While there is reason to doubt the possibility ofdevising an electric mo- tor capable of doing heavy work as economically as the steam engine, there can be no question that, for light service, a satisfactory electric engine is one of the most Widely felt needs of the age. All that is lacking to meet this want is a suitable battery; in other words, a simple, compact, portable, and, if possible, dry apparatus, capa- ble of generating a steady current of electrimty fer a considerable period without renewal, capable of standing unused Without material waste, yet able to give out its full power on the instant when required, capable of be- ing easily and cheaply kept in workâ€" ing order, free from fumes, and not liable to leak or spill its contents under ordinary circumstances. The applications which await such a battery are practically innumerable. ‘ It i's‘n'ot implissmmhaï¬ï¬t‘Eamï¬mn dwelling house of the future will rival Houdan’s in the diversity and com- ' pleteness of its electrical appliances ; yet, without entering the region 01 speculation or looking beyond the simple daily needs of ordinary house- holds, there is a present call for the services of this fleetest, neatest, and most tractable of servants, sufï¬cient to ensure wealth and renown to who- .ever shall capture and harness him satisfactorily. Even with the fuming, slopping, troublesome batteries already in use, enough has been accomplished with electric motors to demonstrate the superiority of electricity for light work. Everything that steam can do in such cases it can do; and there are many occasions, domestic and otherâ€" wise, where steam power cannot be conveniently employed, where a small electric engine might do the required worquuickly, neatly, With- out heat or risk of explosion, and without calling for special engineer- ing skill or knewledge, the common lack of which must ever act as a bar: ,to the general employment of steam for household servxee. And though the power obtained may be, in itself, many times more expensive than an equivalent amount of steam power, the advantages attending the use of electricity are so pronounced, the pos- sible saving of time and trouble so great. that, witha generator such as we have described, there would be no hesitation in giving it the preference inthousands of cases Where a little power is wanted for continuous work, or where there is occasional need of a small but instant effect. Take, for example, that/almost unâ€" iversal household necessity, the sewâ€" ing machine. How immensely would its usefulness be increased by an ac- ceptable means of running it: a motor which would require no wind- ing up, which would not easily get out ol order, which would be always safe, always ready, and perf’eeLly under control! A man who shoulu devise a. battery to meet this demand alone would be sure of a. fortune. But this is only one, of a countless number of uses to which such a bat- tery might be put. In almost every civilized home, there is water to pump, washing ma- chines to operate, wood to saw, coal to lift, and a multitude of obher labors, all of Which might be done advantaâ€" geously by simple electric motors, provided the requisite battery were forthcoming. Besides; there is light to furnish, doors and Windows to guard against burglars, errands to run, and accidental ï¬res to report-â€" For light manufacturing purposes. the call is equally urgent. In every workshop where steam is not used, there are presses, saws, lat-hes, drills, and numberless other present er posâ€" sible machines, to which electro motors might be proï¬tably applied. For amateur workmen, nothing could be more desirable or more likely to meet with- immediate acceptance. Then What an admirable centrivance it would be for driving light wagons or propelling pleasure boats I There would be no fuel to carry, no ï¬re to watch ,‘no pessible explosion to fear : there would be no stabling or groom- intgr to pay for, and no food to buy for the hours of idleness. Mr. Bergh ought to offer a premium for the in vention, simply for the sake of the animals he loves. The light of other daysâ€"practical, not pcetic-â€"wa.s the tallow dip, and, further back, a bunch of moss in a dish of grease. The advance from this primitive illuminator to the gm jet covers a~m0st important Stage in the progress of domestic economy.â€" To make the illuminating material distribute itself was a capital stroke of policy. By most people it: is re- garded as the ï¬nal stroke in the eonâ€" fliet with the shades of night. But it falls very far short of it. Where the range of application is so great, it is needless to multiply ex- amples. Our purpose is to suggest, not to demonstrate,the multitudinous uses towhich a satisfactory electro motor may be put, and to call the at- tention of inventors to the certain reward that will come to Whoever shall overcome the last remaining 0b- staele.â€"Scientzï¬c American. Before we can truly say that our streets and houses are lighted scien- tiï¬cally, another and more important ad vance must be made. We must get rid of the offensive and poisonous products, the heat and flickering, the sharp contrasts of light and shade, the needless expense and frequent ï¬res, and the thousand other disad- vantages attending the distribution and local combustion of our illumiâ€" nating material, by distributing in- stead pure light. The problem is simple and easily solved. \Vhat we want in our rooms is a clean, white light, like diffused daylight. The popular mistake lies in supposing that the light must ne; A Chance for Inventors The Light of Coming Days. cessarily be generated where .it is used. The remoteness of our natural illuminators ought to teach us the absurdity of such a position. ' Every tyro in Optics knows that light is the most tractable of material effects. It is obediens to the last deâ€" gree. You can send it Where. you. will, to any distance, through the crookeJc-st channels, through the darkest passages, and it will emerge undimmed, ready to be absorbed or dispersed as the operator may wish. his well known also that there are many ways of producing a brilliant light, much more easily and economiâ€" cally than by carbon combustion in small :1 id scattered flames. * Yet, curiously, this familiar knowledge does not appear to have ever been put to practical use in producing a simple, wholesome, agreeable, scientiï¬c illum- ination for public and pri 'ate build- ings. To our children, the old fash- ioned candle snufl'ers are unknown, or known only as relics of an anti- quated system of domestic economy. It is possible that, to their children, gas pipes may be equallyobsoletc as articles of household use, light tubes furnished with reflectors and termin- al radiators taking their place. . The working of the predicted system can be sketched in afew words. Given, say, a large hotel to be far- nished with artificial light: Instead of having a net-world of gas pipOS leading to the difierent rooms and to different burners in each room, accord- ing to the present method, the light for the entire building would be gen- erated in one place, say in the main ventilating Shaft for the utilizing of the surplus heat. The distribution of' the light would be effected by means: of reflectors, eaeh throwing into’ its} appropriate tube a bundle of rays (made parallel by a lens) sufï¬ciently intense to flood the room to which they were directed with a pure white radiance, which could be turned on, or 011' or graduated by simply press- ing a knob or turning a key. liisize the light tubes need be no greatei“ than ordinary gas pipes. . indeed they might be much smaller, since all the light required for the largest room might be transmitted to the reâ€" flector as an extremely slender beam. The terminal lenses would close the tube against smoke and dust, which, would dim the reflectors at the angles ; and by keeping the enclosed air pure and dry, the absorption of light would be inappreeiable. The advantages of this mode of illumination are many and obvious. There would be no poisoning of the atmosphere by local combustion ; no scattered flames to occasion ï¬res; no circulation ofeombnstible materialto encourage ï¬re, should it happen to break out; children and careless ser vants would have nothing to handlel that could possibly do damage ;.there would be no misplaced heat; no smoke or odor to sicken or annoy; no cross lights or fliekerings to hurt the eyes. Besides, the lighting of a house would help to purify its atmosphere, instead of vitiating it as now, if the source of light were placed, as we have eugâ€" geeted, in the ventilating shaft; and, very likely, the economy of the light name be Been that‘m'eaï¬s for the in"! stantaneous illumination of the entire house could be maintained at all hours of the night without costing more than our present imperfect and par- tial lighting does. ' ‘ ' Forv churches, theatres, and( other places of public resort, this method of lighting is specially available and in- viting. The source of light might be in an absolutely ï¬reproof Vault 0r chamber, or in a separate building, so that the danger of accidental tires, with their attendant evils, would be reduced to the minimum. Similar advantages would attend its applicaâ€" tion to shipping. For mines, especi- ally coal mines, it is unappi'anhéibl'e for simplicity and safety. Smoky torches and treacherous “ safety lamps †might be entirely abolished, and the deepest pits flooded with white light, without flame or the she- dow of a risk of explosion. Because when the air of the streets marks 30 O or 40 0 on the Fahrenheit scale, a room overwarmed by a ï¬re can be cooled by opening the windows, the average English house-holder adopts the ready conclusion that Whenever a room feels hot the way to cool it is to let in the external air. Accordingly in these piping times he, and still more often she, opens the sunny side of the house, and lets in air of a temperature varyingr from 100° to 120° or so. ’l‘hen,'because in a very short time the room beeom es much hotter than it was, it is consid- ered that the windows are not Wide enough open, and the supposed error being remedied, a still larger quanâ€" tity of hot air is then let in. And so we ï¬nd Materfamilias sitting .with a very light muslin on her frame, a great deal ot’ perspiration on her up- per lip, her face the colour of'an Or~ leans plum, and her condition’of'mind [o the last degree dejected, simply beâ€" cause she persists in disregarding the most elementary principles ofnatural philosophy. We told her that if she will open the windows on the shady side of the house only, and keep the others closely shut, her dwelling will be at least not hotter than the shady side of the street, whereas by her arâ€" rangement it acquires the heat of the sunny side. We tell her, also, that if her house be large and the inmates ,few, she may live in adelightful state lof' coofness by only opening the Windows at night and keeping them closed during the day. Her house will then be some 10 O or 15 0 lowâ€" er in temperature than the streets and convey very much the refreshing effects of a cool bath upon enteringit-. We tell her all this, and she is very much interested. At our next Visit we ï¬nd every window open and the house full of redâ€"hot air. “ It stands to reason,†She says, triumphantly, “that you cannot possibly cool -a house Without plenty of ventilation.†~The Lancet. Hot Air and 0001 Rooms ‘ A correspondent oi the Boston Jour- nal contributes the following account ofa kidnapping case in England near- ly 40 years age, which in some of its aspects resembles very much the case of the Ross child in Philadelphia. “About 38 years ago a similar case to that of the Ross boy’s kidnapping at Philadelphia occurred in England.- A beautiful child was stolen, and the robbers notiï¬ed the father that his child could be ranSOmed‘for the sum of£5.000. The father replied through the directed channel that he was a poor man and could not raise £500. ’t‘hereupon the robbers replied that they knew that he was a poor man, but. they also knew teat he had rich relatives and friends from whom he could borrow the amount, and if he did not send it by a certain day the child would be killed for self-protec- tion. In the meantime the whole af- fair got into the papers and all Eng- land was aroused at the audacity of the seoundrels. Large rewards were offered, ministers preached from their pulpit about it. Great sympathy was felt for the parents, the money was raised, the child was recovered, but all his beautiful curls were cut close oï¬". The police and detectives were i totally unable to make any discoveries as to tho were the crimihals. Many arrests were made, but with no result. It is a welloknown fact that the Bank of England never reâ€"issues any of its notes, ifthey have only been out even a few minutes. One ofthe gentlemen who contributed to the fund for the ransom of the child, knowing the above fact, went to the Bank of Eng- land and got its ofï¬cers to mark and register the bills he was going to give the father to obtain the release of his child, and requested the bank ofï¬cer to notify him when the bills should be returned to the bank. He did this in hopes of getting some trace of the scoundrcls who had frightened the whole community. Several months elapsed; when one day he was notified that the bills had been returned to the bank. Upon inquiry he .found thatthey came from a bank in the North of England. rl‘hereupon he posted North and found that the bills had been deposited by a person who had opened an account with them. The gen tlema'n and the bank clerk re- turned to London, when, on their are rival at his house, a detective was sent 1 for, and at the same time the father 01 the stolen child was requested to meet them in order to inform him of their discovery. Intmediately upon his entering the room the bank clerk said : ‘Why this is the man thatdeâ€" posited the bills with us.’ And so it proved. In order to raise money he had abducted his own child. It was noticed that he had lived better since the restoration of his child, but noth- ing was thought of that, as it wassnp~ posed that sympathizing friends sup- plied the ineans. He . was arrested tor conspiracy to defraud, tried- con- victed and sentenced to penal servi- tude. So ended the great child kidâ€" napping ease, and people who had» little ones slept easier. ,a machine if he has to spend days Many thousands of dollars are eX-t pended annually in the purchase ‘of" useless machinery, palmcd off on the unsuspecting farmer by the oilyâ€" tongucd and unprincipled socalled agents, pedlars and patentâ€"rights men it is asserted by some thatthe agents of machinery and agricultural imple- ' ments are a great blessing to the per: sons that use such articles, on the principle that they are ignorant of the use and beneï¬ts of the improved machinery which is being introduced from time to time. But such a theo5 ry is absurd. I think the farmers in- telligent and thoroughâ€"going enough to seek the manufactories and canvass the merits of" the different machines offered, and supply themselves with such laborâ€"savingimplements as they censidcr economical. Under the pre- sent system an agent comes along with a very oily tongue, a pretty good knowledge of human nature, and. an aptness to discern the -weak side of the farmer, and is determined to sell for it (and he can well afford to spend‘ much time by the proï¬ts he gets); He exhibits his machine, or engravâ€" ings of samples of it, descants upon its superior merits, displays a string of certiï¬cates of leading men‘ in its favor, and ï¬nally leaves you with your Order for the machine. In many cases the purchaser is cheated, and he curses the agent, pays for the machine, and throws theuseless art iele aside. Just glance around you, and at nearly every house you ï¬nd 'a churn, washing machine, a COIfanllh tivator, and many other machines 'of a like character, which are never used because of their worthlessness. Let us, in all cases, tr «' a new invenâ€" tion before we invest, and if we ï¬nd it well adapted to our purpose, inform our brother farmers of its merits, through our favorite papers, and we may discuss their merits with proï¬t in the club. The manufacturers may advertise their wares through the same papers and send samples of their machines to the different clubs for their inspection, and thereby keep up a direct communication between the producer and consumer, with proï¬t to both. A young and sentimental Miss just before taking arsenic, wrote “I shall awaken in Heaven in company with the angles.†Imagine her disgust when she awoke on earth ineompany with an extremely unromuntie stom- ach pump. Such things make one Wish stomach pumps had neverbeen invented. A company has been organized with a e: pital of seven hundred thousand dollars to cultivate the Petrie plant, a. valuable product of the gulf coast of Mexico. The ï¬bre of the plant is seven feet and a half long, is very durable, and is claimed to .be equal to hemp for rope7 bagging, 'and other articles. An English Abduction Case. Useless Machinery conâ€" EGAR T: ‘RS a] 31'vi- x kid_ mixturap had cannot - ‘ i 16 Of from c? Elle u111‘iv_‘ a A‘rstomac At the Adams House in this place,l at about 7 O'clock last Tuesday even- ing, ’Squire Rains terminated a ra-- ther romantic and originally gotten up ï¬retrclass elopement by uniting in wedlock John W. Shrover of Water» loo and Miss Mary Krantz, from'sixi miles 'north 'of La Per~ City. “It seems for some time‘ they hgdgcontemâ€" plated committing matrimony, buti for an equal length of time the far, thcr of the fair Mary had ï¬rmly if‘ not fiercely insisted that no sucfh affair should ever take place, and was mov- ing her from place to place in order that no meeting should take'plaéc be- tween the lovers. But they Were de- termined, fearless, and ready, and ac- cordingly young Shrover procured one of the Water-100’s most spanking livery rigs, proceeded to La Porte city, and was soon in private and earnest cou- sultation with his lawyer; As the‘ young lady was of age, habeas corpus &c., were suggested, but wduld not answer emergency, such process be- ing too slow when immediate action was necessary. At; last a happy thought occurred to Mr. Shoyer, which was successfully carried out, thusly}: He remembered once having dropped his breast pin and Mary playfully pick ing it up had kept it. _ Capital! He would have her arrested that very 1 l l l l night for stealing the pin ! He ae-l eordingly swore out, a_warrant before Justice MeQuilken. ConStable; A. l Cotton immediately proceeded to the domicile of the cruel and obdnrate “ parient,†closely followed by‘ Shroyer, and arrested the girl at 2 o’clock Tuesday morning; before the very eyes of’tihe Father and another suitor for his daughter’s hand, whom the father, but not the girl, smiled favorably upon. The ofï¬cer had pro- ceeded about; forty rods toward La, Porte, when in) handed his prisoner over to his h stily empowered deputy, Shroyer. Mr Cotton says it was the liveliest drivmn‘ he ever did~trying ‘to keep up with? that W'aterloo rig! ‘Arriving at l’orto City, Shroyer withdrew his Action for theft'and paid the costs, but qtoadily prosecuted his other claim for n warranty of the girl’s hand, in the shape ofa marriage certiï¬cate, by driving in a zigZag course to Toledo. : Tun NEW WORLD’S GRAND REMEDY. â€"â€"The Old \Vorld has played its part in vegetablmnedication. But the botany oi the New World is, as yet,_iniperfectâ€" ly explored. One new and most im- portant revelation from that land of wondersâ€"California~~l1as astonished the scientiï¬c, and accomplished such cures of diseases of the__stomach and bowels, bilious complaints, malarious fevers, nervous affections, and all dis- eases proceeding from a, vitiated condiâ€" tion of the blood, as have‘ never before bc en witnessed. ' Befgl; \VALKER’S CALIFORNIA VIN- EGAR E: was all the alcoholic and ‘mixmra'i dicines are falling into dis; cannot; resist the overpower- “; enters ‘into its composition. t1: aperient, a tonic, derived my new vegetable sources, an i‘rstomaehic, admirable in all a v diseases; and, in fact, as near to u iversal remedy as botanical discovery and scientiï¬c skill can hope to attain. Dr. Walker “considers†it†a ‘cureior all diseases not organic, and really the great varietyvof' diseases in, \vhich it is successful seems to warrant the opinion. . Every family needs such a remedy. It saves pain, anxiety, and docrors’ bills. We know what trouble it is to keep the bowels of children in order, and any remedy that will strength- en and regulate their weak and varia- ble digestion must be a domestic bless- unriwt pulm on 1119:. At :L recent Sale in Zeiglersville, Berks coun Ly, Pa., a wagon was sold thathud been standing long enough in one place to permit a walnth two about ï¬ve inches in diameter to grow up through ghe bed of the wagon. When writing to» advertisers plensesay,_lllat you saw their .x advertisement in this paper. ‘J’ AGEMENT ‘Aug. "ls-t. Thoroughly renovated and repairal. Now ï¬rst-class in every respect. :_ (TERMSâ€"$2.50 t6 $3.00 er day. according to room. Corinnercial Travel em,- $2.00. HANGED HANDS AND MAN-- /’ AGEMENT ‘itug. :lst. v Thoroughly rgnovated and L, \V. CASS, ROYAL HOTEL, and settle into trnuslewluc disorders. Eruptions o the skin are the appearance on the surface of humors that should be expelled from the blood. Internal deâ€" mugements are the dobermination of these same hu- mors to some internal organ, or organs, whose action they domnge, and whose substance they disease and destroy. Avm's SAusAmuxbuA expels these humors from the blood. When they are gone, the disorders they produce disappear, such as Uitceratmm of the Liver. Stomach, Kidneys, Lungs, Eruptions and Eruptive Dneuscs of the skin, St. Anthony’s Fire, Rose or Erysipelas. Pimplea, Pmtules, Blutahaa, Iails, Tumors. Tclter and Salt Rheum, Scald Hawk Ringworm, Ulcerk and Sarge, Rheumat’hm, Nev,» ralmla, Pain inthc Bones, Side and Head, Female Weakness, Stervility, Lcucorrhrm ariuin from in» tcrnnl ulceration and uterine disease. rap“), is. pemin, Emaciation and3Gciwral chil‘ity. Ml their departure health returns. ' MEWS SflBSAPABILLA I > PREPARED BY . Dr. J. O. AYER (B '00., Lowell, Mam, Practfcal ï¬nd Analytical Chemists- Norflwup and Lyman, Newgmstle, General Agent's. WSOld by all‘â€Druggists and Dealers in Medicine. ‘ ~ . Hmniltun, Aug. 20, 1574‘ [Frbm the Toledo (Iowa) Chronicle.] FQR PURIFYiNG IHE BLOODf A Lover's Ruse. Proprietur‘ HAMILTON, ONT awe of a seriés of écomplaints which are very gprevalent and afflicting. It puriï¬es the blood, purges out the lurking humors in the system, that undcmline health J. N. STRONG, This compound of the vegetable Mtemtives, Sar- sap'aï¬lla,Dock,St.illinginiu and Mandrake with the Iodidea oi Potassium and lImn‘nmkes a most effec- Manage: Composed of the follmv‘ingva‘nd other ï¬rsr-m Steantshipsgâ€" L OHNDLQ‘N ,. Q U EB E C AND. MONTREAL. $12. Latwrepceh V Scotland, 'Thames, 5 Severn, The Steamers of this Line are intended to sail as fol- lows during the season of navigation 0f1874, to and (mm London, Ouch? rmzl NHVHLI'C' 1 {qzui n1 Plyâ€" mouth, a ‘ ' Nay-“561's: |874. Sr." LAWR‘ENCH SEVERN ~ - . . . 7 A _ _ , , . _ , ‘ DELTA (m'a Halifax, RS.) - - » ‘ THAMES (m'a Halifax, N.S., and St. John, NB.) - - » - » - - ‘ ST.’LAw1usxch (via Halif " N.S., and St. John, NJL‘) ~ - - > - HELIOS â€" » - â€" ST. LAWRENCE SEVEnx - - » - D111.“ A - » g THAMES â€" » ‘ S'r. LAWRENCE TEMPERLEYS, CARTER, & DARKE, 21 15-. ctcr Street, London ; W. ‘\". WEEK‘S 8:, (10., Dmnicnn. I'lynmut‘n : ROSS It ()0, Quebec '. or Through Tickets from all points West, at REDUCED RATES. Certiï¬cates issued to persons desirous of bringing out their friends. Through Bills nf Iming issued on the (Imminent and in London for all mm of Canada, and in the United States tr» hen-(ï¬t. Milwau- kee, Chicago and other points in the W099. Fur Freight or Passage, apply to U hours, (133’ and evening on all chmnic dis Dist-uses of Women and Childrmx, Midwifm'y togotlxpr Wlth those of u privm‘o nahu‘c. THE GOLDEN FEMALE I’ll-Ls, (11m be lm'Ll ht his oflicé. Sent by mail to any part of the world. 3}] per box and two poslngc stamps. You“ 'men, take particular noticeâ€"you can lm rcetoret to health by applying (eilhcr in perm“ or by letter.) All female complaints skilfully 11 .zltcd. All letters must be addressed to Dr. A. Davim Box, 1039, Tqmnm‘xmlarin. . ‘ ‘ W _ .1 1...~1\‘. a We, the umiersl mod, have hm-n cured b)"1)l‘. A. Dnv’Js‘; Toronto!b1it.fâ€"~J. H. Williamson, P. H. Mulgrcw C. '1). Preston, Anthony Ka' ‘mï¬, Henry Thorne, J. BrittonJ’avt.F.(,‘arr, Chasflr. (Ming’nw. ll. I’isnamns, and six hundred others have been (111'er LETTLE SU M MER‘ RAN GE. TEMPEBLEY Lm FUEL-SAVING LITTLE RANGES Invented by Mr. Jas. Chamberlain, Foreman of R. M. W‘nnzer & Cu.‘s T001 Department Patented in the mred at R. M. much? -V 1 M; $53.04;. W‘Aw-I-ED. GA LT EDGE TOOL CARRIAGE SPRING MANUFACTORY Axes. Hatcheis. Chisels, . Km Yes, Carpenteré’ Tunis. . Coopers†Tunis, ~ ~ TPick’s'; . _ ‘ H mm fliers, ‘Maclline Kniw'm Carriage “pl-idgsï¬afl desm‘ipiisns, ’OSlâ€"iempei‘ed and wan-3mm! JAS. \VARNOCK '3; CO. Ay‘sm’ 9'. 187; bieasél Engines. flamers, Salaam Haw Ming. Shal‘iing, Pulleys, Hangers, Screw Stump ' . Rlzmjï¬neéam: Genera! Matehiimry ‘ï¬'lï¬n‘nfï¬Ã©tï¬réd at the MORA IRON WORKS, HE STEAM ENGINES MANUFACTURED BY this ï¬rm are in many respects superior_ to any other made in this country being seFf-lubricaiim: throughout, audunc remarkably powerful, and l.‘ nomlcal on incl 35 well as reasonable inprice. The efï¬ciency innbe judged hyflle continually increasâ€" ing demam‘l’ h necessitates qonstant additions A» :1 “Inâ€; Hamilton, J mm 12, 1874‘ FERGUSOEEBER mm 4500., Agents ï¬or manufacturers of Salmon, Lobstors: Mackerel, and Home Fruits, in Hormetipally Scaled Cans. tunâ€"820. a] Ohlcuféztéd for ditferent s eeds‘ 51060111111910 the sysggxplgt worlgi‘ng. geacnptiv'e Gircu ars sent on 1 H.“ y".r.m “ï¬rm? u, BULMER .E SHEPPARD, 317391] , Ofï¬ce: 244 Parthensis Street. Montreal a 11mm 0 [RES Brown; 50111311 8»: Cu WHOLESALE (413003333,- BBIGK :Mï¬ï¬ï¬Ã©Ã©Ã©ï¬g E Galt All Sn m; Wan-21 n t x ~11 - 'J. H. KILLEY & 00 Hamilton. Feb. 20. 1874. 3! Thth has Liver nppe "0d befm'v 1120 public THE CANADA SELF-ACTIN (1‘ 1 Hum; m «L; a 55s.. Eur-g E“ Oct-ibier I, i873. One» of the most practical, efï¬cient an (1 DIRECT IMPOR'E‘ERS ST. CATHARINES, ONT Ont, April} [1874‘ LGUSOEEEAE Km & BATHURST, NEW BRUNSWKE. Hamilmn, (Malaria FROM LUNDON FROM QU name D A V] D 811 NW States and Canada, and manufac- VVANZER & (703$ FOUNDRY. Delta, DR. A, DAVIS, \‘9 (‘mmnlix Tmmx'nP- ['1' STMRS. 'l‘l‘rilmm'v on Exé‘h'anu'n Lam- 13,171; E M? mi {cal “meg, AN 1) ,OF, ST. UA’HIARTNES SAW WORKS, (Successor m J‘. Flint‘)‘ Manufacturer >0f 911 kinds of SAWS, Sémw Knives, Patent, Plaster» ing meelsagï¬zc. Wednesdai’ £010 Manufacturer of 11x0 J. Fï¬nt Patient, Im» proved Champion Cress Cutsnw; ulsc thcli'ght- ning‘Crosa. Cut Saw. Wednesday R. HBMETH ngnesda \Veduesdn jTuessduy, Jub‘ 28 Jrhursday, August 6 Thursday, August ‘20 'l‘hursduy, Sept. 10 Tuesday, Sept. :22 Tuesday. October 6 ’cdnesday Montreal. (1313 Helios A '1‘ WOW; KS 1874, Jub‘ 28 August 6 August ‘20 ‘(-1>t. 10 J My July Aug. Sepé. 9’ Aug. UJi 3 l4-(igu 26 2E! 12 306 5650.000 in Valuable Gifts ! The only Reliable Gift Distribution in the Country. ‘ :31ng gingfRPmSE 1 LU nu ,uxawu EMMY“, SEPTX iï¬â€˜H, 1874. 01V]? GRAND CAPITAL PRIZE, $5,0JO EN GOLD! Two ,":1 WM; $1,000 '\\‘0 'l’mzm ["100 Pm: szm {5100 'Gieenbacks! (mo. Runny (flamingo and Matched I!01‘H:-s,with S117 varâ€"mounted “amass, worth $1,500 I One Horse and Lu y, wit-h Silvurumumed Harness. m;th 3350'). ()u!‘ I‘inn tuned R ' .mud Piano, worth $550 1 Five Family Sm 1);, M things, worth $100 each 750 Gold and S var Lover I‘Iunt‘ing‘ \Vatchcs (in an.) WM‘L}: from ,30 to 15300 caul~ ! Gold (Mains, Silver-“Ewe. Jewelry, kc†(\‘c. l‘A‘JHH IN ,‘x - [€157.62 R 1‘5 ï¬VAN'QJCI Libud i’mmittmis Who Single Ticde ' ' 10 ; V{'WL uty-flsc (If; uher containing: titm of the mnmmr nf in rcfcrcuru to the Di om». .mkring‘ \hmn A MAIN OFFICE. The 954.29%;Esgiplï¬jshï¬ï¬‚ House t in Uaimfliu Chis, curing (X; Songs, mum-3.3;?- '& Sums, .Ei'ilnluun 68; 9 mm. " ' “amines Bums" A large \‘ariciy of now and second hand Pianos and Organs constantly in stock, varying from Fifty 10 Two Hundred mu} ï¬fï¬â€˜y'dnllars. ». ‘ gflï¬ï¬ï¬gi Mnnbnr 0f Gig/1‘s, ($1000 ! Tic/{02's l/Tnn'rcd, (0 50,000 I The Mason & Hamlin dzrgan (Mnupuxay, Huston, héï¬'s’bs are G1 I: NTEED' 1<~“0'R"F1VE YEARS (601:. 4:. Prince 136300.. “1111531111 Send for Circulars, Price Lists, Terms. &c before purchasng olsew zero. HEA D OFFICE 771‘ BRANCH OFFICE DEPOTS A'I‘mW. L. (fm‘1‘i09‘,L0ndon ; J Clcnch‘s St. ()nthm'incs . Lancolicld Brett, Hamilton ; A; L. Middlumiss‘, Port, 110120; R. VanNormzm’s Bollo- Ville; J.» Mchc‘s, Windsnr: John Owen’s Strat- fm'd; Wm. Mnthing, Peterhm‘o‘; J. Lcth'brid'ge‘S‘ Brnntford ; R. S. Porior‘s Lindsay: G. F. Counter‘s Simcoe. gaï¬fï¬ï¬ï¬sa Thu Grant Rapids and Indiana Railroad having been cmnpictod from Fort Wayne to Indiana, to little Traverse Buyinear Mackinaw, and earned all of its-grants of 151m a. over 1.000300 ACRES, now ofl'cr Splendid Bargains in the Best of Farming Lands These, Lam‘ls are t?mberéd with bench and maple, (‘hn and other hum wood, nrd are accessible to the boat market, by ' y J Dominion of Canada for tho follou in: Pianos And are in {i j3a'i'6 of the State uncqualledforhealth. we“ watered, rand contiguous to the great Fruit raising Section of the l‘laist.‘ Shore of Lake Michigan. MICHIGAN is One ofuthc LEAST xxmm'rm) and most prosperous of the States: ‘ hillCLHGA- is Hétédlorlï¬ splendid University and Vonnal Schools. all part. of {1 magniflevnt “Free choc] .‘l t(-1}1.“_011(l(_)wg(1byth “sung. CIYIGAN is famed for its Manumctorios. its Furnaces, its Railroads, its Water Calm: its beau- tifulLakem and ï¬t‘ilï¬hlg enterprising ’I‘ , us, V11- laggs and Cities. ' h, 1n. 1 flunk: “n‘. I my» mp. \uuvn, Mn'nmAN » ‘producw Woul‘ Wheat Oats. ('urn, Barley, Potatoes, m. < MICHIGAN pruduc . inethwlahln quantitios of 11-99! Copper,‘ ‘41] '01", Coal and Lumber. nun, \ uypm, L‘njvph. \‘vul mu. awn-1“. MICHIGAN in the durtlon of tho State near thus-‘0 L::_ (15.. H‘Odl‘f‘“5 :11} ‘inS‘ of Fruit“. ‘\ u 1L, The Fart of Michigan in which these lands are found as - NOT A WILDERNESS BY ANY MEANS, 'lhwcï¬arém ï¬apids and Indiana Rail Road runs through Lhe C(‘nfl‘flJfl' thc Grunt. but contains a population of and is rupidlyfllling 111) with Rattlers from Canada, Sweden, Norway. Honut and from nImost awry State in the I'm’on, Onn‘kuim .éx' only. ddwn‘, bplan'cq in easy time pay- ments. ’ _ v " “ Inst rmnent" Over 100,000 'acres of the lands of ,this grunt [lavokgl‘ready been sold E The wéalth 61' ï¬lm Country is in the soil, and now is 'the limo. m own :1 Slmrv of such “'0th, when it. can he had at . During (no )’('511‘ 1874 and 1875, any purchasers of not less than 80 acres of farming land1 paying oncâ€" quartm rlnwn. who will go upon it for settlement within Four Munfhs'nftor purchase, wlll he furnish- cd with Fl RH ASHES fï¬r himself and family over the 6:); ll. 8; I. 'R. It, from where such strike the road. to [hex Malian near his purchase. rpm; NEW ROCKLAND SLATE CO. ARENOW prepared to supply the wellAknown 'Rockland Rum’ing Nate. in my quaï¬ti‘uy and of any sizes“ _ (j. MHFMMQNRSecretary, 2H4 :s-m ‘ Monueu] 'i‘u Coloniesar Exaaih'iduals {mt l8“ EL [87' . is (If) élï¬phite ii; the same dosâ€"ea Wli'll'é ï¬raï¬â€˜c'c‘tré the head less, is more palatable and mupr cheaper, Rockland Rooï¬ng Slate at Send for descriptive Circular With Testimniala of Physicians from all parts of the country. sf Sample packages for trial, 25 cents. yrcparcd by BILLINGS. CLAPP & CO" Chemists, .znacon, Muss. New York Ofï¬ce, 8 & 9 Cgllege Place. its $4 a 1m}? ï¬a'é‘aa'i' WEST V 3 ‘Emugmmakmz I.1-‘zZuf$iET0kL V - , 1 E if? 233.11% ' 7351‘;qu fdymcz alsélgcï¬maegasmmi FQR FEVERS: AGUE 'I‘nwm‘. 0. m ‘ “ 15.2111 AND ORGANS MANUFACTUL’ ID BY )0! W Fith Ht From $4 (0 and $1 ()per Aura 1,:0003000 «ACRES A M ERICA N HOTEL A. (‘2 E. NOEli)llElEiEB, D ()FFICILJS KING ST. EAST. TORONTO NCH OFFICEVZG .HPARKS ST. OTTAWA TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND SOULS! "Hill? RICHEGAN L‘WBS !! 169th Regular JImzthly VVA'E‘ 5412‘; A $1) liAiL, is as eï¬â€˜ectum a remedy '1“) I REDU’ so PRHCES. To be_;Dfa€7n wan-min» um n}: a in†list of prizes, :1 descrip- >f drawing, and other infnnnzuiun hisâ€; tum, \le he sgm. tam“ D]. ‘RIRUTED IN AH AGENTS IN THE 01‘ ). wUl he sgnt. tam“ \nmt he addressiod tn D. MKS, 30x 2... Lapd Commissioner, (,1 mud Rapids. Mich ,. ‘ 320-1)’ 11 In) Tit-kph: 0f 111v above TV ._ New] 5' :immï¬. U win m] Dr. J. Walker’s Caiil‘bi'iiia Vin- egar Bitterh‘ me a, purely Vegetable preparation, mnde ehietly from the n:t~ tire herbs found on the lower ranges of the Sierra Neruda mountains of (lulit‘er- nin, the medicinal properties of which nre extrneteil therefrom without the use of Alcohol. The question is almost: daily asked. “ What is the cause of the unparalleled success of \‘ixueiii: Birâ€" TERS?†Our answer is, that they remove the cause of disease, and the patient reâ€" covers his health. They are the great. blood puriï¬er and a. lite-giving principle, 3 imrt'ect Renovator and l-uvigorntor of the system. Never hefore in the history of the world has It medicine been wm‘ponndetl possessing the remarkable qualities of \‘iNuGM: lirrruns in hearing the sick of every disease manis heir to. They are a gentle l'urgative as Well as :1, Tonic, relieving Congestion or Inflmrnnatiou of the Liver mu! Visceral Orguus in Bilious Diseases ’ _ The pre'wrties of Du. W 41 Kim’s ,qu The pi‘upm'tios of Du. \VALKER’S VINEGA 2: BI'I‘THRS are A pvi'ient. Din '>h(n'etie, ()urminmivn, Nutritious. L:~.xal.ive.. iuretic, Sedativv. Cum:tur»ii‘i‘imilt Sudm‘iï¬o, Altera~ live. and AiHHEiIiuuR. Grateful TIIOHSMIGS proclaim VIN- EGAR BITTERS the most wonderful In- vigoraut that ever gustainmi tho sinking: sysicgm. . .. 1‘“; No Person cam take these Bitters according to directions, and remain long unwell, provided their bones are not de- stroyed by mineral poison 01‘ other means, and vital organs waned beyond remit- Bi‘lious, Remittent and Int-er- mittont Favors, which {we so preva- lent in the valleys of 0111' great rivers throughout the United States; especially those of the, Mississippi. ()liiagimissom'i, Illinois, 'l‘enncssc'e, ()umherimid, Arkan- sas. Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Gmmle, Pearl, Alabama, Mobile, Szbmnnnh, R0- anoke, James, and many others, with their vast tri‘hntai'ios, throughout our entire Cinnitry during the Sun-liner and Autumn, and remarkably so during sea- sons of unusual heat and (h'yness, are invariably accompanied by GXtensive deâ€" rangpments' of the stomach and liver, and ether abdominal viscera. In t it treatment, (, pni‘gntim, exerting a p w- crfnl influence upon those various 01‘- gene, is essentially necessary. There is no cathartic for the purpose equal to DR. J. \VAme‘s V’lNEGAR BITTERS, as they will speedily remove the dark colored viscid nuLLler with which the bowels are loaded, at the game time stimulating the secretions of the liver, and gene 'nlly restoring the healthy functions of the digestive organs. Fortify the body against disease by‘pui‘ifying all its fluids with VINEGAR BITTERS. N0 epidemic can take hold of 9‘system Unis foreâ€"armed. Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Head- ache, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stonmch, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Bilions Attacks, Palpita- tation of the Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain in the region of the Kid neys, and a hundred other painful symp- toms, are the otl'springs of Dyspepsim One bottle will prove a better guarantee of its merits than a lengthy advertiseâ€" ment. Scrofulzx, or king’s Evil, White Swellings, Ulcers, Erysivpelas, Swelled Neck, Goitre, Scrol‘ulous Inï¬mnmations, Indolent, Inflammations, Mercurial All’ections, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes, etc. In these, as in all other constitutional Dis~ eases, \VALKm’s VINEGAR Brr'rms have shown their great curative powers in the most obstinate and intractable cases. For Inflmnmatory and Chronic Rheumatism, Gout, Bilious, Remit- tent and Intermittent Favors, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys :md Bladder, these Bitters have no equal. Such Diseases are caused by‘Vitiatcd Blood. Mechanical Diseases. ~Pex~sons enâ€" gaged in Paints and Minerals, such as Plumbers, Type-setters, Gold-heaters, and Miners, as they advance in life, are subject. to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard aga'nst this, take a. dose of WALKER’S VIN- EGAR Bxg‘fms occasionally. 52,000 how m use ; no other to Htmment ever obLaiucd the same a; ‘ hwity. ’ We 1m,- m k Agents 7193‘ the above instmmonts, an are in a‘ 1x3 " m to supply Local Agents in every pan cit-1101mm damn manufacturers’, lowest wholv For Skin Diseases, Cruptions, Tet- tor, Salt-Rheum, Blotclles, Spots, Pimples, Pustulcs, Bails, Cm‘bunclcs, Ring-worms, Scam-head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas, w, Seurfs,‘Discolomtions of the Skin, 11m .5 and Diseases of the Skin of whatever name or nature, are literally dug up and carried out of the system in a short, time by the use of these Bitters. .- ‘Ifinz lljape, I and“ other Worms, A.»_.. n.,._.,....4.1.. THE “ FII‘CHER‘ PRIN G E ORGA'HS ADELAIDE STREET, THE “ MATEUSHEK†" "‘7 'â€""r *7 lurking in the s ’stem of so many thousands}’ are effectually Sestroyed and removed. N0 system of medic-inc, no vermifugcs, no an- thelmiuitics will free the system fmm worms like these Bitters. Em Female Complaintg, in young ‘All instrumcmvs w‘urmntcd ï¬ve years. Wlwlesa and Retail. _ KFAgents \mml in every Town and County. or old, mmmd or singlefat the dqu of W6 manhood, or the turn of life, these Tania Bitters display so decided an influence tha‘ impinvement i_s soon percegtible. -7... 1“ 1 . ever you ï¬nd its impuntles bursting througl the _skin in‘ Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores; cleanse it when you ï¬nd xt. obstructed anc': sluggish in the veins; cleanse it when it in? foul; your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood pure, and the heath of the system will follow R". H. MCDONALD & 00., Drug-{ï¬sts and Gen. A gts., San Francisco. Ualifnfl and cor. of \Vnshingmn and Charlton 8:3,, N. Y. Sold by all Dragging pd DI-ulers. Pf 3 September 2. 1873 ï¬lemiéet’hé'vn‘iatea Blood‘wheq Is-a most desirable Parlor Instmme: There are about 14,000 of them in us giving eminent satisfaction, and \\ I offer them, in all conï¬dence as betti I value than an ether in the market . The Messrs. , seher have over thirty years‘ successful manufacture of this of this Pizme to refer to a guarantce of its good qualities. No other Piano has gained the same favor in so she)! a time in “.umda as the Fischer sinu its im'xmiuetiou by us," Is enuorsed by thu moat noted artis' of theday .13 the mnst musical a) «lumblu Piano made, and in their di fercnt styles, from the little “ Hm m:qu Bum" to the "ORCHESTRA! square grands, are. suited to the Bm «lair, Purhmx', or Cancel-t 1 ‘1]. i‘ORONTI‘(’) .193 '