LOVE REASONS NOT. CHAPTER LII. A GATHERING CLOUD. It was strange that she should use the| Vani same words which Leone had used. “I canmot bear it, Lance,” va said **Why have you done this?” act hed ‘He was quite at a loss what to say to her; | she had expected him to 80 1 he was grieved for her, vexed with those who told her, and the m caused him to turn angrily cound to her. “Why did 2a: take her? What is M to you?” she asked. “My dear Mation, can you see any hi in my giving madame a rest, whether on water or on Jand 7 She was ai nt answered hi “No,” as eats: “the harm lay in con- it from me; if you had told me about | his Laie and have. liste sie nfl feat you me why, people tale about you and Because : ald da {Bathcan, ad asked, feteresst for minute before she | cular friendahip ‘or acquaintance between je not gossiped about you, Twi oursel ‘ow can A out t eas Ane do Sp talk 2 th different Lance, she ‘ssid unhappy ; if there ‘anything to tell me tell it now.” I have to tell. yor he ned. to her geotle es re on the contrary, hi , you will not o ris ‘The words touched him deeply; he shought continue this conversation, pane infact, of the boat among the water-lilies, th Deautifal, passionate voice floating over the | je saps) the beautiful, passionate face, with te defiance as the words of the sweet, sad | satis pa fell from her lips. “Lance, why did you not tell me ? Why | did you not ask me to go with you? I can-| gitence, Lad, he not understand.” hen a man has no proper excuse to make, no sensible reason to give, he takes refuge in anger. Lord Chandos did that “I should not suppose ot po Wee first gentleman in England who has taken alady out for a holiday ad felt himself highly honored in so doing.” “But, Lance,” ‘repeated his fair wife, | * I decline to say another word on the ~ I have said all that was needfal., let: it end’now.” « Yon ts y this, Eoorisst that am dis- , Lance,” said farion. say it, hoping that yon iatend to obey harry "Withoope padehée word; anil in pertect thandos qnitted the room, Te was ulto by sscidant she learned he eno, “why did you not take me] went often to Highgate, In the ables 1 “My zn Marion, I did not think that |), I was compelled to tell you every action of | ¢ a fine pair of grays ; she liked using ie door vith a pair of chesnuts she parti. my life, everywhere I went, everything I ealarly disliked, did, everyone I see ; I would never submit to such a thing. Of all things in the world, I abhor the idea of a jealous wife.” She rose from her knees, her fair face growing paler, and stood looking at him here are the gray sco naked Lad tas dos, “Coming down Highgate Hill, my | Itisa tribe hill-—so steep and awk ward,’ a he mi: with a strangely perplexed, wondering | replied tl 20. * I cannot argue with you, Lance,” she said, gently ; “I cannot dispute what you say. Youare y a perfect right to go where you will, and th whom you will, but my instinct = ““My,dear Marion, you are tier: tonto, he anid, abruptly; “you know noth. ing of th Pr ry ceas Bive lest ne hinieiih tire of aoper ron her oe "Ch than he nat 6 oo an. Wnenhe weal eee thought nothing | L* of ie but fora sudden look of warning she w fla: room the eouclusions and very miserable ones oud rive them deepened—deep- | P° all her loving amiability, her phetias Boe revels an jion deteriotates the human mind or the bv ee i bepueal actress in tl | human heart more quickly than jealousy. when I ask for an explanation a dur watchful days, Lord Char - Yon hays tumiercojcite Mee “No,” te replied, et ‘T have n “and I do not understand, ought Madame Vi pie ‘was so good anc Hear “So she is,” he replies , You must not from me ?” “Marion, I will not be annoyed by jealous wife.” the would have f him, «Lance, dont likeit,* abe ai, slowly; him eae ee nea wr One day asense of it her. happiness came over her, and she deter- but eit she is so good | mined to speak te to him about fe She would | 9 phy should ithe try to take my, husband destroy th iy agehas net done, 20,” he replied angri a any thin his danger, and all might have gone well ;as it was, all went He regret of her lost is shadow that lay be jo would dispel thecloud. Surely he would for ‘bor al e—ahe wr nap the world for his study, in the ploaniiny of a bright ft sci am not jealous, Lance,” she replied; /day, when she went in to him and stood “but when I'am told s proves to be true, inf tnt “Say nothing, Marion, which is alwa ue wisest thing » woman can do,” jeich i & wile gazed at him with proud indig. nidio not like the tone in which you ee f this; tellme frankly, is it with iene nd ai the time dame Vanira which y “7 shall say nothing “of aiities Ver ira,” he replied. gi e drow nearer to hi laid one white hand on his is toute pa wistfally into “Lan hat Madame Vanira is to “ She is nothing to me,” he re a ptory. and it ae by his si a do not know what you hecinsl: sink hin cigeee: no said, aes fee that she said no more, CHAPTER LUL fatal passi dhaman hegrt, and tarns 1 Das aint mace Chandos di wn All a brooding, this’ hot angui the desolation, the jealousy seemed to sui and reasonal uni = * Trifles lightas Are tothe sealous co confirmation strong Iw was so wick at last gre wt bitter to be born “lies #2 Chandos, ped i ge teh edied. People were beginning to talk ; when | had so1 ja | Lord Chandos was Pocagrd they fire) Vanira. I know it by the expression a © Ma Van- ae significant smiles. Against Madame they ualataiiod So a = e aeguniance | + a mis-/ conid, Lord Chandos rejoined his wife. Mi mn the faintest |? « you that ety pao hold of a pean af (isn who would come Seem ives to ture > se] vag the eases ape a satire of fate, su of her own life -that Leon e's iewala lips curled with a bitter suaile. It was sho w e | had cad ha (ostandl quibble of the law, and ish, | woman had taken him for herself. ¢ ble | brief reply. of hep passed on, bat fate again intervened m the person of ‘Lord Chandos, iy Sar ‘ion, sat pele once that something was wi Madame your right,” she said; “I Borgel Hi ve rumor of scandal ; but certain idea was hoc that “Henosforth She” watt or rent in society—that Lord admired the queen of song. | Noone insinu- ated the least wron; “ oo. have dared 1” he cried, forgetting him: pab- followed the mention of either name. “ Mada ‘anira was at Lady Marty: t night,” one wonld say. And the laughing answer was alway thandoa was not very hee he Yanira sung to perfection ‘ Fidlio,’” would remark one, Another would an: swer: ‘Lord Chandos would know how to ap- | DIA ;| pland.” of Leor rrosgan beast mn peer ‘to him. mis| «have dared.” she replied ; ‘1 refuse or ee Madame Vanire again -ahe ae _ | Lord in | heard And T py ria you wrong a good and blameless woman, Marion, when you say rds.” Risdame Venire waszaore cenerly.Song'8 | chooses fe yfrenda oho emia ie my. after than other women in Londo: not only over the stage,but | as you please in that oe ins replied, | Tiel Leone would bear much for hi: 72 did not paid what his wife erie mpted to s ‘they mete ef 1 the night of Lady Easton’s ball; neither knew that the other was com- them beter Coe ee, other horses they bee the eaatial anti-room that Ted to the fall dase te face. Leon of pale amber brocade, and Lady Ci aibmantatutiaatcuns daily Hloanalvat the long train ot wnich was fastexed with w shining pearls, Tt waslike the She oe of rival queens, rion’s gi one 8} Lady Macion,”” sho eaid, fn low pai “have f displ ased you ? “Tes, you ” was the brief reply. “You will apeueoricay ante? 28 F 1e ra <5 8 ry “No, I baieer: to Seek. Bias oe eo of as to what their next jeeting would be like, He knew that ne wore a fuer dress g 5 oe d to see it. They ‘aes a brief space of | advertising a course of iectures on hygiene cra e to receiv As you refuse ig ’ friends, I must Vanira; he had always been.so good, so de- re. bad go to meet them,” said Lord Cha: si badd ahs proi andos was the | 8° 407 then But the result st her watching was bad; fa not mot sino it showed that her husband had other | lame oS mann, foe ‘hen called s and went hom HYGIENIC FRAUDS: ga Medical —— ets Who Terrify Hu- by am Array of po The tau | of hygie itself so reluctance that we draw attention io the 7 at that this subject is apt to be taken as a text by wandering lecturers, who use it as of introducing a great aS of ns. it ‘itish Medical Journal. Women whoin no tes way could get a hearing find that by they can draw together a wealthy and jafluential audience, and having once caught their ears, can terrify them with said | sham pathological horrors regarding the reproductive organs. The Indy lecturer, armed as she may raed teeta with sone A eican dip degre jhe-wolf in sheep's clothing. “Will you tell me wh ed Leone, | # often only a 8 P 7 hose object is to terrify and then to rob. Lady Marion’s face lashed crimson. the trick is ingenious, and unfortunately “Since you sak me,I will tall you: “You nd I do have been seeking my esos ‘hose are wtrotg words, Lady Chan: tae ”” said Leon sched pessary, for ps, five guineas has’ been STEEL INSTEAD OF Woop. Metal Now Extensively Used as ajSubsti- tute for Lumber. Since iron and steel are so universally used asa substitute for lumber there has “They are true; henceforth we are | been an enormous increase in the capacity band’ 's love, Leone could have retaliated the temp ion was strong; she coal From that hour all pretense of peace was| wit! my a7 cast balived be- je him from me, the words My friends are honorable wo- | of the iron and steels works of the world, id seek to steal my jewels | myo rather than seek to steal from me my hus- German Iron Trade Association ha lately taken the pains to point out, for the ih Bee of all concerned, the many advan- ‘Then the remembrancs of what se by es tality 0 Brereton bee game over him and froze, the waaay beaten eA ere eel tare bo a inten sim fection.” ors on he pn His wife was quick to | eset cng me harshly, Lady | hase ownepetal risky andi rogget- then, hi “You bring | ed, for example, that. unless: carefully in- peat cannot say it with truth, Ob | said to h all these nee ge ae > eS © | sulated a large eballding « full of steel and ‘Lance, how you pain me.” story posing ene clesring’ myself ol iron might There was such absolute, physical pain | would be well ; aredit for the teat re feeling that she ‘in her face that he was grieved for her. know she loves the | it for the first time that sweet girl looked pices: on him. Instead of bending 8 him, she looked straight into its face. “Lance,” she said, ‘do you like Madame Vanira?” Hi © was prot “Mose decidedly I ‘aa he answered ; “every one must like her.” t give his wife ie M h possessed. Fiercest, io Tae wow faites had taken hold of the eat indy, racked and tortured you to go with | faded from her face, ‘the light hetyes +6 told you-about ity" e said; Jeyes 5 she grew ru d pale; at night “Lady: Tifeld s390, tha you are her Sreathed in her heartand she kept it there shadow, is that “Lady geld is ‘There is no. pain so cruel as jealousy; P “gossip, and the wife | none that so quiekly deteriorates @ charac- who ites to scandal about her husband lowers She did not shri ry. ion, envy, hatred oi k now from his words, Ron one and in everything; it P inp Tet them. “You exmnot,” eaid Lady Chandos ; | have no wish to hear your defense, you “You are very hard on me,” said r of them would do such a thing,” t- | cried fay Chandos. ‘Ladies of the class to whieh I belong do not spend whole days | at Cale, I. T, a (Gwaty e Vanira—you and I eleventh Swreck that e| are strangers from this time action by foie currents eating it up as 2 rail, Serining pare of an water japan tear 10 Sse le w danger Existe ita remedy should be readily ¥ | coverable. A Fated Spot. The last serious wreck sige the Missouri Kansas and Texas Rai 8 tothe ¢ half mile of thav-point in tuntan dee Leone; | years ° om: <The day may some when you will admie Ployes of theCompany 10 yosrnago'a widow, dl “Ta dig will'saved cone “it which will mistake good for evily oF righ but [shall protest against you, an we yo ver sway over the minds and hearts “of men, | redress her wrongs, and the curse seems dail | be e“ectual. wi 1 | cow killed by a irain, and for som or il m0] ya said a man of long experience ne kind word Goals Chenioa fake i <<Thave notoue word to say,” was the Es a to 3] must not cross the threshold of my door ag: dry dead! 1 Chandos grew deadly pale as he | bat op Tay, Chacon nd. hee Satriage [#0 Jaudable an object that iti is with some P for * Nitro- seas cannot be sonia ° in petroleum operaijena i5'Ghi of Selday scat eoue the | feckless manner in which the deadly ex- plosive has been handled ever since it came into use in the oil country it is a wonder know its lasting properties and how impos- apse itis to destroy them. “In manufacturing nitro-glycerine one the proce:ses is the straining of it through felt, usually through the crowns of old felt ats. After tl they are burned to place their saturation with Ppa yee beyond the possible doing of damage less and thought 6p t a nitro- e Bradford olf avd bute an suiflleye thobghs lee woald { put the lite per ates of the explosive to a test. He Whale eer used ase acaba wana thoroughly, and, then aanory herr eer He glycerine factories and in handling the dangerous stuff about m troatmeit he pat’ the felb od the tron ene of the tinner's bench, where U ed the heavy iron erm through a two-foot Peso ean iad wrecked the tianing shop.” tdi SAR Handkerchief-Case. White ribbed silk is used for the outside ee oe HANDKERCHIEF CASE, laid silver corner, with a line of tawny- ellow chenille on either side of it, while ar and out again tothe surface farther ead wee ie of the braid is » str: rand ig aus ears and tied wi th be ns.—'oronto Ladies’ Journal Ese ae Bag. square of croch- ked wish knitting silk in 1 any deaized color, _A pink square of cham. SPONGE BaG. ois is placed inside the rings Blining of oilad. sill’ The’ bag ish with rings tneen ti tbe four silk pompons give a p:s.07at Toronto Ladies’ Journal Tried to Speak When Cut in Two, A horrible feature of the cutting in two 0 | of Darling at a sawmill at Newberry, Fla., pen to | two or three times as though endeavoring: to npoak, but doth quickly ssaled hia Ips and this has: Household. Palatable Gravies, It would seem that every cook, no mat- gue, or a piece of beef has been boiled may be reserved for dinner hour,all the contents of the dripping pan and set them away ina vool place. The grease will rise to the top and harden, and ravy done set the pan on the and havi rhig stirred in the wet flour aad a small nd of butter if it is desirable to Be careful to stir until the butt a melted or ib iwill tinker the Peosald made by boilin, ie, liver, heart pepper and salt, and it into a. jar Silk Waists. Nothing fits under a cloth or jacket as without linings or bones were introduced and ate now made ae carefully, fitted fod that is made, ut not to show any seams, i is sometimes plaited in at he front is made in several ways, sivas with a full look from the. sl and sieved, smoothly and tightly pa fh geri over col the material or fo fh with belt and long ends satin ribbon. For mourning black silk or surah waists are considered Permissible with black cloth skirts, ese waists are generally made sith tora-beok reveré edged with bands of crepe and have crepe collar, cuffs and A Pretty Ceiling A very small, unpretentious dwelling may be so prettily Pepa: as to be a joy to the possessor,and a home not in the least ‘behind a larger one, in tasteful arran, ment. We will not speak of roofs, veran- das, vines, sia ee are all outside, and wails, wor ‘ling. General we find the’plain. whitewas ling: m try houses. It can ‘any plate; any lay can decorace her ceiling to it herself. Gta ecletiatah inns ak che EN. ke mnea, she can pur- ty paper for the ceiling, designed in artistic petieras an colors, tor mmederate cost. , however, y straight and smooth, and the pattern not twisted awey. I think the paint and stencil 1,000 a. corder. he | he y Navigation of the sel: B Iate easier to manage, and if a simple Tinta elias loop ctisescaee cata considered a very dificalt task to pit dt om Good Recipes. Bakers’ Ginger Snaps.—Mollasses, 1 pt. 7 sugar, 1} cups; butter or lard, 1 cup; clove: 1 teaspoonful ja, | teaspoonful; baiter, Marble Cake.—White part. Butter, cp, white sugar, 1} cups; flour, 2 cups ; milk, } cup ; whites of 4 eggs ; } teaspoon- ful cream tartar ; } teaspoonful soda; fla- vor with lemon, ts) Batter, cup, brown sugar, I-cup ; m , Soup; flour, 2} ups yolks of 4 ccc andimbicerat a ie 1 teaspoon cloves, ey p the eee se _fpoonfuls, “alternating. This will make um Pomona’s Padding, a one cup tapioca over night in a ak cook in the same adding more if necessary while hot a cup of well sweetened cranberry much nicer than it appears from the de- Ajele in fact, it is a very nice light Molasses Cream Cake.—QOne cup aa cream, one cup good molasses, one eg one teaspoonful soda, one-half cup ae raisins (or one cup blueberries or huckle- berries in their season), cinnamon, cloves nda pi salt, Add to mix a rather stiff batter and bake from 30 to 40 nates. t with one cup of white water enough to spread over the ca Pineushion. ‘A favorite cushion in our CAs grand- mothers’ time wi panying design, and for its Saat we give it aow. ‘Lhe model was dark-blue velvet and lemon colored silk. Cut six velvet and six silk pieces, each three and five- eighths inches square, and fill them with PINCUSHION, bran, Take a pencil, sew fashions in alteraation around it, the » pencil eep them firm, six little bags is. made of a piece vor stalk two and three quarter inches square, tilled with sachet pow of ribbon finishes the top. Journal. a Ee Ph ST NO RICHER PRINCE IN EUROPE. And Yet a pint to the iis ae Want increased 3 Toronte at Pig: is no prince in Eu BG possessed of a larger private fortune than the Count ot Flanders, the only brother of King Leopold of Belgium, and heir to his increased by thrift. Under the cirew fot bat deplore his lack of polley ins apply- ing to the Belgium Government for an in- crease of his allo from $40,000 to orl og OR Ecsta, Italy, ete., there ag object and r the nation paying reignin, ly, since the “latter has sur- Spal ita fa each case, immense ~tboes silk and_ velvet | enin, ~ | ber constructed of brick, and the ae don ists to the | serv tots DEVOURED BY WOLVES, AN INCIDENT IN THE EARLY HIS- TORY OF ab ta) How ameitier Lost is Wire and Child he Once Happy Home Burned to ine Ground—Me Left the Place and Never Returned. A few days ago at one of Toronto's hotel an old man far into the 80's had this weird and somewhat thrilling experience 1 s & “It isnow just about three score yeart ago since I first landed in Canada, and I tell you boys, there has been a mighty story I am song to tell a Tt took my- self and my y to come from ‘Brechin, aise where we lived to Lake Simcoe, where we settled, We had few neighbors and there lay before s|us what seemed a Paradise, the maiden forest studded with princely pine and filled with all sorts of game, and the lake filled had built our little home, a log cabin, and to the lords for WE OWNED OUR OWN tome, “ The days passed and happy days they were, and in the c was approashing I found that our epi had well nigh given out and as Toronto was the nearest place that I could replenish them, I started for here through the woods for iY her only of 4 eld ie T felt some- what anxious about & “ Three day: what a si what seemed. ber of wolves fighting With eno 6 ae ‘tlle ig the air wi THEIR HORRIBLE HOWLING and all‘the time trying to reach the inmates ofthe shanty. Iwas absolutery greater disturbance among the hun gry «wolves an ‘As we drew nearer, 1 beasts had actuall; ee ed among the wolves, shot in among the pack ae hey ‘soon disappear- ed, dtuacn ddsanw TM hb eese oF my deat ones and s litle farcher I found the bodies of my atte eee When { tarned again to the cabin i ‘mes. ihe wol olves had scattered the “ a the hearth I+ left the place aig aighe haviase wane es it since.” —————___" PROTECTION OF IRON COLUMNS. we went to it and felt that we were equal Mysteries of the HUMAN BRAIN ! ‘The latest discovery in the scienti-) apd not the nervecentres, which are Ac world is that nerve centres located | the cause of the trou! in or near the base of the brain con- trol all the organs of the body, and when these nerve centres are deranged the organs which they The wonderful cures wrought by ; the Great South American Nervine ; Tonic are due alone to the fact that this remedy is based upon the fore- supply with nerve fluid, or nerve| going principle. It cures by rebuild- force, are also deranged: When it|ing*and strengthoning the nerve is remembered that a serious injury to the spinal cord will cause paralysis centres, and monk) A increasing the na of nerve force or nervous of the body below the injured point, | ener; because the nerve force is prevented by the injury from reaching the para- lyzed portion, it will be understood how the derangement of the nerve centres will cause the d The remedy has been ‘found of infinite value for the cure of Nervous- ness, Nervous Prostration, Nervous | cae an be at Forgetful- ness, Men! Nervous- | of the various organs which they supply with nerve force; that is, when @ nerve centre {8 deranged or in any way diseased it is impossible for it to supply the same quantity of nerve force as when in @ healthful condi- ‘ion ; hence the organs which depend _ apon it for nerve force suffer, and are unable to properly perform their work, and as a result disease makes ant its appearance. At least two-thirds of our chronic diseases and ailments are due to the imperfect action of the nerve centres at the base of the brain, and not from peice tans Es Portia Withst Some experi che were recently m the building inspection department, Vienna. on the protection of iron from fire by casing Cement Success Fire. w derangement baad originating in the organ itself. ie great mis- take of physicians in treating these diseases is that they. treat the organs J. Torrance, Agent, ness of oe Hot Flashes, Sick Headache, Heart Disease. The first bottle will convince anyone that a cure is certain, South American Nervine is ake out doubt the greatest remedy ever discovered for the cure of \ndigestion, reat and all Chronic Stomach bles, because it acts through the allow your reales or the preju- | dices of others, t ae you from using this health. remedy. It | is based on tho ie] of years of | ‘scientific research and study. A, single bottle will convince the most incredulous. it with brick, says Engineering. A wrought iron column twelve feet long, - built up of two channels connected by lattice was ‘is was set uy ‘Sy cham- brick wall laid in fireclay mortar. The wall did novi closely around ed. Various samples of stone, concrete eemuive, cls notaliig of this kind Aa and other ress oo pat bak + rap in the jam! lee then pet bigs api Pian whiet rs imm ly abe is. Beigiam, where the dynasty has never made y concessior a pare fase and weg the King a ‘are paid, not “asfannuitant, aoe i as salaried Sa for the mousy. Bat nothin ean pert kind can be said of the Count ‘landers, shines dolent man, pa! no | chamber had di |. The ceiling part whatsoever in public life save to ap- | had been lined partly with plaster of Paris entertainments, The and partly with terra cotta ti yd were he Legislature cannot, there- | ‘The enclosare around iron for asking in aggressiv- | pil tanding firm, change cor- plas ri After the fire had aoe out the doors were broken in and a stream ot water turn- fire ber An examination a the r showed th cg the walls eek laid is si din return’ for hia $40,000" = year allow- ance. CSS emer ies. GREAT SNOWSTORM. Stopped by Iee—A lockade im Austria, A despatch to the London Daily News from Paris says thot navigation of the 8 says that iy Ne nd | 2,000 men are at work ‘earing the South- train was ciaoaae for 72 hours, e] ma'am, am I supposed to of the one cee or 80, Pays i clay ‘mortar was largely washed out of the joints. On removing he casit ssehectasy} e piller was found to be uninjare, even the paint being unscorched, | te HIS HEAD SPLIT. Man Recovering After Mis Brain had f Been Severed by a Saw. the saw-mills of Puget Sound have sent to Seattle, none competes with that of Horatio s Svetson stepped under the table to fix it. Ho ran his head against the saw, and in less than the twinkling of an eye his head was 2ut across the top just in front of the ears, ‘The saw went down into the brain fully three inches, tne point of exit on either side of the head being on a level with the he brother’ says thet “blood and brains were coming from his head, which looked as if ic was falling ey sera winded man was hurried to the It all Depends. The smallest boy in the arithmetic class is the son of a man who works in a coal “William,” anid the teacher, “how many re in a ton "Tae omallest boy wi y,, that's a mo easy question, William.” (Nev. 1 Know it's enay ; but, please, coal or selling 1t?” Ps un every~ ture of 149 degrees Fahrenheit, ching said to him, When he was pape a woul ie ene the eciestia sinews tould tele be buying the | er, a yped from bleedin through ie teephiiog cperdsiges, nae and was Pifoward night partial paralysis of his arms and legs set in, but he regained the fe Of all the peculiar and interesting cases ane. clear. He could talk, but with difficulty. His temperature was tly well. man and there ‘was no inflam. mation in the wound, and t aan re was no indication of fever setting i ed of all his mental faculties, ws ee appetite and being perfectly normal in all otker aalos of his body. BEATEN WITH’A POKER. ig | Marderous ae Near Mer toca A ave, yen? Omemee foal says — en at aay and laid = oo bare in four pounded mercifully at be aac shoulder nell life was almost extinct, Then he left the house, was arvested by Gon Constable Short saree Wealieaen aoeitien A queer 1 Seinen! lord George—‘‘How do you like arith. metic Tide le Dick—“Pretty well, so far 5 but the teacher an eae next week w to extract rad » Guess ‘atid | he rust think we're ell going, to be dene fist”