Fear. One of the worst features against which physicians have to contend in the treatment of the sick, is that of foolish fear on the part of the patient or of the friends of the patient. Is the strong man, who is usually Well, touched with an ague chilll Has he now, for the ï¬rst time in his life, felt the twinâ€" ges of rcheumatics or of neuralgia ’? appetite gives way, his coura fails him, and he timidly gives up, and fears he is going to die ! The doctor is sent for, his tongue looked at, pulse felt, and powerful medicines proscribed, , L 1 and he gets no better very f; wife and children catch the infccl' fearâ€"rand a general alarm excites the entire household, drives away sloc} , and aggravates the dilliculty tenfold. Now comes a consultation of physicians, and the treatment of the regular phy- sician is approved, and more medicii â€"â€"-poisons-~of the same kind are pre- scribed. The fear is kept up, and the patient is kept down. I†lied he been let alone, or, given a sweat or a wet sheet pack and a. day’s quiet, with a dish of oatmeal porridge. he would have come around all right in good time, without all that cowardly scare, and that little had matter being made ten times WOI'SC. A child ovcroats, or cats what it ought not to eat; is taken sick, and the poor, timid, idgety mother beâ€" comes frightened out of the little wit "h" was supposed to have, and, boo-hoe, uhh calls the doctor. “Eva throw up something as black as aerow. Could be: it have thing l†n a part of her liver, poor Now, if sellicontrol and coolness of judgment be ever important, nay, in- dispensable, it is in the emergency of sudden sickness or of occasional acciâ€" dent; and with this calm, cool self- possssion, without foolish fear, nine lives out of ten now sacriï¬ced could be saved. The “let alone †policy, when one don’t. know exactly what is best to do, is just what is best. Nature, in a: y event, «loos all the healing, tink- cr with the patient as much as we may. But the doctors must live, no matter how many others keep their beds a long time, and then either give up the ghost or recover sufï¬cient] y to become permanent chronic invalids the rest- of their lives, a prey for those‘ whose, interest it is to keep them so. But the point we wish to impress on the reader is, the fact that vastly more people are frightened to death than die from old ago. And what’s the use? Why not be more courageous? Why notbe more plucky? \Vhy not light? It is in accordance with God’s will and with God’s laws that we should live healthfully, till the oil of life shall be exhausted, burned out, by work, wear and Old age. Is it not a sin to be sickl Has not a. law of nature»- and nature’s laws arc God’s lawsâ€"been Violatcdl Do you cast the blame on him? Look out! Do not be irreverent. Do not blasphemel No, no, dear reader, the blame, if blame there be, rests otherwise. thou to that. Hope, faith, trust, and a spirit of quiet. submission to the inevitable, tends to buoy one up when in affliction and to bring him peacefully into a haven of happy health, where he would be. Courage, courage, then, oh, ye timid ones, and don’t send for the doctor till something breaks. ->oo~4â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" M .7 A . ._, _ $210137 .l’zllru'iJG E91383 A writer in the Observer gives his experience : Not long since in tiavclling from Basel to Paris, we became hui O. y. As if divining our condition, the guard put his head in at the window of the train and politely asked, “ Shall I order a dinner for you at the Hex staâ€" tion 2†“ But we do not stop long enough to ca it,†was the reply. “ True; it will be served in the train for three francs, and the dish-es removâ€" ed at the next stoppii’igâ€"placc.†“ By all ncans order it.†The telegraph carried the order ten miles ahead in a moment ; and when the train drew up at the next station, the door was openâ€" \ed, and a circular basket, three feet high and one foot in diameter, was put in our compartment. Upon the top were knife and fork, spoon and napkin , a bottle of water, and a flask of wine, and a glass; a little salt and pepper and a large roll. Opening a door in the side of the basket, we saw four shelves, on each shelf a dish. The ï¬rst was a hot soup, the second was a. slice of a la: mode beef, the third vcg~ stables, and the flurth a. half chicken and salad. A bunch of delicious grapes was also found on one of the shelves. We ate our dinner quietly and com- fortable, while the train rushed along at thirty miles an hour, and then reâ€" . stored the dishes to their places. wWhen the next stoppage was made, a porter removed the basket and. received the pay. “’0 reached I’uris after a twelve hours’ ride, Weary and hungry, : but neither faint with exhustion, nor if'cring from a lit of indigestion. ' __.__ mw._¢® on @ur Eyes. The eyes minister to sight, that most important of the senses, which bring,r us into communication with the physi- cal world; and not only do they subâ€" servc this property of’ human intellecâ€" tion, but they also constitute a medium for the external expression of “ the thoughts and desires of the heart.†This expression in its numerous phases is the most easily learned and under- stood by all classes of mankind. Many of these phases, indeed, need no interâ€" ‘ pretation, but are instinctively compre- . hcnded by the civilized and savage among men, and by even brutes. As a vehicle {or transmitting thought or intelligence, it is most facile. The questioning eye, the “ look that answers ‘ch,’ "I the stern gaze that says so plainly “ No,†have no need of the lips to act as their interpreter. reads his master’s wishes in his eyes, ‘, rimmautlu to z::;‘ ‘ s The dog ' and hastens to obey the command be , fore it goes forth. All comprehend‘and acknowleng the power that speaks in the flaming eye, that inspires terror in the guilty and fresh courage in the virtuous; in the commanding eye that compels awe and , prompt obedience ; in the “ look that speaks volumes †when the tongue fails to express the last-thronging thoughts and emotioi 5;. As a natural organ of language, the eye may express all the noblcr emotions of the mind ; so, also, may it be made the servant of baser uses. The look of coarse insolence, the lccr so expressive of a. brutal mind, the " ‘ ‘uts more thanl l the lip’ dare utter, stone of thel l forms of the lower language of which the eyes are susceptibleâ€"Annuul of P/zrcnclog/y and I’llg/siognomy. _.._~..~._---.M...-..._...... Uncle Tom’s Cabin. Mr. John. I’. Jewell, famous at one ti moasthcpublishcr of “ Uncle Tom’s Cabin,†tells some interesting facts connect-ed with the publication of that work. When Professor and Mrs. Stowe nine to Boston to negotiate about it, Professor Stowe was very conscientious, and after agreeing to let chctt publish it, said he did not believe it right. He "was sure Mr. chctt would lose money by it; no one would want to rea an anti-slav- ery novel except those who read it in the Jim. Ol' cou "so the publisher said it was his risk. Then the ques- lion came up whether the copyright should be sold in full or retained, Mr. 'chctt strongly advising the latter course. So the contract was closed, Prof. Stowe remarking with a dubious smile, “I shall be wolf pleased if Harriet gets a. good black silk dress out of it.†Subsequently Professor Stowe (after the book began to sell and was noticed) aonfcsscd they dared to hope they might really get enough out of it to buy 3 little cottage and a quarter of an acre of ground. he financial romance came when the first payment forcopyright was made. It consisted ofa check for $10,000. The authorâ€"then famous, but not re- alising the money value of her fame ~â€"wiLh her husband, the simple-mind- cd professor, stood looking with a dazed surprise and pcrplcxity at the ‘ l3 Lilo bit of paper by which they were' informed that the Tremont lank vould pay to Harriet Beecher Stowe or order the sum of $10,000. At last, with a queer and almost pathetic simplicity, the professor asked the publisher what. he should do with it. Doubtlcss that gentleman would now be surprised at his own simplicity. It was questionable then whether he had ever seen a‘chcck before, and cer- tainly ho had as little knowledge as most women have of the mode of banking operation. Mr. Jewett, fearâ€" ing they might be easily swindled or robbed, went with them to the bank, having ï¬rst advised them to open an a rcounl, to keep but little money about them, and draw check when they wanted any. The famous book sold by million copies. The unafâ€" fected, simple little lady was soon t‘ansformcd into the renowned auâ€" thorcss, and “The Beecher,†as Mr. Jowctt expresses it, became from that date the uppermost trait. He paid in all over $536,000 for the copyright of the work. ‘ _____.¢°oâ€"-wâ€" \. r... Sabbath. .l'. T. .M . Gcservmg me The following story is published by Connecticut. iapcrzâ€"There lived in \Icw Ilaven a man whose wife, Taba- I :3 observing the Christian Sabbath, as he for his remarkable patience in bearing with some of 1111' unpleasant ways. One Sabbath morning a barrel of flour stood in the front hall which to the good mzm seemed to be in the way, and t7- -" it would not be very wrong to put- it in its proper place beâ€" fore going to church. So, after break- fast was over he proceeded quietly to roll the barrel into its place, which was up one .light of stairs. No sooner had. he reached the stairs and commenced to ascend, than his wife came out and forbid him going any further, declaring,r that God would withdraw his blessing from them. and the whole blame would rest upon his conscience. After paus- ing a moment to think he resolved to proceed, let the consequences be what they would. Having succeeded in getting it half way up the stairs, Tabaâ€" thy determined. to have it her way, as mum, rem. :d up and took hold of his feet, pulling them from under him, who he and his bu] rel of flour came ' to the bottom, causing the head of the , barrel to come out, covering him with the contents. As soon as the poor man could remove the flour from his head sufï¬cient to enable him to speak, he looked up to his wife meekly and penicently and said : “ Tabathy, let us pray." is... ~<â€"»-â€"A 5» ~ g. 4.7â€"«77770â€" A mien l . 9i- “Witt $5.}. .‘Jav 00.. v a ((131.55. The New .Yerk correspondent of" the Sl Louis Republican writes of smigmling practices, saying: Some time ago a passenger of aFrcnch ship was suspected of having a quantity of diamonds to get through, and on the dock she was told she must be ex- amined. The dear girl protested. It was no use. So, turning'lo her fel- low-passengers she bade them warm adieu. The embrace she bestowed on one lady was touching; she kissed her iot once, but twice, and with each kiss she gave into her friend’s keeping a solitaire worth $33,000. Then she went off with her mouth full which she would have swallowed rather than disgorge. As she alter- wards explained those awful large stones impeded her utterance, and sheintcnded giving the Custom House people a bit of her xnind,.and thusshe was enabled to do so, thanks to her own ingenuity and the size of her friend’s mouth. ' Mâ€"M It is a correct thing amo London fashionablos to boast of having traveled in an American palace car. V Miscellaneous «Items. It is a melancholy; fact that those who declare war are never called upon to do the lighting; if they were we. suspect there would be not the slightest amuse- ment of this nature. Sooner or later, justice certainly overtakes the leader of a country brass band. A bridge came along and struck one on the head the other day, as he stood on the top of an Erie freight train. The Indiana Legislature is petitioned to pass a law ï¬xing deï¬nitely the date of “ Ground-hog day,†and making it a public holiday. The subject ought. to be referred to the com mitlce of {he Abolc. 0‘ A new poem by Robert Brarmin was announced some time since, but it hasn’t appeared yet. Evidently it is going to be one of those thoughtful, elaborate, real nice poems which no- body but Robert can understand. “J. Grayâ€"Pack with ny box five dozen quills.†There is nothing re- markable about this sentence, only that it is nearly as short as one can be con- structed, and yet contain all the letters of the alphabet. “Give us a copper, yer honor,†cried a street Arab. “ Be off with you l†replied the gentleman ; “I’ve no change.†“Please, sir,†contin ued the urchin, “do give us a hall'- penny; I’ve lost half an hour runnin’ after yer.†Mr. Carruth, a northern Nebraska man, lives on a farm which is six miles square and all surrounded by a. hedge fence. The house is set three miles back from the road, which must make it very nice for a fellow when he wants an appetite in the morning to run down to the gate and back before breakfast. Captain Austin, of the American ship fronsidcs, which in August last ran down a. fishing smack offt-he English coast, drowning two of the crew, has been committed for trial at the Lancas- ter Assizes, on a charge of “man- slaughter,†it being alleged that nobody was on the lookout on the ship, and hence the collision. According to the Memphis Appeal a queer marriage took place at Jasper, Tennessee, the other day. The brideâ€" groom, Mr. Martin, had attained his seventyâ€"sixth year, while the bride was a blushing girl of only thirteen. To add to the charms of the little modest maid- en, the threeâ€"score and sixteen gave his bride $3,000 as a marriage gift. The latest Parisian story is of a nun who had ust died in the French capiâ€" tal at the age of ninety years, who had a new set of teeth grow in her a few years ago; a. previous new set at sixty-three; also at forty-seven, and these in addition, of course, to the earlier sets that all have. Poor thing! She had three times as many tooth- achcs as lessfavored mortals. The Cincinnati Times asserts that it is true that a Cincinnati‘woman uttered this lament over her lost lap-dog, An- gelina : “ J ust think of it, Mrs. Henry, my Angelina is dead, quite dead. Now if it had only been Thucydides (Thu. was her eldest,) I could have borne it ; for Thucydides would go to Heaven, you know, and be very happy, but my Angelina (booâ€"hoe l) is gone and I shall never see her any more (booâ€"hon) l" It’s a. deep mysteryâ€"the way the heart of a man turns to one woman out of all the rest he’s seen in the world, and makes it easier for him to work seven years for her, like Jacob did for Rachel sooner than have an ' other . ’ I .. i I often think woman for the asking. of these words : “ And Jacob served seven years for Rachel, and they seemed but a few days, for the love he had for her.â€â€"Gcorge Elliot. ' Phair, a murderer under sentence of death at Vllindsor, Vermont, was born and reared in that neighborhood, and has reputable brothers, sisters, and other relatives living. He had become such an outcast through dissipation that not one of them attended his trial, and nobody could be found to testify a word in favor of any point in his conduct or character. A clergyman is now work ing at him, however, with a probability of making him a Christian before he is hanged. “ \Vould you please give a boy, who broke his leg the other day, a. few per; nuts ’2†inquired a small ' chap of a Michigan avenue grocer. “Now, boy, you are lying to me,†said the grocer, looking him in the eyes. "' I don't be licve you know any boy who has brokd en his leg. Come now, do you ?†“Id-o I don't,†replied the lad after some hesitation, “but I know a boy whose sister fell down and jarred her teeth out I" He got a few peanutsâ€"~â€" f)etroit Free Press. We ï¬nd the following story in the Denver News 'of the 13th, which deâ€" monstrates how cold it is in Colorado : “ There was more than the customary stir at .lJLlS Vegas, the other day, when thestagc coach, with four passengers inside andacorpse for a driver, came tearing into town. The driver, though frozen into a beautiful “ still,†was sitting bolt upright, with an awful grimncss of face and adcath- grip on the lines. The ghastlyJehn was helped down from the seal and next day there we. a big funeral at Las Vegas. ' ‘ I was once walking a short distance behind a. very handsomely cresscd young girl, and as I looked at her beauâ€" tiful clothes, wondered if she took half as much pains with her heart as she did with her body. A poor old man was coming up the walk with a loade( wheelbarrow, and just before he reached us he made two attempts to go into the yard of a house, but the gate \vus heavy†and would swing back before he could get in. ’* \Vait," said the young girl, hurrying forward, “ I’ll hold. the gate open.†And she held the gate till he passed in, and received his thanks with 'a pleasant smile, and she passed on. “ She deserves to have beautiful clothes,†I thought, “ for a beautiful spirit dwells within her breast.†\ A Healthy Individual: ‘* The following- is..‘th.e- last. thing" written by the late “ Artemus Ward :~†Ontil quite recently; I’ve been? a healthy individooal. I’m. ucrly sixty,l and yet I’ve got a muskle in my arm‘: which don’t make my ï¬sts; resemble-~ the tread of a canary bird, when th'eyf fly about and hit a man. Only a few? weeks ago I was cxhibilin’ in East; Showhegan, in a. bildin’ which had been formerly ockepicd by a pugilist â€"0ne of them follows which hits from the shoulder and teaches the manly art of self-defens. And he cum and scd lie-was goin’ in free in come quence of previsly ookepyin’ sod bil- din’ with a. large yaller dog. He sod “0 yes,†I scd “0 no.†He sed, "’ Do you want to be ground to pow- der?†I scd “Yes, 1 do, if therâ€"i‘s a powder-grinder handy.†thcn he struck me a dfsgustin’ blow ,in the left eye, which caused the concern to close for repairs; but he didn’t hurt me any more. I went for him ener- getically. His parents lived near by, and I will simply state that fifteen minutes after I had gone for him his mother, seein’ tho prostrate form of her son approachin’ the house on a shutter carried by four men, run out doors, keel-fully looked him over, and cod, “ My son, you’ve been ‘foolin’ round a. thrashin’ mashecn. You went in at the end where they put in the grain, come out with the straw, and then got up in the thingumujig, and let the horses tread on you, didn’t you, my son 1’†You can judge from this what a disagreeable persOn I am when I’m angry. ,‘,_h-,0,. .._ . . Russian Sand-Flea Sl. l’olersburg, the capital of Ilusr sin. is the heaven for children‘who have a propensity for making mud and sand pics. In many of the small public parks of that city there are, here and there, large open spaces, covered with gravel. Every morn- ing in each of these spaces may be seen a large pile of sand, cone-shaped, about four feet high and six feet in diameter. After breakfrt all the pod with hatchcts,.little spades and wagons, repair to these cones, and employ themselves in digging them down and scattering the material ac- cording to their fancy over the grav- el spaces. The next morning the cones are all ready for another assault. The city government provides the sand, and has it piled up in the cones each night. The result of this sim- ple plan is that the children acquire a fondness for exercisc’ and labor, and get that healthful, openâ€"air amusement so essential to their vital- ity in a city. Perhaps they always get the usual maternal spanking for soiling their clothing, but this is one of the swoets 0f the halcyon days of childhood that can be looked back to in after year. without rovengclul feelings. -â€"â€" ~râ€"9o-a«~oâ€" a Borcs. Ther is probably no one who could not tell you volumes of ex- periences and sufferings from the per- sistency of bores, although every onc’s idea of them’varies. - The man who replied, when asked whats. bore was, “A fellow who talks about himselfwhon you want to talk about yourself,†made the most compre- hensive classiï¬cation of the kind yet imagined, and they all, with slight variations, come under this heading, for if they do not Ialk about "cm. :3' ‘ it about Some hobby of rhcir own that , they hold forth. There is the scientific bore. “ On man and his functions he talks with a smile.†I never meet one of these that I: do 'notremember the snub ad- ministered to apcrson of this descrip and wittiest of New York diners- out. . him, was pouring fcrlh his theories, and ended with the assertion that the oyster was the equal ofa man. “I hold,†said Mr.â€", “that‘itis the superior, for an oyster sometimes shuts up,†with which extinguisher ~.~. ! I‘VD children of the neighbrll‘li‘b’ld,“equip- ' tion by one of the most promin‘ent‘ The bore having button-holed ' mpion Bu earth“ of in on One of the “ characte I’ in which our New England village hfe labour _ ' has justpassed away at Williarhstbwln in the death of the negro Abram Parsons, or “Abe Bunterj.’ as hewas . one acquainted vith- , 'Abc’s popular i‘title Was . descriptive and grew out ‘of'his ram- ' known it evcir ' the town. like or bunting propensities, “ buntâ€" ing†being his readiest and most effective method of d'cfen'Ce. Ills thickness of skull, even fortune of his. race, was simply'aslï¬mnding.’ He would split heavy plank with his head in the way of business or for the amusement of any one willing to pay a quarter for such fun, or would utterly discomï¬t and rout an alliterâ€" sary by launching himself bodily ass-l irresistibly at his stomach. T. we were his play spells. The woriiiics of the village will vouch for other stories. illustrativeof Abe’s more vig- orous uchivcmenls. They beguiled him, years'ago, into splitting avsmall grindslone. He was ashcdatonccf the stores ,if he wanted a cheese. Naturally hc did,‘a'nd they told him it must be put in a salt saekaud he must smash it with his head; so they inserted the stone, and Abe actually and literally shivorcd ’itâ€"â€"~and. let llr. hepc, got his cheese. When “ Cole’s store†was burned some years ago, and the heavy door could not/be broken open, Abe very obliging pounded it in with his head He was a kindly, good~naturcd fellow, had been born aslave in New .York State, and been freed, much against 'his will, found the task of caring for himself and an cvergrowiug family a discouraging one. 1 He was a good laborer vhcn properly “ bossed,†but up to his death represented well the oldâ€"fashioned “White Oaks†shift lcssncss, though latterly he was brought, with his family, somewhat under the reforming influences of Prof. IIopkin‘s mission chapel. “Abe Banter†will be missed as a member of the “lower faculty †about the college and by the grad- uates at the annual commencement season.méprl‘ngpteld (dings) Elzgm'rcr. â€"â€"â€"A-Aâ€":â€"â€"â€"â€"~â€"o 9 (>â€" â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" ‘l’he Americcn Revivalists . land. thousand pounds is the cxpmscs of the Moody anl S key Agricultural llall'luas been so C. the month of .‘dur in three sucâ€" ceeding; months they are in other quarters of the 0 Our Liverpool correspondent ivritcs that they have arranged to spend the whole of the month of February i:. .lflvmpool. A temporary building, capable of ac- comodating some eight thousand per» sons, is being specially erected as a cenâ€" tral hall for the occasion 3 ’and though only of a temporary cli;‘u'n.c..r, to be entirely demolished after two months, it is to cost £3,390, and the committee calculate that at least £1,500 will be required to cover the whole expense of the visit. They are confident that the amount will be speedily subscribed, without the necessity for a general sol- icitation. The invitation to IV Moody and Sankcy was foi’v.’ these gentlemen in September I was signed by nearly one hundred of the clcrgyinen and ministers of all do» nominations in the town. Carly. month a numcrously attended Cm once was held of the leading mini and other fricndsof the movemc town. Mr. Moody was present, and the whole of the arrangements were eomï¬ plctcd. i i 9. 'Wh‘en --Writing to advertisers please say xhut_you‘ saw their ad vertise-ment. in this paper. ASK YOUR ,anwnuavmu . he gently disengaged himself from the clutches of his adversary. â€"~â€"â€"~ ~~~~~~ > c 9 . <â€"~â€"â€"â€",â€"‘¥ YVe have received a copy of Withâ€" row’s “ Catacombs of Rome,†and have pleasure in endorsing the following opinions of the press. No Canadian book has ever been 50' favorably re- ceived :â€" “A book of unusual completeness.â€--~ N. Y. Independent. “ Enchanting as- a. novel, and full of Christian instruction,â€'- 1V. ‘ I". _ Sunday-Sci. 091 Journal. “A book of uncommon interest and importance.â€-â€"- Beec/zer’s Chrixtz‘izn Union. “Gives results of latest explorations at Itomeftâ€"JV; :Y. 'l’rz'bzmc. “ Must prove an almost indispen- sable part. of every library.â€~Buffalo Chris- (um A1I'vocate.. “ch could linger for hours over this enchanting work,â€â€"Naslrville, Tenn, Christian Advocate. “ Every lover of good books should have it "AJIamz'ltan Timca. “ By far the best book on the subject in the English languageViSt. Louis Christian Adâ€" vocule. “ The fullest, latest, and best resume of facts on the Catacombs.’lmToronto Globe. “ A credit to Canadian scholarship and lit- erary taste.â€â€"~C’hrislian Guardian. “The Church is under great obligations to Mr. \Vithrow for his gift of this book.â€â€"â€"Ncw York Christian Advocate. “’What a. perfect fascination have those memorials of the ChurCh, so near the time of Clirist,â€Â¢â€"IIer- aid, Boston. “ ls, wonderfully interesting. Such books ire wort-11 their weight in gold to the Christian student.â€-â€"-I’zltsburg Record- cr. “ is_r-:iluscly illustrated with line on- gravings. A book of unique and absorbing interest,Lâ€"~Erangclicul ll'itncss. “As fasci- nating as a novel, whilst full of weighty thoughts for mature and cultivated minds.â€"~ Toronto Moi “The most important and interesting 1‘ " int contribution to Christian Art and Archwology. One sccarcly feels like leaving the perusal until, the last page is devoured.-Ladz'es Reposilory, Cincinnati. “ lVill be found valuable in Sundayâ€"School libraries, as its style is so simple and its subject matter so interesting that it will be read with avidity by the elder scholars.â€â€" Montrcal ll‘zhzess. “A work to be classed with higher literature, and well worthy to be deeply studied, not only by Jhristirn schol~ are but by the more thoughtful part of our entire Christian people.â€-â€"â€"!l[€!}e0d£.st Quarter- ly-Ii’aview. a L. v A California man pounded his wife, was ï¬ned $90, and sold her silk dresses to pay the ï¬ne. Woman in BY MRS. HARRIET BEECUER STO‘WE. Address orders to BE. CHARLTON, Hamilton, Out ’3 classless... as cï¬â€˜e‘cmml a. rmziedg/ -†- ‘ ‘ FGR FEVER 3:. as the Sulphate in the same doses, while it a] flu,- Iwad less, is more palatabloaugl much chcapul; , , "all: ' ' Send for descriptive Circular with-f Tnstimm of likysinians from all parts .10? the country. W‘sflmple packages for trial, 2.3 cents. Prepared by BILLINGS. CLAPP AL: (30.. Chemists, Boston, Mass. how York Ofï¬ce, 8 s; 9 college Place. 7:": A Ir. m A norm/r: sour; FOR ta‘crcel --‘- E’s) Richly illustrated with oil plates, and a magniï¬cent , largc~sized oil I scnted to each subscriber. monthly parts.- Also, - Knight’s Mechanical Dictiona- iir ismwxn u. KNIGHT, Chief of the Patent Bureau at \Vashinv and useful work, indispensable to arm; lished in semiâ€"monthly parts. J. B: FORD 6t. 00., 27 Park Place, New York. and 40 King Street 'Weel‘f Hamilton, Ont. Publishers of Scientiï¬c and plate. of “ Sam the Princess" pro: Publ had in semi- . a rat".- Pub. Art Works. and the “Christian Union,†(You. .; A M. N OF A 'l’HOllSAND a eccieuaeurlvn When death was hourly expected from Co. HP- Tiox, all remedies having failed, accident lfll to a discovery whereby Dr. H. Jamcspurcdhls only child with a preparation of Cannabis Indian. He now ‘iisrccipc free on receipt of two slumps to pay gives t- I cxpcns There is nota ' rrle symptom of con- sumpliou that it does not di upatc Fight Sweats, Irritation of the Nerves, Difï¬cult} pcc‘ ration, Sharp Pains in the Lungs, Nausea at the b omach Inaclion of the B0}V0lfl,:llld Vi" ting of the Address, CRADDOUK 6}: C0., 1052 Rare Philadelphia, PIL, giving name of this paper. TVA}? ‘Ellb, E‘AINES AND GrillN'l‘lLlEME.r TO ,4 qualify as TELEGRAPH OPERATORS for ()z‘llces opening in the Dominion. Send for circular. ('f,‘:{.l‘li‘rlrtfi 5.:- BAKED, x Toronto, Out, 35 w3m] , f’kIâ€"llgexicy to Loan. ,_ .- N SUMS AND FOR PERIODS to suit borrowers, on Real Estate per cent interest (not. in advance). , -_» . A ply at. the ' ofï¬ce of the NATIONAL. LIFE INaIfJRANCE COMPANY, corner: of ,James and King Streets, Hamilton. 7 * LIVRYGSTON, MOORE (SB 00., General Agents. 3444f Hamilton, Nov, ‘13. 187’. liter- 1: ya, ._ Davis; ’l‘oronloh‘Ohtzâ€"fl. '11. Williamson, 1 'lilulgrew, C. I). l’rcqtgni ’Secui‘ityuat _8[ , 9-! . .K « fl: Quack? , U Rheumatism an cow . ered by the ord iary practising" physici: a5 incurâ€" able diseases. and the qurry has often been propound» cd. of u .at beneï¬t to the helpless sufferer is all their pretended ; and or what. doth it availâ€"their ‘ .l ’ ,1 5 course of studyâ€"ll they are obliged onledgc that all their resources are 'of no ac count when called upon to prescribe for a patient suf~ fering from chronic rheumatism. The great trouble lies in the act that the mode of investigation is pre- ilhin certain boundaries andhmitations conr , the studentto troadgin certain wellâ€"worn paths, 1' disgrace -aiid._exoonimuuicah§ofl from that highly respectable orderofhmrtals‘k'nowï¬as the Med? ' l j :I’qul. How often genius has been curbed in "MS of investigation can be en sily imagined. .‘tcn really grand and beneï¬cial discoveries have iced under the ban of censure by those self- ‘liuxtcd censors. for no rcason‘whal'cver, but ‘ that they are innovations upon a stereotyped and time honored prescription. It wais not-so, however, with the proprietor of the . ‘ blamond Rheumatic Cure. mulling in the profcssmn, and the learn- cc of an able mind. qu' ‘kly compelled the a to sucrlunb, and new ph “ n5 generally all . be World, where 111“ medieu isintroducod, ad» mil. of its wonderful efï¬cacy," and often "prescribe it for their pal ients.~ 0f counsel, the use of the Diamond Rheumatic ‘ ire. without the aid of a. physician, is a. saving in, ' es lo the sufferer, but the really conscien- tious physician should rejoice at this, for the reason of the general hem-at arising to mankind from its “33. T T H E PE 0 P L E Draws OF’SANJTARY Pom s, l , Montreal, :June 18, 1874. )1. g .‘dnssus. Dawns EBGLTOY, ‘ , - GE)"1‘LHMEN,â€"l’liiViHg been one of the many martyrs of Rheumatism that I meet on my daily rounds, lwas induced. to try the celebrated Diamond Rheumatic Cure. Iliad suffered thelast live or six weeks the most terrible acute pains across my loins and backâ€"â€" so severe, indeed that I could hardly walk without the help of a SH 1 cmmncnccd using the Diamond Remedy, following the directions carefully. Relief came immediately with the ï¬rst bottleyâ€"imprm ed with the second, end cmnplctely eurcd'nnd free from pain after using,r niy’lll‘th small bottle. , ‘u are at perfect liberty to refer to me either pri» y or publicl ', as I feel .vcr_ thankful for the re- liex an" rmpalhize with my fellow sufferch from rhcun: in. man Wm. stv. Respectfully vours, J. It. Qumran, , 51 Labillc street. ' . This mediu‘nc has for several months past been used with perfect 5' ss dud satisfaction in the hose pitals oi Montreal, a. . recommended by the very best mclioal practitioners in that oil ' H " fc, speedy and positive cure for either chronic or 0 Rheuma- tism. _ i r ’ 'Thcrc is no in depressed "\‘i circulation a] 'lne which so promptly revives the on, restores the general and, meal the pain, ‘d‘is- pates thcgmxgcstion, prevents , . . .. .. “lion, andrestcrcs the bei’llh) ..ciion as . ' , DIAMOND ‘i‘IlEUMATIC Co In thousands of instances the prompt and free use of this in in has saved many vuluzililc human lives. Hence, unoml Rheumatic Cure should be in every ho ' , in in ', in every shop and sinp, every ( u c and countmv room. . .. rented to contrvin the full strengl of the medic-i n its highest state of purity and devrhlpment. and is superior to any medicine ever compounded for this terrible complaint. This nud‘ ie is for sale by all Di'uggists throughout the Dominic If it happens that your Druggisl has not got it in ck, ask him to send for it to I‘lOl-ll ARC]? LYMAN. [agents for the Province of Onlaiio;-.,Scett Street, T route. ‘ (Q. MATEUSHFKjr runes STELL ouu'ivs‘LuEb‘i New YORK, Juncfl, 1837. Mussns. HARLOW d: MArnirsnizxâ€" I cannot refrain from.a frank swoon} of the verv m‘ent supcriorily ol the hllitliIISIicli I’ian'os, as‘ In respect suprri-or to-all'mherjst é {l‘h‘e :"Or- cheslral †is a marvel of power and sweetness, and in all r051 Acts equals any ConcertGrapd; while the “ Colillr' “ possesses the power ,ofzunv. 0 'dinâ€" ary :quarc) me by our, bc§t makers gangl’v‘renlly; has no em 1 n1, purity an smocgncas ol‘ té‘iie. ' ( “rm-(1,) ~ .? Chu‘timcs‘Fï¬AnnL. (Jompm und Pianist to His Due Um: uVL‘ of Q‘axe Weimer. "‘3‘ ,: 'E‘f: , ,1 ‘ .W . I ‘ The: .c EECEER PIANO! 'Is'wlthout exccpllonithebestpnfcdigm priced in- strument in ‘the market. :- MrI-‘lh‘mcbél‘ commencedi hi business in 3824, and may‘ (slain; rank as tlï¬ oldest in New York in'thc Piano trade, Their-sue cessl'ul business of half a centcry enables them to offer a fl‘rst~ciass piano at mmpproach , F‘Rl NOE ORGANSI The oldest anp host, nudgich better satisfaction than any other organ in ths market. -‘ - ‘ I I ‘ 1 I’ in em: 1.»: oz comers, 35.1 8 Adelaide Street East, » , .Toronto. dill}! Lou t r -' ' a Tif_.:ATI§. ' ' ’ snvsi‘ worms: . r. , ‘ R. H .S M ITH (Successor to J. Flint) Manufacturer of all kinds of SAWS, Straw Knives, Pu tent Plaster- ing ’l‘rowcls, &;c. Sole Manufacturer or the J. Flint Patent Im» r Cut Saw: ulsc the light» v . . alugsCi-oss Ont saw. ’- on .‘liéFfN . †LA? i. a; .. . . w. Wm‘rantod. {317â€"15' :»,.:.«s WAN bid CONSULTEI) A Ill-ALL } hours, (lay and evening on all chronic diseases, )isw Can be had at his “office? ‘ Slant by mail tomrypart of the world. $1 per box and lwo‘poslagc stumps. Young men, take particular noticeâ€"you 'can be izcstorca lo health by applying (int-her..de:parsmrrovl by letter.) All female complaints skilfully treated. All letters must he addressed to A. Davis, Box 10550, 'l‘oronto, Ont ' ’ ' We, the ’nndcr l, have been cured by ï¬n. .' r: a}, .iour'v 213.11. , Anthony line . ll;'.._ .F.Carr, Ulias.(l.(}lis,J Theme 1. Fiction lll'lltou‘ 1’1! in ’ , , , - 'Gill’sM‘c am. @113 . , I cal Stair-dill der, aflowrd by s, builders, and practical stair- builders to be thexlajo tend s_iiiiplestwcrk"y’ct'pubé‘ lis‘ucd. Every carpenter that wants ,to keep) 11 )- wilh the times Bhoold greein‘ev'awdm'T-Thc o' comains forty three plates also an Apprentice De- artmenp. The bestof. inertial-s furnished from ending architect's, bulk crs and mechanics. ,Pube lishodat the low price of 35. Subscribe to local ~ ,oradd‘ .‘ , , . .- m u . ~ -. z 2:. .31 (fr xï¬vrflxT‘E9 ‘ General Agent. ‘ Box .507, Ha ilton,0nt5 a???“ AGENTS WANTED.â€"The work is Copyrighted, and can only be had from the local agent, or general agent. 3m Hamilton, Jan. let. 1875,. ' “Mona IRON WORKS. line Royal Highness the 's proved Champion Cross - .. (lf‘i’\"0111011'2111(l Childrcnfilidwimvj‘, etch, .lL‘ng 3:1‘3Vllll’l1q§e.0fa,,lll‘.l‘vi£ i, unï¬t. _.’ ' , . :lI‘HE. GOLDE’I}, FEM.%‘}§I§L&:§. ‘humlrcd others hayc‘been puglem, 4,. ines. He’s-p, Steam " a i g. Pulleys, crew Stump and General Steam Eng Blanufactured at the moptarm. THE STEAM ENGINES MANUFACTURED BY this ï¬rm are in many res ects su erior to any other made in this country cing se f-lubricating throughout, and are remarkably powerful, and eco- 11101 gal on fuel as well as soqable in price. The efllc cy mï¬yzb ‘ngl d b the con nually increas- , énund w n'e \ 53 ten con t additions ’to ourmachin y mi plan . J. H. KILLEY 85 CO. Hamilton, Feb. 20. 187-4. 306 . ills bï¬ï¬llltl. c ï¬ldcst Established? House in Oauaqlp , fl ,Aenn'r‘ 1N Tun 'Domlnlon 61' Canada for the to owing Planou Uhickerlngdï¬ nous, I Memway ,écwpns', . ‘ gBjInili'puurtg sons, ‘ / “nines Brat... ANS) ORGANS MANUFACTURED BY The Masoiilï¬iï¬ Organ Company, Boston, Geo. A. Prince delta. Rattan). Instruments‘lnahufedturblf by any of the above houses are GUARANTEED FOR FIVE YEARS. A hinge variety of new and second hand Piano: and Organs censtantIy lustock, varying from Fifty to Two Hundred and ï¬fty dollar's. - '» W‘Sc'id for Circulars, Price Lists, Terms, m. , before purchasing elsewhere. A. «k S. N8RDEEHFEER, IlEAD,OFFICE-~15 KING ST. EAST, TORONTG. BRANCH OFFICEâ€"28 SPARKS ST., OTTAWA. DEPOTS,AT,â€"-W.,L Curries’,London; J Cleneh‘fl St. Cuthm'lnes; Lanceï¬eld Bros, Hamilton; A. L. MiddlemiSs‘,’ Port ‘Hope- It. VanNorman’s Belle- vlllc; J. McCrue’s, ,Win sor; John Owen‘s Strat- ford; Wm. Mathias, l’eterhoro’; J. Lethbridge‘s, grantford; R. S Porter‘s Lindsay; G. F. Counter’s Qimcoe. ' Toronto, Aug. 7,1874. ,226â€"eoW-13' _ lilllllll bilabial, For Diseases 0,! the Throat and Lungs, such a: Coughs, Colds, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis, Asthma Consumption} THE few positions which have won the conï¬â€" dence of mankind and be- c o m e household words, among not only one but many nations, must have extraordinary virtues. Feb ,7 haps no one ever secured - so wide a reputation, or ‘ aintained it. so long, as Hat‘s Cunnav Pmroaan. It has been known to the 'public about forty years, by a long continued series -. ot' marvelous cures, that '. .hevc'won for ita. conï¬dence in its virtues, never equalled by any other medicine. It still makes the most effectual cures of Caucus, Cows, Cousunrnou, that can bemade by medical skill. Indeed the Cnssar l’scroi'mn has really robbed these dangerous diseases of their terrors, to a great ere tent, and 'ven a feeling of immunity from their fatal effects, t is well founded, if the remedy be taken in season. I cry family should have it in their closet for the ready and prompt relief of its members. Sickness, unï¬t-ring, and even life is saved by this timely protw il( 'l‘he prudent should not neglect it, and the wise ‘ . Keep it by you for the protection it- affords by ts timely use in sudden attache. 0 ~ V I , PREPARED BY "I Clever 0a.. Mass. I, 'i i Munroe“. AND nastvi'ic Northrup Lyman, 7 Newcastle, General Agents. 53’ Sold by all Druggists and Dealers In Medicine. "(April 15, 1873. 113 C 1,000,000A RES ‘ ;':-=‘ ‘ ‘-â€"0Faâ€"-' ,'A-'!I: eerie. on) immune Lmls : l The. Grant Rapids and Indiana. Railroad having been- completed twin Fort Wayne to Indiana, to 3 3'. .- fl, littlellu‘lï¬ivarae near Maokin v, and earned all pyritrs grants of nuts, over 1.00 00 scans. now m err, .1 ... ~ ‘s '-" TSphzilll-ltllirgams in the Best of farming Linda To Colonicsor lympfduals fails“ 51. {8:15. ’ These Landstziile flxnbdred Iivlth Wench; and maple, elm trad otheiï¬ia'gl \vqga, ard gee , , _ A _ ces'gible to the Fostmark‘ét, "‘3; "" a; E _ WA'EER Asp BAIL, And are in a part of the State unequalled for health, well watered, and contiguous to the great. Fruit raising Section of the East Shore of Lake Michigan. M1011ch is one of the LEAST mm:an and most pmsperous cylic States. ,2, x 11 7 . 1 l is, otedl'or' splend' , Ngi'lifid Igldlloél , allpalegmlk’hï¬u ' Condor-rues and-testimonials seii’tgoii" lf: I ‘ L‘5 03.5%.“? .‘ UlldQW' ï¬t; .' ‘-"» .Every Iii’strul‘nciit waimnledforï¬v‘ .e gr; 3% " ï¬ll ongcm is famed férIIts enable 0!. its .\muï¬.a»inuverv Couuf‘vbf the D0- 1-,, h." -- ' Furnaces, ffs Railroads, fts‘Walcr Courses, its beau‘ tiful Lakes, and stirring enterprising Towns, Vil- lagea and Cities. llicnxeAN produces Wool. Wheat, Oats, Corn, Barley, Potatoes &'c. ' v MICHIGAN produces inexhaustablc quantities of . Iron, Copper, Silver, Coal and Lumber. . MicnioAN in the ortion of thc,SlaAé near these Lands, reduces all indsof Fruits. , "t The ‘rz‘aï¬d,Rapid,s and Indiana: Rail Road runs through the c‘entrerol’ the Grant. ' The part of Michigan in which these lands are NOT, A mourns Bl All MEANS, but contains a “population-of. , ‘ "iv-0 will?in ‘foundis. ( 9 : .chLs 'mid'israpidlyï¬llin u with settlers from Canada, 0 and, and from almost every _ 'weden,’ Norway, State in the Union. =Ov‘er‘l60,’000j'abres of the lands of this grant have already been sold I The wealth of the Country is in the soil, and now is the time to own a. share of such wealth, when it can be had at From $4 to $8 and (Slaper Acre. One quarter ‘nl‘. " r , {.ylméug», or 74“ d 1875, any purchasers of 1 t1 5 (kn (lac, a farming land, paying one- quarter down, who will go upon it for settlement within Four Months after purchase, wlll be fut-niche ed w1th FEE-1}; PASsES for himself and family over the G. R. .821. R. R., from where such strike the road. tonic station nearesthispm'phaee. 3,11le (1m liagaiice in easy time pay- ' 5- . .' , ’ K , ARI), - . " ‘ ’ ~fLand Commissieneh Pll'RUl‘l ’ Grand Rapids. Mic « Clary of Land Dept. 320-1 . LE’S fl Shirt Factoryl isOn‘lllllG N0. 8 King St. ,East, [I O s- 5% gigs? Hg ‘31 «a ' ‘28 is 3 ‘ F.†. . , 01g _ ‘99,, 'H , ï¬ "31. - .. h, lg g5: . ‘ ’d DIRECTIONSIOB. SBLP-MEASUHF lT: . S cqrgundï¬eck‘rslze around Chest; size around “'2; , size around Wrist; From centre of Back to end Df‘Cuï¬â€˜v; for .Stiids,.Eyelets or Buttons in 0 h . Front. ; for Studs Eyclets orButtonsin Cuff: plain 'Front, or 3 or 5 Plaits: whcnvwcntod; price; quan- tity: V p - j _. l ' ,f G. Treble’s anmolh Fur- nishing Mouse, Hamilton, (but. PEGALCOMANIE FOR AMUSE~ } MENT.-â€"Box containing eighty pictures, ma- terials and directions for transferrin sent , anywhere on receipt ad $1.80. GALLE. ER 85 SIGN, Port Hope. Ont. Q 1.,40