HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1911-5-25, Page 3TRE EXETER ADVO
ATE, THURSDAY,:: MAY 25, 19 1.
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FV�R8 11-1E 9P11tVE ;
L� OTS PS
+ ,°. .e..4—e.+.4 4
°.e,4: .a. •
C`HAPTEIt , ^I•—(Corlt'c j ber day when Derrick Darnley drove
t�11 this f:zfslted through his mind' once more throneh the well-renieni
s be sat fglashed
ng at her from be- tiered London -streets. He was
,:bind the open newspaper, e I tirom the bronzed almost beyond recognition,
but the old bright look had died
train flew through the lovely cowl- out of his handsome; gray eyes, and
try and approached the London there was a moody, disappointed
saxtole, expression eveverpresent on his face:
Sloe shall love lne,xf be, said to He had eon - back suddenly and
himself., "I'11 Isiaoek all thought of, inexpe_etedly, and, having deposi--
that fellow from her mind before ed his luggage at his old chambers,
ran many days older! I've bought he drove first to his mother's house,
her- -shes mine, body and soul,
.and I don't mean to share her with
no one.'
And having arrived at this deter -
and then on ` to his several clubs, 1
It was, perhaps, a relief to find
that Mrs. Darnley was not in talvn,
having started, already for her usual gatives, and Darnley
ruination, Crawshaww sisrnrnone;l his winter sojourn at the Riviera. Der- eneer'cd,
valet from an inner compartment,'riek had half shirked a meeting with " is , be
And of derad him to oen soiee his mother. Sho woillcl remind hirci i I ly �wrotee ny}'t Tuesday sor•� morn
• l , : t'n� at ° dally y
-chatnpafne without further delay. too elearl of that summer 1 ,o day night,' e,ti•rdaut y; that loons
Like most ignorant, vulgar -mind- Ripstone Hall, when the : ,es had, hopeful, Poor old unele and poor
,ed people, Mr. Cr'awshaw had en reared their beautiful faces to the, Doily! She: must be terribly' cut up,
extraordinary predilection for im- sunlight, and shed their perfume Ort` I wonder if any one is with her, She self? Can she be happy with this
bibing the most costly champagne the soft air. He Had guessed by;aught pet to be alone. I vt�ill go' brute? Will not ber own innate re -
At the strangest honi'8, In his for- some vague leas that his mother • dawn at once. I shall just cath -finelnent---for a refined, dainty gen-
mer life' he had been noted fer his hadgauged itis seer", and he the eveuing express," • tiewloman Nancy is, and ever must
temperance; , in fact he had been "ebrip from the continents hep' lips; , sat down an,tt wrote out a tele- be --will not this recoil and shriek
Vic, da
.knelt a total abstainer from U- 'might utter on the girl who had Taro, His brow was drawn autt his from, the daily cion tact with the.
quer; but with riches and idleness so cruelly blighted his whole hap- ovth set with vim de4ermivat:on• Coarse, low mina?"
this good habit soon vanished, and piness. 1 A sudden fear had come into hist
lee fuuind it necessary for his Yen, . whatever hard or bitter mind, What if tie should meet (To be continued.)
strength and his dignity to have re- thoughts he might harbor against Nnncy there; Meat more likely "•'
Used in Canada for
over half a century
—used in every corner
of the woad where,
people suffer fron»
Constipation and , its
resulting troubles—
Dr. Morse's.
Indian
Roo ` 'P
stand higher in public
eatimation than. any
others, and their ever-
increasing
verincreasin sales prove
their merit. Physicians
prescribe them. e
25c.abog,.
eft a trifle
d
His ears had hungered, yet
shrunk from hearing some mention
of her name, as he sat in the elub.
He knew the sort of conversation
the :bare whisper of Thomas Craw-
shave was likely to provoke. But
whether it was that alt gossipand
excitement about the parvenu had
died out, or whether the clubmon-
gers had imagined,, for some vague
reason, that he would not care to
hear ny such gossip, Darnley could
not tell; but the fact remained that
not a single soul spoke of Craw-
shaw or his wife.
"I am glad of it," was the.
man's thought to himself, as he
learned back in his corner with
folded arms and moody face. "I
could not bear to listen to any '
marks on him, for they would seem
to reflect on her,' f
His dark eyes were fixed on the
gloom of night .onside. There was
a dissatisfied, use cern rOrtable ex-
pression in 'them.
"If 1 oould only arrive at some:
good conelesion as to wins she treat-
ed me as she did' It was SQ )evince
her € She had a kind word for every
living oreaature. Even the flowers
wonsympathy and love from her;
and yet Net she crushed the very
light out of Ivy life? She wantonly
destroyed nay happiness and broke
My heart!' Why?, Surely, if she
had wished to eateh Crawshaw, she
n)i lilt have spared me. Can his
vea'ltlr be such a salve to his ocher
,,course to frequent stimulant, which t Thomas Crawshaw's wiffi in the
unfortunate custom was followed, i• ,a than she should be with Dorothy at,
,
1. l m t.ll h 1• ,, , depths of his heart, he had not ar- sncb a time?
s it could not fail o be, with a rived at a sufficient degree of 14 was because he loved her still;,
Bitable re anits. Nancy started as "strength, or hatred to permit others. eeuse despite her 1nerce.urry, C
she heard Mill apcat..ilig, .aped, lin; to breathe thein ill. his presence. crllo' conduct --despite all his of-'
314' her.head fi'''eld her hands' leanest He dimly felt that his ,mother forts to crush her .rut of his mem-
'bank
em-
b ck against the cushions with
litvout.avenothing u1esait to say vra—thou she grew there stronger
!1osedI eszndPhle, wanface,op this subject, and might perhaps and strongereach day, that the
Her thoughts had wandered, ase have probed him disagreeably as to Tian feared, yet 'longed, to see her
she sat motionless and silent, in a thci cauuso cif his sudden disappear- again.
misty, niioonserous way, to the rose'.,anee and still stranger silence, So .at wwuuld be 'o. to gaze on her
garden; ate "'tad feel the soft,
g } it was a genuine sighof relief that face once more, and pain ndasoiaib-
warin air as on that: by -gone sun)- he gave as he learned from the ser- able to realize that for him such
neer day; the scent of the perfumed ,ant that tier mistress was gone, joy must never be --that she had
flowers seemed to steal into her aincl was not expected bad:: for at by her own act separated herself
very
heal', How gentle! ho
voce-.
least two months. lie got into his from himand given herself to an-
flul ! how happy it was! and then a ab again and drovo to his favorite other man.
s;earfae of deeper happiness still elub. 1. Through all his- journeyii'igs-and
oi`o;tt river hep°. Slie heard in fancy* r 1 . wasgreeted with a ler- he had covered a pretty good dis-
tha,t quiek» firm step; silo felt the Hao he g e 1
w. enthrallment of his ,,,Ak_, ° storan of hearty wvoxcls and tance during his American trip—
feetuestions and given a pile of let- this had been the bur'deln of his i
'enec ; she heard upain his soft, iron-
questions,
thouryht.
tier voice Itis hitridS tUllelled }ler8, tors enongh to occupy his attentiont�
f h 1 Stntetimes he
gxc:w angry with
and with a start the mist was scat- or : ours.
Hav`n ht t hi r l ,; all at- hirmelii., a incl he wouhl aposirophizc
tered and the vision. vanished, i g ii? n3 5 parriedhimself as a dolt,. and not-wvi?rthy
She was in the saloon cart age tacks as to what ho had clone and n name of rcdolt, He would laught
speeding through the •autumn -ting where he had boon too, 'etc°, etc., scornfullyhat himself.
ed country; speeding away from Darnley esconeed h mself in a eoi rthis'rloornv . miserable crea-
ner and began his task of reading
Was gloomy,
rt: ear, sin
Hall, from Dorothy, .,£rqm l; tui•e the:pr°ud ambitious Iyer ick
'dear, kind, genial Sir Humphrey, through his correspondence, which Darnley of d, few months ago?
from the sweet, loved gardens, the
affectionate, generous, indescribab
ly dear atmosphere of home --- she
was going from all this to what'?
Her eyes opened involuntarily.
,and rested on the man opposite,
had accumulated to an enormous Where were all his hoped his ea,''
clegut.ree hedhis. scarabscely
got
ger prospects1 Could it be possible
if had fctheelfi got throughger
that he was so weak as to let the
half ai page. of the first 'erect he
opened before he sprang to his feet vision of a blue-Gyed, tcrnpting fare,
in mingled surprise and pawn, wee].) away all that hitherto Made
� his life`?
that creature, with; his comnrotl It was written by Dorothy a few
an ire
person, his cruelass ac ran w ety y :
, swarthy face, his
mean cowardly nature—that man "1 de not know, deardearcousin,"
was her husband , her companion for she wrote, "whether this letter will
life, through good or ill. ever reach you, as I have received
A wave of utter repugnance no answer or acknowledgment of
rushed into her throat and almost the others. I fear that it will not ;
choked her—the sacrifice of that but it is a slight relief to me to
moment seemed greater than she write to you, even though the
-could bear. chance of your reading my words
Crawshaw's eyes met hers, is so very faint. My dearest father
strained with pain and horror for is groing worse. Oh, Derry, if i
the time out of all likeness to their lose him, I think it will be the enc
former beauty. of my life, for my heart will break.
hchampagne he had just swal- Be has asked for you now and
'�e p a
lowed, ran. like fire is. his veins, then." ff
glassDerrick Darnley sprang from his 1
He poured some- wine in a . y p U
and went over to her. seat. + Two or three of his old ac-
"You Took, like a ghost with that quainta'nces were watching him
white face; take a drink of this, with mingled amusement and curio -
Nanny, and then wake up. 'I didn't sity, but he neither saw it nor
marry you to let you sit in a cor- cared.
'ver all day' you know." "Has any one seen Merefield
She crouched back for an in- lately ?" he asked, hurriedly. "Is
:stant; then, scarcely knowing what he in town?"
-she
did, she snatched the glass from Merefield! Why, he went off to
'his hold and flung it out of the win- Jamaica or some place all in a liar -
glow. ry last week," observed a young
"Leave me to myself !" she cried, fellow, quickly; then, -with a hearty
madly, "or' if you ww=i11 laugh, "They do say that the Hon.
passionately, , y �
not I will throw myself out of the Ella Chester has fairly hunted him -
i g,have -flung out of the country.. But' whats up,
•cariiabc, as I just7 away,
theta glass 1'' old fellow ? You look deuced
There was a dangerous earnest- green !"
ness in her intcns.ity of manner that "I have had bad news—very bad
impressed Crawshaw ; he waited d news. My oousin has written to say
moment,,
then, with a short laugh, her ;father, Sir Humphrey: Leic :s-
turned and went back to his ter, is dangerously ill. It is; a great
'31C T,
newspaper and his corner. shock to n)e:! He is such a good old
"She'd do it, too, I do believe!" chap,' he said, involunta)iiy, al -
he - and then most ,to :himself,. "it hurts ins to;
die muttered to himself, , . r ; , ,
' t inlois eyes' again. hear anything has happened to
the light came
"Never mind, whatever happens, him." Be paused an instant with
I'm her master, and she shall know a momentary dread. "I suppose,"
it soya enough !t, leo said, his voice growii .a little
husky— I supZpoec ' you fellows
haven't he rd anthin� worse
haw e y
CIIAl'I'Llti'X trll. about hire e ?''
was a, 'die air••, dismal '1�overn an )�t•c .w a a jp
It.,
and over again, but
Stronger men
Darnley have fallen
potent tof h ; and
would, do what he
all to no good.
than Derrick
beneath love's
go where be
would, try as
he would, he could not root Nancy
out of his heart,.
He possessed no common nature,
and: he' had loved with no common;
love.
rl'ime might, perchance, soften
awe *ay the ragged edges of the
wound ; but heal it, and efface the
traces of'it altogether-neverI
And so it was .that, as Darnley
wrote the telegram to Dolly, and
planned out a'hurried journey down
to Ripstone Hall' -without further
i delay, his mind was haunted by
those marvellous eyes, and he was
wondering how his old love would.
look, how she would greet him, what
he should say, almost more than he
thought of the poor old man whom
he really held in deep affection, and
for whom he had unlimited 'sym-
pathy.
"0 sweet one love! 0 my life's de-
light;!
Dear, though the days have divided
`us!"'
per chorus of Ile-
er by the souse of desolation, of de -
sea --
'nee s—egeragesanisenanteessaneesass,
So ran the troubled, : sad melody
in Derrick.Darnley's heart as he: sat
in the railway carriage and was
borne away from London to Rip -
stone Hall.
'('� life's delight ! Surely that
His n
w-aas true; for life had only dawned
in those shori, few, madly precious
summer hours. It was ;ended now,
for;, he did not live; he simply sub-
nn
ub-
nZil;ted to an existence, which,
dreary as it was, he;was not coward
a
enough to dream of ending.
t,.
"Dear, though the days have di
aided us 1'" Ay, that she was—dear-
a
Pleases everybody.
Is used by men, women, and children in
all parts of the World. There is a reason.
Its superiority over other kinds.
Contains nothing injurious to leather, but
gives a hard, brilliant as d ia. i g polish.
It is good for your shoes.
THE F, . DALLEY CO., Limited, to
`Hc114iILTON, Ont., 1ft,UEI LQ, N. Y, arid LONDON, Eng,,
telly stops coast cure* coitta:,
• ttuoat and laaatlI ,..0 +^eaaa.
1' ,TE
British fest °1110 Toles Over
ecunlry's System.
By the end of the year the Brit-
ish Post Office will take over the
management of the country's tele-
phone system from the private con-,
;
li has
pony, whichliitherto controlled
it, and the British public does not
regard this particular nationaliz-
ation project entirely without Tills-
givings especially in view of the
fact that the direct control by the
State of the country's telegraphs
has resulted in a loss of $00,000,-
000 in the last fory years and that
the present annual loss is well ov-
er $5,000,000. Business men are
Afraid that reel tape will hamper
the quick: and cheap telephone ser-
vice that everyone wants.
"Ahnost every European count-
ry bas secured a cheaper and bet-
ter telephone service in the last
few years than England has done,"
said G. Dalzell Read, a telephone
authority,' who is in Lonoon, after
having inspected the German, Dan-
ish and Swedish systems,
"A telephone at $10 a year is not
an impossible dream, but it is a
perfectly sound business proposal
if the systems continue to expand
at the present rate. In Denmark,
already, outside Copenhagen, the
annual subscription- for small ex-
changes is $11' and additionahcalls
may be obtained at the rate of
$5.50 'per i,000 -calls.
"Sweden, too, has a most ef-
ficient and moderate priced tele-
phone service with more than 200,-
000 subscribers. The installation
charge for a private house is only
$4 with an annual subscription of
$10.50.
spans
e-
51,iii, that surrounded her image.,
-the best known to rwodera tr d' the `. it ww s <t ,curious fanev� but Darn
is the activo.p.incipleweiclr makeer.,
lee had grown
to think- sometimes;
of the Nancy of those summer hours
as of a fair, dead creattti•e---spme
Lhing to, mourn : and to wore' )p ;
something that, though she was
gone, lingered yet to re)nind him
of the, brief spell of happiness site
had brought.
It was a sad but a peaceful re
flection, and one that even in its
sorrow was more pleasant to him
than ti's.eiC;tatel truth that she lived,'
and; had divylfully' deceived ,for4 an
,. �•�t4 r. m�"'w.n„�.-5.,.wi:7y.7t Yd gg�Y �.�,w i f ,
So nuch'retter t?t .n ardtnary, physics WHC.le th6+lr ntvef
gripe. pup°ce or cause nausea, and never lose their e fcctivenesn. Oneo'the
best of the NA -DRU -CO line.
25x. iw box. If your druggist bas not yt stocked thorn, sera3. 25c. and we
11 mail ,them.
::2 nal Drug and Clien,ical'Co npa i » of Canada Liuuted
Mgntzeal. _.
ai
eL
i;im1rt et the startlnq pout
nave a care. nny urveeliablR
brands are oftered w�heevo ;
uses then,; pays for It. You cau-
ttc t a;2ord to 1oce._
AMSAYS PAINTS
are seta by reliable dcalera Only,:
backed `•y guarur4teS, ane to
makers aro respon.,tble. 'Zou
cannot got tiro established reput-
able 'quality in any ether pat %s
—and you ,pay car,?'' the prcpOr.
price --not' too high and not too
low—known in Caaadn, for over
sixty Y .ars. Write for our I3co4-
1rt 73 D on house painting.
it will'hclp you. It is hr-nciuonae.
RAMSAY c C N GO.
Tt- PANT .+ Fatgfit7e3gt
rsAmena,
LOYAL SERVICE.
While journeying ° through Cen-
tral Africa once, after severaldays
of severe marching, the men of Al-
fred J. Swann's caravan failed to
reach camp. He returned to them
with water and assistance, and find-
ing the' carts with only half their
crew, he asked where the heavy
load was, and they replied, . "DIiles
behind." It: was on -this journey,
that he witnessed a remarkable in-
stance of the endurance and loyalty.
z
r,
-r>
4
LBERTA
THE
CITY OF THE
WEST
OFFERS UNLIMITED OPPORTUNITIES FOR INVESTMENT
Y La EST`'TE
and do not work hard all your life. The man whose ambition deemn't
rise above holding his job and drawing his ay, will never nava
any thing but work and the hare necessities of life.
iw• great number of the world's' largest fortunes were fouudcd on
come shrewd real estate investment. here's an opportunity for you
to start yourself, on the road to success. if you're wide awake enough
to open the door tee opportunitywhen she knacks.
A very small eurt of money invested Now in WAINWRIGHT real
estate can't help growing very rapidly. This great Canadian west of
outs is going ahead by leaf leaps bounds, and oall the towns
and cities situated in it, WAINWRIGHT is the most favored ono.
i r)iilYTuING is` in W.AINWRIGHT'S favor—loeatfon, ,land, water,
climate, gee., eouldu't be improved upon if they were made to order.
WAINwaronT is the largest divisional point on the. Grand Trunk.
Pacific Raihvay, betweou Winnipeg and Edmonton -located 656 miles
from Winnipeg and 125 miles from Edmonton. Wainwright will bo
one of the headquarters for the Grand Trunk traffic for the whole of
Alberta, by way of the coming 1 Hudson Bay Route, also by way of
Prince' Rupert, a'' as well, the terminus of what ivill bo their tong.
est and boat branch line into Southern Alberta.
In 1901 W1,INWhIQRT was unbroken prairie. To -day it, has a pop.
elation of 1,600, graded :.streets. cement sidewalks, churches, stores,
banks, hotels, immigration hall, a $17,000 school. opera house,.firo de-
partment. G. T. P. Shops, with `a large payroll, stock yards, etc. Do
you wonder that WAINWRIGHT is termed the coming city of the
West—that wo aro enthusiastic about it?
The Grand Trunk Pacific will have a $75,000.90 Hotel here when the
line is completed to the coast.
L 3 Month, No interest
OTS $60 to �L � $1� Cash; $5 perlh�iosl ,,,
LET US TELL YOU MORE ABOUT WAINWRIGHT
Sit right down now and write us. 'It won't ccst you anything for full
information. Don't let this onportuuity slip past without at least investig-
ating it. Sendin the attached coupon at once.
1
Please send me full particulars of your property in Wainwrielit.
Town
Win. Geraghty
Man. Dir.
odpr� a� investments holed • wr B k?
t
6697.15 Commercial Union Eldng., Montreal Sec.-Treas.
of a black man.
Fearing the men would be
'starved, writes Mr. Swann in
Tighting the Slave Hunters in
Central Africa," a,e pressed on to--
ward them, and finally discovered-
' the Lead drawn 'up under a bush.
' Searching round for traces' of the
crew, I heard _a voice fai)ltly call
ou :
I am alive, but give vie water !"`
On lookinginto the bush, we die -
covered the lewder, sheltered froni
the sun, and after giving hind water,
1 asked
WWThei'e are the others?
"C,or'ie err -to /auap; ' he replied,
``for food!' a .1 d''WaLI;L..
"Why did yipii not go?"
"No, master; I could not leave
the boat section.' My name is Ma-
htibubu. I was one of Livingstone':
boys. . I sho;ill .}lave died b
load. '1 cut off the hide hshi,u-s
and ate them,' and, the roots 1 dug
up and ,sucked for moisture:"
Tet Ti Ca inan quest' -oil concludes
4fi Swann, the ability of black,- men
to pdrfplm loyal service, after' cvic."
clench"of such heroic ,conduct:
ra
es" sa'elt'"tt
That.
ANI.FON
Oars Use.
HOME OYSlNQ has
always been more or
5' leas of a.dtfficultunder-
E t l:ittg-- riot so when
i yea use
S d fSample;
,:�.
Ca dela Story
ra
:axs
too
u t50
TS:ori
so
n
-
IIahansoN
ONE cxc ,Llr,
Morirearcyn
Q1,
,1tiSv 'd'Y.S.v'.K
wVitb Oe•O•iAV c-ou can cele; either :fool,
t Cotton, Silk' or: Mixed ,:Goods Perfectli avi:Ch
the, Sittit Dye. No'' chance of usr i the
'u n o c..1) ._
y
.
� for the 1:00(15. 3
`
O:I have e .- o-. C color..
;.
' nfor r3
The nwost iri:g!wly en'icle it app!icatioii
for tlac reduction of Swellings, Goitre,
Thick Neck, l lana tint 'Enda gen,etst
lt'" Potiitive.
of all, 3i -inns, in ens and air
5, c7 t els xv) C##iti veal an:i
tilFt.'
n�tart.. rw5,t'n�a i s�"`
}Flr
(h
GOB