I I I Prices from up I na Giro liberty to tew utter cad to freely according to conscience above all other liberty INTELLIGENCER AND ADVERTISER No paper Bent of North York unless paid In advance to United Optician i an J No Copy cto Each Newmarket Ont Friday June j TERMSJL25 per annum if paid in advance Up Brighten Up Time is here the to clean up about the house renovate and the old things neat and clean again We can help you in work with our line of governors Knox College have appointed a committee so select a successor to Prof Kennedy If all the blackboards in the City Schools in were put together they would cover an area- of square yards 1814 ran public schools of the city for six he total cost of mainte nance for look was the coot has grown faster than the city A man named Win Wheal who was talcing a ride wagon loaded with fin nil I Tor the Era In Loving Memory of Mrs Jackson T DEDICATED TO THE BEREAVED RELATIVES J W It is surprising what a little paint or varnish will do toward brightening up dingy surroundings Wo have a paint and varnish for every purpose and would be pleased to have a paint talk jrou Color Cards for asking at HARDWARE PAINTS GLASS PLUMBING FURNACE WORK NEWMARKET ONT IN THE J Bank of TORONTO SAVINGS DEPARTMENT OF Ami OF TORONTO ACCOUNTS may be opened for sums large or small THERE IS NO DELAY or diffi culty about opening an account and the money may be whenever required- INTEREST IS PAID on your money PROM THE DAY YOU LEAVE IT WITH US TILL THE DAY you take it out BRANCHES In Ontario Quebec and the West CAPITAL REST ASSETS P FIELD Manager Newmarket Incorporated Lath Bill Staff Trim i Cornel Church DArcy ORDER PHONE OR CARTERS JOS WESLEY AND FRED HOOVER I- I Perfect Are what you expect from the bailors hands Perfection of fit is assured when WE- MAKE High Clasa Tailoring Reliable Goods arid Superior Fit arc the upon which wo have built up our See our Spring a leave your next order with u ILL MERCHANT stone and while chatting to the driv er of the team was accidentally jolt ed from his seat The wagon passed over him causing injuries which re sulted fatally Tenders for 283 of the acres mining in the Gillies limit of fered for sale were accepted for the aggregate sum of It is re ported tho Government consider the tenders too low and will not accept any of them The Dufforfn Park Driving Club is practically out of business till the courts pass upon the legal points raised with reference to cancellation of its charter by the Government The suburban traffic by steam rail way to points out of the city is be ing anxiously discussed days and the matter is being pressed on the attention of the Railway Com mission Toronto is discriminated against as compared to Montreal The agitation will effect a change For the first five months of this year the citys license department- took in as against for the corresponding period last year The raise in dog licenses and the earlier collection of licenses account for part of the increase Two men played a false gome on a Hebrew merchant in the Ward a few days agp They sold him gold brick for and then managed to exchange ft for a chunk of brass he- fore delivering A dead beat game John Shaw was committed last week for trial on a charge of at tempting to commit an indecent as sault The Winnipeg City Hand will be among the other hands at the Na tional Fair in this this year About sixty men all Europeans and most of them heads families left Toronto on the train on Thursday of last week en route to Europe All of the men had prospered well in Canada Some were returning home to spend their days in the old land while some of the younger men were going home in order to escort their wives and fam ilies out to Toronto later on The International Council of Wo men whose quinquennial meetings have just been held in this City re presented some of the noblest traits of womanhood in the most civilized countries of the world They are leaders in movements making for the and welfare of their sex During the session of Womens Congress in this City last week In spector Hughes escorted the delegates on a tour of inspection to the various public schools of the City The Committee on the State of the Church at the Anglican Synod re ported among other things as fol lows Your committee regrets to note the great worldliness of church members so many of whom are self- centred and live lives of pleasure This is instanced in the marked In crease of novel reading weekend ex cursions which cause in church attendance an increase of gambling and betting and the lack of training and proper upbringing the children It is said 1500 people were present in the church at the wedding of Miss Jones to Rev T Crawford last week and between and spectators outside The wedding cake was four feet six inches high and the presents to the bride were estimated at It just cost Lee Duck 850 and Lee Chung Chinamen for a little- fracas they had the other morning in Final arrangements for the of July celebration in were made at a meeting held week in St James Hall Before taking at am on the morning of the parade will be held from the lodge rooms A sixyear forestry course will be inaugurated at Toronto University at coming term Students taking course will qualify for arts and forestry degrees simultaneously A new police policy is to be inau gurated at lacrosse matches after this Where a player intentionally commits an assault on another or misbehaves on the field he will be arrested forthwith Brutality of the I stronger towards weaker players is to be punished I By Mrs P Grant She has passed from earthly pres ence And removed from mortal sight Through the gates ajar has entered With ineffable delight Listened to her Saviour saying Words that thrilled her as they fell Welcome to thy heavenly mansion Thou hast done thy earthwork well Oh what joy now fills her spirit Earthly language cannot tell As she views the wondrous glory Hears the songs of triumph swell Wonders at the glorious prospect Spread before her raptured Raze Not a sign of age or weakness Een on those of ancient days Absent from the body present With the Lord she loved so long Meets again her dear ones joining In their hallelujah song Nevermore to weep oer parting With them joyous young again Safe eternally from sorrow Out of reach of racking There no trouble eer can touch her Where she will for aye abide- Here her body sweetly resting There her soul is satisfied Here her cares were never ceasing There no bending neath the load Here oft weary conflict There no sorrowbeaten road l BY ANNA SHIELDS I He is but little changed in many ways though he Is twenty- and the handsomest man I ever saw 1 After this she mentioned meeting him several times but said no more and I were wandering through than she would of any of her garden of but hand- friends some country seat called in for El- en the Harding Place Years be- home secure in love in hope Mr Harding called upon papa to- how she had faded The roses that r had tinged her cheeks with delicate hues were gone only fleeting blushes corning there she who bad always been slender was her hands often hot then cola as death When I questioned her she seemed so distressed I dropped the subject thinking she was frightened at her own loss of strength But I could fore the owner Jasper Harding had thinking ever of the sweet face that not rest and sought the old doctor die1 and bis widow having would brighten my fireside the dar- tendencies had been sent to whose life I would make happy Italy where she lived at the time I fortunes wheel made a sudden was saying farewell to Ellie twisfc n 1 mention- in the neglected garden the small sum of money I had For I was twentyone and going to in the bank of a rainy day It was still sunshiny weather when my ncle advised to invest it in a There will wait and watch for dear ones Whom she taught Teaching them as to love the Lord all true mothers seek my fortune For many long years Ellie had been like my sister her father being the clergyman of the church my mother attended and keep ing a school for boys during the week that we all worshipped whose brown curls and soft fawnlike were our standard of beauty was but natural but she was afraid of the rough country lads and clung to me as her friend and protector I left school when I was eighteen and wept to college but during the holi days I discovered that was more to me than a sister and I wooed her with boyish but sincere devotion un til I arrive I at manhood and my un cle John wrote to me to come New York and learn business business enter rise he had in hand which promised quick returns of im mense profit I took his advice doubled my mon ey put it in again and again and lea than a year was a rich man Then I stopped I had no love for business I had more than repaid my uncle for his interest in me and my ambition was only to settle down at marry and be a ben efactor as far as my means permit ted of my fellow men Again my goon star seemed in the ascendant It was just before my to jparture from New York that stran ger called at rny boarding house and I had lost my mother and stood j few minutes I recognized my old school fellow Harding He was as Ellie had written handsome as his boyhood had promised and Should to love Gods Holy Word To the gates of pearl oft coming Passing down the golden stairs On swift visits to her loved ones Whispering comfort mid their cares Breathing thoughts to her companion Tender loving still beloved Who was ever faithful to him Loving helpmeet ever proved Short will he the separation Soon theyll meet beyond the sun Gladly doff his earthly mantle When his labors here are done Full of years the limit passing Spared to influence and bless Those perchance who might wandered In the paths of sinfulness Lived to see them useful members In the highways of the Lord Striving with their varied talents To promote Gods work and word Walking her footsteps doing Deeds of kindness she had done Too well known to need repeating As her useful life is known Long the fragrance of her memory As sweet savor will abide One by one her friends will join Swell the countless sanctified alone in the world so I sold the small cottae she had owned banked money and went to say farewell to Ellen We had spent many pleasant hours in the old harden and knew all the nooks corners so I went at once to our favorite resting place a sum mer house on the bank of the river that winds through Here I told my lovetale aril asked simply and frankly When I have made a home for you will you be my wife Ami I was satisfied when she put her little hand in mine and said quiet ly You know that I will Horace You love mq I have always loved you But there was no shy blush no with a graceful finish manners ne ver foppish but the perfection of easy courtesy To my surprie he came to offer me a lease of his house Margaret has told me of your love old place he said and I shall not line there for years if ever again I do not care to sell it but should like to think it was in the care of friends I am too old a traveller- to settle down at home But I watched him as he spoke and I could see lips quiver over this last tender word He grieves for his mother I who had known us both from child hood I am almost tempted to be frank with you he said after we had talked a long time for I believe El- lies happiness is dearer to you than your own Wait I said the room seemed to rise and fall in great waves round me There was a long silence and then the doctor spoke again Months ago Mr asked me the same question you are asking to day I told him then the trouble is mental Remove the cause and she will get well And the cause I asked hoarse ly- Is the struggle between love loyalty has promised to be your wife and she will be true to her promise if it kills her She loves Charles Harding I said A J i i I fear so You must not blame her She did not guess her danger till it was too late but she dismiss ed him when he asked her to be his wife He told me that himself for I am as you know fatherconfessor for the whole village Again a long silence Then I went out from the office with a sad weary effort to tread the long lonely road of life alone would not kill my darling The night train took me to New York and found Charles Harding still at his hotel You were to sail for Europe this month I said On Saturday next Give me your ticket I will go Your place is here with I 1 thought and was full of selfreproach ookcd ad taken for my own pleasure in his proposal senses but in a moment For nearly a week he was with me drtooping the graceful head no low- constantly and we concluded our of the soft brown eves And l business in a friendly spirit I did I knowing nothing girlish tremors not understand then why he seemed was fully blissfully content almost to watch me possessing me would he my wife self of my tastes habits and I would work for the home in Wons but I thought he was careful whleh to make her happy With J about his proposed tenant for love of such a spur to exertion I must sue- his old home he whispered YAu cannot mean to mock me 1 her We talked as we had often done be fore of the handsome rouse beside us so long closed and deserted Many a time as little children we coaxal the old servant who took of it to let irs roam from room to room looking at the handsome furni ture muffled in linen at the pictures sent often from Italy for the wide drawing room and whose beauty a mystery in the halflight from had there care Never lived happier man than stepped the railway platform at Millhaven one afternoon when Octo ber was reddening the leaves and was a crisp hint of winter in the wind Home Both mine in little more than two years when I had reconciled myself to the prospect of a long separation and years of uncongenial work Charles Harding had helped me to Sacredly her memory cherish Think of her with loving thought As their model and example By them never be forgot Handing down to generations Yet unborn her influence righteous godly living Is a blest inheritance A Change of Heart I care for nobody And nobody cares for mo Sang Tommy at play in the sweet new hay Where nobody could see So his mother made the fire And searched for the old hens While the sun from its place high overhead Went sliding into the West She filled the water pail And picked the berries for tea And wondered down in her tender heart Where hex little boy could bo Alone in the dim old barn Tommy grew tired of play When cows came home and shadows fell Over the newmown hay So into kitchen he ran With a noisy Hi hi yi His mother had made him cake i She liad him a saucer pie the a frosted long in foreign parts but who was evidently old Margarets idol There was a lifesize picture of him taken the year he went away a tall hand some lad with large dark eyes and strong features Ellie had given me my first pang of jealousy when she said Is he not handsome Horace You will never be strong and tail as he will be For I was small slender and never in very strong health It was to give me a chance to gain health that my mother had moved from New- York to then I was a child but although I Improved in that way I was never strong r tall If only I could bring you here that two me passed select dainty furniture carpets and the broad windows Margaret the curtains for my new home and I was servant told us stories of the j delayed a to see the boxes and glory of the family en from the train and sent over to of the that were everyday Harding It was while 1 stood in the time of Mr Hard- beside the baggage car of tho young heir who was so friends who did not see and one said Harding Gone to Europe again Smitten by the pretty girl at par sonage say Bosh said the other It is like ly he would come from the best soci ety abroad to fall in love with a country girl They passed by and I felt my breath come quick and short A thousand little trivalties came to me the merest breaths of confirm ation Hut I smiled presently Elites last letter lay over my heart in my pocket and was true Every line of the letter was as sweet and loving as every line she had ever written to me had been and I only now to live said to Ellie as we pitied my rival believing he might stood upon the porch in the June found this wildflower fairer than the exotics of courtly circles abroad My freight disposed of I hastened along the wellknown road to the par sonage thinking of Elites delight So he gave her a loving hug I will help you next time said he I care for somobodyi And somebody Cases lor me Our Boys and Girls Send the ERA to absent friends moonlight And she laughed the low sweet laugh peculiar to her with whom all things were sweet and ten der as she said You need not aim so high Hor ace I will be content with a far humbler home than this It was late when we parted at the parsonage gate and Ellie gave me the first kiss of betrothal for I would not see her again for a year Yet I was happy in going The city was my mine of wealth to be worked by patience Industry and hope till I earned a home for Ellie Every week she wrote to me ten der loving letters full of interest in my business- little womanly sugges tions about my hearth and accounts of the events of In one she wrote is in high glee Charles Harding is coming bome His mo ther died m Florence in March In another over a low pony carriage that would come in a days for her especial pleasure What would I not give my darling now that I had the power as well as the desire to indulge every whim If I had missed the shyness of maiden love in ray parting with I might have been satisfied to find it on my return soft were no longer raised frankly to meet mine the sensitive blushes came and went under my caress the little hands trembled as I held them the words of greeting were tender as ever and Ellie spoke gently of our future our home She had grant ed my wish for an early wed ling and already her simple trosseau wis In preparation tried to make the way smooth for her happiness when I gave- up my home and exiled myself She never told she loved you He hesitated and then said slowly Never She told me she had been engaged to you for two years and would be true to you Could I force her to say more Ah how could she help loving him 1 It took away the sharpness of my pain to know into what tender keep ing I put my darling Such gentle chivalry such delicate thought for tea happiness brought tears for which I felt no shame into my eyes I will wait until Saturday said and you will give my letter to and I handed him my fare well letter If we are both mis taken telegraph to me to return It I do not hear you I will sail in your place Hut no telegram ever came to me In a newspaper I saw in Paris I read of the marriage and for five years they have lived in the home I hoped to share with my lost love I am writing this on an hospital bed where I write often to while away the weary time between me the death the doctors say must come in a few weeks o Many delicate and nervous people who cannot digest iron tonic should not eat spinach which contains more iron than even the yoke of an egg Onions are also an excellent nervine June Fire Satur day destroyed the flour mills here The ruin was complete nothing of the wellequipped mill being left It was owned by Press A Son had a capacity of one hundred barrels daily and a lot of the machinery was new It was valued at about on which there was insurance of June Four money bylaws were approved by the poyers today One providing for sewage disposal works had a majority of another for spend ing on the sidewalks was carried by The sum of was voted for parks improvements by a majority of The bylaw for converting the present public library into a free library had a majority of Mr Carnegie has promised 12500 for a library building in con nection witji this proposal is The finest leaves from Ceylon Tea plantations are contained in Sala- Tea It Is packed in sealed lead packete to preserve its delicious fla vor and Sold by all grocers chilled me with fear to see never by peddlers or in J ARCHIVES TORONTO