Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1902-04-11, Page 6ABS,i, TE SE RITYo ccowoe Carter's Little Liver Pffls. Must Bear Signature of ,see Fac -S miio Wrapper Below. *tare :mon .nd as easy to tame as seignire BARTERS WER FOR HU ACKG FOR DlrlN€SS: FOR etuausES5., FDR TORPID LIVER. FOR -CONSTIPATION, FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR THEOOMPLEXION 1 I PUre1.7 Vegetable. ijAjtllOfl... OO. At DUKE 51 -CK HEADACHE. VETERINARY TOHN GRIEVE, V. S., honor gre.duate of Ontario el Veterinary College. A .Idiseases of Domesti ens:pais treated. Calls promptly attended to an ohergee moderate. Veterinary Dentistry a specialty. °Mee and residence on Goderich street, one door of Dr Scott's office, Seaforth. 111241 LEGAL JAMES L. KILLORAN, antieter Solicitor, Conveyanoer and Notary Public. Money to loan. Office over Pickard's Store Kehl Street, Seaforth. - 1528 13r-rister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary Public. Solicitor for the Dominion Bank. Offi3e—in rear of Dieminion Bank, Seaforth. /donee- to loan. 1225 lr M. BEST, Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer, el. Notary Public). Officee up stein, over C. W. Pepat's bookstore, Main Street, Seaforth, Ontario. 1827 ENRY BEATTIE, Barrister, Solicitor, &o. Money to loam Office—Oady's Block, Sea. AD th. 167941 dARROW & GARROW, Barristers, Solicitors, &a. Cor. Hami.ton St. and Square, Goderioh, Ont. DIORIE GOR -DO 7 A STORY OF TIIF CLYDE. BY THOMAS C. GIBSON., CHAPTER I. Dickie Gordon was only one of the rank and file, but he thought it an outrage that, he was sot a Brigadier -General. The trouble of it all was that nobody save hicnself seem- ed to be in any way impressed by his many eminent gvalifioations for shining in a higher sphere. Perhaps that is not quite true, for there really was one who had',, • abounding faith in his abiti y to a000mplish, the many wonderful things of which he considered himself capable ; but of her we shall !peak later. In the first plane, it must bo explained that Dickie was not really one of the °` rens and file " in a military sense. , He was not la soldier at all—not even a volunteer—but just a humble junior iu the office of Maori,. Wheatley & Rice, wholesale produce me chants, West Nile street, Glasgow, Scot land. Dickie was somewhat pensive, highly romantic—a trait of character that wee heightened, perhaps, by a too close etudy, at an impressionable age of ttyrpq'e'� works— and he was just twenty.1 Four years ago he had left hie home by the banks of Lich Lomond, filled. as eo ritany country boys are, se ith the belief that' the battle of life is more easily fought in great .city than elsewhere, and that the - orld may -be con- quered in a few years, ore or lees. YOU see Dickie was rather igiorant, despite the vast amount of knowledge be had acquired t the village school at borne, and at the Glasgow Athaneaum evening classes—and elsewhere. He used sorhetimee even to fear that the wells of learning would beoorne exhausted. But that ickie had actually acquired some real kuo ledge since Doming to the oity is beyond dis..ute, for he him. 1f acknowledged that he knew lconsi.lerahly less at tte end of his f., r peara' apprenti ',- ship than he did at the nd of his first four days' service in the cap city of office b y. So you see hie, after, =11, wits a hope ul case. One thing he halearned was, tat office buye are not cons dersd Eby heart' ss employere to be worth ore than six s il- linge sterling per week, rite irrespective of any laudable ambitions hieh he may ent r- tain about supporting widowed inothers, and providing school an college education for younger brothers an. sisters. It was a bitter pill for Di•:kie to : wallow, for he ad left his home R i:h lofty deas in his mind on the subject. It took thwhole four ye re to entirely disillusi. n im, and it, might very likely have taken l.nger had not he subtle influence of the bright. -eyed, da k. haired damsel afore . entioued haste ed matters. Dickie had made the a-quaintanee of is young lady—how need •ot concern us ; e - sides, to tell it might s ockome read re' notioes of propriety—a d bad soon to en her very .deeply into his 'onfid nae. She, on her part, had dieplaye.d : wonderful interest in hie welfare, and had m nitres .ed what was, under the circumstances, quite a superflut?us amount of sympathy fo him in the trillale and hardships a Hi wl,i h hit path in life was beset. , It was not that his lot !was really` parti u- tarly hard, but it. pleased Dicie'!, Byronio temperament to think it wit . And. then you see, he was rather partia to f feminine sympathy, and this naturally presented itself as being the best and mot irteresttng way of oblaiiing ir. If rho tr th must be told. Dickie had taken, n t ono, . but several young ladies into his con fi ienee, he had found them all deeply sy pathetic and in- terested to quite a remarkable ex ent in his well-being. The irony o his being m - polled to occupy such a utnblie pciaition in the world became more app rent] to im every day,. and but for t a wealth !of m id- enly sympathy lavished, upon bine Dickie would have found life se rce bearable. He might probably have bee driven to join the volunteers, or do some hing equ illy rash and desperate. Even th pos ibtlit'y of the •` Reg'lars" would occasi nal' haunt hiim. The maidens saved him f om this 'enadn es, but even in this Dickie f It that there *as a strange irony, for he f and it impossible • noroefRSTED, enticeeeor to the late firm Of Donseeyancer, and Notaty . Solicitor for the Can sealanThenk of Commerce. Money to lend. Farm tor sale. Officio- ha Soott's Blook, Main Street E. W. TWEDDLEI Graduate of Royal College of Dental Sureeons of On- tate°, post graduate cour:e in rt.) wn and bridge work painlees extraotiou of teeth. Office over Dominion Bank, Seaforth, fcrmerly occupied by G. F. .B.1:en. 1761 TAR. F. A. SRLT.ERY, Dentist, graduate of the 1.1., Royal College of Dental Surgeone, Toronto, &leo honor graduate of Department of Derstistry,Toronto U !vanity. Office in the Petty block, Hensall. viett Zurich every Monday, commenoing Mon- Tweddle), giaduate of Royal College of Dental eons of Ontario ; first class honor graduete of T ronto University ; crown and bridge work, also go d work in all its forms. All the moat modern methods for painless filling and painless extraction of teeth. All operations carefully perlormed. 3 Moe Tvreddle's old etand, over Dill's grocery -olio orth. - 1640 Dr. John McGinnis, flon. Graduate London Western University, membet al Ontario College of Physicians and Efurgeone. onles and Residence—Formerly occupied by Mr. Wm. Fickard, ViotoriaoStreet, next to thc Catholic Church ArNight calls attended promptly. 1163x12 DRS. BETHUNE & ROSS Office over Johnson'e Hardware Store, Seaforth. /Ilex. Bermes E. -Nigh t eaile attended to at the office. 1772x52 eaLte etsieent Physician and Surgeon, Toronto Gen- eral Hospital. Honor graduate Trinity University, member of the College of Physicians and Surgeons Ontario. Coroner for the County of Huron. Mee and Reeidenee—Goderich Street, East of the alethodist Church. - Telephone 46. 1888 DRS. SCOTT & MacKAY, PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, Wench street, opposite Methodist ohuroh,Seaforth S. a. SCOTT, graduate Victoria and Ann Arber, and =ember .Ontario College of Physiolans end Surgeone. Coroner for County of Huron, el. itaollAY, honor graduate Trinity University, gold medalist Trinity Medical College. Member College of Physioians and Surgeons, °abed°. 1488 System Renovator —AND OTHER— TESTED - REMEDIES. A specific and antidote ter Impure, Weak and Im lion of the Heart, Lives Complaint, Neuralgia, Los of Memory, Bronchitis, Ooneumption, Gall Stones, Jaund.ce, Kioney and Urinary Diseases, St. Viins LIEORATORY—Goderich, Ontario. J, M. McLEOD, Proprietor and Mann • RED CEDAR SHINGLES. the unders:gned wishes to announce to the public, that having bought a large quantity of the three best bands of rt ti cedar shingles, and by getting a liberal diecount for cash. ie prepared to sell them to cus- touters at pt 'ries that defy competition. S. LAMB'S Lumber Yard, Seaforth. HEMLOCK LUMBER. 'Having le emelt at the Seaforth Lumber Yard a very large quantity of all the different lengths and e. ie y arared to fill any bill that is / reeented of the very best quality of Hemlock. S. LAMB'S Lumber Yard, Seaforth. PIN E. Having bought a large qualdity of pine from a large firm in alueltoka, I sin getting pine dressed both sides cr or e side, for siding, flooring, ceiling; wide plank for water troughs •, spruce and balsam for gravel boxes, 1;ght and durable. Alen white cedar sbinglea XXXX and XXX and XX of best make MI Muskoka. Large stock always on hend. $, LAMB'S Lumber Yard, Seaforth. 1776 'rH EIGN DST Eight pounds of love and laughter, ot can fill up the !blank out of her experience of puny, wailing childreu, Whose coniing brought no glad- ness r the home. Wom n who have used , Dr. Piercee Paw) *te ' Prescrip- tion s a pre -natal prep, ration know that it makes 41 the difference be- tween happy, healthy, mother- hooct of murmur- ing ,and misery. And] they know also, I that happy, healthy mothers have happy, healthy i• . whol body for tlie ho• odi It practic- ally doesaway with the pains of child- birtlo gives the tit o the r abundant vitality and en- ables her to nurse and nourish a healthy The sTfavorite Pe scriptioh" contains no alcohol, neither opi no cocaine, chloral nor any other narcotics , tlI am mother of childretee writes Mrs, eei A. Briggs, o Mill od, Douglas Co., °regain, never suffered! any t speak o ; had no after woinan ; weigh about tie pounds. I have had some stomach trouble, but a few doses of 'Golden Medical DiscoVery ' NOWA set In an right. I am all the medicine one 1 eeds, if taken in timel to keep one in perfect lie! 1-th. e I feel that ;I owe ny little boy's life to ler. Pierces Golden .ble jot Discovery, as he had convulsitms,and eve thing he ate would bring them °it I coinmencY•cl to give hint the 'Got en Medical Discoeety ' in ten drop OS es three tit les be found and he gro* • like a Iv ed.e Dr. Pierce's Pleaspeit Pellets are the 4st laxative for *omen ' 1 weereimeassesesseeseaseseeseesseememaaeraereeeeeeewi of 'you'll, had his Miad secretly bent' on loOliiag 'afterlsome caste else's sister. Do !not bleme them, i reade . Time .was —perhaps eeill is—when you e tusilf were not over And do the trip, *as arranged. Diokie had to horrote ten thilling from Mather, to help to de ray s expi iies, and ehat naturally hu t hitt pride nd eelf-resPect deeperately, nd ait rwards hurt his pocket eti I worse w en the time c me for him to mere proof. owevp , of ha far the world Wilt: out of jeint eciei Ily wh n! such thtngs co Id be. Dickie fe b withip ; himself, you eet, that he *as mu h more oompetent1than M ther to spend a large inc me wieely1 and' usefully. It was, therefore, clearly a gross injustice that Math r ehould have a large indome, while he, l) okie, had barely suffi- cient to pay hi i weekly board; It was cer- M ther, but thee what tam ifice or suffering it At wae an i experience that might have Dickie's. The day was one ' of ondrous beauty.. Overhead not a cl ad m end the deep blue sky, but far off behind the die. ta t mountain tope etretched long bars of si very white. The freeh k!trachig air and b illient sunehine; the spar ling blue waters the matchless scene y of he Clyde, and above and before all the ma netio charm of d Lim uite out of this re into a kind of fairy - own, ain I es Persons have b en known to gain a pound a ay by taking an ounce of SC TT'S MIT SION. It is stran e, but i! often happens. Somehow the' o the pound; it see digestive machinerfr goini prop erly, so that the patient is abi to digest and absoib his o0inar way thie gain nce produces s to start th food, which he co fore, and till at is the is made. A certain amo nt of flesh is necessary for healt • if yoi have not got it you 4an leC it by taking airs You will find it just useful injummet as In winter, and if you are thriying upon It don't stof because the weathei warm. SCOTT &BOWNE, To onto, Cei4da. IRLTRON EXPO proposal as his going away. She than him after all, younee, but, Dickie could not admit that, and t las of opposition was just exactly needed to enable him to make up He immediately set himself to oon of the feasibility of the project. not quite succeed in that though his logic and eloquence to the utm he did succeed in convincing hims wandering spit it) of the Soot had aroused within him and was fast his master, though he knew it not Six months later Diokie was a w New York, OR w: a wiser of course, hi laamtii;hae. to lee her opt!, Tbilatit bein fairly b coining w irlwind and oath w rid of carleand!c la d where eyerythi g was right and beau - ti ul, mid *here eire y one was happy and fi es in which ambitious yoeng country lads, w o had all their lives been filliog their lungs with the puto fresh air !of the moun- t ins, were 'oorifined all daY until their cheeks lost the glciw of health and the cooe liJoivn handi became thin and white and d lioate, and where he °nee !equate shoul- d rs becameipremat rely etooped and bent. It was not that these Wogs had preyed eihnally, whenin On of' hi pensive moods weuld he ruininate on them! ie an obseekt Bert of way t but beyond a hazy idea that - meet things In the world Were wrong, and that nobodyibut himself a emed to know how to set them iri ht, Vs knowledge of Bat, on t ie daY f daye there was one ec*ous, and hat wa that itt this El Dorado into which e had! f und Lircself so suddenly m stere, wh cared leas hole the Utopian d came of youth th n for rincling out . of ittoxicating preeenee f a piece: of embodied m nt Was fu 1 of grace and beauty, and the divinity in t e pardon of a ,beautiful and ✓ ry rustle df whdse dress wae agile music of the merry little a twee on the beach. And then the glahces that shot_firoin under those lopg dark hishes-ewhat heart would they ofleyrnpathy that fell from those rosy lips, oo her merry laug hen she chose to tease ! Ah ! Dickie, Die' ie, leveller heads than thine might- ell [tee becornefilled a i tit the intoxieation f it all I need not tell ef 11 the otnentous things Dickiteand his fair compan od had to say to each other t at day, nor of al( the wonderful diecoveries t ey nea e cone ruing each other. Most likely, readeir, you h ve said them all yclurself, or ad t e said o you. If not, cl cornea then I sincelre y pity you, for then you will hay misse the gneatest and parest happiness which it i permitted ue poor or - tale to enjoy on th a mum:lane spher —a ha piness th t eorne but once in a lifetime to young ME I and; m aider . hat tnorn ng Dlic is and his compabion so " and " Mr. Gordon," That night they th n Dickie found'himseld back 'once. more in the bard work -el -day world, a mere wait in the ranks ef the surging mighty mast of jotitling, and.trampling under heel, without heed or remorse, the weak end faltering. A kihd of despair tocilt posseseicin of him at the coritest he muet wage e're it would be oesible for him to1 pub hie foot on even the o est 'rung of thelladder that leads up to -fa e and fortune. 1 The treeod watt fleeting an seen palmed, but it Was Dickie's rat re 1 glimpse intothe mighty problem t at huManity has for theueienda of years b en vainly, endeavering to solve, and will pi le - ably get on doing for thousands of years to t first'perhaps, yet gradually shaping it slf re clearly and distinctly, was beginning ake form in Dickie's mind. At bottle, eed, the struggle seemed dishearten ng n ugh; and the prespect 6f succeas small ita eed • but there were other places where au ely the pressure was lese great and the to short, the road to succesa was free anal easy to:travel. Many sleepless nights Dickie Spent cagitatieg the matter, and the more he !thought of it the more the idea grew ,on hita. At last he ventured te consule Jeanie. 4.-. first she refused even te listen to milli a It was,still early summer, and t as yet hut few promenaders on Walk, tine Newport 09&11011 havin opened. :The morning was bright but there ems a keenness iM the a was probably the reason why the figure occupying one of the seats 'steps overlooking the bathing bea alight shiver and turned up the co light summer coat. The figure was a young nsan hardly past the flush yet with lines forming, as if pr about the corners of the eyeis and on the brow, and with the bloom absent froin the cheeks. When look for a more sheltered nook with a slow step lacking in vigor tioity for one so young. Present found a spot more sheltered from east wind, he sat down again. of bathers were disporting theme the beach, some paddling about i lows, others joining hands and to meet the long rolling breaker cisme lazily shoreward, while a 1 stronger swimmers breasted the out from the shore. Beneath hi thundered and boiled among the boulders strewn about in wild p the foot of the cliffs. Away' ocee. monotony of the vast expanse of ing waters was unbroken rave w northwards a heavy trail of bro lay along the horizon, marking t some steamer probably making fo Vineyard. Dickie—for the solit. on the walk was none other than these things with his eyes, indee mind was far from Newport and unfolded before him. He was another summer day whioh he ha the Clyde—a day that now was with the things of the fareff pa memory of which remained und the lapse of time. What e morn that had been for him ! 4ow -thoughe that morning when he h so gaily and lightheartedly on Iona that that day was to ohang future career. It had begun him to woo fickle fortune in a st All through the six long years pitesed mince then the memory of • derer in re were scarcely which solitary ear the eh, gave a 1 r of his that of f youth, aturely, uth and f health rose to walked nd elate having he keen number es along he elud- ing out ayes far the surf eke and usion at ard the rk, heav- e far off n smoke but hie he scene nking of spent on timbered yet the med by stepped oard the is whole that had had beerr 110 0 1 a 0 ever present with him, hit sta.r_oLehope in tirnes of bitter adversity And de guiding star in prosperity. An memory of that same day was he te make up his mind to return o that land he had left so long ago such high hopee. He had cone York thinking, its so twiny thi the streets paved with gold. had found them paved vrith th hope of countless youths who like himself, never doubting b America's mighty comniercial wealth and ha.ppinets to the terms are synonumous--woul theire. He had not then learne dom the pursuit. of wealth ever happiness ia its train, nor how petite, comes at last but to mock 0 It eeemed to Diokie that int years he had spent in America been crowded the expsrience of time. He had not been long in first point that was brought ho rather foroibly was the fact that in the Weetern hemisphere was which had created far lees commotion than he had expected. - With hie bearing and the excellent testimonials 'he oarried with him Dickie had thought that it weuld be an easy matter to find employment.' On the contrary, nobody seemed to wan him on any terms, and for three month , with a sinking heart and a sinking puree, lee walked the !streets of New York vainly se king "for liberty to toil." At length a f iend—his landlord, to wit, who -was probab y becom- ing concerned about his d employ- ment for Dickie as a bricklayer. But, Dickie protested, "I'm not a lericklayer, and wouldn't know what todo." That, how- ever, he was told, was all right, He was merely to watch how the others did and he would soon learn. His initial blunders -were to be attributed to. the different methods employed in the old country. It was a sure sign of a " greenhorn " to admit that there was anything under he sun he could not do. And so Diokie bought a trowel donned a suit of overalls, and duly present dinned! next morning at the appointed lace. At the end of the first :fifteen minutes ,,he found himself the centre of a gr u of work- men whose hilarious mirth epee il brought the " boss" on the scene. Poor ckie stood before him shamefacedly, the ot blood mounting to his browland te les. The foreman, or "boas" looked at hi and then at his work. " Guess you ain't ed to this sort p' work," he said, his eye winkling. The fact was self evident, but i kie man- aged to falter—" They do it diff rently in must be something in the climate of the old country that keeps your walls f om fallin' down—or mebbe it's cause your o untry's so tarnation small that there 'ain't room for 'em to fall," said the nian. The he con- tiaued—" Es we don't want this wall here to fall down an' bury half o' us I g ems you'd better git through." ` Diekie did not need to have it explained to him that " git through" meant that hp want° quit. His bp trembled, and the foreman, who was a kindly enoug man in his own way, saw it. He looked t Dickie'a handa. They evere already torn a d bleed- ing. By long experience he hei learned, without need of further (petition ng, what it all meant. He had seen many a, youth in pair, his now the ping him e more to Iled with to New , to find tead, he shattered ad come that in etropolis ath these soon be how set- tees bring ten p 708- 8. the six here had If a life. ew York to him is arrival an event Vigorous Womanho Illgtde Perfect by Dlx. men t which. Does is Claimed for it. Settee Exactl • Nerve Trent - What The happiness of every hon.e denutda very largely on the heall,h ,ip• he wife and mother. If she is iiervous, peevish and irritable, worried by the little cares of every day life, ,and to •mented hy pains and irregularities )t at aro sure to accompany a rundown system., there can be no happiness in t home for husband and children. Too many women are victims of ner- vous exhaustion, and do not now It. They suffer from indigestion a id dys- pepsia, nervous headache and sleep-. lessness, and drag themSelves about the house feeling languid and tl .ed out. You can be healthy and vigo otis if you follow the advice of Dr. eh se, the famous Receipt Book author. He would not deceive you, and ihi treat- ment' never disappoints. Dr. Chase's Nerve Food is- intended for u t such cases as are here desCribed. y upply- ing to the thin, watery blood z nd weak, exhausted nerves the Ivery m terials of which nature constrticts yra.w nerve cells and ntsw bodily tissue it, gradual- ly and certainly reconstrnct and re - .vitalizes the weakened and desbillihteaatedd- nervous syStein, CULTS nervo ache§ and -dyspepsia,, iand pe overcomes weakness .ond irre Bates & Toronto. RIGHT'S !SEAS is thp deadliest and most painful malady to which rna.nkind is subject. Dodd's -Kidney Pills will cure any case of Bright's Disease. They have never failed in one single case. They are the only remedy that ever has cured it, and they are tile only remedy that can. There are inufithins of bent and name—but imita- tions are dangerous. The original and only genuine cure for Bright's ODD'S KIDNEY PILL fifty cents eid box at all druggists. Dodd's Kidney Pills are I Diokie's predicament are then. " I ain't got anything suitable to offer you," be said kindly, "but if you like you may try your hand at carryiid tbe hod for a bit till 4ome- thin better turns up. I'll speak to the boss about you, and rnebbe he can fix you up." 1 Tears of mortification and wounded pride sprang to Dickie's eyes, and he hastily turn- ed his head aside to dash them away, The foreman no( iced it, and pretended to be examining a pieoe of work minutely, Pres- ently Diokie turnedoto tell him he was ready to accept his offer. " That's the way, lad," he sail. "'Twon't last long, so don't get discouraged. You're made o' the 'right stuff, and you'll get along in time, never fear." These were the kindest Vvords Diokie had heard since he landed. His eyes filled and Ms voice was too huaky to as Diokie in time discovered, not more hum- ble than falls to the lot ot most .asidring turning point in Dickie's fortunes. 1 Not/ that he jumped immediately into pros erity, or that his pith after that became a ooth. Far from that, indeed, but he had re tived! his first and bitterest lesson, the rest mild! be easier. He had the good sense to s other his mortification, bittet though it was and to set manfully to work determined t Burt mount every difficulty—which showed thatl the foreman was right in thinkitg that Diokie was made of the right stuff. . Prosperity did not come quickly. For mote than a year after that his pat was; far from being an enviable ene, b b he held bravely on hie way. He was passing through the furnace, and the gold was be- coming ever purer and more refine At lengbh hie reward came. He obtai ed 4 situation with a large New York firm and first, Dickie threw all his energies in o •hifi work, and promotion rapidly followed redoubled his efforts, for now he ea preaching nearer and nearer every da happY time when he could return he Jeanie, and, with pardonable pride, a porous, and I have come home ta ask share with me my prosperity." But " The best laid schemes o' mice an Gang aft agley." DIckie bad still anothelt lesson to lea bitter as any that had receeded it, t it laoked the sting of hhmiliation, wh always the part that is hardtst to bea • One morning Dickie woke up to fin tha the price he had been paying for his pros i 1 perity had been toe great. Under the strai ' his health had been gradually giving way Malaria, that felt though much nec erste I disease, which had dugs° many Furniture graves, had for years been slowly but surelt undermining his constitution. He eede it not, but worked on, seeing only s wee" coining nearer and nearer to him. H w nbt a singular case. Thousands are ever day doing just as Dickie did, never p usin te consider that nature will inovitabl exec just retribution, and thousands are dail , pfiying the penalty which they never rean Med until too late that they had incurredJ An attack of pneumonia at length put a pause to Pickle's career. For a week h hung in the balance between life and death; and then slowly, very elowlY, he began mend. When he was anfficiently recevere to bear the dictum, it was only to be told that he muse say good-bve to all his oherishe ed hopes and schemes. Ile must be colntent, the doctor told him, to step aside froth -active business life for an indefinite period —possibly for years—otherwise he would pay the forfeit with his life. had come out on the tiff Walk, where he dt. i And so Dickie had ome to Newport t recuperate—and to th k. Every day h could be alone with nature, and there he had fought out his battle against bitter dike appointment and blinhted hOpes. It was hard lesson to learn— o hard that b t fe of us ever learn it—bu Diokie learnt he had learnt the othqs. The victor aP tha pros ou tee oug ch i how the world may Oboose to look on you ?" that ib was only your proeperity that I loved ?" Jeanie in- errupted earneatly and with just a touch of reproach in her voice. " Oh, Dickie," she continued, " can't you tee that I too have been learning lifela lessons since you went atnity ? I too have come to see and under- stand how infinitely greater and nobler it is to have learnt goodness rather than to have aequired wealth or fame, or any of the bub- ble° that the world loves:" Dickie felt the rebuke, but he wee not yet quite dons. " But, Jeanie " he answered, I am nee good as yen thiA. Oh if you " But I do know," Jeaamnieatbrtoimkeer.H.n." -it Of only knew how weak I the best of us, who oan say atilhigmoothe! Nay, the very Words would give How sweet and realturing to poo Diokie licensed her gentle, perfectly odulated voice and quiet womanly ways 1. ow dif- Terent, too, she was, he thought. Ay, "he too, be felt, must have passed through `the tire. to produce that nameless °bulge. Some day, he doubted not, she would tell hire of it. " I could be a better man if I always had you beside me to help and encourage - me," he said, half musingly. He had been pleading against himself. It had been a hard thing to do, but he believed he was doing it for her sake, and he felt that they must understand each other from, the firet. e nature it had come to him days before we met him n the Cliff Walk. And noW Dickie was going home. Yes, home—not, aa had once been his chief ambition, to ask Jeanie to shin% his prosperity. That Was gone at one f44 sweep. But he woUld tell her of hie failure and disappointmenti and of the lessons he had learnt from them, and—but maybe she wouldn't want to_he_af any more. I! i II CHAPTER III. 'l li A few weeks later Diokie found himeell once more in GlasgoW. He lost no time in calling on the Nicholsons, but found the hoarse shut up. He was filled with momen ary ciisappciatment and alarm, but on ma e ing inquiries he found that they had oniy gone for the summer to—Ardrishaig. Did- kie's pulses thtilled at the name, and he wondered if the omen were good. Next da he took his place on the deck of the steame for Ardrishaig. It was a bright sunny morning, and the caller air was laden with a fragrance opening blossoms and filled with the hum I many bees. Bright -hewed butterflies flitte i';1 about from flower to flower, and the song f the lark came down in 'full rich notes from a tiny speck in the blee above. Here an there on the surrounding hills just a fain tinge of royal purple might be discerned,ba the heather would not bp at its best fd nearly a month yet. Only a few !straggler were loitering about the pier, for it was sti comparatively early and the Glasgow boa (the arrival and departure of which wer the ohief events of the day), would not be i for over an hour yet, But the two figuree walking slowly along by the beach in an ene nicely opposite direction from the pier were evidently in no way intereeted, as the resIi of the community seemed to be, in the arI4 rival of the Glasgow boat. " Oh ! Diokie, just to think that you are back again after all those long weary years; How long and dreary they seemed with yen so far away," theAirl Was saying. " Ay, Jeanie, Dickie returned, " bu surely you do not—you 1 cannot—understan what it means my coming back like this Can't you see that I haie come back broke in health, with every prospect blighted an the future all full of dotibt and darkness ? have not done any of the wonderful things went away to do. Don't you know that th world will look on Ina ste a failure ?" • " And do you think that it ;matters to me Now he aaw what a good and no was hers. He hnew how she love he felt that to any more would o her pain. " Then let us always help each other," she answered in a low voice. " And, oh Diekie, promise me that you will never go away again." " Nob if you bid me stay," h answer- ed, and as they had now paseled froni the view of the idlers on the pier, he Aid some- thing else which it is not necens ry to re- Diokie did not go away' again. The caller air of hie native hills and glene, aided by Jeanie's skilful nursing gradually restored the bloom of health to his cheek. With health restored, he soon found that the future was not so dark end dou tful after all. His experience had not been altogether in vain, and he soon found himsel in Li re. munerative situation, and he was areful not to overtax nature a second time. A few years later Dickie and J anie were quietly married. -They 1 still li e quietly and unostentatiously in "en. ld Sanct Mungo," where they are know among a large'circle of friends foe their charitable works and for the useful end uns lfish lives they lead. Every summer they leave the city and go off to a dear lite' watering place by , the shores of. their wn loved Clyde. There they are equally ell known for their good works, and they lo k forward to a time, not far distant, when ey will make theiohorne near the apot wh re they firat found their happinens. THE EkilE. HEALTH IN .SPRI - Nature Requires. Asisist During These Mon To ' Help Throw Off The Impur ties That Accumulated During -the inter : Menthe- Purgatives Should not be Used—It ii a Ton o That is ifeeded. Ip this olimate there are man reasons why people feel all out. of gear in he spring mouthe. Perhaps the Chief of th se the long hours in imperfectly ventila d offices, You may feel that there is nothin eriously the matter, you are only,a little tired after slight exertion, or perhaps your ppetite is fickle, or little pimples or ereptio in on the skin show that the bloodl is not as pure as it ahould be. If you feel this way, net only your comfort but your health demands that you take proper steps to clerinte your- self of the blood impurities that a e reopen - blood pie -rifler, nerve strengthener aneS gen- eral up -lifter of the entire epaterri, Dr, Wil- liams' Pink Pille for Pale People meet all these requirements more perfectl then any other mediciae. These are _tonic pills, and not violent and weakening like purgative medicines. Nature does not reqtt re a viol- ent measure in spring, but a hel ing hand to throw cif the impurities which basic so - cumulated during the winter, an, so toning 'and strengthening every organ an function Ithat a condition of perfent health will pre- vail. Everyone—old and young ought to take Dr. Wilhams-s-Piak Pills in he spring. There is no other medibine will o you so much good. Mr. James Salmon, ostmaster, Salmon Creek, N. B., sans :—" eat !spring I was feeling decidedly unwell. I was weak, dizzy ae times, and continually telt tired. My appetite was poor and I wa losing in weight. I tried several medicines ut noth- ing did me any good until I bega t e, use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and a ifew boxes would advise all who feel -run do n and out of sorts to take Dr. Williams' P ak Pills." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are al o effective n the cure of all diseases due to edoor, thin, watery blood or weak dery es. o not take' a substitute for these pills—it is a waete of money and a menace to healt to do eo. See that the full nanie " Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People," is on the wrapper around every box. Seld by all medicine dealers, or sexit post aid at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2 50 by ad- dreseing the Dr. Williams' M. dicioe Co, APRIL 11, 1902 WHAT ! DOES THE GRIM SPECTRE FOLLOW YOU INTO THE JOYOUS SPRINGTIME ? Brockville, Ontario. • Wise and Otherw se. —The baker who mixes his ough prop- erly Mica aoft thing of it. —It's funny how Many me there are who are trying to get rid of a " good ell—ingft'''s a mistake to isuppose elle art of - ' —A man may be the poor to hire a lawyer and at the sante time ca afford to keep his own counsel. —Some pretty women are un 0/3860110 of their beauty, but the majority a e not even Momentarily forgetful. ,I' ---Thcoes who are satisfied ith what they have accompliehed will ne er become famoua for what they mi ht aim pliehe ' —The average man ever fully realizes the truth of the adage about a ol and' his money until after he has bumpe 8 up egainst *erne other man's game. i coachman and a footman." Lit le Georgie —Willingness to be taught hat we do pot know is the sure pledge of g owth, both M knowledge and wisdom.—Bla rt I —The „British divorce court has very rcises her In.erogative to the limit during ours, sh-e ought to be content t outh shut while she alumbere. You'd make a, pretty g the employer, sarcastically o ly had a little more comm never occur to you that if I ha er waking keep her but did it a little a clerk at V/ha is Life to Yo If you are a via im of pile?, as one per on in every four is, you euffe keenly Item one of th most tor. tering ailments lmown to manjuad may ell wonder if life is really mirth living. Certain re! ef an41 WM- Mate cure Is ay/hieing you b means of r. Chase's Ointment. has never fa' en to ours ilea. Pain- lessly and taturally it allays the inflammation, heals t. Defeats the Burden of Death 13 ReMoving Your Terrible Bur. den of Disease. Are you still in suffering, misery and 4e. spondency ? Does the grim spectre Du% follow Pou cksely as the joyous aprinattan around ''13t1 ? Are you still clingiug.tewe elegy to false theories of pigskin* Iv friends who persiat in assuring you tut time, care and the use of your present me& clue will give you new health ? Boaseured your present condition 341 perilbui one. The condition of the =tad& trifling 'With life and waeting prod Yon Should remember that -while clothes!the fields with fresh grass ere, and while the trees with a se are shotwieg bursting buds and new . the hurnan beiege—old and young—tett in thoulsande in springtime. Now ia the time for prompt, deeided so practicol action if life is to be entre& be. judice and the erroneoua theoriee ofe am, medical. men should be cast aside whn tbe tich and those in bigh social poeitione. 10 hand o death is upon you. It matters sst what y ter social position be ; the mediae" that saves the humblest, mair orowomeata surely the one adapted for the needsof tia lifesaving that no other medicine tan ten equal. It has rescued rich and peer tuna carefully prepared pretteriptiolas failed he the work. If the suffering men and womto of to-dey could but Bee the happy item la hear the kind words spoken by the teasel thousands who have been Imeocle well oz4 strong by Paine's Celery Gompotinde it would noon dispel their existing doubtead Painess Celery Compound is the only teedichte that reaches the root of disease ;.- it is the only agency that can remove year terribl load of disease. Unsolicited' testi, matiani, neuralgia, kideey disease, liver menial of cures pour in every day. Young. and ol constantly bear witness that thee - complaint, dyepeptie and blood -diseases are Compt:tund is faithfully used for ..A thne, Be. gin Jeanine to -day poor sufferer ; delays ent dangerrus, • GoOd Security. "Mister do you lend money here? asked en earnest young voiee at the office door. I ' The lawyer turned away from his link, confronted a clear-eyed poorly dressed lad of twelv.e yeare, and studied Jahn keenly for a minute. "Sometimes we do—on good security," he said, gravely. The little fellow explained that he had a chance " to buy out is boy thatin mile papers." He had half the money that he required, but needed to borrow the other15 " What security cen you offer?" askod The hey's brown hand sought his pocket, and drew out a paper, carefully folded ice, bit of calico. It was a cheaply printed pledge against the use otintwricating liquor and itobacco. A respectfully as if it had been the deed: ti to a farm, the lawyer examined it, accepted ibi, a d, handed over the required sum. A:friend who had watched the tralteitether borrower departed. " Ynti think that I know nothing about, him," ismiled the lawyer. " I know times he earrie manfully, in what he supposed te be a bnsinesi way, and tried to negotiate a loan inistead of begging the money, I know thab he has been under good influences, or - he valid not have signed that pledge ; and that he does not hold it lightly, or he would not haive cared for it so carefully. 1 sires with him that one who keeps himself from, such things has a charecter to offer IS. emu ity." • Handsome Designs Sent Free of pcst To Any Addrose in Canada. DIAMOND DYE MAT AND RUG -- Patterns are the Most Popular. The; continued and increasing demand for the Diamond Dye Mat and Rug Patterns, is the beat proof of their great popularity. Thelasoinating art of Mat and Rug mak- ing blithe home is now cultivated by wo- men olf every social rank. There is ivitle many ladies a pride and pleaeure in being able to show nice specimens bf that hendh work. I TheiDiamond Dye Mat and Rug:Patten:is, combine beauty and simplicity. After se, curing one of these patterns, any lady On. easily hook it and produce a voluableandat- tractive room ornament. Themanufacturers of the celebrated Dias mond Dyes are prepared to send to any id - dress tree of coat sheets of pretty and shit* able designs to enable ladies to seleet front. Address The Welle, Richardson & 00.e Limited, 200 Mountain St., Montreal, P. Q. About Things. —The yearly military establishment esti-- mate Of the United States is $90,280,934. and they are now agitatiog for powers to perform the marriage ceremony, as other Justices do. Why not ? —There is no longer Sub II thing As S- burgler proof safe. A Chicago electrician has inVented a method by which the strong- - est safe can be 2 at open like a Owe of —Chicago has a spasm of .nausea just now °ter the rumor that thousends of worn. out hbraes have been cue up into " prime beef,"!and sold on 'butchers' counters in the city. i —The Pope's income is $1,400,000oone' seventh of which is guaranteed by the E02- peror ,a Austria ; another seventh comes- from-vilsted interests, and the remainder is, derived from Peter's pence. —AI Kansas preacher has been charged, with heresy, because he is said to have ex- pressed a belief that the "serpent's that talkedlwith .Eve was a man, and that Gaited wife wfts also human. If a man wants to keep opt of trouble with the ereed-makeree he wil ' do well not to pry too closely Info i,, the m steries of the infancy of the nee. But if 'ain's wife wan not human, what wen she ? , !And if she was human, where did she coMe from ? YPUR SISTER SPEAKS. SuffeTing Women Should be Ba. oo aged by the Hopeful Aci." e of this Algoraa Lady. —Miss Emily Liddell, of this placsA nor women roubled with Female 'Weakness in any for , to try Dodd's Kidney 1111*. " Fo months at a time I was 30 low sod weak t at I found it impossible to attend to my hoe ehold duties, my hook used to sell* somethi g dreadful. Now I feel stronger and bet er than ever I did, and Dodd's Kat weight n gold to any young woman euffer- " They built me up wonderfully, and I - • Winitoba Mo Ba It is well know trcubles spring from indigestion in a, cbil peevishness and ale voreseriona troubles *a colic or tramp, -eases, diarrhoea in ot in many Case& The haying constantly at treidiog these ills ts.1 • McMillan, Log *her who is particula advice on the cage of medicine for the Win tle fmes is Baby's • :—" They are t OM used for infant theca to nay baby for ach trouble, and" t thorough in makin should be a single da in her house." Baby's Own Table ages, and Will eure palms, collo, sour simple fevers. The teething Ohildren, and prvent croup. mo opiate or other ha in water they eau b fafety to a new -he *dealers in medicine e scents A box) by ad 'diem& Medicine Co., The following lee for last week, b Michie visited A good many attend • Crerar, in Grey t iamb week.—George made a -nice o 'Young, 6th line, talk this spring.—The ro =gatherers and foot - easily get along wit 3rd lin; was elected cattle were shipped f —Cattle are selling eihort of feed.—Hou .at this Seasor. L-rimbago Bac Don't lie around ;and money, because lumbagto. Do as th -dime. Buy a large good liniment. Pols it fregnently over th the pain, <hives it o joie, Nerviline ; never harms. ...250 at Pewee drug a No. 6, MeKeues Morrison, E. Holeki rison.--Third Beni") 'Robinson, Morri Tsiee. E. Elliott. 8 ranee, D. Smith, W • Elliott. Part T E. O-albrodth. ,ing of pupils in No. -of Me.rch, names in 'Class—Mabel _Do Robbie Munn, We -Coleman., Third. C Bessie Munn, Bob Middleton, Louis :strong,. Senior Se Alpine MeEwen, Todd, Ben Elder. Alice Midd'eten Second—Nellie Ro Mary Walper. No. 4. STANLEY. noonday report for NSL. 14, Stanley, Fifth—H. Whitem Grassick. Fourth Ohmage, Jennie Me Mary Mackay* W. Junior Thirtf—E. AT, Logan. Firat P a Logan, Ada Me in the monthly Nifth, Freeborn Jo ,ond, Jean Grassi -ink W. No. 5, STANLEY. Tort of flee standing election No. 5, &aril a /902. The repel' ten text examinatio -dining the winter. -earneetiv requested carefully an -1 note .ehildien, and there •-to the preparation .thildren at borne an ance at -school - 'lasso. 74; EaiIist Ella Dowaon, 61 Lemon te 58. J unto Pollock, 74 ; James Third —Mamie Lam 55. Junior Third Lloyd Dawson, 69 -63 ; Mary Stogdill, Ella Stephenton. 56 Victor Boyes, 47 ; George Armatreng Part Second— Mag 3.% Armstrong, 85. of°t1;sateielinamtD37:11Y:?ietao fleet, suffered unce and although he to tirne permanent roil iil he used Cate Lim quickly and pe loafotastIrreht4i4tozheoanotenaristrhh:ozio to use, quick to re afoi tzosh:: Engaged 50 Ye Wtward &WU:1de and Mts. Eliz bet The worst possible spavin can be cured in 45 minutes. Riegle:nes, Curbs and& Splints Suet as quick. Not painful and never has failed. Detailed information about this now method -sent free to horse owners. 'Write today. Ask for pamphlet No. 202 reming Brow- Chemists, 26 Front St. , Woli1,Toren10,021. RED CEDAR SHINGLES. the unders:gned wishes to announce to the public, that having bought a large quantity of the three best bands of rt ti cedar shingles, and by getting a liberal diecount for cash. ie prepared to sell them to cus- touters at pt 'ries that defy competition. S. LAMB'S Lumber Yard, Seaforth. HEMLOCK LUMBER. 'Having le emelt at the Seaforth Lumber Yard a very large quantity of all the different lengths and e. ie y arared to fill any bill that is / reeented of the very best quality of Hemlock. S. LAMB'S Lumber Yard, Seaforth. PIN E. Having bought a large qualdity of pine from a large firm in alueltoka, I sin getting pine dressed both sides cr or e side, for siding, flooring, ceiling; wide plank for water troughs •, spruce and balsam for gravel boxes, 1;ght and durable. Alen white cedar sbinglea XXXX and XXX and XX of best make MI Muskoka. Large stock always on hend. $, LAMB'S Lumber Yard, Seaforth. 1776 'rH EIGN DST Eight pounds of love and laughter, ot can fill up the !blank out of her experience of puny, wailing childreu, Whose coniing brought no glad- ness r the home. Wom n who have used , Dr. Piercee Paw) *te ' Prescrip- tion s a pre -natal prep, ration know that it makes 41 the difference be- tween happy, healthy, mother- hooct of murmur- ing ,and misery. And] they know also, I that happy, healthy mothers have happy, healthy i• . whol body for tlie ho• odi It practic- ally doesaway with the pains of child- birtlo gives the tit o the r abundant vitality and en- ables her to nurse and nourish a healthy The sTfavorite Pe scriptioh" contains no alcohol, neither opi no cocaine, chloral nor any other narcotics , tlI am mother of childretee writes Mrs, eei A. Briggs, o Mill od, Douglas Co., °regain, never suffered! any t speak o ; had no after woinan ; weigh about tie pounds. I have had some stomach trouble, but a few doses of 'Golden Medical DiscoVery ' NOWA set In an right. I am all the medicine one 1 eeds, if taken in timel to keep one in perfect lie! 1-th. e I feel that ;I owe ny little boy's life to ler. Pierces Golden .ble jot Discovery, as he had convulsitms,and eve thing he ate would bring them °it I coinmencY•cl to give hint the 'Got en Medical Discoeety ' in ten drop OS es three tit les be found and he gro* • like a Iv ed.e Dr. Pierce's Pleaspeit Pellets are the 4st laxative for *omen ' 1 weereimeassesesseeseaseseeseesseememaaeraereeeeeeewi of 'you'll, had his Miad secretly bent' on loOliiag 'afterlsome caste else's sister. Do !not bleme them, i reade . Time .was —perhaps eeill is—when you e tusilf were not over And do the trip, *as arranged. Diokie had to horrote ten thilling from Mather, to help to de ray s expi iies, and ehat naturally hu t hitt pride nd eelf-resPect deeperately, nd ait rwards hurt his pocket eti I worse w en the time c me for him to mere proof. owevp , of ha far the world Wilt: out of jeint eciei Ily wh n! such thtngs co Id be. Dickie fe b withip ; himself, you eet, that he *as mu h more oompetent1than M ther to spend a large inc me wieely1 and' usefully. It was, therefore, clearly a gross injustice that Math r ehould have a large indome, while he, l) okie, had barely suffi- cient to pay hi i weekly board; It was cer- M ther, but thee what tam ifice or suffering it At wae an i experience that might have Dickie's. The day was one ' of ondrous beauty.. Overhead not a cl ad m end the deep blue sky, but far off behind the die. ta t mountain tope etretched long bars of si very white. The freeh k!trachig air and b illient sunehine; the spar ling blue waters the matchless scene y of he Clyde, and above and before all the ma netio charm of d Lim uite out of this re into a kind of fairy - own, ain I es Persons have b en known to gain a pound a ay by taking an ounce of SC TT'S MIT SION. It is stran e, but i! often happens. Somehow the' o the pound; it see digestive machinerfr goini prop erly, so that the patient is abi to digest and absoib his o0inar way thie gain nce produces s to start th food, which he co fore, and till at is the is made. A certain amo nt of flesh is necessary for healt • if yoi have not got it you 4an leC it by taking airs You will find it just useful injummet as In winter, and if you are thriying upon It don't stof because the weathei warm. SCOTT &BOWNE, To onto, Cei4da. IRLTRON EXPO proposal as his going away. She than him after all, younee, but, Dickie could not admit that, and t las of opposition was just exactly needed to enable him to make up He immediately set himself to oon of the feasibility of the project. not quite succeed in that though his logic and eloquence to the utm he did succeed in convincing hims wandering spit it) of the Soot had aroused within him and was fast his master, though he knew it not Six months later Diokie was a w New York, OR w: a wiser of course, hi laamtii;hae. to lee her opt!, Tbilatit bein fairly b coining w irlwind and oath w rid of carleand!c la d where eyerythi g was right and beau - ti ul, mid *here eire y one was happy and fi es in which ambitious yoeng country lads, w o had all their lives been filliog their lungs with the puto fresh air !of the moun- t ins, were 'oorifined all daY until their cheeks lost the glciw of health and the cooe liJoivn handi became thin and white and d lioate, and where he °nee !equate shoul- d rs becameipremat rely etooped and bent. It was not that these Wogs had preyed eihnally, whenin On of' hi pensive moods weuld he ruininate on them! ie an obseekt Bert of way t but beyond a hazy idea that - meet things In the world Were wrong, and that nobodyibut himself a emed to know how to set them iri ht, Vs knowledge of Bat, on t ie daY f daye there was one ec*ous, and hat wa that itt this El Dorado into which e had! f und Lircself so suddenly m stere, wh cared leas hole the Utopian d came of youth th n for rincling out . of ittoxicating preeenee f a piece: of embodied m nt Was fu 1 of grace and beauty, and the divinity in t e pardon of a ,beautiful and ✓ ry rustle df whdse dress wae agile music of the merry little a twee on the beach. And then the glahces that shot_firoin under those lopg dark hishes-ewhat heart would they ofleyrnpathy that fell from those rosy lips, oo her merry laug hen she chose to tease ! Ah ! Dickie, Die' ie, leveller heads than thine might- ell [tee becornefilled a i tit the intoxieation f it all I need not tell ef 11 the otnentous things Dickiteand his fair compan od had to say to each other t at day, nor of al( the wonderful diecoveries t ey nea e cone ruing each other. Most likely, readeir, you h ve said them all yclurself, or ad t e said o you. If not, cl cornea then I sincelre y pity you, for then you will hay misse the gneatest and parest happiness which it i permitted ue poor or - tale to enjoy on th a mum:lane spher —a ha piness th t eorne but once in a lifetime to young ME I and; m aider . hat tnorn ng Dlic is and his compabion so " and " Mr. Gordon," That night they th n Dickie found'himseld back 'once. more in the bard work -el -day world, a mere wait in the ranks ef the surging mighty mast of jotitling, and.trampling under heel, without heed or remorse, the weak end faltering. A kihd of despair tocilt posseseicin of him at the coritest he muet wage e're it would be oesible for him to1 pub hie foot on even the o est 'rung of thelladder that leads up to -fa e and fortune. 1 The treeod watt fleeting an seen palmed, but it Was Dickie's rat re 1 glimpse intothe mighty problem t at huManity has for theueienda of years b en vainly, endeavering to solve, and will pi le - ably get on doing for thousands of years to t first'perhaps, yet gradually shaping it slf re clearly and distinctly, was beginning ake form in Dickie's mind. At bottle, eed, the struggle seemed dishearten ng n ugh; and the prespect 6f succeas small ita eed • but there were other places where au ely the pressure was lese great and the to short, the road to succesa was free anal easy to:travel. Many sleepless nights Dickie Spent cagitatieg the matter, and the more he !thought of it the more the idea grew ,on hita. At last he ventured te consule Jeanie. 4.-. first she refused even te listen to milli a It was,still early summer, and t as yet hut few promenaders on Walk, tine Newport 09&11011 havin opened. :The morning was bright but there ems a keenness iM the a was probably the reason why the figure occupying one of the seats 'steps overlooking the bathing bea alight shiver and turned up the co light summer coat. The figure was a young nsan hardly past the flush yet with lines forming, as if pr about the corners of the eyeis and on the brow, and with the bloom absent froin the cheeks. When look for a more sheltered nook with a slow step lacking in vigor tioity for one so young. Present found a spot more sheltered from east wind, he sat down again. of bathers were disporting theme the beach, some paddling about i lows, others joining hands and to meet the long rolling breaker cisme lazily shoreward, while a 1 stronger swimmers breasted the out from the shore. Beneath hi thundered and boiled among the boulders strewn about in wild p the foot of the cliffs. Away' ocee. monotony of the vast expanse of ing waters was unbroken rave w northwards a heavy trail of bro lay along the horizon, marking t some steamer probably making fo Vineyard. Dickie—for the solit. on the walk was none other than these things with his eyes, indee mind was far from Newport and unfolded before him. He was another summer day whioh he ha the Clyde—a day that now was with the things of the fareff pa memory of which remained und the lapse of time. What e morn that had been for him ! 4ow -thoughe that morning when he h so gaily and lightheartedly on Iona that that day was to ohang future career. It had begun him to woo fickle fortune in a st All through the six long years pitesed mince then the memory of • derer in re were scarcely which solitary ear the eh, gave a 1 r of his that of f youth, aturely, uth and f health rose to walked nd elate having he keen number es along he elud- ing out ayes far the surf eke and usion at ard the rk, heav- e far off n smoke but hie he scene nking of spent on timbered yet the med by stepped oard the is whole that had had beerr 110 0 1 a 0 ever present with him, hit sta.r_oLehope in tirnes of bitter adversity And de guiding star in prosperity. An memory of that same day was he te make up his mind to return o that land he had left so long ago such high hopee. He had cone York thinking, its so twiny thi the streets paved with gold. had found them paved vrith th hope of countless youths who like himself, never doubting b America's mighty comniercial wealth and ha.ppinets to the terms are synonumous--woul theire. He had not then learne dom the pursuit. of wealth ever happiness ia its train, nor how petite, comes at last but to mock 0 It eeemed to Diokie that int years he had spent in America been crowded the expsrience of time. He had not been long in first point that was brought ho rather foroibly was the fact that in the Weetern hemisphere was which had created far lees commotion than he had expected. - With hie bearing and the excellent testimonials 'he oarried with him Dickie had thought that it weuld be an easy matter to find employment.' On the contrary, nobody seemed to wan him on any terms, and for three month , with a sinking heart and a sinking puree, lee walked the !streets of New York vainly se king "for liberty to toil." At length a f iend—his landlord, to wit, who -was probab y becom- ing concerned about his d employ- ment for Dickie as a bricklayer. But, Dickie protested, "I'm not a lericklayer, and wouldn't know what todo." That, how- ever, he was told, was all right, He was merely to watch how the others did and he would soon learn. His initial blunders -were to be attributed to. the different methods employed in the old country. It was a sure sign of a " greenhorn " to admit that there was anything under he sun he could not do. And so Diokie bought a trowel donned a suit of overalls, and duly present dinned! next morning at the appointed lace. At the end of the first :fifteen minutes ,,he found himself the centre of a gr u of work- men whose hilarious mirth epee il brought the " boss" on the scene. Poor ckie stood before him shamefacedly, the ot blood mounting to his browland te les. The foreman, or "boas" looked at hi and then at his work. " Guess you ain't ed to this sort p' work," he said, his eye winkling. The fact was self evident, but i kie man- aged to falter—" They do it diff rently in must be something in the climate of the old country that keeps your walls f om fallin' down—or mebbe it's cause your o untry's so tarnation small that there 'ain't room for 'em to fall," said the nian. The he con- tiaued—" Es we don't want this wall here to fall down an' bury half o' us I g ems you'd better git through." ` Diekie did not need to have it explained to him that " git through" meant that hp want° quit. His bp trembled, and the foreman, who was a kindly enoug man in his own way, saw it. He looked t Dickie'a handa. They evere already torn a d bleed- ing. By long experience he hei learned, without need of further (petition ng, what it all meant. He had seen many a, youth in pair, his now the ping him e more to Iled with to New , to find tead, he shattered ad come that in etropolis ath these soon be how set- tees bring ten p 708- 8. the six here had If a life. ew York to him is arrival an event Vigorous Womanho Illgtde Perfect by Dlx. men t which. Does is Claimed for it. Settee Exactl • Nerve Trent - What The happiness of every hon.e denutda very largely on the heall,h ,ip• he wife and mother. If she is iiervous, peevish and irritable, worried by the little cares of every day life, ,and to •mented hy pains and irregularities )t at aro sure to accompany a rundown system., there can be no happiness in t home for husband and children. Too many women are victims of ner- vous exhaustion, and do not now It. They suffer from indigestion a id dys- pepsia, nervous headache and sleep-. lessness, and drag themSelves about the house feeling languid and tl .ed out. You can be healthy and vigo otis if you follow the advice of Dr. eh se, the famous Receipt Book author. He would not deceive you, and ihi treat- ment' never disappoints. Dr. Chase's Nerve Food is- intended for u t such cases as are here desCribed. y upply- ing to the thin, watery blood z nd weak, exhausted nerves the Ivery m terials of which nature constrticts yra.w nerve cells and ntsw bodily tissue it, gradual- ly and certainly reconstrnct and re - .vitalizes the weakened and desbillihteaatedd- nervous syStein, CULTS nervo ache§ and -dyspepsia,, iand pe overcomes weakness .ond irre Bates & Toronto. RIGHT'S !SEAS is thp deadliest and most painful malady to which rna.nkind is subject. Dodd's -Kidney Pills will cure any case of Bright's Disease. They have never failed in one single case. They are the only remedy that ever has cured it, and they are tile only remedy that can. There are inufithins of bent and name—but imita- tions are dangerous. The original and only genuine cure for Bright's ODD'S KIDNEY PILL fifty cents eid box at all druggists. Dodd's Kidney Pills are I Diokie's predicament are then. " I ain't got anything suitable to offer you," be said kindly, "but if you like you may try your hand at carryiid tbe hod for a bit till 4ome- thin better turns up. I'll speak to the boss about you, and rnebbe he can fix you up." 1 Tears of mortification and wounded pride sprang to Dickie's eyes, and he hastily turn- ed his head aside to dash them away, The foreman no( iced it, and pretended to be examining a pieoe of work minutely, Pres- ently Diokie turnedoto tell him he was ready to accept his offer. " That's the way, lad," he sail. "'Twon't last long, so don't get discouraged. You're made o' the 'right stuff, and you'll get along in time, never fear." These were the kindest Vvords Diokie had heard since he landed. His eyes filled and Ms voice was too huaky to as Diokie in time discovered, not more hum- ble than falls to the lot ot most .asidring turning point in Dickie's fortunes. 1 Not/ that he jumped immediately into pros erity, or that his pith after that became a ooth. Far from that, indeed, but he had re tived! his first and bitterest lesson, the rest mild! be easier. He had the good sense to s other his mortification, bittet though it was and to set manfully to work determined t Burt mount every difficulty—which showed thatl the foreman was right in thinkitg that Diokie was made of the right stuff. . Prosperity did not come quickly. For mote than a year after that his pat was; far from being an enviable ene, b b he held bravely on hie way. He was passing through the furnace, and the gold was be- coming ever purer and more refine At lengbh hie reward came. He obtai ed 4 situation with a large New York firm and first, Dickie threw all his energies in o •hifi work, and promotion rapidly followed redoubled his efforts, for now he ea preaching nearer and nearer every da happY time when he could return he Jeanie, and, with pardonable pride, a porous, and I have come home ta ask share with me my prosperity." But " The best laid schemes o' mice an Gang aft agley." DIckie bad still anothelt lesson to lea bitter as any that had receeded it, t it laoked the sting of hhmiliation, wh always the part that is hardtst to bea • One morning Dickie woke up to fin tha the price he had been paying for his pros i 1 perity had been toe great. Under the strai ' his health had been gradually giving way Malaria, that felt though much nec erste I disease, which had dugs° many Furniture graves, had for years been slowly but surelt undermining his constitution. He eede it not, but worked on, seeing only s wee" coining nearer and nearer to him. H w nbt a singular case. Thousands are ever day doing just as Dickie did, never p usin te consider that nature will inovitabl exec just retribution, and thousands are dail , pfiying the penalty which they never rean Med until too late that they had incurredJ An attack of pneumonia at length put a pause to Pickle's career. For a week h hung in the balance between life and death; and then slowly, very elowlY, he began mend. When he was anfficiently recevere to bear the dictum, it was only to be told that he muse say good-bve to all his oherishe ed hopes and schemes. Ile must be colntent, the doctor told him, to step aside froth -active business life for an indefinite period —possibly for years—otherwise he would pay the forfeit with his life. had come out on the tiff Walk, where he dt. i And so Dickie had ome to Newport t recuperate—and to th k. Every day h could be alone with nature, and there he had fought out his battle against bitter dike appointment and blinhted hOpes. It was hard lesson to learn— o hard that b t fe of us ever learn it—bu Diokie learnt he had learnt the othqs. The victor aP tha pros ou tee oug ch i how the world may Oboose to look on you ?" that ib was only your proeperity that I loved ?" Jeanie in- errupted earneatly and with just a touch of reproach in her voice. " Oh, Dickie," she continued, " can't you tee that I too have been learning lifela lessons since you went atnity ? I too have come to see and under- stand how infinitely greater and nobler it is to have learnt goodness rather than to have aequired wealth or fame, or any of the bub- ble° that the world loves:" Dickie felt the rebuke, but he wee not yet quite dons. " But, Jeanie " he answered, I am nee good as yen thiA. Oh if you " But I do know," Jeaamnieatbrtoimkeer.H.n." -it Of only knew how weak I the best of us, who oan say atilhigmoothe! Nay, the very Words would give How sweet and realturing to poo Diokie licensed her gentle, perfectly odulated voice and quiet womanly ways 1. ow dif- Terent, too, she was, he thought. Ay, "he too, be felt, must have passed through `the tire. to produce that nameless °bulge. Some day, he doubted not, she would tell hire of it. " I could be a better man if I always had you beside me to help and encourage - me," he said, half musingly. He had been pleading against himself. It had been a hard thing to do, but he believed he was doing it for her sake, and he felt that they must understand each other from, the firet. e nature it had come to him days before we met him n the Cliff Walk. And noW Dickie was going home. Yes, home—not, aa had once been his chief ambition, to ask Jeanie to shin% his prosperity. That Was gone at one f44 sweep. But he woUld tell her of hie failure and disappointmenti and of the lessons he had learnt from them, and—but maybe she wouldn't want to_he_af any more. I! i II CHAPTER III. 'l li A few weeks later Diokie found himeell once more in GlasgoW. He lost no time in calling on the Nicholsons, but found the hoarse shut up. He was filled with momen ary ciisappciatment and alarm, but on ma e ing inquiries he found that they had oniy gone for the summer to—Ardrishaig. Did- kie's pulses thtilled at the name, and he wondered if the omen were good. Next da he took his place on the deck of the steame for Ardrishaig. It was a bright sunny morning, and the caller air was laden with a fragrance opening blossoms and filled with the hum I many bees. Bright -hewed butterflies flitte i';1 about from flower to flower, and the song f the lark came down in 'full rich notes from a tiny speck in the blee above. Here an there on the surrounding hills just a fain tinge of royal purple might be discerned,ba the heather would not bp at its best fd nearly a month yet. Only a few !straggler were loitering about the pier, for it was sti comparatively early and the Glasgow boa (the arrival and departure of which wer the ohief events of the day), would not be i for over an hour yet, But the two figuree walking slowly along by the beach in an ene nicely opposite direction from the pier were evidently in no way intereeted, as the resIi of the community seemed to be, in the arI4 rival of the Glasgow boat. " Oh ! Diokie, just to think that you are back again after all those long weary years; How long and dreary they seemed with yen so far away," theAirl Was saying. " Ay, Jeanie, Dickie returned, " bu surely you do not—you 1 cannot—understan what it means my coming back like this Can't you see that I haie come back broke in health, with every prospect blighted an the future all full of dotibt and darkness ? have not done any of the wonderful things went away to do. Don't you know that th world will look on Ina ste a failure ?" • " And do you think that it ;matters to me Now he aaw what a good and no was hers. He hnew how she love he felt that to any more would o her pain. " Then let us always help each other," she answered in a low voice. " And, oh Diekie, promise me that you will never go away again." " Nob if you bid me stay," h answer- ed, and as they had now paseled froni the view of the idlers on the pier, he Aid some- thing else which it is not necens ry to re- Diokie did not go away' again. The caller air of hie native hills and glene, aided by Jeanie's skilful nursing gradually restored the bloom of health to his cheek. With health restored, he soon found that the future was not so dark end dou tful after all. His experience had not been altogether in vain, and he soon found himsel in Li re. munerative situation, and he was areful not to overtax nature a second time. A few years later Dickie and J anie were quietly married. -They 1 still li e quietly and unostentatiously in "en. ld Sanct Mungo," where they are know among a large'circle of friends foe their charitable works and for the useful end uns lfish lives they lead. Every summer they leave the city and go off to a dear lite' watering place by , the shores of. their wn loved Clyde. There they are equally ell known for their good works, and they lo k forward to a time, not far distant, when ey will make theiohorne near the apot wh re they firat found their happinens. THE EkilE. HEALTH IN .SPRI - Nature Requires. Asisist During These Mon To ' Help Throw Off The Impur ties That Accumulated During -the inter : Menthe- Purgatives Should not be Used—It ii a Ton o That is ifeeded. Ip this olimate there are man reasons why people feel all out. of gear in he spring mouthe. Perhaps the Chief of th se the long hours in imperfectly ventila d offices, You may feel that there is nothin eriously the matter, you are only,a little tired after slight exertion, or perhaps your ppetite is fickle, or little pimples or ereptio in on the skin show that the bloodl is not as pure as it ahould be. If you feel this way, net only your comfort but your health demands that you take proper steps to clerinte your- self of the blood impurities that a e reopen - blood pie -rifler, nerve strengthener aneS gen- eral up -lifter of the entire epaterri, Dr, Wil- liams' Pink Pille for Pale People meet all these requirements more perfectl then any other mediciae. These are _tonic pills, and not violent and weakening like purgative medicines. Nature does not reqtt re a viol- ent measure in spring, but a hel ing hand to throw cif the impurities which basic so - cumulated during the winter, an, so toning 'and strengthening every organ an function Ithat a condition of perfent health will pre- vail. Everyone—old and young ought to take Dr. Wilhams-s-Piak Pills in he spring. There is no other medibine will o you so much good. Mr. James Salmon, ostmaster, Salmon Creek, N. B., sans :—" eat !spring I was feeling decidedly unwell. I was weak, dizzy ae times, and continually telt tired. My appetite was poor and I wa losing in weight. I tried several medicines ut noth- ing did me any good until I bega t e, use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and a ifew boxes would advise all who feel -run do n and out of sorts to take Dr. Williams' P ak Pills." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are al o effective n the cure of all diseases due to edoor, thin, watery blood or weak dery es. o not take' a substitute for these pills—it is a waete of money and a menace to healt to do eo. See that the full nanie " Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People," is on the wrapper around every box. Seld by all medicine dealers, or sexit post aid at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2 50 by ad- dreseing the Dr. Williams' M. dicioe Co, APRIL 11, 1902 WHAT ! DOES THE GRIM SPECTRE FOLLOW YOU INTO THE JOYOUS SPRINGTIME ? Brockville, Ontario. • Wise and Otherw se. —The baker who mixes his ough prop- erly Mica aoft thing of it. —It's funny how Many me there are who are trying to get rid of a " good ell—ingft'''s a mistake to isuppose elle art of - ' —A man may be the poor to hire a lawyer and at the sante time ca afford to keep his own counsel. —Some pretty women are un 0/3860110 of their beauty, but the majority a e not even Momentarily forgetful. ,I' ---Thcoes who are satisfied ith what they have accompliehed will ne er become famoua for what they mi ht aim pliehe ' —The average man ever fully realizes the truth of the adage about a ol and' his money until after he has bumpe 8 up egainst *erne other man's game. i coachman and a footman." Lit le Georgie —Willingness to be taught hat we do pot know is the sure pledge of g owth, both M knowledge and wisdom.—Bla rt I —The „British divorce court has very rcises her In.erogative to the limit during ours, sh-e ought to be content t outh shut while she alumbere. You'd make a, pretty g the employer, sarcastically o ly had a little more comm never occur to you that if I ha er waking keep her but did it a little a clerk at V/ha is Life to Yo If you are a via im of pile?, as one per on in every four is, you euffe keenly Item one of th most tor. tering ailments lmown to manjuad may ell wonder if life is really mirth living. Certain re! ef an41 WM- Mate cure Is ay/hieing you b means of r. Chase's Ointment. has never fa' en to ours ilea. Pain- lessly and taturally it allays the inflammation, heals t. Defeats the Burden of Death 13 ReMoving Your Terrible Bur. den of Disease. Are you still in suffering, misery and 4e. spondency ? Does the grim spectre Du% follow Pou cksely as the joyous aprinattan around ''13t1 ? Are you still clingiug.tewe elegy to false theories of pigskin* Iv friends who persiat in assuring you tut time, care and the use of your present me& clue will give you new health ? Boaseured your present condition 341 perilbui one. The condition of the =tad& trifling 'With life and waeting prod Yon Should remember that -while clothes!the fields with fresh grass ere, and while the trees with a se are shotwieg bursting buds and new . the hurnan beiege—old and young—tett in thoulsande in springtime. Now ia the time for prompt, deeided so practicol action if life is to be entre& be. judice and the erroneoua theoriee ofe am, medical. men should be cast aside whn tbe tich and those in bigh social poeitione. 10 hand o death is upon you. It matters sst what y ter social position be ; the mediae" that saves the humblest, mair orowomeata surely the one adapted for the needsof tia lifesaving that no other medicine tan ten equal. It has rescued rich and peer tuna carefully prepared pretteriptiolas failed he the work. If the suffering men and womto of to-dey could but Bee the happy item la hear the kind words spoken by the teasel thousands who have been Imeocle well oz4 strong by Paine's Celery Gompotinde it would noon dispel their existing doubtead Painess Celery Compound is the only teedichte that reaches the root of disease ;.- it is the only agency that can remove year terribl load of disease. Unsolicited' testi, matiani, neuralgia, kideey disease, liver menial of cures pour in every day. Young. and ol constantly bear witness that thee - complaint, dyepeptie and blood -diseases are Compt:tund is faithfully used for ..A thne, Be. gin Jeanine to -day poor sufferer ; delays ent dangerrus, • GoOd Security. "Mister do you lend money here? asked en earnest young voiee at the office door. I ' The lawyer turned away from his link, confronted a clear-eyed poorly dressed lad of twelv.e yeare, and studied Jahn keenly for a minute. "Sometimes we do—on good security," he said, gravely. The little fellow explained that he had a chance " to buy out is boy thatin mile papers." He had half the money that he required, but needed to borrow the other15 " What security cen you offer?" askod The hey's brown hand sought his pocket, and drew out a paper, carefully folded ice, bit of calico. It was a cheaply printed pledge against the use otintwricating liquor and itobacco. A respectfully as if it had been the deed: ti to a farm, the lawyer examined it, accepted ibi, a d, handed over the required sum. A:friend who had watched the tralteitether borrower departed. " Ynti think that I know nothing about, him," ismiled the lawyer. " I know times he earrie manfully, in what he supposed te be a bnsinesi way, and tried to negotiate a loan inistead of begging the money, I know thab he has been under good influences, or - he valid not have signed that pledge ; and that he does not hold it lightly, or he would not haive cared for it so carefully. 1 sires with him that one who keeps himself from, such things has a charecter to offer IS. emu ity." • Handsome Designs Sent Free of pcst To Any Addrose in Canada. DIAMOND DYE MAT AND RUG -- Patterns are the Most Popular. The; continued and increasing demand for the Diamond Dye Mat and Rug Patterns, is the beat proof of their great popularity. Thelasoinating art of Mat and Rug mak- ing blithe home is now cultivated by wo- men olf every social rank. There is ivitle many ladies a pride and pleaeure in being able to show nice specimens bf that hendh work. I TheiDiamond Dye Mat and Rug:Patten:is, combine beauty and simplicity. After se, curing one of these patterns, any lady On. easily hook it and produce a voluableandat- tractive room ornament. Themanufacturers of the celebrated Dias mond Dyes are prepared to send to any id - dress tree of coat sheets of pretty and shit* able designs to enable ladies to seleet front. Address The Welle, Richardson & 00.e Limited, 200 Mountain St., Montreal, P. Q. About Things. —The yearly military establishment esti-- mate Of the United States is $90,280,934. and they are now agitatiog for powers to perform the marriage ceremony, as other Justices do. Why not ? —There is no longer Sub II thing As S- burgler proof safe. A Chicago electrician has inVented a method by which the strong- - est safe can be 2 at open like a Owe of —Chicago has a spasm of .nausea just now °ter the rumor that thousends of worn. out hbraes have been cue up into " prime beef,"!and sold on 'butchers' counters in the city. i —The Pope's income is $1,400,000oone' seventh of which is guaranteed by the E02- peror ,a Austria ; another seventh comes- from-vilsted interests, and the remainder is, derived from Peter's pence. —AI Kansas preacher has been charged, with heresy, because he is said to have ex- pressed a belief that the "serpent's that talkedlwith .Eve was a man, and that Gaited wife wfts also human. If a man wants to keep opt of trouble with the ereed-makeree he wil ' do well not to pry too closely Info i,, the m steries of the infancy of the nee. But if 'ain's wife wan not human, what wen she ? , !And if she was human, where did she coMe from ? YPUR SISTER SPEAKS. SuffeTing Women Should be Ba. oo aged by the Hopeful Aci." e of this Algoraa Lady. —Miss Emily Liddell, of this placsA nor women roubled with Female 'Weakness in any for , to try Dodd's Kidney 1111*. " Fo months at a time I was 30 low sod weak t at I found it impossible to attend to my hoe ehold duties, my hook used to sell* somethi g dreadful. Now I feel stronger and bet er than ever I did, and Dodd's Kat weight n gold to any young woman euffer- " They built me up wonderfully, and I - • Winitoba Mo Ba It is well know trcubles spring from indigestion in a, cbil peevishness and ale voreseriona troubles *a colic or tramp, -eases, diarrhoea in ot in many Case& The haying constantly at treidiog these ills ts.1 • McMillan, Log *her who is particula advice on the cage of medicine for the Win tle fmes is Baby's • :—" They are t OM used for infant theca to nay baby for ach trouble, and" t thorough in makin should be a single da in her house." Baby's Own Table ages, and Will eure palms, collo, sour simple fevers. The teething Ohildren, and prvent croup. mo opiate or other ha in water they eau b fafety to a new -he *dealers in medicine e scents A box) by ad 'diem& Medicine Co., The following lee for last week, b Michie visited A good many attend • Crerar, in Grey t iamb week.—George made a -nice o 'Young, 6th line, talk this spring.—The ro =gatherers and foot - easily get along wit 3rd lin; was elected cattle were shipped f —Cattle are selling eihort of feed.—Hou .at this Seasor. L-rimbago Bac Don't lie around ;and money, because lumbagto. Do as th -dime. Buy a large good liniment. Pols it fregnently over th the pain, <hives it o joie, Nerviline ; never harms. ...250 at Pewee drug a No. 6, MeKeues Morrison, E. Holeki rison.--Third Beni") 'Robinson, Morri Tsiee. E. Elliott. 8 ranee, D. Smith, W • Elliott. Part T E. O-albrodth. ,ing of pupils in No. -of Me.rch, names in 'Class—Mabel _Do Robbie Munn, We -Coleman., Third. C Bessie Munn, Bob Middleton, Louis :strong,. Senior Se Alpine MeEwen, Todd, Ben Elder. Alice Midd'eten Second—Nellie Ro Mary Walper. No. 4. STANLEY. noonday report for NSL. 14, Stanley, Fifth—H. Whitem Grassick. Fourth Ohmage, Jennie Me Mary Mackay* W. Junior Thirtf—E. AT, Logan. Firat P a Logan, Ada Me in the monthly Nifth, Freeborn Jo ,ond, Jean Grassi -ink W. No. 5, STANLEY. Tort of flee standing election No. 5, &aril a /902. The repel' ten text examinatio -dining the winter. -earneetiv requested carefully an -1 note .ehildien, and there •-to the preparation .thildren at borne an ance at -school - 'lasso. 74; EaiIist Ella Dowaon, 61 Lemon te 58. J unto Pollock, 74 ; James Third —Mamie Lam 55. Junior Third Lloyd Dawson, 69 -63 ; Mary Stogdill, Ella Stephenton. 56 Victor Boyes, 47 ; George Armatreng Part Second— Mag 3.% Armstrong, 85. of°t1;sateielinamtD37:11Y:?ietao fleet, suffered unce and although he to tirne permanent roil iil he used Cate Lim quickly and pe loafotastIrreht4i4tozheoanotenaristrhh:ozio to use, quick to re afoi tzosh:: Engaged 50 Ye Wtward &WU:1de and Mts. Eliz bet