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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1906-10-04, Page 7,...--...,...„-----e,„..„-______ -----e e--- 0.-.-p+ee--e-ecee, •04.-0), -0-4Keeereee, performance. a IS hot upen the Oa, form, tho emell of tea potent, ane the nakcl gaole15' close, above hie head Notes et intereet About Seme Prom throw an ugly yellow glare IT011 i43 b0014: tient People. ' The. lavorite hobby of Dr. Elizebeth tiolnlasvtinnerthoeffneitehA 'phrigoatterrlytenaletczaoa rna6iLy,ropttlyAsincidnenti85.715 nurr,,i5ritgclinInuo.1:5, c:i• aii, ruehee in mediae roe. ''''Oirleteafe 1 was Me. ‘eohn- 13entley„ of Fehotee, Mel: - beginning te remae/:, Ore one of Yom' heaton, hae just eetired from the Phoir first. and your lasting troublCao kwin0 of fe't. Jolufe. Lourett, .of eehieli he hae like 'your teeth, velaieh begin with con- been a raionsand nevUfember for over einty yeare., lie ' er eeaeo tormentind entered tho choir as ee echoolboy at ten cyuo4froeorri, atnitde ttihneen yyoonueildto themnot' Itvi al inttlietY0, yieleevarcrnsttiirtolfv, rtekfigoofirnt5eainntidzilsIdsfoaftnirithie cl,n1notelier.efaiy. „paifeeyeith, them, .which seemsehard, but weenuet all sueournb, or bey, artificial." jue'tice Darling ie a man of many (Dohis ,ears deceive bine? 4,-,S there al. compliehments, as well versed in - readY a slig,ht Utter? the neHave the sheltie titre and art as Mere he is in the law. In his ,+O+0+Oeie0+0+0+C3+0+0-0-•e-Ce*+-0+0+te-+e>+(eee•+ of the convulsions and cessity for house you win patice a *taw, by him a ratelier already struck a chord in the which has le story attached to it. It IS CHAPTER I. passible by the riot of the elements. It 'Matrons' breasts?) "And, even - . vvhero a lands,cape, and, unless your host were is a good 4 t'ep from the suburban villa, you get, a will, nine times out of ten to make the eeplunation you* would fah the pleasure of reading aloud to you "If you evil) allow me, 1 shall have which' is the scene of Brown's married you get a dirty face with it, and nature- to believe, that it was executed with his acme passages from 'Mrs. Lirripers Joe's, 'to the- room in the heart of the ally lodgers de not like good society to linger' He went out to paint. this par - Lodgings,' by Charles Dickens. I do town where the Provident Matrons hold be shown in with u smear of black ticular bit of scenery,. and on opening not know much about, the book myself, tleeir eabbat; and by the time that ,the across the nose, or a smudgy eyebrow 1" his paint -box found that he had forgot - es 1 -have never read ite 1 daresay that ea, despite OW men have reached that room there (Is ha managing his voice right? is he tem his brushes. There Was .no other you know more about A than 1 do . but his mackintosh, lithe of Bur- mumbling or is he bellowing? He emose but to use his Singer as a Write 1 am even to understand" (with a goyne left dry except his speech. Thee' rather dnclinee to be susPieldlis eet HA brush, and in this way the picture was glance at . the ' page' before Mtn) are under shelter at last, however, leave latter, Why did not they laugh at the begun and, finished, - lairs. Lirriper was a lodging house "that enteredthe building, added elide. um- "smudgy . eyebrow?" They ought to Apart from h. keeper, that she kept lodgings In Lon- brellas to many other streaming wrecks have done eo, and he had paused to bIS extensive 111 rary, Mr John. Morley has no amusements what- - - deoe. Sheowas4t very goad sort of wo. of whalehone huddled in Al, corner, ang give them the opportunity. perhaps A ever; but to be eurrounded by his books man.' I 'believe" (another hasty glance), , exchapged the ataxic hhestereng drene is among' them WO fatniliar a plieneen- is his ideal of hap. He - "but she sometimes had trouble with her ora flare of gas, a reek of tea. and a enenedo provoke mirth.). "Where they tal walker, but frpinessom his is a capiy servaritzi. I AM told that eereta anare sultry stream of wet clothes and Pick the black up is a mystery I canna outh upe wards . games heve never y - troublesome sometimes" (a slight ner. humanity, The tea indeed is a thing '.1 solve, as' in the case of the willingest, traction for him. So considhad eratanat e i vous laugh, the more nervous bemuse it tile past—all iti apparatus has been re* girl that ever came jntti a )leteeta half- of everybodys he and everYthing it has i oes not. seem to be folloWed by any rnoved. The rows of chairs are all set starved, poor thing; a girl so willing been 6aid-of hime,that if he keptthat a score echo . from the "aadience). ' "If you will to lace the platform, , and on those that I called her 'Willing Sophy,' down of horso es he %vted probabiy refuse t allow •me, then, as I say, arid if you. chairs the Provident Women sit, sMiling-eupon her knees -scrubbing early anm, od use thebecause he feels eo keenly for „ think- it will =MO you, 1 will read if damp, with here and there a little late, and ever cheerful, but always with the brute creation that 'he'will only con - you • a little of what she says about boy, evidently too wrioaed to he left, at a black face. And lesays to Sophy, sent to be driven on the leyel, The these troubles." home, coinfortably wedged, between 3'Now, Sophy, I my good girl, have a story goes that when he lived In a billy : , e • ' ,couple of matronly figures. The foregoing remarks are uttered hi The entertainment has already begun, brush your heir with the bottoms of the its kindly owner alighted from ina ear, regular day for your stoves, and, do not part of Surrey he encehikllepht,aad huorsbee, ba ts! ut a PrOVidellt :Association." His voice is. public readingeetite does not know 'how loud because, being quite unused to a lou, OW,' dogged voice by Ames Purgoyne, to the "Oxford Women's ing baes yoke, something of a vaguely boastful nature' about what he once did every one else --is singing, in a boom- snuffs . of the candies, and it stands to °ended or descended. arid an ^undergraduate—deMee like saucepans, and. do not meddle with the liege whenever a reason that it cermet he." (Ah,,w1 iwnihnage I,- 100et,teoefn.siAxiteyxapniederesapossessespieaceteabesinerg- "In allboa's Baer." Burgoyne has for a welPeine' sound is this9 to modulate it; it is shy, from the same moment lost sight of his chaperon, and Sophy" has produced an 'undoubted , e:iiecioarhetsehde oPthla°nthdgr. 41°1' cleigernenste cause of 'unaccustomedness; It ie doge remains standing near ' the door, look- -giggle, which Burgoyne hears spreading A .story is told of the late Sultan tookBur.- with h ae r s' ge,d because he is very much displeased ng upon, the scene around him with an and widening through the room. gash' and Sir John 'Kirk, then Consul- withe his present occupation, and has eye. from which philanthropy 18 . all too Heartened by this indication, he goes _la wGeneral at Conetantinopae. The Sultan not been successful in ceericealing. that • criminally absent About him ere in a more , emphatic and hilarious had a very savage chained lion, and, .as displeasure. When a man runEdown. to grouped a few ladies- and gentlemen— voice ) "Yet there it Was. ttild always a happy thought, he offered it' to Sir Oxford for a couple of ' nights, to see more of tae former than the letter— . on her nose,. which, turning up, and John for Queen Victoria, reminding him how the ' sik years that have passed being broad on the end, seemed to boast that the lion formed one of the sup - who are obviously about .to give 'their of it, end caused warning 'from aeseeody Since he turned his undergraduate back services, judging by their rolls of mu- porters of the Royal arms . above the , upon the Iola place have treated her— gate of the Beitish Consulate, and that sic and the 'books in their 'hands.. His breakfast by the week." gentleman, an, excellent ' lodger, with runs down. to .a college chum unseen look paws' over them indifferently—he the presence of the real king of the for the same six years—this is 'certainly has no acquaintance among them. He .There can be no mistake bout it now; forest would be appropriate. Alive to not the way in which he expects to had never Icnown many of the Oxford the giggle has changed into a universal, the jest, Sir John quickly capped it, and spend one of his two evenings. ' . householders, and there Is no place resonant laugh, which goes en swelling, at the same time escaped the necessity "I hope you will not mind, Jim"— where a man becomes Superannuated and rising, until, in the final roar of ap- of accepting such an funpleasant gift. ominous phrase—the college friend has affer so 'short, a lapse of,eyears. • probation which greets the concluding "I .ani Sure that your Highness would said; "but ,i1 am afraid we shaliehave to Flere are new arrivals, He turns his paragraph, the reader's voice is never make an incomplete present," he turn out for half an 'hout after dinner, drowned. The matrons have all- along ", A is such a wet nighte,but the fact is It is rather a, nuisance,- partictilarly as hoed mechanically as theopening door .: and mackintoshed :waterfalls. Two men reveals the advent of more unibrellaed been ready to be amused; it is onreplied, and when you are able to ac - Women 's Provident Association.' Ah, Y. .eye alights on the time before they recognized that, his erie Had it not been for chance, Professor by -the -bye, that, is new since you wvere woman; he does not starta-we •Anglo- tention was 'comic. As soon as they 'do Milne might. never have taken up the Saxons are not apt to Make our- slow here—We had no Provident Women in grave bodies ' the- indexes of our emo- so, they rewarded ' that intention with study of earthquakes at all. He was -your day l" '' ' . ' halls—blithe is conecious of an Odd and more than adequate- mirth,. Burgoyne tveenty-one years of age when Field, "On the 'other eancle we had a great puzzling' sensation. Where has he seen has reaehed the second dog's ear, that the Americen millionaire cable -layer, many improvident men," returns Thee that face before? , do& " ear which his, eye has ybeen. sent to the British Sehool of Mines for a dryly: • - • earnestly searching lox' througbout. His young MaU to go out to Japan. The "Bilboa's Bay" has .come to an end "Well, the fact is, my wife is on, the without his perceiving,it. He-ls putting taslealhen is ended. He heaves ae deep present professor waS the man selected. -committee, and a&cid deal interested sigh. of reliefaand, with. a reffeation that, "When, can you start? 011 Tuesday?" bis memory through her. paces, trying en it, and we give Otero a sort to find some nicheyin his three of enter, after all, he is glad he was obliging, is asked Field. ' The student responded that ' happy tainment -once . a menth through the Oxford- , yeers in vehich -to place 'thee preparing to shut the volume; when he the time was too shor.t to get his things winter Wiens—tea and` buns, that kind strangel,y known yet 'unknown figure. feels the inevitable Brown's hand oil his together, as it was then Friday. "Look of thing, sixpence. a head; they enjoy it 'far More *than if we gave it them . for There is no such niche. It, iS not an Ox-, shoulder, and his husky voice in his ear. here, young man," said Field, "It only - took six days to make the world, and if ford memory at all. What is it then? Capital] you got on capitally!, Could -.nettling. and after tea we get. people to a whole world can be made in that time , . recite and read and sing to them. I run An earlier or a later one? His eye- not be better; but you yvill not mind ge- your few things can _be got together cn brows- are drawn together in the effort Ing on ,a little longer, will you? You sure 1, wish them joy of. my reading to- less. Leave .a note with my secretary of recollection, making him look, if have only read for ten minutes, I want night for I do nothow-1 arn ,, to as you go Out as to 'what Wary you possible, , crosser. than before; when tie you to try something different this time Semite myself audible; I am as hoarse as a crow.' , ., • is made aware of the return of Brown —a little pathos, for a change. I have . ., want." On the Tuesday the young man by finding . his 'dand his m , arked thwas one page. Here .1" - "1. Iniew,'-thosi Oxforel colds of old," arm seize • The Dhis way to Japanovvager-Duchess of alewcastlels returns Burgoyne With that temperate frieeid's voice—a good deal hoarser even, What .i.s there to do -but acquiesce? one of the great ladies who are devoting compassion in his voice whtch we accord- than when they left home—in hiS .ear, 'Burgoyne, coneplying, Ands himself at their lives to the poor. The Duchess was to our neighbor's minor diseasesHe "Jim, do you feel inclined to, do a very once in the middle ofa melancholy tale told that , of all the London districts . is sorry that his 'friend has e.., cold; but he good-natured thing?"' Whifecha.pel was 'in greatest disrepute, "Not in ., the least," of a poor young woman left ruined and _little knows hew ienueli sorrier he will rePliest Burgoyne deserted In Mrs. Lirriper's Lodgings, 'owing to the exploits of Jack the Ripper.- ,- be in the course of the liext hour, .asebe promptlya"if any One iViStles to borrow and only 'rescued from suicide' by the ''Very %VOL"; she repliede"then I will go die, "Dei -e netediStresseattitireelteabout- chooseweemornent when Tine drier-4bout ever, is unable to -sa,ve her frem a tree h ,Z5 from' me, I should advise him to efforts of that good lady, who, how- toasvelahitegidapelni." el lost Suinneceeasttglytima,emosnhge 'With a book and a cigarette. Mrs. me, I shell:,he quite happy in your den the legs ." gic and premature death. The reader the poor in the tast-end, making her 13kown does not object, does -she? And Burgoyne has very .often stood up . to has reached the point at; which Mrshome, for the most part of the year, at and over his knees in water for hours, Lirriper has met the pbor creature on &wa1 daresay you will not be very long watching kr ducks .ainong whistleng, her way to the riViSie 3V reeds on winter mornings, and never thought himself at all to be pitied; but "Mrs. Edam, I says, my dear, tale As e epeaks he realize,s, with a sort of pan --thwpang we pay sometimes to mei However did you lose your way,, he is thorciughly vexed now at his and Stumble in a dangerous place like our dead pasts --that, though it is only moist trousers.- Brown, however, is not three ours since he was reunited tee so easily rebuffed. this? No . wonder you're lost, I'm . his one ,inseparable Brown, . he is al- ''' should he awfully obliged to youe sure.'" What is this sound? Is it pos. ready looking forward with relief .to the he says croakily; "you wont(' - be; laying". fbibele,,gtighgale th,ghteigl.leioiswasrisisif glad to prospect 'of are' hour's freedom from his me under a very real obligation,,if yell society --so terribly far apart is it pos- vvoulc1---"' He stops to cough.. : welcome a- whild' ago, but which is so. 'sible to gra.* in six years. But, before disastrously ,out of place here. He re - "If" I would what?" returna the other doubles his efforts to put an "unmistak- his hall fledged thought has had time to curtly,. and looking apprehenefvely at a ably. serious and Pathetic tone into his do more than traverse his,brairt, Brown book has broken Intit with the eager rewhich BroWn is. expanding before yeice.).: "She was '.a11 In a shiver, and o - hi. monstrances of a mis eyes ataken .species of a. • - 1 "If you would read instead of , me." she so continued. till 'I laid her on her hospitality., . own bed, and em to the early' morning la.e, ; ., , "Leave you behind? Could not hear 4 "Why, the fact is"—coughing ei i ti She held me by the hand and moaned, of such a thing! Of eourse you mut 0-8-Y and moaned, 'Oh, wicked, wicked, eonie too 1 It will be i new experience a in as if to show that there is no im. wicked i—ee" • • .,, i. pasition—"I suppo8e f ' for you., a wholesome change. Ha 1 hal got down my throatthe; but oIg muse Ilnd I have can- What elan the Provident Matrons be and we can talk all the way there and not speak above a whisper. Isliourd r -- made of? They are laughing unre- beck; we have had no talk worth speak- not be heard . beyond the 'front row; strainedly.- Too 'tate Burgoyne realizes Ing of yet." . come, old man, do a good-natured thing that he had not made it sufficiently Again it flashes across the other's` for once in your lifeelear that his intention is no longer mhidwith the same -pensive regret as There is A paute 1 Burgoyne is not __ eomic. The idea of his being a funny before, that talk worth speaking of is very fond of being asked to do a good- man has so firmly rooted itself. in his forever over between them; but, seeing natured thing. ek can do a big one hearer's minds, that nothing, can'- now that further eittempts at evasion Wm every now and then, but he is notepare dislodge it, Such being' the case he steriously hurt the ' good-natured 'Brown, ticulsrly fond of • being asked ,to do a feels that the best thing he can do is to he acquiesces, with as fair a grace as he Small onereach the end as quickly as possible. . • -, May. , , . “ "Surely there must be many peopk He begins to read very' 1st, which is While putting on his own mackintosh. here much better suited for it than I taken for a new stroke of facetiousness, he watches, with 'o., -subdued' Yvonderi AM," he says presently, looking tine the result of which' is that the last sigh his friend winding himself into a huge comfortable, ereund in search of the et the poor young would be Suicide is white woollen eomforter, and stepping little .group ef booked and mustcleed drowned in a stored of hilarity even Into a pair 'of goloshes (he had been persons whom he hadseen but now heartier and more prolonged than that rather a smart undergraduate in' his standing near him, but it line melted. which - greeted "tanning Sophy's" day), while outside the opened hall door "That is just what there are not," ae- smudged nose: In mtich confusion, the ran is heard to sWisheandegie wind joins Brown, pressing his Point vvith the greatly abashed by the honors so mis- to bellow. . more eagernees, as he thinks .11e SOS takenly heaped upon hirn, Burgoyne a "Had not we better have a hansom ?" signs of yielding; uwe are very short jrof hastily leaves the °platform. Twenty uggests I3urgoyne, blinking,- as the hands to -night, and my wire hos Arse t thousand Browns shall not keep him slant gusts sends two or three stinging heerd that the Ore upon whom She WaA there! e ' drops into his eyes. • . (To be cerilinued). oounling for a couple of Songs is in bed 0 "A liansom 1 nonsense 1" returns the with influenza." 'Othei . laughing, and with diffileulty un - "'hippy girl i I wieh I too eves in bed furling an uelbrella in the teeth of the with influenza," says ;rim 8vadotireally. blant. "It le all very evell for a bloated for he sees his- fate about to overtake bachelor like you; but a man wilose halo family 15 tecreashig at the oate, mine is And e,o it comes to peal that, five min- etinnot, afford iiiiiieelf Siicit litixiieleet 1 utg later, .as aeserthed at the opening mile along, emu are not etegar or salt." of lies chapter, he is seated on the plat- Burgeoree feethat, at this moment he teem with Mrs. ',Wiper's Lodgings" OM at all events eenecientiously dis-beii m him, rows of Provident 'Matrons' efaitn affinity vaith the ilea of the two. eyes fastened expectantly 'epon him, and It is indeed a wet night, Wet, as the herridqualnes of etrangp ehynees rac- eme inereortalized, by Browning ht lug over Wm. 1 e "eltrishiras Lee and Easter Day; and I3rown hoe indieeted by a dog's ear Vill0 ever brought a wet night and wet the page at ‘vhith 11, is 10 begin: ,;0 ne Iiiribrellr4 "very aod flapping" ew iNcrc. ie spared indecision on tint head. Bid inglY harlit to I -r; is ht? The talk 80 has Brown indieated •the liege at tedittlt elleerfullY Premised 11 titireg,OPIO's SOW he is to ,stop? He ji8 eenti*ed by a keen guine, t'liend is rendered shselutely 1111e Anxiety as to this point all through his INONAL OINIIRS. UPPORT SCOTT'S EMULSION so yes as bridge to tarry the weak ned mad starved sperm alorig until 11 On find firm topport hl ordinary food. Soul kr ttet tAtt;i;le. !SCOTT la sowNr, eka.nt ;sa, TOW0M4), *4406 , 500. id$.o All Amniotic, No Adulteration $ usod In thikpropanation 11 °EY ON GREEN TEA. THE TEA ThAT OUTCLASSES ALL JAPANS. REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. L,EAD PACKETS ONLY.. 4"Ar1r46orLaW. St. Anthony' e House, in Great Prescot midst of this glorious company you) Street, In the heart of Whitechapelcome to Battle Harbor; . It is interesting to note that when The eettlernent is on an island perhaps Mise Angela Burdett -Coutts was created two hundred yards in diametert, which a . baroness be Queen Victoria, thirty- is the outpost of a larger island, and flye years ago, there was not, a single ploughs the waves of the ocean like peerees in her.own right in thee° king- the prow of some gigantic ocean liner. doms, though Lady Berner s succeeded In stormsthe spray leaps elmeat acmes to her uncle's barony very shortly after- its ledgy surface. A cove hides behind wards. There are` now no fewer than the bluff sea wall, and on its rim nestles ten peeresses of the.United Kingdonl or ,ft tiny village Of whitewashed cottages. of England, besides two Scottish herein- You climb the hill to the lookout Away esses—Lady Kinloss and Lady Gray. Bareness Burdett -Coutts is the olclese come ode. of the north, the fog ,sur - vest proces,sion of the icebergs. They to the north. and south spreads out the Baroness Clifton is the yoUngest, and peeress, in her own right. . rounding their tops and streaming Ilk smoke from their pinnacles. They rnov , , WHITE BEAR Appm.. turn ywessotutaiwthy southward perhaps three or four ee a day. Some go ,directly south down the Newfoundland coast, soin Thesueerintendent reperts during , rt ole eprrgot ng progress. . naPotide into nieo heStrauitist the month of August 214 feet of devie and are swept by th opulent work was done in, the mina. of ,St. Lawrence. Of this 97 feet: were driven, extendieg Day by day kiwi the hilltops you not the north and south drifts on the No. hiernirseloe . cl -' the 850 -foot levelTwenty-five feet Eachthen do ratyh esrne es hnoeriw n- feet. were drifted in No. 4. ore body on on, while old, familiar hulks are los 3 ore body on the 850 foot Tturty., The ore was four .feet wide, and the to view in the south. tach month's ice-, bergs are natives of a more northern this drift was in ore of shipping grille. and $18 ;to the ton. 33 feet of drift- region. Hence the bergs of the la.t smelter returns averaged . between $16 ing was done on the seventh flew cf summer, though fewer in number, ar No. 3 ore body on the 850 foot level. individually larger than those of th Seventeen feet in length. of this row is earliest part. of the season, because they The ore still continues in the fax of have been longer in the maleilagt, cent,- ehe drift, Smeitere returns show a gross hi' from further ;north, • June's icebergs are Labrador's own 16 feet wide and the rest is 10.feet Wkie. ton. A raise was xnade for 25 feet, on product, and have broken off from th value of between $16 and $19 to ,the No, e vein, 850 -foot level. Two veiPS ice-fleld that has filled the bays and ex - of ore were found here, varying in tended far into the ocean in the winter. from previous - width from six inches to eighteen inchare natives ofKane Bay a - july's bergs come ' Baffin Lei. each. These veins assay about $37 Land, while the huge bulks of August4 . arid the far{ up. Nine feet were driven north on a ton. The ore still continues. on fold has never been.. northern rim of Greenland, where man . 0 , . No. 3 vein, 700 -foot level. The whole face of the drift was shipping, ore. The east drift on the 1,000-foet •level was extended twenty eeet. The Superint mi- Little' Willie—"Say, pa?" mine is' very good." Sinelter e.eterne ent conclude's:--11:1The outlook of tN Pa—"Welle-what is it My son?" . the .company, Mr. Thomas Mills,: has . Little Willie—"Who roses all tbe !aunt pany over $10 a ton. The President of from August' shipments netted the cone our neighbors find?" • been in Rossland, during 'the pas ten ................_ . . amined the workiugs, and that , he is an independent fortune, but I lost it all,r TIM tHANC.F. days, and has written that he elas ex-: "Yes," said the architect, "I once. had very much pleased with ponditions as "Ah," exclaimed the shrewd man, `‘I :would be on a permarienll he found them, and that the mine suppose you built a house for yourself.sh)pping basis before the first day of March.' THE LAND 'OF ICEBERGS. .: 'WORTH NOTING! 1 nexe . • * you —. i many paths. ' A lazy man is never too lazy to help, One does net advance far who treads, , It is the icebeegse that make Labrador load up others. steam out of the Straits of Belle Isle, Pretty Daughter—"Manirna, did you fascinating. They greet you when the northern gateway : of the Gulf of Sthear what George said to me last Lawrence, and heaa northward up the night?" Anxious Mother—"No, dear, coast of Labrador. They come floating but. 1 tope it was aprpos." Prettyj from the north, an endless procession, Daughter—"It was more than, that. iv all shapes., fantastie, colossal, statu- assemblage of crystal dcimes and tine Crafty Milliner—"Really, Miss Passay, was a-propo;sal." esqueeven grotesque ----a magnificent , _ , , - rets and marble - foetresees. ---your—iha bite feather On your hat makes -steamer ploks Its way carefully among you look atv---e 1 e :oars younger.," them lest they be jealous of her intru- Mimi Passay--"Welt, you may--er—pu sion and fall over upon her. And in the a couple more on it." 4 PROBLEM. meminammammislarmiami WE RECOMMEN13 hite Be: r Mine Shares HIS MINE adjoins (please note adjoins) The LeRoi —and is k a fair way now to repeat the history of that famous mine—About 250 tons were shipped (taken out in course of development only) in August ---netting after paying for ali. transportation and smelter charges .about TE111 DOLLARS per ton. The management, directors and shareholders deserve the greatest credit and the fullest measure of success for their persistency and courage. Do you lealize what " Repeating the History of 1.e Roi " means? FIGt71E IT OUT : MOO. Illifeeted in Le Rol at 5o, now worth 'S 20,000 500 Invoisted In Le Rol at 50, now worth ........ 100,000 1000 Invested in Lo -Rol' at 5o, now worth 00000b000 200,000 tau can buy the non -assessable White Bear now on the open market at about toc per share. Send -,for reports and particulars and judge whether it will likely sell for one dollar per share in the near future. You are the architect, of your own fortune:—only the " might have "lieens " and "'has beans" prate dolefully of LUCK in others. Use your own judgment, investigate; and Ruts Yon% MONET won't. Wo Have Stiyirs and Sellers for North Stars Sullivan, Canadian Gold Fields' Syndicate • Amalgamated Cobalt, Nipissing, Consolitlated Smelters, Catlieltdiall Oil, Colonial Loan Investment, Giant; CAlifornia, Monte Cristo, etc., 'etea In fact as a client put it recently, we ask you to "Look up your BOX—examine your , . STOX—LAnd write FOX,' Somewhat slangy, but it's pointed and pithy. ,. ., 'I iVE INVITE YOUR OORRESPONDENCE,,, Stant' rd Stook Elohange Building Main 2785 wrack BitaKERS Itlemben Standard --Stock Exchange. Car. Soon and Colborne Strests, TORONTO. *TIA,BLisligo wet I