fae Or, The Hope That Still Lived, Ce CHAPTER IIL "It's sccpaly. ans ig age red abou now tha 's a wom S Rentolph Dare said at the he em table at Moray Lodse that evening. 'ohare referring to the particular fin- th the amas ork millionaires or of the resognized Jewish leaders of the financla orld. Stock Exchange gambling had been the only means of than ever before. e ha he was atte S - wieaeer when Crookende ut he was beginning just w te tain secret doubts on thi grave point; doubts which gnawed at h Lay and made his aieune enemy, dys- Fi ear even more hopelessly for- moldabie than it had hitherto bee these four gues who subject of Barone rook- den, no reason to suspect that! at this particula ® Junot tion it was asore subject wart thelr ho et tuaily been whisperea about "in the City that Baron Crosken- den's « woman," Sir Randolph repeat- mi in a voice which gave due emphasis to the "What do you think "of ar a Nobody's exactly seen him, so far as I oan seen tha calls hey "ve "only erdy POSOCR,, who himself the Baron's a bab noted one of half a bad delow. and he spends his money 1 prince e."" You mean other people's money, 1 Sir "He's willing spend F people's' money quite charmingly { admit that = on't see what need people have got to abuse Baron Crookenden right e of them do," 1 lot of good in one way and The other members of the party 3 n . This was a state o min so rare in her that her daughter, still ov serving her closely, wondered more and rather, is still doing, wonders ets the money from y me irate ne: D end to. e gn end. to it shouldn't have thought there was money enough in the, Uni Kingde nm to keep it up. '8 Jncomprene ensible to me where he ge it all "Hi'm," comme nted ie man w rhe had been valled yu mates "Ye mene enough it per rplexis I adin ies. buildin E *hintselt a palatial town house now t Gate." 'That looks bad, Si an- dolph, with a moment's aminous shak- ing of his feroclous-looking little head "Whenever men c his amp tak- en to building hey gone smash T it. isot it, Chr ine t with affectionate pride at his he undsomi ¢ daughter, who been talking acro the table with her bro ther 'I believe I have read that tn some book about miilionatres." she answered her smiling to him as she a tone which slight Interest urther aw m d thought that . He's | "What business can you have to recall you like this?" Hectdér Dare asked with feigned lightness, coveriig a very real and strong, not to say suspicious, curiosity. "So you still believe that a woman can have nothin do wh "Ah, well, you night know better some. day soon! Good addressed afew more words The men _ look- Ose there can't be anything in her name being Lag same?" Sir n- marked at last, after a long si- which only the movements of the. weryen in waiting had bee au le. often wanted to ask. ad an Gee tunity as enden, though baronet. whether e P "I su dolph stopped before Christine, and ask- ed where she had been to in the, morn- I drove into town," she guewared in low and, hi half- hesitating voic "To Hear. Minty Jardy preach." gir Randolph's¥brow clouded Vhi a 4 4 * Ba at, n ju seem to loins going fi es a week over | since that confounded idiot's bee I w that your mother and t like your Soins. s "I Rad = e the same? Sir Rendoioke" voles 'nad lost its Meation aioe and had become threateningly hard, Christine _ Sent her head aga "Yes. I went because I could not nel going. Mn Hard ts a £00 man, f her father blazed uncom- promising "There something I want to tell you, father; you and mother too," she announced firmly, But I think I had better tell It to you privately. You ana paother might not like any one else to "I not undertaken it the | girl wait quietly. "I = only "thinking b ought ha about it as yet, --I | told you before," sh ed, pe jJerkily and almost incoherently in her owing agitation, 1 I could not nd courage to spe: d pak. "T want to tell you that I have --bi rly "asha help him a8 much as she can ork he is doing. So you will not have to grieve about me. She will look after me.' She stopped panting, to ook father and her mo heigl port 8s ial a 59, burst. he a 'beets' to both her and Sir Ran- tly know that he is a good man, Christine said, lifting her head high to showed that ele took but confront the accuser of him 'who had in the subject . ; . | ta aught her to open her eves to the light "i've heard that Crookenden's got 2] o¢ faith. "That is enourl to Know is it wonderful orchid rm at iS) noey lace in Kent." Hector Da now int r| "*lt may be enough for you, posed, speaking for oe re since) would not be enough for most women of your place bro- , and hars hiv. about im. but know this--thdt though he may be prac- ow he was 'na an bere and last » eppaeite wo of the t able say th it nobody nly The per at an; ab with nim is ¢ that is But Ahe vigorous ter- woman Jo or ches re's not ping '4 wheels "from, the waiGORs or . 0 Every arre ate od, for | 8 immediatel: in the of the High- few Puted to be v curiously enough, as e part) the dinner table Senembared now-- Mrs. Crooken en 3 hendasme was she for gl ee aru ther id her ane hair in sombreneas. cee at ek the ice woke h ° oO Hew ¥y upon whom she sae intruded: I have almost matched ber macipoees clattering ' ; him. am afrai ave pe - | 'she 'could not say any mo * She turn- ' mca tarted. Her eyes t Dd: sul glistening. wit un a mist of te ars, j looked full into the eves of this brother i who ei denouncing a man whom honored. "That ve thing to get she answered wim aiuletly, yout with proach in her ou absolute. Iy sure tha it 1a true? \ Absolutely sure." the younk mun re plied. His eves were as ran) as hers, id they met hers feurlessly she! shook her head j Iam afr here must be a mistake | in this matter somewhere," she dared to} ist. Perhaps the mun who inform. you was inspired by hatred or ma- ce. | i k Mr lardy myself lve to work wth nim ton is not sha Lord Southport, this evening had for been regarde »y her an r afflanced hushasd, : n her sperate spee ather. moved "tt the sound had soukea him from his stupor of consternatic j "You'd better" ask Lord what he rours," he gaid in a vo gravely Sout npors eoncerns bim as ' cerns uk.' he girl let her gaze rest for a mo- who in the time be- ul's awakening had been al- he choice of others as 3 FS aid. iat I could arry d Ih hurt) him the time will come when he nen you, too, will . but Rlad--« and sofa, ye ing on and ed aw and, cusliions ba, e nto a storm py 80 } -- CHAPTER IV 'The Earl of Yoxford aks if can-see him for ten Baron min- ek hed ap ppadiced as the bearer of was m whereon a few letters were lying healt: 5| With "| régiments are demoralized and that cently about. She was the e woman | Mrs, Drockendene had come ore to 2 ' people at the Highlan : Dare A ind litt her dark head He nee and listen ace, flee--or her looked rather 'different from w re, a certain stern in ght be in the exe 0 t was to avi "tordabip. in," she said now to_the 'waiting. erk, Lord 4 asked to Baron he. sexpiatnet doutfu Hy. m Baron Crookenden," the wo ked at her = a oe ng do is a woman pears," he remarked e superbly handsome woman smiil- It was quite true," she ut a ee fi 'ot an idea abo ota- ast, affer or. a concession' uncomfortable oman whom as Pp < 2 bcd The scheme: certainly Will you o'clock to-morrow, ss it? am e busy to go ne it 2 TAR t i it unwittingly, thought he was o-|we should prepare for his coming! pline for moralizing--and a a professor at*Basel University, in . NIETZSCHE, THE MAD MAN." The German Author Who Has Poi- soned His Country's Ideals. e mind of Germany, and in the pro- Waterman's Ideals write with un-, Tifes? duction of the prencth 9 state of af- fairs there. Rather than being = influence upon German Nietzsche might better be called the first one to express a philosophy, or a rational sentiment, 'that was: growing in Germany, -That senti- ment, fed by her awiftot ftane fac- tory wheels, her broadening com- mercial lines, is simply the senti- ment that has tinged: her morals, her philosophy, her very life--ma- with that sentiment has been hard to see until now, when everything Cleanly -- to , use and safe to carry." Be sure you buy the genuine: with the Spoon Feed. «*Look for the word "Ideal" in globe. Regular, Safety and Self-Filiing Types. : $2.50 to $50.00. - At Your Nearest Dealers. lege RP soul of Germany-- een laid bare by me war. Nietz- which is bab! "Th is} sche, known' to us a dis- aig . ee --_ eased, rhapsodic blasphemer, sim- Zoroaster," are not very readable. He deals in generalities mostly, and he sticks to no set plan, wandering about from idea to idea, and using @ roaring, bellowing, jumbled style that occasionally permits a passage of real beauty to crop up. Of peculiar significance aro same of tS sayings just now. For in- ply idealized the "material pro- gress" religion of Germany! Ideal- ized it, put it on four corners of philosophy, bound it up in argu- ment, and--as far as we can see-- philosopher, when in reality, he as only an instrument thrust] ota ahead of his e, to ory in a strange voice about a Superman who was to come after--and that wie is characteristic of an un- Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche was bere of Polish blood long settled in rmany, ken, in Saxony, . t om - He was brought up in a most at a oo religious -home atmosphere and b 1] the more studied at Liepzig, later becoming oe move oes he a 7 need of Christianity." ble h That passage has a terrible hu- Switzerland. As a camp steward in| jor ptr it. east now! » Franco-Prussian War he con-| Then again-- tracted a nervous disease, and from "Every elevation of the type man youth to his death he was a nervous! }4, hitherto the work of an wreck, dyspeptic, addicted to drugs. | . ristocratic scniake-het so will it He died in 1900 insa ne. always be--a society believing in a His books, which caused a genu- long scale of gradations of rank and ine sensation--in Germ any, Were! differences of worth among human published between 1872 and 1888. He beings, and requiring slavery in has long been an accepted figure in| some form or other "Soldiers and their leaders have one a no pity. Why should I show him pity? He showed none to me." (To be continued.) NORMAN ANGELL IN FRANCE. Tells of His Experience in That peace proviigandiic of London, has been here. in France, where he 'has P Sorely-Tried Country Norman Angell, the jee been shut off from the outside | world in a "-- village. Of his ex- periences he sa 'Soldiers, woldiers every where. It was impossible to get away from them. I was living cheek 'by jowl occasionally sharing gir food, sitting round the camp at and discussing the war an politics. The contrast between Eng- land and France as regards the sit- uati en is striking. "In France there is not a family that has not suffered privation, ruin, or loss of a member, mostly the breadwinner. The checks of wealthy persons remain uncashed. Someone goes to Paris with the intention of returning home the next day, and is swallowed up. |A week passes, and nothing is heard of him. We are told that the train | eave is still excellent, which means that a four hours' journey jis }; accomplished with luck in 16 or 20 T) hours.' a| Angell recited some of the ru- mors current dail | °**Your local paper tells," he said, 'quite seriously that the Russians have entered Berlin and-that Pots- ;dam Palace is in ruins. Then you get dark hints that whole French | officers and men have been execut- by scores with a distinguished general thrown in. 'German spies are ~ eo everywhere Advertisements being rutalessly pulled down by Se | town officials on the ground' that they contain some subtle form of German espionage. Yet the soldiers with whom you hobnob are models of good humor and kindliness. Sometimes they are the most unmilitary of mili- taires, goo onest, bourgeois, running to fat and a partiality for sleep after meals. But the moment they hear of German barbzarities they become inflamed = ,Pray for a chance to avenge the | Take Notice, | A specialist claims to be able to make 'hair grow on a bald fete by rubbing it frequently with a Turk- ish towel. It is barely possible that fuzz off the towel has given him false entoteayenant Paw Didn't Know. Willie--Paw, are a man and his wife one Paw--Yes, my son. Willie--Then how many was Solo. mon? Paw--You BO ta be to bed, young man, Every ay she de pe ip a | always a much higher mode of com- | workmen and their employers. At | present, at least, all militarily es- tablished civilization still stands high above all so-called industrial | civilization ; the latter, in its pre- | sent form, is in general the meanest | mode of existence that has ever j | been. his countrymen. believing what he believed ; and ta on the scarred towns, whe! e a few weeks ago there flourished' "that meanest form of -- ~ ie NOTABLE WALKING STICKS. Fredcrich Wilhelm Nietzsehe. Late King Edward Collected Over Three Thousand. The collecting of walking-sticks was his late Majesty's favorite hob- by, his most treasured stick being one which was regularly carried by Queen Victoria. This remarkable stick was fashioned from a branch of the Boscobel oak which once con- cealed Charles II. when escaping from Cromwell's soldiers. Queen Victoria had it altered somewhat, and a little idol a Seringapatam was inserted as a King Edward' a sGilketion of walk- ing-sticks, of course, included all sorts of designs. It was a fact, how- ever, that he preferred as a rule an ordinary crook shape. Indeed, his fondness for this particular design gave not a little impetus to its pop- ularity. Talking of famous walking-sticks and their owners, Messrs. Henry Howell & Co.,:whe are probably the largest stick makers in the world, recall a curious story of the ominous trick which Charle's I.'s walking- =< played on that unhappy mon- arch, for during the famous trial at Westminster Hall the head of the stick fell off Bygone monarchs were very fond of walking-sticks, and Queen Eliza- beth put hers to an unpleasant use, Germany. His works are read by students. But in America, where his erept in as if by stealth, taken seriously . Christianity Greater Folly. In a word, Nietzsche believed that Christianity and Democracy, the pillars of our life, were the great- est of human follies. Both systems held the average man, the humble man, the modest man, as the ideal type, and so ae. the brakes on pro-|. he is not the strong to give of their strength to the weak. Nietzsche's ideal go- cia] arrangement was one in which there would be a huge, moral, help- less slave class mastered by a small, active, progressive class, which did not aim at the equality of all class- es, but at the ultimate production, at the top, of Superman! All this based upon an amendment to Scho- penhauer, which Nietzsche called 'the will to power.' The idea took at once in Ger- many, where, as a matter of fact, huge mass is under the heel' of a master class--the militarists. Pro- fessors, eager to adopt anything so flattering to the class as Nietzsche's philosophy, began teaching it: And 'alone. for the merry Queen Bees employed og for beating her maids of ho- be seen Golemith's malacca cane which' has 'some charming gold mounts. One of the most remark- able sticks in existence is owned by Glory, and mad letters placed on a steel spi ----1?___. Shop girls in New York number over 100, city An egotist is a man who expects a woman to marry him for himseif "Once in a while a man has 80 much money that he feels he can af- ford to be hone est. portment towards one another than ; 2) | A Good Lamp Burns Its Own Smoke The Rayo Lamp mixes air and oil in just the right. pro- portions, so that you get a clear, bright light without a trace of smell or smoke. (4) LAMPS Rayo lamps are easy on the eyes--soft and steady--light up a whole room. "Made of solid brass, nickel plated --hand- some, made to last. yto clean and re Dealers everywhere carry Rayo lamps-- various styles and sizes, ROYALITE OIL is best for all uses NHI TU this great mass, who can pass legis- -- lation only under the censorship of the Kaiser, in spite of their vaunted beauty of Nietzsche is that he in- veighed against monarchy just enough to allow this mass of which he spoke so witheringly to imagine itself capable of getting into the running in the Superman stakes. Anglo-Saxon minds, in the last | fifteen years, have weighed Nietz- sche, and while they put up a pro- tective barrier by-claiming he was a product of his time, they admit he was honest, that his "search for truth was genuine. In short, we have at last pictured him as a 'wild, mad man, who, b 10 Pound, the great © edifice of human life, to smash it to pieces; but that his broom has only swept away a lot of dust and grime and the cobwebs of miscon- ception and error, leaving the vast ohare. the massive a es shin- fe brighter than ever. For we have given him credit. He _ been a good house-cleaner ! Books Not Readable. 5 Extra Granulated Sugar is put up at the Refinery in When you buy Aedlpath, Extra Granulated Sugar in any of these original packages you are sure of getting the genuine : sugar, pure and clean as when it left the Refinery. It's worth while to insist on the Original Packages. Niotosche's books, the greatest of{ CANADA SUGAR REFINING CO, LIMITED, ae , €anada's finest MONCRTAL. *