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Wingham Times, 1890-11-14, Page 2atiugpmEinio FRIDAY, ltiovEMB I, 14 188t, xervo at 1Pteat btaht. * weave root. I wonder if he>; heart heatfaste'r As. I peesed her Ou the street? ' Vsfiti a tell-tale blush come o., ci tuft If once more we Chance to meet? There ie none I'd prize above her, I would love her— Her atone. Q t thee fate would let me call her, Tier with all tier` Heart ray own. Strange how just a glace will often strangely soften e;trauger eyes; Though they meet:maflash and pert we iB Etna a heart we Ever prtze. Live that kfashions ita itsideal eenong then. And tee gtauee she gave shall fill me, .. ,.: .... r ......_ .::.........:,..:.-.....:.....:.r....,..::.r-.,•-,.,».- T1terP *as saw an earth. , ►,pv.pxhataleti thy, dyke around his garden ;near his mouth, and Witt as a klurthod expioded the lye, just flue aide of .tba� In diaggis+ ; tvg ma? work, when, if had dug a drain neroea the foot a£ of king it down. , •satin' nae stone wall, and that "w as the lass itf halos laQeu sae, we naiclit list' batI Lrn she has .been B fl, elle ;atone le picture I ever say'., t' r it was it is God's. will ! lat. It was aa goad AP a day'>a work aa: Nan, orb lltlnrntttrticl. but ! lie had clone in his life -time, and It ;thing but porridge and bend a ', there 1 lost my eyesight, and' I Kaye p g zit all that, as he tbf tt;ht on hisg , coma tak' theta. Site hands not to neve nt the icture hitt of :11 mind. {lhad this advantage, that be would. Qt 1 g p to he sed way of his growing years,.. I nothing for it. Lev?bf+th set forth at ` �,ndra tltxtG she clan tukt+ nttetlling a se. thirty pounds fruit to pay, and na details of house- ,vc.el but she's deem' on her feet Aurlcit clt f yd a xe Bt t rO you dS4tnrisnt nt;haof the l p he, lengthtits earl a say , aev;.1::,:etonr:eattai galea la a:init And g - Leezbetlh, find t , ibt$truetP.d a1]' her Ilttla tr ing +vith Pat of C"111F;PC, nw'1 Bovril; g Of Ilia o treeSes hold work to whiuh she b i 1 Slit's in her bed rte days o, i and t;t,t tt iuttlo t two trees stripped of their spring , d eel Ow said, 1 has laann lassie's dein" the best site can, pith $hie. foritkaUdr.ln reethtne. aory ilttie tHntrer'.tr. bIo w , Al,te. It N'tit 1ottiCe atilt! Q urned, and IN Maggie. 1 1 e ' 9 cana eraitur O ten tnunedintoly. Depend upeu It, mothOn*t there b no lalosson4 .l,is heart ba buoy day u't; I c.tl'd lltta dutlb ^ the Clang; } but whtlt,ut*o kt'r:uont tt. 1toWeH ncsc,ttarg anri t)tur'rhus:; 'drew the e1"save u£ his cotta ltitstily, t was to be :darts 111 half do 8 Weel, I said t0 the doct,:r: She'll Yeu l,lat*' the t/t1ARrta soft taewet', anra:a rLi,""ell?gilh:01. dr riftwitk altat aoltena the 0telt 'rednrr,a tuitattnmatrtse }. ra$a hla eyes. an' v,+i' ltt►lf tl)e Ch'0uble..'l;ut g tOflt.AndOner';:sto hi°ritesystem. "", t.ac f,rner Oftherho tune, too want far rota neaebt:are. 1 to led ,T en he reached ells C for she`s been iia i slew'sSouthinq byrnp" Yer nnildren thlWh file wel'e both lha ] slid sa011 n0uild pplOasant tothOtasteiip,l to@hE, Preseripti tor'u1t altoofBi�hG df ltls y I py, to l ne d Fay$ lie' ,___ir. So I the eldestalga boat lana:te6i steZiva ad5':; rl 66 wood where he canis in 4 ,•,.' for a month h husband at b hastened to pour the But this night when he leaked up .N• 4....... _.. throu¢noul q,ry cottage door, he looked up for Lt*z' asleep. 13+sunders, y P ibottlO. t3o.durO T44,', uys aHk Yor "bias, wtssLowlt to stand in the lighted Three d�'s later Saunders was ask yell telt' a stn ower t • oo ie seorlttxri 9rlaur, +ndtakonn�therkind beth Oruisie, an, pt the carrier to ring ' wine wi' him the moru. f`e`te, no angry wi' me, are ye Saute, dere1 Angry l shouted Saunders in�a tone that made Leezbeth's heart jump p who used her ing for another job:, and tit the end doorway expecting eth sent blagtxie about ant a bottle o w ythe week Leesb , whose signal she as. porridge, that was their evenitig meal. her business. g No e the w returned p t n given for the change, but to their old way of life; Leezbeth had dge ready at five to the thorn- Thrill me, till we llxeet ai+tein. l tt.LIFB'S BA'1.TLE. STITCH ni TI a, Are ye no thinit.tn' it time to lows for the nicht, Saunders 1 Andra 'f'i'at there was no light in the cottage and uo Leezeeth in the doorway. Saunders a heart beat with sudden for forty fear' bilis had not happened years if his wife were well, and int ins trouble he inuttered_Gin 1 tine Leez- beth 1 tine •a`. When be cane in Leezbeth sat by an empty grate, there were no sages is e of . supper, and she was t tears Leezbeth are' ye weer 1. he asked in t I t antes. terror, but Leezbeth. burst ou aatd.x Sobbing as she rose she got the oruiilie• one evening at th down and lit, and; pointing tti'a try dyke. 'tl v,. deed. ay, Andra, man, the nichts o his neighbor, as he passed him e bill -head, where Saunders tltlan was busy building >L letter on the triahtelpiece, she covered' •c the porn ing, and Saunders !shored from .dawn till dark, with as. much dilneence ae ever. On the way home, tno,.be fell into his reveries, troubled : hitueelf about his debt. said poverty, end when heawoke with a shook to the know» ledge tlntt he was a. rich men; it did nothing to dispel the pilin of"tpoverty which had taken up at' abode iu hie heart. Another bad begun to work as late and early as Saunders. did.` Andra Watt, whose cottage was ,three.hun- yards down the hill ,frog • Saunders' had had much distress of ltfrte. His. r wife was threatened with a d�ctine,the doctor had ordered wine anti nourish- ing food ; but all that; Andra, could give her was porridge and milk. Hes 1 in debt, but I never kent till this wife pretended she liked nettling Let- merit hoo pleasant it was to hae twee her face with her apron. Saunders took it down with a are' ceourin' door on us noo ; hut use trembling hand We are to be ralpit winder 1 The season's weel on, an the i' the. tang length, i suppose, he. said, beeches are as omen as a neer back; sadly. Then he added, after a pause, ant' quarter o an I he the . mast bot 111 see for q ' during which Hour yet, :and so saying the speaker, piece for his spectacles, weel, we heir an old, hent Carle,` stooped down fora doily, oor best, sad we are in Cud's •atone, Andra beldon his way mutter ing : Fie's an eydeut 'traitor, Sandy, and he has huen a saf'r faa it a'his dtlys, k for In a sham time itwas , hands. 1 With•,$rembliflg band he unfolded the letter, and slowly spy -lied it out. a dot o It was from Leezheth's brother, who 0 to � thirty years before had Bothe t Saunders to do more ;, so terhug 1e 1•hirt fertile, and whom she had.tihougbt tang li�lnullc'r and trowel among the bracken !dead. Ile wag now a man stricken in • w 4iich, too, had become as llrnwnrts a pars, but had prospered in this rod's back, he t h on his moleskin world's -good, •and, on alae occasion_ of ` jricket, and with !;slide clasped behithd his only daughter's wedding, had sent his book, and his head far inad himself home to bis sister a graft of five ban. of the rest of Lin,, (as he •him e � dred pounds as a portion to her dangle, deciarced his bend eying haste yet 'ors if she had any ; and, if she bad Coit - saved by Sarletne. Beasts are easily alarmed by t1s unexpected The Italian's organ , a monkey, which saved itself nom the oil its enp. evident, n b ;,king p bund g y in into hia +;y seemed to the oreature that c -old The tears had been dropp g , porridge, for it was a sad story to hien. (pull off its own bend. A. strasaager inw tied he`;and 1°,r'ezheth lis• I stance is related by an African lame Row often ted to the saute tale, Get wine aria ter who had returned.from the Hot: toned plenty of nourishing food, .for their tentot o'untry, where lust he bad n p and theytrapping for .own children, who lay dying, pp afterneot could get nothing Dotter than Hamburg, a'ome ofHthe e as out natives,e preparing d said milk and often porn porridge , enough of that. .Angry, gudwife, he a bait in a rocky ravine. exclaimed. I wad hae cause to be We had built a stout pen of rocks e hadnae been ready to and logs and placed tt calf as a bait. angry gin help.?never trent till this meeuit The.sun was nearly down as we start. set what a bleasin' it was to be weeletoedo ed for camp and no one had m e loon mybonnet, an' let roe 'suspicion of the preeence , of drouanger ate m off to the Urulsie; and when t come until a lion, which. had been crouching hack '1'11 threw the neck of the black beside .a bush, sprang out and knocked the me down. n. . a for , "reedy t ra mak' k t y an'lion hen, e • fills... Yhis r , a ny trip an'In s ran g hp on a u traitor. Eh, it's awful to bopF or tiger friths as he 'reizea. This blow of the paw, if it, falls on the right Bildt disables the visor at nonce. I was so near this fellow that b simply reared, seized me by. the shoul- der and pulled me down, 1 was flat on the earth before I had realized what had happened. stood. d 1 was on my badk and h both pans on my waist, facing natives and growling savagely. The men ran off about three hundred feet and then halted,. which was deubtlesrr the reason why I was not ferried off at once I can say 'without conceit that I was fairly cool. The attack had 4,tue ori -suddetlly that I had not had time to get rattled. 1 had been told by tin old hear hunter, Oat if 1. ever found mybelf in such a eredicittuent as. thin I ;float appeal to eke Borne fears. Had I moved my arm to get• emy pistol the beast would have lowered his head and seized my threat So long as 1 lay quiet lie 'reasoned that 1. was dead, and gave his attbntion td the natives. • Suddenly 11*rked like a ring,' .tole lowing the hark with a growl, and the beast jutiiped twenty feet in bis sure prise. lie tonne down bet'seen Wr' and the datives, and 1 turned onoteh to see that his'tail was clown, 1 uttered mere barge and growl$, hut without moving a hand, and the lion; after makistg. a (Arnie emend me, suddenly bolted and went -off with a scare thitt would last him a week. if yeri bad picked up a -stink and t snake ouv,o . ittoea sus b y .'real discove. do just ail the hen did. Ile supposed he had palled down a mat.' The man turned into a dor.. Ile botild not understated it and it frightethe him. baste ye, and tris heels nae burry,) 'he trudged along iu drep thought. Saun dere was, when in presfnc,t of others, taciturn and ahsentluinded ; but as + ter, but she could not tate them; and or three bawbees.. Andra knew he was losing her be-• That was the happiest night the two cause he could not get wliat:> ere ever spent, and, when Andra tried to necessaries of life to bele rhe nous, she was to turn the gift to such account as she thought best. The old man sat down in his arm two thank Saunders, that worthy said -- Non, Andre, band your tongue; an• rib haver. 1:'m sairer behauden to you than ever you can be to me; so we'll say nae mair about it. The two were really 'comfortable at last ; . they found they had riches when a door opened to tpake use ofthein. Nellie so011 emir, stone ag,ktin, and years after Peter showed he had nous under his boniret. $o Saw the Guns at Gettysburg. (t'orttdhd Telegram. Daring the national encampment in Boston an old cotarade with silvery hair was led into .the cyclorama of Gettysburg by •a K brigheeyed little miss. The old man sat down, while the child clescrihed to him the features of the picture. Occasionally he risked her ti `question and slowly shook his head as it an doubt of the accur- acy of her account. She had deserib- ed, in her way, thee onrush of Pickett's men and the band•'to-hand conflict tit the ston)wall, where the brains veter- ans meet the charge of the southerners, when he asked But where's this artillery. Nay 1 Oh, you mean the big' guns 1 They are over there on the bill; in a row All in a row ? lie asked. „Yes, she replied. Ile shook bis head. Look around, id ThereMust be some that said he, Etre not in line. Yes, she said; there are some more down here, but they are all upset ; 1 guess they re heisted, is that where the leen are coming over tile wall1 Yes, grandpa. is there agrove of trees ?- Yes, it beetles to 1'e full of teen, but tltttstooks itt.sa thick you ditn't Else thein. Olt,1 see them, be died. It was then noticed by se?vetol cern lades who were standing near Hull that he was blind. - The little girl replied, ole, no, grandpa, you can't tree were a silent company as they trudged hopie ward —the one troubled with his poverty, the Other shrinking'frow the' sorrow and desolation that were al• ready casting their 'shadow over his hotne. Ay, Saunders observed, itwaking o'nt of a Ioug silence with a sigh, -ay, .Andra, an' ye We senilis' wee Pete to herd Bill Nicol's con. lie's no an auld man of begin his bread-winnin'. No, said Andra; but what's a body to do t Whar there are 80 mony moo's it's ati uneo job to fill them. Ay,deed ay, Ahdra ; I ken that. An' the gudewife's far frae stout. But he's a smart taed, Pete ; an' gin he got his share o' Lear there's nay sayin' What he .mictit be. There's nous sheath hie bonnet. Ay. but ye see— And Andra ended with a sigh. Man, Andra. 1 ken a' abnot it; Seuntters said, vethemently,and Mesh- ed to the roots of his hair. Ye dinna need to mind rne; 1 hae kent poverty a' my Maya an' mon a nicht bae I come Name w1 a hairt like to break an' the anxiety 0' poverty hire so hurri- ed into me that even yet, i' the hame icomin', 1 think l'm the putt man 1: t/as,An' hae the sold #Neta at the anld sorrow to warstle wit as hest real. Non, Andra,dinna ye say a wird, brit yell: let me gie ye 'a help. Send Pete to echnle the morn, au' T.'11 see til the ways alkyl means. Noe, Andra, no to wird Gude-nioltt, Etude -nicht 1 he electaitned, and berried up the path to his Cottage door, while Andra plohged into the young stance weed through whit% his path Illy. IfSaiuntlers was a happy linen that night, Andra nine a sorrowful o»et• Leezttetli *niched her husband at his porridge with .a compla.cetat snide. She wished to Yet} his something, but: did net know exactly how to login. 1 deo; Andra Watt'll no wtnt•hia d tl t I chair and covered this face with• his his a;ttp'oYnfent left him for the most bands. Tie was dazed and beWtlde.ted. hart solitary, he was meet' eriven to himself, In his absence of mind be thous;tit continually of one subject, awl when ne chose to converse with himself it was on tit It tI"u,e. This 'eight's homeward walk was no excep• riot. to the rule, for lie wag once more #,Mind in de'•p and painful reflection, Ye are joist -cit'your way halve, 'ehienders, a paeeeng,'r' said,, meeting lite in. the darkness. • Ay, ay, he said, startled ; its a fine richt. fie lead only beard it, vnioe, Volt was too absorbed with his own "thou'ghts to catch the sense of what was said, so he answered at . random. And what had Saunders Allan to think about.1 Only too Muth. Be had . been so almost lad and was in debt, • till his life, Elis days had been a long .tetrdl;;zle s' �:ll distress and poverty, rn,nd each year proved to all but hiur- ktelf teat he was fighting, ra timing 'kettle. Ito and his goo. wife, Leel herb, were threatened with that ill r.,ntatelhed pair—old tete and want. And wile was to blame I 1'Ot the „eee•d conpie tine tsel�'es, but the battle en,' •lt they hint to fight Ile was it w : c+ful and steady workman, and Stitt t , ten parisbee coui(1 you have met a l• •ire managing or thrifty housewife -I in heezheth. They had bad a .t•,►erotte fancily, end so 11%X11 distress 1 It for more than twertty yoare the t;ror lead been a weekly visite? et ,t e'lr home. Only three Months hey fore the.conversatinn already narrated erauders 'followed tee the grave lila lust iretneinitig child, his favorite daughter, who bad just teaehed • •sartrnan''g eatate. 'Thus it lhappett&& "thtat'Sstinder$ and 7,ee:.beth,butli eve'£' !threescore rises rind 'teff►,, 'sere deeply elebt i 0l*11+dl r#, Lorl�n.tietaasw he cella Orbit itt i ` Then they were not to be roupit oot : they were comfortable; kieh. He struggled with his perplet ;ties, and at length .teat sorrow rose in. his heart Ile h•ad not kuowkl the agony of being childl'es$ with ell ire force till now. His bitter poverty had itt a meatture reconciled hint to his children's death, which' i»oked •.lits a kindly release from is terrible btkrden. Bat now that Leezbeth eked he avere rich, the riches had come too late for all whom they Would have rejoiced to see raade happy by them had been taken away. That night Saunders did not touch his per. ridge, and for many a day the two were as pitch troubled as though a fresh calamity bad befallen theta. Six weeks after the arrival of their her own t h speaking . mt Pet fortune, L.. r f f •.I mind and Saunders' to fir his thoughts had been running in the same' direction, said to hint Deed, Saunders, 1 see alae USA its oor trauehlin' oorsel's as we do, Suint tip early, and working late, when our debts are tiaid. are we hae stller. 1 think we ntielit take the remainder 0' oor trays calnily, .an' nittke life a fecht to the very end. Whitt 1 hae hetet thittliin' trlyeel', Leal -Seth. My "jet' nt the hillAlinad's Anne; and I'll no look not for enitlter; au' yell get a servant leash.) to do .your work i' hoose; ills' be you Mistress as '?e oeht to be. e It was sr d:tpittil arrangement, and both felt It t'dtltd be carried tot to per. lection. o Satinclers paateked shout. the doors, and Leephetl, carefully ins htrtieieti her new rl m eta in the *aye of the bonse. O! ceutal Elt1'j' WON %'erj, litipi`�-'- ai pear err, c tilts Arid def. ,l�fttar th went +in herd t though hi. Bard "nterld bra ietie workkik That fvttN the last +•itlu 1 wvelr j, ll tiAii�ic th"iy t **Witt tilio4Pt;p,6Eaal.I.'titt eX l Ise g wit tete Itlit;t,'I ici:"li a The story is told of a &,mous BoaE° lawyer that one day, -after intvj slight discussion with the d ncig' aeilberately� turned hie batik upon t}1 personage, and started to walk off: Are you tr`ying,eir, to show l'otrt slept:" for the courtl asked the jtidgte,sterntr. No, sir, wall the reply; 1, am trying to t conceal it, *P�..A' ERANCE COLUIV. F eotiuvcr5P ur rtra V: w. O. r u Clippings,. le is statod thin; Sir. W. S, C itat$tidit to devute farce months winter to the promotion of the tel anew niovahueut iu LILA. In Great Main there are nevi 001) Bawls of !lupe and sltni.ar eta) temperance societies, with s ewe lellituu members. 'rite Soo Utilise alone has 600 societies 130,000 members. Tire London Weekly Times and says that live buudred ebiluren, t tett years of age, were taken eu.;tody Itt.st year in Loudon, as find ineapttule. Frt.m Senator Blair's book 'Temperance Move went ; a.cf:ura lie who puttetlt the cup ofitltoxlS to his neighbor's lip; tido It bc,r tieoessary for those en >iged it foul work to examine their oeeui' for their own good. , . The j.sct is broad and high and deet isupon the Arnerican people true polo the attention of the whole It caauot t,e evaded. Poston, even is no longer possible, and were, would but aggravate ei evils end multiply the diflieu. their reinuval.. The operation te. 'Pifer wed, The ra,ages of drink are mors ly and devastating than war, louse and famine. If you see a brother fall Lend a hand. There will some time come to Error's fall or sorrow's moan Live not for yourself alone, Lend a hand. Triple Pledge. Three tithes sod out. This old saying and very apropos a t Alcohol, tobaceo, profanity. , companions— 0 ll$ —dismi n Oal i ' ee n ally Io all at once, and be "out" forev The ipevll's blt,,astonary 7Eatori' All the i'essels bound for W South Africa, coming from end America., stop at Madel nate week the enormous anlo. -l.liquors, detailed iu the follow passed through ` 1060,000 cases of gin ..... . AP ..4,000 butts of rum.., ....... .000 oases of brandy ,000 " Irish. whiskey of- 000 demijohns �00 146,000 barrels of rum u00,000 cases of Old Tom :. . 15,000barrels of albsitrthe ......,, 40,000 eases of vermouth The tropics are being set al Joseph Gook. Only the new' flan exist in the'regions where) falls. The white man fa,� ;Vbere the snow falls there is ';Ile white faun rules where tl� '.flake fall ; tuereforA, if the 11 taloohnl burns out the hope. fixture of the (linter races, t af•the Vast regions of the gen of oar planet -will peci6i1 in tl i to e. gum and the clergyel t;ho strongest lei By "f r ,� 14e tut; a the season is the tI el the"iirwpe•r of the New Yori that four fifths of the 5,1)01 ti nt reach tliei 'ity de'ad•.iloul bear are scot the=re by drtu The jelly feltesys who make 1 .,anti -liquor agita.tiot,, as they bars find drink good wir curse na other kutd is so <only the br'ginuings of what filo; bat the rough -pine box with what puce was Molo11 latight eyed hennanity, are directly the work of drink as fan ia. Tltere•tuay fav oitieein Where suet eau drink spirits injury to body and brain, -1 "'fork is not one of them. 1 here everybody, from the the thy 1, borer, Is being Cali repelled to begin more wet'' eau finish, whatever inereasell ,mental excitement is a� eke, The morgue's (seen ett egret this winter, she :said a lest, 3iartst>tilatnklli. was dont spin' Nellie alien the anOtar i delillbtful perfumed preparation f them. Chapped Hands, (hacked Lips arid lie's was there, an' It Writs tin tiuld story, 13atlntlers t L' eezbetly tread tint got 0n Yes,1 eon, cried the bid soldier. 1 nees of the shrift, iuly '4,1 otiot1 ie6 i on see the Mello alta ttroVu, and the druteeste. any further-•-tt was au old and bitter broken the M tl lying raeultt. ll:cattlt llle heel plat on stnrr to them -Port rritle and. p1Pn`ty . wltble mental i* in ';'fie child leaked xt,leiin int innortoat Wade, e thin he erxrkri or t9te t c1 e f ttaeh l food, dial ken ebttp alt' nurprlso sttd acid : Yoe are jokingt beef fetch sin snarl, i all the riieehaniliiacm that etan4i Elapnders *eat at lila itnrtitlXb WI grtwidprt, s Will bei'r'd rthd diaturtiipd N tl ioc�tlitt oltj iitgtk:jg