f - .4 Woman 3 ï¬rms; wrought ans {viiâ€"$21.5 favsoï¬â€"ér-Taav;;§ dime; and the long-sought hgiress, 1: ml: ’1 Elias’Armyn, this proud ol'dâ€"xâ€"nglemax myonr father’s father; that Wfongec Info ‘33 {our mother; the villam whc without fully understanding the cause oi the trouble. All that the wily fals: friend had done, the son believed the father gun ty of. The bereaved and for- saken husband left his father’s house never to return. He became reckless, and still the destroyer was on his track urging him on, keeping him alienated from his father, who now longed for a reconciliation. After ten years he died, and the proud father wu left childless. Then this old man married, married†a . young "wife, who died within they and thenâ€"he was forced to see thaty ehis grand name and his ancestral halls must come into the hands of a distantrelative, a. man who came of a wicked and de- based as well as a. very distant bran h of the family, and who was hated by the old nobleman for many reasons. Hey had never dreamed oi this man as a possible heirâ€"but the man himself had schemed for Mars to this end. He wastho same 11.2.8 who had played the Judas to the chi man s son; the man who had made the mcther e. wanderer, the child homeless and nameless, driven the father to an untimely grave, and rendered the proud old man childless and desolate. When th'm man presented himself and his pro tonsiong, the oid lord swore that he shoulc never inherit his acres. Then he sent for me, and for years I have searched over Europe to ï¬nd his son's wife and child. WTl'y‘PghS 31? her misery, she left her home. and her friends lost all traec of her. A little mare ghan a. week after his d-‘parmre from his happy home, the young husband who had been decoyed away by afm'sa 1‘ port. of his father’s ill- ness, returned; he found his home deso- late, his wife and child g‘ 119. Then he returned to his father, accusing him as the author of all this misery, and the father believinghis visit to have been thr sole cause of the flight of his son’s wife, did not deny the charge; there wen many angry words, anduthey~ separated . gr 5 "Listen, my friend, and wm kuuw why." c- gauibiu' ~eatid himself. with the pun}, .1 innk still on his face, and with- ou; plush; for further explanation, the (luau-the fluid: as follows: "Mum tum; twentyyears ago. the only 5 .1. ..;‘ a. pz'nlhl and arrogant English noolrnmu :le deeply in love with a, yuan; an. who was the daughter of 2.11 l: LL if; of high family, who bib-i mil» 2:. xni>zi£ii:ilicv, marrying a haml- Swim young Frvnuhuxau. a. son of the \- “fi; . ,‘n The Ivmrriwgu had been a happy tlzu luH‘Ullu-K had died within the . ,. cur-k, m some malignant fever. leaving this daughter with a. small but smiitzicnt fortune, and otherwise at the mercy of to: World. As 1 have before state 2. (an was low-d by an Englishman of u ,‘ni, iiiayu'i. and 3110!“)? {Ll-$2? lkll dam of net parents they mm privatel; married ; 1-11: 5’ lived 1n seclusion fur more than a. year, and were very happy ; httpplul‘ than evx-r when their child, a girl, was b\ m. But presently theer. came a change. The father of the young husband knew nothing of this marriage; he believed his son to be travelling for pleasure, and had himself chosen a. wife to bestow upon him when he should re- turn. But one day there came an anony- mous letter, telling him of his son’s mar- ""riage, rat sailing the secluded home of the young pair, and biddin the father to go and .1118 for himself. i ow the young husband had trusted one prson with the secret of his marriage, had own permit- tud this trusted one to visit his home and know his beaujiful wife. This man be- trayed his trust; step by step he wormed his way into the conï¬d ace of his young wife, and when one day the husband went from home, for a two days' absence, his plot was ripe for development. 0:: that very day the father, blinded, mad with pride, anger and disappointment, came to the home where the young wife was alone. A terrible scene ensued, and it ended inthe father’s declaring that he would give his son his choice between her and him ; if he returned toher, then she might claim him, and keep him; i; he did not come back, she must abide by the consequences, the law should free his son. Well, he did not come back; through the treachery and deceit of the friend he had trusted, he wsskept away, and then the schemer came with a. false tale to the distracted wife; her husband had abandoned her, and returned to his father, this and much more she was made to believe, and then her mother's ï¬erce italia: blood asserted itself; she would take her child and go away; above all she would live. The ï¬ery old nobleman had made one mistake, the Church wou d not anuul the warring, neither would the Smte. Sh..- knew this, and she know. too, that her infant daughter was heiress, after har father, to one of the oldest names and finest estates in England. Still tristi'ug the false friend who had ‘ “Come In Jeï¬. And pray pardon uh me: I haw played you. Miss Armyn, is not th'm friend also. enntled to your gnï¬dexfce' ?" "'He' 13. mdeed. "’ said Lenore, warmly. “Come in, please, and hear what. this genslemau is about. to say.†Th- s adjumd. .md much wondenng, Gc nzlcr mu Jeiclosed the door and came tor... " ."d the grwup "I can L understand this," he said. At this moment there camea. quick step along the hall, and then tho door opencd, and Gentleman Jer‘f appeared upon the threshold. His face became very dark, as his eyes fell upon the in- trude: but Francis Fen-am arose to his feet‘with perxect comppsure, and said: "I am ammo of that,†replied he, bow in; toward the silent, old lady. “Then I shall bcgiu as 011%, only gnu-facing my story by saying, that I shad maku it as brief as pasaibie. And,†with a slight smile, "if I am not banished from your prcsuucu, I can enlarge upon in later." J - “He is, indeed :)7 said Lenore, warmly. If she sought. solutudo, she was doomed ‘Come in, pleass, and hear what. this 0 disappointment, for ~caroely ten min- utimxizu is about. to say. †MUS a Mr she had left the drawin room 7 : anxiJLm-d. and much wondermg, “1'3- Ru-hards, WU, arose and asked. anon Jeffclused the door and came leisurely up the sun‘s, stoppiuo‘ leisure} 7 ' 511;: 5‘ “p. . .-.a Aunts dojr. She came to c%nsult my; "'1 ma z undrrstzznd thus," he said. .vnuny lady upon some unimpormnn 3:33.25 1: (u. in, Ln shamming down stairs. I 41"‘115': Old matter, hub she remained 10119 x .' . 1‘ \,,.‘..,_m -' .u‘cer shat matter was disposed of chat? "1 mm» w bxcx: shamming,†roplied Fan Jug pleasant-1y, and seeming not, to ob- y. L ': m‘iva ,1. "1.153311, my friend, and #:rVu‘thn Miss Durand was yawnino . . '.. I . 1.. . ., ,' - ’ to“ “‘ “"‘“ ,hy. "’1‘! her “3-‘3 81'0“ mg heavy wnh slee; Noh'r‘nvlrslh. I» x. : _ A, . . ' Am "nunui. 1' \A‘flt‘l' himqn†'xï¬fh H'm I think that. 8.113011:- friends should know what I am about so tell you,‘ 'he rupxied, gmv e13. ' Then Sp... at ’ said Lenore, with a. bnsath of rclicf. "This good lady is a friend indeed. " Is your awry an ythiug that Othelâ€˜ï¬ ought. Lotto hear?"sh6 aaked. "Is 1: anyuning,†shudlering. ‘ that. must. be kaps a. Scoren?’ ’ The detective glanced at the um: .11: sitting on the other a du of the ï¬re. L ‘- nore interpletcd the glance. Lenore bent over the picture again. Her father. the father she had never hear! of. of whon she knew nothing; she had taco ' ed her mother’s face; her mother’s andwriting, and i: never once occurred to her now to doubt the; sincerity of the man before her. Soon she 100de up with aflash of her oldvn imperiousness. “Do you know my father ?"’ she asked. "Cï¬n you tell me about him ‘1’†Lenore hen: over the pxcmre and mur- mured, half to herself, ' I have seen it, "-or dreamed of it lon:g ago," then she looked up quickly, “if. 13 my’ ’â€"she broke ofl' abruptly,y and flushed painqu- I! ' “It is your mother’s husbandâ€"your hther. You have seen him. Miss Armyn; but you were a. very young child.†Pam hyper-under: «moonmdm Copyright. BY (CONTINUED. ) Danna the bed. T1116], with the other hand, he explores. Several articles he takes from underneathï¬a pillow, and then he re- places it and the sleeper’s head very gently, and to the stand whereon he placeq t things just removed from their hidznaiace. . ‘ 7 “Go to bed, Laura,†she said to the Eittle maid. “Poor child, you look tired, too; I will close Miss Aura’s rooms; go LU bed.†Laura obeyed quite willingly, and soon )lrs. Richards withdrew, leaving Aura Durand locked in a sleep from which she would not waken for hours. How fair mile is as she lies there under the soft glare of the wax lights; Aura never Meeps without thts,near her,and a} night Mrs. Richards has left a few wax tupu‘s ablaze, not only in the bed-cham~ her. but in the dressing~room and boudoir beyond. Moveless and still lies the fair sleeper. Tick. tick, tick, tick, the little bronze clock in the dressing-room tells off the r seconds, the minutes. almost an hour. , “ion the door of the boudoir opens as i1 ay the hand of a. spirit. Slowly, slowly, ‘ it swings inward, and then a. ï¬gure glides in, the ï¬gure of a man, a man clad in a 1 long. loose, gray garment, and with his ,- - face and head entirely hidden by a velvet 1 mask, and close-ï¬tting velvet skull-cap. 1 He closes the door through which he .;ame, and bolts it without making a. :ound ; then he takes up one of the wax tapers, and, holdingit in his hand passes through the dressinï¬room and ap- proaches the bedside. e holds the taper iloft then, and bends down, gazing stead- fastly at the sleeper. Then he starts back 48 if astonished ; but a moment later he I bends still nearer, helding the taper-so close that the blonde hair upon the pil- low seems almost endangered. At last he seems satisï¬ed with his scrutiny, and then goes back to the boudoir, replaces the taper, and draws from a pocket of the loose gray glnnent a tiny lantern of the “bull’s eye order; this he lights, . and the beams that shoot out are strong and bright. Nor he is ready for work. He moves Withovzt apparent effort, but as noiselessly as ashadow. He must be the very prince of burglars, this masked mu. 1 First, he goes straight to the bedside again, he put down the bull’s-eye, and de begins a seam about the bed. He puts in his arm underlhe pillow on which rests mi the head of {ï¬e sleeper, and lifts it from th: the bed. Th“, With the nthnr how-AR Ln , ea» 9.29 so :3â€: at awn-4m 5'13 set-a 2‘s}; ._._-.. v Hummus ucuamv 510W and. regu- lar, her clasped hands relaxed themselves and fell apart; she was sleeping. M13. Richards satisï¬ed herself on thxs point, and then she turned away with a. trium- phant smile upon her 1_ips. “n A ,._, w__ 9" ..v and)!» She pouied out. the water, and Aura. drank it obediently, and then closed her “YES as commanded. ' To and fro, £33.11}! fro, moved the deft hands of Mrs. Richards, and presently Aura‘s breathing begamq slow and regu- 1-_ l n 7‘ ‘ w __‘_ w“ “-5.“: vAsLA. "Youfl‘must have your water, I see,†said Mrs. Richards, touching the ewor. "Take a. sip then, and go to sleep.†.I u ’ *n Ah'd Aura. said that she did, thinking the while, with an inward laugh, of Nina. .Xnnin and her all night vigil. u",\. . _.._A ‘ "Now,†said“mls".'Richards, “pr to go to sleep. Do you feel in the ~~le»epyÂ¥ ?’_’ ,, to... ._ v., nun-U - Jug pleasantly, and seeming not to ob- ] ierVe that Miss Durand was yawning, I and Her eyes growing heavy with sleep. The burglar places the morocco case and the two packets in his bosom, and then without replacing the contents of the trunn, or closinw the hidden opening, he rises and gazes 11 mt him. His search is not yet ended. On the opposite side of the dressing-mom isa door openinginto a‘ large closet. This falls next under his examination. The walls are hung with dresses. wraps, all the paraphernalia of a Woman’s toilet that ever yet hung on hooks. On the floor are several boxes and tWo trunks, somewhat smaller than the one without. The masked man examines all the dresses, especially the darker ones. and feels in all the pockets. Then he turns his attention to the trunks and boxes ; they contain hats, boots, clothing, what not. The ï¬rst trunk he ï¬nds is not locked ; but the second and last to be ex- amined, resists his attempt to open it. Again he resorts to the bunch of keys, but they all fail him. He turns away from the trunk and seems to be at a loss. This is what he thinks as} he stands there: “I have searched these rooms, every nook and crevice of them; where then is the key to this trunk '9" . Some tho ht has occurred to him; he takes up the antern and hurries back to ' the bed-chamber; he pauses at the bed- . side, and bends above the sleeper. He pulls away the covering from about her shot. lders and throat, and then he opens awxy- from‘the white neck the robe that anldeniy she looked narrowly at the . .:irl. and then exclaimed with marked . - :zolicitude: "My dear child, how heavy and dull , your eyesl .ok.’ no.3 your head ache ?" And Aura, with seeming reluctance, nout’essed that it did; andmmarked that she would ring for Laura, if Mrs. Rich~ :rds would excuse her and retire. In- »:antly .‘vlrs. Richarls was at the Dell. "How tlmughtless I have been,†she >lll|l self-reproachfully, "to keep you up like this. Laura will put you to bed, and -' shall bathe that poor head for you. Now don't object, it will be a. pleasure to me, and I know I can relieve the pains. I am a strong: magnetizcr." lt was quite useless to object; Laura. , was summoned and the disrobin process oommeucetl. “hile Laura was rushing out her mistress’ blonde hair, Mrs. Richâ€" .‘rllS moved softly about, from the dress- ing room to the bedside, and back again. On a tiny stand near the dainty bed ~tood a little cwer and a glass. As Mrs. Richards, in one of her silent marches to and fro, passed this stand, her hand hov- x red for an instant over the drinking glass, and when she turned away three tiny crystal drops were in the bottom of that glass. At last Miss Durand was duly enscon- sed in the snowybedt â€"_~‘ Mun have emeralds- an “My dear child, how heavy and dull your oyesl rok! nous your head ache ?†And Aura. with seeming reluctance, "unfeswd than it. did; andmmarked that «he would ring for Laura, if Mrs. Rich~ ‘ :rds would vxcuse her and unite. In- cantly .‘vlrvl. Richarls was at the Dell. "HUW thoughtless have been," she will self-n-pruachfully, "to keep you up like this. Laura. will put you to bed, and 1' shall bathe that poor head for you. Now don‘t. object, in will be a. pleasure to me, and I know I can relieve bhe pains. I am a strong: mag-nether." A ura. Dwand rammed from tho shop- pmg cxpcdiziuu feeling. for some reason, :2 lo\-.' rpil'iis. During dmnor she seem- wd preoccupied, and soon aft“- she ox- cused hersulf. saying that shopping al- way< wen-ind her, and retired to her CHAPTER XLII -A SFRANG‘) PROCEED Lenore arose and stocgd before him. “ Do you believe me innocent '9" she asked. ‘ I do,†solemnly. "Andâ€"will others ever believe it ?†"i have crossed the ocean to ï¬nd and save You,†he replied; “and you have nwo strong champions in Neil Bathurst and Robert. J ucvlyn. Gentleman Jen knows their reputations. Ask his opin? ion uf your chunws." "1 know their reputations, and I know yours," said the gambler. Miss Armyn. you are safer than if protected by a. standing army}: “Balieve 1n him ? Indy Lenore, he has held at, arm’s length the? 93-36? mother and keen lawyer, at the ml: of all that a detective holds dear. _He, gnarled by a friend, a grand fellow hke blame“, in at this moment. busy {93031113 0110 Q'lspected parties in order tn mm: t._he gum where ‘ it. properly belongs. TWICO ‘you have evaded him, and bemused ting, another man would pronounco you gutlty. But twu hours at: -r yam-escape from his car- riag , half a. block {mom this place, Neil B Lthurst said to me, ‘In spite of this wemiug g lilt, l believe her Innocent, and all» shall not. be â€Tested while it is in my power to prevent it} 'f "Is that the truth? ï¬o you believe in him ?†Lenore; turned he} eyes upon him and any), glmogt breatghlesaly : allud‘ heyare' "Saharan, mpï¬?‘ Iw-mmake as feast ,,_ _- _..- “away, uuu. mes Iorth the ch ' am with its pendent ‘h‘y‘go far I V d »: am safe,†sham tters “an I will make u ’ n 4 assurance doubly sure even \ . “Ah, they are there,†she says, draw ? mg a. breath of relief. “I put them there, ' Jest as I did all the rest, for effect, . and I : d1d. sleep after all. The day had been; trymg, but I did not know that I needed sleep so much. Nothin is disturbed; ‘ they left ah the candles urning, I sup peg; thmkmg that I should weken soon.†0 Puts her hand to her throat and 9V5 forth the chain with “in yen-12..-; near mommg; she oes to the window then and peers out t rough the blind: Yes, day is breaking, but how gray it is. “Can it be possible,†mutters the girl- ' 11 w that woman to put me to SI , and haveI slept all night like this ?†Sud enly she darts to the bed and lifts the pillow. hers on, with calm upturned face and regular breathing. Truly Mrs. Richurds is a. wondesful magnetizer. It is gray dawn before the sleeper wakens, wnich she does with a. start and a sudden excla- mation. She sits up, looking about her in bewilderment, then she springs sul- gionly from her bed and runs to the dre<<l° mg-room. The little clock tells her it :5 “no... .. A,,, V___ -o..., mail “unau- ing what appears theothree packets taken from thence, and closing the aperture in the false bottom. He works carefully, methodically, making no mistakes. When this last trunk is closed and locked he goes once more to the bedside, puts the keys again under the pillow and the two detached ones once more upon the chain suspended about the neck of the sleeper. ‘ Then he turns about and surveys the room, to assure himself that everything is just as when he ï¬rst entered ; he moves a chair a little, shakes out the folds of a curtain, surveys in the same manner the dressing-room and boudoir, and then, like a. shadow, he steals away, closing the doors behind and re-enters no more. Still the wax tapers shed their mellow light, still the little bronze clock ticks ofl‘ the moments nd still Aura Durand slum- 1....... A -.. ,_,__, __- any“ Mu UPULLS awxr from the white neck the robe that is scarce whiter, thereby exposing to view a:slender gold chain ; it is long and worn loos 1y about the neck. He inserts his one ï¬n er under this chain and _dra.ws it caref 'upward. Ah, see! On the end of the chain are two small keys. The man’s eyes glitter as they fall upon them. With deft ï¬n rs he removes them from ‘ the chain, an then he glides back to the closet and again bends over the trunk.‘ The key ï¬tsâ€"the trunk is open. As be- fore, everything is removed; but not with so much care, for this receptacle contains discarded clothing, fragments of everything that woman accumulate, and all crowded in, in a hasty manner; at the bottom of this trunk there lies a small black valise; this the man lifts out quickly and glances at critically; then to its lock he applies the second hey. Alain hut in EI‘IRAAna'I. . rlides‘ “I have searched these rooms, every nook and crevice of them; where then is the key to this trunk ?" Some tho ht has occurred to him ; he takes up the antern and hurries back to the bed-chamber; he pauses at the bed: side, and bends above the sleeper. He‘ pulls away the covering from about her sholeers and throat, and then he opens awxy- from the white neck the robe that is same whiter, thereb exposing to view n'alnndn-u an?) -L-:_ . Finally, he pauses before a. trunk that stands in the dressing room, a lady's travelling trunk, hug: enough for 3. Flora McFlimsy. It is locked ; and now he glides back to the bedside, takes from the stand‘ the bunch of keys, and, in a mo- ment is kneeling beside the trunk, trying the lock with key after key. At last he has the right one, and presently the trunk is open, and he is rapidly turning over and examining its contents. It has a ' great many compartments, after the fashion of ladies’ trunks, and, one after ' another he opens them. Then he lifts out a. tray, and begins swiftly to remove the dresses and shawls, the f urbelows and laces, the soft Silks and dainty linen. And now the trunk is empty, or so it seems. and the burglar is bending over it running his hands along the Sides and over the bottom. Presently he plunges his hand'into his pocket and draws out a bundle, wrapped in soft flannel; this he unrols, and then places upon the floor, beside him, some small and queer-look- ing ste l instruments. One of these he takes in his hand, and half his body dis- appears within the trunk; then it emer~ gls, only to disappear again with another twisted bit of steel. When he again rears ‘ himself he holds in his hands not only the instruments of steel, but a flat morocco case and twu flat packages, The bottom of the trunk, or what seemed the bottom, has parted in the centre, and underneath is a shallow space. It is a trunk such as has been used by smugglers. A trunk with a false bottom. to sum ing places. he invertq chain). he searches their paddings. he feels about the cush- lons of divans and lounges, he overturns footstools, he peers behind pictures and hangings, he searches everywhere. WW râ€"“"' _â€" wâ€"wduv uuv JCWUID- Then he takes 11 a tiny, ele tly L mounted pistol. It is loaded, r951? for . instant use. He turns his face toward the sleeper as he holds it; perchance he smiles behind his mask. Aura. Durand is prepared to defend herself, it seems ;‘ but she is quite defenseless now. The man turns his face away at last, and bends over the gleaming little weapon, examining it closely. It is of foreign manufacture, this he sees at a glance; and his quick eye soon discovers the name of the maker engraved upon it in tiny letterin . And now is does something strange, something unprecedented, for a burglar; again he hits the head of the sleeper, and carefully replaces the jewels, watch and pistol, Just as he found them, retaining nothing but a tiny bunch of keys. Then, lantern in hand, he moves about the room, and from that to the next; he opens dressing cases, drawers, receptacles : of every sort; he searches forsecret hid- l __._ â€". v -uvvu WWW WU‘UD. “Aura,7fx:oni her Eggherf’ the burglar merely glanced at this, and then closes the case an plgces it besidg the jewels. In}. A_ L , , V-_ "U vâ€".-..... came of the watch 1s 93151-3qu these words LA A «k, It is a. smaller cine; opening it. he be- holds a. beautiful dinmondmtudded watch with its golden ‘gljttering chain. On the -_ n- -l AL A It is a. >eper wakens, wiich and a sudden excla- ‘: bolting about her 311) she spripgs sul- ; the valirseasria‘rfngé‘s' .‘LL __, 1 3 Do mothers make it a. point to ï¬nd time _’ to mend broken toys, to tie the knots, to - kiss away the bruises and to answer the ‘ uumberless questions as the children grow vlder? They should never allow them- elves to forget that what seems of little .mportance to them may be of the most vital importance in forming the character of the child. Lastly, d9 mothers use sound common seneepontmually and in lugs doses in training and caring for their children ? If not, they certainly should. Do mothers enjoy the company of their little ones and take pleasure in supplying their wants ? The child that is left an- tirely to the care of hired nurses is ,pftsn the child that causes‘grlef £01- the mother in later years; and the thoughtful mo- lther will realize that she is not blame- ess. Do mothers remember that a. child is liable to cry from the pain of an over-full stomach as from the cravings of hunger? This is a. fact that seems to, be overlooked, judging from the usual practice. Don’t get into the habit of feeding him every time he cries. Do mothers see that there is nothing tight around the little form. Do they realize the importance of having every garment loose and light and warm? A "cross" baby will soon become “such a sweet child†with care in this respect. Do mothire wrap the baby quickly in flannel upon taking him from the bath ? This is very important, and also to see that he is dried quickly and thoroughly, exposing him to the air as little as pos- sible while wet. ,a "â€"-vâ€"â€"vu vuuv uv NULL! ““1111 than good, and bleaching the baby with salfron tea ? Do mothers use warm water and milk instead of soup I or washing the infant with scrofulous tendencies ‘8 Two parts water to one part milk is about the right proportion. Soap will often prove irritat- ing to tender skin, but the milk and water is cooling and healing, and will keep the skin soft, smooth and clean, and its use may be continued until the child is at least two months old. i Do mothers keep a. hst of sxmplo reme- dies at hand P Do they use nature’s remedies instead of dosing the tiny tots with strong medicinos_tha.t do more harm LL-†7 ‘ l Do mothers realize 7 the necessity of keeping the tiny feet always warm ? Lit~ tle woollen socks, with long tops, secure- ly fastened, will be better for the day- time than the pinning blanket. If they seem cold during the night, rub the little feet and legs gently and thoroughly un- til there is a good circulation and then fasten in the warm pinning blanket. Do mothers know the best method of treatin a. child troubled with constipa- tion ? ï¬Don’t dose with strong medicines, but rub the abdomen night and morning with olive oil, gently kneading it during the process. Do mothers apply hot cloths to the feet and stomach of the little sufferer in case of colic ? This is the very best remedy. Let the peppermint remain in its bottle. Do mothers give pure water to their little ones two or three times a. day ? An infant will not be liker to be troubled with “sore mouth" if this is attended to. Do mothers train their babies to go to sleep at a. certain hour each evening ? It will take but a. few evenings of persistent efl‘ort to get them into this habit, and un- told comfort to both mother and child will result. Do mothers shade the baby’s eyes from strong light? They will soon become weakened without this precaution. V____ a... nuuus cue HUN! 3 to care for themselves; and he believes, ‘ ï¬nally, that if government, which as- sumes to guarantee life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, in reality uaran- tees nothing but wretchedness an want, he is living in an age of exquisime re- ï¬ned. barbarism rather than in the noon- day light and love of Christian charity and pro ssive civilization.â€"From “Pro. blems Egon the Western Farmer.†by the Governor of Kansas, Hon. L. E. Lo- welling, in North American Review for January. The western larmer is a philosopher from necessity. Rapidly tending toward poverty, he demands to know why, and is intelligent enou h to answer his own question in the light of reason. He be- lieyes the prime cause of all his woes is the manipulation of the money s stem of the country by unscrupulous andymer- cenary interests. He believes the decline of prices follows the shrinkage of the volume of money in circulation, and that shrinkar'e in volume results from legisla- tion. ï¬e does not believe that the gov- ernment should increase the interest bur- den by borrowing gold, while our native hills are ï¬lled with silver, and labor stands idly awaiting an opportunity to take it from its hiding place. He believes that government is, or should be, for the good of all the people; that levislation should be for the multitude rather than for the few, and he is beginning to be- lieve, if government can guarantee him nothing but hopeless poverty, that gov- ernment has failed its mission. He be- lieves that ovemment should afl'ord pro- tection to e weakâ€"the stronger-ea able fn (mm (rm «LA..-,.I___ , more serious international foo which is confronting the empire. The army is the fundamental basis of the empire, for the army is the nation armed.†, a“. -_- â€"_VV.o, calms ; 'vv 6 stand in the face of serious times, but, as in 1870, when the Princes of the German nation stood together in triumph over a foreign nation, so today they stand to- gether in the presence of their royal com- mander, iving shining proofs of the union of Germany’s Princes and her peo- ple. Germany. will also trinmphoyer a. on Ann “Am A..- _ The mild weather and bright sunshine attracted lar e crowds of people to wit- ness the peruse of the Berlin garrison on Tuesday. The Emperor walked from the castle to the arsenal, and, after reviewing the troops by companies, returned to the castle in the same way, the crowds cheer- ing him as he passed. The Emperor ad- drressed the ofï¬cers, saying: ‘fWe stand .‘n n... l--- -n , The Western Farmer a Philosophen _- '_- a...“ saw Evan“ at the end; then she bends forward. swings the black valise to and fro and suddenly lets go her hold upon it; the swaying impulse given it sends it out over the water, and then it falls and with a- dull splash disappears from sight several feet from the pier. For a. moment she gazes at the place where it went down, as if half expecting it to reappear. and then she turns and swiftly retraces her steps. And still the gray shadow is behind her. . W -s‘. ~_~_â€" a"? uunuuw may IUL' lows, seeming hardly to be a. human thing in that gray morning mist. 0n she goes upon her stren errand. and on ghdes the shadow. e has been moving nearer and nearer to the lake, down where there are no laborers, who may soon come, on to where a. dark pier is grimly outlined through the gloom. Then she glides out upon this pier, out, out until she stands -L ALA It is not yet fairly daybreak, the streets are silent, deserted ; she glides swiftly on, and out from somewhere glides an al~ most impercep‘tible‘grax shagiow that {ol- 1-..._‘ -A â€"_- L _ -__ ...... w"... u trunk ; hurriedly, carelessly she pulls out one mung after another, and ï¬nally she draws forth the black valise. In anather moment the candles are extinguished, the trunk is reï¬lled and closed, and Aura. Durand glides from her room, locks the door care ully behind her and cautiously, silently passes throtfllli the broad hall down the stairs, and ally pauses at the ‘ street door. Carefully .she draws back the bolts and lets down the chainz then, with the black vslise tightly clutehed in her small hand, she hurries out, down the stï¬tely steps arid ewey. _ her neck the slenedr chain_ an; unlgoks L-.._L . L..__'AJI - Speech at the Garrison Pal-ado Mothers Should Know. EMPEROR WILLIAM. (To BE CONTINUED.) 1 The relations betweeiz Englishm Americans '.in China? Egypt, and; and last yqar 'he 'vmlta of 13139... will and purpose, without compromise, concentrated and crystalized into votes at the ballot-box. \ This makes an imperative necesmtyfor a distinctive prohibition partyâ€"a party composed of concientious and determine; votergfla party not only combined hoses cure Jug“. law, but a. party with moral and pohtloal power to enforce iihe lung f entire prohibition without compromise or conciliation. ’ u-.- -v--. uvvlvu Ava. vuu yummy. The moral revolution and the grand re- sults of prohibition can only be brought about by the united effort of an earnest, determiiled people, with their combined ___'n l._ The liquor trafï¬c is now entrenched in politics, and it is there we must meet it ; so unless the people infliggmajes‘ty of then- political power, are aroused to com: bino in one grand, united phalanx of op- position, and through the virtue there 13 in the ballot hurl these autocratic de- spoilers, this piratical horde of unscrupu- lous liquor dealers and their sympathizers and abettors, into an abyss of annihila- tlon, there is nothing left but certain anarchy and destruction for our country. 'l‘1\n ._ "A I ._.___AL, A - The ‘ Blondes should not try to butter color ; it’s only for’tho Clear, olive-skinned brunette New white morocco pure" cases have flat borders of g gilt, not ornamented bu_t hig ed. Those are very elegant; A new thing is a. toothbrt in ebony or polished ivory; can be detached and placed; in the hollowed handle. 1 Boating serges come blue and ecru, and are q? summer wear. Round ï¬re Opals set form a. beautiful scarf shares the opal’s favor. The modern smoking 531 silver receptacle to hold , root, etc. Fancy pencils for an old fashion revived. Linen lawns with blue der beautifully and wear Se’rve iced tea. in long, 1 a. thin slice of lemon floeA Public speaking is 1 smatest trouble in 2 namely modest man a: gree. He is, however, and no one can get bet lic function thsén he c: is no formal speaking}; The Sultan of Turkey alwa; irinks alone, although'he gene largo retinue in attqndance. wither table, plates, hire or only a spoon and his ï¬hgers, f: ‘ he ï¬snes out his food him: a ser saucepans. ' The Shah of Persia. has ï¬ve mix-teen daughters. H1": thre .0115 have twenty-onef‘childr k‘exsian ofï¬cial year book ment: :oyal family three brothers sisters of the shah, whilg the l the cousins number 140. " Wanted. a Detox-min. Friendly Relations of England and America. H ,ï¬- __ VWUIVI - 1! nature were'to disclose her processes man would havx‘flm audacity to patent her inventions. x5 Praise not a. servant too greatly, lest he be pnifed up and masterful ; nor too lxttle, lest he be discouraged. Homely truths are like home remedies â€"apt at times, but applied upon every oc-l casion whether they ï¬t the case or not. I Sentences by Judge. The seed is stronger than the soil. False alarms ci‘eate false securities. Our pie-existent habits are our present tendencies. In the whirl ‘ take the dust. Life is a combination of which the see- ret is not given. The mundane World is conducted on the defensive plan. Fidelity is the conservative preserver of type, custom and race. igig of time some one must \Vhen a thing is hard to endure some- 1ing harder may come to make it easier. So I turned unto the organ. And bean to play the air 0! the tender, sacred 0 cm “Angela, Ever Brig-h anti Fair.†Ah! I neVu- sang so sweetly. All In: soul seemed upward turned, All my . 011th endeavor Throush those earnest carols burned Onl} Fannie: of -â€"-wn’ uuv unu- Tuter the lelther football After Opponenta' blood.‘ After some noses are broken, - And faces daubed with mud ; Alter the ban has been under And Scrimma 0 has “heeleé to halves." AM the Klmcgwe wonder -Wh0 Waiwho was kicking our calves. After we’ve beaten them soundly. We feel’a if the earth was ours ; at when they’ve done to us ditto. We theno more strength than flowers. But "Rugby." the game for the sturdy. A Ttlekwe‘fker pnea go to_the wall; , cl vuw 5U («U but: will], ' Malamute, after a touch-down. nu me out I: alter the {CELLANEOUS READING The Crown Prlnoo. AVE AND 0TH EB WISE. ‘fAItex- the Ball.†The Singer. SAXON BEEN STONE LAKEHURS’E‘ ' SA MTARH â€990900. 9 cocooooooooo‘o. .000oooowowoooooooooQOQOo. The margin of proï¬t. in farming is to small to admit of any unnecessary waste TEE SEOBE’ ‘ 28 Bank of dommerca Ohnmb n, “Now, remember." said a charming wo- man to her now butler; who had a faint conception of a business for which be de- manded the highest wages. “remember. in announcing meah you are to say: ‘Breakfast is ready.’ 'Luncheun is ready.’ ‘Dinner is served.‘ " “All right. mum," replied the proud‘ butler. Not long after, th’m charming woman vénturcd to experiment on a dinner to a few intimate iriends. Fancy the expres- sion on her countenance when. on up- pearing at; the drawing-room door to an- nounce dinner, this literal butler ox- claimed in clarion tones : â€TRIO MOTORS from one-hut lac-u l{mm-up to Eleven Horse Power. Wm: anti we: r lured vol e c 33% °q "g n P0 and whether an led atroo ,r or oflzerwiu. pp! by romm'og'ypn: panama)“. -_-_L_ A, , -â€". a ,___ .V.. «u. AuuL-lul caycubu.‘ “11011 the old man died. Then another ball was given for the beneï¬t of his orphan chi]- dren.-Alvan F. Sanburn. iu the Janu- ary Forum. Slavesto1 _ ' "'J l""’"'v ““" Eighty-year-olrl Bridget Mulcahy. toothless, but still bright-eyed, may be seen almost any fair day smoking her pipe on the stoop of No. 24). Her hus- , band,Jixn, a day laborer, died eighteen years ago. For seven years before his death he was blind, and his misfortune, joined to his good nature, made him a favorite. Soon after Jim’s death Bridget dislocated a shoulder, thereby perman- ently losing the use of her right arm. She became destitute. The neighbors lent her many things (cooking dishes and a. comforter amen ' them) and after a little Michael Roe, w 0 was himself behind with his rent, gave her a. home with his family. Then her friends, “the boys from Ireland," “put up†a. raï¬le for her which netted 8410. She rented a cellar room for ï¬fty cents a week and took in two girl lodgers at ten cents anight. From that time to this she has lived in a cellar or a garret and shared her room with girl lodgers; but she has depended largely for her support upon the ratiï¬es the “boys†have continued “to put up" for her once or twice a year. Three years ago Michael Roe, by that time a widower, was stricken down with a fatal sickness. Then the “boys from Ireland†got their heads together and “put up" a beneï¬t ball for Brid et’s former bene- . factor. Tickets were ftycents each.and the ball netted $75. There was some- thing left toward funeral expenses when But the most significant expression of the spirit of village life in Bulï¬nch street, and a truly beautiful one, is the rvudiness of neighbors to help each other out of trouble. Prudential motives force this exercise of brotherly love to he kept so far out of sight in streets of this kind that, 3 as a rule, its amount is absurdly under- estimated. The well»dressed visitors of charitable societies, however remote from charity their fabricated excuse iorcalling,r may seem to be. are yet known for what they areâ€"a charity picket line. Brotherly Love In a Tenement Street. A spoonless must rd put is a recent in- vention. By pressin apistun rod in an air-tight. raceptacle t e requisite amount of mustard is forced through a suitable sprout. The air beingexcludcd, the mus- tard is always fresh. It is said that window panes of porous glass are being made in Paris. The min- ute holes in the glass are too ï¬ne to per- mit of a. draught and yet large enough to cause a pleasant and healthy ventilation in a. room. is in um , bï¬t: it can bé .flolaZd: Iggether so that one person can handily carry it up and down stains. A baby carriage designed especially for the use of those who live in flats, looks just like any other baby carriage when it ' ' .. Luenh 1 .--‘ - In In H, A car shaped like a. bathtub, in which the passengers either sit. or recline as if in abed, is in use in Berlin. It has three wheels and is propelled by a. naphtha. motor. Steel barrels, made from sheets ranging in thickness from one-sixteenth to a. quar- ter of an inch, are coming into use. Paper spindles for yarn spinning are now used as a substitute for those of steel. the United States and the Chicago to Eng- land, showed how nuine and hearty is the feeling of goodgsm existing between the two countries. Efforts also are being made by difl'erent sections of the com- munity on both sides of the Atlantic to brin about some sort of practical union or al ' nee between Great Britain and the United States. With such sentiment openly and repeatedly expressed, surely it might be possible to effect an alliance so advantageous to each other in the event of war and so invigorating in times; of peace. Putting aside question of senti- ment, however, the selï¬sh interests of both countries would appear to encourage the idea of reunion. It is notable that after the most bloody battles, but before the actual Declaration of Independence, the colonists strained every nerve to ef- fect a peaceable conclusion of the dim- culties which were upsetting the hitherto happy relations existing between Great Britain and the States, although it was throu h the imbecility of Great Britain that the rupture ever occurred. No one can think the colonies were wrong in ï¬ghting the War of Independence, under the circumstances forced upon them. In fact, they would not have been worthy descendants of Britain had they not done so. V Shorlhnnd :m-i Typewriï¬nq, cr'ra :cza Business Education at The Northern Business College. L rcularu'ru. C. A. FLEMING, I’nn'!, Uwcn mound. Om. The New Butler. 'nrunm. 77/5, Works of Genius. expenses when bound, Om. F. S. SCHNEIDER, Watchmaker and Jeweller 391 George Street, PETERBOROUGH, . ONTARIO! RE MEMBER SCHNEIDER’S H’éeu in town for Didi/307m, I’Valc/m lewd/er], Etc. Rcybairing in q]! bravzcées. All work guar- anteea’. Téd Bzg'c'l’ [\Q‘afls {/16 /)’c‘ll(_‘fll CALL WHEN IN TOWN. @364 GEORGE-ST. WE BUY FOR CASH Price and Fall and Winter Tweeds, Worst- eds and Friezes. Has the newest lines in Snitings, Overcoat ings and all lines of Boots a nd Shoes PETERBORO’. MILLS BROS. GEORGE STREET, PETEREORBUEH SELL FOR CASH. OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. CALL ON THEM. FALL AND 'WINTEB HATS Mills Bros. Rates are only about one half of that charged by stock ALL companies. For further information apply to A. C. MAYCOCK. General Agent, 12-3m Box 324. Bailieboro. Ont l I THE BEST AND CHEAPEST FOR FARHERS It i: the only com any isgueing Four Year Blan 'et Pohcy. The Dominion Mutual Fire Insurance Association. . 1'. ansom, [ESE “'c lukl' ‘lxis means «If in- forming the people of Millhrook (which ncrlmps, u generally known) that we have always on hand at choice lot of moms. If you wish a. special cut lvt us know and we will supply you ALI. ORDERS PROMPT]. Y DELI H To ANY PART 0}†THE To n v FIRE Nattrass 8; Dunford 389 George St, Peterboro. HAVE THE BEST QUALI'I'IES IN Meredith HAVE THE NEWIZN'I LINKS 1\ THE FASAIONABLE TAILOR, Tonsorial Artist. PARLonâ€"King-st 8c Ken's bunk. Shaving, Hui .. ï¬brook. oppouite Wood r-cuLting.Sha.mpooingand eve “ng else in the wnsorial line carefully mum - e to. Butcher Shop CITY BARBER SHOP T. H. BRYANS Something nice Mills Bros. Come and. see our stock before purchasing elm-where. Bran New Shades, Styles and Patterns in Suitings, Oven-coatings Trowserings. PETE Pete will be happy to have his old friends and customt-rs call on him and have thrir orders {or their Undertagelfs {1nd Practical We kce constantl ' on hand a large took of urniture 0 all kinds. Our Lock is well assorted and displayed in hree Inge allow rooms Nu trouble t!- how goods. \\'e are also manufac- urers uf the Excelaior Washing Ma- hine. Bgst in the Market. Embalmerc â€Best of Testimonials can b given. GENERAL STORé â€"-= DEALER 1N PETE SIMONS COMPANY, THE PEOPLES’ ï¬n guaranteed. Full lines 01' Cents Furnishings. FURS â€"-ANI) N0 OLD STOCK. Everything bran new and fresh from the ~1:16 George St., Opposite the Examiner Book Store. V l'lfOJIl’Tl. 1' DELI PERI!!! '.-l RT OI†TUE T0 ll .\'. 000000000000 SIMONS 8: CO. - 416 George FALL SUITS AND OVERCOATS. Gent‘s Furnishings always in stock WM. LA N G. Don’t forget the 1)] £00â€" NESEI JAP- w mm: H. uuacr we imprmsion that the taste )5 so Ochclmmlluc EAS lu coumcnct any beneï¬t. h 5 might otherwise be 1;- - them. To such we dash»: A to prove that this is a dc- " “ cided error, as in our pre- _ paration, “Maltine with Cod Liver Oil . ' ' not only is ‘- ‘ 5%; theobjecxionablctastcen- . '3 tirely removed, but the ‘I #1:: preparationis rally pala- (11‘s: tableâ€"relished alike by . old and young. It is the VA ideal “builder," and will Addnss Postal Card to The Maltine Manufacturing Com pany, 36 Wellington St. East, Toronto Graduate ufllw CIeveland can guarantee satisfaczion Competition. to take 1t under the Many persons to whom would be of the verv area“ IF YOU WANT ;( MILBROOK, MISS. E. MELVILLE’S, 424 GEORGE STREET, PETERBOROUGH. PONTYPUDL -LARMER’S LIVERY! His Enlarged Portraits 1n Oil or Water Colors, India. Ink, Sepia or Crayons have no super- ior on this Continent. All work imperiahablc. 170 Charlotte-am, Peterboro’. Ground floor Studio. No stairs to climb. TRUEST, Andlflo st Artistic ARE THE BEST \VAS rlcu «Gmrd young dru‘ers. If you “amt a ï¬rst-elm» horse, a good rig, or turnout of any descrip Lion. dosh; fail to call at this stable. E. B. EDDY’S MATGHE: every ten asks for and gets E. B. Eddy's Matches Experience tells them this. If you are the tenth and are open to conviction, try Stable and nfl‘xce on Tupper UNIQUE. A cute little box of real Japanese Tooth Powder (im- ported) will be sent by mail free on receipt of 15 cents. stamps or silver. Makes teeth like pearls. Crow Med. 00., 43 Rowan} -Lr. , A street, Toronw CALL AND SEE THEM AT THE NEWEST ART MATERIALS KEP HAVE ARRIVED. IX STUCK. STAMPING DONE. "f the Cieveland School of Cultin lll’mnï¬c‘and..- “y- “A. “,3“ H. WALLIS, PHOTOGRAPHS H. WALLIS, FASHIONABLE TAILOR, H PONTYPOOL. Bromies very greatest value '. W. LARMER. Cod Li \"1' Mam of black mills. 5t reeL. refuse CHISHOL. AU CT IOXEER. nucnded 10 Tax-me and dams . onion or 0'1 MING ALL 003158111 ed accordmg Panama:- a: to .3“ Chang“ move .10 15' uwnded w. IIIIM nmnuug 0F U inu‘y (‘olh‘tfl Animalumatw‘ m beam-m “was! with we ‘3 ted: Dominion Hob 1. â€If ION}. ‘ o_\' E\' to Zoan - security. and lower mourns I PETERBORO'. Cn‘IL EXGIX m vm'ous. ARMERS' A) discounted. l ( and: and the U1 The (Interior. of 9 23-7 gems made 01 BETHANY. PERRYTOW N. A: Duilmn. : untied Date I REPORTER onioc‘ T. B. CO Millbmk. Psmcuiu atwntit Causes modenne ct... oppouxe cud W Ofï¬ce Jilin C. Booleiy m m XV .IJ DER 0F third Timmy tho Home Circylc 90:1; 0! meeting ARRISTEPM i Private and the lowest run. A: Bethany on 21: month. w. n. mpu. BONDO an: emu-u Rn bush. jun-be: once in Onmrlo day or euéh mon' IOI'S f I’LL] B N. C. McK‘ Millbrook. 41 S o 6. Meets the a Home Circle fleets third no: room- ova Lech s. W. CLARK W. ARCHER. N HILL Tunas! a eluding q w. Anemia. a Reference ‘OCRT IVAN RCHXBALD , RIAGE Ll‘ rc'noxmzn L. LAPPJ VOYAL CA? 1.1. 903155.“ “'0 Gee .1 (2...? . resszna UEEN‘S l'ni‘ , of WCOHQ ‘zx'rxs'r. $1 HJ‘BROOK 'ILL visit 01‘ mdrhidnx RANN [often Annie their hula 0 $1113 h 12*1 I' UN you ? I the ht when you. came that on were a detec‘give." y “I am a deï¬ctive, my lady. I am Francis Fe. of Scotland Yard," ' Lenore’s face became suddenly grave. “You have come on a fruitless min-ion,†she said, gloomily. “I must ii“ and die an outcast like my poor mother." “You are wrung. Lady Lenore; you Itis a smaller case; opening it he be- holds a beautiful diamond-studded watch with its golden glittering chain. On the case of the watch is engraved these words: “Aura, from her Father;†the burglar merely glanced at this, and then closes the case and places it beside the jewels. Then he takes up a tiny, elegantly mounted pistol. It is loaded, ready for 2" w t' .5' , I 1 l Woman’s crime. ' BY AR ELK-DETECTIVE. one hang after another, » moment the candles 7.3" ,, the trunk is reï¬lled and door care Published by permission of the owners of the Silently passes 'cr dreamed of it. long ago.†then she looked up quickly, “it is my'Vâ€"shc broke off abruptly. and flushed painful- ly. “It is your mother's husbandâ€"your a safe shelter until the storm .‘3 past and the true criminal brought to light. _Neil Bathurst, the detective, 18 your friend and not your enemy.†Lenore turned her eyes upon him and examining it closely. It is of foreign manufacture, this he sees at a glance; and his quick eye soon discovers the name of the maker engraved upon it in are silent, deserted; she glides on, and out from somewh again he hits the head of the sleeper, and carefully replaces the jewels, watch and pistol, just as he found them, retaining nothing but a tiny bunch of keys. Then, lantern in hand, he moves about the and nearer to the lake, Lenore bent over the picture again. are no laborers, Her father. the father she had never hear! of. of when she knew nothing; she had rcco nized her mother‘s face; “Believe in him ? Lady Lenore, he has held at arm’s length that eager mother and keen lawyer, at the risk of all that a detective holds dear- H0, aided by a footstools, he peers behind pictures and hangings, he searches everywhere. Finally, he pauses before a trunk that stands in the dressing room, a lady’s travelling trunk, hug: enough for a Flora Mch‘limsy. It is locked; and now he glides back to the bedside, takes from the stand‘ the bunch of keys, and, in a mo- ment is kneeling beside the trunk, trying the lock with key after key. At last he has the right one, and presently the trunk is open, and he is rapidly turning over and examining its contents. It has a great n.any compartments, after the fashion of ladies’ trunks, and, one after another he opens them. Then he lifts out a. tray. and begins swiftly to remove the dresses and shawls, the f urbelows and laces, the soft silks and dainty linen. And now the trunk is empty, or so it seems. and the burglar is bending over it running his hands along the aides and over the bottom. Presently he plunges his hand'into his pocket and draws out a bundle, wrapped in soft flannel; this he unrols, and then places upon the floor, beside him, some small and queer-100k- ing sto l instruments. One of these he takes in his hand, and half his body dis- appears within the trunk ; then it emer- feet from the pier. ’l‘he wicctlve glanced at th" V-‘M. «Hi ring , half 8'. block from this Place, Neil Sitilllghu Eli'llidlcl‘ suds of ihe ï¬rs. l.-- Buhurst said to me, ‘ln Spite of this nor. lam-apical}. the glance. eventing grilt, l believe her innocent, ls your Mury anything that t-IlMV's and rhi‘ shall not be untested While it is r ugh: not By h.~.ir '2" {n.- iLskHl. "ls :1 in my pr-Wer to prevent 1° . anv in: g. ‘ ~hullcrlng. "that mw‘t b0 honor: arose and stood before him. kcbs a hi'ulcl?†l “ Do you believe as innocent t’" she . i think that all your friends should, asked. ‘ I do," solemnly. know “h"la I ..m about to tell you," he} . . .1. "A ndâ€" will others ever believe it ?†1“: Li.“ . "X‘LLVL’l '. Riff: cumin,“ sci-3. Lcnote, with n "i have crossed th: ocean to find and brea:h of X‘:'llt‘l.. "This nrood lady is a, save vou," he replied;."nndV you 11th iii-iii indtcd.‘y 1 two strong champions 12 Neil Bathurs! “l on: were 01' that" R‘Plicd 110. ‘UW‘ ' ‘ulli Robert .locvlyn. Gentleman Jen in; tow-am tlic sllt'ub old lady. :‘leu l knows their reputatigns. Ask lll') Opin- sha-l b.-gin at onc- , only pr facmg my ion of your chances. . story by saying, that I shall make it as --l know-_ their rolpdtablons, and Iknow yours.“ said the gambler. 'Mm Armyn. brirl'as posiblc. And.†with a. slight . . you are saier than if protected by a standing army“. she turns and swiftly retraces (TO BE CONTINUED.) EMPEROR WILLIAM. ness the para ing him as he srmle, "if lam not banishclfrom your prism ncc. i can enlarge up in it latent AL. tins count-zit there Guinea quick s::;p along the hall, and then the door opened, and (Lucienmiir Jeff? apical-1 e ~ ls o'd. is ace ‘cauic Edgy-1.53:1}; 2:11:15 9‘“... {011 upon the in- ~Aura Durand returned from the shop- tru'ltr. but Fl‘ancls- l-‘crrars arose to his' .. ion feeling, for some reason, fol-t wuh ptl'ltcl. composure, and said: . in low rplr During dinner sne secur- "Conic in Jeri. And pray pardon th. : *1 l-feoccul-lcil, and soon aftrr she ex~ trick I hav;~ played you. Miss Armyn, allied heriftlf. saying that shopping al- is not this friend also entitled to your ways weaned her, and retired to her 1870, when the CHAPTER xx.†v-A Sl‘RANG: ING . moons!)- foreign mander, ivin ple. . . . , , himself he holds in his hands not only the "’ disappointment, ’0†~carcely ten min- instruments of steel, but a flat morocco â€"5 9‘ f“ 5h"? had left the drawmg room, case and two flat packages.~ The bottom llrs. li.«'ha.rus, tm. arose 911d walked of the trunk. or what seemed the bottom, lel~“lll‘0l_l~V up the SE11“: stopping “El-"31y has parted in the centre, and underneath ' 5“ “3"“ " El" »r. â€be came to consult the is a shallow space. It is a trunk such as ....:~rst:‘.l'l<l this." he saiil- . "â€â€œll‘s’ Ill-“3' up“ some unimportant has been used by smugglers. A trunk .. drumming down stairs.i .l'lllSt'llUll'l matter, but she remained long with a false bottom. - after that matter was disposed of, chat- , .an descent] and sec-minor l‘ he burglar places. the‘ morocco case ‘ l 7 y’ a notto Ob- and the two packets In his bosom. and «st?» tha‘ .‘dis: Durand was a ' ' o . . " 7 y aning, then without replacing the contents of .;n-l h‘er ('3‘1‘5 growing heavy with sleep. - - - . . . .. - the trunn or closlnv the hidden npenmw . . . .. l . .b‘l‘ldufly ‘7Ԡtwin-1 narrowy at the he rises and gazes (1 mt him His seargli l .:1rl. and then BXCARImL‘d With marked . 6‘ ‘ ' . ‘ ‘ . . is not yet ended. On the opposite Side of ‘ :zolicitude : the dres 'inr room isa door openinvinto a "M'd‘ar 'lill. how h\ v ‘3 5' .‘. O '. 5 c Ll ‘ la y and dull large closet. This falls next under his . .. , . , v. v . . n ‘\ â€Alhdjtgirsnivit‘li“sit-Jilliilrghi::li.1:::;c?e, examination. . The walls are hung with .wgllt'essed that it did ; and remarked that dresses; “ "ll?†a†the paraphernalia 0f 8’ .‘a. mum ring for Laura, if Mrs. Rich- “9““ *T’ “"19†“â€1†â€V," Yet hung ““ ards Would excuse her and r-._tire. In- hooks. On the floor are several boxes and tautlv .Xlrs. llicharls was at the mâ€. two trunks, somewhat smaller than‘thc ' one Without. The masked man examines "l'll ' (lo: "ltl‘SS l l: ' ". ) . .3“ :tllf‘I‘t‘lpl‘lloaLllllllly. one been, qhi all the dresses, especrally the darker “Cour-.- in. please, and hear what this 1 , .. built to 5.1.3:." . . and much Wondering, _- l the door and came is intelligent enou lieves the ‘1‘ sharrinlixg.†uplicd l"-.'r~ "Listen. my friend, and , . n - -.-.'ny. _ V ‘ ulnar scat. «l lll.u:i"lf, Wltll {fir ‘ ~tl:l vli ills facc, and wrt: of the country by unscrupulous an cenary interests. of prices follows volume of money shrinkarre in volume results from le tion. Ila does not believe that the ernment should increase the interest s ix flows: '-n:yycars agn. the only ulltl a:rogant Engiidi dot-ply in love with a ;. .. 3-.lio has the daughter of ' ‘ high family, who llw~l ‘. Vi'ilarrying 2'. hand- I'ac. a son of :h. hills are ï¬lled with that government is, .L'l 11'. l , . ._ â€3.1 new snappy world. As l have before <3.th ‘. ~E:~- l-w «l by an Englishmal. of i. -‘v-l . and shortly lift-1' rh- d “crux «:f .rrr par-cuts they wrre privatvl; llldll‘lul; lll‘ v find in seclusion In: I am a strong magnetizer." It was quite useless to object; Laura was summoned and the distobln" process worumonced. \\hilc Laura was rushing out her mistress’ blonde hair, Mrs. Rich- locked ; but the second and last to be ex- amined, resists his attempt to open it. Again he resorts to the bunch of keys, but they all fail him. He turns away from the trunk and seems to be at a loss. Illnl'u'v' UL Lnl aï¬'ord lieves that government should tection to t to care for ‘.'.-1) .f. sumes to guarantee life, of Christian he believed his son to be travelling f.-r pleasure, and. had himself chosen a wife to bestow up in him when he should re- turn. But one day there came an anony- mous lwtter, telling him of his son’s mar- ' 'riage, revealing the secluded home of the and fro, passed this stand, her hand hov- : red for an instant over the drinking glass, and when she turned away three tiny crystal drops were in the bottom of that glass. At last Miss Durand was duly enscon- Some thought has occurred to him ; he takes up the antern and hurries back to the bed-chamber; he pauses at the bed- side, and bends above the sleeper. He pulls away the covering from about her sholeers and throat, and then he opens blems the Governor of Kansas, Hon. L. E. welhng, in North American Review January. Smï¬g light; They will soon be was one an tnd this trusted one to visit his home and know nis bead .iful wife. This man be- trayed his trust; step by step hveorined his way into the Conï¬d nce of his young wife, and when one day the husband went from home, for a two days’ absence, his plot was ripe for cl,velopment. On that very day the father, blinded, mad with pride, anger and disappomtment, came to the home where the young wife was alone. A terrible scene ensued, and it ended in the father’s declaring that he would give his son his choice between her and him ; if he returned to her, then she might claim him, and keep him; n he did not come back, she must abide by the consequenccs, the law should free his son. Well, he did not come back; through the treachery and deceit of the friend he had trusted, he was kept away, and then the schemer came with a xalsi tale to the distracted. wife; her husband had abandoned her. and returned to his father. this and much more she was made to believe, and then her mother’s ï¬erce italic; blood asserted itself; she would ï¬n er under this chain and draws it caref 'upward. Ah, see! On the end of the chain are two small keys. The man's eyes glitter as they fall upon them. With deft ï¬n rs he removes them from the chain, an then he glides back to the closet and again bends over the trunk. The key ï¬tsâ€"the trunk is open. As be- fore, everything is removed; but not with so much care, for this receptacle contains discarded clothing, fragments of everything that woman accumulate, and all crowded in, in a hasty manner; at the bottom of this trunk there lies a small black valise; this the man lifts out quickly and glances at critically; then to its lock he applies the second key. Again he is successful ; the valise springs open, and the man, with eager hands, re- moves the contents. It is a dark-looking bpndle;hh_e unrolls it. glances just once . . . a somet in 'ni ' ' V Laura obeyed quite willingly, and soon to suppressilsliai; ::CI;LZ:§:_BI)T112: .vlrs. Richards _w1thdrew, leavrng Aura he rolls up the bundle quickly, shudder- Durand lockcd in a sleep from which she in I), . hurriedly replaces it in the black would not waken for hours. How fair ,3- ’ ‘ ‘ r-llt: is as she lies there under the soft themglrgï¬gegï¬i a the contents Of out this cauti . And Aura said that she did, thinking pm on the while, with an inward laugh, of Nina .lnnin and her all night vigil. "You must have your water, I see,†said Mrs. Richards, touching the ewer. "Take a sip then, and go to sleep.†She poured out the water, and Aura drank it obediently, and then closed her eyes as commanded. To and fro, to and fro, moved the deft hands of Mrs. Richards, and presently .kura’s breathing became slow and regu- lar. her clasped hands relaxed themselves and fell apart; she was sleeping. Mrs. Richards satisï¬ed herself on this point, and then she turned away with a trium- phant smile upon her lips. "Go to bed, Laura,†she said to the Eittle maid. “Poor child, you look tired, too; I will close Miss Aura’s rooms; go L0 bed.†and Let the peppermint Do mothers little ones two or infant will not be with “sore mouth†if this is attended Do mothers train their babies to will take but a few evenin will result. Do mothers know treatin tion ? the best method on’t dose with strong the process. Do mothers realize the necessity her neck the slenedr chain and unlocks a trunk ; hurriedly, carelessly she pulls out and. ï¬nally she, draws forth the black valise. In another are extinguished, , closed, and Aura ‘ Durand glides from her room, locks the ully behind her and cautiously, the broad hall It is not yet fairly daybreak, the sin-sets ere glides an al- most imperceptible gray shadow that fol- lows', seeming hardly to be a human thing down where there who may soon come, on to where a dark pier is grimly outlined through the gloom. Then she glides out For a moment she gazes at the place where it went down, as if half expecting it to reappear, and then her steps. And still the gray shadow is behind her. Speech at the Garrison Parade. The mild weather and bright sunshine attracted lar e crowds of people to wit- de of the Berlin garrison on Tuesday. The Emperor walked from the castle to the arsenal, and, after reviewing the troops by companies, returned to the castle in the same way, the crowds cheer- passed. The Emperor ad- drressed the ofï¬cers, saying: “We stand in the face of serious times, but, as in Princes of the German nation stood together in triumph over a nation, so tesday they stand to- gether in the presence of their royal com- g shining proofs of the union of Germany’s Princes and her peo- Germany will also triumph over a more serious international foe which is confronting the empire. The army is the gls, only to disappear again with another fundamental b3?“ 0f the empire, for the gnlldcruc ?†‘ room. twisted bit of steel. When he again rears army 15 the ’19-‘10“ armed. , "do i« 7.. :9“: m said Lenore, warmjy, : she sought solitude, she was doomed . .. -..n . The Western Farmer a Philosopher. The western farmer is a philosopher from necessity. Rapidly tending toward poverty, he demands to know why, and h to answer his own question in the lig t of reason. He be- prime cause of all his woes is the manipulation of the money?! den by borrowing gold, while our native silver, and labor stands idly awaiting an opportunity to take it from its hiding place. He believes or should be. for the good of all the people; that legislation “to keep you up _ ‘ should be for the multitude rather than . . had “M within the :ikw â€1th Laura willput vou to bed and ones, and feels in all the pockets. ’lllon for the few, and he is beginning to be- ' ,..- l ‘ _:;,: mifoï¬mgp fevpn lslmll bathe that poor head for ,you. {:0 turnslhxs attentiolrll to the trunks .and lieve, if government can guarantee him k,“ , ~.~ .g inï¬rm“. Wm, ' a. small 1..†Now don‘t object, it will be a. pleasure to fifes’ ttleduï¬ntéux; ï¬fts'kbi’lowï¬' clothing. nothing but hopeless poverty, that gov- ‘ .: ,7, L, (“my and otherwise at 351,. me. and I know I can relieve the pains. “ a. no ‘ e rs un e n 3 Is not ernment has failed its mission. He be- pro- e weak-the strong are able themselves; and he believes, ï¬nally, that if government, which as- liberty, and the _ charity and prtE-essrve civilization.â€"From “Pro. fore the Western Farmer,†by come Do mothers apply hot cloths to the feet stomach of the little sufferer in case of colic ? This is the very best remedy. remain in its bottle. give pure water to their three times a day ? An likely to be troubled 0 to sleep at a certain hour each evening?) It gs of persistent effort to get them into this habit, and un- told comfort to both mother and child a child troubled with constipa- medicines, but rub the abdomen night and morning with olive oil, gently kneading it during keeping the tiny feet always warm ? Lit~ tle woollen socks, with long tops, secure- GRAVE AND OTHERWISE. . ,0, lined. rein Man Sources but ‘-Worthy. y thro h a . have Strong allia I know to What you instant use. He turns his face toward down the stairs, and‘Enally pauses it the ‘â€" . wwrmm' allude, and I know that a week ago you the sleeper as he holds it; perchance he street door. Carefully ‘she draws back . “After the Bali.’ fled from your best friend. The man smiles behind his mask. Aura. Durand the bolts and lets down the chain, then, "1%": lathe; {$3231. (cos-raven.) who rescued you from Jason Bradwardine is prepared to . defend herself, it seems; with the black valise tightly clutched in “w. my, “:3! “6 broken. does not believe you guilty of any crime. but she is quite defenseless now. The her small hand, she hurries out, down the , . And facet daubed with mud ; Lunar. bent ovnr the picture and mur- He would have done for you what Gentle- man turns hls face away _at last, and stately steps and away. After the ball rm been under muted, half to hemlfl "1 have seen it, man Jeff has done; providedjou with bends over the gleaming little weapon, swiftly AM the Kline we wonder After we’ve beaten them soundly. We feel’i If the earth was ours ; , h _ , $317201; they’ve (101:: to 2‘22):th tiny letterin . in t at gray morning mist. 0n she goes a a mo mores on: an owers. . . - But"3 b’" 1th st d, father. You have seen hlm. Miss asked, almost breathleesly: _ . And now he does something strange, upon her stran errand, and .°n glides the ï¬gs: og’ggggemg’wnï¬; “l" «V Armvn; but you were a Very young “Is that the truth? Do you believem somethin unprecedented, for a burglar; the shadow. ehas been movrng nearer child." him 2)" Is after sexes snunsrons l h h uporLthis paler, (hut, ml: ubltfld Sh? emails I in h ITtobdslm‘ilor. :‘r ‘ e ’s andwritin . and i: never friend a and fellow like himself, is at room, and‘from t rat to t 0 next; e atVt e on ; t on s e on s orw , n to men s us once. gucuï¬â€˜iiiried w hcr mi. to doubt the this mama; hm,r {mating out suspected opens dressing casez, drawers, receptacles swrngs the black value to and {re and nggtï¬m,39f;d‘gggdï¬,y quiet b‘luocrity of the man before her. son parties in order to lawn the guilt where 9fovory sort; he searches for secret hxd- suddqnly, lets so her bold upon it; the 01m 1reverie rofound. she lo lied on with a flash of her olden it properly belongs. Twice you have ingplaces. th inverts chairs, he searches swaying impulse given it sends it outover wag“ wggeotggglgprgpawm imperiousncss. evaded him, and because of this, another- their puddings, he feels about the cush- the water, and then it falls .and With a- [n the mm of the Maker, ‘ "U ' you knuw my father 7’ 5h: enlik’d- man would pronounce you 81“!th But ions of divans and lounges, he overturns dull Splash disappears from sight several All repentant. I would stand. "Can you 5 ll urn about him ‘9" two hours aft -r your-escape from his car'- And I wondered if the people Gathered there His name to raise Would nOt be, through my en eavor, ed to I’m-er. better ways. ‘ , For I felt within in bosom All the true hea of the song, And I thought some tin y port on Ought to touch that worldly throng. So I turned unto the organ, And been. to play the air 0! the tender, sacred 0 era l8. Ever Brlgh and Fair.†Ah! I new: sang so sweetly, All my soul seemed upward turned, All my . ollest endeavor Through those earnest carols burned. Then the heavenly spell was broken, For. btflldc the great staircase Stood a little ragged maiden Gazlnz rendering in my face. She was shibby. poor and crl pplcd, Not a brl ht or winsome out (i; She has spo ed my inspiration, And 1 spoke in anger wild : "Child †Icrled, "what is your business ?†And lpaused. with mien sublime. there in stupid silence ? ,ake haste I’m wastlr it time. " But she did not mov'e or answei‘; Only led with o n e cs Full of lsnppomtcdpueron er, And a pained and grieved surprise. “ You were singing ’bout the angels l" Here her voice was low and sad, W hllc with cold her slight form trembled- She. poor chllo, meant half-clad. "You wen- sin in ’bout the angels. So I came to 00 at you, kind 0’ then ht on was one' New I know it w‘iisnilyou.†' Years have passed since that brief moment, But sometimes I seem to hear Throukhvm y busysllfe of duty A child s act-en , soft and clear. And 1' always pause and harkcn. As wnh silent lips. alone I send, not a song of triumph. But a pruyvr to heaven's throne. stem _ mer- He believes the decline the shrinkage of the in circulation, and that gisla- gov- Sentenees by Judge. The seed is stronger than the soil. False. alarms create false securities. tendencies. In the take the bur- dust. rot is not given. The mundane dcfensxvc plan. Fidelity is the conservative prescrvcr 0 type, custom and race. \thn a thing is hard to endure some Jlng harder may come to make it easier If natiu'c were to man would havt her inventions. )5 Praise not a be puffed up and masterful ; nor too little . This is what he thinks as‘ he s . . . . lest he be discour ed. mwz-e than a yrs-er, and woreycry happy ; .Virrls moved softly about, from the dress- there: ‘ tands 5:81: ilibttlciinhabliltï¬tclliledrfiaelslsiin “‘32:? Homely trutvhsafro like home remedies '11 1‘â€ka ,. than evr-r “11331 their chno, 1; mg room to the bedside, and back again. “I have searched these rooms, 6v“? he is livinggin an age of exquisitely re: â€"apt at times, but applied upon every 0c- girl. \l'.‘._~‘ b. Fu.’ But presently th r- "H a “fly “and near the dainty bad nook and crevice of them; where then is ï¬ned barbarism rather than i th _ casion whether they ï¬t the case or not. came a cnange. [he father of the young ~tood a little cwcr and a glass. As Mrs. the key to this trunk p" d If h d 1 n e noon husband ii!l"“' nothing of this marriage; Richards, in one of her silent marches to ay 8 t an ove l‘he Crown Prince. Le- hasa decided fondness for orange pekoe. for roda, has an income of $7,500,000 a year, . K t of which he runs the overnment. _ . awxy from the white neck the robe that Kn . ou . 3 young pair, and bidding Eh†father ‘0 go 59d 1? “hf: 339“? bed' , is scarce whiter, thereby exposing to view Home†Should 0“. Prince \Valdemar Of Prussia, the only and ,. p fur hitns'clf. how the young "how, said Mrs. Richards, “prepare agenda gold chain; it is long and worn Do mothers shade the baby’s eyes from sun of Emperor William’s sailor brother, l’lusbaml had trusted one pxrson W135 â€ht to g0 to Sleep- D0 3"“ feel 1“ the 1935‘ loos 1y about the neck. He inserts his secret of his marriagt‘: had 9‘7““ Pe'm‘lb' >1991W?†Prince Henry, is deaf and dumb, a fact of which scarcely any; one outside of court circles is aware. Marie Henrietteg‘the handsome and soft- voiced queen of the Belgians, is especially fond of driving, and dues it particularly well. She also rides .well, talks well and is an uncommonly good musician. King Charles of Portugal leaped from to. his carriage recently to interfere with a fight and prevent a probable murder. His majesty overpowered the stronger party and turned him over to the police. The Sultan of Turkey always eats and drinks alone, although, he generally has a large retinue in attendance. He uses neither table, plates, ï¬ife or fork, but only a spoon and his rs, from which he ï¬s.:es out his food from a series of little saucepans. ' - ~ The Shah of Persiahasï¬ve sons and tnlrteen daughters. ' three married .0115 have twenty-onet‘children. ‘The Persian oï¬cial year bookmentions inthe royal family three ers and two of of insCELLANEOUs READING migrant!» Reading roi- Old and You And Scrimmage has "heeled to halves," .Who 'twalxwho was kicking our calves. And flu but glaeuasure, after a touch-down, the . Our pro-existent habits are our present whirligig of time some one must Life is a combination of which the sec- world is conducted on the disclose her processes .Jhc audacity to patent servant too greatly, lest he Queen Victoria brews her own tea and Gopal Rao, maharajah guitowar of Ba- brin or in the United States. openly and repeatedly expressed, surely it might be possible so advantageous to each other in the event of war and so invigorating in times of peace. Putting aside question of senti- ment, fect a that t can think the colonies were wrong in ï¬ghting the War of independence, under the circumstances forced upon them. fact, they descendants of Britain had they not done 50. Paper spindles for yarn spinning now used as r. steel. Steel barrels, made from sheets ranging the United States and the Chic land, showed h the feeling of g the two countries. made by different sections of the munity on both sides of the Atlantic to about some sort of practical union , . both countries would appear to encourage the idea of reunion. after the most bloody battles, but before the actual Declaration of Independence, the colonists strained every nerve to of- peaceable conclusion of the dim- culties which were upsetting the hitherto happy relations existing between Great Britain and the States, although it was through the imbecility of Great Britain ‘0 ago to Eng- ow nuine and hearty is oodgviiill existing between Efforts also are PETE SIMONS COMPANY, being 416 George St., Opposite the Examiner Book Store. com- Pete will be happy to have his old friends and customers call on him and l' ave 'hf'lf orders for their FALL SUITS AND OVERCOATS. r/ Come and see our stock before purchasing chi-when- Bran New Shades, Styles and Patterns in Suitin Trowserings. N0 OLD STOCK. Everything bran new and fresh from the mills. nce between Great Britain and \Vith such sentiment to effect an alliance gs, Over-coatings}. however, the selï¬sh interests of It Is notable that Don‘t forget the pl AOL'â€" PETE SIMONS a. co. - 416 George 5? Something nice in Gent’s Furnishings always in stock. , LlRMEEWERfl CITY BARBER SHOP: T. H. BEYANS , Tonsorial Artist. IILLBROOK l J ¢ .\ 0. 6. Meets the coco. n Home Circle Koo! o'clock sharp. W. ARCH ER. Loader. J.B.‘l e rupture ever occurred. No one In would not have been worthy PARLORâ€"Kin ~51... ï¬tment) o"l w GtKell's bank. 8 W M c M Shaving, Hair-cutting. Shampoolng and ever tl‘iing else in the mnsorlal linc carefully often - e to. GENERAL-STORE. ' Works of Genius. are substitute for those of COURT IVAN†Meets lhzrd M-vl rooms chr Leech {"iii‘cunxh in thickness from one-sixteenth toa quarâ€" Try our Twentv’ï¬ve cent “‘31 best C- . ter of an inch, are coming into use. . value in t0an also our Ram Lal’s pure hi} _ A car shaped like a bathtub,V in which Indian Tea. at Fift . cpnm l, the passengers either sit or recline as if in 3 ’ ’ ' -, a bed is in use in Berlin. It has three wheels and is propelled by a naphtha W M. LANG. OYAL C A}' A; motor- %. , -. a. U ..h-..-. K".-- MI I B R00 K wrangling: 3 A baby carriage designed especially for 9 ' the use of those who live in flats, looks just like any other baby carriage when it is in Hill, but it can be folded together so that one and down stairs. It is said that window panes of porous glass are being the Home Circle 1 hour of meeting! Society are worm person. Informs: “I ARCHER. S. if you “an! :i fll'NbCliLN» horse, a good rig, m' turnout of any (lescrip Lion. dun L full to call at this stable. ggJ GILLUT SUN? .7 Undertake-’3 and Practical Embaimers. person can handily carry it up \l'ANl‘l-Zli~ Hood younz tom of black . . . drivers. made in Paris. The min- :ri-mumsw -‘.'i I ute holes in the glass are too ï¬ne to per- ï¬fe†of lebtm‘omal" can 1' T. W. LARMER. biggie.“ ï¬::§gl:::dd hiblfli‘g'eviï¬ï¬lgzdg I Stable and ullice on Tupper street. - 0,! in {£1,001}; 3' ‘. We kee constantl ’ on hand a large ’*â€"~ - v _. L Eaiiflg‘: ' . . 1‘ lock of urniture 0 all kinds. Our '. A spoonless must rd pot is a recent in- vention. By pressin apiston rod in an air-tight receptacle t e r of mustard is forced through asuitable sprout. tard is always fresh. " tuck is well assorted and displayed in '~ llrce lrrge HllOVV rooms. No trouble to how goods. We are also manufac- urors of the Excelsior Washing Ma- hine. Best in the Market. in: Brethren wok w. D. 1140*, . . sacred eqursnte amount pluule’s PHOTflGHAPHS HARE] The air beingcxcludcd. the mus- RCEIBA LD ‘l RIAGE LlCE Brotherly Love in a Tenement Street. â€â€˜h‘ PIN But the most significant expression of s the spirit of village life in Bulfinch street, THE PEOPLES ARE THE BEST N. C- MOKI and a truly beautiful one. is the readiness ’ \ _' 7.. w. “we“. of ncirrhbors to help each other out of ’ . ;.. 7 T It. troubled Prudential motives force this 1 ' vii-’2' †-‘, TRL EST, â€In" exercise of brotherly love to be kept so 0 ‘ " - f l ‘ far out of sight in streets of this kind that, as a rule, its amount is absurdly under- estimated. charitable societies, however remote from charity their fabricated excuse forcalling OROZVTO and oenlinte ltol burgh. Member ‘ eons.0ntsrio. c ldenoe Annie gay his “:4 . . Andllost Artistic Butcher Shop ,,.___.._.h. _ Tho well-dressed visitors of . , . His Euler ed Portraits in Oil . LAPP. mziysccni to be. are yet known for what “2: Inkl- ‘llis Incam of m 0,. Waterg Colors, India Ink, L «erect-3d they areâ€"â€"a charity picket line. forming the people of .\l lllhrook Sepia or Cravons have no super- 311‘ L Eighty-year-old Bridget Mulcnlly. (Which mrlmps, H gf'lwl‘ally for on this: Continent. All ’0 l "‘ toothllcss, but stillf brigdht-cycd. 1:1};in be knrlvwnll llmt}. we llmwf alwagvs work imperishablc. TRg-VICTE ,3: seen a most anv air ay smo 'lna‘ ler 0“ 11â€â€œ A C 10100 “1 0 “â€331 S- - . . . t e 0166 pipe on the SL601: of No. 2:), IIcr'hus- If you wish a special cul lt‘l us fl 1‘0“ Lharloue-st., , PeterbVoro - Ground Ontario. band. Jim. a day laborer, died eighteen km)“ and “'9 “'l†supply 5"“ car Studio. 1‘0 stairs to Chmb' H )vea‘l‘s ag()' FUI‘ SO‘VLhn 379a}.§ 1)ef0ro }1is ALI, "l: I'EI(A~ lil‘o." [IT]. x‘ I‘I'.,4, "ERFI’ 7‘7 M . ‘ death he was blind, and his nusfortune, 1‘0 ,gyy 1-,.â€57 4â€: THE 77,," 5-. “ ' N â€If no". joined to his good nature, made him a. [lo 185 BARRISTER- . 'favbrite. Soon after Jim’s death Bridget gm Money f dislocated a shoulder, thereby perman- Natt rass Du "ford real eimdlmlfowé ently losing the use of her right arm. HAVE ARR|VED. 0509-“ . She became destitute. The neighbors A, A , lent her many things (cooking dishesand F] E O O O O O O O O 9 O O o I. “It. a comforter among them)and afteruhttle CALL AND SEE THEM AT II W Michael Roe, who was himself behind _ BARRISTER- s with his rent, gave her a home with his Private and family. Then her friends, “the boys from Ireland,†“ i which netted 840. room for fifty cents a week and took in thcloweet raw. ‘ a: Bethany on 3“ month. put up†a raffle for her She rented a cellar The Dominion Mutual Fire Insurance MISS. E. MELVILLE’S, Association. two girl lodgers at ten cents a night. THE BEST AND CHEAPEST FOR FARnERS 424 GEORGE STREET! SIX c From that time to this she has lived in a 1, i: the only com an}. lssucing Four Year w ’ cellar or a garrct and shared her room with girl lodgers; but she has depended largely for her support upon the the “boys†have continued "to put up" for her once or twice a year. Three years ago Michael Roe, widower, PETERBOROUGH. Blah '0! Policy. ENTlS'l‘. 5:! D preservation troll! Oxide (jib ff teeth. Gooc “‘01 Bethany the 2nd month. Umemee day of each nlonzl Rates are only about one half of that charged by stock companies. For further information apply to A. C. MAYCOCK. rallies ALL THE NEWEST ART MATERIALS KEP l.\' STUCK. STAMPING DONE. by that time a was stricken down with a fatal V SEA sickness. Then the "boys from Ireland†12 3 B xxzfaeiiflgiggném JAS' V w got their heads together and “put up" a ' m 0 ' 8 ° ' casual beneï¬t ball for Bridget‘s former bene- factor. Tickets were the ball netted $75. thing left toward f uncral cxpenScs when the old man died. given for the beneï¬t of his orphan chil- dren.-Alvzin F. Sanborn. in the Janu- ary Forum. .II B MI 8 P08. HAVE THE NEWEST LINES 1N FALL AND 'WINTEB HATS. ï¬fty cents euol1.-.1nd ’ L'EEN‘S l'nn There was some- of me Collies YOU WANT Then another ball was .gl'x r â€Lesa: 'llj. rinl (‘5'. “ and F ‘ ‘ umce at N17. The New Butler. J AS- "Now, remember." said a charming wo- "(Lunumh man to her new butler,- who had a faint conception of a business for which he de- manded the highest wages. “remember. in announcing meals you LL DOMESTIC -7 ed accordms l’arzztoln. attenm are to say; Mills Bros. Nubhyfui 7 ‘ ' ' ‘ ‘ " 'l ' I ' ‘IFQ 1V Charges 710G823“; ‘Breakfast is ready.’ 'Lunchcon is ready.‘ Al 1" 11“" Bl†l‘ h L A ‘11 “* ‘ r... opposzx 0. ‘Dinner is served.‘ " DR H “Al " lt. ‘1 l'id tl ' d F RS '. ' butler} iigi mum up IL 10 plou l I V V . G. H. WALLIS, V ’ ‘flfl Not long after, this charming woman OF EVERY DESCRIPTIO). CALL 0) BETHABX. ventured to experiment on a dinner to n THEM. few intimate friends. sion on her countenance when. on up- pearing at the drawing-room door to an- nounce dinner, this literal butler ex- claimed in clarion tones : . .â€". . “Breakfast is ready, luncheon is ready. sisters of the shah, whilgtho uncles and dinner is served 2" PASH ION ABLE TAILOR, PONTYPOOL, ‘ . . I 1 I ‘- Ll. DOMl-Zï¬'l‘lt bank) “It LAPWS ¢ ed accor‘.:. Parziculnr .i' .e .‘ . Chargu- ill“ a .‘n. if allendcil in). MILLS BROS. GEORGE STREET, PETEREORï¬Uï¬H G 1 r I T' H. H! , V rm unto n the Cleveland SchoolofCullin , i, h . l’ h _ ut, leaving the 13' fasltlenedil will 1"? “31'5“ka tilt? dilly. the cousrns number 140; 1* This is a true story of the capital. . can zuarauloe satisfaction. We Defy Cltgy lull-rook. mks her child and 3Q away 3 “b1?!†“f Villa?" °f_. :1 ° 318': t’g ts, guru xaever closet open and the boudOir door ajar, be 3221:â€; 0?: d1 (211131221113. been 8:51;}, ï¬g,†Public Speaking is theL‘7-Duke of Teck’s % Competition. ‘ BMW-ill "i she would lu‘O- _The ï¬ery 01“ no em“ “."el’s “ 1" â€'21 1°†3’ near or, an to- glides, valise in hand from the rooms. 0 Ir 3 0mg ,ru e 1 e smatest trouble in life. He is an ex~ n - - . . ' a (I ~" '97â€? .2 ‘take the Church woud mvlit Mrs. Richards has left a few wax .. ‘. . feet and legs gently and thoroughly un- . lhe margin of profit in farming is to G H w L .1 . . :2: if,if‘10§:°m,:,nialg., neither would Luggrs ablaze, not only in the bed-charm 5,3323 :33, Synge; ï¬lmy; mégiéies all: til there is a good circulation and then '5:lelï¬ï¬ggei:$::e?3?emgï¬geï¬:nge‘ small to admit of any unnecessary waste. ' - A US, a; "Cl €232; bk» Slate; sh.- lKnr‘l-V this, andshi1 knew; VberV. 1|th Inwfl’le (Ilrsssinarpgiili ï¬nd Eliml'oir then this strangest L, all strange 'burg- fasten in the warm pinning blanket. and no one dan get bettegghi-oug h a pull: PONTYPOOL 3;... a: . tofutlxuf. ncrlulautdausbwrxf “1‘52; ‘iel‘fg ‘ W" " 5 a" ‘ 95 e a" .s returns, comes softly in, bearing Do mothers kecpahst of simple reme- he function than he camfiprovided there A / â€r «. \ .-a._._ .._ hm , J ‘H ( “â€0" hrrla‘P‘TgEO “I" 9‘ EB 0, (‘1‘ Je’fpckit-k tick tick t} l'ttl b back the black valisc. He replaces it dies at hand? Do they use nature’s lsno formalspeak' i’grlnmto do. / M5 / i'f‘ CV1... Uxij U†,. "‘ - ' . “a.“"i‘ “‘5‘! â€â€˜5’ "33“"? â€(‘1 1g“: ,‘ .1. 113.1518? dressing-i0 ’1“ tellu $031? just as he found it; having ï¬rst locked remedies instead of dosing the tiny tots â€" , ‘1‘ k_/ Q\ , / THE FASAIONABLE TAILOR v ‘3 ' ""’ PERRY‘I‘OWY' 51:1 tr titles the “~13" melt ‘1' f: h?“ 'jï¬c in the minute: “(1:1) st 5 oh e It, then he restores to their original places with strong medicines that do more harm Fancie- of Fashiim. /% 0/ ’f, / ’ Nan). @750†‘0 “'l‘m†COJ 11‘3†0i? '~""(l\"v‘l-le wr» 'gh: all her misery, s e 6V. 0‘ 1?;‘33‘5; dmr 0f th‘e'boudo' an 0‘13 every article removed from the closet, than good, and bleaching the baby with Fano ncils for M h . / , “j! H†,1“, new.“ “ms ;,, Suitings. ()ycrcou would be of [he verygrcnxesi value refusc ‘ ivuivimff. a. I: â€AK-kalii'l ‘er mil-ill! third“: his: h ivtthe hin'l bf a. spirit Sltii'gEflifzfly trunks and boxes, pausing at times to as- saffron tea ? mold lislï¬iou revived-1.115 ‘l 0 am m / \i' lugs and all lines of to takeii under :l ‘ or, . l.t‘.;‘mrru_:‘.l‘. I: VA: -, .' _~ - x ,. . '_ - ‘ ‘ V, ‘ -fl_ -_ V . . _ . d. partur: from his happy home, tn.’ 3t swings inward, and then a. ï¬gure glides Lug-higizgf }1:hl~19:£:;: tdnrhiilldlrbtlig mlS Do mothers m warm WM“ and mllk y†.n_; hiqbahd “'hn had been decoyed 1n. the figure of ‘ _ gre t a man. a man clad in a a _ _ . . tru i ' 'i - o m - away by afazse r port of his father‘s ill- long. loose. gray garment, and With ms nk n “10 dress as 1‘ 0 , ï¬rst replac instead of soap for washing the infant Linen lawns with blue orl d‘dotslaum i h t tl } k t k with scrofulous tendencies? Two parts degebeautiftiilg aVndlwear i '1 'th . . 0 ' ‘ n e . noss. return. at; he found his home deso- face and head entirely hidden by a velvet £11.15; tlilenzglitiird 01123123821? 2'; orig; (1?: water to one part milk 13 about the “ght rve me a. m 0113‘, g asses WI 18:... his wife and child g no. Then he mask, and close-ï¬tting velvet skull-cap. ’ g pe returned to his father, accusing him as m. author of all this misery, and the father believing his visit to have been th sole cause of the flight of his son’s Wife, did not deny the charge; there wert many angry words. anthhey separate wthout fully understanding thscause of . the: trouble. All that the Wily fals; :astly at the sleeper. Then he starts back friend had done, the son believed the 1.3 if astonished; but a moment later he father guilty of. The bereaved and for- l bends still nearer, holding the taper so east-n husband left his father’s house; close that the blonde hair upon the pil- RSVL‘I' to return. He became reckless} low seems almost endangered. At last and still the {leeway-3r was on his track. he seems satisfied With his scrutiny, and urging him on, keeping him alienate.) then goes back to the boudorr, replaces from his father, who now longed for a the taper, and draws from a pocket of rl‘Cl'nClllEClUE. After ten years he died, the loose gray gument a tiny lantern of and the proud father was left childless. the “bull’s eye’ order; this he lights, Then this old man married, married a » and the beams’tllat shoot out are strong young wife. 'w he died within the year. and bright. . Nor he 18 ready for work. and thenâ€"he was forced to see that his He moves without apparent effort, but as grand name and his ancestral halls mus: neieelessly as ashadow. He must be the come into the hands of a distantrelative, very prince of burglm, this masked a man who came of a. wicked and de- man. « . based. as well as a very distant bran -h First, he 3099 straight to the bedside ' farzrilv, and who was hated by the 31383111.- he Pull! down the bull’s-eye, and : blcmab for many reasons. He had begins 8- 58W about the bed. He puts 7 his arm under-the pillow on which rests n ...r dreamed of this man as a. possible , _ . heirâ€"Dc: the man himself had schemcd the head of the sleeper, and lifts it from the false bottom. He works carefully, methodically, making no mistakes. When this last trunk is closed and locked he goes once more to the bedside, puts the keys again under the pillow and the two detached ones once more upon the chain suspended about the neck of the sleeper. Then he turns about and surveys the room, to assure himself that everything is just as when he ï¬rst entered ; he moves a chair a little, shakes out the folds of a curtain, surveys in the same manner the dressing-room and boudoir, and then, like a shadow, he steals away, closing the doors behind and re-enters no more. Still the wax tapers shed their mellow light, still the little bronze clock ticks off the moments and still Aura Durand slum-‘ bets on, with calm upturned face and regular breathing. Truly Mrs. Richards is a wonderful magnetizer. It is gray dawn before the sleeper wakens, which she does with a start and a sudden excla- mation. She sits up, looking about her in bewilderment, then she springs su l- denly from her bed and runs to the dressâ€" ing-room. The little clock tells her it :5 near morning; she oes to the window-r He closes the door through which he came, and bolts it without making a mund ; then he takes up one of the wax :apcrs, and, holding it in his hand passes through the dressing-rmm and ap- proaches the bedside. ie holds the taper ilof t then, and bends down, gazing stead- least two months old. that he is dried sible while wet. Do mothers see tight around the realize the importance of sweet child" with care in this respect. liable to cry time he cries. - their wants ? The child that is left en- icr 3. .:.rs to this end. He was the some the bed. Tth, with the other hand, he $313.3? gearieaig t Eggggiowtheabhixtid: tirely to the care of hired nurses is ,offen not. who had play-ed the Judasto the old explores. bear-9.1 Varticles he takes from “Can it be ss'bg7 ,, tte grthy . ‘1 the child that causes, grief for the mother man‘s son; the man who had made the underneath,% pillow, and then he re- PO 1 le, mu rs egir. H ' Ill: tour a sander-er, the child homeless places it 81111 the sleeper’s head very DldI allow that woman WP“ “‘0 to - - - 37 ther will realize that she is not blame- an-d nameless, driven the father "to an gently, and . to the stand whereon gigs;:gdshzvdiï¬ulfpfoalilihlgblgdliZEhlif; 1685' untimely grave, and rendered the proud he {’13ch â€13" things 1!!5t l'emoved fmm the pillow. . Do mothers make it a point to ï¬nd time old man childless and desolate. VWher their bid“! flace. _ ~ “All, they are there 7: she so. drawâ€" l to mend broken toys, to tie the knots, to this man presented himself and his pre He draw i chair toward him, this inga breath of relief 1“I ut mi?) there ikise away the bruises and to answer the tensions, the old lord swore that he shoulc glar, places it before the just as 1 did all the 1.85,, fol; effect and f ; numberless questions as the children grow never inherit his acres. Then he sent for stand, t e light of the bull’s-eye did sleep after all The day hiid been' ilder? They should never allow them. mg, and for years i have searched over full upon if, and arts y down trying, but I did n‘of, know that I needed: elves to forget that what seams of little Europe to find his son’s Wife and child. . . booty,_there by the very sleep so much. Nothin is disturbed... .mportance to them may be of the most Miss Armyn, this proud old noblemar , there is a case of jewels, they left the candles gurnin I su ’~‘ vital importance in forming the character was your father’s father; that. wrongs: bones; great blue glem- pose thinking that Ishould wakegri soon}: of the child. Lastly, d9 mothers use wife was g’ï¬lgl' mother; Elbe Villain th , of course Aura She puts her hand to her throat, arid sound common stensecontlnléally and £111 muvht evil was seen and" war;- _, . ,dnws orth - ~ - lar e doses in raining an caring or ' dmne' 6; and the long-sought heiress,- ' is Dockla_ .% the chain mm Its pendent 3 their children? If not, they should. recentiz'ialsonthe Thames ofa ' ' - , ~ . . alumnae boat, with steel framework 7 ~ 7 I A ' at V ~ 981183â€"811 . daluumin' um lates forthehull,“have - ‘ . , ~ ', ' . . speed,whichthemak- “OISE†n _ The air-ea use,“ out pith. @999 worth “, “Elï¬n, ' “m ‘9‘? _ . "Jason. deesawht . . ’ ï¬sh. may 01' hairpin-Kiln? .. » .y'go certame . ‘7' ’far I am f n u I’Vwfll Ina-k0 5a of She mutm, ‘nd 4 “3“. , a. is“, ' shaft,- ' and marker hat ‘ Then 9 see- vail. proportion. Soap will often prove irritat- ing to tender skin, but the milk and water , is cooling and healing, and will keep the silver receptacle to skin soft, smooth and clean, and its use may be continued until the child is at De mothl rs wrap the baby quickly in flannel upon taking him from the bath ? This is very important, and also to see quickly and thoroughly, exposing him to the air as little as pos- that there is nothing little form. Do they having every garment loose and light and warm? A “cross" baby will soon become “such a Do mothers remember that a child is from the pain of an over-full stomach as from the cravings of hunger? This is a fact that seems to be overlooked, judging from the usual practice. Don’t get into the habit of feeding him every Do mothers enjoy the company of their little ones and take pleasure in supplying in later years; and the thoughtful mo- Americans {in Chino, .Eflpt) andlast yqar *he'mta of ‘t -. a thin slice of lemon floating on top. The modern smokingsetï¬as a chased hold cachous, snake root, etc. 37'“, ‘ Boating serges come injfgiyory white, blue and corn, and are quitflhs thing for summer wear. -.‘c},, "1“. Round ï¬re opals set willhdiamonds butter color ; it’s only for’the nah-colored, ' Clear, olive-skinned brunette,€3g-- in the hollowed handle. v Wanted, .‘ Dewrmmm‘ï¬ï¬‚m 'l‘he liquor trafï¬c is now éï¬ï¬‚mhedin politics, and it is there we must meet it ; so unless the people ~in.,§§;;msaesty‘ of their political power, are aroused‘to com: bins in one and, united phalanx of 0 position, an through the. virtue there is in the'ballot hurl these‘ autocratic de- spoilers, this piratical horde of unscrupu. lous liquor dealers and their sympa _ . and abettors, into an abyss of annihila- tion, there is nothing left but certain anarchy and destruction for our country. The moral revolution and the grand re-a sults of prohibition can only be brought about by the united effort of an earnest, determined people, with their combined will and purpose, without compromise; :- concentrated and crystalized into voteszat, the ballot-box. . . ,, ,- s1tygfo1- : .' , - This makes an 1ilnrli)perative neces part a. distinctive to i ition part â€"a y composed of cdizcientious and determined votersâ€"4 party not onlycombinedbu : l" “ cure just law, but a party With - moral endpohtmal payer to enforcethe lag!- entire prohibition without cemptomr‘ee or " conciliation. ,1. ; e. o.. . : _â€"â€"_ .7 “ F The Friendly Bent; sot England The relations between Enghshmfo - l <4:- ; . .râ€˜ï¬ 3 form a beautiful scarf p Turquoise shares the opal’s favor. . \ L Blondes should not try to {Ear the new . “-P . Mn -. Elicia andwhethsrsupplledby sire ' I TORONTO TYPE FOUNDBI. Place to Shortlmnd nn'l Typewrizing,orro 2::5 Learn. . 9 0 $6 00 O. 6 9 960009999 00 ' OOOOOOOOzOzoxOOOOOOOOOOO ( TOBACCO HABIT , ‘. ED NERVOUS 0181A; : The system employed at this insiit. t o is the famous Double Chloride of G: Thro Slaves to t hav.o been emancipated p- tcen years. Lakehurst Sanitarium is u oldest institution of and has a ' well-earned reputation 1. maintain in this line of medicine. whole history there is not an instants .» any after ill-effects from the Hundreds of happy homes in all parts a the Dominion eï¬lcacy of a course of treatment with :t For terms and full infcrmaticn writc » THE SECRET ‘ .3‘7, 28 Bank of Commerce Chamb'rs, m. A K EHU RS? .. -_ .: ro morons from one-ht" am - up to Eleven Horse Power. Write :c impression that the male tended . ‘ 9“ ~ is 50 Chinclim" ,V,‘ . ., Enron-Tux mum. is 5‘7. : 'l ‘. .; ' - J 7 â€In“ W 1.3.2332;Eff;$2“c.‘:.?.l3.l‘.~°.§§fâ€Ã©â€™f:2? Fall and Winter Tweeds. Worst Wm: I» FLEMlNG, l’rin'l, Uwcn Sound, Om. ' onlsrlou lig‘kh your new; l1»- eds and Friezes. Price and fit guaranteed. Full Gent's Furnishings. 389 George St, Peterhoro. . To such we (itcll': _ to prove that this is a de- cidcd error, as in our pre- paration, “Mallino with . Codl.iver0ll."nolonlyis tllcobjeClionablctasteen- '5 tlrely removed, but the preparation is really pala- tableâ€"relished alike by : old and young. It is the _. ideal “builder," and will restore health and color lines of J. T. STINSON, _: DEALER 1N17~ SA rvlTARn _ w _ . this “run down." To any New white morocco parents card Boots 21 n d Shoes. . smakmaloftheprepmaon pETERBoRO'. cases have flat borders of golfer silver OAKVILLE . ONT “131° 1"“ Address 1’05Ҡ. m- F\‘Gl\‘ m gilt, not ornamented but h' , ‘Tbumish- â€"â€" -» PETE R BORO' M “5° Manufacmï¬nc Com ( I \‘iil’olmf ed. These are very elegant LV ‘ uiet. For the treatment and cure of ' on St- East. Toronto. ,7, .v n. A new thing i1221 ii soothbrï¬slï¬iï¬mognteg amononrsu. ‘ ____-.-,,_, . N..-â€" c. n l in ebony or po '5 e ivory". no me . ' can be detached and placed uired, TEE 31036811?! E‘B" UNIQUE. A cute little box of real Japanese Tooth Powder (im- ported) will be sent by mail fre(- on receipt of 15 Cents. stamps or silver. Makes teeth like pearls. Crown .‘dcd. C0., 43 Howard street, Toronto. T. B. C01 BA â€"A.\'I)â€" SELL FOR CASH. 't , e 20. . : geaifntlibsibvpbiem. T/Zc‘ lizg'cr ll’t‘aï¬e‘ {/lt‘ 5,6116%! l!) the last fun» NESE Millbrook. CALL WHEN IN TOWN. [-3’364 GE( )rlGEST. its kind in Cane-l NINE OUT OF every ten asks I‘ for and gets l E. B. Eddy's Matches “ Experience tells them this. ‘AEMEIIS‘ VA) 1‘ dlsCl.lll‘.ICC.‘V, (lands and he '\ V: The (Vile-cum. o. .~ 'v Loans made 01 7 .1 charged. _ FIGSâ€"“0" [I Reference-l WEB? BA Millbrook. Inlt , H.â€" RE MEMBER SCHNEIDER’S lVéen I): . town for Diamonds, [Volt/14's troatmori biar eloquent-wit: ass to Lt Toronto, Ont. lewd/cry, Etc. Repairing in If you are the g“ \ . a . t a m .. all branches. All war/é guar- tenth and me open Tmms ‘35:“ ’- I ' mer’l . 0‘83 anteea’. to com lotion, try F. s. SCHNEIDER, Watchmaker and Jeweller 391 George Street, Torontoand Winnipe. PETEEBOBOUGH. - ‘ E. B. EDDY’S power required voltage c osmium I,» V '3. you ? I the ht when you. came that on were a detec‘give." y “I am a deï¬ctive, my lady. I am Francis Fe. of Scotland Yard," ' Lenore’s face became suddenly grave. “You have come on a fruitless min-ion,†she said, gloomily. “I must ii“ and die an outcast like my poor mother." “You are wrung. Lady Lenore; you Itis a smaller case; opening it he be- holds a beautiful diamond-studded watch with its golden glittering chain. On the case of the watch is engraved these words: “Aura, from her Father;†the burglar merely glanced at this, and then closes the case and places it beside the jewels. Then he takes up a tiny, elegantly mounted pistol. It is loaded, ready for 2" w t' .5' , I 1 l Woman’s crime. ' BY AR ELK-DETECTIVE. one hang after another, » moment the candles 7.3" ,, the trunk is reï¬lled and door care Published by permission of the owners of the Silently passes 'cr dreamed of it. long ago.†then she looked up quickly, “it is my'Vâ€"shc broke off abruptly. and flushed painful- ly. “It is your mother's husbandâ€"your a safe shelter until the storm .‘3 past and the true criminal brought to light. _Neil Bathurst, the detective, 18 your friend and not your enemy.†Lenore turned her eyes upon him and examining it closely. It is of foreign manufacture, this he sees at a glance; and his quick eye soon discovers the name of the maker engraved upon it in are silent, deserted; she glides on, and out from somewh again he hits the head of the sleeper, and carefully replaces the jewels, watch and pistol, just as he found them, retaining nothing but a tiny bunch of keys. Then, lantern in hand, he moves about the and nearer to the lake, Lenore bent over the picture again. are no laborers, Her father. the father she had never hear! of. of when she knew nothing; she had rcco nized her mother‘s face; “Believe in him ? Lady Lenore, he has held at arm’s length that eager mother and keen lawyer, at the risk of all that a detective holds dear- H0, aided by a footstools, he peers behind pictures and hangings, he searches everywhere. Finally, he pauses before a trunk that stands in the dressing room, a lady’s travelling trunk, hug: enough for a Flora Mch‘limsy. It is locked; and now he glides back to the bedside, takes from the stand‘ the bunch of keys, and, in a mo- ment is kneeling beside the trunk, trying the lock with key after key. At last he has the right one, and presently the trunk is open, and he is rapidly turning over and examining its contents. It has a great n.any compartments, after the fashion of ladies’ trunks, and, one after another he opens them. Then he lifts out a. tray. and begins swiftly to remove the dresses and shawls, the f urbelows and laces, the soft silks and dainty linen. And now the trunk is empty, or so it seems. and the burglar is bending over it running his hands along the aides and over the bottom. Presently he plunges his hand'into his pocket and draws out a bundle, wrapped in soft flannel; this he unrols, and then places upon the floor, beside him, some small and queer-100k- ing sto l instruments. One of these he takes in his hand, and half his body dis- appears within the trunk ; then it emer- feet from the pier. ’l‘he wicctlve glanced at th" V-‘M. «Hi ring , half 8'. block from this Place, Neil Sitilllghu Eli'llidlcl‘ suds of ihe ï¬rs. l.-- Buhurst said to me, ‘ln Spite of this nor. lam-apical}. the glance. eventing grilt, l believe her innocent, ls your Mury anything that t-IlMV's and rhi‘ shall not be untested While it is r ugh: not By h.~.ir '2" {n.- iLskHl. "ls :1 in my pr-Wer to prevent 1° . anv in: g. ‘ ~hullcrlng. "that mw‘t b0 honor: arose and stood before him. kcbs a hi'ulcl?†l “ Do you believe as innocent t’" she . i think that all your friends should, asked. ‘ I do," solemnly. know “h"la I ..m about to tell you," he} . . .1. "A ndâ€" will others ever believe it ?†1“: Li.“ . "X‘LLVL’l '. Riff: cumin,“ sci-3. Lcnote, with n "i have crossed th: ocean to find and brea:h of X‘:'llt‘l.. "This nrood lady is a, save vou," he replied;."nndV you 11th iii-iii indtcd.‘y 1 two strong champions 12 Neil Bathurs! “l on: were 01' that" R‘Plicd 110. ‘UW‘ ' ‘ulli Robert .locvlyn. Gentleman Jen in; tow-am tlic sllt'ub old lady. :‘leu l knows their reputatigns. Ask lll') Opin- sha-l b.-gin at onc- , only pr facmg my ion of your chances. . story by saying, that I shall make it as --l know-_ their rolpdtablons, and Iknow yours.“ said the gambler. 'Mm Armyn. brirl'as posiblc. And.†with a. slight . . you are saier than if protected by a standing army“. she turns and swiftly retraces (TO BE CONTINUED.) EMPEROR WILLIAM. ness the para ing him as he srmle, "if lam not banishclfrom your prism ncc. i can enlarge up in it latent AL. tins count-zit there Guinea quick s::;p along the hall, and then the door opened, and (Lucienmiir Jeff? apical-1 e ~ ls o'd. is ace ‘cauic Edgy-1.53:1}; 2:11:15 9‘“... {011 upon the in- ~Aura Durand returned from the shop- tru'ltr. but Fl‘ancls- l-‘crrars arose to his' .. ion feeling, for some reason, fol-t wuh ptl'ltcl. composure, and said: . in low rplr During dinner sne secur- "Conic in Jeri. And pray pardon th. : *1 l-feoccul-lcil, and soon aftrr she ex~ trick I hav;~ played you. Miss Armyn, allied heriftlf. saying that shopping al- is not this friend also entitled to your ways weaned her, and retired to her 1870, when the CHAPTER xx.†v-A Sl‘RANG: ING . moons!)- foreign mander, ivin ple. . . . , , himself he holds in his hands not only the "’ disappointment, ’0†~carcely ten min- instruments of steel, but a flat morocco â€"5 9‘ f“ 5h"? had left the drawmg room, case and two flat packages.~ The bottom llrs. li.«'ha.rus, tm. arose 911d walked of the trunk. or what seemed the bottom, lel~“lll‘0l_l~V up the SE11“: stopping “El-"31y has parted in the centre, and underneath ' 5“ “3"“ " El" »r. â€be came to consult the is a shallow space. It is a trunk such as ....:~rst:‘.l'l<l this." he saiil- . "â€â€œll‘s’ Ill-“3' up“ some unimportant has been used by smugglers. A trunk .. drumming down stairs.i .l'lllSt'llUll'l matter, but she remained long with a false bottom. - after that matter was disposed of, chat- , .an descent] and sec-minor l‘ he burglar places. the‘ morocco case ‘ l 7 y’ a notto Ob- and the two packets In his bosom. and «st?» tha‘ .‘dis: Durand was a ' ' o . . " 7 y aning, then without replacing the contents of .;n-l h‘er ('3‘1‘5 growing heavy with sleep. - - - . . . .. - the trunn or closlnv the hidden npenmw . . . .. l . .b‘l‘ldufly ‘7Ԡtwin-1 narrowy at the he rises and gazes (1 mt him His seargli l .:1rl. and then BXCARImL‘d With marked . 6‘ ‘ ' . ‘ ‘ . . is not yet ended. On the opposite Side of ‘ :zolicitude : the dres 'inr room isa door openinvinto a "M'd‘ar 'lill. how h\ v ‘3 5' .‘. O '. 5 c Ll ‘ la y and dull large closet. This falls next under his . .. , . , v. v . . n ‘\ â€Alhdjtgirsnivit‘li“sit-Jilliilrghi::li.1:::;c?e, examination. . The walls are hung with .wgllt'essed that it did ; and remarked that dresses; “ "ll?†a†the paraphernalia 0f 8’ .‘a. mum ring for Laura, if Mrs. Rich- “9““ *T’ “"19†“â€1†â€V," Yet hung ““ ards Would excuse her and r-._tire. In- hooks. On the floor are several boxes and tautlv .Xlrs. llicharls was at the mâ€. two trunks, somewhat smaller than‘thc ' one Without. The masked man examines "l'll ' (lo: "ltl‘SS l l: ' ". ) . .3“ :tllf‘I‘t‘lpl‘lloaLllllllly. one been, qhi all the dresses, especrally the darker “Cour-.- in. please, and hear what this 1 , .. built to 5.1.3:." . . and much Wondering, _- l the door and came is intelligent enou lieves the ‘1‘ sharrinlixg.†uplicd l"-.'r~ "Listen. my friend, and , . n - -.-.'ny. _ V ‘ ulnar scat. «l lll.u:i"lf, Wltll {fir ‘ ~tl:l vli ills facc, and wrt: of the country by unscrupulous an cenary interests. of prices follows volume of money shrinkarre in volume results from le tion. Ila does not believe that the ernment should increase the interest s ix flows: '-n:yycars agn. the only ulltl a:rogant Engiidi dot-ply in love with a ;. .. 3-.lio has the daughter of ' ‘ high family, who llw~l ‘. Vi'ilarrying 2'. hand- I'ac. a son of :h. hills are ï¬lled with that government is, .L'l 11'. l , . ._ â€3.1 new snappy world. As l have before <3.th ‘. ~E:~- l-w «l by an Englishmal. of i. -‘v-l . and shortly lift-1' rh- d “crux «:f .rrr par-cuts they wrre privatvl; llldll‘lul; lll‘ v find in seclusion In: I am a strong magnetizer." It was quite useless to object; Laura was summoned and the distobln" process worumonced. \\hilc Laura was rushing out her mistress’ blonde hair, Mrs. Rich- locked ; but the second and last to be ex- amined, resists his attempt to open it. Again he resorts to the bunch of keys, but they all fail him. He turns away from the trunk and seems to be at a loss. Illnl'u'v' UL Lnl aï¬'ord lieves that government should tection to t to care for ‘.'.-1) .f. sumes to guarantee life, of Christian he believed his son to be travelling f.-r pleasure, and. had himself chosen a wife to bestow up in him when he should re- turn. But one day there came an anony- mous lwtter, telling him of his son’s mar- ' 'riage, revealing the secluded home of the and fro, passed this stand, her hand hov- : red for an instant over the drinking glass, and when she turned away three tiny crystal drops were in the bottom of that glass. At last Miss Durand was duly enscon- Some thought has occurred to him ; he takes up the antern and hurries back to the bed-chamber; he pauses at the bed- side, and bends above the sleeper. He pulls away the covering from about her sholeers and throat, and then he opens blems the Governor of Kansas, Hon. L. E. welhng, in North American Review January. Smï¬g light; They will soon be was one an tnd this trusted one to visit his home and know nis bead .iful wife. This man be- trayed his trust; step by step hveorined his way into the Conï¬d nce of his young wife, and when one day the husband went from home, for a two days’ absence, his plot was ripe for cl,velopment. On that very day the father, blinded, mad with pride, anger and disappomtment, came to the home where the young wife was alone. A terrible scene ensued, and it ended in the father’s declaring that he would give his son his choice between her and him ; if he returned to her, then she might claim him, and keep him; n he did not come back, she must abide by the consequenccs, the law should free his son. Well, he did not come back; through the treachery and deceit of the friend he had trusted, he was kept away, and then the schemer came with a xalsi tale to the distracted. wife; her husband had abandoned her. and returned to his father. this and much more she was made to believe, and then her mother’s ï¬erce italic; blood asserted itself; she would ï¬n er under this chain and draws it caref 'upward. Ah, see! On the end of the chain are two small keys. The man's eyes glitter as they fall upon them. With deft ï¬n rs he removes them from the chain, an then he glides back to the closet and again bends over the trunk. The key ï¬tsâ€"the trunk is open. As be- fore, everything is removed; but not with so much care, for this receptacle contains discarded clothing, fragments of everything that woman accumulate, and all crowded in, in a hasty manner; at the bottom of this trunk there lies a small black valise; this the man lifts out quickly and glances at critically; then to its lock he applies the second key. Again he is successful ; the valise springs open, and the man, with eager hands, re- moves the contents. It is a dark-looking bpndle;hh_e unrolls it. glances just once . . . a somet in 'ni ' ' V Laura obeyed quite willingly, and soon to suppressilsliai; ::CI;LZ:§:_BI)T112: .vlrs. Richards _w1thdrew, leavrng Aura he rolls up the bundle quickly, shudder- Durand lockcd in a sleep from which she in I), . hurriedly replaces it in the black would not waken for hours. How fair ,3- ’ ‘ ‘ r-llt: is as she lies there under the soft themglrgï¬gegï¬i a the contents Of out this cauti . And Aura said that she did, thinking pm on the while, with an inward laugh, of Nina .lnnin and her all night vigil. "You must have your water, I see,†said Mrs. Richards, touching the ewer. "Take a sip then, and go to sleep.†She poured out the water, and Aura drank it obediently, and then closed her eyes as commanded. To and fro, to and fro, moved the deft hands of Mrs. Richards, and presently .kura’s breathing became slow and regu- lar. her clasped hands relaxed themselves and fell apart; she was sleeping. Mrs. Richards satisï¬ed herself on this point, and then she turned away with a trium- phant smile upon her lips. "Go to bed, Laura,†she said to the Eittle maid. “Poor child, you look tired, too; I will close Miss Aura’s rooms; go L0 bed.†and Let the peppermint Do mothers little ones two or infant will not be with “sore mouth†if this is attended Do mothers train their babies to will take but a few evenin will result. Do mothers know treatin tion ? the best method on’t dose with strong the process. Do mothers realize the necessity her neck the slenedr chain and unlocks a trunk ; hurriedly, carelessly she pulls out and. ï¬nally she, draws forth the black valise. In another are extinguished, , closed, and Aura ‘ Durand glides from her room, locks the ully behind her and cautiously, the broad hall It is not yet fairly daybreak, the sin-sets ere glides an al- most imperceptible gray shadow that fol- lows', seeming hardly to be a human thing down where there who may soon come, on to where a dark pier is grimly outlined through the gloom. Then she glides out For a moment she gazes at the place where it went down, as if half expecting it to reappear, and then her steps. And still the gray shadow is behind her. Speech at the Garrison Parade. The mild weather and bright sunshine attracted lar e crowds of people to wit- de of the Berlin garrison on Tuesday. The Emperor walked from the castle to the arsenal, and, after reviewing the troops by companies, returned to the castle in the same way, the crowds cheer- passed. The Emperor ad- drressed the ofï¬cers, saying: “We stand in the face of serious times, but, as in Princes of the German nation stood together in triumph over a nation, so tesday they stand to- gether in the presence of their royal com- g shining proofs of the union of Germany’s Princes and her peo- Germany will also triumph over a more serious international foe which is confronting the empire. The army is the gls, only to disappear again with another fundamental b3?“ 0f the empire, for the gnlldcruc ?†‘ room. twisted bit of steel. When he again rears army 15 the ’19-‘10“ armed. , "do i« 7.. :9“: m said Lenore, warmjy, : she sought solitude, she was doomed . .. -..n . The Western Farmer a Philosopher. The western farmer is a philosopher from necessity. Rapidly tending toward poverty, he demands to know why, and h to answer his own question in the lig t of reason. He be- prime cause of all his woes is the manipulation of the money?! den by borrowing gold, while our native silver, and labor stands idly awaiting an opportunity to take it from its hiding place. He believes or should be. for the good of all the people; that legislation “to keep you up _ ‘ should be for the multitude rather than . . had “M within the :ikw â€1th Laura willput vou to bed and ones, and feels in all the pockets. ’lllon for the few, and he is beginning to be- ' ,..- l ‘ _:;,: mifoï¬mgp fevpn lslmll bathe that poor head for ,you. {:0 turnslhxs attentiolrll to the trunks .and lieve, if government can guarantee him k,“ , ~.~ .g inï¬rm“. Wm, ' a. small 1..†Now don‘t object, it will be a. pleasure to fifes’ ttleduï¬ntéux; ï¬fts'kbi’lowï¬' clothing. nothing but hopeless poverty, that gov- ‘ .: ,7, L, (“my and otherwise at 351,. me. and I know I can relieve the pains. “ a. no ‘ e rs un e n 3 Is not ernment has failed its mission. He be- pro- e weak-the strong are able themselves; and he believes, ï¬nally, that if government, which as- liberty, and the _ charity and prtE-essrve civilization.â€"From “Pro. fore the Western Farmer,†by come Do mothers apply hot cloths to the feet stomach of the little sufferer in case of colic ? This is the very best remedy. remain in its bottle. give pure water to their three times a day ? An likely to be troubled 0 to sleep at a certain hour each evening?) It gs of persistent effort to get them into this habit, and un- told comfort to both mother and child a child troubled with constipa- medicines, but rub the abdomen night and morning with olive oil, gently kneading it during keeping the tiny feet always warm ? Lit~ tle woollen socks, with long tops, secure- GRAVE AND OTHERWISE. . ,0, lined. rein Man Sources but ‘-Worthy. y thro h a . have Strong allia I know to What you instant use. He turns his face toward down the stairs, and‘Enally pauses it the ‘â€" . wwrmm' allude, and I know that a week ago you the sleeper as he holds it; perchance he street door. Carefully ‘she draws back . “After the Bali.’ fled from your best friend. The man smiles behind his mask. Aura. Durand the bolts and lets down the chain, then, "1%": lathe; {$3231. (cos-raven.) who rescued you from Jason Bradwardine is prepared to . defend herself, it seems; with the black valise tightly clutched in “w. my, “:3! “6 broken. does not believe you guilty of any crime. but she is quite defenseless now. The her small hand, she hurries out, down the , . And facet daubed with mud ; Lunar. bent ovnr the picture and mur- He would have done for you what Gentle- man turns hls face away _at last, and stately steps and away. After the ball rm been under muted, half to hemlfl "1 have seen it, man Jeff has done; providedjou with bends over the gleaming little weapon, swiftly AM the Kline we wonder After we’ve beaten them soundly. We feel’i If the earth was ours ; , h _ , $317201; they’ve (101:: to 2‘22):th tiny letterin . in t at gray morning mist. 0n she goes a a mo mores on: an owers. . . - But"3 b’" 1th st d, father. You have seen hlm. Miss asked, almost breathleesly: _ . And now he does something strange, upon her stran errand, and .°n glides the ï¬gs: og’ggggemg’wnï¬; “l" «V Armvn; but you were a Very young “Is that the truth? Do you believem somethin unprecedented, for a burglar; the shadow. ehas been movrng nearer child." him 2)" Is after sexes snunsrons l h h uporLthis paler, (hut, ml: ubltfld Sh? emails I in h ITtobdslm‘ilor. :‘r ‘ e ’s andwritin . and i: never friend a and fellow like himself, is at room, and‘from t rat to t 0 next; e atVt e on ; t on s e on s orw , n to men s us once. gucuï¬â€˜iiiried w hcr mi. to doubt the this mama; hm,r {mating out suspected opens dressing casez, drawers, receptacles swrngs the black value to and {re and nggtï¬m,39f;d‘gggdï¬,y quiet b‘luocrity of the man before her. son parties in order to lawn the guilt where 9fovory sort; he searches for secret hxd- suddqnly, lets so her bold upon it; the 01m 1reverie rofound. she lo lied on with a flash of her olden it properly belongs. Twice you have ingplaces. th inverts chairs, he searches swaying impulse given it sends it outover wag“ wggeotggglgprgpawm imperiousncss. evaded him, and because of this, another- their puddings, he feels about the cush- the water, and then it falls .and With a- [n the mm of the Maker, ‘ "U ' you knuw my father 7’ 5h: enlik’d- man would pronounce you 81“!th But ions of divans and lounges, he overturns dull Splash disappears from sight several All repentant. I would stand. "Can you 5 ll urn about him ‘9" two hours aft -r your-escape from his car'- And I wondered if the people Gathered there His name to raise Would nOt be, through my en eavor, ed to I’m-er. better ways. ‘ , For I felt within in bosom All the true hea of the song, And I thought some tin y port on Ought to touch that worldly throng. So I turned unto the organ, And been. to play the air 0! the tender, sacred 0 era l8. Ever Brlgh and Fair.†Ah! I new: sang so sweetly, All my soul seemed upward turned, All my . ollest endeavor Through those earnest carols burned. Then the heavenly spell was broken, For. btflldc the great staircase Stood a little ragged maiden Gazlnz rendering in my face. She was shibby. poor and crl pplcd, Not a brl ht or winsome out (i; She has spo ed my inspiration, And 1 spoke in anger wild : "Child †Icrled, "what is your business ?†And lpaused. with mien sublime. there in stupid silence ? ,ake haste I’m wastlr it time. " But she did not mov'e or answei‘; Only led with o n e cs Full of lsnppomtcdpueron er, And a pained and grieved surprise. “ You were singing ’bout the angels l" Here her voice was low and sad, W hllc with cold her slight form trembled- She. poor chllo, meant half-clad. "You wen- sin in ’bout the angels. So I came to 00 at you, kind 0’ then ht on was one' New I know it w‘iisnilyou.†' Years have passed since that brief moment, But sometimes I seem to hear Throukhvm y busysllfe of duty A child s act-en , soft and clear. And 1' always pause and harkcn. As wnh silent lips. alone I send, not a song of triumph. But a pruyvr to heaven's throne. stem _ mer- He believes the decline the shrinkage of the in circulation, and that gisla- gov- Sentenees by Judge. The seed is stronger than the soil. False. alarms create false securities. tendencies. In the take the bur- dust. rot is not given. The mundane dcfensxvc plan. Fidelity is the conservative prescrvcr 0 type, custom and race. \thn a thing is hard to endure some Jlng harder may come to make it easier If natiu'c were to man would havt her inventions. )5 Praise not a be puffed up and masterful ; nor too little . This is what he thinks as‘ he s . . . . lest he be discour ed. mwz-e than a yrs-er, and woreycry happy ; .Virrls moved softly about, from the dress- there: ‘ tands 5:81: ilibttlciinhabliltï¬tclliledrfiaelslsiin “‘32:? Homely trutvhsafro like home remedies '11 1‘â€ka ,. than evr-r “11331 their chno, 1; mg room to the bedside, and back again. “I have searched these rooms, 6v“? he is livinggin an age of exquisitely re: â€"apt at times, but applied upon every 0c- girl. \l'.‘._~‘ b. Fu.’ But presently th r- "H a “fly “and near the dainty bad nook and crevice of them; where then is ï¬ned barbarism rather than i th _ casion whether they ï¬t the case or not. came a cnange. [he father of the young ~tood a little cwcr and a glass. As Mrs. the key to this trunk p" d If h d 1 n e noon husband ii!l"“' nothing of this marriage; Richards, in one of her silent marches to ay 8 t an ove l‘he Crown Prince. Le- hasa decided fondness for orange pekoe. for roda, has an income of $7,500,000 a year, . K t of which he runs the overnment. _ . awxy from the white neck the robe that Kn . ou . 3 young pair, and bidding Eh†father ‘0 go 59d 1? “hf: 339“? bed' , is scarce whiter, thereby exposing to view Home†Should 0“. Prince \Valdemar Of Prussia, the only and ,. p fur hitns'clf. how the young "how, said Mrs. Richards, “prepare agenda gold chain; it is long and worn Do mothers shade the baby’s eyes from sun of Emperor William’s sailor brother, l’lusbaml had trusted one pxrson W135 â€ht to g0 to Sleep- D0 3"“ feel 1“ the 1935‘ loos 1y about the neck. He inserts his secret of his marriagt‘: had 9‘7““ Pe'm‘lb' >1991W?†Prince Henry, is deaf and dumb, a fact of which scarcely any; one outside of court circles is aware. Marie Henrietteg‘the handsome and soft- voiced queen of the Belgians, is especially fond of driving, and dues it particularly well. She also rides .well, talks well and is an uncommonly good musician. King Charles of Portugal leaped from to. his carriage recently to interfere with a fight and prevent a probable murder. His majesty overpowered the stronger party and turned him over to the police. The Sultan of Turkey always eats and drinks alone, although, he generally has a large retinue in attendance. He uses neither table, plates, ï¬ife or fork, but only a spoon and his rs, from which he ï¬s.:es out his food from a series of little saucepans. ' - ~ The Shah of Persiahasï¬ve sons and tnlrteen daughters. ' three married .0115 have twenty-onet‘children. ‘The Persian oï¬cial year bookmentions inthe royal family three ers and two of of insCELLANEOUs READING migrant!» Reading roi- Old and You And Scrimmage has "heeled to halves," .Who 'twalxwho was kicking our calves. And flu but glaeuasure, after a touch-down, the . Our pro-existent habits are our present whirligig of time some one must Life is a combination of which the sec- world is conducted on the disclose her processes .Jhc audacity to patent servant too greatly, lest he Queen Victoria brews her own tea and Gopal Rao, maharajah guitowar of Ba- brin or in the United States. openly and repeatedly expressed, surely it might be possible so advantageous to each other in the event of war and so invigorating in times of peace. Putting aside question of senti- ment, fect a that t can think the colonies were wrong in ï¬ghting the War of independence, under the circumstances forced upon them. fact, they descendants of Britain had they not done 50. Paper spindles for yarn spinning now used as r. steel. Steel barrels, made from sheets ranging the United States and the Chic land, showed h the feeling of g the two countries. made by different sections of the munity on both sides of the Atlantic to about some sort of practical union , . both countries would appear to encourage the idea of reunion. after the most bloody battles, but before the actual Declaration of Independence, the colonists strained every nerve to of- peaceable conclusion of the dim- culties which were upsetting the hitherto happy relations existing between Great Britain and the States, although it was through the imbecility of Great Britain ‘0 ago to Eng- ow nuine and hearty is oodgviiill existing between Efforts also are PETE SIMONS COMPANY, being 416 George St., Opposite the Examiner Book Store. com- Pete will be happy to have his old friends and customers call on him and l' ave 'hf'lf orders for their FALL SUITS AND OVERCOATS. r/ Come and see our stock before purchasing chi-when- Bran New Shades, Styles and Patterns in Suitin Trowserings. N0 OLD STOCK. Everything bran new and fresh from the mills. nce between Great Britain and \Vith such sentiment to effect an alliance gs, Over-coatings}. however, the selï¬sh interests of It Is notable that Don‘t forget the pl AOL'â€" PETE SIMONS a. co. - 416 George 5? Something nice in Gent’s Furnishings always in stock. , LlRMEEWERfl CITY BARBER SHOP: T. H. BEYANS , Tonsorial Artist. IILLBROOK l J ¢ .\ 0. 6. Meets the coco. n Home Circle Koo! o'clock sharp. W. ARCH ER. Loader. J.B.‘l e rupture ever occurred. No one In would not have been worthy PARLORâ€"Kin ~51... ï¬tment) o"l w GtKell's bank. 8 W M c M Shaving, Hair-cutting. Shampoolng and ever tl‘iing else in the mnsorlal linc carefully often - e to. GENERAL-STORE. ' Works of Genius. are substitute for those of COURT IVAN†Meets lhzrd M-vl rooms chr Leech {"iii‘cunxh in thickness from one-sixteenth toa quarâ€" Try our Twentv’ï¬ve cent “‘31 best C- . ter of an inch, are coming into use. . value in t0an also our Ram Lal’s pure hi} _ A car shaped like a bathtub,V in which Indian Tea. at Fift . cpnm l, the passengers either sit or recline as if in 3 ’ ’ ' -, a bed is in use in Berlin. It has three wheels and is propelled by a naphtha W M. LANG. OYAL C A}' A; motor- %. , -. a. U ..h-..-. K".-- MI I B R00 K wrangling: 3 A baby carriage designed especially for 9 ' the use of those who live in flats, looks just like any other baby carriage when it is in Hill, but it can be folded together so that one and down stairs. It is said that window panes of porous glass are being the Home Circle 1 hour of meeting! Society are worm person. Informs: “I ARCHER. S. if you “an! :i fll'NbCliLN» horse, a good rig, m' turnout of any (lescrip Lion. dun L full to call at this stable. ggJ GILLUT SUN? .7 Undertake-’3 and Practical Embaimers. person can handily carry it up \l'ANl‘l-Zli~ Hood younz tom of black . . . drivers. made in Paris. The min- :ri-mumsw -‘.'i I ute holes in the glass are too ï¬ne to per- ï¬fe†of lebtm‘omal" can 1' T. W. LARMER. biggie.“ ï¬::§gl:::dd hiblfli‘g'eviï¬ï¬lgzdg I Stable and ullice on Tupper street. - 0,! in {£1,001}; 3' ‘. We kee constantl ’ on hand a large ’*â€"~ - v _. L Eaiiflg‘: ' . . 1‘ lock of urniture 0 all kinds. Our '. A spoonless must rd pot is a recent in- vention. By pressin apiston rod in an air-tight receptacle t e r of mustard is forced through asuitable sprout. tard is always fresh. " tuck is well assorted and displayed in '~ llrce lrrge HllOVV rooms. No trouble to how goods. We are also manufac- urors of the Excelsior Washing Ma- hine. Best in the Market. in: Brethren wok w. D. 1140*, . . sacred eqursnte amount pluule’s PHOTflGHAPHS HARE] The air beingcxcludcd. the mus- RCEIBA LD ‘l RIAGE LlCE Brotherly Love in a Tenement Street. â€â€˜h‘ PIN But the most significant expression of s the spirit of village life in Bulfinch street, THE PEOPLES ARE THE BEST N. C- MOKI and a truly beautiful one. is the readiness ’ \ _' 7.. w. “we“. of ncirrhbors to help each other out of ’ . ;.. 7 T It. troubled Prudential motives force this 1 ' vii-’2' †-‘, TRL EST, â€In" exercise of brotherly love to be kept so 0 ‘ " - f l ‘ far out of sight in streets of this kind that, as a rule, its amount is absurdly under- estimated. charitable societies, however remote from charity their fabricated excuse forcalling OROZVTO and oenlinte ltol burgh. Member ‘ eons.0ntsrio. c ldenoe Annie gay his “:4 . . Andllost Artistic Butcher Shop ,,.___.._.h. _ Tho well-dressed visitors of . , . His Euler ed Portraits in Oil . LAPP. mziysccni to be. are yet known for what “2: Inkl- ‘llis Incam of m 0,. Waterg Colors, India Ink, L «erect-3d they areâ€"â€"a charity picket line. forming the people of .\l lllhrook Sepia or Cravons have no super- 311‘ L Eighty-year-old Bridget Mulcnlly. (Which mrlmps, H gf'lwl‘ally for on this: Continent. All ’0 l "‘ toothllcss, but stillf brigdht-cycd. 1:1};in be knrlvwnll llmt}. we llmwf alwagvs work imperishablc. TRg-VICTE ,3: seen a most anv air ay smo 'lna‘ ler 0“ 11â€â€œ A C 10100 “1 0 “â€331 S- - . . . t e 0166 pipe on the SL601: of No. 2:), IIcr'hus- If you wish a special cul lt‘l us fl 1‘0“ Lharloue-st., , PeterbVoro - Ground Ontario. band. Jim. a day laborer, died eighteen km)“ and “'9 “'l†supply 5"“ car Studio. 1‘0 stairs to Chmb' H )vea‘l‘s ag()' FUI‘ SO‘VLhn 379a}.§ 1)ef0ro }1is ALI, "l: I'EI(A~ lil‘o." [IT]. x‘ I‘I'.,4, "ERFI’ 7‘7 M . ‘ death he was blind, and his nusfortune, 1‘0 ,gyy 1-,.â€57 4â€: THE 77,," 5-. “ ' N â€If no". joined to his good nature, made him a. [lo 185 BARRISTER- . 'favbrite. Soon after Jim’s death Bridget gm Money f dislocated a shoulder, thereby perman- Natt rass Du "ford real eimdlmlfowé ently losing the use of her right arm. HAVE ARR|VED. 0509-“ . She became destitute. The neighbors A, A , lent her many things (cooking dishesand F] E O O O O O O O O 9 O O o I. “It. a comforter among them)and afteruhttle CALL AND SEE THEM AT II W Michael Roe, who was himself behind _ BARRISTER- s with his rent, gave her a home with his Private and family. Then her friends, “the boys from Ireland,†“ i which netted 840. room for fifty cents a week and took in thcloweet raw. ‘ a: Bethany on 3“ month. put up†a raffle for her She rented a cellar The Dominion Mutual Fire Insurance MISS. E. MELVILLE’S, Association. two girl lodgers at ten cents a night. THE BEST AND CHEAPEST FOR FARnERS 424 GEORGE STREET! SIX c From that time to this she has lived in a 1, i: the only com an}. lssucing Four Year w ’ cellar or a garrct and shared her room with girl lodgers; but she has depended largely for her support upon the the “boys†have continued "to put up" for her once or twice a year. Three years ago Michael Roe, widower, PETERBOROUGH. Blah '0! Policy. ENTlS'l‘. 5:! D preservation troll! Oxide (jib ff teeth. Gooc “‘01 Bethany the 2nd month. Umemee day of each nlonzl Rates are only about one half of that charged by stock companies. For further information apply to A. C. MAYCOCK. rallies ALL THE NEWEST ART MATERIALS KEP l.\' STUCK. STAMPING DONE. by that time a was stricken down with a fatal V SEA sickness. Then the "boys from Ireland†12 3 B xxzfaeiiflgiggném JAS' V w got their heads together and “put up" a ' m 0 ' 8 ° ' casual beneï¬t ball for Bridget‘s former bene- factor. Tickets were the ball netted $75. thing left toward f uncral cxpenScs when the old man died. given for the beneï¬t of his orphan chil- dren.-Alvzin F. Sanborn. in the Janu- ary Forum. .II B MI 8 P08. HAVE THE NEWEST LINES 1N FALL AND 'WINTEB HATS. ï¬fty cents euol1.-.1nd ’ L'EEN‘S l'nn There was some- of me Collies YOU WANT Then another ball was .gl'x r â€Lesa: 'llj. rinl (‘5'. “ and F ‘ ‘ umce at N17. The New Butler. J AS- "Now, remember." said a charming wo- "(Lunumh man to her new butler,- who had a faint conception of a business for which he de- manded the highest wages. “remember. in announcing meals you LL DOMESTIC -7 ed accordms l’arzztoln. attenm are to say; Mills Bros. Nubhyfui 7 ‘ ' ' ‘ ‘ " 'l ' I ' ‘IFQ 1V Charges 710G823“; ‘Breakfast is ready.’ 'Lunchcon is ready.‘ Al 1" 11“" Bl†l‘ h L A ‘11 “* ‘ r... opposzx 0. ‘Dinner is served.‘ " DR H “Al " lt. ‘1 l'id tl ' d F RS '. ' butler} iigi mum up IL 10 plou l I V V . G. H. WALLIS, V ’ ‘flfl Not long after, this charming woman OF EVERY DESCRIPTIO). CALL 0) BETHABX. ventured to experiment on a dinner to n THEM. few intimate friends. sion on her countenance when. on up- pearing at the drawing-room door to an- nounce dinner, this literal butler ex- claimed in clarion tones : . .â€". . “Breakfast is ready, luncheon is ready. sisters of the shah, whilgtho uncles and dinner is served 2" PASH ION ABLE TAILOR, PONTYPOOL, ‘ . . I 1 I ‘- Ll. DOMl-Zï¬'l‘lt bank) “It LAPWS ¢ ed accor‘.:. Parziculnr .i' .e .‘ . Chargu- ill“ a .‘n. if allendcil in). MILLS BROS. GEORGE STREET, PETEREORï¬Uï¬H G 1 r I T' H. H! , V rm unto n the Cleveland SchoolofCullin , i, h . l’ h _ ut, leaving the 13' fasltlenedil will 1"? “31'5“ka tilt? dilly. the cousrns number 140; 1* This is a true story of the capital. . can zuarauloe satisfaction. We Defy Cltgy lull-rook. mks her child and 3Q away 3 “b1?!†“f Villa?" °f_. :1 ° 318': t’g ts, guru xaever closet open and the boudOir door ajar, be 3221:â€; 0?: d1 (211131221113. been 8:51;}, ï¬g,†Public Speaking is theL‘7-Duke of Teck’s % Competition. ‘ BMW-ill "i she would lu‘O- _The ï¬ery 01“ no em“ “."el’s “ 1" â€'21 1°†3’ near or, an to- glides, valise in hand from the rooms. 0 Ir 3 0mg ,ru e 1 e smatest trouble in life. He is an ex~ n - - . . ' a (I ~" '97â€? .2 ‘take the Church woud mvlit Mrs. Richards has left a few wax .. ‘. . feet and legs gently and thoroughly un- . lhe margin of profit in farming is to G H w L .1 . . :2: if,if‘10§:°m,:,nialg., neither would Luggrs ablaze, not only in the bed-charm 5,3323 :33, Synge; ï¬lmy; mégiéies all: til there is a good circulation and then '5:lelï¬ï¬ggei:$::e?3?emgï¬geï¬:nge‘ small to admit of any unnecessary waste. ' - A US, a; "Cl €232; bk» Slate; sh.- lKnr‘l-V this, andshi1 knew; VberV. 1|th Inwfl’le (Ilrsssinarpgiili ï¬nd Eliml'oir then this strangest L, all strange 'burg- fasten in the warm pinning blanket. and no one dan get bettegghi-oug h a pull: PONTYPOOL 3;... a: . tofutlxuf. ncrlulautdausbwrxf “1‘52; ‘iel‘fg ‘ W" " 5 a" ‘ 95 e a" .s returns, comes softly in, bearing Do mothers kecpahst of simple reme- he function than he camfiprovided there A / â€r «. \ .-a._._ .._ hm , J ‘H ( “â€0" hrrla‘P‘TgEO “I" 9‘ EB 0, (‘1‘ Je’fpckit-k tick tick t} l'ttl b back the black valisc. He replaces it dies at hand? Do they use nature’s lsno formalspeak' i’grlnmto do. / M5 / i'f‘ CV1... Uxij U†,. "‘ - ' . “a.“"i‘ “‘5‘! â€â€˜5’ "33“"? â€(‘1 1g“: ,‘ .1. 113.1518? dressing-i0 ’1“ tellu $031? just as he found it; having ï¬rst locked remedies instead of dosing the tiny tots â€" , ‘1‘ k_/ Q\ , / THE FASAIONABLE TAILOR v ‘3 ' ""’ PERRY‘I‘OWY' 51:1 tr titles the “~13" melt ‘1' f: h?“ 'jï¬c in the minute: “(1:1) st 5 oh e It, then he restores to their original places with strong medicines that do more harm Fancie- of Fashiim. /% 0/ ’f, / ’ Nan). @750†‘0 “'l‘m†COJ 11‘3†0i? '~""(l\"v‘l-le wr» 'gh: all her misery, s e 6V. 0‘ 1?;‘33‘5; dmr 0f th‘e'boudo' an 0‘13 every article removed from the closet, than good, and bleaching the baby with Fano ncils for M h . / , “j! H†,1“, new.“ “ms ;,, Suitings. ()ycrcou would be of [he verygrcnxesi value refusc ‘ ivuivimff. a. I: â€AK-kalii'l ‘er mil-ill! third“: his: h ivtthe hin'l bf a. spirit Sltii'gEflifzfly trunks and boxes, pausing at times to as- saffron tea ? mold lislï¬iou revived-1.115 ‘l 0 am m / \i' lugs and all lines of to takeii under :l ‘ or, . l.t‘.;‘mrru_:‘.l‘. I: VA: -, .' _~ - x ,. . '_ - ‘ ‘ V, ‘ -fl_ -_ V . . _ . d. partur: from his happy home, tn.’ 3t swings inward, and then a. ï¬gure glides Lug-higizgf }1:hl~19:£:;: tdnrhiilldlrbtlig mlS Do mothers m warm WM“ and mllk y†.n_; hiqbahd “'hn had been decoyed 1n. the figure of ‘ _ gre t a man. a man clad in a a _ _ . . tru i ' 'i - o m - away by afazse r port of his father‘s ill- long. loose. gray garment, and With ms nk n “10 dress as 1‘ 0 , ï¬rst replac instead of soap for washing the infant Linen lawns with blue orl d‘dotslaum i h t tl } k t k with scrofulous tendencies? Two parts degebeautiftiilg aVndlwear i '1 'th . . 0 ' ‘ n e . noss. return. at; he found his home deso- face and head entirely hidden by a velvet £11.15; tlilenzglitiird 01123123821? 2'; orig; (1?: water to one part milk 13 about the “ght rve me a. m 0113‘, g asses WI 18:... his wife and child g no. Then he mask, and close-ï¬tting velvet skull-cap. ’ g pe returned to his father, accusing him as m. author of all this misery, and the father believing his visit to have been th sole cause of the flight of his son’s Wife, did not deny the charge; there wert many angry words. anthhey separate wthout fully understanding thscause of . the: trouble. All that the Wily fals; :astly at the sleeper. Then he starts back friend had done, the son believed the 1.3 if astonished; but a moment later he father guilty of. The bereaved and for- l bends still nearer, holding the taper so east-n husband left his father’s house; close that the blonde hair upon the pil- RSVL‘I' to return. He became reckless} low seems almost endangered. At last and still the {leeway-3r was on his track. he seems satisfied With his scrutiny, and urging him on, keeping him alienate.) then goes back to the boudorr, replaces from his father, who now longed for a the taper, and draws from a pocket of rl‘Cl'nClllEClUE. After ten years he died, the loose gray gument a tiny lantern of and the proud father was left childless. the “bull’s eye’ order; this he lights, Then this old man married, married a » and the beams’tllat shoot out are strong young wife. 'w he died within the year. and bright. . Nor he 18 ready for work. and thenâ€"he was forced to see that his He moves without apparent effort, but as grand name and his ancestral halls mus: neieelessly as ashadow. He must be the come into the hands of a distantrelative, very prince of burglm, this masked a man who came of a. wicked and de- man. « . based. as well as a very distant bran -h First, he 3099 straight to the bedside ' farzrilv, and who was hated by the 31383111.- he Pull! down the bull’s-eye, and : blcmab for many reasons. He had begins 8- 58W about the bed. He puts 7 his arm under-the pillow on which rests n ...r dreamed of this man as a. possible , _ . heirâ€"Dc: the man himself had schemcd the head of the sleeper, and lifts it from the false bottom. He works carefully, methodically, making no mistakes. When this last trunk is closed and locked he goes once more to the bedside, puts the keys again under the pillow and the two detached ones once more upon the chain suspended about the neck of the sleeper. Then he turns about and surveys the room, to assure himself that everything is just as when he ï¬rst entered ; he moves a chair a little, shakes out the folds of a curtain, surveys in the same manner the dressing-room and boudoir, and then, like a shadow, he steals away, closing the doors behind and re-enters no more. Still the wax tapers shed their mellow light, still the little bronze clock ticks off the moments and still Aura Durand slum-‘ bets on, with calm upturned face and regular breathing. Truly Mrs. Richards is a wonderful magnetizer. It is gray dawn before the sleeper wakens, which she does with a start and a sudden excla- mation. She sits up, looking about her in bewilderment, then she springs su l- denly from her bed and runs to the dressâ€" ing-room. The little clock tells her it :5 near morning; she oes to the window-r He closes the door through which he came, and bolts it without making a mund ; then he takes up one of the wax :apcrs, and, holding it in his hand passes through the dressing-rmm and ap- proaches the bedside. ie holds the taper ilof t then, and bends down, gazing stead- least two months old. that he is dried sible while wet. Do mothers see tight around the realize the importance of sweet child" with care in this respect. liable to cry time he cries. - their wants ? The child that is left en- icr 3. .:.rs to this end. He was the some the bed. Tth, with the other hand, he $313.3? gearieaig t Eggggiowtheabhixtid: tirely to the care of hired nurses is ,offen not. who had play-ed the Judasto the old explores. bear-9.1 Varticles he takes from “Can it be ss'bg7 ,, tte grthy . ‘1 the child that causes, grief for the mother man‘s son; the man who had made the underneath,% pillow, and then he re- PO 1 le, mu rs egir. H ' Ill: tour a sander-er, the child homeless places it 81111 the sleeper’s head very DldI allow that woman WP“ “‘0 to - - - 37 ther will realize that she is not blame- an-d nameless, driven the father "to an gently, and . to the stand whereon gigs;:gdshzvdiï¬ulfpfoalilihlgblgdliZEhlif; 1685' untimely grave, and rendered the proud he {’13ch â€13" things 1!!5t l'emoved fmm the pillow. . Do mothers make it a point to ï¬nd time old man childless and desolate. VWher their bid“! flace. _ ~ “All, they are there 7: she so. drawâ€" l to mend broken toys, to tie the knots, to this man presented himself and his pre He draw i chair toward him, this inga breath of relief 1“I ut mi?) there ikise away the bruises and to answer the tensions, the old lord swore that he shoulc glar, places it before the just as 1 did all the 1.85,, fol; effect and f ; numberless questions as the children grow never inherit his acres. Then he sent for stand, t e light of the bull’s-eye did sleep after all The day hiid been' ilder? They should never allow them. mg, and for years i have searched over full upon if, and arts y down trying, but I did n‘of, know that I needed: elves to forget that what seams of little Europe to find his son’s Wife and child. . . booty,_there by the very sleep so much. Nothin is disturbed... .mportance to them may be of the most Miss Armyn, this proud old noblemar , there is a case of jewels, they left the candles gurnin I su ’~‘ vital importance in forming the character was your father’s father; that. wrongs: bones; great blue glem- pose thinking that Ishould wakegri soon}: of the child. Lastly, d9 mothers use wife was g’ï¬lgl' mother; Elbe Villain th , of course Aura She puts her hand to her throat, arid sound common stensecontlnléally and £111 muvht evil was seen and" war;- _, . ,dnws orth - ~ - lar e doses in raining an caring or ' dmne' 6; and the long-sought heiress,- ' is Dockla_ .% the chain mm Its pendent 3 their children? If not, they should. recentiz'ialsonthe Thames ofa ' ' - , ~ . . alumnae boat, with steel framework 7 ~ 7 I A ' at V ~ 981183â€"811 . daluumin' um lates forthehull,“have - ‘ . , ~ ', ' . . speed,whichthemak- “OISE†n _ The air-ea use,“ out pith. @999 worth “, “Elï¬n, ' “m ‘9‘? _ . "Jason. deesawht . . ’ ï¬sh. may 01' hairpin-Kiln? .. » .y'go certame . ‘7' ’far I am f n u I’Vwfll Ina-k0 5a of She mutm, ‘nd 4 “3“. , a. is“, ' shaft,- ' and marker hat ‘ Then 9 see- vail. proportion. Soap will often prove irritat- ing to tender skin, but the milk and water , is cooling and healing, and will keep the silver receptacle to skin soft, smooth and clean, and its use may be continued until the child is at De mothl rs wrap the baby quickly in flannel upon taking him from the bath ? This is very important, and also to see quickly and thoroughly, exposing him to the air as little as pos- that there is nothing little form. Do they having every garment loose and light and warm? A “cross" baby will soon become “such a Do mothers remember that a child is from the pain of an over-full stomach as from the cravings of hunger? This is a fact that seems to be overlooked, judging from the usual practice. Don’t get into the habit of feeding him every Do mothers enjoy the company of their little ones and take pleasure in supplying in later years; and the thoughtful mo- Americans {in Chino, .Eflpt) andlast yqar *he'mta of ‘t -. a thin slice of lemon floating on top. The modern smokingsetï¬as a chased hold cachous, snake root, etc. 37'“, ‘ Boating serges come injfgiyory white, blue and corn, and are quitflhs thing for summer wear. -.‘c},, "1“. Round ï¬re opals set willhdiamonds butter color ; it’s only for’the nah-colored, ' Clear, olive-skinned brunette,€3g-- in the hollowed handle. v Wanted, .‘ Dewrmmm‘ï¬ï¬‚m 'l‘he liquor trafï¬c is now éï¬ï¬‚mhedin politics, and it is there we must meet it ; so unless the people ~in.,§§;;msaesty‘ of their political power, are aroused‘to com: bins in one and, united phalanx of 0 position, an through the. virtue there is in the'ballot hurl these‘ autocratic de- spoilers, this piratical horde of unscrupu. lous liquor dealers and their sympa _ . and abettors, into an abyss of annihila- tion, there is nothing left but certain anarchy and destruction for our country. The moral revolution and the grand re-a sults of prohibition can only be brought about by the united effort of an earnest, determined people, with their combined will and purpose, without compromise; :- concentrated and crystalized into voteszat, the ballot-box. . . ,, ,- s1tygfo1- : .' , - This makes an 1ilnrli)perative neces part a. distinctive to i ition part â€"a y composed of cdizcientious and determined votersâ€"4 party not onlycombinedbu : l" “ cure just law, but a party With - moral endpohtmal payer to enforcethe lag!- entire prohibition without cemptomr‘ee or " conciliation. ,1. ; e. o.. . : _â€"â€"_ .7 “ F The Friendly Bent; sot England The relations between Enghshmfo - l <4:- ; . .râ€˜ï¬ 3 form a beautiful scarf p Turquoise shares the opal’s favor. . \ L Blondes should not try to {Ear the new . “-P . Mn -. Elicia andwhethsrsupplledby sire ' I TORONTO TYPE FOUNDBI. Place to Shortlmnd nn'l Typewrizing,orro 2::5 Learn. . 9 0 $6 00 O. 6 9 960009999 00 ' OOOOOOOOzOzoxOOOOOOOOOOO ( TOBACCO HABIT , ‘. ED NERVOUS 0181A; : The system employed at this insiit. t o is the famous Double Chloride of G: Thro Slaves to t hav.o been emancipated p- tcen years. Lakehurst Sanitarium is u oldest institution of and has a ' well-earned reputation 1. maintain in this line of medicine. whole history there is not an instants .» any after ill-effects from the Hundreds of happy homes in all parts a the Dominion eï¬lcacy of a course of treatment with :t For terms and full infcrmaticn writc » THE SECRET ‘ .3‘7, 28 Bank of Commerce Chamb'rs, m. A K EHU RS? .. -_ .: ro morons from one-ht" am - up to Eleven Horse Power. Write :c impression that the male tended . ‘ 9“ ~ is 50 Chinclim" ,V,‘ . ., Enron-Tux mum. is 5‘7. : 'l ‘. .; ' - J 7 â€In“ W 1.3.2332;Eff;$2“c.‘:.?.l3.l‘.~°.§§fâ€Ã©â€™f:2? Fall and Winter Tweeds. Worst Wm: I» FLEMlNG, l’rin'l, Uwcn Sound, Om. ' onlsrlou lig‘kh your new; l1»- eds and Friezes. Price and fit guaranteed. Full Gent's Furnishings. 389 George St, Peterhoro. . To such we (itcll': _ to prove that this is a de- cidcd error, as in our pre- paration, “Mallino with . Codl.iver0ll."nolonlyis tllcobjeClionablctasteen- '5 tlrely removed, but the preparation is really pala- tableâ€"relished alike by : old and young. It is the _. ideal “builder," and will restore health and color lines of J. T. STINSON, _: DEALER 1N17~ SA rvlTARn _ w _ . this “run down." To any New white morocco parents card Boots 21 n d Shoes. . smakmaloftheprepmaon pETERBoRO'. cases have flat borders of golfer silver OAKVILLE . ONT “131° 1"“ Address 1’05Ҡ. m- F\‘Gl\‘ m gilt, not ornamented but h' , ‘Tbumish- â€"â€" -» PETE R BORO' M “5° Manufacmï¬nc Com ( I \‘iil’olmf ed. These are very elegant LV ‘ uiet. For the treatment and cure of ' on St- East. Toronto. ,7, .v n. A new thing i1221 ii soothbrï¬slï¬iï¬mognteg amononrsu. ‘ ____-.-,,_, . N..-â€" c. n l in ebony or po '5 e ivory". no me . ' can be detached and placed uired, TEE 31036811?! E‘B" UNIQUE. A cute little box of real Japanese Tooth Powder (im- ported) will be sent by mail fre(- on receipt of 15 Cents. stamps or silver. Makes teeth like pearls. Crown .‘dcd. C0., 43 Howard street, Toronto. T. B. C01 BA â€"A.\'I)â€" SELL FOR CASH. 't , e 20. . : geaifntlibsibvpbiem. T/Zc‘ lizg'cr ll’t‘aï¬e‘ {/lt‘ 5,6116%! l!) the last fun» NESE Millbrook. CALL WHEN IN TOWN. [-3’364 GE( )rlGEST. its kind in Cane-l NINE OUT OF every ten asks I‘ for and gets l E. B. Eddy's Matches “ Experience tells them this. ‘AEMEIIS‘ VA) 1‘ dlsCl.lll‘.ICC.‘V, (lands and he '\ V: The (Vile-cum. o. .~ 'v Loans made 01 7 .1 charged. _ FIGSâ€"“0" [I Reference-l WEB? BA Millbrook. Inlt , H.â€" RE MEMBER SCHNEIDER’S lVéen I): . town for Diamonds, [Volt/14's troatmori biar eloquent-wit: ass to Lt Toronto, Ont. lewd/cry, Etc. Repairing in If you are the g“ \ . a . t a m .. all branches. All war/é guar- tenth and me open Tmms ‘35:“ ’- I ' mer’l . 0‘83 anteea’. to com lotion, try F. s. SCHNEIDER, Watchmaker and Jeweller 391 George Street, Torontoand Winnipe. PETEEBOBOUGH. - ‘ E. B. EDDY’S power required voltage c osmium I,» V '3. you ? I the ht when you. came that on were a detec‘give." y “I am a deï¬ctive, my lady. I am Francis Fe. of Scotland Yard," ' Lenore’s face became suddenly grave. “You have come on a fruitless min-ion,†she said, gloomily. “I must ii“ and die an outcast like my poor mother." “You are wrung. Lady Lenore; you Itis a smaller case; opening it he be- holds a beautiful diamond-studded watch with its golden glittering chain. On the case of the watch is engraved these words: “Aura, from her Father;†the burglar merely glanced at this, and then closes the case and places it beside the jewels. Then he takes up a tiny, elegantly mounted pistol. It is loaded, ready for 2" w t' .5' , I 1 l Woman’s crime. ' BY AR ELK-DETECTIVE. one hang after another, » moment the candles 7.3" ,, the trunk is reï¬lled and door care Published by permission of the owners of the Silently passes 'cr dreamed of it. long ago.†then she looked up quickly, “it is my'Vâ€"shc broke off abruptly. and flushed painful- ly. “It is your mother's husbandâ€"your a safe shelter until the storm .‘3 past and the true criminal brought to light. _Neil Bathurst, the detective, 18 your friend and not your enemy.†Lenore turned her eyes upon him and examining it closely. It is of foreign manufacture, this he sees at a glance; and his quick eye soon discovers the name of the maker engraved upon it in are silent, deserted; she glides on, and out from somewh again he hits the head of the sleeper, and carefully replaces the jewels, watch and pistol, just as he found them, retaining nothing but a tiny bunch of keys. Then, lantern in hand, he moves about the and nearer to the lake, Lenore bent over the picture again. are no laborers, Her father. the father she had never hear! of. of when she knew nothing; she had rcco nized her mother‘s face; “Believe in him ? Lady Lenore, he has held at arm’s length that eager mother and keen lawyer, at the risk of all that a detective holds dear- H0, aided by a footstools, he peers behind pictures and hangings, he searches everywhere. Finally, he pauses before a trunk that stands in the dressing room, a lady’s travelling trunk, hug: enough for a Flora Mch‘limsy. It is locked; and now he glides back to the bedside, takes from the stand‘ the bunch of keys, and, in a mo- ment is kneeling beside the trunk, trying the lock with key after key. At last he has the right one, and presently the trunk is open, and he is rapidly turning over and examining its contents. It has a great n.any compartments, after the fashion of ladies’ trunks, and, one after another he opens them. Then he lifts out a. tray. and begins swiftly to remove the dresses and shawls, the f urbelows and laces, the soft silks and dainty linen. And now the trunk is empty, or so it seems. and the burglar is bending over it running his hands along the aides and over the bottom. Presently he plunges his hand'into his pocket and draws out a bundle, wrapped in soft flannel; this he unrols, and then places upon the floor, beside him, some small and queer-100k- ing sto l instruments. One of these he takes in his hand, and half his body dis- appears within the trunk ; then it emer- feet from the pier. ’l‘he wicctlve glanced at th" V-‘M. «Hi ring , half 8'. block from this Place, Neil Sitilllghu Eli'llidlcl‘ suds of ihe ï¬rs. l.-- Buhurst said to me, ‘ln Spite of this nor. lam-apical}. the glance. eventing grilt, l believe her innocent, ls your Mury anything that t-IlMV's and rhi‘ shall not be untested While it is r ugh: not By h.~.ir '2" {n.- iLskHl. "ls :1 in my pr-Wer to prevent 1° . anv in: g. ‘ ~hullcrlng. "that mw‘t b0 honor: arose and stood before him. kcbs a hi'ulcl?†l “ Do you believe as innocent t’" she . i think that all your friends should, asked. ‘ I do," solemnly. know “h"la I ..m about to tell you," he} . . .1. "A ndâ€" will others ever believe it ?†1“: Li.“ . "X‘LLVL’l '. Riff: cumin,“ sci-3. Lcnote, with n "i have crossed th: ocean to find and brea:h of X‘:'llt‘l.. "This nrood lady is a, save vou," he replied;."nndV you 11th iii-iii indtcd.‘y 1 two strong champions 12 Neil Bathurs! “l on: were 01' that" R‘Plicd 110. ‘UW‘ ' ‘ulli Robert .locvlyn. Gentleman Jen in; tow-am tlic sllt'ub old lady. :‘leu l knows their reputatigns. Ask lll') Opin- sha-l b.-gin at onc- , only pr facmg my ion of your chances. . story by saying, that I shall make it as --l know-_ their rolpdtablons, and Iknow yours.“ said the gambler. 'Mm Armyn. brirl'as posiblc. And.†with a. slight . . you are saier than if protected by a standing army“. she turns and swiftly retraces (TO BE CONTINUED.) EMPEROR WILLIAM. ness the para ing him as he srmle, "if lam not banishclfrom your prism ncc. i can enlarge up in it latent AL. tins count-zit there Guinea quick s::;p along the hall, and then the door opened, and (Lucienmiir Jeff? apical-1 e ~ ls o'd. is ace ‘cauic Edgy-1.53:1}; 2:11:15 9‘“... {011 upon the in- ~Aura Durand returned from the shop- tru'ltr. but Fl‘ancls- l-‘crrars arose to his' .. ion feeling, for some reason, fol-t wuh ptl'ltcl. composure, and said: . in low rplr During dinner sne secur- "Conic in Jeri. And pray pardon th. : *1 l-feoccul-lcil, and soon aftrr she ex~ trick I hav;~ played you. Miss Armyn, allied heriftlf. saying that shopping al- is not this friend also entitled to your ways weaned her, and retired to her 1870, when the CHAPTER xx.†v-A Sl‘RANG: ING . moons!)- foreign mander, ivin ple. . . . , , himself he holds in his hands not only the "’ disappointment, ’0†~carcely ten min- instruments of steel, but a flat morocco â€"5 9‘ f“ 5h"? had left the drawmg room, case and two flat packages.~ The bottom llrs. li.«'ha.rus, tm. arose 911d walked of the trunk. or what seemed the bottom, lel~“lll‘0l_l~V up the SE11“: stopping “El-"31y has parted in the centre, and underneath ' 5“ “3"“ " El" »r. â€be came to consult the is a shallow space. It is a trunk such as ....:~rst:‘.l'l<l this." he saiil- . "â€â€œll‘s’ Ill-“3' up“ some unimportant has been used by smugglers. A trunk .. drumming down stairs.i .l'lllSt'llUll'l matter, but she remained long with a false bottom. - after that matter was disposed of, chat- , .an descent] and sec-minor l‘ he burglar places. the‘ morocco case ‘ l 7 y’ a notto Ob- and the two packets In his bosom. and «st?» tha‘ .‘dis: Durand was a ' ' o . . " 7 y aning, then without replacing the contents of .;n-l h‘er ('3‘1‘5 growing heavy with sleep. - - - . . . .. - the trunn or closlnv the hidden npenmw . . . .. l . .b‘l‘ldufly ‘7Ԡtwin-1 narrowy at the he rises and gazes (1 mt him His seargli l .:1rl. and then BXCARImL‘d With marked . 6‘ ‘ ' . ‘ ‘ . . is not yet ended. On the opposite Side of ‘ :zolicitude : the dres 'inr room isa door openinvinto a "M'd‘ar 'lill. how h\ v ‘3 5' .‘. O '. 5 c Ll ‘ la y and dull large closet. This falls next under his . .. , . , v. v . . n ‘\ â€Alhdjtgirsnivit‘li“sit-Jilliilrghi::li.1:::;c?e, examination. . The walls are hung with .wgllt'essed that it did ; and remarked that dresses; “ "ll?†a†the paraphernalia 0f 8’ .‘a. mum ring for Laura, if Mrs. Rich- “9““ *T’ “"19†“â€1†â€V," Yet hung ““ ards Would excuse her and r-._tire. In- hooks. On the floor are several boxes and tautlv .Xlrs. llicharls was at the mâ€. two trunks, somewhat smaller than‘thc ' one Without. The masked man examines "l'll ' (lo: "ltl‘SS l l: ' ". ) . .3“ :tllf‘I‘t‘lpl‘lloaLllllllly. one been, qhi all the dresses, especrally the darker “Cour-.- in. please, and hear what this 1 , .. built to 5.1.3:." . . and much Wondering, _- l the door and came is intelligent enou lieves the ‘1‘ sharrinlixg.†uplicd l"-.'r~ "Listen. my friend, and , . n - -.-.'ny. _ V ‘ ulnar scat. «l lll.u:i"lf, Wltll {fir ‘ ~tl:l vli ills facc, and wrt: of the country by unscrupulous an cenary interests. of prices follows volume of money shrinkarre in volume results from le tion. Ila does not believe that the ernment should increase the interest s ix flows: '-n:yycars agn. the only ulltl a:rogant Engiidi dot-ply in love with a ;. .. 3-.lio has the daughter of ' ‘ high family, who llw~l ‘. Vi'ilarrying 2'. hand- I'ac. a son of :h. hills are ï¬lled with that government is, .L'l 11'. l , . ._ â€3.1 new snappy world. As l have before <3.th ‘. ~E:~- l-w «l by an Englishmal. of i. -‘v-l . and shortly lift-1' rh- d “crux «:f .rrr par-cuts they wrre privatvl; llldll‘lul; lll‘ v find in seclusion In: I am a strong magnetizer." It was quite useless to object; Laura was summoned and the distobln" process worumonced. \\hilc Laura was rushing out her mistress’ blonde hair, Mrs. Rich- locked ; but the second and last to be ex- amined, resists his attempt to open it. Again he resorts to the bunch of keys, but they all fail him. He turns away from the trunk and seems to be at a loss. Illnl'u'v' UL Lnl aï¬'ord lieves that government should tection to t to care for ‘.'.-1) .f. sumes to guarantee life, of Christian he believed his son to be travelling f.-r pleasure, and. had himself chosen a wife to bestow up in him when he should re- turn. But one day there came an anony- mous lwtter, telling him of his son’s mar- ' 'riage, revealing the secluded home of the and fro, passed this stand, her hand hov- : red for an instant over the drinking glass, and when she turned away three tiny crystal drops were in the bottom of that glass. At last Miss Durand was duly enscon- Some thought has occurred to him ; he takes up the antern and hurries back to the bed-chamber; he pauses at the bed- side, and bends above the sleeper. He pulls away the covering from about her sholeers and throat, and then he opens blems the Governor of Kansas, Hon. L. E. welhng, in North American Review January. Smï¬g light; They will soon be was one an tnd this trusted one to visit his home and know nis bead .iful wife. This man be- trayed his trust; step by step hveorined his way into the Conï¬d nce of his young wife, and when one day the husband went from home, for a two days’ absence, his plot was ripe for cl,velopment. On that very day the father, blinded, mad with pride, anger and disappomtment, came to the home where the young wife was alone. A terrible scene ensued, and it ended in the father’s declaring that he would give his son his choice between her and him ; if he returned to her, then she might claim him, and keep him; n he did not come back, she must abide by the consequenccs, the law should free his son. Well, he did not come back; through the treachery and deceit of the friend he had trusted, he was kept away, and then the schemer came with a xalsi tale to the distracted. wife; her husband had abandoned her. and returned to his father. this and much more she was made to believe, and then her mother’s ï¬erce italic; blood asserted itself; she would ï¬n er under this chain and draws it caref 'upward. Ah, see! On the end of the chain are two small keys. The man's eyes glitter as they fall upon them. With deft ï¬n rs he removes them from the chain, an then he glides back to the closet and again bends over the trunk. The key ï¬tsâ€"the trunk is open. As be- fore, everything is removed; but not with so much care, for this receptacle contains discarded clothing, fragments of everything that woman accumulate, and all crowded in, in a hasty manner; at the bottom of this trunk there lies a small black valise; this the man lifts out quickly and glances at critically; then to its lock he applies the second key. Again he is successful ; the valise springs open, and the man, with eager hands, re- moves the contents. It is a dark-looking bpndle;hh_e unrolls it. glances just once . . . a somet in 'ni ' ' V Laura obeyed quite willingly, and soon to suppressilsliai; ::CI;LZ:§:_BI)T112: .vlrs. Richards _w1thdrew, leavrng Aura he rolls up the bundle quickly, shudder- Durand lockcd in a sleep from which she in I), . hurriedly replaces it in the black would not waken for hours. How fair ,3- ’ ‘ ‘ r-llt: is as she lies there under the soft themglrgï¬gegï¬i a the contents Of out this cauti . And Aura said that she did, thinking pm on the while, with an inward laugh, of Nina .lnnin and her all night vigil. "You must have your water, I see,†said Mrs. Richards, touching the ewer. "Take a sip then, and go to sleep.†She poured out the water, and Aura drank it obediently, and then closed her eyes as commanded. To and fro, to and fro, moved the deft hands of Mrs. Richards, and presently .kura’s breathing became slow and regu- lar. her clasped hands relaxed themselves and fell apart; she was sleeping. Mrs. Richards satisï¬ed herself on this point, and then she turned away with a trium- phant smile upon her lips. "Go to bed, Laura,†she said to the Eittle maid. “Poor child, you look tired, too; I will close Miss Aura’s rooms; go L0 bed.†and Let the peppermint Do mothers little ones two or infant will not be with “sore mouth†if this is attended Do mothers train their babies to will take but a few evenin will result. Do mothers know treatin tion ? the best method on’t dose with strong the process. Do mothers realize the necessity her neck the slenedr chain and unlocks a trunk ; hurriedly, carelessly she pulls out and. ï¬nally she, draws forth the black valise. In another are extinguished, , closed, and Aura ‘ Durand glides from her room, locks the ully behind her and cautiously, the broad hall It is not yet fairly daybreak, the sin-sets ere glides an al- most imperceptible gray shadow that fol- lows', seeming hardly to be a human thing down where there who may soon come, on to where a dark pier is grimly outlined through the gloom. Then she glides out For a moment she gazes at the place where it went down, as if half expecting it to reappear, and then her steps. And still the gray shadow is behind her. Speech at the Garrison Parade. The mild weather and bright sunshine attracted lar e crowds of people to wit- de of the Berlin garrison on Tuesday. The Emperor walked from the castle to the arsenal, and, after reviewing the troops by companies, returned to the castle in the same way, the crowds cheer- passed. The Emperor ad- drressed the ofï¬cers, saying: “We stand in the face of serious times, but, as in Princes of the German nation stood together in triumph over a nation, so tesday they stand to- gether in the presence of their royal com- g shining proofs of the union of Germany’s Princes and her peo- Germany will also triumph over a more serious international foe which is confronting the empire. The army is the gls, only to disappear again with another fundamental b3?“ 0f the empire, for the gnlldcruc ?†‘ room. twisted bit of steel. When he again rears army 15 the ’19-‘10“ armed. , "do i« 7.. :9“: m said Lenore, warmjy, : she sought solitude, she was doomed . .. -..n . The Western Farmer a Philosopher. The western farmer is a philosopher from necessity. Rapidly tending toward poverty, he demands to know why, and h to answer his own question in the lig t of reason. He be- prime cause of all his woes is the manipulation of the money?! den by borrowing gold, while our native silver, and labor stands idly awaiting an opportunity to take it from its hiding place. He believes or should be. for the good of all the people; that legislation “to keep you up _ ‘ should be for the multitude rather than . . had “M within the :ikw â€1th Laura willput vou to bed and ones, and feels in all the pockets. ’lllon for the few, and he is beginning to be- ' ,..- l ‘ _:;,: mifoï¬mgp fevpn lslmll bathe that poor head for ,you. {:0 turnslhxs attentiolrll to the trunks .and lieve, if government can guarantee him k,“ , ~.~ .g inï¬rm“. Wm, ' a. small 1..†Now don‘t object, it will be a. pleasure to fifes’ ttleduï¬ntéux; ï¬fts'kbi’lowï¬' clothing. nothing but hopeless poverty, that gov- ‘ .: ,7, L, (“my and otherwise at 351,. me. and I know I can relieve the pains. “ a. no ‘ e rs un e n 3 Is not ernment has failed its mission. He be- pro- e weak-the strong are able themselves; and he believes, ï¬nally, that if government, which as- liberty, and the _ charity and prtE-essrve civilization.â€"From “Pro. fore the Western Farmer,†by come Do mothers apply hot cloths to the feet stomach of the little sufferer in case of colic ? This is the very best remedy. remain in its bottle. give pure water to their three times a day ? An likely to be troubled 0 to sleep at a certain hour each evening?) It gs of persistent effort to get them into this habit, and un- told comfort to both mother and child a child troubled with constipa- medicines, but rub the abdomen night and morning with olive oil, gently kneading it during keeping the tiny feet always warm ? Lit~ tle woollen socks, with long tops, secure- GRAVE AND OTHERWISE. . ,0, lined. rein Man Sources but ‘-Worthy. y thro h a . have Strong allia I know to What you instant use. He turns his face toward down the stairs, and‘Enally pauses it the ‘â€" . wwrmm' allude, and I know that a week ago you the sleeper as he holds it; perchance he street door. Carefully ‘she draws back . “After the Bali.’ fled from your best friend. The man smiles behind his mask. Aura. Durand the bolts and lets down the chain, then, "1%": lathe; {$3231. (cos-raven.) who rescued you from Jason Bradwardine is prepared to . defend herself, it seems; with the black valise tightly clutched in “w. my, “:3! “6 broken. does not believe you guilty of any crime. but she is quite defenseless now. The her small hand, she hurries out, down the , . And facet daubed with mud ; Lunar. bent ovnr the picture and mur- He would have done for you what Gentle- man turns hls face away _at last, and stately steps and away. After the ball rm been under muted, half to hemlfl "1 have seen it, man Jeff has done; providedjou with bends over the gleaming little weapon, swiftly AM the Kline we wonder After we’ve beaten them soundly. We feel’i If the earth was ours ; , h _ , $317201; they’ve (101:: to 2‘22):th tiny letterin . in t at gray morning mist. 0n she goes a a mo mores on: an owers. . . - But"3 b’" 1th st d, father. You have seen hlm. Miss asked, almost breathleesly: _ . And now he does something strange, upon her stran errand, and .°n glides the ï¬gs: og’ggggemg’wnï¬; “l" «V Armvn; but you were a Very young “Is that the truth? Do you believem somethin unprecedented, for a burglar; the shadow. ehas been movrng nearer child." him 2)" Is after sexes snunsrons l h h uporLthis paler, (hut, ml: ubltfld Sh? emails I in h ITtobdslm‘ilor. :‘r ‘ e ’s andwritin . and i: never friend a and fellow like himself, is at room, and‘from t rat to t 0 next; e atVt e on ; t on s e on s orw , n to men s us once. gucuï¬â€˜iiiried w hcr mi. to doubt the this mama; hm,r {mating out suspected opens dressing casez, drawers, receptacles swrngs the black value to and {re and nggtï¬m,39f;d‘gggdï¬,y quiet b‘luocrity of the man before her. son parties in order to lawn the guilt where 9fovory sort; he searches for secret hxd- suddqnly, lets so her bold upon it; the 01m 1reverie rofound. she lo lied on with a flash of her olden it properly belongs. Twice you have ingplaces. th inverts chairs, he searches swaying impulse given it sends it outover wag“ wggeotggglgprgpawm imperiousncss. evaded him, and because of this, another- their puddings, he feels about the cush- the water, and then it falls .and With a- [n the mm of the Maker, ‘ "U ' you knuw my father 7’ 5h: enlik’d- man would pronounce you 81“!th But ions of divans and lounges, he overturns dull Splash disappears from sight several All repentant. I would stand. "Can you 5 ll urn about him ‘9" two hours aft -r your-escape from his car'- And I wondered if the people Gathered there His name to raise Would nOt be, through my en eavor, ed to I’m-er. better ways. ‘ , For I felt within in bosom All the true hea of the song, And I thought some tin y port on Ought to touch that worldly throng. So I turned unto the organ, And been. to play the air 0! the tender, sacred 0 era l8. Ever Brlgh and Fair.†Ah! I new: sang so sweetly, All my soul seemed upward turned, All my . ollest endeavor Through those earnest carols burned. Then the heavenly spell was broken, For. btflldc the great staircase Stood a little ragged maiden Gazlnz rendering in my face. She was shibby. poor and crl pplcd, Not a brl ht or winsome out (i; She has spo ed my inspiration, And 1 spoke in anger wild : "Child †Icrled, "what is your business ?†And lpaused. with mien sublime. there in stupid silence ? ,ake haste I’m wastlr it time. " But she did not mov'e or answei‘; Only led with o n e cs Full of lsnppomtcdpueron er, And a pained and grieved surprise. “ You were singing ’bout the angels l" Here her voice was low and sad, W hllc with cold her slight form trembled- She. poor chllo, meant half-clad. "You wen- sin in ’bout the angels. So I came to 00 at you, kind 0’ then ht on was one' New I know it w‘iisnilyou.†' Years have passed since that brief moment, But sometimes I seem to hear Throukhvm y busysllfe of duty A child s act-en , soft and clear. And 1' always pause and harkcn. As wnh silent lips. alone I send, not a song of triumph. But a pruyvr to heaven's throne. stem _ mer- He believes the decline the shrinkage of the in circulation, and that gisla- gov- Sentenees by Judge. The seed is stronger than the soil. False. alarms create false securities. tendencies. In the take the bur- dust. rot is not given. The mundane dcfensxvc plan. Fidelity is the conservative prescrvcr 0 type, custom and race. \thn a thing is hard to endure some Jlng harder may come to make it easier If natiu'c were to man would havt her inventions. )5 Praise not a be puffed up and masterful ; nor too little . This is what he thinks as‘ he s . . . . lest he be discour ed. mwz-e than a yrs-er, and woreycry happy ; .Virrls moved softly about, from the dress- there: ‘ tands 5:81: ilibttlciinhabliltï¬tclliledrfiaelslsiin “‘32:? Homely trutvhsafro like home remedies '11 1‘â€ka ,. than evr-r “11331 their chno, 1; mg room to the bedside, and back again. “I have searched these rooms, 6v“? he is livinggin an age of exquisitely re: â€"apt at times, but applied upon every 0c- girl. \l'.‘._~‘ b. Fu.’ But presently th r- "H a “fly “and near the dainty bad nook and crevice of them; where then is ï¬ned barbarism rather than i th _ casion whether they ï¬t the case or not. came a cnange. [he father of the young ~tood a little cwcr and a glass. As Mrs. the key to this trunk p" d If h d 1 n e noon husband ii!l"“' nothing of this marriage; Richards, in one of her silent marches to ay 8 t an ove l‘he Crown Prince. Le- hasa decided fondness for orange pekoe. for roda, has an income of $7,500,000 a year, . K t of which he runs the overnment. _ . awxy from the white neck the robe that Kn . ou . 3 young pair, and bidding Eh†father ‘0 go 59d 1? “hf: 339“? bed' , is scarce whiter, thereby exposing to view Home†Should 0“. Prince \Valdemar Of Prussia, the only and ,. p fur hitns'clf. how the young "how, said Mrs. Richards, “prepare agenda gold chain; it is long and worn Do mothers shade the baby’s eyes from sun of Emperor William’s sailor brother, l’lusbaml had trusted one pxrson W135 â€ht to g0 to Sleep- D0 3"“ feel 1“ the 1935‘ loos 1y about the neck. He inserts his secret of his marriagt‘: had 9‘7““ Pe'm‘lb' >1991W?†Prince Henry, is deaf and dumb, a fact of which scarcely any; one outside of court circles is aware. Marie Henrietteg‘the handsome and soft- voiced queen of the Belgians, is especially fond of driving, and dues it particularly well. She also rides .well, talks well and is an uncommonly good musician. King Charles of Portugal leaped from to. his carriage recently to interfere with a fight and prevent a probable murder. His majesty overpowered the stronger party and turned him over to the police. The Sultan of Turkey always eats and drinks alone, although, he generally has a large retinue in attendance. He uses neither table, plates, ï¬ife or fork, but only a spoon and his rs, from which he ï¬s.:es out his food from a series of little saucepans. ' - ~ The Shah of Persiahasï¬ve sons and tnlrteen daughters. ' three married .0115 have twenty-onet‘children. ‘The Persian oï¬cial year bookmentions inthe royal family three ers and two of of insCELLANEOUs READING migrant!» Reading roi- Old and You And Scrimmage has "heeled to halves," .Who 'twalxwho was kicking our calves. And flu but glaeuasure, after a touch-down, the . Our pro-existent habits are our present whirligig of time some one must Life is a combination of which the sec- world is conducted on the disclose her processes .Jhc audacity to patent servant too greatly, lest he Queen Victoria brews her own tea and Gopal Rao, maharajah guitowar of Ba- brin or in the United States. openly and repeatedly expressed, surely it might be possible so advantageous to each other in the event of war and so invigorating in times of peace. Putting aside question of senti- ment, fect a that t can think the colonies were wrong in ï¬ghting the War of independence, under the circumstances forced upon them. fact, they descendants of Britain had they not done 50. Paper spindles for yarn spinning now used as r. steel. Steel barrels, made from sheets ranging the United States and the Chic land, showed h the feeling of g the two countries. made by different sections of the munity on both sides of the Atlantic to about some sort of practical union , . both countries would appear to encourage the idea of reunion. after the most bloody battles, but before the actual Declaration of Independence, the colonists strained every nerve to of- peaceable conclusion of the dim- culties which were upsetting the hitherto happy relations existing between Great Britain and the States, although it was through the imbecility of Great Britain ‘0 ago to Eng- ow nuine and hearty is oodgviiill existing between Efforts also are PETE SIMONS COMPANY, being 416 George St., Opposite the Examiner Book Store. com- Pete will be happy to have his old friends and customers call on him and l' ave 'hf'lf orders for their FALL SUITS AND OVERCOATS. r/ Come and see our stock before purchasing chi-when- Bran New Shades, Styles and Patterns in Suitin Trowserings. N0 OLD STOCK. Everything bran new and fresh from the mills. nce between Great Britain and \Vith such sentiment to effect an alliance gs, Over-coatings}. however, the selï¬sh interests of It Is notable that Don‘t forget the pl AOL'â€" PETE SIMONS a. co. - 416 George 5? Something nice in Gent’s Furnishings always in stock. , LlRMEEWERfl CITY BARBER SHOP: T. H. BEYANS , Tonsorial Artist. IILLBROOK l J ¢ .\ 0. 6. Meets the coco. n Home Circle Koo! o'clock sharp. W. ARCH ER. Loader. J.B.‘l e rupture ever occurred. No one In would not have been worthy PARLORâ€"Kin ~51... ï¬tment) o"l w GtKell's bank. 8 W M c M Shaving, Hair-cutting. Shampoolng and ever tl‘iing else in the mnsorlal linc carefully often - e to. GENERAL-STORE. ' Works of Genius. are substitute for those of COURT IVAN†Meets lhzrd M-vl rooms chr Leech {"iii‘cunxh in thickness from one-sixteenth toa quarâ€" Try our Twentv’ï¬ve cent “‘31 best C- . ter of an inch, are coming into use. . value in t0an also our Ram Lal’s pure hi} _ A car shaped like a bathtub,V in which Indian Tea. at Fift . cpnm l, the passengers either sit or recline as if in 3 ’ ’ ' -, a bed is in use in Berlin. It has three wheels and is propelled by a naphtha W M. LANG. OYAL C A}' A; motor- %. , -. a. U ..h-..-. K".-- MI I B R00 K wrangling: 3 A baby carriage designed especially for 9 ' the use of those who live in flats, looks just like any other baby carriage when it is in Hill, but it can be folded together so that one and down stairs. It is said that window panes of porous glass are being the Home Circle 1 hour of meeting! Society are worm person. Informs: “I ARCHER. S. if you “an! :i fll'NbCliLN» horse, a good rig, m' turnout of any (lescrip Lion. dun L full to call at this stable. ggJ GILLUT SUN? .7 Undertake-’3 and Practical Embaimers. person can handily carry it up \l'ANl‘l-Zli~ Hood younz tom of black . . . drivers. made in Paris. The min- :ri-mumsw -‘.'i I ute holes in the glass are too ï¬ne to per- ï¬fe†of lebtm‘omal" can 1' T. W. LARMER. biggie.“ ï¬::§gl:::dd hiblfli‘g'eviï¬ï¬lgzdg I Stable and ullice on Tupper street. - 0,! in {£1,001}; 3' ‘. We kee constantl ’ on hand a large ’*â€"~ - v _. L Eaiiflg‘: ' . . 1‘ lock of urniture 0 all kinds. Our '. A spoonless must rd pot is a recent in- vention. By pressin apiston rod in an air-tight receptacle t e r of mustard is forced through asuitable sprout. tard is always fresh. " tuck is well assorted and displayed in '~ llrce lrrge HllOVV rooms. No trouble to how goods. We are also manufac- urors of the Excelsior Washing Ma- hine. Best in the Market. in: Brethren wok w. D. 1140*, . . sacred eqursnte amount pluule’s PHOTflGHAPHS HARE] The air beingcxcludcd. the mus- RCEIBA LD ‘l RIAGE LlCE Brotherly Love in a Tenement Street. â€â€˜h‘ PIN But the most significant expression of s the spirit of village life in Bulfinch street, THE PEOPLES ARE THE BEST N. C- MOKI and a truly beautiful one. is the readiness ’ \ _' 7.. w. “we“. of ncirrhbors to help each other out of ’ . ;.. 7 T It. troubled Prudential motives force this 1 ' vii-’2' †-‘, TRL EST, â€In" exercise of brotherly love to be kept so 0 ‘ " - f l ‘ far out of sight in streets of this kind that, as a rule, its amount is absurdly under- estimated. charitable societies, however remote from charity their fabricated excuse forcalling OROZVTO and oenlinte ltol burgh. Member ‘ eons.0ntsrio. c ldenoe Annie gay his “:4 . . Andllost Artistic Butcher Shop ,,.___.._.h. _ Tho well-dressed visitors of . , . His Euler ed Portraits in Oil . LAPP. mziysccni to be. are yet known for what “2: Inkl- ‘llis Incam of m 0,. Waterg Colors, India Ink, L «erect-3d they areâ€"â€"a charity picket line. forming the people of .\l lllhrook Sepia or Cravons have no super- 311‘ L Eighty-year-old Bridget Mulcnlly. (Which mrlmps, H gf'lwl‘ally for on this: Continent. All ’0 l "‘ toothllcss, but stillf brigdht-cycd. 1:1};in be knrlvwnll llmt}. we llmwf alwagvs work imperishablc. TRg-VICTE ,3: seen a most anv air ay smo 'lna‘ ler 0“ 11â€â€œ A C 10100 “1 0 “â€331 S- - . . . t e 0166 pipe on the SL601: of No. 2:), IIcr'hus- If you wish a special cul lt‘l us fl 1‘0“ Lharloue-st., , PeterbVoro - Ground Ontario. band. Jim. a day laborer, died eighteen km)“ and “'9 “'l†supply 5"“ car Studio. 1‘0 stairs to Chmb' H )vea‘l‘s ag()' FUI‘ SO‘VLhn 379a}.§ 1)ef0ro }1is ALI, "l: I'EI(A~ lil‘o." [IT]. x‘ I‘I'.,4, "ERFI’ 7‘7 M . ‘ death he was blind, and his nusfortune, 1‘0 ,gyy 1-,.â€57 4â€: THE 77,," 5-. “ ' N â€If no". joined to his good nature, made him a. [lo 185 BARRISTER- . 'favbrite. Soon after Jim’s death Bridget gm Money f dislocated a shoulder, thereby perman- Natt rass Du "ford real eimdlmlfowé ently losing the use of her right arm. HAVE ARR|VED. 0509-“ . She became destitute. The neighbors A, A , lent her many things (cooking dishesand F] E O O O O O O O O 9 O O o I. “It. a comforter among them)and afteruhttle CALL AND SEE THEM AT II W Michael Roe, who was himself behind _ BARRISTER- s with his rent, gave her a home with his Private and family. Then her friends, “the boys from Ireland,†“ i which netted 840. room for fifty cents a week and took in thcloweet raw. ‘ a: Bethany on 3“ month. put up†a raffle for her She rented a cellar The Dominion Mutual Fire Insurance MISS. E. MELVILLE’S, Association. two girl lodgers at ten cents a night. THE BEST AND CHEAPEST FOR FARnERS 424 GEORGE STREET! SIX c From that time to this she has lived in a 1, i: the only com an}. lssucing Four Year w ’ cellar or a garrct and shared her room with girl lodgers; but she has depended largely for her support upon the the “boys†have continued "to put up" for her once or twice a year. Three years ago Michael Roe, widower, PETERBOROUGH. Blah '0! Policy. ENTlS'l‘. 5:! D preservation troll! Oxide (jib ff teeth. Gooc “‘01 Bethany the 2nd month. Umemee day of each nlonzl Rates are only about one half of that charged by stock companies. For further information apply to A. C. MAYCOCK. rallies ALL THE NEWEST ART MATERIALS KEP l.\' STUCK. STAMPING DONE. by that time a was stricken down with a fatal V SEA sickness. Then the "boys from Ireland†12 3 B xxzfaeiiflgiggném JAS' V w got their heads together and “put up" a ' m 0 ' 8 ° ' casual beneï¬t ball for Bridget‘s former bene- factor. Tickets were the ball netted $75. thing left toward f uncral cxpenScs when the old man died. given for the beneï¬t of his orphan chil- dren.-Alvzin F. Sanborn. in the Janu- ary Forum. .II B MI 8 P08. HAVE THE NEWEST LINES 1N FALL AND 'WINTEB HATS. ï¬fty cents euol1.-.1nd ’ L'EEN‘S l'nn There was some- of me Collies YOU WANT Then another ball was .gl'x r â€Lesa: 'llj. rinl (‘5'. “ and F ‘ ‘ umce at N17. The New Butler. J AS- "Now, remember." said a charming wo- "(Lunumh man to her new butler,- who had a faint conception of a business for which he de- manded the highest wages. “remember. in announcing meals you LL DOMESTIC -7 ed accordms l’arzztoln. attenm are to say; Mills Bros. Nubhyfui 7 ‘ ' ' ‘ ‘ " 'l ' I ' ‘IFQ 1V Charges 710G823“; ‘Breakfast is ready.’ 'Lunchcon is ready.‘ Al 1" 11“" Bl†l‘ h L A ‘11 “* ‘ r... opposzx 0. ‘Dinner is served.‘ " DR H “Al " lt. ‘1 l'id tl ' d F RS '. ' butler} iigi mum up IL 10 plou l I V V . G. H. WALLIS, V ’ ‘flfl Not long after, this charming woman OF EVERY DESCRIPTIO). CALL 0) BETHABX. ventured to experiment on a dinner to n THEM. few intimate friends. sion on her countenance when. on up- pearing at the drawing-room door to an- nounce dinner, this literal butler ex- claimed in clarion tones : . .â€". . “Breakfast is ready, luncheon is ready. sisters of the shah, whilgtho uncles and dinner is served 2" PASH ION ABLE TAILOR, PONTYPOOL, ‘ . . I 1 I ‘- Ll. DOMl-Zï¬'l‘lt bank) “It LAPWS ¢ ed accor‘.:. Parziculnr .i' .e .‘ . Chargu- ill“ a .‘n. if allendcil in). MILLS BROS. GEORGE STREET, PETEREORï¬Uï¬H G 1 r I T' H. H! , V rm unto n the Cleveland SchoolofCullin , i, h . l’ h _ ut, leaving the 13' fasltlenedil will 1"? “31'5“ka tilt? dilly. the cousrns number 140; 1* This is a true story of the capital. . can zuarauloe satisfaction. We Defy Cltgy lull-rook. mks her child and 3Q away 3 “b1?!†“f Villa?" °f_. :1 ° 318': t’g ts, guru xaever closet open and the boudOir door ajar, be 3221:â€; 0?: d1 (211131221113. been 8:51;}, ï¬g,†Public Speaking is theL‘7-Duke of Teck’s % Competition. ‘ BMW-ill "i she would lu‘O- _The ï¬ery 01“ no em“ “."el’s “ 1" â€'21 1°†3’ near or, an to- glides, valise in hand from the rooms. 0 Ir 3 0mg ,ru e 1 e smatest trouble in life. He is an ex~ n - - . . ' a (I ~" '97â€? .2 ‘take the Church woud mvlit Mrs. Richards has left a few wax .. ‘. . feet and legs gently and thoroughly un- . lhe margin of profit in farming is to G H w L .1 . . :2: if,if‘10§:°m,:,nialg., neither would Luggrs ablaze, not only in the bed-charm 5,3323 :33, Synge; ï¬lmy; mégiéies all: til there is a good circulation and then '5:lelï¬ï¬ggei:$::e?3?emgï¬geï¬:nge‘ small to admit of any unnecessary waste. ' - A US, a; "Cl €232; bk» Slate; sh.- lKnr‘l-V this, andshi1 knew; VberV. 1|th Inwfl’le (Ilrsssinarpgiili ï¬nd Eliml'oir then this strangest L, all strange 'burg- fasten in the warm pinning blanket. and no one dan get bettegghi-oug h a pull: PONTYPOOL 3;... a: . tofutlxuf. ncrlulautdausbwrxf “1‘52; ‘iel‘fg ‘ W" " 5 a" ‘ 95 e a" .s returns, comes softly in, bearing Do mothers kecpahst of simple reme- he function than he camfiprovided there A / â€r «. \ .-a._._ .._ hm , J ‘H ( “â€0" hrrla‘P‘TgEO “I" 9‘ EB 0, (‘1‘ Je’fpckit-k tick tick t} l'ttl b back the black valisc. He replaces it dies at hand? Do they use nature’s lsno formalspeak' i’grlnmto do. / M5 / i'f‘ CV1... Uxij U†,. "‘ - ' . “a.“"i‘ “‘5‘! â€â€˜5’ "33“"? â€(‘1 1g“: ,‘ .1. 113.1518? dressing-i0 ’1“ tellu $031? just as he found it; having ï¬rst locked remedies instead of dosing the tiny tots â€" , ‘1‘ k_/ Q\ , / THE FASAIONABLE TAILOR v ‘3 ' ""’ PERRY‘I‘OWY' 51:1 tr titles the “~13" melt ‘1' f: h?“ 'jï¬c in the minute: “(1:1) st 5 oh e It, then he restores to their original places with strong medicines that do more harm Fancie- of Fashiim. /% 0/ ’f, / ’ Nan). @750†‘0 “'l‘m†COJ 11‘3†0i? '~""(l\"v‘l-le wr» 'gh: all her misery, s e 6V. 0‘ 1?;‘33‘5; dmr 0f th‘e'boudo' an 0‘13 every article removed from the closet, than good, and bleaching the baby with Fano ncils for M h . / , “j! H†,1“, new.“ “ms ;,, Suitings. ()ycrcou would be of [he verygrcnxesi value refusc ‘ ivuivimff. a. I: â€AK-kalii'l ‘er mil-ill! third“: his: h ivtthe hin'l bf a. spirit Sltii'gEflifzfly trunks and boxes, pausing at times to as- saffron tea ? mold lislï¬iou revived-1.115 ‘l 0 am m / \i' lugs and all lines of to takeii under :l ‘ or, . l.t‘.;‘mrru_:‘.l‘. I: VA: -, .' _~ - x ,. . '_ - ‘ ‘ V, ‘ -fl_ -_ V . . _ . d. partur: from his happy home, tn.’ 3t swings inward, and then a. ï¬gure glides Lug-higizgf }1:hl~19:£:;: tdnrhiilldlrbtlig mlS Do mothers m warm WM“ and mllk y†.n_; hiqbahd “'hn had been decoyed 1n. the figure of ‘ _ gre t a man. a man clad in a a _ _ . . tru i ' 'i - o m - away by afazse r port of his father‘s ill- long. loose. gray garment, and With ms nk n “10 dress as 1‘ 0 , ï¬rst replac instead of soap for washing the infant Linen lawns with blue orl d‘dotslaum i h t tl } k t k with scrofulous tendencies? Two parts degebeautiftiilg aVndlwear i '1 'th . . 0 ' ‘ n e . noss. return. at; he found his home deso- face and head entirely hidden by a velvet £11.15; tlilenzglitiird 01123123821? 2'; orig; (1?: water to one part milk 13 about the “ght rve me a. m 0113‘, g asses WI 18:... his wife and child g no. Then he mask, and close-ï¬tting velvet skull-cap. ’ g pe returned to his father, accusing him as m. author of all this misery, and the father believing his visit to have been th sole cause of the flight of his son’s Wife, did not deny the charge; there wert many angry words. anthhey separate wthout fully understanding thscause of . the: trouble. All that the Wily fals; :astly at the sleeper. Then he starts back friend had done, the son believed the 1.3 if astonished; but a moment later he father guilty of. The bereaved and for- l bends still nearer, holding the taper so east-n husband left his father’s house; close that the blonde hair upon the pil- RSVL‘I' to return. He became reckless} low seems almost endangered. At last and still the {leeway-3r was on his track. he seems satisfied With his scrutiny, and urging him on, keeping him alienate.) then goes back to the boudorr, replaces from his father, who now longed for a the taper, and draws from a pocket of rl‘Cl'nClllEClUE. After ten years he died, the loose gray gument a tiny lantern of and the proud father was left childless. the “bull’s eye’ order; this he lights, Then this old man married, married a » and the beams’tllat shoot out are strong young wife. 'w he died within the year. and bright. . Nor he 18 ready for work. and thenâ€"he was forced to see that his He moves without apparent effort, but as grand name and his ancestral halls mus: neieelessly as ashadow. He must be the come into the hands of a distantrelative, very prince of burglm, this masked a man who came of a. wicked and de- man. « . based. as well as a very distant bran -h First, he 3099 straight to the bedside ' farzrilv, and who was hated by the 31383111.- he Pull! down the bull’s-eye, and : blcmab for many reasons. He had begins 8- 58W about the bed. He puts 7 his arm under-the pillow on which rests n ...r dreamed of this man as a. possible , _ . heirâ€"Dc: the man himself had schemcd the head of the sleeper, and lifts it from the false bottom. He works carefully, methodically, making no mistakes. When this last trunk is closed and locked he goes once more to the bedside, puts the keys again under the pillow and the two detached ones once more upon the chain suspended about the neck of the sleeper. Then he turns about and surveys the room, to assure himself that everything is just as when he ï¬rst entered ; he moves a chair a little, shakes out the folds of a curtain, surveys in the same manner the dressing-room and boudoir, and then, like a shadow, he steals away, closing the doors behind and re-enters no more. Still the wax tapers shed their mellow light, still the little bronze clock ticks off the moments and still Aura Durand slum-‘ bets on, with calm upturned face and regular breathing. Truly Mrs. Richards is a wonderful magnetizer. It is gray dawn before the sleeper wakens, which she does with a start and a sudden excla- mation. She sits up, looking about her in bewilderment, then she springs su l- denly from her bed and runs to the dressâ€" ing-room. The little clock tells her it :5 near morning; she oes to the window-r He closes the door through which he came, and bolts it without making a mund ; then he takes up one of the wax :apcrs, and, holding it in his hand passes through the dressing-rmm and ap- proaches the bedside. ie holds the taper ilof t then, and bends down, gazing stead- least two months old. that he is dried sible while wet. Do mothers see tight around the realize the importance of sweet child" with care in this respect. liable to cry time he cries. - their wants ? The child that is left en- icr 3. .:.rs to this end. He was the some the bed. Tth, with the other hand, he $313.3? gearieaig t Eggggiowtheabhixtid: tirely to the care of hired nurses is ,offen not. who had play-ed the Judasto the old explores. bear-9.1 Varticles he takes from “Can it be ss'bg7 ,, tte grthy . ‘1 the child that causes, grief for the mother man‘s son; the man who had made the underneath,% pillow, and then he re- PO 1 le, mu rs egir. H ' Ill: tour a sander-er, the child homeless places it 81111 the sleeper’s head very DldI allow that woman WP“ “‘0 to - - - 37 ther will realize that she is not blame- an-d nameless, driven the father "to an gently, and . to the stand whereon gigs;:gdshzvdiï¬ulfpfoalilihlgblgdliZEhlif; 1685' untimely grave, and rendered the proud he {’13ch â€13" things 1!!5t l'emoved fmm the pillow. . Do mothers make it a point to ï¬nd time old man childless and desolate. VWher their bid“! flace. _ ~ “All, they are there 7: she so. drawâ€" l to mend broken toys, to tie the knots, to this man presented himself and his pre He draw i chair toward him, this inga breath of relief 1“I ut mi?) there ikise away the bruises and to answer the tensions, the old lord swore that he shoulc glar, places it before the just as 1 did all the 1.85,, fol; effect and f ; numberless questions as the children grow never inherit his acres. Then he sent for stand, t e light of the bull’s-eye did sleep after all The day hiid been' ilder? They should never allow them. mg, and for years i have searched over full upon if, and arts y down trying, but I did n‘of, know that I needed: elves to forget that what seams of little Europe to find his son’s Wife and child. . . booty,_there by the very sleep so much. Nothin is disturbed... .mportance to them may be of the most Miss Armyn, this proud old noblemar , there is a case of jewels, they left the candles gurnin I su ’~‘ vital importance in forming the character was your father’s father; that. wrongs: bones; great blue glem- pose thinking that Ishould wakegri soon}: of the child. Lastly, d9 mothers use wife was g’ï¬lgl' mother; Elbe Villain th , of course Aura She puts her hand to her throat, arid sound common stensecontlnléally and £111 muvht evil was seen and" war;- _, . ,dnws orth - ~ - lar e doses in raining an caring or ' dmne' 6; and the long-sought heiress,- ' is Dockla_ .% the chain mm Its pendent 3 their children? If not, they should. recentiz'ialsonthe Thames ofa ' ' - , ~ . . alumnae boat, with steel framework 7 ~ 7 I A ' at V ~ 981183â€"811 . daluumin' um lates forthehull,“have - ‘ . , ~ ', ' . . speed,whichthemak- “OISE†n _ The air-ea use,“ out pith. @999 worth “, “Elï¬n, ' “m ‘9‘? _ . "Jason. deesawht . . ’ ï¬sh. may 01' hairpin-Kiln? .. » .y'go certame . ‘7' ’far I am f n u I’Vwfll Ina-k0 5a of She mutm, ‘nd 4 “3“. , a. is“, ' shaft,- ' and marker hat ‘ Then 9 see- vail. proportion. Soap will often prove irritat- ing to tender skin, but the milk and water , is cooling and healing, and will keep the silver receptacle to skin soft, smooth and clean, and its use may be continued until the child is at De mothl rs wrap the baby quickly in flannel upon taking him from the bath ? This is very important, and also to see quickly and thoroughly, exposing him to the air as little as pos- that there is nothing little form. Do they having every garment loose and light and warm? A “cross" baby will soon become “such a Do mothers remember that a child is from the pain of an over-full stomach as from the cravings of hunger? This is a fact that seems to be overlooked, judging from the usual practice. Don’t get into the habit of feeding him every Do mothers enjoy the company of their little ones and take pleasure in supplying in later years; and the thoughtful mo- Americans {in Chino, .Eflpt) andlast yqar *he'mta of ‘t -. a thin slice of lemon floating on top. The modern smokingsetï¬as a chased hold cachous, snake root, etc. 37'“, ‘ Boating serges come injfgiyory white, blue and corn, and are quitflhs thing for summer wear. -.‘c},, "1“. Round ï¬re opals set willhdiamonds butter color ; it’s only for’the nah-colored, ' Clear, olive-skinned brunette,€3g-- in the hollowed handle. v Wanted, .‘ Dewrmmm‘ï¬ï¬‚m 'l‘he liquor trafï¬c is now éï¬ï¬‚mhedin politics, and it is there we must meet it ; so unless the people ~in.,§§;;msaesty‘ of their political power, are aroused‘to com: bins in one and, united phalanx of 0 position, an through the. virtue there is in the'ballot hurl these‘ autocratic de- spoilers, this piratical horde of unscrupu. lous liquor dealers and their sympa _ . and abettors, into an abyss of annihila- tion, there is nothing left but certain anarchy and destruction for our country. The moral revolution and the grand re-a sults of prohibition can only be brought about by the united effort of an earnest, determined people, with their combined will and purpose, without compromise; :- concentrated and crystalized into voteszat, the ballot-box. . . ,, ,- s1tygfo1- : .' , - This makes an 1ilnrli)perative neces part a. distinctive to i ition part â€"a y composed of cdizcientious and determined votersâ€"4 party not onlycombinedbu : l" “ cure just law, but a party With - moral endpohtmal payer to enforcethe lag!- entire prohibition without cemptomr‘ee or " conciliation. ,1. ; e. o.. . : _â€"â€"_ .7 “ F The Friendly Bent; sot England The relations between Enghshmfo - l <4:- ; . .râ€˜ï¬ 3 form a beautiful scarf p Turquoise shares the opal’s favor. . \ L Blondes should not try to {Ear the new . “-P . Mn -. Elicia andwhethsrsupplledby sire ' I TORONTO TYPE FOUNDBI. Place to Shortlmnd nn'l Typewrizing,orro 2::5 Learn. . 9 0 $6 00 O. 6 9 960009999 00 ' OOOOOOOOzOzoxOOOOOOOOOOO ( TOBACCO HABIT , ‘. ED NERVOUS 0181A; : The system employed at this insiit. t o is the famous Double Chloride of G: Thro Slaves to t hav.o been emancipated p- tcen years. Lakehurst Sanitarium is u oldest institution of and has a ' well-earned reputation 1. maintain in this line of medicine. whole history there is not an instants .» any after ill-effects from the Hundreds of happy homes in all parts a the Dominion eï¬lcacy of a course of treatment with :t For terms and full infcrmaticn writc » THE SECRET ‘ .3‘7, 28 Bank of Commerce Chamb'rs, m. A K EHU RS? .. -_ .: ro morons from one-ht" am - up to Eleven Horse Power. Write :c impression that the male tended . ‘ 9“ ~ is 50 Chinclim" ,V,‘ . ., Enron-Tux mum. is 5‘7. : 'l ‘. .; ' - J 7 â€In“ W 1.3.2332;Eff;$2“c.‘:.?.l3.l‘.~°.§§fâ€Ã©â€™f:2? Fall and Winter Tweeds. Worst Wm: I» FLEMlNG, l’rin'l, Uwcn Sound, Om. ' onlsrlou lig‘kh your new; l1»- eds and Friezes. Price and fit guaranteed. Full Gent's Furnishings. 389 George St, Peterhoro. . To such we (itcll': _ to prove that this is a de- cidcd error, as in our pre- paration, “Mallino with . Codl.iver0ll."nolonlyis tllcobjeClionablctasteen- '5 tlrely removed, but the preparation is really pala- tableâ€"relished alike by : old and young. It is the _. ideal “builder," and will restore health and color lines of J. T. STINSON, _: DEALER 1N17~ SA rvlTARn _ w _ . this “run down." To any New white morocco parents card Boots 21 n d Shoes. . smakmaloftheprepmaon pETERBoRO'. cases have flat borders of golfer silver OAKVILLE . ONT “131° 1"“ Address 1’05Ҡ. m- F\‘Gl\‘ m gilt, not ornamented but h' , ‘Tbumish- â€"â€" -» PETE R BORO' M “5° Manufacmï¬nc Com ( I \‘iil’olmf ed. These are very elegant LV ‘ uiet. For the treatment and cure of ' on St- East. Toronto. ,7, .v n. A new thing i1221 ii soothbrï¬slï¬iï¬mognteg amononrsu. ‘ ____-.-,,_, . N..-â€" c. n l in ebony or po '5 e ivory". no me . ' can be detached and placed uired, TEE 31036811?! E‘B" UNIQUE. A cute little box of real Japanese Tooth Powder (im- ported) will be sent by mail fre(- on receipt of 15 Cents. stamps or silver. Makes teeth like pearls. Crown .‘dcd. C0., 43 Howard street, Toronto. T. B. C01 BA â€"A.\'I)â€" SELL FOR CASH. 't , e 20. . : geaifntlibsibvpbiem. T/Zc‘ lizg'cr ll’t‘aï¬e‘ {/lt‘ 5,6116%! l!) the last fun» NESE Millbrook. CALL WHEN IN TOWN. [-3’364 GE( )rlGEST. its kind in Cane-l NINE OUT OF every ten asks I‘ for and gets l E. B. Eddy's Matches “ Experience tells them this. ‘AEMEIIS‘ VA) 1‘ dlsCl.lll‘.ICC.‘V, (lands and he '\ V: The (Vile-cum. o. .~ 'v Loans made 01 7 .1 charged. _ FIGSâ€"“0" [I Reference-l WEB? BA Millbrook. Inlt , H.â€" RE MEMBER SCHNEIDER’S lVéen I): . town for Diamonds, [Volt/14's troatmori biar eloquent-wit: ass to Lt Toronto, Ont. lewd/cry, Etc. Repairing in If you are the g“ \ . a . t a m .. all branches. All war/é guar- tenth and me open Tmms ‘35:“ ’- I ' mer’l . 0‘83 anteea’. to com lotion, try F. s. SCHNEIDER, Watchmaker and Jeweller 391 George Street, Torontoand Winnipe. PETEEBOBOUGH. - ‘ E. B. EDDY’S power required voltage c osmium I,» V '3.