EN NUA OZ 140:1 u UA, uxxuu...-... lmrs, Attorneys-at-law. Solicitors in Chancery. '(:a.1vuyuncera, &c. Omcos-Corner otDun1op and Uwun snraots, Barrio. J. T. Lenuox. Hnughton Lounox. ~ is .'v\--.rr1rn1nn(\ MISOELLAN IOU8. .- _-,xa.'~\-,\,~ \~u..`-....., ~I\ sIv\rv JOSEPH ROGERS, CHI-EF CON- s'rABLE,county ot Slmooo. 0!oo-Pouoe f`.nn rt Rnrrln ARRIE` FOUNDRY, ENGINE. 65 BOILER WORKS.--H. SEWREY. Manu- f_a.otm;e_xj_9t gvpry tlesorlptlon or Enzinan. Hanan, $500 Revvard 1xr,. ...n1 ....... H... ntunm mung:-:1 lnr nnv mum nl HEALTH Is WEALTH! T . `. Pat-l`or suites Bedroom Iultol. Sideboards. haw Clraln, &o., V Cornice Poles. and all kinds of lrurnlturomsda to or(.1n`|.-by coVmpo.tont.v[o1-kpmon. Also 5 ;_ _`- _:1h""- go 0]-gr, 1 uyjvwuwlnv vs -yo-._-._ Plaininc :.a:ncl- nnnn` on shorten Notice. "T. BANTING, oL1sun,uuum:x . 0 Slmooe, will be at his oil! at the Court Ho - Barrie. every` Saturday. ldenoe and ' 0-. known, . J \ VAv. w~ a.Fur{NI_]`_uRE1| K W. MQVITTIE, D. L. SURVEY- - on avdReniEsta.t.oA onticalgary N . W. I`. cum. ndence aollol wl h x. ml to in- veatments n Province of Alberta. N. v '1'. A, W.M v11"rn:. Addreoscalga. , i.he to, Monttsns, U. S. ' 1-7 V n 51nly.n Special attention to Cross Eyes and Catarucgz KT}? How Lust. Haw ngsmin L GO T0 1.. s. ac. LSANDERB (Eatabmhed yearn) ' :03 tom Watches, Jewelry and Electra-Plate, Dunlap-11., IIAIIIIIIL Teams H 51.00 I u AovAn6I. .LllLl UB5 THE GU|.VE|Wl_E|.|. MEDICAL 00., 41 ANN S-r.. Nncw V l`YE, EAR, THROAT AND NOSE 1 _. s. JOHNSON, BARRIE, um. -PORTER. of and danlar In nmn. nf ..nl ;ii.'"i.'1`7c`>fI, PRIV tn lmm nn I-nnl nnfnfn no, 1. -_ _--_- T, B_A;_NTING. ..0LERK,OOUN l.'Y , m.......... will be oloe, at_ _the Com-_t Vol. L. R. C. P., L. R. C. S. En. - $70,001 `E H-~vur1l) ul lowest I`t_).` w-r -`A,-....._._ _,, FU RN ITURI. CO L12.` `$22 up n... . Done on Shortcut n A vm nnnm RAD! MAPK. :\ , , I: AFTER.) I shorten nouuc. DAVID V DOUGALL, In Roar or the Market _ ti`-"'3"--` v_ . . , Barrie. .5 In-Iuvnh Inn. 41 ANN S'r.. NEW YORK . 40-ly fXrE*'1r`"'b`s, Intnnaf an `AA! `BA --. Lot 52-ly Ilene .11 HI!) Howl 2tl`I'i V ooN7E.YI1V0ER, -c., ISSUBR OF MARRIAGE LIOENBES. ` nun-swan any man HIJYAL Iusumii cummavz ASSETS. $25,000,000. Has the Lnrgesii Surplus of Assets over Liabilities` of any Fire Insurance Company - ' ' in the world. . .. OFFICE.--South Side of Collier Street, op? posite the .A nLe;`1'4:an Hotel, Barrie. 11.1 run): I 0' uni! I u I. IUIU. ' 336555.587 Re-inawrance Reserve, - - $1,060,424. Losses in St. J ohn .s Fire, - $180,000.00 ' All paid in two weeks after me. ` !Also Agent for the Commercial Union Insur- ance of London. Capital. 2,000,000. 47-ly. Azent at B31-rig. n, 'r_ Lnu n1-. -__ IN'v1cs'r1cn FUN ' . . mmns INVES`l`ll1)I IN cAN.u3X' .'3'333;%3 I Seem-ltv, `Prnmnt Dnunnnnt. nn r.nm...Iu.. 1.. ' 1: unuu 11` Vl!a3l'liU11V D Security, Prom t Pa 1; the adjustment 0 its teatnros of this Company. IIAIUAIKA .....u... .- CITY OF LONDON, ENGLAND, Capital 2.000.000; deposited with the Govern- , ment at Ottawa `$100,000. . THE MERCANTILE FIRE INSURANCE ($0.. Capital 3500.000; Government deposit made. THE ABOVQ ARE ALL STOCK COMPANIES. "I`HE WATERLO0 MUTUAL FIRE INSUR- ANCE C0. Capital, $500,000. `\I\/\/S/\I\ R R. HOLT, INSURANCE BROK- '- ER andGe oral Agent. Realeatatebou ht and sold Collections made in any part at e oounty. Money to Loan. 0moe-Bothwe1l's glqqk, opposiw the Runway station, We, n.. V -v. Olce. East side of Owen Street. next door to I the Bank of Toronto. V 1 Ilnuu-in 011.6 Il.._.I. Icon -- - I HARTFORD FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY. I'l'ARI'.llI!IIIn In Iin U 11v..\1u , uxumuouu n U\JLJ.v:.\- ` - | ;\pprui=acr..1u1Bil1Post.ei`.&,c. Repts (,u!l .s`ur\`n.ms provided. Olce up-stalra opumnm Posl Utllou. over lloudex-son's Store. 18 ma. uumra I . ISTABLISHID IN 1810. ASSETS, JANY. I. ma. s Re-insurance Rum-me. - 5 0 , ,(, * . . K csbs noun) or mlluao-rons: Hon. Henry Sternes. Chairman: Thos. Cramp. Esq..` De-Chairman; Theodore Hart. Esq.; Angus C. ooper, Esq.: E. J. Barbeeu. Esq. Insurenceseifectedat Modenlte Rates of Pre- mium. Dwelllngs. Churches and Farm Proper- ties insured at Specially Low Rates. (1 F I` GIHHVII "T551117!!! I'I(\l'I!n!\1! nun Auuutuu nu my I G. 13;. 0. smrrn, Res.-Sec JAMES SCROGGIE,I GONVEYANCER, COMMISSIONER IN B. R. ` Promjatly Adjusfed.` V - JAMES anwgnns. , Agent at Barrie. Barrie. Sept. 11. 1878 `[113 J. I.|\.l'JJ.V .1 COMPANY, llshed 1782. ' `D.l'J 1.4111. Juxuxnu 1.4.1 to u an COMPANY. Established 1803. 811,000,000. For Fire business only. CHARLES 'VV'.AY, Land and Inwiarlce Agent, Izife, Fire and Accident. `FOR THE FOLLOVIIIIG GOMPAIIES: THE PI-`KEN IX FIRE INSURANCE of London. England. Estab- Hnhn l'I2. , > ,:V _ . ..,;" J. s\'~* ~ u o ncmlpaporpfchecounty.andonjoyjn nlilblaoblgo, the lu.rgustcu-culation of all news apex-E N;,,|md in t.h.ssocLion, is a most doslrab e me. gm n ,_,a_v L ng_. ~,lts. contents-'-edltoruu um ,,,,,,,,-an ptog-wt1g_ be round to be of u inn-1 which :_u_st.m _ sh e:_.4l_!V.; __ut~clase country weelliea. " ' ' . b mpartmontlsatocked with an exuen. [\E1l)10&`;g0~rtlnBn of all requisites for printing : g,,,1iug facuiuea for turning out first-class wor . I` u._w type and 3 1)}38pri e outta {(03} 31111 `styles of P "".r2q..sI!l.{:1- class 'oafnnr?n1.i?1(5:z. 0 G 0 _`.ny THE IMPERIAL INSURANCE Capital sm,ooo,ooo_ For Fire business only. `.l:l.J DU V n4I\u:u.\x 1.1 1.4.1 no u J.u:.xL1 uu . COMPANY. Insure: all kinds of P1-opert and Private Dwellings. Over $100,000 depoalte with thn Government. A .At prloea to suit every . Bu-heal Oil and F` `- ' Varnish alwqyn nutook. ' vnmrnnma PROMPTLY mm. ALL V WORK WARRANTED, L `Also Agent for Agricultural Implemento. GIVE ME .lc'.lLL.--Si of theGolden Saddle. Baveld Street. nrrie. 20-ly THE QUEEN INSURANCE COM- PANY. capmm2.ooo,ooo. HE SOVEREIGN INSURANCE- and Drlvntn nwnlllm-nu. Over 1100.000 denoalte &nd 1"?! V858 uwemng: | with the Government. THE ROYAL CANADIAN FIRE AND MARINE INSURANCE COMPANY. Old P. 0. Building, Corner of.0oll1'er'and Owen Strut. Has how 5 large sunply or Tmnkh from 500 u` to $25 : Values and Satchels at Bpttom Prices. single and Double Harness, cozzm, sad. I'll), nuzrru nlnnhm Rhl. mlil. ?AIfX.M0RR0W, A.eu::1v-1-_ _ I `J_ . ..,. MCCARFHY, PEPLER CARTHY. Barristers, Solicito &o., Ban-ie.0nt. ' , . ` l)`Ar:rrw MCCARTHY. Q.C., -F. E. J. A. Mvcurrnv. D. F -. _._.'rv-u-gran 1-{A 1 Remember -STt;'n'd, Ema ; Brujk Block, nearly opposite the Sum any:-putt "mun " ` ` !PAI am` To: WEIGHT. GEO. DUDLEY, HOUSE, szazv g FRESGO Agent for the following Insurance Companies: BAYFIVELIIJ S'.[`REET,= mu nouns Ul. xuronw. Barrie. 21st March. 1883. POST OFFICE l-3'IIILZDiIiI;I(}, BARBIE. \ . Rates Mo(lerate, Losses Equitably an Promptly Adjusted.` `. 4 IA-J23 ERIAJAIQQQ .1AME EDWA;;Ds, ITITRT DIYARYIVED . `LIVERPOOL & LONDON & GLOBE J INSURANCE COMPANY. LIFE Xi?) FIRE. -.-._. `A R.:\ DEN l`1U 11.61, I)t1l.\v1.\a.l.\J;AuI.v . Attorney, Solicitor in Chancery. Convey- mxlwr, &c. Ofce~I<`irat Door South of Post. 01!lce.VIHnd's Block, Owen Street. Barrie. ~19-ly , A _- - 7 1'1\'?\YI'\'\f 1') A DDT EIABNESSEMOWM. DI PAIN TERI Lgle Double Collar"-_o, 8 dies, Curry 0ombs,Brushea, n'h1pa, and Laahu- _ NORTH on snidon nomn. Sole Agent for the Oelobntgd Res.-1 I.-seoy.. Montreal. INSURANOI AAA----_--- a. a2.ooo.o6o.' " Agent Barrio. O. T. LOUNT. lit . u ` `A ` ' 7 '- , . ' , ' WORDB_ ARI. THINGS. AND A DROP OF INK FAIJJNG UPON A THOUGHT iAY PRODUCE THAT WEOH MAKES THOUSANDS TKINK."-DY30N._ OFFICE! uu vv LUIDIIOUI JOSEPH ROGERS . Agent, Polloo Court. - Barrio .an.u nun ` UUu,UVU xent. and Libel-silty in tea are the prominent I am. 33.358587 $1,060,424. $180,000. 00 affair nn Barri'e%. Ontario, Thursday, Jung 7, 1883. .5 vvvvv uuwlla, . Or anything that is usually-kept In I. first-9 Drug Store. rmrs1buNs' `rnmcnmxons <':.umruu.Y_ um ACCURATELY rnnunnn Large Stock of ` MAIIDEII, [NDIGO AND OTHER DYE STIIFF8 ALWAYS ON HAND. TRY THE "BCIIA 'l`00'l`ll POWDER 1 There are anumber or persons out of em loy- to work do not need to be. hose willing to work eanmake from $100 to $500 a month clear, working for us in a pleasant and permanent business. The amount our agents make varies. some make as high as $500 a month while others as low as 8100, al dependlngon the energy of the agent. \Ve have an article of great merit. It should be sold to every House-owner, and ays over 111) per cent. prot. Each sale in from 3.50 to $10.00. One agent in Pennsylvania sold 32 in two days. and cleared $64.00. An agent in New York made 846.00 in one da . Any man with ene y enou h to work a fu day. and will do this uring 1: %`year can make from $2,000 to $6.- 000 on year. e only want one man in each county, and to -him will give the exclusive sale as ion as he continues to work faithfully for us.. There s no com etltion. and nothing like our in- vention made. artie-A having from 8200 to $1.- toinvest. can obtain a General Agency for ten counties or a State. Any one can make an investment of from" 25 to $1,000 without the least risk of loss. as our C rcu]ars_ will show that those investing 825 can after a thirty days trial return the goods unsold to us and get their money back. it they do not clear at least $100. They show that a General Agent who will rake ten counties and invest $216.00 can after a trial of 90 days re- turn all goods unsold to us. and have money re- turned to them it they fail to clear at least 8750 in that time. There are `many persons having money to invest. who oould not give the business pereon.alattention-suoh can employ sub-agents without leaving home-making-a large amount yearly out of a very small investment. We are - not paying salaries. but want men willing to work and obtain as their pay the prots of their energy. Men not willin to work on our`terms will not work on nnv. hose" meaning business will re- ment in everyCounty.-yet ener etic men wi ling - NONEY TO LEND ON, REAL L latutu at Six percent. interest. LENNOX & ..}<.`.\'N1).\I. Solicitors. Barrie. _ , 4 . __....-.. 1-;-\-ux [THE PHA_RM'AoYl iW. T. Barker?L-Go.. |uxmunnmm arm] Men wlllln `to work on om-`terms wlll work on any. nose meamng business will re- ceive our la)-ge descriptive circular. and extraor- dinary offer by enclosing a. three-cent stamp. OGXVO IEYKO IIBBCTIDEIVG 0113011131`, and 0XIJ`&0!`- dinarg ofl'e r by enclosing: stamp. with hair address. The ttocom ly with our terms will secure the county or coqntnas they may I wish to work. A Arlcmna Patent .Medicine.s- ;;- Stus R Choice Perfur;zes. Combs. B1 ~zulq;:'"g - nan, . RINNEI; MANUFACTURING Co.. no Smithld Street. Pittabnrg Fa. 4 1 V ~ - y. nommou mam In thankinthe public of Barrie and vicinity for tho liberal atronaie bestowed upon him in the pasnbegs mum t at he has at conden-able ex pense increased his bakin facilities and is now prepared to do 3 larger bus ness than ever. Made In the various styles and quality the beat- Delivered in all parts of the town. _ ~ _ `i'lll'; Kg!) l'Al`A.V B3 1L\lJ_L'JJ4.*LA. vv 5 lHm\\'.\', Pro rict.or.-Excellent accommo- dnriun fur Ihu lr`u\'v ling public. Bar and Larder Wullalmpliud with Um best. Good stabling `and t1lLunli\':-hn~uln-I`:-I. Luggage of guests conveyed frtsutouudfrunl all Lmins. Few doors west of .\Iurkutat..on Uunlop-st. lluuuvno AVPRATHY .9: AULT, BARRISTERS ` and Actornoys. Solicitors in Chancery, No. tarios Public. Uonveyanoers. Barrio, Co. Simooe. Unt. Omoe over Bank of Toronto. ___._ _ _ __.._......~ F`. :r. BROWN, Manufactured fresh every day. Ask your grocer ' for _them and you will use no other. PIC-NIC PARTIES SOCIALS &. WEDDINGS supplied at short notice and on reasonable terms. nu 1.. 'n!lII\I\II\t)'Il1`I'7 `I IJI)f\1I7M' To any put of the Town. In any quanties to suit purchaser. from 25 lbs. upwards. at the Orders left at the M111 or B5 post card through the post oloe promp y attended to. The any ll`1oV-ur :M::u1. Collier Street, near the Market, Barrie. |I-'LouRs FEES] % FANGY Goons, Cheap Wools and `Braids, I-"I...()'lL'J'I=I.,. Chop Peas Oats and Barley BRA": SHORTSf&.c-, &c-. lFREEMAN SI |cnvs1AL_PALAc srons,| I R. ` hiI]I_ 1......!~ in PROPERTY iron SALE. Parcel 1.--That ro h-out house on John Street lstely occupied by J. ollsnby. Peroel 8--'l`hst ne hrlok residence situated at the hesdo! Mulosster street. Pu-ool 8-Tho west oflaot 20, Con. 1,:1n.the Township 01 Tiny, oontslnlnz 100 acres. Peroel I.-Lots 2'12. 274. 275 south side of Albert street. Alliston.` no choice bund- , 15. -Lot K. Can. 2. Township of Bonni- dsle. -consisting of loosen-es, more or less. nuns:-Inn u! A av A mod. on . ' Wanting Employment. -FOR BBAIDING` AND EMBROIDERY, Silks, Oarwasss, Patterns, Chenille, Cards, Tassels, Table Draper, 44;, I Tmuus JQABX, Appnyw R. R. HOLT. omoe `nonweu'a ia1ook,'opp; N. an N. w. station. ` . Barrio. 1883. 11-amou. - - _ ..-s-uqvwqvru , WIUUJJ U1 1:1. La.` u to . _ man. better thin W t. u.... .3:i'?o3`..`?m. soumhm :m3.`saco:. 'rownsunoc.nm,.nmnnaea- . no em: and own cdunmwlbonti _ U316. ' VI. IVVIMAUII, nu TERMS EASY, APDIYW ` n COUNTY 03 s1McoE GENEI_tA_LADVERTISEB). `LOWEST MARKET PRICE. 1 WH(*)TEl7.;:>-:_f`, Tn I". t`I~lN'J`l`.A 1., (LATE BIGELOW Hm's}:umumait.~t1mlmiIwnyDenot. Barrie, saw :Lvwuu.1.uea uye Drugs `ipon Ghowc Perfurzm, Combs, ~u.;hes,' Toilet Soaps, Lnvthlno that In nunnllo Hand 1.. .. ta... . LEADS THE_ v-AN. Opposite Railway_Statio*n, Dunlap-st. a. E. VALLEAU, MANAGER. vg---3--v-- - - sA 1 . - ......\... ...... hnttnr umn coin: West. _cA. :_c.::. AT CL. Address, I)n\v\w BABRIE. BISCUITS FREDERICK J. Bnow}: EVEu- uu-v-.. .. as::*:.:.::;!:.:t!-v`=-erk~= ~;.."' :`~* TO ALL T. GIIIIIILE, DDn`DDI`"l`!\ _, V PROPRIETOR I 4-ly. "iii; F315 2; xIfZ{aTfvs9o1.e1ey, and the cross accounts for the curiously varied traits which his character discloses. His family is a cadet branch of the old Stabrdshire Woleseleys, who yet hold their property in the Midlands, and who are Anglo-Saxon. The cadet branch from which he springs has been domiciled in Ireland for over a hundred years; and intermarriages with adjacent Hibeman families have brought it about that quite half of the blood in Sir Gar-net s veins is Celtic blood. It is from it that he gets audacity. his clan, his buoyancy, his debmmair aplomb, his strain of well-timed recklessness, his alert dex- terity, his ncsse, the nimble suppleness that occasionally astonishes his friends, his warmth of heart. The Saxon blood in him gives him his steadfast constancy under depressing conditions, his doggedness to hold his own against hostile intrigues, his nnlm mnnlinnkn, his almost. nnnm-nllnlml llUlU. ms uwu ugaiusu uusuue uungues, ms oalm manliness, his almost unparalleled ' equanimity, his cool, steady rancour against those who have done him despite, his un- faltering delity infriendships. Wolseley is a man who would have risen, no matter what avocation he had chosen to puisue. He perhaps has no special gift for war. He makes War Well, simply as he would' have made good shrewd venturesif he had been a merchant, or as he would have been "chosen for delicate missions had he been a diplomat. If he had been a boot- black he would have launched a Boot- polishing Company Limited, with himself as managing director; if he had gone into patent medicines, he would have out-adver- tised Professor Holloway, and` secured the testimony, not of an Arab sheik, but of an emperor, in favor of the efficacy of his pills. No adverse conditions could have held Wol- seley down; no native obscurity could have ke t him " mute inglorious. -. n ininn Hun ltls Rnaimnnt in `2 "STORY OF ms CAREER DOWN TO THE EGYPTIAN WAR. Jill? LULIUVVIIIK ILUUUIA UK 5113 IUU OI DH.` Garnet, or as he must new be called, Lord Wolseley, is from the pen of Archibald Forbes, the famous in: cbrreapondant of the London Daily Telegraph", It first ap- peared in the Melbourne, Australia, Argus, and was written before` the commencement ` of the Egyptian campaign :- 71... _..-.... .._.. ....:.....I 1.. 1lT._1__I-._ ___I LL- K3 I3 Hllll " IIIUI-U lUglL`I'l0llH.v e joined the 80th Regiment in 52, when as yet a lad of nineteen. The old local connection was manifest is his choice of a regiment.for the 80th is a Staffordshire corps. He did not soldier long with the Statfordshire knot on his. collar; but his first regiment came under his command when he was sent out to Zululand, where also he found under him the 90th, the regi- ment in which he had won promotion and glory in the Crimea and in India. When he was gazetted to the 80th, it was on ser- vice in Burmah, where Sir John Cheape was conducting what is now known as the _Second Burmese War. Sir John was operating against a certain Burmese chief- tain, who owned the euphonious name of Myst-loon, and also the re utedly impreg- nable stronghold of Kyou -Azeen, situat- ed in the heart of a dense jungle. The outworks of this stronghold had to be taken by storm, and Wolesely, only just joined, volunteered to lead the storming detach- ment. His handful of the 80th was con- joined in the operation with a little band of Madras Infantry under the command of Lieutenant Taylor. Taylor and Woleseley raced for the honor_ of being rst inside the enemy's works. `Neither won, owing to circumstances of which neither had any control. Both were simultaneously wound- ed and strangely enough exactly in the same place. A gingal bell struck Wolseley on the left thigh, tearing away a mass of muscle and esh. Taylor suffered similar- ly. but with the more lethal addition that his femoral artery was severed. He bled to death on the spot. Wolseley slowly re- covered, but he will bear to his grave the furrow of the gincral ball. THE cnmsa. When at home convalescent, he was pro- ' meted to a lieutenanoy in the 90th, then in the Crimea. After a short spell of trench service `with his regiment, Wolseley was ` selected for duty as acting engineer of our right attack, and lled` this post through the long cruel winter. He was gazetted as captain in the end of 1854, but the promo- tion was cancelled. And for what reason, do you think? Because of Wolseley s youth ! He had not been too young to. earn promotion, but the authorities thought a lad of twenty-one and a half too young for a captaincy ! Wolseley, justly incens- ed, threatened to resign if deprived of the promotion he had wo.n,Aand the authorities cancelled the cancellation. He was thank- ed in dispatches for his service in the cap- ture of the Quarries and took part in the i first unsuccessful `assault on the Redan. n'n_:1.. .............`.I :.. I.:- ......:.m.... .......1p 8.. um IIHEUCCUHBILII. llllla UH D116 IVUKIIILI. While engaged in his engineer work in the trenches in August, 1855, Wolseley was all but shattered by `a shell that killed the two sappers who were assisting him. The shell burst in a gabion that had been packed with gravel, and the explosion simp- ly stuck Wolseley full of stones. Jag~ ged bits of pebbles were embedded in him all over from head to foot. There was not a square inch of his .faee that had not its stone`; his left cheek was all but torn away, his eyes were closed (to this day he is blind M nun naval. and nu-t of the bone of his -,.. ---- 4; LOUNT, BARRISTEEE : ..........m.-m.I.uw. Solicitors in Chancery. ms eyes were lnuauu. \w uuu may no u: uuuu of one eye\, and part of the bone of his left shin was carried away bodily. Fortu- nately he is able to keep the eye left to him pretty wide open. He was picked up for dead, but astonished the surgeons who were speaking of him as quite gone by_ cheerily mumbling that he was wortha dozen dead men yet? This wound, or rather this broadcast area of wounds, sent him home invalided, and so he missed being present at the capture of the -great fortress of the Euxine. He had got mended, however, by 57, and started with his regiment for set- `Ina V511 W33` one UK WHHUHW WIFII thin destination which Lord Canning : ,lWift steamers contrived to catch 'en`route and di- vert to India. to nid. in. the quelling of the great mutiny that had broken out with so tall `am 1mnxnectadnaIn_ The lnlinnf. F lllllialll nuuu MIMI UKVLUII uuu vuhu I fell y n unexpectedneu. The gsllahlll Perthshire`Gtoybre.kq were included in the column which Sir Colin Campbell led from Oawn :e.,tol..the second relief of Lucknow, . mm the Dilkqoshn Sir Colin lmdse'nt.the Black W,Itgh- down the slope on the llartiniere. The 93rd and this "made 8 nhullf Ilnmbla of tneauuu mu: lnnu.e- ugnaeuy Inluww us the once beautiful Secunderabad garden. .~ Peel's `man, "of the Shannon, were slogging with their -ship s guns into the massive \ structure of the Shah Nujeef. preparatory to carrying it by esealade out of the branches of a tree that w against the` = walls of the shrine. olseley with his` , -r I . two companies of the 90th. `was sent to the left to carry the` lines house. The way to its compound wall the open. Wolseley s fellows took with them a eon le of light guns. So erce was the Sepoy to that. to use`Wolseley's own` quaint collo- qnialism "the bullets dtfopped off the tires of the w eels like-peas off a drain) The e . .Hes_s,hQus_e wns,qa-gyigyiwith a rush. Be- ~ henna _ the Katee Hahn]; - 3 and Wolseley thou t. he might alwweli, `.I.nAn-v.5}. hm. . Fla. id. 'nn-_.niLh_J1i-=.nI1|- slope on_ we narumete. .I.ne voru anu "made 8 hI.l3ly' Ihlmbl Hm nnm Iumntifnl Secundarnbnd mu-den. sann vvonexey nnougnu nu uuguy an wen I|1'.Yv't0o.>.H.did; ' ' 11'. . V hsud, 11 the midngof -.-.:':!!5.-..-: :`.:-.==' 4.-ha .'..L.. . "-:*.'.' "gm "*:-':`"=;_."m"::r*"w ur"- uowaue nag - , :3 {ho gtiffon its roof; Wolnele` `y hidfl The followiing sketch` of the life of Sir Em-net. or sun he must nnw I-an mlnzl, `I'.nu-A 1-ma: SEPOY nnrrmv} A ' Th 90! ` Of ill ' il "th Inf: Jenni-innlgna: Igggnh Tnni l;n gift LORD IIOLSELEY! m'1.e;xurt1:eagmzml IR ISSUED Wolieley ` `n zealous; trap de zele always set Sir Colin's back up,'and his instructions had run only to the e'ect that the Mess house should be taken. 80 instead of credit, Wolseley earned only a wigging" from` the stem old chief, who told him next day that he had never felt so angry with any man in his life. and then forgave him with a growl. Wnllnlnv nus-Hninnfnd in the nill nnnltrnrn TOWI- g olseley participated in the nal capture of Lucknow `and saw the end of the great mutiny, onthe extinguishment of which he found himself a lieutenant-oelonel at 26. From India he went on to China and fought in the a'air at Sinho and in the capture of the Taku forts. He was present at the surrender of Pekin, and among his souv- enirs whiph were consumed in the destruc- tien by re of the London Pautechnicon while he was absent in Ashantee where some precious mementos of the Summer Palace. At the close of this war he was de- spatched on his first non-military mission-- . an expedition to N anlnn to gather all avail- able information in regard to the Taepings and condense it into a report.` Soon after his return to England he was sent out on the staff to Canada,whence he paid a length- ened visit tothe Confederate armies during the great American civil war, and where he was serving as assistant quartermaster- general, when there was assigned to him the command of the Red River expedition. That service entailed no bloodshed, because when Welseley s ries and militia skinn- ished across the Manitoban plain up to the stockade of Fort Garry, it was found that "the malcontent half-breed Riel and his ad- herents had ed and dispersed, but what it did entail if it were to be a success were careful` organization. steady. arduous Ia- bour, shrewd knowledge of men. It was the rst total abstinence expedition which British soldiers had ever undertaken. From Thunder Bay over 460 miles of boat- ing and portage had to be accomplished, and there was no rum in the ration. If I remember rightly, not a man was lost from start to nish; and where before Wolse1ey s arrival in 1870 the half-breeds in their scat- tered huts were valiantly defying Cana- dian rule, there stands to-day a Canadian city with a population of 25,000 souls, the capital of a vast province on the very crest of the wave of prosperity. The Red River expedition made Wolseley a colonel and a K ('3, M, G`, ' . nnannat v- -...-V... It was in 1871 that I rs! met him in a eld on the Hog s Back, the fertile ridge between Aldershot and Guildford. In that year we were making our first ex- periment in autumn manoeuvres. General Staveley commanded the army of defence. The recent Franco-German war had started England into a tful spurt of army reform. Wellington had no chief of sta; but the Crown Prince had Blumenthal in this ca- pacity in the campaign just ended. Kaiser Wilhelm had been inspired by Moltke; Prince Frederick Charles had been assist- ed by Stoelo; So experimentally, a chief of staff, in the person of Wolseley, was sent to aid Staveley in copeing with Hope Grant in the mimic campaign amomz the hed erows of Hampshire. Staveley did not Ike the innovation, and gave Wolseley the cold shoulder. This treatment Wolse- ley accepted with quiet imperturbability. Staveley would give him nothing to do- and he did that nothing with a serene non- chalance.' When he introduced himself to me, I could not refrain from the remark that I was surprised one who had spoken of my profession as he had thought fit to do in his Soldier's Pocket Book cared to become acquainted with a member of it. His reply was one of personal compliment, and I_have found him a steady friend ever ainnn (1 E116 "BUlll4L|Ul'LI lilflyn .I.ll.UHU lllll` oeuvres were more like real warfare than any sham campiign I have known, and were something in the nature of a test competition between the old school and the new school. Michel had all the new lights in his force--Wolseley, poor Valentine Baker, Evelyn Wood, and others. Sir Rolmrt Walpole, who commanded the northern army, `had for _ subordinates the conservatives of the army-Sir Archi- bald Alison, Colonel Gamble, General Shute, etc. The question was fought out at the Battle of Amesbury. The nor- thern army s role was to cover the road to London against an invader, represented by the southern army. The former was drawn up in the early morning, with the River Avon .behind it, looking out westward on the latter, which had camped for the night out on the plain near old Isaac Day's racing stables. The fight began by a demonstra- _tion on the part of the northern army by Valentine Baker s cavalry. Baker certain- ly made as if he were covering the deploy- ment.of thainfantry of_the army to which he belonged for a frontal attack on the nor- thern army, standing there in position. All the attention of that army was centered on his evolutions. That attention he held for two hours or more. The northern ar- tillery had come into action against him. Suddenly, from the edge of a wood, on a knoll right in the rear of the northern army ashed out a cannon shot. That army had hnnn halrnn in rnvnr-an `Rnlrrn-'1 muntlrv 311108. In the more extended manoeuvres of the following autumn, the Salisbury Plain campaign, Wolseley played a. more promi- nent part. He was adjutant-general on the stat!` of Sir John Michel, who command- ed the southern army." Those man- rnnvrnn warn mnl-A lilzn TBA` war-fat-A than HEXIUU Uull I UKLIHUKI H1190. Luau lifllly lliiu been taken in reverse. Baker's cavalry evolution had been. a mere device to dis- tract its attention, while the infantry of the southern army were crossing the Avon by a bridge lower down and marching up on the knoll into a position actually inter- cepting the northernai-my from the roads to cover which had been its allotted task. It was a neat piece of tactics as one could well hope to see, and Wolseley was the contriver of it. The contention then was. I remem- ber, that if there had been actual, not sham, war it could not have been carried out, and that even to attempt it would have been insanity. With this argument I could not bring myself to concur. I held that what of daring enterprise is practicable in _ peace manoeuvres, when all men's blood is calm, undisturbed byithe madness and distrac- tionof actual battle, is innitely more lilie- ly to_ suweed when the air is full or ying lead, and the turmoil of the fray is dis- "turbing uanimity. This I hold true of om-Hm nn vi the strateirv of a camnaiizn. t.nst;p1`-eceas me cmsn unu Dluxur or-wuu D812` (.10, must be as wary as can be the strategy of {my peace manoeuvres. _ _ mun nnrn fiflllll win mrmng lllullnltay. ll!!! 1. uunu urn? w. tactics on y;` the strategv 9f campaign, that, preceds the cladh and bicker othe bat- n mmit be as man bathe stratezv __ 7..., - -~-- * rm: GOLD COAST WAR. When the Gold Coast trouble began Sir Garnet Wolseley was on the Horse Guards stalf. Aletter appeared in the Daily N cm: which suggested a plan of operations gath- ered from as persual of the sparse topographi- ica'.l informsiion svsilsblein relation to Ash- intee, uni naming $1-lunet as the oieer Inset him a i suitable `__for"the oo'mmI.iI"bf "en expedition. `Soon after he was hppointed to thmposit ion, -nsi. in"8P1imb9r. 1873. he .08 3} - ! vlnde` of his troops,` bdfwith E .; pioyrn, `f on speciAl_servioe. T " 8b:s6 qY't e irho hi `or followeiihiur `to mold Bullet Battier. ~ Hnnlm; Riginn IS` h's n's-g.. Jsn hmfn with x VD` U,U\l\l investment on gooq rates of interest pni nmm-y ru-mired until end of l`lt.\'l`H\' K .\.UL'|`. Solicitors. &c.. - VJ Dlluf li_N,|UU|', l .IlQl'8 will QUVUIVU UII Illnl [4118 lIu"l"]l5Drn' AH'h9s` 3763110.!-||..d .9-hart -had been with five work of" _reconstruction _a.m1 pncim hhimjn the Rod'Riverexpedition; other! 118 `tion. In that work his attributes qualify had recruited pro hac vice, becamefx. '9 him to shine, `-belief in them adequate instrument: I? , h---'--o+- ' h fcstfyingqnthinsgdinpouitions. Augcoz t o` -`--Mru".` Louise Chandler Moulton will lied! of nepo-weIa Evelyn Wood; llfye her. home in Boston the but `of this _` T-' :B- 130k": Colonel 'monh"for dviait to her daughter in Charles- _ f;'fw hrr-}ad=`bea`u$ *trrv7,`S."`G., in-u`l`in Junrrshe wiil gr: tel onhfdrhfeh Wollinb Ehropo, on mutual {oi the summer. lo. 23. Whole No. 1624. ten prize essay, Lord Gifford, MoCalmont and Henry Brackenbnry. These and some others constituted the original Wolseley Gang, which has beenysteadily recruited as experience and opportunity have served. and which has created so much jealousy and heartburning among the oicerhood outside its pale. Wolseley s argument is perfectly clear and logical. I am assigned." says he, certain. work to accomplish. I need insruments to assist me Here are certain instruments whose eiciency I have proven, and on which I can rely. They: know me. I know them. Others may, and no doubt are equally capable; but they and we would be strange to each other. I demand the right to choose my own instruments, if I am to feel assured of success, and the right to take the men who, as I know by experi- ence, will efficiently contribute to that suc- cess. ' It is hard to get over this reasoning; and there is one bright spot in the heri- zon for the outsiders, that Wolseley is ever on the outlook for suitable recruits, irrre- spective of aught but merit. I satr him en- list a marine olcer in Cyprus ata mom- ent's notice, just because he found him doing masterful, systematic work in a position where he had been left to his own devices. In Zuland he recruited Herbert Stewart, of the 3rd Dragoon Guards, an entire stranger to him, because he had taken on himself to make good line of communicatian. If you engage a workman you don t insist on se- Iecting his tools for him; you leave him to choose his own; what are you concerned with is that he shall do the work intrusted to. him. ~ VIL. "l7,J..;.1.... - Jnfnmnndnoiinn nnnurnnnu To Wolseley s determination, constancy, Dowers of organization, and force to coerce the home authorities into prompt compli- ance with his requisitions, was due the suc- cess of the Ashantee expedition. In the fighting duty Sir John McLeod and Sir Archibald Alison were his able subordinate commanders; poor Colley was his right-hand man in the transport service. It was a good turn that Dawson, one of King Co'ee s captives, did him when he wrote at the foot of a despatch he had indicted for that monarch- See Corinthians, chap. ii~., verse 2. Said reference, being veried, was found to run--- Lest Satan should get ` a power over us, `for we are not ignorant of his devices. It is interesting to note that the formation Wolseley adopted for the march of his army onward through the ght of Amoauful into Coomassic was that of fqur columns, each facing outward. and so forming a great square, leaving thus no unprotected anks. On his return he was appointed to the command of the auxiliary forces, and early in 1875 was sent out to reorganize the in- testine condition of the colony of Natal. Here be conquered the malcontents by courtesy, accompanied by champagne, and arranged the system of administration that is still in force and working fairl well. When he came back, he vacated his ap- pointment in connection with the auxiliary forces and became a member of the Coun- cil of India. From this playing at work he was despatched to the Levant in the summer of 1878, as administrator of that precious new requisition of ours, the Island of Cyprus. I then accompanied mm, and for the first time saw the Wolseley ma- chine at work. It ran smoothly. Every man knew his place, and tted into it; his work, and he did it. Wolseley, I noted, had a grand capacity for. letting his sub- ordinates alone in their work, so long as he got the results. He gave the impression of being the possessor of a calm strength that was singularly reassuring. He seem- ed to possess the faculty of reserving him- self; he had the repose of justiable con- dence; he decided quickly, but not jerkily. He never fussed, and when at work he had rare power of despatch. He made the best of Cyprus, and to those who know how bad Cyprus is it must be a matter of astonish- ment that he made anything of it at all. vnrnn AF nxmntu in Znlnlnlul sent him menu that [18 maue uuyuuug U1 u. um nu. Force of events in Zululahd sent him thither in the early summer of 1879. The War Oice, with the country at its back, sent him. The Horse Guards were hostile- ly obstructive. Armed with authority from .1... Gm-ndunww AF Qfnfn Wnlnalnv nnfnrn ly ODBlil'llCLl.Ve- Anucu. wwu uuuuuL 1u_y u;uuA the Secretary of State, Wolseley entered the Pall Mall sanctum where the Com- mander-in-Chief rules. That Royal person had gone to the Derby, and nothing could be done in his absence. But I Want to start the day after to-morrow, said Wolse- ley to the locum tenens. and what I want must be done. And done it was by sheer force of Wolseleys strong will. He start- ed with most of his old staff. He had got not further than Port Durnford when Ulundi was fought by Lord Chelmsford. I was the first man from the latter force to reach Wolseley after that victory. He had introduced a new tone into the troops about him. He had abolished lagers and had ex- ercised the demon of funk that had held such pernicious sway ever since Isandula. I don't understand, he had said, that British soldiers in close order, with ries in their hands and bayonets on those ries, cannot give a good account of any number of black men that may choose to assail them. This quiet yet buoyant utterance had the effect as of a veritable revelation. The scales of nervousness fell from every eye, the morale came back to men who were not cowards, but who had been under an ugly gloomy sgell. _ Afmr Ulundrthere was no more uhtimr ugiy gloomy speu. After Ulundithere was ghting to speak of in Zululmd. Wolseley put matters there on some sort of a basis after the capture of Cetewayo, and then went on to the Transvaal to arrange matters with the Boers. They were sullen and disaffect- ed. Gathering after gathering they held, eachone of which threatened to eventuate in `an emeute. But at each, when the Boers awoke in the morning of the day of confer- ence, they found that on either side of the assemblage, no matter how remote it might be, Wolseley had contrived to station a British regiment, at the sight of which dis- play of quiet strength the Dutchmen sul- lenly inspanned and trekked homeward. To this gallant subordinate, Baker Russell, Wolseley, with a kindly consideration, gave the duty and the honour of taking Seknk- ioni s stronghold by storm; he himself being present only as a s tor. When he was recalled he warn -the home an- thoricies that the apparent calm in the Transvaal . was delusive. and cautioned them against diminishing our force in that region. But economy overrode his wise warning, with the outcome all know of. Wnlnnlnv I-m hacnmn n nersmusl inm-am. Wllrnulg, W15" FHU UUIIUUUIU IILI. KIIUW Ul- Wolneley had become a personal inqrata at the Horse Guards, got scant reward for hie work in South Africa, and was xefused the post of commander-in-chief in India, on` which he had set his heart. It gelled him even more that Roberts instead of he should be sent to South Africa, when r Colley got over his depth in the dxi ty with the Un till two month: nan he was the %0}.UVUl' HID I-IU!lPlI Ill Ivll uuuuuuy WIFII `U9 ._ Up till two month: ago he was the %I[1tte1-master-general-at head uagters; in an Inn nnnnnndn Qhl n'|nP`I J: an cu`- MONEY'T6LEi| .qvvg-~_ .. -._ _~. _ v _v u... -..- usttermagter-szonevrrlv-al;_l1e: d `y he succeeded Sir Charles llis an ad- iunimnbuandi-al. He hn.s`maxiv' friends. and `I Ely He Iuqoeeueu Q11? 1311113 83 5a` juliant-general. H~e:ha.s many friends, and as host of jealous enemieg, I .venture to I` tedict that he will gratify the vformer and siseomt the latter- - I do not think he has nnfarduous task before hun, so far 9.: rs)- _ gardu hctual ghting; but after the gpting )- thqre wi|I_ devolve on him the adimmst`ra- ve work and` pacicgv ' tion. In that his` attributes [I2-OOI F NOTII ADVAIOI- Dunlap-33., BARBIE. 5omehowP ' gjl V the exprenio:vo`f I. lonesome xI`:':I1y'i`1'1:: gm-s In four.` Thogo is 3 ygnghring roll of in eyes, I glmoehu of a man geegungd for non: 0 3. dnn t exactly on an never expect; n . But when hi ingt the otlaexidny there was I _ m eye an e grasped. h... .,. 29th .. `d on e e um gaylyt;h_ the 91d Oaognnhd ma Eighty- seven ' 1 CUTE UI yUlll' FBKIIHBUF I In the Legislature ; all except Surgeon Greensa.Ih--he is in Conn-eu---and Adt. Tenahun, who in in the Pension Bureau. ' " What are you doing ? I asked. I am nhipPing clerk-down at Hide Jan T.llow's, and`--with a troubled look- H-unv urnn'|>. wan} ma Anr the Inf. nf Jnvnnt IIIVUII E llli IIIIX '00. are won nothing lonesome about Rank- tmle now. Civilian u I was, I rejoiced at the roapec of his meeting his old friends. U I: -an A mlnndid I-aaimnrnt. T rnmiu-Ir. 5116 WSW 01 111B 1110051113 111I 0111 11181105. t wen u splendid regiment, I remark- ed. The old One Hundred and Eighty- aeventh made 3 gallant record. Where is Gen. De Ree d now 1' .Oh, he`: ollector of Internal Revenue." So he is ; I had forgotten. And 001. Echelon '1" , He : Postmaster." - Sure enough. And Maj. Knmpntuh" He : Sheriff. And Ce 1;. Tompion T United tntes Comm] to-Gutte Perclm, I believe it in. And Lieut. Col. Roudtetep ?" N [TnihuI Qknhan Mflhhll ' " Alla. JJIBUF. U01. xvuuuuwp I United States Mu`Ih'all. . And Capt. Tumbril 7" He is Judge of the United State: C ourt. Oh, yea; and Quartermaster Snlthm-se`(" He was in the Treuury Department until last week. And where in he now T They don't know, said Private Rank- `enle, evaaively. They think he is in Canada, but they ha.ven t found him yet. A}: van and when-n Am the nthnr MH- uanaua, UHF `XIII HISVUII lo IUUQIU. llllll yuu. Ah, yes, and where are the other oth- cers of your regiment? Yn Hun Lmri-lntnra I All axmnt Stlnrunnu SEVERAL BEAUTIFUL naslous. LEHOW B, unu --wuu u uuuuluu 1uun- they won't want me after the lat of June; they have to make a. place for old TulIm\"a nephew. But I'll nd somethmg, Ireckon. - I'm never out of a place very long. I looked after hlm as he limped av.-av. 1 11: never out In a pmce vary mug. limped away. His gait is uugraceful, because he has a. stitf knee, stiff as a bone. It was shattered n.t Antietam. The bullet went crashing into it when he ran back to pick up and save the regimental ag that had fallen from the dead handi of the color sergeant. "Rut I nrnnnrcul nn lnnanll thnf. pl-iunh `iaeia if` 'i?g'e'3'n`i3"P_.'uI.'io`."i*'n we all the o d boys; gallmt old fellows haven't met since '66 Iuu nu hue mu. uuyl ; 5 haven't '65. VIVI--.... cu.-- -...&L2..... `I- ueau nanua Ul uw culur uulguullm But I wondered no longer that Private Rankanle seemed so lonely. He is think~ ing, perhaps, of his comrades, the other privates in his regiment. There were sev- eral private soldiers in the arm . Rank:m- tile, whom'I know, was one. g`he name of the other one has escaped me. Nor do I know where he is. He doesn't appear tn be Consul to any place. A...x ....L :4: L- .......'1.I l\I\`I! n(\I-no 6',-........l KHUW WHUFU HU ID. LAO I-IUUBII D nyyuas I. I And yet, if he would only come forward and show himself, a grateful country has remembered him. He can secure a farm of 160 acres in the far West, after the railroad has secured all the best sections, twenty miles from the nearest postoice, twice so far from water and as far as.a railway train can run in in day from a coal bank or forest, on precisely the same terms as are accord- ed to a man who has been in this land f- teen minutes. It is a great boon and the private soldier should appreciate it. And undoubtedly be does-in a quiet way. He does not make much fuss about it. Ami really there isn r. very much for him to grow enthusiastic about. 1)...L LL- ..._:....L- ....I.I:n.. u4\IItot| ...l....,l I... BDFHUIIBSFIC BD0l.lIn But the private soldier, though indeed he is exceeding rare and marvelously scare at intervals, in not entirely lost. In the dam gone by, when the tiate soldier was more nnmm-nun {than f. Av, vm-v nmu-lv 1.000 of gone Dy, wnen U16 nvaw uuluwr was Iuuru numerous than t by, very nearly 1,000 of him were required to make one colonel. More than many times that many are some- times requisite to the election of a member ofC ongress and even as President. I"1nnu-nfnrn ha 173 ha fnnn I-In will ha LHUYUIUYU HU Will UU IUUUU. LIU Wlll IIU dnagged from his lurking place. If he has not been seen at the poll! by 4 D.m., the general s own carriage will come after him. It will not come after him again for another four years. But it will come for him then. And wn rninirn, tnn, in the thnnoht that IUUY yUlIl'!. Dllla ll: Wlll UUIIIU IUI.` lII| uluu. And we rejoice, too, in the thought that his time in to ofnma Onn dgy the pvptg, snldlcr Will shine reaplendant, a blazing planet agmnst the nebulous background of hhlf-forgotten eld and line officers. It has been ever the fate of the private soldier. Napoleon is dead and all hll marshals are dead. But the private soldier who fought under The Little Corporal" at Waterlot), is he not found in every State? And an some day the last general who fought in the war of the rebellion will paea away, the nal colonel, much against his Will, must die. V Majors and captain: will join the in- numerable caravan ; but the last surviving private soldier of every regiment that fought anywhere will never leave us, but will live enbalmed in the perennial para- graph: Till suna shall riae and set no more. lnEP+{ ROGE as ._ CONVEYAN- 4-.....miumnm in Queen's Bench. Auc- AXUT PI'llV;`ffiANKANFIl..l He walked silently in. We knew him the moment we raised our eyes and saw him standing there. In fact, we had been ex- pecting him; he nearly always comes when we are in just such a strait and needing him. He always wears the same style of c1othes-coat of one kind and pants of an- other, he hasn't any vest, his shoes are worn and run down at the heels, and his hat is battered and dust There are spots of ink about his shirt w ich hangs over his waist-band, and his new paper collar is the only fresh, white thing about him, and it looks as though he had just put it on with soiled ngers. He is pale, weak,-eyed and prematurely gray-haired; he look asthmngh he had never known regular hours, either for sleeping or eating, and he must have come thousands of miles and been coming ever since he was a boy. His starting point was so far away, and so long ago, that he has almost forgotten when or where it was; but we have an idea that it must have been when his mother buttoned his little blue shirt-band around his white, boyish throat, put on his little straw hat and sent him bsrefooted to ask for a place to work in the printin oflice. How proud he was when he went ome that first night. and showed his new brass rule, and tells mother he has learned all the boxes and has a free ticket to the circus next week. and the editor gave him a big piece of wedding cake, a part of which he has brought home for the baby, and if he sets up a column in one day next week he can go shing on Saturday: Yes, somewhere about there was the commencement of his long journey, and here "he is now, perhaps two-thirds on the way. He asks us : What s the show for a sit l We give him a case, and by and by he says he feels faint, and asks us if we can't lend him a quarter -he hain t had any breakfast yet. We know his weakness, and, as we need his work. we go down with him and order some breakfast for him at the nearest restaurant. When he comes back he looks happier and better able to work- In the evening, when he goes to distributing his case, he re- counts the history of his late places of em- ploymen. He kuows.the circulation and amount of businessof every paper in the State, and just why the Dispatch suspended and why the Advance sold out to the'Cmu-- Heiswsll acquainted with the un- ` known editor of the `Thunderer and has w friends on the editorial force of the leading .` journals of the country. By-and-by he . whistles low an air from the Italian opera, i and in reply to a uestion answers with n. ' `Latin quotation. e stays with us a week, and we grow to like him more and more every day; he has read eve thing from Shakspeare -and Ruskin to k Twain and Bill Arp; he knows more `about our laws, national and State, than the best law- vnv in Hus nitv ha in THE TRAVELING TYPE-8E_TTER. laws, mmomu ma bum, mu; me new law- yer in the city; he in` 1! dcqiiqted with the lives of every pminent perno!?'dFlho age, and is a" perfect encyclopedia of cur- rent events; but we cannot 180111 to keep him any longer so pay hil ll"0 und- he sgaiu mm on ht! long road` Omit leads-not to home, for lie ha noriemaot Q the society `of intelligon poplezliho Iiihnlfi for out- tide of `tho "pt-nntidg 'hoTn 5unhiown; ma. be ' Y: to 'ightewbrk1on:.nomo?cit.y 11:75 17 or 3 -I'1'|`n` nu-n" Al|l` IIIIYQIPQIUILL 1|. ma no music we tglguswormonr some any dnify, or ifto om ddjfoi-`rthst, at 1'8 id dt-jmuf. '!'0lh 0110 Milli! ooato an- ot or, with whisky nn1lnudhmIn'!o'vcom- ......... L. -....... KICVG `IJV HUIIIU ru1i'nr'i`r'u'c.-'f.r'u in`: i-n1m-'-5` mu ongreas nuu even 5 rnsuuuuu. Therefore he will be found. He will be `__._..-.I A'_...... L2- I..-l-.'...... -1--- If I... I.-- nner, Wll.Il wnn.-my IIICI llllllllll l0l'- nom- ,_._.r._-_.`._. . . z .._.__..;I.. ._ L9 Emvnnnx, n mi unmutvd ifivv `U, noun; 6 - A . .- noiy 'w`n1sitl{. o ac, _ [mm _\IA.C1{AY, AUCTIONEER, :......i:4innnr, nnnvevanoer. Issuer of IUII N .\1:xuxxrx1, Au uu.u uuuu, I C.):nIni.:.+in)nor. Conveyanoor. of Marriage Licenses under the New Act. Mdney m Lmu at Moderate Interest. Ox-oomore.0n:.1 - 7 o.<|~:m SWAN, AUC'I`[ONEER forum (?ount.y of simcoe. Terms reason- Ma. (ml:-c an. my Store. (Jratghurut. 46-ly {V 1-{' ; 3. nsnmt: ncm, RIFLES AND SHOT GUNS AMMUNITION, &o. ` --- [MILLION DOLLARS H1100. Iuuu u u-av... V .. .... _._ - . , :~iE~I'N0x .3; LENNOX, BARRIS- 1.-. A m..~..mvu.ur..lnw. Chancery, 36lY. ARbHITEcTs A E.\`Nl , MUVITTIE .1; HOL- ; A.-.l.HnnN: I! I. Rur\'nVOI`B. Valu- MONEY TO LEND- [ONEY L` -run. -10 `-liv nm-nnnt. int.OI'0Et. uw..\'m*, L['UENSED AUCTION- .. ...: Inn l)na9n'- Rrn Rants: -- 1 J {F WSON '&' QRESWECKE, BAR-A ri.~aI-I`:-i. so`li,-imra of the Sum-cmc_Court of ;Iit~uum.- for Omurio. Proomrs.~Nomn-les. Con- ...-.-ym, &('. 1\I_one' to loan. Offices: Both-. 1[1`sl%l_uck.npp0s1tc X. 8:. N. \V. Ry. Station. ll`l`il`, lC`J\IEJI`:D---\u\J1.\ V 1.11.34.1- U nnr,UmnmiSBi0ner in Queen's titmour, \p'IrzLi.~4(3r_ and Commission Agont.for thu :5-Mu of Houses, Lands, l<`o.rm Stock.House- huldll1rnilIlrc,H0068, Wares, scc. Also for the cull:-,-lion of '.unLs..\IoLosu.nd Accounts. Oloe l ulivu(`ul1I`I, Barrie. ; Me:MoP{IwALcAaDs! ':iiI I,E'Ili'i"s '\/\/\/\/'\/\/\ H r.\ Ian J unu, \Vuc;;u uluuuv _vv llc H `slit n})pI)HiIt} the lmilwnyDepot., .\1. .~'ll.\.\AL`\'. I'1'oprictor. 19-ly. MEDICAL AND DE\N'7l'AL` :. .1. L. G. uc0ARTY;oFFfoE . ..A.;.:......,. nn Hun \Vost. side of John SMALL, AND FOR FRAMING. J. Sl1\ \V FALJLJ, &l\.\/1'I.I.J..l`JL/1., I'1nn+. Mnasurom_ents, `Valuations and -m`mn.-.for Schools, Churches. Public Build- lhmixn-2-ls Premises, Mills, Farms and for (`uunlry and Suburban Residences. ()t - Hm Knitting Store, west of \Ve1lin ton H2u'ri!. ' 50- 5'. mas, and deaths mserneu Iruu u; uuu..5o. 3, WESLEY. Publisher and Proprietor. . lmsssnna given in all Branches of Painting, 1)rawing. &c.. &c. Terms on application. STuD|o:-Dunlop-s t.. Moore`: ' Brick li1ock..Bb.rrle. -DLJ. ISISSUED EVERY THURSDAY A .. ._ `u....ns`.; qr.m.r._J:r.n_ minznrn '1 on orders! "I 1;-Q gfpe anus 1)_rupn uuu I .. ` " 4 mm lnlis,a.n a.sE3ck"t'hoi`3":7:5" ntcrs an w~..; for the tine class of printing. forms of every description in stock and ` iihmx nt reasonable nu u);)iied . , _. . , _ ,_ v_ iLF1l{.\iS:-F`or :iubscrip_ton--$1 peg nun,- acrictiy in nrivp`ace:'$2 it no _ so paid, ` you .\l)Vi<.i{'l`IS'iNG-'I`en cente~ or line. foi- n .-,~t_in.semon. and tour cents each su sequentin- s-3rlIun._ YceriY `.'d9 not exceeding one inch ;, ,;,.:e_3.g per your. special contracts for year] ,. lvurilslng cnteredinto at reduced rates. Wri - nust be sent for the discontinuance of g murnptigns and advertising. Transient notices of Lost, \\ tmted. For a_.-Lie. &:e.. &c.. not exceed- will be admitted for 25'.cent.s each in. 1 1;; 5 lines. . ' , grtion. A_1l advertisements orderedbystran er. 0 - those with whom thcproprietore do not on cs:.e rule which wi quit be paid for D: ADVAY d to. Notices of local births be strictly adhere arriages. and deaths inserted tree oil charge. 9- WESLEY. RA DEN HURST. BKRRISTER ...--..,.., unlit-.it.nr in Chancery. Convey- .\l1\/Jlsnu x , Nmu, 1V1UVlLL1|u up nu...- mu. .\r himcts, I`. l.. Surveyors. .-, Hana wnul sxnervillcutioxls for buildings d. 'l`u\\'n und Village Lots laid Out. in`-s4 vurnfully located. Timber limits mi, .' (mlces--McCarthy`s mock. n".I`uu'.I. Harrie; Long's Block. Colling- . (}-E_() R G E S. QfqI'n T Y, Ti`irTJI4:`i:'.s`_ H0TEL._'A. W. n\\'\' Ivmm-inrnr _li`.xo.nllant accommo- Z [T\I.\IE RMAN, DENTIST, ..-. .1... nu.-ulna nlnnna nvm-v month: s13\v*EL A1{CI{[TEC'f, .......... nnfn v..1mu.innn and n; jhosx-NK0, DEN'1`ITS"71>` . . . am. H`vn-nnfina Pnmh nlwsrvn nn Ar 6 .-mxj 6}; PER cam`. AucTIbNEEiRs:. { AUCTIONEER .. A e:..Mm. 'I`nv-mu rnnjinn- LOU NT & LOU'N_T. UU NT dz lJ`JU JJ 1, L)n.1.wu.;u;u;u.;, I A:Lornes-at:-Law, Chaucer , 8:2. (,. Ilcu - )unIopStreet.Ba.rrie. Successors 0 sun lulu rm of Boulcon, Lount. Boys & Stewart. \V. 1.<)unL.Q.C. U. VV. Lount. `bl \.V. J. 1ior.I.AN1>. Just to hand at` ' I UR HANDS FOR :.... ._s...,...o An nnnrl frnr-hnl LV UUD. .D.n.u1Ju 1.-uu. nvustment good frocpold mt.-.9 of interest No princi- THE ADVANCE OFFICE. ....-u, uyyuulit ""9 3. Stnti n, on WED- jnyDAY?.JU}_Y 531 P%83..:at`3(?? fL.' ' e'."'.._ r.- -ueoung. of#.L'nt3xo, -abovve Sooiatp will be held i.nBothwell I Hall, opposite the Rail- wav Stntinlt nn WED. Rgu|.,.)[ g`. :1. 5... ..nm".. sZ:l' JAs;.si6_onn,' Runnin- A. E. II, Cmcswxcxn. R I L G. McOARTHY--0FFICE tl West Ilde ['gul[`(ilI|1ll{l(\):'d(g?l(!:leY %r;!)p0$t.e Ml`. G00. Bfllrs 'l._,,_,,m'g and Sash Faotorv. - ,_ .`.\ - : `V rr/\ `I\11\TfI\`I'C1T PUEOLTKN'S ?LE & Mc- ., Solicitors. Notaries I-IT. 7Ii=Vi1I.|.;Ari, A. W. McV'n'nn:. :1). 51-ly 1%. E. P. Pumas. F`. McW.n'r.v pod freenola princi- the term. -. Barrie. ts. JUHNSUN, BARRIE, JM-I - -PORTER. of and dealer in 00315 of all kinds.e.nd(}eorgotown G1-ey,end Guelph White Finishing Lime. Cements of all kinds ' Fire Bricks and Plasterers Heir. Omoe and Eton- 'house at the Northern Railway` Switch. foot of John Street. near the depot. he bond of this Lime is better than that of any other kind. and . the nish superior. 01oe-Corner of John and Elizabeth-sts _ -7 -7 --.-.. _--..-, -.-..-- ...... _ -..-....." Positively cures Nervousness in all its stages, Weak Memory. Loss of Brain Power. Sexual Pros- tretion, Night Sweats. -Spermetorrhcea, Leucor- rhdm. Burrenness. Seminal Weakness, and General Loss of Power. It repairs Nervous Waste. Rej uvenetcs the Jaded Intellect, Strength- ens the Enfeebled Brain and Restores Surprising '1`one and Vigor to the Exhausted Generative Qrgans in either sex. t~n.With each order for 'rwm.vs: packages. accompanied` with vedollnrs. we will send our Written Guarantee to refund the money if the treatment does not effect a. cure. It is the CHE.-\l ES I` AND BEST Medicine in the Market. mTFu1l particulars in our pamphlet, which we desire to mail tree to any address. MAcK's MAQNE'PIC Ms:mcIm:issold_by D - ists at 50 cts. per box. or 6 boxes for $2.50, or w 1 e mailed, tree of postage. on receipt otthe mone . by nddreasinz MACK'S MAGNET C MEDICIN C0.. Wmnson. 0x'r.. CANADA. Guarantees issued in Barrie. by GEO. MONK- M AN ; sold by all Druggists everywhere 47~ly. ` We have recently published a new edi , ion of DR. CULvIcxwELI.'s CELEBRATED ` ESSAY on the radical and permanent cure (without medicine) of Nervous Debility, Mental and Physical Incapacity. Impediments to Marriage, etc.. resulting from excesses D$'D.-Inn {n n nnnhul nnwnlnnn nnluvl! nn-an l\- (_;`. ll. [)\JD:`LL` IXU, .|J1'4.L1.LA.uJ. l.iquid Hus for Ex!.mct.in Fcath always on lmnd; it is both pleasant an auto. Umce over h`.dwu.rd.~4' Book Store, Barrie. Ont. ,,_.,----- . `T 1'\11\'rrnI'rIrI'\ two posta e stamps. 'l`he cele rated author, in this admirable Essay. clearly demonstrates. from thirty years` successful practise. that alarming consequences ma be rad- ically cured without the dangerous use 0 internal medicines or the use of the knife; pointin out a mode of cure at once simple. certain and e ectual, by means of which every sufferer. no matter what his condition may be. may euro himself cheaply. privately and radically. &T'l`lus Lecture should be in the hands of every c;:.uLvJ.L'J J. Ll LIN`! BALL. Car enters: Builder and Manufac- turer of Doors. ashes, Blinds. Mouldings 8:0. Planing of all kinds done prom tly and satiatao-. orlly. Factory. John Street. an-lo. nnuu Anuu, cu. LUDMIUIAIE LIUIII uAuuuuuu t$'Price. in a sealed envelope, only 6 cents, or two postn stumps. author. Essay. U BOILER WC tqoturer of every (I Saw Mill. Grist ll u.. u1.vLV, .l:l.Vl.VI.1.l!4 .EUJ.VU Us to loan on real estate at lowest. rates. Farm- ers` Notes discounted. Collections made in an art of the County. Real Estate bo hi: and 301 . nveyanoing in all `its branches. arriago Ll- cenaes issued. Onrron:-Over Canadian Bank of Commerce. Dunlop-st.. Barrie. 45-ly . no Altmr II'1l3\1't'II I' n-rnrr r-v---vv pri\'u.tcly and radically. 1 bq every youth and every man in the land. Address U BOILER WORKS.--H. 1, t t donor! :1 t 1: Bonus. s1w`"t'x1`1 , u 53:13:13, Jm wood- workimt Maohlgnezw Lecturer on the Eye, Ear and Throat. Trinity Medical Collelge Toronto, Surgeon to the Mercer Eye and Ear nrmary. and Oculls and Aurist to the Sick Children's Hospital, late Clinical Assist- ant Royal London Ophthalmic Hospital. Moore- clds, and Central London Throat and Ear Hos- p..`a.2.: 1" (.hnrr~`\ Street. Toronto. Ma becau- sulted with references, ... .- < `-"* '* .va Eur, Throat and Nasal passages. j& " j We will pay the above reward for an case of Liver Com laint. Dyspepsia Sick hea. che. In- digestion. onstipation or ostiveneee we can; not cure with West's Ve etable Liver Pllls.'when the directions are strict y complied with. The are purely Vegetable. and never fail to give an. isfaction. Sugar Coated. Large Boxes. contain- ing30 Pills. 25 cents. For sale by all Drugists. Beware of counter-felts and imitations. The genuine manufactured only by JOHN C. WEST 8: 00.. The Pill Makers. 81 & 88 King St. Ens Toronto, Ont. Free trial package sent by me prepaid on receipt of a 3 cent stamp. 35-ly. _ uuu11 uuunnn, Uni STABLE. Co I Com-t,Bax-rte. um 0 K.- '/;l,.Vl .\Ll`4L\.LVI.:x;.V, 1J.luu .L.Lu:u., will visit the followigg aces every month : l'I;\l~:'l`.\N(HIlSlIl<)Nla- ay 5. June 9, July I} .\m:. 1, :1:-.'>t. 8, Oct. 6. NOV. 3. Dec. 8. w\'l~IlmII)(:`l-I -Foronoon of May" 4. June 8, ' July` 4;. Ann. 3, Sept. 7. Oct. 5. Nov. 2. Dec. 7. jmm, \.\'|) .`\t tcrn0_on of May 4, June 8, July 3, Aug, :1, .~`opt. 7, Oct. ;).,Nov. 2. Dec. 7. Thu ronmimlur of Lho Month will be at his 0!`- ]l:'1a_ Ha.n(lt,*r9' Block, Barrio. Out. A V .-ly -_.__-::-1 saw M1u,Grlat_ M111. Machinery. `I1 |1\\1-in us- . w. McVI'l`TIE. Mfontans, A ER. House and Land Dunner. ret.l}_r'{1na_tnhaP_]`{ tn Hun nnhlin onnnrnllv fa. fhdhn nnao -1;;-Lu uu .n.uuuu., vv nun Dl.LV.l1\" returnsthanks` to the public generally for their t favors and would mtorm them that he is at in the business, and as prompt and obufu ever. Orders can be left at No. 30. Peel-5 trio. and they will be promgtly acwngled to. 47-ly. A cuae GURANTEED. MAGNETIC MEPIGIHEJRAIN & HERVE F000. =-rw-r- I Truuzz IVIAPK. \ Hr -r.-u; For` 32d and Ycmng, Male and Female. Dnuhhvnhv nu-nu Mnmuvnuunnnau In all in. non... Post Office Box -150. __... _._-v--av.` n RRIE PLANING MILL.e.GEO. Ca. enter 5: Bullder`_a_11q_]_!:_111}uf_no- rs t.nr-aw nf h.-nu... n-.1-.--. nu---I- nn. GEORGE s. mason, rnnntnnuul DR. E. C. Wr.sr's Nnnvn AND Bum Tann- MENT, a guaranteedeseoio for Hysteria" Dizzi- neg Convulsiona. its. Nervous Neuralgiia, H dache. Nervous Prostrationoaused by he useot alohohol or tobacco. Wakefulnees. Men- tal Depression. Softening of the Brain resul in Insanity and leading to misery. decay an death, Premature Old A e. Barrennees. Loss of Power in either sex. uvoluntary Losses and Spermatorrhaamcausedb over exertion ot the brain. self-abuse or over- d enoe. gone box will cure recent cases. Each x contains one month's treatment. One dollar a box, or boxes for ve dollars; sent by mall prepaid on receipt of price. We guarantee etx boxes to cure any o 188. With each-order received by us for ` six boxes, accompanied with ve dollars. we i send the purchaser our written guarantee to re- ` fund the money it the treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees issued on! by JOHN WOODS Sole Authorized out for e. Ont. - Jomd` } c. wssr 8: 00.. 1ePropr1etors. '1'orontt8>3_ (1);; ahla.