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The Wingham Times, 1895-03-22, Page 7OF TO LAST PIRATE, A 1(isrr TQ THE ROMANTIC ISL.ANP.. OF ST. THOMAS. Two 7inceaneer Strongholds -A laanish Possession in Which There Are 'No ]runes --Itvery Other Zanbuige But That of the Owners Spo}con. Of St. Thomas, in the Danish 1'4 est L+ •(fleece Fannie D. Ward writes; The shops and stores are partiettlatrly •'tmintoresting, filled with straw lints, 'really -ladle clothing and tawdry trifles, hut the street itself -or rather the human Iife of•it-is always diverting, Everybody is continually making no enol of noise and ...chatter; but nobody seems to bo in any flurry about It, not even the shopkeepers in their money -getting, who always charge as foreigner at least double the price they" ask native buyers for the same article. A sudden screaming ;mil wild vociferation at .your elbow makes you think thin alt least •a murder is being committed: but it is only a bevy of sable -colored ladies having at, friendly "talk," or wishing each other good morning. (Groups of men converse with such vehemence and gesticulate so utadly that you momentarily expect to see a knife plunged into somebody's bosom; but presently the gri'ming disputants saun- ter along, to renew the Peaces with the next acquaintance they meet, Evidently this is not the plat where "men must work and woolen must weep." Those noisy companies of jet black females, tall and sturdy as the Amazons would be had those fabled creatures existed, are the confers returning from several hours' hard labor in the harbor. Each wears a very short petticoat and a twist of hemp around the bead, her wooly hair plaited in horns, or crowned with a half -cocoanut shell by way of a bonnet, and all .are shouting and singing like frantic Monads. There gots a tall and stately IIaitien woman, averitable Juno in ebony, dressed in flowing . !lite, topped by a gaudy turban beside wheel Joseph's coat would be no comparison in the line of many colors, and on top of the turban is poised a tray of cakes. • 'Those children, playing on a doorstep, dressed precisely in the suit they were born in, are evidently natives. Here conies a white horse (no use to look around here for red -Beaded girls), with a scarlet saddle -cloth /Ind other brilliant c:intparisonIngs, closely followed by a sheep with abell onits neck. Is there a circus coming? (>11, no! The patriarchal rider, with mutton -chop whiskers and closely cropped head nndler a broad, pana- 1na hat, is only plain Mr. Somebody, formerly of Copenhagen, and itis the fash- ion here, as in many parts of the \Vest Indies, for. sheep to accompany horses. They say it is healthy for both animals to live in the same stable. They often become so attached to elle another t'r'at, out- of doom, the sheep will not leave the horses as long as they can Iaeep up with them. Of Danish rule the casual visitor Can, beantifal sight to see this procession, 'of course. say little, He sees clean, well- he to the Spnatuslt untested spurt, One is The bride's father greets the bridegroom.ordered streets, and evidence of con- accustomed Wheal. bull -fighting detaonne tinual improvements, sanitary and other- i ed as both cruel and cowardly -cruel be Presents hunt with a new dress, a cocoanut, wise;but he cent' ot help thinking Hutt , cause of the suffering it inflicts on ani- and many other things, and returns to his g house Then again the procession, moves great open it suer, crossed by a bridge on mals, cowardly because the risk run by on; Hy the side of the bridegroom. walks the main street !town which in the ! the bull fighter is infinitesimal. The first has•sisterwvitll-a silver lamp, and, all the rainy season come avalanches of dead charge is absolutely true, so far, at least' ladlie t leaul the procession,the cats, tin cans and other despised articles, I as concerns the unfortunate horses. Thegentlemen following.. In some parts of India the ladies sing marriage songs. When the. bride- groom comes near the door the father•of tile bridle again conies to receive him.. Ile presents him a -cocoanut and promises to 4, I; � 'x'1.1' ES!, (' .'.'� 1S15. MRM."MPS 4,V3MI 'nEK J�,5:+4:rF.�Aw�•4.u.•M:-+S�.+.w:.�MwMF .. given by patorfaittilias and end her 1.0 in peaceful Eetireineut, k in this ease, at least, the pirate's ill-gotten gains, cid not seem able to purchase letppiness. Tito original owner of ,the other estate, now :molten of as 13laokb'•ard, 1t'l(l used as tL. bugaboo to frighten refractory children, is said to have deposited his plunder in a cave in the rocks of the hill which the sailors call "Mizzen. Top." Yon stay ealsi- ly 1114 this cave, but it is a question whe- ther. the famous pirate- ever sour it or not. At any rate, the divining rods with which the old negl'oes hereabouts search for treasure have failed, so far, to reveal any. tiling. Iiut the sante. cannot be said of all the Sreebooter's hidings, for many 011 iron: chest, lilted with Spanish! gold of the seventeenth century, lute beet! discovered, hurled la ca veruai or near anai0nt sande marks, STORY OF "OLD IRONSIASS'" How the Stirring, verses Coote to, lie Writ,. ten by O11ver �i'rndgil It Manes. "Old Ironsides," Dr. Holmes' most stir* ring lyric and the one which 1)roUgllu hint. recognition as a poet, was first printed fn the Boston Advertiser. In 1880 the frigeto Constitution, the conq tiering hereof many 0 sea fight, lay at Charlestown navy yard, condemned by On unsentimental depart - meet, to be destroyed as no longer sea worthy. Dr. Holmes was then a youth of a1. He had been .graduated from Harvard the year before anti Intel spent soine time in the study of law. At that moment, however, his legal studies had been aban- doned and be was living quietly at home, uncertain Of his future occupation. It was in the interval betwceu his desertion of the law and his resolve to study medicine that "Old Ironsides" was written,. The young man's mind was filled with enthusiasm for the achievements of our navy, and that its most famous vessel should be chopped up like any unhallowed wood naturally provoked and galled hum. The feelings which the action of the department aroused suitable husband for his daughter, so he n•L b ' in hint, found spontaneous expression in goes to a gentleman who liras sL sou. Ifo The Christmas Bobble Horse. first makes inquiries about the•fhmily, the I Among the diversions of ties^ season in property, the health and education of the ' the olden time was the hobby horse. It is boy. Then he tasks the 'father of the boy to said to have originated in Cornwall, marry his son to hisdaughter. The father where, according to tradition, the I1'rench of the son asks for dowry, ILlltl the amount once effected's landing itt a small cove on of this is fixed according to the, means of the coast, but seeing at a distance a num- the pian who asks for it, and not of the ber of women dressed in their reds Cornish man who gives it; that is to say, if the cloaks they mistook them for soldiers, and father of the boy is very rich•, he•asks lieoing to their ships put to seat- '1'he boys thoutsands of diollatrs, and young men thereupon disported them - The marriage ceremony is conducted selves by prancing around in imitation of like this; The party of the bridegroom a horse, with poles between their legs. In comes to the place where the bride lives Kent the festivities of Christmas com- menced, with a curious procession called hoclening of young people, who. had with them the staffed Mead of a dead horse, which they fixed on a pole covered with 0 horse cloth.: One of then got under this cloth and walked about, •pulling a. string attached to the lower jaw of the skeleton, thus making a loud snappinglio:use, which was accompanied by the others, who were grotesquely attired, with hand bells in their • hands.. They went firoua house to house and were given beer, cake or money. Terrifying- lim atnr of Wes Hotarnlai Crow,. Wes Heann lovas a crow, and he is the gawkiest, oddest, ugliest, but withal the smartest biadoneever saw. He hits learned the accomplishments of men so well that he now dreams, -actually has nightmares. The crow during the odd 1lourss of his will- ing and luxurious captivity has. dug a Bole in the walli,ini which he deposits dainty morsels for•t&e future when. liis appetite is not satiated Yesterday fa his hole in the wall beenerefully placed. two pieces of cheese and. tliree bits of meat. This done he ruffled his.feathers, drew hisneck down into thean,•and, standing on one foot, went fast asleep, Perhaps the immense quan- tity of cheese which he hadsgort.ed himself. with a half hour before gave hint the Mille gestion, feriae had a nigitttttaro right on the spot. Suddenly- he woke up, and the air was tent with "sgnavkt squawk, squawk!'.'' in quick succession. He danced over in as flurry of excitement to his hole in thewall and jammed his bill in three times. Every thing was there. No- thing hadabeen stolen. He sidled over to, his perch, scratched his Miall with his foot, in a meditative way, as; much as to say,. "Zw ell„li"1l be—," and, ruffling his fea- thers into tL muff, drew himself into theme supported the whole on one leg, and was soon again in the handl of nod, --Florida Times -Union. itis Vocabulary. 1f ` .. D WIVES Q INDI •LOVE SOMETIMES LASTS l,QN(= 1N HiNPOQ HOMES. Ceremonies for ranee; I)a3a-nett 7ltterest. Ing article on the aterr'la5o Cus, totes or the Country -• tln;;lo t'ar'e 1't•.ithnoRed.. To give a fair idea of Ilindoo women and marriage customs I mustgof'arback to the ancient times and seri }tow and why ens- t.oms changed, writes a native ot lndiit b the Forum. 'There was a time when the; Heiden lady wvas (5''tletned and when there were 110 child-marriaages. Some 01 the "Upanishads,” speculations on pllilosoplly, :were written by ladies. There fire books written by ladies also on mathematics and other abstruse subjects, Of course, they dict not write sensational novels, lint they were taught music and dlatncing-dancing, not jumping, hopping and skipping round a hali in the arms of strangers. 'There were no child-marringes at that time, and the young lluly hard liberty to select 0 11ns- band herself. It seems that the system ilia not prove a good one in the warm climate, where women develop very early, ;old it was changed, and the ,giving of the daughter by the father is the prevailing method at present. The Brahman has to get his clanghter married before she attains puberty. This eastern has crept into. religion. The Hin- even speak to her huslli111i The Utmost 111odcsty is to be observed by p Hiadoa Won1011. She must not talk Inudly or giggle and laugh In the Streets. The young pair thus religiously married-, love .each other from cllildhoO(h and that love bee ecnles stronger when developed and is everlasting. When the girl becomes of rage the wile qua 111(515(04 live together.. In 1101111 the woman is brought up from ebildboodl in the mildest way possible, a id is taught the borne dutles--ta love her bus- bond mid to obey him, Sonietinte--I }will hely in one case out of it million -there is a disagreement, and the wife goes to live with iter pllrents; hitt such -cases are very, very I'ew; 1 niight almost say there is no 511th case. 01 course tlw widow has net the privilege of remarrying, except in the lowest classes,buttllenum can merryagain. atntiwnat »fslnfectiau. A practical unanimity of opinion may be said to prevail at present among pity" sieians and chemists that the following •methods of disinfectiolt have proved the most effective and trtlstwortlty; All fit- briers which will not he injured in the pro.. cess are to be boiled in water for at least font- hours, aind fabrics whicit will not Stahel this treatment require to be sub, jetted to tile' action of dry heat for a much longer, time. Furniture, etc., may be treated with a four -tenths per cont. sole. tion of catabolic acid, All articles whicit have beim in actual use by a patient etre to be hurried, the walls of the room must be thoroughly rubbed down with bread, which Is afterward to be burned, and the sputa (loo religion strictly farbietw single life tor , itud excrements of the patient treated at n woman or man; especurtily must the wo- 1 authorities es aciv cate the eoride of mployment ent prof man be =tried. , ,;tenth and beat, m(Liutainlag that these Owing to this yule, if 0 I3rahntnn s ? aro cheap and efficient agents, being also . daughter attains puberty before niarrlage highly penetrable and at thesanie time are the father is disgraced, the loses 'iris caste dangerous to but few household articles, and no one will ntarry the girl, Thus, ' Of the three chemical agents destructive when a poor man has more than one i of diseaase germs viz,.: carbolic acid corro- daughter it is a misfortune for bum. The ' sive sublimate and chloride• of lime, the Ilincloo father himself has to find out a 1st is th•e•least ex pensive and dial *crone the poem. There was noticing deliberate about its composition, according to the Boston Post; it was wholly imprornpta. To the best of his recolleetion, he says, he .wrote it on a scrap of paper with a lead pencil while stancling one day before the fireplace in the old ]td>nse at Cambridge. And then, without dreaming of the great popularity it would win, or of how effectual its protest would be, he sent it oft to the .Advertiser, where it appeared in the issue of '.l'hurstlaty, Sept. 10. .As it gave eloquent, voice to tlat' sentiment of the whole country,, its success was both sudden and universal. and stops in a big house o1' 0 temple. The The poem was copied with applause froth bride's father has to arrange for alt this. paper to paper, while in Watslsingtoit it Thebritle's father has to look totftecom- wasstruck of onhandbillsand distribtited! forts of the whole party. They .are to be through the city. ' The grand result was treated' as guests. On the evening of the preservation with honor for the Constitu- appointed clay the bridegroom rides on an tion. - a elephant or a horse, or in a palaquin, and • as•long.procession is formed. '!'orches and Dorenon tit' 1(uI1-1*i hthig. flower gardens made of ivax and paper aro The terrible (108411 of a promising young carried on their shoulders, Nautcl niris torero iu the bull ring has once again at- tracted the attention of the English pula- dance before the briclegroom. Ban.dlmusie is played and fireworks are set oft It is a might be made less conspicuous and ens- second Is equally .false, as the tragic death ever its purpose equally as well. He also of Espertero the other day should serve to sees that relic of darker ages, the chain- teach the amateur critics who, for the gang on some of the public works, and the most part, have never seen the spectacle tiful sight fworking ith le they num such gtgms. ive1Lzt his daughter in marriages This male convicts.but the unfortunate females f the Spaniards would only revied ve the promise iss• the betrothal. Then he takes the hand of the bridegroom, and escorts hist to a seat which is raised in Wm, mid- dle of the canopy, •and seats hint en it. This raised seat is made beautiful;, halving small ornamental pillars and 0 cliotming habit of picking up harmless - idlers end ease their skill )n tiymg to sate their arch and a small clonic overhead. The Exiling them to the little island of San mounts -there would be little to be said Jan, there to tend sheep and cattle, 'We , against bull fighting on the score of inet a mother, who was weeping and wail- '. cruelty:. -London Graphic. ing and like Rachel, refusing to be com- forted, om- Iinl,•4 and insomnia. bend, because . her soann, eged, 14, •onde, On the occasion of a dog show in Paris a been sent to San Jan the clay before, merely for preambulating the streets French statistician has published an mai- merely nothing on but a "cuttie sark" of mate of the number of dogs at present to less titan the regulation length! The "'President," who gets his title from pre- siding over the Senate, here combines the three functions of Judge, Prosecutor and Judge of Appeals; and -as in some parts of our own fair West, where to steal a horse isheld a greater crime than to kill a man themselves seem to care less about it than original form of the sport they borrowed the spectators, and shoulder their spades from the Moores -that is to say, the rifling, and pink -axes with op—may air, singing to not of wretched cab horses, oltly fit for the chain accompaniments. Coxey's army knacker, and mounted by professional Would fare badly here, for the police, act- picadores, brit of valuable horses, with ing under orders, have the inconvenient "owners up," who would, of course, exer- • whole canopy is illuminated. On.therught of the groom sit all the ladies; on: the left hand all the gentlemen are sedated on cushions. The Nrautel.t girls,. in two parties, dance before the ladies and gent- lemen.. The bands play, and when the ap- pointed time arrives (the time of the mar- riage must be observed to a second, and, therefore, there 1s always a great deal of bustle among the ladies to adorn and Ulrike the bride ready), the bride•is escort- ed scorted and brought before the bridegroom by her mother and sister. She stands in the presence of the bridegroom„ who also stands, and a yelloiv piece et cloth is held between them. Meanwhile: rice (colored ted) is distributed in small quantities to all the guests assembled to. be ready to throw it on the pair in token of theirbless- ing. partly appointed by the Bing of I}e„uteri he arrives at the dreadful conclusionthat'Then the yellow cloth is, removed, and and partly elected by the inhabitants; so there are in Paris at all times 8,000 persatts the bridle and bridegroom. stand face to that affairs run smoothly enough, barring who cannot sleep from this cause alone: race. then the father of the !)rifle stands occasl0Tlitl trouble Over the entrance of ' And yet, he complains, the barking of dogs near and repeats the Sanskrit sentences, some quarautitled steamer, or the killing I is not even mentioned in medical works as wliic}t n101101 "The. UridegroOm is not de - .some of the causes of insomnia. -Laudon formed, rias not lost mac ot lane not been Daily News. pollutcil, aunt is healthy. To hien I give my data liter in the presence of (Tool, fire '(.hrlstenes in mem. las. * and the priests,” The bride's father says: In malty of the chut•ches tltunint and art- • "My daughter is healthy; she has a less carols, with no less artless atceoinpaini- .. brother. Site is not of the smile fancily as be found in that city. Evidently it is with no good feelings towards the poor animals, for after informing the world that there are no fewer than 80,000 of them in the, French capital alone the calculator pro- ceeds to speculate upon the- number of persons who are kept awake by theirbnrk- -theft is punished with much greater lugs. On an average, he thinks, one dog severity than murder. "To' assist the in ten would be restless alai inclined to 'Governor-General in his arduous duties of bark during tho night, and in eac;11 case ;govei•niatg the colony" --so the statute the barking would cause at least one per - cook r" 'l -there is a Colonial Council, son to lose his night's rest. On this basis It 1 1 ,of an animal without permission of the Council. 'rhe old fort still quarters a gar- rison, mostly negro troops with Danish Officers. I met one of the captains, a flee - looking, blue eyed German, who gallantly • 1(f course, we must visit both the gin' than our owl ares canting broitg )t intt another o the service'give less fickle the bridegroom. toere tonna Protect her as her father old castles that frown clown from their of the midnight mass. After the mass is diel." lofty perches Upon the peaceful town and ; over the reveillon is still h01d, even by '('hen the bridegrooin promises: "In te- harbor. They belonged to noted butter ;those who no longer go to mass. This halm, in looney, conjugal rights and in nears of the seventeenth century, when Ireveillon-the good old custom of the sal mien I will never leave her:" This the port of Charlotte Amelia wvats celebrat after iuitlni$ht "supper following the mid- • promise. is luade'tllree times and he knows ed as arovers pirate to sell their prises inttclsea- re- ought mass at Christ/net eve --dies out that he now has n wife, and that he must %%ve sh their stores, hIt ria legend d.f the t with dfliieiilty from any Frenchmen's lin- love and take care of her, And he sloes es with island that an Englishman ublin,Fogarty saagusage, fruflledtt turkey maiaterial pate dns nre efoieleeood r. �skfttrlthis the saerc l fire islater, he wkindled, robabl from Cork or Dublin, for all Sous. c, sign is tt hose people ate "Englishmen" away front ' grits. s. T theices01 religions neglectt1even ate tied together with t8Isnot �tThe sl> ides conte) purchased the castle of I3latebh 1114 ing of shank 70 years ago. and found beneath it 1 wvhen the fete is hold by wild young Hien groom takes the hand of the bride Mal Ith el istent digging, enoiigli 1 iia restaurants. in the early Christmas walks seven times around the Aro. This is after re p titnrnmr, wvhen the dawn is not ,ret creep- .tilled 'the seven steps." • All the while treasure to make him wealthy for 8 life- morning time. Theo story goes on talthyo say Olathe had nirr tilt you will be roused, and reused the pr d'atsrlrluttthe 1redlicinrtntraUs. 'There A charming dat%ghter '"Pretty l athleen 'ogartY " she is called-wvho had hiack itin by the natio of carthatge wheels and are many minor ceremonies atter this, and snatches Of Christanas song; at the hem, they continue for four days, On the fourth + when feria is ttsiuttfy the quietest. No la, tae brick groom takes the bride to Itis slsendung hot c hildhood in this eastIo and matter who the singer is, the snug of 110.un:) se a far 111 tale lahe d'ypomp 3s When he e to bt otonIng the belle of the town, she ran Christmas day is there. Hair and eyes of Irish "true blue." After mailer, the wife sitting on bus left side, n;Way with a penniless clerk of the Ilnglish now Ito Clot illind. T.1" bride stays theta one night with her Consul; And !herr e nearly broke herR`rainp- Please help the blind, moiler -fa -law, and returns to her parents. n1lits is tam,' 's (,cart, She cams backback1'assert,v---stow did.did.y oft laeeottle blind? Af ert.raa to months slie is sent li back to ber iltak'r 1tafterwvardl.:, no gouger "pretty Miss Tramp -Looking for work, sir. ' hit ...; udi's fund' for a few Inenthq. Willie Fogarty,"" but s;i••t, -hewed, salt rind de- , living there she recopies her mother -in. . tertect by her scant,. ,), a lover, to be for- law's or sister -in lawn's room. ,She does not GENTI�MEN, It you want your FALL AND WINTER urn 1-T Pr made in the latest style, go to "De you understating pigeon English?" asked the young woman. "A little," rivaled the man confesses ignorance "Oh, do let Inc hear you say in it." "Why-er-I only know one "What is that?" "Squab." who never something word" F4. J R I R opposite Bank ot Hamilton,. cAVEATS,TRA E MARKS COPYRIGHTS, CAN I OBTAIN A 1'AT1%NTR leer promp answer and an bonest Opinion. wrltt RO N Ni%%CO.,.wboWavebudnears 5 tyYa131' experience lathe patent nosiness. m !tone atrletly confidential, A BaudBoole oS formation concerningPatents an]tow to o tarn them sent free, Also a catalogue 011ne405 - teal sad a lientite: bowie seat free. 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