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Durham Review (1897), 4 Apr 1907, p. 3

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hid me pen a an]! in a. tad we a. eWIL the an- " and ‘en bro- 's WORK "I. 5-0 as that m to pay it applicant. L The in]: M the up- b “I. said that mn In- when“ Ind Self- ON. IAN it! were mu: ht AN H: tee lay witnco that St d Test it as You Will IISALABAII It In too late. Her voice had been heard. The other can't-3e rushed down upon them. The two vehicles met almost in . com-ion. Two men from the chain jumped out and seized the heads ot the bones. The cub stopped. ' L J open tro, door on his ride, a ring from the tsnrringe, knocked down the post-boy who stood in his WI], uni struck straight straight news: the heath, dir- appearing in a thicket I few hundred yards off. Rose left alone in the carriage. strug- gled to dise.mbarrass herself of the heavy folds of the cloak that had been thrown over her head. She had just unneeded in freeing herself when she heard some one approach the window, and n rich, manly voice say: "You are perfectly sole now. dear. madame. (limp-me yourself, and in a few moments we shall offer you the rest and refreshment you so much need." "The Duke of Beresleigh'." exclaimed Lady Etheridge, in glad surprise. " the turned toward the window nt which he “The Duke of Lndy Etheridge, turned toward t Mood. entering the cab. "Oh, Heaven be pained. What an en- cape I have had! But oh, what fortun- ate circumstance was it that sent you to my aid. It seems wonderful." "No; it is very natural, my dear lady I Etheridge. An attack like that male "p- on your carriage could not for an hour remain a secret. A few minutes aha! mar coach had been ntopPed aim rob. ' and you had been carried off. and your servants left gagged and bound up- on the highway. they were fund by name countrymen returning Iro.atre tram a lrolie. As soon as they were wt at liberty ,they related all the particulars of Magpie. Information was T,tv'n to thel authorities and the whole con“ ubulary force of the neighborhood was raised fot the apprehension of the ruffiana. A nan. mounted on a swift home, brought the intelligence to Berealeigh about mid- night. I ordered post horses and taking an omeer with me. started at once for the Magpie Inn, which seemed to be the eentre of the investigation. I need not any that I was on my way thither when "iilTnsriiaGhiUGrrithut dashed Then. with a how the duke left the ab and beckoned the offieer, who now approached. with tte cubman in custody. I IG the cab that was belting you way. And now. Lady mm. pny excuse nu- a few moments. The principal miscreant has fled. but I must see to the security of the mbman. who. if he is not an accomplice. will be useful as , Witness." . The prisoner looked excessively fright- .ed, and. without waiting to be ques- tmned. began his defence: "Please. your lordship. I was not i' fait.. The gent " hengaged my cab tole me bw 'e 'ad a crazy ’oman to any huff to the mud-'onse, and 'ow 'e waned to take 'er “my in the night, to save hexpming of 'er infirmitics; and when 'e brought 'er and put 'er hinto the carriage I 'ad no suspicious; and when she pom-d wiolent I thought 'ow it was natural, peeing she mu "ad, and I agreed to all she said, And tried to “I. her down like--didn't I now. my lady?" he concluded. appnling lingu- hriously to Lady Ethrridar. "I think it is very likely that he ope-ks the truth," said her ladyship. "I trust that you will prove to have been a dupe rather than an accomplice. Did you Know the person who cum-gull TOtt in this nefarious business?” inquired you in th the duke, "Never set heyu on 'im before, your tract" "Did not the Inet of his being marked excite your suspicions u to the pro- priety of his actions!” "No, your lordhsip’s gun; because 'e um ‘ow 'e were the mask on account of the mad Indy. 'o could not I bear the - _ . I74 L“A\-- - Ill-u "'""J. __ V ,7 - night of 'im, Waugh 'e In 'er brother, w’ich we know as mad folks Mllen take . miolik'ulg ttgin their friends." “W's. he masked when he came to you to cum the eats?" "No. your gun’s 1oex1ship--T beg put- arn---I mean your lordship's we. 'e ’ndn't no mask hon when 'e how "av" "What sort of B looking - 1.5 he then'." "A tall, stoutish, fair-completed nun, 'ith light hair and whiskers; n swat- when gent, with moat the tseaatifuiust amii. u hover I see; I gent no no one would think any hill on. 'E spoke " Could ha' made the tears run down your “Bligh grace’l check hot 'is poornnd fee. Lady Etheridge," he exclaimed, GREEN TEA Is Guaranteed to be Absolutely Pure and of Incomparable Quality. [and packets only. 40c, MK and 60c per lb. At all grocers. 'im before, your sister. 'thr could I know 'e wu deceiv- ing bot me, and a leading hot me bunny t" _ _ -rGilG questioning on the part of the duke led to no further information, and his grace said: . “You will have to go with its, and be examined by a magistrate, who is now " the Magpie, collecting evidence. Re. sume your seat on the box, and drive I: quickly as possible to the Mugpie Inn." The man bowed and .went to obey, when the officer. respectfully touching his hat, said. "I beg your we" pardon, but I think I can identify the man of whom the eabman speaks as a desperate person, of whom the constables have long been in search." "You think so. from such a very gen- eral description as that of 't tall, stout. istt, lisrht-eompleeted gent? Why, there are ten thousand men in London to suit that desvription. It might be you, for instance." "Yes, your grace. that general deserip. tion might suit, as you any, ten thousand men in town; but the particular descrip-l tion,' a gent with very light 'air and whiskers, a sweet-spoken gent, with the{ most benutifullest smile as hever I see,' and the rest of it taken together, could‘ suit only Roberts," said the officer, re- IMMIJ- . :ct.et91 "And who is Roberts?” "Your grace never heard of him by that name. but your grace will know him better as _--- --.-_ " the officer stooped and whispered n name, at which the cheek lof the duke grew pale with horror. "No. it cannot be! has he ventured baek t" "Yes, your grace, he has been seen." The Duke of lleresleigb seemed Io painfully interested as almost to have forgotten that Lady Etheridge was half fainting front need of food and rest; but suddenly arousing himsel he re-entered the eats, and gave the order to drive on. A half hour's rapid drive brought them ‘to the Magpie, where a group of idlers, brought together by the new: of the robbery and abduction, were collected. l The Duke of Beresleigh handed Lady Etheridge out and hurried at once into the best parlor, where he placed her in charge of the landlady. The duke then repaired to another room, where the lmagistrnte Wirq sitting, and where the "ia/j,"'",') was already brought before him to give his testimony. The man could only repeat what he had al- ready told the duke, and so. when his words had been duly taken down In writing, he was set at liberty. Meanwhile. Lady Etheridge having fpartaken of u slight repast and reposed herself upon a sofa for half an hour, rose ‘and gave mudienee to the Duke of Berea- ford and the Magistrate, who waited on _ her there. to receive her statement. When she had eireumstarttially detail- Meanwhile. Lady partaken of n slight herself upon a sofa to and gave audience to ford and the Magistrate, who mum on her there. to receive her statement. When she had eireumstantituly detail- ed all that had happened to her, the ma- gistute expresed his astonishment It events so much more complicated than had been suspected, . I,IL_-_‘__ “,A'A ir: That the pretended deliverers were in league with the first assailants could not be doubted. But what the motive of the masked man could have been in car- tying her off from the house in the wood could not be surmised. _ . "UNI -II n... The mgistnto. having I evidence possible from a', took leave and withdraw They reached Bereslengn Home at nightfall. lady Etheridge at once retired to bed to seek the uittnterrupted rest she so much required. And the Duke related to his mother all the particulars of the abduction and the rescue. Feeling sure that Rose would moire m for mnnv days. the duchess ad- Feeling sure that Rose womu mom: repooe for many days, the duchess ad- dremd a respectful letter to the queen, explaining the cause that inevitnMy de- layed the honor Lady Etheridge desired of immediately waiting upon her mn- jesty. Indy Etheridge remained quietly It homo for s few days, neither making nor receiving visits. Since the night of the abduction and w. "M-..“ ___-ie v Since the night of the abduction and rescue. no further intelligence had been gained of the perpetrators of the vio- Jen-e. The Duke of Bereoleitrh's manner to Lady Etheridge was now so full of re- verential tendernes- that her Indyship wu not surprised when, seated in her boudoir one mg. she was intenupt- ed hr the entrance of bet maid with the 'r'eiiiiCfiiJreosigtt House CHAPTER XXI liming eoileeed all the from all the parties, "My lady, his grace, the dub, and! his re-pecu, and desires to know it your kayaks.) is disengaged end vi! receive an. "Certainly, show his grace In," replied Lady Etheridge, hying aside her book, [ and beginning to tremble with instinct- ive apprehension of the scene that was coming. The duke eotered. Lady Etheridge 'rose to receive him, pointed to a chair, end resumed her own seat. "r hope I find you quite recovered from the effects of Tour late agitation?" rid the duke, as he nested. himself near er. "Quite, I thank you. No duet re- mains but the pleasant one of a lively gratitude to my prorerver/' replied Rose, in a low voice. . “There was nothing to be ttt,'t, fut. Would, indeed, that I could as happy " to merit your-t dare not say grati- tude, but-favor. He paused, in that embarrassment that must nlways 1t- tend the ayostl of a deep love. "I feel that I have much, my much, to be grateful for to 'f,A','", gme’. family, who were very kin to me while yet my prospects were my question- able. And as for the events of that fear- ful night, though they shook me so much. I would go through all that agony of terror again for the compensation it has brought me in the returning kind- nass of dear friends," said Rose, In a voice vibrating with her sottl's deep emo- tion, and with her blue eyes full of in at tears. Her worda. her looks, her tones, be. traying the profound love of her own pure heart, thribied him to the very depths of his soul. He could have throun himself at her feet and covered her hands with passionate kisses; and though he restrained himself, his whole frame shook, and his voice teembled with the curbed passion of his soul, as he took her hand, and said: "Lady Etheridge, you grievomly misunderstand me if you suppose that since those days of our first acquaintance at Bcresleigh Court my heart has changed, except in loving you more and more deeply day by day. Rose, dear Rose'. 1 was a. poor man, with only a barren title ml at "debt-encumbered property to offer you. You wcre an ineiperieneed country girl, scarcely conscious of your advantages as the heiress of one of the oldest baronics and largest fortunes in England. I knew that were you once introduced into soci- ety, your beauty, rank and wealth would afford you the widest field of choice nm- I orig the most distinguished suitors, who would be sure to lay their titles and for. tum-s at your feet. lou had no world. ly father or managing mother to warn you of these things. Should, I then take mhantagc of your isolation and In- experismee to thrust myself between you and your most brilliant prot'etst No, nose. no; l saw you launched upon the sea of fashion, saw you courted by the most illustrious parties in the kingdom; and with a heart wasting for your love, 1 kept aloof, for, Rose, I loved you so truly, that l was willing to sacrifilce my [own happiness for your welfare; and no . . -- “.5... " ' “.3" V‘Vll '"'t't"'"'" .v. iv... .V _ man truly loves a woman who is not will- l ing to do likewise, it necessary," He] paused from deep emotfoil, and Rose, with her eyes full of tears, taltered forth the words: "Oh, it was very generous, very noble; but if you had had more simple faith in a womun's heart, you would have saved up both some months of misunderstand- ing and pain." "Nay. sweetheart, had I prematurely. thrust myself upon your favor, 1 should have reproaehed myself for such egotis- tical preeipitNury, and perhaps been haunted by the thought that 1 had In- tervened between you and a more bril- liant destiny. But now that I have ob. served you through the season, and seen you discourage the advances of those whom the dowagera call 'the most desir- able parties in own,' now, Rose, I ven- ture with a free conscience, to lay my poor strawberry leaves at your feet." -- .. - "AHA an...“ “alumni WVI W.W..F. VHII'V __.'_r .- ,,_ . tP.t all answer, Rose silent! yplaced her hand In his. He pressed that fair little hand to his lily" anytngt. '""%irii'ii,'" iiiG"iiirie," 1 inn seek r..y mother and make her happy I)? sending her to embrace her dttuititler:!ttow./' Rose rabid 1R yet," murmired Rose, in a faint voice. _ "Not, yet, my love; what mean: my "I have shown you my heart, you know that it is all your own, and since that knowledge makes you happier, I do not regret that you possess it, but barrnssment. "But what, sweet Rose?' "You do not know upon what an ob. acute brow it is that you offer to place the ducal coronet of Beresleigh." " do not understand you, dear Row." "Oh," she broke forth, vehemently, " would the play were over." H iG liovver. ldbked at her with a. pain- fulerplexit,v, She went on: .. m..." u - "Ther world calls me Lady Etheridge of Swinburne, but I am no more Baron. ess Etheridge “an: I am the Empress Catharine of Russia} "My dear Rose." "I am not; I feel that I am not." "But the House of Lords----" “Has made a mistake; not the first time in the highest tribunal in the realm has done so." "Lady Ethori'lge, the chain of evidence that established your rights was com- plete, evon to the satisfaction of the most conservative of those old peers. WYhat reason have you, then, to think, that a mistake has been made t" "No external reason, perhaps, but a deep-seated internal conviction that all this deluaive glory of mine is a mere passing pageant. I am but a poor little robin in the plumage of a glorious par- roquette. or a poor deer in the skin of a lioness :or a little player baroness who must sustain her part as well as she can until the play is done, and then sink 111- to hot real insignificance. But, oh, what a heavy payment fate may exact for this masquerade with which she is amusin me. I can fa Hey how the world that J.' tors me nothing but adulation now, will then follow my vanishing form with‘ laughter and scorning. Some, I know“ would pity the poor girl who had boa made so great a fool of by fortune." "Oh, Rose, could it be " your morbid imagination forbodes, could you be ac. prived of all the advantageous attributes of rank and wealth, to me you would ever he the "ttte-ever the dearest tru- mro of my tite," said the duke, m- 'fihr,r,v,,,tit' 1MB.“ ed Ill.! '" borrowed plumage; stripped do] my false-pleador: TrtiuitreiqMrt . hug! little that. of 1m do”. adv o visor as new may cult She paustd in the most painful om- 9n Mathew. tUte/utr,.,',:',',",',,,,',') tell you of this strong conviction of mine with all the emphuu of mooring to m not, no that you mny know oft certain- ty that you are offering your dueal "e out, not to the Buoneu Etheridge of Swinburne, but to . poor outage girl, who is forced to play that part for . season, and ploy: it in enough, no doubt." . "And even if this were no, my, nt for a moment that it in so, that you are the humble village maiden that you seemed . year ago, I tell you that I love and honor you beyond all other crea- tures; I entrent you to be my wife, and “lure you that your acceptance of my wit will make me the heppient,ae Four rejection of it would leave me the most durable young men. Now, dearest, give me your hand in token that you are I mine." "Not yet!’ "Not yet.' What now, dearest Rose t" "There are other things yet that you must hear before committing yourself.' "WUt can they bet Speak, dear Rose, for I do not understand to what you " lude, and I am certain only of one thing .--that nothing you have to tell shall sep- arate us. You are mine only, and for- ever." "Listen first. Supposing me to be that' humble cottage girl that I was a year ego, and that, I may be again a year hence; and granting that, as such, you thought me not unworthy to share your rank. still you would like to thin kthat youh ad won the first love of my heart, for every man delights in believing that he possesses the first, as well as the only love, of the maiden whom he seeks to make his wife. Is it not so?" - "Rose, in the name of heaven, what 'ee you?” - -. . . W "Thit you. George, Duke of Berealeigh, had not the first love of the poor girl whom you ask to become you; Tiff." 'riiLiii_iiaGiiG, wiat in this you are about to tell met" - “T‘Trlrnint iroor Roseu heart was lost and won long before she knew the Duke of Beresleiglt(' _ _ _ .. . "Oh, girl, girl! how cruelly you have trifled with my happiness and your own peace'. You love another!" exclaimed the duke, starting to his feet, in great agitation. . . . "No, no, you mistake me-widely mis- take me. I do not love another; that great delusion is long since quite over," said Rose, blushing at her own vehem. once. "Explain, explain, in the name of hea- ven, explain!” cried her lover, hastily returning to his seat. "Listen, then, and, oh! listen patient- ly. Your agitation frightens and un- l nerves me," {altered Rose. "‘:F(;;givé nie, dearest; I will be calf," replied her lover, eontroling himself by an effort. - - "Two years ago, when I was a poor village girl, living with my reputed ii) ther, there came a stranger to our vil- lage. He was handsome. accomplished,‘ and very fascinating. Under the name of William Lovell, he sought and made my acquaintance. I was a romantic dreamer, longing for a higher, freer, and mote beautiful life than our sordid cir- cumstances permitted. William Lovell appeared to me to be the embodiment of perfect beauty, wisdom and goodness- the thing destined to lead me up to that higher life to which I aspired.’ (To be continued.) u "With a. box of BabyU Own Tab. lets on hand I feel wt With as if I had a. doctor in the house." This is the experience of Mrs. John Young Auburn, Ont. Mrs. Young adds:-- "I have used the Tablets for teeth- ing and other troubles of childhood and have never known them to fail." LHundrwls of other mothers and?” Pf enthusiastic in their prniee. lie, indigestion, diarrhoea. worms. con- stipation and other little ills are speedily cured by this medicinelw‘lt - . . . I p, _I._.-.._ 1AM - __ “yum“, -...-_ __, _ is absolutely safe-always does good-- cannot possibly do harm, and you have the gum-“lee of a government amlyst that. the Tablets contain no opiate or poisonous soothing stuff. Sold by mars. pine dealers or by null at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medienie w., iiGeiwifle, Ont Weary Willie on Socialiun. A Sod-1m I Sociall-t; than what I pine to be. With lodgings at the Wilder! while I set the pee-pul tree, With motor cm that do 1 mile in sixty seconds nat. In which to run the ”and. ot the pro-le- u-ri-It: With 1'll'f"' mercuric- end I "let " my I e. To help me as I ton to bring about tho Onnd Divide. may , to the bad end thin:- ls getting an - I went to be a. Socidiat with million: in the bane. MI " mun-w .. ..-. I'll out In all the “no with of! b - the Poor t In”. There's Happy Jack Ind 'Naco Petr-- chey'vo omen md to me That wealth wu not amid up the WI.) it one: be. And I'm for I dlvvy. though the kicker: all me cnnk- I mt t? be u Seculm with millions In the I want a aulet :3me home to rent in when w- hot, A blame-oh at Leno: or a humble Newport And when the binned W: come, with shy. reluctant air, I'll tell 'om how poor father made we dough than was his all-re: And how-not ret, but soon. you Ltow--r'll give it all any. 99 when the Job I- open, here's my mum- tion blank- t "ut.'" a Socltnst with million: In the n . an noon. work I've - done I "robr-"ir, mn’a moat preview boon," when I've sheared the comm from a mack o' bonds er so. BABY’S DOCIOR. rise u 10 o'clock and all“ A", Jam-1. "oo%sr Man. an Sum. Nature Needs Animus in liking - Spm‘is the season when your syI- l "1 tem toning up. In the grins you 1. must hue new blood just " the he! “I must have new up. Nature demands it. I " Without new blood you will feel wank and ' a languid; you may have twinges of rheu- li'; autism or neursdgti, occasional head. 51 ‘oches, variable appetite, pimples or or it {unions of the skin, or a. pole ir'ueet','.'i" l u t itthLTti IN SPRING. his fun" a, in‘tllese sources of ttteat"" flQ sthe fouuts of continuance an; (Montml Gareth.) 'tsl ti ell-being and near them they located A great deal oi the Legisa ion ieir pueblos. Save sir, no elanenw of aiming to make strikes impossible has attire are nearer to human Att than been founded upon that of New Zea- lose combined into the prlrnltsve fluid land, or, as it has become generally 'hieh must always be within reach of known, "ths land with.out strikes." len who put themselves into the SKIS]; Prophets there have been in plenty to f the desert. The primary .knowlalge 'll point out that the alleged OW at- he tribes who were the prone” and tained for the policy of compulsory ar. very human being who Ira"."""' made hitration was illusory, . since all the is home in the great Apt?'" desert, operations of the law in question had one complete as to the location, distrr- been under . rising labor market, ."? lution and idiosyncrasies of the 'vt""',?:),,?'":,"!?) by increases in "lutt which mpply. . ed made the raising of wages possible. .lt. Spring water is naturally more P” . was granted that in times of prosperity iy the inhabitants of rthtiys,fyEt., tsort- _manufacturers would be found willing to I ;udes than that from the living streams, meet the demands of labor, or to 'usoept l mouse it is always drinkable, 'eh',?, compromises. But when these good It hand, while the watercourse', whie?liia;s had passed and manufacturers for the greater part of the as,.',',',.,',,,"} would be unable to obtain good We“. sinuous reaches of dry sand, fe',,','?,' 'll would the workmen comm to Wm flood a quickly disappearing “PP yd; the '"""ry"r etittM Not even the thinned mud which will n.ot be 39:“; most enthuslaatlo-ot the supporters of by man or beast except m the ' 1ieiitr'trcs' ttrrt'.tratlots was sure on this of thirst. . ' int. answer, and the one special. One is not “Trim? therefor? {that}; now heen given. Tho New Zealand a primitive people on" Thry'u!l'i','hiiettg, of mutton can only obtain springs as sacred; in fyh tte . tt:l,t'ii', ruling price on the British mar- of the aUGntare_tyk pheulitr mt . ket. That means that he can only worship of springs. The Mimi?“ ' afford to pay a certain price for his world.ivide, has el a vert ““3:ho iabor. Nerf hing ago the men employed time, iGruetts.,i,tel.f 1n the fo :e.in one of the large freezing eatuluii. of the highest c.i.vili'alioet Htl ”we: a merits demanded an increase of wages. in its manifestations a wow inter."' ll/rrp, demand went, as usual, to "in. body of myth “pd fsrry: But m e tration. The employers were able to southwest the arid Jivirie.ttt,re lor, show that in the existing condition ot intensified this feature of priyliti,rt t'll. 'the market it was impossible for them turo that no 'spring m the Pg.""' " ,'"ll'i to pay more, and the arbitrators out evidence of many offerings' ”h o agreed with them. The result was deities of water. it P. small “indent Si that the men went back to work. But that the Pueblo Indians “mom "fldl instead of killing eight snoop per hour s rings with speeiFl T,":g,tfl,','i J, 'll they only killed two, hoping thereby they woo, around them-myth . l , l to defeat the award of the court and tion and made then o.b8ete 1fh"t2,t',','l' force the employers to give them the worship. To one .mu'l'ited "i,t,U2et'i'li demanded wages. But it did not stop vironment and its radical ll th _,'l', here. Men engaged in other freezing seems to have irr.y,yee,r,tlfigl', “3f, plants. recognizing the futility of sod:- iuneoneiotts srenertu.ieti? P! 'T f2 ing an incmse from the arbitration ferings to Spring! will not "a?“ o at" court, have, in open disregard of the simple explanation. Perhaps t "d'J,'"l'2 provisions, of the act, kit their work of the un11ergroynd ',',oh'eid1 “rial“ In some instances fines have been In ling up from unknown dept "a'l',TJ'i"e%h1rsfd. on the strikers and the quea always even to the observer v. I' 'lrll;". ition now iiiiivtriiijii2it? hum it himself free from the trauma Sign ef-"he possihiiity of col ting these fines erstition. has hlso had a pgwe Gaikf, man cannot very well m . flat fact on the mind of the In :31me to without money, and to send him h tl like ”my. othtetl'.5.'! Jh,e,',tl'l,t now.»- ewness. tPt “it- lee..' "a: Past Rev. R. J. Cmpbell's “New ttooiogy" Start: Vlgoroul Cantata The great modification! in ”Hum both! whlch we tahiatt - ttrrouqtrout the Club- tian world luv. recently boon mnnttar.tittq than)“: with “poem Waco In m- Und. The leader itt radio-l rad-Ion ot mm In R. J. Gumbel]. pastor ot the on: Town. long . wind louder among the Euluh iioieonrtortstu". He " about to nuke I you ot on country, “mm whoring- ot pro- vinchl mm " their request. upon “Tho Renaud Ytseotogy." . [manual " Mr. Campbell reject- may ot the chle! 6oqtn" or the blue. such " the story ot ma nu of mu it Illl he can how theology um: whlch it: rollover. In on- deavorinl to mm the long-W bo- lletl tn MING. f Mr. Campbell m " vlevc - " (0110's: , “Tho mums point ot the - theology a . _.t-a h. n.- umnmenoo od God and the n- n n. -. ---v [out a. mu“ kmder u borikomforntu". He H "tol ot on country. “an!“ l mom pm " their " Renaud TheoW-" [mutual an Mr. 0-11:le the cue: dogma. of the tt nor! of up nu of mu: It ttteoiottr wtth which it! 1 donor!“ to mm the nets 1n itinqiand. Mr. Campbell m " (0110's: "The mm; point ot th bone! in the “luminance of lama-l 00922,“ of.“ , where It alum Iron: um Multan! made . you. um one“. udGodonmot nun to be 8 revehuon ot C "no one was to the neu- God. The wow 'trod' sand: mun wmo ail an. one. even the most “neon rung. believe. in this room -.--- In unmon with an belief in the llnuuu'cuw - -me" _ trential onenes- at and end mm. This is; where it amen from Unit-thaw. Uni- f urinals!!! made . you gull had put nun on l one side and God on the other. We believe I who to be a revelation ot God and the uni- verse one menu to the uli-mnniieamion at l God. The word 'God' sands tor the tatinit. mmy whence ell thin. proceed. Eng-p; one. even the mast nut-owning mug-j rurliet, believes in this mlity. Thet new the- ology in cannon with the whole thiamine world believe. that the finite universe in one aspect or “pres-ion at that .ealitr. but it thinks ot 'it or him as con-donning rnttter than t blind tot-cc. thereby 1i,',ftQ',ull"l od- enM~ Believinu this. we believe they. in thus no red animation between humanity and the deity. our being is the my I. ood'n. “that“ our conscious-nu- of it " limited. We i',',',',",',,' ”volition ot God in 01¢!!th noun B. "The new (moiety hold. that human nu- ture about be marinated in um. ot in own hum-t. then-elm " "was an. Christ. tdt'otillliiiir.ritiijirdrg"tritNtu'f, whet humility min to he. the lite which Jlltu'lrFiEeifihQutr2MNert'l Mace. Bohruwomhbietoug. m. high-thud“ irgrtsteaatttteed. in the life which in lived. in who ot the whoie. u the lite of new. Every an is . gonna] ctrrot-e, m, mum-non ot a. mat iituet-9yt. side ot to nature at and mm which all bin-hilt! In con. tooth. summit: in (WI, one. All w _ " ___.a-- ALA. -___. one. even CM mom . rung. bellman in this clog In common wit: world b91107. am an aspect or ”onion , "Mn.“ ot-tt pr hlm‘n "9""."e v 1trtatt I. tho “(OR 10 Thu 9 the truth that -- ALA “Mn an. FG in" a. m" - - ..- W"""'""" Grit u an no M when HIM tS)t ' iaiiitrEe'"S't tMe Jam at on mm W- than" not: upon MI " . "1" m an. um. It u t,rdityirye.tt...t?',ty,'d2,ttf, (a In: It I: an -1.r. my“... - -. -- -- -- _ to “but“. Pun h the alien at tho mm a but w m unannou- which tt WORSHIP " SPRINGS. Health-Giving Blood. suns iriirrisiii CHURCHES. TORONTO y found in the south- se United States and ' have been from an- M a most valued pol" es who dwelt in this e sources of life-giving G7aiu. that anon-I. It undemo- ll - - a good In an world (a. an; shit the fol-aboun- 1-0..“ ._..V- t'rN'lllhG'kiifriiiitEiyft2enf,f not an be W at. , 00‘ a I. a by I mu“ all“! ill- and Wit unamunmmm at all: and... “My - this clot . lumen. The thin. w. lid - 'lh",tdreT,CVrarFEiteetP"" volviu mic and diacritics. "The new and“! which. with ”nu-day an -qrrrreot of mod“ wince. tor it be- - hul! to he in may Wm. It in the undou- calculation ot an climatic W. RM“! (“lanthanum mouth! with scientific which at ch. in- mnt religion "mum known a the ‘hihie. While recognising tho was ot the bible a a unique record ot minions entri- lm. It t'GraiTitTritaiiuyyteeer, [u it would my other book. It helm on , the on“ of tolidoua authority it within (not l ,rtttsoot). tho_hunnn ooul. Individuni m in A, L- "has a- umi- my "e tntion. The employers were. able to ' ]_:show that in the existing condition of §:h_'the market it was impossible for them the to pay more, and the arbitrator: hen used with them. The result no rd t t the men went bark to work. But Elli-t instead of killing eight sheep per hour adi- they only killed two, hoping thereby ious to defeat the award of the court and en- {one the employers to give them the this demanded wages. But it did not stop 'ugh here. Men engaged in other freezing " plants. recognizing the futility of god:- such ing an incmee from the. arbitntion tery court, have. in open disregard of the wel- provisions, of the not, kit their work. min In some instances fines hue been lm. we.lpossed on the! tt1t'h Tut; .331” . tion now con roni cw _ . 'ul! '01.- magma a! mining these fin: mm; - ..T...- _.--"" - iraGt'stirtaGrte.triyeiete.Pc "r by 'rTrTt"iiririTtuiitettty'r'""'"' - from what some. tt can "The m mm. at can... has". in the Immortality ot tho soul. but only on the mum! am - individual autumn-I In - A - ‘---...__u a-ua--- that mu mun an-.. ‘7'... ._...___,, . '" of the universal comm that can not be destroyed. It believe. that than no GUr"UiGa"iCtttois".rytitrerryitf_te coal tn the unseen world hetero tt boon-u fully uni otrrteetotttslr one with In mum. - . -__H ‘__“_.. A- .LA -. Tau' C'"k2""iii'iiTGar 'acuu” iii/gel) 'text world by our behaviour in am. and alum:- tr gory ml will be M“. h ' -- - . w- ... #___n_ n- AI..- . n u w... n... -... _V p,“ _ “From all am it will my ho am am the new theology brush- up“. any ot the not! laminar dogma tum m the pulpit. We believed“: [homotduhuintln Maul sense is untrue. tt in mm. not l dtteat'i. ticriGaaotan-ir-tefor the ethic“ luau-action of can We Minn that the very trngteeeee0on ot the world to- dar in due to Godu will lad is a wothiu out ot him-elf with in puma not wholly hidden from Ill. The doctrine of on which hold- uo to he Nunavut” tor dood- that w. can not. hob we Wleve to be h (do. M. Sin is ninplo lam. It is . violation ot an kw ot i love. We reject whom an common um:- oremtion of atoaemertt, that undul- is bent- en tor our hull. We believe not in h an! judnnem. but in s new that in not "acceding. lEvary dn involve- ulna-RIF, suffering which can not be retained by In) work ot mower. When a deed in done in con-queue” are eternal. " .. . A uvuwwww ...- Wm... "We believe Jau- b and VII dNirte, but so nu we. Hi. million V. to was In rum. our divinity and our one”. with God, Ind v. Ire etr1ed to in. the m. whlch he lived." OOXPULSORY ARBITRATION AND WHAT IT LEADS T0 IN NEW nu. posed on the atrikem Ind the qua- . tion now iiiiivtriiieiii2it? hum ha the poutrih'lr of col ting these fines. A mun cannot very well piy . tinot without money, and to send hum h td t in not. helping either his family or he {SCREW 'ertilr' m timny or In. employer who wnntn his labor. Mhr land without strikes" has used to be, A Sample New York larder Trial. ' .Au Itnlinn and his wife kept " sit. ' intrsiatid on the upper out side. Ono‘ summer night four other Italians, pm I ing by, asked to be served with clams, for which twenty cents wu Inked In yment. A dispute arose as w the null. g: of dome served, and while the keqr er of the stand Wu lumping over count- ing the shells one of the Italian. (1r. . Mr and slashed him across the fare, 1 from the lobe of the our to the corner of the mouth. Such . cut I never av.‘ I could only think of a butcher sluhing _ open a rib of beef with his clenver. The l iwelt from the our was as thick as a " "out whipoord. For this cut the Italian I wreaked eight P"-" light sentence in t 'propoftion to the sire of the out. Whih l the cutting was being done another at [these Italian banditti drew a revolvor land fired point blank at the non and !his wife, but, like pott of the 14th THE SYSIEM rhlts. I"! nut, any, .-_v ”Vie __ race, he was I- bad shot. and the bullet I went wide. Two policemm, standing . block away, hearing the shot and tho l scrum: of the women, rushed up just in l time to amt the whole party, the one i Italinn having the smoking revolver ln his hand. Upon extuninatimt, then and there, it was found that the “mi VII not loaded. Now, had these police- I men been an shrewd u the Italian, they would have searched the ground for the "rtridges. Which It Mindy M any when he saw the policemen nonl- l ing; but no, not until they ruched Ihe ‘police station was thin thought of, and I ithen it we: too late, on my one i,ghtg 1 {have placed the eartridgea there on the I Ipnvement, where they wen subsequent- l ly found several hours after the _ Of the two officers who were mud l in this “test only one apps-wed in court ‘ f Had the revoirer was not produod, " ati. Now, In indictment must set forth, In order to prove intent to kill, that the pistol wu "loaded with powder a. Ull," and u this could not be proud, the M was compelled to acquit the do feudgyt.--Hnrry P. Manon, in Leslidu I. u diEio, it mutt in tut Gunny Ind Anon-in m add to he lining up beside Run-h in ope-idol to the proposition by Greet Britain and the United States to dim. It The We - conference the question of limiting Iran-elk. They may for the present render concerted action towned disarmament impracticable, but even the raising of the question will be n gain. Tokuenthehngermchildnnlncw of tim in the but!“ public schools, the Fire Chief recommends that tele. phonic or Cuo elem boxes be intelled in ‘Ill the schools end that in one school the stairway. be divided in two and n railing placed in the centre of each an that when an - Wu being effected the children would be less likely to fail through over-crowding. CURRENT ', l COMMENT, The Runsylvnnin Legishtune is con- sidering a bill to fix the punishment for burglary no u to dimming that form of mine. It in gropond in the' bill that the entering of a house " night with in- tent to steal or to commit a felony shall, if it be the perpetrator'. first often, be puniohablc with not more than twenty nor less thnn five yours' imprisonment, but that if it be his second offence, he 1 shall be deemed a hardened criminal and shall be sentenced to life imprisonment. The burglar is usually ready to eNaennsit murder severely Commissioner of Public Safety Smith, of Beheueetad.v, N. Y., in considering the question of providing policemen who put- rol the outlying districts at night with dogs to aid them in running down the' evil doors. The experimem, it is 'said, has been tried, with considerable success in Europe. In the citieo of Belgium- Antwerp, Brussels, Ghent. Liege all others-the dogs have been found very _ useful in aiding the police authorities in bdetecting and preventing crime. The LSdIejectady experiment will be “lubed nit! considerable interest. _ - Speaking ot tbt. demand for a limita- [90' 'of speed of railway trains, the iirooklyn Eagle says it is at basis justi- fied, but it adds: But where should that limit he placed'. Within what limitation will the factor of safety be secured“! Some obstinate and not no well known he“ enter to complicate, if they do not arrest, judgment. Nuppoae the rate of speed is limited to forty miles an hour. How are We to deal with the fact that more accidents have occurred to trims runuing on a scheduled rate of low athan forty miles an hour than have happened to those sdleduled for a rate exceeding that speed'. More lives have been lost on the trains of the leaner than the greater speed. It is an obstinau Safety to life ind limb is not to be seemed so much in the limitation of speed as it in in applying the prema- tions to all the trains, of whatever rate of speed. (but, applied to the highqnd trains, have made them "fe. fact future prove a vast saving to the rail- ways. Stillwell and St. Clair, of the American Institute of Electrical Engin- ctra, estimate that if all the railways in tho United Mates, which represent 216,. 974 miles of track were why operated by electricity using the single phase 9.1- tom-ting current system at; thy id" tential adopted for the equipment of the New Haven Railroad, an! it the rolling stock equipment con-Med of locomotives and multiple unit train- fitted with mum and eohtrol appar- atua no better than the best which now exist, the aggregate coat of oper- ating. which in 1905 mounted in round figures to 't,t00,000m0, would be reduced to about ”MIMI”. To aceompliah this result power planta delivering about t2,goo,00o,900 Kilowatt hour. per annum would be required. _ In 1905 the average you earnings of lune railways per mile of line were :09598 and the average operating ear. |penaea $6,409. The conch-ion drawn 'frolr. the figures la that the Iii clan {electric equipment now available would I The dmnestic servants of and: In , not unionized, or they might have some- thing to my about the Immigration of l.servants from the old had. Mm. E. tr. 1 Francis, oi the Women's Domenic Guild 'ot (hull, with mum-s in - . real, aid the other by: "an; od {mange can to “”5-1 at. terenee of $1J44 per mile. "We hope to bring on 1,000 "and dumwtic serum: from the old coun- try this ".vosr. We hue " mined girl. cunning on the Dominion {inner mm. which is due at Forum's“. my. but they an all booked. From now till August we hope to bring out‘about 30 _ V . . - A It.-- ___ _,..|, art, every wmsk. Lust Tani-y week In girl. arrived. who were all - by the following day. We out! easily ptsee P' do-ties " as protein mo- inent.' Eteetrieity will probably in the no“ Tho difficulty in to got the girls," Mrs. Francis says. The demand it no meat that it, in impmssiblo to meet it. Until domestic 'ervimr in “protestionliud” somewhat after the mun-er of the am- ing profusion, Candi-n girl: u c rub wing!" it .mm t5ttt1aV vice it better put and In" W eb- Ione other dud-I tHt - WW. ' Icil_tild" lie deserves to be dealt with to bring om__l.ooq 3mm

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