Exeter Advocate, 1915-5-27, Page 2Your Floors Need Paint
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ADDRESS ALL ENQUIRIES TO
She MARTIN -.S ENOUR 60.
LI MIT>wa
ta4 DaOLHT STREET)
Nyle
THE FATE OF AZUMA;
Or, The South African Millionaire,
1LAPTi It SII.
t z , „ '-rte suri;r ,
ti e •ata. , Le,•,i;at a •
"• ilei .lei 'i :.•eked mare ex%
ce; t ;Lae a •tr, had e: a the
F•.. 1 the sea :'tie -;nid. t•a a ant
t• e meet an nes :i" at there it:ad nt ='n
3That r. :h. 'r :De the w- t';1 wht:-
it i 3 t i e �a.,. XI that had been
ea 1 t .t. ,a e: '• age meat wee broken
et' a we •a Judah ;eel that runt eesir.
afie ea a: "lira. George D:anur•. It wa-
ne .sit, th , Vasa Ludy (. a cart ray
tn • ,-h had i o often b f are, with
ra..a xt :tea me',sl.ae:ou. l ' with re-
g int t Iialxrt, that Judith httd
c:t t eel her mind. As one woman said:
•'0a, change ones mind about
Gelene L': vers,'
Whet men began to ask themseirts if
it 'we- o, whether they had better not
eel. ee :brut•=civ._; to home laughed at.
And ware than that, a little of the truth
head treeepired.
There is something odd about it," one
wnm an had said, who was a friend of
Geeree D uiver+' married .'.:ter, the wife
of
in Irish peer, "and when I ,eked Le -
tele about it, she simply wouldn't dis-
cu think it is kinder not to spews
about it. my deer, she said. 'in fact, it's
the ou:y thing we van do.'
X:- for the deur old Duchess of Dum-
fries, who w:ae the beet friend Lady Glatt -
court bad, probably because they were
both so unlike, «he told, Lady G:oucourt
frankly:
-My dear Cornelia, I wouldn't say that
if I weee you, for you know people will
only laugh at you."
Thel was in answer to Lady Glaucourt'e
aft re peated remark, the sense of which.
as ,
matter of fact, elle twos beginning to
think wre true, although :she knew it
w•asn t:
"Judith is $a changeable, so frightfully
exanting. I .really don't believe she will
ever be satisfied with anybody."
"I had to tell her," said the Duchess,
"for though heaven knows I'm sorry for
her, there is no use in telling more lies
than one is obliged ,to --especially when
they are no longer believed.
Yes, it was no use dieguising that this
year people looked at Judith 'askance,
and she was not asked to quite aeueh ex -
elusive houses as she had been;
She Still had a little court of men
around her, forer
beauty
wets that
type which
resembles a picture by a
great artist, roundwhich .he
t re is always
y
a crowd• grouped in a picture gallery, but
she kee
w the signs of change.
Those
that still 1 suera n
dad her, she eould dividee
into
types, there wer
e
men who hadnever
ne r
proposed,
who couldn't or wouldn't,'who
never hd
meant e nt to the totally 11 out of
theuestion
q Men who ocular tff r
a a d
to dress ass .her "even tobuy buy her boats,"
someone, had said. Foreigners who had
not heard, or who hearing didn't care be-
cause they didn't belong to London; but
who thought her 'exquise," "uu neve";
a few boys who heard no gossip; a few.
old men, whom ehe interested more than
ever on account of the gossip, a few mar-
ried men, who either didn't mind if their
wives were jealous, or who wanted to
make them jealous, or to console them-
selves; artists, who had painted her, or
Wanted to. On the matrimonial horizon
there eine no one now; and her mother,
with her usual want of savole faire, with
her horribly inartistic frankness, which
was brutal, when she addressed her.
daughter directly, repeated the old coun-
sel :
'I really think you might do worse than
marry Hugh Glover. "• Notwithstanding
all that. had happened, ,it seemed the only
thing to do now.
Rut even Lady Glauceurt herself, had
been surprised at Judith's ready sestir-
eeotian. Her ability, that .was what she
could
not understand, el' nd what at
she admired,
d
her ability,to facethe
music, .to appear
once more on the battlefield on which her
hopes had so hopelessly fallen, and from
which she had seen so many of the.wound-
ed retirelbefore complete defeat overtook
them, before they were captured, prison -
I Bat Ja i.:h w•+u'd never marry Hugh
, Graver, nt ver: rather, elm would have
i.altevi him ' f i•he c cud. Yee, beneath all
, the humal.at:,in, the horror, the distill.
p o ntn:ei;., the eenee of renewed defeat.
the ak,'n np her s'onrage. her purpose,
' there lees one jay left, which was fierce.
trel-sweet, the joy that Hugh Glover
had gene under, been exposed, Ye'ts, to
her it seemed to emplet ize that he had
g, one under, the fact that the day his
Ibanlcruptry had appeared in the paper,,
he had written, after all that hod hap-
' petted, to tell her that if :she would send
him a hundred pounds, he thought he
could arrange it all with Damien?, "kr-
' range it all with Danvers," ' The letter
h had actually made her smile—it .was so
l "nail."
But how much :the could see now, the
seeing of which embittered all the horror
1 of her position. That night when he had
, threatened, she could have kept him quiet
by offering him money; She ought to have
kept herself in hand. Yes, I're'wleey had
been right when he said to her notto
take that brandy and soda, She had not
i in any seltse not been sober, but it had
exc:ted her, and she had given way to
the ex're''aion of her loathing. Oh, how
rotten, how rotten her life become, how
one thing after the other seemed to con-
spire to make it 'aon:e anti worse, and as
if they were the halting places of an
'etape,' she could mark the three great
transitions, the three great transitions
her character had gone through, in pre-
portion
ro-portion to which even the "malheur"
seemed to have lost its primary and colos-
sal significance.
There had been her love for Sir Hubert,
when she had still possessed streaks, as
it were, of holiness, patches of :sublimity,
Which a -gentle, forgiving hand might
have drawn together into one beatific cov-
ering; when, from gratitude, from shear
have, from renovation of self-respect, from
trust in the future, she might have grown
good. Then the second •time when, after
being left, awful in: her callousness, in
her intent to filch from life what remain-
ed, and to jealously guard her secret,
come what may, she.still .would have been
;thankful to the goods, and been a faith-
ful, or at least a careful wife.
And now, :when her very soul was ar-
raigned against heaven and earth, when
there seemed nothing left but hate in her
heart, hate for George
g
e Danv
erS and his
statey desertion, hatefor Hugh
Glover,
hate th •fd.
r e women 'who scoffed, the
and t e
men who preyed,hate for
the treachery,
Y,
the want of loyalty,
the want of manly
succour, the want of 'tenderness,
hate
b her child because er chi d had been takenaway,
,
who one day when theyears y e rs had come
and gone, and left her- loveless and alone,
might have roved a olace an expiation,
s tion
p
xp
hate for her mother, who so helped the
bleeding of the daily wound, and did, no-
thing to 'bind, yes, and almect hate of her
father, mho coming and going daily could
not read upon her face the imprints of
her soul's deepalr. .
If once she had been 'a -sullied Lady Ju-
dith, an awful calculating Lady Judith,
designing, reticent, cold, now she became
a 'wicked Lady Judith, seeking whom she
might devour, regardless. Yes, it 'was a
wonder, even to herself, that she had the
conat.'age to face the London nvorld again,
the London world, which always knows
the welnet so accurately, and pays no
heed to the redeeming features, the slften.
elating circumstances,doesn't want to
heed them, for fear it should be asked to
pity or, console. She alone knew that it
was her mission still to outwit the world,'
to force it to make ,obesiance, if not ,with
goodness or position or tact or beauty,:
then meth +wealth, wealth on Such a scala
that she could buy the hearts of men and
the respect of Women, even if afterwards
she tossed them aside. Yes, she
prom'S
ed
herself no littlepleasure from toesang.
ahem aside. She had grown cruel, Lady
Judith, cruel as a mother who has killed
her child, and 'who kno*s that if that tie
did not deter her, there is no reasern 'why
she should nob kill anyone elsew.ho
creases her path; cruel, caloula'aing,
watching every move on the board of.
life's game with shrewd, calm eyes, be-
lieving lit nothing, clinging no more to
these sltresl•- of uperetitioue dread, whiell
take the plae'e of tin' divine in the hearts
of the mot hardened; believing in noth-
openly d• 1
ing, or believing, cies ar ng her -
elf am the side of the devil, who alone
Y
with
e'a to forher welfare, antit
te.m itarel
the goo t ing hatred, the growing harden
,ng. the certainty, as if some denizen of
hell had ;told her, that nolle could defy
the therere of lift. and death, that she
would . u,'eec•d, that the justice which she
d eueiieved in wile yet somewhere. and
that .she would one day wield it to her
own perish -le.
What goad could it do, her mother ee
ed hecalf, coming to London, rcv,k'
nvil:g
the whole -tory? She had hoped, Lady
(tlau^our. that new .elle would really go
is for set ceriou,ly. She even suggested
that till thing: had quieted down, elle
;hnulal go s mewhert' for a. few month.;
with Madame Dufour, travel, go round
the world, or t'h Japan. Frewley had evert
offered to go with her. He was c-orry for
her, without knowing the full extent to
whiclz she needed pity. That fearful night,
on wlieb elle had appealed to him, had
brought out what 'was best in him, and
since he had taken himself to task for
I not having lioked after her better. 'I'lure
had even been a touching episode between
them in which ehe had said:
"Somehow Frew, I don't know how it is,
but I don't seem to have had a chance.
Somehow one can't talk to mother about
anything, and—" Yes, with all her beauty
it seemed to Frewley es if something had
been missing that would have helped her
not to go the pace so much. But even he
did not know quite how fast -the pace had
been at one time.' For she had told him
an untruth that night, and although he
knew that it was au; untruth, he thought
that under the circumatauces it was ex-
cueeble, and lie didn't want to know the
truth.
But Lady Judith had no intention of
going abroad, nor of disappearing. On
the contrary, this time she was going to
manage her :'ffaire a great deal better.
With grim humor, she told herself that
she had had enough experience to do so.
That awful night had been one of the
revelations which the fates offered her as
an education. Instead of -showering her
with gifts, they had taught her hew to
weave her own destiny now, and she was
going to weave it.
It might be this year, next year, not
for several years, 'but she thought that
it would come quickly, because she was
moving so cleverly along the line, work-
ing another'set to that which she had
hitherto -worked in, limiting her ambi•
tion, the while she widened it, spreading
it out, making the bassi of it, firm. This
time she would have no revelation, no
surprises, because she would fight in the
open, place herself beyond the possibil-
ity of reproach. It. was a daring scheme,
and one she never spoke of. When her
another asked her, with a species of de-
spair, what intended to do, she would
laugh and say:
"There doesn't seem to be anything to
do, does there, mother?" And her mother
began to wonder whether she was quite,
te
quite sane, She wlah
ad thee
she e wasn't
'
that she wau1d show more daor stvebi signs
nti�a for thenshe spirit-
ed
deme could rl -
fudbes t
p
there was one
ed a. If's s woman in the
away.
wopld to whom it was the bitterest trial
all to have a daughterof nearly
n
gy
twenty-five on her hands, s it was Lady
y
art. She had 'accepted Giau,co ed the burden
epb d n
or two Seasons,•almo• ascon-
cession,of one3t a
wrung from er motherhood
b moth cod
ng y
and mrriage, but, she had never bar-
gained for seven successive seasonal, never,
and really, next season, she meant to go
her own way 'and let Judith go hers, She
really was -quite convinced that so fax
Judith had not gone hens, except per-
haps that once,' And she recognized all
the difficulties now.
And lately, Lady Judith had even won-
dered how she could ever have been so
foolish as to allow any -engagement to
take place wiMth'out having first squared
that. brute, Hugh Glover. Of course she
ought to have known that' he wasn't a
gentleman, and elm ought to have seen
that he was somehow expunged from her
circle. Now, although she knew that he
had lose power, she still thought that it
was quite likely that he was telling every-
body. George Danvers wouldn't, that she
knew, for all the treachery she had met
with, all the unkindnet:a, the quick reap-
ing of the whirlwind, ebe yet could still
discriminate. It was on this d'arlamina'
tion that site eoun:te•d. It was. no longer
a case of finding
a man,who wouldn't
ao
't
speak,none it was a question of fin •7; a
man, who, if he found opt, wouldn't
care,
or could not retaliate. She would find
him, a:he told herself. That night, thee
awful night at Giayoourt, which ifor ever
seemed associated in her mind with moon-
light and a grinning' faun, and feat', die-.
phanous, drops of water, mocking her
. purity wens the last of real •pails of hor-
ror, of humiliation, she would ever feel.
Yet, for all that, how -the scene came
over her sometimes, and, ,because she had
not seen the expression on his face, he
would try and pictures to herself what
George Danvers looked like when be over
heard Hugh Glover's words, Frawley had
told her how well he had behaved. her
brother --yet, that comfort at least ,she
had, that the•:mert who belogged to her,
to whom she belonged, were gentlemen.
The awful, awful feeling was that now
she would perhaps have to enter the
ranks a& those who were not quite, the
.parvenu, the ananufaoturer, the self-made
man. ate did not- know, poor Lady Ju-
dith, that .those mere the men from whom
she could expect the most gentleman -like
treatment, as society is now. If .she bad
realized it perhaps she would lave un-
dertaken her prri;ent crusade in a gout-
ler spirit. fraught with lets scorn.
Yes.:. her brother had behaved well, and
Danvent bad ,done all that area possible.
perhaps, where the one thing seemed Ina
port. bre.
When the words uttered by Glover on
the night air had reached them both, in
a way 'which made? it impassible to ,emit
not to hear, or, 'by the furthest stretch of
the imagination, not to understand, them,.
both men had halted feu: a e e r ond, but
only a moment, both tnstinetively avert-
ing the danger of hearing what came
next by qucknese of dee:sion. Frewley
threw away his cigarette, and Dancer's„
turning to him, - seed with ctuppeeeeed
agitation:
-Apparently 'we are interrupting a Seri-;
one e' crenation:' and turning on his'
heel tont hack towards the house.
Fre '..4eN- slid not follow him, It was •
only right that Judith should know what
hue' been overheard, and. betides, front :
Glovers tone, be fancied that the man ,
was annoying her. He pushed his way to-
w the he f• anntain.
"{Chat on earth can :alto be thinking
shoat, to come here th°s last night, at
the hour and with that man?" lie real-
ized vaguely -that it a •ns all sever betrteen
his ester, and Ilrnavetn. acid he blamed
himself for it; 'what on earth had possess
ed him- to bring Glover with him?
"I came to fetch 3'ou," he told his sic -
ter. '•I don't think you know hew late it
is, and. , "
'Oh, itobira , , ," Judith stret,'hed her
Ima ]randy 'toward him, with somethingg'
like piteous entreaty in her face, 'which
was en unlike her, that Frawley cast a
look of anger at (clover, who stooped to
pick up aomething, something which '
d sin t east merely to gain time.
"I'm coming, Frew." She cast one hair
recd glance at the figure of the ratan and
walked away with her brother. As they
hurried along through the dark path-'
vayt, deserted now by the Croft moon-
light, they could hear the man they had
left. behind, 'whistling softly to him,;elf.
What he was wondering was whether he ..
had won or lost
"I suppose you know that Danvers was
-vitt me just now, and that we overheard
something of what that brute said,"
I•`rewley s poke ,a;rlily. What en earth
had irsu•t'd her to come out aud,>pesk
to the man?
"Ohs dear, .rear'" Judith moaned; titere
is tie other word -with which to describe
the way Ate said: "Oh de se. dear:"
It ivae a cry as of phy, .c,tl pain. and
yet ii - z.ced the com ng topease of wane -
thing whisih she had knc s•n meet came.
htei
Iia old bee eat'tly sisal they had over.
,hard curd as , they hurt:cd back to the
Je Title turned the wards round
aril ranted in her mind pandering if .
there was any iater,tret et',on she soup
put nom thein ash='s, t would s ttc•if,' him,
tE the man eite wee engaged to. so, ;tit,
I didn'tetas hos she ,eu lel ea•i:ain then.
t :ayIt: they bade Lily bear.3 hint ray
the tire part f :lir ,sentence "You will
have to marry ane, she could have lout it :
down to Me s:c:encc of a fervent love,'
i"When that fellow Danvers ers knows -"
When they were close to the bailee. she
maele her brat her repeat them.
-You are euro that those were the ex•
act wors?
'' lute dt n"l'e'.''
No. thn,• :o t'>ld never explain. She
nti''ht perhare with another Idiot of man.
'have invented a story of having flirted
with this man (Hover, -but he wield want I
I'to know everything, he would want an
explanation, an explanation smell, :is later 1
Iwlien he 'was mint -ter somewhere. he
would demand of another p wer which
1 bad slighted the prestige of Great Britain. ;
She would babe to explain it 'neidly,
coherently, and the could not. Some
1 months ago perp;ipe she would have
bad sufficient vitality to invent a plan&•
ible tale, but to -night elle was. conscious
i that she was mentally, if not physically
I weaker than she had been Were her in-
tervie•w with Hobert (:reaham, Now to.
i night, after her eenversatitin with Glover,
: ehe wee+ dazed, stunned. She could not
find words in which to explain.
And as elle neared the hou:e alis won-
dered if he would he waiting for her, and
Ishe told herbrother that clic could not
see him, not 'to•night. , '
"You had far better see hint now," her
brother told her, he,s disappointed,
don't you know, hiea last evening, and then
sending him 'to play billiard -'-,what on
earth .
"Oh, don't don't," Judith pleaded pito
owaly. It •w_a •t no good asking her what
had pcasesweat her. It was her evil gen-
ius, the ill -luck which seamed to pursue
her always, always. Now she saw, ne all
the humans do in good time, that noth-
ing that they can do avails, that the
twists of fate are beyond the most pot-
ent machinations and designs of men,
that for all the good she had done she
might as well have left Danvers and Glov-
er io themselves, for, as surely as if it
were written across the sky, she felt that
everything had come to an end: She could
never explain, never, and if she did, at
any moment Glover might 'tei'1, even
now, in a few moments they might 'e
talking together. In her confusion of
thought:, in her dazed state of mind, -she
+icngot, having jest come ,tram an inter-
view :with a man lost to all sense of hon-
or, that all - men 'were - not Like Glover,
that 'with Danvers she .was dealing with
agentleman, who would take no 'word but
ea' own.
But evhen they returned to the house,
Danvers was not waiting for 'them. Some-
thing, the could not have told 'what, held
him back:from seeing her till she sent for
him. And mare than that he wanted to
think. What he had heard would not
have affected him so much if it had not
come on the top of a certain sense, al
most of .-discomfort, which had pervaded
his whole engagement to her,
'He had never, he told himself, felt quite
certain of her, Stever +been quite sure that
she cared for him deeply; there had al-
ways been reserves, barriers on her side,
which he bad found it difficult to sur•
moun , to overcome, which lie had 'never
been, quite sure that he bad ibrakett down,
had atu'ulounted, and now the explana-
tion soured 'to lie in those 'words:
Whotz that fellow Danvers known,"
Aw 3'et, he thought only that it tmean�t
that ,she had been engaged to him, Hugh
Glover, but even, that fact disturbed 'hitp,
because she btid'fold hint that she had
never been enieaaged.
The 'fact that She seemed to have toad
hint an maritah, troubled hint, the facet
that in her poet 'lay little episodes which.
she had not confided to him, Yet still, he.
wanted to trust her.
It wee past one o'eloek when he bad
left the rhododendron walk; it was 'three
wizen he 'went to bed, and no word had
come from her that she wished to see him,
and this was hie last night,. It must
mean 'that ehe intended to throw . him
over. In the morning his valet -came to
awaken him for the early 'train, but he
told him that he would not- go till eleven.
The carriage which rolled away soon af-
ter seven, carried Hugh Glover alone,
Hugh Glover 'who t'Ilouglzt ht was not bet -
tee to see any of them again just naw,
and who had thought to travel up to
town with Danvers.
At breakfast, Judith did not appear,
and her silence held in it something ow-
.inous for George Danvers.
After .breakfast, lie sat down and wrote
her a letter. lie had hoped to see her be-
fore he left, and hoped to hear from hor
own lips what those word, had meant. 1,
Ile repeated them over again. Ile was
cerrhin that be could have .faith in her,
but surely they .must have an interview.
If ache hadbeen mistaken in thinking
that elle cared for him, well—she mu':t
give him up. Ile must leave now in half
an hour. Would she not come down and
see hint and tell him frankly what it was
all about?
When the maid brought the letter to
her e mistress's room. Judith who bad note.
slept all night, had duct fallen c ale.•p. The
mwent awlaiday ehe letter 'by bier bedside, and
When she awoke, it mas the sound of
carriage •wheels on the avenue, which
awakened her, the carriage mheelat which
bore away George Dancers. lie lead wait.
est till the last moment, but she had giv-
en no sign. In 'her gilence, it seemed to.
him, lay her answer,
And 'when she awoke. Judith knew that
it was a -fate. a dismal Kismet she dared
not withetaud, that it would be ma good
now to call him •back. She did not write.
Size did not explain. She eauld not, '
(Tc be continued.)
•
"PROM THE RANKS.."
Officers Who Started Their Military
Career as Privates.
That it is quite possible for a
private to use, step by ,step,
through the British Army, to the
rank of General, we are reminded'
by the news of the regent death of
Sir Luke O'Connor, who was one
of the earliest rankers to do this.
He enlisted in one of the Welsh
regiments when a voting man, went
through the Crimean War, was
given a commission for signal bra-
very and ability, made a great
name for himself when he was
awarded the newly --created V.V.
for swing the colors in action, and
then ruse, until at length his career
was crowned by his being made a
full general and a knight.
But Luke O'Connor was not actu-
ally the first of these not -rd rankers
who ruse to be celebrated generals.
Probably Sir John llley could
claimelabit that distinction.
John llley entered the Army by
enlisting as a private in the lisrs:a
Guards, and he so won tilt• confi-
dence and commendation of his su-
periors that he was given a com-
mission- In the end he became a
"Sir," and a. full general,
The Duke of Wellington looked
VVhel
A Woman Wants
her summer Dresses--
her
resses—her "frilly things" ..her
fine linens -:-to look their
whitest and daintiest—
she is very particular
to use
Sliver Gloss
LAUNDRY STARCH
It gives that delight-
fully satin finish. :
YOUR OROCEER I -IAS IT
66
The Canada Starch Co. Limited, Montreal
t -
on 1,
E eta one ofhisclay • s
cleverest and
tan
,most reliable men. Indeed, at
Waterloo few of our leaders were
so much trusted and consulted by.
Wellington as was General Elley. -
Then we might mention Joseph
Brume, who came into the Army
as a little drummer -boy. He fought
so well in battle, and displayed'
such early evidence of precocity as
a soldier and leader, that he was
given a lieutenancy, rose quickly to
higher posts, and ended his military
career by becoming a lieutenant -
general.
Joseph
Joseph Brume founded quite i
family of great soldiers, for since
his death both his son and his
grandson have become generals.
In our own days we had Genera>ll
Hectofr. Macdonald,: whose, teaa-gb
career is too well - known to need
revision. Enough to mention here
that Macdonald entered a High-
land regiment. showed himself eo
brave and able in battle that, when
offered the choice of a ti .C. or a
cummis'ititt, he chose the /atter,
and then ruse quickly to the -
heights lie attained during the
South .'African campaign.
.tis.,, we must not forget William
Mclleaat, perhaps the greatest rival
`-Mirk" ()'Leary has had amongst
soldiers of past days as the "one-
man attatk'r" of an army. At
Lue'knuw °Ale/ eaan, with his own
hand, killed eleven of the mutineers
in single combat. After receiving a
commission in due course be was
promoted till he a
t last foundnd h}lll-
salf General W. 1<IeI3ean,
It is characteristic of the cowl
way he had of looking at things
that, in response to the congratu-
lations of his -captain at his feat
just described, he answered
"Tut, tat, sir! Why, the whole
jolt didna talc' me twenty meen,its I"
.14
ere
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