Wingham Times, 1891-10-16, Page 2•
(the Mingbam Chau
V" ,0•11.”.
PII/DAA, OCTO BER I6, late
The Draken:tartat Qburo1.
4.7
superintendent where the load run to,
and be said he hoped to die if he itnew.
I asked bins if the general superintend.
cut could tell we, and he said he didn't
believe they bad general euperintend-
ent. and if they had, lie didn't know
nnYtiling, ITIQrP about the road than the
Thr, teentegton niawk„ye gets off peseengers. I asked him who he
the.neitontog goon thing on the Drone, reported to and he said Nobody. I
man at Chareh. asked e conductor who he got bis
On the road oneenmore, with Lehan tirdere frobn,and he said he didn't take
On fading away in tee custanie, the fat oteler front any thing man or dead
ghost, And When J milted the engie
passengtrileununing Idly on the window
pane, the oroleis passenger asleep, and neer who he got bis orders from he
the tall, thin passenger reading Gen. said .he'd line to see anybody give him
Grant's Tour Around the World, and orders he'd run that train to suit
wondering why 13Iair's Keystone himself, or he'd run her in the ditch.
Stationery, should be painted above Now you see, sir, I'm a railroad man
the doors of A. Buddhist Temple and don't care to run an a road that
Banares. To me 0,0111SS tlie, brakeman, has no time, or makes no connections,
runs nowhere, and bus no superieteude
end seating himself on the arm of the
seat, says: ent, It may be all right, but I've rail,
roaded too long tc. understand it,
I went to church yesterday, '
Alaybe you went to the Congrega-
Yes 7 1 said, with that interested
tional church ? I said.
inflection that salts for more. And
what chant did you attend? Popular road, said the brakeman,
no old road too ; one of the very olds
Which do you guess ? he asked.
est in the country. Good roadebed and
Some union mission church 7 I haze
comfortabie cars. Well managed road,
arded.
too ; directors don't interfere with
No, he said, I don't like to run en
division superintendents and train
these branch roads very niuch.. 1
orders, Road's mighty popular, but
.don't often go to church, and when I
it's pretty independeut,too. Yes,didn't
do, I want to run ou the naain bus,
one of the division superintendents
where your run is regular and you go
down east di econtinue one of the okl-
schedule time, and don't have to wait
est stations on this line two or three
on conneetious. 1 don't like to run ou
years ago ! But it's a mighty pleasant
a .brench. Good enough, but I don't
tike it. road to travel on, Always has such a
pleasant class of passengets.
Episcopal I I guessed.
Did you try the Methodist ? I
Limited express, he said, all palace
cars and two dollars extra for a seat, said.
Now you're abouting, he aaid with
fast time and only stop at big stations.
some enthusiasm. Nice road, eh 7
Nice line, but too exhaustive for a
•
Fast time and plenty of passengers,
brakeman. All train men in uniform
Engines carry a power of steani, and
conduetor's punch and lantern silver
•
don t you forget it; steam gauge shows
plated, and no train boys allowed,'
a hundred and enough all the time.
Then the passengers are allowed to talk r
.niveiy road ; when the conductor
back to, the oonductor, and it makes
shouts all bard, you can hear him
them too free and easy. No, I couldn't
stand the palace cars. Rich road, to the next statics's, Every train light
• shines like w headlight. Stopover
though. Don't often hear of a receiver
'being appointed for that line, Some checks are given on allthrough tickets;
mighty nice people travel on it, too. • a passengers can drnp of the train a
Universalist 7 I suggested. . often.' as he likes, do the station two
Broad gauge, said the brakeman, or three times and hop on the next
revival train that comes thendering
does too much complimentary business:
Everybody - travels on a pan Cone along. Good, whole souled. °Owens
icinable conductors; ain't a road in the
ductor doesn't get n fare once in fifty
miles.. Stops at all flag stations and. country where the passengere feel
won't run into anything but a Union more at home. No passes; every pas-
senger pays full traffic rates for his
depot. No smoking car on the train.
Train. orders are rather vague, though, ticket. Wesleyan air'braltes on all
trains, too ; pretty . safe road, but I
.and the train men -don't get along well
didn't ride over it yesterday.
with the passengers, No, I don't go ro
Perhaps you tried the Baptist 7
the Universalist, though I know some
guessed once mere. .
awfully -good 'men who run on that
Ab, halsaid the brakeman, she's
road.
a daisy, ein't she ? River yoad, beauti'.
Presbyterian 7 I asked.
fol curves; sweeps around everything
Narrow gauge, eh 1 said the brake -
to keep close to the river, but its all
.man, pretty track, straight as a rule ;
steel rail and rock ballast, single track
tunnel right through a mountain rather
all the way and no sale triton from
than around it ; spirit towel grade ;
the roundshouse tn the terminas It
pasengers have to show their netters
train. Mighty takes a heap of weter to run it through;
before they get on the
. double . tanks at every strait:ire and.
strict road, but the ears are a litue
there isn't an eterine in the shops that
narrow ; got to sit one in 'a seat and
no room in the aisle to dance. Then Can pull a pound or run a mile with.
there is no stop -over ttckets allowed., less than two gauges. But la runs
got to go straight throngh the station through a lovely unwary ; these river
roads always do; river on one side and
you're ticketen for.or you cant get at
at ail, When the car's full, no extra hills on the other, and it's a steady
coaches; cars built at the shops to hold climb up the grade all the =tray till the
run ends where the fountainhead nf the
jest so many, and nobody else allowed
On. But you elan% often bear of an river beg,ins. Yes, sin ,111 take the
river roitu every time for a lovely trip,
accident on that road, it'a run right up
sure connections and good time, and
to rules.
no prairie dust blowing in the windows.
Maybe you joined the Free Think-,
And yeeterday, when the conductor
era 7 said.
Scrub road, said the brakeman, came round for the tickets with a
00 time basket punclel dicle't 'ask him to
dirt road bed •and no Whist,
card and no train despatcher. All
trains run -old and every engineer
makes his own time, just tattle:pleases,
smoke if you waot, to; kind of go as paseengers assembled, tell you,
Pilgrim, you take the River road when
you please toad. Too many side tracks
foul every switch wide open all the VI:41
time, With the switchman feet Weep But just here the loud whistle from
TI -14 EGG $TEALBR..
101'0141rd hnost, every night, Anusd
It wanted less than an hour to WO irow itcroee in Ida boat, and back agen.
tide when Miss niarty Leer Weird her
brather'a Witt° grate on the narrow
beach below the. garden, and set the
knives and glesses straight while ehe
listened for the rattle of thw gerden
gatAe*Innted line of hazel ran elong,
the foot ox the garden and prevented
till view a tbe landing piece from the
kitchen wirelow, But above the bezels
One could look across aud oatch a
glimpse, at high tide, of the interven-
ing river, or, towards low water mark,
of the mudeanks shining in the sun.
It was Miss Lear's custom to look
much an this landscape from this
whiiluw ; had,i faenbeen her oaten,
for close on forty years. And this
evening when the latch clicked, at
length, and her brother in his market
suit came slouching up the path that
brokethe parallels of garden stuff, her
gaze rested all the while upon the
line of gray water.
Nor, when be entered the 'kitchen
and hitched his hat upon the peg
against the wall—where it brim ack
curately fitted s sort of bull halo in
the whitewash—did he appear to want
any welcome from her. He was a
long jawed man of sixty-five, she was
a long jewed woman of sixtenone ; and
they understood each other, having
kept this small desolate farm together
for twenty years—eince their father's
death.
There was a cold pastry ready on
the table, and the jag of cider that
Job Lear regularly emptied at supper.
These suggested no questions, and the
par sat down to eat in silence.
It was ouly while holding his plate
for the second helping of the pastry
that Job spoke with a full mouth.
Who d'ye reckon 1. ran against to,.
day down in Troy?
Miss Marty out the slice without
troubling, to say that she had not an
idea.
Why, that fellow Amos Trudgeon,
lie went on.
Pears to me you disremerubers'ee—
sen of old Jane Trudgeou that used
to live 'cross the water ;him that stole
our eggs, long back, when father was
livin.
I remember.
I thought you most. Why, you
gave evideoce, to be sure. Be dashed!
now 1 come to mind, if you easn't
the first to wake us up and say you
heard a man cryin' out down 'pon the
niud.
Iss, I was.
An saved his life, though you did
get 'en two months in jail by it, Up
to artu.pits, he was, and not two
minutes to live, when we healed 'en
out and found he'd been stealer: our
eggs., He inquired after you to -day.
Did he I
les, How's Miss Marty, says he,
Agein rapidlyssais I. The nerve that
some folks have I Comes tip to me cool
as my !Ord and , holds hand.
T'd a mind to say Egg.01 to 'en, it so
annoyed ; but F hada the heart.
'Tis an old tale after al, that feat cn
his.
Two an forty race, come seven..
teentli o' July next. Did he say any
morel
Ies—watited to know if you was
married.
Oh, my dear God
Job laid down his knife and fork
with edges resting on his plate, atd
with
a lump of pastry in one cheek
pass ine; hut I pairt toy fare -tikes.
looked at his sietee• Before he could
little omit , twenty five emits- for an speak she tanks. out ttgttin ;
hour's rut and a little coneert by the
He was rey lover.
M a -et y
1 swear to youelob—liere across this
talne--he was my lover; an ruined
Jett, He was. the only tuan, you
and the target lamp dead out. Get on the eugm""Athend 8trdion andlather, that. ever kissed me; an 1
tte cyou please and oir when y01.1 Want the brakeman hurried to the door .1,eteanee 'eu. As the Lord lived', I
to- Don't have to show your tickets °Igniting 1 f' ' • stood in tile box en Mere away hie
aud the conductor isn't expected to do , Zioneville 1 rf`
ebis trait mikes 00 name to aave mine,
atoning bet amuse. the painetigern stops between here and Indianapolis 1 et o, air air, I was offered a pass het 1 ta 1 It a i . u DOn't Hinder pie, 30h—its truth I'm
men removes all ha rd soft of , ,.
dotet like the line. 1 don't like to. NotogigEtilii;i:• i:EiiiToientisheA from horses. ' nem tenet tie, Itis people were a low lett
Rpswin, Splints, king Sone, Sweeney, atlitos,s pralos,
travel on a road that has no tit -Minus. sote sae sweats Throat. Cer, EC. silSe $V4 by an fathered have hided me if he'd
Dte n 511
en know, sin 1 asked a diviaion staitretraeseli kr:IT:it:eel; g.13e.vi'Vvier. know. But we used to nitiat, le the
•
For the Lord's saire,brother don't look
so, Inn past sixty,and no harm done;
an now evil an good's the mune to tne.
Go
Weil, the last night he came over,
'twits low tide. I was Waitfill for 'en
in the orchard ; au be would have me
tell father an, you, an I wouldn', 1
recken we quarreled over it so loug
Me boat you teft high in the mud,
Anyways, lie left me in the wrath, an
I stood there by the gate in the dark
loughs, for 'en to oonne back, But the
time went on, an dtdne hear his oars
pullie away, though' I listened with
all my ears.
Au then I heard a terrible sound, a
low sort of breathin, but fierce, an
something worse, a suckssuckin of the
mud below, nu ran down. There he
was, above his knees in it, half way
between firm ground and his boat. For
alt his fightin he heard me and whis-
pers out o' the dark:
Little girls it's got
don't sbout.
Can't you get out 2 I whispered
batik.
No, Inn efrald.
I'll run and tell father an Job.
Hush I Be you mated 1 Do you
me. Hush 1
Tiri wartnera neaupat o
A artnerse occupti
for himself end his race, and to ob.
tein it from all the resources of nature
which the Creator
fgeavoisto
en to hi,
eo
immb thatoe
he might exeroise dorniniou over them,.
Tb13 mall who fnrrns. and farms Well, "1
rules; but that requires the most, care.
fol judgement, and the higbeut intels
esi to govern animal Mound plana life,
lectaal leaden When he bus leant -
then he bas ruled to some purpose ;
and then a farmer may rise to rule
higher forms of Activity, Thus by
and by we alien herti the farrners ruin
ing the world. After they have learn-
ed to rule the lower phases a life
correctly, they may rise.to rule others
with advantage. In doing his work
the fernier must MSS anidnals, as the
world required numerous and varied
.products for food. Englaq and thin
continent consume more food per head '
of their population than they did 25
year3 ago. We eat more per bead,
more mutton per bead and more
bacon than the people of 25 years ago.
Vegetable products are replaced by
animal products; consequently the
farmer mustkeep animals adapted for
the yielding of food, and be Must
necessarily keep theta at a profit. A
fernier, who takes more out of his land '
want to let 'em know ? than he gives bank, is not farming ;
w that eats more than it gives
But it'll kill you, dear, won't ft and a co
Likely it will, said he. Then after back to him is a.beirden to him,instead •
a while; of battlin with it be whispers of being his helper. The man who .
again. Little girl, 1 dont want to keeps a good cow, keeps a friend; and
'
die. Death is a cold end, Bua poor man can best afford to keep
t I
reckon we oan manage to save me an the most cows, if he keeps them on
good food, When he learns the
year name as well. Run up to the
eggs :business of raising good cows, then he '7*
henhouse an iwing me as. many
as you can ling—and don't ax uglttotes;
3W. Vi gr ieUetett.d withihe suwpoerrilod;sf, !ondat;ktleletries'
tions, Bea ; can keep
I 'I . ; is often a glut of inferior things in
47
I didn't know\ whathentneant, 1,„t :every niasrket and every climate, but
'
there is seldom a glut of superior food;
ran up for tny li&t, I could tell pretty
well how to find a dozen or nore
and people are willing to pay for it at
i
tile dark by gropin abont, and in high Prices, when they get a chance of
buying it.—From tun' 'address by Prof
minutes had gathered 'em in the lop o
my dress, and ran down agen, 1. Robertson.
could juste spy him—a dark bleb out CODSUMPTION CUBED.
on the' mud.
How many 2 he asked, his voice
:h old pilysjgimi, retired from prricianpittieii,issIgnviaig
t faS Polt=tia"c,f betgti= al
hoarse as a rock's. - speedy and permanent cure of CoitristluipiaLif°firtottr.
About a dozen, iajtetlienstg,i 0 I:Catarrh,esp:ettAsaatintw:loolailsIlil av el 1 (I all njtirreLu;oigr
known to his snffering fellows. . Actuated by this
near and shy careful, so's can catch, motive and a desire to relieve ill1111(111 suffering,
QUiek 1 recipe, in German, French or' English,. with. full
will send free of charge, to all who desire it, this
I stepped down pretty near to the adjioriret set si os fourztirnipng nitannid Sinrthls pet:pry nt.il hi.
brill) 0' the mud au tossed 'eat out to with Block ffochester, 4, Y.
him. Three fell short in ray hury,but , A Ifindergarten Lesson.
the rest he got hold of, somehow. It takes the average single
That's right. They'll think egg long time to find out
stealin naterat to a low fainly like ; Thee all girls are not alike.
aunt. Now back to your room, une I That the first person. angular; MI
dress an cry out, sayin there's *a man be dispensed with,
*shoetin frit. help down '.pon the mudt Tien, because his girl's ethereal
-
When you wave your candle twice i', looking she don't eat like common
the window shoat like a Trojan. mortals.
An 1 did it, Job, for the cruelty in a That the summer girl's a delusion.
fearfal woman passes knowledge. An That he's setting in the car while two
you aescued 'en. an he went to jail. woman are banging on the- straps
For he said 'twea. the only way. An That he's on the earth for a pur-
his mother took it as quite reastnable pose.
that her husband's son shouldnake to
the had—'twas the way orall the
Trudgeons. •
You needn't look at me like that.
I'm past sixty an I've done my share
of repentin. He didn't say it he was iffsetaVattlifUtriti,sd
41=07tartiPy9rasitlettiigtror
regulates the Stomach and bowels, cures
married, did he ?--ix QUILIMIt softens the Gums, reduces Inflammation, and gives
I tone and tnergy ta tho whole system. "Mrs, Win.
COMIt. slow's Soothing Syrup for children teething. is
Nervous
eNr?tril °Isureatge4Pincltr48"g
Toss 'ern here. Don't eome too. teonalines of cases, he has felt It his duty bet make it
Man a
That cigarettes doen make the man,
Ames •ro Anrivens,- Aro yell disturbed et right
and broken of your rest by a sick child suffering and
crying with Dain of Cutting Teeth 1 If so seed at
once and got a bottle " Mrs. Soothing
Syrup" for Children Teething. Its value is ineaktul-
tit 0. tuft will retie% e the . poor initforsr
pleasant to the taste and Is the proscription ot ono ot
* the oldest and best ontale physicians atid nurses in
the Usual, Way. the United States, and is for sale by all druggists
THE usual way is to neglect bad blood
until boils, blotches and sores snake
its presence forcibly known Every wise
person (night to be careful to purify the
blooa by using the best blood verifier and
10010, Buratick Blood Bitters. Its purify.
ing power is waeivalled.
Tina ler Teachers.
The following rules flu, the govern-
ment of children are said te leive been
of great service to many suocetisfal
teachers t
When you coeserinconsent eordially,
When you reuse, refuse
When you punish, punish. good
naturedly.
Commend erten. Never
New Vol* Press,
throughout the voila. Pelee twenty -live CCIAS a
bottle. 13e sure and ask for "Mks Wrishow's
Soornevi 81.21:1+ And take no ether Kind
It is a Coffitnon saying that time is
money, bet it is also a great More—it
is opportunity, skill, ability, oharacter
--and to waste it is to waste life iteelf,
with MI it bolds in entre.
the Australian Coninittriwoeitli.
The Austr4lian Commonwealth wilt
have greed results but the results of using
Burdock Blood Bitters for diseases of the
stotpach, liver, bowels and blood surp,u4s
all etipeotetions. nyepepsia, healtelmo
bilioneuess, serofula, eto, are protoptly
cured by B
That men nuly has teamed to live
'mid.— rightly who takes with a smile the
worid's praise and Winne, and with
nonoeons nt "bit Gripren, wil5on#8 stead heart and hittid goes straight on
Compound Syrup of Wild Cherry is a sure t With the work lie lutemmx hand,
hearten§ remedy. There isms better medi-
tionnegibosr,t1d%",rniero°uf pigitlettrcfrelldrr°111relelifiteitis: softball from tow tin the let of nanuar,y,
--The Tines will be sent to new sub -
Get the gvennue iu white wrappers. 1802, for 26 cents,
Ti
Woul
wbis
beef.
Ti
heer
Tl
whir
ooffe
TI'
beer
you
TI
whits
T
of bi
eggs,
Tt
tvhis
butt(
TI
ere two
for
T
two
for f
rj
dire
the
000
fou
for
cfou
pat
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