West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 30 Jan 1913, p. 6

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Christmas Greetings l9! 2 HOWE STUDY CO! is probably due to uric acid in the systemâ€"the blood must be purifiedâ€"- the poisonous acid driven out and general health must be improved. JeWel myself at the shop N0“ Ijzxid Maitland hated the wo- man Mm had enjoyed the first young love of the man she herself loved. She ha'ed her of possession, yet came hetw She hated h way c.very mud or an argument in ad- dition to those so passionately ad- duced ln these letters urging her to break away from her husband and to seek happiness for herself while yet mere was time, besieged her heart, seconded her lover’s plea and assailed her will, and yet she had not given Every dition to duced 1n break aw peek ban portion j Her lover had been away when her j husband returned prior to the last fateful journey. Enid Maitland saw' now why she had besought him to take her with him, she was afraid to be left alone! She did not data de- pend upon her own powers any more; her only salvation was to go with this man whom she did not love, whom at times she almost hated. to keep from , falling into the arms of the man she; did love. She had been more or less; afraid of Newbold. She had soon: reailzml, bemuse she was not blindedf by any passion as he, that they had; been utterly mismated. She had come; to understand that urban nu. mm... In 0 W l He had wanted to k1] she had prevented, and was away he had made to her. He had beso leave her husband to him. He had used ev‘ that he could to that e1 it the woman; there were always quar- rels, apparently, but this had been a serious one and the man had savagely flung away and left her. He had not come back as he usually did. She had waited for him and then he had come backâ€"too late! wque. He was an eastern man. the but educated. the most fascinating and interesting of the men who fre- quuzted the camp. There had been a quarrel between the letter writer and the woman. than. mm... -1---“ AV [man to this man's wife. They were , but it was easy see what those replies had been. All the passion of which the woman had been capable had dentl} been bestowed upon the wr of the letters she had treasured. tier story was quite plain. She had maz‘x'it-.1Newbold in a fit of pique~ +19 “'38 an PfiQtprn man 4%.. v ' vu- .I.v. “As you will," said the man regret- fully. “I had purposed to end it now land forever, but i promise." “Your word of honor?" "My word of honor." out into the night, into the storm again. or .Vewbold. She had Boon d, because she was not blinded r passion as he. that they had tterly mismated. She had come orsmlld that when the same m4 of the truth came to him, Lu'imbly must some day. noth- t szl._;;!piness would be their it upon her heart. “You are here." “Enid,” cried the man. "No," she thrust him gently away with one hand yet detained him withi the other-“that was emblematic of the situation between them. “Not now, not yet, let me think, but prom- iae me you will do yourself no harm, 5 you will let nothing imperil your life." I A of an ______, -- nun uauuu, I ten her and that man. ‘ riflce her even for because Newbold was 11888. er memory, because! “Quixotic," you ea; “18 in the greatness of; no. She had blund him, thought it shame ; unwillingly, upon th 3 his manhood to he'tha other woman; a] matter what love and! tray it. Even u o anted to kill the other, but led prior to the last '. Enid Maitland saw had besought him to we others, but it was easy see what those replies had the passion of which the I been capable had evi- CHAPTER XVII. { mm. he went into the (1 she heard him cross open the door and go Light, Into the storm By Cyrus Townsend Brady well She sat. down again with the let- ters in her hand. It had been very ° a moment since, but it was not so now. She had but to show him those letters to remove the great barrier between them. She could act do it. It was clearly impossible. The reputation of her dead sister who had struggled so bravely to the end was in her hands. she could not sac- _l- - sure. but 1”) 0WD happines overthrow th memory. f0 8m â€"v“v. {him that his gCPden image h: ‘upon feet of day, that the on which he had dwelt was Once convinced of that he come quick to her arms. 81 prayer of blessing on old and started to her feet, the in hand, to mt] Newbold back and 10" hinL and than at... - ved her hus- , she had loved anoth- tion of the problem. She had but to give him these 'foora M .4.--“ There was something determination, it is was something also The dividing line he and folly is some- were narrow. noble in his true, but there very foolish. comedy and tragedy, between laughter and tears. If the woman he had Oman as 1 f0? the of honor Provide“ hor: She could understand t the man too; she could more clearly than he. 1 tracted by two passions, i and his honor and for her yet but one, for him. A mind, she was better caps ing the facts in the face that she had felt and experienced and dreamed about before were no nothing to what it was since he hed spokenâ€" Ihe could under-tend whet the etruzo xie muet have been in thet women’s heart. She could honor her, reven ence her, pity her. h... ehII_(_h-en am upbject - CCI Ina â€"â€"v -v- “w “a“ man, in order th'et ehe {fight not fall into the arms of the man she did love. In defiance of right. an. was proud of nor tor ma non rigor with which she had refused to take the easiest way and the desper- ation with which she had clung to him the did not love, but to whom aha was bound by the laws of God and , upon the heart secret of roman; she could not be- :ven if the other woman really unfaithful in deed as Yog say? I do not think J, and then she stopped. 3 she was she had re- p, binding conditions and )r as Well as he. Chance. uce, had put the honor on, her rival, in her 9 world had long since is poor unfortunate; in 5 her memory cherished t of her husband. His‘ blunder-9d unwittingl; _ even to' procure her Is cou!d Enid Maitland at ideal, shatter th’at these letters to show gCPden image had stood day, that the love up- had dwelt was not his. of that he wm‘fl'a her arms. She cried 1191‘ feet, the letters Newbold back to her her own happi- understamj the feeling of ; she could think £11161! old Kirkby only hated would have he beneved do DOUUDg He was dis- . for his pride 91'; she had as THE DURHAM CHROVIL'LE “Never. er. utterly 112;; am to Emma matlon and a H: rt 01' surrr“ astonishing. revvln‘lnn. Hw- looked at her cauuusly: Lo- ur his mouth to question her lm: recovered herself in part at least : swiftly interrupted him in a I... of terror lest she should betray l. knowledge. “And what is the picture of ant, ' er man doing in your wife's lockrt? she asked to gain time, for she v.2" well knew the reply; knew it, i-: deed, better than Newbold himsel: Who as it happened. was equally n the dark both as to the man and flu reason. _ c 1". .’ .‘n "I never saw him in my can recall." “And have youâ€"did youâ€"" :‘Dld {suspect my wife?” t “DO You know this man. 9” “' -A."_ __ _ “I don’t seen since that day. It is a I took from her neck. Uni "A man's face.” “Yours He shook hf; 1:05.} don’t know the heart iail‘v‘n". . ul madness i feel. 14:. something yellow that gleamed in alone with a m...Jg.,_-., . the light. “There,” he continued ex- tending them toward her, “is the pic- ture of the poor woman who loved me and whom I killed, you saw it once before.” “Yes,” she nodded, taking it from him carefully and looking again in a strange commixture of pride, that narrow door like a lion pent u; in bars of steel. I had only my own re- .. sentment and pity at the hold. 8011‘s,. {no‘le me ”1:: thin ”or: ‘that I know what coarse, entirely uncultured, yet ‘0" me me a see n your 9398. ave no evé your lips, that I t of your heart, can Can I live on and on? .' , touch you, breathe the mark it in the bee she had displayed. I keep silent? “And here.” said the man oiferir' the other article, “is something t."v no human eye but mine has ‘ seen since that day. It is a lockr I took from her neck. Until 'H. can't do it, it is an impossibility. came I wore it next to my heart.” What keeps me now from taking you “And since then?” making your lips my own, from drinking the light from your eyes ?" He swayed near to l"l‘. his vni‘e rose. “What restrains me?” he demanded. ”Nothing," said the woman- never 1’“. I; this strange tragedy aside he had already assayed? Sometimes an answer to query is made openly. At ture Newbold came b: stapped before her unsteadil now marked not only by 1 ness of the storm outside the fiercer grapple of the his heart. . name. Her mind told her these were idle and foolish, but he would not hear of it. her resolutions she tually the? would no: have been a human wo- man if she had not. hoped and prayed that. She believed that God had cre- ated them for each other, that he had thrown them together. She was enough of a fatalist in this instance at least to accept their intimacy as.l the result of His ordination. There? must be smite way out of the dilem- ma. Yet she knew that he would bef true to hi:=~belief and she felt that! she would not be false to her obit- gation. What of that? There would be some way. Perhaps somebody else knew, and then there fiaslae'l r soul And in spite of felt that even- she knew no hu- man soul except old Kirkby and her- aself knew this woman's story. She could not tell Newbold and she find out. He must cherish his dream as he would. She would not enlight- en him, she would not dissbuse his marked not only by the. fierm- of the storm outside. but by fiercer grapple of the storm in -A-_-L _'â€"v-. " V4 . L ty, honor, compelled her silence A A.-: - - 8h. know,” answered the ct my Wife?" he asked. too may evtdences not be false to her obli- nt of that? There would 2y. Perhaps somebody ‘__j mg now I can Mth you from you." (1011' his hand a_ picture and In! ; low that gleamed in 3101] nere,” he continued ex- oward her, “is the Mo if)? oor woman “ho kned The I killed, you saw it wall odded, taking it from that and looking again I" in be mixture of pride, rP- love, My at the hold. some mete Jtirely uncultured, yH 50" k which gave no evi that moral purpose whic; mark i'ed. I kee said the man ofl’erir' Can I e, “is something the same but mine has PM same day It is a kc r day at r neck. Until M can’t next to my heart.” What an ?,, in my have been unwovm‘ into y nworthy you, and l‘ps m vâ€"v a the angels of heaven kept forever apartâ€"by idea, a principle, numb- 101', a name. uswer to a secret mly. At this jun"- ame back. He- unsteadily,his face aside from that life that ' these things I. but her soul And in spite of felt that even- 8h. Wu. same room with day after day an can’t do it, it . What keeps me “NO,” cried the 1.”;1 | upon me tasks Donn”: xx ' you don’t kmm “'11:! don’t know the heart 1min". tul madness 1 I've}. I’m alone with a “Mafia?! .- -. . years, a man in the U-J and the light comm, 31.:1 .1'0 The first flight I brm'gfi yru .4 walked that room on the othel m“- M that narrow door like a lion pent up in bars of steel. I had only my own love, my own passionate adoration to God alone knows together. he put hearts, we will 1, him to do as he Meanwhile we nu fore.” “My friend.” she saic I. deep sigh. “you mu: night and go on as befi me, thank God ror that and respect intorpose And I love you, and I t that, too, but for me same barrier rises. shall ever snrnmum m How strangely does fate worl ltspurposes. Enld had come the Atlantic seaboard to be the and woman that both these two loved! If she ever saw Mr. James strong again, and she had no t that she would, she would have strange things to say to him. held in her hands now all the tln , she was mastc all the solutions. and each th was a chain that bmmd her. 1“ n - Enid Maitland nodded her t She closed the locket, laid it on. table and pushed it away from So this was the man the woman loved, who had begged her away with him, this handsome A strong who had come within an of winning her own aflection, whom she was in some meas pledged! fnther in his youth.” “And why did you wear it ?" In additiun we will give. to the purchaser quantity of tea. Tn every purchaser spendiu. now and Christmas. we a ill (ziv will ban he said at last with an must forget this. as before. You low: or that, but honor rpose between us. and 1 thank God my tr me as we‘l tnu es. “'hot 1391‘ u p that d it away from her. man the woman had begged her to go this handsome Arm- come within an ace a would have some say to him. She IOW all the threads 19 was master of and each thread \‘si affection, to some measure A China Tea Service O And m the next highest purohaser. head. ll 1 am strongly in the proposal of the Chairman of the BO” dO‘ Education the 80110013 £9 from 6 t stat ted t.Dr “sings Toronto’s M, H. 0., to The Now. l..-4 ._.-‘. . 3y mpathy “D doubt spending ivv Dollars in Our Hnn- I u ill give nhsulsnely free of rust non! Purple Gall Cu by mil. 307.! Purple Sweat l by mil. Royal Purple Cough mail. unadulterated. We do not use any cheap fillt r' to mat. a lam package. entirely difl'cront from any on the mar‘ et at the preaent timc. Royal Purple Stock Specific. 50c pckga.; four 50c polars” in an air-tight tin. for £1.50. Royal Purple Poultry Specific. 25c and fine pckgs.. and $1.50 air-tight than that. hold {our 50c pcksts. Bqull’urme Lice Killer. 25c “A m. ....‘.. .u. pun or ".00 for one otoer. It will inn-p your horses in “10‘ condition with ordinary feed. If you have a poor. Inifit’l’lbio-it'wk- in: animal on your place try it on this one first and see the marvellous result. which will be obtained. Our Stock Specific wil‘ increase the milk flow three to five lbs. per cow l" r day. while being fed in the stable. A M: package will last a cow or home if dnvu â€"â€". large 64mm books (win ,. set-t). on the common diseases of stuck and poultry. Tells how to feed all kinds of hc-rnv and light horses. colts and mares. milch (’nv. calves and fattening steers. also how to m”. and feed poultry so that they will lay as w ii in winter as in summer. It contains 3m le worm Powder. 25c tins; Me by Innufutund only by Disinfectant. 25¢ ROUD Cure. :5 That Specific. 60¢ 96381.; four at: air-tight tin. for $1.50. ’oultry Specific. 25¢ and 50c $1.50 air-“tilt tins that hold Phone No. in winning (hp have ‘t loweflt pric‘Js 25c and 50e 60c tin Offer tad 50¢ tir flu; 80c 50: bottle: 60¢ 60c .9999999’ 1"" field. ( Nun In our s! m aqvpliva! After bein wal broken “king M!"- lorwqxjd. l‘ uui‘able “13 also welcom 130de all selves. T in games 8 After refres all joined in You Till W de uted to 3 us personal .0 ”than i Laboratory {”4 Write for our 9!" 30th ml U WI \\ 1'

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