..._ .v uuuvuy .Cl~`.`C Uub _VUll. 1811 R16 [what to (10. Paul can t trus c.me and 'I m lled` with fear, M ' I-t l`l be all righrt, moth-er. He sj A... T`). 1 Now -the glasses are adjusted, and _ | B`(.`hert picks up a paper and. p_retend's [lto read, but .instead Watche-s over its [itop the tremblin.g of the pobr, thin I _ -nge~rs- and the Light in the anxious f f ie-yes. He? rst response to the letter = f { is a smile, and Robert divines the me.s~ fisage of, love that has coaxed; it; and ; ' after that an expression of startled tfconoe-rln, and he knows that all is not jwell with his brother, even before his gmother `hands on the news: Paul- s ipoorly, and`---and h;e s A away to the 1 sea. ' I A few more lines which brighten her, i' then the pages. utter from her ngers {to her lap, and then nds her burly ifarmeur son kneeling by her side, ten- Vder1y fond=]-ing her hands as; though she were a little child in need of comfort, ,but with never Va word of inquiry or 3 rleassurance. 3 | , _ ,, L I -It is'mornin,g' in the d-_ale, and form the schbolhousea bend tbebarkv of Ran- , ter announces -the coming of the let- 1 ' t-er-s. Leaning hard on Ro`bert s arm,f ` Maxg-aret Musgrave trails wearily down to the gate, and when Sa-lly \Vatter- ! son -has gone she slowly ambles back, a letter in her hand, and disappoin-tment 3 .,in her heart. He hasn t sent 1t, nn...1\....a. n _L_-, - M I Amozrs the croft to the `house and the Ihigh-backed chair, where the glvasoms ` are tted while Robert extracts the sheets of not-epaper, and ercely stramgl-e:s 'a tempta.tio.n to throw them - into the fire are they have the chance of wounding. v { `1-, .1 - |-u -nun. ucalug I13 Il aSn'T. Sent It, }Robert, she" wails, he hasn t sent 5 't`!} '11 . gwould never had gone to press if you ;had. `That s not" a. bad idea now, is it. `Paul? A committee of mothers would `constitute a ne censorship, and, be fwonderfully eective. Many of those 5 a who v rite would -refrain from mischief ; , with--their pens, mental and moral `mis- I ch'cf, it` only mothers were ~ given the : '_opportunity of review. However, I3 mzppose you couldn t help it, youth] "must have its ing. You ve made 11' mistake, Paul`, I m po.s-itive of that; but not all the books, nor all the shrieking of the don -t-know-men have power to shake the Great White ' Throne, an-das for you-1"sel f-I m not! without hope. Good~bye, Paul, good-' bye._ I 9 (To be continued) If unable to write Trav-elling down the slopes b of the: uutermosvt pass in quest of forltu-no, hie` is m.-co111]>auied by lth-clcomfonting can-'1 viction -that his homelliand will" ever retain :1 vital int.exrest in his_ career, and will ;_rievel or rejoice according to` Wlmtl201' failure or friurmph to the end nl hi; :ulv(*nltul'e. For this relas_ozn,. then, the Cumbrian whom lvife =_h-as' 8-elnlt into exile begins and ends all his ex- 1 pluits, be `they on the s-uhvlimwe scale, or lH`\'t`l' so triing, with the inquiry: \\`hat will they say iw Cumberlaand? l'..+:n 1.:.. n.1........,. 43..-... _-...-__.-1.:_-_- Inwaygub befor V V ` UOFYRIOHTI CC. - , , am In teh dduox-I |qI1At:k`l:noou`I.'ulI1`:n'r gpinlzlxll tree wK:'31notP:g .::::.=*:.:.'.=,.'~...u-.... am ...'-=......~=;';~.. 8'08". -;:..*'..-.-. ..a::: 33%.: ..`._,`,_-cs.-~ :. `ASAAAASQRA .-- -.`-O - - -- ..... uuuu 4.11.. rxsner rroperty." -There is said to be erected on the lands a comfortable ve-roomed `dwelling house, good stable, barn and `outbuildings thereon, also good or- chard an well. For terms and particulars apply to, ~ STEWART & STEWART, 18 tf 13 Owen St.. Barrie. ,Valuab1e Town Property In the Town of Barrie, in the County of Simcoe. Offers will be received by the un- dersigned for the following property to be sold en bloc, namely, Lots 19 to 24, inclusive, on the West side of Essa Street, in the said Town of Bar- rie, and Lots 19 to 26, inclusive, on the East side of Centre Street, in the lsaid Town of_Barrie, according to reg- istered plan No. 30, commonly called the John M. Fisher Property. I -There is said tn 1.. ........+.\.: -- LL- Fools `oft rush where the wise man would expect the police. 9! Owing to the great number of Can- 3 -`adia-ns who reside in Chicago, St. '8_Paul, Minneapolis, Duluth and other if cities en rowhe, there is no doubt that lithe Grand Trunk will nd many pat- 3.rons who will take advantage of `the opportunity thus afforded them 1 'fm- a brief visit at the Sta`-tiJ0'n'S with their friends. . Canadian citizens are exempt from ,so-called, Immigration Examination, {and there is no detention at any ` `point. ; Baggage is cazvried through the .TTno&.n,'l QL..A._- ' - - " ` v D i Another feature that will appeal -to the homeseeker is the comfortable transfer at points like Chicago, St. Paul and Duluth into fres-lily venti- \lated clean cars, avoiding the neces- sity of travelling along disrtanc-e in the same car. CHAPTER Indiiference Turned to Fear. 1 To the man who is privileged wi!h'i birth und~e.r the shadow of 'Oumbria_"sf mountains,in the so1`i.tud'e of.her West-'1 em mosses or `hard by -the shores of -the 1' i.n1pCtu0u's Solway, .-tn-ere is granted` "8, talism:-mic mL'as~ure of protection, it sure guarantee of judicious; choice and 4-uccossful speculation. That is whythe, loyal (Jum'b1'ian so seld-om ails. vi REPAIRED Baggage United States in bond without re- quirin-g any special attention on the part of the passenger. Inspection is not necessary at any of the points` at `the border. - --, ---v--vu\/VIIVIU . and Quebec to Western Canada, via. [Chicago and Dul-nth or via Chicago, 3 St. Paul and Minneapolis, am reduced - round trip fares. 9 E The well-'knsown double track line I; ,of the Grand Trunk from the East to IChica.go s appeals to the trave1`ler, and with the superior train service that is oered by this line, including the famous ` ` Inter-nation-a1 Limited l from`Montreal daily at 9.00 a.m., and ' which is the` finest and fastest train '!in Canada, man-y paaseengers will be ;,attracted this way. The route via EChicago is- a most interesting one, tak- jing passengers Ithrough the principal iicities andtowns in Canada and in the {States of Michigan and Indiana. In `addition to this a choice of seven 1]-ines between Chicago and St. Paul iand Minneapolis is offered. ' f\_2, be ,run from all stations in Ontario" A. w. wmmrs } The ' Grand '1'-ru-nk Railway Sysvhem `announce that on Tuesdays, June 13th, {and 27th, July`11t'h and 25th, August 18th. and 22nd, September 5th and 19th, 1911, Homeseekers Excursions will run from all a+..4:...... :_ ni.L-- EXCURSION 1'0 WESTERN CANADA. V Elizabeth St. OPP. DREAMLAND N E A T LY QUICKLY FOR SALE \ Par :11u.' on 5'.l'l'JWART, St.,.Barrie. P `rub: Mains IUIGNC Barrie Branch, Five Pglnt; 1' IBANKOF NOVA SCOTIA over $58.000.000 SAVI;I.GS 3 1 ACLOUNTS % SOLICITE1) % Capital and} Reserve. . $l0.200.000 Total Assetsk YEARS first lusty thril`=Is of 1-ejec-ted the great they say at ih-ome~? n {-`ant .4l...4. --....'.I._.. ....-. .-The Books a'nd Statemems of this `Bank are annually sub- .mitted `to_a Strictly independ- ent Company for examfnatirin. vouv I-Jlvlf If 3 " gvvsvatvr uwtll 1751191 .Nei-their wrasc .he'a'b1e',v at any time-, -to d4e1'ude with falsehope, his outlaok w-as rtshwt of the fatbaliart.-7J_?`or premoni- tion quickly clrysgtallised _in-t_pT conyits; tion, and when the po'9t~mzan passed? him :by,Pw1 ,new1-`regardafed: the erdeiyas =ha`v.ivng`_b_`e'en_ pvm-come, but morq_ly,' vn9d- '1 - _\h`aiwn:ot`e4>hei " V ' . 5"; ` B1iva7'-'-;51'xes'z':.Vrt1a';e:'poex.1::xnan s tattoo beat .upon the-rsi door on the terrace, Paul _ had -a. vision` of- a watching over a close-cropped garden ~hod;ge, and when he picked up the letters and saw that ttehe wa-tcher had not he muttered: 9, word wh5p_l:2' stood -for thanksgiving. -Ilt wasnot that he...fea.r- V ed`her c'riti_1ceism,:z`he was coniamea only with the wv.el.fa,-rig t*hqe*c-ritic', and "he ah-rank, as completely._ as v'bho1'1g`h-he himsae-lf were the` victim I lth-at his must,:3amt:T.T% A ;"f-rom`the1-hl;b'rw_ f ' Steelvhdtihus againet his kith. and kin and'- all the wo1~'ld,_Paul again passed I away from the serenity of _ the Hill Country sto the maelstrom city, and by and bye,whem Famecame Ito him with her bewitching smile -and her faibhlese heart, when his name called to him from the pages of his mominzg paper; when some of the reviewers. ezntoleod him as a. genius and others edenmmced him as a. Icxlumsy clown; .-when. preach- ers i-n city ch-u_rchee_, i_ and -laymen? in country chapels" made his book and) his name the text `note-their sermons; when ledciesof quality sought his acqusain nnce, and men: of high '1-epiite` mid` A each `oetzher and wh.isperediacv the 1) -'--_he was conscious of no "'jauicken.ed_ pulsje-heart`, no ijuiptnre of ex-utatciona. f f AL44 He` drew the proofs to.w'a.rds- him,` dipped" his pen in ink, .wo!`edJ_ou~t the name of ``David` Garth, . and in. its place inecrimb-ed his -own. And he would pay! As if;-t'h-at were possibel Paul had yet -to `learn that no man may" carry the yvhole of hisown burgern, and none may pay the entire sum of his own` debt. * A'las-! Barbara had me-rely appluied _ the spur _to pnidehand pique. . Touched `to -the quick, Paul` resolved` thart no `longger would be dabble with disguises. This was his -own. book, and: `he would stand by it, confess it to tl'1 .wor}d-', and if rt`here- were pe-nalty he would` pay. I 5 And` then, when gratitude had spent iitselff, resentment surged into the gap, from passive indi"ere-nzcue against the. opinion. of the- city he advanceclto open revolt against all authority, even that of `his mother -and an -his friends in the- dale. He recalled the fact that out of regard fon the sentiment `of his own people, lest they should miscontrue his motive and his plan, and! in doing so. had surrendered the paramount right of authorship" for-the obscurity of an assumed "mam-e. And this was how the Ipdalie Inadl dealt with. him! ` turn -the iron into the-ir_o.wn soulls, he ` -..-.,.. ......_, W 'a uuuu` :01 :cnanKru4ness_l that the design had broken down `at the 7 hralf-w.ay_ mark, for" Barbara, whose handiwork he instinctive-lay recognized, in appropriating the Written sheietts, had passed by the" printed` proofs I wh.isc'h `he had. brought with him for em- recrtion, so that she~rl1.ad` only robbed him of a bundle*of waste paper, and ih-is book still lived. uvuul uuuuu 01 ms man-usc_r1pt, a hardr en;i'n.g of his; nature being the first con-. *crete pgoduct of that -darin-g etfont for his sarlvation. The consternation into 1 which he` was plunged! by the discovery f of h-i.s.1'o_ss, whil-e Barbara was still in | ight across the fezlls, was quickly swept away by a oor} of rthankfu1ness_! `th-M: Hun l1.nA;nn 14... : 1.--v-_-. 3-~- ~ Indiiiference, `however, acquired the` mrwgnitttd-e of rebellion` after Barbara. s destruction of his man-usc_ript, hard- (!1'ef.-R nrnnnlv A4-' H...` .a...-.:.--A L<;n@V-'befere the period of his `book. I h-e hail acquired" a eublime- inditferemce {to the opinion of the world, a fact for {which The was i11de~bt'edMpant1'y -to the- inuemce of "journalism and still. morve {to the ~atmosphere of his native hills. ISO long as he did the thing with rea4 son and `common sense approved, it 111attened' little to him whether the face ito _-a nsmie or disgure its-enlf with` a `sneer. ' of the man: in the street shou-1Id~broa.de~n` liable corrective, ami chase` in... !matter to make and administer owns Yaws, -_In the a1'te~r-t.i=me-," ever, the test applied itself in erpig him, the question. he had tzleatedv 1" conztumely nrade-him its slave. Seal id-oes it seem credibl*e:, but it is`1 . the less true-, P-aul lived` to be afrai [the postman. ' r 1- .' Vlncorporated I 51832`. L. J. smaa, rgunager FOX (lreelg. N.B.---I have alwa a had pams 1n the loins and a wea - ness there, and? often after m$ meals m y foo J would distress me and cause sore- ness. Lydia E; Pinkham sVe ta-~ ble Compo has- done me much good. Iamstron -- er, digestionisbe b ter, and I can walk with a.mbit'ion.} ~I . have 0Il%%ll1`ag0i;f .. _ many mo ersoA f31m;11es to take It, as it is the best. rem-,. ih 3'1? the world. You can pu b1is_h`this, BO he papers. - Mrs. WIDLIWE ' URQUE. Fox Creek, N.B.,` Gana_(l_t;I.}` gaggle above 1s only one-of the;th,o31-;;% cons: Of gratgeful letteys which-_ya1ze;='; `nkgflgiii delpg recenved. b ; vthegj Mas?` _ e Icme Company or 1 is`non3 afraid of 16 this 1d his a1'te~r-t.i=me,' 1 how-` d e 2 with Scarcely 1'91, -B11} -I-Q .c- 1 Mm-A % no hear Ruth bus}: in-lv1e:.r lisbtlx ` .?".i.1!i T9591 d`!*i;.,W _Hei-e, then, .'was the problem. What must he do! , ' Send the book,` and leave it to`Li1is.\won'ying'1--.take it him- lql, .'a1v1dL`p1ead,Lprodi_gali-1a`J:e., for par":- Ldgm y._qr,..;'a .corw9`.rdI_`y[ resource, ig- -WGV i_v 1nevt.'4x.> the longing of `the P*`9: : _! ; . _ ; `I have turhed in.-to a. re-ugulavr chat- ; ter-wal'le~t in my old` age. All]; who i come` to the-. house 1 tell of this new wonder that a Munsgrave df Ghym'th~ _ Waite has worked, and when I` see their - gazemenrt and hear them s1y,.-`A .fM;aker of Books.-wel1 it caps ivvery- p \ thing, I feel as 1ightsovm|e' `as a. c-hild. | . When I told` othe Colonel, his face wen-t - so red:$h'at I`began~to..t*hink of apop ~ lexy, and then he shouted`, ` Well; he h ougghrt to be shot, and rushed fmom] the house. As for Barbara, I can t get I `her to talk about at, but I ve promised ] her ftlmt when you send me the book she_.slhaJ'1 nuomue and read 5:1: to. me, so thit we` may go share and share in. itg V pleasure and our 9W~)l joy. Skelton. seems: dhzeds. -by ` -the news---indeed',_.V he ha5.n_ lookseedh `near since _I passed it on T to hAim',`-fwhichis/n .ta very Jk-indJ`y, ani_ Robert .is`going'qbout like one in a ` Ther'e --you. ._see how our V lled-, wit'h'.thaouglhts of you T`and_our_;_h e81'It8' _Wi.th4:p1'i;d 9u_ .I't s ne j; to,.;thi11_:l;..1;lfnarl;h.yvou fvb -_q:hOI.ee11;-hsrl:r<>:x1_.g to re-. ` iil`,'V:3in'8'1973 ;..*.h3t '1._d3tY`."'h?19V 5993106 h3*ouh:*1*ipe own kin; hbut:_:y0`,i .;'!'9*?her w~an~ h h. A A I` % A J: v\v-* v u -mu: vvvu. uauu\a Here ~sh:e broke away to recount some of the most znecemt doings of the dale, but for this a Ts-'mg1e.page- suioedx, and 1:1-pen she - returned to her gloried theme. ' 9 . 7 muu-gnu. _1u-r T-I108 crue=m:1es'o_r bneywmter, I nor "tlhev pains of age, when my eyes have read! the thing my son has writ- ' tam with his own hand. _ [ 'I"l'__., , '- ``I _would- `have gone mys-elif to] Bransty or Arlierdalo to look. for the thing I wanted`---surely I have; never known such.:-im-patiience since I was a`; gir1!s-4but- I- have: not been quite well I lately, -and -have had to keep more than ever to the house. _ Thowinvter has been: a hard one, its .trial has prov- -ed to me that I '11*agve grown into a vewy old` woman. But I_ shall have no thought foa` thee crue=1tiesz of thevwinter, I nan '1`-Hm`. -a.n-_.. -5 ---- Fox Creek. NJ}.- d pains in the -. -vvvnno "' i3less(;(i ginbng women because 0;, him! And his book "would be as a dag- -ger, wounding [hser beyo-md .l1ea.1ing-.. Even Raoberrt, F-armer Robert, had seen a.ndd*es`p:ised-, an-d `had: spared her the agony of reVje1:a).tionu. His `heart grew." sick with "t-he shame -and hu-milriation of J it all". 7 " Again he` turned"-to the[1e~tter,. and read : ._ T , . Now, laddie, don ht'keep us W8IlltiD.g any longer. You know how prooud of you We are, and- we re proud of the book, too. I1t;Il lllS't` be ne, baecsause ist s .the-vworkof. my Pa1rl s brain and ngeurs, I can sIc=a,_r:=e: contain mys'el.fl for joy, and I am giving" God tha'nks l all ltlhrough the day because- he has] .spa.r.ed' me to this hour. I coumt mys-elf ' blessed and honoured among women to be the movth-er of a Maker of Books. , A Maker of Books; forso-oth! - The Mal:-er of that Book! 4 Tlmem Robe-rt packed off to Bransrty j `to buy one, but new books, so it seems, are -a l:ong while in travelling so far into the 1::or.t`h, and` Robert came back looking quite ill and di-stressed, but no [book with him. Poo`r`R-obert! I dii`dn t `think va.ntyo~n-e would have taken the disappointme-nt so much to heart, ex~ cle-pt myself. ` `O - -A- . au.u'v I ` `T`AtL`'l~z;ss1:`tI got. comfort with the -{thought thzat rthe morming was sure to 1 fetch me .the treasune` my old eyes were aching to look` upon, a'nd'~wh-en `the. s1u_1.,rose I" rose too, and I made .Robert ta.kve me. down to the box,- so` that Sa]ljV"Sh=Ovll]d% put your book in.t_o my own hands: > But dd,~a.ppoin-tylont` _ca.me~: Vi`ms.tead'.' ' ` I - -__- J via) aanvuuvl I 31. : was-"on-ly on Monday that `Sally Watzterson.\told me of it; sihehad read` the news) ~on`a postcard t~o`J-ertrsy Sa.nd-- ersono, and on Tuesday I wakened with the. drawn and Pay -tlistening for Sally with the" V letters`. `But SaI=]'y came, b.ring_i`n-gneithver book not word` from my own '!ad=die, and I spent the drear- ies't day I ve_eA ever known. V ` ((A1 I ~ Wb_-y haven t you sent me the book 1 that you have writstcrg? ' And why have you ke.pt-the wuisting of it a secret, hid- ing it even from your mother? um. _.---w v -' - ` . ..~~-v _ J 'V`J`l4 `'3' IV ".l' . sivn` l:l1rilll with mother-`lc`>ve.' His mother /kneiwl But still M-arg\anet' Musgravp. knew-l It begaiz, like all the lefters shxh-ad V even written .to him, with _' fervengt` hope-for his own. welfare, ml then, <..u-dd-enly, it turned- to that other repug- n.ant .t'hgeme+, as thqugh she much reach G i.t'withm'.t delav, and gently chided" him I for his neglect :- lK'\lVI,, ` - ,. .-....w..., uu uv put. (nut letter aisie. and d-topped into the chair placed` for him at tlw: head of the table. and It-l1e.n,_ beean-.m thexwriterwas his `mother. `he tank it um again and began *0 read. `And, instead nf the lnmnmt of a woman. in revol:1; a.9'miswvrt\1v:1- ?\est-"beloved. he ounrl `that the mis~ Riva I-.11-ri'l'la.l. m:u.. -.....4.1.-..a-_- V I - ---v- auuvsrv ` Mchiicafy ha" rplaced- I the letter -on the tatblse. His motJ1_1or s rebuke-- beatter -that he s-houlduvnver receive it, better never` beholirl her tears, not list to 'her aronised lament, So he put that the __Q_;_-mp 0 Cured by Lydia E. Pink- ham sVegetableCompound] t'l1hatT n1.omenpt-`~bo`_Pa.ul= " was one of stagnation, a" moment" of _in.ertin. n- It as though the world has ceased its msortion, as though he himself were cut of from they rest of .n;an-ldnd. Alone "he s_tood~ other in the very core of an immense sire-nee. Movement there was none, and they far-otf ru-In-ble of -the city, the ticking of the clock, fell upon ears tune-d` deaf. -- _-..- it-r4IIOODV\l Ill I-ll_D Uyfo Is'~it now, Amiothei-1 he '.muttteu'ed. \ ~`;`Havo `ine opt at fast! I " With reluctant hand: he slit `the `cover. and drew forth a bunch of close- Iygwrigten sihgeets, whose ratitle betrayed hzis trembling grasp as he. tried to smooth them out.. A ance and" the sheets 1_rmtt1ed~' again, his arm dhvopped limsply by his side. ` FQALKII, vision became blur -old look of fear bu ll.` - I . and at sight of the ? spidery strokes: upon 4 the.e'nve}0pe his red, and that old, rned in hi eyes. His` no1:},{ 1&5: 7'IH%E? N<>RTH14iR1~i ADv)\1$3]L4E` iylng; ~ be'saide L .'...I.u. .A A1 I Sti-1'l,'you are -running away from I gyour mother, from your letters, from lthe book, from yourself: Pity you did? n t submit -your manuscript to Mar- garet Mmsgravev in the first inspanvce, it '1 U I I No; -and I don t intend` to do so. Afraid of her censure? \ No, only afraid that she may mis- unders'tand. I` care nothing, for` any- ` body s -in.terp`retation except her s. 1 1 ve told you before-, and I te'1=l you again, that the book satises me, that ' your own conception of its harm-h1l-nessh E9 nothing but - n idle fanocy. Find me a single concre. e instance of it having . weakened any man s character, d-amrang-VI ed any man s soul, robbed any man of a belief worth: holding to, and I l'l- cap I itul`ate. _ ` . ` . I SUFFERING i Yes; I-had le-tter yesberd-ay. Ah! yesterday---and going away to; South Africa t'o_-night. `Mother heard of your book yet? I see. Have yoq_ is:-mt it ! Um-- -going` on a journey where Irat- | tors` 0311` 15 f01?10W you, eh`! Heard from ; {homo lately? , - ` (AT? '1 -n - .. , I --- -_ O-aunt!`/J \.|*llIllK,LI1I1.y LU]. -I/[PU Ulll man had, in these recenet days, become , veryhcahndid in his speech, a.nd his! vision was acutely focussed. All along he had-A diaicerned the _vitalles't of. Pau1;s weaknesses, and he .Wa.s.und-er "f no m'isa,pprehen.sion as to the motive of `this: suddenly .de-te-rmi_ned journey. I ; ` vGoing a}va.y,- are you, Paul? ,,Alh, , ` well-, you _ re not the rxst man who has [. tried to run from l1=is own conscience.f ;! , ``I m[ not aware of such a ight, 9' I au1Aret1o~1'ted'; -I m going because` I `I need a.fest. A ' --' j v-- w--, ----Cuuc _ E ltters from Canada` must be addressod to our _ \_ Canadi}a_n.Cor_respondence Department in Windsor; :ont; If*you`d esiren to',aee_ us personally call at our-Medical Institute in e ' ` Detroit as wane` and treat nogctionu in`. our Windsor oiees which are used for. corrependence and Canadian business only. as .. _v _&__"-__".';.`_~~....;...-;.. . _- ___g -~ _-__ .. -5;- ans.-.I:aNm:`mr on. %n.-ggauuzniiixtuu EY I His parting with Anthony Fraser, ` though marked: by @959 emotion, was a ! I matter of greater dtxfrculty, for the old m.:nt Inn] in +laoc..-. wm,.....L .1..--... I.._--.__- . coNsuL1'AnoNTrka'I_:_,' 33;}; !:';c:;:-l`)iuu`u'. of Man. can omega man an noun TREATMENT . We `fruit and -Cur; VARICOSE` VEINS, NERVOUS DEBILITY, BLOOD -and URINARY COMPLAINTS, KIDNEY and BLADDER Dit- ouu and allbisouqn Pccnliarto Meh. _consuL'rA11_c_>qrn:g, Rooks rm on nz....`. to ;.n, ............ coyusuus yuuu 1 you are sunenng as me result 0! a miss 1ite-ons. K. a. K. '3I'5i-:' voun REFUGE. Lay your case b~ them condentially and they will tell you honestly if_ you are curable. ' II ` I! I Q, IIIIIZQI an :31: -_ .,., _......,....u'u-u a.-van: vvuvlcul. IR`? LICIU not the key, he was moved by a thrill I. of my.sterious po-wet. Good--`bye, little Ruth-, he said, g'00 I ll not _iA forget you. I-`i'e` been Vtlnking a lot i` -lately, and. somehow it has seemed that i ` ` I 1l not fonge`t. I have ma frviendas true as yo11-Lord and you, but chief]-"y _` ?01.i; Good-bye. 1: I I i 1 ` How many young men H i. can look back on their ' early life and regret their " ./4", ////' misdeeds. "Sowing their ' ` " wild oatsin variousways. ; /" ` `Q ` -"f Excesses, violation of na- ture s laws, wine, women and song -all have their ~ victims.` Y.'ou have re- ~\ formed but what aboutthe seed you have sown-what about the harvest? Don't trust to luck. If you are at present within the clutches of any secret habit by degrees; if you are suf- fering from the results of past indiscretions; if your . V o . blood has been tainted from " . _N. y . ' ` any private disease and you dare not marry; if you are marriedand live in dread of syinptoms breaking outand exposing yourpdat; if you aresuering as the result of misspent K. K. Tau 1.'l\III' (Iona I-u.-.64.-.. which is sapping your life ` Half an h.our later, when he held {uth s hand, with the gasliglmt stream- ing d'own- upon her pale face',*and the` eyes which,_-told atale whereof he held 11n4.- 41-. 1.... `L- _.--.- ------ . - - -~---~-- v- --`5---'"- I m going away for _a while, he explained to Ruth, when the returned home at annnusual `hour, and I ve only an hour for pa.c:kin.5g. You see, I t mosrt slip round and, say `Good-bye to ? : Anthony Frascv. I ve no-t been feel-ii)-g 3 wesll late-1-y; -a. week or two ago the ` Editor begged me. to take a holiday, , 1 and now-there s -the Athos-, she s*ai!r; for Australia by way of the Cape at midnig-ht, and I m `going to make the passage out to Capetown and: home 1 C 2__r.ain. . `1 i 1 1 dare nnt tnAa4rrv!A`-If mm at-n .\.a.`...:...-1 .....a 1:... :.. .1- _Stil~}, his vision was clear enough Vto t ` perceive -the impression * his message . must make `upon the untutored .mind,' and in` bitterness of spirit he repented ` the pique wh-ichhad placed the im- if print ofhis own name on the title i' page, and .so betrayed -him. ` He was one of the martyrs condemned ~`uy~-the gods to be misunderstood`. ' 1 1 I h All the houns tha.t"he ~ca.Hed his own ; he spent tha-tday in `his search for a v_ way of escape; on .;the second day he , gave hour after hour to a sheet of note- t paper, and, in the. end, he placed the seal of his approval upon it, and drop ' {pad it i-nto the letter-box. And then t fear of the pc`.st.nran again began to haunt him, panic took po-see.-ssion of him, and be resolved o-n ight. 3 R 141' ... AA:.--. ..____- 1'- _ --- -'-"-*3` - . p _ On` the broad VA asis of principle. hel had n'o re,gi~e-ts; he believed in 'hisnbook part-l'y- ass a. piece of theological criti- cism, but more as a picture `of life. He`. had not yet learned the one-sidedmess! of art, not yet learned how pen and brush `may lie by the `,present.a.tion -qt ! half the truth. ; -his -toast and `coffee; and; by aneifort Ldesterminedt on making to save tlie ..._ -......- .-.un-a aoyuuu wuUBe_ ta;-'|'l30' to -one of them `had. neither` nor savour. Meahanically Paui toyed with re.spondled to the talk which Lord was meal from the human of silence, but as soon -as opor-tunity oered__ he retired I to--the solitude of -his ow _ room, there I to renew his battle. V , -and longed had;beon1 `born: without _ . 1 J fe-:u-ed for Paul at the star.t,` sin \\'nuI confess to the tru_stwo1ft`hvy fmv. It '.~` :1 sol-emn gift, is the power of writing, and when Paul made up'his| miml for 1w\\'. Work I was.a.fraid! ..r vim. H...& 1... ..,.!...LL'_._.!).. 4:, , ,_-__ -----v--.--u---- -2 ujj Z >iTCCj---j_:` Cor. Michigan Ave. >u;d_Griswo_ld St.,,Detroit, Mich. 4:; Al :13 pi R1-ZAPiN1G A HARVEST o1= s'oRRow ------ v-vi VIICQ run IJII LIV CllJ II. _yUu CI-C Cl 'f6i'J CAN" pAf `JWI-ll`-`ZN CURED uo c.uuu.uL'u':u. "1118 (name 13 mine. iIt needs a srtrong -man to handle 3. pen-one who can t make mistakes `and be misunderstood. Robert, she 3 stoops and peers imto -his face, her 1 voice vibrant with dread, what is .PauI s book about? Perhaps--it s--- iabou:t-God-V-a book about God that may he a mi;sta=ke-'-I-9;nd misunder- :'stood-! ` - I":-`.!I=":a.ul Won t mind anybbdy s blame 1 but yours, motsher. | -`(T .\l.....l.1.. 91. I n . - . _ uwu Jvuso, ulU`l-HUI. | I shouldm"t- have let him be a writer, she begins again, refusing to be comforted. The blame is mine. nnan n ct`-unum ----- 4~ " i ._ _,__.._. _..... uu pug Luau-LUVV D Ay, but it s- all like mist on the -'1 fel'l-sidie, Robert, and I can t See. Per~ ` ha.ps- other_ people won t understand, .aVnd-a.nd--and they l`1 blame him, my own bairn, for writing the wnong thing. - I ICI).-..-1 ...--A M - ` ` ` " "I-t right, n1oth.e1-_ Hers 4 `Our Pau1-a. Mu.s.gravVe~ to tho marrow. I \. i , YT i. Don t leave me, laddie, she wails .}n 2}. fr1.ghtened tone. I m afraid, and ` :11! the dank. Paul cau1 t trust me with `his book, He fears I ll not under. stand-and" he cannot hear the thought `of me making a mistake. What does `t - . fi v"Z1%oa "e1i.eiLi "$31.1 `TF5? y - . . Wllf. fn r1n .'Dnn'l 1...... M. L..__._L ___ vv ...-. wu --u y;-g"y IJ|.Q~' LII \J|IIl5KI\JIL}lJ\` ` l'ntil` his advance from journalism. into the l`.'il'g'l`~l' life of 1itevra.ture,' Paul: ;\Iu. condm-t had been qmite} vquul to the <`lon1zu1 of the- most can-Ll .~o2'inu< M the homeland. critics. W11-a-t I is mmv to the point, his motfher was satised with 11-in1:--an-d what more` than that can :1 reasonable man` dfesoire-1 3"'h~P 1'0jui(':` in "Irish 1)I"OfeSS-i0-I131 8-11.0-C658,, and ;_rIm i<>:l in his reetitudte, d`ai-ly 4-i:u`in;_r 1101' g1'atitud:e for his conquest of temptation. ' l