West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 31 Aug 1899, p. 2

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§ »*a€ 1 a% WOL thi Lit» glo. 0t ap 11 1 TERNS; 9 miyear. IN ADVAHCE eBas. RAZAGE Editor & Proprieto® Tharsday Morning. f i Spant StaidardBank of Ganada,.. thi‘le Heand Office,. Toronto i-r:w:nh\ wâ€"aa= such OAPITAL, Authorized $2,000,008 | 3. 5 U Paid up 1'00()'()0‘ | her S k on m ies Hxna TY soo.coe | heen COAPITAL, Author: 64 Pard up RESERVE FUXND W . F. Cowan, AGENTS in all Outario, Quebec, And Eneland. ts A. i hoi & goneral Razking business transacted Drat*s :nod aud collections made on all points. Dopos reseived and interest allowed at current eee OE EeC CE C erest allowed on savings benk doposits of $100 d upwards. Prowpt wttontion and every faotl Rmaiforded curtomers liying at a distance . BUSINESS DIRECTORY. §# a § _ ® W RRRNMETCOOOCT BflllSTfll, sOLIGITOR 1N SUREME COURT NoTA K Â¥ I'UIll.l(‘.(‘o-mlu!o-et.cu.. MONEY TO LQAN. Loan and Insurance Agent, Conâ€" vey ancer, Gommissioner &c. Loaps arranged without delay. (Collections promptly made, Insurance effected. meNEY TO LOANstlowost rates of Interes# r "1s® ons door north of 8. Meot‘s Store Durhara uCouusy af Grey. Bales attended to prowmp and at reasonable rates. Residence Durbam Out OFFIOE, GREI AVEWY . 13 PUBLISMED BVRRT \ 1 DURHAM AGENCY. S a. REGISTRY OoFFICE + Levder, Registrar. John Deputy â€" Registrar,. Office bou . m. to 4 p. m. FOR SALE | The EDGK PROPBRTY sAVINGS BANK In the Town of Durham, County of | red Broy, including valeable Water Power ‘\[ire Brick Dwelling, and many eligible | w hi building lots, will be sold in one or more ' (,{“l),] lots. Also lot No. 60, con. 2, W. 6. R., |str Fowuship of Bentinck, 100 acres adjorn» | !©/ Ing Town plot Durhara. | ‘t:,‘" Aanaip e on cV o t __f;‘ JAMES LOCKIE, ICENSED AUCTIONEER, for th l.;‘donorâ€"Klng Bt., Hanover, BSUSR of Marriage Licenses. Auo . tioneer for Counties of Bruce and Grey. HUCH McKAY. ALLAN â€" MoFARLANE MISCELLANEOUS. . L. McKENZ!IE, Mortgage Pregidant. OFTICR, GARAFBRAXA Itay openodt Quru: SEROV No O Horse Shocing Shop,| In the old stand. All hand. made shoes. Also Handâ€"made Waggons Has opened out 8 Fire Insurance secured, over Grant‘s Ston«, LOWweR TowN. . TELFORD, DURHA M Apply to JAMES EDGE, was 0 wÂ¥i11 LEGAL Jobbing of all kinds promptly ALLAN MoFARLANE, wWOODWwWoOoRL in connection. A firstâ€"class lot of taken for yart for sale cheap. Geo. § OFFICE, Thoma rar. John A. Munro Office bours from 1 firstâ€"class toler in th even such ong those Laise, _=" int creatures, could : be thought of. It erable to return an the dairy at Kilery OE IOVEUCE O 0 Cug d ng: "Glory be to goodness, . it > | wors®s 82 22 one side of sn‘t little Rosanne." For the flelds‘ burnt off, and one side of her face was € round her spread lonelier, and stranâ€" scorched. Ne)& morning hber neighbor \ 1 ger, and the n}nmn‘ighf began 1O fill in the ward thoughlfully lent ber a | : them cruelly with ghastly gleams and | pit of broken lookingâ€"glass that "she | ; shades. At last in a great fright she| might see the quare show she was [ ; crept under a haystack and shnvergd \ but she bad scarcely. energy to gl:mce‘ ‘ and dazed in inequal alterations till | at it, and was faintly shocked by the | the dawn. disfigured image. All the day she lay | It found her bewildering1y mIset=â€" in a dazed, apathetic state, and tOOk\ able, but delivered from the panic ) little heed of anything. 1t seemed to fears that had beset her, while the| her as if she had been there always world was black and white, and she| in a dreary sort of, dream. stole out of the. yellowâ€"mounded hqg-‘ But on the day after, when the creepâ€" | gart on to the highâ€"road c0 by. Sbe | ing shadow on the floor had shrunkâ€" hardly noticed that she was hungry| en almost to its noon{ide skimpiness,l and cold and damp with dew as she | she suddenly roused up quite awake.% resumed her journey, upOn which ‘he\Just outside the door, which was close | July sun soon began to glare strong| to her bed, she heard a familiar voice‘ and fierce, The way was mmuch longet | speakingâ€"the voice of Dan McClean ‘.xhun she t.hought. and shg Ieugl‘hex_\ed Rosanne bheld her breath as the nurse, it by missing it Several times, finding| a squareâ€"framed stolid person, Was lf“‘r“'“e directions all the more puzZ!â€"| called out to interview, * a young man \ln-g because she was dazed for the| from about Kilbracken, that was come want of_food and sisep.. TWO (women | exin" after a girl." Dan‘s voice would ‘uf whom she had made inquiries ind | have sounded like heavenly music to '|“'h° told her of terribly many miles her, if the echo of Martha‘s bad not gave her a drink of milk, but t,t,“‘t was| come harshly through it! and jarred it all she bad the whole day. With her\ into discord gaudy hat and her carelesslyâ€"wisped-onfi " Be [ j 5+ shawl and bedraggled pink gown, he:"l he 'd%‘ your â€" pardon,. MA am," she curly hair tossed and ruffled and hm‘|b"al him S2Â¥ diffidently, "might there eyes wild and woebegons, she had beâ€"| DC a girl by the nanit of Rosanne Tierâ€" come a forlorn, strangeâ€"looking figure, ney in .‘” which passersâ€"by eyed curiously, and "Is it the name?"‘ said the nuISC on ~â€" which they sometimes made Teâ€" ‘sure I couldn‘t be tellin‘ you th« marks. This alarmed her greatly, for| names of the half of them that comes solitary wanderings were 3 new °xâ€" and goes. What sort is she ?" perience to her. She made up her| ‘*Och, a slip of a girl," said Dan mind never to be a ballad singer, and| whose descriptive powers were nmo â€" |mind BCY V 0 srew a more and more | great, " a slip of a girlâ€"wid black bai d TT cumasliich size she is." solitary WANCPCACFE® . "O" Lae m perience to her. She made up her‘ mind never to be a ballad singetr, andl her aunt‘s house grew 0 more and more desired â€"refuge. At last, when the, shadows stretched very long and the: sunbeams had relaxed their scorch= ing grip, she came to a bit of road that seemed familiar to her. Round the next turn, if she was not mistaken, stood the little white cottage at the foot of a steep field, in the ancgle where two lonings metâ€"she rememâ€" bered the place very well. And, sure, enough round the â€" cOfâ€" ner, just as she had hoped, the little white cottage came into view, a sight which for a few moments she beheld with much comfort of heart. But she had not taken many steps towards i \ before she perceived that something eEVAIEAT C atame nf th ,‘JNN‘.-‘v‘.â€";-_'; 4+â€"4% fire, which was a areac what struck Rosanne V dismay was that there nobody about to mind i stranger boys were ® triangular grass plat b lanos just in fromt of t I 2i PR SOC. P ECEE . EVTE S OC PC COs se th much comfort of heart. B d not taken many steps tow! fore she perceived that som is amiss._ On the brown slope OS s .03 G~ umounte hh 1 :1010 MB s o P rni ie i es boys glanced at her indifferenaly . " (ch, the Mabonys was put out of it visterday for the rint," be said, " and the colonel‘s burning the ould bad houses to hinder the people of comin‘ back _ to them, and squatters and tramps, and all manner. Give me the blueâ€"edged bit, Billy." "4And â€"where‘s me uncle gone tot" town." E7 _‘ Sure, not at ali," said Billy : #r| heard them sayin‘ Pat Mahony was| gone to his brother‘s place, away at | Tullylough." | \ The first boy, who was freckled and | blueâ€"eyed and redâ€"headed, put out his | tongue in acknowledgment of this| correction, and the third, who was like | him, said: * No, bhe ispn‘t. They‘ve all| took off to the States." _ losanne thought they looked quite fiendishly hideous. She was turning towards the | house when Billy said: * There‘s noâ€" body in it ;" but his brother said : "YCis there is, after that ag‘in. I seen Alec Anderson and another of the bailiff‘s men goin‘ round wid a pitchfork awhile ago."" Rosanne ran desperately up to the 1 L 1 & 18 T+ wra g n‘] a "And â€"where‘s me said Rosanne. "1 dunno," said the was to the Union b« OJ ~Sukd Rosanne ran desperately up to the door, and looked in. It was all a smother of smoke inside, and the flames might be heard gnashing their teeth o UCT T EU _ «stfare . ‘Then she Teb S P SR CC O SE o on tss among the crackling rafters. Then she ran on round the corner of the bhouse, and there, sure enough, were two men, ome of whom, standing ON the pig sty wall, was poking a pitchfork into the thatch. The fact was$ that, Alec Anâ€" derson, who had a thrifty turn, had noticed a fresh golden patch where Pat Mahony had lately darned his roof, | and now deemed it worth while to resâ€" ‘ecue the good bit of straw from the LWnE S IRC C000 7 d and friendly. The: true, lived rather & mewhere beyond Hewâ€" ; thought she could re to get there in the xt day, and she knew lad to see her. After was all drearily vague. at she could get field »ewildering1y miserâ€" ed from the panic seset her, while the and white, and she yellowmounded hagâ€" L & qed ie o 7. MEeueCece en 200 at came out of | â€" her feet and | d, the more “‘-‘ll ure of the Maâ€"| ttage, with her. e door, and sayâ€" goodness, if it M t. â€"~ Etstrhe beyond Hewâ€"| but 8"*" */ {5~"_seainst th t ‘she could | with her head against the wall, which there in the| stuaned her inio unconcern. nd she knew| By the time that her croublesome e her. After | world, came back to her, she bad been rearily YAgUE: | conveyed to the infirmary W ard of the‘ uld get field | ewitstown workhouse, _ & doleful es she even| whiteâ€"washed place, where the Jast red ; ballad singâ€"| rays of the sunset were beating 0n the at she had al;_.grimy windows. Poor Rosanne‘s forâ€" rtune; but "fl tunes had sunk so deeply within the ize been ON€| last four and twenty houts that you ent you could | would hardly have recognized her as came out Of | the same girl who had talked to her rer â€" feet and | cousin Martha at the gate among the the more_@t~| hayfields, while the sun went down beâ€" re of the Maâ€"| hind a screen of rounded tree tOPSâ€" For age, with her | her clothes were blackened and drenchâ€" door, and s4Yâ€"|ed with fire and water, and much odness, if it | worse, her pretty curling hair was all For the fie!ld8s| purnt off, and on® side of her face WA ier, and St“.“-\ scorched. Ne morning her neighbor began to [ill | in the ward thoughtfully lent her ly gleams and | pit of broken lookingâ€"glass that "she eat fright she | might see the quat® show she was and _shlvergd |\ but she bad searcely. enerey to glant Iterations â€"till | at it, and was faintly shocked by th disfigured image. All the day she la evring1y . miserâ€" in a dazed, apathetic state, and too om the pani¢c) little heed of anything. 1t seemed t her, while the| her as if she had been there alway white, and she | in a dreary sort of, dream. â€"mounded h"_‘g“ But on the day after, when the creel d ciose by. Sbe | ing shadow on the floor had shrunl e was hungry | en almost to its nooniide skimpines ith dew as she | she sudden!y roused up quite awak upon which lhe\Just outside the door, which was clo to glare strong| to her bed, she heard a familiar voi ras much longer | speakingâ€"the voice of Dan McClea she lengthened | Rosanne held her breath as the nurs ul wenoer ce 7 +; nerson. W round the cOrâ€"| " y,. oped, the little“ It o view, a sight | less ents she beheld | Dan heart. But she| fore teps towards it he that somothing\asA‘ ;{P,-I-lflls and fright she dA â€"shivered ie boy, " unless it below at Hewitsâ€" eps towards it se ©ulTH .e hat something | "% 5 broth wn slope of the And with of smoke was| UPO® Rosa e, and, as she good as a ouds came rollâ€" marriage â€" great, heavy Walish ? S there by sharp| might ne! e lewiter thaluet eyes o conflagration for use on his premisesâ€" Burning cabins is hot and thirsty work on a radiant July day, and Anderson‘s mood had become irritable over it. So when a dishevelled bit of a vagran! @Vedo® . .lA raw of ashaw! Unluckily the un( 4i".. smouldering core, and as it dro Rosanne‘s head, it knocked off and set her hair alight, and scorching flakes before her ® was fleeing away. ylivn® and t but she tripped over & stone, with her head against the wal _ __kwnarem "Is it the name® SUC °C /C lha ‘sure I couldn‘t be tellin‘ you the names of the half of them that comes and goes. What sort is she ?" " Och, a slip of a girl," said Dan, whose descriptive powers were . not great, " a slip of a girlâ€"wid black bair â€"and a smallish size she iis." " There‘s plenty of them, dAike that, H \ that‘s all," said the nurse, "we bave a blackâ€"haired one came in the other day is Wiclal t 2 apb a rani EIRODO C PCCIOCZ L i that‘s all," said the nurse, "we bhave a | blackâ€"haired one came in the other day,| not over big. Some sort of a tramp\ she is, and got a crack on the hbead| wid a bit of the roof slippin‘ down on | her; but I could be axin‘ her her name. Rosanne Tierney did yow say?! And what might you be to her supâ€" posin‘ she is ? Her brother may be ¢" i t seemed to Rosanne as if an endâ€" less pause followed this question ; yet Dan only hesitated for a moment beâ€" | fore he answered: "Och, well, ma‘am," \h(! said, " you might &ay I‘m as good as a brother, any way." L qo 2 gall And with that a stormy upon Rosanne. For wh good as a brother," _ sig marriage with the stepâ€"8 Waish? She hoped to s a brother, any Way.> I And with that a stormy darkness fell‘ ipon Rosanne. For what could * as| rood as a brother," signify, _ except| marriage with the stepâ€"sister, Maggie | Waish? She hoped to goodness she | might never have the misfortune to| set eyes on either of the two of them to the end of her life‘s daysâ€"and she‘d ‘ as lief that mightn‘t be very longâ€"a wair af blackâ€"hearted roguesâ€"the vilâ€" bair of blackâ€"hearted lain might just go } came. When a minute afterwards the DULOC | "> . widd & returned to make her inquiry, (he‘of a widow, for she is consideren T" tramp kept her head under the blanâ€"| °P day in two weeks she must eat ket, and would only multer in a husky'!ouly the very coarsest sort of food, and mumbling way: "I dunno any such | 00¢ day in two weeks she must fast people at allâ€"bid him get along out | for twentyâ€"four hours. Her food and of thatâ€"me name‘s Isabella Hill," facts \always be eaten away from other WOâ€" which were at once reported to Dan men, and she must never dress her outside in the passage, with the adai. | hair, never, sleep upon a bed and never tional details that the creaiure seemed | Wear any jewelry. _ to be a crossâ€"tempered one, and perâ€" A piece of matting upon the hbhard haps not quite right in her senses. floor comprises the couch ol; a widow, | But at this moment another visitor arâ€" and sometimes even the strip of matâ€" | rived in the shape of a small freckled | tTesS )8 denied her; no matter how cold ‘ and redâ€"haired boy, whu was carrying | the night may be, she is allowed no ‘with an averse expression of (ountp. |covering. except the thin garment nance, a large, gaudilyâ€"wreathed st raw | that she has worn during the day. She | hat. " And what migh. you be wantim, | may never look on at any marriage Matthew Flanigan ?"* said the nurse, | ceremonies, for it would be an evil \ " Me mother bid me bringin‘ th‘ ould | omen for her to do s0; she may have lhnt," siid. Matthew. It dropped off been a balfâ€"caste woman, but upon bee \the girl that got Lhurted up at Pat |ComInk@ 3 widow even the lowest serâ€" | Mahony‘s on Friday and me brotber|Yants MÂ¥ order ber to do work that f brought it, home, but she sez i might | I® distasteful to them, and no woman , , be a loss to the crathur that owned it, !" the house may even speak one word ; | so she sent me along wid it, and it‘s| O comfort or pity to her. . Any woâ€" \him she‘d a right to ha‘ sentâ€"â€" \man who so far forgets herself as to 1| " Be the powers of smoke t" Dan| Sh°Y the slightest kindness to a widow ; | exclaimed, seizing hold of the hat, | !8, l&m'ppt;sed to infallibly . become a ; | * that‘s belongin® to Rosanne Tierney;‘.;‘"o“‘t}”““ before long.> Such barâ€" . | she got it new at Easter, and as proud| ‘"'1‘)““ ehavoir is hard to understand j | of herself in it she was as a little payâ€"| Mr]i yletrthese widows take their miserâ€" _ | cock. Sure I remember this tuft of t " °t ot as a matter of course, not y yeller roses wid red glass beads in even having the spirit to rebel against a | them cocked up at the side of it ; Illts injustice. ,.| was tellin‘ her it looked for all the | mmmeonnm mm omm mmmeen: ig | world mie one _ of ;;ur old donkey‘s PRONE TO SUICIDE e | ears; and was axin‘ her why wouldn't\ Statistics show that th * e | lcki e > ~, | she be sticking uptithe other to match \ profession is more prone to n;:“!:‘i';; than any other. During the last uiaaes thom cocked up at was tellin‘ her it world like one . of ears; and was axin soe it." LC " For the matter of that," said the nurse, " there‘s dozens of quare hats goin‘ about the world, «@and all of them that demintedâ€"lookin‘ you‘d be bhard set to tell tho.ane from the other. The aquil of the outlandish gazaboes you see on people these times I niver witnossed." " Ah! but I couldn‘t be mistook in this one by any manes," said Dan continuing to examin®e the bat ; "sure ‘twas sittin‘ in front of me in the trap all the way drivin‘ over from her place to our place and back agin of Easter Sunday, an‘ here it is the very same. Coulda‘t I be seein‘ the girl, ma‘am, MSVE NTR CC C RL me came in the other day,| . Some sort of a tmmp\ got a crack on the bead| the roof slippin‘ down on | could be axin‘ her her nne Tierney did yow say ? ni@ht vou be to her supâ€" TORONTO as it dropped 0P cked off her hat, rht, and fell in e her eyesâ€" She eÂ¥ and terrified, a stone, and fell u2 2608 go back the ed would bhe| ~"It was me OOUN To "u>" said Rosâ€" | â€" ;. Mahony WY@8| was tellin‘ me all manner," said Rosâ€" ply by tossing | anne, who felt as if she were wakenâ€" h on her Off| ing up out of a very illâ€"favored nightâ€"| st Ou speir that | mare." €C or cares, me| ~‘" Trust Martha Reilly to be gabbin‘ | 4 letherin‘ here | about what diesn‘t consATD her," 8210 | ; Dan. " Troth I well knew your St°P| j had a redâ€"bot mother was puttin‘ that! story about it dropped on this while back, and devil a word of e3 off her bhat,| truth in it. ‘Deed, Rosanne, that ould t, and fell in | woman isn‘t anyt oo good I‘m thinkin‘| . her eyes. She| But sure what matter about the pack of ‘and terrified, | them ? Your Aunt Lizzie Mahony‘s stone, and fell stoppin‘ wid her sisterâ€"inâ€"law away at | | he wall, which Drumcastle. I discovered â€" that much cern. yisterdayâ€"and they bid me (be bringin‘ ‘ »r iroublesome you to stay uj ‘there till we would be , she bad been gettin married afore reapin‘ begins. ry ward o the‘l\Inggie Walsh bedad ! Is it idling me e, a doleful time Td be trampin‘ over the country ere the Jast red| after her on a Monday\‘morning in th beating on the \ middle of haymakin‘!? So hurry, UP, Rosanne‘s forâ€", honey, and git all right agin, the way ply within the | I can be comin‘ to feich you. P‘ll borry hours that you Jimmy Byrae‘s sideâ€"car." cognized her as| _ " And did you hear tell the auat® a talked to h(‘!'\ awful thing I done at the farmâ€"throwâ€" gate among the | in‘ all Mrs. Conroy‘s, grand crame to i went down beâ€" | the pigs?" said Rosanné, the recollecâ€" »d tyee tops. For | tion of this disaster now beginning 10 ned and dr““"h'lefll?rg(‘ from the chaos of â€" troubles ater, and much| which had overwbelmed and obliteratâ€" ing hair was all|ed it. But Dan replied unappalled : ; of her face was|" Why to be sure. And was that any ng her neighbor | reason for you to bet hrowin‘ yourself ully lent ber & | after it, so to spake? Not if every â€"class that "Shf;'.su.p- of crame in ‘Ireland was spilt, and 0 C s o the Anntre swinmin‘ ily music 10| ha‘s bad not | RAST INDIAN WIVES. and jarred it| Until the day of her marriage the ma‘im,* she East Indian girl has been the spoiled "might there | Pet of her mother, but the hour that Rosanne Tier-\b‘efs her put into a planquin, shut up tight and carried to her husband‘s a the flurse»{house changes all that was happiness lin‘ you th8|into misery. She becomes from that m that comes | she t | m ~ment the little slave of her motherâ€" 1," said Dan, Lihu.n\', upon whom she hbas to wait rs _ were not | hand and foot, whose lightest word is :”i":l,,bla('k hmr1]law and who teaches her what dishes a \__~..\her busband likes best and how she is maine t se ce ko en dn ards the nurse | am " Sa;g tlléom'za few Sundays later Rosnnn& Tierney was married in her gay b\}qs p and crmson wreathed hat. It W 1eep~\ ‘lightly battered and the worse for its unk-ltr's\'eléy but it would have been unâ€" fee.] ;:m-fih for her to discard it, as only ‘::‘l)gfe'l %nr ifs timely turning ;ut)'on gd{)r;;n(l‘q;r seccasion, it might iprobi ‘nâ€" "'Olce ‘ ‘0:1!tr‘)(;:"}thf](l(::?uzx‘nnmm ghave been worn (9e.| b\'&'l forlorn little distracted, vagrant, o te) 'n'wl‘md of adorning the proud and hapâ€" w'a: p): htl‘ad of Mrs. Daniel McClean. just for a mu Rosanneâ€"â€"*" way { BCE /o. o se ay 7\ Of hec husband the girl sees lttie or upâ€" nothing. _ She cannot complain to him end-\"’f the eruelty of his mother, for he v(‘t\“'UJld never by any chance take her beâ€"| part. â€" He sends in to her the portion »+ | a + y ‘\o[ food he wishes cooked for bimself, r + KOus | her and the children, and when it 18 ; fell k ready she places it upon a large plats "as|ter and it is sent into his room. He “‘Pl.’ilyeats all he fancies of it and then it igg}'::'ii:s sent back to her, and she and the ie {o | cbildren sit upon the floor and eat them | whatever is left. shu'd\ The girls are married as young as 8 ngâ€"a | years of age, and should a little boy s vn-\lo whom such a baby is married die y he|she is called a widow, and can never \ marry again. Married life is hard, nurse | but far harder and more sad i8 the lot , the of a widow, for she is considered disâ€" blan.| one day in two weeks she must eat msky'iyonly the very coarsest sort of food, and such | one day in two weeks she must fast a out | for twentyâ€"four bhours. Her food and ‘ facts | alWays be eaten away from, other woâ€" o Dan| M°D and she must never dress her , adai.| hair, never sleep upon a bed and never eemed | Wear any jewelry. e | _A piece of matting upon the hard . lal ols ol oo uit se t ALINME PRARRAATRD EVCE WP GC CCC O GS after it, so to spake? Not if every sup of crame in Ireland was spilt, and all the pigs in the country swimmin‘ in the middle of it wave, and your stepmother and her daughter, and Marthe Reilly, that can‘t be aisy unless she‘s gabbin,‘ along wid the lot of for a minyit, for hand and foot, whose lightest word 18 law and who teaches her what dishes‘ her busband likes best and how she is to prepare them. A kind motherâ€"inâ€" law is a thing seldom, if ever, met with, and rarely does she give the lit= tle bride leave to go bome and visit her mother. weal any JPTPCCCZ + A piece of matting upon the hard lflnor comprises the couch of a widow, and sometimes even the strip of matâ€" | tress is denied her; no matter how cold \ the night may be, she is allowed no \ covering _ except the thin garment | that she has worn during the day. She may never look on at any marriage ';curvmonies. for it would be an evil \omen for her to do so; she may have been a balfâ€"caste woman, but upon hee coming a widow even the lowest serâ€" \vants may order ber to do work that ‘is distasteful to them, and no woman ‘in the house may even speak one word , of comfort or pity to her. _ Any woâ€" \man who so far forgets herself as to A show the slightest kindness to a widow is supposed o infallibly become a * "widow herself before long.> Such barâ€" [i‘b:u-.)us behavoir is hard to understand * |and yet these widows take their miserâ€" 7 OWn BA TNE . MRA IOC PMEy T Setit able lot as a matter of course, not even bhaving the spirit to rebel against its injustice. :han any other. During the last three years the number of suicides ocâ€" curring among physicians has been, respectively, 45, 49 and 47 per annum, an average of nearly one to 2,000; or, as the death rate among the physicians is about 25 to 1,000, nearly one fiftieth of all the deaths in the profession have been by suicide. Of all the athletic exercises the very best is digging. Probably every sinâ€" gle muscle, vein, artery, and nerve in the body is vigorously exercised in the process. ecome of her ever ving. Sure, 1‘ll not THE BEST EXERCISE ind the girl sees little or . cannot complain to him‘ of his mother, for he by any chance take her ids in to her the portion ishes cooked for himself, L usw : amid‘ wheanâ€"it is it she isn‘t Newspaper Lews. w in‘ toP c e oal! the specia attention 6 or i masters and subscribers to the following #3 Is svill aopsie of tb6 reowcpaperiaws : oPP 1. If any person orders his paper discor F tinued, he must PAY all arreages, or ths publisher ma&y continue to send it until pay: Of th mentis sade, and collectthe whole a ovn|| ied whether it be taken from the offiee or n0t | There can be no lega) discontinuance uptil ‘ plvmentimade. E‘ %. Aay person who takes a pap®® trom | the post ofice, whether directed to hit | name or another, Or whether he bas sub soribed or not i8 responsible for the payâ€"« 8. If a subsoriber orders bis paper t0 be | stopped at & certaintime, and the gublished e * continues to sand, the subscriber 1# bound | w pay for it if he takes it out of the pos! Firs | office. This proceseds upon be groum(| r ofice. +"" t " w for what he 988# | UNDE P 200CE 2%. Aay person who takes a pape® ‘ the post ofice, whether directed to name or another, Of whether he bas soribed or not is responsible for the p! # Lumber 8. If a subsoriber order stopped at a cortaintine, 8 continues to sand, the sub w pay for it if he takes it office. This procesds U hat a man must paY for Sash and Doof Factory. W ThE ES OF Tt : \ j .. @j Aro Fixed Upon South / can Nervine. Beyend Doubt the Greatest M of the Age. waek EVIRT OM HELR HAS PALED it CVE A Discovery, Based In the matter of good health temporâ€" | ble Izing measures, while porsibly successâ€" | all: ful for the moment, car never be lastâ€" | the ing. â€" Those in poor health soon know ; the whether the remedy they are using | Ne is simply a passing incidernt in their exâ€" | me perience, bracing them up for the day, | to or something that is getting at the or, seat of the disease and is surely and | of permanently restoring. he The eyes of the world are literally w fxed on South American Nervine. They on are not viewing it as & nineâ€"Gays‘ wonâ€" ge der, but critical and experienced men bl have been studying this medicine for or yviears, with the one resultâ€"they have ce found that its claim of perfect cureâ€" th tive qualities cannot be gainsaid tr The great discoverer of this medicine was possessed of the knowledge that the seat of all disecse is the norve centres, situated at the base of the brain. ln this belief he had the best scientists ard medical men of the world coocupying exactly the same preâ€" mises. Indeed, the ordinary layâ€" man recoognizod this princoiple long ago. Everyone. knows that let disease or injury affect this part of the human system and death is almost certain. â€" Injure <th> «pingl cord, which is the medium c these nerve cenâ€" tres, and paralysic (s sura to follow. Here is the Artt la _ The tromwâ€" ce :'.-. +e*~ hn Wev® ty y1) im , Shingles Laws. C Soue+ & AMERICAN m (E :20 NERVINE ;. 1, Based on Scientific Principles. Renders Failure Impossible. f t ie pos! First-Olass 1iva og. ground | UNDEB’]‘AK[NG Promptly attended to. 18e8,. . | JAKK KRES8S. J m @&tocli Â¥or saie by Mo â€" G. &J. MeKECHNIE JAKE KRESS Furniture till to be fourd in t op”.‘“ the Darbam Te .. and Lath always â€"Class Hoearse. ble with . medical treatme®s Cu ally, and with nearly all me nes. i# that they aim simply to o8 the 0 _..»: that may be disenszed. SLouth A*~*l ca Nervine passes by the organ®, 8 a lim* mediately @pplies is 0U" tive L,V-’fl to the norve centrer. ‘TOm which th# organs of the body * mive their 841 pIÂ¥ of nerve fuid. The 3®°Y‘ pantre# healed, and of necss > the orge® which has shown the oâ€"!* ard eviden0# only of derangement |!s healed. JIred gertion, . nervousnees, impover.8" d blood, liver complaint all 0"* theif arigin to a @erangemen! of the nerYE centres. â€" Thousands °* tesitmon® that they have been cured of thes@ troubles, even when they hays Di som £o desperate ms to bafMfe t\ skill the most eminent phymcian® beck Beuth American Nervine DA# gone bheadquarters and eured there. ‘The eyes of the world have "Ot beet _ dlsappointed in the inguiry into the r' _ cess of South Ameriean Norviat _ ple marvel, it is true, 44 its wond medical qualities, but th*Y know ; yond all quection that it 4°%§ eÂ¥ t thing that is claimed for !! ho rt t alane as the one grest °C 2in OW _ remeiy of the nineteenth CC ury â€" should anyone suffer 4!0tr*‘" and ness while this raemo>~} !} $ â€" at their bhands 1 » Farlane & Coâ€" ltedical Discovery bis Old Stand I [J Cheapor & w M mellâ€" of the } y test!! red of have b« UEYC EO , which th# their suppÂ¥ ive cfl,nif‘ the OTge® that theif nerv® imon® thes® HE LIÂ¥ES IN OoLD M WORTH $5,000 Hives in a Palnce as Ihing‘s â€"He is Wortb and His Name is Plai THE RICHEST 0 If reports in the world name ds nlai th &Sr q1 M tr on y t1 ut Wwi in th q t 0u M ti pi d r Ni of pi }4¢ 'h.. eral mer the adn Ti W t ni Ti ter Ma th 17 {) W A f ‘OnT Cid ;e8 Flo pov FAl M an ber spI D 9r n t1 if T [ n 1 Xi U h PD€ W W a 10@ 1 1 n 0 ives in % tru

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