Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 19 Dec 1861, p. 4

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«Where is thy home 7" a sweet mild face . 5 ; Fiat # i Sabbath PAusings. | Domvestic Econom. ye HOME, / All o this dep will be thankful " Where is thy home #' a stranger asked A simple viHage maid ; « Sion aaron the green," said she, " er grassy glade, % A pleasant place and fair to see; 'hough we are of the poor ; Centented with our lowly lot, We UH more." 5 «Where is thy home ?'* he asked again, « Where ?*' said a stripling gay, ¢« Nay, ask me not, I cannot tell, My. home is far away : J Far,'mid the battle and the strife, Where worlds are won and lost ; Or else upon the stormy sea, By wind and tempest toss'd." Turn'd as the stranger spoke, A thousand memories in her heart To sudden anguish woke. « My home !--alas ! long years have pass'd Since I a home could claim j Now husband, children, all are gone, And home is but a name." The stranger Upon an old man grey; So bent and feeble that he scarce Could wend his weary way. : «Where is thy home > once more said he, « Thou lookest old and wan; A cosy homestead should be thine For thy remaining span." used, and cast his eye. The old man rested on his staff, ? And feebly shook hus head ; ¢ 1 rest my worn-out frame,"" said he, «Upon a pauper's bed ; Yet I desre no better lot Than God tome has given, No earthly house I ask or crave ; I hava a home in Heaven." No Mansion to go to. Many years ago, you might have noticed, in one of our large cities, a sorrow stricken | young man, with a lady leaning upon his | arm, entering a large, handsome house on street. They ascend silently to a chamber in the thiid story; in the north- west corner of the house. The room is spa- cions and airy, the furniture all rich and ele- gant, but the room all darkened to the som- breness of twilight, for a sick man les stretched upon the couch. He is panting for breath, yet he is fully conscious of all that is passing around him. The young man who has just enterel is his eldest son. In that same room are a group of younger children, from Auna, the grown, and before it ripens, pare and cut in child of seven, upwards to the eldest bro- ther. The wife of the sick man, the mother of the children, 18 well nigh prostrate in her gnef, for n has come upon her in an unex- pected moment." Two weeks ago, her hus- band was the strong active man of business, full of his plans, and prosperous in them all. These two weeks, how quickly have they been riumbered ! The slight illness, the feeble, pallor stricken frame, then the deep- seated fover, and the mastery of disease-- these have brought the strong one to the gate of the grave, and he has summoned his family together, that, in as brief a manner as possible, he may dispose of his property to them. « Henry must have the house on----street and half the ownership of--=block ; Adam and James the block of hotises in --place ; Maria, the house om----street. Wife and Auna must remain here, and--."" But the father can preceed no further. Choking with emotion, and his great weak- ness, have overcome him; he falls back, draws his arms acrose his eyes and remains sileot. Dear little Anna, his pet, his dar- ling, she comprehends but slightly the | meaning of their doings, but her heart is breaking for father. He is going to die, to leave them ; this she knows; but where is he going ? A It1s not a religious family; they have been kind. aimiable, and true to each other, but they have been living for this world. In the bosom of this child, untrammelled thought pierces beyond the present ; and in that deep, sad stillness, with the sick man just about to step into the dark, unknown future, she makes the startling enquiry, " Have you a house papa, where you are going 1° Oh! noj the poor man had not a house prepared for him. 'He had never wanted the Saviour to prepare a place for him, and nobody in the wide universe could give him a heavenly mansion. Are there not many, very many, in his condition ? Reader have you a hoe where you are going. The effect of Prayer. Most persons find no difficulty in believ- ing that prayer exerts a desirable influence on the worshipper himself; but even this can hardly bey if it is? enerally uuderstood that is all. Indeed, I cannot help thinking that conscience itself wsuld dissuade many from resorting to prayer, if brought to look on it as no better than a kind of well-meant cheat whielywe praeti n ourselves for its gL ey Pray rie the much effect on ourselves, muft bo bilieved to have an effect on God. Tt 18 too soleran a transaction by far 1 be ade use of asa kind of spiritual glrateay. No ; make not our prayers to seem ong Hing and be avother. Strike not our devotions dead by the skeptical sophiem gu they can only have an effect on oursel- ill have an effect on God; for fe has said that that they will, and the pro- mise has been ratfied and confirmed in the experience of holy and devout men of all ages. They will have an effect ou God ; for He who is " in the body of the Fathet" has said that they will. ¢ Ask, and it shall be given you ; seek and ye shall find." Agam it is said : --¢ Let ns 'come boldly unto the Throne of Grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of need," table matter fram a swamp, and placed in a And more aflectingly still in the words of | cellar, is covered with a layer ten inches the text ;:-- If ye, ng evil, know how to -vour_ehild: ch how 3 ore shall your Father Shilaen or aster derived from 1 in heaven give good things to them that ask him." Wherefore, ¢ Be eareful of Boifing 3 but.in e: ing by | .snpplica- tion, wil his Nex your rontioet be made known unto ; and the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall , | little hop yeast to raise it. avatér. " He selects the most vigorous ones, op py i] received, and puctually inserted, each week, under the above heading. GeraTiNe Soar.--It is impossible to cleanse greasy dishes, unaided by soap, and many soft hands are rendered unfit for needlework by daily immersions in hot dishwater. As an emollient for chapped skin and a superior soap where a guick lather is desired, 1 would i the following recipe :--To two pounds of olive soap cut up into small slices, add two ounces of borax, put the ingredients into a creek, pour over two quarts of cold water, set the vessel on a part of the range where there is but little heat, stirnng occasionally until the borax 1s dissolved (eight or nine hours,) and when cooled, a thick gelatine 1s pro- duced, which housekeepers=need use. but once to prove its efficacy and economy.-- Selected. ; Hor YEAsT.--Take as many polaioes as you wish--say a dozen--pare and boil them in just water enough to cover them. When they are boiled oft, mash them fine in the water, and thicken with flour while .it is scalding hot, a little thicker than pancake batter ; when it is sufficiently cool, add a When it comes up it will be fit for use, and may be vsed for bread or biscuit the same as any other yeast. This yeast may be kept from one to four weeks, according to the coolness of the weather and the place you keep itin. It should be covered tight from the air. 1 keep it in a small-mouthed jar, with an oil- cloth tied tight over it.--D. W., in North- western Prairie Farmer. Wasnive Woorens.--~If you do not wish to have white woblens shrink when washed, make a good suds of hard soap, and wash the flannels in it, without rubbing any soap on them ; ub them out in another suds, then wring them out of it, and put them in a clean tub, and turn on sufficient boiling water to cover them, and let them remain till the water is cold. A little indigo, in thad boiling water, makes the flannel look nicer, If you wish to have your white flannels shrunk so as to have them thick, wash them in soft soap suds, and rinse them in cold water. Citron Pic.--Take the citron when small pieces, stew until soft, in very little water. For each pie take half a teacup of sugar; one tablespoonful of butter; one heaping teaspoonful of cream of tartar. Fla- vor with nutmeg or lemon, sprinkle a little flour over the whole and bake with two crusts, same as apple pie. This recipe is for the benefit of those who have not the Pie Melon, and who live where they are obliged to eat turnips for apples.--Lucy A. Bram- hall, Wilmington, ML., 1861. Tue Kine or Pumpkins.--The French papers announce that the annual ceremony lately took place of promenading the King of the Pumpkins, that is to say the largest Pumpkin offered for sale. It weighed 242} 1bs., and was 10 ft. 4 in. circumference. What is the largest pompkia ui squash ever raised in this country ? Can any of our readers tell? The largest we ever re- collect seeing weighed, we think, abont 200 Ibs. Porrep Corn Pupping.--Take one pint of popped corn and soak it in one quart of milk for three hours ; then add three pound- ed crakers ; one egg, and salt and sugar to the taste. Bake three-quarters of an hour. agricultural, How to Store Potatoes to Prevent Rot. The Scottish Farmer has the following useful and seasonable hints on storing pota- toes : -- Before the appearance of the dis- ease in 1845, it was quite common to store potatoes in large masses in houses. The roots wotlld often keep sound in this state through the greater part of the winter." No fermentation was induced, and any little, heat generated had the effect of causing the roots to sprout. Since that time, however, things have' been entirely changed. In 1845 the larger portion of the crop was taken up to all appearance quite sound ; bug whenever it was stored in large pits or in houses a destructive lermentatior was in- duced, which speedily}reduced the roots to a rotten mass. It has/been observed that thunder storms seem to stimulate the latent seeds of the disease, and promote first the destruction of the haulm and then ghatyof the tubers. It has been found that putting to- gethor potatoes in large quantities, has often had the eflect of spreading the taint through the whole. For this reason it is seldom that they are now stored in houses. The smaller the quantities that can be put together the better, as it will diminish the risk of their speiling. The narrower, there- fore, the -pits are made, so much the more chance is there of the roots keeping through the winter, and not sprouting prematurely in spring. Itis far from i to begin to store before the weather becomes cool, as heat i very apt to spread the destructive taint, 3 : 4 EN -------- wo New FrEncu MEeTuOD oF GROWING Musurooms.--Thg French correspondent of the New York 7V¥mes gives the following new and simple mode of growing mush- rooms: " A method has been discovered and reported to the Academy of Sciences for producing mushrooms artificially in any locality. Dr. Labourette, the discoverer, first develops mushrooms by placing spores on a glass on which he has spread sand and and it is with the mycelium of these that he obtains the magnificent speci of mushrooms he exhibited to the Academy.-- He disposes his ground in the folowing man- ner: Some damp earth, composed of vege- thick of sand and river gravel, and this, in another, six inchs thi ebm posed htion of houses, He sprinkles the earth-bed with water contaming two grammes [thirty-one troy grains neatly] of azotate of potash tothe square yard, after having first sown thereon the myceMim. The specimens shown at the Academy had grown in six days, and the discover asserts that the action of the id A A sho APS rs A. © ¥ ---- ----a nt A ------ at oa -- va-- Babb § 2 1 So acaVee cu B J. W. MORRIS Has just received a large and complete as- sortment of Fall & Winter Goods which he is Selling Cheap, Cheap, FOR CASH! All who Want Bargains Should Call at Ohce ! Borelia, Oct. 16, 1861. 44-1f IMPORTANT NOTICE! THE Subscriber hereby begs to call the attention of all indebted to the LATE FIRM OF CG. & M. CURRIE, whose notes and accounts are due, to the necessity which now exists of making prompt payment this Fall, as the circum- stances of the late (irm make it necessary that all debts should be called in as soon as possible. All therefore remaining unpaid after a reasonable time has elapsed will be put in Court for collection without any fur- ther notice. The subscriber is authorized to collect the debts due to, and to pay the debt due by, and to settle ail matters that in any way '| effect the business of the late firm, as speedily as possible. GEORGE CURRIE. Grain, Pork, &c. : A full' adsortment of General Merchan- FASTORY!! SIMCOE STREET, PRINCE ALBERT. HE Subscriber respectfully informe the inhabitants of Prince Albert, surronnd- ing villages and country, that he is still carrying on business in the above line Opposite Jno. Heard's Blacksmith Shop, Where he wifl_be happy to supply the wants ol his customers with a superior ar- ticle on reasonable terms, and feels confi- dent that" by leavirig yeur orders with 'him, you will find the workmanship and material such as cannot fal git oniversal eatis- faction. Orders a epairs P: Attended ha romply ALL WORK WARRANTED. (Z~ Ref given if : EB. CASH. keep your hearts and minds through Jesus Christ."--Dr. Walker's Sermons. azotate of potash lasts six yours." Prince Albert, Sept. 255186 ALA N. B. Cash paid for all kinds of | i+ o Fh t= Fine Clothing made to Prince Albert, October 29, 1861. Al Dry Goods, Clothing, Groceries, : Crockery, Hardware, Boots and Shoes, &c., # Which he intends to Sell for Cash and Cash Only! 3 i At sach prices as will be aa advantage to all parties wishing to purchase. The Stack is now complete in every department. iB-GIVE HIM A CALL! Order. = 46-tf STOVES which he is Zell Cheap for Cash, ing elsewhere. Prince Albert, Oct. 30, 1861. ES ------ STOVES The Subscriber has on hand a well assorted Stock of Cooking, Faler, & Box Stoves prepared to or Approved COredit! Also a large Stock of Tin, Japanned ware, Zinc, Stove-PiPes, etc. Particu'ar aitention paid 10 Eve. Troughing, and Job Work of every description Intending purchasers will save monev by inspecting my stock previous to purchas. 0 Shop adjoining the Post Office. (16 6m) hid T. PROWN. THE BALL ROLLING ! STILL THEY COME. ALSO Tin, Sheet-Iron, In fact every thing connected with his line Prince Albert, Nov.20, 1861+ samuel P, Barber \ OULD RESPECTFULLY INFORM &iS FRIEND: AND THE PUBLIC GEN- erally that he is now receiving his Fall supply of . Cooking, Parlor, § Box Stoves, Which he is Selling on the most Liberal Terms for CASH OR APPROVED CREDIT ! STOVE-PIPES, Copper, Sheet-Zine, §c. 0% Sheep Sking, Rags, old of business. Copper, and most kinds of Country Produce taken in exchange. Cash customers take particular notice : you can buy Stoves with ready cash as cheap at Barber's as m any other Establishment inthe County of Ontario. 49-f DONOVAN, WALKEY & GO. (LATE IRA B. CARPENTER,) MANUFACTURERS OF Carriages, Buggics, Sleighs. CUTTERS, &c. BROCK - STREET, WHITBY. All of the above work exectue All work warranted. Call and see specimens. d with neatness and despatch Remember the address. dize on hand at low prices. is & BDYAN WW 'pr PO 0. CURRIE | Whitby, Sept. 6, 1859, 39 DONOVAN, WALKEY & CO Prince Albert, Sept. 12, 1861. (39-1 gia 2 \ CE-- 2iz Bs 2 5 NEW TAILORING ® BEd 1 3 ESE 'CQ & hy Cc ; S w fT SIE AR fsy Z ETSABLISHMENT : a t £32 8 # iz iz z HE SUBSCRIBER HAVING RENTED | Fass & Ei if EE Tele = the premises lately occupied by Mr. te = BEE Unger, on doors east of the Anglo-Ameri- er $ 53 E mu g w i v 2 can Hotel, where all kinds of Tailoring EE =) > =i iS -. 88 will be done in the most Fashionable and reed m © 5 ; 7, u 8% 2 Approved Styles, with neatness a dos a. bry Wi 5 z "ng g £53 atch, and hopes by strict attention to busi- = = £ ow a Ee Se and punctuality to all orders to merit a Sarma i bo - = 9 k= =} gy © SEES liberal share of public patronage. A | 2 a =i = tm Li E EZro Merchants Cloths also made up.-- An------ I a & - E T oA 2aE 2 = All "work done on the riost reasonable 5} = E g BB EHEREE 2 terms. 3 = ~~] = kd 2's 5 eS 3 - aQ = Ye = Q EE> . (= CUTTING ATTENDED TO. £3 = e 5 2.8 2 ERE ni nl ama | ®t 525 [Irifis © . . BULLEN. - E OB FrLgfEs 3 Prince Albert, March, 28, 1860. 15441 | Qu-- & g 3 40 ee EERE 3 5 o TEES 1 ' wr 3 | 22225 E. CASITS =: ziti] - - = (3 wes 5 - Pump & Fanning Mill 8 A | o=5iiesd & = and examiue before going elsewhere. ) 0 Don't forget DEFOR' C Superior class of Work, manufactured of th Whitby, November 21, 1860. arriage Factory on Brock Street. HORD, CARRIAGE MAEER, BROCK STREET WHITBY. Th: SUBSCRIBER in returning his sincere thanks to his friends and the Public gen- | h hitherto so Jiberally patronized 3 ke aanont Fosidence, they will find, ai all tmos a superior class of LIGHT AND HEAVY CARRIAGES Constantly on hand, which wll suit all classes of customers. They will do well to call would sdy that he. intends to where you will finda best materials aid by the choicest workmen. y + 'D. FORD, Proprietor. LOCK" NH DAVIS HAS NOW OPENED ouT Bis. IMMENSE STOCK OF FALL AND WINTER: | Eldon, Aug. 22, 1860. Encourage Home Manufacture ! G. W.IRVINE OULD respectfully announce to his i Friends Hp ublic, that he now in operation, i FOUNDRY In the flourishing village of Uxbridge, where he i d fi such A Itural Implements as the country may require of he d d Pat 'the best Material and most app - terns. As none but the best workmen will ployed, the workmanship may ba relied on. Threshing Machines ! Having engaged Mr. M. W. Forster, who is well and favorably known as a machinist, ties ordering machines, may rely on getting them made, not only in a' substantial mauner, but with all' the late valuable Improvements. Plows, Cultivators of various sizes, Road- Scrapers, Straw-Cullérs, &c. Particular attention will be paid to the Manufacture of the most popular patterns of Plows, including the Canadian Iron Beam: He will also continue to keep constantly on hand an assortment of Stoves, Pots and Sugar Kettles, All of which he intends offering at prices which' he feels confident will merit support. 23 Oun Trox, Brass & CoPPER TAKEN IN EXCHANGE. He takes this opportunity of tendering his grateful acknowledgments, for the very libe- ral favors received during the past winter, and hopes, by strict attention and just deal- ing, to merit a large share of public patronage. Uxbridge, April 15, 1861. R.' WALSH, Horse Farier! S NOW IN THIS NEIGHBORHOOD, and will be in readiness to attend to all who may favor him with a call. He is well acquinted with the mode of pricking, and trimming ; and ean treat sfccessfully any disease that horses are subject to. CHARGES MopeRaTE. Residence PRINCE ALBERT. Prince Albert, June 6, 1860. 25-tf 18-1y Splendid Farm To be sold by private sale 120 acres, 22 acres cleared, situated on the Portage Road, 5th con. of Eldon, 12 miles from Bea- verton, and 12 miles from Woodville. The land is of the very best deseription, being of loamy soil, mixed with limestone gravel, timbered with hardwood. For further par- ticulars apply to Mrs. Campbell on the pre- mises, or to M. G. Robson, Prince Albert. MRS. CAMPBELL. N.B.--All letters must be pre-paid. 36-tf MYERS & SPRING, Licensed Auctioneers FOR THE COUNTY OF ONTARIO, EG most respectfully to return their sin- cere thanks to the inhabitants of the County of Ontario, for the liberal support which they have received from them, and of the same. Having a License for the whole © ounty, they ate prepared to attend all orders' with promptness and on liberal terms. Address, THOMAS MYERS, Whitby P. O. Whitby, Feb. 18, 1861. GOOD NEWS. Courtice & Rolph 8 AYU received a quantity of New Goods, comprising Whalebone and Gut Whips [just imported from England.] Horse Nets, Saddles, Bridles, Martingales, and Harness of all desbriptions, all of which will be sold at the lowest renunerating pro- fits. Please call and examine for your- selves, ! Prince Albert, Ang. 8, 1860. Meat! Meat !! W HO WANTS FRESH MEAT? The Subscriber wishes to supply the wants of the people in this line. His Butcher Stall will be found at No. 47, North Street, Poit Perry ; a short distance west of W. 8. Saxton's Mill, where he will keep a good supply of the above mentioned article. He will continue mis usual route (D. V.) through Port Perry, Borelia, Prince Albert, and Manchester every Monday, Wednes day and Saturday. He will also visit Utica and Epsom every Tuesday ; Sonya and Harper's Store every Thursday. JOHN MIDDLETON. Port Perry, April 15, 1861. 18-1y ROY AI, MATL. New Line of Stages from Oshawa to Manilla in 5 hours, IRST-CLASS Hor: and Stages and careful Drivers, s is one of the cheapest and best lines by far for passengers going east or west by the Grand Trunk Rail- road. Stage leaves MeElhoy's Hotel, Osh- awa, on the arrival of the Cars from east and west. Every morning, leaves Manilla 1 time for Cars going east and west. Pas- sengers by this line going to Lindsay get there the smne evening. Wn. THOMAS, Proori -- COULTHARD, § Toprietors: N. B. Mr. Thomas is well known for ALBERT SPRING, Greenbank P. O. 10-tf 34-tf very attentive and -obhging to passengers Try it by alt means and you will be con vinced that this is a first-class line. 9-1 ROYAL MAIL STAGE to manage the mechanical department, par- | 1 would kindly solicit a further continuation | y over twenty years on this route, for being ! W. H. CARD, ~ Pentist, ER Dentist, (OF THE FIRM OF CALLENDER: & CaRD,) WHITBY, .C. W,, OULD intimate to his numerous cus- ; tomers, and the public generally, 5 that he is still ~ Va INSERTING TEETH Upon the most modern and roved me- thod of the art. TEETH FILLED with the most app { material, and warr Do not be humbugged by the would-be Di 3 A tod; 1H gh the foun- try, but come to responsible persons, and get your work done by those that have perma- nent offices, and not be cheated by those ke that are ing around through the country, here to-day and away to-morrow. Dental Rogms over Mr. Carleton Lynde's Store, Dundas Street, Whitby. Whitby, June 5; 1861: DISSOLUTION (OF PARTNERSHIP. T= Partnership hitherto existing be- tween Hurd & Billings, at Prince Albert, and Billings & Hurd, at Port Perry, has been dissolved by mutual consent. JOHN BILLINGS: P. A. HURD. June 1st, A. D., 1861. 25-tf HEATHER BALM OW IS IT THAT THERE IS SUCH H A DEMAND FOR THIS MEDICINE? Facts answer the question. Because by it the blind receive their sight. Because by it the deat are made to hear, and hence they beceme to know the use of the organs of speech, and the hitherto dumb are enabled to «peak ; and becavse by it the lame that were unable to lay a foot under them for many years, have been enabled, to walk by a few applications. In one. instance, a * complicated case of Chronic Rheumatism and White Swelling, of four years' standing, during which time the legs had to be kept in a horizontal positien. The nights and days of those four long years were epent in extreme suffering. Reader, think of the joy when in one hour and forty minutes' ap- plication, by the proprietor of this Medicine, the patient was enabled to walk as well as ever, and free from pain. Alike in cases of Piles, of from one lo twenty years' standing, in which Surgical operations and every Medicine that conld be thought of had fmled. This Balm has given perfect relief in a few days, and made a complete and permanent cure in from two to six weeks. All Chronic Dis- eases treated with the same success. 25-1y Extraordinary Cure of Deafness. ToroxTo, May 16, 1561. itnessed the examination of John Fallic, we J in ndding ow testimony 10 the very oige Molen persete mg and eneige nent in his case, Leing that of u vl mute, who is sinted by Lis parents 10 have Feen den: an dumb fron. binh. The subject 18 now 44 yenrs of ape, and after three weeks of untiting zenl and artonticr: nt the hands of Mr. Mclean, < now enal led not only i 10 hear, but 10 articulate distinctly the letters of the alpha- bet, a pronounce 'some s he has already m nnce of the treat results "I'l simple, consisting of syringe. ui ternal application of what he Im," composed of vegetable consider perfectly safe. wnd in y i other remedies have failed, have proved cnmently si cessful. syllibles. Such is the have ne doubt a i produce sill further ament of Mr Mel, is very the mternal and ex- his ** Heather JAMES McILMURERAY M R >. RX England. WILLIAM HALLOWELL, M. MR. C. 8. Edinburgh. D., Toroxto, November, 1859. Me. Grorcr McLray.--Dear Sir --We the under- signed, being fully convinced of the great value of yo Hewther Balm. from the facts, of many extinordinary cures it has made in our midst, cheerfully and suongly recommend it to the public, . Hewand, President] O'Donchoe Alderman. Toronto kxchange. [J Hutelvsen. ¥ix- Mayor. John Cameron, MPP. Enoch Wood, E dent of Wesley ference and ~ Genera [B. ¢ Superintendent of Wes- leyan Missions, Cainda Angus Morriso ; John McLeod, W. P. Howlun P.P. J Hillyard Cameron. Q. C A. 2 Geo Douglas, Superintend-| st ent West Circuit, WIR v. M., Toronto. mai. County At ohoe, Auctioneer aad Commission Mer- Captain of the al Zimmerman. Idernan. dgur, Prim. . Min. For further particulars see my Family Herald, which can be had of me or any of my agents. GEO. McLEAN, 83 Bay-st., Toronto. JAMES HOLDEN, Wholesale and Retail Agent, PRINCE ALBERT. Toronto, Aug. 14, 1661. 35-1f NEW TREATMENT, Bufialo Medical Pispensary ESTARLISHED FOR THE CURE OF Dyspepsia, General Debiith, ever & Ague, Old--_, Ulcers, Scrofula, Lrysipelas, Fistula, Piles, Kidneys, Dehlity, In- firmities of Youth & Old Age, &c., &c. 06 NO MERCURY USED. 4x Dr. AMOS & SON, 48 East Genesee Street, three doors west of London. Ig uni 9 at night, in every singe end sym pie Thie treatment they adopt is the result of i thirty yeurs? extensive prt Loudon, There is an evil habit sometimes in solituce often growing up with 1h and which. ifnot reformed by them in due time, not only begets serous ol stucles 10 wutiimoninl happivees, ut i rise to a series of protrcied, lasdious, and devas- ction. Few of those who give way to this © 'us practice ure aware of the consequences, until hie neivous system shat'e ed. feel suange und ealth, for nothing discuses causes of sutlering down 10 ay ous system tapi y y, wastes away the en- ergies of life, causes" mental derangement, prevents tle J EAVES Whitby daily, ing with J the Northern Ye for Manilla, Bea~- verton, and Lindsay. This is the shortest and cheapest route from Toronto to either of the above places. This stage leaves Secrip~ tures Hotel, every moremg (Sundays ex- cepted) on the arrival of the trains from east and west, and-arrives in Prince Albert in time for the stages going north. Returning, leaves Prince Albert on the arrival of the Northern Stage and arrives in Whitby in time for the Trains going eastand west, ' Good accommodation, and careful, obliging drivers. } N. RAY, Proprietor. Sept. 28, 1858. PHL proper I of the system, disqualifies for mar- riage, society, business. aud ull caithly happiness, ard 'eaves the sufferer wrecked in Lody snd mind, predis- posed to consumption and a A evils more 10 be dreaded thun death nselr, es YOUNG MEN TAKE PARTICULAR NOTICE. Dr. ANOS & SON take pleasure in announcing 1a they have invented a most unportant inshument for the cure of the above disenses. [It hos Leen subjected 1o a test by the most eminent physicmus in Landon, Philaddelphia-and New Coll, it hae Leen declmed t only 'Useful instrument ever invented for the cure of Senunal Wenkness, or any disease of the genital organs, Priew. $10 by cred by the secret habits of youth. Mail or Express. & i : + N B.--Dr. AMOS & SON, m YW i Division Courts for 1861 in the County of in good orde NEW REMEDIES AND QUICK CURES, of the Riduoys, Diseases of the Head, "I'hroat, Nose, and £k, and all those drendinl affections arising from a secret habit of youth, Which prodgee eonstituiionsl de hility, render Sarringe impoueple and, in the end, de; stroy both body and nid. te 4 # -- . COUNTRY INVALIDS, Personsin any part ofthe world may be successfully treated by warding a correet detail of their case, wit! a remitiance fur medicines, &c., which will be returned with the utmost dispatch, secure (rom observations |ory Ontario, No.1 No.3 Ne®3 No.4 No.6 No. 8 April 2 1 0 9-1-0 : May 2 1 1 18: ---9: "FQ June 3 1 23 29 5 6. July 2 1 [] 0 0 0. Augmst © 0 [) 16 11 ee September 3 © 8 97. a. 5. .l.& October © 2 1 0 0 Q i= November - '2 1 15 16 015i, December 3 2 20 31 11.2018, Z. BURNHAM, Jvpce. | Sr A TL o POS ap Address Pr. AMOS & FON, 48 Fast Gen acc Stiect thice doors west of Shien 49 BUFFALO N. 1. NN : arg the RT id £0 od | ai = For Seminal Weakness, Pains in the Loins, Affection | "I'hroa

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