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Durham Review (1897), 7 Nov 1907, p. 3

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itness in NeR NKS, th tble YE rter at d that o wil« tt t hootâ€" TT. vent y â€" with theam ally NP D« the 1y n the had s the f the NK 180 Ir U tt yere bw * 1nstâ€" «t ma in ion of OraFry us §t. *) 1% v/ Armâ€" at. Lt to 1Â¥ ar AFP be this ing en it NOF on anel in Lo n t y M *&IYT U« UP T in Ti But Maud, "sweet Maud," _ sweeter now at ten years old than ever beforeâ€" how shall I paint for you her exquisite loveliness?* The child of Daniel Hunter and Augusta Fercivalâ€"the child of genâ€" lous and love, beauty and goodness, unâ€" ited and blended in perfect harmonyâ€" what shall she be but divinely beautiâ€" fow EP e MCM UF o. °w the deposit from the mountains had made a patch of arable soil. Old Abishag was the cook, houseâ€"serâ€" vant, spinner and knitter to the little esâ€" tablishment. And she, too, frequently added,by the works of her hands, a halfâ€" dozen pairs o feoarse yarn socks, to be exchanged at the village shop for "two pounds of sugar, a pound of coffee and a guarter of a pound of tea," or else for a pair of number seven girl‘s shoes, and a pair of number ten boy‘s." Ellen‘s only epistolary correspondence was with Mrs. Hunter, with whom she exchanged a letter every month, and from whom she continually heard _ the most satisfactory accounts of Honoriaâ€" satisfactory, except in one respectâ€" that Honoria seemed to have forgotten that she had ever had any other parents than Mr. and Mrs. Hunter. Mr. Hunter had legally and regularly adopted Rer. And she was known only as Miss Hunter, the only daughter and heiress of the great Daniel Hunter. And she was the beauty, the pride, and the boast of all the singâ€" ing and dancing schools, and all _ the juvenile balls and parties, and "always Queen of the May." But in consenting thus to Honoria‘s premature entrance into vanities, rivalries and selfishness of a juvenile fashionable world, Mrs. Huntâ€" er wrote that she had acted against her | own better judgment. and that now, hav. | â€" ing seen the effect of these amusements | . upon the mird and manners of Honoria D4 to be anything but desirable, she should It put a stop to. c Ellen had no nefighborsâ€"in fact, that | ; rugged mountainous district was very |f, sparsely settled, and the roads were so intolerably bad as to amount to a postâ€" | j tive embargo upon social intercourse. fo The taxâ€"gatherer, Mr. Ipsy, was her only | . visitor, and he came but once a vear. |}, A s â€"% 0_ __CC We one knew lit tle, because she cared little, about farm ing. Here was the lifelong listlesness of a longâ€"lost hope. So that the days flow ed on and her children did not suffer, she did not care. She never took the trouble to inform herself of anything connected with the interests of the farm. If she could tell a field of wheat from a patch of potatoes, it was the exâ€" tent o Kor agricultural knowledge. She certainly could not tell a field of wheat from a field of rye. But for the invaluable presence and forvices of Biy Lew. the Karm awt n us k4 +0 Ellen O‘Leary. After the early storms, a deep calm had settled upon the lives of Ellen and her little family, They still lived at the rockâ€"bound cottage on Silâ€" ver Creek, and were supported by the produce of the fractional farm. Elien OLeaty was a very bad manager, or rather no manager at all. She knew litâ€" tle. uc.ll!e thn ntus® Te ie L C ‘‘C "aAble presence and mn, the farm, and everyâ€" would probably have 7~, Proken up among some little glen or hammer! _ But skill combined. , Little )â€"such i here, She eought his eyes, and her own eyes filled with tears. Again }e smiled: But Augusta raised the lock and pressâ€" ed it to her lips instead, murmari ig: "Not for the world. I would not remove one of them for the world. I love these few grey bhairs. Daniel. they are eloquent mnmmnmnenmmmmmmmmmmsaasssccc22222222222209 0 ] "Why, you are mixing up past quesâ€" | tions and present questions in the most unacountable manner, my love â€"bills that are dead and buried, and bills thai are scarcely born. It was the French question that occupied me then. I conâ€" fess I cannot at preeent see any Away through the difficulty." "You know that nothing can be done in this matter before the next meeting fol Congress; then why harass your mind | with it? A problem that has racked the powers of Congress and the Cabinet for three months is not likely to find its soâ€" lution in the present exhausted state of your mind. Do not labor with it. Restâ€" l restâ€"recover, and then in some healthful, hopeful, strong moment, the answer will come to you like a sudden inspiration." As she said this she was passing her fingers lightly through his â€"hair, and her eyes unconsciously fived upon the silyâ€" ery threads. He saw, or felt her losk, and he sm#led and said: "No matter, love!â€"so that yours is not gray, it is no matter. You are my beautiful portion, Augusta, ard your beauty I have indeed wished to see preâ€" manaedl * countenance, and then she inquired, softâ€" ly: "Now, what is itâ€"the French question, the Subâ€"Treasury billâ€"what is it that has pursued you even to this place, and will not let you rest." He paused in his thoughts, and looked at her in the most perplexed, amused way, and then said: chimer and profounder beauty. But the change that has passed over Damel Hunâ€" ter speaks of the fierce strife of political | factions. His face is thinner and darker | than before, and his great, ponderous ’ forehead isâ€"or seemsâ€"greater than ever } by renson of the orowlne halinucs nt #hs The lady sat by his side, with her hand elasped in his, watching the proâ€" found thoughtf}xln_eu of _ that noble nioq |y, ;, gWItt Hall, and they gccuâ€" pied their favorite, wainscoted sittingâ€" _ | room. The furniture o fthis apartment _ | had been purposely left unchanged, and the room preserved _ its old fashioned, _| sober, slumberous air. It was cool, spring weather, and a fine wood fire was burning in the fireplace. â€" Daniel Hunter sat before it in a large, stuffed, leather chair that might have belonged to the eighteenth century. . Augusta enâ€" tered, and came softly behind his chair, and was stooping _ over him until her ringlets lay upon his cheek, as _ with sweet, grave tenderness she smoothed his brow, and muttered : "Will you rest now?" He smiled gravely, put his hand beâ€" hind him, and drew her around to a seat by his side and toyed with her ringlets, but in a thoughtful. abstracted manner; his mind was far away. The lady sighed and wondered what "question" had folâ€" lowed him to his hermitage to cheat him of his rest. Both are changed in these six years. Augusta‘s pale cheek is paler than ever, and her countenance has a calmer and profounder beauty. But the change that has passed over Darfel Hunâ€" | ter speaks of the fierce strife of nolitical | y . ; V ) °) fet LNis overwrought, toilâ€"worn brain repose a little while?" murmured Augusta, softly passing her fingers over the great politician‘s corrugated brow. It was tfi: first evening after their arrival at Howlet Hall, and they occuâ€" pied their favorite, wainscoted sittingâ€" FoOm. The furnitess s sureo o0 c C C "Will you rest Will you let this . brain repose a lit Augusta, softly p the great nolitiai ful? But it was the soul within : charm to Maud‘ not a child of q passions. Her af found and eterna CHAPTER XVI life and E;)_rx;i';xg"t: settle Howlet Hall; also that o build _ a church and red _ its old fashioned, s air. It was cool, and a fine wood fire the fireplace. Daniel > it in a large, stuffed, t might have belonged the heavenly beauty of K cul 4 Te us & now? Will you rest? °o _ 100se, Nnttle Maud lay ill. Ellen, on returning from Howlet Hall, had found her in a high fever, and had sent off to the Summit for the doctor. Her In the meantime, at farmhouse, little Maud exehimed‘; “io; my own son, I did." C on 2t T PR |HOvelX) years, had only recently returned !to find out that an innocent man had | been executed for his crime. His deposiâ€" | tion was taken down, and he died in ten 'minut« after signine i+ » minutés after signing it." Daniel Hunter was not ; Oor ejaculate. He heard th nunciation, and lifted up his strong, massive face see marbleâ€"and : s p. ; _" PUIUU, Daniel Hunter, so 1 will. But when you have heardâ€"listen, |then. It is not twa weeks since I was | called to the deathbed of a man of the | highest social position, who confessed, | in the presence of myself and the Mayor of Aâ€"â€", that he was guilty of the murâ€" der of Burke, and the he was dying of remorse. He had killed Burke to avenge an insult offered to his sister; he had escaped and gone abroad instantly after the deed and, after remaining in Franc several years, had only renantl> ... ) ""s "To what end. reverend sir painful event recalled ?" ‘_‘To the end. Mr, Hunter, T you may regret your refusal n you ever regretted any act of 3 "Be good enough to explain Bishop Sâ€"â€"* "Heaven be pitiful, Danie!l F To Lath (ae oo V l engiom ae 61 Tooroott ~â€"was . cupon ‘the o6 casion of your calling, in company with several other gentlemen, at the Execuâ€" tive Chamber in Aâ€"â€", with a petition for the reprieve of William O‘Teary, conâ€" viected of the murder of Burke," "Yes, sir; and, Mr, Hunter, it is eleven years toâ€"night since you refused to grant our petition for the reprieve of that man * _ met, Mr, Hunter ?" inquin Daniel Hunter reflected then answered: "Certainly, sir, It was casion of your calling, in several other gentlemen, tive Chamber in Aâ€"â€", 1 for the renrtaws «e uind . CA e en aniiis. Ahoi h cch c db o4 !nn in this respect; though in _ every other respect of moral, mental and Chrisâ€" tian worth, Mr. Lovel was greatlrv the superior of his pretty, gentle, frivolous wifeâ€"else had not Daniel Hunter called him to the pastoral care of his new church. On Thursday before Easter Bishop S â€"â€" arrived at the Hall to solemnize the rights of dedication, and was received with the utmost respect and cordiality. But the countenance of the venerable preâ€" late was overcast, gloomy and foreboding. Kind and gentle in his manners, _ he sought to throw off the shadow from his brow and spirits, but in vain; and after dinner he requested an interview with Mr. Hunter. His host conducted him into the library and they sat down on opposite sides of a small writingâ€"table, the bishop with an ominous sigh and groan, Daniel Hunter in quiet expec. tancy. "Does your memory serve you to reâ€" call the Jast nonuatim seucd ts i E Milonfideid a 5 â€" PB sw CI turtleâ€"doves enough, a very nice matech, some people said, because, forsooth, both were fairâ€"haired and fairskinned, and both about the same height, Mr. Lovel having the advantage of only an inch or S hesâ€" BHE L TE 6 P _ The family were preparing to receive a newly married pairâ€"Mr. and Mrs. Loâ€" vel. And one lovely afternoon in April the bride and groom arrived, and there were kisses, and congratulations, and inquiries, and gentle attentions, and nursâ€" ing tenderness, until they were refreshâ€" ed from their jfourney, and comfortably installed in the parlor. The young couple U S @0 ve t the parior, Fhe young couple were a pretty, innocentâ€"looking pair of knhaai tw e d n N Ng m " departed Ellen was cut to the fsa.t. Poor Fllen did not recollect that at Honoria‘® agt â€"| she herself was just such an meclent, affected piece of egotism ind conceit. Mrs. Hunter rang the vell and ordered cake and wine brought, and when her guest had taken some refr siment, the lady bade Honoria sit down to the piano and sing for them, And the young lady, never unwilling to display her musical powers, complied very grasiuily, ard sang several sweet songs, :0 the delignt of Ellen. Soon after this dinner was anâ€" nounced. At the dinner table Ellen met Daniel Hunter and Miss Letitia, both of whom received her with great corâ€" diality. Early in the afternoon Ellen preâ€" pared to take leave, resisting all Mrs. Hunter‘s persuasions to stay by saying that the little girl, Sylvia, was not quite well and that she feared to leava ther alone all night,. Therefore Ellen bade them all goodâ€"by, imprinted a passion« ate kiss upon the haughty, unwilling lips of Miss Honoria, received a warm, affecâ€" tionate one from Mrs. Hunter, and so eabeetiuiPn ic ht .. thc oi Râ€"wmnl "Pray, do not mention it, madam. You are very good, and I am very much ‘latâ€" tered, I am sure," said Miss Honoria, haughtily, as she adjusted her slightly disordered dress. [3 5.. °2 C" recovered herself and was the first to speak, albeit in a broken, faltering voice: "You must please to excuse me, Miss Honoria. I knew your father well and loved him. I love Mrs. Hunter alsoâ€"ard â€"when I saw you, Iâ€"" "Honoria, this is Mre. O‘Teary, a dear friend of ours," said Mrs. Hunter. And before the little belle could make her formal courtesy, Ellen clasped her in her arms and burst into tears. Mrs. Hunter sat down, calmly waiting the isâ€" sue. But Miss Hororia withdrew herself with an offended air, and resumed her seat. Mrs. Hunter instantly arose again, took Ellen‘s hand and, pressing it afâ€" fectionately, led her to a seat upon the sofe. Kllew ‘rannveral "auseur hels i clunn ame _.. _ _1 "I6 #i8ter: he had and gone abroad instantly after | and, after remaining in Franc mame Lal _1 A . 4#@., 12 ;1 " ‘Uman error!" he ; "for if the convict had been son, I would have done as T1 Hllen received an invitation from Mrs. Hunter and prepared to make her a visit. She went ggthe shortest roite, the bridlepath and therefore took neither of the children with her, but only Liittle Len, mounted on a plough horse, as her attendant. Ellien employed herself durâ€" ing the whole ride in trying to steady and strengthen her nerves for the interâ€" view with her daughter, lest her agitaâ€" tion might excite the surprise and curiâ€" osity of the latter, and lead to embarâ€" rassing inquiries. A brisk ride of two hours brought her to Howlett Hall, where she was received most affectionately by Mre. Hunter, who took her at once into the sittingâ€"room, where Miss Honoria, in her morningâ€"dress of white muslin, sat at the piano practicing her Italian music. The young lady arose with her usual dignity to receive a new visitor. Ellen looked at her, a dainty, delicate, digniâ€" fied little lady, and a strange pang shot through her heart. _ "" " "ited up his head, and massive face seemed turned to d : merciful to human error!" he wa _ uw se h Shots l ic h c & e. He heard this terrible _and lifted up his head, massive face seemed tunrna "I shall see them :;me with more pl.ilâ€" osophy than heretofore, dear," he ansâ€" wered, smiling. Kllen received an invikakine full. uz_ and again she bowed her face and piee«â€" | tive ed“t'.hfklg?k to her lips. sed pres I':lln of your life‘s greatnessâ€"they are Susk suve To CE 20. 1 iling MB 4.4.3 4. 2 last occeasion upon Th % .. use s I e same height, Mr. Lovel antage of only an inch or pect; though in _ every ‘ moral, mental and Chrisâ€" * Inquired Bishop Sâ€", reflected a moment, and the Silver Creek refusal more man to start al more than of your life." I fear, that which we yourself, is that anâ€" J70°_ what you theenks dat for gailf Hoou-onumm.oomn. He mak‘ me seeck ! ‘tmmmm For maka treeck« an‘ talka so Like heem. you bet my !ife, I no 2 sacrio ‘ l'nn..' Chte ues ingss ;.! n.‘.o., ,n-. 4._'.._. P.'onow to be a 4 tak‘ wan!" He tak‘ da beeges‘ wan of alf Ha! what you theenks dat for g l!ocu-om.m.ooml!. He mak‘ me seeck ! Nmmmm hr-nnmun'mnn Like heem, you bet my lifa T w He tal me : ‘‘Mak‘ eet fi‘ for ten AHt And m; da mo;.” i1 do," "All right," I say, "I guess wee Den F4‘ for ten ees wan for two." eH say. ‘"here ces two coht for you, Baby‘s Own Tablets is the best medicine in the world for the minor ailments of little ones, and the safâ€" est. _ We do not ask you to take our word for thisâ€"we give you the guaranâ€" tee of a Government analyst _ that this medicine contains no opiate or harmful drug. _ It:is e vally good for the new born babe or t?:e well grown child. _ It is a certain cure for all the minor ailments of childhood. Mrs. Andre Tremblay. Sayabec, Quebec, says: "I have proved the value of Baby‘s Own Tablets as a cure for several _ of the : troubles that afflict young children, inâ€" cluding skin disease, indigestion _ and teething troubles." Sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from _ the Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. (T. A. Daly, in Cavnolic Standard.) No like da skeeny olda man Dat com‘ to dees peanutta stan‘ Toâ€"day an‘ buy da wan banan‘, He mak‘ me seeck ! Eef evra customer ees go For maka treecks an‘ talka so Like heem, you bat my life, I no Gat reecha queeck. » _ Our girl and boy were evidently rather late. The morning prayers were over, and the exercises of the school comâ€" menced. So Mr. Ipsy told them when Falconer walked up to his desk, made his bow, and presented his little sister. Nevertheless, Mr. Ipsy took a New Tesâ€" tament out of his desk, and opened it and handed it to Maud, and told her to read for him, that he might test her abilities, and know in what class to place her. qy c 0. Cns . Coe ies and the lady‘s beautiful face was unâ€" shaded, save by the drooping â€" black ringlets, Mr. Ipsy, as superintendent, stood beâ€" fore a large desk in the corner, doing something with pen and ink, and lightly kicking his neat boot toes together, and twinkling his eyes and eyebrows, and every little while sticking the pen beâ€" hind his ear, and flying off at a tangent to hand a book to some pupil, or to speak a word to some teacher, puul oi e ue o o en in ate a slight, hasty breakfast, and set out together to walk to the Summit. By the footpath the distance was short. It was a lovely May morning, and Falâ€" coner and Maud had a delightful walk. They reached the Summit and entered the church. The sexton conducted them upstairs into the spacious gallery, in which the Sunday school was kept. Here, _dispersed about in the gallery _ pews, were about a half dozen of teachers, each with some eight or twelve pupils colâ€" lected around her. Among the teachers were Mrs. Daniel Hunter and Mrs. Lovel. Mrs. Hunter had a largeâ€"sized square pew beside the great organ. There were about a dozen little girls around her. The black lace veil was thrown back, and the lad¥‘s BenuUtiful Aaam: ues 9D Gat rearhn : Ale ue oo n nnih So the next Sunday, very carly morning, Falconer and Maund got ate a slight. hastv hranlâ€"face .. In the course of the next week, Mr. Ipsy called at the cottage to know if the children were not to be allowed to go to Sunday school. The children were yery anxious to goâ€"and their entreatâ€" ies, joined to Mr. Ipsy‘s arguments, and Ellen‘s secret inclination to oblige Mrs. Hunter, prevailed over her scruples, and she consented, saying to herself (though she afterward confessed it as a sin, for she was a Catholic), that there was no other church or school in the neighborâ€" hoodâ€"that the Protestant Church was better than none at all, and that the sect which had produced Mrs. Hunter could not be so very far wrong. J on l d in in ol 2 __ Mr. Bill Ipsy came over to see the little convalescent, and brought her some oranges and some fine apples, and sat down by her bed and told her of the beautiful new church that was all ready for dedication at Easter, and the new Sunday school that was to be opened the same day. He himself was to be the superintendent, he said; and Mrs. Daniel Hunter and Mrs. Lovel, the pretâ€" ty wife of the young minister, and one or two other ladies of the county, were to be the teachers of the classes. And Falconer, when he heard the child babbling in the daytime of the lovely lady‘s smiles and tonesâ€"underâ€" stood her visionsâ€"but somehow, even to him, they were invested with a sacred mystery that awed him into silence. At last the crisis of Maud‘s illness ;mssed. The fever waned, and with it aded the bright vision of the lady. And Maud‘s thoughts returned to healthful, ordinary life, EOtrqp P ols inintstrtifimitaliii mt e ccuaicha s s M 353 she thought it was an apparition of the blessed Madonna. Pnsc s Loo ie ied iaten ’come from heaven to visit herâ€"and _sometimes she was Mrs. Hunter, whose portrait hung above the mantelpiece at Howlet Hall. As Ellen watched, alone, beside her, in the darkness of the night, and saw her stretch her feeble Arms, and her countenance irradiate with joy, to welâ€" come the vision of the sweet ladyâ€"so real seemed this vision to the sick child, that Ellen cowered in awe, and crossed herself, and uttered the Ave Maria, for Ajnd Maud, in her fevered dreamsg, babbled sweetly of a beautiful lady, that led her by the hand through green and shady woods and lawns, and who gave her cold, sparkling water from fresh fountairs when she was thirsty, and sat down and took her upon her hf' and laid her tired head upon her soft bosom when she was exhausted. And sometimes this lady was her mother, come from heaven to visit herâ€"and sometimes she was Mrs. Hunter, whose vuntsden 4Â¥ lcll oc c% C l CC VC % em' | tive fever, threatening the brain. And all the family vied with each other in devoted, though profoundly quiet atâ€" tentions to the gentle little patient. Elâ€" len watched by her bedside day and night, scarcely allowing herseif an hour‘s needful rest in the twentyâ€"four. Old Abishag forgot to swear, and fuyed instead. And Falconer learned a ighter step and softer tone when lKe entered her sick room, A Deal in Bananas, SURE AND SAFE. (Ta be continued.) ready, in the Afterward I was taken to Kawaihae, where I saw cattle loaded in a most cruel manner. It was a little after six o‘clock when I landed on the beach among a lot of cowboys and halfâ€"naked natives. The cattle were corralled under the trees, and when one was ready to be taken aboard a rope was tied about its horns. A cowboy on horseback then rode into the eurf, dragging the frightened steer into the watefihe rope was tossed | _ Rev. Davis Brook, of the new United Methodist Church of England, has been selected as president of the National Council of [Svangelistic Free Churches in successior to Rev. John Watson, better known as Ian Maclaren, who died shortly after being elected to the position, _ With $155,000 already expended for the preservation of Winchester Cathedral in England, it is found that at least $175,000 more will be needed, and until this is secured the work has been stopped. Catholics in China now number about 2,250,000, as compared with less than 500,000 in 1880; in Indoâ€"China they have increased in that time from 300,000 to 1,000,000, and in Japan 50,000 have been added to the four that there were 26‘ years ago. â€" J. G. Adderley at St. Saviour‘s Church, near Birmingham, England, the whole choir has gone on strike. J.‘G The Ladies‘ Humane Society of the First Universalist Church of Providence, R. I., which has just started on its seventyâ€"sixth year of work, has laid out during its existence nearly $31,000. Because of certain alterations in the musical part of the service made by Rev. t hane i Cipet o c i on ols h Fromgls Ir d . i CC Trinity Church, Halifax, has purchased the chapel which has been used by the Government garrison, it having been deâ€" cided not to make any further appointâ€" ment to the chaplaincy. tion. The average attendance in the Bunday schools of Massachusetts has dropped in a year from 177,467 to 168,031, the deâ€" crease being laid to the shifting populaâ€" bhres d vies l uon ol PC + The rebuilding of the Campanile of St. Marks at Venice is progressing rapidly, but will probably require another two years for completion. | _ "Tin tabernacles," as many of the misâ€" sion stations in England constructed of corrugated iron are called, are hereafter to be practically a thing of the past, as _small buildings of cement ‘covered with terva cotta are to take their places. The British Church Missionary Society has just sent out two parties, about 175 in all, part going to Africa, Palestine, Northern and Western India, the nest to Turkish Arabia, Persia, Southern India, Punjab, China, Mauritius and Japan. Rev. J. F. Rattenbury has assumed charge of the West London mission founded 20 years ago by Rev. Hugh: Price Hughes in what is called the wickâ€" edest section of the metropolis, and the man who superintends it can be no weakling. GENERAL CHURCH NOTES. ‘Cmeltyr to Animals in Hawaii The American Board of Commissioners for foreign missions has just been notiâ€" fied of a legacy of $100.000 from the esâ€" tate of the late D. Willis James, the amount to be paid in three annual instalâ€" ments. About $£900,000 is needed to put the Wesleyan East End Mission of London on its feet, the buildings row in process of erection threatening to be a crushing burden, despite the fact that they are urgently required. The New England branch of the Woâ€" men‘s Forcign Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church received for its work last year $46,576, besides a beâ€" quest of $37,700 for the erection of school buildings in the foreign field. ‘ I The Union Presbyterian Church of Den ver believes that the best mission work is done by having the edifice open at all times and providing some entertainment that will draw persons to the church. The American Board of Commissioners The East London church fund, in which the Bishop of London is especially interested, is trying to raise $60,000 beâ€" fore the end of the year to keep up its mission work. MhiGGist atniatnh t B tss o Psn es vcacca who have their centre at the Missionary Training Home at Upton Park, London, are to occupy a building that has been a public inn. Uganda is likely to be the mission field for all Africa, as there are 57,000 memâ€" bers of the Church of England there now, and they are supplying workers for the rest of the continent., The greatest difficulty of missioaries in China is to find the teachers that are so much needed, over 1,000 schools being now without instructors of the right sort. The Epiu'opal Sisters of the Church, ces n d e e P se n Sis me ihe immense missionary exhibition beâ€" ing planned for next June in London by the London Missionary Society will be opened by King Edward. e T APERV IRVHUE, The Women‘s Baptist Home Mission Society has 2,036 auxiliaries in _ the States, of which 2,469 are for adults, the headquarters being in Chicago. ay, 1 . __ CCC D0E M 9. The hopâ€"picking season in England is over and the special church mission to the fields has returned. The Students‘ Missionary League of Georgia is to have its second annual conâ€" ference at Macon early next month. The Women‘s Baptist Home Mission n e / a ©u IN THE MISSION FIELD. centre at ‘t’ilewylis_sion_nry lug ie Park, London, a EoW came | r;, ltuot!â€"a‘.u., Bite. Ahat no matter how good a churchâ€" man he may be, there is not one in a million ‘who would not get the best in & deal if he could?! That a mwbowudemonntnz to n'mowdtlutflmnwuno 'H.lt as hydrophobia was the first to clim up a lampâ€"post when a small boThnt you har arding house der and true"? That no matter what a creed may be, she alwa; tection? That a woman enjo ripping up something useful to mnI: something ornamental? That truth is better than. but false teeth are better teeth at all? That about the second time a woman she begins to tell troubles? ing? That the "better" half, whichever # is, should build the fires in the morn s % _ That whenever a man angles for a pretty girl he baits his hook with flatâ€" That the most timid girls have of hinting at supper after the t] Thrt you can‘t convinee a that a bargain is a bargain unle gets it? That it‘s easier for some me make love than it is to make a li That a woman never weeps more terly than when she weeps for spite? mm c 4 uk c io P uies ce ue That smiles cost less lights and they make the ert ihnat many girls would rather di than be an old maid? That you can‘t meet a girl who wil refuse an ice cream? That a faint heart is considered aj easy mark for the modern girlt That even a blind man can fin« trouble without much difficulty? That if you kiss a pretty girl once you‘ll feel hungry for more? That we sometimes write love letters we wish we‘d never posted? That the girl that cannot sing and will sing ought to be muzzled? That nothing costs more than things we try to get for nothing? That it‘s only the pretty women at a show who will remove u.J: hate? That courtship is a vessel in which few single ladies object to embark? That you hardly ever see a policeman bother anyone larger than himself?t That all odd fellows do a lodge? That a widow who wo unknown ? R I 30. 000 O ONCZT 200 4 AO§L Of other troubles are al} the outcome of bad blood. Dr, Williams‘ Pink Pills make new, rich, red bloodâ€"the pure blood does the rest, That is why these ills cure all troubles due to watery glood or weak, shaky nerves. There is not & nook or corner in Canada where you will not find some grateful person who has been cured by the use of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, On the word of your neighbor we ask you to try this medicine if you â€" are weak, ailing or run down. ‘The pills are sold at 50 cents a box or six lfoxa- for $2.50 at all medicine dealers, or from the Dr, Wi)â€" liams‘ Medicine Co.. AnnolruiHe ic Every dose of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills makes new blood . Every drop of pure blood brings the ill, dishcartened woman nearer to health and happiness. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills have brought the glow of health to thousands of sufferers who gladly bear testimony to that efâ€" fect. One of these is Mrs. KElizabeth Danâ€" ham, of Welland, Unt., who says: "For more than a year 1 was greatly run down. I had sickening headaches and my heart would palpitate so violently that at times I feared death was near. 1 was under the care of a doctor, but insteadof improving I lost strength, and my weight decreased from one hundred and forty to ninety pounds. I was disâ€" couraged, but finally decided to give up the doctors‘ treatment and t Dr, Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills 1 am gh.;, I did so, for after using the Pills a few weeks I could see a marked improvement in my condition. ‘The headaches left me, 1 reâ€" gained strength, the distressing heart palpitation ceased and at the end of two months I was fully restored to health and felt better than I had for the past twenty years. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills | are truly a marvellous medicine, and I cannot praise them enough," | Heart palpitation, anaemia, headâ€" | aches, loss of appetite, general weakâ€" | ness, backaches, weariness and a host of | other troubles are all the outcome of | M hinani n srveaes t Made Well and Strong by Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Pink Pills. ming, and he in turh carried it to the E men waiting in a small boat. There men pulled the animal, which must now swim f or drown, to the boat and tied him by | the borntomcide,utercfittl&n- ‘ | had been tied up in this manner the enâ€" gine on the steamer was set to work and the boat pulled alongside by means of a . The cattle were then hoisted on ‘ bomeby the use of a bellyâ€"band. The method of handling these dumb animals is brutal, and while the men seem to u.-eumuchcueuponibleinno_vh. them about, their piteous bellowing causâ€" ed by fear made as pathetic a scene as I have ever witnessed. Thousands are shipped every year, and it seems that some more human method of putting them aboard might be adopted. The Japanese sailor on these ships is said to be the best for keeping the ship clean, while the native excels in handling the boats, especially in rough water. The â€" Hawaiian is a born swimmer, and naâ€" tive boys will follow these vessels for several hundred yards as they are leavâ€" ing Honolulu, swimming alongsige and diving for coins thrown ovemrd by the travelers. _ The passage on these boats is always rough and on the Ewalâ€" ani, as the ship lay at anchor out in the channel, the nights were intensely warm. Fre'ghting in this way is necessarily exâ€" pensive, but those in authority say that it is the only wa practical as no wharf could withstand tie lashing of the waves caused by the mad fury of the winds during winter. At that season it is ofâ€" ten imfiozssible to make landings along the roc ey coast of Molokai, â€"Mrs. C. ? R. Miller in Leslie‘s Weekly, SUFFERING WOMEN bargain is a bargain unless she a halfâ€"naked native who tter what a girl‘s political , she always wants proâ€" ‘for the wing2, / 1 _g0PEEG &B | pense for the modern girlt gunbc en & blind man can fing navy hout much difficulty? of ab you kiss a pretty girl once ow Japan hungry for more? un larmic sometimes write love letters | lfaing "‘d never posted? | Egypt : girl thtunnotlincud‘ es V Â¥ uw widow who wouldn‘t flirt is 10 ARCHIVES TORoNTo You Know ind some grateful person n cured by the use of Dr. ik Pills ‘On the word of “ -rweukyout.otr:ythi- you are weak, ailing or ' The 'filh are sold at 50 | r six boxes for $2.50 at all | ers, or from the Dr. Wi. | ie Co., Broekville, Ont. | Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills | rich, red bloodâ€"the pure | he rest. That is why these 1 troubles due to watery | k, shaky nerves. There is | r corner in Canada where ‘ find some grateful person second time you meet etter than. falsehood, are better than no ever can °0C piTis have a way r after the theatre? convince a woman make a livinfi PCE 1 e than things ‘Tr: :’ ns ; women at a ’ dri r hate? ‘ &7 ssel in which | °0 embark t J bla ¢ & policeman | ing himself ? ‘ gr:;; than electric home brightâ€" , (ry,. ree some men to | Brii l . ul ’ works; $1,000,000 for the funeral of the 1d rather die | °W" Princess and $27.718 for a}} Phas | public schools in the country outside the girl who will | capital; $5,000,000 for what was called the army, $450,604 for the annua] exâ€" onsidered an pense of keeping in commission one old i girlt gunboat which constituted the whole mt“!. find navy of the country, and an expenditure tty :“ olee of about $250,000 for the palace guard. re?t | Japan will at least give the people someâ€" > love letters | f;zing for the taxation levied, It may be not belong to you her bit | only will it help to the selection of good ! verieties to plant, but much information ’is furnished 2s to the care and culture of orchards, and detailed statisties of the extent of the industry are given. â€"It may astonish many to Jearn that â€" Ontario orchardists have no fewer than 14,039,156 trees, 10,373,806 of which are bearing, producing 15,127,790 bushels of fruit, valued at $4,863.345, and that 266,015 acres are devoted to orenard culture, There has been an increase of nearly 4,000,000 in the number of trees planted since 1901. An excellent work 6 Ontario has just been Ontario Department of deals with all the nrin. onl y interest nounced surplus of 118 Seotch whiskey in Scot] to stock the market for and it is proposed that tillers close down with restricting production. 11 the Canadians drink their Perhaps they do. ihe Railway News and Commercial Traveller differs with Canon Welch as to the cause of the prevalence of drinking in Canada. The Canon, acâ€" cording to our contemporary, n‘ the blame for the increase in the crinks ing habits of the people on the immi. grants who came from the old counâ€" iry. This, it declares, to be incor» rect, claiming that drinking in Great Britain has steadily decreased for years. If this was not the case it asks, why is it that there is an anâ€" l0unced surplus of 118 millions of Seotch Wh‘lke}' In MHniinmd bak.. % The Railway New ‘raveller differs w # to the cause of rinking in Canada * CIZEOpPS t Is just as a3 a nation should pass reaches the point Coj shown by its budget, change. Think of $1,10 perial privy purse and works: $1.000.000 far +1 | q fe, 3 O ) "COIAPeâ€" Whe "Festuuarnt Ieep. ers and caterers furnished more than half a million dolHars‘ worth of food and drink to the delegates. The florists also did well. The telegraph and cable comâ€" panies reccived $1,125,360 for transmitâ€" ting messages from delegates to Governâ€" ments and vice versa. Other business people profited in a lesser degree, The Hague conference was gether a failure. The restau ers and caterers furnished 3 half a million doHars‘ worth o drink to the delegates. The f] did well. ‘Tha balnowark ) aeg # URRENT]/ > *\ P CommerL snou:d be exercised in build sive prices, not believing the ranted by the crops and d should 1 The Canadian T ion that the brmea. bullish, and that 4 too venturesome â€" Dds Perhaps it reagn of ing. â€"" TFoAmy us entire syster as the change can economica The Pittsburg terminals h been attacked and about spent on them in five vears: Mayor Schmitz, of San F victed of accepting bribes, ] of appeal by an attorney‘s muet don the stripes. And suit better fits his case. to ¢ Japan ] ernment 3 Kurama, 4 clnu. J.‘\ her naval wasn‘t it enough that butter and milk and such luxuries s} in prices, without taxing us beer and whiskey and such no »Zepartment of Agricu th all the principal fry Ontario horticulturists I} The hed of street car as for ingress and to avoid much )T K over again yet eacrificing their balloons. The Penusylvania A majority Thanksgiving turke will be plentiful and to be thankful for. 17 n Wasn‘t ly lectrify its plant, but much inform:tiu _ as to the care and culture and detailed statisties of the woul But the +270 mormcuiturists, and ch interest to growers, halp to the selection at Cw Ty on U n nas just launched from its t yards the 14,620â€"ton ceruies, a, the most powerful vessel « Japan is determined to mai In t point Corea reach its budget, it is tim, 1X purishment pension of the ust Co.. of No York is ols 5t ©0,, Of .New York, inother $6,000,000 in that business is ca other tan Trade Review i â€"breadstuffs mark that there is dang ome speculator h U+ perit y prestige in Beotland, en V for the Tuneral of the and $27,718 for all the the country outside the 00 for what was called 604 for the annual exâ€" in commission one old constituted the whole uogel, it is time # of $1,103,359 for the of the principles favor the restor nutomobile owners on The Fruits of n issued by the of Agriculture. It is adopting the s as Montreal, with id ‘one for exit. h confusion, . for four years, that certain disâ€" ith the view of +. k thinks that their own share., speciator woird s that Railway « 500 Tor the imâ€" $424 for public vell tha When a an Francisco, conâ€" es, loses his right ney‘s neglect, and And probably no t} ‘ys, we are told, cheap. Something A butter and eggs ing us more on such necessarjes ? it rically be ts which machines to m t man have th ch W not alto will doy 'olupuny is LT ugh r of the M K+ same style h one door It is said It 8 rapidly be made, already 3,000,000 sel of its maintain its goy lon ene In the re Om so the buy | 4 tA p # 14

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