Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

York Herald, 23 May 1873, p. 4

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The other evening, I turned into the squeezed-up passage which gives ingress to the Highbury Railway Station. My , immediate predecessors were an elder] y woman in neat but rusty widow’s weeds ; and a younger woman in bon- net, shawl, and dress of modish shape, but very common ,material. She did not look ridiculous, however, in her cheap finery. Her figure and her walk were both so good, that only for her . own sake did I wish the graceful little ' creature richer) robes. The imitation- lace that fell over her c/Lignon was yelâ€" low enough to be real, but one’s eyes soon glanced from that to the genuine ‘ silky dark-brown hair . it checkered. She half turned, to prevent the swingâ€" door from banging in my face, and I had a chance of stealing a look at hers. It did not exactly answer to her figure, being very pale, and having no strikâ€" ingly beautiful feature, except the large liquid eyes ; but in these, and indeed in tho whole of her face, there was an ex- , pression that puzzled me. A good many faces are mere masks, except to a physiognomist who can read little lines that cannot be smoothed away when the bland or self-satisfied look for public in- spection is put on ; but hers could not a‘ help speaking all over, though what it said I could not in the least make out. ' ‘Its meaning was like a secret told in Sunset-it. It bothered me like a riddle one is, too proud of one’s acuteness to give up, or a name or a quotation that flits in the misty memory, ever and anon giving a flap Withits flying skirts, but obstinately refusing to be captured. _ Although not more than two or ' three and twenty, she had a weary'look ; but ~ there was no res‘gnation in her face, fli‘which, in spite of its despondeney, gave 7 you the impression of one that still be- lieved in happiness, and was hungry 'after it; and her deep inscrutable eyes , ,seernetlhalmost simultaneously, roguishâ€" >ly innocent and remorsefully penitent, affectionately beseeching and scornfully defiant. Perhaps I did not see all this at the first glance ; perhaps, when I digl see it, it' was all my fancy But at ' anyrate, the face puzzled me as soon as ' I saw it, and has Continued to puzzle “Two second returns to Hackney,” said the old lady, laying down her'shilâ€" ‘ ling. My journey chanced to be a , similar one, and I determined if possible toget into the same carriage with my lpsychological curiosity. The clerk, who 0 was taking his tea very much as dogs are said to lap the Nile, appeared at 'i‘ his pigeon-hole with his mouth full of ,_ Lbread and butter, and snapped our blue and pink tickets in and out of his stamper as if he wished they were our h noses. \Ve descended the stairs, that are almost as gloomy and grimy as a 'i coalspit shaft, and when we reached the Â¥ worn platform bricks, found a train had , just gone, and that we had therefore nearly a quarter 'of any hour to wait. ~ Waiting at Ilighbury Station is, as a rule, one of the most depressing modes of passing time. The station buildings are black with the deposits of innumer- able funnel-fumes. The yellow- aced' clock looks afflicted with jaundice, and heartily sick of the task of telling the time. The posted bills are few ; and, _ under any circumstances, auctioneers’ advertisements, time-tables, and an- nouncements that such and such a ’pas- senger, named, has been fined for riding in a Wrong carriage, and such another, indicated by initials; has paid the pen- alty for smoking, or has publicly apolo~ gised for disregarding some other of the . Company’s by-laws, are not lively read- ing when perused by light dim even in the daytime. Your fellow-sufferers on both sides of the line sit in sulky si- lanes on the narrow benches, or pace up and down, in short turns, like polar “bears. Sometimes an itinerant musiâ€" cian, bent on levying coppers, squeezes the most melancholy of melodies out of an asthmatic accordion. The unseen omnibuses roll with muffled thunder over the tunnelled roadway. If you wall: beyond the platform shed, the most cheerful thing that you can see is a yard full of omnibuscs laid up in or- ~ dinary. Long goods and ballast trains V wriggle by in a hurry, like reptiles nu- comfortable at being seen out by day- ! time 5 and passenger trains that do not ~ stop rush past like rockets, deafening _‘f you with their shriek and rear, stifling . you with their sulphurous steam, mak- ing you giddy with their shimmering " brass and glass, almost sweeping you oli‘ _';the platform, in spite of the portcrs’ Stenmi'ian “ Stand back I stand back l” in their Whistling wind, and intensify- ' in: your Wrath at being kept waiting J as you watch their red rear-lamps growâ€" ing din far up the road you want to ' travel. s" e of Waiting at Highbnry, as I walked up For once, however, I did not weary find down its platform, glancing as often 'as'I could, without downright staring, at my puzzling followâ€"traveller. ‘ more I looked, the more puzzled I grew. The 3M) kind of experience that I could c011- ' jeeture would lit that contradictorin cxpreasive face. There was nothing striking in her companion. She seemed meal] a widow who for a. good many years had been obliged to fight and fend for herself. There was nothing mo- so partial, and pi‘qna ymn‘ curiosity. ““ The best bribe," wrme Ema-max“ “ wlliclx London ofors hula}; tn tlw imagination is, that, in such a vast mâ€" ' i‘iety of people and cnulitiuns‘ me can believe there is man for persons 1'0â€" mantjc character ta chit.” At any- ‘rate. there is plenty of room in lbwlbn for romantic incidents; :m-l, unmgro the prosaic endencya .aully inwui‘od to railways, such innldnnta, us I have said, may eVer and anon be witnessezl on the metropolitan “omnibus 1m..." Here is my latest 0:139 in point. From the Window uf :1 carriage on the North London inlway, as the {ruin rumbles over stifling little Citv fitl‘ékfltsl, L: n and rmhm p Ht m1: pickâ€"g plans of suburme tatuuw, ycu oi‘wn catch wu‘i- buz glimpses of house-interiors; and within the carriage, you m 1y sometimes catch analogous glimpse; of he-n‘biube- riot-3,1)m'bi11 revelations; ut‘ li§'\,'7~hi$\‘oz"cs, that make you angry bee mac they are A RAILWAY ROMANOE. mentous, either, in'the object of.their V')<*):u-neji ; since, from apaper-bag which Lima 01d lady was very anxious to save {rum crushing. and a remark or two uxc‘mmged between the pair, I was able to gather that they were simply going to drink ta.“~ at a friend’s. At last a. Chalk Farm train pulled up, the usual rush was made into and out of the cur- , . U . .7 ' H.‘ “ages. 7An? more gomg on? right forward I’ cried the porters; the guard mixed his hand, and whistlod, and slimming the doors as he went, trotted nick to leap into his van as it left the platform. lilvorything outside run in the well-worn rut of railway routine, and everything,r inside the thirdâ€"class carriage was: as commonplace as usual, except the queerly fascinating face, nearly opposite to which I had conâ€" trived to place myself. We were re.- ther crowded ; and some ruddy gruziers, who had got in at the Caledonian Road, on their way home from the cattle marâ€" ket, made, as usual, jocosely polite offers to take any young lady on their knees, and laughed as heartily as ever at their own oft»i'epeuted wit. The usual lean drover from the some localâ€" ity; in u state of beer and a suit of greasy white fustian, was edged off from, as an ineligible no: libor, and, as usual, squared his elbows, and inquired at large whether he hadn’t paid his fare, and, well then, bless our Vision I wasn’t his money as good as ours I The usual little man in seedy clerical black sat, meditating in a corner, and looked upl scandalised at, and nervously contem- plating the rebuke of, the strong lan- guage. The usual policeman off duty pompously discussed a recent “case” with an admiring friend, proud of ob- taining infornizition from oflicial sources. The usual tired commissionnwire nodded his sandy moustaches over his mud- splashed leggings ; and the usual voice- less vocalist, as soon as we had passed Ball’s Pond, began to clz‘nnber over the sent-bucks in inipudent 'quest of undeâ€" served half-pence, instead of well-meritâ€" ed kicks for the ditties with which he had deafened us. Everything was as usual except my enigmatical vis-arvis. Only one thing could I_discover in re- ference to her. As we mn into Dalston Junction, she happened to take off her left glove, and 1 saw that she wore a weddingâ€"ring. By this time, the hoary tower of old Hackney Church rose on the left, and the train was pulling up for the station. Before it had stopped, the sailor rudel)r pushed his way to the door, and almost dragged his mother out after him on to the platform. I handed out her comâ€" panion, who had been so roughly slight~ ed, and then dropped behind, speculat- ing as to what it all might mean. A suspicion flitted across my mind that perhaps the sailor might have good reas- on for his anger; but one is slow to credit evil of a. graceful figure and a. fas- cinating face, and apt to side with their owner, whatever appearances may be against , her. My puzzling fellow-tr - veller followed the two others at a. disâ€" tance down the station-steps and up the street. When they turned into the churchyard, she stood for a second or two looking timidly after them, but again followed them. Her redâ€"and- black shawl flitted over the white flag- stones, and then was lost in the dimly‘ gaslit gloom, in which the white tomb-l stones glimmered like ghosts. As I walked on through old-fashionedVCIap-i ton, meeting almost as few peoplein the l The porters were bawling: “ Change hero for ’acltney, ’ctoria Park, Bow, and Stepney.” The Poplar train was wait- ing ; and hurrying across the platform, my puzzle, her companion, and myself, once more get into the same compart- ment, an end one with a single seatâ€"â€" There was a passenger already in it on the oil-sideâ€"a Sunburned, handsome, but stern-looking man, whose glossy blue broadcloth, black satin waistcoat, and massive Albert chain, combined with his physique, seemed to indicate that he was a shipmaster in his shore- going togs. In the hurry of enterng the carriage, neither of the women no- iced him; but when the train had started, the younger chanced to glance at him, as he sat on the other side of her friend, staring absently, but with a knitted brow, out of the further win- dow. Her pale face flushed an almost peony red, and then more than relapsed into a chalk-like pallor ; the perspira- tiOn burst out in cold big heads upon her forehead; her white lips twitched. The varying expressions of her mobile face chased one another like the lights and shadows of an April day 3 but the shame was deeper, and the defiance more angry, and the supplication, I fancied, both more pleading and more hopeless. She made a little start from her seat, as if she would have gone to the man, and then she shrank back again, as if she wanted to hide from him. Directly afterwards, she pulled her friend’s sleeve, and directed her atâ€" tention to the gloomy mariner. No sooner did the old lady see him, than she sprang up, 'and fairly hugged him. “ Hush, hush 1” the terrified mother whispered, at last remembering that she wasn’t alone with her son. “ I’il tell you all about it by and by.” growled “ Why, motherf’ shouted the man, looking “(is astonished as herself, “I’ve just been up to the old place, and they told me you’d gone to Ameriky. I only got into the river last night, and was going back to the ship now. \Vhy didn’t you leave your address? here are you 01? to now ’1” For the first time, he noticed who was with his mother. All the cheeri- ness instantlya vanished from his face. He gave first a savage scow], and then a cold stare nt‘the poor young creature, who trembled so, as she looked at him from under her eyelids, that the beads of her vulcanite bracelets tinkled. “ 0 Harry,” she said sobbing, “ why didn’t you» tell us you’d come home 1” "' 0h, only to your aunt’s at Homerâ€" ton ; and you must come along with us,” answered the tremulous old. lady, clutching his big brown hand, as if she feared that her just-founa son would fly ofi' into vague Vspace again, if she didn’t hold him tight. H \Vhat’s she doing here T’ the sailor peacefully quiet streets as if it had been midnight, and watching the bright blotches of light in the great dim houses standing back in their dusky gardensâ€"â€" lights hm told ,of happy family gather- ings after the bustling day in the City 4-1" amid fix .5 help thinking ‘very re- gretfully ui' my 1:001" little fellow-travel- ler, left out so chcerlcssly in the dark. I could nut help thinking of her either, as I went back to the station at night, and wondering whether I might chance to travel with her and the old lady again, \ and whether the sailor would he with them. I-lmd no time to look about me in the ShXtiOJ, however; I was late, and hml to race up th ,steps to catch the train. At Dalston, also, I had no time to spare ; the Chalk Farm train was just about to start, and there was that general scamper up and down the stairs, which makes changing car- riages there one of the longest and most wearisomo stages of the journey. But when I had got out at Highhury, I saw the red-{Lndâ€"black shawl going up the steps before me. Neither the widow nor her son was here. The gas shone on my fellow-traveller’s face as she ‘ turned to give up her ticket, and showed that her eyes were red and swollen with weeping. It was a most dreary, lonely- looking face. She seemed to recognize me as one who had witnessed the-scene in the carriage, and hurried out of the passage. - I.watched her run across the street, diving recklessly under the noses ‘ of the ’busâ€"horses that were being pulled up at the station-door; I saw her turn the dark corner of the Canonhury Road; and that is all I can tell of my enigma. But I think I cannot be wrong in faneying that I had had a. momentary glimpse of one of the myriads of dark dramas that are being played out, with so little heed from any but the actors, in huge London,‘ in which over three millions of souls live, and move, and have their trouhlous being. The man who always prefaces his opinions With the remark,“ Now I :11- Ways Speak my mind’freely,”isa terror to nervous people;th Whatthisper- son calls his mind will be found 11 )on analysfi to be nothing but‘a num er of dogmatic statements which are ruled by'his prejudices. The Mitchell Advocate says that horrible diseaSe, commonly known as the spinal disease, still continues its work of destruction in this place. A few deaths occurred from its effects since our last issue. To CLEAN‘LOOKINO-GLASSESerflsh thoroughly a piece of soft sponge, and remove all gritty particles from it, dip it slightly into water, squeeze it but again, and then dip ‘it into some spirits of wine; rub it over the glass, dust it with some powdered blue or Whiting sifted through muslin; re- move it lightly and quickly with a Clean cloth, and finish with a silk handkerchief. If the glass be a. large one, clean one half at atime, other- wise the spirits of wine will dry, be- fore it can be removed. If the frames are gilt, the greatest care must be taken to prevent the spirits of wine from touching them. To clean such frames, rub them well with a little dry cotton wool; this will remove all dust and dirt, without injury to the gilding. If the frames are var- nished they may‘bed’ubbed with the spirits of wine, which will take out all the- spots and give the varnish a superior polish. ' Ono chilly day I was left at home alone, and after 1 was tired of reading Robinson Crusoe, I caught a spider and brought him into the house to play with. Well, I took a wash-basin and fastened up a stick in it like a flag pole, or a vessel’s mast, and then poured in water enough to turn the mast into an island for my spider, Whom I named Crusoe, and put on the mast. As soon as he was fairly east away, he anxiously commenced run- ning around to find the road to the mainland. Held scampor down the mast to the water, sticlfout a foot. get it wet, shake it,- run round the stick and try the other side, and then run back to the top again. Pretty soon it became a serious matter with Mr. Robinson, and he sat down to think it over. And in a moment he acted as if he wanted to shout for a boat, and I was afraid he was going to be hungry, so I put a little molasses on the stick. A fly came, but Crusoe wasn’t hungry for flies just then. He was homesick for his web in the cor- ner of the woodshed. He went slowly down the pole to the water, and touched it all round, shaking hisfeet like pussy when she wets her ~ ‘ ings in the grass; and suddenly al thought appeared to strike him. Upl he went like a. rocket to the top, and ‘ commenced playing circus. He held ‘ one foot in the air, then another, and turned round two or three times, He got excited and nearly stood‘ on his head before I found out what he knew, and that was this: that the draught» ofair made by the fire would. carry a line ashore on which he could escape from his desert island. He pushed out a web that went floating in the air, untilit came on the table. Then he hauled on the rope until it was strong enough to hold him and walk ashore. I thought he had earned his liberty, so I put him back in his woodshed again. soap, then tying up a piece of 'pearl- ash in it and soaking it well in hot water; the stained part should after- ward be exposed to the sun and air until removed. Ink-stains may be removed by wetting the part with warm water, and applying salts of lemon. Securing drops, for removing spots, grease, etc., from linen, may be compounded from an ounce each of spirits of turpentine and essence of lemon, and applied with a camel’s hair brush. The essence should be recently made, or it will leave a circle round the spot. v To REMOVE STAINS FROM LINEN.â€" Fruitâ€"stains may be removed by rub- bing the stain on each side with yellow der’s Bridge. rum The Practical Receipts. Farming is hard, toilsome, slavish work indeed, when you cannot unite with it some pleasurable incentives. Working merely that you may earn money by it is tolerable, and often necessar ; bht’ the true, the noble way, is to have your work, in addi- tion, return you a dividend of pleas- ure as you go along, with added diviâ€" dends of the same sort day by day. To illustrate: a. man buys a home- :atead, as I did here, “in the rough"â€"; a little farm of stumps, brushwood ‘ andtimber. It must be cleared up and made tillable. There is hard work in itsâ€"the hardest kind. To be con- vinced of the fact, let the reader un- dertake to dig out a stump some fine morning. But when it is out, how glad you areâ€"not merely because the work is over, but because it looks so much better. There is an instant re- ward ; and there is the pleasure, too, of anticipation while digging. So you go from stump .to stump, and from tree to tree, and the unfolding beauty of the change is a constant reward. Children whose brain development is un- usually large in comparison With the body, are most frequently singled out for a prema- ture final resting place. Why is this 2â€": Simply because the functions of the body are to frail to supply the waste going on in the brain consequent upon‘active Intelligence, Fellows’Compound Syrup of Hypophosphites is :0" prepared that it imparts the Vital prim ciplo- directly to the brain while it assists in developing a. vigorous and robust body. 'Ihen when you come to put out fruit. trees and plants on this redeemed patcn of wilderness, thesame rewards attend your work. You want straight rows, and your trees to stand up straight, and to “ range” well, if there is an Orchard in every direction. It is a pleasure thus to arrange them. At first they are small, but they soon grow. Day by day, and year by year, the branches extend. The landscape takes a new form. You prune, and shape, and cultivate, and 'fight the weeds, and though it is toil, its harsh- ness is softened by the thought that rthis change of landscape is the work of your hands, the reward of your toil â€"â€"duly seconded of course by nature. The iron bridge at Dixon, 111.; fell with a terrible crash, while crowded with people to witness a. baptism Thirty-two bodies have been recovered and many more‘ are supposed to be under the wreck. This for the fruit farm proper. It is the same about the house and lawn. There are walks to be planned. and made, and carriage ways, trees‘to be planted, singly or in groups, and hedges both for ornament and use. A man of small means can only do a part each season; but the work does not the because of its everâ€"fresh re- wards. A Pittsburg firmâ€"£16393. Rogers & Burchfield claim to have discovered a process by which they can make the famous Russian sheet iron. The latter is made in Siberia by a. secret process, which no other nation has hitherto been able to fitain. The British Govern- ment; has ofl‘ered £50,000 for its disco- very, but even the stimulus of that large sum has failed to achieve the re- sult. American enterprise and ingenuâ€" ity'hzwe accomplished it, and Pittsburg, it is said, can now furnish all common markets with Russian sheet iron at lower prices than even the Russians hemselves.â€"P/riladalp/oia Press. Here, too, We plant trees on the roadsideâ€"the law requires and en- forces it. It is part of the system which has built up and peopled Vine- land so rapidly. A whole community takes a lesson in rural aesthetiCSâ€"that is the gain, or part of it. The result is found in the adornments which are voluntarily planned and carried out. We have fencesâ€"those costly hideous nuisancesâ€"but it is pleasant to have some’lliinggmark your boundry, and an evergreen hedge is cheap and beanâ€" tiful. There are miles and miles of them here. No law requires them, only the law of good taste and the love of tlie'beautiful. On and about a ten7acre farm I have‘something over one hundredrods of such hedgeâ€"two, three and four years plantedy the plantsjcosting originally about two cents! each. Others have more, and f onstitute lines of beauty to glad- , eye and mitigate the toil gem ““en’ about""tli'em, and growing mel‘ogaiid moreipbeautiful every yearT Some: of these hedges are to form screens, as wind-breakers for partial shelter to orchards, gardens and (1 well- ings, and in that form, thirty or forty feet high (net extraordinary for the Norway spruce), will give variety and attractivencs to the landscape, and to the homes of which they con- stitute a part. ' Farmers miss more than they real- ize by neglect of these homestead ad- Ornmcnts. They really cost little in money, while as a matter of business merely they add largely to the selling value. ‘Vith some taste for the work, their care is little less than a recreaâ€" tionâ€"almost” work of affection“ Children can be, in many cases, ins- pired with a taste for such work which will have a powerful influence in attaching them to the place' and the business when they grow up. Teach them how to plant an ornamen- tal tree or a flower-bed, how to prune and care for such things; point out their beauty, and invest them with the responsibility of bringingouttheir best qualities, give them books which treat on the subject, and tastes will be formed and attachments developed which the glitter of city attractions a few years later may not overcome. The desertion of farming by farmers’ boys is probably due'quite as much to the‘untidy dreariness which surrounds so many homes, as to other causes, although it‘may be a less apparent influence. Even if they do leave at manhood for financial reasons, the taste fer rural adornments implanted by a judicious parent will have an in- fluence in returning them to the coun- try when business cares press heavily or business success is achievedâ€"N. K‘Observer. ADORNING THE HOMESTEAD. ‘KGRIGULTURAL. V WThe effect of preparations containing Alcohol is to stimulate the circulation of the blood and secondarily the brain, and to cre- ate a. feeling of temporary imprpvement, but eventually followed by a collapse and break- ing down of the general health from degener- ation of the tissues. Preparations containing strychnim, stimulate the nerv’ous system and 1 allies all agreeable (whilai-atihn of mind ml body for alslmrt period, but soon poisoning shows itself in a stiffness and twitchingr (if the muscles, Lhcnieautiun takeg place ml mutability rm1i'esdalesmiess follow. Preparations that act immediately on nutri- tion, perfecting the digestion of food and its complete assimilation and the formation of healthy blood, m-f cally build up the consti- tution iii ,(armanunt manner with no Ila: ' ' ' Dr. \Vliceler’s Cinnpouxid . and Calisaya, a.‘ ( l;cmi-' call (JO-(kl and l‘fuu‘suve Tonic, may betaan under all circumsianées ivit-h p \sii’im licuefit and with no possibility (:f injury. Sold ‘by ‘ all druggis‘ts at $1. 10 BE DISPOSED OF,â€"â€"THE BUSI- NESS of that desirable Hotel, known as he “ALBlON HOUSE,” corner James and Murray Streets, Hamilton. It has recently been re-litted, renovated and furnished in good styleâ€"the furniture being all new ; is doing a good paying and constantly increas- ing‘business ; it is well located, being within two minutes walk of the G. XV. R. Depot, and five of the Post Office ; contains hand- some Bar, Sitting. Rooms, Parlor, Dining Room, ten Bedrooms, Kitchen, Larder, and good Ale Cellar. Furniture and Fixtures to be taken at valuation. Proprietor having another business the cause of disposal. Rent moderate. Lease could be had. Apply to Se'fitl forICircular, Price List, Terms, 8.20., beforepurghasing elséwhcre .to . (‘ 17A“i\1“r'ra'l"ll“rfl1' Second hand. pianos from FIFTY DOLLARS ang upwards. Which we offér at lowe_1 rates than any other house in the Dominion. A Good Assortment in Stack. flrfi’Scnd for Price Lists. Mason llamli Organ (0., Boston, ' George A. Prince 3: 09., Juflale, we keep in stock A Large Assortment of Pianos BY \VELL KNOWN MAKERS, . EBWARGS’ H. B. W’ARREN $5 CO ’8 Er. MOORE, AGENT, The Cheapesfi €7‘stâ€"class Scale in Canada Costiveness, Jaundice, Dysâ€" pepsia, Indigestion, Dysonâ€" tery, Foul Stomach and Breath, Erysipeles, Headâ€" ache, Piles, Rheumatism, Eruptions and Skin Diseas- cs, Bilimsncss, Liver Comâ€" plaint, Dropsy, Tetter, Tu» mors and Salt Rheum, Worms, Gout, Neuralgia, as a Dinner Pill and Puriâ€" fying the Blood, are the most congenial purgative yet perfected. Their effects, abundantly show how much they excel all other Pills. They are safe and pleasant to take, but powerful to cure. ‘hey purge out the foul humers of the blood ; they stimulate the sluggish or disordered organ into action ; and they impart health and tone to the whole being. They cure not only the every day complaints of every body, but for“ midahle and dangerous diseases, Most skilful physi- cians, most eminent clergymen, and our best citizens, send certificates of cures performed and of great bene- fit theylmve derived from these Pills. They are the safest and best physio for children, because mild as well BIS efieetunl. Being sugar coated, they are easy to take : and being purely vegetable, they are entirely harmless. Quickerng 3: Sons, Hon? Slums, Bus'rLEs, CHIGNONE, Swncmis and 28mm. Plensa call and examine our stock. Letter or ers promptly and carefully filled. AND FEEI: AYER’S CATHARTIC PILLS 1 w DR. J. C'. A YER d’c OO.,L01L‘cll, Mass, ' S0111 by all Druggists and dealers in Mch- cme. THOMAS VEAZIE, (Late of the Veazic House, G eneva, IV . Y. ,) Proprietor. This wenâ€"known hotel has been refitted throughout in the most modern style of a first-class hotel. His table is furnisl‘ ed with all the delicacies of the season. The most convenient Sample Room in the city for com- mercial travellers. Omnibus leaves in time for all trains east or west. Dec 6. tf. ilton family, it is with pleasure I certify to the entire satisfaction it has given. It is all that could be desired. The disguise is per- fectâ€"the offensive taste and odor of Castor Oil being removed, while its medical proper- ties seem unchanged. Children as well as Adults iake it readily. DAVID MCLELLAN & 00., Griws’ Funmsnmas, GENERAL SMALL “"ARES. and FAxcv Goons, LADIES’ Cdmue PL‘aNQS AND ORGANS. Northrup & Lyman, Newcastle, General Agents. May 11, 1873. ‘ d7 Anglo American Hotel HAMILTON, ONT. Wilson’s Castor Oil Emulsion Is recommended by Medical Men, ana sold by Druggists throughout the Dominionaâ€"v Price, 25 cents per bottle. V 53 King Street West, HABKILT‘BN, 0 Gentlemen,â€"Having used for sometime f‘Vlesop'g Cqsfior_0il Enlulsionji in :93. A u-_ on, ma Auctioneer, Merrick St. Hamilton, May 13, 1873. d7-li Manufacture s, Importers and Wholesale ' Dealers in For all the Purposes of a, Family Physio, 62" CURING CELEBRA'E‘EE? May 14-, 1873 Burlington Beach, East, 311111312, 1871. Messrs. Archdale ‘V-ilgon, & C0,, Ham- Counter and Platform Scams, Ti} E31 591‘ E L PC RE PE “5. {EERTFEfiéfi'E Practical and Analytical Chemists ARCH DALE ‘VILSON & 00., OLDEST ESTABLISHED HOUSE IN CANADA. :3 ARE THE AND EXCLUSIVE AG EN T5 for the follmviug F! R E‘LP E9130 I" SAFER‘. 54 Frontâ€"Sb. East, Toronto X's; SiNORDIâ€"IEIMER, Steinway: 52 Spns, THOMAS BURROW’S, 1‘ R EPARED BY Chemists, Hamiltofi, Ont. P. S. VAN WAGNER 'Dunham' SI. Sons, flames Brothers. 15 King Street East. Toggmjl‘o. OER-RAMS, P E gfiEELERT LSON’S 368 km, 775,060 Eli“ THiECE CELEBRATE“ MACRENES SOLD In. all Parts of the World. An Increase of Sales Ufipreccdentcd. Elle Edargegt in the EV orldvam; BRIDGEPORT, CONNECTICUT, U. Y ‘vHE LARGE NUMBER OF CHEAP AND POORLY MADE SE‘VING MACHINES THAT HAVE BEEN puhned on the public of Canada for the past number of years, under the coloring of number of First Prizes taken, or other high sounding pretentious, are now beginning to be well understood, and by many the pang of deception felt keenly, as having " PAID TOO DEAR FOR THE WHISTLE.” To those, and all» others, we would advise them to get the Improved Noiselcss Wheeler & Wilson, and you are safe. They last a lifetime. fi‘mustmtcd Catalogues, givingr particulars, sent post. free to any address. TEAS, SUGAISS. BRGWN, GILLESPIE <55 00., STRENGTH UNALTERED. Produces no 112315051. ‘ Children are fem: at it. Sold Everywhere, in bottles at 25 99:1th each. Composed of the following first-class Iron Stoamships : SCOTLAND, THAMES, SEVERN, The steamers of this Line are intended to sail during the Season of Navigation of 1873, from LONDON for thmc and MONTREAL, as follows : THAMES .................. Saturday, 5th April, SEVERE SWEH’ mm: WHOLESALE GROCERS, ltiAlNiIffiLTON DELTA ................... Saturday, 26th Api‘i]. MEDWAY., . .. ...VVednesda.y, 7th May. NYANZA,...,U...,......Satul‘day, 17th May. SCOTLAND .............. \Vednesday, 28th_ May. And every alternate Wednesday and Satur- day thereafter. And from QUEBEC for LONDON (with pri-fi vilggf of calling at Sydney, 0. 13., for Coal) as fallows By Royai Letters Patent .COPflXNDW THAMES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Thursday, SUI May. SEVERN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tuesday, 13th “ BIEDW'AY” ...Tuesday; 27th “ DELTA... .. .Saturday, 7th June. NYANZA Thursday, 12th June. It SCOTLAND ................ Tuesday, 24th And every alternate Tuesday and Thursday thereafter. Cabin. . . . Steerage RATES OF PASSAGE; reduced rates. Certificates issued to person Through tickets from all; points “Yest at desirous of bringing out their friends. Through Bills of Lading issued on the Con- tinent and in London for all parts of Canada, and in the United States to Fetroit, Mil- waukee, Chicago and other points in the West. For \Freight or Passage, applyio TEMâ€" PERLEY, CARTER 8: DRAKE, 21Billeter Street, London; ROSS & 00., Quebec, or to DAVID SHAW, Montreal. HAJIHLTON, ONT, MANUFACTURERS Have the following Engines all ready for delivery: STATEONARY DEPTH F. E. BEBKET M30; S9 A VV RE I 11 Eu 5‘. $TEAM ENQENES TEMPERLEY LINE“ andm, Quebec afid Manireal. Hamilton, May 6, 1872 (Via. Halifax, N Hamilton, April 15, 187-3 April 10, 1873‘ DIRECT IMPORTERS 20 30 0); , fig. WfiLTGE‘é, {ZEMEQQL AGENT 213$?ng MACHINE MANUFACTURIES S EHfiER-SE-PfiVNER 85 King St. “Test, Toronto ; 54 Janus Sh, Hamilton ; 37 Spark St. Ottawa QUrBEc T0 LONDON HECTOR DIRECT _0F_ AND AND W'ednesday, 16th April. Saturday, 5th April, and St. John, N.B.) MEDWAY, DELTA, NYANZA, PORTABLE Etc" E $60 00 . 24 00, Specific and Tonic Pills. 111E GREAT ENGLISH BEMEDYFOR Nervous Debility, S ermatorrhea, Noo- TURNAL Emssrons, Wea ness of the Gener- ative Organs, Palpitation of the Heart, Tremblings, Sleeplessness, the effect of over- indulgence in alcoholic stimulants and tobac- co, 8m. Dr. J. BELL SIMPSON’S Pills are the only effectual ones for-the above diseases. and are never known to fail. Théy have alseady cured hundreds in thi country. Robert Arthur, machinist, Hamilton, testi- fies 'to his recovery by their use. Safe, certain and rapid in action, a. short trial will prove their efficacy. No sufferer need despair of being relieved from the frightful effects of SELF-ABUSE. - .The Specific Pills are 80k: by Druggists at $1.00 aloox, and the Tonic Pilfs at 500. a box, or they will be sent by mail, postage preâ€"‘paid, and securely wrapped from observation, on receipt of $1.06 for the Spe- cific, and 56c. for the Tonic Pill, by J. BELL SIMPSON 65 00., Drawér 91 P.O., Hamilton. Sold by all Wholesale ’ Druggists. Pam- phlets sent post-free rn application. Feb. 26, 1873. am KING STREET WEST- I :15". w BEARMAN momth 1 . GEIQERAL STAGE OFFICE V. ' ~ kHAMILTON, ONT- " DR. 'd. BELL SIMPS‘ON’S nished withv’l‘ickets over the Road; entitling them to Return of Fares, ‘in the event of purchasing any of the Company’s farming land. For information about the lands, prices, location, &c.,A address ‘ NORTH CAROLINA and VIR- ' . GINIA LANDS. 500 CHEAP IMi’ROVED FARMS as 200,000 ACRES or VALUAIILE TIMBER LAN DS FOR SALE. Persons desirous of, visiting the above states With the intention, if suited, of pur- chasing timber, mineral, or improved farm- ing. land direct from the owners at the pres- ent very low prices, and not in the hands 0- speculators, but must be sold at a great sacf rifice, and parties wishing reliable informa- tion about the climate, soil, products, &c., and tickets at reduced rates to visit the states, and free transportation to see thelands, it will be to their advantage to communicate with the subscriber as he is well acquainted with the. above states and the most desirable to settle in; good climate, fertile soil, and advantales ' of railroads, ’navigation, and other facilities for’the best markets. This is the best opportunity ,ever offered to get a cheap home and the best climate in Americg. Send for circular of laxids arid card. sto. CASE, » AMERICAN HOTEL ! Farfiifig raids are sold to actual nettlers, on credit, one quarter down,‘ balancn yearly payments, interest 7 yer cent. Persons de- sirous of locations for farms will, on_a plica- tion at the ,Ofli‘ce, in G’rarfid Ea‘pigls, go fur- Tm: Perfect. Oct. 30, 1871 Shirts,rGolluirs. Fronts, WHOLESALE IMPORTERS, 42' YOUNG :31“ng1", TORGNTO. QHOW A LARGE STOCK 0F Gents’ eweIFyTâ€"u Lmbrellas and Rugs,“ Orders by mail carefully filled. March 26. 1872. On which_are One Tuousand Millions 0 Pine Timber, and inexhaustible Quan- tities of Maple, Beech, Elm, Ash, Hemlock, Oak, 550. The grant of lands to the Grand Rapids and Indiana Railroad Company, to build their road from Fort Wayne, Indiana, to Traverse Bay and Mackinaw, Michigan, comprises in its farming lands every variety of 'soil, from the rich clay loam, to the light sandy, and they are found in that section of Michigan, north of the City of Grand Rapids, and contiguoul to tlm- greet fruit belt on the eastern shores of Lske Michigan, now being rapidly developed. by railroad and other enterprises. ‘ The Pine Lands an; situated on tho“Mus- kegon, Manistee, Pere Marquette, White Pine, Tamarack, Flat and Rouge River, and lying twenty miles on either side of the sur- ched line, of railroad, and are in tho heart of the Pine‘Spction, from which Chicago is so ~{arger lagppljedv, TO THE TRADE GRAY, RENNIE 65 00., Exeeflcnt Farming and Splendi PINE LAN DS, 'gBoo'ks' npv! publi 'gBoo'ks' now publishfilgig ’Equu ive ferri- tory and beeral Discoulgts. \Vrito for circulars.’ ’ ' Addrex'a' '- ' r, ‘ ." ‘LANOEElELD GENTS _WANTED FOR SOME 9E h Rho ‘_best and 13199? populati- .S‘ubgcnptxop “ « Scarfq, Ties and Bows, Hosxery and Gloves. _ _Small Wares and Tnmmmgs, . 1- FOR SALE, Southern Land Comfnissiouer, 202 North John Street, Hamilton. MICHIGAN ACRES WM. 'A. llgVVABD, Viiifisagjémirts and Bustles. GRAY RENNIE & Co‘ Publishers, Hamilton, Ont Land Commissibner, Grand Rapids, Mich. 0F 526 mm 219 feet FRONT D }P'1'H

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