m\ Li #* Traskâ€"laying on the Canada Pacific Railâ€" way is progressing at the rate of about threeâ€"fourths of a mile daily, It is expectâ€" sd Remnie Sgagion will be yeaghed by the first of June, "freeâ€"planting, so far as deciduous trees go, should be done with the same care as directed for fruit trees. Evergreens may be left until later, and they require even more care, for if the roots once become dry they caunot be rosussitated. Seeds should be sown in moist earth and care taken to prevent it from drying rapidly. This is done by keeping the pots in shady places, covering them over with shaded glass, paper, or some damp moss or grass, sill inati phere and daily dewings overhead, summer and winter. Some growers sayâ€"keep them in a saturated atmosphere but don‘t wet he leaves. Pruning before planting is of great imâ€" portance,. No maiter how carefully a tree may be taken up, alarge share of its fbrous roots are lost, and the jop shoxld hbe eut back in proportion, Window bozes will atiow the few plants meeded for the fazpily garden to be forwardâ€" She ZExpose to air whenev N!mbmifl. bg&tm‘uddock.; ed nearly 3s wall 35 in a hopâ€"had, Observe A young orchard may ‘be aulti¢séed with manured crops, such as potatoes and root erops, but when the trees.come into bearing, #hey need all the soil to themaciyes, y by rows, is pesasewent. Some use stampad Recouding the oxsherd should not be omitted. Labels 4009 hecomée ablicrated, and aro unreliable, bug 2 »»ep, or a record €eas. should go in carly, "Alpha" is a little later than the "Danl, O‘Rourke," unâ€" grape vine remains when the hand that plants it is cold; the roseâ€"bush blossoms when he who planted is in the yard is alone #u the quiet house of death, Fruit, shado and ornamental trees remain a monument to the name and virtues of the Aeparted.. Seedlings, when large enough, transplant to other frames, givicg, at least, an inch each way. Mulching «newlyâ€"planted trees is often highly important, whatever will prevent evaporation from the soil will answer. One intuitively ‘beginps fq think about planting strawberries. The garden withâ€" out strawberries is a breakfast without that the tree one plants survives him ; the eropping, without applying manure ; and put under the plough only what land you can fertilize liberaily, Why not beagtify your farmâ€"house by fruit troes and shrubbery? Remember Filpay ferms require a close, damp atmos The soil best suited for the tomato is 2 dark, warm sandy loam. Feed your land, if you expect it to feed you. Make all the manure that you ean, as this is the bank that pays your drafts and notes. The best‘farm that exists may be ruined in a fow years by a continued , without. mercy, and would recommend t:-o’h“ln* +I intend plasing a glass bottle over one affected twig on one tree coâ€"li‘g tight and watching the result, anzious to see the young broods. I sent specimens by the kindness of Wm. Roy, Esg., to the winter meeting of the Fruit A few weelts ago whiles cutting scion in a young pluth orchard of about 1,000 trees on mylmdsin&nnk.loh.nd.poeuliu appearance in the bark in streaks length ways on last years wood. I thought noâ€" thing of it at the time, but continued the wourk, I accordingly eut a scion in a slantâ€" ï¬d‘wnï¬-flrwghonooflhwpcnlin spots, and to my surprise I found in the pith a series of small cells or what appeared to the naked eye like small holes as though majle with a pin. I at once examined fully these defects in the bark, and the wood and pith with a glass and found that each cell contained an egg, some of them nearly hatched, and a few actually haiched into a smaall roomâ€"e@bout a thirty second of an safely housed in the centre of the trees, Jjust at the collar of the root, these fellows all went to the stove. They were of a variety not known in this section of Ontario and would if not discovered have been sufâ€" ficient to bave esused damage. Yours, &e. R. J. Dorus. Judsonville, March 16, 1878. was found was a new variety (The Ontario) imported. I think it is evident that the deâ€" predation is caused by an insect as they are so scattered in the orchard, and it is likely imported in the tree. This should teach us to be very careful in examining all imâ€" ported trees. A few weeks ago I imported several thousand plum stocks for grafting, and examining them earefully found some #living specimons of the plum borer men present had even seen anything of the kind before. I have examined several works on insects and worms injurious to Fruit Trees, and their mode of attack, and ean find nothing throwing any light on this litt‘o pest. Iam satisfied this insect worm or what ever it proves to be will be ‘ fearfully destructive unless it is sought out by every Fruit Grower and destroyedâ€" Burn! Burn!! Burn!!! I would say hat the tree on which the limb of 2 year old dead and affect@d wood found a single snub of a previous years growth effected which was dead, and have found aver 100 twigs of last years wood affected, henoe I conclude that the product of one single nest has affected some 100 limbs on 40 trees, Lam cutting and burning posited by an insect puncturing the wood or by & borer, I ecannot say, T have only New Plum Pest. To the Editor of the Advertiser. Srm,â€"May I ask you to kindly permit me space to draw the attention of Plum Growers to what appears at present a new pest, especially in this part of the country. mady A$PRos, id is the cartiest and none of the gentleâ€" pet." Sure enough, at this moment, the trump of Gabrmel sounded. The women minute ago, I‘ll give you 2 dollar, Will you do it, Gabriel ?" "Yes, massa, I takes datâ€"dollar." Gabriel, like Zaccheus, was hid away in the tree top in duw time. An immense soncourse of persons of all sizes and‘éolours assembled at the:@ppointed hour, and Dow preached on the judgmen} of theâ€"last day. By his powerâ€"of.descripâ€" tion he wrought the mltitude up to the opening of the scences of the resurrection and grand assize, at the call of the trumpet peals which were to wake the sleeping naâ€" climb up that tree and hideo yourself Among the branches before the people be» gin to gather, and wait there till 1 cal your rame, and ther bidw \such a bhst‘ with your horn as I heard you blow a Bome of the American preachers of the MA pest have delivbred sermons niore startling ; than edifying, and have condescended to singular tricks to agrest and take the atâ€" tention of the @udience. Lorenzo Dow, ‘ | one of these preachers, it is said, was on |his way to preach in South Carolina, unâ€" F der a large spruce tree, when he overtook | a colaured lad who was blowing a large gin horn, and gou‘ld send forth a blast with |rise, and swell, and codence, which waked the sehoes of the Aistant hills Calling aside the blogrer, Dow said to him, "What is your name, sir ?" "My nameâ€"Gabriel, sir," seid the brother in pbony. "Well, Gabriel, heve you been go Church Hill ?" **Yes, massa, I‘se been dar many a time," Do you remember a big spruce pine tree on that hill ?" "Oh, yes, massa, I knows dat pine." *Did you hear that Lorenzo Dow had an appointment to preach under | that gree toâ€"morrow ?" "Oh, 3 es, massa, | every hody knows dat," "Well, Gabriel, 1 | am Lorenzo Dow, and if you‘lltake your || horn and go toâ€"morrow morning, and|: streets, so that you, in trusting to them, are more bewildered than ever, ‘The Rusâ€" sians, one would think, must feel themâ€" selves sadly at sea in sueh a town, for in St.Petersburg nearly every street is straight, and some of the great streets run so far without the slightest curve (three miles at the least), that ane literally cannot see to the end of them,.â€"Macmillan‘s Magaâ€" sine, e | about. At night they aro a serious difficulty, y | tor the streets are not lighted, and you not h | only stumble over them, but are sometimes, â€" | when you fall into one of the holes in the d |roadway, tumbled head foremost into & , | nest of them, whereupon a terrible snapâ€" e | ping and barking ensue. However, â€"they r|don‘t molest you unless you first attrck , | them ; and as canine madnoss is unknown, s | or nearly so among them, nobody need & |fear hydrophobis. I have talked about | streets from foree of habit, but the truth is â€"| that there are but very few streets, in our . sense of the word, in any quarter of the city. It is a congeries of housesâ€"some of them built, in proper Eastern style, round courtyards, some with doors and windows looking towards the public way, but very few arranged in regular lines. It has the air of having been built all anyhow, the house stuck down as it might happen, and $he people afterwards left to find their way through them. Even the soâ€"called "Grande Rue" of Pers, which has some very handâ€" some r‘rench sbops, is in some places as steep as the side of Lochnagar, and in others as rmarrow as an Edinburgh wynd. | It is a eapitai place to loose yourself in, for ‘ you never ean sce more than a few yards ] ahead, and the lamdmarks you resolve to | find your way back byâ€"a ruined house, | for instance, or a plain tree standing in the ; middle of the roadâ€"turn out to be as comâ€" | : : | matter, for a stranger is asked thrice the ‘ | value of the goods, and unless he is conâ€" ‘ | tent to be cheated both by the dealer and | hisfown cicerone interpreter (who, of course, 7 ndmnmmminiuhont!b'un- ‘|der), he must spend hours and hours in |bargaining. Business is slack on Friday | (the Mussulman Sabbath) and on Saturday ‘ | (since many of the dealers are Jews), as | well as on Sunday. It is conducted under | another difficulty, which drives the visitor | wildâ€"that of a@multiplicity of "cireilating | mediums." ; There is a Turkish motallie |currency, greatly depreciated, besides all |sorts of coins of other nations constantly | turning up, among which the Indian rupee is one of the commonest; and you have to make a separate bargain as to the valuo at which the coins you happen to have in your pocket will be taken. Hotel lodging, and indeed almost everything, is very dear ; for Western books you pay half as much again as in London or Paris. There is little sign of a police in the streets, and nothing doné either to pave or clean them. Few are passable for carriages, and the Turks leave everything to time and chance. The only scavengers are the vyultures, which may sometimes be seen hoyering about in the clear sky, and the dogs, of which there are a vast multitude in the city. Though you must have often heard of these dogs, the tradition which obliges every one who talks about Constantinople to moention them is too well established to be disregarded. Noâ€" body owns them or feeds them, though Sach dog mostly inhabits the same quarter of the stroet; and, in fact, is chased away | or slain if he venture into the territory of | his neighbor. They aroe illâ€"favoured brutes, | mostly of :a brown or yellowish hue, and | are very much in the way as one walks | Fhere are no shops in the streets of Stamboul proper, for nearly everything, exâ€" cept food, is sold in the bazaar, which is an enormous square building, consisting of a labyrinth of Jong covered arcades, in which the dealers sit in their ‘stalls ~withâ€"their wares piled up round them. It is all locked up at sunset. You may buy most things in it, but the visitor is chiefly attracted by the rugs and carpets from Persia, Anatolia, and Kurdistan, the silks of Broussa, and the stores:of old armour (real and false) from everywhere. Purchasing is no easy mang e i03 3 0 s NCP Marsvilleâ€"Second Wednésday ‘in each many fainted ; the mon month, a Congregation. Fergunâ€"’l'hlir;hly fgmâ€"io;t_ Forest. Rosemontâ€"Fifteenth of February, April, Guelph. â€"â€" .. &‘ cio it . nc | 72. w lfie o chion n uwl Guelphâ€"First Wednesday in each month. Harristonâ€"Friday before the Guelph Fair. Draytonâ€"Saturday before Guolph. Eloraâ€"The day before Guelph. Douglasâ€"Monday before Elora Fair. H.m.iltonTCyl"_nul_ Palace Grounds, the Durhamâ€"Third Tuosday in éach month. Mount Forstâ€"Third Wedneeday in ea« month, Hanoverâ€"Monday before Durham. Dundalkâ€"Tuesday before Orangeville. _ "| _ The first number of the Grey RevIEw, published ; | in the interest of Reform, has been placed upon ; | our table. The venture is made by Mr. Joseph Townsend, formerly of the Dundalk GurpE, and it | ear gest application and living like his great predeâ€" {@eessorâ€"Benjamin Franklinâ€"on sawdust pudding, | will secure success, then the paper will be one of the institutions of Durham. The RevieEwiscreditâ€" gbly gotten up, and full of theâ€"latest news. We wish its publisher abundant success.â€""Elora Lightning Express,* We have received the first number of the Grey ReviEw, a neatly gotten up shect which is pubâ€" lished in the town of Durham, by Mr.Joseph Townâ€" send, lato of Dypdalk. Judging from the numerâ€" ous advertisesments which appear in the first pe per, we should think that the ReviEw will be well supported, AJthough differing in politics from the new paper|we wish it every success, and trust that , riend Townsend may reason}to regret never have | his trip from Dundalk to Durham,â€""Shelbure Free fairly be considered a Reform Riding. We hope our contemporary may succeed in getting n good circulation in 8. Grey, ‘There is plenty room for & good Reform paper in that riding.â€""Walkerton â€" Te Garey Revorw.â€"We have received the first nun: ber of this paper, published at Durham, by Mr Josepi: Townsend, formerly of the Dundalk Guwe, The papr presents a neat appearance, and we are sure that it will be well supported by the people of Grey, | The REvIEW gives no uncertain sound as to politics. It will be a staunch advocate of Reform: principles. We wish it groat success.â€""Orangeâ€" ville Advertiser." Brice Taey Cosn:.â€"We have just received No. 1, Yol. 1, of the Gazey BEvIEW, a paper to be pub lished by J. Townsend, at the town of Durbam. The Review is to advocate Reform principles, and sphere of action.â€""O. 8. Advertiser," We see by a late issue of the Dundalk Guipe, that the proprietor will, after his next issue, roâ€" move the plant to Durfiant, where he intends to publish his paper in future. If he continues to conduct his paper in the same able manner that he has in the past, he will no doubt receive a liberal. patronage. ‘We wish him success in his uu\upâ€"‘ ‘Du fferin Standard." journal.â€""Daily Globe." The thind number of the Grry Revicw, pubâ€" lished in Durham, county of Grey, by Mr. J. Townâ€" send, has reached us. It is the Dundalk Gumpz in a new and much itmproved form. Mr. Townsond knows how to get up a neat and readable p=per, as the Review abundantly testifies. Its politics are stzunch Reform.â€""Dumfrics Reformer." s We have the first number of the Gnat Revew, & weekly paper just issued in the town of Durham, by Mr.J. Townsend, lnte of the Dundalk "Guide."" The Review is to be published in the intercsts of Reform, and promises to be a live and well conâ€" ducted paper. We wish Bro. Townsend much sueâ€" cess in his enterprise.â€""Mt. Forest: Confederate." The Dundalk Guip has changed its name and its place of residemce. It is henceforth to be called the GrEY REvIEW, and is to be published at Durâ€" ham. We hope this new move will be a move in the right direction, and that friend Townsend will meet with the success he deserves in his now MONTHLY CATTLE FAIRS. Tms Gnzy reviEw.â€"This is the title of a new paper published in the town of Durham, by Mr J. Townsend. It is neatly printed, Reform in poli tics, but its articles are rich and racy. We wish it success financially.â€""Grand River Sachem." Tax Grzy RETIEw is the title of a now weekly journal recently started in Durham, in the county of Grey. The Review is Reform in politics, and dmingthocommgmonmthumwflleuoy the benefit of its advocacy in a part of the county hitherto ansupplied with the luxury of a Reform ‘ The London Conference of the Methodâ€" ist Church ot Canada will meet this year in St. Thomas, on the first Wodnesday in June. About two hundred and cighty ministers are expected to be present. so to speak, which divided the two lanâ€" guages, be converted into "bawbee." she was represented as a child, nine ’monfln old, fat faced, holding the crown of Scotland in her hand, and dressed after the inshion of the times with largo frills about her neck and wrists. Whether the eoin had originally any definite name is perhaps impossible to tell ; but the repreâ€" sentation of their infant queen most naturâ€" ally conveyed to Scotchmen the idea of & baby ; ana it is easy to perceive how tbu‘ English word would, in passing the Border, newâ€"made coin was that of the infant Queen as she appeared at the coronation. In Stirling, a beautiful town on the banks of the River Forth, and long a plaee of residence of the illâ€"fated line of Stuart,; stands the ruins of which originally constiâ€" tuted theâ€"Scottish Mint.â€"â€"Here, from naâ€" tive .mptal, was coined the "bawbee" of which we are now speaking. ‘The coin was instituted during the regency of Mary of Guise, while the future beautiful but unfortunate Mary Queen of Scots was a bo says a writer in an old periodical. Here is an account of the origin of the word "bawbee":â€" called a "bawbeo" in Scotland ?" Very tew Scotchmen, as wise as they are, know the reason, and very few Englishmen care to know. It was on this wiso. "Bawbee" is a corruption of the English word "baby." Db Cmm t Eo OR the value of a ponnj. @ Tl;; :om. when imâ€" ported into England, received the name of "halfpenny." But why . is s halfpénay im 30 uis . ol 4 } 1 and‘ then and then resumed his theme, ilyi;:g, »[ forbid all persons present from touching Brtabtabis Astvictsicns .253 ... 4 fright abated, and some one discovered the coloured angel who had caused the alarm, nmedsalkl _A % SeRus S quietly perched on a limb of the old spruce, and wanted to get him‘down to ‘Wwhip Kim, C PE ltb t .2223 and watched the drifting storm, till the @roaaca .0. a The Scotch Bawbee. Friendly Notices. only Refornt m",“':h what may ub.'mn â€" bawhee" . was originally .a purely. eoin, its value_being .o'u&y balf Thursday in each +a@ + 4@ + ho tdï¬ cepcteniecadt inleuhmonm. MOST APPROVED KINDS. NEW PRESSES, TYPE Can depend upon being satisfied by leaving And with the Greatest Promptitude Having lately raade an addition to our Possosses great Facilities for doing Is now fitted up in the vory best style, and or Best Style of the Job Department, in whe Townships ef Glenelg, Bontinck, Normandy, Egremont, Proton, Artemesia, Osprey, Melanethon and other Townâ€" ships makes it one of the The Large and rapidly imeroasing Cirouâ€" «Grey Review," Good Family Newspaper The office is furnished with READING and contains a vast amount of interesting Best Mediums for Advertisers, i‘"Rrey |Review" 1 28 COLUMN PAPER OF THE LATEST E=" POSTAGE Price $1.50 per Annum, "GREYIREVIEW* ~LOOAL ADD FOREIGN NEWS, W ORIK. If not paid in advance. should subseribe for the In the County of Grey. done in the very AE who want a lation of the Work PROPRIETOR: AND EDITORILALS. & Simple Interest principle, the borrower having the right 4 m ight t by giviamp::'t'o months‘ :aoc.i:l:g Bn:'l'i‘nu- Loans Advanced on Town or: Â¥=4"Good Mortgages and Municipal Debent Boug aitended to. Always t: be loumie in“u'.'.momm. « Farmers and others who want to borrow money can have it Simnle Intarast «..t_ _1 3. "_3 0 "_ "CrrOw mo 2 All kinds of Agent for the Superior Broadcast Seeder and Drill. Also the best Sulky rake in the Domunion, Particular attention paid to Eavestroughing. The subscriber begs to inform the public that he has a NW A DWA C noa mss Dundalk Insurance, Loamgé STOVES AND TINWARE ! Dundalk, August 30th, 1877, Flour, Oatmeal and Cropped Stuff. Bill Stuff cut to order at short notice. Durham, Feb. 26th, 1878. XLumber, IIEADP Groceries, N., G. & J. McKECHNIE, HATS and CAPS; a few more of those splendid BUFFALO ROBES, a prices which cannot be undersold. mds of property Insured in Good Companies at low Rates. Farm Property against ‘in and Lighning for 3 years at 75 cents on the $100, (LIFE AND AcCIDENT INSURANCE.) Man and also his Horse Insured against accidents and death from any cause. GENERAL AGENCY. A U : Has just received a large Stock Stone China Tea Sets, Toilet Sets,&c, Chopping and Gristing attended to at shortest notice. Durham, February 14, 1878. Durham, Feb, 14, 1878. ARCHIVES CLOTHING | , AXES, AXES, Another Stock, best make; for Sheepskins and Hides. Staple and Fancy Dry Goods, .. G. & J. McKECHNIE, Special Discount for One Month. Call and See for yourselves, Durham, Feb, 14, 1878, P FOR CASH OR TRADE Cook, Parlor and Box Stoves. Selling Goods Cheap For Cash. NEWEST STYLES, AND LOWEST PRICES. FURS AT COST. M ONX Ey . * uZ Jown or Village Property. pal Debentu ht. ‘Cof icati ly Toued in the oeenth Mondays and Tnosdays."""" e public that he has a la \\{.AR E, which will be lolraf. Manufacturers and Dealers in Boots and Shoes, Winceys, Lustres, &o., &o.: A sood Black MANUFACTURERS OF Lower Town, DURHAM. shingles. . DAVIDSON, Lustre for 12} cents. DEALERS IN J. McKECHNIE, All kinds of Seasoned Lumber on hand. the Gailoway Sulky] Rakeâ€"the Stock of{STOVES and TIN Value. Ksrm l'mpu-e, m NP Insured and Tath. LH . A. HARRIS, yâ€"3 Ny A Gnuu. ss A ]'\‘ selling â€I“‘ \a l Miracumrous Prx. _ Writes with cold D, water, _ No mk required, _ Lasts one year. A undalk, cl’:t:c';‘ll‘"fll Rample 10 ceuts â€"three for '.'i- , cents. Catalaguetree, Address, MONTREAL 331 NoOÂ¥ELTY ©o, Mentrcel, Que, 32 kept constantly and yl NPAAA yl lows. . Acturted by this motive and a «on scientious desire to relieve human suffering he will send PREE OPCHARGE, to all who d sire it, this recipe, with full directions for preparing and suceessfally using. . Sent by return mail by addressing with stamp, naminZg this paper, Dr. C, STEVEXN®, W.8&.®. _ 235y _ Box 80, Bnocxviuur, OST. Wls dihih M m m Ax oun PHystCra®, retired from active prace tice, having had placed in his hands by an Eas India Missionary the formula of a V egetable Remedy for the speedy and permanent oure of \Consumption, Asthma, Bronchiiis, Caint and all Throat and Lung Affectioys; al®® a Positive and Radical Cure for Nervous Debility and all Nervous Complaints, after having thoroughly tosted its wonderfal curs tive powers in thousands of cases, focls it hit .dl_‘y ‘U. lflh‘ it known to his sutfering fel euclys‘IYSELF CONSUMPTION CURED. DC COO S OA€09 one can become a sucerssiul agent. . The most elegant works of art given #ree to subscribers. _ The price is so low that almost everybody subscribes, . One agent reâ€" ports making over&] 50 in a week, Alad; agent Nrflfla taking over 400 subscriber in ten days All who engage make money fast, You en devote all your time to the |usiness, or only mr spare time. You need not be aw ay from e over night. . You can do it as well m others. Full particulars, directions and term free, Elegant and expensive Outft free, If you want profitable wml send us your address at once. It costs nothing to try the business, Ne one who enï¬nga- fails to make great pay, Ad dress ‘The eople‘sJournal, "Portland , Maine for it at once. Addr PEABODY _ NMEDIO, 1NSTITUTT, Xo. 4 D Buch St., Doston, Mass, l " ' stlrl‘ï¬u-only $1. Scnt by mn‘d on receipt of price. 1t groats of Exhausted Vitalit®; Promatur: Droljnc, crvous and Physicel Debility, und she e: dlâ€"-- concomitant ills cnd untold miscrios that result therefrom, and contains more than 5) orizinal preâ€" .‘a“?o:_" %-me ®f which is worth the price of the book. â€" This book was writton by the mostex« fontive and probably the most #};i}ful practitioner in vica, to whom was -wanimll a ul. d and jew» y “P..I I“. l by the National Medical Association. A....n mphlilet, illustrated with the vory finest book ever is CELPâ€"PREs T"YsElFl’ï¬n-nnl) $1 on receipt . treats of Exhausted Vitality, Prom: Nervous and Phydest Trkil. /. warious medicinos wishass .__1__CTCC Coctors, and but continued nfh:"?aw‘ ..â€:mr-.:z!n h-hu‘ h‘w“.’o h‘l-\o: n-.l:ru;.“u*&.\:\-â€˜ï¬ t severe w mum-mu:mm..m-,h- back, hflh ny::; ms though there was a Enghsnine qh ies Laniocrel “â€"d.’:un ’au(hhn‘:‘â€"’d,‘â€"- bottle of whidh ased mny baine amd suul 2 C LCCIT7 OBE I to take subscriptions for the 1: est and best HMlustrated fumily the world. Any one ean becom agent. . The most elegant work #ree to subscribers. _ The price almost everybody subscribes, â€" Pfll‘!lluk_ing over£1]50 in a week bÂ¥, Iwish to inform «is w1 20000ITOTO0AL Caranan e #»%, Iwish to inform you what is bas done for me. ]am mnul( had been out 7( herlt. for about nn‘T at onee, H, Hauuerr & ( 0.4 fecamntagiealinants s Pi.. > 2. .: not be away from howe over night. _ You en give your whole time to the work oronly your spare moments, . We have agents who ar making over 820 per day. â€" Al. who engage at once can make money fat. At the present time money can not be made xo c‘na“) at any other business, Jt cosis nothing to try the mu Terms and 85 Outht free. Address We ue PPR S T 18 not casily exred in thes times but it can bemade in three months by @DY one of erther s x in any part of the country who is willing to work steadily at the employment that we furnis Cnvuw s a speciality and consequent}y for his customers thin tho merchandise. C meme to suit every machine, and ANY Article these lines not in stock, will ‘be “~m specially on applieation, Teas, Tobaceos, and pipes, in large “.f::\' f Biscuits and Confectiom,. DRUGS, PATEXT MEm(‘l.\’I-:S. Pamyp and OILS, MACHINE 01 LS, Bltl'b'm of All Kinds, Books and Stationery, FANCY TOY$S and TOILET ARTIC LBs Lots 82, 80, and 34, in 3rd Con, & p Osprey, 80 neres each ; also Lot 17 ;u R, Gon. Proton. . Terms easy,"" 3| N nroman .. . "*7 h Constantly on hand at -tln: Post OPPL DUNDALK. | Price only $2 .09 J. 3. Mumu.‘m,\-‘ *78 18sue June 21, 1877. #@"Business done strictly private Residence and address JOS. McARDLp Commissioner in the Quec;,‘s Conveyancer, Farm and Village Lots For Tur Owpest Piee Issoranes Loaxs Ausxcy in the Toy ;:““"l The best Companies in the KNOW 'l'he_ I_'_mpric;or is Marriage Certificates and Bewing Machine Neede For Sale Cheap, to To Bolster; Flesherton, coâ€" HEAL im your own town MOPEVILLE, 0. By reading and practicing ï¬{ lnu(lna;k vrmh- con tained in the best mediexl ELFâ€"PRESERV A NOX f(l‘ your HECTOR MeTXXpe" Dundalk P,p Great chance to make money, _ We meed 4 person in every town ur the largest, cheap. O Be k 12 2 ever issued, entitled mnkifg uâ€l. ily publicati ntiv can dob.; those in geneng land, Maine, * rovi we furnish You neel and Moy,, O Grey OPPIQp YA Z2 Durt Changos â€" mile 80 oc Cld ext m to @4 I hay rle seo! Just cal ()"! reamo end « vears Intest t s ever Â¥iesherton. | Mlos Aag â€"Open overy ALFKED FhOST IÂ¥!: uk. Firat cluss Morignges Beautiful Am} Only Ton ‘mp' fort of th Orders lof MOTT Nothing LIKE ) $ fmad A larg 11 TAILOR AND Office and r Owen 8 ) { yrerednda Repairing done noss and des Residen ceâ€"Oj PJ Always FAll by wrilton inserted us wlar rates Do. w Casaal ads Line ior the t for each subs Ordinary mot deaths, and all Bpring 13 Protessional and busin« .p.onaunl uuder, p T'. imches or 24 |Iln'u' | Three inches do. per y s:..‘r.r column, per y column, * One columu. «* &sTRAY AMMAIT weeks for 81, the : meed b lines. _ Advertisements, e TERMS:â€"#1.00 |mri #a. $1.25 if not paid wit At the OLee, Garafraxa Durham, ISs% "<€ »I*%" ® l‘ "THE R Rockville BUSINESS DT *PII NIRE AXND 1 Do Yonu Warn t MacRAF., REAL E/ Duham prr FROBST & « ARRISTERS and Cutting done BOOTs AND JOHN ROEB 3. W. ARRISTEI PPORNXEY Do ARRI NTIST MISCELLA. pURHAM RATES OF AD and Summer Bont Fi W MEDIC ut in Ful ternal T1 M M Is 16 k , M receive site the 14, 1878 At NJY Sr yI nth it thil DM