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HomeMy WebLinkAboutHuron Signal, 1874-3-11, Page 1• • • fliksinran #ignal, (trtastdititan 1848,) Oee of the largest Papers pshisha Csanta, s prosted sad published at Goderleh. Ontario, grimy VW 13 KY laTIGSDA-T MOUNT 246, • at the Dace, lostreal Street, adjoining the Market !Senate, b/ J. J. BELL, 301703 Ada PROFILIBT01. r tit Timms- Steeper sanuns, erforeen. el if credit . elves. Ns paper diseestiened til. sit arrears ar• paid. except at the optios of die pubi saber. RATES OF ADVERTISING : Right cents per Ilea for the Oise lineation. awl iWo caste per Ilse for each anbsevaant insertion., rinentese cam. not a:mediae • Ilsee. 14 per sasses. hose 6 to 10 liars db. The number of lines t« be reekowed hy Ore epees iseeeptal meamareal by a wale of mild Noapereil. Advartiessweets without spesifte dinettes*, will taarted antll forbid, and charged almordiugly. TIA Li -1113 LEV COTS : fidlowing rates wilt he eharged to tworchatit • and ethers who Advertise by the year, - Owe Cohere* I year *A• •. " month* 3 menthe 25 nal/ 1 rear S6 , 115 10 Itr 11 11 months " 1'11.1201a 9.iarter " 1 gear a rrionthe , " • ino,i•ti. Eighth •• I veal 11 ss . a months. E. .• 3 isonthe.... .... . Tili• ter...meet 1• to b. routine,' to the ordinate hosise-•-• sm. a*t f d s'i It will *it Ise heibi t • n I,t10.1 AtIOS. R eitavs eeeeer„„e,. r, l'neste advertisements of Arms. Isomers to lot or for Sa▪ le, ala. arm. *ter- r 1.11 t• strictly withered' to. AArartisemeets intra.1.4 for inaertion In &ay pertien:ar nosy should reach the office by sx.en 6a. Tiwadel• The large eirenlatton of the !VIGN.ti. make. It aa naorpreaselndrwtising medium. JOS W011 OF ALL MHOS 4 4 le 'etlitelte •. Inersteil with seatnese end .1•enatch. Biqa printed while you wait. yrderelty inatlypniseturilly •ttena- osil 144 warewiwitaWlan llusintss Merton). =airs -cam. Rik:t/ NICI=1101.0407.G. SURGEON DENTIST. to:hce and residence, West Street. Three doors haply, Bank of Mentreal, Goderioh. 1 •11.•• J ohn be:upbeat. (Graduate alit,Gin University, Illostreal), SZAF'ORTH. CIE awl neadesee-One ben- south of Roes' kJ hotel, Mate dray, and opposite McCallum's h otei. Seeforth, April sore nos. 1307 .C. !Shannon . pa T S1C1 A N. SCROSON, as ;kg., Gederieh,OY 11:40.11 DIFeeitiecte..1EAN. lootYstet an. saitintoe. CORilNER. Ate. Mee 11. awilllemiware Our./ door east of Central &hoot Lar. C1111011/111. • McGill College gion- uncle a. au ;moo Mee,' Hamilton 1 Streak Ondoriek. Ontario. „ awn), • * lra I.erevais • rpiti7RINTSR AND ATTORNETIAT-LAW, .,,t0e-10-111WWW11. enrint• CroWn .utorner, GeWortelt,Ust,, Ogee la Coen Mouse. CaineeMn dflE tearrow. DARRIPITERA,SOLICIToRNINcRAMERT,Re. la Ole., Visrket iquare. 410.1.riet. le C. 17,11SOON w12 .1. T. 0*anow. H. Ea. ThCalrI..11C, 3ARiti-erga 4$0 ATTORNItr. !SOLICITOR. a a,) in-Chanseory,ie,,Goideich, Ont. • =TA -To -rya( Vir-ier244:'-cm, ErITS - St - setw. iotaerroas. Chaacerr. Conesaarau, As Crebb's 131..nk, /1101611T TO LIND. I 1 %a Is.s BARNES in returning thanks l'ia to her friends in Goderich for past ; 4, patrpome, begs to Noy that she is now pre to give Lessons on the Piano- 1 forte and Cabinet Organ and in Singing. Residence opposite Mr. Savage's, Colborne St. 134;3 tlitaolaar At fkoagor pagalat Boa, a e. flodsrPh. LE J. 5. SHIM IR CHAS. SRAGIR, Jr Gederleti.Dee.-Ist.1311. ly. - _ _ _ BY . litQIU I IC BB. • ATTORN611 AT LAW, SOLICI• r in Ctuuteery. ate. ti.wlerteli. OaL odes, Aeheson'. Weat Street. Go Irriehi IP. IF. **LK lETK. • • •A ?TOMBS -AT -Ian AND SOLICITOR -IN ' /It Chancery. Cosier! sneer, Notary Pubdc, Offieo, opposite the Poet Office. West Street, Goll inch, Osi. 11111-11. 411. 0 A 111 PAI CP NW. • CRANCIIIRY AND C4a1VSTANCING. Odteest Dula Wahows'•, I liase„.1A„„4,.... sea -tf Godnisk, Oat-, Maloonison as 1Coastnii, • t RRIST K RS, ATTM141173.1101110101b1,1114. • die , Omani, Ont. wag MOSSY TO LEND. 11 j..) MA.31I1,.1C01,1 Money' to L•end. tld J At4h1ECS A RCHITECT, le.. Ste„ KT 11131:111SQ11: ARE Sodericb. Plaits and ilmovilicatlese draws eornactil. CarPootere. ttlasteriers' aad week measured and retool. . 1/07.17. alltaohanan, Lawson 41s 'Robinson Ur 4711a bead all Muds of Sashes, Doors, Blinds. donildiegs,aisit Oreesed Lain ber, •t the tied, *Sea Males Mile 1109. 1. T. DUNCAN, V. S. GreaDC.ril WehrTaal0 Coa/ann. OFFICE AND STABLES, MIorgena Street, Fifth Rouse float cl Colborne Hotel N. B. -Horsea examined as to Betted - nein. 1313 PATENTS, FOR INVENTIONS EXPEDITIOUSLY (V PROPERLY 'cured ‘11 Canada, the Vaned States mid Europe D er 3 NT4narauteed or no charge. Sena for print- !. rid instruction*. Agency in operation ten years. HENRI' GRIST, Attain. Can ids, Englaser. Soli:nor of Patents and D mealtimes Feb. . TVCOAPIC 1 C R D. luISS SKI NIMI2iGS,Teaeher of Merle Iv -a on Piano Forte and Organ. Ternis se weal in advance. Residence, Stanley Baguet, Goderich. January 5th. 1874. 1403 lEST'A.0 At. At. 'r. Ntile MIE >5 SO 1115 RniT•CRANT TO 1.111111genn Kew Block. Welat Street, where ! • , 11 be dad to see MI ha customers and the ". yontellemidnrelly poor.% TIKerreaLat. 07571101, 1. . asa. 1 HUT aNDCOLD IllteLteaT ALL Bowie ia their eimirou. • , JAMES VIVIAN THE ACADEMY IPOR YOUNG L AMES UNDER nut Iii: direction of the Starves or ST. . • Josarn will be re -opened on 1 WEDNESDAY Jan. 7th 1874. TICTLIVI‘4 graition par quarter, (11). • Mks* instrumental, . .. 7 OQ " Vocal .. 5 00 ...... 6 60 traneb, 2 00 Drawls", .7. 4 0(4 LL -711111l XXVI1.1NO. 8. • " The Greatest Possible Good to the Greltost Possible number." GnDERTCTI. nNTARIn. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 11, 1874. WHOLE NO.1412. - - -I 60Di:ilia LODGE NO. 33 ti. N. ID., A • f. A. • ...Air uLA ft CoMIIIINIORTION rash.* *earn Woda...lay of Gaol IMO* .39 p. na. Visiting brethren Heat W. DICKSON, Ser. Guderithdtk am. ISM 2573.1 r ormeoMMEM11414106 _ illoncn to ftnb: IS2o,ococo . sortrie eit _etas et Toni property at 7 pet , dit3Irsitiate, solicitor, ic., . dlif Giederich. MONLEY TO LEND.' . - . IN IMPROVED FARM PEG- "' perty, at 8 per cent simple ii&rest per annum. et pply to '1311111aKle SLOAN, • • ' Colborne Hotel. Goderich, fith Oct., 1872. 1338 I' • • MONEY TO L,OAN AT LOW RATES OF INTEREST. PREEHOLD Permanent Buildineend ••; Sayings Society of Toronto. For paiticulars apply to Merchant'lailor . A. M. ROSS. 9 . Agent at Goderich. Ne7:'S- CT MEET Secretary and Treasurer, 9 . ijotels. BRITISH EXCH1NGE HOTEL, amuurr NIT t RIC GO osairy. • CAPT. M. Cox, - PROPRIRTOR LATE 0Y rit E HURON ROLM 4 eontinnane• of the fa, r sad irepprOft at the COUIOWeeilel Mot TrAleging 111,4, that wasenesided before the lire, dully whetted. --..fewww• ANCHoE LINE. arnatians SAIL ruin XIV YsItIL ZEMIN 0Warsit MORT AND FATT4DAT. PERSL0IGER A CCONODAT1ON 1.11411114.111111.3D Rates of Yu -age SI.* Bridge or Nrffido Glasgow. Liverpool «r Leinionderry„Cabins gas. 976 and IV Row odixg to locati.n. Intewsli- ; ate VI Steerage 534 gold. DRA118 ISSUED AT Lowksr RATES. Tor ?visage- or ftirther infortration. Apply to Or thaleSr IlENDs..as7oLC.-BuRnogTunr!nRsti. T. ; MRS. W ARNOCK. Go.larieh. lad . TAILORING. H. 'DUNLOP CHAS. ROBERTON, Toronto. 1343. r •MONEY TO LEND At Greatly reduced Rates of Interest Toth undenigned ha% aay amount of inrney to ilea. from Iwo to. Afters years, at • 105 rate of inter...ease feriumble term. of repavvnent, pavatde by yearly in.stdments; rate et expenaes will defy competitor.. HORACE HORTON Apprabler for t he Canada Per • =anent Building Plaviwg• Society. of Tooriente. INSURANCE CARD. The Satheertber is agent for the follcwingfIrst-elase [neoprene* Conapianieii PHOENIX a Lond«o, Exitiane. HART1POR7) of PROVANCIAL ef Tor«eto BRITISH AMERIcA, «t Toronr.... JIE Marine bawled.' done at th• lowest possible rates HORACE HORTON Office Merket Square, Goderich. °cermet 1370. • ir311-1e. Insurance. ThE LIVERPOOLALONDON t I. 0 BE INSIERANCE COMPANY. •Iridtable Asset s, .112,01111,000. Lumen yield la the course of Thirty-five yeas* es- reett FORTI MILLIONS OF DOLLARS ! • Claims by CITIC.A.0,01 frit file esti- mated et nearly illta,04SCP0•013, are being •• Amara. Oflju.t..1 am -woo? DEDUCTI0a. blialtr1.44 , Prowl.% P.r.- welt.. and Liberality lo ad - /oatmeal or its limari are the prominent hataros ol thi•• wea;thy NW.: OW1 LIFE issued with very Head Offlco. Canada Branch. MON- TRZAL .• 0.5 .0 .1A111 H ,Reswies I Secretary A. M. 110111t. Airiest ler efidibrish WESTERN ASSURANCE COMPANY. HEAD OFFICE TORONTO.. CAPITAL STOCK .. e400,000 SUPePLUS, FUNDS 208,369.00 RECEIPTSFORTHEYEARe EN DING J UNE 30th 1871. 357,858.26 HON, J. AlchlL RRICII President. B. HAMAN Menaging Direetor. FIRE Hs MARINE INSURANLE AT Lowest burrent Ratt s. OPECIl L Low •reeter Itores,,cov Pet I NO la Insurance for tine or threw years on detached Dwellings. Churchea and Schools with contents, it. Town. and Country plaxe. These rates and terin• of poliev,portleularly favorable to the Farm. kg Conhnunity. First Class nornirreeted for a travelling Agency for the townshirai onUying thiSlewn. Apply di writing with ',v.v./wrath theunderairind for trans mitts ,,o to the Head Mei& , D. WATION. . Local Agent. Gcnierien Nem. 187' GODERICH AGENCY OP 311E Trust and Loan Company of , C A -NA D A'. hworpoaled by lioyal , CAPFTAti-L-014TE MILLION POUND -S - MERLIN. G. ••••/0. Funds,. Tor Investment. • jo.s8 awl. on theltnennni of appiovod peen City or Tewn Property for periods of live years or to suit the eolleellienee of Borrowers, and either repayable at expiry of thee nr hy lOWAIWOMS. Payments le redaction of Loans will he aceeptad at any time oa favorable tome. Srir Apr Mortgages purchased. G. M. TRUE111,Alli, (Semi 13I rest seta re Getterese !TEND CONVEYANCING &LOAN Apncy Office, Blyth. W. H. G. OLLES, Conveyancer, Solicitor in Chancery, and Attorney of the Law e.nd Equity Courts of Ireland, Genealogist, Land, Loan and Estate Agent, Law, Life and Fire Insurance, and General Agent. Um opened An office to Bi) IA, 44e the late iva.tle nee of Br. Hut. hiseon, next hones eouth of Ore Re- gistry Oince, (*edit, Wills, Mortgage*, Re., care- fully prapored; Titles and claims to Irish Natatee is &ad Low Business la trained trans- acted n n•etion with a First class DOWD Pine; Ornweicerios traced Pedigree, preys], cd; !Forty roan ; charges moderate. Motor to Loan -private fonds, and foX Pnblio ,-orapantelt, Oetits maestro. Notes protested sad collootiod. INFOIllet seat house !loath of Rogistry Mos 1107 sere•Ree XTR A MACHINE OIL Has hem io amoral owe for tweissist two years and Lite hot WtifItiottOO,O. may be seem by tea- hillitliany of the loadtag bosses is °etas to. It will nee congeal fa the solderd weether, It la tharetoreinttable tomes lightestaadfasteet, a•wrIl es the heaviest meehines In used GODERIC11.• 11E08 to direct attention to 1118 ery full stook of FALL AND NYINTER GOODS, ,which lois prepared to make up in the most feshionable stele and at the lowest -rates. Clentm .Uttrnit-lti time a(n11 kinds kept on hi;ad as venal'. Goderich, 9th Dec. 187,3. THE • ; • Very_ Wante0 NEW 'iTARDWARE STORE In GrODE 011 UPPOSITF MARKET HOUSE SIGN Of THE CIRCURII SAW mint SI7BSCRIBE RIG ri-4:41. I II iT FIFT A have jogs newrietedvrwai,-,eut Eut.,. rim aa4 COMPLETE STOCK OF HARDWARE. ofailkinits which .1 pnrev that der) irompitition. Beton .. *cohere. Plea* givens . '11.-Lset ei Otioh. uest week G. F.i.PARSTIS &GO Opposite the Market House Aiodarieli Jaa. 12,C, WC I INT / 4:CARRIAGE WORKF.1. B. 3.. 'WHITELY REG'S 10 THANK THE PUBLIC " for the liberal patronage accorded him in the past and to announce that 'he still carries 011 Carriage and Sleigh liniakingin all Its branches, at the old ((tend, commit:to E. Martin's Colborne ' lintel. Carriages Buggies, Waggons, and everything else in his line kept en hand er made to order of the best ,matenal and In the most workmanlike manner. ithrelemo reemeeter EXIVFTID. Goderich 2lith Feb.1873. 1358 -CARRIAGE WORKS, HAMILTON VREETI G9DERICH- o KNOX & ROTHWELL Beg to inform the public that they aro in a position to fill all orders with which they may be entrusted, in a style which cannot be surpested in the County. The vehicles turned out of their establish - style, ment are finished in a very superior ape will bear cornparieon with any. ORDEU SOLICITED, Ooderich, 16th Feb. 1874. 1709 OPENED OUT AGAIN. D OwUs tGo Am CJICe wEeNI IieZri, E T. k8e pit& ha. FPIOOVe.I tO the 1:::t.preadiss a arta.ow. suet, ont Street, or head eat attentios to the RITIMELL 'WATCH 'Mali reelj..."Plir fetocak"::111448u1 chea:r.a"1"4t115.1161 ..:11blia Wfw.H"gb"7":11.11..°.(batiasti;:“.:71'::.s:::.:::::7:A71171:1: • TESTIMONIAL A large stock or Walta.,,, ',';'_airetit ta thodetich. 1 PIly33 OW t qnsaterly etel in advance. t4.1"1"..° at " 6"ta. /.127.10 here meal'euk.. - . Par 16 17 ofampal kinds whirl h. i.::; e.•:1E, hefts-. USUAL Mimi and (ornamental needle -work do 3"-7071ciel'-ar-411171:1r met km extra ehan.us tI) pupils. , , ;11. PARSON'S A CO , Hardware A pALL • En. auto D - " • i Ara. kb 1874. 1403.60 1 11, ernhaats, Godcrich. '' . Sot: Aourrii, . tog isovaiet..si ciCZNZI40. . D. if ' 1.1E11 1 • . • ' ''' 1,11. Mt poetry. Parliament, T a 11 tilLINT MEE lialea So LILIQIIT. To speak, or not to speak, Until 11 the question : Whether 'tis better I should deity 'Offer The stings and promptings of unspoken Orbrouurrnke arm; against teems, of 1, scruples, . '1 And, by uprising, end them l -To to speak, - And, by a speech, to Ray at once end The heartache, and the thousand•uther shocks Which doubt is heir to, -'tis a consum- mation Devoutle to be wished. To rise; -to speak ;- Ha! !-perchance break down; -ayer -theee's the rub ; For ivhen 'nem my legs what qualms utay come Whin 1 am shuffling off sun] • mortal trash Must give me pause. There's the re- spect Whist% makes sad hesitance of so long life; For who would bear the quips and scores of fools, Constituents' disappointment, neigh- bors' jeer, opponents' scoffing, proud wife's eon- tumely, The fading hopes nf office, and the spurns Which silent merit of glib prater takes 'When he lemma( might hie quietus make ith a bare hsrargue Who would fardels bear To groan and sweat ender a load of wit, But that the dread of something terrible Before I've finished doth perplet my will And makes me rather hear the illa I have Then fly to others which I knew not of ? Reporters thus make cowards of us'all; And thus the native hue of resolution Is sicklied o'er with the pale cast of thought, And fancied speeches of great pith and rinoment With this regard unutterid fade a Asti lose the name of eloquence. - -Oft . -i-• 111:1211417LT 1114L,IITL1181.. . "Prilty ! )ps, r prette, hut. -4.--mile perfectly heartless !" said old Mrs. Holmes to Dr. Stanley, with wheat he ai waa conversingeet a large brilliant p y. "Heartlesa ...with that ae usi . ry niouth, and those eyes, 'Obit! of ex pato aion," said the gentleman, miming!). i - "1 den't admire her style of Weide iiit all. She looks like a was doll, and her heartlessness is proverbial. Since her uacle left her so wealthy, she has had lovers by the score, and she flirts nith everyone. Why, look 'at her now. , Dr. Stanley's eye. followed the dies°, tion in which the lady waved ber flan. and rested on the central figure ef a group around the piano. It was a lady, petite, and fair, with a tall, exceediugly graceful figure, pure ()reek features, and large blue eves. . Her hair wale short, but the soft, full -curls made a loyely frame for the fair face. Her 'thou luau( a (lark lace ornamented to ith flow- ers mid, dark green losvea. She WWI Coll. versitig quietly mith a knot of gentle- ineu„ arid Mr. Stahley sauntered ()tree to tht"514:iiiri°uPlilerston," mid one gentleman. "whet ilia btwonts of Harold Llrahaie l' Iler bends sweet over the ivory key' of the grand piano. in the mesaure of a brilliant waltz, when another of the group, supposing that Miss, tlarston did not Wear the question, said,- : "Pcrheps he has coin M il ted a U I title." , "le,is three weeks &ince lie iliiiippear- tal::Ambi41 aluhto."Pehern.C' t,"sa' id Miss Marstpn; "we went his tenet for our -next 'nese eel soiree. It ,orould be too provoking for him to commit unlade. i. "Mrs. Holmes was right," thought Op_ Stanley, "she is perfectly heard*. Poem Harold." . ' He turnedefrom the piano, but step- ped as the hill, rich voice broke ont into song. Missililerston was singing tichit- bert's "Last Greeting," and ia the mournful words she poured such well- ing enerey and deep pethose hat thegroup in the large rooms ceased their gay woe verse to listen to the music. . "Can she sing so, withent heart i or feeling." muttered the (lector, tigein drawing notelet to the place. "Etta," said a yowl: lady, as the lest note of the song died away, "Etta, do play a polka now." A contempt none smile quivered, for a m.oment on Etta Meretou'e lips e then nodditig good naturedly, she duhed 'off into a lively Polka, which soon melted the group round the piano let) the merry dancers ; and Dr. Stanley with the rest. The next morning hills Marston sat in her mom writing a letter. Peep over her shonlder at one sentence: "All hol- loW and heartless. Miriam, you blame rne far flirting ; you are nut here to see how they follow me merely for any -mangy. Not one true heart amongst all of them. There was one, Harold-- ' A knock at the door interrupted her. "Come in," and a woman enters with a large basket of washing. "Good morning,' said Etta, pletutant- ly, "How is Terrance this morning ri, . "Oh, Xiss, it's beautihil he is to:dee. Sure, marin, I'm sorry ye had to wait so long for the wash." "Never mind that. How could ,yot, waah with that poor fellow so sick r "Sure, Miss, it's many a one expects their clothes, sick or well ; and isn't Tarry sitting up the day playing with the toys ye sint him, and Pat, that I kept from school, a minding him." ., "How many pieces Mary i ' said Etta, taking out her purse. "0, bliss, you don't owe Mary Gin- nie s cint. There's the money ye left to pay the doctor with, and the wood ye sint, and the praties, an4 intik, aud the mouey ye gave me teal week ; afire, Miss, it's in your debt 1 am for washing the rest of your life.' "What I gave Terrance luta nothing to do with my washing hill," said Etta, rapidly countmg out the pieces. "Miss Etta,' said Mary and then she stopped. '' Well, Mary I" "Sure, Miss, you do so much good rith your money, I atn ashamed to tell you-'' "Tell me what r "W ell, Miss, it's about the young ruan that's tinted my . room. Ye mind a here the widder died last fall. He came a week beck, Miaa, and he never C4100 down stairs for three days back, Miss, so this morniug 1 Well% up, and he is sick with the fever, out of his head in- tirely, Miss. If you would come now." "Wait Merl, (11 go with you." Throwitig off her ricb silk wrapper, Etta put on a dark grey dross and cloak, and added a close silk bonnet with a. thick veil. "Comer Mary ;" and they both left the house together. In a 105, close room, on a pahet bed, lay Mary Ginnis's lodger. The face which lay against the elute ticking rif the pillow, was such -as one fancies for that of his favorite poet. The heir waa dark, raying over • broad white f•ire- head, reel the deep set eyes were h.ixel, large and full, and the features del.cate. Usually the face was pale, but now it was crimson with fever. The eyes mere fierce cid wild. But even with all this, the hem was beautiful with an almost tin - earthly beauty. In that .p.lor, lens room, sit& ow. ak. a sayir44 angeL She gave one glance at the sick man's fsce, then crossed the room to his gide. "Etta !" said the sick man, "Etta !" "He knows me," she murmured, drawing back. But the young man moaned her name again, end then broke forth into wild, delirious ravings. "Mary," said Etta, "send Patrick to me." - Mary left the room, and Etta turned to the table to find paper and pencil. She wrote hasty -notes, one to her kites. - keeper for pillows and sheets, and an- other to Dr. Stanley, who did nnt guess the friend who sent him so much prac- tice among the poor patients and saw that he was well 'paid - Having otiepatched Patrick with the notes, Etta tried to snake the deselate room louk more home -like. Lifting from the table a waistcoat, sotnething dropped from the pocket to the floor. It was a sinell miniature case, open,. and painted on the ivory was Etta's face. A smile, gentle and pitying, mume her lips. ' -4,11. did love me, then, really. Real- ly. love me. and would not seek' me with the fortune-hunters who follow me. This is the reason I have missed h:m so long." "Arrah, hliu, here's the doctor,' "Stop him. Mary ; I will gmin here. Remember, Mary, you don't know my name," and Etta went into another room, a vacant one adjoining thet of the invalid'e. The door was ajar, and Dr. Stanley's first exclamation reached her. "Harold ! Have I found you at last, and in such a plaoe f" • Etta's eyes ranged over the capabili- ties of the room in which she stnod, and she madded herself, saying, "It will do ; it is Isrger and better than the other, but sa)prear place at the hest." The next day, when Dr. Stentey called to tee his patient, Mary, with a pardon- able pride, ushered him into the room that had been Vacant before. A -soft carpet wait On the floor, and • small fire was in the grate, the latter screened from the bed by ar neat shade. Soft white mnalin curteins draped the win - (lows, Tee bed could hardly let mem- nized with its vihite pillows, mounter - pane and sheete. A little table stood beside the bed, with the medicine, he had ordered, and an exquisite goblet of cooline drink. "The lady, ye mind, I told you that sint ve to Teddy," Paid Mary, 'ahe sint all the nice things and helped me to fix them yesterdny ; and my good man and I moved Mut in to day, so she'll find _him hero when she comes. It's asleep he'e been fur betteten two hours." Two hours! Herold wait still sleeping. hilt he soon woke and leaked with adr- prise ali.int him 'I ho cold, cheerless aspect id the place:was chatieed as if by enchantineta, and- Harold. thought he was dreauting--an angel face bent ever hien with pitying sees and •ruile tender as * loving mother's ' oyer her darling child. "Kite ," he whiepered ; "0, that I could die iu such a elf0111111 !" "Was it a dream -that sweet voice answering hint "Harold, you will not die ; you will I ive for. tee. Your genius shall be wog nivel, your pigtarell *aught. 'No more struggling for life, bot onlr for fasne." And the tears feltes she spoke. Dr. Stanley, Mantling in the deorway, recegnized the ball -room belle, the ob- ject of his friend's long, edentate(' hope- less love. Softly he glided down 'the stairs, for he knew thet a better medicine than he 0.11111 have prescribed was within the patient's grasp. A alert time after, the world said : '•Just to think of Etta Marston, rich and such a belle, marrying Harold Gra- ham, the poor artist !" e • y Griaistones. - In selecting 4 grindstone. after you have found one of thesize that suits yoe. be careful and lea the stone all over, mad :see that it is free frono all hard spout end streaks, and hal not a crack or &Skil it. Mouth pains sill ito needed. for wheirla grindstone has twitched the hands of the raail dealers it is eften quite ditty, and its impertections liable to.escape itetice. There is a great dif- ference in opinion as to how hard the stone should be; while some_ prefer a moderately hard one, others like & sidt one. 4nd as both kinds are made Imre. a good 'Nay would be to try it &beet thei eye with the point of a pocket knife. After you have made a selection, the qtteetion conies up how will you hang it'? If you Wish to make • goodljobin grind - mg *tool, the stone must be run trne. At most hardware stores, where grind- stones are for sale, they keep hangings, si arranged that the shaft revolves on four small iron wheele. They ustialiy sell these castings at so much per pdund. These will adil to the first cost of your grindstone. leo, in the end, are as elleap as anything, for if they are well teken care of wittiest a long time. If you se- lect anything of thit kind, look well to the inside of the flanges, and see that they are smooth and true, and that the nnt on the shaft works well. On Most of these castings the shaft is teitnd, while the eye of the stone is Neese.' A good way to'hang such &stone id to ht a plug of seasoned wood to the eye of the stone, leaving it a little shorteitehan the thickness of the stone. Then, strike a line acrou to the ,lipposite corners, and where the lines cress will 1* the centre. In grinding mowing machines and reap- er knives, ore side of the stone is apt to get the highest. This can be remedied hy having the shaft so that the crank sill fit either end. In days past farmers. used to think the grindstone of but little consequence. Two crotched sticke stcck ir the ground under an tipple tree, and if the stone was within all indiew two of being true, with a good strong boy to turn (who by the way hated the job above all things). it was doiesteiretty fair. But these days have gone by aince these vast improvements him been made in agricultural implements, and those that have a cutting edge require nioe grinding. To the careful farmer only a few suggestions are needed. Your giindstone should never be left exposed to the weather. The stone will soon dry out in spota where most exposed, end when water is applied fir grinding the damp places wear away flutter, ere that very soon the stowe gets out of tette. The stone should' not he left standieg ft -r a long time in water for the same reason ; a better way is to apply water to the top of the stone. If the stone rune on smell iron wheels, use only one drep of good oil to.each bearing. 11 the wheels do not work well, take them reit and clean theehearings with °eel oil. To turn off the Lice of the stone when it has become untrue, use • bar of Swede iron drawn out es has been described. But what shall tee say of the man who has no grindstorea of his own, bug goes to his neighbour who likes to have things iu order, and after doing a jail) of grinding leaves the stone in such cenditton that it is whelly unfit for a nice job ! Well, let every reader answer the question for himself.- Coe New Fuck Tribune. r Ear titlitill8LIL Horse dealers who are supposed to know what seines their interest, pur- chase "Darley's Oenditioe Porters and Anibiaea_fleave Itemedy" by Palo dozen and feed it to their horses for the pur- pose of improving their condition, wt ich it always dece-others should profit by their example -Remember the natne, sad seelthat the signature of Hurd Co., is en eneh tonckage. Nerthrnp 4. Lyman; Newcastle. Ont., proprietors for Canoeist Soli by all medicine dealers. 5oro.otAing abcrut Oystnri. BY C. B. K715. "Bo was a brave man who ate the Bret oyster." • Whether it was miriosity, or instinct, or intention, or hick, that induced this nameleas discoverer and benefactor to break open elm closely - lilting shell of the quietly resisting bleat nethere was certainly a fair amount of strength of mind required on his part to carry his experimeirt to the point of tastieg the ()entente of the surrendered eitedel. lt was an easy thing, "rhea this was accomplished, for other puled to follow his esample, and, havingtasted, to enjoy the fruita, and catch, kill, and eat the oysters, till the demand for them became so universal that the only thought was how to ,supply it, and no heed was given to the probable failure of the bank. When "he yield of the natural oyster - beds began to fall short, people east about fur some mums of repleuishing the impoverished supplies, but before this could he done the natural history of the oyster had to be Method. Now this is a subject about which very little was known, but aie it was eine qua non -no natural history, no oysters -the ques- tion was warmly taken up, and the re- sult is the creation of a new and. most wonderful industry, :the existence of which is, perhaps, hardly known to many people, elthough it is an iedustry diet has been practised in a quiet, unob- trusive way, for centuries. Two thou- sand years ago, the artificial breeding of oysters was carried on by the Romans ire: Lake Inure and jt1 Lake Aromas. This was undoubtedly the first instance of eayster cultere, though the art has acquired new vigor, and been brought to, enemata perfection during the last few years. Sergius Orate, ia the tiate of Lucius Crasses the orator, is saidonnong others, to haye made great profit from breeding oysters. The indlistry became less lu- crative after the discovery of the Britiah beds. The artifiClal cultivation ef oysters is still continued in Lake. Fusaro. By "artificial cultivation" I do not mean the breeding by artificial means, aa in the.case of salmon, where the ova can ttken and hatched mit in troughs, or in the ease 61 poultry, whose eggs can be placed in inguW.ote,. and the hens saved:. the trouble of sitting me theta . The young oysters are born alive, and with - rug nioni can be done then to make greet pets of them, prc tut thein from all dan- gen, and pnt there. where they will fatten quickeet, aad so be soonest ready for the tahle. The yoiing are produced in 'myriads, the mother opening and closing her shell, and "puffing" them forth on the wosld in little clouds. Roughly speaking, oysters may be said to be fit for cousiimption in those months which have to iu their name. Durieg May, June, and July -the period embraced by the @patties; of treading season in various localities - ahoy are not fit for food. The instincta- of the new.born oyster are ambitious. His taste) is "Excel- sicir;" and inimediately he is cast on the world of waters he makes for the shr- face, swimming about with quick vib4ra- tines of the' cilia till he n.oets some substance to which he may cling. On fioding a suiteble resting -place, he secretes a fine eating of shell -matter, end cumes to an anchor. In his natural state, and barring accidents, he is now settled for lite, and henceforth lives to grow, taking no interist in his summed- ing circumstences, and psaming the ex- istsuoe of • very hermit. Oysters are not rery particular in their attachments. It could hardly he thought that such steid -old stagers would eyince any _affection, for the "pipe" or the "bottle." Alas, for the Ilee.eptiOn of merest appears -limos'! . In - stanoes of (tea:tern adhering to totiaceo- pipes and bottles of various thecriptions have frmittentlyiteen met with. Dread- ful to ray, thee when in errant oyster has ence coneeived siich an attachment, it it very hard for hien to break it; he eicks te it, and the bottle or tbe pip, becomes an absolute necessity to his ex- istence. Oysters will, if properly packed, live for a censiderable length of time out of water. At the present ininnent there is an oyster -company which is importing enormous numbers of them to England front America, for the porpou of giving Englishmen something better than their _own little coppery oysters, which can- uet be compared with ours. For the proper fattening of oysters a supply of fresh water indispeusable, nod the knowledge uf the fact is of great Importauce in their (cultivation. For this reason those tipsters Dire beat which breed in bays into which a stream of water is flowing; end this circumstance is turned to account in the preparation of the artificial breeding "beds," or, as they are called in France, the pares. In this country the art of breeding and fattening has 111fen brought td greater perfection than in any other part of the world. We have the beet'Oysters netural- ly, and we are now able to produceth. that are incomparably superior to an others. , Among the moet famous be* ing•grounds in the United States ere, the Maurice River Cove on the Ma - ware Bey, seater° Mani -ice River de- houches into the bay -the be& in Raritan Bay and in Prince's Bay, in the vicieity of New York. In all tt.ese plebes oysters are grown and fattened by hundreds of millions, and the work empliys thousands pf men and whole fleet* of schooners. The oysters are merely tossed bverboard into the mud, where they lie until they attain full size, the space -belonging to each oweer being 'naked with stakes reaching above the surface. In 'France a different plan prevads, bnt it is not better one. At Arcachon an enormo.us and increasing industry has lately sprung up. Arcachon is a Land- locked lesin of large extent, on the coast of the Bay of Biscay, near Bor- theme, with a mud bottom, ie which grows a tonal grass•like weed, called Zosfeta marina, This weed' is of great service in protecting the oysters from the hut of the sun, tor toO much heat, like too niuch cold, it fatal to Ahem. The Mud -banks are admirably• suited both fer the breeding and fattening of these molluscs. Intersected by deep channels, front which the water never entirely reeeeds, portions of them are "eft nearly dry at low water, and it is necusery to enclose these parts with low walls, te prevent them from being exposed. Tiles are arranged in rows on the bottom of the beds devoted to breeding peewees, in order to intercept the )oring oysters al as they are born. These tiles are with a sort (,f plaster or chalk varnish, which, when the "spat" begiu to grow too large and greed each other, is easily brukea with a knife, and the delicate shells oaa be dctached eithout injury; the young oysters are then placed io larger beds, with t. greater fuoportion of fresh water running through thous, where they fat- ten for the market. Greet care a taken to preyent aie ingress a cries*, whelks, star -fish, and other enemies; traps are placed to intercept them, and dogs train- ed to hunt and kill the crabs. In some Cases, in France, ,insteeel Wes( fa/wines are used to catch the spat, con- sisting of bundles (let:eke tied to ether, stink tei within a few inches ef t e hot- tol-n, and innored by large stone. Or There wan not ael Inshman on the panel, circuler hedges of poste and sticks are either. erected, by which the tittle yagrsot l;!iomo ^Tie Reis that the best lip sales oysters ere intercepted before they are in creet'.:.ii it a kiss. The remedy tarried limey by the claret.. . . should be used with great care, how - From emote two millions of yoong are ever, it aFt to bring on an atiegtion produced st one spatting of a single of the beast. oyster; (ma or um.. is a istindt• repre- sentation of sa adult., in a natural stets a great proportion ot this enor• mous number la lost, by being washed' away by the tide before attechment to a suitable object ean take plan, by sandy ground, or by galling a prey to countless enemies. Pure sea water,- with • warm temperature, is better for the spatting of oysters. The fresher the water, the better for fattening purposes. M. Coate, who, fifteen years awn, first suggested to the French Government the possibility of restoring the pi -educ- tion pf the natural banks, states that the chseOf labor at the Arcachon punts slime inneunts to $200,000 si year. WOITteit are generally- engaged in: the work incidental to the care of the pares, such as detaching the oysters from the tiles, sortirg them acoording to their size, picking out the "five fingers," ete. And when we remember the frugality 10 the French peasants, and the small wages they receive, this sum will give some idea of the value of the oysters annually produced. There is great room for the improvement aed exten- sion of the system of cultivating oysters in England, and the success that hat attended the business in this country and in France shows that too much at- Wation cannot be paid to the 'Apses.. In Loudon alone it is estimated that 800,000,000 oysters of various qualities are annuallyoonsumed; and this supply is gofer below thedernand, that the prioe is five times as much be it WY twenty agAL.tralia-particularly in Port Philip - oysters are very abundant, There they are toned attached to the overhanging branches of the trees, which /13 many cases grow close to the water's edge. It is no unusual thing so see • ntan wilkiter with a hough of oysters over his sheulder - --- Msrvollotts Religions Awskaisr 500_t111111. The Istest papers from Scotland bring news of a religious awakening in many cite). in that oonntq, which is said to be unparalleled since the clays of White- field. The movement commenced in ' Edinburgh and has now extended to Glasgow and other cities. In Glaegow meetings numbering several thensands ensemble daily for prayer and religious , exercises. Thaw are presided over by some of the ablest ministers of the Es• tablished , Free and U. P. Churches. The public journals observe that while the movement is apparently deep and serious, it is characterized by an %bunco, of every thing bordering on unseemly excitement. Neither is the movement i confined to the luwer orders, bat hu ex- ' tended over all ranks ef society,embrae- ing members of the aristocramemembers of the bar. nierchan ta and elergy teen of all denouiinetions. To skew the opinion en tertained of the movement, we quote the following remark made by the Rev. Dr. Buchanan, one of the leaders of the Free Chare,h:-'Dr. Buchanan referred to the daily prayer meetings beam held In the city, and said the Preebytery would par don him for suggesting that thief as a Presbytery, should recognise God's hand in them" movements, and expose. their thankfulooss for the awakening which was visible, and which they hoped would stake far greater progress. He spoke of the large attendance et these "rneetinp, one striking feature of which was they could not have been said to have been brought together, or kept together by the presonce of any psrticular person, but by the sentiment ebroad in the com- bmwouniitnyg:fer the need of some special A Polittosl Cnitcoat. The Pact& Scandal end Sir IIugh Al- lan's/350,000 have' Proved fatal to Sir George Cartier's successor in the Con- servative chieftainship of Lower Canada, Hun. Hector Louis Langevin, B., Cheyalier Commander of the Order of Pope Gregery the Greatosc., ke. Lack- ing the peculiar personal quelities and adroitness which characterized the late Baronet, and enabled him to hold such. a compact body of members (moutons they were called) at his back, Mr. Lan- geviii saw ha cornmaed gradually dis- solveig away, and the great scandal has left hint apparently without a single Frenchman to do his behest. No consti tuency in Quebec held out a friendly hand to invite the wanderer to a seat, 'indite is now out off for the present fmm active participation in politics. Under the circumstanc.es it is reported he ne tends taking a trip to Europe, for the benefit of his health. -MjIltreel Wit - A Nowa Cur° for Ithonsations. An Englishman with rheumatic gout found this singuLar remedy a cure for 64*de:watt-He insulated his bedstead from the floor, by placing underneath each post a broken -off bottom of a glass bottle. lie says the effect wise magicid, that he had not been free from rheuma- tic gout fur 16 years, and that he began impr.ve immediately after the apple eation of the insulators. We are remind- ed by tins statement; say! the Steele,* American, of a patent obtained though Bus office for it phoeician some twelve or more years ago,7vhich created con- siderable interest at the time. The pat- ent consisted in placing glass cups under the bed poste in a similar manner to the above, and the patentee claimed to hare effected some remarkable cures by the use of his glasa insulators. WINWIR.0 Lundon claim to possess the largeat clock in the world. It has four dial tea, twenty-tvro and one-half feet wide, whinh are worked for eight and one-half days. The hands weigh each about two hundred pounds,and at thirty seconds, or half a miuute, the ponder- ous minute -hand moves seven inches on the cirenmference of the dials. The whole of the mechanism of the cheek weighs nearly four tons; but motion is given to the whole by the action of a small spring, weighing one-sixth of an ounce ! The pendulum weighs six hun- dred pounds ; bet so accurate are all the adjustments that when is is required to regulete the cleck, the additicm or re• moval of a piece of metal weighing one onnce will accelerate or retard it at the rate of a second per day. "me Here isa telling argiiment for the temperance crusaders. An Ohio mathe- matician has discovered *tut a man eon the use et alcohol every seven minutes, and that those who have died from its effects ditring the last fifty years would bride* the American continent from ocean to oaten, allowing three feet to each body. A sensation haw been produced in peris by • ruinous to the effect that Napoleon IV will maks an effort to seize the throne of France on the 16th inst, when he becomes of age. It is @ten staled that Etigweie, the ex - &epees'', is already hi Paris working up tho case. oat°, Win marrillously treated 4r a loso vicious fellow, quietly said to htm, :re contest between 1111 very unequal, for the'l can" Wee ill language with ogee. aid return it with pleasure; and to me it is unusual to hear, and disagrm- able to speak a. •( A Chicago coroner's jury has just loond that a 'object upnn which they mem 'Ming, "shod of premature birth." .0015o HITHIRTO I have not Netlike' ot the cold;the snow ley deep upon the ground, but so far the days had been fine, and the nighte, though of course cold, wigs by no means exciessively so. The mont- ing of the 19th February, 1873, found us camped on a pine ridge, between lakes, about &cue miles south of Lae Ils a la Crosse, by the spot where an QI had perished of starvation during the previous autumn, his bones now furnish- ing a uight-long repast for eur hirtigry dugs. The night had been vcry-oold, and despite of blanket or buffalo robe it was inipusible to remilin long asleep. It may seem strange to those who live in O twin housta, who sleep in cost, rooms front which thu draught is carefully ex- cluded, and to whom the notion of seek- ing one's rest on the grou nd! under a pine true, in mid -winter, would sppear einiitently soicidal; it iney seem strange, I say, how in e climsee where oold is we:muted by (legroom so much below thy freezing ooint as the roost shade heat , Careatic or &Indian etiminer is known fo be above it, that man shonhl be abfe, it the close of the hard day's march. to iie down t, rest under the epee heavehs. Yet so it is. Whep the light begins to f vie over the frozen selitede, and the first inelarl °lardy hoot of the eight owl a heard, the traveller in the north looks amend him for "a good catanping-plaos." 111 the 5, ir- est country he has tee long to seek for it: fee deed trees for fuel, a lefel space for his tire and his blanket, some green venlig pines e. give hen "brush" fir his bed, and all his reeiiireeuents are supplied. The canip is soon made, the tire lighted, the kettle filled withelnow endue to boil. the supper finished, dogs fed, sone the blanket spread mit over the pine brush. It is scarcely necessary te say that there is not much trete lost in the operation of undressing; under the circumstances one is more likely to re. serve the process, and literally (not figuratively, as in the case of inedeen society, preparing for Iter ball) to desiii for the night. Then begins the cold; it has been bitterly cold all davorith noes the wind hes lulled, and the frost haa come out of a cold, grey sky with still, silent rigor. If you have a ther- mometer placed in the snow at your head the spirit will have shrtinken back into the twenties and thirties below zero; and just when the dawn is stealing over the eastern pine -tops it will not unfre- qhently be into the forties. Well then, that is cold If you likef You are tried by • thirty -mile march on snow shoes. You have lain down with stiffened limbs and blistered feet, and sleep comes to you by the mere force of fatigue; but never goes the COtInCiOUIDWIS of the mid froin your waking brain; and as you he with crossed arms and up -gathered knees beneath your buffalr. robe, you welcome as a beufactor any short -haired, shivering dog who may be forced from his lair iu the snow to seek a few hcmrs' =fast:satin Las Usturslio • -- mLissutondam.yiLinovoi:M•reh 2.50-A,bobmitetel the rear of the on Wallsoe street, and destroyed this budidinge awned ail occupied -by d. W. Harry, Wore!' at th• budding and stock in the Loads., Liverpool sed Globe fur $1,700 ; Brit- ish American, 11,400 ; Mental, IWO. 11-"oursio inadilliviers2m1 ieua6Flin issTlisestf,kizoaailrscofiz-; logs about WO. H. &Ennis, = in the British Ant for $400 ; lose on building and stock . R. Baas, er, insured for $1100 ; loas about WO, by removal. Hodgson & Citadale furniture ditalbadiers: dalossinszedabo,ct J11.00u.vinAg. BRobinnou. n, books Ike., loss about PM. Senn, dry;roeds ; J. W. Srialdlivill= none, r. druggist ; Li Campbell, Gordon & goods ; Domaelly, drr ; Freeman, Nox-on & Vo. dry goods ; Aim -Maystarei, iniliner;, mad d.--111. Soutt's office. BMW St' RRIND1111 OF BILD13.10nCIRIUT CLRLIIIT 71CTORT. Bayonne, March 2.-iltissgthh ant been received by 'he Carlist Junta here, reperting Gott Bilboa has surrendered to the Royalists. Is is said thet one church, eeveral banks, and 17 private houses haye been destroyed by the eembardiuent of the city. Bayonne, Marsh 2.-etime thousand Republicans, encamped near the village (if Somorrostoo, 15 mate northwest a Itilboa, were surprised.,by Carl lats. siod• bloody engagement took place, 41 which one thousand of the former were killed, the remainder took to flight, and were closely pursued by the Royalism. Alio of them were either captured. or drown- ed in an , Attempt to cross the river m the wily id their retreat. Terrible Baler =lesion ta Zug - March 2 -A despetch front Blackharn, Lancastore, brings infelli- Twenty persons wore anstaatly killed lance of a terrific beeher explosion there. end thirty injured ; inane of the latter badly, and, it believed, ne 11 die _ . PRY ERVING Snizrat.m-There es a good duel eetter way oi doing this IA an to paint theta. Wai ha e seen shanele roofs kept till fifty_ years old, oelv hy the application of lime. Here is a tette effective receipt fof preserving simnel...ft 'Like a potash ketde or large trio, and put Mkt acme bareerof wood series lye, five pounds of white +extol, fire pounds of alum, and as math salt as will dis- solve in the mixture. Make the hquor quite warm, and put as many shingles in it as own la conveniently wetted at ouce. Stir them up with a fork, and el.en wrel soaked, take themertit and put in more: renewing the liquor as necusary. Thee lay the shingles in the usual manner. ,After they are laid, take the liquor that is left, put lime egough to make it ines whiterrash, and apply to the roof with a brush or an old broom. The wash nufe be renewed from time to time. Salt and lye are excellent preservatives of wood. -Ohio Farmer. INGENIODI ENOIXZESING. - During the construction of the brides at Kuilen- bort, Holland, says the Chronique de lindustrie, one of the principal traver- ses, some 465 feet in length, was plareid about one inch too far on the piles. This errnr was rectified in • very ingenious manner. The expansion ef the masa of metal was exactly .0394 inches per Fahrenheit degree. At 'the locality of the work the difference between the temperature of the atmosphere by day and by night was 25° Fah. In the morn - the too far advanced end of the tMrerse_wassecurely bolted down, when, during the day the heat of the sun ex- eleep upon the ontaido of your blan- ps:nded the metal so that the free ex- tremity advanced .985 of an inch. keta. Yet do not imagine, reader, thet , Then. et night, the latter end was fas- this its next to an irnposibillty, that men I Wird and the cnntraction soused a lake will perish under many night. of it. Men movement of the opposite sztrentit do not perish thus easily. Nay, even, when before dawn, the fire has been set alight. and the tea swallowed hot and stroog, the whole thing is nigh -forgot- ten, nut untreqnently forgotten in the anticipations of a oold still more trying in the day's journey which is before you. Such was the case now. We had slept ooldly,teid ere daylight the thermometer showed 32 degrees below zero. A strong weed swept tbrough the fir-treea front the north; at daylight tee %%red lulled, but eyery une seemed te anticipate a bad day, and leather elate aud capotes were all ia use. We set off at six o'clock. For a time cable:teal reigned, but at sunrise the north wind sprang up again, and the cold soon became more than retie could bear. Before mid-day we reached the soethern end of Lac lie a la Crosse: be l'ha operation twice repeated broug I the trayerse into ita proper position. Scams or l'iesrea.-It often be- am:hes desirable to insert screws in plea- ter.walls without attaching them to any woodwork; but when we turn them in the plamec gives way, and our effort is vain. And yet a screw may be inserted in plaster en as to hold light pictures, la; very firmly. The best elan is to enlarge the hole to about twioe the diameter of the screw, fill it with plaster of Paris, suck es is used for fastening the topseef lamps, &c., and bed the screw in the soft plaster. When the plaster is set, the screw will be held yery strongly. To CLZAN Cdstrars. -.One teaspoonful, of liquid ammoniaffin one ration of warn water often rotator. the color to coxpeta, esen prooduced by an wed ler alkali. if a ceiling has been whitewash- ed with the carpet don:Aid...few drops fore us to the north lay nearly thirty aro yisitle, this will r*.. ore It. Miles of sheltorners leke, fuel doe% tine great stretch of ice the wind Cattle wit. merciless seyerity. We made a fire. drank a greet deal el hot tea; muffled us a* best we oould,and put out into the lake. All that day I lied been ill, arid with no little' difficulty The-Jouruat of Clio, ry says, that a _ -- -tor chant of &impressed ce fe of gun cotton • tied around the trerik °ea large eree and exploded will out it (Insley- instahtle by the Violence - ot its . notion. The out had managed to keep -up with the throughtbe trunk a eui slim p an that Fart)... done by the keenest 'axe. I do not think that I had, in the expari- I once of many hitter days cie traved, ever -. M. l'o' itChet, in his.great eerie "The . felt such cold; but I attrileeeed this to Uuireete," says time "Anaternioally and illness more theta to- ohe day's sever-. / . . • .. . ity. prammuty speseoug, the human natichan- ' , We held on; ri on nee teeth blew& bitter blastehe d iith low -bent heads tugged atemilily on werd, the tura-breeds, and Indians wrapped their blankeM sant is veryeede end coartm-compared to the exquisite delicacy. revealed in the oreanam of certain auransals. !tut tn us, the intelleet. the real acieptre of the iini- cdoirldil tadfd,larYbyi": and for years they had not eknown so eero; the sun was utterly poeerless to ofteutaked myself, I lie/d net lung tewsit for an answer. My two fellow-trairellers Ono heel spent 'ugh thirty yearsin teal' and had travelled the shores of the Aectis Ocoee at the time when the Esquimault thermometer -stood at 26 degrees belew drift. of dry anew tlew before the batter keptelose -within their greasy snow huta. testimony of such men was conclusive-, as they tan, made their way &pante the aLI:',Pneefseekt,l,ceesp'pr.4 :.ehteethrsalit•hiel.,Th:b:sertotai:chr,:i: one's Nee; to lie on the sled was to chill boiled some tea. ' make itaelf felt in the slightest degree; a the "'there ark4 rare iii° get"al, di"- were,perhaps,of all men in those region; best able to settle a quontion (if outer part* of the continent; the other h Both were renowed trawellers in a land , where bad travellers axe unknown; the, round their heads,nni bending froward threugh the body to the very ntarr.w. 1 1 was imposible to face it long, an l a.4a.lit siftwirumui'redah'oenbeatio4I's. t.„4.,, qtr. sphe,e, he wind. Was this mane great cold '41 wind. To run was instantly to feeese we tint in to shire, wade a fire, turd At mid-day the sun shone, whaitrin the Arctic Circle, „aid eie the Sept:veer Kosence hy the spletell ir .4 ' " she earth's iiihatetints. Were- man te and nervous system, while the world's bit marvelous. Terse, prodoisinates over 'the. apparent tores who thine neat the thisine of the seeoie,already to elevate himself teeorei ,, • ,, conform naore to the Laws of health illd retiorative for the powers (if the brein priee,ress iti enlightement would indeed Etenial. and form e'reeeet of tinier' be- hot-u8th4, aiiiPe'et Aholirsq4o41:par...astP4tivoill;r7sTlinal II , petted Syrup of Hypophosphites as a played iii propontion to the ilit,ntiOt 4 f nature, sold be less addicted to the ratification of his pessions. it would uot ecessary to advertise Fellows' C.1111- • ELME/ ErlItiCillir I ,, e ever felt greater cald than this, even on th• Anderson or the Mackenzie," said the man who will so well aognainted with winter hardship. After that I did not care so much: if they felt it, -mild, if their cheek& grew white and hard in the bitter bliurt,sure- ly T could afford to freeze half my face and all my fingers to boot. Yet at the tints it was no laughing matter; to look forward to an hour seem- ed an infinity of psin. One rubbed -and rubbed away at solid nose and white cheek, but that only added one't fingers carte tryne. list of iced things one had to At last the suu began to decline to die west, the wind fell with it, the thick, low-lying drift disappeared, and it was possible by running hard to resters tha simulation. . With dusk cents A usagnifieent A urorli; like sheeted light quivered over the fro- wn lake like fleecy clouds of many ooloei blown across the stars. Night had long dosed when we reaelsed the warm shel- ter vf the shore, aad saw the weloorae , lighta of houses iet the gloom. -Capteati Butter's if-i/d North Land. THE GOOD MILS ascii COWL •1- Lern-And eo has thee which has hith- erto been looked for in vain, namely, a medicine that could be rehed upon for . THOMAS' • Es. el slor Helsel/1i OIL Worth Ten Times its Freight iss• Gold • - Pain cannot stag where it ia amid. It is the cheapest Itodeine ever made. Use owe cures now niOn &Me TIBOOAT. Oae bottle bag nod 8103. CUITIS. FiftY fetal Worth has cured sin OLD nrant0110 4,300011. It posithrely eines tiabarit Asthma a.a4 °map. Fifty (mats earth pas cured Crick in the Back. and tbe same '-quaMt Lamm Beet (freight pyre atanding„ 71). th2 , We extracts frorn a few of the rosy have been rarAnVnd troradiffirr•at arts of which, ere think. should be en Molest to WS* Use mold emptiest. J. Collard, of Sparta, try. Write.; "Send men dol. Dr. Tilonsaa. lIctecaris bans sold all I bad from you and want more now; RI oures are tool w«Yerful." Allagaire. of Franklin, writes. "1 have sold &II the &gent left; It terts like a clana--Itersaslow at lemsi Met takes epteriduily now." R. 01110,.of tooth writes. "pease fontrard 6 doom Thanes' Meleetx11 0f1. 1 ant hear- ty ad; astetagoashott• larlatereaussac- ad • by tbone who hars used It" 1. Bedford, ThernesvIlle orrites-"Dowd at ewes a Sothisr sup- ply of Rehietric 0910 have WI bottle I never saw anything YR no wdl sad smelt general ,atisfantion," IlsePigaten, Woodford. writes.-'13end !se some more Illislyetne 011, f hare .0101 entirely oat. neeliashaas th^ akar . k Reed Clverton. to. . write iclectrie felting • greet rapettuites bets, wad &Pr milled fur. bend sr a futile without , delay." Lemeyae, illibb di 0o., an„ r. q, - oratii--"asad aloes gimes ajatilarer Rd. w• Bin it to take well.' • rrisold by all medieled daises. "melt osider,-. a 5. N. THOM Paws, N. if.,404 NORTHROP it LYMAN, Itroolerat, Gat Bea - Asada la Absaisura cr add Gedenes • g Joao j Nora.- Xs.searer-filledelaalteFanctrmed.-fti. • ' J. Bond; anodise, & Co., Barfield; J., flenieum, Horprawdle•, J. Paella./ Ihrelerpi.ararry.Leiekaowl and J. M. ildbefla, Dungalmos. -sw*. - - - - Bs Wiese -Too often a cold or alight oaring rheumatism, colds, coug , near- ,e,,°°1111,....,t1 ja..„eceal*, Zedas „*.wilvere.rikordistszylo go is; the "Canedis" Dear°7"*L612t21 oenverted into a serious petitionary di,- ealgvreisiy.otswic sbduoulilloaurer.ux,ybpossemurns and, a ease'""'it cum": eT7sfargi:: pnthent, mow. alai a bites, bowel complaints, &c. It is oalletd glected uutil a simple °arable affection is systeinatmlly of it e ithout delsy. 11 gives relief the reputation for over 3Orsier.-They as• oough or cold should never b• o cmuer ent y); iouur eifft ci at trh 41 wafers,„ alwayseftlesslioss. aid acerb+ moat bene- ficial isfluenta on all the bronchial and with. promptly nee 4 -Bryan's Pulmonic *Lich bate stetained their most wor_id_ Lrful eve_r 71:m87_ pulmonary orgitai. s.tii by an prim- public.7--Hold by all Ineditane uterioury is said gists aud c:,eintry marcliants. Price 23 dbeeafolerrse the to be dangerously ill. The A.rohbiabop of Ca mints per box. Ite.,0•116ete -0- ---='2.M'''',.,„''211411211111112;611111iir/E21101101111