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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1889-06-01, Page 6fa` , . gnawing pain, whish, poor child, Abe The answer seal ed flim. It •was . �* L J�. t 20tj 141 oupld not understand. a Of 00 buret of to s a closer c/intg- �` ' - -, . Queen Mab, It wou,d be useless. 1 Daniel Kingsley' swore when Its 0, 1889, -cm) cowry hope that Time, the great I' earl it. That the daughtelr he ee:c+nee,, will clear awry your • preau hated, acid always' abused, .altould take I dices, As God le my judge, I have the place lie had intended for the pot been makiug fun of you. How daughter he had pampered, adored t Doul, 1 c old?.—in a tender, re rc►ac ►- a swore a"uta ; ail ora Dorothy 1 Dorothy! I say, Doll, ful voice which hurt lien store than pretty Dorothy --.cried with mortifi- i+l.i girl, where are you 1 I've a auger could. Front the moment 1 cation. letter from the governor, and--' laid my weary eyes upon you 1 thought But it was all useless, Barry was elite stopped abruptly, duelliugeritn- -you the dearest, sweetest of little step not the luau to be thwarted in a par- t.t'u all over her small, saucy face, to I cousins, and 1 would not willingly hurt pose; and laoklly, for the little girl. fie very roots of her tangled, red gold one chord of your heart for worlds. he married for pity, amid because he, at.rir. But 'tis my misfortune to b9 unseen. liked her immensely, as he told hien. .;he had run upon �notiDorothy,her 'struoted. self, t,o+►it became the joy, the pride, rt ter., in her favorite 'twat under the Ile lifted his hat and walked the light of his heart ued.er happier' 1,►burrtuuts, but a 9uau—ta k, dark, away. oiraunistances. iteughty--. snaking a cigar and rea'ling - A. great sob choked Mob's throat- „ eavaoes taken around for exhibition. -t newspaper with all the nouchulunce With a .fearful pa•►g of paid, she real• Deepest 7«g} o In the Wpr1;1. Oa trunk had b , through, Est • ,:+ I will not try to plead lay case, iia of dear little h nds. l�li1DA•`4, DECI±i,i1IJI';+R eeeee— 'QLFEEE' MAB• t, l' d p t lI g' d D tl,y.--- BULGARIAN WEDDING, A 8T, LOt1IS LAl?Y DESCRI8C$ ONE WHICH SHE ATTENDEE). •+ww-we+-nT wow w Tarty ut Tourists Attended the. Cor. etuony--eottlege or Travel to the Union of the itaikane--Guider View Frl;hteued and .Intimidated. the %revelers, We were feeling pretty blue when w arrived here at 10:50 o'clock laet night in a most furious storum of thunder and lightning and the rain pouring in tor• rents, sky black as Egypt's night, The crowd of raglans at the depot add• ed anything but a secure feeling, and they took us in as if we were so many our head, and, fortunately. put ou cleo gloves. So we appeared ttiurldst attd patine, in *revel ng hate, druseea the larpcst shoes we j aeese:d, au:d teal•+ ing like tramps ---I tltittl<;0 eattl'teeted au much attention as .the bi .A.fter:vards we drove uc h the park and then walked th the trading part of tiie city. ,� Our courier is a uativ� of Oonstanti. nople, and says the Turl.s are a very' dirty people and never kill any living e thing, It being part of their belief that God created everything for a purpose, except the Christians, Ile says fleas are a natural production of the country pad that wo must not mind them. ---Cor. St, Louie i�epublio, _ rt the w)rid. zad the truth in the revulsion of feel• In the C1as°ode 1<louutuius about r ata to a g, and hey A ltke- I'.ittG'a consternation amused hien, fug that possessed her, seventy five• ratios north east of Jack- w e our hand baggage, and they actual• evidently, for his eyes smiled though She—she loved hien 1 Loved him at sonville Ore, the eeelier' for the cur• ly insisted upon opening every small box �i:s 'i,+, were Grave. first sight, loved hint in au hour with ious will find the Great Sunken lake, and package inside our trunks. They 1 lit, ; •e the governdleis well ? he said the love that must be her doom, be- the deepest lake in the world, `Giber hold a long discussion over a shawl in to e',;, ilv, Bering a silt, tile from a dusky, cause Umust live forever, lake rivals the famous Valle of one of our trunks, but finally decided to leonine head. Your governor happens She threw herself down on tha grass Sindbad the Sailer. It is.eaid to aver stamp our trunks through. While our courier was attending to this the natives to be my step -trauma's brother, 1 and Dried as if her heart weutd age 2,000 feet down. to the water ort heli: ve---to come down to the laws of break. all its sidee, The depth of the water were taking us in, and I never saw snob.0o awful looking men. They looked as if kinship. I am Latvte•ttce ]carry, I. � :She lonoed for his forgiveness, his is unknown,. and its surface is as they wonted to kill us. ,n, c:iit.ty drubbed Larry by those touch, the sight of hie darn eyes that snto��th and unruffled as a mammothmammoth► A ROMAN WELL. r•,risieat,e enough to know aud love lead so tenderly reproached her baron 'stir et of glass it bailie so far below the We spent the day very agreeably, first less, • mountain rim as to be unaffected by d i i r v ng up to the barracks, where we Indeed !—zesentfully.. But was it not Lawrenee Barry's the strongest winds. It as about 16 hada good view of the surroundings Ile was laughing at her, of=, course, voice which broke m upon her eotivul• ntileein let.gtb and about 4 • wide, and saw quantities of soldiers, two of the great, black giant. ldbe had °flea sive sobs? For unknown ages it has titin still, which lovely specimens of men insisted. --tu° of; en new diet she saw nim-- Well, you little fool! silent, and mysterious in the bosomupon par visiting an old well built by the beet, d of the great criminal lawyer, .And startling up she beheld her of the great mountain range, like a P°mans, and we started down the steps L.wreiice Barry. father in the pathway, regarding her gigantic teencli stopped out by tee by the light of a candle, the Sorvian '4; hat Wail he doing here' where;; with amazed wrath. hands of a giant genii. A funtinp leading the nay and Cousin —and 1 tl f•re Frere no criminals to try ? What's the Hailer? Get up and and surveying party recently left Jackfollowing; hut keeping very close to our- 1 was looking for my sieter; she said quit your whimpering, he commanded sonville with the intention of °seer courier. \p a persuaded the pt, come This is always where I kind in his usual forceful way—the way tainin the exact tie 'h of title how of our peaty not to attempt, to conk g P dawn, as it was se very damp and dark herr a hen in the garden. She put which made him obnoxious to his wit ,mysterious body of water and to duel and so many steps, so left tier up tap 1 hat seat there herself 1 --regarding ful, younger daughter. 'aur., if possible, whether or not lash with another individual, who kept talk - 1'u late occupier of it with suspi- She obeyed. are to be found within its ghostly pre- ing to her in his owit dant;uage all the �ci,�n: Where is Dully? he asked concern- etats. tune and poietin ; to the steps, and final- Il'e looked actually concerned, ing b'iutself no more about her tears ly assisting her down. So, to our sur - lot is in your eyes to accuse, me . of or their cause. 8e Never West tol,odgo. pulse, when half way down the winding having done away with her, lis°said in When he had gone up the marble It was one of those wild ni„ +pts You stairs w•e heard her calling to us, and as deep, rich, basso tones.. To -prove my steps and disappeared from sight Mab read of iiinine nove's out of ten. she was very much frightened and ex - innocence I will galdly juin in the clinched her small. fist and shook it The cold spring rain splttshe:l search. Why, Here site comes now, in after him. viciously against the pane, and the th►+ flash ? he said reproachfully, as I hate you -bate yen; and some shutters rattled and banged as the Dor-+thy +•ane sauntering up the shady --day I'll pay you back for all your fitful gnsts of wind swept through vb.:iee walk. meanness to me, she muttered, bitter, the deserted streets. Why,' Mr. Barry, she exclaimed 1y. It was lodge night, but Bro. Fa, eagerly, when did you cornea Then angry, passioliai;e, rebellious concluded to stay at home fur onue. Lest night, or, rather, --shaking - of heart, she sauntered off to the partioularly as his mother -1u laiv Was bands warmly—in the wee sn,a' hours -woods and did not return till dark. on her periodical inspection tour, au:. urea the twal. Oar appearan•ee, Dorothy was in her room, beauti- spending a couple of days . with h`,►ie illite Dorothy, • is quite apropos,•— u 1,7 dresssed and radiant. , With a sigh he lol id" back, in the with a cortical glance toward Mab; which that augry young lady ignor- a- ed. ;t • I have a letter frotn 'papa; Dorothy, she said sedately. He is coming up this afternoon. ,. She wot,rld have added 'bother' but for the annisewent .. ebe fancied it would have giveu the criminal lawyer to witness her vexation over the .news. Theyy walked back to breakfast to= 'author. • Dorothy and Barry conver- -sing gaily of other occasions upon which they had met—occasions on cited we turned back without reaching the bottom of the 450 steps. These poor people are so wild to make a peuuy that they insist upon making you do things in order to reward theta for their serv- ices. From the barracks we drove to the museum, and then visited the palace of Bing Milan's son, then drove to the park. We left Belgrade at 10:50 p. m., and as there are no sleepers en route we made ourselves as comfortable as possi- ble for the night, but 1 cannot say I Papa says I must captivate Law- rocker,his foot in a 01r:,ir, alit it n+:.s_ rested much. The scenery along the rence Barry while we stayhere,' she paper spread o ett'buf.re aim like a read waskedverpretty. ba TheaBalkan noun- ' p p p P tains looked quite bare after Switzerland laughed heartlessly. He says he is screen. and 'the train seemed to crawl, When rich:, influential and the smartest man Presently he chucklod,aud wife and. we reached some little station a dozen at the bar today. Besides he is 'matter Looked up from sewing soldiers jumped in and entered the car handsome, fascinating—and—I'll try inquiringly. and began talkingantongthemselves and anyway, Iiatht r a rpmatltable case, he ex- to us, and as we could not understand Disgusted and sad 'for her own fu- plained,loolcing taxer the top of the we took' it for granted that we had lure, Mab went to her own room in paper, arid, with a suspicious twitch reached a new country. and opened our silence, iib°ut the oorners of leis lnotith, he sato leis for thorn to inspect. They opened every box, more from curiosity, She never wasted mica time or react aloud: 1 suspect, than for any other reason, and money on dress, but to night stirred A model husband died recently at emptied our fruit basket of all the by some irresistible impulse, she slip- Cornish;. N. II. He had been married grapes, which they divided among them- t ped into her prettiest frock, a robe of - 4S years, and never spent a night selves, and then stamped Its through. s line1111 on a ttoid Bend. Dr, Saywoune claims to have isolated a bacillus, called by him •°bacillus crini- vorax," which le the cause of alopecia, It is, he says, found ouly on the scalp of roan, other hirsuteparts of the body, and aleo the fur of animals, being free from it. The bacilli invade the hair follicles and make the hair very brittle, so that they break off to the skin. Then the roots themselves are attacked. If the microbes can be destroyed early m the •disease the vitality of the hairs ►nay be preserved but after the follicles axe invaded and all their structures injured the baldness is incurable. The follow- ing is Dr. Saymonue's remedy to pre- vent baldness; Ten parts crude cod liver oil, ten parts of the expressed juice of, onions and five parts of mucilage or the yolk of an egg are thoroughly shaken together and the mixture applied to the scalp and well rubbed in once a week. This, he asserts, will certainly bring back the hair if the roote are not already destroyed, but the application of the remedy must be very distressing to the patient's friends and neighbors. Ideda- cal Record. A Sweet I'roponai. "The sweetest proposal ever dreamed of," said Eli Perkins, "1 think is from b'• An Dobson," "Inlay 1 call you Paula?" he asked •modestly. "Yes," she said faintly. "Dear Paula—may 1 call you that2" "1 suppose so," "1)o you knew I love you?" 1 "Yes." "And shall I love you always?' "If you wish to." "And will you love me?"' Paula did not reply. "Will you, Paula?" he repeated. "You may love me." she said again. "But don't you love me in return?" "1 love you to love ale." "Won't you say anything more me - Vicar "I would rather not." They were married and happy within three months.—Exchange, Earns We Tau. West Gardiner boasts of a dog that earns enough to pay his poll taxa Ile ire a big mastiff and does a big churning every week; the churn being fitted -up with a sort of threshing machine treadle on which the dog walks. The most re- markable part of the transaction is that he dog enjoys the business so well or has uch a sense of responsibility that no • vitngtng black Iace, which enhanced away from home. THE BULGAs1AN WEDDING. which 111 ab Kingsley was still a school the fairness of her skin, the gold of Well, I should.sey be was a model We are tonight in Bulgaria, in a com- girl in pinafores, for Dorothy was her curling hair. husband, broke•in the elft ittdygrimly, fortable hotel and where we do not feel J duceinent can.entice him from the work uring business hours.—Fairleld (life.) -- ournal. tight years h'r senior, and be it spoken Dorothy was in the parlor singing Just think of it, 'Mary dear,forty three as if our lives were in peril When we eoftly—tuetity-five. with Lawrence Barr when she 'came years and ever eveningspent at first landed our courier evet+ted It Good. yput us in a car- "Are you fond of music?" asked MO. Barry, ria a and started u off b 1 Mab watched them critically, walk- down. home N led Idh' g tug silently a bit in• the rear. How pretty Dorothy looked, with Icer brown eyes a sparkle, her lips apart, aud how Larry Barry seemed to admire her.. - For hien—pooh 1 He was thirty-five f a day, and back and fierce•Ioaking as a Spanish pirate, if be wasn't so Well dressed, so modernly courteous looking, During 1 reakfast he seemed to take great pleasure in suddenly surprising her'covert study of his strong, master- ful face, and addressing questions to het, embarrassing questions. At its close he challenged her to a game at tennis, while Dorothy read to her iuvalid'aunt in the morning. room. Mali won the game by long odds Indeed, great lawyer though he night be, Barry Y proved himself an exe- rrable tennis p'ayer, and went even at peg lower in Mies Kingsley's estima- tion She didn't like him at ali, he em - o e e eon coax him s y ourselves Barry's voice was a rich, rare toner, away from his•`'fatnily, she added .with a coachman dressed in a. sheepskin It went to her•heart with a pleasure . significantly. Poor man, heought to Boat wt rite shut and !pose white trous- tlr abroad bolt. IIf and pain so intense, that she could knave a mouumeut a elite bigb, and ere, "r s costume not bear to listen iu sight, so stealing .she sighed deeply; might have been pretty when new, but out unseen as she thought. she wan Bro. Fay held ',the a er a little was ,wiexcth sinalngly soiled. and he was -very gP p dark, with small, jet black eyes. As it dered near until the song bad ended, higher and continued— was noon (Sunday), all the country poo- and she heard the singers laughing -never spent a night from home— plo were in for the day, and I never saw on the balcony,he *as paralyzed 1., such a variety of costumes in my life. Next day she went to her father. Without tile, storm seethed to beat very fancy, with lots of coins, etc.,. I-- I want to gu home, she said, harder and loudor (a habit storms worked stockings, with skin sandals How long must I stay here ? linve at such tinea), wbi:o within laced up the legs In fact, it reminded Until I stn ready to tell you to silence reigned, save the suppressed me of pictures I have seen of the Holy leave, he answered, harshly, and rustle of tie paper and the swish of Land. turning on his heel, fled from her the thread through the pillowcase the Be in if we could be permitted to enter, and we soon found ourselves. temper, as lie obese to terns the lint old lady was working on.—Companion. escorted into the country villa of the reproaches she heaped upon his ear governor of Sophia, where the house was donic head. filled with guests, assembled at the mar- 1 Sauntering. near, Lawrence`The Sweetest Proposal. ' Barry nage of his sister. Symphony of an elderly relative from the country. - - "Well, yes, 1 am," was the careful re- ply; "that is, when it's good music, Laury. Now you take agood accordeuris an' a fiddle an' a pair o' banes an' a flute, en' let 'em all play 'OId Nicodemus" ali at the same time, and I tell you it's sweet!"---llarper's Bazar. American Preference in Travel.. Somebody has said that if a eannoix.. were devised which would fire a load of • • passengers from New York to Chicago in ten minutes and land four loads outt of five successfully, the fact of the Gfthti load being pretty regularly smashed: ,:would not deter the bulk of the trait:: , from going that way, if the price Were; not too high.—Railway Age: had heard - the question and tinswer, : The sweetest proposal ever dream- The bride- came forward to meet us in the wild storm which followed, His • ed o$, said Eli Perkins, I think isfrom her wedding gown, veil aud orange face softened, yet darkened vengefully. ` A•us in Dobson, blossoms. We also were presented to the Poor little one 1 lie muttered. I hf always knew Kingsley was a brute at .:ood1 core ; but—by Jove, dare I ? A sudden thought -•--fearful, deli. harnessed, awed, annoyed her cions, bold --bad entered his halid- e*. some head. I'll go arid read for auntie, and you Ile paused an instant, then : EMU ge3:und pray with Dorothy,sho said I'll ao it. he said, cooley. I'll take oluly. I do not care for tennis any her away from him, from this obnox. more mous life of hers, and, please heaven, Ati. I was boring you would, teach make her happier in Mine. rtia the art. I ata such a novice—es. • An instant later he had ilei crump. gtetfndy. Put, l,either do I now, I led up iii leis nrnis,a dilapidated yours{; Ji) I) Y A, y I call you Paula? he asked groom, the bridesmaids and their beaux, the landlord and his wife and to the s Gs�tg'stild, faintly, mother of the bride, who spoke to us in tar Paula—may I coil you that? French. One of the relatives of the bride spoko to Cousin in German. uppose so, They insisted upon our remaining to the ! you know I love yont - ceremony, and we were presented seats s• of honor on beautiful blue satin furni- d shall I love you always? tare. The ceremony was noun Bulger. 'len, but Greek. with seven priests, can- I dies, incense and high mass. We were I kept standing just ono hour. 1n the middle of the service their photographs were taken. Tiley were ; crowned with orange blossoms and the 1 If you wtab to. , And will ye'u love me? Paula did not reply. tit�i11 you l-'aula he repented. You may love me, she said again, Blit don't you love rite in return? atilt go and hear you read, too. creature, with wild- eyes looking I you to love me. men all embraced afterwards; also the .ti;;t, turned in the path and faced ,�h her tangled, golden Lair. I lovetyouu sayanything more 6x•. ladieOno of tirobridesmaids wwas very iritrr fiercely. Dear little girl, he whispered, kiss-" y & prettyand spoke English. S1to made No y at won't, either. You have ing away Ler tears Don't—don't pi;cit? herself verypleasautrindwantedtoknow 1 been iilrikitrg fon of me in your sleeve pubs lee away, Mal., Queen Mali. I I would rather not. VI had ever met a friend of hers, a Mist a Ii:sante this tnerning when--a.lronwont go, s., itis no Ube. I love you d 1es were ni, ri,:d and happy with. B.,whowas attending schoolinAntorica, ' , wenet, and 1 dou't thiult it one bit 1 and I shall love von all the days c,i un tree motathe. Now that T have described the wedding ice of you 1—her voice intense with my life if yon will corns to mo, little party, let rue live you an idea of our ap- pearance I ave lt't read for auntie it erre. I am old cynical embittered Sl telex's Vrtitti;rt is what you need for. t,oaraiico la such slfstiuguisitedeompany. l ' ' dirt trala pad with no accomiliodatiea and nit xyalitums of Dy,:}}�,,opsia. Pace 1.v y ttUtl 7g chat(, M�ttlu. /iUi Side u C. for tU.lUt, 'IVU rC:l'.fiieel bum at •� ' ► + , After spending all night in thesmok kali 0+•ili�r i'c, lire«n, l.ethups, lett I sllaii lard you, love Gon�►patioitrL°as of eippntrte I.ittrntesq y, I ttf. cue iia« s hug Lit �bL leteu. sl lily little !ilio of it lax ? � ritamiziu, likv:4 xtl tla.r++. t; ,.....� bines 1,«tit,lte4 $e Lowed coldly. The look iu lea, ) uu,. all the l:.e:tte•C. till yet; cvuix., ,, ; L y Lb3 noon A nig Windfall. The English plasterer who has bean left a fortune estimated at £1,400,000 by a relative in Australia has been discos.. ered at;Iettering, in Northamptonshire. His name is John James Pearce, and ins- til a few weeks ago he liven at the par Ish of Kingsthorpe, a hamlet of North- ampton. Ile lodged with a lady named Weston, after the decease, a few months ago, of his wife, %vile Con niitted suicide. Fear of poverty was ascribed 'as the - cause of her act, Last Sunday, while reading, he canto across a paragraph tine flouncing that a Sydney clergyman had left 1:1,400,000 to a loan in England named Pearce, "Why," exclaimed the plasterer to his landlady, "that's flare; Ize's my unlet That money belongs tit met" Itis identity Inas already been ao- knowledged by the London agents of, the Australian solicitors to the deceased millionaire. Pearce leaves England for Australia in the course of a day or two. Ile worked for several master plasterers in Northampton, and is described by bit fellow w•orkmck tis a quiet, reserved fel- low, a teetotaler, and gave people 'haat iJta i last hu had soap better days, --Liy : 1