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A Gipsy Romance.

Hero is ti story quite in tbe ancient style of romance which tho dirt and dust ot reality have been past destroying. At Eastbourno recently a remarkable elopement caso was investigated. Mr Smith, a wood merchant, charged Andrew Dighton, a young gipsy, with unlawfully elopeing with his daughter Caroline. > Mr Smith stated that his daughter was under eighteen of age, and had manifested a strange passion for tho yonng gipsy, who is a good looking youth about her own age, Mrs Smith sent her daughter out shopping butinsload, she went to Dighton and urged her gipsy lover to elope with her from Eastbourne. He strongly refused, but Carolino pleaded so passionately' with him that he was forced jo submit, and they left thfl town secretly," tak'ing with fliem'a tent. They could not pitch this' the Grst night, so tho lovers sought shelter undpra hedge, They tramped day after day, camped out at ni(>lit in the Sussex lanes,

The. runaways passed through Kent, followed by their father and the police, but it was not until the girl was found living with Dighton in the tent on Plurastead Marshes that the detective caught up with them. There Miss Smith and her sweetheart protested stronglv against; returning here, and Dighton 1 was a'rre3t'pd, The Magistrate disohareoij

tlio gipsy, who pleaded that the girl bad proposed and urged the elopement against his will, and that he did . not know she was under eighteen. Carolino did not allow her adventures to rest, even with the termination ol the caso, for a scene in tho streets followed the discharge ot the sjipsy. Tlio girl struggled violently to freo herself from hor father's grasp, and loudly appealed to be allowed to J join Dighton at his tent. The girls excitement and erics created much sympathy amongst the crowd that witnessed the incident,

Every student knows that in close reasoning parallel lines of thought aji'B laid down and deductions educed. It is not our purposo at this time to enter into a learned discussion, ~ and wo havo drawn tlio above visible >je* Hues simply to bring them pro- , minently before your eye, and ask what thoy represent to you. A railroad man to whom we showed them said "To mo tlioso four lines represent a double-track railway."

A dodor replied to the samo interrogatory, "Tho lines aro to me tho large arteries and veins lying alongide each other in tho human body."

As will bo observed the same lines to either gentlemen suggested different lines of thought, as both looked at them through eyes accustomed to see only that which ft'the most part occupied their attention. To the writer both answers put an old truth in a fresh and original light. As every intelligent man or woman knows, the blood oi every living persons flows with almost railroad speed through the arteries, forced by that wonderful engine, the heart From the arteries it is side-tracked

through the capilliaries and veins, 4hd every drop of blood goes through V 6 kidneys for purification no less than 2,500 times every twenty-four hours. If the kidneys bo diseased the impurities oi the blood containing the wornout tissues and deleterious acids are not drawn out or excreted as nature intended, but continually pass and repass through every fibre of the. system' carrying death and decay with every pulsation. Unless remedied the heart becomes weakened the lungs . trying to do doublo work break down, the liver becomes con. geated, the stomach" refusos to digest Vfrjod, and the result is a general break Why? Because tlio kidneys, the sewers of the system, are foul and stopped up, and the entire blood becomesnothing more or less than a sewage. Nowisitnotcriminal,nay,suici(lal, to allow such a state of things to continuo when such a simple remedy is within your reach, known for a certainty, to do as represented, which jjjll open tho closed pipes of the Sidneys, allow tho effete matter to escape, relieve tho overworked heart, lungs, and liver, cause a healthy appetite, put tho bloom of health in your cheeks, the dove of hope in your breast and the light of life in your eye?

You already have divined the remedy we have reference to; its praise isjunivresal, its influence worldwide. Do not allow prejudice to blind you to your best interests, but to-day procuro Warner's safe euro and be put on the straight road to rude health and correct living. Jpp parallel and closing lines to youare, take our advice and your experience will justify you in thanking us for bringing under your notice a emedy -without a parallel.

Animal Wool is tho material devised by nature for animal covering, and possesses m the slimplcat experiments will prove, tho valaubto _ quality of not attracting or retaining tho noxious, mal-odorous mattora vhioh tho nnimal body exhales. Moreover, being a slow conductor oi heat, Animal Wool docs not chill, even when damp, Therefore, every one should Bcoure I »selection ot our puro Flannels at To Aro Styso, Wellington, f . Skinny Men '■'' Woll's hoalth renewor" restor health and vigor, cures Dyspep ia, Im potonco, Soxual Debility, At chemists and druggists. Kompthorno, ProsaorA (M«ants, Wellington.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WDT18890709.2.15

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume X, Issue 3251, 9 July 1889, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
860

A Gipsy Romance. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume X, Issue 3251, 9 July 1889, Page 2

A Gipsy Romance. Wairarapa Daily Times, Volume X, Issue 3251, 9 July 1889, Page 2

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