Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 15 Sep 1898, p. 3

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m you. I have a". so lllpll‘od me With lOVO. as young". t Your feet. Wm [or V” asked be, 881- n his wife to mark. uplied the astonish. mow as well at bpeare to have tak. Lingâ€"I don‘t under. ntruck dumb. Ho t. made a low bow, taco between the l “bachelor's hall.” imo he was scaled of fancy necktie; gloves and other a of an old bache- DR TROUBLE. I that we genonllyt which yet contdld mud wisdom. wd } been the blow ‘01 5]., then. to '9'" hours i ”3th which n“ id Clark nought. said or did; [era is no account, I his first love, and . was his last. ’Es Bums. that is my wife.” nomad Clark. “Why no in this matter?“ lived you. my dear ave deceived your. to. This in my sis no other lady now it half-WM; to have it} llld I littla mung to her entering, canlht for the you ”'0 90min. .. Mtg. 65mm, at. ng to bar 1.“ '0 Mt. Clark, ox- the u Thor? in hOIitg a 1m fl)- is “rut-3 uu uu; 0|. 1! 1 9drth his wi It in the Sex .hldor’l wi -€}'moon tt 3 Panda and 'm "Mine; hiS'O‘ nation! She died young. Milton’s mend wife died a year after marriage In his third, retribution smote him, tube was a terror he had (burned. More their muriage, he had never In her. She survived him 53 years. Id, wording to Johnson, cheatod hchiidren. Wycherney, the poet, was adroll dog, I“! in Me he married unhappily. Ten days before his death he took an- ‘her partner to spite his nephew and hr. He could die [narrinrl ha. mm. out. Shakespeare wedded a woman much ids: than himaelf. In his will he .1: the lady his “second-best bed.” which may have had a subtle lenti- untai meaning, like Pickwiok’l chops 3d tomato sauce. When Milton was 35 he married Mary Pom], the daughter of n gay, bustl- ing house. She didn’t enjoy 4o’oiock mg and long prayers, and in a loath ran away from home. Subse- mncty she came back and fell on her has iu himâ€"and he used the scene Ithe material for Eve’s begging for Adams pardon in his account of the m: 1e; muon b limping up to it at it s “ -aud 3:11.?” 8110“"the is own poetry HG W“ tug fellow with 300106851 r 3120 Has gentle, and not over- If; 30 he deserted her and the" 3 life was embittered by h“ “1’1"” ' for Mary Anne 058' m Tm; "Maid of Athens was ‘ t F" 01 .‘Ime \Iacri, wife of tBfl‘ 21.'mcn‘” :" Mine in such arabblo rout m: those \\ ho are out would Iain get :mmy left on earth.” Chaucer, m ml! married one of the ladies 1 up Queen’s bedchambor, wrou: P ’3 wife was not only an .1- pandet ,mt housekeeper. but a. fine liter- maxim. who helped Alphonse at his ”,3, Cooper and Hawthorne Wm W ”warmed by their wives to ha- y niting their masterpieces. Thoma My dropped architecture to become .mvglilt at 1118 wife’s urging. Max owl’s translator and literary helm, hm English wife. But these men mere not poets. Wo- m who marry poets play ”a game of “able or quits.” There was Dante. He 34 gwife and seven children after gating down. but he never forgot, his ”rice and poor Mrs. Dante Wasn’t ,mmed to forget her, either. "when-- power she appeared before him, he had 3m; :u'fhxlys le Buff (Lotte) H.5- .;'.‘. ' may ahrtle affair l9, 'tW‘ehEir marriage they lived to- |§1 AL atyflghg years until her hm'flnti‘: Wldower fell in love :‘SQMMW 12320:), and later with mm ‘ S 8- Goethe, lib nghy . ahnnnon... . n b 10” f” or “001, says the author of u “a book. " ve affairs of Famou- her.” Confucius was so y his wife that he had to re he could work in who are in would fain get. Dir“): After “GI-0t" r11"?!" Chlrity Meix- ' ’ Winch” he devot- n Athens. Byron ife and she couldn’t ions in the house for not, to sneak 01‘ mari- 0 they parted. ‘u .Vuv vv â€"_ sigh. Gulbsldl did find such a wo- ma, who “tun went into battle by hi- ddo. Nolan: an “love in Quebec w ”I” Wlbu Du lav-.- â€"â€"___- loved him, too, and when he died ehe refused to marry thb proud Duke of Sqmerset, because she "wouldn’t per- . Lawyers have had their share of mar- rlage tribulations. Bacon and Coke were rivals for the hand of a lady who chose the latter, and made him desperately unhappy. Doctors marry cannily. They can judge women well. Thus Erastus Dar- win made extensive inquiries about Mrs. Pole before he married his second wife. Abernathy told his lady that he had no time to "make love.’ and she must take him yes or no. P.D.Q. She took him. _ was too good for him, and heartened the poor, spiritless fellow by sea, and on‘ land as best. she could. Once when a mob began throwing stones at him she stood at his side shouting, “Now, George, play the man for God.” ' râ€"v" â€"â€" Mrs. John Wesley was eterror, and went on occasion even so far as hair- pulling, for which the saintly life of her spouse certainly gave little pro- vocation. ‘ A The most bitterly debated marriage ever made must have been that of Mar- tin Luther, whose wife used to scold him heartily, though she had been a gentie nun. Swift. loved his Stella, was secretly married to her, some day, and after he died, alock of her hair was found in his desk, labeled, "Only a woman’s hair.’ Sterne was amean and unfaithful husband, but in general clergymen have been guilty of nothing worse than nagging. Many may have forgotten that Cardinal Manning was married before he left the English church. His wife died after four years of avery happy union. Whitfield’s wife also died in four years. somewhat to his relief, as he confessed; though she Thomas Carlvle’s marriage has been more written about than that of any other man, however great. Both he and Mrs. Carlyle were cheated of their first loves, and there was, besides, 80' cording to Prof. Peck, another cause for unhappiness between them. Mrs. Carlyle was very near agenius her- self, and alm;)st as nervous as her fidg- ety spouse. Once, while suffering from headache, she threw her teacup at him â€"of course, with every bad aim. And after her death, how the sad and lonely man missed her! and called on all the world to miss her also, which was un- reasonable. wâ€"v‘râ€"râ€"â€"--v v. tlc, obeved fairly well, loved devotedly, and missed, after her deaih, very much. Johnson had alow Opinion of women Who, he said, could neither make a good book of cookery or even dress in good taste, but oh, how he could flat- ter the pretty giria in his elephantine way! - ’“w'fi “IV "OJ. John Paul Richter said that wo- man’s soul as well as her body, is-bound In an eternal corset, but he seems to have been “happy though. married.’ cess who was reading one of his stories. They corresponded, and after her prince dled Balzac- was promoted to the vacant place in her heart and great domain. .Dt. Johnson was gross, fat, short- mghted, scarred by sorofula, and a mg at table. At 26 be married awo- gnn ‘of 46, whom he disciplined alit- ycuuur, 5 Jewel, a woman of sense and spirit. with whom he lived most happily. But oh, Jeremy Bentham! When a young man he proposed to a girl and : was refused. At 60 he tried again and l was again refused by the same woman. When he was 80 he wrote that she: had always been in his thoughts since in Youth she gave him a; flower in a twen y years of not always unhappy married life, apparently by this man’s fault mainly. His wife was not fine enough for his new fortunes. Thack- eray was agood husband and fathom but his wife went crazy and had to! .80 to an “institution.’ There was some-, thing sordid about Charles Reade’s ollfle : "romance.’ He couldn’t marry Wlt 'I out losing his college fellowship, but formed an “alliance,’ possibly platonm, with Laura Seymour,an actress whose dissolute husband Reade had kept in spendinghmoney. Hood’s First Boyâ€"i you for: goinz 'Selcond Boyâ€"Yes. ( W‘hat d Made me take abath'! â€"â€"_ THE FAIRY PART. Sister. finishing the storyâ€"And so they were married and lived happily AN INDEX TO CHARACTER. If I could see into a girl’s room I could always tell the character of the occupant. for the mind almost invari: ably reflects the manner. just as the manner [reflects the mind, says a writer. Given a tidy, clean. neat, well-order- ed rooml. I would argue a sweet, set- tied, well-balanced disposition. and in nine cases out of ten I would be right. There are, of course, exceptions but it is with the vast body of women I am dealing. On the other hand, a dirty, disorderly, disagreeable room will usually find in it a tenant like unto itself. 'l‘rue, a girl With an untidy room may appear as fresh as a daisy on the street. but that is only her public char- acter and aspect. In private life and in her heart she is exactly what her room tells you she is. I have seen a young man captivated by a young wo- man who appeared to be all that was nice and sweet and fresh and gracious but when he became better acquaint-y ed with her. when he saw her in her: home. he was compelled to “change his mind. and his affections also soon un- derwent a change. Depend upon it. your real character will show itself some day. You will be found out. no matter how you may hide your faults behind the bedroom door. 'Ilherelfare. I say to all young womenâ€" oom tidy. and let it be a your mind and character. Of other hiding place%. perhaps the [no-.t popuiar, eepeeially for paper money. i~2 the big family Bible. It. is quite a. PUiLOiUiM‘V thing in out of the way country hon-e3 to thus secure any valuable papers in the possession of the family. :‘ea caddie: and sugar bowls make exceEIent temporary safes, and the pocket. of an old dress hanging in an unconcealed way in a wardrobe 1;; regarded by many women as one of the- safest. places imaginable for spare rings, broches and bracelets. To CURE A cut.” IN ONE DAY. Tske Lam Eve Brmuo Quininu Tame“ All Dm- ziats "(and the money it is. fans to Cure». two. Another lady once confided to the writer that if she had occasion to leave her house empty she invariably placed her jewelry in her old shoes, which were place-l alongeide the new ones. Quite a lot of valuables can be forced down into the toes without giving the slightest evidence of the value therein. risky Experiment. in!“ tfie""v3ii1?3£ months, when the fire had to be fed, but the owner felt no burglar would ever dream of looking in a. coal scut- tle for valuables. Equally shrewd was a woman in Liverpool, who, whenever th had occasion to leave her home at all, would put her money and jewelry in the coal scuttle. covering them up carefully with several layers of coal. This might have proved a somewhat in the space left below, and then re- place the drawer, which she kept fill- ed with linen. The old lady would al- ways declare that it the house was broken into and the drawers ransacked no one would think of pulling them right out, and that her hiding place was far safer than any bank‘ ' writer, who resides in one of the many ancient houses to be found in Chester, England, had a set of large stationary drawers tOpped by cup- boards specially built into ahuge elo- Iset in one of the rooms. The lower drawer, instead of resting directly on the floor, ran on grooves about two inches above it. 'l'his lower drawer she would pull out, and place large sums of money and all her jewel cases BOARDING THEIR MONEY. Many and strange were the devices of our grandmothers tor hoarding away their wealth. and ton. and it was thn name of the nth; . hat was on his lips. SEVERE PUNISHMENT. 3oyâ€"Did ypur .mother punish rains in smmmgng without her stocking bank, that favorite hid- 5P3“ generation, has almost obsolete, except my old fashioned people f the way vifllages, yet savings to the keep- I'SOD, but who search heralds tho ' - and Sheet Metal works. 5“ u u F I H G ROOFING SLATE. in Buck. Rod 0t Gut-n. SLATE BLACKBOARD8 (W0 supply f’uhiic and High Schools Tormzw). Roofing Folt, Pitch. Coal Tar, etc. ROOFING TI LE (8“ New City Build- mgg Toronto. done by our firm). Metal Cailinu, 00r- piou, etc. Esflm to: furnished for work oomph-«k or for tutorials .1)!ng to any but of the country. Phone mu 0. cumin; 0N0. Ado doammw infirm Wholeeele only; William St, Toronto. Long Distance Telephone 17%. HARRIS BUYS old shin rte roots 0." Adel of b ildings. Used 22 3.13am . 9k your dealer for it. THE FIN”! WOOD PRESERVA‘IWI I PM!" SMJPANY, 370 Q: can West, Toronto. PRONTO CUTTING SCHOOL ofl’en special Indnnnmnnta tn innna man Audra-- -0 _"v'â€" ' mduoecmonl“ to 011m: 1301:; dish-on- a! t kin n ‘uLt. mg. n par zcu an on tpp 3»; f p u, voma ST.. TORONTO. LAW _ -.-. MINT INVITATION is hereby extended to all young men and women interested in practica‘ education to write for the New Prospectus of the "ENTRAL Bvsmzss Comma; OF Tommro. Mem. borsadmittedat any time. E‘ght t9;,’1l1:lrt¢acherfl. un- exm 119d {militias for Accounting, Tc egraphy, Short,- haml, etc. Many students secure splendid positions each term. Get particuhrs. Address W. H. SHAW, Principal. Yonge and Gerrard Sm, Toronto. mums WANTED. Ladies or Gentlemen, to introduce our gunk. We pap 33.00 a. (333'. If making 1888, write. State when can commence wvrk. Enclose six 2 cent stamps and will mail samples and saliuy gqntrgct. â€"'--- m-'---- â€"----- --A‘ -- - n a u ralfi I“, all severe Muscular psihl. instantly relieved by Ores. Cent Nema giaCnre. Price 25c. Enclose 3 3‘0. ntnnpa for tml pack-nae. Tue Hutchings Medicine 00., Toronto. g Hamilton, Ont. g @ommrmmwmwmam." mwmmmfi The Dawson 00mm s;ion 00., Limited, Nguralgia! IF you want to either buy or sell Apples in car lots, wniteus. We will give Hno Hundred Dollars: for any case of Deafnesgmusr‘d by cabal-rm that am. not. be cured by circulars, tree. F. J. CHENEY at C0.. Toledo, 0. Sold hv Drqulsw. 75o. Hall's Family Prim are the beat. i: vâ€"- V‘- bv local applications. as they cannot 903 oh the diaoa- rd portion of the car. There is only one way to cure‘geafngsa,_and that is by constitu- Jinksâ€"What’s I. r03? graduate Course. anybowfl’ Filkinsâ€"Oh! it’s where a fellow takes atumble to himself, before it’s ewerlastingly too late, and goes and gets posted, even if (he has graduated- A plaster which relieves pain, heals cute, burns, ecalds, or wounds. is made by spreading “Quickcure” on cotton or hpen. Cures most violent toothache ‘Wlthout injuying the nerve. It should Lead Packages, . PROVES MIT 11' [8 BY FAR ml 35C.406. soc. and 60c. BEST TEA PRODUCE. THE BIG DEM AND wmvwmwwwmmwammw: WAN T E D. A Thoroughly reliable woman (mar- ried or widow pr (erred) in cvery city, town and village in Canada, to not us soliciting agent. for a well advertised and established artic 6. Easy to sell and s-nlsfaction ensured. No deposit required. Gave references when reply inc. Addreae, bentist-qull you take gut Colonel Oldryâ€"How will it ‘0 with‘ 'Hn'... . AT THE ELEVENTH HOUR THE WILEY PINK POW_l_._)ER C(1,'1‘oronto every house and _ Mikelâ€"ling SCRAP Toronto. E. A. SPRONG, 30 CHEAP Y” c“ "HI. Ml". HOIOO. Barrister-a etc. removen to We ley Bldg a Rich mond 8t.W ..'l‘oronto. LEAD if the' has griduatflgd'. flgadaohe, Fang-ache, I -FOR-â€" ’4 P C 936 COPPER BRASS ludella Ceylon Ton i136 it on The Wilson Publishing Co 73 Adelaide 36. West. 7 in. Outlet, 4x3 Pulley. Good as New. Cheap. IS IN. STURTAVANT BLOW FAN 'A reduction of five pendent. is allowed OI round tray: tin-st and second cabin tickota. For sailingw of ~ name. a or other information apply to any muhovized agent. 8. Bouruor. 1 King St. W. Toronto. or H. a A Allan. Montreal. RATES 0" PASSAGE Cabin 852.50 and upwards: Second 03M. :34 and and $36.25: Sworn. to Livarpool. London. (in-mgnw. Beirut. Londonderry o: Queenqmwn 822.3%! and $23.50. k {camera as“ from Montreal every Than mowing on arrival of grains from Toronto the West about. 9 o'clocx. Dominion Line steamship; Month-3| and Quebec to Liverpool In summer. sud hat. :wza urcw stanchion ' labndor.‘ ' V couvar.’ ' nonunion ’ Bantam“; ‘ Yorknhlro! Superior accommo anon Ior First Csbin. 800' 0nd Cabin aud Steerugo ousongen. Rota cl mmgoâ€"Fxrst Cabin. 52.50; socgnd Cubic. 34; Swamp: $22.50 an n wu'dl toqordlnz U Imamcr and berth. For H formationa pit to Loon Agents OI'DAVID onusonh r Gen '1 Agents. 11 3b. But-smut 8t... Mon Three Farms for Sale, on my terms. Property situated convenient to C. P. Raflway. Specially adapted for stock raising. For further particulars apply to 1M, McNAM ARA,Barristor,North Bay,0M. ALLAN LINE {03ml Mail Steamship 00., Montreal to Liverpool. Farms for Sale “mu-mama“ TORONTO. our. ram hum. Jon I. can. I. COFFEE 00., 5‘31! PAINT mmmmg - “v. gaggm in t hint 00m. For Sale. :E 8808 cm All! COIIISHOI Human, Only muo- In our: plan ow$°§0§am Tum TAMMERERS. _â€"â€"â€" wwwâ€" fifinfifia’x’ mm OPWOQM“ In“ On! on. ma HOT WATIR~Onr new q. tern with steel 11th WARM AIRâ€"Coal or wool ! furnaces. We have It-ylca sud lite! to .91 from. COMIIIATION~ Hm. WM and warm sir tuned for mun roquiremwu. Write us I! ) n hue my. thing to heat cn we may ho ablo to suggest something a! advantage. Heating OUR OPEOIAL".

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