Wingham Times, 1890-12-05, Page 2D
Ot in OW' et late, own. Mottle.'
tilitg I
,,„ woo ths
irty yeera. et age Modge bat
P"
, tetith400110. In oatappeoranee
.Bso 5,,,,„Ablin• OW !Asters *ere very Mattie
TITO elfrralttfeli 1111140tgl ,
104 you dear. Miss awl laity r
-141:4 Ata whispeyeel ow
It yea oerree all fdr art,
to tsU ute terer.'
8044.1i dhaeke matte tadtab got,
sfft heart begun to beet,
4isir "No soret love ) ou until"
eToesettiesh los sweeeouviatteto,
Priteitl Weeetetnelemeerlie (mile
yeut,'s 'rem pried, ia woe;
"rth otekle lue. Hoer can you thee
1Droalt Mei? Ohl lettuce goo!
t 4'111 teem guano..bey youS 1;
"Isli make cuomber.fere
OR. 1.att aro a rake goal go—
De my sweet yeas restore,"
.„Tplere ocka of hearty jokes, Bald all,e,
_".kusl full of onion anow,s
f,Thie is uct artiettoke," groaned. he,
.*Nor Lau, jt % business clip •
0444ive u, tattler rich. iminentie—
He'll stem turn up his toes—
On Totn, 014 makes hay digerence—
Ytrlove me, I suppose ?I!
-"X do," he cried ; "sveed. knew ,bb'—
ab liorulug I'd get up
Potato meek—the fire alight
And slibigyouette LieAuup.,!
'What celery is paid you
Mean biz. '.Chas said she;
"Well, tilt your peieelore (mats co die,
You cautempe with me.'
to Bomb business related to the settle.
IVIA.DGE'S PAO,MOT. meat of a friend's estate. The man
being a typical tdoade, ,While her else
ter Madge was a iheatieltte with operk-
ling black eyes that betokened a love
of mist:thief,
Ms was lttueli chagrined when, in
-return for the picture ,she seat, she
received uot the haudsotne Adonis she
had antietpiteed, but the photograph
of a man appaceutly about sixty years
of age.
1 don't believe those nice letters
were penned by such an old fogy as
that, soliloquized she ; but I will end
the corroepot dome itt mate.
Suiting, the action to the word, elm
immediately penned a short, pert note
to the elfeet that she wished the !tort
respandeece to (mese.
There, she exciltimed, as she folded
the itote and adafressed it to Mr. Uhl.
be entered the boll unperecixott, and
named. moment to listen. As he
did so ,be heard a voice which he
recognised ao Mattle'o eoying Maggie,
Fred's ARLO letter was mailed at
Whit jibe should fled
out about these letter* and the pie,
tore
Don't be a goose, ',Wade, said
Madge. He's a stranger in Middle-
dld. How can ho learn any thing
is regard tet them 1
He Waited for noemore disclosures ;
for had be not thievidenee of guilt
from her own lips 1 !ate fled from the
house ; his braiu 'twined on flee:
'four efter hqur hp wiendered ailetegatly
first up then clown tlett street! Until the
wild tempest raging yithtii bis bosom
had in a measure, tiethausted itself.
'rile cold eight air cooled his fevered
brow and brought a calmer mood,
will wale' and bide nty time, be mut-
tered, as he crosiedP his own titres.
I
turn, 1 guess that ell' and that and hold.
t •
zuy ltdvertisetneut scheme too. She1
Day after day and; week after wee,k
tittle dreamed what a as 3 et to he the went by. The gulf 6:etween husband
outcome of that foolish escapade. and wife had gradually widened, until
Fred Manly. Mettle's hatiltand, was Rosewoed Cottage seemed to have lust
away heath:time at this time attending all the ettractionsdt once held for both
master and naistroes,
They were gathered in the sitting -
room One evening, Fred taciturn and
moody as usual, Mattie dropping like
a plant bereft of the warmth and sun-
shine so necessary to its existetne ;
Madge gazing eafnestly into the open
grate, as if seekiqg tbe key to some
knotty preltlern iithin the glowing
embers. There wait no sound ateclible
whom he wished to see had removed
Anyzavristrio Voa nusuAND Aso waer
from Ooncord to Middlefield, the town
in which Harry Blythe, alias Herbert
Mil -twin, lived. It chanced that he
cane qv v.
(eve anew project, Mettle, some -
ling oi.it of the ordinary way; Mach stopped st the sal" hotel. where Mr.'
1 an. goirtg to ant upon at (nice. Give
Blythe boardh
ed, tted in whiolie had
a guess, Matte.
bachelor apartments. They formed
eat aequaintenee as strangers often
O., I eau% guese. • Yon get so many
strangnotious into Wet strange head will, which resulted in Fred's receiving Jsave tick, tick qf the brass clock on
e
.0f
,
,
n
,
$t should
not he surprised in au levitation to call at Me. _Blythe's the mantel.
rooms alter businese bourse to 'smoke
the least to learn you iutended a trip 1 declare this is becoming uebear•
cigar and heve a social chat.
to the moon in a mitt, sailing balloon, aable, exclaimed ittadge. liming hastily
Mime more practical and matter -4
During the evening Mr. Blythewas she left the room, closing the door
'
called away for a eholt thee. To pas E• with a bang that resoundedthrough
-
away the interim of his absence', Fred
took up an &item lying en the table
fact th LIlthat, Mat. rill simply gottg
to advertise for it husband,
Advertise t'or a hasbaud 'Mercy
on us 1 igedge Hilton, have you lost linear him. He was carelessly turninu
year seeseet . its pages, when his eyes vested on a
Not one of them, sister mine. Was' face that V71.1a not uukuown to him.
stir m on sane in my life,
ttadge,the very idea is preposterous,
Yeti doe't, wane a Lesband.
Of course I cloe't, and have no
tention of slipping my head into elle
noose' matrimonial until 1 em just oet
the verge of old maalship. goit g
:to advertise just for !un, and see ivin.4
eame of it.
Despite Mattie's protestaticns and
misgivin-gs, the advertisement was
...written and dilly forwarded to the
editorial department of e promient
periodical. It read as folio' s :
Wanted—A gentleman correspon-
Thete was nq mistaking that face.
Every lineament 'was familiar to him.,
Could it be possible 1 yas, it certainly
was the ;ace of his own wife, How
had this man .become pesseseed. of
Mattie's picture ? At this juucture,
Mr. lelythe re-entered the roonawhich
prevented further conjecture upon this
unpleasant discovery. Noticing the
album iu Fred's hands he said
I tun glad you found sometItieg with
which to amuse yourself while 1 *A%
out.
I found one piature here that remind
ed inc very strongly of a friend, re,
plied Fred, assuming a cool and care-
, dent, between the ewe' of twenty at.d less manner which at Recorded with
twelity-tive; mast be possessed of aver- his feelings", It wes this ludy,turning
age ability,. good morals and a fair to Alatti4es- picture. Doer she reside
personal address. Object, Fun, lire. Middlefield ?
.. ,
preventent and possday Matrimony. No, replied Harry, it is a lady cor-
' Old bachelors alid'witlowers need not respondent of mine.
apply. Add retie, Tneause. awoora Is she married or single 1
Ashtabula, 0. ',
liarry colored visillly, hesitatTA an
Paste:trews came rorn the North, intent then tipswered i to be frank
South, East and Wt, until Madge with you, mr. Manly, 1 doa't know,1
4ecItired there was a bushel basketful, answered an advertisementecorrespon-
, •4 .. h .
tit the least ealeuletion. Many of dents 'wanted.
„these were read and tossed into the I must have been mistaken regardrate; "t'i're were laid "'"e or a ind the resemblatice to nty friend,Fred
'armee careful scrutiny. At tile end replied eareleesly.
Then tsubject
of two weeks, only half a dozen` 1 ea he
r5.7- wag dropped ; but Mr. Blytbe's cosy
sent retained. Madge could not de
aPartrnent and fragrant Itavanas
leid' open the relative meritef the had lett all the charms tbey lately
anidevided sie, therefore concluded to possessed for poor Fred. pleading a
autivier them all. She soon wade the severe lieadaelte, be excused himself
'discovery that one was too eentimental:
mai linateeed to hie own. mom. His
brain was in e, con&sed whirl. In the
1111(4t114 too preside, and she whs cone .
•
4ildent, two of them belonged to the chaos of his thenahts, one oweot melee
nurse getider, pver two nioiiths atomd cleat before his tnindi his wife's
lied peseta] away ; she found her eer- picture in a stranger's fatten!. Coad
:reepondents limited to -cnie, The is be possinh,4 the mule wile whom he
'wrt title* of this one evinced culture, had ehelishoti so tenderly all these
Ann they were devoi4 of that sena' long yeare was untrue to Lxinit Why
,entulity which is etlwaYa so repellant )10 would bye given his hire for her.
to a girl of Madge's temperament. If for a moment sleep quelled his
Tithe flew byr on rapid *Mee, winter eyelids the specter of los Woe sieemed
tee---• ?mei merged into sprung, when there more vividly reel to hien than in his
pew it reauest from the unknown,who waking memento. lie resolved to
re &el himself Herbert klinturn, that hasten his business, return home at
mite and demand ette, explepation of
the mystery from Igattie.
He arrived jolt after night fell.
gotekly wending Wit Way homeward
• .•
,
;
Therivsa- would exchange photos.
ere Wiidt dilemnist indeed; however,
t of °coaxing, ahe persuaded
40 let her enclose her photo.
tti .1' •
out the entire house. Its dying echoes
were followed by an ontinoue silence
that deepened the shadows resting on
the brows of el/weave retnaitting oc-
wipants of the edam. The spell was
at last broken hi• Fred's voice :
I have been thinking for some time
that, under existing etecutustalices, it
might be better,for all concerned
we two were separated.
The words were spokeu in cold,
measured tones'', that pierced his wife'e
heart like a poisoned shaft unerringly
aimed by a skillful archer. Her lips
refused to utter the words she essayed
to sp eakatint4 the otte thought that
her husband, l#rhome—All that made
life'worth living, weep slippiug away
from her graset forced from her lips in
broken accents a reiteration of Fred's
words : Undei existing circutustauces.
Q, Fred I tell me what it all mean 1
N.dihat have 1 ever clone to merit those
cruel words,
Lather, what Chayenit you done 1
tartly returned he. Advertising for a
correspondent, carrying on a flirtation
with an unkneWn matt, ao far forget.
ting you womanliness and honor es to
send him oven 704 own picture.
I am guiltless ;of these • oharges,
faltered Mattie, .tt new revelation
clawing upou her nein.d.
Explaaatious r full') wed. When
Made re-enteretthe robin an hour
later she found Fred and Mettle cosily
seated side by side on the sofa, appar•
ently eujoyieg each other't Zeitiety as
iu the olden days!1
Bless toy sottl. I Married people
have the queerest freaks imaginable!
°jut:dated she, . again, leaving the
room.
nikre.leriV•WW.c","'"?‘, , '
lila wino and Waltzing her about the (with plenty of brats, shorn, an
room until he declared her head Was meal. &War toad bra"
loosened from her ebeulders and just Meal. Until the pigs be
ready to tutable oft, menthe did, thea :the meal
' eeteatay I he eume, at the thee eepotat. anew. r, 1 :prefer the f
c ,n use aft QW laarrel
ed. He was introduced to:Madge 0.0
an osis friend of Fredea Ae a neater,
of callydel Madge strove to make the
stranger'e ably tenons them a pleatteet
Oath There were pienio exeursious to
various points. of ititereet ; on fair
evenings a row far out over the blue,
placid waters df the lake. All I wile
that has ever realized the witehery of
a nectonlighe ettil ou the !gate, can
.ever forget its power to away and
luielielt the Imere's deepest feelings.
ti,e Fred Predicted, so it proved
Poor Madge ' walked uneuspectiugle
Into the trap set for her unwary feet
and we cannut d-itin our hearts to
ohicle her ; for truly; Mr. Blythe Was a
noble epechnen, of a twilit}, III311 Frei
chuckled inwardly over the success of
his plot.
I was a guest at the Itlanlys a few
week o after Mr. BlYthe"s return home.
One evening Fred brought in a tette'.
addressed to Madge, in a hold, mascu-
line hand. As he landed It to her,
he tetteingly enquired if she had been
advertising for husbands again. Then
alettie chimed in demuredly, that he
supposed Madge teest consider herself'
in unmeciiate danger of slipping into
the .old maid's parade, as the escape
from that fate was to be her only in-
ducement for joining the InatrimOeial
reeks. To these tiallies Madge replied
that she hed had enough of advertise.
ing .to last her a 'life -time and that
people somethnes changed their minds
ahmee matrimony. ' Mattie slyly ins
formed me that Madge had not the
slightest suspicion of Mr. Blythe's
identity with Herbert Militant. She
is to be kept in ignorance of it until
after the marriage w Well will take place
in a few =flats. Then Mr. Blythe
will present her with the letters and
photo aside bridal gift.
ITT.__.. --its•_ Are yot
ADVICIII TO MOYI i disturbed at night
and broken of your rest by a sielphild suffering anti
tryinwith, pain of Cutting Testill If o send
Once ana d got bottle of " Alrs:Winstow's Sbothid
g s
Syrup" for Children Teething,. ,Its value is incainfl-
able It willrellme the midr little suffer.ir
immediately. Depend upon itiinothers; there is no
mistake about it. it aures Dysentery and Diarrlingi,.1 As we have frectaeutty pointed out
resulates the Stomach aud Sows's, cures Wind Celle,
softens the Gums, reduces Inflammation, and gives the ItioKinley Bill Is a departure front
tone and energy to the whole system. "ire. Win, „ , ,„ „
slow's Soothing Syrup " for children teething is the traditions of the Republican Party,
pleasant to the taste and is the prescription of one of
the oldest and best female physicians and nurJes el These traditions pointed towards. a
the United ritotes, and is for sale by all druggists
throughout the world. nice, twenty-flve acute a progressive relief of the war taxes; a
bottle. Lie sure and ask for "Mas. WmeauWs
reduction ot duties, and a gradual
SOOTY-WM SYRUP ' dud take no other kind
Hogs for heHiret
progress toward freer trade. The 4
tar,
e three
alone limy
sour. Yon
is purple.
Do not, soar it far a teed iu warm
weather or it Will get stielty, and
when to this tante the trigs canuot Sat
their usual allowauce. Ftvery few
days give them a feed of dry meal fur
a chump, and some dry earth 44
astute if the pip, amulet get to the
soil in the yard ; nature demands tithe
Keep the yeentepitts dry and warm,
pa: tieularly (mid weather. Two
mouths previous to marketieg, 'feed
them peas to harden tile dean and •get
weight. Soak the peas mita they eau
be readily Fgutted hetweeu the
thumb and Dt.ger, and in this way
you will save the expense of toil and
trouble of teaming to the mill, Now
is the time: to push the hogs. 'When
they begin to sit down while takiug
their food you may he sere they are
nearly finished c.41‘,
I would imprese• upon the n.ind o •
the reader the necessity of feeding
three dines iu twenty -f •ur hours, tit
regular iatervale. Give them Ile
more than they will eat up eh au eeca
titne, sleep the pens (aeon and. emit-
i'ertable, gimlg di tags plenty fresh
eir. They f.houla hate pure cold '
water in the etnOter. In winter the
home should lat:' warm enough to keep
the food from freeziug. 13v following
the above ‘getlyiett a udioione feeder
will waste bat little.
It ie only a few ye sine a hog
seemed werthfof ri tteution, and
now 1 actualltalove t, cal and care
for them. Tilts no tall,t arises from
the fact that I have had good succese,
For example --un September 3rd, last,
I sold live liege 6 utonetts old, and
five 6 menthe old. Their total weight
was 1835 which1 sold at Die.
per lb, live weighe, Making the total lite'
ernount reeeivtd, oae houctred do lam
end ninety two cents (6100.6'2) —§,
p. grown in The Canadian Live Stock
and Faroe Journal VI November.
what the People Pronounced Against.
McKinley Bill, on the contrary, is -
A SITCCIISSPUL PEEDER, DESCRIBES IIIS based upon the doctrine that protece
ineexica. tion is not a temporary expedinut, but
ill Permanent principle; that duties
First decide what market yon wish are to be raised rather than lowered;
to supply. If you are satisfied with that high prices bring high evagee,,
the fall or winter market adhere to
and are a national blessing ; that the
the cid Pteni Let the digs rule ou the first function of a tariff is the stimue
stubble and finish up in tbe pen. I Wien of American Inattufteetures by
you wish to meet the spring or early the exclusion of foreign manufactures,
market your pige must be pushed all and that revenue is a secondary eon -
the timg to attain, to pork -packers' sideration. Against this newform of
weights, elf ITO to 200 lbs. tXt 5
or 6 doctrine of protection the Ameti•
menthe old. I believe the cheapest on people have
ehe
et
pork cep he raised in cormeotion with .onemeced by an
overwhelming majhetta.. An erouseti
the dairy where the milk 18 kept on polio ceaseematt might
eceoutt for
the foam.
the t evolution in the States of Massae
Brqod sows slionld glolltil the stub.
ble instead of the pigs intended for cluptette, Pennsylvania, lodiana and
the legrItet. They will de twill en Eapsae, but nothing less than a pro -
any gieen food as horseettioth coen, fatted endd wide epread conviction that
protective policy of Garfiel
eloyo pasture, with beau eigps, which tho d,
Arthar and Blame, not that cif Harris-
Itre b°n'fartiling foods. -Tt is t'eeee son and Reed mut McEinley, should
eery both before and after farrowing, be the national policy, can settotatt
to keep the sow hi good thriving con- far a revolution which has affeeted the,
dition, not earryiug much flesh. In politic%) complexion af almost every
winter she should have exercise each State hi the Itnione—,alew York Otitis.
day instead of being confined in tt Han union.
A few weeks after t14 little episode pen. When the pigs are farrowed
Fred carne bounding heti, the cottege give no food until the sow looks for
like a boy from sehoel, tyith Came
Mattie, I've a secret tn whipper ia your
ear. -A short time ago 4 wrote Mr.
Blythe giving him the history of that
miserable' little advertisa*ent, also
inviting 'him to visit us. Iffi will come
in Jane. Now, inind, not a hint of
this,te Madge. tWouldn't ohm storm
the castle, though, if she hs,a even a
snspieion of the trap l've:set for her ;
end 111 wager tt ten dollar hill that
elle% walk dolibeeately into the pitfall
What do you t ink of my plot, litt.e
yrttintttl ?
been she should receive a little
ltrea in water, warmed to take the
chill off it. Bran and shorts should
he fed in increasiog quantities with
the elope front the house. Always
keep the pigs as fab as they tatty be
Inside withent interfering with free
breathing. Thp sow in the inettol.hue
may lose flesh.
After the pigs have eonateetieed to
feed freely with the mother, •titke
them from her When they are about
6 qr 6 weeks old. They should now
9
—The Tnnet will be sent to new sub-
scribers from now ill the cud of 1891, fa
41,00.-040i
A gtadfather, about to read his
PaPer, found that Infield mielaid hie
speetintles, Hod thereupod deelared—
/ have lost my &assail eontewheret
and cannot read the paper, A !Mite
Q. year old girl desiring to meat hire,
enswered go outside solg
and look foo ze window* and rtt
hold ee paper up so yott eau read it.
ligy"Tun Times u) new 4bserihers
l 33.st Deoeolhart 1.82,1,1 for 61-001Ptti
eatchint gottifpd all thq Oaf milk they will feth . .
je, ;et • e • ie .ee , •••• et
The
ed b
iltem
tira,At
there
as w
the wi
Was tit
of moat
the im
Eop
Pu die
a FJ.
Pryfog
Ora eel
78, 8
Stewite
±00;
Jo Br
Vert II
:Drooled
gomti oes!not
cwiewn;
but is f
—The
wesi1
°c(1
) el
1'4
Toni, wi
iiid
the Rev
There i
Diphtla
etre aim
'Scott al
a t 1
er
T years
4
. diseases
'some of
and rbgreo
11(Yellmisatya
Bodin Li
death
tktett:irutge 1pi
it:t
for hone
nei
at 1:40"4-
never ra
Disease,
knownIavesa
TbOasboeen
thf
oSt eft: tioltiftils'Biti
Palmer,
OWII a f
paralyti
months
teas a kii
datighte
ttitet Christim
o
frt ai rsa
t I; t
.—.11t. A
Dw cn teatsoed
t
eitturtied
its well in
rosiness
lionaires
Asotro:;tuN
tn
y
timphipubstittli:a
There arel
New Yorl
That p
ail spend
naiades t
ining f
Mee are
mother
Went Ire