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Durham Review (1897), 5 Nov 1908, p. 8

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$ 0 Te CEX "Now," said Inez to her sister, "If Lord Lynne likes to join us here, he may. I could not endure the idea of a formal interview in the library. I disâ€" like «imost everything that is stiff and eceremonious." "You will find much to dislike in Engâ€" land, then," replied Agatha, _ with a smile; "but, MP you have patience to look for it, underneath that stiff, forâ€" mal mannser, that you say characterizes us, you will often find a warm heart and & kindly nature." If Inez LF“ had wished her cousin to be struck and captivated at _ first sight, she could not have chosen _ & more Rctun.qua rhoo for the interview than the shade of the great cedarâ€"tree. The sunshine, sparkling through _ its branches, fell upon thengnlr faces of the two ‘il’ll, that contrasted _ so vividly with the h«;{*mournlng dresses they wore. The sunbeams lit up the magniâ€" ficent beauty of the Andalusian, ;gile they seemed to fall like a blessing upon the graceful head of her gentle sister. _ "Read to me, Agatha," said Inez. "I want to dream this beautiful morning." ;I‘.:.v. brought the .ldyl'. with m;,u ‘;I‘J;.”:m Rexeemntte â€" EOEROTRE CCCE Ee CC r her sister. "Which _ will you | have ?" C "Kindt" she replied; "yes, of course, "Read where you will,"*" replied Inez. | whenever I saw her; but she was an inâ€" ..‘.{fih' except ‘King Armur’l Par. | Yalld for many years before she died. don‘ I do not want to hear that just Tell us about your mother, Lord Lynne. now; it is too mournful." Is she pleased to come _ to _ live at Agatha chose "Enid." She had a sinâ€" Ly nnewolde?" , Bs . rommperthonnmen (iline qveail heauntpenr aparies O "I am sure she is," replied Philig ed the words. He heard the beautiful story of Enid invested with new grace and new charms from the voice that told itâ€"clear and distinot, and full of fl;, mew thoughts; it seemed to unâ€" seal the closed fountain of love and tenâ€" derness that flowed at its bidding. Lord pathos and sweetness, that found its way straight into his heart, and mide wild havog there. It awoke new fcelâ€" Lyune was not the first who had fallâ€" en in love with a voice. He wondered what the face was like that wont with it. HMe stepped forward g-odJn; and there, just lit up by a slanting sunâ€" beam, he saw a fair, swoet face, with gentle, modest eyes and smiling lips; a face to love and to trust; a face withâ€" out passion, but full of tenderness; without genius, but full of thought; a fuace that a man would never rave about, but would love until death took it from him, He saw the golden brown hair that was like his own;, and then he knew that the reader of the poem was his cousin, Agatha Lynne. HMe had not reâ€" cognized her voice. He hud never heard her read before, and the charm of it was new to him. He had not seen Agatha Lynne since she was a child of fitteen. The last time he was at Lynnuewolde she was away visitiny some friends. He could hardly believe that the graceful yirl before Kun was the same little couâ€" sin with whom he haw played, and who had kissed him years ago, and said she would be his little wite, How sweet, und gentle, and serious she looked. "Stop, Agathal" cried another voice, more musical still, but with a strange ring of passion in its tone. "I feel half «angry with Enid; after all, she was too patient. 1 would never do us she did, would you?" "Yes," was the relpy. "When my Geraint comes, if he ever does appear, I would do all that Enid did, and more." "Bo would not I!" said Inez. Lord Lynne hardly noticed her. His heart went with Af:uu'- answer, and something like a wish shaped itself in his mind that he might be Georaint and win her love . His eyes seemed to drink in the fair beauty of{cr face. He hardly looked at the beautiful Andalusian by her side. He came forward then, and both sis ters rose at his approuch. It was omâ€" barrassing moment for them all, but no chevalier of the olden time ever exâ€" ceeded Lord Lynne in grace and courâ€" teay. Ines had seltâ€"possession enough to have metâ€"well, it is difficult to say what would have daunted her. Certainly Lord Lynne did not. She received his condolences and apologies with the same languid grace and my with which sho had received her fathor‘s careases and hor sistor‘s demonstrations of affecâ€" tion . She looked everything that was beautiful and majestic, but not. at all like l'Ffrl who would boeshd to be zord Lynne‘s wife, if he asked her. Agatha‘s greeting of her cousin was characteristic of herself. If Inez forgot, for a moment, or AFpeuod to forget, the strange will that linked them together, her sister did not. A crimson flush covâ€" ered her face, and her nhs eyes fall when her cousin took her hand and clasped it warmly in his own. s 4 "I have disturbed you, I fear," said Lord Lynne. "I have been hurrying through my day‘s work. I expect my mother, Mrs. Lyune, this afternoon, and I am going to the station to meet her. them. Tfalllero happy as the young | love "mot wisely, but too WBil. laciUt? and beauti are when the sun shines | and passion had not marked her as their .a& th:h.llovor'- bloom. own. Her life ran, and always would t eummer morning was forged | run, in commonplace grooves and chanâ€" the first link of a chain that was to nels. unite those three with a strange tie. _ It was this good and gentle girl who Shall I read a little for yout" "No, thank you," said Inez. "I am out of patience with Enid; she is just a mz for Agatha; but she is too paâ€" tient and food for me. I like people to be more fauity and human." "You must often have found your liking gratified," said Philip, with a amile, "for I do not know anyone who is anything like faultiess. hfin' of my quaintances th ite side." .fl:..:: seach I-::'-?'nn&: ‘l)gfr "I hava "1 do not know," said Incz. "I have been with Agatha more than six months, and I have not seen any fault in her. She is insipidly goodâ€"are you not, cars mia" . flood, but not ineipid," reqlied Pnilify while Agatha laughed at her sicter‘s for a time forrtu_n ; the sisters forgot that the stately home upon which they Bo they lingered that morning under the cedar tree. Death and sorrow were been mistresses and rulers; they for*ot the strange bequest that had startlied HIS LORDSHIP‘S ROMANCE CHAPTER IV r | n that morning was laid the foundaâ€" \tion of a tragedy such as had never | befallen the Lynnes _ of Lynuewolde. |\ They were all unconscious of the apâ€" | prouching shadow. Pfi'Ain‘did n:n lhtoP Wl " 1 e s SC L4 wa tha‘a to think" why he lingered at Agatha‘s side, and drank in every tone of her voice. The beautiful Andalusian never attempted to define the charm that 1iâ€" veted her. She looked at Lord Lynne‘s face and knew she had never seen one so good, so noble, or so true; but she did not dream where love of that face would lead her. "This park is very beauttiful," said Lord Lynne, turning suddenly to Inez; "but English scenery must seem cold to you after the glowing _ landscape of Spain." "Do not talk to me of Spain, if you please, Lord Lynne," said Inez wearily. "I want to forget it. I want to cheat myself into believing that I only began to live when I came here." A look of sadness shadowed for a moâ€" ment her brilliant face and dimmed her large dark eyes, and in that moment Inez was inu,'pn-ibly beautiful. "Poor Inez!" murmured Agatha; "was mot the Semora Monteleone _ kind to ‘ The prospect of leaving Lynnewolde, | even for a home of their own as beauâ€" tiful, if not as stately was not pleasâ€" ing to the girls, who loved this, the |home of their race. Lord Lynne said he ‘lh()\fld be in London a great _ dealâ€"he | was going to Scotlandâ€"and he bcu:d warmly. "You will like my mother: I have always considered her one of the most perfectly wellâ€"bred women in the world, You are both left in some meaâ€" sure to her care. You know your father wished you to live with my mother until Here Lord Lynue su.p(ed, and a warm flush rose to his brow. Not in the preâ€" mence of that sweet and fiontle Agatha, or her imperially beautiful sister, could he utter the word that trembled upon his lips; not in their presence could he say one word which would recall to them the will "Until we are married," said Inez coolâ€" ly; "and if we never marry at all, Mrs. Lynne will have three children instead of one." It was gnceful]y said, and then, for the first time. Inez saw something like admiration in Lord Lynne‘s face as he turned toward ber. It was not for her beauty, though, but for her ready wit and grace. S W y mE ir it aeadsaa d 'l‘h:t afternoon Mre. Lynne arrived, and then, for the first time, the two sisâ€" ters felt at ease in their cousmin‘s house. That evening the family solicitor and Sir Harry Leigh joined them, and they all united in rsonuading the daughters of the late Lord Lynne to continue their residence in the house wthere their faâ€" ther had lived and diedâ€"at least for a time, untdl some other arrangements couhi be made. Mrs. Lynne declared that whe should never be happy at Lynneâ€" wolde if her nieces quitted it. Their father had wished them to make their home with her, that she might be guarâ€" dian, chaperone and friend. |\ Wyvérne. Ob, no, he did not love her; ‘It had been but a passing fancy. He \liked Agatha l{.‘Ivnne much better; yet he thought kindly of Florence, and reâ€" \ membered her looks and tones on that |\ morning that seemed now so many | years ago. | __"I will neither woo nor win yet," said | Philip to himself. "I will wait. Wisdom them to remain, that his mother might not feel lost or lonely. So it was decided at last, to the great joy of every one, including the servants and retainers, who gloried in the proud beauty of Miss fi'nm, while theg loved the gentle rule of Agatha. Mr. Gregson was relieved; it saved him an infinite amount of trouble. Sir Harry Leigh was delighted, for he had long contemplated a inarriage between one of the heiresses and his on and heir, Allan. Mra. Lynne was pleased, because she loved the girls and wished to take a mother‘s place to them, Philip was glad, as any . man would be, that the house he called his own was to be cheered and b:'i‘shuned b( the presence of two young beauâ€" t fu} ’hlnl. & ¢ Philip had thought much of the will and its conditions, He liked money but he loved homor more, He knew _ that without money his title and Lynnewolde would be but a farce. How could he keep them up on a few hundreds per annum. Yet he had made up his mind, and no Lynne had ever changed it. If he did not love either of the girls, and if they did not love him, he would never ask one or the other to be his wifa In that case the money must go. He was quite decided; he would never marâ€" ry any girl because he had been told to do so, nor would he ever marry for the sake of money. There was p{um.y _ But d.uanu drawing nearer, for | Philip was q.lnnin( to love Agatha very dearly. There was something in \tho calm, eweet face that chnrmedngim. He liked the repose, the gentleness, the | shy timidity of her manner. She had | not any very brilliant accomplishments; | she could not sing as Inez did, with a | fire and passion that found its way inâ€". | to the depths of every heart. The one | dazzled and carried you by storm; the | other stole gently into your heart, When | onee known, it was impossible not to love Agatha Lynne. She was simply a fair, modest, thoughtful English girl, fresh and bloomi*i a rose, innocent |md gnflolm as a "Thild, open, frank, candid, full of high principle, sweetâ€" | tempered, and gay; not capable, perâ€" haps, of either the deepest joy or the most tragical sorrow; a girl who had thorough command of her thoughts and words; one who would never be led lwnLhom what she knew and believed to her duty. There was not the making either of a heroine of romance or & m'dy queen in Af-du Lynne. She w be a good wife, a devoted mother, a kindly neighbor, and a steadâ€" fast friend. But it was not in her to love "not wisely, but too well." Genius and passion had not marked her as the‘if of time before himâ€"two long _ years. Then his thought flew back to Florence and truth and goodness must determine my choice." CHAPTER V. Life went on much the same at Lynneâ€" wolde. In place of the gny-hnlroxn old lord & {oung and handsome one reigned. A gentle, highâ€"bred lady ruled the house and every one was pleased to obey her. The sisters were '"i happy, for they loved Mrs. Lynne, who was so kind a mother to them; and, as yet, there was no cloud in the aky. own. Her life ran, and always would run, in commonplace grooves and chanâ€" was laid the founda attructed the young heir of Lynne. When in her presence he felt as one who, in the scorching noontide heat, finds rest and shade. He was a botter and truer man when he had talked to her. She never made his heart thrillâ€" she never woke in him that deep, pas sionate love he could give, but she claimâ€" ed and cheered him; she did not fire his ambition, but she taught him more of his everyâ€"day duty than Philip had ever known before. So he grew to love her, and intended, when s. days of her mourning were over, to ask her to be his wife. Mrs. Lynne was muca attached to Agatha,. She stood rather in awe of the brilliant and beautiful Inez, who was so difierent from the general run of young ladies, so intolerant of little conâ€" ventionalities, so fatally dowered with the gifts of genius and song, so proud, so haughty, yet at times loving and tenâ€" derâ€"Inez, whose childhood and girlhood had been spent in that far distant land, and was an unknown noH.dt,o them ; whose beautiful" face . paled, whose bright, dark eyes grew dim, when they spoke to her of her Spanish homeâ€"she who professed utter indifference end scorn of all love and lovers, while she sang such music as would have charmed a heart of stone. Fitful, faulty, grand, generous and noble, capable of any . ex+ treme of good or bad, requiring the training and guidence of a master hand, gifted with the rarest and most wonâ€" drous beauty, capable of giving her life for one she loved, she was an enigma to the quiet English lady who ruled at Lynnewolde. Mrs. Lynce, through her very love for the girl, slightly tyrannizâ€" ed over Agatha, but it was very rarely that she interfered with Incz. Had the proud, passionate heart s kâ€" en yet?t Ab, yes. She seoffed at me, but she would have laid down her life at Lord Lynne‘s feet, content to die if but once he would look upon ker as he did upon her sister. "I never feel as though Inez were one of our own," said Mrs, Lynne to her son one day; "that strange foreign life has made her so different to Agatha. I cannot understand a girl having no storâ€" ies of her girlhood to relate, She seems to dislike Sw very name of Spain." "I (fillte disagree with you, mother," was the reply. "I believe she loved her early home so much that whe cannot enâ€" dure to hear it mentioned." Lord Lynne was away from home very frequently during the first few months after his uncle‘s death. He did not reâ€" turn to Severnoke Castle. Some one there watched, waited and hoped, but all in vain. He wrote a note to Lord Wyverne, and told him how constantly he was engaged, but that he hoped to see him after Christmas. Lord Wyverne knew exactly what that meant, and he inwardly raged against the poor old lord for his inopportune death. "It was alf going on so charmingly," he said to himself. "If he had remained here another week, he would have made an offer before he left. He went away too soon." T LW L. sc e ut l 15 M iba.c Lord Wyverne told Florence that their late guest, now Lord Wynne, had asked to be most kindly remembered to het, but that he found himself too busy to pay his promised visit. If hbe bad ob served gh daughter attentively, he would have seen her lips quiver and her violet eyes grow dim; but his lurdshlg - V Caia 0 aeccpiwh W nc im e uns y was just then too busy with a Perigord pie to attend to any one but himsol?. And of there were quiet tears shed over a bright hope faded, none knew of it; if a fair young head tossed wearily through the long night, unable to find rest on a pillow that seemed strewn with thorns, no one was any the wiser, Florence Wyverne knew how to keep her own secret. ' . 3 kok The year of mourning expired at last, and then Lynnewolde resumed its usual ho-rhdmea. The terms of the strange will had not been made public. It was the wish of all who were interested in it thatit should be so. Lord Lynne was consequently considered as one of the most eligible men in the country The ladies were pressing in their invitations, and it was very seldom that one refused to visit Lynuewilde, whether for picnie, dinner, or evening party. Mrs. Lynue did the honors of the house gracefully, and no one was more popular than the young lord and his highâ€"bred, gentle moâ€" That summer, the one after the death of the late lord, was an unusually fine oneâ€"it was also unusually warm; and the sisters o‘mut but little time indoors. Rend.lng, walking and sketching in the d&&! ells of the parkâ€"lstening to the rea ntgl the world‘s greamt poems, in w‘ht{:h rd Lynne took the keenest deâ€" light. ther None of the family had been to Lonâ€" don dur‘lni the season. _ The time of mourning had been spent in the strictâ€" est seclusion; but next year Mrs. Lynne was to present the young laudies, and unâ€" der her auspices they were to make their debut in the world of fashion. Hoe had not spoken yet. He had qruwn to love Afatha Lynne calmly, deeply and intensely. He thought of her as the one woman whom he should like to have near him through life. He did _ not know if his love was returned. Agatha was not of the demonstrative kind; l?l._lt ho-'lnâ€"tve'n(‘l';d,ml;elâ€"t;ro he left Lynnev'voldo again, to ask her to _becom? ‘hin wile; Some one else had learned to love beâ€" sides Lord Lynne. With all the passion and warmth of her southern nature, with all the force of her genius, with that fatal, concentrated fidelity . that knows no change, that counts no risk, Ines Lynne loved the handsome debonâ€" naire cousin who devoted himself to her sister. One bright morning in August _ the two sisters, with Mrs. Lynne, sat under the great cedarâ€"tree. It was too warm to work, to read, or to sketch. Inez deâ€" clared that the only life endurable on such a morning was that of a bee, who could rest himself at his ease in the very heart of a rose. Agatha, by way _ of soothing her conscience, heldy some deliâ€" cate pie-oo of work in her hand. She was talking to Mrs. Lynne, and Inez was ‘(uc:fn( the shadow of the trees on _ "There are two gentlemen!" cried Agaâ€" tha, suddenly. "One is Lord Lynne; but who is that with himt" the "Some one who seems to know you," said Inez, more by the way of hiding the crimson flush upon her face than from any need of speech, s 1+ e any need of speech, "Oh, Inez," cried Agatha, "it is Allan Leigh! How long has he been home, I wonder? How altered he is!" The two gentlemen walked slowly over the grass. . £ noatta ty _ "I have brought you an old friend," said Lord Lynne, with a smile to Agaâ€" tha, "and you, Miss Lynne, a new one_._" at Mr WHAT NEGLECT DIU FOR HIM Then He Used Dodd‘s Kidney Pills and Became a Well Manâ€"His Experience a Lesson for You. Athabasca Landing, Alta., Oct. 26. â€" (Special).â€"That Klil(fney Disease, negâ€" lected in its earlier stages, leads to the most terrible sufferings, if not death itself, and that the one sure cure for it in all stages is Dodd‘s Kidâ€" mey Pills, is the experience of Mr. James &. Brant, a f:rmer residing near here. Jas. E. Brant Suffered Torments from Kidney Diseases. Mr. Brant contracted Kidney Diâ€" sease, when a young man, from a strain, and, like hosts of others, negâ€" lefied it, expecting it to go away itâ€" seli. But it kept gradually growing worse, till after thistr; years of increasing suffering the climax came, and he found himself so crippled that at times he could not turn in bed, and for two weeks at a time it was imâ€" possible for him to rise from a chair without putting his hands on his knees. He could not buiton his clothes. He was troubled with Lumbago, Gravel and Backache, and tried medicines for each and all of them without getâ€" tin%J relief, till good luck turned him to Dodd‘s Kiduey Pills, Dodd‘s Kidney Pills started at the cause of his troubles mid cured his Kidneys. _ With cured Kidueys his other troubles speedilv disappeared, and toâ€"day he is a well man. Ifi you cure your Kidueys with Dodd‘s Kidney Pilis you will never have Lumbago, Rheumatism, Heart Disease, Dropsy or Bright‘s Disease. According to estimates furnished by the statistical bureau of the Dopartment of Agricuiture, the value of the farm products of the United States for 1907 aggregated ubout seven and oneâ€"half bilâ€" lions of dollars. It is now practically assured that the aggregate value of the farm products of the country for the present year will reach eight billions of dollars, No finite mind can think in bilâ€" lions, and the immensity of the value of the farm products of this country can be only particularly grasped by comparâ€" Isons. And comparisons, rendered possibly by the statistical tabulations furnished by various governments, show the immense superiority of the United States over @very other ooumrf' in the world in the extent and accumulated value of the farâ€" mer‘s work. For instance, the average wheat crop of the United States is twice as great as that of whole of Europe. This country produces fourâ€"fifths of the cotâ€" ton supply of the world and sevenâ€" eights of all the Indiaon corn. The hay crop last year was worth more by $100,â€" 000,000 than the combined capital of all the national banks in the United States, The poultry products were more valuâ€" wlle than the hay crop and the dairy produced market,uile goods worth more than the chickens and eggs. The average annual value of the cotâ€" ton crop is Sout. $600,000,000, and _ the annual value of the live stock slaughterâ€" ed for food â€"hogs, sheep and cattleâ€" is about double in value that of the cotâ€" ton crop. The fruit receipts, including all varieties, from the potato to _ the cabâ€" bage, and other hundreds of millions to the wealth produced annually on the farm.â€"Baltimore American Star. Lakefield, Que., Oct. 9th. 1907. Minard‘s Liniment Co., Ltd.: Gentlemen,â€"In July, 1905, 1 was thrown from a road machine, injuring my hip and back badily and was obliged to use a crutch for 14 months, In Sepâ€" tember, 1908, Mr. Wim. Outridge, of Laâ€" chute, urged me to try Minard‘s Lint ment, which I did, with the most satisâ€" factory results, and toâ€"day 1 am as well as ever in my life. From Bad to Worse. A miner in Scotland was visited by a friend, and among the places of interest shown was the pit mouth. Sceing the cage lowered with the stout steel rope the friend exclaimed: _ "My word! i shouldn‘t like to go down there on that rope." “‘Wh{,” exclaimed the miner, "Aw wadne lik‘ %xfmlg doon there withoot it!"â€"London News. How 1t Seemed. "(Gillet says he‘s saving up for a rainy It: â€" “y." * "His wife thinks he must be saving | CULE wp for another flood."â€"Life. | ol ....,.,___H_â€"_..u ie B geciwmcmceces | Modern Variation. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in COW®. | _ "ono touch of nature faking," observed en * kProf. Sinnick, "makes the whole world an Toeo Unkind. Ananias club." Too Unkind. "Didn‘t you say there was a statesman lnlm femily ?" queried my deaf friend. INk na" T avied hastanin@ to correct ‘rOh, no," I cried, hastening to correct his peculiar impression; "I merely said that a relative of mine was one of the United States senators from Now York. â€"Bohemiar. Magazine. Repeat it:â€"*shiloh‘s Cure will always cure my coughs and colds." Greatest of All Industries, W C h e w in g Tobacco. It guarantees thehigh quality of Black Watch EDDY‘S "SILENT " 4/ MATCHES *# " Slient as the Sphinx !" <~/ t _ [ THE MOST PERFECT MATCHES YOU EVER STRUCK Always, everywhere in Canada, ask for Eddy‘s Matches THE FAVORITES The Big Black Plug. MATTHEW x BAINES Yours sincerely, Men should look for this mark 2973 Some of the Most Successfulâ€"Their Great Tracts of Cotton Lands. The biggest negro farm in Kouth Caroâ€" ling is in Marion County. It used to be Tracy Alford, but Tracy has invested in town property and eut his farm . down. Marion yet holds the belt, regardless of the claims of Sumtier and Qrangeburg Counties, and even of Wiiliam Murry, of Wodoefield who has 180 acres in coltlon Wedgefield, who has 180 acres in eolDO! and will make far over a hundred bales, and even our friend Bob Babb, of Cross Hill, who makes 100 bales a year. . Butler General, a quiet, unassuming lookinfl:egro, who lives about five miles from rion court house, is truly the biggest negro farmer in South Cardtina. General has 200 acres in cotton in one level field without a flow or a washout, and 100 acres in another lot, 300 acres in cotton as fine as any man‘s, trom which General says he will gather at least 280 bales and he expects more. ‘This is his own land, for which he would not take $75 an acre. It is one unbroken field of as fine farm land, level and all stumped, as Aycock or any other white farmer owns, and it‘s paid for, costing him seven years ugo $25 and $30 an were. He has 200 wcres &f valuable timber land and sevâ€" eral hundred acres on his other places, about 1,000 acres in all. He runs eighâ€" teen plows on his plantation and used 140 toums of guano, costing him about $2,000. His tarm supplies cost $3,000, making his outliay $5,000, General is an openâ€"hearted, progressive negro. He has a church and a school house on his place and gets all the labor he wants to work his farm. Anderson General, & brother, works one of the plantations, keeping it up to the acre mark. Both the General‘s are good, Christianâ€"hearled men, lovers of the acre and loyal citiâ€" zens.â€"Columbia Sun. Sallow Complexion The Blood is impoverished and needs iron. This is best supplied by Ferrozone, which contains lots of iron in an easily assimilable ftorm. Ferâ€" rozone makes bloodâ€"the kind that brings a rosy color to the cheeks and a ruby tint to the lips. _ To enjoy perlect health you must use FERROZONE CURES A young lady well known in society elreles of Springfield, who derived excepâ€" tional benefit from Ferrozone, says: "I felt it my duty to make known the value of Ferrozone, _ My trouble was poor, weak blood, and as a ('(lnle(‘:lflwe’m] lips were pallid, and my cheeks had no color. I wasn‘t at all strong, and reâ€" quired a bracing tonic. Ferrozone soon brought color to my cheeks, improved my appetite and maj'e me stronger than ILdvg)een in years. I favor Ferrozone because it is so simple to take and works so quickly." Won‘t you try Ferrozone? Concentrated cure in tablet form, that‘s Ferrozone. _ 50c. per box, or s1X boxes for #2.50, at all dealers, There is a young man in Boston who can trace his family back several genâ€" erations. His failing is a desire to be thought a descendant of one of "the old families." One thing in which he takes particular pride is the continental uniform. HMe was showing this to a young lady the other day. "My greatâ€" grandfather wore this suit when he gave his life to his country during the brave days of the Revolution," he said. The young lady inspected the uniform carefully, but could find neither bullet hole nor sabre cut. She turned to him with a charming smile, _ "Oh! Was the poor old gentleman _ drowned?" she asked. Any persor who drinks 25¢ tea and once tastes 30¢ "Salada‘"‘ will see that it is not only finer in flavor, but that as one pound makes many more cups, it is economical to use. NEGRO OwNERS OF FARMS A Shifted Burden. "So you sold that miserable old mule of yours!" "Yassir," replied Mr. Erastus Pinkley; "foh real money." "Doesn‘t it weigh on your conscience?" "Well, boss. I‘s done had dat mule on my mind so long it‘s kind of a relief to change off an‘ git ‘im on my conâ€" science."â€"Washington Star. "At last!" exulted the exâ€"bicyclist as hbe soared aloft in his aeroplane, "I‘ve found a public highway now where ‘there is no sprinkling cart demon to come along and turn it into a sea of mud!" Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria 45 Repeat it: â€""‘Shiloh‘s Cure will always cure my coughs and colds." The Oratorâ€"My friends, I repeat my question, What two things are helping mankind to get up in the world? . Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper, _ Sailor (in the gallery)â€"The ‘larum clock and the stepladder. â€"Marine Jourâ€" Died for His Country Out of His Reach. PALE CEYLON T Two Helps. ‘CORNS LUKI‘ a |N““°3 8 You can painlessly remove AD com, :Ea, hard, soft or bleeding, b appl Putnam‘s Corn‘Extractor, 1i never ‘mm-. luv!llfilfll'! m!“‘u’(n;::lu“n:lg'&:lnu::nm Th years in on l:szf Cure guaranteed. Bold by ":lnlml"“ 2. bottles. Reofuse substitutes. A LA SA cce PUTNAM‘ Precooling Oranges in CST® An experimental plant for the pre ecoling of oranges in cars is located at Los Angeles, Cal., and consists of two 40â€"inch square insulated ducts leodin’ from an ammonia coil room capable 0 supplying from 16 to 20 tons of refrigera> tion in 24 hours. The cold air is forced in either direction through the car and Lack to the coil room by a motor fan. In experiments, s2Y$ Popular Mechanics, the air was varied from 20 degrees F. when first entering the cars to higher temperatures, The air is forced through the cars at different velocitics and in volume varying from 4,500 to 0,000 cuble fcet per minute. How the Man Lost in the Woods May Get Warm. We must make our traveler who is lost in the woods as comfortable as possible while waiting for the sky to clear. Let him first find a place as well sheltered as possible. A fallâ€" en tree will best serve him. But beâ€" fore deciding on his campingâ€"place, he should look about to see that there is plenty of dead wood. Then, from an area of six feet square, beside the fallen tree, he must clear away the snow, using his feet if nothing else is available, and in the cgm thus . cleared, kindle a fire of birch bark and dry wood, pflinf on the wood until tf‘;a fire entirely covers . th cleared ground. While there is a 3003 fire bumiu%, he maI' gather a large number of boughs of spruce, balsam, or cedar. If these are not to be had, the best substitute for bedâ€"making is brush. When several armfuls have beca1 gathered, and placed near the fire to extract the frost, let him begin gutherlnfi Ary and dead wood, and not until he thinks he has onou‘h for two nights can he be reasonably sure of having a sufficient quantity fci one nl{.t. After the fire had been tu ning about an hour, all ml{ a cleared away. _ The ground will be found dry and %uiw warm. _ Then this space is to be covered with the gathered boughs and on the leeward side of the bed thus prepared, a fire should be built. This fire ought not to be large, as a draft would be creatâ€" ed, and, moreover, the smoke would be umoylns to the sleeper. He is now assured of warmth sufficient to prevent him _ from _ freezing.â€"From | "‘Lost in the Woods," by A. B. Carâ€" ‘leton, in The Outing {(quim for November. in eleven successive speed contests the Underwood typewriter has won the championship of the world. it has been first in all the important contests of Spanking does not cure children of bed wetting. There is a constitutional cause for this trouble. Mrs. M. Bumâ€" mers, Box W, 8, Windsor, Ont., will send free to any mother her successful home treatment, with full instrutions, Send no money, but write her toâ€"day if g:ur children trouble you in this way, Don‘t blame the child, the chances are it can‘t help it. This treatment also cures adults UNITED TYPEWRITER CO. Adelaide St. East â€" TORONTO and aged people troubled with urine dif ficulties by day or night. Frenchman Who Thinks He Has Photographed the Emotions. Dr. Baraduc, of Paris, has been lecturâ€" ing, says the Health Record, at the Theosophical Society‘s rooms in London on human vibration. He showed many fihbtognphn of those alleged vibrations y placing a sensitized film on one of the nerve centres. UTNAM‘S_PAINLELS CORN: EXTRACTOR He usually places the film at night and leaves it tlfi morning. The vibrations of the subject throw "&. nitrate of silver on the film into a corresponding form of vibration, which is found registered on the film when developed, just as the light reflected from an object through the lens of a camera registers the form of that object. Dr. Baradue had also many pictures taken in the ordinary way by means of the camera. In these various states of emotion are shown. Sudden anger apâ€" pears as a sort of whirling shower of sparks and vapor. A state of high spirâ€" itual contemplation produces a m&t‘! globe of light some way above the sitter‘s In one picture the etheric double of a woman kneeling in prayer is shown. Acâ€" acording to the doctor the etheric cosmie forces are continually streaming into us and becoming individualized, or streamâ€" ing out, being disindividualized, mingling again with the peneral stream. One photograph showed the vibration of telepathic communicationâ€"some had lines in ribbons of light, showing attachâ€" ment. In one, taken as the doctor‘s wife passed away, the line or bond which had always appeared between them is seen for tlo first time broken. That Famous Swim. "It is a very dangerous thing, _ I have found, to tell stories to the present younger generation," a Bunday school teacher recently remarked. "Now, I have always been fond of ilâ€" Ilvuetrating the Gospei lessons with little stories which helped to point the moral and a favorite w'#h me was one of a young Roman athleéte who used to swim the ng’lber three times every morning. This generally made a hit with the boys in my class, but one Sunday a new lad with Irish eyes appeared, and at the conâ€" chluion of this story he snickered audâ€" ibly. # ‘You seem to think that this story is rather funny, Patrick, I remarked severely. ‘Will you tell us in what resâ€" pect?‘ _ "‘Beems like he mif.ht have made one more trip and got h clothes, Miss,‘ h« replied -fu. a cheerful grin."â€"From The Bohemian Magazine for November. BETTER THAN SPANKING. HUMAN VIBRATIONS. CURED alphabet. ""The â€" dots www n n on siby PL INTepâ€"LADIEs TO DO PLAIN AND W *lent sowing at home, whole or #DAF® time: good WI.I"It T4 p.ruc; charges pald. J atunid ftor ful! ML hi NCO ne Co.. Mopntreal. Eeeg Et "The dots are all Nfit-"flfl"" friends, "but why do you have so many lonsw l # dashes," he responded, "repreâ€" ultthlfllfl\""l“""“"lm .g,m“un‘wh&ll"*!‘u“"‘dx h‘dm.moy.omyof&homul just let _p‘mz-ndvorbd'cnu' murug@=np " CCC 2C OLP tham 1 “o.moyoo-lll““‘““l !mm mm;ulflvot‘k“'fllll! nto the alphabet. Wh.ldoxphuuonelunnpcw standing mystery. 4 Their decks strewn with dead songâ€" birds, the steamers Moses Taylor, Taomas Hartum and Robert Fulton put in here Friday after a strange and perilous trip Friday from the x ror lakes. The boats were one W ate. The crews of the boats report thut for da{l "h.{ crept cautioull{ along through smoke from forest fires so thick thet one could scarcely breathe, Thousands of birds of all descriptions fleeing before the flames took refuge Repeat it:â€"*" Bhiloh‘s Oure will alâ€" ways cure m’mlll and colds." c d wl i: SnA stt A d testc, vireey 1 on the boats, only to be overcome by the dense smoke. They wore shoveled off the decks by the hundred. Mrough of them were left to substanâ€" tiate the #®tory when they came to PECECC . NERC Eo0RT 0 Een msC oe port.â€"Ashtabula correspondence Colâ€" umbus Dispatch. Painful back trouble indicates diseased kidneys. f Don‘t toms. When you can‘t stoop or bend without suffering painâ€" When you notice urinary disâ€" orders, dizzy spells and constant headachesâ€" Dragging Backache When your back aches, mornâ€" ing, noon and night, when langour and restlessness oppress youâ€" _ _ Then will the telling merit of Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills make you feel better in one day. Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills exert a wonderful influence on the discasâ€" ed tissues of the kidneys,. They heal and soothe, give vitality and tone, put new life into the kidâ€" neys, and thus prevent a return of the trouble. DR. HAMILTON‘S PILLS A SURE CURE Kidney sufferer, health awaits you and hapry cure is ridn at band in Dr. Haimiiâ€" ton‘s Pills. Note carefully the above eympâ€" rome; if they fit your case, don‘t m&. but go at once to your dealer and procure unâ€" ulllns Dr. HMamtiton‘s Pilis of Mandrake and Butternut, sold in yellow boxes, &0 each, or five for $1.%. Morse Tomâ€"Yes; she has a million in her own right. AhK;+2 * Aliy Jackâ€"But money doesn‘t always lead to happiness, old man. Tomâ€"True, but it ought to help im the search. Jackâ€"I hear you are engaged to that homely Miss Gotchips. y Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, etc. An sutomobile that swallows its own dust is described in Popular Mechanics, Pipes suck up the dust from the rear wheels and draw it into a box from which it is again deposited on the road in granulated form. ISSUE NQ. WOMAN‘S BACKACHE The back is the ml.hufilng of woman‘s organism. It quickly calls attention to trouble by aching. It tells, with other sympzams. such as nervousness, headache, pains in the loins, weight in the lower part of the body, that a woman‘s feminine orflnhm needs immediateattention. such cases the one sure remedv In such cases the one sure remedy which speedil&remom the cause, and restores feminine organism to & healthy, normal condition is LYDiA E.PINKHAM‘S VEGETABLE COMPOUND Mrs. J. A. Taliberte, of 34 Artilâ€" lerie Btreet, Quebec, writes to Mrs. ** For six years I have been doctoring for female weakness, heart and nerves. liver and Hduel trouble, but in Lydin Te : Di Â¥t . d y o uold Sn LCC m mika ol o 0COy VR Te Ady oob E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound 1 can safely say I have found a curc. _ 4 was continually bothered with the 3 distressing b‘iuhes hoadaches, bearing down pains, und I kept growing more and more nervous. " L E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Comâ€" relieved me of all these distressâ€" ing symptoms and made me a wel} * symptoms and maCe me a wel} Tess phone ue ddres an fofor$ women, or to use Ly C Finkbam‘s VMConpound?" FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkâ€" ham‘s Vemm“Oom und, made from roots and hu‘h.ga been the mdhuwwlyongth nnndlsusf wwbchayebeenm\(:bbdvh?h Decks Strewn With Dead Birds. e POM:_ 7 Cufanturink i National Manufeoturing CO., * I was continually bothered with the Dustâ€"Swallowing Automobile HMis Safety Vaive. neglect the first sympâ€" It 45, 1908 Crzarina Reje Visit 5 an lig Terents we We Victorikâ€"H : Waterloo No Waterloo S Websnd Wellingtos Wellington Ber t it o Shettord Bou le y m.?.'.? Terre U hergant y Grenviile Grey Rast Bimeooe Bimooe Btormo: Thunde York York York Huntingdos Jeag wes Car Joletw Keamourneke Labeike Lapreiniâ€" No L‘Assomyptio Lotbiniers Richer ow Richmond â€" W Rimouek | Rouvilie Bt. Hy@acint) Â¥arq uotis Gre i.l.flmluu‘ Peter borouyg Drummeond â€" A Q ue be Dauphic brant ... . Breuttond _ . mvun » Noruh Bruce south Qursovon _ ... Dutterin .. . Dundas ... . Pr Nioo ket Pontimc Veudreut Wright luase 16 1dinoe HMal on Maniluos Maicilto c Mertinge BHausti o we K. Â¥ ue k M bnadso Mont on. M M 1A HAS xiand Now xford Bout un Mcurk Oen e ont Coun t wos «o L Vat azm w bC # € W

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