HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1915-10-28, Page 6Env mrTPAIAN
1:JOsc. 1[19 "11,
that kntploit of Lance -Corporal
Albert Jacky..
Idled a Trench Corner With
Dead Turks.
The ineldent ia whitta Lance Corpl,
Alpert Juke, the young Auetrallan,
ebtained the Victoria Cross is de -
On May 10 tea men and ateergeant
of Litt. ottil Australian Battalion, who
were hooting a short section of trench.
at Ceurtneyes Point, found that the
Turhm outeide Ole parapet were throw -
hie Lonnie down into the trenee. Two
Amor:inane tell killed and four were
&sounded.
e..etea ur eleat Tierltm then jumpeu
anu this seetion at Lne trencu vets
ter we nioment left open to a wuane-
eu (newer, \vim weat to see the settee -
Hon. This officer, when coining bace
through the eoramunicatio1i trench,
tend: "They have got me; the Turks
it in The trench."
Lance. Corp]. Janke, immedintels
jumped front the communication
•trence up to the step, or bench, be-.
Lind the last traverse of the eeetion
of the fire trench, which had not eel.
Leen reached by the Turks. lie was
exposed for a moment to the Turks'
lifies at a distance or three yards. The
Turks were afraid to come round the
u•averse and lie held them there tar
considerhble time alone.
'Meanwhile the word had gone been:
"Officer wanted." Lieut. Hamilton eaw
the Turks jumping into the trench,
end began firing with Ills revolver;
leit the enemy Flint him through the
head. A eecond offieer was tient up.
Then Jaeka :Molded: "Look out, eir;
the TurIcs are in here.' The officer
asked Jacka if he would charge if he
(the offie.er) got some men so back
bim up, and Juke, said "Yes." The
efficer'e platoon was following him,
end he called for volunteers. "It's a
tutush job. Who will back Jacka, en?"
One of the leading men answered:
"It's sink or swim, we will come, eir,"
and the leading three went forward.
The moment the leading man put hie
mad round the corner he was hit in
three places and fell back, blocking
the trench. The exit from the treuch
at this end now being well held, Jiteka
jumped back from the fire trench few
the communication trench.
The officer told Jackie he would Wed
the exit and give the Turks the ime.
pression that he was going to Mingo
again. Juke said he would make nis
way round, through a communication
trench, to the other end of the flee
trench at the rear of the Turks. Th
plan worked excellently. The officer's
party threw two bombs and tired
eeveral shots into the wall of the
trench opposite them.
.Tacka made his way round, and a
moment after the bombs were thrown
he reached a portion of the trenches
just behind the Turks. The .party in
front heara the shots and charged, but
whdn they reached the treneh only
four Turks came crawling over 1 he
parapet. These Turks were shot, and,
Jacka was found in the trench with
an unlighted cigarette inelds inputh
and with a. flushed face.
"Well, I managed to get the beggars,
sir," he said. In front of him was a
trench literally blocked with Turks.
Tie had shot five, and had just fin -
Jelled bayoneting the remainine two
One nf these was only wounded, and
was taken prisoner.
THE CANADIAN BOYS.
o Lord, regard our earnest plea.
For all the brave on land and sea
Whom freedom's cattee employs;
light divine their minds direct
And by Thy power fgrom harm protect
The brave Canadian boys.
May they be kept in health and streneth
Vntil their dauntless work at tenth
All enmity destroys;
'While they for truth and freedom fight,
Encircle with Thy matchless might,
The brave Canadian boys.
By wisdotn rrized above all price,
May they be kept from all the vice
Willett weakens and annoys;
'Keen them from lieuer's deadly snare,
Aml for victoiMus life prepare
The brave Canadian boys.
To parents and to kindred give
The power that higher life to live
Which finds in Thee its joys;
The grieved und anxious ones sustain,
Anti home tratunphant bring *elan
The brave Canadian boys.
14, Watson.
Ridgetown, Ont., 1915.
:Vete.
eitisiiiimmutimminiminuomommumiumui
Of WI=
imimustimiessumumessmeiststomentimmisg
Jocelin's Penance
bens but a weakling. Thou art
not fon Mtn, girl. A, mau will egme
day hold thy woman's heart. I'll fin-
Ish mo this turntng, and then *we'll to
l;ed," and despite Roltese's question-
ings, she would not speak again. So
they sat in silence; the monk slept;
the beldame twirled her distaff, while
at her feet Dunstan and the eat dozed
o by eide; and Roliese, with her
head on her hands, gazed into the fire
trying to readeher future in. the glow-
ing, crumbling fagots, while outside
'Frem the ceameelleitt ut the nielemo,
for the Widow eleggot'; then he Moir -
red uwagU1M mad, tree= meld
tion bine 'Mary, eaVe WI, 'row say*
eth I perehancif the tomes wtfl rseel
. what it le, for 'tis well Irnown thee .
she readeth like a monk, By our 1
Lady," says I-" bet Dame Berniee 1-
4"!Plyee4, IlleutiT--"a favor tney ask. Yet, .-
ti,ank thee fer the fouti;. therge
naught in the col/bowel eave a. crnet.
::uolihueti.tott back oe the morrow teed
n11 give thee tee pth
eetscript of e ;
Atter faintly proteeting this mar -
had been vox:coaled by the muffling dere, and. relatine such news. and Mei-
SUM and the noise of her awn horee. gip as she knew, the dleicomfited, Mae-
Ituliese drove her eeele into hie fiat it got was foreed to depart, leaving her •
to urge him pat the cavaleacie. But gift and the preciousletter in MO
the formozt rider, a vetted amen Middies of the witeh; her =Wray
balled. her way, and gemanded, lfl n unsatisfied, and. her feara for the safe- ,
peremptory volca "Whither Peat, ty ef the mysterious missive greedy
time, wench! For by thy attire, Woe engmented. by the precision with
are tint gentle." which the grim old woman locked it
• f mune front May, madam," Relieve from sight in an iron boundoaken
mumbled. eitest.
"Unetvtlized Jade! I asked thee.not „There must nave been nuptials at
that. Whither gogs thou? Left the Anne's Orange." Dame Bernice suit -
veil when addremsing thy euperiore.. fed the spicy" cake approvingly, an
the wind howled and piled the snow Comest thou from Bury and knoweet
high about the house. . one contmenten to jocelin, who (the
CHAPTER XXIII, nut the Prioress Ilosainuud7"
; ‘-lsitor safely out of sight) lad vome
•
in the gray twilight of the dawning.
itohese was awakened by the witen,
•who, as they breakfasted hurriedly, ex-
phiened her plans for the -journey to
De Cokefeld.
"The ice on the river will not bear
yet, and I'd not have the monks Melly
trace thee from my door; wishing to
Veep my 13kin" uncooked for the next
fifty years of life-Asmodeus luttla
Alas Mt To:lose. Ett 3110 en , ,se,
time far to safety to at last fall into i "nrn" ne"en• "Wastle-calte is not BO
1,1iO 11ELIld she had tried so bard to I cfm.l.m°11 as it was in King fienrYn$
mum. ; time. Aye, hard to get the better
eeade? Site shook her bead,
yet, Drew up to the fire, Jocelin,
bling some ineeherent words askinte !
hellieOil, and pleading urgent easte, the night lowers chill. 'Tis well Ro-
tted again tried to press on. But the 1 hese is sere at borne, for methinks if
gossip be true, the lisp-
Prir ress kept her leneet iterose the I the widow's
path and the monk and Other nuns " Ing hawthorn bud of a lord. who, with
drew eleseely about her at a glance 1 &night attendance rode througn Ely thia
from their superior, wile had now un- i roorrting is none other than the bas-
'
eromised me; so, as thou canat not veiled her triumphant. lace.. Then i Lard, Geoffrey CllfforU,
on 111s
take horse this side the Ouse. thou with deft hand idle snatched off lioe I visit his mother, the Prioress. Odds
. must pass o'er it by the witch's ferry, bese's veil. with the eolff and false i heartlings; say I, Lady Prioress! She
Come, now, for one must ride early on ringlets end threw them upon the mow 1 es nco more fitted for Prioress than
mY ferry if he would 'scape a crowd laughing as the bright lecke came ; OrimalkIn yonder. The favorite seek -
of open-mouthed lubber& When safe- tumbling down abseil her stained face, oth the crosses in his mother's pouch,
IY across, knock at tlte first but in the ''Tis no use, Lady," ehe said, sneer- i methinks, more than the cross on her
wood, saying, 'I come for my horse,' hely, nhoutsh ue missed thee at De : Priory,"
and one will be furnished thee. Re- Coliefield, I've found thee nit last, • Hating the insolent. courtier as one
cross the stream some miles lower See," showing a parehmept sealed with : fears and hates a loathsome reptile,
down (thount find a roadway leading
to the ford from the hut); then make
straight for tin. highway. Turn in the
first lane thou earnest to-thount re-
eognizelt; 'tle the short way to De
lied insolently, "Ritut's loves ean of- : not a sin to rld earth of such carrion
Coltefeld. Tarry not; speak to none;
ride faun and before even thount be ford to be particular, thou yellow- : eereasees as his, Had bne a good
headed fool. (God wot my locks were , word, 'twere a joy to prick ltirn
safe in thy stronghold."
Refusing thanks for her timely ale, far more golden. 1 vow, Henry calIe..1 . through the golden broidered doublet
Dame Berniee assisted Robes° to re -them his sitnehine once as wo sat MI-. (where the heart lieth in another
der the oalt at Woodsteekl; ea eal) ,
mine her disguise, and wrapped warm- thou in behind the sisters and follow ' irnyia,n). in fair fight, 1 mean -open-
ly she followed the dame out into us to the convent."
'With bitter taunts, the Prioress "Heaven fotgive me," he thought, as
, htretched a tremulous hand to the
passed the wretched girl, and led her blaze, "that I, so near just punish -
cavalcade back toward Busy, beyond i meat an' slow but certain death, think
which her priory lay, and Roliese, coy- i eught of taking the life of another!"
ering her heed as best ghe might, ' and he bid his beads tingle Dante Ber-
followed the staring nuns in utter ,;
despair, while the monk, *1. burly, ! nice, glancing furtively at him from
across the shadowy room, murmured:
clownish fellow, rode closely behind i
"Lash! 1 powdered this poor
her, to guard against attempted escape. ' monk's draught too heavily, methinks.
While Roheso rode sorrowfully In 1 Hie wits wander." '
againet the whiteners; the lonely. 1 the wake of her captor, Jocelin awoke 1I
snow-covered hut in the foreground: ; from the long steel) caused by- the I CHAPTER XXIV. c .
the quaint figure of the witch plodding'
'eitch's drugged wine, to find himself 1 The red of the afterglow fired ,the
sturdily along before the tall, dark alone in a tiny chamber, seemingly 1 west behind gaunt black trees and
Praned girl. Almost at the water's without egress; bare save for the 1 east a stain over the snowy road lead. -
BOMB FOR BOMB.
(Pittsburg Gazette-TimeS)
Shookit,g as may be the prospect, the
demana of London mass meetings that
the British shall retaliate for Zeppelin
attacks with counter assaults upon Ger-
muny'e "sleer.Ing towns" is but natural
end logical. If elermany chooses to
pursue a policy of "cold-blooded butch-
ory," as Joynson-Hieks deserib-
(.4 1 reprieal in kind becomes necessary
Us a. war 111eAtililli, however much it
must grate upon the tender sensibilities.
it le apparent that Germany will over -
1 mic no opportunity for provocation and
ii p short of no species of terrorism.
There is only one alternative for Great
Britain other than supine eubmiselon,
awl that is to fight baek with the same.
ea:mons and methods as those of its
enemy.
the Abbey seal, "the Abbot orders thee Jecelin set his teeth hard at thought
to hem() TOY gueet; so ride with us, 1 of his leering glances at Rohese, an
pray thee, to our poor convent,".and muttered thickly, staring before him
then, drawing nearer, and speaking tee to the fast gathering twilight.
mw far the others to hear, she eontin- i "An' by the Queen of Heaven, 'twere
the white stillness of the winter's
'morning. Tile town behind them was
not yet astir, °illy here and there a
faint wreath of emoke curled up front
the tall chimneys. The thin coating of
ice over the giver glistened like a sil-
ver sheath, and the snow was piled
high along the banks, weighing down
every shrub and tree. It was a fair
scene. The silent town silhouetted
Okilifeetiee
SO cents
etdmaneou,
Toronto.
By Malting the
blood rich and red
Pr. Chases Ilerro
Voce,. forms new
cells and tissues and
nourishes the starved
nerves been to beanie
and vigor,
By nottng your its-
Oreaeo '.'eight while
using le you mut prove
pesitively the benefit
being derived frerse
this great food cure,
n bux, an dealers, or
elates & eo., Ltmited,
When Tissot Was Satisfied.
.A, charming story is told of Thglet,
the great French painter. While in
England on one occasion -he painted
beautiful religious picture and, meet
-
lug a woman from Paris, asked her
opinion of his work, Characterizing it
as a work of real art, she gave a re-
markably just and detailed apple:mitt-
tion of the various merits a the paint-
ing,
"Are you satisfied?" asked a friend.
The •answer a in the negative
• • •
LABOR AND DIVIDENDS.
(Buffalo Express)
Yining Mr. ltoekerfeller Is quoted by
Et ebieutto reporter as saying: "In or-
der to live the wage-earner must ern
Ids labor from day to day. Cniess Ile can
do ode, the earniftge from that day's ta-
bor are gone forever. Carital can deter
its returns temporarily, in the expecte.-
thiona of future profits, but labor cannot.
11, therefore fair wages and reasotabie
living coneltions cannot otherwise be
provided, dividends must be defereed or
the industry abandoned."
Is there any labor agitator who mulct
nak for a fairer statement than that?
But does everyone believe that Mr. Itocic-
(letter will put this excellent prinmple
In ',notice?
Ile touches in this etatement exactly
Ihe point where melte, has been nnxious
foretei (Evidence; that has brought mest
rile labor troubies. rapttal would al -
Wil yir lake the position outlined by title
yetine eaPitallet, labor agltatore w
he out of their PAP.
KIPLING'S ONLY SON,
(New Stork Times)
thmeelf now beyond the fighlen nge,
Mr. Kb 110t' who proactive and slime; a
31 iititarY petriotism, has done What 110
cola(' lur eountry and its came• by
eending to the front, or morreprobubly by
;money; to go there, this one boy of 1110,
u boy sa, young that in ordinary timee he
wined still know for years enly the OBI-
tvnts sehools. the battles of the play-
eround. It was the Imperialist's ulti-
mate demonstration of sincerity and eon-
)isteney, and Mr. Ripling must have ma ie
-it with infinite Precautions to (weld the
loiblic that eagerly awaite ail WC acts.
l'Or boV'S eIll pfteeed unnoticed
end we Brut beard of hint NVI1141 be is
"iiiieelne, believed dead."
edge stood a sturdy gnarled tree. Re -1 truckle -bed on which he lay, and a !rig to Rosamund's Priory, 'until it
iese no e ur I e, ree- egge s oo ,
t d c leusl that two stout r I th 1 d t 1 wl ereon a! seemed to the cold and cursing horse -
artist
Ho entirely repainted his picture,
working night and. day, When it was
finished he sent for Ills fair critic, who.
pronouriced it admirable, and then she
leaained silently admiring it with
smiling criticism,
"Are you satisfied?" once more ask-
ed tleeefriend, "No," replied Tissot as
he began to work ua the picture for
the third time. When the lady saw
the new painting she gazed at it for
some moments with evident erhotion
aud then, without a word, sank softly
to her knees and began tp pray.
"Are you satisfied now?" whispered
the friend. "Yes," answered Tissot.
• AM
IIEZZICIAIVII MEMORY.
• -Y.'« - 'I
Was Oftbjected tO a Severe Testo
But It litQod the Stain,
A (Met) netted of tin old negro named
ilozeitialt, wins, it was sake had tne
:.tut wonderful memory ever known
to Jame Inueecl, it wee so great that
devil, it was said, was endow) of
aud often dreamed (sf how much
dotter he NUM eontluet tile attains of
eia dominion at home And, abrosta if no
, net had memory,
_ Mezeitials. Iiad lee It be iteown that if
"at auy time anybody !should ever catch
'tint forgetting anything that some-
body could have hits power of mem-
ory. This is where the devil key his
(seance tend laid his plans. So one
day the "old scratch" dreseed himself
in citizen's clothes and APPreaehed
liezekian where he was plowing in
Itie field. Each greeted the other
and Peosed the compliments of the
day, Veen presently the devil eaid:
"Iiezelciale, Of all the •good tillage
that there are in the world to eat,
wliat one thing do you like best?"
A.fter a moment et reflection Heze-
Ida replied, "Chickens"
Without Author words the devil •
turned and. walked away, He stayed
away from Hezekiale for twenty years.
Tben one morning somewhat as be-
fore he approgichect hint as if he was
there at work in his field. He looked
at him for a moment and said,
I-Iezelciah looked up, soratc.hed Ids
head, gentled a little, and replied, if
"Fried."
laNiantgabil••••
-ataligEMMT.Wegs
Purely Herbal -No poison-
ous colorins; matter.
Antiseptic -Stops bl o o d -
poisoning, nestering, etc.
Soothing -Ends quickly the
pain and smarting.
Heals all sores.
50c. Box. All Druggists and stores
aggiegiWEAege,eee-77.:47.17:
ropes stretched from its branches lighted wick flickered faintly in aL man, impzitiently pushing ahead of his —
across the. river to another tree, sitn-I small earthen bowl of oil. The cell t retinue, that the way was blotched
ated nearly, opposite. As they paused was so small that Jocelin, in rising, with blood; and he half reined his
beneath this tree, she saw high up in struck his head smartly against the steed, crossing himself as the horse
the branches a great basket, such as ceiling, whieh as if by force of the set foot on the red streaks, and curs -
laundresses use for their linen. To blow was lifted, and the wrinkled face Ing the deeper for his superstilous
her wonder and consternation, Dame
Bernice directed her to climb the tree,
and pushing the backet out upon the
rope, to enter it. Wiese protestedeaf-
frightedly.
"Nay, nay, dame. 1 feared not the
dark passage to the tower, but‘by my
troth, I'll not venture life and limb on
that mid-air cockleshell."
• "Odds heartlings, wench! Then thou
can'st bide till thy ghostly jailers come
for thee. For they are on their way
hither. Whilst thou slept I summoned
my familiar, though little enough ,
learned thereby, for he was as full of
sullenness as a sullen ox. But the
Abbot, remembering thou spokest once
for me, and the Advocates, knowing
my nearness to thy house, hath dis-
patched the Prior and others hither in
search of thee."
So, Rohese having no further choice,
climbed to the basket and finally suc-
ceeded in scrambling therein, her per-
turbed face peering piteously over the
rim at the witch, who stood grinning
sardonically up at her.
s "Within the basket is a knife. Cut
thou the rope when " thou art
over; and convey the basket
to tho but, for I would put my ferry
out of sieht."
"But niother, how Can I get over the
etreann mewed up in this basket?"
lIow thou grumblest at
aerrelit, Vile pate' 5:vest thou not a
second cord fastened to the basket tint?
P1111 on it, wrench, and get thee gone:"
Rohose gave a faint-hearted pull,
and the bachet moved a few inches
nines tem cord on which it was :gong.
The witeh loat patience, wed broke In-
to fierco invectives, ending \tenth "Aye,
aye. littlo uddlepate; hang thou there,
then, inte ripe fruit till the • monks
come and cut thee down. I've other
business than to be (hipline my heels
herce; and she gave a hop and a elf
and was Out et sight.
kolos.e.., deserted, had no alternative
but to go forward, so she crouched in
the basket and pulled at the rope; thus
propelling herself slowly across the
stream thnie nine feet above it. ehe
closed her eyes tightly, leo frightened
to )(sok at anything, and tears of ner-
vous tear triekled 'neath the shut
lids; but as she pulled away she be-
thought ber of .Tocellit. • Her mind
thus divc:rted frora herself to the un-
fortunate inrinit, she wondered where
In that small hut the witch could hicfe
him front thecr pursuers; for she nev-
er doubted the truth of lice inform-
ant'. statement. So eonjecturing on
another's danger, her nwn was these
For evith a final jerk the
basnet hung within reach of the
tree, and elle sweng herself into it and
dencended to the ground in safety. /first
eating the relies, widen were jerked
a fireat the lever by the witcli, who had
reappeared, atul nimbly climbed up
the tree and down again ere Behese
mute walk away toward the wood;
where, following a sltght path trod-
den in the snow, she soon came te.
i3nia11 but Diviner to Datne
Pere atohrfe knock, a bincksbronined
churl appeared, and in answer to iier
Words, silcntly led a horse from round
the house, and as silently retreated
into the rebin, slamming the door be-
hind hitt,.
Reltese, once on horseback, follow-
ed the path to the ford. The sun rose
rind ebene brightly through tlio trees.
The elf Was braeingly the pnlfrey
ft gO.ul One; and Tiolicse felt hope
apring enew within her, gee ‚.aid
the ford safely, etuetered onto the higit
cacelanithe good progress despite the
ritrioill:, and after tW o "'mitre' Tido turned
into tho tterrow len() Meriticned by the
witoti, fin she rode, light-heartedly
murnerhig (xnatenee of a roundelay,
for youth is Irrepressible, and the cares
and iroublee of the past weeks deelli-
te trent iter elitelltlere on this
brieht winter day.
Corner *Imre the lane took
OMIT turning elle mine fell Upon 6, is Prince 301lit's jester, dente), and titan'e Widow, if It wesn't for the pre-
ttoftk and four auris, Wheee approach by my troth, all he satthe Wag, limitary stage of being hie lax
of Dame Bernice peered In en him. fears. His furred robe and cloak of
"Climb forth, youngster," she said, • ruby velvet, gold prick spurs, and
"but first quench the lamp; 'twere a gaily caparisoned steed showed him
sin to waste good oil. Odds heartlings! to be a man of high rank; and the
'Twits a happy chance which timed twelve soldiers who now came can -
thy waking so, for hadst thou cracked tering up to him ware the colors of
thy crown so loudly against my floor- the Prince's household. Thie fact,
ing an hour agone, the Prior and thy would have indicated to any Passer -
brethren would have harried thee out by that the traveler was a courtier;
like a raton. Indeed, that Norman and, indeed, as he turned his
Prior is like a ferret." fur -bonneted head, to petulant-
eocelln, cla,mbering front the cell, ly order their greater haste,
found that he had been,in a sort of the horseman diselosen the counteie-
cellar where the witch had placed 'Atm, ance �f Geoffrey de Clifford.
once Rohese was away (for, like most John was absent from London, and
old women, she loved a comely youtle, the Favorite, under the displetssure
and Jocelin's mother having once done of his royal brother, had been left
her a good deed, she was determined behind, much to his settees:Um; for
IRON IN WATER.
It Takes. Only the Least Bit
Make Itself Felt.
Half a part per million of iron
water is detectable by taste, and mere
than Tont' or five parts make water un-
palatable. In some mineral springs
iron is the constituent which lamas
a medieinte value to the water, but or-
tiinitrily it is undesirable: More than
2.6 parts per inillion in water used for
lareettering* muses a stain on the
clothes. Iron mud be removed from
writer front whieh ice id mane or a
cloa(Iy, discolored•product will result.
An iron content of over two or three
Part. per million in water used in the
manufacture of paper will stain the
paper,
to keep him from. the monks' clutches). Geoffrey had pressing personal busi- Iron is harmful in water used for
"Did they seek me, mother?" said nests that necessitated au early :visit deeming, for it is in equilibrium with
to his mother, and he. eagerly seized arias which made the boiler become
upon this opportunity to :nake the Climeeciatod, with the result that the
journey. He had counted on complet- free acids corrode the boiler plates, but
Ing his business and being again on the amount of iron'carried it' solution,
the road to London long ere nightfall, by moet wateve is no small that the
intending to spend the night at Brad- damage it. does to staatn boilers gener-
field; but he had •tarried over long uily anuntats to little. ,
at the Bishop's wine cups in Ely (hav- Waters haeing a high iron content
Ing gone thither to ascertain his have in rsome places, where theyehave;
mother's whereabouts, as she ha.d a been used as zloty supplies, caused an
oolony of nuns established in Oxford- itnmense amount of trouble and ex -
shire, and was sometimes there). pense, for they favor the growth of
pTrheegnr,eeetoo, a,ndthielersenpo awt •,elvitiarge,taaredoerd,
water pipes become cicgged with the
orenothrix to such a degree that the
frey found himself still seyeral ranee iron sheaths of that organism. The re -
from the Priory; rnen and horses fag- xeceeal 01 iron freits Weter is sometimes
ged by the tedious Journey, for they easy and eon:et:Imes very. tilffieult.---
had come over an unbroken reed, and United States Cleolpgicql Purvey.
had been force -I to plow through the
drifts. • But impatience never short-
ened any roa.d, and it helped the Fav-
orite no whit now, He and his men.
being forced to plod along as best they
might until, the afterglow had faded
to twilight when they saw the snow -
crowned towers and battlements of the
Priery, and were soon disntounted in
its courtyard.
Geoffrey arrived but a few hours
after Rohese had been locked In a
high, remote chamber,and the Prior -
Glee somewhat disconcerted by the
proud silence of her young prisoner,
Was not in a receptive humor to hear
the 'appeal he had come to make.
The rich, dark dress of the courtier
wee accentuated by the bare, gray
stone 'walls of theeHospitetum, which,
thOugh it did duty a.s a guest room,
was hardly fUrnished save for a heavy
'bench Or two, a Missal stand, a paint-
ed St. Bonifaco on the wall, and a
round iron brazier, wherein flickered
a i!iesecoal fire.
The Prioress had lain mid() her
cloak and stood in -the light of the
tapers on the Missal stand, A severe,
iitiff figure in her white serge tunic,
and linea headdress, she frowned upon
Geoffrey like some forebidding ghost
arisen from the shadows of the dint
room.
Geoffrey felt the coldness of her
glance, and hie smooth flow of pretty
phrases Veaa agitated by it, and broken
itito !alert, oholiel Wanes of words;
like a pond ruffled by the wind. Ere
he had finished his tale_ his mother
broke Int
to
ia
he.
"Nay, 'twas rarer game.' Thou, they
told me, wert translated bodily from
the Oubliette; some said to hea,Vetl:
others to hell. 'Twas the maid they
sought."
"Alt, Mary Mother! Dias they carry
her away then?" cried the monk,
vainly looking about for any sign of
Rohese.
"Fool!" exclaimed the dame, con-
temptuously; "thinkest Bernice of Ely
Is to be caught tapping? Ail old wo-
men are not tabbies, boy! The maid
Is away and safely nearinig De Coke-
feld ere this time."'
"And what hour is it, dame?"
"Thou haat slept long, for 'Us bor-
dering on eventide, and thou wilt have
no time to reach Bury to -night, if thou
be still crack brained enough to re-
turn where thou art as those dead,
whose faults are covered in the tomb
and forgotten. `In the grave there is
no remembrance!' ithue, wilha witch
sleep there soundly, thinkest thou?"
Jecelin having no comfort to offer
one whom the church had taught him
to regard as doubly damned, made het
no answer, replying instead to her im-
plied question:
"Yea, dame, I go back to the Abby.
The least he can do who hath sullied
the whiteness of a maid's name IS to
wash it clean with his blood."
"Dark will soon come down'my
San," said the witch, kindly. "Bide
with me again to-nIght, for a few
hours makes no difference, now the
maid is safe, and on the morrow I'll
get thee on thy way."
Feotsteps crunched on the snow out-
side the hut. "Hide thee 'hind you
curtain; some village evife comes, no
deubt. Yea, though they fear and hate
tho witch, they Must needs run to her,
be it blood in Wile's milk or fits in the
wearding. By the step, it is the Widow
Margot, mother of shnple Tom. No
doubt he hath been at some peaked()
egain. These simpletone aro. seedy
begot of Satan."
'Widow Margot entered; stOut, pant-
ing and reey-u woman of mottle forty
years. She Was decehtly &eased, as
becante the widow of a well-to-do
Franklin, with rather comely feateres,
though sOinewhet vactatt of glance and
eepression,
"Lawks Sake, no good Dania Ber-
nice! How fares it with thee this
bitter day? The wield from the river
cuts one chops all a cheese whittle."
"Well enough, widoW," answoredathe
witch, retOlidly; "what brings thee out,
then, in this chill river wind?"
"Why, noW, eliummer," eald the
widow, propitiating, "1 odd to My
son Toni, 'Now there sitteth 'peer
Dante Bernie° All tneWted In by the
snow; mayhap ehe wanteth. 'There
a kindly deed to carry her a pat of
butter end Mite of this rare wastle
cake thy tousin Anne Wet 11E1 but yes -
Mamma An' Tom,' lowest. I, 10111
not ante amiss if I carry thither this
taissiVe,' Which by this day tante from
tendon town, brought by a messenger
in scarlet; and gold, Who flung it at
Our door With a pack of my brother
Peter's motleys. (thou knowest Peter
*1,74 DrPP,1 Zi4 or c es ot
5:
u RS GARKEP,41:
1‘ Wittqr IOU 11y. or
iiuut you or. youy 1,111117
In Fury or Fur Llarrsenia, Yod
ran buy cheaper and better 14.
ctaling direct with us.
'rhea you realize that we are
TRU Liklie/CHT eidfl 131%.
QV UAW Fillet IN OA
/434 direct from the trapper.
,ott win appesolate our up1iv-
.11104 opportunity to select the
Plied ishinamanufaoturo them
1 cto desirable Fur acts and Fur
rarments then by gelling direct
in you by resit 114..V4) the middle.
meal! prodt by our syettin of
epilog
IP'rens Trapper to Wearer
BLACK 'Note BUT. ThiS 10
rim or the Many bargains illus.
Seated in our FUlt UTILE
BOOK see is a beetle:la srb
snadig trim long lutircd-•mnod
coality-wholeekine.Th q
Stoic iS cut extra deep mid
sidearm. shoulder and back—
giving good protection against
cold --la trimmed with heed end
tall over shoulders and tail at
each end,Bued with good gnat.
ity Natio and warmlyleterii nee.
•
No. 225
Usti
$0.50
No, 22'.
Pole
$13 25
The Muff is made in the large classy pillow
• etylc, trimmed with head, und tul.wo and niouutod
Irnerditt°71' tItttiv-VtlinliirgAh""
No SI, stie
$8.25
No. 2* Muff 56.00
Beery *Alois is so1,1 under OUR POSITTYP (WARM.
irE3:1 to "B4TIBFY YOU Olt REFUND YOUK fawns:.
Send for our Fur StYlo Dochi 101646 edition. SENT
pBEK on request) 'which contains Okpageit ot Munro.
Mao of beautiful Fur &Angela Fur Gammas,
We Pay All Delivery Charges
po NOT WAS BUT BKNA TWAT TO
CHILDHOOD
• CONSTIPATION t,
Room 226 Hallam Building,
TORONTO, CANADA.
UNEXPLORED GEORG/A. .
Huge Swamp Has Strange Race of
)Welates,Negroes andI nlians
onwuid aeuieely think
ISSUE NO, 43, 1916
HLP WANTEDe-MALZ
XL' ANTED -- ACOUS-
t, touted to furnace WQYK, at once.
The Benetton litoye * Heater Co., MA.
11 ton, !jut
1•14 WAS HUNORT.
Under the 'Circumstances Ma
Jumble a Words Wss Excusable.
Prormor $16,mond Freud, the (=I-
noue tlermaa *whaler, has Made a
study of lingual blunders, OPeken, and
printed, and has emboelea the result in
his book, "Phychopathology," As an
example of blundering. speech caused
by subconscious celebration he gives
the following:
"A. wealthy but not very generees
American host invited hie friends to
an evening party. Everything went
wen un•til about, mielnigItt, when there
was an intermission for supper. To
the hithappointment ot many of the
guests there \vae no real supper. In'
stead they were regaled with thin
eandwiches and lemonade.
"As it was during the ,:residential
campaign, the couversation turned
upon the different candidates, And- as
the discussion grew warmer one of the
guests, an ardent Progressive, remark.
ed to the beet;
"You May say what you please
about Roosevelt, nut there Is one thing
he can always be relied upon to do -
he always gives you a square meal.'
"Ile meant, of course, to say a
'square' deal,' The assembled guests
buret into a. roar of laughter, to the
great embarrasement both of the
speaker and of the host,"
cure constipation of childhood. They
Baby's Own Tablets will promptly !tittetes, but in emorgia tnerJ is a vaet
• eany Manx epees un the may or the un.ted
a hendrea aguare maws
act as a' gentle laxative, regulate' the : .ealreitylnvahenaiyarlielyxbett seespytr,leoptertevasostolili.ttiuty texm.r.
,.. s ne ste,v
bowels and stomach and are absolute- ,iiiiiltbreeas who intitibtt it.
11, safe. Concerning them Mrs. A.. en'arbittegTvejnritnt.ri'n"ang °off °8 ,t't,r if 11„"ull
Crowell', Sandy Cove; NS., • writes: there are many parts intuited "impene-
"I Can strongly recommend Bittens arable" and "Unexplored." In the depths
little ones are suffering from constie ot the Indians and eolored people 'tiave
tireittl.r.:L3n-av= nzrulotim-tdi
Own Tablets to all mothers whose
medicine dealers or by mail at 25
pation." The tablets are sold by so mixed races as TO Millitiiiit.biliolioridOegur iiini t:
cents a .box Deem The Dr. Williams', possible to locate many
Medicine Co., Brookville, Ont, Later many denerters from the Confeder-
dial"ay'es used to hide in this great swamp.
The Chriaian Era.. . cendants are living there to -day. They • . Sidg went Into the swamp and their des-
. ate army, and men who escaped enitst-
• e• -
The Christian era which We now Use' call the swamp ground "trembeng earth.'
?niet&theTrepezigacedt;i:tela„yrtffeer,abo,ttg.
Little), a Roman abbot and one of the d trap and
fish, and also go outside and work with
Was fixed by DionySIUS (surnamed The a sturdy race. They hunt an
the cypress iumbermen.
ittoet learned men of the sixth century.
Its ()pooh or commencement, is the,
PILES CURED at HOME by
" 'Give, give,' dries the horseleaoh;
and ie ewer eatisfied, lingrateful,
have 1 not stripped mere than one
shrine for thy profligate spending?
Thinkest then I can go on forever re -
castles the records? The Abbot win
some day discover the falsitiee, and
then 'twill be Magritte attd banishtrient
to Acre for my lady Prioress; and
What -tor her prieeling?"
"Nay, Mother, thott are overwrought.
Something on thY lottrney disaleueed
thee. Didst !Fifty thou Vent to Brad-
field?"
"I said not Whither I Wen; nor
needest thee. Ittoev, presumptuous bey.
Ant r, wheat a king eitO0 obeyed, and
reahn eerved, to be erosilequeetioned
by such aatitou, sitrah?"
(To be Continued.)
eee
Many girl would enjoy being a
ANOTHER NEW INDUSTRY FOR
ri AM OM N.
The W. T. Rawleigh Co., who have
-factories in Freeport, Ill., Memphis,
Tenn., Winnipeg, Calmand warehouses
nhester. Penn., Calciend, (lat., and
Toronto, Can., aro going to build a
factory in litunilton, making the sev-
enth new factory for that city this
year.
The Rawleigh- Company manufac-
ture proprietary medicines, extracts,
;grime, seep, perfumes, toilet articles,
polishes, steek remedies, poultry stip-
Pile's, dip and disinfectants, elm, which
are sold direct to the farmers front
wagons by over 1,I100 dealers in the
United States and abnut 300 in Can-
ada. The that building will be 120
feet Tong by 60 feet deep, four or five
etories high, and work will to started
on this shortly.
first day ot January, on the fourth
year of the one hundred and ninety-
fourth -olympiad, the seven. hundred
and fifty-third from the foundation of
Boma and four thousand seven hun-
dred and fourteenth of the Julian pe-
riod. It is usually supposed to begin
with the birth of Christ, but there are
various opinions with regard to the
year In which that event took place.
The system accepted by the Christian
world is that of 'Usher, which makeS
the date of the birth of Christ four
Yeare 'before the Christian era. The
time for the Christian era was Intro-
duced in Italy in the sixth century
and began to be used in Gaul in the
eighth century, though A was not gen-
erally folknyed in that country until a
century later. From extant charters it
is known to have been in use In Eng-
land before the close of the eighth cen-
tury. Before its adoption the usual
course in Latin countryes was to die,
tinguish the years -by-their number In
the cycle of indication, or tax levying
ora, -Philadelphia Press.
The Curse of tvLasy Wife.
), touilet In the mountains of Ten -
1105800 liad Wailer with a querulous old
ItT=tEgli=„tV4lotttyttwliftbout hard
"Why, WWI," Sala th. tuitrist, "you
ought t) bIt itble to make 1, -As of money
ellIPPing green corn to the Northern
markets "
"Yes, 1 orter," was the sullen reply.
"You have the land, I suppose, and
can get the seed?"
"Yes, I guess en."
"Then why &net you go into the ._epede
unction?"
"No use, stranger," eaely replied the
(Tacker; "the old woman Is toe 'limy to
do the plowtia and plantin'."--Waehing-
ton Star.
A druggist can obtain an imitation
of MINARiD'S LINIMENT from a Tor-
onto house at a very low price, and
have it labeled his own product.
This greasy imitation is the poor-
est one we have yet seen of the many
that every Tom Dick and Harry has
tried to introduce.
_ Ask for ItTINARD'S and you will
get it.
amentior
Her First Con -cern.
- The waitress was pretty and con-
scious of the fact.
The diner was frivolous and for-
ward.
"Pretty tough to be penned up here
on a nice day like this," the diner ob-
served.
"Yea, sir," the girl retsurned.
"You are toogood-lookfng to be do-
ing this work."
"Have you ever thought of better-
ing your condition?"
"Oh, yes."
"It's awfully warm in here."
"Ur, huh."
"Don't eeou suffer from the stuffy
atmosphere?"
Halt losing her bright eyes and as-
suming a pensive air, the girl tartly
replied:
"No, only from the hot aim" -
Pittsburg Chronicle -Telegraph.
M ;nerd's 'Liniment Cures Distemper.
t...............
. Parliamentary Frontiers. ..
On either side (If the commons
chamber 02 Great Britain's parliament
house, mere is a distinct line along
the floor, and any member who when
speaking stepoutside the line on. his
side is liable to be called to order,
These lines are supposed to be scienti-
fic frontiers, and the neutral zone
between is neyond the letigth of .a
swore, thrust, and, although Members
no longer wear swords except those
who are selected to move and Isecond
addresses to the throne on eertain oc-
casions the old precaution still ling-
ers ow -Westminster Gazette.
DIFFICULT.
. Menden Mirror) •
IThe adiutant was lecturing to the sub-
alterns of the battalion.
"In a field," he Bald, "it le YiOW incum-
bent upon en officer- to MOO himself
look as much like a men as possible."
Everylocly laughed.
'erhat is. I mean, explained, "ad intleh
like a eoldter as poselble."
- , ..
2 IN
eteebeekeeozeowee••••••
r•tit'k4
•
COMBINATION COOKER to HEATER
The most efficient and f ecinomical Steve Made.
Will burn oda), wood, eci 6, corn cobs •or anything
burnable,
Fitted with Duelex deate, Hot Blest 'rube end
Stew Dampers, .
WUI hold flee .over night* Otek, bell and bake equal
to the lareett rano&
Hee a fine Oven of heavy steel eheets elosely rivet.
ed teleeether. Body of polished Meal.
If your denier has not s Sample for yeur inispee-
tIon. Send Wed to
RAmILION STOVE tic. HEATER CO,1 LIMITED
sfiteAssOrti 16 IIMULVON, .6N1'.
THE GURNEY TILDEN CO Caudal Oldest Stets Hakes
Now Absootion Method
If you suffer from bleeding, itching,
blind or protruding Piles, send me
your address, and I will tell you how
to cure yoluvell at home by the new
absorption treatment; and will also
saud some of this home treatment free
for trial, with refereaces from your
own locality if requested. Immediate
relief and permanent , cure assured.
Send no money, but tell others of this
offer. Vs'rito to -day to Mrs. M.
Summers, Box P. 8, Windsor, Ont.
•••••••••••AT•Al.0••••••••A•AAA.•
' Quits.
Little MauG.Ie would ten "rboppers"
One day her aunt thought she ought to
Oe cared of tetts habit, so sho spoke
seriously to the littie maid, who prom-
ised to mend her ways.
To point the moral auntie told the
tale of the shepheed boy who was al -
way e calling "Wolf!" until ito one
could believe hint. Then one day the
wolf really came and ale tie alt. the
sheep.
"All the clines?" ioterrupted Mettclie.
"Yes, every one ef them," replied
auntie, decidedly.
"Every single one?"
-Auntle nodded.
Maudie slowly, "I don't
believe you, and you don't believe me.
So there!" -London Answers.
-sena-
His Oualifieations.
- "So," said the old general, "you think
you would make a good valet for an
old rwreck like me, do you? I have a
glass eye, a wooden leg and a wax
arm that need looking after, not to
mention false teeth, etc."
"Oh, that's all right, general," replied
the applicant enthusiastically. "I've
had lots of experience. I workedssix
years in the assembling department of
an automobile factory." -Ladies' Home
d'ournal.
Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, &c,
•2b•••••••••••
FLAXSEED NOW A WONDERFUL
HUMAN FOOD
as deodorieed and used in Dr. Jack-
son's Itoman Meal. It's the most nour-
ishing seed-growu. It has always beeu
knowu as a wonderful food for stock,
but since Dr, Jackson's aiecovery of
a method of deodorizing it, it has
become available az a delicious hu-
man food, 25 per tent. of it being
used in Roman Meal, This food is
guaranteed to relieve constipation or
"money 'beck." It aleo nourishes bet-
ter than meat and prevents indigos -
Hen. Ask your doctor. At all grocera,
10 cents and 23 cents.
THE JOURNALLriTS' CREED.
(BY Walter Williams, of the School of
Journalism, University' of Missouri.)
I believe in the profession of -jour-
nalism. •
I believe that the public journal is
a public trust; that all connected
with it are, to the full measure of
their responsibility, trustees for the
Public; that acceptance of lesser ser-
vice than the public service is betrayal
of this trust,
I believe that clear thtnking and
Meter statement, accuracy and fairness
are.fundamental to good journalieni.
I believe that a journalist should
write only what h.e holds in his heart
to be true.
I believe that suppression of tho
news, for any consideration other than
the welfare of toeiety, is ihdefensible.
I believe that .no ono should -write
as e journallet what he would not say
as a gentleman; that bribery by one's
own poclietbook is 08 billet to be
avoided ns bribery by the pocketbook
of another; that individual respon-
eibility may not be excapcd by plead-
ing another's instructions or anoth-
er's dividends.
I believe that aclverteting, news and
editorial columns rhould alike serve
the best interests ef the readers; that
a eagle standard of helpful truth and
clearness should prevail for all; that
The Caged Emperor.
Alter Elba Napoleen became a bogey •
to the wholeworld as well as to the
British Cevernment, which had the
guarding of him, "Lord Bathurst be-
lieved," says Norwood Young ia "Na-
poleon In Exile: St. Helena (1315-
1e21)," "that Napoleon spent his
time iu concocting plans for escape"
But, said the outlaw to O'Meara,
"Where could I go to, allowing that I
got out .of tee Isi.anci? Every place I
coule arrive at I simild find enemies
to seize me." This punleky dread of
Napoleon's escape front et. Helena led
to England's annexation of the unin-
habited island of Ascension, 700 miles
distant. The even more distant island
of Tristan d'Acunlia was similarly
taken eosseselon of the following year,
because it won thought to be too &In-
gerously near the Napoleonic !Mitt-
ence.
GREAT SALE Or ORGANS
AND PIANOS
. •
Ye Olde F1 IMO of Ileintzman & Co.,
corner King and John streets, Hamil-
ton, Out, are offering 50 organs at a
great reduction in price. Instruments
bearing the nitille8 Cle such well-known
makers as Bell, Doherty, learn, Dos
minion and Uxbridge are being sold
asdoapracticeoewasrit1
0 a3°)lanos from $60 to
$100. Write for complete list of pricee
anti terms.
AAA•TT
Nothing to Wear.
There are women who live to dress,
and the more frequent and radical the
chreiges are the better theylike it. If
their pocketbooks can stand it, no
great harm is done: But the great
majority of women can't afford to
keep up with this pace. The result is
that some stay at home because their
clothes are not in the latest style,
many are nittcia uultairey, and others
keep up with the prceersioa, it mat-
ters not what mey be the cost. '
If a man can wear the same dress
suit for 3 or 10 years and not look
like a freak, why is it. not poseible to
design an evening gown nor women
that will be ia good style as long as it
may be worn? It 1 3 absurd to hemaa
woman say, "I haven't it thing to
wear," when she may have a half-
dozen gowns all in good mutation, -
Frances Freer in Leslie's.
Minard's Liniment Cures Garget bit
Cowr,.
----
To Shaving $10,000,000.
The cost to the eommunity ehav-
ing Vita calculated some years ago by
lingentheo istetisticiatt, who este-
mated that there •were 7,000,000 shav-
ers le the United Kittedons ef. tht•en
claeses-thos..s who shave thetneelves;
thoite who are shaved daily by a bate
bel'; and those, like the majority at
the working classes, who submit thent.
eelves to the razor only once or twice
-
% week. Charges for shaving range
front 2 cents to 25 tomtit; and the ex-
penditure on :shaving must reach $10,-
00,00C yearly.
Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria.
Amphibious Forces.
The use of naval forces on land is,
of course, by no means novel, but not
every one knows that it is a direct ra-
wer:1i of the polleeadopted in the
early days of the news. Under Crom-
well's rule army ofieers were plated
lit 'Command of war vessels, and the
great Admiral Blake was a colonel la
the now moclel army before he event
to sea. Another notable soldier to be
placed in costumed at sea was General
the supreme test of good jeurnallem is
the measure of its public etirvice.
sin which Meek, first duke cf Albemarle, who
-
I believe that the joUrnall tuetiffied the traneference bY winning
succeeds best -and beet deserVes see
two great sea elghts ngainst the Dutch.
ems -fears God arid honors num; is - -Thintlee AtIvertiner.
stoutly independent, unmoved by pride
cif opinion or greed of poWer,
eoix-
struettve, tolerant, but never careless,
self-controlled, pittient; always re-
spectful of its readers but always un-
afraid; is quickly indignant at in-
justice; is unswayed by the aPPerd of
Privilege of the cite:tor of the Mob: •
teaks to give every Man a (+Mlle', and,
as far as law and honest wage and re-
Pognition of human brotherhood tem
Make it so, an equal clumee; is pros
foundly patriotie, while eineerely pro.
inciting Intern:IA(1nel gool Will And
Delimiting world-eonneuleeldin la a
jearnalism of humanity, ef and for
to-day'world.
"Alpine' scoaery ia very grand.°
"Very durable. too. I imagine, it will
pull through the war all right." --Kau.
as e1t3 Journal,
— eerbi