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Waterloo County Chronicle (186303), 22 Mar 1894, p. 2

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ty p¢ $ it a * Air. J. Alcide Chausseé Montreal. P. Q. Whenever Given a Fair Trial Hood‘s Proves Its Merit. A Marvelous Medicine I began to take Hood‘s Sarsaparilla it has inâ€" ereased to 103. _ I think Hood‘s Sarsaparilla is a marvellous medicine and am very imuch pleased with it" J. ALCIDE CHATSSE. The following letter is from Mr. J. Alcido Chausse, architect and surveyor, No. 153 Shaw ttreet, Montreal, Canada: * C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.: Mood‘s Pills cure liver ills, constipation, biliousness, jaundice, sick headache, indigestion. "Gentlemen:â€"I have been taking Hood‘s Sarsaparilla for about six months and am glad to say that it has done me a great deal of good. Last May my weight was 152 pounds, but since HOOD‘S AuctionSales Auction Sales to advertise these well as on this de pends greatly the success 0o the ‘sale. ‘The Waterloo County Chronicle covers the field by reaching more inhabitants in Waterloo county than any other paper published. Leave your orders for bills and advextiging@t the Chronicle Office. _ | CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT? For a gromst answer and an honest ommoghwrne to MUNN & C(0., who have bad ne-rlé y years‘ experience in the patent business. Commuricaâ€" tiona strictly confidential. _A Handboek of Inâ€" formation concerning Patents and how to obâ€" tain them sent free. Also a catalogue of mechanâ€" jcal and scientific books sent free. . _ Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive ngecul notice in the Scientific American, and thiis are brought widely before the public withâ€" out oost to the inventor, This splendid tp.per. issued weekly, elegantly iliustrated, has b{ ar the largest circulation of un{ scientific work in the world. 83 a {eu Sample og»iu.ent free. Bmldmg Edition, monthly, $2.50 a year. Single copies, sai> cents. ‘Every number contains pau tiful platos, in colors, an bow«nguo new houses, with pians, enabling gullgen to show the latest designs and secure contracts. THUNN £ Co. New Youn. 301 200 ACRE FARM n mene ols 1 on a n ie Cure SICK HEADACMHE and Neuralgia in 20 mimures, al o Coated Tongue, Dizziâ€" ness, Dinousness, Pain in the Side, Constipation, Torpid Liver, BHad breath,. To stay cured and rexu.ats the bow=!s. VERY WNICE TO TAKE. RAHyILOHS /A CATARRH â€" rlave yohu Cararth? This remedy is guaranâ€" teed to cure you, Frice,50cta, Injectorfree, â€"Tris Greir Covon CUTRE promptly cures tucre sQll cihers iail, Coughs, Croup, Sore Throat, Hocrsea«ss, Wt ooplni Cough and j.sthma,. TPor Gonsumption it bas no rival; t As curcd thousancs, and will CUrs you if takeanin time, Sold ty Druggists on a guarâ€" ratee. For m Lams Back or Chest, use SHILOH‘S BX L LADDONNA PLASTER.2c. PRicE 25 Cents at Drua SroRrks, ~old by simon Snyder, Waterloo will soon beconducted through out different parts of the county. It pays a Sarsaparilla POWDERS Hundredfold CURES See page 8. . 361 Broapway,. REMEDY, As I have mentioned, our house and grounds were large and bandsome, for my father, being rich,prided himse‘f on maintaining a home befitting @ country gentl man. We also possessed much jewelry and other rara treasures and, for fear of robbers, our house was weil protected without by dogs and within by bolts and bars with electric alarms at each door and window. _ In addition we ali had large dinner bells by our bedsides to ring furiously in case of necessity and the male portion of the family had no end of guns and handy pistols. Ut course that unusual event in our rural and sometimes too quiet existence, caused a little commotion, and, as the despatech was addressed to me, I was watched with eurious eyes, while I opened the euvelope and read its conâ€" tent®. We were spending a pleasant evenâ€" ing in the parlor of my father‘s handâ€" some country home when the front doorâ€" bell rangy and started us all into guessâ€" ing who our visitor might be. In spite of my blushing attempt to ridicule the iden it was pretty well setâ€" tledâ€"by the youngest members of the family, at leastâ€"that our caller would prove to be a young man and neighbor suppoâ€"ed to be deeply in love with me, w}h« ~ our dainty waiting maid announcâ€" rd & m ssenger with a telegram. Almost every room had been entered and nea«arly, all of our jewelry was gone. Even watches from under pillows and pocketbooks from father‘s and brother‘s trousers had been taken. =Will start toâ€"morrow to visit you,"it said, "have sent trunk toâ€"day," #igned, "Mary Norton." She was my very dearest girl frmiend on earth aud had long promised to visit me. The anticipation of her comiog wade everyoue so happy that nothing more was s«id about my "beau," for which I was thankfui. The next afternoon the expressman hrought the expected trunk, I bhad it taken upstairs and placed in iny room, for I insisted that my best friend should share my lovely, sunny bed chamber and not be poked away in the co dapartâ€" ment reserved for ordinary guests. After some trouble and complaining, tor the trunk was unusually large and heavy, the expressman, helped by our gardener,carried it up and set it against the foot of my bed, there to wait for its beloved owner. And most puzzling and alarming of all was the fact that not the slightest sign of breaking in or out could he found at a single door or window. The electrical coutrivances were all und sâ€" turbed. _ _ Consequently,on the following mornâ€" ing when we discovered that we had been robbed during the night, we were frightened and sbhocked beyond measâ€" ure. What could have done the robbhery ? We couldn‘t suspect our servants of any share in the crime, for long years of faithful duty proved the contr ry. If a burgular had secreted himself in the house before closing tiu.e, which seemed propable, how could ke have gotten out and left no trace 1 The more we tried to solve the riddle the more mysterious it became to us, though the village conâ€" stable was hastily sent for,said he‘d soon have a theory to work on.. In the afternoon of that awful day another telegram came to our house from Mary Norton. It read : "Mother suddenly ill. Cannot come, _ Will send for trunk. Please deiiver to expressâ€" man when he calls. Will write particuâ€" lars.‘ In an hour following that came the expiessman and, glad that Mury was to be spared the unpleasantness of a visit at such a forlorn time, we again let our man help him away with the heavy trunk from its place at the foot of my bed. For a week we did our best,rssisted, too,by two detectives,to discover a clue to the robbers, but all in vain. And every day we sent to the postâ€" otfice for my friend‘s promised letter, but none came. _ Then, anxious for fear her mother was seriously ill. L wrote to her. By returo mail came an answer, saying ene had sent neither trunk nor tulegram, that her mother was â€"not sick, and askâ€" ing what it all meant. | | At once I understood the robbery, The burglar had been in thetrun‘k when it came, he had passed the night, save when he was making the round of the house, in my roowm, when I was alone ; then with the valuable plander he had been shipped away in his queer hiding place. No wonder the trunk was heavy and big. No doubt from peepholes in it the robber bad watched me until cerâ€" tain I was sound asleep. Then out he \ must have creptâ€"and the thought made me shudder and feel faint. But, though we admired the cunning and boid tri ‘k, we immediately set about tracing the trunk to where it went afâ€" ter leaving our house. | The expressman, whom we found to be honest and unsuspicious in the matâ€" ter, had given it to the railroad which, on telegraphic bad forwarded it on telcgraphic arders bed fortarded it OUR INVISIBLE GUBST. BY H. C: DODGE. F. [ L 5" I Es uon ;-v‘-T:'Y';.j%;;q",;x :;{,: ..,}m i t _ Hral n e _ Wateâ€"loo County Chro: "Bame manth‘s »fur the robbery I was on a qn-I:‘F visit to myâ€"uncle‘s houge in «distaut town. Like my futher‘s,1t was sp‘cious and showed‘ evidence of the wealth it dcontained. SBeveral wellâ€"armed men were to be stationed quietly in and about the house, to do whatever fighting might be neccesâ€" sary, though our plan was to let the burglar rest in fancied peace, if possible, Then, after his departure in the trunk,. we were to follow and capture his pals in the city, and so recover the previousâ€" ly stoler:larticles. ‘Tis needless to mention our exciteâ€" ment of waiting all the next day for the trunk, or our scarcely concealed agitation when, toward evening it arâ€" rived. But Alice, with a face more scared than mine, declared positively that she wou‘dn‘t. | _ "Well, then, I will do the honors, said uncle, glancing mischieviously at his frightemed wife, , * \sJohn ! you shall do no such thing," spoke up gu..tie, with a trembiing voice, "I‘ll have the trunk thrown down the well as soon as it arrives. No burglar dead or alive, comes into my room. The idex !" Finally we settled down to business and tixed on a plan to catch the coming burglar reédâ€"handed and without any danger to ourselves, E uly next morning I movedfrom the guest chamber to room with Cousin Alice. Then my deserted apartment bad its windows securely barred,so that our expected guest could not escape through them should he feel so inclined, and its door was fixed so as to be tightâ€" ly boited from outside, in the hall.Some old watchés and jewelry of small value were carelgssly ieft on the dressing case to tempt the rascal and keep him in inâ€" nocence of our crafty scheme. Uncle John himself, loudly proclaimâ€" ing his glag@ness at the pleasure of the vigit it prgmised, helped the unsuspectâ€" ing expreseman up the broad strircase and carefully left it in the guest chamâ€" ber, right gide up and where it could ba observed from the hall by peeping through t ed| door. incredilâ€"le part of mystory One evepning after supper and while we were all gathered in the parlor a telegram ‘1“ brought in and handed to wy UCousin Alice. Of course my detecâ€" tive curiosity was sroused at the simiâ€" Inrity ot (he event aud when it turned out to be almoet identical in its reading with the ohe sent to me the night beâ€" fore our Burglary, L instantly knew what was goming. So did the rest, for they, as you may guess, were not ignor int of tha affair. a For some moments we gazed at each other in ege echless astonishwent. Then Uncle Jothin, bound to joke, no matter what happened, asked me with mock seriougsners if T would like the expected trunk set in my room, which, being the yuest chamber, was the right place for 16. ©Yes, but we want to trap our burgâ€" lar friend," he laughed, "and may be reâ€" cover your jewels, Mowever, if you are so inhospitable, perhaps Alice will take the stranger in." Before }dark I n enough to steal in s keyhole and peak in,. My look of terror made him smile in spite of his straight face. ©No! No !" I gasped _ "I should die at the sight ot it. O Uncle John, do send for the police at once. I‘m sure we‘ll all be murdered in our sleep." [YÂ¥+es, the trunk was the very one I had entertaised and even sat on in my room at home, with never a thought of its horrid bccupant. Ugh! the sight of it sent chills through me and sroused a feeling on my scalp, my hair was trying to erect itself. Hastily I ran away from that worse than Blue Beard chamber, and never stopped shivering till supper was over. | You may be sure no eyes were closed in the house that night.The men guardâ€" ing the hall beard the knob of the prisâ€" onâ€"room door softly tried, but, of course, it dido‘t open, which was lucky for the rascal within. _ s s |At last| daylight came and relieved us of some of our awful suspense. After breakfast Uncle John noiselessly unâ€" bolted the door and, carelessly humâ€" ming a tune and concealing a handy weapon entered the room. The trunk stpod just as it was left the evening beâ€" fore. But the jewelry and stuff huf dieâ€" appeared ‘from the dressing case. :/ ter‘s deiight. His game was trapped and ready to be bagged when the time came, _ | | When brave Unucle John returned to us to repart bis eyes shone with a hunâ€" | Just before dinner the other telegram, almost a duplicate of mine,arrived, and after it the expressman for the trunk. an"lifted the burglar‘s receptacle and aced it on the wagon to go to the railâ€" ad station. t ? Then, as we watched it driven away th }nnct: and a pair of constabl s folâ€" min uncle and the still umntTicion- n"lifted the burglar‘s receptacle and e keyâ€"hole of the wellâ€"fastenâ€" & bnggyl.'wo‘ dared speak above dark I mustered courage steal in stockinged feet to "Then silently we awaited results. It was dusk and as no lights were yet burning to let our game see where he was we rightly supposed he would think himself safe at home and act accordingâ€" ly. Prepared to turn on the gas full blaze when he did so, we watched the trunk. For perhaps fiteen anvious minutes it seemed lifeless, Then we heard a movement inside, heard a bolt \gmwn and saw the lid slowly rise and a head cautiously appear. Up went the gas and over went the trunk‘s lid, pul}â€" ed by an armed officer. At first the bead, or its face rather, wore a happy, triumphant, broad grin ; then as things didn‘tlook familiarits eyes opened wider in an effort to understand matters, while the grin faded away like a rainbow. Then, as the facts of the case forced themselves on the burglar‘s startled brainthe poor fellow‘s hairstraightened, his eyes bulged out like a lobster‘s and the astonishment and terror depicted on his youthful but evil features beat actâ€" ing all hollow, "Through streets becoming dirtier and wickeder we followed, without atâ€" tracting suspicion from the draymen, until he stopped before an apparently unoccuvied house and prepared to unâ€" load. _ Ere he could do so one detective juamped on his cart, and witbhout speakâ€" ing started his horse ahead again,. The other, aiued by me, grabbed the fellow and preveuted him from making an outery to alarm his pal in the trunk. Immediately several policemen who 1 didn‘t know were following behind sudâ€" denly appeared and burst into the house which turned out. to be a ‘fence‘ for the thieves. * ‘When the ‘tunk was wjad in: the haggage part of the ~smoking .car, ts owner got on bourd â€"and took chis seat among the smnkers. As innocent as a babe, [ plumped down heside him and in a right friendly way offered him a cigar, wh ch like a: gentleman, he accepted. Then, putfing our cigars together as churoiny as you please, we soon got acâ€" quainted and had truly a delightful chat â€"principally about the weather, though, for the fellow ‘was mighty careful to avord other topics. "Come out of that, you scamp? shouted the police captain as soon as he could talk for laughingy, "and give an account of vourself, What‘s the name of this particular racket, anyhow ?" "His drayman was on hand waiting near the baggage room. _ As soon as he got the trunk on his cart and drove off a ways my smoking friend waus neatly ‘collared and cuffed‘ and marched in an opposite direction between two valiant policemen. Then the detectives and myâ€" self took a cab and started after the trunk. "The burglar tried to laugh also, but it was a dismal failure. ‘Oh, that‘s all right,‘ he grinned, ‘I took yez for the conductor. That‘s why I was scared. Yer see, I‘ve been beating the railroad boss. ‘Tain‘t every chap kin get ahcad of old Vanderbilt and Chauncey Deeâ€" pue. â€" But don‘t tell‘em kers they‘ll be wopening all the trunks on the line and the wimmin might object. Ha, ha, ha ! Say, purty slick trick, wasn‘t it ?" *‘When wereached New York I found it necessary to attend to some business, which concerned him rather more than he‘ thought, so shaking hands ‘goodâ€"hbye‘ and expressing a hope to become better acquainted, I left him watchedt by my town constables while [ .sought my smarter city detectives and put them ‘onto him.‘ t "Leaving our surprised drayman in charge of some of the other officers we reseated ourselvesâ€"in the cab : nd again followed the truok to a police station house, into which it was carried and placed in the captain‘s desk on the tloor. The burglar‘s bluft was good, but it didn‘t work for & cent. "What yer doing with these watches in the trunk ?" asked a policemean as he fished them cut after the fellow hid painfully managed to crawl out himâ€" self. "‘Seein‘ if the road runs on time, boss, The blamed train was ten minuâ€" tes late and I‘m goin‘ to report it. Say, yer hain‘t got a swaller of whiskey yer could .lJend a tired traveler, hey ? Couldn‘t get at the water cooler, yer know.‘ * ‘Well,you‘ll have no trouble in getâ€" ting at the "cooler" now. Lock him up sergeant. We‘ll give him unother free trip toâ€"morrow.‘ "Off to the cell they took the wretch, and then we examined his trunk. It padded inside so that being tossed about by â€" baggage smashers couldn‘t hurt. There were pockets made to button in the lining, but only a couple were filled with his plunder,.| Some empty flasks and crumbs of food we found. . In the bottom and sides were ventilating and peepholes. â€"A man might live a week i0 that trunk, I think if hig provisions held out." 14 In a week or‘so [ received‘s notice to AppurinuNow.?Yorkoourtwmvemy testimony and identify the things stoien at my own home, most:of: which |we reâ€" trunk again and its knew me betâ€" Thus is commenced. Adams could not forgive me for the chagrin 1 had caused him. â€" He laid it up against me, and talked openly about being reâ€" venged. This was on the first of Augâ€" ust. _A month afterwards we met at a party where.the gentlemen drank wine. Late in the evening Adams and I met, and a third person made some remark about the old trial, whereâ€" upon a fourth person laughed, and said that I had done a great thing. At this Adams flusbed and made an impu: dent reply.‘ The reply was addressed to me and|I answered it. The two outsiders lanhed at the hit I made, and Adams said something more severe than before. I replied to him. He deliberately «old me I was a liar ! I had been drinking wine, and my blood was heated. As that harsh, harsh, cowardly word fell upon my ear, my passion overcame me. I strnck Laban Adams in the face, and knocked him back against the wall. It was a cowardly thing for me to strike him there, in that company, but I was too much excited to reflect. I expectâ€" ed that Adams would strike back, but he did not., I was stronger than he, though this consideration may not have influenced KHim. _ His friends drew him away, and T went out into the open air. _ As soon as the cool breeze fanned my brow, and eased the heated bload away from my brain, I was sorry for what I lm.d] done; but it was too late to help the‘matter. I mighthave gone to Adams, and asked him to overlook the wrong I had done, but I had not the courage for that. On the f‘»llowmg morning, a friend, namely Watkins, called upon me, and presented a note from Laban Adams. I opened i‘tj and fonnd it to be a chalâ€" lenge, I was requested to give satisâ€" faction for the blow I had struck. If I was a gentleman I would do so. If I was willi}g, I might designate the time and place, and select the weapâ€" ons. We had graduated from Harvardâ€" Laban Adims and myseifâ€"and he h«+d com nenced the practice of: law. We were neither of us maried, though we were both anticipating that event. We had a case in courtâ€"a case of trespass. _ Adams was for the placntiff, and I for the defendant. It was a wek, foolish complaint, and Adams should not have taken is up. It was c‘early a case of extortior. The plainâ€" tiff held a rod over the back of the d:â€" fendant in the shape of a bit of knowâ€" ledge concerning the privare misâ€"step of a former time; «nd the present complaint was ‘ouly a seeming legal way in which the other power was to be used for the purpose of opening the poor man‘s purse. At the trial J exâ€" posed the trick, and obtained a ruling out, by che ‘court, of a lot of scandal which Adams had plannâ€"d to introduce as testimony. Of course I was severe; and as my opponent had entered upon a very bad case, my strictures cut home. T gained the verdict for my client, and people laughed at the foiled plaintit#, and spoke lightly of his lawâ€" yer. * The lessons of life which my fond moâ€" ther had taught me did not leave me in doubt. I ought to have gone to Adams and made such offer of conciliâ€" ation as one gentleman may* honorably make to another; and if he had rejectâ€" ed that, I could have simply turned from, and jrefused to do a further wrong to right the wrong already done. Bu‘tI had not the courage to do that; was a coward, I feared that my friends would laugh at me, and that the especial friends of Adams would point at me the finger of scorn. ards ! So spoke our old lawâ€"tutor, Moses Drake. â€" And thus.he continued : _ _ So, in the cowardice of my heart, I thought I would be brave before the world, andI accepted the challenge. _ "‘The souner it is over, the better," remarked Watkins. <~And with this sentiment I agreed. _ "Certainly," I responded. "Let it be on this very day, at sunset; upon the river‘s bank, directly beneath the Whiteâ€"Heart Ledge. I will send a friend to you to make further arrangeâ€" ments." "And the weapons?" / "Pistols.]‘ | And so it was fixed. An hour afterwards I found John Price, a young physician, who agreed to act as my second. He.did not urge me to abandon the idea, nor did he enâ€" ter upor the work as though he Jloved‘ it, but he did it because he fancied I ‘was determined;: and in case of acciâ€" dent his professional services might be obwiine k08 . .ih ilkll . 0. ~~I ‘knew that Adams was a good The Tiro Cowards®, What shfu]d I do ? What I ought to do was very plain. I was a coward! We were both cowâ€" BY sYLVANU S COBRB, JR. Late in the afternoon L was vporn the sandy shore beneath the ledge: and alâ€" most at the same time Laban \dams appeared,. We were both anxious to be tt ought brave men‘! He did not speak to me, nor did I speak to |iim Our seconds conferred a while tozether, and then Price came to my side. _ "Must this thing go on?" he asi:ed. I told him I did not know how it could be stopped. I lied; for i) did know. mother, and the other to the géntle | oner, Laban Adams was a prisone, being who had promised to be my wite. ! Our pistols lay undischarged upon th. I sit now and think of that hour, 1 sand. shudder with horrarâ€"the hour when I Two geotle maidens, who loved 3. wrote to my mother, and to my beâ€". better than we loved ourselyes, any trothed. What was. I about to do‘| whose love had led the.o into deep ap. To rob them of all earthly joy forever ‘ xiety in hur bebhalf, liad guesed our And for what 1 Ayeâ€"for what ? ]:r-l seeret. â€" Love has sharp eyes. Clan cause I had not the courage to be a / Woleott knew Laban‘s hoat temper bold frank man; to obey my God_and | when under strong exciterment and spe the laws of my country ! It was to | feared something of this kind from t bow before a wicked spiritâ€"to offer | first. She had ouly to whisper Jher my blood to folly and my hand to murâ€" | suspicions to Mary, and two sleepies der | ! sentinels were npon us. Those tw Whiteâ€"Heart Ledge was a high, perâ€" pendicular wall of granite rising above the river, the top crowned with dark spruce trees. It received its name from a peculiar mark where & mass of whitefquartz appeared, half way up the ledge, in the form of a heart. He informed me that if I w make the least overture of peace, felt sure that Adams would accept make the least overture of peace; he | _ "Ape," emed Laban, "we have ho felt sure that Adams would accept it. | been cowards !" "I think," hbe said, "that Adaws is | _ "And;" I added, "had it not l» sorry for what has happened. You | tor these blessed angels, we might ha struck him and he cannot retract." been “’â€"""t"”‘mg worse." "And he called me a liar !" _ We returned from the dark srow ‘"I know he did : and I know that just is the day was softening iuto :. he did wrong. In fact, there |jwas | light, and from that hour Lahan \ wrong on both sides. . Offer him your | AMS “”‘! imyself were fast friends: a hand, and I think he will take it yith | they who saved us from the are out a word of explanation." | crime eutered apon the life path wi No; I would not do it‘ us, and have blessed us ever sino And why not ? I wanted to do it | NY Ledger: My heart urged me to doit. Thekpirâ€" | â€"â€"â€" > _ â€"eegeeâ€" it of my dear mother,speaking in those 1 is 5n Mpeas en etraesme k 5; old lessons of love and blessing upged | and Klagder divorses relieved in ix |onâ€" me to do it. And another spizit. | :-'Gng_'l‘\i-)(,’j':",‘.“f,.fsr(-’elnmjyfi.?‘*;“g“r.‘,.\ § i 2 | itht to bhysivians p imicah clothed. in younger, starry: loce (and | andfikhs to PiysiOnt on wioon l o 00 blessing, urged me to do it. The law bladder, wlaneys, back and ever jpuil of : of the land urged me to do it. C _| _ | MIBATYYsAgesin malaor female. 11 rlc And yet I would not. _I was afraid that men would say that I was a ow ard! °O, what a precious coward ] was * "You are*hoth good shots," atlded Price. "and if you fire together| you may both fall." | But I dared not offer the hand hand of conciliation. I told him I w He went to Watkins, and prettv soon they marked off the groundâ€" â€" twelve paces. We were to stand back those twelve paces anpart. We were to tura ‘at the word One; we wére to raise our pistols at the word Two; and at the word Three we were to fire. I caught the eye of Laban Adams as 1 took mmy‘position, and I was sure that no angry passion dwelt therein.‘ For an instans the impulse was with imme to throw down the pistol, and offer him my hand; I was sure he would not reâ€" fuse me. But I had not the conrage to do it. I would rather do the deep, damning wrong than do that simple, Christian act of love ! | Our seconds hesitated,as though they knew what was passing in our thoughts; but we offered no word and they proceeded.: The word One was given. I cannot tell all the feelings that came crowding upon me at that moment. I stood face to face with my brother; in a moment we wére to offer our hands to the infernal (stain. I thought of my mother in her distant home; I thourht of the scenes of my shildhood, bright and promisi g; I thought of.my college days, w Lmâ€" ban Adamé was my friend and ¢hum ; I thought of the holy love which had beamed :fi: me since I had ed man‘s estate," and I thought, in one moment more, the black pall |might F.W'it{lfll h â€" o : Watking was a long time i® proâ€" the word Two. ~He n P A > 2 YVOUKR _ CHILD _: t;,d’ 2@ UNACCOUNTABLY LOSING FLESH ]S REFUSING TO TAKE ITS FCCI tm * LISTLESS AND BESIUTATED m Sihe To o WHY DONT YOU TRY | 12e But ( 11 L8 first. _ She had ouly to whisper suspicions to Mary, and two sle seutinels were npon us. Those warm spirits with their cries and melted the iey erust, and our 1. found the surface. "O, inâ€"God‘s name, be enemi more:" implored Clara. #By the love you beer 1« 1l; memory of all you hold dear on c and all! you hope to meet in Hea cast forth the demon from your l prayed Mary. In an instant I resolved to man. _ With the arms of my be still encrreling imne, J stretched my hansl; but I was not in advan Laban. As though one spirit n us, our hands met midway, "I have been a fool," said Lal» "And I huve been a fool and a ard," said Ts "I was a coward he I dared not do richt " for these Heiitr IN Six HOURs.â€"unstressing t and Klagder discases relieved in ix o the "NEW GREAT SOUTH AxerRICA\ h\ CURE." This new remedy is a gros! â€" and delight to physicians on accoun| ©: ceeding promptness in relieving pain bladder, cidneys, back and ever par urinary passages in male or female. 1t r retention of water and pain _ passing i\ . immedia®~ly. If you want quick relief an this is your remeay. Seld by Ed. \.| Druggi~:. My fouly ‘thought," h passtonately, "is of thee." ~he was radiant. ~«How generous of you,‘ "when you have but one." Gave All Me Had With a quick, nervous movem, brushed the leonine locks from brow. §OAP DERBY PLUCG Here‘s a Pointer Miilicns of women throughout the world can vouch for this, as it is they who have proved its value. â€"It brings them less laber, greater comfort. OF TBE The best value for the Consumer ved not do right " Ape," cried Laban, "we hi cowards !" of any soap in the market Smoking Tobact) 5 cent plug 1o cent plug zo0cent plug be syure that the retaild does not induce you t9 buy any other in orde" that he may make * larger profit: L When you ask m Has proved by its enormous sale that it is POPU] fm‘ 4 L | "COUNTY â€" AND wW.D. (:u‘d, f!‘lOO l‘(,‘\\’un\ 114 7 COrysler, of Galt, will Jlead $o the tion of lll- part y 10 be (‘ir(j!lului. injare hi busin reu( {eH \ towI him him thu fm that of the mox dO mdly revolve rou therefore make a cc yd loops in their ort ~and are actual sateH !.::: new theory will s ion ; it is ver] b; the puths of t TY fro: day at havin there TrA\ en plod W 11 h1 the thw sun. . by Uis nex ncither, ind the that it is very ditftic to a populat audie dms. The first con is that the moon no the earth it is uo lo the carth, but becon a planet as the eat‘ Ml& &fi‘(‘t‘[ en .h cf smaller lx,ni}‘ is nev way as to cause 1l I orbhit, the loops rep: revolutions round t way the moon‘s mot h the Hrou a pounding (,‘A_)“v;_"r. 14 mind of th Pig}llr, we l moon golh liikll'\‘ Inf & Joop« The We & News o" thi Ooudty Distric From Ex ky ith Mnllllry (‘n)sainj »mplicated and peo the doctrine is esta ee will have to pa i: lunar friend ight to an i w of the 3 11 mIi U t 11 th it n on human and U ® tÂ¥ l

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