The Clinton News-Record, 1905-01-05, Page 6(„.
•
The Clinton tiews.Record
ough that
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3.4E
N
Young By Charles Garvice
At-dior of
"A Moderin4Wiet,/,
4 Better Tlian Le
ir s rust. ° if' • Life."
*4(4.444w+E***)cow/0714714•Nowtommoo**************
klic"43. 9 1.3...*Alniarkac.1 -
The Rev.
i
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‘„ ilsORAPhiell--' A
Stoyle smiled grimiY.
• "M you please," he Said< "It is
your lookout, not mine. I've done
xny duty -nearly;" there. was a pause;
"Send -send for her. tell her to
come at once; or -it will be too
late,"
"For her?" aeked Bernard.
The dying Man reatietted him al-
most pityingly. • • , .
"Per Miss grey -Harwood," he
said.; and he closed his eyes.
Bernard wrote on the back of a
card, "Come • with the bearer
Sendai" and dispatched a servant in
hialsom; then he went hack to the
bedside and sat and waited. '
The (loot' opened and Nance enter-
ed. She was .yery • pale,, and her twee
were red, She • was trembling, for the
• foottnau had told her. -what .he knew
. Of the tragedy, •
Lard Stoyle opened his eyes and
signed to her to come nearer.
'How • --- how. do you • do, Misr
Crey?". he said. sorry te,
trouble you, I'M about the last Per- •
son you ,expected to Ise sent to see,
I dare say; hut -you see -X happen,
to bo dying," ' . • •
Nance clivw , near and bent Over
'Inni All the . resentment .
-her- heart as. it had-. fled .frP41. 4.9r -
nerd's. • : •
"Dying!" -sho murmured, 'pitying-
ITo looked at her as if aurprined hy
:her gentle -commiseration •
"Yes. You're sorry; too? You're
lilce Yorkes' Yee,. I've met with. art
" accident;" He *I•ooketi At the • bowed
head on the other aide, of the, bed,
"Miss Demerol 1111 (1 I weivfinspeaing
some of her curios and bric-a-brae.
There was a small revolver among,
!mix; and-aad in showing her ;how
to use it I shot rnyself. ' Yoh see,
.we neitherof us had the: leapt idea
it was loaded." • '
"Oh, X am.- Sorry, sorry!" mermure
ed Nance. •
"It le very good -of you," he pant-
ed, With the old drawl. dBut
shouldn't have troubled you to come
to, say that,. thoug 1 :like to. hoar
it:" „: • •
!ritere was a pause ; daring which
•
he was evidently fighting hard fox
. breath and Strength, • •
•
'Miss- Grey.4-excusci Iny 6.31ruPttiess
itot got too much:time, and X
wait to kei sair."'inireifevor-14:Er-goi4g4
with a .tolerably clear .con'Scietice in
-One matter, at any rate, dust -duet
.tell Mr, Yorke vehST-L,why , you left .
Myrtle -Cottage •and. disappeared.'" .
. Nance started arid shrunk slightly,
and looked froth the dying man to
Bee/lard: • le • ' . •
• "p6 as he tells .you; Nance,"' Bees
nerd said ilia low voice. .• • ..
Nitric° leoked at the mottentess•
ilgul'e kneeling besi0e.the bed. •
"Because -because-;,- Ohl Meat I
speak &feed her?" ' ' •
."Yes -and - quickly," said • Lord
Stoyla; "or --or it Will be toe late.
You Wish her to epee*. Felicia?"
Though rip -Movement • came :front
the still figure, they 1i felt that her.
• silenee was consent. •
• Then Nanee spOko.. In a few 'winds
she told than of Felicia's visit to
the cottage, au& all thathad taken
"My' -God"- said Bernard in .a
broken voiee, yet with the ander-
torte of hope and relief in it. see
• it ail! 911, Nance,. 'Nance, ., it as
not true! • I wan lying •UnctinScious
then, and for : days afterward. I was:
not engaged: to 'marry. her. 1 did
;net give her the Phetograpir. , It was ,
taken- from my: rooin. • I missed it
afterward, Nance,. Nance)" "
Sho • diet not. 'pee it, realize It, fer,
a moment; therx, with.'a faiats dry,
. she put. her hand in hi. • .
And. as they _steed looking et each
iodide,the mist of misunderstand-
ing, of doubt and' despair, faded
away forever.
. 'Lord .StOYie Watched them, with 'a;
'gaunt, cynical siiiile."
"All right?" he said, pantingiy,
"All -cleared hp? And you are 'going
to be happy, •yeti two, and 1 shall
be dead -in- a--feW •hoursISS,._;,
Ho sighed; then; after a'Iternent
or ,two of struggling for hreath, he
went oa: ' •
"No one k.xiows. of -of Myrtle Cot-
tage and Long Bitten but us four.
I sha'n:'t Splits for the best of:all
reasons." He smiled, "Anil she" -
he glanced at Velleia,-"I don't think
:she will: Yorke could have made her
silence eertain; it he'd kept a little
paper X signed just now; but he tore
it up. Well, it was his lookOut; , I
' shouldn't have done it; .but he's ,
• better rime than I tun. Perheps"-
with that sudden insight ,which com-
e.s to the dying sometimee-"Pere
haps that's why' you both love hint,
and she -she hated me< Yea, yoti -are
all safe, Mise grey. She, won't
peach. Will you, Felicia?"
She made no , sign, It Might have
' been she, rather than he, who was
horns,
If you
like to
read ef
the ex-
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"irjat, 3/01.1...r.:700y 01.70 MO one Tor
tuts.- He touched his breast again.
"Mind, I forgive you without any
conditions or drawback, but -but if
you think I've any cIaini ljionyoui
keep their secret!"
A shudder' ran through the bent
figure, •
There WaS a silenee-an intense
isilence for a time. Nance aod Bers
nerd stood close beside the bed, and
hand in hand.
,Presently Lerd Stoyle opened his
eyes again. It was plain, irom the
expression, that he saw no one, that
darkness, east, by the ohadow of
death, had fe,llext, Upon' him.
"Felicia!" he said.
Bernard went round to her.
"Speak to • him," he said, not
Sternly, but with pity and forgive -
nese in hiss voice -"speak to him, it
• only one word. • Remember all that
he has forgiven!"
She raised her head and; trottect. at
thedying man. •Ide put . out his
hand.
"Touch ray hand once -;-once in
kindness, Felicia!" he 'said, almost
inaudibly. "I've been a bad lot, • I
know; but -bat I loved you as well
-as well as a better man could de."
She laid her hand in hie, It was
as cold as. his own. • • •
• He' sighed. " ' .
..<.11.h.,P.ctur"1.)r°,1'
!nisei"
The doctor anti Bernard came in.
At the .sound of their footsteps;
Stoyle motioned te Bernard to. raise
him. •
"It -,-was an aceident!": he gasped•
• -"an accident! .1-1 was showing
the revolver toe -to Miss Danierel;
and --and shot 'myself. It Was in My
band -when --when I fell, Ask Yorke,
She -she is innocent -mind, innos.
cent! I -I did it. An' acci-" •
• His • volee failed; there was a
choking Sob, and all was over. •
No 'man' is wholly bad. There is
•seme 'spark of good iii us all; the
least teorthY, and that spark had
sprung up and buraed. brightty' 'With-
in the heart of Lord St.o•ylo during
the last few hours of his useless and
ill -spent life. ' •
POW' better men . Coald,haire. died
-more, hravsly, • •
XXXI: •
.Nearly3six' years later the l.e Was iv'.
chinerep,aity at Rainford Hall. It
-wassaspartieulatly happyssaed • to.
say ioyial and merry partY, Pe4niPs
bkloasse it Was not a,' large .one, and
had very ',little lermality about it. '
As a znatPr •of • fact, Airs: Bernard
Yorke was rather armies for her
:..dintier,••Parties) and people when they
were initited did .aot, as is usual,
"begin to fitaitts exeuseh," Indeed,
aa invitatiort to any of the Rainford
"Hall festivities Was much sought
after and: rarely refused.
At this dinner were the:Earl and
Couatese of Lista and Lord St.
4.ohn, tt., neighboring baronet and his
vvite; the rector, Lady Doekitt, • Mr:
Graham, and:Sir Terence, wha could
scarcely be regarded as a *guest,
seeieg that he always lived with hie
daughter-inelasv, as there, looking
ridiculously young and quite' as
happy as he had ever done in his
life, and Lady GrandiSop, who *as
Ma. a visit to her yery dear friend,
,Mrs, Bernai•ti •Yorke. •
At the, head 'of the table sat the
hostesi. 'Nance had been married sit
years, but . there wasvery little -
s•change la her; indeed, that evening,
as siha• sat opposite her husband,
Bernard, with tho light of the • wax
. candles failing softly ea • her ' face,
she 'malted lovelier, - even younger,
than she had done'. on the' night of
Lady grandisoahri cpneert.
• Happiness is the. true elixir of life,
and goodnees is the moot effective
beaUtifler. When the world ,gets to
understand this Simple otet, and to
act ,up to it, what a marvelous
lchange for the better there, will be
all rottna 1
'Nance was happy now, had been
happy ever since the day s Lend
Stoyie's dying: Words had dispelled
the clouds Which had fallen over her
Ufa and broken down the barrier
7Whieriigiiertipsbetween-her- and!:
13ernard; and her happiness shone in
her oyes,: spoke: elosmentlY in the
tones. of her voice, arid made itself
felt in countless acts of Raving -kind -
noes to • alt around her.
She ;was adored, not only by her
husband, who Worshipped her to an
extent that Lady grandison declared
to be ridiculoUse but, by all her
friends, and most of alt. by the Rain-
ford people, ,
It was to her they came in all
.their grief and sorrow, Pleasures and
:Joys, fully .assured that She would*
shaee thous lessehing the - iirat anti
ihereasing the latter. .
They were fond of Bernard, and
looked up to him.' as the next after
Sir Terence, but It was ;to the
"rilletrese," as they loved to call. •
Nance; that they' eared their:pro-
foundest deVotion.
• The time was early summer, and,
though the candles woo lighted, the
red light .6f the setting Finn cast a
crinanon 'glow through the open win-
dow upori the magnifiterit room,
causing the rich plate and the Venes
tian glass, the ladies' diamOnde, to
glitter with a ruby glow
The &wet Stage had arrived, the
teevants had left the room, and fors,
moment the laughter which had
made a et:ailing, accompanintent to
the :neat had ceased, It, was oho of
those paubee which are tweet' awk-
ward -when they occur to a party of
friends who aro really Mende; and
intimate enough to • refrain from
talking Merely foe, the sake of talk).
Sir Terenee leaned back in his
chair and looked round with a
smile of happiness and content Mille'
cheerful eountenanee, his eyee
rest-
itig at last upotreN'attee With a iov-
ing
tericlorlseeee
Another. pair ot oyes wore looking
at her also -those ef Lord St. John,
Ile Wan -a frequent Visitor at the
IX0,11-one of those visitors- whose
presence is Sea treqUent, indeed, as to
earn for theta the aohriqtlet of
"tame cat." Scarcely a day pacified
but St. ./ohn rode Or walked over
from Lige Court, There wtta
at-
Wayli a Place' for him tit the table,
and arl Often ast nothe filled it, ire
Xvf..,d Of 40.44.4.1 1414.,bobikail-40
4. ,i•�. -qt.-0y • •
;
1.410, 1A44(1 QUM pernarci 0•11C1 4Numtkl
cousulted him in almost everything
they did. Indeed, he was more like
a. brother than' a friend, ' and was
never very far from Nanee's side.
He rode • with her to hounds -for
Nance sea's quite a famoue harms -
woman now -sat by her side in the
perfect hale phaeton drawn by
-"MA) BE CONTINUED.)
THE INCENSE TREE.
f* anuattr and Tixornr, 1,1ixe
rarrrik and
•Incense is the resinous gum that et*
Udes from a tree found in 13ritish So- '
m4111404 from near Berbera to Cape
Guardaful. Some incense comes from
a region adjoining IllasItat, near the
Arabian coast, Inferior incense is
found in India, but the best and great-
est quantity comes from British So-
maliland.
The incense tree is squatty, thorny
and unsightly, like the myrrh and near.
cia, and seldom roaches a height of
teen feet,
• Incense is not only used in worship,
but many orientate use it to Sweeten
the breath And burn it in their houses
to kill disagreeable odors. The crop va-
ries from 2,240,000 to 3,300,000 pounds
and is gathered in the autumn a04
brought to market- by the Somalis dur-
ing the winter months. Tbe price
ranges from 2 to 0 annas (4 to 12 cents)
per poUnd, accOrcling to quality.
Incense is extensively used all over
the orient, and last year 1,493,744
hounds; were shtpped to 13einbaYswIllell
is a great distributiag point, and 1,420,-
880 pounds to Europe, the greater par-
boil going to Marsellles and Trlest.
•,4, •
THE FIRST, SKY MAP.
-*t"Was very lerobabir the Chart
Made b7 Idinvelschus.•
The Chaldeans were probably the
first to cultivate astronomy, which,
-with-site eisterseelence,sastrelegt,qj-
Pears to have beer; evolved hiclepend-
ently by Egyptians; Chinese and Chat,'
deans, yell° had all distinguishedtha..
planets front the fixed stars axed grotIP-
ed these into censtellations,
Drawings of the heavens were prob-
ably common . to the observers of' all
three nations,'but owing to the whole-
sale destruction of •records it is lames -
Bible to say 'whether - any charts mien
plane surfaces, 'which alone can etriet-
:ly ntaps,..Were made by thent,
In More recent times the flrat to
preject a chart of the heavens was
Altaparehus,who upon the appearance
Of a new star decided to record the
state of the eky in his time and to coin -
pile a catalogue 01.41 the' stars viol.:
ble above his horizon He enumerated'
1,080 stars and.in order toD. accurate-
ly theft' positions inventedthe plant,:
Sphere, 'a. prO.leation ot a sphere upon
• a plane surface; -which Is for most pur
poses Mere useful than ri:glebe.
•
lair444 :nod %P.P.,*
The sea • gel) 'makes a splendid living
barometer .' If a, covey of sea gulls fly
seaward early', in the, morning,' sailors'
and fishermen .know : that the .daywill
baliste Mad the *Ind -fair, but if the:
birds keep inland, though there be no
h0e., hanging • out :toward, the: Sea to
:deaote, unpleasant Weather; interested .
•folk know- that the elements will be
unfavorable Ot•IsH• weathersvise flab
the dolphin Is the meet remarkable.... -
During •a :fierce. gale or a storm at sea
the 'tneriner knows that the pad of it
15 near if he .an gee a dolphin or a
number .of .that tisk Sporting on the
.high tea . waves, ,
&panes,. (Ode.
' It .is said that there 'are no. 'fewer ,
than 8,006,000 gods worshiped . by.
the Japanese. ;Praying is made ,very
easy. • Itt 'the Streets. are tall Posts, •
with Prayers printed on'theni and with •
. .
a small wheel attached. Any one pass!.
nig by .can give the wheel a. turn, and • •
that counts as is prayer. The. People
itx the seconds:largest of . the. 3,850 is-
lands Of which the empire is eoraposed
worship 'the bear and reverence the
sun, :40en,•fire, wind and water. •
•
' Wend of Ms Titte,
*Whit makes Brown sci haughty
these MOS?" ' •
"-Why, his Secret benevolent -associa-
tion has elected him to anoffice that
has a title seven feet longer than au'
title there is In Smith's secret. society."
TEACHING THE HORSE.
Will Learn .satsvilninirfthi ilistielets
Can irsoreorra.
Uxpert horsemen believe that 4 boree
on be taught to do anything that It is
possible for an animal So formedand
to be Utterly rless. Thus we know
or horses r g into battle with a
fearlessness t Is magnificent, al-
though in the beginning of their lives
they' may have bon foolishly timid,
shying at everything unusual that hap.
pertedto be seen isa their travels.
In order to teach n borse fearlessness
he must be aecustomed to all sorts of
sights and sounds. Ile Juliet eorae to
know, that 'because something that he
sees or hears is unusual it does not fol.
low that At isharmful, for it is the un-
usual things that frighten him. The
horse Is an animal of one idea at a
time and la not able to discriminate, so
say the Men who have made a study of
the horse. While he will travel along
quietly close by dise roar of a train, be
may tremble the flutter of a piece of
loose Paper flying in the wind. It le
not the frightfulness of the object that •
seemsto alarm hinyhut the unfamil-
iarity of It. 'lifers° trainers say that
the mistakes made in "breaking" and
training a colt is that it is too often
done, in, the seclusion of Boma eountry
roadlnsteacl of mold' the sights and
sounds that the animal must necessari-
ly become familiar with later.
AS soon tie the horse beeorues famil-
iar with anything and has learned to
believe that it will not burt him be
will stand quietly or trot along ewe
-
fully, even though all sorts of noises'
and queer sights are about him. Thus
the artillery horse will stand amid the
rear of cannons, being used, to the
nolee and not knowing...that the Sound
predicts anguish- and death. It is well
to aecustom la horse to unusual sounds
as soon as possible after he is trained
for riding or driving. • It 'renders him.
safe and docile, even .though he be a
spiritedanimal, ift. certain, trainer :
-Bbrees-silid • that -an -ideal- ..school -for -
horses would contain 'threshing ma-
ehtnes, pile drivers, steam drills,, elec.
Steam and elevated ears, a' band
of martial music and a gang .of quarry-
men blasting rock. A. horse that was
• aMelid finch a bedlam as this
'would indeed prove immune to strange
noises. The gentle family horse,: petted
by man and child, is not always 'train-
ed to all this, yet he often makes a use-
ful and faithful animal, loved by his
owner and evidently making aorag re.:
turn of affection. n .
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15
te"
OPEN : Lunn :p4or factg.,
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ni jo..x.nt-E• TINe.ruixree Use., 'pee, 1,, 1904,
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,
We again ono to you with otir story of
trouble, 'but a',Itory' of surprising and. ere-
'eOuraging renults. .. , • • • .
.. Ntiapolog,y istteceesary ; the greatwork
Sf 'the National Sanitarium Associatfors
• ...iarriecl on at the .Muskoka .Coi4ageSana-
i tun and. toree , Hospital for, Cousin/1p.
yes, Jesuits, well'Ictiown, ' •
•. . The 1,500 patients eared for inthese two
;tomes plead hit your help.. . • . .
' The large numbnr ot lives saved, of those.
who-n•few years ego were supposed to be
" ender sentence .of death,''' gives .a right
'-o your ,sympathy. . ,.
ln helping to- rescue a Manlier great
enough to constipate a largo prosperous
,
. s,iliage; the givieg hack to lion e and friends
a, regitnont of work&s, Snr01y will arouse
'aterest in thil,4 Work of mercy, ,
Mich patient cared for in oar Censtunp-
..0 'lattice, renew Os a source of ditisseer,
i that tino life ef ever' citizen in Canada
' more ssottre, ' •
, .
'rho marvellous decrease of id- Der cent.
a throe :t7trs in the <loath -tate in Ontario
: item consumption. „proves that •tho fight,
,arainst tide dread disease is no losing one,
The lettfileOlta 'Fred llespitai for
'f`oitSulaptives, for which this appeal is
Ade, without Any endowment keeps an
seri deo( to all whet are poor and sick, as
z.og. an it Vacant. hod remains.
• Nearly400 patients have been cared for
-n this Trespittil Shineit was opened lese
•,intft three yeara no. Tide has only 'bean
pc.tsiblo because of the continuous strcatu
of gifts that have teeno 'CY Es from every
licrt of entuttla,
itotnenthiv, ton, these were petienett that
other hospitalas a rule ream. ' , .
Alltio,tt everytrade- anti protesqlon has
Red itg'ioprtsetttativet awl of every ago--
trent the young ethoothey d 12 to the
*widowed mother of Ca, .
. $1,6400?...\V",:. ,Iree.eiVe.(1.4t,.‘,1446, rar b.! (4110
e
Trustees of the Free Hospital for don-
iminptive's through bontrIbutions and be.
quests. . '
$50,000 should be given this year it the
Board is to provide for tlw increased ae-
renunociation and, midatenance of those
pleading foradmissin. .
Whore will youa money do so much geed
in bringing health to tho sick and protect.
ii: the lives of these in year home 7
, Why should conSUltiption het be stainped
out if the needful money and help be forth.
emit*/ •, ,
• The offlcial Report sit the Sootetary of
the Provincial Beard. of Ifealth tells a
sat:prising stay -4 -story of n, Winning
fight; Showing that front 1897 up to 1000
there was a steady increase 10. the
death.rato fromTubcreulosis.
Prem. 1000 there has boon It large de.
ere:184S eaeb year, reducing the death,.
rate'from 3,484 to 2;01in three years, or
over 40 per cent. This is ail the,
mare retnarkahlo in view of the, increase in
population.
You havethe Joy of knowing that your ,
dollar has helped itt this merciful work.
The pitiful tifttof it all is 14 knowing
how many more livN eould have been saved
if the needful money had been forthcom-
ing to provide additional beds<
Will yea nob join in this great life.saving
work 7
Your dollar will bring glad:teal.
Fifty dollars will keep a sick ene tot two
montb8; May save a life. Three hundred
dollars will endow a bed for a year.
, Yours sincerely
•Ns
January 5 h 11,405,
esseessierscitiessillateell
E, A :4.4 ri N 92
N;y1-1Y YOU SHOULD .1).SL2:
'An
1,1ft-i' tmteel by sicrilerl ftr;tr"S.
Toa tasting can Wall lie called Ouse of the Erie firth.
A men who can tag•e severtli hundt•ed trips of tea a day,
and, by his keen Senses, tkicet the digevenee
between OM, aud ho, biindlokINI, can tell *bele
each and csN:ry tea was gro'r:n nol only the cciintry,
but tbe partkular district, and often the very plantation
-such.a. man is the prates:31mnd ta::ter.
The head man in my tea room, Mr. W. R. Milts, •
is a master in his profession. ITi . learned the business
in Loudon, Eng., and is is tea taster by right of birth, as
both his Patlier and Grandfather -were .4.a tasters, Tt
came natural to him,,and lie !s recognized as. one of the
best judges of tea in America.
•. He and his assistants do nothing but taste the
and superintend the blendinf.:,.. •
RED ROSE' 7"..1A is the result.
T. Ji ESTABROOKS, St, joim,
oftrANCtiES TO2:fiNITJ, id
- • Bi,Wi sr elb IMEA4 40VirstsAll6OlisOltatts;v•Ivr=p.a.
.S1,21EW. sadessssinesi•-•..-S, • ." ^
Greg,snorg a
Shorthand, like all other inventions and. discoveries,
Is continually improving,.
The latest, fastest to writS and most easily transcribed
system is the Greg -over ftoo leading business . schools
have adopted this system and discarded Pc:Older ones. •
The ,Forest City Business and llorth;pul Collzge,
teaches Gregg Shorthand and Touch 'Typewriting. • And
•every other department is up to the same high" standard
of efficiency. ,
. Students may enter any thite during term. Booklet free.
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