Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 29 Oct 1885, p. 6

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“ I beg your pardon, is it Mrs. Spencer or Mi ~s Melrose '3” She l nughed bitterly. “ Miss Melrose ! I would stab her to the heart sooner than own nor for a mistress. My mistress is a ladyâ€"noble, royal, and of gentle birth. It is an honor to serve my mistress.” “ And is she ill ‘2 How long since ‘2” “ Ever since she married him -curse him !” she muttered in a fierce tone ; “ but I must not be excited. I must tell my story, or rather hers. Two years ago, through the desire of a dying father, Alice Herdon be- came James Spencer’s wife, Before that she was a healthy, blooming girl ; Immedi- ately after their marriage she began to fail. Do yo 1 as anything strange in that ‘3” “ Not necessarily.” “Let me enlighten you further. Dr. Spen- cer was at one time engaged to Miss Lucille Melrose, but he broke the engagement and married my mistre s instead. Miss Melrose was as poor as Job's turkey. Miss Herdon was an heiress, and Dr. Spencer was deep in debt and hard pressed by his creditors. Do you see anything strange in that ‘3 ‘ “ Perhaps so Go on.” “ When my mistress m srried Spencer she was only seventeen, and had been taught to obey her father in everything. She was a. gentle, all‘ectionate child, and it would have been easy for Spencer to have won her love. But he did not care for that. It was her money he wanted, It p id his debts and bought him fast horses ; it set his table w ith nice and costly dishes and put it in his pow- er to keep Miss Melrose robed like a go en. All this time my mistress Lad been slowly but surely sinking, and look you, Dr. L ‘01; wood, I believe she is not dying of disease, but of "Hebe lowered her voice to a Whis- per as she spoke the wordâ€"“ poison.” “ Impossible ! this is a grave charge.” “ OE poison given her by her husband, who, at her de ath, will have sole control of her property and be free to marry Miss M lroae. There is no time to explain the details of the thousand and one circum- stances which have led me to believe it, for we are almost at the door. It is no var the case that Miss M elrose and Spencer are out at the same time, or I should have called a physician before ; but tonight they are both called away by the death of Miss Melrose’s sister, and Willnot be back until to-morrow. With the consent of my mistress, I came for you, and oh, Dr Lock wood, I pray you to save my dear mistress. I nursed her when her mother died and left her a help less infant ; all through her innocent youth she was like an own child to me; and now to see her fading hour by hour before my eyes. Good heavens ! If I knew beyond a doubt that he was guilty his life should pay the forfeit.” 1 put on my overcoat without demur, locked the surgery door, and stepped into the storm. As I did so, the wom m laid a firm hand on my arm, and putting her face close to mine, said : “ Dr. Lockwood, can you keep a secret ?” “ I think so, madame.” "" Swear it.” “ Is this secret of yours of a professional character ? That is, is it anything you wish to confide in me as a medical men ‘3" “ It is." “ Very w 11, then, I swear it.” “ That i right.” A man respects an oath, though why he should is a mystery, since men's mouths are running over with them. A, “ Whither are you taking me, and for what purpose ‘2” ‘ a,“ To the Clifton House, to see my mis- i tress.“ ‘ i" l started. Clifton House was the old nansion recently taken by Dr. Spencer, a stranger to every one in Middlehury. Spen- oo: wasa tall, dark, rather distinguished- ‘xookiug person, who had hung out his sign in the village only a. few doors above mine, but as yd; he had no practice. Ha Vitals unsocial in the extreme, avoiding his neighbors persistently, and when he did speak it was in such a curt, half savage way, that no one was likely to prolong the cou- versation. K‘)‘ As we walk along,” said my comp \nion, “let me explain to you j uat What is neces- sary for you to know. My mistress is very sick." The doctor had a wife, it was said, but no one had ever seen her. She was an in- valid, and Miss Melrose, airiend of the family, presided over the family and sat at the head of the ttsble. Miss Melrose was yet beautiful, and won the udmi ation of all who visited Clifton House, by her ease of mmner and fascinat- ing conversation. I was already beginning to feel a. deep in- terest in Mrs Spenr‘er, although I had never seen her, and like her old nurse X was beginning to feel a great finimosity for D5. Sp: ncer. Mrs. Spencer received me in her bedy chamber. It was on the second. floor, and was furnished with exquisite elegance. Everything in the mom baspoke the daili- cacy and taste of the occupmt. The warm air was fragrant with the faint orior of helio- trope ; and glancing around I saw the purple blossoms and green leaves in an alabaster case on the edge of the south Window. “ Come in,” said I, holding open the door but she declined with a gesture of impa- tience. “ You must come out,” she said, in & "thd'p, incisive voice, “ and be quick about 9%. ’ DBL SPENGER'S {ERIMEL Old Mrs Jerome had been threatened to file for the past five years, and every time I visited her she solemnly informed me that when the decisive moment did come, she solemnly desired me present. But as noth- lng ailed the old lady beyond now and then an indigestion from too much high living, I had never yet beencalled upon to be present at her death. Now, I thought, it must be old Mrs. Jerome in going. I took up my night lamp and went to the door. A strong gust of damp, sleet wind nearly extinguish- ed the light, but, shading it with my hand, I discerned the face of a woman. I was sitting in myofliae, half-dozing over an interminable article on nutrition in the last medical review. The fire in the grate was low, the night was stormy, and the clock was on the stroke of elaven. I was just about to turn off the gas and retire, for. being a bachelor, I s‘eep in the room con- nected w:th my otfi 29, when there was a pull at the blil I started up suddenly, for this was something new. Middlebury was adecoroua sort of a. place, and the people usually managed to be taken sick at season- able hours. The doctor turned and bent on her a. halt as though he meant to read her thought. But she kept her face passive. If he had any suspicions her manner quieted them ; and putting down the glass he left the room. Then Mrs. Hurd changed the position of the glasses. When he came blokâ€"and he was gone but a momentâ€"the nurse stood exac‘ly where he had left her, and M rs. Spencer was lying back in a chair with her eyes closed. Again he lifted the glass, this time it was the one intended for himself, and placed it to the lips of his wife. She swallowed the conten‘s, drank a little of the watar he brought her, and thanked him in her sad, sweet way. “ Drink it, dear,” he said. “ It’s a pan» seen for all evils. I am also going to take a aglass of it,” am] he pointed to the glass still on the tray. “If you will bri g her a. tumbler of water, doctor. M 75. Spencer complains that the cordial leaves a bad taste In her mouth, and nty old bones are so full of rheumatism that it nearly kills me to go down-stairs.” “ Now for my own cordial,” he said, with aflected gayety. “ 1 indulge in something a little stronger,” as he spoke he tossed off the mixture. Mrs. Spencer-accepted it and was putting it tojxer lipvaYhfm Mrs. Hurd_ interfupted, “ It male me stone cold to my fingers’ ends to see him do it,” said Mrs. Hurd, re- lating the circumstances to me, “ but as heaven is my witness I felt no conscience. I argued like this : ‘ If it was simply cord- ial, it would do no harm ; if it was poison, his blood would be on hid own sinful head.’ ” Mrs. Spencer smiled in assentâ€"aha never disputed her husbandâ€"and he went out. PreFently he returned with two glasses. Both contained liquor colorless and odor- less. Mrs. llurd was watchtng him with her heart in her throat, for she told me that she felt the decisive moment had come. There was something in the grey pallor of the doctor's rigid face told her of a desperate pvrpose in the man's soul. A He lifted the glass to the right of the tray and gaye_it_to 3113 v7_if_e. He went to bed Im'lf a hour afterward, complnimng of fgtigue. In the morning they found him dead. I was nailed to the postmortem examina- timu and we discovered in the stomach (If fihx, < .:cea;«ed a suiiiuient quantity of a dead- ly p ,ton known to modern science to kill half-a-dozan men. M y brother phynicians agreed that the 11m): Wm iDBiMJQ, and had probably taken tho, ("mac in one of his unsettled fits of mind. I diii not dirpute them, but even before Mrs. Hurd told her story, I had my own theory as to the cause of his death. I )5. Spencer .returned home the morning after my visit to [0 Clifton House He look- ed Wretchedly, the nurse said ; appeared gloomy and depressed. Miss Melrose cnme with him and looked dczomualy Bad over the death of her sister. Women of her stamp always do mourn to perfection. They neither overdo nor underdo the thing, as women of feeling are likely to do. “ You are always ordering cordial for her," said Mrs Hard, musingly. “ Why not take something yourself? You look like a. ghost 1” ‘7 I think I will take some of the cordial myself, for I cl ) not feel quite well. Alice, dear, shall I bring it here and drink your he xlch '2" The oKlv dependence seemed to be in Mrs. Hurd. To her I unbusomed myself freely. I told her Without reserve that I thought Dr. Spencer was killing his Wife by slow poison, and I besought her to constant- ly watch to save the victim, and discover some proof by which we could fasten the guilt upoq.hi_m. _ _ . She smiled grimly and promised obe- diu1 36, and Igave‘her v. powerfulantidote for the poison I suspeciol, and went home per- turbed and anxious In mind. I did not sleep that night, and all the next day I was in a high fever of excitement. A ring at the bell made me trembleâ€"a step on the gravel outside my ofiim stopped my breath, and I hardly knew what I expec‘ed to hear. I felt sure before I slept I should hear some~ thing. DrfSpencer came at once to his Wife’s chamber. He thought she looked ill, and prescribed a. cordial at once, saying he would go and fetch it. He Eyed her keen‘y, but replied compos- ed1y_: A311 now I must tell the story as it was told me. A charge of such nature, of course, I could not make out against Dr. Spencer without the ampleat proof. If Ihinted a suspicion, everyone would set it; down to my professional prejudice; and if I could not substantiate my stwtement the doctor could make me pay dearly for such slander utfzgred againsp him: There was littlel could do in such a caae. Anxious to do everything, the very circum- stances of the aflair left me nearly power- less. She said, answering my question, that she had no physician except her husband He thoughn himself better acquainted With her case, and therefore better (1 aalified to treat her. He never left medicine with her to take; he always brought it fresh from his (Alice, and administered it promptly. Not a. breaath of suspicion against him in her answers to my questlons, and I felt sure that at present she knew nothing of what Mrs. Hurd had such serious apprehensions. Iwas glad it was so, for with her finely strung organization, it might have produc ed serious results. I made my examination of the patient as closely as I could, and drew my own conclusions. I could have sworn that Mrs. Spencer daily swallowed arsenic in small Q’lautitles, and the deadly drug was telling fearfuily on her constitu- tion. She was a woman who, when once seen, could never be forgotten. I have met in my life many beautitul women, but never one so lovely. . . . . . A.‘ ,4" She was tall and straight, with a purely oval fame, liquid brown eyes, and a. dash of hectic in her check, which is never seen in 1391 feet health. 1. . n. She rgéeirve’d me, as I know she did every» one, gracefully, and though then: was a. Elightj emgagrassxgent in her manner when Astor mysell,1 laid aside allialse asu- cacy and questioned her plainly as to her symptoms. Mrs. Hurd, her nurse, remain- ed in the room, and added msny inlportant little items of informatlon. When she spoke of her husband, it was with a. sort: of hopeless sadness which dis- trgssed the grsstly. .. . .Iv i’éfikéfibiwher illness, she answered my prqfessional inquiries Without hesitation up. 1‘- ‘here was no public ex9osure, however ; “I’ll put; th-e dustpan Where I know you always hit," “Johnny, you are a great source of annoy- ance to me." “What‘s the matter, pa 7” “You ask so many foolish questions. I waso’t a big donkey when I was of your age. “How is it possible now ‘2" asked the mo- th9r_,_ I? littlepugzled. A father was very much annoyed by the foqli_sh_ questions of his little son. HE \\'OULD GET PREPARED IF SHE \VOULD LET HIM "Little boys ahould always be prepared for the consequences of their acts,” said the mnthp!‘ afarnlv, as Johnny tearfully protest- ed against the u e to which she was going to pug uersupper. _ “I didn’t thithink abou-abont it‘” wailed J ohgny, "but I ll git prepared if you’ll let The l'nl‘uly Spirit of the Elephant (‘mnlin- “es and Ship's Inn" I'S :u-o lisod l0 Roslrnixy "or. The love of Keeper Cooley for the fierce female elephant so fitly named Empress is the on‘ly thing which may prevent her being killed. She has already crushed to death two men outright, and maimed [or life an uziknown number of her former admirers. Despite the well-known fact that Empress is 1) .th able and willing to prod, snort and stamp the life (mt of everybody except Coo- ley Without the formaiity of any provoca- tion, there is nu falling off in the great crowds that come every day to see her. “The chain of evidence against: the pris- oner is very strong, uni, it is thought, will hang him,” read Mrs. Fogg to her husband. "Gracious me I" responded the old man, “I never thought the pyor fellow would be chained to death ; and they call this a cen- tury of progress. Sheâ€"“Smoking is different from kissing, isn’t it ‘2" He took the hint. “ She will never be murdered While I am her keepsr,” Wm Cooiey’s anewuing tout tojhe ffarg of MyForrpapgh. » “What do you think of the new man ? asked thevm§naglgg editor'of a! repgrtpr. _ “Well,I day‘s Know. I shou‘ld be in» clined to say he wasn’t much of a news- papgr {naqfi’ ‘ “He told me to-day he’d just been meas- ured for an ovarcoat." Sheâ€"“What a loveiy night it is I If you feel like smoking, George, light a cigar. I dolmt qbiectflj He â€"“I‘hank you, but I will not take ad~ vantage of your generosity. The fact is, there is no aatisfataion smoking in the dark.” Sheâ€"“How strange !" Heâ€"“It I: rather odd, but it is a. fact that acigar is not a luxury unless one can see to smoke." - “Indeed, what do you base your opinion on '3” “Did the audience strike you favorably ‘2" was asked of a young orator who had come home from a political meeting in the next county. THE TREACHEROUS EMPRESS Little Johnny Flzzletop has got the idea into his head from attending Su day school that he could get anything he wants simply by praying for it. A few evenings ago, while engaged in his devotions, he prayed for a baseball, a. pony, s. new suit of Sunday clothes, a shotgun, a quarter of a dollar and various other articles which he needed. While Johnny was thus praying, his brother Tommy burst into tears and said in an ag- onized voice : "th very. It would have struck me more favorably if I hadn't had on my best suit ?" “How's that 1" “Well, you see, I cm’t wash the egg off." “Mamma, please mske Johnny stop, He is praying everything away from me." "No !” fiandishly whispered the old man to himself around the corner of the house ; “and I’ll try not to miss you while you’re going,” he added, as he cocked his gun. ANSWERED. “Will you miss me when I’m gone ?" sang Alfqgso _i‘n‘ the_p_a}'lor._ _ “I could'n 1: Help it, ma. I fall so quick that I didn’t have time to take them off,” replied J .hnny. “011, you bad boy," said his mother an- grily, "how did you come to be so careless as be teal: you]: Rant}: 2” A GOOD EXC USE. Little J ohnuy Fizzletop got a scolding {or tearing his new pants. He fell while running and 5111“; they; aithe lump: Mrs. Hurd and I agreed that it would profit no one to make the wretched affair public, anfiipo ye _kepi 0131' ow_n coqneel. Miss M elrose, in spite of my conviction that she had an active part in the conspir- acy against Mrs. Spencer's life, I could not help pitying Such amisemble, worn, and haggard face an hers I have never seen, and when they buried Dr. Spinner she was con- fined to her bed with brain fever. I aitended her in her illness, but though she recovered in health, she was never her- self again. She was a harmless maniac, whose delight was in gathering flowers and decorating the doctor’s grave with them". She is living still, and still gathers flow- ers and lays them on that grave, singing to herself a. low incantation, which no one ever pretends to underst ind. Not until Mrs. Spancer had many years been my wife, and the faithful Mrs. Hurd slept under the violets, did Alice ever know the perfidy of her former husband." A-nd wfien I told her, after the first shock was over, she crept into my arms and whis- pergq : - “ But if it had not been for J amea’ crime 1 should not have found you, Herbert. So good does sometimes come out of evil.” “No, pa, but you’ve growed a. heap since.” I'RAYINU EVERYTHING AWAY FROM HIM. OT E ACI‘LY A FAVORABLE STRIKE TOOK THE HINT UPON THE SPOT. SHORT AND CRISP. HE HAD GROWN OUT BAG EOU S. UETECIEI). 7n “ 0n the top and surface, brethren,” said a mini-xter last Sunday, “things are often clean and rig t, but it is when we look be- low and explore the depths that we appreci- ate the meanness and deceptions of our fel- low creatures ” He had been buying a. bar- rel of apples evidently. " Tiberius, at his death, left £23,624,000, which Caligula ape-.11: in less than twelve months.” Humph ! This is the first inti- mation we have had that C&1igula attempted to establish an tight-page daily paper in a one-page town. Aman must have a pretty hard reputa- tion when a. simple little paragraph in the local paper aayi. g that he has quit drink- ing leads every acquaintance in the vi lage to go around asking just when the funeral services are going to be held. A societ y paper, in describing the order in which a bridal party passed down the aisle, says 1 “ The Iride walked on the arm of her father." This may be all right, but it seems to us that a church was hardly the place for hu‘ to display her acrobatic accom- plishments. A man who had been convicted of steal ing horses and whose penalty was assessed at twenty years’ imprisonmtnt was asked the usual qu< stion by Judge Naonan, of San Antonio wh') was on the bunh. “ Prisaner do you know of any reason why sentemcz shoulzi not be pronounced on you according to law ‘2’ “Why, Judge, of counsel do. It would 1) wk mt: up in busimss.” Agentâ€"1‘ I have oz 0 lady 20 years of age who has $30,000 in her own nama” Custo- mer~â€"“ Is she good leuking ‘2’ Agentâ€" “ No ; but she has got the consumption.” Customerâ€"“ Just the kind of a. wife to make me happy. Trot her out.” ” Are you going t) perform you“ ablu- tions '3" asked the High School girl, as Amy moved toward the waahstand. “No, Mil- dred,” was the reply, “I am going to wash my hands and face.” An exchange says that at lemt one ton of gold is buried in the graveaof the deadevery year. It is stranthhwt editors will persiut in fol-gaming to have the gold taken from their pockets before they are buried. Emerson, it is said, rarely sought twice the society of a. person who made him laugh out loud. Writers on Landon humorous p5- pera were always his favorite companions. It now turns out that the flute was inven- ted by the Lydians about 1200 B. C This is too long to hold resentment, and we shall accordingly dra v the slugs from our horse- pistol. This is the glorious season of the year when you wear an overcoat one day, a thin c at the second, a porn: plaster the third and a. doctor's bl“ the fourth. A swell young clergyman, who is well up in the social vernacular, made an awful mis- take last week and christened a. boy“ Ah There," when the family intended it should be Arthur. There is more joy in the breast of thé av- erage streetcar passenger in beating the company out of his fare than in finding a dollar in the street. When you apill soupon the tablecloth, your tumbler on it when your wife is looking, and trust to Providence for thereafter. Always look upon the bright side of litel Remember that a red hair shows much plainer on 9. black coat than a dark one. Cooley says that Empress has marked two men for death and will kill them yet. Is the crow a. musicexl bird 7412119 fastmer is always reminded of the corn-st when he sees him. The ghost of a show that we hear so much about may possibly have been the _spirit of IIamlet’s father. It was only the other day that a fool- hardy citizen, of more ‘powerful physique than brains, oflemd Empress from what he considered a safe distance a big ginger-cake. Empress saw the cake, put out her trunk and like a flash twined that mobile prehen- sile integument around the man’s arm. He was saved from being (11'an under her feet only by the combined efforts of half a doz- en men. The In in nearly fainted from fright. It is nearing time for the turkey to be down in the mouth. Printers, as a rule, are not fond of pi. Whenever it is furnished by the foreman it is always cast-’ard. Keeper Cooley treats her exactly as s'hen- peeked husband would cajole and humor a wifaly shrew. He is al ways racking his in- genuity to discover some new panacea for the tropical temper of his mastadonic sweet- heart. E npress recognizes his devoclon to the extent of letting him live, perhaps for no other reav on than because if Cooley were sacrificed she would necessarily starve to death. No other emx loye of Forepsugh would dare feed her. Th; other elephants seem to regard Em- press as their queen by divine right a: d imi- tate her moods with wonderful fidelity. She, however, glvea them very little notice, but roars and trumpets and snaps fire from her wicked little eyes only when there are hu- man auditors near. Naturally her imperial temper is not im- proved by the close and galling bondage In which she is confined. Judging from the iron-bound captivity of this ex~queen of the African jungles Mr. Forepmgh fully realizes the possioility of some such blnody climax to his career as a showman. The prodigious strength of the Emprets, wrought to the highest: pitch of nervous energy by her gladiatorial greed for human life, makes sport of the ordinary chain, padlocks and posts before which even Jumbo knalt in abject submission. Iron and and steel is too bristle towit‘ustand a sudden strain from those prodigious limbs, and at praeut Empress is tied up with great ships’ huwaers, for all the world like a Iibnic par poose wrapped in swaddling clpthea of ropq, She is barely able to stand in one posi- tion and when tired she topples over on one side like a tenement house in an earthquake. Keeper Cooley loves her no tenderly that it is only Forepaugh’s strict orders that re- strain him from cutting her bands and let- ting her gambol on the sawdust. These hawsers were obtained at consider- able expense from the Navy Yard and will only bu utilized until Mr. Forepaugh’s order for the forging of a gigantic chain cable of wr'gyght iron be cpmpleted. Sheet muaicâ€"snorea. MIR Tll FUL RI PPLES‘ Set not the THEY ARE FOR SXLE BY ALL THE LEADING CARRIAGE BUILDERS AT PRICES THAT CANNOT BE SURPASSED BY ANY THAT IN ANY WAY APPROACH THEM IN QUALITY. AS THEY ARE THVE MOST STYEISH, CONVENIENT, AND MOST DURABLE TOP IN THE MARKET. There are over Twenty Thousand of these Tops now in use. and are giving belle: smlsfaction than any other. The manufac‘:urot of these Celebrated Carriage Tops, owns more pabouta for im- provements, and maksa & greater variety than any other firm in Canada or the United States. 407 to 413 KING ST. WEST, Carriage Tops Factory and Salerooni, Coleman’s Improved Plough Harness Adapted to orchard W’ork. No whifflebrees to lnjure trees. Easy on man and team, Working qualities guaranteed. Money re- funded if not satisfactory after a fair trial. Price. 310 without collars and hridlee The only machine suitable for family use. 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