Ontario Community Newspapers

Northern Advance, 13 Jun 1860, p. 1

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Is published Weekly, in the Town of`Bs.rrie,jevery Wmmssnn morning, containing the current news of the day, and all matters pertaining to the nffairs of the County. Price $2 in advance, or $2.50 if not paid withinesix months from date of subscription. , ,. __{ Anvsu'nsm(:-Six line: or under, nrstirisertion, 50c. ; each subsequent one 12c. Over six lines, 7c. or 4d..perline, first insertion"; ench`subse- quent one, 2c. or ld. Professional or Business Cards $4 a.-year; $3 for six months; if not more than ten lines. Special contracts can `be made. by the year, or fractions of a. year. Orders "to discontinue Advertisements to" be made in 4 writing. No paper discontinued until all arrearages are _ paid, except at the option of the publisher. ' `Pnmrmn, Booxumnmo and Runixn `done on the premises. The facilities of the Establishment ore more complete than any `other North of Toronto, having been carefully tted out in every particular. - ` - p Communications should be addressed to the sub- scriber, post-paid. ' " ' n. .`I nr.nrw.n ; q'1_xgg,u_1ze,. _ vvugn` ne camg: yesterday: :. ms `. ]pd..t6.,'s....'1i5Iis ` for 1"kne;w`..'ne {i7`T not'r61'vtoeH.!I 1s=V;.f9t Tit ft.`c2lf';L,`_'x_1or, scorn the for my distressf ; __but I did not expect that` he would---I did not; know that lie could--'help me in any other way. Yet he did. He asked metif. I did not want money for myimmediate use, and I told him frankly that I did, and how _much'. ' I Withollt another woxd, sir, he YfdeYt65I{"T6"T?3T:Ve me` `(If my present embarrassment, and lent me twenty pounds beside. A He had fty pounds to spare, he said, and they were at my ser- vice till I could repay the loan. Vgn 11ni`I can QO;A Mr nnIInIuu 1-I-an} VIUKF loll! J. III-ll|.l|-I ICPCJ loll`: {Uillll `So you see, said Mr. Douglas, that all` the people in the world are not cousin Valentines._ T ' CHAPTER X. ' A V1311` 1'0 THE DISSKANTLED HOME- It was an autumn` day ;. cloudy and gusty.` There had been rain ` in the morning and the day before, and the day beforethat; A but thetclouds were rolling away and patches. of blue sky could be seen beyond. tbetbroken masses, [and gleams of sunshine peeped out ;`over the stubble eldsband over the meadows dark shadows itted, and then they brightened again and shone out resplendently in their varied tints of green andgold. Vvinnnr Tnrhrojur urn urn runny -;n Han LLIGII vulxuu unto UL SIUUII u,uu guru. Willow_ lodge-_-for we are now in the country-VVillow-lodge looked mourn- fully desolate. - A few months had wrought in it a ghastly change. The lawn, which had been so neat and trim, was now rough and ragged ; strewri, too, with soddenjstraw in_ little heaps, and fragments of old carpet, ends "of packing cord and bits of broken furniture and crockery. The paths were overrun with weeds; so were the ower -borders and 1 beds, which had been, moreover, rnth-` Iessly trampled down and destroyed. The kitchen garden was a wilderness; vegetable beds had been turned up as with a plough guided by an unskilled or a. drunken hand, and fruit trees, with broken limbs, had been prematurely stript of their produce. Weeds were ourish- ing---tha,t was all. Tran Vl1nIInn :I'an`P -nvnra A:urnn1 nu 7175]` lIl5-"lalII_u'4 VVJIIG (I110 . . The house itself was dismal as well could be, to have been made so in so short a time, barringaccidents by ood or` ame, or destruction bycivil commo- tion, or foreign invasion. Dust and dirt hung upon the windows tenacionsly-- many` panes of glass were broken ; roses and other climbing plants, which had been trained and fastened to the wall, had been ruthlessly torn down by wan- ton hands, or blown down by the wind, or beaten down by rain; and the long branches, some twisted and others broken, trailed wofully in the dirt._ V The house within doors, desertedby inhabi- tants, presented a still more dreary aspect. It was divested of furniture; cobwebshung intnfestodns from the ceil_- ings; paper hangings, torn carlessly in the removal- which had taken place, uttered loosely on the Walls; and a thick layer` of dry mud in irregular patches defaced the oors. There had been `a sale by auction at VVillow-lodge ; and,-`while it lasted, the weather had been appropriately wretched, with weep- ing skies ; and there were none to trou- ble themselves in clearing up the mess which the dirty boots of countrymen and women had left behincl.` ` II'\I, , , , ,I__ I`,,,., I , H`, __.J .1- other. ' - - M1-. Marsden had passed through the 1 1-,purt`fo'r`~th'e relief of insolvent debtors, ` 1633316 h&df.<?`?T3i,06dVhi8 1i1ie1.`Y- S..hf1d 'Mr2;D6uglj1s`,,who .-had, retAnrne`dV to his #.5.1`E. `=73?-WP'ar1,;M!'9 11!d;90Lh9me ggto w c'h.,o_' :etI1{;n,:g;:;siQ.-lie ;l1ud _tak_en 1i`9:ky;i. g,"Ii;;1qvtihjd;_A'-bat .n`ot broken, ull\l \VULllClI. Ilubl ICID UCIIIVUKII The rain had also found weak and de- fenceless points in the deserted mansion: vityhud fallen through the roof, and had sopped and` stained the ceiling; it had descended the chimneys, and dimmed and rusted the-once `bright bars of fire- grntes; it had beaten in atcbroken panes and the cracks of badly-closed window sashes. Poor Willow-lodge! n., 41;- 11--.. -0 ___L_; L__1 -_.-- 1--...- DQGIICDI J. UUI VI .|l_lLlVV"l\lLI`(J 5 On the oor of what had once been the drawing-room lay a` torn and dirt- V trodden printed paper, the fragments of a posting bill, in which the desirable estate of VVillew-lodge was described in attractive terms; and articles of. choice household furniture were enu- merated, as late the property of Leo~ nard Marsden, Esquire ; concerning which, the public were informed that a peremptory sale by auction had been` ordered fortlie benet of creditors. :- ILLIAM SANDERS, Provincial Land sun} ' veyor and Draug.htsmmi,'rst_house East of the Market, Collier Street, Barrie. V ` April 25, 1857. A A ; 1s_- \ A - '_"`"V"V `The order had been obeyed; the fur- niture had. been sold and [removed ; ser- vau_ts had been paid off and dismissed; the estate had passed into other bands, and would soon` be occupied by other owners or tenants : the house was empty now, however. ' " `AV/inf nnf `n'v'\I:|;n`1f an`-nifty nn Hun (`aft nf IIUVV l.lUV\'CVUlu _'.Y:.t_ not ehtirely empty on the day of wI1ic`h we write; "The door was open; here and there 9. shutter was partially ui1closed;:and froman. upper chamber footsteps might,_ at intervals, be heard. The chamber was thatwhich Basil had occupied-as a child, and claimed as his .qwt_1 when a youth. There was Basil Mard';1' ;1ow_-1 -not _ alone; `hislfhther w_z:z_s;nlso_there. _ Not entirely empty; for a little had been saved from the wreck ; and in this room had been stowed away, for security, packages of papers and old; letters, use- less to all the world besides, rind oflittle 1_Is_ to Leonard Mursden; a few books also, the refuseiof his library, had been laideaside, as a; gift from the creditors to den s clothing" also, and Basil s, and Basilfs and ghis sisters little` library and otlier small proipiert"y--some of ,it-had esgmped the `general, dispersioii; and lj.1iere,,in,Ql}1ibbX'e8 and bags, or piled on th.B;.;9o,,, placed there by the_'ca_re of , Mr. V late ., housekeeper ` before` `she gr:-v;`srii[rhi:'oharge`, wasuli that.r,ema.in-_ gzhixn;-of ipersonul-1 property, pr Amy I "-gr .4. . {WA 34,. 2:1. the unfortunate-insolvent. Mr. Mars-. 1 `..l.C.1.._:.1-r...'."...V"_`.1~"*.n'. oh; l I `ed the rooms and paced the galleries, scarrtily_-furnished . lodgings for himself, fur,Basil and his daughters, at Mr.Hnre- bows, `in the -Strand. _Harebell had ob- tained his release withont passing the ordeal of {the insolvent` `court. His creditor had thought better of it, and had stayed proceedings ; and the young trndcsrnan Wasglad to show all -kindness ; that lay in his power to his fellow lodger of `the. Fleet. They were not long missed there: their places had been * rapidly lled up; there was no want of . inhabitants there. Prisoners in all! stages of pecuniary decay, and of every 1 moral shade and complexion, still crowd- . and took air andiexercise between the prison and its outer walls. Porter was drunk, tobacco was consumed, and racket i balls clove the air, as merrily, or` as moodilyas ever. The coffee-room ordi- nary was kept up with its accustomed respectability, under the presidency of i the old chancery prisoner who had pass- ed through fteen years experience of- Fleet prison life, and had no hope or expectation of release except by death ; but who, having command of` cash-a strange thing, certainly for a chancery victim to have-had resolved to make the life endurahle. But enough of this: i we return to \Villow-lodge. . the light which bumed so brightly and iaith- - Little Watt` 3 OR; ALONE IN THE LIGHTHOUSE. A long narrow point of land, whose shores L were washed by the waves of the Atlantic, ; stretched for some distance out into the sea. I For miles on either side the benchtwas smooth and sandy. with scarcely a curve or an angle -; to break the straight line which divided the ` -land from the water; and had'it not been for fully from out the light-house on the point,i many a noble vessel would have gone to pieces on its treacherous shoals. This little strip oi land had always been called The Neck. and except the tall light-house painted in thell -strongest white and black, with the tiny stone cottage attached, and two or three sherman s huts, there was no habitation for many miles around. 7]" ._._ _I.I _--_t- _ .__t_:._ n_-:__1 _.- , u CIUUIIUI Two old people--a white-haired man and ' his wife-had for years been the tenants of the i little cottage; and every night, as their faithful,` repeater rung out the hours.,they each took, their turn in mounting" the stone steps, and the | steep iron ladder of the tower,toti'im the lamp, and keep the light from going out. Besides this old couple, there dwelt in the cottage a child of some eight or nine years-I-too young to . be a daughter of the light-house keeper and 4 his wife, and too unlike them in every way for I even the relation to exist between them which i her loving title of Grandpa and Grandma i might haveimplied. It was generally known, about there, that six years before, a ship had gone topieces on the coast, and all those who oated ashore, only this child was living , she was clasped in the arms of a dead woman, whom the lighthouse keeper buried beneath a clump of water-willows, and only a lock of her long fair hair was preserved, in case she should ever be inquired for. Indeed, there was noth- ing else to save, for there was no marker: the garments, though on the child s white dress a delicate vine was woven into the shape of the letter W. `* She was taken to the light-house, and because the inmates had no cliililren of their own, and because she looked so bright and beautiful in their homely rooms, they adopted her as their own. For a long time they puzzled themselves about her name; the child.cou|d not tell it herself; and finally the old man said she should be called Waif, be- cause she had come .into their possession, and there was no one to claim her. So the child was growing up in the lonely place, bringing sunshine into the aged hearts, and somehow liglitenedand grew fresher for having a young thing like her to cheer them` with her glad laughter. rri...... ........ ......... ........ :.'.'...l.:..t-. .1... i...i.....i IiIUKll|U|'o _ There were many ways in which she helped the old people with her light and busy ngers; but when her tasks were over, she loved best -to wander along the sea-shore, where she would rove for hours, gathering the bright pebbles and the beautiful shells, until her little apron would overow with her treasures. _Then, in the afternoon she would sit out in the sunshine with th_e shern)en"s wives, helping them to mend their husbands nets, disen- tangling their shing lines, listening to their wild storiesof shipwrecks, and drinking in their superstitious ctions with attentive ears. URL- I! ,L; .L-A _I.__A __n _-.-_.. _...._....__ I'_.__ The light that shone out every evening from the tall tower wasa wonderful thing to her, and ever after she came to understand the danger that it warded off, she looked at its Warning rays with the greatest awe. It was a sacred trust to her, when she was first per- mitted to clean and trim the lamp ; and although the night which followed was bright and cloud-. less;.t-he lay awake until morning, fearing lest she had not attended to it properly, and that shipwrecks mirvht ensue. But after a while she conquered this feeling, when she fonmlthat she was even more careful than the 'old people, and it was with a bounding step hatshe climbed the ladder, and with a. glad heattthat she saw she could do everything w`it,h_ her own small hands. The keepers would never allow her to sit up at night, althoughshe had often begged them to let her "take her turn for an hour, at least`; but it so happened that, contraryto all her expectations, the `whole, responsibility of guarding the light once fell upon herself. - - " 'l'hn li'aI|l.hnmm lrnnerand his wife were one once [ell UPON UCTSEU. , The light-house keper and his wife were one day obliged, unexpectedly, to go to a neighbor- ing town; and fearing lest a storm, which seemed to begathering. should detain them till next day, the old man sent for his brother to come and take his place. The brother sent u o clock ; and as he had never failed in keeping theseppointments, the people went away from the cottage early, with no misgivings on their minds, leaving Waif in company with two shermen : wives. A: the hour of- ve approached,gueta`of wind and rain began to beat "against the house; and the child, seeing that her companion: wereeuneasy about their husbends,- who were stillvout in the boats, bade them go to theirhomee, saying that in a quarter of an hour Uncle Rollin. would surely be with hebl She epreulithe table, putfrash, wood .-.on? there. encl every min`ut'e' or two.Iooked*a't~te1 l oid:tiine' piece; tonee how the hands moved on , F 1 het;1g5 .=nn`d. 6`-came, -without Uncle Rollin -` ,Whelt.1he:: hour-hound` at last; pointed to seven, L momstun trembled with:.anxiety= ' -.`I.a:tLheAel1fool;.!dieappoiother. .t ie`had;I' - thd. '_ .1; , :o.vent:.!!9Inn 9=.=t..r _ re: lvorod reaeh,anI,-V W -I ..x hack word that he would be at the Neck by 5 `A I OHN F. DAVIES, Accountant, Collector, .C_on- veyancer ; Insurance, Land & G'e_neru.l Agent; Commissioner in B. IL, &c., Bradford. ` April_ 16,1856. _ 14 _ ...-: -.-us`-,_.. ..--_ __, _v..-. ._-V..7. _-. V. She was naturally courageous, butrwhen she found herself alone in the solitary place, with the wind whistling around her. and the waters surging madly below her. the terrible respon- her; The light-house seemed to be swaying- to and lro, and the child could not help thinking of the wild stories thatthe shermen s wives had told her, and one in particular, where 8; light~house had been taken from its foundation, =and carried out to sea. Oh! it was dreadful, and the little hands shook. as they poured fresh: oil inthe lamps, and wiped the moisture from the glass, le'st such a fate might be here. .She- looked out ofthe windows, but the sight ap- palled her; the bright light threw a glare on V the water, but she t-ould only see the white- foarn~caps leaping up below her, and hear the sea dashing against the stone-walls of the tower; but as she stood on the little platform beside the great glass lens, tearing and: trembling lest every moment the oods shouldt carry her away, there came, as it were, asweett ; voice in her ear, saying- In thy need call to the Lord; Pray to Him in faith und trust; And gracious aid He will utlbrd." utility that reotedupon hunalrnoot overcame- The words seemed strangely familiar, thouulir she could dot tell where she had heard them, and yielding to the impulse, she obeyed the- voice, and asked God not to forsake her. All! of a sudden there came a tremendous sea,. which swept completely over the light-house, shattering-the thick panes of glass, and` pour- ing in a stream of water at her feet. She- quailed and trembled, but only for a moment ;,- for she felt that now or never she must be faith- lul to her lamp. What if the glass around that: iehould be crushed also? And new the rain-. and the leaping spray came rushing in, but this .i time another sound came into her ears. and she- l trembled anew as she heard the boom of a gun,. and knew it was a signal from some vessel irv distress. She peeped through the wiudo\v,. l but could see nothing but the black niglit, and` `the dashing foam sent her back again. Farr weary hours she watched the lamp, neveav suffering its light to dim, while her form. shivered with the cold, and her garments were- l drenched with the spray that still poured in. u .1 . 1 l I |.,,,_ I,_ #.L_ _2_L. L__h but the strong windrsent her back` again ;' and after wailing another hour, she barred the doors, and won! up in the lonely light-horp1e,lo watch: the lamp._il' need be, imlil morning dawned. HI, ,. IL. A_.,_____,____ |,__. __|___ _l__ l , .._ _,.._, At length (and oh! how long the night hadl seemed),.the gray morning dawned. The- wind had subsided, and the rain came down more gently, when, lifting up her `tired headl lfrom the be_nch `on which it had fallen, she- caught a glimpse of a large ship riding at: , anchor not far from the shore, and with one` tgrateful cry fora sight that rewarded her for.- that long night of watching, she sank ex- hausted to the floor. A little later, a boat was cutting through the- 'waves. The captain of the ship determinerlt Ito go on shore, and tell the people in the light- house that his passengers were indebted to their faithful care of the light for their deliver- ance from shipwreck. At first he could gain. no admission, for the door was barred, luit the- captain effected an entrance through the win- dow, and still seeing no one, he crept up in the-. tower, where he found the little girl lying on. the wet oor among the broken glass. She- was fast asleep, `but he lifted her up tentlerly, and carrying her down stairs to her little bed,. he called to his companions to look at their preserver. Every heart was touched, and a: strange and sudden yearning took possession 08' one of their number, when he saw the fair- haired child, but when in her sleep she mnt- tered the first line of the little verse, " In thy- need call to the Lord, he cuirglit her to his heart, and wept over her. His companions. wondered at his emotion, which he could only explain by telling them that his lost wife used- 'to sing that verse long ago, when she rockedt her infant to sleep with its lullaby. The Old.` people soon returned, and they too wept over little Waif, when they heard the story of her: long night in the watch-tower. The stran- ger who hadrgrown deeply interested, asked if`. she was their grandchild, and the light-house keeper nding so willing a listener, told `him the history of the little girl, and ended in showing him the long fairtresses, and the little muslin dress. Every moment he drew nearer the child, but when he saw these last tokens, he cried, 0` She is mime, then. my own darling child, Winifred, whom I thought was lnst!' As soon as Winifred (now Wail no longer)- awoke, and was told that her faith and courage had saved her own lather, she was grateful be- yond expression, and clung to her newly found parent with eager caressing fondness. while . tears of both joy and grief rolled down the ' cheeks of the agerl pair, who had loved her so * `dearly. ' that house by the sea, but he would not sepa- Her father soon took her away from rate her from the old people who hadgiven here. home and all its comforts for so many years. Together they crossed the broad ocean, and went to live in a beautiful home, where Winifred still remained the light of the old people, and the crowriing joy of her father : lreart.-E.z'aminer. The Love of Home. it is only shallow-minded pretenders who- either make distinguished origin a matter of personal merit, or obscure origin a matter of personal reproach. Tatmt and scoing at the humble condition of of early life affect nobody in America, but those who are foolish enough to indulge 'in them, and they are generally sgfciently punished by. public rebuke. A Vman_who is not ashamed of his early condi- tion. It did hotlmppen to me to be born in e" log-csbin; but my older brothers and sisters were born in a log-cabin. raiseil among the snow-drifts of New Hampshire. at a period so early, that when the smoke first rose from its rode chimney, and curled over the frozen `hills, there was no similar evidence of a white man ; habitation. between it and the settle- ments on` the rivers of Canada. its remains still exist. I make to it an annual visit. I earrytmy children to it, to teach them the hard- shipeemlured by the generations which have- gone_bel'ore them. - I lose to dwell on the ten- der recollections, the kindred ties, the early- fmtionn. and the. touching narratives and this primitive-fqmijy abode l weep to think that none of thoser. who inhabited it are new among` the living; mag! if, are}: L cm ashamed ,9! it.9r..i.t ov6r:.I; nikin.ul.fe'..Im1I' vetliifstioxv restr<%,its~a'.-Al 49fnd9 :51.-Ishinu = !!&s!!151P !`~'"*.`.."'f"*'."v.s 9h-#25-12%-*1` _ i ;~ .:i;xuas..it;gnesth.;ntat,:nnol'a;snd' ' ` - .. 51.6- 4**\3'1,`bi-`.'-"9II"" V"! inciderntbs w.hi_ch; mingle` with all I know 05' IIIIu! :']ll6 ule Il_lu uluuu Ill u;DB\'Ull _yBIf!- rev6l'n'rmnary war, shrunk <{mm.no. danger, no. ? _1Aoil,jnouorie, Io aerva.hj;.:cnuInxy, and` lo- rgisehgin children (9 a. coudiqxghauqr lhauhig; pwn, mags my (name. nun ol'- m ` pg- _i ehet .lo.ued.ous.frouMhI:n2aann1 ma.- ` "I _. .551 , . `Mm ,_`4_,._,_ ;And $250 if noi paid within six months. N o._ 24. J H. LAWRENCE, Life,Fire anLd_Maz-me Insur- . nnce, and House, Land and Town Lot A839`: Conveyaner, `Commissioner in B. R., &c., Issuer of Marriage Licenses.-Oice, Huron Street, 001- lingwood. . ' ' _ nm. 1.1 1957, 42 RILLIA HOUSE, Orillia, James Quinn, Pro- prietor. The above Hotel ha-5_,9~mP1e-9~d _ suitable accommodation. _Ocl.ober 22, 1858. . ,. A 43 _,. --___- `Arum n _MA1m1Ac:E LICENSES:-JOHN ROSS, of will keep a. supply. constantly on hgnd. . Sunnidnle Station has been oicinlly appointed to issue Marriage Licenses for that District, and October 15, 1858. EORGE Rotiisox, Boc and Shoe Mlakery Collingwood. All orders in the above line - manufactured under his own inipection, a[nii'wair- ranted for negztness and strength. _ '1 fu1'1z1s1*0P111i:R_ HARRISON, Dpositary of ne I .1la.n1-'-.\ ranch ` OHN ELLIS, Lit.hogra.pher It Engraver,VKing Street West, Toronto. "(}oimty Maps, Plans of Lots, Invoices, Arms, Crests, on Plate! or Seals, wihP1-etsses. Wedding Cards. . - . July 10, 1855. ;_ _2_8 AAA EANDER S. `SAUNDERS, Watch and Clock Maker, Jr-Weller, &c., begs Ioinform the in- hnbitxuits of Barrie and surrounding country that he has opened business in the above line; and trusts, by strict attention to the wants of his cus- tomers, to give general satisfaction. -Melodeon3,f Flutinoes, &c_., rclmired. /11! work Warranled. . Dunlap" St.. one door west of-Mr. Sanford s Store._ I arrie,- 5th March, 1860. 10-ti. AVID; DOUGAUS Bedstead and Chair Manu- fuctory, opposite the Registry Office, Barrie. -Household Furniture of various descriptions %cnnstantly on.hnnd,or made to order. Wood Turning, in all its branches, excuted with neatness and despatch. v ' . . - Apnl 14, 1855. I ', ' `I4 .aud3fr'i6t!1m`b.ts13th'..' `stint BAD Ba_EA1`H.--lf when the face is brought - near another : the lips are kept rmly ciosegi thereis no bad breath, that which. comes from the nose is not perceptibly disagreeable. Much of the disagreeable odor of a late meal_ may be avoided if the teeth and mouth are well rinsed with warm water, and the tooth- ` brush is passed across the back [part of the tongue. In some persons, faator of breeth and of the feet alternate; lniolhers` both erefreb sent at the same time. A faatid e1uvio~`urise'. usaally,: if not always, from three canses;- b rst it is hereditary, being connected withg,~,e A ecrofulous taint; second, it arises from a, yyo,nt_ of personal .c,le:_tn|in'esg; th,ird,_ /it atvtende,-e_` disordered storrtagii. "Phe secondhand `ihef third suggest their o'w'n`_~remedie'. .Th?orrtt;` is a. grievous and niortifiing--Iutis`foI1tirteL`?t,l9E to all sensitive-`minds. but`itnia.y. be remedied; I to, s verygoousiderablo. extem. Jay; 5pB.r_sjstent_s: habit! 0* .-mic! t ..|9n9L:l'.=! e81.*.1!8.9p gbys .. out._dooriA gotivitiesy pergQnal?.g:;go[rrt,tgg` pm: ' the tte,mper,nte`_~_t_1,se ,or`,ptg;`r;_%;`gu;;f.;rag.giat' st c'==ff.9f".S7'.iI.i?a.i`!*'te `M333? ' at diet-lTtiet, o1_i`eeie ;"` `tbs;-13iidi!iii2;" - !IiiI:oiniorgtly"t`be}1;ipoit t $.11. Qlttftdrufrm, LI; . H1lElUUlLlXrlL l\ \J 1)l\ll`1..V, IMJVU of Shncoe, Du_n1op Street. Barrie, June_1,,1A859. 11 U. nu nu, uuuu Agcuu In: J. `King; Streret. West, Toronto. u y 1 , 185.). I.IVo Nov. 3, 1858. February 22, 1859. lug `V UUll- Oct. 14, 1357. 1REDER,l(`I{ 0'mzm.\:, Reveixue Inspector, Co. ` nf` Rimnnn nnnlnn Htrnnt, 6!): Nortl)mt Qthnanrt )ROVINCIAL `INSURANCE COMPANY.- - ' ` Barrie Agency, George Lane. 7` I an 1.-urn 7 ANSON &, MACNAB, General dealers in Dry Goods, Groceries, Wines and Spirits, Hard- ware, and Crockery. _ .. Cash paid for all kinds of Produce. _ D, L, Susan , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A.'MAcx.ui. Orillia, 24th Oct., 1859. 48-15 Tmms: .$2 per year; in advance; ..` G. HU}ID, Land Agent and Stock Broker Irina Flu-mat. Went, Tn:-onto. . VOL. IX. 33112-i11c55 '1Elimtar1_).% rvv-A ./\A,\,\,~,-4..~ `4\ > B. CLARK, Licensed Anctlohecr and Go'm'- ` . mission Merchant, Dunl9pTSt.., Barrie. 8 ~%.<:~`.,.;-4-,\ 4`, 91 ~ R. J. OLIVER. . -'I told you, said Mr. Douglas, taking- up the thread of his story, which the. arrival of an unexpected visitor "had broken on the previous day--_- _I told you that cousin Valentine and I parted good friends after he had paid my 'long-stand- ingdebt, though we have seldom met, fromthat day to this. I. have heard of him, though, as well as from him. But,. he went on in a grave tone, I need not tell you, Mr. Basil, because you know something of the same thing, what confusion and distress the sudden de- struction,as I may call it-I mean the bursting of these joint-stock bubbles- has brought upon scores and hundreds of families. There was enough of each, I am sure, on the day of my arrest. It happened, Mr. Basil,that not long before I had accepted a bill for thirty pounds, little dreaming of the _sto_rm that was brewing. VV'ell, sir, the money that I V relied upon for meeting that billiwas soon swallowed up in law expenses, and - l`-had. no immediate prospect of more. At the same time, if that bill should not `be met, it would only make colifusion worse confounded. Now, thought I, here is an opportunity for my cousin` Valen- tine .to show his gratitude, I -was re.- luctant to put it to the. test, certainly-; but I knew he was able to help me if 'he_ I would, for a few weeks` previously, in a note _I had from him, he had bragged of hisfunded property, and of the difculty there was in making protable invest- ments. ' ' u r ___'__r`,' L, I-`._-:_.' "r`r-'1-.__;:.__ an-'_; LIIULI I46: I wrote to cousin 5Valentine, Mr. ` Basil; Iureminded` 'him,`gently, that it had been in my power, sometwenty years before, to doihim a triingservice, I did` not say what that service` was, nor hint at any `remembrance of the fact that my interposition alone. had `saved him from imprisonment. I wrote nothing of the sort, thongh I "might" have written that. I told him my position, however -suddenly involved and mixed up in a ruinous specula'.tion--lnot that I wanted him to help me out of that, becausel knew he could not; but that he could, if he pleased, show his appreciation, of any past kindness I had ever hadit in my- power to yoifer, by lending me thirty pounds fora few months, explaining why I asked for that sum, and_ giving him to understand that the bill must be met on the twentieth--of this month, or Itshall` have sorrow upon.sorrow. ~ v _ \ . 'l1|a fnnanntl-u l fhnf in fn;.r1nu' MP D. ORRISUN .3: s.a..\n.>suN, Bafrister, Attor- neys, Solicitors , &c. O1-*mcn--\`Vestern As- Issurance Buildings, Church Street, Toronto, C.W. ` Angus Morrison, 1). A. Sampson. Toronto, November, 1859. _ 45-ly .|JUllgll1S,'" 5113!]. .D u3ll o . Yes it_is, .` Well, Iwhzwzt sort of" an answer do you think. I received fromfmy dear cousin 2 asked Mr. Douglas, bitterly.` u`T nu... iuuuhaa Irlua`ii\1o I1}nv wnli` 1-`HA inn; ;._,L`_And1et.'!9_u.'t,I_1,1nli tt;e,1'_e,_,xza&no.tn1n:I.. . so very uureasona'lje`_ 1n. _ my expecta- tion- ' ` ` - " - - u 1-1'._.__`-_.'.._.Vi`_1;. ;..:.. I 5' ...;..';.'l.4L 1......-. HUVU SUI]-UVV UPPII GU51`-'VV0'. ' `F The twenueth! that Vxsto-day`, Mr. Douglas, said _B_asil. 4. f _ (I vac if in fall .w11nf gnvf nf- an uuux uuuaux 8 aancu a.u|. .1./uusnua, unuswnxy o _ I can guess the `answer you did re- ceive, sir,"o13served Basil, bejbausg you, have prepared*me.for it. . And`yet ' cc Anxynl--\7r`\I1'H'|ink thm-A um": nnthinxr Unreas_OnabTe,.'sir! -I might have thought ,that your cdusin `would have been delightegi to` show t|hatTheAh2_41d not: forgotten ' your former kind'ness,_ said u tr, __., _ ----;._-_ ...__ 1|/|_g'n.._:u .. 4311511- you will know the` world betterl when" You are a young man; Baslll;:_ you are older, rejoined Mr; Douglhg, -. calmly. You "shall `see Valentine s letter: it came yesterday..morning. He took some txime*to_ cbmpose`it, Lsuppose. At any rate;1iel1a"d hd [iny n'ote, by hAiAr n_ 9, montl1'., "And "taking a`-letticaggfgorgx his desk, _l1e' `handed `it to} young; Marsdenlt Readrit out`, Mn` Bzisil a1'1'd"l'e1_; ua hair? all the beauty qt; it. ? ' Bnil__too|jthfl' 2...... .'.'.;.'s...'... -3: .` _ . _'._gQr 3% 9f*iS1%$-:.;x; ?';1.`F9.-- ; ~ hem, .w1,19 9r9:1n9y`gr ae_arcousxr_x.'"j * _ _ . _', He cal`1ed`mef;dear,? ymi gee, `, 1 t_ha;2'%" _~ . p ; N s 5 My-clear :usin, f _ `I_3)as1l5r`e`a',..` If % ve'ryinuc'h regret that you ar=Jrl`inL'di__ij-A; ` cities in m9n9yV,matters...h31t `.h.9.~.'5..IT111.,$_V " ' .yon.o'bs_e'rv_ 9; .` H :4... .. A. > An. , , L . ' vat ',1f9l1; ; ; 1 y; M ` j . 1 ,x{:e :__` "th\eA_y_e wvvg_nI\ dear cous1'n.? = h 11- Q _.-, 1`:-.,, .1-g. .1---1. _ Haste, traveller, haste Hhe ght comes 6:5 > ,And many a. shming.-hour is g6`n'e' .l.. The storm` is 3-shujagg in 1_he_ wegt, And lou anfrar {tom Iiiiii-fund `?e;t";"`` ` _ . Hastenmveller, hate I `_ PATTON & ARDAGH, Barristers and Solicitors, Conveyanccrs, Notaries Public, &c.-Jarnes Patton, Willimn D. Ardagh. Barrie`. Feb. 26, 1558. 7 - 5 vanggn. Anal! 44;. THE STORY OF` VALE.\"l`lNE'8 INGELTITUDE ..-r.uu an -1-. -v\ u Oh far from home thy-footsteps 's_tra_y3; Christ is the fe, and Christ the way, Andvchriht the life; Yon setting sun Sinks ereihe mom is scarce begun; N nnlu In-uu'.1Inu Then linger not in all the plain; ' 1-`Ice for thy life, the mountain gain: Look not behind, make no dlny; `Oh speed thee, speed thee on thy Fay :` - - Haste, tmvellef, lniste. ` The rising tempefsweepu the Sky; The ruins descend, the winds are high; ' ' The waters swell, and death and fear " Beset thy pultg no xfefuge neur; Hanna Irnnnnnv I Oh yes. aishelter you may gain, ' A covert from the wind and mm- A hiding plage, :1 rest, 11 home-- A iefuge {mm the wrath to come; `lingo- 1.-...u.II Poor losi,'bc_'nighted sbnl, arylhoix \VilIing1o nd `salvation now ! ` There yet is hope, hear mercy's call-- `Truth, life, ugm, way, in Ch :-iet is an. Haste, l_m\fx.-llcr, vluistvl, uni ADVERTISER. U t I.UlllI.l.C|ul`ll.|\2.J.\!A um 6'&uu Jul: _AndJLet.!9,u.'f,1_1,111i t11e,l'13.nza &no.thin:z.. . very unreasonable`; m expecta- mmm-% ii=?L=!. ENRY B. HOPKINS, County Attorney, Co, `of Simone; Barrister and Attorney-at-Law, Solicitor in Chs.ncer_v, Notary Public, &c.-0[ce '11 Dunlop Street, Barrie. . - _ March 3. 1353. V _ 9 Struggles in Life. izitctntute. CHAPTER IX. Alli iv A I !.V\v*III\Vl\' II apactrg. u5u. nu.-u , Haste,Iravel1er, haste! ` cyan): ucsull , Haste, -traveller; hub! nun _|u uunuo , - Haste, traveller, huge 1-` . %JUsTIr:Is V11tE`G1EAT,BUTASMPLE PRiNC'IPIJE,}AND'TT;{IE w1aftQL*iis1'cRET~ oF'sUCc_Ess'IN ALL GOVERNMENT, M I: cam'1ot. sLay-.-that. I am surprised ; you should-lnive kept; in the country, and not cqme -to-the neighbourhood of Log- ddn,-\yh`ere your fmnily expenses are so much -1m'ger.:.... You _ haveL.been-V at too great an expense in house xent_-qu)itean unwarrantutilqexpense, qqpsideringyolnp large family.. -. 1 TL ` "Nrnn1 fl-ant : nu-nu-r "fan M. Dani`. T MOFEATT, .01-illia, General Merchant, . Licensed. Auctioneer, Issuer `of Marriage Licenses, &c. Februa.ry20, 1860. , 8-1.f 1 " ' \.~{l.llLU l|l.l_VViLIfuHli.1Ult5 UJKIIUHSU, vconsideringxyourd large .fami'Iy, - read Basil--and; to dtfhim j1f1s'tice',;his face- ushed with emotion as l1e`iir0ceeded- .` but what is more important`, the pro- f'essioni.yo'u have taken up" is thick with disappointments, which are mortifying even to a man oAf..su_bstance,V but disas- trous to.'ot1e' whose famify depends for! everyzhidng on `the success` of his labours. V ` (In , .1 A":-4'-n IUI"V'IlIuII I - "` " . , _ _ ` `?`Now, tpyhat- s pfetty well, Mr. Basil,` isn t it? _said,Mr. Douglas,- again inter- zfupting -the ,reader.. ff-Of`co1:\"rse, if a man has a, large family, he doesnot want so large a hou_se-.ns_ when if was smaller". Wlien a man; `haslno; children, he re-` quires -a twelve-roopmed house,=don t you see ! for at family `of ten chilch-en,'a single'i'ooui issuicient fonall purposes, especiall_y;if.the fortunate individual be an author, _w'it.h'a nenfous b_te1nperamen_t, and so forth. I have paid thirty-ve po u'nds"a year houserent, Mr. Basil. Too much by t_we'nty-_ve', accoxdKi,ng,~ to con- siI1 Valeutin s"scale oflreckoning. And, then, it~is;veryric_liculons of me `to live where employment is tovbe found! Sal- ters and colliers, weavers and spit_mers, donft dothis, of a course. No one but a mad-brained author would think of this wild expedient. Well, Mr. Basil, go on. `m|Ifa on iinurnru-n.nfnl'\ln nvnnnan Out of the mouth of folly sometimes proceedeth ' wisdom, remarked Mr. Douglas", sententiously. Now, I dare} Say when cousin Valentine_ ivrotethat` sentence, he fancied he had hitthe right nail 0.11, the head: "and he. might have beeuwider of themark. `But ifit were ' still` nearer, from him such :1 remark is fraught with consummateTheartlessness. However, go" on,.1V[r,. s-Basil. ` vnn 121"` Iinivnnu `nnvrulnn as-.1r:Acv J.Avvvuv\.u, Bu yu,-.I.vI.a_-=.LJuonu ` I You will never be free from anx_ie_ty and difoulty, continued, Basil, return- ing to thqltter, ` so long as you make writing your sole dependence.` VVhy nototake a situation ! If you were to get_ only a luindred a year. cert-ain-- ' 7` .N'n}H'n" n'1:in'n1-nnu Pnnnuy ' nnrnn-non!-or` 'doubt,jhe thinks'I should be. _ And this, ; U ll\Ill\LIC\l (L JIZLll._\JCllu.Illj-" ' Noblergenerous fellow ! commentedi Mr: Dotr,,zlas*j:'tvli`o seemed to'nd"relief in holding the,` writer up to ridicule,: though Bnsiljwas his only listener. I; rea'lly`ought to be `obliged to my `dear. c_`ousin for his magnicent suggestion. A hundredon` year"! and dearat that, no Mr.` Basil, from a scape-grace `who, as a` single` man, conldn t subsist` upon a hun- dredand my poundsxa yeur without" getting into-diicnlties 2 But I am for-" `getting Valentine s .rule' of proportion, though. i w A man withouta family should have two hundred a year, to'muke~ both , `ends meet`; a man with a -wife and eight; children cannot possibly need to spend more than eighty ipounds a-year.` Go on, Mr. Basil.- r A s 'l\ ,3!` ___J ._ -.1__j2___LI_._ :1/17 Basil . read on, vobediently :-- ` You don t go the right way to work with your children; instead of being a but- dento you, you ought to"be making them useful, as they-might be in `a hull- dred dierent ways. A A. (`An `Ann: uirnrn rnxr t`n\n1:I~noD r\1`1\I'DO ,, LIICVJ \-IIJJCIUIIIU VVOIJW V ` As yawwere, my darling fellow, said Mr. Douglas, apostrophising the letter writer. ,'\Vl1y, that young fellow, long before he came to man s estate, was constantly getting overhead and ears in debt, and tlireateuiug l1i_s.mother. -a widowed mother, too,--that he would hang, drown, or shoot himself, if she did not pay debts." . .And after he became A a man.-;,-,,as much of 9. man as ever he Wil1.be>T_t\V0' years hadn t gone by _be- fore hehad stripped` that V same mother of every atom of her pro_perty,_and com- pelled her to get deeply into debt besides.` And `this`,iI suppose, he calls bejnguseful !' How"_'da're suche} fellow as that,`no\`v, _talk`,of my children, or nnfy body eJses children being 9. burden, and n`ot .fe'el",all theblood in his"syste_m y-V ing: itpginto his reereant face I` . y . "l'nvn.nufnn';c]1nJ ' 'Rocil Innhron In `._tIsI7f"tt,`nn~ho- caitx.ik&3\Vha `wiand age- of ' fl1reeyears nd; ixl '"_de'eply vetsedA'in..the management of .other-p0Pll s->childrAen. Don I_: yqu seej ll. - `A'stonished! well `it is not worth While to"be astouished._ If you" had known my cousin Valentine you would not be`so. ; so he would have me make ri`ght'll as'hef-to say that_ they are not useful `! 'H would have, me_ ` laplprentic them t:o_`uV.factory, I silppcse, 'a't th_e-ad- V months, opthereubotlfs. But there is an old pro've>1jb,TMr._ Basll, `about haclielorgl wives and. `cld `maids ; 'children-yon', .mtst;have' heard it-';~and Va1entin`e; from ' having.11d_,pxfpge1;y'bl` his ownlmust be . it,`i11j`;t1,iial;li?_.rh.t} Mr: Basil 2'? ..,;-._;3 ._:.-.5 __ n-._';..u.-_ 3:5 ; .,.....1 .. `.,It,.was Vexceedingly unwise in you to have anything to do with the D. B. fcqtr1fniny,':o1f qi`1_y .other of these mush- ` ~r6Qm."cbin{zanies;, 1 may gofurther, and sayxgtfl -`am astonishediat you could hY.` Y`i"E' 99f .`Yi`h _- .`1!- .. 1'? i.-`Ii rnbthing--moxe;not than gambling; ' -and having; ri1I_Jl;`9'_1*g;1*1'dj-lost" yam 'pgpp9r.; L . ti, .aien;i:nm9:a1 cguq _ 3Q;no@ge_:.hy% nghtsyonv j wht.*-h`e1pea.;iut .- ` T . .LeI`.'..i`r'. `.O',7u _, [my-.".'H. : . .* wnterpos . 1.. .` % .,_y.,3.i_!`.`.Mre.._..,.f _ . ' % M. HOLT, Agent for the CANADA LANDED CREDIT C0.\IPANY., Apply at the Office AP `fanny-1 T-IAN` .Qnna'Xr l`.n in RI`nkPI`: and an.-. __7V__,,` Ills II r luluv nu) auunuuuu luuu 3 Iam _usto1_nshed-+-`Basil began, to ' 'A'a`fni1;c"|'nr1' inn" '3' 1: `nnf tivnra ``1 a;i 1:;:i':.'1u1;E7.'.xa's`, $ay-:i;`i 71ie did ; and at a `n`d;.'..fzom}_ hisi gompauicn he. 'o'ne_ _xn;o:r_e:_rjeu'nied: hi; IIIKL \4lIlI\o\`l-\p4l'-I_Ill 7' `:11, LVJI I -IJILIUII, SKI VIII ` Q11ite`9,n ttnwaxrantable` expense, onsideringf -1mnr` `lmioa .fzimi'Iv- rend 13, mg {m_1y a few ppunds or a; few hundreds, as the case may be, of our own lawful. mojiies in legitimate enteEf5rise~-it~ is mddest,.isn t it, to nd this carderfand dicer, as he was of old, lecturing us on the sin of gambling ! Please to proceed, ...a.s..i1_3 Ydu.are.tc,c>_.ming Kathe gistpf .. the matter now. " 5 - I/11'; ,,, _.__,';L _,,.- '__~ __,__j_ _._______l. IIIIG IIIGDCCI IIUVVI : ' <, ` A` I canhot assist you in yout present dif_4c11lfie_s,;ii1Tthe way you ask. `I ac- _1nowledge_.`tl1eM obligation of which you remind me. u z II'\L-.._9_v........-4L.'._._.'... 4`L_A. ..-.- _-'. - Dalu vvuqu uI_U vrclauuu wu5_UVUl 3 Yes; indeed ;' but" ,' and Basil - `stopped short, for his emotion half choked him. Well, we'll, he was youngond inexperienced; there is some excuse in that) If he hadn t`been young, perhaps he\vo1`1ld_not have taken his friend sV l ha`n`d+tl1ey were sitting side by side- I and. pressed it almost ._conv.ulsive_ly, and peg-Imps `he would have kept back the V nioisture \VlliCl1-lllllllg upon his eyelashes for-some more `worthy purposes than`to \va_ste.it'in tears for anotl1er`s sorrows. I Yes,_Basil was evidently very young. 1 l `C 'T`l-nae-A in` 1raru' Hin rnnrn nnur IDIIIJI-II-I lIlUo' - . - . `. Thete s'something in that, you see; ?n'1o`re*than cptild be ` expected. A pity_ Valentine hadn t a little more brass and denied the Vbbligation with a bold face; but go on. * . - C 'r`\n|-nn-11 T Ant-|,f f1rn'w-Jr -H` Lanannnan UHF EU Uuo ' T Though I don t think it handsome. in you to speak of .what has gone by now.more tlmnatwenty years, when we wereiboth of its young and foolish. Be- sides, what you did Wag: to save your_seIf; you would not have `done it from disin-` tereted mo'ti\,_/'_e's;. V C` VA V1-on-xnvntunv `kn it`.-.'l.1.-. A`. fine; uun1` Ililobvu Lllvlun _V 5.00 ` Yol1-rememberfthe `fable of the wolf and the crane, Mr. Basil ; bowthe crane inserted his-;longneck.into the wolf s "throat to pull out, with his beak, a bone that-had stuck there, and what the wolf said when the operation was_over '2 H`/"ac-x - `wanna or 1-n1} * 33' nu-.1` nnn:I VI Ultbull UU.\u A;V 1., Apply nu. um .U1uue of Messrs. Holt, S0ns'& Go., Bill Brokers and Gen--- eral Commission Agents, Dunlop Street, Barrie, C.W. ' M... o IOKQ ' ' 4:; ,llAJ UUIMAAI, Hutu LI-Uuu 9 ALLIIILA 'n'\aIl|-I: o , ' _ I-beg your pardon, Mr. Douglas, re- J joined Basil, I forgot for, the moment ; that he is your cousin. I fancied I was /reading some story of treachery andebase 3 ingratitude; But I will go'Tcn with the letter, sir. `However, I semi. you ve 3 pounds as a gift, which you can do what ' you like with-; but I must protest against beingapplied to again under any circum- stances; and as to the acceptance you 2 spea`k':of-it -is very impru_deut in any one in your position` to have to do _\vith'bills 5' if you paidready money for. e\7efy_tliing, as I do, you .would 'haye no ` occasion to give billsaorihotes ofghaud. ' However, I hope you will nd the means of. meetingit, especially if you think you haveany reasonable prospect of clearing yourself, though I.'dont see that you can ; and` if you" can t, you ought not to be rneetiiigone bill to the prejudice of_' other creditors. Yours truly, Valentine -`---I. .1 A 1 A` 1 :1 AI , ,I ,,L,,. I '1 ULI lvuu Iallu luau K ' ` You will permit me to remind `you, in returnfthuf. the loan was refunded, and consequently you have no claim up- on me, _ A cold` blooded --e- - 1134,, nil 1| _,,, 1,, ' J..\.1 _ IJCAAJII `V.lLBJ \J`I\-I\J'IlIl'I, V\4lJ "\-`Bills. .``,There Is` very httle more now, \ B'asi1, said Mr. Douglas, softly. Will `you read the rest '1- `G Vnni urn] nbrrrf rna in vn|11<:nr1 `nun: VII Illcf Ila UU1\L LIIUUUCLI ` A. Stop; my dear fellow ; I have done ` wrong`I fear, to enlist your feelings on }my' beho.ll', said Rosa. s fatlwr, gently. 1 H Tlxnn 11nnv- V\n4`nh l\/Iv n..:|nlnc v-n_ And thus endeth the chapter, said Mr, Douglas. You know - now what ailed me thzit I could not go on with our work. And now, Mr. Basil, what ought I to do or tosay to my noble"-hearted `n nun`; I1 7 A lav uvvv `cousiin '! . 1: \T,,, 1 uu_usu1 :1 A . V y M ~* A You know best, -sir, `Basil replied, - but I think if I were in your place] shouldreturn the insulting gift. I know --'-I am sure I should, he exclaimed- impetuously. - But perhaps it would not be i'igh,t, "he added, hesita_tingly and 1)lusl1ingly,`lc_stl1e had said too much or spoken too strongly, b ll- A 4 _.-_.__ _ -.- .._.. :0 'I' _-_-_._ -__l-- A.__-_- - ` At your age,jor if I wereonly twen- ` ty` years younger; than I am, said Mr. Douglas; . a 1- should drtaillly have yield- e_dTtp'snch;an inipu_lse;_ but I havelearn-i H1 f"nlrn'nn|n1cn1'nr f`i'n fnun-7|. nhnrlr nl` Cf-I luv D|.I\JIl.ClII llll1lLI_IDC , IJLIB J IIKLVC lUulIl' ed to takecounsel of the town clerk of Ephesus, and to ..` do nothing rashly. I did begin to answer'Vnlentine s letter, but I have [not sent it, and do not intend to do so at present. To tell the truth I had no reason to expect. anything differ- ent from him ; and I made application to him partly by way of experiment, and partly as amatter of. duty. -But I ought notto have expected any other result. Arman who could, .as'he did once and again, taunt his own widowed mother with her misplaced indulgence-- who `ionld \)v'lieedle_ threaten her until he a C . -" 1aar*o1': ttr1ii`c,T"ba rrom h'er}WitI1o11t any _jtl1e'rconSiderntiou,q. legal acknowledges nrent, which she held for a large sum `which she had borrowed for him, on her own...,responsibility-. a-tor. -help ~ him: out or one of; his many diiculties, leaving: her rto-meet`--they payment `of itas she. best . ,couid`;l. and` wfho= coxild then` declare `tliat tlfrat l_iie did not mornlly- ori legally owe `that enibarrassed mother a single farthiug; -,-w_a s ,ino'I: likely to 'ha_veT; any strong ' sensefo .obligation in any Other. quarter,, Letsus clmngathei subjtct, Mr.`.Busil.` `If _I. have youthis` rnuch'of*m'y h_isbo- ry,'_-1-- it '=`hhs` =_lree`n`; to show ydn 3 what rvybu` v, -. v m`av`**h`v"*<>: 13* i6,,w`f*rHss1, on; `?*`*`i!`?'F,if` .Andn;o.w I will turn over a pleasant; erpage-in my experience. You noticed that person who`in_terrupted om'`confer- ehe Aye's;terda.y." Wen, Mr. Basil, he . '.a;agi`angel_V6f`_mercy. ` I had .11 O]iit i_if-1ljA9Ii.him, except thatof our, beigg childi'e'n of one cOinino"n Fathm: `I had ineggg c.qI1ferre ,9. single bgu_eij`u;. -.W.oi;a.re-. .::1i .have`hee;1.f6r:ye:irs; ` -..bu-; gxotahillgaganore sthub Jrienclship ' has f is -not: rich"; fM1' `_ :Bi14.i1`~=`~`tli1;?f'io`W it`-`=h`e"`is` .on1sriw a mere; }hii.iit?s7"dlei'k;f`i3.!i dj `a4 'of"his' . lame has wed shmu=gh**a6* = Vt`: Zf ?:1***!%ieiFS;;h2??g ." ILLLUI LAWRIE, Licensed Auctioneer for b:Lrric, and the Townships of West Gwillim- bury, Tecnmseth, Innisl, and Essa. - June 13th. 1856. , 24-

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