ertion; ertion; L’ I ’ Per I, the 122qu othef blisher; forms! :xon, the for tithe :iou :2 for at rhem in discon- 5‘100 {361:3 E0 take 'chthey nsible Ordered .arts with (1:6 sy send criberil 0 N, > LAGE: express mad as red 01' more; LE York. 0., seat g! “CB 1’0 hu'h DOW CE the Land Hundreda‘ spondents hority on SUhjf‘Cta' rat “THE ORITE 2 A 38 MIL? SADDLER, HAR~ I Nass’and Trunk Maker, opposite thé , Crown Land Oï¬ce, : - Durham, Ont. at .~ - *‘t‘; I“ :55; Whips. Spurs, inc , ’ ‘ ‘ always on hand. Jebbmg done on the shortest notice. K? Kpsidencé next to R. McKenzie’s urge buck store, Lower Village. V HERE FI'RNITI'RU 0!“ EV ERY 36301: p.i0n can be ha} as cheap anï¬ as gond 8‘3 3.. anv other establishment in the County. All work warmmed. Wareroom ()ne Door Northutthe sign of me big chair. W Store Luau Town, Durham. â€"â€" Good workmanship punct walky and mode: are charges are the xules at this Smithv. Kerr. Brown McKenzie, IMPURHIRS 01“ “RV HUUUS AND ‘rrno'fm 9,3 '22! (ten-wed Wholesaie Merchants, Hamiltun, Ont. Burham IWILSON. BOWMAN cog, Waggon a Erriage Show ‘Hmumu our. 6. o .' o }I I. 5'7“ WHY H NOW 1,1,â€, \ â€FD I [a the most complete Sewmg Machme made. . . . r , ‘ 1‘ ‘ - I. I E 1. ‘ ' â€" Q _, {u funeHh Uttl‘l‘l'rtfif‘h'. Cutters, Wag; Tm Em“) of the Machine, 0-" beam'fld Lions and! Sicizhs. manut’zwtured from t’m- I stand, walnut. to?) monidmgs ana drawers "3 heat fluted-a}, at the clungvst possible what! Ml work warruntvd. Shop, nppnsite Mr I 'arson'sstore, L-zwcr Toma. Durham. I $1 H o lu‘UldS, «‘3 made 1;; Iend on g .1) 30119). f (in ‘Jn‘tcs :â€"-Ncgt a Ofï¬ce, Durham. ‘)diceâ€"â€"-O '21 Durham, 0 per ce urham )7 1 BATE of‘. ictr): Otï¬ce~~ln Grim: 1 3 County of Gray A! promptly attended to Durham, 1 Samuel E. Legate, ' AND AGENT, VALUER, o.,~c. J 3101163: ‘to Lend from 'one to ten ars, on easy ten-ms of interest. Farms ï¬ eneml at. st J. F. Halsted M D" tU PEEIJI-Jï¬ya. ’Having leased 51;}: in qr? 1 ‘I 3:! 9013033“. -: H p‘ JHPOYeIpremses, lately occup; Pad by ‘15]. ~ “115:; {)12" Li" if.) ' har") am prepared to Ogtrï¬ fat-21*; ac: M: :ommmliatzcn to trgvell e11 andï¬th - public WWW , oeueral )7 Good {mes Liquorse tad Ci. 316(11ch Adee G1 ans. ff ’ are always on _hand. Superior Sthinv George ‘533089 White S: Johnson. Publishers Proprietors.) William Barrett “â€3335? PR! A 51 U??? â€lï¬T'Iz'AW’ P The subscriber thankful for past fa‘voz‘a ’ 5-9 "’~'*’"’f â€1,. («3"‘I‘t3i‘3h “C" "9"" 5 wishes to inform his old friends and the 3°“("‘;"7 "MLâ€"Emil 3;.0;9,(,pper Town) I public generally, that he has again com. ham, ‘JT-t- gmenced business in the abqve Hegel and â€"- w} npcs by s_trict‘attehtion to the comfort of THOMAS DIXbN’ U333 guests to merit a fair share of public ‘ patronage. 41123151123, ATTURXY-{ET-LAW,I W _‘ w; .,_-‘ v._~.__.....__ â€"‘ .â€" SSCER {3F MARRIAGE LICENSES Durham. Ont. WHOLE NO. 175.] rood Farm and Fawn Property at at. UFHL‘L: ~11 Garafraxa SL, W. PRITCHARD, A. M. M. D John Moodie, enomi Blacksmith, Opposite ' “’ilpfs Ham.- and Shoe 9, Lower Town, Durham.â€" a m OPPOSITE ORANGE HALL DURHAM» 913x or 1115: Lu: CHAIR. IF YOU “an": FURNITURE “I! TO ‘1" T0 SHEWEELL »_‘ w..- ‘ James Brbwn. HUGH ROSE, Cabinetware and Chair Factory, 101' 1ne, onveymzcrr, Licensed 'the County of Grey, Books and Accounts :ted. $350,000 to mm 11%! xthe( s Budding, Durham, Ml calla, day or night, Chancery, c., c.â€"~â€"I “ to the Telegraph 164t£ mg] the .e art H )Nl l'axhtmg lone m the LE r ; Tiff} 1.001(3th n :t ‘3â€)? “3‘" Y" Q71 '2‘wa } (,1: : sun 33);, a l'anchi-n’e GOV. (0!? > FRESH MEAT J A S. E L L, Stncsox Daxrtsr. -â€" Ofï¬ce, â€"-One door North of Elliott‘ 3 Hotel, Upper Viliage, Durham. It surpasses all others yet attempted in the most essential particulars. It is simpler, and consequently much more easily man- aged j. it. is more durable, and consequently will last much longer ; it is more elegantly ï¬nished, and consequently makes a more agreeable appearance; it runs easier, and‘ consequently does not fatigue the Operator; it does more work and ofa better quality in an equal space of time, anzl is conse- quentty more economical; it does better work, and a greater variety of it, an'd con- sequently possesses a greater adaptability ; it is a greater wife-saver,labor-saver.money-j saver. time-saver, hoard-saver, and cause-‘1 quently appeals more completely to the.1 philanthropic instincts of humanity, it has stood the test of actual use, and has :tchieV‘ ; ed a great popularity; Purchasers should not select a machine until they have we amined the LGCKMAN, it they would save alarge amount of future annoyance and trouble. f [T Durham, March 16th, 1870. Agent for Durham and viéinity, fDURâ€"ABLE and ECONOMICAL! MANI'FACTURED BY WILSON. BOWMAN €90. HAMILTON our. T is UNDENIABL’E, ALWAYS 0N HAND, T IS L'XDENIABLE, 1' IS UNDENIABLE, ‘â€"-â€". I coamsws Hoir'z't, _ 7‘: RCHARDVILLE. This House has re- ? cently been reï¬tted and furnished in f ï¬rst-class style, with a new to the comfort F and accommodation of the travelling public. 5 Wines, Liquors and Cigars of the choicest ; bands always on hand. Good Stabling and 'an attentive hostler. Stages call daily.-â€"- ; Charges moderate. THAT the Loc'kman Machine already occupies a poaition only accorded to others after years of toilsome eti'urt. THAT the Lockman Machine has achieved an IMMENSE POPU- LARITY in the short t‘me it has been betore the peeple. chen’se Grey. THAT the Lockman Hacbid‘e, zi'ftbd’ not much exceeding in price the very cheapest. machine manu- factured anywhere, is yet INCOMPARA BLY superior to any cheap machine yet brought out. generaily. Good Wipes, Liquoys guardâ€".6; gay-e always .on hand. Superior Siabling and. an attentxve Header. Stagesml] (11in wâ€".-.. L4 A THAT the Lock-man Machine ‘is no't only the LA'I‘ECS'I‘ but also the BEST of its kind, before the publxc. A CHOICE LOT OF 8:} A good Livery IMPLE AND ELEGANT! F. H. Edwards. Call and Inspect. UGH DENTISTRY; HALF-WAY HOUSE, uggwnvmw, JAMES B ENDBNIABLE, HBTEJ; AT THE MACKAY, CHARLES LIMIN. in connectidn. {$1298. In Constantinowe where the dog muzzle is never used bgdmphgbid irnno known. “Why President Grant should inter- fere in behalf of the Fenians whom the Canadians captured, those who suggest the proceeding have not condescended to explain. They may have been only the d‘up'es of selï¬sh and heartless knaves, but they have no more right to ask for the interference of our Government than would other maran'ders caught in similar circumstances. The Canadians have shown that they are quite able to hold their own as against the Fenian or- ganization, and they will lose nothing by discriminating carefully in adjnéting the sentences of their prisoners.†. The New York Times speaks thus with regard to the four or ï¬ve prisoners taken during the late Fenian attempt to snbjngate Canada to the “Irish Repub. lie," wherever that may he : 1 As a contrast, we will give a little of the management of another person who owns a farm the same size, with better natural advantages. Some years ago this thriftless farmer sowed a ï¬eld of ,lwheat. h was put in, in a alovenly manner and mhch too late in the spring, I there Was a poor show of a crop of wheat. He therefore thought it advisa~ Ihle to plow the ï¬eld and Bow it 'to oats. Whey Were howetrer put in poorly and too late in the season again. The oats promised very poorly, so at the proper season he burrowed the ï¬eld over and sowed to buckwheat, The buckwheat was scarcely worth cutting, and to get what little there was, hogs were turned in, the hogs got the itch, and‘half died. ; Thus at the end of tWelve m‘o‘nths re- suited the wheat crop. There are various other little matters connected with his management which contribute to his success, but the secret of it all is, he undertakes nothing but what he a‘dCo‘r‘npiishes thoroughly. 1 His grain ï¬elds are small, ’and no crap is sown or planted until the ground is ï¬rst thoroughly prepared, and strange. 1y enough, as some of his -ess thriving He keeps a good assortment. 0'? pm] try and make: them pay. Perhaps you are than: that there has been a large tube between the General Post Oï¬ce in London, am} the stations â€In I'Iuston square in operation for a num- ber of years. The mail bags for the north are a?! sent by th' ‘ ' ‘," r to a few moments before ‘he'train Teaves three miles ofl‘. The transit takes less than two Seconds-3 Surely this is an age of Wonders.â€-â€"Bostan Transcript. I -w- g to we'mbe‘sud heard a slight rumbling i i noise ’fo’r Beiro’n'teén ‘séoODUs, ‘ivhen 'a bell {rang beside me, 'indiodting ‘tha‘tv the} scroll had arrived at 'the‘GeUéx-al "Po‘s’tg Oï¬ice, four h'uniirea miles oifl"! It al- most took my breath away to think of is. If I cou?d only go to Boston â€with the same relative speed, you might count on mv naggino an “ML... -_- l. mqmred If I might see a message sent. “Oh, yes, come round here.†He slipped a number of messages into the :pasteboard scroll, popped it into the. ttbe'and made a signal. I put my‘ear tC'flt'e'ttbe‘tnd heard a Ilia-LO --"'““““ , int) which the messages are thrown and sent to their destination. r ' . ‘v ‘- - K'"r i I wish to‘séc that,†He again '32: we have not go't it'; it in in the The at ‘Lundonf’ “Well.†~said 50:: must see It, we will get 'it. a few minutes, but it. is now in L He rang a bell “We can’t show it. to you, as ’We have sent it to London.†“But,†lreplied' «you: must have my original paper hate; I _- or, ', g ' ' ' " ‘ I The following extract describes the {operation of a pneumatic tube between Glasgow and London. Probably few ! of our readers are aware of the existence {of the process by which messages and packages are almost instantaneously transmitted between these two cities. ‘ I had occasioh’to send a telegram to London the other day, and in a few minutes received a. reply which led me The Fenian PriSoneré. A W onderï¬ll Letter-Carrier A Good Farmer. PNEUMATIC Tuna n, we will get ‘it. back in :, but it is now in London.†uc TUBE FOUR wapnzb MILES LONG. are many years ? than: ‘that there has '; it in in the post of- “Well.†‘aaid he, “ if v . O ‘ ' ï¬ve minutes t There are on many farms old mca. 7 does that it ivould be undesirable or ' inconvenient to break up and put under tillage just at Once. Much can be done ' towards improving these so as to make them yield a heavier crap ‘of forage of better quality until the time comes when the farmer can summer-fallow the land or bring into the regular rotation of the farm. In some cases the soil of these meadows is naturally rich, but from a deï¬cient amount of grass seed having been originally applied“ from the coarser wild grasses havingl gchokcd out the better cultivated ones, or from the soil having become too com- pact, there seems to be a much smaller yield of pasturage than ought to be the case. To improve such pastures let a heavy sharp toothed ha‘rrotv be run over the surface both ways, to 160m it some- what and cut the sad so as to make the rents take a new start and send up fresh :stems; after this is done sow some grass :‘seed, including clover, then top-dress the land with a mixture of supe’rphoso phate, plaster and ashes, ‘one third of each; giving at least tivo hundred pounds of the mixture per acre; and ï¬nish by carefully rolling the surface . with a light roller to get all level and ' slightly compress the newly sown grass I seeds into the soil. The improvement will be quite manifest the ï¬rst season, if the work is well done at the right ‘ time, say from the middle to the last of April, but still more so the year after, ‘ when the fresh sown grass seed has had , time to take root and spread over the 1 soil. 1 A youthful minister has been expe‘xL ed by the W. Circuit. meeting in Godee rich for indulging azizato’ry caprices. ,1.- ‘ V ‘ lsuc‘gestt tsetse, Seetï¬eeeéggt is the ravages of a little insect “Called-l the turnip fly, which destroys the first‘ leaves of the plant as seen as they ap- % lpear above the ground. This has in- 5ereased to such an extent of late, that pest. The following are among the cheapest and best. Make the ground rich and ï¬ne, soak the seed for twenty- four hours in warm water, then coat. them with snpen‘phosphates of lime, this ‘ has the affect of pushing the mung? greedy little insects, and still have enough for ‘a good â€crop. lithe ivhite turnip, or radish seed be sewn along with the swede turnip in snï¬icient quan9 tity to satisfy their appetites, they will not molest the latter, to any great ex tent. Dustin-g young plants with ashes O O soot. or lune when dew is on them will t also check Operations. m All the ground in the smaller fruits should be covered at the begmning of the dronth term. The better way is to coat rather lightly after the soil has {been thoroughly stirred. This last not in coating too thick, but in not cxmi tending the coat far enough. A ‘whole lorchard, unless the trees are far apart, should have the covering, as the roots extend so as 'to 'intermingle with each other, and the‘mulch’ehonld be spread “For a special mh‘lch We know nothing better than green "grass or weeds, or igatden Weedlngs, sprinkled with leached {ashes ‘If the grennd ‘i‘s previously 'moistened, the severest dreuth Will be ineffectual. Besides, the ashes are a beneï¬t, as Well as the decaying grass, and weeds. Ashes, like plaster, is an attracter of moisture, and hence 't‘hel beneï¬t‘m the mulch. We have tried this withfhe'ï¬neat efl‘eet,'znd 'iveuld l‘e loch to do without it. l l flute-4t will bear it and thrive under it. But the raspberry, especially must be protected in a drouth, if it would succeed well; so the.purrant. Petacoee also may be mulebed to ad- will beneï¬t tbe‘crop. Strew along the Bills, 'ilf‘n'e’more, 3118 there "Will be ‘an increased growth '; moisture and fertilio‘l ty e311 5: 'adae'a‘. l Improving 01d Meadows. From an article on this eubjecï¬. in the Journal of Agriculture, we mike the following extracts :â€" Turnips. “°“>Oâ€"-4 ', COUNTY OF GREY, ONTARIO Mulching. MAINTIEN LE DROIT. Why is a. dog with a broken leg like a boy at arithmetic? Because he puts down three and carries one; The following paragraph is {roman old Kilkenny newspaper :-â€"'Yesteray morning a farmer near this place got up Gift of his bed, and going throngh the ï¬ind‘o'w, accidentally fell down with his head upon the atonés fast asleep, by whioh his neck Won broken, and he died béfore he aWoke.’ Wheh a Scotch minister told his neighbor that he had preached two hours and a half the day before, the neighbor said to him, “Why, minister, were you not tired to death '1†'Aw, na,’ said he, ‘I was as fresh as a rose ,"hut It would have done your heart good to see how tired the congregation was." Wanted to hnomehe 'aacire'ss of the ï¬re when it goes out. Whether the edge of a sharp wind is heene'r than a cutting sat-ire. W'heth'er a treble sine; er does three times as much as another And whether a lawyer ‘ever fainted ï¬nder the burden of e‘onVeying a hone. A man named John Monies, o? Bdr- ford, was killed by a Bull a few days ago. The bull was in a. ï¬eld', and he Went ‘t‘q tm'n him out, when the infuri- ated imi't‘nal pitched at him, and gored him 80 badly that he died in 3!: Min. Alwa‘ys {hm your foe‘srout'vjvara, and yo’ur moughts i'nward; {he ï¬rst will keep you from falling into the gutter, and the last ‘f‘ro'm falling into iniquity. ‘You’d better ask for manners than money,’ said a man to a beggar. ‘Faith an’ I asked‘ for What I thoï¬ght ye had the most of,’ was the edit reply. ‘Dick,’ Said a ééi‘tain iawyer'to 'a Coim- tryman, Who wasConsidered more fool than Ii‘na‘vc, ‘Whaf. should you call the two greatest ;é_11,rfbsitie's in th‘é worl’a ?’ ‘Why,’ replied Dick, "an honest la‘évyer, and a river on ï¬re.’ A French nempa'pe’r .is to Be estab- lished at. Fort Garry. The ï¬ftge‘s‘se‘s i‘n tsho MoFarlénd trial numbered 118. The Mexican government spends double its income. :W«M;€;ï¬â€œw;ï¬Ã©iï¬Ã© ‘dlgy 'ef l'eler’iuen‘ée and mental attain- ! ment. This son of his seems to 'po‘s‘se‘iss i his father’speeulieritics in an ’e‘xagge’rat- ed degree, and may jet pro‘veés marvel- ! Ions in mind as distorted in body. His ‘appea‘ranee so prejudiced the 'mc'm'ber’s of the Presbytery against him that they would have refused him a license if he: had shown any deï¬ciency. He was re- quired to deliver a sermnn of his own composition, and the matter of it was not only good, 'b‘tz't the manner of de- livery ‘ivas "composed and admirable.â€" have not heard to what ï¬eld he has bde'n calleil. 9 Every person should cultivate a nice 3 .sense of honor. In a hundred different ’ways this inost ï¬tting adjunct of: the 5 ’true lady or gentleman is often tried;- For instance, one is a guectii‘n'a family , where, perhaps, the domestic machinery ' t : does no: run smoothly. There is sor- . row in the house unsuspected by thel .' outer world. Sometimes it as. d' ' . ‘éd set: lirhoise'ooniiuct is a shame and grief to his parents, sometimes a relative whose eccentricities are a cloud on the home. Or, worst of all, husband and wife may not be in accord, and there . may he often bitter words spoken, harsh l ' ' ' In any of these cases . the guest is in honor bound to he ‘hlin‘d and (leaflet) far "as peOple without are concerned. If a gentle word within can I to go forth and re‘real the shadow of an l 'ne‘a'rest friend, is an act of indelicacy 1 and ‘I'neanpess almost unï¬â€™msnaéa.‘â€"z‘ Once in home, admitted to its privacy, sharing its life, all that you; hear and see should h hecome'a Haired trust. ‘It is ‘as really 'é contemptihle to gossip about such things as it Would he to steal the ~silver or hor- row books 'and' forget to return them. , ; very Unusizal Negro: Mat M' Was a, qzieei' $5111.21 neighb‘Oh fohnd him at work one day at an enormous wood pile, sawing away for dear life with an intolerably dull saw. ‘Why don’t you éharpen your saw,Mat '2’ asked the neighbor. Looking up with an inimitably droll expression, ‘1 should think I hul work enough to do to saw up this woodpiie, without stopping to sharpen Sam? Said one student to another, ï¬hom be caught swinging a scythe most lustily in a ï¬eld of 316111 grass zâ€"‘Frank, what makes you work for a living. 9 A tel 10111 With you'r talents and abilities should not be ’cati'gbt engaged 111 hard labor, I mean to' get my living by my wits. ’â€" ‘Well, Bill, you can work with duller tools than I can,’ was the reply. The Wii’e 01' an English burgiai, visit- ing him 1:) prison, left with him a steel spi'i'd'g i‘rdm iie'r hOOp (shirt, from which he farmeJ a saw, free‘d himself from his iron‘s, uni made good his eacape. A San Ffan’ciscai’l, Sp’eaking of 'the or’c’beetra in .t'he China‘s thegtre; Baï¬: ‘I he“ you that you ne've‘r heat-H. any. thing like it; why when that Band strikes up, it sounds like t‘e‘n thoï¬'sï¬nd wash-bil‘er‘a tumblin’ off a Eve-Mary buildin’ on to a ï¬rm: side‘ï¬vali.’ A little boy was relating a story he had heard op’e ‘day. His ideas becom~ ing confésed in some Way, he bould ï¬nd no words to explain big meaning. At last he said fâ€"‘Well, I know enough big words, but I don’t know ï¬li‘ei'b to put iiieï¬l iti.’ ‘Gerty', lily dear,’ said a Sunday school teacher to one of he; class, ‘you were a very good little girl to-day.’â€"- ‘Yes’m,-â€"-I couldn’t help being good; I got a tifl‘ neck,’ said Getty, with per- fect. seriousness. Scorched Linenâ€"Peel and slf’ce 'tWO onions; extract the juice by pounding and sque’ciing; add to the juice half an 02. of out ï¬ne white soap, two oz. of fulleï¬ â€™ea'r't'h and half ayint‘df vi‘n‘eg'ar; boil all together. When 'c-ool, é’p’rea‘a it over the noorohed lj'inenditnq iet it dry on 1; then Walsh â€and Boil out the ‘lTnen and the spots will disap‘p‘eai‘ unless burned so badly ‘as to Break the thread. l A. Murder, Almost equalling in hor- 'ror the Pantin tragedy, has occurred at Uxbridge, a few miles from London, Englap‘d. A whole family was butcher- ed. The victims were the father, moth- er, sister-indent! and two ’éh’ildren. The sister-in-law was to have Be’e'h ‘in‘arried,; land it is suspejc‘ted 'trh‘é't sthe murder was 'prom‘p'ted in some way by this circum- stance. The police are on the track of a rejected lo’v‘e’r Who has suddenly dis- appeared. ' “ .,;-.', N. w u . .s -< -....... .. -- Ivan on}. clunv; o rm . .i ‘ 7 - ’Ge%ggmuf 5.41;“; {fï¬ co ~ I. i‘“_ 9“, run to (311 S antmg: WM we? 'Coldr, like ‘grecn apple‘s. ‘It'fs Eaénaexj mg drussxs‘put uufay m a trunk for ‘celleu’t e‘upper {ï¬sh {O'e'h‘t With head? the benefit 6f “St?“fl If :you. can get and Butter or cream __ 3 your husband to “smile on anythmg short ‘ of a sirloin o’r‘a ‘roastéfl tufkey, yet: are a lucky Woman. I Rhubarb.-â€"The best way of cooking 'this delicious substitute for fruit is to bake it. Cut. up the stalks into a pie- dish of nice white ’or yellow earthen- ware, sprinkle's’ugar over, cover with a 'p’lhte,’se‘t in the oven ‘and bake ï¬fteen Kimmy-Mamâ€. 3 ~ . .s ,0 -_--D._ -- Je lEDfl-ab'. £._: _1 ‘ . s o - - A SHEE'P Cn'oiknbiny k; "SNARE-4A ï¬ne Sheep owned by Mr. James Golden, of Farmington, suddenly expired on: Monday, in the ‘ï¬eifl in Which it wasé grazing, without any apparent causeâ€"4.. Mr. Golden had the animal opened,and,ii on examining the throat, he found a large snake coiled up in it in such a manner as to compress ‘the windpipe, and produce ‘death by sufl'ocation.-â€"â€" 0r; anqamlle Szm. ' . ""‘J "“â€â€˜6“‘ before a magistrate for cruelty to his daughter. The little difï¬culty arose; from a discovery made by the parent that th‘e‘girl, who was frequently left in. charge of the gate, used 66 allow her. sweetheart, a young butcher, to drive: f hrs cart tlgrough free. She never "tolI-_I "ea†Tier love. -' ‘How are you Broom ?’ asked ‘a blifï¬ old sailor o'f “a fop who was agra-‘ays an- noyed unless he was addressed as Mr» Broom, and who résponded, ‘I’d have; 'you to know, air, that I’ve "a handle to; my name'.’ ‘Oh ! all right ! How are you Broom-handle ?’ I ‘Mï¬therï¬ said Jemima, ‘Sam wants {to come courting me to-night.’ ‘Weli, what did yqu tell him ?’ ‘01: 1 I told him he migï¬t come. I ‘felt anxious to see how he woulii act.’ A darkey gives the ‘t'el’lowing reason why theeolofed race is superior to the white time :-â€"-‘All men are made ofclay, and like the meerschaum pipe they are. more valuable when highly cdldred.’ ' Pickle‘t! "Onion‘s.--Boil ALL SQLQTS Q? PABAQRQBESO A toll-gate keeper was lately brought c___- _ _ small on IOHF Ottawa has had i ï¬re through ï¬re «Sidekeré, The London Telegraph says a for- midable Fenian movement is in the eOnrse of orgéniz'ation throughout Eng- land, ahd gives ï¬gures to prove its state- meats. Why, ’63 flew, ’banse mam mad ' it yesterday but of ’da'd’s old ’11:). _ And what. has dad’s old ’nn made of 1 Why, one of .grgnny’s old éheetaï¬vhat her mam 'g'a‘ire hei'. It. don’t look very new. What is it made of '1’ .‘A Happy Boy; â€- i say, So}, why do yoii whistle So What makes you so happy 9 ‘ ’Cauï¬e I’v‘e g‘ét i new shirt ; look é here; ain’t it nice ? One half the women marry for fear they shall be old maids, but why should they be snubbed any more than an old bachelor? Old bachelors receive the mitt’eï¬ â€˜oc‘eaSionally, and old maids have been known to outlive several offers.â€" They are both useful in their wayâ€"par- ticulei'ly old bachelors; But this‘ humdrhï¬z life, girls, is an- other affair; Wiih it? washing and iron- inga‘n‘d cleaning day; when children get boXed 0.31:8, and ‘visitér's piefie’d hp din- nerb. in the i‘o'iiiah'ée theije is if) it you can put under a three bent hiece. S..e remains a beauty to the end of the chapter, and steps out just in time to anticipate her ï¬rst gray hair, her hus- band drawing his last breath at the same time as a ‘dtltt‘hi h'ï¬â€™sh’ahd shOuId, and not failing into the un omantic error of outiiving his ’grief and marry- ing a second time ' -â€"v-sa 0V“ UIwUWDo We hnoiv these little incidents never happen In noveiSL-thre the heroine 18 alwéys dressed in White, with a. rose bud in her hair, and lives C3 blossoms and May dew! There are no wash tubs or gridirone m her cottage; her chil- dren are born cherubims, with a seraphic contempt for dirt, pies, and molasses.â€" that it than is a‘sisa‘vage ’ss '3 “New Zea- lander when he’s hungry, ‘hn'd ‘i‘vhen he comes home to an empty c'iip‘hoard ‘zi'nd. i meets a doien I'i‘ttl‘e piping "ffiéuths, necessary accompaniments o'f ‘cottagcs and love-ciamorous for supperâ€"Love will have the sulks, or my name isn’t Fanny. Lovers have a trick of getting disenchanted too, when they see their Arimintas with dresses pinned up around the waist, hair powdered with weeping laces scowled tip over the washing tub; and soap sn’ds dripping from re'd'ciBOws. i -4.‘ b Girls! that’s a humbug. The .;’ery thought of it makes me groan. It’s all moonshine. In fact in“ A crust of Bread; 3 piltc'hle'r' a. thatched toof and loveâ€"4f}: piness for ydu. 8008.â€". 'v -, to a boy’s ambition, and divert his 1 thoughfs‘ï¬â€˜oih other obEects and desire ’ for other and easier employments. We heard of an incident of this nature which E} is, really eicellent and worthy of repe- tition. A boy eight years old was given; a beautiful pair of steer calves, (Here- ‘ fords) costing at a Week old $5, by his . father; and was told 'he might talie care of them, feed, break and train them to his heart’s content; and when thegcame' of age to sell, a moderate price should ; 3' be deducted for payment for keep’ing‘ them, and the balance he might lay in the savings’ bank, to pay his tuition at college or do some other good with it. He took great delight in ’re'a'rin'g and training and showing them ; and a littlel'; less than four years of age ’he sold them « l for $300, full 8100 mo'rethan they were i worth for beef. After paying his father I their cost in keeping he had over 3200 left, which he put into the bank, and at once enlarged his operations by break-. I i l ing two more pairs of the‘same'isorteâ€" c i l r u ~ . That little fel‘ow has now â€got a life to live for, and is contented. Would that other farmers could do as well for their. I Many afax‘inér’h .865 ï¬nnla “stay at home, instead of yearning for the city, if his parents would but hold out some inducement to remain where he is, con- tented, gitber an acre or so of ground he can call his own, or n gardcnz, orn cow. Such little things given éti'z'ziixl‘ns} American . pazie’r, BY FANNY Fang. Farming for Boys. cher bf We. t'ér, ~there’s hap A correspondent of the Ilerwauicci Sentmel writes as follows :--San Fran. cisco is essentially a Celtic bit} ; hnt vie did not know the extent of our Irish population until Sunday, when about thirty Sirhoneand people turned out to give a Fenian welcome to John Savage, chief of the Bombast Brotherhood. By a misapplication of terms we call an ex. enrsie'n of several thonS'ands a pic-hie, land so one-fourth of our residents “pic- :niced†at San Mateo Park, ï¬fteen miles away, and listened with greedy ears to the inflammatory appeals of needy demagogues; urging the servant girl to contribute one dollar per Week to aid in overthroï¬ving the British Empire. Our Board of Supervisors, cunning gentle; men, With political nepiratlons, attend- ed the gathering in state, biit they took care to have all the police. that Could be spared from town duty dithin hail? in'g' distanee. Fenian {relics always 'end in a. ï¬ght, and this one ‘was’ho ex- ception to the rule; Half the doctors were busy next day in plastering crack- ed crowns and setting bones, and the wane; hospital rests-ad iii addition as its imam of ten seriously wounded. A man in Maine has sold. his stock 5! fokcipedes, which cost $1,000, {of 825'. 7 will ï¬nd a place to br‘eak through. Ele- génc‘g 6f lafxgnuï¬e {jay not be in the pox§ei bf ill of is, but simplicity and straight-forwaidnesé ire; I have always found it so, and in all that I have written, I do not recall an instance ivhere I was tempted to use a foreign word, but that on searching, I found a better one in my own language *Call “a spade; not a hell-known, ohlong instrument of manual industry; let a home be a. home, not a residence; a place a place, not a locality; and so witli the rest. Where a short word will do; you lose by using a long one. You loan in clearness; you lose in hone’ét eiptea- sion of meaning, and it: the e'ntitnation of all then {750 are coinpetent to judge, V03 1036 in reputation for ability. m. William Cullen Bryant gave 't‘lie fo‘l- lo‘v’ving excellent advice to a young man who offered hit!) ‘31) ‘a'r't'icle ’for the Eve» ‘ {ï¬g Path-â€" . z ‘_ ' My fyo‘fmf; friénï¬, 1' absolve that yon have used several French expression: in your article. I think if you will study the English language, that you will ï¬nd it capable" of expressing all the ideaé you may’liavc. Hints to The scxenaders sneaked cxty, just about. that time, W 1y called for. ' “ ' 3"" H't' ‘ . “' ‘4’ ‘2‘ ‘ L001: '5. re, gs men, tamt no use to {be ?oolin’ away your time "round herd, ‘kaic dar ain’t nobody in dis house ’cept Bess, and dat‘s me. I ain’tno 7jection to your playin’ ‘J I'm-along Josey,’ 5H3," in de Holler,’ or anything da‘t’s faSInion~ abloand nice, ‘b'ut'de'm ’tali'a'n and othe’; foolish 't‘iz‘nes you’s performing ’i'onna liege ain’t no dcéount. Go away, white folks.†songs and airs breathing snbiix‘n‘htea sentiment) when a negro wcnch, with it mdnth like an ivory-keyed mclodeon’, raised the window and addressed 'ttiz‘é vocal and instrumental a'inateurs under? neath : i A “select number of love-strh'e'k‘ypunï¬ xge‘utlemen, supblied 'i’iith ‘the neceséiiry ,quantity of flutes, Iutes and guitars, took lit into their heads one . eyen‘ing to‘sete‘} nade a young lady, or rather an old house in Charies Street, N ew OrleanS, in which they believed a young lady to be, but in which there was no ’la‘dy} eit‘h‘er old or-young. They tuned their inetrume'uts, attuned their voices and performed away for some thirty or forty minutes, making night hideohs with songs and airs breathing subliih'ated sentiment) when a negro wench, with h ‘ Young man, said the N66? Yorker, I congratulate you ; there is not a city in the United States in which yen. ‘will Inset with so little competition in you? method of doing business. l u tut, Lf ‘Jt ~,.‘:- ltâ€" I . I have not exactly (leggdedfre‘pqqd Plhe young Puritan, but I expect to set- tle into some good business in which ‘1 can'get a liying‘bonestly. A living honestfy ? An honest living, repeated the Bo§~ tonian. made a preliminary visit with letitera of intfcduction to bushes"? men. These presented and the pisjj'a'l cognpliments passed, (me New York ï¬xer» pheps iqéuired of young Boston what. We inteï¬acd to 'dO. ! A young Boston man, wL starting In business in New made a preliminary visit 1’! wiih letters of introduction 1 men. These prescnted and Moonshine and Melody. [V0 , o 19. away for some thirty or forty making night hideox‘zs with Writers and Speaker}; An Honest Li‘érizig; [$130 per Anmiiï¬. L‘s me. I ain’t no 7jection [1’ ‘Jim along Josey,’ ‘C 0",!) U ’or anything dat’s faSIniom {but dem ’tali'a "a and other yous pexférmiu'g ’round :ed away ‘as ,‘i ‘ . a“; J ; W38 imperious- : W119 proposeh