Miss Annie Claudine Whitmore, was thedaughter of a wealthy planter, W. H. Whitmore, living near Dalton, Ga. She was the youngest of ï¬ve children~three sons and two daugh- tersâ€"and was educated at a convent in St. Louis. Soon after graduating she met Captain Wallingford, of the ‘ United States Army, and married him. The Captain, immediately af- ter his marriage was ordered to the far West, where he served until his death, which occurred just before the Modoe campaign. His widow, then only twenty years of age, and as beautiful as the moon on her four- teenth night, Went to Washington city, where she reigned an acknowl- edged belle. Her regal beauty and queenly accomplishments fascinated all who came in contact with her, rendered her the admired of men and the envy of women at the nation- al capital. Proffers of marriage greeted her on every hand. A young gentleman with only his father’s name to recommend him had succeeded in winning her aï¬â€˜ections ere she went to Washington. In fact her only object in locating at the capital was to be near this lover. While on the plains with her ï¬rst husband, whom she married when too young to realize the magnitude of the step, she was introduced to Mr. W. H. Tiffany, eldest son of Dr. Tiffany, pastor of the Metropolitan M. E. Church, Washington. Mr. Tif- fany was employed in the transaction government usiness which required his presence with the army. A few weeks suï¬ieed to render Mr. Tiï¬'any and Mrs. Capt. Wallingferd deeply attached to each other, but the wise and stringent law of society, which prescribes the duties of a wife to her husband, compelled all expressions, or even intimations of mutual admirâ€" ation to be suppressed. His business ï¬nished, Mr. Tiffany returned to Washington, and the young wife remained at the dreary military post, now rendered distress- ingly lonesome to her, with her husâ€" band. A few weeks later disease ap- peared in the camp, and one of its ï¬rst victims was Captain Walling- ford. The rites of burial over. Mrs. Wallingford repaired to her father’s residence, where she passed the peâ€" riod of mourning. She then took up her residence in \Vashington. Among the many satellites that revolved around the reigning social star was Mr. Tiffany. He became the acceptâ€" ed lover of the royal Widow, and she retired from \Vashington society and returned to her father’s to prepare for marriage. Here she encountered an obstacle not calculated upon. Her father bit terly opposed the match and flatly refused his consent. Not that he had any objection to the prospective groom, but he opposed his daughter’s marrying again, preferring that she should pass the remainder of her life with him. He soon won all the famâ€" ily to his opinion, and the lady had either to relinquish her lover or defy her family. She compromised the difï¬culty by agreeing to a postpone- ment, and so notiï¬ed Mr. Tiffany. IIe gracefully yielded, and the ob- jecting parent was appeased. Soon after this Mrs. Wallingford revisited Washington and efï¬ciently used her influence With the President in ob- taining for Mr. Tiffany 3. commission in the regular army for which he had applied. The Rev. Dr. Tiï¬any was the pastor of the church which Pres- dent Grant regularly attended. The reverend gen tleman's popularity with the President, aided by the ef- forts of Mrs. Wallingford, obtained the promise of a commission. In compliance with this promise, Mr. Tiffany was promoted from civil-i ian to lieutenant in the Tenth Regu-i lar Cavalry. His 00mmission was‘ issued in March, and toward the lat- ‘ ter part of April he was ordered to report for duty at St. Louis. While in Chicago, en route to that city, he met Mrs. Wallingford, who was re- turning from a visit to relations and friends in Leavenworth, Kansas. The meeting was purely accidental, but none the less joyous to the lovers. The lieutenant; proposed to the lady that she should accompany him to St. Louis, where they would be se- cretly married. His powers of perâ€" suasion, aided by earnestness and af- fection, at last overcame her scru- ples, and she consented. The two arrivediin St. Louis, and Mrs. Wallinford took rooms at the Southern Hotel, While the husband- elect reported for duty at the arsenal. He spent several days in making the preparations for the clandestine mar- riage. He used every precaution to prevent the affair from becoming public, and most effectually did he succeed. An attache of the hotel was taken into their conï¬dence, and invited to attend the wedding. At 8 o’clock on the evening of J une 1, a carriage was in waiting at the ho- tel to convey the candidates for the matrimonial yoke to the ministerial residence. The lady and gentleman , descended the stairs arm in arm, andj their elegant attire attracted the at-1 tention of all the guests. The lady 'wore a light lavender colored silk dress with a long train, trimmed with costly white lace and looped with flowers ; White kid gloves, and the usual bridal veil. Her ornaments were diamond earrings and necklace, a large solitaire diamond and a plain gold ring. The groom was attired in the customary suit of black. The party was then driven to the resi- dence of the Rev. Dr. C. A. Van An- da, pastor of the Union Methodist Church, who is an old and valued friend of Rev. Dr. Tiffany. There, in the presence of a. small party com- posed of the family of Dr. Van Anda and three ministers, two who had faithfully loved each other for more than three years, and against Whose union even fate itself seemed to have conspired, were united in marriage. Dr. Van Anda and other witnesses of the ceremony were acquainted with That Secret Marriage. [From the St. Louis Timch the reasons why it was desired to keep the marriage secret for awhile, and all united in a pledge of secresy. After receiving the congratulations of those present, Lieut. Tiffany and bride returned to the Southern Hotel, reaching there about half-past nine o’clock. The lieutenant returned to the ar- senal and pursued his routine of du- ty as usual, While his bride remained at the hotel. One week after the marriage Lieut. Tiffany was ordered to report for duty at Fort Stockton, on the Mexican border, immediately. He departed at once, and was accom- panied as far as Austin, Texas, by his bride. From that point she returned to St. Louis, and Proceeded at once to her father’s resxdence in Georgia, Where she now is. Mrs. Tiï¬any is possessed of consid- erable means independent of her father. She has claims against the Government for property taken and destroyed by Sherman’s army during the War, amounting to thOusands of dollars. She commands an influence in Washington which is valuable in the prosecution of such claims. Lieut. Tiffany and his wife are both members of the Methodist Church. He is still on duty at Fort Stockton, separated from his beautiful young bride by hundreds of miles. A FEARLESS WOMAN AND A BRAVE DROWNED. A party, consisting of Mr. Ethelbel't Parsons and Miss Lottie C. Philpott, Mr. \Villiam A. Philpott, J12, and wife, Miss Hattie Fields, of Buffalo, and Mr. Chas. H. Philpott, started for the Cave of the Winds, about 5 o’clock. They chose this time because at no hour of the day can the rainbow be seen in such perfection. Arrived at the cave, they were advised by Mr. Wright, the lessee of the cave, to take a. guide, but as they were all thoroughly familiar with the place, and had made repeated trips through the cave in former years, they declined the proffered assistance, and started down the Biddle Stairway. They followed the usual pathway until‘ they reached the extreme eastern end of the railing, when they clambered out upon the rocks immediately in front of the cave. William Philpott and his Wife seated themselves on the rocks, while the other four ventured out still further, and descended to :1 strosz which flows down over the rocks, in front and a little to the right of the cave. Here they remained for some time, amusing themselves in the water, which brawls over the rocks and rushes through the crevices with great force. Finally Miss Lottie went still furâ€" ther down the river and entered an eddy, which, however, was partially protected by encircling boulders. Here she played in the water, which at this place affords an excellent current bath, and was soon rejoined by her three other friends. Mr. Parsons entered the water with her, and while he was getting a foothold, that he might guard against any possible accident, she slipped. He had hold of her hand, and, as she tell, he caught her, and together they were swept into the current, which bore them down about thirty feet toâ€" ward the river. Those on the rocks ‘report that Miss Lottie was next seen standing up in the water and leaning against a large rock. They were now in a powerful cur- rent, and both seemed to be makian1 endeavors to save one another. Her position was the more precarious, since the slightest movement, either way, would expose her to the full fury of the water, and once fairly in the power of the current all hope of escape would be ended. Mr. Parsons, from his position, could have easily saved himself, but thinking that he could rescue her, he seized her and tried to reach the rock above them. Though he battled with the current with that strength which despair alone can give, they both were swept from their vantage ground on the rock, and whirled into the maddening flood below. Twice they were seen to disappear below the surface. By this time they had been carried well out into the river, and to their agonized friends on shore they appeared to be standing on rocks, about eight rods or so from the edge of the river. To one unacquainted with the great depth of the river and the tremendous force of the under current, it seemed that they had at last found a place of safety, and might yet be rescued. But’ the treacherous current was bearing them rapidly down the river to the death which was now inevitable. Paw sons made heroic endeavors to rwch the shore with her for whom he had risked his life. He was a strong swim- mer, and was seen floating on his back, supporting her, and struggling against the current. All his efforts were of no ‘ avail ; the fatal current separated them, and Miss Lottie, deprived of the strong iprotecting arm that had before upheld her, disappeared with hands raised des- pairingly above her head. Mr. Par- sons must have seen her go under the water, but he still made brave efforts to preserve his own life. From the shore he was seen struggling in an aim- less Way to keep his head above the water. A thick cloud of spray interâ€" vened for a moment between the drown- ing man and the friends who were powerless to lend him aid, and when it disappeared, Parsons was gone, and the cruel river swept on as though this tragedy had not heen. The spof where they were last; seen is about; one-third the distance from the Cave to the Am- erican Falls. Miss Philpotb was 25 years of age, and the only daughter of Mr. \Villiam Philpott, an old and highly respected resident of the Falls. Ethelbert Par- sons, who lost his own life in the heroic attempt to save that of his companion, was 29 years of age, and the son of Horatio A. Parsons, Esq., of La Sallo. A dead dog was buried in a ï¬ne rosewood aoflin atï¬lbany. A Niagara Falls Horror. [From the Niagara Falls Regimen] V ‘0‘ A LAND OF NO CLOTHES, N0 HOUSES, NO TOOLS, NO RELIGION, AND NO MAR- RIAGE. . Seventeen years ago Narcisse Pierre Pelletier, the son of a shoe- maker in a small town in the depart- ment of La Vendee, went to sea, and after a few months was Wrecked with a large cargo of Chinese coolies. By miracle and promptitude he survived the brutality of his own captain, the cannibals who ate up most of the Chinese, starvatiom and more fatal thirst, to fall at the last gasp into the hands of a native Australian tribe. In the settled portion of that con- tinent a native is as great a curiosity as in this metropolis, but the aborigâ€" inal races still have much to them- selves the parts nearer the equator. This was about thirteen degrees south not far from Torres Strait, New Guinea, and the Louisiade Archipel- ago. The savages were very kindto the poor dying lad, adopted him into their tribe, found him a valuable member of society, and were proud of their possession. He acquired ti- tles of honor, inscribed upon his skin and carried in his nose and ears, he learned to carve canoes, and ob- tained an acknowledged pre-emin- once in strength, skill, and counsel. The tribe is a republic in the very strictest sense of the word, acknowl- edging no superiority, and fortunate ly Ofl'ex'ing small ï¬eld for the ambiâ€" tion which leads to higher political developments. They have no clothes excgpt a fringe in the c_ase of women; no houses except umbrellas extem- porized from leaves when it rains heavily; no tools, except bits of hoop iron found in wrecks; no arts and sciences, a very small vocabulary, and an arithmetic shopping short at ten, indicated by pointing to various parts of the body. They have no reâ€" ligion, no history, no social institu- tions, not even marriage, Regarded from our point of view, life is there one great negative, and the wonder is tley get own as well as they do. The women, however, go to the wall, as in all savage life; they are the pro- perty of the stronger, two or three at a time, and are put out; of the way as a useless horse i§ with us when nvo longer useful or agreeable. This is animal life. N arcisse Polletier was quickly ab- sorbed in the new current of his ex- istence. He became a pure and simâ€" ple savage, and as much forgot that ho had ever been anything else as if he had lived in a long dream. He could not speak a word of French; lost reckoning of days and years; knew not his own age ; perched on a rail like a bird ; had restless monkey eyes; clave with strong instinct to his adopted immunity, and only re- Imembered his relations as beings of l anotherworld long since passed away. But he has returned to life. On the 11th of April in the present year, the John Bell schooner, engaged in the beche demer ï¬shery, anchored at Night Island, to which boats were sent for water. The sailors met an party of blacks, with whom they 1 found a white man, perfectly naked and completely identiï¬ed with the savages. They induced him to enter the bout, where he was clothed and cared for by the crew. The dream of that long night is forgotten. Narâ€" cisse is already reading French novels. TREACHERY OI" A HUSBAND‘wA WIFE DISFIGUEED WITH OIL OF VI’I‘RIOL. [From 1hc London Times.] Northern Circuitâ€"fl/anchester, July 29â€"07mm: Com-t ( Before Barn Hud- dleston).â€"J0hn Stanney, aged 22 years, was charged with throwing oil of vita- riol on his Wife. Mr. Smith appeared to prosecute; Mr. Cottiugham to defend. The prisoner and his wife had been married for about a year, and lived at Oldham ; and it appeared that from ï¬ve weeks before the offence was com- mitted, up to the very day previous to it, there had been some jealousy on his part, and that on one occasion he had told her that he “ would make her so as no one would look at her by threw- ing oil of vitriol upon her.†Upon the day in question (the 15th of March last) the two were together in the house, and the prisoner, who had pur- chased the oil of vitriol about an hour before, went into- a back kitchen and poured it out into a. basin. He then returned, and put his arms around his wife’s neck, upon which she raised her face, thinking he was going to kiss her. He then poured a portion of the liquid ‘ on her forehead, and when she began to lstruggle, got her down on to the floor, land tried to pour it down her throat, ‘ saying, “ Whoever has you, shall have you both cripple and blind.†She suc- ceeding in preventing him from pouring more than a very small quantity down her throat, but he dashed the remain-‘ der in her face and ran out of the house. The victim of this diabolical outrage was in danger of death for some time, and when in the box presented a most shocking and painful appearance. Be- fore this occurred she had been a comeâ€" ‘ 1y girl. When before the magistrates the prisoner said i‘ it was all her own fault; he had told her hundreds of times about speaking to Helsby, and she had said she would speak to him. He then told her he would throw oil of vitriol on her and cripple her, and she replied ‘ the sooner the better.’ †The defence was that; the prisoner beught the vitriol to frighten his wife only, and that it fell upon her acciden- tally. The jury found the prisoner guilty, and he pleaded guilty to a. previous conviction of felony. There was also against him a charge of horse stealing. He read a long statement. His Lordship said he was possessed with the conviction that the prisoner The Republic of Nature. [From the London Times} A Horrible Grime. was a man given up to the most vin- dictive feelings. It was the most pain- ful spectacle he ever recollected seeing in a court of justice when the poor woman got into the witness box, and no one could entertain the slightest‘ sympathy with the prisoner, who, in the statement which he had read, had not expressed the slightest contrition. He sentenced him to penal servitude for life. The sentence met with tokens of ap- probation from a crowded court, which was immediately suppressed. HAM Townâ€"Chop some lean ham ï¬ne, put it in a pan, with a little pop- er, a lump of butter, and two eggs eaten ; when well wé‘rmed spread on hot buttered toast and serve. MUFFINSâ€"Beat up three eggs light, mix them with halfa pint of warm milk; to this put as much flour as will make a very stiff better, as stiff as you can beat it. Then add two or three spoonfuls of yeast with a little salt; set it to rise. When light, put your griddle to heat, take outsome bBtr tar with a spoon and put it on the gridâ€" dle turn them freduently. If you want them rich, add a little piece of butter as large as an egg. BREAD AND, BUTTER PUDDING.-â€"- Spread bread and butter, put a layer of apples, pared and cored, then an- other layer of bread, and so on till the dish is ï¬lled, having bread on the top. Preparea custard with four eggs to a quart 0t milk and season to taste. Pour it into your dish and bake. Beat the whites of two or three eggs to a stiff froth, sweeten and spread en the top before taking to the table. Cosmnn CAKE.â€"Tbree eggs, one cup offlour. Bake in jellyâ€"cake tins, two layers. Custard fortbe above. Half a pint of milk, two tablespoons of sugar. two tablespoons of flour, one egg. Boil the custard and flavor with vanilla. POTATO-BALLS.â€"-â€"Bake the potatoes, mash them verv nicely, make them into balls, rub them over with the yolk of an egg, and put them into the oven or before the ï¬re to brown. Those balls may be varied by the in- troduction of a third portion of grat- ed ham or tongue. POTATOES A LA MAITRE D’ Home». Boil and peel the potatoes ; let them get nearly cold ; then cut them into slices tolerany thin and warm them up in white sauce or melted butter, with parsley chopped ; put into in a little white pepper and salt, and the juice of half a lemon. OILâ€"Boil the potatoes, and let them become cold, then cut them into ra- ther thick slices. Put a lump of fresh butter into a stew-pan, add a little flour, about a teaspoonful for a moderate sized dish; when the flour has boiled a short time in the butter, add a cupnt of water and a little cream; boil all together, then put in the potatoes covered with chopped ai'eley, pepper, and salt ; etrew them’ or a few minutes, and then take them from the ï¬re; edda little lemon juice, and send to the table. Publishers of newspapers, and more particularly local newspapers, have to depend mainly upon their advertising columns for their support. Yet how many are there who seem not to realize this fact. Instead of giving their pa- per a liberal advertising patronage, they perhaps give it none ; and if a levee or entertainment is got up in the place, the paper is expected to notice it for nothing. Now if all the patronage that a paper can expect is that; of the locality for whose interest it; works, it would seem that every one should give it the adver- tising that legitimately belongs to it, and not try to get it without paying for it. There is a class of people that seem to begrudge every dollar that goes to their local papers ; and still borrow it and read it, and are the severest critics of its shortcomings. The publisher has to pay for labor and paper, and every notice of any kind, in the nature of an advertisement, he ought to have his pay for. He has got to get his living out of his adver- tising columns, and any society or in- dividual can with just as much propri- ety beg five dollars of any other individual, as to expect it gratuitously of a. newspaper. Any man who does not think enough of his town’s paper ; and every trader who does not believe in advertising, should move into some town where they have no papersâ€"Hardin†Journal. If you have been picking or handling any acid fruit, and have stained your hands, wash them in clear water, wipe. them lightly, and while they are yet moist strike a match and shut your hands around it so as to catch the smoke, and the stains will disappear. If you have stained your muslin or gingham dress, or your white pants with berries, before wetting with any- thing else pour boiling water through the stains, and they will disappear. Before fruit juice dries it can often be removed by cold water, using a sponge and towel if necessary: Rubbing the ï¬ngers with the inside of the parings of apples will remove meat of the stain caused by Piping.- A Frenchman more noted for his conceit and for a certain amount of success with the fair sex than for the cleanliness of his linen, was posing the otherday before a beautiful and wi t'r ty woman, when he delivered himself of this rather arrogant sentiment; “ Women, I change them as I do my shirts.†“ Ah,†said the fair one, looking attentively at the collar of his shirt, “ I should never have be- lieved you so constant." A Newspapers Patronage. Household Recipes. Removing Stains. A ROTTEN VESSEL FROM AMERICAâ€"THE CREW REFUSE T0 SAIL. At the Stonehouse Police Court, Aug. 3, ï¬fteen seamen of the ship Sunbeam, now lying in Plymouth Sound, were charged by Capt. Dal- zail, the commander of the vessel, with refusing to proceed to sea. The case was partly heard on the preced- ing day, when the magistrate order- ed the chi ) to be surveyed. Captain Stoll, R. l. .; the Board of Trade sur- veyor, accordingly inspected the ves- sel, and in his report of her condit- ion, he says : “Thejibboom is rotten, the plank under the top~rail by the port cathead is rotten, and all the caulking is bud ; the bitts for the main stays and maintopmast stays are completely gone to the greatdan- get of the mainmnst. The deck house for the crew is in a bad conâ€" dition; the mizcnmast has been proâ€" iperly tongued, but not being wedged in, the partners are very unsafe; the caulking around the starboard bow is bad; the running:r rigging is bad; and there is only a small quantity of rapes and spurs on board, The sails are old and require overhauling and the boats are badly found." He did not further proceed in his survey, as these defects rendered the ship un- ï¬t for sea. In reply to a question put by one of the crew, Capt. Stoll stated that a carpenter could not be dispensed with, as the ship was in such a wretched condition. The Captain told him that he had a spar for ajibboem, but this could not be ï¬xed without a carpenter. The men stated that there was no carpenter on board, and that if they had been willing to go to sea the Captain would have gone, althou rh there was a seaâ€" man short. The ench ordered the men to be at once discharged from custody. The Sunbeam is a ship or" 988 tons register, and is registered as belonging to South Shields, with Mr. Alfred Dobell, of Georgia, United States, as owner. Mr. Dobell has of- ï¬ces and a warehouse in Liverpool. The ship was built in Medford, Uni- ted States, in the em 1845, and had recently. come to tngland from Quev bee, lor which port she was to have sailed this week. [The South Kensington Museum To study it with care, and then stand in it intelligently, must, one would say, convey to any man s sense of his own eternity. Vista upon vista l The eye never reaches the farthest end in the past from which humanity has toiled upward, its steps traced in fair victories over chaos, nor does it alight on any historic epoch not related to itself; the artist, artisan, scholar, each ï¬nds him- self gathering out of the dust of ages successive chapters of his own spiritual biography. And even as he so lives the Past from which he came over again, he finds, at the converging point of these manifold lines of development, wings for his imagination, by which he passes on the {Oriel track of tendency, stretching his hours to ages, living alâ€" ready in the Golden Year. There is no other institution in which an hour seems at once so brief and so long. A few other European museums may sur- pass this in other specialties than its own ; though when the natural-history , collections of the British Museum have been transferred to their new abode, one will ï¬nd at its door a collection of that kind not inferior to the best with which Agassiz and others have en- riched the Swiss establishments; but no other museum has so well classified and so well lighted an equal variety and number of departments and objects representing that which is its own spe- cialtyâ€"Man as expressed in the works that embody his heart and genius. The museum has been in existence about eighteen years. Its building and contents have cost the nation about one million pounds; an auction held on the premises to-day could not bring less than ten millions. Such a disproporâ€" tion between outlay and outcome has led some to regard South Kensington as a. peculiarly fortunate institution; but there has been no luck in its hisâ€" tory. Success, as Friar Bacon reminds us, is a flower that implies a soil of many virtues. If magniï¬cent collec- tions and invaluable separate donations have steadily streamed to this museum, so that its buildings are unceasingl y expanding for their reception, it is be- cause the law of such things is to seek such protection and fulï¬ll such uses as individuals can rare] y provide for them. â€"-111. D. Conway, in Harper's Jllugm zine for September. The usually quiet town of Methuen. tWO miles above Lawrence, Mass., has lately had a sensation. A few days ago, at a very latte hour, some children noticed a stranger digging in the earth on a rise of land just in the rear of Deacon Charles ingells’ residence, and at a later hour they approached the spot and found a large trunk open and empty. They immediately spread the news, when a number of older people icame and discovered holes dug in the ‘ ground in various places, evidently made in searching for the trunk. The trunk had been broken, the wood-work was rotten, and the iron bands rusted of? in many places. The older inhab- itants were not long in giving a reason- able solution of the mysterious affair. §i§teen years ago, Rev. John Phillips lived a; ehort distance from the spot, and late (me night a bold robbery was committed on his premises, resulting in the loss of a large and valuable lot of silver plate and gold and silver coin. N0 trace of the robbers or property was ‘ ever found. It is new the belief of the citizens that seine recently escaped conâ€" vict/was the robber, and that he has returned to secler his long-hidden measure. Unseaworthy Shlps. [From the London Times.) A Captain Kidd Story. “’llen writing to advertisers please say that you saw their advertisement in this paper. OR NO CHARGE MADE, BY JOHN KNOX} Cancers Effectually Cured, The Diamond Millstone Dress- ing Machine! U SIGNED m saves. large portion of the Limv spent in dressing Millstoues by hand, and to dress the Hunt! with uniformity and exactnuss, keeping the alone ulwnysoven and “in face." A run of stones can he (lxwued in 211: hours. Man-11inch; H0111 on 30 (lays‘ mm. Apply to NOTICE TO MILLERS. $100 IN CASH 3823111] THE HAMILTON TOOL CO’Y, MAKERS, N0. l GGRDDN PBES‘ Auxiliary Publishing (mep'y, Hmnilton, Ont. BI ORTHEY’ g- STEAM ENGINE WORKS '1‘ Manufacturer of o 9 I’om‘AnLI-z AND STA» TIONAHY STEAM Cm,»le AND BOILERS, Stvmu Pumps and Boiler Feeders; also Drops for stmnpmg Sheet, Metals. Steam Engine Governors, &c. 370. â€" and settle into troublesome disorders. Eruptions 0 the skin are the appearance on the surface or humm's that. should bu expelled from the blood. Illtcrnul do mngemems are the determination of these same hu- mors to some internal organ, or organs, whose :u‘tilm theydemuge, and whose substance they disease, and destroy. AYIm‘s SARSAPARILLA cxpcls these humm‘s from the blood. When they are gone, the disorders thoyproducc disappear, such as Uitcemtimw 0f the Liver, Stomach, Kidnega, Lungs, Eruptions and Eruptivc Disease)! of the skin, SI. Anthony’s Fire, Rage or Erya'ipelag, Pimplev, I’mtuley, Blotchee, Bails, Tumors, Teltcr and Salt Rhemm Sculd Ilmld, Rifla worm, Ulcer» and Sores. Rheumatism, Neu- rulgia, Pain inlhc Bones. Side and Head, Female Weakness, Stervility. Lcucorrh rra arising from in- term! «deviation and uterine disease. lh'olmy, Din. pepaia, Ernacintion and General prflz'ry. With their depurtm‘c health returns. MER’s SARSAPéRILLï¬ {widow-0: 584 King Sf. West PREPARED BY Dr. ./. (7. A YER (Fr (70., Lowell, Mass., Practical and Analytical (llmmists- .Noflhmp marl Lyman, Mzumastle, 1' encral A gents. 5%“ Sold by all Druggists and Dealers in Medicine. MATHUSH‘ELIS PIANOS! STILL UNRIVALLEDI Massns. BARLOW K5 MATHUHHEK'H I cannot refrain from a frank :lvmvui nl‘ the very great superiority of the Mmhushck Pianos, as in (we)? respect superior to ail others The "01-- pheï¬grn “ is a marvel of pov mm! s N‘hlnsï¬â€˜ mid m 1111 res can; eqtluyxis‘ 311:3: “(Vténcmr-t, Grand ; Mam: the “ Collbrj†possesses the power of any ordin- ary square plqno by our best, makers, and really has no equal 111 purity and sweetness of tune. (Signed) Cmmmca FRAIHCL. Composer 9nd Pianist, to His Royal Highnvufl 1m- Duc Gustavo of Saxc \Veimur. A H Saws \Vnrrantcd Is without exception the beat medium priced in- strument in the market. Mr. Fischer commenced hi-i business in 1824, and mily claim rank as the oldest, in New York in the Piano trade, Thvirsuc- ceast'nl business of half a cont‘cry enables them 10 oï¬cr a. first-class piano at unapproaclmble pl'it‘w. The oldest anp host, and givesbettm‘ satisfurl ion than any other organ in the; marker. Catalogues and testimoniala sent on umflimn ion. Every Instrument warranted for-ï¬ve years. Agvuts wanted in every County of tho nonunion. T R E B L E ’ S Dominion iShir’tq factory ! HLIN G E [US PATENTâ€"IS DE HAMILTON, ONT THE FISCHER PIANO! AMUVLAULILJ AV fluuu‘augu ..- . u .- wuu m Size around Neck; size around Chest; size around Waist; size around Wrist; From centre of Back to end of Cufl‘; for Studs, Eyclets or Buttons in Front ; for Studs Eyclets or Buttons in Cufl‘: plain Rout, M3 or 5 Plai ts; when wanted; prime ; (1mmâ€" ‘1 y._ F SIG. 'frebie’s Mammoth Fur- nishing House. Hamilton, 0m. A FARM UONTALNING 4S ACRES, ‘1 acres; of good hard wood, large orchard, grafted fruit, barns and outbuildings in good order, will be sold with the above residence if desired. The farm is separated from the brick residence by a road. For further in~ formation apply on the premises to Or at t-lw NEW DOMINION 061cc, Hamilton BEAUTIFUL BRICK RESIDENCE FOR SALE. (Wm. m‘ WELLINGTON .& KING WILLIAM M‘s H A M I L ’1‘ 0 N . 8 Adelaide Street, East FUR PURIFYINC THE BLOOD. DIRECTIQMS 1:03, SELF-MEASUREMENT ST. CATHARINES, ONT M'O "TORIES, CONTAINING SEVEN APPLY A'l‘ 'I‘HF. OFFICE m“ ’I‘Hl PRINCE ORGANS! 1% 0. Box, 17064 TN GOOD ORDER NORI‘IS & SOPER, No. 8 ,R'ing St. Easi, W1 [1L B U Y A RIBS. L. BOWLBY, w YORK, June 24, 1867 This compound of the vegemblc :LRCI‘HNVL‘S, Sur SA]mrillzl‘Dockstiilinginin /2iml Mandrake with the ¢Iodinlvs of l’ntzxns‘nun and /Iron makes :1 must etfvc» {Anal cure of A series of /' complaints which are var) épx‘evulcnt and amiding'. MIL puriï¬es the Mum], purges out, the lurking human 'm the system, that undermine 1)chth (Successor to J. Flint) Manufacturer of all kinds of SAWS, Straw Knives, Patent. Plaster- ing ’Ji‘ro‘xvclsndkc. gole Manufacturer of the J. Flint Patent 1111- proved Champion Cross ()ntgaw; also (helight- ning (JrOss (tut, Saw. RH.SMITH HAMILTON, ONT i '1‘. ()A'I‘HARINES 3 SAW WORKS. TORONTO. 351 [3704f ’l‘umntu A POPULAR SUCCESS! EEPEW’S Possessing most Astzmisilivng Curativc Propm'iios .~mmrm unknown, and only 0M!!!â€- (Iblc (in Hm M'edw'cal Viciory. Its; Properties are such as Ia rapidly insure Sound “(with and Long Rife. The best scientiï¬cally prepared med/wine ,In America. N0 MEDiGINE EQUALS IT. -â€"â€"-â€":0:â€"â€"- DON’T FAIL TO PURCHASE IT. BLOOD PURIFIER Pleasant lo (ho hum. all“ warrnnwd {rt-r ï¬-onl anything illJlIn-ious lo the most delienlc constitu- tion of either sex. Road {/10 crriiflmfm (2/ wonderful 0mm givrn in Dr. Dcpr'zr‘s Treatise amonqmnying WWI battle. as well as those constantly appmrz‘ng in HM mmpaper press oft/u: Dominion. an eminent physiéian, is the diséovorer 0H Jié: Grout Blond Remodyâ€"â€"a Purely Vogot nu Compoundâ€"named by physicians, Dow-wit Medical Victory, that. cures ovary kind of unhealthy Humor, and every dismso 11m depends on Impurity of the Blood, win-re tho Lungs, Liver, and Kidneys7 and ()ihor vital organs. are not wasted boyoml 11w liupi; 01' repair For the cure of Sqrofulah I‘li'.‘~"'i!‘91fl§« VAA'_. For the cure of Scrofula, in PHIL“. Salt-rheum, Eczema. Scamâ€"Honda Scnly Eruption ofthe SkimUlcm‘s, and Fm’vr Son‘s of all kinds, Boils Humor in the Mouth and Stomach or Eyes, Sore Em'R, Eruption on the [10nd, and Pimplos or Bloiches on the taco, it stands I’veâ€"eminently at the head of all other Remedies. 'l'hisin‘ the, fannilinr quvHLiwn put to cvcry invalid h_\' his anxious friends. l'ZVm‘y 111m: that nicks the sysv Lemis a silent plea ofnutui'c fur help. Just as LhU collision between flint and steal 1m HillCCS ï¬fe, lln- struggle between dis ‘1: and nuturo maxim-c5; pain, Rheumatism :md gout are very cmmnnn, var. painful and smnetimus wry pcrilnns dis ‘93. Until revently rhmnnatiï¬m was but very litilu nnderslond by the orâ€" (limu'ypram-lining physicians. It, is essentially :1 (liver ruse of flu: blood, which lurcmncu thoroughly rhnrgcd will! an acid. mi'l cirrnlmling‘ Willi i/hc hluod. it smurf-t in contact, with the ï¬brous tissue This tissue is In- iluinwl by the : 7h] 11nd :1 puinfultliwuuxo rvsnlts. The pnison is floated from joint, in jnint, and one after an» “(her is attacked in Sin ssmn. When 1ho, ills-muse is fully established the put in proscntan piiialrlc speck» uh: nf 11011110834 511sz l‘illj". “E! is \‘My rcstlcss‘, yet hv «love not Inm' . Thu wv‘ li‘ uf (ho lied clothes um h:n' lux lmrnv. Thu snmt, Hm urinu ihc saliva, arr‘ ‘ all SUIII'. [‘Ivcrv thing plainly points to tho nzmn'v (if the. disorder, an :u-itl [unison in tho Mood. The lining; Hi the heart is made (1f the 311nm iihrons material, and this in turn may lm :levkod, mnvcriying it into a dis ease of very great danger \Vluenrumu "y mlmsplzwe (\ffm‘ircxl, thorn is oilwn in store fnl‘ni'e- had hmllh, luilr piimion and drnpsy, Closely allied to Hhcunmtism is 1hc (mm, which is also owing tn n, poisonous avid in the lilood- ’l'hc pain is, if anything, more intulomhlc than ch", pain of rhcunmtisni. It has liven dcscrihed as fulluws : “ Place 30111‘ joint in :I‘ \'l( and srrmv it up till you can endure it no longer ; that may represent rheumâ€" niism : thcn give the instrument :muthm‘ twist. and you will obtain the notiun of gout." In the cure othennmLism, Dyspepsixnlliver Complaint, and (list-uses of the Kidneys :nnl Bladder, its effects are surprising to all. For Regulating the Bowels, and curing;r Bilimls- Hess, Headache, Sicli-Ileudache, Nenrrrlgin, Female Weakness, Nervonsness, Pains in 11w, Side, Loins and Buck, and general VYonklwss and Debility, its curative powers are remarkable. It is a Gentle Regulating Rurgative, as well as 9. Tome. &c. l’ossossmg also the peculiar merit of acting as :L powvrl’ul agent in relieving Congestion, and Chronic Inflamâ€" mation of the Liver and all the Visceral Organs,_ For Female Complaints, whether in young or old, married er single, at the dawn of womanhood, or at the turn of life, tho Medical Victory has no equal. A Prrfccl Renovator and InvigoI-nflor of II": Syntonl. 0m Bottle of Dcpcw’s fllpdz’cal Victory will canvinoe (he most incredulous Q/z'ls curative properties. This nwdicinc is fursulu b) all Dnlggiststhroughout the Dominion. 12w :n‘c 0i fianntorfcit, mmnoundsud- VHtiSul by :1 1'1 rm knnn'n : Joseph Miner x (10., anti passed ruff on Hm unsunpccting' bufl'crurs for the genuâ€" ine. ’l'hc Dizmnmd Rheumatic Cure is secured by I‘Man : . (l: in (-vmg, rivilized country “'11 we H It; Inlr~ , um] 111mm: the labelth lnow ngmnx, “ l),!{.l‘ “ mthmnt why}: 1]} othorsnvufruudsL A For 1.0 uv '\\'!1 mm As to the il'cxmncnt (If rhonnmtism :md gunk what is more in :wccnlunuo with common Sousa than to 110‘ Stray the maid. ’l‘he editur of the host, medic pm'imlr 10:11 in England. thu “Alodim (‘hhnugiml Ru xew and Journal 0f Practical Medicine," speaking; in the name of his professional brethren, gives the recipu from, which tho ‘ . . / Dlamond Rheumatism Cure. I enclose with this flva dollars. for which 1 “We Send ï¬ve bottles DIAMU. ) RHEUMATIC UL, x‘l‘ Two‘ bottles to Mrs. Jsz Savoy, uml three bottles tri Leroy W. Savage, nil nf this plum. llmvc used “we bottles, and You] thxt 1 am (-urcd. Roma-Hull) yum‘s, J. PLJMI‘TON SAVAGE. Aguntx for the, Province of Ontario, Scott Street. Toronto. Sold by Druggistsr quAdDggers. ir compounded the preference over all other remedies ever prescribed for those stubborn diseases. Every avenue of escape for the pnis u must he npcned; the bowels. the kidney Md the skin must he forced into accinn. 'I'llu DIAMOND lillldl lA'l‘IC CURE accom- plishes all this: for while it (lus "oys the acid poison in the bloody it opens all the gates for the dim-harm of itâ€"â€"the skin, the kidncys and the bowels. It is fm‘thcsc sulliulent masons that _\'h_\'. clams are now c\ erywhen: presu‘ilping the DIAMUNI) RHEUâ€" MA'l‘lC CURE as an infallible speciï¬c for rcnmving the cause 01' Gout, (fln‘unic, Acute, or )lnscnlarleuâ€" xnatism, llmnbagn. Sl-intiml, Nervousllvmlavhu.Ncm‘â€" alg‘ia of the 110ml. Ilc‘ ‘1‘,kidm. :unlstulnuull, 'J‘ic Dolomnx, nervousness, flying pains, twisted joints, swollen juints, pain in the luwk and luins, weakness of the kidneys. tired fouling. languid, weary ]>l'nsl!‘ll~ Lion, and all nun-nus ml l'lmmic diam ’ ‘ Guommrmx'x, REL, Feb. 15, 1875‘ W. 1:. WA‘ 0N, Esq., Chemist, Clmrluttctowu; SENIS FOR D'ES'CRIPTIVE PAMPHLET. ADDRESS Sills a: 00., BATH, ONTARIO. DR; DEFEWLOP.P§3l$z§§§§g§! ANED Health Regulator, NOTICE TERI} EiEï¬i HJLTS. NORTHROP d“ LYMAN. A GREAT 12% ii A? YOU ‘? I5 'I‘H