J ft J X D THE MAID af MAIDEN HAINE Sequel to The Bow of Orange Ribbon A LOVE STORY BY E BARR Copyright 1000 by Amelia E Ilarr CHAPTER XI Continued Dogs he remember how he was hurt He declares hi3 men mutinied bo cause instead of returning to New York he had taken on a cargo for the East India company and that the blow was given him by his first or sec A ond mate He vows he will get well tf and find his ship and the rascals that tole her and 1 should not wonder if he does Ho has will enough for any thing Madame desires to see you Cornelia Can you go there with me in the morning I shall be glad to go Madame is like no one else She is not like herself at present She has but one thought one care one ond and aim in life her hus band Cornelia was taken to the dim un canny drawing room by Ameer and left among its ill omened gods and odd treasurotrove for nearly half an hour When mad am e at length came to her she looked ten years older Her wonderful dark eyes glowing with a soft tender fire alone remained un touched by the withering hand of anx ious love They were as vital as ever they had been and when Cornelia said so she answered That is because my soul dwells in them and my soul is always young 1 have had a year Cornelia to crumble the body to dust but my soul made light of it for loves sake Did your father tell you how much Capt Jacobus had suffered Yes madame Poor Jacobus Till I bo key cold dead 1 shall never forget my first sight of him in that dreadful place and then she described her overwhelm ing emotions when she perceived he was alike apathetic to his pauper con dition and to her love and presence There never came a moment during the whole visit when it was possible to speak of Hyde Madame seemed to have quite forgotten her liking for the handsome youth it had been swal lowed up in her adoring affection for her restored husband One morning however the topic was introduced I had a visit from Madame Van Heems Icirk yesterday afternoon she said and the dear old Senator came with her to see Capt Jacobus While they talked madame told me that you had refused that handsome young fellow her grandson What could you mean by such stupidity Miss Moran Her voice had just that tone of in difference mingled with sarcastic dis approval that hurt and offended Cor nelia She felt that it was not worth while to explain herself for madame had evidently accepted the offended grandmothers opinion and the mem ory of the young Lord was lively enough to make her sympathize with j snnnosed wronsr f I never considered you to be a flirt she continued and I am aston ished I told Madame Van Heemskirk that I had rot the least doubt Doctor Moran dictated the refusal Oh indeed answered Cornelia with a good deal of spirit and some anger you shall not blame my father r T f I have been thoughtless selfish He knew nothing whatever of Lord Hydes offer until I had been subjected to such insult and wrong as drove me to the graves mouth Only the mercy of God and my fathers skill brought me back to life Yes I think your father to be won- jnrnii el ilfnl rnrtnr Mnrlii is a k UCiLUllJ unmuit ww -- iS fine physician Jacobus says so Cornelia remamea sueni n ma dame did not feel interest sufficient in her affairs to ask for the particulars nf n np sn nearly fatal to her she de- 4 termined not to force the subject on her men jaCUUUij mus ma ucn auu madame flew to his room to see whether his want had received proper attention Cornelia sat still a few moments her heart swelling her eyes filling with the sense of that injustice harder to bear than any other form of wrong She was going away when madame returned to her and some tning in her eyes went to the heart of vthr lder woman 5 have been thoughtless Cornelia selfish I dare say but I do not wish to be so Tell me my dear what has happened Did you quarrel with George Hyde And pray what was it about We never had one word of any kind but words of affection He wrote and asked me if he could come and see my father about our marriage on a certain night I answered his letter with all the love that was in my heart for him and told him to como and see my father that very night Ho never came He never sent me the least explanation He never wrote to me or spoke to me again If what you have told me be so- and I believe it is then I say Lord George Hyde is an intolerable scoun drel I would rather not hear him spo ken of in that way Very well I would rather have a man intolerably rude like my nephew Item than one like Lord Hyde who speaks well of everybody Upon my word I think that is the worst kind of slander I think not It is for it takes away the reputa tion of good men by making all men alike But this that or the other 1 saw Lord Hyde in devoted attendance en Lady Annie Give him up totally I have done so answered Cornelia And then she felt a sudden anger at herself so much so that as she walk ed home she kept assuring her heart with an almost passionate insistence I have not given him up I will not give him up I believe in him yet CHAPTER XII A Heart That Waits Late summer on the Norfolk Broads And where on earth can the lover of boats find a more charming resort Close to the Manor of Hyde the country home of Earl Hyde in Nor folk there was one of these delightful Breads flat as a billiard table and hidden by the tall reeds which border ed it But Annie Hyde lying at the open window of her room in the Manor House could see its silvery waters and the black sailed wherry floating on them and the young man sitting at the prow fishirg and idling among the lilies and languors of these hot summer days An aged man sat silently by her a man of noble beauty whose soul was in every part of his body expressive ana impressive a fiery particle not always at its window but when there infecting and going through observers whether they would or not There had been silence for some time between them and he did not ap pear disposed to break it but Annie longed for him to do so because she had a mystical appetite for sacred things and was never so happy and so much at rest as when he was talking to her of them Dear father she said finally I have been thinking of the past years in which you have taught me so much It is better to look forward An nie he answered The traveler to Eternity must not continually turn back to count his steps for if God be leading him no matter how danger ous or lonely the road He will pluck thy feet out of the net As he spoke these words Mary Darner entered and she laid her hand on his shoulder and said My dear Doctor Roslyn after death what then we are not all good what then He looked at her wistfully and an swered I will give you one thought Mary to ponder the blessedness of heaven is it not an eternity older than the misery of hell Let your soul fearlessly follow where this fact leads it for there is no limit to Gods mercy Then he rose and went away and Mary sat down in his place and Annie gradually came back to the material plane of everyday life and duty In deed Mary brought this element in a very decided form with her for she had a letter in her hand from an old lover and she was much excited by its advent and eager to discuss the particulars with Annie It is from Capt Seabright who is now in Pondicherry she explained He loves me Annie He loved me long ago and went to India to make money now he says he has enough and to spare and he asks me if I have forgotten There is Mr Van Ariens to con sider You have promised to marry him Mary It is not hard to find the right way on this road I think Of course I would scorn to do a dishonorable or unhandsome thing But is it not very strange Willie Sea bright should write to me at this time How contradictory life is I had also a letter from Mr Van Ariens by the same mail and I shall answer them both this evening Then she laughed a little and added I must take care and not make the mistake an American girl made under much the same circumstances What was it inquired Annie languidly She misdirected her letters and thus sent No to the man whom of all others she wished to marry As Mary spoke a soft brightness seemed to pervade Annies brain cells and she could hardly restrain the ex clamation of sudden enlightenment that rose to her lips Mary she said what a strange incident Did you know the girl I saw her once in Philadelphia Mr Van Ariens told me about her She is the friend of his sister the Marquise de Tounnerre I am sorry for that unfortunate American girl So am I She is a zvcat beamy Her name is Cornelia Moran and her father Is a famous physician in N9w York And this beauty had two lovjers Yes an Englishman of noble birth and an American They both loved her ad she loved the Englishman They must have both asked her hand on the 3amo day and she must have an swered both letters in the same hour and the letter she Intended for the man she loved went to the man she did not love Presumably the man she loved got the refusal she intended for the other for he never sought her society again and Mr Van Ariens old me she nearly died in conse quence And what became of the two lov ers Mary The Englishman went back to England and the American found an other girl more kind to him I wonder what made Mr Van Ariens tell you this story He talked much of his sister and this young lady was her chief friend and confidante When did it happen A few days after his sisters mar riage Then the Marquise could not know of it and so she could not have told g IDOL1 Your servant ladies her brother However in the wor1d could he have found out the mistake Do you think the girl herself found it out That is inconceivable answered Mary She would have written to her lover and explained the affair Certainly It is a very singular in cident I want to think it over how did Mr Van Ariens find it out I wonder Perhaps the rejected lover fided in him What did Mr Van Ariens about the matter What did con say ne think Why did he tell you We were talking of the Marquise The story came up quite naturally I think Mr Van Ariens felt sorry for Miss Moran Of course he did Will you listen to Capt Seabrights letter I had no idea it could affect me so much But you loved him once Very dearly Well then Mary I think no one has a double in love or friendship If the loved one dies or goes away his place remains empty forever We have lost feelings that he and he only could call up At this point in the conversation Hyde entered brown and wind blown the scent of the sedgy water and the flowery woods about him Your servant ladies he said gay ly I have bream enough for a dozen families Mary and I have sent a string to the rectory To be continued The Northwest Territory The Canadian government has is sued a census bulletin which gives statistics as to agriculture in Alberta Assiniboia and Saskatchewan which united comprise the Northwest terri tory The total area of these terri tories is 190903117 acres Of this area 7599 per cent is unimproved Field crops exclusive of hay occupy 53 per cent of the improved land but only a fair beginning has been made with fruit trees and vegetables The area of land in wheat oats barley rye corn peas potatoes and other field roots in 1S91 was 194773 acres an increase in decade of 333 per cent New Method in Photography Katatypy the new method in pho tography is described as follows Over the finished negative is poureU a solution of hydro superoxide This leaves after the evaporation a uni form layer of peroxide of hydrogen Soon the silver of the plate works upon this peroxide and produces a cat alytic dissolution wherever there is silver while in the places free from silver the peroxide remains By this means an invisible picture of hydro superoxide is produced upon the plate This picture can be printed from the plate directly upon common paper to which the image is transferred Danger of Gas Poisoning The modern method of mixing coal gas with water gas greatly in creases the amount of carbon monoxid in the gas supplied for il lumination Hence an alarming in crease in the numb er of cases of car bon monoxid poisoning has recently been noticed Good of Municipal Pawnshop A beneficence to she unfortunate in German cities is tha municipal pawn shoD g Vl nna1rn Qfo rt CTJ 99 I j Id T i UV I I II I n i i it i I Mm i XMwmx wMmmmmmmmmMmm mt mmmimmmmm 1 - X3M8ZgJi2Z3Wmm at ysvffjr v pvv lisrxnrrtfiti u naxTtnrr - vm wserjt i if jaaasasat3ri3iftciiiJSiEiaiv -x v 7 i njvMr firi iii iiiasttxuiviuitiiimr r7iriuiitit iivi r4aJteBkJ TKe Childrens Gift K He was a veteran of the Civil War a bravp and fearless soldier and his grandchildren knew that such another grandfather had never lived Every sunny day you could see him in his wheel chair or limping painfully along Tod and Tucker trying to help on one side and Marthy and Emmy on the other It troubled them not a little that grandfather who was the bravest of the brave and the truest gentleman on the whole earth should wear clothes that were shiny and frayed and had been worn for many many years Fcr themselves they did not care they had never done anything to merit fine clothes But grandfather had done so much had been so faithful and brave and true and he should be clad iv fine raiment it seemed to them By hard work they had managed to gather enough nickels and dimes together to buy the wheel chair from a second hand furniture man It wasnt good enough for grandfather but it was the very best they could do It was all Mrs Monroe the chil drens mother and grandfathers only daughter could do to keep the four pairs of feet covered and the four little bodies from suffering from the cold She worked hard and long but she never complained not even when father left her suddenly to go to the Beautiful Country where we shall all meet some day when we are called away His four grandchildren were not the old mans dily admirers by any means He was always the center of an interested group of hoys and girls who listened with rapt attention to his wonderful tales of the war The po licemen all knew and shook hands with him the firemen always touched their caps to him and the car con ductors smiled at him as they dashed by Grandfather thought it was only common politeness for he greeted everyone because he had joy in his heart if his body was warped and bent Grandfather had been shot in try ing to carry an important message through the lines he was the only one who volunteered to carry the mes sage for it was a terribly dangerous undertaking What did it matter now that he had failed then Was it not just as brave a deed as though he had been successful He was the only man in the regiment brave enough to under take it The Monroe children knew that if one is brave and does ones very best failure is as honorable as success Margie Morris lived around the cor ner from the Monroes in a much finer house and her dresses were soft and pretty and not at all like those Marthy and Emmy wore Please dress me plainer mother she said more than once You see I feel very gaudy beside Marthy and Emmy and the rest and I wouldnt like them to feel Im better dressed Margie need not have worried about her clothes however for the Monroe children did not care although they admired the dainty things she wore It was grandfather they cared about and Margie had no grandfather so they gave her a share in theirs If grandfather only had fine new clothes and comforts like other old men they would be happy indeed Marthy said one of the newcom ers in the neighborhood one day why dont your grandfather wear his soldier cap stead of that shabby old felt hat Marthy looked at Tod Tod looked at Tucker and Tucker looked at Em my Then Emmy answered bravely Its oecause his sojer cap is moth eaten Then why dont you buy him a new other hat persisted the newcomer I should think youd be ashamed of him Emmy and Tod and Tucker and Marthy had tears in their eyes by this time when Margie cried suddenly to the newcomer I can beat you to the next corner and off they started I think it was just cruel I do declared Margie at supper that night Theyre just as poor as can be and every cent has to buy food and their dear old grandfather wont let them buy anything for him I do wish I could help them I doubt if they would accept char ity said her mother Indeed they wouldnt said Margie Big sister Mabel spoke up Didnt he ever get a pension she said What is that asked Margie Its money paid yearly by the gov ernment to those who are disabled in its service explained Mabel The next day Margie asked Marthy about it We tried to once said Marthy but grandfather always said his fam ily thought more of him than the government did for the pension was never given him Mabel says he ought to have one said Margie thoughtfully Oh Marthy I have an idea and if youll promise not to tell till its time Ill let you help Cross my heart said Marthy sol emnly Ill only tell grandfather But hes the most important one cried Margie You must keep it a great secret Marthy agreed and later two flushed faces bent over a sheet of paper upon which Marthy was writing at Margies dictation Nothing wonderful happened for a long time though the two little girls had many talks over their secret it was necessary to have some help and sister Mabel was asked for ad vice All the spring Margie and Marthy acted very mysteriously but not a word of explanation would they make On Decoration Day Tod and Tucker Marthy and Emmy brushed grand fathers shabby suit helped him to his wheel chair and started off in the morning to the cemetery Grandfather had never missed this yearly trip to honor the memory of his dead com rades many of whom had gone to the Beautiful Country He would salute beside the graves of the officers in whose regiment he served with tears in his brave old eyes and then he would tell of their hardihood and valor This day Margie joined the ranks and other boys and girls too till there was quite a procession Each grave was visited and each name who remembered was read to grandfather bered every man perfectly As grandfathers chair was turned towards home a shout in the woods attracted the attention of the little cavalcade and there was Margies sister Mabel running toward them and waving something high in the air Margie and Marthy looked at each other and gasped A letter for the captain called sister Mabel holding out a long en velope with an official seal Grandfather was too surprised for words and his eyes were too dim to see Let Margie open it whispered Marthy in his ear it was her idea So grandfather asked Margie to open it and open it she did right there in the cemetery among the graves of many of the brave soldiers And what was it A document that told of a pension for grandfather And that meant enough money to keep him clothed and comfortable all the rest of his life And Margie got it cried Marthy anxious to give her friend all he glory She wrote to the President herself and he answered her letter grandfather isnt it beautiful Grandfathers eyes were dim with tears of joy Slowly he rose from the wheel chair and standing erect on his crippled feet he saluted little Margie in the stately way that he saluted his generals grave What cheering there was and what a happy cavalcade danced home each in turn pushing grandfathers chair Margie never forgot that day and her most valued possession is a beauti ful letter from the President himself thanking her for her interest in one of the countrys heroes