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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 26 Dec 1912, p. 7

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CXMe sbook Mib bead in NeAAA _ .. \"Idon‘t nd: , There was Peves" _ _‘ .i y 3 M rtwh e is she now?" * _“ ut you said you were not free." * m ydqcfugowmahtorhorthn m â€"Athat howâ€"* i t Joved me an v that wrife, 1 kille + Go fond. mea this ‘sudden \ollce unspect A oufim mistake the joy that i1â€" umDatot. ber face at this announceâ€" ment, . mm’ joy and satisfaction iproduced upon him, however, a yery AHOrOT «@ffect than might have been ‘mnticipeted. Had he been free, inâ€" deed, he would have awept her to his breast ‘and. covered her sweet face ith kisses ; broken . by whispered Iwords of passionate endearment. Inâ€" @ld’figh‘nrmt back from her 4t ~was whe who. was forced to *ake up the burden of the conversaâ€" iid," he cried desperately. . "Beâ€" _me, I never knew what love until I met you." in ° sedret was out now; it had _ 44 her long since, . but was" publicly ‘prociatmed. ‘a man ad blind, as obsessed, as 7 Ds ew 2s i9 © 5n En cpne gale n s y ‘Great . “35 ied the girl amazed Deyond. meagure or expectation by ‘this mudden â€" avow ~ which she â€" had wohoo enspected; ang her hand instinctâ€" eA went t the bosom of her dress qwetb M rep! that soiled, water ‘etained packet Of letters, "are you . \"You say that she is dead," she beâ€" An 81 appealing bewilderment, , that . care so much for me n ie Shere 1. some othet woâ€" _ "J am.a murdérer,". he broke out harably. ‘"There is blood upon my bands, the blood> of a . woman who d me and whots, boy as I was, I _ ‘94 ats the man that did that thing. ibut ‘wha ‘do you know?" he asked iblekly, amazed in his turn. | _ _ '_1..;"¢¢. kby, my uncle Robert Maitâ€" #and, told me your story; they said that you had disappedred ‘from the ~hatr ‘;’ ‘of menâ€"" ‘ "and they were right. What else was there for me to do? Alithough inâ€" e of crime,â€"I was blood gullty. T. ‘mad.. No punishment could be hutl "upon me like that imposed by the stern, awful, appalling fact. .. I awor ‘to priion myself, to have nothâ€" Img more forever to do with mankind OF womankind with whom I was un worthy to so ‘associate, to live alone antll God took me. To cherish my mefmories, to make such expiation as + a@ikks cvay fyeay dAaily f0Of forZzizeccbe, Â¥e4 at ber. Sbe. fou 1 ) & meomen . mitterly .oblivious to ‘ involved nâ€"the were of such .t: 4 * "What are. words? The. heart speaks to the heart, the soul whis m oo ies pers‘to the soul, ‘And so it was with j late us. I had fougbt for you, you were P KR â€" â€"mine, mine. My heart sang 4t as I bm dNMhâ€"d a fintcomâ€" ' p::'l:;ld and ntr}xggl;ag ‘:ver thde rbcl:a mfl.!finftfll % ‘e ng you. t sa e words again . blemishes, and agiin as I laid you down here in eyes and a cheerful. demeanor. â€"| this cabin. . It repoated them over and Maty of themknow, also, what it means / oyer: niing, mine! It says that every to be free from headaches, backaches, ° day and Hour. â€"And yet homor and \lassitude and extreme nervousness, â€" fidelity bid me stay. I am free, yet ‘because many have learned the value of bound; free to love you, but not to Chae ns ‘ take you. My heart says yes, my conâ€" & +) , acience "Ao. 1 should despise myself , it 1 were ‘false to the love which E. , EEa B my wife bore me, and how‘ could I & mBisy s #A | offer you a blood stained hand!" BEECHAM‘S â€" PILLS as the most reliable aid to better physâ€" ical condition. Beecham‘s Pills have nwfimufionmthq act so mildly, but so certainly and so raptisting the Bowais and lives, the + ‘the bowels and liver, they mfliw wnd !improve the w s the use of Beechâ€" Ams Pille so noted the world over Good Effects man did not hel Winirenpeciat‘y moutd rend the a) Omia rve & Every Woman . or two and the Betrayal tn the ques too great for vial matters sould i CRM® I fancied, mo one ever did gome but rown T whe hater shor s fhanion or at "least content. I. bad w better part.: ;I had work, I â€"read, g, wince that time life has ; heaven. and bell. Heaven beâ€" cause 1 love you, hell because to love you means disloyalty to the past, to a woman who loved me. Heaven beâ€" eause you are here; I can hear your volce, 1 can see you, your soul . is spread out before me in its sweetness, i8 its purity; hell because I am false to my determination, to my vow, to the Jove of the past." "And did you Jlove her so . much, then*" ‘dsked the girl, now jealous and forgetful of, other tor the moment. "It‘s ‘not" that,"" said the man. "I was not muci more thin a"60y, a year or two out of college..1 had .been 1 the mountains ‘a ‘year, this c lived Ta‘a mining camp, she was. fresh, ‘clean bealthy girl, her father died and the whole camp fathered her, looked after her, and all the young: mer in the range for miles on either side were is love with her. I sup» posed that I was too andâ€"well, I won her from the rest. We had"been marâ€" ried but & few months and a part of the time my business as a mining en gineer had called me away from her. I can remembér the day before we started on "the last journey, I was going alone again, but she was so unâ€" happy over my departure; she clung to me, pleaded with me, implored me to take bher with me, insisted on goâ€" ing wherever I went, would not be left behind. She couldn‘t bear me out of her sight, it seemed. T don‘t know what.there was in me to have in spired such devotion, but‘ I . must «#peak ‘the truth, however it may sound.â€" She seemed wild, crazy about me, I didn‘t understand it, frankly I â€"didn‘t know what such love wasâ€"then â€"but I took her along. Shall I not be honest with you? In spite of the atâ€" traction physical, I had begun to feel evén then that she was not the mate for me. I don‘t deserve it, and 1t sham 6 ta say it of course, but I wmta fiet ’q{flnd._n higher soul. That made it harderâ€"what I bad to do, you know,"" / _ <"Yes, I %;-" & "The oniy thing I could de when I came ‘to ~my senses was to sacrifice myself to her memâ€" ory because she had loved me so; as 1t was she gave up her life for me; ‘I could ‘do no less than be true and loyal to the remembrance. It wasn‘t a sacrifice either until you came, but as soon as you opened your eyes and looked into mine in the rain and the storm upon the rock to which I had carried you after I had fought for you. I knew that 1 loved you. f knew that the love that had come into my heart was the love of which I had dreamed, that everything that had gone before was nothing, that I had found the one lwomu whose soul should mate with *mine." Al o ‘â€"_*And this before I had said a word to you?" e aabineg" » efaiy <s . "He had drawn vyery near her while he spoke; she had risen again and the that inst atreteneu Oha Seized His Hand neve eonfronted each nÂ¥ ue nvmm.m!z meliest, spot in ar would come here his hand P g.l“’ and Kissed It. other, . He as he asked as if he bad / Ahnten We wer Pour ol your fault. learingâ€"for me mfl?‘»&w-umfi his Bumilation and shame, "If 1 ba only met you frst, or if my wife â€"hed He turned @way but in two swift steps she caught him. * "Where do you go* "Out,. out into. the night." "You cannot go now, it is dark; hark to the storm, you would: miss your footing you would fall, you would freeze, you would die." ‘"Whbat matters: that?" "I cannot bave it." > "It would be better so." . He strove again to wrench himself away, but she would not be denied. She clung.to him tenaciously. â€"« * â€" The man .staired at her lm Suchfilerce surges of<joy . th through him as be had not % the human framwe could sustain.. woman ‘loved him, in some strange way he had gained her affection. It was impossible, yet she hed said s¢! Hs had been a blind fool. He could gee that .now. She stood before him and smiled up at him, looking at him through eyes misted with tears, with lips parted, with color coming and | ing in ter cheek and with her bmg riging and falling. She loved him, he had but to step nearer to her to take her in bis arms.) . There wis a trust, devotion, surrendor, everything, in her mttitude, and between them like that great gulf which lay between the rich man and the beggar, that ‘separated *heaven and hell, was that he could pot cross. : â€" "I never dreamed, I never hoped oh," ‘he» exclaimed as if he got his death wound, ‘this cannot be borne." ~â€""Iâ€" tell you that the quickerâ€" and *more surely I go out of life, the hapâ€" pler and better it will be fqr you." "I will not Jet you goâ€"unless you give me your word of honor that you will not leave the plateau, and that you will come back to me." ‘ resolutely, "that you can never go out of my life again, living or dead." She released him with one band and laid it upon Her heart. "You are here." "Enid," cried the.man. ¢ "Ko," she thrust him gently away with one hand yet detained bhim with the ‘otherâ€"tBat was emblematic of the situation between them. > "Not now, Sot yet, let me think, but promâ€" Ise me you will do yourself no harm, you will let nothing imperil your life." l "As you will," said the man regret flw.,"lh&mw to end it now and forevér,. but I promise," f "Your word of honor?"* s "My word of honot." â€" «; "And you won‘t break 1t." "I never broke it‘to a~human being, much less will T do so to you!" ‘The Face in the Locket, Left alone in the room she sat down apllbotoumlnmamrrom her pocket the packet of letters. She knew them by heart, she had read and reread them often when she had been aloné. _ They . bad fascinated her. They were letters from some other man to this man‘s wife.. They were #igned by an initial only and the idenâ€". tity of the writer was quite unknown . to ‘her. <The woman‘s . repiles : were not with the oeor-.'b it was easy enough to wee what thgo reylies had been. °All. the passion of which the woman hadâ€" been capable had . eviâ€" dently been bestowed upon the writer of the letters she had treasured. Her stotk was quite plain. She had married Newbold in a fAit of plque, He was.an eastern man, the best educatad, the most fascinating «nd «interesting ‘of the men who freâ€" quented the camp. There had been a quarre} between the lotter writer and the woman; there were always quarâ€" rels, ‘apparently, but this had been a sbridus one and the man had savage!y fung.a@gay and left her. He had not come back as he usually did. Shbe had )\ walted for him and then he bad come | backâ€"too late! & y She released him, he went into the other room and she heard him:cross tilv;_”ld-rft’adommdoorndgo out Into the nmight, into the storm again. And I tell you." said the woman thers die, and .mot by my CHAPTER XVil. the report of lance at me in » and vu«u«"! unworthy. cvoa'j it was elp~â€" c oeg ie 4 es aitleg svoue" : mitgtiventiher isamighracem l necerespioratieloaiiny eeperieden He had wanted to kill the other, but She had prevented, and whilé Newbold was away he had made desperate love to ber, He had ‘besought â€" her ; to leave her kusband to go away with him. He had wsed every argament that he couldâ€"to that end and the woâ€" man had hesitated and wavered,; but she had not corsehted; she ‘had not denied her Jov&for ism any more than she had denfed her respect. and a certain admiration‘sfor â€" her‘ ‘ gallant, trusting busband.. She had réfused again and again the requests of her lover.« Ske could »not ‘ control . her heart, ‘mevertheless .ahe had kept to her marriage yows.: But the force‘ of her resistance had grown weaker and she had realized that alone sbe would perhaps inevitably succumb. *4 nsm s aoees WP@FW-; e "'.‘1 Leâ€"pen ShaeL n ca oi P .. **Bruitâ€"sâ€"tives"" accomplished the destred seatit Bd T have io thank then for.my '1.‘3 iavonhle and satisfactory state of health"> s;aA @rrer iN _~Of mt glad to be able to say i you h‘wrg-ttm with Dyspepsia, I am now in perfect health, â€" .< =/__ «_0 _ Herâ€"lover had been :away when jver â€" husband returnédâ€"prior to. the l&at fateful journey. : Enid ‘Maitiand saw now ‘why she hadbesought him to take her with him, she was afraid" to be léft; alone! She: did. not dare ‘deâ€" pend upon wii powers any moré; her only oflb::im was to go with this man whom she did not love, whom at times . she almost ‘hated, to keep ttx falling into the arms.of the man did love. She‘had béen more or less afraid ‘of Newbokk, She had soon realized, because she was. not blinded by any passion as he,.that they had beenutterly mismated. She had come to understand that when ‘the same *nowledge of the truth came to hbini, as it lne;:inw must"some day, nothâ€" ing but ppiness would . be â€" thatr portion.. x% Every kind of an argument in adâ€" dition to those so . passionately adâ€" duced ‘in"these letters urging her. to break away from her busband and to keek happiness for herself while yet ere was time, besleged her heart, i seconded her lover‘s plea and assailed her will, and yet she had not given son bon 6 for i to, mal ahe 2s M dtaien rpiit on repcal Pss way. Now Enid Maitland bated the woâ€" man who had enjoyed the first m love of the man she hergelf 4 She hated her because of her priority of , possesslon, | because her ~memory "I had been given die by t iJ se heat actine I could not stand it to be on my feet <and I w&‘ so : swelled in the abdomen I could hardly breathe. _ But thanks to Dr. Miles‘ Heart Remedy and Nervine L am able to be about the streets, a walkirtg <adâ€" vertisement of the" Curative qual= ities of your remedies, although 1 amâ€"70 years 6ld.""" ‘_ Better than‘ any _ statement ~we could make regarding the value of are these words of Mr. Cochran, Heâ€"speaks. fromâ€"experience, the highest. possible source of knowlâ€" edge. ~IfF you~ have any of <the signs of aweak chrart,. such: as pain in ithe left y@houlder or: arm, fainting. and hungry spclls, shott ness of breat©, smothering spells, lbttmor pJp‘yimim of the heart, you a .4 . wl Dr. Mi‘cs‘ s Heart Remedy which for over, twenty years has been recognized as the best prepaâ€" ration of its kind to be had. Sold under A guarantse assurin return ol the price of the first batt fails to Benefit.. AT ALL DRUGG MILES& MEDICAL G@, Torents, . Miles‘ Heart Remedy Jour R. Coctirax, * Lewistown N C. STIRLING II the Te Kood name; â€"agrinkt ench odds. _ 1t was ¢ â€"prigud : of / her fer : owith. which #he. Aad \to take.Ah6 casiget way and. the ation »withâ€" which: she . had clung‘. 10 ahe in «8 the opposite poles of *~e earth, but ~was yet a common. quality in ene ‘of. virtuous womanhood, :f lofty : ... . Natural, * in c ce pal e to he unex s %unn“m. but,there !: . Now mt sbe knew:<what Jove was and . what 1w aud . whatâ€"its forceâ€"for all that she had felt.and experienced and drgamed‘ about before were as nothing to what it was since he bad spOkenâ€" stt3 (To. Be Continued.) â€" A The Exâ€"Hero: "A, plm%il:amlm the. : teen aninutes . to . le& es * d t se ToR Sn 1 o s Ammal i“i-.«‘â€"; aegip| §~ "". C C eR) "are _ _"AAl 1. 2 Whaa _ hi 4 > * . | ‘r trij 1. CR 4 & «lt P _X | No o ank 2 c vlavest To in &1 * 2 *R P *4 elees <copi® Honseâ€"bus‘ a . cookloss unidâ€"toâ€"1h6_£16e aif, i %}lr n‘fi tewain . 1| <) y ~ V PVA P i n M PP VA N e 4* 2 a PAAAE . P aes»? EVR Nain ut dndet WHAT HPB NEEDED Maitiand and thi "renmiovsd © from PUSSY‘S. REVENGE AFalse® Ste ./‘% sternâ€"sense of jusâ€" Mike,"When. ) eatatcy‘ ; * h. raw ob N d y bay: when ience: (Gok ‘ff \the . houre." leans Bach rat L owar n he gays ?t‘u on the ‘nct that‘s you 40 & 288 the 1itti¢: innocents brightly; < :\ . Mone *Good!" â€" satd "tho â€"oid gentleman. "Togive.{t a drink, 1 .suppose*" = . W They nodded ascent. â€" Then onealse| / *‘ *>_ pblhntl}l'ap‘mlu Anclined, explained | â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" the matter more fully. . "You come|â€" . DR:. along with us, mlbater. Lr‘yog wdt'"w h rt se see â€"some ‘fun‘": hesaid, igenerously.| ___ > _ ‘"This goat‘s just been eai?fig,l whote| Phone 443 crate of sponges, and â€"~. . My? . But| â€" Honor C something‘s : bound~ to ha[:gen sity, Late 1e‘s had a. quart or: "waâ€"ofâ€"Water!"} Hospital. â€" u‘n‘ m h u& .;'su.,"_w.'m ling io do withonpthem, ; Put eftr all qit4 boad Very Cmy hse therh. Father," said the yourz man, "I cannot tell a le."‘ * #* "In that case," sighed the old man, "I don‘t believe you will ever attract any: attention politically. . = Every Womin Krows That Her Husband ‘Canâ€" A Dr. Morse‘s Indian Root Pills Cure Common llls "Heâ€" swallowed every word of 4t." TKE A MPTOR BKE:; "hipPiEcaes art hot a new and untried mmdr our grandfithers used them. â€" Hall a century ago, before Confedération, they were on sale in wz_flye;v«y drug ::g-:::l store ;‘:ihe avr;i; of thâ€"i\t awere t cure in noteands of hontes for Constipation, 1 fon, Biliousness, Rhwmn'*n and Kidney and Liver Troubles, Toâ€" da'y they are just as effective, just a# reliable as evor, and nothing better day they are j rchy‘b‘:yn :\i- has yet been d they ‘but by thels gontle actien plame all whe | + Patrrister, Solicitor, Nob em. ¢ .4. ... >w , | Conveyancer, ete. :. qaRUEE uSbICONN 0¢., HEW TorK ..\ Ofice, .Upsiairs m'fl ACHE HE A D wreat Fatal~Weakness!> .. > #aid the yourz man Loe s Otat ating «l daa oys:* he cri rue youngste leading &2 u A1 P OMe AERITE NC : Pnd i8 id, Ggenerously. | _ SWW a Pm e eating.a whole| Phone 143 ~1.â€" v~King}8t;»Wate â€"~. .. MyT . But| â€" Honor Gradust# of"Toronto Tn happen Wwhen}sity, Late _()f"‘h?‘W“ Cien wa *of ~Water!" | Hospital, ~Ottawa) oMembBep‘â€" of ‘ . the L0 t a 88 We gent it ze | A__Weit, Master in Chaneer; / Aléxs uuh:,rx{.cw'& k D.C.L. Barristers, notaries, ote. . O fice, Upstairs mfll'flx 8t West. Beriin. ... ..}; .. ~ l ®i.9 8 & (SW §so 40‘ M 'W“‘ 1’,3‘. Barrister, Bdlm ity . § éte. Mwy‘lt&lf#‘ n ! Oficeâ€"Pequegithat next â€" Market. Frederick© 9¢;, "Benlin: > _> College . of Physiclanwcand= eoms . of Ontario. W«)qu" & +A gred: from the "otfie@s.0} s 00000 o ;&)«ufi. ,L.Difi';f’ "Col sity.. All brancbes At" Welitisfry â€" tised. Entrance / tomoffieqe > same â€" as Cancordia‘ Hat, . a%Er. > store. > Wallet. t °/ e@ie 50 Sn h CLAYTONâ€"W. WELLS,_ _ . L.:D.S., D.D.S., Dentist, Waterloo. Hours $ %0 5. *Fridays 0â€"to 12 Tél. 181 After April ist will visit Elmirs the second ‘and fourth Friday. in .cach the. second mogLb, .1 Graduate Chicago ‘College ol Derâ€" tal Surgery and Royal â€" College: of Dental Surgeons of Toronto. ‘Dental Oflice in Fischer‘s â€" Block, Waterloo. Dentistry® practicesâ€"imâ€"ail=its branchâ€" €8. ; SXPER!W%@.WNARY;;‘ i € ® n éU R -p‘.‘: K€ 'f:g J. H. Engél, gragdate of. ario Veterivbry ‘Col m Q@fce Ttesidence, Queen §6: * 298. calls by day: or hight <avyswered.â€" â€".* Issue+ of Marriage Licenses Ofige:â€" Pust Office, St. Jacobs, Litentiate ol the Royalâ€" College. ol Detital Su:‘wmlg;‘ Homor v‘*:i' Universi ty ”me; Othce, firs forg, Weber Chambers, King S%. W. Hérlin.. Telephone 202. KiAE uol‘ Hours: Â¥ a m â€"to 5 ’-WJ-""*,:; g, ~. _ . German spoken, â€" _ > 2‘ OfMiceâ€"13 .King St. E. over . ioh Bank Entrance. Ind Door We of Post Office. > Phone 454.. <,.~ _ â€"~*~â€" â€"‘* Beglin. â€" (iraduate _W;»\ . ‘ SMll, _ towunder ‘of : the s.3’ Editor Jo"uh: nal. of Osteopathy 1900â€"13. "Osteoâ€" pathy often cures where all else fails. Chronic constipation, stomach disâ€" Orders, nervous discases, Wum. infantile paralysis, goiter, , sucâ€" cesslully treated. . Electrical ~treatâ€" ments . _A reliable F sench regulator; never fails. T Pn amien irnegys. ail ¢ _pmlo_n.__ ‘_t m‘s ac Dr. de Van‘s Female Pilis <~~â€"~DR. J. E. HETT ~‘Gpecialtyâ€", 3 .. :. ‘‘_ . Discases of the Far, ~....._~ Nose and Throat. King St. East. .=" ~ . / mb&i: or |hvg for '6‘:- “u n‘ wde MINARD‘8. ~ LINIMENTâ€" CURES DISTENMPER 9 DR. WELLINGTON K. ~JACOBS, Offices Dentist DR: WILLLAM GEIGER, S.~ECKEL, Lâ€"D.S.; D.D.S K DR. LEDERMAN, D.D.S8 SCPILEN & A . L., BIT ZER; BicA MILLAR & SIMS OQsteopathic Physician JOHN L. WIDEMAN DR. W.~ J. SCHMIDT PENTIST . > M $ to J .A HBHLTARD OsSTEOPATHY g:ovn 208 Weber Chambers lin. Ontarie; ~~~ 4. HUGHES Waterloo Oddfellow CLEMENT , Notary,. Money “?g King and Block, Berlin.~ //

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