fauna ï¬lms tag. ,1 Advice to the‘Girls. Begin, say at sixteen, to look in the glam; whenever you pass one, and to make up your mind that you are no as beautiful as you might be. Grow gradually discontented with your complexion, andmake up your, mind that it must and shall be‘ improved. Talk a good deal about your want of charms to your young lady friends, who will be sure to encourage you in your law estimate of them. ,Draw the attention of your maiden aunts, grandmothers, etc., to your complex-l ion. They will soon discover: “that it is your liver.†l. ' ' Begin a course of weeping on your pillow at night. It will improve your eyes and eye-sight. Wear a» dotted veil in the street, and never expose yourselfto sun beams. By these means, and by constantly picking out little black on your face, you will become a monomaniac, and you will be ready for the second course of procedure as follows :â€"â€"â€" _ Being ready, take any-daily newsâ€" paper, and hunt out, buy and use all the magical “ beautiï¬crs" that are ad- vertised in its columns: “Balm of Moss Roses,†“Down of Angels’ Wings,†“Dreams of the Violets,†“Old Aunty Guntcr’s Complexion Wash,†“Indian Skin Transformer, discovered by a venerable squaWWhile' in search of the graves of her foreé fathers,†and all the rest of them. Some will be chalk or whiting; some, innocent starch powder; some, arsenic, bismuth and white lead. Some will make you look like the ghost of a working baker, who had no time to. wash his face. Some will ï¬ll your pores with little blacks; some will poison you; some will hurt your eyesight; some will paralyze your hands. No matter, go ahead; buy them all, plaster them on, and oil or cold-cream yourself at night. If you choose you may rub rcdpaint on your checks at the same time. In a year or so ,will come the third stage, in which you will consume all the uni- versal panaceas on record. Youvwill take Smith’s Pills, Jones’ Bitters, Brown’s Tenics,'Robinson’s Mysteri- ous Human Health Protector, &c., no. You will try allopathy, homeopathy, the watercure, electricity, magnet ism, and all the quack medicines. You began by being a healthy young woman, with a few pimples on your skin, which would have departed of themselves after a while. You are now an invalid, with a parchment complexion and an unhappy disposi- tion, and one day you look in the glass and discover gray hairs on your head. Nature, ï¬nding that you would dose yourself into a pallid ghostliness, tries to do what she can for you by giving you such hair as will point the change less hideously. You feel horriï¬ed ; you fly to the paper once more, and read an advertisement in which Daubs â€"-as an utterly disinterested partyâ€"~- advises you to rejuvinate yourself, if you are prematurely gray, by the-use of his Ambrosia Hair-Dye, “harmless, potent, and perfumed.†You at once go Out- to buythis com- pound, which,, when bought, proves to be a grimy mixture with a very nasty; smell, and so begin upon the hair-dyes, and go on till one day there is an end of all things for you, and out of respect to your memory people call it a visitation of Providence, and not a. visitation of hair-dye, which they would call it if they told the truth. â€"â€"â€"-â€"~)â€"o Q94 Strange Phenomenon. The Fort Scott, .Ka'nsas IMom'tor says a strange and remarkable phe- nomenon was recently observed at' sunrise. :The sky was clear, and the sun ‘rose‘entircly unobscured. ‘ When the disc of the sun was about halfway, above the horizon, the form of a,ser-- pent, apparently perfect in form, was plainly seen encircling it, and was visible for some moments. The editor has the statement from two reliable witnesses, who are Willing t_o make afï¬davit to the above. The same ser- pent has been in in Texas, as will be seen by the following, from theBon- . ham Enterprise; V “A few days ago a Mr. Hardin, rc- siding some live or six miles east of this place, saw something resembling an enormous serpent floating in a cloud thatrwas- passing over his farm. Several parties of. men and boys, at work in the ï¬elds,:‘observed the same thing, and were seriously frightened. It seemed to be as large and as long as a telegraph pole,.,was'of 'a yellow striped color, and seemed to float along Without any effort. They could see it coil itself up, trrn over and thrust forward its huge head, as if striking at something, displaying the manoeu- vres of a genuine snake. The cloud and serpent‘moved in an easterly di- rection, and were seen by persons a few miles this side of Honey Grove. The question is, what is it, and where did it come from ?’,’ - A Rejected Lover’s Revenge. Taking a seatjust behind the happy pair in church, he racked his brains , for means of revenge, and looked like , seventeen Othellos concentrated in one. Finally a ghastly smile crept 'over his face, he raised half up in his seat, and nabbed a large black bug that was crawling on a pillar hard by, = and gently dropped him down be- tween his unconscious rival‘s shirt collar and neck, and then calmly lean- cd back with a Virtuous and christian air of satisfaction. The bug soon made his presence felt, and that other fellow began to twitch and scratch himself against the back of his seat and look uneasy, and cast unhappy glances at the minister and affecting ones at the fair being by his side. The bug evidently grew more impa- tient at his imprisonment, and turned himselfloose, grappling around with a recklessness very'sug‘gestive of big ‘- blac'k spicers or scorpions; and that asthey are unjust toward her who is 1 yellow fever fellow. I but bolting .uprightycastcone wild, startled look at the congregation, cleared the space between him and the door at two bounds. ’ The New Infernal Machine.†We mentioned the other .day that the French Minister of Marine had sent out a circular warning shipâ€"owns ers, captains, and insurance agents» against the new “infernal machine,†intended for the destruction of ves- sels which, for fraudulent purposes it is desired to destroy. But .for the respectful authority on which the warning was given, the alleged invery tion might have been regarded as a hoax; and, indeed, we suggested as much, .It was no‘ hoax, however, but a grim and horrible fact. The Bir- mingham Daily Post has seen one of the villanous contrivances. It is an irregularly-shaped piece of metal, about six inches long, by three broad, and two and a half deep ; and it is so constructed as exactly to resemble a small block of steam coal. Indeed, the specimen weflhavo isevidently modelled from an “actual piece of coal, and it is colored a 'bright black, so skilfully that on casual inspection it would readily pass muster for coal, and so might be put into the coal bunkers of a vessel without exciting the least suspicion. The interior is hollowed so as to admit of the intro- duction of a detonating compound, and a mechanical contrivaneeris arâ€" ranged in the hollow part so as to in» euro explosion at a desired moment. We have also an exact description of the materials employed to. fill the shellâ€"for such it may be calledâ€"but these, for obvious reasons we decline to publish. There is only one,tbing satisfactory in reference to this dia- bolical inventionâ€"sâ€"that it is not of English make. - Nautical Theology. A story is current of a sailor, more disposed to divinity than nautical men in general, who, when in this part, formed regularly one ofgthe conâ€" gregation at the church off-popular minister. It chanced that during one of. the d'i'scourses, 'to which Jack was an attentive listener, the doctor allud- cd several times in scriptural phrase, to “Satan being bound in chains for a thousand years.†The passage struck the attention of the seaman‘ with pc culiar force, and during the week he pondered frequently upon the words, feeling every time an increased satis- faction that an individual towards whom he had never been over partial, was so securely and for such a lengthy term disposed of. On the following Sunday he went to hear the doctor again, but to his great surpriSe, and the upsetting of all his recent comforting notions, during one part of the sermon the preacher asserted that the devil “gocth about like a roarihg lion, seeking whom he may devour.†Jack quitted the church oppressedwith a host of conflicting thoughts and emotions; and unable, after many a lough,vsoliloquial argu- ment, to reconcile‘the’ two statements, he resolved to summon up courage, and wait upon the clergyman in order to have the mystery explained. He did so, and after considerable hum- ming and hawing and hitching of the trowsers, at length spoke, at once, told the doctor that he could" not make the two sermons ï¬t, and asked if his satanic majesty was really bound in the stated, to know the length, ofhis cable. ' > “ O,†was the digniï¬ed reply, “ it extends over,the Whole world.†“My eyes,†rejoined Jack, “does it? thy, the lubber might as well be loose I†‘ .._--..__.°-W\_~ Gne ,of.Many..~' Those favored people who belong to large familiesare to be envied; they only know what the true home clement means._ A large family, is ‘a host in itself. Its members are not dependent for. amusementupon stran- gers. They .are always numerous enough to bc'able to organize their own games, Let there be: plenty ; of. boys and girls, and [there can never be any lack of funâ€"masculine fun and feminine fun. “They quarrel,†it will be said. Of course they do, and herein lies another and great advant- age of a large family against a. small One. Their interests are so many, and from moment. to moment so vari- ous, that they are everlastingly clash- ing. \Vhat' better pre aration could there be", for, life? T ey snub and are snubbed, contradicted, till it gets thoroughly impressed upon the mind of each one, early in existence, that he is. not the only individual in" the world before whom everybody must bow and give way. The domestic circle becomes thus a minature public school, in which all its advantages are acquired. Contrast their give-and- take good-humor with the selï¬sh petulence of the spoiled only child, and the beneï¬t of large families must must be admitted. ‘ ' Man and. Wife. Say what you will, aman will always respect a true and constant wife. He may have great defects, even great vices ; he may have his irritable mo- menta, when he will use words as harsh the helpmate of his life. That is of lit- tle matter. _ If a woman is all she should be, he will respect her in spite of himself, and place full .trust in her ; and, notwithstanding the angry taunts, in the truth of which a passionate man professed to believe at'the moment of utterance, his heart will remain faithful to her, and will be likewise drawn to admire and practice virtue. > $09 4éâ€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" A despatch from New Orleans says great anxiety is felt. regarding the in Galveston and ShreWSport, and that all boats from, the former place are "quarantined at Houston, through trafï¬c is stopped; . 4...... I How to keep even with the world â€"Don’t be odd. p Necessity knows no law,but a good many lawyers. ' 1 A companion ’to-Eparlor croquet;â€" cricketi on the, h earth. unless b ... s. itrbé; a witti-cism. 9 Never indudve in a schism, \Vhen you have reached your bot- tom dollar, let it alone. ' Most vessels carry too much ballast, most-meHItoo little. ' Things Wiserandiothenvise. V I g; ..,~.,. ._ -’A scientiï¬c writer gives it as his opinion, founded‘bn‘certain Biblical facts, that the ‘ark- was smaller than the Great Easterii.â€It 'hdda 1three decks, and ,was diyided into-mumerous comâ€" partments by'ilongitudinal and trans- verse bulkheads, for the safety- and. order of its occupants; It was built of gopher Wood, a species of evergreen timber resembling the pine in length and strength of trunk, and the white cedar in lightness. . Inmodel, it was like, with‘iines stranglitf~ and angles The cleanest of persons don’t ;mipd l handling “ï¬lthy lucro.†, l A‘shoemakér is'proprietor of one of. the Long Branchthot’els. 1' ' What relation is: the door mat?. A step farther. An Irish horse trainer hos just chris- tened one of his stud “The Top 0’ the Morning.†They say it's (of r‘ohrer. The ladies do their hair iso high nowthat they have, it is said, to stand on something togputon their hats. ‘ We do not believe that , f‘ aroseby any‘ other r name would ' smell as wheat.†It issiI-nplyan impossibility. to the A Maine farmer has put up on his land a sign readiIig:â€"â€"“No Gun iN aloud Hear.†A double-nosed pointer has been described as a‘ cross between an ordi- nary -_pointer and a double-barrelcd gun. An Illinois railroad shut down on its passes, and thus prevented an Illinois editor from attending his brother’s fun- eral. ‘ What is the difference betWeen the outer wall of a bridge and two nice young ladies? One is is’a parapet, and the other is a pair of pets. A Cincinnati brewer’s wife papered her trunk with .costly revenue stamps, and the brewer is in jail for the Way hejook on about it. ' , ‘ Vthn Shakspere’s mother wished him to confess a theft, what distin- guished character did she held up beâ€" fore him? -William Tell. ' ~ The meanest man in theworld lives in Chicago. He stole his wife’s false teeth, . and then got a divorce on ac- count of her “physical defects.†In a certain town in this Province they have built a town clock, which takes . so long to "strike nine ‘ that it doesn’t get‘ through in time to commence on ten, and the people are getting things mixed. . In these days of high prices of meat and other articles of daily necessity, folks with increasing families ‘ 'd stationary incomes must be glad than otherwise when t dren cut theirflteeth late. Asparagus is not a bad ' and an English journal say a speciï¬c for rheumatic It is -worfh while tr w good as a medicine, ' food. Miss Dorcas Knowle seven ty-one years,hung h i den, M e. Disappointment 'i l 'lieved to have been the moti Archibald Cameron, of L .: leverages .Qounty, died- and W . the 3rd inst, between his own i and the shere. ‘ Ven some mans slaps me on der shoul der, und says, “ I vas glad to hear you vas so vel,†und den sticks behind my back his lingers to his nose, I hef my' opinion of dat veller; An editor says'tha-tthe only reason he‘knows of why his house was not‘ blown away the other day, Iduring a severe gale, was because there was a heavy mortgage on it. ' YVe learn from the Gazelle de Alle- magne du JVord that out of twenty-ï¬ve: cases of cholera. reported within a short space, at Berlin, no less 1 than twenty- three terminated fatally. ‘ Who could havebeen'thewretch ?' I-Iear him: “ The ayerage Massachu- setts girls don’t want any better facili- ties for sliding down hill than a cod- g " througn‘m‘rg‘ms. †A Detroit paper, referring to the practice of discharging lady clerks from public oflices when, they. get married, asks: “ How can a woman he expected to support a husband if' she is discharged as soon as she gets one ?" ,, . There was anunusually large meet- ing in favor of the release of the Fenian prisoners at Clontarf, a suburb of Dublin famous for a celebrated gathering under Dan O’Connell dur- ing repeal times in Ireland. The time will: come when news- papers will be run on scientific prin- ciples. We Will then ï¬nd the adver- tising partsiof a newspaper quite as interesting (at least) as the editorials, and the best,livolicst and most imaâ€" ginative of our writers will be mem- ployed to make the business notices. A professor of physiology, in explainâ€" ing to a class of female students the theory according to which the body is renewed every seven years, said, “ Thus, Miss 13., in seven years you will in reality, be no longer, Miss Bf“ .“I real- ly hope I shan’t,†demurely responded the young lady, casting down her eyes. A Sunday-school scholar, only six yeaI-s’old, was asked by" his teacher, “ Why they took Stephen outside of the city to stone him to death 1†Thelittle fellow was silent for a moment, as though absorbed with the problem, when, brightening up suddenly, he .re- plied: “ So they could get a better crack at him.†Journalism is indeed looking up in Japan. The Tycoon. has started a daily paper, and as he announces that he will behead every ablelbodied “J ap†who does not subscribe at once, he hopes to work up quite a list of sub- scribers, and make his paper “pay from thefstag-t.“ Native merchants Whodo not 5 advertise havegtheir pro- perty conï¬scated: ‘ ujlifi.» ‘; "lenses to squares, but the bottom and top were elliptical in outline, presenting convex- ity to the earth and sky. After giving the dimensions and gtho smodel of con- struction" of ’ "the? {several parts, this authority tells us, as if he were equally certain on this point, ‘that the ark “ is, now in a good state of preservation, but lying under an eternal mantle of snow, hundreds of feet deep, at an altitude of seventeen thOusand ï¬Ve’hun'dred feet above the level of- the sea. Ever since. the .flood dried up, the climate of 'Ar- menia has been colder, and snow always covers‘ the ‘ top of Ararat, rendered it impossible for any of Noah’s descend- ants to go up and ï¬nd the ark.†__ï¬. ‘Which ? . . The follow-ing is strictly true :1 A ped at one of the Chicago hotels with her little‘sou; .Thc boy was not per- fectly satisfied w" .1 matta'ars and things at‘the dinner tame and expressed himâ€" self frequently t‘o that effect. The moâ€"q ther ï¬nally roseand remarked inan undertone to the youthful offender, “ Come with me up stairs and I will at- tend, to your case.†The lad underâ€" stood at once what “attending to his case †meant, but there Was an important matter of detail which he was painfully anxious to have more fully explained so pulling backward on the hand of his mother he blubbered out in a voice loud enough to be heard over most [of the well-filled diningâ€"room : “ Say, mother, are you going to take your hand or your slipper l†i The enthusiasm with which this brief. address. was received was un- bounded. Poor little fellow, how often have we Wanted to know the same thing ourselves! \Vith a very brief season of waiting we generally found out. who undoubtedly didâ€"St. Cloud (Minn) Journal. ’ . A} Blunder. Another fatal blunder by a drug clerk is reported. A‘man who had a discussion about family matters with his wife, and came out second best, threatened to commit suicide, and went out to a drug store and asked for twen- ty-ï¬ve cents worth of strychnine. The ignorantdrug clerk, instead of putting up lpoisoh, gave him’some’ harmless drug in mistake, blunderingly labelled it “ stryohninefl The mangtgok it home, gulped it'down in the presence of his wife, and theni‘thre‘v. hims‘ on the . gliiswvife, I ~tead of drunnihg for up lysician and aï¬stomach ‘ pump, waitednntil she thought he was _ dead, and then commenced to rifle his pockets for his loose change. He was on his feet in an instant, and instead of dying he made it very lively for his bet- ter-half for about ten minutes ; and then shoot the drug clerk ,- and his wife said cord and such things dwell in that house, all on account of a. blundering drug clerk. . ' ‘ Died Suddenly of, Heart Disease. ‘HowcemmOn ‘is ' the announcement. Thousands are suddenly swept into eter- nity by this fatal malady, .This dis- ease generally has its origin in impure blood,~fllled with irritating, poisonous materials, which, circulating thrOugh' the heart, irritates its delicate tissues._ all that a great carrier oeuld be, chest- lad. comind to this ate recentl sto - i I x . y 1’ St y p' ' ,iniits -virmes,‘nevcc equalled by any 'othor'smedicine. he threatened to get a shot gun and: if he didn’t she would. And now dis-l FA 0R SALE, NE AND 7 Port Dover, 611 the Lake Shore, 163 Acres. Good Brick House ;‘ ‘two' Frame Houses and Bank Barn. 18 Acres of choice grafted Apples (bearing) Apply to Box .15, Port Dover. .» July 29, 1873. d18 ~ DAVE) MGLELLAN (it 00.. Manufacturers, Importers and Wholesale Dealers in GENIS’ FURNISHINGS, TAIL-ORS’ TRIMMINGS, . ' HOOP SKIRTS & BUSTLIEs. I iHALm MILES FROM HAIR BRAIDS, SWITCHES, EDGINGS, LACES, ‘ Laoasa’eehre, i ~ ‘ ~ "'3A-C‘KCOMBS; 53 [are , , E‘A mm x“. rtv are; *o‘aw‘r. Please call and examine our stock. Letter orders promptly and carefully ï¬lled. ‘ nous, For Diseases the Throal‘qnd Lungs, such as ric-‘oughs,_00ldc, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis, ‘ i : "'“Astlllï¬ld‘and' Consumption; 'gi THE few compositions, which have won the conï¬- dence or mankind and beâ€" c o m e household words, among not only one but I atniaiiy nations, must have extraordinary virtues. Perâ€" .haps no one ever secured so wide a reputation, or .maintained it so long, as :Avnn‘s CHERRY PECTORAL. It has been known to the ublic about» forty years, I a long continued series '3 Il " have wonforjtabonfldeu‘ce It still makes the most effectual cures of COUGHS, Cows, CoxsuurTION, that can be made by medical skill. Indeed the Cnnnav PscronAL has really robbed these dangerous diseases of their terrors, to a great exr tent. and given a. feeling of immunity from their fatal effects, that is well founded, if the remedy be taken in season. Every family should have it in their closet for the ready and prompt relief of its members. Sickness, ‘ suffering, and even life is saved by this timely protec» tion. The prudent should not neglect it, and the wise will not. Keep it by you for the pmteotion it aflords by its timely use in sudden attacks. , mummy 13v . of marvelousyures, that' cgar Bitters are a purely Vegetable preparation. made chiefly from the na- tixie herbs found on the lower ranges of the Sierra Nevada mountains of Califorâ€" nia, the medicinal properties of which are extracted therefrom without. the use of Alcohol. The question is almost daily asked. “What is the cause of the unparalleled success of VINEGAR BIT- Tnnsl†Our answer is, that they remove the cause of disease, and the patient rc- covers his health. They are the great blood purifier and a lifeâ€"giving principle, a perfect licuovator and InVIgorator of the system. Never before in the history of the world has a medicine been compounded possessing the remarkable . qualities of \(INIaoxr. BIII‘Tuus in healing the sick of every disease Inanis heir to. They are a gentlel’urga’tivc .as well as a .TODIO, relieving Congestion or Inflammation of the Liver and Visceral Organs in Bilious Diseases The repcrties of DR. WALKER’S VINEGAR lT’l‘ERS are Apericnt, Diaghoretie, Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, 1u1‘et1c, Sedative, Counter-Irritant Sudoriï¬c, Altera- tive. and Anti-Bilious. R. H. McDONALD a; (30., Druggists and Gen. Agts., San Francisco, California, and cor. of Washin n and Charlton Sta, N. Y. Sold by all ruggists and Dealers. BasWN. GILLnerE e (lo. Dr. J. c. Ayersft (30., Lowell, Mass. PRACTICAL AND ANALYTICAL CHEMISTS. ch Lyman, , . V ' General Agents. 1 1;? Sold by all Druggists and Dealers in Medicine. April 15, 1873. †'- ‘ ' Northrup~ I TEE ,“ WEBSTER†‘SEWESï¬ MACEHNE, The General Rewrite Throughout the’Dominion. ' A Canadian Invention, and Unprecedented . Success Attending it Everywhere. __L_._ It is Strong and Durable, ansynnd Light to “fork, Has no Cogs or Cams, And will do Every Kind of Work Light or Ifeavy. ’ ‘he‘ most complete set†of" {Attachments given with every Machine. See THE WEBSTER before buying any other. MANIiFACTUnnD BY THE Canada Sewing Machine Go’y, HAMILTON, ONT. June 13, 1837. d11-3m ‘Ti‘IE'Wéib 'ésT'A'stsHéb Buds laundry £2..th licks. Thins. wright: " as? as. f3 q 'Emmumcrunnas ‘ or STEAMâ€; ENCINESs BOILERS. AND ALL KINDs or MACHINERY} ' ' THOMAS WILSON, WALTER. BASTABLE, - July 12,, 1873. AMERICAN HOTEL I Klan avatar WEST . ALEX. BARBIE, DUNCAN M’rARLANE. , dlb Though the irritation may at ï¬rst be slight, producing a little palpitation or case becomesï¬-rmly seated, and inflam- -mation,.or, hypertrophy, or thickening of the lining membrane, or of-tlie valves, is .pmduced. “aliewaviserta-sgiveearly attention tea case‘of thiskind. Un- natural. tlifebbi’ifgién pairilin the region of the heart should admonish one that all is not right, and if you would pre- ‘help it .to beat rightly by theme of such a remedy as shall remove the cause of'the trouble. ’ ‘ ‘ an...» e...â€" WINNING GOLDEN, OpIN;oys.~Pei‘- the enormous and widely increasing sale of his CALIFORNIA VINEGAR BIT- TERS attests. We never look into One of our exchanges, but thereis a pane- face. ,,Our readers will saythat .there must be a reason for all this praise. Theyare right." The efï¬cacy of this celebrated medicine is; established (by evidence which it is impossible -‘to doubt. Among the thousands lwho have borne testimony to its excel- lence', there is not one- dissentient voice. In very many‘phases of inor- ganic diseases it seems to be unfailing. All diseases arising from. a .viti‘ated state of the blood are surely eradi- cated by it. It isan effectual remedy for pulmonary complaints, bilious, re- mittent and intermittent fevers, rheu- Inatism and dyspepsia. It purges the body of. all unhealthy humors, gives tone to the system, and where the vital powers are ,enfeebled, restores their functionséto vigorous and heal- thy aetion. All this it does the more effectually because: its operation is not interfered with by the presence of alcohol. THE VINEGAR BITTERS is perfectly free'from any 'such hurtful ingredient. We have always be lieved that plants contain the true remedies for diseases, and ALL the re- medies necessary. Dr.‘Walker is on the line‘of‘ifeal “progressiand we hope that“ herwtu not re§t~0n-5his-gpres'cnt discoveries. * ‘ I a irregular action, yet by and byfhe dis- Nimith serve it‘ from furtherdtsease, y0u must .3. H gyric ofthe Bitters staring us in the .. 270] Err-W "-IBMAE‘LMAN .l’ROPRIETOR. 1 STAGE ‘. OFFICE 'ZliAMfLTON, ONT, r -‘ FILES}? frail) Fluid-TIES. AREEN a cost Counter and Platform Scales, Tile C/Lcapeslï¬rslâ€"class Scale in Canada. , A Good Assortment in Stock. nFSenC ha s no man living ha‘sf’W‘on, more for Price LiStS-_ go den opinions than Dr. Walker, as E. H. 54 Front-St. East, Toronto. May 14, 1873. d267-6m ' -I.-<(,'., .23 1. THE CELEERATED lilTLE iiihiilfh! The light-running and far-famed VV A. N Al I These Machines present a. record 0f great success. Two *Gold Medals hwarded in Moscow, Russia, and Lima, Peru. BET Worked by hand or foot on Patent Stand. For Agents’ terms a ly to ~ .. .. JILLM.‘ ANZER & 00., Hamilton, Ont. Newcastle, d3 ‘ I. romeo s ‘ WHOLESALE GROCERS, ‘ it is. M II... "Ill 23‘ DIRECT. IMPORTEBS 4) F ~ TEAS, seems... Tim. 1 NORTH CARGLINA 5...: VIR- GINIA LANDS. 500 CHEAP IMPROVED mums II: 200,000 ACRES ' or VALUABLE TIMBER LAan FOR SALE. H Persons, desirous of, visiting theabove 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 of speculators, but must be sold at a great sac- rifice, and parties wishing reliable informa- tion about the climate, soil, precincts, &c., and tickets at reduced rates to visit the I states, andfree transportation to see thelands, it will be to their advantage to communicate with the subscriber as he is well ac uainted 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. S. 0. CASE, Southern Land Commissioner, 202 North John Street, Hamilton. f. S. Shiftâ€? d Bil. HAMILToa: ol'T, MANUranTnnnns (IF STAT l ONf E" AND a remnant erases insinuate-:3 B SEES ’ AND "'0 saga sa- r 13% as >3 V...â€" Havev thefollowingEngines all ready for delivery: "8 H o I: sis-‘5‘ c: so It. 12 15 56" 56 66 66 i"; (is; 13 *-: 6‘ i‘ ' 6s 6s 30 Hamilton, April 1:, 1373. g; ’ [pangs 'FOR "SALE. OR SALE, at a bargain. a second baud No. 1 Gordon Franklin Press. Apply at No. 11 King Street West. Hamilton, Aug. 30, 1873. P I A N OS ! THE " MATHIï¬EK†In endorsed by the most noted artists of the day as the most musical and a , durable Piano made. and in their dif- ferent styles, from the little “Hou- uINo, BIRD" to the “Onenusrnh†square grands, are suited to the Bouâ€" doir, Parlour, or Concert Hall. THE FISCHER" 1s a most desirable Parlor Instrument. There are about 14,000 of them in use, giving eminent satisfaction, and we c~u‘ er them, in all conï¬dence as better value than any other in the market. The Messrs. Fischer have over thirty years’ successful manufacture of this of this Piano to refer to a guarantee of its good qualities. No other Piano has gained the same favor in so short a. time in Canada as the Fischer since its introduction by us. o PRINCE VORGANS. 52,000 new in use; no other reed 1n- strument ever obtained the same popuâ€" larity. We are sole Agents for the above instruments, and are in a. position to supply Local Agents in every part of . the Dominion at manufacturers' lowest wholesale prices. All instruments warranted ï¬ve years. Wholesale and‘fletail. WAgents‘wauted in every Town and County. NORRIS & SOPER, ADmAIDE STREET, TORONTO. September 2, 1873. (123 l r I" 5‘; ‘,'i .1; Minn; Y IIIEEEPVIPERLEY LINE. Composed of the following ï¬rst-class Iron Steamships : MEDVVAY, - THAMES, DELTA, SEVERN, NYANZA, AMBASSADOR. The steamers of this Line are intended to sail during the Season of Navigation of 1873, from LONDON for QUEBEC and MONTREAL, as follows: SCOTLAND, (Calling at Plymouth outward for Pas- sengers.) DELTA ................... Saturday, 6th Sept. NYANZA... ...VVednesday, 17th " THAMES......... .. Saturday, 27th “ MKDWAY................\Vednesda.y, 8th Oct. And every alternate Wednesday and Satur- ' day thereafter. And from QUEBEC for LONDON as fol- lows : MEDWAY ................. Tuesday, 2nd Sept. SEVERN . . . . . . . . . . .. . . Thursday, 18th ‘ ‘ SCOTLAND... .... ....Tuesday, 23rd “ DELTA .. .. .tThursday, 9th Oct. NYANZA ......... .. Tuesday, 21512 ‘ ‘ THAMES .................. Thursday, 30th “ And every alternate Tuesday and Thursday thereafter. RATES OF PASSAGE QUEBEC To LONDON : Cabin.l................ .............,.$60 00 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 on theCon- tinent and in London for all parts of Canada, and in the United States to Detroit, Mil- waukee, Chicago and other points in the West. For Freight or Passage, apply to TEM- PERLEY, CARTER & DRAKE, 21 Billeter Street, London; ROSS & 00., Quebec, or to DAVID SHAW, Montreal. April 10, 1873. (1267 By Royal Letters Patent corï¬Nn’s till. D WEI Stiff. Prod noes no nausea. Children are form offs. Sold Everywhere, in bottles at 25 cents each WILSON’S OASCI‘QR 0.11... secession. A. Proper Substitute for Castor Oil I CAUTION 1 \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. Ask for Wilson’s Castor Oil: assess sawmc MACHINE rno'NT'.‘ 308 feet, BRIDGEPORT, CONNEI_,TICUT,'0'. s. :0: {JEEIEBELITEEB 775.0190 or Tran:er hiAEfIJFACTORIES FRONT 526 Ic-el I‘Wox-ld.®3 uranium as soil In. all Ports of the World. An Increase of Sales Unprecedented. 0 r ins LARGE NUMBER or CHEAP AND POORLY MADE SEWING MACHINES THAT HAVE B‘EE palmed on‘the‘p’ublic of Canada for the past number of years, under the coloring of number of First Prlzt taken, or other high sounding 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 Nelselcss Wheeler & Wilson, and be safe. ï¬lllustrated Catalogue, giving particulars, sent post free to any address. They last a lifetime. so a. waivers, sensnaL'AeeaT 1*» ‘ 85‘ King'St._West, Haï¬iiltoï¬, May:6,21872. Toronto ; 54 JamcskSt. Hamilton ; 37.'Spark_ St. Ottawa.“ d6 '5“