Ontario Community Newspapers

Grey Review, 4 Oct 1878, p. 1

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i rc- FE LATEST We of the Art, i328. TYPE om) mung 're "erc "Grey Iteview" tr "GREY heaven >WNsmn; Department Family y. 5.1 I) Work Jud with N Prompt" lid. I NIT}; I 'e-, i.- um LT tau'otms W Ann-m :m “no“! " w wan; A53t MN Newspaper I!) Etrt Ad urn flung “i".- "ttt nan-1:1: h "II. 1.rrr1'tu.uas 1| n ' Art, ut 'rn‘u. I. nad w an We 'll’ sun use". N NLI’s. kuliuk """"stirte Inn-h. atati'irtdr donu- uhu nhon In Requiring done with neat- noss and despatch'. Al.”- on In“ all that ofa-tha. oljunnl Parana My} my Tum, t ' Cabinet Maker, Cnournn. Incl UNDERTAKEB, I In“ now mum "I fur "vuvtfaeturiag an Mu- cu-no-d to - in the ("may of (my. am In“ .0 an noel an had. but all my good- m of tho AM ‘yh. luring own! nut I In” column. meta" A I [MJ‘onG-dul um! b‘nn'h‘m hr - he “WI. In unwed work I defy cat-poti- Koa. Thu In" In than hr ,Torttgttrtt pt “wt-nu. u "mu-o unulk that 2oppf R1toeerttV Mn- nut b unmanned. Juan all no In ‘12:an 'moo"--+untt not In M Phrh. 0M1!!! " J, W. Walton's Human Mum, Dw- Iun. will moh- plump. um Te,'.': mhscrzher keel-u on hand no bor ‘1“ W; c ”up, but g ml; that are cheap “but I dim-1mm run Crlvrrlk-m ttte l mg we“ and com- toetorttro liarblllr . N. KELSEX‘. Photo orrnWo Cho "mun" Priming on»... Nothing LIKE LEATHER! PAIR PRICE AND MWSG PROFIT, will! glans. bark ttnd rtttsts, ONLY FIFTY CENTS. Pictu- Sails, Curd and kings nlwuyu on hand. PIP,','.; J. LEWIS rvwntly of t'm, City oi 'I‘I-n-uhul‘d'uulm ' ll tat) humps n -d lulu y " [durum . All .1, nurhum. H at Middmughn 1iowt, " mm In- " pram“ to do “vi-5. D‘s-II'OOl-I. [hurdle-dam in. In tttm but In tm, "ring wrll "perirneth the pvt-Quinn an“ I mm "r 1mm lmorinqhm: “In t "on um" Wu] rm-u-in- In; but uttuni- n. Mann; ham " ttm 'yest..ut't'rt'_yr, Hair 1tetstomtivyy A largo "sortment of Frames, Mot- to" and Pictures that will be sold at cost. and even less, Beautiful Ambrotypes For Only Ten Cents. S‘PLEX DID I'ltotmtmpU " " per dor.. b t’urbnmu-hs rum-In in all thr Mum and bui humus! up M. Pt ttrme an In! mid enlarged to " in M10 1iuirsruwd 'h'cll'Glv'il; in but was!" max-wt tram". only a: can. MOTTO FRAMES. 85x21 Inch. fitted oyrklltr. - I'M'ille. Jane, 1371 Sch eik Ishii till' .43 to Bat prr dasy trutdo by nnv vat“: ot oiihl-r "m. rum u- HM: own i, “min. Tlr'jv'uhri nn-I Mm v11 ,rrxrtlt if: tree. [Improve ynur nun Hma at J." bum-u. huh-Io 8'"le a " t I'm Ii u) l. Mr.ttto. Tannin“: Hotel, Priceville. ( )FFK'E at Medical Hull.Lonr Town, Durham. .‘u'i-x'ht mn- pmmplly mans. - in by, a nih- " one]: ttrt,";',',? Auto.at emu. m nigiat par um. mun. mu. am. .xtrt. m A" can”; " IV o hurhnm. Co: Grey, om. “mm who"! " I mm as! in Hum-ml. lamb!» half-worly or n the end at tits u-nr rlndwl ttetvtsbt" in s, s or " ‘0‘" ~r pnwhmr um mt. you” to Btttt limo-on wild and untamed mm for Bale. Hanna... “mum and Ink ‘yl ( , RAIN. ATE of Tomato L nun-racy and I lumber a! tho Court, of Mirth-Inn- and .‘maul Unanim ortrgcrr-8iotdoortrrPttrur'. km Icon; Inwhuu. outrun". y'u , t bum-tau you mm c t g', In A!) pnrdm an? voru' of My " Barber Shop. 1)R01". J. LEWIS w-wmly of o. rrteatrui'h nub-1' ll tat) him "Pt arm... when an": m. m JAMES LAMON. ‘\TTORNEY . AT - LAW, Solieitor in " (mummy. Notary Public, Conny-met. an. I unc- nu] uni-lam quad-1k. HE‘S 'unulcinu. be. ,,,,,,,,, __ -'-"""--"".. '7' am an P MM! Sh. nut urchin m 0": ltununl. .qu awry “mud-y ll Bahama. ALFRED FM)“, J. W. PKWY. LL. B. tummy Ceres-" Am ‘1”. ya! l)',",),', Adv-"human. except when ummmnled by written i-tim" to the doom. an ia-sed until {urban-u. and shared " na- nlu rates, J. TOWNSEND. Orllin'y notices of births, marriages, damn. aad alt bad, of load um. ill-crud true of chant . week, fur " the aaurtii.a"nGJt kc; 00.6 8 lines. I unit-Ia, r at. .........4 Two mu or M Isl-33.3%! Insult. 7 Three inch-do. t-.............. 10 Quarter coll-n, PrP"............., l5 Iulreolttrmr. " ...............28 Dunedin]; " ..............50 Do. sunnnth'... .....'...... 28 Do. thmemmstu...,... ....l5 van! mdrertinemeau chnrgvd a on per bin! in “a tirrt .mn‘m. and 2 cu. y" tine for “2h lubuqnuut ill-union - Bayard} luau-Ire B TeRMtl.s--Natt pot you “Mun", 03.9135 tf MA paid within two mouth. ‘B At ch: IMieo, Guilt-n Strut, Unm- Town, Préhuional tml ‘i‘IIIICI emit, can Inch Durham, - - Ont. Every Thursday Do You Wgnt Money. J 'rsrl'A5', lit'..!")"":)'"'. AQEXT, “THE REVIEW” BUSINESS DIRECTORY. gum: CASH F01. HIDES.’ t 0.1031,. 811:4? guns. n. ulvcrtiud three ' Inuhu». on I). it “I '" of - month. It run maul may do... "cud onm- " than and. " “acumen. a MACMILLAN, Aunts-rims. ATTORNEYS, kc. ARRISTHRS and Attorney. A Law 3-le "ttyrs In Chancery Ind 1uw1vomrr,Coar -Upp" Town. Durban. on MISC ELLANEOU S. '4.g"'.N. NTIST wilt visit British Howl RATES OF ADVERTISING. u a hug "qaaintattee with the f, ' " Ih~- travctittv.r pul lie, thr .ttixeHttvr , monl ha mm rum-r to nu ottgtUttvetirm of mg m:nm.xui:y. Th" an ot Tmurts . r. ALEX. LIVINGSTON. Wood Turning, Aett4tttt m,- nau two month. Frost & Frost. N. KELSPIY. Pl MEDICAL. he. Human); DR. KlERNAN, A "all humm- you an emu}! in T" pm! Town. Durham men an. by' ”new We. In“. no pnvllogn Ir.f mpg!“ priotgpat in much mum and q sub mum as they piano. whether the 'tttthte be 2tt'g2e', In one mm or by “and. “in. Imam W! u once on man no calms,“ MIMI-unlo- antuvo-uo - oe No -iUTi.'. Wir. Inca, lug. _ . Bantu: The Bank " Manama ; The Cums... Bank at Commune. Semarang: “was. Blah. Kerr a Bore _ _ Human: J.Tumbutt. (murmur) () " Ellis tn Loud Money on Farm. City and Town Prawn}. on the {allowing Liberal Terms, VAL; a per can. per annual. Interval pay- .hla llAlJ-YEA‘BLT, NOT IN ADVANCE. a; wr 1'l'l1l,"ir, mum. mum paytbh rnmx, KG IN A VANCE. can.) authorised MC)”. 85.0.0.0... Muhammad Sit Alex. T. one. a. VICYrPHIIENTL A. tr. Campbell. Eng. ornaments: an Liana; ei, 'i. 1tt,t'rdt “out, Got. tt Our ou. o im n' on. s. I c. irrGiFGWiaE ' 't'lllltl,'l “our ""td'tt', 'tt,rftu't?S ttte',',"" ae tby. " m rort on Metrirt is.“ fora"h.la"l' . Loan and Investment 00., DHtrHt mom tor ma Yietttris. The, Wanna and (‘uumlu F'iro m Murine Inmrmu‘e Co's. Insttrane,e Mbdml at Low nan-s. Farm Proprrts inaurml for tum yuan mum“ F'ire and Lightning at 750 on "sch “mm. Mt Commnttientitttut promptly "trttitrv1 to. Busi- uosn [Mum and eov.Mmttint. omco--Main Str't, DUNDALK. Oat. IT Rim-my Luann! an hm: vanity at 8 pr Prttt, Himplo Interest. tor nnv period of tiau, betwoon 2 And 20 yam. JOSEPH F. ZIOWAT. No fines. Expenses Lower than any other Company. For tartlrer ustorsatiogt "ply to (i o no r211 JXQCXH. Or In sk8 Loans nude at a par rmut and upward: Accordmgto pri . mam manual. Geo. Rutherford, Any Person Wanting Money English & Sootish Capital '500,090, Stirling. Rockville Mimi. Btntinrk. Fab. 14.1873. SIIIXGLRS. LATH ANY" LUMBER Custom Sewing of Lumber mu: o. “Ruhr titsw ugh)" all had: " Snw NO ARMlSTICE can if ', _ ’AQ-uni up cure: " Mel-Mo - Wat, Ton-um 'FT'i,hiPh'f furnished on shrrt nntiee, (when: and (Minus. with all to“: of triur when. nhmu on hand. l'llAlll-‘I'ZI VERY "COMBATE. "mm furnixhwl {rm to parties buying cams“ trom us. lh-mmulu-r 'he plan. WM. WATSON a SON. Undertakers, A FIRST-CLASS IIIIABEE To Illllli. Wan Trums,--ts than We: noun of the Pelt Otiheo. fouls-loner ll :1. ".. (‘onvtyanrer wr. , PR") '," E D nml Unimproved Farms tor Inlr. cheap. “out! tor Land “at Village lots tor “In in Damian. my In“) a on En; _ . A" w. -..- - AJ lune tstoek ot thua,Doors and all bud: ot “Wu mum.uw I [Mk ut Moulding. in “gum. m-u-kuu. and Gilt. Plum. sprreitttmtioua and mn. ot Lumbar: mud» out on .uort mute. A mu stock ot Cum. (fl-bu. Baum uad Trim. [“1513me ohut'ANY, (ia'mitcd.) don. " on“, Ind than. to unit tho man. Vol. I. No. M. DURHAM, Co. Grey, OCTOBER 3,1878 War, War ! tir1D?qi, 1?uyuy?, keeps f"', bud on [and sad sum " down bill prime. Real Estate, Loan, INSURANCE, AND THE BRITISH CAN ADI A, Mam-w. @1518 ithtttt tttthitter. PRICE VILLE. OA' T, Chm-dd borrow trom m AND 8X11 SG LIT, WATSON l HUS"?! Wagon nun-I Purim Worn, l‘rleovula. Ont. Lat-ht. Durham. LORMAN MCINTYRE. Log: during 1375. J. W. CRAWFORD, Durham P. o, “dunner, Inuhum. AN rt i It would appear that society at the pres- [rounds of the sociiil ladder, and it is antis- i ent time is comparatively indifferent mi to I foctory lt climbers to know that the money 'rrlustl1erperople are good, elevtaroensihle, aim“? will " let eondaee eventually to i amusing; but there is a universal desire, 1 t'Heir own sooial advancement. By re: inlmoat umountingtofrenzy, to int-ct“nicc" ; fining appeals in obscure "'"."'. they are I people. Thus we tind thut whenever it I enabled to give large ttrtrmt, wit.h great ap- ' a country residence is to be let or sold. all I parent mtwmnimity, the favourite charities I the surrounding neighbours are duvoutly of the lenders f/tyn, thus 1 mking sure I hoping,' that it may he taken by nice people. l ofa reward in this 1ifcv-Ssurdag Review. i and everyone wishes for the entree to I _ '. ---_-----r.- houses where nien poopie are to he inchI Tiir. Frratr ix rim REIGN or AIFRIJD i To an nin- poople,trnd to knotvniectople. l TUE CoruT,--On the accession of Alfred I mom indeed to be the aim nnd the object the Grpat to the throne ofEuglandso over. of lite in this latter half of the nineteenth , run hytheDnnes thathe 1ituloseveryseluocl. I century. Even the worship of the great I buy knows, to conceal himself with it few I idol " Mninmon itself is forsnken by ttyn' followers in the forest. In his retirement tor devotion to the "niee." Although, [ he busier] hirntrclfia devising eeliemee for I however, the ootrtpttttionrittip of 's nice ', ridding his country ofthe pirate marcuders; people" is doubtless much to be desir od i and without much deliberation he saw that l, these meiol ftlltll'lw' are sometime: so luck- 1 he unmet tirkt have n maratime force of his l ing in the qunldic." which pro 1rsv.ally con- i 03m, :iinl meet the enemies of England on Isidore-d necessary to make intercourse} the sea, which they considered their own I entertaining, that one is n§niost tempted to! especial element. He set himself busily i shun their society for n mason. First im. l to study the models of the Danish ships. I previous may seem to juraity the use of the I and aided by his hardy followers, stirred l muelreoveted adjective, not only in its wo a spirit of Maratime ambition. which I fashionable. but also in its general sense ; bad not existed to any great extent before. but on closer acquaintance it is apt to be At the and of tour yam of unremitting found that those on whom the title is be. labour in the prosecution of his schemes. stowed are wanting in some of tho most he possessed the nucleus of a fleet in six important of the rltatueterist'uss which it is gnlleys. which were double the length of I generally un'derstmxl to imply. In asnuill any possessed by his adversaries, and which but very concise dictionary, we find the curried sixty ours, and possessed. ample I word nice tlofined as "very pleasant, daicty, space fir-the fighting men on lucid. With l precise." Now there are mimy persons tliiallsetlic put to sea, taking the command I who are conventionally spoken of as, not _ in person, and routed a. misreading expidi. ( only nice, but very nice people. whom we I tian of the Danes, then about to make a de- l could point out as interesting subjects on soc-mun the coast. The force waslarpr than which to try tho tent of this tiu'uiitrolr, own; but he succeeded iu ccpturing "Y: iy tlt tumnt,"tt: the grmeralntreeptatio one and in driving " the rest. In the I i f the tcu'ttt,rss manning nrcrolde, “mini-lo i nurse of the next your or two he captured l and ';orrdcteuspevrctl, they certainly are not; or sunk eighteen of the enemy's galleyi, l "duinty" is " word which we could hardly I and they found at last that they could not apply to tin-ire mvcrmiron, especially when I hurt) it All their own way on the sem. A. it touch” upon social soundnls ; while _ bout this time the cares of the govornineut "prrtiri" is nu adjective which defines I occupied necessarily much of his time '. his in ithcr their ltchavivusc nor the accumcy of; astute policy was to win over a number of their statements, Ithe more friendly Dance to his cause by What then are the qvulifieatitv.t which Igivingthcm grants of hind, and obligitr4 entitle tb person to be classified amnngitliein in return to assist in driving of ag- “nice people?" This is .1 question which i gi‘essors. He was nearly' the first native of would undoubtedly puzzle iminy of those Il'liigland who made any efforts to extend who so gliiily make u =e of the expression l thn. study of geography. According to the hut. gennruily speaking. we believe the I Saxon e'uronieler, Florence of Worcester. phrase is conventionally understood to l u). 807, he consulted Ohther. a learned mean people who are received into good Norweigian, and other authorities. from society. It does not necessarily point to whom he obtained much information re. the rich or to those of good family. since spectiug the northern seas. Olitlier had "nice people" are occasionally neither the not only coasted along the shores of Nur. one nm- other ; but it is a sine qua non way, but had rounded the north cape --it that they should have it place in what is was a test in those days, gentle reader, but known as " society. " Intimacy with now Cook's tourists Jo ib--atsd reached the charming and well-educated persons will barin which Archangel is situated. The not do--indeed education is at 1 low prein- ancient geographer gave Alfred vivid des- imn among "nice people 'u-but the aupir- criptious of the gigantic whales. and the ant; to this title must, somehow orether. innumerable seals he had observed, not br fair menus 'rfoul,bec'otusaeknowU%rd forgetting the terrible maelstrom, thy members of the fashionable world ; in chart I dangers of which he did not underrcto, and to use ii modern slang expression, ii?)) which it is generally believed in thosednyt [Hunt be "in the swim " of society. Al. was caused by c. horribly viciouuen-dragpn though the parentage of those superior who lucked the _ under. He coin- beings is sometimes the very reverse of pin-oi the natives to'thc Scythian of old, aristoratic. this maybe counterbclcneed by and was rather lever. on them, " they ttretooeitslreeotutuaadatioaa; but high birth brewed no ale, the poor drinking honey- is of considerable adventure at the outset mood in ita Itud, and the rich . liquor die of their cursor. To be " born of honut tilled from gogt's milk. Alfred not manly parents." in old pimpbice quaintly put it sent vessels to the north on voycges of dis. is of no account in any my ; to be the covery, but opened communication with decendcnt of on old line ot'conntry equine the Mediterrcmu. hie galley- pocketing in little better nuke-3h.“ would“ have to the extreme out of the Invent. My otustse-emathuorittttunot4titrt; he was been,“ . die- but to be linked to the m. "on b 'ii'iis"it,t,?iii'ii of W“! m’ cbcniniatar. mm on new - io jib. MW. apiece, and What then on: the qvidiiricution which entitle n {vermin to he clas,isr'rul among “nine people?" This; is A question which would uulru'idl.v puzzlo mung; of those who no glirly make ll re of the expression ; but, g:vnm‘::il\' spanking. we heliovo the phrase is conventionally urrlerstood to mean people who are received into good society. It does notneeesssrily point to the rich or to those of good nimilv. since "nice people" are occasionally neither the one normlu-r; lint it is n aim: qua non that Hwy should have n. place in what is known as '. sock-(y. " Intimacy with charming and wvllwdueated pvl‘suns will not do---iudrriul education is at a low prem- ium among " nice people "-but the empir- ants to this title must, somehow or other. by fair means R' foul, become acknowledged tnotulrvrs of the fashionable world ; in short to use " modern slung expression, they must he "in the swim " of society. Al. though the parentage of these superior beings is sometimes the very reverse of ttristoratie, this may be eomtUrbultsneed by great social recommendations; but high birth is of considerable advantage at the outset of their career. To be " born of honest parents." as old pigrapbimr quaintly put it isof no neeountin any VI]; to be the tleeeudent of an old line ofconntry equine is little better unhae‘tliese worthiee have of late your: intermttrried with the nobility l but tube linked to the pungent»; b, _ almninistar. makes In "plum qiittt 'U"d Setting aside,.ltoyrirmr, the -tion all birth, it il'more inure-Eng to tum to thi moulend social "trilmteof"nitso people." In the Emit plaen, worm mitten-031V nerin which they do their dug townie their Creetor and their neighbour. They " noteondderitto be whet hey tern "good form " to ittihtth in religion or Y. nlcgiou VextrehxeLT Thu M fimt pon- “an", 'hddeti9." not amt-M». ' f.rhheh.tbeih/i,, . riGlrNiAhitiisultAii1ii. we! ' u . would, "ehaleiettrtt.thMge :45. w my be More. . new "dainty" In a word which we could hardly apply tn their eonvcstmatiou, especially when it touching upon unciul seanGls ; while "prreeiso" is nu ndjcctivo which tlefines m ithor their huhaviuur northc accuracy of their gunmen”. low link h to“ In. who! by Behind ttta wanna huh. And “mum, with m, Mn my. The quiet vuloy In. Along the nm a thin min lien, Tho air grow- dnmp and chin; Each day-bird to mo vacuum] 'tia.- Tho bun, town you till. . The nighthuwu I“ “alums ground In "rm. and cumin: tlight; Tho new)“. but 'tim aiming round- It In". the dim mum“ In yonder wood . 'rttiPpoororilt Bepesta in moumNI or], Winn from you mum wumhd hill A long owl mum reply In may Knotts, socurvly hu, The crhkbt chirp! its Mums. And tsttarrilr ma they-did Plpcs forth u. shrill retrain. But now the mr (I full orbed And round, Haunts up um mutant sky. Throwing Men! Ihnduws o'er tho ground That tright the timid eye. You dllmlJ pond, to duh and lone, In borrow“ tight give: buck; And mun the maxim“: Winery ham By yondor gluten»! tuck. In wary nyl. how bright they glam Upon the mu church spiral lining in rol'ulmd sumac nun A yynluhl ot tire. Buck in the variod ”one I I“ This calm September nighvo . A scene of bounty 'P" will be lwtuomborml with delight. A Doyle.“ lull... Nxco People. memes. This tho timt con;- ;“m'ca' people." To go to They o a fashions”. dysprs1r,i" that {on religious duttmuia- M tre rid-cud Id. Aoartainamorutt “no; ttrt In: , may be blemish " . - Hubs tidyiiidfii7 tu be met. I Tnr. Fum- ty rm: REIGN or AH'RED oieepotple, I TUE CorvaTc-0n the accession of Alfred the object _ the Great to the throne ofEnglaudsoover. uincitctutth i run by theDnnes thathe had,“ every sched- Iuporulation If Momphil, anally - than forty thou-ad. u now, it u estimated I Mind by HM yellow favoritism to twenty- ; tir, hands-ad whit-s tad six $1M constantly Ind steadily summed the scionca of nnrigstion, and unduly earned the right of the you! title be kn borne aim of " Pith" of the British tltrrr,"-- TU Eu. aromdtie, gum- whieh Alfred receiud horn the Msl.nhar on.“ in "turn (or pron-ms sent to 'the Nmstorian Christians Alfred buy knows, to conceal himself with a few fcilowes In tho forest. In his retirement he busiud himself in devising schemes for ridding his country ofthe pirate msruuders; and withuut much deliberation he saw that he unmet tirkt have a maratime force of his own, and meet the enemies of England on the son. which they considered their own especial element. Ho set himself busily to study the models of the Danish ships. and aided by his hardy followers, stirred mm spirit of Maratime ambition. which had not existed to any great extent before. At the and of tour yam of unremitting labour in the prosecution of his schemes. he possessed the nucleus of a fleet in six gnlleys. which were double the length of any possessed by his adversaries, and which ury evil; and sfter all worship is in some measure reciprocal; for if the " nice " devotee spends on hour or two I week in s pretty church. Ind gives oily B modest ll'Ci of money which he does not miss, the the devotion paid to him in return by the |clergy is perhaps the nearest Approach to . edontlon which men can reoeonsbly expect from a fellow-creature. Msny nice people are doubtless sincerely devout; yet of them it is said " They ere very nice people, but----," and the "bat" is followed by lumentntions over the one failing which Dollies their otherwise beautiful characters --turtmrly the religious earnestness. As lregurds their duties towards their neigh- l hours, nice people are often very charitable j in nursing their invalided friends who happen to be wealthy. The poor they will also attend to so far as their labours will nmke them popular,and give them inth1euee when the elections take place. Besides, itl is the proper thing to have the reput- ation of being kind to the poor ; and their! bring so establishes a sort of mimic feudul‘ relation between them and their poorer neighbours. When nice people are tenants. l the expenditure of u very moderate sum ofmoney, and a still more moderate snail amount of time, among the neighbouring members of the labouring classes, will give i them almost as much iufhreaess as would, the possession ofa large estate. In Loon don. they must be ever ready to suseribel liberally to the pet charities of their fas'uiov.. i able acquaintances. The judieioue use oi: charities is of great assistance in sealing the 1 rounds of the socinl ladder, and it is sntis- i factory to climbers to know that the money given will at least conduce eventually to their own social advancement. By re: lining appeals in obscure cases they are! enabled to give large some. with great lip-l parent mamurnimity, the favourite charities) of the lenders of fushon, thus 1 inking sorrel of n reward in this hTe.-Ssturdag Review. I There is no stronger evidence of the utter Joniomlizntion of the political mind than is afforded by the reception given to the proposal of President Wolsey, Mr. Bryant, and others, to hold a meeting on the sub. jeet. Newspapers. hitherto the loudest in denunciations of corruption. - at the attempt to reform, and speak of the pro- posed convention on an old womnn‘s meet, ing. Even papers calling themselvpa in. dependent, have only ridicule for the noble movemtntt,--a movement instinct with patriotism and good st nae. and full of promise as the first step on the highway to n politieal reformation. The country needs capitalists. We went great public building-hospitals/troutes, hutolu. ete., and great public roads and im. provetntmts, such as can only be furnished by me: of large means. These we can never have so long as we fritter away our fortunes in ephemeral vanities. and tancy that because the money came easy it should go in the same manner. To one. however, ,who has learned in youth the real use of the circulating medium emddrm fortune will not he likely to be " hone.“ " so often proves. Knowing the luber and care re. quinito to the amassing of wealth, it will be held M Worthy of preservation and in. vestment in some more valuable objects than the foolish and hermful luxuries that suck up so much of our substance, iluan. cial and physical, in these da.vs.-2'ue 3tethodut. The greater part of the press is ominrms- ly silent on the auluject. The truth is, there are very few papers. whatever their pro- fessions and sincere intentions, that are not in some way so related to (hit or that party, or to both pmti-es.as to be interested in the success or defeat of one of them, or in maintaining a. good understanding With both. For such papers to take stock in a. movement that may result in something formidable to the powers that be, or the powers that ere to be, is dangerous, and they prefer to let it alone. and see where- unto this thing will grow. But lie must bo mentally and morally blind who does not see that the political condition of the United States is rotten to its core, and through it. 3o wide, deep, and universal is this corruption, that we have come to accept it nsn matter of courue; we cease to be bortilied by the duly deve. lopments of wickedness that In facile; we regard the revelations of fraud, cf embez- zlemenu, of bribery, of sales of influtsatte and oftioe, as part of the apolln, and to be expected of men who have the chnuca to make money by getting into power. The time forrtrvolr1tiem has come. It is the Centennial year of national independ- ence. Let it also In the yen of political renovation. We mutt I twin! ofhonuty: 3 return to primitive limplicity and enou- omy: I. new national birth to life of patri. otie, ttnselfUh, Washingtonian purity. If tho people lye bo have it Bo, it will come in this yen of gr-tleur York Observer. A lad aimed Allen, who“ people reside ut Huntsport, N.S., was riding in . cart with I loaded gun under In: "mpit, Ind leaning on the muzzle, when it In some way discharged. Medical "tie.srteo wu pro- cured, but he died in a short time. A couple of weeks ago Alfred Field. w" meshed in Guelph on n chino of creating In illicit will And assisting to dutil spirits in Woohriah torn-hip. Ho wu ' to Berlin to mnem- trial. Oh how; laying)“ before (Jimmy J mig- Millar the whoa" plead-d guilty, Ind Wu untamed to pay . fue ofM00,sm1 be imtreSorted a hard Those who have to work hard through long and weary years for their money npprocintu it at full values; but. thawinto whose hands it falls Almost as B matter of course, without requiring any erertiou or trouble, never rightly understand what it represents. Hull parent: would teach their children to work-to 'tttht their own living in early life-tU result Would, we believe. be most salutary. Input tor nix months. But few hue succeeded who did not luv the foundation in youth. The lavish ex- penditure of money or ittsiguiihttuot teiihse --tlu, wasteful extravagance of our hebits ot dress and luxury-are prominent marks of the present age. At no other period of American history have we disbursed so mnnv millions of dollars for cigars. {not horses, champagne, kid gloves, articles of vertu and the thousand other nothings that cost so much. The reason of this may be fouml,without doubt, in the aduge of “easy come, easy go." We inherit a great deal of money in this generation. tor our fathers were hurd-workinz. prudent, economical men. California, too, opened a gran l source of easy-made fortunes a few years since, and the mania. of speculation which has raged without let or hindrance for the last quarter of I century has also been produc- tive of much sudden enrichment. This be ing the case, it is not to be wondered M, perhaps, that gold should be lightly held and readily spent. It in good for . man to bear the Yoko in his youth. Work ond ”Italian“ prop" tho young for the you: of manhood. m that lives on hope hos slender diet. Good lulu“. only formed, are tho commotion give may. a good name in l mine of would). Bucccu come: to him who begins in time. Decay of Public Virtue. A Change Needed. TORONTO $1 per Year in Advance On Thursday. Sept. Mill. while two hm- _ than named Frawley were working m a [ field in Madame tuwuship they noticed a thunder-storm .pproaelsiu;r,, and run for shelter to a Mr Sullivan's Imuse, where they seated themselves on I bench in the hacker]. A little dog lay on the bench between the two men. A flash of inning amok the wooden partition egniuet waieh the, lemon. Ind rentin pieou the been]: on which they at. Bothmen were mttard-- ‘ouit w Mumbrmtimemhd, hum . while he recovered. Tb. " littiehtt.rtretwaett chemo that in in. laattttrhihit. . that: .00, pm In the 1rre we; more orl-iebetoortutitts. A composite pier consisting of fout let: of iron columns, resting on good substantial bnsements, will be placed It cash side of the Fiitli,nnd immense chuinl. Iocuroly fastened some distance inland. will be carried over the tops of tueso piers, And of two similar on" on the luchgurvia island. From these will be suspended tho two lattice garden, each nearlv 1,000 feet in length. The spans are to be constructed in lengths of 150 feet null separatWfiotttud out and placed in position. It L a really unrest undertaking. an! it is utlsfnctnry to know that the immune capital "Wired for its carrying: onthu been fully secured. Tho working drawings are to be prepared as soon as the necessary ultc.ati in; in the original design have been trougiilertsd and mudo,und wohnpa soon to see that com- mencement of actch opmstiotu,-Britah Architect. (inane up Gnomes. - Everyone knows that a geyser is a “gentle and tn. termiitent fountain of boiling water, found not only in Iceland. where they are best known, bat also in New Zeelnnd. laden e vast scale in s district of North Americ- known as the Yellowstone Region. The glacier, on the other hand, is e huge river of ice, slowly moving down s mountsin side, perpetually melting in the warm valleys below, and as perpetually renewed by tho snow-tua, above. The present glaciers of Switzerland or of Norway ere. however, very much smaller then those gigantic sheets of ice which swethe the in. terior of Greenland, and tut once covered whole regions of this country and the Con. tinent of Europe. Not only do these phenomena, in their tnaguiiUentsss and ceaseless unrest. effort! e sublime spectacle. but they appeel to the reason es well Is to the sight. For the geyser tells us that u. neath the ice-clad surface of the ground is a source of unquenchuhle beat, a hidden storehouse of tremendous energy ; whilst the glacier speaks of realms of perpetual cold that remains unwnrmed though tra. versed by the rays of s tropical sun. Ken kind, with all its appliances. 1rttnuUBlter by the smallest fraction of e degree this inner bosom of heat nor this outer mantle of cold. As the see rounds the pebble on the shore, and strives to level the smiles of He earth, so under the operation of time broad ditierenees of temperature gradually disappear. Tune is, in fart, n most pitilees communist. Thur, the extremes of host and cold are less than once they Were. and hence the glacier. and probably the geyser, of today ere but as pigmies computed with the giants that were in existence in yearn long past. As if, however. to tench men the humblenru of his reason a well es the smellness of his strength, these ancient and impressive phenomena have us yet receiv- ed but A partial explanation, and that only at the present day. This much. however, is evident to the most ignorant. In the geyser we here water boiling And boilix a over; in the glacier we have water frozen and slipping down the mountain ride. Out of thecommonest of all t'uitw-wBter--we are mulled until the most imposing of appearances end the most puzzling of plty. sical prcb'aaus.-Seienee for All, A giants“ who bid. fuir to cutrirrd Hrs Captain Bates nu placed m the Deaf and Dumb lultitution a: I’miiuvLJe A four 'UY' Mo, the being I deaf mute. Sim lti Won your: of age, is hit toct in height. and weight” pounda. It tti also stated that we bu twain toes And the sum: num- beat fittgbrs. admire, end fully ennui.“ the b.natit. that their completion yields. without any undue utoni-hment or open-mouthed wonder. Sonar no one is our-pried to he" that the Firthof Forth in to be bridged over though the dithcultiee are if possible greater then thou connected with the Toy bridge construction. Mr. Boueh CE., of Edinburgh mule desigul toe this work some yours since. and these will substantially be adhered to, the chief alteration being the lowering of the height of the spans to 186 feet above high water mark, instead cf 150 foot in originally intended. The bridge to be constructed is atria-span suspension. M owing to the depth of the estuary there in no chance of founding any piers save on the island of nts1umrvie,haltway between North and South Queunsferry. 00 each share from the high ground to the watci's edges series of spam will be carried on brick columns. l Tn: 8mm orm Pttnrsr...-Anotha. mot engineering project in Beotlnnd my be aid to In following on the book of that of tho Toy brides eortMtttgtion. Defeat 3nd imrurmotmtatrudigtmTti" seem olih unknown to the ougimring skill od, during ot the [recent day. Indeed the general public “on: to ab all the" ma. feMattooc,uelstobe annual for numb then annulled " The, look on 3nd - _ mormvc. MAM“ In to det main. Ibo 5. .of two imputtaan epochs in “I. lunar, ad Egan. m of which u can? with... [would Iubjoct. Sir John than] bu 1edthrieeo.ttu9lariii'i'iiiu"'i"i I (1th :3 lo gm» of the "any“ To Caucus or cum m. -0liver Cromwell In: I N a“. m a grant man'- fuulu. but with Chub, virtues, and no“. inhuman. will“ In outweizh them. That I» was n W sud liberty-loving nun of tho higheet pur- poses and the mod "dismount “on. k pcr-ons can autumn Minder, with “an. which went hem. and can. nttee it with nine e.bearem " th. cum ”on.“ $0 ballots being “in. tl" following - mon wen eleoed '-etmidrttt, In. rorartr, of Gslt ; “winding Otto Ila“. of Pnswn ', Secretary . M. William Edwards, of Toronto; EM” (‘0.- mittee, E. Just-on. of New: I. Davidson Ind M, Sweetnun. a! Tm; and Col. John Walker. of Inch. M MoCren. of Guelph. wu "about hm present the ”mention in the Candi Of the Agricultural Ind Am M. .01 John Taylor, of Tampa. wu that“! Oll- tur for the ensuing yen. out conceding. m waledonhydnlum of circumstuuceu and the pudendum of his genius to m high»: phat in HI 1souu'.ry ; and Md art. the immaturity II we uuuou. of the pniuciplu on winch to and his party noted, cumpdbd but to m- Vain tho with.“ of on. {an}. and lb. despotism u a... cunt. ho would trt'.dmrio. 0le bare kit to his country the m legacy oh syttun of govumu. min I no cuuntry won. and few new. hae. It mined to. He wu In baton bu Q.” And the fact which so lh’ongly um ID?“ And patriotism of tho mun. is that In be. can). arbitrary And a dietatw to establish, if possible. not I Amped-m. but u In. All tolerant govunmom. In 'ieirate No b um at once simple. and yet '-irsuirt.d a dignity, up one of his wont '.umatiag-, 'cxrl.arulogist, duieavemd on up band 'I” u the Tunpie of Osiris, by“ ck” tabla commanding; the name. ot “I. “a! Elm-nimtrum the m. at MSMQ' grwdmu of Noah. And Manda: of ttoe i:rer:irrsian motuuuty--to that d M Sun i., we tult.e of 1hr ”ll-known unmeua the Grant. including wont, th, chrormiogfof nine cumin. nie., to. If C. 1.400. This tabut, by ice tho - h- pom! pet “and. Lu ho.- to“! to m magnum! has of in Md Institute in the addition to an “bury id work, of fution,or in the will” ot philosophical App-nun. at in the lam tion of sodium! of do)“. at in“! history." Nomination. an nuke! ..--t “such " might has: 00M..- mh." In: Mun to " luntliu that and the member: of his MM a chunk: in l most amiable ml mm. Ind he Ins accustomed ‘0an his odioers Ind minim" in I was U none but A man with a kind hung-cl -' conscience could do. Ludlow tab in M on one occasion, um I very action debt“. he threw. in I frolic, a cunhion It " hood. And when Ludluw took up no“ cull“ to throw it in manna, he amped. 1ataettitre and ran down min in such . MK, that ho had nearly fallen. Ho would “and. tell the nobility of their drinkin‘dum of the king and royal funny. ad rid“ the slighUst ill-humour Adda tbem " h more cautious. Ho In elm, un- perato in his diet, though hints! in hi table fur his ofiicers Bad public comp]. Ho delighted in mu-ic, And gun chain. eum‘luinmcnk, wLere the greatest In“. wen engaged. lie unwound“! hi-elf with all the great minds of tho In.“ their talcum were mild into who I. they msuutty.--Camll'e Eatery of En- n . " Axcxn-r tauc..-an the Emma wnecouln It the British Museum it to be seen tho skeleton of one Phsnohllyhriw. decently ensued in in original lurid clothes. and surrounded by hug-noun cub eodia. whnreon the num- ot it. my.“ can lo easily rad by Rum.“ ing conclusive midwe- an it one. - mined tho munmv of . king who I. reigning in Egypt now “an I can", ' an time of Alan}... The - i wusoxpluuod in tlieueok-'ugaetuee. April, 1866 -About two yum Mo, " Dumielteu,rt0emua, "ph-td (in .0..- mcuu of Egypt, following " tia. huh“. p unwed out i'Y u. “an“... MW‘ WilhmthoCoanh "nttuyB.C. .ru.uleuAiuioa that the Planck who» hon. "wipe.- 'l/d moo-ox the build" td.th. w Tet' ThrtwotueiGirtehiate . alum-In-uhm' !tt"ttttr-utrd?trruiAiriu7ia". irttttotu-rsiu “in.“ Among tho aviation! - w II. following :--"Thn the Mn th.. with. or the Convontion be "q-ted to consider tn. following ".olutioq :->"TU this Association would noon-M to tho Ontario Government the my of a. amending the Acts-alum; to MM' Institutes Is to permit my mum. to ". peud an mount of money not audio. 10 per cent of the legialntin (not to such Institute in the addition to tha ljhrnn ar d th. “It y Inha- i--t. hl N!!!“- a- the "and blah-- inf 1eutitut" olh Provinc- "d the“ ,rork any - doing. New: mum: “I on“; Walnut {an the loh-‘d M. H'- of Arr, Mn. BeuWet, Ma. CIR-ton. Elan. can».pr hil- mo 1004-. Univ-d. Ink-1L F m... Romania. m N no”, 5...... ough, “Mon. “new! am. “on BMW» Tom». Unbridco. m». Wad-villa. Il Whom". In Thu-mull.“ trtth_tritgta. val-lain bani-[match may) Noah-laid I“ on My "mini-chucki- ‘l'onab. Tho duh Ttttr'utrrMr.g--,aetgaitt. tPrt'ttttrtuta-usu-." It waamuip. il;

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