HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1894-12-28, Page 2sinCISSItat.
1 might have Rriti o, wotd of cheer
Before X LI him go.
Eta weary visage haunts ruetgyet;
But bow evuut 1 foreknow
Mee slightest chance would be the last
To me in nier9y given
71( 4,1%nalmt, Yearings cannot send
That Wcarl front earth to heaven.
-,t; 1 IN IIA TTMES, DECEMBER 2R 1894.
vented him being stolen by covetous-
refleeted b each face in our own ' empty haymow, wiwnee instantly
thieves.
'At last Donald got strong enough
family!' came a great rustling and a series of
-es"liad ane of your brothers or inarticulate ales—from the now Ws- to sail for San Francisco, where be
SfiStersdied, then, Fred ?" asked One covered. Agnes—which St/Untied to us
arrived. after a five weekslaiyage
of the meinlike those of fear and pain. and in robust health„ Here he wrote
"No—that is, we hoped not. 'Ale " 'A bear! A. bar! screamed a long haute letter, and, accompanied
trouble was that 18 months before, the elder Miss AN'arwick. aa bear is
la' Prinee, went off at once to San
tnifibt hove looked the love 1 felt; in. July, 1849, my eldest brother, killing the ehild !' These brutes are Juan diggings He had good luck
?iv brother had sore need Donald; longing for adventure and quite plentiful in our neighborhood. from the very' first and. in eight
tLat for which—too eby and paoua— excited by wonclorful reports from "Pshaw a exclaimed mt." brother months cleared above all expenses
Be larked the speech to plead,,
t self is *mar. arid self is strong newly discovered goldtelds, bad left Hugh, 'bears don't come out in win -
nearly $11,000. Then, being no
Alai I WAS blind that day; home, bound for Califoreiteand not a ter.' longer able to bear up under that
*
. ,
Ought withm
in y careless eyes word from or °aim had yet reached " 'No, nor they don'
t bave long
awful homesickness which all of us
4 Wkatt, athirst, away. are beginning to know so well, he
pulled up stakes and. started for
home.
"Ile tel us that ).ften, while on
the diggings and. in the city, too, he
had been offered 50 ounces of gold
for Prince, but that .50 times 50
could not have bought hiin, very
fortunately for Donald himself, for
on his joarney from the mines to San
Francisco be was waylaid one night
by two Mexican tramps and saved
from robbery and death only through
the dog's watchfulness and courage.
which was the only ..peek of white on "It seems the vaoabouds had con
s But now another whole year had the glossy coat of our long lost cealed themselves in a clump of
Ale ;hoed; whose eyeto.day may look . gone by, and even tar bravely hope- friend.
. . chaparral by the road sitie and were
• asea: ieto loving eye. . fell father had begun to feelalarmed, "It really seemed as if the wise in the act of stealing oat upon their
V tete tone and tot*, perchance =my
thrill . ; for it was not like true hearted old fellow had stealthily watched our intended victim. when petrp eyed
Sad hearts with sweet tiurprise, :Donald to negleo his own people, play until he found what the trouble Prince, sprang forward And bore one
• Be iUr-rarit, like your L,rd, in love,
Auri lavish as His mice, I and yet, if still alive, how was his was, and then, with deliberate put of them to the ground before he
acid: htand aew sm.!, vs • , I
• i long silence to be: mounted for ? We pose to suprise us, had dashed past could use his murdero knife, then
Per night comes lin ttliace. . feared that, like s many hundreds without greeting, and guided by his held him by the throat lit]. Donald
—TUE qGnECiATIONALIST. lof other gold sae rs, he might have -unerring nose had speedily torn the had bound him, while ]is villainous
I perished in fever tricken Panama, hay off the form of his well remem- comrade, seeing the game was up,
itt THE COiDF1 MS i as he would, we tl ught, have eer- bered playfellow, for pretty Agnes disappeared in the bush.
; tainly written if he had safely reach- Warwick used to spend fully as much
"Without further serious adven-
We were all sad tbat New Year's ed San Francisco.); time at our home as at her ONVD. . tore my brother returned home by
eve in the eaustralioaagoldfields in the ' "The grizzled old soldier, Colonel 'Now, having so well succeeded in way of Callao, thence to Panama,
year 1853. The qv before we num- : Warwick, tried Mild to cheer us by creating a sensation, Prince threw then across the istimuts again, and
bered 20 Amertetenand. Englishnien, : his own reminiseetes of mysterious off all disguise, t.n.4 after hilarious- so by an Atlantic steamship to New
who had come in Search of wealth, lost and happily refound eonneado in ly jumping upon each of us in turn Yolk, where he sold his gold, all ex
am]. now three of Our number had India and elsewheae and by truth- gamboled,barked and frisked around cept a few specimen! nuggets, for
just been laid -moat forever on the hilly reminding is of the many in an ecstasy of delight, while we all $17.10 per ounce, thia being then
hilleide, buried in one deep grave, vicissitudes to which letters from started in a wild nee to the house. the highest price for pilifornia gold.
their lives -erased out by a fall of California. were thea exposed. 'Why,' . "Evidently some one — Perhaps "While he was tai* his story the
tarth. . , ; he said, 'the boy haaprobably written with news of' Donald—had arrived, noble old dog listened intently, and,
That night, while the 17 of us who a half' dozen times i but either in . for a strange sleigh stood. before the s
I do believe, understood every word,
„were left sat around the campfire, crossing the istbint$ passing round open door, and as we neared the as at the most striking passages he
young Ross mid: , Cape Horn or coming by way of that I house we could hear my fatber's thumped the floor with his great tail
• "..
Bs" wetwere all friends and. wonderful overlandtpony express the : voice ringing out in tones which did in token of approval."
never yet bad used among :ourselves letters may every ote have been lost. ! not sound like those grief. "You had a jolly time, then, after
• the ordinate; digger appellation of I've known far stra4er things than I There's word from Donald ! Come all, eh, Fred ?" said one of our
ittate), "this Is a sad ending of our that, in the way of missing mail : on ! yelled my brother Archie as he fellows.
first Australian tNew Year's day. matter, to occur ,among our fellows, I sprang to the leading place. "Jolly ! Well, I should say so.
,Maybe it will cher us up some if I even in easily reachcal and densely ! The other 16 of tie followed I'ell- Our New Year's day, which began
tell yoa of one witch in Canada two populated India.' t 3 mell, almost tumbling oe-er each with anxious doubts and went -done-
.. years. ago turned out more happily." "For a year beforei leaving home I other in our eagerness, and burst - , ,
: with forced gayety, i ended in a
There was a general ery of " Do, Donald had owned la magnificent ; like a clyclone into the big parlor. reeniar jubilee:,
Fred, do," and the boy began: Nowfoundamd -dog, Prince by name. I Then the old roof shook with our '
, Feeling too greatl shocked b
• Some:of You know that my - home The Black Prince 'tee youngsters , half frantic cheers, air there, in the the tragic' death ofo r comrades t
is in a backwoods township, -about tailed bun not only ota account - of ; center 'of the mat, stood Donald ; remain longer on the ' Lodden, fotn
80 miles northwest of Toronto and his -color, but also because his chival- " himself! He was Ine
In- of us—Jack Urquhart, Fred Ross
. not far from Gebrgian bay. My nous and daring diameter greatly ; dian-and bearded ike—woll, like ;Joe 'Wells and I—stastted next da
father, who was fotanerlY a captain resembled, m our estimation, that of : ane gold digger, hutwas the same I for Eagle Hawkgetly, Bendigo
in a regiment of British cavalry, sold the famous personage in English 1 old Donald still, whi, , elas ed to 1 ' 1 whence, after three t eeks of profit
Its -commission in 1842 and emiggat- history for whom we had named him. I breast, with her s rms about bis I ael .', „ -wt across th
ed to Canada, where he bought a, Indeed Prince had °Ile saved bis ' nck, lay my dear 1' as mother, soft- i country to Sim Crow treek.
600 aere, partially cleared, ' farm, 'inaster's life when thelatter was (MC : ly crying in speechl ss joy. 1 I may add that Rosie Wells and 1
wishing to give his; five boys and day, in an outlying Veld, suddenly ' Here poor Fred. 1 b . '
four tarts a'3better ebancein life than attacked by a furious, half wild bush ' down, and not a hot sick inan of us back to America a.11 right, and tha
-after many stirring .adventures, go
a fanally in moderate circumstances bull. Hence Donald was so great- : all could trust hi self to speak. ! Jack Urquhart married a pretty,
tan have in the old ,'country. I was ly attached to the creature that he ' Presently, however, le young f >Row
only 8 'sister
of age. then, and my had, notwithstanding the added 'ex- ` —he was only 19—Went on: i English girl and remoined in /lustre,
lia.
baby sister not Ulf as. many pease, taken him song on his tedious I Boys—I—tell you—this—was— i
months. ,
re journey, much to oiar regret, as we almost—too—much for me. 1'11.1 HOLLOWAY'S OIXTAIENT AND Prea,
"ely mother" (1 wash I could eon_ sorely missed the rand fellow in never forget that time if I .should live . —More precious the Gold.—Diar
1:
vey an idea of hotak tenderly Fred all -our outdoor slat ts,
cholera are
a thousand years. : It seemed like teem, dysentery, and
spoke that word whenever occurrhig "So, on this Net et Year's day, all getting my brothel back from the
in his :story), "though a tiny little of us, even down tt 9 -year-old Mar- grave itself. Somelof us cried like 'off the young, as 'alp winter's cold
: through the summedas heat, carrying
thiiag, who wears a No. 2 boot and a gory, thought constently of the far- babies and even t e stern old colo- ; destroys the aged. In the mos
retend a the acute cases, where internal medieines
fire smoke into cannot be retained, the greates
relief will immediately result from
ed down a little, :rubbing liollowayl' .soothing Oint
ungry travellers ' ment over the abd Men. The frit
his rnaster—had ; tion should be freq , ent and brisk, to
Donald told us insure the penetrate n of a large poi.
lel take me all I tion of the Unguent. This Ointment
full. Besides I calms the excited peristaltic action
, so I'll just l
g-ve ' and soothing the pain. Both vomit -
t. ing and griping yield to it ; where
54.
us beyond the mere information that tails either, 1 guess,' wisely observed
he was to leave New York for Colon little Margery.
on the 1.6th day of the month as "Recovering from our momentary
passenger on a sailing ehip, the name astonishment, we . young men and
of whieh he did uott give. From boys were in the act of rushing to
Colon—now Aspinwall,—he intended the rescue when oat of the manhole
to cross the amt.: isthmus to of the mow crept little Agnes, taugh-
t
Panama, and thence „ ke : ship on Mg half hysterically and encircling
the Pacific for San Fr misco. with one arm the neck of a big black
"On the New Year's day of 1850 dog !
his. absence bad theown but a slight " 'Why, it's Prince ! Donald's
cloud on our jollity, as in those days Black Prince!' all -of us simultaneous-
ly shouted, for nowtwe plainly saw
the peculiar, heart shaped breast spot
iglit have held in closer clasp
he hand he held an mine;
Pulsing warmth of my =Mite
sti lava as generons as wine,
Ilfne streara that, even then,
Was ehhing faint slow,
ire have bee (God knows I) the
art
To the fatal flw.
The v.,
u1, and look, aind clasp withheld
0,1 vii.er.hcart, no,tv stilled!
a.)ear tiff , fc.rever out i`if reach,
n 1:.I.t save warmed and tilled;
Tale/ in,suseri and *sons lost, there was no Panama railway, and.
aet h 1 xnetirnqn vain— six or even nine months might well
A wet Iv as barren to int* tears
„As cit ten, muds to 41110 pass away without ktters from blue
r..
A. „Teneknow aensettou.
ALEX. 5'BMIER :MIZE:STK* Till'
ViLiliGE OF ItIL,LiNti 1115 SISTEU.
A PISRE,I)LITABLI.1 keynoNER'S
VERDIt7.
Lucknow, Ont., Dee. 21, --The
death of Mrs. Elder on Tuesday,
although not unexpected, erected
quite a sensation among the residents
of this place.
For the past few months ber house
has been the resort of a very die -
orderly lot of characters, and almost
every night it has en the scene of
orgies of the worst eseription. The
neighbors, fearing that they might
be burned out, were afraid to take
any action against the offenders.
Sonic time ago Mrs.Elder's brother,
Sandy Fraser, sold his property in
town, and. 'has since made his home
with his sister. Run* had it that
he had been in the labit of beating
ht
bit
in a most shamen • inan ner, and
had even threatened ' take her life.
On Monday last C nstable Thos.
Shoebottom summoned her to appear
before a magistrate for keeping a
disorderly holm, mid ber brother
and ethers as being frequenters, but
before her trial cametoffshe had been
called to a higher tri : unal.
The news of her eath quickly
spread through town, and in a short
time many of the neighbors were at
the house. They found the windows
barricaded, as if to resit a seige._
However, entrance was -obtetned to
the house, where 'the ,eorpse was
found covered over 1th a blanket.
She presented a ghost v appearance,
the right arm and sid , being bruised
from the shoulder dove , but on her
face was no evidence .0 ill-treatment.
In the kitchen sat her brother, who
was in such a eonditi n from the
effects of liquor that lietdid not seem
to realize the serious position in which
he was placed. 4
Coroner D. M. Gordon, M. D.,
visited the place, and after viewing
the body decided that an inquest
should be held. He accordingly
I
summoned a jury ,colipsisting of: D.
R. McIntosh (foremata Chas. - Ste-
wart, R. D. Cameron,itobert Hughes,
G. H. Lawrenen, W. Pie Willis, B.
McClure, R. Knox, ' lex. Lawson,
Wm. Bowers, itehell and Jas.
Hood. The Jane, r viewing the
"esterday after -
„„„,,,.....„..........—iv
In tho Cheerma-up Bustraesta:
When the hard times began Iota
year it was reported that a eleirep
Wrillinti &eland that if she liad to
earn her living she would become a
legerteral sympathize," going to any-
one who wished to pour out hey
troubles and worries, listening and
comforting for a liXed SUM Ina* hear;
the interview to be strictly confident
tial, ana the prof(S51)nal sylapatlitzer
never to allow herself to have pains
or trials oreater than those of her •
elient. r'This seemed an add
little fancy, as impracticable -as
original, until a short time ago, when
reading over the lists whieh 4 Wontt
an's Exchange prepares to meet the
wants ofits patrons, the eye fell upon
this item : "In the cheeringeup bust-
uess, A lady who luxe bad success-
ful experience, will read to or amuso
invalids or convalescents." Then
there is such an occupation after all,
and one which this cheering lady has
made successful as well. How does
she manage her delicate, work? by
what cunningly devised means has she
bottled up the sunshine which carries
its brightness into the lives of those
who are strangers to her ? and frora
what founts does she draw spark-
ling, exhilarating draughts? and
who, after she bas spent her day in
"reading to and amusing invalids and.
convalescents, cheers her when
twilight gives her back to herself?
Yet while as a means of gaining
a livelihood the business is undoubt-
edly new, it is really an old, very
old vocatioutto which from time im-
memorial women have spontaneously
devoted themselves.
In the home nest, as daughtee and
sister, a woman learns to express the
sympathy of a loving heart, and in
the new relations of wife and mother
her opportunities increase immeasur-
ably and unceasingly. Upon the so
called weaker partner has ever fallen
the duty of lightening by her ready,
responsive cheerfulness the burdens
borne by heo lord. and master.
The men wheat one must depend
on in the dark hours of life, When
illness and sorrows and losses depress
the most buoyant nature,often possess
in the highest degree the power of
cheering—physicians, Whose mere
presence seems to bring healing t•
lawyers and clergymen, whose help
glows with the unaffected goodness
of their sunny natures ; and others,
weighted with the -exacting cares of'
business life, who yet have a plea-
sant word and a bright smile in the
darkest hour of their troubles.
Blessed be all, . of whatever age, sex,
or condition, -who are "in the eheeringe
up business !"—Selaeted.
y body, adjourned ti
o noon. About 30 witnesses 'were ex-
amined on Thursday by Crown
, Attorney Thos. Dixofe of Walkerton,
✓ and the jury, after an hair's retire-
ment, returned with. the following
,
-verdictt
e "That Jessie Elde met her death
v one Alexan-
by injuries inflicted
, der Fraser."
1
t Constable Shoebo tom at once
t arrested Fraser and dged him in
t the cell, froin when he will be
- taken to Walkerton to stand his
trial. •
s Everywhere Weil Spoken Of.
.
Are Stark's Powders for Sick and
, . Nervous Headache, 13iliousness and
, Liver.
Air, Wood, manager Imperial Bank,
Port Colborne, says : —"They do their
t work ad ' lily "
Mr. Alex. Rurnsey, naperial Bank,
t Welland, says :— "They ere excellent."
Mr. George II. William , the extensive
fruit 'basket man utacr rer, Thorold,
says :—"For over 12 y rs I suffered
..
- severely from Sick and ervous Head-
aches and Liver, 1 trie all the adver-
tised remedies without ffect. Stark's
Powders en red me." ll
Price 25c a box; sold 'VI all medicine
dealers.
51 glove, is as brave as an Indian away pair. But tha rites of hospi- nel himself had to
princess, and she and my father are tality could not be tseglected, and by open door blew the
just like lovers yet So we were a and by, stimulatetbaty the purposed his eyes.
very happy family apd got on splen- gayety °four visitoes, all of us young " At last we quie
didly. , folks joined, just in the gloaming, in and after the two 1
"'Every year a big' patch of bush ; a romping game ofihide and. seek.' —Black Prince an
was cleared up, and when I left home "At ordinary timOs our big ten eaten a good dinne
there were more than 400 acres of; room loghouse was lighted by home- his story. It woi
the, farm under some'sort of cultiva-; made tallow candlei, but on festive night to repeat 11 10
tion. Father and ray three elder oeeasions my mother*used sperm ones, can't tell it as he di
brothers sometimes worked as bardiNumbers of these were now burning you the marrow of
As the hired. men, and they all liked 1111 addition to the great open. fires, • On landing at Co
it, but Hugh and I, the two youngestimaking all within doors altogether . other passengers ha
boys, were, we thought, awfully etre) light for the proper enjoyment of for mule hire,
abused by being sent to school, and our game ; so, by unnimous consent, Mexican spurs thro1
Afterward to :Upper Canada college' we agreed that the t 'hiders' should rider, in order t
isthmus. More tha
crowd already had
fever when they
Panama, and 26
there while wai
Pacific ocean ship,
"Donald was
most at once an
months between
at Toronto. We made up for it .all,
though, in the sunnier and Cbrist-
mas holidays, as thero was any quan-
tity of fishing and hunting every-
where around aur home.
"About six miles from our place generally routing
lives Colonel Warwick, a half pay ningly concealed '1
officer,' whose family is of exactly But then little Ag
the same size of ours, and ever :Once artfully hid herseI
coming to Canada we had dined and of the moment,
spent the evening .with them on discover ber, was f
Christmas day, and theywith us en call upon the whol
New Year's day, aid we always had 4ance.
great fun. "High and low
"Two years ago toolay, Jan. 1, through stable lof
1851, the 'Warwicks--father, mother piles, behind stra
and nine children, big and little-- big fanning mill,
**roe to us sot usual, but when we under the barn, is
no dawn to dinner our total number enecees. Then, ge
WAS only 21, lite toe: 22. The on the thrashing 111
my mother's right hand. was to give tip and let
ehe hertielaathough doing find herself, when,,
gratefally,wore tretibiod door, into 'which th
hieh sae maid not wholly summed, a dark
sal:doh wae more oe ins past us sad 5pr.tig
have the privilege +he fast darken-
ing wood shed, ,sta and nearest
barn.
"The play went crrily on for half
an hour or so, each aceessive 'seeker'
the most eun-
ders' in no time.
es Warwick so
that the 'seeker'
terly failing to
ally obliged to
crowd for assist -
up and down,
, between wood
.stacks,. inside the
er grain bins and
hunted 'without
ltered .aelaster
r, we were about
Ile little mischief
brough the open
pale moonlight
y =sated, shot
into a nearly
dr
on he and. all:the 'fruits er vegetables have originated
1. to pay 840 each !the malady, it is p`ioper to remove all
tha pair of big Tindigested matter tram the bowels by
n in for every a trtoclerate dose oalTolloway's Pills
get across the before using the Otntment.
one-half of the
ymptoms of the The world haz ade no advance
got to the city of in morals for tb4 last five or ten
poor fellows died thousand years, bu in the meantime
ng a week for a they hay done sunttaing Smart in the
way ov eleetrica wonders and
tricker down al- patent rat traps.
1 lay for three
fe and death in - For Over Plft, Years
the how of Fatlir Laporte. a kind FCLO AND wria,-Trass• lititrAnr.-4,1rs. Win
Frelleh-Clanatlian riest, who took years by Inillotiv :nothets ft) tbeir chile me while
slow' SLothfou Syrup has bee: used 'Ur over fifty
good care of' him a d bis effects, and eseethe With pertect suer ;;;;i. It sorthi%liegiild
when lie was ab]- to dictate wrote and is tht.best .rc;;e13;for iwea. is pleasantt;
1. be taste. Sold by Orurtists every part of the
for him to my fath ee though neitlier Work,. Trventytive eents jottle.
that letter nor three Ohm written Ifttlaultbla S"r6 f" Mr8' Winal""
ityrup, and take no e et' kind.
from different plates by Donald him-
self were ever received— a quite The things which! do most 10
common oecurrem during, the first make us happy do nolcost money.
two years of `the California, excite- I.
meet I Young man, don't ask enny favors
"During the whole of his master's "Pm*. bcddY4 it is better to hay
the world owe yu 10 dollars than to
illness Prince stuck dose to him,
though, as Father Laporte afterward 'w'e one.
related, nothing but the dog's own X. D. C. PXLLS CURE onttoene, tox-
fierce courage and fidelity had pre- STIPATION.
4
Pith and Point.
i s
While you are watti g and hoping
you may die from old 4ge.
' Some men work xnochty too hard
and are generally disliked.
1 A. man often 'pretends to -change
. his nature, but he meet does.
I A man doesn't likie to have a
woman use his love for her as a
dub.
Heart Disease Relieved In 30
C.11368 4J organic or sym-
pathetic heart disc e relieved in 30
minutes and quickly ured, by Dr. Ag-
new's Cure. Sold at ishohn's Drug
store, Wingham.
Fortune Mos to be,assaulted; even
a moderate deakon i a safer man.
than a red hot one. •
uagmmeassnroormitsommomemmertrovorassormr.4)...
//RA 0.14TR ET t
Toronto, Ontario.
After TakingI-Jo tts Sarsaparilla
d of a Serious DISease.
' was
I suffering from '-what Is known as
Wight's disease for Ave years, and for days at
IAs Well s Ever
Cure
/
time X have been unable t3 straighten myself
up, I was In bed for three weeks; during that
Before some people ear a thing
they seem to put it awa 'and wrinkle
it.
A woman. is cnthusias4ieover being
married, not over the man see 15
going to marry.
When a man manic seeond time
he always makes an Meuse of some
kind to his friends.
A man will do morefroin motives
lof stubbornness than from motives
of' patriotism or religion.
I 'Norway PineSyrup cures coughs,
Norway Pine Syrup cures colds,
Norway Pine Syrup heals the lunge.
1C. D. 0. THE RING OP DINPICR4114.
CUMIN, TILT IT.
If
,
time I had
tee eta “A''
I leeches applied 1lis,1. derived no belie -
at. Seeing Hood's Sarsapa advertised In
' thepopers I decided to try a bottle. 1 found.
OODFS
Sarsapa illa
U ES
relief before I hail finished ng half of a bot
11". Iget an moth help from taking the Ant
bottle that T decided to try mother, and since
Want the second bottle I feel as well as ever
X did in my life." Otto.Mitaarrr,Teretsto, oat.
Heed*. POW are prompt a, stikdoati Tit
way of *allot. !had b7 all dragglate. Ma.