Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Woodville Advocate (1878), 17 Mar 1881, p. 3

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Carlyle?- Benn-Imam 1|!ch to the World. Flue-0M- Inna LII. Simultaneously With m sppoul Enghnd we have the “ Reminhoom Thomapglylg. £991: flue .to 't‘lgg prise of Cherlee Scribner‘e who received the proof sheets from Mr. ude aunt in in? left the En ' tinten' heads. Mr. roude. i: in own. in the library executor of the [no Hr. Gulyle. end aseoon ufihe mgnnsoripb cane inf? on he mar, his arrangements with his axiom publishers for the “ unbor- lud ” edition of the “ Bemininccnceo." of which he is the editor and for which he in 'd the sumo nus u an Americuh suthor. the summer of 1880 Mr. Culylo Q collection ctmuguccgipmip _M_’.r. Frondg’a w w-nwuvâ€" v- _....__._-‘- ._ ,7 hands, of which he ed him to take charge. They consisted o otters written by his wife to himself and to other friends, with many notes in his own handwritingu In these manuscripts was as much of his‘ life as Carlyle cared that the world should know. and there is certainly as much as is needed to obtain a full knowledge 0‘ the man, both as an author andas a husband. The essential part of his life was in his works, which all can read. “ His object," Mr. Fronde tells us. “ was rather to leave a monument to a singularly fined. woman. who. had she so pleased. mig t have made aname for himself, and for his sake had voluntarily sacrificed ambition and for- tune." And this objeet has been sueoess~ 1 na, 3; DUI-Iv. Mu. uueu v-qvvv uâ€" â€"â€"â€" __---, hwy mom iehed. No one can read this tribute to h wife by this unheppy greet man without beers. His devotion during her life. and his wrewhedneee after her death. make one of the moat‘ touching pie- tnree thepen hes ever painted; _ . TELLING PEN PORTRAITS. vuw Vâ€"vrwâ€" _.~ -.-h ‘ , The “ Reminisoenoee” are of his tether. James Carly“; Edward Irving, the famous teacher; Lord Jeflrey. Jane Welsh Car- 339. his beloved Wife, and in an appendix uthe and Wordsworth; These no the titles 0 the chapters end these are their subjects; but the stories are so woven into that of his own life as to make them ento- biographical. Speaking of his father, Carlyle says: Reyes irsscible, oholerio. end we all dreaded his wrath, yet passion never mastered him nor maddened him. It tether inspired him with new vehemeneeof insight mar--vâ€" u-_ .. _-_ n and more piercing em basis of wisdom. It must have been a bol men that did not gueil before that face when glowing with indignation. grounded, for no it ever was. on the sense of right end in resistance oi‘ wrong. More then once has he lifted up‘ his strong voice in tax courts and the like before “ the gentlemen " (what he knew of highest among men). and rending scum der ofliciel sephiems, thundered even into their deaf ears the indignant sentence of natural justice to the conviction of all. Oh, why did we laugh at these things while we loved them ? There is a. tragic greatness and sacredness in them now. JAMES CARLYLE AND ems. IS OWN LIFE STORY. The more I reflect on it the more I must admire how completely nature had to ht him. how completely he was devoted to is work, to the task of his life, end content to let all pass by unheeded that had not relation to this. It is a singular fact. for example, that though a man of such openness and clearness, he hsd never. I believe; read thgee pages of ‘BurPs' Vlovvv' -‘â€"â€" ._____ poems. Not even when all about him be- came noisy and enthusiastic. I the loudest, on that matter did he feel it worth while to renew his investigation of it or once turn his face toward it. The poetry he liked (he did not call it poetry) was truth and the wisdom of reality. Burns, indeed. muld have done nothing for him. As high a greatness hung over his world as over that of Burnsâ€"the ever present greatness of the Infinite itself. Neither was he, like Burns, called a rebel against the world. butto labori patiently at his task there. uniting the pos- sible with the necessary to bring out the real. wherein also lay an ideal. . Burns could not have in any way strengthened him in this course, and therefore was for him a phenomenon merely. Nay, rumor had been so busy with Burns, and destiny and his man desert had in very deed so marred his name that the good rather avoided him. Yet it was not with aversion that my father regarded Burns- at worst With "indifjference and neglect. I have heard ' him speak of once seeing him standin in “ Bob Scott's smith " (at Eoclefec an, no doubt super- inten in some work . He heard one say, “ There s the poet urns." He went out to look, and saw a man with boots on, like a well dressed farmer walking down the village on the opposite side of the burn; This was all the relation these two men ever had ; they were very nearly coevals. I knew Robert Burns and I knew my father. Yet were on to ask me which had the greater natur faculty I might perhaps actually pause before replying. Burns had an infinitely wider education, my father a far wholesomer. Besides, the one was a mane! musical utterance; the other ‘wholly aman of action, with speech subservient ‘ thereto. Never. 0! all the men I have seen. has one come personally in my way in whom the endowment from nature and the arena from fortune were so utterly out of all proportion. I have said this often and par-:3; know it. As a man of specula. ticnâ€"h culture ever unfolded himâ€"he must have gone wild and desperate as Burns; but he was a man of conduct and work keeps all right. What strange shape- able creatures we are ?_ -.. Q .- James Carlyle married the second time. in 1795; Margaret Aitken. the mother 0; the late Thomas Carlyle. M mother (a woman of. to me. the fair- est «cent-that of the piano. the just and wise) was a faithful hel mate to him. toil. ing unweariedly at his a do; to us the beet of all mothers; to whom. for body and soul. I owe endless gratitude. By God‘s great mercy she is still left as a head and centre to us all and may yet cheer us with her pious heroism through man toils. ii God so please. I am the eldeet o ild. born in 1795. December 4th. and trace deeply in myself the character of both parents. also the upbringing and exam le of both - the inheritance oi their nature health. had not I and the time beat on it too hard. ltl uppoannoo u: Bominhoonou" of due to an outer ihnot‘l who to from Mr. ads 0 Euclid! rip“? m an IIIIII'I 10 In: runn- WMWIpnhlmvu a uh of Conan-h tobacco uni down by Add .50!“ N: tum twdnmonth. Through Mo Ihud mkimvoryuMhninglitflo to (in. encoded huh. sud from mo ox- pooud naming. Thou who would'n give. gm quickly. In the grove thy loved one mu receive no kipdnou. .1 one. boug‘lft u .mwv ”w- ”â€"w ‘ e of other 3 holes. of ihe receipt 0! which end the ester thet encom- peniedthem (John told me he wu vex; Etna. end nigh weeping. “ hut I geve “ He read mth theee speeunloe till his lest deye. and no doubt sometimes thought of me in using mom. nor murmur-Iv m cm Once. on e memorehle Betm'dey. we mule n pilgrimege to hen: Dr. Chdmere st Dnntetmline the marrow. It. we: on the inductin young Mr. Chelmeu a.- minister Whereâ€"C elmers minimne. no he eoongpfi fih‘i‘he fiat Chnlmérl In: still in the first flush 9! his long gn‘dflxgyn high popnlu'ity. “ Let us go end hen: him onoe more." and Irving. The summer afternoon wee bountifulâ€"beautiful exceedingly our nofituy walk by Bnmtielnnd and the and: end rocks to Inverkeithingmhete we lodged. still in e. toneningly beautiful mm- ner heat. the schoolmaster, one Dongle: from Eddington. q clever old noquunt- ‘enoeof Irving's. in after yearns Radical \editor of math, whose Wife, for thtitty editor of mnrk, whose wife, for thrifty order. ndmirntion of her husband. eto.,wss emcdel nnd exemplu.) Four miles next morning to Dnnfermhne and its crowded dny. Chelmers muimus not disnpi‘point- ins; end the fourteen miles to Kit caldy ending in late duknees,in rain and thirsty tntigue. which were cheerfully borne. 3mm um nnmum n! manna. During his first visit to London. in 1825, he seye: My own aitnetion was very wretched; primnrily from a. state of health which nobodyeonld _be expected to understand or J -I.__L _L:_h ‘I’ Inna an HUM: Wu... w “ v-v._ -â€" aymogathize with, mid about which I had as gnu A} poesilglentqbe‘silent. The (mourned 4,; .._- than.) “.3 ”UV“ Iâ€" I'm"" â€"v 7 ,, “ dyspepsia " had got me bitted and grfilod. and was ever striving to make my waking living day a thing of hastly night- mares. I resisted what I 00 d; never did ield or surrender to ; but she kept m3 cart right heavy, my ttle very sore an hzfeless. One could not call it hope. but 0 y desperate ohstinacy refusing to flinch that animated me. "Obstinaoy as of ten mules " I have sometimes called it since; but in candid truth there was something worthily human in it, too; and I have had thro 11 life. among my manifold unspeak- able 1) casings. no other real bower anchor to ride by in the rough seas. Human " obstinacy" grounded on real faith and insight is good and the best. - A wan. non rm: mun. In the midst of some practical talk Carlyle empato wail over his dead wife: :â€" _... ......I Cm. Uua’av “W1!“ W IIâ€"â€" v.â€"_ fiv “Oh, my dear one, sad is my soul for the loss of thee and will to the end be, as I compute. Lonelier creature there is not henceforth in this world; neither person, work or thing going on in it that is of any value in comparison, or even at all. Death I feel almost daily in express fact, death is the one haven; and have. occasionally a kind of kingship, sorrowful, but sublime, almost godlike, in the feeling that that is nigh. Sometimes the image of her, gone in her car of victory (in that beautiful death), and as it nodding to me, with a smile, “I am gone, loved one; work a little longer, if thou still meet; it not, follow. Thereisno baseness and no_ misery IUILUWO Auwnvwâ€"a â€"_â€"v__-_ , here. Courage, courage to the last! " that sometimes, an in this moment. is inexpree- aibly beautiful to me and comes nearer toy bringing tears than it once did. ‘ ‘ ‘ Notall the Bands and Eliote and babbling cohne of "celebrated scribbling women’ that have strutted over the world in my time could. it seems to me, if allboiled down and distilled to essence, make one such woman.” ' L0 as is this article, it gives but a faint idea 0 the charm of this book. Seldom was the public been taken so into the confl- deuce ofa great man. Before we can hope to fight consumption with any {chance of success we have to get rid of the night-sir superstition. Like the dread of cold water, raw fruit, etc., it is founded on that mistrust of our instincts which we owe to our anti-natural religion. It is probably the most prolific single cause of impaired health.even among the civilized nations of our enlightened age. though its absurdity rivals the grosseet delusion of the witchcraft era; The subjection of holy reason to hesrsays could'herdly go further. "_Bewsre of the night-wind; be sure and ,M ___~_:-_.. -lL-.. an-b|" Tn nth-u- ”Unuv v- w--â€" _- _- V close your windows after dark!" In other words. beware of God's free air; be sure 5nd infect gout lungs with the stagnant, unmixed.“ ofiepsive atgnogphere of your ,- ‘lo mm. nuu Vuvunlvv ""-'""râ€""- V, i , bed-room. In other words, beware of the rock spring; sticktc sewerage. Is night. air injurious? Is there a single tenable pretext for such an idea? Since the da of creation that air has been breathed wit impunity by millions of difl'erent animals â€"tender. delicate creatures. some 0! them â€"£awns. lambs, and young birds. The moist night-air of the tropical forests is breathed with impunity by our next rela. ‘tives. the anthropoid apesâ€"the same apes that soon rich with consumption in the close thong generally well-warmed atmos- phere of our northern menageries. Thous- ands cl soldiers. hunters. lumbermsn slee every ui ht in tents and open she s Without e least injurious consequences; men in the last stage oi consumption have recovered by adopting a semi-saVage mode of life. and camping out-doors in all but the stormiest nights. Is it the draught on fear, or the contrast of temperature ? lacksmiths and rsilroadconduotors seem to thrive under such influences. Draught? Have you never seen boys skatin in the teeth of a snow-storm at the rate 0 fifteen miles an hour? " They counteract the effect of the cold air by vigorous exercise." Is there no other way of Imaging warm? Does the north wind damage t e fine lady sitting motionless in her sle gh. or the pilot and helmsman of a storm-tossed vessel? ‘ It cannotbs the inclemency of the o n . air. for. even in sweltering summer nig ts. l the sweet south wind, blessed b all orea. l tures that draw the breath of] le, brings l no relieltcthe‘ victim ct aerophobia. There l-_-_I uv 1"... -v .._v is no doubt that inmilioa who hove freed themselves from the cum 0! thot super- amion our live out bad out hoclthier in the he“: of a t city than its cloves on the ciricut h and of the couihom Aponnines. â€"Dr. F. ix I“. ngald, in Popular Science Moâ€"iihij for Much. The Night-Air Superstition. . CHAMPAGNE IN THE VEBTRY mummm-mummuu llyeeedeu VII“- fall at Mutt to the “In. by Two Lukeâ€"Venue nld WM". There hes been a. sensstlonel one in the London Divorce Court. A few deys ego Mrs. Edith Weutworth Dunher brought an action for judieiel uperetiou on the ground of the elleged adultery 0! her husband. the 1 Venereble Archdeacon Chulee Gordon 7 Gaming Dunber. formerly of St. Andrew’s church. Tevietock plcce. The petition seid thet while the respondent was there to conduct service in e very ornate end hly musical style he wee trequeutly visi in the vestryby two ladies under ve peculiar circumstances. end it vice clleg thet he wee in the hehit of vgmtggg one at those Indies ut her house in Glouoootar hoe. Hydo Pork. The London Daily awn 'vea the following uooonnt of the first '3 antimony: oaoph Shag was the first witness called. He sud he was formerly the vol-gar o!_8_t. And‘row‘a church, Tuvistook - _I--_ __ AL- "An‘â€"-I . 'v-av- -- wv- â€"â€"â€"~7 7, . place, and he used to sleep in the vestry ; above the vestry was another room. nicely fitted u , called " the Yenerable Arch- deacon unbar's study ; it was ocou ied by the archdeacon. who occasionally ept there; some of the choir were in the habit of remaining after the services were over ; they used to drink and smoke in the vestry. and frequently sto ped until 11 o'clock at night; aMrs. B e frequently woameinto the vestry after the service to see 1the arohdeacon, and sometimes she went into his study and was with the archdeacon alone for an hour or an hour and a half ; sometimes witness was ordered to tell her to remain in the churohuntil the choir had left the vestry. and then to send her into‘ the vestry to the arohdeaoon ; witness was vex-gar for about two years, 9.11de Blake’s visits were most frequent in 1879 ; the archdeacon used to send him to the Lord John Russell. the public house opposite: for spirits and beer ; that was _ _.-_ dL--p.. Lt. ‘1oa v WNW: -v- wrun- ~â€" _, . wlhen Mrs. Blake was there; he had also seen a Mrs. Foote there, but that lady did not come so often as Mrs. Blake ; he had known the archdeeoon to he in the vestry with Mrs. Foote until 12 o‘clock at night. and the archdeaoon would hrin champagne into the vestry for himself an Mrs. Foch. . Cross-examinedâ€"â€"Mrs. Blake visited the archdeaoon in the vestry oftener than Mrs. Foote; the drinking took place on thei average three or four timesaweek after-l the services ; he never saw a curate about thvlace ; when witness gave his evidence to r. Deacon, a solicitor. he received a sovereign, and Mr. Wentworth, Mrs. Dunbar‘s brother, told him‘ reviously that he would be paid if he gave is evidence. Re‘examined-Mr. Deacon at the time was acting as Mr. Wentworth'e solicitor; he received the usual“ fee with his sum- mons, and that was all the money he got; he left the archdeacon’s church some months ago; the gentleman who assisted the archdeaoon with the services was Lord Theobald Butler. __ r. . n , A__1_n_ there and sweeping the ca ta; witness‘ had never been charged wi pillering mono out of the oifertory; the kissing he he spoken off took place in the porch. and the arehdeaoon kissed the ladies all round. (Liughter.)" ‘ ,4 LL- _.._..-.. ”In“ cannot-Ana ‘uu MW. e Wi ism 'Kew. the vergor who succeeded Sharp. gave evidence as to the respondent and Mrs. Blake being frequently together in the vestry. He also stated that he had seen the arohdeaeon and Mrs. Blake the worse (or drink in 11 several occasions. Cross-examin -â€"Witnesswasdischarged for being drunk. ~ William George Boylett said he formerly acted as verger and used to live at the church; he slept in the vestry ; Mrs. Foote frequently gave him messages for the archdeaeon, and on one occasion when she called there he put out the gas in the church, according to orders. and showed her up into the archdeaoon’s room, where they remained alone together for about twenty minutes; this sort of thing hap- :pened almost everi Wednesday evening; lwitness had seen t e arohdeaoon kiss Mrs. Foote about six times; he had fetched‘ whiskey from a public house for the arch- deacon. and on one occasion, after. Mrs. Foote left. he noticed that half a bottle of whiskey had been drunk; Mrs. Foote mud the archdeaoon when he was ill in Mrs. Edith Wentworth Dunbar, a tall, lady-like person, was, next called. She ___._ 2.. thn .udo. 1W Insnw ”UAW-a, .-â€".â€" _-__- . esi she was the petitioner in this suit; they were married on the 17th of October, 1872. and they lived together until January. 1879; much against her wish her husband took the church at Tsvistook lace, in February. 1878; her husbsnd ed the entire control of her income unite s few months before the separation; e was in the habit of drinking a great deal and upon one occasion herosme _h_ome_ intoxioeted; ea qu leu u- â€"â€"â€"- â€"__- 7 he would not leave his church she went abroad in 1879, and she was not acquainted with the ladies whose names had been mentioned. Cross-examinedâ€"In February. 1879, they separated; there was one child of the mar- riage named Beatrix. about the custody of whom a petition was fyled in the Rolls Court; it was heard in August last; the first Bergen to tell her of the circumstances whic r sulted in this suit washer brother; an order was made by the Master of the Rolls that the custody of the child should be given absolutely toher husband; that ,R_.‘ .._A_ ”‘3- In Anni“ W “11":- wwâ€"v-â€"-vâ€", â€"_ 7.-.. . _ was because anode: was made in court that her husband would live with her sin. Ro-oxaminodâ€"At thnt time she ma 0 no charges against her husband; Dr. Allen said the arohdewoon had told him on two upnnto non-ion- that ii the petitioner woulddlowhimmoymhowouldgln up tho mind 0! “10 child. ad M his Into could on so whord she planned and do what the liked. This being the cue for the titioner, Mr. Wuddy for the dolenoo ad that the typoqdent . tangy denied the chase: - _.|.z-n. .â€".M 04.1.. All!‘ $5.?” WTifn. $1335 '65 In» (ad wicked 1t riostionu. The Perfidvlof a Faithless Wife. nub-nib“): to Prison. At the Central Crimind Court. London. the other day. {net as the jury were begin» ning to oonsu t as to their vordiot, the prisoner. a9 ox-oggviot, wlgo had bgonltaklt -‘ “ Is that the woman ‘1" asked the risom pointing to a rather ahowily dreese worn 4 with handsome features but a cold. (1 dainful expression of face. " It is," replied the oflicer. / “ My lord," said the prisoner. with slight tremor in his voice, “ that woman my vyife I” _ ~ I] I , .,II_#‘SLL ________ ._, .. - A buzz of surprise followed the announ ‘ ment, and the woman turned her he‘fi? ° sway from the dock. ‘ ‘ I L S o N “ I would like to say a. few words, nring all'his " 10rd,"oontinued the risoner. .K LUSTRES AND GAS" “ The court will ear you," said 1' Justice Hawkins. 031' TO CLEAR. ‘ K ‘ “ Thank lyou, 11;: lord," said 1;? risoner. no onger traying any emetic gut smoking in clear, firzn tones: “Ihslt Cost 7, 10, 12, and 1501’, . i I , ,, A, ‘ a... -_"-..__ served seven ears on a ”similar charge fine. now me erred against me. It I BUIVUU DDVUH vuuu van a- sual-4...... v...â€"-°- 1511 t d ' t . It I . . ,, ' “fin“fim’i‘xé’30ufihҤivfle at 15 335533333. A1” 6168?. one and twenty years, and that will QUALITY. my life. Before you do so 1 would like y to know the whole truth of this affair. “ AS H M E R E AT 0 OST married young. My wife unex . edly showed extravagant tastes aCAN N 01‘ BE BEAT. ex eive hbite. I asve ‘ ,. :33 of en and 3did allwI oou'GLT’GOODS A1 COST AT er. to content her, Honestly I could not ken ‘ pace with her desires, and we took to ooi H- WILSON’S m A nL- ....... “:51. n... {n n“ my nmrntin fun. She was with me in all my operatiorp“! aided in the work, assisted in passi the money. When we were taken 13E evidence was just as strong against her L against me. In answer to questions I p‘ to my counsel, I was told that it I pleaded guilty and said I had compelled her to help me. she would get 03. I did so, and she was acquitted. I,was sentenced to seven years' penal servntude. I served m full time, and came back to London, eter. mined to lead an honest life and to restore my wife to an honest home. It was some ‘time'before I found her; butI had obtained ‘work at 308. a week. IAhsd only_one“w13h WOI'K an 0W. u wuvn. .L unu van, vuv .. -..... â€"to make a new home for my wife. Even- tually I found her. She was living with another man. Hingeme is E99135. She told uuv uuvâ€" .â€"..._. me that she had been obliged to accept his assistance or she would have starVed. Foster was a fellow-workman of mine. I‘ was willing to believe all she said and tow forgive her. It was a bitter struggle, but I did it. 'Come home.‘ I said to her, ‘and let bygones be bygones.’ She said she could not come immediately. It would 1 take a little time to break ed with Foster; but she would do it. I waited, and every week as I received my wages I took £1 to he: and gave it to her that she might have money without asking Foster for any. At last she appointed a night when she declared she would leave Foster. 1 was to meet her at the coins}: of Rathbone place. luvvv ”v- â€"- -_v -77“, I did 80. She said Foster had come out with her and was a street or so off, but that she would go and tell him now that she had made 11 her mind to leave him. ‘I love you st: l.’ she said. ‘better than any other men in the world, end would never have left you of my own free will; hold this until I come back; I will only he a few minutes.’ I waited, and almost immediately a policeman came and took me into custody. I did not know whet theywketoontatmed; it turned on A, A“ 'rr- _ ..... g wvu my -_-_ v__-v_‘e what the packet-contained; it turned out to be false silver coin e ?" He paused here. and there was eonsi stable sensation in court. everybody convinced of the truth of the man’s statement, and impressed by its sirnple and Gymnastic force. , 1 u _n23 L- n LLAL Iva Blmruv 'â€"_ ..-.. C ‘ I learned afterward.” said he. “ that when she left me with that packet in my hand she went up to the first policeman she met, told ;him wh‘ere I stood. that I was a‘ returned convict, a coiner of a (power of had money ; she knew it. she sai , because I had tried to pass some of it upon her. That is my story. m lord i" A pin might ave been heard drop while the prisoner was makin his statement. ‘The court listened with a most breathless interest". When he had finished a sort of half-controlled expression of wonder and indignation went round and the jury looked up at the judge in a bewxldered and puzzled way. “ Policeman,” said the judge. _ “ My lord.” responded the officer. “ Did this woman speak to you, as the “ Did this wox priggyer eays‘?”‘ “. Yes. my lord." " And gave you the information as de- scribed ? " " Yes, my lord.” . " Was the packet of spurious silver in his hand. as he says? ” ' " It was. my lord." Upon the direction of the judge the pris- oner was acquitted and those in court raised a subscription for him. They raised about £70 for him. His story has been verified in every detail. Luu unvu-u-Dv w--â€"_ -w between Captain Holbeoh, 60th Rifles. aide- de-oemp to General Luerd in Canada. eldest son of the Archdeacon of Coventry, of Farnborongh 3311,.Wurvgiglgellir‘e, em} OI. lul'uWLvu u ”an, n u ,, Lady Mary of”, dau tor of Sir John and the Hon. Lady W rond, of Bradfield, Devon, was oalebnted on Monday, the 28th ult. W'Gilbort and Sullivan‘s new aesthetic libretto. is 3 development. of the ballad of the " Two Out-ates. ' Tho marriage arranged to take place .......,... anon“ Hn‘henh. 60th Rifles. aide- TOUCHINO TALE. Plot to Go: ller $2.53; THE LOWEST LIVING PRICE. !_-L' MST z 85101?»â€" mssi __.«-___.__-. H mm â€" E TIN SHOP 1E ’. I I3, . . m... m.- unnrsulnn nauumne: naueeze nué E 8: Pork on hand Cheafi m for New Spring Goods, ‘vl'iémluvmnfidontho onn lady's touhud is not luvibd by e volun- m- â€"'1‘ho grocer who want: to do the thing up brown Ina-brown 1:390:10: mppinsnp luau. â€"Prot. Horrmtnn's and trick: do not him well in the auto 0! Georgia He m gwuuug. â€"â€"Aooording to the Bymnno Harsh]. Much cum in like a sheepâ€"in wolf‘s clothing. â€"He couldn‘t mine the mortgage on his building lot. and 80. r mm. vifihont becoming blind he loot in site. â€"In Torontomiunn the put Week. than has been a large quantity of coal oil Jot not being up to gravity. h- c...â€" â€"Oold brook! m mains arm trout _B.ooip$ to: ”cannonâ€"Why" dip. my. put aha. _ __ cure 101- uaunugxc neaaacue: pqueeze we juice of a lemon into a. small cup of strong coffee. This will usually afiord Immediate relief in neuralgia headache. Tea ordi- narily increases neuralgic pain, and. ought not to be used by persons afieoted with it. â€"'1‘he St. Thomas Times is res naible for the statement that Molly Mate es, the notorious confidence man, marriedaBi e~ town girl a. short time ago. Hewentby a name of Wells, and the young Woman is Catharine Flight. She overheard Mollie talking to one of his pals, and shortly after-4 words left him. â€"â€"-The boiler-makers of Chicago, exoe t those in the railroad shops. are on ski-13° for an advance of 10 per cent. a the pre- sent wages. The ships“ end oelkere there have also k 00 htvo wages raised to 88 a day. ey were set- ting 32.75. St. Louis bricklayera have got ‘4 a. day. TBA TABLE GOIIIP. I W;Wl;y do certain booksellers still crowd their mndows with the horrible looking remnants of their ptook of valentines? _, lie o is is desirous of laying in a. shock for next Kilelentine’e day. These blood-ourdling looking portraits have probably been more ptoduotlve of nightmares in youthful mind: then all the mince pies of the Christin-I 8638011. â€"-The London “ mathetics ” of the I! attitudes. the drawling tones. the long ti! and the Greek dylgy n9}; forgetting); dirty _L_‘_ lace and pemochs’ feathers. unionetely adore Ruskin. who, it is and . went into repturea when he saw "the Jersey lily." The "aesthetics" call Ruskin "master" and they sadly drink tea. But why odors the lily. who is a. very sensitive sort of lady? _ . .uâ€" no nan-n “an uuv - â€"---_ held at Cedar Rapids. 1a., the other do , 3 discussion on the question, “ How all poultry be dressed and- packed for the eastern market ? " brought out the foot thet Boston wants only dry picked and drown fowl with beads and feet off, while New York and Philadelphia went their: with heads and feet on,dry picked and hndrswn. -A marriage serv ce was in pro at St. John‘s church, New Orleans. closely veiled woman withan infantin her arms walked up the centre aislejustasthe ole - man asked if anÂ¥body objected to e union. “ I do," as d the intruder, pu off her veii,and layin thebaby at the feet the bridegroom. “ ere is your child. You are my husband. I am lawiuliy yonrwile, and you shall not marry this woman." She made a furious attempt to attack him. but was restrained by the ushers. while the bride screamed and fainted. It transpired that the woman was not the man's wife. though he had for years made her believe so by means of a forged certificate. LAST WORDS. ti(1)1! a photographerâ€" “ Now keep very a .1! Those of a dying ferrymanâ€"“ I'm going over the river.” Those of a dying barberâ€"" I'm going to make a new dye." Those of a dyin watehmakerâ€"“ I’m going to wind up my a airs." Those of a dying shoemaker -- " I’m through at last.” Those of a dying bakerâ€"- “ I'm not kneaded any longer." Those of a d ing oondnotorâ€"“ No return tickets where 'm going." .- Baby sleeps; Demosthenes be dumb, Our tyrent'e hour has come- Baby sleeps. â€"In the Butteyenjl Egg Qonventiox} Let every sound be dead- Baby sleeps ; The emperor softly tread- Baby sleeps. Let Mozart's music stop, Let Phldigs‘phiqel drop-â€" BABY SLEEPS.

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