Church review . great players,whose agents demand their curryingfavors with the masses, whom it is toodifficult to instruct in the truth aftera bad example of long standing. Theproper tempo—even the Metronomemarks are rarely correct—is the focusof the meaning in a work. It bringsout clearly to intelligent listeners boththe foreground and the background ofthe picture, and presents it with g^eatcare and with the aim to reveal asmuch as possible of it in a first hear-ing, which frequently is the only onethat the many receive. When speed isking, beauty and depth are lost andthe ideality of the com


Church review . great players,whose agents demand their curryingfavors with the masses, whom it is toodifficult to instruct in the truth aftera bad example of long standing. Theproper tempo—even the Metronomemarks are rarely correct—is the focusof the meaning in a work. It bringsout clearly to intelligent listeners boththe foreground and the background ofthe picture, and presents it with g^eatcare and with the aim to reveal asmuch as possible of it in a first hear-ing, which frequently is the only onethat the many receive. When speed isking, beauty and depth are lost andthe ideality of the composer is violatedby the performer.—Music Review. The Park church organ, as improvedby The Austin Company, seems to givegeneral satisfaction. One has to re-member that it takes some time for old and new work to season and comeinto sympathetic action before the bestresults can be obtained. The organ isall right. Christ was tactful as well as truth-ful. Only the brave and the true perma-nently help the (2f SYMPATHETIC PAINS. Neuralgia is supposed to be a spon-taneous pain in a nerve, a pain notdue to any discoverable inflammationor other disease in that nerve. But itis probable that every neuralgia hasits cause in actual disease or injury tothe nerve in some part of its course,or else is one Oi the curious reflexor sympathetic pains excited bytrouble in some other part of the body. Sympathetic pains are often verydeceptive. Not infrequently they leadeven the most skilful physician intoerror, directing his attention awayfrom the offending part toward someperfectly sound portion of the body. A common example is seen in thecase of hip disease, where the pain isalmost always complained of, not inthe hip where the inflammation in the knee. In heart-tire, uv di-lated heart caused by overexertion,there may be quite sharp pain at theroot of the neck on the left side, or inthe left shoulder and extending downthe left arm. A very common accom-paniment of disease of the l


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