3 "S& ooks, Business Cards, Receipt Books, Ball he Je MACDONELL, i Terms. --$2.00 PER ANNUM.) CARIO ADVERTISER. [$1.50 Per ANNUM, IN ADVANCE. VOL. IL, No. 4] Efe uct Peery Blonder AND NORTH ONTARIO ADVERTISER IS PUBLISHED Every THURSDAY Morning AT THR OFFION A ne, go And contains Notices of the Political, So- Fieioural and Somes 'sete on week, together with carefully selected Tans, --1.60 a your; but 1 1f paid in TERMS OF ADVERTISING. Yi -. * > Sen Tass and under 3 fuiof tions; +... 1. 00 Above ten lines, 1st insertion per line...08 £ach subsequent insertion.............02 3 Proffessional and business Cards, six lines and under, 6 per annum, 3 for six months. From six to ten links, 8 per an- num. XJ" Merchants and others can contract for a certain space, with the privilige of having new matter inserted at the end of avery three months, on favorable terms. II Displayed Advertisements are meas- qred by a of solid Brevier, and charg- »d accordingly. ¥3* Advertisements sent without written sostractions will be inserted uatil forbidden and charged for full time. ¥9= No casual Advertisements inserted anless paid for in advance, Merchants will we expected to pay quarterly. 3" Orders for discontinuing advertise- ments must be in writing, otherwise the publisher will aot be responsible, JOB DEPARTMENT. Wezange of our increased facilities Pamph- jo%3, Hand Bills, Posters, Programmes, Bill _. Heads, Blank Forms, Circulars, Check Jards, &c., &c., of every.style and color, ~an be executed more promptly, and at low- er prices than at any other blish an the county. E. MUNDY, Editor and Publisher. Business Directory. FH -- ---- ---- -------- 7 Sms BURNHAM, Judge of th Oounty and Surrogate Courts. Office at the Court House, 1: "ATELSON G. REYNOLDS, Sheriff. -- 4N_ Office, at the Gourt House. 1 of | the best of accom | always: be accommodated "with g8ot boats an 'ackle. | Physician ONTARIO HOTEL! BROCK ST., WHITBY, 0. DAWES, Proprietor. THE RAILROAD HOUSE PORT PHRRY. N. SINCLAIR, - - - PROPRIETOR. Subscriber begs to state that having hed the above establishment, ublic will find it to bea hom Good Stabling, e. attentive Ostlers, and ¢ ion are always at th service of our customers. with Lignors of the choicest brands: of 3 w to enjoy aday or twe of Brig obey fo an 8, % £ £ : : _ N. SINCLAIR. Port Perry, August, 1866. 1.tf. Royal Canadian Hotel, PORT PERRY, C. W, J. J. SHAW ~ - - PROPRIETOR. Fishing or shooting parties for Lake Scugog will find at this house good boats, guns, and tackle. A new and commodious Hall has lately been built in connection with this House, 22 x 80 feet, ealled Port Perry Hall, and is open for Political Meetings, Balls, Con- certs, or Shows. . The Bar has been refitted, and is well snp- plied with choice Wines, Liquors and Cigars. Good Stabling and Altentive Ostlers. Port Perry, August, 8, 1866. 1-tf 3" The Bar is kept constantly supphed |, "Things That Never Die. The pure, the bright, the beautiful, That stirred our hearts in youth ; The longings after something lost, The strivings after better hopes,~ These things shall never die. The timid hand stretched forth to aid A brother in his need, That kindly word in grief's dark hour That proves the friend indeed, The plea of mercy softly breathed When justice threatens nigh, The sorrow of a contrite heart,-- These things shall never die. - The memory of a clagping hand The Theo oF Ls Ae £ And all the trifles, sweet and frail, That make up love's first bliss, If with a firm, unchanging faith, And holy trust and hi Those hands have clasped, those lips have met, -- . These-things shall never die. SELECT READING. Queen Victoria's Book. The Early Days 'of Prince Albert, with Memoranda, from the Pen of Victoria-- First Interview between the Prince and Princess-- Her Description of Albert as a Suitor--Victoria's Declaration . of Love-- Congratulations and Interesting Letters. (From the London Times, July 27.) THE ROBSON HOUSE! (LATE SQRIPTURR'S HOTEL, DUNDAS STREET WHITBY, C. W. GEORGE ROBSON - - - Proprietor. ue subseriber begs to announce that he hag leased the building formerly known as Scripture's Hotel, for a term of years, and that he has now renovated and re-furnished the building throughoat. The are p PP the Post Office, and in the centre of the Town. The Railway Omnibus calls at the Hotel, and the Stages for Uxbridge and Beaverton leave the door every morning. 3 Careful ostlers always in attendance. : GEO. ROBSON. August 10, 1866. 1-tf, DR. JONES, ASSOCIATE CORONER FOR THE COUNTY OF ONTARIO, Phu ALBERT. + N.McCLINTON, M.D, -and Accouchuer. L, Clerk of the Peace e and County Solicitor, EN J V. HAM, Deputy Clerk of the Crown o and Pleas; Clerk of County Court and Registrar of the Surrogate Court. Office at the Court House. 1 {CogHEANS & COOHRANE, Barristers, Attornies, Conveyancers and Notaries Public, &c. Office over Mr. Bigelow's store, Port Perry. 8. H. Cocnraxs, W. M. Coonraxs, Co. Orown Atty. Port Perry. J HAMER GREENWOOD, Attorney-at< o Law, Bolicitor in Chancery, Notary ®ablic, Oonveyancer, &c., Whitby. Rooms xt to the Registry office, Brock st 1 R J. WILSON, Barrister, Attorney-at- Ve Law, Solicitor in Chancery, &c.-- Office next to Registry office, street, Whitby. 1 A LEERE SPRING, LiosxsEp AUCTIONEZR for the Townships of Reach, Brock, Uxbridge and Scott. Orders taken at this office, and days of sale appointed. yy H BURNHAM, Clerk of Third Division PH « Oourt, County of Ontari and = . Port Perry, April 4th, 1867. MRS. WH MOORE, 0. Orrion--Over J. Biglow's store, Port Perry. ; ROYAL CANADIAN BANK! PORT PERRY AG NCY. JOSEPH BIGELOW, . Agent. 1-tf MARRIAGE LICENSES | ! sx Auras, ~ IssuedatPortPerry. OFFICE At the Scugog House. 1 HENRY CHARLES. PORT PERRY = Livery Stables. C. MACKENZIE. Proprietor. The pub- lic supplied with first-class Horses at moderate rates. carriages, 34 Milliner and Dressmaker, "and on the shortest notice. 3" Residence first house Gaublee siote. ¢ BROOK HOUBE! Bubseriber, in returning to the busi- North of Mr. . HON formar Setried oa by lim, solicnsa) and the pubs] + @ call from his old customers JE Epis sssuinallonfosy pteusind Come & Try Them. ! with good - : -- 8 Office { Good Accommodations for Travellers, Maiss at sll hours of the day. Good Stabling and attentive Ostlers. JAMES PARKIN, Proprietor. Manchester, Oct. 3rd, 866. 81 Bricks & Drain Tiles b wishes to the Public with the fact that he has now on hand a large quantity of Bricks and Drain Tiles, at his Yard, in Port Penry, And is prepared to increase his operations to meet the inereasing demand. The ber is also p d to take Coatracts for the furnishing and laying up of Bricks in houses, &e. JAMES GOOD. Port Perry, Aug. 7, 1866, 3m NOT OFF THE TRACK! - BUT RUNNING AT THE RATE OF $2 a doz. for Photographs, AND 26¢. Each for Lettergraphs ! ~--ALSO-- WATCHES and CLOCKS, AND f Jewelry and Accordeons 3" Repaired at J. A. OLARKS Photograph Car, Broek St., Uxbridge. Uxbridge, Oct. 20, 1866. 14-tf PROCLAMATION "To All Whom it May: Concern !! - NOW ALL MEN by these Presents : That it having come to the knowled, of the undersi that there are cer Individuals resident in xi about Pore 'who contemplate erecting Dwellings, &c., in the aforesaid Town of Port Perry, ? Now Tms 18 Tusnsross To Nomiry the fi id resid of Port Perry, and its vicinity that | am reRared fo an. D stantial tory manner, all such JILDING §, and satisfac- BU whether of Wood, Brick or Stone. on the SHORTEST NOTIOR AND AT | REASONABLE RATES. * Given under my hand at Port Perry, in She Topusidp of Reach, and County of Ontario, this 4th day of April, 1867. ¢ (Signed) GEO. ROBINSON, - U1 Nors.--4 few Thousand Feet of Seasoned ooring for sale. ! "NOTE LOST. ve PUBLIC are hereby forbid negotia- ting a Note drawn by Wm. Wallace, Sept. 15th, 1865, in favor of Truman Wilson, (by whom the same is endorsed,) for the sum of Eleven Dollars, with interest at ten per cent, and payable 12 months after date, as payment of the same has been stopped. . DONALD STALKER. Mould Sawing, Wood-Turning, Face-Planing and tained, Build, Erect, | P® * |" introductory remarks," in which, We a this morning the publication of a volume which will be read by the British nation with loyal interest. It is a copious history of the early years of the late Prince Consort, enciched by numerous memoranda from Her Majesty's own hand, cofaining the most unreserv- ed description of the life and char- acter of the Prince, and even laying open to us, in a great measure, the private thoughts and feelings of the Queen herself during the period over which the volume extends. It was originally compiled by Gen. Grey, nnder Her Majesty's direction, sole- ly for ¢ private circulation among the members of her own family, or such other p as, from the relation in which they stood to Her Majesty or the Prince Consort himself, would naturally be interested in the story of bis early days." Notwithstand- ing this privacy, however, some fear was entertained least a copy of the volume igh be surreptitiously ob- published in a garbled form, and it was thoaght that it might Ife prudent to avert this danger. But ' motive prompted - n the judgment of sever- ng po hu judgment she the greatest confidence ; believ- ing also that the free and unreserv- ed expression which the volume con- sains of her own feelings, as well as those of the Prince, is such ase, if made public (however unusual such pablicity may be), will command the entire sympathy of every one whose sympathy or good opinion is to be desired ; and, above all, feeling that there is not one word, coming from the Prince himself, which-will not tend to a better and higher appreci- ation of his great charactor, the Queen has not hesitated to give her to-the y blication. It will be seen, therefore, that the Queen has condescended to take her subjects unreservedly into ber confi- dence, She opens her heart to them in this volume and throws herself up- on their sympathy. She is only anxious that the Prince Consort should be represented to them per- manently in all the completeness of his character, and for this purpose she hae consented not ouly to aban- don much of the mystery which usu- ally environs a throne, but even to sacrifice something of the privacy which is often cherished in private life. The following extract from a letter written by General Grey to the Queen on the completion of the vol- ume for private circulation, and row prefixed to it in its present form, will still further explain the extent of Her Majesty's condescension : " As I believe your Majesty in- tends to limit the circulation of this volume to your Majesty's own child- ren and family, or if it goes beyond them, to a very small circle of per- sonal friends; I have not thought it necessary to omit any of the very interesting and private details con- tained in your Majesty's memoranda or to withold the touching expres- sion of your Majestya own words, Some of the details, particularly those relating to your Majesty's marriage, it might seem unusual to include in a work intended fof more general erusal, though even in that case, judging of other's feelings by my own, I cannot doubt that they would meet with the warmest and most heartfelt sympathy." The Queen, therefore, had estab- lished, by this sacrifice, a peculiar claim to the sympathy of her subjects. But even apart from this special value, the subject of the volume would be s nt to awaken most lively interest. Englishmen have never ceased to do homage to the great and good Prince of whom they were too early deprived. Some if we mistake not, there are many touches from the Queen's own hand, contain a sketch of the Prince's char- acter, and serve to point out the fea- tures of most interest in the present volume. The intention of furnishing a fitting memoir of the Pringe 'is modestly declaimed. The work will "contain a compellation of letters and memoranda, the greater part of those of the Prince himself and of the "Brock, April 3rd 1867. i443 J * |fact, a complete i] 18 -|identified with ourselves and when Jroveeds the | Kent, but of Leopold, afterwards the the proper time bé extracted for & a memoir as may be given to world." But as the remarks we are able to trace in these m randa the career of the Prince from his earliest childhood. We have the evidence of his tutors to the excel- lencies which he early displayed, interesting descriptions by his most intimate friends of his youthful char- acter. This volume is but the of a series in which the whole life of ] carries us as far as the first year the Queen's marriage and the bir the Princess Royal. Prince upto the hjs history becomes one with the his- tory of this country, We junst now pass irom this general account of the volume without quoting the words with which the introductory remarks are concluded, and which seem to make an appeal to all the Queen's subjects. The writer is quoting from a recent sermon by Dr. McLeod, which is spoken of with great admi- ration :-- " «It is only now,' says the preach- er, ' when he is gone, that all who knew him are made to feel how much they unconsciously depended 'upon him ; like a staff on which the weak have been so long accustomed to lean that they knew not how essential it was to their support until it be re- moved, and when with a sigh they withdrew the hand from = the 'place now 'empty, where it was wont to be.' 'It is in this feature in. the Prince's character,' Dr. McLeod adds, ' which ought to make every one sympathize to the very utmost with her Majesty, who, of all persons on earth had the best means of knowing it, and the best means of proving it in a thousand ways in everyday life, and who had the best grounds, there- fore, for appreciating its ancy, ity tenderness, its unfailing strength.' And well may the eloquent preacher appeal to every true Englishdears or conscience to ackuowledge the de- mand which now arises in m quence from the throne for pathy, the prayers, the I sacrificing aid of every her house, and of every ci i Christian nation on her behalf, whom tinue to us as our eign." After this introductio with an interestis neesto) Prt i AN nections of th 6 bert's father was Dake Saxe-Coburg Saalfeld bi years after Prince Albei male line of the allied b f Gatha-Altenburg becam ti bya family arrangement, Sa: passed to the Dukes of 'Meininge while Gotha was attached to the Co- burg family, Duke Ernest, in 181%, married the daughter of the last Duke of Gotha, and by her had. two sons--Ernest, the present reigning | Duke, born in 1818, and Albert, the subject of this memoir, on the 26th ¢f August, 1819. A an written by the Queen in 1864, givds an account of their mother and of her melancholy fate She is deseribéd as a very handsome, altnough ve small, fair, and with blue eyes, Prince Albert is said to have extremely like her," She was, more: over, full of cleverness and talent. -- but the marriage was nota happy one. The Dake and Duchess were separated in 1824, and divorced in 1826; and the Duchess died in 1831, in her 32nd year. Sheis always spoken of with af- fection and respect, and we are told that the Prince never forgot her, and spoke with much tenderness and sor- row of his poor mother, and was deeply affected in reading, -arter bis marriage, the accounts of her sad and painful illness. After her death, in 1831, Duke Ernest soon married again ; but of course, un- der the circumstances, neither the mother nor the stepmother of the two young princes had much control over their education. 'I'hey experienced however, no lack of motherly care ; for two grandmothers watched over them from their earliest ycars with the most constant anxiety. Their grandmother on the father's side thé Dowager Duchess of Coburg-Saal- feld, lived, at only a quarter of a mile's distance on one oi of Coburg, at a villa called Ketschendorff, while Rosenau, the summer residence of the Duke, was but four miles on the other side. On the birth of Prince Albert she was called to the bedside of her daughter-in-law, and we find her from there writing to announce the happy event to her own daughter, the Duchess of Kent, in England. The Queen describes the Duchess as a very remarkable woman, with a most powerful, energetic, almost masculine mind, accompanied with reat tenderness of heart and extreme love of nature." She was the mother, of course, not only of the Duchess of King of the Belgians ; and she seems to be another instance of the rule that great men have generally re- markable mothers. The other rela- tive who took such an interest ic the little Princes was the Duchess of Saxe-Gotha, the second wife of the Duke, and thus the step-mother of his two sons. She lived at Reinhards: brann, near Gotha, and the children were not three years old before she had obtained a visit from there. In- deed, we are told "the two grand- 'mothers: seemed to vie with each other ae to which should show the two children the most love and kind- ee ---------------- the Prince will be described ; but it} 1 should show the greatest prudence in managing them. It is from the letters of these two Duchess- es tht we get the best account of the childhood and youth of the two young princes. * * * But this year (1836) is marked by a far more important event--his first visit to England and hig:introduction to the Princess Vic- Charge of the Light Brigade. Any particulars concerning the famous " charge" at Balaklava, dur- ing the Crimean war, which Tenn; son has 80 finely immortalized in verse, must be of general interest, although it is now several years since the gallant Six Hundred rode up to their death, while toria. The Dake and Lis two sons | 0snnon to right of them, cannon to left arfived at the end of May, und were ol De m, in front of th volle, and thundered." * ey Yofloyse : | the following personal and hic outecnth year, the Princess and| ,coount of the affair which he ro were-both in their seventeenth] ; boon public. year, the Princess being the eldest Jeffs heen belure Jade by a few months. We are not told much of bis visit, but an interesting memorandum by the Queen gives us ber impression of him at that time :-- "The Prince was at that time much shorter than his brother, al- ready very handsome" but very stout, which he entirely grew out of after wards; He was most amiable, natu- al; unaffected and merry ; full of in. terest in everything ; playing on the piaro with the Princess, his cousin, drawing ; in short, constantly occu- pied. He always paid the greatest attention to all he saw, and the Queen remembers well how intently he listened to the sermon preached in St. Paul's, when he and his father and brother accompanied by the Duchess 'of Kent and the Princess were there, on the occasion of the service attend- of the Earl of Cardigan, the Com- mander of the Eleventh Hussars at Balaklava, in 1854, who actually led the celebrated © charge," and was related to Mr. Stephen Massett, dur- ing his recent visit to England, after he had recited Tennyson's stirring epic to Lord and Lady Cardigan, with an effect which may be easily imagined by all who have heard his recitations. At about one o'clock on that me- morable day, after the Heavy Brigade had been attacked by tke Russian cavalry, the whole of the cavalry di- vision was considerably advanced towards the enemy, and the Light Brigade had been ordered to dis- mount to relieve their horses. Suad- denly they were again ordered to We gladly give place, therefore to] x It came substantially from the lips | horses -{ ther went to the University of Bonn, . | where they aitended the lectures of b- ed by the children of the different charity schools. It is, indeed, rare to see a Prince not yet seventeen years of age bestowing such earnest attention upon a sermon.' From London the Princes returned through Paris to Brussels, where they stayed until April of 1337, stadying modern languages and his- tory, and accompanying their uncle to reviews and other excursions. -- While here rumors were already spread of an intended marriage be- tween the Prince and the future Queen of England ; but nothing, the Queen tells us had been decided at that time. In April he and his bro- Schlegel, Fichte and Perthes, and while bere wo have an account of his character from Prince Lowenstein, his chief companion, which closely re- sembles the description given of him He distinguished himself alike in mental and physical acquirements, and was celebrated, also, for his ha- mor and love of fun AER pi Ls How The Pyramids Were ) Built. The stones were brought from the opposite side of the valley of the Nhe, twelve to fifteen miles distant, The first work was to build a giant causeway or road, over which to trans- port the stones. Herodotus says one hundred thousand men were employ- ed ten years on this part of the work. After this preparatory work came the levelling of the foundation, the cat ting out of the subterranean cham- bers, and the elevation of the huge masses of stone. This work, the same writer says, otcupied three hun-- dred and sixty thousand. men twenty ears. 'These men were drafted by the authority of a tyrant sovereign, as men are drafted in time of war, each levy serving a certain number of months, then others taking their places. Such is the structure we have come to examine and which now stands before us in its huge propor tions. What an immense labor |-- what countless years of human toil | Could these stones speak, what sto- ries of crushing despotism, of hard- handed slavish servitude they wonld tell | But the hands that toiled and the hearts that ached bencath this despotic labor have long since crumb- led to dust. Centuries of oblivion have rolled over their silent and now unknown resting places. But here stand the astonishing monuments of their toil. Here they have stood for thousands of years, defying the hands of the barbarian, the storms of the desert, and the lightnings of heaven. Ther lofty heights have looked down with proud contempt upon the chang- es of time and the rise and fall of nations, and smiled upon the con- fliots of human passions, as conguer-- ing armies have come to delnge with blood, and heap with carnage the beautiful plains above which they lift their heads.-- Rev. D. A. Randell, ------ Dox'r 8e Exreavaeant.--If the poor-house has any terrors for you, never buy what you don't need. Be- fore you pay three cents for a Jew's "harp, my boy, ascertain whether you cannot mrke just as pleasant a noise by whistling, for which nature furn- ishes the machinery ; and before yon pay seventy five dollars for a coat, young man, find out whether your lady wouldn't be justas glad to see ou in one that cost half the money. if she would not, let her crack her own hazelnuts and buy her own clothes. When you see a man spend- ing two or three dollars a week fool: ishly, the chances are five to one that he'll live long enough to know how many cents there are in a dollar ; if he don't, he's pretty sure to bequeath that privilege to his widow. When a man asks you to buy that for which you have no use, no matter how cheap it is, don't say yes until you are sure that some one else wants it in advance. Money burns in some folks' pockets, and makes such a big Bale that everything that is put in ps through past fieding. 0 The height.of absurdity--A vege- Queen, from which materisls may at ~ ness"--and, we may add, as to which tarian at a castle show, * mount, Nolan came forward, and told Lord Lucan, commanding the cavalry, that the Light 'Brigade were to at- tack the Russians in the valley, Lord Lucan rode up to Lord Cardi gan, and said ; lan's order that the Light Brigade je to atteck the Russians in the val- ey.' ing with his sword : my lord, but you will allow me ta inform you that there ina Russian battery in front, and one on each flank, while the ground on the flank is covered with Russian riflemen." Lord Luean answered : "I cannot help that, it is Lord Raglan's posi- tive order that the Light Brigade is to attack them." brigade, of five regiments, with three regiments in the front line, and two du the second, while Lord Lucan or- wiien younger, by Count Meusdorf, {dered Lord Cardigan's own regiment, form a support on the left rear of the {going about sixty and aide:de-camp Capt. "It is Lord Rag- Lord Cardigan replied, salut- '* Certainly, Lord Cardigan then formed his the Eleventh Hussars, back, 30 as to front line. Lord Cardigan immedi: ately ordered the advance, , Affer yards Capt Nolan rode obliquely across the front, when a Russian shell fell upon the ground near him, and not far from Lord Cardigan. Nolan's horse then wheel- ed about and carried him to the rear, and Lord Cardigan led the brigade down to the main battery in front, dbout a mile and a quarter distant. On arriving at about eighty yards from the battery, the fire became very severe, and the officers were considerably excited, and bad to be qrdered to be *" steady." Lord Cardigan, at the head of his brigade, passed close by the muzzle of a gan, which was fired as he en- tered the battery, and rode forward through the Russian limber carriages until he came up close to their lines of cavalry. His brigade did not follow him, aud he was attacked by two Cossacke, slightly wounded, and pearly dismounted, but be fenced them off, ahd gradually retired fron them and others who were at- tempting to surround him. When he got back to the battery his com- mand had retired and diverged to the left, and he slowly retreated until he met General Scarlett, commanding the heavy brigade of cavalry. He told him that the Light Brigade was destroyed, and mentioned the fate of Captain Nolan, after bringing the order for the attack, when General Searlett said that he had just ridden over Capt. Nolan's body. Lord Cardigan then bad his bri- gade counted by his staff officer, and found that there were only 195 pre- sant out of the 650. He then ime- diately rode off to Lord Raglan to report what had taken place. The first thing that Lord Raglan said was, " What, sir, could you pos- sibly mean by attcking a battery in front, contrary to all the usages of warfare, and the custom of the ser- vice 7" He replied, " My Lord I hope you will not blame me, for I received a positive order from my superior officer in front of the troops to attack them, although I was quite well aware of the unusual course of proceeding ordered." Lord Raglan then enquired what he had done, and was told that he led the brigade into a Russian battery, that he had ridden up to the Russian cavalry, that he was not followed by the brigade, that was wounded and nearly dis- mounted, and had some difficulty in getting away from a number of Cos- sacks, that the brigade was nearly destroyed, there now being only 195 left ont of 650, and finally that the whole had occupied the brief space of 20 minutes, II ¢ You and your wife should become ome, said a friendly adviser to a hen- pecked husband. ¥ Become one,' ex- claimed the hen-pecked ; hg we are tennow.'! ¢ How so'? © She's I, and Jama 0? Ink made from India rubber is the latest invention. It will be used mainly. by writers who are inclined to « stretch a story." Prejudices are like rats, end a man's mind like a trap ; they get in Nt may be put on alone, or as a plas- f==Grass ax0 Crover.--If the object |in the construction [WHOLE No. 56. Metalic Accumulation in the Earth. In a work of real value on the subject of the precious metals, written several years since in England by Mr. Jacobs, the suggestion is thrown out that it is possible that gold, silver, copper, iron, etc., actually re-accumu- late in certain localities, under the influence of av not yet discovered. Such is of coined metals in countries Hints for August. (From the American Agriculturist.) Amaxars ar Pasrore.--Look to the water supply and see that no animals suffer for it. Nothing but absolute starvation pulls them down in con-- dition faster than thirst, In the very hottest and dryest weather, ho get little good in=the field, 0 4 hare thickets. in, and get aw: ies t stable oy dari 'of tlie day, if owe' has no use for | of ; turnsthent out' towards | Flies are exceedingly annoy- | iog,. & up days, when storms; are | SOY larly, or keep it in sheltered troughs, always accessible to cattle and sheep at pasture, away from the sea shore, where from 10 to 20° miles inland, it is regarded as unnecessary, Smeer should have their noses tarred ; rams should be separated from the ewes, and lambs of suitable age and vigor weaned. In weaning lambs, put the ewes on the driest pastures, but leave the lambs where they are accustomed to be, with a few largé weathers for flock-leaders They should be out of hearing of on another's calls. The ewes should be drivea several evenings into pens and examined, and if their bags are tender, caking, or hot, they should be milked. Mer Cows need regular feeding with some green fodder as the pas- tures get dry ; yarded, and thus fed in the evening, the grain in manure, to say nothing of the milk, pays well for the trouble. Swine.--Give plenty of green food. If there are no weeds to pull or mow for them, then cut clover or grass. The trimmings along fences, and sods cut wherever the ordinary field culture cannot extent, are excellent, Some fresh earth, either upon the roots of weeds or in sods is essential to hoalth, Charcoal is very benefi- cial, and plenty of fresh water de- sirable. At all events, the hogs should have daily a good drink of pure water, no matter how liquid their usual food, and last, not least, they should have a dry, clean bed at all seasons. : Wounns upon animals, at this sea. son of flics and quick putrefaction, need the most prompt attention. We know of no better application than uot pine tar--not hot enough to burn. becomes of it? The nicest chemical researches into the composition of the soil where the major part thus lost by abrasion disappears, does not show the slightest trace of it. What becomes of the pins? Thereis an equally philosophical inquiry--made the more urgent when it ia recollected that fourteen tons of brass wire is manu- factured into pins in one town daily. It seems, therefore, when the metals, are reduced to impalpable atoms, as they are by use, they are transported by the atmosphere, where they are ré:-collected and re-consoli-- dated. Itis by no means an unscien- tific thought that such a movement of atoms may take place. Miners in gold regions re-sift the earth, after a year or two, which had every par- ticle of gold washed out bucause they say it grows again. Here isa hint, at least, for commencing some new train of investigation, What an enormous quantity of iron decomposes and disappears annually every where, if not protected against the disintegrating influence of air and water, which is not (o be found where it disappeared ; and the in- niry is pertinently philosophical, -- Where does it goto? Beyond a doibt all the metals are subjected to laws like other elements. Their separation from their native localities, like burning cosl; is but {liberating a prisoner. After various phases above ground, they wear out, and at last they diminish in volume and disappear ; but they are not lost. In the course of ages they are, regon- ducted to regions that have fie pro- perty of concentrating floating atoms, and again they are dug out of the rocks for the gratification of never- satisfied man. 2 Untold thousands of tons of gold ilver. disappeared three thon- ter upon a piece of cloth." Look ecs-|and 8 io n 3 b © JEArs af A we _ Waear.--Land inteuded for winter | Fe-gathering in the Pao ey 'or 'wheat will need once or twice plough- | 0. thesands of Africa. the iron ing aod harrowing, and if a good ships will sail for wnkuows, Aetig} dressing of fine compost can be ap- | POFts at last, and, at some vastly #: plied, all the better. Sow at the end | t30t epoch in the fatare history of this month or first of next ; use | the globe we inhabit, again be Joa the drill ; put wheat on well drained ried, smelted, and fashioned for bs or naturally dry land. If it does not | ¥5€ of our descendants when winter-kill, water in the soil will pre. | World is further advanced in wisdom. you the oY being profitable. - eat needs thorough tillage. 473." Harvest before fully ripe, and thus secure better straw for| A writer in an English paper gives feeding, and equally good grain. the following account of a singular Beep Grain.--The selection should | superstition connected with the be made at harvest time, when the |', Great Eastern." best grain is allowed to get fully | « Sie is a ship with two cases or ripe before cutting. If this is not | skins, as they are called ; that is; she done, select at once the best sheaves, | is almost like one ship fitted itside have them threshed, and cut out the | apother. Between the inner and ost kernals by repeated winnow-|oyter shin workués 2a sev) io g repairs. Dreadfully dark and sepul- Sracks,--Examine as soon as they | chral, of course it is there, for from have time to settle, and re-top, |the nature of the place, the workman thatch or straighten them up; if| must be completely closed, excepting Becessary, ving braces set against |at the: spot where he enters. Al- upright plan! most all the men who were engaged of the vessel be- in bringing any field under the plow | lieve that. somewhere in the dark- is to get in good grass again, it is Ness and thick air, lic two skeletous, often best to sow the seed by itself | Which can never be fcund till the as soon as the land is in proper con- vessel is broken nop. These are the dition. Grain detracts from the sub- semaine of 8, sili i hie Soar, sequent corn crops." Timothy, or- [tbe latter being a lad. uring WL grass, and bios grass ny be Senaliuegion ¢ of the. Vessel these two sown by themselves in August or | Work rough the week, keep- September. Use an abundance of |ing full time, and their work lay in seed, brush it, and roll it in, with a [between the skins. The smith was light dressing of ashes, guano, or fine | 80 elderly man, of a moody temper, compost. Clover nay also be sown who made no friends, and was not now, but spring sowing is usually popular with his mates. No one had preferred. Roll clover seed in gyp-| Seen him leaving work {vbody was Dm mh er | EER oe, rt ely ; a e and his lad fai Tee o ten, awes Is, the or at the pay-table to draw 0 1 money. They were never heard of N1oNs. -- Harvest as soon as the tops fall over. Those that are to be oe by Fd 256 xy ho worked ou the stored for the winter should be tho- | reat Hasiern. i " : absence had been noticed by the time. roughly dried. Take up onion sets, ; dry. them, and spread with their tops | 522PeY and officials ; but the missing on in an airy ey putting them ops men belug, 28 1 lve, said, vupope lar wil r comrades, re over four inches deep. & "i been very little inquiry about them til it found that their _ Errecrs or Dancive.--An art-cri- i a. It pl oir Waney d tic in the Boston Transcript dismisses | ; ted that the last time they had : the * 207% dgeary with the follow- | een scen they were at work in the q ing sweepii it " " of the shi d before lon; Shall ox vi tlio prowipres = soldi isdn x I wil be worse off than Sve, To | fall, or by the effect of some vapor, a first danseuse is to commit sui- : tu a tr em ty be eld Nine in ten of the queens of the bal-| non who worked at the great ship let have sunken cheeks and chests, |pqlieved that somewhere in the vash and complexions suggesting a diet of { julk there lay two skeletons." 7 arsenical wafers. The excessive ex- CE -- ertios {oli ghart densiog ine Beas Granp Truong Rawav.--Notice is given that the Grand Trunk Rail- ed theatre is fatal to beauty. a oi unhaj Youur? saps every Whole: | way Company of Canada: will: ) some tissue in rame, and be- ay pry: A Domenie Dion 4 its. comes, at last, as Fanny Elssler, by daylight, was once described, A {20 S000 EC NE te raise money for the farther equipment o Romance of the "Great Eastern." low , picture in a bundle of-old shawls. the railway ; to authorize the come EpmoriaL Courresy.--~The editor | version into other securities of the of the Foxtown Fusilier is a generous | existing and flowy 1 We stopth in Sonia to. authorize She. of la ostseript--We e press with | tion o! present Stock and ; pleasure to announce the deceasé of | of the Conpang | to f to our contemporary, Mr. Snaggs, Edi-|the Grand unk, Buffalo, Lake tor of the Foxtown Flash. He is now Huron, and Mon treal and C 0 one to another and better world.-- | Companies, to enter into far , Smilin who have taken the Flash | ran nts and agreements, easily, and then perhaps can't get out at all, will find the Fuslier a good paper. | other purposes. .. . & 2 *