HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1886-04-23, Page 2••••111.••••••••••••
- 5.-.. ----; -
•
...... .... .
"1 wett.;:eil her,. eh:, nail I could no ,
longee see Ler.. 1.:eols 1 1)e eon notice, •
sir, where t'ie reade. jein-oser there to
the -NY‘tit : • • •-•'+'•-.71111.:i 110t... nttb I can.
I was aleseei a ebarp one wita ley eyes
'
from a vceeeetee Weli I followtd her curiOsis-lik-e„an" it seemed to ine that -iso het e to ,- elate e
until selee I. -43... -aa tliore, and then 1 sr.tve elle was like the yet ies Indy w e. - at .. •"- 1 re , se wo se enia • ,'t,:'.- ‘Ii.,1 ..
. It ‘71:'.'..• G ;.',...), ,St" tea : !.; I would have_ lived iny pain through, even. .
though my life ehouhl be its cost. And
eseho-Ools Cie mid • that did. notierel te• • boros. lied she velations iu theeeparts, useeise:,; : lee .4,ettiee lire so 1ao, .
Dorielinster. I didn't knew,until tee ,,,,,, . . :. . .
_
41 Stay, air," she earl; 43 there oes horns mieht lisee men oun a a ,
thing -it noplos to niy. roind /vow. and the dear Fether of, all would. have in, mY proper senses all those interrain.. MASNIN0 A: ot. .arristm,
, .
htlts
while agh heard, through. one of the forgiveti eins. leel been wicked able hours, I should luxe been driven. to
neighbours, tintt a strange Ydntielatle 11 ad PerhepetesyeS, often ; indeed she hal my death by fretting and worrying and , -
eozne to stay at a house about fon): 'Wed to be good -only there is eo inmeA longing for yen! Bat yob" -steadfast. •.5•11-41.:i-leVii -A' If CARD
-44
• soua you or you -never. ouitee 11.VNa I.WAY.
„
1 RENEWINU AND NEW LO 4.—THE Vick/Elt '
111/1.1$$ .DEPSW
1
- 1. f (1 in between then and now. Had I been 1, - -'"NE"'"'` " il`r•"? ""'"'" 4 11 IT 1' ' ' vt?
-. irate- k mid, f.,r 1111.,:',111.,Mt, 11 litot . ..,.1..4. 1t....111.11.11(1.4..!
. . ,.
bo mvo nee, Should never have' Traies leave isliston as f,
from this I atiked about her, beine alsvive•s to be lengt,,1 tar lesre, althectsei Y
lit 'recalled
1
7;0/ i 3111. ,
iny good 'Mall came home that elle • "No," -says Dicle-e," no, it could not ver -ee,141Y aro
Itt tli ”tt 1-; no trivt :
found some way to toll her o' the e still what- they told me of lter WAS
An.:1 titc.1 y tem to .1tr.t." „ Tell ree,' she say.s preeently,
how it was I failed., howyoudisoover-
.
meant to go Dormiuster, or I'd have be she..
Vt, 0 Ate '74{ Mb? 1 elu-a..n,
take she was .malEhig-I felt that, eteay like hoe," pereiete Mrs. Runlet eaeerly, Ilow still it grawa How long the
• • • eil rae 9"
now "-sailly-" has all to be done
over again. INly past trouble goes for
nitught," She catebee her breath heft -
for her Snob. a pretty yOung ladY $110 an,' there seemed to be something iaye-
was 1" • „, terioes too -queer„ BS it were. 'TI 011
on
" Where .des the other i:oatl-tIdone youe way, .sie ; why tyhoulajet yoli E00 if
the young lady • took -lead to asked. it meget eo elle
13ouverie. "OU my way ?"
".To Thurston, sir. -A :good. town so . • " Yes, sure, t�- Thueetouse .I. ba OL 1n1 1.1nr at lionee 2 Hag even Mole oorne s
" No-S'ir Ohicksy. There! Did you
.
far as vegets,hies pee, Let eething to ! thought ier-DY a thuo to 10 o'er there to think of her as dowl ? . Oli, doer, deist -
Derminstee," . , , .......
. ' I 'myself -to the Cottage,f Meau-thates. ' Dit:k. 1 Did Ito know how Sill level him ever think he would eise to knob. 0,
height-sto be regerded as a person of
"Hare yen. re traps'at any esti:tees i What 'tis celled -to- eee ifit-might be my --etliat it was for hien-to eavo him from vital importance, the actual discoverer
horso ?" Rb/F7.8 Dick, turning -with U. .1 - young lady-hoggiu' your pardou sir- the dull hureing paiu thee, will lino in
of ourlittle deserter ?" •
suppressed iteratimwo to t40 .aLi,tiou• but I have so much to do that spareinos • her own heart for ever-lthat elle loft . " You naustu't cell raiene,mes," neer-
_ master. ' . nicets hrelmost unitneWn to me, An old all, all? s reurs She, With e faint return of .the.91a, -
"A horse, sir,? Yes, but not for bar. i gentleman lives at the -.eottage ; very
-es A dr , hut pa •ion te 501) breaks from
e SS a .... k . . $.1. , 4 hiovous. spirit
tees," .. •
. .. ' 1 •eheritable lie be; though given •to soli- • her. It seems-teagitate all her delicate l'r.otbY lu-so • - - - •
This .gleam-- fromestles-fareaffed. ae;s:•
13ut it is all the satrap to•„13-oeverie, . Any 'melte,. au, peeee mixio, eat,. the. eeseee, The eegee loogisig of eoe spirit
strikes with a certain, sense et pain upon
to ride or drive, RO .long as be .is getting , 1veiglibours round; au' SO. I .elsought as is almoet p:tst ceetrol as she dwells on
Bouvevies. heart, Hie eyes. fill -with
nearer toiler. •To arrange .matters with • itow----s" • . • Whet is mid syline mialit Italie beeii, hag,
. .. es -
the station-inester about the leao of his • ‘ e yes, I'll goIliere," 'gays., 13011Verle. ' . not those past days,. KO rich. in ,glatleese
horse ie but the work. of . a moment; • ''` Turning in his paddle, he Hiniles down been overshaelewed by so cruel a cloud.
. There is ino question alieut terms. Lea- at Jr. There ifs. a brightness in Vs • With a little gesture .full • of despair,
ving his card. And a, .suffieieut sten el eta° she has not seen there -beforee--a. she turns as though to ge indoors,. Her
money to buy: the ;melancholy animal sort of vague unsatisfactory hop° :that
presently; produced-eas •Ourety for ite ..etill has comfort in it..
return- Bouvevie starte upon - hiss jour- , • "Why, there now -I'M . glad ' to see
:my. . . you smile at Me," says alio kindly. Then
.. 11 18 still hot neon, end as yob the sun, -
sea..tows .. Alreees -Sarno has sate.
in a crimson glory- banal. the nevrest "It wasn't I,". eaya- Dick. • Then he.
„Irtaeughs with au irresistible merriment.
hills. How quickly the stare areeemem.
Mit to (leek • the summer sky 1 Is it se give you s guess," he . aye, "as to
who was the real ander."
bolo,/ holtina those stars that. they dre.tin „ udrotr r,
tears.
"I have answered all your ciu. estiOne,"
ho says. "Now -answer mine. Tell
mo how it is you are here, and with
wil°14—"
sudden movement prevents a young . .
lu a few words she infilses him master
man, who fey a lone time has been
of all her actions from the hour she left
watching her in a nervous anxiety that Greylands until now. With simple but
, has eliecked his desire to advance, from
• fail se, beek into tlie shadow of the ever- earnest gratitude WM &Wells Upon the
tender care showered upon her by these '
.
.: -..e., Go your ways,' • she says, waving .
' inni onwardses, an' I'll- pray. ilea.veo nrevns `behind, .bini. Thus surprNed; he
.yoe ina.v heve.koate'et better then Mee wrselY amide still; and lets his !longing
to emits; *at before .you end •yoin: 'bed i',1 r-3
.A... '', (3yos seek.. bora. • . .
. .
night." .
though sinking, has not made a peeress).
preach to the end of iterace, when Diek
pulls tein before theevaysido (*Wage
where Doloree crieved'a rest.. '
• The good woms,n Of the hotted, coming
forward, curtseys gravely to the strange
pale young man whoedisincistuting, stops,
quiddy up to her. ,
"Some Cum eince-a 'bog time since
-a month," :begins he nervetisly-"a •
young lady might &eve &me by. your
place -she might, I say. • Did you- see
her? Do you know, anything • of her 2
If you do "-gazing with •heartfelt en-
treaty into her eyes- I implore you
" liere he breake down for a rho-
inentyand, -turningsde, essakes-sonte
transparently unnedessary effort te alter
Lis- horse's girths. Oau you tell mo
anything 2"..he so,Ys presently; in a low
broken tone: -
‘, A young lady?. truly, lb would
be a month cotne yesterday since e
'Opting lady walked in here to me an'
•
asked if she might sit for a bit. A lady
she were certainly, an"..quite • young
thing too-pnrty, but' so,. silent, an' with_
a sad, sad story in her eyes the while;
• perhaps it is her you. look Lori -sly ?"
" Yes," says Dick hoarsely.
"Ay, so 1 I guessed she come of de-
' Cent people, she was that • quiet ate- re-
served:" "
"Did she -was she -how did she
look ?" blurts out Dick at. last, still One-.
ploying himself With a tictitioes
amination of the paltry housings of the
o.nimej he -has bestridden: - • •
" Main bed, Sir -an' sorry I ain to tell
it to the likes 0' you; an' of her -main
a
, anew, • ab' her little bands were trem-
bling • are her fest " -She hesitates,
sheckied by something in his face. ;
He has turned .completely wand, for- '
getfill of his 'ragitatioia, ,
"What ?" deinande imperiously..
•'" They were bleeding:. Ay, indeed,
the peer keit," says the woman, stibdut
ed almost, into eilence by 'the terrible
Look in his eyes: '
There is a" silence that seems •bong,
end thene-
• " It hetet bo her Of whore you speak,"
be says:, a. low -vehemettt tone. • "11)
is imposeible." Hi,e,face looks ghastly.
s Her feet -her little, poorepeetty -feet,"
he murmur faintly the 'very desPair. •
. in his voice kills the, thought' that he
ands anything to disbelieve in laer state- .'
• 1 • IQ 1•
• .*
CHAPTER'
Then all in a moment she soma him.
4Ier mind : dies. back . from dietant
thoughts of him: to the knowledge that
he is here before her, standing osier.
The dying 'son is glinting through toe there in this most blessed twilight.
waving trees, casting warm patelles ef - He conses quickly up to her and holds
liaht aeon the 'MOSSY sward. • There is out his arms, enAgony of love upou his
no sound upon the ealm eveeing air 'save • fade.. She runs to him; ebe -flings- her
e - ,
_the murmur ofthe stream and the gen- iunocent arms.' aronnd his -neck, and
:tie movement of the boughs and grasees, cliuge ".to him as a tired child might
Just here the lawn is lost in a : dense ghee who in its weariest hour has re -
shadow east by, thebranching trees that gained its parent's breast. ' • • •
• grow 19w down until their dreoeing No tears fall from her; no Word vs -
'leaves remelt 'event oethe-water'S bosom. ca.pes. her, . She lies within -his arms
• -The inexplicable SWeetness of the air, seuieseene, her breath • hardly 'seems to
the Softness, • the- purity of tone, the , pass her lips. - • •
.depthof thseareenness that lies within • "My derbies my Soul 1" seiclairns the,
0, -
that 'charmed range of firs upon the • young man, evith uncontrollable emus -
e,
right hand, who shall give voice to ib -tion. '" Speak to m,e, let me hear yetis
' all? It is indeed' a '.porfeet evening, a. •yoiCe 1" • ' • ' •• ' '
lingering renleinaranonof a mostperfect • 'AS though the sound of the well-leeed
summer. . . tone's has power to le:masher, she stirs
. Wn his arms, and .a heavy sigh es-
!, 0 prrow's crown ot soirove Is remembering '
capes her. For a moraent she regains
, . , happier things."... . , .
, Dolores, standing in the foreground of consciousness. . •
" It has been, Tong, long thee 1" she
this charming picture, with her hands
_ whispers, se faintly that he has to stoop
• clasped listlessly b.efore her leeks as
though her pale young • head' has been to hear her. • ••' .
A '•"Too long!" returns he,. with. vebe- •
already bourn:14)y that sad wreath.
mence. • •' ' • .
slight willowy figure she appears, geZ••-
ing with sorrowing eyes into her prelfe ,IIO might perhaps have said toore,but
soinethingsome slight lessening .of the
and forgetful for the raoment of a future
hold of the gentle arms --tells him the
that can contain' for bar no hope. • .
truth. Gluing virith •anxione haste into
She is dad in • a white gownthe •
her face,,he sees that she has 'fainted.
riame white gown in -which. she left , her
Lifting his -shadowy burden and hold -
home now :made fresh and pretty- again
ing it close to his heart, Bouverie moves
as MI:g gdgiriottb's hands ,tould man -
un -a --towards the • house .lioldin thus the
age. e .
chiming .brilliiintlralititit ber head, thing h •
which is scarcely a degree' legs • sunny:
than 'they; .On every: branch "the birds
are Chanting their evensong„ but all.un-
heedeid by her, • .iler thonehtessireeffer
OFeS es • 111 wor ,
learns :witba hitterjoane of sorrow bit
light his burden is -so that it can' the world." ,
arangers into whose life she has fallen. •
•
who or what I Was," she concludes, ...stoney to lotto. oneeieteit rseitieuee, corneiu Why pay others 7, 8, o and 10 per oent
--
/
" Without b. hesitation, ,not knowing kil'I.ES YOU.Nli, Co5illISSFONEli,' ,Ctii..f.
..0.1.v a l'A XCElt, and issuer of Marriage Lidensoit
` they took trio in -and banded me with a,. when yo» can get money from ue at 0 per c.
Kin i and Quoell St acts, Myth. ' '
' tieing 14;i.
. 1,05 p.m. ittixeit
.1..11.1. o :KT ru-iii , 1, • c lying West.
10.0 3104. Iliixtdi .•
3. i 01.30. mixed 1
4.110 p.M. 1.01Xt.il 11.1.1 v.1.1. t:slint•tis
. Mill Ili WP.STI• ON IMALWAT.
Ntoi tit. Going Synth.
•,:•Apri ss 0s, • • • •
7,00 p.t,i. • Xpr.....4 • 4.13 p. to cepiess
NIUS110 TEACYHER3
IS NOW READY TO RECEIVE PUPILS,
—
HEIN MILLER l'iritSERY,
Firm AND ORNAMENTAL TREES, Nolte
• \VAT SPRUCE, eteereli AND
, . • AseTRACHAN VINE,
f THE' LAW= at, WHICH mr. MAKE A SPECISITY
rotrr.iMorval (.1:•ar;tigs,
. CI
LARGE, STOCK . Ar!,10
The 1317111e. 1.1.118111p1114 trf'l 411,11411.111.11.Kty loG G010 "01.
eteere low stees thvo Rutin.'" Ri0 thing 10.
this (Amin:Mimi 5(11 Kt% o money by purollagtig Inter.
Orders 11 JAR mill be peomptla att(nd,d to.
1.8SelVt.$1 •„itieit01...S•• STEVIART, BentoiliOr
et)SVICVA,1\i,:rtt;-.• c. .
ouniints.dotters for ()Merit etati 31anitolut.
OFLIUS NEX'f DOOR BRA, CLINTON'. •
BERLIN.
11zicrrns.r.a.s- ot'. , .
AltRIAGE LICENsEs,-.•-APPLY 10 TI
41.9. undersigned • at the Librax•y Rooms, Smith's ,
"- 1 $TEAril EICIILERS
*Block. •SO-
• :
NIONEY To LENI). IJARGE OIL ' • AND GENE.'11.AL iNIACH1NERY...
. •
ORDERS-:- PRO gPTLY -;-
H. Nelson 84 (Co.
mordry TO LOAN. MORTUAGES BOUCHT.
919‘,• FlUvArs ErtiP/i., O. 01,11oe
• .• over J, JaeltioiLLitoac, Albert street.
„es
sews on geo. elerreaeo security, moderate
ate 01311'401'0st. 33. Chilton.
•
tr'l H. DOWSLEY, AI, D. 111. B.O. S. ENOLAND
1,./ Physician, Surgeon, etc. Office and. restaenee
next liaison's Bank, markot square, Clinton,
9 AITLErox.,-08710E-AT ItESIDENOE
.1.!thu Ontario street,Olinton,opposi to the English
1.turch. Entrance by gide gate,
$503000 To LOAN at 6 por Cont.
carefuluese, a sympathy; not to be sur-: _ ,, - __. .... • • _
passed, so long es I live I -shall bear , li .n. PROBBFOOT, 01)M ,1!1.biGINEEkt,
in ray heart the memory of their good
dembeto -inc. • , . ,. Architect ana Draughtsman, 131.910tIls BLoCK,
' Clinton, ' •• •
•
i -1•1•,..ProvitiOlal And DO OSOloft band Surveyor,
,6 It is well to know that their reward 1 .
is sore," says Bouverie solemnly. •it, Atte ve.-oeSsue: eteemeeeenv ST.—
" There iS iletiCe for 11, while, and then
suddenly,, though' some thought he
has been herbouring has been too strong
for him, he turns to her with a curious
anger in his eyes which is still over-
powered with love. • -
" What did you mean by treating us
as yon did'' he says. " Did you under-
stand ? • Did you do it 'wilfully ? Or is
• it possible you could not guess at the
• depth of the misery to which you con-
signed ns?.It was A Jiving death we
-endured. from day to day.. Did you
know how we suffered 2" He lays his
hand upon her shoulder, and compels
her to meet his burning eyes.
" Yes, for I suffered too," returns she
gently. . '
" Not one -hundredth -part so inuch as
We did, I tell you it was horrible, the,
doubt,. the despair,- the everlasting
fear 1"
" Ali, do not scold rae!";entreats she
.She nestles closer to him.
Sheitea,ls one hand round bis neck, and
With the other turns his gad face to her
. own. "'Dear good Dick!" she Whispers
woeingly, and- press upon his lips a
little soft -fond kis.. Ther -is --a pease,
and tlien" I do think;" she. says, With
very handsomest- and nicest face ihall
hardly so be. Called. ow white she '• What man could withstandthis ? Bou-
t:Ali:y.)1211cm. ,verie, in spite of his etern endeavour to
looks -how -still ! Is it
e , • • with a leek ei the contrary, smiles broadly.
away -lost in- mournful memories of • 8
terror upon his ace, he hastens his foot- now -see how. conceited
1 steps . • , • . pan look' says, his temPtrees, • Canty
hoe' -of him! ' ' • •
Perhaps it is the rapid movement . taking 'asleantago or his. sli' derelic.
, .11er gaze is fixed upon that tiny speck .
. of the great. ocean that shows Clearest •
• through tile air, perhaps the beating erf
through the break in the. beech -frees:
heart so near her own, or the
' beehe thinking of a day now gone, Wheel, herlever'S
.• she walked hand in hand with 040 most „Mere conseiousnees of her presence, that
reviVee her; At all events, before helms
dear to her along a gleaming Shore, A
lovelight inter eyee brighter then eahit- lielf coeerecl the ground tho4 separates'
them. frore'.:the house, she iseestored.
' sedticieg gold?. • 7,
,She is quite motionleas. Not a inoVe, again• ' 7 '" •
Mint betrays the fact that eheis"living. , She struggles -faintly, to I
still Netting heaVily
Iler Soul is' wandering, andethe body'
softly -,2 -it y. •
"She Wins
"It i
ton from the coal pat
she speaks; she bpl
laughs aloticl:
Butt
seS virtue. • As
es generously and
(st_iry givieg voice to her mirth •
s it. She starts as though struck
y some unkrioWn hand. The mere
• sound of her own merriment IULS fright-
eet; ind; • cued her. • She 'chocks it • and palee
nsthiin; •sighs again.•• •
" I do not think•I have laughed," she
went,- " SheeembLnotliaveheeneninche wahe silent. ecstasy for ita return.
hurt. • Not mach-say-it.1" , cries lie . Her form re11iet4 the • evenirrg
tuiTaing suddenly upon the woneeni witli .breeze ; her face -too thin,alassandworn,
' • and tee foil -of spirituality foe this grime
a passionate egony of grief in his eyes.
Then, Suddenly as it came, . all the'
• prussion dies from him', and,, lettine, ide
• arms fall upon the seat not his saddle
and his head on his. arinS,.he bursts into
tears. .
"An' the best thing that could happen
to him," says the excellent Mrs. Bur.
uet to herself; and, as if to' show how
sincere she is in liee .helief, she takes,
• • his recipe herself, and, covering, her face
with her apron, sobs unrestrainedly. for
several minutes in the most comfortable
manner possible.- ' '
" Take heart, dear," ehe says, after
a. while. "While • there's life there's.
hope, you line*, an' she may be 'found
yet-leastways, if yoo an' I be thinking
of the same young lady. • A white fro*
she were, with ribbons on. it blue as her
eyes, bless her. •Pale -blue 'they were:
May happen her 'eyea. were gray ,to
soree.'! ' • • . r• • ••
• "Yes, gray," says Dick ; then w
a forlorn reproach in his 'torte.." by
didn't you keep her till we fOun er ?'
• he asks mieera,bly. ' :f• •
"-Because she Was ben on
• says Mrs. Burnet. " An' ho NVLIS I to
try an' stop the likee ' er ,Slie. was
forever startin' an' min' toe, an'look.
• 44
earth !-Is slightly raised, so, that ono
• witching may rnerk the ravages that Ilia•
grief and illness haye laid on it., The.ee
a,re no tears' within her eyes ; but(ther'cr
is;o, sad wistfulness Shont her carte
mouth nmee pitiful than any weepin .
Now she sighs „faintly,. and h eyes
w'ander to the yellow hills bey nd, on
.• which already the mists of fening are
("
descending. • Perhaps ther , just behind
them, lids her home -4.r werd 1 -and
all that made life swjs t. • .. . '
• How long is it ifice last she dwelt
• with those she
Nay, a centnr
• of time bars
Must all
these
tre
Di k 'and ne dreane?:" •SLITS, in a trouhled-whisper, since las
s atlast: • -
77:1ST' darling," • ,'•
n't etake me to • the hetiee-at
not yet. ,Tlie soft air does use good;
d there are. SO. many things I,nsust say
to you alone." - : „•
,
She,sinks %son a gaiden;sehenear her,
• and be, wrapping a lonee that is
lying there vety tenderly around her,
they areia.squite hidden from the outer comfort' rehires she, with lowered eyes
. . ' and tone. . 2
"You • are sure. You are better here ' ".11) Shall 1" says Dick Stoutly,.
-tilanThrdeors ?"? he asks her anxiously. t this monsent a yoke comes te them •
across the scented lawn.
. " Mifie Dr:florae, Miss Dolores l''
I am Coming.," returnsDoloresqUick.• ..,
":Oh, coree, came, dome! Do iny dear.
The dove is beginning to fall.":"
LJ 'Murray Block, two iloois east of, 1 wigwag' en-
trance. Iteasienee, opposite the Temperance Hall,
Huron Street, Clinton. ()Mee hours, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m,
ve SS. Warn, esecno it OF, MUSIC. PUPILS
ill a t t on de d a t their own residenee,if necessary. Ite-
iidenee, John Itobortson's, Huron Street, Clinton.
-Itiee's now method taught if deSiICil..
• I Saw yul/." Senteepaiefuleiecolidetien.
returns tolrer, and she.elend.ders. " Oh;
those laeb (she says, ." If .1 Could
• only forget them. • if I might blot them
from. my happy past; tut they spoil •
all."• • '
" Our paetenay not be altered," says
• Bouverie. •" But to compensate for it,
there' is always the bright possibility of
herameddabetthe rhododendrons that al -glad feture.
"The future 1 • To nee it brings, no
seats hin'eself beside her. •'They are so
yes/ Four weeks ? "Quite sure. It was only a memen-
ether What a world tery weakness. It is gone now. You .
startled me 0, little" -with a Van Smile
eased her by since then ! :
7" not yen so much perhaps es ttie
er coming days be dreary as
she strange fear that what I saw was merely
st, all colourless, all blank?
les as she.pictures to• herself the a vision, and that rohoola wake from'it
ible monotony of -the gray existence
he has sketched out for herself, an ex-,
istenos barren of love and tender ties,
-end such fond trivial things that serve
• to make life bearable.
• Well, it is .better so I The twining
• fingers clasp 'each other with atercet
warmth, and the throbbingleart beats
back a growing . sob.' And it is alter)
long ago now, Atid..no word, no si n
presently:to litid you as lost to me as ." It lin% jou hfioW,'? says Dolores
yen were vefere.,,, in r, says .tht:Tain!g• Softly, smiling at Dick; but Mrs Edge-
" You have been •worth hate to t•o See me out after sun.
-man abruptly, unmistakable anguish in . !low12-" :-• "•.•
hie tone. ' . " She ifi right. Yee, come in," '624-
'
"Yes, for a short time. Bu•t n•ever claims Bouverie repentantly. "How mod_
mind that now. Tell me of ---." •. of me to keep yau ont all this • time.
• made -you the wreck.. tot now are ?" Come, darling.,L-
" Not until you say you have forgiven
,. ..,
. "r Must niiiid it: What is itthat has
, :" A fever of some scirt. But it Was •
me. You were angry with me a moment
nothing mueh, pr 1 nbuld not beim well, since. I cannot bear that.: If i have
dr- -doulifdliey-nOw,thitik-of.her-as,oaely.r.- ,caed You pain,Dick, try•=try.to learn'.
Yes; they must deem her dead 1 o
as I ain now. You can See that,for your..
ing in her qpiet grave, with all lifehetor- • Theirr— ' " hatitsmelkanpLown sake I inflicted
" I can sde that you are but -a shadow h''' ° ' • ' . ..
of your former Self." • .,,-
naine lost left behind in the world's "I suppose yciu meant it so..But What :.
- ments'ended, and the sad sts:iii upon her
a mistake it has all been. • And how
Dick, hear nae! I will 11 you all you
want to know afterwarde; but first tell
r -ti Li; •sTANnurix, eltADUATTI Or 'TEE PtIED1'
'..1.9pAL Innis rtmentof VictoriaUniversity,Toronto,for.
inerly of tlin Hospitals aud Dispensaries, New -York
Oeronerf or the County of Iturou,Bayfielfl,Outi •
TIRANE R. DARRISTElt, SOLI01±011,
Nothry etc, 016,M; SEARLE'S 'KOCK, .AL -
M1117 STARE; etistoic. .Toronto agents,' Messrs; Mc-
Carthy, Osier, Hoskin ,93 Creelintin.. Private fm.ds to
oit11 at lowest rates Of intei•est."
•
w. WiriLIAMS, n. A, Dr.n„GBAntlTE
Ac•Torentotiniversity; monaber of thoOdliegeo hy
diction s an d S nrgeob s, Ont. Orrie•E SES/1)Ft E the
house formerlyoccepicil by Dr.. Reeve, 3t 'bar street
Clinton.• • .
--DB. WORTHINGTON ;,PHYSICIAN URGEON.
J1.-/Aeacinclienr,Lftiontlateof the Colleg 0185y335e1330-
an13Surgeons of LoweNanada,atid I, • vitteialtiieeia,
Mate -and Ooronoif Or thoCottutyof ran. Oftletand
residence,•: --.The building f ormeil copied by 11
TI3Waites,Hurop Glib -Qt. • • •
Olinton,,Jaia.10,1871. • ••
fiLTNTON 31ECHAN S". IN`KITHTE, LIEII
•\...1AltY and Reading Perrin block, down
stairs. About 1,700 tumes the Library and
RH the Leading N9. spapers and 'Periodicals of
the day on:the't 'Menihership ticket 81 per
1.1.11.11 r e, n n • rain 7 to_
t..T App talons for: mem hersliSP reeiYed
by the Li • orlon hi. 111 the rooni.
. .
T,
IFIGEON DENTIST,. •
ekeltislve right fertile county. forthe thud
process, pf administering • •chefillhally pure: Nitrogen
Monoxide, which is the safest and bestsystem vet dis.
`covered for the. palidissaextraotionotteeth. enlarges
moderate satisfactimi guaranteed': • OFFICE, El,
LIOTI"S 'BLOCK', CMG' ItinitiAllallor Shop,. Huron
' ,• • ' '
in up an • own roa , as exec
some one to ov take her, You -you
, don't mean i114 -do you?" says the
good' woin , regardina biro seatehingly,
" I don4 knoWS hew. I eould,". says
Dick "when I love her tte I
do."
Iliffeersed-itiss
ugly. "An' are yott hor man?". She
paesest, while, -as if loot in the vastness
(Attila new knoWledge ; and then-..""
wish I could help you, Sir," she says
tiadly ; 13ut indeed have no more to
„ tell you. . She loft me without a word
• that could give me a hint as to ;where
she was gain', except that she asked me
bow far it was to Thurston.. She wee'
• the sweetest creature ever -saw, so
gentle, tio grateful for the little I could
do for her. Here at the door, whim she
wise goin', she turned an' kitified Tee."
'The good wet -native eyes fill with tears
again at the recollection, and She wipes
them -hastily, with -her Apron
" Thurston?" repeate Dick quickly,
Ho flings himself i to the saddle. He
has long since Squooz a something into ,
Mrs. Burnet' s hand, and noW riders Up to
her gate eager to puteue his sear&
afresh. But, as he steeps to lift the tiny
latch with hit whip, he hears her voice
Calling after him,, oms noon her running
towards him as fast as ago and come.
ly stoutness Will peewit..
, hurry as it marches ever onwar n o .
And indeed, if by this time. they haVe
began- to think of hey as dead,,,they hate -
not so very far exceeded the truth.
Another faint deepening of •thal heavy
fever, a few days more of exhaustien,•
and she might hale been reckoned. with
those who are no longer ansongst the
living. So near Filltb' was "to the end of
'her life's jonruey that almost tliey '
believe she bad reached it.
Oh, bow cruel were the kindly hands
that had pulled her back from the
gravel What an -irreparable injury did
these 800s." sal:nazi:tans do her when,
they meet% her from her sick cotich and
rescued her from the Berne of Death,
into whose enebrace she would so 'wit.
tingly, have .,
Now, oven nb*, she Might Bei:Midi-
at rest, lying with straightened 'limbs.
and feverless brain, with nothing to
press upon her heart save the toolearth
and the throbbings of the gently-grow-
l/1g grasses. 'Under the dewy eedi she.
would ho resting in 04, great peace, her
sonl heavee,
clasps her little slender bends
and !iglis convulsively. In heaven
" A very substantial shadow. Oh,
• me of Lathe."
• 'T'What ofber/"`"
" Slid is well ?"-with tremulous aux.
ie y, • .
„ " Well as a distressed 'mind will let
her be. Y01.1 alone fill her thoughts
night and day. Think then if she Can
be altogether as well as you could wish
laer." .
• "'You are unkind," says:the, girl, with
&quick sob.
"gust now she is buoyed up with a
hem, which, thank God, till not prove
an altogether vain One. But, if I had
failed to find 3te1i.-4!-- Oh, dear, dem:
love," erica he, with pasSionatti re.
preach, "how cOuld you so haveettified
ewitlewhat was &HIM* world to use yont.-
life 9" _
" didn't invite the fever to visit me,"
returns she, in quaint defence. • " It
waen't my fault that it caine, though in
truth I ani very much obliged to it in
many ways. Those fled days of happy
nneonsciousness, and those others, When
I was too weak to feel anything lint in-
diffprenee, killed the time that lei for
ilence for go bong? Why
du
did yeti not write 2" I
I have fold you., vsvishna yon -.to LIVE -SIZE wonicA iinctAMY.
• • -
TERMS made to suit borrower, segarciing
iwayment and pekod of luau.
Apply to •
FARRA l'ISDATJL,
BANii.EBB, CLINTON::
TILE• HOLSONS BANK.
•• lir permed by Aot of Parliament, 1851;:. , •
• 2,000;0011. •
EAD * OFFICE, MONTRAL.
Tile:N.1AS ......
Lae. R. MOLSON . • , .
F..WOLFERSTAN.THOMAS, (Mineral llanager. •
Notes discounted; '',Collec. tions made. Drafia
issued•
, Sterling 'and. American. excli awe-,
• b.ouglit .and .10131 at tweet
, current rates. '
Interest at 4 per :cent 'allowed Op 41ePOsiis.
•. • .F*N.A.EitS'.
Money advanced to farmers on their own notes with
,.ne or moo -endorsers., -No mortgage required 114 so- •
surge.. , • „
II ceen;LAN ea 'Ira:lapse. •
• . ,
January 188• • Clinton
J.- 13' ID -AL E CI 351 B E,.
•
iTEWELLEt.; &c., ' • •-•
pielecssr.c, TILE 3.11AllICIET, CIA rill'0111
' Where be keep3 a selec't aseartment 01
WA 7'CM, 'CLOCKS, JEN/All:ER Y, SILYER.
• :Which we eel sen at reasonable rates, ,
Repairing of evely description 'proniPtly
tended to, and all work warranted. -
J, BInninColt8. ,
etin1im,Nov.1882, • •
..•
Albert St,; Fieq .floOki.r Store
XCUSIOR-ORGA-
After the levereet test at the late fair in
Clinton, it waenniversally admitted that
FOR PERFECT 'AND EASY ACTION, BEAU=
OF , AND *SikEETNESi OF Ti77.4E, the
t.=ELSIQR was away ahead of illiith-
erisrand destined to be the Popular Metre.'
ment of the day. • This, aloeg with the fact
that a specialprize wasaWarded certain-
ly s,peaks-voiumes for the bistro ments, and
partieis purchasing should see the .Exerr,
• Molt before buying elsewhere,
OEO. 17. OAICBS, PROPitisros..
Factory three doors west, of Molloy's Pum
Itatleiibury St., Clinten.
15.110TOGRAPII.CT,.. •
. • ceeste,esrecolv• •
Dat L
••
risee SUBSCRIBER HAVINO:MST.005121ETED
1 and furnished hitt new Planing. 51111 with, nia:chitt-
cry of the latestimproved DattOr119, igliG lareparod '•
to attend tp all orders in hir,line'in"the most prompt -
and satisfactork3nanner, and it reasonable rates. He'•
:would also return thanks' to all who patronized tlfe.
Old firm bilforo they wereburned out, and •now being
in.P. better •position to exeCtite orders expeditiously,
feels confident 310 04)11 gi.V0 satisfaction to all, -
PACTORY-.Near the Grand Trunk,
Eaof
. .
way; Clinton,. . • '•
THOIKAS licKENZIP.
• • .
L
bld yooePNT 0 NI
. fort _
: OOATS BLOt14.4 •
-t en I hoped Yotr,would, believe' me .1-4 x
"What cruelty eau lio behind a littker-40,:elsgesseeeeoneeeseoeussa
saint -like face!" exclaims Bouverie,
taking the "saint -like face" between his -
hands, and regarding it long and earnest-
ly, "My sweetheart, how pale you are,"
ito so;ys presently, "Surely the cruelty
I spoke of has recoiled upon yourselfF"
01), my poor little pallid love!' Then,
with a Audden tine/unbent • change of
ton&-" But what does it all matter,"
erieo he, " since you are alive---olivet and
•
arms?
• With a rush of the niost invasive,
• tondeteit passion, he catehessleer to his
-beating heart, holding her thereclosoly,
as though to assure himself that it
ie' in-
daed she, the woman he adores,
°hang-
ed perhaps and saddened by her swif 1.
,gla.nce at- life, ha still „het very own
golf,
" Coine in" he says presently ; "'you
must not remain here 'any longer."
" Well, now let no introduce you to
• .„„._•,1's toe sontitetse
• 5
M•Pi.M1:714 .
g• 'inugli841118•81aill".risilnia.751"6111911411,
• (MARGE'S IttOMMATE. •
n To I 1ST T 0
11386-SPRINICI-IBEIG
.• • Impwalo
Betore buying, geVenr special prides for
Balls, Marbles, LaCrosse Sticks,
Express Waggons,Doll Carriages.
catoolirr, flASB BALI,
• CRICIMT GO 2)12.)g.
WALL IVICAP
. THE TsA.IIGEST oil BEST LI USE:.
,BEAVEB BLOM. 1300KSTO1l.1.
IV% co011:11; VlarroN
VillY1UFFER FROM ,
eadaohe
DYSPEPSIA OR INDIGESTION,
, WHEN .
EST'S LIVER PILLS
WM thoroughly ouro you. They
go loot grIpo'or purgo, but act:.
alllt•whoneyor
two cbnaldered prico:;:
OISS. • cy intro-
proxdri to boTtho •
GREATt$T.
LES --&WG
-'0.F THE., -AGE
To au iuffelers from indigestion,
. Disordered Dteracch.
TNEY. ARE AN ABSOLNTE, AND
•
•Sao thorn outi bet troth:we:a from
PERFECT...IMRE
•
yotn. miisory. Oto Mile in a box.
25o: per bpx; d beams for $1
MR SALE Di' ALL DRUOGIS7i AND
, DEALERS IN MEDICINES
Beware of Coareerfeist and 'ease teetafiene.
Genuine wra pee only in Blue, eith siema-
etre on every iiTee-rree 133131 peckage of.
these C.:sleben-eel 1IO sent „ley teSieiss
on receipt ef a 3 cora stai.u.v.
••INO. 05. WEST ,t5'd .
til AND SI SIREE7 007