The Huron News-Record, 1889-06-26, Page 7:Tim Huron News. -Record
8L50 a Year -81.25 in Advance.
Pew The man does not du Jnettce to hie business
.who mends les$ in ado: eistag than he titled in
rent, -A. 'I', Sm.; Aar, the millionaire merchant
of New Palk.
ednesdaY. Janie 241th. 1889
stiff muslin of the quilt, or the eels -
sore cuttin' ofj' the>:da. I listened
again and again, and not a word
could I hear. Finally I stepped
into the room and I ells, says I,
'Pears to mo you're dreadful quiet
in here.'
'Not one of 'ole said a word.
'You'd ort to be more sociable,'
I says, but they just set there, with
their eyes fastened on their work.
FOR OUR STORY -READERS. 'I tools a needle and sat down and
quilted halt' en hour with 'em, but
not ono of them spoke a word'ceptin
MRS. PA\TON'S QU[LTING. to me. Then I had to go out and
put my turkey in to roast,and while
'"rho quilt itself was a double I was 'tendin' to it some one rode
nine•patch, and I had it quilted in i tip so the gate and called out, 'Hello
and I wont out and there was Peter
Ripley, a gossipy old fellow who
lived down to the village, Where all
my quilters lived.
',Haven't time to come in, said
Peter, and this critter o' aline won't
stand, nohow. My wife wants to
know if you can bring her three
pounds o' butter Saturday.
'1 told him I was sorry, but
couldn't spars much 'cause I had
comp,ny.
"What comp'ny V asked Peter.
'Oh,' says I, 'I'm havin a little
quiltin' to day.'
"Who you got 9' he asked, gossip -
like
'Molissy Grant and Mahaly Hicks
and'—
'Yon don't say !' says Peter with
a chuckle.
!And Calisty Hoff and'— •
t'\Vass' and more of it,' put in
Peter
"And Lucindy Marks,' I says.
"Why Abby Paxton,' says Peter,
'ain't you heered nothing•V
'No,' I says, 'what do you
mean 1'
"Have they come yit} V asks
Peter, and when I says they had,
he asks :—'How're they leaking
out V
"They do seem rather quiet,'
says I.
"Do they speak se a114'
"1 do'nt know as they do,' I was
'bleeged to say.
'Must bo a jolly quiltin,' says
Peter, and then he lay back on the
seat of his old buggy and laughed.
•Nell, what is it V says I, pretty
sharp, °for I see I'd got into some
kind of a muss,
'Well,' says Peter, 'them four
women got in to a fuss day.bofute
yesterday over some quarrel their
children had at school, and they
all happened to meet at the school-
house,'and when they parted eoin-
p'ny they all vowed and declared
they'd never speak to each other
again as long as. they lived and
breathed and kept their senses, and
,hero you've gone and got theta iden-
tickle four women shot up together
in a room, and air going to keep
them there all day !'
•,Au' that man jest lay back laugh-
ing.
'You'd better tura 'em loose or
there '1l be damage done,',' says
l?eter, as he drove away, chuckling
to himself, to spread the news.
in a feather and herein'-boue pat -
tura,' said Mrs. Paxton, when she
told me the story that .t now tell to
you in her own words.
'It was oue of the prettiest quilts
you ever saw—all rod and green and
yellow and purple and pink calico,
set together with white, with a set -
on border, a red vine with green
leaves. There -were ,just three
thousand nine hundred and ninety-
nine pieces in that quilt.'
'I' taken uncommon pains Yining
the pieces together and cutter' them
all tree and even, and thst quilt
took the premium six tittles hand-
eunniu' to our country fair.
'I wanted it quilted well, so I
didn't snake a reg'lar quiltin' over
it, but just invited in four or five of
the best quilters in the neighbor-
hood one day, and the rest I quilted
tnysolf, and it took me the better
part of a month to do it. Them
feat•hors is such slow work.
'Melissy Grant was the best and
fastest quitter in the country, and
her tongue was as fast and as sharp
as her needle. But she was splen -
slid company and real good natured,
spite of her sharp tongue ; but once
riled she _ stayed riled, and she
•never said to one's back what she
would nob say to their faces.
'Then there was Mahaly Hicks.
She was 'moat as good a quitter as
Melissy. She was ev'ry mite and
grain as good on straight line's, but
Alellissy was a tootle mite better on
herrin'-bones, though I wouldn't
have said so for the world,
for Mahaly was mighty techy
on that p'inty and so was.
Dleliesy, and there want no love
lost between them, nohow. •
'Lucindy Marks came iu about,
third best among the good quitters,
and she could quilt jest as fast as
any of 'em, but when she got in a
hurry some of her stitches would be
a leetle bit long.
'Then Chore was Mandy Martin,
Calisty Iloff and Betty Mitchell, all
the best kind of quitters. -
'Betty Mitchell was the life of all
the quiltin's'and carpet -rag •sewin
and wool pickiu's in that part of
the. country, she was always so full
of her fun, and sharp as tacks, and
I' felt dreadful sorry when she sent
word that she couldn't come, ou
•account of having a house' full of
company. -
'.Mandy Martin's rheumatism
broke out the day before and crip-
pled her right arm so she couldnst.
came but the other four carne
Mahaly Hicks got there first and
had just set down to the quilt when
Melissy Grant came.
'Come right iii, Melissy,' stays 1
`Mahaly's got a little ahead of you,
but I guess you can ketch up to
her.'
'Neither of them- said a word,
although I didn't hardly notice under it, anlf not one of 'em showed
them at the time; but Melissy laid sinus of givi❑ in.
eller bonnet and shawl and sat of
one of 'em wanted the thread
down and went to work, making
"Veli, I felt terrible. We lived
uu a farts a toile from the village,
and 1 hadn't heered a word about
the fuss. I went back to the house
and there they set, their needles
flyiu' but their tongues still, which
must have beou a dreadful trial to
Melissy and Calisty, but they
seemed .to be bearin' up pretty well
her needles fly. -
'I didn't keep any help then, and
of course, when a woman had a
quiltiu she was perticklcr 'beet bor
dinner, and I was' so busy in my
kitchen that I was right out there
as soon as I'd got Dtolissy thread
and needles, 'and I didn't go into
the sittin' rootn again, where the
quilt, was, until Calisty Hoff came.
' Then I left my pie -snaking and
hurried in,
` 'I noticed that Calisty looked
kind o' queer when she saw Mahaly
aue bloliasy settin' to the quilt, but
he didn't say anything to them,
,bought she laughed and joked
S
lith me all the time I was getting
her thread and •needle and laying
Off a place for her to quilt.
'While I was doing that Lucindy
Marks came,
"Come right in, Lucindy 1' says
I, 'the others all got a little ahead
of you, but I'll trust you to quilt
as many blocks as any of 'em by
-' noon. You set right down here by
Calisty.'
'But I noticed that she took her
cheer and went clean to the other
end of the quilt and set down with
her mouth shot hard and her black
eyes snappin.' I smelt something
burning in the kitchen just then,
and I ran out to see it, Something the well 1'
else kept mo busy for some time, 'Well you'd ought to have heard
and when I got time to think of it them ,four tongue-tied women 1
at all, think to me, '•Well, them They all gave a -yell simultaneous
Women's mighty queer in there for and made a rush for the door- and
women, speshly sich women as
Melissy "Grant and Calisty Hoff,
whose tongues gin'rally seemed.
fastened in the middle and loose at
both ends when they got together.'
'I'd step near the sittin'-rootn
door, but not a sound could I hear
but the needles cutting through the
the well.bu.olcet, when she lost her
balance and down she went.
'Her curly head come up in the
water just as wo got to the curb, and
Calisty -gave one awful screech and
fell in a dead faint on the grass.
The well was walled with rough
stones,aand it was 'bout twenty feet
to the water.
'In the twiuts'iug of au eye Melissy
Grant had alt' her gaiters, and not
being cumbered with no hoopshirts,
or bustles, or frills, she gathered
her plain skirts mound her, slim
over the cull) and down she slid on
the tope of the bucket that was iu
the well
'She went clean out of sight at
first, but the next moment her head
popped up out of the water, and she
drew herself up by the rope 'bout a
foot with cue arm while she clutch-
ed at little Janie with her other
hand.
'The well was only 'bout three
feet across, and Melissy mauaged to
get her feet in one of the cracks
'tween the rocks with her back to
the opposite wall ; but most of her,
and Jane too, was in the water.
"Blow the dinner holt' for the
men,' she says, and I mu and got
the horn, and blowed as if the ho0ae
was on fire. My husband and his
hired men came running in from
their work, and between us all we
got Janie and Mellissy out, all right,
but the child was as limp as a rag,
and we all thought she was dead.
"Roll her over a bar'l to git the
water out,' says Dtolissy, without
minding herself, and her hands
were all bloody, too, because of the
rope and the rocks,
`Me and Melissy went to work
over Janie, and Mahally and Lucio
dy'tended to Calisty, for she was as
white as a sheet and all of a tremble
when she slid come to.
"Janie's all right, Calisty,' says
Lucindy.
'Yes', yes,', says 11alhaly,you chins
right up, a low.'
"0 Lucindy ! 0 Mahaly 1' says
Calisty. I declare it' they didn't
make up for lost time ! Calisty was
all right in ton minutes, an she fairly
cried over lltelissy's bruised hands
and would bandage thele np herself.
Janie come 'round as well as ever by
night, and for three hours thele
women all talked at once and they
was sweet as sugar to each other—
sugar would not have melted in their
mouths,
'I got au early supper and they
went home afterwards, Luciudy and
Marialy ural and arm, and Calisty
and Melissy each holdinga hand of,
little Janie, and I never tileiew them
having any quarrels after that,'
and it happened to be at the other
end of the quilt, she'd shake it un-
til the spool rolled to her, and they'd
get up and walk clean around that
quilt after the scissors 'fore they'd
ask for 'eln.
• `So it wont on until noon,and wo
had dinner. My husband was a
jolly, joky kind of a man, and he
made it so lively at the table that
we gut along first-rate, but wbeu
he'd gone back, and the woman had
gone back to the quilt, they were
silent as the grave.
'I kept talking in to one or the
other of them as I washed the dishes,
and they'd seem to auwswer
sprightly enough, but never a word
to each other.
'Soon as I'd done my dishes I
went in and set down to the quilt
with tho rest of them, and just then
Hiram Hoff, Calsty's husband,drove
up ou his way to the mill. He
had his little four-year old girl
Janie, with him, and he said he
guessed he'd leave her with Calisty,
as it looked some like rain.
•So the little girl came in and
wont to playing 'round with my
little Hattie, who was 'bout the
same ago. They ran out into the
yard, and 'fore ten minutes Hattie
came running in and screamed out:
—'Oil mamma ! Janie' she fell into
mo after th'om.
'The well was about twenty-five
feet deep with a low curb and wind-
lass.. There was a drinking.gourd
hanging by the side of the window
and little .Janie had climbed onto
a tipped -over wooden pail and
reached over to fill the gourd from
•'GIRLS AT AUCTION,
At a church sociable held in Mc-
Donough, Chenango County, N. Y.,
the young ladies, having tired of
the device of raising funds by sell.-
ing kisses at a qu;irter a smack, dc.
aided- to put themselves up at auc-
tion and allow themselves to be
sold to the highest bidder—the
purchaser to bo allowed to enjoy
for the rest of the evening, to the
exclusion of all others, the society
of the young lady whomhe bought,
The Middleton Argus, 111 describing
what happened, says : " Of course
the young ladies intended that it
should only bo a play auction,
'They meant to be sold in earnest
for fun and to have a real lovely
time, finding how much their swains
valued thele at in hard cash. In
their innocence, however, they did
not reckon upon the guileless sin-
cerity, impenetrable stupidity" and
inteusely practical character of
some leen, and so it cause that one
_ Qom,,,
of the fair maidens got Into very, ',/ �
serious trouble. It happeied that
'among the company present was a
clod -hopping yokel who had no
idea that when lie bought a girl at
auction ho didn't really get her• at
all. The fellow was known to be
very penurious, to hang ou to his
pennies like ' grim death to a sick
monkey,' and when the auction was
in progress he astonished every one
in the room by tho reckless way in
which ho ran up the price on a
pretty gill. Ile finally distanced
all competitors, and the girl was
knocked down at $7.49. He drew
out his wallet and counted out the
money, and then said he was going
to take her home with him at once.
This was a new and unexpected de•
velopwont, and some undertook to
explain matters to the young man ; WEST OF ENGLAND SUI1-
but he 'would listen to no explana• INGS & TROUSERINGS,
tion. He'd been to auctions before
and had bought cows and horses,
and, after paying for them, had
taken them home. He'd bought
and paid for the girl, and why
couldn't he take her with him 1
'What did they sell her for if they Male up in Beat Style and Work -
did not intend to let the man who
bought her have her 1 Did any one
suppose that he would have paid
such a price for the girt if he had
known that he was not allowed to
take her 1 The ruore he talked the
madder the victimized countryman
got, and as he blustered and storm-
ed the maiden wept and the comedy
was rapidly becoming a tragedy, AND CLOTHS.
when finally it occurred to some
one yl)', give the fellow back his A Full" Line of GENTS' FUR
$7.49. This was done and he NISHINGS always in stock.
pocketed it eagerly and took his
departure, muttering as ho wont
that they ' couldn't fool him again
with their goshdatnedgal auctions."'
TOO 111A,.NY CALLS ON VIE
LAND.
"Aud that's sortie of us who run
to the Lewd too often," said the
preacher. "We'd dun botherin'
IIiul with trash and tryin' to should-
er off our burdens. It won't do
you 'uus any good to fall un yer
knees if yer mule gits sick or yea
hogs stray away, or tithe cabin
spriugsaleak. The Lawd haiu't up
than to bo bothered with trifles.
He's a-expectin' everybody to have
common sense, and to get out and
doctor their own mules and hunt
up their own hogs.
"'there's ole Steve Parshall, fur
instenco. lie's a-botherin' the
Lawd ulore'n all the rest of the folks
in the country. If ho has a bile on
his leg he draps down and axes the
Lawd to take it away. He'll hire a
nigger to plant his co'n, and then,
instead of -gwine ter work at the
weeds hisself later on, he'll put in a
hull hour axin' tho Lawd to gin
him a full crap. I tell ye the Lawd
hain'tgwin for do it. Ile hain't up
that' fur that purpose•" '
"Kin I pray when Illy old man is
tools sick 1" asked a woman who
had come alone.
. "That's a -cording," he answered.
,'Tbo Lawd hain't gwin ter send no
and down to tell ye to make a
nlnstal•d plaster and git np a redness
on,•or ole ulaur'schist., and He hain't
groin to put 110 handwritin' On the
wall telliu' ye what's good fur bilius
favor or rhoumaticka. Ile's expect -
in' ye to know all th>it and a good
-deal mo', and prayers hafn't got
nuthin' ter do with it."
"My woman's prayin' fur rain,"
said a farmer, who had conn
barefooted and without coat or vest.
"She won't git it!" emphatically
replied the preacher. "When the
Lawd made this yere world in six
days he fixed up the weather and
set het' goilig, and IIe doan' hav
nuthin' to do with wetness or dry,
Less, That's Natur', and yer 'ole
woman kin \v'ar her teeth out pray•
in' and'twon't do no good."
For two long hours he discoursed
and answered gnestiona by turn,
and for straight shots and horse
,'souse he could not bo surpassed. Irl
closing, he said :
"I hain't den gwine ter ask 111e
Lawd to help yea co'n or turnips, or
to gin ye fine clothes and green-
backs. I'm gwin to humbly beg
that he will, in Ili, own good way,
Make ye mo''fitteu i'us' the life ter
come. Pore, fitless, sinful critters,
let ns kneel ill prayer."
—John Manion, a young farmer
living four rules from Fayette,Miss„
and his wife had separated because of
a quarrel over attentions shown Dlrs.
Manion by Richard M. Fowler, -her
husband's bachelor cousin, Satur-
day Manion and Fowler u:et and
when only three feet apart began
firing at each other. Manion was
killed. Fowler was wounded in the
neck and both ;Ilius• Mrs. Manion
is prostrated and threatens to kill
herself, All the patties are highly
connected.
THIS YEAR'S
JR, '170.14 H
CUT and PLUG
SMOKING TOBACCO.
FINER
THAN EVER.
SEE
-IN BRONZE ON -
EACH PLUG and PACKAGE,
617-y
LOTHING.
ABRAHAM SMITH,
Market Square,
GODERICH.
81181088 DIRECTORY
gelttiott'j.
G. H. COOK,
Licentiate of Dental Surgery Honor Gra .nate
of the Toronto School of Dentistry,
Nitrous Oxide Gas administered for the painless
extraction teeth.
Office -Over Jackson's Clothing Stare, next to
i'ost Office, Clinton.
1113'Night Bell answered. 404
ttedical.
I'AR REEVE. Olfiee-"Unlace" Brick Block,
Rattenbury Street, Llesiduuce opposite the
Temperance hall, Il,u•on Street. Coroner for the
Count) of Huron. 010 hours Iron 8 a.w. to 6
p. 111.
Clinton, Jan. 14, 1881. 1-y
SCOTCH TWEED SUITINGS &
TROUSERINGS,
FRENCH AND ENGLISH WOR-
STED CLOTHS,
DR. GUNN
W. Gunn, M. D. L. It. C. 1'. Edinburgh L. 11. 0.
S. Edinburgh Lleenclate of the Midwifery, Edin.
Office, on corner of Ontario and IVilliam Ste.,
Clinton. 478-y.
•
0(111(8/1 i,o at Abraham Sm'ith's.
Num in stuck one of the cheal)e-
and Lest .stocks of
WINTER CLOTHING
Regal.
MANNING & SCOTT,
Barrister's, 4'0.,
ELLIOTT'S BLOCK, - CLINTON.
Money to Loan.
A. H. MANNING,
It will Judi you to call on
ABRAHAM SMITH
JAS. SCOTT.
T. I. F. HILLIARD,
II (MUSTER, SOLICITOR, &e.
Office ---Cooper's new block (ground floor),
Victoria Street, Clinton.
Will attend Division Courts at Bayfield and Blyth
AV' PRIVATK FUNDS TO LKNI, at lowee(• rates of
Interest. 513
T7'11.\VARD NORMAN LEWIS, Barrister, Sol
JJ leitor in high Court, Conveyancer, ,Sc,,
Goderich and Bayfield. Money to loan at five
and one-half per cent on two -third margin. Bay•
field office open every Thursday from 9.30 to 4.30
in Swartz' hotel block, opposite Division Court
Office. 466t1
°EAGER & MORTON, Barrieters,d:c.,dr , God-
lierlch and Wingham. C. Sewer, Jr., Goderich
J. A. Morton \Vingham. 1-1y, •
•
j1AVISON St JOHNSTON; Law, Chancery,aud
If Conveyancing. Oltlee-West Street, next
door to Post Qafeo, Goderleh, Ont, 57.
I�C. HAYS, Solicitor, tire. Office, corner of
CSquare and West Street, over Butler's Book
Store, Goderich, Ont. 67.
Sar Honey to lend at lowest rates of interest.
•
I�1 CAM PION, Barrieter,Attorney, Solicitor in
J. Chancery, Conveyancer, &c. Office over
Jordan's Drug Store, the rooms formerly occu
pied by Judge Doyle, -
t13 Any amount of money to loan at lowest
rates of interest. 1.1)•,
Il111'tt4Iteevlttg.
H. W..E3ALL,
AUCTIONEER for Iluron County. Sales at-
tended to in any part of the County. Ad-
4ress orders to GooeaIC11 P 0. V.17. '
CHAS. IlAlIIII,'I'ON,
AUCTIONEER, land, loan and insurance agent
Blyth. Salus attended in town and country,
)n reasonable terms. A stet of farms and village
lots for sale: Money to loan on real estate, at
low rates of interest. Insurance effected on all
classes of property. Notes and debts collected.
Goods appraised, and sold on commission: Bank-
rupt etocks bought and sold.
Blvth. Dec. 16, 1880
Photographers
81,
CLINTON.
Life Size Portraits a Specialty,
Clinton Marble Works,
HURON STREET) CLINTON.
W. H. COOPER, dr.,
Manufacturer of an dealer In all khule of
Marble & Granite for Cemetery
Work at figures that defy competition
Polio, to pod.
IUI ONBY to lend in largo or wail Nowa, pi!
1Vi good mortgagee or rernonal locurity,gt
the lowest current ratan. 11. ti? -LE, Unroll at
0110ton.
Clinton, Feb. 20, 18b1 LY
Alco manufacturer of the Celebrated
ARTIFICIAL STONE tor Building pur- efin► T
poses and Cemetery Work, which must
be seen to be appreciated.—All work
warranted to sive satisfaction.
MONEY.
I�1t1VATE 1-': NDS to lend w Toe n nod 1111)1
jI property. Appl) to
C. ICJ DO L'J',
Ottice, next \ewe-RKeony(up stake) Ail et•kt
359-3m
ltttltinl.
T99 EN BAIIW
1ncurporated h) Aetof Parliament, 1855
CAPITAL, - - - $2,000,006
REST, - - $1, 000,000
Head Office, MONTREAL.
TIIOJIAS WORKMAN, President;
J. 11. It, MOLSON, Vice -President.
F. WOLFERSTAN THOMAS, General Manager
Notes diseonuted, Collections Made, Drafts
issued, Sterling and American ex.
change bought +"1d sold at low -
ea current rates.
INTKaKNT AT 3 l'KIt CKNT. ALLOWED ,ON DICK b11e
FARMERS_
Honey advanced to turnterson their own note
with one or more endorsgrs. No mortgage re
mitred as security. --
II. CI. BREWER,
' Alanager,
CLINTON
February. 1884
tt000llic.
j-'IUNTON Lodge, No. 84, A. F. & A. M.
V erects overt' Friday, on or after the tut
moon. Visiting brethren cordially invited.
J. YOUNG, w. M. J. CALLANDER, Si,
Clinton, Jan. 14, 1881. 1.
dt'it11�I'.
L. O. L. No. 710,
CLINTON,
Meets SECOND Monday of every
month. hall, 3a1 flat, Victoria.
block. Melting brethren always
made welcome.
\V, G. SMITH, W. ALA
U. 13. CAL11CK, U. Ai.
P. CANTELON, Soo.
Jubilee Preceptory 1tot 16!,
(Blacb Knights of Ireland)
Meets to the Clinton Orange flail, the second
Wednesday of every month, at 7.50 o'clock in
the evening Visiting air knights will always
"cel ye a heart) welcome.
A. MI. Tone, Worshipful Preceptor,
OKonor, !Lashes, Deputy Preceptor
N'ueaAlt McIes:, Registrar
Hopi Black Preceptoty 391
Black Knights of Ireland,
,Meets in the Orange Hall, Blyth, the WtdneK-
da) after full moon of every month.
Royal Black Preceptory 3151
Bloch' Knights of Ireland,
meets in the Orange Hall, Goderich, the This
Monday of evcry mouth. Visiting Knights a rosy
made weleofue.
JAMES wI:LLS, Preceptor, Saltford P 0
W H Al URN EV, Registrar, Goderich 1' 0
CLINTON I{NIGHTS OF LABOR
Rooms, third flat, Victoria block. Regulr
meeting every 'I•hursllay evening at 8 o'eloo
sharp. Visiting linighte made welcome. ,
FOR FIRST CLASS,
HAIRCUTTING AND SHAVING.
Go to A. E. EVANS, FAIIIION:1,Rl.E
BARhlcu, 2 doors east of Nr vs•REcolw of-
fice, Special ah.tention given to LADIES
AND Cin1LDItEN's Haircutting.
Puff PADOuit HAI RCu•rrI NG A St'ktitt.•Y.
FOR SALE.
9111F. SUBSCI4!BER offere for Bale tom eligible
J_ Building Lots fronting on Albert Street; also
two fronting on Rattenbury Street; either en
bloc or in separate lots, to suit purchasers. For
further particulars apply to the undersientd.-E.
DiNSLEY, Clinton. 382
McKillop Mutual Insurance Co,
T. NEILANS> HARLOCK
GENERAL AGENT.!
Isolated town and village property, as well as
farm buildinge and stock, insured. Insnrances
effected against stock that may be killed by
lightning. If you want insurances drop a card
to the above address,
502.1!.
Goderich Marble Works
Having bought out JOSEPH VANSToNI,
in Coddle!), we are now prepared to fur
nish, on reasonable terms, •
HEADSTONES AND MONUMENTS.
GRANITE A SPECIALTY,
We are prepared to sell cheaper than any
other firm in the county.
Parties wanting anything in this lino will
find it to their interest to reserve their
orders for us.
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