The Wingham Advance, 1911-05-11, Page 6Pr
What Will be the eaof the coneteut
Thee la the price' of the neeeteerlee of
life? Now they'xe talkien a Advancing
the price of bogze!
Thiuge move ;timidly In Portugal. The
neve Goverument has deereea the separa-
tion of etameh and state and given n.
• Ure liberty to all creeds. lienceforte
there will be no stete religion in Porte-
/ital.
Plague le a regmar gueat of lndla. In
Mamie it claim:ea 05,884 vietima, an. in-
ereese from 43,508 in February. India
Mea very lerge thin rate, but perhaps'
Franco With her small rate le to be pree
ferred.
Score one for China. She hint a sun
plus In the year's accounts amounting
to $2,250,000. it was secured by re-
dueing th etistinutte by- $37,500,000. Of
the reduction $314850 was in army es.
timatee.
The net debt of the city of London is
itiala,1235,G00. The annual charge falling
on the rates is £3,003,189; met out t.if
renentle, g2,2e7,543; Bemired upon the
elty estates, £108,05, a total yearly
charge of £O,359,407.
4.'
A Spokane raan has lewd 2,000 tierce
of land h tho province ef Alberta in
the laUe district north of Athabaeca land-
ing on which he purposes operating a
mink and muskrat farm. At the priees
of these furs, such a farm would rival
a gold naive.
It is a great iniatake to suppose that
LTnele Sam has parted with all his coal
• lands "to private monopolies." In the
Western States alone, about 100,000,000
acres of Government coal Lends have al-
ready been classified and valued, and
the work le still going on. In Alaska
there is also &aid to be vast quantities.
of coal.
United States Postmaster -General
Hitahcock expecte to show a surplus in
the post office department this year, as
the result of reforms and economies,
thus wiping out the inherited defieit of
$17,000,000. That, too, in the face of
adding 3,089 new offices, 2,124 new rural
delivery routes and 8,274 additional pos-
tal employees.
A Connecticut clergyman has been
mulcted in $4,000 for slanderous slate -
manta made from the pulpit regarding
members of a Board of Education. The
important thing in the ease was the rut.
Ing that a clergyman cannot plead pri-
vilege for statements so made. And
that would seem to be a sensible ruling.
If it were permitted that the pulpit
could be used safely to make attacks
of an injurious nature, great wrong
might be done, to the great discredit
of the churches.
The Baltimore San notes that "it Ls in
the United States that the murderer
claims more vietims every year than ie
any other civilized and enlightened coun-
try in the world. Homicidal mania pre-
vails in this progressive land to a far
greater extent than in any nation in
Europe." It think& thts largely due to
the habit of carrying concealed weapons
and it thinks there should be a campaign
for awakening public senthnent against
the practice.
• a
Dr. Wiley, chief chemist of the United
States Department of Agriculture, has
been investigating the sale of headache
powders. Of the 365 analazed, nearly all
of them containe& acetanelid, phenacetin,
antipyrin, or caffein, all powerful and
dangerous drugs. Meny deaths have re-
sulted from the improper use of sue!'
powders, and many pereous have, by us-
ing them, become drug fiends. Be pro-
poses more stringent laws as to 'the Beef-
ing of such drugs.
The Fort Worth, Texas, Trade Soca,
ety, which is affiliated with all labor
tadons, stoats to keep its head well in
this dynamiting matter. It refuses to
pass any resolutiens or to declare its
belief in advance of the legal inquiry. it
will presume the accused innocent until
the contrary is in proof; but it will not
obstruct the mg searching .investiga-
tion of the charges. It trusts the courts;
and it frankly eays the guilty party or
partiee should be hanged. 'rhat is a pro.
per spirit; enforce the law, but guard
the innocent.
The majority in favor of the chureb
union movement is a substantial one, but
the feeling le not by any means unani-
mous. Of the 08 presbyteries voting, 54
have supported the uniou movement,
while 12 have declared positive opponi-
time It is not, however, safe to accept
these preebytery votes as intlicettam of
the feeling of the inemberehip. fa a cot.
eadidation stieh ee is proponed, int') which
metiers of liclief enter, it would be little
Pt than a miefertune to' eonclaile a.
italen with any eonsideralge minority op
ping it.
OR THE CORNER MAN,
(Exchange.)
Ile -Can you tell me the differenee
netween King George and the Corona-
tioh year? "
Sha- NO, whet is it?
penny.
She-Ike/ever do you make that
out?
Ide.-King (temp is a whole Sovereign,
this year its only 10. end 11!" (nineteen
ethiliinge and eleven leenciat
SineedtioU're :mart. eatity
nitkite fee menu, ether etioa. of fruit riff
that pun', suppose!
lie- -Fruit! 'There is no finit en a
penny!
Urn -Row &Lott the date?
Z44.4o
As she ePoke she drew forth the wi
Anil held it tewarde him.
Ile made a gesture ed went.
'It is yours. Joan. Jaen,' ibe said, lik
a niaa demented, "why de yam *meek t
sue like this?"
"Why:" she =Watch a ,flame eprin
ing stuldeuly to her eyes. "Inaat I DIA
repay you for the wrong you sought t
do met Seel Here ia the will whit:
givea nee all you hold! I will not tek
it from the hands of the men the
wronged me! Take back your wealt
Lord Villiers, I will him) none of it
There is apt a shilling et it but weiti
burn um at the wacti. Not
but would remind tue of thee man
trusted, and who deceived me!" and ,vit
euperb gesture she raised her hand an
flung the will on the fire.
Btu:1a Villiers stood and Stared a
her,
"I -deceived -wronged yool" be crie
"Great Heaven, be just to 'mei I! 1
1 -who loved emu as never man !oven -
wrong you!"
"Yee!" she retorted, stretching ou
her hand accusingly. "You would. hay
wronged me beyond reparation but to
an eceldent which revealed your base
nesse. Lord Villiers, look me in the fee
-eve to eye, heart to heart! --and den
RV;
Ife stood, the great drops of perspire
tion on hie brow.
"Great Heavent what is this?"
cried, hoareely.
Then suddenly he thrust his hand int
his breast poeket and brought out
creased and folded paper.
"Joan/' he exclaimed. "I see it al
now, and here is my Answer," and witl
a touch of inertly dignity not to be pu
into word, he held the paper toward
her.
She stretched out her hand and too
the paper gingerly, like a woman, ani
let her glance drop upon it.
Then she started, and the calor 'earn
flooding to her face. It was the mar
riage license!
"See, my darling Joan!" he cried. "
wrong you! I, who would have died t
save you a. moment's paini I wrong
yeu! An, Joan, • Joan, it is yon wh
he ve wronged me!"
She stood for a aecond, looking firs
at his white, haggard, handsome fame
and then ra, the creased and torn li
cense; then, with a cry, the threw ui
her arms and staggered forward, th
one word "Forgive" upon her lips.
lite caught her as she fell, and fo
a moment held her against his heart
while more eloquent than words reigned
between them
Then, in the half dusk that had fat
len upon the evening, ho, still holding
her in his arras as he sat beside the
giowing firo, told her the sad story o
her supposed death, and she made plait.;
to him how in all innocence ,Bertie had
parted them.
They sat hand ih hand, heart to
heart; there was so muck to tell; sucli
joy and sorrow and wonderment in the
telling, that often the tears blinded
joaa's eyes and clicked hen voice. ama
Ito would catch her to him and kiss the
clew,y oyes and trembling lips.
Dow wonderful it seent, that story of
the dead girl sylioin lie had taken for
hie lost love!
flow v:ondesful Use way in which Pate
had apparently played iuto Mordatunt
Royce's hands! ,
But now the dath clouds had rolled
away and the sky nue blue and brilt
lviientietzswith the sunshine of future hap -
"After bight eitmeth- the moruing.
and after sorrowjoy!" murmured .Toan.
"If our troubles had brought us no
other good, dearest, they have taught
ne haw true and deep our love was, see-
ing that it has braved the storm and
outlived the tenspest!"
"Ah!" he said, as the shadow of all
that he had suffered swept over him and
darkened even that 'moment of bliss,
"but it was nearly wrecked, Joan! We
were both so uearey 'oat!"
Tho minutes red, feather -footed,
eitile they valved the riddle which had
held so much sorrove for both of them
iu its meshes, and it was not until the
great clock had chimed the half-hour
after oven that there came a gentle tap
sit the door, aka there entered Bertie
Miss Mazurka and Emily.
Sean was for estaping from the
stroeg, glad arms that held her, but
he ketp her fast prisoner still.
"Come in, friends." he said, Whin
up at t -hem with a light they had never
before eon burn in his eyes; "come in
and rejoice with us in our joy!
Bettie, you told me to bo prepared for a
shock, and 1 laughed at you; but it was
elinoitt too much for me!
"Mies' Mazurka, if the sight of hap-
piness 'which re ourselves have brought
about is heppinees itself, you ought to
be happy indeed! My love which was
iota to me is found!" wed in the eig,ht,
of them all he lifted Joan in his amnia
and kissed her.
* 8 0, *
A few months later the Earl and
Countess of 'Villiers were stopping at
Genoa.
They were on their wedding tour.
judging by the happiness which seem-
ed thireflect fron his fate to hers, the
moon whiter shone upon their path was
tate huleed eompoted of honey.
It was evening, growing fast into the
night, and the two young people, whose
Advent in the eller bad created quite a
itensatien in consequeece of tho Tamen-
tie story wItich' attathed to them, bad
strolled oub In the cool air to gull
that solitude which even the magnifi-
cent suite of rooms at the Hotel d'-
Itrilia give.
'What a lovely mannered
Joan, a's She leanel upon her huelmtere
arni and looked up At the oky.
°Yes," he Eteeenteci. "I wonder tvlie-
ther it is as geed in England. We abuse
the English weather, but I'm inclined
to think that it's tut worse than other
oeuntrieet,'"
"1 tion't know," said Joan. "Emily
did pot -me, I hope it i11 be fine whet
so get imek text week. I lots to ste
the Weal n gain! Emily eaya that the
roas are already out and that the lAWns
sty looking like 'velvet."
ffe laughed.
"-Emily is an enthueiast abeet the
Weld," he eatal. "And is tn. new tarty
eueentig"
utten" ?aid Joan, stallitig, "and Mica
litaittarierir is taw the planet favorite in
Intel, of Mita Ids Trevelesu, resigiseaLe
Ha draw Ler tietierclit ltiui aiatil kilted
lay gieticel hind.
-I've had a letter. leo," he said -
"from alms, do you thins?"
r4it OM," the saki, Sciih A Islet
latish mid *haute reward gittees. "Lord
Berttlar
"Yes-Bertiee' he satin ni1ing as over
some welcome tidings, "And it con.
tains some vows; can you Lams what'?"
She thougbt n monaeet while he car.
essed Ler haud.
"Is it sbent itifies Mazurka?" she said.
lateghed.
"Right again. He proposed to ber a
week ago, and they are to be married
when we get baele! To title piles has
!their love consphaey brought them.
Well, I wish them joy."
"And 1 -and I!" she muniaured, nest.
ling closer to blue "Bet for those two
friends, Stuart, should you and. I be
walking together here now?"
Ile stooped and nissed her, and. they
turned back towards the hotel.
As they entered the narrow alley
which leads to that palatial hostelry a
ragged figure struggled out of the
shadow, and, dragging itself teem&
them, held out its hands.
. "For the love of heaven. senor. senora,
pity!"
Joan, startled by the suddenness of
the appeal, shrank a little, but some.
thing In the tones of the voice awakened
an echo in Lord Villiers' memory, and
be looked over his shoulder at the
squalid beggar.
"Pity!" groaned the poor wretob,
hoarsely, aa he followed them.
At that moment they came within the
flicker of one of the hotel lamps, and
the miserable creature looked. up at
them and renewed las appeal.
"For beaven'a sake help me!". he cried
hoarsely. "I am English like yourself!
I am friendless, penniless, in a foreign
city! Enough to buy a meal is all I
ask!"
They had reaehed the door by this
time, and Lord Villiers gently signed
to his beautiful young wife to enter.
Then he stepped back into the lane
and confronted the beggar.
"You are English, are you?" he said.
"And you are hungry? Here is some
money for you, Whet is your name?"
The beggar's dirty claw elosed ovor
the.eoin and he mumbleil an inarticulate
reply.
"I think I. know it!" said Stuart Vils
liars. "IL is Mordaunt. Royce, is it
The man raised his haggard face and
looked at him, then shot a glance ha°
the lighted vestibule in the hall.
"You! she!" he hissed, "Curse you
both!" and uttering a string of male-
dictions he raised hie hand anal flung
the coin at Stuart Villiers' feet, and the
next !aslant he was swallowed up in the
darkness.
"What did you say to the poot fellow,
'Stuart?" asked Joan, as he rejoined her,
looking -grave and thoughtful.
'Nothing -nothing much, dearest," he
said.
"But you helped him, dear?" With her
beautiful eyes moist with pity.
He shook his head.
"No, dear. I would have done so if it
Lad been possible; but there are some
who are so utterly lost that no help can
reach them in .this life, mid Mor -this
man is one of them!"
THE END.
iliNIMISOUW•211.1.11161YOMIP
The Lighthouse
1LE1.610.1011111•SMIN ONIALM160...11J
•••••-mm.ualt•anft•-••-••••••••••••
(ily Joseph Deers Lawrence.)
Mary Spaulding sat upon the string -
Inuit of the %vivid, looking pensively
ever the 'fleet of eat -boats end dories
which bobbed' about with the lazy roll -
ere of the incoming tide. Far outside
the harbor a motor boat glided into
view from around the point, and the
girl fixed her bright eyes upon it with
unmittakable interest.
rota the beach came the sound or
o man whistling. As the whistler earn°
near and paused at the little tbe
girl scowled and looked around almost
Mier, tiontly.
"Hello, Mary!" said the men, eeftiy.
"What are you doing here, ali aloner
"I'm waiting for Mr. Trent," said the
girl, a bit loftily. "He's go:ng to take
me out in his launch. Howare you,
Fro n lc ?"
"Oh, l'm all rIght,",sighe dtlie man;
"nept 1 don't see you very much now,
teary. Since you got in with swell axe-
ety, you don't have time for your old
friends, do you?"
"You're jealous," she said, with mild
lboignation. "it (teems to bailer you
ail to see me having a good ttine."
"Taira that, Mary," he protested
sobetly. "You Ituow I'd euther see you
bating a good time their anything else
1 lniow of. But. you're 'ming to be
niiglaty lonesome when air these -city
people go hack. They'll all be Omagh
with you then, end it'll be mighty hard
for you to come down to our way o'
tieing again."
"ley friends won't be through with
nut when they' go !melt to 1 he city,"
she Implied, a little crossly. "Senn ot
them have asked me to dome and see
them this winter."
The man hung his head. and sighed.
'1 don't believe youl lever inarty inc
no",Mary," he said, dully.
Tm din swung her dangling feet
ottr the water nad looked oat at elle
meter boot, which was drawing nearer.
"NN IV, really, Prank, 1 itoift, hive
mob tune to cone:dor suck thinge, you
nriov."
' slant given up," Front- eat!,
"You used to be happy all the time, ji
and Noy to lesee, uutil youget se
botuti up in pieties and phollegrepne,
aed then automobiles and munches led
thinge. 1 guess it Ain't any more. use,
Yeu'd just about dip, living
anew, with tee In the Inert Memel. Ale
Gene all I know how to Li). I can
tilways keep a 44 going, and emery.
titieg shipeiliepa but L COMAII t g) to
%vent efe Iran to he- a eity thap ILOW:
Id 1.0 lost out of a lightetmee. So
ti Ere it is -you want a me place with
al i the fie:Inge, mut ftli eve got ti Met
yon is a wialtewaehed house on a tock,
with a dairy to run haek and forth to
neokel with."
Mary got up ,off the atriug.pitace mid
I furtively smoothed lier *hitt iend patted
i.r fluffy hair.
"herein Mr. Trent," elle said.
guesA theta my answer," muttered
the liglithouseikeeper.
"Ifelloi" tried Trent genet, fee the
horti rattle, niorag .the .1)(11
be looks -4 ts'oeles&y at the other man,
abal slid. "aahrial-mornrup." n• bit eitaly.
"Meaning. sn radii the other, and
turnal away ih beivedtaut end Me-
lees feet.
e itisrth the eke, Mat keeps the light.
haste* tetet tier ',coked 'trent. k.
1744401441f ytounerai'gllj'he *tined, doily.
"Known taiM all zny Ufa," She on-
o/axed, trow4ing ellentint niatee a
Igght,r 004 Man," -
"'be must be," said Trent. "A num
iveultl have ti tut patty goad, or a
pod deal of a gtles$,, to 11014
otoa'11 Pr like that. year ia ead year
Pen. Most chaps would drink them -
Selves to death the filet year, coope4
tip en a rook that."
"Are we going?" asked the girl, ltue
gaittoltilrYs'e we're going!" ee laughea
atel helped her down into the boat.
Toward evening, after the suet had
gone down, the motor boat returned to
the wharf. The Man' and the girl got
out and etood silent for a mementr
looking at the dark bat* ef clouds
along the horieen. The lace Was
fluseed, and she seemed on the verge ot
teers. The man welt nentoun ant he
*frowned as with vexation,
"There aren't many girls that would
think twice about suck a chance," he
tintilieblea. "Mind, I'm not bolding mit
self up as a paragon, but I've get all
the things to make a woman happy, 1
guess; and it isn't every wanton that
gate nchance at them."
, "You might give me a little time to
think," pleaded the girl.
"It ought not to take any time at
all," he replied, gruffly. 'Pm going
back to the city tonight for a few days,
and I want my answer now. Pra not
wed to waiting for things 1 want, any-,
way'
The girl shook her head and twisted
her fingers together desperately.
"It's all come po sudden," she sold.
"It's only fair to both of us that 1
should take time to think. live always
lived right here, you know, and I never
thought about going away. Think how
suzprised all my old friends would be."
"The lighthouse janitor, for Instance,"
taunted the ream.
"Don't speak like that!" she warned
him. "Frank has beeu it goad friend to
"By Jove!'" he leughed disagreeably,
'Perhaps you're in love with the hon-
est light -house man. That weak' be
a romatitic life for a girl, wouldn't it?
Living in two whitewashed rooms, with
about as muck furniture as a jail -bird
has; and. cooking the keeper's por-
ridge for him 365 days in the year. Once
In ten years you might get someone to
tend the lamp while you went up to
Boston to look in the shop windows and
go to the theater. My, but that would
be living! And now you're having a
bad time over the thought of taking up
with me and the best house in the city,
and servants, and dresses, and jeveelry,
aud horses, and automobilea."
"It's going to rain and. blow," itaid the
girl, huskily. "Let'sehurry home."
The waves were already snapping
about the wharf, and the wind was
howling ominously.
"The squall is here," said Trent, as
a few big raildrops fell. "We'd be soak.
ed before we could get to your house.
Corne in here."
He took her hatul and drew her into
an oyatennan's shetk at the side of the
wharf. Presently the ram ii beat upon
the roof and swept eround them in
floods; the wind roared with the sea,
and made the timbers of the shack and
wharf about them like a suddenly 'lbw -
erect curtain. The girl shivered, not
only because she was cold, but from a
vague dread of the man with whom sho
was standing there in the narrow, dark
place.
"Poor little girl!" said Trent, with an
effort at tenderness. "You're shaking
with the cold," and he put his tame
around her and held her close to hita.
'Don't!" she cried, fearfully. "Please
don't do that, Mr. Trent!"
She tried to push hiin fie= her and
free herself, but he laughed and still
held her.
"You're going to kist me, 'Mary," he
whiseered suddenly, "and tell me that
you're going right to the city with me
tonieht to marry me. You 'night am
well enswer now; you know well enougb
that you've too much sense to refuse
um, but you wanted to hold off a while.
Say 'yes,' 'Mary!"
"Let me go!" she protested.
Within, she wondered fearfully if the
man were not right. Had she not al-
ready eecepted his offer of wealth and
axial position, deep down in her heart?
She almank from his embrace with re.
pugnanee, but her feminine mind. fe.shed.
rapidly over the strange circumstances
of the case.
For her pretty face and winsomeness,
this man offered. her more wealth and
power than her young miud could
readily grasp. Of the quality of his love
ar
she ded not think, but his name was
one to conjure with, and the title, "Mrs.
Trent," would bt!, like a patent of no-
bility melee the simple people of her
nathe She saw herself sur-
rounded with magnificence, ass if it were
already assured.
Thee her mind flitted to the alterna-
tive, and it looked dull enough. Long,
(treaty winters Wong the fisherefelks,
uncouth men and sletterrily women;
entbing but rocks and sand, and the
sea, and harsh storms through. all the
years oi Ler life. She resisted her com-
panion's embrace less strongly.
"Mary!" lie cried, feeling her yield.
He clesped her closer, and kissed her
lips hotly and paesionateIy. She throw
out her arms end struggled against him,
but he laughed aloud and held het with
brutal firmness, while he kissed her
roughly again and again, She cried out
al terror, and looked into the surround.
big darkness for some sign of help. The
rain still came down In sheets arid tho
sky was black. Not even the early even.
ing lights of the near -by houses could
be se.eri through the stern:T.00one
And the bled:nese was in her soul. She
felt dishonored and UndEnie'This nian,
who seemed like some rids atimal as
she strove with him, was conquering
her with bie superior strength and emu
ning. Tier head swayed backward Fume
ly; anti at she lookea at the shadowy
figure of her captor a faint light suit.
denly flashed upon his face, illuminating
t but slightly,. but enough to show her
a leering mouth, arid gleaming, horrible
eyes.
Sbe turned her head quickly to 'WI
whence came time and then she
started convulsively as she beheld a
pure white beam of lig,ht piercing the
Angry dinettes% like et Ireon, bright
sword permianting the antler of evil.
"'See! See!" sin' Lake wildly, without.
knowieg why.
The Inert startea nereonsly and fol-
lowed the gesture of her hand with hie
akh!" lie muttered hoarsely. Ithatta
the lightiliousel"
Site gethered ail her etrerigni an4
freed herself from him with it single
desperete effort.
'Yee, yes!" the almost shrieltea, le
an emiteay of telief and tituntple "It's
the liglittiouie! It's the light that
never Like -that seem, Aliipe, and
people, and Mlle titles mule- IV faith-
fulness and hope, And love purity;
and it's stvonger than all the Atones anal
alerinutse! It's my light tied it's my bine
mid life: r at going to it!"
else ran out fearleaisly into the been.
rein earl disappeared in the clerk -
nese. The luau stood motionless in the
shelter of the stistek-sitent, ilwash Ike
new net why.
"'"'"'"'",•-•••••••••••••••,••••••••
SHE WAS SIMPHISE0 I
••••••M,0•••••••
When Or. Mores'. Indian MOW,
Pili. tiered her Ohronie
Liver, Contialfmt
Mrs. R. Stahl; of Winnipeg, Mane tells
an interesting story of relief from alinest
intolerable sUffering_S:
'I can hardly tell you how great ruy
AUfferiaga have been. ChrOnie hver come
plaint accompanied by biliousness were a
daily source of trial to me. Every day
I experienced the sickening effecte of
these ailments. I longed for some medi-
cine that stould permanently drive them
Pray,
Hearing of Dr. Morse's Indian Root
Pills, I thought they were Worthy of
trial, My surprise eves indeed great,
From the very' fast I experienced relief.
Continuing nith them I found my trout).
les were slowly but surely leamag me,
andibefore long I once more knew what
it was to be free from the harassing ef-
fects of the ailments that had long sick-
ened and weakened nie, So great Is my
faith in Dr. Muse's Indian Pills that I
shall never on any account be without
them."
Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills cure
Bowel and Kidney as well Liver troub-
les, and keep you healthy. 25c a boa
atyour dealer's, 14
ARABELLA'S DARLING.
"Noy, I wonder," thoineht Alphonso,
"what Arabella is doing at tins pre-
cise moment?"
(Arabella and Alphonse were mar-
ried last May, and Alphonao,being
a commercial traveller, was fax from
home.)
"I wonder," he repeated, "what elle
is doing?"
Then a brilliant idea etxuok him,
and he vielted -the nearest, spiritualist
medium,
"Wiaut," said Alphonse, for the
third tattle, "Is Arabella doing?"
"She Ls looking out .of the window,"
replied the medlinn, "evidently ex-
pe:ating somebody,"
"That is stra.nge I" said Alphonse.
"Whom can Athe expeot?"
"Ab I" eontLnued the medium,
"someone enters the houee, and She
=asses him fondly."
"It can't be I" cried the husband
"My wife is true to me."
"Now he Ise% his head on her lap
and looks tendemly into his eyes."
"Villain I" Tended the jealous Im-
bue:Id.
"Now she kisses him."
"It's falsel" yelled Alphonse. "I'll
make you pay dearly for this!"
The medium say ithat he had gone
fair enough,
"Now," he said, "he wags his tail."
***
A GREAT REMEDY
FOR LITTLE ONES.
iY
walla YOU.
• you are a eiiietrer teem ateeel•
gla, MAKS E•tre firet 'teat it ran frern
tooth. There are merry easee et' 40 e
ehrome neuralgia, tete ailemee
watch tiever reeur after a vent ea a eestK1
legotiste.
tatimea le is 114etry to ilait
more than one (WM) iT, 1.sa the trestble
may Le obseare.
If neuralgia is from other cettece do
not suffer nee:Basely. Take It is hand
before it Os ton strong a "rip.
Sometimesii is csuti:N•1 tyoverwork;
again by everiaeatirin civ suiveittaillay to.
cold. As it anew; iateely frem nerec41
Ong hyitienleatle: And canine,. get
eentements will ofteri givereliteeec,'•!iii,",
Do not take druge aid IK%141
dere fer riettreigie uetil evinate
means has been tried, Tale dlettnete bee
ing, recurrent, it is daegerout get itiedi
the habit ot artificial eoothingiataue '
Orily take such relief nailer tliaeetiona
of your fleeter, and net ehen tieitong
you can fight off the pain wale entevane
asaplientions, mental 6 .1g4•Sn't 10lIt;11r
grltrtaiengiwdp
etmeiir steecc.tilal ist hra
iIl:s er' n
Orae
tirep•
for this disease tlint is wertItaaryie.g,
Ile aloes not believe la soollarin in, brit
incuring it, ana hie method of core is
by cold water.
Rio method is to treat riot the ponit
where the pain etrikes, but the ;teat of
that pain, which, he eleirne, is the spine.
A towel wrong from ‘iold .water and
covered with is blanket or Turkish towel
Is platted on ths spine well up on the
back of the nock, This is changed three
times in ten minutes,
Cures Spring liredness
Here is a Fine Remedy not
Gives You Health Quickly.
You know how you feel, blue, sickly
and heavy. Each morning you wrikea in
a dull 'dopy" condition and wish it were
night again. Your liver is wrong and
needs fixing with Dr. Hamilton's Pills;
they do cure all liver ills. At once the
system is relieved of p.oieope. blood is en-
riched and purified, appetite thereeees
and digestion .picks up. Health end vigor
return because Dra Hamilton's Pius
make the body proof aartiaeli weakness
and disease. Foe your liver, your kid.
neys, your -stomach, for the sake of your
looks and feelings, try Dr. Hamittonie
Pills, 25o per box at axle' dealers.
HOW TO MAKE A WHATYOUMAY•
-CALL IT.
That is what thousands of mothers
say of Baby's Own Tablet, We have
received thousands of letters preleing
them -we have yet to reeeive it single
one condemning them. The Tablets can-
not possibly do harm even to the newi
born babe. They eoetran none of those
poisonous druge which make the so-called
"soothing" mixtures SO dangerous to the
welfare of the little one. They are it
scientific medicine prepared by one of
the greatest specialists on childhood ail-
ments and should be kept in every home
where there axe babies or small children.
Mrs. Fred McCarthy, Pinewood, Ont.,
writes: "I have used Baby's Own Tablets
and have found them a great remedy
for little ones. I would not be without
them." The Ta -blots are sold by medi-
cine dealers or by mail at '25 cents it box
from The' Dr. 'Williams' Medieine Co.,
Brockville, Ont.
HIS YARD OF PORK
(Youugstown Telegram.)
Rev. Griffith Junes was etandiog In
the doer of a store which he eonducted
in his home town, when he was approach-
ed by a resident, who, knowing his fond-
ness for a joke, asked:
"Can you sell me is yard of pork to-
day?"
'Tea, sir," promptly answered Jones.
"How much is it?'
"just sixpence."
Bent on carrying the joke to its end,
the man paid over hie sixpence.
The pastor -storekeeper went to the in-
side aef the store,and soon returned with
three pig's feet. "There's one foot, and
there's two feet, and there's three feet,"
he counted, "and anybody knows that
three feet make a yard." .
The customer got more than hie six-
peime worth te/ling the joke to his
frienda.
-
1
Cured His lame Back
West Port William Nov. •701. 12Qtft..---f.' 1
have been troubled with a 'lame back
for the past tWerdy, year and have used
plasters and ointments without effect.
At last r tried Gin 'Pills, whieh proved
just the thing, and I would highly recom-
mend them to anyone who has a strains:a
or lame back." 11. Harkness.
Gin Pills act directly on the itidneye,
relieve the. pain, naturalize uric acid,
which is generally formed wben there
Is kidney troubie.
Try Gin Pills yourself before buying
the regular GOcent boxes. Write Na-
tional Drug 4.1 Chemical CO., Dept. IT.L.,
Toronto, for free sample,
SAYIN MEN,
O7-'"-*AZio rrpiblVlytOteU,
Eli Whitney -"That's Some gin, be-
lieve nm.". .
Charlee Diekens-"(ot change for Am.
lea
Cn
notesilian1"
Chang, the Chinese gi a n te-datou'll
have to show me,"
taPaearilhutiltit71)"sfter.'-vililecust a word or two."
Christopher Columbue-hhfy lam(1!"
M ;nerd's Lin iment LumLerman ie
Ftieed,
CONSOLATION.
lith a sigh she laid down the maga.
ziner
ertiele upon Daniel O'Connell,
nailie day of great mee," slie saki, "le
got'llef"eldic
'tutthe y of beautiful women ie
not," he responded.
Elie smiled and blushed. "I was only
jo)iing,', she extlained, hurriedly.-
Wettern C.hrietian Advocate.
< ;
n le
so. ... .._ • 4.:
lagetteatean. ee. an-
t a eeis e e
e------__.........7........._ ...1
You don't even have to be handy
with toole b make a "vibratory what-
youmayeallit." 11 you ea.n thine a
tack rinel cut note -hes in a stick you
can make one pf these wonderful
toys that will ft -ankh is lot of fun.
Take a stick about six incites long
and cut notches in one edge. Fas-
ten a flat, thin piece -of wood to the
end with a email nail or tack that
it will revolve on the tack. Draw
at eeoond piece of wood over the edge
of the notehes and the vibratory waves
generated will carate the end piece
to revolve rapidly. .
The Witiconsin "lumberjack" who
invented the toy thinlis it will work
beat if made cf hard wocel.
MODERP1 WAY
HOME
DYEINO
Is to use Oust Dye
that will color either
Wool, Cotton, &Er or
Mixed Goode Perfectly,
You will End this in
Ilimou.s.r.....•••••••••••••
' Send tor Sbmple
Card ..,d Story
!Booklet 99
Tao rouNsom.
ttlegt 1)SUIV
CO., Limited,
M ant re11 I. Can.
With this Alodern Dye alt you have to do is to
ask for DY.0-1.A the you CANT mite a
mistake and use the Wrong. Dyo for the goods
von have to color.
NEW COMBINATIONS OF
MATERIALS,
Combinations of materialare much
seen. In tailored suits, tunic skirts
show the petticoat or uniterskirt, the
jacket mei the material. The second Ma-
terial is nmployed for the collar, e.t.a/
anti revere facing.
Deep collar and revers feting.; of Meek
velvet are used on light tailored suits,
and two tolors of one material in con-
trasting tones are united in is eimpie
eta.
The always popeler combinetiou of
blue serge and blaelt eaten is again used.
In a blue serge snit a tunic of blue serge
passes arena the figure and over a
eash drapery of black satin media forms
the bank pellet.
TRY MIME EYE RENEE)
Fos RCd,We WWEyos cnti
GRANULATEIDEYELID$.
Bitirkel)nean't apart -Soothes Eye Psi
Owed* Sc!l Itler7a*Ereltealth. Metti, ;ISe. see, lilt
Murillo Ere saive. In isseOtie Tubes, 25e, $IM
ErE.pooRs AND ADVICE ItnEn BY avr4
ItilteeinbSeteRenatedetCoachicagga
TOO PERSONAL.
"How did you get that black eyer
Asked the victim hi the barber's chair,
ertillile trimming au actor's hair yes-
terdayei expleined the tonsorial ertist,
"I mete() Itim if be didn't want an egg
slianipoo."-Chicago News,
-...-a•-••••••• *5 94 • •
Keep Nlioard's Lininient hi tha houee.
THE CALL OF THE LINKS.
(From Coraing Coentree)
Two &otter:nee met mitt exchenged
the small talk Appiopriate to the hour.
As they were pal deg to go supperward,
Sandy seid to Jai::
"joeh, man, 'ill go ye a morel the
links IA the mount"
"The nomin'et" Joek repeated
fain.
"Aye, mon, the moieni," seta Sandy!
go ye a Tumid on the 1ittk 111 the
anorrn
"Aye, wool," said JoLle, go ye.
But 1 hall handed to get millet ip
the morriit" •
AMERICAN FISHERIES.
The manniehial fieheriee ths
'United Statee have an annual' valee•
US ihAierti161q of etleiotetnnoi
pm COLLECTOR'S SUCCESS,
TA•Olitt in a teem of 4475
o man in the ter wait undertook eo pee,:
up every pin he saw ana in one Oar
4000 4,590.
••••*•*••••• ••••••.• aom........•
„.,.., ..........,.. .,.......„ ...... , •••••.......••••*.•••••••••,....,...wr wros. .e•••••,...
459°11? . r41. triiSITIVI P igeh n* an i vino
: eii Ofseette,
, et, ..ciogogge# al risiier.
It Sure clue, end vo:dtive ntsvontivs, no matter gtist.hP/k4S cia Y age sua
infected cr .ezraseJ." Liquid, glvon en the on atito esi tie Wood mug
Oland:, expels the poisonous germs from the bodi • 44419 St r la Dogli
anal Sliest; and Clio:era in Poultry. Lavaca! still , , y. Com
I.a Grippe among I:loosen bens and is A fine i.i 4.4-i T 1311.:: OC sod Si a
bottle; le raid sit a doze*. Cut tids mit. Keep It ;fa dtitO ye r druggist,
who w:11 get It for you., Vree Pcoklet, 'DistenMeN. . iiikaoci, res."
DiSTRICUT0118-ALL. WHOLEfiAt. 4g 8110
SPOON fti4Dteitl. CO.,Ctersisis cad !Societies IP t . '13...g4ut
1
AY .611.11"11141101111
That Stilittlag Headache
sdul tuu$410.04
NNAMRIKO" Headache Walters
t'Attglh.ircalitry137"gfIr.:'M'riZinrattit7
Druir toad Chemical Cato, Vsnaihi,,g4isattA*041.6..4:4: 4
inisiaTtiVateznetticammeitiee eseoroteatelitaitenalinatlidailarMillart
1
foOdaariktialim.10.141.•WMON•144(
EDDY'S "SILENT" MA!
.,
ARE THE MOST MODERN AND PE
A SURE LIGHT, THE FIRST STRI
They make ma noise) or eputter-a quiet, steady
for the smoker, the offioe area the aorae.
All good tiallers keep them anti Eddy% Wooden
crO,P. Pails and Washboards.
•
The E. B. EDDY. Co., Limit
.HULL CANADA
eetVegteSMOMia.Wg!Sen"4119fingMligfinV
HOW LIFE!' LCKAZI).1a!t ea
(Life) , ., •
Is. the OPTEstraTi • •
Come In.
Take one.
No c °lice [ion.
Adinitelon free.
You are invited.
Strangers tveleome.
Ask for free saMPle.
No trouble to show geode.
11,ct us "feather the nest,"
Money back if not satisfied.
TO THE PESSIMIST:
eltiltivznetRzwalwale 1:evildtrie
Keep out.
Dengeroue.
Nc, smoking..
No admission.
Beware of the dog.
Keep off the erase,
Elevator not running.
Donn feed the animals.
Trespassers will be prosecuted.
Not respousibie for tette ansi coate.„
cunid is eorse of the Mange with
MINADD'S LINIMENT.
CHRISTOPHER SAUNDERS.
Dalhousie.
I cured a horse badly torn by it pitch-
fork, with MINARD'S LINIMENT.
EDWD.
St. Peter's, C.D.
I cured a horse of a bad swellieg by
MINARD'S LINIMENT.
THOS. W. PAYNE.
Bathurst, N.B.
.••=11••4
••••••=4•••••••star.44••••••••••
GIFTS FOR JUNE BRIDE.
There are many pretty and inexpen-
sive gifts %Oath girl friends can give a
bride-to-be, Lut perhaps one of the most
eevel is is bedspread made entirely of
lean handkereldels put together with
narrow insertion.
One handkerchief is contributed by
each girl and a jolly afternoon may be
passed stitching them together. The
handkerchiefs must be of uniform size --
perhaps 12 irrelies square --and each
sbould contain the initiate of the giver
embroidered by hand.
If there are but three or four intimate
friends it beautiful dresser scarf may be
made in the same manner with the addi-
tion of a lace or embroidery frill attach-
ed to the edges.
AMONG THE CLOUDS.
(Montreal Gazette.) s •
Plans have been submitted in New
York for a building thirty storeys higli,
with a tower twenty-five etoreys high-
er, the whole. rising 750 feet above the
street level. New York as a city has
declined to limit the height of buildinge
within its boundaries, and the arehitecte
and engineers seemingly know no rea-
son why they should not go as high as
the money put at their 4'disposal will
take them. It is taking them far.
Is Your Voice Husky?
This it a distressingdisability that to
singers, clergymen, and teachers imposes
a %veering burden. A very simple means
of relief is found in CATARRHOZO.Nel
INHALER. Through it you breathe a
healing vapor, jut full of soothing balms
lltalt cover every melt of the breathing
organs in two seconds. Inflammation ts
removed, huskluces is relieved, and ca-
tarrhal taint is destroyed. The throat
gets strong and the voiee clean Usa Cht-
tarrbosotie for coughs, cold*, bronchitis
and catarrh; it is guaranteed to mire,
50e end $1.00 sizes,
LENGTH..
(Chicago Tribune.)
"dell," panted t1ie. defeeted foot lacer,
iniop won fairly, but you heat me by
only.is none."
"Hugh!" gasped the other; el. beat you
half it yard."
"Yes; that's what I said."
At which point the heety interferenee
of the referee became necessary.
-0-0-0------
tainar:d's Liniment used by Physleiane
FOWLS OF (HL AIR.
(Good ttouseireepinge
"when I order poultry from you again,"
eaid the man who quarrels with his gro-
cm. et don't want you to sena me any
of those aeroplane ehiceens." eiethat
kind do you moan ?" "Vie sort that are
ail. wings and machinery and no Meat."
itel"eittetteteeneeen--ea.e.n.
'" •
' l•
RM:4111.
;?!..
: Atetatnnia-eraietOlalathinninttti IS. MA-
ctiniefii% riftiulgers.f ;•St aztgi age and
:.e.Stperi men; ent...I.S. tierkgs1::prieeegie, tie
Ben st eminamtnirirotee i.eg aeon:to Ont.
tt • ee; . 7 ger
I ivE Ott 1..,-WOttL4.N-ii,NIIANT
for work at • illorne4.!payiak $2.00 or
*1,00 per clay, with.; opoottcuril4y to oil-
vance.. spare time erammei used, wore
not difficult, and reuifires:•no feliperlenpe•
Winston, LimiteS
d, ...nadirk4.: 0 ,
,111e. -.0°-
ror,to. • 1: 41%
.
WOMEN WANTED iet
W OMEN WANTED, TO Timm OR.
ders in spare time ; no experience
necessary. our lines especiame: used by
mothers and girls. Apply, Dept, A, Brit-
ish ganadian enanstrial Company, in
Albert street, Ottawa.
AGENTS WANTED.
ANVASSERS WANTED. WERIKIA
ae salary paid. Alfred Tyler, 3Si
*nee street. London, Ont.
A CENTS WANTED -A STUDY OD'
.Lt other agency propositions convinces
US that none can equal ours. You will
always regret 11 if you don't aphly for
particulars to Travetlers' Dept., ere ale
bert street, Ottawa,
OpaSiEnSiThOps, 0C14.eureierst:raalinytivill:Iri:.r Itouiss3s.LLL.
filitsotil. everywhere. Prot. Castle, Hata-
Every Woman
13 Interested and should know
about the wonderfut
MARVEL Whirling Spray
Th.. new Vaginal Syringe. Hess
-biou convenient. It eleansea
Instantly. Ask yout
druggist
If he cannot supply Oa
MARVEL accept no other,
but send stamp tor Illustrated
back -sealed. It gives full porde-
ulars and directions Invaluable to ladles.
WINDSOR SUPPLY CO..
Windsor, Ont, Genarai Agentster Co,* .
. . :
IN THE ONE "GALLUS" COUNTRY
(Lippineott's Magazine.)
A northerner asked a Cracker if be
thought he could get a new pair of sem
pendersat the ferry store. After lie.had
ridden on, the lialfigrown son of the
Cracker asked, "Pap, what's them?"
"I reckon they oe genuses," was the
reply.
"But, Pap, what's he a -going for to
git is par fur? D'ye reckin he's got two
par o' bridles?"
Uterine and Ovarian Tumors or Growths,
You can conttnue treatment at home at
a cost of only about 12 cents a week.
H. S. WOAInRcisE"O'
Womb. Painful or irregular Periods,
chely. Pains in the Dead, Back or Bow-
catsed by weakness peculiar to our sex.
Ulceration. Displacements-, Falling of the
also Hot Flushes, Nervousness, Melon -
els. Kidney and Bladaer Troublezi, where
full instructions, my borne treatment
which poeitiveiy cures Leueorrhoea.
To All Wcimen : I will send free with
A WINDSOR LADY'S APPEAL .
zevolisvlBlettr.alb.winii yloiaki. nisgo" zeleiloarnfarne'es 0Onwinecitieesdt 1.0 a wl Vtl;
clay.to -day. Address Mrs. M. Sunnners, Box
They should be brushed twice each
A knelt is used vertically, not lion -
How they're neglected.
Scrupuloue eleanlinees is necessary.
TEETH.
OF THE
should be inside and out,
not neglecting back teeth.
Before melt and every bniehing denial
floss must be tenet inoet thore•ughly.
Decaying bite, between the teeth hot
only rot the teeth, but spoil the breath.
The teeth should be examined twice a
year that cavities (if any) may be filled
betimes.
hide care is better repaid than that
given to the teeth.
..•••• -.••••-•••=1M-••••0•••••••••--- - •-••
DANGER IN A sonm CORN.
When pinched and irritated by is
tight boot, serious inflammation devel-
ops. Why stiffer when in twonty-folir
home you can get cured with Putnam's
Painlees Corn and Wart E'xtractor, It
'male, soothes, cures for all time. Am
cept no substitute for Putnam's Pain.
lass Corn and Wart Extractor. Price
Zen,
DIVIDING UP A DOLLAR,
Usually a dollar that is paid to
telephone company is dividea np ou
,follows: Rent, 4 cents; taxea, 4 cente;
in.tereet, 60 mite; eurpluee 8 oente;
maintonanoh, 16 ciente; divutende,
cents; labor, 44 c_
Ask for Minard's and. take noother.
made in Canadat.iot
44gattlaVatrit*,.....k.INi.lam..1=44.114g4g144g4sidS..:..',ektrale..1 TA
TH 18 PAINT rou!nitd:.'oarboilot"i
13Tliel.14YIt Yie:r17.howwltim aatirn
RAMSAYS PAINTS
SO4 it means gein to yell noten
you tem it. Reinetriber that you
get tile high etending thirabitity,
tat larb. beauty c,f tone that eon
can't get tim Othn paints, teed the
price is alwaya reasonableatiert-
potsible to be In the low giettilto
but never too high. 1,170 !kale
a lovely 13ooklet on home meinte
lug, /to 3 ou want It? Write for
AlleiMe. We malt 'it
A.
RAMSAy .4* CON •40,
Tait natter
MAKIStI," lki9iftr9491..
.
**foci, titeet.
•