the intent to defraud, and tormenting the poor child‘s mother to such a degree . that it is surprising _ her senses remain with her. The dying conâ€" fession of one of the burglars shot by Judge Van Brunt seemed at first to fur< mish a clue which might lead to the apâ€" prehension of the abductors and the reâ€" covery of little Charlie. All hope from that quarter soon died out, tao, and it may safely be said that the last of the case was then heard. Great as was pubâ€" lic excitement over the matter while the police were still hopeful, the intérest was of the most short lived and spasmodic kind. The sensutionâ€"loving people of America soon found something else to engage their attention, and Charlio Ross is forgotten,. ‘There is, however, no denyâ€" ing the serious import .of his case,. It is one of the most â€"signal failures of justice on the records of a eivilized country. There was no lack of energy, no lack of money to whet that tionâ€" of those who desire to ~see the majesty of the law vindicated and _ ctimé _ punished, avd â€" the pity and sympathy of the tenderâ€" hearted. It is not too much to say that the whole police force of the United States was baffied and powerlessâ€"that it permitted the red herring to be dragged across the trail time and again, whenever the outside public protested against the impositionâ€"that shadows were hunted, and mares‘ nests discovered in such num " bers as <to destroy the confidence of the people in the wholo police organizatiou, at any rate for & considerable tim« \e truth appears to be that the dei. ... ~.. never even had atrace jof the perpeâ€" trators of the foul deed ; the writers of the leiters asking terms for the restitu tion of the lost boy were, as likely as otherwise, cruel fabrications, written with popular feeling got roused over the matâ€" ter to a pitch which‘it seldom attains in regard to the wrongs of any private citizen. Charlie Ross, the stolen boy, soon beâ€" came _ as widely known and his disappe@rance the cause of as much public excitement as if ne had been a great African explorer, or a daring naviâ€" gator of polar seas in search of the northâ€" ern passage, who bad failed to turn up within a reasonable time. There were numerous and good causes for this. The paring and cool manner in which the abâ€" duction was accomplished, the success of the criminals in covering up all evidences of their whereabouts, the numerous "sells" perpetrated upon the police, the agony of the distracted parents, described so vividly by the newspapers, and the asâ€" saults latterly made upon the character of the elder Ross, all combined to arouse the curiosity of the morbid, the indignaâ€" woor, in lactâ€"in broad day light, and taken no one knew where, and no one knew by whom. The Philadelphia press had disgussed the question for some time before it attracted general attention ; the Philadelphia police appear to have been the â€"sole agents of justice employed in working up the case for, it is to be feared, only too lengthened a period. By degrees popular feeling got roused over the matâ€" door, in factâ€" Twelve months ago the great proporâ€" tion of the mtolhgont, mw'm N‘dl.n‘ public of America were shocked and startâ€" led by the announcement that a little child had been picked up from the streets of Philadelphiaâ€"from his father‘s very wition, and mitigated the penalty to six months. Mr. Eltingham ts likely to learn as much in these six months as will preâ€" yent him from repeating the fraud, should he ever have the opportumity, which is altogether improbable. of a single instance in which it was shown or attempted to be shown the ballot was tampered with. Of course we have not universal suffrage, which opens the way to so many crimes in connection with elecâ€" tions on the other side of the line, and our system does not invite or permit the peculiar frauds that have disgraced the political record of the United States. 1t is to be hopei, however, that should any instagoe of an attempt at such an interâ€" ference come to light the example set by Judge Hoffman will be copied. in proâ€" nouncing sentence upon the offender, he informed him that the full punishment. for his crime was two years in the smo‘ Penitentiary. But the Court took cognizâ€" ance of the prisoner‘s weak physical conâ€" | THE CHARLEY ROSS character of the offence. It was infamous, he said, and he hoped the Leâ€" gislature would,as he believed they should, enact a law disfranchising ‘all persons guilty of tampering with the ballot. The suggestion is a good one, anc is worthy of attention wherever the ball :t is in operaâ€" tion. Fortunately, with n ‘ ‘hat has been revealed by the election :« ‘ts of Canada to establish that, exter ve resort has been had in the past to corrupt practices in order to influence elections, and that even yet it is difficult to convince those who take an active part in political conâ€" tests that the practice may not be reâ€" ‘ sorted to safely, we have never yet heard EFriday last he was brought up before the Hudson County Sessions to receive senâ€" tence, Justice Hotfman presiding. The judge, â€" before pronouncing sentence, took occasion to say a few plain and truthful words in regan|] to tha thorities with making a false return of election, he was tried, and convicted. On members of the Board of 4 last contest. He is also a a vyery prenounced ty po, of vyery strong evidence by f turning a Republican canc There are occasions when justice is one by the United States courts, ever when a politician is concerned. There &re so many exceptions, however, that the punishment of a politician, especially for an ‘offence against the election law, is worth noticing. Mr. William S. Kitringâ€" ham, of Jersey City, was election imspec tor in that place during the polling for OTTaAWaA, TUESDAY Tlte 4Gunres. News for Allâ€"Nicholls & Co. Ineresting Ceremony. Symptoms of Catarrhâ€"Dr. Pierce. 100 00 E222E COHImg the poliing tor mbers of the Board of Aldermen at the t contest. Ho is also a Republican of ery prenounced typo, of which he gave y strong evidence by fraudulently reâ€" ning a Ropublican candidate, who was + duly elected, and counting out a mocratic candidate, who was. Eltring. n was charged before the proper auâ€" rities with making a false return of 4 JUST . SENTENCR Advcriitsecmeunuts. otiman presiding. The pronouncing sentence, to say a few plain rds in regard to the , JULY 6, 1875. TRAGEDY. It is hardly| possible to imagine that | agpouse Tilton attached any weight to Bowen‘s m insinuations, since for geveral {le:. subâ€" | ruin / fit sequent to 1863 he maintaiged elosest | him an personal intimacy with Mr. Beocher ; was family professedly, at least, one of his warmest | Church admirers; and to the man whom Bowen horeaft« hwt characterise »s being an unsafe that onl visitor in families, Tilton extended the she was freest access into weprivna‘olhhm and thi 1t appears that between 1 and 1870 | membe; Tilton‘s sentiments towards his friend) | tion, wh pastor, and journalistic associate, under> ; false on m-oh-?o. le Wy showing | _ ; evidences jealousy Beecher‘s | fame as a preacher and author, and he| At & mmu%flim spelt it in to ctock 15 9n Jiatous of Air Reoooert Fouk ts or to t s & mumunmnmxu.flu;u Ju6 fall. The Boctï¬nr scandal is .pr‘::t‘y:g story, as well as an exceedingly int;lyuu one. â€" Let u:. I:“ .whether its leading points cannot rought within m compass. It .ppum: the jearly partTof the jwar, say in 1862} Mr. Henry C. Bowen, the pn&:b‘or 0 the Independent, intimated to Mr. Theoâ€" dore Tilton, who was then editor of that E:sor, that the Rev. H“:l’ Ward Beecher â€"committed acts of ulhn&- which, if known, would drive him from the pulpit. Un the 16th of June, 1863, Mr. Bowen adâ€" dressed to Mr. Tilton, from his residence at Woodstock, a letter in which th:h fol lowing passages ocour tin regard to these charges against Mr. Beecher: "I someâ€" times foel that I must break silence; that 1 must no longer sufter as a dumb man and be made to bear a load of grief most a whgition ux:::hout mï¬m, I a re! had almost said, and you know it." So the scandal was started by hints and inuondoes from Mr. Henry C. Bowen. Of these, Mr. Tilton was not the only doï¬i‘ tory, though Qodm.hn been the chief one. By the instrumentality of these two men, the scandal began to be filtered down through certain literary and religious cireles where, if not believed, it was at least well talked about. THE HISTORY OoF THE BEECHER BCA NDA L. " disagreements" between him and the proprietor of the paper, it is a slander too absurd to be answered. â€" These two genâ€" tlemen fl:ve bolon intimate .m:nd trusted friends nearly years, such friondnhip-mnotmymndnnd. They have the sort of confidence in each other which nothing in the world can shake. That hr. Dohnenood'tqthulon‘buu known, and it would not bolmrdhngto hwthuhohadmndoufhh to enâ€". joy a few years of it. But he could still do itwice the work, and do it four times as well, in the same space of time as any of the younger generation of editorsâ€"men who, as a rule, are no more to be comparâ€" ed with him than a knockâ€"kueed and thick headed recruit is to bo%f‘nd with the nmtscoo?;plishod and sakilful general of the ago.â€"New York Times. as |iest of their number. _ Within twenty », | years from the present time, if things go on as they are doing now, a seat t | in the House of Commons ‘ will no e | longer be an object of ambition amon i. | the‘ classes best fitted to represent a ouf , | tivated nation. ‘That the general decline in public life should have extended to d journalism is not strange, but it is much n | to be regretted. * * * * 1t does not beâ€" a | come any journalist, no matter what may , | bo his standing or oount.rg‘, to utter a sinâ€" gle disrespectful word of#Mr. Delane. He | is a man in whom weall ought to take a â€" | just and hearty fndoâ€"gn utterly fearless r| and incerruptible man, with nknowlodso , | of public life and of eminent men of all lands, such as no other living journalist ‘ | has ever had the mmof;:&lniring; t | gifted with qualifications for his calling to ; | a degree which is now almost unknown in _ | jJournalism, and with a capacity for hard work such as would astound the easyâ€" _| going editors and trashy writers of the | present day. * After a long n'?ht’- workâ€" , | extending from 9 to 10 a m"ï¬htï¬us , | o‘clock the next morningâ€"he will turn to and write two or three score of letâ€" ‘| ters, and then look fresher and heathier than half the young men ofl;vho are now crowding into newspaper offices from milliners‘ stores and lawyers‘ offices. Aund this enormous labour he has kept up for thirtyâ€"four ve=s, never shirking his post or neglectin: 1 duty. His memory is prodigious, and his penetration and insight and unwearied application would long ago have raised him to the highest post in the legal profession, had he folâ€" lowed it after he was called to the bar ‘I An eminently fair and upright man severe in discipline, but always just, get |‘ thek thes can pyssibty perforan ut at the | that they can possibly t at the same time treating them in such a way as % to wmtbeu'hxuut admiration and lasting affection, quick to discern merit and to |‘ putitwth‘:.b«tuu,omnady' to encourage young man just entering upon lifgâ€"such is Mr. at whom | C the new style of English j st seems | Y tothinkitabnvondw;hingtd * fling mud. To say that the Times | ® has made no mistakes for years past would | ® besb-u;&al fthe work of every ma&': : hand is of imperfections. t in mnil:ith-dono its work ba:?ul.lyan:} s well, has nobly maintained credit journalism and defended the hanor of its | 4 country. _ It has served the English |° lo with a fidelity which they will not ®F mly forget. Whenever Mr. Delane | retires from a position which he has filled | A with the utmost :xll.lu::‘uthfgo four and :: thirty years, it wi wi respect and gonfld‘enoo of his countrymen, no ',h 1c opinion or governing the people. No one can read the reports of the recent debates in the House of Commons withâ€" out being astonished at the alteration in the tone and standard of discussion which has occurred in the course of n fow years. Mr. Gladstone and Mr. Disraeli are proâ€" Ix. bly the last of the great Parliamentary leadersâ€"in future we must expect to see an ill:â€"mannered &hering of retired shop keepors, led by the noiseiest and wealthâ€" A great change is passing over England in politics, and in the press there is a class coming to the front which hitherto ggu had very little to do with leading pubâ€" hn on his death bed renousced me as the woman claiming to be his wife. It is inâ€" dood strange, nï¬owevor, that 1 was not in lormed oï¬ny husband‘s duzh, or even ns« illness, until after he was buried. Porâ€" h ps this little inhuman incident may account for the slanderous insinuation. 1 was married to John Lyon in the Roman Catholic Parish Church at Monâ€" treal on the 12th ofAuPut 1868â€"seven yoars nfo on the 12th of August nextâ€"in a lawful manner, in open day light,and in presence of witnesses, Fir,â€"A local notice in the Timzs of this morning does me wrong and in= ainuates a vile -hmiar. It is the paraâ€" graph referring to the death and burrn‘l of nrivate John Lyon of No,. 4 (Gompany of tha battalion of this place, who died lately at Brogkville. It is not true that we lived unhnp&i:y toyether ; and I totally disbelieve t. The Kitor desires it to be distinotiy understood that while Inserting the com manioations of Correspondrnts, he is In no way to be held rt flw.'“lb @ dor the opinions esp cegcd thereiu. voured casy detection, and yot justice has been defied and defeated, and the criminals not only unpunished but unâ€" energy when it began to weary, no lack of interest but on the contrary a perfect storm of indignation among the people, the crime was committed under ciroum. stanoes which would seem to have fa> Ottawa, July 5, 1875 Bcottish American J: urnal ) the Editor uf the TIM KS DELANE®S RETIREMENT FROM THE TIMES. his employers. As for any Corrcspondence. Yours truly, JULta Lvox Ounnllowdoumnkouprh‘, but a dozen swallows sometimes make At a recent spelling match one man opolti:"p-flp"Jnd“M So great was the reverence in which she held him that when he proposed marriage the yery thought of such an act was reâ€" volting to her mind. ‘To influence her he held out: as a truth revealed from God Te tore proammed a conimn ‘Sigk ve n pi a peculiar! and _ honorable position, so | much assured of her salvation or happiness in the life hereafter. "The Prophet has; she says, by his enormous wealth, his cunning and address, and his unscrupulous characâ€" ter, come to exercise almost boundless indmnoein Utab. She was taught to m’g:dh.lm as God‘s viceregent on earth, enti to her reverence and obedience, 3|d heard f'm i"m &rpoldm,.u & ivine revelation, ‘gamy. She was further induced tlo’d{diovo that marriage outside tho Mormon Church _ was unlawful _ and _ adulâ€" ‘torouai)md that to ‘become the wife of the | Prophet was a sure means of attaining a most exalted position in the world to come. She thoroughly believed Mr. Young to be the vicegerent of God, possessing great and miraculous powers, and knowleds‘aomuch so that he was able to read -moughuin‘;h.mu.or( every geuo n ; a perfect an man, incapable of any wrong in dooJ?wad. | was hufht from her childhood to beâ€" lieve in it with an lzslioit faith, and that uniess she consen! to and ‘contracted a polygamous marriage, she could not be The Prophet Charged with Peorjury ‘ While A+Wooing. Mrs. Ann Eliza Young, the seventeenth wife of the Mormon pmh about to u.hmg; securing his in ent for perâ€" jury. To this end she bas made an afiâ€" davit against him at Boston of agculi» ly outspoken character. Briefly to recite its contents, she declares that she was brought up exclusively in the Mormon faith ; that polygamy was a cardinal fairn ; that poly, was a cardinal dostsine of â€" the" Churgh "and, aps o Thomoomphï¬:t in iz{h. eivi‘lv ms of Theoâ€" ore Tilton against Henry Reecher was filed on August 19th, 1874, and the m-worm.wu flï¬'?.n days after. Some mon were spent: in preliminary skirâ€" ::h‘zsovum bill pcrï¬oua:. deâ€" by the defendant, and case was fln.ly called in the Brooklyn City Court on January 4th, 1875. A few days were spent in selecting the jurors, and the opening address for the plaintiff occupied just three d7l longer. B: February 24th, the case for the phinni' was closed, and the defence rested on April 30th. _ Additional testimony on either side omflod all the court days Fometond ::onh.wm h JM’ t On June 24th, the judge charged the jury,; and at the hour of writin theyhavolï¬â€˜:qugilod to lmeuponsnnfiot. f ton and Cfg:ntor Mr. Beecher, Mrs. Tilton and Mr, Tilton himself, and the raw material of the trial which fallowed was thus fully prepared. _ _ _ _ the Congregational Council, which met rostonsibl to judge Plymouth Church, but realf:y to try Boeofl. The deciâ€" sion of that body gave rise in its turn to the letter of Dr. Bacon, whose uncompliâ€" mon:rdy references to Theodore Tilton elici from that individual his celeâ€" brated statement of June 24th, 1874. This was followed by the voluminous stateâ€" menh-ubmiuo({ to the Plymouth Church Investigating Committee by Messrs. Moulâ€" From that time all Â¥a-ibimyof buryâ€" ing the scandal out of sight was at an end. 1t was clear that the men who had first sent it abroad did not mm buried ; and its dissection and x â€" tion in full view of the public became inâ€" evitable. It came up in an official form before Plymouth Church in October and December, 1873, on a question n%i'ldm’ the congregational standing of Mr. Tilton. ?;P.e ‘},f;.‘;g: on . that question gave rise to t | About a woek before these transactions Y | thore had been an interview betweon Mesars, Bowen, Tiltom, and Oliver. Johnâ€" ) | son, at which the character of Mr. Beecher t | was bitterly attacked by Bowen. About | the same time, Bowen had communicated * fto Mr., Beecher grave aspersions on the | character of Tilton. These he followed | up on the last day of 1870, by .b:lï¬uy terminating Tilton‘s ::rg:’ontu tor { of the Independent kr Union. Un the first day of January, 1871, Tilton | wrote a letter to Bowen, it which he proâ€" | ceeded to identify the cause of his disâ€" | missal with the share he had taken in | acousing Mr. Beecher of the offences charged by Bowen, and with his part in sending the letter which had requested Mr. Beecher to quit the pu‘lglt on account of these offences. Â¥+At the same time, Tilton severed his connection with I"z-l mouth Church, and he began to treat Mr. Beecher as the destroyer both of his domestic peace and his business prosâ€" peots. j § Mr. Beecher‘s famous "letter of contriâ€" tion," delivered in trust to the mutual friend, Mr. Moulton, bears date of Januâ€" ary lst, 1971 ; and on the poignant exâ€" greuions of sorrow for the wrong which e believed he had been the innocent cause of inflicting on Tilton, have been based she whole succeeding edifice of insinuation, recrimination and intrigue which Moulton, Tilton and their maje and female allies, have succeeded in bulding up. Menme\:hile. Mr. Beocher did his best to assist Tilton in regaining a posiâ€" tion, to compensate for that which he | had lost. In April, 1872, there was made what appearod to boan honest attempt to bury the scandal. The famous trilc;tiu covenant was signed bï¬ Hem% C. en, Theodore Tilton and Henry Ward Beechâ€" er, in which the first two withdrew cerâ€" tain insinuations and accusations,especial~ ly those contained in the Tilton letter of January l1st, 1871, afninlt Mr. Beocher, and the latter agreed to fi Nhom, forgive all the attacks w:ix had ‘ made upon him, and receivg Messrs.| Bowen and Tilton on the old footing of | fraternal confidence. The rest of the story is soon told. In November, 1872, | there was published, on information deâ€" | rived from ‘Tilton, a narrative which that j ierrible d:r 'i“d(.o" Jl‘.m‘;“"m‘f oo | orrible scandal." Consideri culiar relations botween Tilton and {r:.- ; Woodhull, this characterization of the | story in Woodhull and Claflin‘s Weekly | t was, to say the least, a very bold one. _ |! MHS. BRIGHAM YOUNG NO. 17. ) _ Starting from the close of 1870, the deâ€" vd:smt of the soandal became compliâ€" | eated with the business relations bet en yom thore m mung Pam She 1 t year there was wrung = ton, t{\on lying on asickâ€"bed, a confession of having had, accordine to her husband‘s version, oriminal intercourse with* Mr. Beecher , or, aooordini,.to the statement of the o&nor side, of having listened to improper solicitations from, and felt an improper affection for, her pastor, Whatâ€" | ever was the truo character of the conâ€"| fession, it was written at the request and under the influence of Mr. Tilton, and it | was fully and explicitly withdrawn imme | diately thereafter, when Mrs. Tilton had | been expostulated with by Mr. Beecher. || charged Mr. Beecher with hvlnt mainâ€" tained an impro‘gor intimacy with his wife. ‘Thete is not suflicient evidence to prove that the olurio was made in the tn.d eamondy," it may fairly be mesertest m unders . It may ab least,that Mr. Beecher did’ not understand it in that sense. finally, at the close of 1870, he broadly THE TIMES OTTAWA, * I didn‘t stop to ask," replied the boy "I gw: himo&o m“L H&m boy who upset my dinner basket !" "Arrab, me darlint, "cried Jamie O‘Flanâ€" nigan to 'hilht\:obm" § sweetheart, who lnlnol;.slvenh flnnppa'tunlvh“fl in a word even odgexise during a two L?.mn ride hohinc;l'tho lhtle bay nags in oyster wagon," are ye afther . whymobodamhl:wmm "Shure and its m%hs, quoth the blushing Bridget. 1 a better raison than ~that, mavourneen. Because there is one of them aich side of a wagon tongue,". . t down as a good deed 1"" : "Gave a poor rerEcrecl, ways right. He was an orphan, was he?" his Nothing is more prosaic fo The salmonâ€"fly, '%‘Uï¬ ie re to wax ï¬lï¬ins rod ?â€"Fraser‘s Ma. is Iefnsl qo en age l n c ons Ee on Een shows binds ther every of human l‘;:;with A mn of :lymp&g memories, when & man is once smitten with Ol;thumhlt.l'wum wandâ€" ers on from to exiracting a grilse Mpm" there a sea trout "Gurly,‘" but ever attended by a supreme love for Nature, we are mnin«ll):d of a brother poset‘s picture ‘ of one w 5 S pipa in P r CXA ol ubtiasin Airainr an s made him . a delightful i ’by'looh:‘:iv:? If Sir H. Davy a‘. the hilosop angli Wilson as g‘d“u"blvi“mt nlï¬thhonooolmo his hand.on the butt of the flyâ€"rod, and what charming rhapsodies on xm what touching reminiscences .of doeltf:m forth ? W&.:h:u forâ€" et in im’ï¬:. angler fmtheunhooohs':ï¬:u the brook: side with crooked pin and cotton line, through thohoyo-wxin’ his â€"first to manhood‘s struggles with a fortyâ€" salmon, which he traces so W that we reflect while reading wherein the true postry of the craft. Anglings he i o rnaginedet mm 6+ cabidride tss Abusea army, deterred his venturous steps when munmhbuhocortmuthzn.m- mind was weli stored with and poetry, and he was never weary onbod:wi&hmouotqnthd-,mfl thmohoundcn'ï¬od{udmt, t s with a sufficiency of learning, a fund of humour, and a love of hh'm country‘s literature in particular, which medlop rogatdites oforamp crop of heather, no nite, swathed in mists and dipping Sovn 1b bige Which would enalion i ad 1 was more artist than ho in choice of fies and afflily to send thirty yards of silk and hair across & mnnzlgr:-m so -5“:: the lim';.hould Wd:'zflnl:’rh the salmon. &‘ f‘."'.,?"!"_‘i‘.‘;.&.‘ti“_'."@r% -m†Wiilson merely as an a ; and, to dwenl frst upon the pmghed mt & in its bosom. But we have now to do with NODI6 and ol lair report Mg- the summer sea catches the tints of heaven No need of the creative faculty, or the essayist‘s pen, to skotch the outer . man Murmurod the ru A ln:w nv'zlor Mmm‘ British poetry, and the effect of the upon % Wordsworth and Sco was so great it is scarcely an â€" geration to call Peroy thc{r tather.â€"Oornkill Magazine. *‘> generally. Bishop Percy, between 1 and Johnson, b l-!:le.::;,thorom.v 'awamfrhmh{flp,hd&ooï¬nonpuoop tion of the charm of the ballad postry have his faith greatly injured by the our< rent belief; but there are indications even Percy, exquisite thoug.hh was, did sometimes yield #0 of his critical ojjgononh. Nev the work done by Percy is of ine cal errors of the period, ventured inde to comment on and to praise the fine + mg&r "C&ovy?m†and ï¬o:‘h‘h'. i and got laughed pains. oog; Johnson, who at alater of t&e ‘ohontury gave laws to ‘the ors 0 8 no Boswell selly us, to deery the old bid can, more or less, sym; iyâ€" bod’y can understand a lm‘l:.d body whose taste has not been 'l[)'* training in a false school will enjoy it. e roughness and coarsenessâ€"and still, the repetition and prolixity common to ullad-momvâ€"wm be ated for the sake of genuine of t{lo uinqer. l‘Th. t:lyd ballad is simplest ‘style 0 we the charm of it to morn cars lh-tn to The ballad is a lyrical i i1 oo t, 4 it domer es mbemoryte ;?mt%,ud.ppuh‘:po timen singer, or :::dwom\m nm.mbo'rduunfln ballads were recited or s m bolbutboylrpundln&:lm, ‘ ;h.:.{;du-yuunpd race, with ssions,, hopes, and fears in which ‘ CHRISTOPHER NoRTH rosaic for him to glorify. BALLAD POEIRY, or rhoumatism with its thick Over & he . thirtoonth day «1 July ‘," & mhl'e'n?dc;{l.; s self possess | 4* " try oTraw thiat of any | County of OaHleton, } irn times it | . rlufthog ebimcrmoppeemegpiqarer c fws m | Insolvent A erc + sursly, the | 4nd the soarndment to asies _ of | meb Eoqon, te fas wo " Urtwem in the Cognty" and Scott | merchanta, !rm:mnml l,l‘-'e&.-u. 5 the flkv'.1 WILSON & ORR, Oarvers& Céilder . selve orders for the spring of 1875. Parties vatling Trve ho (he phaine i ordericg: 4. ) BIHAWNL NE hat. Wine nhd Matarin stas mess velng thoronghly sceltmatized, and botter g':‘;m‘&‘..."rï¬m.« Quebes, -::. on hummvacinoy 4n OTraAWa, :gulflflvflyd Â¥ruil Trsos and Ornamenta ouekeirni Do tiieed in Lower Uanade, Cataingues an | prices can boh.ddi'-pg..'" SR io {heandetsigned, who is now ready to re« 'lfl?%’c“m-ï¬h Sts. Caruvers & Gilders. TREES, SHRUBS, &c. A%W _ or persois ’ï¬ii: E'!-.i(itï¬i-ug{a&"; Ootherwise n about Hal! Grounds, M! ay woesl main m.d. m'ï¬" be MQ«?_@ 'hv,dln’:. um!.nutou Public W -'~|-I Mn.&‘luv.lfll. OTH h ‘ J|NOHMCE is hereby giyen that an tese mir * ither in shape of enmmuust f?l‘ni'mu M;u%‘g'nï¬'fl UED PRIOES, The whole of the fin Paris, and a large ~ of the 9%;".:."5‘:',...."“ inninven metsigh ernment : has .“:;0“" the ‘Pyrimont 1 mm entered a..."".‘.‘&."&:-i?""" The Company will also gladiy entertain proâ€" trom first class Arms or individuais of @mnmh differen a mumg?mme ?p'“l.llhu. * “m: siabpaestiont,for forther /n acpntice on bt Landnes. n..&h‘u..ï¬l“ Old Hroad street, K. O . 6O sSnark s â€"st. supply to contractors and others, the produce of ooR o foirebtom and othe ‘of is nana M. d‘Asphaites, who are now the Proprieâ€" wars of the dolebieten Acphahs o it aAshade over first cost, at Lamb‘s Cleari spanitpnnentant Aeaaniy al Ts ies e mamy ues @, portunity for Ifl.ylgm good e a)nunï¬d I‘t’nlln‘. ;lo&:l application to k PICOTUORE â€"FRA ME &hg'lbtoll slippers, at cost and under, \ + BOOTS & SHOES SIAl.lAll.l. Mardh 10, 1875, PYRIMOUT SEYSSEL ASPHALTE, _JVStr ®eosetven axo orexeEp our, 50 Cases of Boots, Shoes, RUBBERS, &c., atvie a n of Haney &For w -.% &"&-‘-@ Coutly ’% I, the undersigned Rovert O-l& lking of t of ‘Otta As~ _Emu.“c o Navy boon Appoinied Amignor im this Oredit uested to file their claima inisfatine sa ies o e on Entis Afeenty in sone Oitg. 00 orta ns on o ooo fon ie puo o pmminatinnorfan Seaaiys In‘d&’odnmn ‘of the sitate of che ema tindit: @nt generaliy, * ; R. 0. W. MacGUAIG, Dated Ottawa, this 10th day Juo.A.a_Lm. Childrens‘ Rubbers at 35 cts. 24 1 ® Ptndyd 4 > 4.+ Ladies‘ Long l“-bbo:‘m o1.5s0.4 -'nd other, goods at proportionately low prices, March 10, 1875, mwfllhfl_(’.mh'“ Insolvent Act of 1869, wiliee; bave been sppointed Assignee in this matter. haw Credit‘rs are requested to file their claims beâ€" fore me within one month, and are notified to meet st my office, Russell House Hlock, Apark‘s stmt.lunumvuumwa on hudqr the uilruonthdn{.uulynext ten o‘clock in the nornl7..mr ll;onunnuolnunflndfln t c ... .‘ 9. 0. W. MacCUAIQG, . the amendment t . In she Cou wnor m?.oomg;c:r%huwu: (&g &u. ?. Uul.o'y. Phlm.’mn. and wmâ€"’um. Linude T. ley, P ton and Frloxll{’. M uxt . w Ther n ow i eriiimnay in s 8 c t 8 10000000 MacCuniz,"ofthe City of Ottawa, Official Asâ€" the abrvegestate will nzzounu':.nd rave costs. receipts, do requext that all parties endebied to the Absvoestlate" witl ‘at 0006 sottio theit Insolvent Act of 1869, P, A. 4). all the ost ight, title, and rlo'mol mmfld lmolv:l:'-mo‘{mmlr- mmol‘ estate, in mnnito, all and sing« that cortain parcel or tract of land and premises situate, |ylnf and boing in the Town» ship of North Gower, nunOou-lydthrhh:’ in Provineo of in the Dominion md.. being composed of the undivided one ous-flofo‘lun r ty in the Fourth Concession of the of zouhgum. uma-gb.smu-u b« as follc vhat ‘commencing i nppimpinien mm ie ipeny oo in said Fourth Uononuiw. 3 the duh‘gm Siat angle of Said lof namber twoulp, Trom cas nun mouo.onzonmlluyulx dogreos west m northern mt of said allowance for road, one obain and fity links from thence porth thirty« six degrees west, one chain and fifty links from thence sixtyâ€"six.degroos cast, one chain and fifty 1 %maw\nï¬mwï¬ degrees one and to t 3e place be« ginaing, by admeasurement two and a::|=m uare chains, be the same There is a cheese factory,0u said premises in good repair and in runuing order, Terms of sale cash. Sbe: l“’hlh“- 'homnnw&n-m Insolvent Act of 1869 mb‘s Clearing Sale, Miscellancous. In the matter of Ottawa, June 19, 1875 1 l.nonll“nflod being the @NLY porson mâ€"iw "lo»r;‘-lvonononcmt ceipts, do requext that all parties endebied to Insolvent Act of 1869. ’ "a L. W. H, HILL, North Augusta, June Â¥, 1875. RBoots & Shoes. ind the winters of this district, an | priges tan 156 fad on apni NOTICE. DA Leqal Hotices,. Cnyle ’Pï¬iiaa.]"i'ii"w'um'u'-' Mut« m;’&:fmfl mbee Wwilkine * ©Cicr." > yN ETL .. Saphuore Poiice t thereto. hllon'&éc:;_f Hane IMA.II.. $ HANEY & FORGIE, ob minted d r ontewa &. C. W, Mac0OUAG, T. W. HILL, Insolvent. 6, 1875. ::,",,,me“-m n pevdiyy » 'l:l'\o';v»uo:’u m:.r‘f §§:‘~ m iriug printed headinge Bnl or e irthsarezng ioi BRi isH NoRTh ameRrica. . Incorporated by Royal Charter, rating, : Numb ~‘ PAPER RULERB, AwKD â€" â€" Account Book â€" Manufacturer, _/ .. GrarKks erRapt, ofraAwal The Court of Di Dealers in Furniture, Heds, Furniture : Warerooms. ANGUS%CoO. BOOKBINDER, Jen. 11. Mz There are Numerous Tinitations on the NONE IS GENUINE! l-ni';‘"â€"lâ€"â€"--zâ€"-â€"m DIRROToRS ; TNA James Mao President. g° r"."m@‘fl. h, MLP.E. mll.'t Keq., Hon, 5b Allay Gm}gsu_ o4 MYRTLE~NAVY, Ing Uhamet, Gorniess and Oprtains, _ *" SPARKS STREET. > 10 Cases of MENV’S & BQY’S STRAW :HATS, Latest Shapes now Opening _ | Hatters &# Furriers. BANK OF OTTAWA. BDookbinders. HAT! HATS! HATS ! 86 SPARKSâ€"SBT,, Opposite the British Lton Hotol. March 12, 1876, { H. HODGE S . inuieninil~â€"2*; x *A u32â€" * ut 14 wl anlmibiel STRAW HATS!!! a. MORTINKER, SMWiscellancous. Stbeg w 00 0 ow ' oib ut Bank Hotices. E nrmiture, UNLE®B STAMPED CAUTION. PATRIOZ Romerrson, DEVLIN‘S. 11, Rideau Street. paroupatie tmibugron axp Comitri?.?,‘ J*»1!e®:stro cured by uelll the water for a Re Weose. Rheumatics! Read! ®, Dropey, Diseases of the Sk10, A iTâ€"c theâ€"Liver and Urinaty Organis t, .. . 5 The REJUVENATING WaATERS so n sought for in years jong fast. for me, and 1 thin ""uoi"n-&ï¬ PERRY DAVIS & SON & Lawrenoe, FW“‘â€"' Burnett‘s Cocoaine y EC PC W Obâ€" ninstet , W i1 (*1 m to that your Pills are an om‘l&fuhgm'g for i@ and 1 ceriainly do anjoy good Joyful Tidings to Thousands. Bd ot s Mip Ioe tan ym ,0i, in TC #4 haw 4n anw Burnett‘s Cocoalne Burnett‘s CGocoaline har gompany tor "the County . of Rassoll. *ï¬ l'n’dmtochrln G, Cod 9 hgl re !npw Kemptvide P. 0.‘ Mr Cody there about mondo‘rl;onown?.' & " 9L MUNTREAL, P. q. Mï¬bhfl.uz‘ J0GEPH BURNETY & co., « Burnétt‘$ Cocoaine Burnett‘s Cocoaine Agricultural Mutual Assurance Asociation _ ~OF CANADaA. Burnett‘s Cocoaine Blimew: ES CE::alne T-l Insurance Co. U LPH U:R, 8 A LIN &E and G A 8 Te mot Greasy nor Sticky, _ _ Burnett‘s Cocoaine Invalids! Attention |! ~*~General Agont Citizens Insurance Co‘y. JAaPITAL, â€" . . © §2,000,000. London, Ont. San. 9, 1875, WANTED, an sgent for Cuas. pessaroums, Norton‘s Camomaile Pills: Lon ion Ottawa, Jan. 23, APITAL â€" . , m, Mti 4 1e | and ®@ \Athire on % 1LOFLG.... *‘ 1875. Caledonia Springs. Cash Assets Over $26,000,000 Equitable Life Assurance Company, Gives Now Life to the Hatr. S0 and 73 conts per Bottie. Leaves no Disagreeable Odor Lougest in Eiffact, rds the: Richest Lustre, HAND:IN «HAND MNMUTUAL J. T. Sutton, Bussell House Block, AGEN®Dtor OTHAWA and vicinity, Xs not an Alooholis Wash, Bisko®, AX D wastine 143 Bund street, Lozdon.‘ @ATidth 9 ol Chermicts, ons .Mm.tfl »s the Irtitated 8 41â€" Suin. AVORY & MOoRE, of Rhenmatics w ir Baths. h.m Elystum of the Invalid F 18 again open . ;. Renedics. Tusurance. ‘Temporary Oflce: TESTIMON Y D. ‘0, MACDONALD R. C. W. MaoCU, Amwnw-mï¬ï¬_g. ce Bentroimerns Poury OTTAWA. Sn io Sono uP 2RORLNO LUTL of the Ski», A iTâ€"cl‘ons of entof theDignstive 4 a Letter ively 88 84 from 8 a.m. to ¢ p.m\. Post Office, Ottawa, June 1. 1476. TDopesin Ti be reoslved at thls offlce. Intores: on mt‘ Seerooidiens Vepmshont me ul 1eg! hy e PCP --â€"-"-â€"-. d houtacts ue Srcsith Are no ’g‘:‘ Â¥ l purekased proas 20 Hop Lt hi Jniy be w ap 1 jor Canadian sieamers A:ï¬: ioi OS bag for Canadian steamers HRITIBEH MAalia . Via New *†every Monday wgmkuu ages the same night. warded Iast and. West in nupproingoiey paot deposits can f J a2 Money order and Havings HMCLA.I&.n.u lus‘ Cons done up in #First on the mmorfet one uP f QTEwa canrer wwouse. Have received of their Spring 1mpo 18 BALESâ€"OARPETS and OURT, Uranrabthg ali the novelties, out for the 0 which the confidently f MANUF hss t AOTURING, â€" JEWELLAY . WATOHMAKING BUsNms . in RMy former WworkshOpé. OveP Wenes. . SHOOLBRED | TAatchmahers tetin ie '-'flg-%. _‘:...-Eu- gi id M . CORNER OF DaLHOUSIE & * 30â€"SPARKS Special Value in Lacse Ov:/n)ns. _ Jane 2%, 1874. ~NAST END Drug__stopjgj T. T. SHEPHERI January 2rd, @7« Chemist & Watchmaker and CRreAt SNIHIHARCES, do¢, Invite. Mathewnal ; eet, betwees 1 i.i"i!g,:zu ATX Bruggists, _ Carpets, egig@ filf 149 much, heve 1. SuUre & @Pk h WoL. ly 1»