OFFICE and one Yard next to Agricultural “Fork, and r Bros. . . ' r office and Yard on the m 51d: _ Telephone in both Oh; 0») l9 Przizlzflg BAKER’S BLOCK, LINDSAY. loose from a V - V ALL KINDS OF I I I Plain And Fancy V O Neatly Executed an at the [Ea-“Q - Y.\' BARRIS’I‘ER. Ilftine in Hamilton's Block, ', ilifli'nl), UH: \1.-.\'\\'E l.\ -". . >.\:‘ E. l; A R R I STE R, AT- sntidzur :md Notary Public Office. Knit-3L, Lindsay. I‘ Hi}: - ‘h‘ii’.'l. \:._\‘i~‘: ' .\’. ï¬idx’ri _\':".\_ in mi: ixs, BARRIS- ‘ 3'1†" MONEY TO LOAN at low. ru\ ‘- 1» \Il swam. o. c, ALEX. jACKSON. ______‘ -7“ H 1:. llcnn, BARRISTER. SOLI- ‘« ' Z ‘R. l"’4l’lor, Notory Public, (‘onvevancen I. ,7 . . . \ . F' . “"m :. l-igenu \ Block, Loriler \ork N Kent .lilV'i ii? >:'e’.’ . In .. ' - m. York Street. Lindsay, Ont. \IclNTYRE (v STE‘VART, BAR- . RislhR‘. Folicilnrs, Notaries, etc., etc†Mam wv' {l'lfdfln limL, KcanL, Lindsav. 01' i‘. .:~ \1 IN l'\ Rf. 'l'. STE‘VART. -\ r. lil-IVLIN, BARRISTER.SUâ€" . ' '1‘ ITIIR, elm. County Crown Attorney, law ‘ "mar Lindsay, Ont. Ofï¬ce over Howe's "r. K' ' “. l.‘.""‘;ly. "trierâ€"l ()‘LEARY. BARRIS- ~T\ \zzmcys at Law, Solicitors in Chancery» . MS. a, Dohney Block, Kent street. .\' - - l.l..\k\'. HUGH O‘LEARY. , ~______________._._.__.â€"â€"â€"â€"- l CAMPBELL, BAR- Solicitors c. Office, Kent St.. MONEY TO LOAN at yous CAMPBELL. ‘ ..c_,_-____‘_______._.â€"__â€"â€"â€"â€" D“ DEGRASSI, PHYSICIAN, ,FON, ETC, ETC†Wellington-51., ..... ’________'_r.-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" RIMAN, )l. D. .\I. C. P. once and residence Cambridge- ;~;w-~i:e l‘mplist Church, .____#__. â€I *M Dll. lll'RRCHVS. PHYSICIAN, i\" .r»":.\'. l-Izu. Ofï¬ce and residence oppos- ‘.i - .. lll‘lll w. i. ‘4‘» . ill';x -St., P. PALMER BUR. ‘Qi. l(l‘liiiduate .“cGill College, x866 " 1': '4 ‘,'.'\' ‘ I'â€" D115. if! )I,’ LT ER. and HOOD, - E' 2-, f A», .md Surgeons. OnTlCC and residence ""1: ':\" ll Yur‘LLSH. Office hours: 9 *0 :1. . p_ q». i) :00 p. m. 'l'elephone l‘. C. Homo, .\I. I). l.. R. C. P. Eng. intuitions glaros. _-_______.______â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"_._â€" mMoNEvlo LOAN. COMPANIES' PFIIVATE FUNDS in l.‘ > \.\t .\T LOWEST RATES. P,“ . ' ' . ‘71'»-\\cr to pay ofl'uny suit: on account ' - .l'iv puvmcnt of interest Without notice -' ’ vim-use. Interest yearly. .\ll payments .l g. H. B. DEAN. lkirrister, Solicitor. Sc ' of York Kent Streets, Lindsay. . tom. x387. INTEREST Terms to suit borrower. McINTYRE STEWART, I - I I -‘ n I f, . Barristers and etc., Lindsay. ' â€"â€" . _‘ .. 7 fl ‘3. ‘ “ I THE -\’ < ‘1 VI ' O , ‘25,; ‘ Lenturv l agazlne ., ‘ ’12 T \l :1“ * :e Nmembcr. x557. i\>uc Tin; CENTHTy com- ’3 ‘ .1: es its thirty-fifth \‘olunie with a regular Circu- - 3 i 2' .‘linlml 250,000. The war Pppers and the Life EPARATIONS. ’2. , increased its monthly edition by 100,000. _ ‘5' killer history having recounted the eventsof Lin- 7, ° Bind .33. Sh. “ . ' ' ~ \‘cul’s, and giving the nece sury survey of ., spawn†and“ , f Lnntlition of the country, reaches a new t intimately , which his secretaries were mos ’. Under the caption. Lincoln in the War, herscme. maul ‘ 9- 09W 321382.03 m 5 ‘.~ mrm 'l‘hc “C‘x'l‘CHMAN is published every Thursday morning, at 50 cents per Annum in Advance. , LQWES'I' CITY PRICES- J- COOPER, Editor and Proprietor. A PLATE. If you want abeautiful SET of TEETH, that Will last you a lifetime, go to NEE- LANDS. Fifteen and ‘20 years and never required any repairs. Administered constantly for nearly twen- ty-one years, extracting teeth for thou- sands of persons Without a particle of pain OFFICE-Kent Street. Next Doorto the Golden Lion. THE RIGHT PLACE Room Papers, PlCllll‘B Frames, p0,- Coughs, Colds, Hoarse- IN THE MARKET, and is very efï¬cient] Self-Rolling Window Shades and Picture 5%â€. A . Goodwin’s, 25 GTS., AT NEW GOODS! NEW PRICES. English 0 Lindsay, jun. 16, 1387. provements and New Appliances with a view of making every operation as near painless as possible. teeth taken out ABSOLUTELY \VITH- OUT PAIN, and a set of Artiï¬cial Teeth that will never wear out, go to ‘ At Dennis' Pump Works. LINDSAY, THURSDAY,VJUNE 21, 1888. OHOIGEST LINES 0F Each-p. A Modernfinancee. . She. with a milk pail on her arm Oï¬ce, ‘ ward going. Crockery, ’ Glassware, Grahanilc Le e’s. With this issue of the \VhATCHMAN we extend to its readers many thanks for the cordial support given us since comâ€" mencing business, and invite all our old customers to give us a continuance of the same. Hoping many readers who have not yet given us any trade will now do so at the commencement of the New Year. Give us a trial. ,I' I need your presence ever near me ; Will you be my guardian angel, dear, cheer me 7†“It has a‘,.pleasant sound.†she said, “A household queen, a guiding spirit, And keep the sunshine ever near it. But I am only a simple child J Ob Hinting, And what must a, guardian angel do ing?" “Well, ï¬rst, dear Bessie, a smiling face Is dearer fur than the rarest beauty, And my mother, fretful, lame, and old ‘ And talk with her of lungs and liver Give her your cheerful service dear, \Ve keep the nicest goods, and have the Handsomest hot, ncss ; Make golden butter and snowy rolls 11635 1 Dinner Sets, and Chamber Sets, Excellent value in TEAS and SU- And see that the buttons are sewed HE A BOVE CI'T REPRESENTS tightly ; SIX FRONT TEETH WITHOUT and sweet, Ever offered in Lindsay. br‘ght’ly' gs: Current rates. Office, 'l‘hirkell's Block. KenLSt. I; kiwi: i; :x‘ (1, H. â€0““st ni-iTllellii3em of persons are wearing Teeth CARS, SYRU PS, RAISIN S‘ CU RRANTS, 83¢. “Yfliidiiiiil read me at evening the daily , .1â€. PET H .Y JA 8, '.,‘ )N, ’.- _ . . The tedious winter nights beguiling ; H x §\'.'l-.R.\. wit-nun, :12}: “1:11:33 J. NEELANDS, Dentist. And never forget that the sweetest face ' Is a cheerful face that is always smiling , For a sort of sublunary heaven ; Gentle Reader‘ Allow me lo Remind You GAS and VITALlZED AIR The lark sang out to the bending sky, es, And out of the tossing clovcr blooms injury. meadow thrushes. And Bessie, listening, paused awhile, .- Grandcsz‘ } "NEVER HEARD Citâ€"'3‘ 'lALWAYS'WlSE‘,‘ WHITE P1116 Balsam, Pimp/rmh'r'mg T/zal Mix is one of [/56 neighbour. â€"â€"-â€"TO GETâ€"â€" To If" “ntna'x m‘u (iii 1 and iron And always be cheerful, neat, sprightly ; \\ ~..- "L ...._\ yo- Gui [,. airing Mat lit/[e lz’ckliflg Cong/z l/mt lingers aflcr M E .A. S L E s HIGINBOTHAM’S Drug Store. Bronchitis, Asthma, c. Hanging Mouldings is at ‘ 1" mg. And Bessie gaily “cut her way ver, near the market. , O L D ondition Powder. lover. The lark sings out to the bending sky. The clouds sail on as white as ever ; The clovers toss in the summer wmd. Recommended by , Joseph Staples, Manvers, Geo. “'erry, Fenelon, Eugene Fee, Lindsay, i-tf. glitcrafurc. The Willow’s Story. BY CHARLES DICKENS. l George Skuce Ops, and thousands (3f otizers. sz’l allow mow/ting else to be pain/ea! of on you for there is l back on the sofa saying, “ Tears folly, and weakness ! ~always the same I w. a. caress, DENTIST LINDSAY, Twenty-Eight Years' Experience. MR. GROSS is constantly adding Im- â€"â€"no wife I†And then he seemed to think he said too much, for he came down ikissed me, and said that he loved i But, for the ï¬rst time in our life, his kisses did not soothe me, did I believe his assurances. All that night I heard In steadily and unresting through room. She never hurried : but Ami (an be liar] 1'11 Lindsay only a! l l HIGINBOTHAM’S Drug Store. 25 Cents Each, or Five for $1.00. v..â€" If you want your w. H. GROSS. AL]. KINDS OF Willow Work MADE TO ORDER. AND CANE CHAIRS RESEATED, By J. H. L. DENNIS. Lindsay Street. as her character. some wrong. I need not not say soon I forgave him loved him again. All iny love » current of my being set toward Tiny life then, ' troy I would have would have laid down and died, New Paper. grave. G A ‘ , Turns aside with her young cheeks I'OCGI‘IGS * g‘°“"“’ ' _ , ’ And sees own the lane the slow, dull tread Of the drove of cows that are home- “Bcssie,†he said; at the Sound she turned, Her blue eyes full of childish wonder ; “My mother .is feeble, and lame, and oldâ€"'4. I need a Wife at my farmhouse yonder, .‘\.\ “My-heart is lonely, my home is-drear, Queen of my'household,..to guide and To warm your heart and cheer your home, So my mother says in her daily clliding, When she ï¬rst begins her work of guid- - Will require a daughter’s loving duty. Ion will see to her flannels, drops, and tea, The Lord He loveth :l cheerful giver. l “You will see that my breakfast is piping now to have been my husband’s speaking And rub the clothes to t: snowy white- And polish things to a shining bright- Willdarn my stockings and mend my coats, l You will keep things cheerful, and neat, That home’s altar ï¬res may still burn ' In short, you’ll arrange in a. general way For home, dear Bessie, say what we may, 1 Is the hi rhest s where to a woman iven.†1’ l g l unuccountably and cruelly, though I The bobolink piped in the nodding rush- i Come the sweet, clear songs of the . Then said. with a sly glance at her 3 l . . “But J chum-do you lllcllllw-tlltlt Is to say. i clusterin" in a frirrhtened wav around f . . . ' . . a "~" 5 “ GOUGH GOLD V \\ but shall 1 get fol all this laboui . 3 “Tobe nurse, companion, and servant girl, altar ï¬res burn brightly; “11d ‘ was rude and course, and ordered me To give up liberty, home, and friends ; Nay, even the name of a. mother's giving; ! To do all this for one's board and clothes ; Why, the life of an angel isn‘t worth liv- \ Down through the ï¬elds of scented clo- But never again since that summer day Has she won a glance from her rustic But Bessie has lost that chance forever. 1 ________.__._â€"â€"â€"-â€" “ Better than too much, †he mut- tered, and then he flung me harshly The same round i “7 “'liy did I groom, marry a mere pretty doll~ zi plaything . married l W ‘llcn walk 1iof it all was soon to be unraveled, the same slow measured thread went on ; theï¬rm foot, yet light, falling as if to music, her very step the same mixture of manliness and womanhood After this burst of passion Harry’ tenderness to me became unbounded ; as is he wished to make up to me for , nor how much I back .in one full, boundless tide ; and the again as before. If he had asked me for as his mere fancy t0 desf given it to him. wished to see the flowers grow over my .1;- act- WOOD, I v†m. I. f) "COAL Fresh mimetic all‘Jtintk . ~ Wholesale)“ Reta“ . and I Wood;Long and Short. Delf- 1 ..-. ,5. toms-rt ofthe town, Cheap, and also'Fre'sh Lime always kept in Stock. Telephone in R. BRYANs. 50 Cents a Year in Advance. ing in poverty and privation, expecting every moment to meet him faceto face; wandering about, so that I may escape the more easily when the moment does come. Solongsstatchedher, itwasnot there; I saw the corpse only; but when» I shut this out from me, then it seemed as if a. barrier had been removed, and that my sister floated near me again. I had been praying, sitting thus in these alternate feelings of her spiritual presence and her bodily death, when, raising my head and looking toward the farther comer of the room, I saw, stand- ing at some little distance, my sister Ellen. I saw her distinctly, as distinctly as you may see that red ï¬re blaze. Sadly and lovingly her dark eyes looked at me, sadly her gentle lips smiled, and by look and gesture too she showed me thatshewishedtospeaktome. Strange, I was not frightened. It was so natur- al to see her there, that for the moment I forgot that she was dead. “Ellen!†I said, “what is it i" The ï¬gure smiled. It came nearer. Oh ! do not say it was a fancy I I saw it advance ; it came glidingly ; I re- membered afterward that it did not walk â€"but it came forwardâ€"to the light, and stood not ten paces from me. It looked at me still, in the same sad, gentle _wa.y, and somehowâ€"I do not know whether with the hand or by the , turning of the headâ€"At showed me the throat, where were the distinct marks of two powerful hands dAnd then it pointed to its heart ; an looking, I saw . , , the broad stain of blood above it. And $$°oiifl°f§§a $2192? $§1§§3§$i then I heard her voiceâ€"I swear I was hols doing. There may be. dozen passen- not madâ€"I heard it, I say to vou dis- gers calling for tickets; half as many want ' iV baggage checked: another wants to send: {sat}, while the evening fell hatvy about 5 me, a. mysterious shadow of evil passed lever tileâ€"a dread presentiment, a o‘on sciousness of ill, that made me trem- ble as if in agileâ€"angry at myself though, for my folly. But it was reality. It was no hysterical sinking of the spirits that I felt ; nomere nervous- ness or cowardice ; it‘ was something that I had never known before a knowledge, a presence, at power, a warn- ing word, a Spirit’s cry, that has swept by me as the fearful evil marched on to its conclusion. » I heard a scream up-stairs. It was so faint I could scarcely distinguish it from asudden rush of wind through an opening door, or the chirp of a. mouse behind the wainscot. Presently, I heard the same sound again ; and then a dull, muï¬led noise overhead, as of some one walking heavily, or dragging a heavy weight across the floor. I sat petriï¬ed by fear. A nameless agony was upon me that deprived me of all power of action. I thought of Harry, and I thought of. Helen, in an inextri- cable cipher of misery and agony ; but I could not have explained what it was I feared. I only knew that it was sor- row that was to come; and sin. I listened, but all was still again; once only, I thought I heard a low moan, and once a muttering voiceâ€"which I know CAUSES OF COLLISIONS. Afllegnph Mn Talk I 13.1.10! 3-!!- roud Magnum to Ponder. The majority of railroad stations are what we call “one man stations;" thntistoeay, the operator acts as agent, express agent. ~ baggage master, United States mail carrier, em, handling at some stations thousands of pounds of freight unaided, and thousands of dollars per month for the railroad and ex- press companies, for which he pays to the company. or some guarantee company, from tsmsmperyea: as a guarantee bondtor futhful discharge of duty. Some night operators are obliged to pay a premium on c $1,000 or 82,000 bond at stations where they don’t handle $200 a. year. We are obliged to boonduty from’Io’clocka. m. till'Ip. in. a regular hours, with perhaps no chance to go to dinner, and where there is no night oper- ator the day operator frequently has to my lntheofllce until 8,9 or 10 p. m. torepert some stock train or ofï¬cer’s special, and in case ofawreck he isex'pected to stuyupull night or perhaps two nights in case of u washout. For all this he gets $40 or $50 per month in the west and less in th! eastern states, and not one cent for overtime. The traveling public do not realize to what extent their lives are in the hands 01 the operators, unless they occasionally read in the papers of some accident caused by the neglect of some operator to deliver his orders . 9 ’ passionately to himself. I And then his voice swept stormfully V ‘ v. v. “ . â€"_ . . “. ,m ‘ ‘tlnouth the house, cry ang wildly, {MaryV tinctly whisper softly, Mary“ and mm, and wants the operator towrite it Mary. Quick here; Your slsfer . then it said, still more audibly, Mur- for him; mother wants that jar of but,†sent by express by this train to his son in the dared!†And then the ï¬gure vanished, and suddenly the whole room was vacant. That one dread word had sounded as if forced out by the pressure of some strong agonyâ€"like a. man revealing his life’s secret when dying. And when it had been spoken, or rather walled forth, ups harder, for many of the roads take Sun there was a sudden sweep and chilly day .5 a general cleaning up day on divisions rush through the air ; and the life, the ; where they run no passenger trains on that d: . was alone 3’- 5021“]? thztï¬wsenzg fle'ghe Imission ha d 1 ItisSundey today, and I have not been gen “ ea ' . 1 ,able to get away long enoughtogoout to . n fulï¬lled; the Warning ha( been 1 dinner. nndby the time I go home tonight given; and then my sister passed away ; will have reported twenty trams.‘ I have not â€"-for her work with earth was done. , had 03° Sunday 1103†With my family for 81! months, not even a Thanksgiving or uChrist- V ! Ellen I" city, etc, and perhaps this operator has worked half or till the night before. But he ought to go to jail. “'6 could stand all this without complaining if we only knew that when Sunday comes we could rest and enjoy the society of our families, for many of us are married, but we are obliged to work as steadily on Sunday as on any other day, per- I ran lip-stairs. It seems to me now on that I almost flew. I found Ellen lying on the floor of her own room, just inside the door; her feet toward the door of my husband’s study, which was imme- diately opposite her room. She was fainting ; at least I thought so then. “'9 raised her up between lsâ€"iny hus- . band trembling more than 1â€"1 unfasten- l ed her gown, and threw wateronherface, and pushed back her hair ; but she did not revive. I told Harry to go for a. doctor. A horrid thought was stealing over me : but he lingered, as I fancied, V , Brave and calm as the strong“ man [ mas day. While the diflerent branches or that ever fought on a battle-ï¬eld, Istood my family were taking their CW up beside my sister’s body. I unfast- ; dinner together, I was as the station eating cued her last dress, and threw it back l :2†gigsgg “1:;in £31 flit?†b31165?da}1'; f s lers: rais d; ' . 9 °, 3"“ Sir 13:23 itiledttddlgdgtihgbandziae train : ‘5 “my “5 J“ 341 “es m but ‘1‘? 0m? , b , chance I have to viSit them in the daytime is around her face; and then I saw deep, when they come to the depot Sundays to black bruises on her throat, the marks ; see papa. which I usually permit them to do. of hands that had grapled her from beâ€" i When 11““ 110Ҡtms Imming my little girl hind, and that had strangled her. And ‘ ’ twice asked him to go. Then I thought that he was too much overcome; so I i went to him, and kissed him, and said, “She will soon be better, Harry,†cheer- fully, te cheer him. But I felt in my ; heart that she was no more. V At last, after many urgent entreaties, and after the servants had come up, At . “ 3M4 was sick and she “did wish papa. wouldn‘t go the depot today." I wished so, too, but I am ithe bedâ€"but he sent them away again then I looked further, and I saw a small 3 obliged to. And what do we get for this iimmediately'he put on his hat and woundbelow the left breast, about which, Sundav wcrkl liothlng; not a coma-Cor: Cedar-Rapids Gazette? - ., _ hung two or three clots of blood, that -. Ins-wt ‘1ku our, uwylw an. WLH “up“ I. ..... edge in her manner of murder. I knew then she had ï¬rst been suffocated, mi There are certain appearances which prevent her screams, and then stabbed iare characteristic of strong and durable where the “round “vould bleed inu‘ardlyy . tllllbel‘. I“ Whatsoeiel' ClitSs if beltings. and show no Sign to the mere by'il' In the same species Hflllmiml‘ that stander . . specnnen will, ingcnerul. be the strongest . land most durable which has grown the .I covered her up carefully ism"- I :slowest, as shown by the narruwness of 181d the Plnow 511100th and straight, and '5 annual rings. ‘2. The cellular tissue. as laid the heavy had gently down. I l seen in the medullary rays (when vissible) drew the shroud close above the dmad-lshould be hard and compact. :3. The fill mark of murder. And thenâ€"still {viscular or ï¬brous tissues should adhere ! ï¬rmly together, and should show to woodi- as calm and resolute as I had been ever i ‘1 . .f. . d the revelation had come to meâ€"I ,ness at a frcs ll) cut sin “0'. nor shoul Since . . it clog the teeth of the saw with loose left the room and passed “Ito my, hus' :ï¬bers. 4. If the wood is colored. dark- band’s study. It was on me to discovâ€" ness of Color is in general a sign of or all the truth. Estrength and durability. 5. The freshly His writing table was locked. \Vhere ‘cut surface of the Wood must be ï¬rm and my strength came from, I know not: V shining. and should have smucwliat ot a ltransluccnt appearance. A null chalky but, with a. chisel that was lying on the . . . . , - l : appearance 1521 Sign of bad timber. (LV In , table, I P th? drawer and broke‘the 1' wood of a given species. the heaviest lock. I opened lt“ The“ was a â€PE g specimens are ill general the stronger and and Slender dagger lying the": red “'lt'h I more lasting. 7. Among resinous Woods, blood; a. handful of woman’s hair rude- l those which have least resin in their pores, ly severed. from the head, lay near it. ?_ and among non-resinous woods those It, was my sister’s hairIâ€"that “'a'y' which hail'e 1least sup or gun; in tillipgyare ' ' in «enera t in strongest ant mos mg. Sillken, “Illegal agbxsn i123- timtl mild, ' 8. rIt is started by some authors that in ï¬r 3‘ ways 0‘ an in“. so .uluc 1‘ wood. that which has most wood, and And 98‘“ to these again were stamps, . in hard which has the least, is the most and d163,.and moulds, 31nd. plates, and . durable ; but the lllllVUl'Silllly of_this law handwritings with fac-Simtles beneath, ; is doubtful. Timber should. be tree from and bankers’ checks, and a heap of V such blemishes as clefts or cracks radiat- leaden coin. and piles of incomplete ,ing from the centre, "cup shakes" or ' cracks which partially separate one annual bank notes; and all the e‘ idences Of a 2 layer from another: "up sets." where the comer s and 9 forger s trade-â€"the .sus' ï¬bres have been crippled by cmnpression: PiCion 0f Whmh had caused those bitter L “rindgills†or wounds in a layer of the quarelings â€tween poor Ellen and mi' 3 wood, which have been covered and con- husbandâ€"the knowledge 0f Whicb had i cealcd by the growth of subsequent layers _______â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"' Characteristics of Good Timber. went out, soon returninngith a. strange ttuuu, AAvv v... c“... av-.-" WI-A~ ....... I l - aside, as I stood bathing my sister’s face, i and pulled her arm and hand roughly, l to see how dead they fell, stopped down close to her lipsâ€"I thought he touched them evenâ€"all in a violent and insolent ‘way, that shocked me and bewildered tine. My huShand stood in the shadow, l ghastly pale, but not interfering. It was true what the strange man had isaid so coarsely. She was dead. Yes ; i the creature that an hour ago had been 1‘ so full of life, so beautiful, so resolute, i, and young, was now a stiffening corpse, ’inanimate and dead, without life and Oh ! that word had set ;my brain on ï¬re! Dead! here in my house, under my roof-â€"dead so myste- 3 riously, so strangelyâ€"why f .How’l It i was a fearful dreamâ€"it was no truth lthat lay there. I was in a nightmare: l, I was not sane ; and thinking how I ghastly it all was, I fainted softly on the i bed, no one knowing, till some time after that I had fallen, and was not praying.‘ hen I recovered I was in my own alone. Crawling feebly to my ? sister’s door, I found that she had been ‘1 without hope, and l “ washed and dressed, and was now laid had 1 out on her bed. It struck me that all and i, had been done in strange haste ; Harry me. i telling me the servants had done it ‘ hile I fainted. I knew afterward nor i that he had told them it was I, and that ll would have no help. The mystery her ; One thing I was decided onâ€"to watch ; the l by my sister this night. It was in vain caused her death. 1 Over them and h‘r'nw “r Sl."*’"':‘3'131M951“ VV'ith these things I saw alsoa letter i the centre or elsewhem' “mating the that my husband opposed me ; in vain that he coaxed me by his caresses. or tried to terrify me with angary threats. Something of my sister's nature seemed l commencement of decay. addressed to Ellen in my husband’s ‘ handwriting. It was an unï¬nished let. i . . tar, as if it had displeased him, and he i Mistaken Identity. ' - . .- KISGSTOS, June Iiiâ€"«Judge. Dumn, to have passed mm me i and unless he fï¬iï¬?“:: If: :1? ihatII Egg: (1:15: ! coroner, who arrived here roster-(lay. re- 5.11351 POSitively prevented me by force! no . . 3ports the killing of Louis 'L-lcliicller on other means would have had any eï¬â€˜ect. get them; they are burnt into my brain l Friday at 30“], 15,3... 3,, ,1“, (j, p_ R. He gave away to me at lastâ€"angrily â€"-“I never really loved her, Ellen; she i yard. H." was lleml cm-k oil the dining -and the night came on and found me pleased me, only as as u doll would i car Buckmghanrund unis walking down sitting by the bedside watching my dear please a. child; and I married her from the ,tl‘aer frol“ 1,11†It)“. I‘IMU “3 h "11“â€le ,. ' ' it not from love. You Ellen vou ,cngine struck him, smashed III the top 0 “Ster- P y’ , ’ 1 ’ ‘ his skull, cut all his left. arm. and crushed How beautiful she locked 2 Her face, ab“ °°u1d ï¬n “‘3' heart, 3°“ 3 °ne 3‘53 him badly. The engine showed alight at still with the gentle mark of sorrow on it my ï¬t llelpmste. Fly “nth me, 1.3119“ iboth ends, and the 1(lcg'94l8ctl deliberately that it had in life, looked so grand l She â€"-Here, the letter was left unï¬nished; g stepped .‘ in the tracn in advance of the was so great, so pure; she was like a but it gave me enough to explain all llocomotu‘ V 0. being Confused by the lights. , ' ' ' - ï¬rst weeks of my Next/day the coroner. who found on the oddess slee in"' she was not like a the meaning 0f the . , V ,_- . . V _ ‘ ‘ . . 1 ï¬lere woniangofIhis earth She did not Sister’s stay here, and why she calledlbi’di ’7", m W11 hm "0 dm’ t) Identity i seem to be dead,; there was life about ' ' ' . . held a preliminary investigation. and re- hhm ““1841, and Why he had told her i ceived the evidence of :1 down witnesses her yet, for there was still the look of t “t , not believe. f how came him 1 if he She might tell me, and that I would i that the dead man was one McDowall a i cause noâ€. as . secure {tom M , I - - .. Toronto,Ont. :e .. . .w Ienteron the more iniqorumt W†of HE new Consertvative Journal started _ . . M _ husband and Ellgn grew more 0W8? and of humansym ath that she resident of the district andbrnther â€f two i - \‘s ~ Ihe early\ears ofthe “air and , y . . p . P y , V M A (t ' t (9.315% ?'-,~i< 5. , 31:}; par: therein. ' In Toronto. called - » 1» 7n." ~ R S t . d 300 estranged. as .}us affection seemed to used to have when alive. The soulwas I saw It :1] gird I {Clix-{fled :31)- head, Megï¬â€™gseï¬l 1111111351122?“ , l:,::1"1u:;c 6:: 1:11:38 1 ..:i “ . . . . . . con , l‘ .5. . ‘ : ‘ 5,132? $9 {dza Supplementary War PaperS, Eb IE -. r , 50 36d 00m- 6 S an. return to me. His manner to her there still, and love, and knowledge. to see my us ‘ shill-lI mg a Vet; pgces brothels were telegraphed m ‘ Just be- .- 2:: 9m . , . . . V . e In Ire . r. ‘w I'l. . . , defylng; hers to bun conteinptuous_ ' d f f l. f h blhlnd me. ( 00d cave“; a‘e ' H . I. . N ,) H‘ - .L‘. Brown. Chm .)~, ~ . .:,. “mule series" bydiflm. gushed generals, ,. , ,' o , . , . , B) egrees 3. sxange ee mg 0 CI' . th I: h fore the bad} v, «ls (,(JlilnLI, ho“ (_\ gr. an â€ï¬gâ€"m†“ mm ' - plea“ ?- = -- - Ms With a. large assort- 1h...dh....uhmwu.,. m Isngpesemeimemomm. oneâ€"mugs m a man te annulus...mm... n. â€gab†a“ \"i P rm“ 13$“?th 15553? {$333533 Hashiliade It: eadto rallicerli sand 110 P1111? M ; i H , ' ‘ i h i i the garden below Ithe wmdows :‘ at me. Alone in the Still midnight, With man I had loved SO long and fondly ' i man Catholic rosary and letter bearing ' ' "1mm M. w I o “ ~ ‘ ~ - . . . ,o , . I, - , .~ . , ‘ ' . ., ) . . UISITE. "1"†“3"" :if'ecamndgasgtx'd of tliiiagreeat eplpalmpesz‘ghuye t f 'Sideboards Bu_ WhICh .he hushedâ€"411$ “milled laugh no sound, no persOn near me, it seemed The strength of horror, not of courâ€" Lachiellcl s manic.1 anluir) I“: tlln. 1dipnlg 3:212:13; you Kennan on Sibei'ia» views it will be the out It In: . men 0 . , and sad, it Tell her, and see if she \Vlll as if I had leisure and power to pass into age, upheld me. I knew he meant to ,car (IIBCIOIchctxec '2 11:3: t1 1i? Ml: ‘11:: night . -~ «- ' » .. - i†, - - . sm -' c ., - 31"de ~ WW“ Liw‘" W‘Mwmï¬â€˜.†started wit t , ' ' l t b beheve 370.“: , . , _ . the world beyOnd the grave. I felt my k1“ me, but that did not alarm me, 1. $28 and his assistant land cmmdes .. y“. 83“?“ g 3.. ’1 \ { l}x’:r:u:>!‘.‘:‘:§>\l’1\%~iii/{133:3 “wigï¬inpgio: . - ..... p, <7†13's“ reams, Co , 0 e ' I was Sitting in the. Window, working. sister near me ; I felt the passing of her only dreaded least his band should then identiï¬ed the body. His wife, living exam-rut ,. , UL: fr4\:el?ndfludy in.Russ'aandSt-'_ _ .STAFF 0F BMW, l IRIIIIS, _: , u ,. .â€" V . It was a. cold, damp day in the late life about me, as when one sleeps, but touch me. It was not death, it was he at Montreal, was rclcgirphcd to. am; a, 0mm miles , ' '~ autumn, when those chill fogs of No still is conscious that another lifeisweavâ€" I shrank froxph II blfhel‘iig g: liefplaid.(,(,,.,¢1u,,i,.::1 “idling, if??? â€3:31 l “"1de me “M 5 0n V3 3. cn and denic cmp atlc-‘l. yr :1 e was . V cream!!!- r' '. No. 14M VV . ; Moles. as No.3 .. or undertookn journey _ red. An intro- the Interior ad- investigation here requi e Russian Master of 0' W ~ V‘s: principaliï¬nes and pm when he 2" » ' . , mm! with some three hundred State â€W“ . '.x . xiiiilish' and othersuundgthe sew r0 ' “n: .15 well as :iiICCurate revebl;u:i of the 8' . '1‘“ , . The man)" mutations t c artists m a M ‘f’d PMS her, .\Ir. George .\. Frost, who :ccom- m a m wild in: -mhor, will add greatly to the value ofthe M “ “°‘- . » . and “his fl I! Elm. Go. «an A novel by Eggleston .. â€I.“ ' 3;; 3:1. ’43.)“, “in rm through ï¬le'yeir. Shorter ibnfd- tollow by Cable and Stockton. Shorter 5C- ; “PPM: eve ry mend). ~..g‘, Miscellaneous Features.- " 't' r . _ (:;;;l‘)"ilff‘n§:rxerul lllilslfï¬ICLI-erllcleion Ireland, by {503‘ I): ney : papers touching the‘ï¬Ã©ld†of Sunday “g“. wamn, illustrated by E. L. Wilson: Wild 1116de lVlfe .ly rhsodlirc ma!) ï¬glifll Ca- phï¬i‘; hr in». \ .m aengbucww ‘ ' done†by Spine '.V‘l)r. Buckley's valuable papers on [avail-limp: and Lham’oyance: essays in ' . By “I“ Diver-why, poems, czmoons, otc. tonuiA‘SPu‘Lu' OFFER the numbers fujthqp" the “2:! if}: Lincoln’l'listory? may“ ' ' _~' scription row I oven“ 1%). 'm. 3“.““5 m All. for 56 00 or with t i In year" “Mndsomely bound for $7.50. be I a null! Publi h i .» . Fe» ‘12:: 2, fur. CL-rvnv Co. 33 East 17 Street m,†And able Journalists in everydepartw. * ’ The public’niay expect" Full News from all miners, ‘ vember are just beginning; those fogs . with the frost in them, that steal into ' * *one's very heart. ' It wasa day when a It seemed as if her _ her at his feet. I stretched out my arms in horror, to thrust him back, uttering a piercing shriek ; and while he made an ing in with ours. breath fell warm on my face ; as if shadowy arms held me in their clasp; as if. her eyes were looking through the The mistake in identity was all the more smgular since the face of the deceased l was uninjured. ‘ ____â€"â€"â€"â€"-__ . Able Editorials. . ,_ . . . visible blight iszin the air , when death ‘ . . ' Accurate Roped-ts.“ _, is abroad every where, and suffering darkness at me ; as if I held her hands 350"- tOSCW me, 0}?th himself k m dconscience for he V 'F’air Comments, I r i i " ‘ ' and crime, , Iwas alone in the drawing- in mine, and her long hair floated â€and m the “PM Of his fury, I “15th by hzi‘tnbodlisfii’midibilyillbreof hath fear for . Reliable commwm .- i .3 H H V i ‘ room Ellen w'asup-stair's, and my my forehead. And then’ to Shake as him, Shnekng Still, and so fled away Iris bfdfcllow and sharp cure for his com- . InfereSting sï¬nraigim‘migekoe. 6 our own husband, as I believd, in the city. But these fancies, and convince myself that into the (18111055, where I lived, 0h 3 {panion ‘ _ And all other De WW " , ' , . I have remiembered since, that I heard she was really dead, I looked again and for many, many months. In a town recently" whet-c me . M! .V In short, and mtwilkb‘éra‘Bi-fgï¬t,‘ d made-mg; OI thelmll door softly opened and a foot- again at her lying there ; amarble corpse, When I woke again, I found that my swim matches and unaware being held, Readable..and RembIQ.Palier- ~~ 3 , ' . .7 ‘ mstVep steal quietly by the drawing-room ice-cold, with the lips set and rigid, and poor baby'hnd died, and that my hus- the 913e,“. people ,,,- ,, household were 'EVéMLOOkS for" it. '5 "i†d 1 ’ b r: "iip‘thestaarsf The evening was just the .~deatli band . beneath her chin- band had gone, none knew Where. discussing,“ latter, am, the voungptgm All should Read.It.-, um e 1‘ I , ‘nning‘ *0 01059 iiiâ€"4111“, gray, cud There she was, still in white shroud, the But the far of his return haunted me. were talking of the SpuVI’llllg of the skat- D-MILY ' WENT diffs "“1â€â€œ l ., ghosbï¬kb“;jthe‘dying daylight. melting snowylinen’ pressing so lightly on‘herf; I couldget norest day or night for ere on the $13 Voï¬ghfï¬ï¬gnwz’s ,- . *2. " . 1., E], ., "<2 mothering shad‘ . 'i owsthat stalked like no life. withim. no warmth about hemm11 dmdofhim; and I fa“ gang W "h†htiliibe “533213- L-‘uice‘ Lent m. l ‘ _ EMPIRE, . . _ . wandering ghosts about the fresh-made all, my fancies were vain dreams. Then with‘ the 'one hard thought forever piti- 9,312,, ’but ,1,MZ,,,,.‘O,, the last 'week, \, *9 mm“ 5:“ 31"" mm an ""3110 . ’ worm ' {silt working stillst r buriedmy race in lily hands," and wept my pursuing meâ€"that i should- on he “sham“ m, ,; ,,,_,__ . 0“,. ,f we 3 i ' , aï¬mflm mw’m‘ H p I - some ofthosesina-ll rmentsaboutwhich as if my heart was breaking. And ° into his hands. I put on widow's Mumfd‘ .TV réumrkcd that he'xlioughe ' ‘ ‘“ cash.’ Mama, ' , ~33 . 383m , o 1'3. _ _ ‘ W e - . ‘ . 1 mod suchfonddreams, and wove when I turned away my eyes from w for indeed am I too truely she must be putting on an «00:11th ‘ . ' D’ co ' and as I her, the presence came aroundmeagib: widowed bend M‘Lm' We. do MW- .