It is athome that the ruin of the soul begins. “ At home I †We hear the re- sponse in tones of pained surprise or indignant denial from many voices. “ It is a hard sayingâ€"«and cruel l †It may hurt like a blow many sad hem-Ls; but if it is trueâ€"what then? “It is not true! I can point you to a dozen cases within my own range of observation to disprove the assertionâ€"to young men who have gone astray in spite of the careful training and good example of relig- ious homesâ€"in spite of all the best of mothers and wisest of fathers could do.†Yes; we hear such things said every day; but feel certain there is an error somewhereâ€"a defect in your observation. Were you in the homes of these young men from the begin- ning ? \Vere you familiar with their early training? Did you obserVe the personal bearing of their parents to- Werd themâ€"know their walk and conversation? It" nay, then you are not competent, with your instances, to disprove our assertion. A small error at the beginning of a series of calculations in applied‘ mechanics, may lead to a great disas- ter; the slight variation from a right line at the beginning will throw a projectile hundreds of yards away from its object. It is in the little things at home; the almost unnotcd departures from order and good government; the neglects arising from parental self-indulgence; the weakness of love that fails to nip a fault in the bud; and many other things that might be instaneed, which turn the young feet into ways of life that, as the years go by, lead farther and farther from safety and happi- ness. The Bible, experience, and reason, all declare that; the future of a. child depends upon his early training. If this is bad, the chances are nearly all against him. “But,†we hear it said, “children ‘iliSOd under the worst of influences often mum good and useful men.†The cases are exceptional, and stand out in strong contrast with the rule. And so we go back to what was declared in the beginning, that the ruin 'of a soul begins at home. How many instances crowd upon the memory! Let us take a few at this time for their lesson and their wurn- mg. Not long ago, in one of our princi- pal cities, an almost broken-hearted mother parted from her son in the court-house, and was taken fainting to her home, While he was thrust into a van and conveyed to prison. His crime was stealing. Society hold up its hands in pity and amazement, for the young man’s father and mother were highly respectable people, and good church members, as the saying is. The father’s business reputation stood high. People said of him: “His word is as good as his bond.†And yet his son was a. condemned thief. He had stolen from his emâ€" pldyer. Did the ruin in this case begin at home? Yes. it was at home that the son learned to be dishonest; and he learned it from his mother ! Let us rehearse a few of the lessons, in precept and example, that were given to the boy. “’0 begin when he was just ï¬ve years of age. 110 was standing by his motherâ€"we will call her Mrs. Omdorff, and the boy Karl â€"when the boy heard her say to his aunt, in a tone of satisfaction : “ Barâ€" ker has cheated himself. Here are four yards of ribbon instead of three. I asked for three yards, and paidbf‘br only three; but this measures full four yards.†“It was his business to look after his passengers,†replied Mrs. Omdorfl‘, who felt rather uncomfortable at this question from her little boy. “ It will teach him a lesson.†The boy listened, and waited for what was to come next. He loved his mother and trusted in her. Karl was a little surprised. It did not seem like his mother; nor in agreement with What she had often said to him about "truth and honesty. But he bad faith in her, and was sure she could do nothing wrong,» His Aunt Ruth, of whom he was very fond, and who had great influence over him, was a weak woman in some respects, and much more inclined to take the current of other’s opinions, than to give herself the trouble of opposition. Her innate sense of honor was a little disturbed at her sister’s View of the ease; but she failed to say the right words that were in her thoughts, and which, if spoken, might have helped the bpy to see what was just and right. Karl thought a moment, and then said : “ But he won’t; know any thug about it.†Knd so the matter was pushed aside, neither mother or aunt imaginâ€" ing that the bright and beautiful boy they both loved so tenderly had re- “ What are you going to do about it? inquired the aunt. “Keep it, of course,†answered Mrs. Omdorff. “Barker will never be the wiser. He makes enough out of us, dear knows I†And she rolled the ribbon about her ï¬ngers. “Little pitchers have. big ears,†said Aunt Ruth, echoing her sister’s laugh. “ Oh, you’re too sharp I†exclaimed his mother, With a laugh. “ I wasn’t talking to you, anyhow.†A day or two afterward, Karl heard his mother say : “I saved a car tic- ket; this morning.†“ How ? †inquired her sister. “The conductor forgot to ask 101* it “\Vhy didn’t you give it to him, mamma ?†asked Karl. RUINED AT HOME. BY T. S. ARTHUR ceived a lesson in dishonesty not soon to be forgotten. “I do believe,†said Mrs. Omdorfl', no: long afterward, as she sat count- ing over some money, “that Poole has given me the wrong change.†“Let me 'see,â€she added, going over the money again. “ Two and a half, three, four and a. half, four and three quarters. It’s a fact, I gave him a tenâ€"dollar bill, and here are four and three quarters change.†Karl was in the room, and heard her remark. “ What did the goods amount to? ’; asked her sister. “ There were eleven yards of mus- lin at eighteen. That is a dollarand ninety-eight cents. Two yards of silk at a dollar and a half, and an eighth of a yard of velvet, one dol- lar; making just ï¬ve dollars and ninety-ï¬ve cents. If it had come to six dollars my right. change would have been four. But he has given me four and three quarters.†Then in atone of satisfaction, she added: “I’m that much richer, you see, Ruth.†- Her sistersmiled 3 but did not utter the disapproval that was in her heart. Karl listened and took it all in. A little while afterward, Mrs. Omdorfl‘ got up and rang the bell, saying as she dia so, with a short, gurgling laugh that seemed ashamed of itself: “I guess we’ll have a little ice creamâ€" at, at Poole’s expense.†Aunt Ruth only shook her ï¬nger, and said,feob1y : " Oh, that’s too bad I†But Karl was not able to see whether she approved or disapproved. The ice cream was sent for and enjoy- ed by the child. While the sweet taste was yet on his tongue, he heard his mother say: “I’m very much obliged to Poole for this treatâ€"it’s delicious ! †Is it strange that the boy’s percep- tion of right; and wrong should be obscured? or that, in a day or two afterward, he should come in from the street with an orange in his hand, and on being questioned about it, reply 2 “A woman let it fall from her basket, and I picked it up. She didn’t see it drop, mamma.†“But why didn’t you call after her? " asked Aunt Ruth. “ ’Cause I didn’t Want to,†answer- ed tho child. “She dropped i1. I didn’t knock it 01!.†Mrs. Omdorï¬' was not satisï¬ed with the conduct of her child; and yet she was amused at what she called his ’cuteness, and laughed instead of re- proving him 'for an act that was in spirit a theft. So the child’s education for crime was begunâ€"his ruin initiated. The low moral sense of his mother was perpetually showing itself in some disregard for other’s rights. A mis- take made in her favor was never voluntarily corrected; and her plea- sure at any gain of this kind was rarely concealed. “ He cheated himâ€" self,†was a favorite saying, heard by Karl almost every week; and as he grew older, he understood its meaning more clearly. Mr. Omdorï¬â€˜ was a man of higher integrity than his wife; andjust in dealing to the smallest fraction.â€" “Foolish about little thingsâ€"more nice than wise,†as she often said, when he disapproved of her way of doing things, as was sometimes the ease. Mrs. Omdorï¬' had learned to be guarded in her speech when he was at home; and so he remained in ig- norance of the fatal perversions going on in the mind of his child. As the boy grew up his father’s supervision became more direct. ' He was careful about his associates, and never permitted him to be away from home without knowing where and with whom he was. He knew but too well the danger of evil association ; and guarded his boy with jealous soli- citude. Alasl he dreamed not of the evil influences at home; neverimagined that the mother was destroyingin her son that nice sense of honor without which no one is safe; nor that she had taught him to disregard the rights of others; to take mean advantages; and to appropriate what did not beâ€" long to him Whenever it could be done with absolute certainty of conceal- ment. We do not mean to say that such were the direct and purposed teachâ€" ings of the mother. She would have been horror stricken at the mere sugâ€" gestion. But she had so taught him by example. 111 heart she was not honest ; and in many of her transacâ€" tions she was as much a thief as if she had robbed 21. till. Retaining what belongs to another, simply because it has come into our hands by mistake, is as much a theft in its spirit as pur- posed stealing; and the ï¬ne lady who keeps the change to which she is not entitled, or the yard of ribbon mea- sured to her in error, is just as crimi- nal as the sneak thief who gets into her hall through a neglected door and steals her husband‘s overcoat. The real quality of an act lies in the intent. Is it any wonder that amid such home influences, the boy did not show, as he advanced toward maturity, a high sense ofhonor? That he should be mean, and selï¬sh, and dishonest in little things? “As the twig is bent the tree’s inclined.†Evil seed will produce evil fruit. . ' Society punished and execmted the unhappy young man, and pitied his wretched mother; little dreaming that; by her hand his prison doors had been opened, Another instance of the baleful in- fluence that may exist at home is to be found in the ruin of a young man who recently died in one of the lowest and vilest haunts of the city. He had boen well educated, and grew to man- hood With a ï¬ne sense of honor. His mother was a woman of rare culture, and beloved by every one in the circle where she moved. All the moral sentiments of her son had been care- fully fostered and developed, and when he reached manhood no one showed a fairer promise. But it; was not long before a shadow fell across his life. He had learned one thing at home that was destined to work his ruinâ€"he had. learned to love the taste of Wine. His father belonged to a class of men who consider Wine-drinking as a mark of good breeding. He knew all about wines; and had a weak vanity in being thought a connoisseur. if he had a friend to dinner, he would bring out two or three kinds and dis- cuss them through half the meal. He called the men who were ranging themselves against the terrible evilof intemperance, and seeking to stay its balef‘ul course, “ poor fanatics.†He talked of pure wines and liquors as harmless, and gave them to his son at suitable times and occasions, moderate- ly; only guarding him by warnings against excess. But these warnings went for notlr ing, as appetite increased. At twelve years of age, the boy was content with a single glass of light Wine at his dinner. At eighteen he wanted two glasses, and at twenty-one three. By this time he had acquired convi- vial habits, and often drank freely with other young men of his age-â€" His mother was ï¬rst to take the alarm ; but his father was slow to beâ€" lieve that his son was in danger. The sad truth broke upon him at last in a painful humiliation. At a large party in his own house the young man became so badly intoxicated that he had to be removed from the com- } pany. From that unhappy period, wine was banished from his father’s table. But it was too late! The work of ruin had progressed too far. At twenty-seven the wretched young man died, as we have said, in one of the lowest and vilest dens of the city. We could give many instances like this. Here, at home, is the chief source of that Wide-spread ruin by in- temperanoe, that is every year rob- bing society of thousands upon thous- ands ofyoung men, who, by education, culture, and social standing are ï¬tted for useful and honorable positions. They are ruined at home. Here they acquire a taste for wine, and here they learn to think and speak lightly of temperance. Not in one case in ten does a young man acquire the taste for drink in a saloon or tavern, but at homeâ€"if not in his own home in that of some friend. We fear that ‘the drinking-saloons men set up in their dining and drawing-rooms, and to Which they invite the young and old of both sexes, do more to deprave the taste and lead to intemperance, than all the licensed taverns in the land. It is here that the appetite is formed and fosteredâ€"here that the apprenticeship to drunkenness is served. Year by year, the sons of our wealthiest and most intelligent and influential citizens are tempted and led astray by the drinking cus- toms of societyâ€"ruined at home. How few of the sons of successful men rise to the level their fathers have gained. _How many, alas 1 sink so far below this level that the eyes ache to look down upon them I Worse than dishonesty and drunk- enness, because more hidden and subtle, and more destructive of moral and spiritual life, is that home influ- ence which springs from perverted ideas of marriage and its sanctities. If sons and daughters grow up in a home where the moral sentiments are low; Where departures from virtue are spoken of lightly; where prurient gossip and vile scandals are indulged in with manifest pleasure, their cor- ruption is almost certain. Chameleon- like, they will take the hue of what is around them; and when they ad- vance to manhood and womanhood will, in most cases, be found practi- cally false to the high and pure stan- dards of Christian morality. “ Let the sentiment at home be pure and Christian, and the children will grow up pure. Starting, then, on the journey of life, with minds unpervertâ€" ed by false ideas, and hearts uncor- rupted by actual evils, they will be strong for the battle that each must ï¬ght ére the natural mind, which It is from this corruption at home, growing out of the essential impurity of the sphere in which children are raised, that society is cursed, in each new generation, by unions called marriages, but in which there is no true essential of marriage. Hence come inï¬delities, divorces and all the evil consequences with which we are too sadly familiar. This is the battle that all must ï¬ghtâ€"the battle between the false and evil things that lie hidden at birth in the natural or lower region of the mind, and which at maturity, When reason becomes active, assert their power, and strive for mastery over the human soul, and the higher or spiritual mind, where truth, and honor, and purity, and God have their dwelling-place. Think at What disadvantage they will be in this great and momentous Warfare, who have, during childhood and youth, had the lower things of their natureâ€"the false, evil thingsâ€" stimulated into activity; who come to the verge of manhood and woman- hood already corrupted, and with the memory full of what is vile and false, instead of with things pure, and true, and good. Alas for them! If they overcome, it will be after long and fearful struggles, in, Which the odds will be terribly against them I lié the germs of evil that all receive as their inheritance when born, is brought into subjection to the spirit- ual. Lay it up in your hearts, all ye who love your children and desire their happiness, that; it is the home-influâ€" ence that more than'anthing else goes to determine their future. If that is healthy and good, all the ele- ments are in their favor; if it is not healthy and good, the chances are all against; them. Large quantities of lambs have been purchased in the neighborhood of Brussels at an average price of $2 75 each. Half a century ago beIIOWS making was a thriving trade. Every house had its pair of bellows, and in every well-furnished mansion there was a pair hung by the side of every ï¬re place. Ipswich, in Massachusetts, acquired quite a notoriety all over New Eng- land for the elegant and substantial articles of the kind it produced. But as stoves and grates took the place of open ï¬replaces, and as coal was sub- stituted for wood, the demand for bel- lows diminished, until the busincss as a separate trade died out. The same is true of flint cutting. Flints were once necessar , not only for tinder boxesâ€"and a. tinder box was as necessary for every house as a gridiron or a skillet, Every one who looks back to a‘ childhood offorty odd years ago must remember the cold winter mornings when the persistent crack, crack of the flint against the steel, sent up from thekitchen an odor of igniting tinder and sulphur which pervaded the house. I have no more idea what became of the flint producers than of the old man of sorrowful memories; who, three or four times a week, called at our door with brimstone matches for sale at a cent the half dozen bunches. Both have as com- pletely vanished from England and New England as have the Red Indians and the Druids. Then, again, are gone the pin mak- ers, who, though they have been in their graves this quarter of a centur , still ï¬gures in lectures and essays to illustrate the advantages of division of labor. Instead of a pin taking a dozen men or more to cut, grind, point, head, polish, and what not, as it used to do,pins are now made by neat little machines at the rate of three hundred a minute, of which machines a single child tends to half a dozen. Nail making at the forge is another lost industry. Time was, and that in this nineteenth century, when every nail was made on the anvil. New, from one hundred to one thousand nails per minute are made by machines. The nailer who works at the forge has but a bad chance for competing with such antagonists, and he would have no ehanoe at all were it not that his nails are tenfold tougher than the former. As it is, the poor men follow an all but hopeless vocation, and are compelled to live in continual handâ€" grips with poverty. . Belloville is agitating for the 01'- ganization of a salvage corps, to oper- ate in connection with the ï¬re bri- gade, their object being the preservaâ€" tion of goods by removing them from buildings on ï¬re. On Monday, 4th inst, the Council ofthe Township ochGillivray agreed to submit a byâ€"laW granting aid to the London, Huron, and Bruce Railway to the amount of$10,000. The voting takes place on the 30th of September. A cargo of 350 tons of rails has been landed at Kincardine for the Southern extension 0: the Wellington, Grey and Bruce railway, so that track-laying can now be proceeded with from both ends of the road at the same time. This is Chicago’s way of chronicling deaths in St. Louis: “ Those that left St. Louis last week fora better country (no matter which way they went), num- bered 2-52 ; and of these twentyâ€"one took passage by the cholera. line.†A Macon (Gm) mule made a decided hit in the production of Th? Cataract of the Ganges, on the local stage there recently. The “ hit†was made with the mule’s dexter hind foot on one of the star performers, resulting in a total eclipse. EDITORIAL NOTICES are so common that it is almost impossible for an editor to express his honest opinion of the merits of any article without being suspected of interested motives. This fact, however, shall not deter us from saying what we think of a new addition to the Materia Medica to which our attention has been recently directed. We refer to DR. J. ‘VALK- na’s CALIFORNIA VINEGAR BITTERS, a remedy which is making its way into more families just now than all the other advertised medieines put to- gether. Its popularity, as far as we can judge, is not based on empty pre- tention. There seems to be no quesâ€" tion about the potency ofits tonic and alterative properties, While it posses- ses the great negative recommenda- tion of containing neither alcohal nor mineral poison. That it is a speciï¬c for Indigestion, Biliousness, Consti- pation, and many complaints of ner- vous origin, we have reason to know; and we are assured on good authority that as a general invigorant, regulat- ing and purifying medicine, it has no equal. It is stated that its ingrediâ€" ents, (obtained from the wilds of Cali- fornia,) are new to the medical world; and its extraordinary effects certainly warrant the conclusion that it is a compound of agents hitherto un- known. If popularity is any criteâ€" rion, there can be no doubt of the efï¬- ciency of the VINEGAR BITTERS, for the sale of the article is immense and continually increasing. Children whose brain development is un- nsually large in comparison with the body, are most frequently singled out for a. prema- ture ï¬nal resting place. Why is this ?â€" 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 so prepared that it imparts the vital prin- ciple directly to the brain while it assists in developing a vigorous and robust body 53 King Street West, BASIIL'I‘GN, 0ST ans’ Funmsames. GENERAL SMALL ‘VARES. and FANchoons. mes’ Comma not)? Sxm'rs. Bus'rmcs, CHIGNONS, Swncans and BRAID- Please call and examine our stock. Letter 01 are promptly and carefully ï¬lled. DAVID McLELLAN 6; Co Manufacture-s, Importers and Wholesale Dealers in Lost Occupations. ALL DANGER A VOIDED. A GENTLEMANIVEIQ ls 1N POSSES- A SIUN of a remedy, which is a. complete protection against this fearful disease, as well as all forms of Diarrhoea, is desirous of distributing it as widely as possible over the country Send. name and address, without delay, enc osing 30 cents to pay expenses. U l’ort Dover; on the Lake Shore, 163 Acres. Good Brick House; two Frame Houses and Bank Burn. 18 Acres of choice grafted Apples (bearing) Apply to Box 15, Port Dover. Julv 29. 1873. (118 THE “ WEBSTER†‘SEW'ING RIACHINE. The General Favorite Throughout the Dominion. And will do Every Kind of TVor/c Light 07' Heavy. u is Strain; and Durable, Emmy :13le Light to “’ork, Has no Dogs on-Cams. The most compkte set uf Attachments given with every Machine. other MAN TFACT’ RED BY THE? Canada Sewing Machine Go’y, These Machines present a record of g‘ success. HWHE QEEEEéZEï¬! VV IRE Z E. 78 J. SHERWIN TKUEMAN, Toronto. July 18,:1873. (us-1i Two Gokl Medals inst awarded in Moscow, Russia, and Lima, Peru. W Worked by hand or foot on Patent Stand‘ For Agents’ 261193. “1}1’1.XPE,__ 270] July 29, 1873 FARM FOR SALE, NE AND A-IIALF MILES FROM Composed of the following ï¬rstâ€"class Iron Stemnships : SCOTLAND, THAMES, SEVERN, The steamers of this Line are intended to sail during the Season of Navigation of 1873, from LONDON for QUEBEC and MONTREAL, as follows: THAMES ................... Saturday, 25th July. MEDWAY... ........... Wednesday, 6th Aug. SEVERN ........... Saturday, 16th “ SCOTLAND ....VVednesday,27th “ DELTA . ....Saturday, 6th Sept. NYANZA ................. Wednesday, 17th “ And every alternate Wednesday and Satur- day thereafter. And from QUEBEC for LONDON as fol- lows : DELTA ................... Saturday, 2nd NYANZA .. .. .. .Tuesday, 12th THAMES ‘ . .. ...... Thursday, 21 st MEDWAY .. .......... Tuesday, 2nd SEVERN.... . .'...Thursday, 11th SCOTLAN D ................ Tuesday. 23rd And every alt-ornate Tuesday and‘ Thur thereafter. Aug. u ‘5 Sept. u “ sday HE LARGE NUMBER OF CHEAP AND POORLY MADE SEWING MACHINES TIIAT HAVE BEE palmed on the public of Canada for the past number of years, under the coloring of number of First Prim taken, or other high sonnding pretentious, are now beginning to be well understood, and by many the pang deception felt keenly, as having “ PAID T00 DEAR FOR THE WHISTLE." To those, and all others, would advise them to get the Improved Nameless Wheeler 87 Wilson, and be safe. They last a lifetime. Mluustrated Catalogue, giving particulars, sent post free to any address. RATES OF PASSAGE Cabin Through tickets from all points West at reduced rates. Certiï¬cates issued to persons desirous of bringing out their friends. Through Bills of Lading issued 011 tleon- tinent and in London for all parts of Canada, and in the United States to Fetrolt, Mil- waukee, Chicago and other points in the West. PERLEY, CARTER & DRAKE: 21 Billeter Street, London ; ROSS 51 00., Quebec, or to DAVID SHAW, Montreal. 368 feet, 775,000 (SF THESE CELEBBRATED MAUIEINES _ 59111 In all Parts of the World. An Increase of Sales Unprecedented. See TUE "WEBSTER before buying any June 13, 18:37 G A. WALTGN, CEï¬iE’RAL AGEi‘éT 307 feet W’I‘he Largest in the World. BRIDGEPORT, CONNECTICUT, U. S. mam“ mm E L E E H TE MPERLEY LINE. Canadian Invention, and Unprecedented Success Attending it Everywhere. DEPTH FRONT 85 King St. W'est, Toronto ; 54 James St. Hamilton ; 37;Spark St. Ottawal Hamilton. May56,51872. FoerreigNht or Pas‘sngg,‘ .a313]y_tp_tI_'El\I- April 10, 1873‘ Approach of Cholera. flu The) lightâ€"running and far-famed WING MACElNE MANUFACTUREES THE CELEBRATED HAMILTON, ONT. QUEBEC T0 LONDON R. M. WANZER 8:. CO‘ HECTOR has emf? Mantraaï¬. MED“’AY, DELTA, NYANZ: , Hamilton, V Ont (111â€"3111 $60 00 d267 AYERIS HAIR V5608! TO ITS NATURAL VITALITY ' AND COLOR. w W a y nutritive organs to healthy activity, and preserve. ‘ the hair and its beauty. .Thus brashy, weal; or hair becomes glossy, pliable and strengthened ; hair regrows with lively expression ; falling I; checked and stablished ; thin hair thickens ; and faded or gray hair resumes resumes their orig "l colur. lis operation is sure and hannless. It cures dandruff, heals all humors, and keeps the scalp cool, clean and softâ€"under which conditions, diseases of the scalp are impossible. As a dressing for ladies’ hair, the Vmon is praised for its grateful and agreeable perfume, and valued for the soft lustre and richness of tone it imparts. Northrup dc Lyman, Newcastle, General Agents. £53,de hy a1: Medicine. Speciï¬c and Tonic Pins. r \HE GREAT ENGLISH BEMEDY FOR Nervous Debility, Spermatorrhea, N oc- TURNAL EMISSIONS, \Veakness of the Gener- ative Organs, Palpitation of the Heart, Tremblings, Sleeplessness, the effect of over- indulgence in alcoholic stimulants and tobacâ€" co, 310. Dr. J. BELL SIMPSON’S Pills are the only effectual ones tor the above diseases, and are never known to fail. They have alseady cured hundreds in this country. Robert Arthur, machinist, Hamilton, testi- ï¬es to his recovery by their use. Safe, certain and rapid in action, a short trial will prove their eflicacy. No sufferer need despair of being relieved from the frightful effects of SELF-ABUSE. The Speciï¬c Pills are sold by Druggists at $1.00 a box, and the Tonic Pills at 500. a box, or they will be sent by mail, Postage pro-paid, and securely wrapped from observation, on receipt of $1.06 for the Spe- cific, and 5630. for the Tonic Pills, by AMERICAN HUTEL KING STREET WEST- PHOI’RIETGR. STAGE OFF} (2 39. "‘3 i LYON, ONT DR. J. EELL SHMPSON’S Sold by all \Vho‘wsale Druggists. Pam- phlets sent post-free r11 application. Feb. 26, 1873. 61:: By Royal Letters Pamm 00 P 11 N D ’ s swag? agm OW 2&3; a wï¬ï¬ a 8453191 STRENGTH UNALTERED. Pruduces no uausmt. ‘ (Siaiifla’en are fowl of it Sold Everywhere, in bottles at 25 cents each ESTABLISHED HOUSE IN C ANADA. Mi :7} 'i‘HE SOLE AND EXCLUSIVE AG EN 5; far the following PL" Nai-S END ORGA NS. minke-ring & Suns, “son ï¬amiin (bu-m (0., Evasion, éwsbrge A. Prime EL (70., .1! ‘ Which we ofl‘crat lowcl rates than any nthm house in the Dominion. Second hand pianos from FIFTY DOLLARS ang upward Send for Circular, Price List, Terms, 520., before purchasing elsewhere to A. 8: S. NORDHEIMER, 15 King Stl‘éct F7513§m ‘ for Restoring Gray llair 5:34; ii’ OIENANN. \Vilson’s is the only sweetened Castor Oil which contains no Chloroform or other in- jurious substance. See Certiï¬cate signed by 23 Prominent Medical Men on inside Wrapper. WILSON’A O A 8 ‘1“ (.3173. O i- L: WE U L S E Q N . A Proper Substitute for Castor Oil ! (EELEEERA'E‘EQH I‘EANEBN : Practical and Analytical Chemists Ask Mr Wihon’s Castor (HE: B Y W EL L Ii NO‘NN MAKERS, 4;: rg‘ a" J. 0'. AYER (f7: 00., i. x- o J. BELL SIMPSON & 00., PREPARED BY we kecp in stock ï¬ssm-tment of Panama L11 Druggigts ami Dealers in C;§U'E‘iï¬Â¥! Drawer 91 1’.O., Hamilton liumlam 5L Suns, flames Brothers. Advancing years, sickâ€" ness, care, disappoint- ment, and hereditary predisposition, all turn the hair gray, and either of them incline it to shed premntilrelx. mum’s HAm chon, by long and extensive use, has proven that it stops the falling of the hair immediately ; often ‘rcnews the growth, and >always surely restores its coiur, when faded or gmy. It stinm‘mtes the T6216 N T a 219 feo‘ 526 foe D EPTH Flu )N ’l‘ THE OLD ESTABLISHED flundas. foundry Mngine Works. THOS- VJILSON 86 00-. STEAM ENGINES; BOILERS. THOMAS \VILSON, \VA LT]; 11 l} ASTABLE, My 12, 1873. E. ECKET? & 80:. IIAIVIILTOZV, ONTâ€. . MANUFACTURERS STATIONARY Have the following Engines all ready for delivery: STEAM ENGINEï¬ â€˜W NI. I I; 3.4 S J) MEDIES ultimately successful in all diseases of a privata nature and Chronic Complaints, from DR. ANDREWS, at. his Laboratory. Dr. Andrews’ Dispensary Up Stairs. Entrance on Exchange Lane. Hours,â€" on Tuesday and Thursday, 10 A. M., to 3 P. M., and 6 P. M., to 8 P. M. Residence,â€"Brockton Club House, Dundas Street, one mile west of Asylum. Persons wishing to obtain any of the Speciï¬c Reme- dies may do so with perfect secrecy, as the ofï¬ce of the Dispensary is so arranged that it. is impossible for patients calling to see each other. No charge for ad- Vice. DR. ANDREWS HAS REMOVED T0 8'7 COIL-HORNE ST. PRIVATE DISEASES. All letters must be‘addressed (post-paid) to DR. ANDREWS, Box 759, Toronto, 0. W., and contain a postage stamp if an amwer in desired. The effect of certain medicines having been duly as- certained in web cases, femalel are lurer relieved from their distressing complaints, the speciï¬c for these being invaluable in correcting irregularities, removing obsbructionl from any cause whatever, and tho only safe, sure, and CERTAIN REMEDY for all these afflicting complaints so peculiar to the female sex. They are nothing new, but have been used by the Doctor for many years. A Good Assortment in Stock. WSenC for Price Lists. Explicit directions, stating when they should not be used, with each box. Pills sent to any address on the receipt. of One Dollar. For sale by all Druggiati. E. H. MOORE,».AGEN1’- DR. ANDREWS’ FEMALE PILLS- WHOLESALE IMPORTERS, 42 YOUDEG STREET, TGQGNTO. 0, now A LARGE STOCK 0F H. B. WARREN & 0031’ Ti) THE TRADE GRAY, RENNIE 86 00., Shirts, Collars. Fronts, The Cheapest ï¬rst-class Scale in Canada. Gents’ Jeweiiy, Umbrenas upd Rug; Persons desirous of visiting the above states with the intention, if suited, of pub chasing timber, mineral, or improved farm- ing land 'direct from the owners at the res- ent very low prices, and not in the ban s of speculators, but must be sold at a great sac. riï¬ce, and parties wishing reliable informer tion about the climate, soil, products, &c., and tickets at reduced rates to visit the states, andfree transportation to see thelands, it will be to their advantage to communicate with the subscriber as he is well ac usinted with the above states and the most esirable to settle in ; good climate, fertile soil, and advantages 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 America. Send for circular of lands and card. Orders by mail carufully ï¬lled. March 26. 1872. NORTH CAROLINA and VIR- GINIA LANDS. 500 CHEAP IMPROVED FARMS & 200,000 ACRES 0F VALUABLE TIMBER LANDS FOR SALE. BRGWN. GILLESPIB & Go.t ‘ a. Q. EEWARDS‘ PEAS. NW‘GARS, Etc.. E VJHOLESALE GROCERS, H A NI '1 I; ’ i“ ( ) TN Hamilton, A pril 15, 1873 Toronto, July 12, 1873‘ May 14, 1873. 20 $0 OTH SEXES CAN OBTAIN RE- Counter and Platform Scales, 8 fl 0 RS ii-P 0 \V E I: DIRECT IMPORTERS AND ALL KINDS OF MACHINERY. Soul‘s. I‘ies and Bows, Hosiery and Gloves, . _ Small Wares and 'I'nmmlngsfl F I RIGâ€"1’ fl 0 0 I" SA FEE}. 54 Frontâ€"St. East, Toronto. MANUFACTU RERS 0F Southern Land Commissioner, M; 202 North John Street. Hamilton. (‘brseié, Skirts and BusUes. GRAY RENNIE & Co‘ s. 04 CASE, AND AND FOR -017- PORTABLE ALEX. BARRIE,‘ “w, DUNCAN M’FARLANE. d267-6m (115 d15-1y