sugzestion? We are f'fllin‘ to admit that for fertility of m’mrou and originâ€" ality in theeâ€"away ‘of abuse, it has fow equis and no superio¢s: We cheerfully acknowledge that its vcabulary of vituâ€" perative epithets is ivalled in Canada, but there is a journal published in Neow York which we are reltictantly compelied to admit is equal if not superior to the Globe as an abu-in"mlt lately reached the climax of |j 16~ when it besto #ed u _a political % neut the designation| of «* ichnanman ever blundered more sly. ln} stead of the people of lthe Maritime Pro« vinces being to a man against the Govern~ i ent they have proved almost unanimous. ly Opposed to Grittisn:. In Quebec the Government have an 0 ‘erwhelming majorâ€" ity. In Untario the vote has been about equally divided. ind this is what Mr. s :0 sweep them all) into the Pacific \Jcean. â€" It was not ({ntarid alone that would give a large jority against the Government but New Blunswick and Nova Neotin also. We trust }r. Brown will not attempt the propheti¢ role again. He may be a very able in some respects, but as a prophet he |cannot beâ€"called a success, ~Not Morrow herself, nor any other «@ th daughter of a seventh daughter" thrives upon the credulity of weak minted New Yorkers, ever blundered more sly. lnk Just previous to the late elections the leading Opposition undertook to do a little in the prophetic line. After inâ€" forming its readers hat the thirteen members of the Cabinet were * shivering wretches‘;_ and * wed rats"" it proâ€" ceeded to predict such a universal feeling of disgust iiled throughout the country at the bad corrupt admin istration of Sir John Macdonald, that the 1one of public opinion |rould rise so high as to sweep them alli into the Pacife ®The following constitiiencies in Ontario have been " c ‘ Previous to the late elections they held by the Grits, but have now declared in favour of Union and Progress : Hamilton, loutly Ranfram N. Huron, Notth Ontario. North Perth, Mr. tieorge Frederick Smith, a son of the Deputy Minister of Marine, subâ€"Lieuâ€" tenant of I1. M. ship â€" ‘lover now cruising in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, has arrived here on a visit to his fitends in this city. We understand that has been ‘appointed tentiary Directors, in t Neil, deceased. We the appointmant of an Mr. Wallice, M. P. for is in town. We are confere looking well, #1d portunity of congratu success. Sir John Macdonald| has gone East on public business. Hs|intends returning next week. Thirty bodies, who were drowned at the late Mctts disas .1‘,“'.- fiflteen and twenty 1 are still missing. Ihe members _ of the Geneva Board of Arbitrators will conel their labors to: A telegram from Bprlin, dated Thursday evening, mags : The Emperor of Ruséia, the Czarowitz iler, and the Grand Duke Vladimir, arrived at the Eastern Railway Station at (a quarter past two o‘clock this afte They were met as they stepped from the train by the Emâ€" peror Wiiliam and Plincs Frederick, son of the Crown Prince|‘ The Grand Dukes of Meckienberg, Badpn and ~Weimar, the Duke of Cobourg, and a liwrge number. of ot her Germin Priccep also arrived. The Ministers, with Chantellor Von Bismarck at their head, the mott famous generals of the army, and chief d{gnitariss of the Imâ€" perial @ourt, were present. . The Czir on alighting sajuted and embraced the Emperor William in a most cordial manner. * ked uy e appointment of sovable a journalist to position which we ari» confident he will lfil satisfactorily. one wl, com: Imsideration . of Bailill®‘s Saleâ€"LRobe List of Lettersâ€"# I Baker For Saieâ€"â€" White Dress Shirts, &câ€"Jas Angus. 33 Grand Gift Concert{â€"Thos K Bramlette. Noticeâ€" Thomis H {Johnston. those (r pening of the New| Temperance Hall onble. Dr. Tuppel has left for l He returns in t a fortnight. H rd of Thanksâ€" ble. Mr. T il s *‘ swee Tation of jour Toronto conâ€" The " thirteen ichneumons would hive a fine ringing : it, and it would be doubly th the because there is n <fifty wilo knows what an ad empetinane NEW ADV/;RTISEMENTS tral Hook.and ‘Laddor Picâ€"Nicâ€"Thos Higman. â€" ‘gnation| of «* ichneumon.‘" l;meuum» igrant c' " REDEEN.ED." IRTEEN 4 SHIVERING WEKETCH Es,; & 4 nou superior to the mi::g‘m.uhuy c of |journalisticâ€" abuse “?‘J.swill! perjuit HNIEUMON M * ley |1as left town hat) Mr. J. G. Moylan d |hairman of Peniâ€" in the â€"place of Mr We are glad 10 hear of ithets in the many~ nit us to make a willing to admit ar South Norfolk, lad to see our old 1d to have this op» lhting bim upon his Jouth Renfrew, North Simeoe, \' ‘vi ' F i::t: Victoria, North York. Faulkner t Hamilton. it do »+ove: nment properly Hali, needed lkll t charm. ‘Jhere does not, howeve¢r, nwmm"h road b§ing commenced at present, and we much duestion whether, when all things are n into consideration, the British Government or people will ever succeed in disc®vering a safer or more reliable route th their Indian possessions than will be ed by the Canada Pacific Railway: when . A line through Southern and Asis Minor would be conâ€" stantly jli to interruption arising from in ional co nplications, and it is highly that if the Imperial Government wanted to send troops and munitions of war to in a burry they would find it i ) to do so with safety. The Caâ€" much « are tal Govern in diso route t mun would be established with India not been altogether dropped. This would pass through . Nineveb, Babylon, Aleppo, and Bagdad, and at other lnpht::-lw Railway, by means of which idirect and unbroken railway comâ€" mun'-qt:- would be established with India not been altosrsthar drannad of wou x were that in order to complete one un chain of railway communication betwéen Western Europe snd the nearest pointonthobcnï¬ouol&nhhhdh, upwatds of 3,000 bailes of railroad would have ko be constructel. The traveller can journey by railroad as far as Constantinople, and from thence to K in North Western Hindocetan the is 3,000 miles. The project specis Hot close pf the | subj of â€"r that un che betwden Wes l e t of man n e acck as & J ::.tltht:r."t; educiâ€" tion people ; fusion nationaliâ€" ties tom(.hn&in!iuiommy." The Grits rejoice in the election of a man who professes such sentiments as the and yet they pretend to be loyal to itish connection and opposed to anything in shape of and to the Camrnt of Sownt wle resturations in What bumb4}$; they are ! 1 S P Te reurnmap C ho ce tw marond ‘ ; an el€ctive Chief Magistrate ; an ve ; universal nln.:‘ vote by ballot ; freeâ€"trade wi our great limes with the Northâ€" Wes§ both by railroads ; the deepening of the ch#Snel of the River St. Yor We rej0 hen we bear in mind the difficdities t which the Union party had to conâ€" in the Province of (ntario, we have still greater reason to be gratified with victory which we have obtained. Opâ€" to us, as we remarked yesterday, a very perfect political organization, by party leaders who were pre: to do anything or to make use of means, no matter how dishonorable, in to obtain a victory, if possible. the influence of the Ontario Govâ€" was used against the Union canâ€" everywhere to an extent never beâ€" heard of in Canada. 1t may easily be imaigi that men who were implicated in ithe Proton outrage would stop at ing, nor can we wonder to find that & lirge fund had been ‘provided by Grit leaders for the special purpose of briBing and corrupting the electors. Mr. enzie and his friends no doubt found the possession of office was a great ad~ to them in the political campaign. Yet) in spité of all the disadvantages which we labored, we divided the votg of the Province with them. The Globe continues striving to persuade i readers that the result of the late ions has teen highly satisfectory to Urit leaders, and that the Government be in a minority in the House of Comâ€" ‘ We challenge the Glob« to attempt & lete classification of members elect. throughout the Dominion. Unfair and y incorrect as its Ontario list is, it not by any possible amount of ingen~ _ manage to show a mjwitylpinn‘ Government in the whole House. , i by the Canadian route three by the other ; and no danâ€" terruption at the very time when House of Commons towards the the late session, was one on the of railway routes to India. It at present is regarded with most in England, however, is one by the steamers would run as now trom i, in Italy, down the Mediterranean, 8 of going to Alexandria would passengers, &c., at the little Seandercon, not far from Antioch. a railway is to be built to on the Persian Gulf, a distance From the latter conveyance again be by steamer, either to or. Bombay, If the landing at Bombay, the saving effected present mail route to India would miles, or represented in time, 92 if at Kurachee, the saving would WML n th6 repo. ts from -qoï¬l_x:-Hdbdmtho own. «"One of the Cttawa ichneumons rived here yesterday" would read we l the columns of the; Globe, lnd.would be regarded as a happy hit the fathful.@We‘ trust our contemâ€" will accept this hint in the spuit which it is intended, and will not forâ€" t the "ichneumon‘ when the first ourable opportunity for its intxoduc:i arrives. r he members of the Ontario Opposition rd the of the Honble. John uh%:.mmn. ce over hi# suoccess. Of they have ryed severs! symptoms alls tending to ‘ thati thei? professions of loyalty to ritish Thihe and their regard for eture of which the Globe " scribes" e usually so ingenious, wouli do good rvice, and might take the place of rats," "mummies," @"howling . derâ€" shes,"" and other appelations of a like iture which our contemporary is in the bit of applying to Ministers of the THE ROAD TO I®ND1A most urgently 1 was roaga A FAIR CHALLENGE. "HUMBUG nearly as him ; and when they have kneaded him sufticiently with their fery fist, thenâ€"zthey hrdvcbx::.â€"ur. H. Ward Beecher. ° _â€" Forcivzyiss â€"There is an ugly kind of W“lbotml_lh‘piu.. Men take one who has offended, and set him down hm&.bb'-pipdtbeirw and scorch him, and burn hbis fault into ‘Cast Iron Sinks‘ is the announcement on the sign of a suburban plumber. "Well, who said it didn‘t ?‘ was the enquiry of a countryman who read it over three or four times, and chuckled when he thought he saw the point. ‘ e degenerated from a monkey.‘" _ @I can speak seven different languages," said a convict as he entered a penitentiary, «No matter," said the t.:rer, "we have only one language here, very little of that. comes a silk gown, and a silk gown teâ€" comes a woman. e r ok wunt ‘iflflpd“-uw\rypinu mvade ? Gloves were worn in Englard from Angloâ€"Saxon times. They were through the middle ages and long after reserved as ornaments for the rich and nobler,although made only of coarse leather and laden with heavy accessories, it is not easy to see how they can have been ornament{il Betâ€" ter gloves came into fashion in the ‘sixâ€" teenth century. Queen Elizibeth‘s Earl of Oxford is reported to hive been the first Englishman who brought perfumed jhv:‘fnm Italy, and in 1578 a pair which cost tylflmnp,porfumodudqwnnh' â€" ed with embroidery and gofdsmith‘s work, was presented to the queen the Uniâ€" versity of Cambridge. "Her Majesty beâ€" boiding the beauty of the said gloves," says the old chronicler, “-hmm- Tepintion af the mane, bold on ‘one if has same, up one | htnd,‘ï¬mt:fln, half way upon ber " Ital soon became fashionable in epecial skill in their manufacture from Italy to France. !'if;l thoni:u:llo:r more persons are now employed e making in England, and, in addition to all their produce,zome nine or ten million pairs, worth nearly £1,000,000, mumu-l ally bmuhtonrzun France. | otreet, or to the Editor of the Newcastle Daily Chronicle will receive immediate attention. Ins James Taylor and Thomas Winship will row any t #xo men in the world £ idge to Bridge on the Tyne or over any recognized championship course for fl'om.f.'ll)totéwtlidqnaicp‘m usual expenses, if called upon to go to strange warers, and conceding the same wr“mlâ€m“bm mlknmflobct&&umd Joseph H. Sadler will soull an men hmmumm»zsopuuq over the championship distance, or either of them can be matched singly. > | Ax.â€"hhmtobom-{vuhintwo se on io saar on Articles sent to Winship, Old Duke of O-l.borhnd‘o Inn, Seotswood _\ James Taylor, Trafalgar Inn, New B:idge Brotherâ€"â€"inâ€"Lawâ€"The Judges, A Bad Style of Arithmeticâ€"Division match, the Tayl>râ€"Winship crew offer the -nlhr-’?o,tho Wards, the Biglins, or :.y_;;hcm m’h.mnj es | The Taylor+Winship crew will row any ahh'r:’.'lrlhfll lhhnm nouâ€" expenses to any four â€" willing" io vale the \Â¥ -w'!n@n-?-'-muï¬eu. The match for fours to be a st aigh ta way race, in best and best boats, ov::.ncourn of from four to six miles., Preferences will be given to the Paris crew o 8t John, N. B., the Taylor=~Winshp crew g wilâ€" lz&unmamup-. in a race .a side, to be rowed over the onship course on the Tyne. Should James Taylor, Robert Bagnall, Joseph H, Sadler and ‘Thomas â€" Winship (stroke) are willing to row any four mfn in the world in fours, pairs and sculle. | ** Tho'l'nyla-\ï¬:nuhir crew have deterâ€" mined that there a ‘:. po mistake as to their rm championship honors, in order to bring about some genuine business if possil le, have issued the following challenge to the world." . } (From the St. John‘s Tckgmy[.) The Taylorâ€"Windship four have, after all their ‘fighting shy of a match with our men last year, resolved to come out bol ily before the aquatic world with a series of challenges which, certainly, ofter sufficient ot variety to attract our own men at four oars, Brown of Halifax at single ‘sculls, Ross and Hutton with douhlo&::alh and and any other combination we :r m“"» The challenge alluded to apâ€" pears first in the Newcastle Chronicis, bat we take it from Bell s Lifs together with the remarks of that journal thereon as CHALLBENGES FROM THE TAYLOR WINDSHIP CREW in justice to Mr. Patrick himself rnd to those who are acting under| him, I trust and believe that the Gov t will not introduce over tÂ¥e heads of faithful and efficient servants any one whose claims to the position are not equal to those of Mr. Alfred Patrick. | fo the Editor of the OTIAWA TIMES. Sir,â€"As an outsider, permit me to offer a few remarks on the above iubject. in ordinary justice Mr. Lindsay‘s position should fall to the lot of Mr Alfred Patrick, a gentleman who his fullilled the duties of Assistant Clerk for years past, and who can point back to & record of upwards of forty years‘ service. THE CLERKSHIP To THE HoUSE COMMONs. To the Editor of | 10 Ihe Editor of the OTTAWA TIYE®. Oftawa, Sept. 7, 1862. Sir,â€"In your is ue oft yesterday morning, | I observe in the report of the meeting of[ the Board of Directors of the Protestint h Hospital, that the Medical Board den‘r!od | on the appointment of Dr. McDougali. No | | notice of that gentleman‘s uppointmon&} was given to the Medical Board, conse. , «uently no objections were raised against | ’i'. 1t would appear from your report that ‘ Dr. VauCortlandt, Dr. Hill and my self, ‘ had person«l: objections agiinst Ur. Me, ! Dougall, while such was not the cise ; we ) objected in commIn with the other memâ€" | bers of the Medical Staff, not against the || main, but ag:inst the prindiplo of appoint~ | in: any one to the Medical Staff without _ oftiâ€"ial reference to the ‘Medical Board. 1 Had the Boand of Directors officially noti‘ | I fied the Medical Staff of Ahe intended apâ€" ? pointment, [ believe the Medic:l Board ' would have consented to his appointment | , without a diâ€"senting voice. r Jor am, yours obediently, C D. M¢Girumzir, v.D.|® 10 the Edttor c WIT AND HUMOR GLOvEs. F literary tastes lately as the one who believed Yours, &c a mulberry tree beâ€" think fit to make & OBSERV ER Monuay was a gals day in h ingstor, The occasion was tz’tnmin‘ol the first sod of the Kingston and Pembroke Rail. way. A general holiday had been proâ€" claimed by the Mayor, so the.proceodmp were made unusually interesting _ Atâ€"ten @olock, the time sppointed for the cere mooy, an immense crouwd h.d assemSled at the intervsting point, which is within the city limite. l:r Drenoan haq m.l honour ol turning the first sod. YPDN th iBE wieie se wnliiecns...... a ble; while in placing shoes under the bedâ€"covers, leaving the toes sticking out, is the preventive, par excellence. Again, in some places, shoes are put under the bed, soles upward, or both shoes and stockings are laid crosswise on the fljor. % wl n o n S where ; and even ed on . by boy "Mï¬'““'““m their lllbl,a order that the: may not be attacked while swimming. dnfldn; out of old graves are, in varioustocalities, deemed infall;â€" and it shall h.'lp the party so ‘ri.'.d-n For preventing cranips, various are the, faik To buiow ie Eie ie pmotnen e 2 amd n‘: :E.“;._...-‘.g'tgu ?d ..", regum, Solvitur a morbo «* For all manner â€"Iï¬hâ€"n;lrdc. â€"Take the blood of his lit finger that is sick, and write these three verses following, and hang it about his neck : Jasper fert Mirrhazt, Thus Melchior, B.1â€" _thazir, Aurum,| | _ __ _‘ _ _ Haee fluim:mqne leélnn portat trfa moming __Not content with rtucibing for specific ailments, he gives as a charm : ae clooe as may Do / with ocarse dow, mnmu distil |\a goodwhih,.m reserve it for your use till such time as you haye need thereof. fine ge ;.A"Ah;"&" and ‘oov'::u: C Sss n en e it And tbo.gï¬rd it was the Holy Ghost. Out fire, in frost.| in the name of the Fathor, | â€" Tite Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen." And this is nluonz:iï¬ed, in other parts oPflzhjuly'- Im, into : * * An®Angel came from the north, And he brough eold and frost ; An angel came the south, And he brought heat and fire ; The angel from the north Put out the In the name of the Father, and <Of the Son, of the Holy Ghost !~ Peter Levens, © ter of Arts in Oxâ€" ford, and Stuient in Physick and Chirurâ€" «gery," in his " Pathway to Health," which «* printed for J. W., and sold by Cha«, ym, at the Three Bibles, on London Pridge, MDCLXIV,"! prescribes : ; . For a man or woman tat is in a con umpâ€" tion.â€"Take a brags pot and fill it with water, and set it on the fire, and put a great earthen pot within that pot, and ‘then Eut in these is following : Take A and pyll him alive, then flea off his skin, then beat rhi?tiopb‘ol:; take dates, a pound, slit out stones and lay l.:.zu ol.flun in the bottom of the pot then lay a piece of the cock, UF and westâ€" One brought tire, en en srgiet." 10 it : . L **There were three angels from the est Kue: ~ J oTE c"}s9ce One bm’ï¬n fire, the other frost. Out fire! in frost! | > In the nyme of the Fither, the Son, Holy Ghost !" | _ In Devzonshire the verse hi three an *# A dead wife out of the grave arose, And through the sea she swimmed. Through the water wade to the cradle, God save the bairnâ€"burnt sur, Hetfire, cool soon, in God‘s name," And the charm in Cornwall ccnsists of : w 'l‘h:nm two angels came from the The Shetlanders, to cure a burn, breathe on it three times, each time reâ€" peosting : | ; "Here come I to c:te a burnt sore ; If the dead knew what the living endure, The burnt sore would burn no more." In O.kney, the following is substituted1 : When a Cornish man is inflicted with boils, he finds a| brambleâ€"bush whose stalks are rooted in the ground at both ehds, and getting on his hands and knees, :: crawls under ::.1‘ Umhfl. principle therapeuties is is unknown, but it hp:li"od to be a never failing cure. & For a snakeâ€"bite it is an old custom to kill the reptile and apply its fat to the wound, while the familiar invitation to «* take a hair of the dog that bit you," is accepted daily in some parts of Kh land ; where it is still customary to .plï¬yton bite a handful of the hair ofâ€" the dog in~ flicting it. Norare the English alone in their application of this remedy ; for, a short time ago, a caze was reported in Philadelphia, where a German brought to‘ a physician â€"a chif whose leg hai been fearfully mangled by a doz. ‘The wound was filled with hair, which had produced a festering sore, and, on asking the woman the reason of its being there, she stited that, having always heard that the hair of a dog was good‘ for his bite, she had, as thothimnlwumikingot} run after him, and, tearing a handful of hair from is 'I:uk, applied it to the child‘s bleeding lnck I ‘"Uur blessed Sgvior was »born in Bethâ€" lehem and baptizad in the river Jor.lan ; ‘The waters were wil i and rude, The ohi“.‘ Jesus, was mek, mild and He put his foot into the waters, and the waters stopped ; and so shall thy blood, in the Lame of the Father, Son, and Holy in In the Orkne Islands, .when any one is ttached with {omorrlnge, or bleeding, at the nose, the nearest old crone is sent for, who slowly miitters over the sufferer : " Three virgins over Jo:dan‘s land, Each with a blmnifo in her hand ; Stem, blood stemâ€"Letherly st ind ; : In Devonshire they répeat the followâ€" J a,__, â€" _ 6 "° °00 N06C, a Load is to be killed, and carried in a bag suspended from the patient‘s neck. The length of time for which this is to be worn is not steted, but the remedy is one which, ‘"with variations,‘" Sir Kenelm Digby recommends for many ailments. Such a remedy is certainly preferable to the oneâ€"preceding it, or to the large slice of bread. . on wlgd: candlesnufft has been spread with butter and . molasses, a popu lar prescription in some parts ot England, and which is made more effective if the piti¢nt washes the morsels ddwn wiih water from the nearest churchâ€"font. & h_bl_oodiq‘ at the nose, a toad is to ‘This, however, c lIs for an exercise of faith, with very l:ttle work. Another remedy for the |sime is more tangible, i not quite so pleasint to the palate. 1t is nothing more nor less than to take a epiâ€" der, the larger the better, envelope it with a emï¬ngmoq‘h, and then swallow the bolus. its virtue is said to ‘be so great that the inhabitants of the Emerald Isle are credited with its use at the present day. As sl:o of the following, which is said to be quite as certdin in its effectsâ€" and it no doubt is+â€"to the insect, which is put into a bottle, that is then corked tight und buried. As the insect dies, the disâ€" ease will leare the patient, who wi l soon ! entirely recover. The fi‘st on the list is a charm for the cure of fever and ague ; it is to be written on a piece of r, read solemnly, the paper then t‘o}ded, knotted avud never thereafter opened, h «* When Jesug saw ye cro«s, whereon His body should be crucilied, his body shook, and ye Jewes asked him had He the Ague.? He answered said : + Whosoever keep eth this in mind or writing shall not be troubled with ';r"r and Azue;" so i ord help Thy servant trusting in Thee." Tg in o oee n o o. of the signal advanre of medical li-l“i the number of superstitious remedies sti in use among the common people, especiâ€" ally in England, is surprisingly great. We have compiled, witi some care a list of those that are in vogne in variqus quarters as "sovereign remedies," and are em~ Â¥I0{od by thousands with more (ï¬lfll aith. In spite of the boasted enlightenment of the nineteenth century, and in the face S JIVEREIGN REMEDIES Domioi pietate, cadu and anotzer brought A THM is1d, 8 EP TD zols Council, but if that idea is adopted, the Co n is the | fight between the "er.officios :‘ and their rivals will at every election be savage be, yond all precedent, and uu,Goumment, after all, will scarcely be representative: It is, in fact, a new constitution which has to be framed, and an old one which has to be superseded, and we cannot conceive work which will more strenuously tax the Premier‘s peculiar power, that worderful faculty of his ofumudensmg det«ils into etagesmanship. He must attend to this reform himself, first because his Ministry and the future r{.tho ll..lborl.l party will be staked upon result ; and seconily e tamocte. all a pre @exel ainst‘ it outside. m‘ know well u;‘; Mr Stansfeld is one of the most cautious and eonciliatory admainistrators in the kingdom â€" | greatiy to the annoyance of the [people, (:| on the clergy. ‘The countr} gentry govern 1e | tikes country districts. Any scheme, no matter what, which £mfeuu to be refreâ€" sentative, must break up this monopoly of power, and the difficulty of breaking it up d | will be extreme. The caste will fight for its last prerof:ï¬vu with the utmost teâ€" ; | nacity, and with no small show of moral indigmï¬oué and though it may under the ; | Ballot be defeated, the country voters being bitterly jealous of their own excluâ€" t sion, the gentry have strong arguments on * | their side. No tenantâ€"farmer, whaitever his qualifications, is fit to be a migistrate and decide cases which may interest his ® landlo:d; and if he were fit, Englishmen »*| will not endure an elective ju liciary, how. ever limited in power, We have quite 8 | enough of election in the choire of coroâ€"~ ners, who very seldom have to act in op= ition to high influence or to the popus f:-‘wm, and when they havre proved dis. creditably incompetent.‘ No transier of judicial power can be made from the unâ€" paid magistrates to any but stipendaries, and their judicial power is the lever of the country gentlemen. ‘Then on the existâ€" ‘ | ing plan of county finance they pay the | greater part of the taxation which is levied | on real property alone. Nothing is more | certain than ‘that if the rates on Lord | Greenshire‘s property were abolished he | could ‘add an equivalent amount to his rental, and he therefore pays the |rates. I{ the gentry are superseded | entirely as â€"the _ financial‘ adminie~ | trators of the counties, without any change on the _tax'm.& rystem, the taxe« | : will be paid by one of men and spent ‘| by motE:r set of men, and the temgu- tion to extravyagance will be intolera le ; yet it u:‘y are not superseded, what beâ€" | comps the _lpro:nisod representative | ( government? The eoun;{ electors will never endure their own exclusionirom the County Counc# after the nominee system has ondo:i‘,‘{ot to reconcile nominees with representatives in one boflyh,pmod by olxmem to be nearl unEo-ublo. The di gyhnotdxmmnzod' i y a change in the incidence of taxation, say, by throwâ€" ing it in part on porsonalty, for that will give the electors rights no Minister can affect to disregard, and increase the lanâ€" | L tagonism between the elective and nomâ€" a inee constituents of the C®uncil. Who is | ~ the nominee by the side of the represen» tative when both are taxed ? in any other 3 country an attempt would. )robably be ; made to imitate the British &mtizuuon, % and create a two.â€"headed County Purlia: ;! whent, with magistrates for Lords and repâ€" [\ resentatizes for Commons ; but the Liber. 9 al Ministry has had, wa imagine, neulyl * enough of the trouble :produced by that arrangement, without inflicting it upon j Â¥ every county in the kingdom. &r Stans. 2r feld‘s &Bflm making the hUmon district, or 98, as we ho it will ultimitely be called, the w‘? of adminis. | °9 tnï¬op,&d;u to lf.d.f.lllt,:n"hg fn Boards uardians electin Couneil bunt ; () . 0 °CHDg the County | ]" Cex 27 e e h law, and to the magistrates is committed all substantial power, They are local judges; they control the police ; they maintain and administer all public instiâ€" tutions, gaols, penitentiaries, asylums, and courtâ€"rooms ; they settle the amount of taxation, and they distribute the taxes when collected.. They are collectivel y the public prosecutors, they officer the militia, and they are responsible for the public . _All power is, in fact, legally in the m of a limited class, which is rendered, by the pressure of social ofinion upon the county members, the lordâ€" ieutenants, and the Lord Chancellor, an exceedingly minute | oneâ€"so minute that in many places there is serious difficulty in rootumndgltbe magisâ€" l tracy, and the Crown is driven back, ’ Until this month there was not, properâ€" ly speaking, a trace of representative govâ€" ’omment in the English counties The Poorâ€"law revenue is distributed in part by elected bodies, but even in this depart ment the nominees of the Crown are er officio members of the boards, hold the balance between the two Enrlies, the economists and the spendt rifts ; and whenever they are. interestedâ€"that is, whenever the subject of debate is import~ ant or involves patronage, exercise their lm.ulbonty with much decision. in all 0 matters the squires are supreme. The magistrates are chosen from them alone, the possession of a hundred a year P hnd}dn; a qualification demanded byl lawe ecdpiee Gr 27000E a t . T 7 Very few veople," we sispect, as yet understand the enormous importance and complexity of the next great task which the Government stands pledged t> underâ€" take. Mr. Gladetone has promised next session to reform our whole system of local government, with a view to its reinâ€" vigoration in the representative senseâ€" that is, he has pledged himself to examine,; readjust, and lighten a system of taxation ag complex and almost as burdensome as that of the kingdom before the introduc~ tion of Free ‘Frade, to invade the last stronghold of privilege, aud to devise a representative Constitution nrpli'ca.ble to provinces hitherto governed almost excl 1â€" sively by nominees of the Crown.. . . . Four cases Cornices, Poies, Corâ€" nice Ends and Slair Rods. Just opened at | RUSSELL & WATSON‘$. Hea{th Rugs,; Coca and Wool Mats, of every kind, shownâ€" in great )jx;riety, at _‘ RUSSELL & \WATSO.\"S. Till every lock is lan Fraught with b \_ _ heavens afur Low, D 20000 DOCEmOmE OJo ECeICH+ | +choly airs That thrill the fadeless foliage dreamfully, , As if from realms of mystical despairs. Tall, sombre, grim, they stand with dusky gleams Trembling to gold within the woodâ€" land‘s core, . Beneath the gracious noontide‘s tranq uil beams ; | _ But the weird winds of morning sigh | no more MR GLADSTONE‘S/~EXT i1 . WORK: While on ea in g sast, sunset c )mes; the solemn joy and might f Borne from the west, when cloudless day declines ; .ow, flute like breezes sweep.the waves of light, . And lifting dark gren tresses of the pines, A stilloess strange, divn Broods round and « â€" wind‘s surcesse Tall, sombre, t sky Rests ASPECTS OoF tug n each linled'é:npie and s ing dell ‘ the ~mute rmpture of he ited peace. (London Spectator.) ) &rim, agrinst the mor scarce touched by melan e nen e LE s s A@ t oo e .200 â€" N 6 in io tuncdt Dobely | aod peip gtiep ht Loo â€" 1st price 63 5 imsagine, nearly e ts . . produced by that, _ 9~4 Mile Rice, Champion Belt of Bri e, divine, ineffibl iÂ¥e and nomâ€" incil. Who is the represen» ? in any other oer them in the PINE 6 M CE (EAT Tickets 25 cents. To be had from memâ€" bers of the Committee, Messrs J Latimer, T Higman, D Robertson, F Toms and G Sharp and G Litle, and at Young & Radâ€" ford‘s and Proderick‘s, J. LA i‘IMER, â€" _ THOS. HIGMAN, will be in attendance I &e 220 E2CE PCR U DIP gade, Pnd prizs $1.50. pgâ€"kmemn; High Leap, 1st prize g2, 2nd prize $1. 7â€"Ladder Race (onh:iino) in Coyples, competitors to carry der 200 yards, ioh mt n mt e im o ladder, 1st prizs $4, Jnd prize $2, on time 200 yards, : immer 3â€"Hook and Ladder Kace (on time) competitors to start 100 yards from lad. der, to Fun to ladder, mcunt, fasten chain hook in proper form, and descend, and roturn® to Puwo of starting, 1st prize $3, 2nd prizo $§, 7 k Captain, wa, Sept. 7, | 1â€"330 Yards Dash, Ist, prize $2, 2nd p'"zzggcl.'nd' High Leap, lst prize $2, â€" in i , 1st prize fedpisgen t "S: 8P o9 CAPT. LITLE‘S GROVE, BAAK STRSET ROAD, 10â€"1 ceep Tm; CENTRAL HOOK COMPANY WiLL GIVE Nature has sometimes mad a fool a coxcomb is alwaysof amin‘s own ing.â€"Addison . 1872. Ready& Willing, 1872 Is there no way to bring home a wander. in%‘:lï¬oep but by worrying hind to death ? â€"Fuller. : ""a. "im, rubbing his legs and face dry. Thus, in an hour he is clean and dry, and ready to take a good feed, :?ile with your way he will stand ani . ewelter for hours, and finally dry, sticky an i dirty, Our horses xever founder and never take cold. We never use. a currycomb, The only care necessary is to have the water not very cold, then bathe them quick and blanket them instantly, while you are rubbing their legs.‘ t SÂ¥ 03 100008 PRTS VC o HOFSD, ‘Why, sir,‘ said he, tyou don‘ttake good care of your horses ; you think you do, but you don‘t,‘ , ‘Why ?" I asked. ‘Beoauso, when a horse comes in all wet with perspiration, you let him stand in the stable lnsldnry with all the dirt on. In England we take the horse as he comes in from a drive and sprinkle bloodâ€"warm water all over him, from his head to his feet. Then we scrape him down and blanket him, rubbing his legs and face dry. Thus, in an Bour he is alsan and Some English grooms at Saratoga are teaching the ‘Yankees‘ haw to take care of a horse. Tel ty Toâ€"day I askei one of these grooms, who hsd spent twenty years in the stables of royalty, what he had to say about our Am‘f,rfctn way of taking care of a horse. ning Says the Quebec Chronigle: When we look back and review Sir George Cartier‘s career for the last quarter of a century, we cannot but think that he deserved better treatment at the hands of his Montreal constituents, and we trust that the result will show that though he may hive been deserted by his Francoâ€"Canadian support srs, that the British and Protestant popu~ lition which owes so much to his epirit of fair dealing, has not forgotten him at the present time On Puesday, 10th Se_pt; The annual prizs meet‘ng. of the Disâ€" trict of Bedford Rifle Association will be held at Granby on Tuesday, the 17th Sepâ€" tember and following days. Liberal prizes will be offered. Lt.â€"Col. Fletcher of St Johns is Secretary. . A ccrrespondent of the St. John Te‘eâ€" graph, who recently made an inspection of the work, writes that the company who has undertaken to construct a railway from Fl'eJOliQ‘OD;‘{'N. B., to River du Loup, on. the border of the Province of Quebec, are making good progress. Alâ€" ts«dy about 15 miles of the line are ready tor the sleepers and rails, and it is exâ€" pectel that 20 milds will be in running order before the snow falls. Forten miles above Fredericton the line keeps close along the bank of the river. As it proâ€" ceeds it‘ leaves the St. John and strikes off into the rich fertile lands. The ex» periment of bringing out Shetianders to work upor the railway proved a f«ilure. Most of them soon broke their agreement with the company, and went elsewhere to seek other employment. t The Kingston Urangemen commemorâ€" ated the anniversary of the visit of the P:iince of Wales to their city whilst on his tour in 1860, by a picâ€"nic on Amherst Island. * ‘The steamship St. Patrick, Capt._ Ste« phen, at Glasgow, Angust 21, reports havrâ€". ing brought home the Captain and crew of the steamship Caspian, .of Newcastle, from Montreal for Waterford, wrecked on Belle Island on the 9th of August. The] Caspian was loaded by Messrs. kimmer, is k al 1 WV N i 00 d NeCY 00 UTL C1 ing brought home the Capt« of the steamship Caspian, . from Montreal for Waterford, Belle Island on the 9th of 2 Caspian was loaded by Mess Gunn & Co , cleared 31st of 5(),000 bushels corn. . A number of new buildings laid down at the Windsor an freight stations of the Greai Railway. _â€" The writs for the election in British Columbia to the Dominion House of Comâ€" mons arrived by the steamer California on the 11th August, They are returnable on the 12th October. . HOW T THKEAT A HORSE s)mpathetic even towards squires, but the country gentry are still under the delusion that he is in English politics a Red., The Premier must look to the matter himself, and even to him it will be a heavy tack, synmpathetic even TCâ€"NIC B R PROGRAMME 1, 1872 DUMINION NUTEsS AT nmenced shipping lumber | _ \i i * # +*OUths Linen i Markets, by the Midland | Three Ply Linen Coffs, 30.c ; Shirts, Collars, Cufts, F7 of Stratford, has been apâ€" &c5 made to order, at the of the County of Perth, in | OGTTAWA â€"SHIRT uks in o0 1 ' 1 s mad a fool ; but & min‘s ownâ€" mikâ€" irter of a century, we _he deserved better ds of his Montreal trust that the result Windsor and Chatham f the Great â€" Western 3lst of July ; cargo & LADDE _A GRAND 1 8 7 2, are being . . Homeipothis medicine Co Office and Depot, No. N* Tno.pwar, NEw YCZK For Sale by all Druggistsâ€" (:u':-lti,'.; of Filee , (.l;::;-.(,i:::l":: rice, 6 or., 50 cis; Pini 1.50 3 Quarts, §1.75. " © " > * §1.5 rm‘l\en Remedies, excent POND‘S EXâ€" , and single vials of Veterinary Judwna &re sent by the case or single bor. to any part the country, free of chares %.. receint of the crice. 20 Pn ow PP m En T Em ject to, with book of directions,..,. ..... $10 Of 20 vials, with book, Merseo Case. ... 6 Veterina Spcelfics (*nid), for cure of diseases t?:fl S.me-m Animals, with omplete Case, wit e Manua Large nsewsod Case 560 vials, all our Bpocifice, h,dndini"\'et- ul-qodmuuuoxm«nw «bove.. 35 fRBAS . . .1 peea e cng on en e ce en c es n en e c 10 =9, /n lm:'rr Kou‘l‘h. (:nkl-ru..;u.‘...w. = s0, * nary Weakness, w â€" * 31, “l’ll-hr‘hrlod..wiulla;-:-... 50 N y,Spasme, + x %%. * nfl-&n.,w.m&x 50 or §5§ PAMILY (il‘"?l ta A-zeclk fotfl:y’:m"‘lt‘lln;?e lnln:my eubâ€" Sect to. with af Mnsaltsas ow 23, Agent 25 }E 1 19, 20, 21, 22 POND‘S EXTRAC ures Burns, Bruises, Lam zll. Sore Throat, Spcain«, rache, Nrnn.!-;l:. K Lumbage, Plos. Hotis. & tl';:., ‘_ lvee lf::l:: son Mail Boat Lin: Packets All agents are required to . their returns ih fuil time to Thursday, September . To those located at ‘gr:u distan daye betore the 25th. and Maaison Kailroad Railroad. the Louisville Line, and the Louisy.l: son Mail Boat Lin> Pac ;PRICE OF TICKET3. - Whole ticket:, $10; halres, $5; qu .59 ; 11. whole tickets fc‘;r‘lw: 28 for $750 ; 56, $ 500 ; 113 for $1,000 , 235 for $2500 : 575 for $5,001. No disâ€" ;onnt on less thï¬htlw worth 3{ t_l&kï¬.u at a time. n accordance with numerous solici ons. arrange ments have been made with all the railroad and steambo it :ines leadicg into the city for the sale of roundâ€"trip tickets :oof’l‘or six days to a‘l persons who may wish to atterd th : concert or gnwin h tickets wiil be furnished h{ the Loui and ville Ruilroad. the Louisville. Cincinnati and ‘xington Railrond, the Louisville, Indianapolis 10, 11, cither d_1 experience.an entire encess â€â€™:'s:-p""“le'â€"'nu:"" "r â€"’lflclent and Relhhle.†y are the only a "I' cines m M useâ€"80 # that mh-uke-yannotbe u:?tben; #0 hmhh::l†to br:'?--heh&om t s ":‘m as to waye a . Ibey ra est cotnmem{ntlon from all, and jwill always renâ€" der satlefaction. 1 ha a4,.0 °004 & NFDOIC, Ralf or quarter tickets will be admiited to both the Consert and D awing. uull none without such tickets will be adnsitted to 4 ar < 7 »4! mmediebhaiPrcaa s l as B Bcï¬ c is One hundr rformers, gathered from all parts of this counmn:i Europe, under the direction of Prof. Hast, will ute to this grand musical carnivalâ€" And > ample room for every ticketâ€"holder to an unusual musical festival, the Concert ven in Central Park where arrangements ha ade to accommoâ€" d‘;o aJl who may come. 20t05, 1,000 Gifts, alt Cash.... The Concert itself wi‘l be the m chestral °W“ ever occurr One hund: TMOTS. gatherad HUMPHREYS HOnEOPATHIC SPECIFICS 'HAVB PROVED, FROM THE MOST AMPLE . 1 experience.an entire «ncess: Simpleâ€"Promnt 100 + = > °20 one tHousund gifts are all drawa. TIST orF orrrs. One Grand Gift, ORRN: :s +s 2e en is 2 ear se ee One Grand Gist, Cash. ., .. 22220000009 The drawing will begin precisel Snt'lrd?g mo ning. Keptember 28. i ha‘l of the Pubtic Library Buildin until the one thousand gifts are all . 20 al 2# #5 45 not occur again if the season is heeded. Ame vast siles of tickets aiready made, and the increasing demand for them from all quarters, having determined the trusteos that the GRA N D GIFT CONCERT for the benefit of the PUBLIC LLBKARY OF KEN1 UCKY, advertised for SAâ€" TURDAY, SEP UEMBEK 28, mn,tsuu;t. POSIâ€" TV ELY ME OFF ON THAT DAY, WITHâ€" uUT P TPONEMENT, the management now notifies all who expect to jarticipate in the drawing that they should buy their tickets at once. Delay for a few days cause! many who wapted tickets at the concert in December last to without them. mome living in Louisville 'aitoruntil sales were elosod. expecting, no doubr, a roefltponomont, and the « ol_ared fifteen twenty and even twentyâ€"five dollars for tickets which the day before were offered wf\ln'hmm at the regular price. Others living at a distancec sent thousands of dollars by mail and express, which got here after sa‘es were closed, and hl:l to be sent back. ‘These disapbointmants naad 4 Gilus of $2,000 each 15 do 100 do 20 â€"do 99 do Persons holdiug whole EIMILIA SIMILIBUS CURANTUOE. HAlD CF CCR The only practical Shirt and Col ter and manufacturer in Ottawa. Merchants‘ Bank Block, Sparks corner Metcalf. ~Ottawa, Sept 7, 1872. $500,000 d do do do do use of stimulants and tob evile known as a fast life. promptness in its effects is nently _ restori n§ the dev made DR. WHEELER‘s OF PHOSPHATHES an &nlv?'{ita with the Physicia 4 SEPUEMBER 2s THE DAY. YOUR TICKETS NOW OR NEVER $1.00 m.-u. ‘Rzm Rhoumatism, matic Pains ... Fever and Ague,Chill Fever, Agues thalmy, and Sore or Eyes (‘T;:.nrrh,.a:l(gorch‘:ou‘l'c Influenze. ..“-‘ 4Â¥ hm Asthma, Ol'pn::: Breathing.. ... Ear Discharges, impaired hearing. Scrofula, enllryai{hndn. Swellings Cemeral Debility, &uh“\'m Wropey ond scan.y Kecretions . . .. .. Beaâ€"Sicknmess; sickno=* from riding Kidneyâ€"Disease. Gravel,......... Nervous _ Debility, Seminal l‘!nlu!un-, involuntary NM«; | & | _ Extensive stock 'pets, in two and t ex. Super, which v at last season‘s pri examine. Headaches, ‘s‘iéï¬"m""“ï¬l zo :':r-e.u.â€l :"““'p: ful Peflo:u, or Pain W too,too'l’pf!-e?&;iot orere n tipr bne Yowlling .. :. N euraigins Toothache, Paceachs, Fevers, Conczostion, Iqanmuuou Worms, Worm Fever, ‘Worm Colic C â€"Colic or Teething of Infanie Dia of Children or Adult«... Dysentery, Griping, Bilions Colic. A CHEMICAL FuOD axp } TONIC. al W Now. is aund st gal_ ) }_ C NC &re offering st season‘s prices. Call and rine. RUSSELL & WATSON‘s Cash Distribwmion,. 100 70) t00 A FIXED FAC WMX. HEARN, $1.25. UOxford Shirts w larss ‘¢1.75 Regatta Nhirts, Gents three 1 _Collars, 20 Youths Linen C nrcommary in eomodd the Ohio and Missisâ€" ippi and Cincinnati Mailboat T 1 E Owensboro and Hender kets already made, and the or them from all quarters, o trustees that the GRAND the benefit of the PUBLIC J HITE DRESS sirTs be the. mogt brillisnt or Lungs, Nose, Corns, Vicers, ess: Shpléâ€"’ho:"f â€"r ey are the only Mediâ€" and three ply ; also NS COMPOUND: AND CALISAVA stock of ‘ofe Eajos and make reach this office by do‘this succersfulty es must cose some IRT STORE JAMES ANGUs ness, Soreâ€" Toothache, caumaiisn, Ottaw . ‘co, and all The great r and pub .cents. _: Fronts, Dickeys and Collar Cut W giver with two « in the West #1 cent $25,000Cash 25,000 Cas *21,00 do 15,000 do â€" 10,000 do 2,00 do £000 do 7.000 do €000 do 800 do £000 go £000 do 6,000 8,0.0 4,000 #,000 8010 15,009 18,0 10 al n the great d continue 000 Oue NUTRITIVE Woot Car, | {yPENix axl._. _\,ar‘ O 3,,"\ 100 00 $100,00( Department of Public Works, VUica wa, Sept 3, 1872, The Departmen â€z;m..m:«.u itself n.oD:ggept the lowest, or any Tender. Tenders addmssed to the i (endorsed Tender for Feeder) will be reâ€" ceived Aft this office until noon of --lDAY, the 20th3EPTEVBER, inst , for the clear, ing out and decpening of the of the WELLASDCANAL, from the Junotion upwards to Duonvilie, aud to s‘prt Mait« Lock. fications can be seen at t is office, ind‘at the Welland Canal Oflice, ‘b& arines, on and after TUESDAY,\the 1 instant, where printed forms of tepder miy slso be obtained. ‘he signatures of two »~iven} and re sponsible persons, residents of Pro vince, willing to become for the Aue performance of the work, be gt tached to each Tender. 3 Street 10 In 068 nounce to the public of (Xtawas that be is prepared to receive pupils for on the Pisnoâ€"Forte, Urgan, in Vocel Â¥usic â€" For particulars enquire ht Messrs. A. & 8. NMK:{L‘.L. Music ___Ottawa, Hept. 8, 1872 Hall E a _ ï¬u l:- ':." Elie Tal oue * "** MmG:. ‘dl Lewis 24 eo (rran Pm ioh:.l.lm EM‘WJ.-“ g'r:“" * Miss Marion ohnsor Jno Jos > Jourden Jno Johnson Mrs E Kain Jas Edi¢omy" y Kendall H L __â€"awas, Bept. 8, 1872.___ _ 20661 y uce TO CoNTRaCroR Eniehen doo i sag." P Sherg "* Gray Thos ‘}reenaway John Grimes F Green Henry ‘3rieve Geo Prsnch $hilip Bocles wiss Mary A Eastman :u.:’ ns E:o.dl Miss Emma Miss M ary s Poumatent ® M mars* Fi 15 as El‘-mé David Juhn » ber 4 Co Fraser J A | Meser nen Clarke W C . [ Cwboulp M Coo;'WmJ Corrigun Jas Conroy # i i* Sofies Cots f Colions A: thur (h;’ln“hry §:' TÂ¥ Y Delanney Prof J ul Sevice C c“’ DOrI. Mro Sane Dufly Jos Dwyer Jno 261 _ . __ Post t & r repmman, somee â€"â€"_~n__~ J OCAL aAnp Nsl‘_lgl));pflt MUSIC ez . PROF. H. G. TIEPKK begs to anâ€" B u L “‘ :-:‘ 4 rock Brown J:n luo-“"(?t 3 tad Campbell Arthur nl-k‘ Jno Callahan Poter Mureok I U Caltin, Gaze & 0o MeseraR SIRU Y At & i an Mi Cattin & Co Mesere & D Retson Cameron Evans g.u .,.z, Carroik P evilie Cbristie Mrs Margt _ O‘ prien Misp M K ctarkâ€"Kd w Owens Jas Corbott Miss an T suer fhuee Coffer Mr ;u‘k-r '._ MWm' Furks Fred: ts The Lommluâ€"on;r accepting any or n oflered. Tenders to be se: the Hon. the Corn Lands, Toronto, and Bridge." _ The. work the 1st of November Plars and J can be seeh at t A. J. Russell, E To be built acrass the Hyde Chute, in PC At the Dept. of C Mondar, th N. FAULKNER‘s The undersigned acknowledges received in full his claimg ® grip ZEtna Insurance Company, SA1d abe the Agents, Mesers. Pennock & ¢ their promptitude in settling the . The postponed Sale of the ( tels of the Defendant will hh= MUNDAY next, at 10 o‘ #% the ket Njuare, York Street. ROBERT HAMN Tw 12 M5ICal exercises, Doors open at th mence at hilfâ€" past Py order, mu CONSIRUCTION 1 oo ommunr The spacious Hall in ; eau Street, near Sa per been leased for a brpm of perance Hall, and having ly fitted up for said purp ed toâ€"morrow afternoon Hon. S L. Tilley, Rey Quebec, and several of o1 hive kindly consented occasion, Professor Workmen . bags and Ottawa, Sept 7, 1873 Mrs Peter NARD OF THAXNEs ENDERS WILL ttawa, Sept omcs Ducks‘ Cotton R SALE 2068 1 AWaA, Ne The. work to be & iiiv.f;.l' a %-% t o &J ied w in TH AUMONTI be sealei and sidressed e (b!nmmimi‘d{(h specifi ations of the the Crown Timber ( Esq., Uttawa. UNTIL x CÂ¥ °C 1, and hl'in‘ M for said puUrp3s€, w ~fhoibuhs H f"""-z-z'. obin Â¥ J J taicks rvaill W as Wul:“ on 5';‘-'..062. W Mliamme w Jos \'uch Woight Nap grhht no Ya MoCormick 3 Mcb..llr is no %4 Mclean F McLelian McManas I-F MeMshon M Mc Milian Mige I of (Mtawa |that he is pt F. BRAUK, of Griffith several of our J consen‘ed + tember A N FOR thg RKalston M Kevit Ii-r en $ Robertson f(‘o.h.'- W in +! i «7 Hobinson J BM-:J * o. 1. BakKEr, inlin Misd M«ry fxloigh pombng Mitler Mry ©Monabhar fapier con # Moxlcy Jno IE . Pan Thos 11 Polton A Perter Thos Pontes & Co Pocock 4 t next. « t reserves none of the @ rgapeqf, Logan GeeR _ , Maxwell J y l:allouo f Macklin Mrip 4 Mata ns Mer or MiMier Jos i8t rown Larids, Torop Kman w rter Win marked 4 7 THK® 3 W T oA N. FaULKNeRp Tents Mada R iver the T _ e ree ; tin, three ofiocts !* HALL PDoiaid s \"rk N ox Blankets HAMILTQy Fimber Oftice of yéars day of 8 RECEIVEp ©.npleted o H Bridge, k & t th-:‘. C ieigy . right of nvih‘ Block mduc, han Bri TRX * Cc uoi suie 3424 P l. -’_oh for the F A “fl in at old prltor; Au1a®, MeKixwors & Mc ak ysaume Sale of Light Prints " Arra®, lclno-_t l-:: k «m B Ausas, Mammor« & McX 9 Snark ..wï¬)fll“n‘ ) than the Caledonia W be without it, for J mo Doctor need Gimso® & Co., FEEE C tz "Aw.‘fl- May 13. 1872 ineys upmcm of the Caledonia Wfl R Gmsox & sn Collarse 10 cents iwoh, to be had on! be had from 1 & ‘Al‘! T /o ~Â¥e Bwfl arminative is a a e remedy Yor Diarch Corner Sparks and Fas _ Iâ€"‘R‘" 'w,.u'lw& e from Ayime® St sper « Joas)® Cas y ab $.30 a mâ€" to all poin! of Carpets 1 is one of the I Efl ever offe placed 0 _.'.ll:: unde. present 1 *Ws new bagk m.-".‘l-n w every ::' 'l.o»l will hold a Contirg H t l meagans M Hous . .. drunkan Bole Agents tor Of stone out OWita®s Buse B. 4 OSLY,â€"We the immsdiate to the sepuict street â€"opposi ille, t* E. Montroni, , and take pari ", certainly the gume w dryuak It "Will, We tbe ball fof Â¥illage of e ETV . 4. TaAYLOT snd cornet 1 Wim, Davie, a. Goverme rted his so1 (Oext®A Wodk er »pra WA Hout,â€"w ishop of ; & W ATS a person 1i corner F we base bat Uttaw sond #éeotion ts 1. 00 Â¥ largg Puesd Sowers should TTA Stree SATBAT w yesle TE end rus vB al