"GREY REVIEW†“can Style of the Art RE Mad J. TOWNSEND. tvertegs- In“. rey Review†'PROVED KINDS. Family Newspaper Den Work a for Adverti- ICP‘ ic- a.) meaning 0‘... n and “he: T HE h' PAPER Pt IREIGN XEWtt, “I. dam “21.2101! tment, uprronuu E rams, of tho l runs-i. toottr BentiaO Eto " all DIVE“ Ide 'owu " and Atthe Ofriee, C.aratraxa Street, Upper Town, I u're _ ry "IU, ursdn y, " 81.20rt not paid within two months. 1. Three Quark Mali an Ogte er, “THE REVIEW†Durham, - - Ont. I lar rates, l um". um Owen tie Char. mm, N Farmer‘s Hotel. Priecvius hum ( )‘f, Mag-go» Bortrt BEST; l n IC', p, land-1.: In thr ‘n “wit raw-m: new"! of t m Mung Beautiful Ambrotypss For Only Ten Cents. with dun - hogan "suis, Cord at A urge assortme toes and Pictc gold " cost. who the I) aria nyloiw. rum" " the. nu» bznlnn .1]an walnut fr Morro FRAMES. Nothing LIKE LEATHER! FAI ft Te,5, snSreriber keeps on ham] no low “we, Wk bat goods that In ehrrrtp when tea into cumin-radon the long wear and cm:- I." when“). t nu now (unmet tor manufacturing rn mi. do mi to nnuu in the (‘numv of â€my. ml line no on "och on Mud. but rut my good: no of the I.†Ityle. hung crane}! out I [use consign. i-tof A I but. Command and Put-mu Box or m I.- work. In sawed work 1 defy comm. Thu wort u done ht vorkmpn ot oxperiuuce, “mo-0mm that Inn.“ succumb" eul- not be mum-ed. has.“ and soc my “Eureka stsoe"--thiag now m that put... Wk“ n J. W. Boulden'n “was Sho . Dur- -. 'm We prompt Atkinson.†â€my! oqttntrd a kinds album of Naive and m Dund- n my Tannery. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. LEGAL 'rrcillMh".-M.t'Ay per year in Advance, um lack-uh H' LF.N I) I I) , Pisttossrym 'iii ‘ltml TTOI "OBS EY - AT . LAW. Solicitor in "us-ry, Notary Publir, Convey-wot. &e. . and mum-nee - hundulk. 3001's AND SHOES. CASH FOR HIDES. RATES OF ADVERTISING " threemonthn....... ..._ " mat advertisement: charged 8 etc. per " the tirst insertion, and 2 eu. per line 3h subsequent iaaertion--brerier Inm- LIISCELLAN EOUS. l PRKCE AND LII r culnlnn, per yes! 'vlumn 1umn. lion)! and banners cardn, one inch we sud under, pu- par, ........ ' 4 phag- orf'A linen .VnnpAriel menu" fi :rtlwmonh. rxrrrpt when accompanied than instructions to the cuntmry, an " mm! iurlmlden, and chargod " reg- mmg‘ono with neat: mass and despatch. l ST dun-In: the next N. KF. LAT. lallk Ilmmponin: Barber Shop. jaunt. mm lu', In]?! MEDICAL. JAMES IAIN) Dll. Rt W“ Pm! It. MM T q II: I LW‘TID IJORDD'I F Rosy, ' Attorne r, ('unveyn (At.N, Jun, MrertUrM thrre l. advertisement nut tt ex- T AT M )OXI'ZIJ “I vi Mu". Upper 1min. (mice " Ow. Wood & why. IMILIAX. AW, ke. _0trtee_, or J. TOWNSEND births, marriages, t loch new", binned Ll M "quantum: pr, VINO PD a (mind " H Photographer, , MIN. ll " Livnusrox. m Artdroft tHts Tum . Durban J. C. JON'. d1 ite lit " M ntwndr' I Illett St W ' It tty l I ,.\ i . v . g.“;~-;;;;; ' Any Person Wanting Money “are 'yt £1: '28 10 GO u, _ WI£.WATSOH &. SON. R711devtalcers, Geo. Rutherford, wo, 1kmember the p13 Kenna furnish humus. Mme: NO ARMLSTICE Custom Sawing of Lumber JOSEPH 1' With U English & Scotish Capiml $00000. Stirling. 1 No iineg. Expenses Lower tt any other Company. For trtrthrrr lubrmauun arply to A [WENT-(LANE "BABIES T0 “IRE 1torkville Mind. r.rntinek.Frb. lil Cor" nova: Dirtrtet Anvnt for the Yiirirr. Tho (maul; Fire st Min-hm lmumnv‘o Col onwteul " Low Rum. Farm Prom-r three you: against Fire nnd Light} each #10041). All Cn nm'miratinm tr'X,',tJ1,1J, attend now: mute nu eottt1ttrttt L} mud 1an Pram-r1330" the following Libcril Toms, vei-tt per mutlwr "uturn. Intern" pay- nbl-s u.\u-n‘.m.\'. NOT LN MIVAXUE. it} per cgntJ-or 99:9,"), lawn“ pnynblu mung NOT Loan and Investment Co., itiutrvuscF.. _ _ _ Capital unmarked by Chan". 55.000300. hummus c. Sir hlex.tCrtut. TictVPr.sstrti:NT'. A. H. Campbell. Esq. Dmtc‘rnm: His Honor D. A, Mnmlonnld. Lieut.. (but otthtt.; Hon. John Mm mun; Hun. H. c. Wood, Pam-Tram; 'i'Flllil'd,'i Thom- wn. Pai mum Guts. Em: Dun- dd any. Ewl Gordon Itchy; Cr. L. “hunk. Esq; Wm. Inca. Bu]. Bantu: The hunk of Manual; Tho Canadian Bush of Commons. Soucx'rom: Mum. Blake, Kerr & Bord. alumna; J. Turnbuu. 0111c: Mm Str't,DUNDALK. Ont 0 Box-rower! can. by .speeitl terrttagr'tttettt, har, the peivitNrtr of repay-mg: principal in luck mum and n suit chum as they plum. whom»:- n... mm M mythic in one mm or tte 1mm. . - .,_A_A ---_‘.. -0 AV‘R- nu n'nnun" In No Fines. Charges Low. “my.“ ."" ...__V_‘_, i"" Inna. haul-cu - " once on “mum; to cnrltlu w the - tm.", Am†" 3 I'. In) orrtex. u Adelaide Strut tut. Trreate, XIIXUIES Viz-Vrumm , Vol. I. No. 26. Tomlin-donn- In B. m. J?ivl'.F' UNI-"$13" '"f other Ben! Eat-Ir $bes done at once c" ‘IKCI War, War ! ‘FFERS to Lend Money on Farm. City 'U.DE R. use stark att,' "mum n, Runwm on Real Estate, Loan IXS'CILXNCII, AND THE BRITISH CANADIAN Eli I'IJICI; FD ' cheap. M tor . A. McLELLAN, ROBT. Should borrow from the AND SIHTCGLI J an WATSON & an lineup 3h " VERY "d Irma to met tho pl: NT ("WM PA y Y tbo Pout umâ€. I" UR (LIMITED) ATH [mishm‘l nu shut notice. mm with all mm of trim, SAT, at. lt during 1. '1 at 11.1413, ONT, “mun " OBI-f punk-u I SOX'S ct mm Carri-ma Workl. Prievvillo, Ont. advance. made an AI; D rin. The Wont->11: And may Co's. Innunnco Propttty iunurrd tor a mammal; at 75c on 'onvrynnrcr d1. , tsttettrTrrl to, Btt.si, atttmmtivr. 4 an kinds ot MI S l a Z ; t'pon the western breeze t, borne the {mm-Imus of tho wide-spread moon. " To IIIIIIS- The pink-tipped guwun bends beneath moi: foot, The harem-ll ' quiver. mud the {which furzo distance north ot F 19 thickly luluumnml. Fro! may enter now-- '. _ Thu guilelnss puir~wilh All humming my. _ -- ----H 'iris bound ulnlfed in silent. rcvurl‘nce). l The old may pnrch ; nxul as cmm- thrunglng in Tim lulnls and phonmntsqunal one): man have Unto hi- neighbor, in this holy pltueo-- F I l Chitue out the bells. upon the soft spring Mr. _ p' 7 ' Tlwir clear-voiced summons to ttu, House of Gryt, MCINTYIRI M' at 8 torr Mn 't Limo bvtweeu mi. the tinteg, AL gum . Durhnm P. U 111 tWFoh'lt .ll r bt itiiittt "ttttrider. an} ing cnmns RATE. Limited.) Tt5il',iiil ~con1ingto ban l7 L1 rm Saw A blue mist mp- the peaked motmtahrtops, And shrouds tho vnneya with a "naked cloud Of dewy "pour,tul the glorious sun His might puts fottla, run! with NI mamm light Dilpels tho ban. and a bright “mum of gold Pours forth, and gildeth all the naming mam. 'Crnss the hmvth.lanris to the neiguboriog Kirk, Walk the man-millet) and her (than “min; She with but wooded hair in modesty Down-looking. a the uciuhborn slaw puss by; m. rvwcrent spanking: of the looked-fur any "ee Not distant no-hem they their live: Ihnll join in acted bonds. When my husband. Roscoe Arnold, asked me to marry him, I felt it neces- sary to tell him that I did not love him. as he loved 1ue--thatl understand his dcvution, because I had felt it for tuu,ther--tlutt other, Ivan Gray-that to my limband I had to give only n. grateful affcction. Would that rndrtets , He said it would. He told me afterward that, t'uroughtuy weeping he did not eateh the name; that he thought I said also that my lover haul died. From the first, Buscoo was It good lms. baud, If I did not appreciate him the-n. I was not unhappy. I had a bright, beautiful hnme, which Roscoe named Hespetndcs. The library mm oxtensivty,tlto conservatory hummus. Books and Iloworrt being my ruling passion, my husband had when especial pains to gratify mp. After our buy was born, and every- body pronounced him tt most healthy and beautiful child, Roscoe said to me: "Constance are you happy now?" I looked straight into his honest lrmvn (yes as I truly answered, "Yes, He bent a. delight. I before, A few days later he received a. letter, I asked whom it was from. "My st'ster," he answered. “I never know you had a sister," I said "No, I have never spoken to you of Orn. When my parents died in my boy- hood, Ora was a. baby, and was taken by my aunt to New Orleans, where she was mired with l.cr children. I have only seen her once siuve. tilu, is very pretty. This letter tells me she is to be mar- tied in snryritus He 3M0 me the letter to read. It wns written on delicate. fragrant puller, the pcnmanship easy and graceful. but rather too fine. Rather n brief teotruuunication, prettily expressed, asking us th come to the wedding. "To ch Orleans in July! I am afraid to take baby, and I could not leave him." "I see that we mumnt go, Ihisiruprttc4ie. al4e. I will wriic and tell Ora. ' “And give her my love. Say that I hope th,ul she will be very happy." . I had been present nt but one wedding in my life, and that was my own. I was six-and-twexziy. It was very different from what I thought it would be when I was eighteen. At eighteen I had been betroth- ed to Ivan Gray; at twenty-six I married Roscoe Arnold. The suggestion of another wedding brought back the past to me. When I was alone, the baby asleep in his basket, I went to it drawer in B private cabinet. and tnok out it packet of letters and a photo. graph. The latter was a vir,ml0--s face hand. some as a Greek god's with n. perieetion of contour that must ever be fascinating. As I look at it, the peace it my heart fled away. The. breath of tho past, fragrant, new Springliko. swept over me; the warm, imperious impulses of youth started to life in my Hood. of'. I looked at the letters, but dill not open them. Thero was no need. I had learned each one by hmrt years ago. The packet was small, and I sat with it held between my palms for nearly half an hour. But I put away letters and picture at Inst, and sat down by the open window, swing- ing the baby's basket to and fro. Just then I heard Roscoe whistling lightly as he ran np stairs, nnd in a. moment he entered the room, his hands full of pond lilies. My favorite flower'. I took tho splendid things from him and put them in n crystal globe of cool water. "See betel" said Rnscac. V Ho Itttit tinned " his straw hu, tval the ending hair About his white forehead was literally dripping with perspiration. "See, hare. Connie-here's a. treat for you , Aren't they beauties t" “See how mltemd I Mn. hurrying home through the heat to save your lilies." he laughed. I brought him some cool water to bathe his face. laid out for him some fresh clothing. and went may to no if dinner was ready. Thu†took up, again, the “Umrest,you are mine I" he murmutcd. That was all he said. It was just two years after our mar- DURHAM, Co. Grey, AUGUST 8, 1878. $1 per year inAdvance. Cjonstance's Story. A Mani-h Ha bbquh. down and kissed mo with had tstica. sec-u lulu show POETRY, I sprang up, fearing that something had happened my husband. Duthy the tim I reached the open ball door, a. lady, alone, wan coming up the steps from the carriage. She was very young, richly robed, and instantly addressed me.' I don't remember how I welcomed her, but I threw "pon the drawing room door, and she entered and dropping into u. scat, said "Whcre is Roscoe? 1-1 have not to stay with you," she said, her face pale an makes. present. Another year went by. I was surround. ml by comfort, tenderly cared for. I re- solved not to unlock the rosewood cabinet I was reading in the portico, on June morning, while Melissa. the nurse. was lording little Lyle along the garden walks. when n carriage came whirling up the strive, "Are you not my brother Roscoe's wife?" she asked. “I'm his sister Ora, from Now 01-11mm." I took n vague alarm at her appearance. but I endeavored to speak as usual. “You are tired-ill. Lny off your wraps an.) let mo get you A glass of wine." I went across the hall to the china. closet. When I came back she lay in n dead faint upon the floor. again Iloseoo had gone out of town and did not return until evening. I had had Ortt taken to n. room next mine and put to bed. She was a mere delicate child when undressed, not more than seventeen years old. "Oh haw good you ture-how good van are!" she said, with 1tettrtrendimt pathos. as I bathed her temples and rubbed her delicate limbs. I had studied a little medicine with my father, and I knew she was close upon a. fever. Atlenuth she lay warm and quiet, and soon fell nsle. I sat up until eleven o'clock, waiting " Roscoe. At length I heard his stops in the hall. I hurried to meet him. He looked astounded at my news. "Why, what does it mean ?" he asked. Tho next morning Ora was in n burning fever. She tallrediueohereutly--she did not know me. She lay very ill for three weeks. Poof girl! at one time it seemed certain she would die. but we kept her. At last her first not of cvnscionsncss was; to kiss me and murmur.' "I love you l." At last she could sit up and talk a little. And then she told Heston and me her story. I will not repeat it hue. It was tt tale too sickening; of human Ptuirrionsinfhuued by liquor; of man's tyranny, of woman's wenkness. Her husband was false to her and to his manhood. She clung io him, plending; ho knoclmd her senseless at his feet. And, before that, she had borne-oh, pitiful heavens, so much , “He has killed my love for him," she will. white and shmhlr-ring. “I am afraid ufhim l I had rather die than live with him again'. Let me stay here! Irerehe will not find me. Oh. 1toseoe--constanee, let me stay with you !" We soothed her-promised earnestly that she should stay, protected, beloved by us. Further mnn'm‘snlfun was most hurtful to bur. mu] nearly brought on a relapse of her few-r. So I found what I had never htul--ty sister-ttml I think we made hrr as happy as she could possibly be after the terrible blight upon her youth. Sim found a. fund of comfort in little Lyle, who was very fond of her, calling her "Lolo" in his soft, lisp- ing accents. She was most umwliish and sympathetic in disposition, and this latter trait won from mo, at least, a con- tidenee. She sat with me, sewing, in my chamber, one day. Roscoe had just sent out trom town a. package of now books I wished to see. We had looked them ovor-promisod ourselves much enjoyment in the long winter evenings coming. "What a splendid man licscoe is I" Ortt said thoughtfully. "He in n eompttnion-- n frioud--he is interested in everything van care for-he counsels your wiqhes- ministers to your tastes. Now my husband never seemed to euro for anything only to own nusl" She seldom or never vetsvrtil to her husband. It seemed to make her physically ill to do so. [hurried away from the subject. "I know I have a good has. band, Ora, I respect him, I admire him. But yet," I added. " should have been happier if I had married another man." “Then I told her the tale of my youth. Of my exceeding beauty-of the tourist who wandered to my mountain home-of his beauty, his chum. bio power-mr pos- sion for him. Of my invalid mother, who prayed me not to lonve It,er---of the choice I needs must m.1ut--ot his dtsptsrtarer--hu subsequent desertion. Of how pr mother died Messing mo-how my conscience N" proved, yet my passion longing for what I had lost. (The hot “on mined down my tmee u I eomMded-how deeply had my nature known this experience. . Om listened with {wide eyes. quickened breath. her work dropped upon her lap. When 1 had done she said: "Whuii: his name, Constance? You worth (mm Iii have not spoken it." li':?,' married “Inn Grey." learn one a "Hart, you a pic-mu of him 2" she nuk- I born in 1871. orhamo AREHIVt-zs m_l, TORONTO Those who visit this euriou'.y must dis. miss from their minds all the fancies with which literature, poetry and prose alikc,bn invested them. of rosy mermaids golden- I haired, and jolly momma with Bacchus Ifaces, crowned with coral. They must es. I I peet no shapely Triton with flowing beard. I land his conch-shell slung by his side, noI dainty lady of those siren islands “whence fairy-like music steals over the sea. en-I trancing tho senses with charmed melody." I They must not, on the other hand, visit iti I with preconceived ideas of some narwhal orl whale creation, expect a grampusuike thingI Ior anticipate a porpoise. They must ap- i preach tho "mermaid" with an imagination I Iabsolutely blank, for, whatever they try to I l imagine, they will be utterly diseomfited by I the reality. Who, indeed, could soberly putI Ibeforo his mind the actual features of this I I sea monster, so absurd in its shapelessncss, I Ithat if it were to be exhibited dead the mostI '. credulous rustic would sneer at it as a I e'mnwy hoax , Even alive, the thing looksI a make-up. and a disereditalL, one ; for i I n here tin-tail and paddling-paws-thcy are I I not liusnor yet legir--httve been injured,thc I Irs1ufi,ut't,' appears to be coming out. The I ragged edges of the skin, if such an integu- I mom is to be called skin, have frayed away ', into thtvada, and. if it were not that the ' manatee winks; oeeusionally, the speeta- Itor would be justified in asserting his I town ability to make a better monster. For eyes it has circular apertures which can I neither remain wide open nor shut up tight, but are constantly contracting and expand. ing, perhaps at the will of the mauatee, though apparently at their own motion. For I nose it has two holes with lids.and when it I rises to the surface of the water for breath I the lids open, and when it sinks again the)" I shut. The ear-hole: are too small to he necnI I without keen suuvrehiug,and are simplysuch l I holes as might be made anywhere with a 5 aimlet. For mouth it has an opening with I I a fhtp over it, convenient as preventing ithinge from going down its throat when the ', I ewner is not hungry, but stdheiently ugly to make the manatce the most humble of crea- tures; and humble, indeed, it looks. Rav. ing no legs it stands on its tail, and to keep I its balance has to bend the head forward and l, bow the body. In this attitude of helpless I humility the strange thing stands motion. less many minutes together, and then.with Ia ghostlike. dreadful isulernnity, it begins I slowly to rtittcu and straighten its tail, and i thus gradually rising into an erect posture. Ithrusts its nostrils above the surface. Tho eyes. again, now contracted ton. pin's point. now expanded full to gaze at you with es. pressionless pupils. seem to more by a mechanism beyond the ereatare's control. Voiccless and limbless, the bulky cctacean sways to and fro, the very em- ' bodimcnt of stupid. feeble helplessness, a thing for shrimps to mock at and limpets to grow on. ed in n 'harp, Rupprcsscd voice. I unlocked the cabinet. found the photo- graph, placed in her hand. She g1tuteod--drnpped it as if it had stung her. "lt " my hns'oand,Constaneey' I could only stare at her. "It surely is, Constance" she said, wind. ing her arms about mo. When you first spoke at your girbhooii'r1 love in Blue mountain, I remembered to have soon Fume sketches made there, hearing date 1865. Ten yours ago, Oh, Conny, “but nn escape you made that yon did not marry him ! To be the wife of Ivan Grey was reserved for my fate," she added mourn- fully. And that night I talked alone with my husband. Tllruugll all eternity he will never doubt now that I love him, "Was Mr. Grey‘s name Ivan," I stam- mcred. I was forced to accept the truth. I rose hy-nnd by, and put [he letters and the photograph in the fire. The Mermaid at the London Acquarium. Tm: GREAT BruDor..--The railway bridge across Hm Tay at Dundee is over two miles long. Including the extension on the northern shore, tho exact length is 10,612 feet-that is to any, it is longer than the Victoria Bridge. Montreal, and the Britan. nia tuhular bridge taken together. This great length is taken in eighty-five spans of varying width. There are longer vimlucts over marshes; and meadows, but: there is no bridge of tho same length over a running stream. The greatest difricults" which the engineers encountered arose from the varying claim-tar of the bed of the river. Ncar the shore, the rocky bed was easily reached. and on it piers were built of brick throughout. Further out it was found that the rock suddenly shelved (may to a great depth under clay and gravel. There tho cylinders, filled with concrete. which form the foundation, were made of much greater diameter. and, above the high-water level. iron pillars were substitut- ed tbr brick. The level at the shore: is between seventy and eighty feet above the sea: in the middle it is 130feet nbovehigh- ‘water .mark. The platform ‘on the top of the bridge, which carries the single line of lung, is only Moen foot: wide. lhe death iu announoed of Lady Went. worth (mm Min Hex-inn, who nine your: ago wu married to Byron's madam. She learn one dmghkr, the Hom Adn Mary. .‘-». - - I - ------_----- l To BAX: A msr.--The comparative ex- ‘ecllence must be determined by tninl. as l tastes diii‘cr so widely. Be sure the hem I is of the best quality, large and juicy. not too Gt. A rmnll humwill dry too much if baked. Wash the ham thoroughly. scrape " all mould that may be about the under side, then put it into a large ham. kettle and cover with cold Wetâ€, set over the fare till it is nearly boiling hot. Then pour off the water, wash and scrape again. to remove such derk moulds places as could not come off hetero heating. Fill the kettle again with cold water. plans again over the tire and if not a very salt ham, the water will not need to be changed I again. T o be sure of this, when it hns boiled a few minutes raise the ham from the water with a meat-fork. run a "skcw. er" into it, and by tasting as it in drawn out one can tsll if it is fresh enough. If not change the water once more, fill up again with cold. and leave it to boil until about two-thirds cooked. Then take up. Iremove the skin; have heavy rolled and l lifted some dried bread crumbs, orertutker; sprinkle ever and rub into the ham three tablespoomduU of sugar with some black pepper, then cover the ham evenly with the sifted crumbs. Put it into a bake pan with B wire rack at the bottom to keep the under side from the pan and drippitw, and bake slowly one hour till the whale aurfnce is of a clear, rich brown. A dozen whole clothes and u few bits of stick ein. namon stuck into the um, before the crumbs are sprinkled over, nnpurt e. pleas- ant flavor, much relished by many. Awriter in Noun discuseeethe compare- tive nutritive qualities of white breed. brown bread, and whole-med bread. m lays :--We shall find it impossible to make, by means of leave" or yeast, . light, spongy loaf from whole wheat finely ground, the soucnllod eereulin of the bran inducing chemical changes which result in a moist, dummy. dense product. Even whole wheat merely crushed into the men]. and not ground, [intakes of the some defect. Fine Boar, on the other bond. yields . broad which is light enough before mastication, but which, when masticated, possuees a marked tendency to become compacted into dense lumps which may never be pene- trated by the gastric and intestinal juices, and which are a frequent cause ofconetipn- tiun. Wholesome meal bread cannot be charged with this defect; indeed. it nets medicinally as a laxative, and by reuon of in mechanical texture hurried rethor too quickly along the digestive track. so that the full virtue of such of its nutrients as are really soluble becomes in part lost. Yet there is no doubt that for many persons. cs- pccinlly those who have passed middle age and are engaged in 'sedentary occupations, whole Wheaten meal in the form of broad. biscuits, scout-s, cte., forms In in- valuable diet. If we could reckon all the nitrogenous mutter in whole-meal bread as equally effective with that contained in white bread, we should possess in the former a, far more perfectly adjusted food ; forthe ratio of fieslt.fotaucus to 1rttixivevs is about 1 to TI in white bread, nhile it up- prunchei l to 4 in some samples, at least, of whole-meal bread. Add' to this the higher proportion of phosphates in the lat. ter, and its chemical superiority over white becomes still more mnrkrd ; its fhwor, too, is far richer. Ordinary brown bread is a poor preparation at best. By adding a dash of rather rough bran to flour we do nut obtain a satist'uctoiy or rich product. Analysis demonstrates this faet clearly. TOMA-mas A LA CREME. Pare and slice ripe tomatoes. one quad of fresh ones or . mum! can, stew until perfectly smnoth, season with salt and pepper, and add n piece of butter the size of an egg; just be. fore taking from the flre, stir in one cup of cream, with n tnhlospoonful of flour stirred smooth in in a. pare of it: do not let it boil can the flour is put in. Have ready in n dish pieces of toast, pour the tomatoes over this and serve. Cuixuxnss is Xian 1'0 GoDLtstrq.-- If people Would only bear this proverb in mind it in incalculuble how many ailments might be avoided. A daily hath would prolong the life of thounanda, and yet how few think of taking one unless they are zit the sea.side. The late prcprletor of the best known Latin: probably in the world (we reUrto Brill's Brighton Baths), on re- tiring. turned his attention to the produc- tion of a. sea-salt, naturally thinking that if people who so enjoy a so. bath could get . similar bath It home they would do so. Bxill's sebsnlt is now I well-known Article, trnd we venture to suggest that if people only use it in . daily hath thoy will not only derive the 1mnedits of its invigo- rating efieets, and the increased cleanli- nm, but wi11nUo thoroughly onjoy it.-- New Elation. Let every man do his but to dueottnUn. Ince the tsturmimsbU lmbit of ':i.ii'iiti'.i,) Ind shun it " an tteeursm1 Iin in "or, vuy. No respectable person will allow: Mum-3f to be guilty of it. Business men who makes habit of swearing m11 flrd themselwn avoided by their les'. cm":- as, for it is known that tome patient: can sniff: no mental punidumnc opts' to th. t iMietad by being unwed to listen to ttrrttittte hum. ' HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. Real Brown Bread. a-.< “In . week of m.“ dtth-t. dug My: the no. cps. b we- “ mull, can. cl an I’M M 'toott-rtot how without a accident marringqtte spat ad “Bahia; the Im- !urtunsu new to which the St. John rowing coin-u “span to hob-admin- ‘Od- One. month Toto-tam In. 'tteng, on the winnin- and "6od to " Junk. Although theNertntmtttmt of the Pts-rt-tsehr-ttNhat. III-- !roumue opportunity of ilinGritte to that. ough .thauttege the perfection of his style and the completeness of his training, the indieatiot" in the brief contest whutt P.“ coded the unlucky muup which plum? his opponent out of the no: All pointed in thedireetlon of another complete victory for the Toronto champion. Shortly After rinsing the mile Ross by some minclnnoo fell out of his hunt, leaving Haul-n to row over the emu-so. in†making sun that his opponent was in no danger. The unident is all the mcre unfnrtunnte as the New llmnswieker was in iurtritel.r better trim than on the mention of his visit to Toron- to, and had so vastly improved his style tint there is every reason to believe he would have gi, on a much hrtter “count ot himself than he did last fall. From the Mart, however, though lust-hays Ross llld . sl rule the better for n momentJhrreeocm- ed to those on the judges' boat no doubt u to the result of the rare. When three tar. longs had been made Hanlan had llrcmly settled clown to that cool. busy stroke of his which is the admiration of his friends and the c-nvy of his opponents, while Ito“ was straining awry muscle to keep the ter. vifu. pau- at whirl, the two contestant! were going; and " thctimo of the mishap. ma Russ himself admitted. llnnlnn was 'nhond who fur as can he tsrccrtained tily 1 two lengths. Another opportunity of witnosning Rotm' capabilities will be furnished at Barrio within the next. two weeks. and as Han!“ has ttiso uptown] hiss intention of being present on that occasion, the two mules!- nnts in Wedrsosda.v's race will once mom iind themsdvcs ia tsie "rs rivalry. Ind c. ford a chance of eompariug tlteiruwspeetivo merits The wealth of old tapestries existing in the Vatican. some of it stowed away in cupboards or otherwise we“. hit alt-yo boeu Inspected. and has recently been made known by Eugene Hunt: in his Br. ticlel on the tapesti-ieu of the Yuan: in the Chroniqu tin Arts. Whether in con- sequence of this revelation or from other rec-om, the present Pope has new oom- manded that all the various pieces disposed about the building shall be collected and arranged in chronological onlcr for exhi. bition. It rooms that {or two centurion the kings of France were accustomed to send Ivory your a piece (if Gobelinu tapes- try to the reigning Pope, and as the man- ufacturers of 1" hunters in the. fourteenth and fifteenth centurics also contributed their share, it may he imagincd what a. large quantity has been accumulated. This well-known tapestries eseeatod in Flandcm from Raphael] celebrated cartoons will alone be excepted from thin collection. as they are already exhibited '. hut even with- out these famous work: the Vatican cul- lectiou cannot fail to be of the highest in. ttsrmt.--Arademg, Comma Mcscar..--u is n-msuhlde that more nttoutiun is not given to the sub. jert of earning mmmro from the weather. and carpetinlly from too much rain. Thaw who have given the matter partieuUr ll- tontiou have found that nmnurt- so protect- ed is worth double that which is left out in the open air. Two loads " one is :1 pro- fot few {Arman can word to In“. There, is no question which so vitally concern- Ethc former as this one of manure. Stock ‘is fed through the winter for the expnu 'purpnso of manure-making. Article" which scarcely my to send to market are is no quextiou which so vitally concern- the farmer as this. one of monurc. Stock is fed through the winter for the "P"" purpose of manure-tasking. Article" which scarcely [my to send to market no noverthelemr taken to the city in order that manure may be brought bark u a to- turn load I and yet the whole of the am- mire made romains all the Season expusml to the sun, wind Ind min until it is " minished one holfiu value. Tho trunhln is pcrlmps thu few really belie-“o that r". posed mnnnrcs undergo this loss. But tho matter has been too thoroughly iestod t , admit of n doubt. We know first.rurvr, farmers who did not themselves believe it, until by actual experiment they found out it: truth. In arranging farm buildings it will [my well to look no much to the pres- ervntion of the manure as to tho hay or grain ;and those who have their buildingn moody titthtlted without there momma! mgements will rsnd that twenty fivn or fifty dollars spent on baardg for a covered shed will rank among the best investment. ever muer.-9meriran Slack Journal. 1uttxsrcs.--tJne of the olarst pew-her! the oldest-city in the world, whirl, through all the View“ of history han retained its primitive rimraeter in a greater degree than anyattsereettueof populutiotr, onher in the East of in the Wort, is M present eworieneittg I period of deplwian unoxmnpled in ita long history. Dunn' . can. mentionod by Abraham 1,917 years before the Christin: en in the book of Genesis. long atterwartis tlm capital of tn independnut kingdom until in oomptest by tho Jews, Ind Incoeslivoly the prime of the Ban-am. Saracen“. Ind Tarhiah Mrs. is still the capital of b"mi, out In! (Allen during the putt eighteen you: from a con- dition of prosperity. to one of squalid mis. ery. The civil vs: and mm of 1860 in" any to Alamo I widen-uh}: por- tion ot tite ilk trade. which in mm times. had boon the staple industry of Du- m. MMgd tho Gnu Canal 7“ Wk extinguished (to old Bag- dad mind trade, u. also proved a seri- onl blow to the ancient Syria: hummus. and an import: ofErmsieeatt matttt"ae'agte. It. now qsoettitsed to Inhale-{er goods g In common a! shaped dominion“. no mter, "tlt. city. in. Min; to an . calculations. and “all," soul; BM in we I ott'tttedto-lFutr' -tbt wants of in hat-mévml tsootitr. am In In? "ritttur'ett'M tho IIM-miw a.†Atta NIH-mm “(JO-011. F Ancient Tapestries. - M