Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 5 Aug 1897, p. 2

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" 3.3! an In the old stand. in ua made shoes. Also WOODWORK _Horse Shoeing Shop, mum to. Emma; iGuiGia" Township of Dominick. DAN. um. au of any. Li uGiiiiiiia% at Ground to Lum- P. o. mil be promptly and.) u. D--:)__-_ " A .A - -- LI.§o4p_.m. THE Immune AFTER. l no: " you ieal this morning. old -‘ In .A hit all color. 17.11. your have Iaft anyhow Pee! of Hurlqu than! foe 'G-." A DAN. McLEAN. S G. REGISTRY OFFICE. Thoma - Letder,srutmr. John A. Munro Dosnttrmnriistrii'. Ottieo houm from It and a munch]. Bu opened out a nut-clan __ _ __ w-..v-. “up unmoun- pronptly undo, human. “head. ION-I " LOAN “Iowan at. of In“ lit-“.4..- _-4‘ A. - _ V _ V- .. -_ -w-‘Vl nil-I- ""'""eroenoetao.aosre. more Bulw- maul“ of Inn-dune Liana... Ano- b “can: toe Oonu’u 0! Bruce and Guy. 1ueidoato.--rri" Bt.. Hanna. NOTARY ri"'.ero-uo.u-, MON BY TO LOAN. ALLAN mam, III I'- l ‘LPUKU Baum, mum: :llt mm aim hltittt mu tish promptly JAMES t,6ijitiii, BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Flat-Glass Hearse. UNDERTAKING Promptly “tended to. Fir. Insurance secured. out“. oval Gum's _ Low“ Town. -- - - - - - .109ng ”when“ {or IIOENBID AUCTIONE Of the Best Quality Cheaper 2mm EVIB. P “in tobe hand In his Old “and and“ the Dubs. Bauer. In and Insurance Agent, Con- voymoor. Commissioner ace. We all the would “do. a! ho not" “I "bieeaee.t. the knowing q It". " tho lumped.“ t t. "In, for». "do" his»: (in... “Jon-u pay all an...» it ”In: any nan-nounndlt until”- ..tlo mule, “(I oolUetthe '59]..qu My“ be taunfromtheottue and. The can In no Ugnl diatom-noon“ Inn-nude. ' La pom- who “I.” how .0 you"... whether diluted to hit I... at "etthee, " than: to In tab at!” " not in tupouiblo for tho pay. I. " I when»! onion hit up” to In 'dst,', a . -taitt time, an! the publhhod on an to and, the "ueeiber In bound te y for it it In Mu it out cube poet _ ='. This "out“ upon he ground I in I III nut '" tor what he “on. l HUGH McKAY. in connection. A hit-class lot of -__l:--McKENZ|E, for 1tuiouap. F urniture ”my” bun. IELFORD CLI"" mm“ " PM» MljllllJilig Waggon: KRESS wants him to. It in n mat blessing tbr the Nashua that fear clothes so a longing in that part of the world. ‘In. mundimmy handgu- habttnnl drunkenness, dilatderly life Insanity for mom than n you or by mutual consent when there no no ehib. dren. In Nanny and Mark mu- tual.copaeni after three years’ lop-‘ "anon is sufficient for a divorce. In Austria Roman Catholics cannot get. (inform, but for members of other religious denominations insurmounta- blo aversion on both a. in all that own oven swab. exemplary "0171 ttir. mans" as Caesar. Charm Otto and Augustus all :11va their win: for slight causes. LACK OI? cm A CAUSE. In East Central Africa . man an get a divorce from her husband if he 1ttPtt,_trtrir by _clothes when the was niisnuif" tirriii'ep7iUif t3: wife's dowry, so that it became an object. Tenth mo husbands to be marybiiad Iand divorced“: faunas [mm o. t ought not. ergo on LULn_0V61I snub exunolarv "old ms are an, wanted. some mm!!!» swapping of wives can uwayl bring them about. WARRYING FORMER WIVES. The inhabitants of the Maldives Ls- lauda we so loud of marrying and di- _vorcing that a mm is not uncomzmm-i 1y found married for the Lhird or {Wuht‘umg lo the suns wife. l you received with her. In the second cue you put noertai-n price Mon her. It whiah my one can have the mu m '- willing topey it; and if you unmet that my particular per- . can has been flirting with your wife “youwillmnkoanexoeptioninh-jscue and fix the price et double or treble I the ordinary rate. It In curious that marriage vow: are hithtully kept among the Kabylee. In t the rare cease in which they are not observed both parties suffer iultalllt deem at the hands of their neighbors. DIVORCE CAUSES IN CHINA. The Chine“ live a beautiful and comprehensive list of causes for di- vorce. These no in order, childless- use, iarrtuntion to parents-in-law, lo. quueity. thieveiahneee. ill temper and confirmed illness. One of the ancient commentators on the Chinese law of I divorce line laid it down that a. wife might be turned away "if she allows l the home to be filled with smoke. or “she frightens the dog with her die-1 agreeable noise." There are excep- 4 tione totheee rules, however, as a, i Chinese wife may not be divorced at. a all if she has worn mourning for} either of her partynta-in-laar, if she l has no parents with whom to live, or I if her husband has grown rich ai l he married her. e In most of the islands of the world marriage and divorce are about equal- ly easy. In Samoa marriages are of.. f, hen contracted as an excuee for the wedding (east. and it we toasts are I} M m to ho amale Keylo loan Who your wife in two anthsrmstruet.ro-dur tow Peoria with the dowry You received with her. In the a “‘0 you put tool-tam price but.“ which any one can have m, Knbylea d Algeria have more scientific mounds of divorce than emu: 01mm or South Dakota. If M h-teat to ho a male Keylo you on: Who your wife in two ways. 1ntharmstruet.ro-dur but] holler people with the dowry that Tho Noon at the Sudan in the “than: part of Africa. have niaod divans to the highest pinnacle, because 't'uo-momrtgt.mthatthsr1ead- ‘8'! of Whig society shall nlwsyl be of thing who have oftenest been divmd and rounded. And it Is madly considered low and vulgar in!" s who to live too long together. Innings h " elixir. You has the “a of a musty old philosopher for that. But elixir does not agree with any”, Divorce 1. it. antidote. l Just as marriage customs. however. vary with different nations, on does an dim code. Some races esteem It no he. then manage. Othen leek toan-itanmuohaapotnsibies. A M government. will not tolerate it A an", mm “or: am An I)... who-ern on.-' - Ind 'tea-rt" - (til-one “no. for mv-o.--.- or Ceylo- 'Nrert-8 VARIOUS flITllllillil un all. In Plush-Ohm In the linked IW m mama: BOND [8 new nr son COUNTRIES- Faithful 1htenetrite-. Plea-e. you'll have to act “other dog, won’t any. Mutresir-a mourn the loss of Fido as mun}! as you do but I think of leaving tho homo on account. Faithful Domestic-But mu don"t have to was): the platen. - V n ..-... w - u vanilla auto, would retire. .- I don't want to yet. grandma. aid the little gal. l . But see how nicel little sister he [one to sleep, tlitU urged. Oh, we". r lied Miss Jennie, she ain't old along yet to realize that it's not dark! T Little 5-year-old J eunie's mother had m to church leaving her and her baby sister with that When After a While grandma got weary 1nd put the baby to bed. .Then she suggest- ed by itbwwld be nice if Jennie alao. - ,,,,,V__ ..- .v-vlau ul'lUL owed to England. Sixteen million pound sterling a year must he paid in England. This is paid in gold. while the taxes raised in India are silver. Is it extraordinary that India has stop- ped the coinage of silver in order to get upon a gold basis and relieve her- eif of a heavy yoke that was yearly growing heather. Russia is on a silvur basis, hut she has been {mud into an indebtedness of gold rubles of 1,998,8tr7,49tt. Russia was forced to ask permission of foreign bankers before she' went to war. Russis is about to adopt the gold basis. Japan. the moat prosperous of the silver countries. is paying at the rate of T per cant for a foreign indebted- ness of 2,110,112 Ten. The bulk of her debt loaned her in silver by her own citizens met her 51-2 per cent. per annum. Japan’s financiers favour the Mypgioq o a gold basis. IridiA“is"o£ 'riiiaif7ao. or atom] debt funded and unfunded, of 227,334,- 398 Peru 1flhll5792,.,.y . foreign _ debt China is a silver calamity. It is a matter in the memory of every citizen that the money to pay China's war in- demnity was raised by a. loan in Eu- rope. The Japanese commission has just gone to London to collect it. Bar February loan ot 1895, was dl8,000,00tt payable in gold. and her customs rev- enue la to-aay mortgaged in terms to foreign syndicates. The' United States pays In gold and. borrows " , per cent. Chum/a foreign loan of Decem- ber, 1894, of 88,000,M0, payable in 311-: var. cost 7 per cent. in interest. l Bolivia is a silver country. Her "ex- ternal" debt to foreign eorporations is 2.000.000 bolivianos. The debt owed at home is 4,428,705 bolivianos. Forty per cent of the customs dues at Ariea are by law seized by the foreign bond- holder. them in exchange all the states' rail- ways, guano deposits. mines and lands for a period of sixty-six years. Peru is a silver country. She and a foreign debt of £3L579.080, with ar- rears of interest amounting to £22,998,- 651. Being utterly unable to pay, the European bondholders had deeded to Honduras is a silver standard coun- try. Practically the whole ot her debt is owed abroad, and not a cent of in- terest ins Honduras been able to pay since 1872. Nicaragua is a silver country. She owes £285,000 in London. on which she has been obliged to default payment of the interest. Salvador is a silver country. She was £254,000 in London. ', Paraguay is a silver country. She do- clared herself bankrupt to her foreign [ creditors in 1885 and issued new bonds in exchange far old ones at Just about go cents on the dollar. Paraguay unjust defaulted the interest on the half of her debt which she had not pre- viously repudiated. She owes now in Europe £836,550. with defaulted inter.. est amounting to over £76,500. PERU-BOLIVIA-C‘HINA. abroad. ‘(bIlMoa Where the hill of the "- " Silver and The, In" 50.0 “It“ Debt. to Pay. Mexico is a silver standard country. She has a large national debt. The in.. tmet of £m.m.660 is mablo in Lon.. don. It is not even paygblo in Mexico. Tho London indebtedness is greater than the Mexican ingebtednes. Guatemala is a silver stundnd coun- try. Ot her debt, £887,700 is owed HOW IT EFFECTS THE CREDIT OF A NATION. SOME SILVER STANDARDS MANY DIVORCE IN AMERICA. Prof. Woolnoy find. tint Massachu- ootts has Imarortionatml, four times as many divorce: as France, while Con- ‘necticut has more than five time. on many as Saxony. Chicago. tsoeordjngto Prof. Woolsay. has a bigger ratio of divorces to tgmlntiun n any oth-, or part at may. but St. Louis and San Francisco are good seconds and only tshort diatom behind her in this [OVENING OVER bo burned upon the forehead “Fiber spilt; 8etllet in addition to tho whip- lbw was "haaimd. A guilt at the urine had to than! on tho mfg“ with trope mud the nut. he whip- ped with forty enigma an their way to the gallon and he til' and then 'Aevifrdttsgt,tc1,lt,', it,,t,tl,,ehtt,', " _'lietextmqpitmoats 0111mm: cloths. Tho Connecticut hum of 1778‘ my“ -tihrst tht letter, "A" should 1 I INNOCENT. Prof. Woohoy ur wreaths time when the early settlers treated. in- fidelity in their "haraotorisstio fashion. Ibo first law od Manama“: undo fdulta-y , capitgl crimes. In I”? tht Ptuitaossaatd mommgothum settled by Mr descendqnta lean to he the chief abode at dual-cos." spy- Prol. My. mint W..oouer., in; In]! s Now Engl Puritan. In has wart on the subject. ' CAPITAL CRIME AMONG PURITANS. Putin} iiaTi-iiiin ror)xU" “if Inn-Tr? JAPAN-INDIA-RUSSIA ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO you obtain di- comm. did you our 090‘ Killing so wonderful as that , C Ay, Inn. mod the taunt. who 21luerd to W 3111:: American "tt as soon we ttt :d.mn. n 's'rtsb.hss_remeesiikl" 'l','rLtkgl.'eu,d, l If Scotchmen have little intact. they mun... dUpU y e pretty good count- tPt of that useful end mu. quelo l native of Scotland travelling}: the United Ststee wu taken to see Nie- gara. Fells.There. aid Me American 1r.y?.eAerdid gal; ever we unthin- MEANS IS MARVELOUS, And brings the thSivian to a point of understanding wit his patient which it is believed has never before been no- hieved. . It is a fact that " vouched for by more than one medical savant that if this meter idea proves all that is hoped for it will decrease the mortality un- ong people to a wonderful extent. The doctors will'be enabled to foretell the coming of disease to , person day: be- fore it would otherwtee become appar- ent. It is a remgnmed pethologicel fact that the germs of disuse require omelderqble to work out thir- own evils. This being the one. the health meter would at one note even the in- tiniteeiml change that the grind op- eration of the. germ would hung ebont in one'e phyeual condition. The method of development of every gem in known, and therefore even its slight operation would reveal the truth to the doctor just as well " the Inter dAVAIl-I-u-A-i This is the way that the doctor pro- Coeds. mime his begins the experi- ment he camfully ascertains by means of the health meter the exact CPhysical condition of his patient. This one, he puts the patient through a course which will bring about fatigue. When that is over, he takes the same nou of the patient's condition an in the first places. Then he made the health meter figures, and knows exactly what changes occurred in the interim be- tween the beginning of the exercise and "tgrep/fn.) to th l, l einsig in op ylionl an itiee of an individual by these q __ __-v- H. vs. a noun! a general fatigue, in which Itll path- ological tendencies individual to the person are immediately Apparent to the physician. This is the way that the doctor pro- and: at"... " L._:__ 1- _ By means of this meter, which he has induced the inventor to slightly change to correspond with his theory. In ex- planation of this system the physician says that if we would 9“”in ourselves, [or a shrewd guess " to W at abnor- mal ar pathological tendencies egiven patient In likely to develop, we must watch the patient in a transtion from health to illness. and vice versa. In this way we can discover exactly in what direction lies his line of least te.. sistance to the inroads of disease. The doctor will take the patient while he is well, attach this metar to his wrist. bring him into a temporarily low condition by causing him to be sud- ( denly fatigued. and then note the re- sult by means of the nervous system. etc. Fatigue of this sort is moat quick- ly and harmleesly brought about through the lungs. For instance, a man is mquested. by taking long breaths to keep the Wury at a. given height in the column of a little instrument. called the manometer. which registers the quirhneas lot the flow of blood. Af- tar a perspn has Gdiii “on for .fivyr_mittutA i the prrikiiiCttiiriir'i"'aa tit able to diagnoaa _with great the physical condition of ----- v- rv-uanoulu5 - ary man mknow at all times whether hin health ll good or bad. Lad exactly in what degree in either case. The bicycle health meter is also bo- . adapted by this same ghysician to Eggs! uses, or rather, he as utilized the rtrii..r.rl.t. thereof and claims to be I. In on :------ -_eat . wmcn snow the variations of vitality, Btc., of the cyclist. Dr. Odiardy has giv- en the bicycle halt}: motel- the most attontion of any one, except the in- ventor, and declares that it is the first otep in the dilution of permitting ev- A” man In by“..- -- -" L' _ _ ible. These on tutatoast together with pivots. about one fifth at In inch long, Between the steel plates or skips is the mechanism of the meter. and fes- tened to the portion of the steel that comes against the wrist is s thin strip of what looks and feels forell the world like oiled silk. In a mortise at the top ot the meter one sees certain figures‘ which change from time to time withl the physical condition of the master's wearer. These figures denote the rise and (all of physical condition just " tho mercury in the thermometer indi- cates the changes in weather. The secret of the interpretation of the meter. or rather the exact interpre- tation. as as yet confined to physicians, although the wearer of the meter. of course, knows whether his vitality seems to be inmmsing or lessening.‘ When the (bums of exercise is finished the rider removes the meter and takes it to his physietau.wno unlocks the in- strument and takes therefrom a tiny roll of paper, on which are the figures w.hiehjityiw the variation. of viinlitv ibis. The second meter. in not pertinularly for bicycle people. but is merely in- tended to record the, respiration and than gives the doctor the information which ennbles him to tell astonishing things. because they are truthful, about the phrs.ipal condition end prospects of the patient. At thiq anon ot the year it in particularly “viable to glin the knowledge ot those not. because in manner it is advisable that one should I know enctly THE PHYSICAL CAPITAL, Which in on hand to withstand the in- roads ot the some: heat. This appliu to people who ride wheels " well u people who do not. The first mentioned meter, resembles two strips of steel.» thin " to be flex- “NMMOIOBIEWMIMM n m - A low and Interact-g Imule luv-no- M - - Viable. The very Intent invention. one which iljult nowat tbheieht ottmauneri interesting medi-ientista, is called the bicycle health-meter, It in not. u might seen It tint blush. the health ot the bicycle that is considered. but rather that ot the rider. One variety at metal- is fastened to the wrist of the 0onth just at the point when the physician feel; the pulse. A mu TEAT CALCULATES THE BENEFIT or A WHEEL RIDE. TO REGISTER THE HEALTH I----..--, _ Af? WoNMattgrm, no truth to thé dodiir- the In“ “Him“. HUMAN BEING "Win-E. es if Minis“ 50m in which the path- ingividual to the this 31-9-1"- ammo, WE?F~‘%‘“S firwfi-«fl'filfi’g Jam A. Doll. of Benetton. Ont., brother of the Rev. John Wm, all. B.D., pro-tutu! by no"... maule- A victim or the trouble Ne men! n. "gout American Neal-o eNeeted . 'rg'i'itttt (a I their on M: m w an no beta In" an the In. John Wesley loll. B.D ad his bruta- Me. Juno-Alon. iletomerwmuu- Tgee!ih.Ediiia7iTtl'tl'aiti rt,3hflpt"ptl'diiitiitui'ii " “tud’b: who of Ton-on... A--- A“ tttta," AllolotNo. um.&W.G. It., WpoIBenunok. mo act-adjoin- tremNotDurhnm. In the Town of Durham, County a! any. including "liable Water Power Brick Dwelling. and may ellglblo building Iota. will he sold in one or more Tho‘ EDGE PROPERTY. BUM ll? TIE SYSTEM IN A 1lfillillElili1k ----, lijlllllllitt v I v I -I'I III " V ' ' , '"'eeemear-atermr-aa- aa "k fr " q lllllP' , . ' T iii?,) . ‘ , w" e q _ ll Sr r " v [t , m r 'i5 I I CG , al " . cm lee, “~. ' Cr q _.~\-.‘ . LT - 0'0 “\ ( ti " . 1/, i q f YD y,“ © . _ l " . M \at , , r = " ' , , g _ a: ' y " r' - ll J, , te I E ‘ .t' 'tht/ttomit-Loan. ' / . " , ' ’uamuounn‘ 11ll l "= ' it 'l' g Fra -rrs PA IE - J' t Q Illlilll . . . , I "2 u ll)) . V"", ‘ _ " , / - ' Bg il " .“7 .IH' - B8 - illl!EjS" rT t' f ' l, ..:h tph s I. gud 's. . I t I q ll _ ( - Macs A.B£LL.- F , l guano» 7 . s. . l “"01””!ng follow”! gig! f'trae Gum ' w WI. comp 1mm; 0 t but. " cool wave h coming." "Bo is M. Biwantuadigthovowt'ett her before be cut her. Bow could tut he! Five hundred alumna doll"- in In: own right. d'nm. not only of tin vicinity. but In any. the weteu at the like he" draw medicinal otatitiea, that most white people would bitch to adopt the mode of tmtment prescrib- ed, Tht.inm1idi.tmrudutrto his mouth in the not volume mud for from twenty to thirty minutes. Then he in carried covered with mud, to the edge of the late. into which he is plum tor (mm fifteen to twenty min After which he is mIUd in e blnnket and snowed to sweet on the hot, eul- ‘ phurous sad or rock near by. The was wrought are aid to be wonder- obi-actor. The temper-tun "do. from no decree. to 216 “not. According to the Ioality. 0nd tho “to: [all month aad our. According to the In. '8A_0tq"ttqa_-r-- WMlme Awth.rntdduttfthoetttt-hhi1u,ie MilwhthhownutbL-ko‘ at”. Ihmrttt-hdttrtteautiNt) Quinn-of clear water. “unguided It’looh like not. of love st first AWAKENED HIS AFFEUI'ION. monument)“. Ids-mom. FOB BALI A [All or III. tumult-run...“ iiirei"'r, m KI. " I " u. f. IF,',',.' 'e)tNit.ai2idytiiitiiii IST.tt '.. _ at,Phvitttfg Itiyiifiii 3 leg df a: iiiii7iieDtiitt1 Jana?“ Ulnar " 1"t. 'alt £::=?u.'r" as All a“. a"? m Stilt ' iihi " a: 7___, - 2r". P""'1"PWF. [no one my ttr 1 M1330!" The music "not“ nut-n I»- am” that but June be '2’. comp - r- . PM“ " thin coaditisu a .u A Koo-HI“ Sottttt American Nervme. M; b any“: " tad ew.-Iy;u.n:, " uh! it had conreJ tho M " ”than DOJAC‘U“, he a can . Nth " (it. cu. dmcoury. A - but. of ts P, click}. was taken tn! the work In den l-p‘myiw g in m tdt'ttE2li"i was of Sun A trest' ir. may intend 2hhaii. " m ..E bum up P. I r" m -etnttr “I it beet-II In ttw le, IttNir, tlae one " ttr mmem-u'J-i‘n an". a not"! and iateeoat mowed " - --'-.e.- -u-O‘Vlc ”I m in... New but. 1f4'r,rothr,ttt,tt1n on clinch“. I)... I“ on... Toronto- OAPI'I'AL. tutorial “.000.” " Pail 3 1,000,00t “SIBVI FUN 000.” 7.1.0.“. o... P. Reid. 1lltultriBnt of Canada {-3 Inmllmtlu mums 'tdttgr&rtrt.etaert mm "I!“ Om THEME“!!! msgqqgcg BEsIFRI'EN‘o DUNNS BAKING POWDER Thanh, Homing. ,i‘ Am TWENTY-GIVEN YEARS. Laet_KaLirii 636363: - III In“ Illa.“ u "N 'ANmre" mum. mtetuiFa -iriiuEiaraaT.' ia": thgt Eldon 'u 'ret" y. .hours t III lo, hating the um barn of via my " first through SE" Mount i, “Nor. Show al vagina; "may and bl I Int-- Arm: u drug nu tho no! . Wm t we to I luau. Anny noun”: . (“In U - an“: Ll mg " "none enough mm u the " land I mun, than: I: uh In!) two tn (an ta, alter l but“)! mum the on ha: I n Utai of .1 " IIIVII'II that. plum ply: “not: ott A mam. noun OI: oven on -1! t one! lion cliff} and but um pm no wn In: all (III "of I"; LII oy te: OI

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