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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1905-06-02, Page 7905 liens eetel t of Stock ether per- roprie !nave dbyw Hotel, leeppee George Steong': ght. Taseday.- y Chesnersefor 4z7S Hotel, Soft. [dey-By way oe teremith, Harm ales, for noon; d, and west te • Brneefield, fee to Coon Hotel, inth by way of aes, Hille Green, e to Nicholson's en south to john n 12, Hay, for -,famee Ragarete hen to hit owe in until the fol - 1951 rU 1905. e Proprietor". I -leave his own coed to E. Ball's. ornoon ; then to Clinton, for the proceed to Bero eGoderich Town- rilsonee Holmes- Vedneeday-Will 7th eonceision, s neon; then to eteion, Goderioh Thureday--Will • Beyfield Line, aotee.Varoe, for :proceed to Adam Stanley, ter ble for the nighb. io ele_Kay'e, etle or noon ; then to eareion, for on able, where he knowing Moncley 19524f. 31,714. . oprietoa own etahle, Data emmereial Hotel, nee to Ted. We- ight. Tuesday-- licemesville to erten to Dmalopee -Will proceed tes Car noon ; thence he Thursday - =on, for noon; eau's, for night.. Blyth at lei then to Daniel rdey-Will pro - noon ; thence to will renisin entit 195g opriebor. ale own stable, Rooker, Logan, treble for the Illnerayet for ree for the night. Habkirkes, to hie own stable -To the Doroln. On ; then to P. the night. Fri - Huron Road, for Trance's, Meilen- y-To hie own wilt remain un- morniug. 1952 OTHIAN. oprietor. evement of stook Coneession 4, oidaye, Iv/ en he toon, then beck to n be met by -ere diatatice will s horee ie too me to need any inaure, $10.00. De good draughe 1950-8 B. oprietore. leave hie own rucefield and go to Wm. Work- ekeramitle noon; arty and 800th concession 12. aesday-Ease to to Mitchell at Wedneeclaer mien Hotel, foe at Dien Hotel, a Walton, at Em- u to Blyth, at at. Friday -To tiotel for j10011 morning. Sat- e . where he will Monday morn - 19504f. ES and for tier - of all. /Lin 5. ,.3 payable at the • htslaucc when ERO ; payable when eTAMP. ayab1e wben L, ; payable when. 1RY, Prop. 19514.f. otting Stallion T. R. .0 his own stable Ilop, two miles ninth me. 10 ban& high, ; foaled in 1901:; I Stock Farm, Olney. ; hie present owners Ib will be seed by be very best blood 111e, g etre of Dria to Abdallah, 15 g g a champion trotting ud S. 2.037„ a world's e the sane hind of • buroe, all eons of rreees to Matnbrino Osibrine Chief, Clerk erY Clny, and sire or a4.goed, high going' is.. Terms -115 • It of oner GOVICN- n For pedigree ade eSeefortie 14tu3 Work All Dente geese clean and bright before the day 10 rightly begun. When good brooms and brushes are used it takes very little effort to keep the home attreciive. BOECKH BROOMS are the best made, and like all tools make labor light. For year "the see.ndard goods &de." lin Faded% Liaittd, Toro* Cu. t eves in vain he ence EIEURON EXPOSITOR, ep grSOHI, the head -lights 'of the ine.rs- whose long, floating hair and onze nearly naked lsodies looked - sant c, orainoui, superttataral, At tie bottom of the second shaft sing lan sight arrested their stein, d ade them feel the thrill eef e oti no that touch another world.; • quare of glittertng rocks the mg bed constructed a rude chap- ; an altar, lighted by several wax t pers was in the centre, and a I rge ross of silver, bearing the age of The kprucified, was upon ti ;well g on. the very steps of this Itar was , an old raa,n, wh.ose long, . The Art o outing. Love for an Hour p°rIenseenInteldnetso' tahnetni the mountains Eating is the first thing we learn te they must climb or the many (lane h de and Vie last tbing we learn to do IS 140Ft YoBsv.E4, gers and fatigues of tie canada. they would be required to traverse. Both 'BY A NIELIA. E. BARR.. right Some never learn it at all and end their lives and their happiness , women Welke sure they could '"go through the neglect As it consumes But thotigh Dick went carefully oe.„ wherever Dii:k ceuld ,go;" end Fran- er the ground. already exataitted by teSea's face brightened. with delight much of our tune and must alwaye Captain Benton, nothing new wars at the Wee of proving hor affection do so it is a duty to make it an ade- discovered, Lancelot had stayed two by her aortitede in wdariness, by her quate eource, of pleasure. It Is some - days" at the hotel San Juan de Moat contempt for her own comfort and thing which all may appreciate, and So end had then, gone forward to Bocca safety, and her resolution to discov- . has much to do with deneocratizing del Rio. 'here his stay had been er her lover at all theta. ' -pleasure. As long tui pleasure is con - short,. but it was proven that there "He, would be most likely to .dis- fined to the higher -to musie, Mere- • he had beccane intimate with a Mexi- guise bimself,'' She said; ''he might tune or contenaplatien-it must be lim- can, lawyer, and that they had gone even change his name; but ufider any forwin•d together tO the gorges of . disguise and under any name, I t • ited and be the -privilege of a few wine Ueero Gordo and the great bridge ov- should find ,hlin out." n ed breast and shoulders. He was III e hair flowed down upon. his can have the required, culture, It is er the River Antigen, called the Pu- And after Ail, the j urney was not ; at adoration. He perceived not important to secure enjoyments which ante Nacional. At tide point they 80 verY fatiguing. The season -beinge *I, e p esence of strangers. . all men May' have and not depreciate but the lawyer, but be could ten. isben made for .their rest. and refresh- ortal - oudehdeanlay: only a sirapie bappiness. The good , Krera Cruz, and Lancelot going for- cold; but the air • was so vivifying, e et od upright and began t8 there may be much .happiness it must eeparated, the lawyer returnhig to early, there was some suffering from the capacity of the poor or low. That Ward to Larncero. then Dick found and such perfect - arrangements had t 'Saito Diose santo puerte, santo • be in the many, and. these can have him nothing that was not already peent, that eel declared the journey things of life must be found in the . known. to SeeeLepato had lima as yet, the t light ful part of theie trip. bra So the party went forward to Lan- most de VETERINARY ero, where they rested for Yet toward the close of it they were esome ' nos, senor, eletcedo pd instantly his coanioxis in the eep cky, caverns joinedi in the solenen eloolty until it echoech and raverber- eed through the whole mine, so that yen the lowest labor was vocal with, ratter and praise. "Out of the depths they call unto imi" said Loida, softly. Prances- ch • hands were dropped and claspech er head bent, iier eyes closed. She • common acts in the elementary thinge 'which are necessary to life itself or elays; for hero the 'sight, of the oak- obliged to go very slowly, while weech every OHO Will oceasiopally ej 'V tesiristy College. All disessee.ofpozneetio ee . they had passed the region of fever ed their way over the crests of, lofty hrctitevnets. -TOO-0(11:OP aarl la geenj O'Pyhm3resnietsit Va' reensjuocyh- : their mules with eaUtiOUS stepri pick- -EOM elineee, lege Poem graduate 010Otari0 tree announced to the travelers that -is to try to limit enjoyment to the i hills, or else in deep eullies where soligeit treated. Calls promptly attended $0 and ‘"'-'. pestilence Loida Was exceeding - 11124 Y we e rkh or the educated. -Boston Cooking time* manta. Veierthery Dentistry a specialty. and pestil WOW a 4 residence on ooderielestreet, one door 137 depressed and wear with the ' towering clin darkened the % noon - V. 8.-Bonozaly 0 alb:Weed tee Svas suffering from climatic in u-, Scheel hiagazine. lW..........". ! rode they crossed frequentit- . veins But which way soever they constant excitement, and change. She day. age et r Seeit's ogee eosioreh. F Bonn( . . b., Mt Peet Et dere principles n ;Id Milk ng the defts of Intimacies-. which aro the blessed -"Some men Preach," said Sydney. lever a sperisIty. OW) oreite Dick's Hotel, 4s „ strange and =any -colored the rockS, as bright as a trail of *nests ot our imm.ortite destiny, Smith, "ae if they thought sin is to De thor" istrength to t k li h oxide of silver streak' erneecerge. e)eate diseases of ardomestle animals . a e a, fres. old u.pon terra* Medical Association. of the Ontario Voter. tlible 'to 1141* until she bed recovered superfices of the ground by a red was experiencing OM of those .divine Sleeping In Chesrele. 4Pontrio Veterinary College sn Ilouousiymene imeee also and lird •soonted impose 'ofprecious ore. marked even at the Nan Sneer, Beacons. AP or ere left at the hotel1`... threads. Francesca was singularly cinnabar. Dick was less moved; the scene was be taken out of a Mall as Eve was 1871.62 * 11 I e . et. fee nag of expectancy upheld The Senile affected the whole party amillar to him, but its faraillarity taken out of Adam by casting him wittention e" her. At Lancer° Lancelot had profoundly. Frahcesca found it im- ad never induced indifference. into a profound slumber." So at any ti receive prompt a? Night calls received t ofese. mained a week. Here there were possible to converse, A deep solene- aid, with considerable feeling: rate thought not South, who, preach - of man. n Y ^ • it teethed. her heart arid closed her "It is the 'Airfoil Theos aoios ing one day at Whitehall, observed plenty of traces the young JAI L k LLORAN ' /At the venta where he had lodged Loida answered Dick's remarks schirosi' of tho Greek Church, Is it LEGAL. the host and his wite remembered in a low voice. Dick only asked such there, and lead become familiar with questions as his care foie their safety Esnater, Solicitor, Notary Punlic eta Money to him well. He had bought a. horse ,byti. ,oftice open every week der. Over Pickard's and comfort required. .They were in nee hi fiestorih Mondays, Frittees and Baur- atom Main street, Seaforth. 1904 the people in the jaceles. . Also, he _ One of Nature's grand cathedrals, r . had been. entertaineel 'ber the ohficer they .ielt the presenCe -of the Infinite, in charge of Santa` Anpa's country.. and their souls sae) reverently: .-R. 8. HAYS, , SWOON, COnveYannst and Naha house -at, Lancer°, tent Francesca; }1 ow awful is this pleteeh' fofthriDemhdoeheeli. rser of went with Dick to the little build- At length they reached the mines. iisnkOkeyeeib- Meng eeleese 1210 ing, with its red-steieed walls and The director had boon notified of the T IL BRIT, , Barrister, Solicitor, Cionveyanour 414 Notary Fuiblie. Offloes up Waite, over W lingsgS bookstore, Main Street, ileaforth, Ontario. lelf HOIRESTED, mocessor to the late Sint of X. McCaughey Is Holmested, Barrister, Solicitor l'aesesncer. and Notary „golloitor for Os Oen rdievullank of Covannace. Money to land. Forza goestoct Oros in IOW's Block, Main Street, INIOBINSON AND GABROW, Barristers, Solis& • Om itodirich, Ontario. . E. L. DICKINSON. ISIS* CHARLES GARROW L. L. B. -DENTISTRY. F. W. TWEDDLE, I. DENTIST, netees °thrive College of Dental Surgeons of On- tario. graduate eonrse in crown and bridge work at d etre Sehool, Chicago. Local anuthetios for eWeietion of teeth. Oflioe-Over A Young's sIM, &Math. 1764 DR. - BELDEN, DENTIST, TORONTO, &Journeyed form 418 Ebirbounre St. to his buildt ful new (them 486 Young Et., oppoeite Carlton St 181548 MEDIOAle Dr. John McGinnis, Wee and Residenes—Victorie, Street, SEAFORTH *Phone 78 DR. H. HAMM ROSS, Gewluate of University of Toronto Faculty of ',fedi. Mee,. member of college of Physicians and Sur - of Ontwrio piss graduate comes Obiusgo kat School, Chicago; Royal Ophthalmic Hospi- tal, London, England; University College Hospital, 'i,endotts England. Office -I -Over Oreig & etewarte torn Main Street, Seaford]. 'Phone No. 5: Night nalkistewered from residence on John street. 1890 OR. F. J. BURROVV8„ • IBMett...VORTIEE Office sod Rixidence-Goderich street, east of the ft eatio&st church. Teaserforra No. 46. infhier forthe County of Huron. 1086 DRS. SCOTT & MacKAY, IITIBIOIANS AND OITIRGEONII, 4321! Itilfeet, opposite Methodist ohnrokleatorth ea non, seedieste victoria and Ann Arbor, and number Ontario College of Physicians end serpent Coroner for Minty of Huron, r lifindrAY, honor graduate Trinity University, gold medalist Trinity Medical College. Member Ilkiinge 01 Physicluns and Burgeons, Onlai.o 141111 AUCTIONEERS. modest" verarida surmounted ,by t ; and ' every preparation possible belvedere. Of glass t She sat in the . had been made for their comfortable chair Lancelot had esed, and Diclif accommodation. Dick wasat home. tranelated for her such of the cone versation as the man remembered. Hope grew apace en such favorable conditions. At last' she began to feel that her pilgriraage of Uwe was noe predestined to sorrow and fatigue and failure. Here also 'they procured a litera, or khicle of palanquin, ini which Loida and Franceitea passed over the Tierra, Caliente, or Burning Land, 'between this part of the road and Jalapa, where they arrived one day about /loon. For the first time since they had left the elnited Statee Loida, and Francesca, were enthusiase tic, and forgot their small personal interests in the beauty of the place and its environs. For Jalapa, with all its enchant- ments, was upon tOem-the steei. streets, with the blue and red housee peeping out of clumps of guava trees, of liquid ambar and palms; the hedges of datum and jasmine and honeysuckle; the Is-lona-01ns over- hanging the town; the rocks covered with convolvuli; the thopeend streams from their sides ; the deep, Lege of the hker and the deep blue el the hills blending into one. Surely, if there was a heaven -foie love on this earth, it was here -here at ffor Jalapa, At the "Posada, Fraoceece," Fran- cesca was sensible of that conviction of desere accomplished which so often ends in diseppoinment. She was sure Lancelot had lodged in tbis -very house. Its name tif flIthaecesca" would make it dear end attractive. She stepped happily through the pia7708 surrounding elle spacious court, and watched the pebbling fountaifl in its centre eoiceugtits oi -. Lancelot. Doubtless t 0 ah stood there, and thought, of er But there were nq poaleive traces .i1H0ITA8 BROWN, Licensed Auctioneer for the L Counees of Huron end Perth. Ostlers left M A'. H. Campbell's implement warerooms, Seaforth, or EXPCOITOR Offiee,,will receive prompt atter Mom 'tMattion guaranteed or no charge. 170841 .1.1.•111061.1.0M••••• TAXES G. lieldICHAEL, licensed auetioneer for ti the county of Huron. Sales attended to in any sari of the eounty at moderate rates, and eatisfaction gnerantted. Orders left at the &Worth post &Hee .rras reit 2, Concession .2, Dr:Sett will receive nionnnt sttenten. 188241 A UCTIONSZEING.-B. S. Phillip's, Licensed a Auctioneer for the counties of Huron and keel. Being a practioal farmer and thoroughly niderstanding the •vela° of farm nook and imple. =eels, places no in a ,better position to realize good ;orlon. Magee toodereit. Sidirdaction gnnuranteed ram) pay, MI orders kilt at Heneall pout office or 1 Lot 53, CODOOSelOn 2, Hay, will be promptly Raided to. 170941 The McKillopMutual Fire Insurance Company; FARM AND ISOLATED TOWle PROPERTY ONLY INSURED 011141111141. J. 13. McLean, President, Kippen P. 0. ; Thema, insert viee.preeldent, Brucefield P. 0. ; Thomas Z Hays, 8eoy.Ireaa, fiesforth P. 0.. DUABOTORII. WW1= Chesney Beaforth ; John G. Grieve, Win. George Dale, Seaforth ; John Benneweie, DlbJn; James Evans, Beechwood; John Waft. airlock; Thomas FrEieer, Brneefleld ; John B. MO nee; Iiippen ; 3413209 Connolly, OlitalOrla ASEEITS. Son Smith. Harlock ; L Hinohley, Seafortb : Junes Cumming Egnionchille ; J.W. Teo, Holmes rale P. 04 George linsdie and John 0. Morrisor, andltorr nartiee eesircus to effect ineurance, or transmit other 1 min ets, nig be promptly attended to. Applicaticne to auy of the above t Mace addreseed to their reepective poet Meet 11 LOGS WANTED. isam•••=0.11.1 the undersigned la prepared to pay the highee Oath price for an unlimited quantity of firet-olase fialb Elm, Rock Elm, Basswood, Maple Beech, Ash, Hemlock and Oak Logs belivered at the Seaforth Saw and Stave Mill. Log *be cut an even length, except SoffElm. Soft Elm So be eat 11, lf; erin In leen Will also buy Basewood Heading Bolts, 40 inches- leng, atpee per cord, delivered. ?till Also buy timber by measurement or by bulk Special attention paid to custom sawing, a tiefaction guaranteed. WM. AMENT. MARRIAGE LICENSES ISSUED AT TEE HUM EXPOSITOR OFFICE BEAFORTH, ONTARIO, NO WITNESSES REQ LIIRED of Lancelot at Jalape. And, after' a short rest, the travelers tpole advan- tage of an American coach ninting between. Jalapa anh the Pith of Mexico. At every stopping -place in- quiries were made, n.nci at Las Ve- gas and Perote there rere some doubtful meinories of the "ir 01,1,ng but it seemed hopelesetq ook *Ill anything definite no e' than the capital, • Francesca had beccene 's depressed., She spent all her time lee studying the language of. the ,counery, eut her: and she had no 'Ar confideneeklaiVimtis' heart had deceived her ee nionitions. When loire'f4 lehor is c.on- tinually lost, love in ete last con- scious of a soma of \vowelless and of succumbing to fate. In the City of Mexlce thee found an. American hotel, and gladly made their stay there. Dick Was now at the point where both hie own affairs and Francesca's would be likely to detain hint for some ereelce, end the ladies endeavored to gtve ' tot their rooms as distinctively a 1101116 air as was possible. Then life aseumed a somewhat regular expect. e.lvery morning Dick attended to the mining business which had brouglit him to Mexico, and which wee dirdeeed by the absence of a persoe important to its settlement.' Inethe cool Of the day he wandered abotit tee eity, pene- trating into all the ievorite baunts of , the leperos, or Mexican laaea,rone. For Dick was certain pet, pomp of this class knew the fate Of 1-4s:ocelot, if assassination had terulated it. Arid as soo„n as his busin ss permit- ted the tempora7er absence, he resolv- ed to go to the San Lop -to mines. He had indeed. written here, and re- ceived an answer whith Optained a, hope he did not think it ` wise to give Feancescit: because be was aware of the difficulties encomeepsing the recognition of an Engliehreae, who, if there at all. had speedily left, and who underswod very lietlei that was said to hi. Indeeci, be many! doubts thrown around the 'visitor presumed to le. Senor Leig appeared to Dick to far outweigh eny hoocle of aesured Informaelete, lie had resolved to gii elope to San Lepato, but he fotipe Loida, and Francesca hadquite determined, to He showed Loida tae tittle hut in which he had lthed so many years, his office; his oid booke of accounts, and a great number of the miners who had worked under his orders, and who .received him with noisy de- light. Then such mementoo as had been bet by visitors were examined ; and finally the director remembered a slip of paper upon which tee°, gen- tlemen had written their names. It was found, and given to Dick; and the' two names were Lancelot Leigh and Richard Gilleland. Then - the director, .being urged toremernbereall he could concerning these gentlemen, said that "he was sure the only remained two days. The younger of them had gone down the In4ise -.unto the third gallery, and had then been so ill that. it was with danger and difficulty he had beenbrought to the surface." "It was the young senor who fainted: He,, fainted when the sun- shine fell again upon him. His friend . took lain away the next ;miming," "Ie was doubtless Lancelot," said Francesca, "He loved 'the sunshine. Ile would faint and perish. in the gloom (end death -air of a living pit. It was surely Lancelot! I would have said so even if he had left no name behind him." Nothing further could be learned.' Many visitors came to the mines, and went down them as a matter of curiosity. They excited no particu- lar interest, excepting for the aennunt of gilatuity left for the poor miners. These two gentlemen had been very generous, and the paistres thee don- ated had become the measure by which all future gifts had been count- ed; and -this' .circumstance had pre- served a clearer memory of their per- sonal appearance. Inceilries - among the miners who had seen them left no kitid of doubt in the mind of Francesca ao to one of the visitors being Lancelot. "A beautiful young man,with a sad face, who walked like an emperor," Hew could it be any one else? ot enough? Higher than all creeds, ex above all superstitions?" After ashort pause Francesca said, !Let .us go back,", and they went ery quietly .back to the visible earth i pd aunshipe. The next day they began to retrace 1 heir steps to the City of Mexico, A reat despondency had fallen upon 'rancesca. Loida perceived that hope a her heart was dying. The gaye- ies ,of 0.0 metropolis gave her no leasure, and she ceased to make in- uiries of Dick _as she used to 'do. ither she did not believe in his ex- rtions, or ;she had accepted the idea fa final separation from her loerer, ick felt her altitude, to be a little rovoking. up knew that he had ono everything possible to trace t.lie pule,.., r man, "elle he also knew that Ira cesce only half- believed that .yer ithing hadebeen done. At? eength Ins own • business was *ettld, and there se.exued to be no either reason for delay. Loida, hough she had thoroughly enjoyed dr trip, was beginning to think of ereEngtlish home. It was April, and he could" not help saying continual - e iu her heart: , • - Vague as the deseription was, it sat- isfied Francesca; and she was sure she was now treading the very places where Lancelot's feet had been. She wished to go down the mine /IS far as Lancelot_ had gone. Dick could not frighten her from the in- tentione_ "Had ladies ever gone so Afar?" Dick was obliged to confess that "a party ot American ladies had Ono even two galleries deeper." "Very well, then, Dick, I am cer- tain to go as far as Lancelot went," said Francesca.: "When we do meet, Lancelot will understand the feeling which eed me to follow him. At the point lie turned: my mind may catch _ the thought, of his mind; and 1113r _ soul may feel after his soul, and I may divine whether hewent north or south or east or west." lesevee had. Francesca been so set upon any movement as 'upon this descent :into the San Lepato. And in a few -hours her enthusiasm had stimulated Loida, so that these two tined Englishwomen, Who a year ago had been in the dark • afraid of a walk about their own house and garden., were now -eager to explore the galleeies of a mine hundreds ' of feet below the ground, _There were some points in the de- scent favorable for them. The mine was a dry one, and when Dick had been its superintendent, he had sub- stituted railed ladders tfor the un- couth piece of notched wood which had been the (hilt, road down to the depths, and up to the daylight. And the etrength of their race was in the two weinen. They had determined to see the mine, and they demanded of their souls to be strong enough for the task they had undertaken. Dick round them dressed for the visit, pale but resolute, cheerful and quite calm. The mine was entered by a hori- eontal gallery. After walking three 'hundred yards along if they came to the firet perpendicular shaft; and as shaft succeeded shaft in a slantwise position' the lights that shone from the'bottorn of ,the mine could. be partially seen. at the top of the first shaft; besides which the ascending miners, each with a candle in. hia hel- met, made a singular moving glow that faintly indicated the loaded gnotnes passing up and down. Dick went first, Loida followed. . Then Dick returned for Francesca. No word was spoken. They stood still together on the first gallery. Gigantic, shadow e trembled over 'the walls, Great veldts stretched away leto the darknese. elm:leen glittering pilasters sustained them, and the noise of footsteps reereefierated in the somber caves. From- time to time lights strueeled through the CON E Those who are gaining flesh ,and strength by regular;treat- Mont with Scott's Ernuislon should continue the treatment In hot weather; smaller those and a little cool rniii< with it will do away with any ob,rection which is attached to eatte pro- ducts during the heated season. Send for free sample, SCOTT St BOA NE, Toronto''Ontario. Soe, and $i.eo; all dronks:5. aaa..,straffir'50",mallastimarriNemeRnire,srosawireast h"Oha to he in England, „ Nov •tbat April 's theeei 'Awn whoever wakes he England Sees some niornieg, unaware, hat the lowest boughs of the brush- wood sheaf ound the elm-tretes b.ole are irttiny leaf, Yhile the chaffinch singe on the or- chard bough, In England now.'" L . lhne day„ when Dick was feeling I hat a, mbve homeward must no 1 eve be delayedit he met in the lebby of the hotel an Americon, who pleasantly accosted him, and then ilfred: iffc. tr i D continued.) • jp.&FETY FOR CHILI5REN. , . Mothers bou1d never tgive their. little ones a medicine that they, do Tiot know to be absolutely eafe and eemless. 1Ab1 so celled soothing ealcines 'contain poisenous .oplates that stupify ithe lielplees little one withoat curing its ailments. Paley's Peen Tebkts is the only, medicine for entente and eriou.ner children that gives th mother a positive beuarantete thee, it contains no opiate erhermfill dr ug. Milton L. Jheraey, M. Se., (McGill raversity), hats ebnelyzed these Tatb- leets and taws : "I hereby certify that II 'helve made a •oaireful anfulysis of _Beby's Own lhaiblets, which 1 peetion- 'ally purchased in a druh, store in eifontreal, and the said analysis hate Tailed to detect the presence of any. tthiate or naireotio in them." This means that mothers ,ean give thtein little ones these tablets with an as - o Thing Charles II. and several of bls attendants asleep. Stooping down, he cried out to one of the deliuquents, "My lord, I am sorry to interrupt you, but if you snore so loud you will wake the king." Ifis majesty thereupon awoke and, turning to his neighboa re- rciarked with his accustomed good na- ture: "This man must be made d bish- op. Remind me on the next vacancy." Latimer speaks of a woman who suf- fered from insomnia, and who. all Soporifics having failed, was tahen to the church of St. Thomas of .z -Acres, 'when she fell at once into a refreshing slumber. --London Malt Ile Shut the Fire In. A bright lad. was given a dime the other day by a visitor to whom he had been exbibited as the pride of the household. The youngster promptly:- lost the coin under the bed in his room and. In searching for it with a liglited candle set dre to the leedding. He found the dime and went downstairs without saying a word about the eon- flagration. A few minutes later the bead. of the house sniffed suspiciously. "I smell smoke," be remarked. "Some- thing's burning." "It's my room," ad- mitted the youtbful prodigy, "but, added reassuringly, with a flash of the _brightness In which the fetidly took so much pride, "the lire ean't get out.; I closed the door tight." The fire de- partment arrived in time to save the house. An Old Cure For Scurvy. ScurvSr used. to be regularly treated when it was possible by burying the ' patients up to their necks in fresh earth, a practice officially recommend- ed in the British navy lese than cell- tury ago. Twenty of the crew? of the frigate Blonde were so treated on the shore of Donna 'Allele bay, Santo Do- mingo, Holes were dug in the softest soil on the beach. Into eacb of these a man was put end burled to bis chit, While a. detachment of their sbipmates was ftold off to keep the flies from their'. faces. They were kedt this position for two hours, end the treat- ment': -was so effective that four days later ell the sufferers were able to re- join the frigate. lIVVVV‘i IIVVVVVVIfiftil a D iscriminate " Clothes don't make the. man; but they make all of hIM but his hands and tace, and that's a pretty considerable area of the hurnat animal" Lettem -of A Self -Made Merchant Mein who wear 66 rogiess" rand Clothl always. look Well; Others pay a tailor twice as much. and never look well High prices don*t always mear high quality.D1-SCRIM DIStRiNIINATE Buy clothes that the etyles-that set the standard of fine totloring—that are gum, anteed by rnaker and retailer In other words. buy ''Pr ogress" .Brand Cloth:ng. MONTREA kta_91/1Av OGPSS Sojd by 1...eaclir4 Clothiers - thi-oughoui Ceireadee rearireereehrearenevtrue/vventearveruertanArtrvenhioewtriee /VA r141 Progress Brand Clothing may -he had from Greig & Stewart, VEGETALE 82CLAN Hair Renewe A high-class Rreparation for the hair. Keeps the hair soft and glossy and prevents splitting at -the ends. Cures dandruff and always restores color to gray hair. "VrirAtiVen.r.,Iree" • • Boiling Point of Water. Water boils at different temperatures, according to the elevation above the sea level. In London water 'boils pra,c- tically at 212 degrees Fahrenheit; in Munich, Germany, as 209 1-2 degrees, • in the City of Mexico at 200 degrees, and in the Himalayas, at an elevation of eighteen thousand feet above the level of the sea, at 180 degrees, These differences are caused by the varying pressure of the atmosphere at these points. In London the whole weight of the air has to be overcome In Mex- ico, seven- thousand feet above the sea, there is seven thousand feet less of atmosphere to be resisted; consequent- * less heat is required and boiling takes place at a lower temperattire. AI Smallest Coin. - The smallest coin now current in Eu- rope, and the one .having the. leest value, is.the Greek lepton. The lepton Is, according' to the decimal monatary system, current in all countriee belong- ing to the Latin union, Some idea of this valueless little disk of -copper may tee gathered from the fact that the lepton- is the one-hundredth part of a drachma,. The Greek drachma usually passes for the same value thee a from -piece does; that is, it is about equat to twenty cents of our money, Looking Glasse% In eoliths. One of the ancient customs connect- ed. with Swedish funerals was to place a small lookirig glass in the coffin of an unmarried female, so that when the last trump sounds she might be able to arrange her tresses. It was the practice for Scandinavian raaldeps to wear that -hair flowing looeely, while the matrons wore it bound. about the einence that ,they will do good -that -head and generally covered with some they cannot possibly do harm. The liebkts carte indigestion, cello, con- stipatien, diarrhoea, eimple feivor, teethin-, troubles and all minor oil - Merits. tholdlby druggists everywhero or sent by; mail at 25 dents ,a, box by Writing the Dr. Williatns' Medicine Cid., Brookville, Ont. Early Tobacco. jecording to john Aubery, who TO ate a celebrated work on "the very (mere Indian weede," there was a tithe when tobacco was worth its Weight in silver. 0Anlong otber things Attbery says: "Sir Walter Raleigh_ was tOe first that brought tobacco into Eng-. ILO, and in our parts -North Wilts - it plate in fashion through Sia Walter Tpong. Tbey used shyer pipes, but the cemMoners used a walnut shell. It wee sold then for its weight in silver. I have:heard some ofiyour old yeomen neighbors say that whee, they went to cOippenham to markethethey always ctilled out their shillings to lay in the seelei against the tobacco. Now the elfatomers of it are among the greatest thet hie majesty bath." - A Test of Sobriety. - Gentlemen who have put an enemy into their mouths are recommended to trO very simple test for tbe purpose oh' dnding out whether their brains WOO been oten. They must stand erect with "ffieir eyes closed, and. if thecan perform this feat for a brief period they may come to the conch' - gee that they are all sight Two In- diyhluals who were accused of drunk- enness at Pontefraet proved that they -11 Id honorably stood. the test, and the es against them were dismissed. e great merit of the plan is that it ca, be put into operation anywhere alio at any time. -London Tit -Bits. ea 1 Merits His Fate. "" see that an eastern editor says that as a matter of:face women form eittles simply as an excuse for eating - anq drinking between meals." ! h orridtthingi Is he married or slu- r ..,,, ' qtecause if he's either he doesn't de- serno td be." ‘, form of cap; hence the unmarried wo- man was imagined as awakening at the judgment day with more untidy locks than her wedded sisters aid more in need of a glass. The Ladder of Life. All the events of a life are necessary to a higher development. 'ellecominen task is a round by which we climb to glorious achievement. The ladder which leads us to perfection is made up of small eventsend small victories. In the economy of life nothing Is useless and nothing is wasted. Everything in its place is the best thing for that place. Life is a law, not an accident. -A. S. C. Norris. Retornaed. Mrs. Dearborn -Do you believe ill marrying a man to reform him? hire. Wabash -Sure! I married my first lids - blind to reform him, "What was wrong with. him?" "He was a bachelor. "Oh. I see how you reformed him." "Not only that: I understand be's bad !three other wives since I left him." A Young Critie. "Papa," said the. pastor's little girl, /watching him constructing and revis- ing his Sunday sermon, "does God tell you whet to write?" "Yes, my child, 'God tells me." "Thee_ n"hat do you scratch it out for?" Osieteeed. Gunbusta (in barber shop)-rm sixty years old to -day. Fix me up in style. Barber (finishing shaving) -Bay rum or chloroform„ sir? rtevenge. eW1th00)y-I say. did you recommend that cook or ours to my wife? Plank- Ington-Yes, 1 believe so. Witherby- Well, I wish you would come round tonight and take dinner with us. .41•NrwAr am•••••••4••• • TEACHING THE HORSE. win Learn Anything Elio lidnaeles Can Perform. ' Expert horsemen believe that a Obree can be taught to do anything that It is t possible for an animal so formed and to be utterly fearlese. Thus we know of horses hushing Atte battle with es fearlessness that is magnificent, al- though in the beginning of their lives they may have been foolishly timidf shying at everything unusual that hap: pened to be seen In their travels. In order to teaeh a borse fearlessness be must be accustomed to all sorts of sights and sounds. He must Come to know that becatle something that he ,sees or bears is enusual it does not fol- low tbat it is barmftd, for it is the tine meal things that frigliten him, The horse Is an animal of one idea at a time and is not able to discrimittate, so 'say the -men who have made a study of the bone, While he will travel along quietly close by the roar of a tram, he Imay tremble at the flutter of a piece of loose paper flying in the . wind. it is • not the frightfulness of tbe object that seems to alarm bim, but the unfamil- iarity of it Home trainers say that the inistakes Made in "breaking" Aiii2- training a colt is thttt it is too often done in the seclusion of some country, road. instead of amid the sights and sounds that the animal lutist necessari. ly become familiar with later. As soon 1115 the horse becomes :famile far with anything and has learned to believe that It ,will not hurt him he will stand -quietly 4)r trot along peace. fully, eveu though all sorts of /miser ied queer sights are about him. Thus the artillery horse will stand. amid. thti roar of cannons, being used to the noise and not knowing that the saun predicts anguish and death. It is well to accitstorn a horse to unusual soundft as soon as possible after be is treble for riding or Oxlving. It renders him" safe and docile, even though be be it spirited artimal. A certain trainer of; leorsee said that an Ideal Sehool fOhl, horses 'would contain thrashing mart; chines, pile drivers, steam drills, elece1 tric, steam and elevated eara, a bang' of inertial music and. a gang of qUarthe, men blasting rock. A horse that watt, drilled among . such a bedlam as this' would indeed prove immune to strtuage, noises. The gentle &Daily -horse, petteit by man and child, is not filwAys train.= ed to all this, yerhe often1alakeil a ful and talthful animalrlohed by OLT owner and evidently mains eome re* turn of affection. I . . Honed. ., A They were returning frOD3 E. bUSittiamr bee. 1 "And were there any red ears?" ask.i ed the friend. "Oh, yes," responded the girl- In 06 gingham dress. 41. had, two when pih caught that city fellow kissing me:* A •:— A Poor Recipe. gDon't talk to me about the recipes in that magazine," said Mrs. Lane, with great energy. "Wasn't thatthe very magazine that advised me to put on that sody solutiote end leave the ta- blecloth out overnight to take off those yellow stains?" "I'm inclined to think it may bave been," said Airs. Lane's sister, with due meekness. 41 sent you a number of them in the spring, I remember." "Well, and what happened?" asked Mrs. Lane, with rising wrath. "Didn't the stains disappear?" asked her sister. "Disappear!" said Mrs. Lane in 'withering tone, "It was the tablecloth that disappeared I don't know any- thing about the ains." A leen Tompromise is better than a fist is =int. Not a Bit Like a Cat. Lady Visitor -Your little girl seems to be. very much taken with me, Mrs. Stepewell. tirs. fitepsweIl-Yes, and she doesn't often hike to strangers. You think Mrs. Kippur is real nice, don't you. Agnes? Agnes -You said she was a eat mamma, but she doesn't look a Q110.-E.Ic11ange. Late Beginning.* Slr Waiter Scott began to write bis celebrated. novels at forty. Milton be- gan !Paradise Lost" at fifty. When "East theme" appeared its author, Mrs. Henry Wood, was forty -Jive. Crorawell was forty-one when . he be- gan his public career. The year of the hegira was the fifty-third of Mobana med, and,Alarlborough reached his in- dependent command at the same age. In spiritual examples Abrahain was seventy-five ;when ealled out of Cha - ran, and Moses was eighty when he stood before Pharaoh as the champion of Lirael. UTIS urna DOUBLE FEED -DOORS Just about the meanest thing a furnace can have is a dinky little door. Ever have one? -Hit the edge as often as the hole? One has to be an expert stoker to shovel coal into some furnaces. If you're not an expert you'll get as much on the floor as in the furnace. The Sunshine furnace is equipped with a good, big door. You can put your shovel in and drop wanted -no trouble, no taking aim, no annoyance. Everything about the Sunshine furnace is on the same scale of thoughtfulness. Sold by all enterprising dealers. Write for booklet. the coal just where it is missing, no scattering, or M Clar = 4— LoRDop, TORONTO, MONTREAL, WINIITEG, Vaal VE, si. JOHN, E. A. LAT/MER, gale Agent -.8ea.,