HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1892-6-16, Page 3ANSAS TORNADO,
g Scenes in the Devastated
District,
the Amin], Destruction or the
Recent Storm.
ming dawned in the unfortun-
Wellington, a scene of almost un -
horror and desolation inet the
here yesterday stood rows of neat
structures and pretty cottages were
gb, shapeless piles of timbers, bricks,
and building materials of all kinds,
tivn together in almost inextricable con -
on. The tremendous force of the fun-
-shaped cloud which descended upon this
own last night withcut the slightest warn
ng can hardly be credited, and, in fact, its
effect must be seen to be appreciated.
The work of recovering the dead and in-
jured proceeded all night. After the ey-
chine had spent its fury it was continued
systematically by a gang of 200 men. Agon-
ized women and ,nen who had relatives
I I
r,
the injured, who were suffering fearfully
from lack of medical attention. Some of
the physicians have been sent on to Harper
to render assistance there.
Golden Thoughts for Every Day.
Monday—
God is enough Thou who in hope and fear
Toilest through desert sands of life, "sore
tried,
Climb trustful over deaths black ridge, for
• noar
The bright wells shine; thou wilt bo satis-
fied.
Clod doth suffice I 0. thou, the patient ono,
Who puttest faith in Ellin and none besides;
Bear yet thy load ;under the setting sun,
The glad tents gleam ; thou wilt be sati lied.
Edwin Arnold.
Tuesday. --For to make the condition o
our souls such as we would have it to bef
we must suppose them all knowing, even in
their natural simplicity and purity. By
these means they had been such, being free
from the prison'of the body, as well before
they entered into it, as we hope the.y shall
burled in the ruins ran here and there, cry- be after they are gone out of it. And from
nig piteously, and with bleeding hands tore
at the piles of bricks which concealed the
forms of their loved ones.
Fourteen bodies have been recovered, and
dozens of injured persona have been taken
from the ruins. % Many of these will the.
Opinions differ as sto-Whether the storm was
a cyclone or a tornado, but it swooped down
upon the town at 9 o'clock without the
slightest warning.
The same storm struck the little town of
Crystal Springs and utterly demolished it.
Then it attacked Harper, a town of 2,500
petple, and laid it in complete ruins. Roths-
child block, just completed, and the opera
house are now but two piles of broken brick.
The number of dead cannot be estimated, as
they are buried fifteen feet below piles of
brick and timbe.r. At least fifty are sup-
posed to have been crushed to death. Men
and tools are needed in order to recover the
dead.
DEATH IN TILE MIDST OP A *warm.
In Wellington the whole business section
was demolished. At, the time of the storm a
balias going on at the Phillips house.
Many of the best people of the city were
gathered there for a night of, enjoyment.
Suddenly, in the midst of a waltz, the build-
ing was felt to tremble. The bright looks
of pleasure on the faces of the dancers Quick-
ly gave way to terror and dismay. With
one accord everyone rushed for the door. The
stairway was quickly blocked with a seeth-
ing,s truggling mass of humanity, all fighting
for life. The weak went down and were
trampled upon, and in the midst of it all the
building collapsed with a fearful crash,
burying all but a few who escaped through
the door.
In the mati struggle for life husbands and
wives, lovers and sweethearts bad been
parted and the survivors now returned and
with the ardor of their exertion to dig out
the unfortunate ones partly made amends
for their terror and excitement of a few
moments before.
But the worst scene of horror was at the
Cole & Robinson block, which is a total
wreck. This building caught fire after the
crash, and at least two persons were burned
to death. Mrs. Slasher and her sister, Miss
Strand, svere pinned down by heavy tim-
bers, and there in the sight of the power-
less spectators they were slowly roasted to
death.. Their screams and piteous cries for
aid and the sickening smell of burning
human flesh causeeven the strongest heart
to turn faint. If is thought that other
persons were incinerated in this rire, and
the smell of charred flesh is so strong to -day
as to give probability to this belief.
CHURCH TURNED UPSIDE DOWN.
The Lutheran church was picked up
bodily and turned completely over. The
' courthouse, a solid brick building, was also
,. completely destroyfcl, but strange to say
standing right beside it was a small one-
story frame office, which a man could tip
over and yet by some strange freak thia
was left standing and unharmed. To -day
it is the wonder of all beholders.
On all sides are cruel evidences of the
frightful havoc done by the tornado. Whole
streets of houses aro unrecognizable ruins,
and in other places the storm seemed to
have contented itself with simply breaking
un the rcofs and carrying them a mile. Of
the Presbyterian choral', a substantial
building capable of seating 1,200 people,
hardly a vestige is left. it was distributed
to the four winds of heaven, and yet the
parsonage standing across the street did
not lose a chimney. Immense trees, lamp
posts, and telegraph poles were torn out of
the ground and then thrown completely
through the sides ot buildings. The hand-
some Spicknal block of yesterday is to -day
nothing but a monument of mortar, brick,
timbers, and glass. It contained two news-
paper offices, the _Monitor Press, and Voice.
Neither of thesehas even one stick of type
emaining.
James Mayor, a. piano tuner of Kansas
City, was one of the killed. He had retired
to his room in the Phillips and was reading
from his bible when the crash came. When
bis body was taken from the ruins to -day the
bible was found tightly clinched in his right
hand.
Many of the dead are so fearfully mangled
and crushed that they cannot be recognized.
Arms, limbs, and trunks, crushed and bleed-
ing, are occasionally found by the workmen.
These will have to be buried together, as it
will be almost itnpossible to discover the
missing parts.
BABY BOWERS' wONDERFut ESCAPE.
Probably the strangest incident of this
fearful disaster was the providential and
. miraculous escape of the 7-month-o1d baby
of Frank Bowers, a barber. When the
cloud demolished Bowers' house the baby
was peacefully sleeping in a cradle beside its
mother's bed. The house was torn to frag-
ments, pit the wind kindly and carefully
picked up the child out of the cradle, with
a grasp as tender as that of its mother, car-
ried it four blocks and then gently deposited
it in the middle of a velvety lawn. This
morning the child was found uninjured
c reviling around the lawn and crying for its
mother. The baby is living, but its mother
is dead.
James Hastie was sitting in the Phillips
house barber shop getting shaved when the
crash came. He was instantly killed and
yet the barber who stood over him with a
razor in his hand was taken out of the
ruins comparatively uninjured. "
The stock of the Rock Island Lumber
company is scattered all over the county—
nothing but boards and timbers everywhere.
• A train of freight cars was taken from the
• track and carried nearly a quarter of a mile
by the storm. The railroad cotnpanysvill have
to build......2ecial track if they wish to use the
-care agaLs. At least 200 houses are totally
-wreaked anal as many more are partially
demolished. The most incongruous sights
abound ewessysthere. Houses turned up -
Aide diavitis barns deposited OD top of
houses are Otsie of the strange freaks per-
formed 4g, th,,, wind.
A ..specfal train carrying fifteen doctors
•,came &stair tom Wichita, to -day on the
Santa Eza. ThAs advent was a godsend to
this knowledge it should follow that they
should remember being got in the body, as
Plato said, " That what we learn is no
°Sher than a remembrance of what we
know before," a thing which every one by
experience may maintain to be false. For-
asmuch, in the first place, as that we do
not justly remember anything but what we
have been taught; and that if the memory
did purely perform its office, it would at
least suggest to us something more than
what we have learned. Secondly, that
which she knew being in her purity VMS a
true knowledge, knowing things as they
are by her divine intelligence : whereas
here we make her receive falsehood and
vice, when we instruct her ;wherein she
cannot employ her reminiscence, that image
and conception having never been planted
in her.—[Montaigne.
Weduesclay—Great variety of opinion
there hath been amongst the ancient philos-
ophers touching the definition of the soul.
Tholes' was, that it is a nature without re-
pose ; Asclepiades, that it is an exereita-
tion of sense ; Healed, that it is a thing com-
posed of earth and water; Parmenides holds,
of earth and fire ; Galen, that it is heat ;
Hippocrates, that it is a spirit diffused
through the body; some'others have held it
to be light ; Plato saith, 'tis a substance
morving itself ; after cometh Aristotle
(whom the author here reproveth) and goeth
a degree farther, and saith it is everhexeia,
that is, that which naturally makes the body
to move. But this definition is as rigid as
any of the other ; for this tells us not what
the essence, origin, or nature of the soul is,
but only marks an effect of it, and therefore
signifieth no more than if he had said that
it is angelus hominus, or an intelligence that
moveth man, as he supposed those other to
do the heavens.—[Sir Thomas Browne.
Thursday—
:fie that has light within his own cloan breast,
May sit tho center, and enjoy bright day;
But he that hides a dark soul, and. foul
thoughts.
Benighted walks under the midday sun;
Himself is his own dungeon.
—.10 11N MILTON;
Friday—The nation has certainly not been
wanting in the proper expression of its
poignant regret at the sudden reinoval of
this most lamented Princess, nor of their
sympathy with the royal family, deprived
by this visitation of its brightest ornament
Sorrow is painted on every countenance,
the pursuits of business and the kingcloin is
esvered with the signals of distress.
But what, my brethren, if it be lawful. to
indulge such a thought, what, would be the
funeral obsequies of a lost soul? Where
shall we find the tears fit to be wept at such
a spectacle? or, could we realize the calam-
ity in all its extent, what tokens of commis-
eration and concern would be deemed equal
to the occasion? Would it Suffice for the sun
to veil bis light, and the moon her bright-
ness; to cover the ocean with mourning,
and the heavens with sackcloth? Or were
the whole fabric: of nature to become anim-
ated and vocal, would it be possible for her
to utter a groan too deep, or a cry too pierc-
ing, to express the magnitude of such a
catastrophe ?—[Robert
Saturday—" This is the last sun I uball
ever see, comrade," said he (Marshal Ney),
approaching M. de V—. "This world is
at an end for me. This evening I shall lie
in another bivouac. 1 ant no woman, but
I believe in God and in another life, and I
feel that I have an immortal soul: they
spoke to me of preparation for death, of the
consolations of religion, of conferring with is
pious priest Is that the death of a soldier?
Let me hear what you would do in my
place." * * * "Were I in your place,
I should allow the curate of Si. Sulpice to
enter, and I should prepare my soul for
every event." "1 believe you are right,"
replied the Marshal with a friendly smile.
"Well, then, let the priest come in."—[Al-
phonse Lamartine.
Minister—"The love of money is the root
of all evil." Parishioner—"That isn't the
worst thing about money," "Ah! What
is?" " The difficulty of getting any."
Unless an Austrian gains the consent of
his wife he cannot get a passport to journey
beyond the frontier of his own country.
The discovery has been made that the
soil and climate of Alaska are well adapted
to hop -raising,
The Head Surgeon
!Of the Lubon Medical Company is now at
Toronto, Canada, and may be consulted
'either in person or by letter on all chronic
'diseases peculiar to man. Mn, young, old,
or middle-aged, who find themselves nem,
ous, weak and exhausted, who are broken
down from excess or overwork, resulting in
many of the following symptoms Mental
depression, premature old age, loss of vital-
ity, loss of memory, bad dres.ms, dimness of
sight, palpitation of the heart, emissions,
lack of energy, pain in the kindeys, head-
ache, piinples on the face or body, itching
or peculiar sensation about the scrotum,
wasting of the organs, dizziness, specks
before the eyes, twitching of the muscles,
eye lids and elsewhere,bashfulness, deposits
in the urine, loss of willpower, tenderness of
the scalp and spin e, weak andflabby muscles,
desire to sleep, failure to be rested by sleep,
constipation, dullness of hearing, lossof voice,
desire for solitude, excitability of temper,
sunken eyes surronndedwith Luennia =mg,
oily looking skin'etc., are all symptoms of
nervous debility that' lead to insanity and
death unless cured. The spring or vital
force having lost its tension e very function
wanes in consequence. Those who through
abuse committed in ignorance may be per-
manently cured. Send you, address for
book on all diseases peculiar to man.
l3ooks sent free sealed. Ileardisease, tha
Symptoms of which are faint spells, purple
lip'
s numbne'
es palpitation, skip Lzats,i
hot flushes, rushof blood to the head, dull
pain in the heart with beats strong, rapid
and irregular, the scond heart beat'
quicker than the first, pain about the breast,'
one, etc., can positively beoured. No cure,
no pay. Send for book. Address M. V.
UI30N1 24 Mnodonell Ave. Toronto, Oat
IMPROVD.RENT OF BUTTERs
A Matter ot the Greatest Interest. to Every.
body.
Better butter and more of it seems to be
the ory frern both home nnd foreign mar-
kets to which Canada's dairy products are
sent. The effiorts which have been put
forthduring recent years by the Dominion
Department of Agriculture promiee to bring
about that desired condition ,isf things in
the neat future with great advantage to the
farmers. At the numerous agricultural
conventions which have been held during
the winter season over the whole Dominion,
unusual attention has been manifested in
the question of manufacturing creamery
butter in Canada during the winter season.
The highest authorities on agriculture agree
in the opinion that an extension of the
manufacture of butter during the winter
would result in the keeping of larger herds
of cows by the farmers, the raising of larg-
er numbers of thrifty calves, and conse-
quently the extension of our live stock
trade and an increase in the fertility 'Of the
soil by reason of the quantities of stable
manure which would be available. Any-
thing which can be done to increase the
direct income of the farmer, while it forti-
fies and enlarges his permanent sources of
revenue, must be of inestimable financial
advantage to the whole community.
For many years the practice in Canada in
most districts has been to keep the dairy
cows milking during the smniner months
only, when a supply of succulent feed in the
forin of grass was easily obtainable. Dry
fodder, cold winter weather, badly con-
structed buildings and no special instruc-
tion in regard to winter dairying have left
on the minds of many of even the enter-
prising farmers is notion that winter
dairying is unsuitable to our climatic
conditions. The educational work of the
Dominion Department of agriculture has
clone much in recent years towards bring-
ing before the attention of the farmers the
benefit a which may result front the growing
of large crops of fodder corn, the making of
ensilage and the feeding with succulent
fodder during the -winter months. It has
been illustrated on the experimental farms
that corn ensilage as feed yields an excel-
lent quality of milk, and a much larger flow
of it, than can be obtained upon dry
fodder. The economy of growing fodder
corn for the fattening of cattle has also been
demonstrated in the feeding experiments
which have been conducted during the last
two seasons. The results of the feeding
last winter were summed up by Prof. Rob-
ertson in his evidence before the House of
Commons Committee of Agriculture in the
terse comparison which he made, by stating
that steers fed upon a ration mainly consist-
ing of corn ensilage gained one-quarter more
in weight during a period of five months
feeding at a cost of one-quarter less per day
than steers of equal age and breeding fed
upon hay, roots and meal. The quantity of
meal in the ration of corn ensilage was the
same per d ay as in the ration of hay and roots.
While corn ensilage is admirably adapted
for cheapening the production of beef, it, is a
specially suitable feed for milking cows.
The information which has been spread
broadcast over the country must have con-
vinced the farmers that, so far as a supply
of succulent feed is concerned, it is now
easily possible for them to keeptheir cows
in milk during the whole winter at is
profit. The making of butter during
hat season in creameries may most
advantageously supplement the mak-
ing of cheese during the summer season.
That this can be carried into successful
practice has been demonstrated to a certain-
ty by the experience of the farmers who
supported the two experimental dairy sta-
tions, which were operated by the dairy
commissioner in Ontario during the past
winter. Cheese factories at Mount Elgin
and Woodstock were equipped with the ma-
chinery, apparatus and utensils needed for
the manufacturing of butter and were ran
during the whole winter. At •both pines
the farmers have by unanimous resolution,
expressed their satisfaction with the busi-
ness and their determination to continue to
support the factories during the next win-
ter. That a great deal of interest has been
aroused in this matter in the British markets
is manifested by the numerous comments
which have appeared upon this new enter-
prise in theprovisions trade mid other trade
journals of Great Britain. An issue of the
Canadian Gazette of London which came to
hand lately contained an article which has
a peculiar interest for Canadian farmers in
this connectina. Two paragraphs from that
article are as follows: -
1. The French consul at Maybourne has
presented to his Government a report from
the butter industry in Australia. The sum
of £30,000 set apart by tbe Victorian Legis-
lature in 1889 for the encouragement of the
trade has been increased to £45,000 in view of
the unexpected development of the exporta-
tion of butter front Victoria to the United
Kingdom. The export between October,
1889, and the end of January, 1890, that is,
during the grazing season, was 828,822
pounds. In the following season it had
risen to 1,700,596 pounds, the quality being
of a distinctly superior character. Of the
money offered in the way of bounty, £15,907
had been claimed up to a year ago, and the
season which has just closed promises to
show a marked advance in this direction.
It is hoped that on account of its high
quality and its low price the Australian
butter will successfully challenge the posi-
tion which has been acquired by the French
and Danish products in the English market.
2. It seems pertinent for us to ask. What
has Canada to say for herself that she should
have allowed distant Victoria to try issues
with the French and Danish butter export -
era upon the London market? If a
country almost as far away from
our shores as it is possible to be,
and on the other side of the equator, can
send us butter which commands a top price
on the London market, surely Canada ought
to be able to do the same. It is quite pos-
sible for butter, produced on some of the
rich dairy homesteads of Quebec and Ontario
to be on the English consumer's breakfast
table a fortnight after it is made. There is
not much room for sentimen t in the questions
of trade, but, inasmuch as we cannot pro-
duce at home all the butter we require, we
would rather have it perhaps from our
countrymen in Australia and Canada if they
can beat theforeigner in competition. Cana-
da has done and is doing so well with her
cheese output that the general appearance
of Canadian butter in the English market
ought to be a question of only a short time.
it is evident that our aotion is being
watched by competitors in other countries,
and also that we must bestir ourselves to
win for our batter trade a reputation of
equal merit with that of our cheese.
In his evidence before the committee of
the House of Commons on agriculture a
few days ago, the dairy commissioner cited
some interesting facts in relation to this
matter on the competition with which Can-
ada was to contend in the British markets.
He stated by way of illustration that the
province of Victoria had paid last year
over a quarter of is million of dollars in
bonusing the butter which was exported
from that colony, and whieh competed
with our Canadian creamery butter in the
1.,Pnglisli markets, and gave it as hid opinion
that if the Government of any country con-
siders it prudent to bonus any article of
produce which. is exported, no one article
can be bomised to greater advantage to the
people than butter made during the winter
months. He stated that judicious encour-
agement given to this industry for only
three years would give Ouch an impetus to
it that Canada would export moremoan-
ery butter during the fourth winter than
would be the case in 10 years without any
assistance from the Government being rend-
ered. He pointed out that tha main diffi-
culty lay in the providing of new machin-
ery for buildings which are already well
equipped for cheesemaking.
The cost for providing the additional ma-
chinery, apparatus and utensils which are
required for altering a cheese factory ani
equipping it as is butter factory for opera-
tion during the winter, would be from $750
to $800. Joint stock eompanys of farm-
ers and individuals who own cheese fac-
ories are thnid in the matter of investi-
gating new machinery until they are quite
assured that this business will be both prof-
itable and permanent The experience of
one or two years would doubtless convince
the farmers in every section where dairying
has been developed to any considerable ex-
tent that a large and reliable source of rev-
enue from their cows might be opened up
by supporting creameries during the winter.
The capital which is invested in the cheese
factories would not lie dormant for five or
six months of the year. The men who are
occupied in the znanufacturing of cheese
would find employment during every month
of the season. The farmers would derive a
direct income from their cows during the
winter months. The big product of skim
milk has been estimated to be full compen-
sation for the extra cost of the additional
feed which is required by the cows. Noth-
ing seems to be wanting to develop this
most promising branch of cattle husbandry,
except some little help on the part of the
Government in assisting the farmers to pro-
vide the new machinery which is
indispensable for making an econ-
on- ical and successful start in this
business. The dairy commissioner men-
tioned in his evidence that he was convinced
that, if part of the machinery could be pro-
vided by the Government for a few years,
or if a small bonus towards the purchasing
of the machinery were granted to every
creamery which manufaatured butter during
the winter for three years, there would be
a very rapid and prosperous extension of the
dairying interests ot the Dominion. The
amount of money which it would cost the
country would be a mere bagatelle coinpared
with the great good that would result to the
farming interests. There need be no fear
on the part of anyone that there will be a
surplus of fresh made winter butter. The
total expense of shipment to Great Britain
from points in Ontario, including trans-
portation, selling commission, discount
and shrinkage in weight has been
less than 2 1-2 cents per pound of butter.
That there is an unlimited demand in the
English market during the winter months
for fresh made butter is assured by the
rapid extension of butter making dairying
in Denmark, Sweden and France. Canada
now suds to Greet Britain over 41 percent.
of the total value of cheese which she im-
ports from abroad. Oar exports of butter
for 1891 amounted to $440,060, while the
imports of butter into Great Britain for the
year ending December 31, 1891, amounted
to 05,637,668. That indicates that while
we send to Great Britain over 41 per cent,
of tbe cheese whia'n she imports, our ship-
ments of butter amount to less than 2 per
centof the value which she buys from
abroad. One of the leading importers of the
British market has reportedin connection
With the shipments of butter sent from one
of the Dominioa experimental dairy stations:
"The butter trade is an increasing one, and
notwithstanding a substitute in margarine,
there is an enormous demand for fresh
made butter that will always command a
good price front the 1st of December to the
1st of April. Ireland supplies us well with
summer stock. Stored butter will not BOW
sell at all, hence the trade have ceased to
bold summer make, and buy fresh made
Winter stock."
To sum up the whole matter, it seems
that while the competitors of Canada in
butter making who live in some of the other
colonies receive the benefits of large bonuses
from the govermnent on fresh made butter
which they export, Canadian dairymen do
not need to have that rather unwholesome
stuff offered to them, but it is equally
apparr Me that no good reason can be urged
why the Government should not give its
customary assistance to this new industry,
by way of providing some means whereby
farmers may be encouraged and assisted to
provide the machinery which is required, in
order to establish an industry which is
capable of doing so much for the agricul-
tural community in every branch of their
work.
An idea of the growth of the telephone
industry in Canada may be agathered from
interesting figures published by the Cana-
dian Electric News. Since MO the slumber
of Canadiem subscribers to the Telephone
Company has increased from 2,100 to 26,-
212. Montreal heads the lists with 5,872
telephones. Toronto comes next with 3,965
Hamilton has 1,160, and Quebec has 1,011.
The number of telephones in use in Canada
is greater, according to population, than in
any other country. In',..4reat Britain there
are 167 telephones in use for every 1f,0,000
iahabitants ; in the United States 350, and
in Canada 540. Compared with th rates
charged in other counrries the C-naclian
rates are extremely low. The te ephone
is is great fio,nvenience, and is
now indispensable to business. But be-
fore it was invented no one specially felt
the need of tt. Like many anothei article
that has commanded success, it made
its own market.
THOUSANDS IN REWARDS.
fhe Great Weekly Competition of T h.
Ch Ladies' Home Magazine.
Which, word in this advertisement spells the sam.
Liackward as Forward ? This is a rare opportunity to
:very Madam and Nies, every Father and Son, to scour'
splendid Prize.
WEEK.LY RILIZES,:-BVCry week throughout this grca'
.ompetition prizes will be distributed as follows: Th
!rst correct answer received (the postmark date ou one'
'atter to be taken as the date received) ab the office of tit'
t, &DIES' IIGME MAGAZINE (each and every week 'twin
1392) will get 8200; the second correct answer, $103; th
hird 550; fourth, a beautiful silver service; fifth, lie
,'clock silver service, and the next 50 correot answers wi;
;et prizes ranging from 82.5 down to 58. 'Every corm
tnswer, irrespective ot whether a prize winner or not, wi
iet a speoial prize. Competitors residing in the south^r
.tates, as well as other distant points, have 3T1 co ".
'lance with those nearer home, as the postmark will
heir authority in every case.
llimEs.-Each list of answers must be accompan'
81 to pay for six months subscription to one of LI
,otHoaen MAGAZINES in America.
Nurz.-We want half a million subsorlbers, and
+acme them we propose to give away in rewards ono hi
mr income. Therefore, In Case one half the t•I•
.-ceipta during any week exceed the cash value of 1..
alma, such excesa will be added pro rata to the
.f the reverse, a pro rata discount will he made,
ftitimumNor.s.-"Titz LADIES' Homo ltfaoszrire
all able to carry out itapromises."--Peterberon gh t 's •
ine,) Times, ''A splendid paper. and tinarioally
-Umitings (Canada) Star. 'Plveyy prize whine r will
•tre to receive just what ha t cot', led tr." -.Nora'',
• spacial 11,gister. Address .011 leti, tr) 11,15 LL
/GUS MAGAZINE, Peterborough, Canada.
•
for Infante and Children.
"Castorlaissowell adaptedto children that
I recommend nag auperiorbo n.ny prescription
'mown to me." H. A. ARCHX11,
111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
"The use of 'Costoria' is so universal and
its merits so well known that it seems a work
of supererogation to endorse IL Few arethe
intelligent families who do not keep Castoria
within easy reach."
Cumos !Lamm DD.,
New York City.
Late Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed Clhurch.
Castor]: masa Colic, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, Maritima, Eructation,
Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di.
gestion,
Without injurious medication.
"For several years 1 have recommended
your Castoria, ' and shall always continue to
do 30 32 it has invariably produced beneficial
results."
EDWIN P. PARDUS, EL D.,
"The Winthrop," 125th Street aud th 4ven
New York City.
THE Cairn= COIL -PAX; 77 fltirtiraY STIMET, 1fsw TWIN,
^he
GIElDpilii220 IllaTfeSrBsY
ADACH E
011110NEY REFUNDED. Purely Vegetable, Perfectly Harmless
and Pleasant to Take. For Sale by all Druggists. PRICE 25 Cts
11911111111•11
MoCOLL BROS. 8,0 COMPANY
TORONTO.
Manufacturers and. Wholesale Dealers in the following
specialties :
Lardine
Cylmder
Red Engine
OILS
WOOlr
Bolt Cutting
Eureka
TRY OUR LARDINE MACHINE OIL
AND YOU WILL USE NO OTHER.
For Sale By BISSETT BROS,. Exeter, Ont,
APPLICATIONS,THOROUGHLY REMOVES
r4DRUFF
DANDRUFF
ik"T*1 P "ID
\Toronto, Travelling Passenger Agent, 0 IL
Bays: Anti•Dandruifis aportectremover ofDan.
druif -its nation Is marvoll aus-i n my own case
a few applications not only thoroughly remevod
excessive dandruff accumulation but stopped
falling of the hair, =MI 11 3015 and pliablo and
promoted a visible growth.
D, L. CATION.
GUARANTEED
Restores Fading hair to its
original color.
Stops failing of hale.
Keeps the Scalp clean,
Makes hair sett and Pliable
PromotoS Growth,
EXETER LUMBER YARD
The undersigned wishes to inform. the Public in general that li
keeps constantly in stock all kinds of
BUILDING MATERIAL
Eires4e8. or "andreszed.
PINE AND HE -AMUCK LUMBER.
SHINGLES A SPEOLILTY
900,000 XX and XXX Pine and Cedar Shingles now in
stock. A call solicited and satisfaction guaranted.
JAMESWILL1155
Dr. LaROE'S COTTON ROOT PILLS.
Safe and absolutely pure. Moab powerful Female Regulator
known. The only safe, sure and reliable pill for sale. Ladies
ask druggists for LaBoe's Star and. Crescent Brand. Take no
other kind. Beware of cheap imitations, as they are danger-
ous. Sold by all reliable druggists. Postpaid onreceipt of price.
AMERICAN PILL CO., Detroit, Mich.
•
rtr c o'C• • t *
,ga 40 as
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1,440 60.
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Manufactured only by Thomas Holloway, 78, New Oxford Streets_
iato 533, Oxford Street, London.
iff Purchasers should look to the Label on the Boxes and Pota
If the address is not 533, Oxford. Street, London, they are spurious.
Vi a,
—MEW
THE BEST COUGH MEDICINE.
SOLD BY DBUNIODS ZODDYWHIDIE.
frt.
NERVE
BEANS
NERVE BEANS are a new dis-
covery that cure the worst cases of
Nervous Debility, Lost Vigor and
railing Manhood; restores the
weakness of body or mind caused
by over -work, or the errors or ex.
oesses of youth. This Remedy ab-
solutely cures tbe most obstinate oases whoa all other
YAws.TsthVYS have failed even to relieve. Zold bydrug-
gists at 51 per package, or six for 55, or sent by mail on
receipt of price by addreming TlrE JAMES MEDICINE
CD., Toronto, Ant. Write for pamphlet. Sold la—,
1
MON
can oe eon, od at ourNEW it ofwork,
rapidly and honorably, by, those of
either sex. youtfg or old, ant. 1, their
on-nlocalitiec,wherever they Imre. Any
ono con to tho work. Easy*, learn.
Wo furnish everything, Wo Start you. No 0101,. Ton eon devoto
Your pro mouton te, or all your time t4 the, work. TI,I3 Is an
entire y new lead,and brings wondorfal success to every worker.
ViegInnero aro earning kens 555 to *60 per week sa4 upwardo,
and mere after 0 litt10 nap1oaas. Wo can Iltroish..Yve she em-
ployment
Floyment and teach you FILEN. No space explam heyo. Fuji
Inforation REE. Tlirlin0 az 400, AUGOBTa,
pilEAD-MAKER'S
"2"MALSW
lowliKEIES FAILS 111 SArsques
Fos aux sy ALL osium'an