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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1902-09-11, Page 6744,44,/qc ()J tow•A ,u ..d 2,a % ,.fir ." 4/eiat et,o it4A-00-4(e- ti&co 6 - , _....� * w��•�{f�1 �its .11'x" ** r f"4 LOVE'S EXILE. 44444444/444444444, "And what have 1 done that you gliould be me sorry to see me ?" "Oh no, I didn't mean that. I'm not starry to nee you, I'm always glad to, only we never do now, you know, and I tbought perhaps you would be angry at my coming into your study," maid she, recovering confidence as she Otter that I was not displeased. "Oh; so youu took a 1va,utage of my being away to do what you thought I 'should not like?" I spoke playfully, but Babiole hung her head. "Well, 'tvbbt have you got to say for yourself ?" After a few moments' silence she raised her head, and staring before her with the fixed and desperate ear- nestness o2 a sensitive young crea- ture who thinks the slightest blame a terrible thing to bear. "I don't believe it was so very wrong," site said at last. "I was so very careful; I took off my boots that I had been out on the Mils in, and put an clean shoes, not to hurt the carpet ; and I just put dotwn the notes so lightly I could not bave hurt the planes and I washed my bands be- fore touching the book. "Tbe books. What books bave you been touching ?" "Ob, I took down several; but I couldn't read all, because they were not English," This was satisfactory so far as it went; but three. the ,lest Engllish• authors are considered scarcely more suitable reeding for the youug people than the worst French ones. "And which do you like best of the English ones?" i like one I found yesterday, all letters from different people, with the s's like f's." I poked the fire into a blaze, and led the girl back to the book shelves. "Now, show me which one you mean.' She hesitated and looked at me, at first suspecting some trap. As I waited quietly she at last timidly touched a volume of The Tatttler. I pointed to a modern popular novel, with a picture cover, and popular title, which was among the lumber of the shelves. "Have you read that?" "Yes," indifferently. "Didn't you like that better than The Tattler ?" "Oh, no !" indignantly. "Wily not ? It is all about an a.; - tress." "An actress1" contemptuously. "It isn't like any of the actresses I've ever met. It's a silly book." "Is there any other book you. like?" "Oh, yes. I like these." She passed her hand lovingly over a row— not an unbroken raw, of course —of solid looking, calf emend volumes full of days, which, bad been brighter to me' NOVEL. TEST QF DEAT11. than midaumwer. "1 mustn't keep you Weevers so long now, Babiole,"' ,L gale to her one afteruoou In the first day to of 09.pre. k too c t tvor > ava en making v + I r beet/ , d meet go Rn antiyout a r to Ind lateie, n 1 a r y get back your rosea cm the hills." I saw the light come over the girl's fain as she looked out of the window, ami, with a pang of self-reproach, I felt that, In spite of herself, the earnest little student had been wait- ing eagerly for some smelt word as these.. n , le On - I tl 1 she beer , -car---1 s w g "O 1, A tpleasure, "it must drawn breath of p .t , I e lovely up among the pine -weeds tem" I saki nothing, and elle turned round to rhea wile a mistrustf,tt inquiring tape. I went ou looking over an eeercise site ,tad written, as if ab- sorbed In that occupetlun. Brut the little one's perceptions were too keen for me. She was down, on her knees on the floor beside my chair in a moment, with a most downcast face, her- eyes foil of tears. e - la an lin Cat "Oh,Maude, what AI r.g tui little wretch you must think me!" I was so muolt moved Meet 1 could Mit take her pretty apology quietly. t of laughter. 1 "mutest oat into A shout g "Why, Babiole., you must think inn an ogre! You don't really imagine She looked at me and was reassure 1 %%anted to keep you ch,tlued to the ed that I was not offended. desk all the summer . " "Well, sometimes when mamma ltaa ehle tool` my hand in beth of hers been working very hard —eat now, and stroked it gently, you know, T,ut it used to be like that .1 would rather never go on the —she used to say things that hurt me, hills again than seem ungrateful to and mad: :tea want to cry. And then you, air. Maude,:' 1 used to Iook at her poor tired face Ungrateful, child! You don't know and say to myself, It's the hard work h_ lee"' sour little sunbeam face bas and not mamma that says those brightened this old room." thinge' ; and then, of course, I did "Has it, really 9' :nee seemed not mind. And when you have once pleased, but ratbter puzzled. "Well, l(ad to worst too hard, you never get Pm very glad, but that doesn't make over it as you do over other things." it any. thee, less kind of you to teach ' "Whitt other things?" me." "Oh—fannies, and— things like "There has been �no kindness at all that." on: my; ebeee I assure you." She looked up at me with a shy She shook her head, and her curly sideways glance that was full of the beer towelled my shoulder. most perfect unconscious witchery. ..Yes, there has, and 1 like to "Yes, mamma says they're non- think that theta has. Nobody knows sense." holy good you are but Ta-ta fund me; "She liked nonsense, 'too, once." we often talk about you when we're Babiole looked up at me with the out together, don't we, Ta-ta ?" delight cf a common perception. The collie wagged her tail violent- • "Yes, I've often tnought that. And le, taking tills little bet of affection - them all men are not like--" ate conversation A6 a welcome re - She stopped short. lief to the monotony of our studies. e ?" "Well, I shall leave Ta-ta with "Papayou, then, to keep my memory green She shook her head. "One mustn't while I'm away." say that. One must make allowance "Away! Are; yon going away ?" for clever people, mamma says." "Yes. I am going to Norway for "You wilt be clever, too, some day, the summer." if you go on reading and thtuking i could not tell exactly when I about what you read," made up my mind to this, but I know "No, 1 don't want to be tinge••; it that I had had no intention of the makes people so selfish. But,' with kind when Babiole came into my a sigh, '°f wish 1 knew some study that afternoon. She remained thing, and could play and sing and trite silent [or n few minutes. read all those"'books that are not q Erlt;liF.;fh „ Then ahs asked softly— bhall I teach you french ?' "When will you come back, Mr. "Will you? Oh, Mr. Maude!" BLn.nde7" I think she was going to clap her "Oh, about—September, I think." hands with delight, but remembered "The place won't seem the same in time the impropriety of such a pro- without you." ceeding. Four o'clock next day was "Why, child, when you are about fixed as the hour for the first lesson on the hills I never see you." theanother made eel- veaf time l— Iva ro have anti in mean"No, but—bust I art t ,y journey to Aberdeen to provide myself lug that the good genius is about, with_ a whole library of French gram- and --do you know. 1 think I shall be mars and other elimentary works, afraid to take such long walke alone At 4 o'clock Babiole made her ap- with; Ta-ta waren you're not here!" pearance, very scrupulously combed My heart went out to the child. and washed, and wearing the nir of ,Witte a passionate joy in the Mao - intense seriousness befitting ouch a cent treat one little lemma creature matter as the beginning of one's edit- felt towards me, the outcast, I was •cation. Tide almost broke down, on the point of telling her, aseare- however•, under the glowing excite- lest,ly as I «could, that I had not quite ment of taking a phrase -book Into made np any mind yet, wluea he one's hand, and repeating after m', broke the spell as unwittingly as she 'God -day, bon -jour. How do you do ? had woven it, Comment vans leortez•vous 7' and a "OM `Ir. MInucle," she cried, with couple of pages of the same Lind. fervent disappointment ; "them your Then she wrote out the verb ' To Device of a It'reuch Pheet tan Seems to Leave All Doubt. Behind, Idorror of being buried alive is Minutia race. whole hlman r wh l common ill the - r1- lvod from time immemorial exile merits -have been 10 progress with the view of tanking such a terrible fete impossible. come physicians n]atnitain that satisfactory tests ran n so be wade b - the nae o1 the Roent- gen rat's, but It is not everyone who has the facilttie•ss for malting such n make a I a e CA Ina.. whereas teas a by n tests, 1\1e Ica •tl devised by Dr.1 the land ell e, testa np 1' France., ce eine-settles, es 1 n , a physlrrian of , The doctor uses tleorescln, elle well- known coloring material, and ltis ex- periments have proved so successful that they have wan: for him the ap. proval of the French Academy of Sciences. Fluorescin injected into the Turman body produces absolutely no effect if the body is dead, whereat; it produces most surprising effect if the body is alive. Dr. leat'd uses a solution of it which is so utrong that a single gramme is able to col- or 40,000 quarts of water, ln- If a little of this solution,is jeoted under the skin Of a living per- son, in two minutes the skin and especially the (mucous membranes. will become much discolored, and the person will present the appearance of one suffering from an acute at- tack of jaundice. Moreover, the eyes will become a greenish color and the pupil will almost become invisible. These symptom& will remain for ane or possibly two ,tours anti then will gradually disappear. Since fluorescin produces this effect 0n a living body it naturally follows, according to Dr. Icard, that any body on which it produces no effect must be dead. Llttla echos never grow to be big ones 1f they are promptly treated with Perry Davis' Painkiller. A good thing to remember in the season of diarrmea, cholera morbus and other bowel complaints that come with summer, Consumption The only kind <.,f consump- tion : onwllll:i- tion to fear is " neglected consumption." g People are learning that con- sumption i;; a curable disease, oconsumption 1 c.ted is It a l 'abl e ' 11 incurable. , thatisso often At the faintest suspicion of consumption get a bottle of Scott's Emulsion and begin regular doses. The use of Scott's Emulsion et once, has, in thousands of cases, turned the balance in favor of health. T R 4 n tlOn dt)e. 11,L1 Neglected ted c0 1 g P not exist where Scott's Emul- sion iS. ti Emul- sion t.. t'eof Sc t Prompt use checks the disease while it can be checked. Send for fres sample, SCOTT & i1UWNx, Chemists. Tor011to, Ontario, los. and $t,00; all drujgists. Shott nud Nott, A London newspaper professes to have found the following In an Am- erican newspaper "A duel was fought in Texas re- cently by Alexander Shott and John S. Nott, Nott was shot, and Shott was not. In this case it is better to be Stott than 1Nott, "There WAS a rumor that Nott was not shot, and Shott avows that Ire *shot Nott, which proves either that the shot shot at Nott was not shot, or that Nott was shot notwithstanding. Circumstantial evi- deuce is not always good: "It may be Stade to appear on trial that the shot Shott shot shot Nott, or, as accidents with firearms are frequent, it may be possible that the. shot Shott shot Elliot Shutt, when the whole affair would re- solve itself into its original ele- ments, and Shott would be shot and Nott would be not. "We think, however, that the shot Schott shot shot not Shott, bat Nott ; anyway, it is hard to tell who was shot and who was not," ,rave" in French and English : and her appetite for knowledge not being yet -quenched, she then learnt and wrote down the names of .different objects round us, come of which, I regret to sa.y, her master - had to 0o ng, find out in the dietionary, not beinf; old-fashioned line engravings of Bri- tish scenery, the text containing al prepared tl:to uee off -hand he ench discursive account of the places 11- i for " r g, 'latter -weight" ,We then went d lustrated, enlivened by much histori- I 'wainscoting," , cal information, apocryphal anecdote through the names of the months and old-world scandal. "And Jane and the seasons of the year, atter t Is." "This" was an it- which, serfeite(1 with information, Eyre, and it I lustrated translation of Don Quixote, 1 she gave a little sigh of complete "Oh, and I like Clarissa Harlowe, bliss, and, looking up at me, and that book with the red cover." saki simply that she thought that " v anh R ee " was as much as she could learn per - "Oh, ' "Oh, yes, Iva.nhoe," she repeated, fectly by to -morrow. I thought 1t carefully after me. Evidently, as iu was a great deal more but did, not the case of Don Quixote, she had been ( like to discourage her by saying so, uncertain how to pronounce the title. 1 1 had much doubt about my teaching, "And these 7" I pointed, one by one, to some modern novels. "Don't yon like any of these?' Already I began t theextent [ New York Central and Hudson River Railroad. The above name Is a household of „or excellence' 1 the w 1 word and Pc - the road should be sufficient to at. tract most people,,.but now that the rate is the same .to New York and points east as by other lines no farther recommendation should be sought. Everybody will tell you it h the best. PRINCE "I UAN IN EXILE. lluxer Leadek Lording it Over the entiv'es, Medi l:t,.lu la i 1 P( (,� gradually IF tt td 1 :a +lnll.l ' .rrl h t It n '(� 'I u t, flol(1 the horizon 01 pilin.' tee-ogva- lit.l, \\'t h ave }t now, un the lulthor- It,t ur en hnper(11 decree, that he was :t. l•n .er Iraln'r,endPed the li.>xel' lend- er, It 1•, in'po.,),i1+IP, tlttv'efore, that he nhoul! tome return to matte of - le 1,1 life or 13511 to lawfully toler- nte eeihtc-n--'P. \1'e find Lho folluty- e North , 1 1 tl t 11 > in t, t t(r e i rcf( 1 111E e s: l tilt/ tt lhnt l( '1.:n ( 'iu111, and Itis second Ilett - telt. fluke"Le ft•=Conn's Meet lieu.. tr-n.lnt, ihhl.e f9uuulg, lwvlpg Pont- mltt(11 eterhle by hanging himself n t P'lt:•hou, :=han!•i, Ltyt ye;u'--are, ttr- colsiutg to n I.atlehou, c'npitrt1 of Cimesa, deepateh, alt p(t',;"nt ;mei to be rest '!ng nL Tihua Crum tele the vale- ta), of ( hitieee Turkestan, w111 tit c(ty • ie ntlant one menthe; or,1)nary hew - [try [try on ltOreeb:lclt, west of l'ltino(Ik- 1 man, a gateway ens lib the most west- ' ere portion of the tiveat Wall. It is reported that the two exiles continue 1111 i at ''P n. 1 natives" ll to lord it over the na v part of the 1':In1Wl'or•'8 tiOlni 110ns, and oy their braggedo:'hu a lei ewe ge'•'1' tine loud toIldng of 1V1)at they Interel to. do soon against the "Weetarn „impress t n un �1 ]lnn•bariaats, managet their inlportanue Spon the cSlurple- minded .Enshgarlans ant Tanganie— Clhineve Mohammedans—of t runttni, Tartan and Hanle the latter two etties being often visited by the two in their .sen mei for follower,, and partisane. Owing to the near con- nection of the two ex -Boxers to the imperial o"cupant Of the throne even the Governor of C'llinese Turkestan Baro not alight them." • Contrary to Ills Experience. "This Isn't much of a snake," com- plained the man who had paid 10 cents to see the side show. "The serpent you exhibit on the canvas outside is as big as a barrel and a dozen times as long as this one." "What did you expect to get for a dime?" retorted the showman. "Big snakes cost a beep." "That isn't my experience," raj.otu- ed the other. "The cheaper the whiskey the bigger the snake." Retraction. German village folk are evidently very easily offended, ;The following advertisement recently appeared in the "Al'ernigerode Intelligent Blatt": "1 herewithl refract the libel tittered by me against Frau Meyer to - the friends—Mr. Scott—and the rent— bonnet that sh'e was wearing the same they won't come here this year ?"bonnet tg>is year as see was last "No," said I (t'oo1ly, but with, no sign of tee sncidetl ('11111 her words had given me, "I shall invite then to Norway title year." Before April was over I had in- stalled Mrs. Elsner as cage - taker at Larkhall, and, with Fergu- gutson at my heels, had set out on my wanderings again. UIIAPTIl1R XI. If 1 went away to appease the hadwhich year. I offer her my apologlea. (Signed)- Frau Henning." An Impossible thing 10 find is a plaster equaled to "'('he 1). & L." Menthol, which Is ide aches, iback-aches, stitches, nothing eqe. For uals It. Made by Davis & Lawrence Co., Ltd. The aieauest Man. "I se v Tam, Unit Itlacpbalrson is restlessness to me the meanest man in a' Scotland. en suddenly to persnacle myself that Ten years sin' lie Sent cot his 500 the secret of happiness for me lay we a tin bucket to milk the coo. in never remaining long in the same Tho •laddie and the bucket dldna place, I 'succeeded badly. come back and Sunlit was heard o It was not until I was three hun- dred miles away from them that I be- the lad till the licher mornin', when gan fully to appreciate the joys of do- lie kneeled at his father's door, mettle life with To -to and Teets, and when they cam' he tetled tem He breebt the auld having been plunged into it suddenly ' the comfort of being able to keep tylia he was, wtehoa methods; but dthen eItwas con- o forma - my books together, file supreme bless- mann nil bmetrnarc lags, ao, Il s1waose, inced that by the time I felt more ing of sitting every evening ind fibre Maephairson killed the trlttedeanf?" •••0011.,.. ISSUE NO, 37, 190, HOW CAUSTIC BURNS. Take a piece of woollen cloth, or e pieee of a blanket, and hull it thor- ustie L ca tt ion o oughly in a strong solution soda, and you will find the wool will gradually be eaten away, leaving nothing but the skeleton. Women do not realize how " neap substitutes," which are generally surcharged with soda, or how common alkaline soaps destroy their clothing; consequently they, week by week, subject costly ,> 111 h ands went. e • at such treatment. •e to 1 a br i . such in c 41n0 are immerged for boors solutions, resulting In eczema, coarse skin, and brittle nails, The Caustic soda may loosen the dirt, but it eats away the fabric and ruins the hands. There is no economy In such work. It is SO easy for a woman to test the difference between an alkali charged soap and a neutral washing Soap, that it is Strange that there is room for any but a ptu•e soap on the Canadian ' market. Sunlight Soap has been tested by chemists and analysts the world over, and its freedom front free %ted or caustic has been (lemonstr alkali t by the ,highest medical authorities. Consequently the true saying, " Sun- light Soap reduces expenses." 002. Messrs. C. C. Itielutrds ee Co.: Gentlemen,—In June, 'SS, I had my hand and wrist bitten and badly mangled by a vicious horse. I suffered greatly for several days and the- tooth cuts refused to heal, until your agent gave me a bottle of MINARD'S LINIMENT, which I began using, and the effect was magical. In five hours the pain had ceased, and in two weeks the Wounds: had, completely healed' and my hand and arra were as welt as ever. Yours truly, A.L ROY ,CArrlage maker, St. Antoine, P.Q. o be alarmed a ex en o her same arm chair. I gyne surprise y reading. this at first, t reflectedhat the "]Teel a til'. Said he—Lad, than things "Yea; I like some of them—pretty, should hmno one to tve,Yperimentand i t-er•y homeliness of my are was bound '11 dais very e ytlweel, bu'took t here'$ that well." she haveto bring middle age upon me early. "Why do you like Aon Quixote and! herethat sheon. haddone gbad uit enough There was a pertod of each day which ye Ivamhce better 7" I found It very hard to get • "She considered fora long time. her Inc the first lesson, Babiole rose, Vie-• .through ; whettler in Paris, td „ ,A.uiALue 1 sure of my powers my pupil's real till I t blue eyes fixed thoughtfully on the lected the formidable p le o 00 ' eLljoying coffee and cigarette OINTMENT.)shelves. her exercise -book, and the pen I had , "I think I feel more a5 if they'd i consecrated to her use, and asked me at a care on the boulevards, or tufa••adl>ybest English medlealjournals. really happened." ! it ere she should steep them. We de- in Norway, watching the sunset. on Supplied to British soldiers in South Africa. "But when you were reading Ar- 1 cided upon a cornier of the piano as some p}c turesnue fiord, when the Far all Throat and Oland Troubles, Lamps, e didn't you feel as if that had . being a place where they would not day began to wane, 1 grew rest- Agaoasaos, old teres, Moors, flees, skin h madale, , less. and, referring aimlessly to my nl Eczema Pimples, Stiff Joints, happened?" I ebeh in my way, Babiole having a ' ch irmingly feminine reverence for :watch again and again, could settle Rheumatism, m'Sere Feet, Pleurisy. Arulaas, (oo(AE ' with flash [ t No Way Out. "I couldn't gest out of marrying her" Henpeck explained, "When she proposed she said : "Will you marry nae ? Have you any objection ?' You see, not matter whether I said 'yes' or 'no' she had me." nt "Why didn't you just keep silent, then ?" inquired his friend. "That's what I did, and she said, `Silence gives consent,' and that ended me." Mivard's Liniment is used by! Phy- srctaths. Fads of the RIeh. William Gould Brokaw, a New York �- Would Probably Kirk. � O S I (Exchange.) A correspondent writes as follows in the New York Sun: "In ten years there will be no oth- er religtotr except (`lir•Istian Science. a, * a "Phe lion and the lamb shall Ile clown together: This he rather hard for people outside of the ti tri never - thought to believe, b Lit Stops the Cough tireless a fact. Everything is mind; and Works Oft the Cold. ' We have no bodies. There is no such. LexativeDromoQuinine Tablets cureacoll thing as disease, sickness or death." in one day. No cure, No pay. Price J:/ rents. d yet we Will ven- turenttoybe saysthatliif the correspond- ent ot espon d- ent went home hungry and found no sign of dinner he would raise ds much fuss with his wife or the cook' ns if le really had a body that need- ed nourishment, The Ruling t'eshlon In dying suddenly alter a, stroke of vertigo Jacob leuntzman, a district leader of the New fork democracy', gave a strange example of "the rul- ing passion strong 111 death," Kuntz - men was returning. home after, hav- ing balled out a constituent accused of some petty offense when 11e was stricken. It seems that he lhadi ar- ranged a picnic for hie political. fol- lowers. to take place Monday, and the band hired for .;the occasion deter- mtned to give tee leader a. serenade. As the unconscious form of the dying politician was borne toward the house) in an ambulance the band, be- lieving him to be in the house, played. a lively air eit the doorlitep. Kuntz - man regained consciousness inside the house and asked that "tire boys" be admitted to a last audience. • 1 am d,yin,g," he: Bald, as they gathered around him, "but beforcc i go I want to Stay to you thud I thank you for the loyalty you have shown me. You can win without me, but I'd like to 1)e in at the 'Miele" In a few more h0ilre he tree deed. p Minard's Liniment Lumberman's Friend. How He Saved Money. wife Mr. De Broker—The bills my w sends me from the summer resorts are ruinous, Mr. De Sharp—My wife didn't re- main away two weeks. "Eft ? Ho.w did you , manage It ?" "Hired a fellow. to typewrite any letters to her, and scented "the paper with viola,"—New. York Weekly. society men, is spending $25,000 to Lever'sY-Z(Wi8eHead)DisinfectentSoap put 't small Japanese garden in his Powder is better than other soap powders, esitate neer Great Neck, Under a it also sots as a diainfeetaut, w French gardener he is employing 70 as skilled men on the plot, which is to . be only 200 feet square. It will con- tain all of the rare trees, shrubs and flowers native to Japan, and the Iandseape design will be after the Tatpanese models. There will be little but expensive summer -houses, tea pa- godas and shelters. The walks and lanes Ovid be winding, but all in an e• sect system, Tile plans have not all been read.e public, but Mr. Brokaw ex- pects to have the Japanese flower garden completed in the early fall, TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All dthe mons 1f it fails to cure. refund y 11. W. rp E. tV. Grove's signature is on each box. 25c. The September re Smart Set. '•A .Friend of Cara's,'' by Louise Betts Edwards, the novelette with which the September Smart Set opens, 'es a character study at once very dis- tinctive and very strong. "The Story of Jees Uck," by Jack London, 'is a tale of Alaskan life, and in it the author has veretten one or the best, if not the best sustained effort of his career. Another story of especial worth Is "The Shining Gloss," by Gertrude Lynch, do which the psy- chology of beauty's attitude to- ward itself 1s most cunningly and clearly portrayed. The poems of the number aro contributed by Bliss Car- man, James Jeffrey Roche, Clinton Seo:lard, Samuel Minturn Peck, Al, hers Lee. '('heododia Gar•rlsen, Zona Oh, yes,' w t a as 1 o exci e- 1 down to nothingtill the last rays , ut. "0ne n•ght I couldn't sleep. • the importance of even the most geld by druggists, 3t8c. Try It once. (,ale and others. *1` I t h• d f dPd awa.v. because I thought of it so much:" 1 frivolous occupations of the stronger of dal 1(; n a a 'Then you thought as much about) sex. After this she thanked nue My' four friends, when they joined it an about Ivanhoe?'' i very gravely and prettily for my me for our yearly holiday, ail de- Poser fur the .fudge. "Ye—es, but—" A pause. -I thought , kindness in teaching her, and hasten- (tided that something was wrong, I Pat, having been unduly familiar //bout Ivttplhoe bet:mi :e 1 wanted I cd away, evidently in the Innocent I but that was as far as they could to. and I thought about Armadale belief that I must he anxious to be agree. For wnlle both Fabian and 1 withe a corkless bottle, found him- beeause I couldn't help it, I Edgar had said it was "liver," the self enjoying a night's lodging at I went on tusking her wbat site' What a light the bright child former recommended camel -exercise the expense of the city. hacl read, and I sawn that I dare unmet to have let in the musty iii 'the ScUtlau, the latter would` „I{ex long have yon been in tilts Let give the list. Bat her frank. room ! I began to smile to myself hear Of bottling; but porridge and ;tonne mend had absorbed no ecii, at the remembrance a her prePr b t 1 t Sat `arethpeffer. And though both the country ?" naked the judge the next 1 anal omen I asked h - she iikr:(1 one ural gravity, and Tat -Ta put her 1.-r - fat lfr., Fussell and the lean Dir, th I morning. ransom; peeeant hero. she answered paws on my knees and wagged her BL'Ownr' 1P,a050 t0 a ee mete simply: , 1011 for sympathy. I thought it view that love and Mrs. dimer "1 lime him very mur•h—part of 'ere probable that 3frs. E)emer nvoat 1 were at the root of my malady, the tee bw.k. And when he did wrong interfere to prevent the girl 8 souring latter- suggested that to shut fir. , Judge. 1 V of new , . 1 It a hogshead with Ulmer upl thieveI was always wanting to go grain, or that Babinle's enthuglasin 1"Sure an' it's a sailor 01 am,' an- el1; to elm, noel tell tram. not to be ea fr,r learning would die out in a day wheeze), and then � to marry bis t;wereci the Irishman. wiekee ant silly , and then. 0ll ! I was er two, and I Minuet be left waiting widow would quench my passion et- „Be careful what you say,"cau- se glad where he ret( ••marl and mar- for my pupil with my grammars and fectually, tubus dr. Fuse ell, told Me With i oteoned the judge. "1 doubt very can Med -i lo.oea:' ' dietionaris:'% ori my hands.. an Indescribable Senile, of ill you have ever been to sea. in soli•• "tie, bet then he wase as men However, Farr reappeared next day, go back to Paris and "enjoy my. nee tett' ifnp}_F^3 ''early a man.' i abeeitltrly perfect in the verb anger, self," and, If I didn't know how, 1.11(0; ry }" exclaimed the anon of "Then"Then ,v un. think w inacn are bs'e- e the morales. the, seasons and the was to take liim. g Erin, "Bogota" 1 is c in a wagon ser fpr than men- pages out of the phrase -book, Waren •I did none of these Menge, however, 'I think they c eget 'tv loco't praised her, 811e sled, with mewl' but after my friends had returned to boners' nailer thinkln' Oe came over 4`w "ily '9' a warmth : England, 1 wandered about until late front. the "Id counthry ?'' "Well, men leave 1 a week, and eau- . ' I could liege learnt twice as many October. Ent when the days grew men leave only to be good." . phrases if 1'd known bow to pronounce short again, the home hunger grew I Was surprised at this weever. them 1" irreetstihly strong, and t went back "That le riot true atwaee. Your '+ In fart, beginning to learn at an to the Ilighlands as a gambler goes mother !s a. very geed woman, and . age when she was able to understand, back to the, castle. Of ronrse I knew Ihad to work very hard indePed ' and impeller, by n strong' sense of what took me there, Met when the ti tee "Faith, an' it's, neigh on to sive n months, yet honor," replied Pat. "Have you a trade?' naked the lan • "But mamma's an exc'eptlon: she ilei own rlef r•%c'neees, site learnt hills were growing bleak, and the says so. Anel she says It's very ,lard too fact :mil (,o web that ls'r deer had gone to their winter re - to work as slue dope, and be good, educate -el 80011 became the strongest treat in the forests. t wanted to too: ' interest oI my life, and when my fear see that girl's face In my study again, 1 could scareefy help laughing, that she would tire bad worn away, to hear the young VOiee that rang 1 gave whole hours to conelderina', with youth and happiness rind every r d sweet 1 )O makes tv )1nanT t whet I awned tenet; her, and to pre- quality that ml e poring myself for her 1es:onte As wen- and loveworthy in a man's mind. Eche ter drew on, the darkening days gave might eonjngate Latin verbs or tell us both the exe112e we wanted for Ste. her young girl leve Affairs, an elle longer working hours. from three to had done sometimes with ringing half -bast rsi: we note sat together in laughter, but I must hear her voles Om study, reeding. writing, trnnslnt- again. int:. When 1 f00ftd her wiling; 1 had (Te be Con£lnued.) added Latin to Mg studies. and we diligentl$ plodded through :t ronrse Stimulated the G>ntrlbutIone. or reading arbitral 1,v marker, out by Me. and followed by my •Spit with ' 1t was a elayevllle neal'o jreaeller enti(lteioatle docility, ta110, needing the money, Said : All thottbhts of leaving II:tlla:ter Inc "Brethren, WO Will now ntallt tie box the winter h id now dlnoppeared (tufa nn' for de glory oh 'raved, which etny teetten u thaind. I n 1 reMehapplit mberr�ir1elu will Metts1 istlnotti tpat. anything 10 htiOy a." n before and as 1 snw rpr1flt And Peery nein til the eongregtttlofl though it was pretty to see how i n• nunertly the ;youngg girl heti taken the querulous speech. "Nell, and then I'm a nein, incl i don't bare t0 Werke' 'I'erllape that's why you're so good.' 1 wee so utterly astonished at this naive speech that I had nothing. to say. The blood rushed to the girl if face ; she was afraid she had been rude. "How do yen know tit tt I nm goo I. Ilablole?' I asked gtr-ntly. Iiut this VMS taxing her penelrn. ten toe Smell. "1 de's kitten.' tete atwittered d1ly'ly. "Why do y00 11 til; people are bee h,.rre boo ter 'when they don't Work'"' approaching. 1 regretted the short c-ontrlbutrd. Confusing. The Denver Post, in describing a fashionable theatre audience, says: "The house was filled with web - dressed women and web tubbed men." Gracious! DIdm't the women look well tubbed, too ? Perhaps the men were not well dressed and yet he didn't want to hurt their feelings. This may correspond to saying: "He was good to his mother, anyway.'" Someone ought to warn this origin- al young •correspondent—we are sure he is young—that he is indulging in the most dangerous kind of induc- tive nductfive reasoning. Some of those very well dressed women( might take hes word for it and .get into all aorta of trouble. This is, indeed, the dawn, however, of something really new In descriptive composition. Ask for :Wineries, and take no other. • HOW'S THIS ? We offer Otte Hundred Dollars' Reward for auy ease of Catarrh that cannot be cured by hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & 00., Toledo, 0, We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years and believe him perfectly honorable in all lousiness trans- actions and financially able to carry out any obligations made b their firm, IV OST &. 'DIVA; Wholesale Druggists, To. ledo, 0. WALDINO, KINNAN & MARVIN, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally,act- Ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur- face of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price -75c per bottle. Sold by all druggists, Ball's Family Pills are the best. ALBERT 802 students e,Arplled last year -17 16n ladies and 180i'Q COLLEGE men. Two matrl.btpi u ton Scholorehtyy• ♦al• 1 ue $150 and a111sO won ab da %••Bunn of BELLEVILLE, ONT. ate %•9010 New Pipe -organ Pa• �nsetie Selencs Rooms ant,Art0allery g l added. Superior facilit.�s in Bookk gt$_ Shorthand, Telegra y, Eli ation a PPTy � a � al Cnitare. College buildings,sow ails" gymnasium and rsa"11eu& heateal br 't.ass ane lighted throughout by electdall/. Will open Sept. 9, 1909. Wer 111natrated circular address PRINCIPAL DYER. D. lie. DEMILL 28th uYEAR.-- OPENS2nd, opn ,0ps_mi. Rnsttopealaday NEV. A. B. DEMILL, COLLEGE President, St. Catloar- Ines, Ont, Hontion this Paper. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup should always be used for Children Teething. It codoittgDrand ands he best remedy for iarbcce NON UMi3U)6'6nrgcrrt• BT1tUa8NT81nt Humane Swine Y, Stook Marker and Call Dahonwr, 8topeawine of a.rll use, from sizes with aant a blade-. ka,all Orae., with s anti Alado. 6:tra.h Ilona. Z'e,np,elltat. free, Prlc. e1.30 or %end #1 fartrlal ,l titworkaseudh.„-.r- Patd Y U.8. May e,'OSfor ll yrs ; Canada Dee.17, '01,10yr., 21611101H61UIITON, Ydrish*,Uwa.UJ. and women en to i � We 0 kl Men n 1 5 Y Bona Fide Salar 1I)g agents. nppotnt- y • 1ng agonte. Sums to travel, others for local work. Rapid promo- tion and increase of salary. Ideal employ ment, new- brilliant linen. Best plans, 0131 established house, LINSCO'L'T PUBLISHING CO., '1.'oronte,. A BOON TO HOESBInIN—One bottle of 1C[PERIAL MAPLE SYRUP. English Spavin Liniment completely removed a curb from my borne. I tape pleasure in Plrequality standard from Ocean to recommending the remedy, as it acts with r from Ocean. Your money back 11 noteatlafactory mysterious promptness In the removal horses of hard, soft or calloused tumppe, blood • , lit an(1 • GEORGE' R MBarrkham Ont. Sold by all druggists. ROSE & LAF LAMB, lspavin, epiinte curbs, st.)eny, s Agente, Montreal. sprains. A Birch ,Lod Whipping. At Northampton Petty Sessions, William Brown, eleven, schoolboy, 1'9 Oxford street, Far Cotton, was chargod with stealing, about 6.20 p.m. on Monday, the 21st of Jul;,, near in (fold street, -. - I from a• ____.__-. Keep Minard's _ Liniment in the Northampton, seven dozen Northamp- Honse, ton Daily Reporters, value 3s 6c1., • the p'r'operty of Samuel Smith Cam- pion. A tact named Dunkley de- posecl to seeing the defendant take the papers from'the tram 'while the conductor was collecting tares on top Of the oar. . ITrotltrn admitted taking; the papers. Defendant wan order- ed to rec(.lve five strokes with the birch roti.—Newspaper Osvner and Modern Printer. The Earl of Dudley. The Earl of Dudley, the new lord lieutenant of Ireland, is the young- est man rho ever represented the 1lritiiyh Government at Dublin eastle. Ile has just passed his thirty-fifth year. Ile traces his lineage back to William Ward, rt wealthy gold - email of London and jeweler to the queen of Icing Charles I. His, full time is William Bumble Ward, but be is not at all humble. Ills father wan immensely rich, owning 40,000 acres of land and many mines and collieries. Itis rent roll was return- ed at $610,000 a year. The very highest education was given the young earl, who Inas proved himself one of the stanchest nobles In the United Kingdom. Prostrate with Rheumatic Fever Six Times within Twenty Years. 3PHIS was tbecnso of 1tr.l-11Wnt• nhlre,otLansdowne,Ter.,Calne, who, during tills time, as would naturally be expected, suffered the most intense agony. Be wrltest-- "1 heartily endorse the testimo- nials which you publish of St. n 1 bave (tin ki iter t r In Oil a cobs P 1+..n a mutterer from rlreumateM and klndre.d complaints at different ttmes'during the lasttwenty'years. ,have been tall prostrate welt rheumatic fever atx tines dnrine that prrlod,therefore I consider 1 know something about rheumatism.'During •di of these twenty years T have tried various advertised rlheumatic remedies. O11s, ointments. and PmbrOrdtloIis NouP of th(m grave me much itunv,relieelett wbetetrledNt.,Tne"bs (41l I found rluite til) ■ To prove to ,you 3 that 19r. Ointment ie a certain holm 'e .O Chnso and absolute neuro for each bleedingo nd pro.•• tdinrm�tt piles, the mannhsotnrere have guaranteed 11. B • •bs tes tlmonlale in the daily prcar andmet y bore what they think of 1r. YOU can use it and gety}''our money back i4 not cured. 60c a. box. at all deal01 a et Erateesoleke TEH ee Co.,TorOntO. ' Dra Oha$e'S.Ointment ues forent results, 1t onset] the pain ullno03 inhalediately, and h8A (lone for IMP 30111t. nil other ramedlas put together never began to do. '• I feel very grateful to you ns the proprietors of this tnvalunbie remedy, and wish you every success In v(ur humane efforts to benefit mankind hy minimising "1 could ntv' you severet ennee that 1,11 VP bet.11 (-10(0, which have come under1)1y (totter., and through my recommendations: also one of toothache, Ono Or fuc(uehe, anti one of sur. throat. 1 have recommen- ded St. Jacobs 011 for BUMP time past, and ehalieontlmle to du so byevery means !nmypowee usleon- 8)051 7011 drving of (very puppeseorL" Bodily a(•b(s null palms all succumb to at, ,Ttie"b0 0t1, I.1.1 \1 11.131111)8 APPLES 1 r I11UL1L W UUII We solicit 33011r consignment( to 'Montreal. W rite or wire 118. Prompt, Antes. L` RUFF 8eFARM o OR N1 SALgarw—Peninsula o! Winona, termites from Hamilton on two rail, says.130 acres in all 35 of which is in trait, mostly peaehee, VV'1t1 be gold in one parcel or divided into lo1eof 16 to 20 acres to sett pi/z• JonathanThis Carnenter,P.decided. bargain Winona Ontario CONTINENTAL LiFE INSURANCE COMPANY HON. JOHN DnYDEV PnESIDPINT The report for 1901 showed remarkable increases over 1900, in the following Items: IIG 0 705 db .. ease ,3 increased Now business y a 39,819 Total • aned Premium income increased by Total Income lnereasedby 42,576 Assets harmed by 4:1,959 Insurance in force increased by 1,399,466 Continental Life Policies are unexcelled for simplicity and liberality. Agents wanted. 0E0. B. WOODS, CU AS. II. FULLER, General Manager 'secretary. Keep 'MIS GREAT EYE REMEDY. Do your ogee Reit, pater, cormarmec tire, or are your eyes over-worked, sore, vol, misty, of do your eyes burn, twitch, or are -they gr oFIit E, Na remedy for the e e 50 good. I'.ttsy'te apjr Eyeply. Not injurious. Guaranteed as repretlented. All Gone.. Y.e spondeirco receives prompt attention. galled anywhere ^ on receipt of OOc per bottle. V THE OPENG CO., Woodstock, Ont.__ Your E. B. EDDY'S INDURATED FIBRE OHMIC V' TUBS, PAiLS, WASHBASINS, itc.0 Ate for tittle bar awls first - elms dealers. »1'1 s , ► 7' M / . L„a((