,. IS PUBLIS!l&:D · -BY- 11····- THE CANADIAN STATESM AN !EVERY WEDNESDA.Y ltlORNING M, A . JAMES, AT THE Oll'lllICE PostTI»lllcc Block, King Street, Bownta11· ville, Ontul"lo. ' TER~S: ..$J,!;O per Annum, or $ 1 if paid in udvunee. Paymen t strictly ln advancf! required from eubec: 1bers outside of the county. Orders to ·disoonU.nue the paper mu~t be accompanied b~ the amount due, or the pa.pe wil nu~ be atopped. ·subsot'lbers are reaponsibleuntl tuU payment is a.de. ')_ BA.TES OF' A.DVEllTIE!INGs iii~ """'~ , Whole Oolumn one7ea.r ...... · ...... 860 oo ·~;:"' 0 " " llal year .. . .. · .. . .. · 36 0 " " One quarter ........ . 20 oO ;!! Halt Column one year ............. .. 36 O~ - " Half year ........... ... 20 0 " One quarter .. .. .. ..... 12 50 ·Q11arter Colurr.n one yee.r . .... ...... 20 O~ " " na.Uyear ...... ..... 12 5 5 " ·· One quarter ·· ·. . . · . 8 00 Ten llnes and under. ftret insertion , il!IO 50 Eaoh subsequent insertion...... O 25~ l!'rom six to ten lines, first insertion O 75 ·Eaoh subsequent insertion...... 0 35 Over ten linea,llrst insertion,perline o 1 0 -10 ·Eaoh subsequent insertion ',' 0 03 l'be number of lines to be reokoned bY _ ·th & space ocoupied,.meaaured by a eoale of O l',d Nonpareil, I "';:: = DRS, ltlcJ.tlUGIILIN ~ BEITR, OFFICE :-MORRIS' BLOCK, BOWMANVILLE· Dr.J.W.Mcl,AUGHJ.rn.1 Dr. A. BEirH. Gra.du. Uoentj.a.te of the Royal ate of the '.l'oronto College ot Physicians 'Uld member of the Umversity, l'hys1ola.n lloyal College of Sur· Surgeon, &o. geons, Edinburgh. I. . lllITUHELL, j\lfEMBER OF COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS l 'l. and Surgeons, Ontario, Ooroner, etc. 0 oe a.nd Residence. ,Ennleklllen. U. DR · .J. (). W. S, OBMISTON, I,, L, JS, Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer, &c, Money tc loan, Office, in Beaver Block upstairs in rooms formerly occupied by Dr. Harnden, Bowmanville. 39 DR. E. c;, JlciDOWELJ,, ICENTIATE OF ROYAL COLLE GE . of Phyeiclans. London, Eng.; Member or College of P hysicians and Surgeons. Ontario. .SuRGllRY AND RESID&Na&:- Rear of Messrs. liigglnbotham's Drug Store, Bowmanvllle, 6- lyr.* L D. BURKE SIMPSON, 0 A.RRISTER, SOLICITOR, &;o. MOPTUS j"11 BLOCK, up stairs, King Street, Bovvme.n'le· . Solicitor for the Ontario Bank Prtvat.e Mo·e vs loaned at the lowest rates. .John Keith Galbraith, .J A RR I 8 TE R, SOJ,JCITOR, NOT .A.RY ) P UBLIC, &c. Office- Bounsall's Bloo,k S:lng Street, Bo!:_~~~_!lll~ '.Mon.~~o_ lend, J .llOCERT .UtMOl/R, a or at L11ow and Solioitorin Chancery. Money WU.LIA.M WIGHT. OKGISTRAR, WEST DURHAM ISSUER 't\. or Marriage Licenses, Barrister and Attor- oaned on Real Estate, Otnoe on King s~roet, Rowmanville. _ _ AUCTIONEER for the County of Durham. Orders left at the L ICENSED office or forwarded to Tyrone .O, ·IUl receive prompt a ttention. SNll'ltS:r.u~ 28:6 m P 8. C. IUJNKING, the County o~ la on Shortest notloe JOURl'lOll P . 0, L ICENSED AUCTION EER FOB Durham. Sales attended and lowest rates. Address 36:tf Pianos Tuned and Repaired. · ,.,.... i.ARTIES WISHING 'l'HEI:&PIANOS P Tuned or repa1ren oa.n nave thom attended ·to b.f leaving word at the DOMINION ORGAN Co's OFB'ICRl, Bowmanvllle now oelng in their omplo~A fisst.-olae mall DENT l &T RY. 0 z · · o Gtllodnate orthe Royal College cl Dental c;. I I H A RN 0 c l N, L D ft · Surgeons, Ontario. OFFICE OPPOSITE EXPRESS OFFCE. SOLD FILLING A SPECIALTY ARTIFICIAL T EETH lNSEl!.TED WITHOUT PLATES, Great Reductions iu . price on all Dent11ol Work. Vitsli2ec Air, constantly in use producing Painless Operations. Particular atben tion pa.id to the regulation of Children's 'l'eet;i _....ALL WORK WARR.ANTED.~ Branch office, Dr. Rutherford's Orono. -~-- ----- - ------ - - -·- - --·- DE.N T.I STRY J· '.111.o 11111" BR IMA C01WBE . .&J.I. J I PBA.CTIUA:I. DENT.I ST, !)VEB TW ENTY YEARS EXPERUllNCE. 1 :r oaNOxld eGasA.dmln l steredCorPat11.Jer OperaUons. · MtJCLl/NG'S BLOC&, O.ITl(JE Wl'l'!I TEE rn. WITmuT !rUT ll I Fine Hair· Goods. LADIES, ratroni ze H0m B TRADE. After spending much time and money, I am now prepared to fill all orders promptly. I have a fine aas01·tment of WAVES, BANGS, SW I'.l'CHES, COMBS and FINS very cheap. B .A.N"GS FRO:M: $ 2 U P - Old Switches colored and made to look like new. Highest price paid for long cut hair. DAIR TONIC - - _Warranted to prev!lnt the ~air from fa.lliog 1 out and will make it grow. . · WI have a lso. a. fine lot of now Stamping Pt\tterns. All orders p:oomptJy attended to. 47 I M rs. A · D A VIS , Nead2'Block, Bowmanville. The girl took up his hand and kissed it in The Po:nt of View. a. burst of gratit ude. A great lot of every person's time is de" You a.re n; good man," she said. " Yea, voted to making faces at othtr persons. ' CATARRH.-A new treatment has been did~ I'll come. Poor old grandiather. He'll l0v.41lled whereby a permanent cure of tl.1 The unmitigated respect of no one man mies me of an evening, when he comes home dtberto inourable disease, is absolutely &tfe ..1 . ·-but anythin~ will be better than it has is ever given, very long, to any other ma.n. id In from one to three applications. no matt ..11 No man ever thinks himself wrong-not whether standing one year or forty years. TJ.1~ been lately. We',·e both been misera.bleeven when for policy's sake he a.dmits him· ~emedy ls only applied once in twelve da;i;",. a.nd perhaps some day- - " Lnd does not Interfere with business, Deso ·ioIt is always the other ;iy~amphlet 1 She smiled, her face flushed a.gain a.a i ts self to be in error, sent free on receipt of stamp hr AUTIIOR OF "J,ADY AoDT.EY"s i;!ECRET, WYLLARD's \VEIRD, ETC., Krc. ha.cl flushed, at the first mention of Lady fellow who really is mistaken. A.. H. Dixon & 8on, 305 King street, W lln\ . f oronto, Canad11o. Belfield's name. When two or more persons a.re a.greed, . WHAT IS 0ATARRH1 " Will they let me come and see my on a. given · point, they warmly applaud ea.ch · Catarrh Is a dangerous dieE1a.se which thous.CHAPTER V.-(CONTINUED.) He mounted Don, and rode slowly home- grandfather sometimes?" she a.eked. other's wisdom. \Yhen they disagree, they . & nda are oonsclouely or unconsciously suffering Don was .browGing contentedly upon some ward across the open waste to the lane with "Of course, and if you learn to be a val- feel conterr.pt for ea.ch other1 even if they lrom. It is a muco·purulent discharge caused by the presence of a vegetable para.site in tha ra.nk grass on the edge of the ca.usewa.y, and its tall tangled hed~es, bare now ior the uable servant, by and bye you will get good don't express it. lining membrane of the nose. The predisPOS· ha.d no more intention of goinp a.w11oy than if most pa.rt, eave where the foliage lingered wages, and then you can be a. substantial Idiocy, pig-headedness or cranldsm marks lu,g causes are a morbid stato of the blood, the he bad been the original antedeluvian horse on the pollard oaks, and the beechwood help to him in his old ..ge. ·llllghted corpuscle of tubercle, the germ poison every man-whose tenets differ from ours. in a .nuseum. showed copper-coloured leaves that were to " yes, I hope I may be able to help him '>f syphilis, mercury, toxomoo, from the retenThe society man snuffs up his nose at the 'lon of the elfete matter of t he akin, suppressed The two men went out together, and lo.st till late into the- comin~ year, when the when he is old." perspirations, ventilated sleepinll apart · strolled a.long the causeway side by side. young growth :>a.me to d.nve them a.way. Madge appeared at the V icarage before scient ist , and the scient ist boks with disgust men ts &nd thebadly germination of other poisons in "Of course you can Ree what it is, can't Very slow was the homeward ride, for Don three o'clock with all her worldly goods on the society man. 1he· blood. Irrit ated by these, tlle lining mem. · you, parson?" be~an Dawley abruptly. had exhausted all his freshness in the out- tied up in a cotton ha.ndkerchief. S he was Each re~ards the employment and diver- brane of the nose is ever ready for the recep1lon ot the parasite, which rapidly sprea.dslup "No mista.king the signs in a gal." ward journey, and only quickened his pace not overcome by the gt·andeur of t he Vicar- skns of the other as a. wa.ste of time. ~he nostrils and down the fauces, or bac k of " You think she's in love," hazarded the wh"n he saw the old church tower and age, for t hat grave, g ray old house, with its F rom the socia.l point of view, the ecien- the throat, oausin11; ulceration of t he t hroat; up vicar. smelt the clover a.nd hay in the vicarage sombre old rooms, cool in summer, and tist is a dry, musty old fogy ; and from the lhe eustacblan tubes, ca.using deatuess: bu<. "O' course she is, parson. That's the stable. But to his astonishment the Vicar warm in winter, had been familiar to her in latter's point of v it w, the society ma n is a ~owing in the vocal cords, causing boaraene~s; way it allus begins-'-sighin' and sulkin', and took him past that familiar gate, and trot· her childhood, when the Vicar catechised buttermilky r a.ttle-pated a.as. ll8urping the p_roper struoture of the broncl.ual ' cubes ending tn pulmonary consumption and sleepless nights a. thinking of him. Curse ted him snornng with indignant protest, to her on Sunday evenings, with a class of Both a.re right, and both a.re wrong. tee.th~ him, whoever he is ! He'll lure this one the gates of Belfield Park and a.long the Sunday.school children, in his library. She · · · . · Many ingenloUJl speifics ror for the cure ot T his may sound pa.ra.dox1ca.l, but it 181 catarrh have been invented, but without. suca.way like the other one was lured away, of avenue to the Abbey, where there was some remembered the look of the pannelled ball, not. ooss, until a phyeiola.n or long s.tanding d1scova. sudden, without a word of warning to the consolation, as a groom came out at the and the old Oriental jars, the Vicar's fishEverything depends on the point of view ered the l!xact nat?re of. th disease and the· poor old father. I dursen't leave the cot- sound of hoofs, and conducted the clerical ing tackle, and the perfume of r ose leaves · . . . · 1>nly appliance which will permanently destroytage, lest I should find it empty when I st eed to a loo·se box, while his master went and lavender. Debora.h, the housekeeper, a~d it runs all through life m every duec- the parasite, no matter bow aggra vated the oase. Sufferers should send stamp a t once con:e back. I · haint sold 11o basket for a. into the house to see Lady B elfield. who was a very homely pcrson&go compa.r· tlon. fortnight. I'm here to guard her from the She was in her usual place in the inner· ed with Mrs. Marra.bleat t heAbbey, received All earth is either a ht>a.ven or a fool's c or descr iptive pamphlet on. catarrh, t o the mana.l(ers, A, H, Dixon & Son, 305 . . sa.rpent." most dra.wing·room, a woman always r eady her instructions from the Vicar and ~-allicrl paradise- Just as you happen to look at ~elnees King street, west, Toronto, Canada.. "Who can it be," asked the Vicar with a. t o see her friends, and give them cordial out with with Madge to ·the village shop, it. · Wlaat the R ev. E. B. Stevenson, B.A., a Cler(JU puzzled air. " Is there anyone in the vii· welcome ; not one of those women who have where all the . i ndispensables of this life Tbe da.w likes his own voice better th3>n man of the L ondon Conference of the Jl,Cetho dist Church of Canada, has to sav in r egard. la.ge that she cares for?" to be hunted for on the arrival of a visitor, were k ept in stock, and here the two that of a nightingal.,, and the donkey can't To A.H. Dixon&: Son's N ew Tt·eatment for "Lord no, parson. It ain't no one in the and who a.re never fit to be seen excetit l\<Omen sat for nearly an hour, choosing a.nd understand why his outlines should be less Catarrh. village-it ain't a. working man, or a gentle- when they a.re en (Jrande tentt~. . . buying, Deborah keenly interested, Madge admired t han those of a blood ed horse. Oaklans, Ont., Canada, March 17, 1883 Constance BeHie~d was sittmg with .a. curiously indifferent, looking with incurious ma.n's servant, or anyone of her own station ' t ' tt d I d Messrs. A.H. Dixon &: Son: Severa.I en 1cs a en a pay, a.n no two DEAR Srns,Yours of the 13th Inst. to haud. -else it would be all fair and a.hove-board bookstand on one side of ber, and a capac1- scorn upon the pure white calico and the It eeemed almost too good to be true that I ~m 1>.nd she wouldn't be afraid to tell her old ous work basket on t he o cher. She was a neat prints which were being bought for of them agree on its merits. A b 00k · bltsh d b f th oured of Catarrh, but I know t nat I am. I grandfather. It's somebody whose love g reat worker as well as a. grea.~ re:i-der, and her. IS pu e Y a. amous au or, have had no return of the disease, and never means ruin. Some lying, fine gentleman, ' her needlewor~ was the admiration of all "I supi:ose you can make your own and some people call it good, a nd some ca.II telt better in my life. I have tried so many who'll speak her fair 11ond tempt her to go ~er female. fri~nd~, who we.n t t? her for gowns," said De\lomh, rath1;r s nappishly, it bad. things tor Ca.tarrh, suffered so much and for many years, that it is hard to realize tho.t a.way with him, and leave her to rot when 1de~s and ms~iratrnn m s.a.trn stitch, and provoked at an indiffer ence which implied Women of taste differ on questions of !IO I am really better . his fancy's over. I knows the breed." copied her ac~ievements with the needle at ingratitude to the good VicEr. dress and deportment. · I consider that mine was a. very bad case; it " I have never had anybody else to make " Have you any raa.son to suspect mis- o. respectful dwtance. One person prefers beer to coffee, 11ond was aggravated and chronlc,'lnvclvinll the chief ?" She gave her hand to t~e V~car wi~h a. 'em for me," answered Madge. hroat as well 1 as the nasal passages. and I lhoup;ht it would require the three ;treatments, "Too many r easons ; but I'll t ell you one smi!e, and he .s at down in the Iu;x:unous "Thr.t one you have got on fits pretty another cheese to oranges. It is wholly a m11otter of where you sit, wi but I feelfully cured by the two sent me. and or two, and you can judge. It's just a.bout chair a.t .her side, and felt that hfe was fair, though I don't like the style of it," I am thankf ul that I was ever Induced to send six weeks a.go that l noticed when I ca.me worth hvmg for. said Deborah eyeing the supple form from to whether you see moat of the heads or the \o_;you, home late a.t night that t here was a. smell of Ho t o,ld her the state of th!ngs at .old top to toe. ' "I wouldn't let one of our heels of a. ballet. Yon are at liberty t o use this lett er stating ' baooy in the room yonder. Well, I'm a Da.wley s cottag~, ~h~ young hfe .w.astmg, m ..ids wear suoh a gown· as that, and you'll Nothing is judged a.ocording to definite that I have beGn on red at two treatments. and shall gladly recommend your remedy to some smoker myself, but this wasn't my 'b11oocy the young, und1sc1phned heart pming for have to dress different at t he P~rk. And standards. T here is no system of reasoning l of .my friends who are su1ferers. that I smeH, and it waen't twelve hours old , wa.nt of womanly care and sympathy, a.nd you will not be allowed to wea.r beads by which to reach just conclnsiom.. The · Yours, with many thanks, REV.E, B, STEVENSON neither. It was a gentleman's 'ba.c~y; a.a he had enlis.ted h er feelings before his story round your neck." giddy, foolish old world, plethol'ic enough And hundreiis of others different from what I smoke a.s the cha.m- w~~ ha.If fimshed. "And y et they say service isn't slavery, of some t hings, is badly barren of others, p1>.gne you gentry dr ink is from t he cider . You wa.~t c~ange of scene for her._ a r etorted Madge, with a. scornful laugh. and chief among these is the lack of apprethey sell up street. . I k now'd there'd been brighter, busier life, a home wh.ere she will Deborah · spent a. couple of sovereigns cia.tion of ethics. a stranger her e when I smelt that 'ba.ccy. be taught and c~~ed for," she said, when she grudgingly, knowing how many claims Mr. Now, all things a.re ma.tters of person1I I asked mv gal if there'd been anyone come had heard all. Let her 00!'1e here by all Rockstone had upon his benevolence, and warp and bias-all points of view. to the cottage a ll day. She said ' No,' bu t means. My housekeep er is an excellent having very lit tle sympathy with this unI could see she was lying1 I noticed the creature-but you know my good Mrs. M1>.r· gra.dous young woman. If e. man has corns, he thinks they are awGentlemen'sClothes Made to Order; ·ble ~ os well as I do· ,, · "y ful things; and if he hasn't h e la.u<>hs same smell t hree nights running,· and on r ~ . ou, re to come b ack to ·the v· 10ara.ge fuss "' a.t the "I h t k h Y h w h ich others m11oke about them, the morning after the third night I found ave reason now er. es, 8 e and ha.ve t ea with ue " she said curtly another t race of my enemy. There'd been has a heart of gold." "and then John is to ~alk to the Abbey The tramp thinks that vast riches should r11.i n the day befor e, but the wind shifted to"Well, I will plac~ this pr.otegee of yours with you." . . be legiela.ted against; 11.nd t he millionaire wards evening and there was a. sharp frost under Mrs. Ma.r rable s especial ca.re, and I John was t h'l Vicar 's valet, butler, and thinks th11.t the laborer ha.a a.s much as he ' in the night; and when I went out onto the will do all I can for her myself . general confidant and factotum. He was deserves, oauF.eway there were my gentleman's foot· "You a.re always good, Lady Belfield. known only as John, and seemed to have no The r eformer howls against the abuse of · Your attention is directed to the immense prints, as if they'd been cut in a rock- the You h ave ta.ught me to rely upon your good- occasion for any surname 'l'he Vieu.r 's power, until he ha.a power to a.buse; and stock of prints of a gentleman's strong.soled shooting ness. B ut I mu~t wa.rn Y.ou that this ~irl ' John was known and respe~ted all over the the prea.cher moralfzes against yielding to boots. T here's no mistakin' t he out of a fine may be of vi;ry little use ID .your e~tabhs~; parish. He was a tall, lean, sharp·nosed temptation, until somebody tempts him. gent leman's boot : it's as different from a meut. She is unta.uitht and mexpenenced. man, very chary of speech, and never talkMan owes his narrowness to being more f . . poor ma.n's clodhopper a.a e. gen tleman's "I don't expcot her to be ~f. use to me ; I ing except to the purpose. He was a great familiar with the con tents of his own hide o every d escr1phon at 'ha.coy is from mine. Someboily had been want to be of 11:se to ~er. Brmg her to me reader of newspapers, and a. profound politi- t h h · 'th th · d" 'd I't f h i.s w. 1 e ID 1v1 na 1 Y.o o . t era, . 1k e, V icar. ha.ng · ing about the cottage and talking with as " soon a.a you 1 ciim . Of books he knew none but t he Bible· .anan d to e th '. G dbl I ·11 b · h t m k mg tha t b ecause h e is h imse1f, · : my gal." o ess you. ,, wi rrng er o you and that he knew better t han five curates h e must , neoessarily, b e nearer rig · h t than 'f I . t Cf.ID. ou t of six. H e ha.cl a way of talking about t hose who differ from him She ha.s JUBt opened o ut on e of the largest " Was th11>t a.11 ? D id you never see the o-morrow, l man himaelf ?" t he pa.triarchs, and the kinp;s and heroes of All men are either fool~ or philosopher s, and m ot s t stty lish stoc.ks. ever f b)rought "Never, h e was too ar tful. I've scarcely CHAPTER V L -EASY TO LovE HER. Israel, a.s if they had been Peel ·a.nd Broug- just as you please ; and all life is filled with o own, cons1stmg o : beenthreed.aysf.l.wayfromhomesince isawl The Vi ' car ham; was w1s · d om and good nesa, or ev1 .1 and lunacy, n 19("} - D. C l ' y J) r C S s s·tk . ~ rode Don a·cross the ma r·h ~ · or Bright d ' t and Gladstone, . 1 which I )I I s t he footprmts Ill t he causeway; but my early next morni ' ng, a. li'berty whi'ch that curious, an · qm te 11nconsc1ous y irreverent. JUS · t as you h ave a. mm · d t o accept it. · T here ' 't t.e ,, M d V e I vets, ~~ " I d gentl eman h as never s h own. up ,,h areab out 8 · sage anima.l ·felt inclined to resent, so rarely on wan any a, a ge answer- is no way of getting at any of it definitely, -.C., a.n~ my ga.l has moped all ti.me. . wa.s he ta.ken fa.r afield two days running. ed:,uO nhgra. bciously. for there are no balam:es to weigh it in, and with a very fin e stook of. Feathers and 1;,~ve you never questioned her smce But the Vicar was t oo intent upon humanity ' ut you must want your tea; you no standards of measuremen t. Flowers. t h ?~ j ust now to spa.re horseflesh. m ust be a lmost sinking, What a queer girl Now and agam, o~relese, h~e-Ha.d Old Dawley had gone to t he market.town you a.re. Come along now ; let's get home T?ere is nothing, anywhere, but the P,oint Call and inspect this fin e d isplay, which. theFe been a~yone sh~oting the wild fowl, with a. load of baskets his exchequer having as fast as we can. Martha. will ha.ve got the of view. cannot fail to g ive satisfaction . \'lybody gomg pa.st m a boa.ti? a.nu such k ! . . f kettle boiling, and John will be wanting kis like. Bu~ I might as well expect to get ans- ~un .to t 1 le 1owest po!nt, dire necessitl'. ore- tea..,, .REGARDHlG H£ARTS. J. h h mg him to abandon his post as guardian of · o n was a person w ose wants must alwers ou t o f a s t one. N ot a. w~rd wouId s h e a girl's heart and honor. say to me except she didn t know she ways be studied. He waited upon the Vicar l1' bicla UoucJnstvely 1·roves \Vhy lllan Ge·· oadn't noti~ed-wha.t reason was the;e for . Ma.dge ~ahs ahlone, in the s dame moody at- w ith exemplary devotion, bu t he expected eraJJy Proposes te \Vou1cu. t1tude- w1t t e same moo y countenance t h t th f lk h Id 't h' . b t ,., h er t o wat c h f or peopl e m qa s · which the Vicar had observed yesterday. a e women o s ou wa.1 up on im. A German doctor has lately been making VETE.RI.NARY SURGEON. " W ell, Da.wl.ey, we m~! t be on our guard She t ook but tbtl sligh test not lee of his en - In the kitchen a nd servants' premises he some investigations as to t he size of men's for her, p oor child. She is too hand.some to trance, scarcely stirr ed from her place by was first in importance, and a.11 gave way 11ond women's hearts. H e j ound t hat there ' him. is a difference in favor C>f the mnn, the mas- j be e.~empt f r om danger au d temptat!ons. .I the window, scarcely ceased from her con- before Th v· k' k do~ t thrn.k sh e ought to be le~t to live this j templa.tion of t he marsh, only Jopked at him e icara.ge itchen loo ed very cheery culfue hear t weighing more and being la r ger ; solitary llf.e any longer. Solitude encour- with a bored expression and muttered a sul- in the winter afternoon, w it h a. bright red than that poseessed by tbe fairer half of · ages ~' oodrng. . She wants change a,n,d oc· len good morning. fire burning in an old.fashioned open grate, creation. cupatrnn ·· the sigh t of strange faoes. .. Madge I have got you a place., he said and t he hearth spotless. and the fender shinA heart, it would appear, g1ows most "How is~ · h e t o,,get them ? " k d D ' ' ' . as e aw- plunging into t he core of t hings .without oir- ing like silver. The Vicar dined a.t eigh t, during the first and second years of life, and cumlocutiou. so this 11>fternoonhour wasaperiodofleisure between the second and seventh year it has ley despondmgly. "Sh · ht i t · " and repose. '.rhe large oak table at which again almost doubled. In the fiftieth year, g .go n o servwe. " Wha.t pla..ce 1" D b d . ,, e m1 And be rumed an~ broken·he3rted be- , . "A place 10 a lady's house, where you e ora.h di her cooking was p ushed on and until a. half century of birthdays have f h h d I ft th I 1 one side, and a enu~ round table covered l:een kept, t he heart gr ows a little, Summer ore s e a e m e e1x mon s. . mow will be kindly trea.ted, and ta.ugh to be use- with a snow· white cldh stood in front of t he after Summer . · At 50, however, the growth what Eervant gals. a.re, and how little care · ful t am going to take you to a n ew and there. is t aken of 'em. She's not old enoug h ! ch~erful life, to a good home, clean rooms, flre·place. Martha., the h ouse a.nd parlor has stopped, the onl} change from now to or wise enough to be left t o . take care of! good wholesome food, and companions of ma.id, a. rosy cheeked buxom lase, prepared t he close of life being a. slight diminution. herself. Send her out ·to service anywhere your own age." everything except the aotua.l ma.king of the In child hood the male and female hearts a.re 1 tea, a sacred office in which Deborah al- the same size, but after manhood, the masf I h ?reab out s, and t h e. fine gen tl ema.n w h o let ' " You mean t hat I'm to go into serv ice," I d ~1s fo.otmarks on t his causeway would soon \ she said, with the same sullen air. " F olks owe no interference w ith l.er privileges. culine heart develops much more than the 'The t ea tray was sprea d, and there was a female, aud tho former ends with being two Graduate or the Ontario Veterlna.J'Y College, find out where she was, and be afte1· her. have oft-times talked to me about that. ·' "yt s, my dear girl, the life you a.re lead. dieh of hot-buttered oa.kes frizzling on t he square inches larger than tho latter, If, as Reglstere'"d member of the Ontario Veterinary Sh,e'd have. ~er evenings out, bel ike.' and he d be waitmg for her somewh eres m the ing here is altogether an unnatural lift-. It hear th, by which sat the V icar's John in ~he poet says, t.he cen t re of the a.ffcotions Medical Association. dusk. I .know the world, parson. S he don't; I is high time you wen t out to service, a.ni a dignified atti tude r eading the S tandard. WOfHce and Residence, Newtonville, Ont. lies in the heart. the reason for man always p roposing to woman nnd becoming the affec- Will vieit Orono every Tuesday andlSaturday · P?~r child; and 1knowledge of the W?rld lea.mt to get your own living. " (TO B~: CONTINUED.} tionate bread.winner, the thoughtful hus- Office hours fr m 10 a. m., to 4 p. m., at am t to be learn t second hand. I migh c The girl was silent for some momenta band, and the loving houseband, as the Conlters' Hotel, Calls by Telegr aph receive preach her sennons a.a long as my arm, but: looking across the marsh w ith t hat d reamy imi: ediate attention. Discipline and Death. meaning of the word really is, ,might be sh?;d ,nevei: be wn:rne.d by the~··" l a.fr of hers; then she t urned slowly and CH.A!. GES MODERATE. 'Iher e is service and service, Dawley. I · looked at the vicar ha.if in wonder half in Many desertions continne to ta.ke pla.oe found in the r egion of his heart. know of houses in which the maids 11ore as! scorn with l arge d~rk eyes that w:re capa.- frcm the F rench army in Tonkin. All the well looked after as nuns in ~ convent. I'll i ble of looking unfathomable things. deserters who are recaptured are shot withHis Generosity Explained. talk to a. lady I know about y our gra.nd- 1 " Did my grandfather p ut that in your out compunction. Lately eighteen soldiers 'l'hey t ell down Ea.st ot a. poor fellow who daughter, and if I can interest her~" head l" she aaked. of the Foreign Legion ran a way from Son thay "It will be hard to pc1.rt ; wit h her," said I "No. Your grandfa.uher told me only with a. Jot of arms and. accoutrements, They owned a remarkably fat hog, and who also the old m!ln, " but I can't keep watch ~ver i that yoti were unhappy. It was I thought wel'C caught in the mountain d efiles after a owed a r ich man. The hog was about the her always and sell my baskets ; and if I I of the cure." chase which lasted a considerable t ime, and only property the poor debtor had worth don'~ sell t hem we muet star.ve. And she's ! " A pretty cure !" she cried contemptu- the eighteen were condemned to be shot at levying on, and the law exel)lpted a ma.n's gettm' to hate me for bnog, so w_ atch · j ously. "You t bink it will make me happy once. It is said that when the men were only pill'. One day t he creditor meeting the t ul of h!'r, I ~an see that. . it s a wicked I to scrub floors and pote and pans, or per . drawn up in single file in front of th eir debtor said :- "You need another pig. Let world, parson. , . . haps you would send me out as a nursemaid graves the adjutant, who waa in charge of me send you a. nice little one." The poor ,,It's a troul:>lesome world, ;my friend, and j to mind squ~lling babies I would rather the firing party cried out with an oath, on man was astonished. "Why, I owe you for we must make t he best of it f~r ourselves starve and liave my freed~m t han be a well- seeing some of the doomed men fall sligh tly t he hog I've got now," he stammered. and ea.oh other. Man was born to trouble fed slave. " out of t heir ulightment, "Can't you fellows " Never mind, you need another one and as t he. sparks fly upward. Have yo~ heard "Ther e is no ~uch t hing as slavery in the keep your dressing better than t hat? Eyes. I'll send i t , " and he did, a nd the little pig PUREST, STRONCEST, BESTv a.nythmg of Mad ge s mother lately? house where I am uoing to take :you. L!idy right I Dress !" No sooner was t he com· was put in the pen by· the side of the fat Ready for u se In any quantity. . ~or one. In less than an hour the const able making Soap, S o ften i n g Wat..r, Disin"Not ·~word, parson. Ah,_she was a bad Belfield is one of the kindest women I know. mand given than the pr1eouers with parade· {octin g , ancl a hundred et.her uses, .A. and a.ttached the fat hog and took it ca.me lot an out a.nd out bad lot, with 11 heart a.s I She ' 11 take y 1 · t h · f can e quals ~O pounds Sal Soda , h 'd h h ·n " . w1 . ou no er service as a a.vor like punctuality straightened themselves up a~, as t e uet er1!1ost ml stoDne. to me, and she will h ave you treated kindly and obeyed as if they were on the drill a.way, and thus t he law and the rich man Solcl by all Grocers and Druggists, You muet not Judge her, awley. She . and taugh t t o be u·efn l ground or a.t a. review. · Then the fa.ta.I com- were sa.tiafied. - Pltitadelphia B ulletin. TORON'l10. F:, W.GILLETT, was brought up in darkness and .~gnorance. "L11ody Belfield, '~ cri~d Madge, jumping ma.nd was given, and t he eighteen went No one ever taught her her duty. up and flushing to the roots of her ha.ir, down beforethe terrible volley. The adju- He Knew What He Wa.s Talkinl!.' About. " There's duties that don't need to be "Lady Belfield will take me into her ser - tant's wor ds-if they were ever u t tered, and One stormy night abou t four months ago it is probable they were- show t hat an iron taught. The duty of loving your father and vice. " mother. '1.1h11>t ough t to come natural even " Yes, M.a.dge, and will interest herself in discipline still prevails in the French Foreign a little girl came into~ family up town where there was already a boy t hree or four to a. savage." · your welfare. She has heard of your dism'\l Legion. years old. One bad evening t his week the "Your daughter may have d ied years life here, and she has promised to do all iA father and mother were going out and t he ago." her power to make you happy. You won't boy wanted to go a.long and take the baby. Progress under Difficulties. "I don't think so, parson. I heard ot r efuse such a service as that, will you ?" her six or seven years ago- not a word from " No," answered the girl, after a Ion" Dakota. Immigr ation Commissioner- Say To t his the mother objected strenuous1y, her, mark you- but I h ea rd from a. man who pa.use, "I won't refuse. I ought to be my friends, you are interested in the future and for a final argument she said : " But, my eon, don't you know we can't had seen her in London- riding in her car- very grateful, I suppose. It's a fine thing prosperity of Dakota, ain't you ? take lit t le sister out such a stormy night as riage- or in some body's co.rria.ge- a.s bold as for dirt like me to be let into such a. house Dakota Citizen- In what way ? this ?" brass- as fine a lady as any in London, Joe as that." ·· "You would like to eee popula.tion pour "Well, I don't ca.re," he replied. "It Tronnion said. He's a gispy hawker, sells " It will be the making of you, Mao ge," in u pon us by the million, wouldn't you? brooms, and baskets, and such like, and answered the Vicar gr avely , " And I hope Of course yon would. \Vell sir, we have was a good deal stormier than this the t ravels all over the country. H e saw my you accept the situation in a. r ight spirit, h a.d sixteen tons of pamphlets printed, show- night she come here." gal, he did, not seven year a.gone, all a.mong I and will try to do y our duty to tha.t ex:cel· ing t he marvellous agricultural, horticulN l ill u WILL CU RE OR R ELIE V E the gentle folks in London , dressed in silk j Ient lady." tnral and fioricultura.l resources of this apo eon · 's .iuausoleum. and satin, as brnzen 11.s you like, she that I The girl vouchsafed hi'll n o assurance a.s wonder ful section and calling upon farmers T he Empress E ugenie h as expended £ 100- BILIOUSNESS, DIZZINESS, never came to look after her child since the 1 to her intention upon this point. everywhere to sell out and come to this 000 on the mausoleum at Farneborough. DYSPEPSIA(, DROPSY .! little one w11.e t hree year o!d." " When am I to go?" she asked, sul- garden of t he gods. But we need a little T he building is constructed of Ba.th and INDIGESTIO ri. FLUTIEtdNG " W ell, we h ad best forget all a.bout h er , lenly. help to get these beautifully written t reat- Portland stone, in the F rench Renaissance JAUNDICE, OF THE HEART, . Dawley, t ill God puts better thoughts into "At once- t o·da.y." ises before the public." style, and it is surmounted by a bronze cu-p· ERYSIPF.l A S, ACIDITY O F " I have hardly any clothes but t hose on her mind and brin~s her back to us. I'll see "Oh! Want money for postage, eh ?" ola., which is a conspicuous object for miles SALT RHEU M J TH£ STOMACH, what can be ,done a.bout Madge. She my back." · "No, we've got tha t fixed. But the train around. The altar, 11o highly ornate piece of HEARTBURN 1 DRYNESS wouldn't s uit everybody, never having been " My housek eeper shall get y ou some which is to bear them to the outer world work, is of Ca.en marble, and t he flooring is HEADACHE, Of THE SKIN. in service- b ut I think I know a. Ila dy who more clot hes. You can come to the Vicarage has got stuck half a mile from t he sta.tion, of red and white Corsican marble. There is And e very species o:t dist1ase e.risi.Dg 'II h e·1p me. ,, w1 as f as t as you can, and D eb orah s h a I1 b uy and we wan t you to shoulder a. shovel and a whit e marble altar in t he crypt where the :t.rom d isOJ"de:red LIVER. KIDNEYS. " rn this or in any other emergency, " he : you what you want, to begin with, in the help dig it out of the 'l:lnow."-llOmaha two coffins a.re deposited, above which is a. STOMACH, BOWJ!:LS OR BLOOD. · said to himself, by way of postscript. v illa.ge," World. !large silver crucifix. I l'roprietora, [Now FIRST PUBLISHED.l (ALL RIGHTS RESRltVED.] CATARRH. LIKE AND UNLIK. E. By M. E . BRADDON. -- I I I R. PEAT E, Ta1"lor. ° I L ADI E s IM Rs DONNELY'S M I L L I N E RY · . . I I G.ILLETT:S POWDERED LVE 99 PERCENT I' -.... . --·-. I i . T .Ill UJLBURN&. 00·· I -- ~OBOH2:0.'