The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, December 02, 1897, Image 3

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    SHARING,
Is thy cruse of comfort wasting?
and share it with another,
And through all the years of famine
it shall serve thee and thy brother.
Love divine will fill thy storehouse, or
thy handful still renew;
Scanty fare for one will often make a
royal meal for two:
For the heart grows rich in giving;
its wealth is living grain:
Seeds that mildew in the garner, scat-
tered fill with gold the plain,
THE OUTCAST.
Lilian Fernlie
little boudoir, sunny
lost in gloomy tion
When a young girl in the z
all
luxurious
afternoon,
sat in her
one
med
h of
with
5.0%
a
her vouth and
superabund:
vantages, an
of
brooding alone,
sion is that she
over the
The man in this case
and wealthy
guished
years he
siduously,
spoken
thing,
his wife.”
“Why, why
Yes, Gilt t
touch, his
loved her
Jy fron
frely
beauty, blessed
) of all )
d surrounded by myriads
devoted relatives and friends, sits
the inevitable lu-
is
nencies
CON
secretly fretti
of
was
ng
some man
well
and d
For
ty
well 1
in
had
sho
LO I er
his profession
courted her socie
wered gifts
tenderly
her,
every
upon
1 done
in short, except ask her t«
why?’
Voice,
and yet
him. She
Lilian
chair
was cor
face in
tapped at
“Come
IF +
ify
+1
will
One
ard,
dismay.
“Dear
the pa
caused
r head for him
je
£0 on doing
both from you?
“Yes, Mr. C
ly: “you have both
Without a moments
plunged into his
“l am not what
lie,” he sai You
Gilbert the
late Mr.
Gardens
is J¢ geph
beggar
she said
from me
pause
Reem
believe
boy
Mr
bless them
whom
because 1
sOn
He paused and raise
luctantly to her fs
what effect his
having upon her, and
heip shrinking from
doubts to the proof.
The shock of the truth had dved her
face crimson, but her dilated eyes met
hig as frankly and as kindly as of old.
“Mr. and Mrs. Carlowe lived in Lon-
don for some time after their mar-
riage. One winter's evening (when
their boy, Gilbert, was ten
years old) they were walking home,
the child on the other of his
mother, when I, attracted by Mrs. Car-
lowe's benevolent face, stopped her
and begged of her earnestly. | was in
rags and cold and hungry. My miser-
able condition would have touched that
tender heart under any circumstances,
He longed
“34s f ab rads
coniesaion
LO0
soe
yet he could not
putting his
about
gide
words, and the money wherewith
been backed by the fact that I was
startlingly lke her little coca.
“The moment I attracted their at-
ed and exchanged glances. ‘Like Gil-
bert!’ they said simultaneously;
then they turned involuntarily from
contemplating the ragged, barefoot, at-
tenuated little urchin, crying from cold
and hunger, and looked at their son.
The contrast between us was the key
that opened the portals of an un-
dreamed of life for me,
wr
I'hey questioned me. All 1 could
tell them was that my name was Jon-
old; that my parents (both working
people) had recently died and left me
not liking the ad-
me out to
took my address,
to work for, and,
ditional incubus, sent
for my living. They
| and promised that 1 should
on the morrow,
“The next day they appeared in our |
squalid dwelling, and offered to relieve
my aunt of any further care and anx!
ety on my by adopting me
She gladly accepted their offer. They
took me away h them at and
after I had been humanized Fome
weeks of Mr. Carlowe's
they sent me
school near London, where the
placed their son
see
account,
wit once:
by
supervision
to an excellent boarding
and 1
they
“Gilbert C
that
to Oxford
lowe had ki
with me,
rem
i
chool
ndly
was sent to a
the ins
be ome
and out
conver
1 remained there
Carlowe came
a prominent
rood position h
promotion if |
it
wit
was a
i
a8
A few
to the grave;
heart, 1 set off for
“Well, at the age of twenty-five, |
and in my new character of Gilbert |
Carlowe, 1 began to study for the bar.
Mrs, Carlowe had always a re-
tired life, and Gilbert had
been a most unsociable fellow, #0 there
was no friend to storm my position.
My likeness to him was as strong as |
ever, and no obstacles presented them- |
selves in my assumption of the role
People merely concluded that Gilbert
Carlowe had rejoined his parents in
Paris, and had been living there with
them. That he should have neglected |
his professional studies for five years |
and then taken to them with renewed |
ardor was set down to his eccentricity. |
About the time I began my studies, 1
bought Clifton Park here. The pur-
| chase of the place led to the greatest
i privilege and happiness that has fallen
or ever can fall to my lot—the priv-
flege and happiness of knowing you,
| Miss Fernlie. Well, in due time | was
| called to the bar, and during the five
i years 1 have been in practice success
| has attended my efforts. This you
| know, through our friendship of five
1i8 only son rilbert Carlows
England
lived
Carlowe
years. 1 had just been called to the
| bur when you returned from finishing
your education abroad. Do you re-
member the dinner your mother give
in honor of your return, and that |
was among he guests?”
She half raised her head; a
glow showed itself on her face,
“Yes,” she sald; “1 have forgotten
nothing
“Migs
talking
that the
Fernlie, it was while you were
to me after our introduction
sting of my false position first
me I have felt
logs
know e
home to
it in more ever
since
other
cenee
we
your pres or
When
better
got to ich
when | to
BLOp PI d. and
could
his CYes upon
in her
brokenly
the
and
began
then
when
you lie
after a little went
look at him, bunt
her. Sne hid her face
“1 longed,” he
my
ur
love
on She not
she felt
hinds
10
and
my mis
Mr Car
went on
heart of
friend hip
M1
the
unburden truth
end «
But 1 and
thought
owed
if
man s name
ed under another
backed by another man's wealth ™
am
who
without
will
said. "Besides, 1 pres
and trust
now?”
“I will,” she said
He steadied himself against a
neighboring chair and passed his hand
across his dazed eves
She came nearer
downcast
him, and stood
and drooping
head, within a few inches of him
“1 love better than you
me,” she said, “for, Carlowe or Brown,
io
eyes
you love
I would rather be
your wife than-—empress of the
world!”
He stood transfigured. Then
clasped his hands resolutely
him, and spoke to her calmly, She
knew the effort it was costing him.
“God bless you,” he said. "You are
an angel, Miss Fernlie.” And then
hig heart burst all restraints and cried
aloud in its bitter anguish. "Oh, Lil
ian, Lilian, Lilian! If things had
only been otherwise!”
She hid her face in her hands and
sobbed bitterly.
“l have nothing in the world, Lil-
fan,” he sald; “my fortune is all gone
my good name is gone—and the
doors of my profession are closed
against me! At thirty-five years of
sage 1 must begin life again; begin it as
I began it twenty-six years ago-—Srom
| the gutter
“Do
have
wits
need,” ghe sobbed,
comfortiess! 1
fortune
“There is no
leave me
wealth-—bulld up
it
not
your
eried. “You will never
more me than are now,
the day ever comes when I have
and position,
my labor can
wants, You can never
any less to me, come what may. But
of it, Lillan!, Even when a man
life with all the enthusiasm and
it takes him
of his efforts
in undertaking the
are. 1]
‘Never!
he
any to you
name
of
weatablished a
and when the fruit
gratify all vour
ho
think
begins
pilability of youth years
justi.
respon.
past
well-nigh
hefore the success
others’ welf am
¢ is
id and looked
me?”
IArry
qadful calmness
apparent
would be
undings
wever, that when the coy
gfOme un
happened
eted boon as obtained wel
for
and so
wishes about
, recognizing his ignorance of what
really for him, and patiently
accepting the testimony meted out to
him by the just law. George Muller,
of Bristol, supports a large institution
for orphans by prayer. The venera-
ble founder relates his wish for a
and unilooked
accompan
come
ied it the
avoids definite
bent
is
Thoughts
the dea, strongly
in‘o
it floated about until at
the congenial =oil of the
brain of some wealthy philanthropist,
sends
his check for the required amount.
Cesex (England) Times,
engagement. were
and once
the ether,
Ancient Scandinavian Graves,
Professor Heydeck, of Konigsberg,
has discovered graves of the seventh
and eighth centuries, evidently of
Scandinavian origin, in East Prussia.
In one he found a silver-pommeled,
cross-hilted sword, a pair of stirrups,
two lances, one of them with silver
ornaments, an fron shield boss, three
spurs, a pair of scicsors, a grindstone
and the remnants of an iron pail. In
others were found two oval dishes
richly ornamented, a third of a form
hitherto unknown, bh onze beils like
sledge bells, and sundry other articles,
Queere¥Town in England,
The mst curlous town in England Is
Northwich, There is not a straight
street, nor, in fact, a straight house, i
the place; every part of it has the ap
pearance of having recently sufférec
from the visitation of an earthquake
Northwich, us every one knows, Is
the center of the salt industry. On
nearly all sides of the town are big sal
works, with thelr engines pumping
hundreds of thousands of gallons of
brine every week.
At a depth of some two hundred o
three hundred feet are immense sob
terranean lakes of brine, and as the
contents of these pumped and
pumped away, the upper crust of eartk
weakened, and
ure
is correspondingly 1h
result is an occasional subsidence,
Those subsidences have
effect
are drawn all
on the nearest build!
WHFS, giving
nnside-down appearance,
ee — ———
Beasickness,
J to seasickness
ttacked by It
immediately to
thelr where they grumble
enougt
fights the
and
groan un well
on deck again
ti they are to go
A woman un
tor}
fight
pleasant malady
longer Then
aud pathetic. She
and invariably asks three questions
First, whether jde die of
ness, then !
shore,
omes 1141
to her room
BEeAKICK
» are from
lastly when
A Sensatioy
w who fesi sharg
nerve of the thigh
pensation, and the
mething is
3e first sensa
to 188 Kt
~ a
veil
ruggista
Hall's Oa
ing divert
aces of th
br all Drugs
Hall's Famili
the ar
To Cure a Cold in One De:
Laxative Hr
IRE
There are pr
break than t
Fits permas en
ness aller Gre
lars
rim
o fia or nervons
me's Great
treatise {re
Nerve Restorer, 821
Dic ROH. Kus, 1a i. Phila
makes the mo
tion isan A No
for Consumpti
MLL AME, Anti
*
ue
W.RW
Plau's Cure
Amlima medic
lis, April 11,
Are Dever w« as when
Boome people happy
they are miseratye,
| Don’t Starve
Because Your Stomach
Digest Food.
Sar
Will Not
Take H at rod
It will tone ar
and
sapariiia and
create an
of distress
eat without
will be digested and sssimilaied
will grow strong and healthy
Mood’s 2
parilla
Ia the hatin fact the One Troe Riond Parifler
Hood's Pills cure wil liver ilis. 25 cents
FLASHES OF FUN,
“l can't see why you object to young
oftly. I'm sure constant,”
“Worse than that, He is perpetual.”
Bhe-Did you anything New
York that reminded yow of Philadel-
hin? He-—Yes; the messenger boys. —
Exchange,
Author—I have a dialect story I want
0 sell you, Editor—In what dialect is
t? Author--1 dou't kn Editor-1'Il
‘ake it. —-Truth,
Daughter—What
he in
t
n
1341
wee
OW,
will I do, ont
without a riding
R10 The
papa,
habit 0
i p to Date
a
el--Mnud has been trying
to vi a blevele for
Tru~ to His
writer in t ingepenge
Bringing-Up
At dis.
Las
ey boy
: Most
looked
brown,
“1 don’t,” who
about eleven, was very
dirty, had
he
and
if 1
ano
very scantily dressed, quite
i behind 1
anda
with rounded
eve trotted
shoulders
craned forward “I don't.
my family would beat me,
quite right, /
“But
ARE) i
Ab
Sudaenss
who a who are your
ia :
are
» are strict
he said oudly, “we
To smoke,
It men so
what
that they haven't
to-day.
keeps some busy
they are golog to do to-morrow
time to do anything
prove the claims made
it's cures that count.
for Ayer's Sarsaparilla
And
book free. Address Dr.
Ayer, Lowell, Mass,