HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1893-2-2, Page 7Cures Others
S,'vili cure You, is a true statement of
the action of AYR'S Sarsaparilla.
wlien taken for diseases originating in
impure blood ; but, while this assertion
is true of AYER'S Sarsaparilla, as
thousands can attest, it cannot be truth -
felly applied to other preparations, which
unprincipled dealers will recommend,
and try to impose upon you, as "just as
good as Ayer's." Take Ayer's Sarsa-
parilla and Ayers only, if you. need a
blood -purifier and would be benefited
erntanently. This medicine, for ryearly
'fifty years, has enjoyed .a reputation,
and made a record for cures, that has
never beenua led by other prepare
tions. AYESarsaP arilla eradicates
the taint of hereditary scrofula and
I other blood diseases from the system,
. and it has, deservedly, _the confidence
,of the people,
9
m
areas rfi
„� ars
441 cannot forbear to express my joy
t the relief I have obtained from the
se of AYER'S Sarsaparilla. I was
tfldicted with kidney troubles for about
int months, suffering greatly with pains
1 the striallof my back. In addition to
his, my body was covered with pimply
rotations. The remedies prescribed
ailed to help uie. I then began to take
YER'S Sarsaparilla, and, in a short
me, the pains ceased and the pimples
lisappeared. I advise everyyoung
ran or woman, in ease of sickness
suiting from impure blood, no matter
ow long standing the naso may be, to
eine AYER'S .arsaparilla, }I. L. Jar,.
nand, 33 William st., New York City.
r!x
SIE Care You
red 17 Dr J. C. Ayer at Co., Lowell, Mass.
Every owner ore
anted ho
tokrserrcoty wants
SF 1L now Itnw to
keep his animal in
:tenni while in the stable en dry fodder.
BLOOD Prialtilra is now recognized
a best Condition Powders, it gives a good
etc and strengthens tate digestion so Oatan the
assimilated and forms flesh, thus saving more
costs. 1't reg,mlatrs the Dowels and Kidneys
true a rough Coat into a. smooth and glossy one.
rid horses are ai.
in dr anal 11
when
fRi .1101 0 1 d
casnrx when th.
Ii:shlo toslips and dr
s DICK'S JILTS -
wilt be found a
necessity; ; it will11
orses
a curb, spavin,
or thoroughpin or any swelling. Dick's Lin!.
aures a strain or lamenessand removes3nflam-
,from cuts and bruises. For Sale by nil Drug.
Dick's Blood Purifier Me. Diel;sl:MisterSlk.
t Liniment tie. Dirk's Ointment 25c.
Send a
r� t Cat 1 postal card
6.1 � �j forfnllpar-
ticulars, F,c
cf valuable hceusehold and farm recipes will
u free.
l; & CO., P.O. Box 482, 50 TRE 1L,
R Y NFAWE BEANS are n nese dis-
covery that cure the worst eases of
ANSNervous Debility, Lost Vigor and
AV trailing Manhood; restores the
weakness at body or mind caused
by over -work, or the errors or ex.
Les„ Ls of youth. This Remedy ab -
cures the most obstinate eases when all other
MENTs bare tailed even to relieve. old bydrug.
t Si per package, orsix for $5 or sent by mail on
of price by addressing THE JAMES MEDICINE
'urent°, Ont. Write for pamphlet. Sold in—
s the latest trin uph in pharmacy for the cure
f all the symptoms indicating Kinx,ty AND
writ Complaint. If yon are troubled with
ostiveness, Dizziness, Sour Stomach,
Heath che, indigestion. Poon APPETITE,
0550 FISEL]SG, PNEUMATIC PAINS ; Sleepless
Nights, Melancholy Feeling, BACK Acres,.
Membray's Hidney and Liver Cure
will give immediate relief and EFFECT A Cure.
Sold at all Drug Stores.
Peterboro' Medicine Co., Limited.
PETERBORO', ONT.
HAVE YOU
"Backache
means the kid-
neys are. 111
trouble. Dedd's
Kidney Pills gine.
prompt relief.,,
"76 per cent.
o disease is
of
caused by
disordered kid-
neys.
Might as well
try to have a
healthy' city
without sewer-
age, as good
health when the
) kidneys: are
clogged, they are
Sold by all dealers or
of price so cents. per
17r. L. A. Smith & Co.
book called Kidney Ta
the scavengers
of the system.
"Delay is
dangerous. Neg-
lected kidney
troubles result
i/I Bad Blood,
Dyspepsia, y pepsitx, Liver
Complaint, and
the most dan-
gerous of all,
Brights Disease,
Diabetes and
Dropsy.
"The ptbove
diseases cannot'
exist where
Dodd's Kidne
Pills are used."
sent by mail on receipt
box or six for $a,,r$o,'
Toronto. Write tor
tk. '
POETRY.
One at a Tune.
One stop at a time, and that well-placed,
Wo reach the grandest height • •
One stroke at a time, earth's hidden stores
Will slowly come to light;
One sued at a thio, and the forest grows;
One drop at et time, and the river flow.
Into the boundless sea.
One weird at a time, and the greatest book
Is writon atolls read
One stone at a time a palace roars
Aloft its stately stead;
One blow at athne. and the tree's cleft through
And a eitv will eland where time forest grow
A few short years before.
Ono foe At a time, :said he subduce,
And the conflict will be won ;
One grain at a time, and the sands of life
Will slowly all bo von.
One minute, another, the flours fly ;
One day at a time, and our lives spoodby°
Into eternity.
One gain of knowledge. and that well stored,
Anothoe, and more on rheas:
And as time rove on your mind will shine
With many a garnered gem
Of thought and wisdom. And. time will tell,
"One thing ata time, and tlts,t done well,",
Is wisdom's proven rule.
—(Golden Days.
A[usio.
Was it light that sp^ako fr om the darkness
or music that shone from the word,
When the night was kindled with the sound
of the sun or time first-born bird
Souls enthralled and ontrlunmolledin. bondage
of reasons that fall and rise.
Bound foes. round ;with the fetters of flesh, and
blinded with light that dies..
Lived not Surely till musicspake, and the spirit
elite was heard.
II.
i tusi%, sister of sunrise and herald of life
to bo,
Smiled as dawn en the spirit of elan, and
the thrall was free.
Slave of nature and serf of tense the bondman
of life and death.
Dumb with passionless patience+ that breathed
but forlorn and rouetant breath.
Beard, beheld, itnd his soul made answer and
communed aloud ~yids the son.
III.
Morning snake. and he hears; and the pas-
sionate silent noon
Kept for him not silence: and soft from the
mounting moon
Fell the sound of her splendor, heard. as dawn's
in the breathless nigh:.
Not of men, lett of birds whose note bade ittan a
soul quicken and lean to light :
And the song of it pni,•e. and the light and the
darkness of earth were ae chords in tune.
-1A. C. Swinburne.
Zero Thee Well,
I.
Zare thee well! And tltn' in sorrow
Oft' I bow my bond in grief,
Il'ope 1 for a brighter 'morrow
To bring us a sweet relief ;
When again we'll fondly t end
paths sor :Med. strewn with roses,
As God's sun shines overhead.
where all Nature e'er diseloses
Gods great handiwork so true
'Nestle His vaulted arch of blue.
II'..
Absent from thee the' I wander,
"G ainst life's ills to o'er eon tend,
I min love. in silence ponder
O cr t'1tee as my constant friend;
in my dream':I will behold then.
Aa thy vision fair come near
Bending still with fondness o'er me,
Bidding mo be of gond cheer.
Fere thee well! tho' we may sorrow.
God will speed us a good 'morrow.
III.
Those yen trust are oft' deceiting,
And Use hearts will cause thee pain,
(Ter misfortune often grieving;.
Bound, ac'twern with fate's iron chain,
Yet be brave, and cease repining,
Those .is vet sweet soy for all,
For God all your thnuthts divhring
C"aets aside despair's dark: pall;
In thy heart lot deceit never
Stain thy soul, now and forever.
IV.
14'bon at eve the golden sunset
Tinge the fleecy el c aids with gold,
In the arbor whore we met
Let us bo still as of old
In the spirit. t11o'aeundcr
In the body we may he.
Iioedlee9 ofa groat world' thunder
Or the snrges of life'': sea.
A bond adieu bat not forever.
I+'en death itself can ne'or us sever.
—(David B. Metcalf.
Love's Season.
we DLL& WHEELER n itoOx.
In sad sweet days when hectic duel:es
Burn red on maple and snm'te leaf,
When sorrowful winds wail throe. -,11 the
rushes.
And all things whisper of less and grief.
Minn rloee and closer bold Froot anni"iaohoe
Toatritch the blossom from Nature's breast,
When night forever on day encroaches,- then I think that I love you bast.
And yet when Winter, that tyrant master.
Has buried Autumn in vans of snow.
And hound. and fettered where bold Frost east
her
Laos ontragee Nature in helpless woe,
When a1T earth's pleasures in feu rw.alIs centro.
And stdo by side i't the snug home nest
We list the tcmne;ts which cannot anter,
OI], then I see that Hero you best.
Brit later on, when the Siren Season
Betrays the trust of the senile icing.
And glad. Barth laughoa at the act of treason,
And Winter dice in the arms of Snring,
When burls and birds all push and flutter
To free fair Nature so long oppressed,
1 thrill with feelings 1 cannot atter.
And then'I an certain,' lova you beet.
But when in snleneor the queenlySummer
Reigns over the earth' and the skies above,
When Nature kneels to the roval oomor.
And even the Sun flames hot with Love.
When Pleasure hasks in the luscious weather,
Ane Caro lies on the sward to rest.
Oh, whether Apart nr vhether together,
It isthen I lemon' that 1 love you beet.
(fippinoott's.
Eiirhtee) Hundred and Ninety -Three.
Atmidnight, on my shtdy'door,
Camey raoping.o'er and o'er, •
AndI hoard a deep, deep sfgit.
I opened to the hoary year,
And felt upon any face the tear
That came with the " good-bye.
Scarce had he paesod beyond my sight,
When. in garments pure and white,
Came, his heir. Me held aoltain—
Gift of pearls, each pearl a day,
, Ile elapsed them on. I knelt to pray.
The New Yeai1 gave me hope again.
—Dem. E: Hathaway.
A Thought for This Year.
Weseeby the light of thousands of years,
And the knowledge oftnillions of Men.
Tbo lessons they learned through blood and
tears,
Aro ours for the reading, and then
We sneer at their errors and follies and dream
Their frail' idols of mind and of stone,
And call ourselves wiser, forgetting it seems
That the future may laugh at our own..
[btay,11. egitriek.
A Cheap Substitute.
Wife—Well, what do you think Johnny
wants now?
Husband -I've no idea.
.Wife—He wants me to tease you into
buying him a bicycle.
Husband(wh, has tried bicycling him.
self) -Nonsense, he can't have one. Tell
him to go up into the attic and fall down
two flights of stairs. It will be just about
the home thing, and save me a hundred
dollars.
Women are invariably clothes observers h
to their sex. • i ,
Cares Consureptlon, Coughs, Croup, Sore
Throat, So'dbyy all Druggists on a Guarantee,
Tor a Lame Side, Back or Chest Shiloh's porous
Plaster will give great ,atisfaction,--s$ cents.•
€l flL !ff8 V TALIZISfeW
Mrs. T. 5. Hawkins,C,'hattanooga,Tenn says'
"�` h1ioh's Vitalizer, ' S'AVED 11IY ..Llfr'I1'. 1
conei4er it thobestremedu forcct%biletatedsusteira
1everlrsed:" Forfyspe-ela1"Aver or 1dfl07
trouble it excels, Price] 75 cos.
'NItl LOWS: -. CATARRH
E 'Di
Have you Catarrh? Try this ltemedy. It will
positively relieve and Cure you.Price 65 e,ti.
This lnjectew for its successful tveatirlentfio
;:urnisbedfree. fteinenlber,dbnonsxf siege
are sulci on a guarantee to give t:atief?etir•
SOME _NEW FAO"Pa ABOUT LONDON.
itttereetin ; Vett ate; •," the Wori 1'4 Greiat
est Cit# trent iteCe ti gtetnrae.
The total population of the emtr)ty of Len -
don on t�tn Omit of April, 1'+31, wo,s #'3t,,
431 the '100reaee in ton years icing 3x'17,23e,
or 10.36 per cent, 'i'he euather of tunable
ted homes was 557,134, an iitereeseon 1851
of 65,2.10, or 13.00 per cent.
The total expenditure on the local govern-
ment of London iu the year 1SS0.O t was
:!:10,7'26,000, or as tnueb as an Anetralistn
Cohn: v. This was actual to £'2 10a. 81. per
head of population, The rates were levied
upon a ratable value of C 31,586,0f0, su
that the amount per LI was 61 0.1., hitt fie
ratepayer only pail 4s: 10d. of tliis amount.
The emitted rates fall `equally upon alt the
parishes, b t fort=, 'sl purposes
h s tit the rates art t
_p P
are very unequal, ranging ftom 3s. 9A'1.
down to 19,0,1,1, For imperial and localpur-
poses combined Loudon pays in taxation
approximately X17,000,0 0. The Inland
Revenue retnrns show that the total incomes
earned in Loudon amount to X1'23,513,01)0,
so thus the burden of taxation antennae to
14 per emit. The halant:e of the loam out-
standing at the end of 1891 was 1:.48,08:',•
000.
On Tan. 1, 1591, the paupore numbered
112.547 and the cost of: pattperiaau was in
1880.00 £2.34O,00d, the cost of each pauper
being al 16e. id,
The number of persons committed for trial
daring 1889 99wae2,906, wlrle 100,748 wore
convictedsnmtnnrily. Ttehabitual °Tend-
ers known tot he policenot committed during
the year numbered 2,302. The total repre-
sents apercoutage of 2.7 to the whole pop.
ulation. The cost of the police was X1,79 ;-
000, or X15,1'2s.9d, per heart of the inerintin,
atcd class. Industrial schools cost X20,052.
In the schools of the metrnpo'is the
pupils numbered in 1399.91 0112.3:]1 ; the
total cost of the Board schools was £1,060.
000, of which £1,27,000 was thrown an
local rates.
The death rate in London in 1891 was
21.4 per 1,00!1 of the population, which
compares favorably with other large towns,
Ltverponl rising as high as 27 per 1,0(10.
Tho open Peaces in London, without
reckoning; the issued burial grounds, ex-
tend to 5,449 acres. Besides there are open
splines on its borders which bring up the
total of parks accessible to Lon7loners to
22,000 acres.
The fires in the metropolis is 18(11 num-
bered 2,892, of which 193 were serioas.. The
lives lost numbered (i1, 31 of these
having been taken one alive. The total
cost of the Brigade was £.120 723, or (3 1.
per head of the population. The fire in-
surance companies contributed .£27,1:1$.
Property was iu,urod for no less a sum
than X506,000,030.
RAINED FIRE 011 THEM.
Spectator el' a gtnllrend accident hairnet
to »enflh.
Alton Junction, twenty-three miles north
of St. Louis, was the scene of a verses of
accidents, begun in to railroad collision, and
as a result eight persons aro dead, twelve
mortally injured, and as many more seri-
ously hurt.
The first accident befell the Southwest.
eru Limited express train, which rims be-
tween New York and St. Louis. The train
is operated by the Cleveland, Cincinnati,
Chicago and St. Louis R;ailraad. 'I'he. t.r tin
left St. Louis at 8:03 o'clock Saturday
morning and arrived at the edge of the
junction yards at 8:50 o'clock. Just out-
side of .the yarcl is a curve. After rounding
this curve, and within a bemired yards of
a siding, the engineer noticed thee a switch
was turned. The train was rue :ling at the
rate of fiity miles au hour, and it was im-
possibleto stop. .
. Webb Ross, the engineer, stnek to the
engine, and was applying the ale brakes
when it struck a string of twenty loaded oil
cars. The second oil car from the engine
exploded, and 7,000 gallons of oil were sent
flying in all directions.
It spread out over the tracks in fife. En-
gineer ]Koss was unhurt ep to that time, and
he jumped from the engine to escape. 1\o
mad could cross through the flames that
surrounded the engine. Before lie had gone
ten feet he fell and was burned to death.
The flames spread to the outer oil cars,
and seven of them were'soan hissing and
roaring and sending tip volumes of smoke.
Hundreds of people flocked to the scene and
persisted in standing itt close to the wreck
and burning cars of oil.
When the crash came the passengers were
thrown about thenars, but most of them es-
caped injury.
The crowd ot onlookers had been increas-
ing steadily. It was 11:32 o'clock when one
of the tanks exploded, followed instantly by
four more. Fully 35,000 gallons of boiling
and burning oil were tossed into the the air.
The roar and vibration could be, heard for
miles.
The instant the explosions came some of
the spectators tried to ruin. The oil seem-
ed to be carried by' the air over the great
crowd, and far out in the„village. It seem-
ed to fall in streams and pools. ,
' For those within the circle of 100 yards
there was no escape. Their clothing *as
burned, and literally fell from their bodies.
In a moment those, who oould began running
hither and thither, waving their hands and
•creaming for help.
Some went to the nearest : water and
others ran into the` fields, and aro uriesirig
yet. Panic reigned for a short time, until
the uninjured recovered their presence of
mind to care fox the afflicted.
Two barrels of linseed oil were taken from
a grocery store' and applied. to the wounds
by several physicians who happened to be
on the ground. livery houtie in the little
village was turned into a temporary hospital,
and every doctor in. Alton and its vicielity
was summoned.
As soon as possible a train was made up,
and twenty of the sufferers were brought
ere to St. Joseph's Hospital.
Children Cry for Pitcher=s Castor
ANTIQUE WEAPONS.
SOitliers 'lomat Eonghi walkout wirear1ets.
—Their Curious Equipment.
The Greek pike was 24 feet long.
The meelitnval lance was 18 feet,
The standard Roman sword was 22
inches.
Time :helmet of Richard I. weighed 25
pounds.
The rabbis say Cain kinesis A.bel with a
club.
Favid slew Goliath with a eling•stpne, 13.
,C. 1003.
The cross -bow came into use in the twelfth
century.
The pully -drawn cross -bow had a range
of forty rods,
Projecting engines were first invented by
the Greeks.
Mixed eba.in and plate armor was used
from 1300 to 1410.
(xustavt)a Adolphus abolished alt armor
but a light cuirass,
The French infaz try were armed with the
pike until 1640
Tktmascus blades were famous all over the
world 13.0..500,
The quarrels thrown by cross -bowie often
weighed six pounds.
- Shields evere not used in England muter
the reign of Henry 3'lI,
The crow -bows of the frurteenth century
weighed fifteen pounds,
Swords equal to the best ever made are
still pro:limel1 in Toledo.
Greek'helmete covered the head, back of
neck, eara, and nose.
The betties of Crecy; Poitiers ` and Agin-
court were won by the archers,
The bow appears among the earliest
sculptures of Egypt, B. C. 4000.
In -the seventeenth country Gorman
swords were most highly esteemed,
Ancient battering rates were manned by
100 nr 1t50 reed, generally captives.
The dotible•handed swords. of acedia:ye]
time often weighed 30 pounds.
In naval warfare the ancient 'a
p' lin * hcoks and boarding bridges. p.
1,•
Many suits of armor were in the u
teentlt cent'iry weighed 17:5 pounds ca
Pliny ascribes the invention of the sling to
the Pherueet ns, about 13.C. 2009. •
In 1210 heavy cavalry werecovered,horse
and man, with agate or chain armor.
Stone arrow -points and hatchets have
been found its every country in the world.
Long -bow att'fu gs were of plaited silk,
and worth five times their weight in gold.
At the siege of Jerusalem the Romans had
400 large, and nearly two hundred small
catapults.
The saber is an oriental weapon, It was
introduced into the I+reneh calvary in 1710.
The catapult was invented in Syracuse
406 13. C. in the reign of Dionysius the Eld-
er.
The great two-handed sword was, when
not in action, carried on the back like a
,ver 'Ar.
The sword of Remy the Pions, Duke of
Silesia, was six feet long and weighed 30
pounds.
The sling was made of woolen stuff, and
the stingers always stood behind the infan-
try.
Egyptian bronze swords mule l3. C. 3200
were from 2 to 3 feet long, with double
edge.
The Mexican flint knives were made so
hshair.arp that they could be used for trimming
The shield of Hector, whin slung at his
ltaclt in walking, covered the body from
neck to (reel.
Cross -bowmen were Always attended by •
shield -bearers, who protected them in
action.
The largest catapults threw beams 0 feet
long, weighing sixty -pounds, over quarter
of a miles
The legion was formed by Romuius B. C.
720. Tt originally consisted 023,000 foot
and :3'0 1 orse.
Some sof the woollen towers erected to
o ttat:k a besieged eitv were ten stories high,
about ono hundred feet.
Toledo and Damascus blades were very
pnpelar in the Middle Ages and sold for
their weight in gold.
When Cortez invaded 'Mexico for the
second time he Itosi eighty musketeers and
eighty cross -bow men.
The value of infantry was not fully recog-
nized by medioeval commanders until the
fifteenth century.
The armor of the fourteenth century was
so heavy that a fallen knight oould not rise
without assistance.
The long bow was brought into Western
Europe in the eighth century; bows were
0 feet long, arrows 3.
Iiniehtly lames were from 12 to 20,feet
long, the heads 4 to 8 inches broad, and
from 12 to 20 i11011es long.
The Amazon Indians use a blowpipe with
which they throw au arrow 200 yards with
Wonderful precision.
The misericords was a small dagger with
thin blade made to reach the vitals of an
antagonist between the joints of the arm •
our.
ItliIdOTaI'ui
gats ro Medi
-me. They are z
13Looi, i3UTLTIK.
TONTO and It1scoN
STIt5OTO5, as the.3
supply in a condensed
form the substances
actually needed to sir
rich the Blood, caring
all diseases oomiug
from Peon and WAT
nX BLOOD, ex frotu
Vrrwasn II:mons in
the liroon; and also
invigorate and B1sTLD
UP the Br,0on and
SYSTl:DT,-when broken
down by overwork,
mental worry, disease,
exoosies and iudisaro•
Mons. They have a
Beim re Ac rzoao on
toe Saua7,w SYSTEM of
both•men and women,
restoring LOST lruoa
and correcting all
aameGULAnuTries and
eureaessroNs.
EMERY CAU SFho Ands h's viiptcl fae-
nines dull or failing', or
his ph,, sic ,i powors flagging, should take rhes -
PILLS; ahoy will restorehis lost energies, bete
physical and mental.
EVERY WOMAN should uric° them.
They cure all sup-
pressions and irregularities, which inevitably,
entail sickness when neglected.
YOUNG MEN shoals take these PTLLs,
They will cure the re•
sults of youthful bad habits, and strengthen the
system. i.
YOUNG WOMEN E should take them.
These Pxzra will
*make thorn regular.
yoi:;w,le by all druggists, or will bo sunt upon
receipt of ;rice (Ole. por box), by addressing
2'.)3E on, )I`ILLIA7PX' NOD. CO.
il•aCkvible Qi►t
et an 1 e
for thfa its .and Children.
aCastorlaiaeowelladabtedto chtldrentltat
Izecommend itassuperiorto any prescription
tome. to me.” Il:. A,1.uct s,112. D.,
111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N,
"The use of 'Castoria' is so universal and
its merits so well Imam: that it seeing a work
ot supererogation to endorse it. Few arethe
Intelligent families who donut keep Cartons
wttlxiu egsyre2cb."
CeatLOs MAn'rrr:. D,D..
New York City.
Late Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed Church.
Castoria cares Celle, Cor.stipation4
Sour Stomgch, Diarrhea. Eructation,
hills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes 410
gestion,
Without injurious medication.
"For several years I have recommended
your as it has invariably prods always
beneficial
al
results,"
gem:: r. PAnug8, 12. D.,
"The Winthrop,"155th Street and 7th Ave.,
NewYork City:
Tris CLNTIren COMPANY, 1731unmer STREET. NEN' YOag.
reeelaceei
A G, t]T !1 LE '¢Alit L'S DANCER.
Mr. Henry Maconlbe, Leyland St.,
Blackburn, London, Eng., staters that hie
little girl fell and struck her knee against
a curbstone. The knee began to swell,
became very pai 'ul and terminated in
what doetors Call " white f w 11111 ;," Sllt
Was tet aced by the best medical mel), but
grew worse.
!'anally,
ST, JACOBS OIL
was used. The contents of one bottle
completely reduced the swelling, killed the pain and cured her.
`iAL.I. RICHT! ST. JACOBS QR. DID IT."
0
cum R IN 20 MINUTES BY
Alpha Waters
CF'IITONEY REFUNDED. Purely Vegetable, Perfectly Harmless
and Pleasant to Take. Far•Saie by all Druggists. PECE 25 Cts
MoOOLL BROS,COMPANY
TO11.01 WY.
manufacturers and Wholesale Dets,iers its the following
specialties
Laraine Wool
C lx,a.der Belt ch tt ,nl,g
Med Sn.giit re�. .,: .. .r. ; u,rtall a,
TRY OUR LARDINE MACHINE OIL
AND YOU WILL USE NO OTHER.
For Sale By BISSET1' BROS. Exeter, Ont.
r'rg .teaaa eeeoSeZta ere .
.LLG'NIG YRU0GCG. COX RATTCNiCS,£LCOTKICITY WILLGURC TOU ANC ACCP YOU IN HCALFH.
PNC£ MCOICAL TKCATfllCtIT. PRICE Or £0LT0, *S. -:R. Gla, ,t15. 01V£ WAIST MCA.UKC. P5300,'
PULL PAKTICULMim, 1000 ELECTRIC Co., 0 WELLINGTON 010EC4' £AST. TORONTO. CANADA..
e
XETER LUMBER YARD
The undersigned wishes to inform -th) Public in gr..ilral that h
keeps constantly In stock all kinds of
BUILDINCr MATERIAL
Dree.zet or 77=e.ree:ec,..
PINE AND HEMLOCK. LUMBER.
SHINGLES A SPECIALTY
900,000 X X and X X X Pile and Cedar Shingles now in
stock. A Bail solicited and satisfaction guarauted,
JAIKES WIL A Imo',
Dr. LaROE'S COTTON ROOT PILLS.
Safe and abso'utely pure. Most powerful Female Regulator
known. The only safe, sure and reliable pill for sale. Ladies
mak druggists for LaRoe's Star and Crescent Brand. Take rid
other kind. Beware of cheap imitations, as they are danger-
ous. Sold by all reliable drugists. Postpaid on receipt of price.
AMERICAN IICAN PILL CO., Detroit, Mich.
(b5s0 " c 4,,N§t 6,9 ,)';�
c,c) 047b'r . e• cgs a� , 41r
A8 ti�
't" red
4¢>,�� ° ty g' e
3 e5
�� 1titi o 4�- ' 5" ,
gr tie .9`o Gti 0""C' le a•
alb & 1re.S 4's" 340
�V 0'
Q 4 mL'
r
�yb • 'tib' ZPt' ,,sEl,.
11 2 y �a \pc) •
re
3 ,;se
o
peep.430 01 `4S°ry Goan �fi�
etP
1g &ti a ,d49S� �4w+eO� 4° ..°e't
pfannfactttred only by Tlwtnas 'Holloway, 78 New oxford Street
late 138, Oxford Street" London.
sj-Purebusers should look to the Label on the Boxes and Pots.
If the a(idrets is .net 533, Oxford Street, London, they are spurious,
4