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The Wingham Advance, 1905-08-17, Page 6li Color -favor-s.Frdgrdnce. Are the strong points of ,.. I.1111 yi, li I ,i 11 .1 .ate e Its RICH, CLEAR COLOR, FRESH FRAGRANCE' end DELICIOUS •, FLAVOR, have trade it hosts of friends' Are you one yet? 40c and SOC. M ell live grocers. 1 LOVA ASD A TITLE Poor Clarence ! I met him, melan- choly and desperate, at Rouen, whence ire bad gone, as he confessed to me after a deal of coaxing, to forget "the only girl, I give e -on my word, Lueelle, I ever loved !" Poor leitz ! he is very much altered --for the better, I think; but he is still heartbroken, and, they tell rue. mourns "Jeanne" in his sleep, and car- ries a Iock of her hair. There, Vane, for- give me; you see I can't help teasing you, now, and, frankly, I cannot for the life of me, help sniffling when I think of you. You, the first marquis in this and -the astute and worldly-wise Fern- dale -making love in disguise to a sim- ple country girl, who was not so simple as not to know the marquis underneath the artist, and to secure her prize. They tell me you have chosen in direct contradiction to your avowed tastes; dark eyes, dark hair, hasn't she ? Oh. lane t and onee-"naught but the gold and azure blue, were dreamed of in your divinity." Well, may you happy be, dear Vane ! It is easy for a man to be happy, for he can so easily forget. For us, poor women, well, the best we can hope for is to be allowed to glance some- times at your happiness. Let me do so, Vane; I want to know your wife, and to make her love me, not half-heartedly, but altogether and for always. She can do that, I dare say, being a woman. Meanwhile, dear Vane. spare her, from your kisses, one for me ! Lueelle.," P. S. -By the way, do not forget that I coaxed C'larence's secret from him, that it must be a secret still. I'm here at Leigh Court a week before my time; you know my old restlessness and sudden impulses! Besides, I had exhausted Paris. Adieu--no-au revoir ! Word by word, he reads on -not only reading but hearing, as it were, the very voice, soft. insinuating, and languid, of the fashionable beauty. Word by word it arose and stung him, His face went white at times, and at others crimson. Every taunt struck him home in his heart and rankled. At last he raised his head, and, crushing her delicate, scented note in his hands, exclaimed: t "It is a lie!" But before the words had left his Ups the demon of doubt was in his ear: "Is it a lie?" How did she look when sbe heard the news of his identity with the Marquis of Ferndale? He re- n,embers now that she did not look sur- prised; troubled and agitated, perhaps, but not surprised. Then-then--ahcut Clarence Fitz- james? How often they used to be at the Park -how often they were together! Where had Fitzjames been tbat morn- ing when he, Vane, had met him in the village riding on the bay cob? Doubt after doubt raised by the re- collection of a dozen little circumstances, which were rendered significant by her accursed letter, arose to overwhelm him. If it were true, then be 'had been fool- ed and deceived by a simple country girl. Yes, it must be true. Lucelle was too old a campaigner to rely on a lie, however dextrously told, unless that lie could not be detected. Oh, Heaven! what if Jeanne did not love him for himself alone! Softly at intervals floats out to him Jeanne's voice, singing its simple sea ballad, It is all about a ship " that sailed, and a gale that blew, and the waves that made a grave for hearts so true." He can hear it no longer, but must get the truth. Crushing the letter in his burning hands, he goes to the drawing - room window. Jeanne hears his step, a slow, drag- ging step, as one going to meet bis doom, and looks up with a smile. "Have you finished your cigarette?" she says; 'and I have just finished my song. Oh! how kind it was of you to think of painting that picture of the Nancy Bell for me, and ----" She stops suddenly, startled by the pallor of his drawn fare. that looks ghostly under its dark brow and heavy moustache. "Vernon!" she breathes, hurrying to him, "are you ill?" and her hand goes to his arms. Wetting his lips, he moves slightly back, allowing her hand to fall from his arm. "Waite" he says hoarsely. "Do not touch me!" CHAPTER XXII. At those terrible words Jeanne shrinks back, and looks at bin as if she fears he has gone mad, or that she has sud- denly n take leave of her er own sense.,. Not only is his voice utterly changed, but his face has undergone some wonder- ful transformation. Five minutes ago she had looked around and seen hint leaning against the balutstrado of the ter- raee, his handsome face set in that peace - MI Iook of repast which a man wears who has dined well and has his newly made bride within reach. Now it is hard and strained, haggard and working, as if with some suppressed emotion. At the instant one of theta wild, sud- den thoughts strike Jeanne's dazed brain --suppose Vane, the lover and the lov- able, has gone forever, and this marquis whom she has married is quite another person? It is a fantastic thought, but it seizes ber and renders her motionIc:s. Jeanne -to whom the world is as yet a shadowy, indistinct land, ef which she has not the vaguest knowledge --knows nothing of men, their moods and their passions. Thiele .John is the sweetest - tempered wpm that ever trod the earth. Ila], is but a boy, whose little outbursts of ill -temper are rather amusing than otherwise. How should she know that she is eoufronting one of the Ferndale "black fits," or, knowing it, understands how to cope with it? old Mrs. Fleming, Tully, Southall, Wit - lie, any of then-, would know better how to meet thie terrible, hard -faced, p.ts- sionate man than the slight, loving girl who faces him, shrinking and panting with alarm, 'Thus the stand and look at reel other. the fury blazing in Vane's heart to white heat. rendering him blind tv rCason or justie --rendering hilt in- sensible to love itself. At last be turns, doses the door and epeaks: Jeanne,ep he east,, and how differently the twee leaves his lips, that nate. • which he was wont almost to sing, or so It seemed to Jeanne, "Jeanne, you have deeeived nue!" it is a simple thing to say, but said as Vernon Vane, Marquis of Ferndale, utters it, it sounds in Jeaune's ears as the accusation against a criminal before a stern, unyielding judge. f he looks at hint for a moutent ques- tioningly, then Iter eyes droop. Watching her with keen agony of fear and hope- the fear lest Lady Lu- eelle should be right, the hope that Jeanne will meet him with a denial and indignant question -watching her as if his life depended upon the answer her face shall give him, he notes that sud- den droop,and smothers a groan. "Yes," be says in a low voice, all the more terrible for its suppressed inten- sity, "you have deceived me. Are you satisfied?' Jeanne raises her eyes; her face is very pale and her lips quivering. "I-1 do not understand. Oh Vernon, what has happened?" and she clasps her hands in timid entreaty. "You do not understand?" he repeats. "You are woman enough to know the meaning of a lie--" Jeanne starts as if he had struck her -as indeed he bad, to the heart. "For all your seeming, child -like in- nocence, you know bow to deceive with the mutest of your sex. You know the meaning of a lie, and the value of it." She looks up to speak to remonstrate, but the words die on her lips, struck dumb by the intense bitterness of his haggard face and flashing eyes. "Are you satisfied?" ho repeats. "You have played your part, you have won your game --are you satisfied?" Jeanne finds words at last. "Tell me," she says, and her voice sounds strained and unnatural, "tell me what I have done." At this simple prayer, uttered so pa- tbetically, most men's hearts would have melted, most men's anger would have been turned aside, but in the bitterness of his disappointment, in the anguish of his own misery, Vane knows no pity -the Ferndale temper is inexplicable. "I will," he says, "but you know! you have sold your soul for the worthless price of a title, you have bartered your honor and your truth for dross, you have lent yourself to deceit with the facility of the most unscrupulous woman of the 1 world -you, the innocent, guileless child I deemed you -to gain your end." ieanne's eyes, wide open and be- wildered, are raised to his accusing ones. "Do. you wish me to enter into the mean details?" he says, sternly. "Have you forgotten -do you think I forget what has passed? Do you think that I have lost all remembrance of your feign- ed surprise and ignorance when that ner- vous fool blundered out the title of the man you hod married?" Jeanne starts, and puts one hand upon a table which stands near her. "Do you forget how you humored my whim -as you no doubt deemed it!- and allowed me to think that I had carried out that whine successfully? Jeanne, can you look me in the face and tell Inc that you did not know tbat I was other than Vernon Vane, the artist; that you did not know in marying me, you would be the Marchioness of Ferndale?" As she stands with the subdued lights at the back of her, he cannot see her face distinctly, and as she remains sil- ent, a wild hope rises within him. "Jeanne,' he says, making a step to- ward her, and speaking with feverish eagerness, "Jeanne, tell me you did not bitter? Am 1 too hard? Look e;t -net think how great a, prize I have lost ---1, who thought to have gained the pure, uuseifish love of ca heart unstained, by one ignoble thought, ,ante consider how cruel ('1te diseppoilttmeut must be. "Can you understand? I1 scarcely think yon can. 'Think, then, how you would feel if you had learned that the tit], n p e you. had married for ru.ls but a sawn -that there was- on hfarquis of Fern- dale ,:end that the mean you had so well feigner], to love was simple Vernon Vane! That is within .the grasp of your imagin- ation, I doubt not; ehiid as yon are, you can underst na that. I tell you, then, that my disappointment is a thousaud tittles more than yours would be in such a ease, for I have lost the quest of my life, at a moment when I ;had conceived that I held it within my grasp. Yes, Mak upon your handiwork, and be setts- fied!' With the violeuee of a. mountain tor- rent he pours out the passionate volume of accusation and reproaelt, scarcely re- membering to wilom be is spea.kMg, communing with his own tortured heart rather than addressing the beautiful girl who stands speechless, watching hila with distraught eyes and white face, 'Stopped for waut of breath, he turns to her: "Did you ever pause to think upon what a perilous undertaking you had set out? Did you hope that the truth would never reach mne, and that I should not discover how hollow a joy I bad won? Did you over look forward to this mo anent, when, the mask stripped from that ehild-face of yours, you would stand with your falsehood disoovored, your treacle. ery revealed? Or did you lay the flat-, tering unction to your soul that my fool- ish passion would blind me to yotir de- ceit, and that tbe trick you bad played would be condoned bye. passing word and forgotten? You deceived yourself. Yes, you deceived yourself. She whom I loved was Joanne, the pure -hearted, freak -faced girl whom I found playing with the careless heart of a child in the little fishing village; not the girl who, to gain title and wealth, lent herself to de- ceit and a lie! That Jeanne whom I loved has gone, vanished forever, and in ber plate stands the Marchioness of Ferndale, with whom I have no part or' lat. No! you were but half wise, but half tau ht; your woman's instinct of guile and cunning was only half matur- . ed, or you would have shrunk from this, Jeanne, and have married that other fool --Clarence Fitxjames--" Jeanne starts, and finds her voice. "Marry hili!" she says, almost inaud- ibly. He stops and fronts her, the light of passion blazing in his eyes. "AIL," be says, "thattouches you. You see I know it all. Will you deny that he loved you, that he offered to make you his wife?" Jeanne looks at ],him steadily; her face is very pale, but 'her eyes are flashing. "No!" she says, not inaudibly now, though mot loudly. "No!" she repeats, and as she does so the Jeanne of the last few months -- yielding, gentle, loving and softened --- seems to give place to the old frank, in- dependent girl in whom lies -latent if you will --the pride of a lofty race. It is the old Jeanne that speaks, Jean- ne before love came and conquered her, and the passion and pride in that "No!" ere ars inetnse and as marked as his own. "Do you not deny it?" he says, mad- dened more by .the very absence of the denial, for he has hoped that at least that part of my Lady Lueelle's Ietter ie false. "You do not deny it, and not one word of 'this did you tell nee. Heaven! what fools you stake of use I, who dreamed that I had won the love of one utterly ignorant of the meaning of the word. 3!ou Dame to me with his love vows ringing in your ears. Came to me with the placid smile and winning art- lessness of a ehild-Heaven! that suck deceit should wear so covet a facet' With a groan, he flings himself into a chair, but he starts up the next mo- m i SUPPQR SCATT'3 EMUUiON sums as bridge ge #a carry the weakened and starved system along until 11 cell IIad Oral support In ordinary food, Send for free sample, SCOTT at DOWNS, C,hsmiste,'1 Dwarfs, SDC, and Stool ell druggists, t' 'ATE OF SCANDINAVIAN RINGS Oscar Not the First Sovereign to 1) Dethroned. Xing Oscar is by no means the first Scandinavian King to be dethroned. A Danish historian recalls the fast that in 11809 Gustax IV. of Sweden was compell- ed to abdicate, and before him King Erik X1V. and King Sigismund. The same fate also overtook the reigning queens Christina and Ulrika Leonore. Danish history records the dethronement of only one Kiug-Khristien II. in 1522, els regards King Oscar, the opinion prevails in Sweden that he anticipated his Ills of Norway and even desired it, It ar- gued that, being an apostle of peace, and knowing that the union between Norway and Sweden was bound to be dissolved, he was anxious that the crisis should occur during hie reign, as his successor might regard it as a cause for war. I. .11 !.1 1 ,I! THE WAIL CORRESI'QNDEN '. He Must Have a Seidter's Courage :anti a 1 Dipleanxt's Tact. In reporting a )(sr, the first and most important question naturally arises over the solection of correspondents, says Mel- ville 10. Stone, in The Century. Tho number of men qualified by nature and cducattou forsmelt urh a h°e• i.,k Is vac limited. d. Your war correspondents must be physically cpable of withstanding the hardships of the field. Ile must b0 also A$ courageous as say soldier. Indeed, lite let is an even harder one, because he must put hlmaelf in places of the greatest danger, without the patriotic fervor, the touch of the epmrade's elbow, or the possession of a rifle, all of whteli are largo factors in making up a trooper's bravery. Ito must be r4lpable of doscriping what he sees accurate- ly and graphically. Ile must have as large a perspective as the commanding general, It ho seek to tell the whole story of the battle. 1 }Jut he may have all these primal requisites and stlll prove a failure. lie must be tent - e gratloting 1ly himaselfplinto tthand aympatltictiof and helpful frieudsllip with those whom he eomea l 1n contact. Ile may be an Ideal represents - i live at the headquarters of as American gen- eral, but wholly incapable of serving sails - f factortly with the Russians or the Japan- • ese, As an Illustration, all of the Associated I Press correspondents on the Russian, side speak Dither Russian or French. It they did not they would be useless, At least three of them are long-time personae Mende of non 1 Kouropatkln, Above all, the war correspondent must posses !a narked degree that tamlllartty with events and aftalrs which will commas], the confidence of those in paver about him His influence often extends beyond tits prim- 1 is true that to proauco any appreciable fieldxuitfsl �n of reportingandstrays Into 'the inYigoratioll a Much larger quantity of no of the Associated Press carrespon4ents scent, yeti odor was sou ht out and consulted b the ce is 1 Results from common soaps eczema, coarse hands, ragged clothes, shrunken flannels, UNLIGIIT OA REDUCES P �X E3YS1rj Ask for the octagon 1far .37 MpSI;; AS A TONIC. Doctor Thinks All Perfumes Are Slightly Invigorating, Discussing rho recent discovery by Crookshank, of London, that musk is a vah:able remele in the treatment of typhoid fever and else acts as a stinut• ltutt and tonic for the brain, a local pay sioian connected with the university of Pennsylvania is inclined to attribute the 'world-wide and loug•enduring popu- larity of musk as a perftnlo to the facts established by the London scientist. It o international diplomacy. For ra, tip stuff lutist be used than is necessary stases, during the Boxer rebellioncorn in Chinn, to create a the faintest 0 g y !probably carries sOlnt' subtle suggestion manger of Due power represented In the at- at mental strengthening and elevation, lied expedition as to Ines proper attitude to Indeed the doctor quoted believes that ward the military representative of another • + power, whoea actions were ouster grave many perfumes other than musk and • concern in lea delicate hour. especially those with an alcoholic base _ _------ carry slight invigoration, either mental NOTES FOR NATURALISTS. or physical, or both, even when only in - For thirty years fishes of -many varie- Baled through the nostrils. ties have been kept in aquaria by 1'Ir. P. Crookshank s demonstrations with ON [� (]� ( Davis, of London, and his observations music do not appear to have been ear Nr TRE ,(,[ti�jBIEs have convinced him, contrary to eon- mea far exuopgh to show wliothor the of mon belief, that fishes sleep, though feets of it when used as a stimulant are only in darkness. Artificial light awakens as bad as in the case of most other them. He finds also that fishes have drugs. This question is not, however, of their play or sports, like other creatures. immediate importance, because the effect Evidence has been collected recently , of stimulation being fleeting and transi- which shows that the blue -throat flies tory, the doses, often repeated, must be from Central Africa to the shores of the largo to have the desired result, and North Sea, a distance of 1,000 miles, in musk is expensive. All that is used here less than a day and a night, and making comes from China and costs something ANOTHER VOICE Tells of Diabetes Cured by Dodd's Kidney Pitts. W. G. Bartleman Could Get No Relief Till He Tried the Great Canadian Kidnep it, moreover, in one uninterrupted flight. hire $200 a pound. .As a perfume a pound Remedy, Wapella, Assa., N. W. T., Aug. 7. -- (Special) -This thriving town furnishes one of the most remarkable cures of Kidney Disease that has ever been re- ported on the prairies. Mr. Wm. G. Bartleman, a well-known farmer, is, the man cured and he makes the following statement: "I had Kidney 'Trouble and it devel- oped into Diabetes. I went to the doe - tor but his treatment was of no use whatever to me. 1 began to take Dodd's Kidney Pills in Decexnber, 1902. I took them all winter and summer while I was unable to work my farm. I took twelve boxes in all and in August I was able to work. "Now I am quite strong. I worked all winter without pains in my back or any pare of my body. Dodd's Kidney Pills cured me." If the Kidney Disease is of long stand- ing it may take time to cure it. But Dodd's Kidney Pills will do it. A SOLEMN DANCE. They have a singular kind of dance The storks, which spend their summers would serve a large section of the popu- in Austria-Hungary and their winters tion of a dity as big as Philadelphia, but in India and Central Africa, are also , when used as a medicine the doses, ad• marvellous travellers, and make their ministered every two hours, cost about journeys twice a year in unbroken flight $2 each. None of the inferior grades of each time. From Buda Pest, in Hungary, musk, it is said, are of any value as a to Lahore, in India, is 2,400 miles in an stimulant. air line, and the storks made the jour- 4 - ney in 24 hours, thus travelling at the j Making the Public Wise. rate of 100 miles an hour for the whole It sometimes pays to take the public distance. The storks which spend the into one's confidence. It is reported that summer in Central Egrope and winter some eastern packed preserves on sale in Central Africa travel with the same in the Northwest are labelled with the rapidity. following legend: "The contents of this That those who do not know malaria package are preserved with the very to be a result of musquito bites are hegrest grade of salicylic acid and the very much behind the time is shown by very finest quality of coal -tar dye." The the Sanskirt manuscript on fevers re- chances are -we can't be positive -that cently brought to light in Ceylon. This the goods will sell as readily as if the document, 1,400 years old, enumerates customers were kept in ignorance, pro - 67 kinds of mosquitoes, the bites of viding the State laws allow the silicylic which produce fever. acid and coal -tar dyes to be used in food." -Merchants' Review. The Avenue to Success.- Many a man who sells or manufae- NEW YORK, PHILADELPHIA an article which might be popular- In going to above points take direct ized by publicity hesitates to take the route, Lehigh Valley Railroad. Five fast plunge test advertising should foul to do express trains daily, from Suspension all that is claimed for it. For such dpi- Bridge, Niagara Falls. Trains of Ci. T. R. make direct connection at Suspension Bridge. The Lehigh Valley has three stations in New York uptown, near all first class hotels and business houses; downtown, near all European steamer docks, saving passengers for Europe a long and expensive transfer. Secure your tickets to New York or Philadelphia via Lehigh Valley Railroad. conducted on the greens of country vii- 1 bious persons the experience of others lages in Russia. The dancers stand is tbe best guide. A glance at the an - apart, a knot of young men here, a nouncements of the regular advertisesr knot of maidens there, each sex by it- in the daily papers will remind them of self and silent as a crowd of mutes. A the fortunes that sensible appeals to piper breakes into a tune; a youth pulls I consumers successful wetave built in era onceven . The u ost off his cap and challenges his girl with avenue which theyfollowedis open to a wave and a bow. If the girl is willing, all who want to find a market for a she waves her handkerchief in token of 1 assent. The youth advances, takes a really meritorious product. corner of the handkerhcief in his hand '~,r LINIMENT and leads his lassie round and round. ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT No word is spoken and no laugh is eat with a h.trsh, bitter laugh, heard. Stiff with cords- and rick with Removes all hard, soft or calloused "And I I poured out my confession of braids the girl moves heavily by her- heard. and blemishes from horses, blood my former life and loves, deeming the self, going round and round and never spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, concealment a sin against one so pure allowing her partner to touch her hand. stifles, sprains. sore and swollen throat, and innocent. I made mention of my The pipe goes droning on for hours h coughs, etc. have ;550 by use of one bot - past; while you -you were hiding within the same sad key and measure, and , tie. Warranted the most wonderful the heart that nestled against mine, a the prize of merit in this "circling," as Blemish Cure ever known. love•tale that had been whispered not the dance is called, is given by specta• years, not months, but weeks --days ago! tors to the lassie who, 3n all that sum- Perfect Manners. Jeanne, you were wise! You feared to mer revelry has never spoken and nev- lose your coronet. Well -you have gain- er smiled. Politeness is perhaps instinctive with ed it. Are you happy?" e - - some, but with the majority it is a Jeanne looks up, as he extends a hand 'BOUGHT MY LIFE FOR 35 CENTSe' matter of training, of the slow and to her with a bitter laugh; looks up,then 1 careful discipline of voice and eye and around her, ars if seeking some refuge `This was one man's way of putting it when carriage. Under this training all the from his mad passion. But there isnone. he had been pronounced incurable from 1 angles of personal vanity and self-eou- With a low cry she throws up her arms chronic dyspepsia "11 was a Living death aciousnesa are rubped off, the person to her face. to me until I tried Dr. Von Stan's Pineapple 1 becomes adorned with grace, ease, gen- "Let me go home -let me go home!" 'tablets. Thanks to them to -day I am well, I tleness and simplicity, and what may she moans. and T tori my friends i ,ought my lite for seem to the untraincl observer as the He laughs sardonically. 25 cents." 60 in a box. X80 r perfection• of naturalness may be simply "Go back!" he says. "Will that heal - - the perfection of culture. all you have done? Wile, that make 1 " „ Story. -^ - know it -tela ni _' -" reparation for your falsehood? If you A But he stops suddenly and the light go, will you leave me the Jeanne I love, Adolph, an Austrian artisan, adored PACIFIC COAST EXCURSIONS. dies out of his face, for Jeanne lifts or only the: remembrance of the mar- i During June, July, August and September her head, and be sees in her eyes that chioness whom I despise?" Anna, an aristcrat. And Anna adored i the Chicago and North Western Railway alit Lady Lucelle is -right. As if his words were the knotted Adolph. Another aristocrat, Alfred, an sell from Chicago round trip excursion tick- and"You knew it?" he says, almost inaud- thongs of an actual scourge, she starts ambassador, adored Anna. Anna abhored' eta to San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portlaod, ibiv, shrinks back from him. Alfred. Alfred addressed Anna, admit tie `Victorria and Vancouverrke ,'o atiove'ryslow "Tres," says Jeanne, "hitt—" Then she draws herself to her full ting admiration. Anna assumed amaze- rates, correspondingly cheap tares from ail height,_ And she looks up eagerly; with a and looks at him, her lips eel, meat. Alfred abjured Anna. Anna ad points in Canada, Choice of routes, best oftrain service favorable stopovers and liberal Mosquitoes and Yellow Fever. (Portland Oregonian.) It Is believed to have been demonstrated fully by our people 1n Cuba during the occu- pation by our soldiers that yellow fever is propagated only through the mosquito. Mon slept in yellow fever quarters, on bedding on which yellow fever patients had Iain and died, yet had not a touch of the disease. The only precaution was to bar the mosqui- toes out. THE PALL OF RHEUMATIC PAINS. -When a sufferer finds permanent relief to such a meritorious medicine as South Ameri- can Rheumatic Cure, how glad he is to telt it. C. W. Mayhew, of Thtunesvllle, Ont., couldn't walk or feed bimselt for months -- four years ago three bottles of this great remedy cured him -not a pain since -isn't that encouragement for rhoumetic stttteres? Four National Vices. There is materialism --the insane push- ing to get a little more for ourselves the wealth that God has given our country so abundantly. There is self -conceit - our pride in the fact that he have the greatest country, the greatest rivers, the greatest mountains, the greatest men, the greatest wealth and the greatest trusts and corporations to control them all. There is lawlessness --the theory that liberty consist in every man leaving gesture he stops her. ber eyes flashing; if there had been any monished Alfred. Alfred adopted ogress- return limits. nates, fotdors and full tutor- the right to follow his own sweet will; "Spare met" he says, "spare me and tears in them, they are burnt up now by iveness. Alfred's audacity alarmed matron can be obtained from el, H. Bennett, that government rests on the consent of yourself the mockery of some sophisti- the fire of wounded pride, and the un- Anna. Alfred attempted abducting An- OnOerat. Agent, 2 King street east, Toronto, the governed, which is even seen in some cal excuse. What can explain away such bearable sense of injury. na Anna afraid and agitated, acquainted theories of education that say the child deceit as you were guilty of? What can "Let me go," she says. "I will go Adolf. Adolf accused Alfred. Alfred an- HOW CHURCH BELLS ARE MADE led me to thinthat you did not know "Nol„ geed, abused Adolf awfully. Adolf an- I "No silver is used in church bells," said caste, ,ray. identity? Fool -fool]," he mutters, Ile looks at her for a moment in swayed Alfred. Alfred attacked Adolf, the bell -founder, "People claim there is, t pacing to and fro,gnawingat his mous- silence,then,with a harsh laugh, he aura hil nna aghast, t, aided ed Ado Alfred Aline. abdicated , but I have assayed many an old ball 1 It is quite aehe,and workig he faal letter ith- exclais: g absolute], Anna accepted Adolf. Adolf that came here to be broken up and . photographer iu the palms of his clinched hand. "Did No. Why should you? After all Ace y' p never an ounce of silver did I find in one ,ince. I know that there was no such thing for are but as many others. One man in a and Anna abruptly absconded and aban- ee them. me as a pure, disinterested love? Did I thousand, one woman in a thousand, doped Austria altogether, arriving at i "For the best bells we use old cannon. not know it, What curse is it that hangs marries for love; the remaining Hina Antwerp, and always abiding abroad They give us the purest amalgam we can I ORANGE over me --a curse that, like a two-edged hundred and ninety-nine areontent withafterward,-Torun Topica.!rapt. Tip tpnnr hell t nm mak;n,r now 1 ► l- IIIYYY 1 should never be compelled but only in - palliate the lie,acted and spoken which back!" and she moves slightly.d ]f in- duced to learn. There is the spirit of possible for the amateur to develop into a nuis- Ar`7SU:Ki N +. i 3, 1905. • Mre. Winslow's $Soothlltg exp:thy pehd always be oriel ler tiT,1 ,t..a co . ih soothe the chill sartrtar the gante,we alrww,I colla wad to tae meet malady or illfinreawee (' . �. rl:tvTS WANTED,. A CENTS 1vANT401), 'rO fibli,l, A Sen..m .y� -re section; write toe d�den.and for article le rural " ',Mai Dilor, rt'fl Mbar•, tlso article t.,,e paper, ],rex 41 ratth,'tet.. A GENT'S W?.$'t'..1) l? I:YISIIY CITY AND 1� town In Cv;1Ada, ,to telco criers ter the popular journal, "Outdoor C'tw+,ln," salary or commission. loo Mall IkNliln;;, 'roros� FOR SALE TWO ELECTRIC MOTORS. Direct current, t% and $ horceepow.r. M. dress Box 10, TIMRS OFFICle, MlsCILANatls` V • OtlR FORTUNE TOLD FROM TIM CORA. die to the grave; manors of tutelaries, love, and marriage made clear; what 1 fedi comes true: send birthdate and lac, Prot. Lavas, Ilex 16, Ste. Cunogordo V. O., Meat - real, Can. -.. OOK HERE AOEN'CS lrkwZT MONET. 1J maker ever placed on the market. Great seller, 200 per cent. for agents, Write to -day. 3. Ii, Rowe, Dunnville, Ont. TELEGRAPHY A telegrapher earns from $540.00 to $1,800.00 a year. Do you? If not, let lis quill. ify you to do so. Our free telegraph hook explains everything. 'Write for it to -day. B. W. SOI'iIRS, Principal. DOMINION S0DOOi Of TERM iamilton- Montreal Line Steamers Belleville, ilamllton and Piotoa Leave Hamilton 12 noon and Toronto 7 -SR p.m. on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturday. for Bay of (,uprate, Montreal and interims - Mato ports. LOW RATES ABOVE LINE. TORONTO -MONTREAL LINE. L. TORONTO AND KINGST0ki. Leave Toronto at 8 p. m. daily, except Bun• days. Prom July 1 daily, Rochester Thou- sand Islands Rapids, St. Lawrence, Montreal, Quebec and Murray Bay, Tadousac, Saguenay River, For information apply to R. R. agouti, or write H. Foster Chaffee, Western i'asseniter Agent, Toronto. A Simple Question. "My good woman," said the learned judge, "you nluat give an answer in the fewest possible words of which yon are capable to the pilin said simple question whether, when you were ceasing the street with the baby on your arm, and the omnibus was coming clown on the right side and the Dab on the left, and the brougham was trying to pass the om- nibus, you saw the plaintiff between the brougham and the cab, or whether and when you saw him at all, and whether or not near the brougham, cab and omnibus, or either, or'any two, and which of then respectively, or how it was."—London Tit ]lit,. WHAT MAKES YOU DESPONDENT? -Dae the stomach gone wrong? Have the nerve centres grown tired end listless? Aro you threatened with nervous prostratioa? South American Norville is Nature's correc- tor, makes:ttle stomach right, gives a wolt> of nerve force, keeps the circulation per - teat. A regular constitution builder for run- down people. One lady says: "1 ewe my life to it." --84 A Conundrum on Fiinttetf. learaball P. Wilder has just had a girl baby born to bis house. Mien the doctor was leaving the "merry Little man" caught him by the lapel and demanded, "How is it that I was hulled to sleep last night by a little dream, and was awakened by a little screams?" And then he let tate doctor off with his happy au- swer, "Last night I had a castle in the air, and this morning 1 have an heir in the castle." Boston Dacha. Lever's ae-Z (Wise Head) Disinfectant Soap Powder dusted in the bath, soften the water and disinfects. The Force of Truth, "Salesmanship" advises aavertisers to "beware of the statement 'Selling below cost.'" One of the main objects oh�gopd advertising is to win the confidence of '-emcee lit cptuc tory to winning their patronage. Such statements, often re- h treated, destroy confidence, much as, would the offer of a bank to pay ten per cent. interest o» deposits. To be force- ful an advertisernertt must be truthful. It is tbe truthful "ads" that pay in the long run. 38 the shadow a o and semblance. sword strelces both nos andtemptsla ccWhyshould �r 1 -4,....--...*, i el oldcanton twelve al of n n is composed'of r tons o the deceit I suffer by. 0 , child!" and eon go-" HEART DISEASE RELIEVED Ihr 3o from S •ain. That precious remedy, le a positive Dore for all female diseases. Write for description he turns with outstretched hands toward Jeanne shrank back with a look of MINUTES. Dr. Agnew'li Cure for the ! "These two moulds, the core and the circular and tree mantels R. S. Mantl,L, 1'allSimone, bac. Jeanne, "do you know what you have l terror on herfore. heart gives perfect relief in all cases of I cope, are what give the bell its sweet- 1 done? You have robbed me of my last I will go!"she says, moving toward organic or sympathetic Heart Disease in Hass. It is in their cut that the secret hope --you have wrecked my life and; door. 20 minutes, and speedily effects a curb. It of hell -founding lies. The core is the I your own. Your own. Oh, Jeanne, what t "Stop!" he says, and his voice is as is a peeriess remedy for Palpitation, Shan.t inner mould; it bas the exaet shape of was'there in the hollow bauble of a title bard as steel, and as unrelenting. "You was of Breath, smothering Spells, Pain In I the bell's inside, The cope, the outer and tlue glittering dross of wealth to forget. As the wife of Vernon Vane,. you *Lett Side, and all symptosis of a Dfsoaved mould, has the exact shape of the boil's tempt you to falsehood and treachery? might have left your husband of an Heart. One dose convinces. --83 outside. You were happy until I saw you and hour, your home of a day, and the world - '"Wo fit the cope over the care, and you to be false to yourself and have been little the wiser, and none the • Abolish Murder First. ' i •. into the apace between the molten trials], me; 1 worse; but you have mauled the Mar- (Pittsburg (azette.) "False!" echoes Jeanne, and her voice mils of Ferndale. With your Coronet is run. Wbext the metal has hardened cul ad to see th death a ease for quivers with an tush "false" you urchased responsibilities. From Everyone would bo Wad 4 and cooled, the bell is finished, a e q g p p It abolished, but d mut b libel- "you were false when you silently per -known and Commented citYon cannot stogie of lvteizatlon LY n long and bloody, bells it le neeeasary tie chap tended think h I o back without setting th f th battle with rho savage instfnrts aqd paoAionA bate pieces out of them. Our hell tuner "Ye " , Penalty a o s e , u mur er b . b e its els r. false, ho says, vehemently; , this day forth every act of yours is fished first, We have arrived at our present „ pT To tune to t un tat was nv other than g wi lou se ng a dogs o e of the brute man, Let us not spike aur duns , :e, 1 am. You were fib a when you led me newspapers on your track. You have and break our etial l,otorb tib apo and tit er to a good tnusician,„ 1�Ia, hoe comp an . r to thiel: you other than you were. I wronged rale; will yon add to that dig or the battle may have to be all fought a number of 1tyxnne-•I'hiladelphil 13u1- thought you loved the unknown, strug-' wrong the additional injury of scandal'? eyes agate. gling artist, but you loved the marquis."1'l'his house has hitherto boon free from Jeanne's mine eernee and goes, grad•the shadow of scandal; will you set the ually his meaning is awning upon her.1 tongue of every servant wagging, and Hitherto site has stood overwhelonted i the country agape, by leaving your borne by the passion of his aettsation, searcely : un your wedtiit:g-night?" knowing of what and bow much she is I Coldly, with cruel dit+tinetness, be op- elrar ed but slow], she realizes how baste peals to her. The madness still 1.,.1da g , y l Ian ter toter rises tend falls, aper eye,, open' less, both to her and himself. • to their fullest, state at him wildly. tTo be continued,) "The marglues!" he repeats, passionate- ---•-.- ••-�. ly; "the mail -pis, that was the magic! points About a 'Watermelon, ward that oven you; the l,enniiess artist d i'•nol>1 ant mereenar lue decnts her ! osaession of him anti renders birn tr.erri might have wooed In vain! You were (I a C lvewo,) cold enough until you knee the value To plug 1s to let air Into the melon, eaua- of the Prime -Yea €eared threw mea ing stitherfag and decay around ttue edges of p y y rho bolos, no matter bow carefully thv plug• word when we met; your mites were re- is rc+placed. To plunk does no harm, Down served for ;'larenee Pitzjafnee until von on your twee over a fine, large Dae, shining knew that there oras game worthier of green sad the vine.•> of tbo patch; lean over your attention. You are ail alike. oltiuparh aque0fe--IInn'CarnituOnnedito 010 - bear 108 and young, gentle tend Pimple. I10.9v011 round, Does it ereekte In reep0n15? loots a within d brew' dawn of taose wafts of ]r>oks, and harts that aro old from your r•cthl juicfnesa° Then it hay plunked thea ft elves Sou lair faces and sweet, child- round come. birth like a ripplee of the heart babyhood], Do you wonder that 1 «111" ys riper, titan It Is fit for Ma tads- to eat. 0141 Calabar, the, headquarters of the Southern Nigeria overnnlent, bas just been connected by telegraph with Eng• land. Canadian Hair Restorer Wf11 restore iikkrat hair to Its natural toter., Stops fallinghair, causes to [Whirl gand all scalphead*, tarnir es dandruff, tiin nb oor greatly gredlente, flvy illi uav the hair and whiskerd boeome thtr:k, money and luxuriant. fetch, rnalled, 7r, cent!! had thyro S cont »tamps, or two for 11. a�d sloe Cent stamps: Haan my agoricten. Must be Ordered direct from the manufacturer/sr ThE h1ER'WINCO., WisiNdr, Octads, Coat* letin. . Origin of 1Vlodern Circus. 1: (Century ''Magazine+.) 1'or the origin of the modern elreus one must go back to the English fairs of the seventeenth, eighteenth, and early nine- teenth centuries, Unlike the Arneriean comity fairs of the prewxnt day, which are more in the nature of live stock ex- hibitions, the earl yy 1nglisll fair was to rout of dancing, fiddling, drinlr#n , fight ing, wrn.ntling and bull baiting, the rios• e;st modern npproleh to which is perhaps the quarterly gathering for county count , in the Ilalnlete of the Tennessee morin • tains--e gatlwring, nit It were, of merry endrews, monstrosities, bullies, jilts, tightrope, walkers, acrobats, Contortion• ist.s, equestrians, mountebanks, gl'imir' erti, ecarxtnotichee, thieves, pitkp,ekets, fillers, beggars, fortune tellers, g 1pidcs tend thooe upon whom they v 7. 0 Li Pit LaviliCOPT E.EI;.EtaiDYR ,rMAM .._ PARLOR "SILENT" MATCH NOISELESS. It EADs WON'T 1 LY O1rF. If dropped on the floor Stull stepped on, it will not Ignite, as sonte- • time, happens with theLcommoat parlor matt*. Will strike On any surface. the best yet. AS* TOUR ORMAN r3'olt A 110X. i a' t 111 f i'i • - Tho E ap>t EDDY Company, Leimit HUi.L, :CANADA. 1$4444•J440.4.444i'ivf4+444-4#++44+t 44.4.4+4 . F QOF IN ► w For steep or flat 1406_1* Ater proof, fire proof, war iiad, cheaper than other ireel- Send stamp for tits**, .rad mention this paper. HAMILTON MICA ROOFING CO. Ib1.*Meow Street. UAMItTON, 0.41.1 ADA1. I'++ 4 4 1b(Y44+4 sem