Newspaper Page Text
(From tlie Chicago Ledger.]
OLIYIA: 5
•OB,
TEE DOCTOR’S TWO
BY THE AHTH0E OF
* The Second Mrs. TUlotson," ‘Never
Forgotten,'’ Etc., Etc.
- -
[CHAPTE1: XXXII—Cooteojed.]
“Yes. You want to know how he
could do that? Well, he produced two
papers, one a medical certificate of
your death, the other a letter purport
ing to bo from some clergyman. He
had. too, a few lines in your own hand
writing, which stated you had sent him
your ring, the only valuable thing left
to you, as you had sufficient for your
last necessities. Even I believed for a
few hours that you were dead. But I
must tell you ail about it another time.”
“Did he believe it?” I asked, in a
trembling voice. answered; “I
“I do not know,” ho
cannot tell, even now, whether he knew
the tlie papers papers to to be be forged forged or or not. not. But But I I
have no doubt, myself, that they were
forged bv Mrs. Fosters brother and
his partner, Scott & Brown.”
“But for wliat reason?” I asked
again. ____ “What.'reason?” lie repeated; “you
were too rich a prize for them to allow
Foster to risk losing any part of his
claim upon you, if he found you. You
and all you had were his property on
certain defined conditions. You do
not understand our marriage laws; it
is as well for you not to understand
them. Mrs. Foster gave up to me to
day all his papers and tho letters and
credentials from your trustees in Mel
bourne to your bankers here. There
will be very little trouble for you now.
Thank God'! all your iif® lies clear and
fair before you.” but
I had still many questions to ask, could
my lips trembled so much that I
not speak readily. He was himself
silent, probably because he also had so
much to say. All tho others were sit
ting a little apart from us at a chess
table, where Doctor Senior and Miss
Carey were playing, while Doctor John
sat by, holding Minima in his arm,
though she was gazing wistfully across
to Martin and me.
“You are tired, Olivia,” said Martiu,
after a time, “tired and sad. Your eyes
are full of tears. I must be your doc
tor again for this evening, and send
you to bed at once. It is eleven o’clock
already, but these people will sit up
after midnight. You need not say good
night to them. Minima, come here.”
Hhe did not wait for a second word
or a louder summons, but she slipped rushed
under Doctor John’s arm and
across to us, being caught by Martin
before she could throw herself upon
me. He sat still talking with her for a
few minutes, and listening to her ac
count of our journey, and how fright
tened we were at the grandeur about
ns. His face lit up with a smile as his
eyes fell upon me, as* if for the first
• time ha nAtJcc dlipw out of keeping I
was with tho plSce. Then he led ,\\s
quietly away, and up-stairs to our
bedroom door.
“Good-night, Olivia ” he said; “sleep
soundly, both of you, for you are at
home. I will send one of the maids
up to you.”
“No, no,” I cried, hastily; “they
despise us already.”
“Ah!” lie said; “to-night you are the
Olivia I knew in Sark. In a week’s
time I shall find you a fine _ lady.”
-
CHAPTER XXIV.
seeing society.
Whether xt-, ii or not I was transformed
into . a finer lady than Martin antici
pated 1 could not tell, but certainly
af er that first evening be held him
seli aioot from me. I soon learned to
laugh at the dismay which had filled
me upon my entrance into my new
sphere. resist It would have been which difficult
to the cordiality with I
was adopted into the household. Doc¬
tor Senior treated me as his daughter;
Doctor John was as much at home with
me as if I had been his sister.
Minima, too, became perfectly recon¬
ciled to her new position, though for a
time she was anxious lest we were
spending our riches too lavishly. I
heard her one day soundly rating Doc¬
tor John, who seldom came to his
father’s house without bringing some
trinket or bouquet for one or other of us.
“You are wasting all your money,”
she said, with that anxious little pucker
of her eyebrows, which was gradually
being smoothed away altogether;
’’you’re just like the boys after the
holidays. They would buy lots of
things every she time the cake woman
came, and came every day, till
they'd spent all their money. You
can’t always have cakes, you know, and
then you’ll miss them.”
“But I shall have cakes always,” an¬
swered Doctor John.
“Nobody has them always,” she said,
in an authoritative tone; “andyou uon’fc
like being poor. We were so poor we
daren’t buy as much as we could eat,
and our boots wore out at the toes.
You liko to have nice boots, and gloves,
and tilings, so you must learn to take
care of your money, and not waste it
like this.”
“I’m not wasting my money, little
woman. ” he replied, “when I buy pretty
things for you and Olivia.”
“Why doesn’t Doctor Martin do it,
then?” she asked; “he never spends
his money in that sort of way. Why
doesn’t he give auntie as many things
*
as von do?”
Martiu had been listening to Mini
mas rebukes with a smile upon his
fa,.e, but now it clouded a little, and
knew lie glanced across to me. I
peared deeply absorbed, in the book I
held iu my hand, and he did not see
that I was listening and watching at
tentivelv.
“Minima,” lie said, in a low tone, as
if he did not even care tiia e should
bear, “I gave her all I had worth giv
ing when I saw her first.”
“That's just Low it will be with you,
Doctor John,” exclaimed Minima trl
umphantly; “you'll give us everything
you have, and then you’il have nothing
left for yourself.”
I But still, unless Martiu had taken
' back what bo gave to me so long ago,
j Ins conduct was very mysterious to
j me. lie did not come to Fulham half
! often as Doctor John did, and when
i ue came fie spent most of the time in
long, professional discussions with
Doctor Senior. They told me lie was
devoted to his profession, and it really
| seemed rs if he had not time to think
j i of anything else. much time for
Neither had I verv for
| brooding over any subject, guests
began to frequent the house which be¬
came nr cii gayer. Doctor Senior said,
! now there was a young hostess i:i it,
; The quiet evenings of autumn and win
j ter were gone, and instead ot tuemour
: ! engagements were accumulating on
our hands, until I rarely met Martin
| except at some entertainment where
1 we were surrounded by strangers,
j free. Perhaps Yes, free he thought from tyranny, 1 liko.l but to not be
free from love. It is a poor thing to
I have no one’s love encircling you; a
poor freedom that. A little clew came
to my baud one day, the other end of
I which might lead me to the secret of
[ Martin’s reserve and gloom. He and
j Doctor Senior were talking together,
I as they paced to and fro about the
j lawn, coming up the walk from tho
[ river side to the house, and then back
[ [ drawing-room „ „ . . window, . . which open,
■ was
They knew I was there, but they did
[ | not anything guess g"""° how that keen Martin my said, hearing l .’ nnT '” 1 It " was ' vaa
j for was
[ only a word or two here and there that
I caught. the n said
J “If you were not in way,
j Doctor Senior, “John would have a
i good chance, and there is no one in
tho 'voridl would sooner welcome as a
daughter.” liko another,
! “They Martin; are “have one an
swered you never
[ seen it?”
What more they said I did not hear,
j ), ri t it seemed a little clearer to me,
i after that, why Martin kept aloof from
; lne and left me to ride, and talk, and
j , Why, they
laugh with his friend Jack.
I did not know that I was happier silent
beside Martin than laughing little most
; merrily with Doctor John. Ho
j did they understand me!
j j us t before Lent, which was a busy
| season with him, Monsieur Laurentie
j j )a id us his promised visit, and brought
us news from Ville-en-bois. The money
j that had been lying in the bank, which
j could not touch, whatever my neces-
1 gities were, had accumulated to more
j than three thousand pounds, funds and out for
of this sum were to come the
■ | making Ville-en-bois the best-drained
parish in Normandy. Nothing could
j exceed Monsieur Laurentie’s happiness
j i n choosing a examining design for plans a village for foun- vil
j i tain, and in serious a
] a g e hospital. For, in case again any
I illness should break out among
j j them, built a simple the little brow hospital of hill, was where to be
upon a
[ the wind sweeps across leagues of
I meadow-land and heather,
j “lam too happy, madame,” said the
cure; my people will will teach die no them more of
fever, and we many
English ways. When will you come
again, and see .-what you have done
for us?”
“I will cyme in the autumn,” I an
• wered. - ~, T - — • -1 a.
■ “And you will come alone?” lie con¬
tinued.
“Yes, quite alone,” I continued, “or
with Minima only. ”
CHATTER XXV.
BEEAEIXO TUB ICS.
Yet while I told Monsieur Laurentie
seriously that I should go alone to
yille-en-bois in the autumn, I did not
altogether believe it. We often speak
half-falsehoods, even to ourselves.
j Doctor Senior’s lawn, in which he
i takes great pride, slopes gently down
to the river, and ends with a stono
. ’ et , over which it is exceedingly
J ploa ant t0 leau . and wa tch idly tho
flowj of tJle wate r, which seems to
loit r aImost reluctantly before pass
j D g on to Westminster, and tlie wharfs
and docks of the city. On the cluster oppo¬ of
site side of the bank grows a
cedars, with rich dark green branches,
showing nearly black against the pale
blue of the sky. In our lawn there
stand three fine elms, a colony for
song-birds, under which the turf is
carefully kept as smooth and soft as
velvet. My childhood had trained me
to bo fond of living out of doors, and
1 spent most of my days under these
elm-trees, iu the fitful sunshine and
showers of an English April and May,
such as I had never known before.
From one of these trees I could see
very well any one who went in or oat
through the gate. But it was not often
that I cared to sit there, for Martin
came only in an evening, when his
day’s work was done, and even then his
coming was an uncertainty. Doctor
John seldom missed visiting us, but
Martiu was often absent for dais.
That made me watch all the more
eagerly for his coming, and feel how
cruelly fast the time fled when ho was
with us.
But one Sunday afternoon in April I
chose my seat there, behind the tree,
where I could see tlie gate without be¬
ing too plainly seen myself. Senior he Martin
had promised Doctor would
come down to Fulham with Doctor
John that afternoon if possible. Tho
river was quieter than on other days,
and all the world seemed calmer. It
was such a day as the one in Sark, two
years before, when I slipped obliged from the
cliffs, and Tardif was to go
across to Guernsey to fetch a doctor
for me. I wondered if Martin ever
thought of it on such a day as this. But
men do not remember little things like
j these as women do.
! I heard the click of the gate at la-t,
! and, looking round the great trunk of
j the Doctor tree, John I saw and them Martin. come He in together, had kept
his promise, then! Minima was gone
: out somewhere with Doctor Senior, or
j she would have run to meet them, and
so brought them to the place where I
was half-hidden.
However, they might see my dress if
J they chose. going They ought to see it. 1
was not to stand up and show
myself. If they were anxious to find
me and come to me, it was quite simple
enough,
But my heart sank when Martin
marched straight on, and entered the
house alone, while Doctor John came
as direct as an arrow toward me. They
knew I was (here, then! Yet Martin
avoided me, ami left his friend to chat¬
ter and laugh the time away. I wa- in
no mood for laughing; I could rather
have wept hitter tears of _ vexation and
disappointment. But Doctor - dgi was
near enough now for me to discern a
singular gravity upon his usually gay
face.
"Is there anything the matter?" I 1
exclaimed, starting to my feet and
I hastening to meet him. He led me
back again silently to my seat, and sat
down beside me, still in silence. Strange
conduct in Doctor John!
"Tell me what is the matter,” I said,
not doubting now that there was som.e
trouble at hand. Doctor John’s face
flushed, and he throw his hat down on
the grass ^ and pushed bis hair back
iTOUl .. ills iorolicatl. i , i riM xilOll i ho iftlu Ulfl
hand upon mine, for a moment onlr.
u OlfVlfl, ,,... „ lie said, , very seriously, • i '«-i CIO
VOU love me ?”
V lil*A
Tli« me question /in oof Inn came MmA .man Upon me r»A IlKe a fi
shock from a galvanic battery. Ho and
I had been very frank and friendly to
getlier—a ,, pleasant . , friendship, v • , v • winch
had seemed to me as safe as that of a
brother. Besides he knew sll that
Martin had done and borne lor my sake.
AVitll my disappointment there was
mingled a feeling of indignation against
his treachery toward Ins friend. I sat
watching the glistening of the water
through the pillars of the parapet till
my eyes were dazzled.
“I scarcely understand what you say, ”
I answered, after a long pause; “yon
know I care for you all. If you mean,
do 1 love you as I love your father and
Monsieur Laurentie, why, yes, I do.”
“Very good, Olivia,” he said.
'That was so odd of him that I turned
and looked steadily into his face. It
was not half as grave as before, and
there was a twinkle in his eyes as if
another half minute would make him
gay and light-hearted as ever.
“Whatever did yon come and ask me
such a question for?” I inquired, rather
pettishly. ‘Was there in it?” he
any harm re¬
joined. it,”
“Yes, there was harm in I an¬
swered; “it has made me very uncom¬
fortable. I thought you were going
out of your mind. If you meant noth¬
ing hut to make me say I liked you,
you should have expressed yourself
differently. Of course, I love you all,
and all alike.”
“Very good,” he said again.
I felt so angry that 1 was about to
get up and go away to my own room;
but he caught my dress, and implored
me to stay a little longer.
“I’ll make a clean breast of it,” he
said; “I promised that dear old dolt,
Martin, to come straight to yon, and
ask you if you loved me, in so many
words. Well, I’ve kept my promise,
and now I’ll go and tell him you say
you love us all alike. ”
“No,” I answered, “you shall not go
and tell him that. What could put, it
into Doctor Martin’s head that I was
in love with you ?”
“Why shouldn’t you be in love with
me?” replied Doctor John; “Martin
assures me that I am much handsomer
than lie is—a more eligible parti in
every respe ct. I suppose I shall have
;ihlimorne “abitrt froT3T oiTr” TTFaStfOe; ...
least ten times larger than his. i am
much more sought after generally: one
cannot help seeing that. Why should
you not be in love with me?”
I did not deign forward to reply littlo to him, look and
Jack leaned a to
into “niibi.i my face.
Dlm»: ” ne,(.ont'iuiecl, h.. “tut that IS ; a part mrl
of what Martin says. Wo have jixat
been speaking of you as wo came down
to F ul ham—never before. Ho main
tains he is bound in honor to leave you
as free as possible to make your choice,
not merely between ns. but from the
number of fellows who have found
their way down here since you came.
You made one fatal mistake, he says,
through your completo ignorance of
the world, and it is his duty to take !
care that j-ou do not make a second
mistake through any gratitude: you
mig i, o .or with ,!i • 0 .,
,e satisfied gra t, tide, bes des
SJT.'Xl? lived in Guernsey; CUSJ’JSt and richer S
you are a
priise than you seemed to bo then. With
your fortune you ought to make a
much better match than with a young
physician, who lias to push his way
among a host of competitors. Lastly,
Martin said—for I’m merely repeating
his own arguments to you—‘Do you j
think I can put her happiness and mine
into a balance, and coolly calculate I
which has the greater weight? If had
to choose for her, I should not hesitate
between you and me.’ Now I have told
you the sum of our conversation, j
Olivia.”
Every word Doctor John had spoken
had thrown clearer light upon Martin’s j j
conduct. He had been afraid I should
feel myself bound to him; and the very I
fact that he had once told me he loved j
me, liaci made it more difficult to him
to say so a second time. He would not
have any love from me as a duty. If I
did not love him fully, with my whole otii- j
heart, choosing him alter knowing ,
ers with whom I could compare him, j
be would not receive any lesser gift
frOIll me. !
[TO BE CONTINUED.]
How Hawks and Owls Eat.
Tom'LMgston, ( 1 one’ o^itlmfui'a i
5 whi) is i
entllUHiaStlC . sportsmen, I
IH08t Hays;
"Did you ever notice a hawk or an owl
preparing to make a meal on a bird? ;
The difference in their methods is very
grt at. A hawk will first pick all the
feathers off the bird and then tear it to
pieces as it is devoured. Ho goes at it
in systematic and dainty man- '
a very kill- j
ner. Not so with an owl. After
ing a bird the owl swallows it whole, i
feathers and all. lie then will sits quietly, the |
and in an hour or so you see
owl move his neck about as if he was
trying to untangle a knot in it. Then
he will sort of hump up his back, lower
hi- head, and the next moment a ball
of leathers will roil oat of his mouth.
The citation shows that the owl divests
the bird of its feathers alter swallow¬
ing it while the hawk plucks out every
feather and quill before he takes a bite.’
1 m iT $
mm
,)
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——-—-— MANUFAGTU'LER OF ..___.
W agons am ‘11} llgglCS, ‘ 31H 111'Cfl" ( ea 81' Ill 0 1118.
I keep, for the convenience of the people in the country around here,
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IT’HNITURE!
At the Great Furniture Palace
of tlx© south..
| . it is a well established fact that Augusta is the cheapest retail market in tho
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To aid you in your decision we give you just a few prices:
j Imitation Walnut Suits, 10 pcs., $15.00 | Nice n-draw Bureaus, Gilt rings, only $6.
(t (( “ Marble top,21.00 | Nice Walnut Hail-cloth Parlor Suits $35.
Solid Walnut Suits, 10 pieces, Marble Top $40.00.
Fine Striped Tiny Lounges $4.50. | Nice Oliromoi, dark frame, 7.5c.
kSf Just think. Nice 1 nutation Asli and Cherry Suits $22.30. Same suits sell over'
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cigars, snulfs-eVerything now and fresn. G HAND REPUBLIC Cigar, tho
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■ For the Finest Liquors
,
i Ball at ray bar. The celebrated old Monongahela XXXN, mellow with age
rich in color, soft and velvety to the taste. The Century, Golden Sheaf, and
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••»*««**, ...... ci« s .„u,
JAMES W. .JOHNSON,
GHJIEN KSBOIIO, GEORGIA.
VINCENT’S INAVGERAI!!
Not on State Rig-hts Like Gordon’s,
-HUT TOUCHING
THE INDI VIDUAL POCKET.
READ, REGARD AND REMEMBER
Comer C. Vincent.
The Palace Bar still carries a largo and well selected stock of whiskies—all
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Besides a full line of brandies, gin, rum and wines. G. \V\ Garrett’s
SCUTE lLMLNG 1VINE.
No superior for medical purposes. Blue Bulge Corn Whiskey, celebrated
Sheban’s Famous Soda Water, Milwaukee, Partner and Earth—
quake Beer.
In Tobacco and Cigars* I am Ahead
F. F. F. —best 5c. cigar in Greenesboro! Other cigars, all grades. On chew¬
ing Tobacco, I am having a big run.
jSILLIADS A1TD I^OCXji.
Two fine Tables where gentleman can always enjoy a quiet game, Grateful)
or past patronage 1 rcpectluliy solicit a cojf.inuacfi of the same.
COMER C. VINCENT, Greenesboro, Ga.