Grey Highlands Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 14 Jan 1881, p. 3

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 1 I I BaUJ of the Wlet^ ir*»k»v. It WM » w.ckad Mpkcv baU Who nproae io th« night, • ADd grtend open » hage gruiiUtone Hia penknifa, ikarp uid bright. And wkilatk* iparkavere flying wild Tk« oalUr floor apoa, Qnalh ha ants hiaaelf, " I will Diapateh my Uode John. " Hia property i* Urge, and, if H« oiea and leaves a will, Uia loviug nephew (that's myaelf) Won't get a dollar bill. '*I'll hie unto my nncle'e bed, His chamber well I know. And there I'll find hia pocketbook tjafe under hii pillow. 'â-  With this bright steel 111 slay him firat Because that ia the way They do such things, I onderatai d. In I icicanlt's new play." By this the anxious moon retired (For all the stars were in); " Tis very dark, the nephew cried, " But I can find my km. "Come forth, my trusty weapon, now I" (Ur wuida to that effeji) He houted to bu little blade. Whose power be did suspect. Then out he starts. Hia uncle's door Is thirteen doom from bis He gaws the latch, which upward fliea, Ai.d straight iukide Le is Oue }iauae upon the rntry st%^ Aiid one upon the mat â€" ^j How s'.Ui the bouse at such an hour How mowUaa lies the cat ' " O nephew nephew be not raah Turn back, ami tien 'luru in ' Ygur uncle still is louiid ultep. And \ou devoid of sin " The gallniis tree was never built Fur handsome lads l.ke ou â€" Ot thee to bid I (as kibd Macbeth Wiehtd Am young man to do)." He will not b« advised â€" be atands lit aide the sleeping; form â€" The b '1 hexics to beat cutside A latt.o for the storm. " Tis not t o lateâ€" repent, repent. And all may yet be well." " Ke|.ent yonrself," the nfphcw sneers. And an it g'jea pcllmtll. To right anl left he carves hia wsy, â€" At itakt, thus did it seem Aud, alter he had done the deed. Woke up from his bad dream. .Aod swift to Uncle John be ran, JVheij ilaylight c.in.lx'il the hill. And told him all â€" and L'ccIeJobn' Put nephew in hia will. Jamtt T. Fuld. fa ai QD to briag bar aavt^ 4iag ab^ut that faU^v Bililialh naitkar tike nar udanlM4 1 ka** Ml 1ft* otkatpaaflaaftaU. B*m1hM a hfaayaf tan tkoaaaad paaada. Tkat ia kaiag Mr la* impradaat to kava tke ckarfa of a girt" "At aay rate, A« is ao fi " ' s. ' Pariiaya aj poor tdthatwaavkf Aad«ka*a« I to do BOW T " "That's jaat tl^ P«at, ja* laa. Ika terata of the will are parfactly elaar. La tke event of Mr. HiUratk'a ntwmX to vnAtrtaka the charge of you â€" why, t b aai, aa yoa Hj he will have proved hi»s If vary aaaoh af a fool. Bot, aa ha will also hava pioTcd that be doaaa'c care aboat moaey, I aaa â€" I Borry to tay- inatriKtad to make kia the offer of your hand." "Of my hand! OfJTef " Even aa And it mast be dooa. For, if I do not, I shall loae my own lagaoy acd it ia too much to loa^. If he rcfoaes ttui â€" Bat he can't be such a fool as to refuse the heiress of Combe Baatei, yoa may be Your honoured father did know mea." " But there ia something eJae to bo it aeems to me I How ii retaae T " " Than be ia to have mbe Baaaett wtO- aal yon. Yoa are to have enough to live is comiort while yoa are single bat aadcr bo ciicamstaacea arill yon have anytking mora if you marry anybody but him. It is a cruel will, Miaa Derwtnt bat it ia a eltver one fur its purpoae, I most say. Whatever lup- pen«, the man who mamea jou mnat marry yuu for lore and for fortune, yoo aee and" 'She beard no more. No wonder, thought i abe, that her father had done his ataost, I alive and dead, to keep her fiom a world I where mea, aa a matter of course, assumed only the meanest and mokt tordid moiivei I in one another â€" judging, no doubt, Irou I their own experience of their own. Shi marry Why, if her heart and acul bad not I been married and widowed long ago, abe wouM return with joy to her old prison m the wood rather than ^{ive hersell to aijy man aa an uncomfortable condition attaching to her lands and her gold. Ltt him who had rtfuaed to be paid for the care of her aak her for herself with her landa a handled times â€" she would refuse bim a hundred and one. Let him take Combe Batsett snd wel come, so loDg aa be left her free. ALd then the pittance that was to be hers in case she refused â€" even that, acoord ing to what she bad been taught of the world, would be all too much even that mi^ht be eoongh to attract some man who was poorer still. Was she to be a slave to the world's n^eannees all her days Her heart went back to him who had loved her wholly for herself, if there waa any truth in all tbi ae magical aigna of love that cannot lie. What had become of bim Where waa be now Had he forgotten her all in these years t Had he told himself to some other Woman, for gold Like enough, beinx a man; and men being wbat she had been taaf^ht they were. Bat, had they never been part- ed, he would hare loved her well enough, she knew. Since Love bad been lost, better now, even than Love, was Libeity, for that had become her all. raaaionately ahe felt, " He j shall have everything but Me I will not I keep for myrelf one smallest coin tbat may make my No less full and «bole." After all, there was under the skies another world, where men made co wills, bunted no heir- etsir, laid no plots or cuuuterplota, never talked oi^love when they ui ;aot money, aud, above all, were free. It is the world where wb live without Love, witbaut Gold, and Alone. It waa the world wherein she her- self had lived for her first aizteen ytars, where men were not, and w lere she had been tended as are the lilits of the Held. It was where she bad had the dri am of her Iffe, and wcero she might â€" she fancied in her heart â€" go back, and live aloce with her dream and Le Free. Never, since sh left her hermit- age, had she bein happy icr an hour. She had been, as it were, a vild flower trsns- plaoted into a garden, where it can only feel Itself a weed, and dread the soents and hues around that others find beautiful. She had CBce longed for the world, jm the wild flowers may for the gardens while they are unknown aud far away and noH Wtll, if she cnuld not hnd her field again, any place would be letter than the garden ot the world even the wayside. She could not think or feel as those can who have grown up io the garden all their days. So little, or so much, nad abe learn- ed that, when she hearu EUch an everyday thing merely lumed and Hpnken as the sale, by a woman, of her hand and heart.for the sake of keeping her land, ahe was aajstiuck «itb unspeakable horror as if ^hehad turued over the soil of a bed of roses and laid open the entrance of a charnel, bUck and foul. We, with our sensible bringing up, our well- uudirtakc the Hulc and entire ch.irge and ' 'evulated minds, and btiU better regt.'ated ' hearty, may think her view of such evti^ day trifles a little overstrained. But then we have 80n tuch things with tur eyis she had never so much as heard of one of them till uow. Such a world waa not to be lived iu there was nothing to be done but spread one's wingH, and fly fri ra it with all speed. AT THE TWELFTH HOUR. bV IC. V. tKkiH.1l.lJ0S. lUAFlEk Il-io.NTi.Mtu. "I knew Ie/Wf'nt well tut 1 have seen nothing of liiin f r i-tnic eai sâ€" some time, 'nhfiuld »3y. 1 hope he is well? " â- ' He IS leal, .Mr. ilildreth. He died last Novt ml)tr, iu town. And his little girl " â€" â- â-  litk lerwi:iit dead Well. But a little gill? Well, he was just the man to K.t married before he died." " â- '^ue has no umther. .She died, yon knew, when tht- child was born. Well, Mr. tliMirth, ti n'luke a lou^ ttury thort, Mr. DerwiDt hail two idea.'-â€" p4.rhaps more, but • rtainly two. Hat was an uul ounded trust aril confidence in your prudence and honour, as hii will testilics. Ttie other was an over- whciiiiiiig driail leitt his little girl should ;;ri w up a prey to loitune-hunters, or be "oiitiriiijiuttr«l by the coinpauionship of other ;;irlM. Ill lieliived tliat every ijirl ought to ijriiw up al lie, wiUi uu knowledge of, or i.miiiiiucatioii with, the world. He bad had )-x]H^ri'iKi H I'l the other ^ortof thing, ii Hee, will 11 he was a oung man. So, .Mr Hildrttb, kiiuwiiig your prudence, your liiiiur, jKur friendship for hini, aud yuur h*-iiiiit-liki* iniMlu of living, he Uaves you a legsoy «d till thousand pounds on condition that yuu will, as joint guardian with myself. elucatioii ot the child (she liviug litre with you) until she attains the age of twebty-four, at hIikIi 11^)' Mr. IKth tut he.ii.vtd that a â- ;irl, pruptrl; brought up ai.turdiug to his view a, ought to lio %blt' to run aline. She IS now Ml the chargo of an aunt, Mrs. Joy. Vou acepl the churt^c of course" •'What. I? No. No. .Mr. Dimond. \N ithout hesitation, aud moat decidedly, .No Kew ytais briig, and shall bring, no new thini;.-! to luc. What stiould I,a btudent, who live alone with my books, do with a girl -a child "â€" â€" â-  ' I'hf orphan of your friend " " Whom I i.ot need, aud who does rot lited me. No. I closed my doir last ui^bt, :ial 1 close it still. 1 will have nothing new 111 my lifu " " Not ten thousand pounds " " No. No, once for all." Ho lM)Wcd Mr. I'liiii'iid I ut, niid went hack to his work, Hitl out giving aiioihcr thought ol the New- VeaiV t vcuin^ but vain attempt to cieep within his doors in the shape of a child. CHAKTEK III. It was all \ery well for the lawyir of fifty t HIM .k of a ^rown girl of thret-and-twenty a.' i! hhe Wire no more than a rhild lu amis. Ki|iially nasouablu wax it for Itupert to argiii' that, since Dick LKsrwent was unmor- ritd ome SIX jrjiH ago, his orphan daughter could hardly be live ytars old. But there IS nolKxIy so 'iKxl at ketpiug a recrct, when he likfs, as your Mull, frank, hearty, talka- titi' ien-niaunered man. Mr. Il.uiond kntw, snd tuou^ht his client's intimate fneiiils kni'W also, that the .Stjuirc ot t'ombe Itaksftt Had [mairitd oucc upon a tunc acd had lictu left^a lather aud a widower within a year U'lr^ only so, but that, surrounded ss bi was liy hocii'ty of which be was un- w'iilinj{ to drprive l.imM-lf as he was anxious that his daughter should not share it, I.e had taken t.vtraordiiiary precautions against the disiovrry of f.c: CMSteuce till she was fuliy ^rown. Ills triiniU wore mottly ^ocd fel- lows with no mnney to "(a'cd, ulm would swtNip doan on au heiress alter the gtnial uianuer if their Uiud. One bright, cold moruing, when, in mid- wiultr, htr own heart was oveillowiug with prin^ and joy, the old nurse who served snd guardtd her was suddenly di^missed ebe was earned, by load and rail, many miles aw.ty frtim her old home, aad prestntly her fatliir came and took her to travel with him abnad. She oouhl not 8|ieak to him of the •Iruam which he had doubt, essly discovered, and bad tbua answered. It is to be hopetl she was satistied. She was doci'e and gen- tle, and hir fatter was always kind â€" kind now, even in keeping her to himself for sbe had sceu sU the hum.in Iniogs she needed to see in son ig i ne w honi she taw no more, lie i.eed uot have feared the adventurers snd fortune-hunters whom he uow, as if ruletl by a craze, spent his whole time in avoiding. Ilo need not even have made that will when he dietl, so tbat his hand, though dead, nii^ht still guard her from lovelessness lo marriage and all least r harm. Mr. Di- mond roust have been terribly right when suggc.-^tiDg tbat the Siuiie'sownexperiences ol the World muit have been before he set- tled down at Comtc Batsett with the soul of a girl in his bauds. Sbe mourned, houesUy, when he dietU Llerhape not the less bt cause he had mode her lite so dull and empty. Bot presently she had to mourn for her living self, even more. She as an heirets â€" sbe bad learned to hate the very sound of the word. Aud she wss left in charge of another guardian a hard, stern man, named Hildreth, ao sbe heard a recluse, who had been cboaen by her father for the office bec^uae of his b«ing the only roan ia the world who could be trusted to carry out, consistent.y aud thor- oughly, her father's views. Hitherto, her liie had been slavery, but love therewith. Utnottorth it ma%t te double slavery, and therewith wbat must needs become hate, at least on her side. And yet it waa with a strange feeling very far indeed from pleaaare or relief, that ahe heard from Mr. Dimond of Mr. Hil- dreth's decisive, almost scornful and angry, refusal of the charge tbat had been left to him. She had somehow txpcctcd that he would have received her for mtjiey's sake, and then, for duty's, have made her life hardly to be borne. But here waa clearly a man who would neither do a kiudatsa nor •ooept a duty, if they were inconvenient to kim, even for tea thooaand poanda. It there were to be rtfuals ana rcbelliaaa, they oogbt to have come from bar. " It eeems to me yoa have had a Inoky •aoapa. Miss Derweat," said the lawyw, vka« hia holiday waa «var aad ke eaaa ia It was the 12tb of January, and Rufert Hildrcth had tot yet heard another word worth mentioning concerning his friend's ' orphan and her affairs. It is true be hud received a letter from Mr. Dimoud contain- ing some rubbish or other about something that was to happen if he married the child when ahe became ot age but, as that could not happen for nearly twenty yearr, and as it could not possibly concern him in any way, be bad naturally thrown the letter, half rtad. Into his waste-basket, and, being deep in an ajl-absorbing investigation, baa lurgotten to send a word of answer. Ht worked on, without giving a real thought to such impertinent noraeuse and if auotber girl's form would sometimes come between him aud hia labour, or between his (aperand his pen, be bad become used to tbat ghuat, and would evtn have missed it if it ever ceased wholly to come. So far, therefore, he had made himself secure for another course of an old year which had so cousisttntly proved good to him, bringing him no evil, and, on the other hand, increasing satisfaction with him^eli and indiflerrnce to all Ihertstof mankind. Every day be had risen at the same hour and worked on till bis brain was heartily tired. Every night be intured himse'f a long sleep, too deep for dreami-. The man, day by day, was turning into a machine; aud so he willed. Un this nigbt of the 12 h he was working, as usual, snd I was eveu icore (ban usnaly ab-urbeu. It ^ras a lonely old house in which he lived, near the town, but yet with no cloie neighbouni. Tbiae dark wiuter nights were as loug and as noiseless as the heart of a student could desire, even though, now snd then, he might hear the rush and acr am of the night mail that lossed Riio- ham without stopping, and, every hour, the chiming of the church tower. It was more to keep out these than the rush of the train thar Kupert Hildreth had double windows I to all his rooms, and kept them close even ia summer time ;^-one of his principal ecctn- j tricities was a morbid antipathy to the sound I ot church clocks, especially when they struck I twelve. He made hia servaotigo to bed punctually ' at ten. for he liked, during his night work, to feci absolutely aloue. And never, since he had settled at lUinham, had he hetn dia- I turbed after tbat hour. At first, therefore, I he could hardly believe hia own ears when, late ia the evening, ayd lo:!g after hia ser- vsnts weie out of tbe way, he heard a bell ring through tbe house â€" no cound of a church dock, but within tbe bouse itself, aa if such an impossible thing were happening aa that somebody wss pulling tbe beil of hu front door. It could not be fancyâ€" such things often happen to minds so absorbed in thought tbat outward things often become confurd aad obscured, and when the tenses, cut off froi-i real sights and sounds, are compelltd to find their own food. He had slmost forgotten the matter, when the bell t%a^ once more. It most be real, then, thought Rupert, angrily. .If it happened again it would wake the servants, threw tbe bouse fnto a tumult, and rob him of a whole night' a work â€" and that mast never be. If only to say No to Somebody, he must go down himaelf and stop the ringing, otherwise nothing would have moved him from hia desk had ail Raui- bam been on fire. leak lika aaa to ka raabUag akoat 4a4 tkaa»k KaU noBwkti maaa aa%* ta WiBk ka kail not aa /at wkoll* to jha • mam. " I aappoaa," ka aaii, way to tkea T It ia au( vcfy Ug, kat I na afraid it ia bath vary far aad T«y late â€" for o«." " No I kav« no friead^. I tappnM tkifa iaan iaa?" ' Yoa have b a i ia aa s tksaf Nobody avar ooaica to Raiaham witkcBt friMuls. " He aaoaght again far it to aeem to kim that there waa ahoot ktr bo: wkeUy arao«aL "Ta\"ka said, " of eoaiaa t k ara ia ao laa bat " " I kava to laa a Mr. Bildretk to-aorrow, who Uvea kcre. That ia alL " "Yoo have to laa Mr. Hildreth? Aad wbat poaaibla leaaoo Ton have ts aaa Mtt" "rsaaiaMr. HUdfeUT" "Tbat ia my name. Andyoars?' All his stcmeaa had retomad. Had his well trainad Old Year gone craaed " Yoa wiU know who am.' said aha, •adiy and proudly, " when I WU yoa why I am here. It ia to tell yoa with my own lipa, before I leave aeen a world as thia, where mea Loy love, aad let haarta starve, that Cumbe H..aactt is yours, every blade of israss, every sti.-k and \tune, without yoar having to le put ta the shame of asking for ttte huid of one whom yon refoaed even to loi k at wken ahe could be nothing mora to yoa than the orphan of yoor fri.ad. That ia ail " "He looktd, a'moet in smaxe, ciitainly bewildered, from her into tbe dark entranos through whieh the night wind bad followed her, as little welcome ss sbe. " Pardon ma, " said be, " but thia ia a matter wbioli I have abaolutcly nothing to da Do yoa mean to tell me, whoever yea are, that you are in league with tko^e who seek to brinf into my house and Ufa the child whom I am bidden to nsafce my wife lo my old age " " What child " "What else? Are you play mg me soma trick " He turned aside to li^bt the lamp partly to think, partly to see. " I remember â€" only eleven days a^o some law- yer fellow waLt..-d me to let in the New Year m the shape of a child. 1 refused him at tbe right time ii'i too late now 1 What have I to do with Dick Dtsrwent'a chi,d There ia an early train to-morrow take it, and go ba«Jt again. And tell those who seat you here tbst if wealth, and power, and glory, aud wisdom, and love, csme knocking altogether at my door, I would say, aa I aay to you â€" I want none of you Oo I " "I tell you tbat I, Bertha D«rwent, re- fuse " Tbe lamp waa lighted. Una stiack Rainbam clcck. And never since Rupert had lived there bad he heard ao loud a atroke. For it made no muffled thud through doable windows, but a fail, heavy boom through the open door, which Rupert had thrown open at the second ring and had neglected to close â€" on Old New Year's Eve I The lamplight was on both their faces in the ears of both boomed the bell. No chimes heralded tbe birth of thia New- Year of theirr, though that twelfth day of January ia aa surely New Year's F-ve for tlioae who will OS Twelfth-Day is 0;d Christmas Day. For those who wiU? well, maybe any day in the year will to as well. Only it did so happen that, when Rupeit left the door ajar for a young girl to enter, he had forgotten that, where evil is to be let out, and good let ID, Time is good enough to give us at leaat Two New-Year's Days â€" snd Oid as well aa a New or ratber a New as well as an Old. "Rupert!" "Bertha!* "And/ refused yaaf" And baried out yoa when I barred out the New Yearsâ€" but how could I tell? And what else have I baried out Harm, yea â€" but what else Heaven knows. One bless- ing â€" bow many more?" "Do you bar me out still " He looked at her â€" then far away, as if round tbe world. " Neither yon, nor what- ever Time may bring," said be, "Tnia u New Year's Eve for me. Good and III â€" 111 and Good, let all come they all come from the same place by the same road. Let them all come together, so they come, at latt, with yon .... God will bleu the new, and God speed the old " Rambam clock took a long time to atrike: all this, and more bad been told, when it boomed â€" Twelve 1 [the kkd.] De Lesaeps' Lnck. O.V WHAT TRIFLES OFTK.V DBPIiND OREAT AcnoNa. He opened the door jost in time to save himself from another ring. By the bright hght of tbe moeo, then at her full, he saw a yonag girl well wrapped in a cloak with her hand upon the beU. What does thia sternly. " Who ai wanthcra?" "Iâ€" I'm afraid." rcoad her doobtfolly. " yoa? askadBapart, What do yuu The empress was the Isabella the Catholic of the buez scheme. But for the Spanish ardor wi h which she sustained it, the Isth mus would still divide tbe Red from the Mediterranean sea. " Vour head,' ahe said (speaking of a course in figure) to Couate Wa.ewslu, " depends on the skill you suow in helping my co-siu to cu' his canal." M. de Lesseps' father, who was descended from tbe architect of the Cathedral of Edinburgh, was sent witu Luci^n Bonaparte to Madrid, because he hod been brought up a. Bay nne and could talk Spanish as widl us French. Lucien was the brst ambassador na..,.ed to the court of Charles IV. by Napoleon. His mission was to obta.n the retrocession of Louisiairio, which Louis XV. Lad allowed to alip from his hands. M. de Lesaepa the elder Went about alitays with him, and was the soul of his diplomacy. The New Orleans atlair t rought him into relations with the Un.ted States consuls, the most intelligent of whom was Mr. Kirkpatrick, who, was in business at Malaga. M. de Lesseps proceed- ed to that town, and, assisted by Kirk- patrick, who, like himaelf, was of Scotch origin â€" but leaa remotely â€" studied the re- sources of And lusia and the pohtical condi- tion of the south of Spain. They were drawn dotieir together by romantic affair which sprang up. A notable of the province, Senor Gretigny, had two very pretiy dang ters, with one of whom the consul fell in love. The French diplomat beeutme enamored of the yuuugest, and as Lucien Bonaparte wss in higu favour at the co rt of Ma rid her father allowed her to many M. de Leasepe, wiih whom she went to reside in Paris, where, in 1804, she gave birth to Ferdinand. Her eldest sister became Mrs. Kirkpatrick, and the mother ot the comtesse de Montilo, who was drawn by her De Lesseps kindred IO winter in Paris when her daughters had grown up. "Thua, you see," observed M. de Lesseiis, " what a number of great eveuts have in Itnckauument del ckont depended upon my fathers early knowledge of the Spanish tongue." Another "binge event," which led to tbe execu ion of the Suez canal scheme, was*ihe elder Lesseiis having divined in a poor and unlettered Turkish officer, Mehemet Ali, a vast giniua, and the man who was to ireaa down the Lower of the Mamelukes. The French diplomat reported in thij sense to his gevenuneut anel was instructed to be guided by hia own judgment in bring ng the officer forward. Bl. le Lesseps lurited the Turk to hia boose, and showed himself u various ways bis friencL But suddenly the officer withdrew from his company, and kepi out of the way. When Mehemet was a great man he said to M. Ferdinand de Les- seps " Your father must have been puzzled to think what my reason was for keeping aloof from him after 1 had actepted so much kindness. U was this A silver knife end tork I heard tbe servants say. Lad been at len from hia table at a dinner to whicu I went. I waa so pexir that 1 fancied 1 would pass in his eyes tur being t. e thief, and never dared after to return.' .Soon after Mehemet had related this anoedote he asked M. Fer- dinand d^ Lesaepa to ailow Prince Said, his son, to pass Lis afternoons ai, the Fi«nch coaaulate, in order that he might pick up the French that was spoken there. The boy grew fondly sttached to the inte ligent aad very kind-hearted diplomat. When he wax viceroy and tbe So«a conceaaion w as asked for, ho cntve M. de Leaaens a carta blancne. Tha tftuiainsorttia Tldaa. A Philadelphia engiaoar kaa avaatcd, it ii daiaed, a machine by wbiek tka power of the tidea caa be Btil.aad. Moaaroaa have bean prvpcaad for tka a eeoa al tka aaa lava. TtoOar- t writ at aaea gnffia «itt «ka Inrii qaaatiaa. aad wiU aBaaaidaKly gat iato atoray waters. It it cataia tka* it eaa do will plaeata tka Laad Laaaa, aad at ia aet prohakle tkat aay aaanaatka Mia- iatry aay praaaaa will w aa i aa tka kaarW iapport of the CoaaarvaHvaa, aalaa, ia d r aj^ it De in the diraetioa if eoaiettk Mft Bright kaa exptasaad kia opinioa tkst "fat* ia BO NBMdy.* It Bwy ba bo roacJy far had karrato aad diacaataat, bat it ia a s ft at i va rcasadr far maaataatloa "Boyoottiag. ' Morcova, it aaaaa to ba tka oaly pcaetiaabla raaadr. Aaotkar and not leas dimooH praklea will be forced apon the attention of tka GovaiB' mank There can bo no Joabt that FAXiiKLuaii. u araiAStao nr kkolaih). Tha hard tiaca kava foraad Uimtn to aari' oaaly e oaarf er their position, aad tkeir idaaa on thia sabjeet have baca frealy csasasaad at the a^ricnliural meetinga, which take place all over tha oonntry early in Decem- ber. It ia plam that both landlord and tenent are iu a qoaaoary. In the midland, western, and terathtra coontica there are tboosaotls of acrea wbiek Caaaot be ranted on any icrma. In tbe oonnty ot Esa z alone fifiy thousand acres are latt nniilled the farmers cavegone to LooelcMi and hired oat as helpers in tbe atabUa of Looelon borsc- owners at $5 a Week. In view of thaae facts, ii is not kurprisiog to bear (hat, at the recent meeting of the Farmers' Alliaaoe, a delegate was tor adopting some of the pi iuoipia of the Land Le gae. Thei e seams to be no probabiliiy ot any "let np" for these tilleis ol the soil. The cou.mit:ee who have been reviaiig the English version of the MEW 'fXnAXENT have at length fiuiahed their work. Tbat this haa been no light toak is shown by tbe fact tbat it waa begun in IS70, and that fur foor days in every month ainoe that timeuthe committee have met to prt^ocad with their duti:s. This makes one year sod savtn weeks of sctual working days of seven boors each. Tbe private study tbat the members have performed to prepare thenualvM for the monthly me tings »nnot te atimated. The movement for the reviaiou of the New Teatament was initiated by the Convocation of Canterbury, Bishops EUicott and Th:rl- wali aad Deana Aiford and Stanley being iis chief iustigators. An extraordinary oppesi. tion to the whole scheme was raiaed by tbe Ct nvocalion of York, headed by Archb.shop Thompeon be elidn't like the idea of the Bible " being laid on the table of the ana- tomiat aad subjected to thia rude process " and he "begged for breathing time before they sent thmr beloved Bible to the crucible to be melted down and recast." This feel- ing waa largely shared by tbe older lay members of tbe Episcopal Church, whucou- sideied that what had tetd gcod enough for tbem wu good enough for their cbildieo. It waa explained to them that, although the New Testament might have been origin- ally inspired, its translators clearly were not, and that numtruus aud important ad- eLtions snd errors had crept into the text tbat the faults, m the light of modt rn scho- lartbip. were eaaily eiadicable that mil- lioos of copies of the B.ble are being scatter- ed yearly through tbe world, SLd that it waa an aboolutei sin to mislcMl the people iLto whose bauds these erroneous books are fnt. Theae arguments a ere of no avail » ith tbe Exeter Hall clau ot religiunists, and their "hoes," Lord Shaftsbury, avowed an unconquerable hostility to toe notion of having tbe Bible " dilated and Frencbified." Tbe Jonvocation of Canterbury, however, waa not to be deterred by his lordships fears, and a working committee waa choaeo with power to appoint tbe members of the Reviking Commute, who weie to be "emi- nent lor scholarship, oo matter to whateyer nittiun or religious body they might belong. " Tbe men seiectad were Dr. Auguf, Arch- oishop Trench, Dr. Eadie, Pi of. Hort, tbe Rev. W. G. Humphry, Prof. Kenneay (ot Cambridge), Archdeacon Lee, Dr, Lighttoot (now Bubop of Unrbam), Proi. Miliigan, Prof. Moulion, Dr. J. H. Newman (now Cardinal), Prof. Newth, Dr. A. Ronerte, Dr. Vance Smith, Dr. Soott (Dean of Rocbeator). l.r. Scnveoer. Dr. Tregelle. Dr. J. C. Vaughan (now Dean of L:andaff), and Prof. Wis'.cott. A little later Bm« additions were made to the number, includ- ing Buhop Wordsworth (of St. Andrew'^), Dr. D. Brown ot the Free Cuurch College, Aberdeen, and Dean Menvale. Cburchiaan and Di»sentir, Prelatist and Presbytenau, ludSLdent aud MethtKlut, Bp'.ist and Pcdobaptut, the Auglioan, the Lutheran, ana the Rsiormed, they who em^jLosiza di- vine sovereignty and they who put the streu on humau ircedom, they who see oniy unity in tbe godhead aud who reco^jnize plurality as well aa unity, appear alike in toe liats of the meu empl.yed. Cardinal Newman tlecliued to aasist, aud death and other causes brought down the average attenaance during tbe ten years to sixteeu. The proceedings of ibu committee uave lcen kept as secret aa possible, but ink- ungs oi tome of the ouanges have got abicad, aud it is whis^iea that the verses in the ninth chapter of St. Mark, on which ia founded the luea of the good old-fash.oned fire-and-hnmstuue hell, are to be omitted as spurious, and that the last twelve Verses tis the same gospel are also to te om- mitted or materially altered. Piobob.y tue aUeratiou that will jauae most cautroversy will be the alteration of ibe woidlng of the Lord's Prtyer, in which ;he words ' from the evil one " will be sub- stitutc-d for the Words "from evil" This will at onc« give new life to THE DOCTBIKE OF A PEB80NAL DEtlL, which baa so languished of late. Scoffera think, however, that it will be very unfair CO encourage tbe devil in his depadatious on the humau race, and at the kame time to deny him a place in which to incarcerate and tarment bis oapbvea. TUE FAMOLS MIDDLE PAKK STl'D, fonodel by Mr. Blenkiron, is now oi^pera- ed, the founder's sons haviug dcteimiueu to give up their basiocss. When Mr. Blen- kiroa d ed nine years ago, a grand sale took pUiCd, at which 1U5 yearlings brought about Illl.OfX) 139 mares and foala and 70 mares without toals brought about $340,000, and 12 sires were disposed oi forahout $175,000. The first day t-i the present sale showed little difference in the average prices between then and now. It was remaiked tbat the buyers this jtar were nearly all colonists or foreigners, Australia, the Cape of Good Hope, France, Germany, Spain, and Den- mark being represented. Oae of tbe mares put up was tlie dam of tbe unfortunate Blue Gown â€" Baa Bleu, by Stockweil out of Vexation â€" but, on account of her great age, ahe did not fiad a purchaser. The highest prico, t7,50O, was paid by Mr. Malapert, a Frenchman, for Czariua, a King Tom mare. Kusctte, the cheap* st mate, but by no means tbe lowest priced, was bought for tbe Cape ol Good Hope^ Sbe boasts three Ddr- by winners in her pedigree- Lord Lyon, 1'horroanby, and Plenipotentiary â€" snd sbe is half auter to Bend Or. Some -of tbe Eugliah sportsmen have been having a good aeasun. At Duppiin, carriaa tka aaan a( caivad ia aolaal wariaiab flakaafewktao laa tkn fartjr daaia te kia tlaa. Oaa of ihca waa wil^ a yaaag kiaiaaa wko h lasattad Wa glMK. aad wkaa iuURwdadkikar M^akakalf. Aaa kept Ua Iâ€" i^iiaiat wltk tka raak atar, bat foagfct kia witk avactad boa aa •â-  to gi va bka i**ry efcanar. IV laara tka n.- qaiaita art of fcasiag af tUa paaf aaskw ooata fifty fraaea a kaaoa, aad tka faa far peraiitaioB to try aa aaMalt af araia} oo kia ia twiea tkat aaoaat. Tito Mattci't new opaia, "mabia de oavs," ptodcoed at Har Majaaty'a, ia a ejataapti- ble melange of old idaaa. It is aiaatjnl'y oobventioilal aad ooamoaplaaa at aiag after siKh a maateriiiaoa t f imgiaality as Bmte's •' Mefiatofele," it waa laociTed by the Loo- doo orttia with aa iapatiat-oe that peiiloas- ly bordaiad oa disKast. Maitai is a fl^ppoat aiad tinaatly oompoaer who hsa writtea a nomber of aoags of a sort sore to be lopalar in drawing-rooms, but ahoia atterly incapa- ble ot ooeraiic composition. Tbe aielody to which he owes hn flctitiona fame ia tha " Noa e ver," which to long d.viJed tbe affao.ii'Bs of amatear aingera with the " Ma ilen'a Prayer" and other sentimental nonaeus Mattel wrote it at Hemboarg after be had Uen cleaiied out at the gaming table, aud so:d it lor 200 francr. lUs pab lishcrs have air. ady made £6,000 to £8,000 byitsaale. It was theirsnbveniion of £900 which iuduccd Mr. Armitt to jntMlaoa his opera at Her Msjaty's. â-  â-  â€" â-  â-  â-  â€" â-  » Aronnd Oar 8tr««U. (Prom tbe Toronto Truth 'Ere you see another line of my views of things in print, a new Mayor will be tiectcd fcrtbe -Queen City of the Wea»," anl a new Couccil likewise. With regard to ihe mayoralty I ha^e a few words to offer. Ia the first pUce, Mr. Aid. Close it not the idol of my heart for two or three yry good lea- suns. I don't hke his cooLection with tbe Woodride property at all â€" no more than I like his evidence before the Railway Cjm- mi sioo. In the seoood plsoe, he is guilty of an attempt to ball-doi the Cosaervative ehctors of Toronto, by first getting ap a conven'.ion for tbe purpoae tf openly intro- ducing party p. Ittica into oar mooicipal elections, and in tbe second place manipula- ting the Ward " bosses " snd wire pullers, in sncb a way as to give himself tbe uomina- tioo. If be is elected the case will sUnd thus: â€" Moaiiuatioo for Ma} or. Aid. Cose nominated byâ€" Ald.Cloaeâ€" Moonded bv Aid. Cluee â€" A convention ot'Osisting f Aid. Close, comes to the conolasion that the best nan to rule the City Council for 1881, is Aid. Close. Carried nnanimr.asly, amidst the wildest cheering by Aid. Close. Of MR. M'lltritRICH I have but little to ay, and that little is like the I usiness end of a bee â€" very much to the point This gentleman poies before the electors of Toronto as an ind-ipendent candidate, and why Because he knows to a dot how many chaLow a Orit ha« inToron- to as a Giit pure aid simple. Becsoie be knows that as 1:100:: a Gnts chance against a Toiy â€" even if. that Tory is as fossilized as tbe Onondaga. Giant snd so poor tbst he can't stand alone So what docs this chsrmin^ly ingenuous Ward po itician of the Grit pei suasion do? He comes oat as an Independent; for- sooth cever dieamiog of carrying his own patty vote straight. Ok, no. He would never be guilty of such a wicked thought aa tbat. No more would be dream of carrying tbe "louse fish " by denouncing Tory con- ventiona and party candidature, or would he think that the said loose fish held the bal- ance of power between the parties I should ay not. But tete are tick tax, 1 mean tacttcs, and I suppose tbat in the dirty trade of politics snytbing is fair tbat " tcores oae " for }oa and pu'sa nail in tbe other man's political ctfEo. The third in tha field ia MR. JAME.S BRirrOX. " Biit ns never shall be slava," and Mr. B. evideut'y acta on that principle, for in tpite of two or lhre previous defeats, he Comes up siLiling sgain, and announces bis determination to str.ke ano'.her blow at tbe partizan spirit which is uppibg ail the viji from the health of our civic iustitutions, snd is leaving his fellow citizens at the mercy of a band if brigands (metaphorically speak ing), wbtrse only thought u of eqaandcriug tbe city's money on lueleu water aorka, and whose only dreams are of champagne lunches at tbe public expente. Mr.Britton's intt-griiy ai a private ii.dividnal is Wili known aLd his probity as a public man stands untarnished. As tbe Chairman of tbe Markets' Cooiiiiittee ^e wss the projec- tor of tbe Cutle Market Scheme, which scheme he carried to a succe«sfnl termina- tion, with cred:t to himsilf, snd piofit to his tellow.citizens. As a party man he has always {(iven an independent support to Sir John A. and the Conservative party, but be ii too liberal a man, not only in poUtia bat in roligion, not to see seme good in everybody, no oiatter how mach hia opioious may d ffor ss a whole. He has always been one of the foremost in charity, without the least regard for creed. That a good work was to be done has always been enoU)^h for bim, no matter whether the hungry one wu Cathol c r Protatant. He ia not a brilli- ant speaker, but Le is a good busineu man, aud Toruato bu had far worte Mayers than he would make. THE ALDERMAillC nominations have given the bat exhibit of tbe n^ht claa of men we have had out fur aome years, aad if the people do not do their duty and throw out some ot he nselas oLa (and I coald name them it would, but Wouleln't) I for one will be awfully disgaat d. Tuere are some ex- Aidermen offering, and among them are tome who ought to go ia with "whooping" nisjori'.ies, among them MR. TOM DATII8 tie Irewer, who in the council ia the right man iu the right place- He is not one of tl.oM who are veiy subject to "labial ex- plueiona " or in other words talking a great tieal, but when he wu there before he rov- ed himself to be a great worker, botil in council and committee. •fH*j' • "UiiT «rMo waa HUM* anuMkai pttn ooratt \siSRrjmsims^ aM ky a larfa aa|ar4r, w iadgaaU* ai^ aad I caoaMaally driak a ^aaa af kaa ayaalf. b«t I woaida't ka pail t» 4riak aigjikiag •a Ktw Taar'a dai tliaaaa Ikaa aafla. Hk»ifitaa«a*nltoiMli|r Iha pial tfu t giri te IWaato. Bat I aaatel ny Ma^ far tkaprst ti aa t giriiaalaatfcafcaal^ aad I aa qaita aaaa iba vfll !â- Â«â€¢ â- â€¢ wtea «â-  ka taUa. Who ia akef Bat wka* aa aid â- Bfaw I kava kaooaa, pissnfctag away oa tka ttap waaai aaatoa. Did I kaav yai aajr Aatapt AllrjAt. Happy Now Tear. Pain. Pbt, Jb. •^ OMig* Bbot- MM* UWa, Wt» WOBBi, A«» No oaa will diapate tka raak of Oaom EUot aaMBg tka aovalisU af ktr ax. Ia Eoglaad tkof» kava baaa bat tw* waaaa wkaaa aavala have gainad a plaea ia Ka«liak Uteratars, lat "Bvaliaa'and "Prida aal Fnjadiea" will bear aucompartoa with tka bat work of Oeorga EUat. Yaaa aga it waa tka fashioa to apaal^of Oaonca Bliot aa tka worthy rival of OeofsaaaaMr kaMiae ha modifiad tke eatimatioB m wkick tha clever and aadaaaaa PMaakvaa|an waa once held, and thoiagh the ckarm of her atyla ean never ke aaaairated, it is evident tkiat her repatatioa aa a noveiiat laa graatly daclinad dariag tha paat twaaty yaara, and no ceol critic woold now tkiak of comparing the cm .a c /lunriag of " Ineliaaa" with the broad and maaten^ caavas of " Middle- mareb. " Oaorga Ebot is not only reorgaiz- ad aniveraally m the firet among female noveUsta, bat ahe ia ranked arith the mu- ten of J£ngliah fictioa, and is held by many lo b] the peer of Thackeray and even of Sett It hM long been the fashion t sty of Gaor„e Eliot that her genius waa easentiaily masculine, aud it is said.that her firat pub- lisber.to whom sbe aupsraonally uakaown, firmlv believed tbat the "Scenaof Clerical Life' was written by a man. In the attri- bute of strength G««rge Eliot's novels Buy be looaaly said lo be masculine, tboagh this implies, aad wilhaat sufficient reason, that strength is exclusively a characteristic of maaculine geniiu. Uoqaationably ahe had this quality. Sbe was uot confined, u are many novelists, men aa^well as women, to a canvas large inough only fcr three or four figures, and hr creative power wu not ex- hausted in drawing thoee. In her more im- poruot works she introduced lu to a grand gallery of portraits, eveiy one of which bad its own and iti iking merits. In "Middle- march," which ia tome raspecta is her greatAst work, there arc a doao people, any one of whom is a distinct creation, and all of whom are painted with a power aud fidelity which ouly a muter of fiction could display. To pau from such a book to even so tinuhcd a study as Hawthorne's "Scarlet Letter," ia to compare the jrsnd canvases of Tintoretto with the cabinet work of Meisiouier, No other English novelist hu been thus lavish of power. "The teeming brain of D ckens gave us conntleu carica- ture* but even iu "David Coppertield," the poaaible people, those who seem oapable of Mlf-sustainid life, are very few. Sir Walter Scott Uvished his best efforts on a few cen- tral figures in each one of his novel*, and filled in the background with a bo»t es lay figures, of little more individuality than be- longs to the "First " aad "Second Citizens " of butorical drama?. Geer^a Eliot did nothing feebly. She gave aa idnoli care to the supernumeranM u to tbe leading actors of her novels, and the result is a sustained and uniform strength that acts tbem apart irom all other works conceived on anything like u broad a scale. There wu, however, oi^e obaraoteristie of George Eliot which aros distinctively masesu- line. There is no lack of wit and earcum among women writers, but Oeort,e Eliot ia tbe euly woman in whose novels we find the purest type of humour. The bamour dia- played, perhaps consciously, by Mrs. Poy- ser, and, certainly unconscioualy, by the de- lightful Mr. Brooks, is utteriy unhke ony- tiiiug that any other woman writer hu given un. This is one trait of George Eliot which fully justified her mascaliae name, and might have excused a careleaa critic in mis- taking iU wearer for a mai Tbe femininity of George Eliot was, on the other oand, viaible on every page of her boooka. In nothing wu it more evident than in her in- ability to draw a bero who was at onoe noble and manly and real Her pet heroes â€"Adam Bede and Fehz Holt and Daniel Deronda â€" are distitctively women's meu. They are u good and u impouible u tbe heroa of Mr. George Macdonald, whoae genius is typically feminine. WLi.e George Elliot's women sre irresistible â€" for no paint* er hu ever excelled the long liat of female portraiU beginning with Dinah and Hetty and ending with Owendobneâ€" her men aie unreal Justin proportion u sbe strives to Louimeud them to oar admiration, aad her greatest literary failure ia that intolerable prig, Deronda. 0«*-dapbiB9«»lil:H^ SSarCr'**** lia a faakiaakta g tfih^ aaiaea a tLa I i 8K 8aa Pumpi lUar a tekta »( wkisk awii yaatklal y aycn Waia aiigmad ateaaaa elderijr, kaudataae aaaa, a OLuqaia of fias. Aak«ttateaUgaof ikafuaa dlipata araa, saA tka p ii4 ia aaitaavakajr waanfanad lo tka aa^Mcaaa mma4m^ ky^ for arbiiratiOB. HiaeLcaieaeuragadona oi tka pteyen; kat watda aaaad, and tka aiaklaf auaok tha a^UaM (ka teea, Tka â- arqaia aeU. attnlbr t "OtOr kksi^, a^ eikaa tka ai» a af taa \mmM, ThajrowM Ma, »|ab«tec af kia faUjr, waa prt^alB iiir^^ apoapa^kaa tka asasaaia taaa tfed akd*** r^hiV aad layliad s " Wa lAall aaid Cur ta* la oaaahall ba loadad, tkaotkcrta^ty- bUadioldad, ahall ekooaa oar a w apaat Tha piatola wara aant for, tka f a t afcl okoioa aada, aad tka loaded waapoa faUt* tha let of tka aoblaL Tkat day tl|a lifaieia Lbody of tka yoaag gaablar waa boaaa Iroa tka dicar'a takU Saak waa tka Okaaaliar da itt%, a aaiqaia of Fnaeai, ^Mm af tka liohaat aoblea la ika lalaad at Saa P jadaa*. la tkoaa tcrribia daya of tka auasaora ika ahavakar fail aadar tka kaiCa of tka tefati- atad UaekiL Tka aaiqaiBa aacapt^ m gaiM witk har daagktar, a akild, aad foaul a refuge in PailaeialpkML wkata aka aabaa- qaeaily marnad Mr. De Braail,a r eh -aar- eiaat. Thara Mil*, da Sevra giaw ap a lovaljr {ooag girl. At that tiaa tkara waie aaay ' r aao h olfiona in ABNttea. Oaa of thaa, Cul Dand, beoama aaaaiorad af tka beaaU- fol voang Creole, Diamad kar aad took bar to rronoe, where ha introdaoad har at tha ooort «jf Joaaphiaa. 01 taia aaioa waf« boi^ two oaoghtar^ Ceoalia AgMs Uartrada David and Marie PaalUia. The fiiat waa bora at Toars in 1801, and ohnateaed ia tka great cathadrai oi tbat city. Her god- father wu tka Baroo de Vaublao, and bar gudmothar tha Cuontaa da St. Leoo. Qen. David sat vad in tha Italian ""r*'y ander Napoleon u an adjutant commaiidaat. He was a favorite oi the Cemican, who, dar- ing the £,j ptian campaign, prasentad him with a magniticent sword. Aiur his death, in 1816, Miss David returned to PuUadel- pbia, married a wealthy Amerioan and oaAa souto. A few day* ago the arriter had tka plaa- sura of visiting thia lady on Jackton straat, in New Orleana. Though 76 jreart of age, she looks toaroely 60, and rataina atill the traoa of that baaaty which attractad the admiration of all who beheld. har in har youth. When uked to describe aome of the scenes she had witnessed, tbe lady aaid "Ym, I uw Napoleou 1. onoe. I went with niy father, Ocn. D.4vid, to tna Toiler- ies, and ha poiuiad oat to ma tka cmparor walking in tbe garden. I waa qaiM a child then. My father told ma to look at tbe great man, and to cry, ' Viva I'tmperear ' When I Old so, be slopped me aod said ' I am not mad with you, but I wiab thia to make au impression on y oo ' " On another CKcaaioa, whan I wu going to Vtrsailla, I aw Louu XVill. I aat in a nunnery at Vuiaai Ies, and afterward went to live at Bordeaux. Tnere I saw the daagb- ttr of Mane Antoinette, the Dnchea of Aogouleup, who had jaat returned to France. All I can rememoer of tke aoene is that there waa a great crowd, and that the horses were taken from the carriage, whioh wu palled by men. The reins were ribbons, wuich Were bela by young ladies, who were corered w.tli fieurs de lis. ' One day when I wm girl of fifteen, a beautiiul lady came in a oarnage to visit my grandmother, Maeume De Breuil, who rt oeig- biz.d the visitors, whom she had uot aeeu fur yearr. It was Madame Jerome Boua- porte. The marquise said ' I hear that you are married to au Italian Prince.' ' N u,' she re]lied haughtily, '1 am Madame Bonaparte, auid I will die Madame Bonaparte. Toe wx man married to my hnaband ia not Lu wife. I am.' "I eaw Jueeph Bmajarta many tima ke often came to visit tbe man)uise. I have of tea heard my grandmother uy he wu one ul the moat unaasomiug men she ever met, and Jerome was just like a boy. It wu uiffi.'ult for him to become dignified when occuion demanded." â- om PBKaAL ractruAifl •»» «» WKIao WIT, aaya " Ha wu a maa «• bat vary (aU of gaaeroo, i^^, oa aoaw a n aa iu a used ha^ « trards oaa ul kia ColomU ' tkaaSjarkad takaa huT^hS,' Caar ardoad a taview, smj^* ed h m at tha head of his rJ man, too, who aaold unbe^ » lat^Apol a Mjr, •hotoij hataaf, waa aarpriaed bv k^*H^ iMMr â- â- â- â- â- â-  i l a a tk. CtT S aiady te,tka a a ain g that .tT; aapaJaiaaf kar aiaten „, ' " tka'^ky. »a Am rapUed l»^t â-  Gliartowait,'aDd went^^' ProaaaUy aka kxtkad up «g^ aav tta aarvaat atandinJ a-tJT 4oor wkkk waa atill wide oaT**] i| te aaiqaa aad plame wss^Il^i ora of the Emperor. He hJ*** kavfoad news of ker s.n, ,k» aad kad baaa ilL He wm ' bospavar, of intentional disre^^i bat a Biodifled appreciation T^V Oaaaial who w.. Police.,!'!^ Patankorg for a slort iim. T^ ta hu eoat. The General iJ^X vary aUiad man. and wa» tbe 0?i fa batt, ao his Majesty wu *?« night at a court bail to seBHT acarekrf a thief whohadTnL"" af P«tar the Grat.'"t.i finding this sutue i,V plaoa, aa any one else won d h«.* [alt aortofied .t the Uu^h i!N hiok, and determined to be revTILi OWB way. Shortly afterwora 2!' aakoonoed to bU imperial m^aH^ tka theatre, that the W.Lter f^ Un. The Czar roae hastily u, tli eoafla^ration, and on finding ih»t^ maaur had prcumed to retauT! •ogaat aelf, aant him to refiectTl" cratsoe la Siberia. Finally h. Jz* faitkfal koabaud, bat he w'm t^' wife and vary jealous. Her Mii-T ' awara of this, and nnfortunat^jT" ekiavooa. Whenever, therefor* J!" to gat rid of au officer who i^* aha oommandeJ him to dance wnT so tare u sbe did ao he vai Caocuas. Toe Cx ir's persomi ^^L" aoklierly and simple. He «, "t" with extreme moderation, %^ hia aniform oo a tent bed la Ui,,./ only a military cljak to ^^ allowed his aon, the present £«nJ!r' 000 a month while traveii^j^* Empress spent money so Vii^. ' azpcnaes tor oue nigiit tl.sx ^^ WtJ^l Hanover exceeded £1,600. H« ^,7151 largely, but bis peraOual waLt«Bj,.'j cost little indeed. 1 rwai II 1^ te tfcioa BMtM. "^•"of^TSSur • •Pâ€" ^-t, wMkont paying lor tka aanaonp- L^oTa^^**^^**' b..qucnt 'gl^'^l^on. VOL. icu tin**' -- -lion .baoaent m^'*^ â-  line $50 00 37 60 15 (10 8«0 4 00 SO 15 75 25 8 .tiasTtioaP" ;-h.-aq«-;*!r^t.r.ekonedby spied anu y^. L» â- â€"- __â€" itj Without tlT1^»SUrd till for- wui t« r~ ^,1 t„n„tory oflS e of pub- the Thors lay thil^ pablieatioq. Proprietor. /BtfTLBPQg. 77 W.3d 5 S^ lAL BUSINESS DIRECTORY. Spiwale Carter, 18, Stxrgeonf Accoucltotiro So. HaM; residence at le. Medical aSit.17.1880. 1-y iClAN. 8UBGEON, ilCCoCCH- titf. i»i»L â-  aXljaiv, Owen Sound. r__j£iUers'B building, over Robin- fonlet 8toe«t- l-.v 1RTEB9 ^^ ATTOBSEYS-AT Solicitirs in Chanceiv, Conv.y ' Owsa Sound, have resumed at Offiee open every Tlmr-dav. h ElflNENT FOLKS. r Crown J. W. FaosT, Attorney. LL. 1!. 1 les MasaoB, txKBand ATTOBXEV AT LAW, er io Chaaoety. Owen Sound. 1890. 1-3 Sanitary Saform. WUOHEB id the giri, lookiag ' I'm afraid I've loot ay wayâ€" I saw a b^kt here, aad bo otiiar bunoe Bear â€" I came by the uain â€" is it Verv far?- ' "Noi It ia straight akw« tka road," aaid Raport, rather roughly. It wm T"BTTlh-^ Bote than annoying to ba dktarbad te faC work, and to be mag ap at aaak la kaar ia each a tnfle a a laat-w*y. "Botâ€" iaitvayterT' plishannt of taia aoat daairshia aad, bat osily Budep exoaptinaal a a rt iiii i as ha»a thay been psaotioal vr agnaiaaral. If tka aaw davaa caa ksiaaa tka toto i^a|t.apaa akaa* ael, aw M to eaavert aay ea^ailaakla pa*^ tioo af tha vaat poaa into "Wi rt te i faas^ lAaiaaaatawill raak aaeagtfcagtaat kâ€"a- lamara of baaai ily. laeiaaa aaya aoac- whaca: Hitek yoa/ w^^ ta a ater. Ada- vioaiaatntaw^asBkiaially Ikafraatida^ M tbay awaa alaag aor skoiraL Ban ta tkat. da^ It wood sktoogk Obavartaa aad asi i aa af ty, ta â-  â-² WKKX s Bao or HAaaa alokk THRKB TOKS. There most have been a great many timea tbat weight of hares left on the atate tbe damage done by tnem to tbe crops in tha neigh bourhewd must have been euormoas. It u hard to cOLOeive a lamer kind of sport ibao a battue of hares. Oje mi^ht as well hre at a lot of hay ticka. Lord 8eftoo,With a party of oix guns, killed 7,8u0 bead of came in hve days, and in Kenr, tbi- Dnkeof Eoiuburgh and his party lagged 2,700 »v»nl lu a week. To the great delight of Parii, Victorian Sardoa has given op his attempu to convert the stage iuio a lecture platform, and gone liaek to the cumpoaition of comedia. " BrvoacnsR, whioh he wrote in oollaboratioi^ with M. N. jao, haa been welcomed with aa aftiaioa that must more than make amends for tbe diaauU failure of " Daniel Bochat." The play a ganaiaaly witty, inteaacly amusing, oaa attogelher free from even a snapiciou ul tka didaetie vcte in which Sardon haa coo- evived aauat of hia later pieoea. Aaather aaw play has not bcaa a forta. At tka Qyaaaaa, 'â- ua BBAVKs aaaa," OoadiBataod M. Koaiag, t^'XtJ iy «a tta ttiat prodhctiaa. Tka arttas wtta every deain to Txtsaasta tka oiaaMar, aaeaa M. Guadioet of writiac ok aeataly aad wiU a taradity imanSt a KaKBY rirut will be a gietft loss to the community mout- aiiy speaking, in his mind no more will that massive iuUlect make itself felt within those sacred walls on Front at. No more will that musical voica, be raiaed in ardent uetense of the ooloarad population of He. John'f. No more will tnoae eloquent gesinre-, more expreaive than aords, be used to signal a fr.end, that the man with the do(j has srrivei and is out side waitimr to see bim. I feel that I am breaking dowS a I thmk over it, aod reaeier I have cause lor my re^^reta, I never loved bim as 1 ought to have, aud now he U retirmg fioio the oonncit, I feel that we "may never look upon bis like at,ain," tt Amc Mm laeArfmm. Hj Chiis'.nus it gone aud MBW VXAHa DAY U coming. Tbe cuatom of vUitiag is this year ravived, and everybody annonooa hia iniention of turumg himaelf tor tbe aoaoe into a combjied walking o. ff^a-pot and cake baaket. Toe yoang l^iia wiU of coorae looK beautiful as tney always do oa auch cocas oa and with their bewitching sstilea wiU be almost enoagh to teapt a barmitto take a drmk. Bat xirla, don't do it. Baoiab wine from yonr tablaa enUrely, for aU yoona men are not strong, ali yoang m«, aJTaot aemnLla, otd above aU moat yoang men in the preacnce of a praUy girl, (like yoiraelf for â- oatauce) tiuoluUiy coapalled by some â- yafcnoaa feabnp, oi chivalry, to do nwUv â- a* a tbey ore told. Hiie ,oa^?- broinari Or a lover? U Joo how woold yoo hke to aa hia rialas aadlteahaS antiraly aaaidaitL oii^ s" ^si^^i*^ OHAFF. Aaton have to face the mnaicâ€" that is, the music of the orohatraâ€" aad some of it ia veiy bad. An eelitor who wm told that his last crude WM h clear m mad, said " Well, that ooven the ground, anyhow." "I'm a man of few words," uid Preoder- gast. " True enough," replied Fogg, " true enough; but yaa never ure of repeatiaa them." • Jones thinks a maa ia furtaoe who ha hia will contacted after dath oidy. He ays his will haa been c^teaed ever amce he married Mrs. Jones. A Hamilton man with an ingrowiug noiL chopped hia toe off. ThU remedy uever tails. For solo at all hardwaia atores. Be- ware of imi'.atioLS. A Dutchman ays tbst his ueighbonrs are " te veist neighbours peepU dot uever vaa. MiLe little i^igs und mine hens otnis hoae niit dere can aplit, and loder day two of dem «»me home missing." A litUe gill, a few daya ainoe, addreatitaif her smter. asked. " What wm tbe chaoi To which pans « u reoeling abent to-day ' the laUer replied. " TwM a gieat piU of Dotbiog, and uo p.aoe to pot it lu. " An Irtahaan who wm naar-aightad. and r^u"'?/'^*.'".*"' ' ' i»«td that be ahould stand six pooes nearer his antaso- nut than the other did to him. and t^y were bo:h to hie at the same tima. Tbars are a many iuveatioM tkat " eoo- not get out of order, " and • will iMt a life- ume, that anybody who ahaU discover something that will get out of order, and will only last hag eaoagh to ba oi^ed home, will supply • ioog-felt Want A public appeal hM Utely baaa made for donations and subacrintiaa in aid of tke "'~-- Dianar Society." ' Deatiiuta Ckildren^ may kava homo to yoo, With ^ta^y'a^'Hi Vu face? Aad mind yoo, ay deaTthia IT aa tafrt kada^ Here, certainly, is an innooent and nraie- worthy due a nuu plot, which aU safely conapira to help aid anconrage lA^^ ' *ripP*l. fell, and tore kia clotha wbile okaaiag a stray ohickaote a n«Khboar's lot. He told hi. motherhe ka* i».n«mttog,aa by • foal. She r^ichad l.r hoaja base, and tke youth »«m oTa •tnke, Lowliag fur tke old aaa toaHTaa refeiee. ^^ "â-  flJ^h!I3E12!!.'w°'" " ^l^** Sidney Smi.h obarved how maay of tka aoateateaS men of tka worid imd beea diakSvain petaon, and, afta- naming Mvaralaa«rtbS wgaats. ha added :^M^hy, lookttS;^ d^^ ^.^J •?^" to cover hi. mind daoently with h« mteQect i. improperlf^ la 1611 Hallaad cffatMi ,.„ i mm H«rtajaki.ldkMatlaJsia5Md£r piisksd. Tka -•â€" -â€" â-  "' The London. Society of Arta rec^tly dis- cusad the feasibilty of keeping a sauitary record of every house, so that the Health Boaid ot a town ahould be able to give an mtendiug putcbaser or tenant a cer.irioate ot Its health woithineaa. Tne delMte made it apparent that, iu tbe case ot old houses especially, sufficient pertinent facts conli nut be obtained to justify such ceriiticates. It is easy to ko how greatly they might afftct the Value of piopeity and tiieretore they would prove exceediugly mucbievou^ and outrageou. if tbey were not scieniiti. cally aocuiate. And that it i. .not poaible to make them in every case, nor evtn in the majonty of taa^ Sauitary inquiry has certainly not yet reached a atage where it can point out with confiaence the exact and immediate causa of di.ease, and fix the blame lor them witu abaolute precision. We call it a science, just as wc coll political economy a science but strictly, the term is cf course luisased. it may twcome a aei- eaoe, bat the day ia yet tar off. When municipal tutboritia asaume to paa judgment on the be»lthfulnets, and conaqueutly tbe value, of the premiM. owneu by individuals, tuey should bd very sure of tbeir facta, and that they have enough of them to torai an opinion on. They oaa now point out remediable uuiaaao.-s. and palpable defect! in san.tory engineering bat if they undertook to give medical car- tificates a. to tue comparative healthful- nea oi the different houaa throughout a town, tbey would be certifying to matters about which they ore pUiuly Incompetent to form an opiaion of value. So doan phy- aiciaaa would agree on the sabjaeU But. in hi. recent addieaa before tka Amerioan Public Health Aaociation, Dr. J. S. Billings, iu President, advocated modifil cation ot the plaa suggated io London. He would have the health tffioer of a plaea obtain aud keep a brief deacriptiou of all iU houaa from a sanitary point ot view. Thia would be mere y a record of facU, to which aoividuaU propoaing to buy or rent honaa oonld have ^as on the payment of a fee. ITie Health Board would expreu no opmioo, but aiaply give a aanitary hiatory of the property. lU oonaection with sewen. the number and the causes of the deaths which had occarrcd m it, or in tbe square in which ' *•• sitaated. and other information of that sort. It would be a anitary supple- BiOBt to tU rtooid of title, and of courea mnjht have a decided effect on the value of tbe property. But Dr. BillinM'a plaa, pretty m it is in tbaory. would involve so much muinU de- tail that It would not be feaable m any mu- BMipal government en a large scale To carry it out there wouUl neetl to be a gtaat inaluplicauon of aaiitary inapeotora, aid thwr official visiU wouW become wUous to tka people. Moreover, the number of daatha oocumng m a hoaa may afford no ?*»^. !•«*'«»•«« «i iu OMidi'tion M to Si!r^'^bi^~t!r °" *••'• ^•'« the OMeaaa of which they die, and an evil name be given a dwelli., whjeh it joa not deaerve, ?«oparty oaner. wooid jmUy orv It!t!P"'t • •/»»«'"«* ragi.trat.on which pat toe valaeef their bai.diug. iu peril by •alowing ihaoria of tbe origin oi d^*^ whiob aa not yet firmly atablabed. ^^ a-^*^_'**»*!^***»"'*«fy •^Hnaa proaisM to naoaoM a( tha graataat oaaafit to â€" Ut hM atraadv demuaatrat, Y-AT-L.AW, SOLICITKK IS joery, Notary Public, Ac. Eloaned at lowest rateii on pers/ii»l [estate. Lands boucht and ^o: 1. [seller introduced flee of romuns DUNDALK. ' 21st. 1800. 1 ft i»mh X^tnt*. Ac, rm. Brow-B, 1 OF M.iBKIAtiE LICENSE: ssioner in B. B. Ac. Sncing in all its branches prom;'i!y I and carefully exe-cutcd. iMoney to Lend on Bcal Estate ?^e- Sept. i7, 188C). r. £..^iiuih. i- kBAL AG£NT AND DEAHEK I.S ey Stock, William^ford Stati.in. 18M», f Alexander Brown. B of Marriaee License-' Fire und j After usiug rj Inaursinoe Agent. Commissiouci f„j j^ 1,^;, ' *c. Conveyancer and Licensed for the Couiitv of Orey. FarmerB, _anta, and Land Sales, Punctually at- «d to and charges made very moderate, i eevilla, Sept. 17,1880. 1-v Among the royal people Forties oe four kinga up an opponent's tlt^ve ati table. Amdkkwkst, the oewely elect-.i of the Swia coofederation, shot hui on the street at Berae, last evi-uiug Ex-QcxEi laaballa of Spain takei t interest in M. de Lesrcpsii Pamuu Kbeme, and aru one o the tir to n for tbe ttock. "Money placU ,„ reap fortan::S," ahe tells her fncndi^ Gen. Garibaldi's haltbh3j]),ei,„(, reatored by hi. Tea«ieni.e on tie coMt He freiinently visits the v alonf? the coast in a canoe or small V friend, believe that he will lire ini| longer, at least. Ir Queen Victoria only kifU- tbe respect « i'h which her daughiti LoLije be.ll ha. caoaed heriielf to li n- American people for her str.'hng j., â- he wo Id not Iteea np an unnatural toward, he r for a oreech of coiuention. ise is the one female of the Kn^luh Family oulaide of the lamentc i A box shown to the world il.at she braiiu, a good heart, ^pirit and plii k. the Queen only makes herself rioicoli* treating Lervilf m ii she was btilllutt and Lutter mia. True,itsnoneof ourcjL bu' we can't bear to see so nice a /ami.' split np without ayu a fh' noly JUuf*lQ Paftr. TiEB Dnchea of Westminster, whusr ia announced by cable, but who vas m the cable sta'ee, Mistrea of the liobee Duchess of bedford i. Mi.tress of the Roir^ was the youngest daughter of thelitti fiteorge Corbet, Jr^ tinguisbed Duchea. of Sutherlasu- ir^KpTo^jj AND GENERAL AGENT I nameuhelJin anch honored remnLta,o^J^gonnd. Monev to Loan at low by many Aaierican., and inherited L.y^jntere8t. Principal parable at tlu- beauty, grsc ouaneas of manner, and cirjuKtann of years, and interest half yw- I of heart Sbe hM eeen for some yew leader of Lon on faahion, as far a^ sucht tentate is recognised of late years. T her other sisters, were wedded to Dike gyle and Leinster, and her eldest ustt; Lord Blantyre, whoae daughter is msniK Mr. Gladaione's aldeat an. Her last appearance wu at Kpaom. w hrn her Ul band s horse. Bend Or, won the Dcrbv. Okb of the wealthieat and most e-ctc: noblemen in Europe. lrince Joseph owski Duke of Uielita. recently arnvrd Copenhagen on bi. w.y to Nor«'«y, wlim proj,o8. s to end the winter in U^ar hui .tie wa acoompaoied by a uunjrrous eo nwu ti ii g of a lady compamon, a maitre chapelle, a reader, a se retarv, a hod, geon, a valet de cLambre, tworuuniuK fi men, an enormoo. mastiff, a huj;e ourang ang, two valuable parrots, aiia ei eraJ cs, fals of singing bird.. One fa von «â-  meml of h:s bouseuold, a Ben.al ti,ser, he had compelled to lave behind at bamburg, steamboat author tia poai-irelv dechned convey that retainer acroa the' s. as. Pro Sulko a ski's personal habi a are aomeVi.i; the common. He rise, at I P. M., brtskfa an hour later, and listen, to musicai ».i tions, performed by the members oi hu kaa bold until 7. From 7 to 8 taka a nap, vui i. folloiaed by more ekaaber music \.t\.\ o'doek A. M., his regular dinner hour. Hi' ing dined snmptuoualy, be sallies out on Ml accompanied oy hia Mcretary, and wain! about the town until 5, when he leurai !«{ hia hotel and goes to bed. â- ABotrr thirty -five years sgo, wh(»/iiG»l man Chancellor wu only plain Otto toc Biif macrk, a Pomeranian 'squire and ItivKtoto-l DykeSi be went out one day Bi:tlhoc:J[ ing with a friend on Kime marshy Itnd, tu which hia companion, a stout, bes vx. n CUR The Best S3 I T0.()O3.tl,l 9.000.( ft «tlmal'«if« I I Wlllrb r«OT#' (n I cau^t-n Wind III) Maunnifa. ir rb^ •Irif nf;rT rartti ' prr^*rni»d- ll n('l« iipn-i it It nriB i:pon i II IC ICeiEHliila-w |1 It Purifi-« iht It C^utem ilie ' It i*ruin'trr« I It r.irri«-« vtt il I IC •proo ilir |»J f llealthT IVrKpt] It nu* ;./. s t:. Di i:i!-"r f'f ilt.n fl:i Ttiert- ti*c y^-i *i inl i: rtn N ui' temru- 1 ta r'.*rf .-.•;.- psi:r OF si:.-i Read tr« '0L of P^fso-s you ])\\\ I your valuii: Ua buitcfiXcd aud Liver Coi cine I cvi.i bel Deaf Sir- doctors' liaud eight years, that I have lod tn d't lic'.e it'uri hf.-. -W. QVUV.' ^i or principal and interest repay- meuts, bcr of desirable Improveel Farni- I-v J. O. Sinv, ION AND PBOVINCIAL LAND eyor, Draugbtsmau aud Valn.itoi. d Markdale. Haviug purchased Land Surveyor Charles Ilaukin's of original Field Notes, Plans, structions, Ac, of all his Surveys (he last fifty-five yoar.-., I am o make Surveys in strict accord- with. Profiles and E^timate-d ig Hills, Plans and Specibcatiou« g Bridges, furuibhevl on applies, ey to Loon at 8 per cent interest, letter, or left with G. J. BLYTH, will be promptlv attended to. ,1880. Iv I'l \i. Mi: w.i- ..diiiic I whieli ^rcw my r'"'iu. :%':. iucurablv Lv 1877, 1 c iu:iu Ulood }J I J in. liC'.l ti f.*.ii| a li -i: ;.::; fair daji- w. eutirei\ ' uu;i; Mt. 1 \Vi lli.ali SiH^ 1 1 Erys'.jielu^ vour luiittL me. Ml 1. 9e«H«trai. Jaaies M. IThite, to Dr. Cameron, Owen Sound, (BE AT THE BEVEBE HOUSE, rkdale, on the last Wednesday iu 11, when he will be prepared to per- srations required upon the^moath St satisfactory manner, and upon Item*. " • 1 V I.IVK Mt^Fr.-t. V Pe«b "iii â- - Bl...i S.Ml!i ' mend n- â- :-' â-  MSl.ASi; Mt. K.I. l'i..eu Su valuab" 1"' (.!.;ui- III •.; g»t»l». rsiOlV HOXJ»E MA RKDA LE. suddenly sank" up to his armp.U Vut i^ " â€" •traggl.ngto extricate himself, the gtsi: P«'e»»~joe above hotel and thor- man shouted for help, and, seeing H.nB,- WW"^." '"° "^fitted it, the tray marck approach him very sloalyand caut ".w'^uT'l^ ^f ""' *««ommodation. ly, apparently looking out for tlu nsu.-' "" ' 1'"°" "" "gars kept. home stray mpe, pit ously appealeJ.to hiii """^e- Careful host'er. "leave the confoanded anij* idone'and a him out of the abominable swamp into *â-º L he had sank to deeply that iu siitue wisk] but in bi. moBtu ' "' ' " JOHN VAN HOKX, JI^MO. w»a goaelaaay yonaM faUoWa artkawaatbar.witkcatkavu the aii^aat iataarioa of takaa tktoaah tbe mens Witt afMd datfof dirttaall tkey akoaki kave. Yoa woaldfeal awfallr cat nf.m»mUMt joa? Aod aow C»m2 tka«gk ka »a lamiafai axpbrpr. ^tia tka paaikility of com* râ€" •Uaaely OeaDuastrated lU viOjo batk ^jmd abroad, for ia t^DdaJJ a okvioaa»jr la tka hgbt duaotaaâ€" thM^ tka pnvaMioa of diaaaa. It kM BadoalX adly ka lptd aaaaatiaUy to being aboat tka laariMi w tka avangaW Ufa whiok tka aaa- tary a akowiag t^xpaot tkat pcatty aaa it ie aot too aaak ta will im tka fatara obtain a aaatary ova riiirtaaii a 'i^lStlu^S^^L'i^."" typSdte!^ «« MM ta sAwta to disaovar aad raaava !â- *'"•â- â€¢'••, â- â€¢â€¢ ttwa ia a Rrowag mm. !!L*?. â- ?-* J~*» »i!» •-*• itoS^ Md tmt ttaaifltvbk wkiaktkata My deiir friend," » plied Bismarck, with the utmct calm, "J« will certainly never get out of ttst liol« i* body can poaitively ave yoo. IU teV^ f» what, my dear fellow, I'll save you ilttflt of suffocation by putting a ctarf ft sho' to yonr head. Thus will you die « o* more swiftly and more respectablv. ' Sua ulated to euperbuman elforv i y the imfflu* peril menacing him, the unlucky sportaU auitrived to wriggle out of thv mud » foura, and, and wnea he had recovereii !• feet, broke into a storm of vihcniesi "' proach. Herr Biunarck lUtened to liim «"" sardonic mile, merety oLser-ing, "i*»' yon see how right 1 wu, after ;iii ' 2" man for himself " and, turning Ins laci • hia infuriated companion, cooly wiOked**" in search of more game. HOTEL, SIARKDAI.E. Proprietor. Hotel ha-i bod a lar^r aJ- added to it, thoroiitthh rvt';llcl, second to none lu tin' coimtv. and attentive of-tler. Knit- nodation for commercial tra\*i- f l.«0 per 4ay. 17 l* â- aa it s i y mni ka M ii^Hi kM t*. t» f r a ri w ta uj tkaemokata JTT -T" "*â- Â« »J*aa g« iMa a pty ta mmt md aaataavM* alk«/^ ron ffamt OLaaa arami mat, an â-  DO TOO fBL A»00t CTI «oagrd«^da«'td»it. ItMyka^ Wyil I Tkara k7 tka i^alikaljtoha'wp'i^IU^ '*^*'t • iMrihia alart ^nt W part tka and ka wo«U JS**^** tka paaaata of a kw •'*^â€" nqalnag tkat wkut dUaw M* Uad, tkaaa â- ^ tka • waidd i«t*a Aaotrr half of Queen V ct ia'» " iaUa are deecendanta or htisban.ls of *if dsnto of Lord GranviUe' grandl. ntt. " What ia keU T" aakad a Lat «a S«» day aohoal teaohsr cf a Uy ia clssi Saaday. " A 4 rt with a bufr* 3a am/ repli«l the boy, ' £ir. • 1^ aaU what do you mekn, sir »" -•'«»*' tka aaak-apiiitad bat eorpnsed tas*«| "Wa Ikawdaypa uy to my m» •tfcar aantaft wkaa ka pat on a ibirtj^ • aaak batloa off, • Wall,thia is hdl.' Ita*^ aU I know aboat it." â-²ooraMNBtotkaSt PaUrsburg oon* PMdaat ta tka Otkgm OmiUe. a Sopi*^ Ctaaoilof Slata i. to ooms into ex.steiioca Boasiaat tka Saaaian new year. lhi» f*" eU U ta aany aa aU tka busioesi of* aapira ladaMdaaUy e( tha Citr, tbe l»"j (•tuiiiai tka daaiaiaw only of qoestioa^ JJ^jjTgao^ JB- «l»io« W'th Prio«3 5AFORD, Ont. PBOPBlEtoliS. ommodation for the travelling is well stocked with th' and Liqaers and the best tins. prinoessa the Casr i« exp** M «• Ua» vitk kia family in retircm««* JdaMia, naaialag Bmparor in name, " aa far m Baaaaa oiif""*^*"' nef** tkaaaraaof Bmparor a oiroamrtanoM P***" tohi*** i • â- tor. l-.v ERCIAL HOTEL. ECE-VXLLiE. Ont. I oommodious Sample llooms "**as, 4c. The Bar aud larder with the best the mi^ket af and attentive HosUer's. ATKINSON, Proprietor. ,1880. 8 WILSON, 5JR door to Eqioaitar "Twad at aay hoaae in town. Iy 1 l'i...e» Mil ' Puin» ;i: ii.y "^^v Appctit i«n.i '•:' I relieve iiic v.i.v Syrni'«i.:.li (â- â- ;•â-  al«ra» »-'iv. »â-  ' justly di-ierw S' .\l| Di.aR mi. ' and 1 Has u:i. went t" a i " u II which did iio^'i 'â- '11 vour Inuiaii 1;;. only a abort tiuioj •d, aud now my 1 can aafely n-i remedy. liySPEISIA A.\l I'Eau Sib.- 1 Vi-ars with I'ytpr kidmv umi !a:i.l ii::uiy iiuiejie-, came very bad ii'.iij 1 seut to vi.ur liottlc of voiir /iiJi| uot hesitate to am compl-tlv cul man, l.ut »»-ca I »itli Kt^tiv H' ail voiir xalu:illc uieJ C lilts I'V1KJ Di.ii: Sil; â€" I Dy-iip-ia I'l aix Indion lUood Syit over htlft-il inc. from this di"iii-i trial. •• Sole tienoial op and I.yrian. Toronto. -tUo .if Heolint: Svnip, an is well kunwii Blood Puritit r throi Plain tOmal Eatuaates fr ^| plication. Satisfi dence â€" (jueen Stre M«tkdfa«, S«pt.

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