Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1906-04-26, Page 6Safeguard, Your Health by using Ceylon Natural GREEN Tea instead of the adulterated Japan Teas. Lead packets only. 40c, 50c and 60c per lb. At all grocers. HIGHEST AWARD ST. LOUIS, 1904 eve Won at Last "By George, you ought to be eshaneil to confess it. To throw off a young fel- low that is a great deal too good for you, the moment a pressing necessity was removed. I never was so humilia",ed in my life as when Waring came to speak to me last night. You have set- tled yourself in his estimation; there will be no drawing him on again—a pretty position you have landed us all in. What's to become of you, I'd like to know?" I will tryto take care of myself, and not to touble any one." y ' "Take care of yourself. Why, you have acted like a perfeet idiot" "Well, Sir Robert," put in Mme. De- brisrty, "I must say it is the first time Miss Joscelyn has ever been told so. Marriage is a very serious undertaking and though it might have been more satisfactory to her friends if she had married Mr. Waring, she has a right to do what she feeils is best for her own happiness, and Mr. Waring's too." Sir Robert Everlfrd stared at her, with a "Who are you?" expression, as if amazed at her daring to speak. "Oh, indeed, perhaps she is acting un- der your advice." "No, indeed, Sir Robert. Madame De- brisay has been dreadfully angry with me. I confess I deserve that you should all be angry with me; still I do not re- gret sdhat I have done" "I haven't patience to listen to you, and—and I wash my bands of you. I don't suppose Waring would accept any overture now." "And I shall certainly not make any," said Mona, quickly. "Then what is to become of you. You haven't a rap and my doors shall be closedagainst you." "But mine will be opened to her," said Mme. Debrisay, with dignity. `I suspect, and I told Lady Mary so," he continued, without heeding her, "that there is some clandestine love affair un- der all this. You have your mother's taste for a low born lover." "If I find as good a hut;band. I shall be fortunate," cried Mona, with spirit; 'nor should I be marrying beneath me. I have no wish to deny my kind, good father." "Then why did you drop his name." "I did not; poor grannie called me by my second baptismal name before I knew what surname meant; but from this time forward I will resume my fath- er's." "But you are known as a connection of my wife's. I will not have you dis- grace us; and I "trill not support you, un- less I know we shall be spared that—" "Disgrace you, Indeed," cried Mme. Debrisay. "Who mentions disgrace in the same breath with Mona's name? You are forgetting yourself, Sir Robert. You . may have a right to be angry, perhaps, l but don't let your anger make you for- 1 get you are a gentleman." "By George, it's enough to make a saint swear, to see you prefer a place like this to a good position. I can't take the charge of your futute. You are too headstrong; and after Lady Mary and myself, Mona, you haven't a friend on earth" "1 su$pose I count for nothing," said Mme. Debrisay. 'I am certainly a mere room keeper. I can't afford my dear young friend the splend,ors of Harrowby P Chase, but I have an unblemished char- P aoter, and owe no man a farthing. I ea work for my living, and I make it in- dependently. Moreover, I can put Mona a in the way of doing the sam, if she is in earnest,Though I"am not worth a word or a look, my ancestors were Norman knights, when, I dare say yours herded ' their cattle, Sir Robert Everard; so your young kinswoman has a friend on earrh 1 besides yourself and her ladyship." t n Sir Robert looked at her anfazed, then i in a changed tone,,and with a gleam of w, amusement in his eyes, he said— "If I t I seemed rude, 1 regret it. Your s young friend's unprincipled conduct to a a worthy gent1eman -who interceded for her, madame, absolutely interceded fur I c her—has irritated me beyond endur - nnce." o had left her. "My dear," returned Mine. Debrisay, "he is a brute. He might be angry -1 am angry ;but he had no business to speak as lie did ;and 1 might have been the wall, for all notice he took of me. 1 trust and hope he will not do you out of any you ought ha e. etov v y . "Oh, Debt how can you think of such a thing ? Sir Robert Everard is thfo soul of honor, though he is rather hasty in temper." "%Shen people lose ose their tempers, the P , P P often lose their heads and their sense c justice. You may be foolish—I don' deny you are—but 1 can not bear to se you crushed and miserable." "I am unhappy, but I am not quit crushed. It rouses me to hear peopl talk as if there was no chance of salve tion for me except as Leslie Waring' wife. I am young and willing to work why should I not earn my living int le as you said ?" "Why, of course I spoke up bold t that tyrant; but between you and m the beginning is awful hard work. Stil I have an idea. You must wait till I think it out. Meantime, I must go; an you, dear, just take a book, and lie down on the sofa and try to sleep. No one can keep their wits clear when they feel weak and worn out. Then if 1 can get back in time, we'll have a walk. You must get acquainted with this neighborhood." tfiiletly but perl;ist-eptly aoii„ liiThel, the • charm of the delicious setreey which l JIMMY'S THREAT TAILED. wrapped their mutual. silent understand- 1O ST E ' , ink; the history of those few month; Theatre Manager's Story of a Street which had been the culmination, so far, of her life, flashed through her memory ABET THIS CASE Arab, --Blear, vivid, instantaneous. But situ A mite of It boy, with neatly -patched • turned resolutely from the picture. —^— kniekerbeekers and a pinched loop: that "Where is the book?" sae asked. "I Dodd's Kidney Pills Cure a Young pluetkedia411tlw sleeve'1 0111,7apt?,egKi tly- will begin my preparations at once. I 1 must do credit to your rteonumendatiou, Man Who Had Reached a bury, manager of the It ,• ,• .trunto at 1 long to snake a start in real life:' Very Critical :sago of New York recently. ';etas• ,i der, aro Reality is a serious thing, yet it bas you Mr. Dandy?" he iuilu:u,l, hesitate at8 inspirations. The sense of "doing real ' work—of earning hard money --has a dignity Ili its laboriousness which scarce- AN hat do you want?" ly anything else bestows; and Mona tIis Case wzis Moro Serious Than he "1 wants a seat for granny down would have rejoiced in this new devel- Thought, nut Thanks to f)oddeeKt(1- where de bin( plugs sit, an' one for opulent of energy, had rshe not been so Hee, Yids ho is Wolf and Strong Now. mesolf up in de peanut. gallery, but (le deeply wounded. 11er sudden, complete, St, guy in de }cage won't sell 'cru --- says . renunciation by her 1 slued. friends atLeolin, Glo. Co,, N. B., April 18.— I'm toutin for de •spees on de walk. Harowby Chase cut her to the soul, eve- (Special)—Mr. Patrick Downing, 01 Oh, 1've got de nutztnnn all right," chilly as sho felt she had in a measure this place, is a young man only twenty he added, diving into a pocket aril bring - deserved it. Her bitter disappointment year's 01 age, but some tirno ago kidney ing out a handful of coppers, nickles nod in Lisle was more regret for the loss of disease had him firmly in its grip and dimes, an illusion than sorrow for a personal be- had it not been for Dodd's Kidney Pius Mr. Kingsbury was interested, and, reayement. In her short experience of he would probably nut have been alive drawing the lad nut, found that his society, she had no friendships nor in- to -day. name was ,Timmy King, and that he liv- timaeies save with Sir Robert Everard's "I think the cause of any trouble was ed in Harlem when he wasn't selling pa - family. It was this abandonment that over work," says Mr. Downing, "any pees on Broadway. o i depressed and saddened her. Her up- way, it began with a heavy dragging `Tort sec, it's dis way," he ex - bringing had not been luxurious. Mrs. pain in my back and across my loins, plained, "(Granny, she's old, an 'sick Newburgh was a strict economist, `hen I was subject to headaches, cramp and takes ear. of me, and I thought though a flavor of stateliness pervaded in the muscles, dizzy spells and weak- it would cheer her up to see the ole - her life; moreover, Mona had been old ness till I felt fit for nothing. But the phants an' tigers an' Marceline an' enough to know there was a degree of worst symptom of my case was when I things at, the Hip, are so I saves me uncertainty about her position and her =Weed my urine was streaked with spare cash since Now Year's, Here it future before her grandmother had fin- blood, then I knew that my kidneys is—$2., 0 for Granny's sent, an' fifty ally and completely adopted her. Yet were affected. Bearing of Dodd's Rid- cents for ole own. But de guy in do the life of that one season had been de- ney Pills I sent for some and I am cage—" lightful. Mona's was an imaginative and pleased to say the pains have all gone Mr. Dandy had comp out from his poetic nature, though not without its since using them, and I am well and office and heard the unvarnished tale. practical side. Tho brilliant and beau- strong as ever I was." "Give the goy a loge box," he told tiful surroundings of the eoeiety to - - - Mr. Kingsbury, "and tell him to take which her grandmother belonged charm- Limit to Size of Battle Ships. his money and buy his granny some - ed her senses, and she had not seen The announcement that tho United State's thing she needs." enough of it to perceive thedeficiencies e g P, which appertain to it as to all human plat build a battle ship of 19, over lona dis- It didn't t dawn on Jimmy all at PPS placement, or about 1,600 tons the gi- once,but finally he was made to un - growths. There was, however, a sound, gantic Dreadnought, which has been launch - true heart under her fair, quiet exterior od by King Edward, is possibly the forerun-tightlderstand, and with the box coupons notwhieh only ide a bearable, but however likeublehomely, ner of the all previous aexe exertionsuct in th a hit a Winh thethe mntteredltincloherented in lttltis nks alnde cldisttp- y , shade. Naval exports decline to admit that eared. f i love only an inmate to bind the inmates the omit of size, combined with effective- P Every seat and every box in the t i together with the golden links of nese, has been reached. The Dreadnought is great o tender sympahty, Then came the a perfectly practical ship; thea why not ono auditorium was occupied last night—ex- bairn of constant employment. "'2cat a little larger? This is the argument of the sept Jinnmy s loge. Mr. Dundy noted ship -building nations. But if there is no the feet. o eree, "e In the sweawas t ofd 11thy i brow, shalt bue divine de- nt tit hero may bo attained onehday another "Tooled again," he sighed. t- i thou eat thy bread," limit—that of the pocketbook of the so-called Fifteen minutes later a newsboy pand- a It was a curious, trying sensation, tho naval powers. _ - r ed to an usher a crumpled note address- ; t giving of her first lesson. If the well- ed to Air. Dundy. On it was scrawled in e- ! dressed, demure little damsel to whom MARTYRDOM DESCRIBED. Pencil: j it was administered onlyknew how aw- "We can't conte; Granny died to - Kingston Man Tells How He Suffered night." o ' fully afraid her eleg int looking t nth- and How He was Cored. e, er was of her, all (lance of discipline "Don't sell that box for this perform - 1 i would have been over. But silence, back- ttnce, Mr. Mundy ordered. , ed by gravity, is a splendid cover for ner- 1 - c , vousi.ess; and Mona did not utter a Iword beyond what teaching required, nor did she ever feel the sante panic again. 1 "She has beautiful frocks, mamma," was the sentence of the little ten-year- ' old. "Her black cloth must be tailor- made—it fits like a glove; and she has l'idtley Disease. ugly "No, son," replied the busy manager. An awful quiet settled down on Mona after these agitating interviews. There was nothing more to do—nothing more to be resisted. She did not regret what she had done, but the reaction Was pro- found. A great gulf seemed to have yawned between her present and her past, which nothing could bridge over. Her boxes arrived from Harrowby Chase, and a formal list of disbursements on account of the late Mrs. Newburgh from Sir Robert Everard, acennpauied by a check for a hundred and fifty-three pounds, thirteen and fourpence, the bal- ance due to her. "There, dear Deb, there is my whole fortune! What shall I do with it ?" "We must take care of it, ma belle— great care. Let me see. I had better lodge it to my account, and I will give you an acknowledgment that I owe you that much. I ani proud to say I have an aceonnt ata lank. 13e^_au with the Punt Office Savings Bank, dear; but es my connection grew, through your oar grandmother and others, I gathertd en- ough to move a step higher. 1 mace a fair amount for four months of the. year—more than I ever hopr-d to do once --then rather less for four more—a tri- fle fur two --and two don't count at :ill. If my health is spared, I hope to p.o- vide for my old age." "I know you are a wonderful woman, dearest Deli. Let I cannot live upon you. What. s^herne had you in your head for pre the other day?" "I will tell you. Now I ata getting a name, people begin to bother me to teach quite little children, and I believe I have reached that point where a few airs would do me good. So I shall say I can - nut undertake children under—oh! 1'II ix an age by and by; but that I should ike them to ge trained for a year, or vhatever time it suits to say, by my upil and assistant; that I will see what rogress they are making occasionally, nd that they may be considered as un- er my tuition, though at half price. It will take, my dear, like wildfire. You re a very fair musician. We'll go into artnership, and make a good thing of t" "What a splendid ideal Do you really think I can teach?" "Not a doubt of it; bet I can tell you is horrid work, and needs the patience f Job. I begin to believe there is noth- ng on earth so rare as a good earl You ill get on, I am certain, only don't be 0o anxious, and be sure you give your - elf airs. The public is a nettle that tings if it is too tenderly touohea:" "I am not naturally meek, but I shall ertainly feel anxious" "Have faith in yourself, dear; it's the my way to get on. Then you have a t of money for present use, and a plendid lot of clothes. You shall pay e for your board when you begin to am two guineas a week. Then we'll do ell. Though you were made for a dif- erent life, and so was I, dear—very dif- erent. I was the belle of Ballgkill•rud• cry; when it was headquarters for the istrret, though I say it that should not. h, well, God's will be done 1 Who knows hat good fortune is in store for you? can tell you, you are in luck to have our troubles early; mine didn't begin ghtly till I was eight-and•twenty —over venty years ago—and now the best ope is to 'Hake enough to die easy. ',hereas there's a chance still of the eautiful young prince turning up for ou." "Not nowadays, dear Deb. And when o you think I may begin my battle for dependence?" "I spoke about you last week to Mrs. fathewson. IIer eidest daughter reeelics under my direction; I cannot eep her voice down; and there's a lit- e thing of ten she wants me to take for le piano. Now, I'll Hand her over to one -they are rolling in rieheel Here's book on teaching. the plantain German. on st'nly it, and follow it. I'raelie,' up few of your noisie-et pieces. People 'enc to think you can teach music with our fingers, instead of your head. They so taken with a few gynnaeties on to key -hoard." "Yea, Deb, I will praeti; a dilige;rtly. I aveu't touched the piano since poor 'auuie died," "Well, it's time yon began. Yee have pretty touch and a fluent fing'r. As sinning, come, let ns try that duet gnor Bocearicllo taught you last gin - g. What ages away that winter seems have gone;" "Ala dues it not!" said Mona, with u ell fi i;',11. And all the glorious spring -time which succeeded. it; the dawn of dazzling de - ht when she first perceived that Lisle Mine. Debrisay bowed her forgiveness. "I only wish to stay ]here and be tor- gotieen," said Mona. Sir Rdbeft played with his watch chain for a minute in silence. "I believe it would be for the best" he bi e m w said at last. "I renounce you from this f time forth, nor will I lilies Lady Mary d nor my girls to hdld any communication d with you. I have a couple of hundred A pounds can in my hands of Mrs. New- w burgh's money, after paying funeral ex- I pensee and other things. I will send you y a check for it and whatever belongs to ri you at the Chase." t "1 have already put everything to- h gether, anticipating this expulsion," said n Mona. b Sir Robert made a step or two to- y ward the doer and paused. irresolute. "1'11 give you another chance. ee ill d you authorize me to mance overtures to in Waring ? 1'11 do my hest for you, 11 you will." 3 "It le impossible, 1 could not consent se to such a proposal ?" cried Mona. 1; "Then 1 have no more to say, nor shall t1 I ever see you again, if I can help it." 11 He turned to go. y "Though you are so angry, Sir Rob- a ert, I ant not the less grateful for all your kindness," sobbed Mona. "I do love a Lady Mary and Evelyn clearly; it re a s' cruel punishment never to see Mein Y again" nil "I have no patience with sentimental tl bosh," he returned harshly. "Your ae- tion proves how much of real regard yonlr have for any of tis." And seizing his hat gi he left the room, The next instant they heard the front a door shut violently, and saw him rapil- t,° ly walk down the road. tee CHAPTER V1L "Eo that's done," said Mme. nabrieay. stirring the fire with thine twee, and de potting down the totrer' with a clang."How awfully spites 1,e its!" c, eleuned art 11014, still stanches where Sir lbe,bert ]ig "For years a mar- tyr," is how Chas., H. Powell, of 105 Raglan street, Kingston, be- gins his story. "A martyr to chronic constipation., ,but now I am free from it and all through the 'use of such beautiful jet ear-rings."I - Dr. Leonhardt's Anti - Nor did the young lady doubt that a CHAS. H, POWELLP111. music teacher so attired must be desery-!"I was induced to try Anti -Pill by ing of all attention. , reading tine testimony of someone who So the new life was fully inaugurated , had been cured of constipation by it. soon after Christmas—that Christmas I had suffered• for eighteen years and I which poor Leslie Worine had hoped , had taken tons of stuff recommended as I would be so heavenly bright— which 'cures, but which made me worse rather Mme. Debrisay and Mona quietly and : than better. Doctors told one there was sadly celebrated together. The former-1no Dare for inc. Dr. Leonha.rdt's Anti- ) who was a Catholic if she was any- I Pil1 cured me." thing.—acompanied her young protegee I All dealers, or the Wilson -Pyle Co., ; to church and enjoyed a particularly Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont. • crisp French novel over the fire for the I s - _ I rest of the day; while Mona sat long Asking an Innocent Question. at the piano, playing from memory and First actress—Why, haven't you heard, 1 dreaming over the past. She gave few' dear, I'm engaged for one of the principal i thoughts to the future. parte !n "Beauty and the Beast?" "And," thought Mme. Debrisay, "she beauty? actress—How nice: And who playa powder cures him. Want any stronger evi- i might bo dining in splendor—in Paris, ry dance of the power of this wonderful remedy I or Rome, or London—with powdered One Long -Forgotten Wor 1ry. over this universal disease? Want the truth flunkies behind her chair; not that there i o fthe onditions im rove I h t case C w t tlm o and aereni, Writ George is much comfortp yo ge Lewis, to be got from them. increases. This tirue ten years ago you were Shamokin, Pa, He says:—"I look upon my I Well, well, there's no accounting for a worrying about bow you could manage to cure as a miracle." It relieves in ten miu- young girl's whims; but I'm sure as I pay the difference when you traded oft your utoa.-89 ani sitting here that there's another old wheel for the season's modal. y : ,. man in the case and. please God, if noth A Smart Rejoinder. ing is said, she'll forget him." BETTER THAN SPANKING. A young city clerk .entered a restaur- So the duys and weeks flew past, and; ant one day for dinner, during which Mona with the blessed facility of youth) Spanking does not cure children of time he was making several complaints began to revive. A simple life, plenty to bcd-wetting. There is a constitutional about the cooking of the food, much to do, the society of a kindly and amusing cause for this trouble. Mrs. M. SUM- the annoyance of an old commercial companion are wholesome tonics. Mme.i:al•;itS. Box 8, Windsor, Ont., will send traveller sitting opposite hint. Ile ids- Debrisay was extremely amusing. She free to any mother her successful heino tened to him till lie could bear it no been largely educated by observation treatment, with full instructions. Send longer, then he quietly looked up at the She was at once skeptical and eredul-'no money, but write her to -day if your clerk, and said to him: "Young• snap if out; her mind was utterly untrained—' children trouble you in this way. Don't you had your dinner where I bad my yet a certain, keen, mother wit and a blame the child; the chances are it can't breakfast this morning you evould have largeness of heart, made her judgment 2 help it. This treatment also cures adults less to say, I doubt." "Oh," asks the on the whole, clear. She was still quick and aged people troubled with urine dif- clerk, "where was that?" "At home," in temper, though it had been much chas•• ficulties by day or night. came the unexpected reply. toned, and also extremely resentful of No Great Difference After All. - ' small Blights. Sunlight Soap is better than other soaps, Now, it so happened that the gentle- (Datrodt Pree Press.) but is best when need in the Sunlight way. man who occupied the drawing room "It isn't canswered mute to cask a Mine-, tiny Sunlight Soap and follow directions. floor, had a pet dog—a rough terrier how many wives are mos." 2- Sew mpany wives the um, bitbar." - —which he firmlybelieved was of the i Wen, it isn't polite to ask an American Minard's Liniment Cures Burns, etc. true "Dandle Dinmont" breed, and which madame pronounced to be a "thorough bred mongrel." It was an ill-tempered brute, and used to attack the house cat, which Mine. Debrisay had taken under To whom it may concern:This is to her protection. Dandie, as the dog was y es lied, more than once pursued the cat certify that I have used MINARD'S into madame's sacred apartment, and LINIMENT myself as well as (prescribed on ono occasion had worried a small fur it in any practice where a liniment was rug, by which she, for some reason,set'r required, great store. e'q , and have never failed to get A wrathful mesago had therefore been the desired effect. despatched to the owner, requesting him C. A. KING, M. D. to keep his favorite chained up, as he had destroyed some valuable property. The reply—which was no doubt never ailalio has her ambassadors In ever intended to meet Mme. Debrlsay's ear— h but they an Europe. They may not be known lcourt in the was to the effect that Mr. Rigden was regular dlptomatic world as sue "Willing to pay half a crown for any two What the Woman Thought, are there all the same, enny halfpenny damage inflicted on her 4 - i Japanese Progress. According to the United States Con- sul -General at Nieuchwang, the indus- trial development of Japan is coincident with rapid strides in the art of advertis- ing. He reports that the British -Ameri- can Tobacco Company and the Japanetse Government—wllioh deals in cigarettes as a side -line --are engaged in a strenu- ous campaign for the cigarette trade of Manchuria, and that the little yellow men are giving their Occidental com- petitor's cards and spades and yet beat- ing them at the game of publicity. The commercial progress of Japan ,has been phenomenal. Now that advertising has become a factor in her forward push the western nations mtay have a bard run for their money. The only relief is in the same anedicine the Japs find so bear*. ficial, and more of it. Advertise in the Times. =1= EIGHTY YEARS OLD— CATARRH FIFTY YEARS. Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal I -- —a -s Miss Krupp. Miss Bertha Krupp, the richest woman 1n the world perhaps, is now known as "Queen Krupp" all around Roaen, where aro novated the vast cannon factories which alio inherited from her father. In that place alone she has 1 40,000 workmen tolling for hor, who, with their families, make more than 200,000 per - eons dependent upon her now. If other con- cerns be added we have a total of 300,000 dependents. She owns gas works, rallwaye, telegraphs, telephones, her own bakeries, slaughter houses and general stores. She has even her own army, regularly drilled, with stern rules of dlcipllno; 1t is called a fire brigade, but is as much a body of picked troops as any In Germany. Icer army num- bers more than 900 men, well armed. Fin - rags and jags. „ They were talking about the now star In Kinard's Liniment Cures Dandruff This was intolerable; the soo►et "sire never laughs at jokes," maid the man. "Maybe she bas no eonso of humor," said the other man. Maybe she has false teeth," said the wo- man, And then the conversation languished. blood of all the Debrisays—sho was a Debrisay by birth as well as by mar- riage—rose in an indignant tide at the affront. Mme. Debrisay sought a person- al interview in the hall; and as Mr. Rigden was in a hurry to catch his om- nibus her dignity and stern remonstrance made not tho slightest impression. IIe told her hastily sho should not heed the mischievous representations of a servant, that although he had certainly uttered the words attributed to him, he did not mean them to be repeated. He was quite willing to pay for damages, but Ito would not chain up the dog to please Mrs. De- brisay, or any ono else. So saying he de- parted hastily and slammed the door be- hind him. 'Tho ill-mannered barbarian," as Mme. Debrisay observed to Marion. "A rotur- ier, my dear; a roturier, pur et simple." After this there was a running fire of hostilities, for Mme. Debrisay was not disposed to turn her cheek to the mit- er, Things had settled down to a regular routine. Tho depth of the winter was over; Parliament had met, and Mona had nearly as much to do as she could accomplish without fatigue, though she was quite willing to do more. Madame even talked of making a little excursion to the sea side at tho dead of tho sea- son, if things continued to prosper. Mona was returning late ono after- noon, after one of her busiest days. She was weary, but more hopeful, though sho was thinking how this timo lust year she was looking forward to the mingled joy and terror of being pres- ented. It was a little hard to be so sod- denly dragged down, and Carried away fro all the gayeties and pleasures, the society and distinction, that she had en- joyed a few months ago, and to which she felt she should never return. Yet there was no bitterness in her regret; site felt that she was singularly for- tunate in having found such a friend and such a home. '1`e be Continued.) ;' if a' ' II a Cow gave Buttcr mankind would have to invent milk. Milk Is Na- ture's emulsion --butter put in shape for diges- tion. Cod liver oil is ex- tremely nourishing, but it has to be emulsified before we can digest it. Scott's Emulsion combines the best oil with the valuable hypo - phosphites so that it is easy to digest and does far more good than the oil alone could. That makes Scott's Emulsion the most strengthening, nourishing food - medi- cine in the world. Sand for free aetnple. • SCOTT As SOWNB, Chemists') Toronto, Ont. Goo. and $1.00 All druggist ... • What's the Matter. Rowland Hill was greatly annoyed when there happened to be any noise in his chapel to divert the attention of his hearers from what ho was saying. On ono occasion he was preaeliing to one of the most crowded congregations that ever assembled to (tear him. In the middle of his discourse he was disturbed by a great commotion in one of the galleries, and looking in that direction he exclaim- ed, "What's the matter there? The devil seems to have got among you!" A plain country -looking man immediately started to his feet, and addressing Mr. Hill in reply, said, "No, sir, it aren't the devil that is doin' on it; it's a lady what'a fainted; and she's a fat un, air, as don't seem likely to come to again in it hur- ry." "011, that's it, is it?" observed Mr, Hill, drawing hie hand across his face; "then I beg the lady's pardon, and ---the devil's, too." Canal -Boat Churches. Both in England and France, says Sun- day Magazine, conal boats have proved of great service in the spreading of the (Gospel. In England tho eanal boat trav- els along the Fens, and rnachen scattered districts on the banks of the Wends which otherwise would bo larking a yell- g rious service. SM•V1ees ere held on the boat itself. In Prance, where it is pns- Bible to travel thousands of lnilen by eannt, the McCall Miseinn bps dello good work. A boat-ehapel, which sorts 150 people, moves slowly on its way, stop- ping rat hamlet after hamlet for fort- night or more. Usually t11e boot is crowded and an overflow etmgregatidn listens from the banks. Sometimes site boat is moored ender a bridge, and then, too, holds Its eroWds of listeners, for the services are very popular. On the Dela- ware River is a wooden ehureh built on tho decks of two large boats, and it can be towed from point to point, as re - fluffed. 111 11 111 I ditlallarikilkatga— ISS (J Il. NO. 17. 1906 MISCELLANEOUS, ) AI.V1I.T.T1 FRUIT LANDS -10 ACRID 1'.1u, excellent for fruit, grrdenlug or poultry; cto:;e to electric cats; big money 1p Dealt. Write quick to A, S. foster, Oakville, WA? TI:D, IMMEDIATELY, TWO GIRLS about 20 years of ago for positions es cools and housemaid an a private Madly; good wages to reliable glrta. Adds' 9 In writing to Mrs. Ileo. 1', (11a.esco, 71 kanutu etrcot east, ILautilton. Souvenir Post Cards 12 for I0c; CO for 60c; 100, gl; 100, $2; 50e, 1u Canadall ;tso0nt. mixed, r$3; alcat bums, 811 prne finest k.s vv. R. Adams, Toronto, Ont, Men. Winslow's Soothing Syrup should el- . ways be used for children teething. It soothes the child, soothes the Gums, cure* wind colic and Is the best remedy for Dtar, rhoca, $5,000 REWARD will be `person whoproo vesthat Sunlight Soap contains any injurious chemicals or any t,rm of adulteration. She Id So is a perfect cleaner and will not injure anything. Best for all household pur- poses, Sunlight Soap's super- iority is most conspicuous in the washing of clothes. Common soaps destroy the painted or varnished surfaces of woodwork and take the color out of clothes. Even the daintiest linen or lace, or the most delicate colors may be safely washed with Sunlight Soap in the Sunlight way (follow direc- tions). Equally good with hard or soft water. Your money refunded by the dealer from whom you buy Sunlight Soap if you find any cause for complaint. 1 Lever Brothers Limned. Toronto Told All in One Sentence. (Aurora Argus.) Doll Faulkner was the victim of quite a serious accident yesterday evening, while riding a bicycle out to her brother Tom's home in the southeast part of the city, as a result of the breaking of the frame near the front wheel, pitching Dol headlong to the ground, striking upon ills face, which was crushed and bruised an a most frightful manner, chief of which was a terrible gash clear across his forehesd. while the nose, mouth and chin were badly cut. HAVE YOU A SKIN DISEASE ?— Tetter, Salt Rheum, Ccald Head, Ringworm, Eczema, Itch, Barber's Itch, Ulcers, Blotches, Chronic Erysipelas, Liver Spots, Prurigo, Psoriasis, or other eruptions of the skin— what Dr. Agnew's Ointment has done for others It can do for yon—cure you. One ap- plication gives relief.- 35 cents.; -87 Consolation for the Nobodies. If you are miserable because you are not great, think of the former greatness of Rome and cheer up. For eleven hundred years Rome was mistress of the known world. To -day the language of tho Romans has almost been forgotten and tho Roman capital has no commercial importance and 1s known among men as a curio. The Rom- ans, noted as philosophers and soldiers, who invaded and subdued every nation known at the Roman period ,aro now museum cur- iosities. If you are not great, you will at least escapo the humiliation of having your body exhibited 2,000 or 3,000 years after death, A SOUR STOMACH AND A SOUR TEMPER travel hand -in -handy and are the precursors of mental and physlcal wreck. Nino hundred and ninety-nine times in a thousand food ferment (indigestion) is the cause. Dr. Von Stan's Pineapple Tablets keep Lho stomach sweet—aid digestion—keep tho nerve centres well balanced—they're na- ture's panacea—,pleasant and harmless, 35 cents. -88 cam' 157 Cold Weather in Nevada. Tho town of Loveloeks, in Central Ne- vada, ran so short of fuel the other day that the inhabitants had to pull down some of their buildings and use the ma- terial for fuel. The mercury was at 30 below. Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere. ':a DR. LEROY'S FEMALE PILLS inooly tore 62 e,c tnits !a"loal eco used 0 1 cutbeo for over in'ty years, u1 , :wool Invaluable 1'hr tho pup pesodrai:;nrd. un1 lire guaraa. trot l.y ibe mrq.n, s. hw9oxo eta,np for sealed e.r, Ida r. 1•11..e bl ea per box of „'u%g :lar yr y ,nail, r, cutely scaled, on receipt of price LE ROY PILL CO., Box 42, Hamilton, Canada. Bank Building. Another instance of the stimulative efe feet of newspaper advertising upon the banking business is reported from Spo-, kane, Wash., where one of the host cone Iservative financial institutions of the Northwest entered upon a systematic publicity campaign in 1002. On Nov. 9 of that year the deposits of the bank amounted to $1,253,103.13. On Nov, 9, 1005, the deposits had grown to $4,002,- 347.15. The increase resulted from tho I publication of a six to eight inch "ad.” across two colunms, three times a week for three years. Some bankers look upon newspaper appeal ns a sacrifice of dig- nity, Some fine morning they will wake up to find that they have all the dignity and their advertising competitors all the deposits._ r -ace Lehigh Valley Railroad. Positively the last New York excur- sion this season. Friday, April 27, via Lehigh 'Valley Railroad. Tickets only $9.00 from Suspension) Bridge to New I York and return. Goad 10 days. Goode ! on L. V. R. fast 'expreucs trains leaving Suspension Bridge at 3.50 and 7.15 a. an. ' and 7.15 p. nn. Don't fail to go. For tickets, time tables, maps of New Yorlc !and further particular -scall otter address ' Rclbt. S. Lewis, Passenger Agent, 10 Kang street east, Toronto. Real Aim for the Reformer. Charles E. Hughes, speaking before the Ethical Culture society yesterday, found an admirably terse expression for the cause* of corporation malfeasance. Ito said: "Whoa we say a corporation ]las or has not done a certain thing we mean that the directors have attended to or neglected a duty." In other words the responsibility Is always .personal. To attack the corporation as such as so much ' sword play wasted, The officers and direct- ors constitute the soul under the ribs of ` death. Since they are subject to the usual • moral and judlcal penalties, they alone are really worthy of a reformer's effort. DROPSY IS ONE POSITIVE SIGN OF KIDNEY DISEASE.—Have you any , of these unmistakable signs? Pufeness under 1 the eyes? Swollen limbs? Smothering feeling? Change of the character of the urine? Ex-• ltatistion after least exertion? If you have there as dropsical tendency and you shouldn't delay an hour in putting yourself under the great South American Kidney Cure, --86 1.4 Just One of the Difficulties. Public ownership and operation by the various provinces would bo attended with many difficulties and touch friction. At every provincial boundary the ,people laving on either silo would be compelled an come munlcating with each other to make use of the trunk lines of both provinces which would be attended with difficulties of double connections and double tolls so far as the neopie were concerned and the account keep. ing and adjusting of revenue by the different provinces. ENOLISII SPAVIN LINIMENT Removes all hard, soft or calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, sprains, sore and swollen throat, coughs, etc. Save $50 by use of one bot. tie. Warranted the most wonderful Blom mish Cure ever known. Disagreeable Interpretation, Mugglns—My wife says I am one mauls a thousand. T Buggins—Cee! What a hopeless minority. ' A Modern Heroine. There is something heroic about the we. man who can view the display of Easter mile linery and then go home and trim over last season's hat. Minard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia. Pa Had to Get Even. "What' are you crying about?" "I got licked twice to -day." Te "Hoaew hor was liCcarat?" "lcetl mo an' I told pa an' V went up to lick the teacher lm' the teacher licked pa, nn' pa came home an' licked me.'i oraing4310 Eli® ® a That precious remedy, is a positive arra for all female disease,. Write for deem,, p,teUl edroufcm• and free emmpie. R. S. MOGILL, Simcoe, Ont. Aott .w aettane Farmers and Dairymen What you mates a Tub, Pall, Wash Basin or MIIk Pan Lek your cn000r for E. B. EDDY'S FIBRE WARE ARTICLES You will find they give you satis- faction every timo. THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE , Insist on being supplied with EDDY'S every time. .—. ,..wr ,•••......,..,,......,. .,_ _ sere ler!•. cess* ct!r_--hrwssweurli ca emeaerscoes arr=;•...• ;:•, .0 1 _ DOU(rH (Y S CEMENT E Y i3(jl(,DIRlG BLOCK&E M CHI Makes all hinds of ]3loeks, either solid or )tollowr W and 0110 set of pallets is alt that is neeessat 1 'Me. ntnihiie is simple, handy and easily oiler - Med. erratetl. 1Vhy pay Taney Prices for it Bleck ta- ehlnn when yon eon buy this machine and outfit at a moderate east? Send for booklet, prices, rte. Awnrtled diploma at Canadian National Exhibition, 1001 OLIO. 1101J011TT, Patentee, Waterford, Onto Patented