Winn £05§ have the same hold on him and she might win a fuller share of his aflec- tionsâ€"indeed, she had been ready and waiting to accept him if he only brought a moiety of that desired love for her, and nothing‘else. She would win it all in time. But perhaps she had not un- derstood him. She gave him every en- oouragement'and sign of her preference consistent with a woman’s modesty and self respect. But his overweening pride had blinded him, and he could not see thingsintheirproperlight. Inanim- pulsive spirit, born of modiï¬cation and pique, she had married. Form yams, doubtless, his attitude toward women hadbeem or! areprehen- s'lble and cynical nature. But latterlya 'ma'e rational spirit had come to him, and he had seen clearly enough that he Ind not the woman had been in the Inch a complete taking down before, :lot even when the late assistant com- missioner snubbed him in the orderly room for trying to bully a corporal. †And here he broke off what for him was an unusually long speech and lit his pipe. He was unpleasantly con- scious of the fact that his talk was be- coming of a rather wild and personal nature. He was also aware of the fact that by saying he did not care for one woman more than for another he spoke asif he had been charged with so doing, when, indeed, nobody had dreamed of hinting at such a thing. But now the ill concealed look of surprise and signiï¬- cant snence OI n15 cummuc umuguu 1: home to him that he had betrayed an interest in Marie St. Denis which he wished to avoid expressing, far less feel Either know nor care. Jeannette, how- ever, says she came of good stock. But while we are on this subject don’t mis- understand me; if the girl’s name were Smith or Robinson, she might still be every whit as much of a lady as she is nowâ€"the ‘rank is but the guinea stamp, ’ after all, and is too often put on deuced inferior metal. But since you are on this racket I may say she bears a name that is as good as if not better than most borne by our English aristocracy, and you advance the speculation that she has a drop of good blood!†‘ C 74-11‘ U00 V'Lvu u......v___ _ “No; the race that took a score of generations to develop hereditive traits and patrioian graces cannot have altered _-_r-_.n.:-_- wâ€"vâ€"J Then, as it conscious that he had be- trayed a little more interest and warmth in his treatment of the subject than there was any occasion for, he added, with rather a feeble laugh: “But all this is unimportant, and I don’t care a rap for em» woman more thanfor another. But at the same time I can't help thinking it is :i confounded shame of old St. Denis to Lempt Provi- dence and bring disgrace upon the girl as he is doing, knowing that she is breaking her heart over it all the time. He stpBQEf nir‘ï¬ptly and W in o silent and significant “In nu: verso cixcnmstances in a strange, new country and with stem snrroandings. †I . LAJLA 1here is nothing of the money grub about her that there is about the father; she is good hearted, sensitive and proud, and, by Jove, she has got the right met- al in her too! I never saw Jamie get .Iu râ€"vâ€"_v-v__ 0 I0 much in two or three generations, even although the lot of the latter has been a hand to hand ptruggle with ad- _â€":-._,i .7 But he made a common mistake in supposing that his own particular past and its experiences would make him proof against all emotional prompting: in the future. His had been a natura? enough if not a common experience. He had been brought up to better things than his station in life would now have indicated. He had enjoyed his brief but bright existence as a man of fashion and pleasure while it had lasted. But evil days, which come to most of us, came to him, and the only thing that would have saved him from minâ€"marl ago with a rich but proud irlâ€"he . ad not the courage to . o told himself and truly that had 9 remained in his former independent position he would undoubtedly have asked her tc marry him, even although she could chow a covered it for awry shilling he could. But w at other construction could the World lily pat on his eon- , at i! he asked er to marry him, new 0 was pennileu. than that it was pure- ly sordid and mercenary? And what , can the girl hereon think? Perhapi i! this no he began to regret that had lot so many golden opportuni‘ flea Clip. for he had really admired her. ,3“ it was too late: his pride was too for him. and he had left England .17 than on much as saying aoodby. In six montha' time he heard that the heir on wan married, and inconsiltently he at woman‘s inconsistency. Pen he did not know that the woman whom in particular-ho jeerednthad hailed at ï¬rst with almost satisfaction the now-o! his mined prospeotedor she had thought “’98?! wouldwould not pow-tam. SINNERS TWAIN. But there is no royal immunity grunt- ed from the promptings of the human heart. Artiï¬cial surroundings and con- ventionalities may shield us from many wayward longings, but give the princess an opportunity of recognizing an afï¬ni- ty in the person of the plebeian, then all the laws and philosophy of man that ever have been or may be brOught tc bear in assisting to destroy the attach- ment so mysteriously formed cannot and never shall remove that unseen but potent bond that knits together twc kindred souls. But there was no one go ing to interfere between Harry Yorke and any one whom he should chance tc feel attracted by, unless, indeed, the impediments yere of his own making. I 0V. 2'9. LINDSAY. 33113311. N 3 216 by 1:qu But the Wanna had inï¬n- By JOHN mom. A. wgmbaun-m. binds†1895, by Fredeflck A. Stokes Com- mu m. rwâ€"uâ€"r __ in aworldlypointot view, for ithad deadened ambition in him and caused himtopassthroughlifeasif hishigh- est object in it were merely the acquir- ing of strange and novel experiences. He thought he had done with the one great experienee of. 528- .E.6 w POE aware of the fact that he had deluded himself and that he had not reglly loved; for it he had he would either his mar- ried the heiress and snapped his ï¬ngers at what the world might think or else he would not have tamely submitted to 9 EUPPO-Sititigus inevitable Witholt nab iii some endea'vc'a: to oyei'oorn'e'jt. _ 4,# LL £1563 him; peghap‘éï¬b? for the better H :L L...‘ we": BU any-\- â€"v- â€"- bio of brought home the accusation to him that in his concentration on self he had caused otherstosuffer. The natural laws of retributive justice maybe slow, but they are sure. In the dawn of a new life that he struggled against he was haunted by the upbraiding shadows of btless 'thé aawm'ng d :36 truth upon him by the awakeningof a feeling that he had not dreamefl himself capa- _,L_' -_- Ln 8010 ywvu an n-.. ___‘ As for the sergeant, he seemed strangely ill at ease. He could not settle to read. The friendly little wordy spars between his youthful comrade and the cheery little scout seemed to have lost all attraction for him, and as for indulg- ing in conversation with his superior oï¬lcer, as they had not two ideas in common. that was not to be thought of. The mere fact that the officer was com- para'tively uneducated would not have mattered in itself, but Jamie, having by contact with his brother oflieers be- come aware of his deï¬ciencies, dreaded to expose his ignorance more than he could help. Moreover, being of a jeal- ous nature, he imagined that when an educated man talked to him it was sim- ply for the purpose of mystifying and ridiculing him. His normal condition, therefore, when with his intellectual superiors, was like a bear with a sore head. Jamie. however, would probably nave liked to go Into the Other room, and to see a little more of that interest- ing girl whom he had honored so open- ly by expressions of his admiration. But having heard the cunning little scout whisper to the private (as if he feared being overheard) that the dipper still remained full of boiling water up- on the stove in the next room he lost all interest in the girl, and came to the conclusion that to talk to one in her po- sition was derogatory to the dignity of an oï¬icer of the Northwest mountal po- lice force. The others had sawed and cut up sufï¬- cient ï¬rewood to last the little house- hold for a month and stacked it neatly in one of the outhouses. They had kept the buckets full of water, thrown down some hay for the few head. of cattle in the corral and done other necessary work about the place. Indeed in pure gallantry Dick Townley, in spite of the protestations and warnings of Marie St. Denis (whom he seemed very anxious to favor with his attentions), would insist on one occasion on milking a certain cow that the girl warned him, though quiet enough generally, would probably resent the ministrations of a stranger. But the polite youth scouted the idea, and taking the pail from her hand start- ed in to milk. When he picked himself an old one. A couple of days had passed, the snow laden winds still blew ï¬ercely, and the police party were kept close prisoners in St. Denis’ ranch. As for the inspector, he continued to enjoy long spells of mental abstraction, lying on his buffalo robe on the floor before the stove, with his eyes ï¬xed upon the ceiling. At long intervals, when he recognized the neces- sity of varying this species of entertain- ment, he would adjourn to the stable, where, sticking a straw in his month. he would keep the horses company for half an hour at a stretch. It was a re- deeming point in his character that he seemed fond of animals. ‘ ‘A fellow feel- ing makes us wondrous kind.†Surely nature made a mistake when she gave Jamie some semblance of a man. Had she, for instance, made him a donkeyâ€" : four legged one, of courseâ€"he might have posed as her supreme masterpiece. “AA“ AA speaking. He noted the erect and beau- tirul poiseo: her head upon thoeegrace- ful shoulders, the smallness and fault- less symmetry of her hands and feet, her clearly cut and expressive features, that faint suspicion of the sun’s kiss on her soft cheek, and the simple perfec- tion of her plain, dark. close ï¬tting dress, only relieved by the dainty white cufls and collar. Hers m not merely a physically beautiful face, but it was an intellectually beautiful mandnot mere cold intellectualityâ€"far intellect, in it- self, is a cold thingâ€"but therewas in it M Then she gazed abatraotedly at the glimmering 0! some of oldJeannette‘a burnished culinary appliances as they hang against the opposite wall, but she seemed dimdent in regard to looking at her visitor. He again scrutinised her thoughtfully for a fey minutes without ,,,3 L--â€" “An Australia story, †she answered ; “perhaps hardly awoman’s book, but it is an azniï¬na mm. “mi I have bean ï¬naé indeï¬nable Eqmethmg that deï¬es analysisâ€"that which men try to express when they use the word‘ “soul." “What. have you been reading?†he asked her at length. ‘7 â€7 ing, and there was a quick and pleased recognition on her face as she saw who the visitor was, so perhaps, after all, there was no necessity for expressing it in words. Old Jeannetze motioned him a chair near the stove and told him to sit down. The thoughtful and helpful ways of the troopers had commended themselves to her. and, moreover, when she considered that they were under the absolute nuthorlty of her pet antipathy. the inspector, her sympathetic nature regarded them with a great pity. "I see you have still t the inspect- or’s shoving water on 0 store. Jean- netto,†said the sergeant oheerily. "Sure. sure.“ said tho old lady. “and the skunk will have it yet it he puts as much as his nose inside the door. " The girl had laid aside her book and m lookiu into the stove. Her two hands were aided on her lap in front of hen Through the mica slots in the stove the math ï¬reï¬ght gloomodondï¬iokoxpd Viv-v upon igr-"bhgiahtweflitioally beautiful face and ï¬gure. Shq made a_p{gtty_1§!‘o- vv- -u. u. up a few seconds later in a dirty and dazed condition from the neighborhood of the opposite wall and wondered where his cap and the pail had got to, he wise- ly concluded that it was a mistake and beneath the dignity of a mounted po- liceman to associate himself in any shape or form with such an ungrateful and stupid animal as a cow. The sergeant on the afternoon of the second day, as if he could endure his own company no longer, had left his comrades amusing themselves according to their several. ideas and betook him- self to the next room. Marie St. Denis looked up from the book she was read- ‘oe, nothing had been further from ' thoughts? He fairly bit his lips with vexation at the false light he must up- pearin to this girl. And now how could he right him- self in her eyes without making matters worse? It was such a. delicate subject and must surely only bring further pain and humiliation upon her. Surely we oouldnotdeemhim guiltyot suchcan- did brutality. Fearfully he stole a look ..°..--.-_ -_ _ And how that cold and crystal stream that hurried through it, flung in the ï¬rst place from the dizzy heights of Gov- ett’s Leap, pierced its way between cy- elopean blocks of sandstone and through black subterranean passagesâ€"a verita- ble river of Styxâ€"until it emerged into the bright sunshine again. on the other and lower side of the mountain, to form the Nepean river and help to swell the lordly Hawkesbury. or such n place Milton or Dante {night have dreamed. “Hid-l“ w..-J_â€", _ encalypti, immense tree ferns and men strpus fantastic old world flora, lurking in places where the sun never shone, were hardly discernible to the naked eve. and where. indeed. the pitiless. aaamantme wen: u; rocx made an em- light even in the daytime. ‘ ___-LAI -5..-“ "7.81716 she, with that subtle intuition which some women possess. saw that “I‘vvou w- â€" .7 -ï¬, But suddenly rhoollooting himself he stopped short. Though he had tho pow- ers of a born narrator he had no inordi- nate opinion of himself; now he asked himself, in a spirit of irony, if he were graduating for the lecture platform. , , Ann L‘ A4,“! a-Trï¬imvyrc‘l’itfï¬h not stop £10?†he cried almost resentfully. “How I must have bored you! Wl}en I. get woum} up on He in his turn stopped abruptly. What on earth was he talking about to this girl? He had entirely lost sight of the awkward parallel and personal hear- ing that the imaginary case he had been discussing had upon the surroundings of this girl’s own life. Had he forgot- ten what he was and what he was there for? Was it not bad enough to have un- thinkingly put into this innocent girl’s hands a book having such a direct per- sonal application without parading his views upon it and running the risk at beingoonsideredas playingt-hepartod a moral preoeptor, though, to_ do ‘him But the girl did not seem even to no- tice this self deprecating speech. As she had listened to his description the interest upon her face had become in- tense; she had sat in a state of rapt at- "Yes.†he said musingly and withan unconscious. pitileu candor. “apart from the moral conveyed. it in simply the history of a natural sequence obey- ing one o: nature’s just laws. It in the inevitable tragedy which waite n thooe liven whose downward career an begun by some apparently trifling di- vorconoy from the obvious path oi duty until passion or the aordid love of gain has perverted the moral eyesight» and death aloneeun break the spell that binds the iniatuated victim. Jolt think of those misguided men boinsehot down like wild animals by the creepera"â€"_ about this place. Begin. †Perhaps it. was the one thing that use “mnnv reticent man most loved tC "i’giliaps -it was the 01 this usually repicent man “nun-‘4 - vvâ€"â€" -7, , talk aboutâ€"the great works and won- ders of nature that he had met with in the coarse of his nomadic career. And now he told them, in a simple, modest way that had no suspicion of pedantry about it, concerning this wild, almost subterraneous valley. As he warmed tc his task he lost sight of his surround- ings and described it with characteris- tic, graphic touches that held his listen- ers as if spellbound. They could almost believe they were in that farotf aus- tral land. He pictured to them that great jagged rent on the tablelaud oi the Blue mountains, that seemed tc pierce into the very bowels of the earth, and whose sides went down sheer fox 7 4â€"‘J ~vâ€" -_ d, moi: subj‘écts there is. no holding me; like the Saskatchewan, I go on forever.†tention, her hands clasped before her, resting on her knees. Then slowly she seemed to awake from wandering in that quaint old world valleyâ€"the deep- est valley with perpendicular cliï¬â€˜s in the known worldâ€"to the stern, now- bound world of the frozen north, and the change was aremarkable one, truly. As for Jeannette, she had sat with Wide open eyes and tingling ears, as if she listened to some of La Salle’s ad- ventures in the days of le bois coureurs. Australia seemed a farther OR and more mythical country to her than that hap- py hunting ground of the Ojibways and the Crees.. She felt a wholesome respect for a man who could tell of such wonderful places and at the same time hardly talk of himself at all. “Now,†said the girl, “this book has an interest for me that it had not be- fore. But it is a and book, and the mor- al is so evident"â€" EIULUU Au IIV I‘lv and whose sides went dox'vn sheer for 4,000 feet at a bound; how, viewed from the verge of this yawning, night- marish abyss, the white limbed giant M ,1 _- A“ She checked herself abruptly" if she had said more than she intended to gay. “Oh, do tell us about it,†cried the girl. not that thothonzh‘ d‘itw any wuv-«-_._ - “Pray come to the light," said Barry Yorke, taking her by the arm gently and leading her to the window. “One of your cars looks as if it had been nipped by the frost. †And truly enough the lower lobe of one of her small shell-like ears was frozen; it was as white as the snow it- self. Two minutes’ exposure to a sharp wind will often sufï¬ce to accomplish this not uncommon accident in these latitudes. He took off her beaver cap gently, caught up a small handful of snow which had crusted one side of her buf- falo coat, and, with one hand among the soft, gleaming tresses of her shapely head to steady it, with the other rubbed the nipped ear with now. She submit- ted to the ordeal, as most people sooner or later learn to do in the northwest, as a matter of course, but with a some- what heightened color. Luckily the frost bite was a slight one, and perhaps the pain occasioned by the thawing out , 2‘ :_j--A HEY? him “3- “ ...__ "OB, ‘ cmï¬â€˜Ã©e y'sa are right," she said coldly after a pause, "and . I ought to feel obliged to you for the delicate way in which you have .tried to inculcate better principlw into us Poor folks"â€" 7*A -Aâ€" mknn ch; W Jun lutun .- â€"-â€" _-_ 0! men than to suppose you guilty of such 5 wing! a saw mm the nut that you had not dreamed of preaching at us; it was wrong‘of me to try to joke on such a subject. Come, let us cry quits, though your punishment has been more than you deserved. †There was a strange Entare of contrition and kankncss in her voice. And the old lady chuckled grimly In her youth herown cal-shad been b0- aen many a time and thawed out ton-the It was a signiï¬cnntthmg mmwd He could hardly trust himself to an. swer her on account of the unwanted elation that he felt. The girl began to show in a new aspect in his eyes. No experienced coquette of the gay up to date world could have applied the rack and released him again more skillfully than she had done. The very fact‘ that she had caused him temporary pain made him feel attracted by her. Pcrhupu he hurl not thought himooli capable of the emotions that thrilled him when he felt the touch 0! that silky hair and that cool. 00ft akin oi here. What with that smut pity with which he had begun to regard her. and what with the knowledge 01 the misery that he know he must unwillingly have mightâ€"tor such thinal not infrequently happenâ€"in a moment of urea-coins and irresistible impulse have caught her tohim and toldherhowdenr uhehad become to him. He could remember how, when putting a: the date: or the heiress inthe old country. the only feel- ings that he experienced when he had handled her dainty little feet were that her boots were uncommonly cold and elammyandthuttheneel mtanirre- detihle shiver through him. But then steel' isnotabeauhtn' lthinsliJhea eon “A11ms-nousâ€"enlâ€ahecried- "Each acnpof beantifnlteawiththebeflt 0‘ creaminit. Blamyhmnaï¬myw mnst’have had your ear V817 M1! 110' thaw out!†WWW punchy“; u..- _~ . But she was mlsmken when she thought she could jest on such a sub- ject. for her lip had quivered, and there ' ' ' her voice as she brought the senyence to an abrupt elm - n _3 __A.. Li.â€" Oknt â€" Then she rose from her ï¬scat. put on a dainty beaver cap. pulled on a large loose fur coat and drew on her mitts. He rose to go. “Oh, no. not till Ioome back.†sho- sald pleasantly. “Jeannette will make some ten, and yon must wait and hove ocnp with us. You see, we are quite fashionable folk here, and generally have a cup in the afternoon about 4 o'clock, but then we don’t have it at dinner, like most people in the north- “w, â€"_â€"v __ or, , west. I am going out to get some honey. which is in an underground collar on the face of the butte, and won'tbe long. You 500, it is my particular domain and not Jeannetto’s; hora is in making the boat cup of too over you drunk. An re- voir. †And with a graceful little courtesy that would have done credit to a court belle of the second empire. and a. smile that seemed to banish care, she entered the little passage and passed out into' the blizzard â€Lungs“; Luv aw 'wâ€" - And now as it flashed upon him that his conduct must have appeared in the light of a deliberate insult his face he- eeme the picture of remorse and morti- ï¬eation. Truly a man is a blundering animal. But with not a little satisfac- tion she saw the perturbation of mind she had caused him, and, like the true woman that she was, came to his aid. “Forgive me,†she cried, and there was a hint of pity for him in her voice. “Do you think I am not a better judge ,_- â€"â€" ._:1e- n‘ CHAPTER VIII. Marie St. Denis was back again in less than ten minutes. When she opened the outer door, a gust of cold wind and a little cloud of ï¬ne powdery snow came in with her. Indeed it was frozen on her eyelids and cheeks, and for a mo- ment she ï¬ves scarcely recognizable. “The drifting snow stings and pricks one’s face like so many needle points," she exclaimed breathlessly. thing. but such thing. will be as long as human nature in human natureâ€"u long a: pretty girls will menu that: am and there no aooommodulng young men handy to ram tho mpwded ctr- anlntlon. » _ _ ‘ _ .w‘aâ€"O __-_ be But it was a remarkable thing that the operation took so much longer to perform than such operations usually do. Long after the car had become a natural and healthy pink againâ€"and she must nnve known very well that the trost had bEC-u driven out or n Tum the circulation of the blood restoredâ€"he continued clasping that beautiful head with one hand and rubbing that eat with the other. Her delicately flushed face and those bright eyes were danger. ounly near hie then. Surely such 5 pul- peble clullylngwele meet reprehensible ess was inconsiderable, if indeed it pained at all. His prompt manipula- tion of the frozen lobe had minimized the unpleasant consequences usually at- tending such accidents. - .. 4| 9,,n‘L‘A 'iâ€"titnkesmchal'mgtimom â€ï¬re“. If also promotes an minus: aqueduct ' girl. “ '“uiuihuvobaodyou to rub Inch x has time!" She rally ey likg , have exprwed dim-may on -"'Don't mention it. " he replied she0p~ Zshly. “It was an uncommonly frozen earâ€"I mean. I dpu‘t think that mmww«::.mww' 1701103 led. D110†' sax-z. A 5'Don‘t mention it."horepliedshee “shly. “It was on uncommoniyhodg earâ€"I mean. I don‘t think that it waggmnch â€1:07:15ng 8111,. 7135711755 Whatever." she rejoins simply and without thinking this speech in any way remarkable. But their eyes not. and than was a half serious. laughing light in hers. and such a. con- scious stricken look in his that they both broke into a somewhat foolish and shamefaoed laugh, Then they sat in the early twilight aid enjoyed Jeanette’s tea. They did not drink it out or mspanent chine cupeor chaste sevres. bntoutotplain. deï¬ white pomelnin that is associated with the Hudson Bay company's hard- ware department. And Jeannette poured it onto! a little brown earthenware pot, of which the spout oould hardly be said to be intact; but, so far as Harry Yorke was concerned. he only knew that. it was most delicious tea and- that he could not help saying so. They sat round the stove and chatted merrily. and under the cheering influence of the tea old Jeannette, with the volatile spirits of her race, kept them amused with some truly wonderful reminiscences she to- , uh“ -_A. ._A.» counted. She possessed an almost inex- haustible fund of the folklore of these once wild regions; of the daysâ€"not use very long ago eitherâ€"when the buffalo blackened the plains with their num- bers; of the exciting adventures of the old French voyagers with the Indians; of the days of the old Northwest com- pany and the Hudson Bay company. when Assiniboin, Manitoba and the ter- ritories generally were unknown or at leustknown onlynsaparto! theGreat American desert; of the daysof Louis Biel and the ï¬rst rebellion: reminis- “No. sir." was the reassuring answer of the private. "It is that beggar York- eyâ€"I beg your pardon. sir, I meant to say the sergeantâ€"fooling with that pret- ty girl in the next room. And what a time he is having, to be sure!" And at the thought of what he was losing the outspoken and precocious youngster turned over on his side and groaned. ' _ - . . . . A “Is heâ€"er-fond of that sort of thing?†queried the ofï¬cer. angling, ac. cording to his went, for information of an incriminating nature. “Well, I should just say ra-ther,†answered the private, somewhat un- justly, it must he confessed, but with an excusable desire to punish his supe- rior overcoming his scruples. "Why. Harryis such a eonï¬rmedflirt that he’d canoes of Wolsoley; what Fox-t Garry looked like in the old Rod river days and of the second rebellion. In short. Jeannette was a living epitome of the history of tlxo‘greae long land. then was watching the eflect o! the flickering ï¬reï¬ght as it played upon the hair of Marie St. Denis. discovering e gleam of gold in it. Hewould hove been perfectly content tolit there for an indeï¬nite period. so satisï¬ed was he with his occupation... ' AI 7 -mh-.. .. â€Wkâ€"“tie" EGEi ‘6 that!†' suddenly cried the gentlegmn whg {eprcsentod her majesty “1 80°93 afore.†“Sir, did you do me the honor of ad- dressing yourself to me?†inquired the little scout. with gravity. “Yes, stupid. I declare. Pierre. you grow stupider every day. I say. you constable, you Townley chap. what‘s that- blanlzod row? It wasn't: horse. was it?†And Jamie's voice became ........., -- a V , , It grew dark, but still they sat talk- ing and laughing; the cloud that threat- ened them had evidently lifted for the time being. It would have been a dim- cult thing for a stranger. seeing them aiming there. to have guessed the nature (2 the business that necessitated the presence of the police sergeant in that house. This individual. indeed._ jut T3 the next; room: when the omccr. the private and the scout sat. a peal of laughter hag} pepetgtefi: .4": __jj-_1_ â€"‘-°â€"â€" -â€" _. w, , “You don’t say so! The devil he would!" was the weak and dubious comment. was it?†And Jzu tinggd wgth_ pnxieg. make love to the black eyed goddess High}: if he get the chancg" Jamie did not feel quite certain that the primte‘l reply committed the ser- geant to any speciï¬c charge, so he did not care to pursue the matter further lest he should betray his ignorance as to the personality of the dark eyed Eve in question, who. he concluded. might on- ly be some Toronto barmaid. after all. The private noted with disappoint- (W and week.) much." hid the I he‘rd that era 11 “17:“ Promptly executed. Estimates ‘ We. acï¬liby mail when so required. THE P08 7 Job? ‘DEPM MEI/7' Clove? is“ wanted, for PRICE will lhorougn-brea' and Farm Stock Insured at very Low Rates. Fetch on your Seed»: and get your Farm Mock Inga-row! at JAS. KEITH 1’2. WILLIAM 571:2; W‘l nuns. WWI-Ll.- my wallet! Soothing syrups, am that moan- tcr church are composed of opium or morphine! MOTHERS, Do You Know “We â€I‘MMMmetmymadmmbegamymm “may“ mrumwwu¢mumubbmrwommdmuuga bWthflhmmr no You Immanuel-hummer the famous A ,‘A, â€"_, “(thumbnail-mm yen-I. and am more Canada is now sold um «gamma-mummy notuxmmmommomw: ofthe United Summand o! # WMWWWmmm.mudhis assigns to use an: Word “W"dbmandmmmmmuammmnoaenm YOUR WIFE GAN RUN-___ WE KEEP THE RIGHT GOODS- ALL TEE GGMFIEFETS OF HOME g I. muwmwmmmflc poison" Family Grocers,- East of the Benson 'HURLEY 81 BRADY, Chlldren Cry for Pitchers Gastorla. We pin our business honor to our gomis as a guarantee tint quality and price are right. If goods 0 hippeu to turn out unsatisfactoryâ€"as thcy someâ€" tipes will-we take them back. Can anything be but ? and y rticular attention to quality. ‘ “if,“ he; of £3.16). dry goods». maybe? W614 {mff shoddy ceries too,-â€"more than you sufl‘Qc'ï¬l‘fL laps. Ti? desire to make an extra prom mdfu: some dealers to buy them, and of course the L0“ sumer sufl'en. Don't count {or much unless your weekly grocery account is satisfactory and die quality right. It takes but a little thing to Spoil the pleasure of a meal, and it takes but a trifle more to mar the peace of the household for a. week. Your household ever so much easier. more cc. cal, and with inï¬nitely less friction and m‘ infelicity, if you will permit her to b.1y111c groceries from us. for Infants and children. ON’fisREO MUTUAL LIVE STOCK Zane“ Berti The POLE Insurance Co mpun g. 03.30 A05“ '03 4t Bradr mmmmamm. quuwadm-n House. Lindsay’ â€" honovggz the HI GEES? â€2121' TH! :oncmx- emcstic .11! .58! offs -â€"- all I] %\‘u 'l‘hm o 9W5 Hive 531-3; d aunfloa “V8 been Given by Darts prc fielded 51 JOWed by ; bred sw'u Farm. \‘(il 40 pounus Ul’ Lari: ties In all WO’TO\\'\d the two-u 1111c 501': I M hbe ï¬'osslng c grown all given by which 3!: per acu. ties have grep: mu “LIL SOME ‘ 0n“ .. . [hi tics buzh Report and 50"" "(If Md t. lace y â€a Whl‘ w your .guy “A" Cun'u .9 due “ck nu nun-nu 3?"? “ x h “law â€smut “on the re unl‘ Mr cve‘ LINDS BAN 3pm" 10 t‘ 110 ll Brunt! lids hire-i 51011. but i to!)