| | TIME TABLE * STATION.- OSHAWA TIME GOING WusT, 1 GOING EAST. moda'n, 7:45 a.m. | Mail, ~ a « » Mixed, - - = 245 a.m - 335 pom. 5 5:25 p.m. | Express, . . . Eepress, - - 11:23pm. | Passenger, < . 7:17 p.m The morning express goes up on Sunday morn- 8g, tut not on Monday. WHITBY STATION. "Trains going Fast leave Whitty Station ten inates carliar, and those going West fifteen inutes later than the above, LEY MIR SORIRI 38 SA - A ERCHANTS AND OTHERS ARE invited to call at our Oilidh and ex- wine Specimens of Plain and Fancy PRINTING. All orders promptly attended to, and Satisfaction Guaranteed. NW. R. CLIMIE, - - PROPRIETOR. Guimio Cehawa, Frid: NN The Ambiticus Man; and his Prospects in North Cntario. Excessively He was not * born to blush uns his great abilities must no lofger remain latent in the comparative obscurity of privete 'ife bis high talents were evidently designed: t> shine amid our representative men, and nce destined to "Caesar was: an so is William H. Cibls, his o'erspowering elogue ring through tlie halls of our Legi At least, 30 he himself has lately discover- ed. But that the free and 1 electors will fail to appreciate this marvel ous discovery, is-a foregone conclusion. $urely he must be infatuated, to endeavor to euter Parliament at the p-esent junct- ure, as the candidate the Moderate- Liberal-Conservative-T. of North Ontario, and as the thick porter of an Administration that js fai tottering on the brink of a certain di The death knell of that party in and thin sap- lution. Ontario was distinctly sounded, on the 21st of March, 71, and in the coming con. test it will assurediy be buried ir the vault of a still smaller mivority. Exizemely an'ortunate, too, has been 2ir. W. II Gibbs in his choice of North Ontario as a stepping stone to his fat riding that most unmist in favor of Reform princi form party by the return of two ete greatness, --a kably declared les and the Re Reformers in the general election of 13 and still st i decision by the trium Thos. Paxton, with over eight haudred of a majority, and we vouchsei revocably seal the previ overwhelming ant for Parliamentary h son of W. H. Gibbs. "Yet it was th necessary taat the ridi } Conser more serie will un- sus verdicts by tie ejection of this new aspir- , in the per- iested in the eral-Consorvatives met in solemit and in their great wisdom scitled on this talentod member of the Gibl's lineaje as iticed on the altar of Certainly his prospects _the victim to be sa a hopeless cause, are o'er-shadowed with dark and lower ing clouds,' Perchance, T. N. Gibbs, M. P., may ha ¢ brother sumewhat, by unfolding t uraged his affectionate » him a little of his not over-creditable experince in that llne ; he may have told him low ofttimes the we :rstood views of the Deatli of 8. II. Cocl.rane, Isq. With regret we announce the death ef Samuel H. Cochrane, Esq., of Whitby, Crown Attorne{ for this County; which sd event occurred at his resinence on Tuesday afternoon last, 23ed inst. illness lis A sovers the was of short duration, «eld which k he contracted recently { such a'lirm hold on his lungs that all at- | tempts to counteract its ef On Wednesday was forced to disist from ¢ to his room. medical skill available, els were una- vailing. f last week he ice duties, and The together with the confine himself most careful attention, were alike unavail- iably in the conflict with death, and the patient breathed his last on Tuesday. Ie will be very much missed from the social cirele in Whitby --in which town he was | born--and will also be mourned through- out the county, his ability as an advocate coupled with gentlemanly deportment, having seeured him very many friends and-- admlrers. Decea.ed wag thirty-five years warm of age, . and leaves a i widow and three young children to mourn the lors of ah exemplary and affoctionate husband and father, Ra a aa Soa] E. M. K Guex, Esq, will address the temperance meeting on Sabbath afternoon next. ? " Ox-Lookzr/ came to hand too late for this issue. appear next week. A Correct account of the rseent re- ie) bl union at the Presbyterian Church will ap- pear in qur next. issus--not room this week. Tur ladies will find Miss Roomz's dress making and millinery rooms, up stairs, over Deering's Boot and' Shoe store, next door to Hoitt's gallery. Tue severe cold of the past winter has Mr. Taplin, of East Whitby lost over twenty-two been hard on bees; swarms, TLase bees can't improve any more "'shin- ing hours." THERE is great rejoicing in Manitoba over the re bald. was celebrated st Fort Garry, by theburn- enation of Lieut., Gov.-Archi- On day evening last, the event he ex-Governor and Riel, in efligy side by side. ing of t | Work has been commence on the Grand Junction Railread. we grading is to be done between Belleville and Hastings this out scason, the iron to be brought next , and the rails laid down in the It is expected that the road will A good thing Belleville people should ate for the " Murray Canal," next Tue Oshawa Lacrosse club Lave received ch game either in Toronto or Whitby. layed here, rounds L 4 can be ob- While as- Ir. Fitzmaurice sole on which the .. somawith } " tonewith his en homa Nad : alled to his a igh suf ou a wagon, ring g » some t Taz w largely attended, end pa fair . at y sed the weather Leing favorable. The prize list--for which we have not room in full ill be published lished 2 priucipal interest in our next was cente:- ted draught horses, in as fol- majority have hn ome by the un- | 1 Is then the old ale bribery to sarupulous use of money. e game of be repeated again ! fear not the result. Ontario base Couservativ Ve mgsirust so, still The electors of North % 3 iat al ay , forsooth, Mr. will ind any tl Wm. that conmtitu- such atter sacred rights. Gibbs has lately ency with his august presence, aud, in the columns of read from day to day, in the most eloguent of his a unanimous supp ~udured on all: sides, and, in fact, to judge from ir reports, one might imagina that it would be hope- less to oppose him. All this is too trans- parent, too much like * whistling to keep one's courage np." and 'far fron being compatible with the unvarnishied facts of the case. No doubt W. H. Gibbs highly eppreciated the right hand of fellowship extended to him by that noble body of | martyrs who are the reg: attendants of. the village taverns, and the hearty wel- | come of those who are ever ready to hur- rah and cheer at the back of any man who has plenty of money to spend among Ahem. Bat no one knows Letter than the same W. H. Gibbs the chilling rgeaption he met with from full many an independ- ent-thinking Conservative who failed # ves the propriety of importing a South ! Ontario man to represent th of North Onlarir; anl doubtless thus early in his canvass has ho begun to feel the strong cppeeition presented by that voters & ho honorel the subsidized organ, we terms, welcome -- of terests solid phalanx of iatell gre desirous of a more ir lependent and Hieral Administration at Gitawa, and who entirely- approve of the "coursa of tlieir present ropresentative, John Hall Thomp- god, Ecq:, in firmly of unwar- ranted aggressions of the present Ministry on qur most cherished rights and princi- ples. W, FI. Gibbs will find ont to his sorrow, before tho struggle is finished, that there is the most material difference between the nuproarions and fluctn ng congregations of the intcxicated bar-room crowd, and the &ntrammeled and staunch support of the honest yeomanry. "Tis an unpropitions omen to lave the rery beginning of one's public lifo stained To tale f Gibbs scems-to be rushing liead- As an Oshawa man, we {ake a y interest in hina, and now, in good li this in w long, friend il. season, wara him that he may, with honor to himself, retire from the contest, if he | would not have his political record marred .- wy such a merited rebuke to him as the | exponent, in the North Riding of Ontario, of that most corrupt and recklicss Gavern- ment led by. Sir John A, Macdonald, | Tuose wlio are fond of Salmon Trout, wil bs pleaied to learn that Mr. Garth received a supply of these delicious fish this | taorning, sud will have them twice a week during the reazon | >: : public krow somethi 2nd, Geo. _ Porter's ™ Surprise." Parties wanting Horse Bills printed, would do well to call at this office and leave their orders. I ---- ---------- Travel Rates to Fort Garry. | For tke information of any of our read- ers who intend going to Manitoba, or have friends going, we publish the following rates of passage, which we take from the Liberal, at It will be seen {hat the fare is not so high as is generally supposed. : From a circular issued by N. published Winnipeg. IW. Krit- son, manager of Kittson's Red River Trans- portation Line, we learn that on the open- ing of navigation, passengers to Manitoba will bé carried as under; -- From St. Paul's, 1st class, $22.00; 2nd, 817.00. From Duluth to Fort Garry, 1st class 19,00; 2nd, €15. Meals on boats; 50c. : dm amount of bagga nder 12, half fare. Tifue from to Tort Garry, six days. Rates per hundred lbs. These quoted in American currency. w It is expected that when the line of steamers from Sarnia to Duluth commences persons will be able to reach Fort Garry for $39, first class fare, ge allowed; children St. Paul's of freight rates. are 83 & It is time that Dawson should let the ng of the Canadian Route, of t this route to half what it was last year 815 ---------------- Joseph Hall Manufacturing Company. he The If there is one establishment in Canada icli more than another indicates ehter- » and success, it is the Joseph Hall ks in Os and the people of Eng- land would be somewhat surprised to learn that from John 0'Groat's House to Land's End there eoyldn't be found amore exten- sive acrienltural and general machine n rfacturinz business than is found in Os wa. y We have same experience as to the kind of material turned out by this Com- rany, for we venture to say that a better Gordon Press than the one we purchased last spring was never turhed out from any factory. Every tradesman who has seen it maintains it is the best Press Lie has ever come across; and from what we know, their reproductions of American patents far surpass the productions of the original establishments." We are glad to learn that this Company with its usual enterprise | as our advertisement cclumns will indi. cato has started a branch in this Provir ce and we advise every man who proposes to i 3 I to call at the Joseph Hall Agency at Point Dopglas, Winipeg Manitoben, inyest in machines of any best | "~Your communication'| Will | We believe that it is the intention | Government to reduce the fare by | ol The Hon. Mr. Maciktenzis. ! ! The Toronto Mail, €ir John A. | Donald' orgin, and some of the lessor lights which follow in the wake of the Mai] | are arising a great hue and cry against the | | Hon. Mir. Mackenzie, and all for the sim- | ple reason that the Isolated Risk Insur- Mr. Mackenzie lac- | |] " bo --of which has taken a risk on'the Pro- vincial buillings. The Hamilton Times lays the matter before ils readers as fol ande Company is President lows: -- ¢ Bat the grand charge is that which | reflects on Mr. Mackenzie's action with reference to the insurance of Provincial buildings, It appears that now, for the first time, those buildings have been in- sured, and an item of $5,000 for insurance appears in the public accounts. I: appears also, that Mr. Mackenzie while Treasurer, is at the same time President of the Iso- lated Risk Company, and that some of the buildings in question have been in- wed in this Company. Thereupon the sensitive nostrils of the Mail smell cor- ruption, nd the whole Tory press, in obedience to the order, sniff with their sensitive nostrils, and they too smell cor- | ruption very bad. Tender-conscienced fellows that they are--one would think that the political camp in which they have spent thdir lives would so have mured | them to foul odors as to have deadened their olfactory nerves. 3ut no; each in- dividual proboscis has left to it the keen scent of a virgin organ. Or is it that they | have grown morbid and have lived so long amid cerruption that they now seem to nose it everywhere 1 The latter, we think in so far as the present instance is con- | cerned, is the case and for the tollowing | reason 1. The munificent sum of five thousand dollars being spent for Insurance is divid- ed among no less than eight companies, of which the Isolated Risk, of course, forms one. a The fact of Mr, Mackenzie being President of that Company entitles him to of the profits than the humblest shareholder. When the moiety + of tha five thousand dollars received from the Government by the Company is divid- ed among all its shareholders, we presume Mr. Mackenzie's portion of 'the spoils would amount to perhaps fifty cents a year -perhaps a few cents more or less. If the act was a very corrupt one, it is quite evi- dent that Mr. Mackenzie personally will not grow wealthy on it, 3. Asthe Isolated Risk Company did its work at as low rates as any other com- pany would, it eannot be said that Mr. Mackenzie took advantage of his position to im on the Province. 4. 2» Hon. Mr, Campbe], Post: master-General (Tory), is Vice-President of the Company; Mr. M. C. Cameron and other Tories, are among the Directors. Does thé Mail mean to insinuate that these imeaculate Tories are sharers in the pro- fits of that corrupt Insurance policy 1 would give them perhaps fifty cents for the crectionof palatial residen- ces and the maintenance of huge establish- ments Let the Mail be cautious, for if it treads on sacred and houonrable toes of such men as Campbell aud Cameron-- Tories o binest stripe--it will find that even Sir John cannot save it from punish- ment. 1f anything fore lamentally weak than ¢ jure : Mr. McKenzie has ver appeared in the newspaper history of 'anada, we fail to remember it. Bitterness and malice there are but the charges made are weak to the depth of imbecility. The ist do better, or pe opl® will think J yurnals its superiors. For malic with mendacity, either T der can equal the Mail, better look pt to in k sO to 1s Cur New Covernor:Cencral. ndon (England) correspondest of y Globe, reuce furnishes the following to Earl Dufferin, which, no interest our readers:-- e event which will interest » appointment « f Earl Duf- of the ferin nor-Gefieral Dominion. I should fancy the appoint- » wise one; though it is only fair to at the igh reputation for ability, has always "been based he might evince great talents if he had the new Governor's very } rather on a general impression that opportunity, than on .any actual eviderce of stateswanlike qualities. There is a story told ®Bout his mother, that to some person she remarked that her sister, the Dutchess of Somerset, was the most beau- tiful woman in the United Kir m, and her sister, Mrs, Norton was the cleverest, | "" And "what are you I" was the natural quesfion. '" Oh, I" her ladyship replied at once, "am the most loveable." The same quality is inherited by herson; for I hear of no public man who is personally more liked by his friends, than Earl Duf- ferin. When a very young man, he wrote an account of a tour to Iceland, 'which had much of the Sheridan wit and sparkle about it, and that had a great run. Dur- ing the French occupation of Syria in 1860 he was sent out as a British Commiseion- er, and discharged a very difficult duty with cemplete success. Since that period he has taken little active part in public life. Tie would have been appointed to till Lord Mayo's place as Governor Gener- al of India, if Lord Northbrook had de- | clined the offer. His Lordship took the chair last summer at the dinner given to the actors of the Comedie Francaise at the Crystal Palace, and made a speech in French, which even so critical an avdience, pronounced perfect. As far as foreign polltics;are concerned I should say Lord Dufferin was a disciple of Lord Palmers- ton and held strongly by the Imperial con- nection. . Gre ! Ae The catalogue alone:of-the British Mus- eum consists of 1,200 printed volumes at Savannah. Tar last Fenian Raid on the Manitoba frontier cost the Federal Government about £90,000. PHILADELPHIA has over 200 acres of ground. devoted to parks within the city | of Limits, THERE are two thousand rag pickers in | the New York streets, some of whom are | well off, » Ix Olio, if property was equally divid- | ed, every man, woman and child would pos sess over £1,000, Busiys commences to look brisk! again--tiose who do the most, are the ! judicious advertisers. . 8 Taz fall wheat in the Western States has | sufferd severly by the severity of the winter. _ A Chinese newspaper has entered npon its two thousand volume, It has lost all its origninaligubscribers. | SrLver Jewelry is manufactured to a | large extent now, and is quite fashionable | in New York and Philaduiphia, Two new lines of Atlantic steamers nre proposed, one to run between (Glascow and New York, and the other betwean Tiver- poel and New OF | and ought, on its merits, | & election laws. peas and new potatoes are in the | PARLIANENTARY SUMMARY. Oa Thursday, Mr. Dlake introduced a Bill providing for the holding of the elec- | tions on one and the same day throughout the whole Dominion. He has also given notice of another, giving the Judges the power to decide all eontroverted elections, The latter is a most important measure, to roceive the unanimous sanction of bofh Houses of Par- liament. The papers and correspofidence eonnected with the negotiations of the Washington Treaty were laid upon the | table. Mr. Cartwright introduced a Bill for the better protection of navigable streams and rivers; and Sir John A. lonald gave notice that he would introduce a Bill to a similate the law of Canada with that which exists in England, with regard fo Trades' Unions, which authority to be illegal in this country. In reply to Mr. Young, 'Rir George E. Cartier said it was not the intontion of the | Government to proceed daring the present year with the construction of the proposed \ | defences; but the policy of building fortit | fications and the granting of an lmperia guarantee having been the result of agree- ment between the Imperial and Canadian Governments, that policy could not be abandoned unless with the consent of the Imperial Government. : In reply to Mr. Young, Sir John A. Macdonald said it was not the intention of the Government to introduce any general They might propose some small amendments, but they did not co template altering the laws so that elections in each province should take place on- the one day. Mr. Young then gave notice that lhe would introduce a Bill to provide for hold ing 'elections in each Province onthe same day. A number of motions for retarns ragard- ing matters were passed. On Friday, Mr. MaGill introduced a Bill to incorporate the Bank of Hamilton; and Mr. Mills to abolish dual representa- tion, Roports of the Department of Public Works and Militia were presented. Mr. Holton drew attention to the fact that a portion of the documents referring to the Washington reaty conference had not been prodnced. Sir John tried to make it appear that all had been brou Mt down which eould be given in the public interest; but questions by Messrs. Blake and Mackenzie brought replies from the Premier which made it evident that some of the despatches had been wrongfull kept back. = A resolution was carried, appropriating v £45,000 per annum for.five years, to de- fray the expenses of the Geol of Canada. : : A motion of Sir.T. Hincks, to relax Leth : ler certain extent the law rest of Dominion notes, in or >] 1 + o » « r Banks to circulate more large notes of smaller den ations, was ied after considerable débate. On Monday, Hon. Mr. Blake introduced a Bill to provide for the trial of Contro- verted Elections before Judges Mr. : Harrison introduced Bills Sills ! Printing and Publishing to incor- perate the Mai Company; to extend the law as to the car- ms; to extend the rying of da 8; it to appeal in criminal cases, and for rerous Wen other purposes. Im reply t Governmen was not the in- ) ies, members of the tention of Gov flour, whea coal; that : of United es and Canada w the western bound for fishi anted to residents in i Canada only; that a naval force w heretofore, protect our gulf fisheries ported by the Imperial Government; that a wharf would be built at Prince Arthur's landing, Thunder Bay, the e mer; that a sum of money would be voted for removing rocks which now impeded he navigation of Fraser River, B. C. A number of returns were ordered to bo brought down. Which the Human and which the Brute. The Dubuque (Iowa) Telegraph vouches for the following singular horse story: On Monday evening last a man whose we could not learn, was seen wending his way up Julien avenue, leading a mare by the bridle. He was badly intoxicated, so much that he staggered, and it was some- times more than he could do to maintain his equilibrium. The mare kept a close watch on his movements, and whenever he came near falling, the mare would grab his collar bet ween her teeth and hold him up. She did so noless than adozen times in the presence of several interested gpec- | tators. The drunken man fell down in the street once, but no sooner had he done so than the animal grabbed the back of his coat and set him on his feet again. When a little beyond McNulty's house, the own- er of the mare met an acquaintance of his who was also drunk. They engaged in conversation, and while talking, bumped against each other, and the man first edt % fell. up by the mare, and just as soon as she had finished her job, she turned round, and let her heels fly, in a ssvage manner, at the man who knocked her master down. Fortunately her heels misred the mark. ud- He was immediately picked A Minister not long ago preached from the text, "Bo ye therefore, steadfast!" but the printer made him expound from " be ye there for breakfagt. Tre Rev. Norman Mcleod, D. D, , the popular editor of '" Gool Words," has raade arrangements for visiting Canada during the summer. + Tue depsit of rock salt reported to have been foundiin New South Wales is corrob- orated. It is the first of the kind discover- ed in Australia, and very valuable, A New York we Iding cake we ighed forty pounds. It was in the form of a three- tory house, with sugar bride and groom { coming out of the front door : wad Bulwer says poverty is'only an iden, in nine cases out of ten, and that there is | | really more happiness among the working men in the world thun among those who | | are culled rich, Jaues Fisk, jr.'s estate, after all reports to the contrary, foots up over £3,000,000 for Mrs. Fisk. Jay Gould made over to her among other property, the Grand Opera House, which is accounted worth £1,500,000, Tae longest bridge in the world is the Tensas and Mobile bridge, at the city of Mobile. It is fifteca miles long, crosees both rivers, where there are draws, It id supported on iron gylinders drven ing the bed of mornss, and is probabiy the lon reat structure 1 the world. > have been said by high | suing sum- | IB ao as 1 . It cannot Letoo strongly impressed upon our farmers that the great point required nsure success in growing heavy erops of roots, such as Swedes, Mangolds, Beets or | REMARKABLE SUCCESS OF A cam | | ADIAN INSTITULION. | CONFEDERATION LIFE ASSOCIATION OF CANADA. We call the attention of our readers to | 5 hole in the centre of the roll, Tur Hamilton Times says, people buy ing roll butter on the market. liad better have the rolls cut into before they are weighed. A party on Saturday last bought arvoil ticketed bibs. 1 was paid tor and takem home. When the roll we cut about a teacupful of water flowed froin The farm- 8 Carrots, is that the ground should net | 4), following notice of the above Institu- | or gelling it is known, and may hear more only be well enriched with manure, but alsp thoroughly well prépared during the th of May by the use of the plough, cult It is of the first importance to obtain a deep mellow and he n vator and harrow. | well pulverized seed-bed. cost of growing a crop of roots is nearly the same bo the yield what it may. tl Hence the great point is to make, every effort to ob- tain a heavy yield proper management, Carrots particularly require a heavy, mél- y 3 11 and low and well prepared - sced-bed, should be sown sufficiently carly to ensure a good advance in growth before the sum- mer drought sets in. * Give a liberal seed- + to thinping out the ts than risk few, for the carrot is a tender plant when from having too iable to suffer from ils. lds follow next in succession, and neglect or inatte n to det: Mang 1id be got in by the fifteenth or twen- ticth of May, earlier if the season is well advanced, which, however, is not likely to prove the caso this year. The seed ncea i not be planted so closely, one inch apart will be quite sufficient, and in fact a liber- ai seeding, and should one half fail to grow there will 'still | The e enough of plants and to spare. "ellow Globe is the best sort tion, extracted from the St. Catharines! '" Great success attends the | op Daily Times: Contederation Life Assurance Company. It seems to have the right kind of men at the helm to give every prospect of going ahead. As an eyidence of the popular re- ception which these Canadian Institutions meet with, we may mention that the busi- { meas done by the Confederation during the month was nearly 8250,000. Mr. Balfour, the local agent, has had the assistance for gome time of Mr, Henderson, one of the general agents, and the amount of business done in this town for the last few weeks is truly wonderful. {One would think that Lite Insurance business would sodn be run into the ground by the great amount done at present, but those that pretend|to know say that it is only in its infancy. Mr. James Carmichael, one of the Inspectors of the Company, has met with equally good success in the East, having closed, (ashe advises the Head Office in a letter | received yesterday), during the last few days thirty-two applications in Millbrook. | The success of the Confederation is now an established fact, it having received an ampunt of business and standing in the | Dominion which is but seldom 'obtained even after years of hard work. With the su clearly demonstrated that Canadians are ready to support home Institutions in pre- | ference to foreign ones, especially when such advaniageous terns are offered as those of the Confederation. As a further evidence of the favour with which of his liquid butter before he is much old- | It would be a good thing if some one | of these scoundrels was made an example Worry or Nore.--For the cure of Scrotula, Skin Diseases, and every kind of Humor. Depew's Medical Victory i stands pre-eminently at the head of the other romediss. In the cure ef Rheuma- tism, Dyspepsia, Liver Complaint, anil Kidney Disease, its effects are surpfisivy ito all. For Regulating the Bowels, and | curing AC Female Weakness, and General. Debility, - ss of this home Company, the fact is | derstocd to he the * coming man" this | the French Government, that their army Biliousness, Sick Headache, its curative powers are beyond money wnd beyond pric. It is the Great Blood Puritier. The Blood is the Life of the flesh. Purify the Blood, and itis har for Disease of any kind to remain lor the body. ; It is announced that the Hon. Alex. | Morris will succeed Judge John: Lieut Governor of Manitoba. will take place as soon as Mr. Morris' vote can be spared in the House at Ottawa. | as The change Mr. O'Connor, member for Essex, is un- | as Mr | Morris' successor iu the Ottawa cabinet. | It w:s announced in London papers, that Bismarck had given peremptory notice to for value as feed, Lut the Long Red will || Co. pany is being received, applications in | must be reduced and war measures great- give the heaviest crop. One edvantage of the General Brinch in sams from 10.000 ly curtailed, or a German army would | g | i ; 1e edvantag ) 3 Ma the Lest of any root we ca qolil tand the drouth A top dressing of salt at!ile rate of 100 Ibs. per + is that they will { n grow, acre is very ciffectual as a manurial agent to this crop, and is largely used for the purpose in England, Sugar beets will bo cohsiderably grown and as a cattle food ars more But they ge of being easily hurt other root. le than any i isadva t frosts, 1 the winter on that accoungunless they can e(« do not keep through be taken up early and t! stored away where are perfectly sef £pe ters manufactures for t ] + from beets wil such cases €¢ Jc wy is however, a pro ct the tracting su ed, and in well for the purjoze, having their are still near g To grow a good cr closer together tha or carfots, and most of the work of enld ration after wust be dons with | the 1 of roots per aore nd h ventv-five tons about the d usual yiel with extra good care and J 3 seed should be sown early, just as soon as all danger of late ® , y the young plants Thi to four apart in rows. y and pre- --This is the grand stand-by of our farmers as a root crop, and 1 rarely fails to yield well in favorable sea- sons but is nore lixlle to be affected by insect in sumn her roots. r and dry weather than of the growth of this crop is a d, in the fall after the in, 1 frost to amount Jdo¢s not interfere with the gre 2 pla Hence late in June or ot rains set a moderate +1 wih the crop may be early 'in'July, and + uake a full return. Owi bulk of our farmers prefer it the enr- T to lier roots. he land can into a f paration altar all other ne. the barn yard by opening fur- It is generally manure given hém with manure, and then the plough in such a way as to leave ightly dlevated ridge on which | to sow the turnip. . Where well composed manure is applied it may be dragged into the goil, or covered in with a gang plongh | > | and the seed sown on the flat surfac | drills twenty-six inches apart. | Company of Canada. | downwards, were received by mail from thirty persons on Saturday alone, of which four for $15,000, were from Nova Scotia, and upon these last ghe anual preminms should be settled in full. amounted-to nearly £600, ation is rapidly L } nying the ional Such' remarkable | good results must be satisfactcry to all concerned, and furnish the best proof of | the fact that this Company is fast becom- ing the most popular one throughout the Dominicn."-- Daily Leader, April 17th, 1872. STRATHROY races ¢ 2 24th and 25 of May. - Warr and 24t Four races for each kh a of May. | bell is eight feet Li ITaxiLToN races take place on the four Ay - irom thejr€ be no peaches in that district this season. The *" cold snap " i ness for the peac '" Way are loafers in an editor's sanctum | like sha trees? Docause we are glad when they leave but we think it always seasonable. Oxe handred and seventy years ago the first daily paper in England was publish- ed. Its name was the Daily Courant, the publisher was one Ellzabeth Mallett, and the first number appeared in Fehruary, Ye O~E of the most recent triumphs of in- geunity recorded at the Patent Office is a | device for opening in the morning and closing at night the gates of beehives, the object being to exclulle the bee-moth. The gates arg connected 'with a poultry roost that when the fowls are on their perches the additional weight closes the beehive gates, which open azain when the fowls depart in tho mornin . . . | Two weeks have passed since the assem- | bling of Parliament at Ottawa, and very | 1 wering of seve al questions by members | of the Go Ministerial measures ' | nearly seven inches. « | eight and a half days, but it only strikes | for seven and a half, thus indicating any neglect in winding it up. {ing up races take place on the 23rd | two hours. wencing 28th, of June ; £10,000 hur - 1 a The foregoing is sad, hand. | ment of the Assembly, has together with | ! his war-like policy in the reeruitirg of an | | mier informs M. Their's very curtly that | he must reduce his army to | France upon whose good faith he ean de- | = ittle has been done yet, beyond the ans- | Joserr HALL MANUFACTURING COMPANY speedily enter France again, and occupy it until 'the war debt owing Germany The statement The Confeder- | is denied, however--but it is nevertheless N believed by mary t> be correct. * A Bic Crock.--The large clock at the English Parliament House, isthe lasgesi | in the world. The four dials of this clock'| are 22 feet in diameter. Every hall min- | ute the point of the minute hand moves | The cloc) will go x The mere wind- the striking mechanism takes The peadelumn is fifteen feet ; the wheels are of cast iron; the hour 2 feet in | dianieter, weighing nearly fifteen tons. and | the hammer alone weighs more than four | dred pounds. "Tlus clock s >s the | of long | quarter hours, and by its strokes the short ig erines paper regrets to learn | hand reporters in the Parliament Chani- | Barley, $48 2s,.... |. Contre friends that there will | b##s regulate their labors. At every stroke | Peas, # bushel, hea | & new reporter takes the place of the old | ." | one, whilst the first retires to write out | Maggch did the busi-| the notes that he has taken during the | | previous fifteen minutes. % Tue speck of war in France has become a cloud a good deal bigger than a man's! M. Theirs bravado at the adjourn- | army of 1,600,000 men and 2,700 pieces of ordauce had its natural effect, and brought down 'Rismarck with an ultimatum of a very positive nature. |The Prussian Pra- 225,000 men, or he will put a Government in charge of pend. This is very bold and positive and evidently intended to bring about wiir. At least, it is difficult to see how any na'ion { Wheat, ® bushe to purchase our wheels of no other mang | factorer. -Mr. Glen's facilities ase passed, and we feel Sure that he will je fect satis n. We therefore wind him to tiie public of Canada tire conlidenge, foc : sive le will wheel in all respects equal x vl ufacture # our own. JAMES LE "FEL & Go, ----inm | DEATHS, | In East Whitby, at the old hom. y on the 23rd inst, in his 84th year, Johy Hepburn, sr. #The funeral will take place this (Friday afternoon, at 1 o'clock. : : A Chemical Frod a -- and Nutritive Tone A LL THE ORGANS AND TISSUES L of the body are constructed and nourisheq by the Blood which holds in solution the materia] - f which are made bone, ninscie, and nerve and utes to each its proper proportion, Ton rfect Jormhtion o! vigaiirng there mast tion, 4 will be Dyspe; dissolved from ir geation and Assimily, nnctions are deranged t the food will be {perf icient gastric juice, the y and deficient in fibrin wl the whole system undergy rverted nutrition; df f , Heart and Lungs, Nervone Prost hand General Debility py. sult, and the constitution is broke: Waiting Chromic Disenses. ; Be the nth of the Live '0 enabl Stom. ach to digest food, and to supbly the othe , on from mental and physician exertion, Dy Wheeler's Compound Elixir of Phosphates and Calisaya Is reliable, and permanent in its effects; Sold by all Druggists at $1, - en -- OSHAWA MARKETS, April 3 Flour, Wowt,......|.........00....88 Zaps Wheat, Fall, ® bushel,.............. 135 14 Wheat, <; 2, ¥ blizhel, 0s Oats, ® * ushel,....... LF LE RYB iv yne sain es on ns 02 Barley RF ER 0 a Peas, ¥ bushel,................. Potatoes, # bushel Butter, ¥ », Lard, ®m,... Seed.» bg AlsikeCiover.....4 Timothy Clover Sced § BOWH Wheat, ¥ bushel... Rye, Barley, Peas, Oats, do | LER Clover Sced, ¥ bushel, ... Timothy Seed, do Butter, ¥m,....,. do do do LEY) 0 0g 015 MONTREAL MARKERS... April 28 ier 31 35°@ $1 20 "nein 2-08 on 0s 088 08 Wheat, ¥ bushel, ...... Oats, ¥ 32 13, ... . 05 iia, 080 08 TO MARKETS. Avil Slnens oer oe 00 072 0 od 0 52 07 [2] 260 Butter, ¥», .. .... Tone Barley, Peas, Oats, do Rye, do Potatoes, do Hay, ® ton, do do WHITEY MARKETS, A» REI 1 115 .0® .0483 06 08 L016 dvertisement ey 18 06 06 06 LE 01s Wheat, Fall, ¥ bushel,.... Wheat, Spring, do Barley, ¥ bushel, ...... Oats, do Peas, do Potatoes, do A having any spirit and sinews left can brook | W¥- FREDERICK McBRIAN, M. D., M.R. C.8._ its tone for the sake of peace, ! To the Public of Canada. -- : ? r Osmawa, ONT., MARCH 8, 1872. J ® OFFICE OF THE Being desirous of testing the merits of | veggunent. ey in the Address, few as they | the differen: water-wheels now offered for were, are not yet ready for presentation to | the House; and as a consequencq the daily sittings generally last but an hour or two. sale in Canada, as {o their economical use | of water, we as manufacturers of the GEx: | VINE James Lerrer Dousie TURBINE, | : | make thie follo; ing challenge"to the wan- The Cabinet sessions are doubtless more! ufacturers of ANY WHEEL now made in | . + % A 3 chet i . | season. P ize occupied with plotting how to retain office | Canada, whether it be nuiTaTIONS Of the | 3¢ason. Patrouize than in maturing measures for the public| 8 | weal. Evreka.--The Montreal Herald thua| describes an Aliomina, or Man-flier, now | being tried in that city. | parties. James LerFeL Dousie TursINE or any | other pattern, the wheels in all cases to be | wholly manufactured by the competing We will place in the hands of any respon. | The apparatus | sible party six thousand dollars ($6,000), | i consists of a large air bag, which the oper- | and the party accepting the challenge to | by, plants will be spafed by the fly. Top dress | ator places under his body, while attached do the sawe, the money to beheld subject th a i | sbundame of sun, to ensure that enough | i e drills after sowing with plaster, and as | ALY y "BD sor wing, the movements being directed | to be tes { soon as the young plants appear, dust fine- | 8°F Wing, the movements being Siredicd | same ru { ly powdered lime along the top of the | drills. This will materially assist to keep off the fly, and if this can be done till the young plants begin to show the rough leaf " | they are safe. Watch the crop closely after seeding and if the fly appears to take too many, re-sow, all the vacant spot with fresh seed. Cultivate well; thin out to six or eight inches apart; and as soon as the | crop is well established and the weeds got rid of, let it alone to grow till the end of October. Miss Rye has left England again with 15 deserving poor zirls for Canada. 17 is said that the western section of the G. T. R. will shortly be reduced to the 4ft &1.inch guage. ER Factory.--A factory for the manufacture of rubber trinkets combs, bracelets, &c., has been established 'in Napanee, and is now in full blast. Mr. Harper, owner of Longfellow, is to have a worthy competitor for the M« month cup at Long Branch thi no less a one than the English he { ing, who is said to bs tha fastest ani in the world. He is to be "shipped fr England for sthe countering Lén ATTACKED BY WoLvES.-- Not long since | Mr. Pat Murphy, wood-ranger for Dodge | & Co., was attackedin mid-day, by 5 wolves in the township of Digby, Co. Victoria. At the onset he adruitly placed his back tly { against a huge rock, and valiantly defend- 1 | ed himself with his tomahawk, against the | | furious charges of t hie ravenous brutes. He [also used a goad cr rod in keeping them off. They slunk away leaving him in pos- session of the situation, -- Advocate. Tar following is the correct prices paid by { Bonner for his celebrated horses;-- Dexter .8 33,000 Pocahontas. . ., . 34,000 Lantern : | Lady Palmer . Peerless REL 7 | Bruno, "aan Jae Elliott ' | Flatbush Maid. ....., i ! Membrino Bertie, about (Mz. Bonne: 8 words). . »... «+e i 12,000 i pr ---- {> Total,.... veer B140,500 | | The stable ang ground upon which it is | | | | | built must Lave cost at least £100,000 | making 'an aggregate of the handsome , amonut of a quarter of a million of dollars | | sail with him for Hindostan. ! to fall into the hands of the Bedouits. The | was transferrel from one harem to another | | and finally became the wife, or slave, of a + swell, to each arm is a kind of flexor and exten- | to the award of the judges. by the operator's feet and hands. operator expresses himself well satisfied | vith his trial trip, and 'announces ais in- | tention of giving a public exhibition of his | powers. He states that he can cross the St. Lawrence in seven minutes, and that, though this appears a very rapid passage his fatigue will be ho more than that of an ordinary five minutes walk. Themackhine will soon be placed| on the Montreal mar- cet. Bostrox is properly 'horrified over the story of a Paritan of the Paritans, who has just made her way home after twenty years exile and suffering. When 18 years of age she married a missionary, and set The vessel went to pieces on the Arabian coast, and her husband and herself reached land only Arab Chief murdered the man and married the woman. * As her beauty waned, , she common water-carrier, from 'whom zn American travelier ransomed her. After many trials she reached the hub in safety. Sud to say, her relatives, who have absorb- 4d her patrimony, do not greet her with | The wheels | in a flour mill, driving the of stone, grinding the same wheat, and having the same number of | square inches of opening to receive the | water, the amount of water discharged to be the measnre of the amount used by each wheel. | The judges to be non-residents of Can- ada, and to be thoroughly well informed | in the mode of testing the power of tur- | bine wheels,--each party to choose one | judge and the two to choose the third. 1 The owners of the winning wheel to have | their money refunded them and the loser's | money to go towards establishing a me- chanical free library in any town in Can- ada named by the owner of the successful | wheel. | The wheel to be tested at §, §, Li 3 and full gate. : Each party to give good and sufficient | honds, to the amount of £4,000, that. the | loser shall pay the entire expenses of the | test. | There are some wheels that give very good results with fnll head and fhil gate- age which entirgly fail under partial head and partial gateage. Such wheels in oar climate, where'the water-powers are affect- % . 1 1 x n- | passionate love, and are even ventu:ing to | ed Ly both cold and drouth, are cf no | ask whether she is not playing the role of | Practical value. Tichborne Orton, Tre Great Eastern sleamship has just 'u chartered to lay a new trans-atlantic le to connec and aiting th ince the overy that tha great ship was 80 Well adapted for this kind of work, England with New Youk, | is now lying at Sheerness completion of the cable, | { she has proved a perfect mine of wealth to | the little band of merchants who about ten » | years ago purchased her for rather less] than the value of so much old iron. Since | 1863 the Great Eastern has been devoted { exclusively to gub-marine telegraphy. During that time she has laid in various parts of the world no less than 25,000 niles of déep sea cable, all of which is now in successful operation. In doing this | she has traversed the Atlantic, : Pacific, Among the! pages of valuable matters, which will be | € Southern and Indian oceans. 'nomical water wheel in \ We glaim that ye are the only makers | of the GENUINE Jaymes Lerrer Dousre | ToreiNe WHEEL in Canada, and that it is | without a RIVAL in the WORLD IN PRACTI- | CAL RESULTS. | More than 6,000 of these wheels are now | in operation in Carada and the United States. The sales of no other wheel ever | yet introduced on this continent exceed one-sixth this number Our wheels have been thoroughly tested | in Great Britain, and has fully maintain- | ed the reputation-it has gained in Canada | and the' United States, as the most eco- | practical operation | ever yet introduced. : | We are now publishing a new descrip tive water-wheel pamphlet containing 150 lines she has laid, may be named the sent free to all applicants. | Australian, China, India, and India Ex- tension, and the capital invested in the various lines which she has laid, and as- sisted in laying, is estimated at £33,000, 000. OwNERs of orchards in the neighborhood what is known as the oyster shell bark lice This insect is grey in color, a similar hug to that of the bark, and spreads from twig to twig, and branch to branch, until the tree is covered ; and such injury. results that in many instances, a large portion of it dies or becomes unproductivy A remedy is recommended in the fora: of { paint made hy boiling leaf tobacco in strong lye. It should be applied with a brush to all parts of the treo where the ice are foun beiore the buds Segin to | | | of Fergus complain of the rapid spread of ) For further information address, F. W, GLEN, Oshawa, Ont. | N. B..--Wo desire to call nitention te the following certificato;-- SerixeriELp, Ohio, Deo. 25, 1868. Wo take Jlodaure in informing the pub. lic of Canada, that we have sold and fur. nished Mr. F. W. Glen, of Oshawa, On. tario, Patterns, , Formers, Dia Guages, and all other necessary inf tion to build our celebrated Double bine Water-whoe¢l, invented by James | Leffel, avd known as the * Leffel W hed). # We have also obligated onrselves to fuse nish the same facilities for wanufacturing to no other parties in Cousda, to Mr, | Glen, no one can susgesiully build our | whe ls, an] wo advise Freatics th Canada, | lugs, Tia Tur- | i 1UY'S HOSPITAL, KX LAND. LONDON, ENG- Hindes' Hotel Oshawa. WANTED! SERVANT GIRL. Apply to MRS. JOHN B. HARRIS. a ERS RI 4 Fresh Fish, Fresh Fish, Salmon Trout, N HAND AT GARTH'S, 'THI§ MORNIN and twice a week during the m. Oshawa, April 26th, 1872," TRAYED OR STOLEN. ROM . THE PREMISES OF THE Subscriber, Lot No. 12, 4th con., East Whit- on Saturday night, 20th inst., 8 sheep and 4 lambs. Any person giving information that will lead to their recovery, will be paid for their trouble. \ DAVID McGEE. pd-2w. STEAM 'BETWEEN LONDO AND MONTREAL. S---- - TEMPERLEY'S LINE, Composed of the following ron Steamers: SCOTLAND, MEDWAY HECTOR. TWEED, THAMES, SEVERN. First-Class The Steamers of this Line are intended to safl £ | frem Quebec and Montreal every TUESDAY dur ing the scason of navigation of 1872, and from London every Wednesday, calling at Plymouth" on the way out, Through tickets from all points west at reduced rates. Certificates issued . to es desirous of hringing out their friends. or full particulars apply to the Company's Agent at Oshawa, - C. W, SMITH. FOR SALE. TYE WEST HALF OF THE SOUTH . 43 Acres, in the South-east corner of the corporation of Oshawa. A quantity of wood thereon. i Also, 16) acres in Grundy Co., lows, U, 8, ten miles from Cedar Falls," 4 miles from New Hartford village, on the Illinois Cengral R. R. 70 acres culiivated; frame house and stable | thereon. The whole 10 be sold very cheap. AM. FAREWELL, 45-81, shawa. Notice to Contractors! LAXS AND SPECIFICATIONS will be ready for your ins ion fn a few 8 of a Factory and other buildings to be rected ail Osbava. | Main building two storeys high and about 300 fect frontage w Plo deep. MACHINE-MADE 1 AT CO., Toronto and Oshawa. Ozhawa, Feb. 23, 1872, a FOR SALE. HE PROPERTY ON SELINA ST, isting of a story and a half Frame & house, with stone foundation, There is. sland driving shed attached, a len with & number of choice Fruit Trees on it; alvo, a neverfailing well of excellent water. For terms and other particulars apply on 2 8, te premises, to WALTER FOGG. " ot March 1, 1872, NOTE LOST. LL PARTIFS. ARE HEREBY LB. warn2d against pagotist made Ly EA MUEL A. DLA Herry rborn, dated November In one year frora date, March It, 12.2, 79 pd N, QUEBEC, in - for a 4 ih Bhd q besides ualit the « quantity of mend), tafe = 2% chea F HH Bop sows AEXFED 22