—_ (Continued.) SYNOPSIS, Feter Clephane and Andrew Kilgour are courins, @ulenta at Edinburg University, hetwren whom ia a better fued. Tbe former is the ron ofa rich city Jawver and his cousin is the heir of an estate io ihe Highland« that hae almost pasced into the hands of creditors. Afier a bitter fiybt with his cousin, Kilgour is on his way home when he falle in with company at the “Houod and Stag” inn at Perth. Arrived home his companion on the journey terns out to be his uncle, Peter Clephane’s fai ber. “its a eurious coincidence,” said my father, when the voluble Mr. Cle- phane had been induced to take a seat, “that we should just have been talk- ing about a profession for him.” “A very important matter, cousin,” responded Mr. Clephane, with deep gravity of tone and countenance. Ther, assuming his sprightliest manner, and looking at me, he added, “ The mest important except getting married. Aye make that exception, Andrew. Faith, the lasses take the lead, will we, nill we. Solomon with all his wisdom couldn't resist them, and when he. failed who’s likely to succeed * What's this the poet says ? There’: nae poetry in law, cousin, and I'm clean forgetting the warblings of the muse, but anyway he means that in €amp or grove love’s supreme. A man meets his fate when he meets his wife. Mind that, Andrew. But about the profession, cousin—excuse my digres- Sion into the realms of sentiment and romance. Lawyers go there but sei- dom, and, truth to tell, dinna feel ower well at home when they do make an excursion. What’s to be Andrew's profession, if it’s a fair question ?’’ “There's a difference on the point,’ answered my father. “I’m for the law partiy because I remember your own progperity, cousin, and he’s—well, he's against it.” “make Ser se Mr. C'!ephane stroking his well-nourish chin “Dear me, that’s unfortunate, amd yet it would never do for us all to be of the same mind. There are many ways of making a living, cousin, and the laddie has his own tastes nae doot. As to the law, it’s with it as with many another thing, those like it best who know least about it. At the best it's a slippery game, in which ten fall for one who keeps his feet. I have sjrackled through—l'll no deny it, but [Copyright, 1893, by John Alexander Steuart.) wi’ the skin o’ my teeth, as the man . of Uz says. I'm not sure I'd advise | another fellow to follow in my steps. But dinna let me interfere; dimna let me come between father and _ son.” Whereupon Mr. Clephane rubbed his hands, thus figuritively washing them of the whole business, and the subject of talk was changed. When Highland hospitalities been dispensed, Mr. Clephane ami my father went out for a walk, leaving me behind. Il was ret sorry, since their absence gave me an opportunity of speaking with my mother, who, good soul, was ever willing to take my part. I told Rer my whole story unreservedly, and she sympathized as only a mother can. [ also told her the history of my relations with Peter, which startled and surprised her. “It is a shame, Andrew,” she said, with the tears gleaming in her dear eyes, “but Mr. Clephane prohably knows nothing or Peter’s behaviour, and at any rate for your father’s sake we must uphold the honour of Kil- burnie. It must not be said he came here and was ill-received.” And then with many a caress she told me she quite understood my un- lippy position, and that she would do what she could to re-establish ine in my father’s favour. I could see however, that the loyal heart deeply troubled. She would fair £een me obey, while pledging h: as a partisan. My biessing* memory. \s fate would have it, when 1 ther and his visitcr returned they accompanied by a neighbouring } Sir Thomas Gordon, of the Elms, whom the reader has already casua:., heard from mine host of the Hound ard Stag. Meeting the baronet in the course of their walk, my father, with the impulsive generosity which had Wrought such trouble to his house, in- sisted on taking him heme for lunch- eon regardless of domestic convenience or resource. But my mother was right giad to see Sir Thomas, and he in turn was glad to see her, declaring ig his fine cld-fashioned manner it did his heart guod just to cross the thres- hold of Kilburnie. Sir Thomas, my rmother had told me, always gave her the impression that he was extremely lonely. He might have heen happy as the world goes. A retired Anglo-Indian official, he was Wealthy, and though a widower, ne had the companionship of a devoted daughter whose equal in beauty and Rocdness has not breathed since Eve left Paradise. ut these biessings Were mysteriously counterbalanced. There was a break ie his health, and —~cCne could see it plairly—a break in kis heart, two evils for which money is no medicine, and which ev@ filial Gevotion can hardly do more than .al- leviate. Sir Thornas had voth seen and done & great deal in times that history now Calls stirring. He had been a promi- Rent actor in more than one memor- able and exciting scene. He had fought a valiant battle, and victory had crowned his exertions. Yet he bad a skeleton in the cupboard. He Kighed often, and his habitual look was downcast. But he was not of those whe parade their woes. In tompany he was cheerful, in a sub- fued way, end always gentle and con- Siderate Much knowledge of men nad © nee ean ton ne ee ee ee ae a <A ’ ' and their imperfections had not hard. | ened him, and bitter experiences had but saddened, not soured, his sweet | spirit. Nor had years of authority | and much honour destroyed his child. | like simplicity. I hoped that luncheon would pass | without reference being made to what | had brought me home, but in that 1)! vas disappointed, for the matter lay | too near my father’s heart to be kept cut of his conversation. Sir Thomas was told of the plans that had been made for me, and how for some un- | accountable reason Sl] ciling them. I was bent on a We must not be angry or disap- | rcinted if youth does not see with the eyes of age,” said Sir Thomas, | graciously, looking at me. “ Morning and evening have different lights. Mr. Andrew has the fresh vision and quick intelligence of his time of life. They ! are not to be despised. At the same time I am sure he will consider sober- ly, and not underestimate the import- arce of the decision he is to make. Least of all will he grieve by any obstinacy those to whom his Welfare is perhaps dearer than to himself,” and then he added, after a Patse :—* People’s thoughts run on the lines that are most familiar te tkem. India occurred to me. I make & mere suggestion. How would you like to make your fortune in India ?” “No better place in the world for @ young man of ability and enter- prise,” put in Mr. Clephane, quickly. * Dod, many’s the fortune has been made in India. I think 1 see in An- crew a nabob in embryo.” No one took the least notice of him, all the attention being bent on ne. I was embarrassed and foundered like a man out of his depth and reck- oning. i had not thought of India, but as the drowning man clutches at a straw so I ardently expressed a de- sire to go to India. greatly to the as- tonishment of my father, and the hor- ror and consternation of my poor mo- ther. ; “Do not make a hasty choice,” said Sir Thomas, in his kindly tone. “Come to The Elms to-morrow even- ing, and we will talk the matter over at dinner, Perhaps we may have th honour of Mr. and Mrs. Kilgour’s ecmpany also, and. Mr. Ctephane, I shall be honoured if you, toe, will join us. Then we can all help destiny to choose “a career for Mr. Andrew.” And so it was arranged. For the present at feast I had relie?. ° (Ta he Cor: i nt ) ——- ‘The athletic woman is the wo- man of the day. The past twenty years has seen wonderful pro- gress in this re- spect. That this tendency will re- sult in a more ro- bust womanhood, better able to bear the ‘burdens and duties and pleas- ures of life; there can be no ques- tiom. But this resriit will be ac- complished by the building up of those women already in rea- sonably robust health, and the kilhing off of their weaker sisters. Athletics will make a natmrally strong woman stronge- and healthier ; they will make a naturally v ak, sickly woman weaker and more : ‘and wf indulged in te excess, may , ‘atally. in who suffers fromareakness and the delicate and important or- ly feminine, cannot hope to reneral health through ath- brties, + is she remains kocally weak. A woma: ‘ring in this way is unfitted to bear the strain of athletics just as much as she is wefitted to bear the duties and burdens of wifehood and motherhood. There is a sure, safe, speedy and perma- neat cure for all disorders of this descrip- tion. It is Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip- tion. It acts clirectly on the organs con- cerned in wifehood and materwity, making them strong and healthy and vigorous. It secthes pain, allays inflammation, heals ulceration and tones the nerves. It fits a sovnan to indulge in, and be benefited by, athletics. All geod medicine stores sell it. ‘Your valuable * Favorite Prescription’ cured mec of female weakness and a catarrhal dis- charge from the lining membrane of the special atts.’ writes Mrs. T. H. Parker, of Brooklyn. ‘@*k.son Co., Mich. “Iam now perfectly well.” Or. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure consti- pation. Constipation is the cause ef many diseases. Cure the cause and you cure the disease. One ‘‘ Peliet’’ is a gentle laxa- tive, and two a mild cathartic. Druggists sell em, and nothing is ‘just as good.” - cee EPPS'S COGOA ENGLISH EREAKFAST COCOA Possesses the following Distinctive Merits: DELICACY OF FLAVOR. SUPERIORITY in QUALITY. GRATEFUL and COMFORTING to the NERVOUS or DYSPEPTIC. NUTRITIVE QUALITIES UNRIVALLED In Quarter-Pound Tine only. “repared by JAMES EPPS & CO., L:d, called on: L M oF Cig EMCAVE MONIC VE AUTRATIVE AOE AKATIVE DUAR TG, =, Pf (T AESTORCS STRENGTH , Pap RENEWS VITALITY, hi PURIFIES THE BLQ0D, Seal REGULATES THE KOMETEL and THE DAILY KXAMIN: R, CHARLOTTETOWN APRIL 9. 1898, SEE Beware of Imitations and Substitutes. Get Paine’s Celery Compound with Trade Mark as shown above. It has cured thousands of the most desperate cases; it w HS GRLERY = GOW THE GREAT SPRING MEDICINE ick and Nervous People Well a Se a - A RE ITN So POUNA eT 2 MNES 2 Ba RT a na “i — “tS ae tea ape i RA DAN DN ma ip lg ee ae re oe ne Deen ee aa Ee _—— ie i 4 ad q- an} INES: - | ¥ - “4 : it ‘ ‘ " ste uit ih ) my ie RLINGTON. VT. = Lt sues 1 cure you. an Seam QUEER AMERICAN, RIVERS. One Floridz. River That Seems Undecidrd Just What to Do, F. H. Spearman tells of ‘‘Queer Ameri- ean Rivers’’ in St. Nicholas. The authur BSRYS: Every variety of river in the world seems to have a cousin in our collection. What other country on the face of the globe af- fords such an assortment of streams for fishing and boating and swimming and skating—besides having any number of streams on which you can do none of these things? Onecan hardly imagine rivers like that, but we have them, plenty of them, as you shall see. As for fishing, the American boy may cast bis fies fur salmon in the arctic cirele or angle for sharks undera tropical sun in Florida, without leaving the demain of the American flag. But the fishing rivers are not the most curious or the most in- structive as to diversity of climate, soil and that sert of thing—physical geograpay, the teacher calls it. for instance, if you want to get a good idea of what tropical heat and moisture will de for acountry, slip your canoe from a Florida steamer into the Ocklawaha risex. itis as odd as its name. and ap- penrs to be hoyelessly undecided as te whether it bad better continue in the fish and alligator and drainage business or de- vote itself te raising live oak and cypress trees, with Spanish moss for mattresses as a side product. In this tickle minded state it does a lit- tle of all these things, so that when yoa are really cn the river you think yon are lost in the weeds, and when you actually get lost in the evocds you are quite confi- dent ycur capoe is at last on the river. This confusion is due to the low, flat coun- try and the luxmriance of a tropical vege- tation. To say that such ariver overflows its banks would hardly be correct. for that would imply that it was not behaving it- f. Besides, it hasn’t any banks—or, at least, very few! The fact is, those peace- ful Florida rivers seem to wander pretty much where they like over the pretty pen- insula without giving offense, but if Jack Frost takes such a liberty—presto, you sheuld see how the people get after him with weather bulletins and danger signals rnd formidable smudges. So the Ockla- wahba river anda score of its kind roam through the woods—or maybe it is the woods that roam through them—and@ the moss sways from the live oaks, and the cypress trees stick their knees up throngh the water in the oddest way imaginable. EE SURE you get what you wx when you ask for Hood’s Sarsap.- ria. Unequalled in Merit, Sales,Curo . There’s no substitute for ROOD’S. Bottled Joy. Empty boitles wanted, cheapest cash price paid for ali kind of empty bottles JOHN P, JOY, sol ? Homeopathic Chemists, London, England 4 Bookmeking In the Middle Ages. It required a man of great parts to be @ successful publisher at that time. as much as or even more than it does todsey. Such an institution, for example, as the Sorbonne or University of Paris required the highest guarantees of cha) acter, capi- tal and literary capacity in the licensed bookseller. He must be an adept in all the knowledge and science of the period, as well as perfectly skilled in the mechan- ical needs of his business. The university, coo, which was always in close touch with the church, even when its studies had be: gun te broaden, exercised a jealous censor ship, lest some religious heresy should creepin. Whenever an error of this or even of a more trivial sort was found, the transcripts were burned and the booksell- er heavily fined. Sometimes his privileges might be entirely revoked, indeed, and he hiiwself imprisoned. The bookseller could not even fix a price on his own products. Four of the guild in Paris, for example, were sworn a8 appraisers by the authori- ties of the Sorbonne ta fix the seHing value oi a book, and any deviation froin this was a penal offense. To students the price was fixed at two-thirds of the charge asked of the general purchascr. The booksellers en 1 trade without tho license of the university, which must also approve the purchaser. Asan additional help to students, the Sor- bonne in the middle of the fourteenth cen- tury framed a law compelling all book- sellers to keep books to lend out on hire, and this example was imitated at Ton- louse, Bologna, Vienna and Oxford. In this way circulating libraries were estab- lished in Round Table. treba eN yr Wiikey if The == Label Reads “‘Abbey’s Effervescent Salt,’’ <™ what’s in the bottle is hea!th- “pe S' Ving, refreshing and bracing. Swe lf the label reads otherwise -™ what's in the bottle acts other- wise. No other preparation in cm the world is ‘*just as good” as = ‘ Abbey’s.” AAARARARABARARRAAR? LEGAL CARD. MATHIESON & BENTLEY Barristers, Solicitors, dc. OFFICES— Cameron Block, Charlotteto-rn. Main Street, Georgetown. MONEY TO LOAN. J. A. MATHIESON, W. E. Bexrir’ Geo’town, Chitown. 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