HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1900-9-20, Page 6LEGAL.
DICKSON & CARLING,
ristersiSoneitors. Notaries, Oonvoyaneere,
Commiestenet% Etc.
Money to Loan et 41 per cents end 5 Tor cent
()MOB t--FANSON'S BLOCK. OXOTER.
a It. C.SULINfii.„ L. U. DICKSON.
member of ibe erm will be at Ineusati on
'Ihurselay of each wens.
MEDICAL
nroence, M. O. TORONTO Lin
altehist, te C. LTinsitx 1.:Mver
face—Crenitori. One.
W.BROWNAIsaiD. M. C.,
S, dractuate Victorie eiorirsity
ee rad rosidenee. itoolieiou Isebora
tera, hineter.
R.
_
RYNDUAN, °Droller for the
4-o Comity ot Heine. °Mee. opi *site
t ensue nie stoi 0, tisetee
tilt1NAltn.
Tennent & ennent
tentaseleat.usr
Graduate oldie ositaria Vet Coe
le ge.
1 tycc....prze titer ibTewn
iti wfr.nizi,00 lityruAL
eon iesa etAN4.' I
te,4iinixoelpentu 4363.
hiAp ()FIRM - WATiRLOO, ONT
111, i mug r le:slave ever re, v-allgh
34AI,, iv htl I t Xestero
4 . Love Iv art,,,Ilre,v;:itait
res lee tele:wee norereerie
:me( zi 1$417 .44..'01114
Lle r siers irvis
tg g g'i`t-g'gs glgt!g: ll14,/,k tile e sone= thee ir
tn e:seitra-.
•
eeti441301t Oes
efeeice euveriee, i.f..perey LiVAS
2t7 v. .V.413 lueeht
,
steriete. S1'46,100.00 - ete•sieting 4.‘,tsa
03.1 kao,',,,,erp,re-,' anasses-
ttd KV ellv. iesei 4.41 lel arse.
O. •v Ar, *3* -P.• 11.4:Mile is r, teem
.10t• . en s, eitee,
Lt, eke ni for Exeter and vice -sin..
lIE EXETER TIMES'
UNREQUIThD'LONTs
CHAPTER, XVI.
st„
hethan nramatiet or modern philoso-
After that evening leushmar yielded ,pher. The Radieal's brat bad been
binteelf to the alluremente et Ciree, near him alweye in those last years,
the person of Lady Cartniaow, with osittbag at a table a little way of,
lese reserve than he had shown hi:there lwriting e copy ox an exereise or at her
and in proportion as his attentions benefactor's feet wring over a faiey
grew more marked, Ciariee bet:lamete' le.
And new the preseacte Of -ba r1
rcT,Zdehn!hisi-114olt111:0; grows in heaoatl ; in the house worried him. Their chance
a meetings had been of the rere,st lead
father ased to say as much almost
every time he came from tne works.
The me e were always bathing mis-
ale!. The strike was alwaya earning,
but the strike never came."
"Mr. Danebroole /tad an extraordin-
ary influence over the raen—eu ex-
ceptienal power of mapaging them. He
contrived. te ward off the strike,
Partly by that personal influence,
Partly by concessions. Your ladyship
has refused
" To accede to demands Nv13.1Qh Icon -
skier prepoeterons—which eay father
would. pever have granted."
" You father would have gone with
the time; ready Citataiuow, tje was too
ehnueihieent, in /oho:bites and coot. 1, yet he was always expecting to meet Ntvictea /3144 to 47 t° Stein A rising
every ae, e t ,
mire a hundred. women without giv- ;her ou tbe staihn or in the cerridtors.
1 Ile had made up hie mirel •that ebe " If sonic oh us (lout tand fir
Sna
inguen:Adheiaorwan atrrtioc,reea;iy la life, married , 0,, an in , a de0 against that tide, it will be over ell
triguer, setarous ele-
z our heeds before long 11 saki Lady Car.
o.beve him, gaining wealth and eocial : biebb la the heit5e- Elelv quielaY Sbe nninnw jewkie,a like Belo
us by his marriage. Ile had been h°41 c°14tri'ved to lXet that fo°1111Y - -
eiesumev
er onld hardly have giveu
Nesterius into her
1 exeeltent husband to a eoraewhat ,tmPPessionahle ber credit for so much spirit—or ob.
illY wife. Be bad, nursed her wheu'' "b.' .91: Ilati 11Q941wIllked hee ''' ' etinaey--he did net know whieh to
he was siek and buried Iler as became': hr°ther "140° °he was, A mea child eau it,
ere both, r_ow he WaS free to ehooee iaalilldtl heberwgthaiiiesewratnea nati aliaatitihnrowdenepuertt „ The men have held on. tbough tbey
am:thee wife when he pleased,
%
"Yes, e•he is sueerbly handsome,' wet.
ewered Lohman "but I dealt
at; elite ie your styte. You prefer
OIIAPTBR XVII.
Rrennet and the outskirts efIh
atiu awre F4311e114i 4" looked a litae More detestable than breek e't°1A1151" stehtlees nld
at pale girl
are worse of es to eerrent waeee
than other ironworkers in Ilrumut.
They have held 011 forte sake, of
theme admirable funds which Mr.Bane-
Mignon, or th
tre
tarae, ext.s_my caatuees amstteaarinoot,n, imr.,al ci.t4Lz.t,str lr hact 0,..,t11yber, auguelt,iel.sleileapsrueeep;tetotlorf bmoenuusztaboiltdant-
, e rugLady 47.M10W
la • ni, l was .sitting opposite him, dad in ; 115 at a disadvautage; but there. la
I''' 111•Qtilier'6 nrii4illien4s 18 117,.'rtuitly bran
own velvet d 'table tittle, very unpleaeitut feeling arisieg lutists
ht3;uruziiiietutit4umulze.i..tu: uoletttl. yrwCarermeirw,
;rnwiotnixi:etdittitetIlieetSoaah411; Nbvoni t unellter rt.131:glaoaidr:
1 tuavortkoriyin
n an Bidetlauovothapotyththee rthola
,sstt
!brown hair, wages. in Pstret eteer Crete 1:tte ours,
eee 1 "You velvet and. tar will not be im. worlr is dollO by the ton, by a ganger
" uw sns l's 9"tIv417 rePell"" proved by irort and coal (lust," besaid, who andertakes the join aud era04oYe
There is esenetheng impish about her.
itanuid have detested hienelithen dumb ;.A.wwiitua
happairlri.scpl. tein
ragg glance at her Men under ltim. This plan saves the
firm a good deal. of responsibility, and
lereatare with 0.101.1keYish tri°k°, le4P-• i eOh, I have had this gown ter ages. the Man line it better because they
WO oVer IS."Ja'.5114" 4144 atm 93'5 t41144/! Ielieuld be rather glad to epeil a." can earn more monoY while an hu-
nt+ tinexPected4 ir• "41 VI3ee•S; „41:44 1 Liisitrear'e eyes, in sheer absent-. telligent ganger may make a small
,..h'isiei eters fautsd.y tuurang, kt ". Mignon 15 worse, tor hitt, is mere isre-
es mindesiPees, muted the :figures on the fortune."
lillles Sicaele ryijeljele elbeteee Pawole- Tho Sill rerai1d3 rilepavement; two halt-olad factory girls 41 1 will heve no middle men in MY
.1
Wile" 2;lt"*.‘17C%1.4'''' '41' 4-':1'e "n"'Sgew0,0$ ; . — ..— , , T1ie
„,,,,. fluttering by la cotton, hugging their bueiness,” said Lady Carminow.
sena, 4 ini ,I.:7, teat., te i ..7':•Ile Le 4°64 Ue't'uer'' 2"44eY 4-"`" '"""''' shabby little stiawls across their nar- The manager owed submiesivelY-
44441i lil 11" i'i 4; '431•Ns. P"r:ieterth i utaiteciplined nal -tune; elle late e grendi
i.e.t.s. illb a19VVE,:asais0: VOW Chest* as they faced the eade
eat wind; " Your la'ship knows best," he said;
2'4'3 j'i 0 a; tri• IA's', .,lim: - ..... lel vele 4 valet eoul. 6,ties.diast and etrong and end it struck luta that the Radican's "hut I assure you there is a danger
ei ill e 4 iteetat .eart.en rt V .,,,n4 Z C4,41:01 i -:especting"
li ..:_elDt in•-y.4tett, tte.erite, itieuNblaotioi 'se' -- . lean howl ageinst the inequality of fortune in gettieg old-faeltioned. A. system
it tct i .n eit ister;in„,it St cdc,cs '.',ily Incrusug: "'het 44 19 ha3h 619 "um not of thole themes whieh would which answered admirably ten years
twee hossetere or dome upun egg*. nhe Dever lack linteuers. AV beginuing to work awkwardly
t seal; plane 1.31ENTie One 0) • h vein tie tete letir
U "n4,41 alP14 r' c'11411'0:'" I .*CjurizY "4'4 "0U "4° 'mit" • tia• s'he "These two girl's looked rather envi- now, There was a tirue when We had -
1
LEGATION IJIFE AT PEKIN,
DUCAL PALAVES OCCIJPIBH BY
FOREIGN filINISTnRS.
-hea.
Theineenesteences or the neuperorn find comfort tn. wearing additional the city as the legattou people ha4
Queer (Moons et Suseesslon to Dimon
furniehed salons a the modern ,Axa-
bassatiors. Glass wiudows mad tigtat
doors have replaced the old Chinese
fret -work aud paper wtntiows, while
chimaeos have been built in every
available cornet\ The winters in
Pekia are cold, and witere the Chinese)
grounds end houeixtg theM Ovor with
sheds a bamboo matting-
Everr since the outlereet of the
Japanese war the moving armies of
Claineee soldiers from provinces where .014
make it dangerous to wander about
foreignees were unknitivet begen le
Ntar Itelattons--Tittotte That iietoeit 114,411as of clothes the white man insists rermerly done. 'Mere have been
;he 11)liteiwe 44' lult 14•01teos-s•I'Ve 441 hts fires to keep warm. and the secret treatie.s, waves a reform and
:lie eaeitat.
. Many cbitnneys built in these old pal- '
The S'acCeSsiOn to the Dragon acee 'nye Se disterbed the spirits ot
l'brone of China is hereditarY, bet it their former ocoupepte that they have
does not descend to any particular son caused more diseussion than Affairs of
et the reigning Bmperor. The ebolee state.
uatielly falls on the oldest Ben, but The heavy walls which surround
the Emperor is seppo.sed .carefully to these legati,aas hare ox.,„v„e4 effehtiee A LACF, CHEMISE
watch and judge the abilites of his eteeees of defenee, witile the Chinese
great reections, Potts leeheadengss
hurried flights, rumore of uprestng,
andioations, the coming neol going of
legation verde, and now i at last, tbe
dollops.
s --
different soils and chose for the sue- mealiest a bwidiug leaup against WOW% Sles4.100 bi the cause of law
gess/aloe the atm who would make tbe eue aaatuor and their maniere" alleys la Erenee.
best RInceror ead give bis people the aue courts age narrow hisesease end The higner Courts raris are new
the Emperor die without making anY eta- secret comenumeetiee that ton be woman's chemise, the vane of whieh
hearing a suit for the recovery of a
wisest and mast peaoeful rine. Should their Many back gs.tes effer tacilities
iielections, the princee of the herailY, feun4 in no °their city in the svorld. fixed. bY the, Plaintiff at the en -
beim; the beothere or uticlita at the The British legatiou, in Mitt* a ormono sum of 00,000 francs. or 1012i-
441.4
Emperor just deceased, meet arkd from smelt beset ef iieseenee ea* bees% able 0011. The suit was brought by /free.
the late EMPeror. select mime one cif ' of thousands, is adjoined on both the
that et !to defy Chinese mobs numbering tees De Rutei who was born a BonaPtIrtc%
the generation, eueceeding
the fanaily to oecupy the throne. For hs tbe compounds ot and was, eberatore. once a ogre' ire -
portant pereets. Some time ago--un-
north and south
thone mentbora Of the farailY who are • friendly Chinese. At the north-weet der the EmPire—Ulle• Bonaparte =are
r the socceseiou great ducal yarde; OA the west were still other ,
.ister to Italy. As a bridal gat tho
tied M. Rataz41, thee the Frenell lk.,1114-
fortneate as to bO seleetetl earner were the Imperial carriage
palaces are aeleeted foe *Mai incleemre,s a friendly atom, wbile, , city Of Paris chose for her a Magnl-
residetaces. Tile Forbaldee. OitY the stable gates at the southwest cor• fieent piece of lace adroitly fashioned
Lfl the hezrrt of the oit7 gr 1)(34u is ner of the legation opened into a largo '1 into a most graceful and dainty ger-
the of the RrePeror himself, Chinese market, The walla around the uleAt. It was a gift appropriate for
and to tbie eity is leroeglit the teems legation, almost three feet thielt, have a FrilleeSS. The hlitlei Was e/lehanteda
ber a tne fentily who is eelected, as bietn tnt 0,1-01101 into the nov01301,4340 and laid aside the laCe garment wall
the heir appareut. lint outside a tile et the friendly Chinese ead, througb 'her most priceless treaaeres, So cern-
vete great parks or compound* that IthewTs*,:,:deatsryo:athtteer Ctohl:atou6gami:licup.ot !fully did she preserve it, in fact, tbat
Kane three years ago it was atilt an.
Forleleldee City. Pelrin le dotted with
, 4,s tIoalls rang
fro= two hanlienthaanbe4d Pireogrilislalotilii)a4ndaroa.ulsnedttithespuiy. ' dor lock and ney in her Paris Mime,
In the meantime Mme. Ratazei bed
• el those vital ducat palaces.
to five aoree in Area, and are ear-. Thes legations are, ill fact, little become Mate. De Rune, Many of her
Adeti by high brick walls a great tits within themselvo. no English, early bridal gifts had departed. no
b1 cutting them off complete- 41,top, bas en its prt.mites no les3 Iftee chemise, however, had never hen*
oity catteitie. v re an area of about six acres. ' One night Mule. De Rut" Ittweeti
tbau eight or ten different walla and Wet sight of.
the sound and smells of the
The eh'eteee have, always been op- e are separate estabiishmeuts was entered and the most preoinew
while these decal pilaces are assigne theIfilliSter and for the First and things it contained stolen. Rye* the
Secretaries a Legation, ex- historic chemise did not escape the
pused to any hereditery nobility, and
ae Imperial residences to seas of the tensive quarters end. barracke for thief, who fortuuately was cant/Awed
reigning muuerch, it is always with consular students and Military escorts shortly atter with most of the stolen
the provision that whee the famity private atables for the Minieter and goods dill in his possession. Tbe O-
f the occupant :aas by the uperation general stables, ter others of the , fair Was promptit brought up in ono
f 0114)04e 1:tw, whioh provides that legation, a doctor's house and a i of the lower Courts, where Atm% De
imperial descendants lose ono degree hospital, a parsonage and a chapel, a , Rute objected to the disposition tem -
school and homes for teachers, beside u porarily made of her preeleets gar -
extensive quarter," for servants. , relent. It was, therefore, given into
Tie other le,gations, except the ' the custody of a higher Court, the.
American are maintained on the sante " taken to the redord. office, and,
general pap, Plan, though nCiLle Of them on ter a year's time, through some tele -
so eleborate a scale as that mane. ! underetauding, netually sold, togethe
Wined by the English. The Atnerican er with some °Otto unclaimed goedo,
legation occupies' the most bumble ' at auction. What was paid for it no-
erters a any foreign 111i0S1011. On body knows, but, as neitlker its ra)uo
e south aide of Legation street nor its history was suspected, it is
just beyond the old marble bridge that likely that some thrifty shopkeeper
meioses the owlet, it lies in the shatlow secured. possession. of it for a Jew
t t / ZiRralit tiittatt.n. "it• etiatteine of. tong, the blued e 9 onsly at your atibles," he Said, natieing n't a single melon man on Um prein- in rank with caina generation until
3 a- irred
wets out tacanieune Netrepaperl. evereleet, densengeguti wig.) ever •et the long, wietful entre which followed ises ; but labor was scene last in the third, been reduced to the level of
m. fra
0, SY4.'
01,0114Weedier arrrelent'in his t 4 tn.., soLiU L)
, the fen ledy la the Pete earrtage.
name tor anotherl.d,er te. 1"3- eult-cri Vag.* ;Luc utOtiu. Ater runitietty apan- ter when we had some of Our biggest
prt„,44 wow, his 4,00e4ineee _nether, too, all quiekeilver, lieware
benave tee ell arreers or the pub isher new of her, Nastorius." grand gowns for Sundays—dottskin or let in some of the 11111011 mem Aud
en Or slid. re -p ,netbro fOr PaYlilenZ. "You ratty be sure they have as jobs in hand, and we were obliged to
eat -skin and cheap tolveteen. They
• 110W Nve uanst either ghre them what
coati:ale tat teed it until the r>e„ Meat is Male.
t. her
te Jim tti..retihe lei e amount. wbether \NUL bew"re ter herP i always rouow faeltions," answered the t r p par for a strike."
y wan 0 re ts
e 1$14`4enl."411 /Wts' ither from evil, if Gate bat
- in ea te for elakt•craut 044. thee:lit may be gthix Clariee, lightly.
, "One teat belp feeling sorry for men
setem, max mate 1 rs. u et r I suppose"
eamee a thee& the su .0eigtio,IS WV testde i .1143r Aim, es gods," exelainteu. ' ss e . . a li iv, I 'be
ban r*da II umai =AY.
al at, courtshavedeciied that riga:411g "Not a man—in England"
"It they strike, we can get other
mst.tert, it la the poem° wane the p wee is pun. uever fear evil from her,"
the common people, the Palaces shall
vort to the Crown far reessignmeat
to sons of the then reiguing numeral
la ou account of this peouliar law
that the palaces a Pekin are ineupled
by an ever changiug population, first
trinces et the blood, then their cha-
rt% and their grandchildren: In sucoes-
taLetu w rapon. or periodical4 frOin put .iIi41"1"1"tlail eit is .alt thleitatnniaani‘ss13004M; "Yes, with thet gentie, paesive eor- " But we can get tbena from Bel- eion after thean; then. the palaces are
tftste, or remuMng dud tearing them tuical.ed uginati011. Be es e row wiich hUrte, nobody %tud does no- glare.»
Vaud. body any good," answered Lasbmar, vacated and reasSigned to princes of
er. remit latio melee e Of ruteutional the ,oheii upon besoi
Assuredly Neetoritts was not in love The manager shrugged his ahoulders the reigning arab,.
rCARTEKS
1TTLE
IVER
PILLS.
UR
Sick Headache and relieve all the troubles inc1.
dent to a bilious state of the system, such as
Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness. Distreas after
eating, Pain in the Side, &a. While theirmost
remarkable success has been shown in curing
SIC
Headache, yet CAIITZR'S LIMA LTV= PILLS
are equally valuable In Constipation, curing
and preventingthis annoyingeomplaint, while
they also cOrrect all disorders of the stomach,
stimulate the liver aril regulate the bowels.
Ruin if they only cured
HEA
Acbe tlieywonld be almost pricei?„.al thoto
'who suffer from Slit 41;ssing complaint;
1)11t feltlaitt.gy their goodness does not end
sere, and those who once try them will find
these little pills valuable in ao many ways that
they will not bewilling to do without them.
But atter all siok head
CH
laillsebane Of so rnany lives that here Is vrhers
We make our great boast. Our pills cure it
..ehile others do not,
Can's Lrrmic Lyme Pius are very small
and very easy to take. One or two pllls make
a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do
not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action
please all who use them. la vials at 25 cents;
eve for $1. Sold everywhere, or Rent by mail.
.1 CASTER VADICINE Hew lea.
11I all.Due. ban Prite.
with leuiel. smote "If one of. us were eisbiesiely.
with Lady tetrininow. Laehmar had to The fourth generation front the
like thee little Norfolk dressmaker
fear no rivalry in that quarter; and by now, who, hei g
n •one day moved to " Belgium iron works are in a very
condition " t o v I s - el • f royal d
royal family have no ollicial title or
this tinte Leant= had decided that pity for a poor wretehi in jail, teen up prosperous , tits n t . rattle Stall n pusons o 1e-
this
meant him to be Lady Carnal- , do.o.bt if tbere are men to be had at scene, to the remotest generation. are
.her crass, and forever after devoted Liegeii,
- now's hasband. allowed to wear the° yellow girdle in-
ner line DO the help and olace of jail " rind if these men leave us they
1 "I would rather be her `599°1111 1116- prisoners; bore ‘vith them, comforted dieative of their xoyal descent. These
, band than her third," he thought, "and torfeit an olaim •upon my father's. yellow girdle men, of Huang Deletes,
them prayed with thent• died in her
as it. is written that I am to marry . are one of the features of Pekin. Many
patient slavery. That is what real
her, 1 had better propose at ones." of them have inherited wealth from
pity means, and how very little there
go said this to himself yet did not is of it 11 their royal ancestors, and are pro -
funds,"
"Naturally."
" Than they will not go," said Lady
immediately propose. There was a' Carminow. " Assuredly not the old
lurking repugnanee somewhere in his '
1 Lally Carininow did not pursue the hands, who have touchel bonuses al -
mind, a reiuttanee which he amid not argument. She was looking straight ready and have been working for an -
explain tbirnself. Ue was angry • Lefore her towards a great dark gate- nulties in the future. No man will
o
with himself for not being more
Way as gtoomy as the entrance to forfeit the reward for which he has
in •
Tartarus. They mere in one of the been working."
love.
i.liew happy Hubert weep he dingiest streets in 13runuti-1)anebrook " Anger is short sigbted, Lady Cae-
lane, et) called after the great Dane -
library one morning, after he had let
the shooters go out by themselves, on brook had established in this Mid- rbemandems bweerr.e
miaow, Radicalism has been gaining
grottiest in this place ever since lean
off Yet than any :hi-.
thought, as he paced up and down'the
brook Iron Works, where Mr. Dane -
1 ten by his own hand. i , . ' their magnitude these of Darlington, 1
. Ttwteernty
the plea of lettere that must be writ- 1laud centre works ,which rivaled in
Clarice and itins. Mulcibert that hera.vweobrekenineagolinng13urranil. Boulirt ltIrvaaggee:
and competed with the Krupps and the 1 Ile had prom.' cl to drive to 33rumm Cookeville of Germany and Belgium. have remained the same. You had bet-
withLedy Carminow could hear the chink ier
afternoon, to go over the great Dalin- of the steam hammers; and she al- go with the tide Lady Carminow,
aturdikee
letmeers,,a.vv
raise the ages before the
s
NER-v Eerneeeteeeeee
emery that care the vont at of
Nervous Debility, Lost Vigor and
BEANSFaiiing Maalleed; restores the
weakness of body or rated caused
by ovennerk, or tbe errors or ex -
tosses of Vouth. This Remedy ate
solutely cures the most obstinate cases when all other
T.:maximum have tailed event° relieve. eole hydras -
gists at st per pre:knee, or six Mr 55, or sent by wallop
-eceipt ot priee NT,iptCrgr
Bold at Brown int.'s Drug Store Exeter
HIS 'OWN TALK ONLY.
0, Grabbie's1 all righ.t, remarked the
man who never speke of any one.
Of cionagee he's a trifle fond of con-
versatleae but--
Conyereation exclaimed Pep-
.
prey. Not at all. It's a monologue
or nOthitng Nt6Ith him.
brook iron works, of which Lady
Carrainow was sole proprietor. Her
name was on the carts and wagons.
"Clarice, Marchion,ess of Carrninow."
ways heard that sound in this place
with a faint -flaill of pride. She had
btroad acres which gave her a ;position
among the landed gentry, and of those
Lasitmar had never been over these she Wee proud; but these works were
mighty works, and hie hated seeing
her kingdom. Rare was the source of,
works of any description—hated the
her wealth and here she reigned
thud of the engines, the smell of the
supreme. The va.sbness ea those
furnaioes, the grime and dust upon
Phateolan halls, the multitude of
ev'erything' and wais Lint "17 fon"'h blackened faces, the clang of the
even of the operatives, though
engines, the roar of the furnaces,
a humanitarian age insisted that he
where the keels of mighty iron -clads
should adore them.
and the connecting reds and cranks
He felt also that this exploration of
of large locomotives were welded and
the works was in some measure a sign
fashioned, impressed her woman's
of bis bondage. He would be looked withfanay an idea of p&wer. Th
upon as Lady Carminow's future has -
factory was like an. arsenal, and she
band.
!seemed to herself strong as a goddess
"Ye,,s, my brother Hubert was the
of war, when'els made her slow pro-
ba,ppiest fellow I ever know," he said grass from ball to hall, preceded by
to himself; "happy in spite of ozreat deferential foremen and officials.
affliction, for hie always lived hie own It pleased bierlo thielt that Laellmar
life—did not go this way or that, like a
would see her atnidst these surround-
sheeP before a 'drover, as we wretehed- ings. She had given no notice of her
creaberes all do, we hondslavee of
&nixing, and it seemed to her, as she
cuotom, eashion, self-interest. How alighted from her carriage in the great
well I remember him, in this room black quadrangle, that the manager,
day after day, calm, restful, reading,
who ran to receive her, was less effu-
meditating, writing a little. I must
Sive than usual. He bowed before her
get his literary remains published, by
and spoke with bated breath, as to
the by. They would make an inter-
esting volurtve. What a dull, empty
WBITEBAIT,, life it seemed to me then; and now,
I by heaven, 1 allneist envy him.., He
Wtatehait are the young of her -
lived not alone, but with the giants
rings, sardines and ling,
of the past. compAnions were
Titans. I am etenseel in blue -books,
and par by pamphlata, and newspapers, 'No, it is not that, my lord," an -
the chaff of the day 'and hour, strewed eweree the manager, gravely, "That
tee wind and forgotten a year ki.nd Of thing never puts us out of
on
• • gear. Bee at is hardly a good time
hence."
Ile recalled his heather's figure sit- for her ladyship to Visit the works.
tang at the d,e0k yonder, the crooked Our men are on the eve of a strike."
shoulders hidden in the deep arm -chair, Lady earrainnw laughed softly,
one delicate hand supporting the pale pleasantly, as at an irresistible joke.
tient brow, the other one ' an ope,n That is a very old stout" she said.
page of Cereek or Roman poet, •Eliza- " hiive heard that all m? life. My
Ware. After' WOOd.va
Me Great Engtisk Rerhetly.
,14 druggiats in Canada. Only veli,
Sold and recommended by all
• able mediae:Le eiscovered. Six
packages gttaranteed to our() all
forms of Sepals' WettikneSS, all effects of abuse
or excess, Mental Worry, Threessive use ofTte
',emote, °pi:U.131ot Stimulants. /felled on receipt
of 'priele One useltage 51, sir, 56. One %ail please.
six tea care. -Pamphlets free to airyaddress.
• TIte Wood Cempany, Windsor, Ont.
Women Ishosphodine.is sold in Exeter
by 3% •W. Browning, draggist.
a queen, but he had a troubled look,
which Lastiniare quick eye perceived.
" 1'm afraid we've come at an awk-
ward time," he said. "Yen bave some
gigantic job in hand, perhaps, in the
throes of completion."
"1 wauld mech rather shut up the
works," replied. Clarice. "Please do not
let as diseu.ss the ,question any longer.
I have* tronght my friends to see the
works, not to hear the usual doleful
prophecies about strikes which never
OdItle. The Danebrook men know they
are better off than any other men in
Bromine'
She led the way, walking rapidly
past the manager's office into the
heart if. tire citadel. He had hardly
time to snatcla aphis hat, give a hur-
ried. direction to one of his clerks ands
get in front of the little procession.
A foreman appeared almost' by Magic,
and amidst the din of huge engines,
and. in the heat and glare of giant
furnaces, Lord Lashmar surveyed the
source of' job Danebrook's fortune.
He Saw the hinge =shapely mass of
white hot faggots drawn from the
roaring fUrnace by the steam crane,
plucked as it were, from the mouth
of hell; -such a demoniac seeming
spectacle as he had beheld years before
at WOolvvicla Arsenal, where he went
as a boy to see the drawing of a gun.
To 13e Continued.
HER MISTAKE.
Mrs. Handout --You are not a native
of thhs oountry, are youy
rainent men in their community. 13ut
others have fareddifferently with
fortune. Some hang around the
eeriei offittes seeking the lierartiest
employment; others are the scribes
and teachers, and even servanes may
be found wearing the yellow girdle.
• The treaty which closed the French
and Enttlitai war be 1360 first granted
to the Powers the right to maintain
their embassies la the Chinese capital.
In tile early days, before the building
et the raiircen from Tientsin to Pekin,
the line on travel tees up the river
to Tungthatv, and thence into the
capitar through the eastern one of the
southern gates of Lhe city. Entering
1:lekin through this gate, the Forbid-
den City with its imperial palaces lay
to the west, and it wis but natural
that the first E.nvoys should turn up
the first street leading toward the
palaces. It so happened that this
street hod been for centuries the
quarter in which lodged the Envoys
from the tributespaying neighbors of
the Chinese -Empire, Careens, Mongols,
Tibetans and lndo-Chineee, and the
street tvhich is kaorein among the
foreigners as Legation street is ealled
by the Chinese the Street of Tributary
Nations. The fact that the foreign-
ers established themselves in this
quarter has. in a large measure in-
fluenced tbe Chinese in their treat-
ment of them, and while a mistake
was made in this respect, still the
early Anabaesaders chose wisely in
selecting gor their residences the
ha.ndsomest of the than 'etacupied
palaces belonging to the Crown.
Weary Willie—Shure I ie, mum 1 I3ut
you ain't, de fast person dat has mis-
took me ter acpolitieiate
A LOGICAL CONCLUSION.
The true poet, I suppose, writes
poetry because he simply can't help it.
Yee; and it, seems to follow that no-
body should write poetry who *an
help it.
of the great wall at the Tartar Oily francs,
The Chinese cannot uudeiretand and TUB SITAR'S WONDEltFUL CLO
have ?ever ceased to wonder and Quite a puuique clock has just beau
speculate an bow one tv.ho lives so made for the Shah of Persia, as not
imply as the Araerican Minister eau only is the Teheran time shown.. but
expect each consideration and xe- the time in twelve other cities of the
spect from the representatives at the world. he center dial which Is the
other Powers who maintain eourl largest, shows Teheran time, whilst
with Oriental splendor in the rnagni- the smaller dials show the thno at
ficent old palettes of, the Manchu
Peinees.
Some have complained that life in
Pekiu was almost exile. For many
yeaxs it tva.s comparatively quiet. The
Ministers lean Little to do looking af-
ter the interests of their Governments
and there were few complaints from
their eitizeas itngaged in trade
throughout the Empire,. The delight-
ful summers were spent in the old
temples an the fat:arms western hills
overlookiug the plain surrounding
Pekin. Excursions and side trips to
the great wall, t.he Miatg tombs, the
summer puke°, the beautiful deer
park, or to the royal potteries, where
the beautiful yellow, green and blue
poxcelains whicheadorn the Imperial
palaces are made under the direction
of a descendant of the original inven-
tor, furnished abou.t all the excite-
ment that was to be found. In the
winter time the succession of State Observing the fixity of her soles gesse
dieners and legation balls was varied she paused for a moment to inquire
the matter was.
with lee c.arnivale held in the skat- what,'
big rinks, which were made by flood- Oh, 'Mamma, replied the little hoe, I
�wish you'd tell me how 1 0 sulell a
ing 'the tennis eorwrt.s in the legation yard.
The English &deleted a 'large 'palace
which Lay along the west eide Of a
canal that drainsthe lakes within the
Forbidden City and ilea just norbb of
Legation street. The quaintness and
Oriental magnificeeice • of these ducal
palaces have been largely preserved by
the legations that have oecupied them.
The maseive 'enbranties stand un-
changed; the open pavilions with their
taectanred pillara and riola carvings are
used as ball rooms. The courts and
atilaose and walks, with their rooker-
ies and terraces still stand, but the
details of the dwelling houses bave
been changed to Suit the requirements
of modern comfort, ancl there is 'little
conap.arison between the severely,
simple tnir.niahings of the former Chin-
ese occupants and the tax.trehously
Pekin, Washington, Yokohama, Hem -
bay, Samarkand, Constantinople,
ornate Home, Berlin, Paris, St. Petens-
burg and Loudon. All the figures on
the dials are in .Persittri diameter, In-
cluding the names of the various ci-
ties, and each diel is indented in a
very handsome ormolu frame richly
engraved.
nMELLING A YARD.
Willie Jones sat in. wondering
silence, watehing his mother while she
xneasnred some lengths of sloth She
counted a yard as from alma the tip
of her averted nose to the fartneet
point ;she could. reach by :stretching
out her plump arm sidewise—,l method
of meaeurement resorted to alike by
the little and the big, the long -armed
and the short -armed of her sex, axia
deemed by each as accurate as decisive.
A MINISTER'S E PE IENCE.
Suffered Terribly with a Volient Form of Itching, Protruding Piles
Escaped a Dangerous and Painful- Operation;sand Was
Thoroughly Cured by
Dr. Chase's Ointment.
While scores of tboasends of paopIettLt iti it,. as I had .t,ried -ya.iiinins re,
in all walks aonf itflias caorme iboeiritnsg,tc tlit7eciliolgf ,1 • oirj at, N' 'eMf au a:gee i anialedh5 lflY Sart :ob\V, .rigo.rie):11;r1::::(1e.,joyows
0 filad .bat just bbs
piles by using Dr. Chase's Ointnaent,
dissppeared
and
o bblct
medna:pearkanfro:veni)SthieisW:cleaseorfucolni:ridepearartae....; tho at. 5, D,Et. dab. 1:vees nowilinttnah; ja,i,etasatirodao 1111)(1,;
of the welfare of others as to help to sft\L‘fm14 ,ve:trylif (1,1aligem.m.: xpta::::::t.
odist minister, who is held in high es -
tion. The following. letter from a Nfeth- a04.31-34.,td wtt-h a thankful heart tett,
teereeril kinnownenn, trrelplreOSnetnatle.iollowhexePreerhthencies 'gni -1,:e
this testimonial, knowing Olaf.
owfhoVerreyeolgnnainzys in Dr CilehraSsesnOdintLmile°1114st Dr. -• Chll•s•e'sha-i4 40Tie
the only actual cure for piles and itch- so eseee fo L. IS. You a rti Itt
ing see, diseases. , 1 parfeol Ube rty in 'tat this tel isminia I
' as vosi see fit. Or the b .nefit ot whe,"
ReN. S 1)13.Prall' tal°dit aftlfeted." e
aiLtint:thill'finge4::,.yallull'srili,j:ti3ern:°1:1,6—taPed'IrilyinxiagyTispair:iltdnej5:DdaafbrtD1corle'ratCYw°vellealtniiSbY any of (..Q•ihr;e.:Ir m- c'pmrecIllair t?.f,,,..--7ric"ini ha,tlicirld'171g
No eneecian or d i lig g as i ii. ot/iii
. violent,,,,.rtisf f. if e ou, rir at ty.: ri,, raann5,,o,d1 LtehloAnrigseLidtei :wiamabs:wpoL .til'hi I ai gbtr,;hee a: -tt Cnhe va:lire 'ey e0L,Ibnetnie:;nttne,a,.,vna bi,ot k ft e.,v.}. : O i 0 1.:>1 iliOiSe
It iS idle only , erne/1.1(1S W 1 tat ft hes
I was able to stool. At this severe pilee of aPay farm, 60 e(i111.18 a box, sit,
orisis 1 purelvised a box of Dr. Chase's all dealers ow Edmaneon, be tee at VOr,
Oiatmeat, but 1, bad iittie or no Toreinto.
eettesetetre
. .42.1