West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 3 Nov 1881, p. 1

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h“. when "iM.mugts. Vanna-H -- - . qrtito " «ham - by. the chmmclon 01..“ , the moon “not“.-. It " the In). “a. 'the' mo an" it w A".- t nth-cu tho nub. d " te, ”adieu who u. “I “305. when l-.. . y the moon!“ ia", In Mun one “I tho feirer-r" t gnu". hood IRE“ .‘9 Wtrea to bo an Ink-n.- - l, of wheat “7:: otted dual, out m. M " that in a M. h city. than with I hung. - wide hon-o." J... u “WHY!“ yo .5 - anything WW a“ " her pt"tor,"yoe m tutater." “And ,.ug h . "seats-rom--. no upphoaunn." him“. II hi _ 1vttonsuGti' by...“ pundit-cl “mud HIM 'teri"rmiiaGiii t,'"e'ir-ut.aTi'a' ml. " . _ bled. " Woman can "ut, N me, unuutert, mah' - bu bud work; bet .“ Imam in the val g. u: lu'tnyscl'." "\\'.d’J.‘r MOI 'rood-ht"norsatr, um /' "Cum and vi . m the. Ho - U..- Ktter to dull in tho on.- [Haunt It an. mm.) “Vidal“ ibtbom "only uzsunuum civil}; . NV. We. “no DREY. my” my“! ..ns.,ua".-.Ae - n. III.. w . an.“ ’I.ln., in], I. b, M.. fan-p.- m. um- IJII. L I... v.as p. ll. ms west. I am. It.“ , -., "2”... I.) Mud-r 1. km TU u I. u I. Inna-I I. b, y-V: tq. KMhuu. H -., “:4. I. - b. an. a I " ”I"? "on?“ " m. m - VII." CN 'e'gt,Ttst s.tu. 50...!- FAIL - I n.. 1357. a new 3381'!!!) , HOP In! chain. it hat' tft.'. - In“; It. El). lav. m. I " a mum.“ 5"ku .gumth ~.n- ol a! L"..'" . n '0-.. MK leit my! 7“; ‘I’IS'I' DIRECTORY; my that" ”a... ' to. a. Ah.a. Iota m .ttho8P, "rr p. 'u.. 9:13 ' . ot'; p. In. Ptao.7a".' I t't.maaontui'i"i. r “pa-in. do clown tq “3" the n tN I acne: ofthe "I“... rar God pan! ht ‘1 pm)" run-“l: iii, mm- than " p. ‘3 yr» ~ru.m tum IIO’.. _ '.he I‘m-- lull in " I. school a up. -. tru- ut. 'ath " {LE-elu- l‘l' "Mu" mum-M ar--- " H'MII. " " 7:Jtr New. - r mun vol-on; 'ttoo, a... w l 0.0. I , vr trome fl rvt‘wv-n wok. Tt'.Tt 'hrr. A Mann. h __...._ rbnooo. wood?“ up " n m “a. rmnr I.“ A v. AA I. Itteriii l, ARM. - In REG . Mao Ludiu' a - 00“ & In”: WAN“ by and an. mm M that!“ In: many Customer-II for 'd'lfd 'A'all,'lgl In 'sT,'l'l','l' T2tl at? CII; a! Do.- l..- ovu pup-mi to .3"... work of A Superior Quality. A. an] COPYING ad ENLARGE“? don. in A t "ru 1 AMERICAN mam, 00934! & Bright Gold Sets. Picture Framing I)... in 85 ail-nut Scylu. lying at! Summer Fuhiom "3:11an received. _ DURHAM Br., DURHAM. B-il-or-ite the Cami. Pushy- tor'un Chmh.‘ JOHN ROBERTSON TAILOR AND CLOTHIER. PHOTOGRAPHY. Duh- Iov.s moo convoy-non. and Lin-ed Anal..." or In. County of they. ’rumm. onlmnumntl band Silo-gnawed 00 um. '"""'uar"re1th+ and. vary Lumber, Lumber, Shingles, Shingles, hath & Lime, A T THE ROCKVILLE MILLS. Also ISSUE]! of Marriage Lia-nun, Fire and ut0-e-,c'ommissiosuia tum», PLANS, hreeifietthons, Estimltel. le., hum-hat Wu" Hum-rlnmudoal and Imps-c- H P"er1"""""I -- -_ ‘7 "I', ALEXANDER BROWN, .0. Duh. Mb Limo. Durham P. o., May Mth, 1880. Durhaert,Poh. N. 1878. DONDVtt.ont. WIDE. “In-01mm Intel. sham-no, "on Mon, by M'lkhyJIou Ioo'cluck ..m.tose, m. blowing)“. Gee,e',u, of Dunno Vetrixnuy Col. ogc, aroma VETERINARY SURGEON, " . lumen, will win“ Durham? 0000, Hrtti,,h Hum] hum thin] fund-y (Fur lay) to the and of my adv-In. - In will bo mow! Impw to I.“ upon all Show I.“ nu)" In: r hit" with mu pas" rou-gm Allin-vi calm-ta! In lulu will luv por- Iovmod In the m“: nu] no»: nylnrrumi Qty-10A lava-mu]. any at tho Icahn: Dean-u of To, Cutting done to Order. mugs. on. menom. we be at his Other, Hanover,from 8 nan-:25}; 2::- A'ltT.e'htfi"s'y. 'rg'd'i, . . u . . Inuit-Um to. p 'W [)th mm. 1870. TH! LATEST NOVELTIES IN - m.-." - nun-cw]. uu-II’UIIVIII "a... 0'. “Iikhvo "sumo-i u Flo-human. bio. ”an." My "heretofore. mu m. J. W.r1MrBX,LL.B. County Brown Anomy. Jun an. I”. "' BAHRISTEBS and Attorrter'iLor ._, 83ng In ct-tttttey-seem., 1%., an.“ “h mmml-uhucmnl. Wu! 9min Elva and ' w. M. CLARK. Architect and Builder, . up. “unity " 101mm. Lot'n.céi.3 lr. G. R. Bununek. Rr9teeou-oettirthnore-.tuat- .11 IMO! 1ooaL.osr.,uertoahoiot one... hay I“, he, Invented “my. week. by unnamacmwmm mum. am any. who- mompwod by 'dfg?1MMt11"g'ttt It. 'tontmry, no law . and and a "gun" nun. I...- I'm. Dunn. y Tth, um. y-u BUSINESS DIRECTORY. M238 or ADVERTISING. m - m- “I on. not ©-"avqeqt-uraatt. em. own path“. .tyfttte,uet8rtte.dea.-tsohfraTsti WEN-.0 ... not " LOCI-o.‘ E". Z. NIX()N, Eva-1 Thursday, " .. on... n...“ but. Um an... "ORNEY " Law, Solicitor in Chan- "-r,ComrrtuMogt" " Rummy Public may“ . AT . LAW, Aer.-orrua L32...“- Patti-Dru. Ito". Hypo: Town ik M" W-ent --e m" W. TrPf1Feuete PRICEVILLE, Osr., "h-it-Hoa-t mount... F'-r-. I B. D. IACIHLLAN, T. DONAGHY, T.-.JAC'IEI.I. A. Mink I M13. MEDICAL. i--mngham, 1..NWor..U. J. TOWNSEND. Publisher. 'KT, q.dttt' JAME S HANNA mmchl. ' . i?i','if?iiFdrire. T"-ui'"auiit.r., 'trttFlt! , B . a J. W. CRAWFORD. “NEOUS. S. JEROME. Hearth“ Kola". old Shad. I I”. slow -_ "“ GGG aid, cums. mt-tit y" 11M V __ a." W..- m. v- u ' do“ to: of III-Mon. km or no luv. ”mains: a. “on an»... '11) ttnd you will be Prowl, In!“ Old At I Moderate Prion. Sonar)”. Damn, Nut can. Yard Hotel. BOOT and flfli)llllNllll, no lunch]. tor All u n" low We... Also orb-ad. and made to mount-o, all kinds (Sand and Pegged). and. by work. men who took all the First Prilanr boots, " the County Show! held In Durham, an d m FRESH EGGS and GOOD FLOUR SHOES, to" En now on hand seven! hundred palm of TANNER, CURRIER and Dealer A I'llll‘T-(‘LAII IIICAIQI To mm: Reliant)" tho "ro--. Ihon til-hue. not” Ill? Post (Imus. BUILDER, l)urhum.kecps on hand . [Argonauts at tuish,Doors and all kinds ot "uu0ingrtttststrtau,nbu, I “out of Mouldin I in deut,lou\wnd.und um. i'td'y'dtlitlral,l'l sud BiluorLurstbertuadt, out rut were notice. A [“113"ch of Conn. tlrstNrt.,8ttrouet. tend Trim mush-non but , J. C. JOPP, f on t fl . I Lt'Ud ",'/glte,P,et orth In Avril, m. 1881. Cash for Hides. . .. " . ‘___ J. C. JOPP. Nonmember the pin-o tteat c, num- mnei. Kiln like“, Hanover, um. Factory Boots & Shem. Waggon. Carriages, Buggies, and “I own nude: in bi. lino of bunnies- on the mom“ tunic” mm! mm: of tho but mam-rid. Mo in use Ale-l for HANOVER, Oar. TIE Shh-crib" u new ' Handy nll who mu In: Hanover Carriage Works, My Motto-tnose and promp “lamina to but.“ and Mr damn”: lwtween all nwn. Ilu. CONVEYANCER, Commissioner in ER. I... Islam. In” dk Inn-mm Ago-I. Lands Bought and Sold. Dada, Lea-cu, WilUhe. neatly and correctly prepared. Auction Sales Attended. All Emil-cu Strictly C'onhdeuual. CHARGES LOW. Wartoverr,Mnrcts " "MIL Leather, Hides, Boots, B. DAVIS, FLESHERTON. To lumen 3nd buulneu mon on lhor. “Moa- domd new: " good counter-ll. Idouum manned nu fair amnion. Dim-tuned “mu-l Bank In". g‘yoble “All Bulk-in Ontario and Que no. Collocuom of not" and-econ" on muons“. unn- Blind l"aotory. ROBT. BULL! And lubnndlowul a the I“. of In pox out per tannin . 0mm in Middaugh's Bloch Garaframa Street. Durham Planing , BASH, DOOR m Genera Bunting ihutaust,. "NIANtiuyrED. Farming "iruiiusnu. “on In my gummy mom... 'l‘HIS BANK issues Letters of Craait on (ma Brit-in And other PM Conant”: Bun-ml Conn“ Hurling Exchnnge: In“. drum on Now York and att put- of Clank. DEPOSITS of " and upwards Received, Boon which the comm Mot imam. '1" be dlowod. Runny d1 who inf"; Capital $6,000,000 : Reserve $1,400,000. 1 CANADIAN BANK Ill COMMERCE: DTriiig:AM. W. CALDWELL, J. A, Halsted do Co., BANKERS. CULLECTIONS MADE Deposits Received, MONEY ADVANCED Vol. IV. N o. 38. DURHAM, 00. Grey, NOVEMBER 3 On reason-bl. corms, 1nd I Malt_iltg. "itll -AND-- O.L.DATrtsr,Mrusatrerr R. McNALLY n50 Waggon' be (tii/ttttii iill'jititttii'_tttt. 1100 “Where does, ho belong I" Oh, dou- mel if that in} I good no“ though, hngbod I thought]... young mm. " In hand the shriek. “Belong- in the "atioAmm., I should a]. The", old follow. My that yelling, If you don’t want to ho mud. Tho Int word- wm thriohd out " he turned the corner and tnt his land mint 3 lamp pool. “Go when you holong." he almond hmruly. Go uh I: I belong t I vendor Where do I belong t Where-oh, what. do I bolong?" "Ringing the boll, no you, you drunken old vagrant t" “OH with you I Go when you belong I" Poor old Dsniel! I think he lately could be abused wuh the ' of the“. The old man trumped 0n until he ruched the “one door uep of mother home. m reached up A blue, tstiif bend. and pulled the bell, but in another intent he use lei:- ed roughly, end in a dead ooueoioneneu he been! the cruel worde- And but there might ho some pecan-ed of the opinion um old Daniel Stock- ing had no right with indignation, I will “I; I think he had. " he turned away from the ehsed door In aid men. tally ', away. “Ho Itoppod suddenly " the door of I icomfortnhle looking hon-0mm rapped upon 1 the door with his one. Through the win. dow he could we the family batting oosily about the centre-ulna. laughing and toll:- iug merrily. A pretty little girl com. quickly to the door and opened it-but aha alum-d it shut I moment after, saying, I "Oh, father .t it's the old Stocking." "Turn the key, Fanny," her {other abl- were“. "I want nothing to do with the old drunkud." Some other time the old men would heve turned and shaken hie cane " the boys, menecingly, but not to night. He lien bruised and desolate, somehow; he had not been able to get out for two den, to even get drunk. He remembered the Rich and curse: of two nights Nrtr--tlmt wee the reuou he did not new" down to: the comet saloon. m had bed no money than; he had none now; no he could expect the “me treetment if he ventured there. “There gun the old worn Stockin." shouted n had boy from over the wuy. "An old 8toeking,iu, its-u-he, I” shout- ed another had boy from our the way. I "Oh, di-ole-oh I" be said, wining with pain. " u suddoultwinge of rheuma ‘tism gripped hun viciously bulwoen the shoulders. But he Iron btnvely and open. ed the outer door, the cold wind Ind mow blow in " face. but be shut tho door be. bind him, and walked slowly, with tut-, Andy step up the street. _ "mu . member cf the church and I'm The lust bit of con] which he owned was just burning out in the old “on and the old nun nhivoudu In ruched forward and ("amped the overcoat to wnp about his lame shoulders. n toehle light, because the oil In. nearly out ; there was In old ovorcmt ragged and tilthy, lying in one corner Ind an old bat, tend but kept n company. And tbere ‘wen ill the old Man's belongings, except Who grime shirt which he wore nndemnth the old uttered suit, and the boots which hourly covered his stoektngletm feet. I [ any 'uearly cuvered', for there were four] t an pe oping out. And then poo-onion? Well, I will tell you. Thorn Wu . crackod lump not ing upon the cld mantlepioce, giving forth It really seemed u if then never was a (e, will: so many such Ind broken l lights on this partioulae on. of which I am trpetsknyt--" hunt an: wu the opinion of Daniel Stocking. m sat disconsolntely upon the bench glaring disconuoluoly from his bluodshot eyes stout the room It _ worldly pomsaion. Mo tit-cord: than: the Moth-n M: No Tlla, min mom; To: love supremo brun- - hurt, And [all dominion holds. Ah, list my soul! What we: thin. on , How can", thou “my roam , Thy “than were but pun-hm has. 3 That ia thy native homo. rm out thr work ; an. an. thy elm: new up and an." no man; ', he breeze» is um! um loan will I.“ Thu to tho Madly more. blood mbed warmly into the old fact, no be ttirngd momma, m'pt ”H "--'-P"'- - - "Re"ri P"h-thorttmauioete tho-hon, And All their name- can. no" pun the nomad have th- mm. And not. blunt dun-Ir; In]. the" the has. in Tutu. an” Mum; In no mph: than. 'tttsm-tG-iii-,-. MB». no I“. the. mitmmrope an ac an Inn-n1: .oMt,. F die my PM IhotmitorrimoGiat,.t,U. gmum '0": .. ti idl AndvaautheMndmat-t. 'uf,uf,1',r'a",':,", £32318 T""' an. a VI. In. , gummy... 'ttgut/cnet:",,',,',',',',':,"'" "Buy. an P".', tall m Wm I Mons?” "m hm but tou, an. calf“; A natural and. mm jmam lip. m 3‘" than: “a Treed. mud‘ looted him from hand to foot, 1am; in " The - Malt "f o'qn rm" "I"? one glam» the filthy, "(god (Inna-m. the ,d'l'.'llShtl,'i'2t :1- C21'd'1'i., pe, thin "e.'. the heavy 0y" and pro. A ttood ot clonal... a”. young toea. Bis hem wu Io proud and mm n". of “a, "and u "a. (e cold. that he tlt like shaking tho old And amoe- all out pone; mandrel] for daring to speak to him ' but. Lo I dun my mu dong an mom, I . "oond thought followed quickly. And-Hum: name- ceue. h... _ . - Old Dan Stocking. luvs-AIM POETRY The cholera is spreading in an out a n1 is udvmcinu toward Europe. It has td. rudy made cousidonble mug“ n Ado, and bu ruched Mettea, when tho Mum-n]; mum: m imploring their Prophet. Two out“ opidomiu “um considonblo stun- tion. The Bmt in the yellow fever in tun. "al, when the hambu- of vitttims have been grant, And the second diphturiC which has killed man mph in the south l of Band: “In: “I "t"crtttt not str. ‘m the We t in 'r.vaii.d “an mum; In Mum out of 00,000 pun-cons who m and“ I." “ball te In Out of tMott I... 'tee.tfft'1ret,?ta.nLaiiii In tho", tho luminou- m who doesn't alum" in lih th fellow winking behind W” -uole.--t" my know vim u in doing, but notody also do... Maral 'uNilsn, while indupenr.ibU in some on", in I ralic of uncieut days when the bill-sticker MIL] boll-mun reigned sum-clue, and in u beat but rough and rudy'cumpared to the nut Nd," catching the public an Along with the pungent "UM. or" or Mn Inurt local nun. What pltospuus If. to soil Martian want: no to buuiuou. They will not in . ”manna war-Lies. will go when: you can't 'ro--tur mil any agoodword [or yen in ylncu yuu least nubpeeud . Mott people no "at. of the famous ad. vice gave by the thrifty Laird of Dummy dyhl, on his 1leutltlted,tn his Ion and heir: "Pl-wt trees, Joek-uu.y'll not when ye'r doopiu’l" v The uyinz may be modornizvd itrtor- ‘Inun adveriiiusrmruta, yo men of business --tluty will work while you “a sleeping.' And soon After he Wu picked up, put in . wooden box, and buried, and people soon forgot thet such I man " old Dan Stock. ing had ever lived. But still the world move: on, 5nd the day speed- on when the Mater will surely any, " Inasmuch " ye tlid it unto on. of the least of theso yo did it unto me." “Ha'sl worn out stockin," I you I" Ida t Morning came, clear and cold. Two news boys, taking I short route over the Iruisy street: diFCOVQYOd Daniel Stocking. He was buried in the snow, which had fallen I“ night, Ind when hie cold {one wu discovered, one boy amid t "Wlsy,Titu, it's old drunken Stocking t" . . "Aud tho other “mated with I chuc- “Mebho it'l them where I b'long," he thought, his old, and eye: brightening . little, as he turned from the handsome, well lighted street Ind tattered down the way. But, oh, bow long 15 nemod! Ha thought he would never reach the end from whence streamed tho brilliant light. And he never reached the cud. Al for Daniel Stocking. be walked Iway. solder and weaker than Eden. Ho huh} bled more,too, And " bad grew smugely I dizzy. m walked but In (our steps befure; lm came to an alley, looking down which. ' he discovered a bright light. I Think that the master of that house grew any nearer the Savior that night t And with this parting thrust, the door wn cloud, and the gentleman went back to his warm bright sitting room, where thr Holy Bible In; :puufnlly on the centre table, where “God is love," in Illuminated text, hung over the door, and “Nearer my God to Thee," hung over another. "Of com-u you do-dntnktmu generally do, quite often I" "No-no harm indeed. I thought I-- belonged hero. I ferelkimur--kinar lick 1nd hint." "Belong bore, you idiot t What do you mean t" "Don't I-l-trung hero t" Minimum] Daniel. "What do you man by ringing my door. bell t" the gentlemen uked newly. _The door opened. A guy haired gen- tleman stood in the doormy. It was {ha same man he bud heard an hour Mo Innk- lug a may» in tho lecture '00tn--a prayer for the poor. Poor Daniel Stocking'l brain m in I chm. Enlookod n " clothes And im. age they were glouy bud new sud myat lining, is in the old dun. He climbed tlm mum. steps with {11m ing steps, uni ‘wuchod the bell, feeling I new “up”! for [ himself, while just opposite the liouse, the young man waited to on the "suit of his ulvico. l “Thanh whore you belong, pointing to I Immune allusion. "You look is “mush you ought to be tho owner of thu tiue hotme--rou an drown] lo huudanmoly. Go right on, or palm» you had better ring the boll tirat." How to Mfke Money. Toollttuodwhnt, dorm “3,100 Method and too um. of emu... “WW-A". " little the, I mi-op. <1: -',i' . a- tell " Too an new” 'l'il,'r'p:;e,',agt"ittt:t:t, W“ . When Pl'" "atFimtr, m " "It public litetthet iuGUhii; of srt produu‘ mp. inhevethelr "Uni! mum'md; "Bondy“ ”um. ttte host 'pint of Pt.'"" “*3 “WWII: My hare Urmottrandeoosiit. w. see a in. int-rid], 1Uir "it in the human mind. They won alibi inthe limb-like MM nti.-. with“ thereto". n“ " "in m“! which new interrupts their liondih um. 'hmet" "itt.one "totue,and - to " inop. glee. Therefore. who... tUt the m. p. a. position to sech other. Religion is the w sown; in unnumbered “new“. lg in st foetcrmother alert. aml ert Ht ' trom I heertily rejeice.es e Bishop of the Church “I. the “In m most trenccendent ideuy. Be. of England, to have been honoured by you d pro- ligion preserves ert with conservetive cere- with the opportunity of expressing myself ad "1d end art “Duh" the "Puma“ orrar1igion on ert es en outgrowth of religion end an he old Mt the tasat forms. Tttery aet end maet in eurileryto it. It would, in the eyes of I i; but many n" on sech other with bomstieiU not e for, be the better for religion were otteot. t'oysanituotherwue exceptthey ellniinisters thus to identify Tcur.".: l ing to out-top their respective bonndries. when with art. mom. “a philosophy. l Lhongh tltoy "or, come to mun“ towel-dc cech 8. Atsotutoisetrr.-1'U ert which is el- I t tine other an ettitudc of tuttagottistn. It is w”. claiming to be emancipated from 1 "ttsly. “PM" to be, observed that artists of the morality is not the ebsolute art; perhaps I it this highest orderlscknowledge their indebted- the morality which it rebels against is not I ncss to "by?" tbr "hint! conceptions the etsolute morality. The practical I tin e and for meterlels of sublimity, grandeur, question hesto be discussed on e lower t [a im. “I besauty. Lotus 'ur/fr PM” before l level, but it is not'to be dismissed ”though l; met you the utterances of "has assembled to the ert which comes into ttonfliet t mired set forth the reletions of Art in legend to, with morality w.” spun‘sns became k , ttnd educetion and religion--. it is not the highest. True on te ct for I. l Pm'fl'm of the Raye] he"te.r--, Jterfeetiot" of art are its sefegiierds, but u h the The higher itttetwda of art-by Ym'h I art may be so much without being perfect. . rf his understand tU encouragement of .'? best Its pvrfection exists rather foe itself then " "oete, And the P'""".'.""' of ita best for us.though we rejoice in it efer off ; whet w gen" 1rt,1yyyt-ey he considered t.o besnfc- I we need is that it should be stimuletim: Pl s the ly PPe with the ittttsllmttaal went: ofll end this too is what the artist needs, for he f', mnk- cultivated people. It wee essumcd thet. too is of the same clsy es we. Like us. he in tnyer for tnet'tt "1tttritl TYP-t example. an Idcsires fresher emotions then the ordinary th "'l?rf"I""" In the requisites of various I round of life supplies, though this to hes “I Ioor. oracles of _"o1ne""i"-, directend method- I e cutie-faction at its own fol'tliuse who clier- In ised Ttttn ot instruction WM expedient.‘ ish its "eetioum And the craving which 1:" cred I believed much good in the proposed "l ir, occesnunal with " u habitual to him. IU rection 1usa ben "co.usplislurd; but, “I Be reluscs the false gratification that m you often happens m experiments, Bn indirect might he found for it it he Would make MI and 1uterpceted benefit was tthro the "sun I virtue slwsys culminate in some kind of do I-- ~nemely. the gradual education of the Lord Mayor's slww;lite loses such tiaror tm sick people by ttteMtq of exhibitions, mu"tums, _ " it has in the attempt to make it just s m "1d “hog" in. the Appreciation of works little I otter, end s little easier and a. little mi all, of taste i inducing, consequently, tb refer. I prettier. If the artist will not idealise or. tut "ee'tomttttre, and swekening tlist epli- dinery life by feloilyilig it, and cannot ful wee tttds, to.r, mental pleasures which. 'YI". of ideelisc it in the light of the higher law, or ne, kto the T.""'.'"'.'". of sdysncing cmhzstion. sustain 1utviselftwoutlu, level of ideal ec- “a thr PM PrmCIlII‘f tr, I “he“ now admitted, tion, it rciiinins for him to go beyond the fun 1tre that if wink " to he provided fog those who 1 world since he cannot rise share it. He I d rtcd IT by toil, their leisure should sdrso bo " I tries to (escape the Gckneved routine of my .oyeetutytontion. .Apy.tt1testherfromliyCei2i,' duticsand felicities into u. an. I the question respecting the Sabbath, and I satisGelory fairy-hind of extreme passions. f row with reference only to other periods of of untried desires, of unfettered impulses, 'lie ttetrration from. labour, it is felt tlust the working themes-lies out within tlieexcitiiigl Cor ey. means of ratiorml r,T'yytt.reiretioP, complexities ofnhnormnl situations. Since cen rim aaul improvement. should be m m“ to" he cenuot have the true ideal, sud will not boo tslri the '_""i'ttr.my'1htliay. That such ro. put up with the hvlse, he demands the ll" one i sources are indirect elements of culture wel whole ”we of the real, and chooses to be tmst ch. t can no longer doubt. Many in the higher F always glonniug on the outskirts of posit. T elasseis-w,tls marrow" of thought in”may. The lust of the flesh and the lust tiee he “In" matters “"1” taxed from a" to of the eye und the pride of life are not uecl , . drtr--ean rsrcly tum to the srte yjr':aC'ii'di'u,11,'1 theylsave tlirirideul ino- won [ttt, if?” tt8 to olgects of "y."'""?' amusement. ments (or they could not tempt us), and lubi he l onof sohuse; but to In“) 'Y" labour " I there comes a time when art thuh, it herd lt, Ho i, ehiefly f’f the body, while his mental r"."": to part with one of these. The only justi- twin' mi I era "f lt, a eertain exercise 'f ths, mind fieation that has been put furwcrd for the ego, nd even in.lis hours of relaxation is , whole. persistent attempt to pluck the "tlowers, of ttBtu IIT, change. It " partly f.or this reason evil” is that the artist shares the general 'l,",,", so “if: tla, at)“ 'ut? are more directly menus l dislike to their fruit, and that, whether he P' I he ofiustruction 'Wltll the lower orders III'I'Iplncks or no the world is mm to we" "ttel ' they can be '.vitlt emu”; sud for tltis ran-J them. There are very few like John For. in“ Miran the working‘nmu, long before. he np- I sfer, to whom ttlmost all tart, Mpcrislly until}. cc pi-ccintes “n for its T". sake, "'ylily th"'.- I clsssicnl art, was essentially immoral lo. l" . sentsto make a stud)" in connection with i, cruise it nourished the pride of life; 'at tiom t" litstory. poetry, or science. of, "at “club I that appeals merely to the curiosity or to A c_,to msuyis only an Tt'C?1tt.at."tiyn. the extreme sense of beauty is elwnye Men Par bolt from me to undervalue thet dilet- thought safe and respectable; when we on T all tentemm; .far be it from me to wi,h Gd tttimmoral tut, we mean art that Andi ' that enthusiasm to u less. (ht the tron. deals with sensusl impulses, or reuse: re- cloth in trnry, I believe that the progress of con. hellion .2"th the order of society; per. fully nu noitmenrtrhip and the best "orts of living heps too there ere many who oliject to the we!” k. art, developed and displayed by meens all that bcceuse it results in the second. And 'l""" Id such an institution Y! this, ere " essential even on this point public opinion is rather Ituuo is to tlt.tr."1.to which I hive referred as emplietic then clear. It would he lmddoifonm re central ltr/ttu t'??ryibut.o'ltt remot- Bud 1 popular defination of literary ini- been I. "treflection. It " to manyin thismeiu- morality which would not condemn the y/l'" bly, and to many more whom I’m. assem- episode of Poole and Francesca; it is al. they bly represent: ' tliet the sdventeges which most as if Dnute had com. to our“ um”. “10 I' I here noticed ttttt meinly tohe eecribed. end lot he blessed them eltcgcthsr; they grout L Our ukuowlcdgemente ere due to ell those ".9 Ilweye together, and they always love; the . l p. who, by the interest whieh they tahe ttt there ere more who could lesrn to look to Ttettt ... such pursuits, or by direct .neoltr agemeut. such e hell with yearning tlieu choose to ter “I it have contributed to that diffusion of the, enter the pnrgotary of Gerontius. The Lsur- mitt love at art which in its consequences may cote msy seem " uuimpeseGble on this “In” - be tea-riled es . ttebiotsal betsesiit. Tite more es Dnnte,yet it is hard not to think tmlly s line ot thought pursued by the opsakerr, Aylmer's Field en immoral poem. The km” . shows by iatplitrstion that art " in ellience wrath of mm worketh not the righteous- New l’ with religion in ttte education of the people ness of God, end the only outcome of A.,1. tr, , , --hat_rt teruhsto rei1tte tlm "ati. mcr's Field is the wreth of men. “sum” t meats “13 INN“ of men So thr does it have an evil notion represented in en evil Tht contribute to "rsrugtUrt the emotions MN] spirit; if weere not to condemn this. how INN“. . umtice of religion in than! or prepare src wetoeondetua such I poenies “The petty them toreceive the principles of religion. Leper." a priori, merely because IRWIN“ , 2. A Dignitury of the Chttrels.-hs, e Swinburne follows Luther's msxim. pea-ellw’“ ' minister of rcllaicn.tl10 Bishop of Oxford forriter? In truth, the question within entry I took his plm mam th- um- on the oc- whet limits it a. sets topersne "m for ert"lP1“”‘| l union, end spoke with philosophic insight isherdly one thet could be seked in en I man Cl , into the relation between "listen end ideal um of things. Then ert would he but“ I "i-Not only, he stud, does the art of continuelly enriched by life, end lite tllu. Them pointing owe its re-birth emcngns to the minted by set. It - occurred to ltis I iniitmntr. of the Christzu'n faith-not only Buk-uus,orTitiatt, or Leonardo, thst Queen did it flrtd its earliest subjects in the ente- the choice of Hcieules by between " and and st logne of its objects of belief. but even down "t-ert in its sentence epochs hes shears 08,250 to the present dey it is the hid-lion which been nourished and suited by ti-le-n. were s tneehrlst'len religion meinteine enough ed ornnchutenedptdecf his. When” acne, which opens the eye of many to end.- spcek 'desitotmiag"aettbr'trt,"we echow. use Meets” cloned themwhicheccustoue We touting-Med life does not need “my them-lune comma that conecleuti- my longur to be not“. become itie pent“ mendlehcnrtn “in. Vida“ led. Whenltleendertueperted. throne. “Mosul-oceans! to ther assess in ‘MhmtubQIHI-wm.‘ tlnttheretoretheleh e niacin-u... im an. chains“ tUdte,C,tt at: All“ e.artema.eo-tts.t in- umtzony' ene- mas . "iith,','etla'dr,', as our“... therewerdsofltte tor at. he hunt.- It.',',?, pennies-Mb our 'eloeh-tttet used" “mi Kaarrwe" - nil-a ”up netn munch” in...» mania-MINI! bun-b- "I" kill qrehtvrtentioestteuthtertuaoo.end "dtrahadtt'tagagtttt.. Vowel-m mate-macaw," pesteeileeleeseutee - trA4a' '4'd"lt, ‘mmm. 'l7ii7iUJ;li1"L' due-sermon set. A“ Wail-oa- e " . "tq6.hn-t-.qtrg-ot-- 9% l . a. . in Art'ytrer"etji. ‘uwhbl‘b I,“ ig mwh%eftqtsaedhe6a-b-t-rr'hts “.d-e h-atrgtr- u Ieee' _ . . 9““ H. A A ‘_ - -- _ _ A - A 2. A Dignitury of the Chttreb.- As a minister of religion, the Bishop of Oxford took his place smut; the mm: on the oc- omion, and spoke with philosophic insight into the relation between religion end 'srt-Not only, he mu], does the an of pointing owe m re-birth among an to the iufitMrnts. of the Cliriutmin faith-not only did it find in "rliert subjeete in the cue- logne of it. object. of belief, but even down l to the present thy it in the high tone which the chi-Minn religion mointnine among In which open- the eye of nanny to under. “and nature mud themmhieh “custom then: show eompu'ebend that conscienti- oneneee and Mouth: dealing with their lee"' -rtiel to their Ileana. and ‘thnt therefore there in I union between a -that you give end "euro-aut you re- ceive “Christianity, and that In tam you lender but to our great work-tut you help min umber“ up in our epoch! nation in "iat'tttt the but 3nd t"eo'tAetruortttisuu--autrmti - - "'--"m"eel. ""“s for for mere meterisl ,rtuau--for exumple.en improvement in the requisites of verious or- articles of G'0tttmtmNt--tt directsnd method- ised system ot instruction wee expedient. ml I believed much good in the proposed di. rection hes been tu'cousplishod ; but, es an often happens in experiments, In indirect and unexpected benefit was else the result _ ~nemely. the gredunl education of the ck people by menus of exhibitions, museums, end schools. in the Appreciation of works 1y of taste ; inducing. consequently. e teter. ence to nsture, and swekening tlist apti. " tiide for meritsl pleasures which is one of to the criterions of edvencing civilizetion. H, The principle is, I believe, now admitted, m that if wail: is to he provided for those when xl live by toil, their leisure should also be en l J' object of attention. Apart altogether from I the question respecting the Sshbnth, and iv with reference only to other periods of cessation from labour. it is felt that the l. means of rational recreation, retketion, ' h improvement. should be in store tor y I the working man‘s holidsy. That such re. l e , sources are indirect elements of culture we l l. i can no longer doubt. Many in the higher. tslam-vnu their powers of thought in' Ii;;: matters heevilv taxed from deyui" . drty---ean rarely turn to the srts or I _ ei), as to objects of momentry amusementI ( , l or of solace; but to him whose labour is i l a i ehiefly of the body, while his mental pow. l I I era are inert, in certain exercise of the mind 1 l I even in_bis hours of relaxation is it whole- I some change. It is partly for this reason ' , that the fine arts are more directly menus l y of instruction with the lower orders theiii I they can be with others; and for this rea. t , son the working man. long before he up- i s I pt'cciates urt for its own sake, readily con- . a suite to make it study, in connection with l, c I htstory. poetry, or science. of that which i t . to many is only an agreeable dilettanteiun. ' t Par be it horn me to undervalue thet _'i,"'i,':i,'i'iri,",i'r'i,':j f, antenna ; far be it trom me to with s' thst enthusiasm to be less. tht the cam d trory. I believe that the progress of cow b noiseeurshlp and the best "orts of living h srt. developed and displayed by meens oi'I il such an institution as this, ere " Quentin] . to we’ll-rots to which I hwe referred es a] centrsl'iight is indispensible to the remot- fi est "tuetion. It is to may in “dummy " bly, end to many more whom this seeein- .1 My rcpresentt ' thet the edventegee which It I here noticed sic meinly to be escrihed. e1 Our schnowlcdgements ere due to ell those i, who, by the interest which they teke in tl; such pursuits. or by direct encouragement. " have contributed to that ditrarioa of the ex love ot art which in its consequences msy es _ be rounded es s national bettssiit, The to line of thought pursued by the speaker, A: shows by implication that art is in suience m with religion in the education of the people us -As ieresert tends to rei1tte the senti- ml merits end habits of men so fer docs it he contribute to strengthen the emotions end 5p: prsctics of religion in them or prepare an them to receive the principles of religion. Lg ..._ -.. --'1 L ought, thereto". ever to twin “many " with one anothee,and - to he in op- . position to eeeh other. Religion ie the t {outermother of art, end ert hee ' from ' religion it: moat transcendent ideele. Bo. . ligion preeervee ert with comer-retire are. I end Art emhalnn the sentiment: of religion I in the fusstrt fame. They not end react in ' many “eye on uch other with bemstiei,1 _ effect. Noreen it be otherwise except they I ontstep their mpective honudriee, whenI I they loop eome to Mannie towerde cull other an ettitnde of tuttagoniimt. It in further to be observed that artiste of the highest order acknowledge their indebted. neu to religion for original conception: and for meterieln of euhlimity, grandeur, end beauty. Let us therefore place before I you the utterance: of ertiste assembled to set forth the reletiom of Art in regard to education and religion--- _ I. A President of the Royal heoutnr.--. , 'The higher intereste of art-by whieh I I understand the encouragement of ite bent .' mom, end the npprecienon of its best , pro0uetiomr-may he considered to he gate. I 1 Ir identified with the intellectuel wants of l I cultivated people. It wee essurned tut.". “on View“ Mainly. m and relig- ion is" their origin in tttes Diving mind ; but when win-mi abjectiroly, any In" their no“ in tho bum mini. They Ann-L6 ".--, -- _ _ _ .. '_-.----. B-----"-..."-'" At, z, 1881. Whole No. 191. giliiis:h: a', -"_iFr"'"r"'" Fug-“'3' rivaitt,esitu-, quitrrijiuir, Humiliation-admit Hamming-huh J.'.ta,"t's but the '2'ut"ttf, b ((91.08er "ttmis M7! I Foroublo-uuhuolaqnpmh wnqt Gunilla but]: the M. " Spanish huo d-ttia-d to k, in t,"a','g2tprgu't 1t,rt,t"dr"l has“ . 0‘ on "lt'htt"l2,ht in m... '._'h. on British soil, “at.“ h - punuvo penny until the I“! b 03,250,000. B.fomurtrie% I. pun-h ,r.noopotrethuturudttt he!“ in noncytom their m a w. Mwoowpn'm - to in my unu- for their protection. The con- phinunt union Mu. wan-gin...- . man nun“ White, who Ind boon fined a [or shooting“: Col. O'Cnlluhn'l nu. The mammal have.“ a In. utgN. ltinuid that tho prank lama. d Queen “and. “all“ to mm and “:0 Douala“ “I mud in“ d Tho wit. of Cal. O'Cslluhm. of Folk, county Clue. nu manly "mirod It “a. potty “lion for carrying . Me without a “can... Col. O'Cdlqluu at Ma may In" been “boyM.” all In obliged to cmm. " Renews or A Mororrmr.-rt, June leet , while some workmen were one.“ in , digging . ditch on the farm of Mr. George , Cornwall. township of Beet (Mord, they ' lame upon the remeine of whet in“ have ' been e mulodon. end of greet entiquity. The jaw. which ie very complete. it two ' feet [uni-inzhee long, end the teeth. which ' ere still well preserved, weigh four made. i Sound of the nu, the humerone. redlue. I neck junta, end meny ot the smell home were e e: found. The whoie heve been el- l hihitull at mvernl of the country tennis the district by the Buder, Mr. Aloe ar. twright. end when " ost-tlt. e Sew deye ego. the attention at the Minieter of Edn- F eetion wee drum to the collection. A number of gentlemen visited “teapot when the romaine were found. All were much interested in the remeine. end it ie hoped that when the belenee of them, whet ere enppoeell to he etill inteet. ere but, they will be secured for the mum of out ne- tionel University It Toronto; A dilbulioel ecu. wee committed In the Main Centennial building " Phiiedelphie on Thuredey Ieet. Forty-Eveline. wo-ee end children were burned end hell their clothing ruined hr e vitriol “levee. A full gallon of the terrible ecid wee on“ over the crowd eeeelnhled in fro-t of the epecc not“: of the omen by eome vit1inat. concealed in the north-eat atelier]. who followed up their work by an“. the ILL,; bottle c‘reehing to the Boere, the splintereu - dying in - dilution. They then eecepod throth the iyligit to the roof of the building. we tieenee te the ground. The ect wee done e0 quietly and the Inuit. wee eo inetenuoeue thet the Meta. scarcely neliud whet week-et- tee until eeIBeIent tune had duped te Pee. mit the eeonndrele to ileum lute eeo cape. The injeriee iMiated we plied- pelly upon lediee. who he“ *1“ temole injuriee but their doth“ e0.- pletely ruined. A reeled at “All, he b-uotrtrmdib. “to mm “the lib- , w - - ; a. 1tr-iiiiUGiiTWl'C. in M «M a.“ u oe sf may Magnet " to “in“ Kim and but. Winning. ad ling- ho _ 1'.tt'"htPdsonsnaaeiiiriLiri " Bivuondnwou Mamba-[u not“ I aathe 60th mild. Mr. Cochin-g I00 _ out in July of mammal». W“ " . mam mypouww menu-bu. ' It tho northern and of Alli-Ind. tou. t He describes the country in this “:3. u , extscduulr rugged and and“ vim-up ' alumna. or." aim. “can...“ l the greater pm. emu: tribal-Ida to the t Ciumeltillor Nelson rivon. The van... , was ole". yet not omdingly cold. with ' more than the usualmow (all. H. tituatt. t ed " chow-lions during the put. lum- ' met, mulling “together than: 1000 ‘ mun. Oftlu, geological romance of m I puticulnn Mr. Cochnne ”was“: " report. but enough in- bun (but! in. him to show that an phyuiul to.“ a! the country explored In out-dimly rough Ind largely interacted with firm and later, in may of which " no to be mum] in nhundwoe, And who“ that. .m lined in may plug. with “on” aood umber, prmcipdl’v 'Prttt6. Wild “haul. mun It will except when hunt] or shot down by the Indium hunter, who by thin mum earns I inhuman for himul! and manly. The block and horn hon. the moose 3nd curihn door m 51.0 Equally met with, bond“ . munbee out» mtqttikr tur.bsaring nuimalu. This Hahn will never Locum. an ugrloultunl one, nil-bond. oeeatiiotml patelsms of futil- hud wan fuuud, when aerial- its" binds In upon- " to have reached mummy. - __._. - - want even the ballot dvq- Ilka him m n “Avian. m- mm. "on our own work, aid 'a; mu». moot Mull-litany in muons 'Wmp.tter - h. B. “no pun u“ thing. u. pm; hi: Md " on or the but ”his. man of What 9".“ IL. L-" . . mm'. M' “h, - I tettienJt.aairiai7L"i,", lb 'ltyfPterrisaGii'ii"'ii"c watt “W‘hl I‘ll or". Pt"ttktLiiihli'iu lini- the "rr my a “a... _ “""W'Wl'wq. tttt '0 known." he H " “ruining" . In. ”In. luau-nominal nu. " “gm ttak.ttetj-iiiuriail'r'l"f. “Whit-(la, w my. Allah‘- W“ “‘1 h h. “”5 'iiet-.aia,i.a."'i'.7_" bring In}. mod-1.. thte ltr m W". ere", thiit, 4; 3:4le 33%;. 'ltt,t,trgtii, my in; mum " Lrtrt 'P? 153M "a Pteptrt.d.hii “ " mCird,,li, Wh'm “E 'lld'dd and on. Saw-l JAIL n -- . “can“. - rm bull-u Managua. bt "ll > 2E

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