West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 1 Aug 1878, p. 1

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Good Family ,PPRO 'ob I. rowxsnxn. which: "Grey "GREY Deg Local "RONUEt of mans: partment, MAI COLUMN MATT“ r " podly $.ch a u the Art, _ i0\v EET AND In. Newspaper an»... of Revi. AI d other To" Minna... "sl,-. new... REPORTS. Eta in“; All ate a was EDITOM mm: tom is orna- the Arth ordinary notice: of births, mining". deaths. and Blt kind: ot local nun, interval free Cl sharp. In. ”.23 If not paid within two months. ‘3 Praia-ion! and bushes! ends, one inch spam! and under, par year, ...... .. 8 4 Two Suthe- or u hnu kayak] Ina-nu 7 Thm inch-do. per "ar......,...... Mt Quarter column, per yen. . . . . . . . . . . . .. l5 Ilaliculumn. .. .m.m.rr.r..r.. 28 Una'cvylumn, " ......_.......30 Do. mxnhnth‘... ............28 l u' v " ry Wh u rsdny. STRAY ANIMALS, tbt., alumna] three week.- tor " the advertisement not tc ex- ceed 8 linen. Adosrtuemeotr, except when Accompanied by written instmccimu to the contrary, an: insult! until Ion-Wan, and chug.“ n rote ular m, - _ --t-i At the out», Garafrua Street, Upper Town, “THE REVIEW” Durham, - - Ont. " f. .4' E ('hnnen-ry, tuned and mar 0-0. 8mm I ' Hollcihn in I kmhm-m. Flu-d tug - Open awry , my“) FtitrNT' Do. mxnhnlh‘... ............2tb Do. tl-mouths....... .... " Cum advertisements chargonl 8 on. per him tor tio, lint. marrtiou, and 2 cu. per lime for on!) subsequent iuaortiotr--brsviei meal- 17-3513: iiut. pr, "N/lil Chum-r mil. .10 an. em " I) ikoA.- t Farmer‘s Hotel. Pricoville. huh mu the tras wecudr you hm I - L Tummy». t " in Meints nu In“ “on I, “In “I"... lb.- " ttto bent stslv, prom-inn “null-1 their "ttmb'!" y Ill r Beautiful Ambrotypes Only Ten Cents. " iiGiiG; V E a u Homo mums. 8; x2 with that. but and rings. 031A “an" Nuns, Cord nun-l Rings I i) A large 53801111161 toes and Pictu gold at cost, durum the m who the Nothing LIKE LEATHER! FAIR PRICE AND LIVING PROFIT. l Fl" numb, but gnu-1‘ that an- t‘ln‘np v mum: into eosrodvratixrtt tho lung want and l fort u tho Rotunda BOOTS AND SHOES. I - - heilitirs fur manufacturing In ml- cl. and to tune in the County at any. rmt hIV. .9 “I“: on land. trut :11 my mods luv ot tbe - Itle. having: opened out . 1.11:. tgh,','; - at A I but. I'mlenuml sud French Box or " no wore. In sewn] wrrl , dvfy camped- = TI. Int! u dono by warlunenul “whim not-you admit- that Joppi 811mm" un- not In sup-Hod. F1P,esl'J,',l,1', Photographs L Pitotostrrsplts InaJr in all the IN stylus. Plums t'op'it','l I, In». rum Hui-Iran! hut Ill“ “Alum trame, outs .1...“ an! no my - bl ova- yttytcra15: " BUSINESS DIRECTORY. LEGAL 'CYi, ply),'; J. LEWIS won: otTorembr.yY leul 1" l I.' l Itsralrtuttr done with neat- _ j “-_-‘A“ at-oee12?.e.1ty,ft',e,r, - WM " u" I‘m 'rEitNs:-Si.0o per you in Advance. Mum , RADI'AT , MA loch in! 3km! Do You Want Money. "ifGiittf (Tutti Amman P' F M" l- hurhn E. " TTORN EY JAMES LAMON, new“ _ AT . LAW,“ and“: in J. w. l Aitlti'.i'l'E it, D. MCDONELL ARMSTER, ATTOXLVF. -Upperr Town, hum, Ont ARIHS'H EXT] Maul " CASH FOR HLDES. RATES OF ADVERTISING MISCELLANEOUS. I and "iii,; “Bu;ka tutoe"---thing I" Mt than 'm".. US a. J. W. Bonus-‘9 Ib-ss shop, but- -. will nod" my: “union. iiiGGa despatch. mOseri'oer Filo ST “alumina: iiiUriiidGt of Frames. Mot- .nd Pictures that will be l at cost, and even less, Barber Shop. Beatinels, MEDICAL. at In. JAM IESON sinus“, 315mg Dit. KIERXAN, Lt Medical ILIIImecr T " ili,GFirGuk on Um 1 " " DUMB!) stt, " Jwin at 1 “OBIWN. MAC MILLAN. ST-LAW, an. " ll visit 'Spepce‘n why 'BOST, L.L.B., Attorney-ttHat Solicit Comoywcer. ae., Punk“ at m ry Pubrt Dandy-1k. Jt & COWI'ER, Mt all nine». Upper, Towh, do Dawn " Geo. Wood a keeps on hand no low . _. _ ,7; -L-...‘ -I|nn We): m, 1573 " 'GUGiiy Fi arts. J. TOWNSEND " two mouthn I] we. WihiiG/sarte. when tho long was! and our A r marl“: for tt per ii, In] tho latest and b copied and ,uu.rtl &s, pox LuMttutonr nt ib Attorneys-at Law, Jun. Owen Bonn-l und tO m Trunbiou Build- “Wynn-4| to do "air-Inning. 'ke.. to“ cqu-rivm-HI In the dim tun-nun Mm with In at nttrmion. Mum- te' I Mais xwuwnuvyg. t. M halt: M Town, Durham LY FIFTY CEN'T.S, I! - on hand. University and tlv the: ot Naive a! runny. T. D. COWPER yt LvrNusaos Y, " Ofhee . yt my sirians In Jour to Purl“; runny-mt, ta Tl J. c. JOPP Inch, fitted oftiet, op grapher, f the City M with thr u minus tttt MI Hotel tk For In " Jedi WW] utr, " N " " as! Walnut. Nw-wmnl. nut ad mm of Lumber In lull stock of Ctsilltvs, I' axing-alum: a on [and Remember the plugs IPIKVERALS furnished on short notice. Caskets and (hams, with all sort: ot Mm Innings, Mm.) a nu hnud. House luminhad no. to Men bug in; will» than an. Remembrr the place, WATSON & sows Yagoa ma Carriage Worn, y7 Prietn 1110, cm. NO ABMLSTICE Bry/,r','l'1', WM.WATSQN As SON, Undertakers, With the Custom Sawing of Lumber SHINGLES, LAT” Any Person Wanting Money English & Scotish I?ivlis1NE?iT nun-xxx; (Limited.) Capital 3500.000, Stirling. No tlnea. Expenses Lower than any other Company. Fur further iatormmtiott apply to _ A FIRST-(LA!!! “EARHE wo lllul'f. Itorkvillit Minn. I Ir to ylu Geo. Rutherford, JOSEPH F. MOWAT Cal 0 naval (\g‘ont. District Anna: f, (Human Fire a M “(acted In Low li three your: - Vortey Imam! on {arm tit' simple 1:1me tor my part turd 2) ye: omco Main sum. DUNDALK. Ont IT 19 nml Tum! anpvlty, vn the tnilowing Lilwnh Terms, Vin} tt per ct'ttt. per tututuu, Interest pay- able uxnr-vnuux. NOT IN ADVAXCF“ a; pnr cent NT unnum, Interest. payable YEARLY, NOT IN .'il'I'Al,'i"cht (‘nplul nsrthorlaed by (harlot. ”000.000. Loan and Investment 00., C) annmx'r: Sir Alex.'r,thut. “rpm-1mm“ A. M. campbett, Em. mnmlu: lib Humor D. a. Mum. Liam. Gov, of Out; Hon. John 1i'tilgr,v. Mon. s. c, Woof hat-M: , yt _ _ Flea' Canada Hm a Marble Ins-"mum Co's. Immune! alerted In Low Itatea. Emu l’mywrty hum"! fol “am your: will“ Fire and Lightning It 75c on etch 91mm. Mt commmtietuions T,'g'J'er,, nthndnd to. Bul- num private Am tuusthleutiat. -"iuGGr/4.i0liafth, 7 non, Esq; Wm. Inca, Esq. Dunn: The hunk of Manual; m Can-din Bunk of Commons. Bout-non: Noun. make, Ian a Boyd. Inna”: J. mun. Borrowers out. by "new Arrangement. hue the prtvUmt? of ”paying principal mm "any and u unvh than on they view. new: we mm.) be I myth-la in mm sum or by insul- “a hung M " as. an -ttgttag no sailor!” all outer Bell - Be (Idlin- p-vh-sol.or adv-Ite- - on fin-7 _ Ago!" " " 3m cruel; u “and. 5mm nut, Toronto. Vol. I. No. 25. Cami-dam? In B. ".. t'cnweynnnr We. "PROV ED and Unimproved Farms L bar ale. cheap. Bend tor Land List. Village lots tor Ida iu Dummk. done it onco, and c C"ilra't6 ' En" yu"rir'AtAT'ru'. War, War ! ‘FFERS to Lend Mung; HI Fr.trtty..cits. on hand Ind ma Real Estate, Loan, THE BRITISH CANADIAN "ieii,i,i2, (elf,? - A circular Saw Aglimc 1 Logs during 18'm, PRICE FILL Js', ON T 'Fr'Trr9rM."". -_'e'-. er-i-e-ee-e H n, F, .; George Groig Em .; Don, Ald than Esq. 'o'i'f'i'llidil ROBT. BULL. A. McLELLAN, Shuuld borrow from the INST AND till I NGLES‘, " Durham. keeps on hand a M Hm); Donn and " kinds of HM.” u no”: " Maul-.1123: in Vpmt, Durham. NORMAN McfNTYllr It yr the V'ich r com. and urn-Mas Mending to “can: gmmcd. RANCH, AND ml um (Luann) a mun ammo. north of CrMI'A N Y, (Limited. ) W. cllAWl%llD, Durham I'. l at inst all kind» ot PING, Jireri nu shirt w Shun-ls ax min. Tho Weston: Ind moo C'o's. Insurance l Proprrty hmurwl ‘or " Lightning at 7.30 on Y.NI) LUV] Vullustvr, Durham Bait the amen . at 8 per cent. time between g ijt itihtttt (ititttritttt, mi ttoft-tost, ind Trim Saw o And study m: Nature’s way ; But my weary stops I wonded dong. For the bird: around we had ended their song. I wandered among the Mn: one day, When: Nahum was smiling but “we I He'- haunting and chums before me lay, Ttsat'iousrorrow's light was bringiag;- That darkness mun come just After the day, But In“: no longer, and punc- ”my. Down doop in the depths of my ham than 1ietg Chums surpaasiugir I'm in tiMmr-. Chums which none could witbotuld ; A visiun of bounty tsurrrGiugiy fair. I saw in that beautiful Inna. A dove tUw through the use: to the right And cuooduit parsed, "good night, good night. The sun In: dipping behind the hull. Mada (2mm: of silver sheen, And rainbow colours that would not 'bido As the sun could no mum be seen. Alt whlnxxsred no plainly in my ear. “The (by bu dapuwd And night in here." I turned my leaps. with lot-town]! “so, And wished it warn always any That I might remain in that beautiful place Bat souMrthittg lightened my heart trust than, And I could not rutruin from singing: tt whispered of pleasures to come "gain,-- That vision mung the hills; And the birds and the trees in my memory the, While my soul with coutuutmont Bur, For “tor this lifts, which in mostly night, Thar» will dawn on my vision the endless light. And Ntttttrg I” going to rest ; Fury-mud but»: the clear uir an. First among Turkish social topics is that l of the harem. Tho Koran allows a. Mus- sulman to have mar wives; and many per- I sons have consequently imagined that po- ' lygamy is the rule in Turkey, whereas it is the exception. A Mussulmnn may only have as many wives as he can keep in com- fort; and it is only the very rich who can afford to keep four. The middle-class Turks bare only one wife apiece; the men of the lower class are often obliged to re" main single from not having the means to support It consort in the style which the Modem law enjoins. Nothing can be more tin-Turkish than tho Mormon idea of i accurnulatiug r. number of women to live ' under one roof, quarveling in the kitchen I and parlour, and acting as household i ilrudges for their husband. The Turkish 1 wife is nut a slave; tho chief fault to find '1 with her is thnt she has too lofty a sense i hf her own dignity. Au advoeatuof female i rights: would have some dillitulty in per- suading her that her lot watogritiablo '. she ' has never envied the emancipation of Christian women, wlsoxe ireparisr, shook her; while she has noticed that they get much less respect from the men of their: faith than which is invariably Tcuehstded to her. She veils. her Lee with no moral regret than a Western Indy unveils her shoulders. Turkish women are not l shut up. They go out when they please, l attended by their odaliks ii rich, or holding their children by the hnni1 ; and their inng- I pie voices till the Lazar's, for they are noisy : talkers. Wherever they pass, men of alli (reeds stand inside deferontially. If a hus- i baud meets his wife in the street he makes I no sign of recognition. If he perceives her halting before u dmper’s stall and guz- ing srigzifiesruly at silks dearer than he l can 'dford, he must possess his sulll in rea- l And time [mused on wings the none-t. A bird skipped through the branches o‘erbold, And mum We wordy-J10 to bed, go to bed." 'Wuy up " the mouncrh‘s east, And the scene aid better thaw words could "r, “Beyond thin world u " audios: day." A stream that flow" down tho stoop hill-id. can afford, he must pussms his sunl in res- ignation. muttering "Mushalluh." This respect for women prevails also in the home circle, and it comes naturally to the Mussuhnnn. who has been taught from his lmylmud to behave courtcously to the softer sex. The Western conjugal expression about "wearing the breaches" has its '1' ur. Kish cuuntcrpurt in the phrase to "live under the slipper;" and it is to be feared that not a few Turks know the taste of this implement Lof nxuriul persuasion. A hamal (street porter) once came before a cadi to complain that his wife trounced him too frequently. “See what mine docs," answered the magistrate, opening his gown and showing some wells on his neck and shoulders. "Go thy way, my son, and thank Allah thou art luckier than A Turkish house is divided into two parts-the selumilk for the men, the hare- milk for the women; and the latter has as many sopamte suits of apartments as there are ladies. A Turk who has but one wife may require a large lmremilk if his mother and sisters live with him, for each of these ladies must have her private set of rooms and servants for her separate use. There must be no crowding or mixing of domes- ties in a well ordered establishment ; no that if there be four wires they need never see one another unless “my please. The tirst wife is called the haunn, and takes precedence over the othors all her life. She has alight to the best rooms, and to I fixed share of her husband‘s income, which he must not reduce to minister to the ca. price of his younger spouses. As these points have generolly been settled through the ulemns or priests before the wedding. a hmun’s jointure is as safe " that of sl Frenchwoman who has had .0. contmt‘ dnueaptp by a notary. During the last twenty years monogamy hos become more and more the rule among Turks of the highest olass, and even among those) who hove two or three wives the haunt: has gunhnlly come_ to ho "Med 18an- inxswo wank-rt“: "item of, . Christmphonu. a, visits sod 'tnitrttie DURHAM, Co. Grey, AUGUST Turkish Wives, Wok-n of Nature. BY FLOYD \"LL'OTA POETRY. The Turk who has money marries young, and an excuse for polygamy might be found in the fort that his first marriage is always on “(grain do conven- am-e." His father bespeuks A 'hridd for him from among the daughters of his best l friend, and he does not see the young lady until She lifts her veil in the. bridal' eham. l her after the wedding, The preliminaries fare conducted by the mothers an both l sides; and doubtless a son will now and; then plead hard to be nllowedjust one peep at his intended, but a. prudent matron Will i turn a deaf our to such eutreuties. Tho I damsel is more fortunate, fur the can sei, 1 her bridegroom elect through tho grated l windows of her residence, or, elescr' guilt, under cover of her veil in the hours. It imight be supposed that, as feminine no.- i ture is the some in all latitudes, k girl who. _, know herself to he pretty might devise in: timeout strutegeins fur letting her batcvtlsesl, got tt sight of hcr---fuu. instance, wear a ) wry thin veil, or contrive that, at the hour _,, when the young (-fTendi culled on her father, one or two of the wooden bars of lilo? 1uoucharabies (window grating) should ihe displaced. But this would he quite Contrary to Mussulinmi notiom of delicacy, which are not to he triiled with. Turkish girls are unaifeutsilly modest. Those of the lowcrelass who are engaged as aer- [ rants in the. houses of Frank residents are imuch preferred to Greeks or Armenians ' for their excellent behaviour, cleanliness, l and regard for truth. Looking upon mar. riage as their natural destiny, they are I careful of their reputations; and when l married make first-rate housewives.-. ', Pall Mall Gazette. the humans of other gentlemen. but huh aloof from wives of the secondnpghothgrj dogmas. These are not oqrr1,,tt aha; sight, but being generally We‘mu social status, who have not {my (lower to their husband. Tau when. n pasha would take four wives of (le- grec, Bll being daughters of other push” or of the Sultan, and all being richly por- trotted ; but manners have altered All this respeet--at all events.,in Lhmkopoan port of Turkey. It must not-Wampum}. however, that n hanun cherisheq Iny such jealous hatred of her fellow-viva}! isfolt by in Christian woman who sees hit hus- band flirt with strange women. She is content with the largest share of her hus- band's respect, without dcnmnding his ex- elusive devotion. not philosophy often goes the length of choosing from mung her own odaliks or companions (Irina oda, room). one whom she deems Intel to be his inorgmmtic spouse, and she will do this the more readily if she hnva‘tdken n. fancy to the girl and he unwilling to ice her leave the house. la some Imus-05, not of the highest chm, the four wives are M friendly at home as it is possible for “lemon to he ; though (nu-h may .have a. diffcmnt not of outdoor friends whom she will not introduce to the others. In any case the supremmy of the hzumn is always acknow~ lodged, and the others will not intrude themselves into her presence unless invit. ed. In vicwof the importance attached to liners. ll the new 'tcquie,ition of Great Britain in the peak fut Mediterranean, we give a sketch of the of the il bland of Cyprus from Murray's Hand. lemon I book for Travellers, which will be read then 7,1't w'th interest r-Cyprus is the most eastern tthove tl Hand of the Mediterranean, and lies off blue, an the coastof Syria. It is 145 mileain length, of rich, extrvnw breadth 55 miles, and its minimum rose-eol, breadth 27 miles. having an area of 4,500 "Win- square niiles-alunrt the size of Jamaica, ening,a qr ntarly a third loss than Yorkshire, and of Mirn has now apopulatio of 200,000. It has Perhaps hitherto been but little visited bytravellers, Jit wer owing to the (rronnous statements rcgard. ltus an ing it. There is, however, no reason why ofmy l travellers should not visit this island with back au as great impunity as any other part of the from th Levant. The climate varies in dim-rent t'cturit t parts; tho northern region is the most hilly natvly N and wooded, and the least fertile, and the roads Ill heat in that district is tempered by the I ride th winds from ‘.he Karainaniun Mountains, with "it which preserve the frozen snow in the till tsupr, hichest spots during the grcuter part of the the livi, year. The cold is very revere in winter. write to In the plains in the southern districts of are dn Cyprus the heat of the sun is excessivo,but hunters is moderated by the sea breezes. The smoking richest as well as the most agreeable parts cast, tis of the island are in the vicinity of Cerinea paired, and Paphos (mien). Larnaha, the chief are sum seaport of the island, is about a quarter of the eris, a mile distant from the son: the Consuls ing to ti and most of the European inhabitant: re- our owl lside at a suburb on the seashore, called small. I by the Italians the Marina, which is the at the y chief depot of the commerce of the whole glam” island. Although,Aarstka is situated in though what is regarded as the worst part of seated, Cyprus, the country around being arid.thiu_ not ita I port, it is stated, has been selected solely wardnc owing to the safe anchorage of its roads. on the I About an hour’s ride from Lax-nah. Bockyl may» our the borders of the large Bolt Lake, on the road to Citti, is I mosque in "WE which the Turks suppose to be interred the I Wife body of the detained of their prophet. anon: Ntkosia, the capital of Cyprus, was besieged should by the Turkvuiiur Mustapha in 1670,' the aura to siege lasting (urtrti" Gr, when " was utter." titan by storm; between the gates of _ Ab: Fungus“ and Baths, situate in a putty Him». guano. in a and! mosque in which it in- 'rs turd thoBumm-r. or candid-mp” h like tuu' puma the Turkish " on tho Jed. The Island of Cyprus. M+>n ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO ”113.". From the summit of the minuet of with“ the best view, it is stated, is to he “it" the mulberry and palm trees being interspersed with minaret: and ancient Christian churches, now converted into mosques. The principal products of the inland are wheat, barley. cotton. silk, mad, der-roots, olive oil, wine, combs, hemp, pitch, who], tobacco, tatlt, tine timber, and fruit; there is an average yield of 1,2M,. 900 gallon' of wine and 193,000 cwt.cfsult. These are stated to form tour-fifths of the entire exportation, which is at present principally to Marseilles, Leghorn, Trieste, ind Coast of Syria. Nearly the entire im. ports consist of British goods hrought from Beyrout, Constantinople, Smyrna, end the Mediterranean ports. Emu-ta were made in 1866 to increase the growth ot cotton. _. From Limasoi there is A considerable trade in the shipment of wines and rnki,l made in the vicinity, to Egypt and the islands of the Arehipelago; large quantities} of climbs, which grow in the neighbouring forests, um shipped to Ilussia and nail, 1'1 the sportsman, Cyprus offers a. wide mid untroddcn field. Its hills and valleys) are described as swarming with hares, parti‘idges, francolins, bastards, and quails; in the winter, wvodeoeks, snipe, and wild duck are found in great abundance ; muf- ilons, or wild 'sheep, and wild hours, are to be had " Cape St. Epiplmnimr, the district around which. called the forest ot Acamu, is uninhabited. The antiquities of the islaud belong to three distinct epoeU- Gretian, Roman, and Christian. The period of the Byzantine dukes lasted nine centuries; and among many fine churches erected at that period is still to be seen tho superb one of Muchern. There is It conjecture, for'. which no ground is assigned. that the Jnytuments of that period were in a. great pint destroyed during the time that ah. Island was held by Richard I. of Eng. bud. Life in the Rocky Mountains. Oh, that I could paint nith pen or! brush! From my bed I look on Mirrorl Lake, and with the very tytir1iest dawn“ when objects were scarce discernible, it l, lies. there absolutely still, a. purplish lead! colour. Thou suddenly into its mirror tinsb‘ed inverted peaks, at first a bright orange, then changing into red. making the dawn darker all round. This is a new sight, ouch morning new. Then the peaks twin, and when morning is no longer “spread upon the mountains," the pines lll't' mirrored in my lake almost as solid objects. and the glory steals downwards, and tl red flush warms the clear atmos- phere of the park, and the hour frost sparkles as the crested blue-jays step forth duiutily on the jewclled grass. The maj. tasty and beauty grow on me dailv. As I crossed fretu my cabin just new, and the long mouutuin shadows lay on the grass and form and colour gained new meanings. I was nlmost false to Hawaii ; I Couldn't go on writing for the glory of the sunset, but went out and sat on a rock to see the deepening blue in the dark cun- yous, and the peaks becoming rose-colour one by one, then faling into sudden ghast- liness, the awe-inspiring heights of Long‘s pcuk fading lust. Then came the glories of the afterglow, when the orange and lemon of the east faded into grey, and‘ then gradually the grey for some distance ( above the horizon brightened into a coldi [ blue, and above the blue into a brand band of rich, warm red, with an upper band ot) rose-colour; above it hung a big cold moon. This is the "aily miracle" of ev- ening, as the blazing peaks in the larlmess of Mirror Lake are the miracle of morning. Perhaps this scenery is not lovable, but, as if it Were a strong, stormy character, it has an intense fascination. The routine I of my day is breakfast at Beven, then I go back and "do" my cabin and draw water l from the lake, ma . little, loaf a little, i return to the big cabin and sweep it alter- nately with Mrs. W.sule, after which she reads aloud till dinner,“ twelve. Then I ride with Mr. Hyde, or by myself, or with "Mountain Jim," or go their cattle, till supper at six. After that we all sit in the living room, and I settle down to write to pm, and mend my clothes, which are dropping to pieces. The strange hunters and prospectors lie on the floor smoking, and rifles are cleaned, bullets cast, fishing-fiurmade, fuhirttaekhs reg paired, book are ,otterprooferd, pirtoeonga are sung, and about halt-put eight I own the crisp grass to my “bin. always expect- ing to fied something in it. We all wash our own clothes, and, u my stock is so small. come pint of the day must be spent at the wall-tub. .l’olitaueu ind propriety all-syn prevail in our mind company. and though various grades of society are male. canted, in. democratic tqun1itr prov-ilk, no'sit-ttagfett, Indtlamianeithnlur‘ nude-non on. aide, nor Malian on the otur.--3Ga' Bird? kucnfron the Becky Numb". "What I must," said I you”! bean. “is swife witltoat a failing." "Then you'll never marry," said his sister, “because. should you iiud such . woman. she'll be sun to want I husbmd of the “no clut- A farmer named Faribnnlt. nut St. Pull, Hiram. shot sud instantly killed two trumps whom he caught setting fire to a Inn-oat. ing machine in his wheat tuid. m gun phase]! I], but wu km N- 1878. $1 per year in Advance. A maps-dental the Winnipeg Fm Press. writing “June 9th from Bsttleterd. says t-BattUtbtd is a anti-d place, being neu- Wet Pitt sod Edmonton on one side end Carleton and Prince Albert on the other, end lining s prospect soon at oom- nunitation with Forts Walsh end Holdall. It is convenient tor (rulers {routine plains. who ere beginning to come hen tor-supplies in outage for fur. Here, es in places ell through Canada, are spots of not very rich land, but one moot expect to tind hun- dredot milesol landwlsere no labouri- required. Men with - would soon make money here. If determined to work they will Bad not ”many drswhecks. The climate is most enjoyable end invigorating; the lead easily cultivated. us no stamping requires to be done, end there is but little stony ground to be found. Horses can food out all winter, and in spring are bitter than those that have been kept in the stables. Although we are always led to believe that the climate is severe, yet from the dryneis of the atmosphere, people can work out of doors all day during the winter with much thinner clothing than in Lower Canada. You seldom see overcoats worn, nnd never see mttfflerx; and where in Lower Consds one would be for ever eselaituiug, in February and March, What disagreeable weather! Here the cry is, Is itnot glorious weather? It is useless to expect all the l luxuries here you have in an old country, 1 bat it would only be very discontented l ‘people, and those 1h terminal to look on l _ the dark side, who would be unhappy i l a I place like Battlefurd. The reports that l have gone abroad of trouble from our Indians have been eltiefiy caused by plott- ing individuals who have no other Lut'illlB of bringing themselves into notice. The Indians know full well who are their fricnda, and having always been consider- ately and fairly dealt with by white people, and knowing the great benefit white settlers are to them, they will hardly be so foolish as to listen to the promptings of wicked i men, who are far from having their welfare at heart. While the Indians are settling on tln ir reserves is the time for the missionary i work. Energetic. noble-minded men, who i have the conversion and improvement of the Indian race at hrart, ought to know that now is the time to teach the Indian the war; to Heaven. It is only when they nrc settled alone with thrir tcachrts that the power of the Gospel is unmistakably seen, and the fruits of thy 1uistsionarirs' efforts. are fully appreciated. The English Church has done a noble Work in I this country. The Wesleyens have also done well. Da. Amour " Buarw.--rn 1827 a new and more extended sphere of usefulness was opened. The head mastership of Rugby became vacant by the resignation of Dr. Wooll, and Arnold, after some hesitation, resolved to offer himself as a candidate for it. He was so late in form. ing this resolution that some of his friends considered that he had lost all hope of election, as other candidates had already been canvassed for. His testimonials were few but weighty, and what perhaps con. tributed to turn the scale in his favour-mas an expression used by his friend Dr. Haw- kins (in I letter), in which he declared his belief that if Mr. Arnold were elected to the head mastership of Rilgby, he would change the face of education in all the public schools of England. This prediction he verified. Of his management of the school we have not space to say much. but it has left a mark in this country which will never be effaced. Owing to the lax ad- ministration of his predecessor, he found that a radical reform was necesqary, and 1 he set about it judiiinusly and firrul: , _ tmdeierrcul by opposition and unshaken by l it. At first the constant innovations made startled and alarmed those with whom he had to deal. But they were wou round by degrees by his gentleness and Christian forbearance, and also by seeing that how. l ever prone he was to change. he would always be kept within bounds by certain fixed principles, from which he never swerved. His manifest singlencss of pur- pose, too, gradually became known and appreciated. Among the buys he was generally very popular, and over the bettrr class of than arquired an influence which lasted during the whole of their lit-en, and l was rendered stronger from the fact that they regarded him It not only their master but their friend. His life at this period in- volved such content activity, that we are lost in astonishment at the energy of one who could carry on so many occupations at once. For besides the daily routine of school duties, and the composition of one sermon every week " afternoon eervioe at the school chepcl. be we: employed in will»; e history of Home. and bringing out an edition of Thunydidoe. beeidee writ- ing ooouionel pamphlet: on political lub- jecte. But with ell thishewaenobook- worm. but took recall-reunion, and mixed freely in the opera end mumonudhie Men. Bis home. during the My; we: Wmlnnd. whereinbeilteui- deuce nee: homicide. celled Fuzhou. ,.hiutu.tiliint.Ur-imrMth"milr, and when be divided bis line between lou new rambles end working at hie history of 'um-ri-tm, - ------_-------- l So gonenl wu the disuse in the kingdom Propoull m on footin Italy {enacting It" or “In. centurion ago that than m 2,000 miles a! nilwqat acute! About that 100 ltr hospitals in England and S88,60Wt0. Scotland. Battleford. any, Out. "trN.-Ahtmtht_. - banned and, this will». in: thrill-[ed “Hold. all“ in nib. ”Miamin tho countyd Nodal. (help but. a thmtrr, and James Smith. hi. a“ on... - aid “you. you! of m. want from the home butt-en “and (hm o'clockthin morainctou- hndtourhr-im They hulk. Mh‘llht-rt time when the you; can return“ to the hon-o and and on the "stofthittuniry to get up. n. then “at to th bedroom ooesqUd h " mMmdaM-ckod one with.“ pump M. which be brought in with him, mtttrttt "ttttttt gull-I on her land and hurting her Inna badly, which she put nptouhieldhemlf with. Hotbox) that tuothortsistarirtlm" “clutch“ Wham! on the the new this: “claiming ttut he had “killed her!" Probably thinking he had done to ho turned his “taxation to a yuan brother Mto I“ to tho kitchen. and who. up a has: kettle, threw it at James, and, getting mansion of a pistol, held tho 11111er at bay, telling him he would shoot him if he came near him ; James then left tho house. and " sulnetiuu- it was sup- posed he had fled, but he has since been foundin the Urn hanging by the nook. dead. The old man With found behind the burn dead, with his skull annulled in. The inference ispat he had lawn killed by his son before, the attack was made on the ‘rest of the family. His body had been "ragged some dirtance towards a straw staek, the murdvrpr probably contemplnt. ing hiding the body or burning it in tho straw stack, but abandoned the inlmntiuu. The girl first ottarked is 1lansrerously hurt, her injuries liming caused horto vomit blood. Them had how a quarrel "out sums of money which James had stolen from the old man on dim-rent orcasinns. und he had stolen mum-y to Co to the 1hldfclloww' excmxinn lo Hamilton, which cum“ off 10-day. and his fulln-r had discm'm‘vxl this. Tho pump lnmdle had been saw“ off, having: “mare and mi pttrposctnaeeowplrsh his murdcrous in. teutious A later and more explicit nmunt of tho Rockford tragedy is that young Smith we“ to " Iistcr's room some time in the night and stole tho key of hi. “that's money-bot from . string of keys which were wound the oldest girl'. body. He stole the int my and put the key but in the bed, and upon the girl turning over in the bed shortlv afterward: telt the hey ttlsieh awakened her. Ind suspecting what had boon done. " they had expected he would nttompt tho tllett. She then gut up and told her hither something was wrong. M the string of the keys bad been out from her body. Her {other then got up, and wont to the son‘- l room Ind accused him of tulu'ngthe money. They both then came down stairs And had some words, the uld mun threatening to have him arrested if he did not give up tho money. His son then gave up put at tho money. The fatlut tlu-n procured n halter, And started fur the hold to got a ham to go to Simone, Paying he would put I stop to this kind of work. The son follow. ed him up a lane bark of the Urn, Mid there murdered him with a club about. two feet six inchel long, which he had prepare the evening before from an old pump handle, nnd which the girls now him cutt- ing, not knowing for what purpose. It was round to the end, not square, on before stated. His subsequent actions are oar- rectly detailed in the first report. The old moo Wu forty-nine yours of ago, and highly respected. An inquest was held this afternoon on the bodies of George and J tunes b'mith,tU victims of the Rockford tragedy, by Dr. Hlyos, of Simone, assisted by Irrs. Howell ttsd Langrill, of this village. In the can of George Smith a verdict was “turned in u- cordnnu with the forageimz tutu. and to the otteet that Juno: Smith tsommitted Iuicide by bulging. It is thought the eldest girl will recover. The mother only died about one you Mo. She In: the second wile, but left only one child, I boy. The rest now 1ivimr--4wo girls and a boy-am children of the first wife. "mess war, to hum been married (0-day. How "" l’noxomurn CAKE To mu ls. vssrED.--An English patent of his! )n-zir, taken out by Mr. Edison. clearly sh,nvt,r that his mind was [wing proparcd fur Hm conception of the phonograph. In that patent he describes a mums of n nmliv 1: ordinary telegraphic signals by n chisel. shaped stylus warming in Amt of pnprr enveloping: cylindrr (r plate, along the line of. groove out in the surfuve of thu- latter. These indnntml marks were to be capable of rc-trnnmiitling the uncanny nu- tnumticaily over anvil": wire if requilvd. Here then wait tho xvii In“. nod the Vihrnting die of the telephone “h the MM. needful to griminute the phonograph. That seed was dropped in!" it by "widow. “How did you dieconr tho ptitrr'iploe" asked A newspaper ropumr of Mr. Edison, "By the met-est accident." replied the Poe femur. “I was singing to the xuuuthpiuca of a telephone, when tho vibrations of the voice sent the tir" steel point into my finger. That M4. no to thinking. " I could noon! the notion-of the point and "ttot-tttsi-ret'"."'",--!"- mluwmmm whytho thing would nut talk. I tried the "prim Int on a strip of telegraph pupal-.wd (and that the point nude In Ilphulnt. I Chanda}. woul-‘H-looi hMoo' into the mom. In: the putt luck our the Med “and but.) I hint ‘Hdnot ”film. Ideumdneltonuke. a“. that wail uni-k My. Ind “v. .7 “is” instruction. telling It. "at I hilt-maul. My laugh- Odltu “If! (In M M'- The tttttstat, I. path. I! o "sk..".--. MW According to the Pall Mall Caulk. 193):on ha-1isHemdtrom England. Tragedy at Rockford. HOMER - --.-.-

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