Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park News-Letter (1904), 17 Jun 1905, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

His arms were (bunt mo,’ his hm touched my « check It wu £1? 1» clear in daylight 1mm] un- (1919:0011. For a mam-mt I lay with my had upon iii nhénhder; then I diuengaged myaelf and stood apart. » » w , H I 'éflHLAND " PARK ' {NEWS-LETTER: 701m END 100 77’ S 00 (/51 vAppu-ently there was something Walk: in I, dewfiptionl' on B] Whoun of flu . night when '1 N I“ Midi my deep“; mother and kqpt my- eel! unite by conning volume: which my lover Ind ”unneededâ€"abut». word. whisk he lied upokon e! i’iphireuily. ht which he Ind probably never W thin I should Mad» ' , “Did you cum theni'f naked his cousin.” . “No,” I replied, “th 1t It“; the tub grew mummhmlwmuabiom human “or W I Ihdl not feel quite such an igno- m We (tell hen mi mbjectl in common.” figs m’v’o‘ma vii» I “ain‘t. ynv mum I M- j tom and walked to an (Matt and o: m dock. WWW»Wfltmm00§Byn-‘ A. it“? '5“! and! W I n- - ' “You love him "3:, Minot scum!" laid my y WWW x 1m'mnant m1 magma, m , _, ” ‘ in ELM , . Jot!!!" he oyghinsd V " ' ’ 3: chimed .1; him gitticdiy. Though :11.“ young, in. “it w» my, his rue thin and liked. I fitm- 501204 3!); ha ennui if; cousin. Win it only be- W he was younger and stronger! He met my gimme with ”other far more piercing. He seemed to read my‘ though”. i 7 "I dmmt envy “Joint Endicott,’ '- said he. " "Why m1}? » ‘ “Became my 530 not 1mm him, child. ” I was about us utter a. fierce disclaimer. How glared he s‘ay’sof How (lat-tad he guegtibn my af- '-£er.t£on? - ~ ' - ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ “Yak, .bnt you do not 10%) him. You Jove ma, 9nd me oniy. I know M” . - , , “Ym have no right to speak in that way!” I ériad. ' “Am I not his prqmwed wife?” “It. in qnite true,” I said in a broken wdy. “Quite true! Oh, if I Ind but discovered it earlier, I! I had but known Whit the new feeling meant! 3n: indeed I did not; I only knew that I was very Rpm-«pimps» than I have ever been before. .Sometiw I has wondered why, and reproached mil, 4'or my dear mother has been ,dead only‘ no film a time. Sometimes~-” He interrupted me without ceremony. ‘ “If you had Yum, wht would you have done!” "I think I would tuber htve jumped into are in: than have lot and! love you,”I answered Volume I 8 By L. E. TIDDEMAIN HIGHLAND 'PARK, ILLINOIS, JUNE I7, I905 SPECIAL TRAlN SERVICE Dunnd Jule InJ July (or flu Daron}: Concav- at Ravi-in park In addition!» the ngulupoflioo o speck! tnin fol- flu Mudgtioh 9!qu Pct-stand Highland Puk patrons-win run dtily a MW: “whit!“ MAM 8:059.» ““ HfihhndPark. Matthew 8:2!Sp.m .~ .-., ' 7' Wfi" wit-1‘ My wire broke I gdvancod and, standing on Wig-toe, raised my face to his. Then I kitted him. ' ‘" “Good-bye,” 1 said-«“Good bye!" _ “You still intefid to many“ this otm'man," he midâ€"~“this cousin of mine!” ' ~ um m: mym'pw thdtjov mums“ , layadhin gorawhflmukingin ”may.“ the face that had grown no familiat. I lovéd each 'I’ifle. Others might have called than disfiguring, "but not I. They weft; part of him, they were char acteristic, and I would not havB smoothed o'n'e “my. I would not have had Him other than he was in the ,slightest particular. ' “Now that. I kimw,” I said. gently, “I Mama myself and myself done, not yonâ€"not yoti! ” ‘,"Yes, and I will be a' good wife to him. He shall néver know. Heaven bless him!’ ‘How tvmatffil, he has been.,how patient} I would (lie for him if that were possible, but, since it. is not possible, I will'live for him.” ‘ He premed me to his bénrt. I restéd there ," moment 'uutil he ,atooped and kissed me. Theri were tear: in his eyes udhe lilac mid “Good-bye.” Aftér‘that I 10ft him; fitter that I fought my bums Moxie. Sometimes I reproaehed myself more bitterly than the most rigid monlist would have done. Sometimes I prayed tint I might die, at othgrs I lay prostrate, weariéd by the strength of my own emotions. And again I looked in the 31m «Main time with a flame hum} bf my own boimty. It I he] been I plain woman, Wéll Deniman would not hu‘o learned to love me. I shoals! have gone to my future husband hurt- whole ifâ€"-â€"â€"â€" All .01! avg Qum‘iffin an “if." .I had thought myself so stmng, Ind other! had the liko opinion of me. ‘How 1' Ido'fn'ed myoglf now! Yet ulteontampt would not help John Endkbtt. l M him more thin lint-mud bin nâ€" oon-red self-«stun I bathed 11-) eyes and put on my hottest It'd moat becoming dreu. l nould M iii: ,Vith ,. nailing fuse. lie Ind wanted pltiontlx, he ”1‘ rgacive ya mirewnrd.” No ydtog what 1 m be Illould he spud :1] pain. I unlined my eye. in catch of the figure I'm I felt would still be funilin in who of the you“ cut had rolled over n. I Ind not‘ obliged, why Iiould he! I longed to heat the may W W Ind om cheered me. Alas, I van W to dflr amintmont! "' -= '- " His cousin. whom I Ind not non line. our men,- arable intervuw, joinod me. His. mm mm Endipott wu unyoidubly ”(Vaulted from mama " ' Iméflvu tothWoip out (If mingled mam ~01 he»? m ' ward: «her doctor, had elated III: M sheltei . math he! root. until the day cumin am can “maxi; leave it a: a bride. She welcomed me kindly, and was loutI in pniced of my future husband. I listened poem to every ward clue uttered. I Mad to realize my a position more fully. I wanted t6 inure” um 3'17" maelf that I was about to marry a. good, true mam» ‘ vamman whom everybdfiy mpécted and admired. l ‘wia glad when my hasten me me alone' an the drawing room. There, In the gleaming, I couId think my own thoughts. I maid meal! the distant period when John Endicott, for pure goodness' sake fingd tended my dear mother, bringing her back to life from the brink of the grave. , , The clock strwck seven. Why am he Huge“: Every mommt of delay would I felt, make the- meetjng mute painful to me. The mvant mama and offered to .briug me lights. I Mined that. It seemed to we that it would WW Min. *5 must than, I (headed to lock John Endieott in the: me. I fainted lent the km W I kngx 91‘ am should meet mine with a Question in their :g‘niet depths-41 question I could' not u ‘ ‘ , lest, in an utter abandonment of” ghoul] shriek out my secret gm} no; law; go mg” for ntonomont. I buried my 1m in my W gm waited; Mcning with pink“ amuse”. At last he came. But"! did not hm hm. He entered unannounced and stood behind my ' . By a strange inning: I beam awe of his L once. A. moment later he was heading over mo. 3‘! land covnw’ ' a apmmzkc Numbér 3

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy