HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1911-05-05, Page 7sees vele teaeutte .eteenellerelleeelleeffeleafeeMlieUereeeell
euee eesseee Asa etas :eke/weer feet,
Wc.11, you se, that is jnet what I
wanted to stink to 'yen about. 11 ien't
hie tneestrallienne any' !auger."
The colonel stewed.
"3.n feet, it nee er wee lilt, .Colonel Oli-
-vex. Lord Arrowfield'a lestowill has
been fouled,* and. he left lee*. Wald and.
nearly•all the property away- been Lore
Villiars."• -
The colotiel and the girls gasped.
- "Left "the Wold and the money—away!
"41ohe graciouel And whom did lm leave
it to, then?".
"To Ms granddaughter, a youug lady
et the name of Trevelyam," said Miss
Mararka„, smoothly. •
"Bless my soul!" exclaimed the eel -
meet, deopping his eyegtaes. "To a. young
lady earned "-Teevelyan! .Never even
heard of. her!"
"I daresay not. But no doubt you
vonle like to make her acquaintance?"
"We• slimed by delighted!" tempered.
lennweline; "any relation of dear, dear
Lori. Aarowfield would be received by ns
an old and valued .frieud."
"I am sure she would," said Miss Ma -
market, dryly, while old Craddoek's gnare•
ed and wrinkled face contracted with a
trier behind the ekes' backs. "I will
go :me fetch her. girls
first. Colouel Oli.
(I", yea have quite made up your
nheule, all of 'semi, in respect to Miss
!ere sby?"
"tele quite, quite?" la ed. Julia
owl Emmeline, acidly.
'Me serer wish to see her again."
eate Emmeline. "And as t4.) reeeiving
her into our hone now that a lady
rulers at the Wold, ie more than ever
"Pm glad to hear you say. that!" said
vees Mezerka. with nii1e. "1
uolite etre yen mean it and will :elide
o. And now Yll fetelt Miss Tree -et-
-ear."
OA most eh:trine:le young lady." said
eohniel. "Poov Villiers! Tenet all
bait be, poor devil? Well,
:leen my soul, he dithet deserve it."
"Noe' eroaked Crsuldock: "very few
ee. Here mimes tha fortunate young
" and he threw beets with a simuter her sweet, innocent lips whispering, I
love You 1' Would to Heaven I could
forget her. and yet, no 1 1 would noted
I could! In such a gray and dreary life
as mine even the memory of her • is
somethiug. Forgive me, Bertie," he
broke off. "Iought not to weary you
with my sorrows; but, you see,. you
had re.ceive(t me. and. ro.rgiveu 1115
Miss Mazinuka. laughed.
"So they would if they had known be-
forehand that you were the mistress of
the • Wold. But 1 hal got them in a
cleft stick ! Alia now don't • give a
thought .to them; they'll never trouble
you any more, depend -upon it. What
time is dinner to -eight?" -
Joan
'Yon are mistress here," .slie said.
Miss Mazurka. wielded. •
"So I am, with your permission, for
a few hours longer. We'll say seven o'••
clock, .and• we'll have, a nice dinner. I'll
go and see the butler and give hint in-
structions. Feeley Miss Mazurka in -
street -Lag a behler 1" and she -went out
laughing.
Meanwhile, at the time Joan was still
wondering what was going tohappen,
two gentlemen gut out of tee- train at
Deercombe and stopped out smartly to-
wards the Wold.
"I'm afraid, Villiers, you uthink this
rather a cool thing to drag you down to
your old house to see the lady who has
dispossed you of it," said Bettie, for it
was he and Stuart Villiers. e
Stuart Villiers smiled gravely.
"No: 1 placed myself in your and
Miss Mazurka's hands, and 1 did so un-
reservedly. I am grateful that you h,e,v-
feet insisted upon toy going to. Buenos
Ayres, for instance." •
Bettie laughed.
"And you still feel—what shall
say?—resigned to the loss of your
wealth. Villiare?"
"Quite!" he assented: "No wealth can
buy me happiness! Kaye told you my
tory.Bertie; some men would have out-
lived the loss, I suppose! I cannot! She
'le with me every hour of the day. There
ie not a day that her beautiful face
does not rise before me, sometimes with
the' loving smile she used to wear when
she lived, aornetime With -a shadow of
veproaelt mating on it. Wity—" he
stopped and looked towards the sea—
"this place, every inch of it, apeaks to
mo of her. There, along that road, we
used to walk, her head upon my breast,
CARET FAIL
IN BEST
Alberta Lasly tells
by Oodd's Kid rl
For Weak, Nervous,Suffering . From
• Dodd's Kidney Pills
-• New Person. "..
Beearealime Attie May 1. (Speelal)--
Woveti who, eee'nereettS, ...run down and
'safe:deg from elheumetiSne. ca,nnotfail
to be inteilestede in the lse of . u Miss
Gertrude E. Beyomee of this place. She
was exectly. in that Medi:time To-1aer
she is as she pets iteherself "a new per-
son." Dodd's Kidney PilSs cured In r.
Here is .her statement even. for =bile
cation:
"'Aty Kidney Disettee . hutted from' a.
cote two Years ago, Rhe mate= ent in,
awl I was weak and esteems, end in a
run down coneitiont 1 1 as attendee by
a. dodo)} who did =tee, pear to uttder-
steal; my ease. Three limes of 'Dod(re
Kidney Pille made * clew person - of
me."
Is not Mies Reyotne's f „condition an
exact deseription of nineetenths of the
ailing women. of. Clump? The doctor
did not understand : he ease. It- was
1
simple enough. It WaS Chiney- Trouble.
And Kidney Disease ie he oue - great
cause of worrietee. eroulnes. Dead's' Kid-
ney, : „1
Pill e .tuways ettre 11.
TO bit' world seemed to 1 math his heart.
IL wee the farm of junta! Yee, it was
here, the eameless genes, the poise of
womENthee -ate eek, the very trielt of the
folded hands evert. hers! .1 melee 1 111
' heart stood still, his face gri'w white;
what maul tenet' wa5 tele that was fortl-
f cure • • .,
tug mu.
Y Pills. A feeling of weaklie,;., took poeseseimi
un-dowru and
h sunset ism—
Mede Her a
seeiie ae the eoor opened and Joan (un-
teree.
-See was very pale, nee her lips (pee -
eve!. slightly as she entered; but after
the pause of a seeond site (nutty towards
?hem with extended hand.
Tee eolonel stepped baek with a start
are! eofrown. and the two gale, nestling have bre:mg:lit it on yourself. When .a
eteeeotase red, tossed tip their leade. neon undertakes to be the keeper of such
**Will yott lute shake hands with me?" as 1—" Re stopped.. and .shrugged his
sete ennn.
"Ahem:" eoughee the eolonel. "ruder
.len esreneretateme. Joan, it will.he better
if we speak eandidly. sin not aware
ender what- pretenee you have made
eon:. way late this. Imitee. Mit 1 must
inferm you that wed -ere -deely regret
time -ealmin!• -your past teekluet bit
teeeered a.11 iutertmiree between my and. ferffelly.
Stuart Villiers eltoole his head.
"None! Oh, no! No, 1 saw heel 1
saw her cloak! 'Besides,forgive me, I
ea allot -talk of it 1 Let us speak of some-
thing eke! This young giel—do you
thiuk she will mind my coming to see
her here?"
"No, she will not mind," replied 33er-
tee, in a low yoiee. "Villein," he said,
after a. short silence, "how are your
nerves? Do yon think you could stand
a shock?"
Stuart Villiers laughed and held out
his hand.
"I ani as firm and steady as a rock,"
he said. "Why, have you got a. shook in
preparation for me„ you merstery-tuonge
err'
"Yes, 1 bitve," said Bertio. "No, I am
not goiug to 'tell yon what it ie. It
would upset my plans, to say nothing
of Mies Mazurka's, who is too forma-
a,ble a pereonatte to interfere with. But
shoulders with a Awl .and
"1 understand,• keener," said. Bertie,
softly. "She must have been very love-
ly and very lovable."
"No woman more s0. on this earth,"
responded Stuart Villiers, fervently.
"A.= I appose there is nodoubt
about her death?" said Bertie, gravely
euegetere and yourselt tutpciesible! •
enatt's Merits dropped. and her eyes
a.:...1•0041 for a ittemeel, with just indignee
teen. bet her voiee was 1111111 and almost.
t•r•tro.(' as she said:
111, ;von kilow all my ',eel story.
..-11 4 Vi')'
Wt know- ahem! -enough!" said the
itt4tit.P. to the young laity
house you are burred:ma -,
et. thet moment tee 4toor opened and
hi se elaeurlet entered.
de:eel?. colottel and young ladies, (meet
eurprise, isn't 111 Yon didn't
••,*ee 1. to fine in Mese eoett, your ware,
wee',,. yeti tteated with smelt entesidete
e tee , the owner of Wold. Misr: hist
Treeelyan!"
"Weiss Trevelywn! fleeter of the
gasped the colonel.
"feet; lerevelyan!" almost shrieked the
eites; "and Joan ie-,-,"
"'Oess eouut Ormsby, gratuldetegluter .of
Stuart Villiers nodile
"Yes, it will, not
time," he saideheitit a
membered how loan at
dered round the velvet
"All Tight," saidaBe
but with a certain agit
senroely managed to at .pprees. • "Pre
get S01110 letters to write and I'll leave
you." •
. Stuart Villiers itnedell, lit bis cigar,
and sauntered through jhe French win-
dows,. into the queeteine e.
He *would go througi the interview
with Miss Trevelyae, stttfle the legal
business- which would fuuike over the
whole of the Property), bequeathed to
her, and then go to—Wel, perhaps Aus-
tralia. It did not muck leather where.
In a minute or two lue forgot all
about Mies Trovelyanand gAvehimself
up to thinking of Joan
It was strange, but this evening he
could only think of her as living.
The scene in the dead -house, by the
Thearies seemed to grow vague and
Misty, and, it was the live Joan who had
•
walked with him by the see, that rose
before him.
"Olt • my darling!" he murmured.
"there is only one hope left me—that I
may meet • you above!'
. And he looked up stt•tbe evening sky
with a reverence which was new born in
lila that night, then he turned 'and Vat
about to enter the losase, -ellen it slight,,
girlishFigur CR.2. ', -1e nl -aqi 6e -gate
into the garden. :. ' . . .
If Wall 45.• kreee.fit' 1-,wittliitto form;
and in its attitude of solitude and lone-
liness it seemed to appeal to, hie oerer-
wrought senses in a strange and almost
awful _manner.
He' stepped btu* into the - shadow of
one of the buttresses and waited for
her to pass. - ,
She same nearer, li”r head stilt turned
froth hint, and as ,he tame, and her
form becotne more ehmely eutlined
against the ivy-eoverel wall, something,
a hand stretched forth front th' invisi-
the htte earl," ernakee old Craeuloce. there is a shoek waiting for you, and
wite grim of delieht. "Therui is eo i were yo„
tele -take. eolonel. V1i1 fumed ittt
WHIP bitek and aids prrwod. Fg
Layeetin °mushy, of the letith Irish. A
teise, 4111. guile e. severise
Pei he ehnekled 'hoarsely.
Tem unfortunete OliVPI'A stood pale
I nif ahnost..grN n chagrin reed die-
emmfiture. A
V4 a conspiracy!" at last gaep•
• e fee colonel.'
"That's just what it is," said Miss
Mgr,-e:kn prnmptly "a conspirney iu
117 v.:$11 frinnds from feleel And,if yon
reel. to knew how eompletely it has
suteo,eiled, ask 'Mr. Craddock, who hal
'1)3' ul1 permissioe to tell you et4Ty-
ehitue as he yonduete von to the front
• getcl" -
CHAPTER XLIet.
•
• With, itrooptlig ementereanene,the teree
eneueed (nee foiloWed by .,Cradd‘oe'k. who
isftwr evjoyee any Iente 1» his life as
eteloyed the etnerterene en hour
white he unioieled the itory, to the en.
hem% e trio.
Tee next nmenine the Olivers left for
, .
tee eon tipeet for elle I) enefi t of the r
ami, Deeecombe it not likely to
he uettored by theitepreSenee agniu.
Tie: day drew oit A-nastill the feeling
nt eoepon se whiclt hung over jean and
Emily was 110t ,1*111.01ted;
Mazurka hitd unmasked and veil-
ueolebed the Olivere; but there was still
• Watling an.othu act to finish the com-
edydwhich elm end Bertie had so care-
- eetede prepared.
"Leave it ell to me, doe, just for a
folk beurs longer," she pleaded to Joan,
as they sat in the drawing room. "I've
eel:teed 011t 1117 intentions very well so
far, haven't TI"
lees," said ewe "Alt, 1 Wish they queer little garden tor a wlule
and smiled.
e for the first
sigh; a? he Te-
d 310: had •wan-
laere.
eheerfelly,
tion which he
"And 1 warn you," said Stuart Vil-
liers, amuuing, "that no altack you can
manufacture can touch nie. I ain case-
hardened, my dear Bettie. If you could
raiee the dead, but there, no more of
that! How well the old place looks! I
should have been proud of it if she teed
lived and 1 eould have seen her there as
ite queeru and mine! But now 1 part
with it without a pang. The sight of it
makes my heart ache. It will be rny last
visit to Deercombe 1"
"You think so!" said Bertie. "Here
we are! Let us go round the heel: way
—will= is it?"
"This way," 'said Stuart Villiers. "It
leads to some rootue I had fitted np
while I was staying hero."
They went to the door in the wing in
Which he had lived before he fled with
,Than. and Mr. Craddock opened it, as if
he expected them.
"Alt, Craddock!" said Stuart Villiers,
very wearily. "Yon here? That is vevy
kind!'
"Yes, my lord, 3 ant sorry to hear of
your lordship's los-----'
"Thanks! Be a faithful steward to
your new mistress, Craddock," he said.
The two Men event np to their rooms
ancl dressed for dinner, and thee Stuart
Villiers ewantered into the rooms he
had occupied in the old days, end Bettie
tette to him.
"Miss Trevelyan eatmot see you until
after dinner,' be said. "Will that be•
time enough?"
"Very well," essented' Stuart 'Villiers,
gently.
"And she lute placed this wing at
your disposal,' went on Bertie. "Can
*en amuse youTeol•f with a clear in that
of tem, and he had to putt up his hand
against the wall to keep Mewl!: from the Nerves.
Nervone d Isola see a re more , mem mon
and. more serious in tbe speteg than at
any other time of the yeere'efluis le the
colaion or the hes 1 medleal en thoritica
after loug ointervation, :vel changes
in the syetem after MO 'Winter months •
may cause emelt more 'than 'speing
weaknese," and the familiar tweerinese
anti a eltiege. • Of finitil recoede proved that .
in April and flay• neerelgtheuele. 'Vitus
{Neve, epilepsy and varitnie forms of
nerve distutherees ave at their leered,
especially among theme evil° have not
rowelled middle age. . •
'Che atitiquated =stem of taking put',
gatives•114 the spring is uselees, for the •
sterneeetly needs strengthening, While
purgativee Melte you weaker, , Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pine have 'a special action
On the blto1 and 1101'1'iN, for they give
strength andeltave cured nut only many
fermi; of nervous • dieorders'but also
•other spring trueeles, =eh as headaches,
weakness of the limbs, loss of appetite,
trembline, of the hamiseas vrell as un.
NERVOUS DISEASES
IN Tlif SPRING
Can be Removed by Toning lip the
Blood, Thus Strengthening
•
• Slowly, with doevaeaet Mee, slue ap-
proached. bint. So near now that he
could almost, toneh her. So aear that if
'be moved she meet. see him! At that
moment she stoopeti and picked a spring
flower., thee on hieing turned her face.
to him, and with a cry that seemed to
leap front hie tortured hetet, he moved
forwardand called her name.
"Joan!"
'She stetted, dropped the flowm, .and
creeped her hande ower her bettett and
se these. two stood. and ,looked at each
other. •
.•Tremblieg like a leaf. while to the
lips, he held out his quivering hands.
That it a vision he was eonvinced.
Itis mind, over -strained, bad given way',
he wee mad, mad, mad! Yes, that was
it! • It was the fleeting vision of a Illaa7
tic!. .4‘11[1 yeteeoe, heaven! ---how reel
she seemed. It was Joan. the Joan of
old, 'teed yet more beentiful, more sweet,
more lovable thaw ever!
SE
\f.
E
•
ut.
b octrielle'lyil ea•N:leti 11' Ile
ta, s(111.1e(Al. n l ya to t—ea-1:0'. (:11.19:gullit..hilyjs.i.pclivt.(uitu:1)(1111,en.e:i ..ai 11.1:‘,dflyiel,lotitiettiTult18:ioni..7:1bs.ltolt:a.kio,eltpli.loeiw,yrt
. . P 13 1 ( • t
ever you may be, anewer inei You are
like—one--I eseut to know awl. loved!
t 0 1,t0. int'l health.
J( all pude and. trembling, relied her nialeildal l 3
isieor 4,01110:neiltiul,6exe••e11rs'iaxleir')e-oxt1
i),s. forby
1' or heaven's seise, enswer ine!"
$e.50 from The 1)r. Willi:tete' Medicine
Co., Bret-I:vele, Ont.
e
Ail Relieved by Lydia E. Pink.
ham's Vegetable Compound.
Sikeston, Mo. — "For seven years I
suffered everything. I was in bed
for four or live days
at a time every
. month,and so weak
I could hardly walk.
cramped and had
backache and head-
ache, and 'was so
nervous and weak
that I dreaded to
see anyone or have
anyone move in the
room. The doctors
gave me medicine to
ease me at those
tines, and saicl that 1 ought to have an
operation. 1 would not listen toIhat,
and when a friend of husband told
him about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound and what It had done
for his wife, I was willing to take it.
Now 1 look the pieture of health and
feel like it, too. I can do my own house-
work, hoe my garden, and Wilk a COW.
can entertain company and enjoy
them. I can visit when I choose, and
walk as far as any ordinary woman,
any day in the month. I wish I could
talk to every sufferingwernanandgirl."
—Mrs. »BMA BeetTLIMZ, Sikeston, Mo.
The most successful remedy in this
country for the cure of all forrns of
female complaints is Lydia E. Pink -
ham's Vegetable Compound.
It is more widely and successfully
used than any other remedy. It has
cured thousands of Women who have
been troubled with displacements, in-
flammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors,
irregularities, periodic paius, haelcacixe,
that bearing do wit feeling, indigestion,
and nervous prostration, after all other
means had failed. Whydon't you try it?
eyes.
s''ismailde. Joan Ormsby, Le'
ore Villiars
lo
"Ale 06, no!" he eried, in a terrible
velee. "Do not deceive me! 11 is
trick! My Joan is dead.--dettd!" -aitd
at
the voice so full of agoey„Joan put her
hand to her heart, that eemned breaking
in sympathy with. his.
"1 11111 trot dead," site aid. "1 allt
<loan. Yes, the wretched dupe yoa ottee
called yours! Lord Villiee t, s lutil 11i1`,2
you to say to me'!"
"Not—dead!" he (tried, boersely. -Let
me touch you! Speak again! 011, teod.
alive and not dead!"
She stood before bite, a pitying light
eeftening the severity of her eeate.
141111 Joan Ormsby ---1 am Ida TreveI.
yen," she said. "You bave deem to eee
Lae, and I am here."
He stepped forward. end caught her in
his arms, the Leave runaing des -en his
face. For a moment ,he Itteled against
his breast entieseent, then she struggled
from the chain he had formed routed ner.
"This—this is a» insult!" elle treated.
"nave you forgottee tbe wrong )4,1.1
eutzglite to do Inc. Lord Villiare?"
*ePorgotteu Wrong!" he ,hoed,
"Wlhat is it -.yea eey t lie pa-
tient with me, Joan! My brain whirls --
ley heart's on fire! • De patient
She stood and looked at elm.
ant Joan Ortusey," she said. trying
to' speak eo1411y 'Coit wished to it':
1110"
As she spoke ehe moved tereerd the
window aud entered the rooet„ anti. half
blindly, he followed her.
It was she who was cote -peed: elle.
the woman; ee, t hemate who wet all
distraugh t.
"Joen! joan! Alive:" he kept mur-
muring, his thirstieg et es devottreng her.
"Now," she said, standing beset., the
fire and raising her eyes to Lk, ;whet
have .you to say to met"
He was (silent, leaning against the
table. his hands shaking.
".Ain 1 to speak?" see seete, in A !ow,
clear voise. "Be IL se. You are teethe,
Lord Villiers, to relinquish to ate that
whit& I mine by law and right. is that
so?"
He inclined his head. It :seemed •IA it
he only half heard and understood.
"I am Joan Ormsby, the grans:updo.
ter of the Earl of Arrowfield. Thiz es-
tate is mine, the wealth you have owed
and nesspeet is mine. This will gives 11
to me,"
(To be Continued.)
AN ACCIDENTAL DISCOVERY.
(Chrietian tieralde
Blotting rapes was discovered purely
by accident. Souse ordinary paper was
being made one day utt a mill in )3erk-
shire, England, when a, careless work-
man forgot to pat ie the sizing meterial.
The whole of the paper intuit was re-
garded as uselees. The proprietor of the
desired to writea note shortly af-
terward, and be took a phew of waste
paper, thinking it was -good enough for
the perpose. To his intense anaoyance,
the ink spread all over the paper. Sud-
denly there ileehed over his mind. the
thought that this peper would do in-
stead of sand for drying ink, and. he
at once advertised his waste maw as
"blotting." There was such a big de-
mand that the mill etteeed to make
ordinary paper, and was soon oreepied
in nmeing blotting pa.per, the nee of
which soon spread to all confttries.
SCIENCE JOTTINGS,
A goat lives abour ten years and wilt
tette about a quart mi naila. day.
The Cnued Kingdom ,as about, 2,500
s ua pers.
emnanas an potatoes aro very much
alike in ehemant.. eonnicsjaon,
CriaMT)a 0,1 le 1t Li ilt.le more than 12 per
cent. ateuhot,
(Arsns are sili: trodden with the bare
feet in meet, -eurts of Spain and 'Italy.
0,:,141;lied.tiz.tiailasent;u1sag,eetnieaeoring to purify the,
v.00-,..suela nits recently launched its
first..borne-`built nal' vessel.
I:( 51 nosy Pt.,Stlge temphoue from
London to st.- Petersburg, a distance of
851rutt'''.
To village. of Walchwil. Switzer-
.
land. half of the natives have the name
oi Warliniann.
A ustra curios anti tribal Idols are
eagerly made in Germany Lu cake' the
teeney of the tourists.
Tice ramming of paving stone 51 donit.
nee with a *pneumatic tamper, doing the
vfierek of tt,e. ulnae rammer in emelt less
tn
Piersherins battlingwith the plague in
Mateitterie preteot themselves with rub-
ber Coat, gloves and helmet, the latter
soaked 111 iodoform.
There are four languages in generat
uee in Switzeriana. hut Gentled is en-
countered to the greatest extent. French.
Italian and Romansch follow in the order
given. u.
The erevis of British submarines are
regularly drilled in 1115 use of the safety
helmet. by which they May save them-
selves and others in event of Ws:tater.
A, reser source of rubber supply bee been- •
aunouneed to the :French Acadefisereetrt
stelenees in a gum .found- in abundance
in the Malay peninsular =a archipelago.
et is easily gathered and contains from
10 to 20 Der cent. of pure gum.
Thore is a possibility that the fogginess
of tee London atmosphere Is decreasing.
The: statement is made that twenty -ono
7.1:levaors fa.ogrov:I,Jter,eia)1,vslas.dauriteu
i;nknt'ilhe.of
filty-
wtirter
montl.s. while lately the average is about
ele7riL
ut*ion in metals is said to be pre-
vented by the paesage through the metals
ot a week current of electricity. This is
a "like =re like" treatment for the pit-
ting' of metals is said to be due to the
local electrical aetion, that is feeble cur-
rent ti.e.1+.1:00eti by tile MO1111112.1' water on
cliseindar metals. often impurities in the
metal itself, at the point of corrosion.
The passage of a weak current from a
alrratuo, will eounteract the local cur-
rent and in Cots marmer the metal pre -
Paris to Tokio wilt
be slortened from ss days to 11 days 10
heurs by the opening of the new connect-
ing lir.e of the trans-Siberlan railroad
from Mulelen to Wihe on the Korean
c.•a.icuul.t, cutting^ out the trip to Viadivos.
e
The taking and ex'hIbiting of moving
tpiiicetutr1sees ohfasthbeeestyt rgotsecaotplt.. lat,litipirsc;teedathiews
the tripoul while the exposure of the film
is being made and lessens the vibration
while it is being projected on the stied.
By recent ehanges made in the design
of the motorcycle Its appearance is great-
ly improved by making use of the tubes
of the frame for the storage of many of
the parts which are now hung to it. For
this purpose it is neeessary to make tha
tgl'ranehop
aterltitelmoaerl'ant.ors of aeroplanes
ati)ninIheld responsible for damage done
to persoss O property when coming- to
the earth. In two eases such operaters
have been fonral guilty of homicide and
Punished. although the punishment was
not as great as that for other forms of
tlI'IsastotaeVilanne1.
Theount . of earth ,excavated
and yet. to be taken out in, bUllding• the
Panama Canal under the -pro/ected plans
amounts to 214,6191,594 gable.11arils.mis
Dile would tower nearly 2 1-2' times as
high as Cheops, and would contain about
14 Ulnas as much material, by volme, itt
height it would extend up into the sky
hearty 1,1e) .feet.
WHY T1-4EY'RE SHORT.
"Merriagee" said George Ade.. et a din-
ner in New York, -is a wonderful! thing."
Air. Ade laughed a cynical haehelor'e
i'lllgielle.
uerlege," he wont on, "elttere pee -
pie so. I met a men Lite other kitty who
had Teeently inueried, and he looked so
liferent that I •• lid:
"'Why, my bey, 1 thought, you were
tall. Bet you've shorter them when I
sew you laai, on owe actually short
rio'N'v:S7"8s, 1 n371 he returned. Teo
merrie(1 end settled down, you know.'"
NOT THEN.
"Do you think ti memory for dates
helps
amtgillattelle," replied' Farmer Con-
tested. "But not when he is selling oprieg
ehickets."--Washiegtott Star.
HOW 3 Doctor's Bill W3S
Molded
When the amount of money paid
every year by a large family to the phy-
siclaa Is footed up, it makes no :small
item of expense. Bat to entirely esu-
eap0 15 doeteretbill for several yeare ie.'
an intereeticg neeompiishmeat on the
part of Mrs.. tleettle Begginseeef
le, 0., Ont., which given this :sensible ad-
vice: Very frequently teere are ailments
in the family that, cite be avoided if
`Nerviline' is used. • When my children
come in from play with a cough or
Blight cold, 1 :rub their cheats •with Ner-
viline, put en a Nerellirie.Borous Fleeter,
and give them it .stiff doe of Nerviline
in hot water. They are =reel,at onee.
leer cramps, internal pains, iedigaition,
Nerviline has; never failed, 4.1Ild fur .out-
ward use there eouldn't be a better lini-
ment. By using, the Pelson remedies
we. have avoided 'doctor's bills for years.
Others can do the estme. Timis informa-
l= is well worth cutting out and keep-
ing for future refereneee-
4