The Huron Expositor, 1904-09-02, Page 71 You know the medicine that
makes pure, deli blood—
.
-' Ayer's .,arsaparilla. Your
mother, grandmother, all your
folks, used it. They trusted
Sarsaparilla
'it. Their doctors trusted It.
Your doctor trusts it, _Then
!,trust it yourself. There is
health and strength in it.
terribly from Indigestion nud
thin blood. 1 found no relief until took
Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Four bottles perma-
nently ougtsd rum., mt. mace, y.
camiewaspowa•ri.00 a bottle. for ATER cm.
AH"d1riesgeirgisetrae.d Lowell. Mass.
Rich Blood
T 2. 1904
SEPTEMBER.1904.
'an get a large
door and ova'
e0alst Without
r gettnig the
fire yOUrSelf.,
of our
etc to US for
Guxney
dry Co.
oetteed
Heaastmi
modevero
FORTH.
ife without
'profession,
lo his work
•
rid College
,ms just the
iookiet free.
wow 4•Etz.wr,
-00Ww.IWWW.
SWAM
igiij
4744
Ayer'S Pill
la. Keep saying
Lad over again.
twit=
enieeiteiee -areeriterelf.de
Wa hair
kindeoE
will give a
CASH ONLY,
)
Ring
some new dia.
r tcek, eapeeiellY
xd one a t $88.0%
14 PI$ goed algae
C any wheu.
•
I I r4FR.,
d Winter
"Wantea
rol,v-1 to buy a quantity
e within packing eistenect
leatioulere apply at tea
Co.. esaforth.
-
1
Jake Weak Hearts Strong.
!Make Shaky Nerves Firm.
They are * Sure Sere for
Nervousness,Sleeplessness, Loss
of Energy, Brain Fag, After El-
feCts of La Grippe, Palpitation of
the Heart, Anxmia, General De-
bility and all troubles arising from
s run down system. -
They regulate the heart's action
and invigorate the nerves.
This is what they have done for
Others They will do the same
-fo.r, you.
GREAT RELIEF.
1 have taken. Milburn's Heart and
Nerve Pills for palpitation of the hearb
smut thattered nerves, and for both trouble
hays found greatrelief.--Mrs. W. Ackert),
IngersolI„ Ont.
FEELS SPLENDID NOW.
Before talting Milburres Hearb and
Nate Ella I was all run down, could nob
• sleep ab nighb and was terribly troubled
with my heart. Since taking them 1 feel
splendid. I sleep well at nighb and my
, heart does nob trouble me ab all. They
beve done me a world of good..—Jam
McLeod. Hartsville, F.B.I.
VETERINARY
rOfilt GRIEVE, V. S., honor graduate of Ontario
..; Veterinary College. A ./disesses of Domesit
; -.Jib:WS treated. Calls promptly attended to an
anarg•es inoa..iate, Veterinary Dentshy a specialty.
' Vffice and residence on Cthderich *reed One door
Of Dr Sonars °Moe, thisforth. 1.11241
. VI HARBUEN V. S.—Honorary graduate of she
r Ontario Veterinary College an Honorary Mem-
V
her of the Medical Association of t Ontario Voter
(nary College. Treats diseases of a doraestio animals
by the raostmodern principles. Dentistry and Milk
Fever a speolalty. Office opposite Diok% Hotel,
Main Street, Seaforth. ',Ali orders. left at the hotel
will receive prompt attention. Night calls received
'at dice. . . 1871-52
• LE,GAL,
. 4AME8 L. Kl4LORAN.
Ranister, Solioitor, Name Public eta. Money,[ to
loan. In Seaforth Mondays, Fridays and Setur-
daye, Office open every week day, Over Pickerd'e
stern -Main street, Seaforth. 1904
R. HAYS,
Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary Public.
Solieltor for the Dominion Bank. ',Office—in rear of
Dominion Bank, Seafortha Money to loan. 1285
'
K. BEST, Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer
T
,,,, Votary Publio. Offices up stairs, over C. W
spat's bookstore. Main Street, Seaforth, Ontatio.
- 16117
•
E1,110 TED, successor to the late arm of
• MoCau hey & Ifolmested, Barrister, Solicitor
Conveyanaer, and Notary Solicitor for the Can
affionOankof Commerce. Money to lend. Farm
der 'sale. Oilloe in Soott's Block, „Main Street
eafarth.
1-11011/NSON AND GARROW, Barristers, Solioit,
13 ore, to., Goderioh; Ontario.
E. L. DICKINSON.
I8884f I, CHARLES GARROW L. L. B.
DENTISTRY.
W. TWEDDLE
t •
DENTIST,
.aeadeste of Royal College of Dental Surgeons of On,
tario poet graduate course in crown and bridge Work
at ilaskell'e Sahool, ()Wong°. Local anesthetics for
painless extraction of teeth. Office—Over A Young%
_grocery store, Seaforbh. 1764
MEDICAL.
Dr. John McGinnis,
'on.adnats London Western University, member
Ontario College of Physicians and Surgeolan
Mice and Residence-r-Poimedy oecellaled bYair. Wio•
Pickard,'Vlotoria Street, next to the Iletbolio Chureh
Wlight milt attended promptly. I458arlt
DR. H. HUGH ROSS,
Graduate onntrersity of Toronto Family of
, eine, member of College of Physioians and Sijr.
geons of Ontario ; pass graduate courses Chicago
Clinical School, Chicago ; Royal Ophthalmic Efo#141-
tal, London, England •, University College Hospital,
London. England. Office—Over Greig & Stewart%
store, Main Street, Seaforth. 'Phone No. 5. Night
cells anewered from residence on John street. 1890
4
Dir. F. J. BLI R ROWS,
S-MALEICDIVT1=1
- Office and neemeuee—Gloaerich streetLeast• 01 tin
Methodist churoh.
1
Titrarorronn No. 46.
Coroner for the County of Smola.
' 1884,
DRS. SCOTT & MacKAY,
PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. !
Codenoh street,. opposite Methodist churoh,E!eafoOh
G. SCOTT, graduate Viotoria and Ann Altos, fend
member Ontario College of Physician,* lend
Sargeons. Coroner for County of Huron,
1. 1..toKAY, honor graduate Trinity Ilnivereity,
'old medalist Trinity Medical College. Mintaber
College of 1%3mnd/trio and Surgeons, °Made.
1488
AUCTIONEERS. -
VfROMAS BROWN, Lfoehsed Auctioneer 'for the
Counties of Huron anct Perish. Orders left at
at M. Campbell% Implement wareroorns, Seeforbh, or
TI:11 ExPOSITOR, Officle, Will reoeive prompt attention.
satiefantion guaranteed or no charge. 1.70841
TAMES G. AlcMICHAEL, licensed auotioiher for
V the county of Huron. Sales attended to in any
part of the cionnty at moderate ra.tes, and satisfaction
guaranteed. Orders left at the Seater& poot office
Or at Lot 2, Conceeelon 2, Hullett, receive
prompt attention. 18132-tt
UCTIONEERING.—B. S. Phillips, Licensed
..141. Auctioneer for the mulatto of Huron and
Perth. Being a pi -anneal fanner and thoroughly
understanding the •value of farm stook arid imple-
ment; places me in r better position to realize good
Priem Charger( moderate. Satisfaction guaranteed
or no payAhI orders left at Hansa post office or
all Lot 28, Conoeselon 2, Hay, will be promptly
attended to. 170941
TAMES- A. SMITH, liceneed auctioneer for the
month of Huron, Sales primp* attended to,
In ary part of the county and malefaction guaran-
ittd. Address Winthrop P. 0, 186541
MeEiilop Direnory for 1903.
MICHAEL MURDIE, Reeve, Winthrop P. 0.
JOHN S. BROWN, Couneillor, Seaforth P. 0.
minus unix, Councillor, Winth
JOHN MURRAY, Councillor, Beechwo P. 0.
ritr. 0.:
JOHN M. GOVENLOCK, Councillor, brop P.O.
JOHN O. MORRISON, Clark, Wintkrop P. 0,
DAVID M. ROSS. Treasurer, Winthron P 0.
801.0atON J. SHANNON, J. P., Sanitary littPettal
Winthrop P. 0.
••••smormsole....1
MARRIAGE LICENSES
ISSUED AT
THE HURON EXPOSITOR OFFICE,
SRAFORTE, ONTARIO.
ammEmaasenem.•
NO WITNESSES REOUIRED.
•
The Gentleman
From Indiana.
• • By BOOTH TARKINGTON.
Copyright, 3890, by Deifeeday & siaCI lie Co.
Copyrighk, 1902, by McClure, Phillips & Co.
• (Continued from last Week.)
The buckboard ,stopped on the Her -
aid corner, and here and along Main
street the line of vehicles which had fol-
lowed it from tile station took positions
to await the parade. The square was
almost a tiolid mass of bunting, and
the north entrance of the courthouse
had been decoreted with streamers and
flags so as to make a sort of stand.
Hither the crowd was already stream-
ing and hither the procession made lb
way. At interamis the gun boomed
from the station, and Schofields' Henry
was winnowing the air with his bell.
Nobody had abetter time that day than
Schotields' Henry, except old. Wilker-
son; who was with the procession.
In advance came the boys, whooping
and somersaulting, and behind them
rode a band of mounted men, eating
their horses like cavalrymen, led -by the
sheiriff and his deputy and Jim Bard -
lock. Then foliowedgthe 'limitless club
of Arno, led by Boswell,. with the mag-
naniraous Halloway himself marching
in the ranks, and at sight Of this the
people shouted like -madmen. But when
Helen's eye fell. upon 'Hallow•ay's fat,
rather unhappy face she felt a pang.of
pity .and unreasbning remorse, which
warned her that he whe , looks upon
politics when it is red must steel his
eyes to see many a man with the heart-
burn: After the men of Amo came the
Rarkless club. of Gainesville, gr.
Bence in the Tan with the step ef a
grenadier. There followed next Mr.
Ephraim Watts, beating a light wand
in his hand and leadin d
of workers from the oil field in their
stained blue overalls and blouses, and
after them came Mr. Martin and Mr.
Landis at the head of an organization
recogniZed in the "order of procession"
printed in the Flerald es "the business
IL o a . an p aye n
such magnificent timetliat every high -
stepping foot in all the line came dovin
with the same jubilant plunk and lift-
ed again with a,urianimity as complete
as that of the last vote the convention
had taken that day. The leaders of the
'procession set' a brisk pace, and who
cou ate set any other n o a pace
when on parade to the strains of such
a band ple.ying such a tune ae "A New
Coon In Town" with all its raight and
main? '
But as the line swung into the sq. -Sere
there camp a mement when the tune
was ended and the musicians paused
for breath and there fell coniparative
quiet. Among the ranks of the "busi-
ness men" amble.d Mr. Wilkerson, Sitlie-
lag at the top of his voice, and now he
could be heard distinctly enough for
those near him to *distinguish the mel-
ody with which it was his intention to
favor the public:
• "Glory, glory, halleluiah!
As we go marching on."
The words, the air, that husky yoke,
recalled to 'the men of Carlow another
day and another procession not like this
one. And the song Wilkerson eves
singing is the one song every northern
• born American knows and can sing.
"The leader of the band. caught the
sound, signaled to his men, twenty in-
• struments rose as one to twenty
mouths, th,p snare drum rattled, the big
drum crashed, the leader threw his
baton high over his head, and music
burst from twenty brazen throats:
, "Glory, glory, halleluiah!"
COmmonl• y, the first symptotn of a "cold"
Is a chilly feeling, accompanied by !aloft -
lag, or a tickling in the throat The roet
frequent of external causes are dratt lite,
wet or cold feet, or going from hot rooms
suddenly into cold ones. More frequently
• there is an inner cause—namely the stagnies
tion of the blood caused by constipation or
biliousness. Almost the first symptom is
the feeling of cold in the feet and increased
discharge from the nose.
No one ever takes cold unless -consti-
pated, or exhausted, and having what we
call mal -nutrition, which 18 attended with
impoverished bloed and exhaustion ofnerve
force. Tonics consisting of large portions
of alcohol iron or cod liver oil do not bring
the desired changes in the blood, because
they do not enter the system snot are not
absorbed into the blood, with the exception
of the alcohol, which shrivels up the red
blood corpusoles when it does come in
coni*end
contact.
botanical extract of Dr. Pierce because it
contains no alcohol, and offers a reasonable
etuid scientifie method of treating the blond,
by improving the montive functions of the
patient The tGoldemMedical Discovery"
accomplishes this, by first restoring the
eafeebled digestive organs, so t.hat food,
the natural tissue builder will be digested
and. assimilated.
• Accept no substitute for Dr. Pierce's
•Golden Medical Discovery. There is noth-
ing ',just as good" for diseases of the
stomach.
g a etachment eaaneekeeeemearieeemaegeeeme
4
1
Instantaneously the whole procession
• began to sing the refrain, and theipeo-
pie in the street and those in .the
wagons and carrieges and those lean-
ing -from the windows joined. with one
accord. The ringing bells caught.the
time of the song, and the upper air
reverberated in the rhythm.
The Harkless club of Carlow
-wheeled into Main street, 200 strong,
-
with their banners and transparence.
Lige Willetts rode at their bead, and
tediind him strode William Todd and
Parker and Ross Schofield and Newt
. . m
Tibbs and Hartley Bowlder, and even
Bud, TipworthY held a place in the
ranksthr6ugh his connection with flie
.)They were all singing, and
1.)-11intl them Ilekin saw the ling cov-
ered barenehe and her father. nod be-
side him!f sat Joli4 Ida rid ess, ill i his
head beked. She glanced -at lirisceee
He was Istanding'kon the sea h in front
oiler and hlinnief' and both were sing
ing. Meredith •had climbed upon the
lia,ck seat and was nervously fumbling
at a cigarette. "Sing, Tom!" the git I
cried to him excpdly.
"I should be ',ashamed not to," he
answered, and • deopped the cigarette
anda_ began to sing "John Brown's
Body" with all his strength. With that,
she seized his hand, sprang uti beside
him, and over the swelling chorus her
full soprano rose, lifted. with all the
.power in her.
The barouche rolled into the square,
arid as it passed Harkless turned and
bent e sudden gaze upon the group in •
the buckboard, but the western .sun
was in hi eyes and he onlycaught e
glimpse of a vague, bright shape and
a dazzle of gold, and he was borne
along and out of view down the singing
greet
"Glory, glory, halleluiah!
Glory, glory, haileleia.hil
Glory, glory, halleluiah!
As we go marching on."
The barouche stopped in front of the
courthouse, and Harkless passed up a
lane they made for him to the -steps.
'When he turned to them to speak, they
luau to c122r again. and he had to
111111111We
• Disease takes no summer
vacation.
If you need flesh and
strength use
Scott's Emulsio,ari
summer as in winter,.
• Send for freeprnple.
SCOTT S: EOWNE, Chemists,
Toronto, Ontario.
soc. and $1.0o ; all druggists
-
11710401,4.
:,,whWeadtirlf.0"r
Ross was visibly embarras ed. "Why
—fer—fer the other editor."
"For Mr. Fisbee?"
"Laud, no! You don't su pose we'd
• go to all that work and both r to brisk -
things up for that old entleman,
do you?' a
"I raea,nt young Mr. Fish e. He is
the other editor, isn't he?"
"Ohl" said Ross. "Young Mr. Fis-
bee? Yes; we put 'cm up re hira."
"You did? Did he appreci te them?"
"Well, be—seemed d of like
"Where is he now? ca e here to
find him."
"He's gone."
"Gone? Hasn't lie been he e this aft-
ernoon?"
• • "Yes; some the, time. Co e in and
stayed durin' the leevy you was holdith
anddsaw the extry off all right."
."When will he be back?"
• "Sence it's he'll a daily be gits here
by 8 after supper, but don't stay very
late. Old Mr. Itisbee and arker look
• after whatever comes in • en, unless
it's something .speelai. He' I likely be
• here isy half past 8 at the farthest off."
I "I can't wait till then. I've been
wanting to see him every m nute since
, I got in, and he hasn't bee • nearme.
• Nobody could even point him out to me.
Where has he gone? I want to see him,
now."
4
a
i "Want to discharge him again?" said
a voice from the door, and, turning,,
they saw that Mr. Martin • tood there
. observing theta.
"No," said Harkless. "I w nt te give
him the Herald. Do you k ow where
. he is?". .
;Mr. Martin stroked his b ard delib-
erately. , "The person you speak of
hadn't ought to be very bar 'to find in
' Carlow, and—well, maybe •hen found
f a cocliell
The coin -
o hire that
said Briscoe. -"We're too far off. Mr. carriage of yours by the day, and Iteat-
Meredith, smipose you take the ladies ing and Warren Smith are sitting in it
closer in; stay with the horses." • ; up at the corner with their feet, on the
"Re's a great main isn't he?" Mere- cushions to shoed how used they are
dith said to Helen as be handed her to riding around with four
out of the buckboard. "I've been try- every day in the week.
ink to ttbalize that 'he's the. same Old till, you're .ready to go out
fellow been treating so familiarly There's an hour before supp
all idhy long." • * you can talk to young Fis
"Yes, be is a great man," she an- want He's out there."
swerede "This is only the beginning." The first words Warren S
, That's true," said Briscoe. "Only had lifted the veil of you g Fisbee's
• you'll want to put a kind
wait for them to quiet down. •to that deed to the Herald.
"We can't hear Lim from over here," mittee Was reckless enough
hite 'horses
tes waiting
Briscoesh
r time, and
ee all you
ith spoke
wait awhile, and we'll all go lli to duplicity; had shown John
: WashingtOn and get a thrill down our fine intelligmace and,supre
backs when we hear the speaker say, and sympathy young Fisbe
. 'The gentlemen. from Indiana,' and see , ed for him, had understo
4 John Harkless rise to sneak. But hurry had made him. If the ope
. along, yohng people.". ! McCeme had been made and
i• Crossing theostreet, they met Miss tory f evidence published
: Tibbs. She was wiping her streaming • own pap4r while Harkless
eyes with the back of her left hand and. 'a candidate and rival he
- itLIl mechanically waving her hand- ; felt dishonored. The Me
-ieerclii.ef With her right. "Isn't it beau- could have been used for
tiful?" she said, not ceasing to uncoil- benefit, but not for his own
- selously Butter the little square of cam- FiSbee had understood in
* btic. "There was such a throng that him It was a point of h
ono
i I grew faint and had. to come away. I would have held finical end inconsist-
with what
e delicacy
had work -
d him and
attack on
the dainna-
Harklesse
imself waft
ould have
une. papers
Holloway's
and young
had saved
that many
I don't mind your seeing me cry. Pretty ent but '
near everybody cried when he walked comprehended was vital
up the steps and we sew that he was ' And this was the man
lame." •: charged like a dishonest
•1 Sohn Harkless looked down upon the man who had thrown wile
attentive, earnest faces and into the eyes) was riches into his 1
onethatyoung o Fisbee had
Harkless.
e had dis-
ervant, the
(in Carlow,
• p, the moan
• kindly eyes of the Hoosier country peo- - who bad made his -paper and who had
pie, and as he spoke. the thought kept made lilittt and saved 'him. Harkless
recurring to him that this was the place wanted tiksee young Fisbee as he long -
be had. dreaded to come back to; that •ed to see Only one other person in the
! these were the people he had wished to • world.
leave, these who gave him evelything
they had. to give, and this made it Md.-
' kilt to keep his tones steady and his
; throat clear. Helen stood so far from
- the steps (nor could. she be induced to
penetrate farther, though they would
• have made way for her) that only
fragments reached her but these she
remembered. .
"I ' have come home. Ordinarily a
man needs to fall sick by the wayside
or '0 be set upon by thieves in order to
realize that nine -tenths of the world is
,Saniaritan—and the other tenth only
too busy or too 'Ignorant to be. Down
here he realizes it with no necessity of,
illness or wounds to make him know it,
and if he does get hurt you send him ,
to congress. There will be no other in
Washington so proud of what he stands -
for as I shall be. To represent you is
to stanct for fearlessness, honor, kind;
ness. You. have sent all of the Cross- '
roaders to the , penitentiary, but prob-
ably ea& of us is acquainted wfth
politicians who ought to be sent there.
When the term is over i I shall want
• to take the first train home. This
Is. the place for a man who likes to
live. , where people are kind to each e
Other and where they have the 'old ,
fashioned way of saying -home;' other
tlaces they don't seem to get so much
nto it as we do. And to come home as
have today—to see the home faces -1
have, come home." _.
As the barouche drov up to the
brick house he made out through the
trees a retreative flutter of skirts on
the porch, and the though crossed his
mind that Minnie had own indoors
to give some final direetio s toward the
preparation of the banque . But when
• the barouche halted at th gate he was
surprised to see her w ing to him
from the steps, while Tom leredith and
Mr. Bence and Mr. Bos ell formed a
• little court around her. ige Willetts
rode up on horseback at he same mo-
ment, and the judge w s waiting in
front of the gate. Hartle s stepped out
of the barouche and took his hand. "I
was told young Fisbee w s here."
"Young Fisbee is he e," said the
juAge.
Mr. Fisbee came arco d the corner
of the house and went oward Hark-
less. "Fisbee," cried the atter, "where
is your nephew?"
The old man took his and in bath'
his own and looked him between the
eyes and thus stoodt whil _there ,was a
long pamie, the others w: tching them.
"You must not say that 1 told you," he
said at last. "Go into th garden."
But when Harkless' tep crunched
the 'garden there was • o one there.
Asters were blooming I beds between
the green resebUshes, a id their many
fingered hands were flunt open in wide
surprise that he should expect to find
young Fisbee there. It as just before
sunset. •Birds were go siping in the
sycamores on the bank. At the foot of
the garden, near the cr ek, there were
some tall 'hydrangea ushes, flower
laden, and beyond t em one broad
shaft of sun smote the creek bends for
k mile in that fiat Ian and crossed the
garden like a bright, ant drawn veil.
Harkless passed the ushesand step-
ped out into this gold brilliance. Then
he uttered a cry an stopped, Helen
was standing beside the hydrangeas
with teeth hands pre sed to her face
and her eyes cast on the ground. She
.had run away as far e she. could Min.
There were high ences extending
down to the creek on ach side, and the
water was beyond.
"Your' he said. "Y ul Tour'
She did not lift he eyes, but began
th move away from him with little
backward steps. W en she reached
•
CHAPTER XV.
was 5 o'clock when Harkless
climbed the stairgto the Her-
ald office, and hia right UPI"
and hard were aching and
limp. Ross Schofield was the only per-
son in. tlie editorial moth, and there
Wee nothing in his appearance that
phould have caused a man to start and
fall- back from the doorway, but that
la what John' did. "What's the matter,
Mr. Rarkless?" cried Ross, humming
forward with a fear that the other
had been suddenly re -seized by illness.
"What are those?" -asked Harkless,
with a gesture of his hand that seemed
to include the entire room.
"Those?" repeated Ross, staring blank-
, ,
ly.
"Those rosettes — these streamers
that stovepipe—all this blue ribbon?"
Roes 'turned tale. "Ribbon?" he said
inquiringly. "Ribbon?' He seemed
unable to perceive the decorations re.
ferred to.
"Yes," answered John. "These ro-
settes on the chairs, that band, and"—
"Oh!" Ross answered. "That?" He
fingered the band on the stovepipe as
if he saw it for the first time. "Teel
I
"But evhat'e it for?"
"Why—it's--it's likely meant fer dec-
orations."
• "It seems to have been here some
time."
"It has. I reckon it's most due to be
called in. It's been up ever Bence—
sence"—
enVito Vat —
4
th bench on the bank she spoke with
a ouick intake of bre
th and in a voice
"Pure soap I" ,You've heard •
the words. • Ip S U11 light
Soap you have the fact.
R.EDUCES
EXPENSE
szz
_
RIGHTS
ISEASE
Is tb deadliest and most
painful malady to which
mankind is sublime, Dodd's
Kidney Pills will cure any
case of Bright's Disease.
Theyhave never failed in
one single case. They are
the only remedy that ever
has eueed it, and they are
the only remedy that can.
There are imitations of
Dodd'a Kidney Pills—pill,
box ad name—but imita-
tions are dangerous. The
original and only goneine
aura fot Bright's Ditease
DODO'S
KIDNEY
•
to me. Do you know what Iafelt?
• While his daughter, was dancing to-
' Wiens a stranger had taken his hand
and—and"— . A sob trose in her throat
and checked, her utterance for a mo-
ment, but she threw ine her head proud-
ly. "Gratitude, Mr. Ilarklessr she
cried. "I am James Fished's daugh-
ter!"' '
I He fell back from the bench with a
sharp exclaination and stared at her
through the gray twilight. She went
, on hurriedly, still not looking at him.
: "I wanted to do something to show you
. that I could he eshareed of my vile
neglect of him—something to shew you
. his daughter could be gaateful—and it
' has been WI .dear, happy work, the
i little I have done, that it seems, after
all, that 1 have done it for love of my -
pelf. It is what I had always wanted
to do—to earn a living ;or myself; to
: live with my father, Whea I •came
'
! here, my aunt and uncle were terribly
• afraid I would stay with him. It was
to prevent this that they determined to
go abroad, and my father said I must
go back to them. Then you were—
were hurt, wed he needed me so much
he let me stay. When you—when
you told me—she broke off with a
strange, flutteridg„ half inarticulate lit -
'mit te''''''''''''d"""'" tie laugh that was halt tears and then
he alniost faled to hear
, the merest resuined in another tone—"when you
whisper, and 1 ter words came so slow- told me you cared that night—that
ly that sometimes minutes separated night of the storm—how could 1 be -
you keep i sure? It hioN been only two days, you
f'
see and event if 1 (multi have been sure
•; of myself—why, I couldn't have told
PILLS
Diedd's Kidney Pills are
fifty cents a box at all
druggiets.
them, "Can y
the Herald?"
"Keep you"
He came n
stand. Is it
again?"
"Have you
—now—why wouldn't, resign? You
forgive my—that telPgram?"
"What telegram?"
"The one that came
morning."
'Tour teleg
"Did you se
•
"It did not.
"Yes—it did
",But—whit
"It was si
Aligned"— Sh
away, 'not lif
Her hand, resting upon the back of the
bench, was shaking. She put it behind
her. Then her eyes were lifted a little,
and, though they did not meet his, he
saw them, airei a glory sprang into be-
ing in his heart Her voice fell still
lower, and tee_ heavy tears rolled down
ar her. "I don't ander- you. Oh, I had so brazenly thrown my-
you—yon—who are here self at your bead time and again those
- two days in my—iny worship of your
orgiven me? You know goodness to iny father and my excite-
ment in recognizing in his friend the
hero of my iirlhood that you had ev-
ery eight to think I eared; but if—but
if 1 had—if I had—loved you -with my
whole soul I could not have—why, no
woman could have—I mean the sort of
voice sank. agein to a whisper. "And
w
sure ',of myself? And now".-- Her
f I had wanted to—even if I had been
ngiorl ,I,ain—,couIdn't have admitted it—
must have denied it. Do you think that
then I could have answered 'Yes,' even
i
"And now?" he said tremulously. She
gave a Inuiried glance from right to left
and from left to right, like one in ter-
=ror seeking a way of escape; she gath-
ered her skirts in, her hand. as if to run
• into the garden, leht suddenly she turn-
ed and ran to him. She threw her arms
• faobroeuhte aitis. neck and kissed. him on the
d
am?"
d me one?"
ome to me."
to you—thie
1
was it about?"
ned," she said; "it was
paused and turned half
ing the downcast lashes.
•
her cheeks, 'It was signed," she whim When they . heard- the judgecalliug
pered, "It wa signed—S. Fisbeed "
i
- He began o tremble from head te
w
foot. There as a long silence. She
had. turned full away from him. When
he spoke his Voice_ was as low as hers,
and he spoke as slowly as she luta.
"You mean—then—then it was—you?"
"Your
• "Yes."
"And you you have—yon have been
here all the liner
"All—all e cept the week—you Were • see the look the vision had. given- him
—hurt" 1 when the barouchei turned Into the
The bright, veil that wrapped. them oquare. She 'smiled upon _hint and
was drawn ahvity, and they stood in the said, "All afternoon I was wishing
• could have been your mother."
He• clasped her hand more tightly.
• "This wondertui world!" he cried.
• "rester:lair I had a doctor—a doctor to
'cure me of lovesickness!"
After a time they had proceeded a
little nearer -the house. "We must
hurry," she maid. "I am sure theyhhave
been Waitinig for us." This was ,true;
they had. •
From the dining room tame laughter
and hearty voices, and the windows
were bright With the light of many
lamps. By and by they stood just out-
side the patch of light that fell fPoni
one of the windows.
"Look!" said Helen. "Aren't they
good, dear people?"
• "The beautifel people!" he answered.
THE END.
from the orchard they went back
through the garden toward the house.
•'It was dark. The whitest aeters were
but gray splotches. There was no one
in the orchard. Briscoe •had gone in-
doors.
"Did you know you are to drive me
into town M the phaeton for the fire-
works?" she asked.
"Fireworks?"
"Yes. The great Harkless has coins
home." Even in the darkness he could
"You,'" he said. "You/"
quiet, gathering dusk. He tried to
loosen his neckband; it seemed to be
choking him '"1-1 can't—I don't com-
prehend it. i I am trying to realize •
what it all theans." .
"It means °thing," she answered.
"There wa an editorial yesterday,"
he said, "an editorial that I thought -
was about Rodney McCune. Did you.
write it?"
•
"It was at) ut—me—wasn't it?" '
"It said—it
the----the—loy
low county."
Suddenly s
fiot misunder
said that—that I had won
of every person in Car- '
e found her voice. "Do
stand me," she said rapid-
ly. "I have done the little that 1 have
done out of gratitude." She faced_ him
pow, but Without meeting his eyes. "I
owed 'you more gratitude than a wom-
an ever. owed a' man before, I think,
and would have died to pay a part
ef it."
• "What gratitude did you owe me?"
"What gratitude? For what you did
for my father?'
"I have never seen your father in my
life."
"Listen. My father is a gentle old
man with white hair and kind eyes.
My name ig my uncle's. He and mit
aunt have been good to me as a fa_ther
and mother since I was seven years
old, and they gave me their name by
law, and I lived with theme My fa-
ther came to see me once a year; I nev-
er came to see him. He always told me
everything was well with him, that his
life was happy, and I thought it was
easier for him not having me to take
care of, he bas been so poor ever since
I was a child. Once he_ lost the little
he had left to him in the world, his
only way of making his living. He had
no friends; he was hungry and desper-
ate, and he wandered. I was dancing
and going about wearing jewels—only
I did not know. All the tithe the brave
heart wrote me happy letters. I should
have knoena for there was one whe
did and who saved him. When at laet
eame to see my father he told rne—he
bad written of hie idol before, but It
Wet. no! V_Iilecame _that iimetetd alit;
The British. Guinea,
It is ammeg the things generally
known that: the guinea 'obtained its
/lathe from the gold from which it wall
made having been brought from the ,
Guinea eoast by .the Aftlean conarmitY
of traders. • The first notice of this
gold was .in 1, 49, during the common-
wealth of Eng andewhen on the lath of
Api•it of that year the parliament re-
fereed to the mind) of state a paper
•preilented' to t e house concerning the
coinage -of golit brought lo a ship lately
come fkim "Gfilny" for the better ad-
vancing of trade. But it was in the
reign of Cheri
first given ,to
things not gen
s II. that the mute was
Ids coin. It is among
rally known that when
the guinea was originally coined the
intention was to make it hurrent as a
twenty shilling piece, but from an ert
ror, or rather 4 series of errors, in cal-
culating the exact proportious of the
value of gold and silver it never cir-
culated for that value. Sir Isaac New-
ton In his time fixed the true value of
the guinea in relation to silver at 20s.
8d., and by hie advice the crown pro-
claimed that for the future it sliould
be current at 21 shillings.
A Minister Cured
of Itching Piles
The suffaring from licitinga
I burning was almost be.
rand endurance.
t.
1
The victim ef a were ease of piles is not eoly
edit for mental or physical work but is kept in
IgnoOst constant agony.
, Besides the dreadful itching end burning
liel30,111 there is a strain en the nevous system
which ahrtest drives a personae -nye
So far as is known the enly absolute and
rhaanteed sure far evoy farm of Dila is Dr.
se's Ointment, a arePa-7-1-'3ffifdeb
rtandard as wood sm.
REV.W14., THOMAS, BIVIVfl1it, Ont., wriitet
—" As a men of seventy Years, 1 tan grateful to
God and to 13r. Chase's Oiaironnt for a cure ef
piles which bed eaue..e4 me endless annoyases
and much mime.. The itching and Learning ,
was almost beyeeA endurance, but Dr. Chase's I
Ointment breeghttguick relief and as the Uvoble
lies net returned, 1 hays reason te believe fjte4
the etni
Is lasting"
II Dr. CrASe* Oismusi 40 emits a bem st4 an
Sealers, ce Bdtrimieni Bela and Ce., Tceente.
-To Feted you egaimet imitations the pot -twit
" and signature of Dr. A. W. Chase, the famous
receipt Latch maim are on miry him
Ayees Pills are gently laxative.
They greatly *Id the Sarsaparilla.
London Policeman an
'London policemen are stab]
eareful eyetem of preparation before they
are considered fit to go out and travel a
beat.
•
Al London constables, wherever they
•
may be ',stationed, yass through the -same
initial -course of training. They must, of
course, be etrong and healthy, and their
character must be unstnirched. Strength
and health are of particular importance to
man who may have to gegpple at any
moment with a brawny criminal, and musb
certainly spend two or three nights a month
ID the open without regard to weather.
.And every constable passes once a month ,
under the dodoes inspection. As to char- '
sober, well, that is of the emcee of a 0011b 7
stable, who must be not only a guardian !
but an angel, odletriti '
When a man has shown that he has the
strength of a guardian and thecharacter of
an angel he may ba accepted ana potential
policeman. He ie put through a eix weeks' -
emirate of training.
Day by day he goes to Wellington bar-
racks and is taught the elements of drill—
which seem unimportant to & man whose
function is to act alone. He in also taught
a little wrestling, and instructed as to• the
best method of overcoming a recalcitrant
wrongdoer.
•e
Doubtlees there will come a day when
constable' will be taught by Japanese and -
adopt their syetem ofrapplied methematice. '
At present the youngetnan.learns only the
raw method of the west. et, •
Duriug thoee air weeke, too, he attends
police courts and watches the demeanor
and listens, ta the evidence of oonstables,
thus picking up some small knowledge of
the powers of the police and qualifying
himself to carry on the traditional laws of
police evidence.
• When the six weeks are over he appears
before the commissioner of •poliee—who is
by virtue of his office a justicse of the peace
and sears in due form that) he will mirry
out his duties in preventing burglaries,
robberies, felonies and murders, and he
will protect property and no forth, and
6nally, will not divulge offielal eecrets.
That done, the young man—the young
an el--beeornes a guardian, with uniform
and truncheon, and is sent on to the streets
to see that London behaves itself. i
MOTE/13111 AND BABY.
When baby is well the mother is happy.
When baby is erose, fretful, feverisla and
cannot sleep, the mother is depressed,
worried end unhappy. Baby's Own nib.
lets make both mother and baby happy, be-
cause they cure all the common ailments of
infante and young children. They sweeten
the stomach, cure colio, •aid teething
children, cure constipation, 'prevent diem
rheas, and promote mend, bealthy sleep.
And you have a, solemn guarantee that the
Tablets contain no opiate or poisonous
" soothing " stuff. Mrs. ih McGill, of
Biakeney, Ont., says 1 have used
Baby's Own Tablets and have found them
the best medicine I have ever had for the
cure of the ailmente from which young
children affair. I shall always keep a box <-
of Tablets in the housed' Sold by medicine
dealers everywhere or sent by mail at 25
cents a box by writing the 1)r. Willia
Medicine Co, Brookville, 0.nb.
• Pointed Paragraphs.
—Few clouds are as thick as they look
—All poror people are more or less per-
secuted -by society at large.
—You can drive some men to drink but
yen can't make them take water.. -
—One of Chioagesmodel men mended -
tures dummies for clothing stores,
—The girl who is the,most indifferent to
men is the one men moat admire.
—The longer you anticipate a pleasure
the less you will enjoy it when it eomes.
— Bleep is said to be healthful, and no
one seems to know it better than the hired
girl;
—The man who has to *ask his wife for
oar fare every morning has no •nee fur a
•mother-in-law.
--The girl who is the mosb popular with
men in general is apt to make ane man
miserable for life.: a Isfeetr;
—A girl who is too lazy to keep the holes
in her hosiery neatly darned has no busi-
ness to monkey with the leap -year privi-
leges.
—If yeu are not feeling well, just take
another look at the last bill your doeber
rendered, and Ws- ten to one you will feel
better.
In Praise of Chamberlain's Colic.
Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy.
" Allow me to give you a few words in
pride° of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy," says Mr. John Hank -
lett, af Eagle Pass, Texas. I suffered one.
week with howel trouhle,aud took all kinds
of mediciae without gettieg any relief,
when My friend, Mte r. Johnson, a mer-
ehant here, advised Me to take this rem-
edy. After taking one dose I felt greatly
relieved, and when 1 had taken, the third
do ee was entirely cured. 1 thank you
from the bottom of my heart for pettang
this great remedy In the hands of' man-
kind. For sale by &lex. Wilson, Drug-
gist, Seaforth,
—John Mason, a Wallace -township pio-
neer, died on Friday, 12th ult., aged 74
years. For a number of yenrs he bad been
severely afflieted With rbeemetism.
— South Es,-. thoplost.one of ito oldest and
most respected citizenin the person of
John levier '3r. who died at his home on
Tuesday, Augo.et dth. The late Mr. laden
was born in SWit7orlamd seventy aiX years
ago. When a child of two yeare he mem"
to Canada with his parente. .They settled
on the farm where Mr. toiler lived until
the time of his death.
—8, B. Hatch has resigned his position
on the teaching staff of the St. Marys Co!.
Iegiabe Institute and J. B. Wilkinson, of
4
Morpeth, has been a felted in his place.
flt—G. Cary, of St. arys, is under arrmt
in Stratford, He is snapeeted of being lin-
plioated in a burglary in that oity.