The Huron Signal, 1881-02-18, Page 22 THE HURON SIGN AL, FRIDAY FEBRUARY 18, 1881.
! 1 LIB FOR 1 LIFE.
se pees mous so=
a i'Tiei4 I - Ogerease
Sena wontWt started, Limbs', Augment* Dr.
Dvtirl�art, and Y Ws went *rowel
the villege, dews the moorland, to the
ponds, whish Augustus wooled to so -
mains, with a view to wild -duck shout-
ing, seat, or, "Aker, 1 ,sight say, this
winter, for Christmas. is Doming close
ups us, though the weetb er u stir p
Mild.
Lisa and her husband walked oa fent,
and quickly left us far behind; for, nut
baring been out for w long, excerpt the
daily stroll round the garden, which Dr.
Urquhart had insisted vont flee freak
air seeded to turn me did,. I managed
to atonable on through the wdBagel keep-
ing up talk, leo, for Dr. Igittthart
hardly saidaitRtbtng, until mel;, esy.,.
upon the •pert moor, bright, impiety,
snnthiny. Then I felt a chatting-- a
longing to cry out or sob -my bead
•warm round and round.
"Are you wearied! yea look as if you
were." 'Will you like my aro!" ""Hit
down -tit down on this stone- my
child!"
I heard these sentences distinctly, one
after the other, but could not answer.
I felt my bonnet -strings untied, and the
wind blowing on my face -then 41 grew
light again, and I looked round.
"Do not be frigkunied; you will be
well in a minute or two. I only wonder
that you have kept up so bravely, and
are so strong."
This I heard too- in a cheerful, kind
voice --and soon after I became quite
myself, but ready to cry with vexation
or something, I don't know what.
"You will not tell anybody?" I en-
treeted.
"No not anybody," said he, smiling,
"if turning faint was such a crime.
Now you can walk! Only not alone,
;uat at present, if you please."
I do not marvel at the almost un-
limited power which, Augustus, says,'
Dr. Urvuhart has over his patients. A
true physician -not only of bodies, but
souls,
We walked un, I holding his arm.
For a moment I was half afraid of Lias-
bel's laugh, and the silly etiquette of our
neighborhood, which holds that if a lady
and gentleman walk arm -in -arm they
inust be going to be married. Then I
forgot both, and only thought what a
)1=omfort it was in one's weakness to have
r an arms to lean on, and one that you
knew, you felt, was net unwilling to
have you resting there.
1 have never said, but I will say it
here, that I know Dr. Urquhart likes
me -better than any other of my family;
better, perhaps, than any friend he has,
for he has not many. He is a man of
great kindliness of nature, but few per-
sona] attachments. I have heard him
say, "that though he liked a great many
people, only one or two were absolutely
necessary to him." Dallas might have
been had he liven. He told me, one
day; there was a certain look in me which
occasionally reminded of Dallas. It is
by these little things that helikas me-
at least enough to make me feel, when
with hirer, that rest and content that I
never feel with those who do not care �
for me.
I made him laugh, and he made me
laugh, sevetal tithes, about trifles that,
now I call them to mind, were not funny
at all. Yet "it takes a wisp man to make
a feol, and none but a fool is always
wise. "
With which sapient saying we eerie
meted ourselves, standing at the edge of
the larger pool, watching the other cou-
ple stoning along, doubtless vert, busy'
ever the wild -duck affair.
"Your sister and Treherne seem to
suit one another remarkably well. I
doubted unce if they would.
"So did I. It ought to be - warning
to us against hasty judgment. Hpocial-
ly here."
Mischief prompted that latter sugges-
tion for Dr. Urquhart must have reool-
lected, u well as I did, the. lest and only
time he and 1 had walked scram this
moorland road, when we had such a
serious quarrel, and I was more passion-
ate and rude to him than I • aver was to
anytxody-out of my own fami}y. 1 hope
he has forgiven rue. Yet he was a little
wmng, too.
"Yes, especially here, he repeated,
smiling so I have no doubt he did re-
member.
Just then, l.issbel • laugh, and her
husband's with it, rang distinctly serve
the pool.
"They seen, very happy, thew two.
I said, I felt sure they were, and that
tt was a bleed thing to find the alder
one grew, how much of happiness there
et in life.
"De you think so I.
"Do you not think en
"I do; but sot in your Doan exert),
Remember, Mw Tbe,dwe, people res
life in a different woe* at tweedy fi.e
mad at—"
.,Forty 1 know flat
• 'That I as forty t Which 1 are net
,sits, by-the-}ry TQn dnuht it w•Msen
you a Med awful age
1 said. it sun• perhaps for a woman,
toot for a mean no name than the prune
of We, with Emmy years
which both to wurk asp#
•'Yes, for work is
joyment that ever
kis stood
VL „�..
liltus
7•' '�
wit I
before kiss b
sad gars myself credit tit e•>gpee 4(
flnenco than I P'- ' sed it
to depend epee other pop • pooh
is that Gement of tea w$ob a
can du with kis own toe
and not enjoy It; wild
Mood and nut be satisfied.
Pealeps in seas slight we I Silted
the, at least, p far &a coucersed myself,
to whom everything seemed so delicious,
after this month of sorrow.
e e.h l yes, 1 taatherel ad,ct-Mea Dr.
Urgilllari.'r- iMA/e't�!'t' 110 with mere
also. Po, it ia, I trust. Thio le a lovely
dry, lovely to its very dose, yew see."
For the sun was sinking westward,
end the clouds robing themselves for one
of those infinitely varied late autumn
sunsets, of the glory of which no human
eye can ever tire.
"You never saw a tropical surwti I
have, many. I wonder if I shall ever
see another."
After a little hesitation, 1 asked if he
thought it likely, Did he wish to go
abroad spin?
'`For some remains, yell" Then
speaking foroably: "Do not think nae
morbid; of all things morbid, cowardly,
sentimentality is my abhorrence --but I
am no naturally a cheerful Minded man.
That is, I beliete I was, but circum -
stamens here been stronger than nature;
and it now costa me an effort to attain
what I think every man ought to have,
if he is not absolutely a wicked marl
"You mean an even, happy temper,
which tries to make the bestof all things,
as I am sure you do,"
"An idle life," he west on, unheeding
"is of all things the very worst fur me.
Unless I have as much work as ever I
can do, I am never happy"
This WAS cunepreheuaible in degree.
Though onething surprised and pained
tee, that even Dr. Urquhart -was not
'`happy•'. Is anybody hapPY?
"Ido not misunderstand tee. 'I had in earnest; I beg your pardon."
not spoken, but he often guesses my We then returned to the discussion of
thoughts in a way that makes me thank- his plans and intentions. I asked hien
fol I have nothing to hide:. "There are how he meant to begin his labors ?
as many degrees of happiness as of good "From a very simple starting -point.
nem, and the perfection of either is im- ,The doctor' had, of all persons, the
possible. But I have my share. Yes, greatest influence among the poor, -if
truly, I have my share.- only he cares to use it. As . commence -
"Of butht" meat, and also because I must earn
"Don't -Don't!' salt to my porridge, you know my beat
Nor ought I to have jested when he course would be to obtain the situation
was in such heavy earnest. of surgeon to some dispensary, work-
house, hospital, or even jail. Thence,
I would widen my field of work at
pleasure, so far as time and money were
forthcoming...
. "If some one
a fortune now ! °
"I .do not believe in fortunes. A
man's best wealth consists of his person-
al labors, personal life. Silver and gold
have I none; but wherever I ern, I can 1
give myself, my labors, and my life."
I said something about that being a
great gift -many men would call it a
great sacri6oa.
"Less to me than moat men -since,
as you know, I bees no relatives; nor
u it likely I shall ever marry."
I believe so. Not constantly; but at
intervals. Something in his manner
and mode of thought fined the convic-
tion in my mind, from our earliest ac-
quaintance.
Of course, I merely made some silent
assent to this confidence. What was
there to say ? Perhaps he expected
something -for as we turned to walk
home, the son had set, he remaiued a
long tune silent. But 1 could not speak.
In truth, nothing came into my heed to
say.
At that I lifted my eyes frsm the
ground, and saw the mist beginning to
rise over my moorland -My gray, soft,
dreamy moorland. Ay, dreamy it was
and belonging maty to dreams. But the
world beyond -the struggling, suffering,
sinning world of which he had told me -
that was a reality.
I said to niy friend who walked be-
side me, feeling keenly that he was my
friend, and that 1 had a right to look up
into his good, noble face, wherein all his
life was written as clearly as on a book
-thinking, too, what a comfort and
privilege it was to have, more than any
ane else fwd, the reading of that book -
mid to Dr. i7rgnhart- my old hesita-
tion having altogether somehow vanished
--that I wished to know all he could
possibly tell se of bps plans and projects:
that 1 liked to listen to them, and would
hitt do more than lister - -help.
He thanked sea. "List/sing is help-
itag. i hope you will not refuse same -
thaw' to help the in that way -it u a
great enrmfort to tae. But the labor I
bops for is atehmively a rswa'st if ata
war could give aid, you meld, ler
Pat are the bravest le ash I ever knew."
"And rho you think 1 never oars help
year
"Se.
fIo our walk avoid
I hey "ended,- thew. there
was a good deal of leaagbini will Auger
tea and L.satiet --'sic W ptibed one
another snkkedeep into the ped, end
bibaved esnAly like* ample el 'skid -
head,
wood bs deed' That law, sir, ay Churcu
out en a holiday,. and though. blood will be
burr.'" bums, Lk. Utglisrt ailed behoves has never been
And, though your weed -
1 afterward followed leisurely, walking --snuulltd. t day sympathise with
slowly together along the moorland rued lin, loam charity
-we did DU4 row one, eunvereatio4 banged murderer, uphold fit'.
Wi etpealy Ftoetw used alike tbati * fi!► lotto been. eswtar'dtY twA-
, w ans•in-arm we 1 egg Lluwl 1 will so more have
I did not fat` defenders of such, time
twaspiri-whet M, I1, gig + g is
*Act w rhes it, or ustries4ly, or eat taken
roaswitaw N is more in lift than mere happi�edam, thelibil pman whetted �.
a ou>ner*l .4:::*, ii. B r its- as there are stole Wags Ips the Ate ed aur'
To ads se rivet so all.
.. Ko,tb W'.on,t esaottlrK, ►►b• the social than aero saarryist/ sed giving !»! hisDr 1BIa k. ilfine wouldbe $ lush marriage. rriage. If treat aireuesetances, is Cohn, greatly distressed, begged
humbler positron. Yew bow I Bove se hue taken that r'esulutiom, he is perfectly perdue and retracted everything bet
income except 7 m pal." jumttil•d is having duce so; and keeping the mischief was don. Thwlgh we
I confessed that I had never given a to it I would do exactly the Baas. anticipated no serious results - indeed bn
thought to his income, and, again sail- The ebarsoter of a man who marries has been now for sores houre inti
s'e1ld t �.h was sere Of )j<irgself to a same, or a duty, has always asleep iu his bed still he was made
ing, he sus '!',
beaus sort sit ideal of delis- like sky much memo by the unfortunate dis
He tlxon teett4 egglain that he Max mid Thekla- But they were lovers puts, staid, at our eeriest
believed mural ph7�1 evil to be - betrothed lovers; free to say "I love Dr.Urquhart
se bound up together, that it w&a idle you," with eyes and lips; just once, for wish, tilt midnight, though he did not
to sttaek ease wittiest trying to cure the a day or two --a little hour or two. go into papa's moil. When I asked
other. He thought, better than all Would this have made parting less bitter him what was to be done in case o,
itemeut
n
building etjails and reformatories, or or more I cannot tell; I do not know. papa's head sugaring for this excfor him
wen ed churches --''vacs eke Word can I shall never know aught about these -if we should send to the camp
be spread abroad without need of bricks things. When u So I will came homeDr.of th.iii. -he sent for "No,
o, he would rather we
or mortar- -would be the establishing of r'`1
mwitary improvements iu our great and myself -I left him at the door, and Yet he was anxious, 1 know; for after
towns, and trying to teach the poor, net went up into my own room. Colin left -ie sat by himself in the study,
how to be taken care of in work -houses, In the parior I found Colin Gunton saying he had a letter to write and post,
prisons, and hospitals, but how to take come to tea: he had mimed meat church but would come up stain to pupa if we
care of themselves in their own homes. he said, and was afraid I had made my- sent for him. And when, 'satisfied that
And then, in answer to my questions, he 'elf ill --so walked over to Rockrauunt to the danger to leave, I udvepr in apa anteeptp,
told me many things about the life, ley see. It was very kind -though, while he prepared
rather existence, of the working classes acknowledging it, he seemed half time of our acquaintance, saw Min lied: -
turn sick at heart; marvelling how, with He and Augustus, now on the beret of 1 wanted him to take something; -
all things going on around me, I could terms, kept us alive all the evening with wine or food; or, at least, to have one of
ever sit dreamily gazing over my moor- their talking and laughing. 'They our ponies saddled that he might ride
land, and playing childish tricks with planned all sorts of excursions-- hunting instead of walking home, but he w;• 111
bees!
shouting, and not -to take place during not.
Yes, something ought to be done, I the grand Christmas gathering which u We were etariding at the hall ---only he
was proud, that it had coupe into his to be at Treherne Court. Dr. Urquhart and I -the others having gone to bot.
mind to do it. Better far to labor thus -one of the invited guests -listened to H tack hath my hands and lob al.
in his own country than to follow an I all, with a look of amused content.
idle regiment into foreign parts, or even Yes -he is content. More than once,
a fighting regiment into the terrible as I caught kis eye following me about
campaigne. I said so. thereon' we exchanged a smile- friendly,
"Ah'. you 'hate soldiers still" even affectionate. Ay, he does like me.
I did not answer, but met his eyes; If I were a little younger- If I were a
I know twine were full -I know my lips little girl in curls, 1 should try he is
were quivering. Horribly painful it "fond .ef me." "Fond of" -what an
was to be jested with just then. idle phrase! such as one would use to -
Dr. Urquhart said gravely, "I was not wards a dog, or cat, or bird. What a
difference between that and the holy
words, "I love!" not as silly young folks
say, I am "in love" --but "I Yore; with
all my reason, will and strength; with
all the tenderness of„my heart; all the
reverence of my soul.
Be quiet, heart; be silent, soul: 1
have as I said before, naught to do with
these things.
The evening passed pleaaantly and
calmly enough, all parties seeming to
enjoy themselves; even poor Colin cour-
ing out his brilliantest and beat, and
making himself quite at home. Though
he got into a little disgrace before going
away, by saying something which irri-
tated papa; and which made vie glad
that the little conversation this morning
between Dr Urquhart and myself had
been not in family conclave,, but private.
Colin was speaking of the sermon, and
how "shocked” his mother had been at
its pleading against capital punishment,
"Against capital punishment, did you
nay?" cried papa. ``Did my curate bring
this disgraceful subjeet into my pulpit
in order to speak against the law of the
land -the law of God? Girls, why did
you not tell me? Dura, remind me 1rn
must see the young Mars tomoew. •'
I was mortally afraid this would end
in the poor young man's dismissed; for
papa never allows any "new -tangled
notions" in his outages -they must think
and preach as he does --or quit. I
pleaded a little for this .one, who hail
a brother and sister dependent, on him,
lodging in the village; dad, as far as I
dared and could, I ple1ded for his ser-
mon. Colin tried to aid me --honest
fellow; backing my words, every one
with the must eager aaaervations; well
meant, though they did not , exactly
assist the argnment.
"Dors," cried papa, in utmost aston-
ishment, "what do you mean?"
"Miss Dura's quite right; she always
is," said Colin, stoutly. "I don't think
anybody ever ought to be hanged.
Least of all a poor fellow who, like"--
(he mentioned the name, but i forget itaw sr
-it was the cthat has been much
in the newspapers) --"killed another
fellow out of jealously -or in &passion -
or being drunk -which was it? I say,
Urquhart --Tre erne -won't you bear
me outr'
"In what?" asked Augustus, laughing.
"That many a own has felt inclined
sometimes to commit murder; I have
myself, before now -ha! ha! and maty a
poor devil is kicked out of tate world
danemn/ upon nothing, who inset s hit
• may ey be better, than a great many
young scoundrels who die unhurt+.
That's the truth, Mr. Johnston, atones
I say it"
"fair," said paps, terming white with
anger, "you w at perfect liberty to se,y
eittw etlj what you pl.provided • hs
not is y premises No one. Whewser shag Meek s ay steel.. and blow
phase my Maier, es to deny Ris law
NI down here" (droppings his hand ever
we our peat family Puke, whish he allowse ens hitt IneueY to kook; assess,
ere s Ithew Y the heist, privet
dorm; tips Si* lead b r
say one, no
writtenen win ,leaks g "a lifetime.)
"Galli bat he lima heap-liedWb
'ese
the/i1N meati biew•4 Ivy Witt e I hes
without hawing others w cake happy
d w
andrew hammers from I
1)r Wath wished, as matter atter of pro
tessin al etiquette, that papa should once
N411.111 c.,usntit Ila. t • t'tittkart about kis
,eking citation' northern journey; but*
oa�l
iaadieig to the camp, we hound he
w un the have," anti had been
tut (tree, Pape. was diseppuinted
soda little atinoyed. i It was strsage,
wither; but ;night have been sudden and
important business connected with the
plans of whioh he told me, and which 1
did nut feel quits justified in aommu1
I k
Datiug farther, till he interimpapas him
self.
1 land a week of that restless laziness,
whick 1 aniline* most people unaccus-
tomed to leave home experience fur the
first few days of a visit; not unpleasant
laziness neither, for then wastheChriat
mac week to anticipate and plan for, and
every nook in this beautiful place to in-
vestigate, as its own pusaesson scarcely
care to do, but which I and other visitors
shall w intensely enjoy. I'am try-
ing to..aseil settled. In this octagon
room, which Lisabel- such a thoughtful,a
kindly holts as Liaa makes-- has spe-
oislly appropriated mine. I take up my
rest. It is the wee -est room attainable
u,g
in this great, wide, wandermansion,
where i still at times fuel as strange as a
bird in a crystal goitre; such birds as,
the Aladdin Palace of 1861, we uaxl to
see flying about the tops of these gigat,
tic, motionluse trees, caught under the
glass, and cheated by those green, wind-
less, unstirred leaves into planning a
natural wildwood nest. Poor little
things ! To have once dreamed of a
nest, and then never to be able to find id
build it, must be a sore thing.
This grand "show" house has no pre-
tensions to the character of "nest," in.
ep:e,,,ie," To use the word in it mein,
long and steadily in my face as he said [
good by half ridiculous, or pathetic; though Lisa
"Reep up your heart. I do not think Idoes tot find it so. Stately and essy.
any harm will COME to your father.• our girl moves through these uagnifi
"I ]nop,e 'Vol.,. Destro dear papa-- a !cent rooms, And enjoys her position n.
would indeed he horrible." ( if she were born to it She shows goarl
It would. Nuthiug otos: io. allowed 'taste avid g.a,d fueling, t. e~ treats maul .
,, (prx,y, washed-.tt Lady "ingest& Tee
herne, and little, fussy, infirm Sir Wii
Ilam, whose breve scratch -wig and gold
. "
spectacles ntrely appear out of his owe
Dr. Urquhart was not more caplicit P'c
than this; but 1 aur sure he wished m with entailing respect and coo
to understand that in airy of rhos points
sideration. They aro aaightily proud .•t
discussed today, wherein he and 1 her, as they ueed to be.Trott?, the best
agreed, and both differed trim my thing this their patricaau blood cnudd 'I"
was to ally itself with our plebeian line
father, it was our .iuty henceforth, as
much as possible, to preserve a respect•' Rut thank g.,dxdtaess that Lisa, not 1.
ful silence. And I thanked him in my I
was the victim .d the ,,,man! Ti toe,
heart -and with my eyes too, 1 know -
this great house, so carefully swept and
for this, and for his furbeannce in not garnished, sometimes feelaiike li beaut.
having contradicted papa, even when ful belly without • soul: I should dread
most violent and unjust.a demons entering eat p.eeseming it.
u'When shall you be coming again, Dr. cYerapelling lis" to all sorts of wild and
Urquhart!"
wicked deeds, in order to break the
'$cmc day some tiny. suave harmony of things. For inatanca
"Do not let it lie very long first. the three drawing -rooms, eu suite, whet, -
Lis and 1 spend our 'earnings, amid a
„ by. l•byreith of costly Iu,nber---sofas, table'.
And here befell a thing w atrange,'so i end chain, with our choice of five tire..
unexpected, that, if I think of it, it seems i G' warm at, glowing in steed and gilded
as if I must have been dreaming; as if, trete.' and glittering with pointed chins
while all the rest of the events of to -day tiles; having eleven mirrors, large aro!
which I have w quietly written down, 'Iowan, wherein to catch at all pointe
veru perfectly natural, real, and pair views of our sweet selves --in this splen -
able -this alone were a inething unreal, did wilderness, I should. diel trouble
impossible to tells seize me. : sun, rage. or ramp shout like
And yet, oh me! it s nut wrong, any wild animal The oppression of it
though it makes my ckeek burn end my
would l e intolerable. Better, •thous
hand tremble -this poor little hand. and times, my little room at Rockmount
1 thought he had gone, and was with its little window, in at which the
stand-
ing on the door -step, preparing to lock- branches wave lamellar sea thasn as �ie
up, when Dr. Urquhart came back ::gain in to. -d, my own little bed, beside
along the walk. it was he, tLough in which I flung n.rielf down the night be
tnatmer and voice so uuii'sr himself,
fore I left it, and prayed that ay coming
that even now I can hardly believe the' book might be as happy .. my going.
whole is not a delusion. [m sit totrtrrtcsu. )
"For God's sake for pity's sake -do
not utterly forget me, Theodora'
And then -then -
He said once that every ratan ought to
hold every woman sacred; that, if net of
her own kindred, he had no right, ex-
cept as the merest salutation, even to
press her hand, unless- unlcsa he loved
her.
Then why-
No,
hy-No, I ought not to write :t, mil I will
not. It is if it is anything --something which sell at 10 cents or large Right
sacred between hini and tee; something ounce bottle 7boenta. kt 4.4". 1768
in which nu one else had any part
which may not lw told to any one ex- 'THEY ALL DO IT.' •-•••ib •beesmtify the
Dept in my prayers. teeth and give hagttnw to the breath
use , "Teaberry' the new toilet gem. Get
My heart is so full. I will vireo this b cent sample. •' 1763
And then for some time we were so
still, taut I remember hearing a large
bee, deluded by the mild weather, come
swinging and singing over the moor, and
stop at the last, the very Lend blue -bell -
I dared not call it a hue -bell with , Dr.
Urquhart by -of the year for his hone,.
supper. While he was eating it, I picked
one of the flower -stalks and stroked it
softly over his great brown back and
wings.
"'What &child you are still'."
(But for once Dr. Urquhart was mis-
taken.) .
"How quiet everything is here!" he
added.
"Yee that wavy psple Ione always re-
minds me of the hills in the 'Happy Val-
ley' of Prince Rasselaa- Beyond them
lies the world."
"`If you knew whit 'the world' is, as
you must one day. But I hope you will
only see the best half of it. I hope you
will have a happy life."
I was silent.
"This picture; the moorland, hills,
and lake -your pond is as wide and
bright as a lake -will always put to in
mind of Rasselas. But one cannot live
forever in our 'Happy Valley,' nor in
our lazy camp either. I often wish I
had more work to do,"
"How --and where'"
Ax soon as I had put it I blushed at
the intrusiveness of this question. In
all he tells me of his affairs I listen, but
never dare to inquire, aware that I have
no right to ask of him mere than he
choome to reveal
Right or not, he was not offended; he
replied to me fully and long; talking
more as if I had been a roan and his
obnfidential friend, than only a simple
girl, who has in this at least some sense,
that she feels the can understand him.
It appear., that in peace time, the
duties of a rvgrmental surge. at are almost
nothing, except in circumstances when
then bseuree as hopeless es they are
heavy; such u the cases of unhealthy
barracks, and other avoidable causes
of nortalrty which Dr. Urquhart riot
Augustus discussed, sod which he has
tiruoe occas;ueia]y referred to, when talk-
ing to papa and me. He told me with
what anxiety he had tried to ed on foot
reforms in there matters; how 41 his
plans had been frestrated, hy the mod-
ifiers of "monument, and how be was
hopeless d over eataania sa and IIm-
deed, he showed me an t,Meid letseis,
rSMived the* meriting, finaily disarieskat
the quake.
'Ten ate, Ude Tfs.iow►
"vee weed taw owed a roma Aeehlie
ie toe rums ter h peer powers."
r
"Are
you
1 I began et the
wrest. sed; that i attempted toe ami.
would only give you
to grieve hue in any way as lung a>! h
lives...
Lorr.+w. - 1 have secured the agency
,fur this ;,new compound for Dyspepsia
and Liver Trouble& It cotes to n,.
under most favourable auspices, NON -
very
very highly endorsed and recommended.
Its wonderful affinity to the Digestive
Organs and the Lisle, increasing the
dissolving juices. c.rrectin$ the acids
and carrying off impurities of the
Stomach and regulating the Liver, can
be tested by securing a ample bottle
and say my prayers•.
CH
Pa•1's a ,w•os. too-tortAwnCoMTnRTtxe.
CHAPTER ,VII. laws w e p kmsr r ef
laws whkh vers the c+slm
Nil rrrORT. ►nd nwtrttbn, end h • exre1nl •phi of
the doe prop•rUts of weU-aeMetsd Coope. )ttr
Trehenie Ce,urt. itTl,t1 lass prnvieed our breakts•t table. with s
1 +N flaveutad brv0 s e w,Nirh mq trvr
stiteti
Where, after Auuther months pause, as ssay�ev{� ded�� t11is, 1� is b>! the Jordi
I resume my journal m T- tech erne l of gist fAst a om'
7 e+wdn (rent emit stems
Papa and 1 have been here a week. }La //sow ek nsl�N are ldkir ii
At the last moment Penelope declined i -e ne ra . to attack wherever there to
going, toying that some one ought to ma girt. a serene► 'tar'I a tarn
Ar etptmlt enrs►�1vea weft t�M w1U•
keep house of Rockmotibt. I wished to Pti" �fnod 6" ri n"ni h+d rranae.
GVrY t7 n F'aok�etr
do se., hint she would n..e allow me. ±!ditis::: ! t e stets neva '
Thu u •Erre laoo, And d, hoodoo. -.nano metes s M
p Pape rr(1 >• it s ( t.' !leaner for at'ttsriee" ,teen.
extremely. The enforced change, the , rt,i
ooaaplete up"etting of his fut•uoer solitary Camping awl to the pine wends has
wend, fins by Lu►bel " surriage god loosen ree,neewreataed t,. a,n"nta*fi►o es
then by his own illness, seem to lave , ti"tltiI dad the Rus- 1Jt M n r, is les
made hien Quite rues "gun. Refore ♦e leek en the Adirsasasakt, =al"
a re
WI Dr. MAIL pn,nauaced hitt entirely aarkpbie eater Ilse "w afflicted
reoaserad, ie might i with lye Mswar7 donate a&ec stake it
tbis� ugh mweetosbb oeavenient se ewer met, nus Y it moos
eery. ohm all tin ha, fs et the treat
west ore reea'wehle hp went (lasv's
Store er Run Menus esu enenM/e
leak forward les healthy. green 01 mea
Sod ps.sD1 Per, alt'rod N h in
as tray +aro by anw►e "44114110100r„elper t wheb pude, ih s reuses.
ielsnaes: hawing wider u trpos1 ie N Weird ed rigemsebls foto, as the vi tis, ,
wrong to write "i3eetiows 1 - thea be hos d the native tadisiat►gw.k At • co"
jaybd riot hestmoretwny
than ewenaef1*orew{A "Alb
es P1t(""1411*ahell., lleiil Tbeee
e r
tea I hew out saybodt racily •eiee Lis bows -Adv ,