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Hazelwood.
* ,
By GERALD CAHI.TO’T,
IT
CHAPTER XIII.
“1 UOVE TUB LOVE I BEAR HER. *
We come now to Will Trefoil's second
■discovery, shortly which we record here because It
^*as after saying that last good¬
night ' to Miss Bentley, that he, for the first
time, tho thing acknowledged previously it to himself, and that
faet heyond concealed was now a
We have question.
said that he went to bis room
With a heavy heart.
He locked the door, paced the room
looked thoughtfully, opened the window and
out. It was a dark night, a very
dark night, but he gazed in the direction of
the 1’riory, thinking of the first, morning he
had seen the surrounding country by dirt’s
light.
He closed the window finally, took the
lamp from the dressing-table, and placed it
on one by the window; cut sOm'e ttotfi
paper into half sheets, and then, with a
deep sigh, seated hins’selt and began
writing.
Will sat there A'.v nearly an hour writing
rapidly. At ‘ho end of that time the half
sheets were filled he had chronicled in un¬
studied. words the second grand discovery-,
and hp.,1 translated iate Written language
the Tor language of the heart.
many minutes he gazed Vacantly at
the half sheets scattered over the table.
Then collecting them m order, he tookfton*
a drawer a small penknife of Emily’s, and
a bound piece of blue ribbon which bad once
Securing Emily’s hair. hall
the sheets together, be
looked at the manuscript for a moment, M
be held it in his hand, almost affectionately
and quite sadly, then placed it in the pock¬
et of hSs overcoat. This done, lie sighed
with extreme relief.
1 bus he chronicled his second discovery.
Let us learn what that was by reading
Borne of the paragraphs contained in the
writing, Will Tryfoil. and by so doing, know more of
Thus rau his half sheets:
“In less than twelve hours I shall bid
adieu to Hazelwood House forever ; in less
than fifteen, I shall again meet the good
Siftie creature whom—not without strong
resistance on my part—I have wronged. If
J have sinned bv Wronging her, may God
forgive mo, I
"When came here, only a few Weeks
foack—thou h it seems long years—I loved
her far more dearly than toy life. Alas!
thsl affection, which 1 imagined only death
‘could end, has passed away within a
month!
“My Emily—still and always mine—shall
never know of this. I will learn to hush
the whisperings and conceal the secrets of
ttnj’ heart when she is near.
‘I will marry her, forsake the truth, and
■swear to her that, she has all my affection,
and that I am happy.
“Let my life from now be a huge lie, sc
that hers may be one of joy. 1 have stolen
away the love I gave her in return for Levs,
and I am too great a coward now to blight
her life and own the Wretched theft.
live* “May you, my bright little woman-child,
on in the thought that you retain the
ficklo thing you prize so much; mav vou
never lose faith in Will, M ill has lost
faith in himself.
“Yon found mo sorely iu need of affec¬
tion, and care, and kindness, and you gave
them to me.
“ You have often laughed and called
self second mother; your¬
my you, child-like and
innocent as you are, gradually taught me to
walk on a path which you lit by your love;
and I will not give you in return—a blow.
No, no, my poor Emily!
“But the boy’s love is dead, dear—it was
transient. The man’s love is born—it is
eternal.
“What a great difference there is belweon
them—all the fascinations which won the
hoy’s affection fadi into vapid nothings be¬
fore the graces of the being I now adore.
“Emily was a pleasing, woman’s* pretty girl. She
—a woman devoid of blemishes.
her “Gradually dawned has the knowledge that I love
upon mo —the formation of the
mad passion itself, which verges on idolatry,
has been so too —beginning with deep ad¬
miration of her loveliness—from that to ad¬
miration far more deeply, of the refined
beauty of her mind.
‘ Miss Bentley! Tbo words to
me are
poetry, and an eebo answers from my heart
when I speak that name, or hear it spoken.
Looking at it upon this page, it seems to
me as some sweet thought which expressed iu a
mysterious language, I alone under¬
stood.
“How irresistible is her power over me!
A word from her turns certainty into doubt;
a glance shatters what in the past seemed
right, and shows me the true right—right as
she sees it.
“She has peopled my brain with new
thoughts—has clothed the world, humanity,
and all inanimate things in fresh clothes,
sweeter and purer than those in which I
knew them first. She has made mo look
into my soul has, in truth, introduced me
to If.
'/ have loved her with open eyes- have
loved to imagine her gratitude or pity.
Selfishly have J thought that I could r< -
sign my life to behold those heaven-like
eyes shedding one tear for me.
“Though it is hopeless, and wrong to
poor Emily, and though my future must be
embittered, 1 glory in this exquisite
thought. To think that I might have
died without knowing her, and through
knowing her, myself, is a more bitter re¬
flection than any even my deep sadness car,
fashion.
“My worship of Miss Bentley is a double
love—I love the love I bear h r.
“To what end am I writing this? The
gratification of a vvliim. Th* words I have
penned are so wildly distributed is my
mind—badly chosen, tho ideas which flit
through my brain come too quickly, and
give placo to otkms t o rapidly to allow mo
to express them all, while even those that l
can seize are far beyond my power to trans¬
late into words.
“What I wide is real. I feel that should
it ever be perused, I, ray love, and the thou¬
sand words unv. ritten here will be under¬
stood ~ T
In her binary there -is a book which tells
to ttolo'ml; c“ I :
to Godin his wi d, lamenting prayers to
earth by burying in its breast the written
revelations he deemed unholy.
"And he buried the story of his fierce
paBsion under the ground on which his
abbey cf.4 stood, so I wil: bury the grand secret
life under the ground of the Priory
“Mav God forgive me if Hove too deeply.
May God watch over and protect His grand
est work—Miss Bentley!”
With that blessing Will’s strange manu¬
script ended.
* * * * * *
The junction which was to be the meet-
THE DEMOCRAT, CRA •#FO RDYTLLE, GEORGIA.
ing place of Emily nad h»r lover was a
very ses.-iug dingy, weather-beaten platforms, station, pos*
three connected by a
wooden bridge and staircase.
four , Emily, from London, was due there 3'2
minutes lo three p. in.; Will at s
minutes to foilr p. m., both being expre i:
form Emily’s place of arrival Will's wellld be plat
number three; platform num
her twb( but us her train was to arrive ten
pdhultis ea rlier than his, there would be
p'enfy of limb'fcflrE'er'fo’cross'fV« bridge,
and be ready on the central platform to re
ceivh him
W hen Will’s train was about half a mile
from the junction it suddenly stopped. He
dreaded the c oming meeting—her le\o and
bis deception—the questioning of her eyes;
his acted kiss
At the end of four minutes tkb passen¬
gers looked out of the car windows in the
way they always do Will when aid an the Unexpected
stoppage occurs. same, but
be saw n» cause for alarm.
At last a signal was given that the train
could proceed.
It arrived safely at the .iu.nctiill at seven¬
teen minutes pa»t filar.
Wilt flighted on platform number twO,
ared looked at once from One Emily. feud to the
other of it, but ho Hied nbt t&S He
knew' that she eho'uld arrive at platform
number three, and conoluded tluit she had
made some mistake about his Iraiin and wd!
thou in oue of the waiting-rbtJihs. train
The guard Of thb accosted him:
“Aim vtSu utvnjg on. sir?”
‘‘Acs, but not*this moment. How long
do you stop here?”
“Not a minute, sir Wb’HS late already." to
Clearly. W Emily and he must proceed
London the next train. He me do for
the staircase with the number intention of seeking
her on platform u£’usual three, when at¬ a
somewhat incident arrested bis
tention.
Two well-dressed ladies ot middle age, a
young man—All lady- a them little eiidently boy, and an of old gentle¬
of one party,
and all of them very nervous and scared,
descended (he staircase, followed by twb
guards and a porter. Aft'ir those came two
poorly dressed frightened. giflb and a young hum, also
pale e.tvd
Will, with his foot On the fltst Walk,
turned his head and Mtcbed them. He
could scarcely defilie his cxiioctations; his
heart bPgAh to beat, and his tongue to feci
liarcbed ns be watched them. It was so
startling—that general paleness and the
common frightened expression. Vveil
The guards assisted each of the
drossed party into a first-class dir with Un¬
usual civility. Sola© brandy was given to
the little bdy, ivhose teeth chattered against
the glass as he drank it. The guards then
went to the poorly dressed party, and,
equally civil, assisted the girls into an¬
other first-class car.
The porter held the glass of brandy to
tbo young iilan, but ho shook bis head half
foolishly, and joined the girls, with his feet
almost slipping off the step aa he got into
the car.
It was all over in a few minutes; then the
train -teamed slowly from the platform and
the, guards looked at each other congratu¬
latory, as though glad it was gone.
from the first stair Will Tryfoil tried to
call out; but he could not speak, not even
find words to ask the question that trembled
on his lips.
With shaking limbs he ascended the
stairs, and when he reached the top ho
found that lie had no recollection of having
mounted them.
lie turned to the right, along flight the wooden
bridge, then down another to plat¬
form th
To hi8 surprise he found it empty—a sta¬
tionary train having how much previously hidden it
from him; but greater wa.sjaie
surprise when 5>he»Rl the sounds of many
excited voices from platform oue, also hid
den from him by stationary cars.
His limbs seemed to bo lifeless; he
Walked to the only waiting-room on number
three.
As he turned tho knob of tho door ho said,
almost in an inarticulate voice:
“Emily!
No one answered.
The waiting-room feeble was flickering empty!
There was a fire in tho
grate, which was rapidly expiring. liis
lie caught a glimpse of face in the
looking-glass. deadly pale!
It was
He walked unsteadily away from the
waiting-room, up tbo staircase and across
the bridge, and descended the stairs which
led to platform number one.
Once there, there was no need to ask tho
the well
dressed and poorly dressed parties of per
sons returning to London, the deserted
platform and the many voices are all ac
lounted for in the appearance of platform
aumber one.
There had been an accident!
-
CHAPTER XIV.
THE rail wax accxhent.
Everybody on platform number one was
laboring under great excitement.
There was a small crowd of excited out
Riders, a group or persons who had each
engineer talking loudlv to three policemen,
a knot of startled listeners, and the station
master, with his bat on the back of
head, besieged orders by questions tbo railway on ono
and issuing to fear, and morbid
on the other; excitement,
curiosity all mixed together in a strange
scene, at once life and death-like, and all
telling that there had been an accident
once** a 8 n ,
so he t re .nhled hke a child,
powerless and unmanned.
Collecting himself as well as he could,
beckoned to an intelligent-looking porter
follow him.
They walked away from the crowd, and
Will put some silver into the man’s hand,
“Tell me how this happened? 1 ’ he fear
fully asked. him.
The porter told
It was the old story a collision with a
freight train!
“About a mile or less from the station,
They’re clearing the line now. and I fancy
there's one or two buried under the shat
tered timber and iron of the care.”
“Do you know-”
Will stopped. He could not ask the
question, so the porter finished it and an
bwered it for him.
“\\ hat train it waiq sir? Yes. The
London train from Euston the five to
(' , 1 '”
The two trembling words spoken as he
had spoken them, staggered the porter. Ho
“Steady, rii; bold »! WU. *»
your friend a-coming by? ’
" 111 Tryfo 1 showed his ticket.
The man shook his head.
’^h res one of three third-class earn
smashed. If there s passengers under the
spill, your friend am t one of them, c? r .
^ ^Get" s’ome
jramly. _»
, ;U j re
“Look in the refreshment bar and wait
ing-room-, while I’ra gone. If -our friend
tin t there, nor on the platform—well, I’ll
be back in a minute, sir. Holdup!”
Cold from head to foot, and with trera
bling limbs. Will looked into the waiting-
rooms—empty; into tne re treatment-room
—also empty; no Emily) himself.
He tried to rouse would ha
Certainty of the worst impression than TO pro
duced a less profound that
euerej-stuilihg doubt which palled him at
that moment. with all the infor¬
Tli© porter came back
mation he con'd glean. had escaped, h(|
The passengers who
said, were then on the platform. Intelli¬
gence had been received that the bodies
of ah elderly lady and gentleman had been
found on the removal of one of the shat
iered cars, and that there were no otb 1
bodies there unhurt
All hope that Emily was . .
ijoue! disappeared with the
His stupor fever of
pense, and in its place came a ,
excitement. tofed , will .
The mail aliliost no”,
there v. ere lines on his face which were no
there a moment before* and his eyes seem -
twice the si/.e they Were when he had lust
spoken to him. t<
She was not ld'led. The portet sWore
the truth Of that.
There wefe nine killed* but Emi'^ u
not among theili. Two of the nine Were
young women, but their bodies had siren
been id ntified. They had been resid. n
in Hie towii. tidd , fdr , that .
AV ill’s hetitt ilumVod tatii v
Ho questioned tho iiuili as to the in jit" >
and dying, and cunningly framed his ques¬
tions so that the porter could answer them
in a few words.
There were four or five passengers who
had sUStftiuSd slight External injuries.
A hi on g theih Was ft young woman who Was
unknown. too,
There were three passengers* seri¬
ously injured. They had been earn to
the hotel Opposite tho station* Where they
wore n ow bteiug attended to by the principal
doctors of the town.
wore ft
\oung woman. had to to ,
Aud this was all the porter <
him. sir," he said,
“Hope it’ll be all right, >a
B ill htlrried away. delay the
Without a moment’s young mat
left the Slat on, and, crossing the road, en¬
tered tbo hotel, small crowd lum
Around the open door a
collected.
Tho proprietor happened to be stand i
in the hall when Will entered. The youa;
man's pale face, wildByes! andoicited moil*
nor instantly told his errand to tho hotel
keeper, wlni said in a kindly tone:
“Follow me, if you please, sit;” am!
Will, obeying, was led to tho empty coll
room.
Tryfoil explained, incoherently, that lit
bished to Bee the young lady who had been
injured in the railway accident.
The reply was that ho could not do so -
at least not just them name?" gasped Will,
“Do you know her
“Can you describe her? For God sake an¬
swer me!"
The hotel-keeper did not know her name
He believed that her clothes hud been
searched, and that no letter, or card, or ad¬
dress had been found upon them. When
she had been brought in he had been ton
excited to observe her appearance; so h
could not describe bor. She was o6f
taily youug, and he fancied that her hail
was fair.
TO BE CONTtNl ED.
EDISON’S FIRST MARRIAGE.
4
.
Eorgett ing all About His Bride
the Appointed Hour,
An old telegraph wlto ,
operator, was
stationed at Menlo Park when Edison
first came there, entertained a reporter
the other day with some stories about
the wizard. Ho is an oddity, doing noth
ingin tha common wav and setting at
naught all tho conventionalities. The
first Mrs. Edison was an operator in the
Newark factory where Edison was mak
mg ■ th« the machine machine to to fill fill bis Ins first hist order order for toi
the stock indicator wlneli brought him
into notice and formed the basis of^ ids
fortune. She was a tall, fine-looking
girl—ono of a dozen sitting at a bench
winding magnets. One day as Edison
was walking down the line, that girl
spoke up and bade him good morning
without raising her eves from her work
“HowdidvouJowitwasir "Good morning,” said the inventor.
“Oh, I always can tell when you re
near’ was the reply
“See here,” sard tho man of inven
tions, . “I’ve noticed you and a good deal of
late. ried Suppose you I get mar
?’’
“I’m ready.”
“When shall it be?”
“Three weeks from to-night.”
“AH right!” and the inventor went on
his rounds while his intended bride
me rrily wound away upon her bobbin of
*
w re
«" th.vrta-jtoa.H
iH ( nt oi stock indicators came back fiom
tho purchaser, inoperative. When Mr.
Batchelor, who has always been Edison’s
right hand man, went down to tho kIioj>
after supper lie found the inventor there
in his dirtiest shop-clothes tinkering
away at tha machines. Didn’t lie re
member that it was bis wedding night!
No, he’d forgotten all about it. Batchelor
est fWj clothing th<! store got groom him to into the a near new
Aiut, then to a barber shop, and finally
P ut ' Him on a ear and shipped him off to
the house of the bride. Then he went
buck to the shop to work, supposing that
was the last of Edison for that night. In
an hour or two, however, Edison rushed
in again, threw his new coat down on a
greasy lathe, hung liis waistcoat upon
the gas-pipe, kicked liis shoes under tho
bench, seized a file and went at tho de
^vesfimk L indicator T as if there was no
J faithful 1 ?,?! 8 ??’ lieutenant ar f^ iere till ..| lfi the , stayed t with his
looked morning sun
in on two weary toilers and an
electrical stock indicator tliat worked
like a charm.
When wealth came to them, Mrs. Edi
son No. 1 betrayed a tendency to branch
onf jri the social world, but it had no ef
011 inventor’s habits. One of
the largest entertainments Newark ever
j j"“ S tn^EdisolTwork^were
«» « *? ! * ■* ««"« * ‘““ e
A committee of them went over to his
laboratory the about midnight back and there rickety was
inventor, tipped m a
old chair, in his shirt sleeves, liis shot
less feet high up on the workbench, sing
fog ^„ hi away into happ'y his phonograph clam at the higl, top
s voice, as a at
The present Mrs. Edison stick* to her
husband like a shadow. She is always
a t his elbow in working hours, with book
and pencil, taking down his ideas and
experiments. She is, in fact, a help
mate in every way worthv ^ of his abil
jties.
OF
IMICUIIliUlalll, Rhp||mnt jem
Kidney Disease »
Insomnia
Dyspepsia,
ceases Peculiar to W omen
38 of Appetite,
Nervous Prostration,
General Debility,
-Effected by
Natural Electricity
AND
Electrified Water.
-AT’ THE
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HILLMAN,Taliaferro Co. GEORGIA.
On tho Washington Branch of the GKOU
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The treating of Patients consists of
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In nrs daily, getting the benelit ol the
eli clric currents and drinking freely
of the electrified water.
*jfNo sitifieiiil menus used
y,
EXPENSES.
Admission to tho E.ectric Rooms
$1.00, which gives privilege for Ihe
whole day.
Rates at the Electric Mound IIo
ti t,, $2.00 per day ; $10.00 per week.
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73 SELL T1IE GHKAPEST AND BEST—
ENGINES & BOILERS.
< ompleto (»in am! Mill outfits a Speeialety. Mill
ami Engineering Supplies,Cotton, Grain,Saw Mill and
Labor-saving Machinery, Shafting, Pulleys, Belting,
, jrjfPm I Saws, Inspirators, I.ai’jro Stock Injectors, to etc. Select From.
Prices low. Goods Guaranteed.
Write for circulars. I iiT’Castingn of every kind, and new work flight and heavy)
promptly done. Best outfit South
GIN WORK New and Repairs, promptly this and well mention done. this t^TWheii
you write to or call on firm Paper.
PENDLETON FOUNDRY AND MACHINE WORKS
Chan P. LOMBARD, Proprietor
II manufacturer of and dealek in
! . Mill Machinery,
w En gin & S l ies.
>: e, 1 es upp
flip -~5 ej|7i< Nos Repair 61-5 to Work 627 Kollock a Specialty- (11 th) Street.
1
Augusta. Qa.
AKents for (he PENBERTHY INJECTORS,
l< PliOI'd'I’IION:-As every Injector Is
a tested by the makers before it leaves the factory, we
r °J- know that, if properly connected and We, instructions car¬
ried out innot fall to work. therefore of
A—Tall Flpe. BB—Steam Jet fer to Pay the f..-. pense s of any man to eome tc our
U—Suction Tube. DD—DellT- faetorv and SlOpF-R DAT wriu; seue, if the lb-’
eryTube. K—Overflow E—Ring. Cap, II—Valva. Jeetor does nut work, provided it has aut bean tnis
wed.