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Lucknow Sentinel, 1891-07-31, Page 2w _. �_. . , ..w�� _ 1 ' $, ... ,_. _ ... -.. # ,, � . � wa>Ii�1il Tanis. tenderness, " you know why I have come-- which I do not see ; which ,I Swear does'against prison ® Ak ittl .11l[e t Wh tt was P b�, had taken strong 'told to disapprove of her. It was too bad of y possible for me to keep away, not exist -I will cross it. If you can not of the lad's uaagulatiO14 and the &nay grew Nesbit to put the child so far away, and T � in my I love yon, Princess, as a mate loves but come to me, I can come to you ; and I will. that he too would gleep more Sweetly ander with s�serSon whom she did not lilts ; it Z'414 .cctrty once in his life. Will you come to ,use ? You ars mine, and I will hold you -here in the shadow of the old cedars in the land amounted to a total separation, for of course l�at8d the men Will on be m wife? - ___ _ _ . _. _.,_ _ y �y arms, on my breast, in my heart. Have the soldier had loved so well it would be impossible for her to make `�.ve-me wh The " 1 shook bier head, and moved, her you, and hold _ r" + _a ltrlbe me • _. ou, so help me i . Nye and Pocahontas stood near each such ai journey loften. ., ��� Bitter grub. kraal with a gesture of denial ; words she With a quick stride he crossed the amall other beside the newly -made grave, and A s ring at the door-belltardily ,, 11 Don't you know 71[e! had none. space between thorn and stood close, but an they quitted the inclosu�ree _ th a answered by a servant, and then foo pm . - -.. Why,n the farmer `-` I know of what t You are ng, Ptah- still not touching hes hatlds met for an instant coldly.. Poco- approached the parlor door. Husband Siad �" Yahoo, bf►sseed.•y- cess. I know the ides that t taken «Have 3you no pity?„ She moaned« Nantas tried Sot to harbor resent- wife looked up with interest -with ezpec- �, a" i Bnt i take - pie „ , t ;,1. boarders see�ion of your maid. You have heard of None, he answered hoarsely, Hage uie�t, but she could not forget whose hand _cation. V�'sa it .;a visitor ? NQ onl the. _. y "-,,----Summer es- an i skin'em - my former marriage, and you: knave that the -yore a nyfor, me ?Tbo�-for um- both . -- I lave you it had' been that had struck her the first aeiv - t wit a telegram which : he handed _ ,..+ w1.� wQtt1$ii who wag my wife Still ItF�Q. is it -how ,. God knows,. 31A1a.4w�{e...1itQ��?W �. __.�,. .w__ .-. .Zeac:ity board not ao 4'� She iienitier heed ininuteassenty until to-night--andM you love me I ho and After Warner's death, airs• Smith $p Obethin envelopo withdrew.rland-aud then tngniai , , r - GOes down, There y a . aline 8u u,i— Thorne gazed at her pale, tluile_face with believe. iS no i+ to ll(q{hos�lissd� - thing ltween us +save to colla men t'v g ' 1"'*' 'w .,- - 71d1e scrap e, which even a ceusonous �- e remained day after day shat through his own hands --o l:nfwig r Do i work T Well. tinned : world does not abate. I salt you to commit is his chamber, b silently Sad re the ins and outs, the minnti� of daily hap- ' ` T I guess r4o l " Listen to tae, Princess. That woman no sin • to share no tnodl?a Y Sympathy Pe --.a:ot,npw leastwMa. d' disgrace. I ask Fon to jetting with dumb a th all s th . ,1, Not when city gents Ethel Ross -is• my wife., no longer,, be my wife before the face of day ; `before and consolation. Her strength and appetite hat is it?" questioned Ethel, tkio- 11 Atssd their ladies even in name • she used to be my thesis. of mea ; in the aiht of heaven ! °, declined, and her interest in life deserted lently. Wants air aa' ' r_._u L� �t T cou�Temoud uuisk safe in fact twn eam €gee. QW- � r,,,,,, .� ...,c L" ecru u of .h x;'►'. a hopeless quiescence that was " A despatch for you Shall I open iw?" 7fi aa'skeetera lives have drifted ntterl asunder. It was heaven . It was all so s Sage to her, she inexpressibly . pitiful Her husband, in " If you like. I hate despatches ,,, nck her will, and I acquiesced in it, for She bad could not nndeorataad.� Words, carelessly alarm for her life and reason, hurriedly de- always an est unpleasant possibilities.- It's c '; . " never loved me, and Iio hen m idiotic in- heard and scarcely heeded, came back to tided to break up the establishment at a local, so I guess it's from m aunt; about I give 'em all toto- ':« �]�� fetus 'o tr n for het b t ,e.sl rt >ah G +. . '.N,I ..)',W .._,. :4.. .�. v:T'.i' .... :.a.9l.i. �i'�vT",..""•, .. ... . .....,.... .. ........ .fsnN.a w2".^.. �.F ._'^R.F".•� 1Trv"..T m..f.. i._. 1e... ..t, .I'_,/'.'t_.0 nor ..S_', T•i^' 1. .�T. nl:.,L'S^'1'1'^r�1:. E � � 1.� ,- - �� �11 � � � �_ y eu :y Et , r e, sn : %u Y9-uvc t $i Y:� isi eL` k%1r5 Y�¢7 ' < 4' tbii i �f i ti�i 7d1 u i a. �z jv r�^Sar aq," ] vvi#e an s¢ie San the gaT3 had ceased foa es. At last, vett useless itetahom . t was like a mnndinga that constantly reminded her of Cecil tore open the envelope and read the i x m even my prese::co became a troubje to her, knell bar lose. few words it contained vaith a letthe nin , . " isioa�• vs beth she was at no pains to conceal The "Nesbit," she said wearily, axing his In the beginning of June, 'the move was visage ;then he let his hand fall, •,yt��i, .mn� breach between r.s svidentd with the name unconsciously,`listen and ander- made, the horse closed, the servants lis- stared blankly across at his wife ;°and I unt>�no Elting reed to us b h'owe y. t is mend on are free a es of the Ian and of missed, and the cats of the estate turned •` „ ` �� ,+ Amu• � -essIVs from -fellow ! and it's about 3i' , _ f ems' broken, and we are fetter.- y I Can not see tt ss. over a Berkeley. �i'itkr the da of the child, he said, uneasily. An I Smoke free, there was an In my eyes you. are still hound summer, the birds of + • y exultant ih his vol 44 }. Pie their What fellow . What child . Not y t. Iat%baaazd ring voice, as though his I am not bound, denied Thorne, flight northward. miIIe ! Give it to me nickl , , 1, � ,, , , tae its cool-- freedom were precious to him _.__ _._____. __ _ _....... _.___-- _ y= ----- --- ---- •L -�. —�. _. - r •O, _.... .thefarsa L e ; -whoever on c ":im I is itl" Shine +" questioned the y - she snatched the to egram from his; q girl, slowly and I am, lies, and the troth is not in him. I'•ve The. summer uietl ' for the famil ,a11 � r As the city feller arm at y_ told you all -and yet not all Ethel Roes at Lanarth broken onl b y y twisting hand. Hastily She scanned the Well. I �� . y the usual social words her breath corrin in her y i;,, Yee. �� free, .a woman who was my wife -whom you �Pl?eIImgs. visits from the "Byrd girls as fin rs trembling so that eh�conld scarce In heart and thought I was bat in the scarcely , , ':A, fact I was born " he acknowledged. the ge s r -goers Ffdd's i�aslksimptoa. d. edged. The say. is my wife still -is about to marry y were still called, with their Husbands hold the paper "The child is dying. a" � 'ccccc�, r Words I spoke on the steps that night es- again. To join her life -as free and separate and little ones ; a marriage, a christening, r• r d the ,a s te�g, Come at once!" That was all, "I 1% �° �j('1r b salons unaware. I was tortured h°m mine as though we had never met -to lettere from Jim and Snaie, and measles message was signed Nesbit Thorne. Short. = ter",•° 1 I1I 1VL D� y jealousy, and tempted by love the life Of another man- Ian t that enough+ among the little Garretts. Id, August, curt, peremptory, as our words a apt to ti , I had no right to speak them then ; no ' Cant you see how completely every tie be- Pocahontas and her mother went for a be in moments of intense emotion ; a bald r r , can excuse or palliate the weakness wr11CI1 t�+'+'n t+a is cnvo_wo.i Y� ..t -h tn. P;ed __. t7,� �_: ' , , JCHAPTXR � allowed me to. I should have waited until Poeshontaa shook her head. I can not --- v v , ' us. ' to by the fact roughly stated. �a47`• K « medicinal waters for the latter's rheums- " Cecils!" she cried, sharply, `` don't you ` I could have come to on untrammeled -as understand on and on will not under- tiara, and after their terata home Berkeley hear • M child! 31 bib is d iu �1 j." ' The weeks rolled by, and gradually Mrs. y "y,� '11' 1 Mason grew convalescent- She was still now. I attempt no jrstification of my mad- stand me, she said mournfully ; "her sin �k a holiday and ran up to the Adirom- do you stand there staring at me i g I must j !, ,confined to her room but the worst of the Hess' Princess. I have no excuse but aqy will not lessen our sin • nor her unholylacks to see Blanche- 1 ss love, and "can only sue for on. 1� go -you must take me to him now, this in-' I'll ^ � . pain was over, and she could lie ou the sofa y P� Y' r marriage make ours pure and righteous. Poor Mrs. Smith did not rally as her stent or it 'will be too late. Don't you " `� b the fireside and have Berkeley read aloud forgive me, sweetheart -using .the old Thorne Stam his foot, " Do you may � ho and the h , Y y .< y 1?�. yeicians-as is understand . My darling -my boy is - to her in the evenings. Blanche, if she hap• word tenderly- for the�ssake of 'my great wish to mad en me !" he exclaimed ; enstomary when a case bmf ea their skill- dy;ng p' and she buret into a passion of s ,.; . I ' paned to be there, world sit on a low chair love. It's my only plea his voice took a '` there is no sin, I tell on ; nor scald oar recommended farther and more tom late of her hands a d wa' k beside the sofa bus with some delicate bitleading tone as he advanced the plea marriage be unholy. Ion are to us c The mast take her ab pig& est of all for a woman to steel her both for nothing on God's earth but a try send for a carriage. There's not a +h r.,;a4<,.ar*,. , y y. torturing y Paid, and <. , { of fancy work, and Inter in thh g what the excitement of foreign travel moment to lose. Oh, m bib s m baby!', k= u` ` evening Berke would- take her home, h� meat' scruple. - would do toward preventing her from sink- "You can't go Out y b s storm. IL's 't,T •`s.1. .. Sometimes Pocahontas world bring her Meat I understand, Mr. Thorne, that For a moment . Pocahontas lay quietly lng into confirmed invalidism General sleeting heavily, and I've been ill. I can't ?' { . n^, ' : work and listen, or pretend to listen, with love for me suggested the thought of in his arms, lulled into 'quiescence, Then Smith, who had abandoned every care and let the rest b divorcing our wife ?" she questioned a wrenched herself free and moved pp you go all that distance with only a s��?,r,t - but oftener she world 6o into the hoarsely -11 that I came between you and awn from him- It had been said of his wife t embra ofdevotinghimself maid, an �� how am I to titin out in such � Parlor and play dreamily ,to heraelf fory 1� $ caused this horrible + It is not -it her proposal with weather?" objected Mr. Cumberland, who, �. =f+ • ours. Side had taken np }ler music itgdus- � that she could be hard upon ea¢��. and meted on the experiment when he was opposed to a thing, was an ^° triorsl and ractised hard in her can not be true. God above . Have I occasion ; the occasion had hem tried as adept in ding up olistaclea I tell you it's y p spare , arisen, and She g speedily as possible. p « 11 �`4 i tnonnent& fall+en so low .-am I guilty of this terrible was hard. Some weeks before the day appointed for impossible, Ethel It's madness, on such a I i � . She had been playing a long time one ; " GO !" she said, her face Iran as ashes, her marriage, Ethel removed herself and her night as this. t"w : evening in April, and had left the piano for Princess,'! he said, meeting the honesty but her voice firm ; `` it is , you who Fare belongs to the house of a poor and plastic " Who cares for the to ? " v Ethel. i . • -ra low chair beside the open fire. She was agonized eyes squarely, " I want to tell you cruel ; you who are blind and obstinate. the etc of m wa inn who was in the habit of allowing her. whose feelings if evanescent ere tense. el, - -tarred.-----Althou -$ rm - . self-to-..be--run-into--an -mould._-her--niece i-wm--5- r gh p g -had come the -• __._ �- _ triage ,wit thel_ ,- I_o3-e€n11--neither See nor-usnderstand-� h , y. , G�eot7• I d`on t want you, I'IT--_..__._..�...__..__ ___- `" a were .chill and the room was and of my ssnbsegnent life with her. I had this thing may not be I have showed out should re4e- According to theirs g 1;y *� y ming gree by myself. Nothing shall stop me. if it large. Her hands were cold and not intended to harrass yon with it until my thought, and you will not bend ; im. menti Ethel gave her whilom husband due stormed t re'and blood I should go all the , she !Spread them out to the blaze. The later -if at all ; but snow, I deem it best] .plored you to have pity, and you are notice of her plans, and Thorne, at same. I'll walk -I'll crawl there, before I ;It `t' �Y heavy curtains billowed and sank and bil-. that you should become acquainted with it, merciless. And yet you talk of love! you once removed the child to Brook- will stay here and let my boy die without fi lowed and from my lip& It will explain many love me, and would sacrifice me to lym. and ' again, as intrusive puffs of Wind .thin „ placed him . under the me- He is my baby -my own child -I tell officionaly through, the crevices of the cid gs yonr'love ;love me; and would break down care of a sister of his father's, a you, Cecil !-if he .isn't yours! " casements Blanche and Berkeley were Thew he briefly related all the miserable the bulwarks I have been taught gentle elderly widow who had known sir Of, this fact Cecil Cumberland needed no "s '.z ` -_ - ---Loma ]Donnewith her r' She ha� ingpsllaat °-gHebearwg diadl glossed over anon I oth- to onnmotennderstand -t4 �gistify_ foul --love• -a W_t_Hih.�he pnti�the liarid�of--an- minder: - It seas -a thorn thatpricked-and----._:_�_. _ the book and o e seemed to me no , furnished, only �remov- stung even his dull nature -for the child_ ) < •. - a Week ago, and did- not care to heal it on his oafs - - again on_hunself,,bnt,stn� Aiffereat,- ss.- noble---and--unselfish. • Leave mS --such' article3 as had :belonged to his fathe lived Toa eala'is tem rament it - F�' over. utg to show throughout how opposed 'to me ; I am tired ; I want to think it out Pate• The house was"hateful to him and is galling to be reminded of a predecessor in _ P �a_§ The front door opened -gnietl it was tine marriage was this marriage how far alone." he felt that should the heart` } � always on the latch --a d footst pr a removed from a perfect ancon was this Thorne stood. Silent, his head bent in which he dreamed ever dawn for him, w life it closed over him ; if the man still affections, even when the uveae it iia alo the „ball • nick union, Pocahontas listened with intense tho ht- " Y " he sal « • must be set amid different , •.'0 � ; �° ng es, d. Presently, tt surroundings intolerable. U atter ght to the parlor do�orr ; the knob strained � � . following every word, will be better so, You are overwrought, m those which had framed. his matrimo He was not a brute, and he knew that ha ' `�` 6 turned. ' No need to turn her h sometimes almost anticipating them. Her and your mind is worn with 'excitement • 'nom failure. , �, . sad. no need heart ached for him -ached wearily. ) Twelve hours after the meat yield to his wife's reasure=that he to question of her heart whose -step, whose y Life osn need rest. To morrow, next week, the marriage had no choice but to yield • but he stood hand that was, to ass whaee had been so hard upon him; he had Suffered week after, this matter will wear a different bad been Published to the world, for a moment irresolute, staring at her with " t • filled the room. �. pr esea� Ss. With ,a woman's involuntary 'hardness aspect. I can wait, and I will come another marked r was ` '1." lam agsain page speed- lowering brows a heart curse on living Thorne came across the room and Stood to woman, .she raised the blame from It will be different then.,, ing +southward, addressed this time to father and dying child slowky formula K a j y' y� Thorne's, shoulders and heaped it upon " It will never be different " • the mice Pocahontas, and accompanied by a thick, in his breast. . obipoSite,. great light of o in his a those of his wife Her love and was low • the closet written, his hands outstretched for hese Be. , gray eyes had a hopeless y letter. Thorne had decided s he turned to leave the room to give tnumbed with many emotions, Pocahontas her sympathy became h>, advocates and look:. E . i that it would be better to send a messenger the necessary orders, a carriage drove leaded for him at the bar of her judgment before, this time, t ;rr � half-roae, an inarticulate murmur dying on � CHAPTER SpIII, 4 PreP� the way for rapidly to the door and stopped, and there ' ' a !,t lips. Thorne pat her gently back into Her heart yearned over liim with infinite him In his letter Thorne touched but was a vigorona pull at the bell Thorne t . chair, and drew one for himself n to compassion The next day Thorne gnitely returned to lightly on the point at imine' between Them. had provided against all possible dell x, • He saw that her th had ossa New York, ,without " the IseartL-rug near her he was '►Pa S making any attempt to thinking it better to take it for granted that Then the question arose of who ahatild aroused, that she suffered for and with him, see or communicate with Pocahontas again. her views had modified, if not c oed, accompany . % , to ke,ep.sileuce for a little space, to ye baso pang her, ;and they found that there �. and he could not forbear from Striving to He had considered the situation earn The - strength of his cause lay in his was not a single available woman in the �� A her tame,to. recover herself ; he was eatis- `1IIg S. . .1111, fled for the moment with the sense'of her push the advantage' He went on speak- and decided that it would be hies ;Z;; , love, his loneliness, his ��, r , - coarse. o yearning need house- It was impossible to- let her go . a*��, ,Y - nearness, and his heart was filled with the � earnestly • be demonstrated 'that this of her.. On these themes be 'dwelt alone, and Cumberland, with the curses marriage which had proved Bao disastrous Pocahontas told her mother, very quietly, with all the eloquence of which he was rising from his heart to his lips, was.forced, xr jog of seeing her once inose, The was in truth no marriage, and that its annul- of Thorn's visit, his proposal, and her t e� master, and the letter closed with a were lit, but b diml Thorne ► y. passion- in very manhood, to ' o with her himself; 1,. � and �e botu to ei �� bra- went was just and right, for where theme lcetion of it; jest the bare facts, without ate appeal, in which he poured out the long Iii Brooklyn airs Gieawell met them her - 152 sl" was no love, he argne� there could be no comment or elaboration. 4 But airs 1�iason re ceased fire of his love : My darling, self at the door, and a Sur. riled- 4,� iiaacy : he" must have light to see his, loge, With all the'so had a mother's ht and oonld read be- p me I ma come to yon -or rather tell as well she might -to see Mr. � - " I wart to losok at you, Princess," he ' P 9 : with all insight tell y the sn tle arguments of which he was the lines ; skis did not harass her me no I will understand and in She motioned Ethel toward the sta' r said,n gently, seeking her eves, with 's.look master -and the were neither weak nor daughter . with many ,words, even of a rettyour in his not to be misunderstood ; "'it 'has' p -P silence nghtly. Fon are proud, and then with a formal inclination of the 1 . •. been so long, so crnekly long, my dei few -he assailed they Every poorer of Iris ProyaY ; or with questions : she Simply drew my beautiful love, and in all things I will head, ushered her m�re unwelcome est , brilliant intellect, every weapon of his the sweet young face down to her bosom a spare you -in all things be gentle to you • into a small antes I have looked on sweet face- women parlor where there was a fire S°� mental armory, all the force of lases indomit t, and held it there with tender in all save thss-I cannot give you and a lamp burning. Here she left him ('+' r mW Yon must not gall the others For this kgs• ' able will was brought to bear upon her` kisses. Nor. did Berkeley, to whom n �,t $tat meeting I want but iron -Son only, g Po , p -I. will not give you up- I will wait here alone- Her house was in the suburbs, and �fe« , mS love ! my queen !" His mice lingered and brought to bear in vain his mother Communicated the fatty for another week, and if I do not bear from there was nowhere else for him to go at �, Calm, pale, resolute, she faced him -her volunteer any comment to his sister: on I will start for Virginia at once- that hour of the ht and in that terrible over the tez� off endearment with exquisite clear eyes meeting his, her neryoas hands After what had ' you, • Vic* k • ., folded hil thee. She would not was ,nota' Thorne's�horne's proposal with joy and pride and enduring thgaLfnl• storm. Porabamtss vrag silent for her life she y t surprise,. and to them 'the girl's nes&" its �.' give way. In their earnestness both had answer was a foregone conclusion Poor Pocahontas took the The room was warm and cheerful; a onnld not Rare seporken,then. Her gray eyes and they stood facing Bch other on child ! the brother thanght impatiently, the her mother's Palms to t child's toy's lay scattered on floor and °r ;',, , had are appealing, terrified loot: As they met m, the letter sofa, a little hat and coat were a ..* ta+emb]iau� hano3s cla=sped and the hearth -rag, their eyes nearly on a level. mother wistfully, how much bitterness she put quietly. away. She world t on the table beside a ci � . The man's Band rested on 'the mantle .:;ad would have been 1 gar. case, y m her Hp revered with the intensity of his excite. have loved Jim B� her could she only answer it, lint not yet ; at night -when the and a ,crumpled. newspaper. There was► How,fiighteaed you los);, ms darling," q y yam•:, house should be quiet she would answer 'it. I nothing for the man to do .sere to Start 7 Tdaasrne maim softly sand meat ; the woman's hung straight before �g the weeks that followed Thornes The lines Con i Containing tb,e brief announce• . around and walk the . floor im tientl i keeping a tight rein •over himset£ Tour her, motionless, second retain no sad , Pa ' v , l „ ass, bat scrag together ,until north, the two families went were at the h of the list : y r �,: • eyes are e a star-.ded f$wa'& Have I the knuckles showed hard through the tense were thrown together more and I longing for death os hasten with his work, skin . She would not a way. more intimately. Blanche's '-�AP�I�• so that the false position might be ended. bees too akyrripf=Loo thoughtless Said lacca- .. �F y ewe' Cc�iae ��08� -At the Church of the I Guided by ane instinct Ethel weal ". , My love , he mnnnured eaten meat and R'arner a incrs sed illness served ring . 1t ' �' SooSou l�evr Ist>wI hirtdloaed five ve e' n�has e his a with an appealing tends g Ha1S TrinityFlgeptexnber si,-t, 13-. by the y straight to the chamber where her child. lay . `< to break down all restraints All thron h 'p- John � vestal Cecil Cumberland to dying -perhaps already d `ter. for this nae ' of look and gesture Come to me. the winter the bo had steadily lost Ethel Kos= Thorne both of this ca s y sad. Outside the 1.Ling Bas Divea3earr ed for I®S �m sweet face on m breis and as the rtn ..ted' �' ''door she paused with her hand -pressed hard `` i vatrr-as t1he caadenined yearn for reprieve. y t' call as they hoped, Pte, instead of 'Ira. *J&,aan laid the paper on the little " on her throbbing'heart, d xr Hare you no shut for me, eetizeart ! S°� dear arms around my neck I need rallying oped, his decline became stand beside her chair. "alt daughter,,, It was a piteous eight that met her vier " 1, $w you, Princess : my heart cries out for _con, more ra id. the best advice wash but -ns. word of we3nome far the . assn whose still not be -denied I can not live p she said, looking • up at the 1 seriously, as the door swan open, rendered doubly w beaver is rc+ur lore ` 1`au kzkvr I w �suld science could only bear the annouac�ement this can make no dieri'uce ' piteous by the cugcutns�Lances A luzunona A coma. Yoa knew I loved eau, Prinoeas." without you. You are mine -mine alone, of bereavement ; there was no to be " No, mother," very quietly, ,,no differ- , room, a brooding silence a tiny white bed :. ,Sad I claim 'coat lose : claim your life done, the doctors said, save to alleviate JWP Yom." tl3e vv,rd was breat}i encs ; but I thought os. ought to kno}r. , on which a little child lay; slowly and pain_ ' �'hst is that woman' What is any woman Pain, and let the sad come felly. it If only she could think that this made,' fully breathing his life away. ,y} ;..... thea uttetvsd, but be beard it and made a to �. save vOn, my dar ' o ou Only ! was needless to wo the bey wwii�th change o a difference Sh_ was very weary of the i "I , t half, movementmare for u ea,3, the light in his 1 �My lore ' ash lore ' ' It is m very fife or 'bootless erpertme nts. -Even to the struggle The argnmeata which i formerly � (To be continued.) . eyes -� P onai<ely' S ll,' he for -which I am pleading. Here yon, no mother's wilfully blinded eyes, and f&Lcely- sustained be . 6ct fhetr tamers to the lPapiera. head hi�r,nr•ti in `ch ick ; be w call giTe bee ,r had, with Ceaseless iieratiga, s time. Pity . No lose for ills man whose heart is fed hopes, conviction came at last that h'er lost their force : her battle -worn iniad e 11 I r !, .< von it+ none `y' . son's diva were numbered. . longed to throw down its arms in n' mi d i Rochester Herald : The summer is no Tau knew i ]Dred yon. PriFrcec - he �� . ., ,.: ted <• Yes,. ria marc have kraasrn ? Poeabonra riicered, and bent slightly Berke�ec, Roy alk and other of the neigh- recces] sooner here than people begin to. go in _ surrender. Her up bringing had bathing where, the water is deep without . e''' - forw-ani�ben face was white as death, boring geritlemen took turns in aiding with been so different ; this thin was not re- ' , ,. tazrst burn its wnvd rain- be it bee eves sttaage and troubled- The. thea and the t -water � is the g stopper . to reflect upon the dangers which o)�.a_:}es ig girded by the world in the ssa,me' ht as ' PO g streagsli sad Stz4e of his peen ons°Am in ssOa:hern Coanisy neighboihar3s it a .o her : way surround a person who goes into water from my heart lP rou.-t, meltzne xnd dew hes toward him es a magas: draws p opinionated, appeaed ` she G`er-e`r-Uined, , where wading is impossible and good fusing them into one_ DOM': tr t� ,...ak' where rafessiaaal curses are unknown c =cions' ,saber had eaIled swimming is imperatively neceAgaty. �e ret, lose, tine -,e is ao Ler t., su�el TAT as she rae}di` t'i o 1d he g:re Of a l t'�e. alalic i; leads that watched her co was he . ht ` �t ho a a� sh'e, to set lass , < perienced boatman who Chan 's ualeas rm wish I -- an�M �T. � and teade.3 rein ,hrdagh long weeks of ill- up her feeble judgment a t .be world`s � user-ar 'l am Sadden v she star •e,i eretn again; sn nes,.:, the ane that We,raer learned to lave verdict -to cx=ndemn . p�•s, ' the bather. who Can't swim, the near von.'' _ �� crticise WX,ietrs ama:eut yachtsman who doesn't know drew �k si s:1e Ali :he euro: o the bw:, wa5 13erke3e. 5f.ason There was derision' D: v or:,e mut; be -moven Scr. tare Porahoatas tali ed hes form rzs•,lt ;elc, P s� F'�' ` a rhos *ht: 1 sir . P enough to anticipate a squall and the called ug hes pride her smmsu'zeK.3, her aic4 t?7Ougrts df her past l;,e all tt* e etq-h, in the nature of •.he allowed the; : a 1; �) ma,;: be sarriS ,d ti�Li lei sr irifnes,cea syniid v-hic,h man-ho•hsc �$e j bather who is ignorant of the strength sense of the -tune he had done her. and L' she pr` 'heh1 "t true* d-. t3a_k on her ills soldser who had Eotnetilnez ,ha: a i_.e might be saved. - s the dertow, `� should give way &a ir�staat-if she ;�o:},i endured., w -h ch the weaker nat .,-•�e, , , . are all mentioned in i t and as�r:s,3 inti Po e tibe could not ao re��>gm i su.7 res ,ed on- To the . �H3-DTEF: �t � ne pets at this season of the year, and rie3d a s bdtfi: she w c+Jd 1� 1 tahappus they all figure in the mortuar� o. Th look in his eye&, the tendczaeea os it li this �£ A c 'a'� ialack as the grave � g?�''s.3. cJ-mr h s :sine of rnuble, ;'C' :o_; ae�,:n : :he � ,� y�:;� Sad Lis- �Chv don't the le learn to swim! 11 i�• ho fess as death. ? awne.d at hex feet : a the vo* c- voice, appeared to sap t faunda:aons of PF man b�xa - in vert . 4oiden of &4-- 1, L:- `. - a;,rm of a Jaauas; Pe4P 11 „ c. tame: as high as hesveaez e�te4d ? �. ; mouth a scan :the old debt of kiadnes= wa_ A Tw♦rtriice' hes rotation and to r .rn iii bear^,, t., w az ever. I within her. fore be4. ' cancelled and a new• aunt 01?ezlb a-ith a �:noe-her re -cm f-,,= her weidja^ . Why have von �roaae `� she `� I cel na: come. slip wa led in ant 1, -h�PP in the balaus_ whi h h3rl len y `- �• i The out -door household work in summer `• .rs ]�xi her .<,Hate s` h no mer:r'-ao gats for :rte henhi to fair mcmth such as that of the summer kitchen washing pa• roP On a staL. desz t liisa. srorn=g, , a, ,d , t •,e der Z2:t,s of Par' ng �T tone one of gtaozsss ^cinch Hsd roa T -mem is s hzzmer .ore=s us I da:* n,•t �, "'m and ironing, is a sort of make -shift with not done, harm enough . Whv have torr Wanner sr as laid :q rest i he r� .�,erlati ,_,. faazi -i=. • level : a cAkT I cannot Isatth srareyarCl }ode .or' c,alr mat:r mishaps like barns and scads But came • Foca: Temgle one rhos: -Y€ * :o h,rr '-,,:e r- 'The e Mr. Jno. Heinemann, Middle Amara, Iowa Thorne started slightly, bat c+omr�e�rlel " Theme is no•banler,' nded Tho- , MAwn. It w•as the l.r,T s vwn rbc aest i cebea�ea:�; . " and Is. hi tom' s^`uch a • a:-.mu;a;,i,n ,,, sr,� C- A-, has found the true remedy. He hiLLL mself. It vssa� the formes ma-raE� ,rise call st.C.):Dowi?�§re ani h2b IDotltie: fest cxsnst> Six-, w cx�apls d • es Sad en -a^e ha:. �: dirorti,> :fibs seat it ke�`a lv--.er�'ry w -<--.-, aTe free rasa . ria s a vs s ?] i' a':3 tri, h Ehe sr j '> i !save p'ry;etretl orGx ,r P..�. n ' e , of pe sacs scalded my leg with boil hater, I a { ,• s ` l ink a .::e ._ .a hn c: -- t.<.e.:.n^ tae :•c•..a,.ns �;r :_I 'd is—s,de �y 1.; r : Saar ha3 a �aine�i car^le a. tlaC &-an;e time r r '' \ must d&r osti." h meaia]et d.dwitt. hex. diTize, to keep :us .tsuadez, sere' tine law those ofsbes oven Pe�sple at Gr vsoa.i The Tbarne a Sant veLl eD�, h ha i. w�`h' sae tr�ttl # t Iamb's 1'1tYprotnptly cnred My ••• �" o;Satz os•n will. 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