5l-53 King West, HAMILTOM Puma 658 Foreign and Domestic Wall Papers Of all home decoration is the properdecoration ofthe walls. Many homes that are furnished. with good fur.niture and floor cover- ings are ruined with inap- propriate WALL PAPERS We will gladly assist you in selecting a correct Wall Paper forjour needs. Decorating is on} ' profession Four per cent. paid on de.. posits running for one year or longer Deposit in our Savings De.. partment, 31/2% interest paid, half yearly. Cor King and Hughson Fts HAMILTON MONEY TO LOAN Valualor at Grimsby W. B., CALDER Co.", A. C. TURNBULL Adrien, mob. - "I suffered terribly l with female weakness and backache and I rr 'tIRI. 'ttgig-tlight got so weak that I l , lllllllllllllllilliilllllllllllllli.', could hardly do my I . 3-5.. - ' “II-gill work. When I Ill ' 1lIl "" , I q i'ii,!:liil't. washed my dishes I l IIC,] f. had to sit down and Illllllll 5’3 2-) Vigil.- when Iwould sweep _ lllllll 2iJ.fi'i.. the floor1 would get .. Illlliillll tilit [il,iiit,' so weak thatlwould I IllllilliilllFtagaifffi,iiit.ji' have to get a drink 'PN iiiiireri)i every few minutes, I I .l.1It"lllip and before I did my , 01 h dustingIwould have I _ . to lie down. I got so poorly that my folks thought I was I going into consumption. One day I I found a piece of paper blowing around 1hevardnetdIpieUditup andread it. I . It said 'Nved from the Grave,' and I told what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta- I hle Compound has done for women. I I showed it to my husband and he said, I ‘Why don't you try itt' So I did, and utter I had taken two bottles I felt and better and I said to my husband, 'l don't imp need anymore,’ and hessid 'You had I H better take it a little longer anyway.’ A, Sol tookit for three months, and got I the well and "rontt."-Mm. Anonzo E. Idau BAKER, 9 Tecumseh St., Adrian, Mich. 1 sun Not Well Enough to Work. I TI In these words is hidden the tragedy It of many a woman, housekeeper orwage I rett we: ft',", t,'gg'it', herself and is often whe e in en a only, on me e 'l1lil'lf Whig)†in house, 'l,l'dlrlfdt I ll tory, shop; store or kitchen, women face should remember that there is one tried I ject and true remedy for the ills towhich all I ther women are no, and that is Lydia E. I "I Pinkham's Wgetahle Compound. _ It ' promotes that vigor which makes work I noun easy._ The Lydia B. Pusan Medicine I The Hamilton N _ Provident and Loan Society MONEY TO LOAN ~1' si" 5‘31 ir'ss'iyi'ilit,1i':j'jii' __' r 3. I}£53335{FE‘RR‘Eï¬hï¬â€˜ZIQg‘ i .373“ J"r. C “1:: , ’1 C3} iii I:':. uQ, cr-w, (L '. _ 3.3. 3313: , 'iC2/ ay, y: mi ( _ "4? k J t R. ' 15:35 li/gif _ (,iiiiisf, 'i'iigl) V 'tlk‘SiQ (“93$ "w' Ji trick \ " 51:59:53?“ -' Cd â€by: s", 'i' u? I, , " *-'\~: a} (, a; 1/ I," A. il Km!) & FARRELL W. W. KIDD The _ Basis Mm. Baker So Weak-Could Not Do Her Work-Found Rattiof In Novel Way. Ill“) NOT ' STAND M FEET Prisiitte, and Company Real Estate and . Insurance Office Main Street, GRIMSBY. C. FERRIE. Treasurer C. T. FARRELL Jerry she touched on lightly. ‘There’s one thing. Peg, that must part us some day when it comet to you,†he titttu1y said. “What's that; tathgrl'! “In; Pox-"- “A La She softened some things and omit- ted others-Ethel entirely. That epi- sode should be locked forever in Poe's "What made ye come back so and- den-like?" _ "l only promised to stay a month." "Didn't they want ye any longer?" "in one way they did an’ in another they didn't. It's a long history-ttlathe what it is. Let us sit down here as we used to in the early days an' I'll tell ye the whole o' the happenin's since I left ye." _ ~- Next to H. G. & B. Station Main Street, - GRIN "We wouldn’t have this time but for you, father." Mason & Risch ('The Piano with a Soul†"From 'Bueirshoe to ‘Agricultural Organization.' The History ot a Gen- eration of English Misrule. by Frank Owen O'tjonneit." She looked up proudly " her father. "It looks wondherful. father." "PII rade it to you in the; long even in's now we're together again." "Do, rather.†"An' we won't separate any more. Peg, will we?" l RANK O'CONNELL stood on the I quay that morning in July and watched the great ship slowly swinging in through the heads, and his heart beat fast as he waited impatiently while they. moored her. His little one had come back to him. Amid the throngs swarming down [the gangways' he suddenly saw his daughter. and he gave a little gasp of surprised pleasure. They reached O'Connell’s apartment. It had been made brilliant tor Peg's I return, There Wm flowers every- I where. every one of which is inspected and .guaranteed. Write us for prices. We can save you money. Keenan Woodenware Mfg. Co., Limited Owen Sound, Ontario He raised the littered sheets of his manuscript and showed them to her. "This." T She looked over her shoulder and read: C Ifyou want your fruit and veget- ables to reach your customer in good condition, ship them in "An' what have ye been doin’ all these long days without me?" "I do indade. It's many's the tear Pre shed over him an' Robert Emmet." "Then ye’ve not forgotten P' "Forgotten what?" ' "All ye learned as a child, an' we talked of since ye grew to a girl?" "I have not. Did ye think I wouid?" "No, Peg. I didn't. Still, I was won. dherin' "..... . "What would I be doin' torgettin' the things ye taught me?" “It’s the grind furniture we have now, father!" "Do ye like it, Peg?" "That I do. And it's the beautiful picture of Edward Fitzgerald ye have on the wall therel" "Ye mind how I used to rude ye his life?" . His heart bounded ‘ue saw Peg's face brighten as she ran from one ob- Jeet to another and commented on them. The World's Greatest Artists use it in all their concerts and _recitals. I have secured the agency for this famous instrument and will be pleased to have . you call in and see it TO THE FRUIT GROWER Kaybee Fruit Baskets . T. HARTWELL CHAPTER XXVI". After Many Days. GRIMSBY "Jerry!" he corrected. 's "Please forgive me for what I an to ye that day It was wrong of In. to say it. Yet it we: Just what " "Stay where ye are!" cried O’Com Dell. hurrying out as the bell rang again. "l want to ask ye somethin', 'Pda Gerald." she began. . "Jerry!" he corrected. 's "Oh, please," said Jerry - hurriedly and taking a step toward the door. “al- low me to call some other time!" "I have never seen America. I take an Englishman's interest In what we once owned"- "An' lost through mlsgovernment." "Well, _tve'll say misunderstanding." "As they'll one day lose Ireland.'" "I hope not. The two countries un- derstand each other better every day." The bell rang again. Peg started to go, but O’Connell stopped her. “It's McGinnis. This is his "nigttt, to call and tell me the politics of the town. I'll take him into the next room, Peg. until yer visitor is gone." "We'd inthroduced ourselves " ready," said O’Connell good naturedly. eying the unexpected visitor all the while. “And'what might ye be doin' in New York?" he asked. "How are you; Peg?" He smiled down at her as he used to in Regal Villa, and behind the smile there was a grave look in his dark eyes and the old tone of tenderness in his voice. "How are you, Peg?" he repeated. "Pm tine, Mr. Jerry," she replied" a daze. Then she looked at O'Conneli, and she hurried on to say: “This is my father, Sir Gerald Adair." Ber father was talking. She opened the door and walked in. A tall, brong. ed man came forward to greet her Her heart almost stopped. She trem. bled violently. The next moment Jer. ry had clasped her hand tn both ot his. She heard her father's footsteps go into the little sitting room and then the hum of voices. -- One evening some few weeks after her return she was in her room Dre paring to begin her night's work with her father when she heard the bell ring. That was unusual. Their call- ers were few. She heard the outer door open/then the sound of a distant voice mingling with her father's. Then came a knock at her door. "There's somebody outside here to see ye, Peg," said her father. "Who is it; father?" "A perfect 'rthranger--to me. Be quick now.'" She became O'Connell’s amanuensis. During the day she would go from library to library in New York verify- ing data for her father's monumental work. _ Those first days following Peg’s re turn found father and child nearer. each other than they had been since that famous trip through Ireland when he lectured from the back of his his- torical cart, _ "I dreamt he was dead--deadt Aer I eouldn't rache him. An' he went on past me-down the stream-with his face 11pturned.'.' 't'he grasp loosened, and Just as she slipped from him O’Connell caught per in his strong arms and placed her gently on the sofa, and she fell asleep. She crept in and looked up into his face with her startling eyes. and she grasped him with both of her small hands and in a voice dull and hopeless cried despairingly: She woke trembling wittrtear, and she turned .on the light and huddled into .a chair and sat chattering with terror until She heard her father mov- ing in his room. She went to the door and asked him to let her go in to him He opened the door and saw his little Peg, wild eyed, pale and terror striek. en. standing on the threshold. The look in her eyes terrified him. "What is it. Peg. me darlin'? What Is it?" mg down a stream. She stretched out her hand to grasp it when the eyes met hers. and the eyes were those ot a dead man-and the man was Jerry! . All through that night Peg lay awake, searching through the past and trying to pierce through the future. Toward morning she slept, and in a whirling dream she saw a body tioat. "Ye'd betther be. goin' to bed, Peg." "All right, father." _ She.wexit to the door. Then she stopped.- . "Ye're glad_)'m home. father?" He pressed her closely to him. "I'1l never tave ye again." she Whit) pered. "Has it comet Has it. Peg?" She buried her face on his breast; and, though no sound came. he knew by the trembling of her little body than she was crying. . So it had come into her life. The child he had sent away a month ago had come back to him transform. ed in that little time into a woman. The cry of youth and the call ot lift had reached her heart. After awhile he stood up. tn “I love you, P She iowgred .her eyes and said m. 99. THE INDEPENDENT, Gnmsm, 0334310 sand Sir Gerald. '6+Fer6-r6q6qqqrqrqrqqeqstt,,i, 't'4'64"H"e"e"rFH"rFrree+rrtreqreq, It will be a grateful task to revive old memories of those who formed the foreground of the life story of one whose radiant presence shall always live in my memory, whose steadfast- ness and courage endeared her to all. whose tniiuenee, on those who met her and watched her and listened to her was tarreaching, since she epitomized in her small body all that makes wo- man lovable and man supreme-honor, faith and love! Adieu, Peg o' Mr Heart! We will also visit Mrs. Chichester and hear of her. little grandchild, born in Berlin, wtiisre her daughter, Ethel. met and married an attache at the embassy and has formed a salon. Some day with O‘Connell we will visit Peg in her English home and see the marvels time and love have wrought upon her. But to those who knew her in the old days she is still the same Peg o' My aeart--resolutts, loyal, tmihiehing, mingling the laugh With the tear, truth and honesty her bedrock. ND now the moment has come to take leave of the people I have A lived with for so long. Yet, _ though I say "Adieu!" I feel it 18 only a temporary leave takipg. Their lives are so linked with mine that some day in the future I may be tempted to draw back the curtain and show the passage of years In their various lives. The thought came to him that he was about to give, to England his daughter in marriage.' Well, had he not taken fromthe English one of her fairest daughters as his wife? And a silent prayer went up trom his heart that happines» would abide with his Peg and her Jerry an}! that their rornanee"woula last longer than had Angeta's and his. When O'Connell came into the room later he realized that the great sum mans had come to his little girl. "Do you know one of the tirgt things me father taught me when I was just a little child?" "it was from Tom Moore, ‘Oh. there’s nothin' half so SWeet in life-as Iowe’s young dream.' Ft Jerry stroked her hair and looked Into her eyes and smiled down at her lovingly as he asked: "What will your father say?" She looked happily up at him and answered: I came here. I love you. Peg, I want you to be my wife. I want to, pare tor you and lend jun and make vou happy. I love you'." Her been Ieuped‘and strained. "Do you love me?" she whispered. and her voice trembled and broke. "I do. Indeed I do. Be my wife." "But you have a title." she pleaded. "Mare it with me," he replied. "Ye'd be so ashamed o' me." "No, Peg; I'd be proud' of you. I Iove you." Peg broke down and sobbed. "I lore you, too. M lather Jerry." In a moment she was In his arms. It was the first time any one had touched her tenderly besides her fa then PHONE " H. L. Harshaw We Are "Doing Our Bit" "I knew you would never write to me, and somehow I wondered Just how much yum cured for tnec-it at all. So She tried to speak, but nothing came from her parched lips and tightened throat, ( . Then she became conscious' that he was speaking again, and she listened to him with all her senses, with all her heart and fiom her soul. might have expected from me. Bat ye'd been so tine'to me~a little ‘no. tsoar-all that wondherful month that it’s hurt me ever since, nn' I didn‘t dare write to ye. It would have look. ed like presumption from me, But now that ye've come here ye're found me out, an' [want to ask yer pardon, an' I want to ask ye not to be angry with me." . . "I eopldn't be angry with you, Peg." He paused, and as he looked " her the reserve of the held in, self contain- ed man wks broken. He’ bent over her and said softly: "Peg, I love you!" The room swam around her. Was all her misery to end? Did this man come back from the mists of memory because he loved her? BUSINESS AS USUAL at ’reducing the high cost of living. Ex- ceptional values in Roasts of Beef at 16c. per lb. Mutton at UK. to 20c. per lb. Give us your order for Saturday. We can satisfy you. .. T Grimsby AFTERWORD. 'io--"---- Attractive trips to various points in Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland and Prince Edward 'Island. Tickets good going August13, 14, 15 and 16, return limit August, 31, 1915. The Maine resorts including Kennobunkport, Portland, Old or- chard, etc. Tickets good going Aug. 27, 28 and 29, return limit Sept. 13, 1915. Particulars from Canadian Pa- crtic Ticket Agents or writtrto M. G. Murphy, Passenger Agent. Toronto. A Gentle Remind». Ire-Bare you decided what you will wear at the next german? Btter--a?ttat depends somewhat on the thtwem that are sent me. I have a perfectly do“ gown that. with a dozen jack rota. would he just too sweet for anything:- Richmond TtmetrDitpttett. know- lny more than they know 'rttemtttrsortgtnruasinesethem-a, mam But in: probable' that the print: Chinese characters existed Moo-ttro-rm-tttera. 1789, when the federal government went into operation. the number at once. In the thirteen states was out. about 'ttmatt-ee-New You Am trom 1689, when a house in Boston was employed for the receipt at letters for and from the old world. lit 1372 the government of New York colony established a post to. go monthly tram NewYorktrtBotrton. Atteneralptmb otBee was ambushed in Virginia tn 1692 and in Philadelphia in 1698. In MIMIâ€. The beginning of the postal -hfti 1nwuthotowtutmiteit States at. 'rttenEtreemtotretotttmrtttstttatt trittN-mmtrmrttetstmtittssttagit !yopdbetrtnt'dtetrhtemmnn."-antaextttr, Emmi-t. wttesnrtgettotuwoodalttnatttnt: them waiting for me. Actually that ttott known the. Menace hum a ttite we a shotgun.†“That'- nothing," said another at an partyhomhisplaoeatthoothorddq‘ of the are. “You fellows have seen my little Tuner. haven‘t you? Well. -otNmtofoiiowme,tmtifttt. “new!†my Shotgun!» “antthemdstwondertuldozh th-tMil-tttsoma-tIntent"- Pttsoearmhreamirimtinqutadt0tat an. “Whenl tMngoutmretthttt mlbeoteout and on both eldeeotthe Yukon rlver and its tributaries. tor a Mace of more than 2,500 miles. One of the supervision districts contains a full 100,000 square miles. The other- averaxe more than 65,000 square miles each. Of the natives of Alaska ap- proximately 11,000 belong to six tribe. of Indians in southeastern and south- em Alaska and in the valley of the Yukon. About 11,000 are Eskimo. on the western and northwestern cont. along the Bering sea. the Beans-mu and the Arctic ocean. Something man than 3,000 are Alena and. mixed the“ through the Aleutian lama-Club- The Alaskans. 'Agsttttlgtq to the government mun- du. on “the: of Alaska are about â€an in number, and they are was! our more than 850,000 of the 590,000 Ian-n mtien of the territory. Their mall -tttiementt, extend along 10,000 Whtsttteattineseufirutarsewrtt. We": "--a-_sassa, 500. a. box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 250. At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. MELLE. G. GAUDREAU - Rochon P.Q., Jan. 14th, 1915. "I suffered for many years with terrible Indigestion and Coitstipation. I became thin and miserable. I had frequent dizzy spells and became so run down that I never thought I would get well again.. A neighbor advised me to try 'Fruits a-tives'. I did so and to the surprise of my doctor, I began to improve and he advised me toga on with 'Fruit-a-iives'. I continued this medicine and all my Indigestion and Constipation was relieved. I consider that I owe my life to 'Fruit-a-tives' and I want to say to those who suffer from Indigestion, Constipation or Headaches. try 'Fruit., a-tives'. Give this lovely fruit medicine a fair chance and you will get well the same as I did". F gill DREAMS V SAME TRUE SEASIDE EXCURSIONS‘ Wh CANADIAN PACIFIC Life Unbearable from Indigestion Health Restored by "F ruit-a-tives’f The Admit-aim 1'0qu China. Language. CORINE GAUDREAU. TERMS:--The property will be sold 'subject to a mortgage in favor of the Hamilton Provident Loan Society for the sum of $6,500. 10 per cent of the pur- chase money to be paid in cash on the day of sale, the balance in cash within 30 days, or the purchaser will carry $1,500 as a second mortgage on the said premis- es_at the rate of six per cent per annum. AfSinclair,‘ Esq., So'licitor'fdr: 'thsrvdrii'iaic, Tillsonburg) Ont. Further terms add condiiiohs irrigate 1crlpwnpq the day of sale. . " For fuller particulars apply to John B. Havens, Esq., Wlnona P. O.; J. A. Liv- iygtt.on,. .Aut.itionetr'c9rlrtttjbyi; or Victor On the premises is situate a good fruit orchard, consisting of about 19 acres of grapes in full bearing, 840 black currants, about 300 cherry trees, also strawberry and raspberry patches. A goodmew two storey house, fully equipped and two new frame barns. (and twenty links more or less to the cen- itre of a ditch running north and south through the said lot; thenCe northerly and parallel to the westerly limit of said lot and following the centre line of said ditch to the water's edge of l Lake Ontario; thence westerly and following the various windings of the water's edge of the said lake to the place of beginning; together with the right for the grantee and the owner or owners for the time being of the lands hereinbefore described and his and their tenants or servants and all other persons authorized in that behalf by him or them from time to time and at all times -hereafter at his and their will and pleasure for all purposes connected with the use and enjoyment of the said lands to pass and re-pass either with or without horses, cattle or other animals, carts, wagons, carriages or other vehicles, in, along and over a strip of land fifteen feet in width immediately ad- joining the lands of the Grand .Trunk Railway Company and extending from the easterly limit of said lot number seven to the easterly limit of the lands above described. MORTGAGE SALE ---0F--- Valuable Fruit Farm Township of Saltfleet _-_-_--"---------.-. """"uriuiimrriirimGiirrririiri"i'riii""iii CLASSES ARE NOW BEING FORMED by Miss Maxwell, R.N., graduate.ot New York City Hospital, and Post-graduate of Fordham Hospital, New York. FOrmerly_ superintendent of nurses at New Jersey Hospital, Trenton. Essential principles of nursing thoroughly taught. Number of students limited. Tuition, $15 for two weeks' course. 35 Bay street south, Hamilton. Telephone. Dated at St. of August, 1915 AND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that after such last mentioned date, the Exe- cutor will proceed to distribute the assets, of the'said estate among the parties en- titled thereto, having regard only to the claims of which he shall then have notice, and that the said Executor will not be liable for the said assets or any part thereof, to any person or persons, of whose claims notice shall not have been received at the date of such distribution., Dated at St. Catharines, this 20th day Catharines, in the County ot Lincoln, Bo-. licitor for the Estate of the said Edward Carss, their christian and surnames, ad- dresses and descriptions and full particu- lars of their claims, the statement of their accounts and the nature of their securities (if any) held by them. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to Sec. 56, Chap. 121, Revised Statutes of Ontario, 1914, that all creditors and others having claims against the Estate of the said Edward Carss, who died on or about the twentieth day of February, 1915, are required on or before the 1st day of Octo- ber, 1915, to send by post prepaid, or de- liver to. A. W. Marquis, of the, City of St. And I hereby can on all voters to examine said list and take immedi- ate proceeding to have any errors or omissions' corrected according to fam IN THE MATTER OF the Estate of Edward Carss, late of the' Village of Grimsby, in the County of Lincoln, gen- tleman. deceased. WEDNESDAY, SEBTEMBER Dated this 16th day of August, A D. 1915. _ YOTERS' LISTS 1915 " Municipality of the Township of North Grimshy, County of Lincoln Notice is herby given that.I have transmitted or derlvered to.the per- sons mentioned. in Section 9 of "The Voters' Lists Act" the copies i'equir ed by said section to be so trans- mitted or delivered of the list made pursuant To said act, if all persons appearing by the last revised Assess Tept Roll of the said Municipality to.be entitled to vote in the said Municipality at elections fer "mem.,. bers of the Legislative Assembly and the Municipal, Elections and that the said list was first 'posted at my odice at North Grimsnby on the 14th day of August, 1915 and remains there for inspection. T ' NOTICE is hereby given pursuant to the Statutes in that behalf, that all creditors and others having " claims against the Estate of Andrew Crown, late of the Township of Gainsboro, in the County of Lincoln, gentleman, de- ceased, who died on or about the 24th day of June, A.D., 1915, are required to send by post prepaid or to deliver to the under signed, a full statement of their claim on or before the 24th day of September, AI). 1915, and after that date he will proceed to distribute said estate accord- ing to law and will not be liable for any claims of which no notice shall have been received by him, at the time of distribu- tion. Dunnville, August 16, A.D., 19iti. WILLIAM A. CROWN, Executor. l' PRACTICAL-NURSING Notice to Creditors Notice to Creditors A. AV, MARQUIS, Solicitor tor the sald Estate. THOMAS W. ALLAN, Clerk of said Municipality. Dunnville, Ont the grantee " the time re described or servants , Executor, L195