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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 7 Nov 1907, p. 7

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oi \ULatry Donovan, l‘ve been tempteo ) Kill that féellow a~ dozen . times. @ ling is too damned complicat ; ?}‘4‘ . _ I. wish. my lamented andia ther had deft me something 8y. To think of itâ€" that fellow, after imy t: tment of: himâ€"my cur Per_â€"A h o t ig and abusing him seace I _ came we! Great Scoft, man, T‘ve _ been f‘}f bounty, I‘ve been living "his moneyt â€"And all the time he‘s fi“fiw- ‘and I | audit your bills on my arrival." ‘Theâ€"fone was peremptory and <oonâ€" mptuwous. Bates had. failed to satâ€" #ly Pickering and. was fiung off like â€"smokedâ€"out. cigar. How .much had he allowed .. you expenses, Bates?‘ ® : "?« et my ‘gaze imperturbably. "He paid me filty dollars ‘a month wages, sir, and L was allowed event] sfive for other expenses."‘ ‘""But you didna‘t buy English pheasâ€" s and champagne on that «allowâ€" idfathe ~ayould not have had you Â¥e, sir‘‘ > :: j “a,? &s though to. esâ€" Q'l it‘ the. consequenees of â€" his Rords, and when I came to . mysel{ itry was gloomily â€" invoking _ his itrange : Irish gods: (hatry Donovan, l‘ve been tempteo Je ‘was carrying.away the . coffee ay an lbipvummd to . the ":ifl gir.~ You seeâ€"" 4 it I don‘t see!"‘ > | had oecurred to me that as Mr. ing‘s allowance wasn‘tâ€" what might call â€"gencrous it was betâ€" er to augment itâ€" Â¥Well, C P took "libert " ol advancing a ttifie, as ‘ might say, to the estate. Your th trusting in me, just because of | dogâ€"like devotion to my â€" grandâ€" her‘s memory. Lord, Tcan‘t face | fel w ag p" ‘lack ig. @t times in perspicaâ€" : (Â¥6 ;Zgj is â€" marred large opague spots. _ . Now that iére‘s a woman in the case ~you‘re ,fi,g' . than _ ever. Bah, _ these oment / And now we‘ve got to go LA ho e e ment to stay ~ ‘How do suppose . he heard . of â€" it . so rom Morgan, quite possibly. . I ow letter from . Mr. â€" Pickering e h _ morning. _Jm a ° moâ€" e placed <before M;jwfi bearâ€" he same date as my own.. It g&' rebuke of Bates for his ite to report my absence, and he ordered to propate to leave on ‘first ot: ) _e “m,"“ your ‘:,,,' women! My own heart v:lh words. <I . was . jentaged | bitter. No wonder she had been bus for me to avoid . Pickering daring me to follow het! Wo Ned a council of war for: tha‘ .Afll{&pg«m;m viewm::um Pickering‘s: letter. His iredness in ordefing me A0 Jéave i prompt and decisive action neâ€" sary jon my patt. _ 1 . summoned work." , Mr. Pickering has learned # w; from the house. on t of the attack, and I‘m orâ€" ‘«When â€" sweets" lose their sweetnessâ€" and «* substantials," their charmâ€"there are always â€" MOONEY‘S t did be find out?" 1 . asked wian toid him! How ild he e at hably from the stars,â€" the universe . undoubtedly . saw you z off: to meét your ladyâ€"love. PERFECTION CREAM SODAS to coar back the appetite know how good~ they are not w Q'*hr'l answer . .& mood for réeflection The man came \ with a Kest _ plate Do YOU On‘6. #1" marry. _the ters," 4 retorted. ‘‘You o onee, . your.â€" affal Irish éi.:fi on, wa: u ip made heaven seem nbe,i;ml then the &‘luud maltster. 'l‘akz t impertinence. But perâ€" MEREDITH |NICHOLSON. "iy growled tte victous. 4h o d ::\ aniid o "H‘:" dliness. â€" ue â€"_â€"_ __ Gonndent of his friendlitigss, * * / . _ & n o o ouldercd " . C P ime: ‘Mruade db k ie un in it on s n noung! want Pn L n ySEs fv“’!;f “tfi‘fig&%&"’“ J fi;“ 4 ‘ffl-t;"r .?fl; C 3 o Rinkalk a1 the > aniline. * abnd ® 4 ’ fouh & t: 6. â€" C6L ws C 6,â€" ms&% moke languid1 "’lfi saw you not C 0 â€"eith & ‘the adyâ€"love. cause of my absence. . On‘ â€"suckh . a ‘ matter I m':’rm get p::wu rry the pittie sympathy: from Laxt a d. . **You had,. moreover, & M"-fl’n 1. could it. jaffair not discuss. ‘uh:.l veveredx . with m, â€"that any one, Leven shrank from mentionâ€" Ten seem ing her nanie, though it trang like the then the cail of bugles in my blood, p shaken ~â€" She was always before me, â€" ithe #. â€" Take charmed spirit of youth, linked ". to But perâ€" évery foot of the earth, every gleam of ‘the sun upon the iceâ€"bouna . iake, iswer. I every glory of the winter :unset..‘_Al. An of ?':}Qw I had ever. atifiea bf her. Amid ‘the day‘s erplextuies I started sometimes, thit beara herâ€"voice, her Jaug ter, or sa&w her again coming toward me :down the stairs, or holding. against ~ the light hber fan. g@u mndflmr mes, â€"I really | so Titt her, 1 could associate her© with â€" no home, only with that last Aing of the autâ€" umn upon the lake, the : snowâ€"driven woodland,â€" that t‘W at the, organ in the chapel, those"stolen moâ€" ments at the Armstrongs‘, 1. re sented the pressure of the hour‘s at fairs, and chafed at the necessity for talking of myâ€" perplexities with the good friends who were there to â€"help. 1. wished ‘to be alone, ito. yield to the sweet mood that the thought of . het brought .Ame. ‘The doubt that crept through ‘my ‘mind as to any possibilâ€" ity ot connivance between ‘her â€" ane Pickering was as vague and â€" fleeting as the shadow of a swallow‘s wing on a sunny meadow. "You don‘t intend fighting the fact of your absence, do you?" demandeo JLarty, after a long stlence. . . â€" ; "QIâ€"course not!" I replied quietly. "Pickering was . right on my heels, and my absence was known to _his men . here. â€" And it would ~not be square to my grandfatnerâ€"who never harmed a flea, may his soul rest : in blessed peace!â€"to lie about it. They might nail me for. perjury besides.'_' ‘‘Then ‘the: quicker we get . ready for a siege the better. As Iâ€" underâ€" stand your attitude, you don‘t . purâ€" pose to move out until you‘ve found where the siller‘s hidden.~â€"Being a gallant gentleman and of a forgiÂ¥ing nature, you Want to be sure that the lady who is .mow entitled toâ€"it gets all there is coming to her, andâ€"as you don‘t trust. the.executor, any. _ furâ€" ther . than a true frishman trusts a prime minister‘s promise, you‘re â€" goâ€" ing to stand by to watch the boodle counted. Is that a correct analysis ofyour . intentions?"‘ e ."And if he comes with the authori ties, the sherif and that sort oi thing, weâ€"must prepare for such . ar emergenty," interposed the â€" chap lain: » van ‘"So much the worse for the sherif and the rest of them!" 1 declared. _ ‘*‘Spoken like a man of spirit. And now. wo‘d better stock up at once, in case: we should be shut off from our source ‘of ‘supplies.â€" This is a lonely place heré; even the school is a e mote. neighbor. Better: â€" letâ€" Bates visit the village shops â€" toâ€"morrow. I‘ve tried being hungry, and I don‘{, care to repeat the expetiencé.">~ . ‘"That‘s as near~ one of my ideas as you‘re likely to get, Larry Donoâ€" # in 2l Larry reached for * the tobacco "I can‘t imagine, 1 ; really . can‘t believe,‘" began the chaplain, ‘"that Miss Devereux. will want to be brought into this estate matter â€" in any way. . In: fact,"I have heard Sisâ€" ter Theresa say as much, _ 1. supâ€" pose there‘s no way of preventing a man lrom‘puvigt;hh property to a Youngâ€" woman, who has no claim ‘on Min,â€" who | doesn‘tâ€" â€"want anything ‘m him.". & f «L «5 ‘"Bah, these women! People don‘t throw legacies to the <birds . thesc days. Of course she‘ll take it. ‘Thenâ€" his . cyes widenmed andâ€" _ met mine in a gaze that reflected . â€"the mystification and wonder that struc > both of us. Stoddard _ turned ‘Trom the. fireâ€" suddenly; stairs Larry was al ruaning toward the h{l. and lw:yd, him . springing up the steps like W cat, while St6dâ€" dard and: 1 fAllowed. â€" > < _.*Where‘s Butes?" demanded <. the cMaplain. PMAE To chap . ons i Lu;utqod «t the top of the stairâ€" case ding. a candl¢ . at" arm‘s length in front of him, stating about. «*I‘lH thank you for the answer," I m‘ NC IARET ES e 4bLs ;‘l:., We could bear quite distinetly some one | Walking on "a stairway; ~the m wore unmistakable, just as 1 I m several previous occaâ€" slons, | ut ever bemmg. able . to trace their source, . â€" * â€"I went direqtly~to the rear. of the house â€"and found Bates putting the dishes away in the pantry. | "w \z“-:m no hint â€"6f its / Where "Hore, sir,. I Mave been cleasing up the disner things, Mr. Glenat:~ is @:uffiphpw;fll:@" ¢ ~1 joine ltw" ies in The Ibraty. c ie Sn Lolt m Ame. "tes + ‘‘Where have you been?"‘ I demand What s that?. There‘s some one uy «hk @yre : BQOVRIL Cortain‘ things were «; «. ABat oAAA om . s â€"upon a ne;’::i‘ qi"{n fidh( _of walls and Aoor â€"our clue from the efforts made by Mo “‘tK allyâ€" to: find: hiding places by> â€" this ;pxoceu. Pickering: would undoubicsâ€" iy afrive .shortly, and we ‘wished to anticipate bis movements as â€"far as possible. § t the qonbie ind 3. mgit puota, doinet Pianke ronkd a io i #toddard, whose interest in my alâ€" tairs was only‘ equaled by fertiâ€" lity <of his suggestions. One of us should temain abroad at night, ready to sound the alarm in case of â€" atâ€" tack.‘ Bates should take: â€"his turn with the restâ€" Stoddard insisted on it. _ Within two days weâ€" ~were, â€" as Larryâ€"expressed it, on a war footing.. 45 sadee: 3 couplornt shot gumsoand several revolvers to my own arsenal, | boxes. Bates, m as quarterâ€"master, . brought a couple of wagonâ€"loads of provisions: ~Stoddard assembled a remarkable collection of heavy sticks, he had moreâ€"confidence in them, he said, than in gunpowder, and, moreover, he explained, & priest _dint not with propriety bear arms. t was a cheerful company of conâ€" spirators that now gathered around the big hearth." Larry, always restâ€" less, preferred to stand at one side, an elbow on the mantelâ€"shelf, pipe: in mouth; and Stoddard sought the bigâ€" gest chair,â€"andfilled it.â€" He . and Larry: understood each other at once, and Larry‘s stories, ranging in subâ€" Ject from. undergraduate. experiences at: Dublin to adventures â€" in . Afrjca and. always including endless conflicts with the Irish constabulary, delightâ€" ed ‘the big boyish clergyman. _ © _ â€" Often, .at some one‘s suggestion of a new idea, . we tan of to â€" explore the house again in search of the key to the Glenarm riddle,â€" and . always we. came back to the library: ~with that riddle still unsolved. "Sister Theresa has left, sir." Bates bad been into Annandale to mail some letters, and Iâ€"was starâ€" ing out upon the park â€" from the library. windows . when he : entered. Stoddard, having kept watch the aight before, was at home â€" asleep, and Larry was off -ome{lhm in the house, treasureâ€"hunting. â€"I was~ feelâ€" ing ~decidedly. â€"discouraged over â€" out iailure to make any progress â€" with Jur investigations, and Bates‘> news did not interest me. y ‘‘Nothing, . sir; but Miss Devereux has come back!"‘ ‘The â€" devilt" 4 hef I turned and took a step _ toward iu this morning, and the Sister left at once for Chicago. Sister Theresa Jepends particularly upon Miss Devâ€" sreuxâ€"so _ I‘ve heard, . sit.., Miss Jevereux quite. takes charge _ when she Sister goes away. A few of the students are staying in school through she holidays"‘ d ‘‘Well, what of it?"" I demanded, without turning round. ‘*And I‘ve learned: somtthing else, sir.‘ * ‘"Well?t" . ' 4 ‘"They all came together, sit.‘"‘ ‘"Who came; if you. please, Bates?"* *‘Why, the people who‘ve been trav= <ling with Mr. Pickering came ; back with him, and Miss Devereux came with them from Cincinnati. ‘That‘s what I learned in the .village. And Mr. Pickering is going to stayâ€"" "Pickering stay!" °_ «> "At his cottage on the Take for a while; The reason ts that he‘s worn vut: with his work, and wishes quiet. The other people went back ‘to New Yotk in the car." s the "I~â€"said Miss Devereux,"" he repeatâ€" »xi in dignified rebuke. ‘‘She came "You seem full:â€" of information," . I comarked, taking another stepâ€" toâ€" ward my hat and coat. . ‘‘He‘s opened a summer cottage in imidâ€"winter, has he?" â€" I had been blue emough without this news. Marianâ€"~Devereux had come back to Annandase with Arthur Pickâ€" ering; my faith in her snapped ~like a reed at this astounding news. She was now entitled to my grandfather‘s property and she had lost no time in returning as soon as ‘ghe and .. Pickâ€" ering ‘had discusich together: at ~the Ar:mlc;;a’ my fight. from â€" ‘Annan~ dale. returd . have no othér meaning . than . mm a strong Tie between them, | and he was now to stay on the ground: pnâ€" The Return of Marian Devereux CHAPTER XXH, was substance enough i without pushing shaaows {BOVRI romal ul;tqgaonya.hg Its rich, beefy fla the digestive orgnm::' day pas th m «c Makes your riduth water BOVRH Wh All All the essence 4 grocers sellâ€"BOVRIL ng | s is hew sbare are consteits ilecamchee. |" °T. shouldy‘t eall thas . « debatable (At is always found that" mml "I . k . that “M"",“""'f is Te stoee Soue col m on maition on mpiet o) ons . or â€" sallow. uu;ngfll& "how mirth P had | Uissue waste is left in â€"eer«> loved in her could suddeniy OA ,;“u";';"'flxh und feritet@® tbe/so ‘hateful." She halfâ€"turned away. 50 0 with . . h c.-:i'qp, morphine,. phenacitine and z‘zlt 1 might â€"not see her lace. . The 'N",";mofl,',’f:.mr is \1:.!7;;t thought . that she could countenance tlh.b‘y dlog ine ‘x!::- i i;’icke::ing in any way â€" tote me with TheÂ¥" never Fexclt" the‘ ‘seat * ofâ€""tna ‘ J2810U; "Fage. keop BOVRIL always on hand, There‘s not t cannot help make some disk more palatable try til I should be dispossessed and ber rights established. She Had led. me to foliow her, â€"and my forfeiture had been sealed by ‘that stolen interview at the Armstrongs‘, = It. ‘was a black record, and.the thought of it angerâ€" ud me against mysell and the worid. ing ‘through thehall made a ~pretext of looking jor a (book and came in and exciaimed over ‘their‘~ inabiiity toâ€"find it with much suppressed .gigâ€" gling. . C o They golieve for the moment, but they â€" clog the system and . do .nmt They never reach the. seat of the trouble, they cannot purify the blood. | ~‘Frul it-'("-l'lg’ . completely. . cure aed on ?"m Verdlamore rgumy. n a e y h ate kidneys. Anâ€" duce healthy skin>action.~© Thus, all the.. waste : matterâ€"body poisons~are taken out ®f fhe ‘blood and there is nothing to cause headaches... "Fruitâ€" aâ€"tives" are the only remedy that roally cure. deag _ @Tell. Mr. Donovan .that I‘ve gone to _ St. Agatha‘s," L said,~ and 1 was soon sttiding toward the school. A sistet admitted me. I~ heard the sound ‘of a piano,â€"somewhere in the building, and &‘ consigned ‘ the . .inâ€" ventor ~of pianos~to hideous torment as scales â€"were . pursued endlessly <up and down the keys. Two girls passâ€" The pianoâ€"pounding continued . and I waited fcc what seemed an interâ€" minable time. 1t was. growing dark and a maid lighted ~the oil lamps. 1 took a book from the table. . 1t was The Life of Benvenuto.. Cellini and **Marian Devereux‘" was written on the fly leaf, by unmistakably the same~ hand that / penned © the â€" apology for OQlivia‘s performances. I saw in the clear flowing:lines of the signaâ€" ture, in their lack of superfluity, ner own ease, grace and charm, and, â€" in the deeper stroke 13. which,â€" the was crossed; hfl;‘ chaiténge, ~a readiness to abide..by . consequences once her word was given. â€" Then my own inclination to . think well of her angered me. 1t was only a pretty lit of chirography, and â€"I â€" dropped the book impatiently when~ I heard her step on the threshold. K "I am sorry to have â€" kept _ you waiting, ‘Mr. Glenarm. But this. _ is ‘my busy hout." » â€"» in mieh Ahe, iedictant ection is w + na m 4e f"%' ease y the special . way Tsl use Tete. tA on Weaatet on sent on receipt of price. _ _ Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives Limited, >. Ottavig, Ont. "I shall not detainâ€" you long. 1 came," â€"I hesitated, not _ knowing why. Ihad come. * ts ? She took a chair near â€" the â€"open door and bent forward with â€"an . air of attentionâ€" that:‘ was ~disquicting. She wore blackâ€" perhaps to fit her the better into The house of‘a somâ€" wrâ€" Sisterhood.. I seemed â€"â€" suddenly o remember her froma time long gone, andâ€"the effort of memory: threw me off guard. . Studdard . hadâ€" said there were several Olivia Armstrongs; there. wore certainly many _ Marian Devereuxs. The . silence grew _ intolâ€" crable;, she was waiting for me to speak, and I blurted: _ ~ ‘"I suppose you have come toâ€" take charge of the property," _ "Po you?"‘ she asked. f â€"â€"**And you came back with the exâ€" ecutor . to facvilitate matters. I‘m glad: to see that you lose no time." "Oh!"" she. said lingeringly, . as though she wore finding with difficulâ€" ty the note jin which 1 wished . .. to pitch the conversation... Herâ€" calmâ€" ness was maddening. ~ B "I suppose you thoughtâ€"it, unwise, to wait for the bilwebird â€" when . you had beguiled â€"me\ into breaking_ . a promige, . when I1~Was trapped, _ deâ€" m.‘“ . ; s Her elbow on the arm of the chair, her hand resting agaipst her . cheek, the ‘light rippling goldenly â€" in _ her hair, her eyes bent upon me: inguiringâ€" 1y , . mournfully;â€"mournfully, as s had seen . themâ€"where?=â€" once before w’={ heart leaped‘ in that â€"moment, .. that thought. > "I temembernow the first (time!" I exclaimed, more angry than 1 had ever ‘been before in: my Hife. ~~ + >*That is ‘quite remarkable,‘"‘ . she said, and nodded her head fronically.. "{t wil’ut Sherry‘s; you were 't.: Pickerin ou dn”oll your fan. he Mehrz up, ‘and you burned toâ€" a little ROVRIL in sit T tefresicand strengithe puts tive net It containe in eand favor of prin creates appetite ves it the delightful odor of your af atr aCap of is k . the fo uz. helping xd you eat. ige ef. _ "Stop!" { bawled, â€" ‘"Do: youâ€" think that‘s helping me? And to have you curse in your blackguardly â€" Irish :diaâ€" ! lect! 1 wanted a liftle Angloâ€"Saxon sympathy, you fool!. 1 ‘didn‘t â€" mean for you to invoke your infameus gods ‘against the girl!" e s {. ‘*Don‘t be violent. lad. *‘ Violence is reprehensible," he admonished with maddening ~sweetness and / patience. ‘‘What i was. trying.. to inculcate | was rather the fact, born in tupon me through years of. acquaintance, {um you are,â€" to be bold,â€" my lad, ‘to be bold,â€" m good dealâ€"of a â€"damnâ€" ed fool." Her tone, changing from coldâ€"_inâ€" dinerence m::g most uv;ou dhd:::: stung me intoâ€"selfâ€"pity : lor« my Pi:l?i in having sought her. _ My anger. was flot uuu& her, ‘but wgainst Pickering, who , 1 per« suaded myself, <always blocked . my path. She went on. & 4 ‘‘*You really amuse me exceedingly. Mr.~Pickering is ‘fii,m more thai a match for you, Mr. Glenarm, even in Jhumor." > P a % She lett me so quiekly, so.s0ltly,‘ang Rski that 1 stood stafing like aâ€" fool 2t which is . ne spot. where she had been, ugt‘mg”;‘ then 1 went gloomily back to _ GlCD~ dwellers arm House, . augry, . ashamed â€" and way ther crestfalien;. .L. 0= _ - Eo e Pran Wls T oo Oe MO CS OOR D ) A1NC i dwellers ol Alaska, who made their arm House, _ augry, â€" ashained â€" and way there from Asia; rase crestlallen, . |___.~~ _ s ~â€" Only aâ€"Few Hundred Left. s While we were waiting> for _ dinner | . ‘Phoy are monoganmists, and no such 1 made a cleam breast or my ACQU&IN® ‘ thing as vice is known among them: tance "with her ‘to. Larry,â€" ~omitUnE _ They are permiltted by their pricsts to nuthing,â€"rejoicing even to paint _ MY haye more than‘one wife, but ~never own conduct s biack as possible. . 1g00 so. They have no laws at all, but **You inay remmemwer her," 1 conâ€" cluded, ‘she was the girl we saw at ishetry‘s that night we dined there. She ~was with Pickering, â€" and â€" you noticed her,â€"spoke of her as _she went ‘out." / ~> ‘‘That little girl who â€"seemed _ so bored, . or _ tired? Bless. me! > Why her cyts haunted me for" days.â€" Lord man, : do you mean \to sayâ€"‘" â€" _A look..of utter scorn came upon his ~face, ‘and he ‘eyed ~ me =â€" conâ€" temptuously, â€" 3 "Ofâ€" course I meanit!". I thunderâ€" ed ‘at bims He took the pipe from his mouth, pressed the tobatco viciously into the bow!, and " swore steadily in .Gaelic uiitil 1 was ready. to clioke him. ‘‘Dinner is . served,"‘ ~angounced Bates, and Latry led the way, mockâ€" ingly chanting an Irish loveâ€"song. The trilling . of â€"his r‘sâ€"was like theâ€"whitring rise of a flock of quails. CHAPTER. XXIIL { The Doot of Bewilderment. We had established the practice of barring all the gates and ‘doors . at nightfall."~ Trere was (no . way .0 guarding against an attack from the Iake, whose frozen‘ surface _ increased the danger from _ without, but .we counted on night patrol to prevent a surprise from that quarter. 1 ‘was well aware that I must prepare to resist the militant arm of the law, which Pickéring .would no doubt inâ€" voke toâ€"aid him, butâ€"I intended â€" to éxbaust the possiBilities in searching for the Tost treasure before I yieldâ€" cd. Pickering might, if he would, transfer: the estate of John Marshali Glenarm <to Marian‘. Devereux _ and miake.the most he could of that serâ€" vice, but h'mld wot drive â€"me forth ‘until I~had satisfied myself | of the cxact character of my â€"â€" grandâ€" ‘s fortune. : H it has vanished, ifâ€"Pickering had stqlen it and â€" outâ€" witted me in making off : with it, id‘ Ts tâ€"uy‘ â€"â€" :'ulf;'â€"r ‘‘My character is my own, *what rek it is,"> 1 blurted. F ‘The phrase, ‘‘The Doot of Bewildâ€" ermént,‘" Rad never . ceasel to rei< Nerate ‘itselt _ in my mind. _ We disâ€" cussed a thousand explanations of 4t as we pondered~gver the scrap of papér 1 had found ~ in the Hbrary, and every book in the house: . was d-.ufinlul' in‘ the search fot ‘W He came up at noonâ€"it was. the Awentyâ€"ninth . ot Decemberâ€"with gris my Tace . and <hands anda grin on his Tace. I had @pent "my morning in the â€"towers, . where it was â€". beastly 2 woad Tot Ti Teit emamedt & l new Theoties. s 1‘¥e found something,‘* he * said, ‘The passage between the house and mmdm to fascinate Latry. He that. it maut: have somé particultr use and he devoted: . his time to exploring 16. ;« > uN‘ but Idst word anâ€" hour. back again and Hing â€"his‘ ; to ord on the twnr r._ _ Give me a plece of bread, nd . see whether ot not." (To be Continued ) pe evidently ‘im #olng Y | ~This newâ€"tribe is the only one m . ~JAlaska which makes pottery, Dr, Gorâ€" EY‘ don says. / All. the others are basket MAU weavers. ‘Dr. Gordon believes the race ml‘oh'ol ahcient Asintic origin, gra dually driven by Athabascan Indians Sy, and Eskimos to its present quarters, 4* which is a natural fortress.»They reâ€" and~ present, perhaps, the "most â€"ancient ber i Be. Pace T. & amd l e dn I.‘Fm’. "m" a Eskimos * icesin strong traces of ] Crime. and vice a: among them and patural pantheism > . Bive M” .'i ‘, PES C ~'~1_‘ P "Dhey hww% or corruption degeneracy â€" with whichâ€"the «white: have n‘ <ted /the Athabascan _: Indians ‘and jmos, Dr. Gordon lived for severatsmipnths â€" ‘"‘Though they are dying out," Dr. seok Pafmccin mt itenigees" Te * gent., have retained the most ancient charâ€" acteristics of dress and speech. _ In clothing, instead of â€" wearing turs, they sew .skins of birds: into _ robes, using the breasts ol loon ‘and various -Imia of_ducks whichâ€"abound in the river .‘ Of their clothing, utensils, arms, etc.,: Dr. Gordoi ‘gathered collections, and .when they arrive he and other ethnologists will try to discover wheâ€" ther.the tribe, is of Asiatic_ origin or. whether it migrated> from < Lower California, do‘ so. .. They: have no laws at all, but are governed by. patriatchs. They are tail, and the women . graceful and beautiful. & _ Toronto Star:â€"With sixâ€"inch whisâ€" kers and anvigorous kick against the mining regulations of the . Whitney Government, the Sherk, brothers and son, of Galt, arrived in the city Lthh‘-x’noming. alter <a â€" sixâ€"months‘ prospecting tour in the wilds of the Montreal River district, . northâ€"west ol Cobalt. 3 » . "This much I have found out, while in the North this year," said W. B., who is a â€"veteran prospector, ‘"It is impossible almost to do business honâ€" estly with certain people in the new district. The perjury that is. indulgâ€" ed ‘in is abominable." There are four men in the partyâ€" W. B. Sherk and S. H. Sherk, brothâ€" ers, C.â€"L. Sherk, a son of. W. B., and Sam Goutherie, an employe: HAIR AND WOES , Mr. Sherk declared that the: reguâ€" latfons respecting locating and inâ€" specting claams in the north were disâ€" regarded in a wholesale way..Claimâ€" jumping and other irregular. dealing :i;:‘u feature of the life of the disâ€" ‘‘There should: beâ€"complete revision of the regulations," said the swarthy rospector,‘"‘and the situation up in zho new district will never be satisâ€" lactory until this is done." The quartette declined the offer‘s of the services . of sundry photographers and barbers. < They wanted to go home to Galt first to give the folks up there a #ight of the kind of hair and whisâ€" g! can be growm in the North coun * s the Spring to grow some mote,‘"‘ said Mr. Sherk. : ~To check a cotd qyickly, get from your â€" druggist J‘l.i‘uh_‘ C@andy Cold Tablets called ,Preventics. Druâ€" ggists everywhere are now dispensâ€" img _ Preventics, for they are . not only safe, but decidedly certain and prompt. _ Preventics contain no quinâ€" iney .no laxative, nothing harsh _not sickening. . Taken at> the ‘‘sneeze ‘Btage" Preventics will prevent Pnew‘ monia, â€" Bronchitis, La (rippe, 6tc. Hence ~ the name Preventics. â€"Good for feverish childrep. 48 Preventics 25 cents. : Trial boxes 5 cents. Sold by A. G. Hachnel, Waterloo. Shigh ‘"And we are going back North in Do you know that it makes meats tastâ€" (eprorsencare and moses and 1 tor. sott saucesâ€" . mfihtryulud for a otp of boaf tea 1 i Our new . cook book, "*M Favorite Reésipes," tolin h-: to use Armour‘s Extract of Boof the rigm way. Sent free on receipt of m a metal cap from a‘jat of .‘i.' * Uhi# extract. A LITTLE GOES A LONGâ€" WAY Armour‘s Do you appreciate the cconomy of Solid Extract of Beef? ©f Mongolian ancestry. t6 are utterly unknown and theit: â€"religion . is ARE PROSPECTORS 107 Petted in Oanaite by receipt of On Thursday ~&Â¥vening the sum of metal cap :'H 'h:i. stoten ffouxfi m-«n& m a jar of annheim wc' L lnuj:et. of "14 y living in I;glfiit- =~**"BI haod â€" who | had been. in ‘Leâ€". offce in Canaite by mv the dayâ€" was 'lw‘ Aarwour [ * t to his home latet in " b’ the + D §\ the recovery of. â€" the . aemett and Pelephane taa * _ Honor graunate of Torouto University| . «t in disea: es of the nose and t T 9y ‘tentiun given to the use of the a<s .5__3'“-.&'-:‘«' sane e e y . ‘on‘s office, Berlin. DR, J. E. HETT,â€"PHYSICIAN _ _ W * mApE»8 &A Fâ€" G. AUGAERB. â€" a ‘Dentist. ~OdAfellow‘s Block. _ W. K. Wi " LD.$,, m: 0’“ 0’. M. \:" ‘f;g‘l‘ ;Au "Cffce on Albert Btitet, ntar For , mutual convenience patien: frcm a distance are partic buested to nake appoin gomcod she second Thursday Thmreday and Â¥riday ::.a lmhhflng..‘-.“ 2M‘ ‘will be sioced AroIF P, CLEMENT. %‘C. via EIPERIENOED J .. u\w-l.:;;-o-‘-- Lo . Offl.sâ€"Post Office, St. Jacobe, Ont, f By b:l;?c whl:: school has beâ€" come nfs® achool in e:!-rn Ontario. m rolment again excecds that of a year :g: Why? Becadse our courses rough ar 2 rraotical with in chfic cf our COUM 4 SHORTHAND and J departments, You may eoter NOW, 3 6 W rite for our free catalogue RLLIOTTR Mo LACHLAN . STOLEN MONEY RECOVERED (Frameaseritege M Specialty, Nose, Thrcatiand Ear. _ NV * w x1 aterioo. â€" Will Â¥ish: OHN °L WIDEMAN Largest and B Cor. King and M. ORAM, : Over Bank of Hamilton,Beriip, STRATFORD MEDIOAL in 14 Queen Pri w Bs o ty ®

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