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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1891-05-01, Page 6`-�` ", , "r „ , a� I i,�, „,, 4 ; :14M ..i'.•*, /' • , 0, k # . u r : Tf�►o i[inistexiat Qall. yielded to him. The world was all sun: again, soothing her like an infant.” her in Fenmore devoured bar their. a� Got lavictr w>srH sea. ti�+,�,� �H�,` t .` The 1, the•,gr11;'tba"C1a11;' thine toad beauty, and Paalino.:Girey wag '•yQR will go to Lolation,Pan12" rhe W)1e1} the first iiaeh of heir xetarn had ,A. `I � ; �-; ;.. The ministerial call, the rad>ant centre from which all his to whispered tliroogh her teary ale sett Dfdsi'.t i ftca lslin► and Be tete_ w Whfoli dootera_lovp Sud doatstnt.itaGa.; _ _ . , "'.you will gg Y9Qo-o1, sha discovered *bat Paullne•Grey, �ad A,pwed out. to London ? P.QRsese®d of Ahead thougand ,_> adv,, and too saplm: '. �" s�i t'' 1 ,� : , _.,.drd sone atilt. atl�erA beryte u Mit{r ,. Withz►ghtooUp $eel : more oo pt tato; They were msxried. at onoe; and this " My precious darling, I cannot," he te- are. Kennard, ' ' ' " s -e -- - t%it sum a1fU, $e had fioish ibis introductory remarks .r1� >!Iy masewauldoverhanT, brlght dans day be was bringing. his tram- .piled; "my home- is here, miy. duties lie bat removed tr-om competition by her a � propose,. when he dieaov. w., a� �:, ud woo about 3 ie4caii-tbasnnualcall- stir" bogie iso the Rouse that in lois eyes here; i1 would be worse than beginning life marriage, where two different beinRa, and Bred that hie prbgposal would be treated ��; 'Unknown to Old 8t. Paul t only needed her presence to be •little anew so go. You must see this, Pauline differently re arded b the world. For f_h with contempt. .;. • . - Tha.Apostlee-svaut,'wlth full oouseu% - " earthly Eden." What the young bride if you consider one moment." � first time- she saw. by An -lose oe . "-Go on, Mr. Sprigger, she said, imps. • �� Tonyission fidlds, where they were beat; thought of it he could handl tell for the She Saa herself out of his arms, and tleatl tapping her foot aA the carpet s ht x '�. And eeepain�1 were wail content y g passion or novelty the step down rhe had y . pp g p V To do so-li19 and small. sunshine was Singing a dazzling haze round 'her soba ceased, ss they had began, on the taken when she married the country paused in his remarks. her as he. stood to help her out of the oar• instant. doctor, and the sight went very near tarn- " I was about to ray, Miss Silder he +t� Tho gall -the worked-up call- ria e ; mild top the h t �' continued, " that I am aware the the The stipulated call ; g perhapa, , spy tears in . I see nothing but that you are unkind ing bar head. human heart, especially a woman's, s� • °A� Bixo4 up by men, whose lova and grace his oyes helped to blind him a little. Bat and hateful." she eaolaimed. " I knew yon By her wealth and by her beauty She delicate thing, and I Dome tonight to 1K. 8liine sweetly In Choir cheek and Laos ; Jadith, the old servant, Standing back in would do nothing i wished you." managed to bold her own among Cha tsiraot i,yt 'i ,."� �.�; _ Whonever think it a di191 k.1sgrace k it od A •1�,_r� 1:, . ] !! 1,•a, • ... ,.......t fiT* .�,,. k.�.,• , .! . �?' .J ,- r... _ • - S T„C.t# R 1fA,, lit �g� la . �., .. l,. ,��Iqq..t..._•, t��s�a_. �?9 a� 1 L !?al._ zRa.. �F d rv-,w�-., C. :5�. ,'";1 r�u:,�y,,,.,s._,iax,. ^s�..?�m”" y. ..r, .,.�.n° `"1Eu_ 3:.'� � u` ""G.: nt, c 3: t��.i,. ,'�1..,?*rI + .•• g1�.. ..C. n ,;tr. „�a:✓,. _>+'CRY✓",'*,"`t"'it,•.1n„_,.. .-„,,,. �. ''iv�'•'r£'-�j ire-t'`j�',*'i°'fiUwi4Yy�i�L''iW,V'Lkl'b't$}`L'i5''GGi(v,•�c^ ,.,_ra..a,,.^r*'T ' .9"� +• F' • t; been under for sometime, I think. Tobe I to lm or vision, saw and inwardly- strong word. I think yon cannot mean and then the longing to return to Fenmore, lain Mise Hilder, dimmer Ido not wish The call—the one-h+gree cull t fretted at the haughty. curl' o! the aiiarlef it.” where at least she was somebody seized p h r`ZVj. , Made by some bass, tbaa sail, lips, the aeornfnl rise of the arched brows, '• I do," She answered, salient her her, end She. wrote and told bar husband to cause you future suffering, let me state Who poses as the big bell rhes that I have ntver cared enough for you to N° I'!, g p as the young bride stood, an instant and beonsy nudes s cloud. that rhe wasted to come home. set you to link your lot with mine, there- ,fY k , . �h oi> cath board, and. who will keep . 4 �i ° ; A row fermentin broad and deep surveyed her new home. •" I cannot be hateful to you, you know, tore do not think that I can return the g- - y The poor fellow want np to Petah her in mow':, ;a�4"�0 Ehoold conference alight his call. " A proud, tricksy creature 1 She'll be if you ever. loved me," amid Paul • and 9 tremble of delight, picturing to himself R,,� ;� " 1m' 'love you bear for me. My nstet,tions to you ,� &e like as not to break hie heart," thought he tried to smile, but it was a feint the fondness that would once more shine 'have been proa,pna d purely, by a freiez7e�ly ��k�; • Tb .call -the i;wo•horsa Dell, - g ' . the old woman, ail she eourtasied low, end mockery, and his lips were white. on him from oat of her beautiful eyes, and M,ft ,�t: „S ch moans aswap—that's all , 3+ p y F + �6 s+t ^ . .. The jockeyq cal it "fair exchange; • then Stood &aide and held book her staff " I never did love n " S e e " ' ling, nothing more. Bat I true* this -a - - - - ------ - -- - p -- „ , ,rl€$'"ii - _: it�t6$`.fi6,fti6if��r�� _- 1p 11� y"'hi�' - aeee��er IPP. er i sten e V.;, '�h it sn jeot to a change, 4.<w„ p. • y . , ' x inn, :k At conference—with a squall. Mistreas might have ample room to PASS. Pauline t " said her husband. was the reality from what he had pictured said, taking his bat to go,,, for remember, ?� jl , ,. - A gleam of the outer Sunshine seemed to She answered nothing, but her angry. it. The woman that met him seemed you ever have in me s true friend. Be ' 4, T Three c rneringer's. atais all, w follow the fair young creature as she went eyes turned restlessly from the set , face. soaroely the same he had left behind him assured I will atony S be s nephew to yon" �,�-4 ..- 'through the dim stone 'nsfl smiling now, Oefore bar. the morning he started alone on his'home• And she was so dumb with eurprisa and a �, a.,, • 710ihWr-1'a,,�11.'.`nV,8,,,, brother in thee�ap, and olio i •" +! anger. that she iiia t any°good-bye to. him , him to a lowergroup g ng like a petted child to her hue- You thought yon did, Pauline ? said ward journey three months before. The aU: s to which self-seekers stoop ; band's arm. From the wavy gold of her he. " Who made you think so ? Who bloom of bar face hvd faded wish late when he bowed himself oaf. -Baton Herald. wtwas Heaven's calf. nti � 'thick hair, se it tell in �oae Darla over her made oa ? he repeated, when She did not hours 'and fretting ; her red lips were ,rr�'` The Dell, the saintly call, shoulders -for the tiny 1l 0e -bonnet had answer. p drawn down, and the whole charm of her Dyepepala vs. Hair. °�4'" Once "honorbr! ht" for all; ° g been' shaken off and was swinging by Dna •' You, I suppose, with your talk," said blonde beauty was gone. Dyepepaia is one of the most mbnoa. t L No longer comes from - of ,,no ou know, atria as she went -10 the delicate sheen of Praline. •' YOU raid I should be as hmppy Almost her first words were a complaint, Dearer nt . baldness. Nature is great � x� , 11 For when it did some got ,,no show"- g • Who yearly no -7 move to and fro, her peach silk dress, a light and er glory as m bird in your country house," she amid; and nothing he %cold do or Say pleased economizer, and when the nutrient elemeata I . . Transferred by loader, call, seemed to envelop her. Her dainty feet the tease began to flow again, plainly show- her from the hour they left London behind furnished by the blood are insufficient to went room to room; her clear laugh ing the disappointment. them till he handed her into the bs ?�', The Dell, the outside call= y• properly support the whole body rhe cats, I >&'iva or ten thousand call; rang out through the quiet house with s " And I thought you would," he said. windowed parlor o! her hones as Fenmore. off she supply to parte the least vital, .like 4 That witq a Sy takes lively fish jubilant giadneea. Heaved knows, Pauline, I thought you There her fretfulness reached oils climax, the hair and nails, that Abe heart, -lunge I Out of our book, to grace the. dish Paul Lennard, usually so grave and quiet, would when I said it. Bus it has been a and amid a storm of hysterical sobs she &nd other vital organa may be the better', 4 Of nobby s.'whose people wish lau hed with her in the fulness of his o mistake from first to last -whose fault I told him he blighted her 'whole life, and .nourished. In oases of severe fevers this ' -; . High $yore that won't bawl, g joy; . g y and this young doctor, who had almost dare not think." �� made her miserable; that he never had economy is partiealariy noticeable. A single g grown an old• man in his lonely home, re. ,,You know whose fault it was, she loved her -lie had only married her for hair is a sort of history of the physical ti� The Dell, the lightning call- Tke tele�ra hic call; ', "Sendeala p" ,, newed hie youth, and told his heart to be said, flsebiog alp; "is weeyourS. And now her money. ooadition of an individual daring the time . ... ry —'some photographs. fid, inasmuch as it hed ,� I " `Lr ::Send some newsy paragraphs;' g gained its desire, yon will not do what you car{ to mend it. Standing by the fire, with his arm rest- it has been growing, if one could read r, "'That telt of you" -"Your autogra h";• and won' the love•of Pauline Grey. " T will do anything, end ever thin ` "Our board meets soon; ' that'8 a yeverything you tog on the mantle, end his face turned to closely enough. Take a hair from - the i . The desires of oar hearse ere not always wish, eaoept leave this piece Lor London," Cha Shadow, Paul Lennard heard her to beard or from the heed and sorati- . The call, the bogus o4ll, good for us. They sometimes coil them• he replied. "You shell live there, it you the end in silence, his pride too sorely hart nize it and yon will see that it Someone to boom, thava 411; selves into scorpion whips to scourge' ale; like; and I will go wish you, and stay till for him to defend himself, his heart too stows some attenuated places, in. r` I Who tole about making pretense and So Paul Lennard .learned, in many s you are settled," keenly .wrung for him to feel anger against dicatin that at some period g g g p od of its growth ��' That a is in demand immense, bitter lesson, before the autumn pmesed into The doctor's voice was alimly enough, but her even then, for she was his wife. the first the blood supply was dtfiolent from over. Has many alpplicatione, hence ' yrs He'.11 wain a bigger call, winter. Not at once did he discover the his face was a sickly gray, and the fine and only woman he had ever loved. Hie work, anxiety or under feeding The hair "'° real feelings of the woman he called wile. muscles around his month twitohed ner• soul shiver d within him ale ha stood there tells out when the strength th o! the toots fa y ' The Dell, the unsought call, For a few Short, blissful weeks she seemed voaely. The agony those words adef him and looked the fruits of his folly in the insufficient to anstsin its welsh*any. ager, ,. �: ; that's al; �9 .Test to descend, T work for Goa-tr ht►. yea h®r_ aaulf neat at--t�---.11oma� -and would ht►ve-been lain fo r etrrn er _..__ __..._ _-._- _ ._. _ __ . _ El gwRrd to wield,_..-_____ _. pal q p g ,bat leoe� -A orfs ivhar did mat love-lifm had end a tiro l►aie will bake iti' pl, also x• . O�gome b000r circuit,°mission field, gave him back love for love. Then she the wife S eye saw nothing of it. been bed enough, but s wife who despised the root is olaeaead. For.thie reseon !soh apt ° c . ' • Which cannot now.muoh salary yield, '• g person has a certain definite length aE ' Goes in the stove, too small. began to fret a little, only a little, at first ; When will you take me ? Will you him was more than be could bear, though tT; but da b ds the plaint row stronger, reals take me ?" she asked anxious) . ,aE , Y y y, P g g y y ; every instinct o! his nature told him she hair. When the hair begins to split or fall till it broke into an open. murmur ; and she the frown fadia from her face. was unjust, and selfish and unwomanl oat message of the Scalp is exoeflent sk�� love She had !signed so feel-perhapa she I will realy.tmke you wheneveryoa tell Presently her robe ceased, but finding thus Place *be ti a o! the fingers firms Upon �N'�' had felt it for the time oast as as me yon ere ready to go," he answered he did not enewer, even to upbraid, they the scalp and then vibrate or move he. aTHE,, D:OCTOR, .a o ild mi ht Sin a t it had wearied reedit as he walked from the r •h g g qy ot, y, Dom, went be en s sin, thio fi a made s little louder soul while boldin the al„_ with no more care for the pain she was off to bis favorite resort in trouble or 1a g g m p g preeBnre im der 5,1.11- p , g - fJtt_nger. _ • T -his will etimalate the bloodveeeelsnnder- ---- - CI HAPTER I. in ►oting�5an if the quivering human neeS-the smooth, glistening sande of the ” Yon want me to die," said she; •' you neath and'.brin about better nourishment � �"�� ��, heart had been indeed a senseless plaything. shore.' brought me here to die. Your knew this of the hair.•. A brush of unevenly tatted THE LITTLE RIFT WITHIN THS LUTE." �f18 was bat a spoiled child. atter all; and The young wife asw big tall figure hurry horrible place would kill me and you want briatlee is. also excellent to Use upon the it you see the carriage, Lizzie ? They like one, She sighed, after forbidden ples- ing and striding through the long grass of it to kill me right off, you do; that you may scalp, not the ' hair. -Halla Journal o , ehould• be here b this time. Looks sin, the meadows, and she watched f y g sures. She had been used daring the hed if disappear get my money. You d o -I know you do ! " Health. ; ° child; your eyes are younger than mine." of her little life to being feted and admired, down the dip of the hill. She saw it again The last words rose in a shrill oryi and , The speaker was a comely, rosy -hoed end made mach of.. Pleasure oma ale the atter s little, still harrying on, thio time to Dr. Lennard; with a closed lip, ren the ` dame of fifty years or thereabouts, with, a breath of her nostril4i sad almost as neceo- meet the great green waves that came bell, sharply. Old Judith, her fade almost � Helping the Poor. . white apron reaching down to the bottom eary was admiration. tumbling and tossing in. Then she turned as cloudy as bar meSter's, came alp quickly, The question which the Rev.. Dr. Rains. .' of her Bluff dress, and a spotless muslin, In the dreamy little fishing village 'she from the window altogether, and went to hastened by the imperative peal. ford asked in The Forum, •' What can we - s asp shading bar. thick gray bends, Alto- had admiration, if is tragi, but, unexpressed, .her own room to look over her things and - " Your mistress is not well," he said, do -Lor the Poor? " he anawere in a few � gather she looked -what she was --a respect• and of oomrso. rustic quality ; and pleasure, consider what would be the earliest time at pointing to the now silent Pauline, who words. His plan comprises "two or three • frh able, confidential' servant -one, too, who in the sense She read she word, was a thing, which she could be ready for the journey. lap in s heap on the conch quivering like r large free churches, built on cleared epsOea y , either from long service or strong love, undreamed of there.. The people, as she Not one thought of the home she would frightened child, and gaaping for breath. on east and wee* down town sites, always ° . took '.more then the usual amount of knew them, were smple, and hospitable, leave so desolate ; not one care for the true Got her to bed as gaiokly as you cart and open to the public, provided with real intermit in the affaire of •her matter, she and kindly-natared, but they looked, one heart her going would ' well-nigh break, then call me." preachers, and having each a larg kinder- ?l� youngest, and withal' the favorite prroti- end all, the hard enrtaoe-polish that gave perhaps wholly embitter. She had married He lets the room as he spoke, and the garten, a swimming both and a gymnasium , stoner in Fenmore. The little town of such brilliance to her London world. she young doctor for a change, at a time spoiled girl on the coach gave a more an r as important parts of its outfit. Near these ` 1 Fenmore stands on a email elope, looking. Theirlife was not her lite, and • she would when she w&a weary of her London life. sob as she heard him going out. g y churches a band of unmarried .clergy and down on the German Ooasn, and behind it not fit herself to it. Now she bad wearied of him so she had " Paul 1 she cried, ander her Breach picked ley workers should live, undertaking . k c , stretoh' fens and salt marshes, desolate Herhuebsnd saw this, and, in the pleat- wearied of everything in turn, from the almost ; but if he heard the did not heed da*y for a stated time, perhaps, and ander time She is their control all these sooeSsories of viii. nl ; w+ enough to'leok agora. At the date of my tads of hie love, forgave it, and triad to y in. her white satin crib, end end the indignant Judith ora not likely to iii ' 7; story, it was a sleepy, out. of•the•w&y fishing forget the cruel stings her unrest gave his played with her silver belle and coral. She repeat the summons. zation Should be placed. This plan would rr� village, with one straggling street .of poor faithful heart. He blomed only himself, was going book to town in search of fresh Pauline' went to bed of her own free will, coat money, but is would do more to right v • + , houses, and tiny Shops; that .was Fenmore not her; and when all hie efforts to content changes; and not one womanly instinct but she would not let Judith call the doctor. the Cliaroh in the eyes of the working Proper, but round abort in the wide track this wilful women, who ore his And yet s whispered -that snob. search was sin. . " She was almost well," she said " and people it would more immediately affect as le; 'it Of country that went by that name for look stranger to him, failed, he did whet his The afternoon passed, and Dr. Lennard would be better still after she had slept." the lite of the metropolis, it would do more,. . . of a better. there were several handsome own honest nature sold him was best, to be did not return. The evening set in Stormy, Guessing something of this, the doctor to sweeten and purify the bitter 'springs at : , mansione. done -he spoke openly to her, and asked and the hail -drops rattling against the lingered by the gate for some time, and which the poor must drink than the build. - .Mti • In the immediate neighborhood of the her if it was indeed true that his love had kitchen windows were as so many drops of then, finding he wee not aammo'ned in• ins of ten cathedrals would ever do" And ". village there was the rector's house and, Mr ceased to suffice her. ice falling on old Judith's faithful heart, as doors, he Strolled off to the beach, a Hamilton lady adds : " Close n then `11 I Neadham's, the land agent, among the rest They were standing together in the canny she sat by the low file end'liatened for her - The wind was high, and the Sky gloomy drinking places, and lose of money will ` „ Dr. Lennard s, .Is Stood on the highest bay window of their sitting -room, looking master'a knock. enough in parts. The waves, all Stoked. be lorthooming to carry oat this grand i sky shoulder, of the little hill, and he wide, out silently on the fair view spread before It was late when the doctor came in, pale with fomm, rolled high with an anggry roar, sobeme." . r . pleasant windows looked over corn fields them. One, at least, saw little of it, and and wearied, ,hie thin samlmer coat was and Fenmore sande looked diem&L enough $ in the loomin a Could Not Say That It Was. . _ ., and shining sande to theses. If was all of perhaps is was the acme with the other: through end through. Pauline was Bitting g g• T.arning on to them, the " r' . , ane deep mellow brown shade, and a terrace Within the lost few 'weeks Paul Len- reading in the parlor, and she looked up, doctor saw that he was not the only one Brooklyn �� Life: " Isn't ,this perfectly d ;K • led from its low -stepped door to s'eunny, nard's Oslo, grave face had aged whole from her book with a pont as he entered. who had ventured out, in spite of the high delightful 2 She asked, as they eat on the .; ,well•keps garden, then is a Sasb of veers in fee appearance, and the rare' exile "I waited dinner.ever so long for yon," •wind and threatening storm. sofa with their arms intertwined and the . ,r;,X,i bloomfor it was Jane, "the month of that made thee ark eyes so wonderful, end gibe •raid. " Where have'yoti been • all this A few yards in advance of him, standing brilliantine on his mus*ache not very far roses."the whole lace bright. had not once oroosed while ? '! where the spray fell her over in ahowere, from the orimson balm on her lips. The garden eloped gently down, and it it. " I met Mre. Greso&m'e man on the wag a •young girl, rather above the medium " Dorothy," he replied, !" when 1 know lhad reen shad nooks and mosey'bank� Mrs. Lennard stood and leaned her fore- shore," "" he hs ; slander And well -bails with that your mother is listening on the stairs, g y , he replied. He was on hie way brie exactly r that g where the can could not reach the dreamer, head against the glass, while her fingers for me, end I had to go book with him As g y g acetal, you might See at your Loeber is waiting in the vestibule . 11, ` and a cool, tinkling fountain; and a cosy, turned the gold circlet road and round, once." glance that, though she wog no longer a wits wcane, that the bulldog is loose is the d .i . fewer•wreethed summer house. and now and then nearly Brew it off alto• Mrs. Gresham was a lady of fashion, and child, ape was not yet a woman. Her has front yard, and that your little brother in ^�" . x It was as pretty a home sal any in the gather. Her husband, standing a little way worthy of interest, so Mrs. Lennard lowered wee off, and her fresh, young face wag under the sots, how can I as that it is • ' "� • kingdom, and to it, this bright Jano day, its behind her, saw the movement and sighed ;,. her book again to ask what had been the dimpling and flashing with sheer delight delightful ? " i Z11, ,• ' / master is bringing home hie bride -bring• it was like the restless toying of the,oaptive' matter with her. ss the salt wind swept by her: P. -S, ,`, °F. Ing her home with such joy and pride that with hie chain. " Spsome;" replied the doctor. " She Earn is bite midst of hie bitter thoughts It Pays to Advertise. ), ,,,, I - , his dark eyes are sparkling in liquid glad- " Pauline,", he said, ,abruptly, urged so was better when I got there." . ,, Dr. Lennard could not'forboar a smile at Philadelphis Record. The estimate has 5 �:?I , W11, , nese, and his grave, sweet month cannot speak, As "it were, by her dreamy unrest, He had crossed over to the fire when he the keen enjoyment this wild scene been made $bat within the last swans ° p i }�'; )!seep from breasting into Smiles. An heiress, " you are 'not happy, I can see. Tell me came in, and now he stood there perhaps evidently afforded the stranger, for that years P. T. Barnum expended upward o �, a belle, queen of a brilliant London'season, what I can do to make yon so 2 in the hope of receiving some kind word, she was one he Saw t a glance. He stood" 83;000,000. in newspaper advertisemen • yds, she had read those signs. of her power on She turned roand quickly, and replied: some little wifely attention; bat nonb came. still for a moment watching her,,, the and, notwithstanding this expenditure,1 Y more faces than her husband's; tint some. "Yoa, d'on'e want to riiake we happy.. Presently she looked up with s secants of amused smite Still on hie ince, and just lett behind hien a Lorsane of 85,000,000. �, 11 thing in fie passionate love, its entire, You don's care how I sm." of disgust; the steam was riaing from his then the girl turned and saw him. Many other baeinese men seek to make Paul Lennard was natural! ° �' untalterin,g devotion, touched a now chord 111 sere ao maoh,t'-,said he, "thee your .damp clothes, and had reached her.' y s'handeome their fortatiee, without such expenditure. ' illi the heart cf the bride, and her bosom unhappiness is my torture. I would do " Do change that cost, Paul 1 " she said. man ; the rare sweetness o! his It is needless to add that they do, not ono- ' Hnttered ander its eilken cnveriog, her anything. I woald`lay down my life almost " Yoa will give me my death of cold if you Smile added greatly to the charm of big need. ;d,. pulse beat higher as she neared her future to see you content." stand there.", dark face, and perhaps the stranger young li as She- was, was not &:t0 of Railroad Tem 'oma, and for she first time, perhaps, she " I do not went yod to lay down your The pale lace wens a shade paler, ends q her insensible pe>•ance 114en. , sense of iter new life dawned upon her. life," she replied. " I only want you to do sharp spasm oroesed it as he went to his of this charm, for she blushed vividly &a The Hidlond' Railroad Temperaser l Beautiful and in heiress, Paul Lennard a very sensible, pleasant thing." • own room. . she saw him. IInion of England hes a total m merehi t , "I had feared to aspire to the love of Pauline, "'What is that, love 2 " he &eked. " You: will give me my death of cold," he Feeling ,guilty. of rudeness the doctor of 4,625. Three hundred and fifty-six Mai" Grey. The shame of being looked upon &a " Leave this place, and go to London," repeated, bitterly. it Alwaye herself -never raised his hat, and turning, walked in the meetings have been held during the past 4 forinne•banter had held him back; the Said Pauline. me: She spoke the truth ; she could never opposite direotion, his own troubles soon year among the employees of ,the g g "" sweeping yMidland" ,�•'"'� strop love ha bore her urged hien forward, She had drawn closer to him se She have loved me. moetin g swa all remembrance o! the line, and an effort is being made to eahb- • till his heart getting beyond We control spoke, and her sunny, head almost touched '" It is the'little rift within the lute, g' lihh A circulating library for the use of men 1., he resolved to fly from temptation, eines his shoulder. The spell of hlsr loveliness That by and by will make the music mute, ' Not so with Letty Leigh. See had no employed in email Stations where good . he could not overcome it in s lair fight. So was etes'ling over him, ea it hmd esolen And ever widening slowly silence all." asd thoughts to dim her recollection of the literature can not be obtained reso vin he went that same night to a once before, and hed felt tis had l .when `hslndeome man she had Lound observing r g' g So it was in the young doctors house. her so intently — `. darty where he know he should meet her, She did not,trample+on it, - Bold. Day by day some little griede�ae y ; and the wonder whether Better Than Danetnq. �1` old, laxed b'y she dengorone feacinstion of " I oonnof live here;' rhe oontinned. �' I she should meet him again, and if he waa , . �,. rose up that jarred his life to the very a resident Munsey a Weeks her smile, he drifted further and farther vieni to see someone, I want to go some- centre; day by day the mask fell lower or only a ooance vmew at Edna, y � Mende, severely from his only eafegaard-the resolve of the where, Paul; I shall die it you keep me fn Fenmore, served to beguile the homeward , yon broke seven Successive engage., • y P from off hie brfdo and it she did not stand menta to dance last might. morning. She was gentler end kinder than Fenmore." „ walk fo 'the toasty little ootsage abouts g . ' revealed sed mocking demon, she most Edna, eweetl -Yes m j �he'had ever known her. She a ped upon Then the illusion tell upon hien. It was quarter of &mile from Fenmore, where y ► y dear, but -I • i s 1? P surely did tie a aotilleae, loveless woman. the lief h '! made an engagement of tar more impor- his arm; liatened with a ben head so his he she wearied ofg and it was to be free of Dr. LennArd kept his word. As Boon ale g s, other end daughter had, lately truss. taken alp their abode. "l� `>L low, simoSs incoherent whispers; and his society she longed ao so gel to London. Pauline sold him she was ready to go, he ---�_ ! , \,, every instant laid 'his senses more and To be free of him f There was the winning, took her'to London, and Saw her safes (To be oontinned.) At the Ball. more under the sirens ell of her oath coaxing, and sweeteet beans on that n y ----' P y g y p• settled with the lady friend who had offered Buffalo News r Col. Ydr er-Who is . and loveliness, till all prudence, all !sera turned face, but no wifely love, no womanly to receive her; and then he travelled book An Inspiration. that tell young+ lad over there ? (;. forgotten, he poured out his love, and consideration, and the young doctor's to his dreary home in Fenmore. Judge: Wealth Man y w.; asked her to be his wife. " heart hardened as be looked down on it. The eo le, always a fond of she kind 9 y (giving an order for Gilhooiy-Well, She was my future wife The season had been an annsnelly " I 'cannot o to live in London," he said, people, y and moaure) I want you so pat on oi<that the a oonple of mpittha ago.' The engagement "` -brilliant one• Pauline was weary of md• coIdly ; "'bu' g ou coin o there on & visit if grandfather young doctor, had a father end mons conceive. Lal spread of eAt&hies that you was broken off, ' g grnndfstoer before him hed cared the sick oma ocnoeivo. ' .; ,:.. anirrt*iAq,: weary of Landon life- eltogetlier• volt like." of FontvlArefcr roars, were now dcflbf Artist siselr the _ ` tt'"' . The real, earnest 1pve in the eyes of •the " Oh, Paul,. how can you be so cruel 2 ' devoted to him, and the brilliant young - -Happy thought 1d I'll go dog o Chat'! lift Too Pri the of, Wales; grid Work y ( p young donutry „dootor wag inex ressibly she cried. , "How could ou think of send creature whose passing light lead left such le Smith's and oketoh his froe-lanoh adllign, the ocher day to a'wow York Inexpressibly y p g g Y Sun men, "'ig the beet reseed women in '' sweet to her women's heart of ter the linnet ing we all that wa�Aiyone? YOU say I deep gloom behind is, had men A herd counter. , ' J "r F " and flatteries of the last few months. She may go, beeauee you now that I cannot," word And sligoting speech finny at I her, �, � the world. I dons believe she wears the longed for change, and she accepted him, she added, bursting into s etortn of soba. though she could not know if e d _ crhA , same dress twice, and she has her hat - + p p The nestion of the marriageable a dressed in Paris ever day. e None of these reasons ever entered the After all, Vanl was a onn hneband, and q g age for isles hair, y y She wears i '3` 3 1# • would ams have oared ii she had. known it, women is very muco to the cora in Swollen. + , you know, ,and " tt brain of the happy lover as he took her in he loved Pauline. The tears did whet no For a month or no, Pauline wag I-V A bill. has }a�ben.introduced-into toel�wsditllr 6oadS her, .ossa over, to - - -' � -^ _ _ , ..._. p-_._hi8 etyma, and ttlsned gar r -Ad ltpa- rattly, briglatdlaaeeaeoiIldhavedona;Choybrangot happy Iresriy so; a$d tbWW "she res�Teee While one wig PM`iS Ailly - ttlmoes reverently, with a gee&1 wonder and back his senderndao+ and he took her in hie demon began to gnaw At her heart again,, -- t that toe lowest age et which Ch g ie going ROVORF -tho, R Y - w erlie'mEn I d iia iti. -- - _:.. - wslrlen..ali hllS -allowed to -mart Qnnel ,-to-.,+rrtxselr iso 1>e �>c __.r s;... .JOY, _._•::. t! 4s0xt• ibst..they ,.,pbo lld-,b,e,.,.so arra .tandkleaed.her hot cheeka-again. &sad; suet. -A W0M disconten€ thtlts- 17-�- r � y Shout&; . eooed the of o . _ ._.., .. M.._ _ _� _ _-.__ �,_. _ - .. _ e8_ t S. _. _a. tali onion. _ _ 11 r__ , .� ,� ,, . M...� �a_w - a .PW .m_. _,.�..... _._ m ...-.-..._ � a be raised, 01.. . . -� -, tn..ac ng to:% 1.