w.‘ m. 1 weak eyes, and those who don’t want to have them, should avoid pianoâ€"prac- tice 4nd dear-icons . 'by artiï¬cial .«light, especially at early morning. Those whose eyes are in any degree sensitive, will accomplish more in the week or month to study only by daylight, and during the evening avoid gas and give themselves up to plain knitting and cheerful conversation; for deep study, close thought even, if the eye is not used, tends to determine the blood to the head, and makes the eye worse if it be inflamed or painful. Embroidery, or‘evbn any kind of worsted work, is bad, as bright colors tax sensitive eyes very seriously. Reading from a moving page is also trying to the eyes. Many persons who have travelled much, tell me they have permanently impaired their sight by reading on the cars. Young ladies who go out to walk with a book cheat them- selves in two ways. The exercise they get is not good for anything, and the moving page and the brighter light than within: doors, injures the eyes. To make bodily exercise proï¬table the brain must rest from books, and send its nervousand circulatory force into the muscular system. How to Bring Up a. Child. Begin with considering Him" th’é'best.’ and brightest, and most beautiful child upon the face of the earth I Look upon . him as the eighth wonder of the world I Tell everybody so. Keep telling them so until he is big enough to hear and understand, for he should not be suf- fered to grow up in ignorance of his own importance. Stuff him with sugar-plums when he cries. It will teach him to cry more, that he may get more sugar-plums. It will give him a suggestive lesson in causes and results. He ought to cry. Healthy children always cry, and it is healthy to listen to them. Crying dcâ€" velopes the lungsâ€"wards off early con- sumption. Always let him have his own way. If you do not, it will break his spirit, and what is a good boy for whose spirit has been broken? Solomon’s head was not level when he said : “ Spare the rod and spoil the child.†Probably his brain was softenâ€" ing. Never command him to do anyâ€" thing. Ask him to do it if he pleases, but if he doesn't please, never oblige him to. It mightrouse his temper, and give him an attack of colic or in- digestion. ‘ Death in'the 011p. “ He that withholdeth the corn ,the people shall curse him.†Shouldthis scripture ï¬nd-a sudden fulï¬lment in the world, what a shower of curses would be rained down upon the brew- ers and distillers of the lands. What a terrible fact to contemplate, that $50,000,000 worth of breadstuffs is annually withholden from the peo- ple Of this countryâ€"~enoug'h to feed all the pauper-s of the land, and drive want from every home,-â€"--and made up into poison to ï¬ll the land with pauperism,, crime, wretchedness and woe, actually murdering its 100,000 victims annually. God" stored this food in nature’s great store-house to feed his children, and bring jOy and gladness to the wife and children, and keep at a safe distance the ravenous wolf of hunger, but the harpies have plundered the storehouse of this di- vine blessing, aud manufactured it into the blackestncurse that 'r‘ncn or devils ever invented for the ruin of men. ' ' ' Who are more richly deserVing of the curses of the people than the manufacturers: and vendors of alco- helic drinks? v The nutritious proper- ties of the best Bavarian beer are so small that it will take TEN-gallons to contain as much as a 'ï¬ve-‘poun'dfioaf of bread; and it will take 1,200 lbs. of barley to make 1730‘ gallons of beer; here we see the Wicked waste of bread. In 1869, England censumed 63,000,- 000 bushels of grain in her breweries and distilleries, and had 1,500,000 paupers, four-ï¬fths of them made so by the poisons made from this grain. In 1846-7, when the famine raged in Ireland, and 500,000‘ people starved to death, there was then stored in her breweries and disti‘lleries grain enâ€" ough to have-fed them- all arid saved their lives. ' How long shall this murderous business go on ? The Christian church is largely responsible for the rum murders that fill all our public jourâ€" nals, and send red handed ruin through the land. Is this a Christian land that allows one hundred thousand human lives to be taken annually by the drink demon, and does not say to the law-makers, Stop this business? If he should become disobedient and impudent, as perhaps he may,â€"children’ are liable toâ€"consult a doctor at once. If you fee this gentleman well, he will tell you that the child has “ too much brain ; large mental activity 3 a mind of unusual precocity,†etc, etc, all of which will be pleasant for you to hear, since it will give you the idea that you have brought a genius into the world. He will tell you that the child musn’t be crossed. You must be careful how you deny him what he wants. Must not let him get angry. Let him have his Way. ,. After he gets Older, he will be likely to learn the manly science of profanity and the gentlemanly accomplishments of drinking and gambling. \Vell, youthful spirits must be run OH' in some wayâ€"â€"must have some out- let. Say, as thousands have said before you, that you would rather have two knaves , than one fool in the family. That is a very nice Way of putting it, Hand consoling too. Makes much of his bright sayings. Repeat them to your friends, if they don’t see wit in them, it is because they haven’t brains enough to see wit in anything. ' Let him begin young to order the ser- vant, so as “ to get his hand in.†Give him all the money he wants to spend. Let him go out evenings. Don’t tie him to his mother’s apron-strings and make a. milk-sop of him. If he calls you “governor,†and his mother “ the old gal,†don’t roprove him. It is only young Canada crop- ping out, and isn’t Canada “ the land of the free and the home of the brave '1" Get him a revolver by the time he is ten, so that he may be ready for emer- gencies-â€"-a watch, and a revolver, by all means. At eighteen he will need a fast horse and a betting-book. Persevcre in this course, and by the time he is twenty-ï¬ve the world will have heard from him at the end of a rope, or in Parliamentâ€"nobody can foresee which. ' In this Dominion who can predict results? {are 0f the Eyes' day to every man nominated for Ofï¬ce, “Stop this business or be de- feated,†it would very soon be placed in the condemned catalogue of other crimes. Until they say this, the families of 100,000 drunkards will hold them guilty of their brothers blood. We send theGospcl to the Trouble with the eyes is becoming very common amomr our pupils in ad- vanced classes. The normal eye is capable of an almost infinite variety of uses. It can see near and far with equal facility, but like any other organ if used almost exclusively in,one direc tion, it loses its range of ability. Hence, if kept too constantly on the printed page, the range of vision is im- paired, and it may become near-sighted by much reading of ï¬ne print. We have long known that the eye is often injured by looking at the sun, in case of an eclipse, without the aid of smoked glass, the perceptive power be- ing impaired by excess of light and. heat. It is alSo Often, injured by look- ing at small objects with too little light, as, for instance, reading ï¬ne print by moonlight. But we are yet to fully realize how often the eyes are in- jured by strong gas-light. It is often too intense, and has a flicker which is particularly trying without a shade.â€" Those accustomed to gas or kerosene, find it difï¬cult to see by candles or any light less brilliant. But those who have habitually used candles, can not only see well with less light, but their eyes last longer without the aid of glasses than those who have rejoiced in the flood of light which the gas-burner emits. When the optic nerve has become superâ€"sensitive to light, a good candle is a great relief. Of course, it will not make the room bright as gas or kero- sene, but will furnish light enough for reading. and the soft light will be much less trying to the eye. Twilight is Avery grateful to the eye if We rest in it, but very trying if we read or sew in the transition stage from day to night, or night to day. The use of artiï¬cial light at early morning is very bad for the eyes, much more so than at evening. To go from sound sleep and deep darkness into the light of gas, especially for study or practice, is very injurious. \Vithin a few weeks several young ladies have consulted me in regard to their eyes, where they have been seri- ously and permanently injured by piano-practice at early morning in the gas-light. As the music cannot be changed to suit the 'exact focus Of the eye, it is the more likely to become in- jured in this way, than in most other ways. allow this heathen Moloch to destroy its millions in our own land. Statis- tics recently taken in several towns in Connecticut, show that one-third of the men who die, die of ,«intempen ance. The whole church ought to arouse itself to this great work.â€" Morning Star. How to Lead a Cow. Every woman will tell you that a man can be led easier by putting an his hair, but we never knew till recentâ€" ly that the reason you can’t lead a cow behind a wagon is because she‘objects to having her horns pulled. The other day a red-shirted emigrant passed through here on :his way to Carroll County. His family and household possessions were in a covered wagon, to the hind end of which was fastened a cow. Behind her with a sharp .stick walked the emigrant, giving her a smart welt occasionally when she hung, back. Every now and then she 'would brace herself and stop the team, and then in unclerical language he would beseech her to go on, marking each forcible period with a prod of the sharp stick. The poor cow rolled her eyes and rolled her tongue. 'The poor emigrant, too, was dusty and tired, but his voice and- stick didn’t fail him. She had sudden- ly halted the procession in front of the post ofï¬ce, and was shaking her head in reply to his earnest entreaties, when a man called out to Red Shirt that he did not “ understand cows worth a cent.†’ ' “ \Vcll, what are you going to do about it ‘l†asked Red Shirt. ’ “Why, just take that rope Ofl‘ her horns, and put it around her neck, and she’ll lead as quiet as a‘lamb. If she don’t, I’ll follow her a niile"myself.†The rope was changed to her neck and the team started. She gave a look of surprise and walked along. “Well, that beats all l†said Red Shirt, and without a word of thanks he mounted his wagon. ~The procession moved slowly on toward Carroll County, and the cow followed with countenance as placid as if she were walking home at milking timeâ€"Ame: (Iowa) Intelli- gamer. iano The study of any foreign language is much more trying to the eye than the reading of one’s own. The words lack' the familiar look, and hence they are not so easily recognized. The searchâ€" 1 ing for words in the dictionary is par- ticularly hard for the eye, and if the alphabet be dissimilar to ours it‘is still more trying. Hence, those who have o recently, to a child only tWO years old, at Huntertown, Pa, “to keep him quiet, caused his death in‘la few hours. ' Let the Christian church say to-' heathen of foreign countries, and arm around his neck‘than by pulling" this season. A dose of morphine administered, * Love Victorious rat‘s.â€pr dried " Thomas-"lire? Leddy has been waiting upon a girl whose parents live on Tenth street. The girl’s parents have endeavored to prevent the match, and the lovers ar« ranged to slip quietly off to a clergyman yesterdaygforenoon and get married. Ten O’clock was the hour set, and Thomas was seen hanging around the corner of Michigan avenue and Tenth street, having a ï¬ve-dollar bill for the preacher and a hardslookingï¬st for the man who should Cross his path; The girl made-an excuse to ‘go out and do' some shopping, but as she left the; house her mother became suspicious and called in the father, who was hoeing cabbages. They tracked the damsel down to the avenue and saw her join Thomas, when they rushed after her. The lovers’ran over behind ‘Woodbridg'e Grove, and being overtaken there,McLeddy Stopped and put a crape band under his father- inâ€"law’s eyes, while the girl pulled her mother’s hair and used her sharp nails. It was rather more than this old couple could stand, and while they were pro- miscuously scattered around on the grass, Thomas and his fair one boarded a street-car andmade their escape and were probably legally and, lawfully married before high twelve. Several neighbors saw the affair, but they" were like the woman. whose husband was tackled by a bearsâ€"Detroit Free Press; 7 . Early Marriages. All things considered, we believe the world would be happier if early‘ marriages were more frequent. \thn men marry young, they open life with glowing hopes and earnest ambitions. Idleness and frivolity fall away from them. Responsibility stimulates 131.c- ulty, and makes industry necessary. Many'a man has been saved by mar: riage from dissipation and a wasted life; a young man with ayoung bride will soon show the stuff he is made of ; virtues crop out of soil that was, even thought vicious before; all that is manly, aspiring, hopeful, aeariiest, exalted, honest, comes to the surface. If there. is health on both sidesâ€"and it is onlymarriages where the physi- cal dcvelopment 155 good and the health sound that we are advocating â€"-it makes little diï¬â€˜erenCe what the worldly goods are with which the . couple are endowed; if the man is sound in health and of industrious disâ€" position, he is almost certain "to make his way; while a young woman with ,an honest, industrious, energetic, affec- tionate husband, has, take "all the chances of Life, about-aS'reaSOnable certainty _of_ a prosperous future as any human being whatever. The man, might die andlcave her -with children, life insurance is a ‘guard against want if this occurs; against allother chances she has the best card in tho worldâ€"the devotion of an honâ€" est, strongâ€"handed husband. Those who marry rich may, and often do, become poor; those who marry under the conditions we have described are almost certain to obtain competency and assured comfort. . ' Carving a Turkey. There is nothing, says Max Adeler, a. young unmarried man likes better than to go to a dinner at the house of a friend and to be asked to carve the turkey. He never carved a turkey in his life,'and with an old"'maid on one side of him, watching him cloSely, and on the other side a fair girl for whom he has a tenderness, he feels embar- rassed when he begins. the knife down toward one of the thigh joints. He can’t ï¬nd the joint, and he plunges the knife around in search of it until he makes mince-meat out of one whole quarter of the fowl. Then he sharpens his knife, and tackles it again. hits the joint suddenly, and the leg flies into the maiden lady’s lap, while her dress-front is covered with a shower of stufï¬ng. Then he goes for the other leg, and when the young lady tells him he looks warm, the weather seems to him suddenly to become 400 degrees warmer. This leg he ï¬nally pulls loose with his ï¬ngers. He lays it on the edge of the plate, and while he is hack- ing at the wing he gradually pushes the leg Over on: the clean tableâ€"’cl‘oth,~ and when he picks it up it slips from his hand into‘the gravyâ€"dish, and splashes the gravy around for six square-yards Just as he has made up his mind that the turkey has no joints to its wings, the host asks him if he thinks the In- dians can really be civilized. The girl next to him laughs, and he says he will explain his views upon the subject after dinner. Then he sops his brow with his handkerchief and presses the tur- key so hard with his fork that it slides Off the dish and upsets a goblet of wa- ter on the girl next to him. Nearly frantic, he gouges away again at the wings, gets them off in a mutilated con- dition, and digs into the breast. Beâ€" fore he can cut any Ofl‘, the host asks him why he don’t help out the turkey. Bewildered, he puts both legs on a plate and hands them to the maiden lady, and then helps the young girl to a plate- ful of stufï¬ng, and while taking her plate in return knocks over thergravy- dish. Then he sits down 'with the calmness of despair and fans himself with a napkin, while the servant girl clears up 'and' takes the turkey to the other end of the table. He doesn’tdis- cuss the Indian question that day. He goes home right after dinner and spends the night trying to decide whether to commit suicide or' to take lessons in carving. WOW Useful veils of grenadine, in square meshes, made of sewing silk, are new They are far more sub- stantial than the ordinary gauze gre- .‘nadines. The Mississippi river is now called “ the steamboat graveyard†by, eoplo who'think it sweeter to be mas ed on a railroad than 'to be blown up on a steamer. , First lesson in kissingâ€"The gentleâ€" man should be a little the tallest. He should have a clean face, a kind eye, and a mOuth full of expression in- stead of tobacco. w 123...... First he pushes At last, while making a terrible dig, he , couldn’t bar his way to Truth. \Ve News Items. ‘Ward Beecher drives-a four- in~hand. New York has fourteen street beg- gars who pretend to be blind, but who see as well as other folks. - A Rock Island artist a prayer for. deliverance “from my firiénds and most intimate wenemies.†A Cleveland boy crawled under a lounge to avoid a thrashing, went to sleep, and 200 persons searched four hours to’ï¬nd him. _ †A Philadelphia servant left in charge of the house fora week cleared the house of $7,000 worth'of‘ furni- ture and sold it for $650. ' ' ‘ Upwards of 8,000,000 copies of the penny-edition of “Pilgrim’s Progress†. are said to have been sold by, the English Book Society. ' A Cincinnati girl was married three times in one day to the same :man, having a methodist, Baptist and Uni- versalist clergyman. During the recent gale at Cape Brenton, a church was lifted to the height of thirty feet. It went, appro- priately, toward the skies. An Akron woman ran three miles after a moving passenger-train, and then became obstinate and sat down on“ the track and made all trains stop; The Boston Globe has, it is said, sunk $80,000 since it was started, and is still far from being a ï¬nancial sucâ€" cess.- There are rumors that its Stock- holders are becoming tired, of the effort to establish another paper in Bostom - Gen. McClellan is general manager ofa company just established in New York, which is called the United Roll- ing Stock Company, and might’be de- nominated a railway livery establish- ment. It builds and buys, and keeps ready to loan such rolling stock as railivay companies may need, such as locomotives, passenger cars, baggage cars, freight cars, coal cars, _&c. There is at least one juror in the Tichborne case Whowill beimpartial. He has received two among many let- ters, one of which declares he will be shot through the heart, should he not vote in favor» of the claimant. The other assures him of‘ithe same punish- ment should he decide the other way. He is the most careful listener to the pleadings, and is determined to be right and a martyr to llio conscience. The advocates Of women’s rights will be gratiï¬ed to learn that the Government Of Japan is disposed to accord increased consideration to the sex. An order has been issued that all women may stamp important deeds and writings with their own personal stamp, and the Department of Reli- gion-has published a notiï¬cation that six women, whose names are given, have been appointed preachers; and that attention must be paid them, as they are rich in knowledge. The ages of these ladies are alsopublished. They range from ï¬fteen to ï¬fty-seven years. The Boston Traveller thinks it somewhat remarkable that the “tem- poraryinsanity" so much spoken of ' ï¬fthcse days, never incites its subâ€" jects to'do benevolent deeds, but al- ways works toward crimc. “Several persons,†it says, “who are extremely woll-to-do, have recently committed the highest criminal offenses; it has been proved that at the moment they Were insane; it has also been proved that some of them at previous periods of their existence had exhibited signs of insanity, these being so noticeable 'in some cases as to render conï¬ne- ment necessary; and yet no one of these persons was ever accused of having done a benevolent deed while temporarily insane. It is somewhat strange that the effects of this tempo- rary insanity should always assume the form of crime." The Lebanon (Indiana; Herald has this neat paragraph : ‘- We gently, and, as it were, unconsciouily, pushed a. paper weight toward the end Of the table where she sat. Directly it at- tracted her attention. Sin} looked at it, took it up, looked nine earnest, and then laying it dowu, he calmly rose, gathered her am p‘c rts about her, and straightway to 1k her leave. not even saying good-luv. Certainly nothing was further fr I1: our inten- tion than to give offcn: in w' o merely wished to attract her :.1 .-..-.ion to the paper weight as a Wow: .1. art. We regard it as a ï¬ne ‘w-n-n .f art, and value it solely for that reasonâ€"but the effect it has on some visitors is remarkable and inexplicable. It is a small slab of crystal, through which may be seen a sketch representing a skeleton, surrounded by this legend : ‘This unfortunate editor was talked to’ death.’ †AN ACT or J USTIOE.â€"- Doubting Castle was a sad stumbling block in the path Of' Bunyan’s Christian, though it can sympathize with the Pilgrim, for Doubt always besets us when we are asked to believe anything particularly extraordinary. Consequently, when we heard, some eighteen months ago, that a physician in California had compound- ed, from the juices and extracts of cer- tain herbs found there, a medicine that, cured almost. every variety of blood dis- ease, we were incredulous. Since then we. have had opportunities of testing the accuracy of the report, and are free to admit that our doubts have vanished. Seeing what we have seen, knowing what we know, it is impossible for us to question the remedial properties of DR. WALKER’s VINEGAR BITTERS. That this famous vegetable Tonic, Alterative, and Antiseptic is a speciï¬c for Dyspep- sia, Liver Complaint, Chronic Constipaâ€" tion, Fever and Ague, Bilious Inter- mittents, Scrofulous Taint in the Blood, Incipient Consumption, Local and Gen- eral Debility, Rheumatism, Sick Head-f v ache, and Diseases of the Kidneys, seems to be a matter beyond the pale of controversyâ€"a ï¬xed fact in medical history. The statements of friends, in Whose veracity and intelligence wehave full conï¬dence, corroborated by our own personal observation, Obnipel us to ad- mit the surpassing merits of the pre-‘ paration. > i @' One of the Canadian Navigation t The costliest necklace in the United States is owned by a New York wid ow whois not worth $1,000 in cash. A widow woman at Omaha, who has eight boys, says that she had rather do a washing any day than have to go up stairs at daylight and pound them out with a policeman’s club. A Connecticut editor avers that “ there’s an art, a genius like the poet’sâ€"born, not made,†which pro- duces fried potatoes as delicious as a fairy’s dream. He does not recipe. The suffering in Shreveport is very se- 'vvei-e. ‘ The fever rages fearfu’lly, and there is a great scarcity of physicians and nurses. The inhabitants are calling for assistance from outside quarters. An'IndianapOlis man writes that if Barnum will go thither he may secure an animal wliich'is supposed ti) exem- plify Darwin’s “ missing lynx.†It has attacked several citizens lately. Company’s line of steamers leave their wharf, foot Of MacNab street, Hamil! ton, daily, for Montreal and intermedi- ate ports. Prices low and accommoda- tion excellent. .Imm ' WHiTE’S AND give the ' ! PIANOS ' ‘ II endorsed by the most noted artists of the day as the mostmusionl and durable Piano made, and in their dif- ferent stjles, from the little " HUM- MING BIRD" to the "Omansrmu" Iquaro grands, are suited to the Bou- doir, Parlour, or Concert Hall. Tan,“ FISCHER" ' ' Is. ‘a moavdesimble pane: Instrument. There are about 14,000 of them in use, ' giving eminent satisfaction, and we ' offer them, in all conï¬dence as better value than any other in the market. The Messrs. Fischer have over thirty your lucccssful manufacture of this of this Piano to refer to a unranteo o v! lts‘good qualities. NO at or Piano has gained the same favor in So short a time in Canada as the Fischer since its introduction by us. - ' , rnmon ononns. ' ._ 52,000 new in use; no other road in- strument ever obtained the same popu- ln-rity. We are sole Agents for the above instruments, and prices. and ‘Rctail. mAgeuts'wanted in everyfl‘nwn and County. ORRIS - &. SOPER, ADELAIDE STREET, - - September 2. 1873. . . d23- AnsleiN a nine STREET weer 133*. “as? BE.&.3§u-M.é§-.LEQ ruornis'reu. GENERAL STAG-El! 27:11 ’3’? 9 12k Twill/ION. ONT.‘ N ew Letter “A†SEW“ ii lilh‘iï¬lh’il. a , , We Challenge the World to produce their equal. All the principal points in the best Machines combined in one. Just adapted to‘the wants of the people. Suits every one. Do notiniss seeing it, and you Will surely buy it. , Ever] Machine Warranted perfect or no sale. Ayents I’Vanz‘erd- Territory Seemed. Address, W. A. WHITE k (30., 90 King Street Welt, Toronto, Ont. . September 1‘, 1873. Miss Sihtiiihllfl FOR PURIFYING THE BLOOD. This compound of the vegetable alteratives, Sar- saparilla,Dock,Stillinginia and Mandrake with the Iodides of Potassium and Iron mach 8. most eï¬ec‘ . /tuul cure of a series of ’ ‘ écomplaints which are very _ /prevalent and afflicting. -It puriï¬es the blood, purges out the lurking humors in the system, that undermine health disorders. Eruptions of the skin are the appearance on the surface of humors that should be expelled from the blood. Internal de- rangements are the determination of these same bus moreto some internal organ, or organs, whose action they derange, and whose substance they disease and destroy. Ann’s SARSAPARILLA expcls these humors from the blood. When they are gone, the disorders they produce disappear, such as Ultceratmns of the Liver. Stomach. Kidney», Lungs, Eruptions (rad EruptiveDuenaen of the chin, St. Anthony’s Fire, Rose or Eryaipelns, Pimplea, Puutulea, Blotchee, Boila, Tumors, Tce‘ter and Salt Rheufll, Squid Head, Ring worm, Ulcers and Sore/3, Rheumatism, wNeur- rulm'a, Pain inlhe Bones, Side and. Head, Female Weakness, Stability, Leucnrrhma arising from if:- lerml ulceration and uterine disease. Drapery, 17.1.8. pepsin, Emaciation and General DeInlIty. With their departure health returns. PREPARED BY Dr. J. O’. AYER d} 00., Lowell, Mass, Practical and Analytical Chemists- Northrup and Lyman, Newcastle, General Agents. WSOld by all Druggists Dealers in Medicine. DAVID MOLELLAN (it 00.. Manufacturers, Importers and Wholesale Dealers in GENTS' FURNISHINGS, TAILORS' TRIMMINGS, HOOP. SKIRTS 84 BUSTLES. HAIR BRAIDS, SWITCHES, EDOINGS, LACES, BELTS, BACK comes. 53 KING ST. WEST, EIAMIL‘I‘ON. ONT. Please call and examine our stock. Lettenerderu promptly and carefully ï¬lled. 625 and LafiDls‘EiS’ THE CELEBRATED LITTlE aims! The light-running and far‘famed W A bl Z E IR £1 1 These jMachines present a record of great success. Two Gold Medals just awarded in Moscow, Russia, and Lima, Per. W W'orkedby hand or foot on Patent Stand. For Agents’ terms apply to R. M. WANZER Oz 00., 270] Hamilton, Ont SEE-VVING MACHINE __. rsosr 308 feet, DEPTH 307 feet. , the Liver Esraeslsmsn I iï¬] ‘u‘ suadrytiigzn "J ï¬nds? MANUFACTURERS 0]? events memes. omens. AND ALL KIND-5 03‘ MACHINERY. ............... one '33. THOMAS W ILSON, WALTER BASTABLE, » July 12, 1873. ALEX . BARBIE, (115 THE “‘ WEBSTER†SECW'HSH, ,EHACIHHNE, The General Favorite Throughout " he Dominion. A . Canadian Invention, and Unprecedented Success Attending it Everywhere. It is Strong and Durable, Easy and Light to Work, Has no Cogs or Cams. And will do Every Kind of Work Light or Ifeavy. The most complete set of Attachments given with every Machine. See THE WEBSTER before buying any other. MANUFACTURED BY THE Canada Sewing Machine Co’y, ‘ HAMILTON, .ONT. June 13, 1867. ‘ dll-Sm . r .u as"; Dr. J. Walker s Californla Vin- cgar Bitters are a purely Vegetable preparation, made chiefly from the naâ€" tive 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 Alcoholm The question is almost daily asked. “What is the cause of the unparalleled success of VINEGAR BIT- TEnsl†‘Our answer is, that they remove the cause of disease, and the patient rc- covcrs his health. They are the great blood purifier and a lifeâ€"giving principle, a perfect licnovntor and Invigorator of the system. Never before in the history of the world has a medicine been coinpoundml possessing the remarkable qualities of Visr ‘ \u BITTERS in healin tho - sick of every disease manis heir to. "hey are a gentle l‘urgutivc as well as a Tonic, relieving Congestion or Inflammation of and Visceral Organs in Bilious' Diseases. . . ' The rope‘rties' of DR. WAann’s YINEGAR l'l‘THRS are Apericnt, Die. horotic; Carniiuative, Nutritious, Laxative, iuretic, Sedativc, Counter-Iriitunt' Sudoriï¬c, Altera- tive. and Anti-Bilious; ‘ R. H. McDONALD 6: (30.. Druggi‘m and Gen. Asia, San Frenchoo, California, and cor. of Wuhin on and Charlton Sta, N. Y. Sold by all “[515†and Dealer:- iiEEL-‘ER i Wilson’s MANuFAoTonins FRONT '52s net D h P-T H 5:32-1- WET“) Largest. inâ€Â§the Worldwâ€"fï¬ï¬ BRIDGEPORT, CONNECTICUT, U. S. - ' O 775,009 or THEsE CELEBRATE]; ' 191.1011:an soLI In all Parts of the World. An Increase of Sales Unprecedented. O 111E LARGE NUMBER OF'CHEAP AND POORLY MADE SEWING MACHINES THAT HAVE BEE'_ pulmed on the public of Canada for the post number taken, or other high sounding pretentious, are now beginning to be well understood, and by man deception felt keenly, as having “ PAID T00 DEAR FOR THE WHISTLE." :Td thbse,~andjafl of years, under the'coloring of number of First Prim: the pang others, would advise them to cf, the Improved NOiselcss Wheeler 6! Wilson, and .be safe; ' 'The'y last a lifetime. ’ £3111“th Gate ogue, giving particulars, dent post free 'to any address. o a. WALron, v'cs: ' 85 Hing-St. West, Toronto ; 54 James St. Hamilton 5 Hamilton, {May 6, 1572. . 1 87 Spark Sit.‘_0ttawa. ' d6 are in a. position to supply Local Agents in every part of the Dominion at manutacturers‘ lowest wholesale . All instruments warranted‘ï¬ï¬‚ve years. Wholesale ' TORONTO. , sh. rises. unison a col. DUNCAN M’FARLANE. ' TEAS , WILSON’S " A ' OASTOR 01L EMULSION. ‘ Sweet, Pleasant & Efl‘ectual. Equally Adapted for Children «t Adults. CAUTION 2 The public are hereby cautioned that a preparation more recently introduced, under the name of “Copland’s Sweet Castor, Oil," contains UHLORQFORM (560 Canada Gazette). Wilson’s Castor Oil Emulsiom guaranteed to contain no chloroform or other injurious substance, and may be givento the youngest infant with perfect safety. ’ Recommended by the Medical Profession, and sold by the principal Druggistsin Ontario. Quebec, P. E. Island, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Manitoba. ‘ Price 250., ‘ I T “MPERLEY LINE. Composed of the following ï¬rst-class Irqp ' Steamships : - ' SCOTLAND, MEDWAY, THAMES, DELTA, ‘ _ sstnN, NYANZA, ‘ AMBASSADOR. ' ' The steamers of this Line are intended to .. :sail during the Season Of 'Navi ation of 1873, from I .ONDON for annno and ONTREAL, as follows: (Calling at Plymouth outward for Pair Bengers.) 'DEL’I‘A.... ....Saturday, 6th Sept. - NYLNZA.. ....Wednesday, 17th “ THAMES Saturday, 27th “ Mnnwnr ................ Wednesday, 8th Oct. And every alternate Wednesday-and Satur- day thereafter. And from QUEBEC for LONDON as fol- lows : MEDWAY ................. Tuesday, 2nd Sept. Snvnnn .................. Thursday, , 18th “ SCOTLAND ........... ..Tuesd_ay, 23rd “ DELTA..~..... .....’I'hursda.y, 9th Oct. NYANZA .................. Tuesday, 21 st ‘ ‘ Tunas... ...............Thursday,, 30th “ . And every alternate Tuesday and Thursday thereafter.' 1 OF PASSAG Qunnse 10 LONDON : Cabin .......................................... $69 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 iss'ued‘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 .VVest. , - » For Freight or Passage, ap 1y to TEM- ' PERLEY, CARTER & DRAKE}, 21 Billetet Street, London {ROSS l: 00., Quebec, or to . DAVID SHAW, Montreal. 1 AprillO, 1873. d267 'F. G. ECKETI & CD. HAMILTON, ONT, ;MAHUFACTURERS .RATES OF STATIONARY AND "arson: enemas 'Have the following Engines allfready for delivery: S IHORSE-PGVVEIE. 12 15 20 25 30 Hamilton, April 15, 1373. NORTH CAROLINA and VIR- GINIA LANDS. 500 CHEAP IMPROVED FARMS a 200,000 ACRES or VALUABLE TIMBER Limos FOR SALE. 66 66 66 66 66 I6 66 66 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 res- ent very low prices, and not in the ban s of speculators, but must be sold at a great sacs riï¬ce, and parties wishing reliable informa- tion about the climate, soil, products, 650., and tickets at reduced rates to visit the states,and free trans ortation to see thelands, it will be to their a vantage to communicate with the subscriber as he is well ac ‘uainted with the above states and the most desirable to settle in; good climate, fertile soil, and advantages of railroads, navigation, and other facilities for the best markets. This is , Elitlltt and Minimal. E ,r' the best opportunity ever oï¬â€™ered 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. C. D. EDWA R DS Finnâ€"P noon SAFES. n. WARREN a coxs Counter and Platform Scales, The Cheapestï¬rstâ€"dma Scale in Canada. _ A Good .‘Assortment in Stock. WSem‘. ' for Price Lists. E. 3:1. MOORE, .AGBN'I’ 54 Front-St. East, Toronto. May 14, 1873. d267-6m BRGW N. GILLESPIB (ll; (30-, WHOLESALE GROCERS, iii Es llvT I I. T 0 N A 333%.,- DIRECT ' IMPORTERS -031. SUGABS, Etc“ E \T POR'I‘ABLllig