Ontario Community Newspapers

Newmarket Era , March 24, 1893, p. 1

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1- Tins J j Friday Morning CEO Sb5BTto TO ABOUR AOORImO TO ALL WBBTT j I I 13 of REACHED BAWK III A if i t NORTH YORK INTRLLIGENCER AND ADVERTISER Ho papers outside of North York paid In adfsuwe VolXLIlNo 9 Single Copies a Cents i Newmarket Friday March J Terms Strictly in Advance within or at end of year i i on issued t AT feel Newmarket to 1 SOLICITOR for Tp Oil- A CASE Bio rfi West 11- f or- cans 48 to MAIN ST Sugar Makers BEFORE BUYING SHOULD INSPECT OUR STOCK OF For itu Bra If ft if- if alii No I piUtelrdbTttfUn TI N woo SAP PAI BUCKETS Sap doe a It tf- LAME A I R0LU50SHEAD A BINNS D Room lome mock 4 A KUDCRT ROSE GcnU AUCTIONEER Tor lb York Mllcf Telephone No to WRIGHT CO done promptly WJ SPOT CASH NOT SHOE HOUSE Is making a Big Clearing Sale of Boots and Shoes tor the next days so as to reduce my stock to make room for Spring Goods- The Bargains you will find all down the centre of the shop When I say Bargains you know I mean what say They will not last long at the prices I put them at Now come along Richards Co Qmtlamrt In driving aver mount I look a severe cold which set- lied in my back and kidneys causing me many sleepless nights of pain The application of LINIMENT so relieved roe that fell into a deep sleep and complete recovery followed John McLeod Annapolis THE Recognised Standard Brands a Murlgo Kioker a able Beutifal of winter by will oon be put For winter cannot I we Iby to mm ianhloaMjoKioialflboTVifi Giro thought for quia BMQlifal with balmy Should flfl our with got To Him who remind long turn and spring all toara Bidding oar the toll and That form a fart of Uf spring I of rett To Kali by Altar the the and spring I of In a land that is far than tills J Emblem of red joy Of that no alloy spriog In lb glorious 01 and growing ol life when Of Ufa mora Newmarket March 893- Lost JACKS liuUEKOf At lie tit Office Repairing Neatly Promptly Done ivt- otAXmX AND CLOCK a lad hind- SO SIGN RED BOOT GRIFFIS be ap florin an fully for I of and We Cigar to y In rellAbi as rnmj coin- Our rtc s SONS Montreal and Life AaiaraacoCqi past as sojtr to Abdc of Kot ticotUod Kog Companion lUHoa Wrights Tin Newmarket- ALBION par day a- for meet all Kit J Tilt OK NORTH Vivlyih for PURE DRUGS CHEMICALS CHOICE PERFUMES AND TOILET ARTICLES Largest and Highest in Canada CANADA DKiripn- UNITED MANITOBA nocjurD Vmughmn cat down the ship Thai was report that reached borne when the news came of the low of good ship Beatrice off the Sandwich Islands in a great storm The lifeboats were lowered and filled and while the captain upon the quarterdeck commanding the loading of the boats the sank There wasmuch more description in the papers that I had obtained for an hour or two from a file of three years back Three years passed on sickness exile and sore poverty before I un tamed a passage upon a bound vessel and landed in London For I am Captain who went down with the ship Beatrice The rush of the storm conus to me on my as it came to one when sank with Claras name upop my lips never hoping to rise again But rise I did io the blackness of night and catching a floating spar kept above the angry waves till the storm lulled and daylight crept over the waters It was many hours later when I was picked up by a disabled French vessel with the fever raging on board and short of hands its fatal ravages I gave willing work there tilt the So it happened that the church bells were ringing for Sunday morn ing service when at last for a two mile walk I entered the village of G the home of my dear wife It occurred to me at once that if I followed the little stream of people entering the church might see if my wife and her father were alive They would be in church probably But I not wish startle Clara by rising suddenly from my grave in the tea so I stole into a quiet comer and watched the people as they came in My heart beat fast it seemed to suffocate me as I saw her come at last her close widow cap shading her nut brown hair and her pale cheeks Never had seen that dear face so ad and so white She grieved for me Her dress had do sign of re turning brightness about it being sombre arid heavy with a long crape veil hanging from the black bonnet My wife I my tittle love How I longed to spring out fold her In my arms and see the bright ness come back to her bonny brown eyes and the delicate flush to ber cheek But I would not I The first meeting was too sacred for all these curious eyes to witness- So I nestled against the pillar that screened me kept my hand over my eyes and listened to the service It was all over and the congrega tion were rustling io their teats when the clergyman read distinctly the banns between Ceorge Hudson and Clara widow of the late Richard The whole place reeled grew black before me If I did not actually faint I lost all note of time and place till the shook me I looked up to find we were alone in the church I reeled out upon the porch but not heeding the mans com ment A drunken sailor But in the air a mad desire to face my wife to know if was in truth So utterly forgotten seized me I remembered well having heard of George Hudson although I had never seen him His father was a manufacturer of considerable wealth and the owner of a superb residence newly built when I was fait at home The son Iras then abroad but re port represented him as a very hand some accomplished man of twenty- three courtly as was to be expected from a citybred son of a wealthy map He was nearer Claras aye than I Wild To BJitor of Bra According to promise I have mads effort my gel all Ins and ants of of but of late lbs great trad of tola country ass got so low that than many tech nical polo I cant on I writton to head and to and to soma of cat kings of New Uvtloo Texas and Axisooa for the of the utile So til answered that old la hot osttla red is picking op again sod they are going to have new They And books or any thing pertaining to cattls eye lam great man cattle king of Arizona wrote me that be oat of lb bnalnesa and ride miles any time to kick stasr There a regular association of of New Mexico Texas and Colorado with at New Presi dent Traasorar and It meats in abort city and fell are numerous and are all shrewd sharp and They are sent to all Import- sot poults to which cattle are shipped to wit Kansas Oily Cheyenne Helen and ell Mo- graph nobis to which may be hipped Their doty Is to all brands add keep an account of cattle sold fa that market differ ant pee bead cost of loci by shipping elo of and snob train or so many oars eto and all the are wired to An Is kept Of said and owner of laid brands gets their though some of their cattle may have been shipped by the last fear Of the staked add In the present there has eteallng done so are gelling ftp a fie thai dont much The ranches ere yetting good and cell A man stew Mex ico axe now greatly elated over she torn affaire in the Ufa It seeme that at last long drawn sag in beef bottom and ranch men who hare changed and dropped old and now beginning to sea daylight with the ranch child might give an indulgent ucde but I did not love him as dreiroed I could love I groaned aloud as my wife spoke but not hearing me she continued But if I did not love my hus band when you forced me to marry biro at least I did biro no wrong If my heart was not bis it was free I loved no one else He took me away you know from what tyranny and cruel exactions be took me Upon my word you are compli mentary speak the truth Captain took me into his great noble heart as something to cherish to love He gave me every wish of my heart and gave it tenderly lovingly He wrapped my whole life on the sunshine of that love till out of my gratitude my happiness my deep deep content was bom an antwering love Before we had been six months on the sea together our world the ship I loved my husband with faith ful enduring love such as even in ray girlish dreams I had never given ray ideal hero Very romantic 1 sneered the old man and I wondered what I bad ever found to like in him Then my baby came said Clara and my childs father became to me dearer if possible than my band had been You know what suffered When Dick left me know the long agony sickness the weary hopeless struggle back to life that followed the cruel news of my husbands death But for my babe must have died- Great choking were interrupt ing Clara as she spoke but the hur ried on Hived for my child and God took that too from me I only ask now that Me will take me soon Heaven where dear ones are There was a long silence Then my fatherinlaw in a harsh voice You will be the laughingstock the place if you refute to George now I shall refuse him This trick has turned the indifference I felt before to a loathing and con- from like FROM THE The contract for the Totten ham Town Hail baa been let for Damage to the extent of has been done by the floods on the Hudson River feat The body of John Tynan was found on the railway track near on Sabidray a Burglars broke into the post office at on Friday night but were scared off before anything curious how much faster a street car humps along when you are running after it than when you are riding on it The Methodise church at Mich has band music The minister is one of a band of and his wife is the leader securing was was he alio nearer her heart then her old husband had ever been I hurried over the familiar road ILEKONE WILLSONS SWEETPLAVORED CASTOR OIL Pleasant to the Taste pnsrnvc THE LEADING DRUG STORE NEXT OFFICE SCOTT Proprietor Application pulei tod Relief am a prut and ftQlhr from piles It lj a of ftSd EDOrv its met Id their is a cuhk menu foil loroltoto for- or by of Daodavi CANADA LIFE CO -OAPJTAL- AND FUNDS- DOLLARS A Iris A ULAN over ground at headlong speed for before I reached the cottage I saw a little blackrobed figure ahead of me that I recognized at once Again the instinct that warned me to spare her the shock of my sudden appearance me pause and allow her o enter the gate in front of collage whole I stole round the fence and went in the tear gate From a clump of shrubbery cover ed thickly with summer foliage I HARDWARE MAIN ST NEWMARKET J KlWUClX I Coon In UU so plAKO now pre to f papUef eft Cornet C- itUisCi rj1 MR ASTOUFFER CONCERT BARITONE Conductor of ttlojlBjj loitrocitf lo prtsasjlgn a P to -mctkir- Photos Photos I ghh mm will bo found ftnil iht trial our will fully an DkVI8 MUSIC ifsmtitoa MIHtl 1 YOU WANT tai in it lUKbL 2Ualt8 Kitxixn lillltlijf J TrootO luelfrUvu Or a Q HA VINO tat Mr to AM to torn oat work in to work opcor the lothflprodueHon win be mad l On or OIL Mr dot bo lo flood lb Willi but lO iOtteUOO ssMCOlfnMUjfACell011 Old ffULMefl Power Co Rioted of the illU to ftver Trotpot A to Mil our ID Ual of l fur MAY J DUNNS BAKING POWDER MlK OH Weak Children will derive strength and acquire robust health a MftotOiing of Food Medicine SCOTTS EMULSION far- v j have rushed over the toot id a cargo of gums ana spices had the vessel repaired and was still unconscious of all around me while sailed away leaving me Alt my savings were invested in the Scairlce and although she well iniuredt I could not draw the money in the Sandwich Islands It would be too long a story to pencil all the miseries and hardships of those three years until I landed and sat in a newspaper office read ing an account of the wreck and my own obituary I had worked my passage from my last port and bad my wages in the pocket of my coarse sailors suit and I was waiting for a train to take me to the village that was my home Home Clara I Those were the words that braced my heart for all the rough encounter of the past three years and yet with in a few hours ride of them my courage was falling me What might not have happened in three years Death might have and was not a young man having reached my fiftieih year My beard and whiskers were dappled with grey and face was bronzed by exposure In my youth they called me hand some and my form was still my teeth firm and white my eyes large and bright in spite of the snow on my hair and the fifty years scored in my life Clara was much younger Five years before the day when I I married her for true loves sake my first love and my last She daughter of a fellow townsman who was my true friend for years and from the lime when she was a baby Clara had been called my little wife livery time I returned from a voy age my cabin was stored with pres ents for Clara till her fathers cottage was a perfect museum of foreign curiosities and her wardrobe was the envy of all the girls of her acquaint ance in the village When she was nineteen asked her to be my wife in truth as she had been so long in name She looked frightened at first A few days later she put her little hand in mind and promised to be my true faithful wife We took a years cruise on the for a wedding trip and two moot he after we came home a blue- eyed baby lay upon Claras breast loitered at home for nearly six months and then kissing wife and child farewell wringing my band hard I left once more to start upon that illfated voyage Alter reading the whole report of the wreck came to the conclusion that I had no business to be alive No one with the of the eye witnesses the letters from the few who were saved the evidence on all sides could- ver believe that I Richard Vaughan captain of the Beatrice could be still existence But there I was and a few hours later would be home But It seemed as if the chapter of my misfortunes was never to he tin- I ished for the train met with an inci dent and we were kept all night up- on the Ike well hidden could see and hear all that passed in the cottage parlor fatherinlaw was there when I first looked in atone reading a paper with his eyes restlessly watching for someone to come I did not mean to be an eaves dropper I scarcely know why I waited hid den and watchful for Clara to come When she did come it was with flashing eyes and crimson cheeks such as bed never seen before Her voice too was raised to an angry pitch of excitement quite new to me Father she cried who has dared to tell Mr Gates to read the banns between George Hudson and myself I did the short reply You you Yes I did You have trifled with Mr Hudson long enough I never trifled with him He ha asked you twice to be his wife And I have twice refused thai honor But you shall marry him I He is rich and will take you to his home You cannot refuse him now that the banns are published Father father how could you Pray what axe your objections to Mr Hudson Is he not young Yet Handsome Yes Of good moral character Yes Well then what can you find to object to Not want of money surely All the excitement was gone from Claras face- She seemed to feel stifled by the net gathering around her for she pressed her hand to her heart as in pain In a dull tone she said wearily I will never marry Mr Hudson I do not love him Come hat is a stale excuse You made the same when you re fused to be Captain wife Refused to be my wife Was that loo her fathers doing Had the been tricked then My heart was sick as I leaned a tree near me and listened to what further was to come The sweet I loved rang out firm and clear You are right father I did not love Captain when you threatened to turn me from your house if I refused him I was but a child and had my own romantic of a hero young and brave who was to come and make a heaven of love for rat I respected Captain Vaughan and gave an affection such as a tempt I will never overcome Then with a piteous wail she cried Oh my husband my own dear husband why are not here to love and protect me I could not bear the pleading in her voice- Unmindful now of the danger of startling her anxious only to tike her from the tyranny that oppressed her young life I stepped from ray hidingplace and went to the porch As my footstep rang out there Clara grew deadly pale her breath suspended her eyes dilated with fearful hope Breathless she listened till stood in the doorway when great cry of she sprang into my open arms and tainted there Her father sitting bolt upright stared as if I had been a ghost- indeed I had a right to be I carried Clara off before his eyes across the hall to her own room and there I won life back to her white face and stilted pulse She could only cry nestled close in my arms for a long long time but her weeping was so quiet and she clung to me so happily that I like an old fool let tears fall from my own her soft hair When she had wept herself quiet she told me of our and how the whole world seemed dark and desolate to her when it died Then she kissed rae and bidding me not to stir she vanished behind great armchair in which I was seated She moved softly two and fro there and suddenly came in front of roe all dressed in soft white muslin with knots of ribbon at her throat and in her hair and the gold ear rings and brooch bad given her shining in their places I will wear black no more now you are come she said I cannot mourn even for my baby when Heaven has sent my hus band back to me That old hypocrite my father-in- law had recovered by that time and pretended to be delighted to see me But we have had separate estab lishments since that time for I went to sea no more The very mention of it made Clara turn faint We invested the insurance money in a good farm and live our happy peaceful life there with two ones who came to replace the blue- eyed bibe who died during ray long exile How George Hudson bore his disappointment I never knew My miraculous arrival wu a nine- day wonder but George Hudson was seen no more after the return of the lost to Got Sunlight Band wrapper bearing the wonfe Why Don a Woman Look Old Sooner Than a Man to Ian Bsoe Limited Boott St Tomato end will receive by post a pretty picture free bom adver tising and worth framing- la an easy way so year home The soap best in market and It only cost lo postage to send to the wrap pers leave the ends open Write address carefully ST Everything in nature indulges in amusement The lightning plays the wind whistles the thunder rolls the snow flies the waves and the fields smile Even the bnds shoot and the rivers run By the breaking of the ice is the Lower Genesee river at Roches ter on Saturday the steamer of was torn from her moor ings hurled against a bridge and wrecked Two and a ferry boat were carried out into the lake and lost log are and steadily ad yenning Same alio with the iodnstry have lately seen an estimate of the aheap on ranches there are now sheep In New and the annual manner from is have rapidly grown in under the prosperity thai baa attended the basinets or years and outlook now for the lira stock try In New seems really more than it has for many years would take q ft or columns to write all the of the live slock system as It now exist I have condensed Ibis all ooold bat I tear taken op loo much space already Wa have had no rain or since sunshine end warm weather Years Sew Max Two hundred plasterers work ing on the Worlds Fair buildings at Chicago have struck for an increase in wages from to per day Nearly every coal mine on Brazil has been closed down as a result of the switchmens strike at Chicago Thousands of miners are thrown out of work Cat An unknown vessel has foundered on the West coast of land the mainland of Denmark and several corpses with a large number of petroleum casks are strewn on the The are two things which will make us happy in this world if we attend to them The first is never to vex ourselves about what we can not help and the second never to vex ourselves about what we can help At the assizes in Ottawa John was fined and sentenced to six months in gaol for malfeasance in office when acting as chief engineer of the mechanical branch of the works depart ment Rochester March Arthur an elect net in em ployed by the Brush Electric Light Company while replacing carbons in a lamp this morning was killed by an electric shock The circuit was not entirely He supposed it was and taking hold of the lamp with one hand ana the chandelier with the other he received the current worth Snowing Keep the cover on canister Rub lamp chimneys dry silt Throw chloride of lime in rat holes Wash oilcloth with skimmed milk Beat carpets on the wrong side first Cover apple barrels with news papers Keep everything clean around the well Apply hartshorn to the stings of insects Pour boiling water through fruit strains Drink cream for a burned month and throat Put your coffeegrounds on your house plants Good eggs always have dulllook ing shells Boiled vinegar and myrrh are good deodorizers Use- oatmeal instead of soap for toilet purposes Camphor is the best antimoth preparation known Use hartshorn to bring back colors faded by acids Waggon grease will take off warts and protruding moles If sneering be induced it will stop a disagreeable hiccough Quern What to In wheat the Saskatchewan Red Fyfe is without doubt the finest spring wheat in cultivation and should be more extensively raised in Ontario The White and White Russian are largely in demand In oats the Black Tartarian is the best for all purposes having a thin ner hull and more food than any other besides being a heavy cropper In barley rowed varieties do not seem as a rule to do well here the sixrowed is a more sure crop In field peas the Mummy pea seems to be taking well and are rap idly taking the place of the Common White The Prussian Blue pea i much in demand for export and should be more extensively grown In fodder com the Red Cob White Ensilage a favorite variety In roots the Large Short White Vosges and Large White Belgian are favorites in field carrots The Long Red amongst the mangels and Scottish Champion Top Swede still hold the foremost position amongst the Swedes- Many varieties of Swedes are apt to produce a heavy of tops in a wet sea son but after severe tests the Scot tish Champion has clearly shown that it is no respecter of seasons damp or dry it retains its well known characteristics large smooth roots and small headgear At much as bushels have been cropped from an acre- Advocate relief Ham March Residents of Troy are greatly over daring burglary and murderous as sault which was committed about a mile and a half south of the village early Thursday morning The vic tim Martin Carey was terrible beaten and lies at the point of death The burglars stole which was hidden In the house and so far they have evaded arrest How often do you hear a man saying when asked to help the church 1 cant afford to give much owe debts and I must pay them 1 have just bought and times are so hard Im afraid I cant pay for it And we find these very per sons spend far more than the church in ways that are a curse rather than a help to them By loafing round the hotel and keeping high fellow- wellmet with they waste what would be thought a good subscription to the church The following from an ex change should be read and remem bered by everybody Be careful how you apeak of womans character The purity of woman is the salvation of the race hope of future and the redemption of man Wipe out her purity and man sinks beneath the wave of despair with no star to his life into a channel of safety book then before you speak and remember that the hog can root out the fairest flower so the vilest man has often ruined the purest womans character The total solar eclipse on April will be watched with great interest by wherever it it will be visible The result of ob servations will it is expected mate- rially aid in solving many unsettled prablems with the spots projections corona and motions of the sun The eclipse will be invisi ble from North America The Har vard and Lick observatories of this country will send representatives to Chili to view the phenomena Brazil and Africa will have astronomers from England and France to make observations The eclipse will be of unusual duration Questions are often asked concerning the rights of public high way in towns and cities and answers to some of them The streets be long to teams and vehicles and pedes- have no more business upon than the teams would have on the sidewalks The crossings at the street corners belongs to pedestrians who have the right of way there by law as against teams Many drivers ignore the law and go dashing over sidewalks endangering lives and limbs of pedestrians without thinking they are violating the No ve hicle or horse can within the law be driven rapidly over a crossing nor can the driver obstruct the crossing The funeral sermon getting to be a thing of the past No sermon was preached at the obsequies of Hayes Blaine Butler or Bishop Brooks It will be a relief both to the mourners and to the officiating clergymen to have the custom aban doned entirely The funeral sermon is often either a fulsome eulogy of the deceased which oftentimes every listener knows was not warranted by bis life or it may be a long religious exhortation entirely out of place and in bad tut for the occasion A simple service of scripture prayer and sacred sufficed for the obsequies of the men mentioned above It enough for any funeral

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