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Ontario Reformer, 12 Sep 1873, p. 4

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rs TI Wo oy ' ala bic bolt aide 22 " . (Continued from First Page.) \ } said the" matter is a trifling bne. Was | the twenty shillings that. was ler 1ed upon | John Hampden for his ship money trifling ! It would have been better, those times servers and followers of expediency will | tell you,' for him to pay the twenty shill- ings than to be vexed and harassed with suits, and yet upon that issue the liberties | of England were staked (cheers) and his | fame is held in everlasting remembrance | { by all worthy sons of England because he | refused to pay that trifling sun, and put | fortane, fame, life itself to the issue, rather than desért what was his country's cause (Great cheering.) Wasita trifling matter | to Sir John Eliot that he should write an humble létter to the king and should say, | "I sutthit myself." Seeing that Parlia- ment had bein dissolved ; that the evil | had been done ; ; that whatever was wrot. 5 { and tyrannicel had been exercised ; | it a very important matter that he should | say '1 Tegret my error," and so escape | | thing under the light of the sun to please | that something must be amiss with him, he biding the good time when Parliament would be called again ? These time-servers | and followers of expediency Would tell you | it was a trifling matter. They would tell | you that Sir John Eliot ought not to have - done what he did do ; they would be little the martyr's fame ; they would say that | his sufferings ought to full upon his own head ; that sympathy for him was entirely | misplaced ; that there was something ! utterly absurd in the man not yelding for | the time 'and waiting till Parliament re- | dressed his wrong. No, sir. These are doctrines we cannot afford to hear broached | without their being denounced. We can- not permit the most trifling encroach sent | upon prineiples the invioable preservation | of whicii/is the only security for our li- berty. (Hear, hear.) Lei us not agre: that any--vhject can justify our parting | with one uf the securities of liberty. Let | us agree that there is, as all history teaches there is, danger, the greatest danger in au I have seen it in my own | I tell you now, that 1 evil precedent. brief experience. never aw a bad act gassed in Parliament, but that it was urged, and oftentimes suc cessfully, as a good precedent for the | passage of a much worses act the next ses- sion. Such is the inevitable result. Give the precedent and it is always stretched, | | and stretched in the wrong direction. The - trifle of to-day becomes the monster of to- | morrow. The cloud no bigger than a man's hand tu tlie morning may become » of the night, which will swegp s of the country. (Cheers ) And let me say, you bat ill repay those | the delu away the lit sufferings which that noble man, a part of whose 'story 1 have: recounted to' you, endured, for, as he has told you m that letter, you aud your children, if you perniit one jut or one title of the sa- cred principles which his blood has sanc- tified, which his martrydom has enshrin- ed, and which is now the eorner stone of English liberty, to be impugned, to be broken in upon, to be iufringed by even the highest and wighti at, with the Dest and J of intentions, much less by in- ¢rimivated ministers seeking -- gem tn coticeal themselves from justice. (Great ajplause.) Lit me say to yon that no situation is so secure but that ne- gligen ce of the people may engager it, and "that no situation is so desperate but that the vigilance of the people may work out' Upon the viligance of the people depends.the preservation of your liberties of to-day. That vigilance 1 I hope wou will awake tJ the magnitude of this issite, There is mo doubt what- whatever that the their own salvation. expect you to exercise. feeling. of the people will be the feeling of ' Parlia- ment at the next session. There isnodoubt | 155¢ degree. whatever that what you--that what the intelligent pe ple of Canada shall have de- "termined in the meetings out of Parlia- ment with regard to the arbitrary exer- cises of the prerogative, will be the feeling of Patliament. Will yout then awake to the issue! will you let your voice and weight be felt ? I believe yon will. I cal upon you by one stern lesson to teach a! strictly prof by strata- | » Ais: f ONTARIO REFORMER, OSHAWA, ONT. riiDAY, SEPTISMBER 12, 1878. ul ready to cry, but "1 was determined that he shouldn't have the satisfaction . of seeing the tears fall, Forget,' says he ; forget? I wish to Heaven I could forget! Its nothing ! but grant and groan from one: years end | | to the other ! 1 have lost all patience with you says he. "When we lived in past of a | house, and you did yoyr own house work, you were as well and as happy as any body, | and no man ever had a pleasanter little home than John Stephens ; but what have | I now to leave, or come back to? and | this, Doctor, is what he ended up with,-- " Kate," says he, more nor less than a drunkard !and in | ' you are nothing the sight of God, more culpable than most of the men who stagger through the streets because the majority of those poor devils | have some sort of an excuse for their con=| | duct, and you haven't the slightest. You | have a luxuriant home, a Husband doing | his level best tv make you happy--every | you, and yet you will persist in swi illing tes.' Yes, Doctor, swilling was the word | he used--boo ! hoo! hoo! Oh dear me to think I should ever have lived to have | heard such dreadful language out of my "husband's mouth ; and then says he--and | making me as miserable a wretch as walks | | the earth.' ¢ Pretty plain talk," Doctor, with a shrug of his broad shoulders. ** Oh yes," sobbed the victim, 'and so aw fully coarse and nnkind. If I had had a spell, and died there before his very | face, I don't believe h® would have cared a snap of his finger. I tell you Doctor | | Ellis, there is such a thing as a man's get tting hardened.' * Evidently," with a laconicism absolutely painful. interrupted the replied the physician, ** But my husband has nothing in the world to trouble 'him but just my pour | health ; and I am sure I can't help that.' Thissreiuark was more in answer to her | companion's tone and manner, than the | one single word that had accidentally es- 1 ped his lips, and this the Doctor felt. | to hear all that was necessary for you to | and comfort are nothing, compared te my | again. "There is no sacrifice 1 would net { on." x re ; condition, and I shiauld really like to be told when you have been sufficiently calm know 1" " But, Dr. Ellis, 1 should think you | ought to understand that my own health husband's." Mrs. Stephens was weeping make for him." «Curious creatures I" mattered the Doe tor ; - 'Alelightful bundles of contradic: bs tions! How the mischief should 1 know, Mrs. Stephens, how much you care for : your husband ? I am sure you have spent the last half hour complaining about him. Is that the way women fenerally testify their regard for their husbands 1' «Oh, don't, Dr. Ellis, please don't," pleaded the terrified woman. 'I will never complain again---ever--- if you will only let me know what I can do for him. Do you know, Doctor, I had begun to think lately was growing so irritable. Poor dear! how | wicked and thoughtless I have been." « This, then, is the "trouble. I shall take it for granted, madam, that you know something about physiology, and can fol- low me without diffienlty 1" " Oh yes--yes, for mercy's sake, go " Very Well ; I find that the pericar diom--" / a "The Pericardium 1" repeated Mrs. | Stephens. ¢ You know what hat is, I suppose 1" Evidently Mrs. Stephens' anatomical knowledge was Hmited, She shook her head in despair. " Something about the heart, isn't it I" she asked at last. " Yes, thé pericardium is the membra- neows sac that holds the heart. Well, sometimes this sac--it is no matter about pacticulars, Mrs. Stephens," and Doctor Ellis suddenly came to a stand still. "1t is enough, though, for me ty say: that we are both passably anxious thay this heart should remain where it belongs. Mr. Stephens must be amused NE | IGROCERIES, WINE * Anyb dy would think, by the way he | entertaining books--a bapyy home--musie. goes on," continued the irate woman, ' that I enjoyed my self with spasms, and cramps, Anybody would think it was a pleasure to me to and fainting fits. feel, every time I sce a funeral procession as if the hearse was geing to ¢ Oh yes "such a life enjoyable, very, indec ', Bay Doctor Ellis took no notice of these last words ; the mau's eyes grew. luminous, top at our door next. is very and his whole face detlargd that he cou- sidered himself master of the sitnation, and if Mrs. Stepheus had not been. so en- tirely taken up with her own ailments, mental and physical, that honest counten- ance would have betrayed haw, * You say," in the large easy chair, 'and asswaihg a he b gan, settling himself pal air, 'that your hus- band has n ito trouble him but your Stephens " How?! w why how do I know anything? y the evidence of my senses. Dont] Koow that Yoh Stephens has a splendid business that looks after itself, a magni- ficent income, and money enough to live | on the bare interest, as well as a family need to live, if he never entered his office while he has breath I' '" But money isn't everything, Mrs. Stephens ** proceeded 'the physician, with a calmness almost mevhistophelian. There are other troubles beside meney troubles. How about health, madam ¢* Health I" repeated the lady with a sinile, she intended to be sarcastic to the ¢ Health? Doctor Ellis! Why, there isn't a | ealthier or a sounder man than my husband in the whole United Stites. He eals more in obe ney than I do in three months.' "There is nothing the matter witle your husband's s*omach, Mrs. Stephens." | Dr. Ellis shaded his face with his hand, | and waited further developements. Murs. | Stephens mistowk this attempt at forced You play and sing, do you not, Mrs. | " Oh yes--I used to," and Mrs. Ste phens' tones grere so pitiful now that big Doctor Elin® ally aud truly was oblig god | to wipe both his eyes and. his nose Be- fore lve was aware, the lachrymal duct had | got the upper hand. ** Well; try it again ; get a teacher, and go to practicing." ** But how aw I going to manage my | spasms I" subbed the lady. Vell, perhaps between us both--yon | using your will power, and thinking of your husband, going out with him, and | taking care of him--and I duing my best | { in my way, we may be able to subdue them ; but you must remember this, ma- damn --do not let Mr. Stephens have the faintest suspicion (hat you think anything | i 15 the matter with hiin ; and above ali, do him, and all that you know, just as you | used-to when you were first widrried." Ardother series 3 sobs from Mrs. Ste- | phens. { The Doctor arose to go. His patient | had entirely forgotten that he Had left no | prescription. "" About tea, Doctor 1" she asked, as he prepared to leave. ** Do you think it very | hurtful 1" | '" As an occasional tonic, 1 have no ob- | jection to tea; but as a daily beverage n:adam, it.is an invention of the dev i. Good morning." John Stephens sought his home tha | evening with a heavy heart. chondriac--it mattered little which ; one was as bad as the other. His rewmon- strances and pleadings had proved of no | avail ; he was doubtful even whether his 1 He opened the door | | wife loved him. softly with his latch-key. This had be- come habitual ; seldom did the gentlemaa shiow himself to his wife until after the dinner tell had sumutoned the family to N.B.--The Chapest lines in Japanese Silks, ever offered in Oshawa, LIQUO His wife he | believed a confirmed invalid, or hypo- | NEW BLACK LUSTRES, NEW POPLIN DRESSES, NEW SAPANESE SILKS, NEW PRINTS. NEW COTTONS. NEW SHIRTINGS and Black Lustres, J. BARNARD, Bee Hive, August 13th, 1873. Wholesale and Retail Dealer in AND SIMCOE ST., OSHAWA. Agent for Davies & Bro's Celebrated XXX Cream Ale and Porter. 4 in Stock. THE TRADE SUPPLIED: Hats and Caps. WILLIAM LANG STOCK OF WHICH 1S COMPLETE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. Gents' Furnishings. WITH CARE AND DESPATCH. Poplin Dresse S| | Sideboa rds, RSIPURNITUR 15-1y INVITES INSPECTION TO HIS SPLENDID NEW SPRING COCDS! Clothing Made to Order nn opew-Apeay 'Boots and Shoes. ---- WE HAVE NOW IN OUR SHOW ROOMS OintinShe. DINING ROOM SETTS, And ether Trnitare, in great variety, all of First-class Manufacture. LUKE & BROTHER. Oshawa, July 15th, 1873. 3-14-1y W. WIGG & SON, FREDERICK NEALE, Cabinetmakers and Undertakers | Yote SIMCOE ST. NORTH, OSHAWA. : Book asss ' | Sofas, Burea Desks, Stands, Cup dina 7 Tab | Begstond Washs tands, Jibles, Mattrasses, Looking Glasses, and lof all kinds and qualities kept constantly on hand. Also Agent in Oshawa for the | Dominion Noiseless Patent Steel Spring Bed Bottom, comfortable and durable, approved of before | Clean, healthy all ethers by those who have had them, and sure to cive satisfaction. Ito sole Agant fer S PATENT BALANCE WINDOW BLIND ROLLER, Frames made with neat- PALLING' | A first-rate article, ictures in ) lren's Cairia gre at variety. ness and das; { healths* how do you know that Mis, | Dot treat bit like an invalid. Juet amuse Choice Brands of Cigars and Tobaccos alwa ays or age Lat + UNDERTAKING. { Special attention pai id to Undertaking. shortest notice. | kept on hand and made to order. Teums reasonable. RJ Map 40 a'ino ATINALOAISHYU 81040q §pood S11 008 puv [v0 ® wry oad 0, AAVAT Dad f ® sooud pue enfea poof ¢ dvd ®t [9 Ing npoued Lounges, W gmen's * .s and + Perambulators always on Funerals attended to on the A sp Jlendid Hearse furnished when required. Coflins | BEDROOM SUITS - Everybody, | A DISCOUNT OF 50 SETS OF BEDROOM SUITES, | = CENT. To Select from, Raging in Price From $25 to $200 each. WILL BE GIVEN FOR CASH ALL-- PARTOR SUITS, Readymade Workl FOR THE NEXT Thirty Days | To clear out the Summer Boek, \ i LOOXR! Gents' " " $150 « L Girls - 50 " Calf, " 65 "100 TC. HAWTHORN, g ry i i Ring Street West: | Oshawa, Aug. Gth, 1873. 1414, " Prunella Gaiters - 70 cneté Vdc ad LaGusiuus EGAR Brriers the most Viguent thit ever sustained £2] areording to directions, i unwell, provided their bones are stroved by mineral poison er means, and vital organs wasted *epair. Bilious, Remfttent and Inter mittent Fevers, which #ré 66 privat lent in the valleys of our ES throughout the United States, those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Illinois, Tennesses, Cun sas, Red, Colorado, Brazos, Pearl, Alabama, Moile, Savannah, | anoke, James, and wy rie their vast iribytasies, Hytsughu entire country duri Autumn, and Tr ence hyd | sons of unusual heat al dryness, Residence an Hotel WN.FREDER AUY'S Ht X LAND. 1 esidenee, Sime > ING ST Geo. Rot Robson Howse Wea fPEETH I latest pring cheapest, and with Gold and apin by produc Dental Room Atkinson's Dry X ICENTI 4 ofice over ARRIST LICITOL = Public, Oshawa Simcoe Streets, © #4 MONEY | old. - - J. E YOUNT § s. Cochrane Ontario. CREE N ARRISTH AT-LAW, Public. Convey Loan, J. Hamer Gur RCHIT ance and Oshawa. Agen to and from Nev Nok--Messrs, Fairbanks, HOLES of of HOO! erisl a otto OR FE ROOKLID the Isolated of Canada, Toro) tidn. Also, for ( ies capital £2. to and from all 1 1 sample rooms, «. ARRISTE Solicitor i Notary Public ok Street, W FR HYSICIA eur, and Cu $5 to $2 of either sex, yo at work for us in time,t han at an Address G. STI) corrupt and andacious Ministry that they | concealment for emotion, and immediate- the dining-room. . cannot unpunished trifle with your dear- | ly assumed a sitting posture, brushed her | A strain of 'music met and transfized est rights, and to plant once more broad | y.:. away from her forehead, and lookad Abt's beanti- and deep. the foundatiors of public virtue | | i. cingly intd her 'companion's fice. ful song was being rendered, and his wife and constitutional liberty, the noble | " Why du you accent the word stonach was the musician. He was just in time structure which your rulers are now |, strongly, Doctor Ellis 1" she inguired in 19 hear, ~~ shaking to its base. (Immense cheering | ,, vious tone. invariably accompanied by éxtetisive -- rangements of the stomach Be CENT and other abdominal tg treatment, a purgative, sortiiga sim erful influence ben, these vaion ; Jas gans, © is essentially necessary. 3 is no cathartic for the purpose : HIS Ro Di: J. WALKER'S VINEGAR sox Brrrem, brwt of accom as they will speedily femove Kingston and 3 him on the very threshold. 'oonid oy ATEKINSONS DRUG STORE HONOQONNYV OL " The eves that cannot weep Mrs. Stephens was for- | Are the saddest eyes of al PUT SATTALS ¥8MR] AY) Jo. paw the honorable gentleman taking his seat | amid thunders of applause again-and «gain repeated.) JOEN STEPHENS PERICARDIUM | unexceptionable, and yet he be far from | parlor door and peeped in. *IPANOR KIRK "Now I am going to tell ycu just what my husband said to me this morning, Doc- tor, word.for word," and the invalid, Mrs. Btephens, lay back again on the sofa pil- lows, the very picture of misery. The! family physician, who was called on an sverage to the Stephens mansion three hondred and sixty times a year, drew @ | Mrs. Stephens broke down entirely, and tight to his heart. chair close to the couch, and waited qniet- Iy for Lis patient to open her buck of com- plaints. "Last night, yon see, Doctor, I had an ill turn 1 iz wanted to eome for yon ; Lut wh got 80 that he dared to leave me, he concluded that we'd better let you sleep." . : 4 "Muck obliged to him," said the doc- tor, with a little sarcastic emphasis on the personal pronoun. "Last might was the first undisturbed night's rest I have enjoyed for a week." Mrs. Steplien's confined : "This speil was the same asl had the Jast time you were sent for, Doctor--"" "A slight nérvous attack," broke in the | physician, "nothing more." "Well, it don't make any difference what you call it, it was mighty hard to band said first, Doctor, before we. go into symptoms. When he was going down to breakfast, he says to me, *'Kate, what | shall I send you up 1" as an excellent omen. 'Only that I might make yon under- ! | stand that a man's digestion could be most sound in other directions." | "Then you mean to tell me that my ( husband is sick ¥' I "ldo" ¢ Perhaps you will go still further, and | say dang rously 1" "If you desire it." "Oh, Doctor Ellis, how eold and vn- feeling you.are ! 1 should think you vuglht to know . by this time," --and just here sobbed as if her heart would break. "Ought to know what, Mrs; Stephens?" inquired the doctor, with uncalled-{or de-, liberation. "You ought'to know--to know--that | my --my husband's health and lif2 are of a good deat more consequence to me than my own " Al, indeed," interrupted the physi- cian, with an elevation of his bushy eye- brows, immensely trary opinion, as well as poveral, excellent re asus for said opinion. . "Dr. Ellis, will-youn be Kind enongh to tell me what's the matter i my hus- band 1" Mes. Stephens {was now on her feet teats all wiped away, eyes flashing with resentful spirit, and only a little guiver of { There she stood, | determined, wemwnly, The Doctor was delighted, and such an honest face it was i getting herself, and' this the Doctor hailed | - | word or set of words that can' provoke so suggéstive of a eon] 1 Tatil . - | the lip, to show how deep a wound the | pear ; but let me tell you what my hus- | kind Leart in her bosom had svstained. | reproachful, defiant, | | GO TO been as silent as the grave. " Company, perhaps" he muttered. Curiosity overcame him. He opened the { Mrs. Johu Stephens, vecomingly attired, all alone, as enthusiastic over the fine | rendition of a piece of music as he had | ever seen her. « What does this mean, Kate! i] + asked, with outstretched arms. "That I have given up tea, and am | going to try hard and be well !' I guess my voice will all come back, John." «J guess so," he replied, folding her | J hree months after this, the cure wasso radical, that Doctor Ellis made a clean breas of the whole thing ; and there is po hearty a laugh in the happy home of the Stephens as this physiologically scientific one, | DPericardium. "TOR - Good Bread There was | For afl! yout this evokes had REMOVED TO NEW AXD LARGER PREMISES Next Door to COWAN'S. - ---- | Drugs, Patent Medicines, Scented Soaps, French and English Perfumery, Hair Brushes, Combs, Tooth Brushes, and a General assortment of Dye Stuffs. verything of the best Quality and Strictly Genuin TIVISNIddH 'M oq Ms 'ayeoLnyut Jo aqpotap aoy jou Iv OM 'SMOO0TO ANV SIHOLVM NI MHOM TV "0% '43MM HINVINHOLYM up aw oym Auw 9jaul LPIPI0O pom PER 'ssouianq Jo) pauado mou §1 amg Lae SIH LVHL » Yoegs SIT #9 'era mania sosuydand Aue Ju Tee oy punoq ole pus ssoursng uve om 'VAMAVHS( 'LSVH LdII™LS ONIY MOTH S,NOSTIAL 'POIUBIIBAA puB padiedey Anjode)d NAN 03000 10 "0)PTI-T0ATIS 'Aramap 'X0d1D 'eBY0Ie MN TAX -, THIS SPACE RESERVED FOR A. & §. NORDHEIMER, DEATERS IN Pianos and Musical Instruments. 15, KING ST. EAST, TORONTO. LOOK AT THIS ! 1 HAVE OPENED x" 11y (0 Boxes Glass, " Star" and 12qaouIad LLLP 4 (1 ge --------------------; SIBLE RC tan ee aet------y tesa HATCH & MEARNS, Hardware, Tin and'Stove Dealers. KING STREET, OSHAWA. Beg leave to return thanks for the liberal patronage bestowel ¢ during the post year, and would solicit a continuance of the sane, have on hand the Largest. Best and Cheapest Stock of HARDWARE, and &c,,| Ever offered in this market. Our.Stock com prises part of the following : 500 Kegs Cut, Shingle and Lath Nails, 50 Boxes Pressed and Horse Nails, Diamond Star," James, Walker & Parker's, and Brandram's White Leads, English and Ameican Colors, Blundel and Spencers Boiled and Raw Oil Fnrniture and Carriage Varnish. American, Erelish, find Canadian Yocks, Latches, and Knobs, Butts, T. and Strap Hin aes, Screws Le, Spears and Jackson's and Sorby's Hand, R ipaand Tenon Saws, Ch Gouge's, Plane Irons, &ec. American Socket Firmer Chisels, "THOS Lm Man © 1 ud colored viscid matter with ph shih Wines a. bowels are loaded, at the stimulating the secretions of the and generally restoring Pray funetiops of the digestive GigAIS Fortify the body agai by purifying all its fuids Avi vi BiTTeERS. No Spidemis ca can take ofa Pr stem thus fore-armed. psia or Ind a YSpeDs in the Shoulders, Tightuess of the Chest, De Tats Eructations of the Stomach, Bad in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, tation of the ITeart, Inflammation Lungs, Iain in the region of the I ness, and a hundred other toms, are the offsprings of | One bottle will prove a better | of its merits than a lengthy | ment. Scrofula, or King's Ed, | Swellings, 1 Jeers, Erysipelas, El Goitre, Scrofulous 1a flammuations, Inflammations, Mercurial Som Bry Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sim Frid | In these, as in all other consti | 'eases, WALKER'S Vissear Br | shown their great curative powers most obstinate and intractable cases. For, Inflammatory and Rheumatism, Gout, Bili tent and Intermittent Fevers, the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Buti these Bitters have no equal. Such | are caused by: Vitiated Bldod. Mechanical Diseases. -- gaged in Paints and Minerals, webs | Plumbers, Type-setters, Gold- beaters = | Miners, as they advance in life, fe. to "paratysis of the Bowels. 4 against this, take a dose of Ware's Vi EGAR Brrrers occasionally. For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, -Rhe um, Blotehes,; Spots; | Pu s, Boili, Carbuncle, Ring woreh | Scald-head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, Beg : Senrfs, Discolorations of the Skin, iscases of the Skin of whatever r, are li te erally. dug up and of bling and aw Domini e transac v Brick Blog wo Brother wed on nts in Canad: . The Sa ih On all dey wed, Oftice Hours --F Pm, except on 8 at 1 o'cloc ONTA CAPIT OSHA OFFICE~-SI FFICE 'H to 3 o'clock Tk D nm. nk busing Sandu,' United Ts. nn Je this Branch. In| over$4 00, repay shawa, July 16} TR ---------- - RED] AM NOW any amount af arm or Producti Lowest Possi n sums sn 1 mann. -- re-paid by a You up: i . { that he carried rvund with him from door | 2 STOV KE ays I, don't want anything in the ! to doon, from sunrise to sunset, every | J 4. world but a good, strong cup of tea. Tell |. AND T I N SHOP McCHESNEY'S ONE DOOR EAST OF HOBBS' HOTEL; KING STREET, WEST, Avestments mq ud other securiti BILVER AND GI Bitte Star Company's Bevils,. Squares, Dividers, &ec., it Tay pe, ind cher det Dawson's and English Planes tu 3 Rodgers' and other English English Cutlery, : systems of i bo vermis 1, Plated Forks, Spoons ete, B. M. Tea and Coffee Pots, | like these Bitters. r r Spades, Shovels, Rakes, Hoes, Forks etc, | For Femal lain ious STOVES AND TIN WARE, [Je eg oe ot | Fi Female Complainant Which will be SOLD CHEAP: 'Guns, Revolvers, Shot, Powder, and Gun Caps; { manhood, or the tarn of life, ay rig . (bh Aun ' - . 1 , Tarp hi | Bitters display so decided an a | Special attention paid to all kinds of Evetroughing | Tome Lome st Chore." ease the Vit JOBBING DONE ON THE SHORTEST NOTICE. 4 . : wn ' lay in the y@r, that it was a mighty hard Bridget to send it up in tae little tea-pot." | matter to keep it from an immediate be- I saw, Doctor, that he didn t move after | trayal of the whole purpose. 1 said this, so I turned and looked up at | "Mrs. Stophens," said he, * lim, and such a pieture-of rage and dis- | no cause tq be alarmed. If 1 can only get ! gust I never saw in iy life. Finally, | your cooperation in this business, | fol | says he, 'Tea! tea! tea! its nothing | certain that I shall be able to make a but tea froma morning till night. Kate,' | well man of your husband in afew months | B A K E says he, 'you are the color of a chinaman' | at the longest ; but, as true as I sct bore | i 'mow. Why don't you order a good piece | before you, I cannot do this alone." of beefsteak, and a slice of brown bread, "Why have I not been informed of this and a cnpof clewlate ; that would be a | befure 1" bruke in Mrs. Stephens, imperi- sensible breakfast 1" ously. & ¢ But John," says I, 'you forget that | '"Who was there toinform you, mad- am sick and have no appetite.' I was am?! Your husbang does not know his Where I intend to keep a well assorted stuck of # 'you have | For further parti Ofticin]] Cec NN ila April 154k. 1871. as ee IR Cleanse the V ten Ble Blood Chandeliers and Brackets, | ever you find its impurities By strict attention to bukiness and doing everything in a workmanlike manner and EVETROUGHING & JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO | | | i ot vi a it when, [the skin in Pimples, Fv. i at moderate prices, I hope to secure a share of the public patronagé. our feelings will tell you when. PRODUCE TAKEN IN EXCHANGE FOR GOODS AND WORK Cut Nails $5 per Keg, Caslr; other goods at proportionate prices. | the blood pure, and the eh refore oi ts EI COLLIE HATCH & MEARNS, ores: %eD0TALD & 00% herons a1 | , " = # Acres. The Sol 3:181y. } King Strest, Oshawa, April 31st,'1873. do Wa ed Ae i orth het Lot of Acres, nable ter BRA a... id a INCE THE the Connty of Sale in Lump, 1 thi in ought to b sage August 12th, 1873 Oshawa, August 13th, 187g. 13-34 _- a

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