THE GRET REVEVW TERMS ; $ per year, IN ADVANCE CHAS. RAMAAGE Editor & Proprietor & goneral Bnï¬?l bustness transacted Drafte wued and collections made on all points. Depos ts received and interest allowed at curreni CAPITAL, Authorized _ $2,000,00€¢ w« Paid up 1,000,008 RESERVE FUND 600,000 W . F. Cowan, StaadardBank of Canada BUSINESS DIRECTORY. NOHARY PUBLIC, Commissioner,.cic., J. P. TELFORD q3 adaisvs®, â€" SOLiGITOR D SUFREME oar Loan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" Â¥eyancoer, Commissioner &c. Loaps arranged without delay. _ Collections promptly made, Insurance effected. MeNEY ‘TO 1LOAN stlowost rates of Interest t * one door north of 8. Heot‘s Store Durbara Thursday Morning. S 0. REGISTRY OFFICE. Thome: *« Larder, Rogistrar. John A. Munro Doputy â€"Registrar, Office hours from 1/ «. m. to 4 p. m. JAMES LOCKIE, FOR SALE The EDGE PROPRRTY. In the Town of Durbham, County of Grey, including valeable Water Power Brick Dwelling, and many eligible building lots, will be sold in one or more lots. Also lot No. 60, con. 2 W. G. R., FTownship of Bentinck, 100 acres adjoinâ€" Ing Town plot Durham. W. L. McKENZIE, ALLAN MeFARLANE MONEY TO LOAN Fire Insurance secured. OFFICE, over Grant‘s Stonu Lower Town, Horse Shoeing Shop, In the old stand. All handâ€" made shoes. Also Handâ€"made Waggons â€" toueer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. Residenceâ€"King St.. Hanover, GENTS in all principal points in Ontario, Quebes, Manitobs United State: BSUER of Marriage Licenses, Aueâ€" Mortgage taken for wart purchase Head Office. Toronto: DURHAM AGENCY. Has opened out a firstâ€"class HUCH McKAY. SAVINGS BANK MISCELLA NEOUS. allowed on savings bank depos.ts of $1.00 vards. Prompt attention and every facil ded curtomers liying at a distance. Jobbing of all kinds promptly WOODWORK President. Apply to JAMES EDGE, Edge Hill, Ont. in connecticn. A firstâ€"class lot of DU BR HA Mâ€" for sale cheap. â€"A" THBâ€" LEGAL J KELLYX, Agens. MoFA RLANE, Manage KEEPING A FEW SHEEP. Every farm should bhave its flock of sheep, just the same as the flock of poultry, for home use. It costs little more to feed a lamb that will dress twentyâ€"five pounds, during the sumâ€" mer than to feed a fowl weighing two pounds. By good management, says &A writer, a score of ewes may be fed through the year at no more cost than will be repaid by the fleece. Thus the lambs cost nothing because they need no feeding until they are needed for meat, except the little grass they get. This may not be thought to cost anything, for a very poor grass field it must be that will not keep four or five shsep to the acre, and there is nearly always some runâ€"out meadow that will keep the sheep during the summer at really no countable cost at all. _A lamb of twenty or twentyâ€"five pounds dressed weight, if of the right breed, is the best eating in existence The Shropshire I think the best breed for lambs, but the common native sheep having some Merino blood, crossâ€" ed with the Shropshire ram makes a8 good a lamb as can be wished. The preâ€" sent summer I am killing off the male lambs of a flock of about thirty ewes of the common stock which cost me & year ago $1.50 a bead. The smallest lamb bhas dressed over twenty pounds, and just now they are reaching thirâ€" ty. So far the lambs have not had over 25 cents‘ worth of feed that has | cost money. While sucking, as soon as they would eat, they got a handful of a mixture of cottonseed meal, bran, and corn meal, and after a few days, would be always ready on hand to skip into the feeding pen where they pot their feed once a day without disâ€" turbance from the ewes. Since the grass came, they have had no feed exâ€" cept an occasional scattering of corn given to the flock to keep them tame and easily handled. _ The dressing of the lamb in these warm days is a simple: matter. One is picked out from the flock, brought up to the barn for the purpose, in the evening, so that it may be immediately put in a stall by itself without any driving from the field. The rest of the flock goes back to the pasture after getting some salt or & haindful or two of corn. In the cool of the morning, the lamb is dressed, and, before breakfast, is ready, the meat is ihung up in the cellar. The met hod of dressing is thus: A block and tackle is hung under the roof of the shed beiween a double corn crib, A thick bhardwood piank bench eighteen inches high is used to lay, the lamb on. One single stoke of an axe beheads the lamb which then is totally deprived of sensaâ€" tion, and struggles scarcely at all. The hind legs are skinned down to the ham and tha hock joint is severed, the ends of a gambrel stick are put through the loosened sinew, and the carcass is hoisted by the tackle to the right height for dressing. By this time the lamb is quite dead and has bled dry. It is skinned carefully, keeping the meat clean and from contact with the wool: the fore legs are cut off at the the breakfast belil calls just as the wotk is finished. After breakfast, the meat is taken to the cellir or any other desired place and the liver, milt, heart and tongue, are served for dinâ€" mer, or for a small family, with a little homeâ€"made bacon, these will make two good meals. If the head is scalded and scraped clean, it will make an excelâ€" lent soup and meat for the next day. The quarters are separated as soon as the carcass is stiff, and put into the refrigerator, where the meat will keep well until it is used. If a sheep is A4ressed and, as it should, make forty or more pounds of meat, this may reaâ€" dily be divided with aneighbor who is doing the same thing and divides in his turn. A fatted calf may be managed in the same way, at pracâ€" tically no cost. Blackleg is an infectious disease of caitle, produced by the blackleg bacilâ€" lus, a facultative parasite, which lives and propagates in the soil of infectâ€" ed Aistricts and in bodies of the disâ€" ed districts and in bodies of the disâ€" eased animals. Certain kinds of soil are very favorable to the existence of this germ, and such soil when once inâ€" fected usua‘lly remains so permanently and constitutes the source of the disâ€" ease in animals. Although infectious, contagious disease; i.¢, the disease owes its existence to an infecting prinâ€" ciple, the blackleg germ, but a diseasâ€" ad animal does not transmit the disâ€" ease directly to a healthy one. Healthy animals become diseased when the germ enters a wouna in the skin or mucous membrane of the body. Such wounds can easily be produced on the legs while roaming over the ranches or at the mouth while grazing. _ _ BLACKLEG AND HOW TO TREAT IT The characteristic symptom of this disease, and by which alone it can usâ€" ua‘lly be recognized, is the appearance of large swellings on various parts of blackleg is, strictly speaking, not a the body, usually on or near the upâ€" per portions of the legs, and never bo-‘ low the knee or hock joints. The swelâ€" lings vary in size, but are always formed by the presence of gas that has collected in the tissue meshes beneath the skin. This gas is a product of the blackleg bacilli. When the hand is passed over these swellings a characâ€" teristic crackling sound is produced. When incised with a knife a bloody fluid with a disagreeable _ and sickâ€" ening odor is discharged. a_Press bulleâ€" tin %(z\nms exper sta.) The principal general symptoms of the diseass are loss of appetite, high. feve‘r fu{d ]a‘me- when the muscles of the legs UNIAKIO ARCHIVES _ TORONTO the are affected. Nearly all sffected aniâ€" mals die within one and oneâ€"half to three days from the time of attack. Medical treatment of this disease may at present be considered as absoâ€" lutely nseless, The only p}';u:tical. m:z- lt cAsuns M iss n r e lt tw 7. s y B thod of dealing with the disease is to prevent it. Keeping animals away from infected ranges or parts of rangâ€" es is an absolute protection. Sometimes this is impossible, and then protective innculation must be resorted to. It is a wellâ€"known fact that vaccination or proteciive inoculation prevents almost entirely the appearance of the disâ€" ease. MANURING PASTURES. Apply manure to pastures by spreadâ€" ing it on the surface and it greatly stimulates the growth of the grass. The casual observer may conclude that the extra grazing thus furnished is the sole gain. Such a conclusion is a mistake, says Thos Shaw. Root proâ€" duction in the grass is increased proâ€" portionately with top production. This means that there is great increase in fertilizing matter in soil in the reaâ€" dily available form of vegetabhle plant food. The benefit from the manure comes back in the form of aduplicate or at least a twoâ€"fold harvest. The first benefit is in the form of increased grain production. Should the pasture be plowed up and sown to grain? Of course if the pasture is a permanent one, the second benefit will not be forthcoming otherwise than in the form of increased productivity in the pasture for a longer term of years. Applying farmyard manure thus, is certainly one of the most profitable ways in which it can be applied, and for several reasons, it is, all things considâ€" ered, the most convenient way of apâ€" plying it. It can be drawn at any season of the year that may be desirâ€" ed. The time when it would be least advantageous to apply such afertilâ€" izer is the season when it cannot usualâ€" ly be drawn, that is when the grass is growing vigorously in ths spring. The much labor that is then on hand forbids the drawing of manure. It may be applied with great advantage in the late autumn and during the winter, when the surface of the land is suffiâ€" ciently frozen to sustain a loaded waâ€" gon or sled. There are no seasons of the year when the farmers have so much leisure for drawing it, and they can then apply it in the fresh‘ forln‘l. Eoo on eeeen o e e N Oe oo It is grently"udvantageous to be able to apply manure in the fresh form, not only because it is convenient but beâ€" cause it is also economical, It is econoâ€" mical because the work can be done when labor is cheapest. _ It is econoâ€" mical because it precludes the necesâ€" sity for handling the manure twice as when it is composted in the field or piled and turned in the yard. It is ecoâ€" nomical since it precludes the necesâ€" sity of having manure sheds, and it is economical because it prevents nearâ€" ly all waste of fertiltiy. EMess on en e on en w It may be objected that manure will waste by leaching when applied upon a frozen surface, and when the snow is on the ground. The objection is not well taken except when it is applied on hilly surfaces or on land subject to overflow in the spting. All exâ€" perience on this question points to the conclusion that there will be but little waste from leaching when manâ€" ure is thus applied. The great growth of the grass the following season points to the direction which the leaching bas taken. To be able thus to apâ€" ply manure is agreat matter. There is no loss from leaching in the yard. There is no waste of nitrogen from deâ€" composition unduly rapid and excesâ€" sive, and there is no waste from fire fang interesting â€" Resuits of Recent German Observation, The Berlin correspondent of the Lonâ€" don Daily Mail writes‘: Of late years the attention of savants has been diâ€" rected to the investigation of _ the "Plancton," under which name the red and yellow coloring of portions of the service of the ocean is known. All the expeditions leaving German ports this year have instructions to pay special attention to the matter, and ordinary seaâ€"captains are encouraged to chronâ€" icle all particulars regarding any apâ€" pearance of the phenomenon that may come under their notice. In the Gerâ€" man "Notes on Hydrographye and Maritime Meteorology," Herr H. Halâ€" termann, of the Naval Observatory at Hamburg, recapitulates the present state of knowledge on the subject, from material supplied by learned and unâ€" learned men. According to these authorities, most of whom are officers of ships in some way connected with the German Naval Observatory, the reddish coloring of the ocean is of more frequent occurâ€" rence than the yellow. _ Both colors oceur most frequently in the South Atlantic, but always at a considerable distance from each other. . The yellow tracts are found prinâ€" cipaily in the tropical and subâ€"tropiâ€" cal western parts of the ocean, not far from land. The red tracts which are probably caused by animals relatâ€" ed to the "Clio borealis‘" and "Limaâ€" cina artica." The food of the whales in the Arctic seas, are found in the southern latitudes of the Atlantic, where the influence is felt of the cold currents from Cape Horn. * sea in the immediate neighhorhood r)f‘ Cape Horn. The yellow tracts are genâ€" erally ascribed hy capurins to polisn or floweing waterâ€"plants, whils ‘he red tracts are oftens desori‘ed as being caused by th prssence of small «niâ€" mals, such â€" brimps, ‘leâ€"â€"10>sters, etc., It bhas a‘so been noted *hat she red tracts are *~r ‘ly ,ccompameil by whales and immepse flocks of biras, which is seldou the case with the yelâ€" low tracts. Much s exvected frow this year‘s scien ©‘~ maritime expeâ€" ditions towards sâ€" i; the mystery of the wonderful appearance. "It 1; however, somewhat remarkable that no reference is made in any log to the appearance of red tracts in the COoLOoURS OF THE OCEAN. is to Chappieâ€"Barbah, how _ l0DE will I have to wait for a shave? Barberâ€"Ob, about two years! Is your son up in the history of the dark ages? I guess he is. He‘s usualâ€" ly up most o‘ the night. â€" Judgeâ€"You say the defendant turnâ€"~ ed and whistled to the dog. What folâ€" lowed? Intelligent witness â€" The dog. ~Apatie The Kind Lady â€" So you 8 of the tented field? Weary W â€"Yessum, I was one of the best cireus at one time. Dah‘s a heap 0‘ callin‘ fings wrong names in dis worl‘, said Eben. Lots o‘ folks call plain 1 takin‘ care 0‘ dah bhealth. Arthurâ€"Are you sure she loves you!? Jackâ€"Â¥Yes. When I told her I had nO money to marry on, she asked me it I couldn‘t borrow some. Mrs. Howesâ€"I don‘t know what We are going to do. There is not a thing in the house to eat. Uncle George â€" You might take baarders. s Echoolmaster (entering boys‘ 4O0"~ mitory)â€"What are you doing out , of bed this time of the night, Murphy? Murphyâ€"Oh, sorr, I got out to tuck myself in. Cholly,â€"Yaas, sevewal years ago 4 fell deeply in lovea with a girl, bOt she wejected meâ€"made a wegular fool pf me. Mollyâ€"And you never got ovel it. The Occasion.â€"I told the boss just what I thought of him yesterday. That must have taken a lot of nerve. What was the occasiont He raised my salary. Give Them _ Credit.â€"There‘s _ On° good thing about these conceited peoâ€" ple. What‘s that?t They don‘t . come around and wear you out because they‘ve got the blues. es Miss Sheafeâ€"Oh! just look At that wheat rising and falling in the breeze. How beautiful it is Mr. Cityman â€" Ah, but you ought to see it rising and falling in the Corn Exchange. Before we were married you used to write me three letters a day. Did I, reallyt Yes, you did; and now you gel angry just because I ask you to write me & little bit of a check. Mrs. Taddellsâ€"Let‘s see! Susie Dimâ€" pling is about twenty years old, isn‘t shet Mrs. â€" Wifflesâ€"Susie â€" Dimpling twenty! Susie Dimpling will never see twenty again if she lives to be eighty. Haitieâ€"Then we went to Scotland. It is perfectly wonderful the way they talk the dialect. Uncle Georgeâ€" Whr â€" wonderfull MHattie â€"I should Haitieâ€"Then we went to scotland. It is perfectly wonderful the way they talk the dialect. Uncle Georgeâ€" Why â€" wondeirful?t Hattie â€"I ehould think they‘d forget now and then drop into Engliish. I often do when I‘m reâ€" citing Burns or playing golf. I‘d like to, lady, said Meandering Mike, but it‘s impossible for me _ to clean dem rugs on de terms you offer. You said you were willing to work. Yes‘m. But me an‘ Pete here has orâ€" ganized de. oarpet-])eul_ers"unioln. aB_', if either of us works fur less dan $7 an hour he forfeits his membership. Those Loving Girls. â€" Nell â€" So you and Jack are really engaged, are you? Bessâ€"Yes; we bhave dceided to enter into a life partnership. Nell â€" And just think of itâ€"Jack will be the silâ€" ent partner. Yes, the fair young girl went on, we are engaged, but I do not think I should have accepted him if he had noi proposed in such a delightful manâ€" per. What did he"say? He asked if I would permit him to add an engageâ€" mentâ€"ring to my collection. Two wellâ€"dressed men from Paris drove up to the:best hotel in a country town in the department of the Eure a short time ago and engaged a doubleâ€" bedded room. They deposited a very heavy trunk in a corner and then went out to see the town, telling the landlady, a widow, that they would return at night. But night came and the itwo men did not come back at the time specified. _ The landlady waited, much surprised, and kept her estabâ€" lishment open after the usual hour for closing. _ This was soon observed by the local gendarmes on duty, who enâ€" tered the bote! and reminded the proâ€". prietress of the place that the curfew, or its modern substitute, hbad tolled: ’the knell of parting day, and. that it was full time to extinguish lights in all inns and cafes. The widow said she was waiting for two men who had lcï¬ a big trunk behind them. _ This ‘caused the gendarmes to reflect a litâ€" )119. One of them, well versed in crimâ€" ‘inal annals, suddenly remembered the \Gouffe case. He also thought of the iyoung starap collector whoe was murâ€" ‘dered in Paris afew years since, nad whose body was thrust into a trunk. ! Anxious to secure all the credit of a \_discovery which might lead to promoâ€" ’tion and glory, the gendarme learned in criminal lore asked the widow to ‘let him see the trudk, and told his comâ€" panion to wait i0« him at the bar or buvette of the hotel. The landlady accordingly led the man to the room and he began to gauge the weight of the lig box, when suddenly the lid |flew up and out jumped a wiry little man, who brandished a big revolver But he Might Have Worked His Game Simâ€" ply as a Guest, ‘n bis right hand. The widow screamâ€" ed and the gendarme wos temporarily thrown off his guard, u: e soon pullâ€" ed himself together ané gâ€"appled with the person who had been acting Jackâ€" inptheâ€"box. The other gendarme, hearing the lindiady‘s shrieks and the suffling overhead, was soon on . the s.en> of action, £n* be‘ped his colleague ‘o manacle th» mycte ious person who ba i jumped out of he trunk and to take him to the lockâ€"up. There tne fellow refused to give his name or to s@y anything about his companions, â€"~30 are supposed to have retu:rned to Paris, leaving him to plundsr <hs inn when its owner and bher servants were asleop. | CAME IN A TRUNK. FALL FUN. _ What folâ€" â€" The dog. u_ are a hero ry Watkins ; best in the ngs by dab said Uncle in laziness dorâ€" of Newspaper L&AWS. w We cal) the specia‘ attention ef Pos masters and subsoribers to the following sy nopsis of the nowrpaperiaws : 8 Pamamr s 70000 UV'--- MCY 1. If any porson orders hie paeper discopn tinued, he must paY all arreages, or the publisher may continns to send it until pay: mentis made, and collectthe whole axovn! whethor it be taken from the office or not. There can be no lega) discontinuance until paymentismade. â€" s l #%. Aay person who take the post office, whether d name or another, or wheth soribed or not is responsible Sash and Door Factory. â€"â€"illli> 0 es BAaving Completed our New Factory we are now prepared to FILL ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY. We keep in Stock a largs quantity of Sash, NDoors, Mouldings, Flooring and the differâ€" Lumber, Shingles and Lath always In S&tock. Uoors, "‘-U“lmuï¬â€œâ€™ e e e ky © 00 . â€" ent Kinds of Dressed Lumber for outside sheeting. Our Stoock of DRY LUMRE is very Large so that all ord can be filled. TXE EYES OF THE WOR Aro Fixed Upon South Amertâ€" can Nervine. wEEN EVERT OTHE HELPR K4 TALED Nt CVE Beyond Doubt the Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. A Discovery, Based on Scientific Principles. that Renders Failure Impossible. In the matter of good health temporâ€" | Izing measures, while possibly succomseâ€" ful for the moment, can never be lastâ€" ing. Those in poor health soon know whether the rethedy they are using is simply a passing incldent in their exâ€" | perience, bracing them up for the day, | or something that is geiting at the seat of the disease and is surely and | permanently restoring. | The eyes of the world are literally | fxed on Bouth American Nervine. They are not viewing it as a nineâ€"days‘ wonâ€" ‘ der, but critical ard experienced men have been studying this medicine for Mrz with the one reeultâ€"they have found that its claim of perfect curaâ€" tive qualities cannot be grinsaid. . The great dircoverer of this medicine so desperate was possessed of the knowledge that the the most emi: seat of all disease is the nerve centres, South Americ situated at the base of the brain. In bheadquarters :; this belief bhe had the best scientists The eyes of and _ meCical men of the world disappointed ir ocoupying exactly the same preâ€" cess of South mises. indeed,. the ordinary layâ€" ple marvel, it man resognized this principle medical quali long ago. Everyone knows that yond ail quer let disease or injury affest this part of thing that is c the human system and death is almost alone as the . certain. . Injure the epinel cord, which remedy of the is the medium o‘ these nerve cenâ€" should anyone tres, and paralysic ‘s sure to follow. ness while th Hore is ths Ar+‘ ‘nlo The trouâ€" at their hand For sale by Mc Farlane & Co, $) [Â¥ â€"‘ AMERICAN "f > NERVINE ( | /'( /'i‘f; x S l&/ ..\;l"‘“\‘ j L&AWS. K._ G. &J. McKECHNIE U edie hob HruHar® Of the Firstâ€"Class Hearse. e Con on on ooo d tm an dn thik . ) eE P T U C UNG d UNDERTAKJING Promptly attended to. JAKE KRKSS. [ble with medical treatment u«eu» |ally, and with nearly all medicines, is | that they aim gimply to treat the organ t‘!ut may be diseased. South American Nervine passes by the organs, and imâ€" mediately applies its curative powers to the nerve centres, from which the organs of the body receive their supply of nerve fuid. The nerve centres healed, and of necessity the orgar \ which has shown the outward evidrnce only of derangement is healed. Indiâ€" ‘gostion, â€" nervousners, impoverished blood, liver complaint, all owe their nrigin to a derangement of the nerve centres. Thousands bear testimony that they have been cured of these troubles, even when they have become® so desperate as to baffic the skill of the most eminent physicians, because South American Nervine has gone to headquarters and cured there. The eyes of the world have net been disappointed in the inquiry Into the sug» cess of South American Neérvine. Poo. ple marvel, it is true, at it» wonderful medical qualities, but they know beâ€" yond ail question that it does everyâ€" thing that is claimed for it _ 1t atands alone as the one great certain curi; 3 remedy of the nineteernth century. Why should anyone suffer distre:s and sick* ness while this remedy is praciticall j at their hands T JAKE KRESS Furniture still to be found in his Old Stend oppesite the Durham Bakery. Bost: Qualitz THAN EVEL. %K o N ,‘; \\® /. & \ "~@My Ks 'A†fgr <g sA | 138A )\ G 9/2,“~ re t . g\:\":‘ W a i|| k\' , C * % ï¬, f Cheaper orders i7 The Everetts were absorhed misery and horror connected uncertainty as to Mr. Evere Gradually they realized that . and still greater sorrow thi them. The air was filled with that could not be traced ; the tJ pers printed paragraphs withi natures. All hinted disgrace cowardly flight. Statement zl‘-tad on one day, would wn obscurely on the nex! left their sad effects on the bearted family. The press mal self, and seemed determined itself not only unjust but 1 To satisfy the public‘s demand the most sacred of human rig violated. Defence was just a #gible as redress. Everett kep mfrom his mother and M« carefully read and coll ery item of interest and inf«¢ A week had passed since Evert and she was busy one afte i;l‘ own room whe at the gate, out of man in black hea It was Mrs. Everet! shown up directly to R she begged a private manner was sad and co cothu' with ber mour: a painful impression. | measured, as if she had to a certain purpose mined to carry it th .Qde Rose‘s anxiety ai ly to the point * You can d service, Rose, i -a['n M w as facing hber. _ * Yes. Perhaps y« Everett was engag large operations. 1 them in detail. 1| â€" the present conmditio friends are satisfied bere to carry them i have turned out su ters stand, there is but complete ruin, ‘r‘?‘:n *" Why do you 1 of this? You kn Mr. Everett‘s in "I want to m urgency of the possession of the teenth of the m« several of Mr. E If they are proj will be shatter« able. You are stand it ; but i: cornerâ€"stone. & been made to | So much depend tune only â€"hun« failure. Itcan b with the adequa ward and gu against any l0 promptly met : stored, and his they may appe proper fruit." _ *‘ What a gran such a person â€" * Would you sacrilic own happinessâ€"to secu "I can‘t follow you want me to do?" "To give him up." "Give him up?" *"Yes. And to do it | gl‘ove effective you sh eep this interview a s is in Boston. HMe mus this compactâ€"never s You have it all in y< can save us from pover Oh, Miss Mintura, hs us, and agree to what "Won‘t you tell me plan is t" "Simply this: You gagement, say, by lett save your feelings and it would be difficult f« your grief in parting \ might suspect that y« back your true reasot why, poor fellow it bheart, but he knows â€" hanging over us, and â€" _ "If she loves him wou! this anyhow whether he 1 or not ?" _ f " Ah, well, you must no much from bhuman nature Larry, and in the reboun may go out to ber. Grati the rest, and they may gother. It is a great off that 1 cannot fully realize would rest with the three you promise ?" " + must think." ‘ "Oh, but the hours are this horror is killing us!" *" Where is Larry t" "He was telegraphed 1 ton. Some man was foun hotel there. Your good with him; I had his m morning just as T was 1 man was a stranger. 1 bhorae before Larry. 1 sen the mind what he thinks 0‘ before us is to save his lic scorn. If you lov« forget oursel{ and on good . fle may conclude er has advised you to nection." ‘‘Oh, he never would acor such heartlessness!" " Now to the point ; tin Here is the scheme. With tion and all this other tri us Larry will catch at an) is greuen(od to him. Daphn If be will marry berâ€"and & forward and made me the o0 largeâ€"hearted girl that she put her fortune at our ser _1 L 1 EM L ut cour What You @8 CHAPTER XVI y ou Know â€" rett‘s integt nt to make of the cas n of the fac f the month f Mr. Evere are protest« shattered a ou are too ; but is lil tone. Bo fa de to prov« A HAPF over us age to q . would must n k By Author of Divorseâ€"A he thinks of ythin )h@® W JOs8 s, and he question not be Ar enre n# n n H« |hiï¬kJ e self n# & yU n # 48 hi n