§3 of the great bed in which that worthy lay. It got to be known, too, in a wonderfu ly short space of time that Mr. Worksop carried in his breeches‘ er other pockets some thirty or forty guineas and halfâ€"guineas loose, a handâ€" ul of which he bhad exhibited with uncommon satisfaction on several ocâ€" casions when overtaken in liquor. It also got to be known in an also equally incredibly short space of time, thanks to one of the watermen who had rowâ€" ed Mr. York aghore from the brig Jane, that the tall young man with the long bair had owned himself worth only half a guinea, of which he had given four shillings to the boatmen after a tedious dispute, one to the landlady for his bed, and a sixpenny bit for liâ€" quor, leaving him with five shillingsâ€" all the moneibhe had in the world, sccording to own admission ; "and quite enough," exclaimed a deep voice amidst the jostle of men on the stairâ€" ease, "to account for this here murder." Premtjy. there was a cry of "Room for Mr. Jawker!? The crowd made a lan«, and there entered a round, fat, fussy little justice of the peace, with the only constable that Deal possessed =â€"a tall, gaunt, powerfully built though hock-knï¬ _ man, in a rusty threeâ€" cornered hat, and a long stickâ€"folâ€" lowing closs at his heels. Little Mr. Jawker approached the side of the bed. and after taking a lon,gi look, full of kmowingness, at the bloodâ€"stains, he erdered the constable, giving him the The story soon gathered a collected form. It was known that about nine o‘clock on the previous evening a tall young fellow with his hair curiing upâ€" en his back bhad applied at the Lonely Star for a bedroom, and was admitted by consent of Mr. Worksop to a share I TE 7 m v. One of the two wenches m‘sAt‘i?flly_ The world moved very slowly in those slipped away to give the news. occurâ€" | days, and Deal‘s solitary constable, Timâ€" blooded murder was no co',mnf":l found | Othy Budd, had not fairly started for rence in Deal,. A L“’â€â€œ"““i- m,: art, the | the house of the widow Bax on a road dead with a slug through f.me ashore | that would have brought him in time body of a smuggler e d?x on hi=l|t° the ancient and beautiful minister with a ghastly cutlassâ€"woun C x‘)‘block- of Minstéer, until the clock in Dea! head, the corpse of a gagge Foreland | Church showed the hour to be a quarter ader" at the foot of “1; tails nec_lbefore nine. He was mounted on a Height, were mere business de that was | clusmy village cart, like to what Hoâ€" essary items of a programime t ulous | Zarth has more than once drawn, armâ€" fuil of death, hard weather, ,"Lu’:"a COol f ed with the warrant, a full descri escapes, murderous conflicts ; uenume | tion of the tall young man, to the og: midnight assassination was «C few | taining of whose name from the brig novelty in its way, and in C tinaâ€"miaig, | Jane. atill lying in the Downs, the magâ€" minutes, thanks to the 5?'"‘“&%3 sâ€" | istrate objected on the grounds of deâ€" the pavements outside the inn, bedrgoam lay, and animated with full conviction. sage, the staircase, the tragic ling men | (hat he would find the malefactor at itself, were crowded with hu&[hmghind- his sweetheart‘s house. 1 and women, eagerly talking, ; °d for|. The old village cart was drawn by er ones bawling to Lho“._“ ea lace | 2 lame horse that was occasionally to news, and the whole r'uketyhp the | be impelled into a brief staggering trot 1 threatening to topple down wit by the oneâ€"eyed driver who sat by C‘rin. weight of so many people. ol onl n hi ie ho c K0 T 0 t 0042 Ge VC l So shrillâ€"voiced a woman as Mrs. Mate could not squeal twice at the top of her pipes and yell "Murder! murâ€" derl" also without exciting alarm. The first to rush upâ€"stairs was her husâ€" band, an old man in a white nightcap, an aged frillâ€"shirt, and a pair of plumâ€" colored breeches. He was followed by the drawer, by a couple of wenches who had been busy cleaning rovins downâ€" stairs, and by five or six sailors, who came running out of the adjacent bedâ€" rooms on hearing Mrs. Mate‘s cries. Grasping her husvand by the back of his neck, the landlady pointed to the bed, and exclaimed: "Mr. \\'orkso;l:» has been murdered ! murdered, Joe, 1 tell you! _ Blood in our house! _ Murder done in the Lonely Star l"â€"uttering which, she fell upon the floor in a swoon, but contrived to rally before her lhusband seemed able to grasp the meaning of what she had said. C There was a great stain of blood upâ€" on the sheet, with smaller stains round about it, that seemed to be sifting out even as she watched them like a newâ€" ly dropped biob of ink upon blottingâ€" paper. Mrs. Mate squealed out a secâ€" ond time even more loudly than before, following the outery by an hysterical shriek oi "murder|i murder!" meanâ€" whils noting, with eyes enlarged to twice their circumference by fright, that there was a pool of blooa on the floor on the side where the boatswain had lain, with other marks which vanâ€" ished at the door. It was broad sunny daylight outside, but the little window set close under the ceiling admited but a piliful light. However, at one glance Mrs. Mate was able to see that the bed was empty. She was prepared to find the boatswain alone, knowing, as we have seen, that Mr. York meant to start for his sweetâ€" heart at daybreak; but on glancing @round she observed that not only was Mr. Worksop gone but his clothes likeâ€" wise. This was unusual. She stepped to the bed, and more through habit, perhaps, than with design, she pulled down the bedclothes, which lay someâ€" what in a huddie on the side the boatâ€" swain had occupied, and instantly utterâ€" ed a loud squeal of fear and horror. When next morning came, then, exâ€" actly at the hour of seven, Mrs. Mate went up the somewhat darksome stairâ€" ease that led to the chamber in which Mr. York and Mr. Worksop had slept, and knocked at the door. She receivâ€" ed no answer. She was not surprised, for Mr. Worksop was a stout sleeper, apart from his trick of going to bed with his skinfull. _ She knocked again, and yet again, accompanying her blows by a vigorous kicking; and failing to receive any sort of reply, she lifted the latch of the doorâ€"understanding, of course, as the landlady of the house, the trick of opening itâ€"and walked house at seven o‘clock, neither sooner nor later; and to have his breakfast of smallâ€"beer, rashers of ham, cheese, red herrings, and brown bread ready for him in the little front parlor downâ€" stairs punctually by a quarter to eight. Mrs. Mate was always careful to humâ€" our such sailors as stayed at her house with money in their pockets. _ Mr. Worksop had now used the Lonely Star for five days continuously, not to speak of his being a regular customer whenâ€" sver in those parts; and in those five days he had spent his money bhandsomeâ€" ly, begrudging himself nothing, tipplâ€" ing with a quarterâ€"deck rather than & forecastle taste, and there was good prospect of his remaining in the house until the following Wednesday. Ihe name of the landlady with the appleâ€"red cheeks and array of ~white chins was Mrs. Mate, and this good woâ€" man had received instructions from Mr. Worksop the boatswain, from the first day on which he arrived, to call him every morning whilst he slept at her A TALE OF THE SEA. IV. uen ie ET "s Ne would not suffer, sternly orderâ€" ing them to turn about when they had proceeded half a mile, "lest," as he bawled out, "the criminal should catch scent of their coming and fly." It was a drive of five or‘ six miles. Constable Budd stolidly puffed at his pipe, with now and again a heavy stick, and an occasional dive into his coatâ€"pocket, where Jingled a massive pair of gyves or handcuffs, for such ease of mind, maybe, as the chill of the jron could impart to him. Seawards, where the blue of the ocean showed steeping to the golden line of the Goodâ€" win Sands, hung the huge white cloud of the lineâ€"ofâ€"battle ship, scarce stemâ€" ming the slack of westerly tide, though every cloth was abroad with studdingâ€" sails far overhanging her black sides and %rinning batteries. Little . was said ï¬ethe two men as they jogged along between the hedgerows and pas! the sandâ€"downs on that rosy and sparkâ€" ling Sefltember morning, saving that when they were nearing .Sandw_inh. Budd‘s mate turned and said to him : ‘"Timothy, it‘s the long chap, as he‘s described, as slept with the bo‘sun, that you‘re to take, ain‘t it t" "Oy," said the other with a slap at his breast, where lay the warrant. >* "But who‘s to know," said~ thedriâ€" vgr, l;'thlat it V;':sn"t the bo‘sun as killâ€" ed the long chap? & & "IE. yon'dg heered what was said, you wouldn‘t ask such a i(ueetion. answerâ€" ed Budd. "I knew Mr. Worksop. He WOr ‘h DrODaPr mankbsmenld "al o se e sn s s y U lay, and animated with full that he would find the mal his sweetheart‘s house. The old village cart was a lame horse that was occas be impelled into a brief stagg by the oneâ€"eyed driver who 5: stable Budd‘s side, and who sions acted as assistant or * that worthy. A crowd folle cart out of Maal faw Al_)c. ; "_ "G°+ Ereat indeed ; and many would have been glad to have accompanied the constable the whole distance ; but this he would not suffer, sternly orderâ€" ing them to turn about «po,‘ M Urderâ€" was very great indeed have been glad to ) Py c geo s Semert s Sm e t T EuK creeps or drags to search for the body in the vicinity of the beach ; but though they persevered in their efforts till noon, watched by hundreds of peog‘.e ashore as well as by the innumerable ships‘ crews who crowded the shrouds and tops to observe the result of this patient dredging, nothing more than a vyery old anchor, which was supposed to have belonged to one of Tromp‘s ships, was brought to light. The instant the little justice of the peace made his appearance there arose a stormy hubbub of yvoices of men eager to point ouht the bloodb]t(ilms.ilt w&:‘s a tragedy that went too deep for. merâ€" rimengt?dyet one might have Fauggd at. the eager postures of squareâ€"sterned boatmen bending in all directions in search of new links of the crimson chain of crime, as though a vessel full of treasure had.gone to pieces close aboard the land on top of a furious inshore gale, and there were ducats and doubâ€" loons and pieoea-ofâ€"eight in plenty to be found at the cost o a bhunt amongst the shingle. So many inquiring eyes were sure to discover what was wantâ€" ed. Stains unmistakably of blood ‘could be followed at varying intervalis from the pavement in front of the Lonely Star; then into the middle of Beach Street; then an ?gly patch, as though the burden of fhe body _ had proved too heavy, and the bearer had paused to rest ; afterwards, for a hunâ€" dred paces, no sign; then half a score more of stains, that conducted the explorers to the timber extension that projected a little distance into the sea, and there of course the trail endâ€" ed. Nothing could be more damniâ€" fying in the theory they suggested than these links of blood, starting from the bedside, and terminating, so to speak, at the very wash of the water. _ It was universally concluded that the tall young man with the long hair, name unknown, who had slept with Mr. Workkop, had murdered that unforâ€" tunate boatskvain for the sake of the guineas in his pocket ; and under covâ€" er of the darkness of the night, hbad stealthily borne the corpse to the timâ€" ber extension and cast it into the sea. Mr. Jawker started off at a rapid pace, followed by the constable, â€" to make out a warrant for the apprehenâ€" sion of the tall young man with the long hair for wilful murder; whilst a| number of boatmen went to work with creeps or drags to search for the body in the ‘viclnity of the haanh s Fik) #LubslL There was a great crowd outside, Deal was but a little place in thosa days; indeed, it is but a ilittle placa now, and the news of the nurderâ€"if murder it wereâ€"had spread with someâ€" thing of the rapidity ®f theâ€"sound of a gun. It was a sparkling morning, a small. westerly draught rippling the sea into the Tlashing of diamonds unâ€" der the soaring sun, the Downs filled with ships as on the previous.day, the white front of the Foreland gleaming likeâ€"silk upon the soit li‘}uid azure Fasc it, with, noblest sight of all, the lineâ€" ofâ€"battle ships, the central feature of the mass of craft, in the act of tripping her anchor and flashing into a broad. surface of canvas with her long bowâ€" sprit and jibâ€"booms to head to the rorth and east presently for a cruiso as far as Heligoland. a PW . ‘"‘They must be followed! They must be followed l‘ cried little Mr. Jawker j "they may lead us to the discovery of the body of the murdered man.â€"Folâ€" low me, Budd !" with which he went downâ€"stairs, the gaunt immense conâ€" stahle closs behind him, and ths peoâ€" ple shouldering one another in purâ€" suit of both. 8. name of Budd, to clear the room Of 2l save thoss who could throw light ugfrn this matter. This being done, â€" Jawker fell to questioning the assomâ€" bled folks, and bit by bit gathered as much of the story as they could relate. The landlady, Mrs. Mate, was ignorant of the name of the tall young man with the long hair ; but he told her, she inâ€" formed his Worship, that he meant to leave her house before daybreak that morning, to be in time to breakfast with his sweetheart, who lived Sandâ€" wich way, and who was none other, as sh> supposed, than pretty little Jenny Bax, for ‘twas the widow Bax‘s name ho mentioned when he spoke of walkâ€" ing over to his love at dawn. At this point there was a disturhâ€" ance outside. ~Budd the constable lookâ€" ed out, and presently looked in again to inform Mr. Jawker that fresh prints of bloodsiains had been discovered on the pavement, and could be traced some dirtance. > ha "has 2 _.oâ€"°0 ~JO8@EGC g between the hedgerows and pas! sandâ€"downs on that rosy and sparkâ€" : Seï¬tember morning, saving that n they were nearing . Sandwich. Ts miatn umssc ho ut i V. +; 5 CVrea what was said, you ‘t ask such a uestion," answerâ€" id. "I knew %(r. Workso&. He proper gentleman. Mr. / orl mounted on a e to what Hoâ€" ce drawn, armâ€" a full descripâ€" was drawn by occasionally to staggering trot vho sat by Conâ€" who on occaâ€" tide, though th studdingâ€" black sides Little . was they jogged watch" to ‘ ork. of all E200 SmE llCl\'uE' ~jed to â€" Mr. Worksop. The landlady ~ | stated that she had frequently handled ? | the coin, and that on the day preceding ‘ | his disappearance or death, she had {‘ isked him to sell it to her ; but he reâ€" ; ) plied that it had been given to him by $ a sweelheart twenty years before, and â€"| that he would not part with it for a |fon of gold. She and other witnesses ‘ | rlso testified to Mr. W orksop having ‘| heen in possession of some thirty or ‘| {orty guineas, which in his cups he had & trick of lugging out by the handful, ] hat the company might know a jolly j sailor need never be a pauper. The two | bhoatmen that had rowed J%eremy York ishore gave evidence that he confessed he was only worth half a gumea, that | chere was a quarrel over the fare, and | ILI.;t]E.(hey ha(? to be satisfied with four shillings, York‘s statement on the other hand, vas as follows: He said that on the aight in question he fell asleep, after anving lain~with the boatswain for tbout an hour. He was then awakenâ€" ad by the oppression of the atmosphere, mhich made him fear that he would suffocate; and being ?arched with hirst, besides desperately fevered by {he atmosphere, he resolved to seek for |the inn‘s backâ€"yard, where .he might ‘~,.ope .to find a pump, and where: he | would ‘be sure o‘ h relief of fresh air.. As,.he could not lift the latch of . the door, he searchod Mr.. Worksop‘s clothes, not ch ing to disturb the man, who bad showmunelf querulous and grumbling, as though in pain, and found a knife with which he succeeded in opening the door, «It was a little past two ao‘clock when he returned to his 4 bï¬room; a fzint light fenetut.d the indow "from the oil amp outside, which emabled him to see that the bed was emï¬ .. He also took notice that 4 Ar. Worl!.op’s wearing apparel, that The first bearing <was before "the mayor of Sandwich and a bench of magistrates. The room was crowded ; never in the memory of the most anâ€" cient inhabitant had anything : of the kind excited so much intérest, not inâ€" deed, in ‘the district, but throughout the southâ€"eastern portion of _ the county. It wag universally agreed that Mr. \{’quso'p'dzad been murdered, and by whom!if not by Jeremy York? But, then, what had become of the body ? The marks of blood: that it had been dragged to the timber extension were conclusive enough; yet it was almost inevitable that a cor(pse thrown _ into shallow , water close inshore should be set upon some part of the beach by the action of the tide, unless weighted by a heavy sinker, in which case there would be a chance for the grapnel. But lay after day, a broad tract stretching ‘rom Deal Castle to Sandown Castle aad been swept without result. Would ompleter evidence be forthcoming ? Would York confess, or make some adâ€" mission that might help to solve the mystery ? ; ‘ The landlady of the Lonely â€"Star, along with other witnesses, Eroved that ‘ the knife and the onld Aanim E.2 p, Allâ€"â€"that be said was, he \ya.s"in_no- cent of the crime charged against him, but refused to declare more. When York was searched, they found in his coat pocket a large claspâ€"knife with a ring through the end of it, capâ€" ped, where the ring was, by a mountâ€" ing of copper such as formerly might protect the buttâ€"end of a pistol, upon which the words "Gabriek Worksop‘" were rudely scored. The knife looked tq have been newly cleaned. There was no stain of blood or anything approachâ€" ing such a mark visibleâ€"upon it. In the pocket where this knife was they found a Spanish gold piece minted. in 1690, with a hole through it, as though the coin was used as a charm or an ornament. â€" His bundle contained mereâ€" ly a few trifles Of wearing apparel. They also found upon him four shillâ€" ings in English money and other artiâ€" cles of no mement as evidence. But when they came to strip him, they found the left side of his shirt heavily stained with blood. + + He thrust his hands.into his pocket with .a look behind him, and in _ a breath almost, so quickly was it done, he and his assistant had thrown themâ€" selves upon York and handcuffed him. Ten minutes later, Yotrtk (finioned in the cart, between Budd and the driver, was being leisurely conveyed to Sandâ€" wich jail, whilst .tie widow Bax hung weeping bitterly over the form of her daughter Jenny, who lay motionless and marbleâ€"white, as though dead, upâ€" on the floor. is * "I‘m here," he cried, "to arrest you for the wilful murder, oither last night or in the smallâ€"hours this morning, of Gabriel Worksop, mariner, who shared his bed with ‘ee anfl who‘s missing." _ "What do you want?" exclaimed York, slowly rearing himself to his full stature. â€" ‘"You!" thundered Budd.â€"*"Put that knoife down," E 3 _ ‘It‘s the Deal constable!" cried the comely old lady. Â¥ i4 19A _ York did so with an expression of amazement. _ The constable procured his warrant. * & Close to York was his sweetheart, Jenny Bax, an auburnâ€"haired little woman, of eighteen, with soft dark eyes and girlâ€" ish figure and breast of snow scarcely concealed by the kerchief that covered her shoulders. (Hah es _A little table was laid for breakfast; tre room was savoury with the smell of eggs and bacon and coffee. _ Half risen from his chair was the figure of York, a tableâ€"knife in his hand, a frown of amazement angd indignation upon his brow ; confronting him was a comely old lady in mourning, half risen too, and staring with terrilied,eyes and pale cheeks at the constable and one-eg'ed face .that showed over his shoulder. ECC Iei . NOR MR RDC M IMAR 0M enc eceaine t Budd and his man got out of the cart, threw the reins over a {)OSt' and walked to the houseâ€"door. . It stood open. With a mere apologetic blow ugâ€" on it with his fist, the constable marchâ€" ed in, and swifily peeping into a room on the leftâ€"hand side, and noting that it‘ was vacant, he turned the handle of a door on the right of the passage and stood in the threshold, fillmï¬ the frame with his gaunt, knockâ€"kneed figâ€" ure and huge SKMTS. su82sz8s.mu® ; s o They rumbled through the streets of Sandwich, over the quaint old strucâ€" ture that bridged the little river of Stour; then to the left, into the flat plainsâ€"dashed here and there with spaces of treesâ€"that stretched pretty nearly level all the way to Canterbury; and as the great globular watch | in Constable BRudd‘s breeches‘ pocket pointâ€" ed to the hour of ten, the cart came to a halt opposite one of a group of cottagesâ€"the prettiest of them all, a little paradise of creepers and green bushes and small quickset hedge. shaâ€" dowed behind with trees, with the dark glass of the windows sparkling in tiny suns through the vegetation, and the air round :ï¬)out sweet with a pleasant farmyard smell, and melodious with the voices of birds, and the bleating~ and lowing of cattle in the distance. _ _ sop worn‘t a man to shed the blood of a flea.â€"Whoy, look .hereâ€"the long chap comes ashore wanting money, an he goes to bed with a man with nmih hand forty guineas in gold, It speaks for itself, \‘fillum; it speaks for itself. â€"Now, then, probe this old clothesâ€" horse, will ‘ee?We shall be all noight at this pace." They rumbled through the streets of @Gandwish avar tha auaint old strucâ€" andiady of the Lonely Star, ith other witnesses, roved that e and the gold coin ï¬ad belong- %Ir. L\\'f)rk_sqp. The â€"landlady VI. Perry Patetticoâ€"What do you think of this bere idea of the progress of the oount;g' bein‘ mostly doo to the diviâ€" sion labort ce Wayworn ‘Watsonâ€"Oh,, I guess it ig all right, but they needn‘t take the trouble to divide no labor with me. And_ what a surprise it will be to dear George! she was saying to herâ€" self.‘ It fits lovely, and I mean .. to make all my own things after this and save allimy dressmaker‘s bills. It isn‘t every man has such a wife. T‘ wear it to the progressive euchre club toâ€" night. I know not another sinfle woâ€" man will have a new thing on. I‘ll just sew in this last sleeve and I‘ll have it.on when George comes home, andâ€"â€" There was a shriek, and the {all of 127 gounds among the sofa cushions. She had made both sleeves for the same arm. £ the tide of defeat, throwing himself reâ€" peatedly into the thick of it, and givâ€" ing evidence of a courage that can on‘fy be‘ described as heroic. Bleeding from a severe saber cut, he was at length literally swept off the field of battle by his father‘s officers and by his own friends, who fully realized the irreparable m{'ury that would be susâ€" tamed'bg Italy on the event of the popular heir to the throne, as he was then, being either killed or captured There is but one monarch in Europe who can show the scar of a wound reâ€" iVvird in war. It is King Humbert. The latter, at the battle of Custozza, which resulted so disastrously for the ltalians, endeavored in vain to stem The judge summed up, making but little of the circumstance of what he referred to as the heedlessness of York in retaining upon his person such inâ€" criminating articles as the knife and the coin. The jury conferred a â€" few moments without withdrawing and reâ€" turned a verdict of "Guilty." Whereâ€" upon his lordship put on the black oas. and after a tedious sermon on the hidâ€" eousness of the crime for which the prisoner was to suffer, sentenced him to be hung by the neck until he was dead. not. have advanced a groat in defence of the man whom she believed a murdâ€" erer. In the brief time that the lovâ€" ers had hbeen together before the arâ€" vival of the conmstable York had told his sweetheart that he was in hope of obtaining the balance of his wages as secondmate from the owner of the Caeâ€" lia; and this coming into Jenny‘s mind whilst her sweetbheart laf' in Sandwich jail, she wrote impl'ormg{ to the ownâ€" ers of the brig, spoke of the terrible charge that had been brought against Mr. ?]‘i:remy York, and how neither of them had funds to enable them to procure counsel; and she prayed them with all the might of her little burstâ€" ing beart to send hber the money ber sweetheart said was owing to him, that some effort might be made to rescue him from the gibbet.. In response to this piteous entreaty, the owners of the brig sent her ffifteen guineas, with which money she hbhastened to Canterâ€" bury and there engaged the services of the likeliest law'iver that that ancient city contained. Thisâ€"lawyer had severâ€" al interviews with York, and hbe was candid enough to represent to Jenny Bax that though he would do his best there was little‘ or no hope. Beyond his solemn assurance of innocence,couplâ€" ed with the carelessness, which cerâ€" tainly did not look criminal of his sufâ€" fering the knife and coin to remain in his pocket, the young man seemed inâ€" capable .of stating a single point upon which the defence could rely or which it could make anything of. _ And it | turned out as the sagacious lawyer had predicted: the evidence that had been previously tendered was gone over again; and far more diligently examinâ€" ed; the bloodâ€"stained shirt, the knife, the coin, were produced. The landlady of the Lonely Star along with her husâ€" band and six other witnesses were preâ€" sent to testify to the coin, to the knife, (though the name scored upon it abundâ€" antly indicated the ownership), to the money in possession of the boatswain at the time of his disappearance, to the circumstance of Jeremy York having shared the bed with him, to the avowâ€" ed poverty of the young man, to the bloodâ€"marks terminating at the timber extension, from which point beyond, all question the corpse had been thrown into the sea. ‘ {DIDN‘T WANT His SHARE ETY RNTTVTE ME e DPRTTEOTT 1 * his guilt.as the knife and the Spanish coin. But it is always through some oversight on the part of the evilâ€"doen that he is brought to book. However it might be as regards the concealment of the guineas and the retentiqgof the knife and coin, it was beyond all disâ€" pute manifest that Mr. Workshop lay somewhere secreted, a murdered man, and that York was his assassin. _ Jenny alone believed in his innocence. She and her mother were poor; but had the widow been well to do, she would had lain upon a chair, was gone. He was somewhat surprised, but concluded that Mr. Worksop had been awakened, as he himseif had, by the heat, had dressâ€" ed and walked forth into the night, and that he would return presently. . He got into bed again, but lay sleepless, until, hearing some distant clock st rike four,‘ he rose, clothed himself, took his bundle and left the house, CArTY!NE away the boatswain‘s knife, which he would have left behind, had he rememâ€" bered that it was in his pocket. He was unable to account for his posessiOn of the Spanish piece of gold, wgich the witâ€" nesses swore had belonged to Mr. Workâ€" sop ; nor could he explain how it was that there was bloo({)-slaius upon his shirt, in the bed, on the floor, not . 10 mention the marks which terminated at the waterside. x 4* ‘he ITALY‘S SOLDIER KING (To Be Continued). AWFUL WARNTING. captured A young lady came in last week and x:flted some medicine to istraighten r mose. As a matter .of fact it was straight. Some of the boys advised her to_vmtthutdocot;:)]:i who b{..-'ivm‘ someâ€" thing that w (A eq W °S " uid make her nose crookâ€" ed when straight, might on the theory of like prodl:ciï¬l&ikg,‘blp her, but she could not get theory through her tellectual cast o:ame in for treatment. He stated that his handwriting, when in his office, was different fromm that when at home. 'Tï¬eï¬dl‘t he was afflicted. flooklg at .samples of both and: as I foun, himâ€"Oh, well him. Sw â€"nev Queer Incidents Revealed by a Hospital Staif Surgeon. "Humanity in ‘general seems very much inclined to have something the matter with it," said & resident phyâ€" sician at (m large city hospital, reâ€" cently. "A great many people have ailâ€" ments, but a great many more only think they have, and that makes them even more burdensome than if they reâ€" ally had. For instance, I know an old lady a widow, who owns, beside a litâ€" .tle house and lot, one of those migratâ€" }Sa,sh and Door Pac@ Lumber, Shingles and Lat» alm, In Stocl. K. G. & J. McKECHIm Having Completed our New Factory we are nop Pripg to FILL ALL ORDERS PROMPTLy We keep in Stock a large quantity of ® Doors, Mouldings, Flooring and the difly ent Kinds of Dressed Lumber for outside sheetm; Our Btook of DRY LUMRE is very Large so that 4) or * can be filled. DRS. KENNEDY & KERGAN, s« uSn â€"Le (a o 4, rigge? . Has your Blood been diseased? Have you uny weakne=s/ OU New Method Treatment will cnre you. What it bas done for others it will do for 10M OOU‘WIJI‘“QI FREE. No matter who hak treated you, write for an houes n F6 of Charge. Charges reasonable. BOOKS FREE â€" "The Golden Monitor‘ ustrated), 0B Diseases of Men. Inclosoanms‘chmï¬. Fealed, â€" â€" pBI IÂ¥"NO NAMES USED WiTHOUT wRITTEN CONSENT. PAâ€" VATE. No medicine s nt C. 0. D. No names on boxâ€"s c envel« opes. Everything confidential. Question list and cost of Treat ment, FREE, sa_ ie frral and cure Varicocels, Emissions, Nervwou Weakness, Gieet, Stricture, Syphilis, Unnatural Disc/ Kidney and Bladder Diseases, 17 YEARS IN DETROIT. 200,000 CURED. READER ! M Bs OSE CC PAPPCOCCITCY PCMR UT POVIMUSUELY UPC bitionâ€"lifeloss; memory poor: easily fatigned ; exc ‘n: luu ! eyes ennken, nF;ud m"ak pimplee on face; losses; restless; bagï¬ud lookin(f: weak back; bone pain»*: hair loose waricocele; deposit in vrine and drains at stool; diâ€"trustiw; want of energy uufmauathâ€" w 6AN CURE YOU 1 ° *"The vices of early boyhood laid the foundation of my ""’ ruin. Later on a "gay lifo" ard exposure to blood diâ€" c‘ reases completed the wreck. Ihadali the eymptoms of | 1 Nervons Debilityâ€"eaunken eyes, emissions, drain in urine, 1 nervousness, weak back, etc. Syphilis caused my hrir to ‘ { fall out, bone pains, ulcers in month and on tongue, 1_"‘_ blotches on body, ete. 1 thank God J tried Drs. Konredy & Kergan. ‘They restored me to bealth, vigor and happiness o en VA Joh: EM?'COCELE’ time &ï¬a}";?;‘i‘:’:;fli:â€""l was SSIONS anp | Pss elpraprp commet IMPOTENCY ~ | ie n laless . 1 ell a CUREO:_____ _ Bm Keimeiy Athannan o Poous A ment and l omn ppebialisle 10 6i life and ahbition." This was t my afficted fellowmc;n.-x;led and happy. 1 rec VARICOCELE, EMISSIONS am» IMPOTENCY CURED . EB@CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAYi AHE Yuu 9 Nervous and despondent; [ bitionâ€"lifeloss; memory: Wood‘s Phosphodine is sold by responsible wholesale and retall druyy: AR444 4A % % % % 4 4 2@ & 4 & 4 4 T. .4. ~ 200.000 WEAK MEN C Wm, Excessive Use q Oph-, Tobacco, or Aloohe | ! EM soon lead to Insanity, Consumption and an . Before Taking. Phosphogine has been used successfully by hundreds almost hopelessâ€"cases that had been treated by the most talented phys; clansâ€"cases that were on the verge of despair and insanityâ€"cases that wer tottering over the graveâ€"but with the continued and perseverin> use ~| Wood‘s mm. these cases that had been given up to die, were restored to manly vigor and healthâ€"â€"Reader you need not despairâ€"no mat ter who has given you up as incurableâ€"the remedy is now within your reach, by its use you can be restored to a life of usefulness and ha; piness Price, one package, $1; six packages, $5; by mail free of postare, One will please, six guaranteed to cure. Pamphiet free to an y address. A DOCTOR‘s EXPERKIENCE. tPD" We treat and cure Var tRAAA 4 44 6 16 2 %° 2 5A &b a O o o a >3 i “AI WEF. . B0C Iwmr . m * “ d CCC o2 t _ Cl 6 W 4 NE husunats W 4) S BEFORE TREATMENT, AarIkE TREATMENT, â€" BEFORL THEATLENT, NO NAMES OR TESTIMONIALS USED WiTHOUT waitten JOHN A., MANLIN. JOHN A. MANLINK. _ CHAS. PowrRrs other day a fellow of rather . _I looked at,samples of both I found both samples bad, gave STARTLING FACTS FOR DisEaAsED vict RESTORED TO MANHOOD BYy pRS. k of rheumatism. . She n;ight CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY.â€"CONFIDENTAL , no matter what I gave The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont., Canasa Are you a vietim? Have you lost hope? Ares Is the result of over 85 years treating thousands of cases drugs, until at last we have discovered the trus remedy combination that will effect a prompt and permanent cur Sexual .Debility, Abuse or Excesses, Nervous Weakness, 1 Wood‘s Phosphoding. _ M â€"thidrcias (Q pmmyms mulgot sizi In=~ Von Blumierâ€"Did your """ n W trousseau when y08 fl‘: Dimpletonâ€"I should @3 «ol didn‘t have to buy ber 95 clotb® Brownâ€"There is on struck me about {ema Mrs. Brownâ€"*AVh1ts Brownâ€"As soon as a unconventional she d0 attend conventions. "It is wonderful h stand, and how vers is, some have the s full of "yaller." No a woman walked to bhad been burned in she got here and s stuck to the chair. head and left muc! "A month or «o who had had a coug! a year was broughi entirely relieved, : that he was cured â€"no doubt, he was. "Of course bypoc! self a malady. You has got on sociable fliction and they c Siamese twins. in a out of ten, the patiel dies. woenak or debilitate Ei) heÂ¥ THE PARADOX EXTRAORDINARY o. 148 SHELBY S1. DETROI!IT, M!1CH. â€"â€"The Cr afterward | IWin . NO RISK. t T ATTCONC odmulent 1 an carly grave â€" wer CoL Luence ENT 4 ts in the Dominig »WIT an, with DeW 0) H not bide wile bHv nglish R It€ D All Stappy ReQ! IM8. After Tak sore throst es( Cured, 8; NOBM. A but 1P _ . while ip Te mah s vioe h‘lh d 1€ bing * iul #¢ me K.'lfl wht rey, including valua) ‘u D'du"o an Niilding lots, wi]} be sc t.t.b lot No, 80, , "BSUER of Marriage > troneer for Counties 1 Residenceâ€"King St., JAMES L L of Dental Surgeons of ted without pain by the or vitalized air. rarticu Alling of the natural tee! 0e next door West of Po and Insuranc eyancer, Commi «rrenged without . promptly made, Insu NEY TO LOANstlo ONOR Graduate ¢ ICOEXSEp ICENSED ACOCTL A N Vourty of Grey. Sales at reasonable rates. T. G. HOLT E; N P I HUCH M will to be found WP‘"“ the Dar FOR 8. EDGER P ene door north of © Of Grey. All so d to Lawrase P. C led to. Residenco ship of Bentinck, Fire Ins I0E, over Grant‘s 8 ERTAKJNG Pro EY PUBLIC, C NEY TO LO ISTER SOLCITOR INESS DI C n LEGA a subscriber Oro at a certain tinne as to send, the # or it If he takes This proceeds an must pay fol tâ€"Class Apply to 3 liges, another, rpot is AUCTTI uUrn! P O luuttiottiesss J of Bentinck, Best Qu: THAN E 4e, and 66, un"" “n_oltl" the specis MEDIC &« TE DURKH DUR j suD e n* ste and sn for seles ‘« Mc AUCTL who whe! | " ' T o for for