Grey Highlands Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 19 Aug 1886, p. 6

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 V; I WON Am LOST. 'Tht Udfâ€" wlwra fa A* Udj?" Mr. D WTMt damftocUd tAmmt fiiiosly W tte m- lh*«Lwlyr 'Sm MB MhOMi â- ilMhlniT « TliM* vMB't M l^y kM*. air." ••N»I»dyr ' No, sir I th« MHTflact wm amptr, jost M yon Molt a*w. DU yoa optot to find » lady hara, airf Tha maa wu ooriana. Mr. Danrara tanad baok wfth a raddaa â- oapiolea ha gUnoad fixafe nadar tha aa»t at tha oanitgf, wan ap t« tha rack arar hfa kaad. Tha tnTellbg bag, tha draaring-oaaa, wara both gaiM. Hahadnatramulndaalr dfaappaaraaoa «ntU naw. He apraag from tha oarriaga at » bound, n mnttarad loipva- oation aao^pinc; him ha pnllad ont hb watoh. •• When will tha naxt train to St. Sabaa- tian'i atart f ha dcmudad of an bneotor who itood in hb path. " TUa train haa jait oome from from 8t Sabaatlaa'i," the man anawared oraoolarly, and with the oanal cffiiial oontempt fbr tiia Ignoranoa of na intairogator. " I know," Mr. DanTora ratomad impn- tianUy. •• I want the firat down train." "Om joat goneâ€" won't be another for tbreo hoora." **Ia thb year loggaga abT" tho porter IntMrmpted, pointiag to a Udy'a travelling tmnk, now and handaome, and to inndry rimUar artiolei. " Where 4haU I take 'am, â- Irr •' Take them to " Mr. Daavara lofthb aontenoo anfiabhod. "Shall I label them air," icqalrad the poitor, iriio waa a little deaf, and wu be- ridea rather dazsd by the ateam of an engine blowing off rather oloae to hb oara. " ShaU I label toam " " No," roared the gentlemanâ€"" oenfoond you f " You might keep a oivil tongne in yonr head, at all aventa. tha man gmabled to hlmaelf ai he tamed away. ' Bat I rookon aomething'a gone a good way wrong with my gentleman en the road. I wonder what made him think there waa a lady on the other aide of that carriage I" And no oarioai was the man on the inb- jeot that he went back to the carriage bi qaeatien and examined it minotoly â€" with no reanlfe, it b tme, but anparently with aeme gratifioatien to hlmaelf. Joat aa he waa turning away ho eipieda amall folded paper lying en the grannd. "la tbia yoar», air " heinqniied, taming bMk to the gentleman. Mr. Djmveri read it and thmit it away. "Here oiJl a haniem, and take theae things to the olaak roam,' he aaid to the porter " L save them there â€" oonfennd the ticket I Pat the portmanteau in here. The tolegraph offiie," he called to the driver aa he sot in. The porter ateod on thakorbatSae looking after the retreating vehicle and aaying to hlmaelf â€" " Well thia b a mm go I I'd give aome- thing to knew what'a up, I would. The gent waa liberal enough, for all hia bad manners â€" a real gent, though airitable," he conclud- ed, teialng up the half-orown Parolval Djtn- vera had thrown him. "I shouldn't mind a hard word or two more at the aame price any day." Meanwhile Mr. Percival DjmTora had oanaed himaelf to be driven firat to the tole- graph cffi 30^ where, however, after writing out a menage addrasaed "St S sbattian's," he suddenly changed hb miad and tare the paper in halfâ€" and then on tawardi the Eaa- ton Station. Not that ha particularly oar- ed where the man took him but he had been forced te name seme destination. His plans were at yet in chaos, only a aim in- stinct svggeated the order for the atatlon for the Nsrtn. As he aat back in hb cab he was scowling at a pale spectra which hftd risen up from amongst the flowers and fa- venra of hb bridal festivity â€" the spectre of a dead paat, long borkd out of sight and for- gotten. " Daad and burled," he repeated te him- self more than once â€" "dead and buried. Who shall dare to say It is not a Meâ€"a, wretehed lie ' he repeated with a savage em- phasis â€" "a forgery â€" the device, of some wretehed creature who owes me a grudge perhaps " et there waa a strange fatality in the resurrection of that dead-and -buried teoret past just at this supreme crbls of hb life and certain words he had heard somewhere in seme period of ohildbh superstition, words of solemn threatening and retribn- tbn, came back to his mind. He caat them aside impatiently. Snoh old man'a fablea shonld not fetter a reaolnte will and a atrong mind. He needed both for the emergency in which he found hlmaelf. It was an awkward aitoaticn; it was woree, it waa a ildioulona one. HU bride had run away from him on her wedding day She had cheated bimâ€" thb innooent anao- phiaticatod girlâ€" by a rase aa aimple as it waa anooeaafnL Could aha have doviaod it alone T For a moment a dark suspicion douded hb brain thon^ he throat tt from him. Eren in hu bitter anger and hnmilia- tten he could not ae insnit h«r â€" ^lib pore- bride. aeandal he won- If tho world mnat •Kiel aa Penival gnaw and tear. hearted, innocent ye^- How waa ho to aa dered. That ravenii not have anoh a didn Danver'a bridal HXLui He did not boUavo her few wwda-^tltat alio had flei from him and from all who belong- ed to her, end that it would bo n s e l eaa to seek her. She would, she moat, take refuge in her own home, and with her own peopbâ€" ahe waa ao i|paorant of the world, ao timid and helpleas. He would take tho next train back to St Sebaatian'a, and then Than two courses would bo before hiop i whioh â- honld ho take T Should ho still hold to tto tone ho had already takon with Bra-ftat the tolo waa esily a triok-a sOly oohMlWy soare T Or aheuli he graap hb nettle boldly, and toll out with ooivtnotaig candour that eld story of tho paat which ho had oonnted for ever burled and Udden away In (ho aeerol diamber of hb own heart? Should Immd* f eaa the grain of tmtti, and ao fonad wMi a high hand* *)• mbeUovooa fiabohoodT ^no oaadld oesurae involved a good deal, aa ho psroolved. It lavolvad a pocO wUAf for all Ma dotonninod laf diat lM i*»gyt laoognhad as wal and â- ofa c dng Watt If Oaatory aboold ha no f al t ihooi r lwit a hat^ n-blo reiuty? Whaltf pwrf«t «"â-  iMd bolyinciawaiftforhlmttera, atSt.8obaB- tiaaVTwhanaf an nlMaaintho world, ho had 'a, wl aip aatod to to â-  1 tod wlHi How aa^ Ml 4and iatka^ir ar. 9o'M ^^ ifma Ba aoakolaiid awta^a faMo. 'IlilMiMtlaBiB h oertola biad, la half formed foraiga ohar- aoton, and tho .warda». aa ha road thorn now, ware atarillBg oBtogk tar a yanag bridoâ€" oonviaol^^ aaon^ ho ttoaghtrwith a thrill of azatperatlon to aay anwBling oao. If Eve had loved him, oould she ao oaaUyhavoaoaaptod horreloaaa? " Marte Delorme Danvars "â€" ao the bD- lotranâ€" "livWaliiL Taomanriagoof thb memlag oaa be ae marriage. Perdval Danvera woold, to bar, have called thoao lioea meloiramatio and strained, anobHont and olamay invsntfam. Now, to himself, he oallod tiiem nothing of the kind. He had aeen aoaiothing onty too like thoao trembling oharaotara before ho waa familiar with that atyl^ pathotio and aimple in ita fofglvbg roproaoh. His dark cheek paled and hb atroD^' band tromblad aa ha drew from ttio'lnnenneat receai of hb poeket-book a tiny ateip of printed paper â€" a nowapapcr paragra^ph apparantly^and laid it iMeldo ,tho written paper on hb knee, aa if to oonfront the one with the other. " Died, at BsUa Vista, St- Jerome. June 10 kh, 187â€", Marie Delorme Danvera." "Itb a lb!" Parolval Du»vtra eried raddenly and violeatly, striking the written witneaa with hb open palm. " A wretched lie I Some eld aervant perhaps haa concocted it. Yes, there waa a wo- man â€" 2 Frenohwoman â€" ^^I remember, who waa in her orafidonco, knew all her aeoreta. Thb woman haa tamed upâ€" Haaven only knowa howâ€" ^ud b trying to make a mar- ket ont of her knowledge, She mnat have been in tho place by aome nnlnoky ohanoe, have heard of the weddbig this morning, and lain in wait for me, to threaton me with what mischief she could do, and to make me buy her sQenco. Stay I There waa a woman hanging about the oarriage- door as we left. I thought ahe was look- ing for the seat. She mnat have been look- ing forms, and, by aome fatality, let her preoloua ooncoatlon fall Into my wife's hands, defeating her own ends, and mining me." Yes, ruin would be the consequence of thb /tuce, if ho were awkward â€" ^niln to hb heart and to hb life. Perolval D ra- vers saw plainly the fatal depth opening before hu feet. He knew that he must crush the danger with resolute â€" it might be with unsompalouaâ€" fingera, or the airy and prombing fabric of happlnoia and of gratified ambition which he had just reared so suooesafuUy would be ahattered into fragmenta about him. He laved that lost bride of his with all the paaslon of hb matured manhood â€" ^a passion aa diflForent from the aoft aentimen- tal fancy o! hb foolish youth aa the bum- Ing fervour of the tropioal sun is from the feeble ray of the p»Io moon. In -aplto of her celdneea. In aplto of her unreipanslve- ness, perhHW because of them, he who had had a world of women at his feet loved thb young girl aa he had never yet loved woman. It maddened him to think of loalng her. He vowed that he would net leae her, csat what it might â€" that he would yet win hia wedded but unwon bride. Ha thought out his plan of action with his head between hU hands, as hh cab rattled through the neby street;, and, whan It tarned inta the great gatea of the Eaaton Station his oonrae wai reaolved np- on. Ho would tako her at her word. Sbo might perhaps try te hide herself, as she had threatened, from all belonging te her, for a time but In any ease, he reflsoted, he could trust Mrr. Dalamaino's worldly wit and promptaeaa of roBource to cover the esoapade and save the scandal until it should please him graciously to return from tho silenoe of hb high db- Eleasure, In tho role of a jastly-offended nt generous butband, and te receive hb erring bride back again. Ha would prefit by tlie time thua given him to arm hunsolf with a complete refutation of the fooUsh tale that had soared her away and hb re- turn would be a triumphant one, giving him the right to atart ^em a new poln^ and, he told hlooirlf, with a new and over- whelming preatlge In hb favour. Even whlbt he vehemently repudiated them, there were donbte and feara haunting, him which, for the aake of hb own peace, he must clear away and tot at reat for ever. The edifice of aeclal auocoM which he had been building up ao carefully mnat net have a flaw In Ita fonnaatien, threatening it witn terrible downfall at any moment. His face darkened aa ho vowed It ahonld not. " For Uverpeel," he aaid te the clerk at the booking cfSje. It was the first step In the Jenmey whioh waa, to set him free. gNMS aaahaadMbbdap ttm, Baao. A good-aatafad i *traokporhur by the b«i«lltrt trwbUd yoaagfiiM. oMIly took h«r.b«f«* «f«* horas ahaatomblod along and hoirlad to a first-obaa oaniago. "Wh^rotOtmbar ^, Her eya oaagkt the plaoard avur tha oarfttM window. '!• Btaakatano." ibo add huMf. It waa a pbwo Aahad aoarotly avar board of, and thoiafora, aha qilekly loeogabod, tha mora Hkely to bo a oafo v«itora. I havaaotiofcot," aha addad to tha Biaa and he oa^bd a porter. ^. ,. " Bring tho lady a tloke^. far Blaakstoao," ho aaid. " How mneh wffllt bo r " FJteen ahiUings, mbi." She handed him a aarerobm aa aba ahrank breathleas into a seat. Woold ho Bovar come back t~ Wonld tho train never mo^ OBl Fifty aeeondi had aat olapaod b^ore hfa hand waa throat in at the win- dow, making her almoat ahriak ont in her torror and yet it had Momod aa aga. " Ilokat, mfaa, and t.io ohaago." She gave him oao af tha two halt-orowaa he haadod her. Too iriifat -o amiaded, tiio traia movod oa alowlyâ€" eh, ae slowly I She orooohod dowa, hldiag her faoo. Fortoaatolyahawai idflM. Tho apood of tho engine grow ftwter and f aator, tha Btattonludga glided by, the ootekbts of a town wore paaaed, groea meadowa and olnatering woods ap^aohod and glanced by, and the ion ahoao out She waa free 1 She waa aafe I taahaddowB OHAPIEB VI. Tho ahock of tne anddon revdation had rouied the Ibtleaa young bride effectually. She believed impUoity in ita truth. Per- oival Danvera'a oenacbnce-atricken look had foroed oonviotloa heme to her heart. Se fnll and perfect waa thb conviction that ahe Boomed to have known it all almig. It waa thiKwhich had ateod in the form of a Mthf ul inatinct between her and the lever whom all the 'world pndaed. An indoaoribable horror and loathing of the man totk the place of the tobratien with whioh ahe had aeoepted hb eenrtship. She oeverod her eyoa that ahe might not look at him. She felt hertolf toambiing withiaatormaf ladlgnant republon, She ahrank aa far away from him as the limita of tho candap permitted. She ooold aoarooly breathe In hb preaenoe. Then tho train atoj^od at tha jonotioa otatioa, and Mr. Diavera doaeeadod. She waa alone. She coold broatite freely enoe mora. A ginddon overmartariag impnlao aeued hex to otcapa, to aot herself fr«o. It waa the werk of a mement to ahako a long traTelllng-oleak out of its straps, to hide h saaa tt » tha alegaat aad eea^ouens "gaiag-away " oortama, to anatoh up droaa- ing-eaao and bag, to hurry into the next oompartDieat throogh the oammnabaflag door, andtofastsait soooroly behbidher. What If tiio outer door shonld bo looked A puih leind hir. No hyleldod to her toaoh, and i*o afnag diiwn amoagat tha ralh. iatarasti H a g aaoh cBwr haia ia a Mad of ifaa oat^eraAa^ phShSTiST mUStfoS Mi aad,iBtlwMHto«l lw|» fii^ of tzi Thoahadowa laagtheaod, tha aftoraooa wanad, and still aha janrneyed on and on, with no other aim than to pot aa wide a spaoe aa peiaiblo between horaalf aad tho man whom, a few houra aince, ahe had vowed to "love, honour, and obey," till death did them part. She thought with a ahudder of thoae aelemn vowa with their awful binding power. She knew that Perdval Duivera meant to cliJm all they gave himâ€" that her only'ohanoe lay In flight, in hiding haraolf from him and from all who belonged to her. She knew tee that there waa no one to whom aha oonid torn for help. Tho ovoata of tho last throe montha had taoght her to dbtrust all theae who werenearost and dearts' to her, to count them all aa ranged en Parolval Duiver'a aide. Her atory, nnaupperted by any preofâ€"fer anoh proof ai ahe had waa, aha remembered, Uft In hu han4|i â€" ^weold be received with otter ncredulity in her own heme her cenviottona, her feeble word, ^ould be overborn) by hb peweriul pro- teatationa. She would be bitterly reproach- ed for tile disgrace ahe had brought on her- self and her famUy, and would be handed over a second time to the man whom she loathed. She could hope for no mercy now. Had she not already been refoaed it? She waa faint and aick with hunger, but ahe dared not atay even to eat. She bought a Bradfhaw at one of the stations at which the train atopped, and fonnd that, at a junction joat abort of Blankstone, she cenld catoh a train bound for the dbtant North Welsh border, a part of the oeuutry quite nnknown te her, and not likely to be vblted by any of her people. There ahe might hope to be aafe, ahe thengbt. She tied a thick gray veil over her golden hair and fair young f aoe and, as her oarrkge gradually filled with feUow-paaaongsrs, ahe ahrank into her corner away from the curious and intorested glances sometimes directed towards her. She had navor tnivelled alone before, and, at the first excitement subsided and the depression of a long sleepless night- journey iMgan to make itself felt, the sense of lonelineaa penetrated to her heart. Then with the night came torrors which the daylight and the aunshine had held at bay. The chill gray dawn far which she had longed throufih the darkness seemad when It came only to give a fresh impstas to her nervous torrors. She grew sick with fear at each recurring etetien, lest the face of Percival Danrers; lest thishoutad message from cffioial should be (he signal that ahe was dboovored. It was a relief when she left the train at last at the terminus. The parter who car ried her scanty luggage oenduotsd her to a qilet little hotol, where a pleaaant-looking motherly landlady took charge.of her at once, spread a oosy oomfortable breakfast, and hovered about In a kindly Interested way, very comforting to her, lonely and faint as ahe waa. She waa provided with the meana of living for sometimeâ€" in herignoranoe ahe thought for a long time. In tho droasing-oaao ahe had boon ao careful to aecnre was a packet ef bank-notes the present other rioh god- father, given to be spent on her honeymoon tour in Beman moaaics or Venetian lace, or bn anoh foreign triflaa aa might pleaae her fancy. And thb atore exhauatod, ahe woold atill have her jaweb to fall back upon ahe had read of herolnea in dbtreas aelling their jeweb. Her;firat care wai her wardreb?. She want ont into tho town aad chose a aimple outfit, anoh aa a yonnp govemeea might be E-ovIded with, and loot no time in exohann- g ttie handaome travolUag dreea for qubt brown attiro which would b»filt idontifica- tfon. Than with tremblhigflngora ahe hid hSha? ' ***^' knotted, under i^*I?t*5°*^'"'" " wearinoaa of tho night It had aeemed to htr ao easy to be leat new, with quick inoonabtenoy. it aoem- ..1 fe. K easy to be fonad. Would it ed to her so not be safer to hide In aome romoto oountry â-¼lUage T a giri paaaed at the moment with! Uberal haad, from aome oountry gardoa. A breaUi of grMu fields, of ferny SdywSdt oame, wafted witii the pertimTif ^JJot kwraaaed aenaoo. She ti^ed ilad weat back at once to tiio ploaaantfaoed laadh^. "Can you toll mo of oountry bdZ^f: teUlotfF*' Bf* ftaeMjl flllto* ea tha tJIt»|a Mf*l tN««h« l ea h a d aa ait tiwkMSMi Uailly jbM ^t tha womaa, and • aaddioalmpalw fJkm.hut. Sha felt ia her iieirt tiMt that f aoa mi treatirarthw. ' No I am aot a wMow," iho aaid. " Yoo win keep my aoore* will joo aot I am on- happyâ€" I am la gr at traohla. I want to find a qokt plaoo whare I oaa llyaâ€" porhapa whore l oaa fiad a faw ohndroa to taaohâ€" ua- tU -ah," aha ozolalmod roddealy bonttag iato toara- ** oh, porhapi for all my life 1" *• My dear," lald tto gaad wamaa •• doa't frot'â€" pattifluK tha littie white haad tender- ly. 'Ifll all oema right, aavar fear. I oan aoa how it b yoo'ya f atiea aot and oomo away in a pel Yoo hayen't baon married aa I have, and yao havaa't laara't tha waya ofmaa,aad yoo'ra frightoaod at the firat hard word. jBot yao'ro too yooag, and â€" yonll exooae ma â€" too pretty to ba wander- ing aboot by yooraatf alena. Make It op dear i make It op aad ga baok to him." "Ob, ae, ao," tho ahadderlag loathiag ia tho fair yooag faoo atartted tiio laadlady loto a aow yi«w af the matterâ€"" I oaaaot go back I Yoo wHI aot bstray ma t ' " That I won't, aiy dahr. Yoo may troat my ward." " Help mo ta find h homo," Eve entreat- od. Mra, Smith aet herself to think the mat- ter ont. ' I've got It I" ahe aald atlength triom^- aatly. Tharo'a ttarah Jeffoatt Sha lald aho'd Uke a qoiat lodaor ar two if I oame aoroaa any that woold aoit. Her roams b nio* â€" a ftirmhooso â€" aad aho'a a vary ro- BMotabb wcmaa aad a good womaa, too. Wo livod together befora I wai married aad I ooght to koow her well, for I've lom- mered her aad wiatorod her, aa I may aay and I oan aniwer for har." " Where b it T" "Ifiaboatttreaty mlloi from heraâ€" as pretty a country place as you'd wbh to see. The station ie two mllea from Sarah'a plaoe. If yoo tell her yoo oame from moâ€" Ann Smith of tiie Webb Harpâ€" ahe'll do well by yoo. And I'll drop her a line myaelf to make more aore." Sa i^ waaaettled; and Mn. Snith aaw her yoong guest Into the fl/ whioh waa to take her to tho railway station, and oame back te her own parlor behind the bar, with a aad fiad countenance. " It'a aa wall Smith waB*ont of the way," she mid as she poured herself oot a oop of tea. " He'd be asking questions, and he'd get short answers. Man want to knew everything and they're not to be trusted with It when they do know It I" There were two stotions between Eve's atartingpalnt and her destination. In the carriage where â- he fannd a place were al- ready seated two ladies snd one gentleman. The Eontloman, a grave person in clerioal at- tire, handed the young wife in politely, re- arranged his own baggage and wraps te make room for hers, and theae olvIlIUes of- fered, retired to hb corner and hb news- paper, and appaared to be absorbed in the latter. He left the train at the next ataticn and Eve aaw him on the platform up to the last moment, waiting qnbtly, with bbover- ooat and rogs In a loose heap over hb arm and hb bag at hfa feet-a highly reepeota- ble, parfectiyirreprerohable, typical country paraon. ' Ten minotos later the trab atopped again, and E7e prepared to descend. Suddenly ahe stood atiU and atartied her feUew paaaenBora by a cry â€" â-  "My dreislng-oaaeâ€" It la gone 1" She waa atanding with her veil thrown back, the better to auist her iruitless search and her beautiful young face whi^wlth the dawning oenaoionineaa of all the lou inyolv- ??»!!' i."'fl °" money-all save the change from the five-peund note with which she had paid her betel blU and her fare-and her je web, the atero on which ahe had counted â€" were gone I ..qâ„¢?.?*'"»T "' *• ^^^* repeated. " Surely not I aaw you brhig it in Inyour hand. It cannot be goneâ€" let na look 1" She aearched, her oampanion asiiitad. the porter rummagod under the aeata and in- apectedthe rack overhead; the ladies left But the case was oertalnly gone. SleSi' "'"'•"' "'«'"'»••' "-•y-'J w^"^^""'**' '" »•"•' "M reproving, ly. How oan yen aay anoh a thing t ' obeoanltbeT No one but he haa loft tho oarrlage,«d I aaw it jaat before I S member It dbtlnoUy. It waain "kamEi SL-Sf?r"Jl5^»"'*P' IdoremambS ward inaonor when he got ont. ^^^Bo. aolargymanrthe other remea- •â- ipa yoo ha The toara were rolliag dowa SL. ?*"P •" •»•' "liter replied. " hopa yoo have not lost mooh »-to eU. JJItoohooka, hot .he itrogglod fer Som- lo^Tor't^J*"'"' «"»••«"•»••'»•«. aa'JsS^'^Pj^ "•^^ •* »»••." tho oldar lady ;^Tdagraph ba4 at esomec •peaktohimT" ^•" ' **«'"*i«« a-S^^ There .SSI's: •JSrs.'Sn?' 'T°\ a obrgyman, got oot at Hemd^ waa ia Pnt Iato the carriage. „ J dreaaed like tk. -Hoaahaw. No oao Md add«L.Ji*2!^. "« »• •" netto aaU Jt«#!!? **" *»*/ o»Ued An- Efâ„¢*»»_5 we oatch him. "»»;*w^i*iMdtoEvo. • 'LPP*irnBainat himi'i n «.me pre^ quirt yiUagei^a ISffi' " ,S?^^ "L tmesee,"aaldaa landlady i^b:...Jne man to rV**» •!•?• rtfl^rtively aTtho^tlS aS^ J^ iSfa^"^-" '"••**»'» »»»"• befcre her gueat " there'a room at HanshaW »nd at Barnam bat are yoo lUaely to ate. uytfme, ma'am 1" "-wy «o atay " Yee, aome tinw " gotoaodtoit." 4*oit " Ak. mafMi I 'fiit^hlSMfC'MAi^ â€" OM oyei won fizad opan tha brtahftTn. woddiag-ring whfc|k«Srh3fi!ai^ train moved on, una aad •Pptor agaiart tho ikation- it s a qiiM* ean^j^v^S^' Itlanetto ba «,«- •«« i â- â€¢lntelyoemfeS»5,T^*u7u "•nt. but it iTn '»rhJ;t**lJ ••metime. sies fiu??*^ AN tke most famous i,"J*«l CSi*' India, which not a^i*' «««C*H» tor. but alia «,,'j\ntk,5.»« UmseUte?h;V.,?'V*^««lw he Inhabit. i,^;M*«t!uJ.' •ngh water m K3l""'r *ll •" hb gill. duSbi^i wS: can thu, remain S5ail"»'»«V, maot oendition, buri^ ,!?v!!^ *, tbe paud. OMtt5SLl*\H'N5J theee fi.h wHl u^^SL*^^^, •Utoof.u,D.nd.di7mfe»2 pwd. which have b.,?Zi»»«««« oeaaive aeasens mnAtS T "WiHl with fuU-grown •nak..ha»4?'*Wi»« In countries where "5^ dry up. at cartaia wmsu Ing them either He dorTwth tk- make their way ev.r,«d»itj'«lj Pall-grewn eel. jenrnev «._ whentheppud. iuUEKC?? dry In summer. To keeaihTr' Ing these «car.lan,.S;"dte on each side of the he»d »».1m\?' thus formed with waS;' ""*•* A singular walking fiih t. h,.,^ mus, of *he tropioal Pjoifi,.v!r" tidehelitarallUaKiirt' and, erect en two l«ei flJâ„¢,*" beaohlnscrchofyioW." marine animal, left by th.r«,dlnr TheLesjonofsBrem, John Wesley wai enoe trsnblel b, to the dhposition 9f the Tirinu t^. the cltance. of eioh in raferanci tVhi happinen or pMlshmaDt AdraB, night, tranaported hin ta th» ntajlhi u f ll^'ll" *?y RsmwCitblloihef asked the thoughtful Weiley. " Yes," wa. the reply. "Any Episcopalians!" " Yes." "AuyPresbyterlaoiI" "Ye«." " Aiy CangregatienUiiti!" " Yes," again wu the autar. '*Aiy Biptisti!" "Yes." " Any Methodist. " by way of loUighi,! asked the pious Wetley. I " Yas," to hia great inligiutUii, wuial wered. I In the mystic way of drauii, inital transltloa, ani he «toad before the ptsJ heaven. Impreving hi. eppirtiidtr,li| again Ic quired: I " Are there any H-JinuGitbolin henli " No," wa. replied. " Auy Epis zepaliani ' "No." "Any Prbsbyterbn.!" "No." " Auy Uangregatienaliit)!" "No." "AnyBiptiats?" "No." "AnyMethodbti!" "No." " Well, than," he aekad, Isat Inwuli:, " who are they inside " " OhriBtlaas I" was the j ibllut wmi YStaK!! M»i" B^ â- tamaerod. « 0?I*t2ift n-lffi???-*" Court." hliVB ta "Wm Palfilment. H9 8t3ol baneith her window Ani bmeath the ilex-susde (The ilex was » maple), And he sacg a serenade. Wt will hope she ganged hu farrotDr Th' amDUBt of noise ne made. " Oh, why art thou not new me ' He Bang it eixteep time" To •' fear me." and to •' cheer me, And to fourteen other rhym» And interepersed wi h largMW W""" From Oriental climes. She leaned from out her lattice Her lattice was not barrM (Her plate-glass window, tMH^ And psrhaps ahe lewed too lurt For the lattice was wide open, m It opened on the yato. A sudden flash of lightning. Or so it aoemsd to i,«nc,h,..ing, Then he felt his moaclee tlgh-eim* And hia 8'ght gfe^'^^^rtwari «»* .And they aank together earthwaw. AU nature aeemed to swun- Was he happy, was ha g»tefttl For this oomplalsance of W»^ No-he muttered some hl»g naw^ Ai ho crawK^ oflf to«' *^* la fulfil ment of ontmAn^«^ Too soon than »**«"" _rJ«C««* How the Apaohes Lire «idBid^_^ An Apadhe willrida a J""^? 5^*1 animal, and cut as ««• •Pg^.tfry.^ of him a. he oan oonvenlantiy «^»^ freah horae, « Pw"'" .Sll »»»"!2 wm ride the fresh 5?"» S^iae.t'J^ him no further and hi. inPP'f^. ^^^ hb last horse b e^»"*^ Jb^** tho steed wdstoaIanawo««/" ,ho•»i• goyernmentaooutlaraApMWJ^t IW; fowed aUtheammumj^wtlg;^ ^^^ of oourse, stand to '"*lT.rlri*»i path and supply them wWi ^jf^ ttfaway they are •"JSiS,ohi«l^*J war. When the «»oat.Mj«^t^i«« return to tiie reservatlsiiano •»- tiiomaelyea. There fa *••«"«'•'•" l'd^Btl»»»^' #8* putting "boedle" toto*y»^ i^Jj^ ^ould nave ^r^^^^l^J^.^: ;ri3'B;^Sat;^r;?.s.-i^» " boodle," It »•"" Biooh ont of plaoOi

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