HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1894-9-27, Page 3mit
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•
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LEGAL.
H.DICKSON,Barrister, Soli.
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Peblie, Jouveye nor, Ooramtasioner, lee
Money.so Loan:
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il. ' . '
Barri, ster SolicitorI Conveyancer, Bto.
. •
EXETER, - OBT.
OFFICE: Over O'Neil's Bank.
PLLIOT & ELLIOT,
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OFFICE, - MAIN - STREET, EXETER.
/i e. v. stream puermatcne IS0D10T.
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• MEDICAL
.-r W. BROWNING M. D., M.. 0 '
•
CY s P. 8 , Graduate Victoria, 'Univers tY:
eftlee aud residence, Goralnion Lebo 'a
tory .1lito ter .
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Dit. RYNDMIN, coroner for tae
County ot Huron. Ofdes, oppesite
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DRS. ROLLINS & AMOS.
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Separate Offices. Residence same as former.
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J. A. ROLLINS, AL D.. T. A. 4UMO-3, AL D
Exeter, Ont
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M TeTG-1 IN.TM MR-
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Awmtextlenlittni
WOMAN'S STORY,
• CHAPTER L-(CesTarteets)
They looked One way and that,and talk
ed, and pointed out boundaries and dis
tutees. Those dear old cheetnuts in the
hedge -row must came down ; the river ter
race must be continued alopg there ; th
meitelow would have te be leveled into a• u
upper and. lower lawn ; and there must b
tone balustrades and flights of steps.
" I'm afraid it will cost a fortune," said
he.
"We can afford to do it, dear, now we
slave given up the house in Clhester Street.'
They heel discovered two or three yeare
'Wore that a London house wee a useless
expense -an incubus, even, since it obliged
them to live in town when they would
rather be in the country. They both in-
finitely preferred life in Berkshire to life
in Belgravia,eo on the expiration of the firs
term of the lease they gave up the house,
and sold the bulk of furniture to the
incoming tenant. And now they could
spend so mach of their time we they liked
in the house by the river, and. could
winter in ltely or Switzerland without
any scruples of conscience. When they
wanted to reside in London there •were
hotels ready to receire them; and, on the
• other hand, they could enjoy many metro-
politen pleasures while resident at River
Lewis, sloe the journey to the West End
took very little more than an hour.
The child had stuck to her book with
dogged determination while her mother and
father were in-doors;but the sight ofthein
standing on the lawn was too muoh for her.
Their animated gestures filled her • with
curiosity. What were they pointing out
to each other? What could they be talk-
ing about?
Her tutor laid his long, white fingera
upon her shoulder with the slow, caressing
touch she knew so well,
"Where are your thoughts flying, Daisy?"
he said, gently. "We •sha'n't manage our,
two tenses if you don't attend better."
"I'm rather tired," said the little girl,
"and.I want to go to mother."
" Let it be one tense, then, only one ;
but it must be quite peidect. Shut your
book, and tell ine the French for "
" Je suis "replied Daisy, watohing those
figures on the le.wn-her mother in a gown
of oream-white woolen stuff, with an orange -
colored handkerehief knotted loosely round
her neck.
The tutor -tutor for love, not gain -
never looked up. Dreamy at the beat of
times, he was in an unusually meditative
mood this morning. He seemed to be giving
a small portion of his brainspower to the
child, while all the resb was lost in a laby-
rinth of thought.
The present tense, indicative mood,of the
verb "etre" was repeated without a hitch.
"Good," said Arnbrose Arden; "we will
have the imperfect tense to -morrow. And
now you may run in the garden for half
an hombefore we read our English history.
Perhaps yoa would like to read outeof-
doors.
"Very much, if you please, Uncle Am-
brose."
She put her arms around, his neck, and
laid her soft cheek against his silky hair.
He had pale auburn hair, which he wore
rather long ; his skin was as fair as a
weman's., Hair and complexion, and the
clear, bright blue of the large,dreamy eyes
gave something of effeminacy to his appear-
ance;bat his features were large and boldly
cut, a longish nose inclining to aquiline, a
strong chin, and wide, resolute mouth. He
was tall and broad -shouldered, but had the
stoop of a bookish man, whose life was for
the most part sedentary. All his moire -
manta were slqw and deliberate, and his full
deep voice had slow and deliberate mode,-
lations- a legato movement that answered
to the gliding movements of his figure.
Daisy flew out to the lawn like an arrow
from a bow. She had her mother's hazel
eyes and her fnother's vivacity, slim,
straight, and swift as Atalfinta, with dark -
brown hair flying in the wind. Ambrose
Arden rose slowly and sauntered after' her.
"May I inquire the cause of all •this ex-
citement?" he asked, ea he approached hus-
band and wife.
"Didn't you hear just now you man of
Me?" Robest Hatrell exelaimed, laughingly
"Can it be that mundane things have no
interest for you, that you have only ears
and mind for the abstract?"
"I heard something aboht Florestan's
ZI EXETER TIMES
son hooks indiaated that the spot was
, Daisy's °boson resort. Here in fine weathe
er she carried on Ito education under the
• affectionate guidance Of her father'e friend
and neighbor, Aeribrose Arden.
O When they bought their cottage at Lam -
ford Mr. and Afro Hatrell found Mr Ard-
, • • M.
en established in a small square brick
house 01.1 the opposite Side of the roads on0.
of those ugly, useful houses which people
need to build seventy or eighty years age
amidst loveliest scenery, houses winch imply
? that at a certain period of English history
the aense of beauty was dead in the English
mind. Idolises as, square and as unbouti-
ful are built by the dozeus nowadays on the
outskirts of French provinciel towns, and
seem the natural outcome of the small
botxrgeoie retired from business, Time and
t the mild, moist atmosphere ot the Thames
Velley had dealt kindly with •this sordid
Initldiugt and had covered it from basement
to roof with. roses, passion -dower, woodbine,
and tumpet-ash. So seethed, and standing
in the midrib of an old-fashioned garden, it
had assumed a certain humble prettiness,
as the eominoneet laborer's cottage will,
when it has time to ripen. It was quite
good enough for Arn broth Arden? the Oxford
scholar, the man who had carried off feeMe
of the chief prizes of a nuiversity career,
but whose name, from a social point of view,
. had been written in water. Even the men
of his year bad scarcely heard of him, or at
most heard of him as a poor creature who
neither rowed nor hunted, nor spoke at the
Union, nor gave wines; a creature who
only sat in his rooms and read.
He came to the square brick house at
Lamford, a widower with one child, a boy
three years old. He had married a Parson's
daughter in a village among the Welsh
hills'and had lived with her in that quiet,
far-off world until their brief married life
ended in sudden darkness. Her son eves
just beginning to run alone when the young
mother, who had given up the pious and
chezitable ways of the vicar's daughter,
took the contagion of a deadly fever by a
sick.bed in a remote homestead hidden •The moon rose at nine &dock that even -
among the hill;, too far for the elderly ing, and Robert Hatrell sauntered into the
vicar to carrywords of hope and consolation, garden after dinner to smoke and rnedi-
Ambrose Arden's wife had taken the duty tate upon the projected improvements.
of visiting these people upon herself. The With • him action was everything,
woman's husband had an evil repute, was and reverie, however pleasant, rarely
known to have ill-used his wife, and she lasted long. To -night the meditative
was dying of some mysterioas disease, mood lasted no longer than a single
alone and friendless. Amy Arden went cigarette. That finished, he opened
daily to visit her, Ambrose walking with a little gate in the kitchen garden and
her, and while his wife read or talked strolled across the road. .Another little
to the sick woman, he sat on a little rustic gate admitted him into his neighbor's
bridge that spanned a trout stream hard by, garden, and he went straight to the open
reading the book he always carried in the window of the roomy parlor which Ambrose
pocket of his shooting -coat. Never had had converted into a study, by the simple
Ambrose Arden been known to leave his process of lining it from floor to ceiling
,house unsupplied with intellectual food of with books. An old knee.hole desk occupied
some kind. • the centre of the floor, and three chairs and
Whether the dying woman's malady an oldfe.shioned sofa completed the sum of
was centagions, or whether the house itself the furniture, It looked a snug and con -
reeked with drain -poison, the dootors never genial zoom for a student, shabby as it was,
decided. All Ambrose knew was that his in the light of the shaded lamp by which
young wife fell a victim to her own large- Ambroo sat reading, unconscious that any
hearted charity. From her ch ildh ood she had one WM looking in at him.
ministered to her father's flock, and she "Shut your dusty tome, old book -worm,
was stricken with death in the path of and come for a stroll in the moonlight,"
duty. said Hatrell. Whereupon the student rose
Mr. Arden left the mustiotiottage in the and obeyed him without a word.like a man
Radnorshire village, in which he had lived of weaker will obeying one of stronger
for three years in comfort And refinement will.
upon a very small income, which he had A cigarette was efferedeind taken, and
inherited froni his mother. He was an then the two men walked along the road in
only child, the last, as he supposed, of a silence, broken only by a common-plaee re•
race that had slowly exhausted itself' a mark or two about the weather and the
race of gentlefolks who had neither toiled night, until Robert Hathell said, abrupt -
nor spins, and who had don e very little to die-
tinguish themselves in the busy places of "Are you sure it was the same man?"
this world. They were a Cheshire family, "The man you described to me? Assured.
and they have lived on their own land ly it was. What, other should know your
and had seen their importance and their story?"
means gradually decaying, from generation "No perhaps not. I doubt if the is
to generation, without being rnoyed to any any one else who -would know." re
strong, stand-up fight against adverse for- "The whole matter is easy enough w
tune. Some of them had been soldiers, and understand. This man is one of manYs
some of them had been students not mdse. all on the verge of starvation, refugees of
tinguished in the records• of the University;the Commune, who have been dragging
but the active temper which can redeem out a miserable existence in London since
the fortunes of a race had been unknown in last May -nearly a year. I, who Dan a Re.
the house of .Arden. • publican and a Nihilist in • theory, have
Ambrose fled from Itadnorehire with a sympathies with thesemen who have tried
great horror of the soil on which he left the to reduce theory to practice. So I whip.
grave of his dead wife. He had been very ped up a few pounds, your fiver atnong
fond of her, not with a passionate or others, and took the money to a public -
romantic attachment, but with a mild and house in Greek Street where my friends
in somewise fatherly affecbion, appreciat- assemble of an evening, and distributed it
ing the sweetness of a most perfect among them in accordance with their
character. She had never been more necessities. While telling these poor
wretches the source of the money, I hap-
pened to mention your name'and the man
followed me into the street afterward and
questioned me aboub you. I naturally re-
fused toanswer questions which I consider-
ed impertinent, and then he told me his
story."
"And of course made the worst of it?"
"He told it in a vindictive spirit."
"And you think, perhaps, that I ought
to have elated differently -that Claude
Morel, the chemist's assistant, ought at this
moment to be,my brother-in-law?"
"My dear Hoare'', a man's relations
with women are jot the ono part of his
life which no other man has the right to
question, and in which counsel and
opinion are worse than useless."• Edgar at Inspiration Point while she went
"That's zre answer," exclaimed Hatrell, after a carriage. When Mrs. Morse was
impatiently. "Why don't you say at once returning with the carriage Miss Edgar saw
thatI ought to have married a milliner's her and started to meet her. A northbound
apprentice and had that man for my bro- electric car was rapidly approaching and
ther-in-law ?" • seeing the danger she was in when she had
'Ho would not have been a very agree- nearly reached the tracks Mrs. Morse,
able onnection, I admit, in poet*, al- beckoned her to go back, while the motor.
though in theory all men, are equal, There man signalled and endeavored to attract
are plenty of men of as low a grade socially her attention without avail. She was deaf,
whom I would accept as my friend and the oar could not be stopped, and it knocked
equal to.morrow-but not Claude Morel. her down, the wheels passing over her head
The fellow bears the brand of Cain ;von and crushing the skull in li horrible Manner.
his forehead. It was men of his starop Death was instantaneous. Coroner McGarry
who made the Commune what it was. He took the statement of Mrs. Morse, who
was one of tiller speakers, the intellectual asserted that she did not believe any ohe
element, the force that set other men's was to blame except the dead woman her -
brains on fire. I was sorry to see great self. ,
hulking, honest fellows under his iefluence.
I could read the history of the last year's
riot and murder in that little room in Soho,
"Yet you think lie ought to
A very dangernes man, your OlahuadvMe obreele.n"
my brother.itelaw," said Hearelle slashing.
at the flowery bank with his stick harping
irritebly on the question. •
no memory- of having ever mot there. They running., I have to thank his violence,
had some theses •common, although 04e not my prudence, for my escape, and for
wee all energy, the other all repose. Mrs, my sweet Regileh wife. I shudder to
lletrell was a voracious reader, and looked think of the difference such a marriage as
to Ma, Arden for counsel and help in the that would have made in Toy life.''
choice of booke. 'By the new lights afforded "Th zt depends upon tho eteeugth ef your
by his wide knowledge of tho best authers, love," said Arden. "I on enagtne a Da011
she fooni moan a pleasant short out to a loving sto deeply and trely as never to re,
higher level of thought and culture than gret fleeing married beneath bine"
govereess or professors had revealed to her. "No, Ardemreperaenoe nruat come. It
She grew to depend upon lam for intellect- is the atter-taste of passion; and a gentle -
nal guidahoe; and it was with •delight she nuen'a love for a ,peasant girl eau b only
aecepted his offer to edueate her only child passion at best,'
after his own plan. " That depends upon the gentleman."
"It seerne almost, absurd to see you " Ab, you are in your provoking mood
we.atiag your time upon that child," she tomight, I see. Did this fellow tell you
said,feeling some compunation at the begin- *hat has become of his sieter-whether
"ling of thinga. she is dead or living ?"
"I have plenty of Vane to waste, and "No, he went fate no perticalars,nor did
Daisy's educatiou will serve as an arrow- I encourage him by stoking emotions,. He
went and relaxation for me. Now that talked of broken promises, broken hearts,
Cyril is et Winchester, I have no young a blighted life, pride, and etheity-talked
thing to lighten my life except Daisy.' as you may suppose a Communisr, nurtmr-
"But to see you tom:Ming a child of seven ediipon Le Pere Duchone, would talk of
seems rather like settinme. Nasmyth barn- an English geneleman who had in his idea,
mer to crack a nat." • compromised and dissappointed his sister.
"Oree of the boasted merits of the Nasmyth lout him short as I possible could, only
hammer is thab it cart cook a not.. .Let considered it my duty to kb you know
me think that I have not lost) the lightness that the man es in London, and that he
and delicacy of mind which on underatand threatens to hunt you mu and , revenge
the workings of a child's brain." his sister's wrongs -her suppood wrongs,
• The mother submitted, and was grateful; wewill say -in some way or other."
and it gradually became a familiar thing to "That means lying in wait for me
see Ambrose Arden, the grave student of at the corner of a London street to shoot
seven -and -thirty, whose magnum opus was me, or to throw vitriol in my face, I sup.
bo make a revolution • in the history of pose," said Hatrell, with a scornfullteugh,
philosophy, bending over the brown -eyed " I must take my chauee of the bullet or
child, and teaching her history upon his the vitriol." -
own plan,which was to begin in the valley "It may be only an empty threat; but I
of Euphrates, and travel gradually down- own I don't like the man's physiognomy
ward through the ages, from the dim or his history, and I recommend you to be
fairy -land of the East to the finished civil- on your guard. It might be wise to try
ization of modern Europe. He hada genius and get him out of the country. I dare
for simplificabion, and contrived to make say he would emigrate to one of the colon -
the broad outlines of ancient history clear ieseif emigration were made profitable to
and interesting even to that infant mind. him." '
He had traveled over all the same ground "Arden, do you think I em Bitch a pelt -
with his boy, Cyril, who was now dieting- roort as to buy my life from a foreign bully?
Melling himself at VVinchester, whenoe he He threatened me in Paris, and I turned
came nearly every saint's day to see his him out of my room neek and crop. He
father. wanted to frighten me inte a marriage with
his sister bypretending to believe that I was
CHAPTER 11. her eeducer. But that was not the worst.
When I told Min that marriage was impos-
sible, he insinuated that there might be
other arraagements. A wealthy English-
man in love with a girl of inferior stabion
might make such a settlement as would
insure the cornforb and respectability of
her future life, without the legal tie. In
a word the man was, and is, a scoundreL
He knew that I was reds, and he wanted
to make a market out of me. Don'b you
know thee °Ilan tage is a profession in Paris;
O profession to whioh a lazy scoundrel looks
as the one royal road to competence? And
he found that I Wee not a singing bird.
Whatever debt lowed to my little Toinette,
it was not one that he could force me to
pay. And do you suppose that now, four-
teen years after, I would award his bluster
with the concession of so much as a six-
pence ? If you do think so poorly of me,
Arden, you must be a very bad judge of
human nature.
(To DE OUNTINVED.)
CONFIDENCES.
and."
"Precisely. Had you been more. keenly
interested in the welfare of your friends,
you might have heard that I have now the
°Mince of buying the additional ground my
poor Clara has been pining for ever since
we made our garden." •
"I am very glad," said Arden quietly.
"You don't look a bit glad," said Clara.
"1 am one of those cold-blooded people
whose faces do not express what they feel.
I am heartily glad, all the same-siuee you
and Hatrell are glad."
" Oh, it is Clara's business. This place
is Clare's creation. She can do what she
likes with it," said Hatrell. "I'll have
Cruden over this afternoon to plan the new
garden."
" But, my dear Rob, is it worth while s
to begin our plans before we are even sure
f the ground?" remonstrated common sense g
n the person of his wife.
" St e are quite sure. itis only a trues- 15
on of a hundred or two, more or less. m
Plorestan wants money, and he can spare h
he land; we want the land, and we can
pare the money. There Is alloys so much t
ime lost in beginning anything. send i
or Cruden at once." 0
"Yes, and you and Mr. Cruden will have
Tanned every detail before I can make a in
mingle suggestion," said Clara. " know 0
our impetuosity of old." ' r
"My love, the new garden was your w
ea, and ,you shall carry it oub in your h
wn way,' replied her busbaed ; "but we 0
ay as well see Cruden's plan. He is 00 p
est; mau in this part of the country for a la
b of that kind. ttre will do nothing swabs th
tit your approval." • g
Clara gave a little impatient sigh. She di
new so well for how little her approval 'el
old count when once the landscape m
ardener and his men were set at work ; os.
ow little pause or leisure there would be sh
r thoght or taste, and how the whole ell
minus would. be hurried along by her an
asband's impatient temper till all was fix. A
and completed -for good or ill. And w
e know that the loveliest goados she had 01
to hini thari a dear and tenderly loved
friend; and his affection at the beginning
of their married life had been as placid,
temperate, and serious as the love of gray-
haired Darby for gray-haired Joan after
their golden wedding. It did not seem
within the capaeities of the student's
nature to care passionately for amything
outside the world of thought.
He went to Loudon and lived in a lode.,
ing near the British Museum for about half
O year, while his infant son Was cared for
by a little stay -maker at Roehampton,
who had about half a rood of garden ground
behind her cottage. The boy thrived web
enough in this humble home, and Ambrose
used to walk to Roehamption every Sun-
day to look at him. All his week days he
pent in th' reading -room of the museum.
One day he discovered that his hey had
rown very fond of him. He cried end
lung to his father at parting; and then ib
rat entered into his father's rnind that he
ight make a home for his GOD* and for
is books, which had accumulated rapidly
ince he had lived in London, the tempta-
iona of the secencl-hand book -shops being
rresistible to a man for whom the world
f books was almost the only world.
The valley of the Thames was fairer and
ore familiar to the Oxonian than any
ther part of England. lt was also within
each of the great reading -room ; so 11
0,F1 on the banks of the Thames that Am.
rose Arden looked for a home. He found a
atoms and a good old garden for thirty
oundsayear,and,as his prowlingsaboutthe
mplit streets within a. one -mile radius of
museum had made him familiar with a
refit maey brokers' shops, he had no
ificulty in getting together the few sixti-
es of furniture necessary for the establish-
ent of a 'widower with an. infant, son. A
rpenter from Elenley put up pitch.pine "No, no, DO 1 eilice you were not so far
elves for the student's egistinco library, entangled with the SiSfOr as
d providing space for fature 1.3urehases, But I was entangled. I loved her, man.
d with his books and his on, Ambrose Yes, I was over heed ape' oars in love with
rdeo settled down to that dreary life that milliner's apprentice. and had
hich he had /towhees leading for between more than half a mind to fling prudence
even and twelve years, to the wind and marry her. She was very
The Hatrells made their neighbors a.c- young, very confiding, and altogether it-
aintanec casually one summer evening on nocenti. Yes, te grisetto in Paris, and inne-
e river, whore the ritudent wise sitting cent. Get]. knOws how Tong that would
th his boy in a punt moored to the Ittet, She had left her native village less
biAlik, the father 4124000 a
ok, the boy Aelaingt" and where Robert
atrell was sculling his wife slowly toward prentieed her to a milliner in the Rue
e sunset,in his eapaeieus skiff,tho strong, lietive des Petits Champs. Wo inet, by
ythinical woke bearing witness to the purest acoident in a street crowd, she
ie when he was ono of the best oars in hustled and frightened in the inob.
e University eight, The eesual nequaiat- happened to protect hen I walked home
00 80611 ripened into en easy and familiar with her, Swan ao f' -beyond the 13astille
tercourse, and with tho passing years -and so began an itequaintance which
timacy beetiene frienclehip. The two mon might have ended -Geri thoWe hoW-if
n been at Oifferd togetherialbeit they heal that young MEW had not to tore° the
CONSUMED AT SEA.
stattitiei Tenoning- ate larders of the
'North German Lloyd. tine. '
The Allgemeine Flepher Zeitung states
the following ebout b e provisions used by
the steamers of the, North German Lioya,
10 1893 :-Three million nine hundred and
ninety-four thousand four hundred and
forty-two pounds of meat, 658 live oxen,
97 live calves, 193 live hogs, and 508
sheep ; 164,498 pounds fish ; 142,045 chick-
ens, ducks, and other poultry ; 251,441
tins and bottles of conserves ; vegetables to
the value of 86,218 marks : 366,051 pounds
of beans, peas, etc., 904,060 pounds of rice,
2,73,700 pounds of flour, 1,187,052 pounds
of breadand zwieback, 188,146 pounds of
roasted coffee,296,610 pounds of sugar,225
738 tins and bottles of milk, 10,008,57'0
pounds of potatoes, 438,137 pounds of but-
ter, 1,583,210 eggs, 140,354 pounds of dried
fruit, 119,870 pounds af cheese, 13,408,753
pounds of ice, 30,26], bottles champagne,
8,619 bottles of sherry, madeira and port,
115,680 bottles of claret, 70,97e' bottles of
Rhine and Moselle wines, 19,123 bottles of
cognac, 36,419 bottles of rum and gensver,
177,368 bottles of mineral water, 673,870
bottles of beer, and 575,995 litres of beer
on draught.
KILLED BY A PALLS TROLLEY.
A New Jersey Womaneteets Instant Death
Opposite the Clifton House. •
A despatch from Niagara Feels, Ont. ,says:
-Miss Elizabeth Edgar, of Plainfield, New
Jersey was run over and instantly killed by
an electric car on the Niagara Falls Park
and Rivet Railway near the Clifton House,
Saturday afternoon., Miss Edgar was the
guest of her cousin, Mrs. Charles M., Morse,
of Buffalo, and they came down to the Falls
to see the sights. Mrs. Morse. left Mies
en had been the slow and gradual growth
care and thoughb. get
Mt. Crudon however wan &prince arnong th
nurserymen. trd had taste and knowledge wiflowy
and many acres of nursery gropna) and, if wi in
14,1 wore Mit ellewed time, all wouia ne bo
doubt be well, B
Ambrose Arden strolled down to his th
favorite Sala under a weeping. willow, which rh
overhung the river arid ITSUIS f011t Of tin
tender green above a rustic bench and table. di
Thera Were cuithione seattered on the an
ground under the tree mint there Was a doll in
sitting with its setwditet back propped up ill
against the trunk. These attd verrous less ha
GREAT INFLUX OF PRISONERS.
De mere Conelets In Central Plestni Than
, 'Usual at Thie Tima
No fewer than 391 convicts are at the
present time it, the Central Prison, Toron-
to, repenting their past misdeeds, while
they board at the expense of the inoffensive
public. This number represehts an increase
of over NO as compared with September
lot year, and is fully up to the Winter
Season averege.
The increase is hi ell probability due to
the fob that instead of sending weary
wanderers to jail for short terms, ea in
former yeare, the magietrathe in the various
them a year befen I met her; and traveled I counties arse Sentenoing them to tents in
to Paris to fled her brother, who had nes- the Central prison,
An Easy One.,
First Tramp.-" net house 18 elesed tip,
Wonder if its vacant."
Second Tramp-" Thai; easy, It the
key is under the doormat, the folks is off
for tho day ; if it isn't they've gone for
good."
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria;
e
""' -Meet eedelle ' eneee. zee ssena s
for Infants and Children.
nonstoriaissowell adaptodto children that
recommend !tree superior to emypreecription
Imown to Inc." IL A. Ancmat, M. D.,
111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N.Y.
"The use of 'Oastarla' is so unirersal and
ite merits so well known that it seeree a work
of supererogation to endorse it, Few arethe
intelltgent families who do not keep Casten°,
within easyreach."
C.S.s.LoS D.D.,
New York City.
Late Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed Church
r.,..sze-geesevessiesstser-e-e
Crestorin mime Colic, Constipetfon,
Sour etomach, Diarrheea,ErnetatiOn,
Mils Worms, gives sleep, end promotest dl
gestion,
Without insurious medication.
"For several years 1 have recommended
your • Dastoria,, ants than awaya eontiseue to
do so ee it hes Luvanably produced boueftcial
results,"
EDWIN iv. VArmar,g. D„
"The Winthrop," leeth Street artd
New 'ark City.
Tux Osnmazza Conway, 77 litTRIttlir SZREET, NEW YORE,
s ee- ; srness Snsenee..15•31 ''•
• . sate ' • see e"
PERR D
51W"."'IGZL4raiiii* t riU r
AND BOWEL COMPLAINTS
DIAN
itYis'aPiaL
DO YOU it!..E.!....i.:111_11! THE HOldPirs F•=• E FECT IS MAGICAL.
thus
need a powerful nourishment in food when nursing
babies or they are apt to suffer from Emaciation.
Sc tt's Emulsion
of Cod-liver Oil, with hypophosphites of lime and
soda, nourishes mothers speedily back to health and
makes their babies fat and chubby. Physicians, the
world over, endorse it.
Babies
• are never healthy wheni thin. They ought to be fat.
Babies cry for SCOTT'S EIATJLSION. It is palatable
Ind easy to'assimilate.
Prepared by Scott & Bowne, Belleville. AB Druggists, 50 cents and V.
...._.,„_..„_.,,....,,,.,,,,.......,,,,,,............,,,.„5,,,......,.....,.....„...„.....,
WEAEy ,., 1,7° C.:',.‘ -i..# '
V. • fi't4 r c q ,
, ,
EA s .p.%
. 641:11a
r ki
1.1 9 a eZ •,-.1 1 ' Izt.
Thousands o,7 :Ilene e.....eie...:..el _;.}-7.?2 ,an aro annually swept to at promatnre_grave
through early irdiecr. 'e'en • e ...&, t. .*...i'S.k ,. iv Self abuse ann. Conetitational 13lood
Diss,ases Iveve i.,.1,ed ;tee -.,Arefeete; t . 'et., te" many e.promfaing young man. . Have- yen
any of the folleerle ...:. Seel p alai 4: ..: '..a. :.::-. ; nue Despoedeet; Tired in ra :Loraine; 1.LO Arabi-
tionn Memory leeete .lete,. 1... 7.* t...:,...,,.$.1t .i-A:Atitabie anti- Irritable: Eyes .Blur; Pimples Mt
the Friee,e Dreame :zed ene.' as. ,e, Steele; AieFtlees; Reggard. Looking; Blotches; Sore
Throat; Hair levee; Pre -, ,... . 1,1a t; orraken. !Deese.- Ltfeless; Distruattal szrd Lack of
.1kter.ey and Sterteg5a. te i.e. al,..e.4:bwili: :treatment will build you, up mentally,'physically
and 'sexually. .
Chas, Patterson. Read n r..,1 0Fir ti 1 .,E-. Dv ..p., wcqn,um Have
,,,, .. f'..44.:,'' v INI3a1 L• kiaz...;2 ut...t 1 L. IN Ct. ftir.likUPilli Done.
r ...i
N.
"At 11 years of ego 1 Ranted P. bad habit which elraost ruined
rem 1 bceareo nervous and weak. My back troubled me. I could
e and ne exertion. Read and eyes became dull. Dreams and
dreins at night weakened me. I tried seven Medical Firms, Elec-
tric. lielze, Patent Medicines and Family Doctors. They gave me
no help. A friend edvised ma to try Dm. Kennedy Et. Kergan. They e
A emit rao ore month's treatment audit cured me1 coald feel
snyeeis gainme every day. Their Nets Method Treatment cures when
Carero. tutlotiit
oneo.w.n'eta ce.ss They have cured. many of my frienda."
Dr.
• .11:i11/3 5.111WITtLD
"Some II years ago I contracted a serious constitutional blood
dies:leo. I went to Hot Springs to treat for syphilis. Mercury almost
killed me. After a while the symptoms again appeared. Throat
became sore, pains in Ilmbs, pimples on face, blotches, eyes red,
los of heir, glands extheged, etc. A medical friend advised Drs.
Kennedy tkliergtm's New Method. Treatment. It cared me, and I have
no oemptoms for Ave rears. 1 um married and happv,. A.s a
ge relator, I heartily recomend 30 00 aU who have this terrible dieease-
Cureu 6 yew:, z1.7..fatis." It will eradicate the pOiSOn, from the bleed."
10 Capt. Townsend.
15 'YEARS IN DETROIT. 150,000 CURED.
• N riy life Early indiscretions and later excesses made trouble
411 am sg years ne age, and married. When tyouenyes blelaeadnaeri
e•Mef mess I ler nee.' I bekdncame weat and nervous. My
effected and. I feared.Bright's disease. Married. lin was nasals-
ete „te leetory and my home unhappy. I tried everrhing-all failed tiil.
I tooktreetmett front Dm Kenneth, and IC:wean. Their New
• „ele.e.. Method built me hp mentalle, payeiamily awl sexually. 1 fee),
and net like a man in every respeet. Try them."
,
ea- tio Namcs. Used Without Written .
1.4' e" •
consent of Patient. ti
vtl
,1,11 1 'ft', `45.)
rit failn curing Diocesan of inc/..
Our NeaViethort Trestlm. e
strengthens tho body, Atops au
drains and losses, purities the blood, clears the brain, buil' ds up the nerve.= ansi eexual
systems :rad restores lost vitality to tim body,
We ..vrautOe to Cure Xervotso Toetztlity, Val/Irssr noocilsoal,
$erentei0001, V itricocel te leer tctruers, oteet,Thatamturax nasciaisrmeef
i=t rearto Lula as ti? Kt di isey arid Dlocateloo.
REt,,,FIABER Drs. itennede & term ale the Icediag /specialists of
V1 t'attrakfataTii.le7 egr;rartepa o Et oeuro ot b natoelAa7t. stihiceet.r re°Yot
I ran no risk. Write them for en honeet opinion, no matter who treated yon. It may
save you yea= of regret and suffering. Charges reasons:ale. 'Write, for a
efitestion List and 1rsek Free. Consultation Vrett,
RS. Ktnntori
IMMEMETSF.',Ont :
148 Shelby St.
taf:41 Dateolt.. Mich.
• enesseeire t.eitlerengiE
W . IRALGIA,PLELIRISY,SCIATICA CURED EVERY TliVIE
k Are 11•11EUNIAJISM
D 111. MENTHOL PLASTER ono.
•.,••4-
A Reputation.
Littlirl-se &mese that Mrs. Nexr-
dooroits:reig:Ia.;;'gtdyiIttIWhy
mhr_y do you thilik
sy°01..,:itthtlee his 000k.og eutisabilia.Rs (If oils lel owtsayoi fe1101
Acad of senile (3001 for crackers and angel
cake and. ice eream, the Walt other ledieS
A Near Approach.
. Little 0,1r1. --"Did you ever dream of be.k.
ing in heaven'?"
Little Boy-" No, not ',toddy ; but'
dreamt once that 1 was right in the middle
of a big apple dumpling.' •
'When ono is intoxicated by laugh
outtht he to be ealled Att.tight?
eg gas