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The Signal, 1894-3-8, Page 2THP SIGNAL: •U1' i. . , l►'T. I II i I:'I) 1', MARCH 8. 1894. 41M the tab'et. which is rereteaeed by de- ps.dasts to the fifth generation. To be.scoeeelul w mtwto.•ry work u.e ttst be oareft 1 to treat wtth a degree of respect and not to revile the chanted beliefs which have catered tuto the fibre of these people through , risks' ermermtlone. Thiuk of tie roe ersnce t het you bear to the memory ot your dead father, and the t'hinamen's, heart Le just as tender to hie father'• mem- ory as u yours, because t.od has mad. bum. It had been bis custom to tell the Chinese, psreenally end by hie atud:uts to honor thy father and thy mother, end he toil hoard aced Chicle e respond, " That us heavenly truth. Christ was ale intro duoed to the Chinese as • mediator, and they oa..ght the idea yuick•Iy, fax in China no hulloes" cru be trensacte.1 and n., mar rl ge contract can be mni.Jc without • e e It •tor% file fact th.it 1 have this tablet, which is the aroyls iii et revered by s l'hio•mar, and the speaker. testifies (het his heart nes leen te•cbed by the grave of God through the toomm retcrirt to, for mores could nut have bought it, mea -h .. the Cloacae tova gold, an I tbvy do do gold turd as much as the people to Cana.1r do. Sante peop:e talked of the eacntioe iu• volved i `going to the dark plaxe of the earth to npfsaci the usaeanheWe rtJae. art ('brut, but there was aro s.a•titice involved et all. It was a glorious privilege to hr able to obey the cornet•. 1 of 1;,..1 and to do His work to accoglauce with Hu word: - The speaker had begun his work in For mom at Tamsut some twenty-two eters age, and had to overcome Many obstacles before he hal b:. it able to mike mu,•httn• pregame up -ea the people Time and •gain attempts had (.can made upon his hie, modes ofteu did the Lord throw his shelter eroun.l end about hon lu teaching his students a' the college In Formosa he did not folio* the regular curncuiuro of the Weettru schools of learteug, but endeavored to ground the etudeutt on the knowledge of t'hrat cud Uun crucified. He would not spend live minutes, oil tnethemati.. and what waa styled the higher eduuitiou until that end war attaio-d. t:„ti be merciful :o the paalirwant of rehio.. at• flirt muuhl put Confucius ride by si e eats Josue. They might put.Socr•tes or Plato with 1 wfue:w as • teach• r end expounder, but Christ was the Master and I: deenter and beyocd all temparteoo. There was a travelling vac- cinator Io For.osi who went from place to place and always did his .bei: to retard the nus.tunarerirwk. It, al•ays spoke of the speaker as " that foreign devil," and W .)'reed the people to beware -of their walls lest the miwtonary would poison them. The preacbrl• had tried to meet thus mat but C001.1001 succee,i ie do.ag so; and at last by got his students to attend the church and asked the Lord to change the Win s heart. Shortly after that he received (se invit tion to the vaooinetors horns, and moa rgjnested to bring leit stult•ats with him, and when he weut there he was re- ceived with open arms by the mss, and reek - e.t Niiog- bymas and explain --the plea rd salvation. Tree new wee. by the power of God, thoroughly couverted, and proved a most salon. Cnristiaa until the day at hat death. During his resi.lemos in Forman the speaker Atka extracted) oder 41.00) teeth, and by that method had tense in contac: with a large number of the rnb.bitaots. At times, however, he war not wed received, atdson:cu.nte there is no welcome for the fore.gner-iu China; tout as et 1',atiad• and the United states there is no piece for the " Heathen Chine*" Mat thus taint is the Bard's and the fullness thereof, and a bet- ter feeling end soon exist both im.l'b:sa and America. The trouble heti-neo Franc.• and thins sal tate blockade of Formosa by the French fleet hvl out back the work of Clittsttantnoi the island to s great ex• taut, and the speaker graphically flee:nb- ed the horror. of war. and the vomit.. pleat persecution of the Christians by the infu- riated followers of Conluciue. When the trouble started he had been asked by the captain of a British vessel to leave the u i.t.t and sill away, 'but he believed bo life's work was in Formals' and he refused t0 leave it. Since that tome the injury to the mune of Christ and the d.lnage to the churches had been made good, by the ble Being of Gad. There are now sixty churches on the island with 1,800 communi- cants, and there are a lartte number of stu- dents in the colleges preparing for the pros- ecution of Chriauan work. 1 here were no students in the colleges who were not thor • ougbly converted or who were ashamed of the work. ,' A.hamed of .(sus," cried the misaiooary, and his face ht up and hie eyes Hashed, '• i am not ashamed to own His name and to defend His cause." In coo elusion he said this was hie third visit to Canada : the probability was that it would be his last, as he never expected to return, but he hoped that every one within the sound of his voice would ever acknowledge the blessed Lord, and always stand up for Jesus. The service, which was of • rather un- eaten! character, was brought to • close by the singing of a suitable anthem by choir leader Reicher, the proclaiming of the church announcements for the week by the pastor. Rey. J. A. Anderson : the singing morin, by realest of the mtaatooary, "AII Heil the Power of Jesuit Name," by the choir and congregation : and the benediction by Rev. 1►r Mackay, of Forma's. • is the altermone Rev. Dr. Mackay gave • very euit.ble, eloquent and i.strmctive ed drett• to the t•tabbsth School, and left at 3 o'clock to occupy a pulpit at Clinton in the evening. t•w•s asps wawaliseD. Everyone meet have observed what are wemalIy esprit the whiskers no a cat's upper lip. The use of these in a state of nature k very important: They are organs of touch. They are ►hatted to • bed of close glands nosier the skin : and each of three long and stiff hairs is connected with the nerves et the hp. The slightest contact of these whiskers with env surrounding object se thus Snit most distinctly by the animal. al. thoegb the heirs are themselves insensible. TM/ stand out on each ode to the lion es well as in the common cat ; so that from point to point they are equal to the width of the ao,mal'e body if we imagine, there- fore, • lion stealing through a cover of wood in an imperfect light, we eh.11 at once see the ass of thew long hairs They indicate to bin, through the r.ic•.t feeling, any oh. steak which may present itself to the pus• sags of h.. holy ; they prevent the rustle et 'bon ,the and leatee•which would give warn- ing to illi prey it he were to attempt to pew through tan claw • bush . and thee, in e•nn Janette.. with the soft realties. of his feet., and Me for npnn which he treed. the re traettk claws never crating in oostact with the gr°"n'11, 1 hey 'testae him to move tel grams his victim with • medieval gr .ter span than that of the snake, til.. `lido. ring the gym's, and is not perceived till it r smiled round its prey. While so pheinetisa or pharmacist - _ Lu" entIy wrrrm.s • ewe, the .1 (' A MRS. GEORGE W. WILDS. ree.Itarute. era weem.a like assets lis. lis ■ d 1. •.4i,*.s. la all that I... hero written of the Isebe (:surge W. Childs, of hie charities, hie pbil- •athroptee, .ad of the depth and breadth of kis great lee ot all ntnaktud, there bas bees but the P heed irettis. of Mrs. Chihli, and the place else occupied to the life of her ttng`uahed husband, remarks • writer i New 1 ork Mail and Express. Philadelphians, as • rule, know little .b rut her They can tell you til• was Forma (butter Patterson before marriage, and the daughter of the put.( in whose establishment her busbaud his early start in life. Iteyuad this, o0 *else' fee p te..esaaoy u.fr.rmauo. •1 the el Stow lite of the 1 nib.'. inanition , a 1 perwuality of its rni.tres.. t:vmsa Bouvier ('odds is • slender 1 won.an, smell featured, dusk compleuu and ef.oea.e•heel, , wet v,ustetp ••t T'iirt finds expression in the airmail soft tulle with which she regards the mos denoteirithuc denote of tl e n1r1 a;ement o' h household .tTatrs. Although proviJsd wit • competent .1.11 of servants, Niro l'bil. inmate up to a general personal supervisi et everything. tine of her marked 'metal' 1. • moat intense •s-eriton to dust, • much of her tun. u spent while •t home emote ra.pectruw of furniture and heaving to dec,over it possible the slightest spec left by the maid after the regular morniu Janisg. - Mrs ( hills has never been what might be called • so, et/ woman. She emj..y• the friendship of the moat distiuguubed families of I'ht1•de!pl1a, 1'. Cada •Iledem, • h Inc,,,i, the i Imola, the Kiddies, the Idoses garten• and others of equal social duan thin, but tashieuakle !unctuous at her tow .r country house aro practtwlly unknown It war el her canon" t.. lunch two or tier times • week with these intimate friends in these tints she was almost always a •Pio 1.1 to TNAi SAT IN SLIPPER. Amhl Ilse 1'0,461.1.41 ne uuw, I ebelf hear., 1N Irola.**aa.l t rtnk.I' • Ir'Wilda., helot Wilda. %1p re foil rr."..-s t..11 n 01..1 a iserts hest Mare. Fromi a near illy p1)t-+ and tel.., •• snit a .ra.; Jswt 16rne .here the br4.6 sled 11,, , mg. and tee apiary Haus deers (sou. Ilse oilers ..f Venue who skis). (Mod (illy sly might ight Ante uwue.l it as dm J (her.. a sea j The lip .0 r 11n) n 1.11.- Nat 141 -1... peeps, Milani Int .1naute+hill I warty) .0 &A.wt 18 wafer 1liadeeella, wish1 tipsy as no Part. 1„ 1•.•s of a Inde with a week4st , t.. A.aul it. 410444111) 1141, left as the price .•f., Wirt% lir. tell you I he truth, thiesllth it it.., N rnlnld For Puy Ali) 11111111111.r .1 I.K. . r regret. \red .•e '114 iter sneers n4 w hie). 1 !01 told. ,rr ru11uother N. peed oR tier Ilr.t minuet. 11 4111.• Kip liens a Fife, In very (she her usher m•tfe ly • do the ittle ned, at ci- ert b 1s 00 ar- oJ in • k g M I MS: A SKETCH. The orchestra bronght the overture to a (lose with a blare and tang that made the walls ....•h, and the footlights .lance. tear the patrons of the Alhambra Theatre liked plenty rel -go- itt their mimic, as in everything connected with the enter •tainmeut for which then paid twenty five cents per heart As the• mastic teemed the g*tiay Curtain r•dltil no and revealed a seat stage scene -- brilliant with papier mach• and tinsel and the litany talk,• believes of the Ilit,llle• world. There we. a Crowd,,( Lode••, ant the Mize.] /00..111 Maw. gave go..1 tapp„rtnnity for the +tidy °f types. Hit among the hundreds were just two, of whom 1 want t.. tell yen Mime was firat violin in the . 1han,bra e •orchestra. There was a traliti,eltothe • effect that his came had once been • Mimes). but's•.•anse lime one had Baia et' that he was • tl tLiw+.•y-(...kin name hal forthwith be. n cuntraat'teelse N11111, '.'•M two hundred years old. The urchins earliest recollections erre tit til.. e-r•nvI.rl thoronglifier•s alwnt ('ark If,.w of Ins terror of •the big t1..lic.•tuan c luau of told sad hnng.•r. Alis father wag a thief -his mother us bail. His Littler, (oilier .lire] mem the gallows. awhile his mater al grandfather bad taken Isp hi. permanent r•sidt•n,e at Sing Sing. 1 have not trt.nbled to trace his genealogical tree further, but utak*. let doubt I would !hurl that for two hon lr.vl sears the condition+ of hrrv]it. temwmtd by Iver niece, Miss Peterson, herd with 4r. sal Airs 1'11dd. from chi h, 01 up to the time of her marnege Robert H. \Ic('arter. Mrs. 1 ed.'s oldest fiiende -were til iat g stem del the late lien. Rotert fetter eon, Ilse old \lextatu war Leto .She prntr•-. illy Knotted there more thin anywhere else a Phiredeiphie. 'Of the 1'atlei bon girl. NIr•. Child* w.a very fond, one .t them esi.•'cial- 1y, wbo.tteraer.is became Mrs. dott-n else Her cener&tat:on at there ui .* ..+! sm' b .t!. st Iwmeand sieved. was i o ,road Itrgely to a d.acu.siu. of 11r. t• into is late t.enefaetions. These were .so oumerou., sailed. and often broughf out such recut 'y pat bet ie stories _of erratum that t !ormetl a fruitful theme day after day a week after week. Mrs. Child. rattle-appearedP with her h:ubend. They :beatre had aro • tr'actrons for her. (Ince or twice a year perhaps, elle would consent to see Eder Both or some comity disuagnisheJmatat but for tilt ord.nary dramatic attracti she had no inclination. t kca•iooally dartthe opera erasion she would occupy a b. with Ser. Child*, ant on these o0c.azune t .miweeneof her apparel was in sit marke.l tr./street with the bnll.ot coetutn about her as t) excite the very attentio she sought t, avoid. The daughter of til late Ikon Stanley hes lived with theta:1de Ca. a) years. BelemAli•• Peterson's ma stage, which took place about tis a years ay the gree were continually together. M saanley to now the constant c�,mpanion o Nati The widow of the dem 1 pitilaatbropi, ame to pommies, prohahly by cor atant a .d s,. concentrate environment Lad heed steal w to' tar- encentrate and culminate iu poor littlehayad Mims every witkr.l and wretched trait. to which humanity is athje ct. Mint, had not been long in this world in 446 nuitil h - tenet asesit)tilatetivwfa tlfa1T tie knowledge of stool and evil w1101 1115 Progenitors had leen iudnetrienely m• cumulating fur him through so n(auy .iieueratiums; and it does not require much perspicacity to Kure. in which branch of tide knowledge he itaa the greater inheritance. Now gun may think from this that Mime was pretty incl- tint he was not. because he twee e: sed one wring grace. 1 eke dais. while he wasvet u ren• ',Mall lad. Mims heard a band playing in. the street. Possibly he had heard wtsek• before, lit mule. with the outer o, dery it had never r•ach..l and tnm•hed that micro organism which we. term «•nl. Ire )lima followed the band a long way- s ispl3roatlwarpast the t'ity Hall and in- • to one of the gram' eremites which he u.ciation, many of ler liusband•s traits an characteristics. Her servants have ber with ber for a generation. Such • thing dimities! is absolutely unknown. From it' scullery maid to the butler every -.eryan was sure of a liberal present at t hristenaa, cud the family physician's services were al ways reedy in case of illness, Mr.. Chills carried out the same generous policy in her home as her kashmir; lid in the office of the 1'ubac Ledger. It a servant became incapacitated by illness or injury he or she was pensioned off for life, and not tofre. plently provided with a little home. If marriage, instead of illness and it wasn't very often --Mrs. Childs took pleasure in giving the girl a substantial wedding pres- ent to start in life with. and oo such °cc a- tom Mr. chills generally stepped in him self and added something handsome The same rule of kindness and consideration ex- tended from the house to tb. stable. It was an invariable rule of Mrs. ('bilda that her carriage horses ebould never be out of their stalk after dark. If • conveyance was needed in the evening, it was hired from the nearest liveryman. Neither Mr. nor Mrs. 1'hil�s accepted any toy-rtauons to dowers. It was found necessary to make this rule nearly 15 years ago, and ,t was at Mrs. Childs' .uig s i n she f0uod the levitation' increasing so rapidly that to accept even a third of them would take her away from home every night in the week and every week in the year This did not sot* her ideas at all, and the result was that all calk to dinner par- ies were thereafter declined without any exception. Her e•eotnge have always been spent at home. In the summer the Phila- delphia mansion at Twenty eeond and Walnut streets ham been closed and the country horse at Wootton opened. Mrs, 1'hills spent moist of her time in that ohartn- ing place tiIl. ('h11ds is • member of .t .lame. Protestant F:piecopal Clutch, of which her deceased husband was a vestryman. Any thing like ostentaticuu display has always been distasteful to her, and it has been her custom for many years to reach chur_h early. enter the pew quietly, and at, the oat - chianti of the vertices spend eery little time to social exchanges. It was to no sense any desire to be exclusive that prompted bre. ('hills to avoid people : on the contrary it has always been • matter of regret with her that her nature waa so retiring. It is now said in 1'hilasielphia by persons who are sloes t0 Mrs. ('hili. and the Dextral family is • social way that the splendid white marble manioc a1 the deceased millionaire will very shortly be sold to John R i)ex- tee!, the eldest .on of the late A. .1. Iter t -e1, as dirt Childs has said Chit she cannot endure the idea of living then to the future, and will probably make \1'oottoe her nyder emideses. R► wnsalanfIgeento r,.. syrup. 1►c. Wooed'. Norway Pias Syr.p core. reecho, colds, mit ham, bronehitia, hearse nese. creep, and .11 disarms of the ehmat and lung.. Priem 25e. and 5O . , .t all drail• gist. ] only kuew as "rep t°evn.The band • tnani sit fast and peer Mim-'s little feet grew very tired, until they would carry • Mtn no farther. Than he '.it down up oil the curbing and cried. But he rose fermi the curb with the veils of • ambition firmly implanted within him He woniti 1N• a musician Heneete.rtit Mini. wed' papers and blacked boots more indtlstr)nnsh- than ever. and hoarded his pennies with all the gree,( of a miser When ile finally counted thew and found there were ••nnngh to lin\• a fife. it was the eonauul oration of the first %tett in his .career. From that on he emended 1y regular stages. the Bret of Which was hanging *bout a Bowery concert hall tuft' cnitt sating the acquaintance mf the tit siciaut there and'tlt*" last of which wail first violin at the Alhambra When the orertnre wall over and the ••nrtain lifted, Minis leaned back in his chair, /domel his ere., and kept only wide awake enongh to know when aoy illi.,ical acevtmp anime•nt was needed. I1ht he was not permitted to rest long in peace. There wax a roar from the audience, half of applause and half of derision, and he opened his Py.a to look *limit for the canoe. I hi the stage was a young chantrrnse giving it seri° comic sung with inter lude...f dance 'dew; and'graceful postur- ing tl new singer, he saw at once. And, tm catch the audience. she was singing to and making eyes at .t,me °ne in the orchestra. and that mime one wars - -Mims' Now this had never happened before. There were plenty of comely fellows in the on-heestrs. The young Ivan who played the has, viol was of a Byronic. cast of feMit,., and the cornet plover was am round and rosy aa a big red apple. and these were the ones at whom the sylphs t,1 the stage namely made pretty months That she ehonld hare selected him, with his old and weazene' fere, to draw all eye•% toward, male him boil with wrath. As he could deo nothing lint sit quietly and hear it. he began to tta.ly the singer And thia ie what he saw A young girl not yet beyond her teens lie was toile nrr of that, in spite of the make rep" of the stage. winch the f,e.t lights and her urarn.•se t° them and to him brought out .r. hi'e)nely A girl with a fresh, bright int•.•, yet un marred by the hard life of the theatre The fame of ' Nonie," the new singer at the .ilhambra, ran quickly through the town, and the theatre wan (-roseate] nightly And every night she sang at Minis, until it came to he the feature of her performance and looked for by the regular habitues as the piece de resin tante of the entertainment. vin ase old Mimt�' said one Clem my word, he Noshes like a • les( tiny when Nonie (-onset' at him Moat he a new sensation to the old chap. to have a girl leek at him twice. (Inc, i.,roagh to were most e)f 'ell int.) a fig "Well, i would be willing to wear his face for a night to wet as many smiles *p he deem But herr gond fora try for .tn_, at least With that. the young fellow turned to Hower melba ani selected a clump of the finest rows• At the end of Nnniel art. he eton.l well op and threw them straight to her feet Nottie bowed. pick tel thein np and ot)nrtemod again laugh- ing and showing her white teeth the whAe Mims, scowling • little looked about te see who hada thrown the fine ere When he saw, the growl grew *ask viable did •foaaotb.r erg les er osohestrs played. misread. The moo who tris to t.4• advantage of the igneraaos of mother occasionally gnu • Relaid for hie Oliver. A Roston man. nem ire lengks4, seeing • Lahore, slogging flints e at of ebalk. pompously asked kiln if he thought they grew. ")tore," was the reply, "1 hoose they de," r-. "Thee pet some gilt se • table, and .se a. to tis pmeity, strength, and how ',inch it grow• i• • year... p*fess eta Aret's sarsaparilla. it "And you, lir," said the laborer. Mord/�aiM admitted at the tato s tie'epi 11 LALs i CClisap. 11(93. gr t•M•• and see how meek it Rrnw' i' . gels.-larpm►'. Mwaaxtn., asst shiegls, u Kidd'., Siek isadalike asalisowM r theakepleet wsa b tsok.ltallay's Litter leaglimA He went to the stage-dior anti w frt. Newt. 14) tome oat. '('here w group of turn admit, o.ottag f thaws At, tig•le tilt, favorite ..r per invite her to a little simper In It neer by cosy retreat au•1 among t Mitiss slaw the one who lied thrown Hower.. As Sonia came out, thio hurried forward anti spoke to her girl hesitated, stopped anal lists their with a slow anti half outer negative went on peat him to the s car The fellow male an if to follow. looking about. h.• save Mims' eves H upon hint Beneath the street li they glittered like beads of fine retained uuc.uuy from the setting of •IU••e•r. a face. The man eh ht- +Alen tete stn! welkc•1 away tu other direction. The next eight, while Nome wee s ing, a heavy Hower parr., was sent de to the (date -an tuitional tinny at .1111aiebta. where (nutters of that war.• neat lunch in'dlgt,l In. It PO $Mil.'•1 that it cave down where M was, and he had t•, ttelp lift it over stage rail. A. he did net, he mew a hying among the il•.wen.. ant] wi .!rater..,• fillip he manage.( to titre oat net that it fell beneath his .hair. knew instiue'tively who Awl rent it. to confirm his suspicion, he tunnel booked about the house. As Ile It:ill thought, the +ante t wits again standing to catch Non glance ef.e•ptime l.•dgr•ui.•nt but N glance was fixed. im.teael. upon the violin, and the bin,• rye+ sheet tint parts as Minis •11.11 srately got/ picked up the note and placed it in pocket. 1'IdAt the $.11•owiug night N thought 10 hese/ her revenge. St. 'Miran by singing and waking eyes the Byronic youth with the lines vi and utterly ignored Mies' ``.r•r:en But she haat reckoned without her le for tilt,• authent-e would -have none of They had 'lse'owe s.t� acetst. ased having the first violin ad &silent part in this little by-play. that they war bro.: no change. And thea thecoat between the face of this old young gam and the nay cheek' awl sparkling of the girl lent a pi•tutwpyne effeeti Untie to the queue that nothing elm could rib the peopG' began t 1 hiss and h. and hoot W .L,.w 1hr1r .Beep pit, while (-rite of ••Miuw' Mims' firit violin'" gave a1ledl inlerinetat to their use-aning. The tiirl st..pteel. bewilderil at t enttbnret. mei At first • u. not realize t came. But when she did her Hashed angrily', an•1 she -went- .MI: i- siste•nfly ignoring their displeasure a Tying to drown the tununit with h ,en voice eat to charm them into got int nr• with her imetty--ways. 1n the confit+i.nt she iarelesaly ca I•., near the footlight-. atnd jarring t light game covering from one til the wept her tilegti skirts above it. A t. ttgne of flame leaped upon eta there was it cry of horror Tie bon T1s• andietxr. tricker by the ptwtibilitr. ume ug ill the indamahle material hP rage. rn.h.d pelt melt.: for t heir-. The orchestra toll•.w-t.L t nfuhii err their instrnmt•nt., ala ill hill tit ban it takes me to tall u they lute! (deem 'nth a'iTa�ta.. thatualy two temple aimed in tile en•Iangertd-ptrtton of t ht-atrr. ( me of these was the gir vraptre.l in the winding sheet of Ham ud the other was Mims. Tearing hie coat trona hitn An heapran •rw•arl M wt a Hung himself ripen ti age. The girl. terrtr stricken.'. b •alizing his danger as well me her ••t et tit retreat toward the win ire.. seeing that (u :111P otnent mor.• til re would be comninnitatte•1 tee the can a, w•ens..'Papw11115oil her anti gathers le Iituig Hemp int., !informs Him.. ,se'l`ls to til.• pain and Jaeger or r arlle.. of them in !n+ pa.*.,lent,• •• 'aver co .arae the girl. he beat the fit ,ern with his handl tors her lnrnin irts away and at last wrapped he rturel and burned, lint Itvingaud ru Mile. in his own garuent. Nonie w-Iw tint lee sev.•r.•ly injnreel lie at ahs could ep pear at *h.• Alhawb in in a few weeks. and when her rn watt ameinnct•tl. the honer w ow•del. Nnnie diel not attempt to ming to an e lint Miens that night, lint. aro til cache], he cyst not the first violin. H ad spent his leisure during her retire Ptlt in compering a new a•compani Pett to her dance. and had 'taken an. tailed permission to lead the orches a on this eventful night for its per Wiwi Y • Of • haps. MI* hem the liar The led. fain treat bat, zed ghte anti his rugged the tug awn the sort hap ins the note th a w it He yeti and tlllow ie's first a )art, his cafe she 01. at oa /1. to nrr uld sari do eyed re- twl sal• T4'. iso► he et si reel sir .l mP he m, her, .f he ng use re - he g Ie nt r1, gel e •1 1f e n re g r. n t fa re as 1' u d • r been ] r •1. Il. sk t.. er til age► 111 Cr WI tee m m tr formative . i way that he hail .pent his leienre, f•• much eft Miura time hal lately taken rep in hannting the Horiatd are the fruit :hot... and Learing off thei choii:e•t treaettres to Nonie'. room. And when he hart been admitted to her heel able, and she.. lying there sus sweet and fair, had taken his hand and kissed it, and cried over the scare which were there for her wake. and had thanked hint sem prettily for paying her life, the poor es gamin was very happily wretched indeed. lint, as 1 It*.P said, elle got well and pang and tan -,d and made eyes at Mims as she had never chew before. When ahs had finish.,1, how they did appland' They ehonted and "tamped and ►ningled mew of ' - Nonni r' and "Mille" They grew lin wild that the ..reheetra player hal to g° and stand nl.on the 'tag' Mesita Nonie and bow fu, acknowledgments And tille wap something that an on-h..tra player at the Alhambra bad never done hefnre At the enrtain (ell slowly and ahnt thetn out front the people, Mime heard Nonie give a icing Nigh He tnrneti toward her. And saw a look in her face that made him say impulsively . "What is de Perhaps thereit wsaar"' mon potency that( he knew in the little won!. Perhape his vols Pxpr.-aw-.l more than the word it eel( However it was, 1 am certain that In, Immo deet or nnmaidenly thought prompted Non', as she threw her arms *tonna Mime' neck and let ber head fall Nem his shoulder, like a tired child. And neither knew that the curtain had game putt far enough to 'shield their heals' from the anlience, until renewed .,Monts and langhter and bravne told how well the taming act •.f their little drama had hewn received In the glean that followe.l, old Time played some queer trick,. For Nettie undid much of the evil that had teen done to Mims, and the joy she brought Into hi* life welled np and shone out through his fire, snaking it yon While Nonie. as even the prettiest girls will, grew gradnally older. until }teams to tamp that there Wim not so much dip parity het we'll their faces as wonld hake one look twice Whenever 1 see Mitres mow, i cannot help dlmotion which N the etmo*er fa a saaa'. Hra, fb. d Ne safiv it at w'1 rlanisett "A • Word To the Wives Is Sufficient." For Rendering Pastry Short or Friable. OTTOLENE Is Better than Lard BMWs! 11 kr Nose of ite disagree- aNs and Indigestible features. is torsed by leading food and cooking experts. Add your Grocer for IL • Made only by N. K. FAI,RBAN'tiCO., Wellington and Ann Strsst.. MONTREAL. CRISP AND CASUAL_ _- An uncut diamond looks very much likes hit of the best gum arable. Pimple• may be permanently tuned by the continutd use of E:eellay's liver 'i.•venges A •'conciw" report of the World's Fur,ln twenty five volumes, is to be published. For nettle rash, summer heat and general cpneca.nac Lew a$alpiur .wap. Im Even the bees Pod it hard times, and are to be fed un cheap auger by careful api.r ista There are 113 night schools in the city of Mexico, nine of n Lich ire Dight schools for adults. There are probably more Mohammedu,s is India than all the teat d t tide world put tseotber. -J11 Prince of Wales h.s 1i brotb�n-Tt 1b older, �" cousins, and 58 nephews ad nieces. "' in Ragland a .1:100 one year accideat ta- anennee policy is thrown in with 's pair of •..peed, rs. Tbe chan.w of • person being killed in 24•mile railroad nJe are mud to be but .ns in 1.491.010. 0 1 potato, claimed to weigh four and a haat pounds, is the product of a (.ra•gertlle. Idaho, farm. The projected Cana! from M•rseilha to the River C hone is receiving great' atteu• tion 10 \larsctlles. 144 inactrvs or torpid liver must be aroue. ed amp all had bile removed. Burdock 1911. are beet for old or young. Im An Leland in Sarno Ray is inhabited only by a pack of ravenous doge which have al- most dneenrrated into nukes. A habit of constipation se moat dangerous to the health. Take Eseitay's Liver Icor engem. They are pleasant to take. Time is very swift and busy : but It al- ways ..ems to have the leisure to put • wrinkle or two in every sit •Dollar all -wool suit of clothes. A pale or sallow complexion may be over come by the use of F.aeljay'. Liter lerenges. They purify the blood and give tone to the complexion. Chicago hotel men complain that their houses are deserted. A house that had 3,000 guest. • month ago now has but 300 and .o It runs. some .ympton a of worm. use E seer, colic, variable appetite, restlessness. weak - tees and convol.iota. The unfailing remedy le i)r Low's Words Syrup. Im (:old leaf, when beaten Into • sheet of the Michelson of L_: 1 250,000th of ea loch; ap- pears to be of • beautiful green wbeo held up to the light. Captain Sweeney, C. S. A., San lheeo. (at., says " hiloha ('atarrh Remedy is the first medicine 1 have ever found that would do me any good. -Price 5O cents. Sold by all druggists. e w The benss of the whales that the lawman Kuser slaughtered in the North Sea last dammer are b he turned into furniture for the Norwe. ian boathouse at Potsdam. It is not to he wondered at that .Ayer'. Pills .re is such universal demand For the cure of ceestipatioo. bilio.smees, oe any other complaint needier a laxative, them pills are un.urpa.•ed. They are empty, coated, easy to take, and every dose is of 1.011.,. For First -Class Footwear Faultless Fit and Finest Finish, in Foremost Fashions, at Fairest Figu res, Find Granby Rubbers and Overshoes. THEY IIITAR LIU IRON. ALL D&ALDN BELL THEM. ATURE YIELDS ANOTHER SECRET ! It has often been couteuded by physiologists and men of science gen- erally, that-11rcetvous energy or nerv- ous impulses which pass along the nerve fibre, were only other names fur electricity. TLis seemingly plans- I ible statement was accepted for a time, Lot has been completely aban- doned since it has ¢cep proved that! the )terve- are not good enndnetors Oi electricity. and that the velocity of a nervous impulse is but 100 feet per! second -which is vA'p inuch slower' than that of electricity. It is now generally agreed 'hat nervous euergy, or what we are pleased to call nerve Braid, is a wondrous, a mysterious force, in which dwells life itself. A very eminent specialist, who has studied profoundly the workings of the nervous eyetem for the last twenty•hve years, has lately demon- strated that two-thirds of all our ailments and chronic diseases are due to deranged nerve centres within or at the base of the brain. All know that an injury to the. spinal cord will cause paralysis to the ' body below the injured point The; reason for this is, that the nerve force is prevented by the injury from 1 reaching the parol sed portion. Again, when foot is taken into the ; stomach. it comes is eortaot with numberlei- nerve fibres in the walls of this organ, which at once send a nervous impulse to the naive centres which -control the stomach, notify log them of the presence of food ; where- upon the oene centres send down a supply of nerve folie or nerve fluid. to at once begin the operation cf digestion. But let the nerve centres which control the stomach be de- ranged and they will not be able to respond with a sntlictent supply of nerve force, to properif digest the food, and, as a result, indigestion and dyspepsia maks their appearance. So it it with the other organs of the ',odv, if the nerve centre* which con- trol them and supply them with nerve force become d:ranged, tiny are also deranged. The wonderful success of the remedy kuown as tilt (treat South American Nervine Tonle iA due to the fact that it ie prepared by one of the most eminent ,,bysicians and specialists of the ago. and is based oii the foregoing scientific discovery. It possee.es marvellous powers for the cure of Servo Lanese, Nervous Prostration, Headache, Hleeplesenest% Restlessness, St. Vito.'s Dance, Men- tal Despondency, Hysteria, heart Disease, Nervousness of Females, Hot Flashes, Sick Headache. It is also an absolute specific for all stomach troubles. segs: WIDsoN Wholesale and Retail Agent for Godsrich and vicinity IASIST Upon having Featherbone Corsets. Refuse all substitutes. See they are Ameyed AM: PATENTED SEPT. 1N, ItMS. Ne. 201 I& NONE ARE GENUINE UNLUS O0 STAMPED. THEY ARE PLEASANT TO TAKE Y E T POWERFUL TO CURE Iowan uvot LOLINE& M POTTS ANI. per do swot nae..'te er rusk a,: wetter til. system Mee pmlkand o•Awpnrt..ti,e•, .rut theytone n the 5. w asd e.owerh,'ad iiv'them mbeis.1 strength t-, do 'bar work a.tu.a.,r and well. They eons C•,-, Mt.;.., 1• Indigestion, Headache, Bili...._ see, Mesal•, .ti'snoeeee ',et all disea.ti owing f►. 11 imp re blond, or slug tish liver. Ask Tear C•'•aat•t Tee Ties., -OZTY- COAL WOOD YAZ27�. Reseda' •tearoom given to SAWED AND SPLiT WOOD. J Hiadqu.ters (ret• all gids 0f NAND. SOFT 1 BLACKSMITH COAL. ('tidal weighed m. either market tee ay •asks. hot r) Pr41we were ash Oar wasro- IVa ICIlen. TMrpaaa. e'e.s.eeeen. JOHN B. PLATT, Prop. PATENTS ! CIYIATS, MIN SIBS AND Ci,-. JT$ tined, and all looloo. In the tr. I. Paw atMded to at MODRRI TX PRIM r t. the U. 9. Patent Of sokw1 sea aurin Palmate IS len nine Ms these '•mete hem WIHHINGTON. (Toed NoDRa. ontt��DRI WING. e�W.e 'si.td epee a e pat (MAWR p Laf&d 11ie OIL free et we maks NO CyA TIIN PATRNT. We refs, hem to the Peoameeter, the mum gM Order Div.. aad to ellejak of tis U. n. Patent 011or. /or etreshv. advise M. or and rhe eeees to nog & e11oaf I your awe 8t.t. or (mem!, writes* c a allow da r)e., neesertst... oweswosbtngtes. D. o tett WHY i Don CI BO. BARRY, itis Dederick furniture dealer and On!lerta►ker, keep the haat stock of furniture and Ondertaiw)s. supplies f And bow is is that be can sell so otkenp 1 1 Bin CAUSE f IIP Atwh that it pays in the long run. Hie motto is: Small Praise awl Quick Se turas." He alma snakes • specialty of *Aare tr s tag. (five hies a esIi bs/wo wafleid alwaysso Mug. 111111 1