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HomeMy WebLinkAboutWingham Times, 1891-04-17, Page 2stn, miu whir, andwills, y room, ua Pitt the eat, by hands be clean; e ktouse ti, e look' nd: former. your face, t booming, es,t; up steam, humulin;; bit,ke and stew; sit;. ?; uti pulse is gumming, osrt Neild .to to r s eousitil;. assts arrive, it wilt pleasure double uou ve put yourself t.,t oubte. h ofeab` you done you ar potogize ,Dasa and table. italit,y,-- uhaels be humomitig. otort. battishe¢, when li * eitatolelgiralal pos tier's of my by may lunnefaetor hem And than end t n toed to if evvte related all the eveuts of the last fifteen * the par ante I lxi view. l.' yews. teed. d dally in ali th; f►r^otulueid Tbe doctor opting to his feet and oi'iiitle, toot offering the cuetoruary grasped his old friend's hand. rwaittl, but described my uleforcunate Well and generously (lapel said be, eatifota', my honor last, auil usy fore but Mr, Thorne not well, l apt d hints i faintly, tune hlatAtH4l. I am Fur two weeks I kept my loss lie, T suffer greatly, let Ono go to lay fore the public, and had almost Le• room, gen to despair of any favnratle'result The nest day be sent ler me to his when, one morning, a stranger came private office. I found trios lookiug to me—a tall, dark. stern looking tt ttu, pale eta hs►ggerd. who regarded me with a pair of kiride Sit down, my dear Arthnr, said he, ly brown Cayes that bad something in low vet ee and listen to use. For a familiar about•thetn. long time I have had a cenfeestun to The stranger declined the seat I make to you, one that weighs on me offered bila, and began at once speak,. so heavily that rI must ease ixiy con" ing brusquely and to the point. I science of its :load. I eau better bear have beard of your loss, he said. I to do so now, that.I have,in a measure, leave read :your advertisement in the made some amends, for the trouble that p apers, ttnct.I fr el deeply interested: in. I once caused you; sed mei cried I, and for you. I have just left your The trouble „Doltai i late employers, rand after the saties You have been the meet generous f f a 4 motory mariner in which .all my .nos- isiPn'to•me, lt is through yo it , it tions where, answered, I because your nese t occupy my' present position; suretyfor the $20,.004, . is to you I owe my happiness, and 'Wheel ,more than all, my honor. I sprang toward hini'in the wildest! II1r.Thorneopened his desk and took excitement, from it a pocketbook. n Oh sir. I began, .bot he soon stop- Do yon r'cfnneinber this ' this 1 meld he as• ped me. he placed it in my hand. Let me finish he said, ,I've done 'Yes, replied I, It is the one I lost ; this because I am convinced that you but how— , are an upright, honeat.m€n, and the I could not finish the question. Tho greatest proof of city confidence 1 can truth stared me in the faun I sprang give you is that 1 am about to offer to my feet in dismay. you the position •ot cashier in my Great heavens! 1tT cried, you found banking -hoose. My name,sir, is the money. tit ,• NaE oOKR OMA uty-tine when T first e, the daughter and o Thorne, the great. ly in, love with the towing well that such adness, aa reported to be a very us mao,who.would look it law. I felt that lie. twit as give a hearing and ea to witeuinr her George Thorne. Aye.! and kept it, be .sroa`nad, with Gerege Thorne, the father of Alice, ,anguish'in his voice. l3ut, ohl do not the girl I loved ! Ah, the mystery was oondenrii without hearing me. Tester- salved 1 It was of her his eyes had day you*Beard Dr. Panard allude to reriuded•nte; it was to her I was in- the great losses. I had sustained by the debted for this help. failure in Philadelphia. I did not dare :I: :` to make my embarrassment known, as Fifteen years had flown since I had that would have .hastened my ruin— lost the pocketbook. t had now be- my ruin:! God knows it was not for conte a prosperous man, surrounded Myself that I cared, but for ,Alice, my by all the luxuries which. wealth af. fords, I had found in Mr Thorne. more than it patron; 1 fforiutl 'a friend. Under a brusque manner he had a 'heart of gold. From the first day of our Acquu►utanee he had evinced to- ,_ ascot, whet would that.. ward ins the liveliest interest and at- e m',erg 1 I had ,i otli- feotion: r conl.penwJ was soon made partner, and when, sacrifice of a, marriage, on a certain blessed day, I became ver the husband.of Alice said his . `eon -in rr� cod -byte without ft word. law, he presented me with a reeeipt tioti, though I knew she- guiah in my heart, and the in the soft eyes averted kissed that trembling band. lif rsiirie, tnnl turned away krewell to her and her.hbpei. MAO 'Mit St.,r the hliAPPr iltiafaert by dkbt rwt To klw•wrlta go the d aAloutt its glaarnit g reach, Between th' ethereal poles., When 'Arnocafe them, each Must treats the -Bride of kleule. Over the Milky Way. Haug Greoi t, peetu olel. Onee, driveu far astray, The Hon's red chariot rotten I And eaoh Oiynl1,liau god That *tame wild path above Whit winged sandals trod Up to the throne of Jove. Over the Milky Way, The Northman tell with pride,- Am ray meets answering ray l;ulltlirn id met his , bride. Lonely, in heaven' afar, Elis love's resistless might Built out, with atm. ou star, That viaduct of light, Over the Milky Way Our later fancy rune With fioieuce'self at play Maze Among its of sues, 'Where reason eau diviue, As segos wisely geese. Those thicker orbs outline The eoemic wilderness, iiemoten ems 'infinite, W sere sight its course may urge, 'NV here thought tray fearless flit,. And touch ereation s verge! But swifter faith o'erleaps Tile farness of the spheres To where God's spleudor sweeps Titre' all th' eternal years. His hive yon pathway thigh 33ullt to life's summit land, And bade this emble o sky Tell tis, wlio lonpiug s)and, As stars in countless'+ uw (lee stream ()Wight Oolong There joys so frequent come They make cup ell.dwy song. Ah, not in t'ttiti for hope, .A.ud not in ',Vain for me, That lane ixV heaven's blue Dope Trails its White uebult 1 see the saute eyes glow That looked where Jacob lay, And the same glad wings go Over the Milky Way. The violent l3i A 644 A ars once en Itvrup" t wide 1 inunadla rlilook , regulltteI ea the •` Cir and. eortenethe Uvula, reduces 1 etr,e earl energy to the whale l locw'e HoothI lbt•, Syrup" for pleasant to this Sarre and in the the oldest and beet townie phy the trotted States, end Is for e throughout iiia world. Prtre l.ottso. iia sore and Mk for Soe'reow livg?n And takn no IA 'runniest B now; 1r'itanotecing 174 Georgia. Forst or five of us were waiting on a hotel veranda in a Georgia town for the 'bus to drive up and take , us to the depot, when a colored miensame along, dragging after hint about the meanest -looking dog you ever saw, What are yongoutg to do with him 9 utuza4a`s Gore The following is a list governors of Qiineda for area years and the data pointment, Sir John Guiles $intooe, 1 Sir Robert Shore Milea, 1801. Sir Peter Hunter, 1802. Sir,John Craig, 1807. Jaord iBt rants Gore, 1807. Sir•GeOrge Provost, 1.812. Sir Gear; e Drunirrtond, 1813. Lord i'ranoie Gore, (second tine .. 1815. Duke of Richmond, 18113. 'Sic Peregrine Deneitlend, 1822, 'Sir John Colborne, 1829. 'lir Frencis. Bond head 18136. Sir George Arthur, 1888. Lord Durban', 1888, Cliar'es Poulett Thompson, Lora Sydenham, 1859. Sir Charles Begot, 1841. Sir 'Charles Metcalf, 1848. Earl Cathcart ^15' Lord El Sir Edieun siker Head, .1855. Viscount frionck,,186 L. Sir John Young, )..808. Lord Dutl'erin,187 1, Marquis of Lorne, 1580. Lord Lansdos ue, .,188 I. Lard Stanley, I8810. darling child. It was on ttho .114th of asked one ofdie group. ' December that yon lost yeur money. Kill hirn, sali:1 It was on that day that I meditated t Brit why ? suicide. I was short $20,000 to meet No good, sail., my llabilitiest:. and maturing on the 15. Then sell hini. I was overwhelmed with. despair ; the Can't do it. air of the• office seemed to stifle me, ' Then give hen away. and 1 rushed iAto the street. 1 had Nobody would .dun take him. hardly gone ten yards when my foot 1'11 take hint. 1Bring Thiut rijht up struck something. It was your pocket'. tare. book. 1 opened it, and the sight You is foolin'1•sah._ turned ane. giddy, and "faint. Then No, 1: ain't. /Here, Live him to ane, for the $20.000 that lie .had paid to .commenced within my breast one; of those moral strlig les, which, even to .conquer, is fearful, but in which, alas! ii was miserably vanquished. The ,next day 1 satist}ed all claims upon 'me. To the stiorld I wan George Thorne, an honest, upright than ; to thyself, 1 was iiiothing better than a malefactor. eau know the rest. Through my guiltyou pasted tiro weeks of indescribable.aiiguish. 1'ltaire since endeavored tcemake•reparatioinfor this , misery I caused ; but 1 also suffered. )1r. Thorne's sacci intimate friends, Arrived in New York, and one morn., Moral atonements are the most cruel, ing while sitting at breakfast expressed because they are eternal. I have ;rent surprise &a the numerous advert. 'known and yet feel the bitterness of moats in the papers relating to money lost and found. Well, said he, T have not the slight. est sympathy for those who lose money. they: are generally careless, stiiptd people, not fit to be trusted; although I retuembeti having heard of a young Man who lost a pocketbook some years ago eontaininng .$120,000, and 1 dnelaVe when t read his piteous appeals which ,were in all the papers, my heart fairly a.shed for lona. But, continued he, addressing my lather -in-law, whc had beeonne very pale, you ought to re- trrc other the circuinStanees, for it occurred jset tit the time of the.l;reat failure in Phil"titie':phis, by which you were so heavy a loser. Yes, I remember tho affair, t•eplie'd Mr. Thorne, who appeared to be slits feting. I never heard,corntinttec'1 the elo+c.or, what becitme of tete poor de rll; and yet 1 should like to know. Should you? said I, laughing then let irate gratify your curiosity. t1 Artb1tt' Withace, ant the poor devil, oieetseee ;1Yt;ye•tl emit iota mil tii•t; lwt 'i lidsi Cita lll4t. Ira lltt iciigt, it had I get back to town,' t %ving earnestly to drown'. in the bustle aud interest. -when a terrible inisfor, in ;. Mr Overton had 400;0b0, desirin' and stet it cash,. the coitimiasion my -horror ou ieketbook con- one. us or lost bat matter- I utterly` ext few hours them, after fad to iris deltperate ve position, be irretriev 'fo'r there are surepicionr: le e f,a„ta1 bo A titian tn5ortally o ptrysioaily the wound of s �.l the Messrs.°vertan for-nty.loss. leo time went on. The banking - house known as the firm of Thorne Wallace was then in a thriving condi- tion. I had a beautiful wife and two. lovely children, and yet, with all these. sources of happiness, I was not •quite contented.; there was a crease in the rose leaf. About this time Dr: Ponard, one,'of g and of a hopeful tt to realize that I dealt With. On prene,l after ttiy atiel the nttelr 1m - p Itethook being 4 �as't podlt'St of my Vet t.14-a?,raol°Stunts Unit 1 e dept 1;t, oral' t tteerp m hater r Re' to "ail ilitsdr'n t tri r t, filled y e and here's a quarter for yott. He tied the dog to a chair and ran over to a hardware store and bought a collar. • Then he went to a dry goods store and got half a yard of blue rib- bon; and in ten minutest the dreg was blanketed tip iind lowed until he .did look fancy. He wait taken to tho depot in a 'bus; and we itad scarcely arrived when a whiter man,[ who -sat on a box whittling came forward iiud said : What ye got thar, stranger? Chinese fox hound, replied out friend. Shoo 1 Never sa* one before. This is the only one in • this coun- try. Cost a heap l • Given to me ley ; the Chinese con-. sut at Washington, but 1 witted he had.hini back, He is so evitti after gatne that he bothers the life out of women as Promoters. fl 'elm remember well that it seet:ned; even after women had conquered their place nt %medicine, that the twin pro; tensions of law and[ divinity would still remain closed to thertl. Yet the p'reacher's desk had Been ocoasianallr ti`.ocupied by theta from the fou ndatioutl of the colonies, Anne Hutchinson almost revolutiouizell the New En ,e land churches; Mary Fisher and Anne Austin taugb6 publicly the doe - trines of Friends, Barbara !Teck wee galled the real founder of Amerina►.t ?letlrodie t. Methodism, as the Bnglisl1 seat had been largelyet established by Susanna Wesley attc1 the Countess of Huntingdon. Obeylin College sent out, sotnelorty yeelrs ago, its first. woman graduate in4tbeology, but hart Only just printed her name as such for` the first time in its triennia4oatalogue ;. Rigid her ordination.,tn 1858 was the first bestowed on any American of bNr sex. There seem he yet to be no trti tworthy statiitt tcs as to the. eliale ., nuitiher of women 'Ministers in this country. The Sortidty of .Friends has aboht 850, the Universalist Register fst 1889 contains the names of 35, the Congregational Year Book 5, and the Unitarian Ti►eologtoal School at Mead- ville has had 1(1 ,swwornen as pupils. The biseiples of Christ have 43 wo•- men preachers, The Free will Bap- tiste, the ?rimitivii Methodists, and the;?totestaut Methodists have also ordained vYemen on a small scala, nuts the institution of deaconessns,i is being my e, c revived among tiro latter denomina- Father, I et'ied, '.Alice's father and Well—urn.. x never set any value limns. To illustrate bow the clerical D 1' oil hien Ile's a present, end sup-ifueetions of a 0/0121.01 luny ber regarded captation, Say, any soil, can yen for- give my cr'itiial Goold I forgive ? l looked at the pallid face, anguished. eyes. What were my suile�ings of those two terrible weit'ks compared. to the secret pain and shame" this man had borne for year's? this man, the irictini of one solitary deviation from,reetitnde, so upright in all else", and whose life since had been rine long aton+ennent. 1 ;rasped Ids band ; tears me. is he all right for this eliittoto 1 ;Oh, yes. Good natured ? A perfect baby. How tuuch'II buy hint 3 , mine, alt is forgiven, forgotten, o tri her Diva fansily,`tlie Rev Ada (J not owe all, this happiness of my islet to that state pocketbook ? Owing' to the unprecedented cietrrrtlift fee plete,glastl it has advanced censiclera1vly in priee. Messrs McCausland & 8on,Ttrrunto, fortunatbi' made a r. contract before the advance for a very considerable tluautity, and are thus onabted`,to offer their patriots thin season a deoldeel' advantage hi price, the quality beiut#ituperiot' to any llvse pre. viously imported. , ,.�.....-:1111. When tt timate nhro►ve earA i tole ittrur ti>✓ohlid lrfie poeketbouk its dries Ins ha jniht► tbebhncalr it is et :.etty pose•I Might to keep Trim, but as he is a fox dog and this is a fox country, some gond matt arount here ought to have hint. Wiil you take $201 litnt Make it '$25, Can't dont. Juat got two t.'. •- for the dog as be staudis dwell, 1 aupl.sep• so.t°ll Vie and it will 1.1. hettl i. fe. Ae'y. WO TOMO' to : t . Y;r. . ,. ptllawiets• :. . ee f.• dub x,rt..•. d r Bowles gives the following dialogtte, perhaps from. her att4u nursery. This , iittle danglitex' 1I ivina' unnouoced her intention sof teil.tug mamma tui eelr vbenevttr :yi..s should be old .,'i. t: •,• Vis}1 ti ,et ; brother etontl ' • e tint; i,:i '+:rt d t+ci pie setae. tie; :sees, looking tits hitrt e 1 '�.ii ,. Ptitigr yet ,• -,'- n1e • Yea 1 this Marls 10.11 bout.13 pa. Br.tiatl: i; aial A di °rnkard la modesty, the, spoil of west reason, fie tetvetn and tl the beggttr's,e tronble II t llitclr�'u'>i sot leis Own Aim tea "i Ge annoy of Mt a dietra brewer's le house he nion,tlie co his wife's his rleigltlic C1i't�pru�s. Theligt 3•r tis is no friel W4rttrrat* stl far ai..R►rrpl,i t';ome:rued, It giver. 'ammo fs;wer nen than any ogler be proportion to its capital, Fol the annual output of ,s hrewt mated at S'.,000,0U0 crop 660 hien, while au iron ore 1 tite cultic ospitel ,require laborers, The great cause of social ' drink. Tho great cause of p drink. When I hear of hroken up and ask the Daus If I go to the gallows and as tin the cause, the apswe Then I ask myself in pp'rfeet meat wby do not menpout a this thing? Oar legislators,+ together and pass every ures sary to the welirare of • }t,e peg yet pass laws sand% liquor through saloons• ---e -t2 Ireland,] According to a cable dispel papers of last week, the Engi of Lortls.bas almost as large Lion of bink shop ownors as New York Legislature. The Book, so the dispatch reads,) the fact 152 Peers of the real d.wnera of places lu,whioh it drink is sold. The number shops owned by these peers The list is headed by the Ear -vino the B1ue•b.00k- shows, is of 72 driiuking places. N; the Duke of Bedford, with credit, 'Then comes tinl Devonshire with 48, follow Earl of Oawlou with 89, th. Rutland with 37it the :Carl with 35, the Duke of North with 81 and the Duke of Po 32. Jocluded in this list is" Richard Lewis,D D, bishop who, the Blue -book shows, c r of two such places. • "Ln Grippe" or Influenzaet cured by the use of Wilson's S Wild Cherry, the old reliable Bronchitis, Whooping Cough. I loughs and other diseases of nVstetii- Wilson's Wild Chet firma for many years and is b re nded by all who know its v: allprominebt druggists. Coaneotiols Comp14 FIRST Tdt:r' OF A.LOCOMOTIV Trim aT C'l.gItt TvNI 'SONIA, Ont, April 9.--. cotnotive to pass through Trunk Railway tunnel :un Glair River hero.did 8o ell making the run from the #l►e United States side ani turning, having a flat oar' it, The run bark from States sido was tit the rate utiles an hour, The tract class shape, and everytb smoothly and satisfactoril locomotive were Mr now &neer ; Mr i il'nair, isuperintentlent ; 1Ir 13lail alit mechanical seper:lltl Pzrcy, assistant to the g tiger, and a represents press. There wee a hfrg, lt*ttd to mei the fitateigt the trip through the aunt ties bleveifroin all quart United Statee, side the c at enormous crowd and j *Mettles woIoo0104 th sal lta wit be 11, u , •. •, ......,s a 1