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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1906-10-18, Page 2 (2)04-a+ne-e+ e.04,eeeenee- CIIIAKER 'De you IM411.17 thci Wdly hoL.3 Leen 6Ont, down again?" Sin eveehe have 'posed einre Bur- coyna'a eye followed hie kpeerelam trends down Meeoeceemia. met hi la not in Oeford now. Ho /eft, it, indeed, twenty -roue hours after the re-eneounte deeeribed; left It veilh something of a eeetarninetion,rtevee leeerovisit ite too. In spite of the good Brown's verie ,ferceesly, reiterated invitation to hint to run down for another Sunday when - eller he should feel inclined, and wheel he aceepted eivilly, knowing, that, be ehouid. never feel incbned.. At the present moment he is pacing up and down the still wintry, northevindaswept 'walk of a country -house garden in Shropshire, in the company of a lady whom he has known as long as he cart remember; a lady who would have been a friend of circum- stance, even if she had not been one of choice, eince her home has been in -the immediate neighborhood of the only one lie has evet had; e.a.lacly whose friendship he • has tested by letters . On thin paper from New Guinea and Con- tral Africa all about himself; at whose feet he has laid on, his return more heads, and skins, and claws than she has well known what to do with; whose husband he thought a very good fellow, and to whom he wrote a very ,riice ter on that husband's death; lastly, con- cerning whose only child has been made the tcommunication that opens this chapter— 4gDo you know that •Willy has been sent down again?" "I did not know it; but I am very sorre. now thnt, I do know." "You need not be," returns she cheer- fully, "he does not, mind it in the least; indeed, happily for him, most of his friends have been sent down too." "What has he been doing this time? Putting the Porter into the fountain? or screwing up the dean? or what other playful little pleasantry?"' "Yon need not speak in that nasty sarcastic volee," says she, half laughing and •hall vexed. "After all, you must know that young men 'will be young men; or, at least, if you 'do not knoae It now, you must have lcnown jt once." - "If you take that time to Me," retorts Burgoynee smiling, "I shall have to sotice your gardener in your -fountain, to peeve my juverrilitY; but come, what has he done?" . "Absolutely nothinga asifar as 1 can Make out," replies she, spreading out •- her hands as if .to enephasize the .state- ,ment: • .. "Do yo mean to say that the authori- ties have bent him down de, gaite de coeur without any provocation at all?" askBurgoyne, in a tone out of which he is unable to keep e, shade of !nue- - dulity. "I' mean to.. say," replies she, nettled, "that .he had a few men to supper, and suppose 'they were making a little noise; did you ever in your day hear of an tmdergraduates supper where there , was not noise? , However, in this -case, from what he tells me, Willy was tak- ing positively no part in it.", , . "Ife tirtes sitting in a corner, With cotton wool in his ears, reading Aris- totle,'" . suggests., Burgoyne teasingly. its& seems," continued shenot deigning to notice the interruption, "that the proctor came in, and was very. •rude, and Willy was-lold to go to, the dean next morning, and he either was a little late,, or mistook the hour, or 'some trifle of that sort; and when he did o he•was told thatehe was sent dowi. owever"—with scene 'triumph in her voictc—"1bsdid not matter in the least— he did not mind; in fact, he was rather glade as he has long wanted to go to Italy in the spring." • Italy? -Then perhaps we shall meet; I, too, am going to Italy." "Are; you.?" sine'says. "Why should , you go to Italy? There is nothing to kill there, is there? le not it at, Naples that, they go out in full chaeseur urn- . form to sawn tomtits?" Which speech Se her revenge for his sarcasms upon her gtherd to yon?—eetiieh? E. leave you a eleo'..he, interpreflattOth," *, But either Jame is to ruffled by the eoilereeeed he her tone toward lue Leis Gr her remarks have preeeohecl in h. ei !mire of thought eveleh drew not tend tereerda lequaeity. The loud rec,,eas batemeeng theMselves on improbabl r` small twigs eleeve their heads, and hearsely melodious, callings out thei -ternal esaeli-'oteer, aei-4 to seine time the only eourat, that ;break the silence of the celd spring afternoon -It is again Mrs. 'ling who at, last in fringee , "If you and, Willy are both going to Italy, why ebould not you- go to. gettier?" Jim deee not inamediately anewer; the. PrOied is sprung neon itim with such eaddenness that he dove not at once 'know whellier it ts agreeable to him or the reverse. "You do not like the idea?" (Continued the mother,' trying, not, very successful- ly, to keep out of her tone the surprise she feels at hie not having lumped at 4. plan so obviously to his own getvan- tage. "I did not say so. I did not even think 110 SOrl. . Ent Burgoyne's 'face hae taken on a rather careworn leak; and het* little ar- „row misses its mark. "You see Amelia is at Florence,” he . says explanatorily; • "her father, Wile Wileene had a Clergyman's throat in the ' autumn, and was 'obliged to . give up. so they .,all Went Abroad.. They e havebeen abroad all thewinter.; you , knew that I have not seen her eine° 1 nte 'huh!, from the' 1Peli100-9 TheYeareettow walking in n. Winding Shrubbery path, vvh080 - laurels protect elhein from the DinehIng wind, They have, turned eeverai corners, and tra- Versed half a quarter of as mile before cilther again breaks silence, It. is the lady who doee so finally. • • "Jim, bow long have you been engaged to Amelia 7"• There is a sigh .mixed with hie *newer, "Eight years—eight years Bala next ' lune; it Wes the second summer term ttfter I came up.". "And 'ea far as you caneach you are likely to .10 apgagoAl for another eight petin 7" ^ '"An -far as I can see—yer4„ but then It cannot 'seo far," Verlaine his companion is fanciful Wenzart; but 00 notices that tha time he not iigh. ',Poor Amelia," elie Cao, half Mader her breath. "Peer Amelia," repeats he *has lyz. "witty .poor- for being engaged to to? Yo'* aro not, Very complimentar,y, fr Byng." she Petite tip friendlily at late. "Fmr. being engaged to )0u, OP LCillit Ofily en. so." "Willy is ah ideal fellow -traveller,' says ahe, "excepting In the matter of punctuality; I warn yet'---laughing— "that you wriuld always have- to drag him out of bed." • "But,'- suggests Jim, slowly,' "even eupposing. that I embraced your design with the warmth which I see you think it deserves, how can you tell that it would meet with his approbation? He his probably,made up a party with simee of the other innecent victims of a cor- rupt University 'system." A "No, he has not; the friend with whom he was te have gone has thrown him over; at least, poor man, that is hardly the way to express it, for he has broken his leg; but anyhow he is hors de com- bat, If you went with Willy," she adds, after a pause, and with a rather avistfut air, "I should be sure of knowing if anything went wrong." • 41 am to dry -nurse him, in fact, only I stipulate that, If he brings you home a Contadina datighter-indaw, or 'corns mils himself ' with a countess', like the commercial gentleman at Todgersa you are not to hold me responsible." , And so it comes to pass:that a fort- night later, while April is still young, Burgoyneen route to his Amelia, is standing at a window of the Hotel de Genes at Genoa, . noisiest of .hotels, though, to be sure, that, is its only fault. He is looking -out at the gay market that. is held in the piazza below—the gay marlset that is over and gone by nine o'clock. It seems odd that so many, women, so many umbrellas, so many baskets, so many oranges and lemons—each lemon, With a glossy •green leaf still adhering to its inch of stalk—eo many fresh vege- tables, can be swept awayin so shot% a time. But they are; ail the gay ker- thiefs are fled, and have been replaeed by a row of flatus with sad droop headed horses, a good hour before Byng appears—appears radiantly welt washed and apologetic. ' • "How many morning chapels did you attend Ittet term?' asks Burgoyne with some drYness. 'It is a vile habit,' replies the other, sweetly, sitting down at a little label, and unfolding hes breakfast napkin. "I do not mean going to chapel, but be - mg so .late; however, 1 realty am im- proving. 1 am a quarter of an hour— twenty minutes 1 earlier than I was yes- tterday, and,. thanIc God, we have no trein to catch to -day." , Burgoyneis rather inclined to echo the thanksgiving a little later in the day, as they stroll with the pleasant vague- ness with which one strays about a little-known foreign town, not exactly knowing whither, through the streets of the queenly city, with which neither of them has much • acquaintance; Byng's twenty-two years of sehool and college, Of tricket and grouse, and etailcing, have left not much. margin for aught else; and Burgoyne being in the case of 'some widely wandered semis and ex- plorers, to whom the Nyeinza' Lake and the Australian Bush are more 'familiar than Giotto's Campanile or the'Lagoone. Thereeis a greyish -looking English sky. lwith now and then little ;Sprays of rain; and now and then flashes of warm eun. Neither of the young men 'know much' Italian, and such as they peeee„es they are abltained to air before each other in asking their way, eo they wander wrier - ever chance or faney leads theist' They look curiously into eiturches, they walk tioevn deep narrow etreete, whose hOusee have' for three centuries been threatening to embrace each other across the etraight eity strip fitia far above their head% They glance at the palace 'fronts, and wonder ateehe eeultn Ittred portals wher6 fresco and fruit gerland and fine tracery epeals of s lime at more Mauro for delicate work that has ne end but beauty, than thio brenthlees one. Everywhere the gar - dente they aco budding green, untrained rosee Mating bowers, ripe oranges hanging over the walls, They jostle againet women, each made Charming, even the ugliest ot them, by the black ace kerchief tied about her head, "Henry James Sap that an Engliell Crew(' N the beet -looking in the world," say A Dyne, in a tone Of strong diceent, following with ltis eyes a little tripping kigure, and With an expreselOn Of pro) notmeed approbation in theee ogee, !which give; litirgoyne a momentaryt twinge of misgiving no 10 hi9 ehaperon- ship, "I should put it flu) other we" up, and say that they aro the ugliest,' a croWds, aro taglfy, and most in. _ .0 1,-0 preen- reeeerealr-„y, liee!..eeee tee iaeon 1'3.3 7,r.hey aee, celeetee:og flro Car,TheAl„ aleacit oi pe';aceee fize40 desere seetelezer rem° than that• of el teeeeeeeehat, eteshie, orei ri-cecht, hcre eel hee peeZfaiieeeeel Neh,leet (191: 'k:41242,70 sleete4 BeneVh eat teeeeein toelree 4,,?.,7 icD112-4.1 cn eLlbx:c. Zzant 117,721%a %,,,-Pae. Ocean, eetly heeenfleeL o*ereen veilre fee to. fl ee„ g:oeiereJ1 tereeeh an/ ehiee Ltenglh 04111.tli fra;),Z2b" iat'CY harela ha un (make evediceth Into tile, reelleet of al elp the' eehoing steno elaireo clearn wide the' feet , 'the mestere. have foeeve cowed te trhaele they enter. Ae we a beenee et lzes leeen Zlven to the e4Y Oenaa-eeloVely. raPriTing, .esreat gifteoloy Me dying hand 'of if 1, it leteet Peeseasor, the last of that hig and leefeeitifut raeeLie v -e may Jude.° o ca y then' pecetureee—who paced its floors, and wet forth In finei fune- Val pomp through ito worthy-le-be-nu- perial portals. Burgoyne and Byars are standing be. lore the great Vandylee. The costode ;veiling a altutterr,*and throwing Avider doeee,epets- aelerighter ray of •lig,hte for - the staring Britons—several others have eolne,d, thernaelves to our friend -to gape at it by. What does the . stately gentleman :PA M3 great. white horse,. whom Vandyke has made able to set at nougat death's effacement, think of them, OS the cuatode slowly swinge him forward on his hinges, so that the day - Warns May bring out more oleariy still the arresting charm of his serious Mee, his outstretched arm, and grave, gallant bearing? Looking at him, whose heart antongeus is not bereieg,ed by an ache of gouging that that "young and princely'' gentleman on the brave white charger should ride down to:ui out of his framo. end bring back his world with. him? Probably not a better world than ours, but surely, surely, a handsomer one. After awhile the other tourists drift itatety, but the: two men still stand and tiaze. Into Burgoyne's mind has come sense .of disgust with the present, a 'revolt against steam trams and the Cromwell: Road-en:lost perfect symbol of that bald, unending, vulgar ugliness, ev•hich,. In some moods, Must seem to everyone. the dominant, aote of nine- teenth century life. • The light-headed flynge who alwaystakes' his color from his surrounding, is iuslied into silence that is almost reverent too. "What st, difference there is between his Italian and his English pictures," lie says, presently. "Do yo e remember the Marchese. Balbl, and those divine talbi children in the Grosvenor, last 'ear? Oh, no I by -the -bye, you were in America. The fog seemed to get into his brush whenever he painted an English - 'woman, always excepting Henrietta reearia,, who was not an Englishwoman, and whom he was obviously rather in love with." "Is that a piece of scandal of' your 'Own invention, or. is it founded on fact" asks Burgoyne, rousing himself, ,and looking overhis shoulder towards .'the entrance to the next frescoed, mir- „ rortel pictured room, whence he hears the sound of approacbiag voices. In his eye is an idle and mechanical curiosity, Mixed with vexation that his short- re- gpite from his fellow-eountrymen, is ended, for the tones that;are nettling are those of a woman, a woman who .is saying • in a key of satisfaction, "Oh, herb it Is I I thought I remembered that it was in this room.” At the same moment the speaker, as evell as the person addressed, came into eight; • and in an instent out of Bur- gdyne's eye has raced away the lack- lustre curiosity, and has given away to an expression of something beyond -sur- prise, of something more nearly verg- ing on consternation; and yet, after all, there is nothing very astonishing in the tact that it is Mrs, Le Marchant 'who is the woman in searelt of the Vandykeo srhere, is nothing mere surprising in her being at Genoa. than his being there I himself. At that mart of nations it can g never be matter for wonder to meet anyone; but who is this to whom her Observation Is ,addresaed? it is not Mr. Le Merchant; it is not a man at all; It is a slight woman -- "White as it lily, and small as a • wand"— like t'.Lance's Sthter, dressed with that heat, tight, grey -tinted simplicity, se- ivere, Yet smart', which' rnarks the bred Englishwoman on her travels. Is ft one of the younger ones, who hes grown up. so startlingly like her? Mir- iam.? Rose? or is it, can it be, the dead 'Elizabeth? (To be continued). . 'A woman caret; not who has the first word, provided she has the rest, of, thein. WHEAT MOTOR Bfl II entoo Dievoveve fireh,t7tute if?r ber Made- From (Vitiate. A, new 6sublitzato I.9:, rubber bar; irtpon founl, gal if ,the claims of a MiddlY')- can (England) Inventor prevee loi.3. 1,7eill foundei, eve ehall seeno dee* eee motor care end hieycles with tiremelte 4 wheat, gale ballu that onqe tvero her. nels of maize, 7mavernentr3 of barley, Wad linoleum' that alight have been rya, talned succe'z. bri,-3arl. , Patent .olfico reeortl; show that none° 300 hive/ahm eef boeetitutee for rilbter have been iiied, net o e of which has at!. The new claimant is Air. William Thre.ifall Carr, of. 1,Vonibley. Ile, pure pines to make aotificial rubber from eer. eals. It le said that a syndicate of cepa, talists interested in the manufacturing have offered chine $1,215a.000 for his patent GEIINIANY'S NAVAL IDEA. "4 righte, ' The invention of artificial -rubber wasIncreeee in Navy Made Necessary by ' prophesied at the recent meeting of the tvorld has been eager for it ever since A Gertrian. Government official of high liter Dependence upon Importe. Britielt Avocietion„ and the induetrial the Motor car and bicycle trades eee ktaeleaet apotelaeelee_vemeeexplae standing, haS been giving a correspon- hie•fll '11'4'`ta e*'113114' lila. 1111')P1,1''' '011110', nation 'of the necessities drieffig Written' Mr. Carr's substitute is obtained by! ce e, natural article. • treating any cereal with phyalin, al ' 1 policy along the road to international Cloudy Draperies Blowing in the Breezte in eolution as a ferment, turning stuffs. he says. comes from abroad, one- collieion, One.third of Germany's . raw ' food • Grimaces. . , well-known chemical substanee that, acts Cause Series or UPERIORITY Over Japan Teas 10 so pronounced that: tca critics have nothing but pAseoe ifs, 4 It on a teapot Infusion. 111 CEYLON GREEN TEA. Every loaf is uncolored, undoctored and of:virgin purity. 4,03d'potakets deeci, SW gild Goo per 111). At sil greeerse WRINKLES AND NERVES WOMEN'S "FLOATING" FRILLS ANI,11;- RIBBONS. starchy matter In grain into dextrose. ., to, Check fermentation at any desired aereale,, and 75 per cent. of he.r foreign The tz berersea,nt man Walking in Another chemical is used in the process stage. This makes it possible to pz.o- trade is sea -borne. It le ouerehogni- hny lace where fashionable 'women Bond met, liegent Street, London, or duee the ,ertiftetal rubber in several tion of the utter dependeece of VdrIzian •Indut5117 and "en tile vitillitY °f the bocongr gate will infallibly come to the differentimports, which has reVolutionized Gerstrengths. The inventor proposes to make the madnyitipopli0clya0up and edpsuffering from St. Vitus' dance. In their n substance in six grades, from a liquid I - conclusiothat English women are f(ownc'theu ,voonluums ef:hoof coounr. carriages, on the paveznent, or ifl. hardness suitable, for golf balls, in which is)turiuscotiboneinogi au'igereaactquniarvernsaetnliteosfeccriodniiesin: grins, screws up her mouth and her solution suitable for waterproofing to a motor ears, every woman in the street of cork and the toughness of chilled, on economic-politicalsline,s. and the desire to expand across the seas form it is said to possess the lightness eyes, twitches her lips, jerks her shoule a future with a Russian steel. In other trades it will be service., Empire barring German goods, . sell 118 looks to 'dud. erit oanndwirgeesn.orally behave.s as isha t able for tires, tubes, linoleum work, and - euffieleet slabs and sheets for block pa.vements. I3ut it is not SiSt, Vitus' dance. The Mr, Carr intends to, visit Canada and )smi.containAedraerBicriatnish continent, 11.1. grimaces and the gestures are caused, other grain -producing countries.. for the first, by the wornan's hair, and, second-. purpose, of arranging for supplies ofaeo,: e 'Chamberlain's lines. In spite of Radi- cal and Socialist fanatics, Germany, ho 1Y, by her "floating" -frill* and ribbons.' means to be able to exercise, cereals in quantities sufficientI to cope where necessary, the force upon which "There Is a great outcry against the with the operations contemplated. the Ultimate success of commercial poli srpieneget' aid a West End beautyiele.isPti'oa London Expressrepre- When he was asked if his invention cy is dependent. He claimed the neces- sentetive. "There will be a greater out - might not have the effect of increasing My of the establishment of a central cry when its abolition restilts in prem. - the price of food, he reVied :—cusloms union, with the Rhine 'tare wrinkle,s and 'nerves.' "There is no danger. The new lino- under Germany's protection and. the . , European leum will be a reserve food supply. Jr), : Adriatic manned by her marines. , the event of a famine it can be boiled 0 WRINKLES MUST COME. and reconvereed into 'Ode': . the 'fourth of the people is fed on imnerted la CLOCK PLANT. There is a plant, a native of Borneo, which le known as • the "clock plant," The name' is derived irons the action of the sun'Is• rays on the leaves, which are three in number—a large one extending forward, with two email ones at the base pointing sideWays. These, corning in contact with tho rays of the sun, oscil- late like the pendulum, of a clock, the larger leaf moving upwards. and down- wards, going its jutl length every 'arty - five minutes, the smaller leaves moving towards the larger, completing the dis- tance forward and backward every forty-five mirages, 'thus resembling the hour and minute hands of a clock. WEidlIT-GUESSING. I .110..14.14, am. Favorable and encouraging reports A recent novel weight-guesing compe- "' • continue to arrive concerning work on titian, which was a feature of an agthtee white Bear mine at Rossle.nde The ,cultural show in the Isle stilted in remarkably accurate •jud,genent 01 WigAtv re- Rossland Miner has the following :- being displayed. A large number of oi:eThshodoetsvelf°oPumndentmioftht he e 8 ewe , .vf eo roc, i 1 ine ve ve vi people purchased tickets, which entitled and elsewhere in the White Boar, con - *them to enter the competition for judg- thaws with flattering results. Eighty Ing the dead *eight of a bullock stand- tons of first-class' ore and 40 tons of ing in the show -yard. When the bullock concentrates were shipped to the smelter was slaughteredand weighed, it was during the week.' Thiswas taken out found that three competitors had guessed M the course of thedevelopment." the exact Weight of the carcase. .. .............. STAR RAYS. What causes the rays or pencils of light that seem to be thrown out by every star when seep by the naked eye? A Germari scientist' has been wreetling with the problem. He fintas that' all eters show precisely the same rayse.but that in the ease of the brighter stars the rays are plainer and somewhat longer. It is further remarked that the rays, seen by the left and right eyes differ, and that if the head be turoed the rayr are rotated in a coiTesponding manner. It is thus concluded that the source of the rays is not in the stars, but in fhb eye itself, the middle of the retina being not perfectly, homogeneous in its Sensi- tiveness.. wfijT,p BEAR MINE, When a man's temper gets the best "11. is a great comfort to have a child of, him, it generally reveals the worst about the house," said the man of do - 1 him. • meetic taetes. "Yes," answered the un- Tttlk is so cheap that betters are wil- feeling wretch, "when company comes ing to 'give a tot of it free with each that you don't Care for, you can make have. the child- recite." tee ••••••••••••••••••••••••06.111111 FIFTY CENTS riu IN ohm conditions the . 11 gain from the Use oI Scott's Emulsion is very rapid. For this reason we put up a fifty -cent size, which enough for an ordinary coughor cokl or useful as a trial for babies and children. In other conditions the gain Is slower—health cannot be built up fro a day. In such cases, Scotts Efile1$1.1t must be taken as nourishment, a food rather than a rnedkine. It's a food for fired and Wskit digestishs. sum, & BowNe, cilombis," lareasees see, and Slaw, ditreggiets. • , "Only one woman in fifty is blessed 'with naturally curling hair, and (the forge majority—those who have to use, pins and curling tongs—are always ex- periencing the. uncomfortable sensation, 'of stray locks which free themselves from hairpins and fall forward to tickle' 'the unfortunate person's nose, • It Is an extraordinary thing to watch' a smart woman, her hands engaged witW 'her umbrella, purse, and skirt, trying!' to blow a curl Out of her line of vision., She twists her nose, strains her mouth' sideways, and, in fact; would be horde -fled if she „caught eight of herself in the mhror. ' Wrinkles must inevitably come. Grimaces are the greatest en,emy, to beauty," *FLOATING" FASHION., ' • A fa.shionablee modiste—alfriblites the " ociety grimace" to what she desig•e tmJates the "floating fashion." ,."The well-dressed woman nowadayst 'Must float," she said. "The more cloud- like her appearance the' more she will be admiredeler veil must float from' the top of her hat, bunches of ribbon, depend over the brim, ribbons float' from ,her blouse, and her scarf floats in every breeze. 'These cloudy draperies are liable to .blow in .front of their wearers', faces,, end it is very unpIersant to see a wo- man distolling her pretty features in the, vain effort toebaow away the long end, of a. rosette or a wisp of tulle." You ca.nt judge every woman by her looks, -because appearances may be bought at most druggiste. • Investors,. We have associated our name with White.Bear. Mining Shares, and to our established clientele desire to say that we give it the strongest possible endorsement. , Firm in our belief that White Bear is rapidly reaching e position that will cultnirtatc,(0 another Le Roi success., it has all the .evidences NOW. Located and forming part of the group containing Le Rol, War Eagle, and Centre Star at Rosslastd, 13. C. Ship- ments, alreadymade an procebs of cleveleprnent only) have stetted SIO a ton after paying all costs of freight, Orrielter charges,' etc. Reports reaching us regularly aro highly setisfaetory, and we confidently expect to see another repetition of the Le Rol wonder, THINK OF IT! THINK OF III, Atd particularly note 'the location of White Bear, In a group of mining properties paying regular dividends of ifit per cent, "• CANADIANS WAKE UPI To the intmenee possibilities Of 'White Bear, before it passes under foreign control. Act, an'd act promptly, if you would benefit by this, which we consider the greatest opportunity that has 'been placed before you for some 111116. 15I00 SOO $1,000 DO *OU REALIZE IT? lineest d in the Le Itoi is now worth • • • ..911,11,11011617'66.900/1 **** •401111•0•6 820,000 41 11 di * ** ** • 0111.....1,0130.40 100,000 114' 44 u a * * 611 * • OOOOOOOOO •41•••••••••• 209,000 You have magnificent possibilities in "White Dear. Shares Ino developed mine, producing under the most favorable conditions, actually selling at prospect figures. To those who have already taken advantage of this offering we want to extend our congratulatiOns. Teilhose who up 10 the present have not-eSeen lit to do so, 'lee want to reiterate what we 1100 'already said, and assure them that our confidence in this property is, Unbounded., YOU Ca eoure White Boar Now at About 10 Conti a Share ukt our advice and do not delay an hour INVIESIT $500000 (NOt Speculate) IN WHITE BCAR As a beginning in a remarkably attractive offering. We have buyers and sellers tor , Californittt Whitt negro Cariboo, .Syndleatt, 1Vith3nley Dar. Colonial Investment and Loan, Cato :$11:00:44# mbiefitd:vaticavoirno.:60olaryiha liFSIStroo, scoraieholiter•Col)nAsolipdrtias,iseindligt;Sivm)epttnisteittiry4:0Grturtittlechary: waanarcle4Fpwarirentsmeees: ate;:uintaltentt Trust o Giant, Novelty, Do Not Fail to Write or ire ,as To,day. Wire Orders at Our * .1Af or n corny. Exp: b"tinAN:Igr X Is* RO stin404 StOgig I A, STOOK ISROIKeRS, * imori Aletukrs Standard Stotic Exchange. Poildino (Tor. Scott and Colborne Saw TOItONTO. "1 14441il• $7654stablikled 1.887,