Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Northern Advance, 5 Jul 1900, p. 11

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--mg`; snovdlty oi ~=tnvol.Ing adv `g'gh`to new. main tlitnvbmpotgutod Var vmon. 1-an .,.g._euggv.,.y.- -fohild Inf llkdd Ml DC` I- U..- n-4-an-41. 5-` lhjm 4:` l `PU? -- luu-u-vv % H0 1510 young; 1.;7m..{ .3. 0102]` lnprauion-_ loan` tof.du2 Bozo;-._ % aAI;._n`_a.rL- whtf -brother of Noun, '0]! 1...... _ J Tell me all abotit the abduction of little Oswald," repeated Mis Neslie` to Gerald Dorman.` ll? VI ` "I n:ever even dreamed of it," said [Viv-ion, slowly. - ' 01'!` _ -__.L L- 1-,,,I u .u. 1 n?1u'o.":?vLT 3{"5`5_0f his 9.90 was tor- 7n 3);. 0541-`TER Txxxv. It may be that the ice will prevent Andrup from reaching that station this fall. In this case he willhave to camp where winter overtakes him and will resume his route toward the south next year. Arctic ice experts. are very much afraid that the ice con. ditions will not `be favorable this. sea. son and adzme of them predict ~ that Andrup will not be able to go as far ieouth as Angmagsalik, but that he 1891, to :winter on the bleak coast. win be-compelled, like Lleut, Ryder in ` `I VVVLLI Andrup is an officer in `tho Dllninh GROICI Navy. The work he was detail- ;ad to do last year was very unecono- itolly carried out. He mapped the out -cont from 65 d:w.'6 Geo. to 6'1 dad. 22 I90. north latitude. no will leave Copenhagen this month on the steam. at Antarctic with three companions and his intention is to go ashore nos: the 69th paralll, and will then t1 ai..val south betvkeen the island and the coast ice. His destination is Angmagnalik, 65 deg. 45 seo., `the only settlement in "East Greenland. 'Du1.`in3__.thia journey he. will pass all along the unexplored| August the Antarctic will go to Ice- land to" take _9n 9. supply at coal and will then proceed to Angmagsalik to mee-t Lieut. Andrup, . ` I-.. ,--v. - V,-- .q-. ~ V 1 ._V.$..~- Under this. new method. the elootrio bells at._the exchange. and 0.1! thy aub- s._'Jiber a wire will be done away `with,_ and small electric glpvw lamps used in their stead. These will be so arrang. ed that the moment the` subscribe; lifts the receiver from the switch! um w-ill be alig-hat at the excygnge, -LL_..L:-.. -1 LL- While in on this misaion a party. of time -naturalist; on the Antarctic will travel. north to the entrance to Seomsby Sound for the purpose at studying natural history and explor- ing the northern fiords if the condition of the ice permits. At the end i of A__L_.__L!_ ___:n ..- L- r_, 7VVV`honV'-`title opentatar at the exchange has `switched the oallev on_ to ht. mquiregnumbev. the latter a eallylight` hogim` to slaw. and` the callor*a`lightT dies out, `and remains no as long .3; Tthq._oqnve:rbatio_u- is in prog_rosa.- V 1-|,_ LI_.'._I._..-....... LL- -___L_-_ :"[ffg;}Lg{3i* ringing.-u;; it; u; 1,. emploxd 91! the na\v`_13iritinlr..noat.~ ottioe bglanhonns. V I .. A . * om`. Andrup mix 1`Iw.Io_0IuIne the ` Unknown Put at It. . 4 There in 8. part of the east coastlpf mouthaern Greenland that has not 1 been .visited by any explorer. I Quite _8 number of Arctic investigators have been north and others south of it, but `the region between 691193. and 6`7 ddg. .22sec. noxfth latitude, a distance of iabout 100 miles '1: g as yet entirely unknown. A year ago this unrevealed `part of the coast was-a deal longer than it now is; but Lieut. And.- [rup explored a. part of it. lut year and now. he `will return to complete the :' ` ..n I 5, -LL- I\__2-L- `The Telephone Bell will no Aixollshed In A.` f..._I..` --n.. M -I-nA -gIn-1 I--.. ..__ nunv -w-my-cw-v -vwg- ..-a.- -v g--vs----y--V`.-u -up In England and In Place Taken by an Electric Light. ' The National Telephohe Company of England proposes to introduce into their motropoljtI\n' syatom..an entire- ly /new method "rinsing-two." ,'_. Ll_!._ __-,_. ____LI_-I LL, hfwhe attentiyon of the operatbzj called without the subscriber having to xicemly -a~.sng.u_p." -wvw V'_"" ' -*~ '.*':`.' F"-I' By tlnihsmeqans the exommze 098m." tot.` PM t5_al1_ without interrupting the speakers when their oogverlatiqn iq. OYQI? ` ' . _ system has lien sucogsio-2 tujly tri.eu1_.hy the National Telephone 0m.npa%nx\on the trunk line! with Snot-L Land, fund was .inauzm_'atod at `Bristol on W.hit'M9n;d for the bnotit at lqgal unbsoriberm . ` '.PIm'%`-f._.6-.hBl Yowhsve dkoboyod no. Wjlliov-Jisiovvhaol mud not to. n. 'aip't_m.y%o.nlt- ' > ,,_ - _ '?*PiV"3?3* 795?-!%F1to.. Hf ~ Wil1i.er`-N9- '1? ..Y W4` `.`Dn?1a'let, imp `catch you atbat scum ? an I `mg ;n;at_ to-jot, m. `V `m 1300 thenre worezoo Lr - hLa:.A_tra1a;. in 1999 mm 3-:'2,7)o5?.A' 3 L _._._ L = V, 7.7` _ - 2' I ~ V ` '45?-lhet I mizhuoe epphar'_t,3`.lu In` #33 Way `apt in ethfe _e!{e.fr.. I "spent `the greater part army time in Liverpool, mating -prepmuag. for the boy : departure. I-..88lirC you, what I out him lest. he was living and wen; fie stood on the deb! laugh.- my and waving his head to I so- eure you else of another thing-who W413 a for better boy wheh he Want avray-than he had ever been here. My brother is a good men; who will train him well. If he suspects any mystery at all. it in nothing like the truth. He may imagine that the boy is Lad! Nealie'e son--he does not know that he is heir to Lanoewood. The ad- vertisements and rewards that at- traoted so much" attention never met his eyes." _.. - .. _."A-L I--.`.l..n Ill-D V ? She utood quite ~niloht,' leaning against the passion owers; thin BM- denly sheraised her tune to the blue NOMORE HELLOOENTBAL --uu----*7.-------- GREENLANUS EAST COAST. 3EW1`311Lv To Be oozitinned. Yachting costume of white linen (luck. The skint is in three pieces. with inverted boa:-plait at back` and front. The fastening is at back. Bands of blue linen trim skirt, ending `at edges of the plaits in front._ The waist is close tting, with stifape of blue linen stitched acrose vest front. A bolero `coat of the white linen has a wide border of blue linen. on which are rows. of silver huttona. A. sailor collar, of white dink turna oiveritho one of blue; cuffs are of blue linen. The braiding on edges and deaisns in cor- ner is ot the finest blue linen cord, Stock has band at top of blue linen, and` rows. of cord below. `Tie of white I pique, knutted aailorneurt 01 `blue lib- erty satin. The sailor hat has; a mu- lard. scarf twiasted around crown.` Itorming rosettes and ends at side. . Don't wear your best clothes. Don't take your boat `dishes. Don't plan to- trestinnntg that will be difficult to carry and difficult `to serve. Don't take too many sweets. It's the silh- s,ta.n_t'ia1s that count, Banish care. Banish fastidiousness. Make up your mind to the "peak of dirt" with a fair _sprinkling of ontomologica.l' specimens fzhrown in-then` git out and rest." To Choose Poultry;-The male fowl should be chosen in preference to the female, and thewehorter `the spurs the younger the bird. The claws and beak: are easily broken in a. young bird. Short-boned and rshort.-leased. poultry is usually considered . the most delicate. Ducks, geese. and tur- keys should have the tent and lose 1imp.and.mo'ut; if they areas! an stiff it iI"a Itele bird. T To \SrB>ie9t"VEl3;1tHtwar--:-V-Froa)z/ butter should he the same color through- out; it it atrocity nrohabll two: `qr three art -,0 MW boon worked togeth- er- It shauld $1.60 Ima'11-Dloauntlr - -uy--v Tr; Chums, Malt-2-The. but `joints haw tha 1001!: V01} mqttlnd and:.mix- oLwith;at. want which M9 tholean of a dark red color and hard skinny tat .18-:.1l8.|n341! 0161- It tho mat is ,g_qod;1tVy;i1l yin auiokli who Brenna 1: thy ztmm ' Oannfng Peas-For peas, th's' very` oat way is not _to pan agy tlifat arg _v'ory+`youn'g. Let the quite `plldii. not of wars; toool.l; pairtly .bd!1`tho'm t'he"aume `as you wofrld tojr" the table but do` not put salt. in thdl ~watot.n-:'{io!gnthby' 8l`e_ quite donfe, uni; A a%_ lll0.lLl_tl`~lil!e if Achildrgn and oaxmtukors. , (T _`v- v 'l;I;e';Jbjactiva` point daidod upon.` let the_ho \_u'a ndt `be too long. An all day picnic. when there are little ones. 1;. a. wearinosa to th'e.t1uh at. both ` TEn'e.1i9uLr1cm`c. The ideal leaves. one rested. refreshed. vitilined; ready to: anew ..turn aththb wheel of action. To feel its toad effects. one must not so to it ;``wot'9 `a atraxxlo." in its preparation. It mustfnoit involve in much at one!`- tion durinc its procress as to bring back an ache every. time you look at it in retyospoot. are stun heir adva were int adodorp b y Express Id uuttot 111 pruba lszpruit; ' ondition `to go tot -~._..;---~ '- -- , I-.-...rv_,-.,'-._ - "ma dmoao 1:8}?--Iio`a them an? to % ha stain- l can `.-u so ' . nu will 190%: clear. It fat :11 thick it will WHEN You Go mnxnmme. One 6! the libs! ntaody wan Ilaul {Half A l`I'|VlsIl C-`lxlllo LAS an instance 01 what great events can follow trivial happenings, the genesis of the Crimean war is inter- esting. ' ` In 1851 Louis Napoleon demanded of the Sultan that the Latin monks should have a key to the great door of the church at Bethlehem; that they should have a key to each at the doors of the Cave of the Nativity, and the pr-ivils 0! setting up there a silver star boating the arms of France. . - After a year of arduous negotiation the Turkish Government yielded; and in February, 1853, the keys were hand. ed over to the Latin monk: and the silver-`star was established in the sane. t`uery`ot Bethlehem. V -y:-~_r-.vu,-u -`.v-_-.- Enclandapd Franco jqined him_,~gnd 59: _ , 31'-0m. .;Ih liht baginniugs, sprang the most merciless, bloody gag fruitless atrusulqa at the ninotegp wntum , V ; _ . T. nod 0703" Wul.` CEIVVV` Qbd `.131 V it mouth to `overow thereon. FIN! `tic rubber: and 4.-eves: ml at. 9.1 wake! m year malt boiler. at `#31! saw heat as thtt in the 9938 03` let mu ta: 10 or` 15 minutes Tlqghh-J en the cover: as tight on possible be- fore taking out at the boiling water . and once afterward while they are cooling. When quite cold never dia- ' turb them, and do not lift the can: by the tops when you carry them `away, as this will sometimes loosen them. Be sure your rubbers are quite pliable. It is better to get new ones than to use those that have be-_ come hard and` unyielding. l'1I-_____ l1,_.:I Uhtoltunateiy, the Emperor Nicholas; as head of the Greek Church, considered this an infringement of his rights, and immediately ordered. 150,000 `men across the Turkish fron- -tier. At the same time he demanded that" the ` claims of the Christian population of Turkey should be secured by treaty" with himself; but the Sultan refused -this, with the support of France, Austria and Prussia. The Oz.-an then proceeded to seize the Danuhian provinces, proclaiming at U10 lame timmthat he had no into tion to commence war. ' '3 sdH`_ nd j extra BVOI`. W or-` ' The central. European onuntraga ac; to , .,ted to seougro a compromiae, but 1.1 lthr party would ngras to: than `mediation. and in. Octolm tho sultan, declared w=ar.__ 1-:\.._n-_.n__:1n,__',.- . . ... '_ _8oeing him-.011 the manic `vm9rni._nAg__, gazing id.,v wt to um matnwainmalloci dllt gm him: (T30lB'6_(_10-iVV'.n Oi ;`h.qh_g] |_. Come down out of that, av1 _0i ll [W01 .yez a down-whack: will meTr*op`aI. " -9LL ,,,b'I.._:. Glovr Cdr:l{a1:1(1'.;i:; a stronc de- coction of red clover blossoms by first drying them in the shade, than gteeping in water to cover. Strain and `reduce by boiling. To every quart add a pound of cut sugar and n v\:wu4- AG \T-___ f\._*I,_ E0 was an Iruh idle boy. but he had the Celtic Wit. He had ahippgd 09 board, of .3 Inun-9t-war. when ho npnnyod the hoatswain by his last.-g -v ~19.-p vv---`' #9. pint of New Orleans molasses. Stir until`th'e`sugar is dissolved, and re- duce to the consistency ot not very thick molasses. Cool and bottle. Some add half a pint of alcohol as a. preservative, but if stored in acool. dark cellar, it will keep in Warm weather without this. , ,.,-__v-- --you-`vs.-4 vxnuo f Currant Jam--Wash`, stem andmesh the ripe fruit; Allow 1 lb. sugar to 1 lb. fruit. Put the fruit and one- fourth of. the sugar in a. granite ket- tle. When boiling` add anothet quarter of the sugar, and when all auzar `is used let boil until very thick Adding a little sugar at 1 time prevents the fruit from becoming hard. ., Cucumber and Tomato Salad-Peel the cucumbers and out in thin slices. let stand in salted water five minutes. Take the same amount of ripe toma- toes, peetand slice thin. In aglass dish place a layer of the cucumber: and then a layer of the tomatoes. air ternating until the dish is full. V Make a dressing of vinegar. olive oil or melted butter, 1 teaspoon to 1 cup vinegar, season with salt and pepper. and turn over the cucumber and to- mato, enpugh to neariy cover.` Let stand ve minutes and serve. .p-..-. -a-. v v- Spanish Chocolate Cake-Grate halt a. cake of Baker's chocolate. mix with 1-2 cup of sweet milk and yolk of 1 egg. Put _on the back of the stove. thoroughly warmed and dissolved, set off to cool. Take 1 egg and the white of one, 2 cups sugar, 1 cup but- ter. teaspoonful soda dissolved in 1-2 cup water. `Add the chocolate and flour to make a-thin batter that will -pour smooth. ' Bake carefully. I!.____.I 1-n__,~, _ ----v-v vv--------J: Canned Blueberries--Place ripe ber- ries in tightly covered pan in hot oven. with 2 tablespoons hol; water in bbttom of the pan. Leave till they steam through. Try with teeth. If cooked, `but not crushed, fill self- aoaling glass jars, pack full and cov- IBERIS. A -7 F!-ith. such`... relled ti; 0: 1;?-_o`u.1d'n qt com! 31 1%` othud ate. uni. dozenl, . cwsn: or cmumu WAR. IDLE. BUT WITH- l_mlnop~ the 't ~11. km ? ll-IV ` raphs Thurs says:--.T 9 followm Command: rmed. . ml.` Ecinly Ac 185?. riflas. I 5 morn ` wator I FARE. A u..;.,;.q rig!/liq ' wm v . . .*::ey::;;~;;r-. dyihip: and." if`: theshgiurlg: bhavq itoompamon for-that A gt wic-kgd when 130:1- ,l,,.uy thmk the boys dc`-lth8_L: ' I affair. ._..lynd gravely sad. `me to ad nothing 0 bath to do so, notnf dquo8ti0- . . mm-0, um 18 Well, [could wt anything else. [should . Vivien does. I shall not go ml dreary old Dower House [shall go to Paris and `live Thank Heaven, though I 1039 I do not lose my money! won, tell Miss Neslie that I pins fortnight from now.` Oh, boyha-J but lived, this would uvobmll 'wus,as a matter of cournma motion over the death of the heir. People \\ ho had mbt '1; cut Lady Xeslle in the days lrrogautprosperity were sorry now, and called `to express their llseemed really providentialn vlole estate would have been if"miIudi had remained there longer. . brilliant train of visitors had , " ' .` The Comte da ,who had wouezl the fair widow 'tor the sake of living at Lance- us one of the first to go. He lhy. Yet every one said the the ca urroum III: 15 - _: Eflyz: Atand Lady N3"3 3` 51011, Miss Ne8lie.1 at that the Abbey! ur pg;-mis. W hrrmhomg. It seems to loilbhe .3019 place requires W 1 have never met so motley gtmtojs; and Holmgs tells my fog months at atune. I M `t very 1110645 I Wm 1 can be` of any fa.saistan0eV in her rem0V' . W3 wonderful dlfference Lady Valarie. um mth1' .t -mistress of the Abbe! and Mien woman who looked at on he put his kindli- _-LI.\n ;' [151 11am" `nlwked gravely Games, she said, `fwhgn sorely tired, thought %. doath might be the belt (1, and I have oft.- ' were out of thei - nowthat it has happened. I ath.-I am heartily sorry _.., .._-..-V-as nu vvuas-up ' I have lost Lancewood, and MI lose you. I regrgt tho` mnoewood.` 1 do not `regret, ofyou. [shall do better-, E343`; who I. rrt time _ _, van we-\I_h1V E hers7I Did he know; I to umiersta'nd that Mien while suffering of de>j_`x`Ai1'ing irrita-A, nkilal -' ' ` Mr. Gres/ton re-5 nning that even- kuow. Mr. Ge:-_ at the Abbey - in; to do so. .116.` ..~spz1re the tim_e._ 12.. . L V T` [.-0on{inuad. Muck with1l;i'o' zeal tar tho "1 A am not very pa.tient, said, Vivien; "and. you are kephinz mo in 'suspense. . . T o He came one gtep. nearer to hot. = "Do you mean, Miss Noslio. that you do not know where I have bpen-what I have been doing 1" `El-.. 'l._.._l. __-__- - _.2_.I_ ___2L`I_.;. la dead," ane gaapau. _ A Min Nesllo, one or non making sums terrible miata-key I_" did not- write to you--I duel not-'lu`t,.!0-' letter. should -f?Ill`il1t0= bhorkhllllfg but I thought you-' uuddratoad~.'.' .11-*r-_1__-A.-_.I Lg-BA`... `uh; AIM`-1 `Ill: Nu` I-UlJVIl5I-IV Ilhllwawv-Iv "Understood what 9" `she o;i6d'. hi a passion of despair.-. You arekilling mg with this 'auppan|o." A , 3 "Miss Neslie," he aakpd. iI_1:a Alo,w_. voice, "d you believ`o tje "child 30 50 really dead'?" " V" ' , "Certainly I do, sh; replied. V He is not` dead. said Goraldldwu ly. -'1 tho'uht,yau`kno1anc wwyon um. I thbugtit you.f7w1shroa; ta at him, aVnu1s! toah"h_`1:n7away."_.; ;.,'v _ _ :_-_.___.I 1.. 'LI.';' 0' She saw -his face grow pale and his` eyes grow,di'm in the waning light; _ Do you ask me that? Great Heaven, `do you not under.sl;.and8" A . g -T-%1{e.5" a'1{a'?L}'ia35." :?Jwi},'7?i"}1o not {know what ` you have hee_.1:I_ d9iNiu Gerald. - ' - u`l'\.. -u A n u Q A y Annknii I DC\I.O I "Great Heaven!" she c rie'd,, rathei; to herself than to him. Hefitrengythj seemed to tail her. _ Sh-e7 clutched. at the Ivy lo'ave.-3 as though` she would lain save herself from falling.` "Did you mean"it or not!" he a_,aked.." ` ls dead,".she gasped. V u|n.. u-.n- nnn nf.nl~`il`mIklI` I meant it the {but now {ha cl;i1<`iA V` M. 1&1 Q U3T1 juju vv vv v 7 \``But he was drowned in IE0 3`-i,5.&y" she returned. r_a|stng-_h9r .oo|orV1ou'I0o` tab: .. ' " ` :' __._ __A. `I 6hh.annh`!.-O, . -- ~-~~--- v-- -ca --vv-Iwtu-9 1 He sat down by the open window,` and Vivien stepped out on to the ten-` race. The evening was warm, dewy, odorous. The thought of a. walk -_._ a VV IS? yI'd$IIII ` but she had semi-e vagixe. indenablo , dread of being alone with Gerald. Dormen. She kept within eight 01', the window;eatraAnge'to say, hawever, -1 he seemed in no hurry to join} her. She 1 walked eeroee the terrace to the! broad atone belustrede, "and.-_ leaned 1 idly over it. Gorgeous pueion-ow-5 era twined thomoelves mend it, thick green ivy almost clothed it. She little dreamed how air _a. picture she made, her black dress sweeping the ground. her lovely hoe bent over the passion- tlowers, her arm: renting oh the ~ green leaves." ` Gerald watched her until he coma ' I ' watch no longer; than he went out to v her. The go1de.n~xaye:ot the setting I. sun lit uph-er head and tune as with`; a kind of glory. Gerald laid his on here. ' h I 1 1 I Sli;r;I.1s';1"1:er"tace.toV his, and he saw that the axpreuipn on i_t wag Perfectly genuine, and he fell `back from her with a. cry at bitter pain. "1 An -...L .-...I_'__A___j n -, r~ -.---. 7vV-'--` -. f _` Herr heart seemed to _a.i_nk. .Wi.th_i.h her, a sudden horrible. tam` bamef Over her. _Wb,at did he mean She. tried` W to .ask.hi1;; b u?u.e1~1ib'iEw. Ru: :55 i would not part. 7 I, mL__ 1. ,,L,,__-__J_"LI_____- U0l"dlQa" - Do you remember the evening I found you sitting by the sun-dial! Lady Neslie and the Ooxnto d-a.CaIloux `were walking on this terrace. 130 `you remember what you said .-- that; you would give your life even to the gluon whoshould rid I}anoef'wood of it: `Their I" ~ ' ' ' . _. ` .-. . 7 -`u L-;u_ LL. When dinner tinaa over aha lott gentlemen * at ' thoi; wine and . lit, Greston became quite noxnmunioativo. "I do not consider that-I am lrrc. voront," he sqid, whon Idoolare that the heirs death named to `me provi- dontiul. It the -boy had lived. it would} have beonallnovor with` the. Nealios at lbanoowood. Her hdyahip would have `ruined the family. -Alroudy there is` the greatest. dittoronoo in the house; therejs order, regularity, method. It is now thwhouse of g gentleman gov-' eljned by a lady--before it was some- thing that battled .desotiption. I am heartily glad that Miss Nealia 1133.? `her own again. she i3'a noblb w'o.} man " -. -v-- - v-' w. nrouwvo POI3 "1 dgnat understand, she repued; "and, Gerald, tell me. whyk did you to- turn this `ring 9" EL, , zuu yuu 1101; unaers:_anal" ; .' i "No. 'I.`,ell me, why did yoii .rturn; fit!" ` A ` ` ' I D `9Sure1y," he said. "I was not min.- taken; surely I did not dream that you ;uttered cortain_ woxjds." ' 4, -.1`-bbn V1i c;x_i1;-age roturnai "th0I`O could be nothing father to foar. a-11- cl _1_. _,_l!_j ..I.-._-_I__ II! J. ....A. LU III`! I " 5 my ht"-10!" ,"x.oA m `ct. V` ' mount it. You HM ". """1'm."-. w him awn: %%W|14 5, "h-l_i;'Nqs1ie; he said, "I am co 1 for myTro.wa.rd. . 1 1 ' g ('11, ` ` -no, uu.avIJ' odnorous. u '18h the grounds _wiu pleasant; hilf hn `haul -mg -L - _.-...-_- 2._;-A9_-_L| formation 1 land; perheated h Polar emperatu ble regio ` ""_!:'o:u must .hvo v_ory niuhVu'- 'toniahod,"' said Mr. G,res`tonUto Gerald. _ T"Vefy." `he replied `with quiet brav- ity: and Vivien wondered that 1:; said [IO EOIU. I ,. ` 030.3, sokins her lly P099 i "Miss Neslie." he said, "believe me. thetevil is not without remedy. Just as I would have died to do it, I would die to undo it." ` . `'Tell me 'all." she said, presently. . "I will tell you.- In the disguise, .1 had purchased I met the child. and- ho did not know, me. I took him in- to the woodmand. by tellina him some Story "or other. persuaded him to. change his clothes and put on the little girl's dress that I had bought. He enjoyed the fun, and talked all the time; then, I leading him by the hand. we walked down to the giver- sido. and. unaeen by him. I threw his hat and came into the water-.-farther down 1 flung in hfu whip- Many pen.- ple who attemard .i0ined in tho. ae1_1_jehmet that day an old man and a_,littlo_ g.ir_l- as they thauahtnvithout the lam idea. who 'therea1lx were_. Then they went etrtaieht eorqes th country; took the train at 9. leading junction_ and wont _t.0 v L9.nd0n.- - M! mung. who his, devoted to me. ha: underta'ken the entire`. chase` and odgcation pt an hen;-ht_1't_ he does not xnqjw whqshe .is;.l;&9d he mutual! he say; e_ho ut. ,La.meW'edHM.; the tesult at at. ldibo4i.m1;;~ tir9inrn~9r.. if he auupectm; he methinc-. J;-have pmmised him ftinf h.un4.drod.t,nar_ annums $34.; Wib. that he,._i_a ,-to p:e'Vid7'.hW!n93A91: - tor `the ..-;'58, J `htltlll S9`-Mir. 1.; _._II, `L. `nnC"" Q - .'IInl`d .{;;;,g|;o;. B9 wax well 893.. wall .dreqeod..w,a1l educated; htswill have I "$tiJJ. -the said. droamily, "I done: I understand. You were away in Lon-l (1011 when Oswald disappeared --- hour. .1'3 You have been concerned in lii abduction I" " ` _1 "Iwent tn London merely, to obtain & dissuiae." he anuwma. A Shall 1! "W11 you the story 01 'the`abdI`;ction,` Mia: "M'g.l:.. on ~~~~ .'p-u vu-9. Donn. U5 iB`IUuIj'oLLU. 3 Miss Nealie I." ._ 1 1 she beat her head for mutants. and then, raising it}, ahid-- ` f "V--- L- I _ -..-v ..` 519.. on, Wed nxmandoe Orange `Ri en broken he -timei arass la - ~~ ".""""" --. r"vV*. "'`4'.`4.' . she stood likev one turned to stone; the setting gun shining on her (ass showed it was white.` and cold, and `still, as the tagoe of the dead. Shes never itnovod nor spoke. A Tho shock was so [terrible to her that in after years she [wondered that it did not kill her. ""lIUv A------ -3- ' ----v--vvu v--WV Oil hlb OIVI! EIII HUI. "May Heaven forgive me,"s'he said fslowly--"and. you also! I can" never . {pardon myself, Gerald. I feel` like 9.`! `murdoreasz .. V T 1 |- "Ray." he returned; "an tar as the `boy is concerned, the ohhngovis tar ghetto: for him; instead 0! growing l . up cdluiputod. nnprinciplod, spoiled ` ityrant. ho willhbo made - uaetnl .m:.n and 0 good membeto of society. . Ho would never luvs boon that hero." I I El-:Il H -|.- ...:J~ 1,. ,, ..._.-.. av! u--uur-'.' . 1 ! You; tell ms all-toll me oven . 40- .tail.-- - I ' yvasvmad'!with~no'1A-row and shame. I `did not really: mean` it. _-I swear that I did now .-.-- .-p\`vGI`olU]I_v1 WI! tgr-I 't:ibietoajQe.V_.. N _ _ _`.`-'.l"hen I have toiigd, and planned, QM worked. and pinned -in vain. `he ..`a. in 3 "" 30` despairing` that all the generous apart of her nature was aroused.` She laid her hand on his. - _ _ "He is living and well. returned Gerald; `Fine in on` his way now to greatest care at bun.--one who will Amakehim a good, honest. honorable man. is so young that he will soon forget all about Lancewood. o'He {America with one who will take the can live in at-uenoe. it you please, but away from here. and Lancewood wili remain in prone: hands. . I QLA -5..) ISI_. A.-- 1 "I went to London and were pur- chased for myylt the disguise of an Old man-'& white wig and a white beard. Those. "with a broad-brim- med hat. so disguised my face that I hardly knew myself. I next purch- Dused a. dress of a little girl, and then ' :I returned to Lancewood. For days __I wandered about here watching an opportunity` to waylay the boy; that iop1'Jortunity`' came at last, when I found him by the banks of the river. iHe did not know me, and `I persuaded `him to go into the `woods with me." ini: lbw: vain.` `v.dL .4..-at` on W I--wr us- I I will tell ` you everything," he Promised. `I had planned it in my Eovm mind even before I had left your `lside on the evening thatgyou gave me your ring. I told you I was going to London on `the morning following: I lthought you understood that it was lfor this." ` . .-HweHstUoppetZI ai)fupfly-a low mean! `from Vivian's lips had. startled him. .""""" "`." -7'-a ~~. `W '="""`9"'."Q*:"' "' `WW. , w mm 59 ,W.i1.l';b ,tan,gh't I1. tgada. 0? nrotagql9n.,..xhic1;9yex,. he unturn- Ho: 1tkag_;mzT-.bnoQ1;'er. and romainud W,itli.1y1J.{n_s_ll_ sump. - .'

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