ZP «â€"] A) 9 0 af An Klequent Tribate to Her @reat Wortk. ‘The last paragraps of the concluding volâ€" a upse of "Royal Windsor," which Mr. Hipâ€" h worth Dizon had just completed before his | * death, are as follows , . "The ¢entral figure|" in this family group is veiled. The veil is & mnot without s silver linimg, but the veil is here ; a habit of the miud as well as of the physical frame. No great emotion should be seen to negr. To read the story of such mloss we need some help from time and space. When Queen Victoria has become |* to the descendants of her people what| Queen Elizabeth is to us ; when all the | , trifies of our time are gone and only theweâ€"|â€" alities left, the story of her love, her hapâ€" a piness, her lossy will be & favorite theme of * posts, artists and storyâ€"tellers. Faith that | , knows no limit, constancy that clings like 1 life, are not of every age. What will the|, writers of a coming day, who take this| theme for tale and idyll, have to tell ? | They will draw the picture of a young and fatherless girl, called, while in her teons, to cccupy the greatest throne on earth ; who had to take her place at the head of a great socicty, with little or no support from her immediate kin. They will paint her grandeur and her loneliness in & station which allows no sharer and admits no frien1.They will show the Saxon prines who came te her and made himself a part otf her; then, in line on line, (the story of their lives will be unrolled ; years of domestic bliss,.broken at length by & sudden snap in the very noontide of their married joy. Then may come t*;e patheâ€" tic sequel of a sorrow which no .change, which draws away from the haunts of men, which lays down much of the pomp of Royal state, and gives up all the vanities of the worldâ€"not in old age, when blood is said to be cold, butin the flush of life, when all the tides of emotion were runzing highâ€"to nurse in solitude & deep and tonâ€", der sentiment of personal faith. Millions will dwell with fondness on this story of here ; a habit of t! physical trame. : be seen to near. m loss we need so space, When Q: to the descendan Queen Elizabeth ;iï¬nn heart, in which the woman 18 raised to a bigher throne than that of "The Man of the Caverns" was the subâ€" jeet of last night‘s London Institation lecâ€" ture, which was delhvered in the theatre by Prof Boyd Hawking, F. R. S., who fills the Chair of Geology in Owen‘s College, Manâ€" Inkhabitants of Britain 20,â€" 000 years Ago. es O P 149C chester. He said that the riverâ€"drift mon | g and the cave men were living in Britain, the hills and valleys in the south of Engâ€"| ; land presented the same outlines, as they | did now.. Could we take our stand in |, these times on Shootor‘s Hill or on the |: Essexr Heights, and look over the Thames § valley in the direction of London, we should | ; see a donse forest of oak, ash and Scotch | fir, and the course of the Thames marked by rows of willows and alders. A few thin columns of smoke rising over the tops of the trees would mark the camping places of the primeval man. In the forest ~wild boars, mammoths and rhinoceroses, wild horses, stags and Irish elks would meet our eyes, and in the summer time countâ€" less herds of bisons, like those now ranging over the plains ef Northwestorn America. In the winter were vast numbers of reinâ€" deer and a few muskshcep, the most Arctie / ot the mammalia in its kabits. In the riv‘ ers were otters and beavers, and the e%â€" plorer would be startled by the snort of the hippopotamus in the reaches of the Thames near Brontford. Beasts of prey also aboundedâ€"lions, leopards, grizzly bears, and fores. If we penetrated to one of the camp fires we should have seen the riverâ€"drift bunter chipping or using some of those rude fiint implements which lie buried in the London gravels along with the animals which he hunted. â€" The viver.drift man, in the long, course of ages, C 2.3 hv the man of the caverns. the Neolithisc Ago down to the present time the progress of man has been unbrokâ€" en in Britain and in Earope, and the presâ€" _ent condition of the European people _ was to be looked npon as the result of a gradual series of changes by which civilization caaacdad civilization, and race succeeded some® Of MERER M C 1 lie buried in the London gravels along with the animals which he hunted. The viver.drift man, in the long course of ages, was succeeded by the man of the caverns. like him a bunter, living on the same aniâ€" mals, and more highly equipped for the battle of life. In the course of time the ""*"" " Loanneared, the climate and e EC cal C geography of this country became almost what it is now, the hunter stage of civiliâ€" zation was superseded by that of the herdsâ€" men and the tiller of the ground and the nanufacturer of the Neolithic Age. From o_ _ ar..lihia Ace down to the present succeeded civilization, race. -{E."oxh order yielding place unto the new," because the now order was highâ€" er and nobler.â€"London Times. 21,000,000. Califormia, WItN 1099 M * ©00,000 ot people. im very little smalier than France with $6,000,000. .Nevada is very little smaller, and Oregon is larger than New York and Pennsylyania comâ€" bined ; so either of these new States could easily hold two older States‘ combined popâ€" eCP oo O Oe s omm is o . Eind epnfacts has only 1,000,000 of people to WeR CCCR ulation of 8,500,000. We do ds m nssy Nee k | ~*1_1 _ L. dtth.cottiiet ind wmth ovï¬zwded with 1,500,000, mor Ohio wito less than 8,000,000, nor New York with 4©500,000, Aund yet if Texas were settiod as thickly as New York, its 1, ©00,000 of people would grow to 22,000,000; if like Obio, it would have 21,000,000 ; if like Massachusetis, it would hold 52,000,â€" 000, or more than the whole present popuâ€" lation of the Union. There are only fifteen TCO us 46 _L_KEK* whish have hos .« J o ~oApineanpnnnnnt m lation of the Union. There are only fifteen States Tovit of the thirty:eight which bave each more than 1,000,000 i7 geople, «hilk there are fourtean States whith have each a larger area than Eugland with her t C D ue S c1223 shas States Pdpnh{ioh Statistics. Alabatna t0as Nrgo as Pugland, and ye T 20. +4 mmmpeiny Queen Victorig. rge as Eugland, and yet of people to England‘s rnia, with less than 1, . in very little smalier take our stand in x‘s Hill or on the k over the Thames f London, we should ak, ash and Scotch 1e Thames marked alders. A few thin ng over the tops of the camping places In the forest wild not think almost eountry‘s present population. « ISthe whole serritory of the Union were setfled like New York, it would c,nhm ;0â€.000, if like Massachusetts, 560,000,000, and if it reached England‘s ratio of inbabitants to the square mile, its population would alâ€" most equal the present population of the * Tainted. ‘Winter and spring butter is often very * pouch injured in fiavor by allowing cows to | * eat the litter frora horse stables. Cows are not unfrequently very fond of this litter, though it is impregnated with liquid manâ€" "are from the horses, and if allowed, they | eat it greedily ; and the effect is that their | milk @nd butter: will be tainted with ‘the r‘uu of this kind of food, in the same way that the flavor is injured by eating turnips, but to a more disagreoable degree. If litâ€" ter is allowed to be eaten, it should be givâ€" ed to cattle not in milk, and on no aceount should milch cows be allowed to consume other than the sweetest and purest food. Very nice butterâ€"makers are sometimes at a loss to account for stable taints in butter, especially when extraordinaty precautions have been.taken to bave the milkingedone in the most perfect manner, and so on in all the processes of handling the milk until the butter is packed for market. . Still the | the butter has a disagrecable taint, and the | cause often comes from allowing the cows, | when turned out to’water and exercise, to |feed" aboutithe "hotse stable, ; where they consume all the litter which, on aceount of \lits being soaked with liquid manure, is ‘| cast out of the stable.â€"Rural New Yorker. The Oxford graduate was showing his sister over his rooms in college, when some one knocked at the door. Supposing that it was oneâ€"ofwhis friends, and not wishing to be chaffed, he hid ‘her behind the curâ€" tains, and admitted an elderly gontleman who apologized profusely for his intrusion, and excused himself by saying that it was manyyears since he had been at Oxford, and cou!d not leave ~without paying & visit to his dear old college and the old rooms he had occupied as a student. How Butter is Sometimés "ah I" cried the old gentleman looking around, ‘the same old sofa ! yes, and the same old carpetâ€"everything the same Y Then, walking into the bedroom, he reâ€" marked : Yes! and the same old bed ! and the same washstand ! Yes, everything the same !" Presently he stepped toward the curtains, and remarked, "Abh ! and the same old curtains !" Looking around he beheld the young lady, and turning round, said : "Ab, you young dog, and the same old game I" "But," hastily replied the undergraduâ€" ate, "that young lady is my sister." To which the reply came, "*Yes I know, and the same old story !" CrEay ror Puporsa.â€"One egg, one cup sugar, one pint milk, one cup flour ; boil until thick ; favor the puddingâ€"and cream with lemon. Grxasr CrackEers.â€"One cup of sugar, one cup of butter, one teaspoonful of soda, one teaspoonful of ginger, half a teupoon-‘ tul of cloves. Take flour enough to stifâ€" fen ; boil all the ingredients excepting the flour ; while Loiling hot, pour over the flour, stirring it all the 'time. Rol! out thin i aund bake in a quick oven. IuTErestine Estniare.â€"The estimated numbers of religious denominations among the English speaking communities throughâ€" out the world according to the New York Sun are : Episcopalians, 18,000,000 ; Methâ€" odiste, 16,000,000 ; Roman, Catholics, #18,â€" 500,000 ; Presbyterians, 10,250,000; Bapâ€" tists, 8,000,000 ; Congregationalists, 6,000,â€" 000 ; Uniterians, 1,000,000; m‘nor religions sects, 1,500,000; no particular religion, 8,500,000. Total, 83,000,000. the plough ?" said a farmew»~to a green Trishman, whom he had taken on trial, "Arrab," said Pat, "how could I hold it wid two horses drawing it away from me ? But give it me in the barn, and T‘ll hold it wid anybody !" A ProrreEssor was explaining in a young ladies school in Frante the theory accordâ€" ing to which the body is entirely renewed. every seven years. "Thus, Mademoisell F.," said ho addressing a pretty blonde with a The Same Old Story.‘ wideâ€"awake face, ‘"in seven years you will no longer be MadeiBoiselle F." *T hope so," repled the unsophisticated, casting down her eyes. Am Oil City Irishman having signed the pledge, was charged soon afterwards with having drank. "Twas me absentâ€"mindedâ€" mness," said Pat and a habit I have of talkin‘ wid meself. I sed to meself, sez I ‘Pat coom in and have a dhrink.‘ No zar,‘ sez I, I‘ve sworn off.‘ "Thin T‘ll drink «lone,‘ ltl to meself.‘ ‘An‘ I‘ll wait for ye outside,‘ Bez I.~ An‘ when meself cum out, fuith an‘ he was drunk." Hagyard‘s Pectoral Balsam has a tonic affect on the stomach gnd' the digestive orâ€" | gans, without any injurious »affect. on the Reeerty CORILT Cl ce andie . 68L system. _ It allays irritation ef the bronchial tubes and stomach, removing the phlegm from the air cells to the lungs ; at the samd time healing the inflamed or irritated parts. We hate never known it tg'fn"l in Eiving satâ€" WeE 4 4 2 4d ahcanint 4 o n t i isfac.t?on. whnen used according to directions, for Cotighs, Colds, Hoarseness or an other affection of the throat or lungs u.«{m g to Consumption. _ For sale by all dealers at 25 cents per bottle. â€"b 104 A writer in the Scientific American tells how he cleans his premises of rats. He TE C F tread we put the erystal of the copperas and scatter the same in the corners of the floor. . The.result was a perfect stampede of rats and mice. Since that time ‘not a o â€"ufall of either wats or mice has bean ‘Driox‘r you tell me, sir, you could hold 11000109610 ut indfioedadicttahe‘s Aininnn tss oi on in oC DPRTITC he cleans his premises of: rats. He lmw&aflmm wt 7:30 C + "In every cfevice where a rat miqhtl%';. Hagis, N.G. W.B. \‘r’:xf-{f Bec. dz T. A Hapis, M U« "°" _ ish is given the cellar, as a L well as a rat ‘exterminator, and 10 cent Plctu_res UUBLQI Dlm‘ L AZUISRIA , dysentery or fever attacks the While you have a chance. AND. â€" â€" * KELSEY Also MAKES PHOTOGRAPRS " mu,r ;' GLES, l W es se LAM : bacth | 42. at.s hast stela for low prices. â€" All Photographs Hone at oncs, and shesp, to suit the times. wy Manufacturers of and Dealers in | LUMBER, LATH, _ _ LUMb.flin, dinddedis dis diedis 9 C SHINGLES, â€" FLOUR, Bill Stuff Cut to Order, All Sizes. Gristing Dry Goods, Millinery, ORGANS The Largest and Most Complete We are now manufacturing Square and Upright PIANOS. Correspondence Solicited. Sabbath services at 11 a. School at 2 p. m. Rov. H. Chureb Wardens, H. J. M ie »~ n se 0200 PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. Divine Service every Sabbath at 11 a. m. and 6:30 p.m. Sabbath Bchool at 2:30 ? m. Prayer meoting every Wednesday evening at :30. Bible Cluss every Thursday evening at 7:30. Rov. Wim. Park, pastor. Services overr Sabbath at 10:30 a. m. and 6:30 p.m. Sabbath School at 2:30 p. m. Prayer mooting every Thursday evening at 7 o‘clock, and Bible Class every Monday evening at8 o‘cleck. Pustor Rov. se CE BAPTIST CHURCH. Bunday Servicesâ€"preaching at 11 a. m.; Sabbath School at 230 p.;o.: Preaching ut 7 p. m. Woek evening Servicesâ€"Monday ovon‘uz.‘ young peoples‘ mï¬ muï¬h’ at $ p. m. ; Wedngsday evening, A class at g m. Thursday evening, rogula~ prayer meeting at 8p.m. € un smaramregemepeney . 8. G. REGISTRY OFFICE Thomas Lauder, Registrar; John A putyâ€"Registrar. Office hours from 10 & Night of meeting, Tuesd® ho . 2 mJ W. Mo is i rrtnt A Cnzaony Boo. _ _" Go to KELSEY‘3 Gallery -!03»-' 10 cent Pictures PO8T OFFICE. Office hours from 8 &. m.to 7 p. m Feb. 12th, 1880, es mt 000000000 DURHAM LODGE No. 306 OF A. F. & A 9 L2 ud y c au est Honors ever awarded tq any Maker in the World. " e emmcmmrnymgyzng m eniey STEPHEN LODGE No. 169 L 0.0.F. lhalstrentiy Pobt se x G. & J. McKECHNIE MEDAL AND DIPLOMA, CENTENNIAL, .. .. . 1876. do do SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, ... 1877. GoLD MEDAL at PROVINCIAL EXHIBITION TORONTO, 1878. HIGHEST Award at INDUSTRIAL EXHIBITION, Toronto, 1879, Factory in the Dominion, â€"â€"â€"â€" 140 x 100 â€"â€" MECHANICS‘ _I_I\' STIPUTE PURHAM L. 0. L. No. 632 TRINITY CHURCH. ETHODIST CHURCH. Sawing attended to during Winter or Reg'l;t?n:r 'Gohn A. Munro, Deâ€" Ohoe hours from 10 @. m. to 4 ptu. Dominion Organ Company, Rov. H. B. Wray, B. A., pastor H. J. Middaugh and Elias Edgo. DIRECTORY m. and 7 p.m. Sunday DOMINION Mailed Free. Addressâ€" on or before full moon Best in the Market. on or before full | wiin the Circular Gaw agaipst all kinds of Saw «t 7:30 o‘clock, in Send for Illustrated Catalogueâ€" Zs.| NO ARMISTICE Bowmanville, Ont. Tonomo. ‘GREY, AND BRUCE RAILWAY: CHANGE OF TIME. On and ‘after MONDAY, 5th May, 1879, trains will run as follows:â€" . TORONTO (UNION STATION. Dopart, 7:30 a. m., 1135 p. m., 540 p. m Arrive, 10:30 a. m., 3:00 p. m., 940 p. m, ORANGEVILLE. South ~Depart 735 a. m., 11:35 a. m.,5:40 p. m. Arrive 1i1i0 a.m., 4325 p. m., 6:20 p. m« North. Depart, 1130 &. rm., 440 p m. Arrive, UL:15 a. m., §:20 p. m. West. Dopart 11315 a.m. . Arrive 11:00 a. m. , _ owExX souKp. Depart 6:30 a.m., 12:00 noon, Arrive 4:00 p.m., 10:16 p.m. ‘TEESWATER Depart 6:008. m., Arrive . 4:80 p. m., Fortime atintermediate stationssee Time Tables l EDMUND WRAGGE. General Manager Toronto. April 20th, 1879 PIANOS. All Sizes. Gristing and Chopping attended at Shortest Notice. Now Very Logs doring 1878. , War! ter Months. â€" Fall and WINVOL WOUDA * MC0°°7°" Boots and Shoes, Groceries 11:35 a. m., 5:40 p. m» 4:5 p. mo., 8:20 p. m« 440 p m. §:20 p. m.. Arrive 11:00 a. m. Durkim P. O. â€"108 Having anticipated the rise which has taken place in every discription of manufactured and imported goods, I purchased largely before the advance, and will continue to sell every deâ€" scription of Cotton and Woollen Goods, ‘ : GROCERIES and HARDWARE, f \ BOOTS and SHOES, ) At OLD RATES. ».1%~ a¢ Pantnary Cotton. 20 Yards for $1.00. Bales of Factory Cotton, 20 zardas JOFP o1W« PILES OF TWEEDS 65 cents, worth 90 cents. And a large line of very fine quality for $1.00 worth $1.50. Wool Shawls at less than wholsale price. Undershirts and Drawers, Flannels and Blankets all at old prices. Stacks of And Groceries of every description equally low. . Purchasers will find it to thesr advantage to buy now. Complete. The Cheapest Goods JAMES : Fall and Winter Stock of STAPLE and FANCY Finished, and Ready for Delivery : Sleighs, Land Rollers, Gang Ploughs, Turnip OCutters, Straw Cutters for Hand, and Straw Cutters for Horse Power ; S TOVES of all Kinds! STOVES, Stoves, STOVES! Call and see bdo.n purchasing ehewhcro.mwo will not be andersold n:d are selling 7 inch Pipe and Elbows at 7c each ! Cash for Hides and Skins. Truck taken as Cash. At 1 Durbam, Jan. 21st, 1880. Durham, Nov. 20, 1879. COOKING PARLOR BOX from $20 un. from $5 up. from $3 up. Durham, Sept. 18, 1879 of TEA of all Grades at OLD PRICES. blbs of Currants for 25 cents. 6lbs of Tea For $1.00, All Sizes and Dry Goods, Clothing, Boots & Shoes, HAS now received his FA LL and Winter Stock. oPr C. L. GRANT. Intending purchasers will find it to their interest To call and exomine his goods before Purchasing. LA DIES Wmmuwhndontfafltom;usbok MILLINER Y G ROCERIE S Everything at Lowest Bates. OATMEAL, & CHOPSTUFEF Which he will sell CHEAP for CASH, Always on Hand Cheap and Fresh. D U R H A M . =â€"â€"ATâ€" .‘ H. HUNTER. COCHRANE. all Prices. HARRIS & Co. in Town month. <@ Walkertonâ€"The last Wednesday month. Mildmay â€" Last â€" Wednesday month. JOHN ROBERTSON TAILOR AND CLOTHIR, Residenceâ€"Opposite the Canada Pl-‘. Spring and Summer Fashions l‘.].,; rmocived. THOMAS sm'rn& Saddler, Tanng, Shoemaker, | No. 5, Garafraxa Street, LOWER TOWN, â€" . DURHAJ The Highest Market Price paid for Hides and Skins. The Damy Wiryrss is : ers in Amorica at loss tha BLST OCENT KE W# AL giving all the latest news by telegraph, editorin‘s on the most important questions, a mmgehcnsl a correspondence columm, a valusble partment devoted to the contemporary press, home nnd râ€" ligtous readingawoekly summary of thenew books Son mamurinesâ€"tn fact each nurmber is the world‘s, ligtous readinga woekly sumn and magwinesâ€"in fact, each : meadEaR d NC NOst l‘flo; including & vostage, £3.00 a The Werkur Wiryres boars th to the week as the daily does to ! mper the news is summarized & e simallest space, that everyt place. Jts great popularity is sh €IRCULATION OF 8950 Amonget the best classes of the ¢ 4mmense cirealation jnstifes its 5‘ the price at $1.10 a your, nad subscribers reaches $7,000, w\ this year, the price will be red: doHur. _ __ Durham, Febh. 14, 1876. c[areuod of the Wits it is that of Donald Gra iAâ€"!;;n_li'l‘. Manitoba, who WJ is such a nscessity that to do an impossibility." _ _ -‘l'ho Nonmnuns Mrssevo® semiâ€"monthly illastrated pa 800 a yoar to single subsciibe olubs. It is the pioncer of t) tions and goos everywhore. HUXDREDNS 0 every year of the import lunay sehoo! and ‘-y t immonse circulation of « been enabled to make ¢ appearance, even at its eently been improved t1 tion of a neat border‘ wh tor liked than ever bfï¬m: ble paper but a beautiful one. . Thore is w16 r bu ut one. ore 0 B ition of this prper devoted to 4 SUXDAY SCROOLS. | Its club rates are as follows : ;Oooyhlw‘bï¬ address, 82,50 ; 25 c0 ies to the one address, $6 ; u_q&uto_t’lxonuxrou..ufl;wmwmuï¬ Cutting done to O address, #22. uï¬.md“mmtvu“ wakion JOHN DOUGALL & £ON, PomustERs, j MoNTREAL Dusham, December 19th 1878 For the Review CHEAPEST AND BEST PURHAM Sr., DURHANM. WEEKLY ~CLOB â€"CREAT IMFROVEMENTS iN 1880. TXY© B53T! THE LARCEST! THE CAEAP: 3 IN NORTH AMERICA. P NEw PIESSUS â€"NE V TYPEâ€"INCRE8 sILLED iN PUBLICATION. On the 2nd of January, 1880, l'ltw!fl C103E wis take auother of those upward st in the march of anprovement that bave iainod .t for neany forty years in ts nigh tion 28 THE LEADINC FAMILY NEWSPA OF BRITIGH AMERICA, "al ‘The increasing newessity for groat variey of readinx matie: in cach week‘s issuc, so as t inâ€" clade the news from al! sections of the Dominion ana meet the varied tastes of its numerous real ors has rendered expedient the enlargement of T un Werkiy Guosr much beyond even its presenticce dimepsions. . Commencing with the llm wenk of the New Yea therefore, the form ot #he Mper wiil be changed trom that of w» 80â€"column paper to that a 96â€" column paper : and the iendth of each p,‘cnll w( be so extended as to gÂ¥e. in all. an 4ocrease of reading matter in each reck‘s whoct of ccarly 32 cotomms beyond its pesent This vast addition to whe capacity of thepar®/ will enable a bili of fare to be presented wekiy probabiy mor« varicd and tnwr-:;x thi was ever before accoinpushed in an }y jarnal The liwerary matter wilt be -ml incr@ased mont wilt de mWen PnCReeit TUCL p i ds L ol t 00 00B OB 3 se id ie cmmarve :';c wilh be devateo to Mouschold andr0cid wrs ; and the Agricuiturat Deportment®i}) be l&deuu mor» efficicnt than ever befose Copmthstunding The great eniargemets ond sent postase free to ali paits of Canada United Staws, payable invariably in adys *Nowwithstanding the great enia ‘ " a l‘tl; ene PV .l"p\mo.\n to be -u£ the annua) @bserip to to Ture Wueriy Guope will remain # here tofore, guly _ TWO D"CLLARS PER AviUM. 7 CCS 4s CLUB RATES Pon. 880 ‘ Any onr mmat ilberty io 59B up « «4D on L‘ -a:,,,' I "‘:““F'F‘" t: addrérmsed x ul rme : eparately, acdmay be to; any Pn’-'O.-& Relia! J> pasties get z“- wit be eupâ€" plied wi.o a,0camen “2. the parer graus, u:r*w‘lvuu-m Guo4 wil! be Ireoth uz Weesuy Guo Bent free suag d to any Post Office + Great Britain it I’†w qine sb ingw ee "3 Reri. aac0s 5> beveul ty PO n bank draft, q0) 4700 1 t <1, or by ©â€"prous AL terian Church wl g » altamcce to i £)0€ PRIETIHG b.cmptions se y Jan wary, 18 *â€"AND â€"â€" WiILL BE ASs FOLLOW® ; trated paper, w subscribers, and : moent of the WiTs ry where. . We soce Ing OF EVIDENC m‘.nan woutk it as 1 by the Orecide. . m of over 51600 cof nke great improve at its present price vod in appearance m 4 d vatindy 4o t «s bonrs the same relation y does to the day. In this marized and condensed to at everything may have® writy is shown by its ; OF $0,500 COPIERS es of the community. This stifles its publishers in placâ€" vear, aid when the number $7,000, which seems uk:lnx ill be reduced to the ro PME IN THE WORLD, s by telegraph, editorials apt work it is dotng in 'fl he Oreside. Owing to i vor 51000 cofies, we have yeat iimprovements in is present price, â€" 1t has o ) appeapunce '3' the dch will muke it much o, »ot ouly being | one. Thore is wlso an by those who have tried auns criber trom Portage ) writes : "The WiITNESS ; do without it is alurost orn is an eightâ€"paged pamer, which costs b bers, and much loss the WirsEss p ed to all its subsortb. cent a day. It as the § OPINION Â¥ \each 1ve Thst v1 «30 on hile poer copy m" * amd the we. The | M «lay and + 2 Yurd tae above the patroi The ve s uperior t yrize wror $72 * Pirat clws & Fergos YET Tllus A heauti the host & 1‘4‘ Pive O# Gornk, t The ® ud «le, Jentinek Rathor! « D x Wiidd 4 veaaity , Lower T \ oat in th OCutt Danda 4 2 mol vevan oi B‘ ©Bhimaae s ca ‘Those | Otnises Bound . a 13 oru or} :'nlnnlï¬ The Su! ine Cal Durhin nsert mlarc Ord Aoaths free 0f boy n % aoluw +oL Mali « Une e Do ALF Prot Two a ‘Three * RAl +RA Atth Lower * RA BU 64 P:N‘ J oc ABR A dv TBE TT TT D