« sucâ€" large 6 ome ke it rised Yow 1 the Tal be aimes nag er Thure tio imâ€" the above remedial . 1 %> # the 10 e It t * ADove dis. l"'""‘ Agent EP it y Villuge sale by Feunil iCs d ale and iversack ney #asam$ jy ctual, ag aw berry , anticote wou t hy dysen¢. y kin@ m _ by of Witgd greeably sentery, We ’lplll'. t Inâ€" tablea, ‘hier :'h’. finesg 2(8 . off l nnh.; h.ntu-' F ow ler‘s Adl perâ€" inlly nth and erdeen nfter ; Uhange c by hbigls >wn 'l‘fll". subscriber is propared to Receive and ‘::e Up, on the shortest notice, and in the Latest yh&annn Boy‘slothing. A good At;auranteed . Is Agent for Wilson & Co. Sowing Machine Manafacturers, Mamilton, which ho is prepared to sell cheap for cash and on time. These nachines arereliable and highly finished, fit for any drawingâ€"room . ’lnidoneoâ€"olvymih the Canada Presby terian Chureh.| llpring and Summer Fashions regulsr received. Residence at the Old Post Office, LowerTown, DURHAM. JOHN ROBERTSON |'I'AILOR AND CLOTHIER Lumber, Lumber, Shingles, Shingles, Lath & Lime, PRICEVILLE, Oxt., ]SSITEH of Marriage Licenses, Fire and Life Inswrance Agent,Commissionorin B. R..&e Fonveynucer, and Wicensed Auctionee» or the County of Grey. #"Farmers, Merchants, and Land Sales,attended to with punctuality and charges made very moderate. DUNDALK, Ont. Willbe at ‘hg. Hotel, Shelburne, every Mon day and ':‘ay. om 10 o‘clock a. m.to 5 p. i. Dundalk,March 20th 1§79. y57 600 Bush. Fresh Lime. Durham P. O., May 25th, 1880 I" ( ; RADUATE of Ontamo Vetrinary Colâ€" lego, Toromto. YETERINARY SURGEON, Bentinck, after noon." Messages for the Dr. left at Luathorford‘s agtended to. 172 DR. LIGHTBODY, ‘Vl LL be at his Office, Hanover,from a.m. to Noon, Athome.2nd Con, N.D.R B.\BBISTERS and Attorney‘sâ€"atâ€"Law Solicitors in Chancery, Conveyancers, etc., Owen Sound, have resumed at Flesherton. Office open every Thursday as heretofore. Priceville 1830 Durham , Feb. 14, 1878. ALFRED FROST, County Crown Attorney ( you want a first class Boot or Shoe in ALEXANDER BROWN, Ilouse, Sign, and Ornamental Painter, Cutting done to Order. he latest styles of fashion, Sewed or h-vonuom:ï¬...bonmm fnd you will be Properly Suited and June 24th , 1480 F. DOWNES, T THE ROCKVILLE MILLS Alexander Robertson, BUSINESS DIRECTORY. LEGAL _ Lower Town, Durham. . y7th, 1879 W . M. CLARK, Architect and Builder, wrhan MWeney to 4 a argequantity of JOISTS. Lot 41, Con . U. K. Bentinck. :: g1, the advertisement not to exceed 12 lines. Avertisements, omr when accompanied by r «ten instructicns to the contrary, are inserted iti} forbidden, and charged at regular rates. ing, Graining, and Paper Hanging promptly aitended to. sco and_ Banner Painting a Speciality. .â€" 1 .F. v-mt:. ord-r;‘ oft mt J r Mowats cham., March 3rd, 1881. 156 ,ANS, Specifications, Estimates, &e., Furnished. Work Superintendcd and Inspec Charges Moderate. 158 â€"~TERM®S%:â€"$1.00 per year in Advance. â€" $1.33 it net pa‘d Within three Every Thursday, At "THE GREY REVIEW I". Z%. NITIXCODN, ©. . J A C M H, . A . TTORNEY at Law, Solicitor in Chanâ€" cery, Commissioner in B. R., Notary Public TTORNXEY â€" AT â€" LAW, Ce.â€"â€"Onlcrl opposite Parker‘s Drug Btore, Upper Town, DURHAM Str., DURHAM. MISCELLANEOU®S. W. CALDWELL, Faskhions Regularly Received RATES OF ADVERTISING. TAXILOKL, At a Moderate Price Frost & Frost, and SHOEMAKER E.D. MACMILLAN, FLESHERTON. MEDICAL. J. TOWNSEND, Publisher 2e tm DURHAM. J. W. CRAWFORD, A . ROBERTSON J. W.FROST, LL.B fmâ€"116 Upper Also vâ€"64 y3l y10 Grocery and Provision Store Field and Garden Seeds 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 Durham, 1870 & 18830 Fresh Oat A FIRSTâ€"CLA®® HMEARSE TO HIRE Remember the placeâ€"a short distance northo the Post Office. TANNER, CURRTER and Dealer ITas now on hand several hundred pairs of Always in Stock, and will be sold Chsag for Gashâ€"cr Farm Eroduce. FRESH EGGS and GOOD FLOULR l;l‘[l.l)El{,Dnrham.keeps on hand a largestock of S«sh,Doors and all kinds of Building materinls,also a stock of Mouldings in Walnut, Rosewood,and Gilt. Plans,specifications and Bills of Lumber made out on short notice. A t«llstock of Coffins, Caskets, Shrouds and Trim mingsalwaye on hand JUS‘!’ ARRIVED at Always on hand and exchanged for Oate. Fresh ‘Groceries Remember the place next to Reid‘s Hotel, Main Street, Hanover, Ont. R. McNALLY 'l‘lll'l Subscriber is now prepared to Supply all who may want Waggons, Carriages, Buggies, and all other articles in his line of business on the shortest notice and mude of the best material. He is also Agent for Seeds, Seeds. Hanover Carriage Works, HANOVER, Oxt. THE famous Cavalry Horlélbzr has secured the services of a Good agouâ€" maker. Business prompt and Priges reasomable. Dundalk, Sept. 23rd, 1880 hâ€"136. Factory Boots & Sheos, J AMES HANNA April, 1st, 1881. Cash for Hides. J. C. JOPP. My Mottoâ€"(Close and promp attention to business and fair dealing between all men. 164. Blacksmithing & Waggon Making. Hanover March 24, 1881 Deeds, Leases, Wills&c. neatly and correctly prepared . Auction Sales Attended. All Business Strictly Confidential, R. DAVIS, FLESHERTON To furmers and business men on short dateenâ€" dorsed notes or good collaterals. Salenotes urchased ata fair valuation. Draftsissued atusual Bank rates, payable atall Banks in Ontario and Quebec. Collections of notes and aecounts on reasonable torms. BURNET‘ S And Interestallowed atthe rate ofsixper cent, per annum . Leather, Hides, Boots, Blind â€"Factory. ROBT. BULL® Office opposite McAlister‘s Hotel Durham Planing Mill, SASH, DOOR 122 Real Estate, Loan & Ensurance Agent. Lands Bought and Sold. Upper Town, DURHAM A Large Lot of Farming Implements. 1YCNVEYANCER, Commissioner in B.R. Seed Grain of all Kinds taken in any quantity in exchange Suituble for all at very low prices J. C. JOPP, Vol. IV. No. 22. J. A Halsted & Co., Deposits Received, MONEY ADVANCED Ebe Grevu Reticlo. SHOE3, &e., DURHAM. â€"ANDâ€" AND IN CHARGES LOW G. L. DAVIS, Manager just as steady as any farmer ‘round hore. Buch doin‘s. 1 anppose Jose will come home to. fHine Loz Lm giads we bopt Little by litle a change orept over the meadow farm. A new atmosphere per vaded the house. Books and papers began to be a matter of course, and Mattie Richâ€" ards was a freqnent bearer of sheets of music to Mamie Peters. Farmer Joe‘s views altered. He found time to read now and then, and didn‘t find the moments wasted either. He had a way of dropping a newspapcr in the hands of his help after tea, much to Sam‘s disapproval, who told him there were & heap of odd jobs might be done up while his hands were hanging round after swpper. â€" In tactit nettled Saw to see that his brother was such a favorit« with the hands, and it was not pleasant to hear his wife repeat that Mary Peters had so much time to berself ; or to hear 1i Jack or Dotty tell how much their cousins knew. "Father," said Juck, *.an‘t I earn money about the farm the way Joe does? His father lets him spend it for real nice things and he takes the Youth‘s Comprnion, and has bought a set of: tools and heaps of things besides." "No, sir. If you waat to read you‘ll have to borrow books, and I guess uay tools are tha l est to. work with,â€" ‘n I ain‘t a goâ€" ing to have you with papers in your hands until after your work is done." So Jack borrowed booksâ€"thrilling stories â€"â€"which he offared to Joe, but his cousiu‘s taste was of a different nature‘ carefully trained as it was by his father and mother, and he returued the books after reading a Years went byâ€"two, fve, siz. ‘The pretty country village began to attract public atâ€" tention. City boarders appeared and from the very first, Joe Peter‘s house had as many as it could hold. It was a pleasure to be with sush refined péople, and" to have such entertainment as the books ‘afforded. The elder brother was ‘eager‘ to follow the example, but his wife fAstly refused. "I‘m clear beat out," she said.‘ "I can‘t bear those * eity folks‘ with ‘their notions. There‘s one of the young ‘then over ‘there waiting on ‘Mussiic, And" when LX " warned Marvy, she only Imogh#d® and ~shad he "was That seitled it for him. _ Three weeks afterwards the front door opened wide admii an elegant pianoâ€"Joe never dic anything by the halvesâ€"and three curiy heads Lent qver the beautiful iilnstration. in a montuly Magazine. Samand his wif condemmed the folly in loudest terms, but Squire Richards and the minist x ~ld Joe he had done a gool thing. "O", Joe! Can‘t we ? _ Mamie is so fond of singing, and Josey and Lucy would read forever, if 1‘d let ‘om !" Joseph Peters walked into his house with a thoughttal air. His wife looked enquirâ€" ingly as he sat down beside her. Thers were people who said that Mary Prince would never make a decent wife for a far mer, she was "too high strung." Evidentâ€" ly Sam thought so, for he choose a very different sort of a woman to manage his farm house. _ He never repented his choice ; in fact he never thought of doing anything without her advice and counsel. When he told her of the suggestion of ‘ Squire Richards, she diopped her knife m astonshment. ( ""You‘ll bring theto to the poor house if you jump at every idea. Better listen to sme, Joe." "You need not worry about me, Sam. There is a good streak of your father‘s savin‘ in me; but I‘d like to have my children enjoy life more than I have." "It‘s the same. He got his queer ideas out of books, you can depend upon it. If I send my boy and girl to school in the winter time I do my duty by them in that line,L hope you won‘t 40 smy thing foolish." "Joe Peters. I hope you remember what book learnin‘" did to Ben, exclaimed Sam. «*Mother would have him go to college, and he dicd &; poor as poverty." "I ain‘t so sure it was the learnin" that ruined Ben, Sam, but the spendin‘ so much that didn‘t go with tke books." The gentleman readily agreed and the #wo farmers walked home together. "I baven‘t thought about it yet," replied the other. "I wish you‘d come over to the farm, Squire, and talk it over with Auary Do you think we toiled all these years to get such things ? Idon‘t mean offense, Squire, but I‘d just be encouraging idleness to follow your advice. What do you say, Joe ?" ""Well, if that don‘t beat the Dutch !" exâ€" claimed Sam, the elder of the two. Yes, yes. Now you are both rich men and you ought tc enjoy your wealth. You have children, aud I don‘t belive you want them to work as you have done. Give them m taste of something better. In short I advise to get a piano, teke one of the monthly magazizes, and a newspaper or two." **No, indeed, but you will allow Squire Richards, that we know a little the most on farming matters." *"Well, I hope we are not above taking advice from anyone. Are you, brother **Well, T‘am glad to hear that yow say so. l‘am sure your brother feels jnst the same as you do. How wi.l you take a little sugâ€" gestion from me 2" «Yes, Squire, the Lord has blessed us in busket and in store, ztd we are proper thankf2l for all his merdstes." The Squire‘s Advice, DURHAM, Co. Grey, JULY 14, 1881 atâ€"| nice strawvervies in powdered sugar, from | spread over the pudding and cover with a d as| meringws meade of the beaten whites and sure | three table spooonfuls: of : powdered sugar, have | Retuen to the oven until the top is delicatcâ€" ‘ded. | ly browned. ; llow| Somme people ean invent awful mean 1. slurs. ‘When the Jookine girls was whalâ€" can‘t ‘ing away at the piano and pested the next ions.| door neighbor, the next door neighbor here | eame out on the steps, listened to the noise rned | a min‘te, looked up ‘to the Jenkins ‘girl‘s ~was [ mother who was at the widow an@d said, rore. ot plumbers at work in your house, ome | Beven t you ?" No w nilcrihose fam‘ bopt don‘t speskâ€"MO0ws Lo tur Poor Eptror.â€"Three gentlemen during a conversation agreed to pay $10 each to one who should tell the tallest and most ridieulous story. The firstcommeneâ€" cd his stoty thus: "There was once a wealthy editorâ€"" "Stop !" eed the rest of the party, "here‘s our money." MurErss. Ingredients.â€"Butter, half a cup ; sugar, half a cup; milk, two cups; yeast powder, thrae tablespoonfal ; four, one quart ; salt, one tablespoonful. ‘The quart of flour should be a scanty one, and the yeast powder thoroughly rubbed through it. Bake in muffin rings. Strawrzaey Puppina.â€"Cream, a eup of sugar and a tablespoouful of butter : add the beaten yolks of five eggs and two cups of finebread crumbs soaked jn a quart of sweet milk. . #lavor with lemon or vanilla. Pour into a deep pudling dish and bake until the eussard is ‘sa%.‘ Roll a pint of I swbseribed for the paper. While restâ€" ing one noon and looking over it, J saw an idvertisement of commissioners inviting vids for a bridge that was to be built. I put in a bid for the Bridge and the job was awarded to me, on which I cleared $800, which enabled me to pay for my house and lot easily, and for the newspaper. If I had not subscribed for the newspaper I should not have known anything about the conâ€" tract, and shouid not have met my payâ€" m:nt on the house and lot. A mechanic never looses anything by taking a newsâ€" paper, She replied : "If you will subscribe for tiir paper, I will sew for the tailor to pay for it." I wiâ€"hb you woald subscribe for th# néwsâ€" paper : it is so much comfort to me when you are away from home. "I would like to do so," said I, " but you know I owe a payment on the house and 104 â€" It will be ill I can do to meet it." A correspondent says : "Ten years ago [ arrived in a small town to the west of this, and one day on returning home from work, or I was a earpenter by trade, I saw a littlé girl leave my door, and I asked my wife who she was. She said Mrs. fHams had sent her after their newsprper which my wife had borrowed. As we sat down to tea my wife said to me by name : "Well, now, there‘s areason for al! mvl prosperity, Want to. know it?; ‘Twas, the pieno,; and the nmgazine, and the , paperâ€"after the Bible and speiling l;ook.-'; Now, do yor think you are going to ruin | after you hags dons all this for me ? Don‘t say one word! ‘I‘was the piano, t and the magazines, and the pnperâ€"aflerl the Bible end spelling book." | â€" mt t e p $ nnasa _ + "But Samâ€"sho !â€"T can‘t see, somehow. His wife died last weekâ€"clean worn out. Dolly‘s married a real good farmer, but she can‘t teud to nauch at home now, of course a0d she has to work sume as her mother did. Jack is so moody that there is not a soul that likes him. Poor Sam he‘s worn out too. ! Accordingly the gentloman went. Far mer Joe met him at the depot ; and after a few mon.ents silence, during which they jogged over the road, he turned and said : "Bquire Richads, you‘ve been mmy best friend. Wauit a while! I want to tell you about it. Look at me. I‘m strong as that oak over there. My wife is as hearty and blooming as her girls ; my boy is a minisâ€" ter. Squire, and he‘s gotthe best wife in your daughter there ever wasâ€"‘cept one. My daughter Mary hus married a rich young merchant down in New York. She got a good, steady, christian husband, and a spleniid boy that‘s coming to see his grandpa this summer. Then Lucyâ€"now Squire, she‘s graduated up to May bloom but she‘s going to marry Tom Allen. He‘li take the farm some day, and do better than I ever did. Meanwhile, Squire Richards moved to the city. A mau of good sense and clear uuderstanding, he neverthofess beciimeo inâ€" volved in some speculation, and at the and offive years found himself a poor man. Overwhelmed and broken down, he receivâ€" ed a letter from the meadow farm, urging him to come down to the country, and hinting at ard. ; The young man spoke bitterly. He felt the differsnuce between himself and his eousin all the more keenly for the reason that he knew he was his equal maturally. He knew that Mat4s Richards, the loveâ€" Mee®gertin‘the village, preferred Joe to himself, and that in itself was no small grievence. Dolly felt the déiference; bh* strove to show that she was as good as Main‘e and Lucy, by flirting and dressingas becoming as possible. you on the farm, Jack." "Well I ain‘t! I hated it always, but now I‘ve got to stick it out." A Valuable Newspaper. " The couveredtion of an intelligent hciue awakens in children the power of thought, directs their attention‘ to subjects worthy of thought,â€"and‘furnishes their minds with ual improvement.â€"Home beaming wit) intelligence, is an atmosphare congenial to the inquisitive mind of children, and a;ront factor in theeducation of children. CLildâ€" ren : hunger perpetnally for new ideas. They will léaru with pleasure from the lips of people, what would be drudgery to learn fom : books; and if they have the misfortune to be deprived of many eduâ€" cationat advantages, they will grow up in . telligent if, in childLood;"they hear daily the conversation of intelligent pbople. ] that she certainly should let it fall took sueh complete possession of her that sh: dashed it down, and then came in a par oxysm of the most distressing nervous exâ€" citement to tell her msother what she had done. ‘The susceptabélities of children, i not eared for an1 dizected aright, become sources of defect and weakness; but i guided and nourished by tender solicitude, they grow into things of beauty and strength. % Children are eapable of high intellect l 1. Children are bighly susceptable of the | emotional. This urises from the sovereign { sway of imagination over mankind in child j hood. Wuen things, tinged with the fairy :and magie colors of imagination are pleasâ€" ed before their mind‘s eye, children are thrilled with pleasure, dance with delight, ar give expressions of repturous joy; on the contrary, when things turned by the 'power of imagination into objects of tear, are placed Lbefore their mind‘s eye, they start at their own shadow, conjure up phantoms of alarm, snd quake at their own fandess Cmqze indeed are the forms, iuto which the fears of childréi‘ are someâ€" times cast, by the infinence of imaginative i vagueness, This is shown, in a few cases, with conclusive effect by a writer as folâ€" y lowsâ€"*‘The objects that excite the fears of children are often as curious and unacâ€" countable as their secret intensity. Miss Martineaun told me once, that a special obâ€" ‘ jeet of lsorror to her, when she was a child ‘ were the color. of prism, a thing in itself| so beautiful that it is difficult to conceive how any imagination could be painfully impressed by i; but the #error of these magical colors was sueh that se used to rash past the room, even when the door was elosed, where she had seen them reâ€" fleeted from the chandlier, by the sunlight on the wall. A bright, clever boy of nine, by no means particularly nervous or timid told me once that the whole: story of| Aladdin wae #ightful to him ; but he never was able to ezplain why it made this imâ€" pression upo® him. A very curious in stance of strong nervous apprehension,not. however, in any way connected with sup ernatural terror, sccurred to a young gir‘ about eight years old, a daughter of a friend of mine. ‘The mother, the gentlest ani| most reasonably indulgent of parents, sei t her upstairs for her watch, cautioning her not to let it fall; the child, by her own ae count, stood at the top of the stairs with the watch in her hand, till the conviction "Tis the earth without its verdure, M And the sky without the sunshine, Life is withered to the cored Bo wo‘ll leave this dreary dosert, And we‘ll follow the Good Shepherd To the greener pastures vernal. Where the lambs havegone before With the Shepherd evermore! Children are the sunbeams of home, and like the sunbeams, composed of primary colours, as exbhibited to us in the rainbow, , ¢hildren have in thzm faculties of various ikinds, capable of being drawn out and ! wrought into beautiful traits of character, I . : + under the genial infuence, the wise direcâ€" : tion, and the useful instruction of home. Home is, in the general experience of mankind, fragrant with sweet endearments, with happy memories andâ€"with hallowed associations. Oh, there‘s a power to make each bhour As sweet as heaven designed it, Nor need we rowm to bring it home, Tho igh :‘ew ther> be who find it ; We seek too high for things close by, And lose what nature found us ; For life hath here no charm so dear As home and irienas around us. We oft destroy the present joy For future hopes, and praise them ; .__ White flowers as sweet bloom at our feet, If we‘ll but stoop to ruise them ; For things afur stil}sweeter are, When youth‘s brigk#¢ spell hat bound us : : __ But soon we‘re tought that earth was naught Like home and friends round us. The friends M'npoed in time of needy When Hope‘s last reed is shnledi." To show us still, that, come what will, We are not quite forsaken ; Though all were night, if but the light From Friendship‘s eltar crowned us, i _ Twould prove the bliss of carth was thisâ€" Our homes and friends around us. This description of home glows the sacâ€" red affections of Lome, and sparkles with the genial sympathies of friendship; but there is in it the lack of childrenâ€"a serious defect. Oh, the weary solomn silence Of a house without the children ! Oh, the strange oppressive stillnoss Where the children come no more. Ab, the longing of the sleepless For the soft arms of the children, l Ah ! the longing for the faces Ticking, ticking by the door. Strange to see the little dresses Hanging up there all the morning; And the griters, ah! they patter, We will hear it never more On our earth forsaken floor ! What is home without the children, Peeping through the opening doorâ€" Faces gone for evermore! Strange it is to wake at midnight And not hear the children breathingâ€" Nothizg but the old clock ticking, The Home of Children. often done before, from seven to nine 6‘clock at which hour his son and an assistant went to take him up stairs to beJ, and \tonodhindnd. At the inquest it wis concluded that death was caused by =n ‘overdose of intoricating liquor,; and was ted‘by heart discase. world to the now the first stepy and his hbead on his arm. Here be was ullowed to sieep, as be had _ Suppex peatg at Aumaâ€"An inquest was held on Saturday the 25th uit., by €or oner Dr. Paget, on the remains of the late James John:ton, for many years hotel keeper in the village of Alma. Deceased was in his usual bealth on Friday, was L:bouc the house during the day, he ate his his meals heartily, and gave his family no cause for alarm. Between six and seven o‘clock he added one more glass of whiskey to the the many drank that day, and im mediately fell on the f1 ‘~ .. He was assistâ€" ed to thre foot of the stairs, but for want of help could not be carried to bed. He sat upon the floor, his right arm resting on ‘ ren lies not so much in‘ things® withâ€" out them, it springs 44¢ 6F the principles gud habits sown and formed in them by the instruction and examaplse of home,. | Happiness comses frow withir. All the money in the world cannot bringit. Lové : and truth avd an untroubléed ¢onsciencsé | may, but never a great house or a wide I estate. Little erms encircling the néck will muke the heart light over which no diamond sparkle. All the grand pistures and splendid works of art owe in possess will never adorn a room as do the smiling faces of those dearest to us. The thiugs‘ that may be bought are pleasant to haveâ€" nor is wealth to be despised; but never pity the poor man who has the wealth that gold cannot buy, nor the woman whose jewels are those which Cornelia was so l proudâ€"good and obedient sons. Tt is thus | I the outcome,not of pomp and cirenmstance, but of a well conditioned mind, induced by | the eulture of bhome in childhbood, and sus ,' tained by a life in necord with the hamane | benevolent, and enlightened dictates of the heart and understanding in manhood. A| | story is told of two travellers in Lapland, { which throws more light on the art of beâ€" { ing happy than a whole volume of proverbs ; and aphorisms. Upon a very cold day in | winter they were driving along in a sledge wrapped up in furs from head to foot. ‘ ’ Even their fages were closely covered, and | | you could searcely see anything but their | eyebrows, and these were white and glist ‘1 ’ ening with frost. At length they saw a poor man who had sunken down benumlâ€" «l ard frozen in the snow. "We must | stop and help him," said one of the travellâ€" | ers. "Stop and help him!" replied the | \other, "you will never think of stopping on such a day as this! We are half frozen ourselves, and ought to be at our journey‘s end as soon as possible." "But I cannot / leave this man to perish," rejoined the more humane traveller ; "I must go to his relief," and he stopped the sledge. "Come" said be "and help me to raise him." "Not I," repled the other; "I have too much regard for my own life to expose myself to this freezing atmosphere more than is neeâ€" essary. I will eit here and keep myselt as warny as I can till you come back." Bo iuying he resolotel,; kept his seat; while| his companion bastened to relieve the| perishing man, whom they had so provi A «dentially discovered. The ordinary means | were used for restcring consciousuess. But l the traveller was so intent upon saving the â€" life of a feilowâ€"creature that he forgot his } own exposure ; and what were the conse | quences ? Why the yery efforts which he | made to warny the stravigs? warmed him | self. Ho be® the sweet consciousness 6‘ | doing a benevolent act, and he also found himself glowing from head to foot by rea | son of the exertions which he had made. |: And how was it with his companion, who was so much afraid 6f exposing himself ? | ‘ He was almost ready to freeze, notwithâ€"| ‘ » anding the efforts he had been making to | keep nimself warm.â€"O. S. i 8. Childré® s&re cnpable of grest happiness _ through tue â€" t« â€" of home.â€" The _ happiness _ of _ ch@d/ Again, the children of such a home areled by example to acquire the habit of reading, and furnished with books, to enrich their minds with knowledge on all subjects. A library of well chosen books, to supply the mind with means of recreation and materâ€" ials of thought, is to children the most valâ€" uable article of furnture in a house. Without books, to enrich and Leautify the mind with gems of thought, what is the use of a finely furnished house to children requiring, as rational beings, intellectual exercise?â€"UG ive us a house furnished with bcoks rather than a gorgeous array of furâ€" niture, beyond the wants of the inmates. Both if you can, but books at any rate. Think of the mental torture you must unâ€" } dergo to spend several days in a friends ] | Lonse,and bunger for something to read, while you are treading on costly carpets, and sitting down on luxurous chairs, and sleeping upon down, as if one were bribing ‘ your body for the sake of cheatiag the mind. Books are the windows through which the soul lools 0@% A house without Lbooks is liké. & rsom without windo®s A book is good company # it is fuil of conversation ‘without logthsity. It talke to you, not through the ear, bit #a=other, often times more desirable way, &5 fpoaks with silent eloquence to the understand * ain#t to the { heart in a feast of reasow and Ets fow of; Whole No. 175. mnow bind the ols _‘ UNTARIO ~ARCHIVES Mr. Daniel Ferguson paying the Frensarer . gze sum of $5.70, being toud bélauce.â€" Car. 4 Moved by Mr. McArdt#; seconded by WÂ¥. Black, That a grant of $10 be given to imâ€" prove the Tovnligo between m ahd Proton, con. 19 providing give an equal equivalent to said assount. Moved z Mr. Buckley, seconded by M¢. at Mr. ‘s ‘s + secoad Tuesday in July.â€"Car. McArdle, That the taxes in arredr for K6 2, con. 19, for the year 1880, be erasoed> on = for baving his lot sold by the through an error in his ass‘t.â€"Car. Moved by MZ. Abbott, secondud 6y NÂ¥ McArdle, That the Reeve itsne an order i# favour of Thomas . Talbot forthe am‘t of $20, as a settiement in full of his elaid# Moved by Mr McArdie,; seconded by‘ Mr. Black, That the upplication of Thonas‘ Rodgers and others for this Council to theâ€" morialize the Hon. Postmasterâ€"General to have a regular mail route established beâ€" tween Mount Forest and Pundalk, vi@‘ Cedarville and PPopeville,; and to Huve a regular stage on the sard rowd,and that J, J. Middleton, John Abbotty and Josoph McArdle be a commmitted to diatt the sumé Movel by Mr. McArdle, so onded by Mr. Abbott, That the petiuon of James Fletcher and others be received. and pro ading the p tiioners pérford the amouut f wors proposed in their petetion, under the Conncillor in the Division, and that, Mr. Buckley gract? $10;, then this Council‘ grant $10.â€"Car. be paid.â€"Car. Moved by Mr. McArdle,; seconded by Mr. Black, i'hntth. account of Stovel & Bon for $6.72 and C. W.. Routledge of $10,10, Moved by Mr. McArdie, seconded by Mr. Bluck, That lot 10, on con. 7 be placed in the Road Division‘ of Alex. Gilâ€" lies.â€"Car. Moved by Mr. Buckley, seconded by Mr. MeArdle, Thatthis council graut $5, proviâ€" ding that the Councillor of Division No. T yraut $5 for the purpose of putting on a Bridge and cutting on the hog‘s buck on the west side of sauid bridge.â€"Car. Moved by Mr. Abbott, seconded by Mr. Buckley, That the petition of Johu Moâ€" Luban and others to detatch the first com. from lot 8 tw 12 inclusive, from School $e¢â€" tion No. 9, and joined to a Union Section uf Proton, Luther, Arthur and Egremont, be granted, and that Edward Cnvwn’h be appommted dicferee on beluif of this ‘FoWst‘ ship.â€"Car, Moved by Abbott, seronded by Backâ€" ley, That the petition of Juun Muluall and others ‘be received, and that a graut of $10° be given to improve th6 road on con, ) and 8, at lot 28 provided a similar amount be expended by the Counciliors of the divi~ sion.â€"Car. Moved by MeArdle, seconded by Buck, ley, That the petition‘of Weury Yemenand others be rederved,‘and the parties be heard the next meeting of the Council, and that‘ the Clerk give the necessary nouwice to those interested.â€"Car. At this stage the Councrl procecded te‘ the geveral business of the Townslhip. Moved by Mr. Abbott, seconded by Mr.® McArdle, That the Reeve issue an order to‘ the Trustees of School Section Nv. 11, for the $20 granted said Section on presentâ€" ing the Inspector‘s Certificate.â€"Car. Moved by Mr. Black, seconded by Mry Buckley, Tuat the ass‘t Roll, as amended; ve now finaily passed and certuled.â€" Car. Moved by Mr, Abbott,seconded by Mr/ Buckley, That lots & HW (Doyle‘s Burvey,) Dundalk, now ass‘d to Smmuel McCuiâ€" losh, be placed‘on the Ro!l to John Gardiâ€" ner, and that John Montgomery be Fl‘od on the Roli as owner for lot 39, con 1, inâ€" stead 0* Farmenr‘s Son ; and Jus. McLeap be placed on the Roll, i0r tarmer‘s sou for lot 19, con. 12.â€"Uar. u _ Movs4 by Mr. Buckley, seconded by Wz Abbot, That Mrs. Tammon,lot21,con. 7,and‘ also James Cogan, lot 27, con. 7, be placed on the Roll as supporters of the Separaté Eehoo!, Section No. 6.â€"Car Moved by Mr. Abbott, seconded by Mr/ Moved by Mr. Abbott, seconded by Mr. MeArdle, That the whole of lot 10 on the Sth‘con, be ass‘d to James McEwen, und‘ that the east half of said lot, ass‘d to Dunâ€" can be struck off the Roll.â€"Car. > Moved by McArdle, seconded‘by Abbotty That the personal property ass‘d against Rob‘t Gillespie of lot 4 in the 6th con., be struck off the Roll as agrinst the said lot. â€"Car. Moved by Mr. Buckley, seconded by Mry MeArdle, That Patrick Mulball be placed on the Roll as owner of lot 88, con. 8, in stead of Joun Mulhall.â€"Car. Moved by Mr. Moved by Mr. Abbott, seconded by Mr. Buckley. Thut Micheal Ryan be placed on‘ the Roll for lot 12 con 7, now ass‘d to Patâ€" rick Ryan.â€"Car. Moved by Mr. Black, seconded by Mr. Buckley, That William Egan‘s ass‘t be reâ€" duced $60, personal property on account of the death of his cattle.â€"Car. Moved by Abbott, seconded by Buckley, That lot 11, con. 6, on Nonâ€"Resident Roll, be entered in the Resident Roll to Arch‘d MeCannell, also 88, con. 1, to Jas D. Steâ€" phens, Kleinburg.â€"Car. Dasey eaeey stead of Isane Traynor. Adam Traynor owner for lot 82, con. 7, and 81, con. 9, inâ€" stead of Isnae Traynor. L. _ W. Yeomans, owner for lot 29, con. 8, instead of John Page, removed. Hugh Wilson owner for lot 17, con. 6, instead of John Page. ol s e Cmm aits o HEAK . Flike and Jas. Phelan, tenants. Joseph Meâ€" Ardle be placed on the Roll, owner of two acres ass‘d to John Hopkinson for $850,beâ€" ing part of lot 12, con. 12. Benjamin Sncars, as‘d for lot 20, con. 5. Thomas Rutherford, owner for lot 9, Block M, inâ€" mbnervigiis P o sirnctvas Pss 2s 4 Mainâ€"st., part of lot 281, con 2, W,. G. Hicks, owner, at a value of $200. GSaunâ€" ders cwner, G, Liddel!, tenant, for lot 20, con. 12, at a value of $700. Hugh Meoâ€" Gurrin, tenant for lot 17, con. 17, ata value of $550. Wm. Wood be placed on the Roll for $100 instead ot $50. Jamés McMullen, owner lot 24, con,. 5, and Pat. Moved by Mr. Black, seconded by Mr.. Buckley,. That Charles. Gitbert be placed on the Roll as owner forlot 14,con. 7. Wim,. J. Armstrong and Charles Armustrong, tenâ€" mudds # C 4o4 malsue _ c mluy 0 uce LCC oor [EO0E "HoP, HEA§ES: Charles Fothergill, tenant for five aorés‘ and house lot 220, Range one, at a value of $100. James Fannel, tenant for lot"5,° ___Proton Council, as per adjournment,met At Cedarville as a court of Revirion for the Assessment Roll, and other busiuess, on‘ Tuesday, 14th uf June, 1881, at ten a. m. Members of Court all present. ‘The Reeve presiding. The minutes were read of the previous meetting and confirmed, Several communications were received and read. â€" 4 " EMA HS were ants for lots 286, 287 and 238 Proton Council. . Black, seconded by . the taxes in arrear for o¢ Joux Vzszt, Clesk.