Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 19 Apr 1900, p. 7

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109 KT at Amer« rl4 A “)!‘: Meantime tho officer had written down the woman‘s address, and now turn«! to him, taking vold of him pouch!y, "Come, now, yow young thief ; I‘ll Buke you to a placs of saicty, and mis threat. For a moment he was so . overâ€" coms with astonishment and distress he could not say one word, and stood whers he had been arrested, trying #o rezain his breath and scattered had sy with ] on his the w his th pu t Y pW It sudd BLl Bunt h« W n m Ag shed upâ€" it have H W moro "Tut! tut! tu?:! We‘ll see to that," said Mr. Lawsor. encouragingly. "I‘m not going to let you stay hare long ; we‘ll go up to the house on Yernon House to sleep toâ€"night and back to "I don‘t know what my mother will think," he said, dejectedly ; "it will just about break her heart to know that I have been locked up in a staâ€" tionhouse like a sommon thief." so COt friend you ulin‘: take it, and nobody with any sense would suspect you of such a thing," Mr. Lawson loyally but inâ€" diznantly affirmed, but losing sight, in his sympathy and fondness for the boy, of the stern facts of the case, which polinted so strongly toward his guilt. "But don‘t be downâ€"heartedâ€" we will fix it all right," he added. "The mattor will be easily adjusted toâ€" morrow morning, when you go before the judge." Ned sighed ; somehow he did not feel so confident ol his vindication as his 1t t] ! right," he added. e easily adjusted toâ€" when you go before lized that it _ was the surly owâ€"I‘ve no time with you." it the stationâ€" ct you of such loyally but inâ€" t losing sight, ondness for the s of the case, gly toward his downâ€"heartedâ€" course I know 1 nobody with Ned exc‘aimed, ille he looked ut with tears never thought alng a pursé, m any oneâ€"I man agreed iof that iBill t and had ns upon Ned, the e, of course, o until thoey liug report t his refusal nd of all ed, with a ng â€" OL _ Fesâ€" away to n O W wh Wi Un st her presence. k â€" "I am aure mdomn.m* a person who would take what does not belong to you," she said depreâ€" catingly. "I can bardly bellere tBat you etole my purse." | ;. ; | _ / At 9 o‘clock all three repalred to the ~court house, where they found the ofricerhwho had arrested Ned awaiting h a ance, ther with the wmppe:_rm nu"r:. had Mr. Lawson â€" was so well known that his vouching for himâ€"his testiâ€" mony regarding the last three years of his life, and his story, too, reâ€" guarding Ned finding and returning the forty dollars which he had Jost, would have great weight with the court: while, too, the fact that Bill Bunting had been convicted of having stoien Budge, and been the author of numerous other scrapes, would ssem to indicate that Ned‘s suspicions of him in this instance were correct. % Bhe regarded Ned with perplexity and real regret when he came into been stolon. No one, he thought, could look inte his frank, open face, and _ clear, truthful eyes, or listen t his brave refusal to escape sentence of law by telling a lie, and beligve that there waa anything mean or vicious about him. P X;â€" He saw that it would be useless to urge him further to adopt the course he had advised, and he reâ€" solved that he would do the best he could for him otherwige. vowed that he wouid get even with me sometime, for telling about that fiog; but I‘ll not lie about it, even I have to go to jail." "Very likely you are right," re turned the lawyer, but looking g.Jave, although ie secretly admired Nod tor his‘faithful adherence to principle and believed in him thorâ€" oughly, y stati 1t and warts. NAntask keep up see wha A case of Catarch of Twelve Years‘ Standing Permanently Cured by Catarrhozone. Miss Lizzle Sanford of 853 N, Market street, Chicago, 11., whites: "I have been a constant sulleter from catarrh for 12 years and was much bothered by dropp‘ngs in the throat and severe headache. 1 dsed a great number of Catarrh snufls and powsers, but received no benefit from them, some being worse than useless, A trial size of Catarrhozone helped me more than anyâ€" thing cise 1 ever trled, and 1 wish to say it is the best remedy I ever used, it has cured me, and 1 shall recommend it at every opportunity to my friends." Catarrhozone, the new medicated air treatment, is a guaranteed cure for disens s of the nasal anua resplratory passiages caus ed or maintained by imicroble life, It eures you while you breathe and canâ€" L were hardened and obstinate, if should insist on your innocence e face of such conclusive evidence ist you, and give you a severe senâ€" ; while, if you plead guilty on st offence,‘ as I have said, he W uch a gradual thingâ€"so painless ut so cruelly relentless, that at ° years we awaken to its horrors. ‘onsumptionâ€"Death. That is the advised, discard those worthless 1 powders, they never did heip d never will. Use the latest and oved treatment, Catarrhozone. It ted to cure the most chronic m‘s Corn Extractor for coras considerable cheered that he would rn f the night I e, and smiled s he bade his frien Ol sai kely h 1i In h anything so mean un(l' d Ned, firmlv. "I do not ou, how 1t came in my h I am pretty sure ting put it there tol just this scrape. Ho| N the seat of the diswase; nir can go, and no matter he disease may be in tue al tubes It always sucâ€" of Catarrhozone, blic s#peakers universally for the alleviation of sore to PP he it . I did not n not going let you w, NowW rt whil ibout gt lone for shs getting you mcluded. risâ€" olf quit« ven with you just I go to othe a by the t have in the quite hiraself fore the per auâ€" ave the sveal | to conâ€"| it ut the | both would rith ) le uro !.‘.n..o t has conâ€" Ts it hat ing the system and proventing the llle peculiar to @pring, Dr. Chaso‘s Kidâ€" neyâ€"Liver Plille will take / the pains out of the back and side:: and thorâ€" So long as the kidneys and liver are active and vigorous there need be no fear of spring humors, pimples, boilw and eruptions, for the poisons which cause these will then be effectually removed.from the body. Besides purifying the blood, cleansâ€" Spring is nature‘s cleaning time for the human system, and the kidneys and liver are worked overtime in the effort to remove the morbid . waste matter from the blood. _ *~ He arose, and, aftor summing up the evkience, remarked that the case was peculiar, that he was impressed with the truthiuiness of the prisonâ€" er in spite of the circumstantial eviâ€" dence against him and ‘his heart rompted him to pronounce hiin guiltâ€" fim ol any intentional wrong; but In the absence of sufficlent proof to the contrary, to sustain a decision, he felt obliged toâ€"â€" At this point one of the doors at the back of the courtâ€"room was thrown open, and a slight, girlish figure dartâ€" ed within, and sprang straight toâ€" ward the judge, while a clear, sweet voice called out excitedly : "Waitâ€"oh! waitâ€"â€"" The judge‘s syimpathiocs were with the boy. _ Still he was there for the purpose of administering "law â€" and justice accornding to evidence," and that against the prisoner so iar outâ€" weighed that in his favor, that he felt that it would not do to ignore the facts as presented by the préâ€" secution, and allow him to go scot free; there must be a sentence of some kind, although he resolved to make it as light as would be consistâ€" ent. NO DOCTOR THIS SPRING ue opposing couns>i crossâ€"questioned in the most rigld manner, but without making him vary his story in .the slizhtest particular. comiums, He the Ned‘s rity in thres : wel th Mr. Lawson was called, when he concludsd, and his account of how he < had first made Ned‘s acquaintance, in connection with the restoration of the forty dollars, his testimony to his unvarying integâ€" "Iv‘s too late now, mum, for the case has been entered," the man gruffly returned; "but," he â€"added, with a sharp look at Ned, "don‘t waste your sympathiesâ€"you can‘t always tell about these smoothâ€"lookâ€" Ing, oilyâ€"tongued youngsters; someâ€" times they‘re the worst kind." Ned flushed again, and turned away with a feeling of in Arnition and inâ€" Justice at these uncharitable remarks, and then they all entered the court room together. They had to wait some time, for there wore two or three cases to be ‘The charge was read, for the prosecution g course every word t against our young hero ‘Then the evide ant was called 1 aroge from his se in the box, he ch ward the back of heart gave a gre Bill Buating sitti and dirty as he before, and with his evil face. comp¢ stand there wore two or three cases to be heard first, and it was between ten and eleven before Ned‘s was called. ly sald. "Thank you ; but I shall try to be game, even if the judge finds me gullty," Ned â€" returned, trying to speak bravely, but losing some of his bright color as he thought he might perhaps have to go to prison or to the schoolship, or some other place equally objectionable. * Oh, Mr. Officer," said the woâ€" man, now turning to the policeâ€" man. "J am sure this boy‘s story is true. Cannot something be done to get him off without a hearing ? I have my purse and I cannot bear to appear against him, he appears like & nice, respectable fellow." He bent down and whispered in Mr. Lawson‘s ear that Bill was present, telling him where to look for him, and to watch him during the examinaâ€" tion, then with a firm step and a composed air he mounted the witness int vet The usual oath war administered to him, and Ned‘s look of grave attention and air of reverence as he took the Bible made a favoiable â€" impression man man true "I am sure of it," the lady anâ€" swered, gravely, as sho searched his clear eyce, "butâ€"it was found on you, and of course gome one must have stolen it from my pocket." * â€"~nat is true," Ned said. smiling sadly, and flushing, "and 1 â€" know that things look dark ror me; but I am innocent all the same," _ "I am very sorry," the lady kindâ€" "I did not, madam," Ned respondâ€" ed, as he politely doffed his hat to her, thus revealing his head, and broad, open brow. "I never stole anything in my life." in If the Kidneys and Liver are kept in perfect : order by using Dr. Chase‘s Kidneyâ€"Liver Pills. ht judge listened attentively to recitals, and was improssed both the truth of_ the boy‘s stateâ€" and Mr. Lawson‘s hisch en then rec face fNushed erimson every respect during ears, evidently carrie with it. (To be Continuet1) ( [ , the evidence riven, and of told â€" strongly whom he _as he the last d great AJ d iwus vinegar and ito. 1 didn‘t _ mect | the family party again at breaklast, | {or thse same day I took a notion for I a run over to Paris, and, returning to [my lodgings in the afternoon, I put _A few nocessary changes and toilet things into a hand satchel and was ‘ in gay ‘Pares the next day. I stayed there about a woeek, maybe ten days, lwhen I returned to. ‘Lunnon.‘ _ and, ‘dlnlug with a friend at his club, it waus rather late in the evening when 1t wot to my lodgings in Craven strect, | fo+ which, please remember, I had | paid tho rent for a month in advance. I recoliect it was a brizht moonli¢cht The blood can only be cleansed by the activities of the kidneys and liver. That is the only means which nature has provided. To purify the blood you mugt work in barmony with nature and assist these organs in their giganâ€" tic task of continually filtering the blood. Dr. Chaso‘s Kidneyâ€"Liver Pills act directly on the kidneys and liver, and arp the most effective blood puriâ€" fiers over discovered. One pill a dose. 25 conts &:x at all dealers, or Edâ€" oughly curée Lumbago Brights easo, Bilionsness, Oons_tipatlou derangements of the Kidneys Liver. No one more keenly enjoyed a joke at his own expense than did the late Judge James Goggin. Ever ready to promote a little quiet, harmless fun himself, he was always quick witted and ready in whatever direction the diversion might take. "anns ol court," "the temple," the preâ€" cinets of the law courts and the courts themselves were of living interest to Goggin, and no one cither side of the soa was better readl in ‘the history which clusters about them than was he. He carried letters to several of the English judiciary and to distinâ€" guished mempers of the English and Irish bar, and consequeatly was treatod with considerable professional and social attention, though personâ€" ally he cared very little for such things, much preferring to take his daily pilgrimage in the simple, demoâ€" cratic, easyâ€"going fashion that charâ€" BOA whic he. the 1d in the British " Lunnon, ye kneow often put it. Old Lon of Dickens, the ancien He was particularl; relating some of his e ing an European trip liked to dwell upon thi Ud in the British "sometimes their | would choose to b clous to their ‘lea ther,‘ and I woul« mysel{ perched up myseil percued up conspicuous figure i: millinery of a *Ht chawncery, me bov.‘ WIT OF JUDGE GO5SIN. BOARDINGâ€"HOUSE COMMUNITY Judge Gof his mode oi in London i tels and tal in a seclud thorough from the bainkmen advance, and dinit "The peo His Funny Experiences on a Trip Through Europey. NN 10 terized him vh n D. ivi vyAo was C . There w use who re ; . were al diy â€" and | i p.casant ut centra icient an the tomp W 28 th very simpie in nd upon arriva‘l d the great choâ€" isant apartmen: On mC pC felicitous in eriences durâ€" id especially h honora SAW An yolis th O1N woOu Dis and and ljy | the door 1 rented aps "" | to go to t U" | clows lookh uld * *No, #ir lon | has there 1 He har the pa . he comes h X\ Fraud and falsehooi w.1! insvitably lead to f:ilJure and distress. _ Humanity embraces t>0 much of selfâ€" ishness, recklessness and seinfuiness. What this world needs is more Chrisâ€" tianity to neutralize and harmanite the humanity. ® "Yes, sir," anaswoered one of the vesâ€" trymen. "That is the graveâ€"amen â€" of the complaint."â€"Chicago Tribune. "The principal _ thing charged against me, then," said the clergyâ€" man, after listening to the committee, "ln “tlmp I make too long prayers. is it ?2" Uuburnished Silver Buttone. A fashionable gown of "cherbat au lait" (a warm pinkyâ€"brown), has the skirt almost covered with a compliâ€" cated* system of tucks. The released fullness escapes about the ankle. The distinguishing . feature is the jacket lined and faced with white satin and buttoned down the front with a douâ€" ble row of silver buttons. These are not. burnished like the plate upon your dinner table, but have the dauh look of unburnished metal. The butsâ€" tons are not too small and look solid. milk a cow," objected the old wo She was, bowever, mistaken, f litile lator Hoer Majoesty returned a halfâ€"tiled jug. Meantime, Pri Clementn> had laid on the table bowls, a loaf and the needful k and plates. The old farmer‘s wife served by the Princess, who, it pears, greatly enjoyed the a ture.â€"Philadeiphia Bulletin. nis h durir the : nigh custody _ nor _ nothink ho that sort. But yer must leave the door of that there ‘ouse halone, sir, han‘ you must move hon. _ Besides, sir, there‘s no manner 0‘ use o‘ you‘re aâ€"trying it with that there key, sir, for the parties in the ‘ouse, sir, ‘ave changed the bloomin‘ lock.‘ "It was true. The maiden lady and the invalid brother, ‘had had encuth of me, and during my absence in FParis had changed the jJock. 1I hinto that "*Why, burglar, d to you, of glar ? y ~~.~0, Sir, can My horders ha clearâ€"Hi ‘ave â€" And The Wicked Vestryman. Iy Each FOUl e moral regeneration of They frequently visit the the prisons in Athens, giv. religious instruction and : attention. of xperiences Greece i8 QUELE )r the remainder of lon I steered clear rtments with _ reâ€" Chroni things 1t a v Her Fads and K y you from the ever be able to the old woman will go to the where the jugse tlimn®, . 1"rincess th» table three W 1J0N@€, SIP, UAD‘ Besides, #ir, use o‘ you‘re there key, sir, ‘ouse, sir, ‘ave lock.‘ iden lady and W WO M m the adven 1y me for a | leave it l 1 lass â€" of you do. werry ‘er into that he door ir, han‘ es. Sir, you‘re ey, sir. ted perâ€" hoes of Stuart, n Anne oi Rusâ€" ‘t, wife ‘ Ber"nn hey are dainty ade for English ‘en Hoâ€" ) mornâ€" vâ€" were U ex 7 i bur with i1 118> ring the OW woâ€" hat ty Ti IMâ€" mng by red be 18 f

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