Snore's nothing Ilka a delicious oup of Tea as a delightfully refreshing stimulant and bi*afin soother.. CEYLON TEA , Leads the World. Sealed Lead Packet* Ouly. Beward of Siibstltutea. A Dark Shadow; Or, A Coming Vengeance CHAPTER XVII.- (Continued). T.h? Oh, no." returned Klisba. rather piizslrd bv her tone; then ho laughed and book his head. "No; it will take a day <,r two to work Tibby round to the idea: but I'm keen on it- for y. ur sake. Mina; an' I 11 atop down to the office " M'.na let him jo how could she stop him. without t'.ling htm everything? Who r<-: timed to her pr:vct>ing: waiting through the notea for the uleu which wa to bring hr happlncw. Tibby came home to the midday meal; but Klisha said no- thing of his extravagant plans, aud wink- ed <-autlouily to Mina: Tibby was alway in a hurry to get back to her work, and m-\<-r in the best of humors at dinner- time. "We'll tackle her after supper. Ulna," >id Kliha. with all the astulcnece of the diplomat, when Tibby had departed In tho uin.il whirlwind. II !i.i JH left alone In the afternoon; and he got out her books, aud tried to i-iiMi-iir.it>- her attention on them; but (he ws mil waiting, listening. As the daylight began to wane and dunk came, her hrirt bpg.tn to mk. He had not <-om*. t*he tried to rransurn herself by in- venting all aorie nf reanous, excuiei, for liis noj-api.t':. r nice: he was a great man, a member of Parliament; ho had not boon able t/> get away, had been detained by buMr.e. Beside*, why should eho din- >i'i'-> lieroelf, trfing that he was sure to come In the evening? Hhe waited and ! tcned to the clock striking the hours: how fast they raaie now I Hope was beginning t<> .!.< in her boaom. Hhe listened all through Hupnertlme, when ehe made H lirrn ni'f of eating, but every morsel she imt in II.T mouth threatened to choko hr. Not jet did she begin to doubt htm; but hir In-art v.-i heavy; it ached with loug- mr Mif wan scarcely conscious of the ni> tine ot the other two. and she found hrrvM-lf at, .mi: y hoieniiig to Elteha as he :r. mMcd und faltered over the proposed > ming. 'Oh!" <-v .j.mi-<l '1 iljby, with fierce irony. You only ... u- to (u to Murgit or tiarth- eud; you re hurt) you don't want to go to BriffblOB " -v .iriiorougb or one of them i/U'-cr III France where the other swells ;>? What IKJIIMMIIK* you're talking, father! As if we wunti-d a change! Aud if we .1 -I what'** the matter with the Koo- !.>< j| <r<li'nx i>r 'Ampotead 'Kjth? Mar- rit. Indeed! An j<wt b'O your swell fniMiilri 'ave given you u flve-pouu' note or :!' Ow do you know they'll ever cool* bark? 1 don't know much ubout 'em, an' 1 lnn t want M, but. I've ,i!w.iv 'eard thst heri-i* rio dt^uejideui-e to be planted ou >m. l.'.cik .u Ur. WDkins. the cat's m, >i man. as .'i|,p- ,-. ever so ninny of those fine .in*. in the West Knd. an' the money 'e IOM emrv year with bad d-li.M. Told me )i:MH*lf rl: if he was tn be p.iid all ili>-m swells owe hiin. he'd be an independent rentleman. mil nbl to ,k.- a pub. 1 ilon I want no < liange '< eptin' out of a xiri-reiin slid if Mina does, vthy take h"r iloMtn to (trimildge for A blow on a penny steamer I in cure nh'd agree with m that it would do her more good than mak- ing Ill-melt Ml with shrimp* it M.irgit or trapesing on a pier ,it Mrin-inl wont yer. Mina?" 'Yes. oh. TAJ." ouid Minn ulmently. ) fi > < ,M no -ii-.i- bul he winked at iliii-i. -iill hopemlly. M .1 > remained ill) for some lime after l.lu 1 otlii'TH had gone u> bod ; bu'. though '" >i nl urgrd h>-r ;. ...in. . r an excute, he could not see the printed i,.'ige. for her eviv wi'i-i* dun wiLh unehi'd team. Hli>- wen: in lied at )st. mid lav bei-ldo Tibby. very -nil. almoHt uintionleeii, <-hoking I, i. ': the (. tint threatened to bin-' from )-i-r ''i>-. driving h;>,-l thn tears which Na-Dru-Co Laxalives are different iu that they do not gripe, purge nor cause nausea, nor does continued use lessen tlu-ir effectiveness. You can ilu-uys depend on them. 250. a box at your Druggist's. J78 HitltMul Drug ami rtwmlral CD. I Canada, llmllrtl HOME DYE that ANYONE The Guaranteed "ONE DYE fur All Kinds of Cloth. rl**n,8lmplr,Nor.!i>nr>nf MltHkM. TRY II I fen4 lor l*r C.ulor Cird .n.l Hnnkl.t. swam ID her ey<>8. She vraa very palo in the morning, but ishc atwumed a cher- fuliiewi Mfhioh deceivtd L isli:i, thoueh ltd i.iVr v dirt not pass unmiu>d by Tibby. Hhe made no remark, however, but put on her prrpoeterutu headgear, und inarch- ed off to work. She W;IH iu the midat of a tusule -with some children on tlie ntalra, whi'ii a tele- graph 'boy came down the Rente at tho proper pace, u mile an hour, und. halting at the doorway, eyrd Tibby with iuark<vl disapproval, und demanded to be inform- ed if a person by the namo o( Mina Bur- r-ll niMil'-il in that house. '"Ero, give It "ere," enid Tihby, and she enatchod the telegram from hi hand. The boy, aftr Inquiring anxiouely where she uoually bought her hats. a,nd adroitly dodging a boi on tho ears. nlourbed otf, and Tibby wont up tho fituirti again. l.n. half-way he etopped, ponders! (or a mo- ment, then, thruming the telegram in hor pocket, wont down again and into the Btreet. When nhe had turned the corner ahe opened the telegram und read it. It ran: i "I am unavoidably prevented from <vim- ing to you. I will write. I am Quite well, but grieving ut not (being able to ueo you. -CllTe." Tibhy read th tMegram through, count- ing the wordH and miniating the c<wt, then, with a mtvage nod of the head, vile thruHt the telegram iuto hor pocket, mut- tering: "Of oouroo! Just what might havo been expected of th likes of him and In- claaa. He'll i-:!<- . -will heP Not him! An' if he doct, i..- ., got m to T.,. hi,. Her mind'B et on him" -she atiflcd a flen-e nigh "I can see that. It' lucky for 'or that nhe'n got a geniblei woman to protect her." That day Minn nuffored all the agonlea ot the ulcknem Uiat comes from hope de- ferred, which precedes actual deepair. Of course, he had been prevented from com- ing, butbut why had ho not written? Just one line, on llttln line, to toll her why he had not come to aeaure. her that he had not changed hi* mind, now that he wa well again? In after yeare Mina wa never able to look back upon that d-iy nr the two that followed It without a dull aching pain. Th dark thadow of a vgtio trouble nomned fall not only upon her, but on the other two. Tibiby appeared piiddonly to have loct her capacity for m-oldlng, and wa almost an Bilent HH Mina, at whom xh every now and then glancixl with a trnng pity and ynaniing in her old- young cvi-; and oil the evening of the third day nhe ui<l abruptly, and without nny leading up to the mthjert: 'What did y u eny thai trip to Marglt would coet. father?" Ulna happened to be out of the room, or h would have winked Ht h<'r triumphHni- ly, but with every nign of mevkuer.H h went lnt>o detalln with Tibby. "Well, it'a a rldli-kloim notion," nhe :iid t lout, with on air of reiignution; 'but if you've tet your mind on it I 'iK>eo we sh'ill bo forced to go; for you'll worrit and worrit until wo do, I know. An' If w'r goin', we'd better go at once," ehe added. "P'r ivp Mlna won't caro to go now," re- marked Miilni, with i>u affectation of doubt. "Oh, yen. nhe will won't you, MinnP" onid Tibby. iw Mina. white and wan. en- tered tho room. "Kathf ri got thia foolish notion of goin' away utill running in h!| ' head, (lot a rravln' for e,i hathin' and i-a.ohln' iienwinkle iwjftonin' of the brain or old age, 1 n'puue. What do you uuy, Mina? ' Minu' face tin ln->l. and a fevertrh eager- lie.^ fihone In her eyen. 'Yen, ye*! Oh, ><!' <>ho uald, her usually clear toice dry and lioame. "Let m go; oh, let UH go! l.n UK go at once, Tibby, de.irl I- I urn not well. I feel u if I were choking, us if tbrro were no uir. 1 want to go away far nwny. Tn ii. oprang up and caught her jut In time. t'HAPTKK XVIII. C'.ivo ro K'hed hid roonm in the state of mind whl h mil be eHxily BBMMtDOd by I'vi-ry man who ban bcvn in love, und in fortunate enuiigh to be loved in return. Notwitlixlui'ding h eveniiie from Ir.- family, and bin eolilary life, ho had had happy iiK'iii. niii the inomunts lmm<'<li:ii<- ly following a IfleCWMM Hpeerli; during a long burnt \\illi the hoiirulx, a eirong pull up rin-:ini, a tUHslu with n twenty- pound >almon: the happy iniiiiienlu \vhii-h come :' a man when ho In young and fetrong und IIIH pulpn IH botinding with health. Hut h had never known nurh linpplnew HB this, which thrilled him through and through, and <>t hiu being dancing to the muxio of joy. He knew the gravity of tho Ftep ho wu about to take, knew that the world, not only the world of hit* own clafn, but the larger one., which wa aleo lntcrentrt In bin movi-inentiH, would dM'lart* thut he wan acting n fnol'H part, win mining In-- car- eer by "marrying beneath him"; thut everybody would laugh and unocr at what they would deem Int. folly, hin Infatuation for a girl who wa KO \vry far below him In social position. The over-buy and iihlquitoiiA roj>orte.r would ruke u;< Mina'8 anteoedent, and dilate upon her lowly, not to nay vulgar, fmrrrmndingo. In hit; mind'fl eye he already saw the "spicy" pn.ragraph which would inevitably a^>* pear In tho dally and wnpkly papers; ho know that bin father and his two brothiTH would ho ftirioiiB with him, and that hu would be mill more of an outcast than he wan at nroerit. But nil thin cxmnted fnr nothing with dim, compared with tho fact of his great love fo> Mina and hor love- fur him He O!N/!DiyiN KNIGHT DISTINGUISHED SERVICE ORDER COMPANION OF THE R/INGE A PXT TE I THE FFD>ILLEV OLT.|NODU8T N'OVf/fSTE I HAMILTON CANADA iNoRiJST began txi plan out hU ooarie of action; It would nut be fair that Mlnu ahould face bin world without m;iuo preparation. Though be hlawelf wuu uot only not ashamed of bur. but proud of her beauty, II.T t -l .' and her Innate refinement, he "us too worldly wine to be Ignorant of ili" i '! that ube woull bo uliy aud fearful and very likely unhappy If ba were plunged, all unprepared for the change, into the society to whih li belonged, and iu which he muet continue to move u- leea he abandoned bis career. And be bad no Intention of doing BO, for h knew that under i-i- i"-i uuupiceti Mlua would take her place by his eide and would not only be a joy to him, but, a helpmate iu every euu no of the vrord. lie would send her to u good school: "in of the really good aohoolu at Brighton or Eastbourne, for iiintance. where nhe would ...i-' Mil' with the duughturu of people of rank and r h ..-.. eo thut hi might be armed at all point* lie MJBMU van (juite ut:uncd with her an cho waui and hit- resolve wan made for her nuke and hem only: no that uhe bhou'd not be handicapped und embarrassed In her uew sphere. lie could go down and sue her frequently- every day that parted her from him would bu a lout day und as soon at* posniblo they would be married and begin their life t/ogethur. lie had a bath and changed, aud then foil to work at the pilo of letters on hn table. While he w.ie reading them there varoo a knock at the door, mid in rosponso to dive's invitation Quilion came In. ".Sorry to disturb you," ho paid, hie eyes fixed a foot above Oive'e head. "Jugt looked in to see how you were." Hive liltod his radiant face and laugh- ed. "Firnt.rato," he replied. "You look -it," itaid Cjuilton. "You ap- pear to Hike a lot of killing. But I imag- ine you were very carefully nniMd by those humble friends of yours." "I W;IB indeed," laid C'live with devout gratitude. "Yen." Quilton paused a moment, n'a colorless eyeu flied on a picture above (J.ive'i shoulder. "One of the young ladies is rather eccentric, isn't she? But the other atones for her- f.it*r u little pecu- liarities. A very beautiful girl: don't often eo that peculiarly reilnixl tyi< uuiongtft her clam." C'live colored and his eyes dropped, but Quilton did uot appear to notice it or the tone in which Clive said: "She is as good as she is beautiful. Look here, Quilton" -he hesitated a mo- ment. "No; I won't tell you jiu-t yet." "There inn't any need," .a!d (juilton im- passively. "I am aware that when you have made up your mind thut 1 ain worthy of your confidence you wi 1 tell me that you are iu love with nor. Oh. my dear fellow, don't look no Hiirjir!>.'d- give me credit for the ordinary intoUigence of a boiled owl. Benide*. the young lady gave henself away the day I went to sen you. I mentioned that you were excited and might need her. nnd she flew pant me with an expression on her face which might have been road by a blind man." Clive drew a long breath, nodded, and smiled. "You've gueeeed It at once. Quilton." he said. "1 am In love with her; and, pleaoe Ood, we are going to be married." "Quite BO," uaid Quilton, a if he were OKscnting to a nta.temcnt respecting the weather. "Why not? Hhe IH not exact y of the class of Vere de Vcro to which you belong; but that will not matter to you. who are so prominent a Pemocrat. who go In for the 'efluaJity of m:u.' and have Justly earned Uie title of the Friend of the People. In fact. I admire the consist, cncy of your proceedings. Ignoring th claims of the daughterw of a thousand earlfl, some of whom arc doubtless quite willing to marry you. you go to the Peo- ple-capital P. plcaee and choose a brli'.e from amongst them. It doesn't matter to you that her father plays the fiddle in the BtreeU and that her sinter is a freak who has no business outside a side- show I beg your pardon. ' Clive leant back and laughed. "Not at all, my dc-ar Qnilton. WhiU you eay to absolutely true, but It makes no difference to mo. I would marry the girl I love If her father were 'doing time' and her sis- ter danced In the ballet. Love levels all distinctions, you know." "Quite so. Good old <yn>y-<book whee*e. By the way," he said, an if suddenly re- collecting, "they aren't her father and sie- ter, are they? You oaid as much the other day. If I remenvber?' Ho put the nuetion In the most catual and Indiffer- ent way. "That's eo," replied Clive a> Indiffer- ently. "You don't know who she Is- hnv no idea?" u. M.I Quiltou as indifferently as before. "Not the slightest." replied Clive. Quilton nodded. "You are content to take her a ehe to-do not care anything about the mystery? Bhe may be a prince**, like the girls In the ntorybooks. you know." ('live laughed "She has a higher title than that, my dear fellow," he said with absolutely boyish ardor. "She IB a queen, queen of ray heart." "Beautiful!" murmured Quilton. "You ve got love's young dream us badly ns they maku it. And this lack of curiosity on your part will continue, you think; you will not want to hunt up her origin, cm; ploy detective*, worry the girl herself? ('live laughed again. "I certainly shall not," he said. "It will be enough for me that 1 have got the (tirl I love, that uhe In my wife but why do you nk?" "Ah. why?" echoed Quilton. "I'm sure I don't know; juct the journaliiil'* inter- cat in a little love romance." "I sec." said Clive. "I* there any news? ' ho asked as ho turned to his letters again. "Yes," fcnid Quilton; "the Karl of Raf- boroug-h has been taken .ill, but no doubt thoso teli'gram.H will tell you." He nodded to two or three telegrams In the pi'e; and Clive tore them open and sprang to his fet. "My father in very 111!" he said. "Why didn't you tell me ut first?" "I wan trying to break it to you." naul Quilton; "'but I saw that you would come upon the telegram before I could do so. )l was taken ill at he place In the country. Rafborough : you will want to go at once. I there anything I can do for you? Hen here. I'll hr'lp you pack while you look up a train. He wa taken 11 yes- terday. There is no need to look HO ro- momeful. Wo only got the uews taut night. I phould have oome and told you, If you had not returned to-day. I'll find your things- there's u Uradnhaw on that taiblo." "You're ft good felUrw." ga!d Clive. 1 Throw oine elothco Into a portmanteau. II must be very ill muet want me badly. There are four telegrams. There is Just time to catch a train Quick, Qui'ton!" C'live reached the station only just In time. Hu WHB fond of hin futhiir. had long since fi.rifivcn him, unrt nil the way clown to Itaf'mrough was grieved and anx- ious about him. He did not, forget Mina; but it wa Just possible, if hto father had recovered, that he, CUlve. minht return to town and see Mina. next day. In nny cnso he could telegraph or write to her. At RaCbornugh ho found a carriage wait- ing for him; for the ready-witted Quilton had wired to nay that Clive wns coming. The old coachmnn, who had been in the nervtco of tho family Hiiioo boyhood, touched his hat nnd shook his head grave- ly lit Olive's anxious inquiry. "I am glad you've como. Mnnwr Olive, _' he naidriivo. wou'd bo always "Mauler" U> tln> old servant who had held him on .. pony and tanght him to drive. 'The Karl's mortal bad. It's some kind of a stroke, I believe. We was afcard thut you were abroad somewhere, and that tbo Karl might die- fee left alone." "Is my brother Ado'phus not there? ntked Clive. Tho coachman shook his head. "No, Master Olive; his lordship M very ill with Homethlng or other, at a Nurnlng Home. And Mr. Uortle" he hesitated "I don t exactly know where ho la, sir." C'live was driven quickly to the Hu'l. It wa a beautiful old plaee, surrounded by some of the finest timber in Kngland -a.n old-world place, rich In historical asso- ciations. It was nrchitwturally imponing, but It was very milch out of repair, and 111 kept; and it had the appearance of nil such places when the owners lack ready money to maintnln Uiem. fDivo, of course, loved It; nnd oven at thta moment, when Ills heart was heavy with anxiety, he wn conscious of a feeling of pride und ad- miration an the carriage nwopt nn the avenue of magnificent bfiyinon. and n turn in tho road disclosed tho ancient hous nd lunnu of his race. Smell it! just once! You can shut your eyes and verily believe you are breath- ing thcdclicate fracrance from a bunch of fresh sweet violef3, so perfectly have we caught the real odor of violets in Jer- Bens Violet Glycerine Soap. But this is not all. We have caught, too, the beautiful green of fresh violet leaves, yet kept this soap so crystal clear you can see through it when you hold it to the light. Alk your druggist for Jergini Violet Glycerine Soap today. lOc a c*ke. J cakes for 25c. Get a quarter'* worth. Jergei\s VIOLET Glyccrirve So&p Feritlt by CatiarfiaH ifruff/tfi/rom coast Jo coast, including Newfoundland rr uml uk. ind - mw, v to ih. -.1 - - Jr>u C. Ltd. 6 .-. i .e Strut. Penh, > young for *o long still smouldered within Dundy Kafbi,nmgh, and it flamed up feebly at Bight, of Olive. He nodded bid al ready ehaklog head and tried to with hia twisted lips. (To be continued.) The butler met him with a face ae grave as the coachman'e. "Th do<-tor nays will you go up direet- IT you come, eir," he said. "Hiu lordbhlp IB about the same." Clive went up the great stalra, and the doctor came into the dreasing-room to meet him. "I am glad you have <y>me, Mr. Harvey." he said. "The Earl has 'been aking for you, fretting. Yes; it was a paralytio stroke. He la conscloufi, and underftanda whut la said to him; but he gpeaks with difficulty. He knows that you are here; he heard the carriage. I scarcely need aek you to keep him as auict as possible." Without a word Olive entered the bed- room. A nurae glided out, and he went to the bd. He was grieved and startled by the change in his father. Rafborough had not been called "Dandy" Rafborough for nothing; he had been young for years, and bad looked, when Cliv e.rw him last, little more than m iddlo-aged ; and he could scarcely believe that tho shrunken form, with the druwn, tw:stod face and hollow cheeks, could be his uprightly, youthful father. They had removed ).U, wig, there was no rouge on bis rheeks, deep lines hod beeu middenly graved at the corners of his drooping mouth and about, his eyes; but though the outer ehll was a wreck, the Indomltaible spirit that had kept him HOW TO ENJ01' LIFE. Agreeable Companionships Made Man's Daily Work. Should a man look upon his bread earning us an unwelcome task, to be hurried and done with confusion and at the risk of his health, with the hope of reaching an early per- iod of retirement when he may do what he will and really "enjoy life?" But suppose a man can hope to retire at an early period and live thereafter without gaining work, is he justified in regarding whatever respectable occupation he has as a bore or as merely a method of earning enough money to retire on 1 And, if he so regards it, is he likely to enjoy his retirement? He will make a very doubtful experi- ment. Whatever a man does dur- ing his active period he ought to do with such orderliness and thor- oughness as to get from his daily and monthly and yearly labor the pleasure that comes from doing his itask well and the additional plea- sure of so doing it that he performs a real service. To do anything wholly for the money it brings is not to do it well enough. And those men who contract the habit of working wholly for the money are likely thereby to unfit them- selves for the enjoyment of a period of retirement; for the right-minded man makes agreeable companion- ships in his daily work, he finds problems that call for all his brain i and character for endurance, for fair judgment, for just deaJing, for doing as he would be done by ; and all these are the very warp and woof of successful living. The kind of man to retire from money earn- ing labor with the hope of really Children Need Sugar Pure ciitf IT (t BtocMary to tlis l*.ilth of young of old. Good hoan*-nia<l caniiy. 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