BRITISH S^YAGKS. ,He Kngli«l» iron Region-j Hw e wM t"cfjlisery and Despair. '4 riirffliB] (rham, England, letter to the says I never think of ^° in the "iron region " of South ,rel8 '"^\re •without recalling Punch's l^toon of the two wretched little ' .jeet boys saying to the passing " " " Please, sir, ain't we dirty and ^â- "^h enough to be taken care of, '-â- "'J a few of those honest British vrho are so eager to "convert the „ (jy aading the vices of civilization '^^^ nf barbarism would only take the â- •^ „ walk across the " Black Country" fr.A =ome time agoâ€" from the border â- "kshire to that of Cheshire, and eyes open on the way, they rvjrfficK i^eP their ,ee quite enough to convince them i gloomy title is amply deserved, and war of labor and capital has been upon many diversa fields, but ' •"he^re'^is"' plenty of the heathen in I tian Eogland " who stand in need of '^d teaching fully as much as the f. n or the Ganges or the fanatics of h long ' out -r- j^ it chosen a spot more gnmly ap- L te than the scene of the recent labor ^â- ?oun(i Birmingham and Wolverhamp- "'llie line of the Great Western rail- J -.jithe Mersey to theThamea, though Ljiaz and ending with true English TZ in its mcst charming form, passes r â- nice Bunyan'a pilgrim, through the 'of the Shadow of Death. At first -, you are among green Cheshire "w8, dotted with grazing cattle and "'dgerow3 and clustering trees, and a fflimpse of ancient Cheater looking with ita grim old ramparts and dark- Vhedral tower upon the broad smooth of the Dee. Then come the grassy lad dark woodlands of the Welsh and the houses of queenly Shrews- ue city of the " proud Salopians, " -J themselves along the heights that L yc its winding river, ou whose banks, nve centuries ago, Princ3 Henry ,j and Falstaff jested, and Douglas ;, 'and Hotspur died. IS soon as you begin to near the fatal all the freshness and brightness and •7 liies out of the landscape at once, ii the reeds and grass whirled down â- ^liead sea by the Jordan shrivel up â- £ih the moment they touch the dead- oiness of the lake. Kven the glori- fy sunshine can not pierce the league- r'eil of smoke which is the standard :.v the iron king over his own chosen :.. Ine whole fifteen miles between ::..amptou and Birmingham make one iinty, nlthy, hideous town. Bilston, lii'ton, Smctlnvick, "West Brom- iVeilDtsiiury, form a continuous chain ;i05!i, so to speak, between the two .entrrd c:iinps, arjl from first to last ;fvtr ouce esripe from the endless .t.i o! bhckeueii bricks and mortar. .haui't'd iuiieed is South StafTordshire •.his "jiarticular district of it most of ;:e ti-.j far- oil' days whea this mighty «iil-i its roaring tires and clangmg :, wa^ only the (juiet little village of ii.kam, whose name still lives in that suburb of West Bromwich, and in B'jlar corruption of Birmingham into r.igeffi. Obi joke nf the ill-favored man who â- aiJL'iity good-looking in the dark" is :o sadly true of this dismal region. .:,â- time to see it to advantage is at when all the filth and disorder are :. and when the transformed panorama :: a ghastly picturesqueness worthy ,:; himself. The midnight sky is all with countless furnaces, against the i-e o; which the tall factory chimneys ::t black and grim, while the stag- :jui3 around are changed to lakes of lad the weird, misshapen figures that ~i repass, look quite unearthlyj be- fr.at infernal splendor. But by day :arv landscape lies unredeemed in all i"u; deformity Huge, unsightly ;5, grimed with soot and dirt great .-.anaeys, outlined in all their gaunt ;= against a smoky, sunless sky ' broken timbers, rotting in pools hiack ilust and cinders cg^'ering â- I an n tiding the very air green, :thes :e?tei'ing under the shattered o: tumble-down hovels hideous -i rents scarring the earth in all crates and pit-scaSolds starting nioantains of rubbish like the half- •iitietonsof primeval monsters, and fe, a3 far as the eye can reach, and ashes below, till the whole las its ragged children will tell !i., unconscious poetry) hre burnt out." iLi.ve â- like V'0?.D,S OF WISDOM. ^:ty fxuqierates fools, dejects cow- •Wa out the faculties of the wise =triui, puts the modest to the ne- â- ^rying liicir skill, awes the opu- :!iakes the idle industrious. â€" Cole- "-ious CI men are like the index of a "«y point out what is most remark- -:...â€" .i./;;so/i. "':n oiteu puts men upon doing the -iees so climbing is performed in -â- posture with creeping. â€" Sicift. "-jts called beauty a short-lived tyr- "'ito, a privilege of nature Theo- â- isfieut cheat Theocritus, a sil- -ice Carneades, a solitary king- -^Kitian said that nothing was more • Aristotle attirmed that beauty was ' all the letters of recommenda- â- 'S" world Homer, that it was a [â- ; ii:t of nature, and Ovid, alluding " i" a favor bestowed by the gods. "'Maui. ^â- ^ities and fopperies the vanity of '1 is the greatest. True nobility is [••fom nature, not from birth. Titles, ;3ay be purchased, bnt virtue is the " '^hat makes the bargain valid. â€" I '%s,"saidaSunday-schooolteach- J^ss trying to impress the doctrine -«r.ce on the class; "now boys, !f^ bave told you, betrayed his a then went and hanged himself. j^ the best thing he could have done .^J^'Dg himself " " The very best ;*' he could have done," said the ;n the class " was to change his i«ct. Tke Trn« Home. !iaUy^f«#*epWwhere "Ole^toterw-..- If hZf ^T*;" fi"rt consulted. The object dJ^i V !l^ *^* *^*^ the point of ien- mHl ""' '«' P^^* "" which family lifetama. The first requisite Utomak^it so attractive that none of its ii«»~i itfB shall care to linger long outside its limits. All legitimate means should be employed to this end and no effort spared that can contribute to the purpose. iMany houses called homes, are tept with waxy neatness by painstakine ^ous women, who are so oppressive m their nicety as to exclude all home feeling from their spotless precincts. The very name of home is synonymous with peftonal freedom and relaxation from care. Bnt neither of these can be felt where such a mania for external cleanliness pervades the household as to render everything else sub- servient thereto. Many honsewives, if they see a speck on the floor or wall, or even a scrap of thread or a bit of paper on the floor, rush at it as if it were the seed of pestilence which must be removed on the instant. Their temper depends upon the mainte- nance of perfect purity and order. If there be any failure on their part, or any combma- tion of circumstances against them, they fall into a pathetic despair, and can hardly be lifted out. They do not see that cheerfulness 18 more needful to home than all the spotless- ness that ever shone. Their disposition to wage war upon maculateness of any sort in- creases until they become slaves to the broom and dust-pan. Neatness is one thing, and a state of perpetual house-cleaning quite another. Out of this grows by degrees the feeling that certain things and apartments are too good for daily use. Hence, chairs and sofas are covered, and rooms shut up, save for special oqcasions, when they are permitted *0 reveal their violated sacredness in a man ner that mars every pretense of hospitality. Nothing should be bought which is consider- ed too tine for the fullest domestic appro- priation. Far better is the plainest furni- ture, on which the children can climb, than satin and damask which must be viewed with reverence. When anything is reserved or secluded, to disguise the fact is extremely difficult. A chilly air wraps around it, and the repulsion of^trangeness is experienced by the most insensible. There are few persons who have not visit- ed houses where they were introduced to what is known as the company parlor. They must remember how uncomfortable they were while sitting in it how they found it almost impossible to be at ease, and mainly for the reason that their host and hostess were not themselves at eaise. The children were watched with lynx eyes, lest they should displace or soil something so that the entertainment of friends became very much like a social discipline. They mubt recall, too, how sweet the fresh air seemed out of doors, and they inwardly vowed, in leaving the temple of form and fidgettiness, that something more than politeness would be required to incite them to return. Home is not a name, nor a form, nor a routine. It is a spirit, a presence, a princi- ple. iMaterial and method will not, and cannot, make it. It must get its light and sweetness from those who inhabit it, from flowers and sunshine, from the sympathetic natures which, in their exercise of sympathy, can lay aside the tyranny of the broom and the awful duty of endless scrubbing. An quatlc " Marquis." How small a world this is to be sure In our early youth a roving disposition and a love for manly sports and exercises- look out ye scribes who throw off big words from small stomachs â€" used to take him, amongst other entertainments, to a sheet of water named " Hollingworth Lake," near iManchester, England. The lake is some mile and a half in length, and mighty proud iMancunians and other residents in its vicinity are of this (to them) big aqueous expanse. In it and on it we have passed many happy hours in the lang syne, and on several visits was highly entertained with a clever ornamental swimmer named iMar- quis Bibbero. Our readers must not surmise that this was a scion of the British aristocracy. Nothing of the sort. He was a weaver, or spinner, or something of that sort. It is quite common in rural Lanca- shire for illiterate and foolish parents to christentheir children" Marquis," "Squire," and even " Duke," jnst as Americans bestow post- baptismal handles upon children of a larger growth. Well, in pursuit of pabulum for the intelligent reader, we the other day made enquiries into the antecedents of Bebritl, the latest man who has expressed a determination to court death at Niagara, and lo Bebriel and Ribbero prove to be one and the same person. Why, if Bebreil- Bibbero is not an old man he must have discovered the famous elixir, for it must be fifteen or twenty years since we saw himâ€" then approaching his prime. Anyway, he is old enough to know better than at- tempt, or rather "tempt," Niagara's whirl- pool, and, between us, reader, we do not believe he ever meant to. Advertising has been reduced to a fine art m this new world of ours I Here are some figures which may interest Temperance reformers and others During the year 18S2 there were 38,377,820 gallons of proof spu-its distilled in the United King- dom of Great Britain and Ireland, of which 19,206,892 gallons ^^re distilled in Scot- land, 10,124,467 in England, and 9,046,461 in Ireland. England, however, consumed 16 811,494 gallons, Scotland 6,o02,9oo, and Ireland 5,239,815. It has been so commonld taken for granted that the average Irifihman is never wihout a bottle of whiskey under his armâ€" an idea founded chiefly upon the typical stage Irishman-that it will doubt- lis be a matter of surprise to many to find that there is really less drinkmg done in Ireland than in either England or Scotland. Of course if one comes to make compansons based on the relative populations of the three countries, it may possibly be found that Ireland drinks more than »« goodfor her nevertheless the fact renuuns that there is less whiskey distilled anf drank m Ire- land than in England or Scotland. Pat has faults enough. Heaven knows but a pro- l,ensity to drink whiskey is no more ohara^ terifitic of Pat than it la of John ^uU or Sdy They would all three be better Stl'ess, were they to rid themselves of the nropensity which exists. TtnXt la SnauBflr. Lightness Is the first ^sa^taal-^Kke the food and drink taken in warm weather. There is then less work to be done, less waste of tissne, leas need of the pre-eminent- ly muscle-forming and heat-producing sub- stances meat and bread and fruit, as beins both palatable and easily obtainable, ia mac£ in use. Its advantattee are that it provides a seasonable change of diet, light and whole- some if well chosen, and a palatable tonic and stimnlant of digestion with aperiens properties. There are few who cannot ent joy it in one form or another. For diabetes the only least desirable kinds, as certain nuts and almonds, are available, aJl others, as containing sugar, being forbidden. Sufferer- from acid dyspepsia must select carefully and limit their consumption to the least ir- ritating â€" a few strawberries and a few grapes. Diarrhoea and dysentry preclndi the use of all fruit. On the other hand, for constipated persons it if sometimes the only reliable remedy which they can use oontinu- ously with comfort it is also of benefit in reneal diseases, by its action on the bowel. Atonic persons generally tak^itwell, and feel the better for its digestive property. Those in ncnmal health may e»t almost any ripe fruit. The bland varieties are the most wholsome and nutritious â€" strawberries, ap- ples, pears, grapes and srooseberries. The last named, however, with currants and raspberries, are less wholesome than the others. Stone fruits are apt to disagree with the stomach but the more watery, as peaches and large plums, are better than the smaller and drier, as apricots and dam- sons. The pulp of oranges renders them heavy. Among other foreign fruit bananas are wholesome. Dried fruits, and the skins of fruit in general, are indigestible. Nuts, the edible part of which is really the seed, contain much albumen and some fat in a condensed form, and are particularly diffi- cult of digestion. Fruit may be taken with a meal or on an empty stomach. In the former case it promotes digestion by it gen- tly irritating effect on the mucous mem- brane of the stomach and intestine. If an aperient effect be desired it had better be taken iu the morning before breakfast or between meals. A succulent and pleasantly acid variety is best for both of these purposes while it is also a food. The quantity of fruit which should be taken depends on the kind. If it belong to the bland nutritious class, a healthy person may now and then partake of it as freely as of any other whole- some food but he will gain most benefit if he take only a li "tie and take it regularly. The same may be said of the invalid with whom fruit agrees. Cooking removes much of the acidity from crude fruit and renders it lighter as well as more palatable, tto treated, it is productive of good and at harm but it is a fundemental principle th whatever fruit is eaten uncooked it must be fully )ipe and not over ripe. This may sound trite, and, indeed, the principla is commonly admitted but not, it would seem, by all, for we still find people, and not a few, who will themselves deliberately take and worse, will give to the children, green gooseberries, green apples, c., the very hardness of which, apart from their acid pungency, suggest their unfitness for diges- tion. Sueh people use as food an acid irri- tant poison, whose necessary action is to cause excessive intestinal secretion, with more or less of inflammation. Hence arises diarrhoea. On the other hand, fruit, which is overripe, in which fermentation has be- gun, is a frequent cause of this disorder and equally to be avoided, and perhaps also more difficult to avoid because the insidious beginning of decay is not easily resognized. It should never be forgotten by any who in- cline to follow the season in their feeding, that the want of such precautions as the above may produce that dysinteric form of diarrhoea. "British cholera," which is occasionally as rapidly fatal as the more dreaded Asiatic type of that disease. â€" The British Medical Journal. Tlie Latest Bonanza in California. BiEBER, Cal.â€" Mr. Thomas P. Ford, editor of the Mountain Tribune, of this place, publishes that the great ipain-cure, St. Jacobs Oil, has worked wonders in his family, and that he would not be without it. He states that among all the people St. Jacobs Oil is the most popular medicine ever introduced. Wool batistes in checks and white and black mixtures will be much worn this fall. In the summer and the fall, the urchin climbs the garden wall, For green apples, in his frolic He will eat his fill, till, very ill, He's doubled up with Colic. The antidote is Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry â€" an unfailing remedy for Colic, Cholera iMorbus, Cholera Infantum and all Summer Complaints. (30) Heads, wings, breasts, and crests of birds are the favorite ornament* for fall hats. The most elegant French dresses, made of the richest India, changeable Venetia, and Lyons silks, have blouse bodices and cutaway over- jackets. A good head of Hair is a crown of glory to a woman and will hide many detects of feature, therefore use carboline if you want to be handsome it is cleanly and as pure as spring water and the perfection of Hair renewers. The London Queen reports a departure is the style of skirts ot young ladies' ball gowns the hitherto indispensable waterfall drapery qeing replaced by skirts of tulle and net ar- ranged ballet fashion in flounces of unequal length, which are trimmed with perpen- dicular rows of satin ribbon fastened lightly upon them, producing a pretty and novel efiect. The interest of most modem fiction turns on the joys and woes, the trials and tri- umphs of love. The novelist delights in episodes in which the tender passion is ac- tive. And yet, strange to say, no roman- cist has ever tried to put before us what â€" the experience of all who have passed through a period of amatoiy ecstasy will bear ns outâ€" is the moat] delicious, tender, -apturons part" of the billing and cooing of the smitten. They can describe their ges- tures and reproduce their whispered noth- ings which mean so much, but they cannot give us their silence which is the best part of the whole thing. Why do they not in- dicate in some way â€" by a row of dots or stars, say, or a blank space â€" these intervals of Beulah stilluess M4tt* mimiiWmpitei. lets " for her arvr and general debility, and has found them t»^ jf^od medicines, and would recommaocl ihem to all sufferers from Liver C!omplaint, Soar Stomach, and General Debility. Yoors fraternally, N. £. HABMON, Pastor M. £. Church, Elsah, IlL A velvet and velveteen season is pre- dicted. Bed-RlddoB mnA Cnxod W. E. HuESTis, ot Emporia, Kansas, says that his wife had been nek nearly seven years, and for the last four months bed- ridden. She has been treated by a number of physicians and only grew worse. Her at- tention was called to Dr. Pierce's " Grolden Medical Discovery" and "Favorite Pre- scription," which she commenced using. In one week she could sit up, and in three weeks could walk about. By druggists. Copper color and mignonette are gain fashionable. Young, midde-aged, or old men, suffering from nervous debility or kindred affections, should address, with two stamps, for large treatise, Wobld's Dmpeksaby Medical As- aocunox, Buffalo, N. Y. A dress entirely of silk is no longer correct for street wear. Corns Corns Corns !â€" Discovered at last a remedy that is sure, safe, painless. Putnam's Painlkss Corn Extractor never fails, never causes pain, nor even the slightest discomfort Buy Putnam's Com Kxtractor. and beware of many cheap, dangerous, and flesh-eating sub- stitutes in the market. See that it is made by PoUon Jt Co., Kingston. English jacketg and jockey cap bonnets will be much worn. In future every business and professiona man will need to know shorthand, aud per- haps telegraphy, if he wishes to succeed in life. Many business men employ shorthand writers paying them as high as $100 per month. The Collegiate Institute at King- ston, Ontario, of which A. P. Knight, M.A., is Principal, includes these subjects in com- mercial course of study, and every young man and woman should make a note of tlus, and obtain its proapectna before selecting a college in which to get a business training. This same school has long had an excellent record as the preparatory department of Queen's University. Bright woollen braids trim bjithing and yachting costumes. Important. When you visit or leave New York City, save Baggage Kxpressage and Carriage Hire, and stop at Grand Union Hotei, opposite Grand Central Depot. 150 elegant rooms litted up at a cost of one million dollars, reduced to $1 and upwards per day. European plan. Elevator. Restaurant supplied with the best. Horse cars, stages and elevated railroads to all de- pots. Families can live better for less money at the Grand Union Hotel than at any other flrst-class hotel in the cit French women wear bathing stays under their bathing dresses. Catarrh â€" A New Treatment whereby a Permanent Cure is effected in from one to three applications. Particulars and treatise free on receipt, of stamp. A. H. Dixon Son, 305 King-St. West, Toronto, Canada. Felt and velvet bonnets will be worn to the exclusion of plush, CHoiera In Canada. The best medical authorities state tha chol- era is making rapid strides towards this contin- ent. We strongly recommend as a preventive Dr. HoflQnan'a German Bitters, which cleanses the system, leaving no foothold for disease. 50 cent' per bottle. All chemists have it. Pointed or tapering crowns for bonnets are no longer fashionable. S Mrs. Partington declared the Neuralgia to be worse than the old Rheumatism but however bad either may be, Burdock Blood Bitters will conquer it. It also makes pure blood, regulating the Liver, Kidneys and Bowels, and eradicating scrofulous humor from the system, 25,000 bottles sold in the last three months. (25) New round hats have stiff high crowns and straight and rolling brims. The well-known drug firm of Ormand Walsh, Peterboro, writes that Dr. Fowler's Extract of WUd Strawberry is one of their " standard summer mediciues, and has a good sale." An unfailing remedy for all forms of Bowel Complaint. (26) Small shoulder capes or collars with full pleated ruffles are among late novelties. The fiuit merchant s strawberries may not fill the measure; but Dr. Fowler's Ex: tract of WUd Strawberry fills the measure every time in the people's requirements for an unfailing remedy for all forms of Sum- mer Complaints. (27) The long Newmarket ' coat and New- market bonnet, a jockey style, go together. Mr. W, J. Guppy, of Newbury, informs us that he has used Burdock Blood Bitters in his family with good effect, and adds that the Rev, J. R. Smith has Used it and speaks of it in high terms of praise. It is the great system-renovating tonic that cures all dis- eases of the Blood, Liver and Kidneys, act- ing harmoniously with Nature's laws, 25,- 000 bottles sold during the last three months. (28) The newest yachting costumes are made of white flannel,, with a loose blouse bodice, asailor collar and cuffs of some bright hue, and a deep kilted skirt, .finished at the edge with many rows of narrow braid, to match the collar. " A. P." 1.39 Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Limbago, Baokacbe, Headadie, Toothache. S«re Throat, •wellln**, SprMas, BnUMC, Baraa. 8c»lda. Frost Bltec IXD AUi Onota BODUiV Fiua ahd achxs. Sold bT DnmUU and De«ler« ererrwhere. Flttj Cbu • boUU. "" J 'â€" Direetloiu In 11 t«iifu«g««. THE'onARIXS A. VOGBUW Of. 11 mwlii I T-nâ€" "'••'•"' Si l W a M ^. â- 4, C*. A. From Mr« WABD KITCnBI.Ii. MaD »ser of Uie Bank of CommBree, HsnUlwB, Out. Hamilton. Jaanary IStb, 1833. J. N. ScTHXRLAiO), St. Catharines. My Dear Sir, â€" I am in raceipt of your favor of yesterday's date, asking my experi- ence with regard to RHEUMA TINE, and I have no hesktation whatever in pronouncing it a success in my cue, and in heartily recommending the remedy to those suffering from Rheumatism. I suffered for months with that trouble in my right arm and shoulder, and often was unable to use my hand, and at night the pain was frequently so great as to render Bleep an impossibility. I must confess that I entertained a repug- nance to "patent" medicines, but some of my frienda persuaded me to try " Rheuma- tine." and although it may be true that might have got well without it, one thing I do know, that aiter taking four bottlea the pain took ita departure, and have now the full use of my arm. 1 heartily wish you unbounded success, as I fully beheve your remedy is all that you advertise it to be. I am, my dear sir, yours most truly, E. Mitchell. Of all the sweets of which mortals can dream. There is naught to excel strawberries and cream. Neither is there any remedy known to mortals that can excil Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry aa a cure for Cholera Morbus, Cholera Infantum and all Bowel Complaints. (29) Grays, browns, and indefinite shades of blue or blue-green bid fair to be very popular. Practise economy by using the Triangle Dyes. Perfect in both dark and light thadea. Ask for three cornered package. 10 cents. Crushed strawberry is no longer fashion, able, shot blue aud plum color having taken its place. ROOFING.â€" CHEAP, DURABLiE, FIKE- PKOOF, easily put on. composed of 3 ply Felt cemented toftether for Flat or steep roofs. H. WIIjLIaMS, Manufacturer and dealer in Felt roofing materials, i Adelaide Street East, Toronto,^ ^^^ S" iOCK FARM FOR SAJjE. THE FINEST Stock Farm in Missisquoi County, Que., situated at Dunham, consists of 500 acres. Sugar Bush ot 2,000 Trees, 100 acres in Wood- land, 150 in Meadow balance in Plough Land and Pasture. Buildings worth the price asked for the farm. Never failing supply of water Send for circular giving full description. "Tl. K. THOMAS, Real Estate Agent, 131 St. James St., Montreal, Que. A FORTUNE. Any one wbo wlU retam this slip to the addreai below, with SO cenis in Btmps or eoin, will receiTe 4 articl**8 worth 10 tinie» 50 ct». which will enable them to cler from $5 to $2U per week. Money refunded to any one dla- sniisced. JAMES LEE CO., MONTREAL, CANADA. BEAVER S. S. JIjINE. WEEKLY BETWEEN Quebec, Montreal, and Liverpool, CALLING AT QUEENSTOWN AND BELFAST For lowest rates and all particulars apply to Sam. Osborne Co., "^^^^ IRON- â€" Bar, Fig, Ulieet, Hoop and Band. FIRE OLAY Bricks, Drains and Tiles. OILS- â€" Linseed, Castor and Seal. WIRE BRUSHES, TUBE CLEANERS. BOILER PURGEK. For Sale by COPLAND McL AREN Cor. Wellington Grey Nun Sts., Montreal. Dominion Line of Steamships Running in connection with the Grand Trunk Railway of Canada. Sailing from Quebec every Saturday during the summer months, and from Portland every alternate Thursday during the winter montiis. Sailing dates from Quebec :â€" Montreal. 4th Aug. Ontario, Ilth *Oregon, ISth Dominion, 25tltAnz. Toronto, 1st Sept. *SarnJa, Sth " Rates of passage Cabin, Quebec to Liverpool J50, 960, $65, $80; return, $90, $108, $117, $144 according to steamer and berth. Intermediate $iO. Steerage, $24. The saloons and staterooms in steamers markod thus • are amidships, where but little motion ia felt, and no cattle or sheep are carried on them. For further particu lars apply to any Grand Trunk Railway Agen or local agents of the Company, or to DATID TORRAXCE t CO., General Atrents, Montreal Professor Lispinard's SKIN BEAUTIFIER. This elegant Medicated Cream is warranted a i^ure Cure for all Pimples. Black Spots, Blotclies, and unsightly Eruptions on the face, neck and arms. It positively removes all such imperfections in a few days, leaving the skin clear and smooth. It will cure the worst case, though all other means have failed. For beautifying tbe complexion it is unrivalled. It makes the skin soft and white, and removes Tau, Freckles, and Sallowness. This is tbe only preparation recommended by physicians, warranted perfectly harmless and its use can- not be detected. One package lasts a month. Price, ($1) one dollar. Sold by Druggists, or sent by mail in plain wrapper, post-paid, on re- ceipt of the price. Sole proprietors for Canada. THE LISPINARD COMPANY Box 285, St. Catliarines. Ont. 38th Provincial Exhibition OF THE Agricultural and Arts Assooiation TO BE HELD AT GUELPH ON" THE 34th to 29th of September, 1883 Entries must be made with the Secretary at Toronto, on or before the undermentioned dates, viz: Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Swme, Poultry, Agri- cultural Implements, on or before Saturday, August 2dth. Grain, Field Roots and other Farm Products, Machinery and Manufactures generally, pn or before Saturday, September Ist. Horticultural Products, Ladies' Work. Fine Arts, etc., on or before Saturday, September 8th. Prize Lists and Blank Forms for making ttB entries upon can be obtained of the Secretaries of all Agricultural and Horticultural Societies and Mechanics' Institutes throughout the Pre- vince or to HENRY WADE, Secretary, Agricultural and Arts Assooiation, Toronto. D. P. McKINNON, President, South Finch.