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The Wingham Times, 1904-01-14, Page 7• • LCST W1FEI O o A NOVEL.: 4 O ED BY MRS, H; LOYETT,CAMERON, Author of 44 Worth Winning," etc,. • • • • • dear Mr. Curtis about. this ,charin- ing little roots. Of course, love, it must be your boudoir—it is made for it." "I had thought »o, too, aunt --that is to say, if ➢1r. Curtis- -" 1 added, looking up at hint with dutiful defer- ence, • "My dear Freda, the whole of my house is at your absolute disposal," said ray lover, with courteous gal- lorttr;y. "All! what a lucky girl you are!" cried eery aunt, uplifting her fat hands in admiration. "It is just what I was saying; and you must let .Inc write at once to AIaple, and have a man down to do it up. Wo Want fresh paper, white and gold, or perhaps little bunches of rosebuds. I saw a stweet paper the other day at a house in Tavistock Square where I was pnying a 'visit.. It was all cov- .ored with little birds and pink roses, something quite new." "Good heavens! Aunt Selina," I ••cried, uplifting my hands in horror. "lily dear, it would suit this room to perfection," continued Mrs, Carr. 'who never paid any attention to my interruptions, as sho had but a low idea of nay intelligence; "and with it we shall want a pretty, fresh cre- tonne, pink or turquoise blue, with cupids—appropriate toth c joys of IIymen—cit, lair. Curtis? Then we must turn out these old-fashioned, uncomfortable chairs, and replace them with some nice low well -stuffed .sofas, and hang some pretty water- colors on the walls. We shall make it the brightest and pleasantest room in the. house. Now, do give me •carte blanche, lair. Curtis. - I am sure you would be charmed with the ef- fect.'• George Curtis looked helplessly at me. 1 "If Freda wishes it—" he began. •'I wish it! Not for worlds!" I .cried. "Why, aunt, this room would be utterly spoilt if it were altered. It is quite charming as it is."' "Freda, you never had any sense!" answered my aunt, with a ;•.gli of despair. ''Sfr. Curtis, I know, quite agrees with tit tet°; but you were always an obstinate child, and brought up in thewilds sof tho country, as you have been, and with your poor fath- er, too, always running his head into things. Ah! yes, I know, of 'course, Mr. Curtis, that he is very .clever, and all that; but neither Henry nor my niece are in the least able to take care of themselves. It is a good tiring I am able to conic down and see after things a little! Now, Mr. Curtis, let map go upstairs ' and look through the bedrooms." 'The rest ofth a house was gone one over. Aunt Selina, talking incessant- ly, admiring every roost, suggesting .alterations, laying down the law, and no doubt enjoying herself im- mensely, whilst George and I follow- ed in her wake with mute resigna- tion, and I made mental 'and most ungrateful notes as to never asking Aunt Selina to stay at Edclington after my marriage if it could pos- sibly be avoided. When at length we were in the carriage again on our way home, as me drove out through the lodge gates, Aunt• Selina turned round. to me and said solemnly, with impres- sive fervor: "Frederica Clifford; you ought to go down upon.your bonded knees and thank God night and morning, for giving you such a husband, and such a house!" CHAPTER, XIV. The time was five o'clock in the .afternoon --the seen Farmer Rick- ett's six -acre field at the bottom of our orchard. Background—last sum- mer's hayrick thatched with straw. Foreground—one threshing machine rampant, and one field -harrow re- cumbent, drawn up side by side, and resembling the skeleton ribs of huge snanei loth animals. Dramatis per- sone—two snow-white calves, with pink, watery eyes, being fed out of unsavory -looking u k anb t c e , an an- �cient matron in a rusty black gown,. and a battered yellow sun bonnet on. A Woman's Tribute to Dr. Chase's Remedies Showing how these great fondly mediciheb win. the eo rlAdertc ott o e h people, and establish themselves hi the 14omeb. MRS. IMIN'WORttALL, 335 Victoria Street, London, Ont., states:---" :—"For years I suffered a great deal with catarrh in the head. I tried 'everything I could' hear of for it, but it refnained for Dr. Chase's Catarrh Cute to cure •trtc. Though entirely freed front catarrh, I Was left in s nervous and ruts down condition and then began using Dr. Chase's Nerve Food, which has built up my system, strengthened my nerves and made the strong and well. We have also used Dr. Chase's Syrup of Linseed sad . Turpentine in our family for coughs and colds, and never knew it to fail to cure these ail- ments." Mea. 'Worltatll Dr. Chase's fatally Medicines hare proveh 'their right to tt place in every home, and have cause to be considered indispensable. To Met you against hnkations the portrait and gnatnre of Dr. A, W. Chase, the famous eceipt book *ether, ars on every bog of hie her head, and a young lady stretch. ed at ease upon her back, under the shade of the aforementioned hay- rick. The calves are both playful and greedy --they are possessed With an insane desire to get their two heads simultaneously into the bucket, a feat which, being a moral impossi- bility, ;Holly endeavors to frustrate, by presenting the bucket to each in I turn with strict imptutiulity, which stratagem the twins resent by in- creasing efforts to upset it, Two or three ducks, attracted by the pros- pect of food, have waddled up from the farmyard, and stand grouped ex- pectantly, and a couple of gray pigeons are whirling about round and round overhead. Presently the calves, with convul- sive gurglings in their throats, come to an end of their repast. Off goes Molly towards the farm -house in the , hollow, bearing the empty bucket, and after her hurries the whole of the live stock—calves, ducks, and pigeons—and I am left alone on my back under the hayrick. Papa has gone to Eddington,. Aunt Selina has driven into Narbor- ough upon a shopping expedition. I have a letter from Bella in Any pock- et, which I mean to rend over again res I 1 p cut y. It is a long otter, and h going me that sho is got g abroad immediately for three months, and wishes I was not such a kolas to marry, as then I could 'save gone with her. I wish so too. Three months abroad with Bella would be infinitely preferable to an indefinite period at home with George Curtis. Furthermore Bolla tells Amro she will :write again from Paris, and begs me to Ariake use of her house whilst she is away if I want to be in London. It is this portion of Mrs. Thistleby's letter I intend to read over again from my couch under the haystack; but I am very idle, and I cannot rouse myself sufficiently from my rev- erie, even to the extent of putting my hand into lily pocket and taking the letter out of it. I lie quite still on my back with my arms folded into a pillow behind my neck,and my eyes cast up to the blue sky straight over my head. It is ono of those lovely days which one gets sometimes at the end of October, warm as summer, and still and balmy. There is hardly a cloud in the sky, and a lazy little breeze conies softly sighing up from the west, that just stirs the hair upon my forehead with a soft, sleepy flut- ter. There are all sorts of sweet scents about me—a scent o1 freshly - turned earth from a ploughed field hard by, a scent of ripe apples from the orchard beyond, a scent of hay from the rick behind me, and then —all at once, a scent of what doe' not appear at first to possess any raison d'etre—a scent In- appropriate, unromantic, unlovely! yet which to a man's nose is ever re- freshing, to a woman's eminently suggestive—the scent of a freshly -lit cigar. This inexplicable odor, totally for- eign as it was to the surroundings in which it suddenly developed itself, caused me to spring rapidly from the completely horizontal attitude into the partially recumbent. I sat u A shadow carne round the corner of the hayrick and lengthened itself across the short grass at my feet, "You don't look surprised to see me," said Captain Thistleby, as he seated himself leisurely by Any side. "I am not. I knew you were com- ing.,, How so?" "I smelt you," I answered gravely, with a corresponding upward sniff of rey sneak nose. Ho laughed softly after his worit— a little low Laugh that had a peculi- ar fascination for mo; it said so little, yet meant so much. IIe con- templated the end of his cigar for a moment, and then replaced it in his mouth, For an instant we were both s i- Ient Swiftly my thoughts traveled back to that blessed day at Seacli(T, when he had coin uuexpoctediy as now, down the garden Steps behind ine, and had sat, as now, at my feet. I remembered with what a queer feel- ing of ,dismay I had realized that he was to be my companion through the day, and then how rapidly the fasci- nation of his presence had wrought upon mo, until ere the day was end- ed I had learned to love hien. And since then how many sights had I not fallen asleep With his name on my lips? How many days had I not awakened with his image before my eyes? And yet he seemed further -- miles further from me hero than he had done at Seacliff. Iilvidently his thoughts, too, had traveled back to the first day of our acquaintance, for his next words wore an allusion to it. "I am not going to throw it away though," he said, in allusion to the cigar. "You like smoke, you know; you told me so at Seacliff. 1)o you remember?" "I do not remember any of the silly things I said to you at loaclifl; it is so long ago," I answered, look- ing away front him. "Ah! I *Wish I could forget them as easily. 33y -the -way, what an un- kind message that was you sent me by fe11a the morning you Went away'• "Yon were very lazy," I Sold, laughing out of sheer gladness o! love. Ile drew my bead down again It THE 1'INGE .I TIJt1 S JANUARY 14 I094 The satisfaction of having the washing done early in the day, and well done, belongs to every user of Sunlight Soap. 1OB hie long lashes. "I cannot remember; perhaps I was sleepy." "Oltt by the way, you had register- ed esister-ed a Very uncomplimentary vow the night before; you swore you would never see me again." Captain Thistieby contemplated the burnt ask of his cigar. "I kept that vow very well, didn't I?" ho said with a senile. "Remarkably." What a funny girl you are!" were his next words. "1)o you know, you have never asked me what brings me here so suddenly, nor where •1 have come from." "Have I not? Where clo you comp from?" I said indifferently, not car- ing much for the answer. That he things between its that can never by cannot marry Mr. l-'urtis. I hank s:vopt awrt: y, Don't cry, sweet for'; gone 'up to London to della Thistle - all be irnppy lay -end -1>Y, L :11.1 by .8 'louse for a cloy, and than 1 all this is gone by. 1 wanted •ou. shall Jain her in .Paris. You ttoukt. to know that I really loved you, be•- not like ere to be miserable, dear pa - cause sometimes 1 have been afraid Pa; and I should be if l married Mr that you had accused me of trilling trait you. I ant a bad rural in many ways; but, believe true, when I tell you that my love for you hes been, and will ever be, the purest thing rn nay life, and lliett is why I will not spoil your life for you." I clung to him. weeping. "Thera is no disgrace •nothing Then, like a guilty ereatutie, i put that I would not bear for your out my candle and .rcpt out into the sake," I said, brokenly. darkened, silent house'. flow the lie held ate tightly to h!r heart in stairs creaked under my descending silence. footsteps! I stopped anti slhivered, hardly daring to breathe, psi 1 pass- ed may aunt's door. flail way down, on a little square landing, was the door of my father's rooin. Softly 1 turned tho handle, and stepped into Clip room. I rio not know what made mac go iii. I might have left the note in his study; but a certain remorse for the sorrow I was about to Irving upon hien stung my heart. I must see the old Man once more before I went. The moonlight shone in across the narrow, Iran bedstead, my father lay still in deep, untroubled slumber. I stooped down over him, and fancied as I did so that he looked strangely gray and aged to -night. As 1 noted et him go. ".dark, why must you the angular outlinee worn lines r of hisound ltpale is r olclrface, cave me? I love you so!" "Hush!" ho interrupted, quickly, .he thin gray hairs scattered over eying his hand upon my lijis, "don't nis pillory, my heart almost tnisgave ell rue so. I know It well enough, me at leaving him so selfishly; but sating; but don't tell ine of it; it as in a moment of doubt, I stooped would make it too hard to leave down and kissed hint softly, the you. Believe me it is best. Nothing clock below in the hall struck half - an alter what is, and I will not past twelve. poll your life. Perhaps, by-and-by, Five minutes more and I should he day clay come; but now I -rust , lose the train --my opportunity go." would be lost, probably forever, I He took both my hands, ono in steeled my heart, and turned swiftly ach of his, and one after the other from the room. raised them to his lips, kissing them The front door was locked and bar - hungrily and lingeringly; and then he red; but many a summer's night in nipped h suddenly, Iturning ; Cl terns denly, enc, the years of my childhood had I rem me, strode away through the crept out of the study window on apple trees—a tall, strong figure in apple depredations intent. I had not dark relief against the primrose even- forgotten the way to softly unbar ing sky; whilst I sank prone upon the shutter and to creep out through the grass where he had left me, and the French window. Five minutes wept as I have never wept again. later I was outside, flying across the Curtis, for, good as he is, I da not cove !►!nt, d will write to him from Paris. Ask hint to forgive inc. Dear Irapa, don't be anxious about me, 1 will coxae buck in a few weeks,--• Your unhappy child, "Mow sweet, After long grit f and pain, '1'o feel my true lo'e's amts About ine once again," Alas! why did it not last forever Looking back upon that montenx of joy in after years, I can truly etny that greatly as I suffered later, 1bet instant of happiness was cheaply our - chased at the expense of ell that was to come. "I)ailing, I must go," hn said, gently Lt 11hdrawing himself feom Ae.y are, s. "Mt! will you not explain to ate:," I cried, despairingly. Since 1 he'1 found env lover, it seemed so hard t r should be here at all was enough for me, It did not occur to mo to be critical as to why or wherefore. "Well, I have been at Newmarket, t where, with my usual luck, I have d lost my stoney. I am on my way to town. I had to pass Sloppertown Station; I thought I might as well c stop an hour or so. I am fortunate s in finding you. Your servant direct- t ed Inc to the field. I have called, you know, to see if you had any message for Bolla, for I shall see her in a day or two." ° "No; I have nothing to send to Bella," I answered, carelessly. What did anything signify to me n0W, since ho had so plainly conte hero for my sake, just to see me. It almost irritated me to think he should frame so many elaborate ex- cuses for coming. I sat looking away from him, across the valley, in silence, with a great joy at my heart. Suddenly he bent down and looked into my eyes. "Child you look ever so glad to see me!" n '4 silent garden and through the sha- CIIAPTElt XV. dowy orchard, undiscovered and safe. 1 was in the open meadows, a rapid I never quite knew bow it came ; scramble across a wet ditch and a bout, or why 1 did it, nor what ' gap in the hedge and 1 was /ended were the immediate influences which in the high road, speeding along as rove mo to commit the wildest, , fast as my swift footsteps could maddest, most indefensible action of I bear ate, alone in the silence of the ry life. It was a webk before my wedding - ay. I was sitting up very late at 'gilt alone in my little room. The window was uncurtained, the moon- ight shone t s o in 1 c and n in cold, al g a e Y ,p tream across the shabbily -carpeted oor. 1 leant my arms upon the window -sill, and my chin upon my ands, and looked out. The apple trees in the orchard be - ow were all in a dense, dark mass f shadow, save where the starlight ad here and there caught and sa- wed their topmost branches; the valley beyond was tilled with a hazy ight; the background of hills was hadowy and indistinct; only the reat chalk -pit shone . out in the dis- ance, white and gleaming against ho gray hill in which it was iln- edd d o . I was thinking of nothing in par - "Do you know that you 'cannot d hide your thoughts son bit?every- g e ecy thing shows in your face." "X ant," I.answered, simply. He closed his hand upon .nine, and d held it tightly. I did not make even n an effort to take it away front him. t I was too happy. Surely now, I thought, he must see i s shat I love /din. Surely now he will d say: "Give up your engagement, and comae to rue." h I waited breathlessly, trembling I from head to foot for his next words, 1 0 His next words were as follows: • h "You are very foolish to sit on the grass in that thin dress; you will catch cold. There was a heavy show- or this morning." I jumped up hurriedly. ° s "Yes, you aro right,".) I said, t sharply, with a sort of discord in my t voice; "the grass is damp, and I am b very sorry I have sat here so long. I night. I was very tired before I got to Narborough --very tired and foot- sore. Once I nearly gave in and turned back, so appalling was the .. lc -u. darkness of the way, and so muddy wee the road along which my tired steps plodded endlessly. It seemed as if I should never get there —as if it must be ten miles instead of five, and then if 1 were to miss the train, if I reached the station just too late, and had to comp all the way back, if so, I knew 1 should never go through it all again! I should sit clown and accept my fate, and marry Air. Curtis decorously that day wee*, and bo miserable ev- er after. No; if I did not fly to -night I should never By at all. And the baro thought of having t--s:etudge all tfcular. I felt only a weary sense at vary way bac ` again mallet ine And I walked rapidly along the hurryon brcat .,sly, till at last the narrow footway that led across the of isolation and hopelessness, like madness of deed I was doing was field towards the. orchard; Captain one who, tired of .struggling against lost;itse"1no sheer terror of being too Tllistleby following me, since there the strong tide of a stream, lets J„La, for the train. was no room for •him by my side. himself glide on in the eddying waw, The station was nearly deserted The shallow stream that divided ers,careless of where thoy may fiery when at last, panting and weary, I hi. .- reached its friendlylights. There Farmer I,iclaett's field from our orch- There was an abspldie silence in 6 and was spanned from bank to bank the air; not a breath of wind ruffled by a single plank. have left your sunshade under the trees; not r living creature stir - "Your the hayrick," said Captain Thistle- red upon the earth; not a stick he by, as we reached it. "Wait an in- leaf garden ed ao tho ground in the stant for mo, and I will go back and dark danden below. it.” Suddenly from afar, across the val- fetchIt was too true. In my ley, came the low, faint sound of a haste X had forgottentri i indignant and my railway -whistle. I listened to it .companion had not been slow to take hearhears , unly, as one listens who advantage of this point in his favor. then not,. until it died away. And Common politeness forced me to nthen all at once, like a flash of under - still until he brought it to clap before my eyes, like a thunder- standught, mac. into my heart, cause a thought, I crossed the stream, and leant • a word—escape! Why should I not. against the knotted trunk of an old foolo while it was yet time? What a apple -tree awaiting his return. u was to sitstill and await my , Great branches, heavily laden with and destruction, when flight and liberty, crimson -flushed fruit, hung over 1nY and perhaps even happiness was still head, and swept down on every side within my reach. 01 mo to the ground, shadowing the Where was Della's letter? What had blue of heaven, and screen}ng Inc in a sho said about lending mare her frame -work .01 greenery. Fallen lip- house? With trembling handsdI new pies, some rosy -red, some creamy- m my and then le, and struck a yellow, lay scattered over the short, match, and then writing-tckedable the untidral 1 thick grass at my feet, and the clear er of my little wr}ting-fable until I brown stream rippled on with a plea- found it. sant murmur in front of me. She bad told an tde totmakego rti to her house if I wanted use f it. ea Mark Thistlebycame Presently li e c Y back to me across the rustic bridge,. Evidently her servants were there. with my sunshade in his hand. She said how gladly canhe Ln abld have As he came up to me our eyes met and nae for her well enough abroad, suddenly. Captain Thistieby forgot and I latch her were 00 idh tow fes. to give inc my sunshade; instead of sero that these wdee no idle words, doing so, he first took may hand, and Bella loved inc dearly; she r would then drew mo close to him—so close give a good dent to save etc from a that my head lay kr one blessed marriage to which she had always minute upon his breast, whilst his strongly objected. lips touched mine. She was note no further off than Then he put me suddenly front him. Paris. I would go to her; it Would "It is hard to give you up," ire be easy for me to follow her, there. said in a broken voice. "I ought R r Square, t' uptelegraph t ff her house ft, Croi never to have come here, Freda; I for �' uarr, tele ra It to her from have done you a great wrong, 1 fear, there, and start its soon as possible. Only what I had to do must be done When I canto to stay at Chadley I , at once—a.t once. darlin s desperate desperate,o was that I hd mde up my mind hat I • If I wafted till the morning Yiy would stake you my own at any courage would fail,andanother day 'ost; but X have thought better of it would be wasted; Would the os be singe. X love you too well to drag tunfty to escape would perhaps be you through trouble and disgrace.'" wanting. "Do you think I should care?" X In a few moments any plans were 1 "Doa stip- was - matured. I glanced at the clock, it broke in, passionately. yo p Was twenty minutes past twelve, and pose it would matter to me what was said et me?" the express Was dun at Narborough 1 longed to tell hint that I fared at five minutes after two. Narbor- him so dearly that to give up wealth ough was five attire off. but I was a and position for his sake Wouhi he good walker --I had been there on no trouble. but only a happiness— . foot once before. It Would take me that to be thought worthless and a good hour and a ]rail to get there. heartless by the world would not dis- . X had 110 time to loco. grace me so much in my own eyes as I I thrust a few necessaries hastily to marry one matt Whilst I loved into my traveling -bag, and a Ave, - pound 100 r, pound note, a present from my aunt, anI longed to tell him this; butitiarlt into my parse, dressed myself tint X'histleby did not ask me for my j heart; for the landscape Seemed to upon his shoulder, and softly Stroked bo fairer, the sunshine to be bright- my hair, fO er, and the sky bluer, since he had ""bY little darling," he said ten. L 1n cornet to my side. "Why slid you not derly, "I have eon a here to -day to w get up to say good-bye to me then?"visit you good-bye forever. Ilad our .t "Impossible to Say," ho answe red, lives been differently sbaped, we . givin Intl 'a sidelo=ng glance n er av been very ha t to eth- er; but it Cannot be. There are ti eclly in n dark woollen dress an acket, and tied a Meek veil over my at. And then I sat down to per- m). 'the hardest task of all. 15raw- g my writing -case. towards rue, I rote, With a trembling hand: Dearest rather,--' '1)e not be very angry with lull, 1 alight ri a pl y tog et be continued) WAKEFUL BABIES. No baby cries for the mere fun of the thing. It cries because it is not well— generally its little stomach is sour, its hotels congested, its skin hot and feverish. This is often why babies are wakeful and makes nigl}t miserable for the parents. Relieve the little one and It Will sleep all night, and let the mother gat her needed rest as well. Just what mothers need for this purpose is Baby's Own Tablets—a medicine that speedily relieves and protnptly cures all the minor ailments of young children. The experience of thousands of p d mothers has proved the truth of this, and among these mothers is Mrs. amts Farrell, habberry, Ont., who says: "I think Baby'spwn Tablets the best medioine in the world for little ones. M y baby, y was cross and gave me a good deal of trouble, but since using the tablets I Could not wish for a healthier or better natured child." Stronger praise could not be given and the mother has a guarantee that the Tablets contain no opiate or harmful drugs. Sold by medicine dealers or sent post paid at 25 cents n box by writing the Dr. Williams Medicing Co., Brock- ville, Ont. 114)1 gy:xt$;LoAls at 434 per vent:, on easy terms of.lte ayment. Apply tp A .• Mange, Kent Block, Wingham. Notice to Farmers. c The Canada Furniture Manufacturers are now prepared to pay the highest price—mach higher than ever before--• for all kinds of Hardwood and Basswood Sawlogs, to be delivered at the Button & b'essantOhairVactory,Wiughatn. Those intending to get out logs this season will profit by calling ou Tilos. BELL, Mtn - agar. WANTED—FAlTIIFUL PERSON TO CALL on retail trade and agents for manufacturing house having well established business: loco territory • straight salary 310 paid weekly and expense money advanced; previousexperienee unnecessary; position pernmanent; business successful. thelose sotf•nrtdressNI envelope. -Superintendent Travellers, Oki Minion Bldg., Chicago. The Kind You Hove Always E1ougltt, and 'which. 1uie been in use for over 30 years, has borne the slgnatnre or and has been made Under ids perm + nonal supervision sines its infltncy* • Allow no one to deceive you In thick All Counterfeits, Imitations and fL Just -as -good" are but Experiments that trine with and endanger the health or Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment„ What is CASTORIA Castoria is a, harmless substitute for Castor 00, Pare, gorie, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It Is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys 'Worms axad allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation, and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach .and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's r0naceft0—Tile lliother's Friend. CEEVIIINE CA TORiA ALWAYS Dears the Signature of Killcl TIie ilavoAlways Bought in Use For Over 30 Years. THC CCNTAVR COMPANY, 7? LIUPPAY'•',TRCCT, NCW ?CPA C)TY. ♦rrrrrryvvvvvyryyyyvvyvvv, vvvvvyvvvvvvvvvv Iyvvvvvv1' ► ► ► ► ► ► T. A. MILLS has decided to clear out ► ► Boots., tp► Orf S all his stock of' E Shoes and Rubborsl. inside of 30 days. E Every hair is marked down to a clearing price. 4f t 1 r, ► • Call and look through the stock, and I am 4 C sure you will buy your fall and winter supply at prices never heard of before in Wingham. cost 1S-40 OBJECT THEY MUST CO ! ! ! 4 • 1• 11 • 1,,,' i E Must be Cleared A full line rri • A • ► 4 Out in Sixty Days t s 4 4 1 to select from. MILLSF ' I Ajl1.AAAAA,LAI,>/.AAAAAAA.A L1 A A AA AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA The Proviucial Board of Health has been informed of 50 eases of typhoid in Pembroke, with one death. WAD•• -.trustworthy gentleman or lady in each comity to manage business for an old establislivd house of solid financial stating. A straight, bona fide waekLysalary of 115.00 paid by eheck each Monday with all expenses direct front headquarters. Money advanced for ex• .uses. Enolosoaddressed envelope. Manager, Ca;tten Bldg., Chicago. 250* • t tb.tgaItee,Vlil ...totted loolver. e, clear 'bosh l'epptLbl WO.* oar Aly -clue 'wooer. a+ai►er A w ..rwtt true''.4. ritliiiarrei.w GE LAWN FENCE indestructible, trantlsonte, Parrett. only 20 cents per canning foot. Sttpltrieent by its or local dealer. roti THE PAGE WII E1a 'ENCS Co. 1.."- Montreal, Winnipeg, Bt, John 0