Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

York Herald, 19 Jun 1874, p. 4

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_ _ {. Lost Atlantic Steamers. l It is :1 terrible fact, which may starâ€"l tlc many of our readers, that in the. space of thirtyAthrcc years since the on .5 fortunate President left New York on' the. 11th March, 1841, never again to: appear to mortal ken, leaving not (1‘ trace of her fate, nearly fifty steamers, E including the. West India iiiuilâ€"liozitmi while on their p sage across the Atlun» tic, have been utterly destroyed. Ol'thcsc , seven after leaving port mysteriously/l disappeared and have never since been heard of 3 four were run down by orl collidcdwith other vesscls,‘ [our wcrc l burned , one, the Canadian, ran on sunk- on ice in the Straits of Belle Isle, on the 3, 4th of June 1861 , one, the Ila/(272a bio-E lemon, foundcrcd in midvoccun in No-j: vombcr, 1850, and another, the [fiber-l, nia, met the same into all the coast oil Ireland in 1868. ~ The rcnmindcr of the niclunclmly list, amounting to nearly thirty vessels, 3 were wrecked either on the 1rish ori British coasts, on those of America, or} on islands or rocks oil“ them. Full eighty of these ran in foggy weather on the shores of either Nova Scotia or foundland on, their westward voyage, :L sufficient vurning, it might be sup- posed to captains to give the hind a. wide berth in those latitudes. One only, the Iowa, an American vessel, was wrecked on the French coast near Chcrbourg, in 1864. It is generally supposed that shipwrecks are caused by the rage of, the elcn’icnts, but of' the thirty ve 131 which went on shore only three or four appear to h 6. directly sufi‘ercd in conâ€" sequence of heavy weather. Misculcu» lotions as to distance run and courses steered, clouded skics, dork nights, and more generally than all, dense fogs were the primary causes of the destruction of all. these vesselsâ€"if, as in too muuy in- stances, a reckless desire to make :t quick run should not rather be set down i to the account. Comperativcly few of these shipwreck. occurred without seriâ€" ous loss of life, at least; four thousand persons having perished among 1 go pusâ€" sengers and crews who vcre on board. 1When the zit/antic was wrecked on Mung her’s Head, off Nova. Scotiu, in 1873,11!) less than 562 persons were drowned; ‘vVith the City of (flaw/0w, in 185.1, 480 l people disappeared. \Vhen the Austria. E was burned in mid-ocean, in 1358, 470 lives were lost 3 with the Arciir, 3.00; with the Angloâ€"Saxon, 37:3, and with the Ville (lit [Ia/cm, The di-struo tion of other vessels causod the loss of' fewer lives than those named, as hop-l pily fewer passengers were on board; but with several on the list from one to two hundred human beings perished. On an average upwards of three vessels l have been lost every two yours. a 5*. nv on l The most terrible beyond all descripâ€" , tion of those sad disasters was the loss oi the Amazon, \Vestilndiu. mail steam- er, which left Southampton on the 2nd of January, 1852. She was the largest. steamship over then launched from at“, English dockyurd, and was built. ofouk, teak Duntzic fine the last bcinrr 2 J h I an exceedingly inflamablc wood. Her officers and crew numbered 110 nian and she carr'cd fifty passengers. From the first, doubts were entertained about the engine, which worked badly and heated the surrounding wood. She had 1 not been thirty-six hours at son when, . as she was entering the Buy of Discuy against o strong head-wind, llumcs sud~ denly burst forth from the cngincâ€"rmnn, l overcoming all the efforts made to ex- tinguish them. Her bouts would hovel . carried all on board but the lest fatal ' . ’ i ‘ ’ . istor has the gout, cmbarrussmcnts oc- act of one of the engineers had been to turn on the pipe of the cistern which fed the boilers, so as to allow contiuuâ€" ! ous supply and prevent an explosion.‘ Thus, no power could stop the blazing? ship, and the captain not knowing what i had occurred, in expectation that the: boilers would exhaust themselves, \vuit- ed till too late to lower the boats, several i' of which were oh fire. The heels of others, to prevent them from swinging. \ver 1. grasped in iron crqdles, and when attempts Were made to lower them by l those ignorant of the fact, capsized with 1 all on board. Two life bouts, the pinâ€" nace, and dingy, ultimately got oil with i the fiftyâ€"eight persons, the only ones; saved ou’. of the 162 who had left South- ampton. Among those who perished, was Eliot \Vurburton, author of thcl “ Crescent and the Cross. The loss of the vessel was owing to her defective engines, and the unprotected condition of the surrounding wood-work. The destruction of life, however, was en- tirely in consequence of the engineer’s error in judgement and the way in which the boats were secured. Had they been lowered in time, all in the after part of the ship might have been 1 saved ,' but this would have been a. most dangerous operation, from the: l ,speed at which the ship was tcaring‘ through the troubled waters. The President heads the list of mvs- . terious disappearanccs. \Vith what awful anxiety tidings of her were waited for can be remembered by many. Nmic overcame. ‘hc lest accounts we have of her is that she left New York on the 11th of March, 1841, having on' bourdl among many passengers a son of" thcl Duke of Richmond, the Rev. 11. Cookâ€"l man, and poor Power, an author und= the actor of Irish characters. she caught fire like the Amazon, ori rushed headlong, against an. icelmrg, orl ran into or was run. down by another" vessel, like the Tide r311. Ila/Urn, will. . 1 never be known. As icebergs are rarelvl met with in the course she would hovel taken, probably her fate was that of: one or the other ofthose unlmppyships. More mcluncholy with regard to the; number of lives sacrificed than even the loss of the .l’a'esidcm‘, was the destrucâ€"i tion by fire of the Austria in mid-ocean: on September 13, 1858, with 470 of her passengers and crew. No sooner did the flames appear than all discipline was overthrown, and in the mud rushl to the bouts many perished who, had order been maintained, might have been saved. Two of the most serious losses 1 are still fresh in our memories, as they occurred only last year. Of the Villa. ‘ 1’01 udizitcs the , might have scomod discourtcous. ' (and the London) is well known. . knows this very wel . Whether . 1 the Atlantic. 20th of 3" York, with about board, the greater number of whom were steer-ago passengers. living short of coal she was steering for llalihtx on 2t dark night, when the oilir rs of the watch, under the belief that the hip was much further oil' the hind than w s r. ,~ the vase, mistook one light for another, . and she was run stcm on to u ledge of rocks oll' M *uglu-r‘s llcud, twenty miles from the port. A frantic. attmupt vas nmdc to lower the boats, whl‘n after striking" several times, the ship rollcd' . ‘ , } over into deep water and sunk, cngull- ing nearly hundrcd human beings, the rt. .iuinalcr hzivin’r in the meantime sprung on to the ;s or climbed in to the rigging. Not 21, women or child was saved, most of tho hapless oncs lmv- ingv been drowned in their ba-‘rtbsbel ‘*â€"-].I’.".\'1-’T'(3 Hour. t i‘.‘.'. .V.....-._..._.. v p .0, 4 _, . The Troubles of R0 yalty. v“? I, n .1 not n controversy between the Queen and the Prince of \Vul sin regard to the pay- ment of debts o the znnount of il‘;ll.l0,- DUO, which i... . latter has incurred and rci‘uscs to pay. A l'>'LT-I‘i-l(‘)11 of those obliâ€" gations are of long standing, and the creditors have become clumorous liquidation, but p A l .111 (1 were inmrrcd in the performance of State dutics, shouldered oli‘ upon him by her Majesty, who, as is well known, shirks as much as possible the l'utigucs .ztnd nnnoyanum. of ipvecs ,md Chum”, in short, the. ceremoniuls- generally. Queen has made the Prince do her work, and bus failed to meet the expcnn scs inc irrcd ,' and the heir apparent, in his turn, has ncglccted to pays lhcsc cxâ€"a pcnscs, so that, as we huvc suid, bills to :t large amount have :u:cumulutcd, and the august mother and son are quurrclling with ouch other as to the responsibility there.'or. Both of" them have inn’ncnsc privute fortune :uul rc~ ceive vcry large ulhr-cvu run: the public I'IJ‘JCfHICH, especially in order liCiYh’ that they may be enabled to defray the ‘ cost of maintaining their regal shite. . of the l’rinre of ‘i' :50, lllll, und <39 8 The :uinuul iucmnc \Vulcs not less than his mother has two or three lines u much; butncithcr of" am is willng to disburse a p n by by wuy of keeping up the royal show. And the consequch is that Parliament will be uskt-d lo nmke an extra appropriation. The dread of sea-.ndul is vcry potent mneug C(uiservutivo .l‘lnglislnuc'n, :iud that. $300,000 will be 01‘(l~’.‘l‘(‘(1 publ, ulnqu without dcbutc. 'llllcro were prrycrs for the szu'b jour- ney of the CARY homcwurd. noon he left Buckinghan l’uluce, most ci‘the English Royal family goingdown 1:) see him oi The Queen, With that pwuliur vie of her duties as he. .css which bus been remarked belbrc, hml gone the day before to Bulmorul, and was in fact in Scotland when the (bear :iid good by to the lllnglish shores. in u person of less exalted station than the Queen, this The cunvonicucc of llzilmorul as a royal rcsi- dcnce during the session of Parlizuucnt 7 By traveling day and night and taking v11 .v Q u i post horses after the railway is quitted, u Illinistcr or a messenger can reach Bubnorzil, receive the royal commands, take horse and rail again, and be back once more in London in loss than three days. lfbusincss is pressmg, or u. :liinâ€" cur, but what are these in compurismi ~ to the gratification of Her Majesty and lbllU preservation of the royal health"! And arc we to suppose that the l‘lmpeâ€" ror of Russ'u i‘clt hinisell’slightcdl or that the thought occurred to him that ‘ the Queen mi Tht have debi ind her 9 v journey a single day l or that he wonâ€" dered how the Queen would like it it ie went 0 1" .0 .- ' scov l. u: ' 13‘)" l ‘ 1‘ * “do .7 tlc lt. lrluc she was to leave St. l’etcrslmrg for Lonâ€" V don? The Emperor had, in, fact, accom- plished the object of his journey. The grout prcculenco question has been set- tled to his and his daughter’s sutis acâ€" tion. The Duchess of Edinburgh to.ch hcr placo next after the Princess of \Vules, and is (loscribed as her lioyul and Impcriul Iligln’iess, and further identified as Grand Duchess of Russia. The country, says the 13hnmincr, does not, cure a fig which of the robral indies is entitled to exhibit hcr buck huir to at less lortuuute rival. ( __.â€"â€"-._..«â€"o.¢+â€"..â€"â€"_A Experience is Wisdom. Why blame mammu if she wishes 1101" daughter to make a. “ good mulch l” It - Is it not as easy to love a. worthy rich mun us it is to Worship :1. worthy poor man? To be sure it is ! In her eyes, :1 poverty-stricken youth is necessarily the enemy of all maidens whose fathers live :it lhorute of Some thousands per- :innum. She may have married :2. mun 1 having prospects, but without POHlllml 3 but. that is no reason why her darling child should have done so. ‘,l..ov:-, in a cottage may be all \cry well ,1 und, porâ€" hups, at one timeshe considered it the ' height of human bliss. llut age brings knowledge and experience; and what ‘ hey-day of youth appears pure gum, is, in the niirldlc-uggc, very often discovcrcd Io betuwdry tinsel. Besides, though her husband has turned out trumps, it by no means follows that it she confided her daughter to n mun oc- cupying a. similar position to that in which her partner commenced life, he will ever rise above it. So she prefers, 1n the 1 1 like the prudent soul that she is, to be: on the safe side. Thus she fixes her at- tcntion upon men who have already made pzu'cs her traps for both him and her daughter to fall, into. 'W’ell it is for he (laughter if her mother's plzins succeed â€"â€"though she may not think so at the time. But then she is young. - -~-~4 an w-a-â€"â€"--â€"~~-vâ€"~ According to the census of Japan for 18 7'2, which has just been published, the t n the annals of shipwrch was that oil, She left Liverpool on the 1 ch. 1873, bound for New ' 1,000 persons on? social and political circles, . in London are excited by rumors ol' u, for . dis lloyul llighucss: n the ground that they ’ A nd madam v a name and position, and pre«. Things Wise and Otherwise.‘ way," says an eXchangc, “ but so Mr as cnildren go, a bootâ€"jack exerts a more powerful influence." 1 l A. Philadelphia youth was recently married to a girl who had refused him eighteen times. He viiihes now he hadn’t ask cd hcr but seventeen. 1 it is no longm‘ the vulgar title of “drunkenness,” but rather the polite : and exprcssrve title of "‘ dipsomania" by ,which the evil is to be known. i A Chicago mun wrote to Agassiz that he had an apple which he had preserved for fifty years, and when Agassiz wrote for it, the joker will it our; the apple of his eye. ' hey wcregoing to put it man out of u San Francisco theatre for creating a v disturbance, when 9. voice cried, “ He’s all right, he’s killed at Chinunniu f” and they let the mun clone. ; Sonic singers at at concert wore. some- what startled by finding:r that the selec- tion, “ When wcuried wretches sinkd-to sleep," had been printed on the pro- gramme, "‘ \Vhon married \vi'<:tclics,”ctc. Indianapolis bo;.sts of a versatile di- vinity student who preaches in English, pr:in in Armenian, sings in Turkish, and hol his tongue in eleven other hingqu “Sh-all I cut loin of mutton smldlewise l" Sfib’l :1. gentleman. " No,” sui: one of his guests, " cut it bridle- wisc, for then .1 may have :1. chance 10 .gct a. bit in my mouth.” 1 Lot 5-. uuscuwnts fill up the chinks of your cxislonlro, not the greater spaces ". Lot pleasures be taken as /l in), E‘S. this . thcrcol ,'.l):inic1 took. his pruvcrsmwith his winâ€" ‘dows open; plcusurcs which need not cause 9. single blush to :m ingenuous chock. A "Wisconsin paper thus advises its 'tion day: “ \Vhen you look :it your t1ckctto~duy, think wheth- gorilla: ciandidutc for eldernmn has the , requisite qualifications, whether he can gthrow an inkstun‘d across the Council 1 -. Cilmlllnfl‘ with uccurucy." readers on «E l We ask for long}; life , but it is deep glii‘e or gruud moments that signify. Lot ltlu- measure of time be spiritual, not mechanical. Life is necessarily long. .‘vlon: mm of insight, of fine pemonul rcâ€" ior., :t smile, at glanceâ€"«what ample borrowers oi‘cis‘rnity they er')‘. To be continually suli' to the breath of" slender will tar :. purest virtue, us 5-. constth exp ‘10 to the atmosphere will obscure the brightness of the liucstgohl; but in cithcrczise the reul value of both continues the same, although the currency may be impeded. A young; man who \‘us married in Detroit six months ago has joined in ' the discussion of the question of family economy, but his little contrilmtion is fur from Sz'itislhctory. “' 1 do not,” he says, “ undcrstmul how it is 1. used to figure it out, us I sat with my arm around her wuist on Sunday nights, and » week, and new 1 spend fifteen dollars, rand um hungry half the time.” Brute! Little Freddy \Varner is a male child, 1 of some live summers growth, and his 1 mother, like all good mothers, never lets slip an opportunity to impress upon her ofl‘spring’s mind some wood practical or moral lesson. She had given little Fred 2t line apple, and said to him : “ Now, Freddy, you must give half of the apple to your brother Gregory, and when you divide anything with another person you must always be sure to give them the largest half.” “ ch momma.” replied the little philosopher looking sharply at the famous big apple in his hand, then suddenly looking up into his mother’s face, he said. “ Dcarmamâ€" mu, you take the apple and give it to brother Gregory, mid lot hiir divide it lwith mo. --â€"->o¢.â€"â€"â€"â€"-- ought Girls to Court? l have often thought that a young follow must have a good stock of as suruuce-â€"nay, of downrjght impu- tdencc, to go through the ticklish ter- rible, torturing ordeal of u courtship. lle has not only to run the gauntlet .01 gossiping young,r ladies; to be talked. 01', and to be the mark. of watchful observations for the whole neighborhood in which the fair one frcsidcs Nor is this all. If his adâ€" dresses are only acceptable to one ' memberâ€"tho depository of garnered l up love of it whole lifcâ€"-ho is sure to l encounter the savage brothers, and is just as saroto meet other equally flattering manifestations of paternal .opposition. Now, this is all wrong. sThc exchanges should be more equal- ized; and some are sanguine enough to believe that the day is not far distâ€" lant when they will be equalized; 'when we shall hear of young ladies paying; their addresses to young gen- tlemcn, visiting them nightly at their Ihouscs, invitingr them to parties, to l bulls, to \‘olk, to dance, to sing, to out ice-cream, and, matters are brought to an interesting crisis, “ pop- ping the question” itself. Ah! what u delightful thing it lwould be, fiurricdly waiting in your mother’s parlor, carefully brushed and strapped, to be courted. To be tenderly stared at, night after night, by girl attengirl; to have one's brown, rough hand occasionally squeezed, and to have one’s waist deli- ‘culcly encompassed (of course, only after *‘ the engagement” , tho‘worldl .17 emplmticully girls 1 lslmnld court. 1, »-«â€"-â€"-â€".-â€"â€"~> *6 . 4-â€"-~â€"»-â€"â€"â€"-~â€"»‘ i Mrs. Cressmun, of Iowa, inadver- ‘ tently trod on :1 ruttic snake the other her nnklc. Being a woman of strength , View of the situation, and discovering .that her foot rested near the head, and that while in that position it could not bite, she put a little more determine- ) by some of. the most delicately tapered arms in ; " Kind words are wonderful in their , g long desertation 0n the advantages of Advantages of Crying. i A Virginia 1': twenty-five dollars for killing a rooster. _’ A. French physician is out with a l The engineer said he spoke to the genâ€"i groaning and crying in general, and '3 especially during surgical operations. " lie contends that groaning and cry- ing are the two grand operations by which nature alleys anguish; that g those patients who give \ my to their 1 I l . l l l I l l l i l v 1 natural feelings more specdi ly recover from ccculcnts and operations than these who suppose it unworthy for a man to betray such symptoms of cow E I ardice as either to cry or groan. He tells of a man who reduced his pulse from one hundred and {wordyâ€"sixto sixty, in the course of two hours, by giving vent to his emotions. 11’ peo- ple feel at all unhuppy about uny- thing let them go to their rooms and comfort themselves with a loud boo- ‘hoo, and they will feel one hundred per cent. better afterward. In ac- cordance with the above, the crying chindren should not be too greatly discouraged. If it is systematically suppressed, the result may be the St. Vitus dance, epileptic fits, or some other disease of the nervous system. What is natural is nearly always use- ful, and nothing can be more natural than the crying of children when uny- thing occurs to give them either phyâ€" sical or mental pain. Probably most persons have experienced the ell’cct ()1 tears in relieving great sorrow. It is even curious how the feelings are alloyed by free indulgence in groans and sighs. 1 Then let parents show more indulâ€" gence to noisy bursts of grief on the part of children as well its other per- sons, and regard the eyes and mouth as safety valves through which nutu re discharges hcr surplus eteum. » ~~~~-â€"- % or“) -v -â€"~~â€"â€"â€"--- ' A Georgia. Heroine. The following graphic description of the fair South is given by a paper print- ed in the State of Georgia. “ Aiming the many visitors who came to 0dr city I on Saturday last to sell their country ' produce, was a young lady from an ud- joiniinbr county who had chickens, e and butter for sulj. ller beauty VuS of transcendent e2 cellence. Bright, flush- ing, intellectual eyes, and face round and rosy, while her calico dress was plain and neatly made, and fitted bczm- tifully. llcr rich black hair llowcd in luxuriant richness. .llighly educated, she convex-sod fluently, and deported herself with becoming modesty. were no false bustle or purchased coniâ€" 1';lcxion ; had no top~knot on her head, or false fixings to present, but stool in the majestic beauty of 3. created intelliâ€" gence that would not yield to the dos» potic dictates of frivolous fashion. It has been :1 long time sin-co we gazed upon such :1 sight. The young men crowded around her wagon with curiâ€", osity in their eyes and admiration in their hearts. The old men wept for joy that there was one who had not bowed to Baal. She sold her country produce, went home, milked her cows, cooked supper for ten farm laborers, and [went all it would then cost to live would be I to church a ,1, night with my sweet. two dollars and seventy-five cents alhemtyt~o/Â¥'~m . ,__._~ _..~.<o.â€"â€"â€"râ€"~~ About Cremation. With some people cremation is only a question of time. If it don’t come in this world it is sure to come in the next This world is alla fleeting show, how sweet from it to pass, to vanishzup the chine ' us carbonic acid gas I A king of Babylon ordered cremution for his subjects, and built for that pracâ€" tice the first furnace , but Messrs. Shadâ€" rach, Mechuch and Abcdnego would'th cromate. The worst feature about the crema- tion business is that some winter morn- ing, in a fit of philanthropy, your wid- ow’s second husband may empty your ashes on the icy p rvemcnt for the boneâ€" fit of pedestrians. \Ve lit the poor follow at dead of night, the carcass continually turning, in order that every side might get its share of this new patent process burnâ€" ing. N0 pelting rainstorm came wet- ting the pile of fuggots to which we had bound him ; no Babcock extinguisher dcudcncd the glare, that formed such a halo around him. ,( ~«~â€"-â€"+ ‘ a". A~~--~~~» . A Dunn’s HEAD AND CROSSBONES ought to be the trade mark of every dealer in Rum hitters. But no; to proclaim their real mission would ruin them, so they sail under false colors, and do their deadly work surreptitious- ly. Fortunately their triumphs over credulity are nearly at an end. Ever since the introduction of DR. VVALKER’S CALIFORNIA VINEGAR BITTEns the sale of all the burning fluids advertised as ‘tonies’.’ has been rapidly declininw. They are still the unwholcsomc solace of individuals who wish to satisfy a morbid appetite for strong drink, with- out compromising,r their r pectability ; but the sick are everywhere discarding them, and adopting the VINEGAR BITâ€" TERS, The success of this wonderful vegetable ustonishcs Dr; \Vulkor him- self. He believvd, when he gave it «to the world, that it was an unequalled tonic, free from the objections urged against the medicated firewaters and dilutions of strychnine, quinine and other powerful alkaloids employed in modern practice; but he scarcely cx- pectcd that it would prove a. specific for chronic dyspepsia, livcr~complaint, in- cipient consumption, confirmed rheuma- tism, gout, sorofula, nervous affections, general debility and all diseases that disorders, without destroying, the vital machinery. Yet‘ this, unless thousands of witnesses have conspired to deceive the public, is actually the case. . cs t Think before you speak, and think before whom you speak, think whyyou day and the reptile coiled itself around Speak} and think What You Speak- Last Sunday night, says the Helena, and rare presence of mind she took a (Montana) Herald, two colored men quarrcllcd over a game of cards in a se- loon on Clore street. \Vheu they had finished one of them was minus a. chin. If any one is so incredulous as to doubt (in. Hath, run down by the Loch Earn, country contains 2".) princes, 1,300 noble ‘ tion into that foot until one of her this statement, he will be convinced by we have already spoken. One of the families, 330,000 priests, and 323.000,. children brought hora. stick with which going to the saloon, where said chin is most frightful and sudden catastrophes 000 of inhabitants. , she dispatched his snakeship. . now on exhibition. 8110' tlcman with the whistle us kindly es; possible, but when th fellow droplcd one wing on the ground, raised his good eye heziveuward, and coun'uencod whet,» tingr his spur on the rail, lin‘l)ea)'unoi': ceased to be :1 virtue, and he. lot il into ‘ him with thirteen fl‘el’lll; curs. u l x. l l l in writing to advertisers please . say that you saw their mi vcr- ! g; u”. n r15 "“ tiscmcnt in t “per. L 0 N n on]? "g3 $33 AND MONTREAL. ’ 1874. 3J1? " .... :53 f Lil"? E. . Composed of the iullmiinu‘und nth-31‘ firstcluss lpon Stcmnships :â€" St. Lawr nee, Scotland, Thames, Severâ€"n, riches. ‘ The .‘ltcmncrs oi thi Linc :er iri‘. lows during the l: sonoII ' from London, Quebec and Eric mouth. outward, for 1‘25. v niml to sail l’li‘ TIIA r 7 ~ ,Ju: :s DELTA ~ r » - - 7 ', June 13‘ Iliitmosi r » - » s r » r r - v ' .31 .' 1 Sr. Liner L. l’liil’ld 01 {11.711}. Tumor, r r r r r l l in. - 7 Si. l..\'~fv'1kli.\".’l'. r r r r r r .'.. ,‘rAugustU Through Tickets {iv-m RATES. Cortifl ’ ' . bringing out their . .us. nrounh "'iued on the Continent and in l. ‘ ~ nedn, and in the Lnitcil S‘ . Uh} go and other poi! For Freight or 1’». ({‘ICMPERLEYS. CA1 .. Street; Lend. R5, Plymouth: 1:0 for ..ll .4. l‘ lrnlt. .. m 1.10 \‘v'ozi. April 3;. 1:57;. .1 , {l (l 0, 0:; ll Pi (f 55;: E [1; been completed from Fen little Truvcrsc Bay. near .‘ of its grunts of binds. o‘. rr LUJ " oll‘er n‘ P‘ l l . . tpeulatl in; 2‘4: Eielon'csea- ' ‘hosc Lu elm and oil bust zuurkcl, ’ircd u lib be 1 wood, uri‘. urc i.“ A a, 6’ an? :m' ‘ 4 «a 5% in; ,4? hr ‘0‘ £73 or in km am And un- in a part of the “ well watered, und- Co): raising Scciion of the 1; {Shore of MICHIGAN is one o“ 11101.11Anl mum; mid most prosperous of the Mules ' Micu.oAN is noted for 11s splondidl'x’niw‘ w. Normal Schools. all part of 21 um ‘.lill School Syslcin.” cndou'cd by (hi. 5 ' MICHIGAN is finned for its _ . . Furnaces, its Railroads, its Writer Courses. its b u- liful Lukcs, and stirring enterprising Towns. Vil- lagcs and Cities. lineman: produces Vfool, Barley, l’otutocs, &c. .MICHIGAN produces iuexlta Iron, Copper. Silver, Coui our nibcr. MICHIGAN in Ihc portion of \‘Iutc ncur these Lands, produces all kinds of Fruns. The Grand Rapids and Indiana Rail Road runs through the centre of tho Grunt. The port of Mic found is NOT A WlLDERNES-‘S BY ANY lvltlil 8. but contains a pcpulnliou of TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND $9731.22 1 i and is rapidly filling: up with *1 th'rs from (,‘rruda, fiwcdo'n, Norway, Holland. ....d from ohm-st cvcry btzitc 1n the bliion. In“ Whom, Outs. Corn, I“l:lbl(‘. Qiuiniiilm nf? v.11 in which lhcsc lun(b'- ei'c. Over100,000 acres of the lands of this grant have already been Sillfi l ‘ The wcullh of the Counir' is in the mil, and new is the tune to own a .«hurc m such \vcullh. u'lum it can be had M F '02” 1'0 tit; arm? .5” ()pm‘ .érrc. One quarter only, down, balance in cosy limo pay» moms. During: the your 1874 21nd ISTT), any purcluiscrs of not less than 80 acres of farming: land, 1, yian one- qunrtcr down, who will go upon it for smile: within Four Months after purchase, wlll be furnie 7 ed with PEP-t} PARK-J‘s for himscll'und‘ fmu'lw nvn r the G. R. d; 1. 1.1. it, from whorl 'urh strike ‘ road, to the smilon imircsr his purc‘ H Addri ""r ‘fv . . E-IO‘VVA. £33.13, 1.71m}. Commissioner. Grand It ,, is. Mich. 320'ly F. It. In PEIRGE‘. Secretary of Luxul Dcpl, thfill @llltl is as efi’cctuul a remedy w- . FGR FEVER St. Ath as the Sulphate in the some doses, while it nfi‘ecis the head less, is more palatable and much cheaper. Send for descriptive Circular with Tcstimmha’ls of Physicians from all parts ofthe country. WSamplc packages for trial, 25 cents. Prepared by BILLINGS. CLAPP & (10.. Chemists, Boston, Mass. Ivcw York Ullicc,'8 & 9 college Place. Steam Engines, Boilers, hit Saw Mills, Shutting, E’uilcys. Hangers, escrow stump , 322': chine-sum! {lessens} achinery Ivi‘itnu{richly-ed, at. tho I Mflhn ERG?! W'flliioy flaming)», {mm rixs. £152.21! EAM EN GINES MAXI" FACTURED BY 1 (P1113 ff." : this firm are in many respects superior to any other mode in this country being self-lubricating ‘ throughout, and are remarkably powerful, and (300-. nomicul on fuel as “‘01! us reasonable in price. The : efficiency may be judged by the continually incrczlsâ€" ‘ lug demand which no ulcs conslunt add to our machinery and p ut. * J. H. KIEJJK‘Y 1L". ‘ Hamilton, l‘eb, ?0, 187-1. brow -, [5- 1221!“: 3‘1. .i char ‘1 l our. ' lie. 5-! ELTON. - "1" 4, 'i N and dosing theta Rsuucsn PRESEfi. . f VHE 'NEW ROCKLAIiTI) SLATE 00. All..." NOW/‘3 pre cred to supply the wcllvlmown iiccklzmd Roofing . late. in any quantity and of any sues. I. E. BRVWONE. Sec/rater}, Holt‘t‘gnl " Rockl he!“ tilroad was made to pay S . the s w ; 1"“: color u‘ , und (ii Cum. THE " MATHUSHEK” la endorsed by the most noth nrtla of the dust the most musical in durable Pia no made, uud in their (1: icreut :1 ' v.8, from the litt e " HU: MIN!) :3 I)" to the “Ollolli’tfi-‘FRM square grands, are suited to the 30' «lnir. Parlour, or Concert Hull. is a most desirable Parlor lllbtl‘uuwl. There a: Kiut14,000 of them in us i . .ng cmiucnt satisfaction, and u t .i ~r themwiin sill confidence as hot“. “glue tl ' n-any other in the marks The "‘ srs. Fischer have‘bvcr thirl; r. successful manufacture of ill}: ( his Piano to ruler to a.,,gu1|mutu of its good qualities. No other I’iun . limgeinal the some favor in so shun a time in Canada as the. Fischer sim- its introduction by us. l 4 Fiscunn’ - . ‘ w. 1. rr. ’ Vin- Cali S ERIN G E GREAT-38. . 52,000 now In use ; no other reed l) strument ever obtained the same pcpi larity. W c are 50.; Agents for. the above instruments, an are in a position to supply Local Agents in every pml of the Dominion at mamufucturcrs' lowest wholesali prices. . All instruments warranted five years. und l’tctuil. itfi‘figcnts wanted in every Town zmd bounty. NORRIS 5501 Eli, AD]1IJ‘A1.,E srum. . Teamstro pricmbcr 7. 1373. tl"3 Vl'h olefin m L. "Lb .i. Cs". cure. 1! effect: urc as Woudcriul and satisfactory as over. It restarts {L1 .' or faded hair to its youthful color. It removes all eruptions, itching, and damlniff ; and bi h'.’ its use becomes white and clean. l'f.‘ its tonic properties it restores the capillary g‘llunis to their nornml vigor, preventing boldness, and inukiiw the hair grow thick and strong. tor nothing can he found so miméucl, or :ird article )3‘ compounded With the great- . nor of Massachusetts “ H!I)PAR.-\'ll0.\' for it E" El {l ll 7% 4;} 3?. A Rfl’ttl E) ' iii, FOE! ’l‘lilf. VVHISKELRS. This 0‘ ‘ "migration uniy be relied on to change mi from only; or any other undesir- able sl )wn, or block, at discretion. It is easily um .041, b: w in our. I‘ltE mums, and quickly molly pwuluccs :1 )‘ci'innncut color wbivh will ...v:r rub nor v.35!) oh. EU 3’: U WA (V1171 l 1317 RT i’. 1’. [‘[rl LL (in 00., .NASIIUA, A". H old by all Drugg' and Dealers in .‘Jedii. ‘lhrzm 5c Lym'm, 571.3, ()cuuml (iii my. 5’ ac mlg/ Reliable Giff Disfributz'r/n in. Net? Gamm'y. w .r .. -,.,1' - 1“ '1') “IGQQOG 1.. \Tslusele nuts ! .1) TI) I‘Ji DISTRIBUTED IN .eiieis’s Hill. Semi-Annual Gila”? Bill‘l‘llERPngE l l 1‘ To be Drown szTllli‘LlMl Y, JULY 4th, 1874.. one e mi!) CAPITAL PRIZE, one,ch SN GOLD! D SlLVl’lll-l iv: linen 11' “Fill Fivu Pnizus $1.000 '5 . i lr'mc .l’mzns .725! ' ‘ Finals {4100 l ' "‘51 Two Family Uzi)“. cs ‘1‘ d Matched Horses, with Sil- vcrqnouiucd 1141' , \vo1~th5:~'1.500 each ! Two Bugci Horses. 34.0., woth $600 each ! 'l'vvo blue to! l Rosewood Pianos, worth 32-550 each 1 Ton Family is p; Machines, worth $100 each LEW) Gold and : vcr Lever Hunting.r .Watchcs (fr. :ill,) \"I “"i ham 0 to 5,7300 ouch l lolrl Vere. Jewelry, 3.1:. &<‘. We, 10,000 ,5, , Tickets limited to 50,000 / IS WANTED to sell Tickets. to \x‘uom " qiums will he paid. '.l,\ ’l‘ickcts >310 ; Tu’olve Tickets ‘lvl .€1 TV”??? by.“ j, ‘cului-J coulnuinx 1-. full 1" 4 of mines, ado .. .1 of the m um no: «1‘ ’ ml other informr iu rcfcri- o lo tm: Irisvributiou, \n'll be sent to on) one order.) them All b'ttcrs must be hddre’sd to L. l-‘. sum, Box 86, Cincinnati. -_.,.lillQGE _ "00L ' "AND “ ' ' avarice senisz omega " _ viAimrAC'ronv. t ~l.’:_, not :31. 5'? "l" a: M n Axes. 'Eizttchcis. ‘ Chisels, _E__~Snivcs, . fi)arpexitcrs’ Tools. ng’opggys’ Tools, " Picks, E3 an: more, .Ifiachine Knives mulirdescriptions, I "Lâ€"lcmpercd and warranted. ms, i'Aitnoek «s cc. Gun,01H:.'AprllL‘1874. ‘ "anâ€"eh- TIlE CANADA SELF-ACTING . ' ' ' w’lhfililllht l Es e . (7' {nod for (lifi‘crcm speeds, according to the eye. mm of working. Di. "ptivc Circulars sent on application. Also, HAND LEVER BRICK MA- cr inns. lll'ljfvllill d: SHEPPARD, 317-31111 244 Parthcnsis Street, Montreal. A no: 5.69.31 ()fiice: liAh'llll'l'ON. l)]"[‘. E. 0 A R l" ,2‘.’ ’1' Fill. rn‘ rnln‘rou. Hamilton, May 1'. 1874. . . . 316,133. _. ~_........_ _.._._..~ _-M,i. «w amass" continue ensure 1 Red, White, B.7zw,.Gg'egn, Purple, Yellow, 'I‘rzmspm'ent and Beautiful. Your name beautifully printed in Gold for 30 ms. per. dozen, (mixed colors), 4.;‘1qzcu,$1. Best Bristolâ€"I . is omiev.‘ A ant! {or manufacturer. of Salmon, Lebltorl- ackoral. and‘Homo Fruiw,.1n Harmotlogllénflscgohd ,to paralysis of the Bowels. .'I‘o EH EBHUAN nanny, ; cgar Bitters are it purely Vegetable preparation, made chiefly from the na- tive herbs found on the‘ lower ranges of ‘ the Sierru Ne 'uda mountains of Califor- niaythe 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 Bi'r- Tnns‘?” Our answer is, thut they remove the cause of disease, and the patient reâ€" covers his health. They are the great blood purifier and o- nto-giving principle, it perfect Renovutor and Invigorutor of the system. Never before in the history of the world has it medicine been compounded possessing the rcmurkublc qualities of VINEGAR BI'r'rEns in heulnn,r the sick cf.cver.y disease man is heir to. ‘I‘hey arc ‘i gent-lo Purgative as well as a. ’I‘ouic, relieving Congestion or Inflammation of the llivfll' and Visceral Organs in Bilious Diseases The properties of DR. \VALKER’S \' l r: em n llirrnus are Apericnt, Diaphm'etie, (‘nriuiimtivc, Nutri ‘ous, Laxative )iuretic, spam -.‘. {hunter-lrrimnt Sudorific,Altcraâ€" :lvn. 4112.1 .qui-Bilious. Grateful Thousands proclaim VIN- EGAR BITTERS the most wonderful In- vigorant that ever sustained the sinking system. No Person can take these Bitters according to directions, and remain Ion-g unwell, provided theirbones are not do- stroyed by mineral poison or other means, and vital organs waisted beyond repair. Bilious, Remittent and Intera mittent Ii‘evers, which are so preva: .lcnt in the valleys oforir grout rivers throughout the United St;1tcs,csncciully those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee, Cumberland, Arkan- sas, Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grundc, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, S’i'llllllélll,1i0- anoke, James, und many others, with their vast tributaries, throughout our entire country duringr the Summer and Autumn, and roman-loiny so during sea- sons of unusual heat :uu‘l'dryncss, are invariably accompanied by extensive lic- ‘zmgements of the stonuich and liver, and other 9.1 - Y'ii ‘.‘lscol‘ét. In their treatment, 1; 3n .rc, exerting: u pow- erful iufiue - 2 these various or- gans, is it necessary. There is no czztlnu-iiu h.- ll‘ purpose equal to NISSAN BITTERS, p DR. J. \VALineu's as the: will speedily remove the (lurk- colorcd visa-rid numcr with which the bowels :ch loaded, at the some time stimulating the secretlonspf the liver, and generally reswring~ the healthy functions of the digcs lve organs. Fortii‘y the body against disease by purifying,r all its fluids with VINEGAR Bi'r'rmns. No epidemic can take hold of a system thus fore-armed. Dyspepsia er Indigestion, Head‘ ache, Pain in tho Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stomach. Bad Taste in the Mouth, BiliouS'Attacks, Palpita- tution of the Heart, lnllunnnation of the Lungs, Pain in the region of the Kid neys, and a hundred other painful symp- toms, are the ollsprings of Dyspepsia. One bottle will prove it better guarantee of its merits than u lengthy advertiseâ€" ment. ~ Sc1‘ofule,,or..l{ing’s Evil, White Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas,’ Swolled Neck, Goitrc, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent Inflammations, Mercurial Aifections, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, etc. In theso, as in all other constitutional Dls- eases, WAhKant’s ViszAniBrr'rsus have shown their great curative powers in the most obstnmte and intractable cases. For Inflmmnutorymul Chronic Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious, Remit- tent andlntcrmitteiit Fevers, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have no c( uul. Such Diseases are caused by Vitiatcd lood. Mechanical DiseaseS,â€"Persons en- gaged in Points and Milierals, such as Plumbers, Type-setters, Goltl-bcaters, and Miners, as they advance in life, are subject guard aga'nst this, take a dose of WALKER'S VIN- EGAR Brrrms occasionally. For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, ter, Salt-Rheum, Blotchos, Spots, Pimples, Puslulos, Bells, Curbunclcs, Ring-worms, Scum-head, Sore Eyes. Ei‘ysipelas, Itch, Scurl‘s, Discolorutions of the Skin, lIumors " and Diselis‘es 01‘ the Skin of whatever name or nature, are literally dug .31. and carried out of the system in a short time by the use ,0! these Bitters. Z. . H Pin, Tape, and other Worms, lurking in the system of so many thousands, are effectually destroyed and removed. No svstem of medicine,'no vermil’ugcs, no an- thclminitics will free the system from worms 'like these Bitters. . For Female Complaints, in young or old, married or single, at the down of we manhood, or the turn of life, these Toni. Bitters display so decided an influence tha improvement is soon perceptible. -' Cleanse the Vitiated Bleed when- ~ ever'youpfind its impurities bursting throng} the skin in*Pimples,tEruptions, or Sores; cleanse it when you find it obstructed and. I ,slu rgish in the veins; cleanse it when it is; fou ; your feelings willfiell you when. chr thc‘blood pure, and the'henlth of the system will follow. - ‘ 1‘. H. hIcDONALD 5; (20., Druggists and Gcn. A gts., Sill] Francisco, (Juli fornia uud cor. of Washington uud (.‘hurltou 3:3,, N. Y. 5011! by :tIl.l)1'u!'4rlsi 5,: .ul Dcmlcrc. Qiy'l‘. C.»\’I‘HAR1'NES k SA‘V WORKS. R.H.§MITH (Successor to J. Flint? Manufucmrcr of a 1 kinds of SAWS, Straw Kniv’ésf, Patent Plaster- inf,r Trowels, &c. Solenuanufncl urer of the J. Flint Patent Im< proved Champion Cross ‘ Cut. saw; also 1.1.911qu- ' nlng Cross Cut Saw. ST. CATHABINES. ONT. [317.13' All- Saws \Vnrrnntcd. .QLC‘? .EE'i'REéLiQHED That: lualiilfiunliyt 5’ '5 _ > r ‘ _ ,rds, printed in Goldhl’or ‘ , r 7, aâ€"â€".- ;30 cents per .mudro'l, Apdress, ’ T i a y , , ciinswaITe, I ,_ I , -. - , - .-.‘ ' newrostqmce.0nurior w MANUFAQWRFR? .0'1’ king's: findmsshoitsns. AND ALL KINDS F' MACth'El’tY . K .” ..... 013.2%". THOMAS WILSOR, Am r. BARnIIZ, warm BASEABL’E. . DUNCAS Minimum. July 12, 1873. u are

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