"Gone in, my do», come in,†he and. tumbling. “Minna-drum an: in put. and like-Adena: in mid-M Rhos-though “Nanak/m." hulls-n was going Mintothe old beck and new him lying on the ground. I we: glad I could not loo his (we. I! he hld looked up. I might hue gone heck, and than I should never have lo“ him any more; Guy will not come here ngein ; be u going “my to night; we hue aid voodebyu to each other. you know. It will. be a long weal-m .89an lens.- '°.°s 300?:bxt." bait out our tin narrow that Ind come pocket, the Colonel thong M he could have home iï¬ bouqt;_ bgtthoae dim hck- lustre .lumt mam “$‘M‘A:dawa. !" hhe though 3": sum " fling er mmubokthimludber pains-ha nkhthmhdnlink chikL Im‘ucyumdry; may hulthe dull andeustlook on may no in tho-cot n flap-tutu. ark-sin manubed. du- odby auxiliary; the only know that uhnnndherdurlonhdginn each out: ‘nkhjod-bys, unldnntmlnra long, "When ilâ€"wham inâ€"" stunmerod the Colonel, losing his haul com lately. and withing Ellen were nou- ho be p him' In hi: non ummity._ “ Guy ?" Iiid Jane, completing his aunt- enco {or him. “ I left him In the wood, the m the? the ‘31anme V.“ have '11“ no hi3; rwtlkl and ulk: together. I wont béouno he told mo it was bag In. I 109ch iu {tang-31y it; the hint gray light that m l lingual: _..... . - n . . .. chuod may Into the lnml of dream: by n piunblo ream. A solitary ï¬gure came 310ny tqwud im “through Elm gloom. , _ Jsie, her club band: fallingungnimt her aim-x "w 8‘3"! v whit?†of her {969.011.91- Jane, never singing Ibout the home a; she used to do; but yet Jane safe under hisown roof, watched over. loved, comforted perhaps I little in God’s own 1 time, by himself and that dear wife 0 bisâ€"these were the vision: that the old um was conjuring up as he puied to uni fro in the ï¬lming dark- ness. _But the \'iaionn_qui_o ly_ fled atlast, "Isn't this the pnth that leads into the pine woodâ€"our favourite walk 2" he said presently. Aud Jane answered “ Yes.†She was awed by the sure intuition of some coming evil ; ahe felt like a child whom some one was leading into a. dark room full of mysterious horrors. Guy had some dread- lul thin to tell her; of that she was aure. Well, I e was no coward, and she would show him how brave she could be., Linked hand in hand the two followed the pathway thnt led into the woods that were new gray and ghostly with the gathering shadows. Robin 51!! no more. A thousand stars in place of one are and there shone overhead, the sea no ed“ inst the rocks more legally, for t c win was rising as the night toll. “601mm! Daubenuy, looking like asilhouctte against the dusky sky, paced restlessly up anglAdqwu, up am! dowy, the gnrdgn: ‘ If those two for whom he watched and waited had not been Guy Challoncr and Jane Hearn, he might have thought that passion and despair had won the day, and that never D3010 should he see his word's sweet face or listen to her gentle voice. As things were, the Colonel knew that though the parting between the one-time lovers might be as the Very blackness and bitter- ness of death itself, Guy would strengthen the woman he loved to do the right, and shrink from the thought of seeing her fair white life sullleal, even for his own sake, as from the touch of a red-hot iron. He trust- cd Guy utterly; but this waiting tried him sorely. How would Jane look when she came back from that fateful walk along the shore? What should he do to try and com- fort her? Would Guy come With her or would she come alone, widowed and deso- late indoaq, even though stian wife 3 He could not meet her gut. He fr. t u if he were stifling, thong the breeze blew softly in fromthe sea and the freshness of In Antnlnn owning wan in thcfir. - No: there was no appeal awainst Walter Hearnâ€"noncâ€"unlesa he had fed a dissolute life under cover of a false name and false position. Granted this, what end was to be gained by dragging Jane's name before the public and giving that. unrighteou: critic the chance of saying that there had been †faults on both aidea. no doubt!" Even when a woman’s womanhood would be dragged through the mire by staying with 1- man whose only pleasure is to degrade her, there are stilllound cruel and unrighteous ones who will any that, be things how they may, her place 18 by her husband’s aide, while hands are not wanting to cast a stone at her bowed head. What chance, then, was there for Jane, who had no blackened bruises to show, but only: a bleeding heart 2 â€Perhn age the blnckgunrd um not want hot back, thought the Colone , trying to oboer himself up a bit; "pethnpa he might be willing to accept aâ€"aâ€"conaidoratiou to leave but alone." Jmo, forever separated fromGug Chal- l_oner; Jauo,_wc_nry-l_loartog! nqd an ~eye(_l; hintheï¬ddsfla'lliukhird; Inthcjoymnmhimhia nongwaheud; And woudmuneetnsthemngof his by. ‘ “Pmallngoingt‘itmed tony,â€" “ Far, hr nny Hut 1 travel My.†Tothshwoetï¬eld-muicllentanw; {‘7me sorry-nag! Malabar ' x nan-chin .1" nghdmcwn, Hybudnfln; Jumhhcnunkagain. ‘ "85] Maybe“, Arttbon braking for plenum, or braking The lava round me tell udly down, Then laid, "Ala! the Autumn inn' ! The Summer "allow bu homewud Parkman, than love And longing Ky,â€" Fu, far And "rift. With time they drift." But the sunshineth Around me new; Back to me quickly the little bird flew, And nag, u he luv my falling tan,â€" " Love known no Winter in bu yearn. Nay, nay ! For love, them is no me]: thing ; It is, And it must be always, Spring 1" Just before she went out she had been singing ; should he ever hear her sing again “'hat was to be done about \Valter Hearu? Doubtless he could oblige June to go back to him; and then there was her incomeâ€"the residue of the fortune that had been so miserably squandered ; yes, that would he a temptation to the man, no doubt. How the Colonel wished that “falter Hearn were one of those men, actively cruel, repellent, gross, from whom the law can easily protect any woman! As it was, there was no law against a man slowly breaking his wife's heart by neglect and indifference; no law against a man treating his wife with rather less consideration than he would an article of furniture in his household; nor yet, if a woman were fool enough to leave her world- ly possessions un ruardcd, could a man be prosecuted for ma ing away: with them. $1.3" gaudyâ€"a long. long good-bye." a 1nd top), i! the had-obbsd her JANE HEARN’S TRIAL. for win 2" A may 18 1mm: CHAPTER-3. CHAPTER ILâ€"coamxvxu. CHAPTER 11!. Autumn Bong. mmmmmmmmm Mmmmmmhm “mm“ 1.3%. .mmmmw mmmmiï¬m mam†mu Mu. “Mm mmmm mwmmmmm mmmwmmm E w: “ Yes. you, my dear ; he sailed yesterduy." Ihmmerod the troubled m. At the time Jun said nothing; the only shivered and mt a? to the 6m. lacing dose] . over it bodi out herbandltoteblue. Af n Dnbcncy. going lohly to her room. opened the doc: ludthily to no Jan. kneeling by the bed with her arms than up m an oovorlet. No nob: thook thc dig!» frame that prostate at the foo‘olGod; haunt, hides-Li! it In»! been to; hunt if tun had mumonlid 90 q“ bitternhingolthopoorwdnnd “Do not be anything from me,†aha aid. coming up hind him and hyin her um nbout his neck; “h in no real 'nd- ncu_:_tcll Incâ€"is (guy gape t"_ lhi to which Guy Chuloner was now at- tac ed niled on that scientiï¬c quest which wu ghaorhia the interests of unions. The Colonel aw I 0 notice of this and secreted the paper that conhined it; but. he subso. queutly won such 5 guilty air that Jme mspï¬ctad the truth. In his heart the Colonel riled terribly against the determination of g“ ireâ€"this go- ing hack to a miserable lifeâ€"bathe knew8 it was no use to protest. You cannot. bring the law to bear upon a man because he blots out all the brightness from a w'omlns life and starve: her heart. He may care not one jot or titde, though she weep herself blind, and) ct the World sees no flow in his con- duct. He my ace her sick and suffering, and show her loss sympathy than he would vivo to a lame hunter in his stables or a sick cum! in his kennels, md the world will only call the woman “ enacting. " The Colonel knew that thew things were so, and felt his own help leunees to sand between Jmo nod 00min: trouble. About a wee} before the date of Walt“- Hearu’a expected lrn'nl in England, the Ihip go thigh Guy VCthlonp‘r wan not? 9‘- In Jane’a eyes marriage was a holy thin , not a mere contract to be broken at will. a a woman, for the sake of, and in defense of, the purity of her own womanhood had to leave her husband, then henceforth she must face the world alone. As long as the man to whom she had vowed to consecrate her life lived, no matter what his sins against her, no other man could be more to her thania true and loyal friend. po-iln'liï¬u ollifgmdthcnbeenoetbcebhce'ith it: black y duct dandy truanâ€" lnd mail. a. leg-:1! vb: were the hckhbthannd Shah-d edwithm Nov; {t was the flew life, the new beauti- ful happy life that had opened like a fluwer- strewn vista. before her, that must be set aside at the call of right and duty“ This was June's creedâ€"an old-fashioned one, no doubt, as the world goes now, but sweet and pun: as the scent of those old- _fashioned garden flowers that are going out of fayqur noyv-a-dnys, too. n She could nerve herself to kiss the dear dead face of her lost hope and calmly drew the covering shroud about it; but she could not bear to let. others look upon it laid so low. It was lost, (lend to her forever, but sacred beyond all wordsâ€"hers it was and Guy's. No one elfe‘ lied part er let injt. nu 1‘ u l ‘- The Colonel and his wife felt that. it was best that Walter [learn should never know of this one cp isodo in Jane’s life. “ by should he, ill‘deed. ’ He had no rig ht to such knowled 30.}10 had acted a. lie , ho had been utterly unfaithful to the woman he had \owch to love and cherish. put, and aa a tale that in told.†There were no half measures in Jane's creed. Believing herself free she ha'l giVen herself up body, heart, and soul to the new life, the exquisite new life that had opened out before her. Her days, her nights, had been full of thought and full of dreaming of Guy Chal- loner. She had searched her own mind to discover its fullest capabilities in the way of enlael'inlgl into those grand pursuits he loved. She di not want to try and turn herself into an aggressively learned woman ; she only wanted to attain to the power of being re- ceptive and appreciative, to be at once am- bitious {or him and proud of him, and to be both theaefliiugs with understanding: The old life a? pain and stmgg 10 had once grown dim and musty, - it had seemed a thing unreal, as though it were the story of some other woman that Jane had once read with a mighty pity stirring at her heart. , ,_ I.‘ I, LL, ___.L,__ L: “ I have (lone no' wrong,†she said, lifting her and, tired eyes to the old Colonel’s face, and making him feel as if it would do him good to swear a good round oath at things in genqrai and Waltex: Heap-n and his whims in Welter Hm’n hat “whim†had been most whiny carried out. He had had binding, and 110', u be pluuntlyputit, be m cumin home again to settle down into an cum domestic character. Jana kncwfu well that that meant. She kgcw (be old routine of by heartâ€"bod the utter of or hing as! every quym can the whim of the our; the utter' to his wifc'l ha can that had cbuaztcriz- ed bu ooggiuctrom the curly days of_ their nrtiéular; â€and Guy hazl done no wrong. Ve do not know, elther of us. \Vhon we did we kissed each other many times, and said good:bye." societ utterly detectshle to her; the spend- iqg every pouihle Luthin he could by hi: bends upon, and, want 0 all, the posing a s gentle-spirited victimto domestic worry â€"-n great soul linked to I women who hex. ther under-flood or: predated him. She knew what been the gelling of the chsin thnt bound her life, and now had she not 1130 tested of the sweetness of liberty and pence and love! And now the old struggle must begin again, and the story of Guy’s love, his tenderness, his ceaseless thought of her, all their happy companion» ship together, mustbe :‘assclregm that is be Buried deep down beneath the earth of forgetfulnesa. Few people knew anything about it, and Jane was gomg aw ay from all her late surroundings into a life and an at- mllsphere {gr rcmov_ed frgln any pf tilem. The quite, hopeless resi nation of Jane’s look and voice maddcncd t e Colonel. And yet there was nothing to be (loneâ€"absolutely nagging. myriad life _; q".- culï¬vnï¬o}: of; kind .3: “ I shall not mind, †said Jane. “ I £hink I am a person who is better without friends â€"nn unsympathetic sort of person, you know," she added, with a smile the sight of which sent poor Mrs. Daubcucy out of the The story of Guy's love for Jane Heam, and hers for himâ€"tho story of those madly puppy gnqutpa by _tho \Vesterp genâ€"way t9 Mrs. Daubenuy was so frightened by J arm a stony calmness, dim eyes, and white. weary face, that she hardly dared speak at all ; which was .pcrhaps a. good thing, since there are times in life when even the gentlest words scar like hot irons, and sucks. time had come to Jane Henrn. She made all her oivn plans, packed all her own thin us, went about the house quiet- ly seeing to t is or thatâ€"more able to think of what ought to be done than either her guardian or his Borrowing wife. She had de- termined to go down to Southampton and meet her husband. “lVon’ c you be very'lonely in London, my dentiel†Mrs. Daubeney ventured to any, gently stroking Jane’s handâ€"the hand whereon the wedding-ring glistened, and where once a. single amethyst, Guy ’5 gift, had shone with softest lustre. “London is a lonely place for any one who has no friends." “I want to leave all the old life behind me,†she said. “You will not see me for ever so long. “'alter will not cure to come, I knowâ€"you remember he never did. He will write to you, I dare say, and I shall write. You must not mind if I have not much to say about myself. I do not think there will be muph, "to say_.†mon'cytéufru; a double Mrhiqhthis PM purphyodwdily, wilbscauhnt ".3†rather It In! Mn. Cnven‘l habit to any that also And her huband “understood one an. cum: maroughly." which was mainly hue, sine. paths}: two no}; Wendy ug- â€burg: nova: Una. nud each med into :15 of the «he: pafecfly. Yum Kmmnvnin 1001.de Cum {mid him to bin henn’neontnntâ€" Indian on. She Whimnnnuun thrown ntnyâ€"nbnoluldy thrown nny in myï¬ngn; waged to inn-ham that: bin Belle dapd up man! be: hnhadvqnyis .hnc drugged hemlf wearily {mm the bed; the room "mm befnre her eyu, ‘ho rushing sound was nil] In her an, bu somehow, the badly know how. Iha got down thin, md graded the loud-voiced. over-dressed woman who was called "Belle," and the man with dyed hair wd latqnmed mons- pche, yho had the! good luck to ho ho! Then, as he noticed the pde (me sad ahndow-dukened eye: on the illow : “ “7th the devil'l the mum wit you! Belle Cnven Ind her hunbmd m hem, sad it looks deuce-11y uncivil, you know, fur )‘on no: to show." Weiber Beam was going out for the day with some friends of his, n lady Ind hc-r hue- band. people whom Jane disliked and thor- oughly dintnuted. He came noisily up the stain with his grantees: on, flung the bed- room duor open widely, and then stood still, stain with no particular uympnthy, but. 1 good en] of mnoymce, It the prone ï¬gure on the bed. H But now, as a two~edgcd sword, the thought that she mi ht never see Guy again, pierced her heart. Vhen a. vessel is report- ed “missing." hope ever dies a lingering death. There always seems to be a chance, and the mind clings to that; chance as a drgwning mm_ to q fope. Butujustas Guy turned and leekcd upon her, just as she met the exquisite sudden sweetness of the smile that she had loved, the vision faded and she awoke to realityâ€"n strange and commonplace reality tooâ€"for she was lying on her bedroom floor, under- uesth the window, with the paper crumpled in her hand. “I must have fainted." she said to herself, rising with some difï¬culty, and making her way to the bed. How weak she felt, lying there ; and surely the rushing sound of the sea. beating upon the shore was still in her ears! “ Why, Jane. here you m, us you 2 I've bog: hunting_you {ll 0V:8l'_ _the plwe._" The What-1mm the Spï¬ngwu com- ing. .Thoï¬gda begs}: g? lycll_npon fhe bunchesof the tree; in the Landon path. In“ yeu's lures, lying brown and withered on the ground, were swept up into hupn, no tbut the young gnuahoob had 1 chance to gseppp and try vb“ they crinhl do to One woman read th‘Bse chem-16:3 daily rec- ords dry-eyed. She went about her daily duties ; she was gentle, uncomplaiu'mg, ready of eye and hand as ever ; but Jane Hearn’a heart was breaking within herâ€"for that missing ship_ was Guy Chaljoneg's. Sheucould not realize the idea of death coming in such swift and terrible form to him who seemed so strong, san‘m‘e, so full of all mly egdqrance. Through all the trouble of the old life begun again; through this second cruel ex- perience of neglect and selï¬sh indifference ; through strivinzs after l’etter thingsâ€" efforts such as only a woman brave an-l true could be capable of to draw her husband nearer to her, to win him closer to her side; the thought of Guy and of that short story of their loves and hopes in the Summer that was gone had che_ered_and strengthened her. It was no in this case; the slow agony went on day after day, week after week. Once, as Jane was searching for the expected paragraph, a strange and wonderful sensa- tion came over her, the letters danced and wavered a moment before her eyes, and then â€"yes, she was away on the shore near the dear old home, she carried a long tangle of aca~weed in her hand, and Guy was beside her. She heard the low murmur of the sea, felt the warmth of the sunshine, and the clo_ae grasp of her lover's haml_on hers. mks an; Inking world m: with a soft green carpet. But though these ï¬rst sign: of coming verdurc Were plentiful enough, it n- th» is ï¬lled a. 1‘ hte Springf‘ and furious gale: presently swept the sea and wound the land, bending down the trees and doing their best to shake the tiny buds of! and we the birds from their wooing. Ashndow, too, a ghastly ahadow of gnu dread. W93 om we End; _ The ship thnt had sailed upon thet mo- mentous next we; missing. In vein was much In 8 upon the broad wide m for any traces of whet Ind been so flit Ind brave 1 thing ; eager watching, onized listening for gleam of hope or sound 0 tidin were alike In vain. Day by day were to e seen in the gapers paragraphs headed, " The Missing hlp ;" day by dly hope piuecl and died ; day by day the shndow on the land and in men’s hearts deepened and grew._ The more worthy she could be, the more she could conquer herself, the higher the standard to which she could live, the more would she feel as if, in spite of all outward sewrance, in spite of all width of separa- tion here on earth from the man she loved and revered, yet should she and Guy in heart and soul stand side by side, as those who strive together to “endure unto the end," living life patiently and bravely as heaven had ordered it for them. She had striven after the ideal, and to a certain extent she had not failed, for \Valtcr Heam admitted that his wife was “im- proved," and joked about that whim of his as a thing that had had good results, and taught Jane many lessons of common sense. She was not always fretting herself over things nowadays, he said, but had learned to take things quietly. Also, she cared little for outward show, and spending little on her- self, left all the more for him, though he had the grace to refrain from saying so openly. At all times the sources of \Valter Hrarn’s income had bean wrapped in mystery. The supply fluctuated, ton, like the waters of the Nile ; now overflowing his coffers as the river its banks ; again, showing nothing but a vast expanse of desolations. Since those years spent inf America this intermit- tent character hail become more marked. \Vhil; life lasts hope neve’r ï¬nite.) dies. She had thought that in a time to comeâ€"a time still very far away, but somehow and somewhereâ€"when they were very old, she and Guy might meet again, might be friends and companions, might perhaps speak to- gether of the dear old times. Jane thought these things and was thank- ful for them, not knowing that the real truth lay in the fact that her physical powers were failing? under a. long-continued strain, and that E16 did not feel things as acutely as she once had done simply because the tired heart began to beat more icebly than of yore. \Vhat ehe mistook for patient resignation, was in truth butabodily las- aitude that, if there had been any loving eye to watch her, would have told a sorry tale. And then, upon these worn-out nerves of hers came the ordeal of the waiting and watching for news of that missing ship. Jane’s income he kindly ‘forestalletl as a rule, and when he did leave her any residue of it, took great credit to himself for so doing, and made expansive reference to men who were â€close in money matters to their wivesa’ People (women mostly) said what a pity it was that Walter Hearn's wife dress- ed so shabbily, (which was not true, for though simply, Jane- was always duintily and neatly dressed.) They also said it was no wonder he left her at home so much and preferred to be seen with male “stylish†women. The truth was that when he was going out anywhere, Jane's husbmd would' say to her : “ You can come with me if you like, but it will cost twice as much as my going alone,†and there Was an end of the matter. Well, things had gone on in'this sort of way, sometimes better, sometimes worse, always cheerless for the patient wife, and Jane thought she was getting used to it; getting less sensitive than of yore, pleasing her husband better, in that his indifference did not make her suffer and annoy him by evidenceof the snme, as_it nsed_to do. War " otgmterw' tofu]- mmldbecomeminenubk. Aishmnm theydothcworkolmuneyuwtfluif thymfdlcoingthepodtgnmtdm mnzfpgndggmsllmhgivingthmm mining them, ind {re n' faultless currency, One function still remsined to be supplied. Gold is too vslusble s metal to nerve as emsll coin. Every nntion requiem a large stock of these small tools. England called in silver to perform this smsll but necessary work ; but she did not thereby, in the true sense, become bi~metsllic. Shillings are a legal tender for debt: only to the extent of 40:, Their supply is limited ;!or the Government is under no legsl obligation to coin silver, as it is to coin gold; Further, though they no nted to the novereign in the proportion of 201.. they do not pm silver worth the twentieth put of that coin. Thus they etc not full, tmomoney, ' g u metal ss lunch values they elm in respect 0! the sovereign. They Ire in reelity counter- 3 end tlmrdeï¬nihon is not ail": ooln M {or whet they are worth “silver, but tick- ets [ortbe twentieth put of s â€assign. ll' silm should decline very seriously in ulna, they would be exposed to the dengu- tbst shillings of correct value might be forged with good silver, and. being-upped unto as. alum, nudes their numbers excessive. Hench :tperilwem to belsll then, s new coinage shilling- ol grater weight of tile changed victims, much to their own 16- mta ‘ ‘ ge. Innghing, talking. ind mining more noise ‘hm was at all well-bred, the trio n: In.“ set out n their dny’l planning, and ane was! t in pace. Then she hid her down once moteâ€"rest, silence, time to think. those were the things she craved for. The rest was coming; the silence was nest. The dsy wuunnnnlly ï¬ne and warm for so early in the year. It teemed u if the wind hid worn Itself out with its on violence. and the atom: god gale: of the but week changed to quiet, whlle ï¬tful gleam of sunshine brightened a :ky flecked with fleecy clouds white I! driven mow. ing equilibrium in tho vulue of her gold money in her excellent system of Bank of England notes. Under the law of 1844 a vast supply of thoroughly safe notes is non- suntly sup lied to the money of the nation. Fifteen m1 'uns of paper pounds cost: but a trifle ; {or no expensiva gold nu been bought and kept in store for them. T be pa- per circuhtion has never fallen so low as to reach them- Th3 are made safe by excel- lentisecu‘rities pl god by_ thobnnk lor ob- Softly the shadows lay upon the bosom of the sea ; birds were singing their sweet fare- well to the day that was done; the room where Colonel Danbeney and his wife sat by a cheery pine knot ï¬re begin to grow dark, save for the flicker of the resinous flames. The‘old people loved the gleaming. and always put off ringing for the lsmy as long as they could. Many a time an'l oft did they hold long converse at such times about their dear child J me, she who had gone out of their lives and left 3 silence such as may he felt wh. n a strain of music, pas- ting swcet, dies into silence. This evening their hearts seemed more than ever full of her. The Colonel hsd just said he would give anything he had in the world to hear her singing once again about the house as she used to do, when, all at once, he grasp- ed his wife’s hand, and the two listened. intently with straining cars. Jane was sleeping with I smile upon her lips. Three hours liter. when tha house- mnid stole up stairs to see if she could get her mistress to take a cup of tea, she wu sleeping still more soundly. What was that low far-off smud! Was it the sound. of a vuice loved and 1031:! They could catch no words, listen as they might, but the 01:1 familiar melody of a song both had loved came plainly enough through the stillness, and than, between the parted cur- tains of theporliere oppo lite, they saw Jme herself moving slowly towar-l them. Upon her face was a tender shadowy smile; her eye-s shone with a soft and lambeut light; her hands, white as lily-blossoms, fell in front_of her; clnaned the_one in Ehe other. Gold possesses many merits for serving as money' Itis clean and beautiful, light of weight in combination with high value, hard and slow to wear away by use, capable of great subdivision, andâ€"what is very import- antâ€"as coin admits of being reniclted at once and without trouble or loss into the metal of which the coin is made. Thus rc- melted, it recovers all its full powers as a commodity. As to the great point of stead- iness in value, it is not perfect ; no commo- dity whatever is. Nevertheless, it exhibits great powers of retaining an unchanged market value. At one or two great epochs it has undergone great changes of cost of production, and of consequent worth, main- ly due to exceptional circumstances in the yield of the mines ; but they have been comparatively rare. Allegations of serious alterationsof value have been brought against it within the last half century, but we main- tain that they have never been proved. It is very easy to say that the discoveries in California and Australia have acted largely on the value of gold, but there is no harder matter than to give a proof that all pricesâ€"- and all must be effected in the value of the money of which prices are formedâ€"have been really and markedly affected by new contributions of the metal from unlookcd- frr mines. Mr. Bagehot (lid not believe that such proof had been established, nor is Prof. Walker far removed from this feeling. It may be that corn has maintained astead- ier cost of production and value down the ages; but corn is manifestly too heavy and too bulkyto do the work of money. It is obvious that it cannot be made common money ; but contracts, such as leases or be- quests, might bo framed on the basis of pay- ments of deï¬nite quantities of corn, esti- mated in the prices of the day. Such con. tracts have been made, often with great suc- cess. Gold further possesses the enormous 1 merit of being largely used in the arts. The i demand for it for ornaments, chains, plate, and other articles is very large throughout the globe, and is a powerful supporter of its steadiness of value as money. It is a metal widely used and sscssing a distinct mar- ket of its own. he demand in that mar- ket, of course, comprises every obiicct for which it is employedâ€"money as we 1 as or- uaments. It would be a great loss if its use were confined to money alone; for then there would be no second force to counter- act the fluctuations in the demand for it for mone . By being used simply as a metal, as it ecomcs dearer or cheaper in its own market a tendency arises to increase or di- minish the demand for it for metallic pur- poses. and thus the disturbing force on its value is weakened by having to work over a large area. As coining is unlimited and (ex- cept for the State) costless in England, gold can be taken from the circulation or added to it with the greatest case. One further re- course which England possesses in maintain: “ Jane, Jane i†cried the Colonel, and would have risen from his place but that his wife held him back ; "Let me go,†he said hoarsely, putting her aside, but by that time he reached the other side of the room no- thing was there save the growing shadpws. “\Vife,†he said, coming back Ink: and shaking, “ we have both been dreaming." Mrs. Daubeney only wept silently in answer. Her heart was fullâ€"full of dire and dread forebodiugs which she shrank frum puï¬ing into words. - The‘ï¬ext day strange news came to that quiet honey. Walter Hcarn’s wife had been found lying dead upon her bed; she had died in sleep, the. smile still lingering about; her lips, but cheek pillowed on her hand. Jane Hearn’s Trial was over. Her tired spirit, weary from the battle of life, from the struggm to hold the ri ght, no matter at what cost, had drifted out into the “ dream to come.’ Not alone, for no tidings ever reached England of the missing ship in which Guy Challoner had snilell away from his dear love. That story is one that will never be told †until the sea. gives up its dead." Gold as the Tool for Exchange. m,owool, ml“! 0w. nun Ina Inu- be; men nun, Maul villain u radius a! dxbtnflu. This W I. Wally dun-KM uncanny! :11qu “Manama: (mm. WWW-5:; Much; “many ww- ,,,A,_-x_- .A;.._. A w Flannel.» Egthï¬'é..co. linguist-i. The Canadian Steam Users‘ In- surance Association. am A. mn.....................m [105. J. Io!URnlCB............Vuh-I Ila-d 06cc. 0 mama. mm. A. l’. 1031 Che-p. ï¬rst Mu u Wiaï¬ï¬m'muoiu, Lon. don. 'l‘admonhh on sppllauon. Won gulp named. Addgqh _ _ 1‘ oz. mm w.rmmp Oneida. Ca. and» mud, Out; â€51““.le than]; [we [run stump-Ind mu: hum-o plus and hrdvood; chylounmdbbd mu; (Minty-1n crunch hm' no um had; ntmnduwl o! nun tra «Indium than hip Wimlmm drivobonn;buudlnum “.003; “Magoo! or- der; km W. Mon 01m; 02".“?! in PA I t" ‘ Ind Dawn! secured In (bum, Uuiwd Sutu- Mn! Furelg‘n wunuiu. lllDUUl‘. AIRD & 00.. Bari-ecu, lechsnla' lmmuw. Tommu. I: vs sometime- queationed by machmbs, say: 1:: exchmge, whether taint-ï¬ning pay}; The question will hudly bear dimmmn m the light of the following fuss, tutu fur trunnion. advortisementss bell: The Chi chago mm: _gets for gélnmn, one GENTSâ€"MAKE MONEY BY HELLIRU HIE hen lerinl Funny Blblo; connin- 2.600 nm mun“. 63 full e. 40 “och and 28 Durc. For Widths. 0B2 HOLTZEB & (.0‘, mm. .Eif.l‘r-.~ Au'vcr with well bonnyâ€"bu: in WATER the «arid ’or quick-ml hud pun chy, etc. Never ‘1‘ but; try iv. Send {or ctmnhr w maul. 028 flu: a. Hamilton.â€" ARM FOB SALEâ€"LOTS 61 AND qt. Blvur‘l‘uugo. T_o_v_nuhlp Queâ€: 0:1. [1ng 'mmdmmm u . by win. my mean-y ysgr $26, 000. The New York Htrald n:- cuives [or its lowest priced oalumn,§9 . 7‘23, and for its big best $318 000. The New York mam méivea for its lowest 329,764, mi for its highast. $85 648, and thesep pipers are never st 3 loss for sdver‘dsemans to hll their calnmns. Their patronsga comes not from any desire to assist the respective pspers; but from business men who ï¬nd it proï¬table to sdvertise. Have you any excuse for xnfl'ering with Dyspepsia or Liver Complaint? In there my reason why you ghoul-l go on from day to day comï¬hining with Sour Smmach,Sick Headache, nhitnnl Costiveness, palpitation of the Hurt. Heart burn, “'ntehbmah, Gnawing and burning pains at the pit of the Stomach, Yellow Skin, Coated tongue, and disagreeable taste in the mouth, Coming up of food after eating, Low Spirits, (w. No ! Itis positively your own fault if you do. Go to your Dmggisbâ€"nnd get a bottle of Ganxx‘s AUGUST FLOWER [or 75 cents your cure is certain, but if you doubt this, get a Sample Bottle for 10 centw and try it. Two doses will relieve you. â€THEY ALL no IT."â€"’Fur beautifying the teeth and preserving, for sweetening and giving fragrance to the Breath use “Tear berry" the new Toilet gem delightfully cooling and refreshing. “ Dobyna’ Sura Cure " will cure the very worst cases of Catarrb if the patient will only exercise a little patience and persever- ance, and costs very little. Hut“ I 0 once. Ph'rly applianï¬ hu’é firii choice L. C. BHNTEN. Si. Thymus. QM. 1 tuning enuchould write to HENRY ants-r, innt 80 iciwr, Ottawa, Grinds; twenty your [IMIVOC iryroflpawnt, 11w]. mï¬piim I.;' II M. SHEEP MAR SYUI st) 65C," MINI-.1 final 'Ian- It†FOR reaper-st mowers and threshing ma~ chmes use Castonne machine oil. .L' No. 5 and 6, 10m Conccnlun McGimvmy; ,c‘im,‘ vunient to church and sch ml; {or partlculnrg apply to GEORGE ' lfpflllmok, Ont. GOLD CURE for Drunkennesa. Du. Luna H. Kimâ€. legm, III. the dllmvcrcr, «uh; his new b00k_FRE_E_n_nï¬Â§pQ ’ yuan. â€"Ebnshod; secure territory ll once.r OHKVRIVIULT- [BR 3 C04, Berlin. PATENTS TRY Burdock Blond Bitters, the great system renovator, b10311 and liver syrup, acts on the bowels, liver and kidneys, and is a superb tonic. IT N EVER Rumâ€"Dr. Fowler‘s Extract of \Vild Strawberry is an unfailing remedy for all kinds of bowel camplaint. ASK for Castor-inc machine oil, for gale by dealers generally. ARM FOR SALE-200 ACRES-LO' 1‘8 7 No: pantâ€;- lOlh Cpncctafuln hicflilï¬v-gn) , cop- Tun Great Triumph of the 19th ecutury is the great medical climax Burdock Blood Bitters, cures all diseases of the blood, liver, and kidyeys, nervous and general debility, nnrl is“the purest and best. tonic in the world. AGENTSJE FURNIIURE. CASTORINE machine oil is not affected by the heat, thus making it a. very economical oil to use on farm implements. Counts and Cuffs, new styles, Kid Gloves, new shades, one and two-buttoned, Silk Handkerchiefs, new patterns, Silk Umbrellas, new and cheap, at Cooper’s, 109 Yonge street, Toronto. THE Toronto 011 Cu. are sole manufac- turers of Cnstorine. Infringements will be prosccuted. READER and mower manufacturers any Castorine Is the best 011 in the market. HAVE you heard of the wonderful cures efl‘ected and beneï¬ts derived from th'e use of Edison’s Eléctric Belts. If not; call on your druggist for pamphlet with tuitimuuials. They are as food to the hungry, as wnt«.-r tn growing pln'nts, and as sunlight to nature. FRAMES CASTURINE machinc oil wears longer than other 0115, and Is entirely free from gum. TIIE Greatest Popularity of Dr. Fmvler‘x Extract of Wild Strawberry is whore it has been longest known. Time cannot detract from its merits. It if the old reliable reme- dy fur all bowd complaints incident to tizu summer season. Mussm Tucxm'r 8.: BILLINGS are often asked to sell their “ Myrtle Nnvy †tobacco to retail dealers. They never in any case do so, and for the best of reasons. The wholesale trade of the country have a die- tributingmnchinery which handles the “Myr- tle Navy †without an addition to its perma- nent expenses. If the manufacturers were to undertake that work, as they would by selling to the retail trade, it would require an independent machinery, the whole cost of which would have to be borne by the pro- ceeds of the tobacco sales, and of course it would fall upon the consumer. Selling to the wholesale trade alone is, therefore, for the consumer’s beneï¬t, and is a convenience to the retail trade, because every traveller who cullsâ€"in the grocery lineâ€"can take orders for “ Myrtle Navy.†HAVE COURAGE.â€"You may suffer from scrofulu or some foul humour, your liver may be congested, your lungs dismsed, your kidneys deranged, your joints distorted with rheumatism, you may be almost n walking skeleton, yet despair not, Burdock Blood Bitters has cured othersâ€"41; may cure you. Du. FOWLER'S Extract of \Vild Strawber- ry cures canker of the stomach and bowels, dysentery, cholera morbus and all summer complaints. W‘E‘ï¬â€˜Ã©â€™fï¬ DESIRO’US' QED}? Rossin House. Palace Hotel at Canada. Mark. [1. Irish. l‘ron. Barrister & Attorney, 900. I]. â€â€™IIMUH, 30 Adelaide b’aut. gï¬ï¬inéï¬ï¬ flimwmwy. TOR ONTO. iii-2m WANTED FOIL ’rOELLER‘s "171?- . BASES of leo SWIMâ€"tho beat {Innor'l lrmk WNExé OF STEAM BOILER}; You Have no Excuse. Adverï¬slng Pays LDOAN 85021. 0111107. Ont 'WAN'IED: Pbâ€"n'in ow Es- TAnLstu-zn Maine... wma u nerI Earl‘- nnnllmnï¬n h-vn Ill-av Picture Mouldlngs. Mirrors cu- Bend {or whoicmlu 115! H J. 91.517112“ A: 81:05.. Toruntu. TkApzxAuKs, uglfvlgï¬u'ya oSifAWA Guinea 00., 07 Yonge Struct,'torr;lxm, Onuno. am. g._xqogn._ mammal-mums, I n733°fl§3mm mmflono “baabï¬zvm In! . 31 commm 81322? 20301310. ma «mum. ' ' :77, 79 and 81 llichmund Street West, Toronto. ‘mnlufacturcn superior qunllty o! Carri-1m Bodie- nnd Seats. cheaper and honor than can poulhiy hes lmilUn the ordinary my. Band {or mice flu, or Thu 8t. Innis lnm Haunt-In Ind southern um- wny Company have 5 [Nu] Unm a! nmrlv 2,090,000 um: in Hue lwo nhuvoqwnod alum, which oom- priw um {allnvrln “unusual. Than luull He he- Inu sold a low pr ca nml on long times. Good Olimw. 00ml l'oo )lc‘ Vunod Balls. l-‘rw Rm Mm ' Pr ucu. Rich Mum. Pine Tim I. "la Luna Choice Frulu. Choice fluke“. Wnuar l'awcr. “null, Country. ' Nu Grudwppcn Two cray- my ho grown on the name ground In one you. What, Com, nod Conan Mun-b in um ammo ï¬eld. (it: nu'i Mo rlvun and the [and 0mm. Price. lav. IcvonYuu' cram†desired. For mmmndon “my to TIIOXV KSSEX, hum Dom- mlulonu', M. the 901-, Lime flu“. or w sample order. SoutheastMissnuriicArkansas CHEAP HOMES PETLEY & OO., l28 TO l32 KING ST. EAST, TORONTO. This year's American design]. .8130 Hulfles' Cuuilca, dzc. Facwrynudahow roomsâ€"No. 110 6.: 112 Rich- mond at. west. Toronto. EDWIN i_\' The 13th Excursion Train for Manitoba WILL sum ox For particulars us to tickets nud rules on all classes 0! freight, apply, oncluslng 3 can! rump. to huntanlu‘u m mlnu any mun 0! “um um: c. 5VL s fun at m 5 . I - wifs‘ï¬ï¬sï¬ MEN! {‘vonxl's' 6t)“, BR'Aï¬IFmiHWAm. D°mim°n Exhlbltion, Montreal. COME AND INVES'I‘IGA'I‘E. “’0 test a farm engine ovary day and a portable grist mill every week. Plenty of references. SMISIHCUOH guaranteed. Wednesday, 29th Sept, 1880. 6 50. The errul stimulativo Embvliul . 7 Sum. In nm udilrezs iv Cumdn on vccoim u! the price, ‘15 ctv.EA1KNl-.S'l‘ DERRINGER, Chuuist. 596 King u we! 'I‘un u». GOLD, SILVER AND NIOKLE PLATEBB. 29 to 35 Adelaide Street East, TORONTO, ONT. UNE THOUSAND IN STOUK. HURRAH FUR MANITOBA! R. W- PlilTTIE. W. MILLICEAMP & 00., Show Base Manufacturers. The unhuld miseries whirh rcuulL ; from inniis Minn in curl) life may he alluvizuu‘l and rural. Exhausted vi- miin‘, Nervmm and Wuï¬iu'll Dummy, will ‘nccnmu a drcnm of the mun, and vigorous munlmud may In.- rcsturcd MM regained. lmluhimhlc uvidmcu is L!- ‘- {onlul uf the truth of tin no slamnwnta. nl’mpmcv. in sealed umppcrs post free. Athlrccs N. 1). Institute, Kim;- 'un 689-10311:le Important to Farmers. STANDARDWQHOPPING MILES, , ‘ Guanmécd to grind any klml of min. A \gcll. F THE 13th FAST FREIGHT, 25â€: SEPT. The GOLDEN GRIFFIN, the leadingfry Goods and Clothing House in Canada. will offer special inducements to Farmers and others purchasing Dry Goods,Ca.rpets,'Iweeds, and Clothing, while in the city. WATEROUS ENGINE WORKS JOHN G- LAVEN lJ unvl Munsuwlu‘q inhfllihly produced by tho \ulhknnwu nml celebrated muusmchu pro- duct-xx Avnx‘s l-‘umIULA. in six weeks. All luzrccublc'1uul_]l0w- UXUIHANT WHISY f. .- See our exhibit of above Machinery in opexation at Toronto Exhibit-ion '\ Provincial Bhibition. Hamilton, and “ CLIMAX †Breech-loading Shot Gun. V-nod 80".. lllch Mum. Choke P‘rulll. Healthy Country. FARM ENGINES Crab-Cut Nun will cu! tutor mid nu ' In unlcr lour er lbw my other aw in tho world. oy no mum- !wtured only by and sold by the Hardware Trude every- where. Tun: In; other. We nlw mnku 1m.- Law. Tooth, Lightning, lmpmvul Chum mm, Pit-Emu, in than, Ml kinda nml [nth-rm. Inclu lug Um New In» proud Champion. “ St. flatharinaa Saw Works.†WILL OUT. AND 'nm Improved Diamond andthe Haulan B. E. SMITH & (10., 8t. Catharina, .. v m--.“- uuquumu 1'6. It women. heal! and Ilrcnullmnl. 3m] an b. [.1104 on .- c. A {rlnl ulllmuvlncs DIAMONDS NONE OTHER GELU‘LNE Photographic Goods, Mouldings, Frames, Chromos, Mottoes, Plcture Mutts, 85c. 128 Bay Street, CAUTIOINI'! signs Lyon 86 Alexander, MYRTLE NAVY Burdock "only": Olnl'mem. carbo- lntod. shnuld _Iu~, mm] In cupnootwn with Bur dock Blood 1' Hon Inr curmu ulcers ubcom. fovErfSoroé. cm lMI'OILTERS AND MANUFACTUBMIS 0F IN BRONZE LETTERS. Bruntford, Ontario. Clan. EACH PLUG OF THE GBIST MILLS. and OUR. SPECIALTIES. PORTABLE IS MARKED TORONTO