West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 3 Jan 1895, p. 5

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lk - - gnu"... In» yum-u ”u...“ ....t..-e PfPs..ry"ottsness, Pain in th- Sidn. Cttrtretrmtito, Tm mm. Bad Baum. com; cum-l my, _ the bowels. I." we. to Tatm. c... max uluucul Ind W 'troLiruiaiirs. lino CoaeATretetse, Dug»- - wttti plug. .rtdttmttrttartIai" {0 mm tNNt8metgg. m ttliitilhtit.'hkti'ih'tih'i, m dmttam+ t,iiii,'iE a%'.'"h'l'l'l'Al'girtG'%GGi. F.... Tar. tt m 001 and ttamp. at 399.1529“! Ju'r,"AldlliSrhts,"A' _ .9913: ihiiriaYGiiirViriairr REESE; $31:th on can to the Inventor. Tm. 'lt,',".",'-.. Irll,%'T,t',utt"'o"r'u',%'g',gfil"g,'N the but 'i"rP,',,2'. of ttat,,',','.".", In In. mud. I . sun mm was; Arlra,'lt'a'lrr.'ar4"A'r', and. trl sTnriiaarintG%uTGurifeuGFTuT, ur.iia an m mum manly More the while-Ith- CAN I OBTAIN , PAT“?! "at. 'e, main and an honest mmmm l1. 1g,qi'la',e't'2t'?, banana-n my,“ wanes at. a on bur Mig,',,', non-many madman. A a.“ at: mm mm: Punt. an now Io oo- lnnlbannmtrn. Hangman“.- MqlaoattrtsenttitNsttooBtofmC_ _ - Gwyn-m»! bonanza Iguana bar born new i?” mmwith n Suva. [Mimic-ml). 1 mad wnduu‘l Spam cure. Thu Brvl- ll Kenn IX" And 1 mm been 0mm '150 gum Inna hone. l 01“th mm ulna week-I. no A no: “for mine a worth of Randall“: Spam: Clan. Yours truly, W. 3. Mn. KENDALl’S SPA"! thw. Dr. n. J. XII-mu. Co. Mrs-t have and 9:33 J. Run-nit? KENDALL’SV SPA!!! (HIRE 7haiiiTiii;ii5rrFiiir0iiiiii 8 cy new! boy Wu loll MOST macaw/L parser thus A blacklmith in Norwich, Conn, found it difheuit to Ihoo I :91qu hone, And tthloroformet. him. Then tho job 1m rud- ily done. A few days but the home Inc- umbod to lockjnw. And died. An open countenance of nun-uni ditren. Iions won poo-used by A devil-60h recently 1mught m the Gulf of Mexico. About. forty mile: from Brownlville. Tenn. In mouth had I lateral spread ofovor fire foot. mrnrnerust,Norwar, tho. moot. northerly SLR with tiuutr-dippmg in a common notice was the result-nu of Dover, N. E u" year two tone oi mud were need there. Vulture: cmno: diecovernmm by the. new of smell. They rely entirely upon their sight when in queet. of food. An old Greek law prevented the husband of I divorced women from merrying A women younger than the diemded wile. [ The ccellieu far in that of the lee-otter. [ A tingle akin of thin animal, eold In: you in London, brought the enormoue mm of 31,100. It we. six feet long by two feet A paper w W110. " said feet of the bride The dymg um whue will " no lost. In: tut I] “will: ucque. Black can are thlllrel. Mun luck and full hm Li Hug Chat and: in can): should long to I: No Norma in: wry of th. Bone inland neu- Cum Inn ambushed A tttth' m2. tie added in a cup 0 sable an: strut br; " can. A? on». Cm... 1min in m eereg. and uni blight-n new proofs New: to New Subscribers $1.00 to and 1895. g trom h Ora link that ity by night have, " A rule, rs netsrly double the Iize of then. In“ By y in Um day-lime. Yellow rubbers ue now on "lo, for me 'er yellow shoes. FOR Matt oe BEAsT. n the world, but climb no mild M great bay " - frozen. Chris- which in one thouund mile- to the of Harnrnerfeat,i. ice-bound in win. Jrruthelogtsts hue dhcovcrod .ixtrfie. men of hurnmirtbirda. An ostrich can kick with the force of I tle, and " adv-y- kicks forward. [t ha been demon-timed that pomhin may than: gold for tillirtg tooth. rm maven of equntori-l Africa hvo I urn. ot telegnphmg by drum-bent: ’.:p.is who no tomco in the public uoin ot' France no promptly diam-o". The humming-bird of Mexico by. u: 0“ ,t u no: much Leger than n Path had. 4.1., Inns. of Grady. Nix, "may a 1,001! had etc-trio by two throw- oh Price Vt per Bottle. .de by all Drama or and»... J. KIINDA If. COMPANI noon-uncut "Lu. v7. VH- low Kradat"e ltnnu Thu Will be Fun-cl of Illa-re“ In Ivnybody. Jarrow, aged eighteen, ll . “tong [e worked on t tum in Illinoiu. a bud In sun lift A 21XNpound m r, and cm wriw bin nuns on tho n :- forty-um pound dumbbell, m um! your Randall" - Cm mom tor Curbs on two born" and Ltniment 1 hAve not ml. as truly. Axiom rmnrcx. marruge ceremonv of I .1.me a not. complete until lb. ,mahe. the the bridegtomn. dying wtah of n Phiiadelfhin Indy. 'roll u now the white: 0 legal con- ms mu she should be buried in her I'yrr,ro _ - will t>.E,ua.is,%i." ', can: In: command mu around r. Manager. think they bring good d full haul". use by: two hundred and Donn strrtrutUt of two homo oqudu that of Subscribe for the REVIEW. w to and of 1895 and W'EEKM H 1)} y Sm". m. M3535}: artist. and Css THE crAuuuNG. much in propelled by n nil London, Dover And Chstham er Incl-n that the not: nutri- i diet is butter, Ind that ul ot' 1895 and Weekly T mn- ycar for $1.25. I} C ws I' wri AND THERE mps we. Are made of oiled Mt y " & seen: world's me your tor 81.25. ll m \ FARMERS Sus _ " . rates cash in already our . two or all three tlt the REVIEW surprise you. 'e at once. " small wing. We per, renew " ends to follow. I Drydor "I . no" Abominable enter. late in life In mid. " I an forred to tal.e my non-uh by the the» every time I go near I table." m "frerr.d much from in digestion. ytikkeoituek-" h'l A Christmas present for gum, Md, o. Marie, I'm in such Mina Fo.dsek-"What in that you are weriniLom_l8nntieA' -- _ Sweetest tiuaan-"It isn’t. necessary to hung in in the dark come", my dour." Duran D.lia-" Why do you always hang the mistletoe on the eundelUr in the middle of the room t" An men". one, in which A husband wa Accrued of banning his wife, was cu trim in a certain court. A friend of the family bed been summoned. mach a nine: his wiil, to testify in. to the blows. E was naked by the prosecutor I " You - then blown administered y' " 1 did." " And did you lee the very beginning of the quarrel between them t" " 1 did." " When wu it '." " Five you: aga." J,' Fire yen- ego ! How we: that poe- sible t" To cure pork, dry all u rubbed into the cut pieces thoroughly. elpecially around the end of the bone- in the heml And shoul- den. Ind the inked mantis piled, skin lide down, for twenty-four hours in is plume whereit will not freeze. Then the meat in peeked closely into barrels, with n quarter inch of dry salt between the lnyorl. end henvy weights, such as elem "ones, ere plnced on the top. Then enough alt in dissolved in boiling water to make . brine strong enough when cooled to thut I potato or on egg. The ulted meat in the barrel u now kept covered with n cold l brioemnd left to cure for five or six weeks, amsordimt to the thicknen of the meat. It in then removed from the brine, washed, and dried all for uni. It will keep best if hung up in s smoke-house. and smoked occuionolly with}; smudge of tsorncoUgreen wood, or hickory bark. It will :an keep very well if packed with elem hay or atraw In tight, covered barrel. and stored in a cool. dry place. " Wham you troubled About , " 'u-r-r don't know what to call it, in the fire mny he uled to warm .he water when u. geu Coo cool. The hair should be pulled out, not Ihnved off, sad I very dull corn-knit: or drum-hue will do rapid work on the body, while a trowel will scrape the groove* about the heed. Hang up n carcus from a gnmbrol stick m the hunstrings, remove the inside: " noon u pouxble, sad drench the meet, both inside tsud our, with the coldeet Weber obtaitsabler, no as to cool the iUsh nridly. AI soon " the cnrcul in thorough ycooled, but before tt in frozen, cut it up Into Inch pieces u are desirable ‘lor home an. The part. that Ire to he need ' or tor mking heed2heeeo Ihould batman. nod if it u not convenivmt to render the lard immodntely it any be trotted m the me my. u the the 0le which is to be boiled into mp grease. Pork for future use lhonld be nlud. l In scalding mm, the boiling mm sh‘ould be cooled con-Ida sbly, for i too warm it not: the lid! mm; of loosening It. Either have plum of help or convenient, App“:- can to 'l1'l7d the cucum- rapidly. Save the he“ by covering the Into: barrel or tank thertev" possible, And atonett banned I In these days “new prices for hsrrn pro- I ducts, A put of the fumer’e time can very ' profitably be employed in batcheriu"g as much meet es his household can use fresh, or cured, for future needs. There is also more or lees of is demand in the locsl mnr. ket for dressed accuses, especislly of hogs It u bent to kill the letter during the coldest westher. The night end morning before they use butchered the hogs should not be ted, u the resulting emptiness of the stem-ch end intestines 3“an the car. cess to be more easily dressed and the meet to cool more quickly. In cstchxng the uni- msls. do no: chase them to overheat the 1 blood and taint the fuah, nor bruise or whip them, es the meet is killed dong thew..- , end u pale and tasteless. Sticking the hogs through the throat to the heart kills end bleeds the Illinois st the some operation, I though A previous werll.direetod blow on the head stuns the bnin ted p"verttagrsurn, '. t w“ I gnu: " their wedding ' The "all ntnlks mny be fed whole, but lthe hr eones should be cut for heding. Even tiers. the cuttle will leave some of the hard butts. If one htd the menus and {militia for crushing the” hard wnted “elk. they would decompose in the man- ure help much inter. Some out the fodder All At once in the fall of the year, but gen- enlly it is better to cut u needed, or only s week in advance. The snocnlence of the stalks oozes oat more or less when out in small piecegnnd there is quite s percentage I of loss. Where n cutting machine is not owned, and it is necesury to borrow or hire one, the whole qnnntity will have to be out " onco:bnt nfter sll,cntting machines In sochup that it is quite essential to have one on the farm where mlny cattle ere kept. lithe stalks Ire cut when in a wet condition they will surely mould and spoil. endit is quite essential in havingthe whole crop cute: once to nee that the stalks Ire in the proper condition for mampulr non. Wise in Her Generation, 1 Feeding Fodder. Corn fodder, to give the best results mutt beexpoeed to the elemenza as little " possible. " lucked outside, the outer layer of aheevee should be kept all winter for protection, while tttone drawn from the inside, " much " poetible, should be used. Water-meted Ind frozen corn-stalk: prob- 1th represent u poor food Is any that zen be thrown in the cutie yard. As soon Alter hmeating u possible the stalks ehould be cured into the bun or stacked outeide properly for winter in such a wny that the min will be Ihed. Top upping is quite would to pro-ens the full nutritive nine of the fodder. It in always better etored in the burn. but with . good dry found-tum end capping, it will sand the expo-lire pretty well. In feeding, this outside Ihonld tirot be dilpoud of before tint in the ban in touched. hose. The pink: rot Around tho mil holes and soon each individual punk will fly "tlf one nep- upon an end. Besides it in itfiealt to secure A smooth wnlk with crouwiu f,,"thr,; A. to the planks. it inn mint: 0 to an inferior material. or Inchu is inclined to Iplinber. Let the planks be run through I plmer to make them all of t chickness. A walk made in this way will prove ulilhczory in use an" Villlul ration shown alidovnlkfnnd it. im tion, that " now in actmsi use and, l _ h d. ing very tirm And true. Lengthw , ps of 3x4 inch ltull'cre laid upon thrt rocks In,” bedded in tho ground, the broader _ than rocks sad the more tirmly eltlhnlheil the bottom Cree-wine over the lengthwise strip: In hid strip. of 3x4 inch tstuifjust the width of the walk, upon which the planks no laid lengthwise. A HidGWalk Ihonld never be laid with crosswise punks. Such A 'tlk in I continued source of annoy- la muly village. and farming communi- tiel the lidewllkl no constructed entirely oi plural". When thin in the cue it I! one of the gran“ importance, than they be properly laid. of decay or a tilting walk will soon follow constructionr The side. wnlk must. be hid up from the ground and u. must. have I broader, tirmer foundaticn that. III usually given it, if n is to remain useful for unv length of time. The illus- Her DitBeultr, Constructing a Plank Sidewalk Butchering on the Farm PRACTICAL FARMING. Cynical. 57lirt7i5F, f _ a: S A gill ot catholic adid Iddod to a bucket ot whitownh will kill the vermin in a hen. ham. lime. The luv. time they had met the squire eat in the Brluet pew of his village church, the walls of which held many tablets to the memory oi his ancestors. He, their des. ccudnnt, through mortgages and reduced rents, bed to train his daily bread by Gil, ing t'cospaaaertgerm, and inviting them to ride to the "Augel." Many examples of the vicissitudes of Ytarkahireiamilim, might be given. Thin the ladies of a family who were in . position frequently to entertain the Duke of Chi-once no recently u when he we. (panel-ed at York have been ep- plicente for eituetionn u governess”. A man who WI. the titular owner of most or, the lend in another villnge culled on the churehwardrnsa (who were his nominal tern. ente) end nked if they could give him an order for moves for worming the church, in he who muting hie living by lelling them. Auocher gentlemen in position, moving in the society of noblemen, any new be neon in the uniform of I porter " elation in hia naive county. Envely he" then people heed their poeitienl, And, instead of dough“ which A century beck would have u considered the only thing possible, via. swinging on their reletivel, they hove nohly resolved to do their best in reduced uéremnetenoee. T A York-hire View in London last month psid his 'bas fun to one who only ten years ago wu the Ignite ohm Eur Riding vil. "Rullo, old Sculls, how are you I" ' lord," Wag the quick reply, "if you 30mg to take the y from my Dame, 1 you will add it to your own." _ The late Vilconnt Mouck was Viceroy of Canada. at the time the Act of 1567, creat- ing the Dominion, Wu pueevi, and that alone is 3 title to distinction. But Lord Mouck, any: London Morning, is also well known in connection with a "chestnut" which, if not true, is surely well invented. His lordship. when an Irish peer, sat in the Common, in Libernl member for Portsmouth and going u to the late M r. Vincent Sonny, another 'Jlll'l,lt,1 Irish member, he said, "Rullo, old Sculls, how are you 2" "My lord," woe the quick reply, "if you are going is tgik'oihey from my Dame, I beg; ’ In his twpital speech to the Royal Society yeyerarca model of after dinner oratory '-ProteatiorBuxley pictured the time when, in pursmne of Professor Dewar', recent experiment: in low temperature chemistry, the substitute for chumpegne at Royal Society dinners will be "hquid oxygen, bien truppe." The Professor wondered, when the-timulmt was Iced oxygen, "to [ what length! the eloquence of the speakers would go." Why. obviously, the upecchm would be "gassay," and the banquet “a t.-, " frost 1., Von Bnlow often expressed the wish that that his death his brain should be angrily onmined, with the view of due. covering the can of the dreadful head. when to which he was subjected, and to which he donbtlen attributed his accen- cricitien of much and conduct which pro- voked no much uninvomble comment. _ Rev. Dr. Phebe Hensford,the well-known I Universnlisc elm-gym», enjoys the rare distinction of having been the tirst woman cheplain wpmido oven. body oi legislators. This experience we: hers in the yeers of 'ro and '72 " New linen, Conn. For such services she reached the stipulated pay given men for like offiee, end was presenwdl With A cheque on pey day u were the law. l leQl’l. I Jamel L Houghteling, of Chicago, the founder of the, Episcopal organization of lay workers known as the Brotherhood of St. Andrew, u n prominent banker bad business mm of Lbs: city. He is a graduate of Yule, Ind in spiel. of the hun 'dust his bunineu mu we engroux'ng. does as much work for no Episcopal Church, of which he: " an enthuaiutic member, as many elergy. 1 men. John Alkhnm, the Northamptonshire poet, died recently st Wellingborough, his native plums, " the Age of sixty-nine. m was the author of nanny poems and sonnets. his lint volume lining been published in 1863. For the greater put of his life he Wu B working nhoemsker, and thus gained for himself the nnmo of “The Shoemaker Poet." Sir Pntrick Keenan, the chief commits. lioncr of Irish mtionnl education, who died recently, bud been connected with nationnl eduution All his life, and gained bin high petition through his own merits and ex Hence. He nu u member of the Irish Envy Council. Iris residence at Glunevin wu the historic Deville, where Dr. Dolmcy lived Lad entertained Swift ami Stella. I Dr. Edwud S. Holden, director Lick 0tmervutory, hu just n through the Mercury of Sum,- of Meiningen. the diploma tad cross! 0 mander of the 8axe.Ernestine Order, [order Wu founded in 1690 and ream. tn 1883, and in given in recuguionn tistguialted services in high oilicisl l" either military or civil. Some Reverses of Fortune Clwydfudd, the Welsh archdruid, has just died, " the we of M. He lusd won may mods]: for poetical composition, and since 1860 had, my nrcndruxd, proclaimed ewh Welsh Eiatoddtod. HI: zirengtl: and vitality were wonderful; when 84 ymra old he climbed to the top of Snowdon. The llboring classes in Austria are mic-ting the question of universal nullruge. There u no doubt that the sentiment, in favour of it u duly increuing. Although in; with evident. reluctance than this is Admitted. the sentiment. in fur. becoming of such proportion: u to force itself on public attention. The Prince of Wales bu presented to the Club house " Cove! 21 canon to be used in firing salutes. The cmnon are of the time of George the Fourth, and were taken from the Roy“ Adelaide, 5 toy warship thst the Sailor King built for his Amuse- meat. on the Thunea, And, when not in training, keeps himself well by rowing, swimming, and hunting. He bu an mcomc than might "tufr I duke. M. Cannon. the English jockey, will robably lend the list of winning riders in t'fl'll'lli..ll'd your._ H? Ga a bout-house The Resin! protester oi medicine at Oxford, Sir Henry Aeltad, bu ryigyed on the icon of Lie Li failing Tiifiti'.- tlie Henry in in his eightioth year, and the tittiou, year of his public work. lt in aid that the latest victim of golf in England in the Mu'quiu of Salisbury, who, in spite of his 64 yearn, was drawn into the - recently while staying With Mr. Bulfonr. The pnctice of employing women as "dverrtiiing aolieiton, by the Igenciea and elm periodic) in growing, " the women hue proved quite to cspable u the men in this field. Ink-mung Items About son" or the Greg! Folklol’lhc World. French 'sreltwologiesl science has tsuffered u very serious Inn in the death, at Touris, of M. Leon PAN-bro, the [unwed author of " La Reminunco en France." .71” . r, , ' illllMltll i. g ., " " ”if; h 'iii', f/i' / i'i'-l)llllllviii'iiiiii,lr , - l " Tf 1 l . Eilitl. [f PN . .a‘ l IN \ "r"'")),,? q V (li 5’ _ VN '., \fi‘ V, W . i.'iiivi2.i.t..iiu','; flu“ PERSONAL POINTERS recogmuon of dis. igh oiticial positions lixeccor of the just rcuvivad State of Sue- RUBINSTEIN AND A PO For one mm .who joins the revolution there no thou-und- ohnen who no unruly in nympnthy with the efforts to have done with the pro-om, regime, and to obtain to their country tree om And reprolanuliv ‘Governmonb, which would nuke the Ru aun- muun of their own destinies. An behind them than no hundreds of thou- and: And millions of people when” harine logic enough to fully :Idhore to A column l don-J program” in the European um no duUtiMed with the pro-out regime, rd “in chums- in the otrttatitttthmat me. The bulk of the Russian 515105101] clue is entirely European in their culture , end for them autocrncy is now" mach nu obsolete. ebeutd institution " for the intel. ligent foreign oheervera who look upon Russian things from outside. Hence the deep-rooted nnugonilm between the Government end All the ethic-ted clue-en in thireountry, Antagonism which found ita moat glaring manifestation. in the ID- cnlled Nihililm, but in much broader than; may be judged by this extreme manna-l ting of dileontent. This 1 Russia Advances. Tl.cre is one fundamental fact which must be when into account by those who wish to form A clear idea of the Rue-inn situation. It is that within the Inst. thirty years Russia hes made an enormous stride in advance, notwithstanding the elegant immobility of her politics] institutions She has become quite a. newcouniry. The economic conditions which modern BO. ciology declnres to be the keynotes of national life have changed since the emin- cipmion of the eerie, assuming grsdueliy we European type. But more striking "illhtt,teAtiii, intellectual growth. _ i 10m Win hits “and oiserts of "Christ" be brought out And live I The time and ocu- bio]: may yet be npe for in primeutation to the public. I asked him where to address him in cue any one could be found who would under. take rhe veuture-it would cost. he said $40,001) to bring the opera out, but it could be completed md presented in unborn time He answered : "Oh, anywhere ; Pain. Dresden, Leipaic. cure of IN oolt. They all know wherever I mny be." a; One evening Mrs. May gave a dinner for it Rubinstein and Piotti, after which the reel feast begun. They pleyed. us only then m two could play, Rubeutisin's great concerto re in B lint. In some way the people had J. learned oftheevent. and under the loggia, lt. and on the lake in boats and gondola, they 1, were assembled in crowds to listen to the h famous Artists. They were both M. t y best, and played like musical Titans. d Young Rubinstein. in hisinvslid chair, was 'e wheeledinto the room And listened to his f father, as it proved, for the last time. Now he hes peacefully in the little village : cemetery, end his mother will come some- f times and visit his grave and be the guest i of Mrs. Mny when the villa is completed. ' rccBrysmrrs's (men iioiiin' I at the end of hi. life was the development r of sacred opera. He turned a. deaf enr to I [ all suggestion of its impracticability. Even i _ his wire. who realized ill tutility, could notdimutadehim from his dream, He would I Wm eloquent on the subject. " Yes." he t hill to me, " I wouldcome sguin to America, l but not to play, except. of course, inciden- ' tally. I would go to bring out there my t sacred opera oi 'Christ.' You hove rich men who could easily undertake this enterprise. Your people are more enter. prising than they are in the Old World. 'l if people could go to obertunmtrrgisu and listen day after day spellbound to this great drama, how much more powerful " would be the impression when given with q all the resouroea of vocal and orchestral th music. * "People Are tired of opera " now given. They make love on the "age-slit: "lb and kill each other-it is a musical love story. But this grates: of all Unmet. the sacred drama, which appeals to the moat profound monument. of the human rams-it, religious c4etnettt.th" in deepest of All, and survival :11 other sentiments.” i own 1315mm '. . "Ah," he said, “when one A has many hair sad few nose, it is any to " catch likeness." [ , Mme. Rubinstein impressed one with her _ womanly charm And sweetness of manner, us well as latent strength of character. Her absolute devotion to her invalid so: In. touching in the extreme. She Wu quite plesscd with the attempt of one of the, party to Amuse her son by sketching his likeness, which pissed the time agreeubly 1 without axing his strength to talk. After his death she sent Across the waters message I of grateful remembrance for the now much prized sketch, saying she now understood why it was nude fuller in the cheeks thus he then appear-sq. _ iii in the morning he denoted several hours to composition and practice. From the room reserved for this purpose,at the north and ot the hotel, would issue wild surge: of wonderous melody. We used to gather in l the room nextzo this one and listen in rapt l silence until the impromptu reeital was over. Miss ErrumsJueh, now Mrs. Well. mnn,wns a mnsient guest, travelling with her mother and titutets. A meeting of the _ two artists wu arranged in Mrs. Mny’a salon one morning, when Miss Jnch tang many of Rubinstein's songs to his an accompaniment. Miss Juch sang as though inspirud,tsad at the close Rubinstein turned and gave her a low bow and warm grasp ot tlwlmnd, with an expression which tton- veyed for more than mere words. I in Lhe summer of 1893 it wu my good fortune to meet a notable coterie numb. led at the Hotel Bellevue, Cndcusbbin, on _ Lake Como. Here Rubinstein Wu in. "stalled with his wife and youngest Ion, m invalid, “randy in the Advanced stngu of consumption. t bright, have youth, the kept up his cheerful spirit to the hat, sud died in the only Autumn, a little leae than thyeisr before hie father was to follow him. l Piotti, the 'cellint, hu 3 villa near by and WMHt frequent member of the circle who were wont to memble in the plenum puriora of Mn. Col. Muy, of New York. A "mural Party on lake U'ortto-iba. nlrlll'l Great Ambition It the Lsat Wan " Produce ll- Sun-ed opera. RubinsteiuU dent}: cum» 3 sense of per- ttoutsl loss to all who have ever come in comm: with him. We have never for. gotten his first mud only coming to this country. We were nlwnys stirred by the occasional announcements oi A pouiblc visit again. 1 REMINISENCES OF ONE WHO MET THE GREAT PIANIST IN 1893. two at the piano called I; eomtnettUrom Rabimste Prt. SINGINL A EAST? I'EXFIL S rfi2gj'ift1'tit(t'ti'iaj#f RUBIN STEIN. forth this mment his 'when one in any to 'iRibi' mi very Holden: bean "ktViiiGliisGria "In “other one, mentioned by Briana do Boiunonc, 3 young lady who had - about: my romantic or otherwise “has disposition. yho had rend has for nova In the one of the suicide ot lovers Mr. Ferraro rhinlu that it is the women tether hen the men who have the courage of their despair. The woman in nlwnya more cour- Lgeous at the extreme moment. And when the man would purlcy with deuh she urge. him on. The notorious cue of Bsumd and _ Trans-ea, which made each an excitement _ in France tb few yelrl ago, is I one in point. "It we! the women. llle Trounot, who conceived the idea, who persuaded her lover. and prepared everything for the pur. pone. At the hour fixed on the fatal even~ ing, she, without institution. urged Bench] to out. the eneriee of her puke, end when Kennel, seeing the blood,gu'e u every idea of suicide, end wished to ue upger wound, the not only ruolutely minted, but forced him to givs her poison and " Inez-hoot r. Child murder is the usual verdict in these ones, but it is " beyond doubl. that, payohtrl?gimuly upeeking. they are simply cues of completed suicides. thet the de. struction of her children in for the mother time” an integral part of her own suicide. end, we my any. in complement." The not of these mothers. Mr. Ferrero edmite, in " horrible," bat he adds. " the lenti- ment leading to it in noble, profound t) these crimes, therefore, cnnnot produce the horror and loathing we feel for other murderous deeds, but rather crate e {eel- ing of alum and apprehension, mixed with narrow." " At other times mother; have killed Lheir children tor other rennin: A certain woman called Aresreillea, two year‘- Igo. in avillnge in France, committed inlaid: after she had killed her son, who was epileptic and of defective intellect, u Ihe feared that after her death the son would be ill-treated in the lumily, on account of hll idiocy. Another mother in Switzerlnud, ogsin. resorted to the ume horrible expedi- enbbecauso her daughter, being on idiot, mu to be rem‘oved to a lunatic uylnm." ( imprisoned for some petty theft, seeing herself reduced to the most absolute desti. tation, sold her hurt puma ot furuiLure and with the proceeds thereof one evening gave her five children a relatively sumptuous dinner; after that. when the children had gone to sleep she Ila-angled every one of Lhem and then tried to destroy herself. . .... UL, =', A- . --- " Of tll the terrible trogediea which the economic arisen of our times have no fre. quently produced Among the working clau- el. few, nerha ' Are In dreadful u thoee where su'1r,ll'ratll'e'r"l, before doing may with themselves, hove killed their childron and ended a life so full of prlvnion and misery that it had grown to be beyond en- durance. About six yen rs, ago u Putin, I woman of the name at Souliine, whole has. band for a. long lime out of work hud been Ode of the Ipecini features of the suicidal mmin is the " multiplex suicide." Sny- Mr. Ferraro l More men than women commit suicide on “mount of domestic unhappiness, for the apparent renaon tint, on the womln in probably a mother, her affection for her children will not permit her todeaert them. In France and for A long period, us against fifty men who killed lhemnolvea become they had been Abundonod by their WIVGI, and forty-one who did no on Account of their wives' dotth, only fourteen women Ire found to have committed suicide because of their huabmdl’ nbnndonment or death. The cause is to be found in the character of a woman's love, which'Georges Sand hss [described as a kind of voluntary slavery under the man. which according to the nstursl disposition of each woman, involves, in a lawn or higher degree, her desire fur "li.iuscritiee and suffering for the man she loves; female love, therefore, enjoys such pains and revives in it, for it finds its greatest plenum in abtseimriom" When the tortures of hopeless love become more than she can bear she kills herself instead of killing the cause of her unhappiness i We read, for instance, in the letter of an unhappy woman: "You deceived me; for two years you promised to marry me. and new you abandon ms. lior ive you, but I csnnot live without you." Sue can htrdly think that the woman who could write thus and act as this poor thing did was a woman of well-balanced mind. "When the penal of croued love no beyond endurance there are but two forma of reaction against them-crime or suicide. Thoec, indeed-whether men or qrornt)ti.-. who heve been deceived by their eweet. hurts, unless they become resigned Ind‘ gradually cancel them from their minds, will either kill their feithleee lover: or destroy themselves. The quution u, therefore, why the relation among women nppeals more frequently in the shape of suicide than murder." tGsr for the ptryehologitusl came of this preponderance. Mr. Ferraro bu reduced the problem in the {alloying mugner: With love an the “use. there Ire mere women who commit suicide thus men, except in Fame and Email. Thus, to quote Mr. Ferraro, “poverty being the greatest sociel weakness, it does not in . women constitute an impnloe to commit suicide. but is rather an chemole to seif-deutruotion, and strengthens in her the desire to live end protect her offspring in the dengeru of the buttle of life. " BITTER DEATH TItAN bison“; More] disgrace or the dread of it lends‘ meny women to suicide. The followmg letter Wu written by I young girl before she committed suicide, and Mr. Ferraro thinks that "ita striking simplicity could not be surpassed by the most powerful page of my grunt Author": "l have tried in every possible manner to obttsin work, but 1 found only hard heart or conree people to whose shameful proposals 1 would not listen." Another youn womsn who took her own life wrote: ‘5 could get ngood situation and be rich, but I prefer to die wretched then live a disgraced womnn." Mr. Ferrero therefore asserts then “the foremost function of iife, nutrition, is rersly the cause of suicide in women." ' A wom-n has more courage lad more rebound in her. A men who is mined, in other words, will bring grunt misery upon his {Amily by tasking bu, life. He loner the helpless women m4 children to beer up under the blow that his felled him. The mother's love is so much stronger then the hstherU chm she wizl live with her children if she cannot. take them with her. It would never occur to her to ulna heron life end leave her children to struggle “one. Mun ha grater pride of pine. than wo- man. If he in“. from A high ponitiou he prefer! to die nthor than to live in I lower \Iphere. “Mam" says Mr. Forum, "ts much prouder of high social position Lhnn woman, because the principal him of his work and of his struggles in to obtain such high nocinl standing; Ind u fimuttnil ruin mum defeat, it "tl'" him the uhupcu unguinh, jun u the loan of 3 gnu "t does to n general." Two ('AUSIH " 'tt'rc'Hrk. The causes of suicide seem to be ususlly two-dotitutioa Ind low. Destitution daea not. lend so frequently to suicide Among women in among men. The reason for thi. is "id to be thst the iinrrrrgitsl ruin of a min means the ruin of his Wife and denghu tors, perhaps of a mother and sisters. be} well " of himself. The women. of conree,’ shsre the consequences of the dinner, but they have not the responsibility of it upon their shoulders. Prof. Lombroso and Mr Ferrero egree that all physical sud morsl pins are felt loss keenly by women then by men-which is a wise srnngement of Providence, considering how msny more they hnve. (",'i'i"i'i:'i,-i,it; onenor tor Love-ite Innu- oucr orl'overty and Martial Unhappl- nenn--Lettern Left " Warm-n Hulda". William Ferrero, who humude ' study lot suicide in all ita phases. contributes a very interesting article on the aub- joet. He Wu surprised to tInd that suicide was more common :mong men thun women, the proportion being one female to seven male suicideu. I SUICXDE or' LOVERS. HOW IT HAPPENS THAT MORE MEN THAN WOMEN TAKE THEIR LIVES. SLAVERY UNDER run nus DOMESTIC U NIIAPI'INISS. M CLTH'LIX SUICIDE. ',ftti a 1iiiEi, 357.1. ""F " ”an...“ (,,,ircr', N Hi" Mil a: ii/ai . 1L _ WOMEN SUICIDES kw?! Eighteen venturuome tourist: lost their lives in the Alps this season. For orrr Filly Yen". MRS. Wrsst.ow's Soo'riuxu Svm'irhns been med by millions of mothers for their children while teething. It disturbed at night and broken of your rest by a trick child unifying and crying with pain of Cutting Teeth sen: at once and get n bottle of “Mrs. Wiuslowu Soothing Syrup" for Children Teething. It willrelieve the poor little sufferer immcdia tely. Depend upon it, mothers, there is no‘ mistake about it. It cures Diarrhoea. re- gulates the Stomach and Bowels, cures Wind Colic, softens the Gum: and reducen Iafhun- mation, and gives tom and energy to the whole system. "Mrs. Winslow1i Soothing Syrup" for children teething it pleasant to the taste and in the prescription of one of the but female phyuciaul and unru- in the United sum. Price twenty-live cents I bottle. Sold by all druggiltl throughout 'ht world_. “Be can ayd uh: [or "Mira Wessr.ow's Soo'rmsc Sunni-3' ’ The third page or the Toronto Daily Mail is noted for."' Want." advertuement'i. If you want a lituation. I mechwic. I basineaa, I machinery, lodging, ifyou want. to find out when any one ttr, Idvertm in the Toronto Daily Mail Ind rend the ad- vertilemenu on the third pugs :of that paper. The ohm-go is two can“ 1 word each insertion. or ten cents a word for six insertions Addreu the Moi], Toronto. Cumin. _ Bourget In; described this pltyfhologitmi phenomenon very exactly in his "rhueiirle. " Even the atudy of suicide nmong woman My; Mr. Ferraro, sadly and with truth, show once more “that it in woman's destiny to suifer rather than to cause suffering; Lo "ifer for her own inultn, And often, ulna '. for the hum of others." “Gin me the: proof of your love sad inithfulneu, ehe wrote to tum, slludiug to her propoul of suicide. liar lover demurred bus Bheimuated until she succeeded in per- suuiing him, And one morning they were found together, killed by pouch. Caner Ally when the idea of joint suicide arises in tho mind of s wnmnn. it grows, “has 'Ttriusrdimsry strength. and becomes Almost. I fixed idea. She thinks of nothing else and leaves nothing undone to obtain ‘hor nim: she persists in her “tempts, sud if she does not succeed at once she will try Liz-in Ind again till at last she Atkins her objectnmd having once wrened the men's consent. from him, she will wuch lo the last moment then his courage does not fail or slucken. A worn-n of such disposition is: terrible (longer. and utmost. A true entence oi deuh to nlovcr whose in. shibitory humltimsot the brain are not ex- tremely strong. Be it sooner orluer, she will get the better of his instinct of self. preservation And lend him to suicide. " lhe came to know Hun. her parents would not marry her to the mm aha loved, wrote And proposed ioinb tsuicide Lo him l mad as the young man " first wu not dupe-ed to ugree to it, the tried to per-undo him in every pouible manner. Ihe came to know IhM. Acomplete stock of Whips. Combs. Brushes, Bits, etc, kept on hand. Repairing nromptly attended to. a?! illitri11ir1ery, First-Class Workmanship guaranteed. Richean-ica paid for Raw Furs Is still in his old stand on Lambton Street, near the Post _0ffiee, where he is ready to till all orders for anthem; Jan. 20th, 1899. HARNESS; 535%?! Lumber, Shingles and Lath always Having Completed our New Factory we are now prepared to FILL ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY. We keep in Stock a large quantity of Sash, Doors, Mouldings, Flooring and the differ- Sash and Door Factory. ent Kinds of Dressed Lumber for outside sheeting. Our Stock of DRY LIIMRH is w-m Large ho that all ord We are also getting up New Rigs of all kinds ALL wow; GlAllANyr.ry). And get your Buggies and Waggons Repaired at Lowest Rates. April 2lth, mm was ” a'rt'l' "7'Mifi'i,iy/; c, Mrs. E. DAWQSON’S. , HEAVY AND LIGHT J] HARNESS, ii' SADDLES, SI BRIDLES, f COLLARS, Etc. New Stock Horse Blankets; CHAS. LEAVENS, Jr., Come 2 Come 3 Painting Done in the Latest Styles ii Millinery. Fall Miillliinerv McKNIGHT d; LENAHAN "iriMBodaigiiesr,r- In S10:- can be complaints. They do not. as most in: and so many other medicines 'ltr,'d theirettoct or produce aftermnstim‘ and»: nice to take. 25 cents I i “1 $419,326 deaie. A “00x lo Ilotvirx;r,s.-Uuc. bottle of Englinh 31nd“ Unimum. cmnplctcl) rcuun'cd new!) {mm my home. [take plcauncm rcconnn'cmiiu: the wunmly, asit net: with mysterious proruptatemr ir the tvtuoval from horses of hard, Raft or mallow“! lumps” Mood spuyin, splints, curbs, uwccuy. [tides Am] sprama (iv-11:0: Rosa, Farmer, Mark hggLQgg Sold by’McFlfhle & 0.. Tho two tiehis of Waterloo 1nd Lindon Ire ench covered with I crop of grim popping every year. Spnuc’s Powdeis. each package ot .which contains two preparations, on m , round wooden-trox, the cover a: which forms , measure for one dose, In Immediate relief for Sid: Headache and Stomach, aha? Neurrlgia, and all kindl of nervous pains. andunother in on (troy: ito 4 of one in an ordinary which acts on.the Bowels. Liver Smmb, forming a never failingpern‘ ffrttertyterttJor' "I! new; and Slough Eng”? Spnvin Linnaeus "mono Mt Hard. at: or Callouaed Luna I “It Blemishes from horses, Blood Spying; Curbs. Splints. Sweeney. Ring-Bone. Mitlo, Sprain. all Swollen Thrash. Coughs, etc. Save Mo by an of one, home. Warranted by MoFuluo * Co. 'Rm.rz, " Sn: Uucss.--Diutreoin Kidney and Bladder diseases relief in " gout; tho "Great South America Kidney Cum" This not remedy in . great surprise and delight on on Account of ita exceedin promptneu in relieving pain in the 'ii?'ii'ii5,,?i,'ifj, back.) In my Brt oft I) n nury in' male, fugue. It uneven 2't'ntel of: vista ad pain in pasting it ulmolt inane? a‘istely. It you In. quick relic! and can in u your remedy. Sold by MoFulun t Co., Dragging. Single stone: in the WMII trurrouodUg Bulbec weigh 3.000.000 pounds etch. f And when you have 25 Ammonia or " , Puritan Soap “Rappers send them to m. and a three cont suing for postage, uni we will mail sou F EE. . banana: picture “liable for framing. A list , pictures around each bar. Ammonia. f Soap has no cqunl. We ”command it. Write your mum, plainly and nddml: W. A. BRADSHAW & Co.. 48" and 50 LomUrdSt., Toronto. Sold by all Renard manhunt: udq ”been. Give it A trial. The gift of song is never panned by A bird of prey. The product of the wax tree of the Ando- cannnz. be distinguished from beeswax. Havr Your Ameni- 'io'"' “Tarpon CHARLES LEAVENS, AT 65 J. MC KECHNIE. itEl'ei%ihl _ m :0 so that all orders -_- m . - , I) 3:113:12. Try his famous Japan Tea. An asty general _trrpeerua, ' Crockery, w, ingers& Wringol Stands. . " " 103 W. & C. Tsets 44 Dinner Sets 85 pieces $7.00 " " 100 " I ‘n-‘l‘ Crockery and grocery CRYSTAL SETS E.lum-'I‘he day "berm Guelph. L'oushs-5iouda, Leforo Elan Fur. Irotviltun-crrstrl Palace Grounds, th day alter Guelph. r.c.stcssci-- Final Fridnyin each month; yrrgt:s--Tlutrsuv. following Mount Fores I/ts"")---" before Orangevillo ursugeville-8eeodd Thursday in ac mouth. _i'letrerton--aronday before Orange“! Pus/laik-Tuesday before Ornagevilicle kjielbttrtte--wedtfesuus baton Onngevillq Wulkytun-Lastt Wednesday in each womb. The best place to bay you _ MECHANICS INSTITUTE. Nat I Bsll--opeu every Tuesday evening from 7 tot) o‘clock. and every Saturdny 'lrom 2 to4 p. m. Annual fee " Dr. I (7,eit Pres. C. Run-go Bee. Mm. Mull“. month. Jcelvls--First \Vedesdny in and: month Um ristou-Feiday before the Guelph Fa: Druytou- Saturday bole“: _0ttfltrls. Dv.ihaua--Third Tttesihrp in each mend. l'fieeiille-MonGy before Duran; iLatyuvcr--M auday before Duhsm. MouutForetrt-Third Wednouhy in not --------------.----.- ‘PUBLIC SCHOOL. Durham School l Baud meet: on an lat Sum-dz, in Librarian. a. Board meet: on In. HEIRJI; "fi every mouth. Dr. atus,Cltasrasaet. Thea. Allen. Principal SAUGEEN TENT, 501.11.. No. 164. meets on the tirrt and third Tuesday. ot every month. Thou. Brown, Com. J? C. Knudsen. R. K. arse assortment of Fancy Crystals &c. SONS OF SCOTLAND. BEN NEWS CAMP NO. M, meets in S. of S. Ball, Friday on or More full moon. Georg. Binnie. Chief. Geo. Banal. Sec. This, Society 03ers iuuursnee of [81000 or 5200031 low rater. and and} initiator, F0420. L. Grunt. SLW., A. McKenzie. Recorder. DURHAM LODGE. A.0.U.W.. man in the Hall over Guam old store. on Ie.2.ed {and at: Monday of every month. COURT DURHAM .No.It l.I.O.F. Night of Meeting. on second nnd last Thurs. Juy in each month. John Livingstone. Chief Range. B. Burnett, Recording Sec. seat, JOHN CAMERON. DURHAM L. o. L. NO. 632. Night of Meetire, org Thursdly or before full {noon in each month. Wm. A Anderson. DURHAM LODGE NO. 806 OP A. F. k A. M. Night of Meeting. Tomduy on or before full moon of each mo: th. Visiting I-retbolu welcome. Thos. Brown. W. M. Geo. Russell, Sec. POST OFFICE, Oihee hours from 8 I. u. to 7 p. In. Arch. llncKenzu. Posttmwtcr. GREY LODGE NO. 169 I.0.0.F. Night “I Meeting every Monday evening at 3 o'eloek, m tbs Odd Fellows Hall. Visit- " Lxethoru welcomed. W. B. Yolk! Sec. Deputy. a. m. to My, Serviee every Sslpbul and 7 p. m. Snbbslh Sal Prnyer mowing every We " tt p. In. D in ‘EEEHANICS' INSTITUTE at w. J. CON 's 011. Paton. Sabbath Serum at It a. 1' and 7 p. Sunday School an I Bike chm at 9:30 tl, Church Wardens. w. B. Voile: Ind T. Wlmmore. STORE. TRINITY CH CECE DURH AM DIRECTORY 3. Iftrsultmerit,er orders his paper to In stopped It a. certain time, and tho published eonunues to send,the subscriber“ bound to ply for it if he takes it outq,ttlse, post ottiee. This proceeds upon be ground In! I nun must pay {or-what he uses. There cu: be no leg.) diseontin-untit pa mxontism-de. 2. hay person who was a papa trom the post office, whether diremd to " name or “other. or whether ho has Bute scribed or not is ro-ponsible for the PV. TT, I. "layperson orders hiapspor (“scan tinned. he must pay all mongol. or the publisher may commas to mend it can! pl)- mentiu made, and eolleetthe whole “zonal :lmlbor it be taken from the ottur. or not» THE DURHAM We all the weak “taxation or re- masters and suLseriberuo tufollowiiy nopsisoz'lI-t- eewrpttperlaorst ohuu Services-ll Lunch: Sun- ut any month. G'enelg Services- m. tirst Sundn' of every month. ) 3.1.1). lhird Suanv ofeveey month. C' CHURCH AI‘TIST CHURCH ..ESHYTERIAN CHURCH E1 HODIST CHURCH. "May Servim. morning " 11 B. m. mill School and Bible ems " 2:80 . Preaching at 7 p. m. Week even- Service-is-inf evening. rennin REV" W. MCGREGOB. Paton. Monthly Fairs " meeting at. 8 p. m. u on Monday uremnl P. EV. R. MALONEY, Futon J. C. POMEROY. Paton. famous Nagaxikt An assortment of EGISTRY "FFiCE. Thoma w, Registrar. John A, Munro. -giu&rlr. Ottiee ham trom 10 s N ewspaper LBWB. sauna. School " 2:30.13; in: every Wednesay evening In cute-2:: . Quiet m

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