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HomeMy WebLinkAboutHuron Signal, 1849-09-20, Page 1........,ter...--.......-- - . -1 i 4 TEN 8111LLiNGS I.f ae,AMCS. "THE GREATEST POSSIBLE GOOD TO THE GREATEST POSSIBLE NUMBRR." VOLUME II. DR. P. A. McDOUGALL, CAN he consulted at all boors, at the British Hole& (Laicairas's- ) GoSeeieb, Sept. 13th, 1848. 33- ALEXANER WILKINSON, Provincial Land Surveyor, OFFICE AT OODERICH, HURON DISTRICT. Nov. 94, 9. 43 J K GO ODI NG, AUCTIONEER, W'LL attend SALES in any part of the District, on reasonable Terms. Ap- ply* .the p- ply..the British Hold. Guderich, March 9th 1849. ' ev-6o I. LEWIS, BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, &C., Jose, 1848. GODERICH. JOHN .1. E. LINTON, .OTaay PUBLIC, (Jonuniesioner Queen's Bencli, AND CONVEYANCER. STRATFORD. Stokes, CHEMIST and DRUGGIST, -WEt3T-STRERT GODERICH. March 8, 1349. 9r-.bn ALEXANDER MITCHELL, AUL'ri 11NEC14, BELL'S CORNERS, ,, SOUTH EASTHOPE. March, 29, 1849. v9 -s8 A. NASMYTH, FASHIONABLE TAILOR: WIRDI'eaV'S'72114 GODERICH. GODERICH, HURON DISTRICT, (C. W.) THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1849. FARMER'S INN STRATFORD. MRS. DOROTHY DOUGLAS, widow of the Isle Thomas Douglu, of the Farmer's Inn, Stratford, begs to return her thaeks to the Inhabitants of Stratford, and the public generally, for the very life -rat Auppurt which they received during the short time they have been in Stratford. Mrs. Douglas begs ti intimate that she intends carrying on the bttainees as hereto• fore at the Old Stant, in her own name, and hopes by .Incl arreatinn to the comfort of her guest., and moderate chargee, to merit a .hare of the public patronage. Stretford, 9lst August, 1849. 2v-neetf TRAVELLER'S HOME, STItASBUIRG, \VaT)•Lou, 28th February, 1S49. THE Siit.enber hereby intimates to his friends and the Travelling Poblt' res. - rally, that he ha. removed from New Aber deen to the Village of S'rashurgh, and will now be found in that well known house for- merly oecupted by Mr. Junes, -where he will be ready and able to conduce to the comfort of those whn may honor him still. their patronage. And while he returns 16auke fur past (scarp, he hope., by strict attention to the want• and wishes of kir customer., still to merit a continuance ol their patrunage. JOHN ABEL. N. B. -Good STABLES and attentive Groom.. 12_ n4tf TO BE SOLi), ' A N excellent Farm, being Lot No. 111 L' Maitland Conra•u•n, Township .uf G. Jenrh, containing 100 acres -30 of which is cleared. The land is of a superior quali- ty, and well watered. It is sittestrd exact- ly nine miles from the town of Godertch on ' the Huron Road, and at the j inetlnn of rix die'arent- roads; a d ae it ts in the center of • populous and prosperous locality, it o cx• relleni ly adapted for • Tavern .'and or . Store. Thi. fano is well entitled to the attention of percoos desirous of an eligible situation for business, and will be sell on very reaa'noble terms. ' For parucula:. COVDITIgkI OF THE BRAIN IN EARLY LIFE-LFFECT ON THE MIND -OF EXCITEMENT AND ENLARGEMENT OF TIIE BRAIN BY DISEASE -MEN - TAI. PRECOCITY USUALLY A slim -- TOM OF DISEASE. ar AMaarI1I aleGIIAM, r. n. Concluded. It is thus. that a child ie made an intellectual prodigy. The premature development of mind. is owing to the premature development of the brain, oeeasieeed by undue excitement and the robbing of other organa of their natural ohne rel vital enmity., But. as Dr. Johnson s.v., this u • truth hole amended to by the world to gene- ral." Most parents tie ignnnit of it, and ars eiertained by ndmepnurement. that they frequent - generally •naso.s for the early cullih. peso of thely continue to incr.aar Will the subjects err fifty minds of their chvldrea.,. To effect this object, gran of age, and long flier the other portions of they are swatted by leathers, who undertake. One system hn•e ceased to enlarge. .• This with the aid of honk•, maps. machinery and pie- benonnenon,w" w M. Bari. " t. not ger rue, lutes. to make childrenof only a few yrari of p y r age understand a vat meny truths in Chranolo- evea in the adult, eepreiaily among meta eioea py. History, Geometry, and many other sciences: to study. or profound medtt•non, or who devote to n.aotre very rapidly their •ndestanding., and themselves, wohoflt relaxation, to the a¢itamon• sorpr.ingly gturken their rraoning powers. - And **ben a child from much inetrucfion, or from duras•, los re•chrd this sup•rr trental condi- tion Minicabs and Ass. -doles of hu I Ji are pub- ICshrd (lir such childre,: seldom live many gran.) (.r the sake of marrnctinn sod example• Such pubhratinns have been ex'en..ely circulated; they have been ¢really approved, and pro.ably hare had much influence with parents, in the edit - coition of infants. ''rand the cnndiiiona upon which this can be Much o1 'hr ILooahtlwnesa n1 parrnI, re. I effected. and it* consequences. .1 would have girding the injury they may do their children by him idly awnre that in each case, unusual •e - Godeneb, April 12, 1849. 2v-n101f„ u apply to Th•aas D•'rk, Tavern-kecpe:, 1 DANIRU GORDON, Goderictt, car to the proprietor JONAS COPY, Village of Harpurhsy. CABINET MAKER: simpered with the muscles is other parts of the bade. Every employment' in which men rotate brings into relatively greaser action particular Pula of the system; some organs are cosslandy a,rd scnvely exerciaet, while others are eondemo- rd to inactivity. To malar, therefore, one orgao owner to another in power, it Is necessary not poly m exercise it frequently, bat to render ether organs inactive, so u not to draw swat• (horn it that vital energy which it requires is order to be made perfect. The important synth resulting from these face, that the more any part of vas Atmos system u ex- erciser', the more a es eelargsd. sad as pincers iaeruucd. applies equally to all organs of the body: ,t applies to the brain es well as the mus- cles. The heads of great thinkers. as hes 1.oeo stated, err wonderfully large; sod it has been a - 4.o unquiet and enterprising spirit. The head of Bineperr, for instance, was small iii youth. but acquired, in after life, • development nearly enormous.”; 1 would love the parent. therefore. understand that hi.entld may be made to excel in eluuo.t any thing; that by increasing the power of cer- tain ngags through exercire. be can be made • prodigy of rally mental or muscular actiii'y.- Bat 1 would is,. hits at the serne time, under - too rely col ti at int thio mmd., hes arisen from tivity nod power are produced by extraordinary the mystery in which the science of mod has deyeloptnent of an organ; and repec ally that in been tofu se d, and i¢tinranee of the connexion early life, no one organ of the body ca be diapro- betwern the mind end body: for we find them ex- portionetely exercised, wiehout the risk of must eredingly nnxinun and c•refnl aline ihr health injurious cucsequencrs. Either the over -exceed of Meir children ;nattier respects.F.ndrely (or• sod i,vrr•taiked organ itself will be injured for get(at of the brain. they know there it danger in exercising many other para of the hardy too life, or the development of oilier and eesentid math, when they are hot partially derelnped._ p.tte of the eyatrro will be •nested (orever.- Tliey know That cantien is mesentery wu ehil- ream what hes been said hitherto, we either the der. m read et to Meir (.n.1. lest their delirse fsllewing fart., Which should he made the basis dee• i rr nr¢an' .hnuld b• iopiroo by w W. ea- of ell ost•,c,ton: feet., which f wish often to re- rihngandtotatula'ingregimen. Aparentwould p•sr. are /pain itli, twntaiitl organ by is rz. be greatly alarmed if hie I•nlr caikl, by enntinu-d all thr mental fat.ltiu are w,.ife.trd; it is er- tmdinXly drlirate, and Ina par firstly drrelopal us enemtragem•nt,pnd warning. Lad learned an env rAiLliau! or -ezcUemrat ost schen se Chia es moth fond no a heilthv a l i'r. Sue's a prod!• ata, 1 People who are the huhu n( indulging nn- erf cv of glort-mv might , ,dnuh'•dly be forme,, - e. 10.rtremely haslydous. The nwd.at of effecting it. world he •nnvwbat Lk^ the rel rnabhn w child to remember. end ger, very often develope-mertain muweles of the fare to such a degree es to impart to the cosnte- ' pah•ioly the tarter ie ihr mare .i' bees.,eaose the, ounce •n rspressioo of ill -nature, when they are stn u a more delicate organ rhea the stmn.ch. t The acti•,,y of moat of the mason of the tidy [t io long protracted insanity an opposite slate too br very ere.•ly it .reseed:' they can b. mode of Ohtn2* tray, tear p ace boon the brn actually reason. and study, with the *helot? and constan- cy ■a f *du't Each method ia e d+arrr,ts hat cot to a-igrrbr. Thrss ds.n East VIM Ceaais CO's, Ofcs, lone 16 1849. .901911 WtSr-s-rKE}:T. GODERICH. August elrh, 11149. 2r -n30 D. JOHN HYDE, (earl ROM antacid E IE IID 1(C IL HEIL, NOTICE, THE Subeenbt•r treeing 1.EASF.I-1. f.v the ter ..1 Twenty 'care, 1!'o Porter• ly esu lb. North side of the Market :goers, at present occupied by '1'lse„dure Itet. , Eeq. washes to i.11mate to (line• who wislr to avet: themselves of an EI.ItilRI.li SIT- STRATFORD. I (JATION for BI'SIA EIS:*that he will Joey rt. 1849. 2P -o26 I La*ts BUILDING SiTES Inc any Term . not excectnng •Twenty Year., at aal-aerate - I Rent per annum. tt 'IiORAt'E NORTON. Gndereb, March 19, 1848. 9v-s8tf Blank Deeds and 111enlorials, s r( h functions ( wh,le '•a t dlimir It. e.peetaily in the intellectual rega.:b.. oM arm' their ont nor nr• 1 r wt.. ono -i til (.mi�.t' and d powwer 1 will dwell u^nn shit Such. ridging from hie skull reerntlydi.emered, fact • little. A child, for inetane.. may be WWI grub big ihr tape with Dean Swill, who .or gradually accustomed to est •w'd dig -.t large same, year* hefnre hi• death sits in •n imbeetle i q•anttles e•n of ,imu'atin'millet! fond. 1 have1eoote• E-gnirol mentions the cote of an ie: -0e sato an sometime of 'bis kind, eel when 1 re- .fern+le whose forehead on .dmisrioo tato the manrtnted with the parents nn the imprnpriett, Iin'pital was to large that he had • drawing made I sod danger u(allnwiog a child hon two y'-,rsold. of it, bat akrrw•rda it became smell and nor• patch dirt enngantly. i war Mid that he was an• row. -R. 51. ) 1,500,000 ACRES OF LAND FOR SALE iN CANADA WEST. THE CANADA COMPANY have for deposal, about 1,500,000 ACRES OF LAND dispersed throughout most of the Townships in Upper Cauda -nearly 500.- 000 Acres are situated m the Heron Tract, well knower as one of the most fertile parts of the Province -it has treb:ed its popula- tion in live years, and now contains up- wards of 20,000 inhabitants. The LANDS Ire offered by way of L B A 8 E, for Tea Years, or for SH DOW .Y-IAe plea 'f one ff tb Caah, and tie balance is fastal- meats being done away milk. The Rents payable 1st February each year, are about the interest at Six Per Cent.upon the price of the Land. Upon most of the Lots, when GEARED, NO MONEY IS REQUIRED DOWN -whilst upon the others, acoordisg to totality, one, two, or three years Rent, moat be paid in .dvauce, -but these payments will free the Settler from further calls uotil 2nd, 3rd or 4th yea of his term of Lease. The right to PURCHASE the FREE- HOLD during the term, is secured to the Lessee at a fixed sum timed in Leant, and an allowance is made according to antici- pated payment. Lists of Lands, and any further informa- tion can be obtained, (byapplication, if by letter post-paid) at the 'sOvncss, Toronto and Gederirh ; of R. Biaeraui., Esq., Asphodel, Colburn. District; Dr. ALLISS, Giesi$, or J. C. W. Data, Req., Strafford, Huron Dwtnet. Goderiah. Match 17,184E. 7 AND all kinds of DIVISION COCRT BLANKR, and BLANK PRUSIIN- SOkY NOTES, Inc save a1 the Signal Office. Fiery description of JiOOK and 3013 Printing executed with neatness and dispatch. LAND FOR SALE. c IHfl 2 IFOIR ('.112 l J FIFTY-SIX Acres of excellent Laud. t.e.ne . the Witt pert of Lot 16. 7th Concession til Wawaoah, will Ix enld for less than the Gov- ernment price. One hallo( the purchase m•ney will be required down, and Iwo rears will be •1• lowed for payment of the remainder. lntendtng parcharen may apply to Mr. JOHN ALLAN, Tavern Keeper, Gidericb. Goderich, 13th July. 1849. •`2-23.1 eommen rnhn.t• and i nd..d Jae npp^armd to he tit u gnreo• fel h- hat ennn after Otis he hid n long In8.ntmarory fever,+.d an notional character for children, which 1 strrihnted at the time, to the aimolatingcdiet allowed him. This diet ap- i geared ■1.0 to have •n effect upon hie denim. - tom, and confirmed the eh tion of lluteiand, that ••'nitwits whn ore *rmnanroed in rat much Ianimal ford become robust. hui et the same time n pasniona-, vent and h•ual.• A chid may also be made to execute surpri.tng macular: mnvrmente, Snell as walking nn a rope, olid other Into•. but these ere frowned nnle by long portio• which greatly develnpee the mu?rte1 by which f the movements are eaien'ed. From fregnent' and pnwe,ful action, the muscles of the arty. of. blarkemiths and hoxere and boatmen. floor to the lower 'oohs of doom -re. and those of the Inc.. j of hof oone,f become strikingly enlarged when • See Memoirs nj John Mooney Mead, who; !died April dth, I83I, aged 4 years. 11 months,' i days. He was " taught hymns before he could I .peak plainly," •' reasoned with," and constant - In instructed until his last eicknese, during: which. " when the parent. and physician thought him getting Netter. the disease. ,cdl.ola any as- sigor:He rouse, goldenly pot on • viol -et and co - STRATFORD HOTEL. (Lada ■al'i.) THE Subscriber informs bis friends and the Travelling Pubhr, that he bas leaped the targe BRICK TAVERN, at the Eaat end of Stratford, (now the county town of Perth.) lately occupied by 'Mr. Isaac May. -where he will be ready at all times In the effect produced by the fortune of Helen of Ktrconuel-a fortune which came h p of the revolving wheel of the mntahfe Roddres, notwithstanding all the efforts of her father to make the coupe of her life happyand its termination bleeped. Abatractr4 as the thoughts were of the three inhabitants of Kirconnel-the lady, the laird, and the daughter -(rout the eeenes that were ever changing in.the warlike world around them, so much greater was the necessity Inc cul- tivating the oppnrtuniltee of enjoyment that nature and fortune hail awarded to them: and so much greater also was the relish Inc that enjoyment which has ever been found in minds and hearts properly constituted and tuned to the harp of gntuinrsi, to increa.e with po.eesaion as much as the fal4e taste for stimulating avocatmns cloys with the eaay.surfeit. It is not often that, even in these days, when the humane virtues of a high civilization have inclined mankind to the cultivation of the social affections, that a family is found with' its different members so pred'epe.ed Inc the harmony of exclu- sively domestic joys, that Prime chord does I not occasionally give forth a dr.cordant I !Sound when touched by •nexternal impntar; but, in the times of which we speak, and in• the part of country where tate indivinale re- sided, " the happy f.tnily" was a group that i eve mere often foendln the La -ries of the I poet or the creations of hope deferred than In the real existences of the troubled and- vexed world, The house of Kirconnel, where theee in- I divitoals reatdid, stood on " fair Kirconnel • Lee;' a term implying that the wood which in those days encompassed every baronial re.idencc, had Leen, to a certain extent, cleared away, to aline- the daisy covered! lawn to rejoice in the beams of the generally eecluileil Pilo. But at a little distance. the empire of the forest was eg•in reatimed, obi the rondo on exacted by nature. of allow- i tug Kirtle to enjoy her grassy bank, rover-' ed with iho wed rose and the eglantine; and to roll 'playfully along .her pebbly bed, 1 unimpeded by the neighboanng trees,which, ass if in amatory dalliance. sent down their steagglrng lips to kiss her as she went.- 7'he wood bower -in early times a species'' ef neral retreat in much greater faebron Ithan nowadays -was, in repetition of itself, seen rearing its ornamental walls, round whch the native parasitic plants were en- 1 twined in close etubracr in various patty of the woody retreat. Some of these had ibeen caretuf!y looked to by the Ial_v of Kir- 1 connel hersel', who, anxtoua to confirm I.cr • ( husband's resolution a±ainst cneairina in I the were of the times, left 0n energy unem- 1 eloped to render their rer•;lence, as well iwithin the walls of the house as in the bowers and _erdenn, as pleasant to the eye an, the frees of her heart and mend were de - 3 TWELVE AND 811 PENCE --�•T Tan *'D Or 111 Tot. NUMBER XXXIH. word more to may what they were, when they lived. when they vieitad this mess o:' sorrow, and when they deported frees it, possessed sit Mairence is their simple Lrevity that moved the heart of the visitor with a power now little felt and leu appre- cia'ed, 7'Ina .welling treed tumuli, with these vtm;,Ic .p+nhing grey -headed stones, standing yet leaning to a side, as U them- selves bent by the hands of lime, bow hum- bly might they appear, encircled •s they were, with the' proud monarch of the wood, the primeval oak, that had seen the sires and grandsires of the lowly inhabitants of " Death's Matting" rine and fall, and become dust, es man contemplate. the daj-Sy wing forth in the morning, live oot its day, sad die. Such was the romantic buryingnpbreo of Kirconnel at the time of w h ch we speak; and even now, when the oak has fallen be- fore the axe of ei,ilizatmn, and Fante's trump has 1,o•in�!c;; *seen over the tomb, the place has a hall ,we.t eel romantic clidrac- ter (the Kirtle is poll there) not exhibited by other burying-grtuinds'in Scotland. In those •e!r'a'e, the members of the I fancily of Kite moo! pissed the greater put of their time. Helen, though a lover of home, wu fond of _ratifying a fancy preg- cant of beautiful insects, and a taste fur what is hivetv'th nature, by sitting by the banks ol the Katie, and supplying her mind with the pabulum of the olJ,QScotti•h roman- ce,. "Ref Co.lyear and hie Cross -how.". and "G.Ibert with the 1Vhite Iland," though soon ani erred d by the tontineatsl roh:ancei, were then the legitimate foun- tains' of amnaement to tho fair maids of Scotland; and thou who aimed at sublimer fl;ghte, might have had feet -terse to "Fyn Maccuwl," or "Gret Gow Macmorne;" but there was in none of the works as yet cir- culated in Scotland, what might gratify the intense yearnings of the female heart for these poetical iunages which subsequently sprung up with the more mature growth pf chivalry. The (ores of warriors are not the loves ofevery-day life, far les. the:overs 'lithe inspired peel; and Ilelen, as she read three old legendafy romancer, might (lid in theta the amusemen! that at .rded a relax- ing a'ternative with her own poetical eons- , muningc• with the [.Ideal ba -d of all -Na- ture; but fur the tn.piration of love itself she required the ethernet -roan -in that high respect she hal prrfiured of the noblest of God'. creatures, to rouse l.er heart from nature to the lov. r'e dream. As yet the m.o.! of K:rennet had not seen any iniiiidual that realized the idea she formed, by the banks oI the Kirtle, of j the indtsidual who coil.) call up in her young boson those extraordinary emotions wh:rh constitute " fore's young, dream." - The aeehided mode of life adopted by her parents, was nnfsvoure 1:e to a chice of the 1 From the Tales of the Borden. h lig!.tf..l to the ratiooal-andlo.mg foul of tap manic objects; and it even appeared to er appreciatine and grateful lord. As Sir he her tether and mother's wish ,hot Pueb T_iIE LEGEND OF FAiR HELEN -OF' ( KtRUONNEL. The Peat of a branch of the Dumfriceahire Maxwells - Kireonnei-a property lying of far distant from Domfties, and surround- ed by -the little pastoral stream, Kirtle, ie me of the;.mo•t beautiful that ever gratt6• cd the taste or inn; :red the pride of a high amity. It tt•as not until about the begin- ning of the ,eventernth century that it same Into the po..eesion of the Maxwel'r; t for, Miring a long period. :t belonged to the 1 old, though never ifltiitrioln fainly of the Belle, who, amidst all the termed and of the march territories, had the good, Benne to prefer the Quiet plcasnres el the retreats o1 their own pure Kirk, to the tumultuous and cruel scenes which boasted no etreamlel hot the heart's blond of revengeful form. -- The power of Lord Maxwell, or tl.e threat of Douala", were rgoaily tnavat:ing to force the old proprietor of Kotunnel-though he _replied as a le.eer baron, and might coin- iitisd retainers to fight 1 f his pica -.to i'a ceifee the pleasure, of domestic peace on the,dltars of Laverne or Bellona- these con-. j•tnct goddeepen whn, hand in hand, swayed the destinies of Border men, and r'- ulated the Border rights of strum and luum. Ile held hie fine property directly of the crown; land, s0 lon'r as he fulfilled the conditions of I his right. he cnnceived himself entitled to the enjoyment of what hal been fairly got and hunmirably retained. One strong ele- ment in Ktrennnrl's determination to live at home, in the enjoyment of what hone may produce to a mind capable of appreciating ?le sweet., wax the Isar interrupting the happtnees of hie lady -one of the family of Ireiegs in that quarter, who latterly carate to possess lits property -and of one rhtld, a daughter. the mail of Kirconnel, rnncern- ing whom, ae nil our readers know, more hes been •tit and *ting by antiquarian min- strel than ever fell to the hapless lame or irrasure•t memory of fair woman. We need scarcely ear, that this n-mmng hcirese of Kircnnnrl'n name was Helen; 1' r, whn :het has read the touching line. of lenker- tnn, can ever forget the name of one whoop fete has drawn more tests than ever did that of the hern'ne Lady !Margaret. in the old , ballad of "Douglas' Tragedy T' The dis• , were of *setteery women, 4heagh hollowed} by the sanelifytng power of lore, have sel- dom In this court y tnepirrd the Harp of the t minstrel; Po far we ere forced to admit the power of beauty, ah,ireefed lrnm the finali- ties of the mind and henrt, that It hes been • talisman to herdic genius In every aye; yet it is honourable to the charweter of our nation, that the emit which illumine. the "fare divine," hoe called forth strain* as melting and triumphant se ever were pro. , fluted by the lineaments of physical beauty. ' 1t i•, however, when the two qualrtte• hay. he.* Coned enmbln.d m • favourer danghier 1 Redland. that an tshappy fate has erer- , clad its greatest powelr in producing a Isyespothy whtrh has 101 no harp to mond fithilty to the milers tree, se heart in net trnib land intimated, and so nye destitute. of •ympathetie tears Rich has rrnle hien )wain says- choice should be exrlu,ird.. Piet her heart ! might, in the absence of mane 1. -rein, learn •' Fa: erre her ert,rrs with fiuwrro- g Rowe sod li;i divers colours, . In be. p:ea.ed tt WI Cie. Cho ce that their Primrol and p.rvink: I love or p' licy might point nut to her ado-- Mint• fevrrfoy, and eglantine, tion. A second coueiri of her own, 1Valtcr Colimbin• and ma there were. I (fell of Blacket 1leurc, had a free paespnrt Than ani man mocht think." i to the hail of Kirconnel, as well as to the The Graces had, as yet, but small in- j powers that were enshrined in Kirconnel fence in' Scotland; bet the Genius of woo le. The laird Paw'in the ynung man ?hivalrr, a cognate Ppirir.. was busy in his nearest heir. in the event of hie Deice effecting a great revrintion is the minds nil being taken from h -m by fate; and dhe lady lie inhabitants: and though there was little t could :levee?, at. &he thought, in hell's r tint n him to humanize, there was much to ole- , and hombre manner. eons a,.imilation to vats• ard beautify. Troche of bis power I her own love n( retireihent and ease, and P might already be seen about the bowers and i consequent direlish of the warlike and san expected ,nrm. •• he , Pmoir ons " clam by seven' jsdoeinaa petering -minister• ` led other., all rat whom united in the req•e.t thea it might he published: and .Il agreed in the emotes; that • kneed elite of the wnaacr in wards dm! child was treated, together moth Ms results would be profitable both to parents and children, awn • benefit to the moue of educeiion." !sincerely hope they will be: but by producing a very differ- ent impresoion from that which the Ammar is afford the usual comfort and supplies and de'i¢ned to make: and by teaching parents to .promote the personal convenience of his ev"'d adnpnnt , amitar enar're with the children enmrniated to their env. See .1., Memoirs n) guests. Addison Pinnell, Mary Lnihrn', Nathan W. WINES and LIQUORS of the beet de- picterrman, aJ noicesnf numerous ether „use ecriptioe. A steady Hostler alwavo in intellectual prodigies, which are to be (nand in attendance. ALBERT G. HATCH. hook-rtnrea, in Magazines, and •srtous Periodi- MARBLE FACTORY, SOUTH WATER ST., (MLT. D H. McCULLOCH eowtinnes to man- e Wane re HEADSTONES, MONU- MEIN 'S. OBELISKS, TOMB TOPS, W.r is Marble and Freeness, an cheap ee any is the Provisos, ea work warr•atsd se order, or se .large will he trade. Prices of Marble Hsedetosse (toot le to So dollars; 31 P'resetoss from 6 to 30 dollars ; Moen. -test. ke., from 60 dollars upwards. -- written soarnesteatioss addressed to the • ,ndn.igeed eontaisis lass leseriples., ADA at whet priest is gents or Preemies., will be psaateally ►heeded to. D. H. McCdJLLOCH. Galt, Nov. 8th, 1641- 42ns3 TO THE PUBLIC. 1 HF.RRBY emotion all sed every ponos.. preemie whamnssees, free swedev or 'Masi TWO PROMISSORY NOTES. Wised bywe is favor of Robert Moderweil. elle for 10 18.1N ; attd •anther for £I new ever des, se i Bare resetved ase vales fir tulle nae. WM. Me11LW AiN. f)oierl.A, lid Sept. 1849 av_.31-31 Stratford, 18th July, 1849. 2v-n;5'f TO MILL, PROPRIETORS. AYOUNG MAN wanting a bumwtion a Meller -alae a good Accountant. For further partrenlars apply by letter post paid. to F: G., Tucksr•nuth, Huron District, Canada West. • August 20th, 1849. 2v-et9tf BURLINGTON LEM= = A ZIADIh ICY 0 THE ACADEMIC YEAR for 18.19 ani 60, will commence t'0 Thursday, the fourth day October, and clove on the first Thursday of July. Circulate gime futi information, may be obtained at the Ake of the Huron Rifest, or by applieetion to D. C. VAN NORMAN, Principal. Hamilton. 7t► Minot. 1849. SU -GM -7i VALUABLE LOT LOT OF LA$D FOR SALE. LOT 8, Lake Shodre, towe.Mp of Aehtield, enriaining ONE HUNiDRRD AND SEVENTY-TWO A- CRES, linkman, two miles of the thriving VSlagw of Port Albert, is which there se a Graft Mill, • Saw Mill, and ea Oat 111•iL- 're. Lot is bounded on the west by the Lake, and on the net by a tut road, --sea te well watered. Q"J'1'or particulars apply --if by letter post paid -to IRA LEWIS, E.q. Banister, Go/srteb. Owl.neb, 9nd July. 1149. ve-e tttf calif for children. (1 The groes errors committed by parents in over -wetting the brains of their eff.pring has its origin in the false system of ph,lo.ophy, which nes elated from the time of Plato to ihr present duty. and by which the mind ie regarded a sepa- rate costa), having no wort •fcnSneiine with end being snits, infueeeed hr mater. 1f Phrenolo- gy do nothing else the dispel this prepael'roos ion it will .eenmplish much. lied this science haven discovered and its principles. acted epos • , thousand years ago. what grievions errors in education, what incalculable injury to the brain would ha.. been avoided: and what • mens of splendid talent which has !ren empleved in lw,otlkas m•nphys.eel sp•rolaine• might have her. preb'sbly turned into mon useful rhenne'is! 111e leer a. peeple were iefferent of the for'. ,h+t in ills iib the mead vr.•ts-rhroogh rPrwreeey of material organs, no rational vi,we el the true method of preserving the health ni the brain could be intertsi"ed. Many wrirrn before the time of Gall knew. indeed, the intimate relepnn raison, between mind ■ad m.mn,rbnt it was 'M 'stew, of Phrenology, Orsi. tiliteneereiti f'y which tweed the melte mind iltrongle and preeeiely to Mie important point, end wilt (Mobilises ie time week a tltmoaeh chancre is pahhe sentiment end be •tiesded with meat hap• py result -R. M 1 (• Thin fees et vadenia►le, and yet sneer p• - rents. at eontesi.d with re►gisa then nff.pnng it dbm misMr. moos ...ds give then, highly 's^.sw.rd .ead'swnte, woos. and ether cross drinks, sed Bull rens In •ggrawata the •,oieore N their lower propreaitie., flewssese remarked that aft ellldrea were thieves, fare and gl"'Inne. Per the latter.goali'y they may often thank their pimento -R M Outdo* of Kirconnel, where some rode,gilnary custorne of the fiance. Yet it was figures of kniehia in various positions -one -kmtwn that the arming laird el Blacket resci::ng a damsel from her enemies -one House had been engaged in secret frays bee in the romhet at o-rtrance-one striking the 1 ween the J ihestnm•s end Cridhtnne; while, palteades of an armed city -placed, as they for some perpn.e not generally .known, were, in the retreats of peace and domestic thnu_h, from What we have Paid, net diffi- h•Ippiners by a former warlike posse,scr of cult to h'• surmised, he had fought in die• the prnperty, ,ervcd the p.trnnae of orna• .,eller, and dtseleiined the gl ,ry of having Mending the'.eq'iectcred waikw, and sou, hewn nfl t!'t h. ata • f rnar y J ihnstooeb, plying to the peaceful and happy inhauit- 1 whone dead:. might have aweigh' hint re- Ants a contrast between the pursuits of war . noon. if not wealth. Ji. had f ought 1r. and the plea=urea of borne, cad home's a .pint of animo•fty and a thirst of Treed, blessed erjoyments. that lay deep tested in ht. Led: t, hilt %tach, At a little dis'ance from the mansion or along with its oots'ime fruit., he had striven cast lc -for every hoose, in thrice day., had in conceal, fruit, the knowledge he po - a castellated character -was end .till iv the ed of hi. frinrd•, tae Kircu"mel., wee, hnrytng ground of Kirconnel; a Ppnt which, , good -will he had motive lo cab: sate more from the peculiarity of its titillation, as well as from its own mournful •aesocuat,ons. im- pressed the mind of the vieiter with feeinge which startled him, as much from their novelty .P from their intensity. There IP a email stone there that would i( deciphered and communicated to nor readers, antici- pate our mora, .•e! eirn, t",'• ••-a lv tear be- fore our ow n eyhire a e relieved by powerful than that of weak, or glory. - Ile wc•he,1 to recommend htmerlf to the (nir Helen, hitt aernrring the lode and es- teem of her bailer and ntntller; end he doubt- ed not that by lits nn•n per.unel aernm- ptichmente-neither firs nor nn:mpnrta• t -aided by the advice or power ofparenral lore and authority, I'e iso' 11 .nrrepd in changing to her the o'd I a' -i u 1 ('.bogs of our recital. 11.• •..... .1 by at vessel, to ordinary f•i•mleh:p into the higher and give morne ilea I .0 ex:raorul nary .net p-ircr,en'Pnent. of olio•'• fl. where it Lep. T:, - grout.] -of the dm,l, ,a f',a;iarved is oar nir!. " Deat;t'. Mailing." am it hip wnrret.evni been called, ie wiser -ted with stl the e4.er•ms of a s•Ibhtm•d melnutlolr, w b eh Plate. nature a. i wh•.e. amu I I '•k• to tho.e high gut pones n( I -.•r gr. at Author in reit- mg poor "mile's with their 1, -art rha,trn ing woes. Al theiota• of whir', we eprak. thep place of the flea 1 wee entirely serrourd- ed with high mit. Ppm ad:ng elm., except where the silvery Kirt.r rmbreerd alio hel• fewer, Pprr•, Re she rolled ell%ty a:illt{t mere .lowly. it night almost anp.gr. e' this pied than ell -where -and neointima a anti threnody to the ear, rel the gi ariPn *pinto, that ten,'.4 the clew form* which they once ammeter,. A few eery res 1e stone.. who're rodenr,s woe thea greatest recommendation to the sentimental mind, told, in thegnalet "old Ingle.- of that day, their simple I.1•. 11rre Ite'hr the.r.cM of ys sons (.f Ktrrnnnrlte," nnghl here brt'n on a rode freestone that hap long pince'41s- apre•rrd. ' Terraughtte dad chow% to he here," appeared upon another old robe; and .oma erMb,ted mere pimple eek... -.till' pointing trot nothing morn than wane end ..*name, yet more eingnent in that 6reetty thaw the moat " slowei ern " "Jon Kirk. pairyebo," "Andrew Welles," "Helen John stun," Mary of the 1.e'," wallets one Tee die„ i,aaaa Cs:nFa .L -We are in- formed by n Lteed, that he re ervel a com- menters nn trent Nia;;•rs, aesterday, s1a- rang that Lady }:ig.w re to ren.sin at the Fall. ('r a uiior0., w!t:bt hi. Excellency will pr,.cert to King.'"n res att.•mt the Prn• vttsct,l Suuw, atter w he h he w l; make it tt-Qr Inwards the 1Vt.t, rasing th.o'gh llranttetd r'tr h w route. This weal a8'rd au ep,•.•rluel Isarfeel • their le 1 , to tits prop I, ' f ilia h•ghly n of the o ottn'ry to nem? Ito ernes' Irr for decency and order, and to •h..w 'heir 1"val'y and d. toff"n to the S'overeig'n piths Empire by the renrte- .7 and re•pert wh eh they, will rrh,btl to• .ade h. r nnule reprea ntalive.-Brawfforl then Id. , POST l)rrice.-11-. nnd^tetsnd that the orrangenomte nrcmity to been'ered int• presov s to the 'fancier el tie Prnstneial foal Office to the People rf these Provin- ces hove born rnmpl•ted in England. •it will be rtcrib istrd alio' a ere -auto wee pls..- ed ttnrtee the 1st sre•ten of the Canadian Legu'slure. In an P Ips' ion Of this event, providing 6•r the ',ta il:msler.t of a reduced Wad wet:efts rate cf p"siPge-Frntwi*tr.