of the 1 ca. growers, and :5 am erased and sold by then! m: a sampicof the best qualities of Indian and Cc) 10:: Teas. For that mu they see that none but :11. Vet} fresh lavas go into Monsoon packages. $30 4“... MIL. OF F251 (UP HIP .aomu OJCOB â€IF 2. (UL: .rflmz_h . “2.". That is why “ Monsoon.’ xhe perfect Tea. canb‘. r'd at the same princes inferior tea. ‘_ ‘° Monsoon †Tea 33 packed under the supervision ofthc 'l‘t:a_g'r~o‘vlrg:rsE and is 39‘166111‘9 a_r_zd sold 3);: thpn.‘ on shortest notice and satisfaction guaranteed. FLOUR, OATMEAL and,FEED THE SAWMILL 7H! FINEST Tu In THE Won“: )It in. put up in sealed addicts of 54 1b., x Kane 5375.. and sold 10 threeflao'ours at 4°C., 5°C. and 60c If your groccrdocs not keep it. tell him to writ? :3 STEEL. HAYTEP 8: C0,, 1: and 13 Front St LUMBER. SHmGLEs AND z. ext-H; alway on hand. .\2. G. a"; J. McKEcuNIE. Its Local News is IComplete In these days of imitations it is well for everyone to be careful what he buys. 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He kissed her face. he kissed her hands, he called her by every loving and tender name. - “Let me use the truest weapon in my armory,†he said, playfully. “For the love of Lanoewood, trust me, Vi- vie-n!†“ It is from Lancewood your trou- ble comes,†he saidâ€"“ I can see that,â€" Lancewood and this boy; but I cannot see yet how they are connected. Heav- en, which has already shown me so much will show me more. There is some mystery Pocr Gerald Dorman, the boy, Lancewood and yourself, are all concerned in it. With a little more patience, I shall make it out, Vivien, would it not be better for you to tell me than for me to find it out ?†“ Yes,†she whisperedâ€"“but give me “Nay, if you do not understand, I will not explain, Vivien. I have used entreaties, prayers, expostulations, all in vain. Now I threaten that unless you tell me the secret yourself, Iwill at once set to work to ï¬nd it out; and I will never rest until I know it.†There was no answer save a low moan. He continuedâ€" “ I am your husbandâ€"the one in all the world who loves you best. ’Why can you not trust me? Who could help you and chmfort you as I can? Who would share your troubles as I should? My darling. do not repulse my warm, true, deep love, but trust me. I am not a foe, not an angry judge, but your true lover. If there is anything in Which you have done wrong, let me set you right.†“ I will never speak to you again if you do that,†she threatened. “ I cannot help it. Your silence to me is terrible; it shows that there is something far from right. I consider myself bound in duty to fathom the m5stery. It strikes me that the boy himself would be the one to help me.†“ The boy himself 1†she repeat-ed. “ Yes, he seemed struck with the word ‘ Lancewood.’ If I were to send for him, and try all I co‘uld to awak- en his memory, it seems to me I should get near the truth.†There came a low cry from her lips, but she did not speak. “Take all the time you need, if you will but trust me in the en †he said. She tried to think that what he said was true. It was neither fate nor chance that was guiding him, but the finger 0t! Heaven. She had done a great wrong. a great injustice; it could never prosper. Yet how could she give up Lancewaod, to Valerie and her dissipated friendsâ€"to the boy who really seemed to her to haveno claim? How cduld she take the place from her son Whom she had fondly believed would make so noble a mas- ter for it? †Dear wife.†he said, “ there is a struggle in your heart, a struggle be- tween right and wrong; be braveâ€" let the right prevail. Own the truth, no matter what follows. Only cowar- dice needs secrecy. In the name of Heaven, by the love you bear to me and to your children, by the value you set upon your fair name, by your pride of race, I entreat you to tell me â€"trust me.†you found I was in the habit of visit- ing some place unknown to you, of passing by a strange name; that you found I cared greatly for a child whose face resembled my own, as Harry Dorman’s resembles youlrs. What should you think ?†She made him no answer. “ I know,†he continued, “ what any man who had less faith in your good- ness and truth than I myself have would think about your silence, I know what the world will say if it gets hold of the story and finds out how much the boy resembles you.†. t‘ n fax V k8 as he †S 1‘. say ? 1 t “v ha 04 ‘ 1y. ' ‘Would you really do this; Adrian?†she asked. She remembered how the boy had seemed in some vague way to recog- nize her face '? How would it end ? How {much would he learn from him? All surelyâ€"most surely all. Witha deep moan she buried her face in her hands, Lord St. Just knelt by her side. Then, again, she reflected, that if she did not tell her husband every- thing he would find it out; he was so near the truth, that a few ques- tions, a few inquiries would elicit it: she had never dreamed that he would connect Lancewood and the boy. “I would, indeed,†he replied. would have no scruple in doing it.†She remembered Gerald’s dying wordsâ€"“Be must go back to Lance- CHAPTER XLIX. Lady St. Just persisted in withhold- ing her secret from her husband, and he as resolutely declared that she must reveal it. “ How cruel you are!†she sobbed. “Cruel, Vivien? I do not wish to wound you. It is you who are cruel. Put yourself in my place. Suppose that you found me changed, unhappy, full of a sullen brooding sorrow, Suppose that you discovered that I was keeping a secret from you; that 1’ Through Storm and Sunshine iitfl †But he resembled his mother,†she cried, eagerly, "even his face was like hers in those daysâ€"Le was like her, too, in character then. Gerald Dor- man’s training has doubtless done much for him. Believe me, I never thought of him as my father’s son. To me he was always Valerie’s boy, an intrerIOper, the evil genius of Lance- wood. I had many excusesâ€"the place was getting into evil odor everyâ€" whereâ€"it would *have gone to ruin in his hands. I loved my home so dear- ly, Adrianâ€"you cannot enter into my feelings.†. ‘What have you done, littIB hands.†he said, “ with the honor intrusted to you?†“ I can imagine the depth of your love from the gravity of your sin,†he said. .Then he took her hands in his. â€He looked at them long and steadily. But his wife’s confession horrified himâ€"he could not recover from the â€"impression that it had made upon himâ€"he could not realize it; that the noble lady he had worshiped as the pattern of all womanhood had been guilty of what she had revealed. was to him incredible. .Still he could make allowance for it. For her pas- sionate love of home, for her intense pride in it, for her horror of all (1939. oration of it, for her dislike of the gay Frenohvmman, and her friends, for her dread of seeing the fine old place ruined, he could allow, but he could not understand how so noble a woman, cOuld have erred so terribly. “ You seem to forget yourself,†said "Lord St. Just. gravely. “ The boy may be the son of a strolling player, but he is also the son of your father, Sir Arthur Neslie.†Lord St. Just was literally over- whelmed. He was not a hard 0} stern manâ€"he was lenient, merciful, consid- erate. He could make excuses and al- lowances;. he was slow to condemn. “ I will tell you,†she replied, “ be- cause it will be better for you to hear it from me than from any ohe else. That boy is Sir Oswald Neslie, heir of Lancewood.†She rose slowly from the couch, she stood before him in all the magnific- ence of her beauty, her face pale, her eyes filled with the fire of pride; she drew herself up to her full height. He looked at her in wonder and amaxe- ment. “ Oswald Neslie-I I thought he was dead.†“ Then I sinned more wilfully, more deliberately than at first, I have not been happy, Adrian. Sin has not pros- pered with me. Yet I have not look- ed on it as sin so much as a deed done for the good of Lancewood. People may say what they will the son of a strolling player has no right there.†Lord St. Just started; it seemed to him for a moment that he had been shot through the heart. Then he said in a low voiceâ€" “So did Iâ€"so did every one else-â€" but he is living and well.†“ Stay,†said Lord St. Just. “ You have taken me by surprise; I am be- wilderedâ€"lostâ€"I cannot believe it. The heir of Lancewood! Great Heaven, Vi- vien, what does it all mean? Did y0(u know that he was living? Tell me.†“I will tell you all.†she replied. And, standing there, erect and queen- ly, more beautiful in her pallor and her shame, than he had ever seen her, Lady St. Just told the whole story. As he listened to it, his face grew pale. ‘When it was finished he looked at her. “ You might have thought *so, when such was reported to be the caseâ€"but, afterward, Vivien. when you knew all ?†“You forget,†he said, “ that I do not even know of what you are speak- ing. Tell me one thing, Vivien, which will make all else easierâ€"tell me who is the boy ?†Should she tell him? If_ she did not, he would find it outâ€"he would be sure to do so; it would be better to trust him now that he was so near the truth. “ I did not mean it to be done, Ad- rian. iWhen I spoke to Gerald Dor- man as I did, I was bewildered, driv- en half mad by all that was going on at Lancewood. I hardly thought that he would take me at my word so quickly. Believe me, I honestly. thought the child was drowned.†“ Trust me,†said her husband. “ The time has come when you must tell the truth. Do not hesitate; be brave, Vivien; and tell it.†“ You will hate me,†she moaned; “ but, oh, believe me, Adrian, it was not quite my fault ! I was mad when I uttered the words that led to it allâ€"quite mad; and he was so de- voted to mehe thought I meant it. I did not, it was all a confused hor- “ May Heaven forgive you 1" he said. slowly. woodâ€"promise me.†Dare she totally ignore those solemn words? “What shall I do?†cried Vivien, wringing her hands. " What have you: done, my darling," ’9 CHAPTER 1.. " Yes,†she said, and raising her face to his, she went on; “ You are too kind to me, Adrian. I am all unwor- thy; I do not deserve it.†But he answeredâ€" “ My darling, you are still on your throneâ€"the queen of all womankind for me. There is no creature living who has not done ‘wrong, who has not yielded to temptation, who has not either more or less gone astray. Your sin was, after all, a kind of vir- tue gone to seedâ€"an intense pride in your name, family and race; it had" its origin in what was really a virtue. It was not of the common order of sin, although, my darling, it was the sin of a life-time. Now we must go back to the duties of life; they will be all the better fulfilled since we have resolved upon doing right, cost what it may. I will tell you this even- ing all that I have arranged to do.†But Lady St. Just did not go to her room to dress; he saw her go to the nurseryâ€"and he followed her, lest in the madness of her misery she shouild say something of which she would afterward repent. Emigration in Hungary has assum- ed unusual dimensions lately. During one month 15,59] passes were issued to emigrants. “ Thank Heaven,†said Lord St. Just, “ that I hear you say so. Yes, my darling, he must go back at once.†“ I do not make light of your error, my wife,†he said; “ it was a terrible one. But you are ready to undo it, ready to atone for it. I can enter into your feelingsâ€"I know how you loved your homeâ€"but, my darling, I cannot understand your sin. -What I want to say to. you is this--you shall not repent ob‘. your trust in me. I will take the whole matter in hand-â€" I will so arrange it that, while the young heir shall be restored to Lanceâ€" wood, you shall be screened. Your share in the transaction shall never be known. You will trust to me to accomplish this 2†ARCHERY IN FRANCE. Word comes from Paris that French women have suddenly taken up arch- ery, and that courts are being laid out at all 0:! the country clubs where there are women members. One of the chiei attractions of this sport is that it demands pretty costumes, dainty, elaborate ones, in place of the severe tailor-made affairs. He spoke, gravely, sternly, and ev- ery word seemed to fall like fire on her heart. She saw her sin stripped of all sentiment; she stood face to face with it now. for the first time â€"for the first time she saw that it really was a base, cruel fraud on a helpless child. Before this she had looked upon herself rather as avio- tim; now she saw the base, horrible nature of her wickedness, and Vivien St. Just cried out with terror. "I must unto it all. Adrian!†she exclaimed, “I must unto it allâ€"at once. He must go back.†He saw her kneel down and bury her face in her hands while she wept aloud, he heard her murmur words of little Arthurâ€"little Arthur and Lancewood. He knew how terrible the ordeal was for her. His eyes grew dim with tears as he remembered the passionate pride in and worship of the boy who was to have been Arthur Neslie of Lancewo‘od. ' “I have sinned to preserve it,†she replied. “And in sinning you have lost it,†he said. “The deed you: have done brings greater shame to the Nesliee than all Valerie’s gayeties, low friends and dis- sipations. You have betrayed your fa- ther’s trust, Vivien; you have tar- nished the honor of your house far more than Valerie ever did. You have held Lancewood ‘by fraud, which is what no Neslie ever did before; you have, in plain and simple language. committed a gigantic theft, forwhich the law could punish you most ter- ribly. You have defrauded an inno- cent child of his rights. You have taken advantage of the fact that he was fatherlese toâ€"in plain words againâ€"rob him. Strip your story of all false sentiment,of all sophistry,and the fact lies before you that you stole Lancewood from a child. Family pride love of race. will not hide or extenu- arte such wickedness.†“ Yotu have sinned greatly," he said, “ and your atonement must be com- plete. It must be speedy and entire. Vivien; the â€boy m‘ust go back with- out loss of time.†he said, sadly, “ with the hopor in- trustod to your keeping t†Lord St. Just sat still, wrapped in thought. The sound of the gong striking for luncheon recalled him to every-day life. He went to his wife and. kissed her fondly. “Vivien,†he said gently, “you. rmust rouse yourselfâ€"we have to live our lives, dear. We must eat, drink, sleep, walk, talk, no matter what we suffer, what we endure. Raise your face to mine, darling wife.†She looked at him with weeping eyes. All her pride had left her now, she had s‘ulnk sobbing on her knees; she was no heroine, but a criminal; her head was bent in lowly self-abase- ment, in lowly contrition. To Be Continued. LIFE AFTER DEUAPITATIUN The Doctur's “end That Seemed to [Ian- and ma Winkâ€"Two Remarkable Supr- Ies From BMHollows-Experiments on Animals. We see a very distinct reflection of the duality of our vital state in the very arrangement 01 our nervous system. The chief masses of that system, as every one knows, consist. of the brain and the spinal: cord, and a second system of nerve masses call- ed the sympathetic system also exists. and is found lying as a double chain of nerve knots or ganglia down the front of the spline. Now it is evident that as the brain is the most import- ant part of the nervous apparatus. the spinal cord and the sympathetic STRANGE OBSERVATIONS AS TO AN INTERESTING QUESTION. make that a freshly guillotined head has been kmown to make gestures of the mouth and to move the eyes when a bystander taunted it. It has been impossible to trace either the truth of the De la Pommerais story or the source of the lust named incident. but there is no reason why both should not have been correctly re- ported. Much would depend on the rapid flow of blood in. the case of -the head of ’the guillitined criminal in reâ€" spect of the existence of movement or consciousness. . . . by poisoning. IPhe story goes that some of his confreres waited on De la Pornmera-is before his execution, and, informing him that it was? their desire in the interests of science to test whether any degree of conscious- ness remained in the decapitated head just after execution, asked him. if possible, to agree to give some sign or token by way of solving the pro- blem. De la Pommexrai-s acquiesced in the suggestion, and it is said that. securing possession of the head as it fell, and preventing further hemor- rhage, the doctors shouted into the ear of their former confrerq demand- ing of {him to. give some response. One of the eyes was said to open slowly and shut, and than all symp- toms of life ceased. A writer re- The first point to which our atten- tion may be directed is the collect- ing of evidence regarding the im- mediate effect of severe and mortal injury on, the subject thereof; One of the best-hmwn illustrations of the fact that such injury does not pro- duce immediate death, or at least that absolute cessation. of all movements which we popularly recognize as the main. feature of life's ending, is that afforded by the case of Capt. Nolan. The Captain. headed the famous charge of the Light Brigade at Balaklava. In the course of his duties he was struck in the chest by part of a shell, the missile tearing the chest open and wounding the heart. Kinglake gives a graphic account of the incident. “The sword," h-asays, “dropped from his hand, but the arm with which he was waving it the moment before still remained high uplifted in the air, and the grip of the practised horseman, remaining as yet unre- laxed, still held him firm in: his sad- dle. \Ve may regard as facts the circum- stances above notedâ€"that men kill- ed instantly in the popular accept- ance of the short term may continue to execute apparently definite and purposive movements. A somewhat ghastly rec-ital referring to a guillo- tined man has been generally credit- ed to the renown of the Paris School of Medicine, and relates to the same curious features that mark the bat- tlefield. The Parisian case was that) of Dr. Dela Pommerais, who was guillotined for the crime of murder “Missing the perfect hand of his master, and finding the accustomed governance now; succeeded by the dangling reins, the horse all at once wheeled about, and began to gallop bask upon the front of the advancing brigade. Then, from what had been Nolanâ€"and his form was still erect in the saddle, his sword arm still erect in the airâ€"there burst forth a cry so strange and appalling that the bearer who rode nearest him called it “unearthly. And in truth, I im- agine, the sound resulted from no hu- man will, (but rather from those spas- modic forces which may act upon the bodily frame when life as a power has ceased. The firm-seated rider, with arm uplifted and stiff, could hardly be ranked with the living. The shriek men heard rending the air was scarce other than the shriek of a corpse. The dead horseman rode on till he passed through the interval of the Twelfth Light Dragoons. Then at last he dropped from the saddle." An interesting parallel case to that of Nolan, is that of a sergeant in charge of the Ninth Corps on the Confederate works east of Peters- bux'g, during the Civil War, who leaped on the parapet, and with his cap in his left hand and his gun in the right cheered his comrades on- SHELL DECAPITATED HIM at this moment “as completely as a1 knife could have done," “but the tall form continued erect for some set:- ends, the arm still waving frantiâ€" cally, but with ever lessening sweep and power, until the forces of the body collapsed, when the headless trumk toppled over to the ground." system must together occupy a sec- ondary position. This is unquestion- ably tha case, and the plan} on which our nervous affairs have been order- The newest kind of marble for boys is one that will give aloud report twenty times in succession when thrown on the pavement, and then leaves the boy in'poseeesion of the or- dinary marble of the larger size. The reports are cazused by a thin layer of explosive material just under the out- er covering of the marble. ed represents the well-known princi- ple of the “division of labor." With a complex body to look after. our nervous system exhibits a clear specialization of. its duties. If there are parts in the brain whose duty it is' Pass now to the case of man. Here, injury and accident, unfortunately, supply us with a parallel instance to that of the frog. If the spinal cord of a man be divided, say in its mid- dle part, the lower half of his body is paralyzed. He is unable to move it, and he has lost all sensation in that half. But if the feet be tickled, the legs will be drawn up, although the man is not conscious of making the movements, and is unaware he is putting his muscles into action un- less he sees the motions of his limbs. Here we again. come in contact with the idea of the independence of the spinal cord. We see that conscious- ness has nothing whatever to do with the womks of the cord, any more than when we tickle the foot of a sleeping person and the leg is moved, we can assert that he is conscious of his ac- to “think," there are other parts whose function it is to guide our movements. If there are groups of mm. the “intelligence department" of the brain. there are other groups that supervise the work of the heart, and that control our digestive pro- ceedings, and that see to it that the duties of the lungs are duly discharg- If. now, you remove the foot of the same leg and apply acid, as before, the leg will be again raised, but as the shortened limb falls short of the irritated spot, the headless amphib- ian will, after an interval, raise the other foot and endeavor to rub away the acid. This is a well-known ex- periment, and its teachings are singu- larly instructive They prove to us that the spinal cord is capable of carâ€" rying out movements of a very com- plicated character, movements with a purpose, such as we should be inclin- ed to believe were controlled by the brain alone. On such a principle of division of labor, we are bound to find the varied ways and works of the nervous sys- tem carried out on different levels, as regards the importance of the du- ties performed. Now it happens that the spinal cord which runs through the middle of the backbone, Within which it is protected as within a bony tube, is really a kind of brain deputy in many respects. It acts on the Whole as the confidential servant of the brain, but it also possesses an independence of its own. Its duties are of a lower nature than those dis- charged by the brain, but they are none the less essential for the perfect ordering of the body's welfare. Even if the head office be singularly well organized, it cannot exercise its funcâ€" tions properly in the absence or ineffi- ciency of the sub-offices, and the special card is really a series of sub- oï¬ices carrying out many actions which otherwise we might be tempted to credit to the share of the brain. If we divide the spinal cord of a frog and irritate the foot the leg will be moved, after the fashion in which the uninjured animal would resent being tickled. Here we have separat- ed the brain from the feet, and yet control of the muscles of the leg is not lost. That which the brain does in the frog apparently is not so much to-carry out movements, but to in- itiate and control them If a frog’s legs be allowed to come in contact with some weakly irritating fluid the legs naturally will be withdrawn after an interval. Time after time the action will go on, till we can gauge fairly the periods which will elapse between the withdrawals of the legs and their descents. If, now, the spinal cord be divided below the brain, we find these movements much accelerated. They pmceed at a quicker rate, because the brain con- trol is removed, and the mechanism of the animal is left, as it were, to run wild, like an engine from: Whichl the influence of the fly-wheel has been removed. But we may find evidence that the spinal cord of the frog may control! actions in a fashion that would al- most lend belief to the idea that it is much more than a mere brain deputy. Cut off a frog'e head care-a fully, so that there may be as little disturbance of parts as is consistent with the performance of this qpera- tic-n. \Ve ‘have removed the brain, of course. and all that is left in the body of the chief nervous system is the spinal cord. Now place a drop of acetic acid on the inner side of one thigh of your headless frog, and you will see the animal raise the foot of that leg to wipe the acid off. DO YOU FEEL TIRED t. IN THE MORNING? Does Sleep not bring Refreshment? Do you feel wretched, mean and misc!- able in the morningsâ€"as tired as when you went to bed ? It's a serious conditional â€"too serious to neglect, and unless yog have the heart and nervous systea' Itrengthened and the blood enriched by, “I'ther'l started Using Burdock Em Bitters, and when I had ï¬nished the secont.’ bottle I was almost well. but continued taking it untill had completed the third bottle, when I was-perfectly Well. Before taking 3.8.3. I could'scarcely eat .. thing without having a - . . Bur“ pain in my stomach. Now I eat whateVer I like with- out causing me the least discomfort." -- M RS. 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