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. ?VJfro UmnV ft If a [A /^o TT> an ccji Ie^2^:? ov jrturning of that huge'Grf^^^wfrp! cold's play to thaSAr.g p&tage up ( thi jfcqp^sjaoJile canon and mquntafn side" which had brought her to UlIS flWf hiiVen! from the world, buried himself in this mountain, and had stayed there deaf to tho allut int, uill uf WSTTTy 1 wuuiuu; 1 be hsyd bad the courage .to do that, it .strength t'Qf.^nd . admlreaf'^ril'd BJaiUand[w:as no . mean Judg^of thfe mentaf powers of her acquain4*nr?9Jfih?f^i$JdsCJafl3ull of lif?) spirit aed- the joy o(l..them as any^yoing rVV*om?ua- should. %e, .but-sh^ had, h&t t^n.;Usdsie<!"W and, thrown withJ the"Vest Tor nothing., '^gblesse | \ oblige! That his was a iflibd well IU1UU U fnnfflU^ieuge or me most, varied sort she easily^nd atf perceived. Of course jlrjp ?pip8?i books of the last five years had passed him by, and of such he knew nothing, but he could talk intelligently, interestingly, entertainingly upon the great classics. Keats and Shakespeare were~ hfs-flsest thumbed volumes. ~He had Ma plucc vnniKroct i y?iWeffinttepsk,n! Enld Malt* woman of broad culture and wide reading and she deliberately set herself to fathom this j iter dismay, but-genarally to her sat-1 Isfaction, she found that she had no ! jUmxtet frwith rwhifch! te.TwaKd *> hl< | ^BRf^hl^ee^fe Win ftit flfne ffcwer of good ^tyi^^diirygn^ ?e;ifleue6s and J consideration? Where could she flndi these qualities belter-di splayed? Sh^ jya^ absolutely alpn^^'th this lu^H VUiLllS!^ "i-v Eerence;,s5fefc rectu^lly asif they^ad .both., bee^r &bauiloned;^tif ah'h& ffde ii the worth j Poftfc or: eA4t ttfay oh- somelbhely Is-1' ^ land in./ th^ Soqth Seas, ,y.et she.;felt: as safe, as if she. ha.fl h.een in her own hoase, &f* her Uilcle'sff With every pr6teCtltii -that1 human-power could- give! |Je jbh^jieYar ;Brepumad: upon: the :8it-~ uation.in the least degree, he never once referred" fo the circumstancea.. 6t their meeting ln-'the remotest way," he never even discussed her: rescue from the- flood, he never tojd .her how Ko/1 KnrriA Knr thrAiiah tho rnln fa ! MC UttU iiVl VUi Vii^u UiV Mft?M >vv the lonely shelter of the hills, and In ho way did he say anything that the most keenly 'scrutinizing mind would torture into an allusion to the pool and the bear and the woman. The fineness of bis breeding was never so veil - exhibited as In this reticence. often than r-ot it's what he.) does not- rather than what, he does that indicates the man. . It would be folly to deny that be never, thought of thase things. Had. he forgotten them there would be no merit' in his" silence; but to remember them and to keep still?aye, that showed the man! lie would close his eyes- in" that little room on the other J side of :.the door .and see again the ] dark pool,- her white shoulders, her j giUCeiJU ill ill:?, UIV? JU Vf 1 > lUCC ? n.u its crown of sunny hair rising above the r^h ng. v ater. ILe had listened to the roar of the wind through the" long nights, 'when she thought, him asleep" if she thought of h^m at all, and heard againT-he' scream of the storm tinrt-hrtti-brougtrfh^T to his I ajr^y.i ,^'o snow.;,'{Job thill! JfoIAsHtd his cheek when lie was abroad but repjlpd^d }y'm .e^jrthata fftgdit in t&e cblaram when he'had held her close and carried bhcMtin;'doV.ld not sit and mend her .boot witjiout _re;nemberlng th.ht'whfte foot before which he Vdnfd \fa:rT hfiv??: prosfrtfted 'hirh-self-and upon which" hV would liare" pressed :pfisstonate bissns~.i?. he-hhiP given way io his^doeieeH,. Bat'heriept 1 all ,the?e ^hing^-4u bhsr hearty; pondered J,hem .au^'made juo. sign.- - , she ask beauty,.in. i^rplover? Alf, Ihcre at last he failed. ...Accyrd-. ing to the canons of perfection he J did not measure up To the standard. Hi's features'were irreguiaT. 'hts Chili a 'triiT- too "square, his mohfh a thought to firm, his.jbmtv wrinkled a' little; hut. be vat g'*pd to. look at fpr.-j He looKeu stror.-, : .* .. clean aud j v *? f. : . r J* % a f?? ^ " -^fct^loJked true. V l)yre p^isl afLat^ him, tpo, that stamp of practical pf. I .' flciencr that men who can do things ] : alwayq hsre* YougooMa at gh antf* "Torrrat ^71 thjiJihaflTik u^j#took B But after all the things jite' said . love goes where :at lyaui, UI11 fltfl The" "sender. " TWa.xwpa^n 4<5rtred thie-. man: neither . beqaqsq pqr*. in, aphte , ol. these qualftres.' ' That tney we're might acdonht far-tiir arffection~ btit If they ha0? not- been, it may* be that that'affection,: that rtbat passion, WoiUd-HaVe lph^bitated:>her,-i)eartvetllhir.No Ofle cpm say^np one can. tell.bow or'.vhy tbps.? thJn^a.afe.. Sb^ hadvJoved him| While she raged against him and hat-' ed mm. She did neither the one nor the -fllhciL. &Jhose JtajO?1m4 Vwims, J ??-?JIjshJlovec/L*lt6 i&eJi 3 Mystery is a great mover; there is J nothing so attActl^ Is cannot solven^y^iflratroir or ^ tflO man V^TP tlln.n -I ha ^M^hnrn, why ..bo ?omo[HtdUilvl;t j questions tof wblcji ghe, h^d ,yet n? ! < atiStteWT tfrirthilStetT Her" profoundly. J because she did not know she que"? i ^ioned in ittCfeWsft'^as aroused jsad the transition to love was easy.'r Ea>j4n<$iit?, ^ooi-i^-r^sp^ns^lei'far many an affection. "The ivy clings ^ tQ tbe^fixst n^et-^r/aft,'; iCyve&^-irgm ' and woman heart free _ an<J^.jthrpw 1 tbenf ffegelfier-'lnd let'thefe be'decent * kindneswomiwth bld^s.t htkf It- is 'aP 1 jUQSt Inevitable .that paph^ 9bail .-.love j tne other. Isolate them /romi the ^ world, let them see no other cdmpan- ' iops -bixtrthe tone tbSn 'ftnd flfar'o'ne 1 ^omaB/^^t^a.Tesuit.i)ecoine?-mor4 ' inevitable. ?< ' P^Yes^^j^woman^ Ipved this man, j no|T one dispnte ner dor.^. ttuft *bsfrwbuld- H&ve HiVed-' him 'had bfr t>ee? Jme nnsongumillions to stand before her, and it was Irne..: He wan tbe gomple m en t of er nature: They differed "in temperament aa.mu.eh as in complexion,"and yet in jihese-differences as must always be to . make perfect love and perfect union, there were striking -reseiiibfahces, necessary points ci contact,-If -..There was no reason whatever why Enid,. Maitland- should not Idve this man. ^Tbe..Qply possible chock upon J her feojipgs would have .been her rather aVfcmalous relation to Arm- ' strong, but she reflected that she had promised him definitely nothing. When she had met him she had been heart whole, he had made some impression upon her -fancy and might have made more with greater opportunity, but unfortunately foi* him; luckily for her, he had not enjoyed that privilege. She scarcely thought of him longer, . She would not have been human If' her mind had not dwelt upon the 1 world beyond the sky-line on the oth- 1 er side of the range. She knew how those who loved her must be Suffering ' on account of her disappearance, but , knowing herself - safe -and realizing ^ that within a short time, when the ! spriugicame again, she would- go back j * to iiaem and that., their; mourning would be turned into joy by her ar:j_ rlTfttr she 'dflUTJTh'or"concern "herseTff] very greatly over tlieir present feel- j 1 ings and emotions.; t-aixt .besides, wltal r j would be the uffo tJi^ wWA4ng <i\e4 V those things? There was metal more ; r attractive fnr tipr pinto a* J, hand. And o'ho wuh two?blissfully ^ hannv* tn pntrrt.iin fnr ninrn thnn a i ' moment any sorrow. | 1 She pictured 0^111r^and the church's blessing would make .them one. To do her justice, in the ^simplicity and purity of he^lhougits y, 'she never once thought tff^ha^Vhtf world might say about that long win- ! ' tor sojourn alone with this man. She | I she never once thought how humanity j would raise its eyes and fairly cry upon her from the housc^topsr She tH9tt.fi up b&brtij tm* ;ira lnnooinf she could not -.vr reach the high. position t n9 rn t t jsq!?f>coa@ft .wi' "iifssifagg. hin^&V0 ^ Now, love produces both happlnes And unhannlnp.RR hut nn tha whnla think the happiness predominates,,fo Rf& itseft if-dt bfe "trh?;anff-hfgtr i its own reward. Love mar. tee! itsel unworthy, and may shcinJt-av^m-,fr?E ffce'imlitdning oWhe s^ote-Idce-vf th helnveri,-yat it Joys in its own qkIbi ence nevertheless. Of course it greatest satisfaction is in the returi lyjUiHWiytnes^'srpii'ati tn \ I WeVuJy lovinr. I j yftaijIjmd.XowevejL have to endure indifference, or flgh againTt jfflbaHon vfnchJJnef'Wifc ni fespo^BTforffiiis man Pwed hdft$vit! a lovf^ tljfct j&as ithK har nwo Thfl mnnn in tha tritn .nnhm ism, looks on piany brooks, the broo PhesJJfc n^iTtout^Hfc one Aove/hir in h&JEs.SJ# ona-lfenrfHl S?5WnT3f&,9i,y/1l5^ecti9Pl<9,MI w^sfwjfetoe^ht' fe?tafe knew, was tne greater; in many year ik h^tfi??-iSll3riWs ?n4~$%W Mturf^-^? stows* be btht sng fepr^s^fltga is bib hot oni: ffcb flt-.aao4n b?t womankind...He ha been a boy. practjcally whfeft.Jie hai bur^d (to, those c mo\uatainj and - jp all' th$t~ tiine be bad, seen, nc |>pdy,, like" Enid blaltlapcf. Ev(ery- at sjuWekt" wblcfi bad' been 'exploited t show wjra tHP-MvturM-,lnVA.-Mm couli be furped .abquj. to, account ;for hi passion, foij pff. .. they^re not^nftoeet an Divine. 3h ht ff/ljfl me eremites or ola ne nad beei aawged into the dcsut bj iciiiuifl1 >wd. anetbti uuuuiuii- 1ml iiiiih tnw ^mribvr^ ok iwe^Jehrafy tmd youth During those five years of solitude, o study and of reflection, the truth ha< pdfMffOubi'oUfea/iiiself (bifoXllfito Uonciusions vasuy ai vanuuvo mu what he had ever~U"elieved possibh as tp the woman, upon whom he hai SVfetlbeS&ftiirhis heart', 'ttld gO?"M ^ wlr-^Bt>#*ion :his present woman was the precipitan which brought th$J*Jfo life. He knev now what the old appeal of his wif bad beeiA HetagjrvM^ what til '^ln'^I^h^ft/"two thn^^mjftS^ar lriexfrtcfttfly: Ihterfciiff^l^' body'^hl ?ouL-: Where: .tbe fnnctiofc of one W gjns and th^. function, rof the^otbe ends ho one is able to say. In ai human passions "fire admixtures " c the: earth earthy.1 are bdrn th aons of old Adam as we are jebori the sons' of the New." Passions ar omplex. As in harvest wheat am tares grow together until the end, si In love earth and heaven mingle evei He remembered a clause from an ar :ient marriage service he had read "With my body I thee worship," an< with every fibre of his physical being he loved this woman. It would be idle to deny that, lm possible to disguise the facts, but ii the melting pot of passion the pre ponderao^v Jtigredient was mental am spiritual; and jtist because higher am holier things: predominated, he heh her in, hi6 heart a sacred thing;. Low Is like a rose: the material part is th< beautiful blossom; the spiritual facto Is the fragrance which abides in thi rose jar even after every leaf has fad ed away, or which may be expressei from the soft petals by the hard cii cumstahces of pain and sorrow unn there is left nothing but the lingerini perfume of the flower. . * His body, trembled if she laid i jand. upon. him, his soul thirsted fo her; present or absent he conjurei before his tortured brain the sweel ursr "rtrtrr ftihrrmtim 'iwur east.?hi bad been clearsighted enough in an aJ.oin? JtUejjiisX,Jiytlas neither clear si^itHflifim-^e^l^Vni in thinking o the preseut. lie worshiped her, h< could have thrown himself upon hi ijnccs tn lirr; if it would have addei to her happiness, she could hav< killed him, smiling at her. Kodeshi In the JuggerijJEIt ^ar ot the a^Tclp* idol, It ith his bWi; would he lj^veRr hes^|tf ^the hft-< to compass her with sweet obsei Bervances. The world revenged itsel ""in liim frir his Innrr npFlpcf. it lia( rfufinfcd this one woman all it: charm, its beauty, its romance, an< had thrust her into his very arms His was one of those great passion: fthtfcli IhUtJnvhiAe 'tAi^ Ire^cird^ '6'f ?tft< past. Paolo had not loved Franceses more. Oh,.yes. the woman ki ew h#|ftve< straint, how absolute the iilnjgpMtin Df ^j|"cart ^fcden iPfinTf ? k. ? "Ill^HOW TO IP 1. - ??? :':* '" LOOK ' !????: >|?f- "CORTRIGH t = and accept no nj __ aSPfciLfitt glgl^aw Haiti ware & k!, ta n k ^ *n 1 8 -3 ?I ? ??i JA>!IOISO HUG 10 TJi>H To w aaauio/j tsoo wojss ;coo; ?, : ^ IJA3 a::iT JIOT TS.TC hit Imn gffgpp J.13HD a j "* ? T> 1 5| ,'j I -MS- just- t-he-rthingi- ? J | iMch * i X'.j V.- M?<;SC:E ^ t: ;'..3 ji: Horton &H t I" '.^ * SXfiO.-?" f?.'-!"?? ,*?OZ3 o *3-rf* y ? >r. V' Ri Mcl. WAT ^ g.^."[ ,\:\ ;*?rj ?1 .iiiV - - ." " * a I A r.'S.i. .:: n. i&z Lv, ., \: Relieves i Backache " Instantly ? 1 Sloan's Liniment fs a j*reat " ' fi.( !* ' ' remedy for backache. It ' *yj J : penetrates and relieves j the pain instantly?no rub ~ bing necessary?just lay : ^ B it on lightly. r 1-. Here's Proof. ki( ' "I had my back hurt in the Boer War M< [ and in San Francisco two years aro I i fi was hit by a street car in the same place. ne 3 1 tried all kinds of dope without sucI cess. Two weeks ago I saw your lini . M merit in a drug store and got a bottle to sa lK- tty- JlteJirstapplicationcaus. diustanr Z. ,1 , relief, arid now except for a .little Stitf- Pi "ness, I am almost wdl!.'' * , FLETCHER NORMAN, dy * Whittier, Calif. ye ;l tTA&irC * I VA/Vi&X^W | f IBPBMi .is - the.- ^ ?>est femedy :fo? 1: thj . .rheunutism, ,. jie omalgia, ; , re] V sore. tliroaj ^nd sj^pjjiSi. { no Miss E. Rim of Rrooklpv. N/EL, '.3 " ' 3 pi writes; ''Sloan's I.ipiroent is ttig best ctt 3 ' Iforrheunwtism.J I hafc used six bot- vO ft L rtWs of it priSt is granii.":< i :: 1 ' f* i-| ; I*-*:. SeW by oU Dealers. r. ': is*s 9 J I Trice, 25c., 53c., a.^d SI.CO. ; J i '^or ' cJl'V-iiz*.-I'*' 'c-"x ' ot (ft- A pKJj JOWTHEGENUINE^ FOR TOE STAMP . nr^ Reg. u. s. Pat, off. 1 dl ecnulc / 1 fatitut?. if you want n rnnf thar? aa the building, nnd nrvrr nrrri ;259ISJ tjlufTT^pfOOJ LAj^Uinifipprovj Supply Q?0^jawaSj.C. ? riT.it a f02A 83GTJJ0VII T2C0 TA D T830I0H0 370 7.0 TTJ3 in ttt rro'iV. " " 12 Q37A2 M' -u; 00 ^ RJ6HT ;- vx. k"OIV nth'. .-'H uiir; *).&! EEGH--NUT ~*a 'BRANDo K b.u. Og.BI FEANUT-.- v-jii ^ BfcJ-TTER * Ac .:J 00.8*; H.-'woc .?h>< '&&fiJ ')g.?* 33j mtfpke P H>a;.fc jHOit T/.aifli arf ? llS Q fiUH , rs, ^"'o^ m. I z. rfl friv. o~-:! llzi r.ftos ?1^NI i.'i.t. "' no'!*., }i." tci tdxii -r???*?!?' .:v?ia 1 HAmCAPpED " S,}!^ fl ra ' ^ .... wT. ....i. * * Ills Is the Case.AVlth Many ChierawF r?i>K'- \'~;' K Too many Cheraw citizens. . mdicapped with bad backs. The asing pain causes, constant miscryjH H akin'g work a burden and stpopip&V^H lifting an . impossibility. .TU'4? ck aches at night, , preventing rejshing rest and in the mornin^^ iff and lame. Plasers and llniibeiita, iy give' relief but cannot reach!the, use. To eliminate thepains $$? * hes you must cure, the kidneys. ? ( Doan's Kidney Pills are for sick ineys?thousands testify to V. their,' vaii rlnnht fhomiV PV1 Si ll. van ;yu uvuuv ~ nee? ' / ,". "/.'." . 1 .. t J. T. Amos, Third St., Cheraw, S. C.r, ys: "I have used Doan's Kidney . . . j 77uJ' * lis and I know that they are,a remeof merit. About a year ago I was ; J . 'm ?/T . . 'J r? 4/f ry much annoyed by my . kidneys, d suffered, from a lame and aching/ ck. At that time, I took Doan'3 .* J..". ' i - V .1* t? 9 .If (Jney Pills as,directed, getting them )in the Cheraw Drug Co? aiid' they/ stored me to good health. I Know. ^ it Doan's* Kidney Pills act just asf presented and '.consequently' I ,"!do. t hesitate to r^qommend them."./,., "or sale by" all dealers. Price/"f.fe Its'.' Foster/AUTburi'i /'Co., / Dii/falp^ w York, sofe, agents for the Lntted .. u.:z ;o now: LteJ. . , ?,; "t .T ; *. ,^ v 1* ,* ; . - "'Qfj 93 J Remember the jianie?Dojri's fanc^ ^or. sale Jay 'all dealers. ' Prij^eif % its. Pbst'er-Miibnrn" Co*J BirfTalo,' wi.York. sole agents for the UhiteiSf1 &n a -/ . r^s- y : ,;oQ sjoio j < .-la.a- ysfMxT temeniber the name?Doan s? ce no other. 11 * /inajiuj "sorr/e* Yearr ajro; once ph9l-:"ff^erday V- weii't ? I ffreahveOniifcl -l was" a^^Bnii?)f^^^H J4iouffe.;df l(7Hls.:'an(i wKen^B^okfcf ound I was a(JitFt18 sy: ? y t?;9%M $9."-TTLondoD- Telegrapb^T , :r^-i 11:# ijd.nl* sir,.;:- ?'rt9Tb Mr#