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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1906-01-18, Page 600 Luxury for Everybody 11 OEYLeN TEA Stimulating. Refreshing. Lead packets only. 40c, 50c and 60c per lb. 1-11011EST AWARD ST. LOUIS, 1904. Delicious. By all gel:mere. I"Yea," *ale Bell, "Very kiwi, But where is llal 14 "Ilal 7" says Jeanne,. looking triteuud. "Yes, where ie hal" There is a dead silence. The aervants wait for the signal to uncover. Vance 11", lost in thought, looka Up, "Is he not here 7" - —.,-4 , . rf Awr, say a Bell. "Ire hasn't been in, his room tillICO the morning. 1.---" Ile stops short, foe the count has slid deftly arisen to his feet, with a strang ' look of suepleion, • "Is it Hal you are inquiring for ?" say. Lady Lueelle, svito, engrossed in conver- sation with Clareeee, does not appear to have heard the previous inquiries, "Olt I know evhcre he is ! Ho was kind en• ough to go of this morning te shoat a. hawk for my bat, and 1 suposo he demi not like to come back without it." '-'--- And be smiles. Is ssssiless ais Neee el 1,6:eel:date e e 1 0 el etti 0. e 0 :: 0110 i.e.,' lie Id 0 s 4 r i The. count sinks into his seat again, .-1 looking, for the first time inhis life, , I rather confused. .1 "I was afraid some accident had hap - '1 pened to my dear yourig friend,'he !says si to Maud, witb a charming smile. ;'I "How kind and thoughtful of you/' i- murmurs Maud. "If he doesn't come back until he . shoots a hawkirt rorbacle we've seen the last of him for some years," says LOVE AND A TITL 4. '... tr 14+ WI, ..1A6, 40 6,1104 0 14 01 0141:01(0446.00/ 60(4C41644#1:4 6,1 0 0 6! 0 st Nugent bluntly. "It is for an appetite, Lady Lueelle!" "Without any fuss?" "Which. will be rather hawkward." re- ‘s•aaaaa•aaa,a••••••••aeas•ess . calls out Nugent, composedly. 'We'll "Without a word to a soul? he replies, , marks Mr. Lainbton, quite unconscious w ANTED. $7 TO $10 PER WEEK OAN . s put them outifyou'll mule and play." "Shake hands," says Nugent; "you of his pun. home; sone name and address for full par - be earned working for lie at your But she shakes her heacl—she wants are not quite lost, Clarence. Then no , There is a general laugh; Hal is for' ticulars, The Dominion Knitting co., 041- -to find .jut if Hal has returned—and.more worde; es you Sity,, we understand gotten by all but Jeanne. Bello and Lad j" lia, Ont. Sunlight Soap is better thar, :-.41-R,T soaps, but is best when used in the Sunlight way, To appreciate the simplicity and ease of washing with Sunlight Soap in the Sunlight way you should follow directions. Z rol " • 4 1. 44, rs. difierA re- Airogor'4% g tp Yet lee After rubbing on the soap, roll up each // // i / 1. ----piece, immerse in the water, and go away, 5 tiL Orr ' 'SOAP AGENTS WANTED. with a light laugh goes on her way. each other; good night.' Lucelle. Jeanoe is so far from for- • Stopping at. a wintiew, she looks out, . "Good night," say e Clarence, and he 1 getting• him that she is pale with au -A OEM'S, WE ARD PAYING IsARGEST 41 commissions of any company doing an. and sees a solitary figure pacing up aid yams on, pale and agitated. • iety, and is so absorbed that she snatches honest business; we manufacture the high - down with hurried, restless strides, his 1 This little momentous conference had • that other pale and absorbed fece next est grade ef flavoring powders in Anwricee hands behind him, his head bent—it is t taken place outside the door of the hers—Clarenee's..4.11 through the dinner, . You can make from five to six dollars a Clarence. Again Lady Lueelle smiles. 1 apartment that goes by the name of the which he scarcely touches, he sits vainly • ••!.n Tn'ufaAtolgiltrgtoCou„s HartattaellteT Iivanta "Where is Jeanne, 1 wonder?" she ladies' room—a kind a boudoir conpnon trying to talk and laugh, but every nosv "4" says. "Evidently somewhere be Cala to all the Indies N1110 MaY Want a place and then glancing at Jeanne with a look ' get near her, or he wouldn't be there. of refuge on a wet day. It is seldora on his face which nearly maddens Vane. Why is it men make such fools of them- . used, hAvever, and it is only by chance , "She has told him already that she is selves when they are in, love? 'Women that Lady Lucelle happens to be in it, : going," he thinks. "Both pale and ab- . lem she reeves on to the upper corri- . moment. behind the nearly C1OSCa deer, at this. I Stradted, they sit and suffer. Yes, 1 eXT ANTED, YOUNG WOMEN OF G0013 rev; Nurses. Tbree education to enter • Training School (3) years' course. S don't!" And with this obtrusive prob- dor again, but stops suddenly. with a i ' shall take the empty shell with me t.41, - quick flush. A horseman has just ria- , one hoard every Low as have been the two men's voices, morrow—her heart will remain with Kent, Superintendent Toledo Hospital,ecT°7- "- term commencing Jan. lat. Apply to Miss To - den into the courtyard, and, throwing : word, and, as CabrIle him!" the bridle to a groom, dismounts, and goes down the atairs, she slips out, and Such thoughts are not likely to tend ledo, Ohio, U. S. ,A., sm looks after him with eeeiwny,e in my way; with an evit is strange! Vane sends dish after dish away, as has il ile. toward producing a good appetite, and enters the eastle—it is Vane, Very pale , Souvenir Post Oards . and haggard, he looks like a man that ' but it is always so. Allt1 DOW he has ' 12 for 10c; 60 for we; mo, 0; 200, t2; 500, has some matter of lite and death upon been usual with him of late; but when . his mind. Lady Lueelle pauses. wrested this weak fool out of my hands the ladies bave gone he drinks glass $s; all different. Largest and finest stock' in Canada; 600 m ; mixed, 53 album' Ps all rices. "Shall I stop and speak to him?" she i —or so he thinks! You are clever, my after glass of port, which is :not usual asks hers'elf, wistfully. "No, he has Lord Charles Hamilton Nugent, but, you with him, and sits with his fingers on W. R. Adams, Toronto. Ont. avoided me of late—better not. Let him are pitted against 0. woman, and will the stem of his glass, moody and silent. A BSOLUTELY THE BEST; PITMAN OR seek me—he nmy have to do it," and she • need all your astuteness! And so the • It is a lovely night, and all the front 21 Eclectic Shorthand students -write let - Pen 132' ' Then there is no time to be lost!" by the moonlight. The servants are leve•smitien Clarence goes to -night! ' or terrace part of the eastlosis flooded ters after 1x weeks' romivpaleetein,:trurscetimien. , Vane strides Across the hall, glances ' elleowrthtaerir book reieding,rotigemistLinLs e1..pen- into the drawing room, just as Lady Lu- Ten minutes afterward, Vane rings britging the tea; Maud sits at the piano, meneelp. 520. cello halts above, and goes into the bil- the studio bell, and Willis appears in his the others are scattered about; the lege, Yonee and Bloor, Toronto, Ont. liard room. 4. 1 usual noiseless fashion. room seems hot and close to Jeanne, ani Nugent looks up, and, obeying a look ' "Go and find Mrs. Flemin,g, and tell she feels restless, her mind. equally trou- rises, her to ask her ladyship if I can see her bled about Vane's sudden return to rather than a gesture of Vane's, f pitches his cheroot aside, and follows or a ' . few minutes." ' England and Hal's absence. To • Jeanne him up to his studio. Willis disappears, and returns almost mental trouble always brings a longing "What is it, old man?" he asks as ins,tautly, for fresh air and scope to think in; he close tbe door :after him. ' 4 'Her ladyship will come down to you Maud's thin voice grows almost tortur- Vane p,ces up and down for a momentimmediately, my lord." ing, and at last she opens the French in silence; at last he stops, and looks Fiminutes afterward, there is a window, and steps. out on the terrace. at Nugent with a face so marked by gentleenterrs. 'mock at the door, and Jeanne As she does so she hears the thud-thd u anxiety and care that Charlie start. a of horses' hoofs, and one part of her "Charlie," he says, in a low voice, "I She is dressed perfectly ,superbly. Art trouble flies away instantly. . must go back; I can't stand this any has done its utmost as the handmaid It is Hal, of course! longer. I fancied I could remain until to nature, and she looks to him—with To run clown the steps to meet him, MISCELLANEO es, b the weary, restless spirit whose heart is our time -was up; I believed, I wanted , P. scold him pet him, and learn where 'he to believe, in your assurance, your em- eaten by the wasteful crest% of un. .re- bas been, is the impulse of the moment. phatic assertion, of my—of Jeanne's (tufted love—like some exquisite vision Throwing her face shawl over her head, purity and innocence, even in thought; i which the old painters used to catch and and gathering up her rich akirts, she hur- I can believe it no longer—stop!" for imprison on their canvas. For a mo- ries around to the front; but the sound Charlie had started forward, pale as ' ment he is silent; then, as he rises and has ceased; no, not ceased, but drifted himself. "Do not misunderstand me: 1, looks at her, standing so easily, grace- t believe she is pure in act and deed, but fnllYs clasping a diamond bracelet at era the back. Thinking that Hal. I cannot trust her to herself any longer. her wrist, his tortured heart aches again. Don't ask me what I have seen—yes, I "I did not wish to trouble you to come will tell you. I saw Clarence kiss her to rne," he says, in a low voice. "I hand; I heard his voice, low, passion. would have come to you." ate, troubled, as mine—Heaven help "It's of no consequence," says Jeanne, me—used to be! I will wait no lonser. in the measured tones in which she el - Dr /MIRE POST CARDS, ENGLISH OR .L Scotch, 6 for 16 cents. Dominion Sup- ply House,. Xing street, Hamilton, Ont. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup should always be used for Children Teething. It seethes the child, soothes the gums, cures wind co/le and Ls the beat remedy for Diar- rhoea Confession. (Buffalo Commercial,) he Tauthor had been dragged fainting from a crowd of shoppers. "Almost like my last book," he murmur- ed, recovering his senses. The listeners, being of delicate perception, know then that the book had fallen dead from the press. - DEATH OR LUNACY seemed the only alternative for a, well-known and highly re- spected lady of Wingham, Ont., who had travelled Sunlight Soap will do its work in thirty to sixty minutes. Your clothes will be cleaner and whiter than if washed in the old-fashioned way with boiler and hard rubbing. Equally good with hard or soft water. Lover nrothern Limited, Toronto is3 The Tree of the : Ws the belsain fir. It is coarse grained. I It shows a white weed. I It is the tree front Maine. It has been "it" for nearly 30 years. It was "discovered" by a party of duck hunters. The farmers. thought the shrewd. New Yorkers crazy. The original Christmas tree syndicate did not long enjoy a monopoly. Fir lands have gone up from $100 for thousands of acres to $10 to $20 a single. acre. The seaboard is stripped of them long since, so the tree of the season now grows far inland. About 1,500,000 trees a year are cut in the New England. States. Three-fifths of these trees grow on the bleak hillsides ef Northern and. Eeastern 1Vlaine. Farmers and timbermen do the great- er part of the harvesting these evergreen delights. • An iconoclastic soul says it's the Christmas tree because no one has ever found any other use for it. With the dwarf gray birch and the bitter -willow shrub, it forms a final hedge of vegetation arovaid tire Pole Peary. is rarehing for. It ts said that it costs but two or three cents each to and the trees here. As they sell at from 25 cents to $5, it would 'seem to be a good business. After the fir erop has been cut off I the land will not produce anything un - Previous to this Christmas tree busi- ness the fir lands of Maine were exempt 1 from taxation, because they were held valueless. Though pines, spruces and. even hem- looksr used in different t f tlie country as Christmas trees, in the East this superior and fragrant balsam fir is the tree of trees, forming 95 per cent. of the big Maine output. til it has been burned over. • Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, &c.• Snapshot as Evidence. 'A snapshot photograph, taken by a husband of his wife smashing the glass of the •over -mantel procured him the dismissal of a summons taken out by her at the West London police court, the magistrate observing that a husband must be either an angel or an idiot who would tolerate such conduct on tho part of his wife. 7 -- BITTER THAN SPANKING. wishes to rule in without attracting over two continents in a vain . attention, Jeanne goes back, and, listen - r a euro for nervous debility and 1 ; ing as she goes, tracks the rider to the dyspepsia. A friend eeoommended South 1 American Nervine, One bottle helped, six I front of the terrace itself; tracks him, • bottles cured, and her own written 'testi- • and comes full upon him, hidden in the many closes with these words: "It has saved. shadow of the shrubbery. my lite." -20 -a a—s--a— b . To her surprise, there stands George, - i arlie, I must—I must take her back ways speaks to him, in which she con- i dusty and travel -stained, beside ono of Jury's Peep•Through a Window. to England with me to -morrow." ceals and disguises the wistful craving the bays, panting and. sweating, with The necessity of altering the law "Right! Quite right!" says Nugent. on her part. There they stand, divided the foarn flecks covering his broad pelling jurists to view dead bodies was s that such cause as you believe exists. either, and Inc gulf is bridged—a word— : With a start, Georgg swings around, inquest, says the London Chronicle, The Mind that! But you are quite right to nay, a look, a touch; and yet that word, and utters an exclamaton. . . person had died item diphtheria, and the go. And what can I do—shall I ex -plain that touch, that look, cannot be given, • . "My lady) Is that you? Yourself?", a o the doctor inquiry took place owing t to the people that remain—shall I send and the ocean rolls coldly between them. , "Yes, it is II" says Jeanne, too anx-1) 'Wine called i' t t T n too la e. he jury unroll - them away? I'll tell them important "It LS of no consequence," she says; "1 bolas to smile at •the strange question, ai mous y refused to view the body when business has called you home, that Lads- was nearly dressed. You wanted me ?" 4 "What are you doing here? where have. told to do so by the coroner, saying they _ Jeanne must go with you; and I'll take "I wanted to tell you that I must go you come from, and why are you riding / were not going to run the risk of anfee- 'em to the abbey, the whole biting of to England to -morrow." them, if you like." ' the bay at this time of night?" 1 tion. The village schoolmaster, who was She looks up with faint surprise, sloth- i George takes off his cap; his .hair Vane holds out his hand, ion the jury, poitted out the danger of his ing more—as yet. clings to his face with peespiration. lie, best and dearest freesia. you, as you , matter ? Have you heard bad news ?" "I knew I could rely on vou, Char- "So soon 1" she says. "Is anything the e."I've come from Master Hal, 4 with -this letter." • my lady, i spreading the germs among the scholars. The difficulty was ultimately got over think best; make the best excuse you "No," he says, with dimmed head. '7. I "Give it -to me," says gemme, teeing by the jury stanaing-in a garden and can, and let them remain 'here as your have heard no bad news." ! it from him eagerly. "Where is Master looking at the body through a window, guests, if they, and you, like.. Can.didly, "What time do you start ?” she asks. Hal—why have you brought it? I can a • - this evening I am almost bereft of my "What can I do for you ?" not see to read it!" senses. If I was indifferent, if I did not He looks up quickly, watchfully. George whips 'out his matchbox, a,nd EyERy • RAGE ON care for her, I could take her away, send, "I am not going alone," he says; "I her away, put a bullet through him, do wish you to go with me.' strikes a light. "But still, nothing shall persuade me by an evil wonian's spite; a wora from breast. illustratea in an unusual manner in an "Begging your pardon, my lady, but anything easily. But, Charlie, I love Jeanne starts. there's no time to be lost" Jeanne reads the letter, and looks up, pale and agitated. "What does this mean?" she asks. "Why should he write this? Why does- n't he come himself ?"' "He can't, my lady," replies George, eagerly. "And you'll come, my lady?" SI! No, certainly not!" says Jeanne, but very faintly. George actually staggers. "No! my lady!" , "No; how dare you, sir—oh, is he in danger?" George does not hesitate a moment. "Yes," he says. Jeanne catches the letter with a sud- den shudder of apprehension. "In don - ger!" she says. "Yes—yes, he must be, or be wouldn't write like this!" "You'll come, my lady?" "Oh, what Shall I do? Ana to tell to one! What shall I do? I cannot -1 cannot go—and yet 4—Yes, 1 snust go I" and in an instant she turns to the man, tains and. composed. "Wait here," she saars• "Pll o—but how?" her! I love her as madly as in the old 4 days before our marriage, as inathe old days before we parted--" "Partedt" echces Charlie, "Yes," parted," repeated Vankf "We ! have been parted since our wedding day. • Don't ask me any questions; I cannot tell you any mort; parted, yes, parted, as far asunder as if an mean dividted us. Think of that! Remember that I love her madly, and that her beauty, I her sweet fare, sweet and bewitching, as you know, draws me on to love her more dearly every day. And parted. , There, Charlie, I am scarcely myself to -night." • "You look it, old man," says Nugent.; laying his hand upon Vane. "Your band . is on fire." "It is my heart," retorts Vane, all most wildly, "and I am full of fancies and presentiments. Fancy me being so i superstitious. For the last two days I , have had. a dread of something intangible i going to happen. To -night it /tango 1 upon me like a cloud. I hate the "I?" she says, and the color leaves her face as she thinks of 41a1 and Verona left helpless to fight against the couht. I But he, Vane, Icnosvs nothing of the ' real cause; he sees the sudden pallor, and thinks it is because she is leaving. Oar- ence. and he, too, turns wbite. "Yes' he says, almost fiercely, "Vi7hy should go alOne ? Why should leave you here ? Do you object — do you re- fuse to aeompany ?" Jeane, still pale, gazes at him with sur- prise which he deems feigned and un- real. "I obiect—refuse ?" she echoes, in a ! low voice. "Why should 1?' "You may be acquainted with the rea- son if there is any," he says, haughtily, scanning her face. It falls and crimsons. "Ile knows all about Hal and Verona, and is angry with me," she thinks. "There are some reasons then?" he de- mands, in a suppressed voisce. "No," elle says, with a pause, "there are none weighty enough to lead me to disobey you. s a e ready at any hour you name." "Good," he says curtly. "We start at one o'clock. Jeanne inelines r tea . "1 sliaIl be ready," and she turns away t e very air, the castle, everything about i it. Yes, we'll go to -morrow, aod take j her with us." Nugent nods. What can he say or do? Right, you are quite right, Vane. Shall tiay anything to -night?" "When you like—no, better wait till the morning; my being busy 'will he as excuse for your eeplainin instead of me." Nugent goes out without another • 'ems& his heart wrung for his friena; ; not five yards has be gone when he' meets Clarenee coming languidly up the stairs. For a moment Nugent feels inelined to reize him and fling him out of the win- dow, but he controls himself, and, in- stead, lays his hand upon Clatenee's shoulder, "Lase he says Sharply. Clarence looks up. "Well?" "Aren't you tired of itaegipfs and dawdling about? Why the devil 'don't you go to Norway-- Nweden--or wher- ever you said you were going1" Clarence starts, and red/Ione angrily. "What 410 yeti. mean, Lord Nueent? 'Why should. 1?" "On sou want to ask me" says Nagent. eternly. "Beret be a fool, Clarence. I don't want to quartet with on, and if I am to newer aseur queation sit 4114 do so. We understand eat+ other. What felted can your staying do yousself--or others?"' ('1.u'en'e tnrns p510 v4 ta lig head, bitsig ide lipa irresolutely. Sutla' sienisr Ile Iseze• "Nugent. sou are sight," sass. istransely; unaerstatia you. 1 eau do no geed, alai nothing but harm to myeelf. 'feu ate right! %tin go." ailment bias nut hot hind. "Spot:ea .stitar a maul" .. says.. "When tlereis geftLee a great effort. "TO•night." • THE PRAIRIES Has Its Cures Credited to Dodd's Kidney Pills. ••••••••• •••••••m• John White Col ad get Nothing to Help his Rheninatiam Till he Tried the Great Canadian Kidney _Remedy. Vilow. Grass Assa., N. W. T., Jan. 8. —(Special.) --do place on. the prairies but can furriish some proof of the splen- did work Dodd's Kidney Pills are doing hi wiping out the Kidney ailmenta of the west. It was near here that little Edith Harris was so wonderfully cured of Dropsy by Oda and nosy Mr. John White is giving an experience almost as remarkable. "I think," Mr. White says, "I should Id the public know of the benefit I got Vont Dodd's -Kidney Pills, I had Rheu- matism for years, and. neither doctors "You must—Master Hal tbought you nor medicines did me a bit of gooa•1111 would ride, my lady—your mare." last spring I tried Dodd's Kidney Pille, "Alone!" says Jeanne, aghast. ,They did me a great deal of good. 1feet' "Time—time's precious, my ladylu :like recommending Didd's Kidney PilLs even stronger than I can talk." Dodd's Kidney Pulls eure the Kidneys. Sound. Kidneys strain all seeds of disease 'out of the blood. They tome up the body to its highest standard of health and energy. 1 1 mutters George. 1 1 , Jeanne c enc les her hands, undecided, but pauses at the door. "And our ei cannot go alone," she says, snore to guests—do they know—are they as. posed of ?" herself than to him. "No! Go to the t 111 d 11 ht d rt '0 "Thay are disposed of," he says, bit- terly, thinking of one only. "Say noth- ing ---there is no need. Nugent will be host in our absence." "Very well," says Jeanne, again. re- clining her head nu and she gees t. Half -an -hour afterward the diner -bell chtuge out over the casette; and Bell, who is never late on any measion, crones out of his room, and kneeks at Ilal's door; , that young gentleman beineninny miles 1 away, deees not hear hizn, and, at last, after playing a mild tune on the riefence- less oak, Bell opetta the. door gentle. "Ital. my dear boy, there's the din- ner bell. Are you dreesed yet ? Make I haste, they are al going in. Can I help j yoo, can By thme is tilie tonna that he had been tuireeaing space. dial is not there. 101 goes into the rooms and looks around. It is extreme- , ly tidy, not a thing is thrown about --a ' clear proof to liellat mind that Hal late 1 • not le.en in the room shag, the servant arranged it in lite lusty morning. "New where late he gone 2" nelrea poor Bell; "it's. 'unlike him to mise his dinner. Ana ha in fend of hie pipe, too. freer me." .And. vainly epeeulatines tell goes down, "Perhept lie 'beta bad time to dress, fitul—bat be wouldn't have the courage to dine %vitt' them in. a sltooting-jaeket." • If Hal been% the fount tem, for Bell haute 12i3ex e eelleney Nutlet at a teble in Ida frock mat. and Maul. in a delighted 'whisper, telle Bell how it ',online: "jeanne neked him the last mement and beggill wit to take the fteelile of going 'tonne to at :`,A; rind lie gilled. Weal it kind of him r s e getg ogee ready --"Too late, *sty lady; it will be too Wel" says George. "My lady, coat% you trust me to take care of you the years?" amid honest George's voice tremblee. "Go, then," says Jeanne. "I do not know what to do! and / am to ask no one! Olt! what cast it be?. Yes, go -- 1 will come." "Bight, my lady," says George with it ring in his vom, Master Hal was right. He said setter' come, How long will you be, my lady? I can be ready In ten minutes.' "Ten minutes -a quarter of e1t hour," says Jeanne. "Bring the luerses to the end of the moat," rtati the next moment alte ie gone like a altadow. Like a shadow also stmas Lady Lucelle behind the terrace, looking down upon the two, o.na hearing it worsl here and a word there, stud yet no shadow, not the hie -cleat, that ever was met, held tar evil m. heart or no aubtle a brain, She has scarcely tittle to crouch down be- fore Jeanne is almost upon her. find. tionly Jeautte turns and, instead of -'"en. tering the drawing -room, goes stiong the Bachelor, Widows attd Hogs. s. X. Daniel, nthrifty bachelor of Vaelnut Grove townshtp, will do to tie to, told armful provide a sumptuous living for a good wife. He has Met to pigs 14 months; old that weighed 929 and 00. Won- der if there is nnesthet bachelor in the coun- ty that me beet him? We nureteetty hurrah for the widows as Well Mt the baehelors in raising big porkers. - Mrs. Adeline Cash, of Duchville township, killed four pigs tbat made ber 1,444 pounds of meat, and her neighbor, Mrs. Itileabeth Walker, MAO MIMI four that tipped tins begsm 51 Afinara's Linimeat Cos Limited. Gentlemen,—/ have used MINAIM'S LINIMENT from Gine to time for the past twenty years. It was recommended to me by a prominent phsedeian of Mont- real, who called it the "great Nova Scotia Liniment." • It sloes the doetor'm work; it is perticularly good in eases of Rheumatism and Sprains. Yours Truly, terraeo toward the other entrance, and G. G. DUNSTAN*, ea she turnethere fluttere front her, in- Chartered heeoutitant. cumbered by the long skirt' of her dress, Halifax, N. 5,, sept, 21, 1005, and her shawl, a, crumpled piece of pa.. per. •••••• --- • • - ,• • (Tea be continued.) New tight for Photorapiters, Thera are over a tlemsand paper mills M.Its.oul rietet, the well known Gen. fxt the United Stotest, and their total geese inventor, Strat.4 Volt he Me aisrov. proattet amounts to nignit three mai- toed A new light by which photographo lion five hundred thousand torte anti- nifty he taken at night men better than akr, "Mined at over 5150,000,000, dui the day, Spanking does not cure, children of bed-wetting. There is a constitutional cause for this trouble. Mrs. M. SUM- siERS, Box 8, Windsor, Ont., will send free to any mother her successful home treatment, with full instructions. Send no money, but write her to -day if your children trouble you in this way. Don't blame the thild; the chances are it can's help it. This treatment also cures adults and aged people troubled with urine dif- ficulties by day or night, _ BELIEVE! BELIEVE in the modest conceptions and In the purest ideals of humanity. BELIEVE always and in all circumstances in theseinal victory of justice, righteolles ness and truth. BELIEVE in your own country, in its constitution, its laws, its principles and in its destiny. BELIEVE in a great deal more than you can touch and handle and see with your senses. BELIEVB in the force of the human 'will to do whatever is wise and necessary to be done. BELIEVE in tbe good of human nature, and of this, no matter how dark things seem, never despair. BELIEVE that the discipline of life, its chastenings, its bardships, its raysteriee, are part of a great, wise plan. BELIEVE in the order of things, in the universe, as reasonable and good, that the laws of naturo are wise, wholesome and 10 yourself, as sent into the beBnzefusieenvLE world to do and to be something worth while and as able to accomplish this end. BELIEVE in duty as an ever-present ob- ligation, for which no man or woman ever did or ever can escape without making inner or outer shipwreck. BELIEVE that man's richest, completest life needs soil and atmosphere, and that these are nourished and cherished by many things beside Gold, hard, demonstrable facts. BELIEVE in the value 01 1110, as a price- less boon of the Creator, and never con- sider for a moment the possibility of wast- ing It, throwing it away or of destroying VE that there were wise people be- flted that there will be such after yourself.0iTou n 33rout you, and do not imagine that wisdom was born with you or evill die with you. maim that the "Will to believe" can be strengthened, and that you can and ought to pass °vet once for all from the doubting mood into the strong, brave, fixed attitude of faith. Good Pay of the Press Agent. (Washington Post.) The press agent .02 the Panetta Canal should not be out out of business until he explains why the num who purcaases sup - Tales for the 20,000 men on the isthmus should get twice the pay of the man who eateries the same seeveceo for the 60,000 men Of the army. Minard'S Lininient Cures Distemper. Salaries of British Ministers. Of all the members of his Majesty's Cabinet the Lord Cluaneeller recei4es the highest salary, namely, 550,000; the Prime Minister,the Ministers of the Interior, Exterior, Cotonies, War, Fi- nance and the Seeretary for Indian Af- fairs receives $25,000 each, the Secretary for Ireland $21,500, and the other mem. beta of the Cabinet a salary of $10,000 each, The Lord Lieutenant of Ireland reeeives $100,000 a year, the Lord Man - cellar for Deland $40,000, and the first Secretary of Palle Works, $10,000. The three latter officials, however, hold no. portfolio. • . • Training the Apprentice. A barber in the Commercial road, Step. neq, Eng., announees "Free she'll* by art apfrentice every Tuesday, Not re. e." LORD ABERDEEN'S COURTSHIP.% Lucky Shot That Brought Down a a Bride. When Lord Aberdeen WAS 30 years of. age he was still unmarried, and his friends'Irafghingly said he would remain heartwhole all his days,ssays the Royal Maggiine. • But fate willed it otherwise. He was shooting over a friend's estate, and all unwittingly he crossed the border and shot some partridges belonging to Lord Tweedmoutb. A party of keepers took him in custody as a poacher, and insisted on his accompanying them to Lord. Tweed - mouth's house. Lord Tweedmouth saw at once that the tale the "poacher" told was a true one, and persuaded hint to stay for lunch. And so it happened that he met Ishbel, the daughter of the house, who charmed him from the first with her beauty and accomplishments. Now she is Lady Aber- deen. It's All in the" Sensation. (Stratford, Kan., Republican.) i When. for any reason whatsoever you get aggrieved at the editor, just rush into the office and order your paper discontinued. It will make you feel as if you had done something. and then you might go and sleek your finger in a bucket of water and pull it out again. The feeling -will be the same. It's all in the feeling. I _ PILES CURED IN $ TO 6 NIGHTS.— Ono epplication gives relief. Dr. Agnew's Ointment is a boon for itching Piles, or Blind, Bleeding Piles. It relieves quickly and permanently. In skin eruptions it stands without A rival. Thousands of testimonials if you want evidence. 35 cents. -23 _ _ Whiskey Shipped in Barrel of Apples. The United States customs officials have made an important seizure at New- port at the office of an express company. A barrel, supposed to contain apples, consigned to parties in Maryland from Quebec, was opened and found to contain 32 quarts of sealed Canadian whiskey. A layer of apples covered tbe bottles. - :- Sunlight Soap is better than other soap, but le best when need in. the Sunlight way. Buy Sunlight Soap and follow directions. Chances Galore for the Boy. The bey of to -day has little to fear tint the field is booming overcrowded iu our own country. It is lust beam opened. It, is for the young men who are Just beginning to think what a wonderful world this is, to study well the achievements of the past and to see In what manner they are to be im- proved. Never did the world call more loud- ly, more insistently, for young men with force, energy and purpose—young men train- ed to do some one thing—than to -day. And every year that cry grows louder, raore in- sistent. But the times demand men of large, liberal, energetic minds, and the man who insists on doing business in the old-fashion- ed, humdrum way is as much behind the pro- cession as is the man who insists on trav- eling with an ex team instead at by rail- way. 1 TO STARVE IS A FALLACY.—The dictum to stop eating because you bare in- digestion has long since -been exploded. Dr. Von Stanei Pineapple Tablets introducal a new era in the treatment of stomach trou- bles. It has proved that one may eat his till of anything and eVerything he' relishes, and one tablet taken after the meal will aid the stomach in doing its work. 60 in a box, 35 cents. -21 _ _ Synchronization, (Albany Journal.) • Mrs, Murpliy—That's a foine boy you have here, Mrs. Maginnis; how ould is he? Mrs, Maginnis (with motherly pride)-11e'll he two years ould to -morrow, an' he wor born on the •same day as his father. • _ - Minard's Liniment Cures Garget in Cows - 1 L Mistake of a Foreigner. (Boston Transcript.) Scott—Here is an Englishwoman visiting us who says alt voices have colors, Thus the voice of a drinking man is a dark amber Mott—Voiee flotillas -1 That's hig breath. ISSUE spa Slow Walker,' Leaps Two feets is th trich when it walk is alarmed and begli its minting stride for fo eceistnmeessis, 'which easily carries it over the gonad at a, rate of twenty-five miles an hour. Ordinarily an ostrich makes no fest to profit with legs less than it q as long habitually two a three and • Tour' foot stride, for it scents -to be one of the rules of nature that birds like ostriches, flamingoes and cranes extend their stride only when alarnted. The ostrieh when it runs takes both feet off the ground at every stride; its .progress being made by means of a seises of jumps so rapidly' performed as to leave the observer wider the impression that one foot remains on the ground until the other is placed. --; hith You cannot be expected to have faith in Shiloh's Consumption Cure, the Lung Tonic, as it cure for Colds, Coughs and all diseases of the. air passages, 0 you have not tried We have faith in ie and we guarantee h. If it doesn't Cure you it costs yeu nothing. if it does it costa you 25c. That's fair. Try it to -day. Shiloh has cured many thousands of the Meg obatinatecasca, and we do not hesitate to say that it will cure any Cold, Cough, Throat or Lung trouble. 11 we dia not believe this we would not guarantee it. Shiloh has had an unbroken record of success for thirty years. It has stood every possible testwithout failure. Further Proof is found in the many testimonials of dim who have tried Shiloh and been cured. Mrs. Archie Taylor, Asaph, Pa., writes r— " housle a bottle of Shiloh's Consumption Cure and found it very beneficial. havetwo childsege and they had a terrible cough. I gave thens everything: I could think of, bunko, 501 00 better until one evening my husband bought a bottle of Shiloh. We gave it to the children when ther went to bed, and they slept all night, It cured then; completely. 1 shall always keer't Its the house." 603 SHIL01-1 25c. with Avarantez wherever medicine 11 fold. Wonders of the Wireless. Wirelees telegraphy, trom a marvellusly Interesting scientific ,demonstration, has be- come an accepted commercial fact. Nowa- days ehips on the seas, that once were as entirely cut off from eommunication with the land as though they were on another Planet, aro now constantle within speaking distance of some wireless station or some sister vessel. It is all wonderful and awe- inspiring, end recalls that day only three - Quarters of a century ago when the first pious message of wonderment was trans - ranted between New York and Washing- ton. _ SOUTH AMERICAN KIDNEY CURE is the only kidney treatment that has prove en equal to correet all the evils that are likely to befall these physical regulators. Hundreds of testimonials to prove the cura- tive merits of this liquid kidney specific in cases of Bright's disease, diabetes, irritation ot the bladder, inflammation, dropsical ten- dency. Don't delay. -4 : I = _ Professor's Wife, Too. While calling the other day on ssAismd who lives with a Professor's familska wee astounded to hear bln2 wife of the Pro- fessor call down the stairs to the setvant, "Katie, Katie, put me on a couple of hot irons please." My friends said he .guess- ed Katie could do so with great joy. —. Lippincott's Magssine. _ ENfiLISII SPAVIN LINIMENT Removes all Hard, soft or eallpused lumps and blemishes frdm horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, sprains, sore and. swollen throat, coughs, etc. Save $50 by use of one bot- tle. 'Warranted the most wonderful Ble- mish Cure ever known. s - 7 The Calm "Bad Man." The bad man of genuine sort rarely look- ed the part assigned to him in the popular imagination. The long-haired blusterer, adorned with a dialect that never was spok- en. serves very well in eastern Dation abcut the west, but that is not tbe real thing. The most dangerous man was apt to be cutlet and smooth spoken. When an antag- enlist blustered and threatened the most dangerous bad man only felt rising in his own soul, keen and stern, that strange ex- ultation which often comes vfith combat tor the man naturally brave. • Minard's Liniment Corea Diphtheria. _- Scarcity of American ShiAL (New York Herald.) Out of 4,211"arrivals of all °lames of yes - eels from foreign ports at New York last rear the American flag flew over only 760 ships. According to figures given out at the barge office recently 478 of the 160 ves- sels were steam powered, and there ware five ships, twenty-five barques, six brigs and 240 schooners among the sailing vessels: In thls thne there were 2,844 steamships un- der foreign flags entered at the cuetoro: house, of which 1,355 were British and 621 German. 04, y's Sy r ce urn For Coug'hs and Colds. , (Orange) Pallesorna net 'redone rentear, is a pooldee cure for sat female diseases. Write tor description circular and free sample. le. ledellste Shntots, Ont. FARIVIERS AND DAIRYMEN when rod retteitte Tub, Pally Wash Bashi or Milk Pali asit your riocer roe E B. EDDY'S FIBRE WARE ARTICLES 1...••••••••• ea,,S • 1c0.11. 11/4101z8p4ifigpSiii.F.$:70 imtiErtoprosiouim,.' ' YOU WILL FIND Tumor own YOU SATISFACTION sponsi for cute or mistakes he should ITVISttit TI/Viri When a married woman beghte to 06nrpla1n that MI 111 ell 411 oalke Mos Might jest as well pack up and go home to marnme, THERE IS NO SUB$T1TUTE INSIST ON DUINO sUPPLIZO WITif itoDris SWAY win i• • 'e . 1 1. 4. The V London, 'of strength mule yestel veritable Is. erals. No party been the ground 02 1130 othe beyond its Manchest lias melted son. The conversien great major. 'of 1,980. • with a Li last Consery division bein Mr. Balfo as the guest golf in the II MASS sneei row night. contest the tile present tiring. In the bal °ridge (Libor, .Alr. Balfour •---enst election votes, and hi 1,350. Four seats were sixtls going Tit order 1 • molls turnov eessary to sa ist majority seats of 7,3f. aggregate Lit the sixth sea becomes 2,46. votes polled . ists 28,487 b erals' 20,992 justifying tit would main their poll. If Lancash --that what will think t Unionist par in the next Pi But it is n ft clean swe 0.1 csterday w when Parl i a have lost 21. in capturing return for on made. Of the pre 66 seats are required for rneets at We, position of tl results so far Liberals .... Irnionists .. • Labori cos . . . Nationalists This includ unopposed, elected at Ips The return polled yeste before Mond Cambridge named yeste ilext Thursda Can Among thc slims. Sir GI with success on the lines He had a tin res -"Mboral, 3,413 At the lad Parker had Greenwood al. Canadians in Ileading the p irork City, w dred thousan in the riding is reported t canvassers on few days, Mel at the last elc unopposed. Greenwood, servative, 61 0,094; Stuart. 3 The most with big maj minorities, a Bradford, w: Rochdale, all The Libern Bury, Staff Manchester ni The Union ton, and Wine lieventy-tht 411110 -morrow, it don, and all other import; seats of men of the Cabin prominent 111 involved. George for Ireland, t Dover, retai Bryce, Libor! Two Lon yesterday, the last mut gain. There wets trelana, lute 'Math. whets 'May sirglitly Ow af th els was at there mils a Unionist, and one Lab Co 4 As ,the re zon-differ • on people figurer. $e iho Morse of vantage 1 they had to