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I - � — go- � I ___ � __ I __ - � �, I, , � I - — I I I � I . - I I t � , . � � . I - � d 'and abetted her son in the versing on what lay so near th the heart of THE LOSS or THE BIRKENIELEAD. heroic dflicer's behest to, stand calmly where TH-E GUILTY FEAR SGIENC& . I - A . - IF I # 0 er husband.. , 1, each -George's restoration to health, and - � . I I they were and face. the inevitable. Theer ., THE ORLS Of LINLAVER - m"'u-pleLl h w6re-no,flashing eyes and resolute looks as — . - _/ � And Arthur himself, -,arid Arthur's wife -or the sc%d possibilities that might ensue if the An �instauce or British courage that WM Graded by Go -d Co I . - - . - -3 1i I I widow-w-ba-t-calainity4ad- likewise over- event were not restoration. At length if he had addressed them on the eve of bat- ...ir'n's, ght Xlwayg . I Never be Forpotten. ,Z. I I I i Clara pleaded fatigue, and retired for the couvieq elin. , - � ? I e I taken them? Everything that wai'possible, tle ; no answering cheer, such as would have , 1 il ' was done to trace - Arthur, but nothing night, carrying her husband's letter with The Birkenhead, troopship, iron paddle- greeted his ears had he asked th,.m to follow On a trial for an assLit a surgecn, In gir. !, CHAPTER 11. - the Court that, ­ f, availed. He had gone like last winter's her, no doubt to weep and pray over it alone, wheeled, and of 556 horse power, sailed him in the deadly charge. But each in that ing his evidence, informed � 1.e, - 1, ( -1 RAPE THE PEDLAM'S DISCOVERY- . snow. He could not have wilfully des - erted asgoodwomendo. Father and son continu- from Qaee i nstown, 7th January, 1852 for the moment resigned himself to death, and took in examining the prosecutor he !oand him , . his wife, because the deepest and wa mest ed to sit there for another hour, not saying Cape, havino, on board detachments Of the farewell of h)pe, and love, and life, and all suffering from a severe contusion of the in. - r - ;�p I I I much one to the other, but smoking toze I teguments under the left orbit, with a great - I It %vas the yew.�- oi that EgYP�ian cam- affection had always existed between them. ther' 12th Lancers, 2ad, 6di, 43rd, 45th and 60th things dear! Face to face with eternity, ? - -el-Kebir -And she, left with her little baby Clam, '_ It need we doubt that many a painful thought extravasation of blood and ecchviriosis in the ,_ ptgn ia which the battle of Tel in the silent confidence offriendship, which Rifles, 73rd, 74bh, and 91st regiments. - ,� h been-4ought and won after the long was beart-broken, and, did not suz-vive much at such times is better than talk. struck upon a pointed pinnacle rock off and bitter reflection rushed through the cellular tissue, .� - - ' which was in a �urnifi.ad etate - _' might-m--ri!h beneath the stars. The British over , year. The Vicar's wife was the- Simon's Bay, South Aij-ica, and of633persons doomed men's minds ? Many a backwarl There was also considerable abr��on of ) . n The hour of eleven bad pealed out from � - 10 army- thereafter entered Cairo, c-'rry"g alive, and, whew the youn mother died. the church -tower, when a load ring was Only 184 were saved by the boats ; 454 of glance would be taken in fancy on dear fa- the cuticle. I It c, � - I their sick and wounded with them. In the took -home the little Clara, " heard at the door -bell. Shor' risbed February miliar hoine scenes, and well -beloved TheJudge-You mean, I suppose, that 6 and brought her tly thereafter the er-,w and soldiers pe . - � - hospital quarters an officer sat writina at a up with her owntwo boys, and was a true Mrs. Sommes, the old housekeeper, entered ,13; 2. . I faces never to be seen again. But not the man h%d a bad black eye 9 e � i table. fie was dark in complexion, as if mother to the child. � I the study. � . I Tile foregoing is the record in - Haydn's a heart quailed, or gave outward evi- Wimess-yes. - - I � he had been for many months under the Even the f - act of this . poor child's orphan, " Please, air," she said, addressing the Dictionary of l.'ates of one of those striking dence of mental strtiggle. Down, still The Judge -Then why not say so at on ce? � ____ - burning glare of a sub -tropical sun - while Vicar, I that be the gardener come to tell events', the facts of which, once impressed down, siink the ship, yet all was calm on Medical experts, when they ,- ,et on t�le i the thilu" and wasted face showed 'that he ed condition failed to soften the wild and 'ten. board, as if her company had been assem- itness stand, are occasionally apt, I-'ke this I In the Unnatural resentment of the old lady at us that Rafe, the owd Scotch- padlar, have upon the memory can never be forgot . W. had been and still was an invalid. found a pore man a -lying tu-night on Brath- The incident is called to mind by the fact bled for Sunday morning service. Sobbing surgeon, t,) hide what they know and"r wv� f - the Hall -Dame Norham, as she was I e, of itn' .ail, ; mont be was known as Captain Norham, rig Fell, and Lawrence Dale the miller and that the details were recently read out by wives and fatherless children were drifting � regi gerlerally styled. She would not see the - I 'erm � 9 words. It is when doctor's h 11 but to the Vicar of Linlaven and to the child ,- refused to look upon it, That it wa.s some more o' them ha' gone up and carried royal order oil the'parade groand'of every over the blue expanse to a haven of safety "i learning lo be zui�'eri L -y ti�cjr � Captain's young wife whr,rn we saw enter the o fing of her own son was nothing him down. They ha' made a bed for him German regiment, the Kaiser thus acknow- but with Col. Setorr-under the starlit sky common sense that the), do most t�o &il_i,1,i � the Vicar's study at the Close of the last f1sp I � chapter, he, the absent one, was simply and d unnatural 1� spiring examp I to her ; he had been a wicked an in tile Owd Grange, and please, air, could ledging that no more in i i le of -already in the grasp of death -there was the innocent arid Convict the guilty, � more kindly spoken of as George. And it son, and hacf murdered -yes, murdered- Mrs. George let us have some blankets and military heroism and perfect discipline no craven heart who wished to take the The question whether the person who 11 wraps to cover the pore man, for garderier could be imagined. place of any of the lielplees ones, and be fires a gun or pistol at anothe� duriLg tbe I to these dear ones at home -to his wife his own father. She bad been left by her I was - husband sole executrix of his property and says be be as near dead as ever man can The story, despite the glary of its lu.nin- saved instead. No; some at the pump,-, al- dark night call be i0entified by means of � -he was writing now. Let us look over I estates, and never, so long as she. could help be 9" � Ous heroism, is a sad one. The British though they knew the labor was futile; the light produced in the discharge has I his shoulder and follow his pen. 1. The Vicar replied that Mrs. George had troops fighting against the Kaffirs had been but the greater part, rank -to rank, and Iong interested medico -legal minds. This %, "I had a, it, should the child of this unknown, mean- o � " I " One evening," he wntes, of retired for the night, and was not' to be hardly cut -up, and reinforcements were shoulder to shoulder, stood on those sinking questicil was farst referred to the class (if . . i � strange experience. It was after the re- ly-born Esther Hales, own a single- shred i ceipt of my father's letter in which he in-. them- � . disturbed ; but that she,'the housekeeper, I urgently required. These reinforcements planks -faithful to duty -uttering no mur. physical science in France and they ali.swer. .. . was herself to give the gardener what was I were sent out from Cork on board the troop- Mar or cry -a band of noblemeD, whose ed it in thLe negative. A case tending W � formed me that your grandmother bad re- Her only remaining son, Jim, counted necessary. ship Birkenhead with all haste. Two re,ii- true heroism no Thermopylae could rival, show that their � I c decision was erroneous was . - . I . solved ' to settle her own property otherwise upon succeeding to the estates of his father Wilfrid started to his feet, and said he merits had suffered severely in the campaign and whose devotion neither saint nor mar. subsequently reported by Fodere. A woutan I than upon you. I.had been in a despairing a I Iter his mother should depart this life ; but would himself go down to the Old Grange, --the 74th Highlanders and the 91st -and ter ever excelled. And standing thus, in till- positively swore that she saw the face of a ; � . I mood for sorne days. My wound was not Jim the dissipated youth had grown UP to and see what was afoot. the reinforcements included 66 men to the broken order, with the bL'ave simple-minded person Y�ho fired at another during the I ; healing well, and I _ worried mrell into be a dissipated man -had burned, so to The Grange was a tall building just be- . former, and Captain Wright one sergeant, sailors -who were to share their fate-,az- night surrounded by a kind of glor�, and ght of - i sometEing like deltrium as I tho the speak, the candle of life at both ends, and youd the vicarage garden. The night was and 60 to the latter. There were also On ing on them in speechless admiration, t'hat that she was thereby enabled t,o identify ( helpless state in which my death would had, good ten years ago, passed into a name- ow mparatio I . D co vely calm, and the old build- board detachments of the 12th Lancers, 2nd battalion of British soldiers were swallowed the prisoner. Th -is statement ,%-as confirm. ( leave ypu and our poor children. That you less grave in a foreign land. His sister,too, in ' i I g i,ould be seen standing out black against Queen's Regiment, 6tli Royals, 12th Regi- up by the relentless waves. Not half -an- ed by the deposition of the wounded man. � � . y I should be entitled by all the obligations of had died, unmarried; and now, the estates the aky. From the doorway a gleam of ment ; 43rd Light Infantry, 45th Regiment; hour fro2* the striking to the sinking, yet De8grange-8, of Lyons, perfcrmed many � � - natural law and family ties to the provision and other property were designed for the li-ht ,-hone out; and on entering, Wilfrid 60th Rifles ; and 73rd Regiment. The 74th time had been given for a grand display of experiments onthis sub ect, and he conclud. 11 - o i ,� . which your father's mother has it irr her possession of a very distant branch of the saw the pedlar, with some others, standing had lost ita- commander, Colonel Fordyee, all that is best and noblest in man. In ali I elthaton adark night and away from every � power to make for you, azmd yet to be cut family, the Linleys of Longarth, according I beside his pack, lantiern in hand, and before in action, and Lieut. -Col. Seton went out 433 souls periehed-including the gallant source of light the person who bred the gua I I I �I off therefrom by a perverse and unnatural to tile fiat of this hardened old mother', him the figure of a prostate man on a rough- with the reinforcements to take over the -Seton, whose noble heriosm was an example i might be identified within a moderate Zi�. act of,will on the part of one so nearly re- whom neither calamity nor death was able � Iv extemporised bed, evidently in a state of omman. He was the senior officer on board to, all -and not a woman or child was lost. t,auce. � lated to you -I say, the thought of all this to soften. t o unconsciousness; Wilfrid put his hand on the transport, and next to him in rank Of the dead the 91st contributed Sergeant A case is quot-ed by Foriblanque in which ( I burned into my brain, and must have goad. So variously does adversity act and react the man's wrist, and after a time satisfied was Capt. Wright of the 91st. .The Birken- Butler, Corp-otals Webber - and Smith, and some police officers were shot at by a h-igh- � , - �ed me into a kind of frenzy. on different natures. Some it ripens into a himself that, the pulse was beating -feebly bead, which was a fine paddle steamer, 41 privates - May their glorious memory wayman on a d&rk nighL One of the ( . "I do not know whether it was in a state sweeter and nobler fruition ; others it dries and intermittently, but still �eating. The commanded by Capt. Salmon, a master in never be forgotten. OffLcers stated that bLe could distinctly see I I of daliriarn or in a dream, but I found my- up and warps into sapless rigidity. gardener arrived from the vicamare with the navy, made a good passage, and, on the There were many miraculous escapes, from the flash of the pistol that the robber � self in the dear old church at home-tbe All this Was in the minds of this little blankets and other coverings, in which the 25th February, 1852, reached Simon's Bay a ( - amongst others that of Cornet Bona of the rode a dark brown horse of remark ble � church of Liulaven. I was seated in my family group as they sat there with George's old man was carefully wrap�t' ; and the pedlar Time wg.s valuable., and, not only was the 12th Lancers, who was a splendid swimmer, a % - - shape about the head and shoulders, a d / father's pew, and alone. It was night, and letter before them. To the Vicar it recalled volunteered to stay there for the rest of the ship steaming at a speed rapid for the and reached the shore by his own unaided that he had since indentified the horse in a yet somehow it was not quite dark. The thoughts of Arthur Norharn in the da,ys of night beside the man, and to give waraing period -eight miles an hour -but tile com- exertions -afterwards lending valuable aid Landon stable- He also perceived by the , church was filled with a soft luminous haze, their youth a�nd friendship- long apo. to the neiahbours if anything happened to mander of the vessei to shorten the dis- to others, who must otherwise have perish. same flash of light that the highwayman as of moonlight through obscured glass. I " Yes," he said to Clara, 'tl�e appearance render help necessary. tance, closely bugged the shr,re. Simon's ed. But our concern is with the escape and wore a rough brown overcoat. sat, absorbed in the perfect stillness of the of the figure which George saw in his dream Wilfrid thanked him for his kind offer, Bay had been left behind, anA every stroke adventures of Capt. Wright, of the 91st. This evidence was accepted, for it was place. Then up in the church tower I heard is like your father as I last saw him. I ex- and bade the man good -night, promising to of the paddle was bring�ng Algoa Bay, the 'Capt. Wright with five others grasped a considered more satisfactory than that of I � the bell strike one -two -three -slowly, pect that I must have described him at see to the sufferer in the morning. The landing place, nearer to band. The night large piece of driftwood with which they the man who swore that he recognized a, � . solemnly -till. it had struck twelve; the last some time or other to George, and that the others also retired, all except tire pedler, to was fine. The waves rippled gently in the came in contaxt when the ship sank. Tile robber by the light produced by a blow an � stroke dying away in long melancholy vibra- picture I then drew has lain latent in his whom Lawrenoe Dale the miller stepped moonlight, and scarce three miles off could sea was covered with such floating pieces his eye in the dark ! The phyatologi.9t ( tions; and once more the church was all mind until recalled to his memory -while in back a pace and wb isper,9d : ' Rafe, I fear be seen the dull gray of the coast . line of and with men struggling in the water. ' So knows that is a clear impossibility, because . I still as death. I then observed'that the a state of semi -delirium. Yet it is very that poor creature has somethiDO' on his Danger Point-orninous name ! The hopes far as the captain could judge at least 200 the flashes thas perceived are unattended . 0 � ., - * west door was open, and that a white belt strange and very painful to have the past mind. Let what we heard him say yonder of all were high, for never yet did the men were at first keeping t-kemselves afloat with the emission of light and it is not � � of light lay across the porch. I saw, too brought back to me so vividly as this dream on the hillside to -night lie a secret between British soldier's heart fail to beat with by'clinging to pieces of the wreck. But possible tha�, they can make other obj&--ts a figure standing there, shadowy, ghost-like, does. ", thou and 1. I� would ill become us to quickened, eager exciternerit as he neared men were sinking in all directions, and the visible. � an� yet alive. He entered, and moved No one spoke for a time. Clara was evi- bring mischief on gray.hairs like his. ' the enemy with whorn lie was about to en- sharks were busy at work. Three boats In a case of murder by rstmngulation the . slowly up the aisle until he had almost reach- deutly thinking less about the dream and And so exit. - gage. Numbers strolled about the deck, were drifting bottom upwards towards the woman who perpetrated the crime had boon I ed the - altar. But he did not approach the strangeness of it, than of her husband's The cold gray light of morning crept slow- chaffing, talking, and speculating On the land. With his five companions on the a nurse in an infirmary and accustomed to - i farther, for at this point he came over condition in that distant foreign land. ly over the silent hills and into the brown I work before them ; a few were below driftwood the captain was carried towards layout dead bodies. After the murder she i 1. towards where, I was sitting, then turned Where, in the course of his letter, he spoke dales of Cumberland. The wind had died lounginz, if not sleeping, in their ham Danger Point. But the seaweed and the carried out Unthinkingly her professional 7 � and stood before the burial -place of the with much hope of his final recovery to away ; but Nature, like an ailing child. that mocks. Amorg those on deck at balf-past breakers combined to form a very serious practice by smoothing the' cl6thes under the . � , Norhams of Brathrig hall. I was close to health, she, as she read these words silently �as not slept, met the "min day - with a cen in the evening was Capt. Wright, of the impediment to landing, ind to relieve his body of her victim, placing the legs at full him, and I knew him. My dear wife, it to herself, strove with a woman's insight to aim and tearful look. I g -_ . . 1. the Old Grange 91st. Regiment, and he and the officer of weight from the bit of timber which had length, the ar.ns out straight by the side � . . L - ;. was your father, Arthur Norham I Inever read between the lines much which she fan. at Linl&ven the sufferer of yesternight still the watch bad a long conversation respect- " carried them so far he parted from his rom. and the hands open. The doctor who was ., . . � saw your father in life; and yet somehow cied lie had left unspoken lest he should lay tossing in the weird delirium of pain, ing a light which attracted their attention panions and swam ashore. Others imitated called in at once declared Such a condition . I . � I knew that this ghost, or apparition, or add to the sorrow and the hope deferred and with the fierce light of fever in his eye. on the port side. There was a slight differ- hiscourage. Some who landed were almost of the body was quite inexpLicable on the 11 I . eidolon,or whatever it was,was your father. from which she had already suffered so much. Wilfrid and Clare entered early, and ence of opinion as to which particular bea- naked, and none had shoes. This made supposition of suicide, considering tile. � . . I . 11 I - Jeould have touched him, I was so near; The tears that came unbidden to her eyes stood together& little distance off, arrested con it was, but they were agreed that it progress into th . e interior through prickly amount of violance that must have attended I � I but I could not stir. He did not appear to were an index of the mental struggle through in their approach by the wild look on the was a I;gbtbouse. brushwood extremely painful and difficult. the strangulation. . � I be aware of my presence; but my eyes fbl- which -she was passing. \sufferer's face. He heeded not their pre- Just before 2 o'clock on the morning of Capt. W rigb t led a large party up coun �ry, . - " - sence- He saw them not, nor heard. the 26th, the leadsman was on the paddle- In another case the criminal had attempt- . - I I lowed his, and I saw he was reading the "It is a shame!" said Wilfrid, angrily Clara went close up to him, and could note box preparing to heave the lead, as he had until they arrived at a fisherman's hut ed to make the death appear like the act of . 1; __ I letters on the white marble tablet which breaking the silence, as he rose and began about sunset. By this time they were fear- suicide by plaoing the lower end of the rope � I - � . records his fAthei's death. ...He a d before to walk hurriedly up and down the room. that the pale light of , the October morning previously been doing, when suddenly as -fully exhausted and hungry, having been on near the band 6f the deceased ; but he I - � - _ it with bowed head, as if in deep dejection " What is a shame, my boy?" asked the selected the left hand, whereas the deceased . � *� ,- I was revealing the pinchel and worn face the good ship bowled along, there was felt foot all day after the adventure of escape. I 1. I . and grief, and I heard these words uttered: Vicar. I . of an aged man, with suffering writ large a startling, jarring, staggering crush. The Judge of their discomfort, then, when they was rigbt-hancled, and he did not leave . � "He -gone ; and I-unforgiven I" At that " That Arthur's own mother found the hut contained nothing to eat, and enough rope free from the neck for either � . I I . up at on every feature. He was still in that state vessel had struck ! Every heart stood still. I _'. � moment, a crash as of thunder rang the. Ifalf should act with such persistent and Of unconsciousness, and the sounds that Then rang out the vcice of Capt. Salmon that nothing was procurable about the hand to grasp in order to produce the very . I . %� through the church, and the whole scene mercilesshosility towards her son'schildre escaped his lips were but the d, unin- prompt and clear-" Full speed astern I " Tlace! But Capt. Wright, with the "grit" violent constriction of the neck which ha.d. � � - n, ra i . disappeared in the twinkling of an eye. telligible, continuous monotone o?delirium, This was the fatal mistake; as the engines, - �, I Why, Arthur Norham was flesh of her flesh of a true hero, set out alone, and dragged been caused by the two coils of the rope- , ; � � � woke up. It was only the sunset gan ; and arid, blood of her blood, so. also are Clara which falls so strangely on the watcher's -reversed, drew the vessel backwxrd from himself, rather than walked, to a farmhouse A surgeon pointed out these things. Both . . I must haVe been dreaming. I and her two children. The woman canno, ear. I the point of sunken rock which had pierced I . - t eight or nine miles distant, from which he criminais confessed their crimes before exe- , �, . 6� I was greatly disturbed by tEe dream, get rid, of that fact; why, then, should she She returned softly to Wilfrid's side, and her bow, she struck amidships, driving her sent back provisions to the companions he cutioll. - 1� . . an am still. That I should indentify a man exhibit a kind of savage delight in facilitat. advised him to serffl immediately for a doc- hull in, and totally breaking her up. In the hadleftatthebut. Later, having gathered Sometimes criminals feign to be deaf and . I . E, . whom I never saw in my life, and should ing arrangements to put the estate past for. When left alone, she turned once more instant it was seen that the Birkenhead was r,ogether 63 survivors, of whom IS were dumb. If the impostor can write he may . I feel so sure that he was your father, almos them? I bad some talk to -day with Mr. - . ., I . t to wLere the man lay. a tolal wreck. She had, indeed, already sailors, he took them to Capt. Small's farm, be detected by the ingenious plan adopted " � . � appears to indicate something like an m- Brookes when I was in town, and he says "Poor creature," she said aloud; "what beguntofillin and sink. The inrush of wherethey were comfortably housed and by the Abbe Secard, an old French scien- I I - I � I I - , sane delusion on my part. Your father must everything is practically liettled, that that can have brought.his gray hairs to this?" water must have instantaneously drowned a fed. � tist. When tile deaf and dumb are taught I I t ?. - have quitted his father's house about the time rascally Linley of Longarth is to have the The sound of her voice appeared to arrest hundred men in their hammocks. Capt. Wright's exertions did not end here. to write they are taug1l t by the lip.' The � ., of my birth, and so his personal appearance property, and Clara and her children are to the attention of the man, and to recall his � Now comes the record of tire deed of un- In spite of his fatigue he returned to the letters are only known to them by their I I . could not be known to me. But I will des- be left to starve as far as Arthur's mother wandering mind. By a quick movement, paralleled heroism. . Cool as if he had been coast, and for three days clambered up and form, and their value in any word can -be . I I �' - cribe him, and my father will judge. He is concerned. I say again, it isWorse than bat evidently not without pain, he half on the parade ground, the gallant Col, down the rocks for about 20 miles to make understood only by their exact relative I . i . ­ I I - was.dressed in a riding -coat and boots, his a shame -it is a scandal. Vby raised himself on his elbow, stretching out Seton assumed the direction of the men certain that no helpless creature lay there Position with respect to each other. A half- � PI, Art . bur the other hand towards Clara with an underhis command. Quietly he ordered requiring i ta e. He was joined in th e I � __ head was micovdred, and his hair was (lark, Norbarn did not sin half so Ze a.gainst ass a ric educated impost4-�r will spell his words or -1 I - and curled closely around his bead. He his father, as she, his own mother. is sin. agitated gesture of appeal. the tattoo to be beaten, and the rnIl of the search by a whaleboat's crew, which sailed divide them incorrectly, and the errors in � � .. � . I wore no beard; but there was not light ning against him and his." "Esther," he cried, in wild, distracted tones drums immediately sent forth the muster along the verge of the seaweed, while he spelling will always have ri�ference to I enough for me to note his complexion or the -"Esther! ha'thou coomed to forgive me? call. Many of the men below wh,) beard ,a by the shore. Two men were sound, thereby indicatin his know- - , I - 1. coloar of his eyes. Only, somehow, I knew ' , . the summons of the drummer boys, under- found by the boat clinging to pieces of tim- ledge has been acquired through the ear and ,, Clara lifted her eyes to Wilfrid, and. there Ha, thou coomed to tell me it were all a black moved long g that . 1, it was your father as surely as il he bad wa's a look of gratitude on her face. It mistake -a horrible dream from which I am stood that they had to appear for parade, ber among the seaweed in the last stage of ot alone through the lip. sometimes does as good to hear our own a n _; �, been known to me all my life. .r wonder now awaking? Tell me, truly, Esther- and, instead of rushing in hot haste, un- exhaustion, and the captain found two oth- 1: . . . feelings expressed for us. I zn A man who had defied all other means of .. �� �, what -all this portends, and I eized undressed, to create confusion on the deck, era in the clefts of the rocks -all being hap. detection wrote several sentences in which -whether it is tell me!" And in his eagerness he se � - I 11 - due alone to my feverish state of mind, or The Vicar was silent for a while, and then her hand and pressed it to his burning lips. numbers donned their unifori , a d appear- pily aved. A t mer was subsequently the misspelling was obviously due to errors ,I I .utes ready to fall in. It was ,sent for the produced by the sound of the words. That Y_.- � �) : to some other cause which has hitherto he spoke, calmly, and as if to check the r"', Then, as if the effort had utterly exhausted ed in a few mit " n a a ea . ; - " shrouded in darkness the mystery of his- Jug anve, of his so,. survivors, who arrived at Si_ .: . � � I , . diseppearane6." ' his feeble strength, he fell back on the rude a sublime scene- sometimes the human in a Bay on the Ist of March. Capt. showed he must have heard them pronounc- � ,!,You must not forget Wilfrid," he said, couch, arid his eyes relapsed into their soul can reach an altitude of dignity and On' I ty Wright bore full testimony to the heroism ed. Abbe Secard concluded that the man - I V, The above letter, with all its other de. I 'that, it is doubtful if Arthur's mother can former took of wild,and wandering vacui '. I nobility which is a wonder to itself. So it of ail on board. Speakin of the officers, he was ail impostor without seeing him, and - . , I I D .1 tails of love and longing for absent one&-- help herself so far as the Bratbrig estates If the veil of oblivion had for a brief moment These men stood on the deck of said no ndividual Offi o' ., �_ which we leave to the reader's imagination, a , re concerne I was now. , i cer could be distin� he subsecluently confessed the imposition. A tory-tbia d. fqo.doubt she could -and been lifted from his mind, it mast have a sinking ship ; already she was' settling g,i,h-d above another. " All received their An escaped convict was on trial before a - � - . only giving what concerns our a as-& Christian and a mother she sbould- fallen again as suddenly; for the room is beneath the engulfing waves, but quietly orders, and bad them Carried out as if the French court and the question turned upon I � letter, written in the hot Egyptian make provision for Clara and, the children once more only filled with the hoarse murmur and without question they formed up at the men were embarking instead of going to the his identity with a prisoner known to have . - � . sun, was that which Wilfrid Norharn out of her own private possessions. But as of his inarticulate ravings. calm, yet firm order of their commander, bottom ; there was only this difference, that been tattooed. There was rid appearance . - . 1� carried to -the vicarage of Linlaven for the estates, that is a somewha�t different Clara, as she dropped his band, turned and listened to his words. These were I never saw any embarkation conducted of colored marks upon his arm and the ques- I I . on the night of the fierce October storm. matter, and she has not quite a, free hand. from him with a seared and bewildered look. brief but, brave and thrilling. CaiIn)g the with so little noise and confusion." tion submitted to INI. Leroy, a rnedico-legal - Wilfrid was the Vicar's second son, des. When Arthur Norham left his - father's Her face was ashy pale; ail d, as W ilfri I at other officers around hirn, he enjoined Such in brief is the story of the loss ,of expert, was whether the mail had ever been - tined to succeed him in his sacred office. house and remained so many years absent, that moment re-entered, she made him some silence ; then be desired Capt. Wright to the Birkenhead -a grand incident in the his. tattooed ? - . '� - The lady, the wife of the absent soldier, was the Squire, as a man ofpereeption and know- hurried excuse and. fled out ifito the open. give whatever assistance be could to�daPt- tory of the world's brave men. I M. Leroy applied strcng fiction to the __ - ) the Vicar's daughter-in-law, and the sole led f the world, could not fail to per- air. Salmon. Speakivg to the men, he told skirt on the man's arin. This had the effect, 1, , I � � ge 0 . , 11 - ­ �� , � . - child of that ill-fated marriage between ceive that a young man wit th the strong and She did not stay till she bad reached the tlicin they could not esca e. The boats � � p of bringing out white lines as cicatrices, � . - - his son, and at an vicaragearld had entered the house. - - would only hold' n - - Aithur Norharn and Esther Hales, the an- heady impulses of a limited number, and Life's Oueer Side. with a slight bluish tint. By this means v �- I i - nouncement ofwhich at Brathrig Hall thirty 'age when youth is peculiarly susceptible, "Whatastrange thing tofancy," shesaid these the women and children -would re- the word "Sophie" was plainly legibla in I � ,� , years before had led to the old Squire's fierce would run a danger of marrying some one to herself. -4 Y' Spiders have eight eyes. 1 -in. I - I et wliy did he call me quire. The women and chhdreu-the weak white marks oil the reddeLed a L Th:s '. - . . . t - wrath, driving him onwards within the in the class of life with which he had now Esther? That was my mother's name. It and the helpless- were to be saved ! As for Silk worms are sold by the pound in proved the identity of the cot" ict wh' . � � - I hour to a violent death. associated himself. However respectable cannot be"— tile soldiers -the brave and- -the strong - China. - 'v 0, � �. thereupon, was barely restrained fron-, ! , The Vicar of Linlaven was of the kin of and worthy that class might be, the persOnif AH she entered her own room, and shut they would, if necessary, meet death witl� A thousand children are born in London knocking down the witness. - , I - ! ' - � �_ -1 - � , I? I I the Norhams of Brathrig Hall, but the tie forming it were not such as the Squire, to the door., him! - workhouses yearl . -& _� �- � y / - � , , - , � ,,��_ � of relationship was thinning with time, an with hig old-vorld notions of things, could . (TO DE CWWRIMED). If fear there was hidden in -any heart it A 14 -year-old boy at San Jose, 'Cal., . ,A,- - ' Basket Maldn,-- . - I � would hardly bear the strain of any degree quite approve of as family connections.- was conquered by discipline. Sixty men, thrasi,ed his father because he ordered him � Basket making, which used to b3 pract. �:­ - � � , I - of cousin'ship. But still lie and his two sons Do not speak, Wilfrid ; I am not going to ." told off in three reliefs, were put to the to bring in some hay. - I � I . I , I . - Captain George in Egypt, and Wilfrid- at .argue the 30111t. Well, things being so, chain pumps on the lower after -deck ; 60 tised more or less in every V.-Ila2e, is now 1� An Aeronaut's Awful Fal' The Ion -eat animal kaoii n to exist at the relegated almost entirely to machinery ; ­ ; - home -were of I he true Norhain stock. The he had madeup ii7s mind that, if Arthur o __s-� _'. - Five tho-asand people at Inver. Grove, were stationed at the tackles of the paddle. present time is the rorqual, which averages and yet it is very easy, and children even , , ; I Arthur Norhain bad survived hirn, he should, married or un- just south of St. Paul, Minn., were the box boats; all who were not required for 100 feet in length. may become very cxnert in its manipulation. - I . . I . I I - , � -1 � - ) . been at school and university together, and married, succeed to the property, being hoirified sDactators on the Jst. iiist. of a active duty were drawn up in the poop, to I . \ . their friendship had been ,lose and keen. the elder nf his two sons. Bat -and this is ease the fore part of the ship, which was At & public entertainment in Paris a Even the rudest arid most. primitive of hand- __ i . .1 terriblefall to death Of Prof. Robe,'the aer- youn man I 1� SQ also had been the Vicar's relations witb. what 1 draw your attention to -if lie pre- Iling heavilv. The troop horses were was hypnotised.' Two days made baskets make a pretty present if 51led . � - -, - - , onant. When the balloon reached the Usual now ro - - 9 �. ,,:> - the"family at the Hall, - till the time came deceased his father, and had previously got up and pitched into the sea, some of the elapsed before he was restored to conscious- with mossesand growing ferns. Atawater- ,,;�, altitude Hobe could be -.een tugging at the nes8. ing place, the other day, a clever woman set , � , - - _ , __- � when Arthur went off upon what his father made a marriage without his father's con- poor brutes swimming instinctively for the __ , valve cord, which would not work. Before me children at work cn baskets for a .'�� - _� regarded asa mission of folly; after which tfie sent, then the children ofthat marriage ' land, which could be seen in the bright Georgia professes to have a girl from 80 - 1 3�1f- � - friendship between the Vicarandthe Squire were to be completely and perpetually cu t he ,ould manipulate it the balloon was at starlight about two miles off. Awe-striclo, whose mouth there runs constantly a stream charlLable fair which. was on the carpets ­ - .� - least 3,000 feet above the earth. In the re- -.en . !�%.- ; . somewhat cooleL The latter was ang . off'from any benefit in, or succession to, and these baskets, filled in the way already i I I __ I ry, � 13 I gular way he cut loose the parachute and and speechless, the women and children ,of water as from a small spring. suggested, foand a ready sale, and brought I - - with -his son for quitting the ways of his an- theestates. I . __ shot rapidly -earthward, but to the horror stood wbile the ship's cutter was got ready I An old man 79 years uld, I iv`1eng in Noda- in quite a nice little sum. Shoots of � willow, - . I cestors, and he was equally angry 'Onth the "' Ab," said Wilfrid, 11 that's rathe"* a of the crowd the parachute did not expand in ere used in this instance. These were cut �V_ " * , � ­ then the helpless ones were lowered, and, Way County, .1k1o., plowed his own land _: � - D'y this Spring with a horse 29 years old, w � - � .� r - -, - - Vicar because he refused to take the Squire,,% difrerent story." I and the unfortunate aeronaut fell like a shot a few minutes, aided by strong and Willi soaked in water, and afterward peeled. � __ , I . - . -- _ �1_ � - _; : I I I I � �4 � - - - I side againstArthur. - - -11 Yes," continued the Vicar; 11 that is hands, all were safe aboard. Then which was borrf on the same farm and � I-- � - I . - - I - . - toward the ground. So great was the -force the has worked on it with the -old man e � ver Strong pieces were laid across each other - L �� , . - - , � , , . . *� Nor was the death of the �quire the only Wh -am so -much moved by this dream of of the fall that be was driven in' the soft ropes were out, larid the boat glided away. bottom, __ - I - .y It had just got clear, when the vessel, work- since. and woven together to make the' - cglamifw that follo it 4fuite -impossible to ground to a depth of 10 feet an � - the ends havillu been left su ffir,ien tly long to �,-�--, - �, . I I wed upon these events.- �Gddrge�s. We found d instantIv . . ­ I - � - � � , . . I � I - � The --Squire's Lady, now a Widow had hither; o g astern, istruck again, causing another In India a n " _'w .. - . .. , btain any clue to Arthur's movements after killed. It required the work of an hour Cc in huge funnel of wickerwork is turn iip when the foundation was 0rge -, - - . ­ _: � to been ofa gentle and lovina nature, par- Eik, left, his,houie, which -%vas but the day be- reach the body,an . d death had occurred long yawning chasm, through which the water planted in a stream below a waterfall and enough to form the uprights for the sides. 1 1 , - � , � tal poure ��, .. ,� � . I - ticularly fond other- husband and children., fore -his &ther�j fa accident. From t d in volumes. The outer bow broke every 6sh coming down drops into it, t ..._­ _� . - bat before. , be Thinner strips were then woven in and out, �_ - - __ - Bat from the hour that she - saw her,.hus- -time Arthur,no longer communicated - with off at the fo-emast, -the bowsprit shot lip water training out and leaving the flapping thus forming a thick wickerwork. The 6 - . . . . _ - � - I- zN1 � � � � '�-1- : band'& dead bcdy carried intci the hall, a the-,fajuily la � ' drew upon -the sum of The Sweetest Lives. into the air towards 'the foremast, andl, -the . prey in tbz receptacle ready to be gathered edges were formed by the uprights or ribs -, �, - � wyer, or . %1 . - change, Alm9stpherionienal, passed over heri - �-mgbne-ywlaqll waspayable to him, -,as previous I funnel went over the side, carrying with it in, � being turned down and woven ia, This is ' ­ I - - I - . . . I p 4_41_ . _1_1 - I - . - I - Rer-husbapd'4 death had been -du� to. her., -10, . � , ­.dis&-pearanzwhe had regularly done. The sweetest lives are those to duty wed, � the starboard Paddle -box and boat. ___ --- , I � . � , disobedienm it wa- I _ - - I I . '. _� � 46n-Arthuea ,p -- Whose deeds. both great and small, AIL this happened within I 5 minutes of tile rudeA kiDd of basket ; but every one � , - I - . _s,much_Ai__ 'W Ifwewererich, fight, the matter Are close-knit strands of an unbroken threA . W -hat dainty things ara woven out of ­ ..� � , i�rftighbj Mercantile Iten knows _ - - I'll ithe�h4dafruck a &gger -into hisi- - - 6 of -law; bat the presump- Where love ennobles all. the ship striking. A second- boat had cap- . - I � ___ - � - fwth46v 404ir-the_cdurts: '_ is such pretty - .1 - - - --- boxorn.- "Ibmad sibiply murder. -The ba, - � __ � i",�_,Woiild SUB � remain against us, as This world may sound no trumpets, - ring no sized when lowered, and a third could not "How do you sell these peAclies �" asked bark and scented grasses. It i .- - .- - �_ . . . - Th�i& - we bells. be got at because of the breaking awry of McGinnis and easy work that it, would be a popular - �_ ­_ _. - . le h6wevith4ut his fhther'iskpow, led, go . j��bi',.Prbve_ that Arthur Norham was The Boi)k of Life the shining record tells. of a colored woman who had them handicraft for idle summer 'hours � if once - - - � , , -_ � ­­ ' _. - - -_ � big &ther'a " i 'W1 _* 1i -fathees death. Near. - ,a! - I - __­ . hA&_,,MaA6&vk,hout � conaii - the forepart. And now came an exhibition. for -s a. I I I k - I - _.­ - I . 1- - - I .. r �., �Y-­ g _�� - - y I q - i" - - t - , Thyllove shall chant its otm.lipatAndes I of"heroism upon which the world might well -.",Six for a dime, boss." - - - . - A064'.4- ldw� Wonlaft - t ey- - ,.- _- `_� - ­ `­­­ -rhavipassed,andthemyster old basket is .�� - � G A � - adopted by the busy bee -s of society. If an I - - W [etwmi-of is - � - 14 .1:7 - haa - - h had "' .,' , � -_ � . � I - In _� � - . � - , lt,_,�,., , - �_ � Af ' McGinnis began picking out half a dozen - - , ­ ,- '.111 _1 ,��, I � ' I 1 I tak-n apart aad woven to. I . - I - c_i .ia 'I 1, Nu 10119- . �­_­ - _ ter its own life-woricing. Achi%d'skisa Strong and resolute stood that - - �� I ­ � - - I I -04" I I . jt,�anm gaze m awe. I , - 1. I - - . � I _S� 6 12�fl__. k6l - - ­ fain = ,has never yet been solv- Set owthy sighing alis shall make thee glad: . . etber again it will give a practical know- - � �y ­ I NA � I 11��aced` the A I I , ` - " '_ ­ , A -MIM __,_ . � ­_ Z �r� ,- ��__�­ - �­ & ,t 5,e,&, - - - w-�,m -Vgu- in thinking that A poor man sery , by thee -shall make thee ,- - wo I I—- . �, � 1 � -k 01 em iW b*-alettei ha ' - Mu". - UK- bareheaded man with the drawn ,a rd- _ of the largiiat and finest. , - - t ':�� , ___ - - ­�- - '.., - - - - - - �, - m ., - � , - I ��_m_ - � , -­­ �_ - -­, h& - th �__� � - v_", _-, I - ricb; � - with his men face to face ath. But, . 44YOU Yer can't pick ,edge of its construction which would be I _� ---I,- 11 , � ��, . _4&tMM-�"-__JXWs;_ � , - � __ h t she has ample . I with de cau7t do dat, b6ss. � - . - , �� - __ - - ___ ' n . ,_ � __ --- - A he ped. by thee shallmake thee says a writer,,' obler than. their adhesion -to � .11 better than any directions that could be - -, �� -_ 11-�� - __� I "I - 1',_��i�,� , - - - - " - I lout d1i biggest -4on u less yer buys 'eni all. " . - . " ----- '_­ � � - , , X4 - - tiR: I es _,�_ - - 7": "�"c,f-:."-�.���;��-�l-,���-�-'I , �, " I ,,7_�W,'!-_.-,�!,�,.;�­ _�--�_ � _�­, : �Iz I ,;1, � -, . - 7 �� .- � ­ -1. - , ��_� I ,� .,. %­ � � I - I- � - �. - ­_ I , . � i I I I I I I I I I I - - - - �, _______ _ '01 . rztrong; � I discipline, sublimer than mere devotiog. to ��- ­ - _ �, , . -'o -to. make some pro- rich. man ! _ A _� - -,-- _ - I L� � �� ,� 4XI -r- --.--- _� `**�_, I& - I - - . - . given. . � , ­: -1 _-�_ _. � Ir n , I � . ., . dreoffOUra, ai . -1, I I I- _­--:�_�, 1_7�,2:�<�-,-, -_,­ LZ -= , _- - -- —1 - __ ____,_ _-4xea4r%___4"� __ - - - _W. *Ojr,�B� _AK*=(& W- . 01, n - �d her �fiil- Thoft�shz - be served thyself by every tense � � ' .I=- �� - - __ - _ - - � - - - , , , - - ., -- - ta es a , A I __ 0�__ - . . - - SPY _ 19�� fnhepw . . ; --- � I I I it. - _,� mw "M,1_1&�;�� � �,l - ----- ____, -� , , � , 4 �n �� . ritwhichmove& . It �ftii, k -match to light up a i.m.--,�54,_ . At . 'i - I Or setvice which thou rerkderest. , �_* M _41L 0 w - , W_ �111 _ , � � _�z�­ _ - " their commander, wasthe crank loose ani it 7ill wake I -,�F- -� -��_14��M& ,.n. - - -p? , X, - - ., �' t, i __'_ � . , Turn a ;;;;; - � - � � �, ­ --- 7 , -1 -.1 I I . I I - ��Sl �� , I I - ; - �,��,­ ­ I - -1 - . nurnitmac uiescence " th " ! self heard. . _�­_-�-,�5 �, -�-7, - M - - __ 111104 (Ins I , -LUM I � -M, - y: . - � - .- - ­60� c - - Browning. the soldiers to f q - -ra- � e _qu �� - gwlfk_�--1 � t , 11 _ I , 1,. Opt .­,- .--, __ - " ­_ , a- i,% , OFF . - � - ,_ . - , - nauce. - ­ . ��.�­�g�-,_-T- , , � . � __ 1. � 11 - .1 . - - __ _1 ­ 11 , - � - , 1_5 , � - I ., e- - --- 11 ., I -:, - ­ _. , -_ 1, I . I I - I � I -1 � , - - " : - , 1� - I ___.,� I'll, _11 J ,,, ­__'�, �j - - U&2� Y - _M�, � I . I 1. 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Gone _1 '. wav of a . � a successi But iss � while the j when he 1 that we 1� with us, i ably ; ar)( ' our mode lieve a fa seem to I own life, i . I . occasion , our home, for the tirr or rare de, alone, the he is withl tato 'IS ourl steak and I taking earl Zing neatri times. W1 13 Ot come f a eat and dr enough to � .it elsewher Stereotypei be had, anc" for us, the I tile ways aj crasies, or, i he is not sa not come adl but every c! lighted to b� seems ev.de heAirt of out' 6�rve oursci FmCA�SE� nieces for se water and 1�1 Have a fry!T of � salt pork; Witt) the por take it out a ill which it i tie flour mix and season V1 and pork bL�� a few niinut� ROAST VF1 in slices wid dish, adding ly with floul was left and 1 ful of gravy three plut's. made of one I ful of baking & P;ece ol bui r1i 1)1) ' tig it in. milk enough I be handled. of the crust, J in a brisk ovc it is baked. i � MOCR _Mi��, fine, add one I curranCs and gar, and spi< . makesfour . PRESSED C corned beef is yet Warr together, not lean may be E dry mustard i oblone taperl- it (ri.4t side � I set two flati weight and I next (lay it N which new sh YOUNG BEF' off the leaves I roots, which v the beets wil Boil them in drop i to a pa � off with wise and place butter, and if X teaspoonful ( hot water Vo h without vineg, them into a S Arincgar, keep wanted, slicin< horsc radish in Xcum from risin GREEN PFAS peas into boilia done and tende dry. Melt a t stew pan; add be careful it do� of cream and a bring to a boil, the pan movin nutil the peas z hot. The wate boiled may be a( 9-nd makes a pal NEW POTATO with a coat" cl( ing vegotables. water and cook longer, Have r butter and creau little green pan salt ; drain the p put over hot wav serve, RicE Sxow BA until soft in two Spoonful of salt - perfectly cold pia ed custard of the Pi- T, of sweet milld starch ; cavo - _� turn the ---&twd