3JAS. A. LIVINGSTON Grimsby, Ont. 20 “mu.ï¬' fruit acros, set to 4 beautiful buildings; situated on Lake Ontario, about three miles from _ St. Catharines and Port Dalbousic. . Hot water heating in house, Lots 17 and 30, Niagaraâ€"8¢ acres splendid soil; finest location on Nia« gara River; good approach to drive; surround farms first ch-:z barn, well built and in good tion; small frame house; about three miles from Queenston; 44 acres in FOR SALE or TO RENT W. B. CALDER, Valuator GRIMSBY D. M. CAMERON, Treas. 4 Per cent. paid on Debentares for ene or twko years. & Fer cent paid on Debentures for three or fve years Dorner King and Hughson Pays 3% per cont. on dhlly baiâ€" open an office in the Town to assist in the finding of sultable employment for our yor month, house and usual privilege (by the year). Nen for general Iaboring, §#e per hour, POSITIONS VACANT FOR RETURNED MEX 50 to 100 menf or raliroad ork, 40e per hour; crossing :::-’:‘;:'h-. Marride men with families for farm work, 80e per hour, carvpestly requested that all employers of tabour send in particulars of positions they have or will have vacast salaries offered, ctc. And if any of the returned GRIMSBY DISTRICT REPATRIATION It will save time and help to get teh organization runâ€" of $1.00 and upwards. It is the purpose Tenmster, by the year. Man for inside work in Inâ€" Apply to G, W. V. A. Club Rooms Marride man for farm, $50 We e es " ‘$.00 man‘s carnings . A rare Mubnr&%‘ Double House and Fruit Lotâ€"The |rent from part of this mnuse will pay { a lot of ‘interest. The frit will pay ‘the taxes, Prics reasorable. Only |a smail amount required down. See me about this place, sure. e . Mouse and ‘otâ€"Splendid situation on good street in Grimsby, new house electric light and water. Price reaâ€" M.m-fllp down this place could be for out of a ; 50 _ foot no ing, fine garden soil, a lot of buildâ€" ing stone and firewood. ‘This is :a L 100 Acresâ€"Great sacrificeâ€"Two wiles south of Grimsby (25 bush); pear . 190 "Wame, ‘Lice â€" srapes, , uit pear , 1 â€" grapes, bearing; 12 cattle, 2 horses, poultry, implements, etc.; concrete “.0 reoms; bank bâ€" n and outh 4 wate rin house and barn; three cisâ€" terns ;two wells of excellent water; splendid soil; ‘u h worth hlf price usked for f ..1, satisfactory reasons for selling; immediate poss, slon: must sell at once; investigate quich ly, as this is a bargain. *R REAL ESTATE‘ FOR SALE â€" AT LOW PRICES ANXD EASY TBERYS rimsby, soil suitable for RFZAIRING â€" A SPECLALTY tind out is .o wear a pair. H. BULL You in se tried the redt, now try the sest, 34 King $ W, Mamilt We LUNCH COUNTERS CATERERS alk ~*%e I looked at Ag and A "*** a Lorrible supposition,‘ says at me, neither on» of us \ , ‘and the innocent will have to anything at all for awhile. f 98 with the gullty.‘ ‘Then he cocks couldn‘t get hold of the yet, for that matter, 1 expect (9"" sakes! Don‘t shoot? yells one up,and find it a pipe dream, passengers. ‘Man, you ought to rbmnvmâ€"'l:; nâ€"-uâ€"-uun never was so completely ‘ l“ml* I was on that occasion. One v | down there, you fool, and make it the river. We need something tt ! and maybe be‘s got a gun. . If t‘ be in getting even with a mut that had Wack! TH v#rite you sure, boy, and you i9 P 8 Lk. :'n&];thh‘@-!-: for 4,000 miles, more or less, as Agey had remarked. ‘There he stood, with uis mouth and eyes wide open. "‘l'l.-l::nyuo.-‘. men up see our first cleanup, -’m’tflï¬h_hl windy," says Aggy. They wanted to see bad, as you can imagine, and when they did see about fifteen pounds of gold in the bottom of my old hat they talked like people that hadn‘t had a d Three wide steps and be was | 2404 vicinity could boast, and deciined in the wasoo. and with one screech | them with tact and the utmost gratiâ€" a pizensd bobcat he fairly lifted tude to the suitor for the compliment, be cayuses over the first riige. Noâ€"| but her "no," though mild, was firm, =“mhmmu-lhhwmhlmwfl wansed to. | vallant spirit which would rather enâ€" "%o that‘s the way I hit my stake, | dare the fatigne and lonelin=ss of old just as 1‘d always expectsdâ€"by | aS* in her little house than to take a i knowing what I was dbing smy | larger life from any but the man who of the timeâ€"and now, there| W8® allâ€"a commonplace in fiction, in wmy iron horse coughing up the | "¢A! life sometimes quite a sirain. TH #rite you sure, boy, and you ‘The sun distorted himself into a Rugâ€" wid Reddy know wha‘s going om« | bY football and hurried down as though -,.‘m~m to be through with Fairficid as soon # to the lads staicht why I as possible. 1t was a most magnificent "Around you go!"* he hoBers. <P Aulith entinitinnbetonnomematnmentarmmmnithasiess o s... * ue «B h year upon year of respectable stupidity that represented life in Fairfield, while her eyes and sou} were in the boiling gold of the sky glory. She sighed. A panorama of life minced before Miss Mattic‘s mind about as vivid and starved. They visited each other, the ladies of Fairficldâ€"these women who was something in the «wing of him that engsusted the Rengal tiger. He ware high heeled bosts outside of his troumgea, a fammel shirt wh a sellow «lik berchief wround his acek. snmd on hie hoed sat a white bsi which somed a Mise Mattle to be at least a yard in Nametor. Under the hat was s o vinegar, two tablespoonfuls of sugar, half a cup each of boneset and rhu bard, a good full eup of the milk of human kindness, dilate in a gail> of water and you have the favor of Wairfield. There was just enough of each ingredient to spoil the taste of all the rest. Miss Mattle rested her elbow on the An unsympathotic stranger would have felt that nothing was left to the Fairfeidians but memory, and the In short, Fuirfeld v~= an eastern village whose cause fiad departed, a emmunity drained of the ma‘e prinâ€" cipie, leaving only a few queer men, the bisck»mith and some halfling boys to give tone to the background of do= ens of old maids, 1 is the management of the women of hhmmu the beart of it with a longing for someâ€" thing to bappen. Then the thought sighed again. with f'.zu A ‘with oye .‘ï¬unn-lhlbvl lage street. Rhe ths.nght she sawâ€"â€"she ‘ubbed her ever and luoked agninâ€"she did see, and surely mever a stranger sight was be held on Puirfcid‘s street! Wad a Roy broken as ‘o coping. and thri«dbare in generaiâ€"then on the hither ide of the way somwe thrie or Tour neighâ€" bors‘ houses ar 4 cpposite the binck» «mith‘s shop and pogto@=, <*= intter of course in a sttze, whore you could uuy anything «> staie groceries to Down the ruad between the arches n4 the weeping willow. came first the a! Benga) tiger come slouching through Â¥e Aust it could not have been more unosual, ‘The spectacie was a man; a Miss\ Mottic‘s reverie idled over ths t ts We MR RiectHrH * . ~â€" her. ‘There was no retreat. #. noâ€" tleed with some reassurance that his eyes were grave and kindly. As he advanced Miss Mattie rose in vanished op the streot. Miss Mattle sat transSred. . Her breath came in swallows, and her heart beat Irregularly, ‘Here was novâ€" eity with a vengesnce! ‘The big man hand on her throat. What could it umen? ‘Ihe gate was opened and the stranâ€" ger stride up the cinder walk to the porek He stopped a whole minute and *.oked at her. â€"At last! ‘Well, Mattie®: he said, "don‘t you know me?" A food of the wildest hypotheses "Yâ€"yâ€"yessir, I kin tell yer where she livesâ€"yessir! She lives right down there in that little house. 1 kin ge down with you" Jos‘ swell ‘s now Why. there she is now, on the stoop!" *Thankee, sonny," said the big voice. "MHere‘s for miggles," and Miss Mattle nmmâ€"mdnul flew Into the grimy fists of Tok % wui of we past with so familiar a saiâ€" wtation? Aithough the porch was a fch welees. their upts were aiment on womau, eyes were om a-.hll-ï¬hfln--‘ ‘Then he laughed and showed his white teoth. "No use to bother az4 worry you, Mattip," said be. "You couldn‘t call it in ten years. Well, I‘m your half uncle Pred‘s boy Bill, and I hope you‘re a quarter as glad to see me as I am to see y$u." "What!" she cried. "Not!little Willy who ran away!" "The same little Willy," he repiled in a tone that made Miss Mattie laugh a little, nervously, "and what 1 want to know is. are you glad to see me?" "Why, of course! But, Willâ€"1 supâ€" pese 1 should call you Wi? 1 am so Susteredâ€"nct expecting youâ€"and it‘s been so warm today. Won‘t you come in and take a chair?" wound up Miss Mattle in desperation and fury at berâ€" self for saying things so «lifferent from what she meant to say. ‘There was a twinkic in the man‘s eyes as he replled in an injured tone: in a fright, but seeing, with a chid‘s Intuition. that there wa. danier In this flerve looking personsbe piped up Instantly, _ _ ud pu Miss Mattie eyed hi.. in some fear. He would be by her house d‘sectly, and It was harily modest to sit ag» wressively on one‘s front porch while a strange man ‘went by, particularly such a very stminge man as this, Yet a thrill of curiosity held her for the moment, and then it was too late, fot |b-¢-mmdnd-bdll'l:'z die Newell, who was playing In the dustâ€"all the children played piackily in Fairfeldâ€"asked Fddie in a, volce which reached Miss Mattlc {istnly, although the owner e«‘dently made no attempt to raise It. If he knew whore Miss Maitie Saunders Hxved? Widle had not noticed the large man‘s approsach and nearly fell over "Why, good Lord, Mattie! I‘ve come 24000 miles or more to see you, and you ask me to take a chair just as if I‘d stepped in from across the way! Can‘t you give a mun a little warmer welcome than that?" _*What shail I do?"* asked poor Miss a distance and been received so very eddiy, is entitled to consideration. She raised. her agituted face and for the first time in her life realized the pleasâ€" ufe of wearing a mustache. ene‘s baif cousin, who has come such Chanta Seechee ranch, North Dakota, sat him down. "I‘m obliged to you, Mattie," he said in all scriousmess. ‘"To tell you the truth, 1 felt in need of a little comfort» ingâ€"here I‘ve come all this distanceâ€"â€" and, of course, I heard about ‘father and motherâ€"but 1 coulda‘t velieve it was true. Seemed as if they must be waiting at the old place for me to come back, and when 1 saw it all gone to ruinâ€"â€" Well, then 1 set out to find somebody, and do you know, of all the family there‘s only you and me left? That‘s all, Mattic, just us two! While |-.'h¢'-'¢=~¢ expected things to be stin pack here and be jus* the game as L markable bead of hair. it mung below the mun‘s shoubler» in a «fiky mass of dark wwariet Gocked with brown gold Mise Hoitle had seen red bair, but abe renmmilared no such color as this, 10# could she reall e«r having seen bait a foot and «haif io @ on a mm ‘Thut hair would have w ie a fortune on the hr* * «* an actrew . but Miss Matt® wns ignore»: of the possibilitics of the profes «h. The yare of the man was a Ane tan. against which eyes, teeth and mus tache came out in brisk relief, The mustache avoided‘ the tropks) tint o# *~ ~â€"ner hair and was content with 1 modest brown. The owner came right nlong, walking with a stf, itrong. straddiing guit, like a map sot used to that way of traveling .. left themâ€"humâ€"â€" ‘Well, how are y09, band upon his, "don‘t think I‘m not giad to see yooâ€"plesse don‘t. ‘I‘m so glad, Will, 1 can‘t tell youâ€"bat I‘m all confused~â€"so little happens here." _ "I shouldn‘t guess it was the liveliest though, Mattieâ€"we‘ve just got to be frionds. Good Lonl. We‘re all thers left! Poury 1 never thought of such 1 thing! VWail, i* Ld Tï¬â€œ"“ WEPNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1019