len of taste and not wanting in architeo tural skill have suggested the expediency of cutting down the unsightly high ground which interrupts the view of the base of the Parliament Buildings in that part of Wellington Street which extends from the corner of Bank S.reet to the Bank of Queâ€" bes. This seems a wise suggestion. Beâ€" fore the old wooden fence was taken down, the unsightliness of the slope formed in part from the deoris takem out for the foundation of the western block was scarcely perceptible. Now that the wall, on which the railing is to rest, has been partially built the hill or slope at the point westward is seen from Wollington Street to much disadvantage. 1t is, in {act, an eyeâ€" sore, notwithstanding the incipient shrubs that adorn its summit. The cost of levelâ€" _ing the ground from the Government workshops to nearly cpposite the Quebec Bank would be very inconsiderable and is rendered particulariy advisablg from the circumstance that Wellington Sireet must, mnecessarily, on acoount of the pew bridge over the canal, be reciuced to a Jower level than at present. ‘That part of the Parliaâ€" â€"ment Grounds in front of the Western block might be further improved, when levelled down, sloping from the street, by having the face of the slope built up with stone precisely similar to that of which the buildings are composed. The effect would alternately, for the public, They did eveything for everybody, but themselves. Ago grow upon them. They necessarily Yailed. . Their eyes would tecome dim and Th: Ottawa Cimes Sir Walter Scott was passionately fond of actors, He loved players and he liked plays. It was he who first instituied a society for the protection of decayed actors. Their best days were generally spent in be good. It would tend to make the buildâ€" ings seem higher. It would, apparently, raiss them a story, and it would add very musch to the general appearance. The -n:vluanm-u.-onqm tron, and/ the Board of Works might, perâ€" haps, be induced to examine and report. List of Unclaimed Letteraâ€"G P Baker, Cheque Lost. > > | Smaill Sum of Moniey Found. _ | their legs fail. There was no remedy but new actors and new scenes, This, Sir Walter Scottâ€"a writer of extraordinary eminenceâ€"soon perceived. . 1t . was he, _ who first insugurited . the fund for decavyed actors. It was he who perceired that a man‘s tilent and histrionic powers could not Ba lost forâ€" ever, It was he who saw that lime while it worked wonders, also ha!, :s disadâ€" vantages. It was he who persceived that the Mrs, Siddons of toâ€"day -t:'.dlotbo the same inspired personage twenty years hence. Her ppwors would full. Her youth,._her beauty, her v tility, her tragic eloguenca _ would fall away. PBut was wanted for the woman of iimperishaâ€" ble memory and fame. Thay protection sould only be got by a pgusion, and that pension obtained from the company of people, whom he or she as the case might be, had honored by their merits. . Sir Walter Scott perceived that tilont might, through human infirmity digiuish; and his desire was to reward it for what it had been, rather than for what is was. . He succeeded. He drew sarourd him a galazy of talent. 1lherg clustered around him the Keans, the Mackays, and the Phelps. He brought around him also the aristocracy of the land ; men who had enjoyed the quips and pranks of a rapidly passing race. He saw thateven his own giâ€" gantic intelloct might fail, as fail ii did, and that the viridness and grandgur of Waverâ€" ley might come to an end. Me know that life stood upon the hazard of a dis. He knew that provision must be made for tear and wear; and he felt that something should be done to recompense wornout faculties. To a public meeting in Edinâ€" burgh he sappealed, and that appeal was not in vain. 1t was i with enthuâ€" siasm. Mmhromoh Murray and an Ord. The frst mena in letters and politics came to sssist a Patton and a Siddons. M-: no drawing back. The case as ted, bad its necessities, and that case was not unhear| . Now there are persons somewhat preâ€" cisely situated here. These are mea, who have spent their best days in the public service, who have edited newspapers. or practised mediciae for years, while there was soul in them, but, who, in course of time, fall from their wlzmhâ€"-n whose eyes had become and their natural strength been â€" Surely for such a class of people as actors there should be some & Is there any â€" made? â€" Assuredly | very . little, Sometimes & pI::.L is proâ€" vided for some antiquatefl public charâ€" acterâ€"a clerkship in the firâ€"oif west or a custom‘s appointment. . Not as a rule. ‘These places are mostly designed for a rising F.uiou,vhom;: knew what it was to toil and moil. blic rewards are ordinarily the prizes awarded to mere schemers. The times, hqwever, in this respect are changing, and it would not be amiss to raise a monument to Sir Walter Scott in this country by who recog~ mise in him the real re of true merit. It was in th‘s way the suthor Of Waverly dreow himself the gratitude and esteem of people who felt this ia him bad found TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. amusement for the public. 1872 & Shakespeare hid | inaugurate‘. HUe made people who, by profession, were " the mere representatives of the people of a past age, people of our own day with like passions to ourseives, le raised the stage to a height which it had never before known, and, in doing so, did a serâ€" vice to the public and an honor to himse}f. He loved his couniry, and smiled upon Bailie Nichol Jarvie, eximibited the good traits of Rob Roy, and at the same time never, for a moment, forgot thait there once existed a Diana Vernon. A‘ter the FrancoGerman War and the | Pomeroy, Ubio, state that the coal miners Communist Rebellion, it is lamentable to‘ 'r»hvro l:;' 'V.\l'k..fl?'b‘:"-. of ;‘l“v p . . in Thi rom three and a o four cents per say France again found herself mThneullubd' Api tiyit salaried eMpl have (Rears). _ _ _ _ _ _ j _ _ | demanded a corresponding advance of pry. LATEBT BY TIUAAPL London, Nov. 4â€"A do?pntch from Sheffield at noon to day, {reports that some rioting had taken placg in that city, and that the police had arrasted five of the ringleaders. The despatch does not say what was the cause of the disorder. Riot at Sheftiel4, arrest of the ringleaders â€"Demonstrations againgt closing the Saloons on Sunday in Riverpoolâ€"An American Seaman charged with Murâ€" derâ€"France will pay Germany this week, $200,000,000â€"Lefter from the Eqperor of Russia to limeo Charles Demonstrations against | closing the saloons in Liverpool during certain hours of Sunday, whichmbo‘u‘: last week were resumed yesterday. A} one place in the ¢ty a crowd numberidg 10,000 perâ€" sons, which was being add: by speakâ€" ers in opponi&ion to the Act, is dispersed by the Police. _ q _ London, Nov. 4.â€"An American seaman was before the courts in street to. day, on a charge of mu:der, itted on the high seas. He was arres under the Extradition Treaty of the ited States. On motion of Mr. Munn, American vice corisul. At the examinazon df the accused the representative of the United StateS failed to make out a prima| fucie case of murder. The evidence that the case was only one of mansiiughter, and tho.l::eododdodmul t decree of erime did not come under provisions of the treaty. Vice Consal) Munn conâ€" curred, and the prisoner was discharged. London, Nov. 4â€"5 p. m. â€" Consols closed at 92}. American rities un» changed ; Kmne43}. Tallow « 94. Paris Nov. 4. â€"ltentes closad at 53 france FRANCE. Paria, Nov. 4 â€"France will pay to Gerâ€" many this week 200,000. france, and will continue to pay similar; installments until the end of the year, sd that on the Ist January only two milli of the war indemnity will remain t S The report, which tirst ap in the wzho'mA had of rresident Thiets a disavowal of Gen. Ducrot‘s order of day, is proâ€" nocnced untrue. _ _ e _ GERMANY. Berlin, Nov. 4. â€"The excitement over the country Reform Bill subsided. The Bill will again be in/ ced on the opening of the Dist. _ _ | f _ Queenstown Nov. 4.â€"8S.8.; Ballic, and City of New York arrived, alko Polynesian 10¢. opening of the Diet. | Thoanornol Russia written an wmwmo brother of the Emperor of {iermany, on the occaâ€" sion of the. 53th anni of his :r- wamuomy oneloy of a C regiment. The Czatcalls to mind the glorious deeds of the allied armies of Prussia swi Russia when fighting in the holy cause, and hopes the fes ot friendâ€" ship between the two iss will en« dure for generations. _ Turin, Nov. 4.â€"The inuniation along the banks of River Po confiaues. Manâ€" ius, which was th has so far SPALN. i Madrid, Nov. 4 â€"Armed |Carlists have mm frontier, near the town They stopped diligen« cies, turned the m out, and nbbalndltï¬pporï¬:-. Two persons were wourded, an Englisy lady and a o w e Senate relative to captains at sea First Snow Storm at Bruyswick, Me.â€" Destructive F im-‘l'mmn suffo. cated by gasâ€"Mr. Japanese Minister at New Ha d discos veries in Winchester Co,â€"The Presia dential Electionâ€"The Disease still ragingâ€"A Printer in Nassau Streetâ€"Strike of Coal| Miners, &o., Ame MIDNIGHT DEsPATeNEs Philade‘phia, Nov. 4.â€"Th@ horse disease has caused a partial of business, aud all the leading avenues deserts= ed the canal. _A boat load of barley that left here was towed by oxen onljits arrival at Phoonix. Brun«wick, Mo,, Nov. 4. â€" foll here last night to the depth of thalf an inch. 1t was the lirst snow storm of the season. Harrisburgh, Pa, Nov. #.â€"The muill building of the Lochiel iolling Mills Co. was burned this a m.; loss $100.000. . Insurâ€" ance on the building is $23, aud on the machinery $45,000. > Boston, Nov. 4 â€"Ths dwelling and barn of Thos. Cutter, in Ariin , was burned yesterday ; loss $12,000. Live: pool, Nov. -l.â€"CotLoq _ Rochester, Nov. 4 â€" This njorning, three men were suff)cated by in the new minéral well ?ood at Avou, their names were Lucias Gilbert, Geo. , and a truck man, name unknown. e o not a single vehicle was to be seen in the streets yesterday. ‘The Sun ishes adâ€" ditional glowivg accounts of goid discover: ies in Winchester Co. W gton m reports extensive preparati for a to Stanley, who is expected to arrive here on the lith inst. All morning papers contain a linal artiele‘‘ on toâ€"moreows contest. . The Worlt u)- we shall carry the cicy cartainly, th s State will almost eq ral the city, ani appaals to yemocrats to give true and joint support to the Joint Presilental tieket. _ _ A Bill has been introgueed in the Uswego, Nov, 4 â€"â€"No imgrovement in rse disease, and but few boats moving on â€"Armed Carlists on thp Frontier of Figuerasâ€"Markets, &¢.| &¢. Ci1BLE NEW*®. [By Montreal Lize ] erican News U rEAT B&ITAIN Nov. #.â€"The mill closed un= w‘elock and Lrought before Commissiorer | Usboru. The Commissioner ordered the | warrants following the indictments to be rnrnd upon the accused and they were | removed to j«l, in default of $8,000 bail, | each E. If Coffin, a printer, was shot in the , thi;h by some unknown pesson on Nas sau Nireet, this mording. _ al Cumberland, Md , Nov. 4. â€"Un Friday night, two freight trsias collided on the Huntington sad Broad ‘Top Railway, Conductor Rower and three others were instantly killed and suother mortaily inâ€" jured. s New York, Nov. 4 â€"Arrived, $®. Cify of Antw rp from Liverpool _ Washington, Nov. 4.â€"1he American and British Claicas Commission bave given permission to take teâ€"timony in various cases. The commission allows the deâ€" murrer of the United States Counsel in The horse disease is believed it will cot last week. Goldshore, N. C., Nov. 4.â€"The horse disease has made its appearance at this place. . o e the case of No. 29, Herndon Baes, adâ€" ministrator, and also allowed the demurâ€" ror of ller Majesty‘s Counsel, in the case of No. 17, Wm. Whecler Hubbel!, the claim of the memorialist, which is supposcd to be implied in the contract on the part 6f Her M») sty‘s Government to compensate him as the alleged inventor in certain imâ€" provements in fire â€"arms, averred to bire been used in the British service. The claimant dil not appear to bave haid any mny in his alleged invention in Engâ€" Springfield, Mass., Nov. 3.â€"%:‘6.“ Boy, the noted trotting horse, and other horses have died from Epizoo within the past 24 hours. Baltimore, Nov. 3.â€"The horse disease has reached its worst stage, of 800 horses owned by the City Railroad Company, all are sick except 11. â€" _ Lo Cincinnatti, (., Nov. 4.â€"Advices from Fomeroy, Ubio, state that the coal miners Wishington, Nov. 4.â€"The President‘s horses »re sick with the prevalent disease. New York, Nov 4.â€"Gen. Burnside arâ€" rived from Europe toâ€"day. e Yew York Nov. 4. â€"Arrived, City of Brussels, from Liverpool. _ _ _ ____ wi?h.'cpodd N?i e elec. & act Congress, the tions for State officers and Presidential electors, is in progress in this city and throughout the State toâ€"day. There is much excitement here, but everything New York Nov. 4.â€"A special from Vi~ md:ï¬l t all these o * . NEW YORK nnn\}.‘“ New York, Nov,. 4.â€"Gold 12}. . Coiton.â€"19}. . Flourâ€"5 to 10c better. Receipts 33.â€" 00V bbis. Sales 11,000 bbis, at $5 90 to 6.30 for supertice State and Western ; $] to 7.85 ror common to choice extra State,. Rye Flourâ€"Steady. Wheat firmer. Eales 146,000 bushels at $152 to $WUB9 tor No. 2 Spring afloat; $1.61 to 1.6% for No. 1 do,; #1.60 to $1.63 for Winter Red Western; $1.68 to 1.75 for Amber Wesâ€" tern; $1.75 to 2 00 for White do. Rye quiet and nominally -ohnm Cornâ€"Firmer. Mflut,(ll) Sales 70,000 bdshels on steamer ; Western Mixed at 65¢ to 664 on sail do. . Yesterday Aiternaon s Despatches. Morning Despatches. â€"Dull and unchanged. Receipts OT?:IH-. Untseâ€"Quiet. Receipts 44,000. Sales 26,000 bushels at 386 to 436 for black western; 42 to 43 for new2 wixed western ; 44 to 50c for white; 41c to 48} for old mixed western; 41 to 470 for state. * Pork dall at $15 37 for new mess, Lardâ€"â€"Quiet at 8fe to 8} for‘steam ; 8]¢ for kettle. Butterâ€"24 to 28¢. Cheeseâ€"11 to 15c. Petrolenmâ€"Crude 14¢ ; refined 261. t LONDON MARKETS, _ _â€" hndo-,’ ' +Nov. 4 11.30 a mâ€"â€"Consols 924 to 92}. â€Ms *65, old, 91} ; ‘67, 931 ; 1040‘s, ; new 5‘s, ® % * fivenedor ks eioens. Liverpool, : Nov. 4, 11 30 a. m.â€"Cotton quiet and steady; Uplands, 10d ; Orleans, The street cars commenced running toâ€" day, The horse plague having sufficiently abated. Money market continues easy. General news unimportant. Clear and very raw. ssofur 1 Wheat 12s 94 for average; California white wheat 13s 34 club do , lis 44 to 12s 24 red western spring; 11s 84 to 11s 10d for winter. 10jd Late styles of Paris and London Millinery now forward,and shown at the lxlliner‘n.oom of Russe&LL & Warsoxr. Those wishing can now see the very latest in the above goods. American travellers hare, it is said, in the last two years, purchased over 4,000 =" quills with which .Lamartine wrote Jocelyn." m e A London paper suggests the importaâ€" tion, in large quantities, of turties to serve as a cheap article of feod, in place of deer beef and mutton. Sup The King of Burmah has recently deâ€" graded one of the ablest and most powerâ€" tul men in his dominions for drinking wine and taking bribes. _ _ ___ _ _ _ _ _ The Council of the Viena Ezhibition have decided on having a permanent aquariug of considerable magnitude erectâ€" d in that city, and plans havre been subâ€" mitted to them for their approval. .. _ Notwithstanding the notices which have already appeared respecting the unclaimed prizes at Wimbledon, six prizes, value nearly £50, still remain in tre bhands of the National Rifle Association. A letter from Mentpellier, Horault, France, states that a drummer of the 63rd of the line, condemned to death by court« martial for striking his superior officer, was shot on the glacis of the citadel. _ The Emperor of Germany has conferred | the Order of the Tron Cross on Mrs. Alsagar, a lady weil known tuo:’l her connection with the hospitals Saarâ€" brucken during the Francoâ€"Prussian war. rage, the Avenir National : are in a position to affirm that [Special by Montreal Line } Bg TELEGRAPH. MONTREAL MISCELLANEOUS ot Father Hyacinthe‘s mars abating more .1 It " We But stop! These seventeen millions, From every land under the skies, Can‘t all be adorable women, Can‘t ali have wonderful eyes, There are faces unpleasant to look a:, Expressions decidedly bad ; Heaps on heaps that never had beauty, Ur have lost the little they nad. There are women who scowl and who squint, And look opgolito ways at a time, And blinking, blearâ€"eyed monsters, Whose kirs wou‘ld be kin to a crime. There are horrible objects with wens, And features all twisted awry, Termagants armed with a broomstick, And slatterns that smack of the sty. Just think of it! Seventeen m.llions ! From every land under the skies ; Multitudinous types of figure and face, A world of wonderful eyes â€" Love‘s wildest visions of possible bliss Turned sweetly, suddenly true. Who wouldn‘t, if he could, be a Census ? ‘Think1 Seventeen millions! Who ? " But now ‘tis odds beyond arithmetic." â€"Coriclanus, Act 3, sc. i. "Lest this great sea of joys, rushing upon me, drown me with their sweetiness." â€"Pericles, Act 5, sc, 1. Just think of it! Seventeen millions! Resplendent with multiplied charms, A host of adorable women Kushing right into your arms, Coming one aiter another, Faster than fiakes of snow ; Myriads burrying up to be kissed, And waiting tor others to go. There are anatomical women, With most of their bones outside, And others, like magnified tumours, That you couldn‘t embrace if you tried. There are women with turned up noses, And noses bent down fiit, And fertures drawn and teoeth all gone, And cheeks like a knocked in hat. There are women all padded and painted, More bumbug than womenâ€"I‘m toldâ€" !.muf:iund of cotton, and offered for e, At current prices of + There are women with fl‘: that comes off, And teeth which they have put in, Who drop slowly apart, like a bundle, As they pull out each separate pin. ©The cem us, it is said, embruces 17,â€" 000,uU women ; who would not be a cenâ€" sus ? "â€"Exchange. " Mercy on me; what a multitude is here!‘‘â€"Henry YVIII, Act 5 ; se. 3. © Your commission will tie you to the numbers and the time of their despatch." â€"GCymbeline, Act. 3, sc. 4. ' Women with brains like a baby‘s, But tongue enough each for ten, Whose trade is abusing each other, And women who feed upon men, Am»zons, Jezebels, cannibals, hags, Say sixteen millions of such, and about, Une million a fellow might chose. You must take them, thougb, just as they As fast as they choose to run in : On the whole, ‘twould seem, v.ewing it calmly, _ As best, perhaps, not to begin. It‘s a pity to give up the good ones, But think of those others! my friend, And as soon as you start at the head of ___ the line, _ C s It strikes me you‘d better not do it, In view of the risks that you run ; Ike feeling of constant anxiety Would take off the edge of the fun Ts fase, the more one reffoous: 11 |. Thomh‘-ec-tnhodhndply, If the question comes ‘Who‘d b Census * ‘I thank you most kindly, not L.‘ For myself, if they‘d ask me the question, l‘dm,uochodouk’whol And say, ‘By your leave, Mr. Census, There are seventeen millions for you ; I wish you joy of your bargain, Mtqm'ot night‘s rest when you‘ve P ?:dmkful-'nmhn't'ic:huu. A Mr-cdull pY one. 1 l‘mM(W) The humors of frontier life are amusingâ€" ly illustrated in a letter from Arkansas, which appears in the St. Louis Democrat : Doves, Oct. 3, 1872. My Dsiz Bor,â€"The double barrel that you sent u-o-bl{uto hand, and I was only shot at once, while I was carrying it home. Bill Silrers porpodu-ohon behind the fence as 1 was passing his house, but I had loaded the two shooter as soon as I got it, and he didn‘t jump from behind that fence but once. riter m Pased 2 tor long mage presiine s t for range ice. Th.uherlanï¬ll'nhlfuhhotndul riddle a man nicely at close quarters. 1 mean to try both barrels on those Jetts when I meet them. You :se, old man Jette stole a mule from us in the war, and when it was over pap laid for him and killed him. Mbm'l‘oumu we called himâ€"the faced oneâ€"he hidbrg:.p‘mdrnundhin Then I picked a fuss with Tom and cut him into tgh:u.nd since that time his brother has been laying for me. I know it is his turn, but 1 think my double barrel will prove too much for him . If you want to see fun, come down for a while and bringe rifle, It don‘t make any difference which side you belong to, and it isn‘t even necessary to join the militia. lthmynr upnpdz against somebody, and all you have to is to lay for your man ani knock him over. Behind my pig ren- one of the sweetest hiding places l know of, and it is so handy, A good many people come withinnngoin;l::eoumn‘d..wuk.ud a man can is time right pleasantly. l'idyor:add-.d-a.nhbnn of Sunday School Books, wit.ht.hmflrhu. If we can get them on time, we will take a big lot of books. I am Superintendent & h:g.lot of books. I am Superintendent of Baptist Sunday School now, and am minnin# it under a full head of staam: running it undera full head of steam: Old man Byers, who was turned out, is :ï¬tnd.bontit,udmuh chaw me up , but he will chaw lead if he don‘t keep clear of me. My wife wants to know if you can send her a set of teeth without her getting measured for them, Her $95 set was busted all to finders by a pistol shot that went through her mouth, but it didn‘t hurt ber tongue. Write soon to _ _ Your friend and pATd â€"â€"== P.S.â€"That sneaking, onery cuss, Saim Jett, crept up last night and fired at me through the window, but he didn‘t hapâ€" rn to kill anybody except a m.r girl. mean to go for him, though, to day, and _mnlgo.h:oohemwcythkcbb An undertaker‘s office recently bore the following cheering inscription : ‘Gone for a dead manâ€"back soon.‘ You‘re in for it down to the end. Bmh.pnp&cd.qim.olo fishâ€" ing excursion, says the bury News : A North Street man went off Saturday noon, for a half day of fishing. When he returned, he had waiked thirteen miles, lost a $45 watch, sprained his thumb, zl:dufllpnr of pants by sitting on his luncheon, and caught a four pound mud turtle. Ho,:t back in time to help the doctor cut his oidest boy‘s foot, one of the several fish hooks he hed left at home. He took & cursory view of the situation and went to bed.‘ PLEASURES OF FRONTIER LIFE. _ pr. Franklin described the farmers‘ con teutmen: i; 1176 :g‘m +Farmer plough, Wife milking cow, Daughterns spinning ml;r thrashing in m‘"sr:'_ All happy to a charm.,‘ Another gives the account of 1372, as CENSUS OR NONâ€"CENSUS * The farmer goue to see a show, His «1mughter at the piano; . il % dl‘llli lis Alt u..f#'- lon:uaa OorrawaA Timrs. NOVEMBER 5, i372. The Government, as well as the Agriculâ€" tural Societies, have, of late, taken meaâ€" sures to advance the system of associated dairies, and it is becoming evident to the small farmers that the factories constitute a powerful metns of obtaining a considerâ€" able revenue from the farms, and much larger than gemerally results from the practice of other branches of agricuiture. As the association system has given farmers a larger rnoo for their milk than could be realized for it on the private or‘individuaal system, this has stimulated them to a more careful treatment of cattle, which, in turn, is reacting in a salutary manner on other branches of agriculture. _ The factories are managed sometimes hy a single proprietor who purch wes the milk; but SIO plan that gives the best satisfaction is where the several persons of a neighâ€" bout hood associate together and establish a factory and have the milk manutactured, dividing the profits the sime as on the American plan, 8 in the Northern provinces but in the Southern sections where a steam boiler and pipes are used the cost amounts to $509. 1he number of cows delivering milk at the factory ranges from 50 to 209, and will average about 100. The buildings are from 50 to 60 feet long ond 25§ to 35 feet wide, arranged for milk room, manufactur â€" ing room, churn room, cheese room, butter cellar and living rooms for a family These buildings appear to be somewhat ernamental in exterior, although the cost is not excessive, ranging from $250 to $750. The cost of machinery is no more than $75 The greater part of the land in Sweden is divided into small farms which are culti vated by the peasants owning them and on which the number of cows kept for breeding, or for the production of milk, seldom exceeds ten or fifteen. The quality of milk obtained from the farms is small, mainly on account of the «+ poor keep ‘‘ which the «nimals receive during the long Winier. lt is only quite lately that a regular system of dairy husbandry his been adopted, although the nature of the country, the climate, andSthe manner of living of the inhabitants. are all favourable, it is said to its advancement. From the description given of the maâ€" chinery, we should judi:onthu the double bottom cheese tu>oâ€"an English invention â€"â€"is used. . We examined these tubs in 1866 in our tour among the English dairies, and found them quite inferior to the American vat, in every respect, while they are much more expensively supplied with fuel. The other appliances about the dairy are of the English pattern. The Journal of the Royal Agricultural Soeiety contrins am adcount of the Dairy factories of Sweden, turnished by M. Julien Dannefelt, Superintendent of the Expe:iâ€" mental Farm and Agricultural College at Stockholm, We make a brief abstract of his article, ‘as dairymen must be interested in learving bow these things are managed abroad. For the construction of the buildings and purchase of machinery, loaos are made from the agricultural societies, to be repaid with five or ten years, at a low rate of interest, or with interest only on a part of a loan. We have received accounts, from time to time, of the introduction of the asâ€" sociated system of dairying upon the Conâ€" tinent of Europe, but nothing in detail has been publishedâ€"until quite recentlyâ€"by which the reader could gâ€"t sn in:ight as t its management, or form an opinion of its euccess. | . Generally one dairy woman gnd a maid are sufficient to do the work, bt:. cecasionâ€" ally a manâ€"servant is employed in addiâ€" tion, to do the heavy labor and convey the produce to market. The wages of the dairy women amount to from $30 to $45 ASSOCIATED DAIRYING IN sWEpEN peas and several bushels of potatoes, with all the milk, butter and chee:0 sufficient for her table wants or for her ownâ€" conâ€" suraption. The maid servant gets from $15 to $22 per annum in money, and a lees quantity of the other products above mur,nd in addition 12 bushels of y, 12 bushels of rye, 1} ‘bushels of It is stated that on an .":f,e 1 15â€"100 gallons of milk make a (Swedish) pound of cheese (15 ounces), and 2 8â€"10 galions of milk, apound of butter (15 ounces.) But when the cattle are feeding on the side pastures of the mountains, less milk is required for the pourd of butter or cheese. The average dividend to the pmm(on of the factory hisg amounted to about five pence lterling per gallon, and sometimes as bigh as 6) pence per gallon of milk. Eue More recently a company with large capital has been organized for the purâ€" pose of purchasing milk and manufacturâ€" ing it into butter and cheese.| The capital of this company is fixed iat £55,000, ($275,000), and the business involves the establishment of branch factories or daries at places which are in daily communicaâ€" tion with the capital all the year round, as well as at other points which are deâ€" prived of such daily communication, _ The milk from the different farms that have entered into contract with the comâ€" pany for the delivery of the produce, is conveyed every morning and evening im» mediately after the milking, to the nearest of the sixty stations at present fixed by the company for receiving milk. 1t is there J‘:ound into tin vessels holding about eight galions, which are glwod in water cooled so as to be from 36° to 40° Fahrenbeit, and are left there until the cream is risen. The skimmed cream is conveyed by railway or steamer (during the winter also on roads) to the central factory, where it is made into butter. At some of l:; l;‘nnch factories where at least milk per day may be w company intend to manuâ€" facture Cheddar cheese, but at present that description of cheese is not made. The skimmed milk is made into cheese on the Dutch method, and now fiods a good market at home. The butter, on the other hand, is exported. _ _ _ _ It is said the attention which this entorâ€" prise has called forth bas giyen rise to the r:)pouh for the forming of, several simi companies in different parts of the country, and from which the best results are anticipated. [ Thus it will be seen the asssociated dairymen having obtained a foothold upon the continent, the system fast spread and become popular among other nations where soil and climate are adapted to this speciality. How far our export trado in cheese is to be affected by this move~ ment abroad remains to be seen. Much will depend npon the character of goods manufactured, and the price at which Man and wife, together, are like a Pcir of ecissors, separated, they are more like they can be put in the English market left to himself. Eh of th» comrades ‘"hmho\lnldny two me.ls of dog bisousts. The i have not yet learnt to -h:;m&†ll;:'ny member of it when taken interrogated ,.‘,mhi-m th the Interna tional, invariably makes| no intelligible in a succulent ard nutritious fluud, floated before the eyes of the people, who had hitherto only partaken of the alderman‘s luxury on rare festivals. But the pleasant vision soon vanished. It was denied that turtle wa: so abundant ; and it was in fact shown that calipee and calipaâ€"h at s xpence a surleit were not delicacies which we could hope to command in any reasonable time. Then the eel was brought forward. We ourselves threw out a hint about utilâ€" izing the sea serpent, if that beast could only be caught, which may have brought the eel to the active mind of Mr. Buckland. ‘There are_ your vagrom eels,‘ cries that observant philosopher, ‘trapessing on moonless nights to the ocean and no one is sensible enough to Lag them for the stew pan or the pieâ€"crust.‘ ‘Your eel,‘ insists Mr. Buckland, ‘(is dainty :c ling. 1 myself bave had some in a London ew.»â€" blishn.ent devoted to ihe preparation of the fish.‘ But the public is «lways slow to put faith in the pal.te of a practical inâ€" quirer in zoology. Men of science are hated for acheiving triumphs over the orâ€" dinary prejudices of maukind, and Mr. Buckland, it we do not mistake, has proâ€" nounced favorab‘y on the porpoise as an article of diet, and no doubt would as soon sit down to a blue monkey as to a blue hare. At a dinne of hippophagic savans at the Langh:am Hotel curious doctrinaires were bold enough to try some fillets of bear, though it was also said that they subsequently regtretieod the enterprise, when informed that the bear died without the aid of any butcher, quietly in his bed, of hale old age. As yet, ns one has sugâ€" gested bear for the masses. Eels and g:nd fish are now under discussion. Mr. uckland asks us why we fling away our carp, our tench, our jick. We could fatten them nicely by hanging the quar« ters of a horse over their nursery. But pond owners reply that carp and trench and jack are not worth their salt, are not worth oooking. A cortespondent of the Times then writes that we should import for our rivers. The pisciculturists are asked to come to the front. Here they have a glorious opportunity of vindicating their pursuit. The acquariatms at the Crystal Palace and at Brighton are only toys afterail. \ Lot the fish farmers go to work in earnest. Let them not be satis~ fied with exhibiting a melancholy Octopas, but let them render pisciculture a branch commerre, until pipes from the sea enable the Serpentine to support the fertile cod, and one of the sights of London will be to visit St. James‘s Park when the sound of a gong or dogâ€"whistle summons the mackerel shoal to the side of the lake for dinner. But we cannot live altogether on fish, and | therefore hope to read many more hints ‘ on food in the papers. A variety of possiâ€" bilities remain untouched. There is the snail. Mr. Buckland ought to be aware ‘ that we waste even more snails than pondâ€" fish, And then there is your frog, tidâ€"bit for a gourmet, left to the owls or the elements. Tims was when the hindâ€"leg of a frog was supposed by every Englishman to form the regular French dinuer, Now this belief has been abandoned, but the fast remains that the frog is an edible enâ€" tity. Then, if our sausageâ€"makers would only speak, what a light they might throw upon the economics of food !‘ Offer a reâ€" ward for the experiences of the chief of a Soho restaurant, and hear him on the ease and simplicity with which unconsidered trifles or an unsuspicious cat can be conâ€" verted into an entree, toothsome enough to recall banquets at the Palais Royal to a returned tourist of Mr. Cook‘s. And could not the retired landlord of a railway buffet be prevailed upon to inform us how soup is composed for travellers? These authorities would be practically worth a dozen Mr, Bucklands at a crisis, and would be called upon at once by a really careful Government. Why not appoint a Royal Commission _to h‘o evidence and taste samples?â€"Pall Mall Gazette. It would be perhaps difficult fora natuâ€" | ralist or (Foet even, or the writer who is | both, and puts sll he knows into a ‘grouse‘ l article for the Daily Telegraph, to ascer, | tain the private sentiments ofs hedgehog ; but if that animal could only read the {ispeu, be would have & very uncomfortaâ€" | le time of it just now. We are keenly | on the look out for something now to eat. We are told that the common chop will soon be as dear as a dish of oysters, and | that in a little while the butcber will na, longer proudly promenade in a grove of | mutton, Eut will either find his occupation | gone or reducted to dimensions at which | the trade will be shorn of its plump and , generous respectibility. And so we have | tiken seriously to the study of the econâ€" | omcs of food.‘ We first looked abroad, and a contributor to the literature substiâ€" tute for the sheep or the cow should be the turtle of the tropics. Ther: were, we were informed, large flocks and herds of | turtles lying unused and neglected in / foreign parts. ‘The price of the soup as at present fixed in London was altogether fictitious. It was kept up by a joint ‘ring‘ of city confectioners and restaurant keepâ€" ers. The prospect suggested by this dis« covery was not disagreeable. Green fat, One of the newest rifies submitted to M. Thiers possesses the advantage that the cartridges to suit it can be manufactured even on the field of battle. _ Une Stuyvesant, an American traveller, recently brought a company of brigands to grief, near Florence, Italy, by the free use of a revolver and a pair of brass knuckles. The total number of horses in the Rusâ€" sian Empire is twenty millions, «"which," says the Pall Mall Gazelte,. s equivaient to twenty â€"five per cent. of the popuiation." A Spanish newspaper, the < Iyuaidad, replying t> statements which bave ap pesred in several of the Eng!i=; newsâ€" papers, energetic «lly opposes the idea of a cession of Cuba. | The Oben correspondent of the Glasgow Herald writes that John Bright, is enjoying his favowrite recreation of fishing on the river Awe. He landed a fine salmon the other day. NEw CarPETS.â€"Russell: and Watson have this day opened out a large lot of their second shipâ€" ment, (this season), of new Carâ€" pets. The latest designs can now be seen at their Carpet Room, in Brussels, Tapestry, Three Ply, Kidder and Dutch Carpets. P ol o Comocl Te in w uo + ie c | Calisaya, the Peruvian Bark, the only speâ€" | citic for Chills and Fever, and that condiâ€" tion of Nervous Prostration and General Debility arising from low vitality and exâ€" | haustive diseases, it forms an elegant and s;reegblo, invigorating Tonic, purely phyâ€" ‘ siological in its action, that may be taken \ safely under all circumstances, and all ’din-.d conditions of the body, as it builds up the constitution in the same manner as our daily food. Sold by all In this city, on the 3rd instant, the wife of Mr. Rabert U‘Reilly, of the Finance Deâ€" partment, of a son Breaxrast â€" Erps‘s Cocoaâ€"GRATEFUL aND Coxrortxo.â€"The very agreeable charac ter of this preparation has rendered it a general favoarite. The Civil Nervice Gazette remarks:â€"* By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operaâ€" tions of digestion and nutrition and by a caretul application of the fine properties of well selected cncos Mr. Epps has provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavoured beverage which may save us many heavy doctors‘ bills. Made simply with boiling water or milk, Sold only in tinâ€"lined rckeu, labelledâ€"James Epps & C>., Homceopathic Chemists, London. d1509y [E REASON WHY! Dr. Wheeler‘s Compound Elixir of Phos glutel and Calisaya is called a Chemicai ood and Nutritive Tonic bec use Phos phat s constitute more than half the maâ€" terial of the human body, and are alsoâ€" lutely essential to the growth of Bone, Muscle and Nerve, which cannot attain full development wi?bout.rfthom. They promote a good appetite, perfect digestion, create pure, hetl'.g;, vicalizing blood, and supply the waste consiantly going on in the system as the result of ment«l and physical exertion. Be'i‘ng“col‘nbine:i with NOVELTIES FOR THE PUT. BILRCH. Two good COMPOSITORS. Apply at this office. Ottawa, Oct 28, 1872. THE "CORNWALL MANUFACTURING CUOxXPANY‘s" Those leaving orders can rely on getting goods made in the very LA'SSEST STYLE by thoroughly competent hands, in the shortest‘pdssible notice. . B making to order ‘V ANTED. OUntario Bank, Ottawa. Payment has been -wfep‘ed. The finder will oblige the owner by leaving it at this office. Ottawa, Nov 5, 1872. 3018 Russell & Watson This Department is now fully stocked, with all the leading goods of the season. Our arrangements are now complete for LUMEERMEN ! LUMBESMEN! Shanty Blankets! To their stock in this Department, as all the newest materials for Fall and Winter Wear! A small sura of money. The owner can have the same by paying for advertiseâ€" ment and proving property. Apply at the Timzs office. Beg to draw the Sealed tenders addressed to the underâ€" signed, and endorsed "Tender for Iron Roof," will be received at this office, until MONDAY, the 11th instant, at noon, for the erection and completion of the Iron Roof of the Library, Parliament Buildings in this city, in accordance with plans and specifications to be seen at this office. | The signatures of two solvent and reâ€" sponsible persons willing to become secuâ€" rities for the due fulhl'.xnt of the contract must be attached to tender. Dress Goods Dress Goods. must be attached to saR@ tender. The Department will not be bound to accept the lowest or any tender. By order F. BRAUN, P â€" = _ _____._.. Secretary. N Department of Public Works, Ottawa, Nov 4, 1872. CHL’RCH MILSSIONS. DSEOP$s CAAML, SSSH MEHT Evening Prayer (shortened form) will commence at halfâ€"past SEVEN. Immeâ€" diately after the Chsir will be taken by And addresses delivered by the Most Revâ€" erend the METROPOLITAN, and. the Right Reverend the Lord Bishops of QUEBE::, TORONTO and HURON. _ _ _ LORC BISHOP CF ONTASIC _ A collection will be taken up in aid of the Mission Funds of the Diocese of Onâ€" ll\RUSSES.â€"Comfort, safety and relief for Hernia, Rupture, Seciey‘s Hard , Rubber Trusses, made in every desirable ‘rucm. indestructible, (steel springs coated with hard rubber) cool. clean‘y; never rusts, chafe, limber. break nor soil. Used in bathing. Fitted to the form. Neatest, uï¬ufl. most comâ€" fortable and best Truss known. tablishment»â€" 1,M47 Chestant St.. Phila., and 707 Brot‘l't{~ N.Y. Buld 1 v all dealers. 3014 3m NOUND. All weights constantly on hand. MAGEK & RUSSELL, 3005d Agents for Ottawa. A Cheque for FIFTY DOLLARS on the Ottawa, Nov 5, 1872 TOTICE TO CONTRACTORS, Thorsday, Nov. Tth, Inst. & HUMPHREYS® HOMEOPATHIC SPECIFICS 1_‘{ A:’E me'nwr THE MOST AMPLE s e perlc «uCCBS: !Illpbâ€"' ~â€"Eficient and Reliable. They are the .lylm- cines perfectly adapted to mhr useâ€"so simple that mistakes can not be hu:gmin h":?bki':l':.â€.mu They Inn\-uln:lo the highâ€" as . e‘tcomme‘!ndon from all, and will always ren« der satiefaction Ottawa, Nov 2, 1872. __ Powder, very necessary in serious CBROR.... ........ cccccececssc2ee»5 1 20, * Sore Mouth, CaRK@T......câ€"«â€"<«1+ 50 80, “mw.m-mhd. 50 S1, ~<* mm‘?-... 50 34. “mm“nm: %6 of 35 FAMILY CASES I-mvhlzeo-uhh(n?dle hmadm a family is eubâ€" ject to, with of directions........... $10 gf“vlnl..wlthboot. '"T,":.‘fl 6 oun-y fuid cure diseases m'ms(a‘.nâ€"u.m 3 Ottawa, Nov 2, 1372 1 e I.ouwoo:.(‘::u 3“ vials, _ Cafleiming all onr Specifics, including Vetâ€" the best and most profitable â€" being Mantle Department Olu-lum No. 562 Bnoapwar, New YoRK For Sale by all Druggists» , Dress Goods:! SDMILIA SIMILIBUS CURANTUR has w eascaon P ced e prgn en Nee on (-rlnuyndoï¬u!utmnenul POXDYS EXTRACT ALL â€" WOOL Bum Mantles and Costumes __ Emissions, involuntary Five Rares, with sne t > 13 anau attention of those ARE NOW FORWARD WY. BEARS, Russell & Watson, 29, SPARKS STREET 3017 3 3016 td 3018 use 10 LISI‘ OF LETTERS remaining in the Ottawa Post Office, Oct. 31, 1872. Ackroyd E Kettles Miss Margt Abbott Miss Emma HKeeley Darby Allan Bros Mesers _ Keeley M Ailen Wm Kirsop Jno Alexander J Kiem in F J Angus Robt King Horace Angus Miss M Kingston Wmm Andrew Miss J Laird Wim Armstrong Mies M Lampert H Atcheson Miss M A Lewis Miss E Barrons Miss Jenret linnan Wm Barry Wm C Livingstone Jno Barber Wm E Lowe Jas Barton Jno J Manning Mrs M Belott Mrs A Mason H Bennett Kate Martin D Beard Mrs S ‘A Mathais A Beall J P Major Mrs Blythe J S Masson Jas Biunn Rev Mitchell Miss Agnes Bouttour Geo Mileâ€" Jno Bootn Levi Millen Hiram Bouswick Miss M â€" Moore J B McLeod Bottom Geo Moon C Boyd Jno Moflatt Chas Brownell M 8 Murphy Jno V Burritt 8 Murphy Miss E Butler Patrick Mulligan Danl Bunin kobt Murphy Alex Carr Miss tusan J _ Norton E H Cartwright R J O‘Connor Hugh Canton M O‘Brien Miss Anne Campbell Mrs A O‘Brien Miss C Castle Chas U‘ vonnell Mrs Wm Cameron Mrs A U‘Dougherty Jno Uhapman G Oliver MraCharlotte Clarke H M U‘Meara Thos Collop Mrs G U‘ foole Thos Colgan Miss E O‘ Reiliy Chas Cope Mrs A Perkins F Cowan W F Perry Miss M Cowan Jno Pilsbury Mrs A Costelow Jno Pond C H Cowan Alex Proudlock Wm Copper E C Price David Ccfpn Wm Prodick W C Collins Mrs £ Purvis Mrs £ Crichton Jno Putnam H C Craig Jno Pritchard Andrew Crowe A Quinn Wmm Crawford Jas Regan Jno Curran Jas Riley Wm A Cumming Robt Rodgers Hï¬' Currie Jas A Rogers Miss Cunningham Robt â€" Rose Mr Currier L D KobinsonThos Currie D _ _ Rose R H. Davis Saml J Ryan Miss Annie Davidson Thos S _ Ryan Miss Julia â€" Davidson D L Davidson Mrs A Dalgiish Robt Darby J C J Dayton Mrs E A Dagg Richd Daughtree Geo Dewar Jno Deag Mis Saml Deag Mis Saml Hlewley E4A Delaney Miss 8 Shatiock Mrs B Dickie A :« Shore Jno polbec Jos Bhaw Mre J.s Doyle & Co 8 Eloane David Dunning A J Smail H A Dunfield Hufl Bouth Wm Duncan Mrs Edw _ Smith Geo Featherson Jos Bt L mis B Fitzpatrick Miss M A Stevens H Flint Wm Bummerville Miss A Fowler Miss E Bullivan J Ssott . Farel Jno Sullivan Miss C Farrell Mrs Ed Â¥ ‘Tavior Devid Freeman Geo Tallow Thos Fullerton J L ‘Taylor Geo Faller Major Tiepke H G Garland Miss C Tift Chas C Garvin W E Foner Wm Gibb J J ~ Tucker Jno U Gibb J W Vaughan Jas Dickie A _ :« polbec Jos Doyle & Co 8 Dunning A J Dunfield Hug Gipson Miss E Gleason W A (Gleason Miss M Glover Miss E Glasier N Gothrie B Gow Wm Goldie Mrs R Griffiths Mrs W Griftin W H Hall Lewis Habberland Mrs Jas Hamilton Fred Hay Jas Halkett J B BHalil +; Hall Edwin Harrow Davii Hanvley vrs W H Hemhilwood P Higgine Saml G Higzeinson Jas H« we Jno Howes W B Holmes Jno Hurst Robt Ireiand T Jacks m Jas Jamieson Jos Johnston Albert Johnston K Johnson Mrs £ Johnston Jas Johnson A H Kain Thos Kain Jas Kayler F Kenn«dy Miss $ Montreal, Trader, insolrent. Lï¬oW.LJtfl.WOl‘,d the City of Montreal, have been appointed Assignee in this matter. Creditors «1e requested to fyle their claim» before me, within one month, and are bereby notiffed to meet at my office, No. 97, rt. James Street, in the City of Montre«l. on TUESDAY, the 12th day of November, 1812, at 3 o clock, p.m., for the examination of the insolvent and for the ordering of the «flairs of the Kâ€"tate generally in the matter of JULES BERTRAN, H requiring anything in Ottawa, Nov 5, 1872 Aémall Brick House to Let in Centré wn, with Furniiure (nearly new) fog Address, A. V., Post Office. Uttamwa, Oct 30. 1872. Citisen please copy. Montreal, 8th October. 1872 NSOLVENT ACT OF 1809 oUSE To LET FUBR SALE. L. 308. LAJUTR £ {% KobinsonThos Rose R H. Ryan Miss Annie Ryan Miss Julia :yln luJCulnrho 12 no J &ye‘:odfluil Boott & Peterson Noott Jas (Meser Bennott Jas Bewell H J Tift Chas C Foner Wm on 44 *4 aughan Jas Vicare B H G Welsh Mrs Margt Webster Jno Welsh Jas Whiten Wm Whalen M Whillans Geo White Geo Witle Jno G Wiggins Miss Margt Wilson H Withell W Williams G Wing Allen Wood W u Wright Miss E McAllister Miss Anne McAlpine Miss A McCord Miss & McCarthy Miss ME Mo â€"wan Jao‘! McGillivray . Wm McGovern Thos Mclotosh D McGuire Mary McGillop & uordon Mclaren Jas (Meâ€"rs McKinnon Miss J McLel.an Sir Wm McLaughlin Mis MG McMurran H Mcâ€"Pbsil Hector G. P. BAKEE, Postmaster. 79. 3018 McDonald D McDonald J B McEdward Alex AXD FURNITURE ts . Po ks the ][" ery and Man ’.:?‘on Tuesday ne»t, mwons & MoMora®‘s on Tuesday next. Aua®, McE mmwons & McMora® ek.i.> 4. & a A are found dead friend cried "stand up will yor lim lay down and seemed as _‘.“fl&wnlfl w ;. Onsw» R¥®** £.m. pOOD: P tm es 38 f 615 8.45 3.45 4 MWAY. xprew‘s Boowry. â€"The re£ y meeting of the St. Andrew‘s M be held on Thured«y evening Cuos:isesâ€"â€"It is certainly ba vhave the streets buried bei I ssud, through which epi plod, but when we fio< f miso, muddy, impassable d,we think it is time the C ndei of the fact. Why a the principal crossings < ® detent state? We Ahe supineness of our in 411 wind that blows Bhoemakers profit by i #+*** * & RauuwaY at 6 a mâ€" C s t 6 P0 â€" and Piano Forte » -rg,ï¬b‘parhï¬ 13, 1872 °_"" jm Ayllll‘l'“‘fln‘ -*“ Jessie Casse *‘ .cave ‘w;ll- "*"~up all points East an io Up." : Yesterduy eveni ial who bhad evidentily maude tnmilier with Old Rye, ¢* tonsiderahle labor on «1 W-I.mtbvnd d ta. and numbers of the ; Bt. â€"Col. Corbett ot Kings Somuez.â€"The (Jrange me lsbrate the anniversary 0 M O _ an mfl p:.. es “’ der, sh alt se â€â€˜*w Water. Gw:.:i Co., ‘Corner Sparks and Elgin “"" &A â€"Medicines Fine Harrison drunk and d public streets, was fined three weeks in jail. te Moreau was charged wi building yesterday aftern l‘.""q‘hï¬â€œâ€˜ ©0 the might be permitted t« =-n-.u.m_-m- i maim‘s to ter irquhar, having ascertai of His Exoell fo explain and pertiaily was frankly assuced o he knew the ro | quietly to ascertain the He dessended with i &rutm . Mp‘q his . Vourt â€" Moxpay.â€"Two med respectively Pow e remaunded until Morton who was found krest on Sunday night, Plot by a grand soiree 1 toâ€"night. xp.â€"Appl3 â€"Just otels and Saloons in ! ‘ upplied with_Caledo Ask for it. Gisso® & Co., 20___1_ Aa» flttaWhn on Pueeday® and lis, H. H. Horsey, K Portage du Fort ; S@m Dr. McLaurin, Vankle J and wife, 8t, John‘s Monatick ; C. Crawford . Bmithwick, â€" Stratfor 1@ Arrives ory day atâ€". at aus Rosssis Hoces Olt ; A. Boulter, R % s d.pll’“ Mondays . Boscovits, the sted in month ; T.KX Ramsay, M â€"The consecration 0‘ e Agents tor DUFFERIN A1 TAY LC gornet 8 strong in« at LeBreton‘s *, in his usual q manner, visisted NEWS WX. BEARXN 'F-ou' ARDING [Wd receivcd, new F4 Forte Music, at A t. His Lordship ) the interesting GOLDEâ€" y to K. A. Brad Kparks and E1 __ D agget. Rappe s Brid in the â€"AÂ¥ «egular s Society ()ttawa about OR, Ag tar the for Rhe Street «nd Summ Water. > for where , Agents. SusseX AD 58tf appiy. A gonts ()ttawa wouds the ep boys #"100. 0. OO 0.00 6.20