Ontario Community Newspapers

Northern Advance, 8 Jan 1903, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

d. s`aa`D.sToRE >rF*" J.McBandless ...FOR..; Blankets, A A Robes `and Bells gffice--97 Dunlap Street, Barrie Melfsis and V % .G%aunois ai cost `Make no rniamke! This is the GREAT Scott in the above lxnes; I: this time tney nad come with -- rest of the party, who wer'e"at the st1e_1_'u.ins. gazing out, aWes1;1uc_k, .5 lisper. `mingled with the .c1~ie1.bf`ft}e" _ ng [.`;1_1'~gIes via. their eyriesv Jrrnre-e miles away -tp'ith "~ All the best qutility anti ,3 guaranteed GO TO THE NEW .I..Aiv}_ :Ott-1 \dT4T*l\JE-' u x: _rI.:.I1'I -VT` 1|-BN5!`-. va Rpoms,.for o$ces in-Ross Blbck. No. 97. Dunlop `fire prphf vault: Iaiely occupied bv Dr. .`g{,llev.,'..* , : ``! V` a.23 ..I.i2--4:: Anw;t,q}<;,`. ROSS, 5 Also twq rooms with Rxault,` 151:1}? ocupied_ ,, A!g1ck.-;& Frase'r;' ';1arri"stcrs ; -`immediate ` u in 4th Cc!>tx-.:-`x`t:o~."- I ` ~. .=N.'_ K 19 in nth Con.-xoo. . .;x *` , _. . - T -`|ppbit<,> f_ f-`LE.\1~'ox.,ARD.AGH. cow*A.\ & BROWN, E NOT E._rI_?:*8: V }}o-" 52` I SQ1it? itoys; Bgrrie. .-L mvrnbvsro jet . oi=i`:;'%L:A~s ;xIl'......_- 5.... -.&_`._'-2.; I').___ In-L'_I- \r' _J, \- L VANILLA. for E6 cv~ean 1.'7for instance; ' - (_ _ V BAKLNQ. `POWDER. for cake`-3. V Que is a drug`. of course ; the other a chmic'a|: ' ';'nd_ there are` still othcrs--_SPICES"of`all_' ',A`. -mas , crg{:I.ot tartar, etc. V ~ . I .4 Igc drugs 's.:at-_a DRUG, " -;"*S1f0R%`j`,?:'eT}fc,ximggi%t knlo_ws--'mo're about 1` `fh:'|nJothr people._-f -- ' L :`Vi'i`fE|3(*a?.`bu$o3"`3fhg sx"`or'.`. " ligtnt-Kitche,'I3%gig'I ; _ V,`.` _. `jg : A cine and gskyus !?0N.KMaN1' .3105: M turret of the cii.stl,lik.:} _ ve the ruins. t1Jeirf= tgge V great =ch;;:yBm; and_i9-,@ , %tl1e_ wqart Hnehdvance [mice % i to h e r} {Bill Heads (in pads) 1 Statements (in pads) Letter Hgads (in pads) ` Note Heads (in pads)` ' Programmes Folere, _ . Announcements `Cards, Tags, Envelopes, etc. Dru3gs and Ilhemmals ! Posters, `av Avnvnz A Al- `N? 54 7 and S. )6 8 in 3rd Con.-_-2oo a. lcomz AND GET oun RATES V - `av: as: In 34 . E. )5 in nth Con.- I00 a. - in - V H7th Con.- " mo a. span... . - - in rofh ,Con.- about 169 a. -..v-`.vn-a.nn4:au 17. in 3rd Con. E.S.R.-2oo a. TECUMSETH. `V-.1 un.;.s- INNISFIL. N. 54 :9. in lath Con. . .V.`, .. U ,_.H - . ,V ' `~`~'.1`o secure valuable information on` geological strata," came in sonorous, didactic tones from the bowlder. `."l.`o obtain the latest views in snapshoot-. ing, that we may thereby be qualied to train the young idea how to shoot the shoots of learning-_ .\ I....n...A......_.. -4: _._u.'u-u-_, p,,., ,. - Jo you if y Tcounr. r-`: or cas I by the make"-rs. e pleased to show them on purchase or not-. A good dis- h. Every at_ove guaranteed Also a. run line of -Table and E FARMS FOR SALE. Every Description S1'_0I/'1 ) Oii""1;ANGE HARnwAr3 ?i~6i&;" no-mi l\r~.r\-r. . . ` _ __ \Vh-.n you ' k he was probably? a tna derfoot fresh from the east--t11is with H1` +110 Ttrnnl-n-nu n...-\...- -3 -..JA- ` ARE NEEi`31:D' EVERY DAY .5`};-'_'i:I2`1l`5I_1s`:;tV;'w:v1'} _l;s"vr I} ;1.ARR'IE; -, ` V`; indow Cards, Dodgers, C1 `I "\ BARBIE. am DOOR wEr OF [BARRIE HOTEL V--.. ---u a SUi`INIDALE. 4 `TO LET. . INNISFIL. "\?i=.s1>1A. want to buy a hub class -`~ --. Q-o\4n aauaqoola UOUWJVLIVUQ "I don't 'care; Ella hSpo1 ford a_ piquant face- was ushed, though she smiled with the rest over Martha's chaing. After you ve done the order- ing` yourself, you don t want toibeb always under somebody else s order. And, besides, she added, I Want to get a snapshot of the lower fallefrom l below Red dock, and Jack never "lets me go where I want to. .I -Want to have a good ti1ne"and see everything, ` What are we in the Yellowstone park lfgy, anyway? - `O I11... ........-.... __-I.-,I,I_ 4, A OF. rvaataldgtxes, w-.w-v- woo`: v no nu Miss Spotford desires the dignity . of. her position" to be maintained, de- claimed a norma_l _c1ass'miss from the a platform of a bowlder just ahead; ` She has been out from parental, high school and city authority for a whole year, during which time she has suc-- _ cesstully filled the position of, in- structor in the Black Tail school, dis.~ trict of Basin, state of Montana. Signed, sealed and delivered by me this 12th" gay or August, 1898. ' Martha E.` Nickel. And she pompously rolled up] an imaginary certicate, took from her small, freckled nose 0. pair of invisible eyeglasses and glanced benignly around upon her giggling audience. " ;I..--u. ' - vv--' u--v-o-cv-on I do wish you wouldn't be "so careful-. of us, pouted one little `lady. .I am quite able to take care of myself. And she tossed "her pretty head with = its tumbled mane like a colt 1'est1v'eT under the curb. 11'|rJ,_ - . .- _. ' ,, Look out, girls! Don't go thatiway --here s the trail." Rattlesnake Jack. the big guide, handed each maid Tot hid , convoy over the rocks toward Insp1ra- 1 tion point an it she were a Dresden. china shepherdess and might break any moment. - * ~ III .1- --l-L ---- ---A4-`-!- '* ' ' " ` Jmum 3, ~19`o3.j d up f old % -'_W111}: ?;ti1 e;`f1;1`;1T&;r;`+:Jinib77 ;1.k-` 1?`? t?11?`*.`,_ .-"4" V` " ' .11 :: r 4- - _ . s _..C, . > I ` A 1 F ` As dullf as disliwateif . replied the; journalist.. I-nqeed; tor` myV,11gtters__I'~} ain compelled to d_Lja.w op. xmpimaginae , 1t-ion formy.facts.._; ,j M ., Mr; Beegher rloolzeti qp. gith` a2<-xnerry?~.A'.; -.-twinkle 111')" hi s,eye and;pndmptlaf':`;iii1;' pletd _?tl1e..T~q_1i9tatipn%'.;V 1I1jfm_,-`;?Sjhediti1 and;Tqp;your lp ,o1*y.`fiJ1f3*o1;`x`\ifw'it,_ 3 ~`:rIm*.. ;.s.`m....;m';.:-.=....e*...~.;x.<-. a..'.m ..-.2 av .- L vooov` vgn gvuo I-I551`-LII-IL. LUL ' VV_lI_.o T .The. newspaper jxndp` felt adV_~he f1ad b'een __kfnoeked_`gtigwh.--B;99k}yfniEIhle"' ! to his country seat. 'Pee1:skil1; The; i newspaper man wusjwell k"n6Wn _to D113` - Beecher and -so went to .hin_jlt\td_%pa5f. jgis re`spects; V . A On your wayto "Albany; ,.I`4-1`31`2+",'.i.;' sume, f said thd-..,pregjchr,.i1 ?4Ar._`;1ft1`: legislatlv . session4V`i,i1te1e`s_tit1Vg `L`e`;_.; _ citing?" ;, 1 , ` u A .. ' EI_i!IL:'_`~, '-r-.. `.n " ;"ell:" w:;1:lLi;(1 the; A minister, you knowsolomon says, `He that consid_e:-. eth the wind will not sow. A v .1 (6 I dinna care :1 button what So1o1_x_.Au')1'\A3V` says. John returu'edTirat`e1y; _I fancy % he kens as little` about farmers work ` as ye dgev or he` wadna hae said ony `such thing.` Naebody .but daft` folk. wad thinko -sowin in sich wind. "Solo-. mon may saywllat he likes. but hi:m an "ye both waglna umk a. guidplow-ii man between ye. - V V ` And the bank was_ not sownfthat day.-London.Tit-Bits. ' 1 ` " v_- :-:-u- ` -u.-11110 I A man strong ovpinioxls otthis.` ov'i'n_as to the tness of things is gar- dener and man of all work to 8. minis- ter in a rural parish in Scotland. One . hols-terously windy `day thelclergyman_ dispatched a message to his servant to sow a portion of a eld known to them both as the bank. In no-very amia-A ble mood the man made his way to the. study. urx..- __A e V he inquired somewhat sternly. Yes, John; I do. replied his master; Ye canna sow in sich .a day 0 wind, explained John. T ` u1tr..n n ......'u_:I :- "`v"I):1'e ye want me to sow the ban`kV?." "A"n'd 1 will, little sweetheart, it you` will: only let me keep it safe} and happy % alongside of mine. lK'l'\-.._4 . - .~-v..a.,- av va. ucauuc _Dear old ack, wasVall sh said, but he seemed quite satised. V __-..- ..... \IO\I Ivuu. \.u;uc. uaun. V _` I You threatnd to take my life}? she said, _ * vn u...-uuue uu. uua. She did not move: reeling somehow strangely contented there. _ She had never before realized what 8. comfort -~ able and comforting pillow a man's ebroad shoulder is. But/after}: mo"- ment her old pout came." back. van: 4-l.......L.._.;_1 L- A , I yaw us uca LUCAS UHUUEU. ~DeI0re D15 Sight. After one instant, during which she lived centuries, she felt a circling rope settle about her waist, and of a sudden. the rocks and trees and sky all danced drunkenly` together around the boiling- crater. ofqthe sun, then fell into it an. Aputit out. - ~. - Wheh she -saw the light again, it was in a pair of very_tender and thankful i blue eyes quite near to her face, and V she was held in a man : strong but ` trembling arms. ' I '51.- .11.: ..-L -H- - "7*i)"o'TmvJv,"3r i'11 shodt you! mu shouted in a delirium of horror, while visions of her body dashed to pieceson` , the cruel rocks ashed before his sight. After nnn inc!-nnf 'u..I..... ...1.:..1. _1_- ' The girl, hearing the whistle, looked up and smiled mischievously. You see, I did get it, she began and stopped. Poor. Jack could not `control the color. of his blanched face. Grasp- ing the camera, she started to rise, but her `footing and withher weight-shet felt herself slowly gliding down the cliit. `Now thoroughly frightened," she turned" and tried to clamber up the ' steep bed of shale. ` . ` u1\-_IL H vvv new 17" vvu a-I: _l.|I: nan n0t `that the treacherous shal_e_,loo_sen'ed by l her hurried steps,'had"started"to move down." One jarring movement `on her part and a whole rock -slide would` vanish over thepreciplce, a `thousand feet 'below, carrying the precious bur- den with it; He must not startle her. He began V to whistle, starting leisurely down the. slope. His stiff` lips almost refused to pucker to the `old college refrain, It's a way we have at old Harvard, 1 and his ngers shook as he felt for ; his clasp knife. to cut the danger rope for a lasso. A ` ~- -7. we voauvUUJUl|, auu , Like an arrow he shot backdown the trail through` thepines to the canyon side._, His `brave heart jumped and stood still for one sutfocating instant. Theree on the steep slope below he sawher. She had wound up her kodak lm in triumph and, half reclining , was twisting up her ying hair, Hie keen eye sawywhat she had not not_ice(_1-p- `that the h-nn'nhm.m... -v.-I-- ---~- --.--no av3s'Uu;LulIl`V` aways ` I ` I 1' 1 Where's `Miss Spoord 1? he -inquir suddenly 1n`theA,n 1i_dst of a` story about -the glacial rock upon which their ko-x daks were focused. - You all stay4rlg'l1t'l1ere. Don't any of you date to stir from this rock! His voice was rm, but his tanned race ' went ash color. The command was not - t to be disobeyed, and they knew it. Lik an nrrnur Inn aka` I.--I_ -1` _ vv -~- - vv,I-uu gut. UUWU Inel'3."` ' _ . ; 1`ime`_-to so back ;to camp," was ' Jack's prosaic ~.1nter1fupt1on : tq - their `schoolgirl ights of rupture, -and th7y\ turned regretfully away`. Whnrn'n `Illa- u....nn._.1an ., - - - .. .. .. V- 1.9.-v uuvvcr .L.uul~l. (l', 001100- t1on. . And she turned the nder of her camera up the gorge. There's always a `rock or uomeplnes in ._the,way here- \. I. wish I could get down there." * ,"l`irnn`-I-A --- `--4* ` bowl and" cuts," poured A it down ave :- ithd brathgd Ella 1,n,an.c`ta_s,yVof, Solomon nmim Know; . .. __ __`1.LI, 1-00 rot; your `N_11g" ,Te.d ~ V fafz " vie. ugg ,....- . .......__ vv u'\._&. gyauv u..I.|u u.1l)[V\.f$.t-{>l.VVl.L`.Y_-_:'. ` ' He mid V`fol_l;<>%\`i*'::`q' ,_F`1'oI,11 ben<:0D-_ 8119 ;- iseemd ]:o.c1;;ng.? ;At}eg_1st. Ted: tshought Vs'o'.-*Agaj{z_1 ~he_;11a_c`1 spqkgn and, th_1s\timeA ' g iti;a`:.1sI.\r.et';,:`,~ It was` J`-`1\.T'o.".'. ~:I:i_.".;.she ; ` hf1 `hxlm3_- 3% *Wa;s=I.h!f<.1de. ;`_>~ s";bnesvHre,ab and--' ith idh: or._.1..; I `H 5 `I 1 i 5 i 5 , um; vu uuu. u.-:r_,v pug" _ut' uau,-\t,oIu_ ,,11e1j; `, T ` Itneeded-= ;u`o;a te1ung, tor, Nell hadf5 known - lgng-Sago,` as every ,.yvc;gap: does. and; fxslg .wa's*5poud of it, , btii: - she` sat-` "silntly picking a.w_i1d'5~ ower to pieces %as_.pe`$Doke.,a~,nd An1:1ly;~asxhn 1J*?,lsked, ,.th.at she` jwe, sip` ;_tneL;i21 II.1.11.dL Mn?- jwi th1hiLIii`?fO :`IiW;}h5iI!3'A?"hl?.. F M.` 1.Hn= ha @n`11'.sa.`,; ..a' -` .1:\..;....' '; .8l1e%11$e!:6i her %t.%i1t!ii% '!ii%iv a -_.- nu uv 'I.a.I_I. vulwc Dl.l..L.Lu`, (he, reIi1eml)ti(gg1`Val'1A:' t}jd,t ;i1s ~_th0.ugh it were yes.t-fday; `yet-.iti"i%w;is.< :'1_hnost ;thre;e,,);yezgi-s-~t;:io; ;` Labo, day -o`f ~ t,1a'f?_xea1'~-'Nell"was not at we npibxiic, V W on.t:1.1i=e nxvfn1:#x TsheimsJ,tI;`ere;'? and 6n that ver:y`s1us= he h8Cl{ f.i51`1} ..1J1fi. *5? "Ti!-' nh )..-:"4.,.-Iu.-.'...- .n-..- in-'n - mliieii hesitated a binbrrientoolied "ap- peallngly at him. then. Thank you. _ she said. % 'fZqu 'a1'e`-.vi=7ry 'I;i_);1d_. A Qujc_l;- . . 1y she 1ret1'a9ed ljer gtps. z1_xidA,L"IIet1.` watc_hing the` 1't_;t'ea/Li:1Jg_ V-5ti_:guL1:ev-`,foiY _`{1_ Vmox_m_3n_ c,T saunteredj:AQ`,g.:t9:;.Zhrak `the ` ' news to"g,t_he 0fIjc_st;_1._; L}. P. I74; ----. V- -.-v-.4`. x.-v\.uL.y DuL1luJCLa3u `day of Joe s death Ted `had met [Nell walking down to. the" works to; [deliver the message. She was weep-V 1 lug. ~He had never spoken to her be- fore, but be suspected. her `mission and. raising his `cap -politely, _s_:_1id"feeJ- ingly: I lLase.L` Miss ; B`mvl`r, _bI n_:_'tel_l them at the Works . Don".t1y ou go down 9` there. ---a urn A-lea The compay tlid 'eon1ething l\1:'1And-- some, - as the boys put it. for each `of the bereaved families, and in addition in Fowler's case took Into the otce at F` :1 fair salaz'y~his daughter Nell, a young -woman_ of` some twenty summers. ` " `rn1...e-.3-.. -3 1-4- .1__ur - vv u...u.u. um. :u.u.,u:u luLt:l \'Z11. It was not thetoat itself that at- tracted -the attention of young Gard- ner, but little Nell I1`owler.~one of the three ladies. V Nell was the oldest daughter of big Joe Fowler. for many years - foreman of ,.the Westchester works, anda man who thought well of Ted and had?kept hiseye on the boy - ; in the early `days. for "there s `some: * thing more than ordinary in that cuss, ' he would say. But Joe. contracted diph- theria during the `epidemic in the shops a "in 1899 and was thethlrd of the eight` a `men carried` o Ithat_j1ever to be forgot- ten spring. "Q`__,_ _A`__`____,, Jan .. .,.-.-'v' on. wnaaull. Qdllllllllu luuucll, `to add to the reaiistic effect three la- dies of the oice "staff and as many men from the "same department. he- comingly attired in `boating costumes. werelounglngh about on the. cushions. Thesmall engine In the craft was not working. but the naphtha was occa- sionally ligrhted to keep `steam upfor the purpose` of blowing the ear~spb1lt- ting whistle at stated` intervals. {- -I 4~ nu-`nu .-..L ;.L-.'a'.~_n _,-- _- `V~l>O ..;u;;- LAJV Uttla ","l.1Jl Wllu 11 the western scorn of eastern igno- 'anc'e of mountain climbing. I m a ountain girl. , . Yes, I know, he assented eagerly, `and plucky and sure footed as Well, ut'I promised your mothers. that` I vould bring you all back safely from his camping trip through the park, nd I intend to do so even though it be gainst your own sweet will. . c There; now will you be good? 1 aughed Martha Nickel. After that ` ouch of masculine masterfulness-- Bogy` man '11 catch you if you don't 'Ilt('.h out! she humnied wickedly as he passed them. And remember how ne bogy man changed his titlejfrom entleman Jack to `Rattlesnake ditto. own on his cattle ranch in Gallatin alley. That was when he was still resh from the east, too--hut that's-or nether story, as Rudyard says. b V Jack looked sheepish, as `lie always n.-ntio.ned. idwheu this pieceof his prowess was ` {I-.ZIiVs"mind was "evidently on the otjfer V out ahead, for he continually glanced in t_hat direction. On this oat was a genuine, if small. naphtha launch, and 'fnAnr1H On 4}... ......J`:...L.-.. .na._1 4- Iona uvv Ina-IV ylblllloo on one oat, showing asmall mzirine `engine and three benches with the same number of` men busily at work. was Ted attired in working clothes and- [doing nothing iii particular. but moving about. ...._..,....--, .9... .. gun. uuu. a year 11,50. The Westchester employees always met after the Labor day ceremonies and had an excursion of their own in a general, good, old fashioned picnic style; This year` Ted had decided to take charge of the two oats that came from the Westchester shops -and see them safely returned. He was not go- ing to the picnic. l\v'. A..- n.'_:. ..L ---L- ' - '- `Shot. ``That s better still. T - --.-I] suyauuu J-.C\lv Go over"and see the girl. ,then',? my `boy._ responded Fitson as a` parting- llf`1___`I A I -..nv\II pp uuvuln-L Flvllli ~-v(ood advice. muttered Gardur to! himself. but I "quit that "a ye`ai' ago." Who Tam-nhn.+.... nn....I-....'...-. -I--.--- `.-vur-1-vivoa uaasgv "VA!-X MI. uuzuc. ? It's enough to Work your eight hours eac1I gay, Ted,'said Eitson to him the morning_ of the parade, and put in you_r evenings knocking a_r'oum . . 61\Tn+ +1.- 14...: u,'_; . , V 7`-c `. ovtv Vt:1:;t`skhocks',.a11'ound. Fits, replied Ted. ` un- -_.--" - -- 3 ~ - ....--. o'vA- who JUGID .l.l'.'u I..U,l been with the Weqtohester company. and there was note man of the ve hundred and - more employees who earned hi livelihood within the wall but `had a cheery word for Ted` Since the last Labor day puraqe, however, to !.h1s most intimate friends Ted had not_ . appearedto be just zisvcheerful as` in the old dais. Moreover,` he was doing .too. much night work at home. (674.9... ....._..1. L4 --r- Ted Gardner. _as-usual, was in` line. Ted's friends always. looked for him on one of the huge oats tha? preceded the varioux unions and labor organizers representing. the different branches oi`. mechanical art. For six years Ted had hnnn vii-In J-1... T`l`r.....4.-I.-_L_-. Fathers. husbands and son were, where. every son of toil should be on such a day, in-the ranks of the labor men` on` parade. A. few were working- ln miniature shops` erected as oats representing some particular line or in- dustry and drawn `along the streets by 1 gaylydecked horses, but the multitude wereiin the ranks, each in his respec- , tive union, ,doing his little to swell the showing in the army of_ the laboring man, the bone and sinew of a great nation: T ' l ` ' ._--._D--.a .-L.`y-.u ovllco "`I beg your pardon, Mlss.Ella. he was apologizing redly to the rebellious lamb in his flock. When he was embar- rassed or excited, his` cowboy vernacu- lar fell from him like the thin veneer it was, and he dropped, as back to a na- tive tongue, into the Harvard lan-` guage, as his ranch friends termed it._ 1 "`It is exceedingly "dangerous around ` these rocks. The.v are shaly and slip- pery, and I have seen more than one go down to death just because they did not realize the danger. See that long line of danger rope stretched along down there to keep tourists on the up- per trail? She nodded. - That very .place;"` he continued, where you wantedfto take your kodak picture, on the other side of Red rock, is the spot from which a .1I`i'lnister fell to the bottom of the gorge, ove_r'1_,60O feet, `last year. We could not even get" down to bring back the remains." It vas awful! He was dashed to pieces. -Iis wife stood here. She almost went nsane over it. we `a OGIIbI,I `- --e'._vl`Ahe great Labor day parade paesed` slowly. along. and parties of picnickers lled the street cars on other thorough- fares. V V Crofds lined the Streets tffom c1ir,b- L stone back to `the very bu11d`ings,' and as far almost `as the eyevcould reach this dense mass of humanity, men, wo- .men and children. cheered and wpved 'pa raso1s. hats. handkerchjets and min- iature ags. A . = VI..- ._.-._1. r-u, - Nell Fow l er Clrpjnight. WA; : sun ueueve I_n Vvixtchcraft. A belief in Witchcraft-still'*p1:evaiIs. in parts of Lang-anhire, Englajid, alsq 11; the Isle of Man, and still mor'e strongly in the Hebrides. A~writer in chambcgrs Journal gives.some inter: : -esting anecdotes of, t11e"s11pe1'stiioI_1s which persist among the 'Heb1'ideaVn_s. Blief in Witt-l1craf.t-i s`a`idvto-`have a~' Wstrong L and ` li\}:ing_A.:.hold ! jgn, dome V-of _the- pejdple of th'os_e;_oute'1j)ls}es, An in-_ -an_e"e.' -is Tgi`yen>.fo`f' it _as`- h.ear`,d befor_` ,St`o1fnq3v_`a?y `sheriffs cifg L _ vember 1SQ9,_7fln --- .. u.u4u_v vuL.|.cl.Cl_.|l. Luuuuel.` Illl] We I do., If one may not say this, how may {it be said? D1'tferent' manner from `what We do is clumsy and inelegant. Every` writer has at one time or an- other found himself in desperate straits i for a means `of hitching diferent on `ma verbal senten`ce_,. and the use of believe it to be justi_ed. The verb f`diifer as well as the adjective dif- ; ferent is a trap for the unwary. Even than. so obviously` supplies a felt i want andvis in itself so logical that we - the. most careful Writers and speakers " when theyemean di`fferixgv from. I habitually talk about-di ering with I `beg to,` d'iffer7Wi_th the honorable gentle~ ordiium -of a-"speech" in "the house `of fcomlmons. and; though examples can of. [ course be quotedwfrom the best writers," ; it is a solecism which offends: againsi: {logic-and instinct. " ` '" ` `V . .- . 7 _ AU. Lman opposite" `is the "most familiar {ex-j n Diereiat Thain. More than oneof our contemporaries, says the-Westminster Gazette, stand rebuked by the editor of _ Notes and Queriesfor using the expression dif- ferent than." A No one of [course would dream of. using it as between noun and '*noun-o(f, saying, for V instance, '``This is adifferent kind than the oth- er. `The_ question is whether it can be` used when a verb follows; Theylact .. in -a" wholly. dierent manner than wej n 9 T4` 1\o\:\ .....--- _.--L ~-. Oh, tell me about it. asked Ella; or g1-ievzmce fox-g'ot'teu. You lassoell e rattler. didn t you? ' _ ` He nod(lod.. 'l`1mt`s all there `was `to. " he said shortly. . V ` . . ;``Except the triing detail of the`ch7ild`;~ 4 hose life you saved by it and1.'who;f_ V i led'reminisceutly--3was my prolt},-l n in -_the estimation 01 the cowboyag. In a mere college te11de1'fOot,~t0LHa:*: nuiue cowboy; a long stride in_- evjvolu-_ \ an etfort `she ,rai_s_edA his big, brawny hgnd to her lips; then. turning, hid her_ face in`the pillows. - . --, .... ......:\.u u. uuuuu5cu.ui.lUU. You must not talk just now, and, besides.` dear, he went on smilingly, I ;know what all your fears were. You have 3: bad. habit of talking in your sleep) . ' - 1113;`, , V - IuIl\rIy LIIO - \ Ted, dear, you are ahve? she mur-T - `mured. I Was_---afraid4.-tat- He raised a mu-ni`ng' nger. ' ` Hush, little girl! -Then, bending over. he kissed a bandagedhand. \'nn hallnf ant 4...n- .!a-..A. M, - -u-uyanaa uu;sAJ Lu LIID UVVIJ Ulg pullll. She opened l1erTeyes.slowly, and they met his. ' T v Lnloll-IV; II V -----. ~-~ - 4 . It was not until afterjmidnight that the physicians allowed her to" come out tr`om.under the inuence of "the sooth- mg opiates. When she did, Ted _was there at the bedside, one little hand resting softly in his own big palm. gho nhnnn `axis: A... ..I.....1_. ___1 .1, , , .__._ ..-nu savu Lu Nell stood with her facveoburied in her T hands. The ames reached for her. L skirts. Now her hands were stretched ; out toward him; _Ted! she cried and ` staggered forward. .Gardner caught her in his arms, and; standing for a mo- ment poised on the edge of the sway- ing -vehic`le, he shot forward and over the embankment, down into the river below. _ It was one chance in a thou- sand. but hemad it. ' TL -__-_ HA ..-._.. gvuauua 1AL\u ,"Ed.1ooked back into the oat. ".I.`he occupants stood screa_ming, not daring ` to jump. The engineer was writhing F in agony, a mass of ames. The pain Twas driving him mad. Suddenlyhe % Jumpedo his geet, leaped into the air and--.to hisdenth, _ \Y-1I _,L- , ,-I - ._-, -..1-~ vs vv \IlnL-l\tI-II Tedheard and saw` it `all. v For in. ._second- he did not move. could, not, but it was only for a second. Then he leaped over into the crowd; in another Instant he wasclimbing up the burn- ing oat.- ` e V A _f1`he. naphtha had exploded. ~ pThe.horses,' almost mad with fright, . dashed off at a wild pace. Men, wom- en and children rushed and tumbled, over each other, screaming in their frenzy to escape death beneath `the hoofs of the horses. Ted reached the seat and grasped the lines. mals made a swift" turn and ed to- ward the river. Would he guide them into the water? The crowd saw his ef- fort andcheered. All this happened in % a minute or less. _ No; he could not control them! On they dashed on the edge of the stream, but" not into the; saving ood. Losing time was losing life. VTVA4-1 l...\1-....J I__'_I_ 9. 4' an A The ani- i 4 E - . --, -....- .. ya-.n.u. u u.cu.Lcul.u5 l'CyUl'|.-HUU a -blaz of light, followed by. th screams of women. fI'\-` I _ ,, _ _- -_--..a-.. uvuuuo ..I.uc cusxucur was starting the ow or. naphtha under the boiler to produce more steam for .11 nal screeching of the`little'w11istle asethey entered the grounds, _ -- t_ Noll had moved down to the stern of {the boat. Before she was seated,'hoW-" ever, there came :1 deafenihg reporttand 1: hlnrzn AP l.'nl-.4- a-u.....-.1 L; L _"'X1'1' this ashed fhnjoiggh nifimnd as gure . in the oat aiiead. the parade moved on, and he glanced from the cheering crowds to the `little -mt... -...----~L- " I ' I V '7 n._u V` I Still Believe l__n 'Wi\tchc_ra`1't. - v n_l_ _I.a.Ip f_g'1he procession `was now hear the. end or the line of march "and "had stopped temporarily at the bridge over the river, which rushed past -the south entrance to the park, where the nal review and sports were to take place. ,_In the small launch ahead the occu- pants were taking. advantage of the stop to change seats. The engineer " WEE frfililr fhn Harry I\` .--..I..LI__ _-A. -1. ifter` tAl'1.e :oVi1`ice, ` he watched her: bending over the desl_;,f and she seemed to, be sippinge farther and `farther away from him and hi [love U ` ' `fie-V1133 the` largest and . best i1ss"()rted Stock in town arid 'zmn'jounces. a` special sale for :th e7__Iiext two weeks at greatly r`educe;d prices. His Astockof. l;Ia1'1i'Ss_ always satisfactory! anti pri'ce$_right' as usual. R. 7.] - cur FI._6w1sRs;.Rose., Carnations, Violets, V etc.,:fresh[evory day, Bouquets---Buttom hblegandot Corsage. Funaral Tokens in '_ an _si a. ".3 _ L VEGEE.`-AB ES--Cele , Crisp and Tendef; Cabbage. arsnips. Becca, Carrogog '.?`etc.'.15I ` - . . , E.ps +;m _w` saga I blseeds ,pu"i.. 1'.` `Inna var ovussaaua ` `Ti iigllstorm of, pebvbleai interru1A)tedT the speaker, `who descended {and walked on with great dignity. The Lothers` followed, their cowboy guide ` bringing up ,the rear. ,KlI 1.`... __,.u

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy