HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1902-02-06, Page 6aide eih a, neer$
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4.The +•
Comingof Gilhin: +•
A Pretty Irish Romance.
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"On the contrary," Lady Darner
says, vivaciously, "I believe she has
softened his heart to smolt an ex-
tent --he was pleased at your atten-
tion to her, it was very good of you,
really, Bingham—that I believe you
can get him to promise you any-
thing, if you only go the right way
to work ! He promised to
settle ten thousand of Gillian's
money specially on you, because you
paid 'Mantle'—such a name 1 — some
compliments and made her laugh I"
Lady Darner says, laughing to her-
self. "You heard him yourself about
the diamonds, and the saddle -horses,
and yacht, and the place at Cowes,
that is pretty well for a beginning,
and we will take care to keep him
up to his promises," her ladyship
says, laughing again quite gayly,
"but more remains behind.
"You will have eighteen hundred
pounds allowed you until Gillian in-
herits her money—it does come to her
on her marriage, but there is some
delay about paying over the money
before she is twenty-one, and he
does trot wish you to be inconveni-
enced or to delay your marriage on
any account ! He will give her
twenty thousand from himself—ten.
of which; are to be settled on you;
that was the concession because you
made 'Mintke' laugh. At his d eath
Gillian is to have twenty more, and
forty If she is the only surviving
child. So you are sure of sixty-five
thousand pounds Bingham—a possi-
bility of eighty-five, your debts paid
off, and equivalent in allowances and
presents to quite two or three thou-
sand more. Rather better than it
promised to be a few hours ago, is it
not?" she asks, exultingly. "As a mat-
ter of fact, yell are' sure—quite sure
—of nearly fifty thousand pounds in
,a.........a
flee this afternoon, M. Dairoyt' an{1
=yea at lde in eta nee cont er-
satic>n II.1tIt this, other pereen,
without t o much Ms another glanee
al Gillian. 'i, never saw a loan be-.
have in such a manner to a woman
before," Lacy t• te's, indignantly—"to
0 knew II + l hied loved h n
t
girl ]i t II 1 1 1 f t
t
g
iv, usea t like George A •.
•0 dearly. 1 .titr
a r
—I 1 t +t s• could.
cher very well it t dy 1 t l
have kno: k,'cl him down 'with pleasure
and kicked hili/ afterward."
"Always sue/posing you were able,',
Lail • limier sneers again. "Well,
what happened next ?"
an'he Wetted arouhltl slowly tike one
stunned," Bingham L ivy says in a
low tone, more as it he talks to him-
self than from any ]top: of interest-
ing his auditor, "and as she sow
rue she caught me by the arm. 'Cap-
tain Lacy,' she said. 'take me away.
Take nen away—somewhere.'
"A train came np beside us at the
shine instant, and 1 hurried her and
HAD Wig BACK
FOR EIGHT YEARS
el e ofa
Thexer c
Terrible i .i;
E
p
Nova Scotia. Gentleman,
Cured.
alnd. How he was
After Snell, [t Long period of Buttering
He le Entirely Restored to Good
teenl(h by !)acid's Kidney teals -11e
is Very Grateful,
Bridgewater, N. S., Jan. 137.--(Sp0-
e1tt1)--Afr. John S. Morgan, a prone-
anent .utan of this place, bas had
a terrible time with hips back for
eight years, but now he is receiving
the congratulations of his friends
myself into an empty carriage and on his couil/tete and satisfaetory
the train went on and we saw 00 recovery.
more of Geroge Areh'r. '.klo look at Mr, Morgan to -day one
"But—tho poor child; poor little would never suspect that Ito had
Gillian, I dceiale 1:r/1'mni3 I think she been the victim of so much torture
went mail for the time being, 13he sat and :tor each a long time, and yet
there in the corner without speak- from his own statement the pain
ing or moving, staring out througll he has endured must have been
the window into the darkness with a something awful. He says:
white wild free until we cause to "I�or ellgllt years I have suffered
and his eyes downcast, "They were a is tolia, and then 1 I ni 1 hip t r the most severe pain i t e bac
awfully apoony—in love, I mean— deuly, I had gradually grown worse till at
she wits, at all events, poor little ""Let me' out! Let me out!' • she1 plant I was cgnnpletely crippled upt
soul, and it has nearly broken her said, and she tagged at the door l "I heard of Dodd's Kidney Pills as
ilearte Aunt Jeannette." :handle. 'Let m0 out,' elle kept on re- . a remedy for Lame Back, but as I
"Has the young lady, who is your prating in a loud, wild way; 'I'll had tried. so many things without
promised wife, confided to you that throw myself out if you don't! any benefit I was beginning to lose
her love affair with Mr. Archer has I'll kill myself if ;too don't ! Let me all faint in anything. However, I
'nearly broken her heart ?' " asks out !' until I was afraid of a scene, donided to try them, and I can
Lady Denier,•with scornful inoredul- and helped her out, and then she be- truthfully say I nm heartily glad
sty. pan running up and down—up and . i did so, for they cured ole,
"I should know it if she never clown—looking everywhere for him, 1 ""I had run down in weight to'
confided a woi,d to me l" Lacy says, the heartless brute ! until she had to • about 1;10 pounds, but during the
steadily. "I always knew elle was stop with sheer exhaustion, and then time 1 wine using the pills (I used in
deeply in love with himl, though I elle prayed and begged me to look for , all about twenty boxes) I regained
never knew before this evening how him. about 2a pounds.
far It had gone. And I wish!, froth "'Oh, Bingham, look for him and ` "OX course I realized my danger,
my soul, auut, that, instead of trou- fine him fop me ! she said, with her ! and .wizen I Sound that Dodd's 1 id-
bliug any more about her—uselessly bands: clasped and' tine tears stream- " Hey Pills were helping me I stuck
troubling—for I would not marry ing down: her- face., I tell you It was right close to thein after eommene-
Gillian, now, any more than I would the most awful piece of business I , le- till I was perfectly well again."
shoot her or poison her, 1 wish you was ever to of the kind!" Bingham hveryone who knows Mr. Morgan
would play the good genius for those interpolates, excitedly. names than he means every word
two—that poor little girl and the "'Bingham, for the, love of Heaven " he says, and much interest has been
fellow she loves—adores madly—on look fax hien, and 1In.rl him for mo ! aroused by the publication of his
my word she does. Aunt Jeannette! she kept on saying. And I did look, 1 stat Hent,
I'll never forget this evening." rued ran up and down, and peered 1 Dodd's Kidney Pills are well
""Tho meeting between the young into every carriage Carefully, an{1 : known to be a sur0 cure for all
lady and this newly -turned -up love what I flame back and told her there cases of Lame urek and Kidney
seems to have affected you Certain- was no sight of him anywhere, and
ly—tuhr!wl your brain, I should
the; train went on. nei I was speaking i '7µ•ouble•
think," Lady Darner says, trembling to her, she just dropped dowry in a The Man
with the fury that shakes her like S'WOOn at my feet
a reed in a storm. "I had to have her carried into the I Once upon a time a man afflicted
"It dId affect me, Aunt Jeannette!" waiting -room and get brandy and sal , with •andrual attacks o1 hay fever
Lacy retorts, sternly, honestly, as volatile tar her, and then when she ; was walking in this city with a.
e�^vered we took a cab and drove ..,
r she a aped Nut- r uh • a k
and His Sneeze. .
he has seldom ventured to speak
to his imperious relative. e e aleout a litt1ej, as she begged me not +"This is about the time when nay
am not ashamed to say it, to bring her home at once ; and then 1 trouble should begin," he said. "A
either. It would have affected you, we went back into -the park, into the wisp of hay or the down of a peach
too, if—you could remember the time Birdcage Walk, and sat down there , would" now start me and send me to
when you did not disdain such feel- ' for half ash hour, and chs told me the ;the mountains for relief."
ings yourself 1 But there is little use i Whole story there. I Just 'then a grass widow passed
i , D'kd you know, Aunt Jeanette, , tlhean and the main sneezed most vo-
n using any sues/ reasons or argu- , edl t be h r ' '
that sale was engag o u a
meats, I know ' wenn I must only 'lied to George ?"irrherLacy as s.
ciferowsly
make you understand at once and „ T g You are indeed eensitive," said his
forever that I refuse to have hand, 1 I knew they were lovers; I did roe friend.
act or part in forcing that poor girl know they were promised husband . Moral.—There are things that
and wife. I did not know alt t}1�e'
hard oesh and its equivalents to less to marry me, for the sake of the should be sneezed at.
loco of her heart arts given to him;
than a month's time, Bingham!" money. I don't love leer, and elle is I di+i not kna,c he lett her without 1
And Lady Jeannette wipes tears not the sort of a woman I could ever 1 the least farewell, bat a letter whit -•11 the e' ust C, o from heated rooms to the
love, though site is a gentle, tender- !
at grateful relief and emotion from she burned unread, as it deserved• cold outer air, and the change sets
her eyes. hearted little creature. I won't make She confessed that she burled it us coughing. Curing winter colds is
And then Captain Lacy rises lip her wretched, and I would give a through jealousy, for she thought not hard if you take Allen's Lung Bel -
nervously, and moves to the other gond deal_ if 1 had it to make her that Anne O'Neil loved him, and that sam. A neglected cold is troublesome
happy with the man she loves so
side of the fire, foiling his arms, and he loved her. Do you know, Aunt and dangerous.
desperately." I
facing Lady Darner pale and re- Jeanette,bow she could receive such
solute—much as h8 would have stood , •• Alen, in that ease, I fail to see an imprssion as that ?" Kiplingianu.
what obstacles remain in the way of
to be shot. I "However site received it, I be -
"Aunt Jeannette, I thank you for the young lady being happy 'with . jieved it ' was true enough," Lady ; [The list Of Britialh sports to which
all your kind efforts for any welfare," the man she loves so desperately, ! Darner says, coldly, reckless now of Air. Kipling has recently macre such
he says, steadily ; "I am very grate- her ladyship sneers, atoll quivering almost �vhot she may say or leave graceful allusion, is unfortunately
fol to you,andyou have been as lips and nostrils. : unsaid. "I believe Anne O'Neil. always very incomplete. Tlie following lines
" Oh, no, aunt,you know better
t tomemany preferred him in her secret heart to will (possibly) be inserted in future
good as a mother in than that," Lacy says, with quiet editions.]
was ; I am sorry to disappoint you I you, though of course your infatua-
anrl displease you but—I after
cannot ' workhalf bitterness; "yon Heyer leave yeur troll flattered her •pride and ambi- The rubber -shod rough 'with a me-
m
Gillian Deane after all!" I half clone. You know well that teen, I believe he never cared one que•t; the ass on the asphalted
"Can you not ?" Lady Damer says,
!
you have put Gillian anal George jot for Gillian Deane. He m gave her ! path.
quietly, with a sort of cold despair Archer as far apart as you have pelt lip in a moment when he saw d}ff}cul- The half-witted hurler of hammers;
crashing her and numbing her intoAnne O'Neil and me. Annes inlrle ties ahead. I deeply regret she is the lubber that leaps at a
quietness, and the heart that some-
times troubles her beating slow and
painfully. "Why, Bingham ?"
"Because, aunt," he says, deeper-
• ately, "I can't marry a girl whose
heart and soul are full of lave for
another man I can't marry a girl
helped you well in one case I know, unmaiden enough and undisciplined lath.
anti 1 believe George Archer's pride enough in her feelings to behave. as The ruffian riding in reel, and the
helped you equally well in the other." ! 5118 diel this evening. Tt wets most gaby in gaiters 'that shoots.
"Yon dare to speak to uses Bin;- :unpleasant for you, of course. She The fatuous flapper of ales, and thehunt 1 To dare to taunt me with is one of those foolish, soft-hearted scoundrel with skates on his
having saved you from •the folly you girls who are always adoring some- 1 boots ;•
were plunging into!" Lady Darner thing or somebody, and going into The lout that loafs on the links with
who—who—fell on her knees to me says/ hoarsely. "I saved you from ecstasies or hysterics over some- 1 his lingo of Iles and the
—this evening to beseech of me to utter lain -and uin ism, dial n yo1 thing or—.nothing 1 I quite under• ;
like,"
spare her,"Lacy says, flushing. "A Y stand Gillian's character." Tito blundering bunt -backed bounder
girl who dreads and abhors the idea I Please don't talk nonsense about " "TI she were onto married and had that buckets along on a bike,
of marrying me, wit, told mo see . a ntosa]hlance!" Lacy says, sternly. i a child or, better stili, three or The bare -legged boobies in boats)
would sooner die ten times over than ' Ion know quite well that Anne
• marry me ! No, Aunt Jeannette, I O'Neil is yoilr own cousin, though in
can't, and I won't ! I don't want a : the third degree. that she is nay
broken }hearted victim ; I want a ; equal in birth., my superior in every -
contented wife i" thing else ! because you treated her
"Yes, yes ; I know," Lady Jean- 1 like an upper servant Is no-reaso11
'vette says feebly, feeling quite sick ; II"iry I should regard her as any -
and faint indeed; "but why has all tiring but one of the best -bred and
this come up now 2 She and yon best -educated gentlewomen 1 ever
seemed to be such good friends; she ; met." , r
seemed growing quite fond of you. Indeed . Am Ito understand that
What cause can there be ?"
""I will tell you," her nephew. says,
"and I would not for Gillian's for -
there has possibly been a second
a fleeting meeting ?" Lady Damer
demands, with a convulsed sort of
tune three times over have heard or , smile—"that both your clandestine
know what I know now a month sweethearts met you and Miss Deane
hence. Half a million would not re- so opportunely this evening. I dirt
eompense me for being married to a not quite comprehend the levenini-
uu h walk on a cold, dark evening
woman who felt tow:mrd mo a5 she „
apes. The cause might have hap- befnre, ,
' lou dant comprehend anything
paned any day—on our wedding day p'
nolo, beyond the fact that fleorge
perhaps ; it makes me hot and cold and Gillian met each other as I
to think of it—jest as we wire start-
told you!' Lacy interposes eoolly.
ing on our honeymoon tour' She met "Where did they meet ?" b doting pother
four children to adore and go into each bent on becoming a blue.
ecstasies about, she would be quite The crass -bonded crocks playing Cro-
well and quite happy. Site is simply quet, the crapulous cad with a
a young girl who has been. not at come',
all strictly reared, in fact, petted The nialiacs mounted au motors that
and indulged, until She is somewhat murder a man every mile.
incapable -of self-control. She has (And I think you will freely admit
warm feel ngs anal strong, impulses ; thla.t I've e bettered my re slier
She Is passionate in temperament, style.)
and. I fear rather selfish and ancon- —Westminster Gazette.
te, and-tlt.mt is all 1 see to
. A DO
++++++,.„....,..,...,..1.++.1.4-1-16+++++
WHERE ARE Ti; -HE
'EMPRESS' JEWELS *icic a dog and he bites you.
*.i..14+++++++++++++.14444.4..!..;..44
v.th'm
a c> 14 told.
C' 1
the coast rhapts a bi iandyou kick h
o� t► tap, as r bitesyou 1 1
lie
H
e
Y
wh4olt will perhalms mane tiny Mass,
t Waft of
.t, b
Into {i '' U • t is of u
Whichall en is tho
1`lcthe more
you kick more1
.The n
ar
'1 e ulr it
Which legends is tient. \\ t 11
Is true or net, no one eau bay, but
Corfu more he bites
.. bites and the
Or
and
hebr stn
the flRhcrtnen of Gorfu b._ileve it an .I t
dream of i1t
When the Empress of Austria, r'e• . the more you kick. Each
(naval the news of het' son Rudolf's
de'a�th, silo was marling It 101110us
0001(1000 of oriental pearls. That Inalces the other worse.
night, No the story goes, the attend-
ant whose duty It was to care for A thin body makes thin
the jewels, was. hoer!, led to see that
the superb pearls heli} lost their
blood. Thin blood makes a
lustre and looked dull and dead. She
spoke of tee matter to Ilei ntbstrese, tbill .bed . Each makes the
ten. tat 14-er sorrow din} not even lis.' Y
If there ten.
A month or tt1'o later the l mnrees other worse, is going
bad 0000.5011 to call for her pearls,
ante on opening 14tc ease found every to be a change the help must
'p'eetrl 111 the neckiaee a lustreless
gray. She called the court jewellers come from outside.
unto• consultation, but nothing could
be doaae to restore the pearls to Scott's Emulsion is the right
titotr former beantry. g
I
Finally a famous chemist of Yi-
011dltt, assured the - Empress . that if help. It the sea breaks up such a
tile
lions timeldlte action be lel oY the salt• combination. First it sets the
water would brimg back their color
and lustre. The impress went to
Corfu later.
While thole she want with Father
Ambrosins, an old nionk, who was
her friend and confidlant, to a wild
spot on the swore of the inland, and
there they hid the pearls securely
Ln a fissure under thg surface of the
water and. left them. There the
pearls (,ore when the Empress met
her sudden andetragic -death.
Father Ambrosius fell dead in the
cloister when told of the death of
1114s mistress. The pearls, so the story-
tellers say, await a lucky finder,
sloimewh,ere along the rugged coast,
and are likely to, be the Capt. Kkld's
treasury •at Corin..
Taking -Ile story for what 1.t is
worth, the fact remains that there
are ell record many (furious instances
In whkoh .pe'arls apparently sympa-
thized with the health and mood
of their wearers. Pearls, too, often
lose their color and lustre for no per•
oeptiblle reason, and in many cases
never ;egatn their beauty.
All through the Orient there are
jewellers famous as doctors of sick
pear]s, and to certain of these doe -
tors pearls of great value are fre-
quently sent by the naltive rulers
and merchants. The salt water treat-
melt is one of the most common
methods - of cleaning with a sick
Pearl ; ,so if Elizabetil� s necklace is
by array chaanee where Corfu gossip
locates it, its pearls may be finding
stealing while they Await discovery.
siders
either blame or explain," Lady Da -
mer concludes, calm now in very
hopelessness, but determined to re-
sist to the last and acknowledge•no
defeat.
"Her conduct has been very in-
considerate, very unbecoming, and I
do not wonder you aro angry awl
disgusted ; a do not wonder in the
least," she goes on smoothly. " The
only excuse 1 can offer for her or
that you can accept,' is that elle
!las been .indulgent to the uttermost 1 • Minard's Liniment Cares Distemper.
In washing woollens and flannels, the
soft soap made from Lever's Dry Soap (a
powder), will be found very satisfactory.
The Sunday Question.
Maanm,a—Yon! mustn't bowl your
hoop in the front on Sunday. . You
!mist go Into true back garden'.
Tommy—Isn't It Sunday in the back
garden, mamma ?
her lover, Aunt Jeannette. George !ole ' pray 1 y tt c o ng, 1
g Lady Darner asks, sourly. , and an indulgent father. If Gillian
Archer has come back to England, "We were In St. James' Park Sta- ' hail fancied the moon, they would
and he and Gillian met face to Lace tion. on the Metropolitan line," have tried to get it for her, I sup -
this evening:" !" Captain Lacy says, after a iuomen— pose ; SO now whon she fahcled a t•
CHAPTER XLYLXVII. tary hesitation. "We hall walked so lover who did not love her, site
"Is George Archer at home again 1 far that we were near the station, thought 1.he ought Lo get lmlm
And she met hint, yon say?" Lady ant, as Gillian was very tired, 1 whether he telehed it himself or
Darner asks, in that same low, wear- saidt for the fun of it, mot •, end when silo didn't get 'him
led -out tone; end her nephew looks illl.tcacl of taking a cab we elm has been ilysterical•nnd disagree -
at her in sonic surprise. would go by rail to South - able over her disappointment in a
Her face is always pale save for the Kennington ; and, UN luck would have fit of spoiled-c]thld grief and vera-
srtistie tinging about the .'!leek it. ju44t 4144 we got dow1!( on the plat- tion."
bones, now it Is ghastly white—dead- en m—right before that—a; tall. bre, fel- 1"I believe her heart is breaking,"
white, and the rouge shutes up un-
naturalty.
' Yes. she met him, I am uorry to
say," Bingham Ia ey answers. .
' aturally," she rays, with rt rar-
eaHtle ring in her weak, unsteady
voice, trying to moisten her dry lips.
"She is korry for her own sake, h(1n•l ultrly franc any arnt, bnrrlerl luf-' .
ton, prior little 1011I .' Lary Rays, with ,try one of her folly—her 'miser -
0 elirug of lite shoulders. " It has t"Ilam, lint lane up 1w4941'-'liim, It.ok- able folly,' she called it. I knew I
been a wretched Wetness altogether ! ing at him with cinch 0 twil=l, dreadful. •must tell 5011 to make you under -
Aunt Teannette, will you tell me why pitsknie look—on 111y honor, 1 never ' stand how matters nay stance—so I
George Archer left Darragh in the KILiS till like !".lie breaks off, unite=cot, made that 'menisci with a reserva-
ily. "The c)hilsl I„Okl41 ace !f she J10; but I made no resonation in ourself, Perry Davis' Painkiller will
onla1(1 not welkin
her 80nses that the 1>romisiug her what she asked hue be- yourself,
out i:lte soreness and fix you
torte: titers, er, pre nn co:,11y within a. ,;elle. To befriend her ; to be kind might in a jiffy. Avoid euhstitutes.
ear 1, of her, pretending not to bee and brotherly to her • to pity her,
1•,w, muffled up in an teeter, was Lacy says, gravely*. "I believe George
writing slowly on, Smoking. 1 ]anew • Archer's behavior to her this even-
)air,- figure in a uhinete, (1114 Gillian ing 11118 been a cruel wound into her
flopped suddenly and stared after very sonl—a wound that will never
him no if elm i (!,gtlized it, ion ; and be effaced, treat the matter as you
the next moment, before I had ma-
ll
ol- like, blame her as yell like. I ant tell-
ing yon my thou; htbr ca Ivontlert.d ing you wh t: I believe is the real
tv1144.1 1 lead bet do, she. snatched her truth ; F•'•e besought mo not to tell
Minard's Liniment Coes Diphtheria.
Not Color I31tud.
" Here !" cried the blind beggar,
" what good's this red 'poker chip to
me ?"
' Ha!" exclaimed the man/ ,"how do
you kno'sv it's red ? Your sign says
you're blind."
Well, it doesn't Way I'm color
bllinil, does it ?"
Alltnard's. Liniment Cutres Colds, etc.
No Wonder.
The waster of an elementary school
sent a circular Lo the parents of
some oI the pupils under hie charge,
stating i1at judiclouu corporal pun-
ishment often had a beneficial effect
on backward boye, and asking if they
would approve of suolh a course
when he considered It necessary. The
following is one of the replies he got :
sneer 51r T bay reseved ttr flogeing
serkler and u haw My rankshen too
wolal> Day such Jhon ass much ass n
like 1 no aeon 114 a vary bad ekoler his
spaleng is simpely atrestles i hay:
trill no tech him llytrtlf but he will
not fern nothing 43 i ken u wit bet it
intda, pini ass muelt; ass u kan,
"Lye truley,
"P. S—the rosin Jlion le sich a bad
skoler is bel{as he is My sun by My,
wife first buebend."
when Your Joints are Stiff and your
museles aro sore from cold or rheu-
matism ; when yon Iprain or bruise
manner ho did?"
"Because 1!e chose," Lady Darner
retorts, briefly. " Yon asked me that
question before, mei I: gave you that
answer before. Ile went bet'auto he
elho0se to go.—
"Now,
o.—"Now, !cunt Jeannette, that }s m)
r
at
answer
r, all Lacy v sa •vs determin-
edly.
et 1 rter n
t -
r
etily. "'fou know the reason that
sent George Arelu•r away. 1 wish yon
wonitl tr11 me an trust me. 1 would
make no 1st•1 mos of 1111y knowledge
yon 00111[,10"1 to mo. And --1 went to
Iowa Mutt parted ilial allyl tiiilhtu."
" Inrlf r.l '1' Lady Kamer an5s, her
rter•1-bright eyrie burning like firce in
her haggard white flee.
"'fns. I rte," f.ney says, tloge;rdly,
With iris bands thrust in his pockets
h" (r. Archer." elle suet, nn'I he tea- niiirlatel;rand Iher f mondaniherfaithien - Fine (.'tut.
thinly coal not pretend he had not fully, I gtvr>uld be ino1 tvh;tt 5hc Ivislt- Tile lamp host atomics in its
light'
heard f" the l peer ' 1 (
1 r tt r t t. s O c,l 3lI ttttrrell it
I
nothing more.I
t r t nil
at me t r 1> . n, td t
1 g
Gnaw, ,
, The .leen who writes l> t L
n= • , t' �a ou
aln ".t in a Moms cry. anti ,r nl r l c
i r• f tarenised her—oh my Manor. I
Archer jubt' glanced; at her, took out •'t'erta}uli,r, Indy Denier asselt18, frownbllg precipice most be thinking
11101 cigar, an'1• rrtleal hie that an hu'l4 conlly. "Be whatever 5140 uteks you to of the brow of a hill.
own
Succeeded Too Well.
"Remember, young man," said tine
practical man, "that in order to suc-
ceed you must teach: people to trust
you."
"I have done that," answered the
gloomy young man. "I have succeed-
ed in getting into debt beyond my
fondest expectations." •
r:r two.
•Olt ! II')I8 cry(' do 1' he rated, with
the coldest indifference In 1his tone
that he count well mama ' rkhhg
be until oho return to her senses. Attyona 0101 du Ills beet, but the
trouble with inoet of us is that 'sur
beet Una good enough.
leoking
You haven't taken leave of yours,
I suppose ? I wish that-- that per -
I was cured of lame back, after sufs
Tering 15 years, by MINAR,D'S• LINI-
MEINTI.
Two Ravers, N.S. ROBERT ROSS.
I was eure.d of Diphtheria, after
doctors failed, by MSNAR;D'S LINI-
MENT,. • -
Antigonish. • JOHN A. FOREY.
S was oared of contraction of ;mus-
cles by MINARD'S LINIMENT.
MRS. RACHEL SAUNDERS.
Dallionlsie. -
had stayed wherever hr, went, A friend in need is a friend—who
1(14 in even while he spoke t=, hrr ;anal if it were a t tho hottnnh of the At -
It
waiters to borrow n liver.
at that moment aman ttrf'L Iota, tali- lantic! In any easy, I tt nit :Vise
may 1401111(1 fllrmy, but them 10 u1
ing Ont : '(le(mrt(r,, i.,' that ,teen : lay Deane tills (14htca(y ((101 It t0 not maitre the cargo 1)rfore the train
been bookingfor ,t rot ((v41(441 eu'(' !' make very relay confl lrints respect- starts.
Ani the said, s 1 woe twice rot est )1• of- ing tele insane lagoon of hers fur Many a self -male man 11x5 been un-
it matt w111, clone riot veciprocatc it
In the ieat(t 1 i t.hattl bc' utterly (118.
Ivaco' if !hie story enlne to her
father'et Pere 10 tun ' n"rthiug of that
slanted .+t:tr keen woman !'•
"It .will not rune to her father's
ears" Lacy Heye, quietly, 'can(}, Aunt Women laugh oftener front asellse
,Trannetto, 1 hop,' I tem tritnt you to of duty than from a a08844 of Intoner.
r(•men,her I have :oaken to you in Strange as it may 4(eetth, thebttsy'
( ( c,' Yon understand, A v,
oilft is n 1 r IriIt un Icm stars 1, .tally is a very idle lxerc,on.
boa ever, that I elinuut dlycltee any A girl'.', !Clea of a well hat is IMO
marriage settlenlent:4 1>t' rnrirange. rt )rale can't tell front a lam Shade.
f110nt•J Wit14 (c!11irre':r nether, rot Try to be al)ntehody--tln!ess you
Ilrerrnt. " are. 1latlsfied to be deselect no tool'
ager be Ctil'ttlnucd.) C "also rani."
SUNLIGHT SO
One ounce of Sunlight Soap is worth more than REDUCES
DUCli S
Two ounces of impure soap. EXPENSE
Ask for the Jateon% liar. 5f your f_i:eoor Cannot supply, write to
LEVp i1 ilR11 lL1t5, LIMITED, Toronto, .ending his• nano and address,
and a trial sample of Sunlight Soar. 'W911 he bent yon fro of cost"
made by rt tailor-made Woman.
The averagem ran iitds ft
Meek
eager pry rohllments
than
debts.
8
The dep1110f bettnty often depends
nlmon the tlllckaear of the paint.
stomach right. Then it en-
riches the blood. That
strengthens the body and it
begins to grow -new flesh.
A strong body makes rich
blood and rich blood makes a
strong body. Each makes the
other better. This is the way
Scott's Emulsion puts the thin
body on its feet. Now it can
get along by itself. - No need
of medicine.
This picture represents
the Trade Mark of Scott's
Emulsion • •and is on the
wrapper of every bottle.
Send for free sample.
SCOTT & BOWNE,
TORONTO CANADA
5oc. and $1, all druggists.
IftlfssfirrinPrIninelnolinennnfrnserren
Veen
HUMORS OE
EXAMINAT.M.
�irls�slrrilrarl0srlis�lslsllsb`•a�a•�;a
The historical and other facts
given hems are taken from school-
boys' examination papers; •.
Of whom was it said ' I•Ie never
smiled agahh ?" William Rufus did
this after lie was shot a 'be arrow.
My favorite character In English
history is Henry VIII. because he
had eight wives and killed them all.
Edward III. would have been Kiang
of France if bis mother batt -been a
marl.
Alexander the Great was born in
absence of his parents.
What followed the murder of
Becket? henry II. received whacks
with- a birch.
The principal products oT Kent are
Archbishops of Canterbury,
The chief clause in Magna Charta
was that no free man. should be put
to death or imprisoned without Itis
own consent.
Where were the Kings of England
°roe/nett? On th'etr heads.
W:hnt were the three most Lmport-
aant feudal dues? Friendship, court-
shiup, inaavriage.
What do you know of Dryden and
Buckingham ? Dryden and Bucking-
ham were at first friends, but scan
became corntemporaries.
Wiihat is Milton's 'chief work ? 14111•
ton wrote a sensible poem called the
"Canterbury Tells."
Give the nairues of five Shakespear-
ean plays. Macbeth, Mikado, Quo
Vadis, San Toy, Sign of the Crone.
An optimist Is a hn.an who looks af-
ter your eyes, and a eseetmist Is a
mean who looks after• your feet.
A man who looker on the bright side
of things is called an optionist and
1110 one who looks ore the dull, side
side is called se pIanlet.—St. James',
Gazette. •
ISSUE NO. (), 1,90°-.
190 _ . 1902
BRUCE'S SEEDS
sthe Seed
We a Pioneers of t S
e the r
Trade In Canada and have trade our
business a success. Our knowledge
cpined from the experience of half a
entury we glue to our custom xrs In
the pages of our Catalogue, which we
Malt tree to an who apply for it. The
Farmer, the Gardener and 1110
Amateur are all served, and served
weIT fvlto patronize the '" Roy ai
Seedsmen."
�� Seeds emailed to ail parts of tho
)igtnon."
JOHN A. BRUCE
YUCE & CO
SEED MERCHANTS
Hamilton, Ontario.
Pointed . Paragraphs.
Sense and beauty, like truth and
novelty, are never combined.
Postage . stamps are ego'tistkc.al
when •they get stuck on tllems'elves.
A wise man speaks well of his
friends and of his enemies he speaks
not at all, -
W,r[nkles tell the Story o3 age to
those who are able- to teed 'between
the lines.
A roan who lorvnd and won says
that tete best than at a ;wedding isn't
the groom.
;Much of man's unbairpiness is duo
to getting what he expects, but
doesn't want.
Time is money to•the unfortunate
wrongdoer wino is engaged In work-
ing out a fine.
The masculine animal doesn't cut•
much fee from the - time females
mare to caress him ars an infant until
they kiss herr, as a man.—Chiioago
News.
la -Mardis Liniment Cures target in
Cows. •
GIOITPINC. 111011 Q1f1CK. .
Some time ago an unprincipled
eltarper. advertised extensively:
"How to Double Your Money—full
partIculare doubt
mm C o
any applied. Ono victimpeached
and gave away the game. The ane -
were to the ad. came on a seinen card,
in tide shape :
'Ills an excellent plan, free from trou-
ble or loss—
Better than banking, trades or
leases—
'rake a hely' banknote and fold it
across,
A,ncl then you will find your wealth
In creasee.
This wonderful plan, without danger
or loss,
Keene your cash in your handss
Withnothingt t
i a �• 1 }
wttotlllo
And every time thn.t y041 fold it
aoross,
'Toe plain' as the. nose on Mit face
that you double it.
I.USiINI(SS C'IH,ANCES.
!'1AS1 Felt RIIAL 1'ISTAT1C OR I1(15I-
J nest, no matter where it is. Send descrip-
tion and cash price and get our plan for finn-
ing cash buyers, Pat ent Exchange and Divest-
ment Company, Toronto, Canada,
VA1i NTS.
DATEN7'S, C'AVEATS, 'TRADE MARKS.
..11.. eta Homo or foreign procured omit ex.
plaited. Booklet onpatents froe. 'Phe Patent
Exchange and Investment Company, Pythlan
13uilding, Toronto, Ont.
VIROINIA HOMES.
You learn all about Virginia lands, soils,
water, climate, resources, products, fruits.
berrieq, mode of cultivation pprices, etc„ by
reading the 'VIRGINIA FR Send neo
for throe months subscription to box201, Far
mor Co„ i8mporia, V.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup should
always bo used for Children Teething. It
soothes the child, softens thegumt, cures wind
0011e and is the bolt remedy for Diarrhoea,
L1ADIES—DOPY LETTERS AT IIOME—$8
to '$12 per wort{—send stamped envelope
for application. Anchor Supply Co., Dept. 112,
Chicago. ..
aan,171T FARM FOR SALE—ONE 01r THE
11 finest in the Niagara Peninsula, ab
Winona, 10 miles from Hamilton on two rail-
ways, 130 pores in all 35 of which is in fruit,
mostly peaches. Will bo sold in one parcel or
• divided into lots of 15 to 20 acres to suit pur-
chasers. This is a decided bargain Address
Jonathan Carpenter, P. 0. box 409, Winona
Ontario
WANTED t° seal
our
deb sam
to to
wholesale and retail
SLESME ho
trade. W e aro t
largest and only manufacturers in our line in
the world. Liberal salary ,aid. Address
OAN-DEX MFG. CO., Buffalo, N. T.
New Laid ]Eggs, Dried Apples,
Poultry, Dairy and Creamery
Butter, Honey, Etc., WANTED.
Will buy outright or sell on commission.
Correspondence invited,
JOHN 3. J4'1IE, 02 Front Street East,
Toronto, Ont.
Beardless Bariey
le prodigally prolific, yield.
log In 1001 for Mr, \Pe11.,
Orleans Co., New York, 100
bushels per 'acre. Daae well
everywhere- That pays,
20th Century Cate.
The oat marvel, producing
from 100 to 101) bus. per neva.
Salzcr'. Oats Ore war-
ranted to produce great
yields. The U. S. Ag. Dept.
calls them the very beet!
That pay,,.
Three Eared Corn.
200 to 250 bus. per mare, Is
extremely proOtabla at pree•
eat prices of corn. Bainter's
teed. produce everywhere,
Marvel Wheat
yielded In d0 states last year
01404(10.. per mare. Iwo Mae
huvo thecelebrated Maeea.
ron[\{'!teat which yielded
ou our farms 03 bus, per acre.
That pay..
Speltr.
Greatest areal food on
earth -00 bus. grain and 4
tone magnificent hay per
acre. That pay,.
Victoria Rape
makes It poaaiblo to grow
hogs, therm and cattle at a
oast of but la a lb. Marvel•
ously protide does well
everywhere. That pays.
1141001ue Inermls.
Most wonderful grans of
the century. Produces 0 tone
of hey and lots and lots of
pasturage beeidcs per sore.
Grows wherever soil le
fmmd. Bnlzer'e seed 1s
warranted. That pay..
810.00 for 15e.
We wish you to try our
great farm seed., hence
offer W send 10 farm seed
• Ba1 e containingThousand
nded Kale, Tcoaml,, Supe,
Alfalfa, egrets. etc. (!ally worth
310.00 to got a start) together with
our groat eaalug, for 12apoe=•4o•
»eafness Cannot l30 Cured
ily local applications as they cannel reach the
d150005ed portion of tho tar. There is only one
way to euro deafness, and that is by constitu-
tional renmeates. Dearness in caused by an in-
flamed condition of the mucous lining of the
)ilhstaohian Tube. When this tube Is inflamed
ivon have crumbling hound or imrierroet
hear-
ing, and when it is entirely closed neatness
is
the insult and Uri he
1 t matron ca bo
taken outa can inflanl n rind oho tube restored to its normal
condition, leasing will be destroyed forever;
nine enhes out of ten aro ennead by t'atnrrh.
which Is nothing betas* inflamed condition of
the nateoue surfacers
Wo will give (fie Hundred Daniel_ for any
case et Deaf/too:((caunoe by catarrh) met Gan.
net en cured by ifall'sd'atnrrh Clore. Send for
clrenlars,free
In a ClUltNaY fit c0„ 'Toledo, 0,
Sold btdrngRgiots, 75e.
Hall's Fondly fills aro the best.
.,..._.
igndratine le the tnni'tdl enemy of
Thrift, •Hayden.
The Frost
Wire Fence Lock.
L
:nen. el•eartriereatare t:
AGENTS WANTED'
fi
To Sell Frost Wire Fence.
The strongest fence sold, made entirely
from High Carbon Spring Steel wire, No
tie wires or kinks to weaken the wire. The
cross wires are held in place by the patented
FROST LOCK. It never weakens or
slips. Exclusive territory given to good men.
THE FROST WIRE FENCE C0., LIMITED
Write for Catalog, WELLAND, ONT.
fd4. v��
IIIFlf1
•" r ,� � id �1t,
ES
ES
1 �
ti
[+ r
T
.847
1 w
S
'i��AT�
iLagLssfi
t,At�ADI�+.N 6�
JDfULS
flND
TUBS
MftDR OF NO HOOPS,
NO JOINTS,
SEAMS,
NO
NO LEAKS.
IND t E
INDURATED �1��.�{� R
WDY'S
ere "lastly superior to the °rdin nary,
Woodonw'are articles Cor domestic, Min. '
TRY TRailiti.
salts 'by alt tire s+ clans dealer*.