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OCLnew_1879_03_12_Oxford_Tribune_newspaper_issue_OCR_ACCESSThe Osfcrcl Tribune OA.VJD.t to.URr RKPORTKR, PUBLISHED EVBHY W^N ESD ^ HARRY ROWLAND, • 130X10 MAW. SIDE THAMES 8TREKT, IXOERSOLL.OXFORD TRIBUNE, ClPECIAiL attention paid to the pubh- O wtlonol Invest and D»frv Sow*. Htlv«»e«irateRaooru <4 *U L cal Etenui; Full Reports ut all Town-Ship C .anty C vinell Meetins*; In syo-". Tbroete.Manwesl. Llute F»l>» »’><' hew York Msrkcte: thel.tM, Item* ol Ne*’» from rrilxnte Mitno; aood Ute-rirr Se'eelld'n-pllhy »nd rredsb'e: mid the I stmtnevetratft Abroad up to tho hour of golna to press. AhiU Cnrraipondente In all parts of the couutr, hnr-»l*h reliable I nturm it Ion ot all cventeut Interesttrane-Ctlaz In Ibolr retpaolho leeaWlw.• The low Price mid every exertion will be uwl t.>•make the elre ilatlna of Jtfw Tkibi xv larger than that >>taar other journal pnbll’hed In thle section of thsDominion. It will therefore »taud unrivalled a* awmi.ortlalnr Medium. TERMS, ONE DO LLA R A YE AR StMCn.X IN ADVANCE. No paper discontinued until all arrearages have been paid.Transient sdrert>«ement<—first Insertion. S cents r-cr8 >t#: eaehsiih’ea'i’ut insertion, Scent* per line. Ul«-r <1 tanas to onarteriv. ha’f-yearlv. or jrtaHr edrcrtNcra.N olees in Editorial column* charged al Ure rate of 10tcjntaw line.AW orion Ukd^wnUnnoMUPTtlscmenLi n-.n^t be In writing and handed l"to l*>e offloo ot publication notI ,ler la the week than Monday.UnleHolhor^w or lerei, all advertt’emente will beMscrtod until forbid, ami chanted accordingly. UTAH adrertticnient* must bo handed In before 11 . m. on Wednesday. To tbnts WTxes.—Postms’ers retomlnr papers willAbllge bv either wrltlm; or alfixlnr t>’e office stamp otShe post office from whence the nxper Is returned.HARRY ROWLAND, Publisher A Proprietor. TERMS—ONE DOLLAR A YEAR, > IN ADVANCE. J VOL. V I-N O . 14. <htn tn ff’innn I Invested In WaJISL Stock* m»kMSIU 10 SllIUu I fortunes even ffinnth.■ B°ok «*11 * * I fro» explalnltftr cverj thing. _ Addrc*, BAXTER A <XX, Bankers, C Wall St.. N. *. The Molsons Bank- ^INGERSOLL BRANCH. BUlaYndS a na<ln tdhe USneiltles I StEatxec*h: Ia *nug«*e Doranft * Eonn »gI1­ P»rtaoiL'xuuta ; deal* Uln-rally with tanner*, »nd Hows Interest on Deposits, wlchcsu be gitlilrawn »l any H®’- AVM. DEMPSTER, Manager IrrcraoB. J*o-lo.te<~._________________ A n d C a na d a D a iry R e p o rte r.FI. ftOWL '*R A b N n D 'O , R AND PROPRIETOR.,. at.w , ' »» '! INGERSOLL, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 1879. J. C. NOnOfflY Banker 8s Broker, INSURANCE & LOAN AGENT. King Street, IngerroU, TR E A xc N ha S n A ge C , L T o* S n an f d t Ins G ur e a n nc e e r a Bu l xine X ** U . Uring WHOLE NO. 274 DARlf S GREEN AND HIS FLYING MAITIINEv If ever there llve-j 1 Yankee lad. < »f l.l« C<» it f -r NOTICE TO ^ADVERTISERS Th* ’’CNxuie’' Cvpv tar Contract Advertisement)'mu*t be h»n<lcI In by Sutunlixv ->l tlie latcrt to ucciireinaerttnn fnihe next l*«nc. Our laroe «nd lncrea*lnccirculation h»« r«n lered ll ahs.-l'ito’y nwcwa'T to CAPITAL -_$l,000,000- H, «t. novriA\t>. resilient. DRSAtaFteTs SC urornen cNy,o Gwo ldY. oSirlvke r, nanndd uUiicnuirtrecndt.m.nrvs Ixm^hl and sold at bc.t rates. Onl.-ra for thepurchase or sole <>f Htoeks, Bond* *nd othei securitieson ComuiUslou promptly attended to. DeTpwoenstyi Ctesnt s uprwearcd,e; Inivvesetedd I n Gofverrnommentami other first da** securities. Interest allowed at 5and U par cent. Mo e n nr e ity y ot l im o pr a orc n .1 e fa d rm p o ro n pe rt t y h at e th e s lo e w ­est rates of Interest. Munlelixd and School SectionDcl>ciitures purvhawd. //ecmiMn i ny,An.l flip end flutter »nd wl.h »rd try—It ever jrnfl tucw a country OunceWho didn't try that a* often at once,All I can aay l«, lh*t'« a *l>tiiHe never could do for a hero of mine. An Mrfrlntrcenlti* w»* D. Green, justness (garbs, J. NI’CA’JCHEY, L.L. B., BASRoliRcitIoSr TInE CRh anncenrdy anAdt tIonmsoelvyen-Ucyt. -LNMawiin, riibllc. Insert»U. McCvishey *iibx1c,up"tdrt,tM’o d<v*n north of the CAro/ifcM •(ffleo. Jngereolb Jin,D> 1 3 7 3 ,-1$ Inge2?soll_ S r an cli. rpIIIS Bank transacts a general Bank-I Imr Btulncss. Buy* ami Sells Hxihnnso onFnir’and *tid tho I’nlteJ State!, and Issue* draft* onLwM<m. N\ »’ V-.'ris. »"■' ’«rts ut Canada.AHott- l.lt.ro-t "tl •!■«’N do-nt. tth.cbcan benllliilrarti al the pleasure of lhe depositor. SAVINGS B ANK BRANCH Ro x y ur a ano l * Co f iap i M r iy e < >l E a iu n da d int . l if e in - And n freckled n«o that grrwlwtwcsu,A lltt'.s awry.-f.ir I inusl tucnllouTint hah, I riictol hl, attentionI’poii h ■ ivoiiiltr.'ul Invention,Twi.ttng hi, tonyue a, he la Uted the ’trines.And working hl. lace a. ho worked the wings,And with every turn < f gimlet and screwTurning and Mrowimr hit mouth rouud lee,Till hie nose teemed bentTaeatch the .cent,Around sour corner, of new biked pier.And hie wriuklud cheeks and bl, squintingeyea,Grew puekcrel into a queer grimace.That nude him took very droll In the face, And wl«c bo mint have been, to de monIlian eve, itenliu did Ixfiirc, M’DDNALD A HDLCROFT, BA s R -i'i R dt I o S r* T in E C R h’ S n r a e n ry d . N A o' t n t r o ic m a P c u y b s t - lc n , t A - c L ., a A w c. , Office—Thame* atreet, !naxr*«H. F. M-iD'vratn. LL. ft. W. Wiuox Hotcr.orr, B. A '.on leaving money lor a kagthenod period. C. S. ITOARE, TM PER.AL FIRE INSURANCEJL Cominiiy ot Landon, Emrisnd. Established 1803 COMMERCIAL UNION ASSUR-ance Company of England. 13 and 2» Cornhill,London. The above RELIABLE AND OLD F-stabllahcd Com­panies arc prepared to received applications for Insur- WL WALSH. TDARRTSTER, Attorney-at-Lftw and.1 ) Solicitor In C’lSE-erv ini In’ i’vency.Office-''-—txlra Iu Wa’sh’a Ill-.-.-k. over Dart AVndeiwool's Frilt Store. Thame* Street.N. B.~ *!>.0->J of Er.’lhh Funds for Investment onXlortsaxo’. MERCHANTS’ BANK OF CANADA, HEAD OI-T'TCE, MONTREAL. CAPITA , -"$5 ,500,000. INGERSOLL BRANCH. TH in I g S B B u» a l t n i c k «* . t i-. B in n s < ’a » c a t n s d a S g el e l* n e E r x a c l li x B t'C a e n k •>» ­ Three Tows’ Policies Icsxtoi on Dwell­ing1 ani Farm Buildings and.Contents AT KOST ADVANTAGEOUS RATES. ALL L05SES~SETTL3D PBOHSTLT. J. C. NORSWORTHY. J. C. HEGLER.which can be withdrawn M.trtrvrc) bo-i-pit »'nl vj'il.Ornes-Over MolsoinItank.King st., IriKcrs'll. SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT.THE ONTARIO J. H. IIEGL’ R, 1 TroBSF.Y-AT-LAW,SnL1<TroP..JN-CIIANCEi:y.A Conveyancer. &<*. JTonfy tn Loan. Vtticf.—Lee » and UaiiB,.<;ro. C. EASTON, Intin. Manager.Ingersoll,Oct. is, IS7S. 1W LOAN and SAVINGS COMPANY OF LON ON. WILLIAM NORRIS, BA fix R tr R iwt I o S ff T iM E ' B R l . i Ut A ai c ' . i .Ths O nic ff s i J c l e re — ct. S Ir e e c c o ix n 'l d L L R. WALKER, P HYSICHIvlAl'sN B',l KS-ku, rTglieauoinca, xAtrcc.c. l.Ingersoll. Ingeraon.Dee. 18. 1873. .W SF ET . 8100,000 TO LOAN. ON «R...e atle nK,-.t.a 't.eo oLlii tsitMunr*r otrt t. m,.- ,$ 2n0t0 U «rno<l upward*, xi RATS 0? INTEREST. M. B. M’CAUSLAND, M. D-, WL C. P. S. ONTARIO, PHYthSeI CVI. ASN. ,a SrmUyR GaaE.lO nNa,v Ay.- ., Cf .i'r-onn^ rrf i- >rS U"mr ~Cn snu itI n-of Oxford, affiea nil It .iks ■ :■ ■ -.to the It-jalHotel Ball Un.-i. Thorny St.. lneer»"ll. 3I0RTGAGES BOUGHT. SAVINGS BANK BRANCH. NOTICE TO DEPOSITORS.—The Ontario Lunn and Savings Company are prepared to receive Deposits in sums of ?5 and upwards at the nite of SIX PER CENT- i"*1' annu,n FOR FIXED PERIODS, or Fivc i,cr cent- on Ju’ nmnd. DR. DOWERS. PHOYUScrI —C ICAniNrlc,* Ssutrregete, ona . f&ewc .,d oTonrsg nwresstn lolf. lurersoll. Dec. 13. 1773. MONEY TO LEND. All investments of this Company nrc .secured by mortgages on Real Estate, which affords to depositors the best possible security for the safety of their BUSINESS STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL. Fur further particulars apply by letter A. I. HOLLINGSHEAD, SURGEON DENTIST, T ICE.VTIATEof the Royal CuEe-o ofId Dental ."(nrgwrM.0.0 ir.. It -.in,—In Lee’s new INSIRANCE AG AINST FIREand »*Ie e>mn>nt»«, st to-vert rite, consistentwith »«Rty to t lie I inured. CEO. KENNEDY. WILLIAM F. BULLEN CHARLES KENNEDY, SURGEON J ) ENTIST. T ICENSED by the Royal College ofJ Dentel Surgery,"ouuri i. Teeth extract-1 urUhout pvln by the u»e <>t NitrrrixGm, ate., U dexlrvj. H;>ed»l utteutiun |>ald to the preeerrallou of nxlurnl teeth.Ofllce ou Kin.’ .tririt, n?;><Mito the ” holy House." W A. 80DWORTH. SUBGEON_DEVHST. MEDMenBteEl SRur ycounf *.t hSev tMRwoiyloanl GCuaorlalnetgeeed ohfiell onw»l»on». Katex to Bolt th* Times. < hike, overW.T. eri»;>’« Furniture Sure, Klug tftrAt. Wc»l.luyfrwll. J*n. 1». 1S79. i'Ki JANIES BRADY HI >uJ I m C .K E lr N fn S , M E i D dd les A ex u a c n t i i o L n on e d e o r n . fo O r f fic O e— x M fo i r m d li , mIn t- rsalL Sale.- In Turn and Country promptlyattended to. Chinje* very maderata. R. J. CAVANAGH, Ar uGcaftorido. In* perrejarro J tfoo ra ttetnhdo »»tCMo Iun ntotwyn oorf .'intry <>a short untlev. Terms lllcrsl, CmMgti-merit* raadved ol all kinds <d merchandise and liberalsdvsnee* uwle. R- J. CMXxiurt, Stone's At&Umiliotass, lageraoll. a o;K £>cm , ACCOUNTANT, CONVEYANCER AND COL­ LECTOR. INSURANCE AKO GENERAL AGENT. ACCOUNTS WRITTEN U?, AUDITED AND COLLECTED. FIRE, LIFE AHO MARINE INSURANCE EFFECTED. AGENT FOR. THE ROYAL CANADIAN INSURANCE CO. HEAD OFFICE, - - MONTREAL CAPITAL, - - $2,000,000. THE LANCASHIRE INSURANCE CO HEAD OFFICE. - MANCHESTER. ENG, CAPITAL, HEAD OFFICE, - LONDON, ONT. CAPITAL, - $1,003,000. THIIn SIn gCerosomll, puanndeyr thhea ms aonapgeenmeednt onln office MB. 3£. M IN ZL EK, Sauings Bank Branch. Drt»»lti< received In the fUviiiz* Bank. In-er»o!l.andintcrr-it allowed thcrcmi al the rate uf Six ;k-{ cent,tyiecial term, made wiUi dutx<*iior* ton ing muiiey fur aIcngtlivned jicriod. Good Mortgage* bought. F. A. FITZGERALD. E»m.. Prevldent.JOHN Wui.FE. Ito, , lit Vlce-Pmident.MALCOLM McAUTHVi'.. lid.. Lute,, 2nd Vice Pro*. October 2i)d. 1878. »l £2,000,000.eto.ooo.wo. Ile lrabte Ite-idtmce Property for Sale—very eon-vrnlent tu biislncvi part ut the town. Uosabuabl*Tcrui*. Apply to JAMES GORDON.fnieraoll. Augrisl U, 187s. 2|| II. McCAl LEY, T ICEN3ED AUCTIONEER for thoIJ GrutitkK at Orf ml, EI(tn and Ml-ldlewx.o»,nCM In CullmUs Ilstel, Ctillndtn. Outerin.8^m Ib Tmn mJ Uaiutry piomptly altend.d tn.Cinraret ibiterate. Aldrau, Culktean r.*l uflju*. Fresh Bread ! bELlVEUEOJOAlLY FUOM ROYAL HOTEL. THAMES SHEET, IN’GERSOLL. RICHARD CAIRNS, • Proprietor. rpnw Hotel la ono oi the meat emn<"rtaM« and com-1 modloua In the County. Every convenience.Flrst-ria** Board. Hxmple room, for CommuxdalTraveller*. Best aceommodatlon tor traveller*. Well-■upi'IieJ Bar, good Stabling and Attentive 11 oatler*.Terms ro»*>n*Ho.lugcrmU, Sept. 11. 1878. 24S-1.V V an ce’s B a kery ,THOMPSON HOUSE. A. A. AYER $ CO., EXPORTERS-CHEESE MONTREAL AND SEW YORK, Buns, Biscuits, Cakes THE BAR STABLINQ inpllel with th* Bert Gro<d Staldlnjt end *Bda ut Wine*. Liquor, Attentive and Obliging KING STREET,Irararaott, Jotc 3.187 L INGERSOLL. J . C. 9 . CAX-S:n,JHQERSOLL. Confectionery F r e d . ROWLAND, At.WAYSJIX STOCK,•root!. M»v i, 18T7.PORK PACK ER. fUtc a fcw white fleece*, which hi re and th<JHHimhl, DaH air;IJkr foam <*n the -Hwn went finatlftg by.—Jrnttvi lovely a looming e'.cr wu -<en!’*»r a tilrg Hide trit* In a flyint;*ni«4hiiw.Th'Hijht ctinnirn? •• Nuw lahin'lgtiAl'»t j Mb the L How* tv b<»* (be »how *I’ll ray I vc «’»t tich a terrible couxh !An* then, when the t »!k, ’*ve all gvuc of. •' Ain’t y<In’ to see the celebrationTl»y, brother Nate. X»; botheration !)’»e got slcli a Olid- a toxt'nehe-I—My gracious!—fecle thirnch 1 shuu'aj fly !"Kahl Jolbam, '* Shu tGucyo larttergu.”Ji lt Harin, »a!J, '‘Ko!Shouldn't wu:,.kr 7 y-m might »ee me, tho',’u>ui mam, ef I int mltl' this Jumpin', thumpin' pain 'n my head."For all the while to him-c.f bo said : —I tell ye what!Ill fl« a few tftuv, around thelulTo ace how’l sc.'ias, then fcaoi'a i’re jrotThe bank-o' tho thing, «-x likely's not. An ail ciw i,Hy fljln’ uier the cclclvatlon! I’ll tt 'li up to the wm-kra *u* M-.rc th* |>eoplc IIII I glil un th* Uberty-pote an* crow ;All' 1II •*> to (he jra*l*i** to"!* tetvw,• Wh»t w >riJ'« thl, 'eraThat I've come nesrFFur I'll auk" 'em believe I’m ■ chap Pm Uw moon;Au’ 1'11 lif a race 'IU> Uicir <A LaUouu r He crept from hli bed. D. 8. MACDONALD, PROVISION AGENT! INGERSOLL ONTARIO. Olre. Thais ss Strert. Chrooiele Building.!■£«■«. *•«*‘K «« SAUSAGES. TENDERLOINS, BACON, HAMS, LARD BAR»KLLEX> POMC, PKIUUalKEBfAnHin JAMES R. MAURIS, ARCHITECT AID .STAIR BUILDER. f b e s h b o bs ,Slnnl W tiMrs Sides for ths ZajUih Karkst. LOSDOH GOT. M. Min k l e r & Co. bank ers. tS~ If you want Neat and Fancy Job Printing, call at the m ’h ib u ne Office. And away neTo open the w\ lulerful butt In thu aheJ. They tern up at him a Wonderin' ejo.Turts----Thn dragon ! Ire’s gain' to fly 1Away hs goes I tlmminv ! what a Jump IFlop— iiujs- an’ Jump ITo the ground with a thump IFlutterin' an' flounderin' sllln a lump." A* a demon Is hurled by an angel'* spear,If. -I* o.er head, tn Ids proper *ph«m—Heels over head, and held over heels,Dixxily down tho abyss be wheels—f • fell Darin*. Upon his crown,)u the midst of tho binmird. he <r.-ne downIn * wonderful whirl of tangled strings,Broken braces and broken sprir g»,Broken tall and broken wings,Sbontlng-star*. and varlou* thli go—Hxruyanl litter ut straw and chart.And much that wasn't so sweet by half.Awar with a bellow fled tho cUf,And what was tlmtj D d Uie goiilnj laugh ’’Tl* a merry roarFrom the old bani-dnnr.And he hears tho voice of J than sr ring," Say, D'riii*! how do you like tly in fSlowly, ruefully, whole ho lay.Darin* Just turmM and looked that way. “ Wul. I like li_,in’ well emi-qb,”Ik- said ; ” but tho’ ain’t sm h a thiimkrlu' alglitO’fun lu‘» when yoemno lo light.*' MORAL. I Jirtt have rao-n fur Hie moral here:airtl Ur, l« the moral—HUck U> jxnir sphere.Or If you In-l.t. m you bare the right,Ou spre.vjliig your wlnxsfora loftier flight,-n.- ,„..ni ..... a,.— .... n .i.i Sclcrt ^iicrahirc. THE COKSEOHEHCES. lie and she wore driving ont together. |lie was dark, short and stout—in fnot, , some people called him fat—a sure way of |enraging her. His redeeming points were j —a pair of keen black eyre, a certain man- | ly, sensible way hu lind with him, and a |reliable look. She was small and sl< ndtr, ] looking as if the wind might blow her away some fine March morning, with "two ieyes ro soft and brown," and v/nving. , ■natural—not crimped—che«nut hair, fall­ ing in little rings and spray around a white ,taco, delicate, but full of life nnd spirit. , Every body in Knipsic Farms said it • was perfectly absurd. At the Inst sewing , society there wns but one opinion. It wns inn unusually full meeting, the engagement j having bnt just cotne ont. They were ; working on a bedquilt f ir the homo mis- jsionnry in Jtariboo. Quilting is tho most | social work imaginable it bo brings every ,ono together, nnd over “ herring-bone'’ i nnd •' shell ’’ stitch the coldest hearts thaw , out. Mrs. Daniel Dodge wns there, Lance i Lumbert's aunt ; and ns no ono knew ex­actly how sho stood on thn all-absorbin’ | question of the day, a hltlo preliminary benting around (ho lm«h wns necess.ry. >Annt P.-lly Griggs boldly opened tho cam­ paign like tho veteran sho wns.* 8o Lauco is renlly engaged at Inst,' ,sai l sho. ll'i’s flirted round bo long I Jidii't know’s he’d ever settle down aud git married.'* 0!i. yon know (hero's always some- tiling irresistibly fisciuniiHg ab*ut Behool-ma’i.ins,’ suggested sarcastic Miss Scrap*,who hail not juitud tho sauio fact truo of Jres«mnkere in her owu experience. * if I am hia aunt—’ said Mrs.Dodge. Every one listened with, ns Vigil pulsit ’ erected cats,' when Mr*. Budge said,• if I nni his aunt.’ They felt it a promis­ ing beginning. When people mean to abnso thoir relatives they generally beginby proclaiming tbo rights of kindred not to spare a story for relation's saks. * If I am bis mint,' Bail Mrs. Dolgo,* I must any I ihiuk he's driven his pigi to rutber a poor market. What bo can fancy in tint little, palo-faced seboo’-inn'am is more than I can see. Her big i- ll iwu village airs, I suppose. A preity fanner's wife sbo’ll make !’‘ Well Hint jest what I was a-rayin' to Miss Stowell before you emn in,' said Aunt Polly. ' Snys I, Miss Stowell, yontuark niy words, L race Lambort'll rno tho day bo ever b-'t his eyes run away with his good sense. Lanae is a forehanded, well-to-do young mai, aud ho ought to havo a real smart, go ahead wife—saint good, stout, capable girl, brought up on a farm,with plain, sensible notions, like yourLasta or Plicmie, for instance. Says Miss Stowell, says she. tbit ain’t fur mo to say,of course; but one thing I will sny, mygirls can turn their hands to anything from making bread to fodderin’ and milk­ in’ the cows. Says she, a farmer thatmarri. s a village girl — and a school-ma’am at that—is a fool. They don't know nothin' nbout work, mid are above it,mid full of all kinds of extravagant notions,cnot’”h to send ft man to tbo poorhousu!' * So.v d ies bis mother feel about it?’ queried Mra. Jedodiah Jones.* Ob, she don't siy much. It isn’t her way, you know. Besides, it's no use to oppose Lnucn when Lis mind is oncemade up. He's dreadful se*.' * Well, I’m afraid he’ll be sorry,’ with nn accent on the afraid that made it Bound singularly like hope.•Will they live at home with the old folks ?'‘ No; Lnneo lias bought ths Jacksonfarm over nt the Corners. He says there's no boune big enough for two families.’‘ The Jackson farm I I shouldn't s*po*eikftt would be quita grand enough to suit Laney's ideas.’* They’re gnin’ to fix the house up some, I believe. Tha barns are good, and it’s Dice land for tobacco.Out in tbo other room, where the girhwere concocting calico dreeses for tho mis­ sionary's children, the subject raged witheven greater virulence, as might have beenexpected, considering that Lnnce bad been n general favorite, and in tho day* of hisfreeuom had roamed from flower to flower, after the usual butterfly fashion of young bftctelor*. Th«y pitted him ; they pitiedher. They wnnderd at her; they won­ der’d at bi o. Poverty and sitkntsa, ruin and dteaete •, were the mildest of their pre­dictions for this unfortunate couple. Equal consternation prevailed in Knip- sio village wh?r« It w m rumored thatLaura Bri 'get was deliberately determin­ ed to ma ry a farmer. No engagomeut had created such a commotion since thenext to tba last new minister had mar­ ried Sue Syllabub. Every body dressed ap and called on everv one else to talk it ' Sbe can’l endnro it,’ said Mrs. Jewett.* She'll break down under it,' said Mrs.Sampson. . ‘ Sbo won't live long,’ said Airs. Jowett. Meantime, the victims, * uncotiscions of- their doom,'were jogging along iu a Blateof perfect happiness and infatuation. They were driving oat to the Jackson farm toinspect their future home, it was a cloudy,bkak Maich day, llio roads maddy, the grass not yd turned green. People whomet on tho street a-lded, ’ A disagreeable day!' to their * Good afternoon I’ But Lance and L inra found it an uncommonlynice jtay. I think they labored under n dim impressiou lliat roses were blooming nnd bobolinks warbling all along thu road.The snmmer ot youth nnd love i t their honrti: cast its glamour on all tho worldoutside. The old Jackson finn-lionso certainly needed to be looked nt through a glamour, if ever homo did. It was a story nnd ahalf house, the paint worn off, no blinds, tho tence, poor at bast, now ditapi.tatvd, a Bulitary scraggy lilac representing theshrubbery. Tbnre is always something slightlypvthetic in these same scraggy lilacs aridfl iweting nlmonde, one so oftun sei's strug­ gling for life in tho otherwiso dreary wasteof a farmer’s front yar.l. Some wom-iu once bud a heart to trv and redeem with tr.cb touch of th» beautiful as camo withinher power the desolate barrenness of bar surroundings. Poor "Mi’s. Jackson set out tint lilacwlnn xho wns young nnd hop-fui. and still expected something oflife, before Jackson’sh„rs!i, narrow skinflintednesj took all tho heart out of her, and made her (ho broken- spirited drndg?, who worked on like n tread-mill horso till one day she droppedirrto her grave, nnd there, kt n* hope, found rest. Then Jackson, finding a house­keeper exvonr.ive. s.slj out, nud went tolive with his s ni out W> st, where hn coifld got twenty per cent, for his money on firstmortgage—ns much of heaven ns his niengrs soul was capable of appreciating. And now another young conple werecoming hero t« try that difficult experi- whose sncc“ss there are so many odds—the experiment so many of us would gladlytry over again, with the dear-bought ex­ perience that comes of fnilnre. WouldLance degonirate into a mere man«y-mik­ing niaeliin", a ‘ keep-what-yon-get-and- get-wbat-yon-can ' rot i of man, like Jack- son ? Would the light, and lope, and 1 <vefade out of Lnur.t's eyes in the years to come, leaving her another Mrs. Jackson? Certainly the associations of tho now homowere not calculated to inspire very cheer­ ful ideas of a farxier's life.Fortnnat'dy, L-mra was one of thesehappy p<«opb) who look out on life through ritely fell to Bering tho bright si la of thoJackson bouse, If secretly rather dis­ mayed nt the torlorn aspect of thi'iga, yet tho native energy of h<-r character rose upstrong within li?r to meet tl:o emergency. Old Debbie, Mrs. Bridges’ washerwoman, used tn ertv, ‘ Ltury’s nil grit. Folks sayit don't take but a small skin to hold a deni of snnuk, nnd that's trnn of Lattry, nny- how.' S'ir» possessed ft latent resolution, apower of endtimnco hardly to bo expected from h> r frail. tleffcale appearance. • This doesn’t loak like a very suitable ' I beliovo,’ jat'l Laura, * In famishing a liotp'o pleasantly anil comfortably, butnot expensively—notbiug merely for ghow. Then lake all the comfort you can out of it.I expect to do wonders with that six hun­ dred dollars Annt Dunlap left me, to say nothing abeut tliat two hundred I'vehid tip—profits of ‘teaching the young idea.' etc.’f flow ihligiii'fiil it ia to n)ap*y an luir- ess!' observed Lance. ‘ Mercenary yoting man ! Then shall be- twigged by the ear for that speech!'ju<jdLaura, attiring the action to tho word, and being repaid by a sound kissing, which itonly nerded tho slightest provocation iotho world fu tempt Lance to inflict, as Laura ought to, have known—in fact, Ifear, did know. Thon Laura said there was something on her mind, nnd Lance was anxious to offici­ate ss hither confessor. ‘ It's » fancy of mine, a secret desire, that I'm afraid to tell yon. I know youwill think it is really extravagant, fur. far worse than (he furnunce. You wfll begin to repent of yonrbargain, 1 fear, and,thinkthere is some truth in everyone’s forebod­ ings about my 'high notions,’ village airs,etc.;' for p opio a!*nys find out. sooner or later, what ‘1’iey say*, about them, at d Lance and Laura v.’cru no exceplions.‘ N msonse, Laura. What is it—a toc’snest ?' ‘ Almost ns foolish, Ur e’, T fear. Abow-window, if you must know. I always did like b >w-whb1 r.r.’, they are so cheerfulnnd sunny; and fillo.I with plants in thewinter, th^y give a room a perfectly hud- tver-bko look. Then one lakes off tlustiff angularity of a room, and gives it j.i- dividu tli’.r. lUra'a a proposition in the Rulo of Three for you, ‘founded on fact,'as story-writers Boy :—As a snico of ro­ mance and imagination to a woman's char­ acter, so is u boxv-wiudew, to a squareroom.’ ‘ A'i. Laura, yon Inve such nn artful way of putting things ! 1 foressa I shall bo’managed,’and noyer know it. However, we'll contrive the bnw-win.low somehow, if possible,’ said the indulgent Lance, who—being in that dolightfully acqnimx-ntstate of mind often manifested in man­ kind before marriage, when tho wish oftho b.divd object i» law—if Laura halsuggested a throe-story cupola as a de sirable addition to their modest mansion,would nuUubtelly have seen at once the exlremo feasibility and necessity of the Spring and snnrn'i pissed away. Lancehaunted carpenters like an avenging spirit, bec.nna an olject of terror to painters andtinner.*, worked had on tho firm day­times, took Laura out driving in tho pleas­ ant aiimni'T evenings. Liura took a tiip t<> Now York, and made a few tno lest pur- swung her lightly down to terra finna in | bii strung hands. I‘ An original conundrum strikes me, Lance. Why are yon nnd I ttnliko Alex- | under tho Great ? Because ho sighed for .other worlds to conquer, nnd we don't need | it. This vVi I furnish icope for all our energies nt present. It does look diLipi- ,dated enough. However. I inn thauktul it | stands upon a bill. I like to ‘ view tho i landscape o’er.' ’ |By cutting away those forlorn hemlocks :wo shall get a view ol tho river and moun­ tains bej'oed, pictnresipto enough to satisfy ,even yon. It's very pleasant here in sum­ mer. little ns you would think it now.’ Inside, the* lionso was more dreary still.Tho pnpir looked all tho more dingy tnnl faded fiom having been originally of gaudy and flaunting designs and colours. Ochre­yellow being n durable colour, not often requiring renown!, every room but llio pailonr wa* painted that line. Tho ceil­ings resembl’d tho works of the old mus­ ters in that they wera very cracked and smoky. Straw, papers, nn old hat, or twoa broken rush-bottomed chair, littered the floors. The March wind howled round tho liouse, rattling tho windows, and wailing down the chimneys,ns if it wore Mrs. Jack-son’s ghost uttering warnings of doleful presago to her successor. After insnecting the whole premises, nnddiscussing tneir capabilities—after Lance |had shown Laura how ho inlcndod to put a rink in the kitchen, wi»b pumps to bring hard and soft water directly into it, insteadof her logging the former by’ Um pniltul from the well in tho yard, nnd catching tho latter in tubs or however she cmbl,as Mrs. Jackson had bean obliged to do, Jackson never having time to ’ lass about women’s nonsense ’—after Laura had con-fidentinlly assured I.anco ho was • the best old fellow in tho world,' an I Lance had reciprocated in kind, only mere so,they returned to the (rout-room, where, seated in state on an old dry goods bnx, they proceeded to engage in tho pleasingooenpation of erecting air-cnsll’s. Let not the youthful rsmler sneer nt tine hero and heroine of mine as prosy,tiresome, uninteresting, because thsir talk turned on pumps, furnaces, and simitar nn- romnntie topics. They, too, had been through lbs ora of hopes, Jaspiir. moon­light, ecstasy, rhapsodies. Now there was a charm better than rotnsneo iu the words * our house,’ * we will do thus and so ;' itsignified so much to them of the future, when they were never to be separated, tho happy home they were to share. Besides,hath not Salomon said there is a time for all things—a time for moonlight, and a time for bread and butler, a time forraptures, and a time fur furnaces? This wen bow they camo to talk of fur­ naces ; Lance said, * II >w m<>uldy andmnsty this room smells I I wonder if Jackson kept bis cheese hero I What’s that verso you quota about— • lath# chill eiraryt* naked Mm. Gen­eral Saiupwa of Mrs. Judge Jewitt, in her meat iusprwwdvo manner. “ To throw Brilgre are not wealthy, but they are one of oar oLlcsi familta*; and Laura, with her connection, ter fine adueatioo, herajran able, lady-like mao tiers aad pretty faae. miebi have married iota tha firstciseles- George Lad-It w»s extremely at­tentive to ter last v*ar, before she went off teaching that miterabta district school,•nd tecatBO mtatnated will* this aoansa farmer " — pronooaead oo-os fehmah. Tten Hrs- Judj» Jaarete took up tterefrain: ‘ Bha would teva do society whatever- Bha WU1 bo otoliced to work Ilka a caltay slay*— farmer*' wivoa always do. Think of Lanra making butter and ‘ Barbarian I* broke in Laura ; * to de- libotately dosecrate Moore by n?te-aa ap­ plication I- Probably Una waa tha beetparlour, and the sun wu never perm ft tod to fairly shine into it more than cnee a year. New paper, paint, and whitewash,and plenty of air and sun for a while. mopping, **tln< with hired m»a. living cmsalt pork I* An4 Mrs. JewiU shuddered U the dreadful ptetun iroogi&aUau thus p«-unted ot ■ farmer's life. «Oh, it’s truly dm adfulmH Un. Qus - Mid fiampiar* minds ma. Do you Hrppore Kainate wooM n«M? It makes n hntwa an muebjpieissnter usd more withte-.' ‘ Lt wteiuly teaK***t rnnovaliM. Noone Ln Kuipete Farm* hw o»e. The Mm oft a farmer ’• aelliBg wood and bnytey Aunt Pally Qrigfa—’ nuanMrtRnisly Laura. Aunt Felly atafaga ®»I * tewt terr harp m trriigo than before. ILsiJa*. s'.io wts, . carefully husbanding Aunt Danlap’ri six ,linudthil with a view to furniture. S.in ,f-lt an honest prido in d- ing sotn< thing tohelp toward providing the mutn.J homo, ia J bums alittii of a helpmeet to start with, at , least, even if sho were to pror.-1 th* miser-nbl? failure in tho cud every ono predicted, j Long Webs of cotton cloth grew into sheets, j nillow-cas' 9. curtain*, wait not, under ht-r (ha-iy needle, flying in and ont through the ,long samar r Jays. Aho. aho found time , to practice various culinary arts in thek'lohcr.. A bit of thn summer was pnt ' away for winter use, in shape of canned I berries, peaches, etc. II"r bread and pies ' were really quits wonderful, ss Lincothouglit. ■ Early in October the/ were married, nnd moved into tlir-ir new home, now hard'y tn :bn rccognizm! in its daintiness of fresh ,naint, pretty papers, nn-.r furniture, ft was 'Lr from being a fashionable or imposing ' residence; nothing Gothic, or Italian, or ' Elizabethan about it. unless indeed wo ex cpt Laura’s one extravagance—the littl-jbow-window; but It bad an eminently cozy, hoinolffia air. The m< ment yenStepped vou TcCr-ived a comfortable,cheerful impression, as if hem were n plac- where people weru in the habit of enj >ying themselves. Entering n littlo square ball—on ono side was th*dining-room ; on the other, lb© parlor; back of the parlor, tiro bedroom, 'rhe furnace imparting a snm-mcr intemperatnre, the doors of these ad­ joining rooms all stood open, giving good nir. and a deal of roominess for so small ahouse. The parlor paper was a green and gilt flower on a light drab ground ; tho carpet, an ingrain, sm >1] cheeks, j;r«ujn thopred’-mlnant eolor. Thronjh the bow­window the sun shown brightly iu overLanra’s plants, making a surunjer within, even if tho ground were white with enow I outsido an.l tho mercury down among thezeros. Each side of Ilia bow-windows, on the little brackets, Parian busts, Evo and I’syche, wedding presents, looked out fromEnglish ivy that twined around th m, and then iii-tover the hanging luraket iu tin* middle of Ilia window. Ou the walls huugtwo or three gooil engraving* ami photo­ graphs, over them dilator* of bright autumn leaves—souveniars of the weddingtour. A set of hanging book-shelves, bear­ ing tho united libraries of Laues an I Laura, presented nn odd combination ofpoetry and works on Agriculture and ’The Hir*«.* Thon there waa a lenngo which was a lounge—not n rack contrived to ex­asperate the hmnan ftama to the .utmostby its knobbiness—an rasv-cbair, a camp- chair, n sb ik-*r iMcki.ig-cbair, ono or twocan* si-ated chairs, a ccutre-lablu with the big lamp, book*, papers, Laura’s work­ basket. This was the family sitting-room. Ix*e>lx- ing iu of nu evening, you would have seenLance one aide of the table in the big easy­ chair, nadinghia paper, or chatting withLanra, sitting opposite in her shakerrocker with her wwiug. (hie great ad- ’ vantage iu marrying a farmer is. that you have hltn at h>nuc with yon aveuiugs, pro-' Tided you make yourself tderably agree- able to him. Irtura, even if aba wore married, still thought it worth while to' fashionably arrange her hair, wear the bright bow. tha dainty coltar. the link■ et eeierna that really adj ao much la a’ woman's aljraclioua. Lanes had too much respect for Uvtira and himself too to ml■ down for tho evening in bis old frock. tumbled hair, overalls tucked into coaraeboots ear airing strongly «f the baru-varj. - Ha brushed his hair, d xnnuj an oid coat ■ and slippers, and so. with a (kite teonU-*. l gained vastly in CMUHort m J hia wife's I affections. i From tbeir windows tlm light happy. home streamed clwerfvjly out over the • snow, a benediction to the pxsaer-Uy.- People were f<md of dropptag in there furI an etanlBg, it ww * so ptaaaani,’ tWi v satd. ■ Many a farmer's bey and girl, an* r m• evening at Lane*'*, went homo thmkiMg farming wasuT ro b%d after aiL and they > wouldn’t be in such a terry U* grow» enough lo leava far the aty, if tt v mU be ’ aa ptiMiMnt at boms. For (tebioR iu Kmp- ,ir' Ferms bad st-tamed an suur. asw orderof things from that provedu>< at Lanee's. The paitosr of every mprclgbUi C*n«*»must C 'atata g tsgy hard and slipper) , telr-sloth sofa, aiz absixa, aad a tent Kidcfng^hair (Kwa^iag »*••» qnsh-tias Tn even greatss degm . • &er tea ttM k ln>'ta I, ni4 not a ray yf light fnua way. back in the L raAmmrajon, Did cotaptny cmri-’i tirroxJtatifeJTyZ io grrafifparade w’«a' mftde of ImiMiag ffree, opaoiog mono, git-tingoui tte tawt Ibiugi, ili«L«b« nvyiarten-,at* gntft fi-lt iiiftt lie cltaui'l t)*ver duie eomo agniu. So Lane* ted wfaw" 'uncoinoioKsIy doing—mtmajKFf work indomonUntLing that« fanner’f.bonu om*1not necoftflnrily bfi degtilale df any ^«in*ble comfort or refiAentefft, 'ftalwe i -maw eoe how tl<« ptiblio stood aff.fllod, 1lift the curium on Aunt I’oliy. Grignr‘•Mt rt-onj? 011 an cv*ta*foh of more iitaa mtnsual solemnity. Tun years of iftartiifaa, . fuaerata, «wjnz j tyaetfeg. _tea>drfnin«s,having in a mrasnrA d< alroyed the pritni- tivelastra of Aunt Polly's b*iit bf^ek al-paes, it waa bring tunxd and mM*wft*z*d, ’ Miss Scrapsjiaviiig teen sammnn»d tnidd on thi« important ocemtion. To them, thru 'momentously engaged, entered Mr a. BtoWcll, dropping hi on fawi way lo tte.viltago to do a littjs ‘trading,’ o’lenyihlyout of para affection for. Annt Tolly, bnt,really to erib a •leivo aarfero gratia ©nr ofMi»s Scrap*. Tuialittte prelimiaalry Mte lied, Mrs. Stowill.said------- , ‘ As I came down4 > tl>« Ltmb*rt% Himmsat Lanra nt her front window, as targe aa life, pinkt-d no inrteh fiffi I should *» if I whb going to l-a at th<* Minister’a.; Yms ■don’tsnpposa Ificy’va ,got compaay, Jo, yon ?’* La, no,’ replied Anol Pdlly; ’ she mto there every afternoon, fadin’ b*r beat carpet nil out. I nover heerJ anything' to • equal it.’ , ; «ri*‘ Nothing’s ton f?r>ofl f?r run* folks, yon know,’observed Miss Scraps, with a spite­ful snap of her scissor*. * I shouldn’t think Lance wonIJ allow it,’ suggested Mrs. Stowell. ‘That wa’a’lold Miss Lsmlrort’s way of doing.’. ‘Allowit! My, he thinks shs’s jn«t right, nnd everything she says law andgospel I’ .... ‘ Well, they do say she makes a tip-tonhousekeeper, better than folks thought forbefore thov were married. Mrs. Jededtah Jones told me sbo g»ts fifty-five cents apound for nJ I her butler, in Boston J * * Fifty-five eenteF almost shrieked Annt P< Uy, wlio only had fifty for hers.’ Yes; fifty-five cents. You see she fixes it nit m> in some sort sf fancy bulls. She's a regular nvmager, I tell yon.*So it wi'.l be wen Lanra Kwss graduallyrising in popular ertnttn. 'it was a fact that the same system, culture, judgment,patience, that Lad made her n anooeBafnl teach’r, atao m ide her a good housekeeper. Instead of <taing everything at the hardest,driving it llirhngh by main strength, ate put some mini! into her work, planned, had meihsd and vrder, made her braina saveher bands. -. But soma skeptical reader may powibly suggest that th-> life of a farmer's witedoea not consist cntirclv of sitting in ivy-wreath­ed parlors with bright trows on ; that there are cortaindijagreeableactiinhiiefl of churn- .ings, b ikings, washing, jug-killings, hired men, not to bo ignored. It is true it was not »11 suns’itna. 1?j '.v livuj uro. Kjatesays Wb»re’* the *v«. l.y«oT«r Mu»Doth nut «■*«)• 1 So it may bo presumBd Laura did pnt escape her share of the discipline Life hasfor every station. Sometimes she was dreadfully tired, and consequently a littlo bhio. Sometimes, after a hard day’s work,a day when sin did not lee! very well, and the children were cross and everything went wrong—such days as will come occa­sionally in every bunsehol.1 — she was1 tempte-d jwrhftps to look back lialf-ngret* felly to tue peaceful davs of girlhood. ButLance was so good, so considerate. If Lanra wns a trifle cross, be dircreetlv said’nothing, which course soon brought belt toa very becoming state of humility and peni­ tent". IL; did not look upon woman’swork as nothing, because different fromhis. II LU it as right that Ltnra slrould have help iu tho honso as he on the farm,even if in the end ho owned lees bank stcek and Government binds es a reenlL IL, actually thonebt more of bin wife »heaof iu mev. S > if Laur * was p*cmri>*rfv less protiinl'leto him than big strapping Pliernie Stow-11 would have been, snd if Lauras>metim*-s bad her trials and vexations, yet they never regretted yielding to thesecret attraction of tho strong love thatdrew them toward each other-—above that bound them only the more closely to each other as the years wont on, and the ex- .perienecs they brought were enjoyed rand endured together. Tobo^anins at Ottawa. Frrnn the La:i-Jou Truth. Fed. IS. fl- rr> is an extract of a letter from Csn> ntla. which gives an necoo t of toboggan­ ing TUo Govcrnor-Gep^ritl tried htahand nt it, and a bit of lit* ennt g«t looaa BTjineln'w under the toboggan, which tai always f ital. Over he went in thn sterpraipart cf tliu second plunge, bnt luckily the snr w was too soil to hurt. Then be toon it into Lis head lo try going down a almrferbill with n jump right on to the skstlng- rink. We trkd hard to di^finnde him, f«r if persons are shot off with sueh an impetus ■ on, the ice is a v< ry differenU&A'1l,*e to tl»«soft snow, and we knew what would happen if the Princes* canghl sight of hi n. Ho*, ever, off bn went ; tho l-'boggnU roesstraight in Hie snow as a horse d<>*a at u th« rink all safe. Then S’vers) genilem'uf .llowtd him. By this time up e»m* thV rriueess, win, vr» bid Imped, was «af» at the bottom <>f tbs big slide, and !<« bnavhauling np her toboggan io notice «n«. Ofcourts nothing would fit her teat aha must try it at that instant herself, tn allthat could bo June was t« level the enow, bank a litth-. so as tn make the toboggan jump a Cutie lest violently, and pnt amna one to datcb her on the oilier aide, and i ff•lie went. Lucky she k> pi the tnlmgsan qnite straight and sat like a rock, to ate spun acres* right to the cnrlmg-rink,«brmthe long-stop, as he was christened, enMghtl ami broke her shock which might other­ wise baee damaged the Inlmegan, She fat wonderfully plncky, but Ilin Excelleneywonll not lei her try it any mor*. Y<hi have no notion how popular the I'rineaaa is. She ami His Excellency and her lathe*go out on a enow trump on Sunday after- uoonfl and she Laa invented auah a p*«tty walklug costume. Il is ft dark blanket cloak, with hood lined and piped vriih r*l,red aaali round waist and pe»tieoal tn som»t!mig Ute it, only wilhont tte J»Ui- Charge IL" An obludi citiz.on who had serened a tewhnmlrad d <ltan> riartod in tha did n«l aartlenlarlv a iwrtrv (farted fn the jbn». Tter* »i« something of rivalry between ths two p’acaa ateart fixing sa.and tte old W*n was cnnHaMtj c o thawatch to roa' that tba other did wte ateud of hint. 1(« had ju l «WUi«d A«w* »b-n h carat a eoakwar wte teed : "AL I yra.1l tere to h.ag np rear ft-Mte now. T»a man ate •»* yaw re* >tta ■***- " Ute do* *M»a firte ?’ rutalhe'ft, state aud gk llO THE OXFORD TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, 1879. ffribuiw,T U BlffCABE POISONING CASE. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 1» W78. Im TH* Niagara Efeatfca case yester- terday Mr, Plumb waa declared elected by a minority of two, Th* appointment of Mr. D. M.Robert- Son as Police Magriatrata gives pretty &Qn*ra! diwrttafaotion—among the Grits - -and Conservatives don't take any stock rtt the matter anyway. htuband told bet; she said ber husband t told Iror that Dr. Springer wm not at fhome.< Croes-examined by Mr. Fletcher—Do inot reaollwt, but I think McCabe did . oak ma to toll my aunt to ctme nnd see ] hie wife; she did keep n servant for eightmonths ; it waa before sb* waa married *, ] she has bad one since. ,George Hugill, sworn, said—Am an ft*- isi*tant in Kneeahaw’s drug slor* ; I sold, i on Wednesday, the 18th December, 1878, ,to Dr. Bower* five grains of tha sulprate i of qtropia, which is the active principle of beiadona, and a deadly poison; be didnot say what be wanted it lot; he did order aconitine at tbe *atn* time, five graine; Iwrote to B. A. Mitchell for it; he took the atropia away with him; it is a pow­der; got the aconitine on Thursday, did not open it; it was sealed up in a small paper bag; never saw the powder before; Igave it to Dr. Bower* just as I got it; it was a bag sealed up in an envelops with B. A. Mitchell's address on it, label­ed aconitine; bo got it shortly after 9 a. m., on Friday; he said ho was going to experiment with it on a dog; he saidthat on Wednesday when h* ordered it; I think he made no remark when he gotit; I saw the parcel be brought back on Saturday; it was tha same papers; tbe hag was open ; I did not weigh it when hebrought it back. Cross-examined by Mr. Norris—Have been in the drag business over five years;saw aconite, not aconitine; saw Aconitine when Kneosbaw weighed it; I got it ones from the Post Office; did not open it whenI got it; I sent n postal card for it; an invoice camo with it; it was enclosed in an envelope, scaled with tho usual gum; itwas in tho shop on Thursday afternoon until Friday; tbe onvelopo was in tlio samo condition when I gave it to Dr. Bowersas when I got it: I gave it to Dr. Bow­ ers between nine nnd ten; ho spoke about experimenting with it; I can't say whetherit was when ho got it, or when ho or­ dered it; lie left immediately when ho got it; we sell Dr. Bowers, I think, all tbodrugs ho gets; have sold him different poisons at different times; never sold Dr. Bowers atropia before; sold him fre­quently aconitine ; Dr. Scott and Spring­ er have dealt there; can’t say have sold them the tinctnro of aconitine; heard Mr. Knecsbaw speak ubont selling that poisonto him; Dr. Bowers came back on Sat­ urday morning after 9 o’clock; tho bag was open; the inside was enclosed in asmall white paper, will not swonr ho did not open it in onr shop; did not see it weighed; saw it on the scales; onr scalesweigh one grain, which is tho srnallesl; wo weigh a grain then divide it; can ■ divide a grain into five parts.Croes-examined by Mr. Fletcher—Was I i not examined at tho Coroner's inquest; 1: know how tbo poison was sold in tbo shop; 1 ; did not tell it outside; did noktell any one s i insi'le. 1 Dr. Williams, of Ingersoll, was then 1 sworn and said ho made a post-mortem 1 examination of tho body of tho deceased; 1 the first point my attention was called to, 1 as being out of the common, was that 1 there was a brightness of tho eye, with 1 delitation of the pupil; the second point ■ was tbo condition of tho palate; the third J point was partial mxscnlar rigidity; onopening tlio body the first remarkable ! point was the fluidity of the blood, with <brightness in color—a cherry rod color; 1 this was particularly noticeable in tbe 1 pleura; tbe whole of tbe interior organs wero congested, commencing on the brain,which was healthy it insolf; taking thelungs they were engrossed with blood sj that we had doubt whether or not there had been a previous inflammation, andtested thnm in water to deci le that point; we found that there was not inflammation; the heart was placid, bnt perfectly healthy,with tbo exception of one small spot of fibrons deposit, the cavities contained no blood; tho right side should have con­tained blood with that condition of lung mentioned-, tho reason for its not contain­ ing blood I attribute to the cutting of Ihovein which loads into tho heart, nnd tho blood lieing fluid ran out freely; tho stomach on its external surface nnd nttbo larger curvature had n spot about three inches in diameter whioh was swol­ len nnd bad a jelly like appearance; thewhole of tho surface of tbo stomach in the tame region bad a deposit of fibrino,which indicated recent infl iinmation; there weroalso spots reddened from injection of blood, these were also formed on the small intestines; tbe kidneys were healthy, withthe exception of the' general congestional condition that w.’ havo mentioned, affec­ ting the whole interna! organ ; the womb was aho healthy with the exception ol aslight congestion of ths seme kind; tbe bladder contained several ounce* of fluid. Cross-examined — I know no natural cause that will produce the group of con­gestion* formed; there was no discn’e ap­ parent in the body to produce dealt.; I can’t account for tho production of thosesymptoms, except by a preparation of aconite; in comparing with all tlio stalis- lies, I bare been able to find on the sub­ject, I wonld say that all tbe condition* mentioned in this case are recorded in those cases of aconito poisoning takentogether; by taking any one particular esseyon will no’t. get every symptom shown, but by reading several; tiro enriy symp­ tom* of taking aconite daring life would boburning of tbe lips nnd throat, the pulse at first decreased in frequency, and after a time it wonld bo increased, and, lastly,weak and irregular, in some coses llrore would bo vomiting from largo dose*, but not in all; you can distinguish aconitine,bnt not from the alcoloids, in the stomach after death; if in very suinll quantities it would be very difficult to distinguish it; f a cbomieal analysis would not determine whether aconite was used or any other al- ealojds; there were notes taken down byDr. Scott at the time of the post mortem.bn11 hare never so5ti those notes. I ex­ amined tiro etomacb; w* sent it to Toronto; bnt opened it and examined it first; be­fore I left tbe place tbe stomach was pnt in a glass jar with a cover and given to ' tbe Coroner; with regard to tbe brain, alow form of fever wonld cause the con­ gestion sicken of; it is possible that; opium poison might also vrodaee eontr**-tiont the main symptom of aconite poison- ' ing w m th* condition in which we found1 th* lunge, heart, stomach and intestines. 1 Cross-examined by Mr. Fletcher—I donot know whether it wm aconite er' aonnitin* that produced the effect ou tbe 1 body; and did not hear that aconite had ; been purchased by Dr. Bowers before go-' tag io tiro post mortem examination; I1 never examined the spine; it was not ranch to do it; it was not a complete post mortem examination; all doctors are friendly in In-' gsrecdl, a* far as I know. r It being trow six o’clock tbe eonrt ad- , jourael on til IO o’clock on Thursday morning. Dr. Bowers being liberated r upon bi* own recognixane* of 82,000, and . Dr. McCausland ra ll.Off). No bail being (fortheo ning for MeCab* be was removed in custody. 'SECOND DA Y-T bcmdly. Dr. Scott, sworn—knew tha hie Ann MeCabe ; have not bee« her medical ad.riser; attended on a post mortem eismtaei- r lion made ou her boby on tiro 28lh Dm .Dr. William* did the work.; [ aasisted and > took tbs note* ; her body was in a healthy ’ rtita ; there waa uo punitive tiling to which---------------------------------------— —. —> death oookl be attributed ; after lookingwas op moktag graal for Iroreeff; no other up th* ew I to tiro eoacluaioo that eonro hr Hr* boos*; there w m u» aorvaat; the oo*ditfas of tb> body might bo eaoeed ■ba eompiafcrod at troing ill; she o*M by Kronit* poMten or tte preparations; the Gtemga bromrbi Dr. &>»•«; «t» took mn* appearunre of th* eye and of tiro etomacb,raedmne from ham end threw it op. and tiro ftaidiiy ------at- - a tr - - «ti - a - - b- PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION. Dr. Bowers and Geo. McCabe held for Tria! at the Assizes. The Ontario LegisiatarD wits pro­ rogued yesterday. The attendance in thiy galleries waa numerous, the ladiea* gal­ lery being occupied. At 3 His Honor, attended by a brilliant staff, entered. As­ sent was given the Bills pasted during the aeaaen, after which His Honor de­ livered the customary speech. The London Times of Saturday aaya the ffirak consignment of the ealilo subject to the naw regulations arrivad on Friday laat at IJ verpool in the Warren Lina Brazilian, whioh haa baon peculiarly aucoeiful in her tramport of lire stock. This is her second voyage Rom Boston during tbs winter, when tha Atlantic is rough, without losing a single bead of cattle. Yesterday the Brazilian landed with 801 bead at the special liage licensed by tha Privy Conncil at Birkenhead. Every animal wu antici­ pated and they will find a ready market in London and Liverpool as dead meat within the ten days allowed for slaughter, fl U probable that American shippers who are awaiting the result of the Brazilian's ex­ periment will ssnd a large number of beasts under tbe timo condition. The election of a Bishop for tho Dio­ cese of Toronto, which created an un­ usual excitement in Episcopal circles the early part of last week and the week be­ fore, has resulted in the selection of Archdeacon Sweatnmn of Woodstock The choice is an excellent one and while regretting the loss sustained by the Diocese of Huron we must congratulate tho Diocese of Toronto on the acquisition of such an able man as its head. The following is a copy of Ven. Archdeacon Sweatman's letter of acceptance of the office :— Chapter House,London, Ont, March 6th, 1879. Mr Dkab Mn. Dkas.—The announcement of my election to the vacant See of Torontorarne upon me with great unexpectedness. Ifeel that I can only humbly recognize tho de­ cision of tho Synod as overruled by the guid­ance of tho Holy spirit of God, and thereforecalling me to a duty which I dare not decline. My attachment to this Diocese of Huron isvery strong; for several years put I have been identified with it* work in the Synod, and myfond anticipation wa* to devote the remainderof my ministerial life to its rervicc; it will eame me also sincere regret to sever the tiesof interest which bind mo to the parish ofWoodstock. In addition to this absence ofany .desire for a change of sphere is the sense ef the very heavy responsibility and arduousdifficulties which must attach to the office otBishop ot Toronto under tho present condi­ tion of the diocese.With these considerations, nothing couldhave induced me to accept so sacred and weighty a change but the conviction that inthe almost unanimous choice of the Synodthe eummons of God to the work was to be heard and obeyed.Having responded to the call, I am preparedto address myself to what I regard as th* grand­ est enterprise that could « nga:o sny tuiui'sefforts—the leading of the Church m the dio­cese committed to me to that state of tainpond and spiritual prosperity, of honor andusefulness, whicli can ouly be attained by aunited, loving, co-operation of all the mom- let* of the body of Christ towards one greatend—the glory of His name and the perfectingof Hw Church in the salvation of man. I enter upon it with a courage ami hope-fulneu—not only because it offer, a great reward in tha acoompliahmrat of blessedresults, but because I feel I can count uponthe hearty support of those who have chosen me to do it; and still more upon tbeassisting, embracing grace of God who hasbeen pleased to call me. 1 fee) deeply how much I stand in need ofthe prayers of the Church at thi* time thatGod will endue me with all needful grace andspfritual strength, and that Ho W’ll prepare me by His Holy Spirit to fill to His glory thohigh office in Hi* Church to which I am to beset apart Asking yon for your prayer* that my ju<lgwnmt may be sowed, my heart sincere, my lifefiady, my faith pure and constant, and my labor* unremitting, \I am, my dear Dean,Yours most smeerefy in a common LonL (Signed! Aimiur Sw w twc’,The Very Rcverewd Dean Grosett, D. D.,Toronto. OUK NEW YORK LETTER. (From oar regular eurreip rodent) New York. March 8, 1879. The melancholy day* of Lent have come the amkloet of She year (except dog-daye) for the­ atrical cwterprwe,. For rix weeki no form of auamement except tbe Opera will be really faalrioemble ami Society tome uncooacionaly alangy and cries, “{lire us a rest C Fortun­ ately we hare Opera in plenty, so there need 1* i»a lael. ol snitable fashionable amosetntnU. Dalian Opera at the Academy, English Opera at the standard, American Opera at the Brood way, African Opera at the San Francisco's, and Burleaqae Opera at the Variety Shows,l.wre little to 1« desired in point of numbersami little room for the theatre, which nowhare to contend with churches more potent than that over which the athletic »r.Talm*«eprandrs. Assured succeues. like the Banker's Daughter and Engaged, may push their way throgh tho Lenten season triumphantly,as the Two Orphans and The Shaaghraun didin iter day ; but the look out for phvs which hare not ttei momentum of popularity to carrythem along » rery »*d preoeut How.vrr,•«r plnrky meirotmbtan nunagera are doingfh^sr iwaft taa titylal IPmAm .mi l’.I ___ " , ~ ----TT —---— * V’ri IVIVJU** th« UftpUwna troupr nn M««hv, that the wjMKTM predicted a fedora, mU. until onetnad to purchase tickets, tkao eoM ouctvoa oftha enterprise rewld Mt ba ontinuted A l-w tbe feat Lissa.) Waduaday, Carawa (withMb«ia Hank) M Friday. »U U Smunaenbukjdd Oaatw) fee tiro tfeterday raaUtre- - .Woa tbat tee »na.t Culreel apprecrote, tbeMteatMO, and, for one, aabacnher* have noTt**iyLita •*» ua Tha prelimiaary enquiry into tbe alleged (case of poisoning of Mr*. McCabe wm topened before Squires William Peers, . William Gray and John D. Hood, at the , Court Hoose, Woodstock, on Wednesday .of laat week. Mr, F. R. Ball, Q. C., ’ County Crown Attorney, appeared tor the ,prosaautiou ; Mr. Wm. Norris, of luger- . ■oil, for Dr. Bower*, and Mr. Ashton < Fletcher, Woodstock, for Mr- George Me- ]Cabe, tire husband of the deceased. These proceedings have been taken in conse­quence ot tho alleged unsatisfactory finding ,of the jm*y at tbe Coroner's inquest, which , is alleged to have been against tbe weight (of evidatwo adduced thereat, an informs- , tion having been laid by Mrs. Rivero, sinter (of the deceased, in order to bring the guilty ,Sarties to justice. Prior to taking any evi- ence, Mr. Norris, on behalf of Dr. Bowers. ■applied to bare the ease against the two denndants gone into separately, but this tbo magistrates refused to do, as they con­sidered the charge ns n joint charge against the two. Tho indictorent was then read to the accused! each of whom pleaded ‘ not uilty."Tbo evidence In the case was then pro­ ceeded with, tbe first witness sworn bringMr. James F. MoDjnsld, who said he knew tbo prisoner, was employed by Mc­Cabe to draw Mrs. McCabe's will about Sth or 7th December, 187B, dated same day m drawn ; the instruolions wero given byGeorge MeCabe ; the will doris*d all Mrs. McCabe's property, real and personal, to ber husband, George MoCabe; I did notsee ber ; sho gave me no instruction s for tbo will; saw a copy of the same will, but not dated, on the 18th December, 1878, atMoMutrav’s hotel; tho copy w m in the handwriting oi Dr- Bowers ; the will that was executed was an eijet copy of the one I drew up ; was not asked L? McCabe tosee his wife on the subject, and did net see her; the will was not sigaod whon I saw 11 on tbe 18th December.Mrs. Jane Cuthbert, sworn, said :—I live in West Oxford, across tbe road from Elizabeth Ann McCabe, whom I haveknown for about fourteen years. She andher husband did not live on yery good terms, so she told me ; saw her the morn­ ing she died; McCaba cimo for an thatmorning ; that wns Saturday, 2lst Decem­ ber, abent 5 u.m; he went for Mrs.H >lrne s; sbo and I met at McCabe’s gate and wantin tbe house together ; the doctors, Mc­ Causland and Bowers, were sitting at tbo stove in tbe dining room ; Dr. Bowers tooktbe candle ; ho first said Mrs. McCabe was dead ; be then showed mo in tho room where I had been tbroe weeks before ; ontbo morning of ber death sho had ber clothes and shoes on, and appeared as if she went to bed all well; a glass withsomething in it was on a small fable ; I put my band on ber face, which was cold, but her neck was warm ; Dr. Springer washer doctor; throe nights before sho died McCabe camo to me for somo mustard . I risked if Mrs. McCabe was sick ; he said•• a liltlo that w.iy ;’’ no neighbors wero sent for ; deceased and I were on the best of terms t did not see any bottles in tbehouse; after Dr. McCausland left, McCabewont to a drawer and took something he said was matches ; I thought it was money; bo gave it to Dr.Bowcrs; a pen andink were on tho table, but I saw no will there ; Dr. Bawara said she inndo her will all right, on my asking if sho was sensible,■bo told mo a good deal about her troubles; sho said she was to have nothing to do with his property and ho nothing to do with bets, as ba wonld drink it up.Cross-examined by Mr. Norris.—Can’t say wbat time transpired between the timeMcCabe spoke to ma and tbe lituo I reach­ ed the house, it was perhaps ten minutes. Cross-examined by Mr. Fletcher—She was not of excitable habits ; sb* was likeany other person ; I felt hurt at her death and very bad that no person was caUod in; Mrs. McCabe might have told her hnsband1 did not like hitu ; wa never had any words ono way or tho other; she was very industrious ; saw bat pass on the Sundaybefore her death; she was going to ch arch ; McCabe came for mo ab<nt 5 a. m.; I bad a fear for McCabe ; McCabe said my wifeor Mr*. McCabe ; I can’t remember which ; be did not seem excited; ha a warned glad, I think; he told the boy he bad two doctorsthere ; be said sbo was breathing ber last ; h* sail she never would rise from tbit b»d : I heard McCabe tell tbo boy to tellmo to come ; I say 1 wns very excited,baing roused out of my bad ; 1 understood he said she was breathing her last, and Iwas wanted immediately ; MrCabo opened the door of bis home ; can’t say who went in first ; I spoke to Dr. McCansland first ;d-m’t know, what I said ; I naked bow Mrs. McCabe was ; he answered sho was dead ; I th inght something wa* wrong ;tbe pan aud ink on the table axode me think so ; my hired man w-mt for relations; Peter Cuthbert aud Randolph Johnstonwero ths two persons in tho home when McCabe came for me ; Mrs. Holmen lives further down Ilian I do ; at tha time hetook the parcel from the drawer be did not ■ay it was matches ; I inspected it was money ; there were several bills; the rollwas not larger than a bunch of matches ; in tlio snmmer time Mr. McCabe borrowed some money from my daughter ; Mr*. MoCnbe said site would not pay hi* debt*. John Giyfer, sworn, said—Kiow Dr. Bowers; did not sell any poisonous medi­cine to Dr. Bowers on or about 21st De­ cember, 1878; was st honse of deceased on Saturday of her death ; saw a number ofbottles there ; I thought one of then) bill the taste aud smell of aconite ; it was half full; I could not say positively it was aconite ; my belief wa* that it was aconite;cork was broken, a fresh break; no hbel on the bottle; it was not in ths shape w druggist wanld send it out; one otherbottl* contained faulanum, about one onoce ; it appeared to be there a consider­ able time, as there was a sedim-nt at the bottom of it and cork w m fastened ; itwould take month* foe a eettletnant such as wa* in it to form; it conld not havebeen used for months; other bottles were most empty ; one contained turpentine ; nothing to endanger life, Cross-Examined by Mr. Norris—Aconiteis a vegetable poison ; it may be used in ■ number of patent medicines; the coroner. Dr. MeK*y, asked me to ro to the botroewith him ; he did not tell Iber* were poi*on there l belli* WM one on no* eqnaro pre-soription bottle, half full of fluid ; it **n- taiuad. m I thought, aconite , 1 judge from my experience; I don't know where thebottle is now; did not, nor did tbeCoronertake it away ; it !■ net volatile more than other spirit*: it contain* aconite an 1 alco­ hol ; toM Coroner it wa* aconite, in myopinion; I cannot aay whether It is an ae- •amuiativc pofaou; laudanum la in oommonuse. Re-ex«mined by Mr. Bill—McCvb* was in tbo ho«ta* when I left; he saw m* look­ing al tiro bottle; be b-l 1 the light. Cro**-ex*min*-l by Mr. Norrie—Aatmitela need for nenralgia.Peter CnUibert, sworn, said— Live near lata Ann MeCabs'e; sh* died on Satnrlay;remember M?Csb> romt ig to my enni's aay in what way bar throat wm aora; aha aaid tiro-thougnt eha waa going to havediphtheria; aba eaid ha might go and pto Dr. Sprinter, MeOaba waa not a ram nt at tbta eoeverretfon; aha aaU ba brought Dr. Bawara; Dr.»<—r — S-W O O 'rations; the Mood, to produoo death of a dog, and one twenty- 1 fifth part of a grain would be sure to pro- i dnee death of a person ; am not aware of 'any scales weighing less than a grain; 1 aconitine and astropia are the most'deadly 1poisons known. . <To Mr.Norrie—Have examined this case : particularly ; have seen Mrs. McCabe fre- iqneotly ; have known her for twenty years; tbe eye was staring, glossy arid pupils dila­ ted ; in normal condition the eye does notalways have a wild appearance ; I presume that there are (Jisessee affecting the brainwhich would produce dilation of the eyes ; I attribute the appearance of tho eye to tbeeffects of aoonite; it corresponds with Taylor’s description of tbe effects of acon­ ite ; there was much muscular rigidity ; Iattribute that condition to aconite ; I am led to believe that Fellows’ Hypophosphitescontains strychnine; did not know that Ann MeCabo used that mtlioino; found tbe stomach contained a few ounces of darkcolored liquid ; stomach appeared conges­ tive externally ; upon opening the stomach found stroma ; there was a largo spot gela-tized ; I atlribnto tho gelatacions appear­ ance to aconite poison ; tbe general appear­ance together with this spot led mo to tbe conclusion ; the heart was small nnd flabby ; it was in n perfectly healthy* state,with the exception of a small deposit of fibrons matter on the externul surface, bad been formed years or months ; wnsnot nt samo nature, but more recont; more recent part on the etomacb conld not have been formed from samo cause, because onewas organized and tho other was not or­ ganized ; one wns hard and tho other would peel off; there is said to bo blood inheart in all cases of aconite poisoning ; there was none in this case; tbe conditionscollectively were not those produced by belladonna : could not exclndo that from my diagnosis ; traces of belladonna would bo more readily discovered than aconite;never saw aconitine, but saw nennito; 1 ’ ncoouilo and aconitine wonld bo different {in colof. tTo Mr. Fletcher—In alropia yon wonld | i have a purplish coso of mucous membrane (, and stomach, and red patches along thewhole course of tho bowels, bat these uro | . absent in aconite or aconitine ; you also ] have more marked dilatation ot the pupils | i than in aconite ; there is, I think, more (congestion of tho brain; tlieso are the lead- | i ing differences I remember ; these are con- j ditions common to a large number of irri- ,* tant poisons ; the majority of these con- i ditions would not ho produced by ordinary I diseases ; any poison would produce thet flabby condition of tho heart; I cau’t say i that nsthmactic fever, which degenerates ; into low fever, would produce a similar1 condition of tbo heart ; L think that over- exertion would not produce the same ef­ fect; tho condition of the etomacb is ono pccular spot, which has been describedbefore ; so fur as my knowledge goes, it is an infallible tost; I have seen a case of aconite poisoning, but never a post mor­tem examination : I saw tbe contents of stomach before tho spice ; spinal diseases are sometimes fatal; the post mortem ex­amination was not complete; tho appear­ ance of the muscular structure was cherry- red ; in some parts there was muscular rigidity, end in others there was not ; thejaw fell down and was much relaxed ; tbe lower extremities wero rigid ; tho rigormortis had not passed nwsy ; I think that js mentioned by Prof. Tnylor ns a result fro„n aconito *, by tho cou lition ot the body as ses? at the post mortem wo conjecturedthat deftv> might have been caused from taking aconite poison ; I can't say what my first conjectures were ; four of us weropresent; cannot remember having heard any other conjecture broached as to tlio cause of death. D. M. Robinson, of Ingersoll, swern—Am a magistrate ; McCabe culled on me to soo some papers in ray possession ; I think it was about tbo latter part of Novemberor 1st of December ; I showed him lite papers, nnd asked him if he was satisfied ; bo said he wanted to tako tho papers andshow them to tho party; I said, *‘Yon better bring tbo party bore,” as I didn’t wish tho papers to leave tbo office ; bo took thepapers away with him ; ho might have been gone twenty minutes or half an hour; then lie returned tho pipers; tho signatureto tbo papers I gave is that of tho late Mrs. E. A. McCabe ; I saw her sign them; the paper is marked ’* A.” Edwin Cnrtis, sworn, says—Knew Mr.and Mra. McCabe ; live about three-quar­ ters of a mile from them ; I have had some conversation with McCnbo about hiswife, talking with him different times ; he told me once that he wished he bad never seen her; it was lust summer somo time,nt his wife's farm ; be said n number of times that he wish Us had never seen her; he said tbe woman was crazy ; be saidhe could have done bettor where ho was ;ho said ho had a mind of his own, but be did not think it eafe-to nso it then ; I have bad no conversation with him sinceher death. To’Mr. Fletcher—I did whai Mrs. Mc­ Cabe requested me to do, and received my pay for it; he commenced conversationfirst in l»t< own yard ; wo had a number of conversaCoDs ; tho conversation about the I2.0J3 w^' ia his yard last summer; did not take <lo,.n when they were mar­ried *, I had spoken to him up to this limo about the marriage; n-.vpr wanted to gether property; Iwentthcte to don little work sometimes ; Mrs. ikCnbe'a brother sent me there before she Wt« married ; 1 never went to guard her; one lime he »ontme after some grain; tbe second Cuversation was in tbe summer; said ho wcqld give 1*2,000 to get rid of her ; at tbe ol'J'r ho conld have done belter al heme ; I hadno reason to like or dislike McCabe ; I was not intimate with Mrs. McCabe; am no relation to Mrs. McCabe's brother;! did notwant Mra. McCabe’s property ; would not Iravo hod Iwr properly if she had given it to me. Solomon Cook, sworn—I lire in WestOxford ; I have known Mrs. McCabe from her childhood ; Dr. Browers and I were in the sitting room of HCMurray'e Hotel;he told Dr. Bowers his wife had n faint- fit; be asked Dr. Bowers what would be ' beet for her; Dr. Bowers said I can’t' prescribe, and will nntil I ree the pati­ ent. John Thorntion, sworn—Live in WestOxford ; ncCaha s a id “ I wool 1 to God it was my wife instead of Mrs.Wood that • wa* to be Iraried;" I ask him wl*)? He au-• Swered'—H I would be a hanpy man the ' procession was then atartiwg off; at tbe • burying ground, nbont three-quarters of anI honr after the first, conversation, be said ; —“ Thornton, I would give oil yon and I[ can see if I was back m I was before I wm married to that woman ;"hesai I, “if I had ss much gold as your horse* could draw, I wonld give it all to get rid of hsr;" I said,“ Why, what's tbe matter with you?" He said; "Thornton, yon don’t know how I feelhe went on to say, •• She will neverallow me to have anything to do with her property there waa a disliking between them by spalls, and by spell* they were aagood fnimds any one need to be ; wo were then talking about the property, knewMrs. McCabe for 2S yaar* ; aha seemed healty ; saw Iser Ust about a weak before ber death. To Mr. Flethar—I bad ono ot’^er eonvrr-ttalion with MeCabe, about eight month* after he wa* married, at Soluoan Cook * Waeksmith shop ; [ am quite sure be saidall 1 hav* e*id ; be tafeht have aaid more ; be said they had lived comfortable together in tbo firstplare, until they hvJ a wnvmdabout tbe property ; Ao would not allow him to do any thing aa regard* hialling herproperty. John Goble, sworn—Knew the late Mr*. McCabe; knew George McCabe, the prie-oner; had a onnvenafion with prisoner a year ago laat Jun* at ny shop in Inger- » >ll; ha aaid if I want! taka Iwr off hi*hand* lie would give me 12.000and ■ form; he would coma immediately; he said he <Was in donbt wbat to do; McCabe was then 1with hta sutler at the door waiting to tnbe < him to bis place; I asked him then if Mrs. fMcCabe waa very ill, and be said aha was 1 Aying; I (ben asked, him what waa the j matter; he then aaid “she must die cer- ■tala;” I then remarked, “ In my case there < were two valuable hyea to be aaved;" he iatilt besitated when I iaeisted that he , ahonld come with me, or for McCabe todrive him down to my place; McCabe drove him to my honse; McCabe waa silling in the cutter at the door, nod conld bear tbe conversation; Dr. Bowers went into tbebed-room and saw Mrs. Stone; both Mra. Stone and attendant wero anxious that hewould remain; when tlio doctor assured Mr». Stona that he could safely leave herfor some hours she assented; after doctor came out of tho room tlio attendant blamed him for leaving; he aaid if medical aid isis required call Dr. McCausland; bo did not return; Mra. Holman was the attend­ ant; she is ill nt present; about four or fiveo'clock I went around i» Dr. Bowers’ bonsr; he had not then return from Mrs.McCabe; on my returning home I calledin Dr. McCausland. Jos. Minord, sworn—I worked for Hrs. McCabe three mouths; the last of mywork was within two weeks of her death; ' sometimes they lived very Christian-likei and nt other times not very Christian-like; 1 tho difficulty was about tho property; I went ' back about two weeks before her deatb.nnd1 left in a week; she wanted me to do herbusiness; sometimes ho was violent; theser quarrels were frequent; she was doing heri own work the Inst week I was there; she had ne servant; McCabe said he would give5 her two years from tho time ha married (f her, and then he would rule; he saill that , > some doctor told him that she would bo ■1 willing to giro it up in two years. To Mr. Fletcher—Have been there sinceher death a number of times; went there , cn the night of tho funeral about twelve :o’clock, from town, and McCabe requested him to stop with him; I stayed two days anil two nights.To Mr. Ball—I have heard MeCube say ho would give all ho could see to get rid of ' her; ho wished bo bnd never soon her, I have heard it said several times ; ha said,after her death, •* Do yon suppose I would have stopped here all this time if I did not intend to get somcthiHg?”; I intended togive this testimony. Dr. McCausland, sworn—I was'called to see tho Into Mrs. McCabe, on tho 2lst day of December, ubont 4 o’clock in the morn­ing; McC ibo brought me a note from Dr. Bowers, requesting my attendance; I went, nnd found Dr. Bowers there; there w.«s nowoman but the patient there; Mrs. McCabe was dying; sent McCabe for some neighbor­ ing woman immediately; sho was periecllysensible; McCabe did not say a word bgforeho went; McCabo was gone twenty minutes to half au hour; ho returned with two ladies; site died about h%lf an honr after Igot there; I asked Dr. Bowers bow it was that there wero no attendants; ho said sho | would bnvo none; there was a documentexecuted ns soon ns I went to tho room; I told tho woman sho was dying; Dr. Bow. ers then eaid that opinion agreed with bi’;this wns after McCabe wont away about 15 minutes; Dr. Bowers then went to a tableand produced a document, nn<| told me that it was a will, nud (hat Mtk McCabe had requested him to present it to her in the event of her dying; I saw that therewns tier name to tho will; I said that sheought to acknowledge her signature; I said I would sigu it ne a witness, whether it wns law or not; I did notseo her sign it; itwas not road over; sho wns almost pulse­ less when I wont in, nnd, as a physician, I could tell that sho wns driug; sho tooknothing while I was there. T<> Mr. Nonis—From her nppenrnnvo I could not tell tho ennso ot her death; I wnspresent at thn post mortem examination; there were Drs. MeKay, Bowers, Scott, Williamsan<l myself present: there weresome notes taken; have heard tho whole of ■ Dr. W’Uiams’ evidence, aud agree with him in regard to condition of certain or­gans; if you take different authoritieswhere a largo number of cases of poison­ ing from aconite are reported, choosing certain symptoms from thr-so authorities,you can mnke out a case titnilar to the one ; we found; from my reading, I find ihnt nil of those conditions found might be causedfrom other diseases besides from aconite , poisoning; nil these conditions found in I tho body of Mrs. McCabe might bo found ina case of a c*ngestire chill, with the excep­ tion of tho fluidity of the blond; many otlr-r conditions might be found by the taking <>tcertain medicine or food into the stomach; the cherry red of the mucous inetnbrnMo of tho stomach might bo caused bv takingblack enrrante; tho congestive chill innyprove fatal in two or three days, or not nt al); toy evidence is based on reading and experience; aconite is a very commonmedicine; I never saw aconitine. John StoM, swom Livs in Ingersoll;Dr. Bowers wm empInyU to attend my clean, and sealed, and went to Toronto ; Wesley Scott brought me a powder somedays afferwsrda, it was also reeled and **nt to Prof. Croft; the sealing wr B done in tbe prereno* of witnesses, Wa conld J find ne traces of disease except in tb* ■tomach and duodenum. Tha disease weobserved was congestion, and wa fonnd - traces of inflammation on th* external surface. There was no disease in theheart ; th*r* w«ro traces of disease 6n the outride of ths heart; wo fonnd no disease in th* body to endanger death ; I would |■ay that tha condition of tho etomacb and duodenum would point ns to a cause that 1 the condition would I a caused by n poi-tenons substance taken into the stomach ; I believe from the condition wo found that death was duo to an nrtico-irritant poison ;one-fiftieth part of » grain would cans* very serious symptoms, but would not cause death ; ntropia it a deadly poison ;one-quarter of a grain would kill ft person; you would have dilitatiou of the pnpil,delirium, and in some cases vou would have vomiting from atronla. The poison­ ous symptoms of aconitine tire slownessof tbe pulse, loss of muscular power, cold­ ness, tingling sensation in the month and throat, nnd pain in tho stomach. Th*month nnd upper part of the throat were ’ ?samined, but tho spine was not examined;1 it is not customary to examine the spine.’ There were n great many bottles on th* shelf in McCabe’s house, about seven dozen‘ altogether ; there was n bnttls of lauda­ num, but I do not think it was nsod ; 9 there wa* nls* another bottle containingr obont half -n ounce of dark fluid, bnt I do8 nnt know ths contents of that bottle. ' James Canfield, sworn—Am Clerk of WANTED. L Fliurr-CLAM CilEKflRMAKKR for Ibv A«en-j£ 1 bank Cheese Fnetory. Owed reference* rt^uircd,Apply pereoeslly to JOHN CLYNE,Avontnnk.Avo«.t»snk. March rt, 1CT9.____________P*-5 ’Buildings Moved and Raised. fpH E nnilersigned is now prepared toJL lake Contract, for Movin* or natalng ButMk^ion short nvtiec either in town or country.Apply to JAS. PICKARD,Jlnlwal Street, north of lk» Hirer.TozervoD. March IS. 1479. rum CREDIT SALE DAIRY COWS Groiotfond.cn Thursday, March 20, » C»if; S Ikree-resr-HoU. wotHred; 1V TERMS :— {10 and order, Coati ; oror that Maovat,Eight Month/ Credit, wdluxit ii.la>«at, cn taraMhecArt/rnTMi tnA.mA MrafM V.*t ht s^w *Ma»«in« For Sals. OAp N plAy E ltsoo o T o h * o C r o o re u r g ad h B -b o r r e e d r—S Mare In foal. McINTYRE i CROTTY.Ingersoll, Msrrfi 5. ICf. _____________Z73 For Sale or to Bent. FO T R wo S -8 i t d or e » r o > r n e t » o F r R am e e n H t— ow n e , C ow o m Cr f o o w r t S a c b ro le ti , .Ju-t outatdo the Corporation, In Horn/ tfrrrrrjr. Tholiu'uo oonulni & Room and Hall on Uw ground tto-T.and B Chamter* and Hatt In tbo rocon-I storey. Goodhtono Cellar, Wood shed and Well ■ f Water e-mrcTilent.Uno aero of xronnd to go with tho houw if desired.Tonus moderate, fi-r particulars ajiply at 5o. 1 TollGate. Ham Street, to November. 8.1878. NOTICE, tfn-tf JAS. BKADY, TSOS, CHOATE,Aiktluucr.Msrrfa IS, IX1». yfa CREDIT SALE •bo Surrogate Conrt. [Mr. Cnnfiold pro- A LL parties having cbiims ngainst thedilultcceedd tthhoo wwiillll..]] II ddoo nnoott kknnooww DDrr,. eV. linden-timed are ln«trtlelc<) V> hand in their »c- Bowers’ or Dr. McCausland's handwriting. This finishes tho evidence.After addresses by tho different coun­ sels to the Court, tho Magistrates adjourned for n short time to consider tho case.After resuming, Mr. Gray, speaking fortho magistrates, said that since there lind been a death in tho caso. nnd sufficient justifying evidence produced, that it shouldgo before a higher tribunal. Tltev there­ fore committed tbe prisoners for trial. Bail, lias been applied for and granted.The trial will take placn at the forthcoming assizes, which will tako placo at Wood- stock. commencing nn the 20lh inst. MrJNTYRE & CROTTY. MORTGAGE SALE OF REAL ESTATE. FARM STOCKAXP IMPIXMEXT8. TOI mbio Cso«nld., Nboyrt h AOuictatrido,n u, ao nU wL oTtt aNmoa,W 1-,iGra’elJinul, on TJIIDA Y, M A R C H 74,At <mo o'c'odc. tho follcnrinjr ra’ooUo ptvuwty : ’UkAint. Wk hl tlwutk*' Cradit. on fu'nilai.lii ap5Mru»el.r>',tv’. FJxtlt |-cr cent, gvr snnmc off h>r ea»b. JAS. BRADY, THOS. PATTERSON,Ai’rth.ucer. Prrtrie»w,March 5, 1-7'j, Boarders Wanted. rpHREE or four Young GentlemenI. cm be awitnnKMhted with B-anl. I*>ii»ntlocality, tanrr. wail Fnmhbcd ttaoim. Sis o’clockdinner it desired. A|>t>!y to MRS. S. COOK.Duko Street S'-utb. TTNDER and by virtue of a Power ofVj Sa1*. cnnfMned In 3 Jlnrt^s!*<? nn«!e by oneEDWARD BAKKER, and <Htrl thftgftb Kept.. fbTlwhich will be produced at the time ci ia*c) Dissolution of Partnership "JVTOTICE is hereby given that themrtncrvhlp bereu r.nr cP’tlnc under the natr.eaisl style ot J. It. WILsnX A CM., Gmcwv »xt>bnsn JI such txts, has th!* day been diw.heJ I.)i-ft|:>xion «,( time. AU perv'HH Indebted t,> tbe latvOrin are rcqve-ted to •«.tt,» their u«.ur.UrlhJ. M.Wttsox A liito., Whj will liquidate all liabilities, J. M. WILSON .1- CO. THURSDAY, MARCH 20th, //VST. Al the hour of 12 n’elnck. nom. on th* rarlnui prem-isei hereinafter mcnllm'd. RY PFBLIC Al'CTIOX. The following taint* and Pivnil-ca in the Town it T E R M S C A S H . For Particular., Apply to JAS. BRADY. BROWN A WELTAAuctioneer. Vendor** ftdiil THIRD DAY— Fkw y. W. Rivers sworn, said :—Know AnnMcCabe ; sho bad a farm in her own right; tho stock nnd implements on the farm were worth 81.&J0; sbo bad notesworth irbnnt 81,150. Cross-examined by Mr. Fletcher—I nev­ er consulted her about her notes; oulyLentil that ebo had 81,15*? in notes. Crose-exanritM-d by Mr. Norris—Mrs. McCabe was sister to nw wife ; Ann Mc­Cnbo has one brother nnd om> ejster livinc; Mrs. McCabe has left no children ; I did not expect inv wife to get th* property ; itdid not instigate my wife to infinite thia prosecution ; my wife wa* in Hr* habit of visiting Mr*. McCob*; sin has becuthere scores of tiinos; I don’t think WwleySc, '•tt was on the best of terms with Ann McCa’ e ; I and the other he»n» will suc­ ceed to the property if this prosecution suc­ceeds. and I suppose if this prosecution succeeds the will v*ill not stand. Dr. A. McKxy—I a*u a physician, prac- ticing in Ingersoll, asd nm a Coroner inthis eonnty ; I was the Coroner that held the inquest on th* body oi Ann* McCabe; th* condition I found tho body jn wasmoderately well nourished ; the»e wero no marks of violence. Tho body preK^ted a very pslo appearance. Tbe pupil o» theeve was partly dilated, witlj a partialrigidity of tbe muscles. There were a few marks on tho shoulders, but they were very slight, Tbo expression of tbo coun­tenance seemed quite flaccid. The cavity of the thorax w.»s examined first. After getting into the cavity tb« blood seemed toflow quite freely; in removing tho lungs we found slight bands of adhesions betweentbe plneri and inwall* of the cheat, show­ing that at one time there had been inflam­ mation there ; th* Inogs themselves were engorged with blood; tho bsck portion oftbe Inags presented a darker appearance Ilian the front portion ; the next organ ex­ amined was th* heart; it appeared smallerthan ordinary hearts; in the interior por­ tion of the stomach there waa a small spotabout the size of a half-dollar, which wasno doubt a deposit of fibrine, from a pre­ vious inflammation ; w* xroxt examined th*cavity of tb* ebrot; w* found tho right ■ide of tbe heart quite empty, without any symptom* of di»•*«<>; we eould find notrace of disease in the heart, internally ; when opening the thorax we found a rein cut which flowed quite freely ; this wouldaccount for the right ride of tbe heart being •mpty ; it prreented a conge*tire appear­ ance, ami on tbe greater curritv of lb*stomach we found evidence of infiamma- th* greater curvity that preseated a j*Hy-fiks appearance ; we next *xamined th* liver, an I found it perfectly healthy. Th* kidney* had no diaasaa but they were en­gorged with MojI. The bladder pnaented • healthy appearance; we found the ~®-Irt* in a healthy appearance, bat there vti OF N E W s pr in g GOODS DO WHITE 4Cd.'s. Stock Wow Complete. TngenroH. Ward. 12, 1870. F A R M E R S N O TIC E. V E S S E E U S Purifisfl Ctefise Reniiel Ii now attracting- the attention e( Dairymen J. M. WILSON & BRO., GET rovtt AUCTION SALE BILLS TRIBUNE OFFICE ALL WORK WARRANTED D . C. B E L L , f:-oni in tel. Lessons Given in Drawing and 1 {"aiming. AGENTS, READ TIUS. THIS PAPERRowell A Co. s Newspaper AdvertisingBureau (10 Spruce Strrei). where adrer NEW YORK. MAIL CONTRACTS. HlENDERS, addressed to the Post- <M>n, on FK11IAY. t»Kl MAKtij.nce o( Her Sisloty. Hallo. HAwntEY and rri-ni.i. And iuCHMOXn ANP BAILWAY STATION, »!v lime. I«r Wee*, nrl w»«.Priii’wl «■•»«•, ortitalnins fartlwr Informsiinn u!■> cooilillrin, ot nropiwd ecutrad, may be m«h. endMenk t<»nn* rd "tender nwy h« <ddel»nl at lb, P>,lOffice, and at the uibce o< th, wteeHncd. ,GILBERT GRIFFIN, EIGHTH PUBLIC ANNIVERSARY OF THE Torn Meg's CUristiaa Association, TO BE HELP IX Knox Church, Wednesday Eu. fg, March 12,79 Join McDouall Esj. NO ADMISSION FEE. RKV. J. McKWEN. A. G, MURRAY SPECIAL BOOKS. At tteae Dnantkai obrn a lau atc*ii«i to tho follow J. C. GALLOWAY’S BOOK STORE, Henlersoo’s Gardenias for Profit. Henderaon’a Praatioai Floricaknre. Living Kpiatlaw—anew book by Ilev. E. THE LITTLE WONDER. There’s wonderful changes M e xcej pains' 0 Q O DR. SAGE’S CAI THE OXFORD TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY, MARSH 12, 1879. O c ©rtorb Sribunc, WEDNESDATi MARCH 12. t87B. GREAT WESTERN RAILWAY. time' tabl e. M>11.........AlUatlcEx. F»BT DOVER & LAKE HURONaMdStratford & Ilnron Railways. • TIME TABfiK N<X 1*. Milverton. O. T. Jonctl-n. Norwich.I.X. »«. Burwell J’« GOING NOlrfli.SO. X ' so. 4.Ex, I Mali. M Valley R’y. NO. 3. TIME TABLE. NO. 3 Monday, Dec. 28,1878. UoING EAST»».l. Xo.5. Xu. UulNfFwi CLOSE CONNECTIONS I Woe-tatnck vtib trains on F. I), k L. 11- U. Line.— --------- —------n T. K.rllh trains on C. S. It. for Norwich with train, un B. N. & P. B. It. G. LAIDLAW,.I'r. | !• •.-------------- rngj,*! * NOTICE. Ailcertirtment* ami other matter firjniblieatitrn miiet positively lehawlal in not later than Tuesday erentny, as our large edition compels us to go to press early on Wednesday morning. BUSINESS ITEMS. THE OXFORD TRIBUNE I* on sale aWocdrock’s C5T 14 ILh. Bright Sugar fur $1.00, at O'Neill <0 Uo.’a. 265 tST Cheapest Teat, al2 J. L. Bl" The greatest discovery of the ago Thoniby's Horse and Cattle food. Try it.•J O’Neill & Co., agent* for Ingersoll. Why, Mrs. Junes, where do yon get thnt splendid DO cent Ten 1 T ffet it at O'Neill £ Ca*B. 2-’>0 L=sT Pure Leaf Lard, al- 7 J. L. I’lrtKlXS', ..Coa and Wood Stove* in great variety at low price* at G. A. Turnci'i Thames St. O’Neill tfc Cu.’b noted 50c. Tea. Try it , 265 f^T Closing out balance of our Cur- mnta. Will sell 40 lb*, for 81.00, at O’Neill & Co’s. 265 C4T Try O’Neill & Co.'a Assam Black Tea, 232 ■ xsr S5D.OOO to Lnaa cn iCortgazcs, ala very low rate of interest, at N. IIAl ESExehoaz* and Loan Office, opposite Marku Ingersoll Prime Breakfast Bacon, alJ. L. PERKINS'. For Cheap Stoves of all the improvedpatterns go to G. A. Turner’s, Thames St. 3Ss” For Factory Filled Salt, Annatto, and Rennets, Cheapest at OlN-eill & Co.’s. 271 ' Money to Loan at Lowest Rates. Apply to J, C. Hegler. . .Stove Pipe and Stove Furniture at G. A.Turner’s, Thame* St ...If yon want to get a first class piece ofFornitare you must call at Morrey’s Em porinm, Thames street. 91 SST Farmers, get your auction sale bills printed at the Tribune Office while you wait, the cheapest place in the county. Our LOCAL AND OTHER MATTERS. *nr For cramps, cold*, chills,and fevers,t*ke , Sanford's Jamaica Gir o ir. j •r John McDonald, rtf Toronto. Will «d> | dreaa sspociallv the business men of Ingersoll, SST Knox Church, Wednesday *ve,( March , 12th, anniversary of tbs Y. M. C. A. Good, programme. (tar Those who insist that the world owe* them a living are generally those who owe the world-* grudge. ear Procrastination is the biggest thief in the world, and yst with all his stealing he never gets anything ahead. «r Keep disengaged for Wednesday evo’g, March 12. Y. M. C. A. Anniversary, Knox Church. Good Programme. *3" Farmer's remember the place to ge your auction sale bills printed-is at thi* office. Those living at a distance should call and leave their order as soon as they arrive in town, as by so doing,they can get their bills home with hem. Remember tho place, Oxford Tribune oflicc^East aide Thame* street Change ov Busixxi’. —Mr. H. Richardson has purchased the stock of jewelry and good, will of tho business carried oa for a numbar of years past by Mr. C. P. Hall. As Mr. Rich­ardson has made himself a general favoritewo have no doubt ho will bo very successful. What t he Country Needs.—Fewer dogs and more sheep ; fewer fences and more pastures; fewer bar-rooms and more schools ; fewer scrub cattle and nrnro good ones; fewer wire-pullers in con­ vention and more people who atteud theirowu business fewer men who seek office and more meu whom the office seeks. Chopping Ac cident.—A serious accident occurred to a farmer near Kerwood, uanoed Charles Pratt, on Saturday morning in the woods. A tree fell on him, injuring him seriously, and instantly killing two horseshe was holding. The horses belonged to a neighboring feriner, This. Ellis, who miraculously escaped unhurt. Broom Fact ory.—A now brocm factory has just b’beu opened by Messrs Smith & P irks in 45, Thames street north of the liver near the corner ofVictori* street.These gentlemen are both enterprising business men, nnd no doubt th«y will work up a good business. They linvo tnkangreat pains to get a qnnnii y of valuable machinery, nnd will, wo believe, erect new buildings iu tho spring. ARi:FETr.r.s Breeding ?—Physicinn« ex- prest, the opinion that with tho disappear­ ance of the mow, fevers of various kinds will appear. Tho grouml will give off poisonous vapors, and people will insist on exposing themselves by leaving wrappings and overshoes nsi.lo ns the temperature of ettnosohere rises, just at n lime when theynr.e realty most needed. This is tho eighty- third dny sinco tho ground was covered with snow and its gases thereby confined. Fiitr, at Springford.—On Sntnr-Iny morning, the 1st inst., about ono o’clock, a n fire broke ont in tho house of Mrs. Blow (dnngbter of Samuel Keeler), near Spring­ ford. Thq immntes being asleep, only awakened in time to save themselves, nnd thnt with tho greatest difficulty. One young man ran back for his clothes, nnd by a crenl effort succeeded in securing hisvest, which contained his watch ; tho rest of tho garments were allowed to go. Thefire originated iu the ash barrel, tho warm ashes settiu* the woodshed, and (hence th i house, on fire. Gb anb CoxcenT at Woodstock.- The first grand eor.ccrt, under the autpiccs of the Young Men's Liberal Conservative Association of Woodstock, will take place in Woodstock Town Hall, on Friday evening next, the 1-ltli in«t. The committee of anungcmcnta'bave taken gnat trouble to secure the best available talent, and they present a programme which should be in every uny attractive, Ono of tho young ladies—Mis* K. Mmtin- ia highly spoken of by the press of New York and Toronto, in both of which cities she has ap- I>care4 and received the highest ancoiiiuni*. aliss M- K- NoInn is writ known and lias ninereceived lliu highest eulogistic notice*. Ar-ranga-nonts have beep I'lado, enabling thosewho wish to attend from lugirsull, to obtain return ticket* at a single fare, atnl wu trust w«shall see * good number of our Ingersollfriends prerent. From Wintep.tu Spring. -The very warn weather of the past few days li.M hod the effect of breaking tho back ot tho very rnggid and severe winter which lias laste l for the past three month* almost uninterruptedly. Although tbo winter ha* been a severe ono it has been none tbo less pleasant. For three months, nearly, tho ground has born covered with snow, and the roads, M ac have been good, enabling fanner* and others to do a large amount of hauling of grain, wood, lumlicr, saw logs and other commodities. The break-up of tho last few day* has been very - rapid bnt not so great as to cause the disas- I trou* freshets which might have been antici­ pated from the largo body of snow with whichibo ground wo* covoral. On Sunday night, we were favored with a genial shower accom­panied with thunder and lightning, ami the sunshiny weather since has brought alongquite a number of robbing and otlter spring How Binns Oil Their Freathers.—A writaria London Land and Waitr says:— “Perhaps the reader has never considered how all bird* obtain the gloea on tbeir feathers wheoh make them proof against water. Water fowl are, of oouree, anpplied with a thicker coating of feather* than land bird*, but all have the faculty of pro. curing the oily matter to cover there feath­ ers and resist the Walter getting In between. Have yon never noticed, when a bird was plucked, a small protuberance above the tail, furnished with a pencil like tuft feath­ ers? It is bare that the ointment- is hid­ den and tbo bird baa the power to raiae tbo thicker feathers that cover this spot, and, passing its head over it,obtain* enough matter at a time to commnnioato it to the m t of it* plumage. And* it is truly in­ teresting to watch a duck pluming itself and covering itself with oil that is re­ quired for keeping out tbo water. A* this part of the body is Hable to give an unple­ asant flavor to the flesh, it ought to be cut off before cooking. Tandy Bros.’ Concert.--By announcement it will be seen that arrangement* have been made by the Ladies' Aid Association of King Street Methodist Church to give a grand concert in the Town Hall, on Monday eve­ ning next, at which those celebrated vocalists the Messrs. Tandy Bros., of Kingston, will sustain the principal part, assisted by the very excellent choir of the church. These gentlemen enjoy such an eminent reputation throughout the Dominion that any additional comment by us at the present time would be superfluous. Their previous performances ii, Ingersoll have endeared them to the hearts of our townspeople, and wc can only recommend those who have not heard them not to mis* this favorable opportunity of enjoying, one of the richest treats ever offered them. Th* ladies of the church under whoso auspices they come deserve the thanks of the commun­ ity for bringing them here, and wc trust their efforts will be rewarded by an overflowing audience. INGERSOLL HIGH SCHOOL, been covered consequence, | rs and others SST Now fa the time to subscribe for t*f Oxford TrilMtne. 81.00 will pay for it Up to Jannarv, IHMk Sugar Cured Hams, at J. L. PERKINS'. MT Thom who are fond of wearing goml Itoota and shoe* and who is not—will do weltn read carefully the advertisement of King &Brown to be found la another column. tr Get your bill heads printed at tho Tat-nc si ofllo* ready for making out your Januaryaccount*. Vve navs * boMtiful lot of sample* tosbow. • 'heap Stove* of the best makes and kindO A. Ternr’s, Thame* St. eV* Th* best and dwapstt printing of allbinds at th* Taiat’RE Offio*. leave your -j BUSINESS CARDS fHiQUALte Lithograph, printed at the »« <o«ts firm t-Hf In Tyra. C»1 j|2F~ If you want Neat and Fancy Job Printing, call at the Tai sums Office. Printed. Envelopes. IW JbAltfiK Stock of gnvetopHi ju*t H. ROWLAND. a a buf e r ist endent b and g irrr LMMDN-LIST. I8TO ^rtsEsT 25 Matrimony — Woodst ock Jail.—Ou Saturday Morning, last Joseph M. Miller, of Norwich, but »t present iu ibo custody of tbs Sheriff of Oxford, and a resident of Castle Cameron, on a charge of attempting to effect an abortion, was uuited in (be bonds of matrimony to Miss Boud, also of Norwich, the young lady implicated in the proposed crime. Tlie marriage was per­ formed according to the custom in the Methodist Church, by the Rev. Mr. Cook­ man, the pastor of both parties. The bride looked charming, nnd was attended by a very interesting young lady of her ac­ quaintance. William Grey, Esq., J. I*., and Issuer of marriage licenses, was pre­sent. The happy couple will not be able to enter on the wedding tour for a fewdays, or uutil lire Sheriff ha* received bi* instructions. Who knows but the married life of that couple will be ono of marked fidicty, although the opening has beenclouded by tbs gloom of the battik ? Foresters Concert.—Owing to press of business and (he crowded state of our columns w* neglected noticing the ven- ex­ otent and enjoyable concert givnn by the Forester* iu their Hall recently, which vn more than usually interesting. A large audience was present, and a highly entertaining programme rendered to the dslightofsll. In the abseuee of the appoint­ ed chairman Bro. P. J. Brown, Dr.MeKay Chairman of tbs Committee ofArrangm.nt* filled tb* chair iu a flttlug tnannsr, and made a very neat and appropriate address on taking bin poeillon. Addresees of as inelruelive end pleased character were de­ livered also by Dr. Oronbyatekba, of London ou “Forestry," end Bev. R . N. ; Grant,of Ingersoll, on '•Camufa.Our Home;” • Mr. Jams* R. Harri* gave A emmet nolo; Mr*. Millard, tb* MUms Wight and Mis* Liza* Vanes gar* seme beentfal mleelfotra ’ BB< lnlrtn'«*oteJ music. Maura.,W-J ’ ° L. Mil­ lard, W. A. R.w«t and Geo. Kennedy also pleaasd Ui" andiane* with tbero ndeetinea.and “ MuMoon. (be Solid ■«," by R. J. Cavanagh created sneh langhtar a* to talriy endangar the rtabdity of the roof.Altogether th* affair we* MSUoeoeefulaaUte prom titers could wish- Dear Sin,—I notice in tho last issue of the Chronicle no less than four letters on < the lubjcct of tho High School, all in - nnswer to, or instigated by, a letter in a former number signed “ Pater Families.” i No ono can read these lettrrs without feel­ ing that there is something very wrong Rimcwberc, and although the writers differ ’ widely in the remedy nnd its cause, they I none of them deny tha disease. Now, I do not wish to enter the di’ear- sion, further than to consider the first of the letters, that signed “ Discipline," nnd I will begin by pointing ont that the similar­ ity of style and verbago of this letter with the ono it ngrets with,signed “Pater Famil­ iar,” would lend ono to think thnt they arc both written by one and the same per­ son, nnd thnt person’s style is very liko a certain Grit stump omtor, whaso voico and manner tho electors wcio verv tired of in ante election times. In both letters ho throws the whole blame on tho pupils and parents, end holds teacher up r.s eminently fitted for his position. This may all be true, nnd it is certainly worth white for pnrenta to pause nnd consider whether tbr-j- are bringing tbeir children up in the wisest manner or not; but parent* ore apt to have notions of their own, and whether right or wrong these will barely bo changed in time to preserve the good narno of the High School. And then I would liko to ask ibis learned nnd profound man what is to become of tho children of unwiso and vicious parents ? Ho say* tha Government funiit-hes nearly all tho fund* to keep tho High School going, (this is ono of hit facts) anil the ratepayer* very little. Pray, whoso money doe* tho Governmnnt dispense ? If not the people’s, wbosa ? And if tbo people's, bos not the child of tbo poorest, or aven tho most vicious parent, us much right toil as the child of tho wealthy and virtuous ? The Rink is another cause. He says parents allow their children to spend their time at tho rink. In this, I, for one, plead guilty, and in this I am not alono. I, in my ignorance, bad thought it just the amusement for pupils after being confined for several hours in tho school room. Was I mistaken ? Or is “ discipline " laboriug under u bit of ico on tbo brain ? One would tliiuk ho was. Perhaps wheu very young be may have tried skating, perhaps ho had a fall, perhaps his head camo in contact with the ice and permanently injured tho bralu. This would acconnt for hi« present elate, and if my conjecture is true, be is greatly to bo pitied, poor man. He goes back to the days of Daniel Web­ ster. It I thought ha would understand it, I would point out that tho world has made very great progress since that time, and educational instilutiona have kept pace with the world, but I don't think it is worth while. I will, however, ask him to go op with bis study of eminent American states­ men. He might profitably study that of the “ Father of bi* Country.” He will find there the story of tho hatchet and eherry tree. He should commit thi* little anecdote to memory (it I* not very long) and follow the illustrious example when stating facts (7). While thanking you for the space in your column*, I am, Mr. Editor, Your* truly, A Pahext. North Oxford Council Proceedings Council met on Satnrdaj, tho first day of March, 1879. Council opened at eleven •'•lock a. m. All the member! present Minutes of the last meeting of Council read god confirmed. Mr. Jesse Drown beard, praying the Council to grant some aid fur the support of Angus Morrison. Moved by Mr. Colyer, seconded by Mr. Downing, and Reiolvtd,—-That the Reeve sign an or­ der in favor Jesse Brown, for th* an tn of84, to reimburse him for assisting AngusMorrison, and for the sum of |6, to enable him to farther assist the said Angus Mor­ rison. Auditors present report of Troasursrte account for 1878, which Was rend. Moved by Mr. Minkler, seconded by Mr- Colyer, and Resolved,—That tho report of the Treas­ urer’s acconnt for tho year 1878, just read, bo accepted by this Council as satisfactory,and that the Reeve sign an order to pny the Auditors the earn of 85 each for tbeir services. Moved by Mr. Colyer, seconded by Mr. Day, and Resolved,—That tho Reeve sign nn order in favor of tho Clerk for the snm of 15.50,his fees for Registration M Births, Deaths and Marriages fur the year 1878. Mfovcd by Mr. Minklor, seconded by Mr. Colyer and Resolved,—That tho Beovo sign an order in favor of Mr. Day, Councillor, for thesum of 810, to he oxp’uded for the benefit of Mrs. Carpenter, and ll.<t Mr. Day and Mr. Colyer bo requested to investigate thocircumstances of Mrs. Cirpinlor, .’nd re­ port to this Council at its next meeting. Also nn order in favor of Mr. Downiii’. Councillor, for tbo sum of 912 ; 82 of saidamount to rsimbunie Mr. Downing for money already advanced to Mrs. Molson,and ibo balance to be expended fur her benefit at the rate of 81.50 per week. Moved by Mr. Minkler, seconded by Mr. Downing, and Resolved,—That tho Auditors’ report ofTreasurer’s accounts be advertized onco in ono of the Ingersoll papers by tender, to bo given the lowest tender, and 100 copies fordistribution. Mr. James Elliott' heard, praying for compensation for gravel taken from lot 14, 3rd con., for repairing the public nnds. Application laid over for further investi­ gation. On motion of Mr. Downing, seconded by Mr. Day, Council adjourned until Monday, the 21st dny of April next, at the hour of ton o'clock, n.tn. Anu. Hill sdox, Town Clerk. That Beau.—Mr. Harry Geo having killed hi* bear ho is prupar* I to supply the public with pure and unadulterated “ bean greas*.' Ths animal was In good condition^ and tho yield of thia portion wm very groat, which has been rendered and pat up by him in diL fvrent sixed bottle* fur sal*. This is a good opportunity for those who use it to procure the pure article. RETIRING FROM BUSINESS. G R I F F E Y ! Fashionable FooLstmeM. There is no modern fashionable notion quite so absurd as ths generally motived Idea that to b* beautiful and attractive a woman mut po-WM a wan, rpir'dutllt fey nnd a figure uf •ylph-like proportions—a fragility in nine case* out of ten the result of disease. By many fashionabl* belle* it w eonaidmd n special compliment to b* spoken of a* frail and delicate. They forget that the naturally delicate face and petite figure are very differ, ent from tha pale and disease-stricken faces that mestusin the sity thoroughfare-,'ook cut from tbo luxuriant carriages of wealth, and glide languidly through our crowded drawing­ rooms. If disease wore unfashionable, a* it ought to ba not a lady in tha land but would take every possible precaution to sroure ths fresh, blooming face and well-rounded figure that only health cangiva Ladies should re­ member that much as gentleman may profess to admire the fao* and form paled and ema­ ciated by disease, when they choose a wife they prefer a blooming, healthful, buoyant- spirited woman. Dr. Pierce'* Favorite Pra- cription is the aiknowleged standard remedy for female disease* and Wsaknesse*. It ha* the two fold advantage of curing the local disease and imparting a vigorous tone to tho whole system. Ij, is sold by druggist. A Proposed Visit of the Queen to this Dominion. CHEESE FACTORY ITEMS. wirJ anr item* «»f nqblie interestrfsctorjr. f.»r public lUuti U thaib Tcirlwf_ rOXD MILLS CHEESE CV. of tho Pond Manufacturing Company the factory on the 12th the following officers for 1879. v iz .F . D. The undersigned will sell out his Large and W ell - Assorted Stock OF I B O O T S & S H O E S I At Cost, and many kinds less than Crist, for cash on delivery,to close the business. All parties desiring to buy Good Goods at Will find this a rare opportunity. This is a GENUINE CLEARING SALE BY THE Ingersoll, February 20, 1870. xst OF APRIL NEXT. TFJf. As CROMWELL. 23 Thames Street, Ingersoll, Ont.272 Hal & Fir Stt HEARN *> MACAUUTS 019 STANS1 HATS & CAPS NO OLD GOODS. Landon, March 5.—It is stated in Lon­ don that Ilei Majesty the Queen is likely to visit the Dominion of Canada daring the coming summer, nl»o P*w through a part of the United Stale*. The mind of Her Majesty has been greatly icflncncod in tins direction by the enthusiastic' a,'countsbron-ht home by Doan Stanley,with wjom she has boen freely conversing oo the sub j-'cL It is understood that the Prince ofWhies, on being consulted, veiy strongly advised Her Majesty to make tiio trip: and that the idea has so far mnutured thatthe comtnnication sent ont the other day to effect that the Queen had re­ considered her purpose of spending sixweeks in Cobnrg-Gotha. the homo of the late Prince Consort, is to be taken as an evidence of her intention to visit theAmerican Continent. It is thought the proposal only now needs the sanction of tho Premier. The annual meeting Mills Cheese was held nt Inst., when wero elected Norton, Wm. Rae, Robert Nichol, William Jackson nnd Francis Elliot, Directors; F. D. Norton,President; Janies Elliot,Auditor. Stock baa been sold during (be year to the amount of 62.19. A dwelling-house has been erected for the chsese-maker on the premises; a new vat and n sat of presses have been purchased and ptrid for, besides other minor repairs; and thsre remains R balance iu tho hands of tho Treasurer of over 8515, which will entirely liquidate the debt of tho Company so that next year tho stockholders may expect a largo divi leuil. Tho average pourdsof miik to a pound of cbocso was 10 13.100. Tho amount of chceso mado during tho year was 193,270 pounds, which sold at an nvernge of 8J oents per pound. On tho whole tho off lira of the Company aro in a very prosp-ou* condition. BROWNSVILLE cnr.ESZ Co’t. The annual mooting of Brownsville and branch chocs* factories wns held in the Brownsville factory on tho 25th nit., Mr. J. E'.liott, chairman. The report of tbo Secre­ tary showed that 030,620 lbs. of chesse was trade during the last year ; thnt 6,991,047 lbs. milk was used at an average of lOflbs. of milk per pound of choese ; cost of manu­ facturing. 1-J cants per pound ; the receipts of the company amounted to 851,210.74, ths expenditure being 852,202.83, leaving a balance to pay dividend on stock of 30 p-r cent—less 9237 to bo kept on lnn<l to pay the fitting up of tho factory for tho en­ suing season. GERMAN UNIOX CHEESE FACTORY. The committee appointed to sel*ct the site for the erection of a building for tho "Ger­ man Union Choose Factory,” have decided on erecting it ou Mr. C. Bender's farm, on the townline between Z-rra and South Eastbnpe. Tenders are asked for tbo buildinganl tho contract will bo awarded on Tuesday next The Greatest Itcmcdy Known. Dn. King’s New DiscovEjtv'for Consump-tion is certainly the greatest medical remedy ever placed within the reach of sufferinghumanity. Thousands of once hopeless suf­ferer, now loudly proclaim their praise forthis wonderful Discoven, to which they owetheir lives. Not only does it positieelif cure.Consumption, but Coughs, Colds, Asthmal Bronchitis, Hay Fever, Hoarseness and alffections of the Throat, Chest and Lungse!4 at onco to it" wonderful curative powers if by magic. We do not ask you to buyntil you know what yon are getting. Weherefore earnestly Teyttest that you coll onyour druggist, John Gayfer, and get a tr'al bottle free eharge, which will con­vince the most .skeptical of its wonderfulmerits, and show1 you what a rerular one dollar size bottle will do. For sale by John AUCTION SALES. J.t-t, Brady, Auctioneer. BALES TO TARE FLACE. Friday, March 14. Dairy Cows, Sheen andother stock and implement", property ot Tho*.Patterson, lot 1, 2nd con. N. "Oxford, on the Thatncsford Gravel Road. Monday, March 17, chattel mortgage saleof Farm Stock. Implement* and HouseholdFurniture, on the premiss* uf Peter Garner, Thatncsford. Tao*<lay, March 18, Dairy Cows, Sheen andother stock and implements, property of Tho*. MeFarUn, I*ot 17, 3rd Con. N. Dorchester. Thursday, March 20, Dairy Cows andSheep, the property of Mr. Thomas Choate, on Lot 20, B. F. Con. West Oxford, two and•ns-half mile* west of Ingersoll. B. uIcL'auley, Auctioneer. Friday. March 14. — Furniture, BuffaloRobes, Stoves, ete., at R. McArtur ft Sen’ warcruoms, Culloden. S T Y L E A N D V A R I E T Y OWNERS Bi ENTIRE HORSES WILL FIND AT THE TRIBUNE OFFICE LARGEST ASSORTMENT OF CUTS IN THE COUNTY TO CHOOSE FROM. SEVERAL NEW CUTS ADDED THIS SEASON. Leave your order* whero you can hare your work done in th* Highest Style of the Artwith th* utmost dispatch at Lowest Price*. II. ROWLAND, PR orniEion. CANADIAN STYLE?, ONLY REAL HAT tsrtnc tu jUmm nn4«,'ball.r .U|-plj- ttw^ubUc^U ■ if THE BIH EAT, C A S H O N L Y S H I R T S Griffey's Hat Store, sics of t hm mo, lorerwH. M.rxh i. 1ST*. SQUAIRS’ A uctio n Room, 1879.S P R IN G .1879. B U S I N E S S M E N 1 B ETA ILSTOR B. ESTABLUlHEn 1*77. KINO STREET. IRaOSOLt. OP s E al N e H e t v h* e r u y nd d cn a M y o t a lO n M d d e O v o e o n 4 i s ng, for tlio REGARDLESS OF COST. F. Squair, Auctioneer, Sale of general mercliandit* every afternoonand evening al hi* sale room, King Street. FARMERS and others requiring sdesbills should call at the Trihune office and l«av« their order* wheu they first arnve intown, so that they can take them with themon their return home. Liverpool Cheese Market. The price of eheese in the Liverpool markethu stood steadily at 4Ss. throughout the post (SnmnurriaL If you have put in a new stock of Let tbo people know it through the columns of the COMPARISOX, COAIPETITTOtr OR J/O.VDFOLF. SOLD ON COMMISSION. CULLODEN ITEMS. The Poet Office in Culloden hu been chang­ ed to the brick store, and Mr. Smart will, in future, attend to the businro* himself. A bail runaway occurred near here lately. While Mix. Richard Alisa was driving down tho Sth Con., she undertook to drive acroe* the fields. Bh* got out, and while the two 7«mng ladie* with her attempted to turn around, the cutter up-set, and the horse, be- ooming frightened, started off on the ran, the shafta breaking loose from the cutter and ■triking the bora*’* howl* *t «very »tep. The A joint stock company has been formed to run this creamery during the coming sea­ son. The manufacture af butter will be con tinned, and a* th* shareholder* are farmer* of enterprise and experience, no doubt a Urge and profitable business will be dona lawson’s cheese factory. Mr. J. F. Williams has purchased th* pro­ perty known a* Lawton’• Cheese Factory.and a meeting of the patrons is called for to-day, Wednesday, at two o'clock, for the pnrpot* of making arrangements for th* coming *ea- *oo, and transacting other bnsinea* counectol with the factory. ent Up. but we ar* happy to learn naitber of The CnUodm* Lodge, O. V, R. No. IM, met DvckJea's Arnica Halve. INGERSOLL MARKETS. n;x>rtcd by W. 8. Kiss, Miller. Grain Nrrchsnt, ie•aaui.Red Whest.perbmbsl ... to to S to 'Kt:’j? O X F O R D T R I B U N E , The Largest Circulated Paper In the South Riding. M E R C H A N T S A HANDSOME STOCK OF COMMISSION AGENT LICENSED AUCTIONEER F. BQUAHL PUBLIC NOTICE, Undertaking A CARD. Tn all wba sn rafferlng (rem th* error* uxl indis-ratines ot yrwlh. nanons wask)-♦«, «rtv d*raj,wssf mantond, Je., I will srwt * reelfw lbs* sillnr« w»ae FO F P Til A Mnk' ■tbl - — - « CajUDbell'a RIH of Fare. H. Campbell, jr., hues hand Mil for «al* cheaper than any other bouee in th* County, the largest stock of Coal and Wood Stove* of all th* Utert improved paiterasi A large H«» Horse at. 1 HandHand Hom, Iron BarrosHagar Kettle* of all sixs.n4.ll Oita.Children's . Htm and Han,I IUk«, Bom andHoes, Iron Htfrowi, Roa-l Scraper*,Kettle* of all sis**, (axtonsiv* stock)li repair* fnr th* same ; also, the heav- saler in Hea-lucht and Alliutm CoalBaek and Lnbnating Oils, Kra’e*, tterotlrouaad < krppcrware. and IV<wk- Fur'- nistanx Goods in general Wool. Wod Fick-iog*. Hide* and Skfo*. Did Iron. Brassand eoppar uhan in eMbange for good* or c-h. K a^^hijg in town or country ■don* promptly, Ravntring. Jobbing orGo* Fitting d*oe ib *U its branch ei, Mtttataction guaranteed er no pay asked j DraswdHaf. BOB.V. DIED. 5 to * ** *■**-» c*****™1 a. wtf. < $66* NEW AND FANCY DESIGNS IN EVERY DDSCtltt’TlON OF P R I N T I N G SUITABLE FOR ALL KINDS OP J O B P R I N T I N G THE LOWEST REMUNERATIVE PRICES. Department H E A R S E C O F F I N S T BIM im iGS, Ikl , REASONABLE RATES, OXFORD TRIBUN E Ucr Husband’s Letter. A mitWte.aged woman bad ariettar hand­ ed to h*r tn the general delivery in the THE OXFORD TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12, L®9. A Printer's Blunder. N»pSl«hTT; h oneoffts faintest of JOHW GAYFER Axes, Axe Handles, H o w To M a k e M on e y! T IS TUB ORDER OF THE DAYt 1 "J. The Gattie Plague. Pref. Law, «ho LoMj the jovernor’s commission-to cxLirpnto the cattle plague from BraiHyn and vicinity, advises rigorous meaures and vigilance in deal­ ing with it He says : “ The disease is not widoly wx)valenVbuc.ius<L.it extends ita nanties «nUr-bytconlagioii and. in- the tchidufommf tlio Atfieri’ caiiMiiis/rnde jsM-e |>ecn’i>tongly op- i v l mt&A the disease has. not only held its own for thirty-six years,but has slowly gained against every obstablc until it numbers its victims six differ- poitunity, sweep with remorseless force over the entire land. To this it is daily tending. From Brooklyn it has labori-- ously crept onward as far ns ^laryland and Virgina, and unless extirpated it will -eonlinuo its baneful eomso until, ra*AH)gopr open pasturages of the westtiud se^th^rwill poison the bouiws of dur cattle trade, descend upon our eastern states with every cattle train, in­ fect the rolling stock on all our great railnxnl/t»links and J>id defiance to all control.' Av hereSer it has met with similar conditions it has proved thus in­ tractable. In tho ateppes of eastern Europe' it has held perennial sway des­ pite the best-directed efforts of tho Rus­ sian government, and on the open pas­ tures pCAstralfa.it still prevails, notwith- stapdulg thomost [wrsfatent and almost Quinoas oflbrts for its exUu tninhtion. So ww4 ^twHhohld’wo neglect Urt> pres-^«0pl»oreiimty and allow it to spread until it readies our unfenced ranges of Texas, Kansas, Colorado, Wyoming, ect Utica Herald. and said : “ He calls mo his uurling! Thnt’s'good 1” After reading a few lines more, she said :“ And be miss's my society so much!” Half way_jdown tho page she epoko as*in-: -Wm^ be'-rtfalle -ma his sunslrins—his guardian angel I” Sho climbed up ou the sill a little furthef.turned tho letter over, aud mused. J.' And.Ue'n fast three pounds, of .flesh.worrying about my health I He's just a darlitfg—-that's what be is I”Eh^ reacMld UuMop of tile forfrth page Biul ^yplniinpA *___ ___ “ What I Going East, eb?" Farther down she growled :“Abd ho uiei that rod-headed Widow Kernshaw on tho cars, eh ? I’ll see about ■ that I Ho probably didn’t tell her that howas married.” She got down to tbe^“P.S.,’. glancedovo'r a couple of lines nnd .rolled right out. “ Not coming homo till next week ? Trains not running I Great press of busi­ness 1 I’ll seo whether he ain’t comin I Boys ! whore’s the telegraph office ?’’.And aheian across tho street, and senther husband a dispatch which made tho operator's hair stand up as ho received Domestic Recipes. g 2 The Cheddar Process. Curvcvpomlcut Utlea Herald. Bilk vilie, Kansas, Feb. 22.—We have ■ read with much intereat the discussions published in your paper on tho methods ofxbcese-niaking; particularly tho <lcs-cripiioqs of the Cheddar proccs by Prof. Arnold and others. Our experience with this, process has been altogether satihfactory, nnd not Knowing the reason of onr partial success, we would like /tu ther information from experts. We inade our first Cheddars during October, 1877, and succeeded in producing betr t«tL<±eese than wo-ever had by lira old nicdo of leaving tho curd in tho whey nn- ^ilaod'.; and^dtliqugli a few of them were dull-colored, their texture nnd flavor were so fine that the discoloration scefiied of slight importance. So well pleusod were we with the general result tfetar we adopted- the Cheddar process enojtentn^ tlie jea§ou of’78, We examin­ ed the cheese closely from time to time, and found them bright nnd curing well until about four weeks old, just ready for market, when some of them began to discolor. They had a darkish, clouded appearance all through, something dif­ ferent from. common mold. Dur cur­ ing rooms being dry nnd well-aired the treatment careful throughout, wo gave close scrutiny to the quality of the milk, rennet, coloring matter and salt, but found hofliing that would account for Um change in the color of the cheese nt thirty days old. The discoloration did not affect nil the dieese, bnt only that of certain day’s makes ; and the texture and flavor of the clouded cheese were not impaired ; nevertheless they were ' spoiled for market. About the middle of June we began to make in the old w£y—4lfaT fa to leave tho curd in the ^rimy fcfitil acid is distinctly developed, nnd we continued this mode until the latter part of July. The cheese cured well and kept bright, but excepting the ringfa^>cint of color, they were inferior in qilnlity to the Cheddars. The lust •week in July we changed buck to the Cheddar process and continued with several experimental exceptions until the close of the season, notwithstanding the fact that occasionally a day’s makewould discolor. Now we would like to It arn tho reason why some of tho Ched­ dar discolor in curing, and the remedy for it, if there is any known ? Perhnfis Professor Arnold, Mr. McAdam, or somo'of the experienced, clear-headed chcese-;nnk<?rs iu the great dairy district of New York can Udi us at ouco what the difficulty fa It hns been intimated that a manufacturer in Iowa had exper­ ience similar to onra. We followed the process described by Prof. Arnold, Wil­ lard and ethers except in one particular, nnd that jq that we did not put tho curd in pires for a chort time before grinding it Wlrrt point is gained by this prc- liinirinry prmiug 1 We put in the ren­ net at the temperature of 82 ° , scald nt V6 ® -102 ° , and when the curd is well Wjrtruted, draw off the whey while still sweet or incpienC acid, let the curd inat,. krtqjing it pt DG-® , until tiro acid is sen­ sibly developed, then slice anil grind, add ralt, nnd keep stirring until cooled to 70- ° if the atmokphere will permit which, Uiiu climate, is nut always prac­ ticable ; aotuetimes 85 ° is as low ns it goes to press ; remains in press IB to 20 hours. Haifa thus the cheese is rich.fine- llnvorcd, good texture, stands up well in all weather, docs not puff, loses less by shrinkagiMrtxl >»* almost entirely free from tiro buttcrvieed flavor common in tliefall.7 Aghittat three Very decided advan­ tage# are the tendency to discolor, and in cool weather to mold, and also a very ten- tier rind, giving an ndvantagc to tho skippers. 1 do not know whether or not bur ex- |»eri<ncefa commou ;at any rate if some ♦me will say-how uur difficulties with theIliHkkr process can be overcome, he may <fa a service to the public as well as to nte espcctlully, yours. SwbscBi ber. A Little j Heathen. CORN MEA.L GRUEL. Tako a pint of meal, pour over a quartof water, stir up, settle a moment and pour off; repent three times ; thou pour over the washed meal about three quarts ofcold water and let bod vary slowly far two or throe hours; thin with milk or -------- and season with a lifllo salt. JOHNXT CAKE. Ono cupofBwoet milk; ono egg; six ' tablcspoopfuls of corn moul ; three table­ spoonfuls of flour ; three tablcspoonfuls of Jsugar; a littlo salt and two-thirds of a tcaspoonful of soda and one of soda and ono of crcam-of-tnrtar. CORN JIEAL PUDDING. Scald one quart of sweet milk, and whileboiling stir in corn meal until of the consis­ tency of pancake batter ; take from the fire and stir in four well beaten eggs ; onocup of sugar, and uutmog to suit tho taste; pour into a pudding drih and bako in a moderate oven two hours ; serve with abard or liquid sauco. CRACKED CORNCOB SAMP. Wash, and put to boil with five or six times it measure of water, nnd let cookslowly for several hours until perfectly Un-cr ; season with butter, pepper and salt. CORN MEAL PANCAKES. Sift one pint of corn meal and pour over boiling milk until a littlo thinner thanmush. When cool odd the beaten yolksof eggs, half a enp of flour and a little* Balt; ndA milk enough to make the batter suit­ able to bake, und last stir in tho beaten whites and three toaspoonfuls of baking powder mixed with a trifle of flour. CORN MEAL PUDDING WITH FRUIT. Three puts of new milk ; ono henping enp of corn meal, and ono even cup of ilaur ; four beaten eggs ; ono cup of whitesugar ; two laldespoonfuls of melted but­ ter ; onc-balf pound of raisins cut andseeded ; one tcnspoonful of baking powder sifted with tho flour. Scald tho milk and stir in the meal then add tho sugar, beateneggs, butter, spico and fruit, well dredgedwith flour. When veil inlxeil, sift in tho flour and beat fast for two minutes. Bako in a buttered dish in a wcll-lieafed ovoa.It will be douo in from foriy-fivo minutes to an hour. Should it brown too fist cover with paper. E it ns soon as dono withcreamed butler and sugar. CORN MUFFINS. Sift together ono cup of coin meal nndtwo of flour ; cream ; one-half teacupful of broken butter ; bent three eggs, yolksaud whites separately ; turn tbo butter, eggs aud oue teacupful of sugar into tho center of the fl-jur ami meal ; bent to abatter in tho center nnd then add two cups of ricbjSMir milk, into which 1} tcaspoou- fuls of soda has just boon dissjlvel; nd I ate nspoouful of salt nnd bent quickly until smooth and light. Dake iu hot muffin­ rings or gem- pans in a quick oven. HOMINY CAK^S. Take ono pint, after it has been cooked ; add two eggs, tho yelks and whites beaten separately nnd salt to taste ; drop in spoon-' fuls ou well buttered in plates aud bales to1 a nice brown. FRIED MUSH. Cold nansh sliced thin aud fried in alittle hot lard makes a delicious breakfast relish,'nnd when eaten frith molasses, or, Letter still, maplo sirup, it makes a most '■ palatable desert. COEN BREAD. Three beaten eegs; ono quart of good, sour milk; two tublcepoonfuls of melted butter; one tablespoonful of stiuar; one tea­ spoonful ot salt; a handful of flour nnd en-> ouyh sifted corn-meal to make a thick 1 batter: the last thing stir in a Lonning tea- [ spodnfiil of ssdn dDolved fa a little water.. Stir briskly and bake in a dripping-pan. Moonshine. cream ths accession of Louis XVIII. He wasknowp ssjhs King of Rome, and latterlyas the Duke of Reichstadt. His life, nfler the six years of royal babyhood iu the Tuil­ eries. was spent in Austria with his mother’s family. In 1882, at the age of twenty-one he died ^VtSsLonburn, many said of nqisonrA weak and effeminate, creature, it was absurd to give him place among the "reign­ ing monarchs of Francs. When the Sec­ond Empire was established, many wonder­ ed at tho title assumed by the Empsror "Napoleon I IL" It was explained then that ho desired to be considered a sovereign by legitimate heredity, hndihad thus rycoiniz-ed the claim of bis Cousin, as that of the poor Prince-in the Temple was recognized by tho Bourbons after tho restoration. Batit appears now that, upon tlto anthority of the historian Kinglake that the intention ofLouis Napoleon wna to call himself simply Napoleon, and that a printer’s..blunder was.responsible for the change.’ 3nst before thecoupd'etat, a minister of the Home Office, busy preparing provincial sentiment,wrote:"Que le mot d'onler tir.Vive Napoleon! ! I" Tho printer took the exclamations for “III," nnd so tho proclamation wentout, wag copied bv the press, and iueor- porated in publlo speech. It was no timo for explanation*, and so the nephew of his uncle adopted tho title. A-Long Courtship. A couple, after a courtship of over fifteenyears, have just been joined in marriage fa Kentucky. Tho wedding was to have oc­ curred in 1881,when tho war broke out,butthe conflict which dragged all classes of people into its whirlpool, claimed this lover ns well. Ho took ono side, her father tookth<J other. Tho old man never forgave it. He swore that ns long as ho lived his daughter should never mnry a rebel. Hokept bis word. Ono by ono his three sens " passed over the river nnd out of sight.” His wife, broken-hearted followed her boysto the grave, nnd finally noho ofjfho onco hnppy house-bold was loft but tho patient girl nnd her stern old parent. Tho wargave back her lover uninjured, bnt tho im­ placable father stood between. Ho refused bis consent to the marriage, and she wouldnot wed without it. And so tho years roll­ ed away—an obstinate old man—two loyal lovers. A year ago ho died. Tuesdaynight last this lang-delayed marriage wasconsummated. ■—H i I I ■•uui pHEMIBT «fe DRUGGIST, Apotbe VJ SSifos' llsll, 'Rianies Street, Ingennll. OntChemical*, fataut .Medicine* uJ pwfwncrv. > S •Q O *S UTPEEARvHIENltST iEhoNulDd aEoeN thTeS AND BOOK-MARtf LESSON-LIST, 1879 HMrrfntad forth‘phtei pmenred from the Americannublhhcr*. Tha neat** wa«b**i>*>latytar>t tho Bun­day School International Lesson IJstyaturtnUxi, Sendfor BMnplK and prises u. H. ItOWLAKl),i Publisher, IngarsoU, Ont. FARMERS AMOS SALE BILLS TRIBUNE O FF IC E writs. SANFORD’S RADICAL CURE Cross C ut Saws, Machine Saws Saw Files, Skates, Skate Straps, Gimblets, Bob Runners, Sleigh Shoe Steel, Machinery Oils, &c., <&c., Muonic Hall' UulMlng*. ea*l aide Thames etreet.Second Floor." ALL WORK WARRANTED TO GIVE SATISFACTION. Sale Bills punted while you wait. Call and miwhen in town—no trouble to ahow our work. («: For 4 a CATARRH Jt > Instantly relieves and permanently cures Sneezing or Head Colds, called. Acute Catarrh ; thick, yellow, aud foul MatteryAccumulations in tho Nasal Passages, call­ ed Chronic Catarrh ; rotting nnd sloughing of tho Bonos of tho Nose, with dischargesof loathsome matter tinged with blood, and Ulcerations often extending to the Eye, Ear, Throat, and Lungs, called UlcerativeCatarrh. Also, Hay Fever, Nervous Head­ache, Dizziness, Clouded Memory, and Loss of Nerve Power. This Great Local and ConstitutionalRemedy is prepared entirely by distilla­ tion, aud contains, in the form of vaporizedessences, tho greatest vegetable healing aud purifying properties known to modern chemistry. By means of Dr. Sanford’s Improved In­haler, which nccotnpafiiea every bottle free of charge, it is Inhaled, thus acting direct­ ly on the Nasal Passages, which it instant­ly cleanses <>f foul mucous accumulations, subduing inflammation when estandiiig to the Eye, Ear, nnd Throat, restoring thesenses c-f Htucll, Hearing, and Tasto whenafLcted, leaving the head deodorized, clear, jad opm, the breath sweet, tho breathing easy, and every senso in a grateful nndsoothed condition. Internally adminis­ tered it permeates every fluid of tho body,cleansing the entire mucous or membran­ ous system through tho blood, which it pur.fies of the aeidpoiron always piesentin Catarrh. It builds up tho enfeeblednnd broken-down constitution, robs tho disease of its virus, and permits the for­malion of Health-Restoring Blood. Uclose tho system is prostrated by scrofula or con­ sumption beyond recuperation, it will effecta permanent euro iu every case. Hun­ dreds of testimonials attest its wonderful curative properties. Every druggist whohas ever sold it will cheerfully bear witnessto its marvellous efficacy. Price, with Improved Inhaler, Treatise, and Directions, 81.Sold by druggists everywhere. There nro many prisons who aro wail­ ing for tho ** right timo of the moon '* be­fore they will venture tn plant their pota­ toes. They wrra governed by the same idea in i^anghlcripg tbrir hogs last season.They firmly believe that tho phases of the silver satellite have a potent influnnee ou products of tho earth. This need not beregarded superstition ; for it respects the theory of a natural cause, is extenuated by the many surprising discoveries of causesand effects by modern science. The opin­ ion is the result of.tho common tendsney to cling to beliefs that are inherited, with­out questioning their soundness or seeking for jationul explanations of them. As fur as the moon theory seems to bo sustained by experiment, there is, no doubt, la everycase, an unrecognized cause that should rather bo accented as the true one. Those farmers that pay no attention tosuch notions, urs just as eucceaful as those who do. We venture the affirmation that every one who is governed by thq state ofthe moon and is blessed with a good re­ sult, inrarisbly uses the ordinary indis­ pensable eondHteiiw. He selects suitableland, applies proper manures, and culti­ vates the err?p as it requires. If be hsd'nt dono these things, bis expectations wouldhave pruv td a mtie matter of moonthine. Ibo Frineers I^mse and the Marqni* were wailing on tile tfaudsy school scholars si a regenL enfrrtaiQmenl given them at Bukin the f< npet aAed a preUyilffle i i»t »f • Udiwoulf u'l tike m*re cake. The liiB* liMtl declined with awe, and her /' l!MleM.fraijp(g tb*kba*l)f#ln4« was stand- ’ i^tfilbe yay. passed Lar again. Againsi.4 J^imOd/ H*r Higline**, struck by tiro tweet modesty and child like simplicity fA tbe ptetty ersaiore, eut a large slice from the esko ana said. “Wtll.mydesr yon mustat least lake tLis homo as ■ present from n»« ; kt me pal it in your pocket." The *hil I beeHateJ, blwobod, and sxhibited a decided enwii-ingucaa to ereept the proffer Thirty-Two Ottkprlng,. II. ROWLAND, Proprietor. J . F. M O RREY , UNDERTAKER J ND Or-XtRAL DEALER IX HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE- COFFINS, CASKETS, SHROUDS, &C. KEPT IK STOCK. Per»on»i attention ch onto fuvend*. J. F. MORE I.Y. Warcrooma—O’Catl ‘ghan’* Dl<-ct, Tl-.tn>c» fctrcUIn;erw)l. Residence over the Warcrn.n.». In-'cmoll. Feb. 3. 1ST*. 00 C O LLINs r>M U >b u >4» to dyoung vi»iur, when la. MtfaawMat. abv dfaewrered It filled to omflowlu*iM-lh-B A SAVING OF TWENTY PER CENT. BY BUYING YOUlt TEAS AND GENERAL GROCERIES OF JUST LOOK AT OUR HARD PAN PRICES 1 POUNDS OF CURRANTS FORBOUNDS OF SUGAR FORPOUNDS OF RICE FOR POUNDS of NEW PRUNES 3 Poumb of very FINE TEA Twelve Cakes of Toilet Soap for 25e. Call and try o $ nr 50c. T 1 ea again . st an 0 y at 75c. 0 , and you will 1h- coaviaced of the fact that C’Nelll’N is the place to buy your Teas, 4c.Ingersoll, January 5, 1879. -2M 46 2012 for for obtained Jor Inre'nTaro riled Stater. directly opjxwile the United Stater Poteat USier. we aPi aWi to attend to off Patrat RSAieanAfk yreatrr eroinf/lner* and tfeef/alrh aad ten crjet, thaa'pthar jvdrtd eftt-enejfj. via v e dt 4 dia-taare Jrwn n'ar/dpgton, e.r,<l who hare, there,fore, to rmptay •• ano^iale attorneys." H e mate prelrmiaary aaniaaiioaa ardo/iiniemr aria prU'rtabililg.frte nf cfnrhfy hsdall who are iub-rertrd In yew Ixtritimn anti Pateyfy are. tn riled to Miuljur mtr “ Guide jar ol/tainiuy Patrsti," irhieh in n it Jrir io tty i) addren, and eontaine rjjhuplde. uetrurtione how to obtain Pplente and other valuable ,natter, li'e. rtfer to the Genaan-Autertean NationalBank, H'ajJiinyiou, D. C.; the Royal Swedu/I; Norwegian, and Danbth Legatiour, at fTaAiug- !»n ; Hon. Joseph Carey late Chief Jttrtire U.S. Court of ClaimJi; to the Ojfieiale of the U. S., Patent O^ire, and toSenalort and M'uJeert tfCnngrr.. from er.ru Kittle. • Add™ LOUIN BAGGBK & CO.. Solicitor* */ Patent* and Attorneifn al Law, Le, Droii Buildin-j. WnNhinctoii. D. <’. S P E C I A L Vick’s Floral Guile. A beautiful wrrk of im flvi. (He Coterag We*H*Plate, and Mb /Ifo.fratvm*.'wftb Deaeriptlutia of th* WIiolesalB uni Retail R.Y.ELLISc/BRO SPRING IS COMING. BE READY. BE PREPARED MERCHANTS: - CIRCULARS, ENVELOPES, BILL HEADS, MEMORANDUMS, STATEMENTS, NOTE HEADS, LETTER HEADS, DODGERS, &c., nil we jive » ordu! Imitation to Inspect our FIRST -CLASS WORK DAIRYMEN CXurtsl Platea, « d many biudred Emtwfotfw. F«M rents in r*prr «i>m ; r) _U> in tlc-fzo* doth. InGerman << EnylUh. C .lured Plate in every nmnbcr and many One Engniv.I run. Prlcert.SS avp»r: Five Copieaforrt.OO. Sped*men NuniLcr* Knt for 10 cent*. Priced. »ik! plenty cf itJunuaUon. Addt«M>. THE BEST QUALITY,Uean make atrnrr faster at am** for <aalh*nal ny-lbin“ •>«. CartUljiot required . we will ,taanvou. Mtperday at b.ma made b> 4«1ndu*uiM-Mcn.womcn.b..ya and alrhi wantod everywtwr* tow .rkforu*. Kow ia the Hue. O«Qr null and (39 INCH) BANDAGE COTTON IIEA11N # MACAULAY’S, ORDERS SOLICITED. Injcraoll, Feb. n, li'S. HAPPY XMAS. TO ALI To the Ladies of Ingersoll and surrounding Country In thanking you for past patronage, I beg to call your attention to thelarge and well assorted Stock of »- OHRISTMAS GODS THE GREATEST WONDER OF MODERN TIMES. 5 HOLLO W A Y Si| lyRIlLS^QiNTMENT The Pill s Purify the Blood, correct alluiaordera of the Liver, Stomach, Kidney* end B..weH,and are Invaltubio Iu all complaluU luddeutal tofemale*. The Oint ment is the only reliable American Counterfeits Cheese Makers. ATTENTION. WE wotdfl call the attention of allengaged In the mwufaclure a! chine to our SEAMLESS CheeseBandage And all kinds of hairy Su]q>!ica. Gang Presses, Refrigerator Vats CVRD MILLS, ETC. PEARCE A PICKERING. London, February 10,1K9. ril H. ROWLAND. Proprlstet PA T A B a TT CONSTITUTIONAL RJCATARRH RS LI 3 DTI | UtTHES CATABR11 Thousands Applaud its Wonder­ful Citrus. Hear What n Reverend Gentle­man says of the Constitu­ tional Remedy. T. J. IL Uacdix.i. low.. Dtrt* Sta.—It !» now two yearn alnce your ,,Con»tltu-ti'.nal Catarrh Kcuinlt” «•» iutrudured to me. I hatewaited thia lonit to <ec If the cure would remain i*r-mancul before didiig thia, my duty, to you, m at Oralthe happy effect* aeerued to me to be "’too guild to lie complete cvcmliov.n in Ingeraoll, and which 1 will eel I at the LOWEST LIVING PRLES- Plcasc Call ami Examine before purchasing elsewhere. ] have nlso axldcd largely to my stock of BUTTERICK’S RELIABLE PATTERNS. And now hope tn bo able to supply all in need of Pattern* without delay. Hoping to see all my old friends, ami lots of new ones before Christmas, 1 remain, yours, respectfully,Thc#e counterfeit* arc i»itoF-»»ed by nnprtneifWv. i 4 my Fillaan.1 tMuUacal. Ingersoll, December 11, LS78,261 The GREAT CLEARING SALE Miy nur tarougbvul U>* Krfttb THOMAS HOLLOWAY. Electricity and Mealing Balsams. Instant Relief from Pain and Soreness, Instantly and mysteriously tho electricalforces generated by thia wonderful piaster actupon tho nervous system, banishing Pain and Weakness, rousing the dormant Muaclea intonew life, stimulating tho Liver and Kidneys,curing Dyspepma, Indigestion, Bilious CoUc, Cramps, and Faina.Rheumatism, Neuralgh, Sciatica, WenkSpine, Weak and Sore Lung, Coughs ami Colds, Weak Back and Kidneys, NervousAffections, Weak Stomach nnd Bowels, Agueand Liver Paine, Enlarged Speen, Female Weakness, ShooUng Pains through tho Loinsand Back. Lack cd Strength and Activity,Nervous, Muscular, and Spinal Affections, re­lieved. aud cured when every other plaster,liniment, lotion, aud electrical appliance fails. PRICE 23 CENTS. Be careful to call for Col li ss’ Vol taic Ei.ixthical Puhteus, and insist upon havingwhat you are willing to pay for. Sold by allDruggists. 25 FOR I5o. nc BK.lUTTFVr. r rsin x o CJItrs.no twoalike. In Suowfiake, Marble. Gold I>ml, HihcrDart, White l»«ry, Drirtol, Tinted, Lily of the Valiev,Damaak. ij.»t like, Morning Olory, oriental. AfroarnBristol, (lranlt«, Arsbaaque, etc., cU.. with yourname elegantly printed, for 15 cent*. W differenttirloa of ty|x* to chaoso from. Taiatsa Omcs,h ccraoll. my cue de-cribol in niiiiy imrtkular*. The lnw»nl“drop’* f;<>ui (lie head hid l<-v.airt very dlsagretiblo,mid * vb.klii? tenratiun utlcn pre«entlh|r me fonnhlng lune. I would loci like tiuolherinx *'>4 b« com­piled la nit up in the lied. My health and cplrit*wexn »«rioiuly affected. When jour Ajrent cam* tuWalkertown Iu l»7«, 1 accnrcd three bottl<i», Before 1bail u»ed a quarter of the content* »t one bottle I founddecided reTef, and when 1 had used two bottle* and athird. 1 quit taklmi it, feclinx quite cured ut that all-ir.eol, and hare not nrc-1 any since until ot late 1 havetoken w.me fur a ci.id in on head.A »ciik> <4 duty to sufferer* from that loathanmedisease, Catarrh. pnwupto me to send you thl* I'ertiB-cate, Uuaoheitcd, with leave to make what use of It youmay aco pnqxr. X- >ur* truly,W. TINDALL, HethodUk Minister,Port EUti, Ont., Aug. rt. 1B7S. A*k for Littlefield’* Constitutional Catarrh Remedy and take No Other. T. J. B, Harding, Dominion Agent, Brock-ville, Ontario. For Sale by all Druggist* at only one Dollarper Buttle. BUY IT I • • TRY IT -----OF------S U B S C R IB E CRAY'S SPECIFIC MEDICINE McIntyre & Crotty's Ab-1 ft I annio <4 tbdr Cbcep FURNITURE,MUSICSTOHE w »g q o x >s COMMENCES ON IBkRAL J A N U A R Y 4 , 1 8 7 9 Immence Reduction in Prices, and Great Bargains will be given. rZEZR JV E S EADING Ktwipaper of Oxford Caret]’, One of the most ntmsikdble men in Man-roemrtinly, Ky., is kfr. John J*cob Good­ man. Mr. Goodman was born in North Carolina in 1783. and is now in hie ninety­ seventh year. Iu 1804 be moved to Mun­ ro* county, then a part of Barren, and baa lived on the same idaee ever since, a period of seventy-five years. For Upward pf forty yean be wka « disdller, and at the ago ofMity-fiva ha oemld hft « forty gallon barrel ef whisky and lake his teddy out of the bungbole. Ha is now living with bis secondwife, his firet having died many* years ago. Fifteen children were the fruit of bis first matrimonial experiment and eaventera ofthe l*»t,making f, grand total of thirty-two. twenty seven of whom lived to be married. He has always been a moderate dramdrtnk.r; for lixty-two years a member of tho Bstfbkehurah au| forte-two yearselerit ofibet body. The father bf Mr .Good­ man died at tho age of ninety-eii, and would, perhaps, have lived kuwr, bat ba broke Lti 1*«, wtevb baatwed Ids doetfe,-GUseow, Ky , Tunes. M U S T B E S O LD McINTYKE & CROTTY. GREAT BARGAINS 1 144 POUNDS ST Sold in Incemoll‘WbolMBlo *M reeaii drUuit-d State*. Me(sMsr.r hsar,t lathe of. thae O. na dof aparrtt * Unad erwcoood.)take irmt ploaaure iu luformlny the |>ubUc that they NEW MUSIC DEPOT SHEET MUSIC, MUSIC BOOKS MusicalIiisiniiBeiits:&c. Ingersoll, January i, 1879, JFJf. McB AIN, Oxf ord Ho use, In gerso l l .264 MANHOOD : LOST, ROW RESTORED I G ood S u g a r James McIntyre, Undertaker, FOB 31.00 J. McISTYML THE For Ten Dollars Cash JYEIF AD VER TISEM E NTS. Culuerwell Medical Co , PIANOS ANO ORGANS! SHEET MUSIC A SPECIALTY Ill SIES8 ClKIiS Printed Envelopes. OXFORD TRIBUNE ONLY «1.00