Th3 Treasure that was too Securely Eid- den on the Banks of the Arroyo. [From the Los Angelos Herald] Tiburcio Tapia. was a. Spanish Don, who had arisen to considerable aflluenee in those times, and, besides being the proprietor of the Cucamongo ranch, conducted a. small store, somewhere above the Catholic church, in What is now called Sonora. The golden ounces, as they accumulated in the hands of the old Don, were all carefully husbanded. Not that there were money banks in those days, with ponderous vaults and defaulting cashiers ; oh, no I but Don Tiburcio deposited his golden coin in the bank of mother earth, where he knew that his sight drafts would always be honored. It was his custom, when he wished to secure his money in this way, to take his son, Ramon, with him, and hide it under ground in some secluded spot. This it happened that when Castro was scouring the State with his marauding band, and threatening an attack on Los Angelos, Don Tiburcio was overcome with solicitude concerning his wealth in money and in goods, and taking his son with him one dark night, he went up the banks of the Arroyo Seco, and there the two dug a hole in the sand, and within it they concealed the treasure. There were two wooden boxes, iron-bound, and ï¬lled with Spanish doubloons, each piece weighing an ounce and valued at $16â€"$50,- 000 in his two iron-hound boxes, which he placed in the sand. and covered carefully over. And Don Tiburcio marked the spot, so that he might come back in time of piece and re- claim his deposit. Near by he planted a lit- tle cross, in such a way that it would be con- cealed from a, stranger’s view, but be easily recognizable to his son and himself. One arm of the cross pointed to the buried trea- sure. Then the two led their horses several times across the s rot to obliterate the marks of their work, ‘an deported: _ . WHEN a. lady is proud of her small feet, hasnftphex Hunted understanding ? - Carriages were presently hired, and the hostile pair drove, with their seconds and the doctors, to Rodange, a little village on the Luxembourg soil, of most peaceful character, for the scandalized Maire came forth with all his gendarmes and vehemently forbade the contemplated manslau liter, just as swords were being crossed. he homicidal party submitted with great politeness, it is narrated, to the vigorous objections of the functionary, and drove back to the frontier, where they again drew their Weapons upon a patch of grass by the high road. Their ï¬rst and sec. ond assaults were without any results; on the third engagement the blade of M. Feuil- lerade passed clean throu h the breast of M. Ollivier, who staggere for an instant, but, gathering his forces for a ï¬nal effort of rage and hatred, plunged his own point deep into the the side of his adversary, who there- u on dropped his weapon. The seconds 0 used in to put an end to the duel, bestow- ing their principal attention upon the younger man, whose linen Was crimson with gore, while M. Ollivier’s shirt-front did not show 1). speck. Suddenly, however, the elder of the two fell to the earth stone dead, while the other fainted, and the doctors, after ex- amination, pronounced his hurt probably mortal. The dead body was conveyed to the hospital at Lon wy, where it was laid out by the Sisters of (glharity, after the fashion of France, with tapers burning around the stone- white corpse, and the cruciï¬x of the “ King of Peace†placed at its head. Hard by, in another chamber of the little Maison Dieu at Longwy, the wounded man groaned and gasped upon his pallet. Now, while the steady-going ox teams are slowly toiling up the valley of San Jose, hear- ing their freightage of goods to a place of se- curity, Don Tiburcio rests himself at home, in the full belief that he has outwitted the rascal Castro and his hand. But, alas, what an uncertain thing in human life! Ramon has been gone hardly three days with the teams when Don Tiburcio is stricken with paralysis, and laid at the door of death. A messenger is despatched in haste for the ab- sent son. As soon as the distance can be overcome by the fleetest horse, Ramon reâ€" turns, but only in time to witness the dying breath of his father. There were but few to mourn the death of Don Tiburcio, and when comparative safety is again assured to the town, Ramon repairs to the bank of the Ar- royo Seco to unearth his father‘s gold. The cross is there with its arm pointing to the hidden treasure, but when the sand is turned up there are no iron-bound boxes. The gold has been taken away. When Ramon dug up 1 the cross, he found beneath it three ounces, which had dropped into the hole unnoticed on that eventful ni ht ; but this was all he recovered. Then t e truth flashed upon the son. His father had removed the boxes to secrete more money in them, or to take out some for his own use. As it was never his custom to secrete his treasure the second time in one place. he had buried them else- where. But Where ? The secret had died on Don Tiburcio’s lips. The inhabitants of the town searched up and down the stream, laughing many a furrow in its banks in the ope oi discovering the secreted fortune. But their efl‘orts were bootless, and to this day the iron-bound money-boxes of Don Ti- bnrcio lie securely hidden on the banks of the Arroyo Seco. Don Tiburcio next‘ busied himself in se- curing the goods of his store. These he care- fully packed in boxes preparatory to sending them away, but ï¬rst he resorted to a strata.- 7em worthy of the shrewd old Spanish stock. {e said to his son : “ Ramon, I will place a quantity of lead in the bottom of these boxes, and when they are ï¬lled with goods, goyou and call in some of the neighboring rancheros to assist us in loading them upon the carts. They will perceive the great weight of the boxes, and will say that Don 'l‘iburcio has sent away all his money by ox teams.†So the goods were despatched to Don Ti- burcio’s Cucamongo ranch under the charge of his son Ramon, and the inhabitants of the town whispered it about that the Don had seng away all his gold. V-“ __ _. ~...-_-, and, their wrath or jealousy being unappeas. able, the matter was referred to the “ arbit- rament of steel,†in spite of all that their friends could do to prevent an encounter. It was arranged that the belligerents should ï¬ght with rapiers on the neutral territory of the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg; the con- ditions being that the combat should not he stayed until one or the other was no longer able to hold his weapon. Accordingly, on Tuesday evening, last week, the “ incensed opposites" took tickets 1) the night train for Longwy, and travel ed through that leasant but memory-haunted country by 'oissons, Rheims, and Charleville, where one would say enough French blood had been spilled in the last few years to make what remains too precious to be poured out in libations to vice. Every station along the line might indeed have recalled to these furi- ous men the duty they owed to France, and they had a long journey in which to bethink themselves, for it is over two hundred miles to Longwy, where they descended at precisely seven minutes past 7 m the morning. There they breakfasted, in separate hotels, as we are carefully informed; but the shadow of impending death seems to have already dark- ened the spirit of the elder ofï¬cer. “It would be rather curious,†he remarked, with a melancholy smile, “ if this should turn out to be the funeral repast.†_ [From the London Telegraph] An “aï¬'air of honor " is reported to us from Paris, and its issue has been that one of the combatants is dead of a. sword thrust through his heart, while the other lies in a fairway to join his de arted adversary be- yond the grave. The efunct duellist was a M. Ollivier, Captain of the Garde Mobile, Aged 33, who was decorated with the military medal for his gallantry on the senguinary ï¬eld of Gravelotte. The moribund man is a M. Feuillerade, oflicer of the Lancers, seven years younger than his opponent, but lately his rival, it appears, for the favors of one described as “a worthless woman named Adrienne Buisseret, sister of a danseuae at the Gaité Theatre, in Paris.†These military gentlemen quarrelled, it seems, over some incident conneoted with the dancer’s sister, 1n- . A BURIED BOX OF GOLD. A Sword throï¬gh the Breasii THS late Grand Duchess Maria. of Russia was a atrcness of art, and the artists of St. Peters urg are about to found an art gallery to be called by her name. A special saloon will contain the work of art which she had collected during her life. PRINCE OSCAR of Sweden, who is going to the Centennial, is a youngster of sixteen, and a cadet in the Swedish army. .A STATUE to Spinoza will be erected at the Hague on the 2lst February, 1877~the two- hundredth anniversary of his death. It will be placed in front of the house in which he died. THE late Countess Danner, widow of Fred- erick VII. of Denmark, has made noble use of her wealth by endowing with $4,000,000 an institution for the maintenance of orphans or deserted girls of Denmark. Accommodation for 500 or 800 will be provided. Tm: monument to John and Charles “Ves- ley has been placed in \Vestmiuster Abbey, but it has not yet been unveiled. It stands near the monument to Isaac \Vatts. To Dean Stanley belongs the credit of securing this honor in England‘s historical abbey. AN incident of the Queen's recent visit to the London Hos ital is recorded: A little girl fpuy year}; 01 , w}}o_ “Ia-{brought info the hospital on January 14 with a B’umed side and thigh, had previously said, “ If I could only see the Queen I should get well.†The remark was repeated to her Majesty, who de- termined to gratify the child’s innocent Wish. “ My darling,†said the Queen to this little girl, “ I hope you will'be a little better now. " THE preacher was a little off color in his cuticle, but the spirit level would adjud e his heart and head in the right place, e said, “My brethren ’ligion is like the Ala. bama River. In spring come freshets, an’ bring all the old logs, slabs and sticks that have been Iyin' on the bank, an‘ carry them down the current. Bymehy the water go down ; then a log catch here, an’ a slab gets cotched there, an' there they lie until there come another freshet. J us’ so there come ’revival of religion ; dis ole sinner is brought in, ’(lat ole backslider come back ’n’ We have mighty times. But bymeby ’vivals all gone ; den dis ole sinner gits caught in his ole sin, an’ (lat backslider gits catched where he was afore ; and they what got ’ligion lies all along de shore till ’noder ’vival. Belubbed breth- ren keep in de current, ’n’ den you are safe." Mrs. KHEDIVE, of Egypt, has lately estab- lished a school for girlsâ€"«one of the most no- table innovations the country of the late Mr. Pharaoh has ever beheld. 'It is proving a great success. Mrs. K. bought a house in a. thickly peopled locality, near the dancing dervishes, erected around it a quadrangle of spacious buildings, handed them over to the Education Department, but herself defrays the whole cost of maintenance. The school is free to all, and when it had been open only four months there were 206 boarders and 100 day scholars, all Arabs or slaves. They dis- card the Oriental veil, and are dressed in frocks, pinafores, and shoes, in English fash- ion ; and they sit, not squatting on the ground,vbut at desks. They must ï¬nd life rather irksome and barbarous when they re- turn home. The clerk had to submit.†He 325st that a. rich man can do anything, while a poor clerk is kept down. DON CARLOS is in the habit of walking about his room at Brown‘s Hotel in Dover street, draped in a sheet, after his bath. Being a handsome young man, he is likely, shou d he remain in England, to become the et of London societ after Easter. Although e speaks excellent rench he does not under- stand English. His suite, with the exception of an Englishman, are equally ignorant. The little black page, the dwarf, which he owns according to royal custom, and his suite, state that Don Carlos is merely in London to pay his little war account. Not his least peculiar trait is the hatred he owns of having women near him ; the female servants at the hotel‘ are consequently obliged to mount by a staircase at the other end of the building, and then to make their way alonï¬ the top passage in order to descend into is room. The unfortunate domestics are fast losing their admiration for the troublesome custo- ‘ mer Spain has at last been lucky enough to get rid of. “ How can a. young man be a. fool ‘2" shout- ed the citizen. “ It has come to a. pretty pass when a boy of your a e attem ts to teach a. man of my years anyt ing ! on’t you sup- pose I know the difference between porcelain and orous ‘2" “ es, sir.†“ Well, then, here‘s your seventy-ï¬ve cents for this porous kettle, and I’d like to have it sent aropnd to the house right‘away.†_ “\Vhat right have on to call them so? \V'lgyldpq't you a 9g 9, cat ‘3†__ > “'But hm'N can iron b7: porous ‘2" humbly inqufed the clerk. A DIGNIFIED unswex" to a beggar girl is †Go, waif, from me. !“ “ What do you call these ‘3†demanded the citizen as he nosed around and held up a kettle. “That’s a Porcelain kettle, sir," was the reply ; “ that 3 what you want, is it ?" “ That’s what I want if it is a. porous ke+- 1e,†said the citizen. v “\Ve call them porcelain,’ replied the clerk. \Vhile a clerk in aHamilton hardware store was yesterday mornin settingthings to rights for the business of t e day, a citizen with gm y locks and self-satisï¬ed look dropped in and kindly asked : “ Have' you any four-quart porous ket- tles 7†“ Porous kettles ‘3" mused the clerk. “ I never heard of them." CORNELIUS VANDERBILT, in the year 1810, when only sixteen years of age, and New York had but 80,000 eople, began his oa- reer as captain of a sai boat which used to run from the beach at Whitehall to Staten Island, carrying passengers at eighteen cents each. From that day to this, through a geriod of sixty-six years, Vanderbilt has een steadily engaged in carrying freight and passengers y land and sea, by steamboat and railroad. His ï¬rst vessel was the Char- lotte, launched in 1815, by himself and bro- ther-in-law. With the Charlotte he coasted to South Carolina. In 1817 he was engaged as captain of a steamer plyin between New York and New Brunswick, ilew Jersey, at which latter Mrs. Vanderbilt managed a ho- tel. In 1829, at the age of thirty-ï¬ve, he was worth $30,000, and determined to start for himself. The ï¬rst steamboat he ever built was the Caroline, which ï¬nally went over the Nia ara Falls. To-day those who are most fami iar with his affairs rate him at from $70,000,000 to $80,000,000. It is understood that the bulk of his fortune will g]? to his son, William H. Vanderbilt. r. Vanderbilt ï¬rst married in 1813, Miss Sophia Johnson, the daughter of a neighbor livmg near his father’s farm on Staten Is- land She bore him thirteen children. He married a second time at the age of seventy- six, a lady from the South, some forty-ï¬ve years younger than himself. The old gen- tleman looks hale and hearty. Dean STANLEY‘S career at Oxford was a continued and brilliant success. He began by winning a scholarship at Baliol, and shortly afterward he took the Newdegate prize with an En lish poem, called “The Gypsies.†He gains the Ireland scholorship, and in 1837 took a ï¬rst class in classics. Two years later he gained the Latin prize, and one year after- ward carried off the theological prize and the prize for the English essay. In that year (1840) he was elected a fellow of University College. For twelve years he was a tutor in his college, and during that time he acquitted himself much after the fashion of his old mas- ter, Dr. Arnold, laboring not merely to im- part to those under his care a knowledge of the humanities, but to develop and encourage among them a spirit of manly Christianity, which has since those days borne fruit not only in many a country rectory, but in other places Where manliness and Christianity are no less neededâ€"4:1 barrack and in camp, in the pleader's room, wherever the liberal pro- fessions have carried the men he taught. It Was “ Porous." PERSONAL. HIGH colorsâ€"The clouds and sky. GAMBLERS have a winning manner. THE policeman’s favorite vegetablewShort beats. THE extreme height of misery is a small boy with a. new pair of boots, and no mud puddle. Tm: latest in the form of a parting salu'ta- tion is : “ Well, nf I shouldn’t see you agm, hello.“ A SAURAMENTO paper says it spoils a Chl‘lstlan man to ï¬nd he has a horse which can trot in 2:30. AN Irish lover remarked that it is a great pleasure to he alone, especially when your “ swateheart is wid ye." “'11th a man‘s thoughts are his only com- panions, he should make them as pleasant and hopeful as possible. Tm". Senate of the University of Prague has prohibited the attendance of women at the lectures at that institution. JUST about this season of the year a good many women imagine that they know how to whitewash a ceiling as well as any man that ever wore boots. A PENNSYLVANIA mechanic has invented what he calls a. “ Smith roller and crusher.†Bring on your Smiths, if you want them rolled and crushed. THEY call it an “ act to promote pedestrian- ism among students," when the California Legislature decrees that no liquor shall be sold within four miles of the State Univer- sity. “ \VIIAT is Heaven's best gift to man '3" asked a. young lady the other night, smiling sweetly on a pleasant-looking young man. “ A horse,†replied the young man with great prudence. IT is reported that fresh disturbances have occurred in Malacca. Sir \Villiam Jervois, Governor of the Straits Settlements, with a company of regulars, has left Singapore for the scene of trouble. A LADY of rank complaining that her hus- band was (lead to fashionable amusements, he replied, “ but then, my dear, you make me alive to the expenses." THE Montreal [Jerald feels lonely and de- serted. Every other daily paper in the city has a libel suit on its hands, and some of them two or three ; but the poor Herald has not a solitary suit to bless itself with. BE assured those will be thy worst ene- mies, not to whom thou hast done evil, but who have done evil to thee. And those will be thy best friends, not to whom thou hast done good, but who have done good to thee. SACRILEGE.~PariSh clerk’s wifeâ€"“ Let you into the church to draw the interior. I dustn’t do it, Miss. There was a. party there last year, and do you know they left a ’orrid Dissentin’ trac’ in the water's pew ! Ever since that it’s against orders. A MAN has put up in his store a. sign as nearly like that of his neighbor as he could remember, and it read: “If you see what you want don’t ask for it,†and the ï¬rst cus- tomer who saw it waited until the proprietor’s back was turned and helped himself. AT the close of a tavern dinner two of the company fell down-stairs, the one tumbling to the ï¬rst landing, and the other rolling to the bottom. Some one remarked that the ï¬rst seemed drunk. “ Yes,†observed a, wag, “ but he is not so far gone as the other gen- tleman below." ACCORDING to a French statistician, taking the mean of many accounts, a man of ï¬fty years has slept 6,000 days, worked 6,500 days, walked 8,000 days, amused himself 4,000 days, was eating 1,500 days, was sick 500 days, etc. He has eaten 17,000 pounds of bread, 16,000 pounds of meat, 4,600 pounds of vegetables, eggs and ï¬sh, and drank 7,000 gallons of liquid, vim, water, coffee, tea, beer, wine, etc., altogether. This would make a res ectable lake of 300 square feet surface an three feet deep, on which small steam- boats could navigate. And all this makes up the routine of an average man’s life. A PRETTY little \Vaterdown schoolmarm tried to Whip one of her pupils. a. boy of ï¬fteen, the other day, but when she com- menced operations he cooly threw his arms around her neck and gave her a hearty kiss. She went straight back to her desk, and her face was “just as red." 0F all the towns in the world, Athens is probably that of which most untraveled peo- ple have the clearest picture in their minds. Rome is too large and too confused ; J erusaâ€" lem has been too completely mined for the imagination to paint it. But we all know the plain going 11 from the sea, the Acropolis rising from the p ain like an island from the water, the more distant hills of Lycabettus and Hymettns, the scenery at once so lovely and so temperate in its beauty. This is the town where the citizens, in the words of one of their own poets, “ walked over delicately through the most resplendent air.†“ MUS’ brace up,†said Sozzle, as he stood on the doorstep at l a. m. ; “ ‘11 never do let ol’ lady 'spect anythin’ ;†and, as Mrs. S. de- scended the stairs, clad in her robe de nuit, Sozzle braced u , knocked the ashes off his cigar, and, as t e door opened, said cheerin - “ Hullo, M’ria, (hie) up yet? Got a. match in yer pocket ‘3†Of course, she did not sus- pect anything. THE Ottawa Free Press is lad to know that there is every prospect o the lumber trade looking up this spring. Indeed, prices have already be in to advance. It is under- stood that Mr. ihn Bell, of Pembroke, has on account of the im roved prospect, con- cluded to have a very arge quantity of deals sewn this season, and has given a contract for sawin to Mr. A. Flock, at the McEwen estate mi 3, Arnprior. He has already ef- fected a sale of the deals at a. ï¬gure lar ely in advance of last season’s quotations. %\Ir. Bell has been offered a very handsome ï¬gure for the timber of his nephew, Mr. Robert Porteous, on the Kippewa. THERE are two bits of china now in pos- session of a poor crippled woman in Indiana that ought to be at the Centennial, as they are probably the oldest pieces of china in that country. They consist of a. small pitcher and dish of the year 1634, thus making them 242 years old. There is no question as to their age, for it is wrought into the bottom of them. They were brought originally from Scotland, and were in possession of the Ma- gruder family in Baltimore until some part of it removed to Ohio in 1836, when these precious relics were packed in feather beds and taken to the Western wilds. They ought to be owned by the Metropolitan Mu- seum of Art. THE London Times reports that during the heavy storm on Tuesday four vessels were stranded off Helingsborg. The crew of one were saved. Those on the other vessels are still in danger. A ï¬shing boat attempting to rescue them capsized, and four men were drowned. Great loss of life is feared, as there is no life-boat at Helingsborg, nor are there other means of rendering asslstance. THE Senate has declared the seat held in that body by Sir Edward Kenny vacant, owing to that gentleman’s absence for two consecutive sessmns. Sir Edward‘s ill-health is the cause of his retirement. He was born in Ireland in 1800, and came to Halifax in 1824, where he enga ed in business. He sat in the Legislative ouncil of Nova Scotia for twenty-six years, during eleven of which he was President of that body. At Confed- eration in 1867 he was appointed Receiver- General of the Dominion, and held that oflice till 1869, when he became President of the Council, retirin in 1870, and receiving the honor of knight 00d. LIKE flakes of snow, that fall unperceived upon the earth, the seemingly unimportant events of life succeed one another. As the snow gathers together, so are our habits formed. N 0 single flake that is added to the pile produces a sensible change. N 0 single action creates, however it may exhibit, a man’s character; but as the tempest hurls the avalanche down the mountain, and over- whelms the inhabitant and his habitation, so passion, acting upon the elements of mis- chief which pernicious habits have brought together by imï¬erceptible accumulations, may overthrow t e edlï¬ces of truth and vir- tue. ALL SORTS. To TAKE WHITE STAINS FROM DARK Weenâ€"Use equal parts of vinegar, smzct oil, and spirits of turpentine ; shake all well together in a bottle; a ply with a flannel cloth and rub dry With 0 L1 silk or linen. 015th and rub dry With 01(1 éilk or linen. SOFT GINGERBREADâ€"One tablespoonful butter, one tablespoonful ginger, one-half cup brown sugar, two cups molasses, two cups water or sour milk, one and one-half teaspoon- fulls soda ; do not stir very long ; bake in :1 moderate oven. SQVASH PIES-mBuil and sift a good, dry squash ; thin it W'th boiling milk until it ls about the consistency of thick milk porridge. To every quart; of this add three eggs, two great spoonfuls of melted butter, nutmeg (or ginger if you prefer), and sweeten quite sweet with sugar. Bake in a deep plate‘with an under crust. VEAL CUTLETS.~vDip in beaten egg when you have sprinkled a little pepper and salt over them ; then roll in cracker crumbs, and fry in hot dripping or lard. If you use but- ter or dripping, add a little boiling water to the gravy after the meat is dished ; thicken with browned flour, boil up once, sending to table in a boat. BOILED APPLE DUMPLING.â€"One pound of suet ; one pound of flour ; heaping teaspoon- ful of salt, chop the suet in a little of the flour to prevent its caking ; chop very ï¬neâ€"as ï¬ne as meal ; then add flour and mix thoroughly ; then add cold water enough to make a paste ; roll as thin as pie crust ; pare a. dozen large apples, quarter and core them, keeping each apple by itself, place the quarters together again and cut the paste in a square to cover the apple; tie each dumpling in a square cloth, leaving a very little room to swell. Boil an hour, putting them into boiling water ; serve with hard sauce. SILVER CAKE.»~â€"0ne cup of sugar, half a cup of butter, one fourth teas on of soda dissolved in half teacup of mil , whites of ï¬ve eggs, three-fourths teas oon cream tartar mixe< in two cups flour. Eolks of the eggs and same ingredients make gold cake. Sea- son the silver cake with peach and the gold with lemon. YANKEE PLUM PUDDINGï¬~Tuke a tin pud- ding boiler that shuts over tight with a cover. Butter it well. Put at the bottom some stoned raisins and then a layer of baker’s bread, out in slices, with a little butter 01' suet strewed over; then raisins, bread and suet, alternately, until you nearly ï¬ll the tin. Take milk enough to ï¬ll your boiler, and to every quart add three or four eg 5, some nut- meg and salt, and sweeten with half sugar and half molassmx. Drop it into boiling water and let it boil three or four hours. Be sure the cover ï¬ts tight or your pudding will he watersoaked. Serve with sauce. SWEET-BREADS, (Fried. )â€"~\Vash very care- fully, and dry with a linen cloth. Lard with narrow strips of fat salt pork, set closely to- gether. Use for this purpose a larding- needle. Lay the sweet-breads in a clean, hot frying-pan, which has been well buttered 0r greased, and cook to a. ï¬ne brown, turning frequently until the pork is crisp. BIIJOUSNEss.â€"~Dr. Hall relates the ease of a. man who was cured of his biliousness by going Without his supper, and drinking freely of lemonade. Every morning, says the doc- tor, this patient arose with a wonderful sense of rest and refreshment, and feeling as though the blood had been literally washed, cleansed and cooled by the lemonade and fast. His theory is that food can be used as a. remedy for many diseases successfully. As an ex- ample, he cures spitting of blood by the use of salt ; epilepsy by watermelon ; kidney af- fection by celery ; oison, olive or sweet oil ; erysipelas, poundeil cranberries, applied to the part effected ; hydrophobia, onions, &c. So the way to keep in good health is really to know what to eatâ€"not What medicine to take. Manufacturer of S'rovas, STOVE SHELVES, PATENT REvoLvmu, FLUsmNo, GLOSSINO, AND Cnmrma IRONS; also, the PATEN" (‘ooxma STOVE EXTEN- SIGN; HOLLOW WARE, ETC. 3923" Wanted, a General Agent in every County. All who wish to consult Dr. Schenck, either person- ally or by letter, can do so at his principal ofï¬ce, cor- ner of SIXTH and ARCH 81%., Philadelphia, every Monghy. . Schehck's' medlcinca are sold by all druggists throughout. the country. 206 and 208 KING STREET, HAMILTON. fresh cold. Schenck’s Sea Weed Tonicis a gentle stimulant and alterative ; the alkali of which it is composed, mixes with the food and prevents souring. It assists the di- gestion by (onng up the stomach to a healthy condi- tion, so mm the food and the Pulmonic Syrup will make good blood ; than the lungs heal, and the paâ€" Eienf will surely get. well if care is taken to prevent VEAI. PinspaLet your veal he juicy, andw not too fat. Take out all the bone, and put with the fat and refuse bits, such as skin or gristle, in a saucepan, with a large teacnpful of cold water to make gravy. Instead of chopping the veal, cut into thin, even slices, Line a pudding-dish with a. good paste, and put a. layer of veal in the bottom ; then one of hard-boiled eggs sliced, each piece butter- ed and peppered before it is laid upon the veal; cover these with sliced ham, or thin slips of salt pork. Squeeze a few drops of lemomjuice upon the ham. Then another layer of veal, and so on until you are ready for the gravy. This should have been stew- ing for half an hour or so, with the addition of pepper and a. bunch of aromatic herbs. Strain through a thin cloth and pour over the pie. Cover with crust and bake two hours. m...“ Wvux w um To smile the I“: mcnlc Snap to do this, Schenck's Mandrake Pm: and Swami: a Bee. Weed Tonic must be freely used to cleanse Ella stoth and liver. Scheuck’s Mandrake Pills act on the liver, removmg all obscructiona, relax the gall bladder, the bile starts freely, and the liver lg 3001} yelleved. A The Pulmonic Syrup ripens the morbid matter in the lungs ; nature throws it, off by an easy expectom- tion, for when the phlegm or matter is rlpe a slight cough will throw it til, the yatient has rest and the lungs begin t9 hf‘al The standwrd remedies for all diseases of the lungs are SCHEch‘s Puwoxxc SYRUP, SCHENCK'S SEA WEED Tome, and Scnm‘cx‘s MANDRAKE PILLS, and, if taken befort‘: the lungs are destroyed, a speedy cure is efv To these three medicines Dr. J. H. Schenck, of Philadelphia, owes his unrivalled success in the treat- mgpt o! nulmqnai'y diseases. No use of any longer taking the large, re- pulsive, griping, drastic, and nauseous pills, composed of crude and bulky ingredients, and put up in cheap wood or pasteboard boxes, when we can, by a careful application of chemical science, extract all the cathartic and other medicinal r0 erties from the most valuable roots and er s, and concentrate them into a minute Granule, scarcely larger than a mustard seed, that can be readily swallowed by those of the most sensitive stomachs and fastidious tastes. Each of Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pellets repre- sents, in a most concentrated form, as much cathartic power as is embodied in any of the large pills found for sale in the drug stores. From their wonderful cathartic power, in proportion to their size, people who have not tried them are apt to suppose that they are harsh or drastic in effect, but such is not at all the case, the different active medicinal principles of which they are composed being so harmonized, one by the other as to produce a most searching and thorough, yet gently and kindly operating cathartic. The Pellets are sold by dealers in medicine. STEWED FILLET or VEAL.â€"â€"Stufl‘, and bind with twine as for roasting. Then cover the top and sides with sliced ham which has been already boiled, securing with skewers, or twine crossing the meat in all directions. Lay in a pot, put in two large cups of boiling water, cover immediately and closely, and stew gentlyâ€"never letting it cease to boil, yet never boiling hard, for four or ï¬ve hours. A large ï¬llet of veal will require nearly ï¬ve hours. Remove the cover as seldom as pos- sible, and only to ascertain whether the wa- ter has boiled away. If itis too low, re len- ish from the boiling-kettle. Take 0 the strings when the meat is done ; arrange the ham about the ï¬llet in the dish, and serve a bit with each slice of veal. Strain the gravy, thicken with flour, boil up once, and send in a boat. Serve with stewed tomatoes and spinach. 0H0 FOUNDRY Dr. Schenck's Standard Remedies. USEEUL RECEIPTS. Send for sample and terms JOHN BOOKER, [419 ORNAMENTAL FOUNDRY AQUAmm a. BIRDS, for Ornament, Boo'rucxs. BRACKETS for Lamps, Shelving, and 0111. r purpmcs‘ CRESTXNGS. FENCES 0f Wrought and Cast, Iron. FLOWER STANDH, cheap and hnndsumv. FLOWER VASES, 181' e and small. FOUNTAINS from $ï¬) to $5M» Fm]: (hunts. HITCHING Pos'rs. MATCH SAFES. PAPER WEIGHTS. PAPER FILES. PEN RACKB. STANDS FOR UMBRELI‘AB. “ “ SuovEL AND Toxas. Pno'rounn-mmn SMOOTHING IzoNs. STATUARY, 11f». size and painted to nature, Birds‘ Dogs, Fawnedker, Lions. and Human Fig. ,;,, r1: , . u u .‘ u List of Goods manufactured by the above Firm Thls standard m'tK-le m camnmunded mm. the gTeat~ est care. It. effects are as wonderful and satisfactory as ever. It restores gray or faded hair to its youthful color. It removes all eruptions, itching, and dandruff ; and the scalp by its use becomes white and clean. By its tonic properties it restores the capillary glands to their nurmal vigor, preventing baldness, and making the hair grow thick and strong. As a dressmg nothing can be found so effectual, or desirable. This elegant preparation may be relied on to change the wlor of the heard from gray or any other undesirv able shade. to brown. or black, at discretion. it is easily applied, being iu ONE PREPARATION, and quickly and eï¬ectually produces a xï¬nna‘nent color which will neither nib nor wash off. urea in Zinc 01- in Bronze. TREE GUARDB of Iron, hand-(mm and durable. GARDEN CHAIRS AND Smmns LAMP Pos'ra. LAMP FRAMES for opposite Churches, Hotels, and l’ubilc Buildings. Dr. A. A. Hayes, State Aseuyer of Massachusetts says of it : “ 1 consider it Tm: sxs’r nmmm'nox for it intended purposes." Sold by all 'Dmggists and Dealers in Medicine. Northrup 8c Lyman, Nev/castle, General Agents. May 6, 1873. (16 7 V ' ningVCro'ss Cut Saw? 7 HAND SAWS in every \‘zu‘iuty, from the cheapest to the ven best. 3T. CATHABINES. ONT. RABJOHN, KING & CO I“ [TUKINGIIA NI’S DY E FOR THE. \‘VHISKERS. All messages left at the Bath before 12 noon will be promptly amended to. - R. P. HA LL 4» 00., NASHIL-i, NH Vin he at the Bath from 10.30 to 12 u.m., where he can be consulted by patients wishing to take Baths, and also by his other patients. MAGIC STOP ORGANS W His ofï¬ce hours at his residence from 12 noon till 2 p.11). will hereafter be dispensed with, New Era. Organ Company, North East, Penn. l Modem Improvemean found in any Reed 0r- gans, and, in addilion, have exclusively the inven- tions and lmprovememg of Jno. A. Smith, among which should be mentioned the. Patent Manic Stop, lvlng the player the most perfect comroï¬ or the rgan without the necessity of removln the hands from the kefubourd while playing): 1 0 Patent Adjustable B ow Pedals, (for the accommodation of short, or tall persons); me Patent Grand Organ Stop; the Patent Name Board and Register; In proved Swell, and {I‘HESE GRAND ()RGANS CONTAIN ALL In addition to its other distinctive features, these Organs are noticeable for their full, round tones, so bright and cheerful, while possessing the utmost plll'lt ' and sweetness. The charming beauties of the ox Celeste ever impress the listener with ad- miration, while the peculiarly weird-like, sympa- thetic efl‘ect of the Vox Humana is most; enchanting. For the value of its exclusive improvements and great attractions, for simplicity of con-trnction, for excellence of workmanship and material, for beauty of design and ï¬nish, these Organs have no equal. The are made either 5 octave or 6 octaveâ€"in plain, me ium, or elaborate casesâ€"with two. three, four or more sets of reeds, the Single Manila] Organs having from six stops to fourteen stops, and vary- ing in price from $185 to $390. For Circulars. Price List, etc, address Tuesday, ’l‘hursday, and Saturday, from 9 a.m. to l p.m., and from 7 to H pm.. each evening. Monday, \Vednesday, and Friday, from 9 a.m. to l p.m., and from 2 to 6 p.111; General Agent for Ontario. W Ever inducement to the Trade, and cod Agents to 0 business in Canada. Very 11 em] mm' OFFICE AND WAREROOMS. COR. JAMES &- REBECCA STS†LISTER BLOCK, HAMILTON, ONT. Wish 8: Heclm Ihermal Baths V {ILL BF. OPEN FOR THE PUBLIC AFTER (his date as follows :â€" FOR LADIES. All Saws Warranted‘ Hamilton. Ont†April 8. 1876‘ Hamilton, February 18. 1876‘ DR. VERNON LOOK AT THE NEW Cox. YORK AND QUEEN’ STA FOR GENTLEMEN MANUFACTURED BY THE JAMES ST. NORTï¬â€™ MAN UFAC’I‘URED BY W. J. POWER. HAMILTON the J. Flint Patent in}: raved Champion Crovs pt SEW; alls‘o ‘tILe light- (Successors to J. Fling Manufacturers of 1 kinds of SAWS Straw Knives, Patent Plaster- ixlg fl‘rgvvelsj &.c. ‘. '1‘. CATHARINES SAW WORKS. E. II. Sjï¬lhk 00 u; L 111"ch am. Sole Mam acmrers o! 4 1 7-311] 1370-1: ' March 18. 1876‘ 410 for Private Parties. including a Balloon and small display. Fireworks of every descri tion for Theatri- ca and Stage effect. Paper Baloon's from $1.00 51011. illnmnmtions with Vmiegations, Lamps, Transparencies. die. Storekeepers and Retail Dealers (to whom a liberal profit is allowed) sup- plied with every description of Fireworks, from the smallest to the largest article. Brass and Qua- drille Bands supplied for Garden Parties, Picnics, &c., on the shortest notice and on reasonable terms. All orders carefully and expeditiously sent to all parts of the country. Terms, cash.;‘Price list on application. To sell the New Patent. Improved EYE CUPS. Guaranteed to br- rhe 11951 7 (Ii/foul bum-nears Qï¬'ered to Agentu by (my Home. An may and pleasant (m [MOI/Wleflt. The value of the celebrated now Patent Improved Eye Cups for the intonation of sight breaks out and blazes in the evidence of over 6,000 genuine testimonials of (m “ ‘ mu mmended by more than one thonsmd L was physicians in their practice. The Patent Eye Cups are a scientiï¬c and philoso- liicul discovery. and as Alex R. Wyeth. M. 1)., and {:Vm. Beatley, M, 1)., writes, they are (‘erlainly the greatest invention of the a e. . Read the following cerli caters: FERGUSON STATXON‘ LOGAN 00., KY“ June 6th, ’7 . DR. J. BALL & (73. chlists, HAMILTON IRON WORKS R5557†All work guaranth ]“lHS'¥‘~CL,-\»‘ S, and promptly turned out. PRICES LOW and TERMS EASY. Hamilton. Murch 4, 187 41?,hn AGENTS ‘WANTED PYROTECHNIG ARTIST S gnu! Rockets and Lights fur Shipping, 'I‘vmplen, Initials, Crests, 'I‘i'iumphul Arches, &c., in Fireworks. (‘oilwtions fined up with the greatâ€! ability for Public Pleasure Gardens or Wod- ding Parties, Christeninga. Remittas, Harv- oat Homes and all other livjoicmgs, from $251.0 $1,000. $5, $10, OR $20 PACKAGES, Manufacture and keep nonstmltly on hand ready for delivery I’éidcé. Steam Engines anti Boilers CIRCULAR SAW MILLS, GRIST I» ILL 85 OTHER MACHINERY Gmlemm‘s Yachta Illuminated 3791 (1 Superior Manner wuh Bengal Lighlo. Spï¬â€™tiï¬' féntice it} our Headers. GENTLEMEN: Your Patent Eye Cups are“ in my judgment the moat splendid triumph which optical science has evernchieved, but, like all great and important truths. in this or in any other branch of science and philosophy, have much to contend with from the ignorance and rcjudice of a too sceptical public; but truth is mig ty and will prevail, nndit ls only a question of time as regards their indorse- ment and eneral acceptance by all. I have in my hands certiï¬cates of persons testifying in unequiv- ocal terms to their merits. The most prominent physicians of my county recommend our Eye Cups. 1 am‘ respectfully. J. A. L. OYER. WILLIAM BEATLEY M. D., Salvisa, Ky., writes: "I‘htmka to yon/art .e armceut 0/ all inventions.- My sight is fully restored by the use of your Pat- ‘ent [we CHIN, after being almost entirely blind for twenty-3131 Lem-s.†ALRY. R. Wyn-m, M. D., Atehison, Pa , writes; "After tom] blindness of my left eye for Jouryears by paralysis of the optic nerve, to my utter aston ishmem. your Patent Ewe Cum restored my eye sight Pergmgentl y in threq ypiputes."i 'Rev. S. B. FALKINSBURG, Minister of M. E. Church writes: “Your Patent Eye Cups have restored my ei ht, for which I am most thankful to the Father ogMercies. B your advertisementl saw at once that your invu uuhle Ewe Cups performed their work perfectly in accordance with physiological law; that they literally fed the eyes that were starving for nutrition. Mu God greatly bless you, and may your name be ens rined in the nfl'ection- ate memories of multiplied thousands as one of the bqqefactorg og‘ your kind.†Home: B. D'URANT, . D. says: “L'sold, and effech future sales liberally. The Patent Eye Cupo, they will make money. and make ittnst, too: no small catch-penny affair, but a superb. number one, tlpttop business, promises, as far as I can see, to‘tge llfelong." HAMILTON, ONT. First Prize and Diploma at Toxonto Fall Exhibition, Sepl. & Oct, 1875. Mayor E. (3’. ELLIS wrote us. November 6th. 1869i “ I have tested the Patent [non-11 Eye Cups. and am satisï¬ed they are_ 00d. am pleased with them. They are certm y the greateat invention of (karma: _ OYAL HOTEL, JAMES STREET, OPPOSITE the Post Oiflce, Hamilton, (ml. The only ï¬rst-class Hot-cl in the City. Reduced rates during the wig Hon. Home}; GREELEY, late editor of the New York Tribune, wrote: “Dr. J. Ball, of our on , is a. conscientious and responsible man. incapah e of intentional deception 0y impgsitlop."_ to sell the Patent Eye Cup» to the hundreds of people with diseased (eyes and impaired sight in your county. Any person can act as our agent. To Gentlemen or Ladies $5 to $20 a day guaran- teeii tF1111 particulars sent free. Writeimmedl- ate y 0 DR. J". BALL <35 (30., N0. 91 LIBERTY STREET, (P. O. Box 957.) NEW YORK CITY, N. Y.‘ Do not miss the opportunity of being ï¬rst in the ï¬eld. Do not delay. Write by ï¬rst mui). Great inducements and large proï¬ts offered to farmers during the winter months. and to all who want a ï¬rst-class paying business. WTHE mm:st commsaxow ALLOWED TO AGENTS BY ANY Hons: IN THE UNITED STATES. J amer 29.1876. 7 (Sm-Bow REID & BARR, Prof. W. MEnmcx writ . lyx I am grateful to your noble invention. My si ht is restored by your Patent Eye Cups. May eaven bless and preserve you. 1 have been using spectacles twenty years. Inm seventy-one years old. I do all my writing without glasses, and Iblesa the inventor of the Patent Eye Cup? every time I take up my old 3Lqu peu."_ __ 7 7 Anew}; BIORNBERG, M. 1)., physician to Emperor Napoleon, wrote, after havin rhis sight restored by our Patent Eye Cum : “ Wuh gratitude to God and thankfulness to the inventors, Dr. J. Ball 6'; 00.. Ihereby recommend the trial of the Eye Cum (in full faith) to all and every one that has any im- paired eyesight, believing, as I do, that since the experiment with this wonderful discovery proved successful on me, at my advanced period of lifeâ€"â€" 90years of ageâ€"l believe they will restore the via- ion to any individual it they are properly applied." ~ABOD1‘H BIORNBERG, M. 1)., Commonwealth of'Maum gingejt‘, Essex! 788. ' J Kï¬Ã© 767th: 175: flangï¬wailw'appearcd Adolph Biom- berg. made oath to the to lowing certiï¬cate, and by him subscribed and swqrn before me, B O O M I f 0mm“ byflï¬â€˜eï¬f promptly ,,,,,,,,,__V ,-.-. LAWRENCE CITY. Mus“ June 9th, 1873. We, the undersigned. having ersoually known Dr. Adolph Blornberg for years, elieve him to be an honest. moral 1mm, trustworthy, and in truth and in vlemclty nuspotted. His character is without re roac . MPBONNEY Ex-Mayor. S.B.W.DAVIS,Ex-Mayor GEORGE E. MERRILL P. M. ROBERT H. TEWKSBï¬RY, City Tress. Reader, these are a few certiï¬cates out of thou- sands we receive. and m the aged we will guaran- tee your old and diseased eyes can be made new ; your-impaired sight, dimness of vision, and over- worked eyes can be restored; weak, watery and sore eyes cured; the blind ma sec; spectacles be discarded, sight restored an vision preserved. Spectacles and surgical operations useless, hi.‘»» -iM; A, , WALTER WOODS Save your eye; and restore your sight ; throw away year spectaclee. By reading our illustrated Physiology and Ana~ tamy qflhe Eyeaight. of 100 pages‘ tells how to reâ€" store impaired vision and over-worked eyes; how to cure weak, watery, inflamed and near~sxghted eyes, and all other diseases of the eyes. Waste no more money by adjusting huge glasses on your nose and disï¬guring your face. Book mailed free to any person. Send on your address. ‘Please seudwyorlrlroxiaa’réga to nus and “:é'vw‘vill send you our book. A GEM WORTH READING! A DIAMOND WORTH SEEING! AGENTS WANTED- Il'lnnufncmrg/n-Hmd St. adjoining the ngagal HOOD & BROS, Proprietors. Hamilton. January 21, 1876. 41 f I" T If E IDealeys “1110 (in? this R EBECCA STREET, \VI L LI A M H AND, SPECIAL CALL. or £11 si' s and kinda swq 11 before me WI LIAM swings. 11;}; n,AÂ¥ .. 1 5 doz. Sample Lot Special Prices. out and send for will gét mam 414 9' EVERY SCALE \VARRANTED it Over One Hundred different modiï¬cations of HAY, COAL, PLATFORM. AND COUNTER SCALES. DOMINION STANDARD GURNEY & WARE, BUY TTIE BEST! in? This Drill has taken more Prizes the past six years than any other in the DQ- minion. SEND FOR CATALOGUE. Possessing most Astonishing Curative Properties hitherto unknown, and only obtain- able a‘n the JOchical Victory. Its Properties are such as to rapile insure Sound Health and Long Life. The best Scientifically prepared medicine In America. I Pleasant lo the taste, and warrant“! free from anything injurious to the most delicate constitu- tion of either sex. Read the certiï¬cates of wonderful cures given in Dr. Depew’s Treatise accompanying each bottle. as well as those constantly appearing in the newspaper press aft/Le Dommion. DEPEW’S Mgdiwl Vigmysu A POPULAR SUCCESS! DON’T FAIL TO PURCHASE IT. an eminent hï¬siéian, is the diséoverer of this Great Bloog emedyâ€"a Purely Vegetable Compoundâ€"named by physicians, Depew’s Medical Victory, that cures every kind of unhealthy Humor, and ever disease that depends on Impuriti of the B 00d, where the Lungs. Liver, and 'idtneys, and other vital organs. are not wasted beyond the hope of repair For the cuge of Scrofula Iirysi; ulns, Salt-rheum, czemu Scam-friend, Scnly Eruption of the Skin ï¬lcers, and Fever Sores of all kinds Boils Piumor in the Mouth and Stomach or ï¬yes, Sore Ears, Eruption on the Head, and Pimples or Blotches on the face, it stands Pre-eminently at the head of all other Remedies. BLOOD 'PURIFIER In the cure othenmntism, Dyspepslaliver Com laint, and diseases of the Kidneys and Bled er, its effects are surprising to all., For Regulating the Bowels and curin Bilious- ness. Headache, Sick-ï¬eadache, eumlgiu. Female Weakness, Nervousness, Pains in the Side, Loins and Back, and general W'eaknose and Debility, its curative powers are remarkable. It figs» Gentle Regulating Purgative, M well as aTonic. 5L0. Possessing also the eculiar merit of acting as a )owuri‘ul arr-om m relieving Con cation, and chronic In aun- mation or the liver and all the Yist‘ernl Organs For Female Complaints, whether in young or old, marned er smgle. at the dawn of womanhood, or at the turd of life, the Medical Victory has no equal. A Perfect Reqoyato: and Invigormg- Hamilmn‘ 0M. 21. 1875. Sold by Druggists and Dealers. SEND FOR DESCRIPTIVE PAMPHLET ADDRESS Sills & 00., BATH. ONTARIO. 7701' the System. ' 07» Bottle «2/ Depew's Medical Victory will convince the most incredulous Qf its curative properties. AND Health Regulator, N0 MEDIGINE“ EouALs IT. Send for Illustrated Price List Hamnton. April 15, 1876. m5 DR. DEPEW..0P.PARISLEBAEQJS: AT) DRE SS as Double Distributors. as Adjustable Hopper Bottom. It never breaks (ix-am. It never buncheu Grain. Ens reversible Steel Points on the Tubes‘ Can stop 011‘ one or more '“ubes at pleasure. A Smgle Lever stops off the Feed and raises the Tubes. 11. sows \Vheal Outs. Barley, Peas, Rye, ‘J'imotl’lv Seed, Clover, 5:0,. and with equal accuracy. Sole Manufacturers in the Dominion L. n. svaan a; 00., HAMILTON. ONT. 3‘“- “'11:: "W 2. "IQ. iï¬mssi £393!) Swami“. GURNEY & WARE, _ HAMILTON, ONT. MANUFACTURED BY A GREAT Hamillon, Onlrzrlo 418