Atwood Bee, 6 Mar 1914, p. 2

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A Strange Meeting; Or,-A Husband in Flight. CHAPTER XXXIV.--({Continued). There were cheers and cries of "Go -- on!" nak he Maried of getty Po sae ever Aer; cae, en y eloquent; Sg 6 ey dl becom oid friends could and ceolness oat ahetr former eo S. Withyoom return, my Wilfred," for me. regard your presence es. cv) a, "making my wWtura to- ane nodded, eer shook hands with -- Mr. Granger ¢ a by his side had a him f he = geeees jelary ng in Inés Chillingfold came forward from the home with us, Sir Wil- ves "Thank Lady Chillingfold," eaid Jack i. Hoge auiet way: shall be very glad to they~erri tved at the Grange, ound q % FOR SALE Cranston Cylinder Press, fast machine for six column, four page newspaper, used very little, in perfect condi- tion, low price. Wilson Pub- lishing Oompany, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. Choose which Grain you like best for your white Sugar and buy St. Lawrence Pure Cane Granulated white, in original bags-- Fine grain, medium or coarse. Each th choicest sugar. Ash your Grocer. ST. LAWRENCE SUGAR REFINERIES, LIMITED MONTREAL. 26-10-13 Send Se for ttial size F or oe Sas Vaseline Camphor Ice sist ane pod Drug cents. CHESEBROUGH MPS. co. 1880 Chabet Ave., Montreal and 'cheere Th r riage. For the first time during the ease tonal campaign, Mr. Hesketh Carton ed to a place. tie and Mollie were in the background i Mervyn; and Clytie loo. jooked on at hay eception wit emile . ahinin: met Gates . her. €: at pb decomp naling Seri last the party 1s was ra tigen realized; and when gant ee prompta sup Lord ingtold was one had any doubt what | jn his valement and Dapbling over with te poll ths onthe 'aiiilence did | st 6 . The audience = Hes- not leave the ball until a vast amount of |, I think tats really, must drink, Mr, Hee topitieaee win actalien sot ly, and eines te hase. 22 weal jolaw n fe shat w ry entbust sealiy ae esketh Carton' of Sir. Wilfred n, W. haa ret Magee Digs dirse See ph ogee oo, and we are also delighted to eee; het I leave that toaet to younger hands." He glanced 4 Percy. They "drank Heeketh Cartou's health; he rove and made a neat iitele speech. mn will allow {t a the health of--his wife. Lady Oar rj - was an intense ailence. The tared from Percy to Bir Wiltred; they eaw Sir.Wii .» who was se% ed next to Clytice, take her hand, and loo round ly, while blushed, and cast her eyes confusion. Mr. Gran was the fi to recover, "By Heaven, they married!" he ex- claimed, springing to his feet. 'They've cut the Gordian knot!--No; they've tied it! Lage ee in tones of aeton- the party; voices ae echoed tsheens by 'the reet of ted one nee exci comment; then some 1 pee Wiltred, Sir Wilfred!' ack rose to hie f pana by Mollie, wheat eyes were dancing, who was -- ing t hysterically. He moment, ll holding Clytie's eos, the exo room "Yea; ee = married, he said. "We are Bramley--I mean, ow we came to be It's a very strange ight," ies L tis "We've nad no end of about ack to Bramtey, re & shan't forget your 'indo ntee. 'Thank wenn very much!' There was no eitting etill at the table Th m sed round the man who had Bramley liam's fortune; they for ever, but something etill remained. He would be a Member of still a future before him. spect he tried to console h = through the night to his gloomy use. He let himeelf in with his latchkey, an went to a4 little room ad fe e pac writhing behind 'his "task and working n the course mt hie pacine. hie eye fell on the -- square box hich | lene' g given him: a souvenir of "their or ' Half ' iently, he took it up, cut the etring, --_ took a9 rom its wrapper and ope i tained a -- a winagleas with the | Bram rest engraved on it. slip of paper as coiled up in it, and with imp tient curiosity he took it up an iid Rt: rom Mar. to: That was all. The glaes and the slip/ of paper fell f nd, his f grew livid. That was all: @ under Inderatood th. glasa was the | one into which he had poured the poison. But Mary ton? How did she know? How} had ehe discovered--detect him! ond ollie, too, knew! he had given the packet; and he remembered that 'which he time, che j in her eyes, the fact that she had not shaken hands with him. M i Seaton--the afi a had be- | rom w much to fear now-- --_ detected ktm. bef wg. der" 'that his soul shrive elied at the *TThe brain works ke quickly, at such a mo- ment; and that Stephen Rawdon had disappeared tert the er ae ut Mary prem the igi * over must have heen in Bram- t damning wineglass, He felt like a man tread- whom ait of as Seal hes hen we m proud light in his eyes,.a¢ he looked round ted mad some = en the pene eye, was j" ured hig | sud. "frank and t, "he, | all Scots, for out of the many colo- | that satisfaction which have boy se ager = wrong-ioer and utterly vanquished him CHAPTER XXXV. It wens. only 3 by instalments, like a ecrial pel thelr friends and the world at ir ewitne to know the gory of sie Seat Send Lady Carton'y marriage) the eo suggestion of mystery in Hes- ----- evetivensen t from my 'tf bat, © most lor vers, soek eolitude; for they ap- with ready and to take thet an proeer. place in the nerahip eager display oy guas m and 46 erlaos heraee desire that should take the place and the. position to which he was datttion a as Bir William's and heir. So it was Bde J couple, a: fforded an opportunity of ir Wifred's acquaintance etand at The next eisciion; but Jack drew the line at he eald, when th {tion rmally made to him; oo would es--I am no er myeolf--and oe ies bullied by _ Whip Too ard work for m '8 quite enough Clytie agreed with him: Couree, aig always: agreed with him. lik ism acca foe oe ecially since I put Hor bation "ap" and her ekirte ened, but a, family, CANADA AND SCOTLAND. of the Heather. At a lecture on Canada given in Penicuik recently by the Rev. gett of Edinburgh, the chairman, Mr. W. "Lin dsay, F.R.8.G.8., in- ee the lecturer, said that Canada was near and very dear to nies of the Empire it stood foremost and most akin to us. Why? Because , | though first discovered by a Geno- ese trader from Bristol, and after- soe ds successfully settled by the | Norman-French, it was not until l that outstanding Scotsman--rather ich| and was with hit This Country Is Most Akin to Land * ment. The present financial crisis experien all over the Dominion was said, already being reliey- ed by the goodly harvest of grain crops, and the money thus brought into the farmer's coffers would na- turally benefit the community gen- erally. a COLONEL. GOETHALS. ae emits a4 How He Rose to the Top in the Engineering Profession. The soldier and administrative military man have been bred for three generations in George in the su anseiaial en- gineer who has just about com- ite pleted his big job of digging the Panama Canal. He is claimed now by many cities and States, but he is a Brooklyn boy, and although his ancestry is Swiss, and of the mili- was @ surgeon in the French army Napoleon at Auster- Colonel Goethals. Zé. lite. His own father, John Goe- arm |thals, was born in Switzerland and moved to Amsterdam in his. early boyhood. In 1848 he came to this country, making his home in Brook- lyn, where, in 1858, the present Colonel Goethals was born. The origin of the family name is "stiff necked," and was conferred on the first of the present line, who was one of the Crusaders, by an early King of Flanders. This man was fighting side by side with his king when foe struck him a mighty blow. The sword was turn- ed aside by the armor and the man kept on fighting. 'A second blow was etruck, but still the man kept on fighting before the eyes of his foe, until the battle was won. Af- ter the conflict the king called the warrior to his side and commended Franco-Scot--John Law, an | burgh goldsmith, who found it ot venient to transfer his intereste of| Paris, where he founded a pe | bank--turned his attention to colo- nising Canada with Scots, that thus, our Then followed the rush of | Scots exiles after the Jacobite a : bellion in 1715, and anew began interest of the Soots in the St. Lav] =| rence. This exodus was followed la- ter, and especially after 1745, by t| many Scots to seek fresh fortunes in the West. Previous to this, h #0 | ever, and in the reign of James VI. and I. of England, Sir William Alexander secured a charter to found Nova Scotia, or sew Scot- land--the territory to ap- panage res the Kingdom of Settand, and to be ere into two chief paella, viz. :--{1) Caledonia (now Nova Scotia) and (2) Alexandria (now New make it homelike for the Scot some of the rivers were renam Clyde, Forth, ete., but to still fur- ther popularize the movement new order of baronets of Nova Sco- tia, was institute hen commenced a great move- ment of Scots to the new Acadia, and from time to time they were followed by other bands of deter- mined Scots, until about the years 1783-4-5, when the clearance of the Highland a took place, and the Scots « wavoag ska Atlantic to form the wel 'enon settlement of Glenga Thereafter chip oar ship Beau its con- excitememt, the eurprise, threw the ught: haa | tingent of clansmen from old Svot} ame 8 ere names of .the ans --MacDonald; Mac- Donal, "MacMillan, - arusDougall, runswick). To further) © him for his prowess. ire,'? sai the soldier, "I break before I bend."' "Hen oetorth," said the king, "thy name i e stiff nec cked."? and for centuries the family motto was "We break before we bend."' George Goethals started school at 'the age of six at old Public School No. 15, State and Powers ree (now Third Avenue), Brook- |- t was in 1864. He played with the older boys around in the lots which are now in the centre of a great city. Nor was he a "star" pupil. The tales told by his teach- ers and associates hint that he of- the regular hours. however, that the soldier bleod of his ancestors first showed itself, for in the olosing years of the civi] war great bodies of soldiers were often noam in the vacant lots sur- rounding _ ite. old schoolhouse, and he recognized the call of destiny in his earliest years. It was in 1875 that the boy first became fired with an ambition to go to the military academy. At the academy-he soon won a reputation' as a "digger," because he was at his studies early iad "Inte. The ef- fectiveness of this was shown when, in 1880, he was graduated so high up in his class that he was commis- sioned a second lieutenant in the Engineer Corps, which is open only to those students graduated with the highest markings. Tn 1891 he was promoted to the rade of captam and placed in cRargs of the improvement of the Ternéssee River, for the next four years. Ile was the chief engineer tary Swiss at that, his grandfather |' i the man's wife took i and I vowed - ready. to overw elm-} pa gta A She- came back, | payin big oe is nearly over. he is 'a sought aefter~ by pg cities case a pos He has been off position of "| New York's Ohict of Police, but is not likely to e it. He will either remain as Governor of the Canal Zone or go north to build the Alaska railway in all proba- bility. . ee TRIALS OF A CLERGYMAN. Some Laughable Incidents are Here Recorded. Do not be a parson unless you are blessed with a strong sense of humor and a thick hide, advises an es not, great is grumbling. If he does, he is b The snubs mix nicely with the welcomes, to prevent you from being puffed up. The following is one of the neatest of them I was asked by a friend who had been offered a living near me to go and see the vicarage and church and The most = appealing o rfumes fe smell this soap. " a in. it the real ist age xp ; pod hair a we Ieting 4 Py 2 it, eend noe stamp Pp Andrew Pexth, Yergene Ga Lia. ¢ Sharbrecke St. Jergens VIOLET Glycerine Soap Wcacake. 3 cakes for 28¢ Get a quarter's worth. ie sale yo Cancdian druggists from coast , including Newfoundlend the end, he turned to me, and said : ! "Be you our new arson, sir, if I may make so bold?' I assured him that I was not. 'I be main glad to hear that, sir;" he said, with relief. good uns so far!' i. a scattered parish, I called up- 'We' ve always had n old couple about tea time. CW rola you lke a cup of tea?" the housewife asked. I confessed that I should like it very much. The ear old soul prepared one, and kept apologizing because she had, no jam or cake. I assured her that it did not matter in the least. "Well, sir," she said, brightening, "after all, 'tisn't as if you was one of them that feed high. Anyone can see that!" One more. A friend of mine had got a, job for a man who been fora long time out of work. I guessed he was getting pretty shab- much .of a size,--and took it round. and. said: by, so I looked up a suit,--weswere cisely 'My 'usband thanks you kindly, sir, but he don't hold with parson's clothes ; but if you've got anything as 'd suit a man, he'll have a_look at it!" en \ The cynic is one who never sees a good quality ina , and never fails to see a b one.--Ward Beecher. Sir Robert Ball, Astronomer Royal, use With relish an musing > ares against himself. Visiting Stratford- on-Avon to give a lecture, he said to his landlady at dinner: "I will give you a lesson in astronomy, am. vé you ever heard of the. great Platonic year, when everything must return to its first condition? In 26,000 years we shall be here again, eating a dinner pre- the late Aga d like this. Will ig give me credit till then?' 'Yes,' was the: prompt reply: 'You were here 26,000 pers ago and left without trust yow with the new kd opium, ugs Whenever you feel a headache coming on take NA-DRU-CO Headache Waters They stop headaches promptly and surely. Do not contain morphine, phenacetin, acetanilid or «a box at your Druggist's 1 NATIONAL DRUG AND CHEMICAL co. 'or CANADA, LIMITED. other danyerous INFLUENZ And all ene oe the horse ecting his throat, apeecdily cured; colta an rses in same etable kept from having thes by using Sronn's: DISTEMPER AND COUCH CURE, 3 to 4 pes often -- use bottle guaora to cure one case, Safe for b: Tes, baby colts, aon te ages and oon: fons. 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