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Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 11 Aug 1887, p. 3

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 iren's Jubilee. est and happiest featnrej ee, recently held in Bng- at given to the school- A large sum of money jscription opened bjr one lers and on the day fol- ir jubilee celebration, tl,» girls and boys gather- in a certain proportion schools of the metropolis, of them came from the 1 squalid quarters of Ihe from miserable coSts dreary houses teeming upants, from hot and f them had never seen a j ie trees and pretty lake, ersions were arranged for They were amply fed ;, and other good things, lows and a hundred other tracted their attention nds played, and there lusic and merriment all iach child also was sent memorial of the day in elf, and the Prince and visited the throng ol j n, smiling at them, and s to them. Surely then all that multitude who pleasure and fun of the the Fresident- ry is told of the individ Belated as the «urdeii« i nansion in Warfjingtoa i had heard rumoon j as drunk and uncivil » te House, so one bngM ed him into his preseB* issal. "Jemmy," "W^; hear bad fltorics abortf 1 are constantly orBi* rs." For a brief wh* for a reply. Atl«*"?l It, bedad I hear niu yon but do y*" â„¢J^ by the poweraâ€" I**" lOYE'S TRIUMPH. Jiijtii- ,i the Aatbor of .^^L^"^?'.. !r™°-" " =â„¢--*-A«m.K,. J*,. Love ob Kindred?" "A Golden Dkeam," c., 4c, CHAPTER L mile of a certain favourite Ches- ""iilins-place, where everything is I hire ^*:*u and altogether unlo/ely with te*. «*"J?' of the blue waters of the Irish I ie *^'^Vhe peaceful and secluded hamlet of iei, li^' v: jg situated but a short distance HerbJ- shore, almost hidden from {roin JQ^ ,. ^j hollow on the side of a very rtefi"*? file hill, and is surrounded by '1^^ 'T.nf apple and pear trees and lovely ""â- ^.ned gardens. 8*^' .:in four zig-zag streets, without a. I' TSroadwal in any of them, form- jfdtl " i_ _n,1 oiK^rlp.n 1eRlivitia in n. I y^**" ascents and sudden declivities in a that sev l^^^t-^t^se'rerely tries the muscles and »»y „f a stranger, but apparently is no »er^^ " :„nce to the natives.^ It has quaint, '"^•ainir upper storeys to its houses, with Lvern»no o^^^^^g^ beams crossing each fiiBti3'J=f J|^jjjjjj„ diamond shaped panels °*"rp filled in with plaster. It has one k^' low-roofed inn, a little modernised 'l Uvin^ down of shiny odcloth upon rr floors which only want polishing to kl. out their rich dark colours, and by " t3 of whitewash concealinjj the red ' "'j^.Ino walls but such innovations have "" ipnriveditofits old-world memories. ylaaint devices for the comfort of a gen- £a of topers long since passed away, its knelled rooms and ornamented galleries Weep window-seats andcapaciouschinmey- .r= vividlv recall the past. "SaSe^reason why this little hamle JLlooked by the crowds that year after "ar3eek the health-gmng breezes along ie esplanade of the fashionaWe holiday re- I Z so near to it isbecause it Ilk so embower- Jin trees that, were it not for the square l»rofitschurch, one would pass by the iretricions brick and stucco villas on the iorenear thepainfully new railway-station, 1 ive the place without ever dreaming that 5Mh a quaint vUlage, which time seems iiive left untouched for a hundred years, existed within a mile of modern seaside Bat the ivj'-covered crucifornr church that [113 30 many secrets hidden beneath its let- tered pavement, and the grass-covered •aves surrounding its walls, sometimes at- tract the attention of an exceptionally ob- servant vUitor; and thus, although the " madding crowd" does not know ofitsex- ktence, Serby is occasionally visited by artists who have been "doing" Welsh and Westmoreland lakes and mountains, and by anglers, who sojourn there for the sake of a certain trout-stream that flows through the grounds of the'Grange. " i;cli was Herby on one fair and sunny June moining, when the shadows of the leaves formed a lace-like pattern on the broaJ red-gi-avel walk leading to the church, and the shadow of the tower was ' tkowa across the graves. Other shadows too fell upon those grassy hillocks and old half-buried headstones as three persons carae out by the vestry door and walked croasthe churchyard towards astilethatgave access to a narrow lane from which the blue sky was hidden by a canopy of lilac and la- kmum trees in full bloom â€" two men, and a tall slender girl of some twenty or twenty- one summers. The girl's clear-cut oval face was pale, and her beautiful hazel eyes ap- peared full of sadness. Her dark and deli- cately-arched eyebrows and long lashes were perfectly black, and formed a striking con- trast to her|hair, which was soft, fine, silken^ aad of a pale shade of yellow that it would cave been flattery to call golden. She was cW ia a tumbled, soiled, and faded gray tes, her straw hat was trimmed with a strip of shabby lace, and her luxuriant hair ^ascirelessly coiled about her shapely head te: small w^hite hands were innocent of gloves, and on the left a broad gold band Titii a flishing diamond set in it guarded a redding ring. The man upon whose ami she was lightly laaingwas about twenty-iive years of age, ttd as broad-shouldered and dark as she slight and fairâ€" a handsome, well-bred tâ„¢, and a good one, or his noble brow, dear frank eyes, and sweet mouth belied m strangelyâ€" a man who would protect his siMy a life with his own, in whose hands sty Roman's honour would be safe, with 'b'entle chivalrous disposition that a ^«ed woman could deceive, a child or a ««! would trust. Eis handsome sun-burnt face was flushed wd smiling as he looked over the giri's ,i' °[ °*t, and, addressing the person on another side of herâ€" a fair-haired, blue- j« young man in the dress of a clergyman (t n- 1, ,i f, '^t^*s not such a teirible business Bill ' ' ^^^ roy wild Hyacinth is â- ^^Wd and fast, is she not?" aotoh ' \^' *^^ carriage will stand firm hjtt! K "*® clergyman who always da'tK *^L*^* brunt when it comes out ose T -ff ^^^ ^°" informality in the sj'h. ^* ^^^ months with 'hard' or iej.^?°""d fine if either of you drags this Itell V n?"^^ ^** ^*ew of breaking it. !isiZ"°'iy«"i,Iwould not run such a tdermV" °°^ ^^^ â„¢y sister, besides con- »^th 2 "^.""^^nce " replied the clergyman, !fjg"ty. *^ »â- ' nddiSl^?® now-that's too much! A The ET â- * '^^^^ • Is it. Hyacinth " ent Ik "i^^*^ "^^" white eyelids for a 't'ileanlj fo^ered them again demurely Wj J -^'^^ther more heavily on her bus- "Well -V- °^*^^ no reply in words. «tdth4t ^^'^ding the '^^ yo« -see- "'^eremwv,""® uneasy sensation, as ***miotl, 1 ^('™®*"^^°8 wrongsomewhere; 'i sin V "^S where there's secrecy "^svooDo 1 °° understand?" answered «aaheZi/r°* •" ^s^ Giyn^ i»"ttfy »ivordsr.v ®P°^'ed forth a torrent *«aied^7'?!^^bjecthadnot his newly- "I»m^r,!^^'â„¢Pt«dhim. "'Ivfmm^ "â- **"*«" she said, looking "iWâ„¢"'°"eto the other and speaking w^'tte-vnnV.'S'^^'^*^ ^oice. "Bob, you ^orrZ! "°)h told me- that everything ^iCik*'" l^gal- â-  I am sure-with Sit: a sobâ€" "I would not have tiJo"^:??'^.*"' me sfv_no indeed I" â-  S^ntho^^^ri^S tears' showed theiii- "Wl^'k fringes of her eyed. «liia*i,"^band, in great diatreaa, cheek\l'i'°'»»d her and preanng his '^t6c^,»Swt»st her fair faw^ "Why, -crying on you're wedding- day-^8o awf aiy unlucky Look, Bob. at what you hav^done with your conacience and your scmplea." Before the perpetual curate of Hwbv could reply, hia aister turned her face to- wards him, opened her large eyesâ€" ao tear- ful and yet so brightâ€" looked up into hia face, ami saidâ€" "It is right It is legal We ars married â€"are we not It is not a furceâ€" not one of those mock marriages one reads of in books ay, and in newspapers sometimes " " Good heavens 1" exclaimed her hnsband. his face flushing with sudden angerThia voice shaking. " Can you suspect me of such a wicked trick? Why, Hyacinth ' She made a gentle gesture with her slim white hand, and smiled at him, though her eyes were grave. "' do not think you would play me auch a trick," she saidâ€" 'I do not indeed Glynn. But you are a man, and men have deceived women ever since the world b^an, and will continue to do so, I suppose." "And you dare to place mti in your thoughts by the side of the villains of whose crimes you have read in the newspapers ' You forget that I am cheefully risking the loss of a great fortune that you are as necessary to me as the air I breath that yon are as pure and holy in my eyes as the memory of my dead mother that yon are my cousin that your brother, whom you know to be ordained participates in the 'trick' as you are pleased to call it I Oh, Hyacinth, I can scarcely believe you are in earnest " and the young man withdrew his arm from his bride and walked on hastily, hot tears springing to his eyes. She did not follow him and strive to woo him back to her side, as many a loving girl would have done nor did she pout her lip and try to look indifferent. The ominous quarrel that was spoiling the first n^omtnts of their married life did not disturb her in the least. She raised her left hand, looked at the plain gold ring with its flashing guard, sighed a faint low satisfied sigh and turned to her brother, repeating the very question she had asked some minutes before â€" "It is rightâ€" legal? Are we married. Bob " • "Yes. It is a little informal, but it will stand in any court of law in the kingdom â€" you may be sure of that. Hyacinth. But you will be pretty j well sold if you find you've married a pauper-r^a man without even a profession. And you know what a hatred our usurping uncle has of us all if he knew Glynn was here, I believe he would disinherit him." " I know it is a case of risk â€" a sprat to catch a salmon but miles and miles of rich and fertile soil by the liver Nore, and a stately and ancient castle, the heme of our race since Henry the Second gave it to red Glynn Verschoyle, are worth risking some- thing for. I would risk even my life to be Verschoyl e of Verschoyle and her eyes lost their steady calmness and her cheeks flushed scarlet as she spoke. "Yes," she went on, after a pause, "1 am willing to run the risk and, if f fail, I must put up with the consequences." " Well," said her brother slowly, "the plan is a good one if it only turns out all right but there is generally a hitch in these things â€" the secret leaks out, or something." " This secret will keep. Bob â€" ^you will keep it, I shall keep it, and we will make him keep it." " People in love are generally fools," re- plied the young clergyman sentenliously. " And do you imagine I am in love with that gaby " she asked, glancing contempt- uously at the tall and handsome young fel- low whom a few minutes before she had solemnly sworn to love and honour all the days of her life, and who was now sitting on an old stone stile leading into the lane, and still looking angry and mortified. " 'Gaby' said Robert. "An honourable gentleman, well bom and well bred, and one of the kindest, best-heartedpluckiestfellows I ever knew 'Gaby'l" "I think so," replied the girl coldly "I should think any man a gaby who, for the gratification of a whim, a fai^cy for a face that pleases him now, that may displease him a year hence, and that he is sure to grow weary of and hate in time, would risk such an inheritance. " Oh, Hyacinth," cried her brother, "you and all of us â€" ought- to be the last to re- fuse to believe in love Look at our fatherâ€" of what he gave up for our mother, and how passionately he adores her and she him, 'and how happy he is in spite of our shabbiness and poverty " „ " Well, they are exceptions, I suppose, said the girl, with a sneer but let that slide. If a cool head can keep a secret and force other-* to do so, this morning's business won't leak out untilâ€" well, dead men's shoes, you know, and all that kind of thing. Hush now 1"â€" *nd her fair clear-cut face assumed its usual expression of haughty calmness. " I wonder whether you have a heart Hyacinth?" muttered sthe curate. "It seems to me that you fcight be chiseUed out of a block of stone, for aJ the human and womanly feeling you displayâ€" you are quite unlike the rest of us. " Heart?" she said, immediately catching his words. " Yes, Robert. I have a hear* be Mrs. NevUleâ€" Mrs. Verschoyle Neville, of Verschoyle castle and Shangannonâ€" but I have not the heart to love yonder gaby â€"dropping her voice to a whisper as they came close to the stUe and her nusband rose â- "^JSF^'mel^d'arest." he said feeling heartUv ashamed of his outburst ef anger "IfoSglt^to have taken Joffei«e at such aâ€" aâ€" trifle. Of course you did not mean "She made no reply in words, but she smil- »^ .if him niacins her soft white hand m h's :Jhe hd^ Piver the stUe. Her bother followed.W the three walked down the SneCther in the ^ade of the laburnums and lilMs, crushing beneath their feet the Slen blJ«soms 4at almost covered the groxMid. A Uttle further on a grand old horse-chestnut tree that caat a cool shadow aU^ntSTand towered upwardsapyranud ««ra tixmij daad, and all laaaeiMnuiibend villi tnMdiaRNM. eU^inc At this atile pMaed.' Glyim NevOl., J!!^i*^Mf iargifna, Jm. had not "?**â- â€¢â- *•««», I npPOiJB. Hladnth r •^tWnk noti^raie i^^? Siling. I tnuuc you might oome home with na. Tdaie Baybnakfast â€" ifyBvcan »U our morning wramble for food by such a nameâ€" iaoBing OB BOW and. If ^ny one saw as together and you did not oome m, there weulii be talking and wondering an4 qneationing on their part, and downright lying on mine â€"and"â€" with a little diadainfal gesture of thehandâ€" "I hate thit." Glynn, who^hadbriv^'ened vbibly during her apeech, dedand with aome waimthâ€" "Yea, I ahould like io go up to the Grange very much, dear I delight in mak- my own coffee and frying my own trout â€" in fact, anythiiw except blowing the fire with my month." "Aa you caught Lil doing the firat time that you oime," said the curate, glad to find the conversation taking this turn. "Yea,â€" the*beautiful child Hyacinth when you and I are rich â€" five or six years hence â€" ^we must take Lil to London and watch the world worshipping her. It would be a crime to let such a flower 'blush unseen' in a Cheshire village, to marry eventually the doctor or" â€" with a laughing glance at Robert Verschoyle â€" " the cur- ate." Hyacinth's lip quivered, and she said with some bitterness in her voice â€" "Very well if that time ever does come, it will most likely come when I am fading and the flower of her loveliness is fairest â€" a pleasant reflection Ah, there is my ridic- ulous parent on the lawn " They had now skirted the edge of the wood, and come to another stile leuling into nothing more imposing than a large sloping field in which some recently-shorn sheep were placidly grazing. It was most decidedly a field, and was called a lawn only because a large ancient mansion, in a state of partial ruin â€" ^with moss-grown roof and walls matt- ed with ivy â€" stretched with its tumble-down stables and out-offices, across the upper end of it. The old peak-roofed, gabled building had no grace or beauty of its own and yet it was a fair and refreshing sight to eyes tired with the glare oi the sands in the hot sunshine, for a |irofuslon jot Uncared for, neglected roses clambered over and clung to and ran riot through the ivy everywhere. The sweet-scented blossoms spread across the little windows, starry sprays of jasmine Seeped, out between the stiff, formal passion- owers. Everything but these fair gifts of nature spoke ruin and decay, and a hope lessness that have even led to a cessation of all efforts to keep up appearances. The- broad gravel walk in front of the house was so covered with weeds that one ot the sheep was nipping the grass growing between the stones. What had once been a row of stately oaks was now a line of unsightly stumps not more than a foot above the ground and bristling with bushy growths. A broken statue of Amphi trite in a grass -grown shell with a memorial of the time when this field was in reality the pleasaunce of a noble mansion. The broken escutcheon over the hall door â€" about which the ivy and some white roses were entwined â€" the ragged' embroidered curtain hanging at an open window, the cracked and worn flight of red sandstone steps, the dilapidated, neglected, poverty-stricken aspect of the whole place, was such as is more often found on the banks of the Nore, the Shannon, or the Blackwater, than by the side of an English river. Its appearance would have suggested thoughts of the Court of Chancery, had the fact not been so very apparent that the dis- order and neglect were evidently the pro- ducts of swarming life rather than the des- olation of a house of the "Courts," Such indeed had been Glynn Neville's thought concerning it when â€" a month or two before that fair June morning â€" he had first leaned over the stile by the wood, and looked with disapproving eyes at his uncle's home, little thinking that in this remote, unvisited Cheshire village he should find in his fair-faced, placid, flaxen-haired cousin his wife and his fate. (to be continued.) Tie Hottest Place in the World. The hottest region on earth is tropica- Africa, where the mean equatorial tempera- ture of the air is 85 ® 10' the same equat- orial temperature being 820 " 94' in Asia, and 809 ° 96' in America. Tbe great bulk of Africa, to the extent of three -fourths, or even four-fifths, of the whole lies within the tropics. Under any circumstances, therefore, a very high temperature might be expected to prevail on this continent. Its physical conformation favors and inten- sifies this, tendency the vast expanse of unbroken land in the northern division, the slight elevation of the surface, and the aridity of the Sahara, all tend to make Africa the hottest region in the world. It is pre-eminently the "tropical continent" The extreme of heat is found net under the eqtuxtm- itself but in the neighborhood of the northern tropic, in the Nubian Desert, where food may be cooked by being buried in the sand. The saying of Arabs is, "In Nubia the soil is like tire, and the wind like a flame." On the coast of the Red Sea, the mean temperature of Massowah is 88 ® and at Mourzouk, in Fezzan, the summer heat reaches 1308® in the shade. It must also be borne in mind that local circumstances increase both heat and cold immensely. Thus Sir J. Hersohell observed a super- ficial temperature of 159 ° in soil st the Cape of Good Hope and Sturt "says that, on the Macqnarie River in Ne« South Wales, "the ground was almost a molten surface, and a match falling upon it was immediately ignited." 140 F. has also been rezistered at Colorado; and near Jibe Euphrates, Capt. Griffiths found tiie ther- mometer standing at 156 ©in the sun, and 132 ® in the shade. At Calpee, in the East Indies, the thermometer on one occasion wa8 observed to stand at 150 « m the open air half-an-hour after sunset. Struck with Lightning Neatly describes the position of a hard or soft com when Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor is applied. It does its work so Quickly and without pain tnat it seems mag- ical in action. Try it.. RecoUect the name -Putnam's Painless Com Extractor. Sold by Jl druggists and dealers everywhere. CLOTHES WRINCERS,; .lUada. ChonM, CupatSi «• Maa OoiiiMn, Trwd^. aad otiMT â- udriH. Hamuhm UnosniAi. Woaas Co., Hamatan, â- 1887- FOS OOfEOlAIE SmPXSMT. THE OSHAWA MOWBSS Tb«y aniiMas aU other mowma in â- nrtiiiiMlilii, qnali^ ol material. MDoeUaace of " " perfoimiuioe of woi^ BTEW MODEL THBBSHEBS. The be«t threihiD(r machinea in America. Ihev do the Uig«at amount ot woric, and thieah deuwr tium ray other machines can do the work. In exoeUenoe of conatrai tion ther an unequalled. They are the best made in Canada, awl are only equalled by their namesakes in the United Statea. 1**KTABI,E BMSIKES.r-No better anicultural engines are made. HAI.I. THKESHIKC MACHI!irBS.-Tbe best m the market for hoise-poweia. W**IWBIIKT. or BINCKE, IBIPKOVED HOB8E BIOWEKS, now the easiest running and best in the world. Also the CAUFORmA, PLNSTT. AND PITTS HORSE-POWERS, of e.tabUghed repute. t^ Repairs on hand for every machine made. JOHN LIVIXeiiTOXE, Trustee, JOSEPH HALL MACHINE WORKS OSHAWA I. 81'AUNl'bN CO., TORONTO ONT. BY'r BIRTHDAY. â-² BUotifBl XiayDrtad Blilbday OMd MB* to ttaj batir iriKMa mother wiU aaad ostha oC two or mar* other faafalea,aod their AteateBdasaaDia- cStTtof ~DVe Sample Tahuible inftx Weaa.Ktel ;Cen Allan Line Royal Hail St8am8Mp Safllna dnrtaig winter from Port and arsiy hniada and Hafltaz every Saturday to Liverpool, and in enm iner from Quebec every Saturday to Liverpool, oaUin* at Londonderry to land maila and pasaengera to Scotland and Ireland. Also from Baltimore -na Hai! lax and 81 John's N. F.^to Idverpool fortnightly dtu Ing summer montha The steamers ot the Olasgov lines sail during winter to and from Halifax, Portlaii' Boatonand Philadelphia and daring summer betwetr Olaagow and Montreal, weekly, Olasgow and Boatoi ' weekly and Olasgow and Philadel^iia, fortnighO} For Freight, passage, or other information apply ti A. ichumacher ft Co., Baltimore S. Omiard ft Oa Halifax Shea ft Co., St Jchn's N. F., Wm. Thomsoi ft Co., SI John N. B. Allan ft Co., Chicago Love I Alden, New York H. Bourlier, Toronto Allans Ra ft Co., Quebec; Wm. BrooUe, Philadelphia; H. Allan Portland Boston Montreal mm RUBBER STAMPS, '14^ cils, and Burning Brands, c. Send for Catalogue. BARBER BROS. Co,, 37 Scott St Toronto. Toronto Silver Plate Co., HANUFACTUREitS OF THE HI0H8ST OKADE OF SILVER PLATED WARES. TRADE MARK. ALL GOODS UVARA.^TEED. TORONTO. THE WHITE THRESHINC ENGINE or LONDON ONT AFULLSUPPLYforI887. J-L.J ONES WO CD ENGRAVLF^ '0 King S^ East TORONTO. Bicycles! s END AT ONCE FOB USI of Seoond-Hai^ MadUnea. VMbi 916 Vpivaiida. New Catalogue Ready Ist.^pril. A. I. LANE MONTREAL MILLER'S TICK DESTROYER. in Tina at 35c., STOCKMEN, give thU valuable pre- paration a fair trial. It operatea promptly and effectually in destroying Ticks and other vermin pests, as weU as in eradicating all affections of the skin to which Sheep are subject Sold 706. and 91. A 36c. "Rn will clean 20 She. p or 35 Lambs. HUGH IIILLER ft Co., Toronto. r CURE FITS! .Wh*B I ur con I do not mwa mn^ to Mop th«B te • nnw and tta«D have tham ratnni asaln. I mMa a radtart rai*. I ban mada tba diaaaaa of nxs, KPII.BP8T or VAW ING SICKNESS a Ufa^lOBS atndy. I wamnt my raaadf to eon tba vorat caaaa. Boeanaa otheia hava lUladlaaa naaeate net now raealvinc a cnra. Sand at oooa (or m â-  toaatlaa and a Fica BotUa of mj tnfalllUe raaaadr. STt* ^zpiaaiandFoatOflloa. It ooata yon notbinc fer a bUL udlwUIcnrayoB. Addraan DB. H. O. BOOT, Bnidi0lllce,37TiiBiiiSt,Tiiniito. MERIDEN BRITANNIA GO. MANUFACTURE ONLY Silver Plated Ware. Artistic Desicrns. combined witb Unequalled Durability and Finish. HAMILTON* ONT. HE greatest dia-' covery of the pre- ent age for Regulat- ^nar the Bowels, and |Curing all Blood, Liv- r and Kidney Com- plaints. A perfect Blood Purifier. A few n Hamilton who have |been lienefited by its jse Mrs. H. Keenan, 192 Robert St, cured )f Erysipelas of 2 yrs. itanding Robt. 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