. multitude. . Chester was more like an American city than I the walls, ï¬lled with shrubbery and flowers, A WOMIAN’S QUESTION. BY ADELAIDE ANNE PROCTOR. Before I trust my fate to thee, 0r place my hand in thine, Before Ich thy future give Color and form to mine, Before 1 peril all for thee, Question thy soul to-night for me. I break 2111 slightcr bonds, not feel A shadow of regret: Is there one link within the past That holds thy s irit yet? (tr is thy faith as c car and free As that which I can pledge to thee? Docs there within thy dimmest drums ’A porrible future shine, \\ herein thy life could henceforth breathe. lxutouchcj, unshared by mine? it Hi, at any pain or cost, 0, tell me before all is lost ‘1 Lop}; dceper still: if thou must feel, ‘ v’ithin thy inmost soul, 'Ihnl thou hast kept a portion back. \i hiic I have stak ed the whole, Let no false pity spare the blow, But in true mercy tell me so. 15 there within thy hearts. need That mine cannot fulï¬l? One chord that any other hand Could better wake. or still? S cak now. lost at sortie future day 11 y whole life wither and decay. Lives there within thy nature hid "J he'demorrspirit, change. Sneddlm.r a passing.’ glory still On all things new and strange? lt inaynot be thy fault alone,â€" iiut EliiCld my heart against thine own. Collldst, thou withdraw thy hand one day And answer to my claim, That fate, and that to-day‘s mistake,â€" Not themâ€"had been to blame? some soothe their conscience thus; but thou \\ ilt surely warn and save me now. Nay. answer not,â€"I dare not hear, ‘The words would come too late ; 1 ct I would spare thee all remorso. 'So comfort thee. my fate: \‘i hatever on my heart may fall, Remember, I would risk it all i ENGLISH CORRESPONDENCE. Englandâ€"Approaching the great city of Manchester~smoky Forebodingsâ€"How the English have Funâ€"Belle Vueâ€"All for a. Shilling. BY K. T. STABECK. I have heard of Manchester and heard it was smoky. I am very fond of smoke. \Ve approached Manchester through several tun- nels, some of which were several miles long. “'0 stopped at one of them to permit a train to pass us, and here I enjoyed a rare oppor- tunity to look at Manchester. It was, most strictly speaking, a. bird’s eye view. I doubt if there is a. bird's eye extant that can look through the second chimney in the city. From the car window to where the horizon might reasonably be expected to exist, the air was filled with murky grayness. Through it here and there loomed ponderous chim- entitles you to a pot of tea, a. half-a-dozen three times a week, from the adjoiningtowns and counties. It is better known to man English people than Manchester itself is, am sorry to say. Belle Vue comprises a museum of curiosit‘ ice, 3. menagerie that would put to shame the traveling concerns by that name in America. By the way, I should like to wager that one of the Belle Vue bears would put to flight an entire American meiiagerie, and even scare the ticket-master, and then get back for an early tea. Then there is a painting of the battle of Waterloo, arranged in terraces, with openings among the imitated hills and ridges for the mantnuvering of troops. 0p- posite this is a stand for the band with flank- ing galleries capable of seating ten thousand people, and between these galleries and the painting is a platform when three hundred couple can dance at one time. Under the galleries are extensive tea and bar rooms ; one of the tea rooms is a sixpence and the other a shilling department, and the shilling slices of bread and butter which were neither cut or spread by a step-mother. The admis- sion is a penny, and many go in for the fun of finding their way out again which in many instances proves a much more diflicult job than one would believe. I saw a heary Ger- man and his wife make the attempt. It amused both of them to see how stupid the English were in getting out. For five min- utes they kept up a smiling countenance, then their features began to retire and finally I was afraid the man would swallow his own head. The woman at last burst out in tears when one of the “ stupid English †took pity and piloted them out. As the sun went down and twilightâ€"that mystic halo which crowns England from the disappearance to the reap- pearance of the sun-light succeededgthc crowds increased quite visibly, and 1 am safe to say that ten thousand people were pres- ent. Across the graveled plaza rode men mounted in armor, making their way to the mysterious recess of \Vacerloo. We mount- ed in to the galleries with thousands of others and patiently waited until 10 o‘clock, when that hour arrived, the ï¬eld of \Vaterâ€" loo renewed its carnage and terrific uproar. A balloon shedding innumerable blue lights suddenly started heavenward ; rockets, Ro- man candles, and blue lights flashed forth. The hills and the ridges became alive with cavalry, infantry, and brigadier-generals ; cannons and musketry peeled forth their thunders ; battle flags waved ; music sound- cn; and the cries of the combatants filled the air. Then a barn in the foreground took fire, and the flames rolled up through the roof, adding their crackling and hissing to the general horror. Charge after charge was made and repulsed ; finally the French were overcome and then the caniionnading and musketry became fairly awful, and the scene closed. All, all for & shilling 1 Dear reader, why not come to England. ~â€"â€"¢ o>-vv-â€". A TERRIBLE SPECTACLE. And. the Son who is in Benev-ue by Roe.- I but, as he lay on a bed in Bellevue lospital, his aspect was un leasaiit. criss-crossed with at hesive plaster, a clearing had been made in the forest of hair on his head, and one leg stuck out into sight, bau- daged. son of the stiffening patchwork, his mouth would open only half way, and when he talked the unvarying expression of his face was very queer. drawn the muscles on one side of his mouth with the strips of plaster, so that viewed from one standpoint, he smiled blaiidly; but on the other side the visage was solemn and resentful. surgeon. rel, and almost all of the barrel was head,†replied John. iiig side, wondering at his good humor ; but a change of attitude showed the other half of his face, which seemed much more appropri- ate to the occasion. about the accident which had injured him. Sixty-second street,†he said, “ blasting out rock. spring; so there wasn’t no hurry Us two kind 0' worked along easy. get in a blast every two or three days, and time. THE STAMMERINC FATHER. on of the Parent’s Defective Speech. [From the N. Y. Sum] He had been a good-looking youii fellow ; His face was His features were immobile by rea- The surgeon had slightly His name is John Garland. u . . ‘ ‘2" r ] . How are you feeling. asked the must “Jest as if my head was as big as a bar- Tlie reporter was standing at John's smil- He was induced to tell “ Me and father was working up in \Vcst \Ve was to get a cellar cleaned out by about it. VVe’d draw out the rock and drill the rest. of the “Facts are Stubborn Things.†Thousands of human beings are yearly borne ‘ on the swift current of disease down to the grave, just because they do not possess a sufâ€" l ficierit knowledge of themselves. A man ' meets his neighbor, and the ï¬rst Salutation is, “How are you ?" or “ How is your health ‘2†The reply frequently is, “ Oh, I am well, ' with the exception of 'a cold.†Most persons lightly regard a cold. leader, do you know that a cold is one of the most dangerous of maladies? A cold not only clogs up the pores of the entire system, and retards circulations but it is productive of Czttarrli, which is quite ' apt to lead to Consumption. “ Oh,†you say, “ it is nothing but a cold in my head.†True ; I but that cold is really a mild form of Catarrh, and if not arrested in its course will become chronic. Cotai‘rh is one of the most disagree- able, otI‘ciisive affections "n the catalogue of diseases. The passage to the nose ii ob- structed, the sense of smell impaired, and there is a disagreeable sensation of pressure in the head. In the more advanced stages, there is a discharge having an offensive odor. If the disease be allowed to continue in its course, thick, hard iiicrustations will form in the head, the bones of which sometimes be» come softened and break away in pieces. \Vliy will persons continue to suffer from such an annoying, disgusting disease, when they can just as well be cured of it? Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy will cure the worst forms of Catarrli ; in fact, it is the only sure and safe remedy which has yet been offered to the public. Many liarsli, irritating pre- parations may, for a time, relieve the urgency of the symptoms, but they do not cure the disease. Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy is sooth- VVcll, Sunday morning we thought we would go ’rouud and put in an hour or 50, ’cause we’d lost a day for Christmas. I was up on the rock piling stone, and father was down in the hole. I hadn’t no idea what he was up to. You see, he staminers so he can‘t say much any way, and so as a general thing we don’t talk very often. Sometimes he begins to say something, but; a word sticks, and he has to give it up. So I didn’t think anything of his keeping still for a good while. \Vhat do you ’spose the old man was doing ‘2" “ Fixing a blast may be “ Blamed if he wasn’t doin’ jest that thing. Notwithstanding ’twas Sunday, he'd took a. notion to set of a. blast ; but I didn’t dream of such a thing. First 01'1" I see the old man a climbin’ up the other side of the hole. He seemed as if he was in an awful hurry. He begun to say something, and got as fer as ‘ John ’â€"â€"then the next word stuck. I gen- erally don’t ex ect any more when he gets that way, and so I went to work again. Then I happened to look up again, and he was a, strugglin’ over that word worse'u I ever see him struggle over any word before. He made up terrible faces, twisted his mouth round and round, and swung his arms as if he was crazy.†-“Never mind,†I said to him, “ try again by’n by. ’Tain’t no hurry is it '1†“ He nodded his head, meaning ’twas in a 9n it neys, lual? enough Of them appearing to W119i! Bummg 0‘ the Goum’h “nth 4‘00 Boys hurry, and tried to start round to my side of the appetite for more, and to leave a fertile imagination busily constructing hundreds of them and ï¬lling the entire plain with brick walls, clanging machinery, and heavy rolling draysâ€"none of which Were seen. The proba- ble magnitude of Manchester was oppressive. As for the smoke it hung as limp as a disli- cloth over every thing. There was no less smoke than I expected to see. I had heard that the contents of the ponderous chimneys fell where they vomited, and pierced every crevice, clutched upon every smooth and bright thing with its smutty fingers. I have wondered how people could live in such a furnace with the faintest. degree of comfort, and if I were surprised that those whose labor called them there could endure the Oppressive atmosphere, I was in an agony of perplexity to account for the presence, of which I had heard of merchants, hotel-keepers, the pro- fession, etc., to say nothing of the numerous strangers constantly coming, checking and sneezing, and going again. I wondered how the church and theatre seats were upholstered to guard against the taint from the soot-be- grimmcd audience. I tried to imagine a wed- flding with its white veils and kids, and almost laughed out aloud at the exquisite absurdity of the thing. Then I tried to imagine a. snow-storm wrestling with the city, but backed aWay from the task with some trepi- idation, and I sternly asked myself “ can this be a white man’s government ‘2†0n stepping out of the depot (it is hard to adopt the English name of station), I was surprised to find I could breathe without any difficulty and that; my eyes were not inflamed. Where 'was the smoke that encompassed the city like a morose giant ten minutes ago? It was where your day of reformation and grand ac- complishment is, dear reader, just ahead. All about us was clear. Just beyond was the ' veil of smoke. It never changed position wherever I went. It was always ahead ; down the busy streets : in the neighborhoods from the elevated portions of the residence quarter ; it was forever visible. After tea I wont to the theatre ; it was the Princessâ€"a perfect gem of a theatre; blue, satin, gold, and red velvet ; and singularly, too, the I play “ All that glitters is not gold â€â€"-â€"where- in a mill girl naturally attempts to sacrifice herself that the wife of one of her employers may be saved and eventually marries another employer and is happy. ’ ' V hatever the emo- tions of the many other mill girls who sat in the auditorium and watched this episode in the romantic history of their city and busi- ness, you can tell as well as I. Alter theatre, Iwandercd aboutthc streets to see if Manchester street life at night differ- ed from that of the metropolis, and found that it did in that it closed earlier, and its main ‘tihorouvhfares were not so abundantly supplied with illuminated chop and public- houses. Being a manufacturing people, I imagine they go to bed early. In fact I am wiling to swear to it. For two hours the next morning, I wandered through the maze of warehouses, on Market street. It was an altogether different section from what I had seen elsewhere in England. They were tall buildings, severely plain in design, and with upper windows that never knew the profan- iug touch of soap and water. From early morning, heavy drays drawn by the colossal horses of Normandy, with chin whlskers on their heels, and freighted with cotton and cotton goods have been toil- ing through the streets, and are still at it. ‘Bere is stored the manufactured article, and from here it is shipped all over the world, to gladden the heart and lighten the purse of the From wandering among them, I came to the ofï¬ce‘of the American Consul, Mr. Crane, formerly companion editor of the lamented Charley Leonard, on the St. Louis Democrat, and with this gentleman I spent a pleasant half hour. In the afternoon, a Manchester friend drove me about the residence quarter of the city. Here smoke was still farther iii the perspective, and a radical change in English thoroughfares was experienced. For three hours we drove among these streets, and if there were any doubts on my part that Man~ any other English town, these doubts were now dispelled. Ilere were streets as straight as an arrow, with broad roadway, broad side- walks bordered by smooth, green turf and shaded by trees, with gardens at the back of and smooth green turf. “'9. passed through Nelson Street, and, as I saw the name, a host of tender memories flooded my soul. Heaven bless Manchester for having 3. Nelson street, that oasis in the desert of life. In the even- ing we went to the Belle Vue. it is a theatre or any other kind of an enter- tainment, the Englishman abandons himself Charges 0f powder varying in weight from with lovely grounds, fountains, streams, and so 220 to 240 pounds and With prejectiles vary. flowers in profusion. so a full enjoyment of what he beholds. he naturally runs to gardens, as better calcu- lated to indulge this desire, and as he builds his house as plainly as posible and throws his weight in architecture on his church, so and “3001‘ 0d ‘1 Velocity in the InStTument‘ â€"â€"you choose the retreat that pleases you garden at home, room of 1,513 feet per second, and a pressure most. but makes the public atl'air as elaborate as 9f 23 tom‘- The §Clentlï¬c manipulation was tree, on one of whose branches is a pretty 'We do not think H} many respects 1“ deï¬ance 0f several recog‘ little cabin, to which you ascend by a spiral nlzed laws 0f gunnery. but With ‘1 deemed stairway, if you prefer dining so far from So far as the new gun has been mothepmrtlh one city as large as it, and New York, with tried; “33 success has been great“ “13“ was by all who have partakeii of the Menu of the he looks not so much to a money and taste can do it. launch of Manchester, except as a manufactory .oficotton' goods. And yet, America has only all its wealth, taste, and reputation, has no public gardens to compare with either of the two which Manchester is provided with. The we would call excursions, made to it two or The London Daily News of the 23d of De- cember gives the following account of the burning of the British training ship Goliath : A terrible disaster occurred on the River Thames yesterday morning, the Goliath, a school-ship, lying off Grays, and having 400 boys on board being destroyed by fire. The full extent of the calamity cannot yet be measured, but many of the boys and one of the officers are missing, and are thought either to have been drowned or perished in the flames. The Goliath was an old wooden line of battle-ship, which carried eighty guns, with engines of «IO-horse )owei‘. Seine years ago, after laying by in or inary, she was lent by the Admiralty to the poor law authorities of the metropolis in order to try the experiment of training the poor boys of London for the sea, and was placed for administrative purposes under the care of the managers of the Fcrest-gate school. She was a large ship of nearly 3,000 tons burden, and, lying solitary in the biglit of the river off Grays, was an object of interest to excur- sionists on the river. At a few minutes to 8 some were preparing breakfast and others cleaning the ship, while the bulk of the lads were below, many of them undressed. The lamp-room, in the forecastle of the ship, was the scene of the outbreak. The lamps used to li lit the vessel after dark are fed with petro cum oil, and it appears to have been the rule to collect them every moriiin g in the lamp-room for the purpose of having them cleaned and trimmed. It is said that one of the lamps was accidentally drop )ed by a lat , and the petroleum ignited and 3 read in liquid fire all over the deck. The 3. arm was instantly given, but so rapid was the spread of the tire that when Captain Bourcliicr, Royal Navy, the officer in command, was called from his cabin the whole deck was in flames. A terrible scene ensued. The hor- rified children rushed up from below through the various hatchways, which were with difï¬culty kept from being clicked up by the crush and struggle, and as fast as they got on deck they hurried to the side of the ship nearest land as the point of escape. Unfor- tunately it was the most dangerous side of the ship, for a strong southwesterly wind was blowing full upon her broadside and rolled the smoke and flame over in the direc- tion of the shore. The poor lads, however, climbed over the bulwarks and hung in the hand or foot, and the boats of the ship being as fast as possible. One or more were swamped, and as many of the lads clinging to the ship were compelled to drop one after another into the water there was ample 0c- cupatioii for the other boats which came to the rescue to pick up those who were swim- ming or drowning. The ship lay only about a. hundred yards from shore, and a good many leaped overboard and swam to land, amongst whom were two young ladies, the daughters of Capt. Bourchier. The boats of the training-ships Arthusa and th'chester, lying at Greenhithe, came down in a flotilla to help, in command of Capt. \Valters and several ofï¬cers, and were instrumental in saving many lives. Capt. Bourchier was the last to leave the burning ship, and it was his belief that all the lads were saved, but there is too much reason to know that he is mis- taken, for two bodies have already been washed ashore, and the schoolmaster, Mr. Wheeler, is said to have sunk. As the sur- vivors were taken on shore the people of Grays, a. small town of some three thousand inhabitants, turned out en masse to receive them. The school-rooms, places of worship, hotels and private houses were placed at their disposal, While all the Coppers and ket- tles that could be obtained were pressed into service to get breakfast for the four hundred, less those who were missing. Kind-hearted people brought clothing for the halfâ€"naked little ones, many of whom were to be seen throughout the day clad in garments of all sizes and of both sexes. An attempt was made to make a muster of the lads in order to find out who were missing, but they were so scattered about the town that the process was unsatisfactory, besides which some Were picked up by ships passing up and down the river and carried to unknown destinations, while others, it is believed, have taken ad- vantage of their liberty to abscond, so that it may be some days before the actual results will be known. Wâ€"ia . The British Big Gun. Experiments were made with the English \Vliether it big eighty-one ton gun at WVOOIWiCh; 0“ De- Tivoli~~I can safely speak in terms of un‘ cember 10th. Six rounds were fired with ing from 1,214 t01,248 pounds. The sixth and last round was ï¬red with 240 pounds of twe~ineh owder, with a 1,247 pound shot, advantage. anticipated. b a Q ~ 4 â€"â€"â€"rw instantly at hand, proceeded to take them off the hole, but there was a fence on one side and a high rock on the other. He made up faces worse than ever, and begun with ‘J ohn’ again, but couldn’t get no further to save his life. All he could say was a kind of ‘ Um- um-um.’ You see he’d lit the fuse, and was a tryin’ to tell me to get out the way. Just as he was gettin’ purple in the face, and I guess he’d pretty near put his jaws out of jint, she comeâ€"3’ “ The word?†“ Moses 1 noâ€"tlio blast. Blamed if it didn’t rise me like a rocket. They say I come down ’mongst the pieces of stone.†-â€"-o - »â€"i WALTZING as A HIGH ART. The Complicated Eincipies that will Make it Perfect. [From the Home Journal.] The gentleman approaches the lady by offering his left handâ€"~one aufait will at the same time make a. slight inclination or half how. The lady places her right hand in that of the gentleman, who their extends his right arm in a direct line to the side, the forearm bent so as to form an acute angle. In this angle the lady will place herself, with the centre line of the person opposite the line of the gentleman‘s right side, both persons on parallel lines, not forming an angle. In this position each will be looking over the otlier’s right shoulder, and by the lady turning her head slightly to the left, the effect of the group will be greatly im- proved, and prevent all possibility of taking each other‘s breath, which is rarely pleasant, and iii the case of a young man directly from the uSe of a nicerscliaum, is “positively IIOI‘I‘It ,†as many of the ladies have remark- ed. The lady places her left hand, hooked, upoti the gentleman’s right shoulder, the fingers appearing in front. The right hand of the gentleman should rest very gently on the lady’s back, as near the waist as possible, so as not to remove the upward pressure of the elbow directly under the lady’s shoulder, as this is the lady‘s support, and must be held with sure but gentle firmness. The hand on the back should rest very lightly, and on every possi- ble occasion slightly raised, so that the air may pass between, as in some cases the close contact induces perspiration, and may leave its mark upon the lady’s dress. Both persons should be slightly bent for- cliains and wherever they could get hold for “limb from the hips upward. 30 that the shoulders may be only three or four inches apart, but the distance increasing downward ; this leaves both parties free in their limbs, so that any contact of person or knees may ing and healing in its eï¬ects, and when used with Dr. Pierce’s Nasal Douche, according to directions, (loos not fail to effect a cure. Sold by all Druggists. i>¢O¢< Samson's PULMONIC Strum, SEA Wasp Toxrc, AS!) MANDILAKP. Pittsâ€"These deservedly celebrated and mpular medicines have effected a revolution in the ieaiiiig art, and proved the fallacy of several maxims which have for many years obstructed the progress of medical science. The false supposition that “ Con- sumption is incurable " deterred physicians from atâ€" tempting to find remedies for that disease, and patients afflicted with it reconciledthemselves to death, with out making an effort to escape from a doom which they supposed to be unavoidable. It is now proved, however, that Consumption can be cured and that it has been cured in a very great number of cases gome of them apparently desparato ones) by Schcnck’s ulmonic Syrup alone ; and in other cases by the same medicine iujconiiectiou with Schonck’s Sea Weed Tonic and Mandrake Pills, one or both, according to the requirements of the case. Dr. Scheuck himself, who enjoyed uninterrupted good health for more than forty years, was supposed, at one time to be at the very gate of death, his physicians having pronounced his case hopeless, and abandoned him to h's fate. He was cured by the aforesaid medicines, and, since his recovery, many thousands similarly affected have used Dr. Schenck's preparations with the same remarkable success Full directions accompany ouch, making it not ah, soluter necccssary to personally see Dr. Schean unless patients want their lungs examined, and for this purpose he is professionally at his principal ofï¬ce, Corner Sixth and Arch Sta, Philadelphia, every Mon- day. where all letters IO! advice must be addressed. Schenck s medicines are sold by all druggists. 1.3.3 inien and particulars froe. Winter st, lioston, Muss. The ‘ Boston Rambler,‘ a 4 page 10 column aper, only 50c. a your. choice t 60 prcm rims. Agents wanted. Spec- G. B. ULLMAN. 12 402-4i ANCERS EFFECTUALLY CURED, OR NO CHARGE MADE, BY JOH N' KNOX. tnsrnmcn : 58-1 King Street \Vest, TORONTO, â€" â€" â€" ONTARIO. I’. 0. BOX 1706. [405.3 O CONTRACTORS. STEAM AND HAND DERRICK URANES. \V. W. GILBERT & 00., 588 Craig St. Montreal. November 3. 1875. 11305 3m ‘ '1‘. CATHARINI’S SAW WORKS. 1:.11. SMTT'Ha 00 (Successors to J. Flint) Manufacturers of all kinds of SAWS Straw Knives, Patent Elaster- iiig Trowels «St-e. Sole Manufacturers of the J. Flint Patent im- proved Champion Cross Cut saw; also the light- ning Cross Cut Saw. HAND SAWS in every variety, from the cheapest to the very best. ST. CATHARINES, ONT. All Saws Warranted. [370-11 THE GOOD S th‘ALCULABLIZ THAT HAS BEEN DONE, and is still being done, by Campbell’s Quinine Wine! It never fails. It has many imitations. So be sure to get the genuine, OAMPBELL‘S. November 3. 1875. d895-3m Si IV! () K it] It S !! be avoided, and should be so avoided as a T [a A S N S most serious mistake. The gentleman’s left hand, holding the lady’s right, should be extended downward in a line with the body, the hands three or four inches distant from the person, the arms forming a gentle curve from the shoulders downward. No weight should be placed upon this arm ; all the guiding and changes must be governed by the elbow under the lady's arm. It will be found that: the group will be perfectly modest in appearance, no more con: tact occurring than in a lady taking a gen- tleman’s arm for walking. In conclusion, let it be remembered that beauty of thought and action may be as conspicuous in waltz- ing as in any other situation in life; that the gross Waltz grossly, the vicious viciously, the reï¬ned and innocent innocently and in a reï¬ned manner. > o O 0 < Hotel Life in the City of Mexico. Everything in the way of living is cheap in Mexico. Of course prices range higher in the capital than elsewhere, but even there the prices are much lower than with us. The hotels, for instance, furnish excellent rooms at from $20 to $50 a month. At the Hotel Iturbide the rooms are very large, and usual- ly divided by curtains so as to make a par- lor and bedroom. The arrangement is a pleasant one, and preferable to having two rooms. For thirty dollars a. month you can procure one of these apartments, handsomely furnished and efï¬ciently attended. The scheme of the hotel extends no further. Your baths and your meals extend no furâ€" ther. Your bath and your meals are outside affairs. ()n the ground floor of the Hotel Iturbide is an excellent French restaurant, and a. very good bath-house. These are sep- arate establishments. The price of the bath is two realswtwenty-ï¬ve cents-wand at the restaurant two persons can contract for meals at $7 50 each per week. Of course there are two restaurants and of oneâ€"the Grand bounded praise. It is arranged as a park, In the city, diningâ€"places are scattered about here and there: Chinese pagodas, Swiss chalets, French cottages in miniature It is here that you ï¬nd the great I believe it will be conceded Grand Tivoli that a better cooked, better served, and more elegantly appointed dinner , \VIIATEVER you do, do well. The Arkan- could hardly be found anywhere in the world. Belle Vile IS the Wilmer but the beat known sas man who put thirty-seven bullets into a The cooks are of the finest Paris schools, the of the two gardens. There are trips, or what horse thief couldn‘t have killed him any more wine genuine, and the accessories simply if he had tried all day. fascinating. â€"Ncw Orleans Picayune. FOR USING MYRTLE NAVY TOBACCO. FIRSTâ€"It is made of the Finest Virginia Leaf. Sl'lCOND--â€"Each Plug weighs one-third of a pound. THIRDâ€"The Imitations weigh only about oneefourtli of a pound to each plug, and are made from Common Leaf. None Genuine Unless Stamped EST *3†a B . cg 0N mun PLUG. Hamilton. Nov. 13. 1875. 396â€"131 AYER’S CATHA it‘I‘IC PILLS I For all the Purposes of a Family Physic, CURING Costivoiiess, Jaundice, Dys- pepsia, Indigestion, Dyson- tery, Foul Stomach and Breath, Erysi )elss, Head- ache, Piles, heumatism, Eruptions and Skin Discos» es, Biliousness, Liver Oom~ piaint, Dropsy, ’i‘etter, Tuâ€" mors and Salt Rheum- - Wonns, Gout, Ncumigia. _ _ _ as aDinner Fill and Fun- fying the 1:1 od, are the most congenial purgative yet perfected. ’i‘iieir effects abundantly show how much they exec! all other I’iiis. They are safe and pleasant to take, but powerful to cure. They purge out the foul humors of the blood ; they stimulate the sluggish or disordered organ into action ; and they impart health and tone to the whole being. They cure not only the every day complaints of every body, but for niidsble and dangerous diseases, Most skilful physi- cians, most eminent clergyman, and our best citizens, send certiï¬cates of cures performed and of green bone- tit they have derived from these Pills. They are the safest and best physio for children, because mild as well as effectual. Being sugar coated, they are easy to take; and being purely vegetable, they are entirely harmless. PREPARED BY DR. J. O. AYERtch'O., Lowell, Mass, Practical and Analytical Chemists. Sold by all Druggists and dealers in Medi- ' cine. Northrup lit Lyman, Newcastle, General Agents. May 11, 1873. d7 1 PUPULlli stunt ï¬lm BLOOD PU RIFIER AND Health Regulator; WE WANT AN AGENT IN EVERY COUNTY IN THE UNITED STATES & CANADA. -~â€"â€"A:02777â€"- GOLD COIN! $1,000.00 GOLD COIN! .O._'_ __«__ VVE CHALLENGE TEIIE VVOI-iLD, And will forfeit $1,000 to any erson who can produce a remedy which will prove by actual test, a more speedy, certain an effectual cure for all Pains and Aches of whatever form, exâ€" ternal and Internal, acute or chronic, deep seated or otherwise, than DR. RADCLIFF’S GREAT REMEDY, SEVEN SEALS ï¬g on .7 GOLDEN WONDER! We have had this challenge of $1,000 Prominently Displayml in all our Circulars and Newspaper Advertisd ments, for the four last years, and not taktu, which shows the superior excellence of our remedy over all others. For External or Internal use. IT WILL EFFECT A SPEEDY CURE IN ALL CASES OF HEADACHE, NEURALGIA, TOOTHACIIE, SPRAINS, BRUISES, FLESH VVOUNDS, BURNS, COLIC, CRAMI’, CIIOLERA MORBUS, FLUX, DIARRHEA, BRON- CIIITIS, CATARRH, COUGHS, COLDS, INlt‘LAMMATOllY RHEUMATISM, ASTHMA, I’HTHISIG, IIEAl’tTBUIlN, INDIGI‘It‘TION, SUMMER COM- PLAINT, I’AINS IN SIDE, BACK ()R LOINS, I’ILES, RINGVVORM, FELONS, STINGS OF INSECTS, BITES 0F VENOMOUS SERPENTS, AND ESPECIALLY ItlIEUMATISM. A POWERFUL REMEDY WHICH IS TAKEN IN TERNALLY BY ANY ONE 1 This celebrated Medicine is beyond a doubt the greatest discovery in Medical Science known to the world. Its action is at once felt ; its wonderful cures are instantaneous ; in fact, it literally dcniolishes pain. .o.- .__ N0 Minlgggj EQUALS IT. DON’T FAIElooruncHAss IT. Possessing most Astonishing Cm-atioe Properties hitherto unknown, and only obtmn- able inthe Medicgl Victory. Its Pro erties are such to ‘ i-a. i lv insure 8mm?! ~cerium-tut Longing. The best scientiï¬cally prepared medicine In America. Pleasant lo the mate, mtg! warranted freefrom'nnytlaing injury)!" to the most delicate constitu- [ion of either sex. Read the certiï¬cates of wonderful cures given in Dr. Depew’s Treatise accompany/mg each bottle. as well as those constantly appearmy in the newspaper press of the Dommzon. BR. DEPEW, OP PARIS, ERANCE, an eminent Ii siciari,'is thedisco‘vercfofthis Great 131003 emedyâ€"m furer V, etable Compoundâ€"named bylphysicians; cpew’a Medical Victory, that curbs cvcgy. kind of unhealthy Humor, and every disease that depends on Impurit of the I3 and, where the Lungs, Liver, and Kidneys, and other vital, organs. are not wasted beyond the hope of TV repair " ‘ h For the cure of Scrofula iurysuwlzis, Salt-rheum Eczema . Scald-Ileml, Sc:in lruption of’the'SkinIllcers, and Fever Sores of all kinds Boils Humor in the Mouth and Stomach or Eyes, Sore Ears, Eruption on the Head, and Pimplcs or Blotches on the face, it stands Pre~cmiuently at the head of all other Remedies. In the cure othcumatism, Dyspepsia,Liver Com laint, and diseases of the Kidneys and Blad er, its effects are surprising to all, I For Regulatin the Bowels and curing Biiiousâ€" iiess, Hea ache, Sick-fieadache; Neuralgm, Female Weakness, Nervousness, Fame in the Side, Loins and Back, and general \Veakiiess and Debility, rits curative powers are remarkablé. 1 R 1 I P I ' an e 8 atm ur ative as “1311ng as. Toutict &c.gu Possgssingg also 'thc peculiar merit ofecting as a powerful agent in relieving‘Congestion, and Chronic Inflamâ€" mation or the Liver and all the Visceral Organs. For Female Complaints, wlicthcr in young or old, married or Single, at the dawn of womanhood, or at the turn of life, the Medical Victory has no equal. A Perfect Renovnlor and Invigoi-nlor of the System. 0m Bottle of Depew’: Medical Victory will convince the most incredulous infs ’ curative propertzes. ‘- Soid by'Druggist's andDealers. SEND FOR DESCRIPTIVE PAMPHLET ADDRESS Sills a 00., « BATH. ONTARIO. euv rug Bear! EQUALLY FOR MAIN†OB BEASTII as}? R IMEMBER, \VE GUAltAN’I‘EI‘l EVERY BOTTLE. as NO CURE, N0 PA If _.’ T16 Y I T, A ND BE CON VINCE/N 1 1 PermEEdnt and Proï¬table Employment! WE Tl An Article of Universal Sale! TO YOU THIS iS AECLDEN OPPORTUNITY! To them we offer, in the sale of our Remedy, a prevent: tIvo of hard We have adopted as our Motto, NO CURE. NO PAY! A Source of Happiness to MEIâ€"ions of Suffering Humanity. During; the past year the wonderful success of this great remedy has far exceeded our most sanguine expectations; thousands have been Cured, and thousands have found out from experience that DR. RADCLIFF‘S GREAT REMEDY. SEVEN SEALS on GOLDEN WONDER, is the Most Wonderful Pain Destroyer in existence, the Most Expeditions, Safe and Powerful Remedy in the World. Cures are. effected almost Instantly, as if by Magic. Thousands of certificates have been received from all arts of our broad land, unsolicited and unaskcd for, speaking in hearfclt and universal praise of this rent Remedy, from personal knowledge of its almost miraculous powers in curing the most obstinate and protracted cases of Disease. $1,000 Proï¬t in Four Months! L872 One Dollar Bottles Sold!! READ THIS! Sco'r'r TOWN, Lawrence 00., Ohio. Mussns. KENNEDY & (JOâ€"Dear Sireâ€"At this late hour I will inform you of the rest beneï¬t I re ceivod from the use of Dr. Radclitt's Great Iteiiicdy, SEVEN SEALS on GOLDEN WOJDER, afterbeing confined to myde for eight years with a complication of Diseases, viz: Dyspepsia. Bronchitis, Palpi. tation of the Heart, Pain in the Right. Side, with General Dchility, for which I tried the skill of our home physicians, also a doctor of New York City, and two from Pittsburgh, and one in the northern part of Ohio. Took enough patent medicine to swim iiiâ€"all to no purpose. At length I was induced to try Dr. Radclifi‘s SEVEN SEALS on GOLDEN WONDER. 1 sent and got six fifty cont bottles, and before using it all found myself able to travel in a buggy. Took the agency for its sale lastApril. four months ago. and have sold thirteen gross, or 1,872 bottles, up to this date, August 20, 187i, and ex icct from the growing deniaan (10,000) bottles in the next year. Gentlemen. if you think this worth usm you can do so, as I am generally known over three counties as a man of great affliction. Yours res cct uily. 1 . J. DARLING. A REMEDY FOR HARD TIMES! TRY Ir! ! For This Great Remedy W'e W'ish You to Act as our Agent. Dear Sinâ€"The above fully explains the articles we wish to sell. This business is honorable, and by bein energetic, will pay you well. It is our desire to appoint an agent in every county in all parts of the tilted States and Canada, granting to each the exclusive right to sell every bottle sold in the coun~ ty. Should you accept the agency for one or more counties, you shall have the exclusive right to soil ‘ every bottle sold in your county, as long as you continue to act as our agent, and all orders which we may receive from your territory shall be turned over to your account. This wonderful remedy, SEVEN SEALS on GOLDEN WONDER, sells rapidly in the hands of the right kind of men. and we want none other. Now. if you think you are the man for the work, forward your order, name your county. and go to work ; you can sell a gross in a few days, without a doubt. We have one man who buys on an average three gross per week, and his orders are increasin rapidly, and he has a small county (Berks Co., Pa.) lie writes that he expects to sell one gross per ay, at retail, the coming season, not countin wholesale. You have the privilege of selling wholesale or retail, or of G [I ENEY dz. W ARE 1 putting it on commission with rungiste. or selling by sub-agents. This business is worth the attention HAMILTON, ONT. of good men and men of capital. Srhould you make but reasonable wages-say $l00 per month for the â€" ï¬rst three months (many make more.)â€"â€"you would nevertheless be establishing a business that. would OW). one Hundred different modiï¬cations of pay you largely in the end. Agents are doiu better with our Remedy than anything else they ever took hold of. Why is this ‘3 1 I "‘ ‘ AND COUNTER. SCALES. Because the remet y does just as we say, and our agents can warrant every bottle. No cure, no pay. K'nlpwifrig that we make all losses good should they be called upon to redeem a bottle, our agents run no ris o oes. SEVEN SEALS on GOLDEN WONDER is put up in $1.00 audin cent bottles, elegantly finished in neat and appropriate wrappers, and packed in nice boxes, one dozen in each box. ~ es’ EVERY SCALE lVAIlIl Ab'l‘EIfi’a‘ai Send f(ir Illustrated Price List. ; GURNEY†85 WARE, HAMILTON, ONT. Thousands are now out of employment. times. SCAL.ES. MAN UFACTU 1’. ED BY To druggists our scale of prices are‘Large Size, $1.00 bottles per dozen, $0.00; Small sizc,50 cent bot- tles, per dozen, $4.50, We give special to our County Agents at such ï¬gures that they. can sell to druggists and to country stores at the above price and make a handsome profit. We also give an ' EXTRA PREMIUM TO' AGENTS I In order to have live, energetic men to take hold of the business at once, we have concluded to give free gratis to each and every agent a present of a handsome. tine COIN SILVER HUNTING CASE WATCH FREE. Beautifully engraved ahd correct timekecper, worth $2000. and a certificate of arrcnc ' 'vin SOLE ' - - - CONTROL of such county as the agent may select, (not already taken) ; and fiiri’herriibiii: a! orders The Diamond Rheumatic cure coming from such counties as the agent may select, will be sent back by us to the agent to be ï¬lledâ€" .- in fact, we give solepontrol of such counties as long as the agent continues in the business. Remember ' ’ l5 the Premium watch is given gratis to agents. We take this plan to have our Great Itenicdv quickly and 15' TUE ' ‘I thoroughly introduced. Let us hear from you at your earliest convenience, and secure yoiir county at once, before being taken by some one else. Re - ember this offer is open for a short time only. i. Small tapital Required in Run a large and Paying Business. I .The ca ita. required is very ritual], andthe profits from it will fully equal that of thousands of mar chants w io have iiivestcdalarge capital ililheir business. Hundreds in all parts of the country are. making from $1,500 TO $5,000 A Y 3A I, And hundreds more will (lato their success from accepting our liberal other at this time. Any one willin to work for success can force it, but those who believe it can be had from idleness are not the kind 0 men we want to push our business. We want A LIVE ENERGETIC AGENT, As one such is worth a dozen who expect a business to push itself, We have spent in pushing our hus- iness ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS. :nniiniiv It has aid us to do it, and it pays our agents. as it advertises it thoroughly in every State, County and i i l '- ’l‘ownsliip iii the United States and Canadawnot onlv for us, but for the Agent. Remember, this is a r. ‘ ’ YET GIVEN TO THE WORLD life business, and tnat every year it grows larger and larger. OR THE CURE OF GOU'l‘, CHRONIC, ACUTE. We will send to parties contemplating to act as our a rents a SAMPLE DOZEV BOTTLES ‘ ' packed with our different Posters, Bills, Show Cards, Tii‘ll'iï¬, etc, A socmeb or Muscular Rheumatme Luinbago, Sciatica. Nervous Headache, Neurailria of the lizxui, heart. sto- UPON THE RECEIPT OF $2.50. ’ r ‘ ' l mach and kidneys, tic Doiorcux,‘nervousness, flying pains, twisted joints, swollen joints, pains in back and loiiis, VVORkIMS'JiI the kidneys, tired feelin , lanâ€" ‘id, weary prostratiou,‘land all nervous and e ronic isoases. ; . ,1 , ,j . > Let any sufferer: who reads this put-cliche 3' small bottle and take it according to instructions around the package, and it -wili not take long to convince him tint paying doctors" fees is money thrown away. Liuiments and outward appiimtions of all kinds are useless. For sale at all Druggists. Hamilton, Oct. 21, 1875. ON L-Y ' llllClllAL POSITIVE I .4 no And to all sending $2.50 for Sample Dozen. we will send free 0f Charge, Samples of our Eight. Iilegun Chromos, entitle : GOOD MORNING ! GOOD NIGHT ! FEEDING THE CIIICKENS l G PAN 1 DO PEEP l READING THE BIBLE 1 FIRST LESSON 1 If you want your county. let us know as soon aspossiblc. as the territory may be taken. We would be ileased to have parties who contemplate taking an agency to send for Sample Package of this wonderful einedy before engaging largely in the business. REMEMBER, WE GUARANTEE EVERY BOTTLE! IN 0 O j j ! 1 December 4, 1875. (111399 p With these suggestions we leave the matter with you. We do not wish you to engage unless you will follow the business as a business, and really desire to make money. We want none but. honest, conscr- entious iiicii. ’I‘o such we Will guarantee success. ’ ‘ ’ OUT OF THE FR& 1\ MOTHER'S GRAVIII t 7 A} . Address all communications to R. KENN EDY 00., SOLE PROPRIETORS, PITTSBURGH, PA. OYAL HOTEL. JAMES STRE ‘1‘, OPPOSITE tho Post Ofï¬ce, Hamilton, Out. The only first-class Ilotei iii the City. Reduced rates during the winter. ' HOOD BROS, Proprietors. liamilton. January 21, 1871:. 400