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VibitIARCIVONTIM
AOMaR Cr a P d
stelet:te 1tOADLEY:5 er.CRET
'Tat rearm ofrotorteee mew
't3YwHOSr:HAhit''<oo
'VIE OLD MILL 11YSTERY
ECT EC4 ee
„......,.....,_ torree,cHr
4M—Ipest clouds, better *apart. With ug
I3,fe Can only be a full ,leaven or a rag-
tag hell. I am afraid of you.” Awl she
treemed to cower . before him, "Your
words scorch me. Qo away, or let zee
fso, Let us never meet again. If you
aye any pity in you, think of what it
to burn as I burn with this love
;phial] you have kindled and to know
rat I can never. --wait! I am mad. Oh,
Ryhy, why did I ever see yon?" She
topped suddenly and stood pressing
Iter hands to her face.
Sir Jaffray stood by her, immovable,
Pat infinitely moved, conscious of noth-
hilig save the wild thumping of his heart
ldAgainst his ribs and of the mad, bowil-
ering thought that she loved him..
!a "Let me go in, Sir Jaffray, please,"
aid Lola, her whole manner changed,
iftive for the light in her eyes.
. , .As she passed she touched him again,
gnd ho drew back as if afraid of losiug
11 self Control.
"One moment," he said, keeping his
'Voice as steady as he could. "I under-
tand now. You are right. I will do
What you wish, and till then I will not
,ay a word more."
:ie‘ He stood back and let her pass with -
alit another word, watching her with
Darning eyes till the last hem of her
tllress disappeared and the soft frou frou
Of the silk was lost in the room.
Then he turned his face to the light,
end a smile of proud triumph lighted it
as ho stood and gazed at the sea, and
Mae woods, and the landscape, though
seeing nothing, lost in the thought that
Ise had won her, a queen among women.
CHAPTER II.
LADY WALCOTE INTERVENES.
Sir Jaffray was still on the veranda,
molting and day dreaming, after his
4nterview with Lola, when Mils. De
Pitt and her cousin Beryl returned to
the hotel from the walk on which he
ought to dove aecompnnied them, and
the former surprised him on the balcony
and before he could escape. Her shrewd
instincts scented mischief.
"By yourself, Magog?" she said. She
generally had a pet name for her male
Intimates as a sort of compromise be-
tween tho Christian and surnames. This
as chosen in reference to the baronet's
great size and strength. "I thought some
One was with you—Mrs. Villyers, of
course"—this dryly --"and had perhaps
stopped your coming with us."
- "No; I think she's in her rooms some-
where," he answered, looking at her.
1 "She's a sweet old lady, I think, for
an innocent, and I certainly do think
'he's the most innocent growth I ever
met --for a woman. She's so fond of
Hear Lola too. I wonder Where sho is.
,They're the sweetest pair I know."
"I think no end of Mrs. Villyers,"
said fir Affray.
"Of cony e; we all do. She's snch an
obliging soul, too—cooling all this way
cfrom her comfortable home, and just to
iplease Lola. I hope I shall be as good
'to my young peoplev;llen I'm her ago."
"One can't think of you•as ever being
,,ler age," he answered, smiling.
' "Yon don't seem to think of ine even
as I are, judging by this afternoon,"
*me the retort, prompted by jealousy
'and helped with a flash of be brown
eye-:.
But Sir Jaffray wasn't looking at
Ter and missed. this, and his answer
was lamentably connnonplace.
"That's all you i.aow."
11 "Why didn't you come this after-
noon, then, as yon said you 'would?
;You ix:cee very well that fonder the
Cut" t :noes Beryl at any rate had :a
xigh' ro c apeet you.,,
''Y'e, perhaps sae had. I'm afraid
.so. I'm sorry." His companion's Wor;!-I
{had reminded bins of what Lola had
said, and ho felt uneasy.
"Afraid so! You are not geoeraily
:more afraid to do what yea ought to do
!than what ya-a ought not." This WV.11
said rather sharply. "Why didn't you
conic?"
' `Ueryl had you, and you had Beryl,"
'be answered with provoking slown::,as,
• ''Anil you had?"
"'Myself, of course," he returned,
getting np.
She got up, too, and stood in his way.
"I don't see why you should want to
lbidt what you've been doing."
"That would bo difficult from your
'Sharp eyes, wouldn't it?" And he smiled
,down at her good humoredly.
"Why don't you tell me all about it,,
{then?"
"There's so little in 'it,' you kelo90.
Only ttt'o letters --X and another."
".L see. You would rather I learned
it from the other, then. I Can ask hen"
"I never add there was anything to
tisk, plea e."
"Ina you blow that Beryl has had
lettc 1 1.14 manor?" asked Mrs. Do
Wa ,, r ; :ing her line suddenly, irri-
tatc.,i., 4040 , fencing with her.
"t ` . �'.l 1:7 I haven't seen her since
•they t .. •.••
' • Your mother has written to her."
This was said as though with special
aignificauee..
"The dear mother! Sho has the best
heart in the world," he replied,
"But she doesn't like the second let-
ter of that little 'it.' " And olio sought
his eyes with a challenge in her own.
"If she has a fault, I am afraid she's
too fond of the first letter. I've hacl my
own way all my lifo," he answered, re-
turning her look and smiling.
She made a pretty gesture of irrita-
tion.
"You're more than provoking today,
Magog. At one time you didn't keep
secrets from m0." -
"There are some secrets that are not
worth keeping from any one, little wom-
an," he replied. Then ho changed his
manner and tone completely, and lay-
ing a hand on her shoulder said earnest-
ly and kindly: "Don't worry; wait.
I'm only fencing."
"I know that, you groat—boy," she
answered. "But I want to know more."
"All right; I understand. Well,
Beryl," he said, breaking off iu a differ-
ent tone, as his cousin Dame out and
joined thorn, "I hear you have letters
from horno."
The girl started slightly at this, and
her usually calm and rather cold fea-
tures flushed somewhat, as if the words
had some embarrassing reference known
to herself.
"Yes, I have hacl one from tbo anoth-
er." Tho two always spoke of Lady
Walcote as "the mother," Beryl being
motherless.
"Is anything up at the manor?" he
asked, noticing her concern.
"No. Everything is just as it was
when we left a week ago. Tho mother
has not been very well; worried, the
says. She asks me to give you this let-
ter." The tint on her cheeks deepened
somewhat as she held out to him a let-
ter and met his eyes, looking at her
with direct and rather searching in-
quiry.
While he opened the envelope, Beryl
turned to Mrs. De Witt. .
"D0 you know tbo news? Mrs. Vill-
yers is going home --tonight, I think, or,
first thing tomorrow."
"No, I hadn't heard it," answered
Mrs. De Witt, looking with a keen,
quick glance at the baronet and sur-
prised to see him start and flush and
then, with an effort, recover his self
possession.
"Tho dear mother!" he exclaimed,
folding up the letter' with a care and
precision which to the keen eyes watch-
ing him were overdone. "She is the
very best soul in the world. What is
that about Mrs. Villyers? Going home?
That is a coincidence. I am going home
tonight. We crust travel together if
that can be arrauged."
"Good," exclaimed Mrs. Do Witt;
"very good and way natural. Magog,
you have inherited all your mother's
goodness of heart and have developed
with it all your own powers of acting.
This little surprise visit of yours will
give her such delight. She loves to have
you with her,,talking over all your
plans with te frank innoccineo of
childhood, and it will be so pleasant to
travel with—dear Mrs. Villyers."
A dry little smile passed over Sir
Affray's face.
"You, are a keen thought reader," he
said.
"What plot are you two hatching
now?" said Beryl, looking from ono to
the other. "I hoped you were going to
sttiy," she began to Sir Jaffray, but
then checked her,,elf.
"I had intended to stop, Beryl," he
said, looking at her. steadily, "but I am
compelled to go home to see the ;;:other
. after this letter," holdi.ug it up. "If
you wish it, of course I'll come back.
You know I always like to do what
you wish if possible. Themothericnows
Unit too."
Beryl so rarely showecl her feelings
that the deep scarlet blush which now
rushed over her face, coloring it a vivid
red from the roots of her rich brown
hair downward as she rose and made
an excuse • and went indoors hastily,
surprised both her companions, and es-
pecially Mrs. De Witt, who did not see
anything in the baronet's words to
cause it and did not understand the
reference in them.
"Where are we all this afternoon,
Magog?" she asked in perplexity.
"Where we were not last week and
shall not be tomorrow," ho answered
sententiously and with a smile.
"Aro you turning sphinx?" sho ask-
ed, a little irritably.
"No, I'm only leo soothsayer, wait-
ing to see what I ought to say and net -
inn rn inetructione." And with that he
went into the house.
"If I don't read that very clever Mins
Lola's band in this, may I never flirt
. again!" exclaimed Mts. De Witt to her-
self as soon es slio was left alone. "But
I'll find opt from iter what .passed this
11%ternoun, it I 11'.v&1 to ar,u E"e queeesson
paint blank,"
Meanwhile Sir Jaffrey had gone to
rear, over .,,,,till and answer the letter
from his mother, and he ensconced him-
self in a corner of the smoking room.
"I wish olio hadn't gone so soon," he
said—lac+ wasn't thinking of his mother
then, however. "It makes it look as if •
I was following her; but, by Jove, it
can't be that—it can't be that; she's in
earnest and means to part altogether."
The bare thought of this filled him with
a feverish fear. "Wish I'd knocked this
busine ss about Beryl on the head, before
I spoi:e. Poor little girl"—this was
Beryl—"I wish I'd never—but what's
the good of wishing? I never had a
ghost of au idea that I'd got such pas-
sion in me till I mot Lola. Beryl's a
good sort, but it's no use to think of
that now. L couldn't marry her feeling
as [ do. I wish—oh, what an infernal
nuisance it is when your people set to
work matchniaking! And one's so Help-
less—worse than if there was a regular
understanding. I could go to her then
and not with the truth, but I can't as
it is without posturing as conceited ase
enough to assume that she's in love
with me. I hope it hasn't gong so far
as that. I wish I'd never—gad, I hope
she, won't feel as I should feel if things
went wrong now with Lola. Wonder
why tho xnother is so down on her. She
oughtn't to have written such a letter
as this. She wouldn't if she'd known.
She'll be ail right when she does know.
Let me read it again quietly and with-
out that sharp little devil's eyes boring
holes in my skull. She's a little demon."
And with this complimentary shaft
at Mrs. De Witt he took his mother's
letter out of the envelope and read it
again:
Mri DnAnz;r TAreIkT-You aro u good son
and will not, I know, have forgotten the sub-
ject of our last conversation. I write to refer
to it because I hear, very 3nucil to iny sorrow -
not that I am surprised, though -that Miss
Orawshay has so timed her visit to Torquay as
to be there with you all. You may and prob-
ably will see nothing in this but a coinci-
dence unless you unfortunately ilnd it a
pleasure, but I can look at it with very differ-
ent eyes. You think you know women in gen-
eral tau" Miss Crawshay in particular. Men
are always making that silly mistake, but it
takes a woman to know a woman, and I have
not lived 00 yearn in the world for nothing,
and I have not so blunted my instincts as not
to be able to read my own sox. I have warned
you to beware of Lola Crawshay. She is not
at all what she appears. She comics of a rank,
bad stock, and she promises to do credit to
her training. Her father, as you know, was
ono of tho worst and moat unscrupulous of
men, and, as for her mothor, she was some
woman from southern Europe whom the man
picked up in some of his disreputable wander-
ings. The girl Herself has completely befooled•
her stupid old aunt by flattering her ridicu-
lous vanities and playing on her silly fads,
just as sho has fooled nearly every one who
has come near her. Sho is, of course, a beauti-
ful creature. So is a rattlesnake, and both are
about equally harmless. She can fool every
man on whom she pleases to use her eyes, be-
cause sho is beautiful, and no man could over
yet understand a beautiful woman without
marrying her. If you want to know the
value of beauty, ask mon who have lovely
wives, or girls who have lovely mothers. I
urge you, then, Jaffray, not to take this beau-
tiful, dangerous creature on trust. I do not
know how far you have gone with her. I am
sad at heart when I think that you aro in love
with her, but I sicken with fear at the thought
of your ever making her your wife;
Remember also that you aro really bound in
honor to another woman. Your father wished
that you !lhould marry your cousin Beryl. Her
father desires it above ell things, and you
know that it is tho dearest wish of iny Heart.
More than this, you have acted up to now as
If you meant to marry seryl, and in that way
you havo won her heart. Beryl loves yen with
her whole heart, Jaffray, aucl you have led her
to do so. I know this well enough, and she is
the truest and purest of good women. I have
often talked with her about the time when
elle would be ; •our wife, and I have now writ -
tea to her a leiter telling her much of what I
have said here, and that I look on you as al-
ready pledged to marry her, and I lave asked
her to give you this . letter, knowing its con-
tents and niy wishes.
I am acting in your real intere.tts, my son,
and in tluit cause I do not hesiteee to take a
very unusual step. Your loving mother,
GIVENDOLIN WALCOTi..
Sir Jaffray had broken out several
times with short, sharp exclamations
while reading the letter, but when he
had finished he sat four or five minutes
in close thought. '.Chen be wrote his re-
ply:
Mr menage mermen. -It will be bitter to
mo to disappoint you and more than bitter ,if
you cannot receive with lc.ve the only women
in the world I can poesii:ly marry -Lola Craw -
shay. Were she as binek as you paint her I
would choose no other wc;man for n:iy were.
It le' too Ivo to alter my chciee. I am coal..•;
home tomorrow to see you about it. Your
loving sun, JAI,i^teY.
"It is better she should know right
oft," he muttered as he folded the let-
ter and addresser, and stamped the en-
velope. "Sho knows I donit alter easi-
ly, and it will pave the way for our
talk."
He strolled out of the hotel to smoke
and think.
It was the crisis of his life, but he
faced it, like all things, resolutely and
boldly, looking the difficulties full in
the face, making his decision firmly and
holding to it with the tenacity of his
race.
Two things lie regretted deeply—his
mother's groundless prejudice against
Lola and the complication about Beryl—
but neither of them turned bins by so
much as a hair's breadth from his pur-
pose and resolve.
He had drifted into the present rela-
tions with his cousin. It had been the
with of othere that leo should marry her,
and he had acquiesced In the plan be-
cause no ono el.;l had ever toucb.- d his
heart. Ile had Wahl Ina in the ee:im,
unruffled way in wlzicli her nature Lad
appealed to hint and had a1' aye ad-
mired her.
But he felt now as if there hail never
been a thought of love toward her in all
his hearh
tb9Hy
slow ins Relines were a mixture of
fear olid hope—fear lest his mother was
right and lest Beryl might feel some-
thing of that desolation and misery
which the thought of losing Lola aug-
gested to him and hope that his mother
was wrong, Beryl was so true and gen-
uine a soul, had been such a stanch
Wald. and dear companion in. the past
and had taken such a strong interest in
all that concerned him that he was pro-
iouncily grieved at the thought of bring-
ing sorrow to her. .
wished, indeed, that he could have
laid the whole thing before her as he
had often done with other and lesser
puzzles and just have talked it out
quietly like friends.
Ee missed the help which the girl
had often been to him, and he was
thinking of this as he sauntered on to
the veranda at the end of his stroll and
saw her sitting there alone, just iu tbo
corner and in the chair where Lola had
sat iu the afternoon.
Ho went to her and sat clown iu one
of the Creaky basket chairs near her.
"Well, walking about to think,
Jaffray," she said pleasantly, "after
the old habits?"
"Yes. I was thinking about my go-
ing off tomorrow. I'zn going to seer the
mother, you know."
"1 thought so from what you said
today," replied Beryl quite calmly.
"What train do you go by? Shall yon
come back?"
,__ 0.._i " DEco Ttvtlt•:z• A--._ 41.
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T7
Literary Notes.
The March lerurlaber of the Delin-
eator is called the spring number,
and is an important one, as it con-
tains the first announcelnen; of
Spring Fashions and is admirable
in literature. The rapid growth of
the Audubon Societies, and the inter-
est taken in the preservation of song
birds, make extremely opportunothe
articles on the Audubon Societies
and their Work, by Frank M. Chap-
man, Assistant Curator in the ,nus,
Cum of Natural Ilistory, Lady Cur-
rie, wife of the British Ambassador
to Turkey, contributes a sprightly
paper on Country house Life in Eng-
land. Dr. Murray gives valuable
advice on Fevers and Fovnrisllnees.
in her series on the Common Ills of
Life. Mr. Meynell's article on
on Children will touch a sympathetic
chord in the breast of every mother
who reads it, and the c'ntrioution
by Fauna Churchman Hewitt on In-
door interests makes a direct appeal
to parents to increase the attractive-
ness of the home life of boys and
girls. The housekeeper will find
something new in "Almonds in
the Kitchen," and a decidedly pract•
deal paper is entitled, Whence Illness
Comes. ?Irs. Elizabeth C. Winter,
wife of William Winter the famous.
dramatic critic, contributes a story
The Mystery of Bebe Claribel, and
The Adventures of Clive Rayner,
are brought to a satisfactory con-
elussion. As necessarily only a few
of the subjects can be touched pn
here, we recommend a careful study
of the contents of the magazine. Or-
der from
r-derfrom the local agent for the
Batterick Patterns, or address the
Delineator Publishing Co, of Toron
to, Limited, 311 Richmond St., West
Toronto, Ont. Subscription price
of the Delineator, $1 per year, 15e
per single copy..
The wide range of the circulations
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garia, the list being headed by the
name of Her Royal Highness, the
Princess Maria anise. George
Kennan, the Siberian traveler, said
i that he found this magazine in homes
on the steppes of Siberia, while Peary
met with it in Greenland. It is an
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fifty-nine of the sixty-five generally
accepted civilized nations of the earth.
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women.
:tfunyon's Catarrh Remedies never fell, Tiler
Catarrh Cure -price 25e.-eradieatea the dlceus8
item the system, and the Catarrh 'goblets-pr:eet
25e, -cleanse and beat the parts,
hiunycn's Asthma Remedies relieve in Weal
•minutes and cure permanently, Price $;,
Menyon'n vite1iaer,, a great tonic y ted 00-,
starer of vital strength to weal: people. $t,
A separate cure for each disease., At all tame,
gluts, mostly 25 cente a viol,
Personal. Tatters to Prof. Munyon. 11 Albert'
street, Toronto. Ont., answered, with free tuedt.e
cal advice tor any _diaoase,
"You con testify to the assault of
this defendant on the person of this
boy, can't you ?" asked the -attorney
of the witness in the justice court.
"Doan' spec 1 cud suh."
".'Well, do you swear you saw the
assault ?"
"Nossuh, kept.&wear dat, boss."
"What ! I thought you were pre-
sent
resent when the trouble occurred "
'I wur, jedge, an' they warn't no
'saultin' done."
"Well, what was done?"
"W'y, dattar woman,Llndy Brown,
jes'natehally busted dis'boy open wid
a six foot plank.—Atlanta Journal.
QUEER I3EART FEELING.
Queer feelinee in the heart are daily
conapltlined of by multitudes of people-•
don't know the muse, but it makes theta
nervous, irritable, and unfit for either
work or pleasure. Mr. 1:,. A. Roes, .'i!lea
Craig. Ont., explaines it. Ile says :• •''[t
casae from la grippe. I was irritable,
worried, dizzy, short, of breath, aunt had
such a queer feeling io toy heart that I
thought I would give up the ghost. Mil -
burn's heart and Nerve Pills chauend all
this, and 1 ani free today from all these
tt ou bees.
rinted-S
tjJti
ra
:e
We are in a: position to turn out • ..
BILL HEADS,
LETTER HEADS,
NOTE HEADS,
STATEMENTS, ETC.
• . . 0
0 •• , • At a lowe, pri e than ever befores
QI ] 3S
We have the best stock of Envelopes in town, and
print and supply them as cheap as the cheapest.
r1-tela�,.r_ iL io
we CL
Printed on the shortest notice and the price in keeping.
with the times.
Give us a call when you are in need of anything in the Printing lltl
and we will itse you right.
THE TIMES, Win