F SW smile;:ia alstP·'·lanswers glibly ; her Christian . such a funny one too- Cressidu. !-I The Old lUill. dom. 1n-law finds mfinltely reaaaurm g. h d th J'ke of it b efove Mv :Here from the brow of the hill I look 1 ' ·· You bhink he will be kind to hrL', Il 0 verh" ear ., e 1 h · ' it · · h as b eena b usy Johtl '.l'llr~ugh a lut<il:'.e cf )?oughs and leaves 1 Thflpa1tthree weeks You think lnhallnothave to r·i· di>ug vert~11i;mes . enas.seen .·111apa.y On the old gray mll!, with.it· g..mhrel roof, 1 blme for her, but she regrets none of iM h. d , k ·, he asks with t·Il and so she may, but tt dld11 t sound .Ana. the mosJ on its rotnng eaves. Work and n ' one of its worrv, as she stands pent t 18 ay s wor ' B C' ' "i lik · h h I ~hou ht l' I hear the clatter that jars its walls, ea er anxlet that touches the soft warin nr1s;, & n· 1 ·e m .°' c Ut'C · u g . · .A.cd the rushing water's sounds; in the full glow of the July aunehine that he!rb t hat r!u h exterior hides. a~ om;;a.nd!ah and f?,relgn as t he brideAnd I sec tbe black floats riBe s nd fall streams through the painted window of g . b b t oroom aevery blL I A.a the wheel goes 5low!y round, the.church, and bathes the kneeling fig" My dear Harriet, ne will 6 a ru e "' " She-Orcssi<la- t hla Cresaida L eigh I rode ·here oCten when I wa~ young, ures on the altar-steps in a warm ro~y l.f he !s anythh:g else," Mr. Osbo~ne has msrrfod a. foreigner t hen With m}' ~ rist on the horse before, light-"twobrldegroomaandtwobrldea." says kindly. "l think they arc~ facmg " Oh dear yeB m~'am-the French ' And talked' wi1h Nellie, themil'et's girl, .As I waited my tur " at the door. With the loss of that heavy burden of the world with as fair a proepect of hap- t ea.char' a b Mies s:ne,.don's a handsome And while she tossed her ringlets brown, the re~.~ black·eyed y oung fallow-~lmoat o. boy, responsibility a long dor mant sense of piness as most young couples ; d And flirtt d hnd cbstted EO free, -The wheel might stop or thB wheel might go- humour wakens in Harriet Smerdon's we mu8t leave to Heaven. An now, aa you may aa.y ; they looked but boy lt was all t h" same to me. breast and she amiles at the contrast of he adds, endin~ the solemn pause with a and ,,.irl beside the other couple I After Come along young and old, great and small and get fitted the tV:o couples present. By J ulla's de· qaintly humorous smile, ·s don't let 0.ne the "wedding they all went df to Au1 ".Tis twenty year~ eince lset I eto, od and suited, too, in price and quality. ;()n the spot where I stand, to·d~y, alre she and Cressida are dressed E'Xactly bride and bridegroom a bsoib all your In· t ralia togeth~r. P erhaps they mean tu ,And N ellit> is wed and the muler is dead, alik~, though neither wears the satin and terest-you have stlll. t-0 dispose of Julia set np a achool th ere," Mrs. J amieson .And the mm t1ind I are gr a y. always keep the largest and best assorted stock of Hats' )3ut totb,till we fall into ruin end 'wreck, orangefiowers proper to the occasion- a and me." . finishes, entering the larger field of medTo our fortuge of toil are t ound, Miss S merdon awakens from her reverie ltative speculation as she finda her facts gray travelling-dress and hat, a knot of Caps, &c., so come along and bring your friends with y ou. And the man goe~ and the strC11m fhws, white fl oweraat the throat, that ls all ; au.d wit b. a i;tart. Yes, luckily tor her, she has begin to fall · .And the whtel move3 slowly round. J ulla is folly convinced that they look like plenty of work to do. In one week from u Ah !" but that t he pale arlatocratic t.wln sisters as they bow thelr heads for this day she will be on board the P. and face is so haughblly unmoved, Mrs. J am· the nuptial benediction. 0 s ~eamer, her back turned for ever on leson would t hink that long.drawn breath "Itta a pity John is such an old frump!" the old world, In whlcl~ she has k!1own 110 a sigh of bitterest di11appoinhmenb. ·O R, CALM AFTER STORM. she said reflectivelv, as she drew on her mucl? of wo~k and pam, in which her The lad y thanks her for her lnforma- In this department I keep all the latest styles and best long daintily-tinted glov~B and took a youb!1 and middle life have I?ll.Bsed wear. tion, however, and makes some careless final survey of her own trim figure before ily away-her face set ateaoliy t owards purchase with such unruffled calm that quality, and my stock is al ways well assorted. CHAPTER III.-(CoNTINUED.) departing for the church. "Of course the new, wherein her latter days are to be t he good woman la.u!!hs at herself for her The Frenchman's eyes roll upward In he Is the best old fellow in the worid, fp m t in something like contentment and h alf.formed imsplcio~ as she stands in the Shirts of all k inds, Underwear, Braces, an elcquent ecstasy ; and he answers with and I love him dearly ; bub he has no idea peace. In one week ! She can hardly shop doorway, shading her dazzled eyes Ties a specialty. admirable promptitudeHose, Rubher Coats and R. R. Rubhers. of making the best of himself, and will realise it I There is so much to do still, from the h ot afternoon snn, wat11hing the " lt ls the dteam of my life, , madame, b .3 such a dreadful contrast; to that hand· and she must do It alone, for J ohn and carriage bowl smoothly ua ..:n the dusty t he passion that alone excuses my speak· some leidor e. Whereas I "- Miss Julia J ulfa must per~orce be allowed one honey· road, till it vanishes from ht>l:' sight. An eai·Jy call solicite d . Ing to the young person before I had con- drew up her tlny figure, poising on t he week at a faah1onable waterin ~-place. " All t he same, I believe she took some .trnlted you. " pointed t ip8 of her French-gray boots, J ohn, indeed, to whom His. alw;ys int erest in that M iss Leigh, " she says, Juli.a. Smerdon list ens with a pang of i>\nd smiled ab the small person refl ected easter to be useful th~n llontimen~al, as she goos back t o her prosaic daily duties BO WMANVILLE. :envy. With what an ldeal lover fate has In the mirror wibh ingenuous admiration. would far r ather spend his time cord.ng with a haunting fancy that she Mary N~E="A=D='S=N==EW=B=L=O= C=K= , ======================::! e ndowed that chit of a Crel!eida I she "R3all,;, Harriet, would not any une boxes and wrltii:g lab els, running ~rrands Anne J amieson, has b een upon _the very = - - -- -- - ---thinks ; when would her stolid British think that Creaslda and I were twins ~" and conaulting time-tables an~ 5 hipp!ng· brink of an adventure. John achieve such a bow or turn such a Miss Smerdon, working against time at li&hs, than throwing pebbles mto the lilea And assuredly her suspicions would be ' ·· 1 phr ase as that 1 the moment, h&d left the words unan- and drawing cruel but invo. untary com- stran g~hened could ahe pierce t he carriage . · But Harriet, though a little relieved, is awered, and hardly heeded them then; parlson s between the pretty sentimental panel11ng, and see the proud woman who b y no means so unqualified in her ad- but they come back to h~r now, and, J ulla '.>f his youthful recollectlon and the sits there with locked hands and whit e Jniration. gazing ab the two faces under the soft faded affected Julia of exist.ant fact-John qaivering lips- the woman who whispers " He LI dreadfully theatrical ; but I droop of the long ostrich feathers, she would gladl>': have r elinquished this cup · br okenly, while t he slow painful tears \l!Uppose t hat's owing to his nationaliny, mentally decides that Oreasida looks plementary JO Urney ; but M rs. 0dbome, drop heavily from h er eyes, those saddest 111nd he cannot help it," is her IDE'ntal fresher and fairer than ever, with the new who thinks her honors ha7e been more words that human Ups can utterThe undersigned respectfully announce to the citizens of ilommenb; then she says aloud, with a solemnity that the sacred rite has brought than suffidently clipped, asserts her right " Too late, too late I Oh, Rosamond touch of the old scholastic severity-" It to the lovely eyes and sweeteensitive lips, here, and of course has her way . my chlld, forgive me I Eustace, how will Bowmanville and surrounding district that they llave bought was very wrong and very ungentlemanly while p ·or J u!ia'a face, with its self-con- At last however it is all over; the school, you bear my news Y" - but we will not say any more of that. " acioua smile of antiquated coquetry, ls as a school, ceases to be; the furniture la (TO EE CONTINUED.) MR. T. P ATERSON's stock of Dry Goods, and will carry on the "I thank you, madame," the y oUIJg only more wiz~ned, pinched, and wan. all sold, t he last personal pos 'ession has man murmurs penitently ; and, if the "Yet she has the better husban<l," she been carted away ; B ea.c'i R omie AMdemy Extravagance ot Rieb Rusioian business in the same stand. light that gleam11 betwe· n the t hick black thinks, a fotle uncomfor ~ably ; for, do stands emp ny and desolate, and M r. and t·easan ts. lashes 111 rather mocking than remoretfal, what & he will, she cannot argue do·"Tll the Mrs. Osborne are steaming a.way as fas t At Da.seaux'a restaurant, in the great lb le effectually hidden ma gracefully sub· vsgue distrust with which t~e brilliant as the good ship .Ade1aide ca1?" bear th em M:on1kui street, a t St. P.,teraburg, six The stock is being sorted up with NEW and FASIIIONADLE Frenchman iusptr1>s her, UDJ 11st as 11he to their n ew home ben~ath tne Southern offictirs were sihing,iu brilliaut uniforms. missive b ow. "Then I suppose you will ha'!e no ob- hoD estly believes it t o be. "J ohn Osborne Croas. drinking champagne. They belonged to GOODS suited to the season, and we solicit the patronage of jection to marry her when my BlSter mar· is a man in a thousand, and Julia has A week or ten days passes, and B e.ech t ne l'eg1ml'nt of H (Jrfle Guards, which, in riee Mr. Osborne- that la to say, ln three drawn a prlze of which i>he does not dimly House remains u uvi&ited of men . By- their white uniform, on black h <Jrses, weekll from the preeent tlme ~ ' guess the worth. I wish my pour little and-by the owner wlll put , in a number and with gt.Iden tra pplngs and helmets, all former customers, and request all persons requiring Dry She studies the dark handsc·,me face Cresaida had been as lucky, t hat she too of painters a1;d paper-hangers and noiey makt1 such a magnitioe1.1u display on .a closely, but can read there only undiis· had found an honest high-winded Engllah- workmen ef <1very kind ; then ht< will ad· graDd par~de. Not far from th_ese mili, Goods to favor us with an early call and inspection of our guised j oy ; and, seeing that, she d1·aws ma.n. Ah, there it ·is !" she breaks off vertise " this dei;irable scholastic resi· tary gentlemen l!at a maim-looking ~1ttle a quick breath of relief. with a forced laugh, unreasonably glad dance " in h alf.a do:Bn newspapers, and man, in a long plain caftan, and wtth a goods and prices. "Very well, Monsieur St. Just," she of an excuse t o mock at her own forebod- then, perhaps, some one will come for· large unkempt beard, with a l.q aeur glass says, extending a large lean hand, which in gs. " lt is a ca.Be of national prl·judlce, ward and take possession of it, and new before him. For some t ime he had been Our stock comprises the best staple goods in the market he squeezes and bows over, but does not after all. I am a bigoted Briton , and lives will be liv t d oat in the shadow of the butt of the j ob s of the cfficets. As this time offer to kiss. "I apologise for cannot believe the men of any country the red· brick wall11, even as the old have each cork flew with a pop agains!J the roof any rudeness, and thank you for the equal to those of my own." been. Bat, in the meantime, the room a cheer was given for t he sparkling wine, and everything will be sold at lowest prices for cash .l)nJy. straightforward answers that have lift ed Certainly there b little to complain of In which Rosamond L eigh closed her and for the >:iches which er.abled them to a weight from my mind. , One question in Isidore's conduct to-day. tfi.s dark world-weary eyes-in which Creasida drink i o like water; while t he threadbare more and I will call Creesida. Are you e.yes glow with tenderness and pride as spent he! earlieet conciom1 days, ls dark. caftan before t he liqueur.glass was rldi· at pr~sent able to support &wife r· they rest on t he fair blushing face beside ened and empty; the garden in whlch culed and mocked at. Monsieur St. J uat's frank smile and him, and h a thanks Miss Smerdon for the she met h er lover la deser ted, the flowers ) A~ the officers made the arrows of their THOS. TOD, shoulder·ehrug are as candidly conciliatory priceless treasure she has confided to his bloom and wither, the fruit ripens and wit sharper and sharper, a smile of con· CHAS. TOD, J r. che.rge In 1mch well-turned phrases aa drops unh eeded on t o the gras!'. , as th&y are modest. tempt pa.ssed over the lips of the lit tle MAG · & "Mademoselle Oreeslda has not b een John"Oaborne could as~uredly never musAt last whlle the owner is still absent man. In a hoarse voice he called to the reai·ed in luxury," he say11 pleasantly. ter · but even as she smiles hopefully, on his au'mmer holiday, and the reigu of wa.i r,e r1'1.1:.A.~VVE: "I shall not shrine her like a prfocess, and' asau;es herself that all ia for the beat, the workmen is yet to be, there comes a "Bdng me six bottles of the best chambut I shall keep her from want. I h ave there ls a lurking uneasiness in her dsltor to th1; empty house- a lady whose pagne." excellent connecblo1rn, and as many les- thoughts that makes the wedding-cake carriage drives slowly up and down the The waittJr hesitated. aons as I choose to give. Ca suffit, n' est-ce bitter, and' dims the sparkle of the cham· dusty 11t1burban road- whose serve.nts " Did you not hear what I said 1" asked pagne. make anxious inquiries as to the where· the man in the caft.an, with a cu;;ting pas, madame ?" "Certainly," says Miss Smerdon; and When the modeat weddiog-breakfil.sb abouts of the academy- a lady whose voice. the last cloud clears from her wrh:ikled la over John o~borne takb8 the brilliant handsome proud face bears visible marks The waiter brought the bottles he had brow with the words, "And now, M on- brideg~oom aside, and, in his own pond· of disllppointmeot when ahe hears that demanded, and elx glasses as well. sieur St. Just, I have a piece of news for erous kindly fashion, bestows upon him the school is closed and the Mlssss Smer"Take the glasses away, and brin~ in When Mm. L eigh, Cre&8ida'1.1 the p romlsE>d ;;h eqne 1md a word or two of don have l~ft, and when a glance at t he the largest washing·b&11in that you can you. mother died, she left in my hands sev;;n well-meant advb e. palpably empty house confirms the sto~y. find ?" aaid th , mean-looking little fellJW, hundred pounds, which 11um was to be " You will be kind b<> her, my b oy," he ' ' ls there no one who can give me m The waiter again hesi~ated, bub comspent on the child's board and education. finishes, a little awkwardly, shaking the formatlon q" 11he aeka imperatinly of the plied on the demand being repeated I did ao spend Lt; and ehe wouid; of slender hand with unconscious energy. neighbor'& ser,.ant, who atares in open shal'ply. · coll1'8e, be penniless now, but that Mr. "Miss Smerdon tells me she's a11 good a admiration at the carriage and 1er·unts, "A piece of 1oapl" wae the next order. Osborne- - " girl aa ever lived, and ahe is a little un- at the rich sa.tln of her questioner's dreas, It wa11 brought. "The long and short of it is," J ohn in- happy about l11aving her." and the costly lace that wraps t he slender "A. towel !" terrupts gruffly, "that, having brought leldore, who has taken the cheque with upright figure and crowns the 11oft ailvery This, too, was given him. up the child from a baby, Mls11 Smerdon discreetly veiled eagernes~ and the advice wnite hair. "Uncork the boLtlea I" baa grown attached to her, and, as she whh delicately accentuated respect, now "Yes mum," the girl says dnblously, It was done. may never see h er again, 11he makes her gives the rt q aired promfae with raptur- "there's the woman at the chandle1· 11 The little man now had the waehlng· a parting present of her mother·a little 008 fervour. ahop round the corner- Jamleson'11 yon basin :filled up to the brim with the cham· fortune-that's all, .And, that being "Her life shall be all eunshlne," he know. She's got the key, and shows tbe pa~ne ; he turned up the sleeves of his understood, there's no need to make any begins, kiuing his slender finger-tips in house, and in course you can :iueetion cafll&n, washed his face and hands in tne more fuss about it." homage to the :i.baentCressida. Bat .1 vhn, h er; but , bless you, she can tell you n o costly wine; then he dried his hands, put id 8'Urrminding Tou,"nBhips : No casual looker-on would have credit- who is nothing if n ot pre.ctical, interrupts more than 1- ju&t about the two wed- a hundred rouble note on the table, cas ~ '1.'o the Fanners of Darlington , Cartwright a? I h&Te much pleasure in bringing before yonr notice my Low D owN BINDER, ed the brutque red-faced man with the him with a short laugh. diuga-that's all l " a look of contempt on the glittering Life which after three years of incessant toil and experiruenting, I can n ow Recommend delicate generosity that'really move11 him; u No life can b e that, my lad," he says With the civlllty t hat thinly veils her Guarda, and left the r estaurant. to you as a decided success , and guarantee it to do as good work as auy o\her whereas the fine mask of Isidore suggests n ot unkindly, for hi' thinks the rhap&od· impatience, the lady thanks her intormWhether the officers ta8ted t he cham· ating Machines will tell very little of the 11el:fish elation he feel~. ical speech the honestl outcome of a ant and drives on. pagne afterward we do nob know. The machine made, and to be of l ig!:tt.er draft The agents of Ele Y He is quite eno11gll enamoured of Cr0ss1- young lover's enthusiasm; "don 't bring "Jamiesbn'11" la ea6ily found- a low- little man h ad raised himself fr om the you it will not work . D on 't lie deceived . This is t he old etory. When I brooght da's delicate girlish beauty t o take her any cloud to overbhadow or storms t<? built old-faBhioned shop, in which every condition of a peasant to be th9 poa~eesor out the Ma.xwell Reaper in 1877, what ,; as eaid of it? Many farmers will rem~mber being told it was too ligl1t, wotdd n <>vec do t !le work, could not etand; but 1t has without a dower ; but the " few hun- wr eck it yourself- and shelter her with moderate wish of the human hearb is to be of millions. itood the t oet of uine years, and t o day i t stand s at ·.h e head of t he list as a single dreds " of which h e n ow h ears for the your love in all the trouble!! H eaven mGy grati:fied,. jadging from the varied stock reaper. I feel confident the Binder I am now manufact uring will be as grea t a first time are an inestimable addition to send her- that is all Cresslda's besb of goods its rather dingy win dows dis· 'l'he Depth iof Sleep. aucceee as my Reaper, and I 1 vould r espectfully ask intend ing purchasers to her charms; and, even while in a few friends wlll a8k of you, and so much, as plays. Two Russian physicians, pupils of the I. Every machine g uaranteed. graceful, well· chosen word" he tb.an~s an honest man, you are bound to do-and Mr11. J amieson makes her appearance- renowned Vierordi;, have been making ln- girn it a tri& monsieur and madame for their generos1· now- that'11 all I have to 11ay." WCall and see one on exhibition at R. H UTCHISON'S, my~ agent, a litble aharp-faced red-nosed woman- vestiaations as t o the depth of sleep. ty he la thinking how gaily he and hl11 " Quite en ongh t.o o, mon 'V'ietll.X), l!llnoe who, with many bobs and curtser~ to the They "' worked upon the principle th&t the Enniskillen, before buying any other. Yours respectfully, little English wife will dissipate those t owner of the splendid E:qu1page an l wear· depth of aleep is proportional to the b · h dl same hundreds in the joyous honeymoon ~h~ rote of ' peril no le a.r y su , ·a your er of the handsome dress, submit.!! herself strength of the s11nsory stimulus necessary proportion11 " thinks the much -amuaed in tlays to come. Isidore, t ho'.1gh his face is composed to a willingly for cros11-exam ab1on. to awaken the sleeper- t hat is, to call And then Cressida Is duly summoned, look of deeply· mored interest ; ihen thev Yes, she knows Beech H oul!B; would forth some d ecisive Btgn of awakened con 1md comes down with paler cheeks than return t o t he room in which all the wo· the lady like tio see it 1 Oh, it was a sciou11ne1111. As a sensory stimulus tb.ey lllidore likes to see, and lovely, startled men are assembled, in which Cresslda is ·PNbty house- a pity to see it lylnge~pty made use of the auditory sensation proeyes that seem to d r ead everything they bidding her life-long frieuda -her only like that 'I They should all miss the Misses duced by dropping a lead ball fro~ a given l. ok upon. She even shrinks from Isi· Smerdon's school. Did she know the ngth ot the st1mulou1 - WILL FIND JN THEgirls by sight? Oh, yea; they m ostly height. The 11tr& do?e'e embrace, when ab last the lovers are friends- " good-b1e." was reckoned, in acc()rdance with some She cries like a child over that parting, bouaht their sweets here !with a prou d 1, f c alone; and when, in arden'i and af· Harriet Smerdon cruahes down her ., d recent investigations of Vierordt, as in· fectionate terms, h e unfold8 his plans to and own r emorseful norrow that the girl' a first proprietorial glance at the sticky jars an creadn g, not directly Sj the height but as her, she stares at him for a moment in b 11 cases- h ealthy, rosv, happy lasses they the 0.50 power of the lielghb. For a perdazed wonder, then bre1>ks into a sudden glimpse of her new life may not ea wer~ too who did a credit to th eir board fecbly h ealthy man, the curve which t hey dimmed and blurred with tearn. True, and vto a~" school. The Mi.Bees S.merdons disconcerting p~saion of childi1.1h tar.rs. glvP shows thau. for the fira~ hour th~ t ears are permissibl e on a wedding day# 1 dl Clearly and eloquently he places the Julia herself will ah ed a few ·o rthodox were very particular, but very ntc9 a e ' slumber fa very light; afber,one hour a!1tl future betore her-11hows her how utterl t - at least, the eldeit was; t he one that fifteen minutes the depth of sleep m. ly alone in t he world she will b e when drops presently; bub it is a rea tempes was marrled seemed rather sllly. of grief that ahakes thls girl's slender S l far Mrs. Jamieson- who is a b orn creaeea rapidly, and r eaches t he maxithe .d.Llses Smerdon have left England for mum pob..t at one hour and for ty-fi ve (1) A MAGNIFICENTLY constructed machine, huilt from carefully lb almost seems a3 though some · thf"ir antipodean home; then, as a con- frame. sudden foreboding seized her, as ehe gossip and thoroughly enjoys the 1nt er· minutes ; the curve then falls qu:ickly to selected mat erials, and one of gr eat lasting q ualities. trast, how he wm love and 'cherish and cllngl! round M iss Smerdon'll :neck in a view, more especially as lt k eep11 that two houre and fifteen minutes, and afterA BINDER with the finest cutting apparatus jn the world. BAR worship her ; how 11he will grow in beau(2) at her door- ward more gradually. At about four glorious carriage captive farewell. i , dl b t t ty and happiness and make th e very joy passionate warranted n ever t o sag. Knives of razor steel. "Heaven bless y 1 u, chlld, and good - has rambled on uu nterrupue y; u a h our11 and thh:by minutes thore is a second of his exiled 11£~. bye" the latter says hurriedly, as John's the last phrase the lady looksup sharply. small rise which reaches Hs maximum at (3) A BINDER well balanced, free from forward weight, and a TILT Tile girl cannot reelst each tender ! i.t · hea~ tread and Isidore's lig~ter foot-fall "The one who was married 1" she re· five hours' and thirty minutes, after which of great scope. t ery ; little by little, she yields, unt llat are heard in the hall. "Wnt.e to me if p eat2, "I underatood there were two the curva again gradually approaches the (4) A BINDER wi t h the newest REEL out, handsome, strong and of lasr., with a quick blueh, a frightened Up· -lf anything is wrong ; you shall have brides ~ " base line nntil the time of awakening. wilord glance and a lon,g-drawn breath that is our Australian address. Be happy, child great capacity. . . "So there were, ma'am, bot only one half sob, half 11lgh, she falters forth the - or you wlll lay a h eavy burden upon Miss Smerdon. I was in the church and (5) A BINDER with t he simplest and sures t k notter m use, never An Artesian Well. " Yes" for which her ardent lover pleads me!" saw ft all, though lb watn't tnuch of a fails to t ie, to t ie tight and in the middle of t he sheaf. - the '~ Yes" that 11eals her doom. Charleston, Sonth Carolina, h opes to " Here fB yeur husband, Cresslda," wedding. Mls11 Julia looked very well, A BINDER that can b e folded in t wo minutes to p ass thiough " Heaven bless you, my child !" Miss Miss Julia's voice breaks in sharply. though a little pinched and old-like. But have by August next the deepesb Artesian (6) flmerdon says a little later, cla8ping the any ordinary gate or barn door. , well in the world. If it fulfill11 expecta b lo1·e Julia ls rather indignant that Cressida's the youna lady, M!s11 L eigh- oh "- Mrs. girl with real emotion. " Yon have made figure should be thrust so prominently J amleson °rolls her eyes in an ecstatic ad· it will be two thousand feet deep, will (7) A BINDER that folds w ithout removing any Bolts, Sprocket me almost happy!" into the foreground on her wedding-day. miration she has no words to express- have a diameter of at least six inches at Wheels, or anything. Simple, effective, sure. And, after t hat, Cressida can say noth · Oressida raises h er tear-wet face, with a "she was lovely, and for all her gray the bottom, and wlll yield forr million BINDER with zinc-covered deck, and inm-capped elevat or (8) A lng of h11r own foolish, childeat fears. rather soared look, and the reat of the dress and hat, the very picture ofa bride !" gallons of water a day- enough for the rollers · n o sticking nor winding in wet grain. ample snppby of the whole city. Work farewells are gob through without further But the lady pays no heed to her ecsta· CHAPTER IV. (9) A BINDER easily shifted backward and forwa rd; with n ew ex· upon it is jusb about begin ning. There break-down sies ; her delicately-tinted face whitens a tension Butt Board for short grain; removable in long grain. The carriage that is to take the young little, and the slender gray.gloved hand are manufacturers in rocky New England "Whom God hath joined together let who would blesl! their stars to be able to (10) A BINDER of r emarkably ligh t draft; easily h andled by 2 horses. pair to the railway-station la at the door tightens on the rail of the chair. no man put asunder I" " Miss-what 1" she r epeats in an odd- sink such a well ln so short a time. It ia all over n ow, and Harriet Smer- now, and Monsieur St. Just h urrbe his don dra ws a deep breath of r elief. She brlde Into it with a frank b oyish impa- ly startled tone, "I did not quite catch M~LEAN, Ilampton, Orono, " Going to 11ee the serpent" la Bostonla.n feels as thoueh a world'a weight had been tlence that bringsa smile toJohnOsborne's the name." -'gent for Darlington and Cartwright. A gent fer Olarkt , for "going on a spree." "Mlsa Lelgh- L -e·l-g-h t he woman suddenly rolled from h er shoulders, and face, a 11mlle that lingers there .w hen he MW & * ·~it&··"'"¥i:n=fF't th h"!lllWJ~ she could r11joice in some great new free- r eturns o . e . ouin, a ~ c, gpgo.aRlllrmm · · *-¥<UMW~i!· na~e W861 SPRING w+st·& Wftml I · HATS ~'S p " 12 Cases Spring Hats received at r· 1Y.r A..-Y E Hat and Fur Store. AVENGED: (GENTS' FURNISHINGS. N E vv F I R M .' MARKUS MAYER, Special reductions for the next 30 .days. f TOD BROS. I....L..'S LOW DOWN CA N AD I AN HARV ESTE R BIN0ER. A Complete Success- No Experiment. DAVID MAXWELL FARMERS BRANTFORD Bl NDER ' ~.. JAMES ROBERT MOON,