stres, ured heap. tonades, 2A » KR ! 161 JN. bham . and. LS, No t e othe 1 to Il;zon want a first class o Intest stvles af fuch in Soutnu Exp, Duz=ax, Near Hotel. V. CALDWELL, _ BOQT and SH0EMAKER Charges Modorat Glazing, ( At a Moderate Price. Durkam, 1361. "VC"m8, (raining, and Paper Hanging promptly astended to. Fresco and Banner Painting a Speciality. reeu o cew u05 DL ouse, * im Spring and Durhain, Mure} Residenceâ€" JOHN ROBERTSON TAILOR AND CLOTHIER « ALEXANDER BROWN Receing Iw-hin;w:l';;v:;ioéil‘n;: he is prepared to sell chenp fc ‘These nuchines arereliable un ""Tl E. snbscriber is propa and Make Up, on the shortes the LatestStyle Mn und Boy‘s ( h tmarrarteed ring and Summer Fashions regulra) received. Durham, Feb. 14, 1878. Lates: Fashions Lumbar, Lumber, Shingles, Shingles, Lath & Lime, Cutting done to Order. F. DOWNES, Bs P uy p)A58 Ornamental Painter, DURHAM. enveynacer, mad .E Will be at H day and Fri VETERINARY SURGEON Bontinek, after noon," Latherford‘s abtended t Alexander Dundalk,Murch 20t} WIPbea ki . Solicitors in Chancery, Conveymne Owen Sound. have resumed ‘at Flesherton open every Tuursday as heretofore. ALFRED FROST, J. W. FROS1 County Crown Attorney. June 2ith , 1480. DURHAM St., DURHAM W, M. CLARK, Architect and Builder 13 * RADUATE PH Lo. six months.. se Do. thrve mouths........ Casual advertisements char for the first insertion, uhnd 2 c« aubsequent insortion.â€"Nouper Ordinary notices of births, m all kinds of locaul nows, insertc Murmy | Am made &6 . ido. fo: #1, the udvertisement not Advertisements, except whe written bastmneticas to the con until forbidden, and charged at Lower Town, Durham. Â¥7 X. opposite Parker‘s Drug Wore, Upper Town wrbhawn . Meney to 1 maprriPraTmTiGgmiriar= s e rsrrecrazil e BUSINESS DIRECTORY. ~ LEGAL â€" | v "ToU Sowe!! cheup for cash and on time, hu:es arereliable and highly finished, fit Yipderindhiy Verts rlbvasa . _ space and under, Two inches or 24 lines N« Thrce inches do. per yea Quarter column, per year Half column, L . MISCELLANEOUS. Professional ARRISTERS and Attorney‘sâ€"atâ€"I TTORNE Y . eery.Commi Is Agent for Wilson & ( E. D. MACMILLAN, TTORNEY â€" AT â€" LA W, &e.â€"Orrtcr it t At the Ofllce, Garafraxa for any drawingâ€"room TAILOR, Every Th ursday, Opposite the Can terian Chureh.{ ". Z%. NIXOoN®., |! "THE CGREY REVIEW PERM®:â€"$1.00 per year in Advance. 81.45 I# not paid Within three ~Orders left at J. ] _ prompt attention ird, 1881 Puk:m, . . . () Frost & Frost, DK. LIGHTBODY, b_o at his Office, Hanover, from RATES OF ADVERTISINXG Oldâ€"Post OfK DURHANMW. 1 1. 000 CcUHs charged 8 cents p t insertion, und 2 con s per line f t insortion.â€"Nouperiel mcasure, notices of births, n:,nhgrn. dea ! locul nows, inserted free of char onl meali®, &c , advertisod three advertisement not to exeeed 12 ments, except when accompan iruetic us to the contrary. are i n nj.("ll"_t;l;.-il;l'l'l‘flhn MEDICAL. DUND: i‘s Hot KVILLE .MILLS. Al Regaiarty Received and f Ontario Vetrinary Col TOWNXSEXD W at Law, Solicitor in Chan ioner in B. R., Notary Public Robortson, 3 A C 16 B 4. 88. A . LJ IERTON Athome,2nd Con, .\',IIR., }.\l ssuges for the Dr. left at 1, Shelburne, every Mon »clock a. m. to 5 p. m. ceased Auctionee: A. ROBERTSON IS PUBLISHED 1 1 at J. F. Mowats anada Pnsb’. Cattle Yurd K. Ont siness cards one inch ICEcHAR YOUE, :.+. ceucersecuacss and Sules,abttende arges | made | yer or Shoe in 1880 J. W. FROST, LL.B AWFORD iotice , ‘ml in thing. A good npariel measure Tth, 1879 and nveyancers, ote to exeeed 12 lines. . n nccompanied by trary, ure inserted y156 Street, Upper Town you ecerve which fmâ€"116 Publisher d Inspec Always in Stock, and wiil be sold C fo* Cash or Farm Produce, ‘ Fresh Groceries Fresh Oat Meal Field and Garden Seeds ts per Ling ne for ea« h an Always on hand and exchanged for Oats Grocerv and Provision Store Upper Town, DURHAM A Large Lot of leat} s.and J UST ARRIVED at Office Also on hand, and made to measure, all kinds (Sewed and Pegged), made by workâ€" men who took all the First Prizes,for boots, at the County Shows held in Durhnin, 1879 & 1850, FRESH EGGS and GOOD FLOUR taken in any quantity in exchange. Ont. |[a is Tâ€"CLA8Ss Seeds, Seeds. Has now TANNMR, CURRTER and Dealer y10 LW B Avril, 1st, 1881 BURNET‘S Cash for Bullding raateric Walinut, Rosewo« ind Hills of Lum/ fulistock of Cofti Factory Boots & Sheos, emember the place JAMES HKANNA. ceks Seed Grain of all Kinds. Leather, Hides, Boots, Hanover Carriage »UILDER H *â€"ANDâ€" BBlind â€"IFactor 10 18 32 60 Blacksmithing & Waggon Making. esc cas s 0i 42007 TT . My Mottoâ€"Close and promp at.ention to business and fair dealing between all men, 164. Durkam Planing Mill SASH, DOCR usiness prompt and Dundalk, Sept. 23rd, 1880 member the place next t:. We Street, Hunover. 0 Suitable for ull at very ldw prices Parx_ning Implements. To farmers and busipess men on short dat dorsed notes or good collaterals. Sale notes urchased at a fair veluation Draftsissued at usual Bank rates, ‘my.blc i Banks in Ontario and Quebec, Collections of notes n.:d secounts on remsor enis. HE famons Cavalry _ secured the services of urge stock 20 use If T Rosewocd,and Gilt. Plans.s» "fl«m‘tlum Us nu.mnlu-numlemnlnnshun no ‘~~, A ck of Coffins, Caskets, Shrouds and Trim wlwav: on hand And Inte Office 122 . DAVIS, FLESHERTON. on hand several handred pairs of d _ C. JOPP, J. A Halsted & Co., n â€" JP â€" Sm oa gin â€"omgn â€" m =~)â€" DURHAM. r,Muarch 24, 1881 ROBT. BUOULL: Vol. IV. No. 14. SHOES, &e MONEY ADVANCED Deposits Received, Piaceâ€"â€"a short distance northo the Post Uffice. AND restallowed at the r * per annum HANOVER, Ost opposite McAlister‘s Hotel.' l)nrlnun,kwps on hnand a of Sush,Doors und al}} kinds of Is,also a stock of Mouldings in d.and Gilt. Plans.y» ~Aeations uow wietes sewy ces un l 1 ticles in his line of buui;;m on the e and mude of the best material. is also Agent for HEARSE To mrg® IN maker, Hides. J. C. JOPPp. o Reid‘s Hotel, Muin er, Ont. K. McKNALLY G. L. DAVIS,Mnuger‘ Prices reasonable. hâ€"136. w prepared tnl , Buggies, | Horseshoer has | a Good Wagonâ€" rate ofsix per cent on short date onâ€" Works, on reasonalle be Grep stood. â€" He remembers being more deeply iumpressed with horror by the shrieks ot the people and the bellowing of cattle than by the srash of the fulling walls and the dull roar of the earth. His reason so far deserted him for a moment that he fancied the screaming inhabitants were endeavorâ€" ing to kill him, but the sight of his cbildl and the nurse restored his mental balance. y150 was traveling in Scio when the earthquake oceured, has written a vivid description of the catastrophe in which his wife and four children were killed. He himself escaped with the youngest child and a nurse. He writes that the first shock was by far tho{ most violent. The house oscillated from} its very foundations ; the piano, probably one of the upright instruments, tumblâ€" ed over against the window and a heavy. clock was upset into the fireâ€"place. A secâ€" ond shock brought the house down, erushâ€" ing to death the four children and their mother, and breaking their father‘s arm. M. de Chivry, with the nurse and infant passed the night in the cemetery. â€" The following morning he could find po trace of his house or of the street on which it i M. de Chivry at all Stream ! can you say thl; ;;mlne? To Huron now haste away, Farewell ! we have said our say, Thought decay shall never ses, ‘Twill live where thy waters bo. Ob, dark, winding, Saugeen River? Memorable to me over ; Pour thy tribute to the sen, We shall meet in time to be. ~eugeen! murmur, live for aye, With beaven end earth pase away. Farewell! for time is awiftâ€"fleot, O‘er its dark bounds shall we meet ? Courses ended, murmurings o‘er, We‘ll meet on that unknown shore, Thy mission glorious will shine. Tis sweot on thy banks to stray At the close of summer‘s day ; Culm within, lun‘d to repose, Ponce too, the world never knows ; Gratetul, to lie on thy side, Gazing, droamiug o‘er thy tide, Peace below, and ealm on high, Musing thus, you pass me by ; Pow ing fourth your hymns of praisc, As the western sun‘s soft rays Peers through fleecy clouds betwoen, Gilding thee with solden sheen; Ere ho sinks away to rest, He hath siniled, thy bosom press‘d, To gludden this mild May=lay., Gentle zephyrs fan my brow While I muse, gaze on thee now : Cooling life‘s stream ; which ebbe,flows To heartâ€"beatings comes and goes, Many streams with joy I‘ve seen; Thou‘rt the idol of my dream, Many mingle with the sea Thou art dearest fur to me, "h«e Frocdom ? thy native strain, Potent waters! man in vain beceks to hold, conting inthrall, Cift of Goct flow free to all, Bounds, if set, thine ir¢ would rise, At lust nppeat} to the skies; The powers of animate dust, To it thou turnost them ; ‘tis just, Larth‘s vein thou art, whose lifeâ€"bl Is borne richly on the flood; All give free ly what is given, Man alone holds back from heaven Children‘s limbs thy water‘s lave, Who sport gle sful in the wave; Fource of j y to young or old, In summer‘s heat or winte‘s cold, Let all poor oppressed 0.10s hie, On thy perceful banks to lie, Or buthe toilâ€"worn feet in thee, And know, at least, thon art free, Potent water beeks to hold Gift of Goct i Bounds, if sot I hoiib uc d And live for to see it rust f ©: extort the heurtâ€"w rung tour Of the widow‘s offâ€"spring dear, Oppression‘s stern, iron heel, Tielpless cnes its power stil} fee}; Poison Tife‘s pure, sacied springs, Thedgh guarded by angel wings, But Freedon: * Hiv magtas Sullal | For the Grey Review. l To the Sangeen River. | Stheee J’ Murmuring waters, bright or drear, | Ever sounding in mine ear; f ' Ceasoless, unremitting flow | Your destined way wisely khow; | Troubled, tranquail, fast or slow, As your power, onward you go. Decp or shallow be your bed, By the same Great Power still led. Cleansing fluid; durk or clear, How I love thy song to hear, Nature‘s music, grand, sweet, wild, Peace infuses o‘cr the soul, As thy troubled waters roll, Like a child T‘d gaze on thee, Pure, innocent, guilcless, free; Trusting in my futher‘s love, While by thy stream here I rove; Or on mossy bank recline, Pure, sweet liquid ; thou art mine ; A short time the art mine own, But soon, Oh, how soon you‘re gone ! Watch I with admiring eye, You come, go and puss swiftly by, Ere you go a lesson teach, Teach me, living stream, to reach Him, whose purpose you do know, Whose finger murkes where you go ; Well for you in peace or strife The Refiner is your life, Kind, good too, He is to me, Who gave eyos that I might see Nuture in perfection stand ; Hundiwork of Potent haud ; Not only her beanties view. But to picree even heavens blue ; Purt of Himself did bestow The Allâ€"wise source I should know, All knowledge is worthless, vain, If preferred to Insting gain. Fitting emblem of my life, Kestful, calm; now toss‘d in atrife : Sometimes bright, transparent, clear, Sometimes flowing durk and drear; Where the waters foum and spray There they sink, to ret away ; Shallow where che stones do lie, Noisy o‘er scanty supply; There with calm, majestic sweep, Holding thy course dark snd deep, J ike the secrets of the heart, Concealed view less, save in part, Many a secret there is laid, Bred thercin, therein to fade ; Thoughts which the world never knows The next fully shall disclose, Active, slow, let thy tide be. Mothinks life resemUles thee ; Like the varying tmodes of life, Now in rest and now in strife. Man may heap Mangolia® dust, > , a Paris wineâ€"merchant, who POETRY whose lifeâ€"blood DURHAM, Co. Grey l She wiped out some of the popper with ' her handkerchief and sang the other verses ‘ with a good deal of fervor, and the choir sat down, all the members looking at the £oâ€" prano. She ealled for water, and the | noble tenor went and got it for her, and ; j after she had drank a conuple of quarts, she | whispered to him, "Young man, T will get{ even with you for that peppermint c.ndy,’ if I have to live a theusand years, and don‘g‘ you forgetit," and they all looked pione, | while the minister preached a most béantiâ€" | / ful serraon on "Faith," We expect the V tenor will be blowed through the rdof some | Sunday morning and the congregation will he wonder what he is in such a bursy for.â€"!1 Peck‘s Sun. t. With eweet tremolo, she sang "Nenrer fmy God to 'I'bc-,e," and the congregation was almost melted to tears. As she stop. 3 ped, while the organ got in a little work, she turued her head, opened her mouth and biew out her breath with a woosh to cool her mouth. The andience saw her wipe a tear away but did not bear the sound of her voice as she whooshed. | _ While the choir wasskirmishing on the ?ï¬l‘st part of the verse and getting scorâ€" ed up for the solo, she chewed up what was left of the candy and swallowed it. Well if a Demoeratic torch light procession had marched unbidden doWn her throat, she could not have been more astonished. She leaned over to pick up her handkerchief and to spit the candy ont, but there was enough pepper left around the salvage of her mouth to pickls a pesk of chowâ€"chow. | It was her turn to sing, and she rose nml,' took up a bouk, ner eyes filled with trars, her voice trembled, her face was as red lR, a spanked lobster,aud the way she sang that old hymn was a caution. ' The chair that the tenor was on stuck to Ihfm like a brother," and came Higlt along aud nearly broke his suspenders. | It was | the temors turn to bat, and as the organ | struck up he pushed the chair of his perâ€" | son, lopked arround to see if his pauts were suved, and began to sing, and the rest of the choir came near bursting. â€" The tenor was called out on three strikes by the um pire, and the alto had to sail in, and while she was singing the tenor began to feel off first base to see what was the matter, i When he got his hand on the shoenmukers‘ / warm wax his heart smote him, and he' loo! ed duggrs at the s0prano, but she put’ on a pfous look and got her mouth to eiug, ‘"Hold the Fort." Well, the tenor sat down ! on a white handkerchicf before he went ’ home, without anybody seeing him, and hel has been, as the eaying is, "Inying" for the | soprano ever smce to get even, ' 1t is customary in all chours for the male 1 sipgers to farnish cundy for the lady singâ€" !1 ers, and the other day the tenor went to |/| candy factory and had a pepermint lozeng ; made with a teaspoonful of cayenne pepper ( in the centre of it. On Christmas he took j L1s lozeng to church and concluded to get | even with the soprano if he died for it. M Cundy had been passed around, and just | . before the hymn was given out in which & the soprano was to sing a solo, "Nearer, My God to Thee;" the wicked wretch gave her the lozenge. â€" She put it in her mouth and nibbled off the edges, and was rolling | b it as a sweet morsel under her tongue when |b the organ struck up and they all rose. + One morning last summer, after the tenor had been playing tricks all spring on the rest of the choir, the sopranoâ€" brought a clhunk of shoemakers‘ wax to clhuich. â€" ‘The tenor was arrayed like Solâ€" omen in all his glory, with white pants and Seymore coat. The tenor got up to see who that girl was that came in with â€"the old lady, and while he was up the soprano put the shoeniakers‘ wax on the chair, the church was hot, the tenor was no iceâ€" bery himself, and the shoemukers‘ wax melts at 98 degrees Fahrenbheit. The miuister finally got to the amen, and read a hymmn, the choir coughed ard all rose up. | . tou may organize & chtirch choir and think you have got it down fine, and that every member of it is pious and full of true goodness, and in such a momemt as you think not you will find that one or more of them is full of the old Harry, and it will break out when You least expect it. There is no more beautiful sight to the : student of nature than a church choir, Tn! see the members sitting together, demure, devoted and pious looking, you think there [ is never a thouglht enters their minds that | Nis not connected with singing antheine, but sometimes you get left, ‘There is one church choir in Milwankee that is srbout as ‘ | near perfection as a choir could be. It has l! j ) been organized for a long time, and never J | bas quarreled, and the congregation swear h :' by it. When the choir strikes a devotional P | attitude it is enough to make an ordinary ! P j Christian think of the angel bard ahove, | j only the male singers wear whiskers and |,, the females wear fashionnble clothes. t You wou!ld not think that this choir Play |p ed tricks on each other during the sermon, | ., but sometimes they do. The choir is furâ€" |g nished with the numbers of the hbymms | ; that are to be sung, by the minister, and | ; ‘ they put a mark in the book at the proper | q; l place. One morning they all got up to sing | /,, when the soprano turned pale, as un nce of B spades dropped at her feet, and the rest of | w the pack was distributed around in the | of other books. They laid it on the temor, he | ,,, swore, while the mimnister was preaching, up that he didn‘t know one card from the | 5,) other, 1 The â€" Naughty †b;t Choir, " MAY; 19, 1881. E : Juxuries of lifa â€" | 6.3 . . _,_ _ 2 523 _ (WUF Put a solar cyclone| East Linton is a new post office to be | or in delieacies, or in the duxuries of life ; | at the rate of 120 miles in a second would opened shortly in the township 0 Harawak, I‘but they:live chiefly on oatmeal made inâ€" do infinitely more damage than one hunâ€" | about bf wmiles friom the village of | to porridge, or into brose, or into cakes, | dred cyclones sould do. 1 Rmaalea sAbitr in s Sutiati ies talatn rssprtsinns Brstinhk Srssssses orâ€" | _ 1. The adaptation of ontmeal to the iim. | â€"the more closely the stones pack the l« ‘as | man system, not nnder one but under all | cement it will take. Then pour on m ell | cirenmstances, owing to its various and nuâ€" | cement and put in more stones, until yo ad | tritious properties. â€" It is alike suitable to | space is full, The work must be so plan he | the tender in years, to the weak and to the | «d as to use your cement and get the ston he | strong. Many children are best nourished | in it before it has tume to harden. For ief | on oatmeal diet because it caures them to | heavy wall, planks may be raised in twe ne / grow strong, and no better food can be| tyâ€"four hours after the space was fille of " found for thema, It is quite as desirable] Ruise them about ten inches, go on as 1 w. | for the studert as for the luborer, and for} fore. I have seen a large barn built in th: ud I’ the delicate lady ae for her hard working | way which has stood for many years ; cos s, | sister; indeod, all classes would be greatly | about the same as timber wall when buil “, Venefited by its use, and dyspepsia, | and needs no print, no shingles, no repa at | with all its manifold annoyances, oan be of any sort, while the walls are fireâ€"proc kept ata distance. Oatmeal is more sub. | and ratâ€"proof.â€"Young Farmer, Bosto r | stantial food, it is said, than veal, pork, or | Journal. n j lamb, giving as much or more mental vigâ€" | _ 120 Miues a Secoxp.â€"When speaking o >â€" l or, while its great desideratum consists in | the spots on the sun in his .lecture, Pro , ’ one not becoming weary of it, for it is as tessor Rees stated that many of them wer d | welcome for breakfast or tea as is the best | noticed to revolvo with great velocity, som 1| wheaten bread. It can be eaten with syr | of thom at the rate of 129 miles per second a ’ up or butter, as hasty pudding, or with | These rotations are explained by the fact f | cream and sugar, like rice. It is especialâ€" | that there are on the surface of the sun ly good for young mothers, upon whose cyclones which drift along those large 1 |nervous forces too‘ great a demand has | masses of voleanic matter at an indescrib. s | been made, by which they lose their equilâ€" | ably swift rate. It must be remembered t | ibrium of the system and become depressâ€" | that the smallest one of the spots would Le â€"|ed and despirited. OQur position is, there. covered only by about eighteen carths. |fore, not the figment of fancy, but veritâ€" | It must not be imagined when speaking of | ; able fact, standing out before us in all the | solar cyclones that they are like the ones .Iooudin'onl of life, % we have here on eurth. â€" Should a solar eyâ€" | 2. Practical but donelnsive illustrations | clone strike the United States, in thirty | of ontmeal, as nht#figious diet.â€"In tlie land seconds all the country between New York _ of cakes, there are ta be forn 1 everywhere | and San Fransisco would be floating awny | among the ‘working classes fine specimens | into space in the shape of a vaporous cloud. , ; of humaunity in tue forms of brawny lads I The temitle fiiction would ignite. everyâ€"| | and I ouny lasses, owing doubtless to their thing. One of our eyclones may traverse | simple fare. â€" They induize not in dainties, 'florlflllu’luu hm.*m, | or in delieacies, or in the duxuries of life â€" | arin. ...\ _ 1 ol IPnr but a solar eyclone _ Let us cast this general statement the form of three propositions :â€" Tho‘ a‘ th‘ lave nhrl'lld :u-: th:ir lnl;per." "Brose and butter" is, of course, made by putting a little butter amongst the meal before pouring in the boiling water. the form of brose. This form of all Sceotechmen are aware, is prep simply stirring into the meal a litt] cold water. Brose and butter has some considered a dainty. The ol song srys :â€" "Gie my love brose, brose and butter, Nice l M .. _ _ 7 3. _ , _ " 20 U F ORHnGRLIG 1 3 n r’econumicul and strengthening thnn' ° | wheaten flour. Oatmeal cannot be made into bread loaves and is therefore umml)y’l ‘{eaten in~ the form of cakes or portidge. ‘| The latter is usually eaten (or supped)with | milk, and is then a very nourishing nud' "ho:\lthful article of diet. Oats in the form | of oatmeal are rich in fiesh and force proâ€" | ducers, and serve as a nutritious and exâ€" cellent diet, especially when the occupn-; tion is at all active. ‘Oatmeal is remark» ;. able for its large amonnt of fat, and is also !â€" rich in gluten, containing more or less valâ€" ; | uable properties than any other kind of : | corn, the next in value in these respects beâ€" | ] iiug maize,. _ It coutains seventyâ€"six per / cent. of heatâ€"giving and a total of eighty» / ; 'w.'ht per cent. of untrient properties. Oatâ€" " ’ meal, when mixed with wheat meal (that ‘ is whole wheaten meal) forms an excellent , f and wellâ€"balanced food. â€" For children oatâ€" ‘ 3 meal is simply invaluable. The use of ; milk with oatmenat porridge renders it more palatable, and also adds to the nutritiousâ€" :; ness of the food. Oatmeal porridge and milk contaim all the elements necessary for , + the due support of life in Lealth and 8' strength. Oatmeal is sometimes used in | _ _ + Anereis no greater mistake, Grains were ere !man's original food, and are yet his best 1t | food. The most nutritions meat is mutton 28 / which is represented at thirty per cent., me | whilst white beans contain no less than as | ninety per cent. of the nutrient property . ‘*8 )\ Wheat meal sontains ninety per cent. C | Whent is the standard food for the adult ar jlmman being in temperate latitudes, as *! | milk is the standard food over the whole sÂ¥ ’world for the infant. Wheat is perhaps © [ better adapted for thke support of life than id any other one arti¢le of food either vegeâ€" table or animal. A distinetion must, howâ€" * lever, be made between wheat meal and * | wheat flour. The invention of the process * | for the re€ning of flour wak a most unfor ® | tunate one. "Fine," or refined, or, as it 1 is technically called, "bolted" wheat, is the p " jdirect source of zn incalculable amount of | i ‘ | mischief, ana a fruitful source of discase,. 'l | By the removal of the outer layers of the ; & (| wheat the most nutrient parts, the "finest" | ; ‘ |of the wheat, are lost, and given to pigs | f |and horses, which thrive remarkably well | a upon it; while man contents to starve himâ€" | e self upon the impoverished residue. It has â€" t been proved by actual test that dogs fed i | upon "superfine" flour, die almost as soon . 8 ; as if left without tood. Refined flour is alâ€" | i most pure starch, which can never become ‘ i ! the substantive diet of human beings. o lThus the corn flours mand other rt..rchcsl iwhich are used as "infint foods" are no FT more competent to sustain life than pure ; W ’waler. Oatmeal is especially the food of | sy the people of Seotland. â€" Burns calls oatâ€" p« meal porridge "the chief of Seotia‘s food." | ar The ort, like other cereal gramms, is well | ch adapted for human food. For those who | al wm"nr exercise in the open air oatmeal is | lis OATMEAL, ! Of all foods the grams stand highest in | point of nutrient qualitiesâ€"that is, conâ€" | tajning both the fleshâ€"formin® and the haat. nving properties. In these respects they stind very much higher even than flesh meat. ‘This fact is not generally known. Flesh food is éalled a generous food, and is commended to ailing and weekly persons, There is 16 »rentar miskelen . pavual ns Oa.tmea.l, better food can be quite as desirable he Inborer, and for her hard working an Article of Nutriâ€" tious Diet. The old Scotch wheat, is the | with milk. ‘This, at t e amount of | formed his entire food diet, as Grains were yet his best | (that _ Briuninas â€" mave Or CoNCRETE.â€"Few ellent . farmers know } ow to baild a concrete wall n ont. | Yet it 1s a very simple jcb, and in many se of 02863 would prove an excellent wall for Fore buildings and cellars. To bu‘ld such a tious. wall you need to set 354 joist at the corners Fand then at intervals of about eight feet along y fay the oqtside of the wall, placing the joists and | opposite and about eighteen inches apart. ‘ e ind On the inside otf the joist set up pl:ml;l it; ‘ng fxbout a foot wide. There will be fifteen | dity inches between theso planks, which will l:e‘ phor the thickness. For a large building which n by wguld have heavry fl({ut‘ timbers, the wall | otch l might be two feet thick ; for a piggery or ‘ other small buildings is need not be go thick. Have a cement made by mixing a barrel good ccment with three barrels fine ande | O plastering sand and four barrels clean meal | gravel. Wet this when mixed so it will be thin enough to pour, and fill between the into | plauks about three inches deep, then in | | that pack small stones as closely as possible | 120 Mtu®s a Sekcoxo.â€"When speaking of the spots on the sun in his «leoture, Proâ€" tessor Rees stated that many of them were noticed to revolvo with great velocity, some of thom at the rate of 129 miles per second. . These rotations are explained by the fact ’ that there are on the surface of the sun | ecyclones which drift along those large ’ masses of voleanic matter at an indescribâ€" | ably swift rate. It must be remembered| that the smallest one of the spots would Le' covered only by about eighteen earths, It must not be imagined when speaking of | â€"the more closely the stones pack the less cement it will take. Then pour on more cement and put in more stones, until your space is full, The work must be so planaâ€" ed as to use your cement aud get the stones in it before it has tune to harden. For a heavy wall, planks may be raised in twenâ€" tyâ€"four hours after the space was filled. ’ Raise them about ten inches, go on as beâ€"| fore. T have seen a large barn built in that | way which has stood for many years ; costs ‘ about the same as timber wall when built, | aud needs no print, no shingles, no repair | of any sort, while the walls are fireâ€"proof | and ratâ€"proof{.â€"Young Farmer, Bmto»’ Journal. fl‘ Undoul:tedly one of the most healthiful )‘ and wourishing articles of diet is oatmeal. ) ; When properly cooked and eaten with £‘ sugar and cream it forms a dish which most _ people relish better than meat for breakfast \jand is very much cheaper. _ Liebig has | ' chemically ~demostrated that oatmenl is | almost as nutritions as the very best Eng. ; ' lish beef, and that is richer than wheaten 'bmnd in the elements which go to form bone aund muscle, Professor Forbes, of ’l Ediuburg, during some twenty years, measured the beighth and breadth, and also tested the strength of both arms and i loins, of the students of the Universityâ€"n. very nu.nerous class and of all nationalities, drawn to Fdivburg by the fame of his teaching. _ He found that in heighth, | breadth of chest and shoulders, and in 1‘ strength of arins and loins, the Belgians were at the bottom ofthe list ; alittle above | them the English ; the Inghest of all the : Seoteh, and Seotch Irish from Ulster, who like the natives of Seotland, are fed in their |3 early years, at least one meal a day of good oatmeal porridgeo, 8. The crucial test, of anal induction of facts in the dem oatmeal, as nutritious diet.â€" strong, and fleet as his fleecy charge. His sole compauvion was a dog. When om party met with him he stuck by us, and as far as his "beat" would permit him, aeted as our guide for several hours. With honâ€" est independence he refused to take even the smallest reward for his services, declarâ€" ing that he had more than sufficed for his simple needs. |.} simple modes of preparation ; but the simplest method in which oatmeal is pre. pared for food is that of the shepherds on the lonely mountains of Seotland, Many h | & time has the writer seen it prepared by + ] these simpleâ€"minded people. The shep. â€" | herd, when he le ives his hut or WFome in ; | the morning, takes with him a small woodâ€" i }Jen bowl, a horn or wooden spoon, and a + | handful or two of meal in a handkerchief, / | His simple, feugal meal is prepared by the | addition of a little cold water from the ranâ€" | ning spring. This, with the addition of a | little milk, forms his midday repast. Of course some shepherds fdd to their repast ,! by taking with them cheese or canes,but the writer has in Ins mind‘s eye at the present moment a hale old man, who lived as related above. The simplicity of diet of a »me of these shepherds is remarkable. Not many years ngo the writer foregathered f with an old shepherd on one of our Highâ€" 1 land mountains. He lived by himself in a ' mean but far from any other hnman habitâ€" l ation. He had but two meals a day, with \ twelve hours between ench, He break fasted at six in the morning, and supped | ‘ at six at night. His entire food consisted | ° of ontmea! eith»r in the form of porridge, | ° brose, or cakes which he prepared himeair| " Whole No. 167 o dRS °* C/mnTCen inches apart, t the joist set up plank e. There will be fifteen these planks, which will be For a large buxldin_g which ++ 4B » a wo of menl in a handkerchief., frugal meal is prepared by the little cold water from the runâ€" along those large ! or at an indescrib.| st be remembered| the spots would be ! t eighteen earths. vriter seen it prepared by nded people. The shep. aves his but or Wome in es with him a small wood. or wooden spoon, and a LEFIUE »fitirifiiinttsattisedtadh s i)\ 17 o writer foregathered | * find it to its ndvantrge to "":'S"- l on one of our Highâ€" :.uerely to insure the traffic for a Canadian lived by himself in a line, “_'e hope the Byndicate, in its efforte y other human habitâ€" todrf" immigrants, will be nble to show wo mealsa day, with the Seotch people where Mr. Imrie is n each. He break wrong. That gentleman sees the same norning, and supped ""jmi“'. to their monopoly that we foreâ€" entire food consisted|°"¢¥ Iti8 ©@sy for him to settle down he form of porridge, '"d“’l‘l"’fe emigration to Canada, but for he prepared himseift| 8 C#WAdians it is a matter of life and he time we raw him, death. We opposed the burgain with all ,and be was hale and :’l‘" power. }\"‘ can only bope, now that demonstration of analysis and the agreed upon shall be rcitled by arbitration, under the provision of the muicipalact. .| Warxixe to Goxroxations.â€"Several ; | amendmenis were mude to the municipal S‘Mt during the lust seseion of the Local , | Legislature. â€" Mere is one of them, which p ! contains a warning to municipul corporeaâ€" f| tions **Section 491 of chapter 174 of the ,! Revised Statutes of Ontauric, is hereby reâ€" l pealed, and the following sections substi, | tuted therefor : Every public road, street, ‘!bridgo and Lighway shail be kept in reâ€" | pair by the corporation, and in default of the corporation so to keep in repair, the corporation shall, besides being subject toa any punishment provided by lnw, be Imble [ to all damages sustained by any person, by reason of such default; and such corâ€" ‘ poration shall also be liable for all damages sustained by any person on account of havâ€" ing houses or lands flooded through and ’ by the construction of any public road, strcet, bridge, culvert or highway ; but any claim forsuch damages must be lodged with the clerk, or head of the corparation, within three months after the damages East Linton is a new ; ' of his loss atser. He wentâ€" to L indon and | identified the claiment Orton as an impos» [tnr. and threatened to expose him, but Orâ€" 'tnu informed him his purtuer Gibbs had ’c‘mceivul the fruud and nad taken advantâ€" | age of the information given lim by Stapleâ€" | ford regarding youns Tichborne. An at ltorucy named Cubbitt was impleuted and got Orton into the scheme. _ A large sum of money was received by the conspirators from Lady Tichborne. When the fuise evidence that Orton was the genuine heir was sent her, more money wus obtuned and divided after Lady Tichborne identiâ€" fied Orton in London. To save Gibbs and avoid being mixed uj in the matter Btaple» ford kept back his evidence, aud when the fraud was discvoered and Orton sentenced he did not think it necessary to inculpate his partner. Now Gibbs is dead and he feels no longer hesitation in giviug the true history, British authorities, is now here, Staple» ford was a solctor in Syduey, aad had a partner named Gibbs, Stapleford was aoâ€" quainted with the genuine heir and know A despatch from Mew York says.â€"] Stapleford, Manchuster, England, wh the time the Tichborne case was heing was said to have been "wanted" by "CWCre mr. reorge dpencer, police mmagie» trate, who after hearing the evidence of the deluded, warned the but cher to steer clear of such characters in the future. The bovine dealer was requested to spend two years in the limestone city, for seven days to allow en up, â€" This morning before Mr. George Sie .. 4 /_ 1 , "" Yeuine proprictor of the «ity hotel, with whom he arranged to have & yard fenced and lay put in the troughs to feed the cattle, after which he made his customery loan from the proprictor, which in this case was 50 cents. Towards evenâ€" ing when the horned bovine failod to arrive one of the $1 victims went in search of his man, and finding him at one of the hotels slightly the worse of liquor bad him appreâ€" hended. Thos, Scott, J. 1.,re manded bim for seven daysto allow him time to straight. en up, This morning Mr. Hood appeared Nug _ 2CRY zm W the Obtaining Moncey _ Under False Pretenses. Owen Sound, May 5.â€"Last week a gentleman of a rather questionable deâ€" meanor and dressed in fuli Robiuson Cruâ€" soe apparel, trrived in town purporting to ve Mr. Hood, cattle dealer of Gueiph. He called on several of our leading Intchers «ud informed them that he had 84 head of cuttle on the road coming into town, and from whom he managed to borrow, owing to the banks being closed, different sums, ranging from $1 to 50 cents down. . He then interviewed the proprietor of the city a country where the ] economy are thoroug he does not advise an a country where the Finance Minister are the furmers to pay an their grain for exnor The Tichborne Fraud ed with thou'a of the latter most merciles iOb m itcP rntmantiagdes. L.d to a corporation, enjoying n monopoly, may be gathered from the letter of Mr. Imrie, one of the Seotch farmers‘ delegates who visited the Northâ€"West last year, ‘This is the tbird letter whuch he has written onuumliect,mdudshuilwm‘b reason why, in the second lottery he depreci : ated the Northâ€"West as a place for settle» ment, whereas, in his first, which was & report of his mission, he roported favorably of the country. | The change in his opiniog has been entirely wrought by the handing over of the Canada Pacific lailway to the people who, while they had a monopoly of the transportation from the N orthâ€"West, charged exceedingly high rates, and who, now that they have the mougpoly continu} ed to them, are not likely to met any more generously in the long run. My, Imrh, points out how compauions wiil far..less pOwer <have, Whan shand 4 0O C psek img to her Northâ€"West as settien the transfer of the Government qo us Inst how the shrewd Scotch firmer, who is the very best posi‘le type of the class which Canada is mort interested inrttract» MAViiel Gpmeentiriei: The Scotch l"a.rme;-‘.,nd the Pacific Railway Syndicate. anything in th said act to ive, when theirinterests clash. 108e of the farmers, sacrificed the t mercitessly, Mr. Imrie lives in where the nrintintas ns Py 4 Cmm hy, in the second lotter; he depreci Northâ€"West as a place for settle 10reas, in his first, which was his mission, he r »ported favorably antry. The change in his oninian ster, England, who at ter are disposed to compel pay any rate of freight on export which a company its advantage to charge, e the traffic for a Canadian +4 4 +4 °e principles of political roughly understood, and e any farmerto setile in e the Priemier and the w York says.â€"Wim CV NP Pacific lailway to the they had a monopoly of to heir and knew igh rates, and who, e monopoly coutiung cely to mnet any amore g run. My, Imrh, Wns‘wing tried the