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The Wingham Times, 1888-11-23, Page 7olTANDERBILTS ESTATE, M THOTaS IN WHICH THE OW COM* NIJJOSC P+iA:I2 HIS FQFITUNZ. Cornelius S•;tndcr'aSlt's Originality wool Power ¶Mc l eti i C arabiiation-.- ne- easefulilois:1 1.eri--eel 1 Y1 of^:tl 1A1iraeC ,. , Another gtOrit est::to is the Vanderbilt ornate. it Was Lid by Cornelius Van- derbilt, ret it, fcikee seas by •Joi1a Jamb Astor, horn tlarrty•nrm year,, and died 'twenty—nine Ie•1rl e'a1'ller, at the seize et , Vanderbilt, who was au American for several gammen:one, had. first (teen the light ou States Island, and ilalterite'd viola= twills from kis Du •Gla stock, Ile had more fiva'icual cmpacity—it amouuted to genius -than Astor; had far greater originality. boldness and power o cora- 1 would like to know, than to see high, and bears the followul bine#ion; but It was exedtrsively or a tabstrrd, i ou checked up h g i d' I believe, by a lady of excellent family, ra�anotary tort. iia divided nian]•:inci into a man, every time he sits town, fling his peculiar inscription: advanced in years and impoverished by two orae, ° s, ilex* who Guard said those cot tab; wide apav ? Then, again, that 1 " Wlacn under high pressure of low pride financial missortunes, but whose social who could not make niouey, and the latter ovrri:.st,fng tyritc!ixn, , • at the legs of his t the check rs rein on yourself," : poeition is beyond assault. She has he condemned as blank fools. Probably overlent so as to purl them le hi. folds 'Petersen is laughed at and jeered Ga Tout 1;9QN £1G" a. . -.s cant st fou,. •11 ever sing ut t! +w11i14, tny(•i1, The C.(+ 4 t st tltoui.,ht;a tliu- I tam bring , Ate kaou,l:ti1moor knew IIatil your soft eyes qu! „*i0ning li;ael nutle me question, too. r y sant Iia :Ten toy your sight, �'. tau al, the worid'n array, I,i fa War t pada flower that at night, Aa ar +: lent legends say. L'ufuh.s ticncatli the nove'n'a deer light. - Ati+i atm at dawn of day. —crags il. [atic.eld iu f iaei matt Enquirer. .. .* '-s: -rr ...lira»w.-^ pj � T 1 �]'(�'�'➢ T I tittle ea urea my recurs, and 1 Dud it much 11.LJ .t1 1 11.V,13 �t I Ila the more 1Cg1 futula31ehall elsoihavo other piceureS, copied reel latiteetti. 111 chow • A LOVE'P, On' tdOii aF$ PRt;ACHC.S thein it lc ee la. iib oat1t. l pc ,rt o;n 0 U CH ZCK FiCIN. Iair of h,.asc , tare cl, Ia.t.d1 ".01 AGAINST TI-l,iT(:tue•, _ d 10000; a 5 ..t of iterate oa ,y redgrace- 1 fill, becat::. e o, their nvt being eve?. Carrying an Ail X atutirt; fa Inas 1%f:4ntl let Ghee} ed, e.t1(1 v l,..ir of evork Inez' ee with Gene About tate Streets Lecturing. ;hive ; cheer+, milers (4n. Tho pectineal will bo ere, orad Sinowlng Thou t11© moro tolling than novae., grid the crusade nigh C7baclydng-•-7Gxlaetiencea, i progress."•—C',,1icaagoTribune. Cruelty or . am ,last the elree;: I hi will, male redid ('Down with the check rein!" Sieh is the war cry chosen by a gentle• 1 When a Cincinnati husband was asked Nen Aro Just as diad. 1 man of Seandivavien extraction whose , In court if he dragged his wife out of bed A wnman. speaking: of the attacks made name is C. W. Peterson. On Sundays, i by the hair ho said ho couldn't really ro- upon her a.+x for their methods of hand- and on weak days, too, he may be seen member, as that wits a very busy morn- lill y their skirts or bustles when sitting , at various street eoenors talking to coach- I ing with him. --Detroit Free Press. dawn, carrying their parasols, and other men, teamsters and owners of horses. to 1 habits, says. I think three-quarters of i Bolds an oil painting in his hands and I A. Novel Social Entertainment, , such talk is nonsense. I am perfectly ' shows it to the people ho addresses as au I Another novelty in the lino of tlocial sure that men liavo next as many marked , illustration of his arguments. The pictureentertainment •is what might be called habits as women. What can boo more I represents a horse, a swan and ty man, all the reminiscent lecture. It wasinvented, A X5acl lsl emcr7. added considerably to her income by de- i �g above the knees, and exposing generally at by the people he addresses. Ile. is often iiveaing drawing room talks upon her ire - no man of this century over bent h msec Mow entirely to the pursuit of wealth, fxsln the time he bought a perfsgaua, at 14, after iris father'sdeath, to carry Tarin products to the New Yorke market, until lite final illness at tiro NOT AN EU't1CATED ELAN. Howas illiterate throughout life, having a violent prejudice agaainut education, which he believed to interfere with pre°. regards pullingdown cuffs so the will po tient success, and talked u peculiar ng- y Petersen says, "but I will stecle4o,my the past winter seem to boyo boon tempt fish, defiant of syntax and orthoepy. show beneath the sleeve, and similar busfuess, and shall denounce the check sou h to induce others to enter the tricks, aro they not every day sights?' rein whenever there is a ohauce. lists,' aa6 several ale montioued who will, The Ar' cnant. , Mr, Peterson is not a member of the .dining elle seligon to comp, inform us Humana society. Ho is no professional what the antecedents of Mr. McAllister's • A mint for mace. friend of animals. In fact, he minds his select clan used VI say and do in the good Nothing could be better than the asso- own business every workday in the week. old times before the wax. To judge. from elation recently formed in Philadelphia But as soon as he feels himself at liberty tho couple of looti�ire3 that 1 listen`ted to nailed the Open Space association, having to spare au'hour or two ho takes his pie- last winter, societ g hi the past was neither for its object the increase of small parks turn and goes out on the street to carry as lively nor as 1iii teresting as that of to - and other openings in the mass of houses on lois eccentric propaganda. Ho is a day, though it walliagerbei ly dull enough as a sanitary measure, and also for the friend of the horses, and he suffers when to be more respectable•—Alfred 'rumble comfort and refinement of the people. ho sons them suffer. 1 in Pittsburg Bulletin.\ This is better than sending crowds of RUG -AIMLESS 01' COMFORT. children out for open air during a mouth (•Fashion is the curse of this ago," said I Chinese Legation at 'Washington. of summer. An address before the Mis- Mr. Petersen; "poople will follow it re- I The members o the Chinese to ration at sourL Hortioultlual society, some years gardlass of comfort. They v;ill put i Wasllirneton try very' hard to make them. the not always attractive top of a pair of taken for a crank and told roughly to collections of American society n thepast, shoes, with strings tied in a by no moans mind his own business, but with the to subscribers, at $10 a course, out of the picturesque knot. To mo one of the re- obstinacy and porsoverauee of Peter the ranks of the society of the present. Now pnlsivo habits is the refolding up of a Tierra% he goes on preaching a crusade and then, when she stops to take a breath, handkerchief before replacing m the against the cheek rein. Ile is one of those a pianist plays an air adapted to the oct pocket, which is quite common among ellaraeters who cannot be discouraged by casion. This performer is her only ex. mere, I always wonder if the user is. obstaokes, and who, having once taken up pease, and as piarl.ists are cheap just now, afraid of getting thorn mussed or only an idea, will follow it to the end.. f he cannot cut deeply into the lecturer's wants the outside fresh and clean. As "Laugh at rue, take me for•11<,fool," Mr. rats. At any rate, her gains during Tiro Boys. Ana 21111ke the mistake of tl;1111 i'.? that "a. ytlrii z will do `c:r the U p.:dt what is14.lit f11 yGlir bile tit. peels their lifelong habits anti f-111,-,01'. :t 1111 0. nni.t.I, three r,OUrit, atilt t'r;li.o.is haul bc:d and all tine ,nld, fUeniItrre, what boy eau be tai1•;Iat the 1 ids'•;tilt -1 of owning Ilio things, and tbe l.ti}a('a- tance of keeping thew in order (? (.iic'e your boys equal advantage with your girls. t:oaa. tliern to stray tett 13001(, with good books and periodicals, pic- tures, ornament.. and comforts in their sleeping rooms, have theyi'. 'chums' come to dinner fregllcauti,Y, invite their girl friends often, unci trent them with great politeness at all that's. A. wise mother Well knowli to us, puts little lunches for her boys in. their room when they have in ell out epeading an evening and seine liaint' late, Not 'long since one of them. said to her, '1 don't believe anybody else will ever do that for ,ale, and x doubt very much if 1 ever have another home that will be as pleasant as this has been.' Uh, it'pays to treat the boys well l Letters he almost never wrote—oorres- nee was as severe a task for him as 1Or Sana Weller—but he invariabiywanted everybody else to put any business pro- f eon paper. He never, so far as own, expressed the slightest regret for his lack of education, and, presumably, x?.ssver felt any, being in this an exception to his race. tut as a compensation—fully sulfide= for him—he was phenomenally astute at a trade, big or little, and had a marvelous instinct for commercial profit. 13efore 20, he removed tti this cit and three years later was worth $10,000, which was breeder, he said, to go oat subsequent sum. At that timo he since, recommended a system allowing for mountains ou their backs and call it the selves popular in ,society. 'They often bu 31 the first steamboat to run bebweoi an openingevery fourth of a mile in all ,bustle. They will torture themselves in male :handsome pxegents—> 1 he jewelry, iTew York and New Frrnnswiek, and re- streets. this way a city would be order to comply with certain forms de- perhaps!, or costly silk—to casual ac- r,oit ai $1,000 a year as captain. Ho con• thoroughly sunny and at the samo time Glared to be the fashion. When people. quafn duces. They are very assiduous in tinned ou the line until he made its be provided with shaded spots. Tho same • torture themselves I do not care. Let paying call's. They start out together and 000 a year• his wife mean- plan included drinking fountains in. each them suffer, they ought to know better, o. froaiu house to house, leati • - While keeping an inn—he had married at opening provided three times a day with 10—at the Now Jersey tarmiuns, and ice. Old cities eau only be improved. I thou thinks to myself. But when I see cards and photographs, Thciy seem helpless animals tortured for the sake of think that their nomas will • not be recd tnraing it to good account. New cit complyingwith ridiculous demands of Ixized, so they leave their lafetures Far fifty-four years he followed the 1 principles. Such eities could not easily fashion, get indignant and cannot stand iized,isll Choir r eaactivo inda,ddualitie ^seater, owning steamboats on the Dela- have portions that fall into degraded it, 'The horse is one of the most beauti- But to most Washingtonians the hot wiwrn„the Hudson and Long Island sound, physical habits and become both vile and ful animals, because of his fine proper- germbs all lode alike --New York yorl Cul steamships ou the Atlantic and Pa- unsightly. To reform men we must re- tions and graceful, curved outlines. ow ride, steadily overcoming opposition and form homes.—New York Graphic. look at that picture. What do you see l .,wailing his fortune. At 7 , with prop- there? . You see the laws of nature vio- • Nothing Lilco the Dinner Flom. trrty estimated at 410,000,000, tho Ylommo• Naohire Noise for 'Nerves. hated. You 800 a machine put up on the I Japaueso gongs melodiously sums dare, as he was called, directed kis atten- It has been suggested that the noise of horse in order to do away with the curved guests to dinner, and are considered tion to, and concentrated his interest in, machinery has a beneficial effect upon the . lino his arched neck forms.' : groat improvement upon the dinner be rlrilways, hisvina• been for many years a nerves of girls and women employed in "That is the way I begin my converse- Of all devices, however, which haves be heavy stockholder in the New 'York and factories. For the first few weeks of her tion with the people handling horses and invented to call people to meals, iild I ♦ ew haven. road.. At so advanced an ago , work amid the ceaseless clatter the em- using the check rem. iitg the bugle, the gong, strings of bells tstrola a change was hazardous to sap the proya goner lly has lno~}ctaelnes, a tendency ' `I tell them that this check ruin iG not suspended from the portiere rod, and the y to af:ness, and suffers eonsic only disfiguring the horse but also injtua soft spoken waiter, no arrangement sends it,rel but g was brilliant) suie ofsyol in de thas b from y such a thrill and awakes such an appetite it, rikaosaing; the allergy and force youth insomnilx. Later, when she become ing his health. It robs him of comfort, i„ In tt11 his plans r and combinations. He . accustomed to it, theheadaches disappear, makes him nervous, and he can't see as the farmer's horn.—Chicago Herald, 'scarcely over rnrsceicnlated, but in at- hearing is remarkably acute, and her nor- anything, because of being forced to look : , tempt.hi to gain command of the Erie 1 vousnoSS is much abated. The result is upward unto the sky. 'Ton 1 point to I • Center of Our universe. MAL wilt% Fmk and Gould controlled it, the reverse of what would bo expected, the swan, and ask the. coachman what) Considering the fact that many astro- he found that they were supplying, with- 'but statisticians and hygienists say that that noble bird would look like if a check' nomers are inclined to regard Alcyone the cert nay thought of responsibility, all the it is what is found in the modality of rein would be put over her head. Then 1 chief stria of the Pleiades, as 'the center shams that ho or others were willing to eases. --Chicago Noyes. point to the checked. up man, and ask the : about which the universe revolves, it pay for. Scor. tiring of pitting his money coachman to tell mo how he would feel if j seems quite curious that many savage and a{'atnot their printings press, he confessed ho were checked up in a relic manner. sooms quite tribes have given. this gene in s mistake, which he ascribed to lois ad - against Recognize the Adornments. "'How would you feel, man?'I see. 'derma to whom ho had yielded, he said, I hope people will not become perfect. 'The first few minutes you would probe- of to peculiar beliefs which extraordinary importance. dar eon - me itis better,judgment. Mope there will always bo weaknesses blyendure this constraint without much p for us to smile at and sorrows for us eo cmplaint. But then you would begin to corning it taap appear obe of groat antiquity. ITIS I'fJ8Pis ATT losingINBD. sympathize over. Weaknesses are the -. '1<irhFln ho saw his days closing—iso hod erne kick. In a short time your sack would � — t locig illness ---he had the supreme sates- humor, the "badinage" of the Creator, begin to ache, and your mouth would bo reaction- of haviug amassed not far from and a perfect man is often a rather dull filled 'with blood from the fruitless efforts 100,000,000, and he cared for nothing sermon. Now madam, yon are 50 years t:'o get the head down. Yon would bo- o se. His ono purpose in existence hohad old, you have daughters who are mothers come restless and begin to toss your head ,flilondidly attained, Although averse by and sons who are fathers, and yet you constitution. to giving away 'money—it ' take you little peep in the glass and fix :dould do 110 permanent good, in his your curls as you used to do thirty years opinion—he presented the steamship Van- ago, as you will do, 'I sincerely hope, iderbiit, which cost 4300,000, to the gov- thirty years from now. It is pretty, itis grnment at the outbreak of the civil war, , agreeable, le, is human and a compliment to :ileal endowed, through the influence of his the Creator that you should recogalize_the soteond wife, the Vanderbilt university, adornments he has placed within your at Nashville, with $700,000. Ho also reach, tame, toward the last, various bequests, Yoa, sir, you ought to be taken home eodne of which indicated that he was not and fixed up. You are 60 years old, and vious to artful gallantry. Iio often your shirt front is all spotted, your h. ped men that he happened to like, and waistcoat is not buttoned, your necktie is at may be said, to his credit, that he was away round at the back of your head and delays as good as his word. Totally your coat is covered with dust. Go home without ptetense or presumption, he was and pat on a clean shut and go down to fall - accessible, having so much ex- the ailor's and order a suit of clothes les can be laid out on the better Hanson Craig, of Kentucky, claims to be the heaviest man in the world. lie weighs 792 pounds, and it takes 37 yards of cloth to make Linz a cult of • clothes. Be weighed 200 pounds when he. was, two years Old. His father weighed 115 pounds, and his mother 122. THAT sAexmNG cotton can be 80 quickly cured by ShUoh's Cure. We g uarautee it. For sale by 0. E. Williams. cLunnitto T'" Any of the following metropolitan weeklies can be obtained with the V. inghatli Tiutss'at tlae figures bete • given. Balance of '82 free : Timms and Globe, $1 75 113180, Mail, and Farm and Fireside, 1 7C 113188, Globe and Rural Canadian, 2 00 Tams and London Advertiser, 1 75 Tenets, and Montreal witness, 1 75 PDuo.and Toronto News 1 76 r,MF.s and daily world.... ,. 2 75 Twins and weekly News with premium, "Christ before Pilate," 1'76 Also, "Fathers of Contederatio9,".,2 00., • �e 5 that will fit yote`, and et your ear ecutive power that ho was seldom pressed teed and look 111ze a ting of taste if k',izte looking, especially in his old age, you cant't be a thing of beauty. I think lis handsome face, erect carriage, and many men associate independence with elastic step were likely to drawattention, dirt and think they would. bo losing sem d d Broadway.IIe might of their manliness if they wore docent weever been a rants m agi ned eo le. Well, 1 might wear better clothes ertr what that' are imagined isto be. Tie People. self, but that tailors have to pay rent ,rhe 1n1y slid not appear, physically, like arid. oilier little expenses.—San Francisco 'diho eels faded, he was. itionaI, unlettered. Chronicle•" Undertnes. onsiness man was. His two recrea• 'tone wore delving and whist. He loved good horses, had plenty of them, and was the despot of the read. In whist, he e played the rigor of the game, nc t bear to bo beaten, which he seldom wens. At Saratoga, where he usually tt t the summer, he was disappointed Ise dud not win enough to meet his hotel bill. When his memory began to fall be ceased to play; serious as was the dlopritation, he was unwilling to lose the iaank he had so long occupied. Ho dId not bother himself about theology; but if he had believed the 13iblical announcement of tris difficulty attendant. upon a rich Mau* entering heaven, he world have 1,, id leve very The Cosr opinion mopolitan.f —PauT even Ln crow e , i if princes clothes. But 1 don't want to reform those Vallest Chimney is Existence. belly the tallest chimney in the 'weird to one that is being erected at- Vast ktowark. Its diameter at the baso is 2y' feel, and it is to bo 9 fent in diameter at top. li Is to be of solid brick to an •utile of 810 feet.. A cast iron rim 20 eaotin diameter r and a bell l will surmount unt ilia :Whole, making the total altitude of th stritctur(o MO feet. There I., 030 bricks tiled hi its construction, sfe. ,,ttr dant will bo #S'1,900. A view of It omit VO bad from trains crossing the I(teyi• Afit ni ,—:'11ow Ttait San. Size or the Waist Statistics furnished by the London stay and corset makers prove that the average just as your horse is doing it now. Hosv sizo of the femoro stay wearing waists has would. you feel if, while the sun were decreased two inches in the last twenty - blinding your oyes, with a burden to draw I five years. Ono mother had ordered a or carry, unable to see where to step, you. corset of sixteen inches to bo worn by her were whipped into a run, into a ditch or 1 17 -year-old daughter by day, and ono of eighteen inches to be worn at night.— Neve York Sun. depression in the rough street pavement? Would you feel comfortable? That'a why you often see fine horses harnessed to elegant carriages paw vigorously, champ the bit, toss tho head, and turn the neck. They want to loosen the check, lower the head, and got a rest.' now 11113 DRIVEn T1111EG IT. "The driver smiles or laughs, or stam- mers something. Eto thinks I am a queer fellow, and goes ou to explain that ho would not mind loosening the check, but the poople who employ him were opposed to it, want more style, and so on. "'Well, then,' I say, 'call your people's attention to the fact that the horses are being tortured by the cheek rein. Tell them that the horses would bo killed in a short time because of the silly fashion.' ••I thus go `on lecturing. Often the drivers and coachmen really follow my advice and remedy the thing. But often the people aro stubborn and da not caro to listen to what I key. "I have discovered that my painting; helps me a good deal in my work. I took it ono Sunday to the People's church at MoVicker's, There was a long row of carriages with fine horses standing in front of the theatre. Tho horses were all checked up. I showed the picture to the coachmen. They laughed and fired at mo enemas of silly remarks. Finally a young couple drove up in a carriage to the theatre. The horse was restless. I showed my picture to the young gentle- man and explained to him the reason of the horses restlessness. The young gen- tleman thought he had a fool from the insane asylum 'before him. The uni- formed coachmen stood around grinning and awaiting developments. "Well, I gave them a practical lesson right there on Cho spot. I unchecked the horse, and thsro he stood quietly and comfortably, showing no signs of being unmanageable. The cheek havin been loosened the horse dropped hia head. Ills neck assumed its natural arched form. tie at once became an o'bj,ct of admire. tion for all the drivars. The yours); oen- tlama:a thanked me for my advice, and the lady that a as with him thou,;'.it that my pbiure was tits bust sohe,no doviaed for the welfare of s orecs, "It is only u elle( v. eeke since I begat' In tine Le:position Genety. Said an old time resident of Chicago not long ago: "I have attended tho osposi- tion year after year since the first open- ing. During the first two or three years I used to go regularly and make one lap around tho' gaallllery,, lent until the other day I hod not set foot in the exposition gallery for many spoons. After this I shall never miss the trip, as it is well worth a visit. It is the territory of the ht steel fakir. In a brief walk of half an our I had my catarrh completely cured five dlifierent times, and nearly choked myself on a piece of 'dog bread,' thinking it a sample of a new water cracker instead of a patent food for animals. I rested my weary arms by trying my son and heir on sin different baby Jumpers, and then I had my clothes soiled by three patent flour sitters. riled sixteen campaign badges offered to me at disgustingly low prices, and was weighed four times, losing about a pound each time. Seven tines 'did 1 v 1 •. drop in a ani(1:e1 tc sea it vo 11, , and when I wont down stairs I had my overcoat pockets chock full of samples of yeast cakes, baking powder, hair oil and 1Lvci piles, The Ivan who visits the or position and mien, + the ggenet°, loses half Lia1t1:1.)." ...Chicago herald. I'?iilosophy of the Plantation. Mr. Levi Fisher sold a couple of halos of last year cotton to the Bensons tele week. Some ono told him be could have got more for it if he had sold it last year. "Yes," was the reply; "but if I had sola it then I wouldn't have the money now." Something lnthat.—Hartwell Sun. Taking the Lead. Southern women are said to have taken the lead of their sex in money making in New York. The head of the richest firm of dressmakers is a southern woman, and women of southern birth come to the front in other directions.—Chicago Herald. C11AC7fis1,WEMAT es ALL KINDS OF GRAINS IN STORE. FINE PEASE MEAL FOR BROW... 1' Baled Hay kept on hand. A. H. CARR. IN T118 COUNTY COUni1 ,I' Tau COUNTY Or 1103(08. ROBIN'' OVI vs. LEE. Pursnantta the or er for Salo in this matter,. and: healing (late the eigh : day of November, IC U. 11e3, there will be sold with • approbation of Isa.e ir.' 'Toms, Esq., Real Iteprese tativo for the County of . Buren, dt the tnatoh'a Eotol i t:o Town of wla hsn Nn Baia County, at the .ur of 18 o'clock, noon, oil '.TUESDAV, NO EMSER 27TH, 1888, Woman's Fancies Concerning Jewelry. A long time ago, that day when the world moved at the nod of Cleopatra, the Egyptian women saved all their gold to buy emeralds for their daughters, because the possession of them not only insured freedom from all physical ills, but made in their hearts- an ever spritng well of hope, forcing them to be cheerful, happy women. Sometimes the emerald was en- graved with cabalistic characters, oftener its smooth surfata was untouched; what could not be aceompltshed by the precious gem itself ceat0fnly could; not by the aid of mysterious symbol. Then the Sici- lian womaia bought coral for their babies, believing that it not only brought to them good health, but counteracted the eficet of the evil nye and kept away the wicked spirits. It seemed for a while tis if the same interest was going to be token in coral now that wan then, for beautiful pink coral framed in. diamonds was not only shown in the large jewelry shops, but was worn by some very sr.to t women. fotsever, the tency seems to have died ,out; coral is no longer eitl'cr'Esplay-'d in the window or on the woman.. Unibr tunately both of theca health giving orrra meats, tho emerald and the coral, aro easily imitated. whioh destroys, their value in the eyes of the lama co,kct- i wotaaa..--Wit.,Seib(( n BY PETER DE 145, Arorlo$t 1n, The following L. ads and Premises : Parcel yo. 1: Lot No. `side of Minnie Street, Mar said town of windmill. ' thirty-seven, on the east Cornyn's survey, in the • parcelconsist9 of one quarter of anameofland,closed by fence,up on which is erected a one and a qr ear story franca house of dimensions sixteen by -entyfour feet, now In the occupation of a month . tenant. Parcel No. 2: Lotthirty-eight on the east side of thiole street, Mar,. Cornyn's survey, in the ,laid town of wingium . ifs is a vacant lot eontainin3 one quartet of an acro f land, enclosed by fen00 and, suitable for building ru loses. Parcel No 8 : The son h half of Lot number threo on the west cede of Josep hie street, Foley s survey P park lots number six, even and eight in the void town of Windmill. This ,arcel consists of of e•ci1bth of an acre of land, he g a frontage of tin ty-ti3r00 feet on Josephine stye . There is erected upon it a two and n quarter sto '.y frame building of ofnielt- xions twenty by fol y feet and containing eleven •roams and a store. he upper part is occupied by a monthly tenant. The tole is %want. The heal Rcpreaenta opals withdrew any or till of the said parcels from ante if in his opinion nn adequate Klee is not bid herder. The paths to the suit aro entiticd'to bid 11IBMS 01. SALE LE :—T a per eent. to the Ven• dot's solicitors on toe da of sale, and the balance within 0110 month dee,' tor. without iatercrt, when the purchasers will bo en itled to convey 013(08. nuttier particu,atti ani conditions of rale t an be obtained from J. A. Morto , Esq, Solicitor, Wind- il:m, end from the Voider • Solicitors. Dated t5113 8th day of November, Min iii c1 nd&c 1 31013 18 518, 10100 F. Torts, Vendor's Solicitors. Beal keptos. ntatl',c. Itr ` tt'heu 1 $lip r vltnt 1 rio rat mesa 2 -assist. 10 itch' them for a thno. nod them It. $e • .: a•- turn r"` 11t 1lhve made the dib axseloiYe+i xy ,b; rCALLZ .l 1;':'falai*study 1 w.tirluxwa.,, t', '1 "n H to r •rs„ cn hh Yleqa e 7 ifaitcriiiiho rason fornetl utV :d•, '•• fNIA Stance Z.-ar tf° •t' ',Pad J,. 0$a`I' 1Illir rd.l'_st1 ' t' t w1 ,c'o t ,!.$. '33 itt v Veal, alarJtitM./I8.„`a Cs t:11. naa,.rt:-.11 gr, Dv !i/yy0..e '7 t .L. ?yea