sermon, and y andibl.. own t rough. woman, who _to contribute et the moment d bhis Pprayer, d to him $15) hbas given anâ€" @ars. _ Othep _ suims much ted more enâ€" do. The larg. the Nyack apd _ there 1R convu.' he not oply yes of bis aud. S sSQ overeo‘. t;ice {ailed bing d Mr. Simpâ€" against the the Gospel is guilty of neglect |& 1 gain soille church. Four lized weaith ty year to d only oneâ€" r gent. for The Raviour se of Judog keep, while nickel. How vale of fife galety, with 1 before us : reached â€" in I1d. God save ling in the aean D P;t‘lsed fifty orphans | Farmshas tour of inâ€" xperimentâ€" ra country about Masâ€" d to Batâ€" rd _ itself, were met who came to â€" homeâ€" en upland T amoudts of rphans in director of D IT. in obtainâ€" # of the building is used has been Columbia n,. while down the in barges bora t es Engt! <b4 an opâ€" it Rault . $15 be.;g f uch.A One Parisian teyn, of tes, and wite and \ modest exâ€"Preâ€" s of the 1 hands. te rest, has bad en t. The themselves _ over the up homeâ€" ices where ment. All ad the op med satig a most of their land uties next burther inection » churcB mericad ducation, mt . ellles to "kianer, latte.s x Moneâ€" n Office EED®, cuarged newsOne ated his a small e war. ERS, Almost Ovep. If. Londonâ€" »rd Prestâ€" ess‘on to is usderâ€" 1 retain and hiz make lit» nis postâ€" ry 1s the line to Charles®s 10Or â€" an ven his e â€" wit B Franonm isports 1€ oceurâ€" 1C& “1. â€"OSS@%= _ and Suffers onten ed n pe\'er t3 Inâ€" The Tablets cure all the minor ills trom which infants and young chilâ€" drem suffer, and are guaranteed to contain nm» oplate or harmful drug. Bold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cenis a box by writing direct to the Dr Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockvil‘e, Ort. k Erery mother knows how much biby suffers while ¢utting teeth. Bwollen, tender gums cause a feveyâ€" Iish, fretful condition, sometimes seriâ€" ousiy affecting baby‘s health. This can be overcome, and the teething process made easy by the use of Baby‘s Own Tablets, Proof of this ig given by Mrs. J. Peckover, New Liskeard, Ont., who says: "I am the mother of six children, and I can truthfully say thait Baby‘s Own Tab lets is better than any other mediâ€" cine Thave ever used for the ills of little ones. I can especially recomâ€" mend them for teething children, and would advise all mothers to use The sergeant sat down. As he did £0, Saunders whispered to his fellow detective, Brown, and he quietly Fanny Inchiey fixed her eyes on the old spot on the wall. "I ran away." "You ran away? You saw the deâ€" ceased stabbedâ€"you saw him fallâ€" there was ouly another woman â€" a woman like yoursel{â€"and you ran away ?" "I did. Iâ€"I was frightened." "Where did you go ?" "Homeâ€"to the castle, to my room." Elaine sat, both her bands tightâ€" ly clasped in May‘s, her eyes fixed with wilo amazement and horror on the white face of the witness, her breatn coming and going in painâ€" ful gasps. o e a* Y Ai®~+ A ery, a faint ety of horror, broka in upon the question. It came from Elaine; and she looked round, and then at Fanny Inchiey, as if she dovulted the evidence of her own "After you had seen Miss Delaine stab the deceased, what did you do?" Fauny luchley‘s eyes wandered from the wall at which she had been staring, and followed Eiaine as she went to her seat at the solicitors‘ table: followed her with an expresâ€" slion of hate and malevolence which, though it was as flocting as a passâ€" ing shadow, was seen And noted by many. " You saw Miss Delaine stab Capâ€" tain Sherwin ?" " I did," came the reply, slowly, unflinchingly. " Where did she standâ€"before or behind him ?" * Behind himâ€"at the side." "He {ell at once ?" "At once." "You heard him cry out twice "" "No! Once! Oncee only ! 1 said once !** The sergeant nodded. "Yaes, you said once. What did you do~ Hush!" for a movement â€" was beard near the entrance. "‘mr lora, I must ask your lordship e stopped, for he saw that the movement among the crowd was caused by the entrance of Elaine and May and the major. He stopped and looked at the pale, sorrow â€"strickâ€" ] en face oi the girl who had just been accusal of the hideous crime, and‘ {altered. In all his experienceâ€"and how marvelous and varied it had beena!â€"le had _ uever known of a case to equal this. | "BShe lies!" he said, in a voice audible to those near him. "Watch, watch! Boe careful! Look at her ! Bhe is lying !" * Bilence!" shouted the usher. The judge held up his hand, his thin, cadaverous face as stern as it had ever been in the moment of passing sentence, and at the uplifted hand and before the terrible face the tumuit died away. The sergeant bent down and whispered to Saunâ€" ders, then raised himself, and eyed the white, set face with grim inâ€" tensity. | Created by the few quiet words of the small, whiteâ€"faced woman, every person present lost his head. And yet not every one. One man alone stood calm and watchful, and It was the prisoner. As if he bad been expecting this statement, he stood, his eyes Tixed upon Fanny Inchley‘s waxâ€"like face, his hands clinching the dock rail. He beckoned to Gerald sternly, and as Gerald pushed his way toward him, leaned over the front of the dock. | ol _ lailies by the ben yelied _ for silence, t roughly pushed â€" and C seething people awaying for a fuli minute, under created by the few quli the small whita.furoX a looki the rail of C g.00 s CUOE, covoe ced lomotnlng flash in her hand. (Phe captain cried out"â€"the voice, _ almost moâ€" notonous, grew hoarse suddeniyâ€" :ï¬m 1 'enw him fall backward over i wan 4 w# w4 L P 1 "Go on. Give your account â€" of what followedt, Did you hear more?" "Yes, but not so distinctly ; they spoke in lower voices. Miss Delaine was agitated ; Captain Sherwin, I think, threatened her." "Do not teli us what you think, speak onuly of what you are sure." "I am sure he threatened uer. She scemed desperate _ and hardâ€"driven, and in the midst of the words I saw bee raise her arm and somcething flash in her hand. (The capl.-lan cried out"â€"the _ voice, almost moâ€" Phoxt Auriave c S SuEO "Yes, but spoke in lo was agitat think, thre; "Do not speak only "I am sur stemed desp and in the ; ber raise | & wal C C P20E , 200 sbe refused ?" "For a time, yes. Then he threatâ€" ened ber, and she yielded ; she conâ€" sented to break with the marâ€" quis," B "'w',h;t-"-m CV s passed 7 She moistened eyes did not m falter. "He made love ed her to break aquls and promise "And she refus ..}‘w a ‘[m, " no neae 4, __°"C Jhem. I was standing near them, behind the shrubâ€" bery. I heard every word." " What passed 7" Bheo moistened her lips, but her eyes did not move, nor her voice falter. BABY‘S FIKRST TOOTh. full minute, under the shock made love to her, He wantâ€" to break off with the marâ€" d proml.ao to marry nim." Slres "euge. c CVE y the bench, the usher gilence, the policemen d _ andâ€" elbowed the the bridge : to and fro ; Fanny Inchley was silent for a s Judge. ;. â€" * ; _ nmoment, then she said : th';hhd;:e. "I refuse to answer." o lerter was The judge looked up. and then to the j 1 "W bat ?" to Gerald. f "I refuse to answer," she re. , C°r21d examine peated, and in her face was clear. NOt 404 bewilder ly revealed, hard as she tried to X"82d4y married! mask it, her inward fury at the t"U0 the letter slip of the tongue by whichk she TOTZOry+ bad mentioned the letter. The sergeant ce "You must answer the question,"* Ination. said the judge, "unless you think _ "Téll us what t that it will incriminate you," had read this let Sbe was silent, and looked under Elaine raised he ber lashes from sid> to side. "I left the brid "Tou say ‘that Miss Delaine got tain Sherwin. Iâ€" ‘"Now, then, for the letter. What letter was it that you gave Captain Sherwin, and for the passession of which, you say, Miss Delaine asked ‘*You cannot have forgotten the way you went from the bridge to the Castle. Do you still say that you went round by the lawn * Fanny Inchley had watched this incident under her halfâ€"lowered lids, and those near her noticed that she was breathing quickly, and in a conâ€" strained fashion, but she turned at once to Gerald as he resumed : lord," whispered the clerk. "Stay," seaid the judge. "Resume your seat, sir." "No, my lord," said Luigi, with proâ€" found respect. "It is better that I should retire, for I, too, shall be a w‘ltness." and he let Ingram Jlead him "The poor .geritlé;liaii -;"u;.;l.'eat friend of the prisoner‘sâ€" blind, my lord," whispered the clerk. "it wasms i, my <ord," he sald, reâ€" epect{iully. "I beg _ pardon. The words were wrung from me." "Leave the court," said the judge. Luig: fumbled for his stick, and the marquis bent down and touched lbis shoulder pityingly, tenderly. CC EOE TTC UPBITUL PY CE H® | ingly. "Come!" repeated Gerald. + She glanced down at him. "I don‘t know. Iâ€"I made a mis take," "I have no doubt you did. Bug I lat It pass, for the present. You ran away when you saw Miss Delaineâ€"as you sayâ€"stab Captain Sherwin ? [ Which way did you go ?" "Which way 2" [ uYe. !n f ___She looked down, and seemed to be endeavoring to remember. A ‘"Round by the long walk by the lawan,." "It is a lie!" said a voice. Gerald Locke moved his head in the direction whence the voice had come, and saw that the denial had sprung from the white lips of Luigi Zanti. The blind man had not uttered A single word, had scarcely _ moved, since he had entered, but had sat, his head leaning on his hand, his sightless eyes turned to the person who might be speaking, listening inâ€" tently, breathlessly. "Who uttered that improper exâ€" clamation ?" said the jJudge, sternly. The blind man rose, pale, but sinâ€" gularly composed. "It WBR 1. mÂ¥ «<ONLY We BA me riine on dbinth M det es dile: â€" 14 & k L110 the letterâ€"â€"" "The detter! What letter ?" _ deâ€" manded Gerald, swiftly. She looked round again. ‘"‘The letterâ€"the letter she stabâ€" bed him to get." Elaine leaned forward as if about to rise, but May held her down. ‘‘This is the first time you _ have swken of a letter," said Gerald. ‘"What twas this letter *" "Iâ€"I don‘t know." "But you gave it to him, you say." "Iâ€"I did not!" ‘"Yes! You did. What letter was it ? Come 2" The marguis leaned forward, his "Ask her!" broke from him sternâ€" lhng-ga.n'd face set hard and stern. y. & ‘"Silence!" cried the usher warnâ€" "Answer, please time," "It is ? Then why should Captain Sherwin come to the bridge at your bidding? You say you did not know that he was in love with Miss Deâ€" laine and had proposed to her ?" The sharp gray eyes looked round the court cunningly, just as those of a fox look round at the moment the cry of the hounds breaks on his MuptAiidss : Ahout css "Answer! You knew Captain Sherâ€" win intimately, did you not ? You had brought him to the bridge, you know. Youâ€"" the insviration came in a [lash â€""you were lovers *" | She started, and her small hands clinched. "It‘râ€"it‘s not true!" she exclaimâ€" ed: ;:a'ntlng'. "It‘s a lie, whoever says is a w as ‘"You bore no grudgo against Miss Delaine »" "I ? No." 1 "You and Captain Sherwin were friends »" > i0 & "Yesâ€"friends." The slight hesitation gave Gerald the clue. i ‘"More than friends *" She hesitated again, and her cyes hid behind the long lids, "Why not * An innocent man was accused, wrongly accused according to your account. This that you have said in court toâ€"day would have tendâ€" ed to clear him, save him. _ Why did you not speak out at the examination before th: magistrates ?" "Ab, why ?" said a voice in the crowd. Fanoy Inchley‘s thin lips _ set tightly. "Iâ€"I did not want to be mixed up in it. I didn‘t want to send a fellow woman to death." _,, 4G. 1 saw her. She cannot deny it!" came from the thin lips, and the gray eyes, like a wolf‘s now, dropped on Elaine‘s face. "Attend to me, please," said Gerald, sternly. "And you went home and told no one of what you had seen 7" AlNo.'I * made his â€" way from the court. Gerald Locke rose. . "You crossâ€"examine the witness, Mr. Locke?" said the Jjudge gravely. "Yes, my lord ! My client is innoâ€" cent of this crime, but neither he nor I will accept a verdict of acquittal on the evidence of this woman.‘ . _A murmur of applause arose, which was instantly suppressed. "You say you saw Miss Delaine stab Captain Sherwin »" *I did. T: BBXE nin Sth k mBBnAE Ammaer don‘t know. When I gave him whk _ as But take your usher _ warnâ€" The sergeant continued his examâ€" ina tion. "Tell us what happened after you had read this letter, Miss Delaine." Elaine raised her sad eyes. "I left the bridge then, left Capâ€" Gerald examined it, his brain feeling hot and bewildered. ‘The marquis already married! It could not be truc, the letter must be a clumsy forgery, The letter was passed to the jury, and then to the judge, who handed it to Gerald. "And it was this letter, which Capâ€" tain Sherwin gava you, that decided you to break of{ with the prisoner ?" said the sergeant. "You saw by it, in short that he wasâ€"already marâ€" ried ?" "Yes" said Elaine, almost inaudibly. The marquis seem>d again about to speak, but Gerald Locke held up his hand. , "Lot the jury see the letter," said the Judge. Te marquis, with pale face â€"and now flashing eyes, bent forward and seemed about to speak, to address Elaine, who stood with tightlyâ€"claspâ€" ed hands and downcast eyes ; but the usher sternly called silence, and the marquis closed his lips. A profound silence followed the serâ€" geant‘s reading of the letter. It was a day of surprises, and the amazeâ€" ment of the audience was too great to admit of utterance. "‘My Dear Ernest‘â€"the prisoner‘s namo is Ernest, gentliemen of the jury, Ernost Edwyndâ€"‘My dear Ernest, I arrived here quite safely, but very tirod. I quite agree with you that for the present our secret should reâ€" main a sccret still, but I tell you fankly that I am gotting tired of this mystery and concealment. I didn‘t bargain for all this dullness and dreariness, and I don‘t think you can cxpect me to endure it much longer. Please send me some more moneyâ€"I know you will wonder what I‘ve done with that you gave me, but monoy and I are soon parted ; besides, it was a bargain that I should have as much as I(wanted ; and I mean to keep you to that part of the conâ€" tract, anyway. My cough is just tho, same as ever. I don‘t fancy 1 shali like this place ; it seems a dull hole. I‘d rather have gone to Faris, where one can buy decent things and amuse onesell. I hate being bored, as you know,. You‘d better send me a cheque for two hundred pounds while you are about it. Did you buy me that pearl ring I fancied ? There was a necklace went with it, I think ; if so, you might get that at the same time. And don‘t forget the shawl I saw at the Oriental place in Regent street. Your affectionate wile, â€"Pauline.‘" "It may bo all plain to the priâ€" soner, but it is anything but plain tofno and the jury !" "1 will road the letter," said the sergeant, gravely. CHAPTER XXXVIL All eyes were turned from the letâ€" tor which the sergeant held in his hland to the marquis as he uttered tho significant words, "I see it all !" and the judge looked across at him keenly and with a grim smile as he said ; as ho recognized broke from him y whole court. "My God!" ho it all !" m CE Liad CIVUTML "A letter. Can you tell me the contents ? Perhaps you have preâ€" served it ?" "I have." She put her hand in the bosom of her dress, and took out the letâ€" ter and handed it to him. As she did so the marquis bent forwarnd eagerly and saw It ; and as ho recognized it an exclamation broke from him which electrified the "When interrupted by the indisâ€" position which we all regret, Miss Delaine, I was asking you what it was that Captain Sherwin had told you which induced you to consent to his proposal that you _ should break off your engagement with the prisoner. I repeat that quesâ€" tion,‘ Elaine looked steadily at him. "It was a letter which Captain Sherwin gave me," she said. ‘"‘Then there was a letter!" murâ€" mured the crowd. Elaine drew her hanads away from May, and stepped to the place in which she had stood when she was giving her evidence., and though her face was still pale, there was a light in her eyes which made the poor old major‘s aching heart throb with pride. "I wish to tell all I know, please," she said, in a low, distinct voice. The judge sank back, and folded his hands with an air of regignaâ€" lion. There had been so much inâ€" formality already that it is to be presumed he thought that to inâ€" sist upon _ strict legal form now would be inconsistent. The sergeant shrugged his shoulâ€" ‘ ders, “\leen interrupted by the indisâ€" | i am convinced that Miss Delaine is willingâ€"yeg, and anxious, to conâ€" tinue her evidence." Elaine rose. The marquis, after a look of doubt and terrible distress, raised his head and looked at her. The judge frowned in deep thought. ‘"‘The decision liee with Miss Deâ€" laine," he said, solemnly. "No one will Rxpect her to say one word "He had!" she said. "He would have married me, butâ€"â€"" she stopâ€" ped, but her glance at Elaine finâ€" {fshed the sentence as plainly as if she had addedâ€""but for her|" ! _ Gerald motioned that he had done with ber, and she turned and left the box. The people were massed close ug :o 1t, but she forced her way throug "Let me pass," she panted, "I am 1llâ€"faint." And they made way for her. _ The sergeant rose. ‘"That is my case, my, lord," he sald. "After the evidence of the last witnessI should not be justified in calling upon Miss Delaine to conâ€" tin\‘ue .her la:ivldence--â€"" iy, .but "No" said the j . gravely, bu Gernald sprang tougge feet. ‘"My lord, without exchanging one word with Miss Delaine, and notâ€" withstanding that Fanny Inchley‘s etatement has taken me as much by ?urprl:e as it has my learned friend, . 3 UPeitated. It was evident to all that pride and caution were battling together in her bosom, At last she raised her white face, and llas;h.ad her gray eyes round the mnv UTUY bntratrictrbe. 24 "VYery good," said Gerald. "Now, Miss ~Inchley, one gne'tlon and I have done. Had Captain Sherwin promised to marry you ? Be careâ€" ful. Take your uqe'." ;§hg‘ hesitated. It was evident tn the letter from " he exciaimed Captain Sherwin ?" ill, see tion toâ€"morrow." Though frank, the lady is cautious, and only signs I‘leAzlo!. "You Krow â€" Who."â€"Lonâ€" vaCScincs BCribendl." ‘They do not worry the book reviewer. They selâ€" dom write a letter, and when they do their style is naive, and their _technique almost a matter of priâ€" vate enterprise. â€" Here, for examâ€" ple, is a note from a sultana to her commissioner : "Constantinople. â€"My Noble Friend : Here are the featherses sent. My soul, my noâ€" ble friend, are there no other feaâ€" therses leaved in the shop besides these featherses? And these feathâ€" erses remains, and these featherses are silky. They are dear, who buys dhese? And, my noble friend, we want a noat from yourself. Those you brot last tim were beauâ€" riful. We had searched. My soul, I want featherses. Again of those featherses. In Kalada there is plenty of feather. Whatevrer been I only want beautiful featherses. I want featherses of every desolaâ€" A Sultana‘s English. The ladies of the Levant, it would seem, are not afflicted with the "cacocthes scribendi." They do not worry the book reviewer. Thevy sel. "Silence !" cried the usher. The crowd swayed to and fro. Elaine raised her eyes to his with sad reproach in them. _ _ The marquis leaned forward and touched Gerald. "There is a hideous mistake :‘ he whispeed hoarsely, all his calm gone, his manver now agitated and passionately earnest. "See the date of the letter 2" Gerali handed it to Elaine. "Will you read me the date of tha letter, Miss Delaine ?" "Juiy the i7in, 1888," she read. The marquis raised his hand. «No!" hbe exclaimed. "It is 1883.‘ No one cried silence; every one was too astounded to speak for a moment. Then the fjudge inotloned for the letter to be handed to him. "Never :" i;xrl:u;'t“!r.(;u;.tll.l in passionate denial and "Elaire: Look at meâ€"â€"*" own purposes ?" "It did. Butâ€"" she hid her face in her hands for a secondâ€"*"the marâ€" quis admitted that it was genuine." ‘"You saw him, then, that evening 2" "Yes," she replied, almost inauadiâ€" bly. "I saw him in the drawingâ€"room, ardâ€"andâ€"" her voice broke into a sob."‘lle admitted it all !" ‘‘Before. On my first visit to the castle ; and on the day of the murder I found it behind the settee in the hall. Signor Luigi will rememberâ€"I showed it to him." The court listened breathlessly. Was she going to convict herself 2 "What did you do with it 2 asked the sergeant. f "I laid it on the top oi the glass case iP the hall," answered Elaine. "And I have not seen it sinceâ€"until now," and she glanced with a shudder at the horrible thing, as the sergeant held it out to her to identify. The sergeant paused. "I have no more questions to ask you, Miss Deâ€" laine," he said, gravely. Gerald rose, the letter in his hand. "Will you tell us why you belleved this letter to be genuine, Miss Deâ€" laine? Did it not occur to you that it might have been a forgery con-l cocted by Captain Shemwin for his ‘"The dagger?" said the sergeant. ‘"Had you seen it before or after the murder ?" "Not until I read it in the Lucerne, before my illness. speak of theâ€"dagger," she a low volice,." The marquis started. "Aund thon I must have fainted and fallen." "How long did you lio in a faint?" asked the sergeant. Sho shook her head. "I do not know." "Did you hear anything, any cry, such as was spoken of by the other witnesses ?" « ‘iNo !†"You know nothing of the death of Captain Sherwin ?" handâ€"â€"*" think I faintecd in the shrubbery. It was dark, and I lost my way. Ire member that the thorns cut my Daily Chronicle. the case of Mr. Charles Leatherdale, a popular young druggist‘s assistant, of Tilbury, Ont. He says; "I krow from personal experience that Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills cure rheumaâ€" tism, because they cured me of a seâ€" vere attack that for months caused me many sleepless nights and pain{ul days. I had tried a number of other medicines, but they failed. ‘Then I decided to give the pills a trial. Beâ€" fore I had finished the second box the pains began to lsave me, and by the time I rad taken two more boxes a twinge ol sheumatism gince. It is like a new man. That is more than six months ago, and I have not had a twingle of rheumatism since. It is my belief that a fair course of Dr. Williams‘Pink Pills will drive the most siubborn case of rheumatism out of the system, and as a result of my own experience I cheerfully reâ€" commend them for this trouble." The pills cure all blood and nerve troubles, such as theumatism, sciatâ€" ica, partial paralysis, St. Vitus‘ dance, anaemia, neuralg.:a, indigesâ€" tion, Leadaches, backaches, kidney troubles, and the ailments that make the lives of so many women a source of almost constant misery. _ Imitaâ€" tions and substitutes are somelimes offered, and the buyer should see that .the full name, "Dr. ‘Williams‘ Pink PMlls for Pale People," is printed on the wrapper around every box. If in doubt send direct to the Dr.' Williams Medicine Co.. â€" Brockville, | Ont., and the pills will be mailed atf 50 cents a box,or six boxes for $2.50. The pills cu troubles, such ica, partial dance, anaem l Painful Malady Can be Cured. Rheumatiem is caused by aclid in the blood. ‘That is an undisputed medical truth, Liniments, outwara applications, and alleged â€" electric treatment can never cure what is rooted in the blood. A blood disâ€" ease like rheumatism must be cured throughkh the ‘blood. That is why rtkeumatism always yields like magle to Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pillsâ€"they acâ€" taully make new, rich, red blood, This new blood conquers the painful poison, sweeps out the aching acid, soothes the necver, loosens the musâ€" cles and banishes rheumatism from the system. Proof of this is found in Erven th Most Staubborn Cases of this (To be Continued.) &A CUHE FOR RHEUMATISMm. M ty e Here, for examâ€" from a sultana to er: "Constantinople. end : Here are the My soul, my noâ€" there no other feaâ€" in the shop besides read l}__ln the paper at illness. I wish to : the marquis, TORONTO entreaty. added, in ‘There is probably no one organ reâ€" sponsible for so maimy ils as the blood and gives rise to many dl.-'! tressing symptoms. The use of Dr. t Chose‘s Kidneyâ€"Liver Pills promptiy( | cures torpid liver and biliousness, | and because of their combined LC« | tion on liver, kidneys and bowels ‘ ensure a thorough cleansing of thne ; system. i Torpid, sluggish action of the liver is responsible for all these sympâ€" toms and while you have a right to blame the liver, it may be we‘l f{or you to set about to help the liver out of difficulty. Though bile, which the healthy liver filters from the blood, is naâ€" ture‘s cathartic, and is necessary to bealthful and regular action of the ‘bpwo‘ll. it is poison when left in the If you are bilious, blame the liver. If your digestion is impaired â€" and you suflier from headache and dizzy srells, blame the liver. If your bowels are irregular, constipation and looseness allernating, blame the liver. If you have pain under the shoulder blades, feelings of fullness after meals, aching limbs, a yellow. muddy complexion, blame the liver. Are You Bilious? _ _ Blame the Liver Even royalty itself has been numâ€" bered among the exponents of peâ€" destrianism, and that muchâ€"abused monarch. Charles IL is certainly entitled to respect as a fine speâ€" cimen of an allâ€"around sportsman, Apart from enjoying perhaps â€" the unique distinction among English sovereigns of riding his own horses to victory at Newmarket, Charles Remarkable Achievement of a Woman 84 Years Old. ‘The present interest in longâ€"dizâ€" tance walking, first aroused by the Stock Exchange‘s little jaunt â€" to Brighton, is but another instance of history repeating itself. Barely A century ago the feats of Captain Barclay and others attracted sufâ€" licient attention to send the town almost mad with excitement. FEATS OF NOTED WALKERS few years. Many of these were as far from the right kind of raw maâ€" terial Trom which to make finished beef as they! well could be. During a period of high prices, markets are not so discriminating in tke qualâ€" ity of the goods offered, put when prices are low, markets are more sensitive ; they avre more easlily overâ€" stocked ; buyers are more careful in making theic selections ; and it beâ€" comes a case of the survival of the fittest only. A high class product of any kind will always command a fair price ; but on a depressed market Inferior stuff must be sacrificed at plrices far below the cost of producâ€" tion. _ _The ranchers _have also discoverâ€" ed that they must be more careful in the selection of their bulls than heretoforre, and Ontario breeders will do well to make a note of this. During recent years every bullâ€"calf. that was eligible for registration was saved with a view to selling him at some sort of price for the ranches; ‘ but the Tranchers have discovered | that they must pay more attention to quality and breeding, and that firstâ€"class bulls are cheaper at a good price than registered scrubs as a gift. It is safe to predict that in a very short time it will not be posâ€" gible to sell inferior bulls to the ranchers at any price. W. A. Clemens, Publication Clerk. | Scores of the Common Iiis of Life Due to Disorders of the Liver are Curable by DR. CHASE‘s KIDNEY Liver PILLS Another reasgon for the present unâ€" satisfactory condition of the stockâ€" er trade, not only in the Northwest, but also in the older Provinces, is the poor quality of a lazge number of the young cattle that have been placea on tn:a market during the last PR ETTE â€"SAR Li 1 ou uk Again, winter feed is scarcer than usual on the ranches thi sfall; and as a consequence many of the catâ€" tlemen that usually purchase a numâ€" ber of stockers at this season of the year have scarcely hay enough to carry their breeding stock through the winter. L ho i (ee e ie o hood of $382.00, are not anxious to buy stockers this {fall at anything like the prices prevailing for the last two or three years. ly." 4 / P wne, pointed in the prices realized. Under date of September 22nd, Mr. Chas. W. Peterson, Becretary of the Territorial Live Stock Association, writes: "Within the past week from four hundred to six hundred stockâ€" erse have reached Calgary â€" alone, and the demand here is absolutely nil. These people must either take ;_he_i_r stock elsewhere or lose heavy. unsatisfactory VARIOUS REAsoNs For THis No Demand for Stockers Out There at Present. GATTLE FOR NORTHWEST head, , Dominion Live much disap s com canr es 22 0 100C eSpRnieg | tnro::t Dr. A. W. Chare, the famous fealers, or Edman:on, Bates & Co., Toronto. To protect you against Imitations, the rortrait and siomama CÂ¥ sar c ul CC e CeReee are‘ deranged than this great pre= ecription of Dr. A. W. Chase. One fll‘l.a dose, '_25 cents a box, at aB liver, Overeating, excessive drinks Ing or irregular meals are very Hikely, to upset the action of the liver, ov» erload the system with bile and bring on biliousness or sick hbead, ache. _ Keep the liver in health by using Dr. Chage‘s Kidneyâ€"Liver Pill@ anrd you will avoid many of the common ills of life. There will then be no consiipation, the stomach troubles, no danger of kidney ang@ urinary derangements. The position which Dr. Chase‘w Kidneyâ€"Liver Pills hold toâ€"day as the leading family medicine is uBâ€" doubtedly due to their wonderfully prompt action on the liver and their combined effort on the kidneys and bowelis. There is no medicine o tainable which is more useful in: casres 0f emergency when the digesâ€" live, uflun; or exgl:gtory y stemps , In days of old, when might was Tight, the cities in the Oï¬ World , that was walled about was comimon enough, but there are very _ few towns in Britain toâ€"day which pre« serve their wurds. ui lucs. 1ew, unâ€" doubtedly the most unique is Berâ€" wick Uponâ€"Tweed, the old â€" borâ€" der town which has occupied many & page of the history oi England, and which to this very day enjoys the distinction of special mention as a place apart from the United Kings dom in every l0yal proc.amation iss sued, Here the old battiements built in the time of Queen Elizabeth remaing Intact with all but one of the anâ€" cient gateways, and even in some _cases the very ponderous gates themâ€" seles on their old rusty hlngea. in reality there are two walls, the out= side and the old one, of which now only some fragments remain stands ing, dating back to the far olf times of Edward the First, who, in the great ball of Berwick Castieâ€"only & Emall part of which now remainsâ€" Gecreed that Baliol should be King of Scotland, a decree which, as eveâ€" ery schoolboy knows was soon set defiance by Bruce and his hardy, warriors. On this outer line of the ramparts still stands the tower in which the warning notes of the war bell were rung to denote the approach of an enemy, an obfect na. turally of great interest to all vige Itors to the town. come a centenarian, suddenly resolyâ€" ed to see something of the world, and, accordingly, Mary Callinack, & Cornish â€"fishwoman, actually suc« ceeded in walking from Penzance to London, a distance of nearly 300 miles, in order to view the wonders of the great exhibition in Hype Park,. Mary created a great _ sensation there, being noticed by Queen Victoâ€" ria.â€"Strand Magazine. F o gua0 2 1O CZ Cp", TTAPVCuIRe in the interval two members of the fair sex were credited with equaling Captain Barclay‘s great walk, truly remarkable instances of feminine enâ€" durance if properly authenticated. In 1851, also, a sprightly country dame, wanting barely sixteen years to beâ€" After 1817 the craze for lingâ€"di# tance walking seems almost to haveo died out, only to appear again a :ma‘x:ter_ of a century ago, although very lengthy interval lunch followed at 12, either from beefsteaks or mutton chops, of which latter comâ€" modity his chronicler guardedly reâ€" marke that the captain ate a considâ€" erable quantity. Dinner at 6 consistâ€" ed elther of roast beef or more chope, with which he drank porter and two or three glasses ol wine, and to wind up the day as he commenced, supper at 11 consisted of a cold fowl, the pedestrian having, we are told, conâ€" eumed five or six pounds of animal food during the twentyâ€"four hours, garnished with such vegelables as were in season. an ace of losing the match, but it was only by exercising the most deâ€" termined courage that he succeeded in overcoming the painful exhaustion resultant from the loss of regular sleer for such a lengthy period. His weight at start was substantial, being 13 stone 4 pounds, while at the finish, after taking a bath and nourishment and sleeping almost conâ€" tinuously for seventesn hourr, he was able to turn the scale at 11 stone. Ima T _ adl. s . WA UH The pedestrian‘s billâ€"ofâ€"{fare during this walk was no less gigantic than the task accomplished 4 Breakfast at 5 consisted of such trilles as a roast fowl, washed down with a pint of strong ale, and folâ€" lowed by two cups of tea, with bread and butter. _ After what appears a his lengthy undertaking. ‘This interâ€" esting diary, however, discloses the fact that be not only came within C Oe C d hour, such a performance being then unprecedented. The match was much discussed, a start being made â€" over Newmarket heath on June 1, 1809, lasting until July 12, or nearly fortyâ€" two days in all. No performanse was ever better nuthenticated and so thoroughly did the judges perâ€" form their task that the state of the weather was â€" recorded and an elaborate diary written up each day getling forth the pedestrian‘s condiâ€" tion. _ As nearly every one knows ga.pt. Barclay _proved ruccessful in At the close of 1808 Capt. Barclay fairly electrilied the whole country by undertaking for a wage of 1,000â€" guineas to walk 1,000 miies in 1,000 :onlocutlve honr'-, a mile in every, & penchant for walking from Lonâ€" don to York and back. His {firet journey was made in 1773, when be covered the distance of 394 miles in â€"slx days, with nearly six bours to W alled Town in Britain author, are appears & & s y