAd at the Revolution of 1488 ib Was barely 12,000. In 1780, thirty-three years after the union of ohe English mud Scobblsh Parliaab he 4 me oIt af theReform Bill d increased f 1832 t had mount,ad up to 20,sOft At the lost "nBW (1891) it hmdrema44t -bho phenomenal figure of 780 414, m%l tug the C[ty of Sr. Mungr the nix,)h t ,rgest in Earope, the fifth b4ni Sb. Petersburg, with a papulation of 876,. rw►_ — Big F4W. Dbaitaway--Well, .Billboard, did y+a' , have a nice western trip t Billbward-Yee- Bob I had a norma escape while the --palny -teat jn Snubber Californie.. i D.ambaWtf,T-'Flow Won tbab T BI1:bO%rd _W.o oamo nom playing in e hewn that wag not #Our miles from a t ostrfoll fano. y Iooland is ergo of the few countries th, r- has a smatter populabfeu now than it he twenty yeara ago. T`ho pact summer sbae h 640 pe'ceons emsigrbted to the United Sbmte 'd Fear never carried a soul to heaven. is Emperor William, In bbanking the sour olp%I authorhloa for thslr Now Years 00 V; gratu'atftne, said Haat he will otrivo d w%inte,in pom.ce at home %nd &broad. r:+ Italian tira•enginoa ver® to b0 pnprrni; with base obted wl,% electric w1roo, Rd moans of which the Gromen working t vat nozzle carp, by protleiog at a button so mm ,,i, times, sigxkal to theac ab the pump that ,as wants the water out off, sur dllvan tbrou Ir- at half speed, and ro on, ild Or" 7rliWGS TO x2X1mX ma/ GUT AWAY WITH. 70,0004 OUNG MEN IN BUSINES& Fully aattif ed that he is in the parWanlat line of business in which he feehr, a stronger, ' warmer Interest thanIn any other, thea a r yeucg man should rertaember : 0 % Ie S Supposed t0 be, 12j< Su Few F of Them orC0 Rest --That, whataver else he may strive Toronto, 1 r to be, he must, first of ail, be absolutely Viler Way to the Front nee f le erve.AQ mpor ryoraoc Malmoften t n STORY OF AN EMPTY BAR honest, From honorable principles he a"po r b n what re n, t exactly t, but "shady" lines; bub each success Is anis temporary, with a certainty of perms- mkTENT ABILITY NEVER USED. Hent iatltl. The surest buriuess anaoaps-- yee, the only auocr5oos worth the making, are built upon honest foundations. There can be no "blinking" ab the tenth er at rats of Them Need a 11 Good Plain ?Palk- benesby, no half -way compromise. There iTg te," and [Gere It Is by A very is but orae way to be eueoossful, and that Is Fraxk Talker. to be absolutely honest; and ths,re Is but w N an article In the one way to be honest. Honesty in nob only 0e �. January 11 Csmmopoll• the foundation, but the capcteno as well, of lr tun'' on II The Young cusinoeR suacels. (J Man In Business," Secosad-He muab be alert, alive, to every o Opportunity, He oaanot afford to logo a Y' Mr. Edward W. rage alltg,le point, for that single point might 0 writes : The cyeses prove blas very l.iuk that would make ,cam- n' Youngtoday is nothingg g man in business Mato the whole chain of a business eaoaaos. y, tmore or less than a 1 hind -Ho mutb ever be willing to learn, n ` ' IDplodder --amore auto- aovor overlooking the faob bhab abhors matio machine. He havo ling age forgotten what ha has still !mea to hill of�oa at 9 o'clock In the taFonzth--If Yin be wino be will cables[ n e owning ,s faithful ba the dntiea he per- ! b 8, avoid the Hao of liquor. p q erne • ors to lunch a4 1.. o,:m0s hank at ' g Fifth-Leb him remember that a gun h ; rases up whatever he to told to da until , y B & mans strengesb reoommende,tion to hie and then goes tomo. His work far roVeotalbiliby, Same youog men, appar• v to dap Is dens. Ono day is the mama to d Lm as auobhor ; he has a oartiln routine eu:ly ouocessfnl, may be flashy in dross, ' duties to do, and he does them day in loud In manner, and dierespootful of women t ed da,out m4nbh in and month out. r.nd scored things, But the youngmin who d 'Is duttw are regulated by tho meek. �s In re6negtable aiwt yv wears herb, The way It lab points, me he a young Haan earflam himself in him private b p , points. Verily, ib y, life oft-tlmes means much to him in his )ate of hum fount he ill the special vault a n business career. No matber where he fJe rias maid forayer. No Given fault can is, or in whose company-respectablliby, b a found with his work. Given a particular b lees of work to do, he doea 16 just as a and all that it implies, will always earn. to Lachine would. Such a young roan, too, mandrospoot. enemlly con !dere himself hardworked— WELL DRESSED FOR FIVE MINUTES. l;.t 'ten overy orked and unpaid, wonder- --- of ag all the blme why his ewployer doesn't 'Eke Odd Whim or a Wotking Girl tho Bay I V 'oogulze hie value and advance his salary. Before Iter Wedding. I I I do everything I am tzld to de," he it was a sneer ye -ung woman that the y rgen, 11 and I do It well. What more cam strop girls are tsalktiag of In one of the r1 g . B�ooklyu shopplz.g ntorea. She was neatly 0' A MERE AUTOMATON. but not richly dressed, and she name with rs This is simply a byre of a young roan twa or three other young women. She h high exists in thousands of offices and looked over the recent elegant dr:eses that a! bores. He oomea to hie worn each day were em sale, and Instated upon seeing 11 the ;ibh no definite point or plan In view ; he most expansive eveaing dregs " of the lath. m• Taves It with nabbing aeoamplithed. He is She particularly wanted it out as low in the n more antematoa. Let him die, and his. bodice as any bhab aro worm. The only g; oaltion can be flilsd in 24 hours. If he do- garment of the kind that was in stook 1; recta nothing from his employer's business, was a gorgeous 11g11b purple silk, ax- tl e oarbatnly aide nothing to it. He never quisitely trimmed with velvet ribbon. b1 dvmcm an idea ; he is abzoluboly devoid of It was nomewhab too large, and the sales- c; reative powers; big position romaina the women insisted that It was no use to try it %me after he has been in it for five yeare era ; but the young girl was cgaally do, p a when he came to ib. termfnod to ass how it looked on her. Ab C THID VALUE OF FAITHFULNESS.lent she warn token to what is called the n Now, I would notice as moment be under- 1 evening room, with Iia dozens of eleabrio lights and !tat walls of plate mirror glass, h food to be IlAttbling the value of faithful- and there she stub on the oplendld $200 robe t, on In an employee. But, after all, faith- and cailed In the saleswoman and the nlnoes to nothing more or lees than ween who bad come with her. The dress v tn negative quality. By faithfulness wa.3 tee Iroso and too long, but the girl had a , man can hold a position for a life' a pratty neck and shapely arms, and evi- ime. He will keep 16 jug`( where he found deatly admired bhem as much as she did b. Bub by the exorcise of this single qual- tha go -,m, while she turned around and by he does not add to the importance of the wound and noratlnnimd her appear• v raition any more than he addle to his own anco in the mirrors, Finally she regretted a a1u0. It is not enough. that ib should be4bab the dress could aob be altered within a aid of a young man that he Is faithful ; he a face hours, though she had bean go In- l nest be something mare, The willingness formed before she pub Ib on, and said she nd capacity to be falbhful to the tmallevb was sorry, but she would have tet look else. I lebail must be there, serving oniv, how- who, c. As she was leaving the store one of is aver, as a faundablon upon which other the 6,IGSwomca heard her sap: I tnalibloa are bnilb.11 There, now, I am ratiefied to be married e CREAM WILL RUE. to merrbw and bury myself in the country. a Dace the rcqulrements of a position are Ili waa my last chance In this We to be i Eaderstood and mastered, then its paseibill- really dressed up. Nov I am eatiefied, r Tag ohould be undertaken. It to foolish, as though I should have liked to wear a few r ome young men argue, that to go beyond 4i0-mcnde,"-A'0w Pork Sun. heir special peaimon is impassible with heir employers. The employer never ox- ISconomieal Foca. 53tab11aa3.00..d--o...-so.1 ra,a_tra;.,n of big I the ,Forum Prof. W. O. Atwater claims I ace. The advance of an employee -- `-`--'-1- ^�- hat whioh is always moans the advsnas of the economical for people us GAJ -- awayyot'e interests. Every employer thmt fs best fitted to the real wants of the would rather a a gsun mean $5,000 a user may be the very kind which supplies pay g the meat natrlrmerab at the lowasb oast. a 0 What I m to the young More ha 0. g f..ar t $5 yRound steak a4 fifteen Dante a pound con• nboraeta Is by far fi a hater the olerkInteraeis is r wma an much;rreuen and energy, is just as Me employer. A five hnudrad oterkchip is dp estible and is fully as nutribive, am Werth jamb that amount and nothing Moro ten&erloln at fifty, Mackerel has all high to an employer. But a $5,000 man is folly amtrit-ive value an salmon and Cobbs from an Werth five times that sum to a buslnesa. oil hbh to half as mach. Oy"bern are % deli - A youug man makes of a poelb€ors exactly er.07. it one ass afford thea: there to no whathe obooeeo-a millstone around him reason fes twat Laavir.g them, ant til conic fa- . Week, . "or a alai ping•absne ba lassies success. v.eted in a plat vt,00lV bring only 29 grams, 00HO iNTRATION. abooit an esoda, of prOtein and 260 calorlea If there exists a searob of succeed it 1108, of energy. `1°ha carne 25 Bente spent far perhaps, In concentrablon more than in any hoar ab 66 a [come[, or three cents a pound, other Bingle element. During boniness woold pay for 420 gr,,me of protein and haute a man should be In bu3111628. His 13,e0sg oalerietl of energy. When a day thoughts should be on nothing else. Diver- .1abOrer buys brei& Ht seven and a five e the best en- rants s rail, the actually nntri sterns of thought are killing b p s deavere. The encoesofal mastery of buss nawds.1 On= him throe times Lea much atl neva queetlens calls for a poroonal tabsront, a th +fooe hag e,atployer who buys it in 0 -our at cergetfalusag of self bhab cin only come 66 a barrotL from the olasesy application and the most ,&"Vow For 1681r. abaelate osnaenbration. Bamu ywrr,3 i.g.o in a very rurRI 6iltrlct rat I STAONAW10Nr. mrn.er Iaad a aotH;@er sale. Now, ea Shore Stagnation in a souse man's career Is hub„ys no tr.3okig [sudor to advertise it, it was l a ayronym for starvation, since there to no t ha east err. of the vioar be give much n0dooc ; ancll thing as standing still 10 tlrc buainena ¢nt to higooanglc,ma,»f2n an Suudayi4 So the werld of to -day. Either we go backward fa,rmor tbew.ghb he would go to the vicar or we go forward ; we never stand still. and;ret bias t.; wrfivert&so the onoir In oburch. Whom a young man falls, to keep abreaeb of 46 I•rPep„ n1 v,p ,bo vicar., i1 bat yeu don't the possibilities of his positleal he recedes Cama to MY ala arch.” cx+ntautly, if unconsciously, perhape. The &aes they sttva.ik the Imrgmia that the young man who 1progresaes 19 he who ereborn vicar reaouldl M4,.-a;rt`s8 the cow, and the man fats the spirit of the bw1nees of him cm- Tat rotpsru Ohoui4l ge to chureb. Now, un- @Iayer, and who pointe oma new methods be f,,rtunatL,,y, tv, wise orae very deaf, Bad on Mets, advances now idocla, suggests now Sunday fellowtog, when the vicar gave out oLmanol0 and osatpnts. There is no more tiro lamnsm of romrda.ge between Joa(iph a,)- direct road to the aotfiFlsuca Of an employer mud -Lao o,n1i Sa,mh So and So --a rather nts- than fer :nim o gee that any o1 his clerks usual LuclZnc-% ,, fcc they n,-ldorn had w Wed- tanderst=ds his buglnasa even bobber tb%n ding -ilia € a•nser tools is for granted than himself, That young mwu commands the the vlo,ar raagtving out particalsm of hid abteattem of his chief at once, and when a caw, and shi-aioxl ent : vacancy occurs he is apt to atop inta ib, if he I1 Ysu ,r,p y ars well ray, -while you are does not forge over the shoulders of oth020, 2bea,t, 1% Ob Qt she Is a msab gentle creature, Young men who thinly olearly, aan, con- oubltvely frac from viae, and a great ombor." ceiwh creat" Wad parry oub, are act so plentiful that even a single one will be lent Marxia„ma in lFadla. eig,m of. r.£"no Mahmraja of idlysore has fumt oauted ONE MASTRW ANOUGIA TO "UV311. to Fie isgue& a regalatiov, to be hereafter Dl 'reseion to itttt no dirzgereaa as stmgna- Cauddered by his Gavernment, the Object Of whioh is to " prevent infant marriages in tion in the career of a young man In bust- barvibarlea of ltiyaore." The regulation, UO3% There in absolutely no peaftlem which Is to come into force within 'ria worth the having in buainase ilio tO-day to wlafph a care of other Imtoresto can be menthe, will a the minimum ago a4 whiarl al added. Let a roan att6mPt to 36rve the in- a girl may marry h 8 years and a boy o' 14. A male over the age of 18 may no' I tereets of Guo m,ster, arta lE he serves him mars a girl of 8 under a heavy penalty. E well In has big henfa aur[ him It oad tall. man ove50 years, of age is not tobealletwei v There to a Ct•.as of eambitloua Young mon who to mars a girl under 14 years of ago, undo a have what tl:ey cheee to call an anchor to pain of Imprisonment, which may erten the windwaad" in baalr baainore. That is, s two oars. Au midor or abetter of enol They matnt%1,n something outside bhoir reg an ofienaa to liable ace Imprisonment for 81 m alar poefhiosn. They do thin from neaessiby' months. a shoe claim()1,. ltorlticn doors not offer saffiolent scope for their po+v:ra er talents i Wash foriSanburn„ does not bring tbeln 'rufliolent inOemo, and Whsn the skin to red and Inflamed tl t they s,ro I I foroc-d," tbc•y 07PWn, to take oo following application is said to allay tI d o0wethlug in adfilbtott. I have knOwaa burnin and give immediate relief s M', tt such young mon. But as far an I have one pert ono of carbonate of lead mr ;, bean ah1O to die0crn, the trouble deco not owdorad arrew root, two parts of Olive 01 lie no muoh with the podtlon they "Onpy and o1 hb its of the ointment of res as with themUIVOs. When a man turns waters Apply lightly to the surface. I. away from the paultion he holds to outside o' of lro, he turns jnat 00 far array from the A low days age, for the first time in mar 10 eurosb path of euoo,po, To do Ono thing years, the water of tbs Delaware bay w porrfaotlp is boder fiats to do two thing' nearly aR fresh as the water of a mousats mtl told m 0 once O! t w affa x w ol. I n of is 1 w l condition air -tits old o l f am. T >y OrLO Of our boot -known aotors, bhab, outside brought about by a strong northeast ori bo of hill stage hnawlAdge ho knew Absolutoly that blow continuously for a week, sy nowalogl Bab he Raad watl•-so well that A forely,n correspondent eabimatotf ti bo lin stands to•da,y rib the head of his pro- •h fe"1111, sild bat; ars ina'.itx 9 of five figures ahem are about t,tea Americans In n Fran (Casal tlme4 evIor, lots than elle h gag In bi )w a Wative of Holland ROULdled a. woung Lady Out of a big 1F'ort-Le,. Fled to Now York and Tkegee to Cairn Kda-Proceed Imam to be T"en to Ikearo His Extradition. E. G. Molentiar, a native of holland,; he is paid to have defra.udod a le,dy client it of her fertunc, to supposed to be hiding Toronto. A New York despatch saps : Sheriff Toffay, at Jersey City, was asked, L Monday by the Holland consul at New erk be arrant R. G, Molenemr, of No. 187 fork street, en a charge of fraud, He did t6 succeed in finding Mr. Molea.mar. Whroa ears age, the Sheriff Bayo, a merchant awed DeVyvor died in Holltknd loaving A FOUTUNE OF ABOUT $IOO,OGO. His only survlving relative was Ann Car - 311s; de Vlver, his daughber. To her he ►d ¢• had his entire ort and a u „t ref lino a g she no one to look %, fter her he appointed 'oUrlaar, who was his fdand, and a banker loots name Is not knewn, to be her guar lane and trastoae of the estate. The banker, being is busy man, had na me to leek after Mies Da Vyvor, and thatr. aty &volved on Mr. Motenaar. One day st daring a bond was offered for rale to the tinker. :He rooegn!zed it as one of tha ,auritiee be had purchased for his deceased: lend, Do Vyver, and ass a resulb suit was. agun for the removal of Molenaar as brus ;e and guardian. In come way, however, Alolenaar not only iaasstfott In 01P,yieag the banker's snipf Qua, bub air_o induced him io visib tau 'orld'a Falr in oornpaiay with himself;, err. Tvlolenaar•, their four children, Mise Da yve-r and her nurse, Whsa they wore ady to leave Chicago. Molenaae prevailed i the banker to go home alone, giving as a+ &mall that he deaired to visit friends 0 olland City, Mfoh. When the banker rived home he FOUND A SURPRISE valting him. Dlelenaar had bad him re- oved from his piste as bruatae, and invcs§f- Mon showed the.b lie had taken all that a Vyv6r saouribfee to America. The fur - Ler pursuib of the case was entrusted to to Holland Causal at New York, who enc- teded in tracing Matenasr to Jersey City. Sheriff Toffery learned that bloienaar had rrchased a big safe from the Marvin -Haiti ompmy, and bhinking that Molenmar d.ght nob be at home, he teak Edward W. Tool'ey, one of the oempany's experts, with Im. Mr. Weoiley was net able ba solve ie combination, and drill!r!g w3a resorbed; ,. Before the safe had been opened in bhla ay one of Molenaar's sons appeared and pened tb.0 safe. IT WAS EMPTY. Mrs. Melonear said she did net know •hat had become of iter husband. Hewent w6y abeub a month age, and she had neither tors nor heesd tram him mince, nor had sha oen able to learn where he had- gone. Sheriff T.leffey had better fortune. He earned that Molonasr had gone to Toronto, I,suads, and had taken $70,600 worth of lies Ile Vyvor'a aeouritiea with him. Ars ffart will be made to secure his arreeb anal xtradlbion. Enquiries were medeat police headquarters: a Taranto last night, but am far as could bet> earned the Toronto authorities have as yet vaeivedno instructions in the case. SMOHELEAS PQR'3 BF% Tome No Great Guns Ruined by Its Use.. gaoord lig' S'- f.A,," 11i1 AI®es powder in the rl emokeleea pa:vdlr Hoed by bhe Italian arbill- sry ham Irreparably damaged a very forge number of guns. The powder has p,'O- dneed suoh an effect upon the bares of the emus that memo 500, have already been com- demnod, mad orders have been fanned to oenuiderably reduca the amounb,of gunprao- bine. Enormous expense will, in coun- gaence, be necessary to roitere the Italia. hold arbillery to Lts former gtato of efnolenoy, no leas a earn than £8,000,000 being mentie,, a as the amonat rlgaired. If the rrporb as to the guns being rondered prac- sfcaily uaeleea through emokej�as powder being used lea correct, Lb will prcn•Irably haves an importmab cffaob en rhe development of thcae powders, which have recelved such a fiUmulss of late years. A Surprised 'twin Rratber.: *A young man at Bmngor wa,a the momb aura prised person in that city S.tturd my when he, coag informed that he had a bsvin s'stor, who, is married and living in Providence, R, L, that being the first time he had ever hoard of her existence. Their mother died whom the twine were five moutha old, and the two were adopted by Barger families, Thews I who took the girl saved out of tl;e Stats,. and, thenMh the father anA five other brethora and sl0ters kept tvaok of the boy, it seems they never tsLok p,trs to t4l him i nbaut hin blyin al0to-. Letoaston (He ) .Tourreoz. Ms. 1Flstermi c. The minister -I'm glad to :gee you hora t•,-dmy, Bobby, in sphe of t he, bad weather ; it shows that, you take &a iratereat in the work of tho Sunday vclloal. Bobby -Yes, sir; de teacher talo us lW Sunday arab if we didn't she ry up tot -day we xvenldn'b get nuttiB' off der Crismue tree nex, Sunday. .ti 9hortoomit it c of oho Portiere. T,'he wearsh thing aboua there experrslvet poWeres the 'Ivom. nare putting in the doorways is that Nva, n. the bill ocrr.es in there art slo doers fear a mttu too slam is chow how msec he is, -A9diis,x Globe. A lsiasterpiece. s Friend -That villain in year now play fen. s A masterpt000. Where did you gob tbs. aharactor ? Dramableb-I imagined a man possessed of r all the varieties of wickedness which my, I wife amoribes to me, when she gets mad. I C Another Rceorll Votre to S11111881111- Sweetie—Jack told me 12,51) night lies loved me, and then he kissed nae." Vottte-Ah ? He usually kletes the ggirlie .e without telling them thr.t, -.Detroit Oft, ,a Pangs. X a rn At the NUISen. 1, 1Dbe Human Elatphmnb-•Say,bhe India rule- 0- bar man gob full lash night. Who Double-hoaded Mata -What did that' do to him? Ly The Human Elephant-Bonnood him. in In 1Killilr 9nielr ate Killikintok, or kinulkinte, wbtoh ad diens aro in the hable of rtrtltic g with IM Indiana tutee, in rapidly d:ecomtnzq extinct. Seyera Tat plants I,%vo r000lved this name that havor to 30, right to ib. The true herb is *9 )nide barb at a young willow. .-.ddd