Loading...
The Wingham Advance, 1907-12-26, Page 6• 4. ..1110.40.0000010.010000.000000.0.00.0, • rzzlmazzletanntonconnanzum The Shepherd's Little Son. (By Emma. Jesateet -4! mother, lion:wr, wales. 1 IT41: 1 li" 111411. Ttt•ltigilt 1 hear 4100;1 tit` tilt` -t reeked ‘eitb lierit; • 'enege,, emnetheag rt: hir t hat slsttll hoar: ail' !"' "Nay, nay, my ebild. lie :dill and weep, .Eate a. „the lambs die ebtenierde keep." "0 mother. einne bee! le tb 3 tleor end hair the mush!, ;eve •t, And eee t Ise gli t t ering forme th t elong with inevemente item; .And 0, the star; it shines mo brigett tt makee my pukes beat." "Nay, nay, my son, thint doet• lett dreamt by night things are ing u het they seem." "0 iggeenfeels;.ouid that t ha 1 non t 4411"41‘' steeee,„„,,, ,esetther mietbis • Yon thought- it •was Le veil! and ilea, but IWO, 110W very Bela! 0, let me follew-elis not far haste With all my 'night!" ."Nrity, and; come, rest, thee in thy bed, •And sleep these troubles hem, thn head." "0 mother, Mother do not sleep! ' an angel drawetli eettr; The shepherde field, is all aglow, but they are bowed with fear; The angel speaks -what does he may? 0 mother, help 1110 hear!" "0 hush thee, hush, nee restless ehild, And cease thy fancies strange end wild!" 40 mother, now I hear! he steed a Babe is born this night; In yonder town He lies asleep -a fair . and holy sight! • a• ,caris birth -star in Um sky flea shines so woutli•ons laight!" • "Nay, nay, my ehil•ti, t•hou doeI• but dream• It is the oden stars that- gleam." "0 mother, wake and run with A --for, see, the eloping -41s gn! • - There's Oise will earry mt. :tt•r frosty fields, I know, To where the little Baby Hee whom an- gels herald lail" The mother mlept, nor feleowed elown Her little son to el3thleneen town; •Saindependen1. Prayere• Almighty and ever 'Wedged God, our heavenly Father, who rib Thy wondrous. love aud mercy didgt send Thy Son, Jesus Christ, to be 'elle Saviour of the world, we thank Mule that to us have e the tidiass, 0' great joy. Send e gOod 'news through 011 the Let Jesus take possession of Eis . sing has the world been eed hee hatred, strife and cruelty; now the Prince of Peace resign. Come ee again, thou King of Love, and sub- tle. the hearts of the people unto Thy - Let Thy dominion extend to every d let 01 men own Thy sway. She earth rejoice with &d- ined with the elory of SC land Then slut ness and be God. Amen. Strength Never asekarrier. • Strength of conviction is never a bar. eier betWeen two persons. Jt is often Two iiiiIiitsenly . supposed to 1:e so. men agree to work together for a emu- " mon cause; little by little they End it difficult to co-operate on certein details of work, as both es-ree-efseige Mita- - Illy one or the tee el tem i ' eill have to aban- eee 0 I. emplace] 8 In 'eery way admirable. co-operation, though And he e s abandolifir104 itesseeepts, 118 the ne- cessity for thi cause th f tilat he is such a good linan and has such strong convict'? J. strong .may be a strong man, liut he misse. ns! He fact that, in this peeuliar ease, it hs ev ought to b 11.100. • weakness, not his strength, that ge -`' ee ates him 'from a man with .•-'1"h" ,e• )1'4 KurizonzollZillramiaszwkanuMN he Tr e a'd The False Maud turned. the letter up and read "Mrs. Falconer O'Leary," tout her fee flushed almoet 10111110. anti then valet and ehe looked from the letter to he fat.lier and her 'lather lo " 0 hind o unruvutont. "Thoro, you perceive, my dear, wha sort of a right this misguided youn man wethes to establish to you. Now " give me the letter that 1 may return it Conie, my dearewhy do you hesitate?" But Maud still detained the lettet and loo•ked 4lintlit and. anxiety frin her father to her mother. Dauiel Hun ter lied patienee with her and gave he time. At keit she said: "Father, 1 ltnow that you are a jus man, and that you will tell me what i right. I am very ignorant, father, an: I wish to know whether tis 1,eally is m true name that is written on thie tette -because if it is, I must, keep it!" "Your. name, my dear? Why, fissured ly not! What do yea' mean by sueh question? Anfever me." "I meant, father, to ask whether tha ceremony which. waa almost over Inn not made 1110 Falconer's wife?" "No, not If it had been quite over! As suredly not, You are under age, Mis Hunter. You belong to your father .aie mother. Only they tan give you 10 mar riag,e." Maud, for answer, silently handed her father the letter. Daniel Hunter efter a few moments' reflection, seemed to have eonquered his first ;emotion of haughty indignation, He sent his ser- vant to tell Little Len to wait for an answer. 'And then leaving the mother and daughter together, he went to his study, taking the letter with him, Here he sat down and wrote to Falconer O'Leary, intending to inclose Falconer's letter in his own. Daniel Hunter seat- ed himself in Ids leather • chair, drew is writing table before him, and set re- efkiting what he should do in this case. Most fathers, in Mr. Hunter's eireuxus stances, would have felt themselves more than justified -would have felt themselves constrained to break off all friendly intercourse with the wild, un- promising young radical agitator, and to destroy at once and forever every shadow of hope of his future union with his daughter and heiress. Most fathers would have punished the boy's insolence by sendihg back his letter inclosed in a scornful reply, or .with a move seornful silence. Most fathers would. have hur- ried their young daughter away, and brought every influence of family affec- tion and filial duty to bear upon her heart, and every allurement of travel, change of seem, soeiet•y, splendod and luxury to nharm her fancy, and. win her from the memory of her childish Love. And as far as the' daughter's welfare alone was interested, this might have been very well, and it would ho.ve prom- ised not 'unfairly for eventual success; for it was evident to Daniel Hunter, as to an others who saw it, that the af•• fection of Maud for Falconer was only the tender, gullelees :outspoken lover of an •only sister for an only brother. Yes, this plan .would have done very well for Maud, only it would have destroyed Fat- -cones; And most fathers would have fol- lowed it, but Daniel Hunter was not like meet men. For one reason, -he had mere moral power than other men, and he did not feel obliged to damn a poor boy whore he might redeem, or with ego- tistical indifference, to turn and, aban- don him to his own deetruction, when he could form, guide and elevate aim to fame and fortune. Falconer O'Leary was a wild, impetuous, ungovernable young radmal-a iglus fatuus, to lead men into bogs and quick- sands, where he would airet Auerneh himself. All this was true, But instead of hurling this firy young spirit down hell. as a native element, Daniel Hunter would snatch it "as a brand from the burning," would place it on a hill, where it should be a light to the world, "a burning and a shining light." That were a glorious thing to do, and Daniel Hunter was the man to do it. There is no great deed ever done that is not founded on a self -conquest, self- sacrifice -some darling selfish interest must be laid upon the adtar to purehase the power of doing it. And the greater the power needed, the greater the propi- tiatory sacrifice denutuded. And under theee conditione Daniel Hunter had the power to redeem this soul alive. The of- fering required from his was a great one. Do you think it was a small affair, for a man of his exalted rank, a man familiar with the adulations of the world, accus- tomed to all the splendor and refine- ments of courts and capital cities, and having one beautiful daughter, his sole helms% to withhold her from the splen- did destiny that might await her in the great .world of society, and keep her as the prize held forth to encourage and re- ward the upward strugglea of a young man without family, fortune, friends, or dintinetion, except such es would be eon. eidered a credit for him to lose. But this Mr. Hunter resolved to do. And having thus determined, he felt himself the ar- biter of the youth'e destiny, the archi- tect of hie future fame and fortunes. He laid the paper out before him, took it pen, and wrote to Falconer. No words of mine could do justice to the apirit of this letter. He began, however, by cor- recting the hofe mistake as to the claim he inade upon Miss Hunter. The marri- age, he said, (Well supposing it had been completed, mutt - stilt have been illegal without her father'e eousent, Arise Hun- ter being under age. "Consult," he wrote, "every. lawyer you pleaee, from a mere country pettifogger to a thief justice„and they •will all. the most shallow and the , are bound to 'whim great social env - e vese, a world-wide renown. By no means. 1, But become worthy of my ehild; and ✓ whether the world indorsea your worth or not, you phial have her. It is not your worldly potrition that I fine fault t with. I myselt run a man ef the people, g and 1 ehould say to a prince, though he , were heir to a throne and came voila- , ing my child, what I sity to youe-prove yourself worthy of my Maud before you ask me to give her to you, And now you n Win bear with the freedom of my words for two reaeons. First, that am the father of the maiden you love, and your father also in years and hi knowledge of life. And, secondly, because I am real- ly and disinterestedly eveking your good ae that of my own:" lastly, he wrote that in returniug the letter, lie acted in no spirit of resentment, but from mature deliberation, and under the strong conviction that in writing and superscribing such a letter the boy had been influenced by paselon, under a. to- t tat misconception of his true position .1 toward the maiden. He coneluded by say- ing that he should be pleased to see hint at Howlet Hall. Daniel Hunter placed his own epistle, s together with Faleoner's, in au envelope, sealed and superscribed it, and rang for a messenger, in whose hands he placed it to Le given to Mr. O'Leary's servant. In t•he meantime, Mrs. Hunter had re- , conducted her daughter bask to the cheer- ful, and lightsome chamber, where they had just commenced the morning. And when they were seated again on the low, luxurious sofa, befdre the fire, Maud dropped her head upon her mother's shoulder and buret into teass-her heart had been slowly filling for some time and now It over- flowed in a shower Of tears. "Now, I wonder why my darling weeps? Le it because she would leave her mother so soon for that young man?" asked Mrs. Hunter, passing her arm around her •neek. "No, mother; no, sweet mother! I could not leave you for the universe. No, not that -but. oh, I do feel for Fab cotter! And so would you, too, if you kneW him -if you knew how he needs me -if you felt how bereaved and deso- late he is without me. Mother you know I have been with him our 'We - 1 have been his helper and comforter ever since we were children. And, oh, if you did but know how much he needs help and comfort, if you did hitt know how unhappy he is." "And would my Maud marry himt- now, tell me true.' "Yes, mother, if I might, for I pity Min so much." "Theo 1 should grieve to see my Maud tuarry him. Pity is not the feeling iuy daughter should have for her future hus- band, but an -elevating love a high re• spect. My Maud does 'la yet even dream of the love she may one dey bear one who shall be worthy of her -who shall be able to sustain and elevate her." "But oh, mother !his empty, desolate home! to find no one sitting by the hearth! It is enough to break his heart. I cannot bear to think of it." "J3ut hie heart is not so easily broken -it is not eo tender as yours -besides, he must not stay in that dosolete home, lt will be even well if suffering drives him forth. A mountain oottage, on a barren farm in this remote region, is no proper place for a talented young man of this century and country, where tilde is work and to spare for all. He must go forth into the great struggling world and win himself a name aud a place And thus the mother and child held sweet counsel together for a couple of hours, at the end of which time Dainel Hunter joined them, and the conversa- tion took another turn. And soon after the carriage was an- nounced, and they' separated to prepare for a drive to the Summit, whither Airs. Hunter was going to purchase for her daughter a much needed now wardrobe of the best materials that the limited country store could supply. • Th.ey re,turiTI to.a That evening after Mr. and Mrs. Hun- ter had. retired to their chamber, "I feel very anxious about our little girl," said Daniel Hunter. "I have seen her eyes fill with tears several times to- day. I do earnestly hope that this is no 'Romeo and Juliet' affair between these young people." "Do not be uneasy. That Falconer loves, as he does everything else, madly, there can be little doubt. But that Maud loves with any other than a eis- terly affection I do not believe. Ma.ud's heart, I assure - wou, has never been awakened to any stronger, more exelu- sive love, than that of a sister for her brother. You Might have been sure of that, by the perfect openness with which ehe spoke of her affection for Falconer. Do girls speak so of their lovers?" "J. judged as you do -and yet -her tears!" "They are a sister's tears for a poor, bereaved brother -no more than just that!" men are always the erasie'S coworker --ethe strop est and the read' t to work wgith, to work with others. re big enough, and strong enough, to sink personal feeling and unimportant details in their indomitable .purpose to bring about right ends by rework wit:. others who make have widely different views from their own. It takes great strength to work success. fulyy with our eccentric fellow -beings, •.. It is a humiliating confession of our weakness when ive cannot work with them. Christmas Bells. • Ring out the old, ring in the new. Ring happy bells across the snow; The year is going, let him go; Ring but the falee, ring in the true. 4.1.1.veg;'•entrialse pride in place and blood, The eivie slander and the spite; Ring in the love of truth and right, Ring in the common love of eood. Ring out old shapes of foul disease, Ring out the narrowing lust of gold; Ring out the thousand wars of old, Ring in tbe thoneand years of peaee. Ring in the valiant num and free, The larger heart, the kindlier hand; Ring out the darknese of the land, Ring in the Christ that is to be. Christ's Life and His Teachings. The facts of Christ's life are recount- ed in the Gospels with as care- ful detail as are the words He spoke. •Seme of these facts are of such nature that they are to be accepted er reject- ed along with Ilia teachings. Many of theee kssons are well nigh meaning- ., - less unmet' it 10 true as represented We'? ',prang Mit of ems minute 7". -deed of benevolence He et. Jesns eisitnied rfi-iee no reason nt of *Ito ocrotcliai - soar started I •liffhae ' 1In to 4 Sle ' IN•21.0 110t 4. La 11 1fe grant- IC ,ts •0 more important 1 ph Ills Wcras aro to o vereal up ;11 that Eis mir- ! r. 11 eredibility ef a Dot depend( lit, npon the i•ela• 1 rtanee uf the thing reeortle.i. fi bevel found it in their litsirte 1 miraeles, have fume! c 1 raiee the queetien h.. b . cede sehl the Oleg-. ottribate Pim in the W.f. tam -1 tte- t Hint 0.4 bight a Oafs. in Hie ae• Al WC grant Him His epote4; P st. nest profmigd, weave you that you have tm legal elami upon Maufl. Consult any twine of any Christian denomination, from Coegregationaltit to the Catholic, ate lbw- will convince yon that eou lutvo ten riseese,a& relig,itme claim -upon her. Than sok Villakeeerecknee. and it ve141 %dem what The Offers hi** deckle:I. fund is at preeent perfectly filet tow, cleared away the .11 f yeur falee foundation, let 11871 'en a better hope upon liettneerarninand.'" and then he proviredtel to unfidd mvit, and goeil wishee and inten. hem Ter the boy. ITe said to hint what leirl said Ur Maud -that be pronoune- d.m. heaver -able pentence of separation Piivorn tbolit; that, on the contrary. • held her up to him as All ineentive o high aeltieventenie a prize to be won. erowning glory to a high eareer and aid Mot if ilur boy's love were anything Atter. than a mere selfish and exnethat i.esitri: if it siare a and holy prin- le I , • 11 1 • • •% w n hey. eArel T do led 1110821 by this n flay," Ilaniel /hinter, "that you . p , . .t ir ; ,1111. N htl frg h OT Mid le that tit es * * * * The next day about noon, the party from the city, consisting of Sir Henry Percival, Miss Ilonoria and Letty Hun- ter, arrived. They were put in possea- sion of this piece of secret family history as soon as possible after their establish- ment at the Hall. The delight of Letty was affecting -it betrayed itself in a burst of tears, as she pressed the new- found darling fondly to her faithful, af- fectionate bosom. Honoria embraced her adopted sister, and touched. her warm, rosy cheek with her chilly lips, and then felt that she had done every- thing that was required of her. But Sir Henry Percival, the young English bar- onet, when he was presented to the beau- tiful girl, started as if out of sleep, for he had been gaZing on her in a per- fect trance of admiration. This did not especially delight Miss Honoria, who cer. thinly considered Sir Henry Per - plea' as her own peculiar eava. In the course of 11,11t tilk% w somewhat large family Were My settled in then. winter liftrerree:"14 mas, But in the Mean- vparations were in pro. time therlestatd nothing whatever from Falconer O'Leary, and Maud grew daily more anxious; and depressed. Often in her innocent frankness she expresed her anxiety and asked her hither or mother if either had heterd anything of Falconer, but her patents had heard nothing satisfactory of the ping man. In the meantime, Valeoner had receiv- Dankl Hunter's generous; letter, but iaddened by love, Jealousy. disappoint. 8 ent and rage, the boy raw everything r lietorted through the fable medium of ipassionte and integhted that hie. "claim upon Wins indieputable, and that Daniel limiter knew It to be so, and had written that temporizing, con - 'dilatory letter only to gain time and put hit off indefintely. And therefore Faleoner, to use Ide own expreseion, re- solved, "by fair means or foul," to get the maiden iu his power. Ile set up all one 144 to write to her and in the morning he took the lett'er to Howlet Hall, and put it in the hands of Ja11108, the parlor waiter with strict injunctione to carry it tie his young nibitress. And James gave it hito the charge of Susan, Maud's own maid, with dh•eetione to take it immediately up to :Miss Hunter, It was as yet early in the morning, and the inaitlen had just Arisen from her bed, and waa standing before a dresming glass combing out her• long, bright ringlets,. when. her maid entered, and laid the letter on the dressing table before her. Maud took it up; it was directed to "Mrs. Falconer O'Leary." The young girl laid it down again *with a troubled. countenance, and a tremulous sigh, inquiring; "Who brought this, Susan?" "I don't know, Siiss Hunter. James gave it to me to bring up to you." Maud took the letter up oime more, turned it over, temtemplated the simmer' seription wistfully, and with another sigh pub it in the hand. of her maid, saying; "Susan, take this letter back to the messenger who brought it, and say - mind, now, attend and repeat my words exactly, Susan -say that it has been miedirected, observe! misdirected." "Yes, mitts," staid. the maid, receiving the letter and leaving the room to obey. And when she was gone, Maud teaned her elbows on the dressing table and dropped her face upon her• hands, and soon the tears were stealing between her fingers. She wiped them hastily away and lifted up her head .as she heard her at- tendant return to the room. Susan en- tered, smiling, with the letter hi her hand, and said: "It was Mr. Falconer O'Leary who brOught it, Miss Ituntei, and he says it was not misdirected -it was for you." "And where is Mr. O'Leary?" inquired Maud, in a faint voice, as tremblingly she took the letter. "He went away dieectly, Mies Hun- ter," Maud finished her toilet and dismiss- ed her attendant, and then took up the letter, pressed' it to her qutvering and placed it in her bosom next her heart, while she knelt and offered up her morning prayers. And then she arose from her knees, threw a• light shawl over her shoulders and prepared to go down stairs, but when quite ready she hesitated, drew the letter from her bosOm, and looked at it again, and turned it over and over, trifled with the seal, dwelt upon the handwriting, and notwithstanding the presumptpous superscription, pressed it fervently to her lips and to her bosom, and sat down upon the 'lobe and wept over it. She would have given much for the privi- lege of redding Falconer's letter and answering it kindly and soothingly. But she knew her duty better. And after her fit of crying was over, she arose again, and folded the shawl across her breast and went down into the sitthes room, where the family were all as- sembled for morning worship. As soon as that service was over, they all went into breakfast. And after breakfast, all dispersed, each to make ararngements for spend- ing the forenoon, either in work, amuse- ment or study. Maud went up to her father's study with the purpose of speaking to him about the letter she had received. She found both her parents there in con- sultation upon some building plan. But as they saw her enter, they broke off their conversation, and turned with smiles to welcome their beautiful child. She advanced to the table and laid the letter before her lather. Daniel Hun- ter took it up, and looked at it with surprise and vexation. "Another letter front that mad boy, my child? and with the same insolent superscription? Really! But I must be tolerant. Who brought it, my dear? When did you get it? And why did you not return it by the mesenger?" "Falconer in person brought it, my dear father, and when I sent it back to him he returned it, and departed abrupt- ly, before I could send it a emend time, and so I have brought it to you, sir." "Mad fellow! I invited him to the house on the footing of a friend of the family. Why does he not come?" "1 , don't know, sir, indeed. Perhaps the letter would explain." "Ah1 and the seal is still unbroken! I see1 Maud, you aro a good girl -a good girl," he said, putting his arm around her waist, and drawing her close to his side, and holding her so, while he asked: "Now, what do you think of this letter, my child? You know, of course, ft is a very presumptuous ect in him to address you by his name." "He is beside himself, father." "And therefore I must endure, if I cannot cure his madness. Well! this letter, my love. I should like to know your secret heart -your sweet Will about this." "Oh, my elear father, I should like to have it to read, and perhaps to an- swer." Daniel :Hunter gave the letter back into her hands, and embracing her fond- ly, said: "Take it, then, my child. Go to your chamber. Read and answer it, if you please to do so. I find that I can trust my Maud in all things. She is her mo- tlier's daughter, truly," and he pressed a kiss upon her cheek, and arooe and led her from the study. And gladly Maucl hastened up into her awn apartnent, closed the door and broke the seal of her letter. And such a letter as it ins! A wild, eloquent, lire passioned appeal, bringing all the. poWer, will and obligation of the "potential mood" to bear upon the subject-cont- nianding, eXhorting, entreating Maud to return to him; by her duty, by their mutual love, by her vows pledged at the altar and registered in heaven.. Maud wept over it before she could compose herself to reply to it. lfer answer was most loving, tender and dutiful. She spared no words to as- sure him of her affection and fidelity; but she said that she belonged to her fa. ther, who had the exclusive disiposal of her, and thnt she could not and would not trifle with her filial duty; that the name he addressed her by it must needs be offeneive to her father, and therefore very painful to herself; that if he were patient she would some day or other be pleased to wear his name, and with her father'm Hanetion, too. And in concha sion, she wrote; alio be continued.) Wife -A's five -end -twenty years the day, John, sill' you an' me yds marriet, an' a' that time we've never yince quar- relled. 11m:band-I dinna, wunner at that, my wumman, seeit.', that I've eich weet temper. Wife ie epeechlest vvith age, ABOUT NEW YORK. FIstiree, Facts end ranch)* of the M °trap° I le. New York city surface) ear conductor,' have their own flute of morals and do net hesitate to say that their low wages, work and the methods of the man- agers justify. the»t in getting their "per- quisites" when they can and they fix a reamonable amount at $2' daily. There is a daily average of 3.385 visl- tore In the Bronx Park Zoological Gar- den, New York subways are now carrying 90,000 more passengers daily than they did one year ago. Board of Estimate of the city says that the municipality will spend $15,- 000,000 more in 1903 than during the present year, There are in the public schools of New York city 48,000 children who are not sufficiently nourished properly to do their work as scholars. Most of the new houses being built in the borough of Brooklyn are of frame coretruction, costing on an average 84,100 each, while a majority of those in the Bronx are of brick, each one costing about $6,500. A burglar who was arrested and taken to police headquarters last week was evidently serious when he said: "This business don't pay near as well as your high finance, and there is a lot bigger chanceof being pinched and doing time!' Daily in New York city 40,500 persons emir pay the street car lines five cents for the privilege of hanging fast to straps for from three to fifty minutes: New York's Street Cleaning Depart- ment says it must have 1,600 more men if the city streets are to be kept in pre- sentable condition. During the last year the retail prices of meat have increased from one to three cents a pound, poultry has in- creased three cents, milk one cent a quart, butter from three to five cents a pound, loaves of bread have decreased about one-fifth in size and pastries have advanced about twenty per cent. in price. Each incoming transatlantic first cabin passenger lending in.hiew York has an hVeragt- 6f ftve trunks. Quito a number have as many as twenty-five, some have seventy-five, and now and then one has a hundred or more. There is a new use for New York pub- lic parks. They are recommended as sanitariums for recovering from drunk- enness. Friday a big policeman guided a drunken man through a gate of Bryant Park with the advice, "Go in there and sit down until you are sober." ,..me•••••••••••••••41. For Business Buildinds The only cleanly. the only fire-prool Felling.-thtling that says the last word III decorative auty.-the coiling that slrws no searns—that wfli oudast lite building tself PEDLAR. ART STEEL CEILINGS Coe no more than the cormnonsmt,buklooktheice as line. OW 2.000de:seas, to suit any store or structure. 8ide-walls tu match. See 011f newest assigns—nothing like them in Canada, either 1D. beauty or variety. Request the free book that shows the whole ceiling story. Send for it to. do'. 210 The PEDLAR People (E" (1861). Oshawa Montreal Ottawa Toronto London winntpog iti,.;.:;.,,,,,titii,,,;,: i ii ,, vrtiti i0.14,,,6; gala :;;F:', ?di% 041,04y, 144 44 WI II '' 1 1 ....j.,,,,..1 .f * When, When you envy the rapid success of another, try to find one the price he paid for it. When you meet a man, study his good rather than his bad qualities. Man is an imitative animal. When you find an employee who is a machine, look farther and you will dis- cover an employer who is a crank. When you have learned to keep you mouth shut at the proper time, you have acquired enough capital to embark in ahnost any business. When you begin to think every other mares business is superior to your own, you will soon realize that your own busi- ness is superior to yourself. When you are tempted to engage ht some business because of the great for- tunes won in it, find out what the aver- age success is before you make up your mind. When you hear it said, "Don't put off till to -morrow what you can do to -day," remember this does not apply to con- tracting debts, writing "mad" letters, er discharging employees. When you are inclined to believe Bar- num's saying that "The American people like to be humbugged," a good look at any of our populous penitentiaries will restore your mental balance. -Spare Mo- ments. The Lonllness of London. If you want to be quite alone, with not a soul to bother you, come to Lon- don, says an English paper. Of course there are people about, hundreds of thou- sands, millions of them, innumerable nameless people, but if you do not know them what are they to you? They pass you by in the street like omnibuses and the cabs. They are part of the street furniture. If you know no one in Lon- don you will be as solitary in your rooms, or your house, as any legendary monk in the desert. A singular thing is the mighty loneliness of cities, a very agreeable thing if you happen to want it. But if you do not? ' • • • Minard's Liniment Cures Garget in Cows. WATT-KNOTT. They Had What -Not Chat Over the Telephone. ' eyece "Are you there?" "Who are you, please?" "Watt," 'What Is your name, please?" "Watt's my name." "Yes; what is your name?" "I say tny name is Watt." "Oh, well; I'm coniing to see you." "All right; axe you Jones?" "No; I'm Keotte "Who ere you, then, please?" "I'm Knott." "Will, you tell me your name, please?" "Will Knott." "Why won't you?" "I sty my name is William Knott." "Oh, I beg your pardon." "Then you will bo in if some round, Watt?'' "Certainly, Knott." Then they were cut off by the ex- change, and Knott wants to know If Watt will he in or not. A Proverb Illustrated. Solomon. bad just remarked that there MIA nothing new under the rein. "I remember a winter knit like this, ottly more so, 'way back in '54," ho plainest Thus we sto the petictiee is of ancient date. ••••10 noir. 'ffltIGNING DE.4.711. Is .4 AND ITS LOST LOVE. A Ouestion of Sentiment on Which Honest Divergence of Opinion Ex- ists—And a Queetion of Fact on . Which Everybody Agrees. _— An eminent writer on the ethical question of love has Nati: "To be happy though re -married argues both adeptibility and courage." Another authority says that most wonion can really and truly love two, three or four times with. equtd fervor, but that a man can only really love once. There are many eases cited to prove these farts, but opponents of the theory quote with equal readiness contra experiencea. Tho writer knows of one man whose wife died of con. sumption which developed front a slight cold, and who, though a sense of duty to his family prompts him to re -marry, cannot break away from the old love of his early days. This man seys he contracted consumption front his late wife, but learning of the wonderful merits of Psychine to oure throat and lung troubles, prompty re- prted to it, with the result that he is perfectly restored. He states he believes it would have saved his wife if he had used it, He says he would have used it but for the doctors. Now he puts his faith in Psyehine and af- firms that if he ever marries again his next wife will not die of th.roat or lung trouble, as he knows Psy- chine to be a positive cure. "I herewith send my photo and tes- timonial for Psychine. I was given up 16 years ago as an incurable con- sumptive, by Prof. Lyman, Rush Med- ica.1 College, Chicago. I suffered sev- eral years after this until I heard of Psychine, and through it I was re- stored to perfect health, which I have enjoyed for the past ten years. My sickness began first with catarrh of the head. I readily advise catarrh and la grippe sufferers to take Psy• (saline, MRS. It. WELLS, "Lyndall, Man," Psychine, ' pronounced Si -keen, is the most wonderful cure ' known to medical science for coughs, colds, la grippe, catarrh, pneumonia, pleurisy, night sweats, chills, wasting diseases, consumption and stomach troubles. At all druggists, 500 to $1.00, or Dr. T. A. Slocum., Limited, 179 King street west, Toronto. "Paternalism." Thar never was a boy mined in the wide world lthat his mammy amid daddy didn't have a hand in the minim'. I've been wet:chin' it ell my life, an' know it's so; an' if we've got for to have paternalism, let's have it shore enough. Wher we see a boy gittin' outin the straight an' narrow path, let a duly qualified officer of the law take the mammy ,and daddy out to the back shed an' dress 'ean down wi' a leng, keen lniggy whip, an' have the boy on hand for to see it Well done. When the diaddies and mammies of this country declae that they can't manage the youngster they've fetched into the wocrld, it's about thne for the State to call 'en to taw. It'll be HO atter awhile that a policeman will be detailed to ge mu -in -arm Nvi' ever' boy tri the land for to keep him from takin' a drink of whisky or smokin' cigar- ette ,an" then the mammies an' daddies kin sleep in peace. -Joel Chandler Har- ris in Uncle Remus, Magazine. I was cured of painful Goitre by MINARD'S LINIMENT. Chatham, Ont. BAYARD MeMUL- LIN. I was -cured of Inflammation by MINARD'S LINIMENT. Walsh, Ont. MRS. W. H. JOHNSON. I was cured of Facial Neuralgia by MINARD'S LINIMENT. Parkdale, Ont. J. H. BAILEY. Too Shy. At a village church -a wedding was fixed for a certain. date. 'the happy morn arrived, and in due course a youth- ful swain and a buxom damsel presented themselves at the Chancel steps, Tho service proceeded smoothly as far as the question, "Wilt thou have this woman to be thy wedded wife?'" upon which the supposed bridegroom, instead of respond- ing, stammered blushingly: "Please, sir, I'm not the right man! I don't want to get married!" "Not the right man!" ex- claimed the clergyman, aghast. "Then where is the right man? "He's down at the bottom of the church, sir. He's too shy to came up." Mange. Prairie Soratohes and every form of contagious Itch on human or anizadls cured In 30 minutes by Wolford's Sanitary Lotion. It aver fails. Sold by druggists. cs - at. Harry's Dream. A lady was awakened by a fearful scream, which came from the room where her little boy Harry slept. She jumped out of bod. and when she renehed the other room she found Harry sitting up in bed, feeling himself all over, and look- ing seated out of his sences. "'Whatever is the matter, dear?" exclaimed the frightened mother. "Oh, mUmmy, Minn- ow," sobbed. the boy, "is I all here?" "Of course you are, pet," replied his mother. "Why?" "Oh, mummy," re. plied. the child, between his sobs, "I dreamed I was a chocolate stick, and that I anted myself." VIIIMMermaasmi•Mg.......1 ,c."1,4v4a. 4 success. The latest The big black plug chewing tobacco. • ale:gee ss 2205 kg g?? Ple..•••••••••••••• Wireless in German Army. The German army authorities hare just commenced, and will Maine un- til Jen. 15, 1008, an important series of experiments in wireless telegraphy at Metz and Strasiburg, rtud at the six leading fortreeses of Ttonigsberg, Thorn, Danzig, Posen, Cologne nuil Ono thousand relerviaiq. who have P?rved as military telegraphist% have boon eall- ed upon to work with these now serving with the army. riv• Takk Restarted fp ItlY Remett te Their SIAM* 7EPPON.F.1.1.1141*.r*Or.am.,-- lht. feigning of fleattla bg eortaiu Male for the eturpowe of deceiving theii, enendes• and these favouring immunity, fel ono of 04 greatrst of tab matter evi.; denees of their intelligent retiocination4 Tide hiMUlittlint is not eonfined to anyef particular family, order or *peke of an4 haat, but existe many, from the eery' lowest to the highest. It is found ewer; in the vegetable klugdone the went known sensitive phint bei»g an lutereeti) ing example. The adieu of Ode is purely reflex, as can b eproved by• oleg dervetion and experiment, and is notll therefore, a process of intelligence, An experintenter, writing 'in WiSeene fur Alle, says that he hes seen the4 teigaing of death in some of the lowers! j ammale known to scienee. Some thn I ago, while examining the. inhabitants ou a drop of pond water under a highepowerj lens, he noticed several rhizopods busile feeding en the minute buds of an alga : 'Ilicee rhizopods suddenly drew in theli I hairlike filaria and stink to the bottomil to all appearances dead, The cause Wall' fOUlllt to be the presence of a water , 1 louse, an animal WIWI. feeds on tbes : animalcule°. lt likewise sank to the bote 1 tom, and, after looking itt the rhizopods ; swam. away, evidently regarding them!' as dead 0ntl unfit for food. I This was not aa accidental oeourrence,1 for the observer hes seen the same wons derful performance twice since. Through\ the agency of what 1901180, he ask% dial these little creatures discover the ap- proach of their enemy? Is is possible that they and other microscopic animals have eyes and ears so exceedingly small that lenses of the very highest power cannot make them visible, or are they posseseors of eenses utterly unknown to and incapable of being appreciated by r"-- - - -----"....1.....7.1.:........1,.............- • ---- ."7--, "--...-7:-.. Maal 7 Science ean neither affirm nor . Inward and Outward, deny either of these su positions Most animals are a ain for food by other animals. Moat of the carnivore, and insectivore prefer freshly killed. food to carrion. They will not 'touch tainted meat when they can prootire fresh. Hence, when they come upon their ,irrey apparently dead, they will leave it alone and go in search of other quatry, unless they are very hungry. Tainted substances are dangerous to let into the stiimach. Certain ptomaines render it sometimes very poisonous. Long years of experience have taught this feet to animals, and, therefore, most of them let deed or seemingly dead ores- turee alone. Byrie " Special" $1.5.00 UR SPECIAL Ladies Watch at P5.00 is a very accurate time piece, and contains a fine Ryrie Bros. 15 jewelled movement carrying our fOliest guaranies, THE -CASE Is 14k gold filled, I guaranteed for 25 years. THIS WATCH can be supplied in L. a man's size, open faced, screw front and back, at the same price, RAMIE BROS., Limited I.P4.138 Yonge TORONTO MOWS Quick ease for the worst cough -quick relief to the heaviest cold -and SAFE to take, even for a child. That is Shiloh's Cure. Cures Sold under a guarantee COUghS to cure colds and coughs El: lquireide ki cei irl e_thoarny oaunry mootnlemyr bau-ack . 4...i--"304yldeaSrs of success commend Shiloh's Cure. 25e., 50c., $1. me QUICKLY! Where Doctors Never Ask Fees. A Japanese doctor never thinks of asking a poor patient for a fee. There is a proverb among the medical frater- nity of Japan: "When the twin ene- mies, poverty and disease, invade a home, then he who takes ought from that home, even though it he given him, is 410 frtoebnbilr.s'a' Ys Dr. Matsumoto, "a doc- tor will not only give his time and hie medicine freely to the sufferer, . but he will also give him money to tide him over hitsiArtIe99,19904g4 Every physi- cian has his own dispensary, and there are very few chemists shops in the em- pire. When a rich man calls in a physi- cian he does not expect to be presented with a bill for medical services. In fact, no such thing as a doctor's bill is known in Japan, although nearly all the other modern apliances are in vogue there. The doctor never asks for his fee. The strict honesty of the people makes this unneces.sary. When he has finished with a patient, a preeent is made to him of whatever som the patient or hia friends may deem to be just compensation. The doctor is supposed to smile, take his fee, bow, and thank his patron." . . 4 • 0 ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT Removes all hard, soft and calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spawn, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, sprains, sore and swollen throat, coughs, etc. Save $60 by use of one bottle. Warranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by drag - gists, 4 - • Wild Goat of Europe. The common wild goat is almost ex- tinct in Europe -even from the Alps, where he used to be commonly found. The Piedmont mountains appear to be his last refuge, and even there he has to be protected in the royal park of Gressoney, where about 300 head are preserved. One or two of the Cantons are urging the Federal Government to find re- sources foe reaoclimatizing the wild goat. One or two private efforts have been made, but the animal does not take kindly to t_......_hem.-London Globe. Mniard's Liniment Cures Distemper., A Poet's Vision. For years the poet Francis Thompso had been one of the "submerged," sell ing manatee, calling cabs, anything t obtain the pence necessary to buy food, At last he yielded to despair, and, ha ieng for some days saved up all he coul arn, he devoted it to the purchase of esingle dose of laudanum. suffieient t nnd his troubles. With this he retired a. ight to his haunt, the rubbish plot in Covent Garden Market. Then by his ow narrative the following incident occur- red: He had already taken half the fatal draught when he felt a hand upen his arm and looking up saw one whom he recognieed as Ohatterton forbidding him to drink the rest, and at the same in- stant memory came to hint of how, af- ter that poet's suicide, a letter had been delivered et hie lodgings; which, if he had waited another day, would haye brought him the relief needed. It happened so with Thompson, for afr ter infinite pains the editor of a maga- zine, who had accepted aed printed . essay and a poem of his, but could not discover lus addrese, had that very mean- ing trated Thompeon to the chemist's shop where tho drug was sold, and re- lief for him was elose at hand.- -From the A esidetny. A VALIJAI3L1,1 STORY. "I heard of a man who laughed scr hard at story that he lost his voiert."1 "What was that story? I'd like tel tell it to my wife." A fault which humbles us is of More j tale than good action which puffs 'to npf with pride. . . . • In Sunday :school a little girl was questioned as to her repeated non-at- tendance. "Why have you been absent so many thnes lately?" asked the teacher. 'Please, teacher," tieswered the girl, "mother thought I'd better not come to Sunday school as my hat was dirty." "But, my dear," objected th teacher, gently, "it is not the outward appearance that we consider; it is the inward." "I know that, teacher," was Maggie's reply; "but it's all the same; the lining was dirty, too." • er Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. Prnverts Up to Date. He who- eaite for dead men's shoes is liable to get corns. Better to have loved and lost than to have been the other fellow. Tacks are stubborn things. lt takes two to make a quarrel and three to make a divorce. He who is born with a golden speen in Ids mouth often lives to hock the family plate. The proof of the pudding is in the morning. He kills two birds with one stone who marries a widow with a family. Sweet are the uses of alimony, -The - Bohemian. A SALLOW SKIN means weak blood, general debility, impaired digeition. NT; one need have thNe-to long as such an excellent blood and nerve remedy u • HA0g MARK news:lime. Tablets are to be had. They supply the blood with red corpuscles and regime hulth, clearing the skin -purifying the whole system. They build up brain and muscle, and make life well worth living.: .50e. &Aar -6 boxes, $2.50. Mira Blood rode and Mira Ointment areas* areellent for blood and skin troubles.. TRY them. At druggists-or/rem rhe Chemists' Co. of caamiat Limited. liamillon-roronto. "-•••410-,. Fastest War Veseel in the aaT According to a London paper, the high speed turbine torpedo boat destr er Mohawk, which recently had sev 4 speed tests under forced draft in North Sea, is one of the fastest war sl• sels in the world. While all the offie I figures concetnirg her speed tests havae not been mede putilic, it has been leer ed that she maintained for six hours speed of 34Ye knots, and later warm up to a quarter of a knot better on consecutive tests over a mile eour The Mohawk, which is propelled by fi turbines -three ahead and two astern wae built by J. S. White & Co., of Ea Cowes, under license from tho Parson Morino Steam Turbine Company. He turbines represent 14,000 indicated horsepower, the steam of ivhieh- is gm. crated by six water tube boilers, fired by liquid fuel, of which she can carry 72 tons. She is 270 feet long, has a beam of 25 feet, a draft of 8 feet, and a dis- placement of 765 tons. Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, etc. • Why They Stopped. A little miss entered a street ear car- rying a baseket, front which appeared, from time to time, the head of a tiny dog. She asked the conductor to stop at ' a certain street. When the car stopped, she held the do up to the window. n't you wish to get off V' inquired the conductor. "Ole no," replied she; "I just wanted Nalcloioaaree where his mother lives." - e_ FQR LARGE FAMILIES ONLY, The Anonynume Society for 1,kononi- hal Dwellings for •the Poor, a Parisian institution, haa made a new departi in opening an apartment house for ht. families only. No family is Ahmed move into it mikes it has at least three children. The house fills a long felt want, private OWIlerg, like many in .New York, objecting to renting to fame ilits with ehildren. As sawn as it W11$ 01/01104 110W holm wag. filled, 241y4i The New York Sun. It consists of a central building eight etoreye high with two seven storey wings. It tentains alteeether 114 stoat - 11t0 tenement ftial a census taken jitst after the opening ehowed that it Ami- n -red 020 pereons of whom 427 were children. The rents vary from 184 to 4e4 frame ($30.80 to $84.80) a year. A majority of the tenements have a. Jorge balcony upon whit+ the room-alWays a good-sized room- open 4. A peculiarity is that the partitions be- tWeeti the parents and childrents rooms tun tale- threeepiarters •of the height to the veiling. This is regarded ns -airing all tweeter:try privaey while it en - :Nee the parents to IT.00p Wat441 over the eldhlren. Tiw window AN are all at 511011 a height nhove the floor that the small ehildreu cannot ellnib t(!et them. In every stairway, be:Mitre tlp steps of m•dinary height, there is flight of half height steps for the woe • of the children, which they eau .. without strain. The building ie equipped with the .estapes -not a general thing in Pali.. ate vistiOttS faeilities approtteliing.:e the equipment of a New N'ork tent:meat • -----eauseanamewea 11,,;i31.74'1,11$4.1l 4