“ Let them ask,†he said grullly, as he took off his coat in the hall, lor Helen had come to the door to meet him. “ I’m too tired, after a day’s hard work, to go out of evenings. We had to do it for a While ; among your family and mine, of course ; but a. stop 1nu_sb be put to it sometime 3 and no time is so good as now. The Sillinmns are not relations, or even connexions, only acâ€" quaintances.†Helen’s countenance fell. She still had the innocent delight of a pure, light- hearted girl, in going into society, meet- ing old friends, and having afew hours of change from the monotony that charâ€" acterizes a, Woman’s life. She had count- ed on no little pleasure in attending this party, for the Sillimans were noted for the elegance of their entertainments, and for the choice people they gathered together. Her countenance fell, as We have said, but she was a true wife, and she only said, meekly, “ Sust as you please, my dear.†“\Vell, then, that’s settled,†replied Mr. Trevor, as he put his hat on the rack, too obtuse to see how much his. wife was disappointed, and not caring very much, it must be confessed, to notice it. “ I did think, once or twice, that you might object to my purpose of staying at home after this. But you’re a sensible woman, and no god-about; so we’ll say no more about it.†, The Trevors had been married but a little while7 and hitherto no husband could have been more obliging than Mr. Trevor; his deference, his iii-(my little attentions, which had so charmed the girl, had still continued, now that Helen was a Wife. But at heart Mr. Trevor was one who thought only of himself. His loveâ€"like conduct had merely been put on : he had long grown tired of it ; his native character was now to assume its real hue. “Why, he doesn’t work half as hard as you do! I’ve always heard his busi- ness was a very easy one.†“ But he has with his wife’s. The Trevors are asked also to the Sillimans. But this lazy fellow of a husband says he don’t; intend to let Mrs. Trevor g0 E ‘ It’s time to put a stop to the thing,’ he told him.†“Surely Mr. Trevor has nothing to do with my going out!†exclaimed Mrs. Chanter, in surprise. No more about it'lm No Helen never said any more about it. She never again even hinted that she wished to go out. But she could not help think- ing about it sometimes, especially when one of her young friends had been to see her, and told her what a nice time they had had at the Mortons, or the Grays, or the Varneys, or some other of their mutual acquaintances, the night before. “ So sorry that Mrfl‘revor is too tired of evenings,†they would add, “ we all miss you so much.†For Helen was proud, and had told her friends that her husband was quite fugged out at night, though she herself had already begun to see that he was more indolent than fatigued. “Well, puss, there's some truth in what you sa y,†answered the husband, with another kiss. “ You’re a dear, good creature to be so thoughtful of me. But then, you see, that’s a reason all the more Why I should be careful of you in turn. Now I know something of a woman’s life. It’s the same iuâ€"door, humdrum round, day after day, week after week, month after month. A man, whatever his occupation, ï¬nds more or less excitement daily. At the most, even if he’s a book-keeper, which is one of the most conï¬ning of all pursuits, he has his brisk walk to the counting- house, or bank, in the fresh air. He meets people he knoWs, on the street, and has a ohat and hears. the news, even if it is only for a minute that he stops. But a woman gets no recrea» tion, after she's married, unless she goes out, now and then, to a ‘ tea-ï¬ght,’ as you call it, or to a party. Why, my dear, if I was to let you stay at home forever, as some men let their wives, or make them, you’d soon loose those pretty cheeks of yours, and by-and-by even your spirits! and at last you’d become a dowdy, if not a conï¬rmed in- valid. Put a plant in a cellar if you want to kill it, give it fresh air and sun- shine if you would have it bloom. Now there’s that fellow, Trevor. I felt, to- day, as if I would like to thrash him.†“ We are asked to the Sillimans, my my dear, for toâ€"morrow night,†said pretty Mrs. Trevor b0 hm- }msband, “ It; will be so nice.†“But,†said the wife, “you are SO hard-worked, just now. You come home looking so tired. Don’t you think we’d better give up this party? \Ve’ve been to a. good many lately. You want rest.†Let us change the scene. The very night of this conversation, there was another one, also between two married people, and also in "nfel‘ence to the Silliman’s party. ' “So you have an invitation to the Sillimans to-morrow night?†said Mr. Chanter to his young bride, as he re- ceived her kiss of welcome. “I met Sillimau himself, who told me it was gotvup in a great humy, which accounts for the short notice. Now, mind, look your prettiest." THE TWO HUSBANDS. BY HELEN B. THORNTON Ice threatens to be an expensive luxury this summer, and many perâ€" sons will doubtless be obliged to dis- pense with its use. In the country, where water may be drmm cold from the well or the spring, and it clean cool cellar or dairy preserves the food fresh, it is not so much missed, but even there water and butter canâ€" not remain many minutes, in the temperature of the eating room, with- out losing their agreeable qualities. Several thicknesses of wet cloths, wrapped about the pitcher, will, by evaporation, keep the water tolerable. A common flower pot, inverted over a plate of butter, and kept covered in the same way, with wet cloths, will keep butter in that state of solidity which i9 eSHential to its: attractive» ness. Her life was so dry and hard that even the least glimpse of the world of imagination would have been to her what the 0001 spring in the desert is to the weary, thirsty traveller. But her husband said, in his dogmatic way, when, once or twice, she ventured to borlow a book, and he found her readâ€" ing, “Pshaw‘l A novel again; how can you waste your time with ‘sueh non- sense , a pretty example you are set- ting to your (laughter 1†Mrs. Trevor had been pretty, as we have snid, when she married. But, in less than ten years, she was a faded, shrunken woman, whose nerves were all awry, and who was Fast sinking into a conï¬rmed invalid. Before she had been married twenty years, before her eldest daughter was a grown girl, she quietly slipped away into her eoflin, and had done with this life forever. Her husband put on black, and were the deepest crape on his hat, and went about telling people of his ineonsolahle loss, and then after a year, married again. 5. In the ï¬rst your 01' two of their mar- ried life, he had continued the subscrip- tions to the two or three magazines and newspapers which had been her favorâ€" ites before she left her fathefls house. But after a. while he haul them stopped. “\Vlmt does a married woman want with love stories?†he said, imporiously, forgetting that the magazine Vitb‘ as much to his wife as his newspaper was to him. Often and often poor Helen thought that if she could only have a few books, a good novel. a new poom, or it periodical of some kind, she couhl lime borne things better. vMeantime, what of the other pair? Today, at forty, hlrs. Clumter is; as handsome us ever, people my, and when she goes out with her daughter, passes. with strangers, fer an elder sister. ller mind has not been starved, nor her soul dwarfed. “ A little, judicious amusement is as necessary to it woman,†her husband al V:in said, “ as feed, or air, or affection.†On this principle he acted. The result was that his wife always kept her spirits, her health, and her good looks, and from being ther- eughly happy herself, was nhle to make him all the happier. with poor Helen, she might as well have been a thousand miles away. She sat in the same room with him stitch- ing, stitching, till her eyes acheul with the monoteny and weariness of it all. was, as might be imagined, tremendous. In one sewing machine factory, just above Ridgewood, over 1,000 panes of glass were broken and the slate roof damaged. The shower continued for just thirty minutes, and in this short space of time damage to the amount of many thousands of dollars Was done. The lmilstenes, on an memge, w ‘re the size of turkey eggs and of every con- ceivable shape, with sharp corners and edges that but like knives. During the continuation of the shower the thunder and lightning. was incessant, and with the screaming of men, womenand child- ren, and the shrieks offlï¬â€˜righted cattle, the scene was one truly awful.â€"â€"r r. Y. Herald, July 6, “ You may starve a human soul,†he often decimal, “Just as (easily as the body. And some do it..â€â€"P(elm’.¢0/L's ï¬lm/(wine. One of the most extraordinary phonâ€" omenas ever witnessed in this country tool: place on the Fourth of July in Bergen County, New Jersey. About a quarter of six p. m., in the village of \Vestwood, during the celebration of the day, a sudden darkness came over the Village, and, before the alarmed in- habitants could seek shelter, a violent storm of hailstones descended upon the heads of the crowd. Hailstones tWO in~ ches and a half in diameter, and as hard and heavy as cobble stones, came down in a furious shower. Hens and chick~ ens were killed in large numbers ,' cows and horses Were stunned. The frigh- tened populace ran in every direction, seeking shelter in sheds, beneath trees and in every available spot. Fortunate- ly the majority escaped without injury. A young lady named Miss Bogart was, however, struck on the head by one of the hailstoncs and her wrist and arm frightfully lacerated. At the Ridge- wood House, in the Village, an enor- mous amount of damage was done. Not a single pane of glass was left Whole in the building, and incredible as it may appear, the hailstones actually- broke through the slate roof as if they had been cannon balls. The storm covered an area of about twentyâ€"ï¬ve miles, stretching from Spring Valley to Kinâ€" der Kamack. The storm prevailed at its utmost at the stations of Pascack and Ridgewood, which are on the Hack- cnsack branch of the Erie tailroad, and the depots were completely riddled, though a battle had been fought in the neighborhood. As late as six o’clock yesterday morning hailstoncs were pick- ed up at the station the of walnuts. Through the section of the country Where the storm raged a most perfect scene of desolation can be witnessed. Every tree is stripped of its fruit, grain fields of rye and corn laid low, and the hope of hay this fall is utterly gone. The sensation created in the Vicinity An Extraordinary Phenomenon JJAILC'TON EH THE SIZE 0]“ ORANGE Evaporation Instead of Ice The article chiefly sold at mth ï¬umy fairsâ€"JILL- visitor. In the boiler room of the Park [[03- pital is a stand about twelve feet high, surmounted by a tank full of ice. A pipe, proceeding from the pump of the heating engine of the establishment, passes through the tank and up into the reception word. All the water that, it conducts becomes very cool from the ice in the tank. A hose, terminating-in a patent vaporizer, is attached to the pipe. A sunstruck patient is placed upon a rubber couch and bedewed with the vaporized water until he revives. IL is not eduezibion alone, nor wealth, nor high social position, that makes one a pleasanttmveling companion. There must be, aside from these, an instinct- ive recognition of individual riglrtsfa kind and respectful demeanor toward strangers, with no desire to appropriate more than a due share of the comforts and conveniences provided for-a1]. One meets in traveling many people of this description, and very many who do not, answer to the description at all. No place where people indiscrim- inately brought logether in more fzwor- able for the exhibition of wellâ€"bred courtesy, or the lack of it, than the or- dinary railway passenger-car of this country. It is Strictly a democratic in- stitution, accessible to nll,;111£l in which one person is as good as another, pro- vided'he has paid his fare. Equality is assumed, and social and class distinc~ tions ignored, at least for the time be- ing. Under th so circumstances it is easy for an intelligent Observer to de- tcut those who have been educated unâ€" der reï¬ned influences, or those who, without special cultivation, :n'c pow-:4â€" Sea of native politeness. How frequently do we see men whose dress and cxternal make-up wnuld not suggest it very near relationship with swine, enter it ï¬nely unholsternd cur, I‘OYt 0 one of the seat banks with a whack, and with the most serene indif- fcrence to all considerations of pi-opri Qty, plant their hook on the cushion before thomiwhich llz\$$j118t been (mew pied, and perhaps soon will be again, by ladies in‘elegant apparel. The desire to elevate the feet is so uncontrollable with many, that, if dislodged from the SPZLbCllSllihll, they immediately ï¬nd a l'OSizillg~]}ldC(H)1l the sent arm, making :1 sort of door-mat of (3?va one THISSng in the aisle. “Now I’m not going to treat you like company, Miss Emma,†said a country hostess to her city guest, “ but consider you one of our own folks.†And Miss Emma went home in just three days after this apparent- ly kind announcement was made, having been in doubt, meanwhile, as to whether she was not considered a volunteer maid-ofâ€"all-work in her friend’s household. Of all hostesses, defended us from this free and easy class. “We won’t put ourselves out none for you,†say they, honestly enough, and you are henceforth in- stalled in all the doubtful privileges of “own folks.†Household tasks are thrust into your hands so naturally that you are a little bewildered as to whether you are a servant or guest, and you soon ï¬nd that “own folks†are not in the habit of plucking the iioweas, and that the few books are under look and key. This is no phase. I have seen «another. You are treat- ed with as delicate consideration and courtesy as the most sensitive could desire, while all formality and coreâ€" moniousness is put aside, and you are received into the heart of the home. Nothing can be sweeter to the st 'an- ger than to be made ‘_‘ own folks†of in this way. He is the constant re- cipient of the most delightful atten- tions, and a privileged observer of'un» rest ‘ained home intercourse. rl‘here is no parade of the “ best things,†no display of china or silver, no depart- ure from the ordinary home ways, and the visitor seeing that his comâ€" ing occasions no interruption, feels in the truest sense “at home.†This is the only hospitality, and that guest will be hard to suit who does not value such quiet, simple kindness. Another piece of ill~brccding ccimistb' in ï¬lling :1, sent with luggage, and then fall to reading; 21 newspaper, or pretend to ho. asleep, while others who have paid as much as they huye are looking in vain for a seat. Bracingono’s knees .ugainst the hack of the seat in front of them, especially if the back is not made rigidly fact to the side irons, is asgmssâ€" ly uncivil as it is annoying to the occu- pants of such Seat. Some kill time by Whistlingr their favorite tune, which is very soothing to the lCSt of the passenâ€" gers, and particularly those aï¬licted to any extent with nervous: irritability ! New and then a devotee of “fineâ€" cut,†expectorates at a marl: en the floor of the passageâ€"way, and after an hour’s practice at the target, quite a sizealjle puddle is fermed for the conâ€" venience of ladies wearing long Skirts. There are other violations of promiâ€" ety somewhat legs aggravating than those we have named, but which are equally characteristic of the illâ€"bred, among which may be mentioned loud talking, argumentative controversy, eating peanuts, and the like. It is really surprising how much the pleasâ€" ure of ajeurney, Whether long or Short, is enhanced by the practice of civility and politenesg, even if it requires a little patience and selfalcnial. The nameless little courtesies to strmlgers, accompanied with a modicum of native tact and delicacy, will go far to compensate for the lack of the educat- ing and reï¬ning influences ef the best society. N0 railway regulations, or legal enactments even, can force civility beyond a certain limit. The rest must depend upon the individual. Nor can such rules or statutes transform {L cartâ€" horse into :1‘ carriageâ€"horse, but with a little aidend co-operation on the part of the animal himself, a change can he wrought which is the next best thing to it. “Make Yourself at Home.†Manners on the Train A physician left at death a large volume, carefully sealed, and supâ€" posed to contain a fund of medical knowledge. On being opened it was found to contain only this simple ad» vice: “Keep your head cool, your feet warm, and your bowels open.†But there is a whole volume in this maxim. VINEGAR BITTERS net as : mild cathartic, leaving the system in a healthy condition. I It. H. McDonald, an experinced druggiet associated with Dr. Walker, is a man of thorough integrity and practical knowledge of the art ofcom- pounding medicine. They have a valuable 1nedicine,and they know how to bring itto the knowledge of public by judicious advertising. We are happy to give them our hearty en- dorsement, and bid them God-Rpeed in relieving:" the ills to which flesh is heir. ‘ *Ghost Explained. in a famous haunted house ion the road between Yellow Springs and Xenia, Ohio, superstitious exhibitions were specially noted. The people throughout that region hesitated to speak about the place, and its peculiâ€" arities were mentioned in whispers. Hence my curiosity was aroused, and after preparing myself to resist any danger that might occur from the presence of desperate characters, I proceeded to the place and provided an excellent point for viewing the premises. it would have been atedi- ous business to wait until ï¬idnight, the time when ghosts are said to ap- pear. But i did not have to wait so long. About eleven o’clock a warm stream of air blew up from the south over a creek and '51. quarter of a mile or more of rich, black, warm bottom- land. As the vapor struck the hillside it condensed, and little flying balloons of mist flew hither and thither. The warm air lingered over and fermented an old pile ot'compost, decaying straw, and a few old boards that were lying about. Then there arose a 'aporous, luminous body, which, with its base on the ground and conical or round, ï¬ery, cloud~like head in the air, took the shape of a woman. Crimson and livid blood-like spots and streaks were about her neck and scattered over her dress. She waved her hands, and her hair floated about in clouds of light, while her eyes glittered like the cold moon. Rising slowly from her hide- ous bed, the spectre moved hither and thither, as it' the wind toyed with her and she cared not whitht r she was taken. At last she started it' to visit me in my retreat, then turning a corner of the stable, she nearly dis- appeared, there being; nothing left visible but a long dirt '-wllite train. In a moment the phantom turned again, and crept into the open doorâ€" ray, steeping she retired. Several, minutes elapsed, and concluding that she had collapsed or worn out her 'aporous strength, I was in the act of leaving,r the place, when she came out through the opening 01" the doorway and crevices between the logs. Then, after val king or floating about awhile, her light went out and she became thinner, and ï¬nally disappeared. The shape of the apparition was such that it was easy to ' an imaginative person to see in it the form of a sad-faced or angry-eyed, restless woman. Then how easy to create a legend ï¬lLed with details of a mysterious murder, and make this the unhappy victim, whose shadow must haunt the place of her taking offuutil her manes are appeased in some legal and etTective manner. But my evidence makes this baseless fabric of a vision the mere result of the vaporous exhalations of a compost- pile. I had a very line pair of ï¬eld- glasses, and could see clearly the effects produced by the stream of air when it came in contact with the compost. \ The vapor began at that moment to arise, and the result would occur in all seasons. Then the lumiâ€" nous jets and variegated colors sprang up from the \ 'ar 11 labo ‘atory wherein Nature’s chemistr T was at work, and finally the vaporous cloud, which realâ€" ly had not any definite ‘ npe, was carried at the caprice o the soft zephyr winds which ï¬itted about, and did not blow suï¬iciently strong to carry this heavier body out ot‘ the regular draughts through the openâ€" ings of the dilapidated house. Tim SUCCESSFUL PHYSICIANâ€"Dr. J. Walker is achieving an eminent distinction as nbeneflitorofliis species. Some stigmatize all patent- medicines with the odious epithet of quackery. But DR. WALKER’s CALIFORNIA Vinn- GAR BITTERS have the endorsement of the medical protession. The editor can conscientiously and cordially re- commend the medicine, because he knows he has found great beneï¬t from its use. For nearly twenty years he has suffered from de 'ungement of the stomach. And though the disease has become chronic, he has already ohtui ned great relicfl'rom this remedy. ‘ (‘ine night last winter in Paris I Went to hear a light opera which had been running six months. The prima donna of the evening was a young Woman who, when the piece began its run, was one of the chorus singers in that very opera, and on that very stage. There is more earnest search after singing voices than there is for pearls. in oysters; in every nook and cranny of every land the prima donna hunt is going on; for while a singer may do without an ini- pressztrio, the latter cannot possibly do Without singers. The Strakosch broth» ers and their agents attend divine serâ€" vice in churches ofevery denomination, on the lookout for promising vocalists; they visit theatres and meeting rooms, where publiospeeking is going on, with ears sharpened to detect musical possi- bilities in a speaking organ whose owner has not detected them 3 they haunt low singing halls where beer is sold and tobacco smoked, ready, if a voice be found, to transport it to the Italian opera†or cultivate it at their own expense until it is fit to warble the world of music lovers to its feet.â€" Oh'ec Logan. } 0m the Lockwood Unionist, December 20, 1870‘ The Music Market. Wmmmrmrrn.w’nâ€"w my»! me:wmr xma‘l ET Vi! EST ' $3.251 139/31 1%. 1‘0 G F. N is I this ï¬rm are 1'11 many r04 mots superior to any other made in 1111's (:0lele )cing‘ Half-lubricating throughout, and are ronmrkably ])l)\\'u]'f1fl, mul («~0- nomiczll on {no} as well as rvnuonuble in price. The efï¬ciency may [)0 jndgod by Hm routimmlly inm'ens ing demand wlm, 1mcvssitntcs constant, addition, to 0111‘ muchimuy and plant. A Scotch minister tells thelellow~ ing anecdote: There was :1 poor l'eL low in Dundee who wns :1 l'enrt‘ul vie tim to intempemnce, and had been, while under the influence of drink, cruel that he had beaten his wile that she lay fer- an hour insensible. One day when a lady met, his wife and usde for him, she replied that he had (tome home raving with drink, and she had to fly from ,thehouse till she would learn from one of the children that he had mum asleep. That lady wenL to him, and with much difï¬culty persuaded him to attend the prayer: meeting one night. it so happened that INT. Memiy speléc than night ztbeii'o ernikeiine-sx, 'de said, “ There maybe a man standing here so given to drink that he may become a curse and :1 terror to his wil'e and children.†The man at once (mid tn himself, “Who has been telling him about me ?†He went next night to the meeting, and at the close the lady who had persuaded him to attend on the preceding night {euud him among the anxious enquirers who remained. He fequ peace, and fur weeks he stood lirni against temptation. One night the craving for drink came back upon him, and he went out of bed and said, “i nnmt go and get whiskey.†liis wil'e implored him not to ge, and he said, "’ 1 would like to keep hark, but i must get whisâ€" key.†At 121M, when on his way to the door, he fell on the lleer, and it was not so much pruying 2,1,»: blirieking to God to help him ; and. there he lay on llici knees tiil the morning began to dawn, and then he get the Victory, and with his face shining zit; that of 3105,08 did on his way from the Mount, that man remained 9 Victor, and irem that d it) tlziâ€"; he had ktptiree from BEETLE SUMMER Invented Ly Mr. Jas. Chamberlain, Fox'omm (g'eIlE STEAM ENGINES MAN! CTURED BY 1*‘UEL-SAVING LITTLE RA NU HS Steam Engiimg, Maï¬a 9%, Mean: flaw Mills, Shai’giug. R’mwys, Hangers, ‘5 *rew Mumga Frown, "HIE NEW ROCKLAND SLA'I‘E (K, ARE NOW E prepared to supply Lhu \\'cll»lnm\vu R‘uclxland {owing Slain, in any quantity and 0f any sizes. DRUMMONI), Hun: mm; WORKS, that «‘1 drink. AGEIVTS EVAX‘JTEID‘ l' termsâ€"the residence of the 1:110 Lewis Bowibv beautifully situated on the banks of SllverukL law 6 brick houst coutumiup; 17 moms; Iwu 51(‘1 of Rockland Reeï¬ng $1ate at REDUCED FRED-ES. gl'ound‘ and farm attached of 5H Hows. if (h-Sirml. Port Dover is to be the terminus of the Port, Dover and Lake Huron Railway. (which is already graded nearly the whole lc‘iiglh (if the line) : and also of HM: Hamilton and Lake Erie Railw For further in- formation apply on the 1mm: ‘ m‘ by h-ttcr 10 MRS. L. DOWLBY, I‘m't Dovm'. A. father in \Viscomin oii'urcd his .5011 five (1011:1129 [0 Luke :1 Lime of tax- 101‘ oil, and then got :1 (counterfeit, biH oï¬'on the boy. 7 314 ixm as the Sulphate in the same (105;); whiié Rï¬ij‘ea; the head less, is more palatable and much cheaper. Send for descriptive Circular with Testimnnials of Physicians from all parts of the country. W Sample packages for trial, 25 cents. Prepared by B] LLINGEL CLAPP & 00., Chemists, Boston, Mass. New You; Oflicc, R & 9 Cgllege Place. in wn-Eflï¬ug m maven/250:“ pimwe say that you HIHV their mlvcr- tisement iu gm» paper. gamgï¬famm V FOR FEVER £5 AGUE Hm 1mm, I‘m-h Hamilton, Juno, 12, 187.1 Mr. Moody and the Drunkard. A11 Saws \‘(m'mxmtd (k ‘nd (21213011 I: ‘K' ('03: ionlml in Ihu Stun (mm-11211 IL M. \'\'m OR SALE â€"-râ€" ON REASONABLE Van's doctor's in 1:10;] Julnmy Smith D‘iké p": C(_ W H O L Tr. E} {M )m‘ . eahmd Hwy '1 \Kvith squills and zth‘nihm And ipemc flu.) ‘ 1 him. lL'i They st'rred him up w ‘x u And tried to mm‘o ‘ lix ut all 1'11 va'u ; his litth 5 \Vas waftcel (For the l) J) 'J'lml I ()m: of tlw mos: pl‘uditn‘ Machines; :3 am ۤCH£N Mackinaw-3' Vanniuctvured at HM. {AL is as eï¬'ectuzil a remedy :I 5‘- (‘\'«‘l':l]>1)v1!1‘(‘dM‘I‘HI‘ PROPRIETOR. .1; STAG-E HAMIL’I‘ON, ONT 1" , .i'fsï¬ GROUERS T 11 3+] INES, 8.. J F E4010 Munuf: ,rurm' of 1110 J. 1"‘nintl’munt Im- proved Champion (Tmss Cu 1, saw ; also the, light- ning (Irma (1111 Saw. (Successor 10 J. Flim)‘ Mmmf inn-1' of all )f SA 'JS, Straw ‘, Patent Plaster- "0175, &C. (Human, and mum ‘K' ('03‘ NH," ' QT. CA’I‘IIARINES L SAW \VORKS. HSMH’H W14 1.91 :I In. ._ 3/ IL“ .515 r21 Ihv pnhli OFFICE Dvpm‘l 1mm! t and [31 7â€"1 y 306 We, the undersigned, have been cured by Dr. A Davis Toronto, 011t.:~J. II. “'illiamaon, P. H Mnlm'cw, (3. I). l’x'ost011,.Antlmny Kasseall, Hem‘ ’l‘hornmh. Britmn,Pnt,l“.(‘nrr, (,‘hus.G.0tis‘sz.I Pisnamus, and ï¬x hundred utlm‘s have been cured‘ Can be had at his oflice. Sent by mail to any part of tho, world. $1 per box and two postage stamps. Ymm r men, take particular noticeâ€"you can be rosthm to health by applying (either in person or by letter.) All female complaints skilfully treated. All letters must be addressed to Dr. A. Davis, Box, .1030, Toronto, Ontario. U hours. (111); and evening: on all chroniq diseases 1)]hCflSOS 01' Women and ()hildl‘eu‘ Mldwlfï¬â€˜l‘y, 0th together with those of a 1m 1110 nature. For Freight or Passage, apply to 'I‘EMPERLEYS, CARTER X3 DARKE, 21 Billeter Sï¬l‘ect, London ; W. Y. WEEKS (is 0)., Barbican, Plymouth ; ROSS A: 00;, Quebec ; or MIL‘nnL V is famed for its Mannhctnrios. its Furnaces, its Railroads, its “'atcr Courses, its houn- mm Lakes, and stirring enterprising Towns, Vil- la; s and Cities. MICHIGAN produces WOOL Wheat, Oats, (Tm-n. Barley, Potatoes, &c. ~ MICHIGAN produces incxhuusmblc uantitics of 111331, Coppola. Silver, (10le and Lumbc . MICHIGAN 3n the box-tion of, Sfixic near them Lands, )rnduces alll‘kindq oflf Ifg'ult Tmmas 7 7 7 DELTA 7 7 7 7 Jhmvs 7 7 7 - ,S'r. LAWRENL Through Tickets from all paints \Vcst, at REDUCED tA'I‘ES. Certiï¬cates issued to persons desirous of bringing on: their friends. Through Bills of Lading issnml nn the Continent and in London for all parts of Canada, and in the United States to Dctmit, Milwuw llL‘C, Chicago and other points in the West. Thch Lands are, timhvrod Wit} 01:11 and mhm' hard \x‘umL :u‘d um bur-t nmrkct, by And a ,in 21 part of the State uncquzillcd for health. WM] watered, and contiguous to the great Fruit raising Section nf the East Shore of Lake Michigan. MICHIGAN is one of (he LEAST INDEBTI‘ZI) and most prospm'mm of the St_a}vs._ ‘ MllvnmAN is noted for its Fplcndidilnh'm'sily and Normal Schools, all part of a Illagnmcunt “FI'CU School Systmpl“ endmvgd bylhtLStuu‘A. ’I‘he'Gmnd Rapids ahd VIndisiVnhwmm Road runs Lhmugh the, centre of the Grant. ’I‘hcpnrt of Michigan in which these lands are fouudls NOT A V‘JILUERi’QESS BY A Y MEANS. (Jnmpoaml of thcfn‘dmvi Eatuszships :â€" Splemhd Bargains in the Best of Farming Lands and is rapidly ï¬lling: up with HI‘IHUI'S from Canada, Sweden, Norway, Holland, and from almost awry Slum in the l'nion. ‘ St. Lawrence, Scotland, Thames, Severn, T]'- Hammers of this Line m" intended to sail as folâ€" hms during the season of IMVI 1ti<m of 187-1, to and from Landon, Quebec and Man '4] (calling at Ply- nmuth, uuh'nrd, for Passengers: THAN m: II mm The Grant Rapids and Indiana Railroad having been complctcd from Fort ‘Vuyne to ludimul, 10 little Traverse Bay, near Mackinaw, and earned all of its grants of lands. over 1,000,000 ACRE. , 1|(I\\' oï¬'m' [>111 mntnius a population 01‘ {‘vszrrlxga Surï¬ng-A2151 descriptions, Oilvlempu’ed and warranted .TAS. WARNOOK & UO. i874. Over100,000 acres of the lands of this grant have already been sold ! The wealth of the Immtl‘~ 1H in tho soil. and now a the mm to own a share of such wealth, when _1t. :11] be had at 0110 quarter 0111): down, balance in (easy li111cpuy 11101115. During the year 1874 and 1875, any plm'lmsms of not less than 80 acres of farmng land, payng one- qunrim' down, who will go upon it for settlement within Four Months :11" 31' purchase, wlll bet‘nrnish- ml with PER}; 13ASSED for himself and family over Ilw (Jr. R. 8', l. 'H. 1L, from whom such striku the mud, to the station no 4t his purchase. LONDON, QUEBEC AND MONTREAL. All insn'mncnts \mrmnied ï¬n.- }' mars. W when and Hamil. E’FA'JCHLS wulm'd in every ’J‘nwn and (/‘nmity‘ Axes. Hamheï¬s, Chisels, H Hives, ()arpeulcra’ Toms, Coopers†Toms, Picks, Elmnmers, Machine Knives PRINCE ORGE AIS A I) E 1 [Al DE ts'j‘lii‘ll'lT, GAL’E.‘ EDGE TOOL CARRIAGE SPRING woaxg MAN U‘r‘AC’l‘U 1: Y. THE “ F‘ISCHER’ To Colon‘vesur Individuals far 1874 5'. I875. From $4 10$}? and $10pcr A are (Eah, Om., April, 1874 TE MPERLEY LIN E. HuMcml‘ April .0. 1871 Wc :n'c Suh‘ Agents for the above instrumenbs, an (a in :1 pu ion to supply Local Agents in every pal‘. the Dummiuu :xL mmmfucturers' lmvest wlmlusah dih‘CS 1,000,000 ACRES THE GOLDEN FEMALE PILLS, TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND SOULS! A“ HI ‘E‘EK‘BHD MICHIGAN LAXKDS H V7". A. Hf) W ARD, NORRIS & SUPER, “’Agl‘Eli A N X) BA IL, [if Land Dem 115a: nnotlxcr reed h SLI'LIIUUHLL*\'L5Y()hl:lihm1 t! BSHHK: 1101“ 11 n. ls (,deorsud by the must noted :u'tis of Lhedayas the must, musical Lu durable Piano made, and in their fercnc styles, from me lime “ 1h". MING an“ to Lhc “()Rénms‘u'lm! square grands, are suited in the £01 V ] {OM LUN DON F ROM QUEBEC CONSULTED AT ALL DAVI D SHA‘V, M 011131931. (1313 ; :z must dummhlc l’:._rlor Insh‘uuml‘. There are about 14,000 {If them in us giving eminent†satyistupc1011, and \ “(for them, in all conï¬deuve us but“: value than any ether in the marke' The Messrs. Fischer have over thin; ycurs’ sue \rssx'ul Iuauufamtuh: m thin. of this Piano to refer to a gunman“ m its good qualities. No other Piano nus g‘uixmd the 51mm fuvnr in :11 slum 1L time in Canada as the J‘“isullm‘ sin“ its introduction by us. 1011‘, I’Jrium', 'nr Concert Hull tinfluirod _\vit11 ht-ach fwd "mph Delta, 30 Commune Sm, TORONTO Ur DR. A. DAVIS, Hun-unto 011 In hunge Laue w or 7‘ AND Medical (Mlice, ,ud other ï¬rst an1 Commissioner, Grand Rnpuls Mlch n. Wednesday \‘v’mlnesday Wednesday \Vcdncsdny K†Thursday Tuesday, Thursday 'l‘hursday HMO m 1116 ’]‘(')HONTO Helios. IBM. July 2 July 14 July 23 August“ July July 1 June 3 June 17 314-0111 Red, White, Blue, Green, Pit-)7 lc, Yclibw, ’l‘x’unspnrenh' and Beautiful. Yuur name beautifully print-ed in Gold {01‘30 C(S. per dozen, (mixed cu‘mm). 4 dozan, 51. 3mm Iiristul Cunls, printed in 60111, fax 50 cents per lumllrml. Address, GLASS UAE‘IIENQ CARDS! ANGLfl-A FE EGR’IUAN INVITEL, Calculated for din'eront “pr-eds, acom'ding t0 the system 01' working. Descriptive Circulars sent, on apiflicntion. Also, HAND LEVER BRICK MA- (11 INES‘ ma mama 5 317-3111] Agents for mmmfnclm'ors Mucknrol, and Home Frnim (Emu-x. and settle into troublesome disorders. lruptimis n the skin are the appearance on the surface of lummm that should be expelled from the blood. [Mental (lu- mngumems are the determination of them same liu< mars to some internal organ, or organs, whose n01 ion theyderange, and whose substance they disease and destroy. Avm‘s SAusAmRiLLA expels these humans from the hlnud. When they are gone, the disorders they produce disappng flue}: as Ut'tcerata‘nns of flu- Liver, Stomach, Kidnegv, Lungs, Eruptions (Hid Erupti'vc Dweaaes' of the skin, St. Anthonyâ€; Iv'irr’, Rose (27' Ei'I/sipelns. Pinmlea, Pustulem Blotchem Mails, Tamara, Terter and Sultlfheum, Scum Hmd. Ring worm, Ulcers and Sores, Rheumatism, M’k» ralgin, Pain inthe Bones, Sideuml Head. [/‘emnlv Weakness, Slervilv'ty, Leucarrlum, arising frail; fn~ tcrnul ulceration and uterine diaouse. Dropw, Die. pelm'n, Enmciatfon and (z'mlrml Dvbilim. With their departure health returns. ‘ PREPARED 31’ Dr. .Z (7. A YER (ft (70., Lox/1‘41", jllriss. AWr/w-up and .l/ymom, ,wattsfle, General .A gents: W’Sold by all Dmggisia-x and Dealers in Medicine. PBRG-USQ ,rg’AGI‘IN'l‘S WANTED to Sun ’l'ivlmts. Lu wlmm Liberal] l’rumiums will be paid. \~ Single Tickets .31 ; Six Tickets £3; Tnulw ’i'iokn‘a $10 ; 'J'\vcnt_\'»1'lvc Circulars containing; :Ll‘ull list of pr" ‘, a descrip‘ tion of lhe manner Hi (1 ing, and other infurmuliun in reference to the lliqtrilmLim, will be gent 10 mm one ordering; them All letters must bu addressed In. MAIN OFFICE, L. l). SJNE,.I:ox SU, 101 \V. 1*“ ti) Sh. Cincinnati. (L, EYEE’S SARSEFéï¬EEEE- Two Plums $1,000 Two Prams $5300 FIVE Psz \- $100 One Family Carnage and Mzztdnu! Unix-«nu, with var-mounted Harness, woth $41,500! One Horse and Buggy, with Sik'm' mmuzlcd Hul‘l worth $600. One Fine toned Rosewmul l‘izmo, woth $5150 I Five Family Sowing Muchilwzz, \\'nr‘.‘u :ï¬'wv «an-'5, 750 Gold and Silvex' Lever lluniing \Vuivhn‘s (in worth Inn“ $210 to $300 each 1 Gold Chains, Sih‘m‘AYur/c, Jewelry; the†Ma lebar of Gifts, 6,000 ! Tickets 12‘) ‘itad 1‘0 501m MONDAY, AUGUST 10th, 1874» ONE (1' 1M ND CAP] T2111 PIE/Zia} Dr. J. Walker’s California Vin- ng‘tl‘ Bitters are a purely \t'egretable preparation, made chiet‘ly from the na- 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 Alcohol. The question is almost daily asked. “What is the cause of the unparalleled success of VIXEGAR Birâ€" TERS?†Ou ' answer is, that; they remove the cause of disease, and the patient reâ€" covers his health. They are the great blood puritier and a lit'evgiving' principle, a pert’eet R'enorator and Invigorator of the system. Never before in the history of‘the world has a inedieiue been eomlmumled possessing the remarkable qualities- of VINEGAR Brr'mes in healing: the sick of every disease manis heir to. They are a gentle l’urgatire as well as a ’I‘onie, relieving Congestion or Inflammation of the Liver and Visceral Organs in Bilious Diseases $50,000 in Valuable Gifts E E The only Reliable Giff Dish-ibm‘iun in the Country. Hamilton, May 1, 1874 The properties of 1m. WALKEIm VINEGAI: HITTERS are Aperient, Diaphoretic, CurminuI-ivu, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, Svduï¬ve. Unnnter-ln‘itant Sudoriï¬c, Altm'w live. and Antigflilious. B. 1â€"1. DIODONALD (t 00.. Dx'ugzg'ists and Gon. Agts., San Francisco. Unlian and can of ‘Vushington and Charlton N. Y THE CANADA SEL.I*‘â€"ACT1NG Giff M“ 1m: FREE Said 15y all Drï¬gg ts uiidflDéaichw. FUR PURIFYING THE BLOOD This compound 0 ', ' I / / , \ ’ " Vegetable alterzwivca .1 ' \ /Mmpnï¬lla,Doclgstï¬li} Practical and Analytical $5,0d0 iN GGLD! RATHER 16 BULMER A: SHEPPARD, Ofï¬ce: 241 Pm‘tlmn' ‘ 5mm, Montreal L‘ HAM I III‘ON, ONT 8/11, Mag/aim '1‘0 1’.“ IHS'I'RHHI’I IN NOTISE. T‘ H 0 PR 1 ETDR V (I A If P E N 'l 3‘17, RAE? Km (‘3’: G N E W CHAS. WHITE This compound of m.- wgcmhlc alterzwivcas, Sn» / salmn‘lla,I)oclc,Strfllingiuiu /aml Mandmkc with t)“; ¢Iodidcs oi L’utmsium and Iron 11‘ 303 a most, eflix- ¢tual cur va a series or. écomplaints which was we»); X/prevahmt and afflicting I It puriï¬es the blood, purch (ml, mu lurkng humors in the system†that undermine limit}: Gait Post Oï¬ice. ()ntzu'im of Salmon, Lohs‘tm‘s, in 1l<-;_\=_v1irally Snnlml 13m»320. Mill 3 SWH‘ ii r. §Giganbaciifl “Jon tit/y E"% E 5 5mm†!