Ontario Community Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 3 Jul 1884, p. 2

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 I^iw mtmmm i i!? Ifit ' £ ?[ »|'Prl':| f mM I His»neles Hei^ "And Ttwokr Frank little •ngh thefsthA lainiled «fe 'â- Yon foolish clald,"she Micl, gathf ring iip her working nuterklf *nd preparing to leave the loven aloce, "do not yon uow that it wM te-aa- nmnit^ated Uecatng t*- have Frank ta'ely ditpoied of for the next few all importoii ilavs £v«^n if he were not in dnty bonnd t) obey Sir George's anm- mons, 1 shoold^tUl aay. Go." ^^ "AbdidafeT^wror o! the .milunera, in fact," Fran)^ obeyed, watching the briak movementa' of his future aister-in-law with lazy, content. He was very food of M.»y but jast nowa^ete-a-^ete with Eiaie seem- ed a thing most de arable in his eye i. "Exactly; and' nclsss yon wish Mrs. Frank deWalden's trousseau to be lunentab- ly incomplete, yoii will rather proton;; than Bborten your visit," M»y said, and disap- peared with a langhing nod. "Is May right, Essie?" Frank afked, tarn ing to his little sve«tfaeirt. "Do I ke,ep you fiom the serious duties of life? No" â€" he sto pad and kissed the pretty upturned face â€" "your first duty is â€" to me." "And yours to Sir George," Essie answer- ed, with a pout but the peat was all play- ful, though there was a suggestioa of tears in tha eyes that wrrc as blue as April ^kies, tuou^h fringed with jet-black lathes. They were a handsome couple, and form- ed a pretty p'ctmre as they sat on the flow- er-filled terrase of the picturesque river side house â€" he tall, strong, gray-eyed, and fair- haired she small sni blender, with fioe jet- black hair, and pretty, pile skin^ that seem- ed to give, by force of contrast, an intensity and depth o{ cilor to the innocent blue eyes.. Frank looked Meditatively at the river g^is" tening like molten gold in the sunset glow, and bright with pleasure-beats of every kind, beioehe answered her last, pettish ramark. Then he eaid with a little laugh, "Wt II, 1 suppose I do owe him some duty, Essie, thougti hitherto he has nob given me much opportunity of paying my debts. I never was so snrpriied ia my lite as when I received his cole." "I tboaght he telegraphed " 'So he did, on his arrival in England, and wrote by the following post. Lat me see â€" I must have his letter. Ah, hereitisi Bath- er a inysterioos epistle too for such a steady- gciog old fellow as my rtspecfsd nncle." Aud Frank placed the paper he extracted from his pocket- bo }k in the girl's hands. She turned it over with a puzzled look, then begaa to study its coatents. "Read it aloud. Essie," the young man broke in aud while bo lounged lazily upon t'ae balustrade and looked out over the sno thshaven green lawn to the g'ittering water beyond, the clear girlish voice real cut the fcllowins: letter :â€" 'My dear Nephew, â€" When you wrote to me tnrce wetks a£0, anro^noing your eii- gagement to MiSs EstherVeraer.jou thought 1 suppose, that }oi were performing a con- veLt'.onal civility to. your father's brother, and never guessed how c'eep ati iatercst; the news would have for him. Of courte it was news 1o be expected. A good-lookng young fellow like cu, with many advantages, nat- ural and acquirc^l was surely loo^ied upOn ap a prize in the mtrimcnial mark t." "Do you take that sentence to heart, Mits Essie?' Fiaok pat iu gravely; but Essie went on demurtly. "Aud I was at one time afraid that, rely- ing too surely upon yoar expectations, you have made an imprvdent choice of a wife. This however coss rot seem to be the case. I take }oir word fcr Miss Yernw's loveable and amiable q'lalities, the photograph an- sweis for her grace and beauty and, as the world calls her father a rich man, 1 suppose she adds to her other attractions the olid and lasting charm of wealth." E.'ie Vtrner looked up fion tVe pap.r with a Euddtn flush, and found that angry rIow reflected in her lover's face. "He is dreadfully practical," Frank said, with a rather nervous smile "but parduts and guardians will te like this to the end of the world." "I suppose so," Essie agreed, shaking her dark head dolefully, "Perhaps papa would have refused me to you If you had not beea Sir George de Walden's heir." "I think the 'perhaps' is more than prob- able," Fr^iuk answered drily, "ladeed, I hardly think tha" I should have found the courage to ask him to give his beautiful daughter to a briefif si hamster." "Then you Moald have dose the beautiful daughter' a cruel \»rong," the girl said, in a shy eaU-wh:sper, and with a quick and elo- quent upward glance that, as a matter of course, brought her lover t} hir side, and, for a while at least, interrupted the readmg of the latter. "Now do let me finish, Frank," she said at last. "Papa will be home immediately, and then you must talk to him. I do so vaat to know what more your uncle hes to say. I have lost my place. Ah, here it isl' "By the time this reaches yoa, I shall be in England â€" at the Court and I r qaest, as a particular favor, that you will join me there at 01 c 3, as there are some business matters that must be sertled between us wifiout farther delay. Remember me to Miss Yemer, whose acquaintance I shall hope sion to make, and believe me now as heretofore, "Your affectionate nnole, "Gkobgs de Waidbn." "What a St -sngs letter!*' 'Eau.e said hand ing it baok. "But Sir George ia rather a strmse man, is he not " "Well, yea, I snppoM so bnt I cannot cay I remember him very clearly. He has led a wandering life,' yon know, and only â- ettled down to his hermitage near Naples within the last three years. I have sinoe. them thonght seToal times of mnning over to see him but " "Bat what?" Essie echoed corloaaly, aa her loTsr paused, with a slight shrug of the â- honlders and a meditative twist of his monataohe." Woold ha not have been glad toseeyoa?" 'Well, h« never erincied any eagomew on the point. In fact, this ia the int iBTltatioB he ever sent me." â- *What a ahooking old orcatoie I And yoa an hk only nlmT* â€" ^hia own facotlMr'a child f If be dma aofe oara foe joo, whatoaa Iwoare forf "Bother a difficalt qntation tt aaawar," Fnnk aud, nniliagat dia girra iBdiguat fBoe. "Co'na, brsaata. sntiqaitHa of evtr/ shall try to oonvert a Uttie ocnfident nod. aoCt ^em eraaaay ^ok, wiA owJ knote and buttons that set of^ the dear pal^?, j the skin; the dnsky loduraad bngh« Wne/ ey w, Frank thought |r«idly and'foaiH^ that J Biaalutj lu i tf i w i i i s i t h s â€" *~' of any msn, even a «raff old woman-hater like bii nncle. an easyttHi.- "ftM'he could not discuES the matter further, for jsst then Mr. Vemer and his elder daughter came out upon the terrace, and the conversitim nat- urally took a more general chaTacter. ' ' Mr. Vemer was a big, flarid, faU' "«». stamped, as it were, with a sort of hall-mark ofiusoeis. Sjmahowit was imprtsible to be in h's presense an hour without fe -ling that he was very rich, and had aocumul»4ed all hrs money by his own unaided exeriions, though why that cmviption should be bcma in upon one it was not qaite so esey to a.y There was nothing of pampous self-assertion in his manner, noshing bt boasting in his quietly-correct spsech but, in soie way, the imprjssioa was given, and it was cor- rect. If Coaetantinj Ytrjer had not absolute* ly entered London with the traditional half' crawn of the praspcctive. millionaire as his sole posses )ion, he had at least spent several years of so did povisrty within it before for- tune vouchsafed him the faintest and most wintry smila but he had from the '^is^. a calmly confident belief in: himself and his own future and, when the occasion for which he had long waited, caine, he seiz'^d it at once. A small sacc^ss^ul speculation was followed by a greater •â- Yeroer's luck" became proverbial upon 'Change, and the ncknown, straggliag man developed into a soci il celebrity. Those itrngdtng days lay very fsr back m his life now May and £s- tie knew nothing of them. He had not maj- ried until the cbuds began tp break theiir lives had been wholly spent in the sunshine of pr jgpjrity. and their only grief as yet had been their mother's death, wbish had occur- red about tbr3e years back. People rather wondered that Mr. Yerner who had no heir to carry on his name and succeed to his great possessions, did not mairy again but he atineunced frankly that he was content with his girls, and meant to devcte the remainder of his life t) them. "If Heaven had sent me a son, well and good," he would say in his mora expansive moments. "I should like to think that I had left a Canstantine Yemer behind ma but Heaven has no' so pleased, and I have received too many good gifts to grumble be- cause one mare is denied m3. Either and May are good and pratty girls, noS likely to disippoini my just and reasonable hopes aud. if Ihey only marry to please me, I shall be quite satisfied to share my fortune be- tween them" â€" an acnouncement that natur- ally broughl a crowd ot c )ur»iers and aspir- ants, eli((ible and the reverse, about the pretty cn-heiresses' heels. For innately for them, however â€" for they had as yet no conception of the strdngth of their fa -.ber's will and the terrible coise- qnensea of incornng his displeasure â€" they had both chosen to please him, and with their future, as his roseatte f tnoy planned it. he was blandly and smiliagly content. M4y,of whom 1 expected less,has done me the greater credit," he would say, leaning back in bis big chair, and j^ininj his finger- tips lightly, as he surveyed the situation serenely with his mind's eye. "Lord Cr jx- ford is of course unobjectionable in every way moreover, she really cares for him, which is remarkable in such a match. Now Essie â€" ah, my little Eisie might have done hettrr, so much admirsd as she was too! But 1 hive not the heart to cross that child's whim. Moreover, De WaMen is a fine young fellow, of excellent family and prospscts there is nothing against him but his present lack ot me.nns, and that my daughter need not mind. â-  Sir Gecr/r cannot live for ever, and then little Essie will be L\dy de Wal- den of De Walden Court. Well, well, the 'whirligig of time' plays us strange pranks What would my good, plodding old father have sa'd had any one told him that his grandchildren would be. the one a peeress, the other a baronet's wife " Having thus philosophically reconciled himself t^ the match, Mr. Yeraer received his future Eou-in law not only graciously, but with distinguished consideration, and made no objection to the early marriage fcr whioh Fraik pleaded, provided that S.r George de WfJden, on his side, tad nothing to say against it. "F.r you will of course ask your uncle's consMit he may ha'.e other views for you," Mr. Yer jer siid, with a statelicess at which Frank inwardly and irreverently laughed, though he answered with perfect gravity that he had alrsady written on tuo subj sot, but vai assordd of hie nnarle's cansent. "S3 S r George has answered yoor letter in person " Mr. Yetner said, when the girls had left thp table, and the two mon sat alone ov«r thsr thsir wine, the elder peeling a peach with much delibdratimi, the young. or casting lenging glanosa out at the terrace, where Eisie and May sat chatting in the soft dask. "In person and en paper too, sir he wish- es me to ran down to the Gour " "Bat he makes mo objection to the mar riage!" "On the oontrr/, he express ;s the warm est approval, adm-'r s E-sie'a phot-otriph, and, ia shore, wrttts very ^aianily in deed," conoladed Frank, thinkfaig that, on the whole, it was better to sumratrize the letter thaa read it jost at present aud Mr. Yemsr raoeivOd the sommary with a well- pleased smile, '-Then, aaheooipea- to bleaa and not to bam, we mnat take his prompiitade as a great oomplimsnt. Of ooorae yoa go to h?»n at onse f "Ofcoone^ It will be rather qoeer to aee the old place aliTWjBRpin. It looked like the palace of the Sleeping Beaoty the laattime I was down thcra.*' "Da Walden OoarC M vtey old, I beUayeT Mr. ' Yeraer asked, witii an aatiomative pride ma the lus^ode veminut d hi i JBiaia'a intore hmne ' bat Frank answered oareUas lyâ€" "Not Teryâ€" BHsabetban only bat it is a l^etoresqae old place, and I oaanot think whatmade my node neglest it so long." "Well, the ncfleatia over for a time at leaat." said th» other, poahiag iiaak his inp'itylnrtkelawi'e- tirOeoige^g'"' "'" ' bemeodivfi him of a*^ aafantiaglj! icT the inlight ^l cried. Kfting her eoft hisJ "Oh, Â¥nak how pB^a^ hw gradgrf^erymomMi^ amd my reward has come, •♦•Ywi but U* ttBie-tw sud, with a litUe involantar^_^Iw you know, I ha^elhsapti'aliitl' â€" ' this visit, Frank." \,- Frank on^ laa^m* ani ?^mf? ty, jewellea fingen that W*»^« then but after war s he recpBf^siWr. with a strange, saperstitioi wonder dd whence thaVthM|Bl' came. ••' wfli go to my n aing CHAPTER 1I^^.'^, who wra'Se loveliert ».'*«^«f Jf izi H« photograhh raal ^girea yw »» '**^ ^ved iihe snlbfeefcof E«e itly »w»yi "»* P»' him. He knew, exaotlyjtow things itandwith manff la^Mrof independent income ^.^pec^a^Jjy^jff^^XM. SdC hat, and » J«^ CL,^¥«^f ^-^^^W m m°th ai interrogative look, as, liamv«. ia4 nXurafly done as o would d/^ia hia placa. .jPnt i|^ to think tliUi jajid.4ai9iitlj? er men MM 5«ie'fiSain. Fr.»k Sottt »i oyer hi, ^ciuse bMbiJyjWile wV y®*^ **ii^him8elflMr4d*?f f kMe+uMessi Wwtklrt^^Ablefelaftty • WJ^yami ..Mr.DsW.u.. «" .,...-'.-.-,„.. J*«* amopgilimjIo^firH*^!^ Tne man the platfosm bo5 and dusty with his l«ng ioaWI*PI alighted at the'qnaint lutle loid-side s tion which- wasffee.: near«t W*lden,0«a;j| Tnel^wiif and thole few were villagers^ ^aht's disorimiuatory powers were not -es- verely taxed In pickmg out thp'tttangec guest. " ' 'i ' ._,. "Yes, I am Mr De Walden. I hope Sir George IS well." ' V _, ••Qaite well, sir, Ipifrahttlo,, i^yiffo ly by the late journey. Ho has senl «ne,djg- cart, sir, as he could not come himBelfi Frank nodded, and as he gathered ap the reins, found himsslfvagnely wondering what it was that stznek him«as strangOj speaker'a tmei^ond look *: ' The perfectly widl-'btsdEogU^^rvant, civilly reserved speech and auto aiatic move ments peculiar to his class; but either Frank imagined it, or the dull wide ey*a rested on WalcTeohiype, „„„„-, his tace with a momentary glance of cariosi- oomfdr^pJUqiVuVVH l^V'C^^' ty and compaoaiQn, â-  ' '^i J\jAk ^MN^^*^^ falsood, M oculd not -an ' 'Pdhaw I I »m ^ting as ii*rvlHlr fa* "J tUdVotâ€" haut«l^ H 1 A '1 ]H fi A ' "Gin ^ried» ci short .smi^ J*lt is an ^i^kward question." ,\. x-r ,. y "Let me make it easier th*n ' aw'f or lyâ€" tbat i salllaag. D id Mr Vener give M daagSVerio yoa, {EVvoun'iinrstraKTmk ^il^^ flbfmrand'his ^SJml^(Vta to help my little Eisie " the young man with a smile at his own foHy^aa the cifnl as thought cart Dowled briskly along through the greea luxuriant country that lay between the 9t, tion and the Court. "1 could never lecture her with any show of propriety (^WiL ^^^ only knew that I indulgsd in jij|bjj[*gand phantasies too." ' • « i" â-  it was nearly six when they dwiif.ffj»- fore the old gray-stone house olothea 'irbm basement to turret with ivy, and bathed in a rosy sunset glow that made th^ #!^alL pointed windows gutter with s|JeweVlitip,' lustre from their dsurk setting. Onthelo^ est of the three ter;ao» that r in along the wide front of the bouse two tall ^eicack- fipread oas the iridescent splendor of their tails, erected their gr*oefal head^ and*, stirt. crowned crasts, and screamed a discordant welcome. " 'Tne raven himself is hoarse that croaks the fatal entrance of Dancau under my bat- tlements,' " Frank murmured soUo poce, and then he scolded himself for the ifiit^ PlV§^\i quotation that had come unbidden Jto his lips, and ran lightly up the i^eptf tX Jbin Sir George, who stoid on the •.T race. ' Welcome to the Conrt, Frank,",Mad'{he elder man. "And welcome home, sir,' cried the younger, in a breath and then they looked into each o^.her'8 faces, and again that curious sensation of being s .udie 1 and compasaioned cime over Frank de Wal- den's mind. "What a conoeited fooll am to-day T' he decided almost angrily. "Of course, after suci an absence, he studies me a little bit. Am not I studying him 7 Yery well, he| looks too, tm the whole, though he aeeiai-a li ;t)e m jre nervous and shaky than I thoii^tht him in the o'.d dsys psrbapi his, years be- gin to telL" '•You look well and happy, Frank," Sir George said, with something like a sigh, as he turned from the contemplatioiLj of hie nephew's stalwart figure and brieht haad-^ some face, and led the way into tS[e ereAt:- cool library that lay at the lack oH and looked upon the placid water of the lake. Frank langhed, throwing his hat down upon the table and settling himself lightly aud easily on the arm of a big chair. "I was just thinking the saoieof you, slip. You lookâ€" I don't know exactly koir-to pat^ it â€" trighter and younger tiian when I saw you last, though that was five ye.irs ago." Frank spoke ahe simple truth as it pre- sented itself to his mind. Had he been deal- ing in subtle flUtery, he must have been pleased with the grat fied fiash of the hand-- some old face, ,tl^e pleased sparkle of the still bright e^rj, though Sia Oeo ge' "I amitfrAil it was to the latter, sir," he said, with a littlo tremor, in Jiis full pleaunt voice. '/Essieis an aogel ^f t^selfishnsss but Mr. Yehdr 'is a self-niad^' mai, ^wbo places an inordinate viilae 0.4 such dig^iti^-. He does not a^k for .m6n,3y--^he has abua- dance of that but his daugbf ilr*^ hna^^nls' mmtt give them ik.h'e"'^r)'a-e in ' the "world. 7Effelderls,ta'matiy L.{fd Cozford, add the younger " â- , "S r George de Walden's heir. Ppo: flir George torned' â- alwi)f â- â-  ahro^]^ ahd stood for perhays fiv3 m{ii^faea.sUmngout4t the lake, from whiph'alt^heshnset glow ha* passed. Frahk.cbald only see his bkck and tVk handsome grajr head that wast still 'car- ried wi:h a proud and stately graee,^ siiKl' wondered, with a sort of restle** irritat'bnj ]vhen he would turii round and speakâ€" Ex- plain his enigmatic qnestioning and still mpip singulw silence in some reaonable [on, ^^ â-  t laBt h* (SJtrtd^iidttrs itTioi lW88fr"H«f crossed to hif.jaM|l«^j|id^f»||d|ii8 Mtp tw atopd in the clew' raveaCng^gDt of the viiae window, he noticed -wit^ 'surprise the gray pallor that had xsrept over the fine-fea'iared old face, the troubled appealing look of the gray eyes; It needed no more to touch his kindly hoait: and all his irritation passed awy« After all, hofr di/1 ha Jkno v what troubles weighed -bpaaihiajuBSbfa min.!, or how much the exertlcn made, for bis sak had cost th6 reclsi? ' M » ' J s^ "Why am I 'poor Frank;' and why do J oa seem so awfolly. trouble^,j sir 1" he ask- ed I^igbtly; aodSir George looked as though Ithe quest'oa relieved him. '"Becauseâ€" y(ArwiU hate mtwheii i:rtell yoa. Frank." " " 1 " "I thi|l^,^,ot ;,bflitnrme,':ftapk^Mw«. I a*«; ed wit^4l,«ile^.Jy| i4t|SUT0H^: "Bacaueeâ€" you are rot myheir.**^ soea I Frank de Walden ^u «ujr 4 "JAtA. iifi gj^.^' rcloght the back of a tall chair that stc-od eh^W J^***!® him with a ^teaafas^ igrip, .fi» itbiUS'ild upper tar; •"M What U Catarrh) -JVwn the MaU (Can.) Dec, m^ oaaililbfihe ••We^anJde^^. the v egetable pa rawts amce^a in k liii imiiJ|{ i iwiat i iiiiM ui Mt» iitt^ 5^7' i|fe|Bt€rbiS^^^^ tubercle, the germ po sou of eynhn" cury, t*cen«», from the ritemZ' effate matter o? the skin, Sunnr^' ' spiritJtbi? tfidly veutilited biS?' ~-"" and other poisois tha' ..' i' in the Mood. Tnesepoj"' the internal lining membran? o! the, hphstMii' state of irriwt ou. ever ra t» dSidiita dl these^jds of the«« j, '«dy| "P tneeustacliliat causing deafness: bor .owiug ©â-  the â-  cordp,' 'otusing hoarseaess, uaarpin, |ir^I^nrtrhetnrd of the bronciialtubaJ i^'g jn pulrnonary coosumptfoi and di 'â-  Wtvty attnnpts have been mtde cova: a oire for this distressing dise •" 'use of inhalan';s aid other ingt I,! bnt noae of these treatmentio ible of good until the pa-aiitei, either destroyed or removed from the i tissue. ' Some tiine' since a well-known phn CbI.f(TCy years Btindinj, after mnch 'me'ntijig, soccaBAgd in diat^rerii n e ece aary combmcfon of ingreflie never 'fails in absolutely and pen^ eradicating this horrible diseue, win standitig^fbr ose year or forty yeui. •"**"â- '•""*• •" suffering from theaboreL ^ut -de- a?, coaimQDieate 1 naiiig4j M ^-sisrs, J^ H. DE 8HS0N 305 Kmg Street West, Ton »n^ get full pirticular 1 an 1 treatise I Oinloiing stamp. r " A Terrible Tragedy. A'tmibie tragedy was happily its the other evecin; by the preaanceo! of the wife of one of ocr mo it citjz^ n 1. The faml con=i "ts-of the hujbi wife and tno children Wti briefly the chriil ng exparieu^e of thi^ fimily, X. hurii jly enci rcsd clie ro im whe.'ehui and faaiil/ wci^ seated and from dsterm'ned exprj:8'oa U!on hs f Mrs. X saw at on^.e tuc soattii .was aaiU)8 Tobti seemed to whirl round in an eccentric ft^hion, and all- the :bbjecta init ' lo fnia^ the jisel vps up in.in extript^b^e conf a«jua He was conscioufr that h|B liughed.a little loud- ly, as at some excellent jest, iuid then some- hair he fdtuid'himself RtariiQ ^J-.i80^ ^face, veff Vhitrah*WiMb«yW,"^-%!crrtg giis^ sarinounting an old cMiae^tbatfrpn^. ed him. 'â-  ' " ••Not yoar heir?" he repeated »ti«)idlv.; "Jaitajokb/orâ€" ••â-  *^, //?.? Tit-J^!: "No joke at all. I have been married^ ur$e €hree four years if^w, my heir also. Is ^eare bM. ' 'Aji awj S^W*Sf/«°« Hi cfe.nsn^el his ra which had accident ily been renon Tae horror esperienied by Mu. may be imigiied, aud in o derta dimilj btlentit n n^ja red f r what purpose he* fed'to "use it. iTiagine her relief when i stated his int u.fonof renrornja two Which acied terrible, and like Vromin she was equal to the occasion, I she had air .-ady pirchas id a bottle of P^l naii'e^atBlros O Ta Extriaicr, of whicii,ij every h^nl, she bat hea'd nohng ~prxlw- A o d the etrils of donesdiliiet us'nj; Pumam's C m Escraotor. An feijhikle inttf tute co itains l ^q^deif girls and £\e principal disp.mesi ga« and all oeher brcificial light. Use ' toe Triangle Dyes, IOj Tde degroea of "profeesor of contempon antiquities" hs s been conferre i iuNsv Yd He is not, however, the manager ot a I troupe. ^%«' The Testimony Or hnndre(?s of druggists bear here viti to the efficacy of Pilsjn's NervilinisiS â- mo it potaat remedy in ttie world for i kinds of pains. Nerviline is composed i newly discovered ingredients, and is eijail good for internal or external use. F chase a ten cent samp'e bottle, and t«ti| nca. T. B,. Melville, Prescott, writr ;y customers who have used Ne: speak highly of it, and I am satiefied it* take a leading place in the market befn lon^" Tr^ Polsoa's Nerviline for pw ^y druggists and country de everywhere. • You may tame the wild beast the coni gration of the American fore t will ca wM^n all the timber and dry woed li sum^id, hut you cannot arrest the pro^ 'Wthat craehl word which you uttered cu llstl^ yesterday or this mjrning. X Theaa ue oti ot peonle-going wroand gmmbliiili n ^t-Mik t the StouacK •allthe time who mipt â-  'WWlSMd IvHWr, U they only oaed Dr. Caraoo's ' ttei4ookid(eiiaUy.' It ia a splendid Blood AI^D.|,rtrt.50oenU ^^^^ straof^ f4cts he- said, deprecatiaglyâ€" Ji»i.i«k T?;«nV "Tush, my d^ boy 1 I am as weli ki a **^* man of my age oafi expeci to be, th^tr u.»Ht but. to return tdyb J and your pirspiibtb'" ' Frank op«ied his eyes at this. Ha own prospecs naturally engrossed a Itfge shsrt of his thoughts, and he was anxj^iu «nough to discuss them but. ^oasidar^i tnat he bad bnt just let foot in the hoaM..tk«t he was thursty and tr»vel-»tained, and eyen a ^^^tlLi little confused, hi. uncWs haate ktn^ck him l!?i^5.- «Lft as unseemly and absurd. â- â- â- .â-  puTiwmii "Oh, my prospects are srvrbro^r^i'tho-^ijrw ' 'â- '^lif ^^^^"«"^^ "And that ia- » •"" "'**; ' I We used von teaTOJeMyl' Fii*^'fftjf 3 *« on Sir George tamed away withaaMthawd- .P*?" ""^•â- ^^«'»*ftr rat^wtd^ary liMol SSSi ezdamation'bf diiffasi â- '^^ '""rTT* L»«ile.. ., 4,^aod'Sir e«orgeH» find words that should softia this terrible rklow Bttt'thiMci^lBr^^fd^ tbaea-db gnd Ibng iaciming, and Frank Wat the ^Mf to SDeax after alt;,. ..â- .'â- â€¢j' ':.:'â-  /.V ., ^^ sir." i?£d, Wg^^S^GtS^^^; dclWQii|f f aflj^g^^r ^ifiippointmi •ppi Wg TOjKBNT IN CABl^TOK PLACI- »' line tlie :C. P, R, E, » store with *rd .^jpdtu rtai SsiiSnd; wnttbletor Dry Goods. Cl« ja^S^od opening. _A. W. B gLL.OrletonPi»«: nhot BBNT.'IN OABIiBTUlf PLACK ON; ' JL llMol^UteC.B BJt., a store with dwelUni; businefsirtaua â-  suitable for Dry Cfoods. Qothini, "I jtyd o^oU^' A W. BELtrCsrteton Pl»oe, Ont llNHAROrS HaIR RESfoP| id MonstaelM IMdaedr. A genmne .1 â- ^^*' lavaanteecl to do sU tbat if It. I «(mdeUg Inxiiriaht whiskers and mi ia s iz{ W««!|. Ia bsStlea lafetar packed te_»% Wi^t ..»™k f tt^^#Ki^S5!S^M?BffijP5gB! %|k«Mlea safely JJkcked to y.j9^m!Bj£l^ Mail IH SatB Of FABHS IS TUT on tbe sideboard," be mih Jmnati "and for the ies|^ I think joaThOi- most wait a little wbi^ j "" """ must s»y to yoa w «jo« Frank onlv wondered ezonae this frantie luM^ bqt hftiag ot hia eydlirowB, and ttifesneftnanMiL fully while he slaked Wstlitat^^*^^ coZ"EfA7«So!?^ '^^-»* '1aBs»eolit,thoaciitlMtii raiha* m. it bat t'je teass^ far patU^ _. v.u .year»-*he foar y«Ma yoami|^;lf«ffKWMfl;f»i«^ ^bnWfefok my I haiiat.l poor Ad .jmrnmnbiMi •«heMjUot-: i.b lMn,th«B r w m UUk- xm vamm, aad kit Bvai btSSLtdSSS^ with me and iMT efaAA SSmm??^ not taU yoa wiM* iN u^SSTSMa^ forymuMtt. Yo« look pSm?^ "** Aaak "I ia liMat*r» Inak looiiQghiauelfwittrikaigir nwS ^Wak and Keppel, Oounty o. -^ •day.ath, et July. 188*. at i odoek P. ,«• " roTMleby taction, at Breckenndge'*}] rnhiitaie Koonu, Oonteon Bloe«, "jji Sound, as foUow»:-Paroel Na 1;-;*^| I Owen Sound, oomiqg d^jpto*^ jl poneesSion. townshto, of SSMwakTlSO •**â- â-  ""^t •**# SSTSSStaTuSS^t fit for gaiK "[I the ti-b*-, 31 about a ndfeftoa'Ko: 1. theal OflMMdsepantaly. Ttoms. onetenu w^| MiuMer at^ane-foniUi witWn XJt^, S )fOM BoM-' Dl Lffi^fllJWI PARIS CJl2 :m ISMMeaeeUTefor itheohaapert. d«MX] So*^l ^mi Jk it i M a n ufaetggetgd C0' WP. GuiTie 1« Ctoar Nun BtreM. Montreal. BomaaOemaiit, lannof Cnnur* diiist*

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