(wwhich existed between Dudley _ and ‘ mecsca could not fail to come with a (sonse of pain{ul shock. Miss ‘Revelsworth on hor _ part had her wn reasons _ for regretting Dudley‘s . words, which â€" plunged his brother ANWictor â€" into a state of such eviâ€" alent jealousy. and gloom that not anothcr word _ was to be extracted fom bim ‘during the remainder _ of the meal. & As: soon as the ladics left the taâ€" zrrd eall i." | *‘R~ rest of the meal passed off very afortably . The tone of haliâ€"veiled mce which Dudley had assumed, anno ed _ Mrs. Revelsworth greatly, €oming as it did from her favorite ne; hew; â€" while to little Betty this ore avowal of _ tender relations, which existed between Dudley _ and Francesca could not fail to come K . Semnen af nainful shock. Miss A mâ€"rment lawer, .aheriog up her k sktcte, Poancosca ran e«iftly a» "#‘ ¢ reaebed th \ deor of har ann‘s Mize jjs> ‘hree wcioutes late for €‘a ie\ AL am ao vyey serty, annt Margaret! ble, he turmed upon Dudley in pathâ€" ¢tic .dcspair. > Allo ,‘ono. my brothor!"" he exâ€" laimed I ask you if this is _ just, it is fair? You must know well my ~feclings towards Francesca; and wet you too are paying court to ker. She cannot ~marry both of us." «* "Tas Francesca promised to marâ€" @iyou?" inquired Dudley, as he very i.,..:‘. the fine chamber, P hat it #ad diffuses it eveniy 972 tias E;_, callte suck is jolcy, tender roasts, light, uwâ€ua-&mfummfl _ _The Gurney Foundry Co,, Limited x3 Toronto, Canada *Love making, I sut ?wf " ahe ang Bei in a bard curatic voice. (*Yes," reorted Dadlâ€"y, pqued b; Auwer, "L ruppose that is what you RAD BROS., Agents 5955 5599 9O5SSLELLES SG655TG ~ The oven of an. Emporial Oxford m must fail in a germ trouble, pcause med never kills inside getims. y & â€"killing drug is a poison to you, id 4 not be taken internally. L is the only way known to | germs in the body without killing the mes, toc nmu.‘:- trouble at no dru no skill in the world, can 1 need it gladly pay for ¢ and giv it to you to try. Imperial. Oxford Range ?h&llflitduflm‘ more than 2o years, has bee fustant pubject ‘of scientific and cal research. Tts virtues are derived from gas, made in large part from st producers. By a process apparatus and 14 days‘ gases are made part of the monfl“‘!"‘ Like Oxygen R the had. to sides of a roast A e ioi in cce o s etc., i to get them cooked at afl. â€" ie Peetic is moves. Hnithhe d food ruined. â€" The diffusive flue construction of the «Oxford sad the 50c. Bottle Free MILLIONSâ€" § deliberatcly cut and lit a cigar. "But no! Not ycet. She cannot de cide berself . In a few days _ per hapsâ€"" , ‘‘As T understand,"‘ â€" said Dudley, still witrout looking at his brother, ‘‘she objects _ to marriage between first cousins." ‘"She has some silly prejudice of that sort," Victor admitted. ‘"But, enfin, that, is nothing. She can withâ€" out doubt be persuadedâ€"" "Have you tried to persuade her?" "Often. And in time 1 shall sucâ€" ceed." pursued Victor eageriv. ‘"if I have not a rival in the same house." "Do you mean that she encourages you?" He sroke _ with some i‘rit:hilityl and impatience. He could n~ lenget disguise from himself the fact that Francesca had at least the sift of enthralling _ his senses, although in his cooler moments he could . not shake off a certain distrust of her.l But the idea of entering into serâ€" jous rivalry with his brother, whom‘ he dearly loved, was intensely painâ€" ful to him. He really believed that: Francesca cared for him. She could not be so good an actress as to have assumed all those tender blushes and charming touches of agitation at their reeent interview had she been wholly indifferent to him. But the thought _ tha® troubled him wasâ€" was she an artful coguettc, playing off the one brother against the othâ€" e _(n ber own amusement? Francesca was not an inexperiencâ€" ed girl, but a woman of the world, a widow â€" of â€" fiveâ€"andâ€"twenty, who knew the value of her words and actions, and the effect of her beauty upon men. Whether or "not For the Ameri its to Liquozoneâ€" mo::w pd:o-:‘: paid for similar rights on any scientific discovery.‘ We Ga'h'iiu:m'.‘.’tii-‘-i‘i& p-::d-u for two nannne, mm dow in .':i-'u:-“ what all the drugs, does in ; troubles what all the drugs, all themln the world, carmnot accomâ€" plish without it. nmimmuu.: dearoy at once and forever the eause of a powerful yet harimless germicide, to need have nevet «.kmoyntlo.y;‘ud forever the canse of h&’i‘""-"-a-.‘." We any disease. And no man k80#®| ui; then mail -*.:N another way to do it. mlhmâ€u mh-n&-m ï¬g o&r:“::oh-a:n germ that &,.hg*.l .....f.."‘,..,.. pgammibet ~A show you what Liquozsone is, and what it Germ Diseases } © These &re the known germ diseases. All that medicine can do for these troublés‘ia to help Nature overcome the germs, and such results are indirect and uncertsin, . Liqsozone kills the germs, Vancouver 4 WATERLOO she fact that she was a widow, and, it uot absolutely deceiteful, she was at least gapuble of very remarkable re ticence on the subject of bes own afâ€" % . a ts P h ‘ viagys s atke farmesarets | silence n&.a reply from Victor, Raising his eyes at length, to the latter‘s face, he was suddeniy ttky m esnt Y x‘ lnok appeared, and ‘how the "# enjoyment disappeared, to be :’Uy an expression of strained anxâ€" "By _ Jove, Victor, how ill you look!** he exciaimed , in a voice from which all trace of illâ€"feeling had fled. "T ‘x-n-hc n;.y:.':c been eating next to day or two, What‘s m Aren‘t you up to the mark, old man?" His brother leaned his head wearâ€" ily upon his hands. | "I am in love," be said, â€" with a sad laugh. "I suppose that‘s what‘s the matter:with me. I can‘t sleep for thinking of her, and I am dreaming about her all day.‘" "But â€"you look downright ill!" ‘‘That is because I cannot eat. And then this ‘English riversideâ€"1 don‘t think it suits me very well. I have talked with the chemist at Kingston t mm oncs ce s UATRET BP TTR PMR and he tells me that people are ofâ€" ton ill when they come out here frst. Relaxing,he calls it. And then it is so hot," Victor _ went on, starting up and walking about the room, with his hands and arms stretched outâ€" ‘so hot 1 feel stified." "But we often had it hotter in Paris,"" 6 "Not this heat. I am always 80 thirsty here," he continued, pouring himself out another tumbler of clarâ€" et and soda, and drinking it cagerâ€" ly; ‘‘my throat feels sore and parchâ€" vd, and food hurts me as it g0®S down. Ab, it is not theâ€"climate,"" he cried in an outburst of aftectionate espansion, throwing his arm _ about his brother‘s shoulders, "it is that 1 am $o much in love! 1 miserableâ€"â€" miserable out of Francesca‘s presâ€" dence! The blue fire of her eyes burns into my _ beart! Ahb, Dudley,â€"yOu, cold Englishman that you areâ€" yOU ‘can never lover her as I do! I hate that she _ should _ look at another man; I cannot endure that she should even talk and laugh with the Irish man; I am _ jealous of that nasty snake that always clings around her lovely wrist. I love herâ€"I â€" adore hert"‘ Mre. de Fiashe (to the Major, who is um-: a short story)â€"Erâ€"yes, major, but don‘t L“ think you ought to tell this «tory in a little lower tone of voice? this «tory It +sems , en ooo e e e Oe It ssems & little me, and the youn lady on Gn othnfl.l]de might oerheaf you. The Majorâ€"Gad, madamâ€"she has just told the yarn to me!" A Thillling Moment The deith of the famons fnnbll tor eador, Reverte, recalls to Londot "Globe" one of the most thrilling inci dents ever witnessed in the arena. 1: uwnfl:-uvfl‘l.yv;;'-Af_hu"dbpming of tw« bulls, Reverte had twice plunged hi: sword into a third, of gnuowp ani ;;rwr?.:wsj{‘; ;;‘{u _beast vmmfl- nued eareering 8 gan itc se heverte for bungling. ounied L the very quick of his gfl_sg._bo Spaniarc the very quick of his pride, the Spaniarc -bauij. ‘Tl"h bull is ml' and, throw e oo Poe UE ie m o t neag ts h‘fl aside his sword, sank on one kne« with folded arms in the middle of thi with folded arms in the middle of thi ring. He was right, but he had not al lowed for the ma: of acceident. . The wounded beast charged full upon him. but the matador, splendid to the last knelt motionless as a statue, while the spectators held their breath in horrified suspense. Reaching his victim, the bul literally bounded at him, and as he sprang he sank in death, with his last efâ€" fort #\-hw one fearful lunge of the head that drove s horn into the flll{l of the kveeling man, and laid bare ‘be bone from the knee to the joint. Still Reverte never ffmched, but remained kneeling, erultant in viétory, but calmily ‘contempâ€" tuous of apy‘ause, till he was carried aw«y to heal hho of his grievone wound show you what Liquozone is, and what ‘* ten_do in jurttce to rounett, pleast §Oc. Bottle Free i love," he said, â€" with a "I suppose | that‘s what‘s with me. I can‘t sleep for her, and Iam dreaming [ To be continued] B7 T the 'p-n't"dg" e d Aickieg : eloal dishes to oat 'mhthl- n‘ sult is that if e he is fond of| is net the kted of food he should eat, n« becomes either so gouty or rheumatic u: un:“v&“& u“wnhn; that he gete an an amusement to all his friends, nd,'wb' ther male or female, hecomes to & grout extent a nuisance to al around "Gout is much more prevalent am wales than emoug females . it is mon.r! prevalent in cold climates than in hot ones, and in those predisposed by hereâ€" dity a n'r{nu-!l excess in eating o1 hflhgk precipitate the attack Undue ptysical work or exertion, exce* sive mental work or worry, expositre to eold or wet, sudden suppression ‘of yer z‘flï¬. .emotional eauses such as sud; joy, & fit of rage, loss of blood, in jury to a.joint or sudden wrench, will o AoEBR 4s c L6 WM. 1 Mb 38 204 90 h > uin ce 1 f’ the same. Indeed, the gouty inJiâ€" vidual is like the atmasphbere when overâ€" charged with electricity. Be has in his Abaih S on ces 2 ds talienen e C ENCY e es OUMe ready to burst out." It is a curious fact, as the aut! points out, that many who live to are very bhard upon those who live â€" Does Dickens, it is often asked, realiy thold his own against the flood of modern stories which rmr- into the shops °5 44e hankeallerst â€" Mesere, Chapâ€" of the booksellerst _ Messrs, Chng: man & Hall, his old London pu lishers, have been looking into their mn past these have nmnlgcd bly over a quarter of a million eopies annually, and that so far from there being any decline, the interest in Dickens and the consequent sales of his works are inenuin'g. every year . It would :fln‘r that the difference in fl}o individ males of Dickens‘s books is remarkably small, udnchlly when one thinks of the long list of them. The least poguhr is the "Child‘s History of England," and, as might be nug))oud. the lhndh.g favorite is "Pickwick." Dur« ing the past three years, however, there has been a 5:-; increase in the sale of the "Tale Two Cities"â€"so much so that it would eou\.‘ first by many copies for thote {articv r years No doubt this is mostly due to the success of Mr. Martin Haryey‘s play, "The Only m:‘ While this pleceâ€"the story dramatizedâ€" Nee e crmariice Memaigl in was hyl:f performed in London there was a brisk demand daily for the book. Next to "Pickwick," the rermau-%‘ faâ€" vorlto,rgdq:d bz cireulation, is vid Cop&e 1d," and, indeed, there is not much to choose between the two. From them there is a rather considerable drop to "Oliver Twist" and the "Old Curiosity BShop," the sales of which have differed from each other only to the extent of three hundred copies. 80 _ 'ufl;t;_;t'fl:t â€"stories which mnly be ranked together are "Nicholas Nick eby," "Dombey and Son" and "Bleak go_use:‘_'_ “Dombesoand Sonâ€" and JDI€AR MOUSC. "Little Dorrit" and "cur Mutual Friend" eome Alnng’.ln comgany with â€" "Martin Churzlewit," and the Christmas books mot far behind. "Martin Chuszlewit" is an illustration of the slightness of viâ€" cissitude that Dickens‘s books have shown. When it was published he deâ€" clared that it was a hundred times the best thing he had done. But somehow the q:fllnl eales were quite disappointâ€" ing, and Dickens was really anxious as to whether the reading public was not loruklm:im. Every year it improved its posi and if that were to be estiâ€" mated on its whole saleeâ€"and not on those of the past three years onlyâ€"it ml!IKohbly come next to "Pickwick" and vid Copperfeld." In hbis recent article on Dle{eu. Mr. Swinburne de clared that "Great Expectations" was rrh“""pn'ï¬.' best of his novels. On sales t comes fourteenth in the list, but the it comes fourteenth in the list, but the recent cheap edition has glvep it a very large vogue with the public. Genenvl‘ll speaking, the public demand for individâ€" ual ncult"l:{dm&m isâ€" in harmony with the s which literary opinion has pronounced upon them. in other words, the books of his which the literâ€" :y eritics have exalted are also most ught by the. public. London ":lospitel" | . _ T9K 11 __ B J A .c Afrmnide JPADC Y -i-h‘!orh-n{huflnuohhuk is a familiar fact that a horse that has been wintered out, on being t into a stable with others is most to develop a cold. ‘The coachman rfl it is because the unaceustomed wa: of the stable makes him "nesh." Howâ€" sver, disinfestion of the stable before Wh-hkmgrushotno m of the symptoms of eatarrh. occurs among domestic animails we Pruree 44 ‘nfection Inostâ€"be present ber mr must be present beâ€" fore it is possible to catch a cold. There are places where colds are unknown. Dickens Holds His The universal experience of Arctic and Anteretie explorers is that so long a* the members of the expedition are in the to ssttlements inhabited by those. who are in frequent communication with the suffer eavere colds. The same is said to 52 tht ruminit of Bon Revis, Shough tiry live in elouds. Colds they Faret thke, be. cause there are no colds to catch, until ‘The Common Cold. f Thers is no doubt, according to the catarrh is a specific infeotious die What we observe among domestic Wï¬â€˜ï¬lï¬erï¬uvm alwa y# ons they remain free front on rsturn to the mainland or they descend to inhabited : they catch sovere ones diâ€" over two centuries the clasâ€" is cold has not ceased to inâ€" im. _ On this remote and the Western Hebrides, that the ordinary always at once author to eit Dr THE BARS CROWDED Upon the Eve of Closing Out Those of Toronto Junction. A CARNIVAL OF DEBAUCHERY Police Had Thcir Troubles and Ohief Royce ll?l\to 'logw"involvu Beâ€" fore He Oo;ld Make Arrestâ€"Eight Men Behind Prison Barsâ€"Mest Revolting of Â¥cenes Were Witneased. The Kidney PHL is the standard remedy for all kidney irreguâ€" larities, ~Jt sets matters right immediately, with these important organs, and aids nature in « a peru cure. <It has been thoroughly tested and its makers ask only a trial to couvince anyone of its efficacy. f BuJu‘ .. BDMaimistfe, . * ‘Toronto Junction, May 2.â€"The animal nature was visible in no small degree among . the thousands . of people â€" who thronged this town‘s streets on Saturday afternoon and evening. The event was the ushering in of the local option bylaw and givâ€" ing a parting salute to King Bachus and six of his satellites, the bars. There is no denying that the crowa made it a success, if debauchery, fighting and illâ€"temper constitute foaâ€" tures worthy of the term celebration. Rowdyism is a mild term for the. disgraceful scenes which witnosscd the incoming of this temperance measure. Men who seldom drank to excess, iugerly grabbed Rt bottles, flasks, even pails and buckets_ filled with liquor, and hied themsclfes to back lanes, where others helped them . to swallow the contents. Ilerbert‘s liquor store handed out thousands of bottles of various kinds of liquor. Much of it was drunk â€" on the open streets, but more of it in the back lanes and around Batt‘s old lumber yard. The ‘‘dead men‘‘ were thrown promiscuously every whére. Felice Had Their Treubles. The crowds thronged Dundas street from the Occidental Hotel to the corner of Keele street, the main corâ€" Wds 4ciiieu‘ ner of the town, > Special constables were sworn in by Chief of: Police Royce and were kept constantly busy dispersing the gangs which congreâ€" g-udoncbecornen.ndumm hotels. _ ‘The bars were ao crowded that fighting in them w Ampo&db\, L. a Aink omcs trrBeuse P p e omt / A fight started at the Avenue Hotel; but there was not room for a man to lift bis arm, and less room in which a man could be knocked down. The ngnunk was done on the street. ‘About the same time Chict df Poâ€" lite Royce was having his troubles near the Occidental Hotel. No soonâ€" er did Be lay hands on his man than two men in the crowd jumped for him and tried to effect a rescue. Chief Royce held on to his man until two more policcmen broke through the mob, mmea handed his priâ€" eoner over to . . _He then tried ummmvdtomov-b-ekmd allow the prisoncrs to be taken . to the station, and while doing this wnother fellow .in the erowd seized the arm of the s¢cond man arrested in an endeavor to oull him loose. c 0 9 99 Curet Drew Iuveiver. 50 pills, 50e He was a big fellow, but Royce tackled him, and with the situation approaching a somewhat . desperate shape, drew his revolver and threatâ€" ened to arrest mmore of them it they muï¬u‘ to be rictous. Cowed by 'IIMII: barrel and determined :.p‘rmu. the officers, the mob away. ~ The prisgners were then conveyed to the station, followed by several thouégand people who . sur« rounded the building and made verbâ€" al demonstrations :'nm but no means to out. on n n o is To obam a k ware . pei in the colls: / _â€" jA | A Farmer PBR % Wrote * ... \Ltâ€") Recéently : "‘The Berliner Gramoâ€"phone (Es iR m OW EC s Guaranteed for five years | "It is made in Catinda.*" Sold on easy monthly payments if desired. Write for particulars, Catalogae and list of Records. Manufactured by E. BERLINER, 2315 St. Catherine Street, Montreal. a Cakeâ€"Walk to a Mazurka )i wiil ealertain Ste €Wsn® MOTW ?Wl as well, Costs oneâ€"twenticth as much as a piano or orgait, housand tines more variety aud pleasure. "A child can operate vou in five minutes. you was a Godâ€"send during the long eold ; year. It cheered us and made us glad I would not part with it for ten times if I could not get another.‘" We have similar letters telling of the pleasure and : derived from the Berliner Gramâ€"oâ€"phone. ur favorite hymans or F0988 O PM Sn 00e Cntive family LW. YORA, N. Y.. AMD WINDSOR, ONT. stroot Toronto. Henry Robb, 14 Toronto,. aged 18 Johnvi‘;'%;l,-;nendu at the Subâ€" way Ffouse, is minus a ticket for hiadi® flsÂ¥ hib ie y n og en e c Winnipeg and his coat. He hung it up in the hotel, and some sneak thicf ran off with it. A man at the Avenue Hotel is said to have lost his watch in th# crowd, but he hasn‘t given his nari@ to the police. Hetels Closed Kariy. It is reported that the license inâ€" spector was pretty vigilant, and that one hotelkeeper may be charged with selling after hours. wl W t se P 97 m MWM m o en a es Considering the amount of drinkâ€" ing done, it is surprising that: more helpless men were not seen on the streets, The crowd was a pretty orderly one, but in back lanes and outâ€"ofâ€"theâ€"way, places the orgies of the halfâ€"dr‘n'(en youths were someâ€" thing ewful. Scenes the most _ reâ€" volting were witnessed, and those participating in them scemed to take delight in making the last of liquor in Toronto Junction vivid with deâ€" gradation and beastliness. Sm Con in ie d oouirieccs chatie Lel : 1b ciibnbaibdialiierstaPinbden on dn ‘The hotels were closed fully balf an hour before the time required by law. s ooE en eae t hotels except the Avenue, before T a‘clock, and the barrooms rid of their maudlin crowd. Aftor the hotels were closed and the supply of liquor cut off, the pugnacity of the revelers began to wWilliam Ogle, 62 Bathurst street, ease offl. Mayor Chisholm‘s house was serenâ€" aded, and a group of young fellows outside treated him to the chorus "How Dry I Am." nearly 10,000 people on the streets ‘The police estimate that there were and in the bars. _ Sunday wu‘l quict day. It was the lull after the storm. Birmingham, Ala., May 2.â€"A deâ€" spatch from Prattsville, Ark., says: News reached this city yesterday that Gaines Hall, the negro, w'ho, it ue RIDbLC:® is alleged, assaulted Mrs, Josiah Owens, â€" Saturday _ morning, _ was caught at Kingston by a posse who took him to the scens of the crime amd tied him to a tree. His body The tro?ï¬lm; season opened on Monday, May. 2nd. $15 to $45 C 7 The police were called in to all the . L MntpiC=a ‘The Englishman‘s idea of breakfast is a healthy one. ‘Toast, jam and teaâ€"a chop mebbeâ€"just enough food for the %@ouï¬mflsï¬e ptop:l!â€"!hc warmth of the tea to draw the to the stomach assist digestion. Blue Ribbon Tea is the daintiest and crispiest leaves of the _ Blue Ribbon Tea is the tes plant.. : .. . _â€" _ >â€" Another Negro Lynehed. PC It is tea â€"free of tanninâ€"appetizing and nutritious. 149 Strachan Avenue, WATERLO Retuse all Substitutes with bullets. Josiah LKMENT, "mel m&m%mb c . ul-'ovc Wh:z Packing Co.‘s store, cormes . King and Fou: streow, "u'.:.‘,uw..â€"waudnu a E. P, CLEMENT, K C.. _ E W, CLEM&®E M fiy. Tctls 9 hirm We W . 14 Queen St, North, Berlin. VY « _ Barrister, oo on teine. .ï¬..- ...E:“::'m Waterlso Telophon R. C. T. NOECKER, 5A Medailist of Poronte U ; Baile tiate of the College Te geons aad Accouchears of © .. eye and ear treated. ‘Officeâ€"» d C la ie Aibert Stroet W aiorioo, & suort Itaus of the late Dr. Walden‘s reatdence. P Licentiate of ho Go: 65e of Entsial g.t.ol‘: dï¬ e# of the nose é‘aom «itention given to the use of the X . Ray and Electric Currents in the disguosis and treatment o sultable THE BERLIN X RAY AND ELECTRO THERAPEUTIC LABORATORY. Xâ€"Ray, Rlecticity and High Frequency es id m ie rment mnpaenpimtttenmient c<*, Goltro and many forms of 'r% of women, ail forms of reotal dissases, cele tub rculosis / of ln:fl- giands, bones and joints, all forms complaints, neuraes: henia, neuraly tioa, sc _ es. dl% or further hfl.-aon or DR. J.E. HETT, Berlin, Ont ’! * Dentist, L.D.8., Royai es Janzen‘s Block, Berlin, over Emyth Btore. Entrance between Fehrenbach‘s ler and Stuebing‘s grocery, ©BRIDE & . ie e aios H WEKBB, M. D. C * Corondt County Waterico Office A W. R.Wilkinson, L. D. S., D.D.8 Office on King Street, Opposite Woollen w Y*W *\ VY _ _ c.w. WEL 2" DLR OM l Suilc ns Waterloo. Will visis Elmira, Ziliax m the socond Thureday and Friday and Thursday and Friday of each mon&h;hm 1 p.m. to Friday 1 p. m. ODONTU aw painless extraction of teeth. _ The oftice willbe closed every Friday afternoon Offlceâ€"Post Offlce, St. Jacobs, Ont. dor ake contracts for painting and paper hank ing in Town and Country. First.class work wuaranteed. Charges_remsonable, Apply a residence, ocmer of Queen and Prinosss Sts, G..HUGHES, Deatist, OBoe in the Od fol ws ‘OHN L. WIDEMAN of L2l ns rmdlas tho Jm& Ank : â€" _ Office Open Daily, Office: Canadian Block, Berlin. onor MISCELLANEOUS N B. A. MEDICAL DENTAL DENTIST. WELLS, D. D. 8., Den‘ist