_ ‘It‘s time to make up your mind about something, you know,‘ briskly observed Miss Juniata Jéasup. _ _ ‘Well,Juliet, what are you calculaâ€" ting to do T said Mrs. Murdright. _ _ Juliet May lifted her heavy head, and looked at them with vague surâ€" * ‘Do? she repeated. What‘s there to do? I don‘t know what you all Indigcstion and Too Hcarty Eating. A perâ€" fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausca, Dp'i ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongus Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. ‘They Regulate the Bowels. Purcly Vegetable. $m_d Pill. _ _ Small Dose, Substitution l:e fraud of the day. See you get Carter‘s, Ask for Carter‘s, Insist and demand She was a dark, largeâ€"eyed girl with chegks as pale as a callaâ€"leaf, a Spanish luxuriance of jetâ€"black hair, and a slight figure, which seemed to be bound _ It‘s a week toâ€" morrow since fonr pe w k{ied,' added Mre. Murdright. t winced. ‘¥as,‘ she said, ‘I know it. Oh, paâ€" P.LB,P. !I e e egr e c L mother‘s sizger, Aupp Murdrjght, andâ€"‘ "I‘bnt?‘- b;krdly s "reason 'h{oll undertake to support â€" ::?q,l have got in &?vo’fl';?n{d M uqfflght, sourly. ‘Yop sren‘t & child, Juliet You were sighte last gpnth, and there‘s mapy a gi your kge sarns her own living and ls up & me sum besides. And it‘s cznoou to the frst of June, and I need every room I have to let for sumâ€" your Rge earn es need Prery re â€"-‘And tlJ:ere is no‘krm‘-oï¬,' ml.m.n. 1mi8, J i »nh;nw -trihull whn:'u‘f: used for lack of breath, * y nzuld sit with folded hlnt cousin Artemisa works and Louisa Lacy goes sat from one to the é; while her beart seemed to stand still within her. At the Grange she .uwd 'l-r.LL has spentF Miss Jessup. !Ponp hild 1 5.‘::: got none. It‘s al! gome in rash specnâ€" hedsd C o,.n‘:,";f.'.‘.w to you f w fl Murdright her shoaldâ€" ‘They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, ‘:’,‘n _'«1 sorty,‘ and sit around the ho Aulist May P * arter‘s Little Liver Pills. ULIET, | HE |JRPHAN. r while her beart seemed to stand within her. At the Gu:hr she d"’.‘w"."-f‘fl‘; ALnJEg bird. BY AMY RAKDOLPH. Small Price. lived in laxury. Bhe bad hos thd Mn sbile of > \ Juliet recosled as if a serpent had stupg her ; she turned to Miss Jessup. ‘Cousin Juniate," she said, you, tom But Miss Jeasup studiously banished when frep set up dressmaking ‘tor herself, Squire May had generously lent ber money for her lease, furniture, stock and fixtures He had never icldmd a ceat of interest ; he had never so much as hinted at the repayâ€" are my relative! Aid me‘! M-h! me!‘ You have age and experienceâ€" am like a lost child in this great, cruel, grinding world " _ â€" _ _ Verily, Juliet May was but a novice in all conventional wisdom, or she never wolld have alluded so unguardâ€" edly to the age and experience of the sprightly qnns...lc Mise Jessup bridâ€" led. anything to say,‘ said she. ‘As Mrs. Murdright remarke,people must expect w work in this world ! ment of his loan, and she had been equally silent. And it is to be pre sumed that she had quite forgotten the whole circurastance, when she added, with some little vindictivenesa : ‘Aud, to my mind, it wouald have been a deal wiser if your papa bad looked a little more closely to his money, instead of lending it to n do wells like Chauncey Graham squander |‘ . ‘Cousin Chunco} was always good and kind" cried Juliet, coloring u; ‘He wou‘ld lnnpddpspui!hooodg! And it is mean and dishonorable of you to say such things as these, Juniata Jeseup _ _ ‘Hoityâ€"toity " cried Miss Jessup. ‘Mean! Dishonorable! Wel!, if he ain‘s both, let him put in an appearâ€" ance and say what he has done with that money ! As Mr. Graham was at that moment supposed to be in Australia, engaged in the management of a maramoth sheep farm, this was perbaps an unâ€" ressonable demand. But, to Miss Jessup‘s infinite amazement, and, perâ€" haps to her discomfigure as well, the front duor was mod or:n at that jancture, and a zed. bearded .n parition, in a suit of some foreign aty and cut, stalked in. . D2 y ‘Is this Mrs: Moses Murdright‘s house? said he. ‘Oan any one tell me if Miss Juliet Mey is here 1" _ _ Mre. Murdright started. Miss Jessup seemed equally amazed ; but, with a ory, Juliet MS; aptang to her feet. faced Fm. the chubby chesked little p&q!el ow of former years. Bub when she flung If so confidingly into his prm§, be held ber with a tender and °"'.$}"f,' oT. 1 led_ tha p , I am so b you h-vgh.l Q:! she nobbod‘ Ob, I was so lonely and forsaken| No one has geemed to care for me, sipce dm‘no oune offered me a home l'Aâ€_" is all smootb sailing ow.‘ Wï¬ moe Apnt a ig P yours npow .} 'Tl‘atom,'ti;le';'e..l_‘lgfo g&!?m "q'l:'hfl{ 6 to ‘I really do not know that I have Murdright‘s quiet] to Waterioo County Chronicle, Thursday, July 1, 1897â€"Page 7 Chauncy Graham into "Well, lm"d‘-n&“bl,l’ But sie said nothing of this as she kissed Juliet goodâ€"bye with an e@usive nees which surprised the young girl. ‘Fareweil, my darling, * she said, alâ€" most tragically. ‘And remember that if ever you need a home, my heart and hearth are equally open to you.‘ *Why didn‘t she say so before T Ju!}â€" ist asked hersolf, vaguely amazed at what seemed to her such a surprising inconsistency. ‘Why did she talk so disagreeably sbout my being a burden, and carning my own living! And why i-.JunishJe.‘_peo-i-.hekvifl- 'mIQWMhM!’ little Juliet! She had yet much to learn of the ins and outs of this world ! Miss Jessup‘s stay in New York, however, was not prolonged. She came back the next day very ill satisfied with her journey. ‘Things are quite changed since ‘I‘ was a girl, said she. ‘There‘s Julict engaged to Chahncey Graham already â€"or as good as engagedâ€"a mere chit like that, with no knowledge or experâ€" ience of society ! And Mrs. Grabham taking on airs like the queeo, and tel}â€" ing me, up and down, that she didn‘t ‘s generally the wa mwflg\: 3.?.3: But I almost wl{b. Jeniata. we hadn‘s been so short with the child" "m’ miu.'g?nhh; ‘but who was to suppose that she was to be an heiress after all F Neuralgia [Torments. Thousauds Conld Tall the Same Story of Misery ~that William Davidson Tells=â€"And Thousanda Have Toâ€"day the Sama Song of Rejoieingâ€"Cured by South Americay Nervine. ‘huI suffered ;mtold mi.:lr.y“ loro'o: rom: neur aoalk Phyihfees tid Thabr btitts 1â€"To keep your feet dry on raing dcgm Tgtm:d on yon:o head. the ‘baby â€"The + Doovnym mlu'Wu % 3â€"The safest way to gather chestâ€" i. S 4â€"â€"Bgow' tz J or candy for ngthings . Porsupde sqmebofly. to BE use miolte is + o. on p g-bdewno & W ,- R B f C * in Ememlay in t aiight M belp mwe, but all attempts were b‘&dl O'I smy South Awrou Ner vine advertised and resolved to try it. The first bottle gave me great relief, s pp NE compl®! 4 § uxg’ WIï¬&m %tvldio * Thedfard, Ont. 4C Ameqimu whaininy "thto. posr. bek Â¥p, 1e â€" Bâ€"To avoid swellowin} Watérmelon m gas k in iE pace at middeay in nflummzw and in East and wuik straight ahead. at midday in midsummer Uncle Peter‘s Receiptsâ€" ring, brewing all sorts of cooling summer bevâ€" erages, Jistilled from lusciouns fruite or from sweet barks and reots. These took the place of the vuigar sodaâ€"water of the merket and the varions temporâ€" ance beers now concected of douhtful "lucent syrups" was that made from Strawberries are acid coough in themâ€" seives and of too evanescent a flavor to make a superior plain syrup to mix with Blackberry Shrub. â€" Blackberry anggests raspberry shreb, bat is inferâ€" ior to it. . Blackberries, especially the great luscious dewherriee . that grow wild on low vines amid the daiâ€".is and clover, -shaum-â€"d_«_.fl Old _ Newâ€"Eng! housekeepers brewed aneverâ€"toâ€" beâ€"remembered spiced wine frow the mountain blackberry. _ Reepberry sauruo. â€"Raâ€"pberry shrub possesses the wiv=ulage of W & made. Se eco about 12 quarts of j eat, plumpeâ€"o biackcap recpberries. Put them in a large stone jar, or huge ye!â€". lqw bow!, and pour over them enough pure cider vinegar to reach as far as the berriee, but uo more. If the vine ar is too acid a little leea will suffice. g:m berries soak in the vinegar for thirtyâ€"six houre. Lay a coarse muslin n ao is nae l reprenmels an the vinegar inâ€" to it, mashing the berries a little to extract all the juice. Measure the liquid and put it over the fire in a w;nohiu lined or aluminum kettle. hen it boils add a pound of loatsugar for every pint, and let the whole bail for ten minutes ; then bottle and seal. Use about two tablespoonfuls of the syrup in a glase of water. Add about twn tableapoonfuls of crushad ice, atir 6 the back of the stove for bol! an §our. but do not let them boil. Stratn u:m Â¥hrough a coarse strainer, 20 i t t e fho dre oo We ï¬'- m-m oms sugar. Heat to it, and serve it with the most delicate white spénge cake or with simple Strawberry Syrupâ€"A strawberry syrup should be made of aweet, richly fAlavored betriee and nar. Allow about seven pounds of fruit and five and a quarter of sugar. Pick the berâ€" ra- over carefully. â€" Do not wash them upless | absolutely um:& and let them be as frosh from the vines as posâ€" Among the most delightful of these rainer, byt nqaid, Let the tias Tormed beil ten minutes. gflu-,fl quantity of the hests cooking brandy, Bottle the cordial and keep it six months before using it. Make peach cordials in the same way, using One White Heath peaches, and adding one quarter of the blanched kernels, cat mio thin strips. Serve theso cordiale in the tiny glasses that come for the half a pound of sugar to a pint of the " o CW CV Pm PPF To Aaced cakes or wafers â€"New York Tribane No ; and by this bolid denial we mean to stand when we take into con whole broad land., Graphic wrote some papers on thé drawbacks and advantages of going to bed carly and getting up carly ; and he eaded his preachment thus : "My brethren, let there be no mistake about the matter. Early to bed and carly to vise uneither makes a man healthy, v-khLu wige." He wrote these words in his yooth, and while time has pakm..-nfld some of his views, he a on sober refection, that his opinions were in the main vight, and that be was really in adâ€" vance of his time for the most conserâ€" vative of medical periodicals eccasionâ€" :{umumumm the early bird is not so beautifal nor its conduct :o worthy of imitation as we have been accustomed to think ; and he again calle attention, in a late number, to the opinion of the Aweriâ€" cah physicianâ€"Dr. Talcottâ€"wha trac es the prevalence of insanity wfl1 i ie en otren early s : seor wuhxmo!u t in Lonâ€" dan the business houses are each year getting later and later, § ‘Tie the voice of the aluggard, I heard Some ago the ho calls himaclf "The Byitnder" in the Londen ‘ That the &mt increase in insanity will have a thorough sifting there luo doubt ; and we are prepared to see the want of sufficient sleep rank As the firet greas cmuse The farmers, many of them dominated moum aid saw, see in imagination a vision. of the thourse h‘ chance outraged Nat m. takes ““a -fl:!wr regenge angd nses them t6 r an hour later some mlnuuorslw{': l‘lflfl' wearisome day, and without know: it they are robbing themeelves of the sieep worth the most to themâ€" that hoor of brain restoring alum that comes when. all vigliance of nerves is gone, and tamn is ther o9 N’ “m’ 6 ‘“ ‘ P “ novelists lon:m ho " m‘"m. m hours mudnl t the 4 ve been in vented for PERAIRIY & insene ; s and \::i threatens to lwlnéi a:: .d ugv, a ate â€"tar » 9. Tan: mb hanths _ _ _ ~â€" him complain, jal Doa‘t call me so early, you‘ll make me Do Peopie Sleep Enough? ROYAL MVR GQLD MNING COMPANYT‘S KETTLE RIVBR MINING & DEVELOPMENT COMPANY‘S SHARES Are the Cheapeat and Beat wi But in the Koatenay District to day, xi Eol © Celumbla Avenue, Roeasland, Brigigh Celumbia Or W. A. RAYVMO, Insurance Agont, Waterloo West, Ontaria ' Reipoit Free Press: ‘Wigginaâ€"had to have his takep out,‘ ":&' * W â€"z. had told his out down "W # up‘every al M‘o‘fu Wone to uht ie MegouleAdd oc i i duotesi l pia in o atone o Cincinaat Tribune. bbheâ€"How silly it is for a BRIUISH COLUMBIA GOLD, . Thornrtorn Langi@y. CALL N OR WRITE FOR THE FULLEST INFORMATIQN TQ in / before all are giren avay, Ne T . Bivton of Bamaia,