ley. 4 °P mt < d.' * F:w,ooo, :fu: Ne @Borâ€" red in a ecurr Book of 130 Pag» * of Hlowers, aund wikome of tue choie esnt or $libionasi eas, adâ€"Acze, Conâ€" pation, I d imesâ€" mess, Heansibaurm. 000 a year Ks loral Guide been recovered from ious damage by food art of th Id easket c. PER ROX, , on Friday 'Ooi,by twenty people were Â¥e or less M , Buchu 1Purific", t andivce, # axtct where tavle Gardew. 1J 3 N TS men in s over Madex Reagodand ivange, eriect are wblh is timca your irrea (0..0C, 1# ~vi 3 cnuuhu.:,_ t Suliciton, vas. 37 FPark about Patenty » Thar a um l on > (hP pyrotechnie & + l ty o# A'-‘ Lo«s of av® -bo'! y present. 1 in the reat nmt oty. In Common, wh ote., for England, 1« world. aand wrow «vann w ki bow mat iss r naaine d D wl 81= tn. n »tents, it ch is ty . Foueâ€" i undt duct nter d.;. * pit and hey and Stem Winders. " @~‘stestin Hall,Parlorand BracketCLO@OCKA, b «ue beantiful design« in Silver and Elecâ€" wo Plated Ware at W. F. DOLLS‘, Fiesherton. spegublusy eviic.iow GOLD & Silver WATCHES LICKE IS, Colored & Bright Gold Sets3 AMERICAN J EWELLERY C ue Erorrttee This machine is capable of sewing through 17 of duck with the same ease as any other mael tan sow two ply, and the strongest Linen thr m|ud¢ nln be used upon it It aIso ean ba as witwass y 2C T t of duek with the aama ai2, 27. ° UE £hrough 17 ply of duck with iho.-onuuuy other mhL. can sow two ply, and the -tmmt Linen thread made can be used upop it. It can be ensily wdjusted to sow the fnost fabric. Prices range from 435 to #A48. THE LATEST NXOYVEILTIPE 1w 'PHE anbscriber is repned to ] and Make Up. on the shortest notice he LatestStyle &nuud Boy‘sClothing Atquarranteed . Residence at theOld Post Office Spring and Summer DURHAM Sr., DURHANM. Residonceâ€"Opposite the Canada Presby terian Charch.| Lates: Fashions JOHN ROBERTSON TAILOR AND CLOTHIER I N thanking my many Customers for the very liberal Patronage received since comâ€" moncing businessin Durham, I state that 1 m now botter than ever prepared to exeeute work of A received. Durham, Feb.14, 1878. E* Farmers, onlmnu.nn;l Land !;qhn,nuondod to with puuctuality and charges made very moderate . PRICEVILLE, Ost., ] SSUER of Marriage Licenses, Fire and Lile Insurance Agont,Commissionorin B.R.&c, Couveynucer, and Liceusced Auctioncer or the County of Grey . h. xG 4 Farnished. Work: ted Charges Moderate Darham Nov.23 1880 l)l.,\.\'S. Specifications, Extimates, &e., )'.xmhhw!‘ \.Vou Supsrintended und Inspecâ€" ud Phawais Lutas k. " Cutting done to Order I ICENSED AUCTIONEER, for the 4 County of Groy, Anction Sates attended to in all pwris cf the County, at reasonuble rutes. Goods sold on Commission.‘ Land Saies carefully attended and the sule bills promptly posted up. Alexander Bobertsoij PHOTOGRAPHY Priceville, 1880 Wilibe at Muting‘s Hotel, Sholburne, every day and Fridey, from 10 o‘ciock a.im.to 5 p.i Dandalk,Murch 20th 1979. Is Agent for the Celebrated wilson B Sewing Marchines of Hamilton. VETERINARY SURGEON,| ALEXANDER BROWN, *7 & Surgery, will visit Durhamâ€"â€" Oflice, British Hotelâ€"from third Tuesday (Frair Day) to theend of every month, where he will be most ""l‘l‘ï¬' to wait npon all those that may fuvor him with their putâ€" ronage. All work entrusted to him will be perâ€" formed in the Iitest and most approved strie. Rurunaexcs, any of the leading Dentists of Toâ€". ronto. l ‘MWead @Bce.â€"Wingham . y162 A«€* W. M. CLARBRK, Architect and Builder, A J Solicitors in Chansery, Conveyuncers, ctc., Owen Sound, have resum=d at Flesherton. Office >peun every Thursday as heretofore . ALFRED FROST, J. W.FROST, LL.B. County Crown Attorney. June #4th , 1980. viot «2700 OB . A LGBb ]’;ABRISTBRS and Attorney‘satâ€"Law Solicitors in Chansery Convevancare ats }lt.\DU,\TE of Ontario Vetrinary Col LuaACELETS, Professional and business cards one iuch space and under. per year, ....................$ 4 T wo inches or 24 lines Nonpariel measure......... 7 Throe inches do. per year................................... 10 Casual advertisarfhionts charged 3 cents per Lib» form the first insertion, aud 2 cents por line for each subsequent insertion.â€"Nouperie} measure. Ordinary notices of births, marriages, deaths;and all kinds of locut news,jrise; ted free of charge. Strny Amimais, &c, advertised three weeks for $1, the advertisetnent not to exceed 12lines. Adlvertisements, except when mceotnpanied by wr «ten instructions to the :'ionï¬,tl’y wro inserted uatil forbidden, and charged it regular rates. lege, Toronto Meoney to Lean. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. TAILOR, Done in 35 different Styles lTTOBNEYS at Law, Solicitors, &c, Oflceâ€"Lower Town, Durham. B.JACKES, B. A. R. A. PRINGLE. MISCELLANEOUS. = Al # ture â€"FTraming â€"TERM®S:â€"§1.00 per year in Advance.â€" $1.95 if not paild Wilhin â€"shre» HUGH MACKAY, 1is1very Tha: At the Office, Garafraxa Street, Durham. €. < % TTORNEY . AT â€" LAW, &c.â€"Orrick h:!‘vo-lul’uhr'l Drug B#ore, Upper Town, "THE GREY REVIEW "*. Â¥. NIXCOON, DURHAM. INXCLUDIN RATES OF ADVERTISING. JACKES & PRINGLE, MARKDALE E. D. MACMILLAX, MEDICAL. T. DONAGHY, Regnaisriy Receive d NOVELTIES Ix DE ‘ & Geuls‘ J. TOWNSEXD; Publisher BEALS repared to Receiv ortest notice, and Fashions regule:) Kelsey‘s old Stand. y1ik. CirimINS, , Lowe: Town ‘"‘T‘h ursday we. &e. Agoo R. A. PRINGLE y190 tinâ€"116 Suitabletor ail at very low prices. _ i Also on hand, and mude to mexsure, all kinds (Sewed and I’uxrd). made by work. i men whn taok all the First Prives.forlinnte, al the County Shows held in Durkam, 1079 & 1880 Spbgbccoiny FRESH EGGS ana GOOD FLOUR taken in any quuatity in;erchauge. 8 l Leathor, Hides, Boots, SHOEG, &e., Has now on hand several hundred pairs of = The Gren Reviemw. : w : mnfflagpéadi l2A 4 iicic.s Â¥5% ' bost House west of PToront â€"â€" | Hooms for Commerciai mr ’ Bar and Larder not to be exe moozn | _ Durbam, Oct. 23, 1081, the ‘ M t a «) Money to atï¬-. fully . p ’l‘"E undersigned has @4 of both private and Com on either Farm or Village proj | of interest TANNER, A FIRSTâ€"CLAss HEARSE To BiRE Remember the placeâ€"a short distance northo® the Post Office., Cash for KHides, af Geen w.___ £7,°0 HAnG & AZ largestock of Sash,Doors and all kinds of Building materials,also & stock of Mouldings in Wainut, Rosewood arnd Giit. Plans,specifications and Bilis of Lumber made outonshort notice. A tullstock of Coffins, Caskets ,Shrouds and Trim minesalwayson hand Factory Boots & Sheos, Rememberthe place 'I‘HE Subscriler is now Supply all who may want Waggons, Carriages, and all other articles in his line of shortest notice und nado of tha y10 Hanover Carriage Works My Mottoâ€"Close and promp ati and fair dealing between all men Iea! Estrte, Lomn & Insnranee Agent. Lands Bought and Sold. Deeds, Leases, Wills&e. neatly and correctly prepared, Auction Sales Attended. All Business Striectly Confidential, CHARGES Low. H.wnvu)n.rnhu.lt.nl. ‘agye: “J;‘xj Durham Planing Mill, SASH, Door ~â€"ANDâ€" 1 U ce o e n o Ey s mill to day.‘" "]'"E undersigned has a large amonnt th: hg" 7 . of both private and Company funds to lend Saunders‘ mill was ten miles away, but on either Furm or ‘.,‘,“;:‘,‘;’t,}':,‘,’("""' ty at lowest rutes | j had made the trip so often that it did not Business strictly conficential and costs of loans ' seem far. I Lolieve oue becomes more atâ€" ooo es o‘,:_"t‘:,‘“;’.'l:('x(â€â€˜,‘: | tached to an old mill than any other buildâ€" Lower Town, Darkam, | ing. Tean see just how it locked as it Sopt. 20th, 1881 ; C‘*_ / stood there nnder the sycamores, with its § | bhuge wheel and elapboarded sides." l mm I * R. DAVIS, FuDEsypppopy. »N% yheel and elupboarded sides Bli'l(l I“a"tol")" ROBT. BULL UILDER, Durham l‘armix‘xg' I;fli'é;zents. 'l'll E Subscriber bege public genernily that he H.uh-‘ 'lor & number of yeurs t PE aR UE i » ‘“. lw. Sulenotes urchased at a };lrvnlnntlon. Draftsissued atususl Bank rates, gn)‘ame atall Banks in Ontario and Quebee. Collections 0 notesand accounts on #casonable terms YONVYEYANCER, C J. C. JOPP, ‘ Patent Metalic Glass Burial Cases kept in stock. Office in Middaugh‘s Block Garafraxa Street. s @uve 1 General Banking Business TRANSACTEE, | '[VHI S BANK issues Letters of Credit on Great Britain and other Foreign Countries; Buys and Collects Sterling Exchange; Issues drafts on Me# York and all parts of Canade. DEPOSITS of $4 and upwards Received, unUn which the cuirrent rate of interest 1 will be allowed. Capitai $6,000,600 : Reoserve $1,400,000. 33 | BANK Of COMMERCE, DURHAM. CuLLECTIONS MADE 5 On reasodiable terms, and a "I brivate and Company funds to lend wrin or Village propert y at lowest rates of interest, trictly confiGdential and costs of loans redused to the lowest figure. R. A. PRINGYE, Lower Town, Durlkm. e place next to Reid‘s Hotel, Mzin Street, Hunover, Ont. CURRIER and Dealer aan ue en UT C ice aund made of the best muterial He is also Agent for HANOVER, Oxt Vol. V . No. s Cï¬rflagea, Buggies, CANADIAN DURHAM. in his lino‘oi_buul;::n ;;11 the -ke'Pf_ol{_{xnnd a ommissioner in B.R. | B. MecXALLY y159 tention to business n. 164. prepared to * ‘*Are you sure that yon abnt and pinned the gute ? he asked. This question stagâ€" gered me. Inlmmbuodw,flml dlid not. Imldpllllb‘ï¬mrms | _ *"When I arrived at Albright‘s gate where ’I turned off to go home, I tound the old | Squire waiting for me. 1 saw in n moment | that something bad gone wrocg. I Lad ’ always stood in the greatest awe of the old gentleman because he was the rich mun of the neighborhood, aud now 1 Te my heurt begining tosbeat very fust. As soun as 1 cumue near he said, *Did you 5o through tins grte yesterday ?" 1 couid have eusuy deuied it, us it was before dayligit wheu i went irough, as T quite us viten went the other way. Charne Allien kneeliug in the 3 burn came to my ind like flash, and beâ€" tore 1 lhad time to listea to the temptes, i/ said, "Yes, sir ; 1 dia.‘" l t "I had always been in the habit ing at home, but I never thought of thing at Saunders‘ mill. As I lay that night in the old barn, thinking c lie Allon‘s courams and whoe .. ""Well, boys, it‘s time for us fellers to go to roost," said Jim Finley, one of the greatâ€" est roughs on the Rocky Fork, as he threw down his pack of cards and began to unâ€" dress. We all followed his example, alâ€" though it was not much undressing we did to sleep on the Laymow; but! we were tso hbuay with onur own affairs to noti¢e Charlie , Allen until Jim exohimod,‘Hey-doy. we‘ve got a parson here, we hev!‘ Charlie was kneeling beside the oatâ€"bin praying, Jim Finley‘s jest met with no response. The silence was only broken by the drowsy cat» tle beiow, and the twittering swallows overâ€" head. More than one rough man wiped a tear from his eye as hs went silently to bed on the hay." "Although I was not acoustomed to such things at home I had become so used to it that it bad long since ceased to shock me, and indeed, I was fast becoming a very inâ€" terested spectat ar." | _ ‘*When I arrived I found the Nort] ! Branch and Rocky Fork folks there ahead {of me, and I knew there was no hope o igcttin;z home that day; but I was not at all | sorry, tor my basket was well filled with | provisions, and Mr. Saunders always openâ€" | ed his big barn for us@ sleep in, so it was | not an unpleasant time we had while waitâ€" )mg for our grist. ‘This time there was an addition to the number that bad been in ‘the habit of gathering from time to time in Seunders‘ bernâ€"a young fellow about my age, prolably a littlo older. His naime was Charlie Allen, and his father had ’l-onght a farm on the Bush Creek road. He was sociable and friendly, but I inslinet. ively felt that he had "more manaer." than the rest of us. The avening was spent as usual in relating coarse jokes and play. ing eards." "It is strange," said a gentleoza sat noxt to me in the car, and with 1 bel struclk un anita an 2N . Peterborough, March 1st, 1882, MY START IN LIFE; WBITTEN For HER rarENTS Boft waves of sunny hair, With gold lights shining through, Shading a baby face as fair As ever fancy penned in air, Or ever painter drew. Sweet Lily, fair and true, With childish gladnoss rife, What tender heart but to thee drow ? What kindly eye but in thee know The sunshine of thyâ€"life ? Only a newâ€"turned heap, One little grave, new made, Bare is the earth when parents weop, Never a flower. to pluck and keep, Never a grassy blade ! Bilence where late was mirth t One mother‘s heart half riven ; One vacant seat beside a hearth ; Omlonlyulvhuonunh; One angel mote in heaven ! ed at Albright‘s gate where o home, I tound the old r me. I sawina mordent bad gome wromrg. I Lad he greatest awe of the old Waiting for the Grist T LALMAN ASBURY. DURHAM, Co. Grey, MARCH 9 ° i iound the North Fork folks there ahead there was no hope of ay; but I was not at all t was well filled with Saunders always openâ€" POETRY said a gentlez:an who habit of prayâ€" such a ite meridian _ y.,, _____ 68 always uti mg-f};-â€"uw its meridian. â€"You never see the first susâ€" | them, the ter tors., ouatint; Aracc amphine |mirs io n, tw ns q145 3_ 1 . . : "° _ OW ~ol; " """ CCC Sibe T4G PA IPHYAEdS i playful hamour he thus descrives it,â€"The ; and long, tf’ be sure. Indastry, en! 1 br'ain of a true C.ul:-dcuiu.u (if: I am not| :xcelll'e‘n.cu mfthe. prele:;t pure‘nt,{ ' mistuken) is constituted on quite a diffor. ‘ ?xln( ation of a rise, un ?r more . fa ent p!f;n. His Mix,.cn‘n is born in panoply, | Cireumstances for the cluhlr.en.â€"Tl ’ You are never admitled to see his ideas in f dren of these take anoth»r rise, and their growthâ€"if, indeed they do grow, and | by, the descendants oftll? present are not rather put together like clock work, ‘ becomo f:ent!.omen. This is the You never eatch his mind in an undress, | progress, . It is by attempting to re He never hiunts or suggests anything, but tOP l'll a !.102]0 leap that so l.nuch m uniudes his stozk in perfect order and eop,. | @otailed in the world.â€"Society may pleteness. . He brings lis tor| wealtu into mu.kiu'g '..ho iuniu.rar-u virtuous and tompuuy, aud gravely Uupacks ip, His Y b.rlumug' -cumheu np _ ho Lf;h., riches aro dw.y;u ‘;bum buw. He uever | ::adx::-u. wa‘t‘: care, uud msuf-rtll; s stoups to caich & glittering Sometuing j, thew bow to do as muuy useful tai Your presence to share it with you before | possible; to do them ail in the best us he quite knows witether it be true tonck or | it us‘l.hu; wil -u:‘u‘nlo in industry, uot. â€" You caunot cry lnives to “Nmu , oty, & eanliness and neatness 7t0 m be finds. Hs does mnoy fionu, but brings, | bmbl:umd:‘:lmt:\.n:;:n::‘ You hever wituees lt Senb 10 apechsrensonne .A .MA il be linble iapediact ; es thcs c M is We bhaye much: in common with the leeâ€" 'of the brow. â€" What re turer, but we do nok go all the length with ! to presume that our ch him in his notion of phtenology. We qo | the same? If they be not at present advance our own views on . traordinary powers of the subject; but while we do not enter into | be, they may have an c the discussion of the queostion, there is, bo | oping themselves; and, it observed, x humorous as well as philosoâ€" , that opportunity, the h phic side to phranology, and in this respect , to us or to theim. Nor nothing can equal Charles Lambs descrip. : that the descendants of tion of the Scotch brain. In a view :,f; to be Iaborers. The pa playful hamour he thus descrives it,â€"The | and long, to be sure. 1 brain of a troe Caledonian (if I am not ©xcellecce in the preser ’ mistaken) is constituted on quite a diffor. " foundation of a rise, uni ent plan. His Mincrva is born in panoply, | Cireumstances for the cl You are never admitled to see his ideas in | dren of these take anoth their growthâ€"if, indeed they do grow, and | by, the descendants of t 2o not rather put together like eloek work, | Decoing frentlomen.," T You never esatch his mind in an undress. l' progress, . It is by atten He never hiuts or suggests anything, b“‘f top at a single leap that uninades his stozk i0 Derfeat asl _ _ s wuligites P4 i ss2ee ue whom _3 |, 2*7°20°05Y IS a thetue, which lins been â€~€"‘ har.dled vy uot a few. One, who favored TY | us with his lucrabations on the subject, "‘â€" | weunt on to say the higher we ascended in id, | the seale of animals the more prowivent the to | brain was. ‘The intellectual differences beâ€" tween a European and savage were seen ut | in the brain. ‘The ayerage brain of a Enâ€" 0t | ropeau weighed 49 ounces, that of a native itâ€" | of Africa 14 ounc0s, The Beotch were the dâ€" | most intelligent people, with a brain weighâ€" | It ) ing 50 ounces. The weight of the brain in [ its ’ distinguished men Panged f:rom 55 to over | 60 ; but there was no invariable corresponâ€" ’ t | denee between the weight of the brain and i id intelligence. Some distinguisheI] men had Of | brains of comparatively small weight, and :; 11| a criminal Innatic, who died lately, had a ’ h | brain weighing 70 ounces, the greatest !*| weight on record. In general, however,‘ 5) the heaviest brains were to be found aâ€"; f â€" | mongst the most intelligent, and the lightâ€"| " | est among the least intelectual. For t.he!s ) | proper activity of the binin constant nourâ€" | $ ) | islment was needed. Injury to the brain ‘ 1 Y | caused impairment of intellect. Weaken. | 9 | ing of intellect in old age was owing to de ; t | ficieut nourishment of the brain. As to | I +| the various freulties of the mind having | € | special localities in the brain, the originaâ€" " 1 | tors of the theoryâ€"Gall and Spurzheimâ€" | w | were well posted in anatomy and physioloâ€" i B gy, as known in their own day. What) they did not take into account was the fact | el that oneâ€"third of the brain substance did ; th not come near the surface of the brain, ; th and the exterior bumps of the head did | 4* not always correspond with the bÂ¥fain sub.| T1 stauce at all. The old Phronology had, to | of a great extent, been given up by scientific [ A8 men, but a new plhrenology had lLeen deâ€" ,' Tin veloped. The lecturer explained from a to diagram what was accepted now as the loâ€" tl.n-. calizstion of the facultios. The faculty of l ©g articulate language especially has been Joâ€"| 8 ! calized with a great degree of certainty. , Qh This was the third convolution in the front | b°‘ the injury of which resulted in the loss of %i% the power of specch. They were, however, l ouly on the throskhokd of this subject; and | , 3 in reference to the localization of the inte!. , i2 ! lectual faculties, nothing definite was { ver. known. Las Plurenology is a theme, which handled uy uot a few. One w1 Curious facts in F the Bram. , barn, ashamed to face hifn; and afraid to meet father. They sat on the porch and talked a long time. At lust icy euriosity overcame my fear, and I stole back to the house, and went into mother‘s room to see if I could hear what they were talking aâ€" | bout. *Well, the boy could be spared well | enough, but be don‘t know anything: about the business,‘ saidl my father. "There‘s | one thing he does know,‘ said the 'Squire,] | ‘he knows how to tell the trnth.,‘ He tlen / | related the cirenmstance which I so much | dreaded my futher to hear. After he had | gone father called me to him, and told mu’ 1 that the ‘Squire was going to start a store | | in the village, and wanted a boy to help, l' and that I could go if I wanted to. I went'f t !:nxxd remained in the village store until it'l blossomed out into a eity store; and people! I say that I got my start in life when 1 en.‘ t tered Albright‘s store, but I always mainâ€" ‘s tain that I got it while waiting for the ‘]r grist." T | _ "Out with it; jast tell what you did." ! "I left it open," I said abruptly. 1 *"Well, you letthe catile in, and they I have destroyed all my efrly potatoesâ€"a | terrible piece of business !" "I‘m very sorky, T‘dâ€"" "Talking won‘t help mattors now, but remember sorry don‘t make potatoes." "I felt very badly over the matter, for I was very sorry that the old gentleman had lost his potatoes, and then I expected to bel reprimanded at horde; but I scon found tnat they knew nothing of the matter, and after several days hatl passed I began to rest quite easy. Alas for human hopes! One rainy afternoon Isaw the *Bquire ridâ€" ing down the lane; so I ran off to the| gotling off my horse, but could not put it in again; so I carelessly rode away and left it open." ) ounces, that of a native | Nros are n «. The Beotch were the | do not mn ople, with a Brain weigh.| 18# nceeded 1e weight of the brain in { They supp Panged f:rom 55 to over| the genera no invariable corresponâ€" ’ but they 0; *4 4+ 4 as well as philosoâ€" l that opportuni and in this respect , 10 us or to the ># Lambs descrip. / that the descer â€"â€" In a view ‘of; to be laborers. descrives it,â€"The | and long, to be ols " oc m ener t packs it, i1;, by bringing chidren up _ to labor with it« _ Hy Uever | steadiness, with care, unud witi skill; to show + something in them huvy to do as mauy useful buiugs ns ith you before | possible; to do them ail in tire best manner; e brue touc up| iW s¢t thein a0 example in industry, sobriâ€" 68 to anythung , 65V» cloun'hnens and mtu«n::uuh wil uty DLb bnu‘;. , :’l;::rbl:. :;'::I:I :: fmï¬m‘ wo Hiiat they u?'.r into the contrary; to »pteheusion of ] I“fl‘lnou always see a good living proceedâ€" F16 ubuness 4d s w "~", ind orgingâ€"| "" ‘ and Spurzheimâ€" I wor omy and physioloâ€" | Hai own day, Whnt’ 8 count was the fact , °D& in substance did ; the ace of the brain, | thei nf "the Hisa f13 lnnd Regard to ""| ferwneim always see a good liVun(‘ t If ing from labor, and thus to rem: shas. agotp Chamne 1 | _ RAisixs ts Thz Worib.â€"You should bear in mind that nineâ€"tenaths of usare, from the lvery nature and necessities of the world, ‘l-orn to gain our livelihood by the sweat of the brow. What reason have we, then, !to presume that our children are not to dod 2 wa‘ & 210. A traordinary powers of mind, as some may be, they may have an opportunity of develâ€" oping themselves; and, if they never have that opportunity, the harm is not very great to us or to thein. Nor does it hence follow that the descendants of laborers are always ; | 8. Seotch metaphysi¢s.â€"In the free cxâ€" b_‘cbauge of thought on any point at issue, | the Scotch show great acumen of mind by | their nice distinetions, subtle arguments land clear insight into men and things. f’I‘bey are lead by their metaphysical tur# | of mind to enquire into the how, the whys j and the wherefore of everything that comes | Under their notice. Metaphysies appears ,to be inwrought into the very essence of (their mindâ€"a fact verefied, even in forâ€" l eigners of Seotch descent. Mill, the son of a Scotchman, is a grert master in inductive I , philosophy. _ Rant, the grandson of a Seotchman, is the logicion and metaphysiâ€" Ician of Germany, ence in philosophy and given in the realms of thought, th world, as in the works of Reid Hamilton. p>0 °00 "CTme iny change where no change " [1s needed, or from the love of change, | { They support measures intended to promote | | the general interests of the community, | ’ but they oppose measures intended to benâ€" | ‘eï¬t the few to the disndvnntnge ol the | many. They are guided in the m:ma;;e.j ! ment of public affairs by the great prineip. !les of political economy as set forth in | Smith‘s "Wealth of Nations." [ T eRVITUIT ® ATTD HBV Heard things in order to avoid L-e-l:;ag-nevns:;;re“:l. | that the Government has asked for tenders into a trap, to obtain vantage ground or to ; to sup?ly them ?vx'.h provisions, \vluc!x, I obtain information. â€"In this, too, we sae | BOP® is the ease,as I‘know uf“l the I“d,"m" that quality aud habit of mind, which | n.eed immeflmte nssl.eunce in that direcâ€" has raised the Scotch to a proud preâ€"eminâ€" | tion. Hoping you will pardon me for the ence in plilosophy and given them a sway ‘ liberty 1 have taken. Ristxs ts tss L um Semen n en 2. The Scotch answer.â€"In the common ! so. The presence of the squatd transactions of life, the Scotch answer one | reserve had caused them some question by asking another. In this, we l but I am glad to hear that their see, the caution to nscertsin the lay of about to be affocted, I have things in order to ardid Leife" awsnsuet ‘ hh the Cionveramant has «cbsa °@] 1. Scotch Politics:â€"As a national char. & | acteristic, the Scotch are great Reformers, 11| while they have Conservative instinets, it | which strongly attach them to things worâ€" ‘s | thy of preservation. Is the one phase of ) | life compatible with ihe other? If so, what 1 | is the reciprocal influence of the one upon a | the other? â€" Little engniry is necessary to , 1 | show that the ono is the outcome of the e ’ other, and that the one acts in perfect har~ 9‘ mony with the other towards the same + | end. Why are the Seotch great Reformers? ‘, They are so not from blind adherence to ',’ party, nor from a superficial view of things P? but from a clear perception of defects in ‘ | the laws and institutions of the Doliu‘cnli |system and from a consequent desire to | rectily them. Why are the Seotch in cerâ€" ; tain things conservative even to a proverb?| They are cunservative in certain things, I' because they so thiuk out things, b;;!orol y they adopt theut, tint they afterwards see |* no cause to change their opinion in regard | h to them. Mureover, they are conservative | * of certain things not from an unreasoning | ° veneration oftheir antiquity but from their | * continuous utrlity to society, otherwise | P they are prepared so to remodel them as| * to be in ndaptation with the times. They co ’ C not content themselves with a& trimming ) * or temporary poliey, while radical mens. l & nres are needed to amend things; but they | 4 do nol make any change where no chanra | From this diagnosis of the Beo‘ch brain there are several things, which suggest then:selves to us as peculiar to that people and worthy of note. )| illominations, dim instinets, embryoâ€"conâ€" }| ceptions, have no place in his brain or voâ€" cabulary. ~The twilight of dubicty never falls upon him. "Is he orthodoxâ€"he has no doubts. Is he an infidelâ€"h» has none either. Between the affirmative and the negative there is mo borderâ€"land with him. You cannot hover with him upon the conâ€" fines of truth or wander in the muze of a probable argument. He always keeps the path, You cannot make excursion spwith him for he always sets you right. His taste never fluctuates. His morality nev» er abates. He cannot compromise, or unâ€" ’derstand middleâ€"actions. There can be but a right and a wrong. His sonversation is as a book. His affirmations have the sanâ€" | ctity of an oath. ‘You must sneak upon ‘ the sqnart with him. He stops a metaâ€" / phor like a suspected person in rn enemy‘s 1 country. 1 CCS 20° P43 chiidren.â€"The chilâ€" se take anothor rise, and by and condants of the present Iaborer ntlomen. " This is the natural It is by attempting to reach the world.â€"Society may aid in orers virtuoas anud happy, , 1882. present purent, lay en up to labor with ud witu skill; to show miuy useful Luings na ail in the best manner; ple in industry, sobriâ€" neatness 7t muke ail D, s0 that they never re guided in theâ€" mnua;,;;a: I’ but as yet have not succeeded to any affairs by the great prineip.! 6Â¥eat extent. There is no sufficient deâ€" l economy as set forth in | @44 to contract with them for any quanâ€" h of Nations." ’ tity, but I am in hopes of being able to do ravever.â€"â€"In the common | so. Tb? presence of the squatters on the y and given tlhem a sway thought, throughout the path upwards is sto;p , endowed with exâ€" purent, lay the more favorable . care, skill, , Stewartand misery 16 always â€" The conditim of affairs in Cula at the preseut time is cansing a good deal of anâ€" Xiowy to bae Maudril Government. Enrope lhas one soldier to every 110 of its popuiation ; the United States ume to. every 2,000. ‘With nearly donble the uui of the inother continent, the United Btates bas seventeen inhabitants to the square taile, against 147 in Europe. ‘This may naln tn meslis i alieba esd ns o ccl 2c on £ , ed by two woll developed horns. The â€"| horus were as large as those of a yearling f ' calf, and projected from the forehead, one * on each side near the temples. The man \| attracted muth attention as he walked * | about the Garden and exhibited his singuâ€" lar appendages. There were about 400 .] people in the building, and Mr. Dean eausâ€" 1 ‘| ed loud laugbter by his strange antics. He ‘ | bowed his head and dashed furiously at the | | people after the manner of a wild Texan | bull. Mr. Dean was unable to speak Eng. l lish, but through an interpreter he told a| reporter that the horns began to show | themelves when he was about eight years | old. They grew until he was eighteen or twenty years old, when the attained their present size, and ceased fo grow. Mr.} Dean‘s case was investigated by several| Enropean physicians and surgeons, with | the view of ascertaining if the horns gould | 4 be amputated. It was decided that ampu» | , tation would be dangerous to his life, as | , the appendages were found to be composed | ( of a bony substance and, in fact, a part of 1 the skull itself, He was accompanied tc | q Anierica by his wife ana son, the latter m|, lad not yet in his teens. One of the Castle | £ garden officials who examined the boys | i head said that he could plainly feel under | P the skin the points of two horns which had v recenuly commenced to develop. ie Nes New York, Feb. 27.â€"Among the passenâ€" gers who were landed gt Castle Garden from the steamer Wiesland, from Auntwerp, on Saturday, was Leopold Dean ; a man about 45 years, whose head was ornamentâ€" HORNED MEX CoxtINc over *n rererence to contracts for lacrosses, beadwork, &c., I am the only person that has been trying to dispose of their work to the outside trade, so as to give thein someâ€" thing to do in order to support themselves 100 sine m Sir,â€"Will you allow me to correct . a ron. | Part of a statement I saw in the Daily i( :4 Wuneulomoï¬nuagoinrofuenee to the the | Ok= Indians settled in Gibson township, vith Muskoka. . Mr. Chogquet, of the Seminary: Hig | of St. Sulpice, reports the Indiaus in comâ€" gy. | fortable cireamstances and satisfied, and up. | Adds that most of them have contracts for byt |lacrosses and bead work and others are | js | Clearing their land for farming. In all reâ€" in. | spect to Mr, Choquet, 1 must say that he on | has made a mistake in part of the above. ta. Having been very closely connocted with y‘s thein ever since they came here, and hayâ€" : ing been at their homes at all times and in uvder all cireumstances, I have had every t Opportunity of knowing bow they are situâ€" le ated and how they feel in the matter. 1 | can fully endorse Mr. Choquet‘s statement ' r. | in reference to their being matisfied with |â€" 8, their land situation in general, for I think | & | it would be hard to find better land in f p. | Muskoka than that on which they have # f‘ seltled, and they themselves think that 1| if they can manage to live through the a a l next eighteen mouths and ovtain seed for | o ; planting, that they will soon be all right, A , | But I cannot agree with him wbout their | , : | comfort and their contracts, as I know it F , | to be different with them. _ After hard | p ) | work of several weeks eack bead of a famâ€" | t] , | ily succecded in erecting n shanty. Most/ , | of them are not more than 12x1Gfeet square | m ! and searcely high enough to stand upright | w | in except at the ridgeâ€"pole. These, after a | 4 : | great deal of caulking, are quite comfortâ€" | ‘; ;nble, as long as the weather is dry, but;;h , when it gets warm, as we had i““h""'f.lr ‘ time ago, and the snow begins to melt on | Â¥4 the roof, then the dripping process begins, | 5p | and there is a constant leakage all along | w ' the seams of the roof, until the snow has J ple } melted and the roof becomes dry, Thih’ wh | canses great annoyances to the cccupants, | , who have to shift their bedding, &c., from | . ’ place,to place, and sometimes out of dpors. 1;!.« The occassion of the leakage is on account | to of not having time to hollow the slabs ofj of t which the roof is composed. â€" But the | app great scarcity of provision among !hem,]"““ and having no money to buy with, is th@) kn< greatest source of tronble to them, , han R. B. Senitves. Gravenburst, Muskoka, Feb,. 20th, 1892 Whole No. 208 A Phcenomenon. OF EUROPE, ome uneasiness, their removal is have <1so heard wiITU THC REST Witness.) ION AT GIBSONâ€" PROVISIONS, the prisoners sulicitor, i that the prisoner Smith bought a pistol at his store a tew days before the murder uf , the old man Simith, also depused thint tmers was another boy in the sture ut the titue, and that he mude the purcuese of a spude. Considerable efforts were mude whdnaleg tlue progress of the inquest to find this buy, bit to no effect. On the 8th Fow. uraw couuâ€" ry lad entered Mr. Hauuah‘s store aiad stated it was he who bought whe apude. Coroner Norton was apprised of the boy‘a presence in the viltage, und be Comuuuniâ€" l Aoe or Suser.â€"The age of sucep may be | known by examining the frout lweth, they are eight in number, and appear during the fist year, all of a small size. In» the buc ond pear the two middle uuys iss outsnd their place is snpplied bp iwo new Wootl, which are casily distinguished, being of u larger size. In the third yeat, bwo uther small teeth, one from each vide, deup out, and are replaced by two large ones, so thut there are now four large teoth in the middle and two pointed ones on euca side,. In the fourth year, the large teotl are six in number, and only two stuull ones reummin, one at each end of the range. 14 the fifth year, the remaining emall lweth ure lust, and the whole front teeth are large. In the sixth year, the whole begin to be worn, and in the seventh, sometimes, some fall out or are broken. Te Artasantr Traaczoy.â€"It will be reâ€" membered that Mr. Hunuah. who cw.es vinces, including a moutum ul lmbm;: The Czar, Empress of Austria, and Emperor Wl« linw telegraphed messages ul syipwily. ‘The Cabinct sent u de patch to Windsor expressing gratification at the failure of the attempted assassination, Resolutions expressing horror at the atteumpt to assassinate the Queen were pussed at var ious meetings toâ€"night Lere and in the I‘ro» a native of Londou. Tue VQ.“.“V alarmed at the evont, In the Co&mwï¬., BSic Williain Rarcourt stated that the man who shut at the Queen this atternoon was a viesk by uveupation and It is understood that th sustained any shock. Av cance is attached to the vuu held a dinner party as asual Sir Henry Pousou tary, telggraphed io assault. | â€" a8 soon as the Queen arrived at the Castle she ordered an equerry to proveed to the depot to enquire if any one was burt. The report of the pistol was sharp but not loud, McLean apparently intended firing again when the reâ€" volver, which seemed to be a new one, was knocked from his hand by a bystander. and handed to the police, Evon scholars were promineut in thoattempt to lyoch MceLean, I of people assembled at Buci this morning in hopes that th drive out. The dem eanor of cordial as usual. â€" There was s spectator‘s awaitine the Om L oys ! Fourteen ball cartridges were fou prisoner, No bullet mhuiks were the Queen‘s carriage, The Queen arrived at Windsor , m». â€" She had been in London since whore she gave a draw ing â€"room on day in honor of Princuss Helung of who is to marry Prince Leopold., The revolver American make, and two have 10 00 CC T PEmEDE t DOuch+ sea, â€" The general opinion is that the act was the result of lunacy, Theimiscreant was with diffculty rescued from the crowd. _ The Queen drove to the castle immediately after being fired at. McLean was followed to the station by a large crowd of people. McLean is twentyâ€"seven years old. He states that he is a grocer‘s assistant. The doctors pronounce him sane. McLean says that hunger actuated the crune, ECOCOC EEmmme NU HUC cab. The wouldâ€"be assassin, the man who fludnttheQuun‘iv-flnu-'dw HcLuu.l.ndiauidtohnnddnfldM- " °> Eapenal Was m‘y driven to the Castle ; but Defore she passed the man had been seized by the Superintend â€" ent of the Borough Polive, wuo was standing near. He was also violently suimed by the crowd, and only rescued from them when three or four policemen came to the Superin« tendent‘s assistance, The pistol was captur» ed by one of the erowd. McLoan, who was miserably clad, was taken in High street,and hence conveyed to the police ststion in the Sael Cl C Sdivigh stiP 4 & The Queen, who-r;- she carriage and fired, John Brown had already ascended to a seat behind the carriage, when a than stand~ ing at the entrance of the utmic mâ€"yard a number of rpectators, pointed a ._“"“ way station this mor, wretch in the crowd. unbort, John Brown had _ [ ""Csor, March 2. â€"A, the Queon was anâ€" “‘-’""dhï¬f'flï¬mï¬hov ing a man : in the station yard deliboratel y :::‘. pistol at her. The man who was a M-Lnkh‘ebjow., was immediately seized by several politéimum aud taken to the Windsor Police Btatiou, Ny one was burt London, March 2 â€"flor Majosty .Queen Viotoria, while standing in the Wandeur rait ware wacato ui. I The Wouldâ€"be murderer a Grocer‘s Clork. 2000 CCC CHRBRIE P MATIER LIGHTLYâ€"CoNURATULATION aF “.indiurl Attempt to Shoot the rolver is a sixâ€"chambered Colts‘ make, I‘wo chambers were loaded have been receutly discharged, ball cartridges were found on the * @++ uby, the Queen‘s Secreâ€" anisivnt the fauis uf the the Queen has not Auv Political signili~ vutrape. . The Queen at Buckingham that the Queen mauras were sound on ed. To judge from the was not heavily loaded, Windsor at 525 p ;â€"rooum on Wednesâ€" Helung.of Waldeok, ‘z, was fired at by a Her Majesty escapued _ Queen wouid the Queen was thamt Palace A crond o $ 1 Z