West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 24 May 1883, p. 1

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In all sizes on the mostimproved ‘nethods, lates «tyles on l!o‘,.h‘:gnl notice and aichargesthat atyles on t’l.o.:‘h‘;vr;n.altnotlce and aichargesthat ; By‘&?&lt.gmglr)’keepfidonu hand a defiescom: § ,Doors an i Give him a eatland support nativeindustry | %fi%&mfl'}f;fi:&; ats th ‘or M:fll"llilgg:. m . Re d , » ans,3peci WM.JOHNSTON, Jr., | «Blastcamaan ts ctottncetiont Lower Town, Durhn. | minesatwavros anyq~""* "Contsand Frim un&_-“mr_ k sccull will oi »"l’ | Askins‘ Patent Metalie Glass Burial Cuses â€"“7 " promss‘my Sm [ j kept in stock. A YERY impostant question for everyâ€" one to uom“'zu there is nothing more inâ€" jJuriousfor health than cold feot, howover such l Sn susthebauclllln. x2 TCT ESm ..-.i;- .......‘-mm .-l---., CUTOTCF SICBD ean very easily be remodied und everybody nade to fichonbr‘.b!ohyu illingon Wikinm Fohn« steme,jenr., who bas all the appliancesior They All Say so! muing Stockings & Socks Look out for cold weather. How are you of for Socks also excellent Prench Kip Boots and Shoes ail kinds. A firstelass Fit us L make no misfits. My Fine Work is mado on the Latost London and New York Styles, For Workmanship and Cheapâ€" ness I defy Compotition. Wid. CALDWELL Durham, Nov.1882. . 3245 PRIME HARXESS LEaATHELR. Call and oxamine and you cannot fuil to suit yourselves. Tumnery cornerof Sauddlerand Albert Stroets, Lower Town, Durham. t market price paid for Hides, Cal{ Ski | Highext market price paid for Hides, Calf Skius SOUTB End, Durham, formerly Military Bootmaker in Her Majeatys Service would call the atteution of the Public, before going elsew hore, to giye him a trinl in the line of Gents‘ Fine Sewed & Pegged Boots W.CALDWELL, SHOEMAXER, IMMENSE STOCK of ROREIGN MESTIC LEATHERS, T. SPROULE, â€"â€"â€" â€" Proprietor. | AllStyles in Steck or made to order on e ameag | Snorks naney r[HIS: Sopalar Hotel has had s large | T o_ Nee addition ndded to it , theroughly refitted, and | CFO KRPESG G» PCY awy. Abvie I irst Olass Barber in counection with the House. N o I' I G E & SHOEMAKERS Nollch ie e o « ® 4& indebted to the Undersigned eith« K._3 County of Groy. Hosklence maad (> Durkam . 1“ attended to in Town "or ( en remmonable torms. +9 ICENSED AC .J Comaty of threy. A in wil purte of the Com: Gorode sold on Commisni aitended and the anlo |n) H.STEVEINSON: (‘INHKAL AGENT. | Londo Â¥ turic Loaging Company â€"Lond 1 emahire Life Frsuganee Co, Merchastil w«rance Co. | Watorice Matual Firo inso Bnugeen Mutual Fice inswrnnce Co. . Ac surance Company. All Business prov tended to. NS, Specifications, Estimates, &ec., arniturse V ‘an Pl;\"hled!”:‘)‘rck“fi-'zp'o‘nnwmllc'i'll:nfl.luw:c- ' New Fdrnl \lre "]areio"ms JA _ addition ndded toit ,theroughly refitted, and | s now second to none in the county." Good stabl ‘ ny nnd attentive hostler â€" First eluss nccommodnâ€" | on for Commercial Trareliors. TERM® #1 | Who have been there, UP PANS to go twenty miles DUNDALK,Ont. Wilibe at M.ting‘s Hotel, Sholmurne, overy Mon duy and Friday,from 10 o‘clock a.m.to 5 p. 11. Iso @indings in great varicty. A splendidlot of Darham Feb.7th 1432 MABKDALE GTADEA'I’E:»! Ontario Vetrinary Col ege, Poronto . YETERINARY SURGZEZON Mesitdenceâ€"Ferguse St., Mownt Forest. y2t2 «J 0M ‘Pu every month, wher upon all ll}nm thist ronage. All work e formed in the |st REFRRENCE, any o ronte . Mead @Mce,â€"\ + us sls | Buysand Collects Sterling Exchange; Tssues drafts Omensoantami eamad hi inthorton.. Omes | * "on wew York tnd Aif pocte of Cunmdaa" * Apemwavary Tnuradiy auhorstofure . # 11.3 | DEPOSITS of $4 and upwards Received, ‘%&,’m& Attorney ,"'w‘ Â¥aos d l uvon which the current rate of interest JSune4ith,1680. y187 will be allowed. Dundalk Murch 10th 1879 l;Alllmns and | Attorney‘satâ€"Law Solicitor®s in Chansery, Conveynncers, ote., rofessional and business curds ore inch 4190400 4O HLOOF , [POT Y OWE . cessn n en & # woinehosor Jilines Nonpuriel mossure......... 7 hreeinchendo.por yeur..... % in eeve db W‘-nnlhahnml» cents Line for the insertion, and 2 conts p.m.r..mm. .mflum&q.â€"!nnyom-l-oumo, AAvertisemonts, excopt when accompanicd by «s. en instractions to the contrary, wre insorted i«u6il forbidden, and chaurged at regular rates . W. M. CLARK Architect and Builder Ordinary noticos ofbirths, marriazes, loaths,and | 11 kindsof local uews,inserted free of charge. | " Mtray Animals, * , adsortised three wooks | . ez @1, thoudvertisementnot to exceed l8lines. | 4 MRST Clauss Honor Graduate of the ' Veterinary Coilege, Registered Memâ€" # e Onturio Votorinary g:e(h:'nl Association , mber of the Student U mion & Coâ€"Operation, will Have their Repairing d;no‘ From the Peoples® Jeweliers, BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Kvery Phuesday, At the O Joo, Grarairaxa Street, Uppor Town ICENSED AUCTIONEER (or the Meney to Loan,. County of Grey. _ Rostlence mad Oflce i "TuR CREY REVIEW! TRRBM®â€"31.00 peryenrin Advance.â€" $4.50 it not paid Within three k. Office~â€"Lower Town, Durham B.JACKE®, B. A. i. I". %Â¥. NTIXCON, COILLCGH A N‘ E.D. MACMILLAN, TPORNXEY â€"AT â€" LAW, &e.â€"Orrice TTORNXEYS at Law, Solicitors, &e. MISCELLANECUS. oppouite Purker‘s Drug Htore, Upper Town, HUCGH MACIAY, m Purhun to tioe his profession 'I. and extracting mh w apeciality. Will reside ut the MeAlister House. _ 3 JOHXN MSODIE, RATES OF ADVERTISINXG. Should Call and Examine ham every Pabrday, arriv m;i the previous in Durhum to practice his profession. DOLL & BROWN. JACKES & PRINGLE, J. TOWNXSENXD, Publisher. Closck, Rirg or MEDICAL. MARKDALLE DENUINWE i V . culy. Is PUIBLISHED wi i+ | having Bank (Capital $100,000). Wholesa wl CanpwBLt. ; Store and everything that can be had to mm mm mss if make it as practical as possible, T einaakk ... 1 Send for a Cireular. tEIGN and w K. A. PRINGLE to bay & uhn w i in pily atâ€" Ont y107 r th led t 1 0 DOâ€" in tary _ GHEOQO. XRESS, y190 y10 ‘‘H A B N A d1R8Tâ€"CLASS i1€ AilSE TO HiRE Nemomber the placeâ€"a short listance gortho batk ade Vudco. Actual Business Departm‘t STUDENTS3 may enter any Scho the year with equal advanta Special Foeatures for 18 PHOXOGLAPHY is incladed â€" .| Capita:$6,000,000 : Reserve s $1,400,000. NYOTI('E is hereby given to all parties &A indebted to the Undersigned either by note or Book Account to cnll and sottie up the same nt oneo, ns he is going out of business. â€" All mecounts not settled at onee will be plaeed in other hands for collection. T. J. ADITE. I BEG leave to announce that I have Commenced the Manufacture of Furniture in wli its Branches, and from my long exporience as a Cabinet Maker, I hops to turn out work second to none in the County. PHONOGRAPHY is incla Commercial course withont c Horseshoc WOODâ€"WORKL JAS. ROSE, + â€" Darhaim, April RL EC Repairing promptly atitended to Dusham, Marsh 12th , 1863 Murch 9, tos? Romember the place, 2nd d Drus Sto: Blind â€"EFFactory On reasonable terme, and a Goneral Banrking Business TRANSACTED. Curham Planing Mili SsSASH, Doonr (al Who is now rewdy to burn out 1 CANADIAN BANK Of COMWUSRCE, Orriczâ€"Ome door South of C L Grant‘s Store Garafraxe 3t, Durkam, Ont. yB A General Finnncial Basiness Transzeted. A lurge amoxnt of Money to lend ut Lowost ‘p(-l- wible rates. Charges Modernte. Furms sold on Commission. Insurnnces Effected at the Lowest RATESâ€"PDNE & Lijg. DAVID JACKSON, Jr., LAND & LOAN AGENT coK.â€" VEYANCER, Land Valuator, &c. \I ONEY to Loan on Farm l'rorcrty a and Mortgages Purehused. Moneys Invest ed for purtios in Mortgages and other Bocurities, Changed Hands. COLLECTIONS MADE [‘HE HARNESS BUSINESS prev conducted by Bonlden Brow., has Le: H th it l’}llS BANK issues Letters of Credit on Grent Rritein and other Forcign Countries; M B W _BTIE M in Opposme Purker NELSON RZEABEURN, ORTHERN Business V ol. VI. No. 21. â€"â€";â€" FPARN® ROR SALK.â€":â€"â€" ROBT. BULL COPLLECR OwEN SOUND k CX S ACXLS M17] C. A. FLEMING, DURHAM. Aug Principal, Box 72, Owen Sound pril COMPLETE ~â€"ANDâ€" ud 1 Of any ki WM 16th. #1 )04 NELSON i 6 1t CEO. KRESS 8Sr & cDOCl Drug Store CONNEC WHITMO:} ruorth of J w led in the atra charge. Wholesale Â¥208 32â€"3 day in y1 1 opralre Lor s T Clover, SEED POTATOES, NHew Variscties. Canadian & American Seeds, d .A Aeiiintnien <bn â€"/ promptly astended to. Fresco and Bannor Painting a Speciality. Wharge Moderate.â€"Order®*leit atJ. F. Mowat rwm receive prompt attention Glazing, Graining, s ERDS, By Steamer Farlking, From the Best Houses in Britain and consisting of the leading Field and Garden Seeds. Are pleasant to take. Contain their own Purgative. Is a safe, sure, and effectual destroyer of worms in Children or Adults WORM POWDERS. "EHTE Sa llouse, fign,. nnd Ornamental Painter, DURHAM. Blacksinith & Waggon SHOP. Roâ€"opened. FIELD & GARDEN ']‘ HF, undersigned wishes to mform the Ludies of Durham and \-ictnll'y. that she has commenced the Dross and Mantle Making business in the building Upper Town, and will be Lappy to receive orders for work in the above line, .{u she has had several years cxperionce,. she will be able to give good satisfaction in all work entristed to her care. HORsS Dress & Mantle Making. Durham, March 2rd 1881 TOYS OF EVERY KIND. )e Gren Reviemw. Lambtonâ€"Street, Lower Tow, Durbam, one door east of the Post Office. NICHOT Glonelg, March 15th, 1885 the COLLARS A SPECIALITY TIUQ Subscriber would respecifully in timate to the public thit be hae a fi..m «Ech «ts Eo T J o o 1| CONFECTIONERY, consisting of Fancy Brackets, Vases, Chinaware, Ladios‘ Hand Satchels, Purses, Necklaces, Beads â€")and(â€"â€" Remember the Placeâ€"Opposite the office of D. Jackson, Upper Town. Durh A"4. a good and fine 'I-toq-ivoi-‘;u;l“;;'r: Wordering, &c., of first class qunm{ and New De â€" signs selling choap, also Nexrt door to the Review Oflice WALL PAPER, ’\IRS. E. DAVIDSON has just received A)A & good and fine stock of Wail pmper, A large Stock of FANCY GOODS and v a Durham, April 26, 1853. F. DOWNES, H. PARKER, Druggist and Seedsman, residonts of i fing comitry. Timothiy, â€" TMPGORTED â€" on HMakigyo ty occ m the 1 \p ROj & other Grass Seeds h done at i1 19th, 1463 HOT 5 wish ie Pownship of Glenel Wht r‘.f:’av rmw Inm d by the inte Thos. Br min Roud, at the and Paper Hanging ) FAKLINCHAM. DURHAM: and Ger i0rt notic to intimate uUIns & CLOCKLIX (RYA USINnCS3. inys heve elue is e em205 th cinÂ¥6 and and the oonndd "And you wouldn‘t give it her ?" exâ€" claimed Walter, with sudden indigâ€" nation. , Glimestared at him in amazement. ‘You wouldn‘t give it hert repeated Walter, with increasing | vehemanas. «"In fac‘," continued Glime, following up the last sugestion, which he saw had told powerfully on Walter, "his mither was here nae langer since than yesterâ€" day, beggin‘ back a ticket for an auld coat and a shawl that the pawnbroker had lent auchteenpence on. She begâ€" git if I wad gie g:ith the tickets for claes ; but when she couldnaâ€"get that, as it‘s no very likely she wad, she said she wndnfalahhhe lticket; for hher ain things, if I wad only gie her that wan: for her boy‘s top-coat,i‘:he had nacthin‘ else to put on"â€"and Glime, not noticâ€" ing the look that was kindling in Walâ€" ter‘s face, jerking his thumb carelessly twards one of the tickets that lay on the table. . | "They could easy lie here," said| Glime, whose cunning eye had been | watching Walter‘s face, “gut as you‘re| a freend 0‘ his, a‘ve nae objection to let ye hae them, tho‘ it be a loss, in case Mr. Harrington may want ony 0‘ the | things in this cauld weather." | Walter examined the tickets and found that two were for clothes, another for a watch, and a third for a broochâ€" he wondered, with a sad heart, if it could be the brooch wi h Harrington‘s likeness and hair in it, that Mrs. Harâ€" rington had shown him with so much pride. He looked at the remaining ticket. Worse and worse! It was one for "a gold mounted hairâ€"guard"â€"too evidently the last fond gift of little Tiz. Alas! had Harrington sold that too,â€" and for drink ! "Here," added Glime, who had markâ€" ed hopefully the sorrowful look with which Walter was contemplating the I 0 U, "here‘s twa‘r three pawnâ€"tickets that, as a favour to a freend, I gi‘ed him some brandy for; and I‘ll be willâ€" in‘ to lot you hae them for a censiderâ€" ationâ€"a guid pro guo, ye ken." «But if there‘s no freen‘ that‘ll len‘ him a helpin‘ han‘""â€"the rascal turned his small gray eyes upon Walterâ€"I‘m afraid it‘ll be a 3»?0«1 loss to me. _ This is the principal part o‘tâ€"noverra much to mony folk, but it fa‘s hard on me that loses suca dale in the same way." Glime‘ as he spoke, handed the slip of paper to Waltor. It was an I O U for fifteen shillings, and was signed "George Marrington.‘ Ah! to well Walter know that hand, Mr. Gime had brought out & slip of paper from his pocketâ€"book by this time, and after a fit of coughing that attacked him was over, he resumedâ€" . V Waiter thought within himself, that if poor Harrington had taken care of himself, his excellence would not have boan so favailiar to Mr. GHlimo. 4 +4 "u1e s a jaymus, yon (cough)â€"yon chapâ€"a rale jaynius, and a very excelâ€" lent young man, sirâ€"leastways when he (cough) taks care 0‘ himsel," Walter replied that he was: whereupon Mr. Glime nodded, and said, "I‘m a freend 0‘ his too," as if this announceâ€" ment should put them both on the most friendly footing with one another. _ As Walter did not appear to see the matter in that light, Mr. Glime, who seemed to be taking stock of Walter‘s appearâ€" ance, proceededâ€" DURHAM, Co. Grey, MAY 24, 1883 "Sit doon, sir," said Mr. Glime, enâ€" deavonring to clear his husky voice, as he shut the door ; "you‘re & freend of Mr. Harrington‘s, 1 learn." IN WHICH WALZER GIVES MR. GLDME A BIT OF HIS MIND, AND SEARCHES OUT AN OLD ACQUAINTANCE IN A STRANGE PLACE. The girl disappeared into the barâ€"roon1, and presently returned with a big,bloatâ€" ed man, who after a look at Walter,said in as suave a manner as he could comâ€" mand, "Glad to see you, sirâ€"(cough) â€"jist come this way." So saying he walked into the bar, followed by Walâ€" ter. Canaah, bright Canaan, I‘m bound for the Land of Canran ; O! Canaun is a happy plauce, Will you go to the Land of Camaan. My Jesus makes me happy now, Though far from the Land of Cana«n If blessed with but a Pisgab view. O! what will it be in Canuan ? No raging storms nor gathering clouds, E‘er darkens the lund of Canusn ; But pleasures flow in crystul floods, Each hourt‘s : Heaven in Cunaan. Ihave not wealth nor honors here, But I‘m heir to the Land of Canuan ; A crown of life he‘ll give me there, I shall reign a king in Canaan, The glorious hour is on the wing, That will land me safe in Canaan ; With higher notes than ungels wing, I shall praise the King in Cansen, I‘m bat & wanderiog Pilgrim heré, I‘m bound for the Land of Gauuan My all is there I hold so dear, My heart‘s in the Land of Canaan My Futher‘s there, the God I love, My Savior dwells in Canaan, With life and joy to all whove, Me‘s the gloricus King of Cunaan. CHoRts, George Harrington. i doot it," returned Glime, a fat pocketâ€"book out of a hind him, and proceeding to the papers in it. "But it‘s CHAPTENR XXXI BY DAVID MACRAE. nd a third for a broochâ€"| _ He was soon standing in frout of anâ€" with a sad heart, if it | other flaring spiritâ€"shop just under the rooch wi h Harrington‘s | big, dingy pawnâ€"office, of which he was lair in it, that Mrs. Harâ€"| in search, but it was sometime before hown him with so much | he discovered the proper entrance. It ooked at the remaining| was a narrow, dark close a little way > and worse! It was one, down, to admit apparently of people ounted hairâ€"guard"â€"too | sneaking in unobserved. _ He hung ast fond gift of little Tiz. |about for a minute or two, hesitating ‘Tington sold that too,â€"| whether or not to go in, Me was not ! ‘ much encouraged by the lool: of the d easy lie here," said people he saw passing in and out. cunning eye had been | Most of them wore dirty, slipâ€"shod woâ€" er‘s face, "but as you‘re| men with bundles under their shawls; a‘ve nae objection to let or rough, halfâ€"intoxicated men +providâ€" ho‘ it be a loss, in case ing themselves no doubt with the means n may want ony c©‘ the of buying more drinkâ€"for Walter saw cauld weather," :that. they, and indeed almost all that ntinued Glime, following emerged from the gloomy close, turned estion, which he saw had , 2t once into the adjoining | spivitâ€"shop. f on Walter; "his mither f)uca thgre slunk into the close a Phxev- | anger sine e'tlun vesterâ€"| ishâ€"looking scoundrel, who had evidentâ€" ] eka ticket for an auld 1y been about no good. _ Then therei withat: the pawnbroker[c‘me“ wellâ€"dressed boyishâ€"like y9uth., cenpence on. She begâ€"| "°* much accustomed o{et. as \hlt.er‘ C g:ith the tickets for| ©00!4 see, to this sort of work; and he n she couldnaâ€"get that, | §t004 for a few ssconds, pretending to likely she wad, she said| b@ reading the theatre bill that hung at the ‘tickets for her ain | the side of the publicâ€"houss dgor, but 1 only gie her that wan Elancing about him all the while; and pâ€"coat, as he had nacthin‘| When he was satisfied that no familiar â€"and Glime, not notie.|¢Y@ Was upon him, hurried into the at was kindling in Walâ€" elose. â€"Then came a man witha shameâ€" ng his thumb carelessly less, gaudilyâ€"dressed woman on his the tickets that lay on , > and disengaging his arm, he slipâ€" lpedmtotl];e close, while the lvlvlmnm M ie iy stood at the entrance awaiti is reâ€" :nld:i:hglvo it her ?" exâ€" | turn, â€" While Walter was :IIT looking * sudden .indigâ€" / qq hesitating, he was very l:lquh ae .‘ * tonished to see emerge from the clos: at him in amazement. !Dr. Daidlaw‘s new missionary. _ The i‘t give it her!â€" repeated gentloman was scarcely less astonished increasing vehemence, to see Walter, but on {uning his erâ€" POETRY caNaan. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO He stopped at a shopâ€"window a moâ€" ment to look at the rawnbroker‘s adâ€" dress on one of the tickets, and then passed on. "I ghall go and see where the pawnâ€" shop isâ€"and perhaps get out poor little Tiz‘s gift"â€"he said to himself. "That will be always one thing done." His sadness and apprehension reâ€" turned now with double force. To reâ€" main in suspense and inaction till Monâ€" day, when he did not know in what state poor Harrington and his mother were, was something terrible even to think of, Ifhe could only have got the clothes, that he was now able to reâ€" deem, sent to them, it would have been some relief, ; for if that hideons rascal had not been telling lies, they were in want even of the commonest necessarâ€" jes. So saying, Walter Lorraine took up the tickets, and followed by a low jeerâ€" ing laugh from Glime, strode out ‘into the shop, and was soon in the throngâ€" ing streets onee more. "Wretch!" said Walter, with a look of nnutterable loathing, as he throw down the money on the table, "there, and may the curse of"~â€"he checked himself, and added in a tore of stern solemnityâ€""No, I had forgotten myself. God help you! If this be a specimen of your business, you have curs : enough upon your head without mire." "And, as your freen‘s a guid custoâ€" mer," bhe said with a hideaus leer, "]‘ll likely hmo anither lot frae him in twa‘r three daysâ€"ha, hatâ€"so if you can mend your manners, and look in as you‘re gaun by, I may gie ye them a wee cheaver." Slime, in whom passion and groed of gain had been striving for the mastâ€" ery, no sooner saw his hopes of making a profit out of the pawn tickets endangerâ€" ed, than he pocketed his affronts with no:very good grace, and named the SNll. ©I should say you were a fool, I suppose if these articles cannot be got back others can be got in their place," He strode up and doawn the barâ€"rcom for a few moments like a ceaged lion, and then by a powerful effort, quelling his indignation, ho turned to (Glimes abâ€" ruptly, he said, pointing to the tickets on the tableâ€" "How mucl: do you wanut for these ? "What would you say my finefellow," replied Gilime, tauntingly, "If I wodna let ye hae them at all »" Bring in whom you like," said Walter, elenching his powerful fists, and drawâ€" ing himeelf up to his full height, "If your man, or any other man that‘s had to do with this inhumau conduct, dares tolay a finger on me, T‘ll leave him less like a man than I found him. See If I don‘t." "Curse your impudence!" said Glime, turning erimson with rage, "If you gie me ony mair 0‘ your jaw, I‘ll bring in my man, and hae you kicked oot into the street." He hurled these last words at Glime with sevage vehemence. Walter was not easily roused, but when roused, his wrath was something tremmendous. l "Ruffian * cried Walter, rising to his feet, his eyes finshing with unconâ€" trollable indignat on, "hcartless ruffian â€"to your face ! You can see one of the noblest youths in the sity come to this infameous den of yours, and drink away his talents, his gooduess, his reputation, his hapinessâ€"and never try, by a single word, to save him! You can packet his money when you csee him drinking himself aun‘(ll his poor mother down to befgary and starvation ; you can find it» in your heart to give him drink for the money he has borrowed on his very elothes ; and when you have pocketed his last sixpenceâ€"when you have fatâ€" tened yourself, like a vampire as you | are, upon his lifeâ€"blood, and now ‘see him and his poor mother starving with cold, you can refuse to let her have back a ticket for even so much clothing as a miserable broker would lend no more _ than eigliteenâ€"pence _ upon! Shame on you !â€"pitilessâ€"monster!" "when that poor lady and her son may {nnd. and finding that he was unacâ€" be perishing in the cold for want of quainted with pawnbroking transacâ€" their clothes !" â€" | tions, he volunteored to go back with **An‘ why, I wad like to ken, should hi. Igie her‘t?" retorted Glime rudely.| _ "I have frequently to do jobs of this «"Am I first to gie value, and mair than lsort." hesaid, "redecming the clothes value in liquor, for thay tickets, andiof some of the poor creatures amonpst then gie them back for nacthin‘? A| whom I labor. 1 have jast been up reâ€" profitable way 0‘ doin‘ bnsiness that!" ‘uewing some tickets for a poor man in and (ilime broke into a husky taunting | my dis‘rict, who kas been brought to laugh. Ibeodary 6Â¥ 4 drunCan wit. * m gome A Reurc or tar Past.â€"The Stratford Beacon says:â€"Lovers of the antique wlo were at the station yesterday morning had an opportunity of seeing a genuine relic of the early days of railronding, in the shape of un engine, tender and coach, sl:i‘:ped from England to the railway exposition soon to come off in Chicago. The engine was called the "Samson," and was Luilt by George Stephenson in 1838. It was about 14 feet long, narrow gauge, with a seat for He stopped, for the pawnbroker‘s asâ€" sistant now stood before them, and pickâ€" ed up the ticket which Walter had laid on the counter. The wellâ€"known hairâ€" guard was soon brought. How strange it seemed to find it in such a place, and see little Tiz‘s hair in that man‘shands ! MWalter paid back the loan with interâ€" est, and following the missionary, was soon in the crowded street again. "What |tales of unknown suffering | and beastily excess these bundles coul4 | tell !" he exclaimed in a low earnest| voise. _ "Tlicre cannot be less thin fix! or seven thousand bundles of clothes in | this place, yet this place is only one of | scores that flourish on the drunkenness| and improvidence of Glasgow alone. | You will searcely credit it when I tell| Euu that nineâ€"tenths of all the munv_\'l orrowed on these things has gone dirâ€"| ectly or indirectly for drink,. There are | ecoats and shirts there by the dozen, | Mr. Lorraine, that drunken men :md: women have stripped off in the next| close, and pawned to get more whishkey: | blankets there by the hundred pawned ‘ by drunken wives and mothers in the| very midst of this piereing winter. â€" You | have no idea, sir, what drunken women will do, I have seen thom actually i strip their dead and pawn the graveâ€"| elothes for drink. â€" And even that‘s not | the worstâ€"for, thank God, the corpse | / can suffer no more. But 1 have seen ‘ | mothers go into closes, in cold, sleety |! nights, and strip their own babies rathâ€" ’ ' er than want the drink. Look at yon|! little searlet frock hanging from ‘the‘i rope, and that little paletot! 1 fenri . some poor little child is shivering at|! this moment for want of it." [1 While they were turn came to be at sionary directed W the crowded racks. Bo saying, the missionary led the way into the close and up a dirty a.mir,‘j to a passage flanked on one side by a row of narrow wooden doors. â€" Heoponâ€" ed one of them and they both passed in. ‘ They were now in a small dingy comâ€" | partiment, with a high wooden partition | on one side, designed to conceal the | eustomers from one anotherâ€"an arâ€" \ rangement which Walter could casily understand would be weleome to most of the charaeters he had seen enter. The compartment looked sercss the counter into a glooemy warchouse, fitted | up with gigautic racks, that woere liter | ally crammed from floor to cciling v ith‘ bundles of bed and body clothes. ‘The whole place had a repulsive disreputâ€"| able air about it, that sugpested vi1 ldly l the squalor and wretchod ness of the| thousands of homes from which thes ' multitudinots piles had been brought. | Walter looked about him with his | mind full of gloomy and sad thoushts. | And this was the place where Harringâ€" ton had come and pawned those things. l Hedhe «stood in this compartment? How had he lookod â€"how had he foltâ€"| when he parted with the ke psake he| had got from fittle Tiz ? Was it that coarse, overdressed clork at the desk| over there, who had written out this| tieket? | "Ay, there they stazsd, in natural proximity!" he continued, pointing with his fingerâ€"*the pawnshop and the prbâ€" lie houseâ€"â€"playing fast into each other‘s handsâ€"two parts of one gigantie sysâ€" tem that is doing more than all other evils put together, to drig the masses down into beggary and crime, and bafâ€" fle every effort to raise them up again. But if we wait here longer we shall be too late. ‘This is the hour for closing, Follow me, please." _ "These accursed places!" exclaimed the missionary with bitterness in bis tone, as he stood beside Walter in the street ; and looked up at the huge dinâ€" 'gy tenoment. . "You have no idea, Mr. Lorraine, what depths of misery and destitution they open the way to, by the facilities they give for turning evâ€" erything a man has or can lay his hands on, into money. Here‘s ts case of this woman that has brought me herc. Wlxlgt eoul;lj her husb;ud do? He ight keep his earnings from her; but zl?ong as he left a blanket on his bed or a rag on his children‘s backs, she could bring it here while he was away | at work, and get money for it to. drink." 5 «I have frequently to do jobs of this sort," hesaid, "redecming the clothes of some of the poor creatures amonyst whom I labor. _1 have jast been up reâ€" newing some tickets for a poor man in my dis‘rict, who Las been brought to beggary by a drunken wife." engea alter‘s it thes brought. with hi thouchts tal | _ _Bince poor Pzyne died on the shores 'of Africa hundreds of millionaires have | passed away who are now utterly forâ€" goiten, as are the writers of hundreds | of pretentious works in poetry and prose, fnuw not worth the paper they are writâ€" | in the fullness of his time, he is to arâ€" irive. ard probably not once, in the | whole history of the human race, has | that end, when it did come, been in | harmony with the visions thus indulged | in,. â€" But surely, of all the strange freaks !of malicious fortune, there has been ‘mone stranger, none sadder, than that | which sent the man who wrote ‘*Home, | Bweat Home* to die an exile on African | soil, and which has left him to a grave ilu« among our English dead at Tunâ€" is!" ® l! | mucu to thair surprise. . Payne msisted , it was because the leader of the squad !h:l'i boen under the magnetie influence of Ross‘s conversation, and Ross insistâ€" ed that they had been saved from insult and imprisonment by the power of «Home, Sweet Home," sang as only those who feel can sing it. 2. The tenor and end of the writer‘s life, the very opposite ofhis own ideal of home. â€" Me lived a singlelife, he died away from home and lies buried in a lforugu land. Tlxe_r(_e wore prosent no l ds lhroat was a | who repented the so dued tone, and then old woods ring with and pathos of the : l the heart of the rou; not only captivated | who said that the a 200 ‘epenited the song :n a slow, sub dued tone, and then sang it, making the old woods ring with the tender m« lody, and pathos ofthe words. It touched the heart of the rough soldier, who was not only captivated but convineed, and who said that the composer of such a song should revor go to prison if he could help it. /And when the party reached Milledgoville they were, atter a preliminary | exsmination, discharged, much to their surprise. _ Payne iusisted it was because the leader of the squad had boen under the mnoenatin | influninse |_ Wwouitle Ross and Paymne were seated | before the fire in that hut, the door was lsuddcnly burst open and six or cight |militia men sprang into the room. | Ross‘s wife was .%intvt(l on a trunk conâ€" taiting many valuable and a ' small %.mount of money, m the unâ€" expected intrusion she sprang up and ’scmuued wildly., â€" Ross spoke to her in | the Cheroliee Tanguage, telling her to be seated, as sho would thus save the ‘ eontents of the trunt, and, as she sat down again, the intruders told Ross !that both he and Payne wore under arâ€" ]rest ard must prepae to accompany the squad to Milledgevitle, where they would be imprisoned. The soldicrs ’lost no tice in taking their prisoners away. â€" Rors was permitted to ride his own horse, while Payne was mounted on one led by a soldier. As the littla "The devil you did! You can toll that to some fellows, but not to ime. Look here, you made that song . you say ; if you didâ€"and I know you didn‘t â€"â€"Â¥OU ca&n say it all withant â€" atannina 'P.l. lnadenumtbohfioldwm::dnuztl me was a warm personal [Join Ross, who will be remembered as |a celebrated chicf of the Cherokees, At the time the Cherol:ces were removâ€" ed from their homes in Georgia to their | present possessions, wosut of the Missisâ€" | | sippi river, Payne was spending a few | weeks in Goorgia with IRoss, who was ' | oceupying a miserable cabin, having | | been forcibly cjected from his former | \home. A num{u-r of prominent Cherâ€" | | okees were in prison, and that poriion | of Georgia in which â€" the tribe was loâ€" |cated was scaured by armed squads of | | the Georgia militia, who had orders to | arrest all who refused to leave the counâ€" | (try. song under such & time or ?2" 16.‘ U 1 E Atvbuari 4. duttiegs i it ns iss sn d | John Howard Payne is the author of lthin song, expressing the yearnings of the heart after home, whichis to all the | sweetest spot on carth. It is not our lprcsem. purpose to enter on a critique of this song, which conveys to us the spontancous and universal experience of mankind in regard to home, but to draw attention to a few things in reâ€" |gard to the writer of it, who sings so lsweel.ly the native sentiments of the: !heart. 3 Whole No. 271. {uu can say it all without stopping. is somcthing ip it about pleasure d palaces, â€" Now pitch in nufrosl it ; and if you cen‘t I‘ll bounce you in your horse and leal you instead it," The Author of Home, Sweet Home. No (Prepared specially for the Review. aid the soldier ; "do you 92" Payne answered, 1 composed wildly, _ HRoss spoke to her in kee language, telling her to as sho would thus save the f the trun};, and, as she sat in, the intruders told Ross he and Payne wore under arâ€" ‘ PLCNue t0 accompany Milledgeville, where they prisoned. _ The soldicrs i â€" taking their | prisoners was permitted to ride his iile Payne was mounted a soldier. As the little hovel rain "began falling until every man was woughly, _ The journey ght. _ Toward aniduight ., in order to keep himself humming: Payne remarkâ€" d I expoct to hear that ch ciremmslances and at Do you know the authâ€" YAS ANnSW@ .4 F4 3 ‘â€" seaved door was or eight e room. avyNC | _ A Grax® Cranm.â€"Colonel ierkeley, who | bas lately returned trom the Andaman | Aslands, bas brought wiwh hirs an extraâ€" | ordinary epecimen of the ciam trive which he succeeded in capturing in that locality . ‘ The shellâ€"Tridacne giganteaâ€"weigls | two hundred and thirty +wo pounds, i mensures three feet nine iuches one way | and three feet six inches the other, an. is nemrly three feet in depth. Th is gignutic ‘ bivalve was captured by driving two poles 02 each side, on which was rigged a pulley ; hooks were attached to the iish, and it reâ€" r quired sixteen men to dislodge the monster i from bis bed and haul him ashore, When opâ€"ned, the shell inside was of 1 pure white, The mantle of the fish was of 4 benutiful blu> color, -llblauml an sunvle meal for the “..\':":‘4 famihes, This is pro‘ the lur lever srought to -;"i There is one of th.; .-n:? Sfhane rd, which is used for h MAin: hoty â€"Family Merald. i08, but a amaller size, inCo] | tion, all the stare visible to the naked eye, | and many others running do.n t »bout | the 7th magnitude, Th interesting poiit, | howevor, and that which yive.. A:» method its great importance, is that the photo. ! graphic magnitudes of the star« do not cor» ‘ respond with the visual, excep! in a very | genveral way. Some <tare which are emal | to the cye are conspieuous or the platek, f and wiee versa, so it i~ hikely that in this | way we shail get a great deal of informmaâ€" ‘ tion as to the nature of stcilar râ€"distion, | At the Cape of Good Hop», Mr. Gill obtumâ€" i ed, with a photogrmmpher‘s camera, a numâ€" | ber of pictures of the grâ€"t comet, which i oxhil it many interesting . points, M. f ut a reeqnt moeting oRthe i: ul Astronomâ€" ieal Society, Mr., Commun prescuted some \photographs of the groat nebala in Orion, which seemm to be decidediy in advance of | anything done | previousiy..â€"New â€" York Independent. 1t vecomes coaunualiy more and amore evident that photography is t. play an in portant part in actronomy, â€" At the obserâ€" vatory of Harvard College Profossor Pickâ€" ering is mauking a set of photographic charts of the heavens, by moan» or a ormâ€" ora of wide angle equatmally mounted. The plates each about six iuclhes by eight, eover a spare in the shy two or turee timos as large as the constollation of Orion. ' HWis sy oc |â€"Had f Bhall be a stered «liin And pilgrims with glad « Will fondly hond sb ove The man who sung the tr Of earth‘s devinest dove Hi Bhall 1 And ho s And fre He nonlerad o%er the dreary muth, ._Forgottes® and ajlone : He who could tench Home‘smatch iess worth Ne‘er bud one of is own, *Neath winter‘s cload and summers sun, AMong the hilly vroud, He bore his great boait, and bed nows To help him with the load ; And whesesoever in his round â€" He went with weary tread. L But he Had Th And step of conscious pride ; He will not hear the tribates now Tuat fill on every side ; Aud when we tell him how lis rich Sad strains our hearts lmve sought Ho cannot tell the price a which The yearning woras wore bougit ! Azd silently this man must oome Unto the waiting throupâ€" Who quve a trumpet v«ice to Home, Aud thrilled the world with song 1 B He | W Phe banishment was ove Dat it will soum beâ€" us 2ey sonary and traveiler, was brought home from .{fricn and placed in Wesminster Abbey amongthe fMastratous dead. A similar honor is avoul to be paid to Payne, the author of Home, »weet home. The man who wiote Mome‘s eweetest Is coming hom« mt last i For years his poor abode was se n In foreign lands slone, And waves have thundered lond betw This singer and his own. But he will soon be journ=ying To friends across the sou ; Aud grander than of any king Bis welgome hore hai be ! An 8. The removal of the writer‘s reâ€" mains to his native land. We delight to honor men of genive wich all marke of distinctiion and publhc d moustration, esapecially on their departure from this world. We assemble to acoompan themn to the imansions of the dead witz all the display of pomp and ~eircumâ€" stance, Weâ€"erect to thoir numes manâ€" uments, momorial halls and other triâ€" butes of honor, In accord with public opinion Livingstone, the famous anisâ€" The banishment was cveri | en on ; but the S12200 7 Tme romminsâ€" a househoid l word whorever the English hmm.' wken, for his «i ple lines had # 3nsm that which ~makes the whote kin." . He died a bachelor, with butone near relative, an elder brother, woll It Leslic, Washington, Alston, and othor colebnitios, gifts from the artiss to Payne. â€" lis miece detected some of the contents of the portfolio one day in a Broadway shop; but returning a fow days later to pro®ccut> furthor in quirâ€" ins, found them porsisteatly ~evaded. The only ‘relies of her uncle that she ever succeoded in geiting were sone E:rfwxiy valueless papers which, by the ind oftices of a friend, were rummaged, ratâ€"gnawed, oui of the weliars of the consulate at Tums, Photographing the Stars. a anperb portfolio, containiny most vaiâ€" Enl»‘lg pg_lpti.nga and sketched by Waest, was That personal possessione, which the t'lm:i' 'y would â€"have ~dearly cherished, mever moucLed them, Among these wore a cane heset greai stovre by, and always carried, the gau ofhis friend Irving, a unique and splendid desk, and eapeusive relative, Loing My guleâ€" less of cm:mon ‘!hno..fl always out at elbows. Wher ho diod, tas brother, in feeble health, was unable to give â€"close ~and ~prompt â€"attention to wind ‘up Howard‘s aftairs. ~ The Bosatly was that m:n{ personal possessione, Whiich the faraily xsrnlth â€"Artace. «onartc, know and in high wgw ms a dawyer. This buother, who 1 ft an fll’fl. w daughter, thad oe0: as a tmuner to Howâ€" ard, mho was‘indee] a most tryins and hen tender erocning zo sing their baves i. id wherosoc‘er true l This thrillingsong h it he who tought Hon Had mo home of li« . But it will heard ti ome pee m royal efore the heard it show with only pathots ted on i € m« name . romaingâ€" a d4, with Th IV »ie was seâ€"n me, rdered lond in 0WA it made d oler. ze «ons mothe we lind birth ud fown : re s maie hless worth makes the whole chelor, with butone Jdor Ilothcl.‘ walt ‘g“l As A o. an u\vda. Yeres 8 a tmuner 1o dow»â€" a most trying and sing uiterly gule mumph bymn that playved OPoul sitave 101 1 »me Caths * ® +Wl od dboiig grown dim found thon exâ€"e ove wWRvO vet Ween tr »we vwat

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