It is to he noted that in several countries the ï¬rst wome.) who have taken a prominent part in literature have been as bad as the men; as for instance, Marguerite of Naval re, and Mrs. Aphra liLlllll. Marguerite of Na\- arre, wrote religion.» books as well as merry but questionable ta and we know that ladies of high character in Edinburgh used to read Mrs. Belm’s tales and plays aloud, at onetime with delightvalthough one of the same ladies found in her 01d age, that she could not read them to herself without blushing. Shakspeare puts coarse repartees into the months of women of stainless vir- tue. George Sand is not considered an ex- ceptionable writer; but she tells us in her autobiography that she found among her gramlmothvr‘s papers, poems and satires so indecent that she could not read them through, and yet they bore the names of abbes and gentlemen whom she remembered in her childhood as models of dignity and virtue. Voltaire inscribed to ladies ot high rank, who doubtless regardc l it a great com- pliment, verses such as not even a poet of the English “ flashy school †would now print at all. In “Poems of Eminent Ladies.†published in 1755 and reprinted in 1774, there are one or two poems as gross and disgusting as anythiig in Swift; yet their a'ithors were thought most reputable women. Allan hinsey's “ Tea-table Mis- eellan) " 77:1 enllenztion of English and Scot- tish Mlllgs was ï¬rst published in 1724; and in his preface to the sixteenth edition the editor attributes its great success, especially ain'ng the ladies, to the fact that he had cx- eluded all grossness “ that the modest voice and car of the. fair singer might meet with no ull'roni." and adds. “ the chief bent ofall my studies being to attain their good graces." There is no doubt of the great popularity of the book in all circles; yet it contains a few songs which the most licentious newspapers would not now publish. The influence is ir- re 'stihle, from this and many other similar facts. that the whole tone of manners and decency have very greatly improved among the European races within a century and a half. In seeking the causes for this improve- ment 1 should lay more stress on the influ- aiee of the sexes upon one another than on more feminine superiority. It is often claimed by teachers that eo-edueation helps not only boys, but also girls, to develop greater propriety of manners. MONEY l.\' ('orAm‘NERsnIr. In an ordinary copartnership there is very often a complete division of labor among the partners. If they manufacture locomotive engines, one partner, perhaps, superintends the works, another attends to mechanical inventions and improvements, another travels for orders, another conducts the cor- respondence, another receives and pays out the money. The la‘tcr is not necessarily the head of the ï¬rm. Perhaps his place could be more easily ï¬lled than some of the other posts. Nevertheless Ir ore money passes through his hands than through those of all the others put together. Now should he at the year’s end call together the invenâ€" tor and the superintendent and the traveller and the correspondent and say to them : “ 1 have earned all the money this year, but 1 will generously give you some of it," he would he considered simply impertinent and would hardly have a chance to repeat the offence the year after. MARRLU : E AND (‘Ol’AR’l‘N l‘I'l'allll’. Yet precisely what would be called folly in this business partnershi is constantly done by men in the copartiiership of mar- riage, and is there called " common sense,†and “ social science †and “ business prin- ciples.†For instance, a farmer works him- \Vomen give my to tears more readily him men! Granted. Is their sex any the weaker for it‘.’ Not a bit. It is simpiya difference of lenlperznnent, that is all. It involves no inferiority. lt'yon think that this habit necessarily means weakness, wait and see. \Vho has not seen women break «lown in tears during some domestic calami- ty, while the “stronger sex " were (:uhn ; and who has not seen those same women rise up and dry their eyesgmnl be henceforth the support and stay of their households, and perhaps bear up the “ stronger sex " as a mz'eum hears up a ship? 1 said once to a I:El)‘nlulilll vzrtehing such a woman. " That wmmm is really great.†“ Of course she is,†he answered, " did you never see a. Woman who was not 5' at when the emergency re- quired?†There was once a real or imaginary old lady who had got the metaphor of Seylla and Charybdis a little confused. \Vishing to describe a, perplexing situation this lady said: “' You see, my love, she was between Celery on one side and Uherulls on the other. You know about Celery :ind Cherule don’t you? They was two rocks somewhere ; and if you didn‘t hit one, you was pretty sure to run smack on the other.†A clever writer says this is the present conditth of the we» men who “ agitate.“ 'l‘heir Celery and Cheruhs are tears and temper. “ Mother,†sziid a r lutelittle girl, “if the dinner was all spoiled l wouldn’t sit down and cry. I would say ‘hang it.’ " This cherub preferr- ed the alternative of temper on the days when the celery turned out badly. But as this alternative is found to exist for both sexes and on a 1 occasions, why charge it especially on the \vomam-suiï¬'age movement? Men are certainly as much given to ill tem- per as Women; and if they are less inclined to tears they make it up in sulks, which are just as bad. N‘eholus Nickelby, when the pump was frozen,was advised by Mr. Squeers to " content himself with a dry polish ;"’ and so there is a kind of dry despair into which men fall, quite as forlorn as any tears of women. The unspeakable comfort some women feel in sitting; for ten minutes with :: handkerchief over their eyes! The fresh- ness, the heartincss, the new life visible in them, when the crying is done and the handkerchief comes down again 1 \\ (lMl’I‘I‘S ’l'l‘lAlt‘l )O'l' A $1" ' 0F \YEAK. “ Celery and Cherubs "â€"Women's Tears-â€" Equal Badnessâ€"What Married Women Earnâ€"Asking for Money~ Hard-“Work- ing Women. Mr. Higginson’s book about wonmn has so many bright and suggestive hints and illus- trations of women‘s life, earners and capaci- ties that {mother brief installment of quota- tions from it; will probably prove acceptable to our readers. MORE ABOUT WOMEN. EQI'ALH‘Y 0F I:A\1>,\ ENS (‘ELERY AX!) (‘HEH 'JL“. . «v.4-woohâ€"wd‘ T1119enthusiasms of the man of pleasure are but few and transient. His appetites, like angry creditors, are continually making fruitless demands for what he is unable to pay; and the greater his former pleasures, the more strong his regrets, the more impa- tient his expectations. There is a r ‘41sen for it and we can point it out. They arise from indifference to the observance of hygenic rules and the viola.- tion of sanitary laws. Cleanliness is essen- tial to health and is as necessary in the coun- try as in the city. A family living over a foul cellar is more liable to be poisoned and afflicted with illnesses than aeity family liv- ing in its polluted atmosphere, but without cellar or basement ï¬lled with fermenting roots and fruits. There is far more sickness in the country than there ought to be. \Vith plenty of pure air, waterfowl exercise, dis- ease ought to be kept at bay, and would be if a better observance of certain hygenie conditions were :11aintained. Bad-condition- ed eellars, small c.1051: sleeping rooms, stores i-thesc are all agents of evil, and are fast making the homes of the farmers almost as unhealthy (is those of the dwellers in eiti ‘ Are not these suggestions worthy of consid- eration ‘.’ fl 74¢04«o.>u.â€"â€"â€"~â€"' The Missionary in Society. A gentleman gave a party in honor of n dibtinguished missionary lately returned from his ï¬eld of work. The ladies appeared in very decollcte dresses, and as the host feared the style might shook his reverence, he apologized to him for it, saying that fashion demanded it. “011, I don’t mind it at all,†replied the missionary, “ l have been ten years among the w 'ages.†Is it damp, close, and ï¬lled with the dis- agreeahle odors of decaying vegetables)? If so it is time you gave the matter your earn- est attention, for you have in that locality, the germs 0t disease, and yourself and famâ€" ily are liable to be prostrated at any moment. You think your cellar or’bnsement is in good sanitary condition. Do you know that it is" llave you carefully examined the premises? Have you looked over the vegetables, to as- certain their eondition ‘{ \Ye know that many serious illneSses have their origin in cellars, both in city and country, and we can do our readers no greater servwe than to urge them to see that at- all times, they are in a dry, sweet wholesome condition. \Vhy should farmer‘s families living in the coun- try, away from the pestilential vapors of cities, be so subject to attacks of" malig- nant «liseahe ‘ One of the very best wives and mothers 1 have ever known, whose husband was of a, most generous disposition and denied her no- thing, once said to me that whenever her daughters should be married she should sti- pnlate in their behalf with their husbands for a. regular sum of money to be paid them at certain intervals for their expenditures. “ I suppose no man,†she said, “can possibly understand how a sensitive woman shrinks from asking for money. lf 1 can prevent it, my daughters shall never have to ask for it. If they do their duty as wives and mothers they have a right to their share of the joint income within reasonable limits ; for certain- ly no money could buy the services they render. There was a tradition in a town where 1 once lived that a certain Quaker who had married a rich wife 'us once heard to repel her, who had asked him for money in a puh- lic place, with the response: “.Rachel where is that niliepcnce I gave thee yestol‘thl_\"."’ lie earned the money for the chil'h'en and the household. She disbursed it 101' the children and the household. The very laws of nature, by giving her the children to hear and rear, absolve her from the duty of their support, so long as he is alive who was left free by nature 101' that purpose. Her task 011 the average is as hard as his; nay, a. por~ tion of it is so especially hard that It is dis- tinguished from all others by the name “Ia- bor.†If it does not earn money it is he- canse it is not to be measured in money while it existswnor replaced by money if lost. If a business man 103es his partner he can obtain another; and a man, no doubt, may take a second wife, but he cannot pro< cure for his children a. second mother. In- deed. it is a palpable insult to the whole re- lation of husband and wife when one com- pares it, even in a ï¬nancial light, to that of business partners. self half to death in the hay ï¬eld and his Wife meanwhile is working herself Wholly to death in the dairy. The neighbors come in to sympathize after her deeease, and dur- ing the few months’ interval before his se- cond marriage, they say, approvineg. “He was always a generous man to his folks '. He was always a good provider!" hit where was the room [or generosity, any more than the member of any other firm is to be called generous, when he keeps the books, receipts the bills and divides the money? In the ease of the farming business, the share of the wife is so direct and unmistakable thatit can hardly be evaded. If anything is earn~ ed by the farm, she does her distinct and important share of the earning. But it is not necessary that she should do even that to make-her, by all the rules of justice, an equal partner. entitled to her full share of the ï¬nancial proceeds. EQUAL LABOR. Let us suppose an ordinary case. Two young people are married and begin life toâ€" gether. Let us suppose them equally poor. equally capable, equally conscientious and equally healthy. They have children. Those children must be supported by the earning of money abroad, by attendance and care at home. If it requires patience and labor to do the outside work, no less is required in- side. The duties of the household are as hard as the duties of the shop or oiiice. 1f the wife took her husbands work for a day she would probably be glad to return to her own. So would the husband if he no der- took hers. Their duties are ordinarily as distinct and as equal as those of two part- ners in any other copartnership. It so hapâ€" pens that the outdoor partner has the hand« ling of the money ; but does that give him a right to claim it as his exclusive earnings? No more than in any other business opera-- tion. What is the Condition of Your Cellar. WHEI \‘ THAT X I N] \\ 1L\T '1'†1-2 WOMAN LARNS ASKl NH FOR MON] v.4.-.on r 74004‘-v>o¢>â€"â€"~ 77" Government Clerks. Clerks in the French Government ethees are not that well paid as to make the strug- gle for places so (lisgracefully great in France as in some other lands, notably our own. 011 an average the salary is only 2,500f., or about $500 a year, and the most of them marry on this and have children. Rent costs them atleast $100 a year, clothing and linen another $I00, if not $120, and general expenses about $100, thus leaving them $180 for food, drink, and the dowry of the (laugh. ter.‘ “Lemme see, ’ said the old man musing with his chin on the top of his cane and speaking in a shrill falsetto voice of age, ‘ it must he forty-seven years since A1111 Maria died, yet I can remember the very gown she were and the color of the long curls that hung down over her shoulder and the red 011 her cheeks that was like a winter apple! Dcar me! she’s never faded a mite in all these years, but just sits there a lookin’ at me, as she did when I brought her home. You see there was a kind of romance tew it, and I’ve often and oï¬'en thought that if 1 had the power and could rite it out it would read beautifuller than a novel; the fact '11:! A1111 Maria had another beau, but that ain‘t no wonder for she was the smartest and pretti- est and best girl in the hull country side, but what I mean, she had favored him ever so little, afore 1 come around, and began keepin’ her company. Folks kind of coupl- cd their names together, and some of ’em, to bother me, hinted that she cared a heap for him. Why, you‘d orter tew her seen him! He was slim and fine as a lady, and wore gaiter shoes, and had holler eyes es if he’d never had quite enuï¬' to eat. ‘Ann Maria care for him?†why, the girl had sense to know the (liï¬â€˜erenee atween a feller as straightns a sapling with a color like new mahogany, and such a melancholy looking specimen at that. Besides, I lied a mor" gage on the old homestead, and Ann Maria’s father owed me money, but I did right by them. I told her ef she married me l’d deed the whole thing hack to her, and .1 did. \\'ell, we was married, and we made as purâ€" ty a couple as you ever saw in your life. Ann Maria had a sottn’ out of china and linen, and I provided the house, and folks said ,1 had the l10>t wife a man ever had in the world, and id goteverything just as Iwant- ed it, and s'posed it would always he so ;liut from the day we were iiiar1ied my wife failed in health and spirits, and in six months i buried her» folks said it was conâ€" sumption, hut it didn‘t run in the family. I was blind and full of pride theni- but I've thought sinee,†here the old man lowered his voice, ‘ ‘ that mobbe all the time she loved that white~faeed chap as l despised ; a we- muu’s heart I’ve found out, is a queer thing, and Love goes where it is sent, but if she did and married me from a mistakean sense of duty why 1.11 l've got to say is I’ve been punished, too, for Ilevcd her‘. Perhaps '1 never felt it as mueh as I (lid when 1 saw her lying white and peaceful 11) her chinz gown, with the violet on it, and something round her neck that 1 never see beforeia little _eheap locket with some hair in that wasn‘t mine. “Then I mistrusted that her heart had broke and I said solemnly as I kissed her good by : “ My dear, I’ll never have a. wife but you ifI live the four score year and ten!‘ and I never have, and I think mebbe she will see that I loved her truly, and forgive me at last.†These are the four swiftcst trains in Eng- land, and as will be seen, the Leeds express, with its rate of forty-seven miles an hour, is the fleetest of them all. Three out of the four trains probably beat the running time for the same distance on any other road in the world. They are all. however, fur out- stripped for a. shorter distance by the train on the Pennsylvania railway which leaves Jersey City at 4. 10 p. 111., and makes the run of about eightyâ€"eight miles to Phila- delï¬hia in one hundred minutes, with one stop at Trenton. The '52 8-10 miles an hour made by this American,trai11 is probably “idioms-parallel in the schedule time of any railway company on the globe. It may be mentioned that the fast trains lately put on by the Pennsylvania. and“ Vanderbilt roads between New York and Chicago com- pare well as to the time Wiih the long runs on the English and Scotch lines, and more than double them as to distance. 011 both the American and English system of mil- ways it must also be remembered that for short stretches of straight track, with good road bed and favorable grades, at speed of sixty miles or more an hour is not very un- common. The ordinary time of passenger trains on the British railways does not vary much, if any, from the speed of the corres ponding trains on our steel-railed lines†about thirty-ï¬ve miles an hour for express and two ty-ï¬ve for occomniodutlon 'tmins. Tie Relative Speed of Fast Trains on English and American Railways. A critical examination of the speed of the English railway trains, writes a correspon- dent, does not sustain the commonly accept- ed notion of their great velocity. nor prove that progress in accelerating. speed which was to be looked for in the country where the railvny was horn and cradeled. The famous “ Flying, Dutchman,†on the Great \Vestern Railway, makes the run from Lon- don to Exeter 194 miles, in four hours and fourteen minutes. With four steps It attains a speed of almost forty-sixmlles an hour. A train on the Great Northern road, the “ Leeds express†does better. It makes the distance from London to Leeds. 187 miles, in four hoursâ€"almost fortyseven miles an hour, with four steps. The train carrying the Irish mail to Holyhead, over the London and North western line and dubbed years age, “The \Vild Irishman,†has now sunkin~ to comparative obscurity with its rate of a little less than forty miles an hour. The eompe iiion over several of the great linns to the populousub‘eotch cities leads to some fast schedules. The morning express on the Great Northern roxd makes only four stops along the line from London to Edinburgh, 395 miles, and flies over the wliolemllistanee in nine hours, with an average rate ofalmost forty-four miles an hour ; and on the Mid- land line the night Scotch express runs the 4'25 miles to Glasgow with a speed of forty and one-half miles an hour. THE " FLYING DUTCHMAN.†A Woman’s Heart. Delmil Frau I’nm A Friend in NCCtl.â€"â€"/)I‘. lV/Ts/u/"Uv BIL/sum, (If Wilt! (,r'lm'ry is a friend in deed. \Vho has not found it such in curing all diseases of the lungs and throat, coughs, colds, and pul- monary affections. and “lust, not least,†Consumption? The sick are assured that the high standard of excellence on which the popularity of this preparation is based, will always be maintained by the preâ€" printers. 0|?LDINGS. PICTURE FRAMES, Mll!’ i “0]! PLATES. (‘HIEOMOS, do. Price List m the trade on upplica &. BR()., 93 Yongc St. Oh‘ PREPARED LEA THER Durable, Light, Elastic,_amd cheap. First prize at Provincial Exhibipon, London. ([‘estimonials on applica- tion. Satisfaction guaranteed. Address, J DOA ' & SON Druyton Ont Chilblalns. 'l‘hesa troublesome complaints may be speedily cured by Hagyard’s Yellow Oil. the great Rheumatic remedy, which, as an external application and as an internal rem- edy has a wider range of usefulness than any similar preparation in the world. Manufacturers of Reapers, Mowers and Threshing Machines prefer “Castorine†Mar chine Oil to any other. It, will outwcar Lard Seal or Elephant, and is warranted not to gum. For sale bv all dealers. USE A \VA CARI N E'I‘ F†R N RE 00-. 97 Yonge Street ‘ , ,, ,, V I Toronto, Ont. 01' Private and 'l'rusLFundsJo1mm on Mortgage of improved Farm and Town property at Lowest Rates. Apply to 0m- !) I'lplivc Prim-«l (falalogllr, beauti- fully illus (Mud, containing all necessary infor- mation for the successful cultivation of Vega tables, Flowers. Field Roots, Potatoes. dun. is now published, and will be mailed FREE [,0 all applicants. - .l 9!“ A. “RITE a (0.. New] Growers. Hamilton. Canada. Send for Descriplivc Circular, Price List. and 'l‘l-sl Imonlnls of BRIUK MAUHINES, BRICK PRESSES, AND TILE MACHINES. We also make [Veneer Machines for Choose box st‘ult', 01' perforated Furniture. The only secret about Ayei"s Cherry Pect- 01'a1 is in the selection of the best materials for the cure of coughs and colds and ski]- fully emnbining them by chemical processes. This all medical men are aware of, as they are furnished with the formuia of its preâ€" paratlon. Really, Miller. Blggard’ Blacksmith. OFFICES :~â€"Ba.nk of Toronto. Toronto. “ childlike and bland," said : “ \Vhat Michi- gan regiment did you command, Colonel?" Then it was that the Colonel spun like a top and swore like a sailor, until pacified sulli- oiently to hear an explanation. Artemqu with surprise, observed “ that he was always getting things mixed about the war.†It is always unfortunate to get things mixed, but never more so, than when one is sick. Then it is that the right thing in the right place is wanted more than at any other time in life, or under any other circumstances. It isa pleasure for us to note in this connection, the experience of our esteemed fellow citizen, Colonel Samuel H. Taylor, who. as is well known, does not get things mixed. In a recent communication he writes : “ I do hereby certify that I suffered very much from rheumatism and neuralgia duringthefall of 1879, and tried many remedies with little if any good results. I had heard of St. Jacobs Oil, and concluded to try it; more as an experiment than with any hope of good results. I can with great pleasm'eemnmeml it to others, for the reason that I know it cured me.†Such an emphatic endorsement coming from one of the very torcmost lawâ€" yers of our state, well and widely known, carries with it a degree of importance and suggestiveness. which cannot be orercsti~ mated.“ ll’as/Iingfon (1nd.) Onset/1’. â€"‘â€"â€"-â€"‘90 4‘->> “5â€" ~â€"- An Upportune Hint. (,7: “ Isn’t the moon beautiful this evening said Alonzo, as he snuggled his arm just as close upon hcr’s as he could. “ Y‘yes, but I know another moon that is perfectly ecstatic in its loveliness." “ Do you? \Vhat moon is that, ducky 1’" “ It's the honeymoon, Alonzo, and don’t you think it is about time for us to have one?†The cards are out. BRICK MAKERS. SEEDS, RELIABLE SEEDS. In a Louisville, Ky., hotel one day Arte- mus \"zml was introduced to a colonel who had comnmnded a Mississippi regiment in the war. Artcnius, in his way that was The American and the European News- papers. l’tabbi Sonneschein, of St. Louis, lately spoke on the dilfcrence between Americh and European newspapers of the present day. The European newspapers he would compare to a ï¬shermen who sits immovable and silent 01 the bank of a stream waiting for prey to enter his meshes. The American journal is like the hunter who seeks his game and secures it by hard work. The American editor always keeps the wants of the reader in mind when preparingnlatter for the press. He is not so particular about beauty of language as long as he secures the news. The European editor on the contrary was like a. college professor, very classical, very cold and very longâ€"winded. The history of newspapers was a history of the world. The ï¬rst newspaper was printed in the Latin language for a select low soon after the in- vention of the printing press. A copy of it is new preserved in the Leipsie library, and the greatest news it contained was a description of the discovery of America. It was printed in 1494, just about the period the discoveries were made. Born in (ter- niany, the newspaper then gravitated to- wards l“ ‘ance, where it existed in it slipshod manner for it couple of centuries. The ï¬rst development worth speaking of occurred at the time of the French revolution, in 1789. An oliicial journal published in Paris at the time issued 2!, scum-weekly edition, which waisztt the lime considered unintter of some moment. Artemus Ward and the " Michigan Reg- iment." $1,000,000.00. J. (103‘!) d: SON, \Voodu‘lm'k. 01H. »<-’>o¢ #0 4.0.» .01 humors from the blood. Vthn they are gom‘. the disorders they produce disappear. such as Ulcerations of the Liver, Slonuwh. K'idmys. Lungs, Eruptions and Eruptz'rc Disoascs of Hm shiny, SI. Anthony/'8 Fire, Rose or Erysipclas, Pimplrs. J’urstules. Blott'hcs, Bails. Tumo Tctfz'r and Salt Rheum, Scam 1105111, If)? (,~ worm, Ulcers and Sores, Rheumatism. JVaurâ€" (Light, Pain L the Bones. Sidr and IIuad, Fa- man IVca/m ,ss. Sterility, meorrhma arising from internal ulceration, and utcrinr (list‘asmu "POP-5'â€, DIISIICpsia, E7na('f(l.h'0n and Gcnc , Dcln’ll'fm \Vith their departure health rutul‘ns‘. humors in the system, that undennine health and. settle into troublesome disorders. Erup- tions of the skin are the apnearauce on the surâ€" face of humors that should be expelled from the blood. Internal derangements are the do: termination of these same hmnors to some in- ternal organ, 01' organs, whose action they dc- range, and whose substance they diseasoand glestmy. A Away? SARï¬AI‘ARILLApoelS these, The Secret of Beauty. N0 cosmot c in the world can impart beau- ty to a, face that is disï¬gured by unsightly blotches arising from impure blood. Bur- dock Blood Bitters is the grand purifying medicine for all humors of the blood. It makes good blood and imparts the bloom of health to the most sallow complexion. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGIS'I‘S AND DEAL- Ii RS IN MEDICINE. I’ll-st Pr 0 l’rm‘hminl‘ll‘ ' Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, For Purifying the Blood. DR. J. U. AYER 85 00., Lowell, Masa, [)0 NWT Bl} DECEIVED by articles bearing similar names. Be sure you get DR. WIS’I‘AR’S BALSAM 0F WILD CHERRY with the signature of “ I. Butts "on the wapper F. E. DIXON & CO. Wanted a section or haif-sec- tion of Solid Prarie Farm Land near a Railroad Station prefer- red. Price from $2 to $4 per acre. Address letter Drawer 3|, Hamilton, Ont. LEATHER BELTING Manitoba Farm Lands FOR FRESH RELIABLE SEEDS 1882. GARDEN 86 FARM SEEDS. 1882. ROBERT EVANS & 00., WILL CERTAINLY CURE Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Influenza, Asth- ma, Whooping Cough, Group, and every Affection of the Throat, Lungs and Chest, including Con- sumption. Sold by all Druggists. 50 (Rams and $1.00 a Bottle. Catalogues mailed free, an application. u-lirnl and Analytical (‘homl m’ll'ha mailed freé to ali ihténdmg gurchaaars on up pliant inn ï¬rmer: wishing a rel-iab 6 change of Seed. ‘Gxain, era, .hould order early grim; on; apghoatign. ‘- nu-v“vn «A A 3,", u V. .0. v... . - .wu vn :- “vow-In. Wit. RENNIE, Spedamzinflrorontoféanada. IIlqï¬rptgngtfloguefor l882 SEEDS MAN L' FA CT URERS 0F llulnslrln! I EL. HAMILTON. 0ST. â€"~S]‘I.\'D TO "â€" None genuine unless with a STAR on the head of the rivets. 81001b0r1138t.. Toronta. PREPARED BY M‘ Send for Price Lists and Discounts. I “54)! SANDS 03‘ “um: ('uralivo Hun: been sold. qnd am doinga good worK. Try 01‘s.! 1 (Inn-0n ‘ . Toronin BELTS This compound of the vegetable/ulter- utivos, Sal‘saparilln, Dock, Stillingia. and Mandrake, with the lodides of Potash and Iron. makes a most, effectual cure of at series of complaints which are very pro- valent and aflï¬cting. It; puriï¬es the blood, p11rgc§out §110111rk§ng Ottawa. Hamilton. London , Toronto, Toronto, 187 187 137 [87 183