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Durham Review (1897), 28 Oct 1909, p. 6

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Miss Vanc recovered slowly, but sureâ€" ly; the pallor on her face gaye place to the daintiest bloom. The time came when I saw that I could leave her in safety. I told her so one day when we were sittingy alone. She looked at me with wistful eyes. "You have been very kind to me, Mrs. Neville. I am a perfect stranger to you, yet you have treated me as though 1 were your OWn sister."" "I will crown my geoduess by :’n’ll. my fio-m and passing out your life, Miss Vane." She seemed slighly confused, and then glanced up into my face with the fraukâ€" ext smile that I had yet seen on her own. "‘Mrs. Neville," she said, ""I should like to ask a favor of you." o o it," I respended. "Will you be my friend?" said . Miss Vane. "I do not feel that I can part from you." I smiled to myself, thinking of the soul that was strong erough to live without love, and that called all love treachery. ty c 23 n oo h ie 1 diodk m "I should like you to be n you willâ€"to come and see times,"* Miss Vane went on. perceive that in my short life EECmREE] ® "I should like you to be my friend, it you willâ€"to come and see me someâ€" times," Miss Vane went on. ‘*"You can perceive that in my short life I have had x great sorrowâ€"so great as to cut me off from my kind, to make me hate the sight and sound of almost every living creature, to turn with loathing from all that is fairest and brightest on earth. I cannot tell you what that sorrow was. You are kind enough not to seek to kuow it. Will you be my friend, yet res pect my seerct, which I choose to withâ€" old ?* "I will; it is you ret, that I care for "You will promise to let me live my old life, uot to try to draw me from â€" it, never to bring . anyâ€" cne to see me, never to ask me to your nouse, but at times to come and visit me, content to know no more of me than you do now?" . C igs‘s a lc i 4 1 Lo in HOE sw Ne "I promise to keep the terms compact, Miss Vane, as long as She held out har hand to me, a clasped it in mine, I said to her: benutiful hands you have, Miss bave seen rone so perfect in sh color." { What could have }m;i her yourg Ufe? The & semed doad. That same were ieJking, something age, and 1 asked Miss how old whe was. She ;\xrprhed for any awered at once: Mrea. Neville." _ EV PCE TIITTCY "Twentyâ€"two!" I repeated. _ " Then when you came here, you were not much more than eighteen?" "Noâ€"â€"ctghteen and a few months." "Have the years seemed long, . MY dear? I asked, gently. 4 "Long!* she repeated. "Each one has been an oze." x t e i it s es k "If you sdo, woulid you 8t "Ol Pol lck s;and them as yoi have spent the past ones*" "There would be no other resource," she replied, shuddering. "I am almost agraid to say what I think, lest I displease you, Miss Vane. If 1 have that misfortune, I ask you beforehand to forgive me. Eighteen is not generally considered a very wise age, is it*" It is as wise as any other age, I should imagine, Mrs. Nevilie." "Nay, my dear, you are wrong. 'Onl_v taught .me many I@SSQINE CINET: JOONO2!! CC yet to learn." "I do not intend to learr more," she said; "I have learned enough." "At eightcen." I eontinued, "we feel pleasure and pain acutely. We are elther at the height of happiness or ln. the depths of despair. At forty we realâ€" ize, reason, analyze, and enc :ve. Has it | ever occurred to you that every human Yife is a precious gift, received for some wise, purpose * What answer will those atea"that have to face the Great Giver give that have to face the ‘rreat GITCT | ith their life all wasted"" | "My life has been blighted, not wastâ€" ed." she replied, looking at me steadily. l "The two things are different." ' "But my dear Miss Vane," I saidâ€"| ry 'E;don meâ€"do you _ not think | * uriuiteen is too.sarly an age . t | ;-;u_'iun that I CHAPTER VI A Fair Invalid i«3 Vane, as long as I live." esently AIISD *1" t har hand to me, and as I m.uo gate that led : i mine, I said to her: "What ed in silence, which inds you have, Miss Vane! I | to break. :one so perfect in shape and "You have tired | She looked at me, a s uat the faintest gleam of 5 reprcssed, as it wer REC as wise as any other age, I magine, Mrs. Nevilie." my dear, you are wrong. Only | expreience give wisdom. I am an you by some yearsâ€"time has me many lessons that you have not the faintest gleam of er face, such as most girls mey are complimented and â€" taow think them beautiâ€" louqelf. not your seeâ€" the terms of our | were beyond t! as long as I live." Prmntly l\l:n Puabadtt E essm Ateren‘ shall graut m C C2 on ‘ After that there was no more to DC said. I did my best in one way, and ‘that was to direct her attention to | every good deed ,every earnest life, that | came under my notice. One morning 1 | persuaded her to share with me my faâ€" | vorite ramble through the woods. â€" The | day was so fine that we went further than I had intended, until in the disâ€" ! tance we saw the grey spire of Daintree Church. We stopped to look at it, for | it made a striking picture, the tall grey %s!eeples standing out in _ bold . relief ilg.im! the sky, and while we stood, suddenly there pealed out the merry 'chimo ot wedding bells. I smiledâ€"the sunshine, the clear air, the blue aky, the bells, all seemed so pleasant to me. "'Huk!" I eried, "Those are wedding bells; someone is being made very happy | toâ€"day." | _ She turned her pale face to me. "ifapâ€" py!" she repuated. "Why, the dreariest | farce under heaven is & wedding!" _| _ "My dear Miss Vane!" I cried, -gartled _| by her vehemence, "what a strange which deliberately to set aside is best and bnglten in life ope‘s self to a dull, consuming "No," she replied. "If the | the sorrow were to come again, aet just as 1 have done." After that there was no mo said. 1 did -g best in one 1 that was to direct her atte every good deed ,every earnest came under my notice. One m P L 8Ek 2x Ned : - She laughed, and a dreary sound it was that came from the young lips. "It is the dreariest farce under the sun," she insistedâ€""a mockery in most cases, a eruelty in others, a happiness never." "It is well that everyone is not of your opinion, Miss Vane," I said. "If '.Key were, there would be fewet sorrowful hearts in the world," she reâ€" joined â€"."Oh, Mrs. Neville," she cried, shuddering, Ycome awayâ€"come away from the sound of those terrible bells!" They seemed to make the old churcl’: radiprne DCPR\ 0 from Cae SREPRRE CE T CC Cc They seemed to make the old church rock with their merriment; they filled the air with a joyous clang. But T saw that the sound made my eompanion ill. She piaced her hands over her ears, 28 though she would fain shut it out, while her lips grew white as death. Back we hastened through the woods until we were beyond the sound of the bells; and Y‘rmntly Miss Vane rested against the ittle gate that led to the copyiceâ€"-mt- od in silence, which neither of us cared â€"the dark, proud beauty appCarCq CC indifferent tYmn ever. "Mrs. Neville," she said, "I will go out with you whenever you wish, but never take me again within hearing of those belis." 1 promised to remember, and she went home without alluding to the subject again. As time passed, the dark beauty of her face seemed to ac uire a new °xâ€" pression. I saw lines of ?irm endurance, of patient gravity, dee ni thercon, W?lire.tbe pogwer qy self-cl:n:fi and selfâ€" restraint, the dull, ceaseless brooding over wrol:s, the fierce rebellion that never found a voiee, the sorrow that }found no relief, the desrlir that in its silence asked only for death, increased day by day. ce ce AUTT t 49 cause of the tem quite knew. Whe and weight of the foundation of the or whether it had from the first, no anout 1t "I shali never believe that quick, heavy trains will be safe on that bridge," reâ€" marked Huldah Vane. We saw the steam among the trees, and then as the train came nearer #o tht bridge it slacked speed. We were both watching it intently. How shall I deâ€" W on n oo o ce comun‘ s in ns :c‘rl.;m horror that ensued? CHAPTER VII tired _ yourself," I said. me, all passion and feeling it were, with an iron hand roud beauty appeared more o set aside all that t in lifeâ€"to yield consuming sorrow * "If the time and 1 should was running slowly when the engine reached the middle of the bridge, and then the stoneâ€"work seemed to quiver, to totter, to give way. Suddenly _ it parted, and the great engine, followed by three or four carriages, fell into the ) PB somartr eP mt LAAAE NTE F EL T C inquired. river in| "Yes, if no change takes place in a‘ ng shaâ€" | short time." over the| No change did take place; the patient : in the | did not open his eyes. He seemed perâ€" look so | fectly unconscious; and theâ€"doctor‘s face to Miss | grew more and more anxious. I watched e steam | him as intently as he watched the sufâ€" , "could | ferer. "Do you think it will end fatâ€" ie great, | ally, Doctor?" I asked. + Yet,| "I am afraid so, Xs. Neville. While ; grand | there is life, though, we will hope." "Had you not better try to find out ck, heavy | who he is? If anything serious is likely Iige," reâ€" ;/) l'nppen, his friends ought to be sent or." he trees,| "The lady is his wife," said Dr. Fletâ€" er #o tht | cher. "She is sleeping soundly. Perâ€" rere both | haps you are right, Mrs. Neville; it all I deâ€" would be as well to know who he is." The train (To be continued.) sE Ves‘ COs y un NE Ee P by three or four carriages, fell river, with four more carriages ing on the bridge. C P Mn 2 s hn Sn mng n EARC TT For a few moments I shaded my face with one hand, not daring to look, while Huldah cried out in horror. There, in the sunlight, was the terrible reality. Almost immediately I recovered myself, and, seizing the sculls, rowed rapidly to the scene of the accident. It had been seen by the men at work in the fields; and in the next few minutes willing hands came to render assistance. In less than half an hour the news had reached Daintree, and there was no lack of help. Strong men soon set to work. Some of the unhappy passengers were drowned, and their bodies were not recovered for days; but those who remained in the earriages were rescued as quickly . as possible. Two or three men were taken out quite dead, and were laid in ghastly order on the green bank. The wounded were not a few. I grew faint as T looked at the forms of the sufferers, with Hulâ€" dah Vane by my side. We had done what we could. I had been attending to a little child whom we had found clingâ€" inss round a dead mother‘s neck. 1 a little child whom we had founC 175. ing round a dead â€" mother‘s neck. 1I thought it would live, but it died in my arms, and was added to the ghastly row on the green bank. Presently there was a ery from one of the carriages that zeemed to hang between the bridge and the waterâ€"some one signalled for help. It was a work of almost superhuman difficulty to rescue those inside; more than once, we who looked on in breathâ€" less suspense, thought that the rescuetrs would lose their own lives in the effort. At length the tall figure of a man was brought out, and then a ladyâ€"and it Mrducest AWhems e e ereaen en t eC s EWA C / legs SUspeNET M CCR UGOLL: would lose their own lives in the effort. At length the tall figure of a man was brought out, and then a ladyâ€"and it proved that they two were in the carâ€" riage alone. "Are both dead?" I asked one of the doctors. "No," he replied. "The â€" gentleman seems severely hurt ; the lady is stunned, I fancy. If we could get them removed somewhere, their lives might be saved." RomIL nc o ie hn <eae Cc Cd@y cOe PWE CICTY ESm seems severely hurt ; the lady is stunned, I fancy. If we could get them removed somewhere, their lives might be saved." "Â¥ou would like to take them to the nearest house?" I said, quickly. "That is the River House; let them be driven there at once. Miss Vane will be quite willing." And then, remembering â€" her * ateltie T thoucht it advisable to conâ€" there at once. Miss Vane will be @U°C willing." And then, remembering her‘ peculiarity, I thought it advisable to conâ€" sult her. ‘ "It is against your rule, against your wish, I know; but the doctor assures me the gentleman‘s life depends on the exâ€" pedition with which he can be treated." "Throw the whole house open," she reâ€" plied. "I am quite willing. If I can help, let me." A few minutes afterward one of the Daintree carriages Was driving slowly 'with the two rescued passengers to the River House. ol C es s ArPHY the "I shall never like she said to me, in a fri used to delight in it; and poetry to me, I again, for it has neen & gm've." L x[lv‘!. She trembled so violently and looked ‘ so ill that when we reached the River House 1 made her drink some wine and retire to her room. "I ought to do something for these goor wreople,” she said. 1 could have lessed the words; they were the first evincing â€" the least interest in others that I had heard from her lips. I was so pleased that I forgot myself and kissed her. Her face flushed and her lip quivâ€" ered, but she did not draw back proudâ€" ly, as she would once have done. "You must restâ€"the horror of that terrible accident has been too much for you. 1 will attend to your guests." Drawing down the blind so as to shut out the glow of the sun, 1 left her. There was no confusion in the house, no nols¢ â€"hardly a sound; the servants had been too well trained to forget their usual habits. ! C $y m nc‘ I went first to the norUh rOOM, """"~~ the lady was lying. There was not much the matter with her; she had been sturmed, terribly frightened, the maid who was watching by her said; but the doctor had given her . a composing draught, and she was fast asleep. That was fiood news. I went gently to her bedside and looked at her. over "I think so," was the rep‘¥; """J were travelling together when the aeciâ€" dent occurred." "Do you know the lady‘s aame?" I asked. "No, ma‘am; I heard the doetor menâ€". tion it, but I do not remember it." It was not of much importance, I thought. How little did I guess of what importance it was! And then I went to the Blue Room, where the gentleman had been carried. Here the scene was far more solemn . The doetor, with a grave, troubled face, bent over the bed, engaged in counting the beats of his patient‘s pulse. I went up to the b«d. One of the handsomest men I had ever seen in my life was lying On it, pale, exhausted, with closed eyes and parted lips. "Is there ranger?" I asked of the doctor. "Yes," was his brief reply. Danger! Was the shadow of death everywhere? 1 stood in. silence, never vemembering to have seen anything like the face and head before me. It was beaut{ of the purest masculine typ@â€"& noble head, CCC te L 02 2e Aavb _ henum hainâ€"olus BUOUG 10. NERTRTE CCC lap c qi & have seen anything like the face and head before me. It was beauty of the purest masculine . typ@â€"& nobfe head, with elusters of darkâ€"brown hairâ€"ciusâ€" ters that waved in a careless, graceful fashionâ€"a broad, noble brow, a face ovalâ€"shaped and perfect in _ contour, oork us t The Antury 1" L asked. M ue ut‘ F "What is the injury?" 1 aske "Brain concussion," replied cher, briefly. "Will you have further | CHAPTER VIII ss Vane looked very pale. never like the river again," me, in & frightened voice. "I ight in it; it was all music to me, I shall never like it it has peen transiormed into when the engine e did take place; the patient m his eyes. He seemed perâ€" iscious; and theâ€"doctor‘s face and more anxious. I watched ntly as he watched the sufâ€" you think it will end fatâ€" advice?t" I Dr. Fiet Horse‘s Leg Swolied Animal Was Too Sore and Lame to Workâ€"Quickly Cured by "I have had a long experience !n treating horses, and I can safely §AY that I know of no linimient for strains, sprains, and swelling that is so useful around the stable as Nerviline." Thus writes Mr. Joshua E. Murchison, from his home, Crofts Hill P. C. I had stiff, sore and swolâ€" I LINIMENT |len. 1 applied Nerâ€" Viline and it worked like a charm; in fact, that mare was in shape to work a day after I used Nerviline. " We have used Nerviline on our farm for twentyâ€"five years and never found it wanting. For man or beast it is a wonderful liniment." We have received nearly five thousand letters recommending Nerviline . as & general household liniment, as an allâ€" round cure for aches and pains. One million bottles used each year. Try it yourself. Large 25¢ bottles of Nerviline, five for $1.00. All dealers, or The Catâ€" arrhozone Company, Kingston, Ont. Foils Snake Which Tries to SwallOW Him. The following snake story was told some years ago by a reputable citizen of Anson county, says the Charlotteville Observer. Driving along a public road one day he saw a frog erossing the road at â€" top â€" speedâ€"hitting only the high places, and few of them. As the frog disappeared in the bosky underbrush on one side a black snake in hot pursuit made its apearance on the other, The story teller followed the two into the bushes to see what the result would be. He had proceeded only a short disâ€" tance when he found the frog at bay, facing the snake nng with the l}atcr ci:‘- 6 4/ usls‘ an. af. uds( ~ Watvestnhe sie e 7 cling about in the effort to make an atâ€" tack from the rear. His frogship kept turning all the time, always facing the enemy. 2o dsc ntnte LCE seten enem}. The reason of this manoeuvre On the snake‘s part was that the frog had in its mouth, held crosswise, and about the middle, a stick about the size and length of a lead pencil. The frog knew _ the snake could not swallow him so long as he presented such a front. _ The man watched the performance for some time, and when he left the snake was still circling the frog, and the latter facing its enemy on every turn. WHAT NEGLEGT Jas. E. Bra ments From Then He Used Dodd‘s AMidngy, " "" and Became a Wel! Manâ€"His Exâ€" perience a Lesson for You. Athabasca Landing, Alta., Oct, 25.â€" (Special.) â€"That _ Kidney Disease, negâ€" lected in its earlier stages, leads to the most terrible suffering, | if not death itseli, and that the one sure cure . for it in all stages is Dodd‘s Kidney Pills, is the experience of Mr. James E. Brant, a farmer residing near here. Mr. â€" Brant contracted Kidney Disâ€" ease, when a young man, from a strain, and, like hosts of others, neglected it, expecting it to go away itself. But it kept gradually growing worse, till after thirty years of increasing sufâ€" fering the climax came, and he found himself so crippled that at times _ he. could not turn in bed, and â€" for two weeks at a time it was impossible for him to rise from a chair without putâ€" ting his hands on his knees. He could not button his elothes. He was troubled with Lumbago, Gravel and Backache, and tried medicines for each and all of them, without getting relief, till good luck turned him to Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. Dodd‘s Kidney Pills started at the cause of his troubles and cured . his Kidreys. With cured Kidneys his other troubles speedily disappeared, and toâ€" NERVILINE IS A TRUSTY LINIMENT ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO day he is a well man. 1fi you cure _ your Kidneys _ with Dodd‘s Kidney Pills you will never have TLumbago, Rheumatism, Teart Disease, Dropsy or Bright‘s Disease. Having heard that the men did not start work at the proper time, the master builder thought he would drop down about 6.30 one morning and see. Going up the yard he caught sight of a joiner standing smoking, with his kit not even opened. Simply asking bhis name which he found to be Malcolm â€" Campâ€" bell, he called him into the office, l.ns. handing him four days‘ pay, ordered him to leave at once. After seeing the man clear of the yard, he went up to the foreman and explained that he made an example of Malcolm Campbell by payâ€" ing him off for not starting at the proâ€" per hour. "Great Scott, sir!‘" ejaculated the foreman, "that chap was only lookâ€" in‘ for a job." Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget cows. Nowadays it is necessary to be violent ‘ if you would move the world to _ exâ€" citement, and a very French old lady spends much fine irony on the manner in which the present generation takes its pleasures: ‘"Ils ne sont plus Franâ€" cais, les Francais, ils ne sont que les mauvaises imitations des Americans," and all this because of Lura _ Park, where the ?opulaoe of Paris spends &#s time in frightening itself with water shoots, nightmare staircases and a hunâ€" dred other| horrors.â€"From the Queen. H. L., N Torcuto. Send for WISE FROG. Brant Suffered Torâ€" rom Kidney Diseases. Imitation Americans. for free sample to Department | Najional Drug and Chemical C04,! One on hte Boss. young mar®. __"~ w r e n c h e d _ her right fore leg, and w y cuagi. from down DID FOR HIM Dodd‘s Kidney Pills Tries to Swallow 'tie shoulder I had a fine mare qmt Â¥ ws E@ d ' .‘.:-fi men did not LITTLE KNCWLEDGE Is a Dangersus "Drunkenness is folly!" earnestiy °V claimed Bishop Mage: in the House of Lords on a cerebrated occasion, says Anâ€" swers. How horrified was the preiate t read in the papers the next morning that he had given utterance to the very Bacchanahan sentiment, "Drunkenness is jolly!" Lord Salisbury was & master phrasemaker; but one of his best points was spoiled when a careless reporter turned his reference to "manacles and Manitoma" into the meaningless "MAMA: cles and men at the bar." Sir William Harcourt was badly misreâ€" . ported once. "Wireat is Diana of the Ephâ€" esians!" he exclaimed upon the plntfurm, but a country paper had it, "Great Dinâ€" ah! What a farce this is!" Lack of konwledge of familiar quotations is a prolific source of misreporting. For inâ€" stance, a spetker ones made use of the well known dnes from Milton‘s "L‘Al legro": "But come, thou goddess, fair and free, In heaven yelept Euphro-)yne." 4 I C C123 10 Ghala 231 PMCIETCTE .Y\lev\' o C n n 1 The coumtry reporter deputed to "take him down" was in despair. He could not make head or tail of this mysterious utâ€" terance. Bnt, following the sound as far as possible, he scizedghis pen and proâ€" duced the following gem: "But come, thou goddess, fair and free, In heaven she crept, and froze h(:l: knee." The speaker w senses than one NO REST FOR TERRIBLE ITCH Till Oil of Wintergreen Compound Made His Skin as Pure as Ever. Mr. James Lulloch, of Iron Bridge, Ont., considers the D. D. D. Prescripâ€" tion of oil of wintergreen, thymol, glycerme, etc., a wonderful cure for skin troubles. He has good reason to think»so, too, according to his letter of Mar. 27, 1909. & "I have suffered for years," he eays, ‘"with eczemg. and now through using two bottles of your wonderful cure, my skin is as pure 4s it ever was. Myv face was so bad I could not see. I â€"My face was so bad 1 COUIG MML FINR L7 could not sleep. I could not rest at all for the terrible itch, Thanks to your wonderful medicine I am cured." As Eczema is a germ disease, and as the germs are right in the skin, blood medicines will not cure it. The only effective way is to treat the itch where the itch is. D. D. D. Prescripâ€" tion penetrates the pores of the skin, kills the germs which cause the ecâ€" zema, gives instant relief from the awful itch and permanently cures. For free sample bottle of D. D. D. Prescription write to the D. D. D. Laboratory Department D., 23 Jordan street, Toronto. The Touch of a Fly‘s Foot Would be Enough to Set 1t Off. "What would be the consequences of firing a barrelful of nitrogen iodide it would be impossible to say," declares a writer in the Strand, "simply because the stuff is too awful to be made in such quantities, . Nce "lt may sound like a joke, but it is nevertheless the truth t{mt the tread of a house fly"is sufficient to explode this dangerous material,. It is not necessary that a fly should walk over the comâ€" puond. 1t has only to let one foot come into contact with the explosive, when the jolt causes it to explode and to blow the insect into the air. "Another manner in which the peculair property of this explosive can be demonâ€" strated is by scattering a small quantity of the dry powder over a sheet of clean paper. _ It then resembles pepper, and only needs a few sharp breaths of the manipulatorâ€"just â€" sufficient to â€" make them rollâ€"to cause each speck to ignite and explode, meantime giving off a long, thin column of dense purple smoke. If a barrelful of nitrogen iodide could be made it would have to be kept moist to prevent . danger. | By comparisor, gunâ€" powder is a mild, innocent, inoffensive material." * For sale by all druggists (Victoria Colonmist). "Yes," said the doctor, "I can cure you if you will follow my directions rigâ€" idly." "All rightâ€"I‘ll take anything." "I‘m not going to give you anything to take. You must simply quit drinking intoxicating liquors and give up smokâ€" ing for at least six months." "And you are going to charge for ordering me to do that?" "Certainly. My fee is two guineas." ‘‘Say doctor, how much would you exâ€" pect to get in advance for hitting & man on the head with an axe?" A WONDERFUL EXPLOSIVE. Lakefield, Que., Oct. 9, 1907. Minard‘s Liniment Co., Ltd. Gentlemen,â€"In July 1905 I was thrown from a road machine injuring my hip and back badly and was obâ€" liged to use a crutch for 14 months. In Sept. 1906, Mr. Wm. Outridge of Laâ€" chute, urged me to try Minard‘s Liniâ€" fent which I did with the most satsiâ€" factory results and toâ€"day I am as well as ever in my life. Yours Sincerely his "Of course you have proois of your story ?" The Arcticâ€"explorer looked pained. "Observe that abrasion on my thumb," he replied. * "It can be seen plainly," they conceded., "That abrasion was caused by a splinâ€" ter of the North Pole," rejoined the exâ€" plorer, with d.i%)nity, confounding his critics utterly.â€"Philadelphia Ledger,. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria. In a certain church in Ireland a young priest took for his text, "The feeding of the multitude." But he said: "And they fed ten people with ten thousand loaves and ten thousand fishes." Thereat an old Irishman _ said: "That‘s no miracle; heg(fi)pa, I could do that myself," which the pricst . overâ€" heard. The next Sunday the priest announced the same text, but he said it right this time: "And they fed ten thousand people on ten loaves of bread and ten fishes." He waited a second, and then leaned over ‘the pulpit and said: "And could you do that, Mr. Murphy *" Murphy replied: "Sure, your reverâ€" leneo. T could." _â€""Sure, your reverence, I could do it with what were left over from last Sunâ€" _"And how could you do it?" said the priest. day." erous Thinz in Handling Great i brases. PRICE OF ABSTINENCE Proof. % course you have proofs of your MR mE sE ® was "taken down" in more MATHEW x BAINS mark HE COULD DO IT 7 ; 'ti a w0 sTORIES OF ROCKEFELLER. ‘ Of the many stories that are in eireuâ€" lation about John D. Rockefeller here is one which is not only absolutely authenâ€" tic, but which throws a curious light upon the character of the famous milâ€" lionaire. Many years ago Mrâ€" Rocketfelâ€" ler was a clerk in a Ohicago hous¢, at a salary of ten dollars a week. He had an ailment which required a simple and harmless operation. He went to a surâ€" geon of high repute in Cleveland and arâ€" ranged to ray so much a month, â€" Not lon% ago the old complaint manifested ’iwef again, and Mr. Rockefeller sent for the doctor of his youth. Aaga J dvnmnikr e viP" ts ./ _ When the examination remarked : "I won‘t keep you WA money this with me." "Oh,". suid . tBe . O10OFs .4 900700000 0 le o practice; I wish no fee." Mr. Rockefeller stepped to his desk, placed bills to the amount of $1,000 in an envelope, and handed them over to the surgeon with the remark, "Well, if R 7 Mn p e C alcca~ San > aveninenk you don‘t want to you will kindly give young doctor of you " 2 420 v an enverope, ENN TCTTTD l2 e : the surgeon with the remark, "Well, if you don‘t want to take a fee, perhaps you will kindly give these to some poor young doetor of your ncqunintnnoe.’ Apropos of Mr. Rockefeller‘s decision to give no more interviews to the press, a very amusing story is told of how he baffled a young New York reporter durâ€" infi the proceedings against the Standard Oil Company last summer. The reporter in question handed him a note, asking "Do r.)u believe you should receive imâ€" munity from criminal prosecution for your testimony here should eriminal proâ€" ceedings be brought?" "Who sent this?" inquired Mr. Rockeâ€" feller. "The editor of my the reporter. The oil kin% bear his hands on the you stepped down from appeared about to w to his interrogator, . pering be said aloud "Tell your editor THE WISE MOTHER DOCTORS BABY WISELY Nowadays wise mothers 00 NOF MV"" their children with nauseous, . griping castor oil or purgatives, nor do they give them piosonous opiates in _ the form of soothing medicines, Baby‘s Own Tablets take the place of these harsh and dangerous drugs, and â€" the mother has the guarantee of a . govâ€" ernment analyst that the Tablets are absolutely safe, . and will cure all stomach and bowel troubles, destroy worms, break up _ colds and _ make teething _ casy. Mrs. Thomas Craft, Binscearth, Man., says: "L have used Baby‘s Own Tablets for _ constipation and teething troubles, and do not know of any other medicine that can equal them. They are always satisâ€" factory in their results." Rold by l medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. es /wb No 9 WBOsEE light Soap to D°C ic. ufon the most delicate fAbFif: $5.000 are offered 10 89XZ S2u ‘finding adulteration !© 2 Sous Casnmâ€" & A remarkable suspension bridge spans the River Apurimac in central Peru, The ropes of this bridge are composed of pliable roots and vines, while _ the planks are made of branches. In _ the humid climate of Peru it would be by no means extraordinary if this vegetable bridge were one day to start growing.â€" From the Wide World Magazine. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper A South African correspondent tells the story of a large meteorite, weighing more than half a ton, whigh has been sent by Dr. Rogers, of the Geological Survey from Prieska, in the Kenhardt territory of Cape Colony, to the South African Museum at Cape Town. _ The metcorite was found at Rateldraai, and it looks like a mass of molten metal with a number of cavities or pockets in it, and where not earth soiled is of a dark bluish leaden color. In parts it has been chipped with a chisel or pickâ€" axe ,and in such cuts it shows small shiny specks. It is described as a dull, warped mass of nickeliferous iron, and Dr. Peringuey, the director of the muâ€" seum, ascribes its advent as due to the disintegration of some cometary body.â€" London Standard. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, All Talked Over. Mistress (hiring servant)â€"I hope you know your place. : 7 Cns m cce SX css EPm i Pm Servantâ€"Oh, yes, mum. The last three girls you had told me all about it.â€" Boston Transcript. â€"__â€"“'â€"_â€" Lifebouy Soap is delightfully refreshing for bath or toilet. For washing underclothing it is uncgualled. Cleanses and purifies, path or toilet. For washing underclothing it (Louisville Courierâ€"Journal.) is uncqualled. Cleanses and purifies, 5 . Nce Ni duntls Madam, could you spare a handâ€"out The Nondescript. or cold bite? I wuz ®@.‘ de man dat kâ€"Wh t j discovered de pole." , Hotel Clerkâ€"Who came just now in | _ «@yyhere‘s yer proofs!" that auto? "De proper thing, mum, is to provide Bell Boyâ€"Three men and a chauffeur. de banquet, and den ask fer de proofs." Vegetable Suspension Brigde. Sunlight his time. Things have change0 said the other, "I am out of Suntlight South African Meteorite. kin§ leaned forward, placed m the young man‘s shoulders, wn from the platform, and bout to whisper a secret 1eply rrogator, but instead of whisâ€" Cach One a Sofid, Hardened, Lasting Maze ' Without a Hoopor Seam Just as Good as CDDY‘S FIBREWAREF wise mothers do not dose n with nauseous, . griping i am not in.‘ waiting for your . h was over, he " stammered THE BFST WOODEN P AIL Can‘t Help But Lose Its Hoops and Fail to Pieces. You Want Someâ€" thing Better Don‘t You? Then Ask for Pails and Tubs Made of To those WB# ""~ lu, whose life is made a burden by undus susceptibility to insect bites and 10 those who have not yet returned from holiday making in regions infeated by biting insects, oil of sassafras should be a great boon, and it is harmless as a" external application.~â€" From the London Globe. n _ uie * A BOON T0 MOTHERS. burns, €°Câ€". "*~ ringworm, scalp < troubles t echoo! Buk without e4% und diseases. : PE Mary & C"~ * 0j 4 years old, was severely burned by ‘8""*" on a hot flat jron, She wa* burned on *b* heel, instep. and on the thigh very badly. 1 at once applied Lamâ€"Buk, which eased the pain, and in the course of & few days th* the wounds were thoroug!y healed." Mrs. Georks Aldridge, 12 Louiso . StreeL Strattord. says :~*While playing barefooted about the yard, my 01 Bortram, â€"6 years old, PE 3 OS on athee builie, which cul about the yard, my 01 Bepsety C P 000 stepped on a brok®n glaes bottle, whic! very deeply into his big t0* The out so deep that 1 #eat for a doctor and ha toot properly Gressed, the doctor leaving tion to be applied daily. Under this ment, however, the wound seemed t uis ececrmmour Auf en very @eeply ID%O U" IIT 100 so deep that 1 #eat for a doctor and had the foot properly Gressed, the doctor leaving &A 19 tion to be applied daily. Under this treat» ment, however, the wound seemed to #4 no better, but OB hy COBLrATY inflaminatiot set in. A klwud(bbor then recomended Zamâ€"Buk. We 0 ned a supply, and after # few applications the obild seemed to rest betâ€" ter. and the pain was very much reduced. 1t a few days, under the Zamâ€"Buk treatment the wound assumed a better appearance, and from that time healing was very rapid. In: flanimation and soreness were finally comâ€" pletely banished, and in ten days from the first application of Zamâ€"Buk, we took tht bandages from the f00t. I feol sure that but for Zamâ€"Buk the child would have had 4 very bad time, and might have had to sacrl flce his toe." 1 TT 12 Ham. Children are always sustaining cuts _ C oL â€"anufreguently Not only for cuts, bruises, etc., is 2AM: Buk effective, but also for serious «kin dis eases such as eczema, ringworm, ulcers, eto It also cures poisoned sores, chronic wounds bad leg, plles, festering sores, chapped handsa cold sores, frostâ€"bite, and @ll #kin Jujuriet and diseases. Druggists and «tores eVvery: where sell at 50c a box, or post free fo‘ price from Zamâ€"Buk Oo., Toronto; $ boxe $1.2%. You mare warned against barmful imi ul;:n- sometimes reprosented to be "jJust w #ood." o ul We oi uy When Children are Injured ! An exciting chapter _ of _ accident: marked the concludmfi performance al the Opera House at Milan. Miss Elisa Bland, a prima doana, wat hurrying to the theatre when she fell down and severely sprained her ankle. Throughout the evening she had to b« wheeled about the stage on a litter it such fashion that only the upper hali of her figure was visible to the public as she sang her part. Meanwhile attenâ€" dants crouched below the screen wer« busy bathing and massaging the foot tc ease the atrocious pain. Signor Barrera, the temor, hobbled about groaning with gout, and the firs! bass, Sif':nr Girino, while taking ai in the afternoon, had the misfortune t« slip into a ditch and strain the muscle: of his knee, He seized every opportumit) of retiring to the wing to give vent t« his feelings. A fire threatened to destroy the scen ery, while a thunderstorm raging out gide extinguished the electric light.â€" From the London Chromicle. o‘luclly stops coughs, oures colds, hlais the throat and lungs. â€" â€" â€" 25 cents. "And this," said the hostess, who wa showing some relies, "is the trunk on« of my ancestors brought over on the Mlyflim." Th ic i seb h those who live in _ "In other words," rejoined the guest "it is the trunk of your family tree." E&panking does not cure children 0: bedâ€"wetting. There is a constitutiona cause for this trouble. Mrs. M. Sum mers, Box W. 8, Windsor, Ont., will sent free to any mother her successful home treatment, with full instrutions. Sent mno money, but write her toâ€"day if you children trouble you in this way. Don‘t blame the child, the chances are it can‘t hel‘r it. This treatment also cures adult; and aged people troubled with urine dif ficulties by day or night. HIS REASON, (Philadelphia Record.) At the Restaurant.â€""Waiter, why d« you recommend everybody to take bee; a la mode toâ€"day?" "Because, sir, if i isn‘t all eaten we shall have it for din ner ourselves." Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes, Relieved By Murine Kye Remedy., Trj Murine For Your Ef’e Troubles. __ Yor Wi‘iglike Murine. 1t Soothes. 50c A Your Druggists. Write For Eye Books Free. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Toronte Thomas BETTER THAN SPANKING. Opera Under Difficultues. ip WeCReu® {00 OO hool, Mother® will find equal for all these a° says:â€"*‘MY raus severely Allen POLAR ETIQUETTE en, . 156 Water **N"0 °a ;â€""My daughter wsonilh everely purned by fall®4 . She was burned on th* on the thigh Y°rY vadly. Zamâ€"Buk, which eased Dt course of a tw daps *4 horougly healed." ariawe. 12 Louiso Street. Eddy‘s Matches Real Thing. y Sowee Mes ol D19 in the country and i burden by undus ecot â€" bites and 10 yet returned from regiom hf“ b’ C 1. harmless A8 AD infrequently 4+ cz wâ€"â€" similar street accldents bruises, wkin St. Â¥a i4 â€" Ahe end of j ;mlnln nt d&ew «of Maurs but with du« Most of t «loouties exn had com patriotic dut “1' declu 1 eemmment would . _ well, aged 58 yea‘ $ , Mrs. E. 1 found drow east pier at 1 been sufferit for some ti 8 due to accid known. She was her custo the pier, ar started in findin; yocks and piles decided tha #ied with th “.l‘l.\' a that began fles in 1868 wita the al and the es m-‘.’h hklfmo Has CGot a New of Ministers x the receipt w# r Premier and y Prendergast und mew Ministry, himse of Premier and Min The new Minast« wffice toâ€"night, Premier and ror=â€"Moret x I‘; Minister of ) Cabeliera. Minister vardo. Minister Concas. r Barrow Minister 0 Camp. ber of Depulies is ment of the Cabin« ® was received wit) | ting uproar that h« A « yourn the sitting mm o l t ts â€" FOUND DROWNE esible t Â¥ ©o ned Moweve to pand jest ; Wb dditeis i endergast, i Mln'l, exp ent persons; #b by death meghter, and Wara and lhe .Nllcfi. iA urages the | mal tranguili “ mow ai o Peterboro, â€" Ont. 'uihy" was the vea jury in the manslan Fred and Harry Joj afternoon, after th vase about en hour Miniater Minister "1 have no means what evidence the verdiet, but I hav« with it," said Cle# \"‘?. "The eviden death was not oo #raw a conclusion t Ministe: "Fredorick whether or a teck on that did not. When the 1 u‘. fGT you, “fll'l‘ that you have profit« events to mind your to keep a civil tong discharged." ury Says Not Guilty and the Agrees . Nt The Girlâ€"~Isn‘t this The Young Manâ€"It‘« 8 There is no use, Miss Pi 'El- had werthe at hbom« i;'to concea! little hand of x Dume NEW CABINCT ing Over the Fall of the servative Governmen!. JOPLING BOYS ARE anti That Morocco Wer Will Brought to an t« to lik« Nee W ts The Rothwell, of Port Lying by Pier. icals Now in Charge the Country. Oet N HOPES FOR PEAC mas 1 xf Manâ€"It‘s an awifu! h use, Miss Pinkie, of v ceal a yawn with thi of yours; it can‘t half 0 Sh a4 Adtccccs..«â€" Ahvkel M W t} mt ty t J M M ph’ y t1 FR

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