The Exeter Times, 1891-10-29, Page 6Sufferers TIE$, HUMAN AND DIVIN
rIteeact Stomach mid Liver derange-
n:ents Dyspepsia, lailioustzess, Sick*
Tifeteletelai, and Gonstipetiou—iind asafe
and cerfain relief in
Ay ee's Pills. In all
crises wltere a ea-
thartie is . needed,
these, Pillsarereeam.
mended' by leading
physicians,
I)r. T. B. Hastings
of Baltimore,. s;ys:
"Ayer's Fills aretite
best cathartic anal
aperient within the
reach of my Nelda.
eioi."
lar. john W. Brown, of Oceans„ W
Va., writes: "I have prescribed Ayer's
Villein MY practice, end lied them ex-
cellent. I urge tlieir general use in
faMilice. "
"For a ntlntberof Tears I was a9lictea
with biliousness which allnestdestroyett
nny health. I4 tried v areoss remedies,
brit nothing at%traded toe may relief tmtil
I began to take Ayer's Yill9,"—G, S.
Wanderlieb, Scranton, Pa.
"I have used Aeter'e Pills for the past
thirty ,-ear$, med. .natal aatisfeal I shred'
not be alive today bi it hail gest been
for them They eared me of dtis'�e .si.a
ssfeeaaall etlierreMedies fa,lel,irtet their
occas--s"aual use asep: me in a nealtl:y
condition ever aiillee, aT. F. Brown,
Chester, Fa,
'"II:Pik been seibleet, lar yeas, to
cae+le:ip:atlan, without being able• to tank
txaueh ret 1 at, last tried Jaycee,. rills,
and deem it toll a fluty and «a pleasure
to testif; that I have clerival great ben -
eat frena their use. For over two y e are
palet I have talent ane oY these Pine
everynigbt before, retiring. I would riot
willingly be without teem."— G. W.
P'ownian, :ti Bast Main arta, t MF1491 , Pe:,
"'Ayer's Pills have been used ip tate*
%amity upwards cf twenty ye ares and
have Completely ierithel all that is
claimed for dread. In ;tat ells of piles,
Trout which I suffered mane years, they
af~ioraad tMe greater relief thee: ay teed;.
'clue T ever tried."-Ti:etuas :. �9a1 nits
Helly Spriu s,. Texas.
Ayer's
..e
et, J. O. Ayer Co.. Lowe, Masa.
Ila:3 cog all limine elsaMd Deane is tic!:.`"sine.
BdiAti-1111,AKERa'F
: 11. tall a
it f
Dv to e;rrr,RMs.".a" r;h
FO:1 SALE r`t '1.,
other of
a
BY R. lb. EARJFQ,N,
Great Porter Square," "The Mystery of 3S, Fehr," "Bread and
Cheese and hisses." Etc,, Btu.
Toe 1'IL'st Link—Supplied by Aire aillington, or Shepherd's 1 uShtt
CIIAI'TE1 ''XIII.
The information imparted by thelaudrord
did not assist rete in coming to any aelluite
conclusion as to whether ;,.tins Haldane was
or was not the daughter of Adeline Dueroz
—always supposing, of coarse, that the re -
pert e1 the eliild's death •char--tly after het
birth was false, which was an assumption
which Mr. Rerlow's client appeared to
have a: rived. With a fair insight now into •
:lir. Haldane's cisaracsir, I felt that lie was
quite capable of inventing a story of a znar-
,aage, anal of retelling home With a child
whor,t he intended to be received as the
child of that imaginary union. His motive
for tines encumbering himself was not so
clew. unless, Tushed, at the root of a nature
radieal y base there grew some tendrils of
aff'ee€ion fora child of his bleed. To enter,
however, upon thiss reed ofconjeettnrc would
lava. lne bans little, sail 1 turned from it at
once, and -applied myself to the task of ex.
tra..ting sack comps of further inure ation
from my ennnp:tnio:t as might chance to be
of Use to nae. laid lte know into what faun t
ilv ales Haldane ltad marries', I ;Asl ed.
Ado, he replied, he dial not,. and what 1
s mare, he did net care ; nor slid
env of the eillagcrs, he added. ,Mr,
Haldane had ch""sen to ignore them,
and to treat thein as though they were so
n,ueh edit. What interest, therefore, was
at likely they would take in a elnmestis oc•
rue, even of that importance? This
feeling, to my mina', ryas urate neural, but
I Wee. eorp 'sal that the I'tu"llor"i of the
Brindled tear ellen/el he so free in express-. !
ing
xpre s -
ng at: It Was true that he was in Lis elms
in N hied► con"litiimt many men are apt to be
•r. la serset, and to. esatinat thentisa•lvee to
. FFlssurc' and opinions which in their soles
l n oatteuts they woel.t temp close. Iiut nae
surprise dial enc"1 alien 1 s bsequel:tt}
le.traral Chas the le"se of the Brindled Cos
wen's h, in c uatnton With an the other pro
pinny intl,e vd"..a.;e, Ix•lOmse l to Mt. H:ai-
d see--weulcl thou ittit in the c.tiu a of a y eat
it that the Ianailo "l whose f nmidy hint
held it for generations cunldO"3:,tain no dsir's- I
tie,e•ra• ca sarttee of a renewal. In aa.l.itioa
to wslick, as my s:,etweateton boastfully re'
n a: ee;i, he wile by no means banally off, end
enu8,'1 nta9;��rd to soap his ringers at any nem.
•" 11 it wasn't for net; wise," seal the laaml-
•" I'd dung the lease is his face. But
in a got no spirit ; glee like nay gratrt-
Interpreting the sigh, and interpreting it
wrongly, I said, "" You find it dull, Raeitee"
"" Oh. no, not at all," she, said promptly.
(We are used to brant, atone. ;sir. Haldane
ten g.:es to London."
" How often my dear?"
""O, over Andover again. Re spends more
hen ia?f his time there."
""''aking Miss Haldane with him some -
Imes I suppose?"
4.0', no, he never does that. Ile goes all
by himself without any warning. And he
taften comes back that way."
"Hut he writes to his daughter before -
:awl saying that heis conttsg bonne. "" i will nut a case before you, my dear.
Ife never does; and I judged from be Matters being in the position you have de -
voice tbat her master Was net in favour with scribed, two things ccur whch hare not
r• been introduved. 'a.ae first is, that the true
"" Miss Haldane has been in Lendon, of laver across the seas coutinues to be so un-
nurse :'"' fortunate that there is very little hope of
""`,Twice, on a visit t� friends." his being able to come Rome and marry.
"" You did not go with her, Rachel?" The second is, that the father tells his
"1 reenaine,l at' the hall," daughter that he is in the power of a false
lover, and tllut if she does not consent, to
starry hint be will be ruined, \Yhatthen?"
"1 deu't know what then," said Rachel
pettishly. "" Mr. Millington, you eau say
dreadful things !"
"" My dear '" I said soothingly, "" I am
only considering the subject from all
pointsof view, as a man of age and eerier -
awe, anal the father of a young man like
Oeor,te -..whose happiness is atstake as well,
rets:; ether—is hound to do. You aro mis-
taken if you think I was drawing upon in
imagination in puttingthe cat to •ou. It
has happened aain and again."
i
"" It went happen with my young lady,"
P rid Rachel, resolutely, "" if I can prevent
it."
"" You wouldn't give way 2'
"" I'd lie chopped into littlebits first. Mr.
Millington, you paid mea eonapliment by
sating that 1 had a heal on any shoulders."
"' You deserved it. my dear."
0
t
t
ire
c
"" that's what I've heard, Large sums of
money."
"" Which indicates that Mr. Haldane is
pressed for it. There are mortgages, per-
haps, All this is very serious, Rachel ; it
doesn't make the 'road smoother for your
mistress. Will she give way eventually 2
Will iter father persuade her to merry Mr.
Redwood?" -
"Never, Mr. Millington, never, :though
there wasn't another man in all the wide',
world, She doesn't dare to say so, but she
hates the t cry sight of hint."
Still, with her fatherott hie side, urging
her----"
"" No, Mr. 'Millington, no. She's quiet,
and gentle, and ltas the temper of an angel,
but she can be firm as a rock, She'll be true
to her lover though they may never come
together ; her father and ALr. Redwood
may break her heart between them, but
they won't persuade her to marry a man
she doesn't love,"
"" It's often done, Rachel," said S ruefully,
for George's hopes were !seeming mere aid
mot"e ilia -mit of realisation.
"" I believe it is, but my young lady's not
one of that sort,"
"" Mr. Haldane was with his daughter n
he time of these visite, and he took her
abaut to the theatres and exhibitions:"
"" Ile did nothing of the lend. Both times
when Miss IIaldatte was •in Loudon he was
abroad. and •kept there. She saw nothing
of her father till they were both beet at the
Hall."
"• 13utsurely,"Isaid, "Mr. Ilal,ianegoing
so often to London, hnsahouse there?? Ile is
rich enough to own orae,"
" He may be that, for all I know,'' replied
Raebel, ""'tut he he,sta't any Sousa that 1
lmnow of, He eters at some 'hotel or other.
Leastways, that is where :Hiss Ilal"lane
writes to him. I don't mind eayiug it to
you, -lar, Millington, but if I was a young
lcdy I shonldu't like to have such a father."
"Auythieg yon stay to me, my deur, is in
etntbknce, 1 look trprai you already as my
Laughter, and -I hope you won't keep (*earge
v.-aititig too loee."
" on mustn't press me." said Rachel, and "" I'tn n at the only one. 1 oa've get a
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PoterborougleO a,
to p' :.,°.,,..i. tl :.
titer, and thinks that Cluelleigti at the
rmt1:1. 1t';i otaly ci nutshell, I tell vier,, lint
se ashes her head anal mourns. She'll get
es it, th't agh, if we have to flit. Why. k
wren°d hardly Relieve it, she's never been au -
e n theatre; else trembles at the very
tlmu •he of one. 'fbat's what hr ivg in I
('hu,ileigh brings a body to ; dries mu up.
.e e, dries "on up. dive me Laudon, I sty I
capita, an I'll go on o:tying it tilt I get her
thole ; and then,when she's got over her
first scare, she'll thank me for actin;; like a
man.
" Yon said awhile ago," I Raid, after
complimenting him upon his courage, " that
Mr. Haldane was One man here and another
nsut there. Yon referred to his yyoung,kay:,.
I take it. Ile bas sown. hie will oats.'
" Has he?" exclaimed the landlord. "1
couLti tell a different tale if I'd a mind to.
When the parson preaches about saints and
t -inners it would have a butter applicatiou if
hepointeditislinger atraiglttatMr. Iiaahlene.
But they don't throw stems at the rielt ; it's
the poor they hammer away at. What
would tite parson say, I wonder, if he saw
the master as I've seen him, on a racecourse
eerryingeuwithpaintedlaiiiesirta way acoat
moner man would be ashamed of ! What
would he say, if--"
But whatever further revelations the land-
lord was about to andira they were, much to
my vexation, cut
short by the appearance
of his wife, who, opening the door uucere-
moniously, stood there and beckoned to
hien. Otherwise she neither spoke nor
moved ; she simply beckoned to him. Think-
ing of the manner in which lie had spoken
of her as a woman of no spirit, and of my
own experience of het- as a soft-spoken
Creature who scarcely raised her voice above
a whisper, I was curious to witness the
result of this intrusion upon our privacy.
Would the Iandlord storm and bluster, and
peremptorily order her from the room?
Would he regale her with a stern lecture
upon her presumption in thnsdaring to break
in upon us ? Would he assert his authority
as master of his house and as wearers of the
breeches in a manner not to be mistaken?
To my astonishment he did nothing for a
minute or two but sit and stare at her, the
while her forefinger calmly invited hint to
the course she deemed prudent for leant.
There was no resisting the mandate. Rising,
after a period of imbecile hesitation, he
looked at me foolishly, and meek
lYfollow
d
his wife from the room, indicating to me
unerringly that it ever the grey mare was
the better horse within the walls of an
Englishman's castle the animal reigned here
wit hin the walls of The Brindled Cow.
The revelations, however, which the land-
lord had made of the ways and doings of
Mr. Haldane tantalisingly g y cuts bort as they
were at the most interesting point, were
sufficiently novel to occupy my attention,
and to lead me to ponder upon the problem
my companion had presented—a mental
operation, the suspension of which was only
caused by the arrival of Rachel Diprose from
the hall. Hailing her appearance as a
welcome relief, and as a possible means of
increasing my store of knowledge, (present-
ed her first with the album which Mr. Barlow
had bought for her. Gifts are always wel-
come to those who are not overberdened
with them, and Rachel was profuse in her
expressions of appreciation and in her ad:
miration of the good taste which had guided
the selection. We took a stroll in the village
T carrying the two albums, and afterwards
walked leisurely to the Park, Rachel being
good enough to observe that she felt as much
at home with me as if she had known me for
years and years.
"1 am very pleased to hear it, my dear,"
1 said.
Hitherto we had beenconversing about
George, and London, and the portraits o
her immediate family in the album, no men
tion being made about the portraits of Mr
and Miss Haldane ; and as Rachel did no
broach the subject, I, as a fellowconspirat
with Mr. Barlow, did not dream of doing so
Rachel had laughingly asked me whether
approved of the pictured' presentments o
the relations, and had then gone off in rap
tures of a baby niece, which I, as aprospec
tive (and wishful to be) grandfather, regard
ed as a good and hopeful sign. These an
other subJects of a close domestic natur
being exhausted, I said—
L"So you and your young mistress arealon
at the hall?"
" Yes, said Rachel, with a half sigh
"" we are all alone.
ice was at, ale 111In rand r grt+tttlL � head on yours ; I'vefennd that out. When
told George my mind, and Ita'sagroe .' eon were with nay young lady you must
:o it. I"11 never leave tray mistress tilt slut ; have noticed that she Wasn't as bright as
it.tppily martial earl settleih" sat
"So George has told me, my dean Batt, • ""lee. I uotteed it."
Rachel, consider•---•neve. ?" "" 1 i -,i left her it bit brighter hreause of
"" Never, Me. altilin ;toga," alae replied in sonat thing you told her about that Honor-
adeter/ deter/wilted tame which rade Inc thin:: i t'•
there wee no shafting this yoaang women, "" 11i°1 slits Ilaltlone telt you, then 1"
once she lead mads up i er mind mud exPreas• "She tali nae uotltingti° replied this very
„eactateas young titadci ; -she knows I don't
C#4! for honor's, and alto won't make it
worse against a young woman wlto'e—well,
never mind what elle is. Idon't weed to he
told everythiuz ; if I diel, what would he
the good of the head, on my shoulders you
thin£: so itigitlyof? 'I saw what I saw, and
1 judged:accordingly. Buttherc was a me-
son for my young, tatty- not being bright and
happy when you first saw her, and Honoria
wasn't that reason."
"" What was, Rachel?"
t'.i it.
Well, my flair," I Haid feeling it best,
in Cieorge'ta interests, not to tppuse o t re,
solute as rr aid, "all we Can hope for is that
yl la/ Haldane will soon he happily married
and nettled."
"" I'm sure I hope so," said Rachel, in-
genuously.
"" For George'tl sake, my dear?"'
•` Yee, for George's cake, and my own.
S. girl eoaldn't wish for at better man dodo;
George, Mr. Millington."
"That elta could not, my dear, nor a
trut•r, nor a more faithful lover. And now,
Rachel, the qt�ue.tion that comes to me ie.,�
flees Miss IIal*lnnc'a1enppiness depend upon'
s,inteonc else , ;'1iere'aa lover abroad, you
told me, a young gentleman who's tryhig to
male his fortune over the water. 1)oea Miss
Haldane's happiness depend upon him?"
""In one way it does, in another wayit
doesn't. Fon ace, Mr. Millington, they
can't do as they like, my young lady and
her true sweetheart over the sea. There's a
big stone in the way."
"" The atone bas a name, Rachel."
"" The name's Air. Redwood.''
"" Ab, air. Louis Redwood, the bosom
' friend of Mr. Haldane."
"" That's what he appears to be, and it
makes the stone all the bigger and harder.
They're as thick oe—" She did not put the
last word to the common saying, not liking
to apply it to Miss Iloldane'sfather, though
1 doubt whether she would have had the
seine scruple with respect to ft r. Redwood.
"'Rachel," I said. "" 1 think it is a good
thing we are having this conversation ; no
harm can come of it, and some good might.
Doyon mean to tell me that Mr. Redwood
wants to marry your mistress ?"
"" He has proposed to icer," said Rachel.
"And she has refused hint?"
""Yes."
"" How does he take her refusal?"
""Laughs at it, won't accept it seriously,
says she cannot know her own mind, and
that he will go on loving and loving her."
"" What does her father say ?"
"" Ile backs Mr. Reriwood up. Of course
you know, Mr. Millington, my young lady
doesn't tell me everything that passes be-
tween her father and her!'
"" I should think, my dear, she tells you
very little ; but you've got a head on your
shoulders."
".
I have to nets the best part. He talks
g
to her in his study, with nobody else by,
and when she comes out I see by her eyes
that she's been crying. Air. Millington, the
a sawM Redwood
other d y T r. 1 w o the
bridge over the lake to Chuclleigh Woods,
and said Ito myself, " If he'd only fall in,
and be drowned !' I did ; I can be very
rr
,
,
wicked when I m thoroughly worked u
e Y
p-
I thought of the scene on the bridge with
Honoria and ofherintervietvwithMr. Zonis
Redwood, at which I had been present, an
unseen witness.
"" I'll not admit that, my dear," I said.
"" Instead of " wicked ' ' staunch and
loyal., ,,
"" Thank you, Mr. Millington, The
trouble is, to be staunch and loyal when
you're being pulled two opposite ways at
once. I did wish that Mr. Redwood would
tumble into the lake, I did indeed. It's
that deep, andthat tantzled'withlily roots,
that it wouldn't have been easy for. him to
get out."
"" 'Mir. Haldaue and he being so thick to-
gether, it's likely that they often meet in
London."
" From what my young lady lets 'fall I
should say they do. What do'you think
I've heard whispered about,Mr Millington
p
--not from any young lady, but other
people?".
" Tell mo, Rachel."
f "" That Mr. Redwood is almost as much
. master here as Mr. Haldane himself. Mr.
. Redwoodis,enormousiyrich ;,. they say he's
t got millions and millions. When he was
or quite a child, the story goes, a very, very
large fortune was left to him, and he wasn't
a
0
" It is. The whisper that's about, that
e he's almost as much master here as Mr.
Haldane, is. caused, I should say --supposing
there be any foundation for it—lay Mr.
to have it till twenty-one years of age. All
the time he was growing up the fortune
kept growing up, so that in the end it
became something wonderful. I've heard
that he could spend a thousand pounds a
week, and not feel it. It's a pity his money
didn't fall to a Better man."
"Before her farther went to London this
lust time he and my lady were together in.
his study a good hour. A bad hoar I ought
to call it, because all that day site never
openedher lips to me. That didn't prevent
me lamming what heal born talking to her
about; and when Mr. Redwood, who went
to London with Mr. Haldane, said good-
bye to my young lady, with his false voice
and cold eyes, that can be es cold and
cruel as voice andeyes can be, I'd have lik-
ed to poison him. That's the reason of her
being unhappy. Every morning there
conies from London baskets of the loveliest
flowers that Mr. Redwood sends to bore
They must cost a mint of money; but
what's the use of 'cm to a lady who doesn't
love him, and who's got more flowers grow-
ing here all around her than she knows what
to do with? She hardly looks at his hate-
fulps s a ents and when I take and put them
r
out of sight• she never as much as aks what
I've clone with them. Ido you call that cove,
on his side or hers ? Re only sends the
flowers to show that he's got a power over
her through her father, and I hate him, and
hate him, and hate him !"
She stamped leer foot, and I could not but
admire her for her loyalty, though it stood
in the way of her own happiness.
" If Gearge saw Inc Iike this," she said,
presently, with a little uncomfortable
laugh, " he'd think I've got a wive temper
of my own. I can't help it, Right's right,
and wrong's wrong."
I turned the subject by saying, " It's a
pity Miss Haldane hasn't a mother living
whose influence, usedonher daughter's side,
would be likely to turn the scale in her
favour."
"• It is apity," assented Rachel.
"Does Miss Haldane ever speak
mother 2" I asked.
Never."
" Is there a portrait of the lady
Hall 2"
"If there is," said Rachel, " I've not
seen it."
"How long have you been in Miss Hal-
dane's service?"
" Nine years."
"That long
was after Mrs. Haldane's
"
death . ,
t" It must have been. I've never heard
her spoken of by anybody.
It was clear that Rachel could give me no
satisfactory information upon an important
branch of the tangled story. Recognizing
this, I began to speak of other things, and
was pleased to see the vexed and anxious
look fade out of her eyes before I left her
for the night. The landlord of the Brindled
Cow kept out of my way on my return, or
rather, was kept out of any way by his care-
ful wife, who must have had some suspiciou
that he had been too free with his tongue.
Smoking nay pipe 'strolled along the quiet,
narrow street of the village, reflecting upon
the position of affairs. I had gained an in-
sight intocertain matters which had an
important bearing upon the story of love
and intrigue, but the longer I thought of it.
the more satisfied was I that.[ was wise in
u p myshare in it. 'Only one
throwi•ng con-
.. woud have induced me to !act
otherwise, and that was that 1 might be
able to serve George in his courtship of
pretty Rachel Diprose. But I did not see
my way 10 this, and it was with an unquiet
mind I sought my pillow, and strove to
believe that things would come right in the
end with him and Rachel andaliss Haldane.
(To as OONTINDirD)
at her
in the
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PINE AND .El.LMLOCK LUMBER.
SHINGLES A SPECIALTY
00,000 XX and XX X Plae and Cedar Shingles now in
stook. A call solicited and satisfaction guaranteed.
JA.a5 771.141TO,
o ®MPA
C�3LI:I BROS. 8c
Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in the following
specialties
Cylmeler
Zed. ES .gine
TRY
OUR L '• p.1D . -wry E MACHINE OIL
ANL/ YOU WILT, USE NO OTHER.
For Sale By B1SSETT BROS, Exeter, }nit.
IL.it Crafting
Murata,
Is need both Internally and orternalij.
it apt# gain:I.gf, isTessin;Lazne st los tntt
relief, frost the eareeest pain.
DIRECTLY TO THE SPOT.
.,. TA tTA B0UIS I 115 AOTI0 L
For CRAMPS, CHILLS, COLIC,
DIARRIEICEA, DYSENTERY°
CHOLERA MORBUS,,
and all BOW1 IS COIiIPLAIPITS,
NO REM SPY $:QUAL$
THE PAIN -KILLER.
In Canadian Cholera incl Bowel
Complaints lts effect les inagloal.
It cures In aver' short "true.
THr, BEST FAMILY RnMSOY FOR
BURNS, BRUISES, SPRAINS,
RHEUMATISM,
NEURALGIA and TOOTHACHE.
$Oi.O EVeRYWH tZ AT .25O. A 14O171.40
re of Co;uttcrfcite end Ireitatioas,
nufnctured only at Tnoatn HotwwnY's Esxan>wISflMZl r,
78, 3vNUN OXF'OR ST11i1tiT, LOzTI)ON.
4O
.ttA �1w
oa 164 00 *04
at at'
�y4 SACC
0?fit' « 4
'�°0 S`td4 4ogw°i Co�Q� w
051
pia,;,°
4
cia
a�ti�41"e,°tib
e. „saa tot "4o -a @y ON
,i
0y") ae dear' ,�ti•„ � 0>
t.
4s err .
,ie eat oo ', Oe" tW��
eV'1 .at" o� yo - o 4� °
Sc t•Q' awe,
tis �o- e. ata t:3 G1t oc5,,0 c 9 c
E°t
•n*
1Q r'tea dot >
ter Purcbasers 'Mould look to the Label on the Boxes and Pots.
If the address as not 658, Oxford Street, Louden, they are spurious.
DO YOU KEEP IT iN THE HOUSE?
ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM.
NO BETTER REMEDY FOR
COUGHS, COLDS, CROUP, CONSUMPTION, &C:
a®�
.K ,yw..t �Y...Y.t..s,. ..Y! i1• S.G•-�7,' ✓.7"."
. bra � wM'M +'R.T`.-.:
'. "24i."+?r7 V.,.9- 'J'.:-` *.1 �' N+J4 W Z:fi. -�TS'ei4 1 M - . a,^ .
r :.•.. ,'t' . , A ;fit I IN NO A -I�E;YE CZ Pi.';u.UTS.:'ySAICIi. Yermaaent�pat a K�
.> �Ltions guaranteed. Salary and Expeneea trntd. Peea-
liar adv:-.utares to beginners. Stock complete. With fest-selling epeelaities.
isecastsaT FRtEE. We guarantee'nnw,t ws advertise. Write Js OWPd
loma'"Te3ERie, Nurserymen. Toiaiinto, Ont, (This louse is reliable.)
Rather Ambiguous.
" This little dog of mine is the cunning.
est thing,'' said Ethel to her beau ; " why
do you knew, he actually tries to sing."
He does?"
" Yes ; every time I play the piano be
howls."
"He is a mulling dog, I feel just the
Haldane borrowing money of him." stoop way witezt you play.
„
Last Words of Great Men.
A great man died last week who furnished
another illustration of the fact that the
dominant ideain life is the one that is most
potent on the eve of death.
The last thoughts of Charles Stewart
e �art
Parnell were of Ireland, and his last words
were: "Give my love to colleagues and
the people of Ireland." So Lord Nelson,
dying more gloriously in the hour of victory,
murmured with his last breath: "Tell Col-
-
Lingwood to bring the fleet to anchor.
And so Napoleon, having fretted his life out
at St. Helena, passed away after ejaculating:
" Tete d'arrnee 1"
Parnell's parting benediction recalls the
last words of Sir Walter Scott: " God bless
you all !" Fortunate for him and for Ire-
land had he been able to leave the world
like Washington with the brief sentence,
" It is well." But doubtless " they breathe
truth that breathe their words in path, and
the parting salutation of Ireland's uncrown-
ed king will be remembered when his errors
and follies are forgotten.
It was the courtly Chesterfield who,
when he lay dying, said, as a friend enter-
ed his chamber, "Give Dayroles a chair,"
and it was Pope who assured an inquirer
with almost his last breath, " I am dying,
sir, of a hundred good symptoms." But to
the leaders of menthe solemnity of the
occasion has been usually present, and they
"lie in the spirit of the last adinonition of
Grotius : "Be serious." . The exultant
whisper, with which the deaf Beethoven
passed away, "I shall hear in heaven,"
wilt never cease to vibrate, any more .than
ibe last request of Goethe, " More light 1
more light 1"
Excusable,
Young Mother—a horrors 1 Here's au
account in the paper of a woman who sold
her baby for teal cents.
Young Father (wearily)--" Perhaps it
was teething." ,,
•
S
ups
oct
BY USING
Dr. Mors®'s Indian Rapt Pi s
THEY are the Remedy that the
bounteous hand of nature has
provided for ail diseases arising from
IMPURE
for BM-
'aSliOrse OENESS, nA1 lilE'
arrtrltcrL>,sTa
ore LEVIER
teat
COMPLAINT, 959f3]PCP•
1• SLS, Lac.,, Etc.
P1�1S FOB SALE BY ALL MUM
W. N. MISTOOK,
fROCKvace, ONT.
Every good man builds his own monu-
ments.
MONNISTOWN, N.Y..
The man who is a man never 'quits work
and goes to whittling because somebe de tells
biin the sun has spotson it.
The devil don't care how much religion
If the world, as it is said, owes everybody people get if they wait until they gee away
a living, the worldbts. o get a mortgage from home to practice it
on itself to pay its debts.
r -