f · ... ,.- r- THE . MERCHANT, JlJLY 25, 18'73.· ==---========== ~~~~~~~==r=============r='=-~ · ====================~==~~~~'i.TA~~r=========-c__::======~-========== POETRY. LITERATURE. lfn the Nouconfonnist.] $29.; REWAllD. Just Over the Mountain. I read ef a 101,.·elier clime Than earth with its summer n.rrayBeyond the dark mountains of time, 1t stretches in beanty av1·ay : The 8miie of 0111· God is tbe light 'T'ha.t giveth the hue of its flowers, And mu.ntlcs each beauty-cruwrrnd height, 'Vith sunlight 1nore tru,;nquil tbatl 011r~. " Some Present Difficulties in Theology."11 ) ,J u~t o\rer the 111qu11ta.in it lies, The sweet sum1ner 1and of the soul ; A11<l 0' ueath tlw~e bea1itilul 'lkit.:i:' 1 :::fo sWr1n-duud ever i:ih:ill l'till, A pilgrim and stranger I roam, In si:iarch of that country afar; I read of a inansion, 1ny home, 11'01· beauty as bright as a r,iktr; rl'lll' city prepared of our God !lath dwdlers within it I know ·11~an1iliar its streets are no'Y trod, By thoso I have love<l here below. J wit ove1· t}rn llJUUllta,iu it Jiefj, A.nd often in vi::iion I sec TJ1e lwu:ie of my Father nriseThe J10urn of my kindred a.nd n1e. I j ·.i WHt\\/ j.iy Lc:tl1 v't1· the 11ills, I wind th.rough the \·allflys he1nw, Sing '1uitl the storms an<l. the ilh Which pi1gri.ns must. suffer and know ; 0 NbnU I, some bright sunny iuot·n, Look down front the summit of blis8, .A pilgrim to angelhood born, J\scapcd to that country frorn this ? Just over the mountain it lies, And there is the boine of 111y heart; rrhe t1ight of it gladdens my eyes, And biddcth my sorrows depart; And i:;}rn.U T the dty behold, '\\---.-hose builder a.nd. ma.ker iJi God? \.VhoJ:Je walls are 'of jasper and gold, '\Vhoac strcetf3 by the o.ngels a.re trod ? Shall I through the emerald gate, From earth and its dtlsert of sin, r>ass on to my angel estate, \\rtth Je~m;.i foi·evt'!r shut in? Just over the mountain it lies, ~iy hmne is the -valley below, And 0 what a jQyhiJ surp1ise Tu ca.Leh U1e Ji1-at flight of its glow. A. pilgrim a.ntl r;;tranger confessed) I look to the m0untain of light, Yrom whence the ,lcar land of the bleat, 'l'he Cana.an I seek, is in sight; 0, .Tcsus my Saviour ~nd guide, I folio:.\' thy t·uugh thorny road, 'J'ill with 'l'l1ce I ~Mely .a.hide, At home in tho land of our God. J m~t over the mounta!n it lies, Contentetl and happy I i·oam, Till dropping- this frail ruoJ"t.al. gui~e I stcinrl in the ligl1t of 01y home. -- W ilncss. The roar matcrial~l3nby. C-o·d fish j5 alwa.y~ R11re to be paid fol'. Row Lo keep square with the world--Don't be round too much. Vlhat is that from which, if. you take t11 0 wholE' 1 some will remain? · "\Yholesome. " Home - sweet, ::!wect home," a.s the said wl1e11 he <'ntcrcd his hive. be~ " It takes two boys to go to school nowaday1:1 -::ine to i;tudy and the other to carry tho boolu;;, "\\.. by arc clergymen like .brakemen? cau8e they do a great deal of coupling. Be- " \Vild Oat.s" are said to be the only crop that grows by gas-light. "'.Vhy is a wliispf:t' fo1·bidrlen in polite i .m· ciety? Beca.ur.e it isn't aloud. }{1)w Lu 1nake a ta11 mau short- A.sk hi111 to leud you :five dollars. "Di·iver, are you running on time to-day 't" "No, sir,'~ \Vas the keeu reply, "we are 1·un ~ ui.i1g for c::tsh. ' i TLe laLe~L LunlleL ift a tl'iAe highct· than freight 011 Lbt:J railrnn.dA and a8 gt·aceful in proportion. ., F.nglaud is celeb1·ated for its fo~s, l""'ranc..e for its frogs, I1·llluw..1 fur iL~ Loge, CAJrn,da fo1· iLll traces np aU forms of authorit.y---pa.rental, po. n dogs, ~Inioe forlts lngs, anrl Ohio for its hogs . litka.J. rmda.l-- to an underived a11thority, i_ source and - co1Tectix·e: which they have their A. Rchool-girl was recently asked at an eXatn11 'l'he d~rivath·e}nunan right to be credited iuatiou, by a clergyman, what .A.darn lost by and obeyed could not exist, unless behind Cvcry l1is fail, and v,rhen presBed rei;lied, " I 8uppu~e hmuan witness and law-giver there were One it was hi~ hat." whose,> tcsti1n011y being infallible must be absoTbe hand!:IOIDP. yonng ma,n who Rtole a ha.t· lutely beliu..,.·cd ; whoi!c will, being supl'em~, ~Land fro1n the basement of au up-town house must be absolutely done. Ile it is who really was Ueda.red by the servaut-girl tu lnwe been fir rcquil'es me to believe toy Lruther wLen he very h'attra(.:th e i1er~lm. speaks the truth, and to obey roy iA.ther when Little .ft1i.nnie, who hears .much discuf!sion he c0111urn.ndH the duty; and if it were not for about reli~ious n«.licals and thfj Ra,dical Club, that authol'ity of IIis suRtaining tbeit-H, 11either when asked by hl!r aunt what part of the ~ew bruLhei"I:! wituel:!l:! 11or· father's command could , r l'e!!tH.mcnt she Witnted to h<tVe read to het·, l'e· hflivc ~uy ~buthority a.tr all over mo. Herein iH that word of wide sweep. "l'hou couldest plied, "The stury about · the radical son," Dignified Clerk-" .A.re you going to tnarry hn.vo no power (literally no authority) against yourself~" Hacetious Patlnndcr _·i .A.rra.h, ~fe, except it wero give11 thee from aboYe. ' n By -va.rioM MJal?gies he aptly illustrates the now when did i-;cr )'P. bear tell of a gentleman grountls on which 'we accept the a.Uthority of tnan)'ing himself? .ShUTe there's a lady goin' Scripture, and adds : " The historical genuine to Le ruan·ied a.long '\Vid me ! " " view of the Biblo as a record of paut evf'nt~, iYl1icl'i ,., A remarkably dirty fficlh stepped in front of "and a testimony to facts by honest men, lli as a small buy t;itti11g on the fence, expecting to "Ct!rtain as any piece of ancient history can ba.ve sowe fun ·by chaffing him. He snid: "be; but it involves, of ner:eJ;sitv, th.;i fact of ~ "fiow1nuch tlo yon weii;h?'". The answer "God.if having spoken to the:.e m~m, ancJ uf wi:ts, "VVell, u.bout as inuch a..q you '\Vould if "thefr having honestly tried to i·eport hii:i you were washed. "-lfecr..rth a.nd Ifomc. . "word." He fintls the Superna.tural- L e. GDd, A Connecticut youth, who read in a. Hart- $peaking to tuen-Jumg iu tlnJ fol'efrunt of the ford paper of the la.rgc clerical force cmplo)·cd record- deny it, the rest becomes unintellig· by one of the insurance companies, called a.t ible ; accept it as a fact, miracles flow out of it. - . 1 the office the otlic't day, ·with a jrouQg lady, ~rhis lecture ia very able and clmiely reasoned, and politely n.slrnd to have one of the clergy· and has a bold convincing Yiew with which '"'e are m11ch pleased. '!'he appeals to lnunu.ll aninen Jnarry them.. · alogy of human relations aro vcr:Y admir;_tbly A little four-year old girl remarked to her follol\·cd up. n1amma. on going to be<l, 11 I am not afraid of Professor Lol'imcr'3 lcetm·c on "Disbelief in the dark."-i' No, of course you zu·e not," re- "Miracles," shows large resem·ch and careful ·TYRONE. plied he1· 1namma," for it can't hurt yon,"- application · or facL~ ~- aud Di-. Cha.Wu:1·'1:1 "Tltr.o" But·mamn1a, I '\Yas a little afraid once, when " rim; of the .A.totrnment" ia cumpleLtl and thorI went Lo the pantJ'Y in the dark to get a tn.rt. ough, with tt ce1-tain hardnes!1 in approach, -if I w~s afraid I couldn't find tbe ta.r l8." we may speak so, \Vhich is shown. in the way .A: fllrm('r, who was sympathizing '\vith a in which he deals with some points in Bush· AT THE nejghbor on the <lea.th of his son : "You should nell's writings, and in those of Dr. Young. recollect, neighbor Jones, there fa no loss 'vith- But the \'olume is re.ally admirable, and con· out some gain. J ohn 1 you remen1ber, \\'as uL sidcring t4a.t the writers had no definite ar· wa.ys n, mon11trona eater." "I know ht· was," rtlJlgement with en.oh other, it is very complete. reo;ponded' the bcrcavcdpEt,tent; "but to think We should not omit to say that Dr . Dykes'1:1 OULD niost res~rnctfully tender bis sinbe was htid up with rheumatism all )Vinter and preface ia clone '\YiLh great sl<lll and good sense. cere thanka to Ins nu1nel'ons friends and died just ii.1 haying tiµie .is pretty ronr-11. n t.'llsto1nere1 ·and tct the pUblic gener~Hy, for the "*'Some £.re.~cnt Diffic~dl-ie.~ ,~n Theofo[Jy: .being very liberal support he has received since bis A 111an out West who married a widow has ,ici·cd nt lhe Engli~h commencing in businesR; and .}lppes by c1111tl· invented n device to cure hct" of eternally prais- Jjectures to Ymrn..g Afen, dcli-1 Pre.-;b!}t&,..i(H~ Colle.ye, Lon<lon-. 'Vith Preface nued i:itrick_pe'rsonal at.ft!nti6u·. to business, and ing her fernier husband. \Vhenever she begin~ by the Rev.·J, 0.::!WALD DYK£S, D. D ., ·(Hod· offering notbing but the pul'eat al'ticleS, at the to decant on his noble qualities this ingeniou8 der and Sto11ghton.) 1uost reasonable prices, t.o ensure a continuance of public patronage. No. 2 merely says:- "Poor, cl.eat· man j how I J. H. would eaJl sp6cial a.ttention to his ve:ry wfah he ha.cl not died ! ,, and the. l.iuly hun1ediThe Great Lakes. ~llperior stQck of . . ....~ : ately bflgina to think uf 8omething else to talk ahout. rrhe following statistics in regard to the ' ola, riiggecl five great lakes in North ~i.\_mericn., Ii.re not ·.\.'Yr etched little boy, ten yearw· ' . which are siire to give the best satisfaction. and almost barefootei;l, drifting along the streets generally.known : Lake Superior is the largest body of frei;h of ])etroit one rl.ay recently, wu~ cwketl wh(:'re .A well-.selected irttick, µf "Dead." "'\7Jie1·e'a yu11r water in the world. Jts greatest Jeogth i8 his father was. 355 miles, its greatest breadth J60 n:iiles, DJ~UGS, u10ther ~" " Ru11 away." Hit:i interlocutor nnd its nTea is given us 32,000 square miles, 1 Jxp1·ef:!8ed ~yrn111ttJ1y, and oli8et'ved that he inust. Its average depth is variously given at 688 CHE11f.ZQALS; feel lonesome. 0 Not a bit of it: there's goin' and 1,000 feet. It is 600 feet "above tho to be the biggest cir<:us here next month yer level of the sea, 22 feet higher than Lake I'ATENT 1lfEDlGIN./<JS ever set eyes on I " Michigan, a!Hl 50 feet higher than Erie.· This volume is an admirable spedmen of a. species of literaturo which, if kept in relation I · to immediate needs, can hardly bo too much cultivated. Vllui.t with cheap tra.rutlations 'of 0 u R. Strauss and Renan, and the general infi.ltratiov of sceptical ideas into the bu~y Englhh mind in a. partial hut snggeetive way, tln'Ough maga· ;.;ines and ne1'rspapers-what with viYid applicatioru of such idt:as given by men like :h{r . M. Arnold, who would have lIB all to he Chriatia.D.B - - - o o - -AND yet wit.h a reserve in the bu.c~"Tountl of our minds tha.t Christ was, after all 1 an amiable ' p · ] self-de_c~iver. and consequently a. r;teceiver of l others, and tha.t such thinf;s as New Testament miraclm;-resurrection and the rest-are Bowrnan·ville but nn unimportant airy appcndn.gc hung on King to the moral clement of Christhmit.y, and cloom· Cont<t.i.1m one of the largest·stock,B · of eel, with the advance of culture, to drop quietly into the , recognised region of "Aberglaube,' . , . or cxtrilo h~1io f, or p111'(: 8Uperstition-Wh(ln Huch MURDOCH BHOS. have opened out 11.11 umn e11se stock of New Fall d · G1. t I b t I · b . · l .,, ] l J· AND ideas, we R.'ly, are presented ht the l'008t fasci11· G _ 00 .R_. · ea. c~~re ias een a. (en, 111 , uy ~og L le ~uoe <, anc as not llng ating form to the young and ingenuous mind RB \VAR D Al B 0 0 K S but First Class Goods have been purchased , r,ustomers can rely on 0 aetni~turally given to seek wha.t i~ novel and tincr aood value for thei l' lILOlle'r. ever shown in Bowmanville. b b .I striking, it is surely no unworthy wor.k to try \Yha.t ..-;an be achieved by "apologetics " in our --oday. And when the task is fairly tried, the cornfort is, that the '\V·ork is follnd to ·l;le mostly ~----0----done ready tu hand. The cu}tu~ed d0.llbters pf · FOR our ninctceuth ccutt~ry, who pique... fheillsclvQS on their vast cleverne.s..o;, .originality, and dar <Lnd the ing, are but follo'\v~rs of the men of "the In great Ya.:ricty. a11cie11t tj.n1e~." Stt·1.ntdd 1 l=tenaJJ, aIJd ·M.r . ·At· · .. ") finnld .1u; f~ l'efllly repeaterl5, in gTeat P<-"·l'ti o( --0-idea5 as old as Porphyry, Cclsua, and Julian . Pla;i.11 trnd figni'ed Lustres, Plain and. 'f~rttt~ Wool Popli:1s, Mety, Cords ....,....A choiceselection of and the rest. Figured Repps, Empress Cloths, ttnd an endless variety of other Hew l\fr. Gibbs! lecture iu thid volu1ne is 1:1-pedally Dress Goods. Black Alpacca.s, Double Warp Black Lustres, Black CoALBUJHS, interesting-, as bringing out this fact, with a honrg, Blad>: P>1ramatfas, Black Crape 'loths, Black Metz Curtis. quiet clea.tTiCl5s and litt?rary grace alike grateful P APIEH MACHI£ BLOTTERS, to ear a.nd lnind. i\Ir, Gibbs is pa.tieut· with specul<i,tive doHbt, on the ground that it 1 is .and INKSTANDS. "hi~lu? "ii.:al. " "Il j1:1 nuL a jueL \iiew ciLhe1· of "Jn1ma,n ua.turl:l or of 1Jisto1-y Lo l'egstrd disbePocket, 'Aftinomndum.s cind Bill " lief of the Christian religion as a monstrous B?olcs, and Purses, a ,good clwice. 1 hs ho.idly possible for a ' par~dox, "·hich it " rational man to entettain. It is "no new "phenonienon ju hfator'y ; we read of its having " been, o.nd wc kno\V- that it is still, the domi- LADY'S WORK BOXES, " na.nt 1nodc of thought in pt)lcr po.rts of the Tl~e as~ortrnent, of .Millinery and Mrnin @ t'Y Goods is very extensive " world, not only amid barbarians, hi,.t arrong WRITING DES~S, and m tnmmed or unti:imrn d Ha,ts and Bqnnets every·.taste carr-be con"enlightened and cultivated hatioria." · And he Work Boxes and Lady's Writing sulted astpe 'a!·iety :;~ , ~o gre>tt. The Fiow~is a'nd F~it,t}~ers, Laces, &b. goes on to write : \'e cla1m tu'-bave tlte largi:st assortment to be found . .. Desks combined,. " }i.fodern unlJclief hatS bt:en able· to arld but Aho a._beiauti· lit.Lle to wha.t Celt:ms and Porphyry and Julian A choice present for a ·Lady. fl1l set of · l.ll'ged lrJ tLe <Jarly ce11turi~~ a.gaitist the faith of Christ. Like modern critics, although in Ian· HANDKERC~IEF ln Black anti White r.eal taces ttml Lite Collnrs, we !rave a huge ttsguagc more offensi \'t:, thC.y ridiculed the idea of PEN ANJ) PENCIL GASES, sortmcnt, at prices to suit all. Christ having been born of a virgin ··a Btory (n,ext to gold) fitted with gold lJtme. w11ich they i:pokQ of as a wild fable. As to Hi~ resurrection from the dead, Cehua said that as WA clw· iee lot of lrfouth Organs . I . . \ no one _ had cv.cr been returned from ~be dead, for the Boys. ~ Our Stock of '1'weecls, Fancy . . Coatings, Pilots, Beavers, Petcushams it was certain that Christ was no exception to Meltons, etc., will be found unusually large. this universal law. The story was either a fraudulent invention of Hif:i'<l.i..C((;i1~les ot· a.:t1 Jrnllui:ination of some won1en Jabol'i.ng lUJde1· ~trong Ji'A~llL Y AND POCKET BIBLES, excitemt.\l1t~here agaiti anticipating modern criticism. Another favourite subject for their CHURCH SERVICES, incredulous scorn was the und.ue iinportance which the Christian .scheme appexre<l to confer WESLEY'S HY.MN'S, upon the rcdccillcd. '"" 'VawOod (aa-id Celsus)"to neglect the world D.Jld nil things in it, and to A!(l) BJBLE CHRISTIAN HYJl!IN occupy Himself uncea:,iingly in sending n1csBOOKS, in various sizes anp oiengers to ft. fow fo,,·mite individua.lB, and to binding. make it Ilis supreme concern ho'\v t11ey might be etern<illy uuite<l to Him ? 11 Mr. Gibbs is 1:!U~ceisi;ful in de:.iling with Mr. ' Bowmanville, May 7th, 1872 ·BowmanvjJle, NiJv. 2Gth, 1872. Arnold's reasons for honoring Ohrist, because He ga.ve " mankind a ne'"'· .methotl antl con1" municated to the1n a secret.' )Ir. Gibbs Wl:lll points out that )1r. Arnold1s theory 4s -unjust to the mor:alfots of the Pagan wo__rld. " rl'hey " failed c.erto.ll1ly to educate the world to mor" ality; but it is u11just to i;ci,y thu.t they did "110t Oul1nsd IUl~l1 to givt: h1:1~d tu Lhe inuf.:'lr "thoughts of their hearts, and to obey their "cons<.:iences. In Plato, Seneca, ~lld in :Mar. " cus Aurelius, \\·e find f:rqch coWisels nobly ex.. pres_ s ed and Carnestl;}: inculcated. .Th.fr, ".Arnold's theory ~s, i11.deed, -only a method of "sheddiiig a ce1-tain religio11s light upon unbe· "lief, f!O that it may appear 3 little lef!d bare ·'and cold than wl1cn it stands out in the .-:lea.r T'HE "light of }3traus's pitiless logic." And this ia we~_ix~id. . Tl1e SubA1: ·iJ\{l.:lr would beg to cnU attcntiun to ~· ·h~ stock of l · :01', Oawild lJykei:i, in hi~ leotnui "OJJ the ' Authol'ity of l{o]y Scl'.ipt11t·e ," t.l1u11glttfully F . .A. L L OPENIN G l· :eoox noo:M: Autumn Fashions Goods. GENERAL BOOK .STORE, I Magnificent display of' Ne'" a11d. ,..,lfi --- Sabbath School Libraries I I BOOKS Christmas New Year D ~ES, S GOODS TIIVL- "Good morni n;;, .!Hike, shure and it is o>Ldy out ye >Lre. Might l Le bould to axe what started yces this morni.1w." 1\'IIKE.- " J ist: b~ aisey, Tim, and I'll tell yo irrn jiffy. SGe, I was tould, y1stcrd;. ~ y, th<Lt ll'listhcr Grnv, ov 'fvrono had aot h01n··· - - - - -- - - - -- - -- - - - "'J" " J J b v an 11 ·1 gant n ew stock a,v Couds, diapc 1is durt, rruin, and its m e.self could h1trdly slapc ;t wink, -all night, thinking lLV the S. G. WEBSTER, L. D. S. cl1tipe.goocls. Ami sum onun; it.~ the fu'Jl store h e lms- piles a'1d piles 1w the natest, p:tttems: and h e'd o·ive ve the makin's ~v an illigau~ n e w go wn for lliddy, for. Siv~nty~tlve Cints ; T&y !or must nuthrn, arnl the J:htccy ior a tnfl e less." I j TIM.-- "An shure il:s foDnina me ye are .!Hike· wouldn't the man be S UR GE Ol'J '7'D ~ :P. l S 'I' [ ;,~rther ~rc<lking do\".~~." ' ' TEETH EXTRAQlEll WLTlfOl,tT PAIN, .!HIKE.- Bre 1ikt;1g.~luwn, rn 1t. Snr~ h.e know~~' tbrick wurth two av by the use of,; that. I 11 jlSt tell you wlrnt it is, Trm, 1f ye want to get a grnle Niti ""' O"-itlc, ( or-:I;'ratro;id:e oj-Nitro1·cn \ name when youre ded, and be called a filantrofized, filosifer nnd . . a public binifadhor, J·ist tell all y-oure ne.b o·Lii·o, a 1,.1 tlie ri"st' ,o.v . " · I "luch rn de1 ight(ul 4' tak~. " ,.u "· Nitrous Oxide fa used in all the principal cities rnank.ind ; ~lbo11t, (}ray's ch:i.pe :-;Lore, and you'll do n1ore fo1 · t,he of Europe and America, and I can with plerurnrc good av you v couut hry, than i ver St. Pittt·ick did for ould lreand confidence revem1nend it to the. Publip, aa ] d I l 1. · ] l II l a sole a.nd plea·a·1t au resthetw. an , wren JC uau1 > tee a tie toads aud snakes out, n.v it that lfyon'\·alueyourhealth nive1' \\1 asini~. " -·Don't Neglect your Teet)l 'rrnL- - "J:'n1 mud1 oL~agcd to ye,-f'Urthe bit av abvice, and won't dettLrn vc; thcre· Jl sl1m'd v IJ c "arate run n,Jtil rnavbee I'd llljS' ' p RICES M 0 DE R A TE. · ·' o , · " i;ome , bargains. The top <IV the morning to yc.' '- I'm off to Teeth pulled for Twenty.five cent"!, Grny s. rl' having comfl to 011r 'kno\vJedge, that certain _ PutUu.rs al'c selling Sf1cctaclcs and E . ~ye U-lassc11 plU·porting to lu) f) our 111ake 1 and to bear our names statnpcd thereon, \\·o hereby caution the fntblic a.9aimit all such i1npostcrf.!,a.s ~Ie1;l:!I's Yt~l owle,c:'i & Quick are our Agent8 in west ])urlw,1n ; aJ.ld a ltt·wn.nl of $::lU, ii:i hereby offel'c1l for th e :i.pp1·d1r.n1liun l~))(l conviction of aJ.l snch impostcri> as try to defraud the public by offering their trMh as Ol.ll' m.ttke. LAZARUS, :HORIUS, & CO. .llontrcal, Nov. .8th, 1871, n7-tf I OeL. CHIT CHAT. ['l"hn Brady and Mike FlynnJ Oct 1S72 1S72 Ye I I [ 0 J .l:Woms formerly oc<.:upied by T. _ J ..Tnn r~R, uvc1· ]'. Ji'. j).-!cArLhu1·'ri Store, JGng Street. Dowmanville,.Tan 2:>rd, Ul'73. tal7·1y. J. GRAY, Tyro11e. Noted for cbea1> Goods. ===============~ MIL -LINER Y (west of the Ontario Bank.) King Street, Bowmanville. .'::,,::;.,,., ·--.-.-.-~---- .;i_.-- - - - - - -- -- - T HE. subscriber fa prepared to builcl ttncn1'~.; pan· lVagons, Biigg'ies, uncl Outte1 _. , · of every description, at short notice, audcf· rNL:;;onable tel'm.r.. J 1 ' l .CLOVE AND BOXES, · l Carriages Painted and Trimmed; RICE & BARKER Iw p or_ t q:s of the BEST- OB.GANS inanufhcturecl < 5J!1 this 9oi\t1nent, :1.re p1·cp;1red L o l1·c"L wi~h · reliaLle tra v.elling agents on ·liberal term s 'J'l1 ey a m rnitking arn;ngcments t o introduce ~01ne first c]r~ss Pianoo. . · ---o--- A Blacksmith's Shop ,, nu the preini::!os, were ~pecinl attention is g-1~~~1 to all -:: · . MURDOCH BROS. C'n.: r riage work, a,nd General~t:. Job bing. ·~ · '..~ : ·~ .{~ ~ ;' 'Vn,re Itomns a.t t;hc West, Dur~ C. :Barker, All ivork done at this EstubUishme;,·. t. wurrlinted. A cnll il5 re81 Jei;Lfnlly ;;oJie,;it,ecl. .r. MORRIS. Bu-wmallville, Oct. l8t, 186U. ;, 1 .~:.'.: ii'1 ·.Sf h a.rn ·Stenrn Print iHg House, Ki11 g Street Bowmn.nv ill e. '::~i';.~; _ ___ !;-. . . . .. ~ ·· JUNE, spring 1872.~ f · ~::::~===== - = =-=-=-=--=-- .. Simmons & Clough Organ Co's I~p1~oved 187. 3. . .., f. ';· Most Wonderful Invention of the Age . Groce;~es, :Ory~ J Moses' Electro-Galvanic, Pat. Jmte 2nd, 1868. Goods, j Attachll<l t.o tliet!e rx~tented Sµ_ ectaclcs o.rc two scientii:ically conf..tt'l1cti;:fl Ga.1 ~· auic Bittterieuunse~n when worn- <leliycring tht'cugh the nei:vei3 of the head, a soft and continuous stream of electricity, '\'italizing and giying healthy action to the l:'ntire be~utiful system of those purt.s abf:!u]utely 8.w.l certa.iuly curing DRY A~:;·~=~, Cabinet GOODStj~'. :~ ~ .~: <Ii ". W,. 1 Organs .· AND New, Fashivnable, aml Ched!ffi Partial Paralysis of the Optic Nerve, Weak or Diseased Vision, N curalgia of the Head or Face, Nervous Twitches In the Muscles of the FELT . . a STA. W. . ANll .v ~"' ' ..... 0 .A.NA.JHA. ..-.---o- - - :Boo.te.& Shoes. etc , ·~to, .. f~r . J Noises in the Head, Loss of Mental En.argy, And a host of l\l ervous Dfao~ses, arising from de11rc1:n;io11 of the uerYOll.8 ehe'rgy of t.h e 1;1ys em 1 Contributing. in a most Mtorlisliinf;, deg1".t'le. t9 life vigor. and health. By the means of the soft and flowitrg stream tof11 Ele'.ttl'idty, Giving Brightness~ ti C csa to ~he Eair, a.nd i::nergy,.to 'll.e ·are s~t! wiilh lenses of th"e to snit all ,Sights, and with glasses for those not nee ing f;pectacles to read with but desiring the benet iits to be derived fro1n ·wcadng tho Ba.ttc1·ieii ; nnrl a.re on~y tu be ]u\.l.l in this vicinity of face, .... -P ~ Clothi'Ug1p!!-de to orc;ler, the beSJl: . trimmings only irned, and the lowest' ~· price clmrged. · · . ' ';; . , . r."!.i ~... ."> ~ .... '0 :i:t GOOD ,,:·} "! . ~- Ne\Jt . - ~: :!:! Grooerie~,.-: ~ I Cl) t Quality~~nd ·Cheap YELLOWLEES & QUICK. m25 ti ;. 6; -ness TO T_HE ·, . EGGS anci BUTT~~ Wanted, ·' S· I'. iIILL ,. CANNOT ,BE SURPASSED '\VALTER vVIGG & SON, tCturniug ttuu~ka to tJwi~· tum·,~~rous Cuf;Lurnet-a n.nd the Public generally, for pMt favors I ·would respectfully invito.itheir attention to our present.stock of Furniture, aa we have laLl.;!ly added the1:eto, that we ,roay thereby be enabled to supply all parties v,rho rnl)y please to 'f.tt~or hi ¥>ith a oalL Great inducements held out to those purcashing at our Establi~lnnent.. Pio:to'uref'., Looking GlaBse~, &q., 'frl\"PJ~d to order, mid in every style. Satnples of. the different kfild of Jv.T.oulclit1g1; cu..r1 he He~n iii't: tli.e ;v\..,.ftl'e·l'OOID. "re \Vf,11ilrl also Deg to inforn1 ;you, tb.at,ha\·pi.g pvr· cha.sed· a r ~· J. ELLIOTT, · BOWMANVILL,:E . ®ranh (tnmbinafinn $ry11nft. '·FITTED WITH THE NEWLY INVENTED DRUGS AND MEDICIN'ES .· ·s-'J?tENDID NEW HEARSE, \Ve shall be ready u.t aJ.l tiine!!', to attend FuneraliS, on t:hort notice, and reasODable terms. N. B. Coffin1:1 kept vu hnud, nnd 1nmle tu 01·der, at the Bowmartville Drug Store. · Machine : I ' Man'Q.~!).~ur.ing 1Co. ·'· ~na. I~lenient . , .. An invention lmving \t mo8t important bcm'lng on the fo tu re· repn t~ tion ., ;_. · ~ Scribner's Patent Qual~fying Tubes, . ;or Iteetl Instrumc11t", 11y 11wa.11s uf whid1 the <1uaritity or Vplu,nie of tone is very largely increttsccl, mid the r1trnlity of tou·e rcmlered · ·- ( W J. HI<~:Git'JlU)TH;AM. NEW JJON11i'ION RETAIL FURNI'l URE WARE-lWOJi Oshawa, Ang. 26th, 18i0. ~Equal · King Street East, Oshawa. Manuf~oturers- .... ~ · to that of the Best Pipe of the Saine Capacity. -.· - -- ( ' ) - - -· - ' of HENRY ELI_JIOTT . Ji vVOOD AND IRON J11111· -G . . WOR KIN Q11r Louis p,,tcnt," a \!ox II111r1ana." " \\l1IMA~!f-..,,NERY- -cox il'<.ttent" " Oektve Coupler," the cbnrming " (;eJ1o " oJ.· ·, c Cla.rionct 1 "" 1 _ ' ·; ·· ··. , Stops, aa1 tl c_r' J;(,l~~-v:, Cdes~e," " DYESTUFFS, Offers for sale oli,e ·u£'· ~Iic.~os,t" extiµ1siv"- atid cowpletE :~ssorrnenl o Good$ fo be fo{\11Ll in any' country stm·o in Onl~rio. ' L&~~ . !Y' · p t . o n. f ' '\ · LBPFEL·S -- .,LAT E Double Turbine Water Wheels, .And Cim Le ubtninccl only in these, .0 rg;u10. Thfrty-Jiuc D itfin·ent Style~, Dry Crockery, Paints, Oils, Gvoc~ries, Hardware Ji'o1· the Pcv1·lor· cvnd tho Chwtch, The B@l 1 lfale-l'iul a nd Worf;:mwnsh·q>, QU,i-ility u;iil . V ol1 M ne of Tone , Uneqv.alled _ _____..;... o- - I.. - A young couple we1·e sitting together iu a romantic spot, with birds and flowers above them 1 when the following dialogue ensued : " My dear, it the sacrifice of my life would please thee 1 most gladly \Yould I lay it a.t thy feet." "Oh, sir: you are too ~ind I but it just reminds n1e that I vdSh you'd ieave off using tobacco." " Cant- think of it. It's a habit to which I am wedded, i. " \ 7 ery well, sir ; since this fo the 'vay you la.y down your life for me ; and a.s you are already wedded to tobacco, I'll take good care you a.re never weddt!d to me, a.s it would be bigan1y." Lake Michigan is 320 milM Jong, depth of it is 900 feet. 10~ n1iles in the \\·idest part, and the mean In its length it is longer tlrn.n Luke ing 390 miles. It has an area · of 23,000 square mile5. · 'rhe grr.al,ei:;t length of Lake Huron is greate~t Superior, be ~ BRUSHES, C011fBS, Ca.stings of a 11 Xinds. SHOULDER:BRAGES, sup_PoRTERS, Etc., Etc. Boots and Shoes, Patent Medicines, etc. l=tEP.A_ Il=tS done on t.he ~· O - ----() - - - - - 200 mile" th' greatest width J 00 miles, .the kept c0n:;,taiftlf0l1 hand. '. 'Ve have now on hand a litrge riuailtity of $so o._ Michi~an mean depth 600 feet, and the area 20,0QO OILS, square miles. GENTLEMEN'S SUITS made lo order in the latest and most apLake Erie's greatest !engtl1 is ~40 miles, COIJ;/j;IJ"J, VARNJHSEB, its greatest width 80 miles, the mean pNved manner, and on tlie shortest notice, from J<'aslilo11rtble a.nd taste depth of its waters 100 · feet, the most ' . "a}icl WHITE LEAD, fully selected ClQ.t hes and Tweeds. The hitest New York F'a.~hiou Pl>1tes shallow of all the five lakes, aRd· it has a superficial area. PAINT;. antl Warerooms, Cor. 6th and- Congress · streets, Detroit, ' Common and Gang Ploi.y;s, thttt will be sold at N othiug ia 111ore dissimilar than natural and acquired politeness. The first consists in a willing abnegation of self; the second in a compelled recollection of others. mil ea. · Hor~es aiid.:,cattle Medicines; Lake Ontario's greatest length is 180 N. B, - Oount.ry Storebeepers supplied on the miles, gre!lteEt width 65 iuiles, mean depth most advantagcutuitel'm~ . , · A choice Selection 'of LA}1PS, for sale cheap 500 feet. Its al'ca is given as 6,000 /5{1uarc Bo'\vmanville. Dec. 9, 1868, 6m miles. of about 9,500 sql.lare at tl1e ven· low(1.it"i1~:icci;, regularly received. H. ELLIOTT JUN Hamp~ou . LOW PRICES ,. .for AT THE SHOP. Downianillc , l\fn rch 6, lf73. tf & BARKER, Agents, :Ontario, West and North of Belleville. m47-o34-tf. ' 'i.,,, Nov. 5th 1872. bp- f'· I Bo~rmavil l e, ,\.ug 21st , 1872 . ~ .., !~~. ·:.~ 1:4; ,;,__ .. I_