lio lbs! ho In. the shovogllnool b nnd cont:-sou bentennd bull`. %to It the low Lworkmausliip. f E v n LEGAL CARDS- WJ; COLCLOUGH MGMULLEN, Clerk to Potty Souionl. L 12111. 1971. 3'!- LLVU 1, DAl\K\lDlnlE, A l" IUIS` ney-at-Law, Solicitor in Chan- xcar. Rm. n. n. 31-nun. K6-1.11~I-s7):\i: H6E1-I:EI'.1, In .qnHr-iln, - {n hnnnnru ANT] NG, COUNTY CLERK, WILL AT- nt Barrie. aver-v.SA'I`IIR- 10 T '1` E R, COUNTY I CROWN ATTORNEY, 9 BARRIE. 41- LVPH E BAR RIEI . Fnwrnnv Ann: apply to ' 3. H. SANFORD, Ammt >g1P|i'.-a.`;"i,.L.;.i yawn. to their cul they have not runent of, J. A. ARDAGH Dli W Pnnmsnsn. T. suuu, Agent. 843- {Hy 975-ly HE Subscriber having succeeded Mr. Grib- bin in the above very comfortable and ` commodious Hotel, begs to assure the-numerous customers of this favorite and well established . stand, that he has made considerable improve- ments in the internal accommodation and other- wise renovated it so as to render the House one of the best Family or Commercial Hotels in the place. The bar will be found stocked with Foreign and Domestic liquors and cigars of the choicest brands. V Excellent stebling and attentive ostlers. Pleasure busts, Fishing taekle and vehicles for the convenience of summer guests and tourists. The Hotel is situated on the margin of the Lake and within is minutes walk of the steamboat wherves. A - ' 873- 1 auuvguu gm; aqua Q`\r\a`un4- I The House is furnished with all the Toronto daily papex-s.- Travellers to and from Orillia and Penetanguiahene will find the bestof ac- commodation. , " . HENRY CLEMENTS, IR- . . . Pu-nnrinlnr J AS. J omvsox , Su. ITHE TERRAPIN Ho'r_ T)unTnn- Sh-an! Fun! nft` Mark-AI QM-pal ARE,_. TINWARE, RE," ` ...........vuu Anal: uuu .. - v- ..... -..- IBEST wmns 1iisfI'> Eiduons. IJDHTO HT 111' IIITTTDO BAR]_R.IE.' - - -` `ONT an. ITHE mfrnmuunl The Accident Jmaimnce company, [N Tm: POST ormon BUILDING, BARBIE, Bnqrie, my 611:, tags. `_ ` 13-` : ' perlulenuence UI ll`. JOLIE MOW BEE. Nearly thirty additional bedrooms have lately been added to the Banana Horne, all which be- ing built of Brick, and well warmed, will be found as comfortable and commodious as can be found in any house north of Toronto. {'5' Cnmmnminl trnveliern will find amnle ac- IOUDQ Ill Elly D0058 l10l.'U] 01' 10l'0l1lO. I3 Commercial travellers will nd ample ac- commodation for showing gamples. Barrio, 15th Oct., 1868. 18- This Hotel has been entirely renovated and re- furnished. The Bar is now stocked with the FBANK \\{. s.T@ii'gEPgprg1ETon.[ usnuuuu "nan Nsw Ar!I!TIMII39xE9 % was !I IVE The bar is furnished with the finest brands of Wines, Liquors and Cigars 8- . FERGUSON IRDYALINSU.RANCE company] CANADA FARIIEIVS INSURANCE COMPANY QUEEN'S run": AND LIFE, I ' ; oouuganom. UNION msu_`1uNfon_ co'u*_.;_A * rmr, mm,` . V--." --.v u -.... .. 5:!!! III .......w..wvwu I 1" HIS hotel, so long and favorably known to the travelling? community, is now con- ducted by the prop1i_etress,a.nd is under the su- perintendence of Mr. John McWa.tt. Nam-Iv thii-tv aditinnnl hprlrnnmn have lntnlv 4.; DA SIMCOE. Mrs. E. MARKS, Proprietress. JOHN McWATT, supm'mmdem.T rI'1lTHhmn1 an 1...... ....I `c.........F.1.,1,..m.". on 1*} 31 1295: I FRASER begs leave once more to re-3 . mind his friends and the travelling com- munity that he is still in the land of the ilving, `and not behind his competitors in the way of improvements. He is still to be found opposite the Barrie Railway Station, where all that is necessary to constitute a plain Canadian Inn are to be found, private and public. ` Conveyance: to all parts North of Barrie. 1 `D 111') AGED II_-.__.'..A.\.. CLEMENTS HOTEL, _ \ l White's Corners, Penetanguihene Road. ` GOOD 85 COM MODIO Us ST./XBLIVNG ...,.- an- J OHN H. Jomvs, n ER OF` ng `Flour uav uwuu VI Iniuuna nun 'Be.nie, Aug. 16th, 1871. ?7"-?-'_ VICTORIA HOTEL, M'nmzp"r smrmnit : This commodious establishment has just been opened, and having been built especially for the purposes of a first-class hotel, is tted up as such, and will compare favorably with any house of the kind north of Toronto. Commer- cial travellers, private families on casual visit; and the public generally, will nd that the pro- prietor knows how to provide for their especial requirements. The best of stabling attached, attended to by obligjng and experienced host- lers. Stages leave this house daily `on the nr- - rival of the up trains. Bar welllsupplied with thebest of liquors and cigars. Rap-.3. Ann 1120}. `I971 23. --.1-- Corner of Mulcaaier and Dunlop Sh-ets. ad opposite the Advance Oice, Barrie. _-_-__..- - -_. _ B A. `RE. I"Z-E}'. Joshua Clarkson, - Proprietor. THE BESTVOF WINES AND LIQUOBS IN THE BAR- [AMES EDWARDS, ]cLAn!gr;_IuEousi} ILLIAM. PARKINS, UNION HOTEL, COOKSTOWN; LICENSED _AUGTIONEER :1 Good Supply of Hone Medicine always on hand . .p...n- .. Tqrontd, On Em11M.5uCl ..----vvv J une, 1868. INSURANCE NOTICES. - __--~.....\.-.,\,vu\~\x,\;\\A_A...o.---`--_-A.._` ' Dunlop'Slrcet, Foot of Market Street, TERMS 3 . VALUATOR, T VETERINARY S URGEON, 4}-c. OYAL HOTEL, ORILLIA. Cookstown,_0ct._ 1867. I 14: :._X'i{G_4E"1\Ii:`N*i: ox?7r?fEJ lC(3.RR.IE HOTEL, BARRIE, COUNTY [ ` A , LEx. MOVR`ROZW,j |XCHV;\NGE HOTEL, I `lie thst he I _..-- -..., _~~_-.-_. _coivVEir}iN0E1a, 390., MJRKET SQLMRE, Second to non intho P.r0_Vi- ,,n\-. Late of the Barrzi Hotei III` .-__.. ' 52237} 3Ii`}1(3E7a`'.' _H0'l`ELS AND SAL0,(;NS.W -../-v.,.p.zv DUNLOP STREET, BARBIE. (Lula Deputy Registrar) K117711171 n'rt\!'!1-I 1-Inn! Vol. I mini: Adm some 5: $1 per_ year in advance; _ A Is JUPPLIED wm I I I I DH ` I F II A9]! 1` 308 TH] Acnujr ton ' n rt-A via a an an an nan.-nu `H. FRASER, Proprietor. Pnopnil-ron. Proprietor. mm mu 1 D, Proprietor. bnetnnguiuhol n 119;:-ma- HULK` Blvyla. ' _ ' A large and varied stock 01 Berlin anla other Wools, Fancy Goods, &c., at moderafa prices.` Machine Sewing and Pinking dfonel on the shortest notice. ` Orders respectfuily solicited. Barrie, December 19th, l87)_ Agent for the Howe Sewinp"Mahing_ . . 51-3mo-pA CHEESE`! CHEESE!` Respectfully informs the Ladies of Barrie und neighborhood, that she has opened a store for tho supply of the above goods on Collier Street, opposite the English Church, where she will keep constantly on hand a complete assortment of- U of every description`. or whlch she is r in-ed make to order in the latest and mo s)t }f :sho: able styles- ' ` A larae and varied aim-I: nl n...1:'.. .....s , .. ......-u u;-41.1;-41:41.14 .I1u.l:J.V1 ANGUS, - -, -. - _0N l` --j-- Disputed Likes accurately adjusted. Drawings & Description: for Patents of In`- veutious carefully prepared. Valuations made and Surveying of every description ex- ecuted with accuracy and despatch. /1..-; 1'... u -rnnv-7;: pry... -- . _ ,_ -_._-, ..__ __~r....v-.- ./lg-ent>for the ./ETNA LIFE, Iiarlford, Conn ` Aug; 24, 1869. 83 4-lyrp b`LoTHIr_a_sTon.|, I-FRUIT1`R%S! Fnlr TR ` sl Prolic 3 to 4 y; ld,?wMe1l EI\ plant; sure to. . satisfaction: b n-.:..... _:u I"- .._-_:_..| .._.n . luuunn_ u-anv wv Order: will A |.DER,`; .-----. -'}$ uv-wuvj H-`AS now on hand an extensive and genuine stock of Single and Double Harness (Os:- rings and Team), English and Common Riding Sadlles. Double `nd Single Bridles, Oollsrs. &c., which he on offer :1; very reasonable prices. Also in stock, some ofthe best English and other Riding and Driving Whips, Bits, Lines,vBrnsl1ss, Curry and-Mane Combs , Gsrds, &c., to be found in this market. . Ant m-tip]: in sin tn-min mnhnfnntnrn fur. The subscribhf begr of the County of Sim choice assortment of Q 9 1 , 1 czvu. anamnnn, PRO VIN CIAL LAN D S U,R VE YOHR DR./9 U GH '1`SM./QN, ./9PPRJ!IER, CON- VE YJNCER, INS URJNCE LJND ./9ND GENERJL JGEN T A II (1319 V "- Ladies` Undercloihing and C hz'ld1en : ' Clothing. . , p ` ADDLERY AND HARNESS. ES- r .' TABLISHMENT, . IN ms OLD smzvp NEJRLY OPPOSITE THE VBANK OF TORONTO, n`rr1m'.nn 'I\'D'll|'lNl| 1) A `DDT ! 5 up Vyuuvss DUN LOP STREET, 110. (0 DC IOILIIIQ In {D15 IDITKSI. ' Any article in the trade manufactured, fur- nished to order on short notice, and .wern.nted_ to giveeatisfaction. I3'Repeire well and neatly executed. Juria. April 8, mo: . e- - - -..---..k Graduate of Ontnno Veterinary College. _ Qeapatches by mail,` telegram, or` othorwiu, promptly attended to. 0Incn,-Co1lier Street, adjoining ihe Fin Hall, over Hunter`: Store. Barrie, Ont. ?.nf vmn |`gIn:_\5\r" _s_u n_u__on[ --_uvvnLtL Ila JJAIJIJI, .kI. 1lJl1' noya-a.t-1aw, Solicitors-in-Chancery, Con- nnoeu, &o. - men-Ow,_qn Street, Barrie, Ont. D. `1*unn, _L.L.B. -` _ Fnucu W. Lanny. .B.-Money to Lend. ie, Jan. 24, 1872. .-- .. . deters. Attornevmnt-Law Rnlinhn-u CAR'I`llY &McCAETHY, BAR- ' ENGLISH nun Hausa. R. KING & SON, R. BOSANKO, L;D.S., PRAC- TICAL DENTIST, , ` ~ Member of the Royal College of Dmlaa . Surgeons of Ontario. ` Rooms on Dunlop Streein Boy : Biock opposite the Queen's Hotel, Barrie, which will be open every day, - except from the 16th to`! .the 24th of each month. ---cg. \.I.A 4a..|.a.Lav4JAlJz4Ia\a" Residence Mr. Carles` McGae a, Thornton. Thornton, September, 1869. 890-11] 1-17 Formerly Drs. Scholeld > Watoon Bqndhad, LATE OF KLINEBERG, Rn-Mano. 11.. nn`....n..-` In-n..-o.. ms.--..a..- 'JADIES AND CHILDREN S has removed his ofce to his new residence on the West side of John Street, immediately op- posits Mr. George Bell : plainig and sub futon. . LIIIBI u Dr. McC., has 9. vacancy for I student. Barrie, Oct . 30, 1871. [OSEPH DOUPE, ';AMUEn 19Biis6z;;' : -"1 . ~21; =_=.~... ._~_~ fc`HAs.1~:n `PROVINCIAL LAMS` sunvmron A j AVALUER, _ ac, -ly ' RARRII h [ENRY CRESW1CKE,.JvN., MARTIN MOORE, ng noun nn `kn-u-I an Achy-.32.-A --.2 --. JU_s'rIcE IS THE GREAT, BUT SIMPLE PRINCIP'LE,.AND THE WHOLE SECRE1` or SUCCESS; IN ALL GOVERNMENg. TDR. J, L. G u--..-- . Mc0ARTI-IYA uguui so zh,.`1m.. ,R. `J. H. WATSON, .._____'*"- SURVEYORS CARDS. v\ -_/'\_`,-\ \_\/\.'\.\.*\/\1\/\. 4---. ~\.\. \.\< \-..-\~s.\..u~ MRS. WILSON` articles gl CSHEESE `nnnniu an cin- 'AT THE AND COUNTY 017 %S1lMC(_)E % GENERAL ADVERTISER |'UTHERLAND:! BARBIE. ished strong vmnrn. IVN.G>".:' ls. ` 51-3mo-p Bal`1;'I`-Vin S;;'seet,i It u G .E;"3a":Rou(]';'W` .7. po.lgl0OOlO II n L_\l71BUu Dlillulg 1:4. 0400000000 4.: 1.--2 ' ' 00000000 1 I R033 stfaeti S. S0-0 000 00 0 0 000 1'2 ' " " 0000000I0000 . . '00000000000067,68l52 Th0mPOn St. W. S. 0 000 0-0 0 1'2 ` _ 00000000 1`2 " `.` 000 00000 1'2 Town Liue`St1=`aet.......... 28,29 1 r 00000000000303]. 1 Charles Street, E. S.;....... 43 1-4- Ellen Street,'E.. S., Block with Timber facing Bay. .Gov va'n,-. Street, I` Baldg rin Street, (I `CC I` `DJLJLLLVJHLUO ` ' V Lot.Acre I Street, N: so I e e I 0 e 0 el 3'8 TOWNSHIP OF SUNNIDALE. Lot 17, East of Road, 6811 (301)., 4-6 acres cleared. Good fanning land. House and Burn thereon. T A Lots in 5th Concession, No. 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 27,30, 52, Village Lots, 1-4 acre each. , . ' Lots in 5th Conceasion,No. 8, 13, o T4-Mn A H Q 1,`. nnngannk J.dU,I.u Au uun uvuvuuclvu, LIV! 0, Av, vu Lots 6, 7, 8, 1-4 aoro each. Parcels in 5th Concession, 1,4, 7. ' Lots, Sunnidale Station, No. 14,15, 32, 33, 24, 35, 36, 37, 1-4: aoze each. TOWNSHIP OF TINY. Brunet: Street, I N` If _.;`;.-uov--an ._ Lot.Aore Nelsdn Square, E. S-io-o---- 2 1-4 cc so u . . _ . . . .. 1 1-4 ,, V _ Jacob's`. '1`en'o.oe,N. S. . it if `I ' Jacol-;; s= '1`e71'_1*ace`,.-S. S: : : n u 66 ' , _ . _ VVUBI: unu. uut `VIII I0` Concession, _100 acres. For pameulan apply to 45- JOHN ROSS_ West part of West half Lot No. 19, Con. l9,10a.oreI. _ . _. East part of South half Lot No. 10, Con. 13, 60 acres. `East part of South half `Letter. 20, 15 acres. KIIQBKI, I-I10 IIQIIIU `III 35" ["55 I 5` class style. 7 .7 . For further pprtionlm Ipglisff I $3 `wnmrunomsn A BRICK Loorfrmz mouthelutlfnll |_iln- 2 nedin tho.Vil of Oiillin Driving Store House, oodahod, Budsndsoltwnm and every _5I10lill0I! 'h_'f'iV_~A6{0Q - 10-. B._-lr. Bobinlon hniothktillhgu pot!` udlumilhrtytorhlo. _. V ` .n...x.n.. ya. man v < '- Laue Pull VI Uvuul unis Aavhvwn. 9,1` Went part of Lot Letter E, Con._.j1 West half Lot No. 13, in {he 12th (1.-mnnnninn. 100 nnnnn, [To let In-go House and Store,` containin 12 rooml, good wofl, out building and I garden, the hgnu Inn Man put in repair in int- nlnn Atria. Efndertalcei: IFABII roiz;ALqom_g 1'6 ; .% ?ooT. ' -v.m= L.......'v -N;ov`enbo`r 14, 1871. TOWNSHIP or VESPRA; " Lot No. 6, in the 13th Concegsion, 200 Icii " " '" '"" """"" _ Lot No. 11. in the 12th Copcessiop, 200` CL\;ni;erla11:i Slrget, . `C I` If . Barrie, Ontario, T'l1ursday,'Feb?i1 1ary 8; 1872. ' ?zxad}ofd s'.,W ..:IIIIICII C` If VII `and. .' ` _ 1:!-Appllyloi IIIII tutu: HIUPAU n 3. `Enema st.,;s. s; [ion , Bdrrie. FARMING VILLAGE: LOTS ?.rov?'NsHi1> NORTH ORILLIA. 'o5sE '.A%NIi STORE '1"oiiLE"1'. AT CHL'UHILL. :1-`on sAL r;.'. ALLANDALE. `I JOKE` I'{0SS_, A_I.1.ANnu.u. '_ S'l"AYNEl{. aumnt-. s. nosiusox,` ~ Snlieilnr & nnmunanr Inc` Ion VI in Gmk.-:1 ] Alrrvv, v - v u - -- S0-000000000006 0000000: 0000 6 'uuou000000006 8000000-00 5 cc F I- 000000006 .-._A. (`I o All ,' sLoAz`v,- Churchill. AR. 1.3 14- 45-; an Our first notice of Fosterfs life of Charles Dioken s brought us to; the . point at which ended those sordid and stem childish experiences -that for: twenty.-ve years were buried in his : own breast. A passage In which the biographer. analysing the outcome of ,` the"-:6 boyish trials, Jets in some new light on the character and tempera- ment ol his friend, may be quoted here as the tting introductlon to what has to be told of DiIk,en s youth and man- hood-and as also interesting for the foreshadowing of future storm and suf- fering in its closing lines :- . 1:1! A ,. I I S 1 1 I 1 I i i -""n'v"?-" I _ gave x_n84IV`_tWppernela.' And, Just Another old gchool-fellow, Dr. Henry. R8 I can never Opelbet book as I gpen Dgnaop, tells a somewhat dfrent any other book,I cannot see the face it_ory.Tj Aiteregtatinglthat m a papa} (evenat four-and-forty).-or hear, -the oalfod ~ Scho'ql ?` Diokeas had voice,wiIhout going -wnnderiug- away uafehad the plnoa in Hampstead vary over" _the ashes` of all_ thatyouth and ymd|_y, tl1_ough`;;thq:a_ooupt:u1i;v `egg, hpe ixfthe wildest manner. A _ . -.IY$'5T11 -!3P!f'!!P18;'ani1Eni5r Mr. F0;-stat adds: ' - `- ' p ;. J1!-'_w=,t,h]e3.: oomplimaqnhg: " ' `T ' ., .` ' -;Mote_a:;1s;fV.ii1or9 i_2I_ai'g|`-y`seAe,. ;ij,I;ih9_5li tit;-. "_4a'_-fq!`ty1!i9Troih- % ` v*-~m;%:tv3rk be- ad THE YOUTH on l)lCKlf3N.S. F`rom_theilLondon Telegraph.) Our notice Mr. Fosterfs life us.-to'_ the which childish for twenty-ve were biographer. on be introduction to told" s suf- aid animal spirits, and probably was connected with every mischievous prank in the school. . . . . Depend on it he was quite a self- made man, if his wonderful knowledge and command of the English language must have been acquired by long and patient study after leaving .his last school. . . '. . . I think at that time Dickens took to writing small tales,end `we had a sort of club for lending and circulating them. We were very strong, too, ingtlieatricals. We mount- ed small theiges, and got up very gor- geous scenery to illustrate the ` Miller and his Men and Cherry and Fair Star. Ireinember the present Mr, Beverley, the scene painter, assisted us '1 in _ What at once he brought out of the humiliation that had impressed him so deeply, though scarcely as yet quite consciously, was a natural dread of the hardships that might, still be in store for him, sharpened by. what he had` in this. Dickens was always a leatr `at these plays. . . . Master Beverley J constructed the mill for us in, such a way that it could tumble to pieces with I the assistance of crackers. At one re-A l precentation the fireworks in the` last 1 scene, ending wi_th the destruction of l 5 which opened `O him opportunities -of his and Forster s common friend Mac- 3 'i 3 i i gone through; and this, though in its effects for the present `imperfectly understood, became by degrees a pas- sionate resolve,'.even while he was yielding to circumstance not to be what circumstances were conspiring to make him." -All that was involved in what he had suered and sank into, could not have been known to him at the time; but it was plain enough later, aswe see ; and in conversation with him after the revelation was made, he used to find, at `extreme points in his life, the explanations of himself in those early trials He had derived great good from them, but not without alloy. The xed and eager determina- tion,_the restless and resistless energy, escape from many mean environments, not by turning off from any path of duty, but by resoltttelv rising to such excellence or distinction as might be at- tainable in it, brought with it some dis- police interfered, and knocked violent- ly at the doors. ; . . . Iquite remem- ber Dickens on one occasion heading us in Drummond Street in pretending to be poor boys, and asking the passers~ lny for charity-especially old ladies; one of whom told us that she ` had no money for beggar boys. On these ad-' ventures, when" the old ladies were quite staggaid by. the impudence of- the demand, Dickens would explode with laughter and take to his heels. The school supplied some of the lighter traits of Salem House for Cop- pereld ;" and Dickens used to point to ' the fact that one of his tutors was afterwards engaged to teach a child of ready, for one of the illustrations of his favorite theory as to the smallness of the world, and how things and persons apparently the most unlikely to meet- were continually knocking up against the mill, were so.very real that the 5 advantage among many noble advaii- _. tages. Of this `he was himslf aware, 3 but not to the full extent. What it t, was that in society made him often uri- . easy, shrinking, and over-sensitive, he _. knew; but all the danger he raii in in hearing down and over-mastering the ', feeling, he did not know. ` A too `great 5 condence in himself, a sense that . everything was` possible to the will , that would `makeit so, laid occasionally , upon him self-imposed burdens greater each other. After leaving Wellington House, Dickens spent a short time at another school in Brunswick square; then for some months he was clerk: to a Mr. Malloy in New-square, Lincoln s Inn ; and from May, 1827, to Novem- ber, 1828, he lled the same position in the office of Mr. Blackmore, of Gray s Inn, who writes-of him thus: _ . He was a bright clever-looking youth. . . . 1 havcnow an account- book which he used to keep of petty . then might be borne by any one with . safety. In that direction therewas in him, at such times, something even hard and" aggressive; in his deter- . tninatioiis a something that had almost V the tone of erceness; something in his nature that made his resolves in- superable, however hasty the opinions on which they had been formed". So rare were these manifestations, how- ever, and so little did they prejudice a character as "entirely open and gener- ous as it was at all times ardent and impetuous, that only very frequently, towards the close ofa middle term of friendship which lasted without the in- terruption of a day for more than three and thirty years were, they ever un- `favourably przsentedto me. But there they were; and when I have seen strangely present, at such chance in- tervals, a stern and even cold issolation of self`-reliance side by side with-a sus- ceptivity almost feminine and the most eager craving for sympathy, `it has seemed to me as though -his habitual impulses for everything kind and gentle bad sunk, for the time, under a sudden hard and inexorable sense-of what fate had dealt to "him in those early years. On more than one occasion indeed I had conrmation of this. __ l must entreat you, he wrote to me in '-Tulle; 1862, to pause fortan instant, and go back to what you know of my childish days, and to ask yourself whether it is natural that something of the character formed in me then, and lost under hap- pier circumstances, should have re-ap- peared in the last ve years. The never to be forgotten misery of that old time, bred a certain shrinking sen- , sitive '1-:_i,n ,a certain ill-clad, ill-fed childi Ihave foun'd"conie backtin the it star to be forgotten misery of jthis later time. T heard) they not unfrequently engaged -earlyhistory are all the more valuable, -years were spent in reporting proceed- rings in the law courts for one of the . appeared in Dickens s life; and then disbursements in tlze office, in which he chargedyhiinself with the modest j salary first of thirteen shillings and six- pence and afterwards of fteen shil- lings a week. Several incidents took place in the office of which he must have been a keen observer as.I recog- nizedsome olthem in his `Pickwick and Nickleby ; and I am much mistaken if some of his characters had not their originals in persons I will remember. His taste for the articles was much pro- moted by a fellow-clerk named Potter, since dead, with whom he chiefly as- sociated. They took every opportunity then unknown to me, of going together to a minor theatre, where (I afterwards" in parts. _ r , These contributions . to Dickens s since he has hiinsell left no direct re- cord ef those days, save `in " Copper. field and in those innumerable and inimitable sketches of legal life which prove that he did a good deal more than keep `Mr. Blackmore s petty cash. After quitting the precincts of the law, struck by the example of his father, who had become Parliamentary re- porter, Dickens` devoted himself to the study of shorthand ; but he could not get into the gallery at once, and two offices in Doctors -commons. But the hey of seventeen was now nerved to patience and industry by his first love ; for -he had found and stediastly wor- shipped a Dora, and the wirship open- edout to the-idolater, both in fact and ction,ahiglily unsubstantial, happy, foolish time. Mr. Forster. disbeliev- ed in any but the Dora of the book, until in 1855 the Dora of 1829 really re- 7 At the school to which his_ father in- sisted on sending him after the quarrel with Lamerts-Welliiigton House appeareci in uicireiisrs I Dickens wrote to his see I don t quite. appreh mean by my over-rating Acadenikx, i?`iii the Hampstead-road,after. of the feehng of Ye_and :- wazds. Jjiqzlfirge part demolished ly _grg__,I_iMa_i;l_ys(ay-p-Dickeiis -ears, until he was about ago. If you mean of my and will only think wha intensity of my nature is began when I was Char, it excluded every other mind for four years, at 1 when four years are equ: four; andtnen I.went a termination to overcome l ties, which fairly lifted r newspaper life, and-oa overahundred men's hea wrong, because nothing: that,I have. positively at myself ever since ! ,1 ed, and so worked, am . 3%`, does not seem to have made anyieonspicuous mark here as a scholar; but, was perhaps of more consequence at that time, he fully re- covered those animal spirits the un- agging buoyance of which, amid hard work and even sore trouble, is among the most remarkable impressions given by Mr. F_orster s book. One school companion writes to the biographer :, V My recollection of Dickens whilst at school is that of a healthy-looking boy, smart but, well-built, with a- more than usual ow of spirit, inducing to hammered away at the hlnlcli fun. I.e_ld9m'or never I think ances that ever got into: *9 31139519`-. - - `He usually held and stayed there, that to his held more erect than lads. ordinarily cause of it all, now loo: 410. nudhers Was. ageneral smartuess upon myself. .Without _3.1?`!,3 hlmv - - -_ -` He invented What sineerelyvbelieyiiig that W91 _3_l,nld.'|."-ill0ls".f Pfdueed by the beengbetter if wehadanei Idd1`l9ll.~9f&-~few_letters;of, tho lime `ed, Icannotsee the.occs.I `.'l'r`.`,d. -i`e".|7!: E915 .5; lI1 our emotion-as Iishould = see -glhlllon. wallnns and Imllrbg =:,=lh|19. No one.;gn' .iinas.ine in elm; tho, !.ft.::t-*l?*?:~arl-tidied l,!|13'd8l'..8' lv:P8ll.1-ll lept oi hand null -earlyzhistory the t eld ` a` had porter, of hpyof in 1955 fhn nnrn .-P1900 rnnlln -.. vv .v..b, uuuuuuuuuuuu nus van vausscuuu M have stood amazed ever And so Isuffer- so worked,and so beat and l maddest rom- into any boy s head and stayed there, that to see the mere cause it loosens my hold upon ZWithout for a moment been `better vievhad never got separat- ed, I cannot see theoceasion of somuch tsnt.deggge' Lpain the taco! eation. V 0!1l!i3 l?59li -' mu ;-samba e .. :(gy5n_~;t;- aiding-o`ndgf.or44y:)." or h3$.:th0 nice v`gitqut*45iR5W`"1d91'i2buva!- ' :e`ve Q:.';esem.of . tl;o.&,=,you_th ,: end `ili-u .oii;sf.`eul-l.l.'.oi=;...`...'.a. 9} .. sincerely believing that it would have 1' "emotion-es I.-should any onefelsa.- No ono.Jen- imagine in them Ldi_s- = "gins, pet'eld; : . Aynd .. just : ask! can neverjo nlnt bqqlli aoalgaglea`. cu Lu nu . uuu nu: .uuAu Ul Iup uuun, uuLu of 1829 appeared sIife; and }hen Dickens wrote to sceptical friend: :11 .'l._..'9A .....2a_ , _..._.._L-..J .__L_;. , ---_--- ....7. . .... ---,.--_. ...-..... - t quite : apprehend what you over-rating strength of the feehng five-andotweuty years If my own feeling, what thefdesperate intensity is, and that this when Chatley s age; that ever ,r idea from my mind for four years, a. time of life are -equalto [our times at it with a de- all the difficul- .f:An (kink Poi-1nl:h..A -....' .... .'..o.. .1.-. nun IIIIQBBIUII IIU UVUIUUIUI7 _au HM: uuucu1- ties, me up into that newspaper andoated me away ` ovefa hundred men's head: then you are nothing can exaggerate that. I hnvn nnuitivnlv ntnn nm.sm.A iNo. Whol` No. 1013. _ -...-J r.-u- u To the wholesome training of severe newspaper work, wheril was a very young man, Iconstantly refer my first successes, he said to the New York editors when he Inst took leave of them. It opened to him a wideand varied range of experience, which _ his wonderful observation, exact as it was humorous, made entirely his own . He saw the last ofthe old` coaching days, and ofthe old inns that were a part of them ;.but it will belong before the readers of his living page see the last of the life of either. " There never was, he once wrote to me (in 184-5) anybody. connected with the news- papers, who, in the same space of time, had so much` express and post-clraise experience than I. And -what gentle- men they were to serve, in such things < at the old Mormng C }rrom'cle. Great or ; small it did not matter. I haveihad to charge for halt`-at-dozen break-downs in half-a-dozen times as many miles. f '1 have had to charge-forthe damage of a great-coat from the drrppings of a blaz- , ing `wax-candle, in writing through the smallest hours of the night in a swift- ying carriage and pair; I -have had to chnrgefor all sorts of breaknges fty times in a journey without question, such being the ordinary result of the pace at which we went at." `I have charged forbroken hats, broken luggage, broken ohaises, broken hari1e.*s--`overy , thing but a broken head; which is the only thingthey wouldfhave grumbled` M topay for. ; :3"; i . ~. During`183the'fsl{etclies went on, with improved spirit in ,_the author and increased` p2cu`n1ary,T`rewa ,rds for him, in the Epening C h,ro_nic_l_e-7-the ,t'1n'auge- menta I,or,'wh1ch'we're pkjnc,ipqlly in the handsilof, Mr. George` Hogarth, who ` diedinotvery long`ago_ ingripe emf ' honeurablefold age,` end with whose, farrgily Dickens destined? soon to. rbecomejjnsparably `asso_c_r'ated." In ' e"l83ti,ope'ft1's the real` careefol Dicl{9.n sf ' as`an author. In the "ea 3 we,e,E's:hi, -'se__llethejcopyright of the " ketdhe? :to:Ma`cr-`in *'e for ` _a eonditionel ypdiinenft, ' j littlq ;_8ul_pecting , _th` 1 hard . wtzw um. up to nqseerl there. . . { That was the beginning `of the sketches which appeared--without remnneration--in thnMonthly until February, 1835. partly uuder the sig- nature of Bozf -the nickname of a pet child, his youngest, brother `Augus- tus, whom in honot1riof.tha".`Viar`of Wakeeld he had dubbed Moses, which being facetiously pronounced through the ncse\ became-Bose's,'~and being shortened became Boz. ` Boz waea very familiar household word to me, long before I was an author, and so I cameto adopt-it. Of his press experience Dickens was "always hon- ourably proud : ten`- -L- "` tion on seinAg-himself in p`nnt.::- On which occasion I walked down td \Vestminister Hall, and __lunaed_ Into it forhalt an hour, because _my _eyes were so dimmed wilh_joy ni pride, _`that they could not bear thstreet, and were not; to bg `seen there. TL. 6 '..-A - A` ` ' ` EEME1{TS,' ......., uuuunly mos-, ms nrsrwriting saw the light-.-the sketch of Mrs. Joseph Porter over tlie'Wa_y,'whicl1 he.- had dropped stealthily one evening at twilight, with feat and tren1b,liug into a dark letter-box in a dark ofce up :1 dark eqnrt in `Fleet-street. The letter box was .that,of, the _ Monthly Magazine ,;__aud whenzsome days after `he bought` that periodical in the Strand --strangely enough, from a young man afterwards the`Hall of Chapman, and -Hall, thus lending new illustration to his theory of the smallness ofthe world ---he was seized with no` slight agita- f\._ .-.L:_I. . - uuuupuuululyu , There _never wasisuch n, ,sh9rtha*.1d writen said of him his friend Mr. Beard, whom he rst met in the gallery; and`upon this path in `life his_:~!_hu'<:cess was time. F01-.two 'sessions, after leav1`ng.the True. Sun,'he worked for the Minor of Parlmmentf i3_Dd.`,iD `his twenty third year he jc-i{ned.the, staff of the `Moring ()hrong'c[e, _ l\Ieai{- ume, in January 1834, his '|"s'!~writing light-.-the sketch of u M-u u can uuuaunuua Ul. uuyl-mug. _ * . At nineteen Dickens began his man- hood by entering the gallery 7on1 the staffof the True Sun, with which Mr. Forster was editorialy and also in other wavs connected ; and he tells .:how he rst saw Dickens bne dny`when" there had been a general strike `of the rel: porters: ~ ` ' ' ~ 3 ~ ~ It 1 non .......-..-I - favourite Jxb,he, began the fiction in which there was 9. Flora tuiset against its predecessor s Dora, both derived from the some original. The inncy had a comic hllm_0ltf in it he found it impossible to resist, but it was kindly and pleasantjto the last; and if the later picture showed h'im"plent y` to laugh at in this retrospect of his youth, there was nothing he thought of more tenderly than the earlier, as long allle was conscious of anything. nineteen ninknn ham... i.:.. .4-..- And $2 on if of paid` "in advance, 5:. I3 Ulr.l ` talr axe: .1 'tiI*;;.0f`;: uyuu uuIu_IU Pl m ihoizo daily` < u`o= rectontidnfh .9. "'1.'&h |.. gr`: j . _`1'_`_ ,. um` man ` `. Diiiil i WI!` .V!!Y*i_JOnd .1 yadts.):infd .1 th 9 ..`if.| = A 9` Very? ditfeient wefihia 0.00 in those days from that which photo- graphy hasmade familiar to the pres- `ent generati_pn.- A look of youthful- nosgrst attracted you, and then accu- dour and openness of expression whtch . made you sure of the qualities within. The features were very good. U0 bid :1 capital forehead, a rm hose with full wide nostrils, eyes wonderfully beam- ing with intellect and running over with dumour and cheerfulness, and tr. rather prominent mouth strongly mark- ed with sensibility. The head was altogether well-formed and symmetri- cal, and the air and carriage of it were and grizzled in later days was then Jfa rich brow-n,and most luxttrianhin abun- dance, and the bearded face of the last two decades had hardly a vestige of hair `or whisker; but there was that in the face as I first recollect it which no time could change and which remain- ed implanted on it, unalterable to the pass, and practical power, the eager, `restless, energetic outlook on each several leature, that seemed to tell so little at a student or writer of books, mil so much of a man of action and business in the world. Light and motion ashed from every part of it. It `was as if made of steel, was said of it, four or ve years after the time to which I am referring, by a most origi- nal and delicate observer, the late Mrs. . Carlisle; Leigh Hunt saidto me, the morning after I made them known to each other, It has the life and soul in it of fifty human beings. In such say- ingst are expressed not alone the restless and. resistless vivacity and force of which I have spoken, and that also which lay beneath them of steadiness and hard enduraw. extremely spirited. The hair_so scant" .last.. This was the quickness, keen-v .. u... an usuu-unun But we cannot follow the biography through the growing success of Dick- ens,vasin swift succession--too swift, some shrewd critics of the day ventur- ed. to think-g Niclsleby, and lhe Old Curiosity Shop, and Barnaby Budge, owed from his facile pen. A great contrast indeed is that be- : tween his life in 1838. or 1839, with. the whole. country waiting on hi. ' words, the brightest names in art and literature ranked among his friends, a wealth flowing in upon him, happy by - himhearth and honoured by the world ,--and those sober days when ho carried ihis cold hotoh-potoh for din- ierchief. from S`omer s Town to '- Huugerford-stairs , orlwandered, in `that?! interval `of business, through. . theiAdelph1 arches, eolitaryuforlorn, . andsdelpairingla The tgqiety _of-his -.n :lts"and the strep3`h~> 'f~\1IJl`-119 .. which; made.` this gonad . ot? ..i;ii; ire, ..retdis, t6 `Foir'a qpr`,V`i.\Izl'Ijiiila up 3 mile mueh=3f'- &:s_- '0!` l ' ta I o ,k I, _.u :3 = '. '1. ..- nor, in a basin wrapped in a hand- ` p`e'c`ulierl,'y 3br`i`ght`,- are-_re`eoted. ' L*;lr'e L *1f'actur'e'of 7| wing Mcbing ,Window Blinds, ks, Concertina Boxes. Wrin... Mr. Forster became especially ser- viceztble to Dickens in negotiating his release from engagements such as those with Macroue and Bently, which. made with an unknown writer, became most oppresively unlair when lame came all at once, with its golden re- wards to men who had paid little more than a pittance for,tlie source of their gain. The copyright of the Sketches had to be bought back from Macrono at 2,000`-`--thirteen times the price he paid for it; and the Angreernents with Mr. Bentley were in constant cause of chang to Dickens, until at lest he` got rid of them all and exnlted in hie1ree- dom. Oliver 'l`wist_, in Bentley e l\ 1iscello.ny, and Pickwick in the green covers, were now (1837) running side by side, the former beginning largely to share public attention with the latter; and. says Mr. Forster- '4'r; _____ ,I_I:_L.p,,1 A, , W... ....i._. .-..- ~vnu-\.g-- It was delightful to see how real all its people became to him. _What I had most indeed to notice in him at the very onset of his career." was his indibrence to any praise of his per. iormances on the merely literary side compared with the higher recognition of them as bits of actual life, with the ` meaning and purpose on tneir part, and the responsibility on his, of realities rather than creatures of fancy. nr (1 1):-I-...:-I-9_ _' ..... __ nn_, rh -'An archdeacon, with his own venerable lips, repeated to me, the `other night `a etrange profane story: afaeolemn oiergy man who had been administering ghostly consolation to a sick person; having nished `satisfac- torily as he thought, and got. out of the room,-he heard the sick person ejaculate: ` Well, thank God, Pick- wickwill be out in ten days any- way ! -This is dreadful. .- ._- --..._ _.'......v.. V: nu-uv I Piokwick s`s'uccess, Mr. Forster, quqting a letter of CarIyle s tells this capltally illustrative anecdote: n A.. __-LJ--AA-~ - ouvuu-vuuo Lnu uiugrupuur says 2 . More than ordinarily susceptible at the moment to all kindliest impres- tion,his heart opened} itself to mine. Ileft llllrl as much his friend, and as entirely in his condence, as ` if I had . knowp him for years. Nor had many weeks elapsed when he addressed to me words which it'is my sorrowful pride `to remember had literal full- ment. .`_`I1ookback with unmingled. pleasure to every link which each en- suing week has added to the chain of our attachment. It shall go hard, I hope ereauything but Death impairs the toughness ofa bond now so rmly rivited. It remained unweakened till death came. ` fui;l.zi`y:1t3`I'3.`;, orster visited him at Hampstead, whither he had removed - for change of scene in his grief at the sudden death of his wife s next young- est _ sister Mary- who lived - with them, and by sweetness of nature even 'morethau by graces of person had madeeherseli the ideal of his life ,- and for whose grave in Kensal-green ceme- tery he wrote the epitaph : `Young beautiful, and good, God numbered her omong his angels at the early age of seventeen. The biographer says : More than nrriinhrilv lllnnnlikln -- yuvly uv II-nu nuvv Anni: - _. With the` session of ].'836`Di0)k0Dl paused his. career 33 a `reporter; `"1 at the close `of -the atmmyour -Mr. Forster met hiin first at the house pf Mr. Ainswouh, and 1901: this vm_d. impression ' o(~ him inxho prime of hit youth: -' -- Cali! -. _ ,_,-~.L_'_ A`.-- .'.. .,uu ugnl .grqen*,u_nu'.nann Olly Us-W - month, and that this youngmmwull-94 an artist _to_ illuamto his ygilil _ 3 ""1 I recdllect awalkingh ` tifhiab lnbl in Furniva1 s Ipn, _tj1`two'or thigh. drawings in, my" hand. which, unt . to gay, he c_lid not find suitable. TITIAL AL- ____2-_ -l 1-O92 mnbann . W-~ * ' Mr. llablot Brenner-hue.-hold neatly 'eversin'oe: " , . U. _ `f- I can remember Thkony) when Mr, nnEAnn,utnlA amt! vonmz 1" 1 VIII Iuluulllt JUTUTJ ] when Mr. Dickens I183! V0958 man, and had giomnomgd dolighnng the world wfth s6me`Ehaming humour- ous works inicovdga vghichwote colour-~ Med hgt gre9n;in.nd`jsant9 out once 0. rnnnth ant` IRAQ IL`: uvnlllin I1`II`l fntd ; nsnmslris |>U1.n1r{G, I % LEY, Venom .FLOUR Ullwn u PETER E1;TF ?`E'I i5IER G6(;Nl '.w.m'a-~' -_ I Patna}; a hnndnomut reauy Wulrg tnxrnxre X. cqInme`_ an nnnt,-5 ug runuc, Hill` I BUGGIES for; ,7 , __.-----v-y, V. H. OROS3! 0| ugto, -and It [`ABLES, K I N I foi r;`S 0/ chemabzunu ing Public, thlt BUGGIES 1.. 1 DD Ullllll ICFIIIPIICIII Dlllllllx [I10 )BVlllg iety, of Toronto, in now the Gitenpeat ndboet. Lonning Inatitation in the Dominion ml is prepared to Advance money on improved arm. Interest from 7 to 8` per cent, Princi- I can .1 paid in one sun at the end of 11:: em. A grie ever ten per cent. per snnum nod both` Principal end Interest in 20 you-e. L Wll. SANDERS, . ` Jppraieer for .}.P.B 6 S. Society. . Oat. an. Inn. < . 1-1.. Lonnl advanced at reasonnble rates, upon proved Farm oz-`Town property, or forthe am of Buildings. . For further particulars - 8. H- SANFORD. OVNEY TO LEND.. APPLY TO ms. EDWARDS, Royal insur ca Oce. Barrio. 'CtlPPl'0ved freehold security,-and st m'ode- ta Interest. - A ' Inn`: On All descriptions of blank formtfor this C_ourt_ mptly lled for service. Legal Forms and nkiug nnd Promissory Notes constantly on d. Jlrflll LU JAG: ,cn Office, Bame. l/1 Flllh Sept. 13th, 1871. was cma. Permrnent Binding and `Saving loniclv. of 'I'omn'..\_ in now tha'G3~.nnneal. nv an--uvuuu Apgy to - A DAGH, ARDAGH & STRATHY, Solicitors, Barrie. |u'i_e Jan. 5th, 1866. _ _ 2-tf umnme AND LOAN Asscwrlcs or V TORONTO. , (Late Clerk C'ount_y Regzstry Otfl) onveyancer, Commissioner in Queen s ch, Auctioneer, Appraiser and Commission nt for the sale of HOUSES; LANDS, RM STOCK, HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, ndn. Wnrnn. ho, Alan for tho nnllnnnn nf pda, Wares ho. Also for the col N'I`S,- No1 Es- AND ACCOUNT.- I`nnh nAmnn'mu malls An Ilnndn Inf! , - ' n n D A 1\ run / . _l FOUNDRY, mm- CULTURAL I M P L E- wonxs. ` mus sum, 1. _now prepuod to uuhetun In article: in bit line, of the Mn Won. and at cheap run. . --MINT AND STOVE B_-rr|e._I>-e.ara1Vss-:.V vv 49-1:. HM GIUUIL, HUUDJSJHULU l"U1Nl'1'UKIS, 510. the collection of mm nm ns.cx- Ann umnrmm -' - Cash advances made on Geode left for Sale. 11 AD, LVULID ALVU AUUUUlV'l'.' Eula Room, corner of Collier -gnd Market Sts., rie. u. ,u uey-an-uawpbollcltorln wan- . Oonve near, to. nmu- a Peter Street, next door vrthe t Olce. - Orlliiu, June, 1868. 23- __ _ _ . _ ..._..._._._._ .,_.__.__,._-_ oe-Church Street, next door to the old Court House, Toronto. .oumzos. n.nq u1cnnn. c. x mczu_m. ,L_.. ___._ nan :-\ }rovd-I}i:m 1! 55.95.! ' \IJJl&VKJ\JI." \Jl.Irl.LJIJll1, .3 be 1. 7 SoliciI.c-.- in Chancery, neyvs-"at-Law, Conveyanqes, Commissioner .R., to. Heir and Dg.-viaee Claims prose- d. Agent for the Canada Landed Credit. puny for loaning money on Real Estate. i 0FFICE-Ne.tt Frank Kean s Store. boo. l, 1868. 848-ly osapu ROGERS,` ; '1.-unLu J). Dt1.LV'U1'hl.'D, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, SOLICITOR IN nasty, Oonveyancer, Commissioner in C. P. , &c., Suntan, Co. Szucon. 900-ly oery, uorvoynucer, uommlssloner 1.1 5.5., EORILLIA SIMCOE 00., C.W. 1~tf ebruary, 14862. )RILLIA 1?1i'1Tfy. SESSIONS. gu. Apply * AMERON, MCMICHAEL .& Mc- ` MICHAEL, BARRISTERS.` - I`u...__l. I:' A _ . _ ; _ . _ 2... dUN'r & LOUNT, deters, Attorneys-at-Law, `Solicitors in car}, c., kc. - 01- unlop Street, Barrie. Loaur. G. W. Loam. I 3 Stewart. . Buy 18:11, 1871. }RANK EVANS. BARRISTER & ATTURNEY-AT-LAVV, SOLICITOR IN I.nnorv_ Cnrvovnnnnr. Cnmmiuinnnr h R R, (Z)N_EY'-T0 LOAN CHEAPER - THAN EVER. ' V wt. uruaz s to maconunue Advertise- . to be made in writing. , P ape: discontinued until all nrrearagen re psid, except at the option of the publish- sm, Boonmmm and RULING done on the remieee. The facilities of the Estahi sh- nt ere mogaeomplete than any o.ber orth of Torn7nt9';'heving been onrefnlly tied out in uexypnrtieulnr. , Intention: phonld be addressed to the Helm, pontnpelcl. A I 1|ll1.L`l`4l'l\ I-113 VV, DUIJIUI [UN IN noery, Corvoynncer, Commissioner L: 13.11., `ORILLIA SIMGOE Go.. C.W. 1-tf' an 0' 4; uumsn, wum A1`- L at his Oica, at Barrie, every~SATVUR- i',from1l |.m., till 3 p.m., according to r of Council and every other dny at his >0 at Oookntown. . -me, Feb. 17, 1362. - 1 T TANDY, BARRISTER, ATTOR- a . I new-at-Law. Solicitnr in Chan- o LIJO \./ uuuwu A'1"1'URNEY, RMSTIDR, &c., DGAR. B. SANVDEFS, I ATTORNEY-A'l`.1 .AW_ sm.mr'mnm :0TNEY T0 LEND: io.llny 12. 1870. vnnux ALL u.LV.I.UUt1K\1l'l I , DAK- , rum:-s, Attorneys-at-Law, Solicitors Obnnury, Barrie, Ont. upon Mo0n'rn. .D Au-on Mccn-my, Jr. rnuI.-Iu their New,B11ck Building oppoo 10. H. Ross Score. ' Dania, June 25,1371. ~ 847. - n--_----------1-.-------------------- Highest nmpmmxcns given. mu auuus SHEEP!!! Apgy A n A m ;I:Ii"V1VART 8:: LALLY, ATTOR. norn.u.1a- Rnl:nim.._:.._n|....-..-.. n-_ nun-Isuklll, ILLLIJALIII cc 0 IDA 1sl,'.l I L Barrister: and Attorneys, Solicitors in me , Notaries Public, Conveyaucera, REE Co. Simeon, Ont. nnnnn name, 25, i37I.' ---.--------:--------------------:r-- RDAGH, ARDAGH 85 STRATHY 5 Ear:-{nu-n Ind A-Mm-...... ..|:..:;.._.'. :_ whisked Weekly, (`the Town of Bcn-1a,. very .'l`munu morning, Vcontnining tho an-oat now: of the duty, and all matters Mining 1.0 the affair: ofthe County. Price 1 in adurzco or $2.00 if not paid at the e of aubocription. vuusulo -Six lines or undo:-,rst insertion c: each lnbleanant nun mu-. n......:- -Six lines c; subsequent one mic. Oven-six Ines, 8 pen-Iino,rst insertion; asch sub- equont one 2;` Professional or Business nrds $4 per year $3 for six months, if at more than tan lines. Special contracts an be Insdo by the, y_ear,- or parts of: 'e:-r. Ordsn to discontinue Advertise- hsds be made in wrilina, R. C` INTER Inn, 1 nidiv {1-:'{rJ /FIRE ./ ~/\.-_x/\/\/ ./\/-\,-\r\. x/-\. xxx. HE Nozrfunam ADVANCE 55, UUIIUOPUIU. Boxes, Wrilln!` cles, Childunrj