> 1...‘ , _, 7 7. M v, . I: 4h- 1. LEGAL &c. JOHN A. BARR BARRISTBR-AT-LAW, Lin y. Ofï¬ce on Kent Street, next door west of Keith’s Agricultural and implement Store. MARTIN & HOPKINS, ARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, kc. Mo- neyto Loan at 03 per cent. Ofï¬ce, Kent street, Lindsay, Ont. P. S. Harris. G. ll. Horxixs. F, D. MOORE, ARIIISTBR, ATTORNEY, 8 SOLICITR and Notary Public. Money to Loan. Ofï¬ce, Kent street, Lindsay. lIUDSl’I-ITH & JACKSON, AilitlSTEl’tS, SOLICITORS, kc. 0f- ï¬ce, William street, Lindsay. A. licoseem. A. Jscxsox. O'LEARY .3: O'LEARY, BARRISTBRS, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Solicitors in Chancery, kc. Office, Doheny Block, Kent street, Lindsay. Aoruvn O'Lnav. llvou O‘Leaav. MCINTYRE k STEWART, ARRISTBRS, ATTORNEI’Sâ€"AT-LAW, Solicitors in Chancery, kc, Lindsay. Office over Ontario Bank, Kent street. Mo- uey to Loan at 8 per cent. on real estate ceuritics. D. J. Mcixrvsn. Tuos. Svswsar. ALEX. A. MCDONALD, TTORNEYvAT-LAW, Solicitor in Chan- ; cery, Conveyancer, kc..&c. Strictatâ€" tention given to applications for Patents of Lands from Crown Land's Department. Money to Loan on Mortgage Security on terms to suit borrowers. Ofï¬ce, Colhorne street, l-‘enelon Falls. MEDIch ’ A. w. J. monassr, M. D., FOIIONER, Physician, Surgeon, kc, kc. J itesidence, Brick Cottage, Wellington street, Lindsay. WM. KEMI’T, M. D., C. M., - tRADUATE of McGill University, Man X trcal, and Provincial Licentiate, Physi. ciao, Surgeon and Obstetrician. Medical Referee to the Standard, I’hmnix, Connecti- cut Mutunl, and Equitable insurance Com- panies. Office and residence, in the house lately occupied by itev. Father Stafford, at the cornerof LindSay and fins streets, Lindsay. Du. A. WILSON, W ILUNIVERSITY of Trinity’CollL-ge. I . M. It. University of Toronto. Memh. Col. I’hys. and Surg., Ont. Physician, Surgeon and Accoucher. OIï¬ce,Colborne street, l-‘enclou Falls. im. J. u. LOWE, )liYSiClAN k SURGEON. Coroner for . the Provisional County of Ilnlihnrton. 328‘ Ofï¬ce next door to the McArthur Iionsc. Residence, the house lately occu- pied by Dr. llryson, on May street, Fenelcn ails. sunvsvoas. JAM ES DICKSON, ) L. Surveyor, Commissioner in the Q. Il., . Convcyuuccr, die. Residence, and ad- dress, Feuelnn Falls. MISCELLANEOUS. Nucoxn DIVISION COURT IN L, THE COUNTY or VICTORIA. The nextsittings of this Court will he held on Thursday, November 23rd, 1882. CEO. CUNNINGHAM, Clerk. “m...â€" J A M ES J. POWER, ICENSED Auctioneer, Accountant and ,leneral Commission Agent. (.‘ollcet- ing accounts a specialty. Ollice, Penelon Falls, Out. “GTâ€"Pun an-r. 6. BIONE‘Y TO LENI) a: G, 65 and 7 per cent, according to secu- rity, on Ileal Estate mortgages. Apply to JOHN A. BARRON, Solicitor, Lindsay .I. HEELANDS, lol‘lNTXST, LINDSAY. One of the firm will he at tho McAaruun Ilousn, Fascmx FALLS, on the third Monday ofeach month. Teeth extracted by laughing gas without pain or injury, or no charge will be made, 363‘ Ofï¬ce established in Lindsay nearly ï¬fteen years. 81,000 170111713113, iumix Cancchurc Depot, Coaticook, I’». Q, Canada. CANCER CURE!) without the use of the knife. The Only Permanent Care In the World. For particulars enclose two 3 cent stamps to S. C. Smith. Ooaticook, l‘. Q.,Cannda. â€"â€"llighest Referencesp-e: ï¬t‘URES SWll-‘T AND CERTAIN.“ [Any paper can publish the above for $5 a year, with this note and paper regularly.) JuszRRIVED â€".\'f THEâ€"â€" ‘MUSIG EMPDRIUM,‘ a large stock of ALBUMS imported for the fall trade. which we are selling at close prices. Also a very ï¬ne stock of VIOLINS, CONCERTINAS and Accordeont, of all qualities and prices. New goods for the fall trade arriving daily. 3’ A call is soiicimi at the Mann Wo- n't-u, Kali .Qntdt, LiuJMy. G. A. m Lindsay. October 4th., 158:. ' lNSU minors. GEORGE continuation, General Insurance and loan Agent, PENELON rams, our.I represents the following ï¬rst class compa. tiles, with which business out be transacted upon the most advantageous terms . The Canada Permanent Loan A Savings Co. The Imperial Insurance Company. 0! Lon. don. England. The Cttivcu' Insurance Company, othua- do, Ru as W The Lnueaahiru the Confederation Lite Association, of Cu- is! u. lemme; Co, of same. i ' BRITTON, WATCHMAKER, JEWIllIlld& illilllllll, ealer in Clocks, All Kinds, 30 day, 8 day and 30 hour, Alarm strike, kc AMERICAN WATCHES, the Best and Cheapest, IN SILVER AND 00L!) CASES in the net-rest styles and at lowest pricu. fl" Persons sending watches from a dis- lance for repairs, can have the amount of work and priCe reported on for their consid- eration, and as I do the work myself, can depend on having it done satisfactorily. Britton’s Block. foot of Kent St... Lindsay. II T A H I 0 B I I K. Capitol . - - . - . $1,500,000. President . . 4 . . . . . . . . . Sir. W. P. Rowland. Vice-President . . . . . . . .C. S. Gzott'ski, Esq. General Manager . . .. . C. Holland, Esq. LINDSAY BRANCH. Drafts banght and sold on all points in Canada, United States and Great Britain. and general banking business transacted. .._‘ Savings Department Interest allowed on deposits of ï¬ve dol- lars and upwards. S. A. McMURTRY, Manager. Lindsay, I-‘eb. 16th,1881. ï¬O-t.f. Eliefcuelon falls Qbugrttr Saturday, October 7th, 1882. The " Asia †InVestigation. The investigation, at. Colliugwood, into the causes of the foundering of the steamer Asia terminated on Wednesday, but the report is not yet published. All the evidence corroborates our last week's statement. that the boat. was un- ï¬t for lake navigation, and that it was next to suicidal to leave port in a storm. Competent authorities say that all can- alersâ€"of which the Asia. was oneâ€"are built on a wretched model and that they are never safe in rough weather on open water. Several of the bodies of those who went down with the Asia have come to the surface and been re- covered, and others have been seen ; but a great majority of them will probably never be found. The Bishop of Algo- ma has written to the Toronto Globe, suggesting that, a subscription should be taken up throughout the Province in aid of the families of the poorer victims of the disaster, and the Suggestion will no doubt be promptly acted upon. l Affairs in Egypt. The following, which we clip from the Globe of the 29th, does not present a very satis actory picture of the pres ent position of affairs in Egypt :â€" “ The despatchcs from Egypt are not very reassuring to those who looked for a speedy withdrawal of the English troops from that country. An announce- ment. appears in the Lendon Times to the effect that. 12,000 soldiers will re- main in EIypt for the present, and it is strongly hinted that the suppression of Arubi is but the beginning of the work of'paciï¬cation and readjustment. Cairo advices reveal an alarming state of things amoag the native populace and Arabs, and sufï¬ciently indicate the necessity of having a strong force of British soldiers on hand to quell any- thing likc a combined outbreak. There seems to be abundant reason for sup- posing that tho explosi0ns on Thursday, which were attended with a deplorable loss of life and treasure, were the work of Arabs, some of whom were caught in the act of endeavouring to spread the flames which followed the explosions, whilst others had been previously ar- rested under the most suspicious cir- cumstances. The Home Government has ordered an immediate investiga- tion.†W Political Rumour. It is a well known and often deplored fact. that “ the best men keep out of office," and the reason they do so is not far to seek. Superior intelligence and honesty are generally accompanied by superior sensitivencss; and, consequent. ly. the men who are best ï¬tted by nat- ural gifts and acquired information to serve their fellows, are kept in private life by an instinctive shrinking from sharing the treatment meted out to all holders of omen, from village council- lors or school trustees to cabinet minis- ters themselves. Den-action and mis- representation appear to be the rule, and just judgment and fair play the ex- ception, especially in politics;snd in exact proportion to the ability and en- ergy ofu public man are the ill-will and rancour displayed toward him by his opponents. The same evil spirit pre- vails both in the people and the Press, and for the purpose, apparently, of cre- ating a wider ï¬eld for its exercise, there appears to be a growing tendency in strong party papers to attach a political signiï¬cance to expressions of opinion on the most unpolitical subjects, and the most marked evidence of this tendency has lately been given by the Port Hope Tinm. A day or two after the break- ing up of the camp at Cobourg the Port (lope New had an article strongly cou- dcmning the conduct of the volunteers. whom it aocuscdâ€" without however bringing speciï¬c charges against them â€"-of gross immorality, and the Tinm. by some process known only to itself. construe: the article into an attack upon the volunteer system. and insists that it was written to scrye political ends, and not, as any impartial reader would suppose, for the simple purpose of pointing out and leading to the sup- pressio‘u of a very great evil. It was not only the privilege but the duty of the fines tourist: and defend the volun- teers if it believed, nit professed to, that they were unjustly accused; but when it made an assertionâ€"in proof of l .srhieb it could not. bring a tittlc of evi- ; deuce-that the News was actuated by a secret‘aud sinister motive, it gave what would be {ludicrous if it were not a painful exhibitIon of that politi. cal raucour which it abscribes to its lo. Cal contemporary, and which unfortu- nately exists to such an extent as to make the best men in the country shrink in disgust from incurring the al- most inevitable conSequences of a public career. Zeal vs. Discretion. The Lindsay Warder, having fired away at the Hon. S. C. Wood until it. has grown tired, or until it has expend- ed the very small shot it has been pro- pelling with tremendous charges of pow- der. now treats Mr. S. S. Peck, M. P. P. for North Victoria, to a broadside. We wish our new but none the less respected contemporary to understand that we do not “ pose †as the defender of Mr. Peck, who will robably show himself quite able to or. ertake his own defence when and where he thinks it necessary ; and our notice of the attack on him is entirely owing to our extreme solicitude for the reputation for astute- ness of the Press of this county, which reputation is somewhat injured by the article headed " Mr. Peck and North Victoria.†There can be no doubt at all that the Warder is a good paperâ€" from a party standpoint, and is being conducted with any amount of energy and vim. Its present mission is under- Stood to be the annihilation of the Mowat Administration and the irrita- tion of Reformers generally, and the manner in which, in its efforts to fulï¬l that. mission, it puts the worst possible construction upon all the acts and utter- ances of its destined victims, and mag- niï¬es molehills into mountains, and twists things generally, is a caution to admirers of'strict veracity and fair play cher to do violence to their feelings by writing political articles for a red hot Conservative paper. Having thus open~ ly admitted the many merits of the Wurder, it will perhaps pardon us for alluding to the one defect which, as stated above, is endangering the repu- tation for nstutcness of the Press of this county. The defect is that it no. casionally lets its zeal override its dis- cretion and pens sentences which con- tain statements as antagonistic to each other as two negatives in ungramtnati- cal juxtaposition. There is a remarkâ€" able instance of this in the article aneut Mr. Peck, in the ï¬rst paragraph of which we are told that “ Ever since his election he appears to have done no- thing but plot and scheme to strengthen himself politically and grind down the poor settlers in every conceivable way." Now what we fail to understand is, how Mr. Peck can contrive to strengthen himself politically or socially by grinding his ponstitucots. The “ poor settlers " are the men who do the voting in the north country, where Mr. Peck got such a sweeping majority at the last election. and where, notwithstanding the high crimes and misdemeanors of which his opponents accused him, he bore the reputation of being the poor man's friend and the very reverse of a grind- er. The Warder will probably pitch into Mr. l’eck as long as it has any hope of injuring him by so doing ; but if it makes many slips like the one we have fetiderly pointed out, and which is not its ï¬rst of the kind, it. will infallihly injure its own reputation for astutencss and gumption, which all its well wislters would greatly deplore. Our Public Works. Mr. Macdonald, son of the contractor for the locks &c. in this village. arrived with his family last Wednesday. and next. day rented the house on Colborne street lately occupied by Dr. Wilson, in which he will reside until the contract is completed. Some of the required horses and carts will be here this week, the engineer will arrive on Monday to lay out the work, and operations will commence on the following Tuesdayâ€" or Wednmday at latct. From ï¬fty to seventy-ï¬ve men, if they can be procur- ed, will be put on at once, and a great- er number as soon as they are needed. Mr. Mscdouuld expects to have the con- tract ï¬nished in a little over a year, which is about half the time unprofes- sional guessors have said it would take. m Kinmount. (Correspcarfeme of the Gourde.) The deer stalker is again in the land. As a business it doesn‘t pay, but. there's lots of fun, as deer are plentiful, and a number of ï¬ne ones have been taken. Our village is improving: we are to have a, new factory soon and those we have are buzzing away like fun, The luinbcrmcn are rapidly forwarding men and sup ice to the various camps, and all must pass through Kinmouut, for it is the highway toâ€"well, 'most every- where. We have a siming school, and. by the way the young folks enjoy it, I guess it must be pretty good. 'Galwny agricultural show will' be held on the 11th inst., eoget out your big pumpkins and come along. W ...__.___.-.. DISAPMINTlp.â€"- The members of our village band intended to have a moonlight. excursion on Cameron Lake on the night of the 28th ult., and got out hills to that effect, but they were disappointed. A considerable number gathered on the wharf at 8 o‘clock, but had to go home again. as the Cobocank did not make her appearance until a- bout half past 9, having been detained by the grounding of a snow which she had in tow. Nor AnTIS‘I'Ic.â€"-We have an F‘ ani- mal inter " in this village, but not after the style of Landseer. A few days ago a calf owned by Mr. Marshall Barley went home hcdaubed from head to tail with a pigment composed of Ve- netian red and oil, such as farmers and provision dealers mark their bags with. and last week one of Mr. H. Diyman's white ducks made its appearance on the main street decorated in the same man- ner. The work was anything but ur- tistically done. and the owners of the victims of the unknown amateur's mou- ochromatic mania wish it hadn't been done at all. much additional money had to be spent on the bridge; but the approaches and the new sidewalk are not chargeable to land cannot permit the interference of any other Power in the adjustment. It Tuusvxss' Manoloâ€"The nï¬ular monthly meeting of the School Board was held on Wednesday evening and all the members were present. The only motion passed was as follows:â€" Moved by Mr. Naylor, and seconded by Mr. Ellis, That the secretary commun- icate with Mr. Graham, Miss McArthur and Miss Twomey in regard to a re- engagement for next year, the other teachers having been heard from. An- swers expected by the 18th inshâ€"C‘d. Moxsv WANTED.â€"Subscribers in arrears for the Gazette will please make 'u note of the fact that we are in want of money, and that if they will call in and pay up we shall take it as a favour, though it will only be an act of common honesty. The delinquents are almost “too numerous to mention “ if we felt disposed to do so; but there are a few hard cases with whose names we are tempted to commence a “ black list." such as some of our illoused confreres have found very effective. Soccsssvm. Exnmn'ons. â€"- At. the South Riding of Victoria agricultural show, held in Lindsay on Saturday last, Mr. John Cullis. of Fenelon, had ten exhibits, only one of which failed to take a prize. His own private premium list was as follows :â€"-3rd on carriage horses; 15!: and 2nd prizes on thorough- bred Durham cow ; 2nd and 3rd on two« yearsold Durham heifer; 2nd and 3rd on one.yearâ€"old Durham heifer; 2nd on Durham heifer calf; lst on geese. At the same show Mr. H. Dcyman, of Fenelon Falls, took two ï¬rst prizes for poultryâ€"one for white Leghorns and the other for bantalus, the same birds that beat all competitors at. the Central at Lindsay last year. At Coboconk, on Monday, the second prize in carriage horses was taken by a mare owned by Messrs. McDougull 8; Brandon, of this village, and Messrs. Robson ck. Allan, of the Cameron Lake foundry, had on the grounds a ï¬ne display of agricultural implements; but, unfortunately, there were no other exhibits in the same class, and we have not yet heard what prizes were awarded to them. ' Tun BRIDGEâ€"The work on the iron bridge was completed about the Iniddle of the week, and the approaches are now being made. Before the bridge was raised it was below the level of' the road, but. at each end there is now a gradual ascent for a considerable dis- tance. Over a hundred loads of stones and shelly rock have been laid down, and when, the work of breaking them (now in progress) has been completed, they will be smoothly covered with ï¬ne gravel, which will make the approaches of the bridge all that can be desired. From the foot-path to the McArthur House, a distance of about a dozen rods, :1 new sidewalk seven feet wide is being made, and the old log crossing at Water street. is to be removed and replaced by a better one. It is much to he regret- ted that, in consequence of an oversight on the part of the commissioners, so the blunder, as they would have been needed last year if the oversight. had not occurred. Neither of them has been lot. by contract, and. consequently. both are being done in a ï¬rst class manner. England Has the Whip Hand. LONDON, Oct. 1.â€"â€"A despatch from Constantinople says the leading Turkish diplomatists are convinced that the in- fluence of the Porto in Egypt is practi- cally a thing of the past. Although the Porte will make every effort to se- curc a voice in the ï¬nal settlement of the Egyptian question, there is little conï¬dence in the succuss ofthe attempt. The fact is recognized that an entirely new order of things must. be established in Egypt, and it is admitted that Eng- is believed the British Cabinet. has made direct secret negociations with the Pow- ers to obtain their assent to the mess- ures proposed by England. regarding the ï¬nancial control, protection of the Suez Canal, and reorganization of the Egyptian army. It is probable that so complete an understanding has been reached that the work of the Confer- rence, in case it reassemblcs, will be merely to endorse the arrangements al. ready made. The feeling here, especi- ally among the lower class, is very bit- ter against England. The best educa- ted amongst the Turkish population think that Turkey had at one time dur- ing the recent insurrection a great op portunity to reassumc absolute control in Egypt, and, the dictatory and timid policy of the Turkish Cabinet is sharp- ly. criticised. Ip is argued that. if a ï¬rm course had been pursued Egypt would not. now be at. the mercy of for- eigners. That England‘will make the most of her cont nest is thought to be certain, and it is believed that. the Gov- ernor of Egypt will hereafter be abso- lutely under the English control, while evcry exertion will be made to restore the status no ante helium, and thus de- prive the Iq’orte and continental Powers of any plausible pretext for interfering in Egyptian affairs. This point gained, England will proceed to deal with the question entirely within the view of her own inter sts, and secure complete con- trol of tit International highway to the , East. Anti-Jewish Riots, VIENSA, Sept. 29.â€"Advioes from Presburg report the occurrence of anti- chish riots at that. place. The mob broke the windows of many houses oc- cupied by the Jews. The military ï¬nal- ly restored order after making forty ur- rests. The military are conï¬ned to barracks. The Ministry have placed the Presbure district under martial law. The rioters in Presburg declare that what they have done is merely a pre- lude to what is coming. The shops and warehouse: of the Jews were forced open and plundered. The riotcrs oï¬'cr- ed obstinate resistance to the military. some of them seizing the soldiers' bay- oncts. Similar excesses were commit- ted in the neighbouring town of Bin-t Monument to Hon. George Brown. The committee entrusted with the task of erecting a monument to the memory of the late Hon. George Brown, on Wednesday resolved to place the work in the bands of Mr. Birch, A. R. A., of London, England. The statue is to be of bronze, ten feet high, and the cost. will be £1,000 sterling. It is supposed that a year will be consumed in the completion of the statue.â€"Globr. An Important Decisinn. SPRINGFIELD, 111., Sept. 29.-â€"â€"An opinion was rendered by the Illinois Supreme Court yesterday in a case in- volving the question of the power of the State Legislatures to regulate the rate charged by railroads for f. eights carried to points outside of Illinois, and wheth- er the Act prohibiting unjust discrimi- nation iu such rates is not in contra~ vention of the Constitution of the Uni- ted Srates. The case was one wherein a sixty-six per cent. larger rats was charged on the haul from Gilman to New York than on the haul from Peoria to New York, though the distance from Peoria is greater by 86 miles. The Court holds that the charge is unjust, excemive, exorbitant and unlawful. and upholds the authority of the Railroad and Warehouse Commissioners to regu» late the freight. rate charged from points in Illinois to points outside the state. H School Teachers’ Salaries. “ The San Francisco School Board is taking action for remedying the distinc- tion qctween the primary teacher's sal- ary and that. paid to the grammar teacher. It is beginning to be recog- nized everywhere that a high degree of experience and natural ability as well are required from the teacher who gives the ï¬rst inspiration to the little mind. All thorough and successful teachers will agree in the assertion that. the competent instruction of the restless and unused primary classes demands a greater expenditure of nervous energy and intellectual ingenuity than is called for by the higher grades. The Morn- ing Call, of San Francisco, advises the Board to abolish all distinctions of sal- ary based upon the grade of classes taught." With the foregoing, from the New York Tribune, we heartily concur. When parents, teachers and superin- tendents come to recognize the funda- mental f'act that the proper treatment of'mind and body in their tender and plastic stages demands the very highest professional qualiï¬cations, and are rea- dy to pay for such, one of the most. hopeful revolutions ever made in educao tionul methods will have been inaugu- ratedâ€"Eco. ‘ Canada’s Turn Now. For many years Canada, as compared with the United States, has been a low- priced country, the scale of wages in all branches of labor being very much low- er', but: (luring the last three years there has been a great, change in this reï¬urd, and the intlioutians‘are that. there will be a still greater'change in the next three years.~ Manufactures of all kinds are springing up in every part. of the country. Manitoba and the north- west territory are being rapidly settled, and railway construction is very active. The Canada Paciï¬c Railway alone em- ploys from 8,000 to 9,000 men and are advertising for more at. $2 25 per day. Farmers have had difficulty in securing men to harvest their crops, and the newspapers are full of advertisements for workmen of all kinds, skilled and unskilled. In short, Canada now has all the conditions that go to make up high prices; a vast. territory, sparsely settled, but rapidly ï¬lling up, thriving manufactures, and great. activity in the construction of railways and canals. In case there comes a period of high wages there it will .no doubt have some effect upon the direction of the immigration movement, many who would come to the United States under the old state of affairs going,r t0 (launderâ€"Boston Transcript. â€"â€"~+«-â€"- Manitoba 008.1. A sample of Souris coal was tested a few days ago in a C. P, R. locomotive at. Winnipeg with satisfactory results. How the coal was brought to Winnipeg to be tested is an interesting story. Mr. George l’ocock, who comes from the coal di>tricts in the west of England, and is familiar with coal mining in all its aspects. came to this country, says the Free Press, last spring in consc- quencc of what he heard in the old land of the fame of the Souris coal district. Having seen and judged for himself, he is now thoroughly in earnest and enthu- siastic in advocating the speedy devel- opment of those immense resources. He has united with others in forming a company to be known as the Souris Coal Mining Company. The Inc bers of the ï¬rm are Pocock, Frccth d: ’ocock. The locality of their proposed opera- tions is situated in township 1, range 6. west of the second principal meridian. The city of the future is to be named “ Excelsior." Mr. Geo. brought the coal in a wagon, driving a distance of 400 miles to Emerson. He was un- der the necessity of swimming his horsâ€" es over six streams on the way, and on each ogca~ion was obliged to unload his coal into boats, and reload it after get- ting his Waggon put together on the opposite side of the water. .\I_r. I’ouock says that the depth of the seam of coal is from nine to ten feet, the depth be- low the surface 138 feet. and the extent 2,0 miles from north to south by 18 miles from east to west. He has had the coal tested for every purpose, such as burning in stoves and way locomotives. be locality in situ- ated about 75 mics from Moosemin 1 nition was stored in trucks in the rail- Crcelt. As soon as the railway com-' pany extends its branch line to the place the company propose mcomrgeoce operations, employing 200 men. A terriï¬c hurricane swept over Iro- land on Sunday. At Quccustowu r- menthal, where thirty persons were ar- "856‘ lfing’ in the hub“! Wu driven , rested. Several hundred Jews have fled l to Vienna. ashore. Great damage was done at.in after the explosion an Arab was ‘ other places. ‘ . crates. in counts attribute it to blacksmiths' forges, and lastly, in “IL! blow on c percussion shell. while the \5 __..__._._.,..__. __._...____. H- r. SANn'roRn, Dealer in all kinds of FARM IMPLEM’ENTS. .__â€"~â€"'.â€".â€".â€" PLOUG HS i PLOUGHS 2 A large stock of John Wbyte & 0035 No. 3 DIAMOND STEEL PLOUGIIS, guaranteed to clean, or no sale. Also, two kinds of GANG I‘LOITGlIS. Points and Soles 0t dilfcrv ent makes always on hand. Agent for The New Brantford Reaper 8: Mower, the best in the market, and guaranteed to do first class work. or no sale. Also, a large stock of Repoinfor the Ruby Reaper. RAKES, RAKESIâ€"Agent for the Maxwell and the Wisner Rakes, which have no equals. llssss turnorsn Gm, master, salt, and Gm Seed Sewer will be given on trial. SPRING-TOOTH HARROIVS and other kinds of narrows. Agent for Combined Seeders, WHITEFIELD’S STUMP MACHINE, the best in the market. A large stock of WAGGONS, CARRIAGES AND BUGGIES on hand, all made of well seasoned ï¬rst class material. It Horse-Shoeing yawning a. Specialty. . :o: [6‘ A good second-hand Reaper for sale. Price, 530. Has only cut 25 acres. F. SANDFORJ), Fonelon Falls A Bivalvular Bonanza. to a burning waggou, another was dis- covered lighting a fire under the train, The joy caused in gastronomic and and a third was arrested for inciting epicurcan circles by Mr. Olsen's paper the natives to massacre. on “ The North Sea Fisheries," and the great oyster discoveries there, will be shade by the whole oyster-eating world. Two hundred miles of oyster-beds, thir- ty to seventy miles wide, that is [O'S'ly, 10,000,000 acres of splendid oysters within easy distance of the British coast, is a discovery to which all those of Stanley and Livingstone sink into _ , . on from his own wine. lilSlflll'lï¬F‘l'lce- one curmlm feature ‘1' Indications of the existence of oil at bout: It. Is that the oysters lie at a depth .. - .._.a._._._‘ Seventy-ï¬ve idiots were removed a few days ago from llamiltou to Orillia. The firt organ ever used in the Irish Presbyterian Church has been ordered for Belfast, Ireland. A resident at Edmonton, N. W. T, is burning a kiln of brick with coal tak- , 5 Gladstone, l‘l:ltl., has’ied to the forum-' 0f twenty-one “"10"â€; “'“S fl‘SPO-‘mg tion of a company to operate that field. summarily of the prevalent Idea that . By an accidental explosion in tho pysters can only be l‘fllscd Fucccâ€ru!ly torpedo nuignziuc ofa Russian mini-of- In shallow water. The man who 1n- _ ‘, war, two oflicers and thirty seamen have ventsa new dish, according to some, , been killed. the Fm"? "1’0 Plant†a "'90, Mama“)? Mrs. Henry has offcrcd a reward of to the Mohammednns, deserves well of . _ $500 for the recovery of the body of mankind, but What IS the Toward 0“ “' her husband, who was lust by the loun- mfln Who dISGOYOI'B 10.000.000 “"03 “l during of the Asia. oysters? And yet all this is tinged - _ Fifty years ago the foundation of' With the melauciloiydoubt whethcroys- Wesleyan Methodism was laid in Ger- ters wtll be cheaper In consequence. many, and the event will he commem- orated this year by a jubilee. The Iltfl‘tlftl states that some fields of oats three miles West of Morris, l‘llllL, will show not less than 75 bushels to the core, the g'l'tllll being so abundant that it is with difï¬culty the reaper cau- biud it. A costar-oil plant cut. down by the‘ frost at Winnipeg last week, during the season grew from seed in the open air to the height of 7 feet (3 inches. The circumference of its leaf was 6 feet 0 inches. An English journal says that “ Mr. Moody's evangelistic campaign will not be forgotten while Scotland stands." It regards his work in that country as one ofthe greatest events in the history of Christianity. There. is commotion among the Men nouitcs in Manitoba. 'l'ho~ consonqu tire clcnu-ut, which believes in hooks: and eyes. is having all it can do to rp-. strain the progressive, impetuous and; won-lily advocates of buttons. A letter from the English Chief Ruhr. hi states that many .lcwish refugees on, their return to ltuS'siu met with violcno deaths, whilst llltlnC who succeeded in, reaching tin-iv old homes in safety are. sttlijrctrtl to almost intolerable restt‘ic-. tions and annoyances. A young girl, need only thirteen, yum-S, living ea<t of Eldon Station, has, this lint-Vest reaped about sixty acres, and accmnplished the work aswell as any man could. The plncc reaped was decor-tied with some pine stumps, a lbw stone boulders. and not a fetv hillooks, which rendered the task so touch the harder. ()u the ‘_’.Olh of Svptctnlu’t' a curious incident. occurred at lint l’ortage. An, Indian got, alnmrul the train with n t-lip, of paper hearing the lblluwiu: : " Cowl, for One trip, Sept. 20, l872.†It turned‘ out, says the I’mgmxs, to be a pass which Mr. S. J. Dawson med to issue Farmer, many years ago, ofa man who It'll years. 113') to ludinns travelling over lmd sown the some kind {)r on“, and the llau‘sml‘ route on his tugs. Mr. had treated me", ,1,†mum m, he had, , Dawson, being on the train, paid tho and as a result he was astonished atl‘iilrl‘mf" pith-“it?†1†Witfllllwll- Th0 mating n crop of rym Mr. Nix tried Indian hm carried the piece of pappt‘ [to experiment this year. The oaten 0" if" 5’03â€, “W1 “'flllf‘d it": lllf’ 20‘“ s“,be puuonh “home I“, spring and of September to use It, thinking he grew up as befurci um“ mm“), “,0â€, could travel on the railroad with It. - developed a good specimen of rye. He had nine. stools of rye, in one of which there were 19 stalks, the highest being 5 feet. nine inches high. The produc- tion may be seen at. this office or at. Mr. ‘ ‘4â€".â€"â€"_ A Heroin Humble Life. ‘h-L. It is not often that, one is willing to give his life for another, but an instance in which a young man very nearly sac- riï¬ced his life for a fellow labourer oc. curred at St. Thomas only a few days ago. Mr. Wm. Burridgc. well digger, was engaged sinking a well. and Sam Root, a young man in his employ, worked the Windlass on the surface. Root's foot slipped when ltweriug the bucket ï¬lled with brick, and thé‘uvind- lass got the start of him and lot the bucket down with lightning speed. The young man realized in 'an instant Bur- ridgc's danger, and threw himself'on the handles of the Windlass, determined to save tho man in the well or perish. The handles thumped Root on the head and ribs, but still he kept himself in a posiiion that, his body would hinder the wiudlass revolving, and he ï¬nally stop pod the bucket about two feet above Burridgc's head, thus saving his life. Burridge came to the top, where he found Root bruised and bleeding and completely prostrated. Ilia wounds for- tunately are not. of a dangerous char- acter. -__,_ Transformation of Oats into Rye. Mr. A. Nix, who resides on lot 2 in the 2nd concession of Seymour, laid up- on our table, on Tuesday, a sample of rye which he claims grew from the roots of outs. Two seasons ago Mr. Nix broke up a piece of sod ground and sowed it with White Spanish oats. intending to use the growth thereof for cattle feed. After the oats had grown to a considerable height he cut them down. They grow again and he cut them down a second time. While he was cutting them the third time he re- membered having read in the Canadian BI Il'l‘IIH. in the townshipuf fienclnnmn Thursday, September 'JHIII, the wife of Mr. Elijah Aug; dcrson of u daughter. ' ’ ' III the township of Souiorvillc. on Sun- day, Oct‘: Isl, the wife of Mr. John Hughes. ofa sun. ' l ' p In the township of I’euclon, on Tuesday, October (ml, the wife of Mr. James Broken- slurc of n sou. ' 1' in I’cnelon Falls, on Wednesday, Octo- ber «lth, the wife of Mr. Edward Ilornncey of“ daughter. N ix’s forumâ€"7 Campbell/hm! Herald. ._.. Matters. at Cairo. Canto, Sept. 29.â€"â€"-Thc explosions at the railway station yesterday continued at bricf'intcrvals for over three hours. By the energetic efforts of the military, although they were hampered by the lack of pumping gear, the fire was pre- vented from spreading, and finally got, , . under control. The passenger station 't“"'“""“¢':“" “'M'M'lby.Hl'l'l'mllm 371% was saved, but a“ the freight sheds! I ply: the itcij. T. J. Iridium-n, it. 1),)". John , , , . . ; pr: Matt-son. of Muult-n, to Mus Agnes containing ten days provisions fondle k'itrtorlailnltuon, of Sumerville. ' army and 200 trucks of nmmuuttlonh A, ,hc “in,†Chm,†pnnonwemmv were destroyed; If is repoer that ion Falls, on \t'edneLday. October tth,hy five men were lulled and twenty wouod- the Itâ€. Mr. lit-there", Mr. Thomas Itob- ed. The railway oï¬icinls express a be, IOU. Jr, to_ Mint Harriet suggiu, both of» lief that the tire was incendiary, as they ‘1‘†“Wmml' 0’ S‘WWHM- noticed that the trucks on two separate lines blazed up simultaneously. The fire began among the ammunition cap- tured from the Egyptians. Sonic ac- nn accidental _._. ..........-..._.. -. __ .__._... ._..__-..â€"- DIAlkltl 1311‘). Q At the tt‘tiltlt'tlt't' of Mr. David Bateson, DIIXILIK E'P IKEPOIRTS FENI‘ZLOS FALLS MARKETS. Ibrpomd by .llellaugall «5' Ilrantlon. Penelon Falls, Friday, {)ct'r 6th, 1832, The ammu- , "Jill's", ""9 “'ie'fiDZ-b Wheat, fall, per bushel - - $0 85 0 Bit Wheat, spring, “ (- o - 0 M 0 93, way sheds. It appears clear, however, i Bulky. per bushel - . v .550 71 that theArabs endeavoured to spread, 3‘", ' ' ‘ ' :3 u if they did not actually cause, the fire. “gm ,, ,, Z ‘_ '_ Z 55 w The troopepatrolled the streets lastly-04,0", n", I. _ _ , . 34, 35 night. During the ï¬re at the railway Cabbages, per doz. - - - so so station yesterday two men with torches Gino“. Pt! bush. - â€" - 35 40 were scin while endeavouring to ï¬rciï¬zz; pun: ' ' ‘ ' . g V . , , - . - . . g the adjacent quarter of the town. L,hort- , Drum, "ou'wnm ,bh 3., 0,, go ' _ ilggs,pcr dozen - o - o 14 V ; caught. throwing a can of petroleum In. Hay, 3: ton. .' . 7 . . 88 09 ’9 00,