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The Wingham Times, 1903-10-01, Page 71, ER SECOND LOVE A STORY OF LOVE; AND ADVENTURE* BERTRA Author of "Between Two 1;oYea '. "Which •Loved tient Best," 4+A Fatal Wedding," (. A Woinai*'s Vengeance; CLAY "Between Two Sins." vexatious to have spent .so much •feeling upon the ghost of a danger, .,U.S far as concerned then.. There had, indeed, been a frightful :accident, but it had befallen an ear- ' lier train than that by •9which they Iliad started, and they hid been de- laye(1 ; that was all, This explanation was soon given, and Constance was still on the pony at the gate, whilst the other three ladies stood upon the platform, No Ione noticed her whilst the first greetings were exchanged ; and Mr, Ii' skive, who was shaking hands "etth Georgy for the second time, suddenly recognized her, es an im- ploring "Don't 1 oh, stop 1" ad- dressed indifferently to the pony or , the train, startled them. The pony. • though a child's pony, was anything tt ' but quiet, and, grown fidgety with waiting, roared, --"stood up On h end," 'as Algy said : which he en- ' h joyed, but which ladies naturally did mot. Mrs. Everett was easily era:seated, and was thrown. latch ! Mrs. Lumsden screamed out, "She's 1 killed 1" Several people rushed to •catch the pony, and Mr. Lewis ran s to lift up. Constance. • t Wore her Marriage. Perhetps saw in his mind's eye a party people by the water's side ; he re; membered how one had fallen down the steep bank, and how he had car- ried her up again. If all that day could have been spout so, carrying a lady up and down a steep bank, I wonder if he would have thought it long There had been ono of those short flirtations between them, which are 'chronicled only in the records kept by mothers and all elderly ladies. They mean nothing, and conte to nothing. --nothing to one of the per- sons concerned, a great deal to the other, sometimes.. it young Dir, Erskine had once very much admired Constance Gor- ton, and had he passed but one or vo days more in her company, would have declared his love for er. Miss Gordon's aunt,. however, ad watched the. two. Mr. Erskine vas, in her opinion, no desirable latch for Constance, and a timely eparture had put a stop to the ac- uaintance. Miss Gordon soon forgot, or rather he had never remembered. A short into after that she married. So much had happened .since then, that this flirtation might well be classed amongst the things of long ago. Perhaps, too, the reminiscence borrowed half its attraction from the knowledge that he was then younger. How many things we look back tenderly upon, simply for that rea- son. The evening was a short one, for they dined late. Constance appeared and both she and Mr. Erskine were very glad to see each other. Both knew admirably how to behave them- selves, and both could conceal their real feelings as well as most people who inhah t drawing -rooms. Mrs. Everett's demeanor was perfect, and Mr. Erskine's a shade stiffer than Georgy had ever before noticed in hint, Mrs. Everett and Mrs. Lumsden had gone upstairs, Mrs, Lewis was still lingering in the drawing -room, and Mr. Erskine was dutifully light- ing Miss Sandon's candle in the library. She 'had not quite felt till ho of She was really hurt, and only I said, "Don't, for Heaven's sake ! I you hurt me so : let me lie still a ' little," and she insisted upon re - meaning in a very swampy ditch. "I ant rather awkward at lifting ;people," said Mr. Lewis, apologeti- cally ; "but indeed it is out of the I.question your remaining here ; I as- . sure you it is: Erskine can .manage • to lift you, perhaps." And Air. Erskine lifted her with- out help. "You can carry her to Alice -Cairn's cottage, can't you ?" said Mr. Lewis. "I'n1 sure you can't," said Con - :stance, drawing a deet) breath. "You'll never be able l ---I Can walk !presently." , His face flushed for a moment, and he pressed his lips la ;ether,—a com- mon habit of his ; and although Constance scented to think that it • was diflicult, lie carried her with great ease to the cottage,—a stone's ,throw from the little station. Her bonnet fell off as they reached .fiho door and when they entered, he .,laid her on the bed. "Oh, thank you, James," she said, ,as if she had parted from hien only .yesterday,—just as if she did not bear within .herself the knowledge ,of, her heartless behaviour ; just as ' le—:}s if he was her friend, and 'rank you, James," was the most '1Lttu;al of phrases. Ile compressed his lips again, and faltered out, "Mrs. Everett, thank Beaven, you are not hurt," and th. a di ew back troll the t,edsi(Ic. Every one came into the one -room- ed cottage, and then fidgeted out. .Again, thinking that they were not wanted. Constance said that she was not much hurt, only her ankle .sprained, and her head and shoulder bruised. She should be quite well pre- sently, and would go back directly the pony carriage—which had been sent for—arrived. Mr. Erskine came in to announce it. Mr. Lewis was standing by the fireplace, and Mrs. Lewis and Georgy were sitting by the bed. "Now, then," said DIr. Lewis. "Let et me go,"said Constance. d Something in James Erskine's man- ner annoyed her, and, half angry with him for standing still without .. once offering to help her, she start-. ed up. "Now you really had much better be carried," said Mr. Lewis. Yj And then Mr, Erskine insisted upon } helping her. She would not be car- ried, however, and limped along to the carriage. Mr. Erskine lifted her 1•°a i in and Georgy could not help watch- °. ( ing his face ; he looked, she thought, "t as if something provoked and annoy- ed hint, but that was all. Mr. Louis drove Constance and y the rest of theart. walked,all h carrying on a general conversation, Mr. Erskine talked unceasingly. Ho was glad to see Georgy, if one may •say so, with the uppermost part of his feelings ; but those Which lay under all were seized upon by earlier reminiscences. Perhaps he remem- bered how he had once carried Con- stance (no, not Constance: he never .called her so then ; it was long alto illervousness and • Indigestion DIlzzines and sick• ie fl, adache cured,'and he nth ,*f11 top Uy Dr. (;tinse'a Nerve Food. GAPT. WILLIAM IHENNEBE11Y, 85 Lockman St., Halifax, N.S., states t—"Before I began using Dr. Chase's Nerve Food I was troubled a great deal with dizziness, nervousness and sick headache, which seemed to be caused from indigestion. Since using this preparation for a time, all these distressing symptoms have disappeared and I con- sider that I am entirely cured. I never used any medicine that seemed to build me up so thorough- ly, and today I am in better health than I harm been for several years." Bynotingyourincrease in weight while using this great food cute, you can ve for a certainty that i it adding new, firm Capt. Rennebe flesh and tissue to the body. Through the medium of the blood and nerves Dr. Chase's Nerve Food sends new vigor and energy to every organ of the human system, and overcomes disease. so cents a box, at all dealers, or Ldmanson, Bates and Co., Toronto. To protect you against imita- tions the portrait and signature of Br. ,A. W. ,..Chase, are on every boa that moment that he was his for- mer self again. "I did not expect that you would have come so soon," she Said. "I worked hard, and so got away: I tun tired now. What have you been doing with yourself all these days ?" Wo have led a very quiet life ; tell me what you have been doing." "Look here ; this is what you said you would havo ; it is your own fault for not choosing a handsom- er thing," and he gave her a heart and a cross of massed turquoise. "It is a beautiful thing ; I would not havo had anything else ; this is my especial fancy : turquoises have been in desired from a child and I thought that I should be happy the day I pOSSCSSCd some." "Well ! are you ?" "Yes, I am," she answered, look- ing quickly up at him. "Let me put it on for you ; it is pretty, though I don't think so much of its u.:egnificence as you do." "People who say that they are poor, have Io rightht to m n t}- cete" she answered, td, laughing. "I am poor, in very earnest," he said sadly. "How will you like being poor, little Georgy ?" She did not realize his poverty: tho pretty house where Mrs. Erskino lived had been to her the type of London ]nabrnnieence. "I never remember that you are poor," was her answer. "It seems to me that at11 you wish for must Como to you, told that you will be sure to grove rice: some day." "I wish it seemed so to me : but how will you like the poverty which is all that I can give you ?" "I 1 I have never had much; nat- urally I cannot feel it : it is you who will iuind the change." "No, not at all, dear." "Good night 1 and do give me my candle." "No, don't go so quickly," he said, with a half sigh, as if her going involved some serious misfor- tune ; "Don't go. What is that book you have hidden under the sofa cushion ? In heanvon's name, what makes you read law ?" he ask- ed, very much amused, as ho took it out of its abode, "Because— ; but why do you want to know ? What business have you to meddle with my books ?" "Flow many cases are you up in ?" he returned, smiling. "That is no affair of yours ; I 21ta3; have many friends i11 the law for aught you know." "How many ?" he asked, With his quiet laugh, and a droll expression of man's vanity upon his face. Ile contrived sometimes to give a momentary expression of vanity en- tirely apart from conceit ; it was in him a sort of novo of approbation, which h r r nth e gave confidence to others, and drew them nearer, than had any of the hard, dry, self-satis- faction of other people's vanity. "How many ? One, perhaps ; and I road it because—, because I thought that you read it. It is stupid, though, and if you are not better than your ----P "Merciful heaven 1 don't impute the collective stupidity oe wisdom of judicial England to me, if you please.'1 Good night ; and give pro my Candle." "X Wanted to talk to you about iio many things." "To -morrow, if you like." "No, no ; don't go Yet, lay child ; afu" .r. •' ` " . till a 11ttlC, (G.r,w.rc. .fir..._ _.. IRE Wf 1G1IA1i TIM, M, OCTOB R 1, 190a More than half the battle in cleaning greasy dishes is in the soap you use, If it's Sunlight Soap it's the best, GB q.rat t(8K un - - do you love nue ?" . She turned round, and her face changed and crimsoned : her whole quiet, calm demeanor Was gone in an instant; you could not tell how, for she had not spolccn, "Georgy, tell 211e1 I feel so old and sari to -night, I want to extort a f;ra- cious speech from you," and he laid his hand upon her shoulder. "Do I love you ?" she whispered back, and by a sudden movement bent toward hint, and threw her arms around his necic. "You know I do. Oh, my Gold 1 I should die if you forgot me." "(i(rorgy, child 1'• "Good night, James ! Mrs. Lewis will come, and I must go." A whole edifice of doubts had van- ishcd Fromm (}eorgy's Mind that night. Questions actually framed, I and boldly asked is the jealousy of f solitude, held vanished from. her mind : and, besides, she was far too shy to ask them really. To Iook at him, and to think of him, was still a certificate of happiness. Mr. Erskine was in the library when Mrs. Lewis passed through; he decorously lit her candle, and pre- sently his own. ,There was a strange confusion in his mind that night. Constance and Georgy were most in- extricably blended together. Ire had firmly believed that to Meet the for- mer would have been to him a mat- ter of the utmost indifference. He had cared for her once, very touch, but he had never thought that be should feel so nnuch at seeing her again. And he looked back sadly to that once,—then drew clpser to the recollection of Georgy. IIe was in a state of mental polygamy just then: wherein many an impulsive nature may find itself. CHAPTER XVIII clenched her hand, as she stretc out ; she did so nese without INC, and stood far a moment her old, imperious look, and fairly burst into a shower of t hiding her face in her hands. „('(instance, for Ilcavcn's sake, do not cry so 1 Constance, Constance 1 you will drive ate. frantic 1" a11(1 all these faults before: mentioned seemed suddenly accumulated upon kis own heal. Constance threw him the 1 which he ought to hove receive long ago, yet lied not, and the down again in the window, lea her head upon her hand. It was a brave thing to (lo, to give a six months' old letter beck to be read without a word of alteration: ;Vogt people would have written him an- other, or espial !fled by word of mouth. 'Who likes to look at a let- ter written under the influence of ex.:' cited feelings six ]nonths ago ? Ile read, the letter though. It was of a different tone front those that Con- stance had ever written to hint le - fore. He had read It through, and then stood watching her front the other end of the room. This was his doing —his madness : he had loved her always ; he had loved her now. He eotild not tell why. ` The Frenchman's praise of the tvDltian whom he loved, has seldom been surpassed. IIe did 'not say that she was fairer and wiser than all other wpnien : he des- cribed her negatively first, --she was not this, she was not that, "Dias, he<i it Ini rhe; have been I beli"etri that he speak would still havo .co)npel104 Fortune with to deal fairly 'with bilin at last, then through his own efforts, and by ears, never admitting that she had used hfrn futt113. All through that. walk he defied Constant's and mistrusted her by turns, till every phase of thought on, that subject was exhausted, linty many times tlid he see Constance fall that day? And how often did he hold her in his arms ? He dwelt on all that till it became an in- etter it so n sat toxie'atinn which it was dangerous ping elle etait mieux femme que les tres." It was thus that .James • kine thought of Constance : he 1 forgotten all her perfections, nay remembered that she was he There were other fair women in world, other loving ones ; but for him, "elle etait 2nieux femme que les autres." That was a11,—and he must love her still. Last night it wits the thought of Constance that animated his tenderness to Georgy. Is the bit- ter saying really true 7 '"1'oujours nous nous vengcons sur roux qui nous aiment, de ceux que nous aeons alines." Now, he had wilfully lost her, Never fear Constance that your power is past ! But it is ton late note,—a mein cannot. break his word as a woman doe's : in that matter verily, is man's late stricter than w•onlan's, "Good -by Constance," he said, without moving, and then the rest of his sentence failed him : he was so prostrate at the discovery of his hasty judgment; and thosatis- faction of feeling that she for the first time bent to him, was now only an additional sting. "It was my fault ; but if my evil fate had not led me away from Brux- elles so soon, I should not have fan- cied, --yes, it was any fault.," he con- tinued very sadly ; "but you will forgive nue : I shall always be your friend, and I will never doubt you in anything again. (food -by, good - by, Constance !" She looked up, startled by his range manner, which seemed to Lilly a leave-taking ; a tear teas ill upon her face, and he was anding noir her, with the letter. in s hand, when Georgy came quietly to the room. Both started ; George's first impulse WWI to look at them fixedly, and then she turn- ed to leave the room. Mr. Erskine did that, however, going hastily clown stairs, and muttering some- thing which was totally inaudible, Constance brushed away the tear, and leant against the window; then came back to the sofa again. What is the matter with him ?" asked abruptly. 'With whom ? 'James Erskine 1 Is he going to married ? or is he ruined? I know 1 so well. Why is he so sad ?" to remember, and there Was nothing for it now but to forget.. Ile liked Georgy exceedingly, poor Child 1 and only yesterday he be- liesed that he wee la love with . . (To be continued) MERRY, HAPPY BABIES. There is no greater treasure on earth than a healthy, happy, merry buby. Anything therefore that will keep the little one 124 this eonditinn is a priceless boon to mothers. Airs. Win, Boll, Maple Creek, N. W, T., tells how she aeoonm- plished this end, She says :—" i ail happy to say that Baby's Own Tablets have done my baby girl a world of good. She was badly troubled with constipa- tion and very cross and peevish, bot since using the Tablets she hs all right. I give her the Tablets once or twice a week and she is now such a merry, happy Hide thing that there part be no doubt cent- B hby's own Tablets are just the thiug I:rs- ter little odes," tact here is it lesson for other mothers who and want a safe and (terrain medicine for the st, ailments from which their little ones. the sutler from Gine to time. These Tablets are sold ruder a guarantee to contain no harmful drug, and they are good for all children front the new bora babe to the well grown child. Sold at 25 cents a box or sent by trail by writing direct to the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Out. The next day DIr. Erskine decided that he had best go to Edinburg iu1- mediately, meet his mother, and break hie engagement to her. Ile went up -stairs to Mrs. Lewis's sitting -room, hoping that he should there find Georgy. Instead, he found Mrs. Everett, who had not appeared that morning. She was lying on the sofa, with her fpot upon a cushion, and a bright, feverish color in her cheeks. Not hay}ng seen her that morning, he coo d not be so ill- mannered as to retreat. st in st James," she said quickly. hi It would only have been ridiculous I in had he remained stiff and formal, so he was compelled to call her by her male. I am very happy that you are convalescent, Constance," and he stood by the table without sitting down ; which would have involved too long a stay. He was not going to begin; Con- stance saw that, and for the first tlino in her life she must make ; she amends, and must abandon the posi- 1 tion of an 'injured person. "You must forgive me, James," be sho said, softly, and holding out her hin hand. "You have left me ages 1 without a letter from you, and II ,, never knew till yesterday, how much to blame, you must have thought i is e me," "My dear Mrs. Everett, pand o1 ole," he answered, very deferentially, but very haughtily. "It is I who was to blame, and I have long felt it : I should have asked your par- 1 don before, and I do so now most heartily : you are very good to have forgotten and forgiven." She felt the irony of his words ; he had never been ironical to her before and sho had never valued her power over him so 2nueh as now that it was passing from her. "Do not talk so t" she said, quick- ly and impatiently ; "I know you are angry with nee quite well: I was angry with you, too. You should not have doubted me so : how could you ever think that I ever cared for that handsomest and good natured- est of good boys, Sir Hugh Stanley'? It was an insult to ole;" and she looked proudly up at Ili.. with the Sad ? Mrs. Everett." Yes, Georgy ; I know hien SP 11 : I wonder Ni hat it is ! If he going to be married, it rather weighs ) 3 l Intl his s icor She t.' f. f ht w ) ei t on with anxious vehemence. Georgy slid not speak : she could not ; but looked at Ml's. Everett so keenly, that. Constance colored. Just then Mrs. Lewis came in. Georgy w0S in. a State of bewil- dermen t all t hat day. She said over their story to herself. She could read it. And why had she not dote so before ? Their looks and the let ter told enough. They. had both looked actually guilty when she entered. There were many other little things which she strung tege- ther quickly, cued her fancy could fill up the rest. tihe was not surprised, after hay- ing reflected is little. It was very natural that her nature should not be enough for his: that appeared quite just, and she never questioned it ; there was nothing left, then, but res 111111 quickly, leaving hin with it tie knowledge as possible that tact caused her suffering. I low strange all the people in the house were to her ! But it did not matter hutch, for •e•n was so unused to companionship, that to no per- son could one word of the bitter protest which was in her heart have been spoken. The oppression of a dream, when one cannot speak or cry out, was upon her, waking. And then she wondered dimly why her 21 fate a e us so different from that of others. Her life had been so lonely that it had changed her, and she was old ; yet still with a repining feeling left that she had never well been young. She must act, though, now,—that was something. She could go away calmly, with no parade of self- sacrifice. She Was not heroic in ani; abstract way : the days were long passed when sho had nursed dreams of devotion and enthusiasm for their own sake ; but for any one whom she loved, site would have died quietly, without expecting that her fate could affect them much, and out asking a word of recount - from any other human being. Erskine did not go to "Min- h that day ; but he set forth on. litany walk. They say that remorse can.n bo walked down ; aps he thought that "love might. as to late now, and he could avoid the sight of Constance as h as possible. Hitherto thoso Whom he loved had repaid hint ful- ly ; and, truly, Well they mil;kt. IIe was too busy and energetic t•' r•t' to ebbed time to deem himself ill - Used ; tend however hard hip tate old winning expression, which, to f change , as she might, had never Itis changed. he She took hive aback, and all those ilnaginary faults wherewith' he had invested her, were strangely melting away already. "You made Inc angry," she said : "I was so Wretched then. I think you really must have been anxious to find a quarrel, when you sought out sueh a cause." "I was not aware that we had quarrelled. Good -by, Constance: you must forgive 2ne for running away so' quickly this morning ; and you must promise to forgive me all my past misdemeanors, whatever they may Have been, for they Were not committed purposely." Ile spoke carelessly, but with a deeper pain underneath than she knew of. "I ant going to Edinburg to- day." Going, and for how long ?" "I hardly know." IIe was in- wardly purposed not to return till she was gong. He shook hands, and Was about to with leave the room, when Constance tion started m), surprised and mortified. Dir She was always accustomed to havo bur her own way, and to act upon the a so impulse of the moment. seen "James, James, come back 1 1 want to spcatf to you." Ile turned per. hack, and she Stood before him, xt w hear old former self. only She Wanted to speak, and could ialuc not find utterance for her words. She had an eager way of gesticulating, sometimes When she was 'explaining, rrir risking anything ; she half ARUFACTURERS. Canadian Association Do Not Want Reciprocity. INSIST ON TARIFF REVISION. Emphatic Views Expressed—One Delegate Soya They Will Fight l'or Tariff Re- vialon Till They Get It-Proferen- tial Trade 11 It 1. Reciprocal— Position of Association To- wards Organized Labor. Toronto, Sept. 1f —About 200 members of the Canadian Manufac- turers' Association met in convent- ion here yesterday morning. The main features of the session was the annual address of Mr. C. A. Birgc, the retiring President and the re- ports of sections. Growth Luring the Past Year. President Dirge referred optimistic- ally to the splendid progress made by Canadian industries and in the growth of the Association during the year. He noted the increase in our imports of British manufactured goods, but claimed that this increase might have been much greater had British manufacturers shown the same aggressiveness shown by those of other competing countries. As to the preferential tariff, he took the stand that thorn should be no in- crease in the present tariff without sonic) adequate return from Great Britain, Ile believed that the signs of the times pointed to tho gradual working out of a general Imperial tariffrr eat a an om g base on mutual t al preference. Canada, he said, was to a large extent the dumping ground for surplus United States products. Our tariff wall should be raised, so as to keep our capital, our resources, and our young men from going to en- rich our keenest competitor, instead of our best friend, Great Britain. He pressed for a prompt and thorough revision of the whole tariff, in ac- cord with changed conditions since 1896 and new needs. Do 'Not $'ant Reciprocity. His remarks, repudiating on the part of manufacturers any desire for reciprocity with the south, were warmly applauded. Every statement of Mr. Binge that Canada asked no favors from the United States, that she had learned to stand alone, and that there was absolutely no senti- ment in favor of reciprocity, met with the emphatic approval of the meeting. Equally emphatic, too, were tho manufacturers in their ap- proval of the remarks of Mr,. Dirge that a tariff revision was absolutely necessary, and they applauded the 1 statement of Mr. George E. Drum- mond, of Montreal, that the manu- facturers would fight till they did obtain a revision of the tariff. The Labor Question. He endorsed tihe Railway Commis- sion and argued for a better At- lantic steamship service. In conclus- ion, he referred to the labor ques- tion, emphasizing the mutual de- pendence of labor and capital. Ile laid down the basic principle that capability must not be handicapped by incapacity, and that the pleasure of wages must be the earning power. Ile frankly admitted the right of labor to organize, but regretted the dominant influence of the central or- ganizations in the States. The pros- perity of the manufacturers must de- pend on the prosperity of their em- ployes, he concluded, and a slump in the industries of the United States might reveal to the labor mon of Canada that after all the manufac- turers were their best friends. To -day the association will deal with resolutions, elect officers ants, decide on the next place of meeting. Regret Chamberlain,* Action. Tho Association Cabled Hon. Joseph Chamberlain, expressing its regret that his retirement front the British Cabinet had been rendered necessary. The Kind You Have 1.alwf ys D.oiught, and WhielI hens bcc 11. in Asp for over 3Q year's, has borne the siguatiare of and has been. made under his per.* on supervision since its infancy„ .. a All Imitations At1a'lvn.o one to deceive you in dila. Counterfeits, 1 nitations and "Just•as-good" are bu Experiments that trifle witIh and endanger the health or Infants and Children—Experience against Experiments, What of CASTOTil, Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor 011, Pa ,Boric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other N'arcot substance. Its age Is its guarantee. It destroys Wo and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrilcea and 1. Colic. It, relieves Teething r a, .troubles, cures Constfpat and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates Stomach and Dowels, giving healthy and natural sl The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. CENWPVE CASTORBA AL Bears the Signature of The Kind You Have Mways Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. 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