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Exeter Advocate, 1911-1-19, Page 344-44++4.+44:1-4-1f tareg7abgeeettleee' peraesh e di t rang r a s s below, "1 + swiftly T is extracted, Bet in tees insnc ta through -- — wee were no fatalities hope I a, ni not growing too proud Dr. Philippi states that the pois- of myself, I want to remember on conttnenced to act two hours af- OR, A LOOK jyro IBE . th,t I have clone nothing to deserve ter dinnee, and the ladies. especial- () all the marvellous good fortune that ly were affected. But all tbe men has eozne to me. I want to remora- and wolhen suffered from hallucint ber that I am guarded and eared a'tierts- for by One win) has Dever yet de- One letle thought hereelf a liviag 'eel -tee' nie. 1 feel 1 am not half tteartlpateoseandAll,ieoftehseerd 11,,roepiervoen,fri?emr, PAST grateful enough. 1 pallet not grow forget that. , idle and luxurious, 1 mese never hmanagdisnearnyelotineeecte. eAeenrcEliniugglisfhoriulany tThis life ie, hers by right. It has 1 "Dorothy is different from me- evaeielt:bdoetyQ ptie,ea:ehntheeur ealarnnralRiirs 40-4-neleeef•••4-en-fee4e•gl'ae+en+41-en-F-fee4-n4--•^4-4-4-404--e-f-e-4-4-4-4e+-a+.4. come to me as a gift—maybe as a sian lady, wile alWa:',..a SP°ka Ger- loan—and as such 1 mit value it- man' entirelY forgot that 1"guagel CHAPTER V.---(Cont'd) made her bleed boil to remembe'r ane -f T had only . ' ea "t a Another lady ran te the tele - •back with a sigh ef exhaustiou as Derrick Dareley threw himself tahat .0iii.dij'yeherinfollramtit°Iallenh;e1 eOuliratp13: ... ' ' tie r„:g :0( :SC " G ::::::1 irl t4 ' t: tlille°1recealivderPauettteetughherextbefligiutiengaitt l' i) s 1°na e Y1 Ye girl MUM/A re,d, a s" tr I t . -- lin that tile family. -did not intend they departed, .. -to reecignize the broken-hearted etas out all the gratitude and bare rteieda. adw°eatyert-IveAntselavnlehe-rotaidwaetearr- "You maY fan me if You like, widow of Bernard Hamilton, 'when 1-3 . ) ' . ' bottles in succession to her own pinese in my heart I could fill the 13r; and Dorothy, ettger to obey him, grave, only herself to weaken r4 teorld le" Pretty coes" he observed, languid- he Pame back from that Indian • whole Iv°riun"—Yes., Ine whete blhea a doctor was hastily silin, took off her broad -brimmed hat and die, - a+ 11 - A glow, horn el the eraeti°4 with- moiled one of the lady Patients. to waved it to and fro, a - - 'in her, flitted aerose her face a,eid If she had committed SOIne crime - , tnade it beautiful. whom be was. au utter etranger, ins. e She was net very sorry whea ehe —bee a even of humble birth—tee) , T , = 7 -II her graceful ede, uncon- 5i5ted that he was. an old and dear eaw Naney turn and more away; might be forgiven," the gir/ womo .. , lend, and would not allow him to' smells of all but h deep thought, but Darnley, evlio had caught a y passionately, to herself; "but ,,,,, aye her, - glimpse of those wonderful blue her only fault was poverty, and be- ' etaaeY made a pretty Picture The men were aiso caught in the, - , with something very like con- eaus.e my father married,.e.ece,ertle: ethneoiu.eghwtties oanteis,f:'t'eialony set3.0-Zd,; aandlit3.telet braifestorm• One of them startedt pp for for him in their gaze, at 011en aed againet hie Perents' 'ease, enee dian ,,, im tor a CIWYnia,S, hut 'lever reaete loused himself, vent their displeasure like tide on "5Lanea °IT, 1°P.Ling at be with "Ohl do be sociable, Miss Ham- /ter and on me; but I do nOt, Want 411Tt.t.i.,,hbg' .4114: Plea). .t''re or zi;'99-itle'lvill adntitror:g'llit°Fg.:ntaCki7ftielsd'oilluur;;Pe7:; atoll,- Le piewied; "it is too het them—it is I V.W. do not own them wr""'"'n °II tIts Pate, mr\vas'ie" 4aee' thinge at other alenPs• Twelve hours later, baying be Promptly and carefelly tree. the Patients had all recovered, u they could none of them remember their eatraordieary behairifir, ,^rrrr--.-- , ,,,-- • mr-mpm,11,1,,,,r shade is delmieue here," t es she's elope eure QdQaarthia. indaStri4)",/ and the of my oNVII he In am 00 • — pronten, Now., to 'aye et eet with 'er; ,and "Many thanks, but I must go. Of course Nancy was not blind quick' to, let ler knew what Dorothy, I think 1 shall walk down1 to the fact that he uncle's position she's got to deal with ill me," to the village, if you don't mind;1 bad Materially added to the dillicule Still intent on the beetle' and vent to see Mrs. WOrtle,y," -ties lona nee mon 4 t loet in her musings, Nang did not _ la e "In all this heat," Darnley -be1 cotonit agamst when she wrote her but Ntilley had already dis1 stry to her hnebancre femily. peered, and with a, slight on Sebelar, studeut, philesopher, gene traction of his brows the young Man tlornan as be was, Henry Chaplin resigned himself to eircurestancea. still ranked as a petty tradesman; The sMiles and Rush had died he had gradually sunk from his nre- %way from Nancy's face as he walks per place, dragged hY a rash and 'd slowly Wok to the 11,011se• It onfortunate marriage, into the very rained her to see the wealth of love Ind attention pretty, spoiled Dore - by lavished and wasted on Derrick Daraley—yes, wasted was the eight word, for her woraan's quick wit showed her that he cared fOr Dorothy only as a ehild, and with just as much affection as a brother gives to a, sister; NSilile she, who reigned aa. queen over the .licarts and lives of all around her, would have willingly erouehed at her eeue sin's feet if by so doing she could have won a look or word of deeper regard. The proud spirit that was so preeminently olle of Dorothy Leicester's eharaeteristics, eeemed to vanish altogether when she was near Darnley as the* snow melts beneath the sun, Nancy had often wished during the •Taut few months—though the feeling had been more or less vagae era' years new, and his eldest son reigned an has stead; but he, too, was blind and deaf to the auseof his brother's child; and if he ever thought of poo e Nellie Hamilton at all, it was with a sigh of relief that she would trouble them no more in this life. Was it `strange, then, that our heroine, warm-hearted, impulsive, generous, as she was, should have . the soft, hat footsteps CO= ward her, and she started with something like fear as a shadow fell across the sunlit path, and, raising her eyes, she saw William the dis. missed servant, before her. In a moment however, her seriee f vague tear and aVeralart rarnall" gutter ,42t, Ilk, It, iva$ bmvily Roy fed in pity for the men's. pooreonas I 1c that $ir John Hamilton, pr d 'Ingteondition, ou , 1 . haughty, aristocratie to the Imek- 11 "1 s°117 to 4e° Yott like bone, would bo more easily appeas- Wdliam," she began"- gelltlY, 44 etel when his daughter-in-law wrote k ng together iler gl°yes and sum. t imploring aid from such a place; it i shade, and stepping to the ground. The man interrupted her angril,g. was nothing to him how, by a series 1 of misfortunes, Henry Chaenbe ban "Here, Aim' that!" be eaid, in- 4 I sorik to this level; it was nothing. 4010atly, "Sorry, indeed., 3ilies UP- t to him that poor Nellie Hamilton 4444, wh" it Waa :i'''''aa as g°t 7411 - had nowhere eiso to rest her broken the chuckent! Sorry, indeed I II est heart.; it Was enough that elle was laiikne'ttiat ttoix)won m ,; nenee.veryoledonebisroftivdme 0*_flo fesithag at a small grocer's shop, tt 4 fourtherate Lon4ou neighbor. a jolly bad turn, and I'll be even "Eat and Merry!" starving yourself -es -stop e,affering the pangs of ind StiOaw'aL werreing about what yeu dere and dare not at Eat hearty Meals of whelesome food, take and you'll feet like a new person. $our stomach—hearthurn— occasional tadigestion— chronic dyspepsia —all yield quicaly to NA -DRU -00 Dyspepsia Tablets.. The properly dig,ested feed restores your elretigth, your stereach regains its tone, and soon requires no ferther aid, 50c. a box, If your druggist ems not etocked them yet send 50e. and we will mail them. 37 NATioNAL Oftuo AND CHEMICAL, ce, OF oANADA LumTso, MONTREAL. FOR PINK EYE li'ITAR1111 rEVP'R AND ALL zioRE " AND TaROAT IDZSEARELt CureVag, OA 444 4,,',L4 444 preNR..4t4tFort for natern., Liquid givea cat tha taarae. Safe far braad mareti nnd nit n:dars:. 13ess-kidpeyretmayri 50 enta a bfIl•ne; 4ateibe dozen., :$,015 by an drnegists and iare 110a$aa, D.Istributors-,p,A. WHoLE„sm,4 nunooisTs. roztAi. CO,. 144, CPsLeI4nge...P.S.A. er vlaka wour *4 innosteu ison1413 THE POWER OF 003trouxp INTEREST, Rerecis a simple, rule fur finding tha number, of years in whieh a m of money will double itself at lapelled interest. Divide 60,3 by the rate per cent, and add to ,:35, Thus at 3 per eent,,we 0 3 by 3, which yielde 23.1 number of years by divid e add .35 years making t r' years. eent„ simple fnterest for money ALAS, 1OO1 EXPLORE Wit0 TONE PERISRE "DARKEST AFRICA." e Greatest of. All Was Davi Livingstone, Who Spent, 'Years in Africa, still tall Africa ent," We might equal t the "Fatal Continent,' s claimed the lives of 4 gre On that day hin, and zdred the hut wit eaceffire. Ile revived a e, and y Oth, the p ening be called to his body servant --Susi—to bring his medicine chest, nd from it took a dose, and then missed the boy. 'Ma pupil—Jacob inwright, a -Colored Mau—slept hi the hut with him, and woke enrly- be morning to attend his master, rid him kneeling by his bed- Ide. Wainwright waitf.xl a while, wing uneasy at his abso.. tioailess attitude, touched on the shoulder, The grcril ionary was •cold and dead. 11 sed from life in an attitudir bey go, arried hi • will Andnwuber of explorers than all t hood; and, incensed and deeply with Yon!" grieved at his eon's untimely death, Nancy drew backtnot alarmed, he promptly' and eurtly cut off all ehint in<ligPauft at tIle jai"' farthan ar COnl.laigatkni with that an(' Insel'enCel sonnieebiddigtiejes:f lfs tz1*O:dotlelo* a11ateouals!hktenfonovilidsep. ,w‘s;ngeI:lusivcd;%erzcniat was measure of cold ly, ll faithfully obeyed, as we ilaVe but with a fu haughtiness in her voice. "Let SeCa. He had been elead for WV" —that Dorothy had been MO 1:0 guarded in her admiration for her cousin ; but she had never experi- 'nsed the decided sense of pain and nnoyance such as came to her now as she left them alone together. "It will mean grief to her some .day," she said, regretfully and ten- derly to herself, "and, ohl I can- not bear to think that she should rush blindly forward to meet it. Yet grown to hath the name of her fa - what can Idol She is such a ehild, ther's people with a hatred foreign title. hardly knows herself the truth to her nature, and to regard her of her heart; it would be cruel and poor, weak Uncle Henry with a worse to speak bluntly to her, and, still greater afteeetion than she after all, she is not SO much to would have bestowed onany rbla- blame; he has no right to accept tion of her father's? her adoration in that languid, sel- She had stray news of him now fish, conceited manner. I—I did and then from Dr. Grantley, and not think he would act like that." somehow she felt intuitively th&t She stopped when she passed the things were not going well with tho tennis c,ourt, and half smiled as she shop or household, though nothing . saw Lord Merefield's woe -begone definite was told her. The doctor face. • never mentioned either her aunt or "Why cannot that be?" she Thomas Moss; and if Nancy ever thought, half sadly; "it would permitted theni to enter her thoughts, she was not long before she chased them away, supplant- ing their hideous memories with some fresher sweeter ones. • Deep in her thoughts, Nancy had walked some way before she became fully aware of the intense heat and fatigue of the journey she had un- dertaken. • "Not halfway, and tired al- ready!" she • observed, ruefully, corning to a standstill, and draw- ing a deep breathe "I wish I had waited how, and come this even- ing, or taken Dorothy's ponies. The exercise would have donethem good," with a smile, as she remem- bered the two fat, sleek, handsome_ creatures, metaphorically and actu- ally eating their heads off in their luxurious stalls. xna,ke Sir Humphrey radiant with • happiness and Lady Merefield would be overjoyed. - Heels a nice toy, too but " And here, be it said, Nancy col- • er-ecl vividly, as she suddenly rea- lized that in that eloquent pause she hael contrasted Lord IVIerefield with Derrick Darnley, ,very much to the former's disadvantage; and that, finding the young barrister eo fair and nianhy. herself, -it was no -wonder that Dorothy did so also. "I will not bother my brain about • it," she •deterMinecl; "the future will shape itself -whatever I may de to prevent it." And with this philosophical rea- zoning she went indoors, and, put- -ting on her hat and gloves, start- ed her long walk to the village. She never neglected to pay a vis- it twice a week to Nurse N4 ortley,tallied; looking at a toy watch hang- pity and power are fruit -whose kindness to her when she ing, from a dainty chatelaine, ohe • flower. most needed it she'tvas never like': of , Sir Humphrey's many gifts to To hoard and hold make ly to forget. her. "I have a very good mind to grew cold. sh- As e walleed. „. slew along, her retrace my steps. It is ignominious, Te earn and give is Jest to byo. thoughts flew tel tecle, and 'the but iinmeasueal-de more Pleasent. i To get and share drives out despair. wretched, so' di nenWhieh for' se Meanwhile, until llaVe determin" !The words that please may cause •el man , dreary vshe had learned ed I will rest me a little. This disease. to call home W The ords fleet stin o brie 144 trio pass. (To be continued.) THE GARDEN OF TILE 1,ORD. SENTENCE SERMONS. Before our eyes God's garden lies, He bids us share its fruits so are. The Day of Rest yields fruit the best, The day of pain may yield large gain. The day of loss leads to His Cross, The day of toil is fertile soil. The day of prayer makes sweet the The day of need brings power to plead. The. frailest flower reveals His power. Of darkest night He is the light. 'While nature sleeps, His own He keeps. The pruning knife brings larger life. The day of peace makes joys in- erease. The day that frowns may win some • crowns. The day of wrong may make us strong. The day of grief may bring relief. The lonely day may show His way. The day well spent brings sweet content. The wasted day drives bliss away. Vexation's hour may bring us power. Temptation's stress our souls may bless. The day's ealm, close brings sweet repose. With power alone sad hearts may moan. A lack of power is evil's hour. The power thee feels upholds and heals. Selfseeking strength grows weak at Jest half -past four, she con length. - and hearts • onietimesitlie past stile looks comfortable' " returned; so -.vividly. ,:thata. e "would 1 ' She, gave ,"another sigh, this aline' tart and ' look es on tigh-e , of reliet,,as. she seek -.back' against. earilie that he hap 'aennlet one bfitheebroted tti)per posts'. ', Her, lail ese nee ,ap.,,':,-an as ss , Iai:-;..'ugnlatiace l,°vdecl, doownn, .1fE.'Lt1:. .4 itles ' Leen h0u sott,$0199:t4 w4.11., 'sail p,e':! she - , ,.„ , ""ltdeaterti May healing a,soN. iutorest has very rest of the wild regions of the ear ago over simple inter-, 144 together, 1g power the ratio The latest -victim ef the orrice the other'being for all.savage is an Exglishrnan---licnt silghb and the others buried t -under a, great carefully mumitii. carried it to the . It was cozweyed to Eng- • 4,, and buried in the presence ci reverend erowds in Westminster Abbey. LAST OF THE LIEUTENANT. What is perhaps the most dread. disaster in all the records of ican exploration befell the expeditioe of 1881 under Colonel Flattera. After paesin safely through the worst parts o the Sahara Desert, the treacheroue Tuaregs swept down upon them, and killed nearly all his ;nen, in. eluding his thirty camel -drivers, and drove off all the camels. The survivors, numbering fifty in all, started back across the sandy des. ert known as the "Thirst C,eun, try," pursued and harassed dee and night by their Tuareg enemies, olorTdiolnise71,:rIov,r,aeter so fofvoilnntreareusutda,..hatt lib a: antBoydtAhleeetrantelbeenr,canli.ltniat,yroct tbh3e' in eres - - Wadais Waelai is the last strong rcuy be enuserateee in 1 th i hold of the, slave trade and is eon a 10 or way, .. . - ' Ta, here:Zs fyeerune0g ytaiteren. 84" 5t:1 Q4ehltrfireo4llIelad 8bey"°ttil°SQ'derellt3'g'ekr°1111:CVall:shatlah; puts his nnuuly in 11, strong. box. ac knew tho risk he 'ran, Hie death A, being 4 very cautious youth,, Stmussi, Lieutenant Alexander hOrne. At the end of 40 years heg adds one more, to the long list of has SaVad $2,000. 3ritish martyrs to the ealme (4. °iv' Places his Money with a basil- ilizatien° or who sues he veil eaew nee I mean, wrote Munge Park, e- sr I, siennhi inter'est 4,Tt 3 l'It'n.r ."te'e*.-n.,, —V, more than a hundred years ago, 44 to the end el the 40 years he liar, 'aZ' sail east with the fixed deterraina- his credit $3,1130. tion to discover the termination of c deposits his money in !on post, ttleine4:igezir,eaorr Bprearnisssita tihnetinleatha.ets. Office Savings Bank at 3 per 'tent. of 40 years he liaasnd$34,868t3lizeZ! Pmedaditeinn' and Park was obliged to compound interest, a fierce rittz;ck upon his ex - credit, fly down stream, taking the risk of But D has discovered a still more ernment Annuity. He is now n---' mad° to the Dominion Government the purchase of a Canadian Gov- int° exotica way. .He pays his mos__ canoe struck a reek, split in pieces, "f`t;and flung him and his companions shooting the dangerous rapids. His the raging waste of foam Perk & desperate effort; to swim The, mat ay,traibned evho sold them ashore, but was swept away and be friendly, who professed tAt 20, and the Government say to ete; dates, The fruit was poisoned end that if he dies during the 40 years drowned. many died in agony. TWENTY TEARS AFTER. At last they reached the wells, but these were held by the enemy, and in the fight that ensued all the Europeans but one—Lieutenant Polguin by name—were killed. He struggled on with a few native por- ters. But now there was no food. The starving men went mad, fell on one another, and the fate of poor Polguin is too ghastly to be here described. Eventually, ,four sharp- shooters reached the town of War- gla, the sole survivors of eighty- eight persons who had set out full of hope a little more than five months previously.—London An- swers. of saving his estate will be as well off as O's estate, for it will receive Twenty years later, in 1626, Ma - back all that he has paid in with 3 jor Alexander Laing, another per cent, "'compound interest, and hardy Scot, inade a successful at - if he survives to age 60 he will re- tempt to visit the mysterious city ceive from the Government an in- of Timbuktu, Before he reached come of $500 as long as he lives. 'At 3 per cent. O's $3,883 would, ir he spent a portion of his capital each year, give him $500 a year for though covered' with wounds, he less than nine years, and if at '70 pulled through, and reaching Tim lie would find himself without a, huktu'stayed there for some penny and in debt if he had no months until the _fanatic inhabi- other means of support: This is tants drove him forth into the de - worth thinking about, and you may sert. He reached El Aruan, a small obtain further information on the oasis in the Sahara, and there was subject of your Postmaster or by literally eut to pieces. addressing the Superintendent of Captain Clapperton was another Annuities, Ottawa. victim, but his death was due, not • -- to savage spears, but to the fever - THE ORP/IA-NA-GE ALPHABET. laden mists �f the Niger' His Ser • -- vant, Richard Lander, tended hina "We are orphans and fatherless." to the end,' and carried leis papers —Lamentations 5: 3. safely to the coast. On\ his jour - A is for pure and wholesome Air; nay, Lander had many thrillieg B is for Bread on which to feed; adventures- In one Place he wa' C is for kind and t -ender Care • • caught by natives, and subiecte3 D is for Dwellings orphans need. to the ordeal by ;s, he had to eat a portion of the dead - E is for Education wise; ly Calabar bean By e F is for Faith by which we live came through it .unharmc n'de it he was set upon by Tuaregs— those masked bandits of the desert —who left him for dead, But G is for God iahe 'hears our cries; torwards in corn anv, wi!I 11." L 11 is for Health His mercies eiv ther, conducted'al) ir3esh ei,1 •ei-ist'34'- ,...a) ei 10'11 which SOlved the puzzling pi -el -Jain" I is for -Ink with which to write ; J is for Jackets orphans war; K is for Kindness always bright; L is for Love so stveee and fair. M is for Medicine and ..for Meat: N is for News from those who roam; O te for Oatmeal made to eat; P is ,for Parents safe at hoirie. , is for Quarts of flowing milk; is for Raiment sometimes red; s for Syrup smooth as ; s for `Tables freely spreael. 1.7 is for ,T,Ise, that in us 'lie,e; , toi-VIrtue made to shine; iSm:Work 'that svinstlie ririz , eellerfee the 'signoth that. w'fel'n4e7.i?..e.:e),Ofrro°;Pl1;c:;Miioh‘ —nen. ---- CRUSHED. They were a happy pair, bent oet • . . enjoying themselves and•they1 didn't much naind if 'the other pas- sengers suffered in consequence. Presently the girl started to cri- ticize the clothes worn by an elder- ly woman sitting on the opposite seat, and the youth, wishing to. please, entered into the thing heart- ily. The old lady's last ea r bonnet and • cloak were fully critised with • more or les; giggling on -tile" young lacly'r great Niger. dpeanritn; the cut ofnier skirt was eon. of the mouth of the g ed, and there is no telling HOW LIVINGSTONE DlEln, what might have eome neat if the The greatest, of all African expier. woman had not pat- a sudden $thp eis was David Livingstone, whose to the conversation by a bit of I experiences of the "Dark Contin- ver feminine stareegv, ent" began in Bechuanaland in She turned her head, noteced tnat 1640, and, extended over thirty- the girl was older than the youth,, three „years, during which time he and in the smoothest of toneS said: favrieikecead.tht:n, bush of thousands please top' us h s o I 1e s f °Ce -1 be'oe'cu'orni asc'eda lsninrficictiWraelil)i'iY sntga.V,enug His last -journey was through tl u p p e r part of a C:Ortg0 Basin; Ire Unshaven. Person (enterin describes the country as "Oae %vast her s shop}—' net want sponge, ,leb ,li,nteeeeteetiazibne;s`letee,glie'ielikotbt h:ass singe, shallaPho.aO .;'entl''le mae s dandruffouie, 'heed-Wa down, and raised a constant Arearn 13rbei__Nell,taee of mist, and being the rainy sea asonud rer\igehrtYthituingdelvrEllies'a'et111gited hae , • ditions even•Livingstote ;sleroli ' 'sique broke down, and his devot servantse,:pade a litter, and),;:st- ered p 'rough, the' deep4"tic aL 271b )ie •