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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1904-10-20, Page 6• • The UnKnown Bridegroom. 611-1/111..4.-N10.41...M..tiL...4.1111...40"4.41"4111•COMIlmoarkitiar%.0"116.11" "Ho will not," the girl Mailed oat, paseloitately. "Ile goes to rejoin an old flaMo. I plight leave known that 3le WAS an Englitill aristocrat, and must, perforce, have an aristocrat for a. wile. Ho baS simply been tennis - leg himeelf at rny expense; but—I nave never yet been balked in any- thing that I have undertaken, and wall not be la thin. Mrs'. Claremont. WO AIM) leave for Rome the last of next week., r aue going now to balm August telegraeoli for *Om fine.st t3ulte of apartments that can be Obtained In the 'Eternal GIES.'" ellierAgle, XIV, 1 Miss ICeng left the room without waiting for her companion to reply, anti was absent for nearly half an hour., She looked somewhat brighter when she returne& although there was still a malignant e gleam in her midnight eyes "When Sir Walter calls again, as he doubtless to make Ma final adieus, you can contrive to men- tion, incidentally, that we have rooms engaged at the Costanza I wale very fortuela,te," the added, 'the Courtneys intended to leave for Rome next week, but Mrs. Court- ney is ill, and cannel; go at pre- sent, so I have secured their rooms." "Very well, 1 will dola, YoUswish; but how you do rush things. Inez," Mrs, Clairemont observed, evath a shrug of her shoulders. "Well, hustling ea essential, if one Is boatel to s'vern success in life," re- turned the girl, liveth a dogged look, as she threw; herself into a luxurious chair, took ale a book, and began te resole Miss Inez King had been In Paris for many Months, ail bad created something of a sensation there, with her brilliant beauty, her vi- vacious manner, and her apparently unlimited wealth, which she scatter- ed ev,ith a ladtsh hands 8 ed to let her go; so she rune about She had many ardent admirers, but tho streets a good deal." not one of them made any; impres- "That is a pity, Carl; she seems slot •npon her until Sir Walter too bright a child to be kept from Leighton appeared upon the scene, getting some knowledge into her swear that Inez Should 1E.) educated —that, eveutually, 'would take her away to a more elvilized place and give her a chance to Income some, thing better than a coarse, unlet- tered •girl. melt as elm must be if doomed to live all her days If she continued te remain in a paining town. The men really meant to live up to his promise, nut lee was 'hamper- ed by Ids environmente—he lacked energy and pin:batty, mid there seemed no poeeibility of his ever being able to redeem it, until he ran &Cress lite cousin, who, simPlY Else calm "blood is thicker then 'way, ter" gave 11181 employment. There was a whoa in -the town. and Carl King sent his ebild 'there ; but the woman whom be hired to keep his house was a lazy slattern, and the little Inez was Badly neglected, end lived a -wretched life, until she was ten years old. One day 'William King, wbile call- ing at the house of Carl on a mat- ter of business. saw the neglected child, and his heart was tou.ched with, deepest pity for her ; for, in spite of her circumstances, she was very beautiful. "How old is ehe. Carl?" he inquir- ed, as he studied the brilliant lit- tle face, with Its great, flashing black eyes and perfect features. "Twelve." returned the man, with a frown of annoyance, that his ricb cousin should see his child tee rag- ged and dirty; for the little Xen- ia, his cousin'e daughter, even though her mother had died about a year previous, was always tastefully dressed, and in the daintiest fabric. "Abe then she is a couple of years older than my own girl. Does she go to scampi V' questioned Mr. King. "Some of the time; the woman in there"—with a backwa.rd. nod of his head toward the lettchen—" don't keep her hale decent, and I'm asham- when. from the hour of their In- troduction to each other, she had managed to chain him to her side, after learning all that there was to know about him—that is, regard- ing his position in England — her private secretary having been in- structed to "look him up"—she had secretly resolved that she would be- come Lady Leighton; that her carealth and bea.uty should become the stepping -stones to secure her a husband and a 'position in Eng- lish high life, She had fondly hoped to achieve her object long ere this, but for some reasten, the youttg baronet, although he was the very Jolliest of companions, and apparently de - head," said his employer. Then, af- ter thinking a moment, he contin- tinned: "I am going to have a gov- erness for Monica, for the next few years; what do you say -to letting Inez come to us and be taught with her?" Carl mewled. Etc, loved his child better than he had ever *loved anything in the world, and he had long been un- easy because he had never taken any steps toward. the fulfilment of his pledge to his wile; but now that the opportunity was offered him, he disliked to part with b,er. • "Governesses cost a heap of moneey—I can't afford it," he mut- tered. sullenly'. "It shall not coat you a dollar, voted to her heart and soul. never Carl." Mr. King observed, In a Iriend- alletwed himeelf to go beyond a cer- ly tope. "My little girl has been tain limit. Several times she had very lonely since her mother died. thought him just on the point of and I would 1 ke, nothing better than to have a companion for her. Inez shall share with her in everything, and be taught just as carefully, and you shall come to see her when- ever you like." "Thank ye, Will; I'll think of formal declaration when she, hav- ing 'recklessly lavished the passion- ate affection of her fiery heart upon him, would have instantly ac- cepted him. But he always managed to evade the climax, and adroitly changed it ear a day or two, and the subject. Still she had contin- you know," the man re- ued to hope that she would win plied, as Ite drew* the girl toward the coveted prize, until te-day,when him and Looked searchingly into the earnest face, for Inez diad listened intently to the convereatIon, and suddenly she experienced a, wild lorig•ing to escape from the wretched life she was leading. The result was that she went to the great, beautiful 'house down in he had etartled and appalled her by telling her of his intended vis- it to Rome, and its object. She was keen enough to under- stand, the moment he began to talk of Florence Richardson, that his recent intentions to her had been merely pastime: that he had simply sought her as a companion the valley to live, and became with whom to enjoy his y, sort of second daughter to Willilarn and,. having found her oongereal, King, the fortunate mine owner, who, --growing richer and richer every day, had made the most of his opportun- boxie fair to become ere long a I.ty for pleasure., The conviction aroased all the de- inf .ancial king. mon in the girl's nature, and she Dere the cbild &bared equally witb had at once resolved that she, too, her air -haired and gentle compane ion, Moni ;would go to Rome, meet this pale- c.a, a dainty, refined little faced beauty, and measure lames evIth her., But who is Inez King ?—whence did she serIng, and how did she come to be the possessor of such vast wealth ? The answer to these questions 18 - velvet another romance and other mysteries, which must be unravel- duct herself accordingly. ed ere 'our story is complete. She woe very quick to learn—very Fifteen years previous the girl observ,ant and, despite ber lament - had been a swarthy, barefooted, able Ignorance on leaving her owi belf-cIad, neglected, yet beautiful home, it wait not long before she child, playing in the streets of a caught up with the carefully taught mining town on the :Mexican bor- Montea. both in her studies and ac der, with other chiddren of tile complishments. %MO Ilk, Meantime, Carl King had seemed Her father, ev,ho was known as to become imbued With an untie - Carl King, 'was o tOarse, uneducated mato/lied energy and ambition. He adventurer, who had drifted from began to take a keen intereet in one mining district to another,un- he work and to manifest a vigil - till chance had sent him into the twee regarding hie employer's inter - employ of his own cousin, Wm. Xing, eats that seemed to them that he who, hrough some streak o1 luck, was deeply grateful to him, and ap- had become the owner of a valuable preelative of ,the great kIndnees he mina. ' had shown him. The two had known each other Gradually, as time went on, and as boys, but they had never been Upon friendly terms, for the par- he continued to rea.ke lilineelf use- iron of Carl had been poor and rut and trustworthy, Mr. King crone thriftless, content to live from to repoeo more and more confidence hand to mouth, and having n0 0111- in him, promoting him from time to bltion to rise in the world, or to time, until at last he had risen to girl—a veritable lily of the valley— who generouely divided ber toys with the less fortunate stranger, and in- cluded her in all her pleasures. She was also clad as richly and become ingly as the child of the rich man, and soon grew to regard herself as a daughter of the house and to con - had been very partial and unjusit in ehowsaing tie much upon hie rela- tive, while, dueler; moat of his life, he, bad Deco grottne. (Iowa beileatli the iron beet Of poverty. And thus. conetaUtly brootilug aver theete imaglaarY lila the old jealousy of boyheett began to develop, un- til a Dorm and weret hatred toole ilsnierSitisett Of blue anti ho began to tlevelop. until a. flerec and eeeret hatred took poesession of KM ati n 110 began te plot the deetruction of his employernd atbe benefactor ot lite eltild with a view to building I a future and 11 fortune fortnez, euelt I ae Oven her ft Whit mother had Lever dreamed a. Allenica and Suez King both 'benalne favorites, each lit ner oVeSi Venial wAY• thoodneational inetitu- tion which tbey had entered. MOulca. watt liked, by those con- geoial to her, for ber invariable sweetness and gentleness, for her anuesiiming ev,ays, her unfailing syin- patliy and readinees tee help,anY" one le trouble. Inez was lionized, by a .certain other set, for her dash and ispielt— beeauee alio was always ready to lead In every form of amueement, a,nd spent =army lavithly to tickle the palates of her devotees. Altbough alwaYe treated 14afl- Lea outward kinditees. neverthe- lees 8h0 inherited her father's trait - ()roue disposition, and secretly deeplsed and hated the fait ,girl, becalms Deane Portune had smiled so auspiciously' upon ber ; ehe was bitterly. Jeadoeis of her brilliant ,0X- peetations, and chafed sorely on ao- ocelot of her Own dependent position, believed thena to be sisters, for Mr. King would not allow it to be known that the girl was dependent upon hie bounty; indeed, one, to see ,the two together, would have supposed tnez -to be the favorite, for elm was ahweYet more ehowily and richly clad than Menial,. for, although their allowance svas the sane, the taste of the latter waS far more simple. Thus ever,y1 due supposed them to be equal heireeses to the large for- tune *which Mr. Xing woad leave, and they, were treated accordingly. In Mr. Kiaig's employ—as a sort of private clerk in his household—there wfaet a young Mexican, whose grand- father had Once been a distinguished hidalgo of Spain ; but repeated mis- fortunes had gradually; reduced the family) to ahnest abject poverty. After wandering from place to place lin the vain hope of bettering their condition, they finally etraYed in- to then:Jiang camp, to whibh we have previously; referred. Here misfor- tune still beset them, and soon' 'the father died. T.hen Mr, King _finallyi stumbled upon the youth and hie mother, and found them in an al-. most starving eonditiom He had taken them both into hie family, where the mother had, af- ter being restored. to health, held the position of housekeeper, and where the son gradually became a. confidential clerk for the man who had been so kind to him., and whom, next to his -mother, he honored and reverenced above everyj other hntn- an being. Augustin° Castaidi was the name of this young man, who, at the time of which we write, was some twentyl-three years of age, and had been an inmate Mr. King's home for some eight (yeara, • ale was a br1lliant fellow, keen and sharp-witted, an innattfe gen- 'Leeman, showing his actod blood in every? feature and act. Although he had been deprived of educational ad- vantages during ills youth, his mo - educate ttheir children. The other family, liewever,waa just the reverse, having a pleasant borne, cultivating the pasition of foreman of the mine, and hie employer, finding him is competent, would oometimee take a, refined eoclety, awl ambitious for trip East, leaving him in eolocharge learning and to ineke a name anl a for n, month or oven elLt weeks. place in the world. Thug seven years oilseed, and Inez COnseauentle Carl always harbor( d and Monica, had reached the age of a feeling of antioney toward his nineteen and eeventeen yearia re - Cousin W111, and they &Med farele r epeetively, and Ur. Xing began to and farther apart, both 'leaving think that they ought to have a home when they reached niall'H es- little polishing off at some good tate and never meeting. again 111 II m1115°1. Carl, in his wanderings, - During Lt. business trip tO LOS An- geles, he visited a, noted Seminary for young ladies, and after eOnVerfs- ikon giw(ni 101.0 .., hminig a while with. the principal he rl 1.'014',`,s; made arrangoente to send his two breeding an I 1&', xing, who, In ep'for ultivated r 0- ite of her p,* " • daughters, no he called them ,to her c eiety, had roi, doutu,r4,ti wiwn I, le, complete their education. was foucd me 'mars mk. tie ir home In the far eouthwees, Where upon hie Cousin and eoright ployment In hie mine. Meantime beta bael married. Wit- ;. 4 Opera. :II. .4. 4i, Giasses I.1 ,, ..., ..;::, .i.:.1 ::it How much the ertioy. •If ment of an evening's . entertainment depends on 0 .;I es the quality of your Opera .i..,..4. Glass i".: ' A pair that ca.ntiot fail to give sataitaction is our P.1.:1 ;mitaiillsi yls.a, merited, no. 2.1.i il • .4 .6.1 Otir stereo reputation or ..,..a. fifty years assures satisfaction :tei p inpurehaing, Send, for cons- ':re, ....Al. plea catalogue. 41 '4 RYRIE 13ROSs A et every! one in tithe institution IMIIMINIMIII•••••11211 Ile had no doubt ehat hie foreman eonNent to the arrangement, they would hove few POd•ti adva.ii• 028 00 he would not be called upon tagee /tie. oup .it 11 war; barn to to defray any of the expenses, and them, a beatitifill BM gill whim at be bad felt eerfectly free to set - they nam d lava,. en 1 in lOtein all Ile the matter without cot/Rutting their hope.; re ntr el. Carl King reel el o nroalel; hatdeom !, girl alio woe lial' ;ven- ial', half A/melee/1, anl these 20it had one ehild—a. daughter, whom they named Inez. The /nether, in smite. or her igeoranee, one low- an- tecedents, WaL; rar inoro aibttoiis than her eneihating, u p i e I T, IV al husbard, td nettle an from. to better tie ir en/Olt:me by eoltes and !soiling nn 1 'wane; by the money t Ite. earn 41 to teLteate her ell'i 1 when ph rheal 1 b. emelt! Oder. But wheh /nee waii five ypairp tge, ,tior N' 121123, On telling Wm what be had done, after hie return, (Owl tacitly con - meted. Ile was glad enough to have hie daughter beeerne learned and ac- eemplielted, latt a feeling of lathe - !tees had totig since begun to rankle in hie heart. tte he realised that elle ,,vite 'bang 'Dried far alseve him, both 0)(411.11v and Intellectually, and that, when her teltattiter r•Setrulti be coin - pried, ,..td she came hulk to five %Atli the luxuried- nfie Isee,tue rico/Koine& and which etemitl heyolld itio,orower to give her. ea vote e ettel oaaa le 2111 1 1212, I/ Then, titi, 1.1t0 oislitet- eke wne f• 11 lh eve le.er Iv.' re tient to his eensin Irritated ad ele• istuthered, Ain made leer bueband preened him, and he fon t tint /o.te mg. A TRUNK ADVERTISER, A dealer in trunks in Chicago credits his lerge local and general trade to the fact that he is the only trunk num in town who adverthies extensively in the daily newspapers. "I think,' he says, that the eustom of travellers alone (due almost exclusively to the newspaper edvertisleg) fully pays the cost of newspaper space," HEI.EN ICE1.10ER'S TMIEPIECE. One May Know the Hour by Simply Feeling the Watch. How Helen Keller could tell the dine of day het& Often been a CatiSe at weeder to people who did not know that elm wall the possessor of a unique, tintepieve. How she came into posseselon of thia watch and later of its counterpart is thus told in tho /aeon Tranecript: Tears ago, In the days of the Empire, tut American Minlater tonna it neeessarY, of course, on occasions to seek an Interview e Numeror, and in this he alweYo Was minerta of the necessity of Making these interviews ea brief posaible and of withdrawing as soon as he could from the blumerer'a presence, malting it men - MI or Isim to keep watch on the passing of time. How to do this was a problem, for to comma one'a watch openly in the proem() 01 the royal personage manifest- ly would be a great breach of etiquette; yet in the inidlence chamber there was no tine:View by `which those received by the Nmperee could he guided In the lewd in the Matter of time. The American reprosentatiie at the Court of France gooa fortune came into possession of a watch which. was extraor- dinary, in ite constrectIon and .whicli made it possible for him to tell nearly the cor- rect time merely by fooling of the watch *while it, was concealer)! in ithi clothing. Tsohleoehveerceauldvadro, th^w4lithita pnroatetbicee, dein. teeted. This proved safer to him than to rely upon hie judgment in the passing of time during an Interview granted by the Emperor, and it is history that ho was par- dPiariatemualtatrolywsourkecessful in consequence in his It is this same historic watch which Helen Keller. now owns, and it came to her as 11, gift from Hon. James Hite, fornierly Conind- General from Switzerland to Washington, D. C. He was a friend of the Ambassador from whom he came into possession of the watch. Mr. Ritz is superintendent of the Volta. Bur- eau for the Diffusion and Distribution of Knowledge Relating to the D'ea.f. He long has beea one et Vies Keller's; best friends. That the gift has been appreciated is shown by the fact that Miss Keller has learned to tell the hot with remarltagle accuracy, or to vilthin t o minutes et the exact time, srholly by the delicacy of her touch. The second watch, which was modeled on the plan of the original, was presented to her by another friend, who had it made expressly for her in Switzerland. SYNDICATE AND PROFESSOR. Prof. Hussey, of California, has found 100 new stare in a year. And, says the Brooklyn Eagle, here's the theatrical syn- dicate trotting all over the 'earth and lias not been ablo to find one. ??I ?? Who Knows Anything. About "E3AchNINIIIIEFZ"? All buyers, sellers and users of EDDY'S IMPERVIOUS SHEATHING PAPER are interested in this question ? ? ? ? ? ? Will every reader of this enquiry 4,WIri0 KNOWS ANYTHING ABOUT HANNICIER" please drop a line on tho subject to THE E B, EDDY COMPANY, - HULL CANADA 'When to "Slip" Flowers. The first of September I cut or break off slips and put them into sand or earth to root for winter growing. The slips cut now will not do muck blooming dur- ing the winter, but will make nice plants for next summer's planting out. From July until frost I slip geraniums and put them into' tin cans in earth com- posed of two-thirds good gardtn soil and one-third sand. They seldom fail to root if not kept too damp. If rooted in pure sand the sand must be kept wet all of the time, but by rooting them in soil they do not have to be transplanted and tiler had done what elle could •for I find theygrow better and stronger. him, grounding him well in certain studies; but, after receiving per- spkiNn. HIS ii,nv mission to make free with Mr. King's library`, 310 had become an anthem,- ou,s reader and student of good lit- erature, and this bad done much for Um. Illonle.a was about pine years of age when he entered the famidel, and from the first lie had been very' fond of the Lovely child, and this affec- tion had pltduatilyi inereaSed un- til, wheal she was about to leave home for the school in Los Angeles, They Removed the Bad Effeets and he suddenly discovered that he 'done- 1 now William Sharam is as wallas ised her withall the paesion and fire . ever again. of his Eiva.nish na,ture. WHILE LIFTING Was in a Bad Way till he Used Dodd' e Kidney Pills. But a sease of chivalry! and of loy- 181urray Herber South, P. E. I., Oct. 10. altyl to the mei who had 'befriended —(Speeial.)-11urt throughstraining Km, mama age to e6ncerta the fact -his hack while lifting, Mr. William Sha - his own bosom; and no one, not oven the object of this fervent af- fection, dreamed of its 'exietence. .W1th Inez he wan upon friendly *ace anore, and when .asked bow he got terms, for elm was alwaYs pleasant Ins health back he unhesitatingly an - and cbatty, and ready foe a g-ood swers, "Dodd's Kidney Pills?' thnewherover slie weld find it; and I . "Having spreined any back with heavy she was not nam-ve coquetting with hfting," Mr. Shaman says in tenting his her benefactor's ' clerk, although !story, "it brought on Urinary and Kid - she would have scorned any serious Eney Trouble. I got so weak that I al - attentions from bite. most fainted, and could scarcely hoId Thus time passed, the mine Owner !up. I was terribly troublecl with hav- continuing to prosper, wbile his ing et get oub of bed so frequently to urinate. "After using many inedieires witb.no good results, I tried Dodd's Xidney I have used ten boxes in all, and now I can sleep without being disturbed, and my old trouble has vanished." Doeld's Kidney Pins cure the Kidneys. Cured. Kidneys cures numerous diseases, One morning, some terce years and including RhemnatiSin, Dropsy, and Bright's Disease. ram, general storekeeper here, got so 'weak that be could scarcely hold up. To -day he is enjoying the best of health tru.stod foreman and eousm never ceased to plot against him, laying trap after trap for his unwary feet, until 'finally, one fatal atter, the un- suapicious man -walked straight into one, and his fate was guile& CHAPTIER XV. a half having linseed since Monica and Inez Mitered the school at Los Angeles, August, as he was fam- iliarly; called, drove Mr. King to the station to take a train for another, • town. "I shall be back at noon, august, and go directly, to the mine, and you can porno for me there as us- ual," saki that gentleman, as theY, drew near the station. The young man often drove hio employer to alai from the mine, ox!. wherever be -vviolied to go, reedy- irtg his instructions for the day and treating over important matters dur- ing these drives, awl thus preclud- ing the possibility cf. being over- heard by any one, for often their eonferences were of a momentous eliaract,er. . . "Si, senor," August replied, and, touching his hat respectfully to hie oompamon as he leaped from the ear. /Inge jest In time to catch his train. aalon he wheeled bis spirited homes arteutel and returned to the marielon and ids work. At the usual hour, late in the after- noon, lie drove to the mine, hitching his horses before the °trine, whieh Was InCated only a tow rode train the entrance to the tunnels,. Entering the office, he inquired of the clerk where Mr. Ring could be found, 'Me man said Ito did not know—he had been In and out of the office flWeral times during the afterluxm, altbough 11 woe an hour or more olive be last saw him. Peeling strangely resale/et, Atignst wont Outeitio end walked, baek and forth Upon the rude plazza for sea. oral nuott tan. T'se days were getting ehert, and it Wteu fast growing dark.; netlike, gathering el nuts led:cat/A vain, and Pe telt necteele to get home before 11 eliouid be too dark to see the Mad. TiP looked :t lt,ss Veci.teb. It wee five minutes of Aix, and premently be HAN • to men ellietsr,e feent the mine, their • foremen, Curl letter, at their lietul. "Have 30o8 teem 31r. Ring "2.4•Aliguet inquired of bine. ('l'o be eontinned.) • Giving Advice to Farmers. (Sylvan Grove, Kan., News.) Buy a new binder and use it it week; then let 11 tanr1 oUt isitn e;eaorre 141eg the hogs can root under it, the calves jump on the floor, the billy goat chew the canvae ram idu Toetteiliepketre rb000lets oannctial:eits;linLaisttl:r3 the paint. 'rake Out a few unneoessary bolts to fix the cultivator in the spring and another for the plough in the fall; let tho lT1tatdsiwitie tin hl:td it,o tOuooandwheel a, while the hornets build nests in the twine box, and sparrows breed in the drive wheel, Let the bearlmtg and the t aol or line, then in a yeaor WO go buy a hew binder like aman.- That's the way it's done. you can't get them to do it • One Cause of Divorce. (Life.) "Most divorces are caused by a very common mistake. "What is it?" "Many a man in love only with a dim- ple or a curl makes the mistake of mar- rying the whole gir,. • Use Lever's Dry Soap (a powder) to wash woolens and tlannels„—you'll like it. 32 USEFUL HINTS. Leave a few of tile husks on. your sweet corn for boiling, and take it to the table with them on. It win Keep warm longer, and you will find it much sweeter. The skins of new potatoes can be re- moved more quickly with a stiff vege- table brush than by scraping. . Water in which potatoes have been boiled is very effective in keeping silver bright. It eau be bottled for use, and if required to be 'kept for a long time a tenth part of methylated spirits will de this. In cooking gooseberries a piece of bak- ing soda the size of a pea, mad with a quart of the tart fruit, will materially reduce the amount of sugar required to sweeten. Unsanitary Laundries. A little Sunlight Soap will clean cut glass and other articles until they shine and sparkle, Sunlight Soap will wash other things than clothes, AB A Rind -Hearted Lover, Sidney Fewler, of Fairfax, In., was to have been married to 4 rinaliville woman an Sunday, says the Atchison Glob; but a few aninutee before the,eeremony was to be performed he announced that Ito twiioatituldfowritlitsdr1= and took A Burlington e. Fowler is a -widower and thewoman is a widow. They had been Acquaintances many years. The wedding date was set for Senator. ' The preacher was present, the guests were there and the wedding dinner was set. But it is said that' the bride-to-be'e chil- dren cried a good deal ,and Fowler said if they were going to feel ao beelly about their another getting marled Ile would withdraw, and he did. • Dear Sirs,—This is to certify that I bave been troubled with a lame back for fifteen years. I have ,used three bottles of your MINARD'S LINIMENT, aod am com- pletely cured. It gives m0. great pleasure to nom - mend. it, and you are at liberty to use this in any way -to further the use of your valuable mediciaa • Two Rivers, ROBERT ROSS. The Knockerie (Chicago Chronicle,) Rear the knockers how they knock, Always knock, What a lot of trouble they can 'make by the knock„ How they hammer, hammer, Immune): In the day and in the night, They are always, ever knocking, Always pounding, always shocking s With a devilith delight; Keeping time, time, tune, With a boiler maker's rhyme .. :- As they bammer, and they hammer and they knock, And they knock. On the mails you:can hear them as they shock AS they shock, shock:, shock, As they shock, shock, shock, With the 'mocking of the hammers on the block.' ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT Removes all hard, soft or calloused lumps and ;blemishes from horses, blood spa -sin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, eprains; cures sore and awoolen throat, coughs, etc. Save se/ by the use of one set- tle. Waranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. EFFECT OF ADVERTISING ., A telephooe company which had 1.1,- 000 stations had made but little in- crease in two years. Then it began to advertise in the newspapers. Three years later its stations numbered more than 70,000. "Advh#ising," said the manager, "achieved what house-to-houee canvassing could not." IWhen the little folks take colds and coughs, don't neglect them and let them strain the tender. membranes of their lungs, Give them iloh9s' Con5uTach ,;02 tion CureThe Liing Tonic It will cure them quickly and strengthen their lungs. It is pleasant to take, Prices, 25c., 501., and $1.00. 306 It is a very gruesome report evhich the Dattereca medical officer of health pre. soots as to theonoral and sanitary con- ditions of laundries, says the London Graphic. The rate of mortality is high, consumption anclorheumatism are preva- leut diseases, and the 'workers are ad- dicted, .beyond their fellow creatures, to alcoholic excess. Minard's Liniment for sale everywhert: (New York Weekly.) "Banzai" as a Substitute for "Hurrah." iSSUE. NO. 43 1904. WilnnOW'BI‘t1OthIng Syrup aticuld always, be used Mr Children lecithin* 15 soothe the ehild, Hottensthounins,cures win colic and, is the heat remedy for InarrhouS, ottown rnoviawritIs Float TIM ae to four hundred acres caeh, for sole; In all parts Ot Canada; eeete Are eataleette. • Intercolouial 'Malty Co...Litnited, London. Exceptional eix per cent . tieeuritY. investigation f:olicited. TeetoNTo. In shouting "Hurrah" we are (in these days unconsciously) repeating the victori- ous cry of the Cossack Tartars in pursuit of their enemieS—a cognate word to the "Mare" of our Indian cavalry as they eneourege each other to strike. Both words simply mean "Kill!" I suggest that we now adopt for this purpose the' popular an(1- victerious cry, of 'Daman' which means simply 'success' or "good fortune." Not only will this he a com- pliment to our Japanese allies, but it will supply a more suitable cry for civil occasions, Surely it would be better to greet, say, a Lord Mayor, or royalty,, or Mr. Chamber- laim with ."Balszali" then With a Cossaok howl for theit blood. Girl (jokingly)—I'd like a place where rn have everything I want, nothing to do and. no one to boss me." What He Got Outi of It. Clerk—This, miss, is no employment He never took a day of rest, office, not a matrimonial agency. He couldn't &ford it; ge never had his trousers pressed, Strong words by a New York Specialist.—"After -years of testing and comparisen, I have no hesitation in say- ing that Dr. A.gnew's Cure for the Heart Is the quickest, safest and surest known to medical science. I use 'It in my own -practice. It relieves the most acute .forms of heart ailment inside of thirty minutes and never falls." -35 He couldn't afford It; He never went away, earo free, 'ro visit distant lands, to see Uow fair a place this world. !night be, Ile couldn't Ilford it. ne never went to 50 a play, He couldn't afford it; His Jove for art be put away, Ho couldn't afford it. He died and left his helve a lot, But no tall shaft preciairos the spot In which he Iles—his children thought They couldn't agora it. Hard to Make Them Do It. (Brooklin Life.) Minard's Liniment Cures Burns, etc. First bearding-liOUSe mistress —I've seen It figured out that people` can live on 12 dents a day. Second boarding-bouso =lath:was—Ali But Hens Lay All Year Round when you season thefood with Myers' Royal PoultsySVitCcw just think what it means to have the hens laying regularly all whiter —when eggs bring their best prices. That' o what Myers* Royal Poultry Spice does fer the chickens. Its ric11 131 nitrogertotts inetter—supplie.s all the constituents that composethe egg atid gives more lastitig it/ten/al heat. It makes hens lay—and insures fertile eggs for aetting. It's 'wonderful for making young poll to early layers—for fattening chicken; duckti'' and turkeys—and frir raising plump, strong* _ 'rigorous poultry. If you want to make money out of your "ehleken yard " ftda Myers"' Royal Poultry Spice. It's not a food—hut a relish. MYERS ROYAL SPICE CO, Nagai% 1i11a,Oat. sfid MY. Bold twerywhera For Evening. Net rivals lace. Palliates remain. Applique is .good. Needlework prevaile. Chenille' is not tieglected: Pale blue is numb liked. Apricot is 3 favored color. moussano is one thii leadbrs, Pale biscuit tints are almost white. There are embroidered taffeta, motifs. Some affeet a touch of Anterican Beauty. Marabout is a feature both in hate ited shoulder evraps. Copper and gola spabgles appear on a einnamon ground. One spangled net robe is all in shades of periwinkle blue. Cloth thews are its faded pink, cinea- mon, strawberry and reseda. Most evening ;trowel are MASAO! Of shirrieg, tucking, plaiting and dainty needlework. Minard's Liniment Relieves Neurilzia. NOVELTY MANUFACTURING CO. Agents wanted for our opecialties. Com- plete outfit door not exceed. $2,00. All good. sellers. Write 1137 Wag street east, Toronto. Hamilton- Toronto - Montreal Line - Ste:mars leave liamthea at 3. past„ To, ronto 7.30 p.m, TUesdaye, Thuridaye aud tAatertlays. Fall Excursion framilton to Idontrearl, Biagio $7,00, re. turn Toronto to Montreal, single $0.50, return $11,00. Low rates b,aturoon porta. Further information apply to It. 4 0, agmes, or write to H. .FOSTElt ORAPPED, Weetern Passenger Agent, Toronto Bliss Beyond Compare. Fond 'Mother —You will be IS years old to -morrow, Willie, and T. want to give you a real birthday treat. Tell me what you would like better than anything elect 1,Villie (After thinking earnestly for five mintitte)--Bring me t whole box of almeolate Means, mother, and ask Tommy Smith to corns in mid watch war el.ht m. Too Much Red Tape. The Vienna, newspapers tell the story of n fire whieh broke out at Ilermants- Tenth, an Austrian village near the Ba- tAionBead"nrolatn mfiol.reebriflacadn° which hn fwraonstisetra. three iniles away, hastened to the rescue, but the Austriau Custom House author - Ries refused to allow the fire engines to pass the frontier before the usual tax on inaported Thaehinery MO paid. The Bavarian firemen naturally tuned back and halt the villiage was burned down before the umeest Austrian brigade was on the scene. CATARRH CANNOT BF CURED with LooAa APPLICATIONS, as thy' cannot reach the seat of the disease, Catarrh is it blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you must take Internal remedies, Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and runs directly on the bleed and mucous sur- faces. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years and is a regular prescription. It „is corn- posea of the beet tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on Ole mucous surfaces. The perfect combin- ation ot the two ingredients is what produces soca wonderful results in curing Catarrh. Send for testimonials, freo. oalkde 5'. J. CHENEY & Coe Prom, Toledo, 0, by glg"tisnatEllyilPrilelels7f5oci constipation. A Valnable Engraving. Messrs. Christie, London auctioneers, recently received what is technically des- cribed as a "first state with untrimmed margins" of J. R. Smith's engraving of Reyoold's portrait of Lady Catherme Pelham Clinton."' It haa been folded and creased in all directions, and was receiv- ed through the mail with an illiterate note, which stamps far its return if vet found 'worth selling, the owner evident- ly thinking its value not more than a few ;shillings. It was auctioned off for nearly $2,800. ' Kidney Cry. —Pain in the back is the cry of the kidneys for help, To neglect the call is to deliver the body over to a disease cruel, ruthless and finally life destroying. South American Kidney Cure has power akin to miraculoue in helping the needy kidneys out- of the mire of disease. It relieves .in six hours. -33 The " Here at Home. (Montreal HeradL) . Under the old. , . the Montreal Steel Works employee sixty hands. Under the now ' it employs 40 hands. From a couple of three-storey build- ings the concern has grown till it now occupies two city blocks. The sales of the Ames -Holden Shoe* Company are now etvice what they *were . . „ • 1143 lticOreatly Shoe Company. has built, in Montreal, sieee the ee-- came into force, the largest Shoe foe. tory in Canada. Think it over. 1t, 2.I'b1.s 1 $ • . • Miitard'S Liniment Cures Dandruff. Enviable. (Town Topics.)• Mrs. Ilenpeck—Her husband simply ..wan't listen to her. Henpick—How the deuce does the lucky fel- low manage it? Rest for VIcktiaer— Plentostixo for She Children it is not always that pleasure Mid pro - 13.1 can be combined. Tile NOW Cdinesturss 'Washer afforde the childre,1 an opportunity of rendering effective help. -and at the same time delight theinaelves. 12a11 -bearings and !strong spiral springs reduce to a minimum all the work usually necessary. Viva to she tninutee does a tub-ftil. If your hardware dealer does not carry theM,Vrite us for booklet. Sold by most dealers at Asa TUE DOWSWELL WF! CO. 1313., HAMILIGII, OAR. f.51. - Farm Forestry Farmer's Staridpoint Management of the woodlot--e tinting trcea to insure repro. duetion—plauting treeo to regtt- late supply of water—planting to bind the soil'ridge planting-, etc, This is onlyone of the malty good thini gs n Farming World Uirory issue t011initin &tens of articles by "men who know" on every feature of' farm work. It's the cheapest and best paper for tie farmer, his wife and •ehildren, in Canada. 'TWO Yeatte tOtk 401•00 Less than le, it week. Send Along e.our dollar and shirt whit the next issne. Write for a free eample copy. Address-• f WWI WM, , err. 1,