Mooney‘s is Perfection â€" 1J _ Cream ' Sodas as then months away; so, unnoticed, had stood behind the big poplar, P Eds s itching the neighbors . gently let . wn into the shallow trench a Homeâ€" ide coffin, rudely hollowed _ from e hal g . a beeâ€"gum log, and, ~unâ€" away at . the â€" first iuffied . stroke of © the dirtâ€"doubling ‘fists into his eyes and stumbling Inst the gnarled bodies of laurel M- idronâ€" until, ~out in â€"a ir sunny space, he dropped on â€" a i {ï¬. t mat of moss and sobbed imself to sleop. â€" When he _ awoke, | ck was licking his face and he sat | 1, dazed and yawning. ‘The sun was | dropping fast, the ravines were filling | vith blue shadows, luminous .. and ; Faisty, and a far drowsy tinkling. from ; the valley told that cows were startâ€" ing homeward. From habit, ‘he sprang hickly to bis feet, but sharply conâ€" scious of a sudden, dropped â€"slowly ‘back to the moss again, while Jack, who had started down . ‘the _ spur, eircled back to see what the matter Was: and stood with uplifted ~â€" foot, amuch puzzled. ho "he re has been a consultation about ;g",;q that morning among the _neighbors, and old Nathan â€" Cherrty, who lived over on Stone Creek, in ‘"the next cove but one, Ssaid that he would take charge of the boy. Nathan did not waitâ€" for the ~burial, . but Â¥ent back home for his wagon, leayâ€" ing word that Chad was to stay all ‘night with a neighbor and meet him at | the deathâ€"stricken cabin an hour §' . ‘The old man meant to have iad bound to him for seven years \lawâ€"the boy bad been toldfthatâ€" | N: hated"dogs as mucn ~as d ha mnh&; the lad did ‘Me long: â€" He did not mean to be ind out, nor to have ‘Jack _ misâ€" ted, and he rose quickly and Jack ig before him down the rocky ‘"path and toward the hut that . had ‘a home for both. Under . the T4 U â€" L * gon '32 ir= |1 o. d lall ~ and |f i o on n omiin ta ns aud Tt A.:a“v en o ï¬_ï¬â€˜dc&f o thec “‘5“ Fick i 4% s o is %h,,,#a s," and: yift, straight» | ht ingain, â€" So. ‘that.. all | s p'\kï¬ i‘rm’*i_' ‘, ;;“y, Aier ts x3 ao Car 1@ x4 ‘ C "mak "nbailiins mc d ronaly fas Xies, now: at some â€"unlovely / -'N'w. ér::; .& PM x: y NS ;‘ ‘a Jog cabin,‘ ‘stark and| Dace "'«ryâ€-’vp,vsï¬," :'L‘ a a "Mashed Bis seythe "Into its | F spMIqWs, And. w ol """‘f igh up, at the . source ï¬l.ï¬" ma} little: stream, the point of ; the | ning blade darted thrice into the ; im door of a cabin set deep into | hage m Black . Mountain, | ‘three : ts, within, were quickâ€" | loosed from aching flesh . for the ! was the spirit of the â€" plague , ib passed, taking with it the breath the ty and the.unfit: and ln‘ 8 thut on Lonesome three were dead i gaunt mountaineer, a gaunt dan» | i’.?n{n. son. Later, the ther, too, ‘jes" kind o‘ got tired," ‘ ‘MNttle Chad said, and soom to ‘herâ€" m hands and feet â€"cameâ€"the well~ ned rest. Nobody was left then t Chad and Jack, and Jack . was dog with abelly to feed and went f jess than nothing. with everybody it "b little master ‘&nd the chance Untaineer: who had shcep to guard. , for the fourth time, Chad, with j_,.- his heels, trudgedâ€" up to &he it of a wooded spur above the bin, where, at the foot of aâ€" giant ,;ml under a wilderness _ of June leaves, _ were three l * ~rough boards, loosely. coverâ€" j I’ & hillocks of ramâ€"beaten earth nd, mear theni, .an open â€". grave. here: was no service sung or spoken Fer the â€"dead, for the circuitâ€"rider â€" ‘The perpetual charm wï¬uhm and crispness f f daintiness and deliâ€" â€"â€" is in every 0ON trom: Lonesome captive by the , «moistureâ€"proof k ,T‘}:.ere 'nll , ing. ..In Mg'!)looï¬v'n. Â¥yw e § T : A\~*% hh emun ie ons oys iig t sorcy tpar k + ‘,‘n’-‘ ,'v-‘v;:’_a' C % ieg > Piales d :_‘ A .-?lA«-~th%:“ ::“ * ï¬,*"“‘ * ing." Agail 'f"'j: e of the * lalling carth smote h ;mf% | §1CC, & CUTIOUE: CMGAE MAAA | NO . ffl t‘&‘ ' pased o ,_ W !;"“. ikh. ~** lrmm handâ€"made "'“'1 | brilliant colots had been ~thrown . in aheap on one of the two heds of ’hï¬*cty withes;. the kitchen utensilsâ€" a crane and a Mal and . pans ‘had. been piled on bearth, ~along ‘-uu strings of heth=_and beans . and ‘r¢d pepperâ€"podsâ€" all ready for: old ‘Nathan when he should come > fot *them, next morning, with his wagon. |Not a Uiving thing ‘was to be . beard or seen Lnflflmmn , m ‘Chad sat down. hem':&louâ€" {liness, watching the shadows up the green walls that bound him in, %and woundering what he should â€"do, and where he should go, it be was ‘not to ‘go to old Nathan; while.Jack 'whq scemed to know that some crisis |wu come,‘ settled on his haunches a .mm way ~off, to wait, with perfect taith and patience, for the ~boy = to {make up his mind. iR ~.Just above him and> â€" actoss. â€" the buck antlers over the ~ door, lay â€" a Rintâ€"lock rifle; a bulletâ€"pouch, ‘a powâ€" derâ€"horn, and. A. small raccoonâ€"skin Iku_wcxuck hung ~from one â€" of the prongs: and on them the boy‘s _eyes ‘rested longingly. Old Nathan, â€" he knew,. claimed that the dead man had _owed him money; and he further knew that ‘old Nathanâ€"meant to ~take all he could lay his. hands on in â€" p&yâ€" ment; but he climbed resolutely upon a chair and took the things down, , atggug, the questign, smeanwhile: © |~"Uncle Jim said once he aimed to | "Uncle Jim said once he aimed to. give this rifle gun to me.~ Mebbe he was foolin‘, but I don‘t~ belfeve â€"he owed ole Nathan so much, an‘, any~ lways," he muttered. grimly, "‘I reeâ€" kon Uncleâ€"Jim ‘ud kind 0‘ . like â€" fer ‘me to git the better of . that â€" ole | devilâ€"jes" a leetle, anyways." Sï¬ The rifle, he knew, _ was © always. loaded; there was not much® powder in the horn and.there was not more than a dozen bullets in the pouch, butâ€" they would last him : untilâ€" he could get gway. No more would. he take, however, than what he thought he could get along withâ€"one blanket from the bed and, . from the _ fireâ€" place, a little bacon and a pone> of cornâ€"bread. > . ‘Then he closed the door softly . on the spirits of the dead within,~ and caught the short. â€" deerâ€"skin~ â€"latchâ€" string to the wooden pinâ€" outside. With his Barlow knife, he. swiftly stripped a barn string from a pawâ€" paw bush near by, folded and tied his blanket, and was swinging â€" the little pack to his shoulder, when the tingle of a cowâ€"bell â€" came . through‘ the bushes, close at hand. Old Nance lean and piéd, was comming home; he had ‘Torgotten her, it â€" was getting late, and â€"he was anxious to leave for fear some neighbor might come; but there was no one to milk and, when she drew near with a Jow . moo, he saw that her twdders . were full . and dripping. It would hart her to: goâ€" unmilked, so Chad put . his â€" things downand took up a cedar ‘piggin from a shelf outside the cabin . and did the task thoroughlyâ€"putting the strippings in a cup, and, so strong was the habit in him, ‘hurrying with bath to the rude springâ€"house . and ‘setting them in cool running water, A moment moté and he hadâ€"â€" his pack and his rifle on ~one . shoulder "and was climbing the fence at the woodâ€"pile. ‘There he stopped. _ once more with a sudden~ thought, â€"â€" and wrenching loose a short aze from the face of a hickory iog, »staggered under the weight of his weapons . up the mountain. The sun was yet @n hour high afd, on the spur, he leanâ€" ed his tifle against the big . poplar j ddldai:â€m witllmk:::â€on a â€â€"â€"hflh’ now t‘u‘m;cm who made him: . s "An‘ I know Aunt Jane wouldn‘t ‘a‘ keered about these lectle fixin‘s; fer I have to have ‘em, an‘ I know I‘ve earned ‘em anyways." K reckon You know it, but I‘m aâ€"goin‘ to run away now. â€" I hain‘t got no daddy an‘ no mammy, an‘ I hain‘t nuver: had. none as 1 Imowsâ€" but Aunt Jane hychâ€" « she‘s been jes‘ like a mother to me an‘ . I‘m a doin‘ fer her jes‘ whut 1 â€" wish You‘d have somebody do. fer my mother, ef You know whar she‘s aâ€" layin‘.‘* Kight round sticks he cut swiftlyâ€" four. lJong and. four short,â€"and with these he built. a low pen, as is the custom . of the mountaineers, close about the fresh mound, and, borrowâ€" ing a board or two from each . of the other mounds, covered the grave tront the rain. Then he #unk the axe into "'""‘ï¬ï¬‚ï¬-"’ï¬"‘ as high up % so that ‘l:. the w :n:- his _ face, ho ‘knelt. down: ~ <= "God!" he $aid, simply, "I hain‘t nothin‘ but a boy, but I got to ack like ‘a man now. I‘m aâ€"goin‘ now. I don‘t believe You keer â€" much _ and geems like I bring ever‘body bad luck, an‘ I‘m aâ€"go‘n‘ to live up hyeh on the mountain jus‘ as long as I can. 1 don‘t want you to think I‘m aâ€" comtiplainin‘â€"ferâ€" 1 ain‘t. Only _ hit does seem. sort 0‘ curious that You‘d we c hychâ€"with me aâ€"keetin‘ dy now, an‘ iohod{. aâ€"keorin‘ . But «way$s hqï¬ . mn»m â€" the ve i a &: r Â¥4 the spur they ‘weus swiltiyâ€"> . acros the river and up the slope of Pine As ‘they «climned, heard the Jast faint sound of a cowâ€" bell far below him, and n’ucn' short, with a lump. in his throat t hurt. â€" Soon darkness fell, and, . Oh the very top, the boy made a fire with ‘his flint and steel, .cooked . a little bacon, < ~warmed his cormâ€"pout, munched them . and, wrapping _ bis blanket around him and letting Jack curl ‘into ‘the. hollow of ‘his legs and stomach, turned his face to the kindâ€" ly starsâ€"and went to sleep. u’&‘:’n trying to. push â€"â€"himself | rose to rebuild ‘the fire. ‘The f time he was awakened by the ‘ prescence of dawn and his eyes open~ ed on a faming radiance in the east. iepara sn e sc h e -A:' © m ; ‘There was no wood to cut,. no fire so rekindle, no water to carry from the . spring, no cow to milk, no corn, to hoe; there was nothing to do «â€" nothing. â€"â€" Morning afterâ€" morning, with a day‘s hard toil at a ~_man‘s task before him, â€"and would he â€"not have given, when old â€"Jim ~ called him, to have stretched his â€"aching little legs down the folds of the thick . featherâ€"bed and slipped back into the delicious rest of sleep and . dreams. Now he was . his own master. and, with a happy. sense of «freedom, he brushed the dew" from his face and, shifting the chunk under... his â€" head, pulled. his old ‘eap down~ a ~little more and closed his eyes But sleep would not come and Chad had. . his first wonder over the perverse result of the full choice to do, or. not _ to do. At onrs, the first keen savor of freedom grew less â€"sweet to. his ‘nostrils and, straightway, ho began to feel the first pressure of the chain of: duties that was toâ€" be forged for him ‘0 ‘his perfect liberty, link by link, & ‘71"’ lay vaguely wonderâ€" ing. ns Coe 1 Meanwhile, the lake of dull red beâ€" . hind the jagged lines. ol rose. . and crimson that streaked the east began to glow and look angry. A sheen ofâ€" fiery vapor shot forward and spread swiltly over the miracle of mist that had been wrought in the ‘night. : An‘ ocean of it, and, â€" white and â€" thick __ as snowdust, =. it filled â€"â€" valley, ~ _ chasm < andâ€" rayâ€" ine ®ith mystery and silence up to waving lines< of range . after _ range the dark jutting points ~ and dark Tthat looked like breakers, surged up* by some strange ‘new law from an underâ€"sca â€" of foam;â€" motionless, > it swept down the valleys, poured swilt torrents through nigh gaps in the hills and one Jong noistless cataract qver a lesser rangeâ€" all sient, â€" all motionless, like a"great â€" white>â€"sea stilled in theâ€" fury: of a‘_ storin. Motning after morning, the boy had looked upon just such glory, calmly. watching the mist part, â€" like the waters, for the land, ~and â€" the day break, withâ€"one. phrase, "Let~ there be light," ever in his mindâ€"for Chad knew his Bible. â€" And, most often, in soft splendor, â€" trailing _ cloudâ€"mist, and yellow light leaping from _ ‘crest to crest, and in the singing of birds and the shining of leaves and dewâ€" ‘there was light. \ ‘Butâ€" that morning there was a hush in the woods that Chad understood. On a sudden, a light wind |scurried through the trees and showered _the mistâ€"drops down. â€"The smoke .. from his fire shot through the low underâ€" growth without rising, and the startâ€" ing mists seemed to clutch with long white fingers at the ~treeâ€"tops, _ as though loath to leave the safe, warm earth‘ for the uppor air. Adittle latâ€" er, he felt some great shadow behind him, and he turned hig face to see black clouds marchalling on _ cither fank ‘of the heavens and fitting their black. wings torether, as though . ~the retreating forces of the nightâ€" were I OUR SPECIAL Ladies VWatch at $15.00 is a very mccurate time piece, and contains a fine Rysie Bros. 15 Jpwvelled movernent, cartying our fullest guaraftee, -rhe CASE is a 14% gold filed guaranteed for 25 years. ‘Tm WATCH can be supplied in a man‘s size, open faced, screw front and back, at the same price: Fighting Their Way Lyric " Special" $15.00 Rrrir Bros. CHAPTER 1J 134â€"138 Yonge St, TforoNTto Limited Here is .what ‘Mrs. Dewar eays pleasure in stating that I have tfound *Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives‘ â€" the best medicit I ever used . for Bilâ€" jousness. I suftered 4i df a severe kind for a long time, but, after â€" taking â€" ‘Fruitâ€"Aâ€"tives‘ 1 have become entirely well, ~I cap,â€" with every. confidence, nznuï¬ Fruitâ€" aâ€"tives‘ to anyone 89 ng from Conâ€" stipation, ~Billousnes# Or Headaches." Calome!, saits cathartics act â€" ‘Truitâ€"aâ€"tives and ~ siimulant gathering for a last sweep against she east. .A sword flumm Trom the dome high above them and, after. it, came one shaking peal that might have been the command to charge, for Chad saw ‘the blackâ€" hosts start fiéreely. Afar off, the wind was comâ€" ing, the trees began to sway * ahove him, and the level sea of mist below began. to swell, and the wooded breakers ~weemed to pitch angrily. Calomel!, saits, oil amd other vicient cathartics act sl the bowels. FPruitâ€"aâ€"tives" . ate & : liver â€" tonic and © siimulant. \ . ‘They act dlrect» iv ~an . the . liver â€"â€" reducing | in« fNammation _ and / Increasing _ the flow of bile. ~insuring comâ€" plete digestion, bile 1 the bowe‘!s mave. . That is why . tâ€"aâ€"tives" aulso ~cure Constipation.. . They. are made of fruit and tonics. §0c & box; 6 for $2.50. At all m“" or sent on . receipt < of pflz â€" Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives, Limited, Ottawa, O ; Challenging tongues ran ‘ quivering up "the east, and the lake of red coals under: them â€"beganâ€" to heave fiercely, in answer. On either‘ side the lightning leaped forward and upward, striking straight andâ€"Jow, â€" Som.times, _ as though it were ripping up theâ€". horiâ€" zon to let into the contlict the host ol ‘dropping stars. Then the artillery of . the â€" thunder‘ crashed in _ earnest through the shaking heavens, and the mists ‘below pitthed like smoke beichâ€" ed from gigantic unsecn .cannon. ‘The coming ‘sun answered .. with upleaping swords of fire and,â€" as the _ black thunder hosts swept overhcad, Chad saw, for one moment, the whole east in a writhing storm of fire. A thick darkness rose from theâ€" first . crash of battle and, with the rush of wind and rain, theâ€"mighty conflict <â€"went on unseen. Chad had seen other storms at sunâ€" | rise, but something happened â€" now, and he could never recall the others hor ever fotget this. All it â€"<meant to him, young as he was then, was unfolled slowly as â€"the years came on â€"more Than the.first great rebellion of. the powers of darkness when, â€" in the beginning, the Master gave the first command that the seven _ â€"days‘ work of His hand should float through rays of a million suns; more than the space,â€"smitten with the welcoming beginning thus of: lightâ€"of life; more even than the first birth of a spirit in a diving thing; for, long ‘. afterâ€" ward, he knew that it meant â€" the dawn of a new consciousness to him â€"the birth of a new ._spirit. within him, and the foreshadowed pain â€" of its slow mastery over his passionâ€" racked body and heart.. Never was there a crisis, bodily or spiritual;, on the battleâ€"field or alone © under . the stars, that this storm did not. come back to him. ‘And, always, through all doubt, and, indeed, in the end, when it came to him for the _ last time on his bed of death, the slow and sullen dispersion of wind and rain on the mountain that morning far, far back in his memory, ~ and <the quick coming of the Sunâ€"king‘s vicâ€" torious light over the glad hills and trees held out to him the ~promise of a final â€"victory to the sunâ€"king‘s King over the darkness ofâ€" all death and the final coming "to . his own brave ‘spirit of peace and rest. Soâ€" Chad, with Jack. drawn . close. p to" him, lay back, «weâ€"stricken â€" and / withâ€"his face wet from â€" mys i tears. 'fl;‘:omlcfl ‘of the: w, seltâ€"pity that came with every thought : ot. Bimaell, wandering, . a lost . spleit ) among ‘“WW â€˜â€œâ€˜ï¬ a <the new W c \m" <4 hto;gy,,m!,to: hxmofl;g’ann‘t [W ‘as a good omen, en â€" he ‘ rose, to find his fire quenched, : the § stopper of his powderâ€"horn out, and ; the precious black . grains scatteted 4 hopelessly on the wet earth. Thete , were barely more than three charges , left, and something had to be done , at onte. First, he must get farthet 4 away from old Nathan: the neighbors ) might search for him and . fine him , and take him back. 1 Bo he started out, brisk and llli'-' cring, along the ridge path with / Jack bouncing before him. An hour later, he came upon a hollow tree, | filled with doty wood which he could | tear out with his hands aod be built a fire and broiled a little . more | bacon. Jack got only a bit this â€" time and barked reproachfully _ for | imore; but Chad shook his head and . the dog started out, with both eyes open, to look for hfs own food. The f sun was high enough now to make the drenched world flash : like an emérald and its warmth felt good, as Chad tramped the topmost edge of Pine Mountain, where the brusk was not thick and where, indeed, he ofton lound m running a short nyl and into some ravine â€"â€" m‘ || trait of cattle and sheep â€" and . the | || »athway «. bet -‘"z little â€" valley ! 1‘ . â€" He â€"must - 4 y more .. ' P s n ud h qwj;»u.y""’n L c tPc MWBs * M 4 4 ‘ Lo ACHH s , p & that that but coocs. nESUACTAUE his nos soit s s belore" * uce Â¥ Ieet to one ol pal 4 very carelully, the boy .-..-2“". Iallen trunk, and edged his way, vety carefully, toward the sound: and there by <a dead imb and. with mnï¬ head ceared three < inches above hi coil of springs, was a rattlesnake. The sudden hate"in the boy‘s â€" face to go down mnow." ~ _ _ . . _ . ~ Een toâ€"aay in parts of the Cumbâ€" |erland, â€"/ the . exdden" comitieâ€" 86 # ;mmw may put. women w ts ‘"had ‘happenéd before to Chad...but the encé drew himâ€"in a flash back to the londyckb_l‘nhpm 1eft and the lonely graves er ‘the big . poplar, â€" and, with a quivering lip, he â€"sat : down. Jack, too, ‘dropped to ‘his ~ haunches j und sat hopeless,â€" but not for long. The chill of night was ~coming . on and Jack was getting hungry. ~So he rose presentlyâ€"and trotted abead and squatted again, looking back . and waiting:<> Buy still Chad sat irresoâ€" ‘lute and, in a moment _ Jack heard ; something that disturbed him, for he ~ threw his gars toward the top â€"â€" of was curiqusâ€"it was instinctive, â€" PMâ€" mitive, deadly,â€" He must shoot off hand now and he looked down the long <barrel, shaded with tin, untis the sight caught on one of the beady, unblinking eyes and pulled the . trigâ€" ger. â€"Jack leaped with the sound, in spite of Chad‘s yell of watning, which was , for the ball had ~gone true Wild the poison was set loose in the crushed head. .. _ â€" the hill and, with a . growl,. trotted back to Chad and sat close to him, lookng up theâ€"siope. Chad. . rose then with his thumq on the lock â€" of his gun and over the hill came a tali figure and a short one, About Chad‘s size, ‘and a dog, with white â€"feet and white face, that was ~ bigger â€" than ‘ Jack® and behind them, three more figures, one of which was the tallest oï¬ the group. Al stopped when they saw Chad, who dropped â€"the ~butt oi his gun at once to the ground.. _ At once the strange dog, with a low. snarl, started down toward the two. little strangers.with his yellow eats pointed, the hair bristling © along his hack, and his teeth in sight. _ Jack answered the challenge with an eager ‘whimper, but dropped his tail, at Chad‘s: sharp commandâ€"for Chad did uot care toâ€"meet the world. as an enemy,. when he was looking for & friend. The group stood dumb ‘ with astonishment for a moment and~ the small boy‘s mouth was wideâ€"open with surprise, but the strange : dog came on with his tail rigid, and liftâ€" ing his {cet high. 7 ‘‘Begone!" . said ‘Chad, sharply, but the dog would mot be gone; he still came on as though bent on a fight. â€" "Call yo‘ dog off," Chad . called aloud. _ ‘"My dog‘ll kill . him. _ You better call him off," he called: again, in some concéern, ‘but the tall boy in front faughed scornfully. _‘‘Let‘s see him,‘" he said, and the small one laughed, too.. _ Chad‘s eyes flashedâ€" no boy . can stand an insult to his dogâ€"and the curves of his open lips snapped â€" toâ€" gether in a straight red line. "All right,"" he said placidly, and, being tired, he dropped back on a stont by the wayside to await results.. The very tone of his voice struck all shacklesâ€"of restraint from Jack, who, with a springy trot, went . forward slowly, as though he were making up a definite plan of action,; for Jack had a fighting way of his own,which Chad knew. . # for him again.‘ Jack seemed helples : Chad‘s face was as as though e abaig. fane: ~Jack ‘"seemed little disturbed; he took â€" his ‘punishment without . an. outery _ of tage or pain. You would â€" have thought he had quietly come to the conclusion that all he could hope to do was to stand the strain until his opponent had worn himsell out. But that was not Jack‘s game, and Cha« knew it. The tall boy was chuckling, and his brother of Chad‘s age was bent almost double with delight. ‘"Sick him, Whizzer!" shouted the tall boy, and the group of five hurâ€" ried eagerly down the hill and halted im a half circle about Jack and Chad: so that it looked an uneven conflict, indeed, for the two wails from over Pine Mountain. a ‘The strange dog was game _ and wasted no time.. With a bound he conght Jack by the throat, . tossed him several feet away, â€" and sprang â€""Kill my dawg, will he?" he cried shrilly. % one Jack was much bitten and chewed by this time, and, while his pluck and purpose séemed unchanged, Chad had risen to his feet and was beginâ€" ning to look anxious. The three silâ€" ent spectators behind pressed forward and, Tor the first time, one of theseâ€" tho tallest of the groupâ€"spoke: .. "Take yo‘ dawg of, Daws Dillon," he said, with quict authority, . but Dawsâ€" shook hts head, and the little brother looked indignant. *‘Me said he‘d kill him," said Daws tauntingly. Trial Catarth treatments are beir mailed out free, on request, by D Shoop, Racine, Wis. Thoso tests a proving to the peopleâ€"without penny‘s castâ€"the great value of th scientific prescription known to dru tiste everysnore an Dro Shoopis C Oh, Lawdy!" groaned the tall (To Be Continue¢) Jack leaped < sud up nuh'd-l'u"aM‘ ch. e‘n ~ two | his clains. â€" P pointâ€" | it and the splendi¢â€" results it is so . ‘ltmmin. Tha® anr olt I To . en o c atey on o 16 is . up as Tollows: Get fro: any good prescription pharmacy Compound <~Kargon, oneâ€"ounce; Com pounrd Syrup Sarsparilia, three oun ces. _ Mix by shaking in a bottle an take in teaspoonful doses after eacl all simple ingredients, making * an absolutely : harmless home remedy at. little cost, Rheumatism, as every one knows is a symptom of deranged kidneys. It is a ‘condition produced by the Aail ure of: the: kidneys to properly : filter or . strain from the blood the uric acid and ‘other matter which, (inot eradicated ‘cithér in. the uring . "of. through the skin pores, remains ‘ in the blood, â€" decomposes _ and forms about the joints â€" and muscles,‘ caus~ ‘ing The: untold suftering and deforâ€" mity of > rheumatism. "r3 This prescription is said . to be: a splendid ~healing, cléansing and | in tase in teaspoontul doses alter cauh Paxp (Alimcc: _ masl and at bediime. . These . arof M _Cor. King and Foundry B6 vigorating tonic . to the kidneys.and gives almost Inns iate Fellel n all ‘orms of bladder‘ and urinary â€" trouâ€" bles and back athe. He alyo waths people in a leading. New York paper against ~the â€" discriminate _ use of many ~patent, +medicines. > ; Ottawa, Dec. 11.â€"The immigration branch bas notified its agents to .in= sert in British papers advertisements advising <intending ‘emigrants to Canâ€" ada to defer sailing. until Spring, when they will be able to locate on tands or to find work. ~ T 1t is the intention to apply the laW by whichâ€". persons : whoâ€" hecome a chifge on the public within two years of arrival shall be deported. â€" Muniâ€" cipalities w‘o have such â€" people can obtain the assistance of the Governâ€" ment by makinf wpplication _ to.. the Department of Immigration. â€" \_~â€" SpapeX . in kur opobithey, To check" a cold quickly, get from your~ druggist some | little â€"Candy Cold ‘Tablets called. Preventics. Drugâ€" gists +everywhere are now dispensing Preventics, for they are not only safe b0t ‘decidedly effective and â€" promyt Preventics comtain no quinine, . â€" no laxative, nothing harsh nor sickening: ‘Taken at the "sneezse stage‘‘ Preven tics â€" will «prevent Pneumonia, Bron thitis, La Grippe, etc. ‘ Hence . the name Preventics. © Good for feverish children. 48 Proventics 25 cents. ‘Trial boxes 5 cents. Sold by A. G, Hachnel. WaterlOo. & 1 Men and Women of Ontario‘ BETTER WAIT TILL SPRING ‘The Great Provincial Charity, The Hospital for Sick Children, Calls On You For Aid. Remember that this Hospital is not # local institution, but Provincial.. d Hospital has tohave _l_’I_â€"â€"â€"I the sympathy that "1 uTk® prorurks" . Works. Last year there were 1093 patients adâ€" mitted. * Of these 378 came from 254 places outside of Torontoâ€"all were children of poorpoophvbom!dnot:mwwb treatment of their little ‘ones. _ _ _ Rach child was in the Hospital 474 da; at a cost of n o n erman $1.31 uch| _aiiihs ‘ per day, or $2.% tor the 474 days If your dollar could straigbten the feet of a little bo“yh Tab “.lfl“:‘u or girl wi w gladly ve is, and your dol]z:.will do that. ‘lwn weore 76 cases of club feet treated p,’,,‘o.’.nlu 79, about 50 were from the country If you know of any child in your county who is sick or has olub feet, and whose parents can not afford to E_v,nn{l the name to the m ospital Secretary. h Tre stock boxl are i 4 :rn. Won‘t you let * | | e Hospital write your â€˜ï¬ a name down for a fow |C@N '( y.u in Heaven‘s own | S MA ork of healing little 10 U [ children ! lns «t 2 * ,) N A great mine eroy R â€"the mining stook that [{ MAE ' always pays dividendsâ€" fieJ ‘/ [ is bought with the monay WO A that helps The Hospital i A for Bick Children to ex« trace the Gold of Life LX\ SE N € S L from the Quarlz O° _ oys qaa®®n . â€"**** Death. f how Pleass send contribations to J. Ross sam He ces netinge io dliidron: Corene uow 13# 8 |APPFAL L â€"AS FOFisne+ the Quart®t Of »yg caath to the '\ it\ W your | S a fow |(Ca a ow: a 6 '4( l Hittle | Af ""( Morey * MR h that U MIAB ’ = MA U to 6x« h ¢ uin (\\es n anÂ¥ i even You C onveyancers, duo. . Money . i opup gorher‘s wook, M nrmngtainnie M Â¥, ® BA y W~ fllï¬c Not C , etc. Office 14 oaree anees o. Onice 14 dueen Oe o Oopeeie s oaeh thouse, formar B. 0. T. ow tetae ireot « ;cons sud Avcouchours of Ontar Kem ainomesoi the on sn t ol PP n PE Kl SOner are uete of Turonté .e namesnres cases. uutkbag." Puoke 4 °C * DR, J, E. HETT, PHYSICIAR â€" _ AND SURGEON, Fâ€"G. RUGHES. . Dentist, Oddfellow‘s Block. Janzen‘s Block, Berlin, â€" er and Stuobings . grocery, W. R.Wilkinson, L.D.$., D.D.8 _ DENTIST. bosi For mutual convenience nq-m%,i trom a distance -:m:rueï¬ly x# ;‘ quested to make appointments. s k Jffics: Over Bank of Hamilton, Berlin Waserloo, _Will visi ra, | nnfemiir ies e mtan &Md teoth. _ 1 W "*_4 o viuts D. D #\ EOkEL ~ L..D. 8. D. D. 6. *" Chicago College of Denta Royal mdnam is uin may im P â€" i ue mmm practio S Poones. Sodates, 1 EXPERIENCED VETERINâ€" ARY SURGEON J . _.___ _ Tesuor of Marringe Lisenses Officeâ€"Post Office, St. Jmoobs, Ont. J: H. m gra ;’0"04,!-4 Alera Bpecialty, Nose, Throat and Ear. hice will be closed By giving &A better course of tsR ETHq Io. mmflm Inoz‘.u‘l.. ‘“"“,...n‘:ri"""o.f“"‘"?n-" the :a':dum suocded. | If in ds wnlf? wilte now our “ We have three t8,. Shorthand and T f Winter term opens E" 6tk. _ KELLIOTT & Mc LAQHLAN, . g When the Stomach, Heart or Kidâ€" ney nerves got weak, then thl. d gans always Tail. Don‘t drug .. The Stomach,: not stimulate the Heatt or Kidneys. That is simply‘ a e shift, M“..'"hm‘mmw _ \Q Druggists 6 as Dt. 3 ‘# Restorative. _ The Restorative .. i# mmd expressly for these weak in« nerves. Strongthen these nerves build: them up with Dr. Shoop‘s. Re« storativeâ€"tablets or i: and ©00 how quickly help â€"# . 6 sample test nfla‘ by â€" Shoop, Racine, . Your . is surcly worth Wis _ LSâ€" OHN . L WIDEMAN J. H+ 1 Olement & M. ORAM, The Leading School Medalliss of k m of Â¥%. ty Apooncnourter U e r troated. . Office â€" Kasidenct hz fi teri0o, .â€"Telephore . ion . _ 1 MLMARKLD, 83 io: gremhate of Tocinto Univeratiey ary 1 01tge, . . es and residente 208," All calls by day .I a MEDIOAL BTRATFORD, ONT Prinotpa Waterloo. â€" > se