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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1893-7-27, Page 2That A'S,; R'S Sarsaparilla. CURES oriimRs iaf Scrofulous." Diseases; Eruptions, Boils, Eczema, Liver and Kidney Diseases, Dyspepsia, Rheuinat,srn. and Catarrh sioula b convincing %ria.: tl~:: same course. o.! treatment \ L I, CURE You All v1.ai. has been ;-.asp`? of the wander, effecte : - .the use of C� eJ Y F 'RS Scars parilla during the past fifty years, truth' fury applies to -day. It is, in every sense, The Superior Medicine, Its curative properties, strength, effect, and flavor are always the. Sat A.a ; and for whatever blood diseases AYER'S Sarsaparilla is taken, they yield to this treatment. When you ask for Ak ``r a , a rsapariRla. limit be induced to purchase an', of the worthless substitutes, which are mostly mixtures of the cheap est ingredients, contain no sarsa- parilla, have no uniform standard of appearance, flavor, or effect, are blood -purifiers in .:name only, end are offered to :o :cr.t becaure there is more p:oit in selling. them. Take f a t r " r {if 1 Sc Pt -s t 4Jby Sir. i C. 1v r.i: Co.. ?.owed, Mss. Sola c°rzi•L't.<<.sts;Price. Ss; :,iebattles, i Cures others, will cure you CENTRAL Drug Store FAN.aON'S 131;0:;1?~. full stock of all kinds of Dye -stuffs and package Dyes, constantly on hand, Milan's Condition Powd- er,, the best in the mark- et and always rash. Family recip- ees carefully prepared. at Central Drug Store Exete C. LUTZ' is the latest triumph in pharmacy for the cure of all the symptoms indicating- KIDNEY AND Livza Complaint. tlIf you are troubled with Costiveness, Dizziness, Soar Stomach, Headache, Indigestion. POOR APri:riTE, TIRED FaxLrno, RITEUuenno P.LNs ; Sleepless Nights, ]]lelancholy>; Feeling, BACs Amu:, Ntembray'a 'iidney and Liver Cure will give immediate relief and EFFECT d Cure. Sold at all Drug Stores. Teterboro' Medicine Co., Limited. PETERBORO', ONT. '0 "Backache means. the , kid- neys aro in trouble. Dodds Kidney Pills give prompt relief." "75 per cent. of disease is. first 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 ore Sold by all dealers or of price so tents. per Dr, L. A. Smith da Co. book za1iid Kidney Tai y: the scavengers. of the system, "Delay is dangerous. Neg- lected kidney troubles result in Bad Blood, Dyspepsia, 'Liver Complaint, and the most dan- gerous of all, Bright: Disease, Diabetes and Dropsy," "The above diseases cannot exist where Dodd's Kidney e ,ry Pills are used, sentby Inuit on receipt Woe ' or six for $2.50. T, ronto. Write for -4 - HE CROPS. Latest Official Bulletin Showing their t) cnditloil iu Ontario. Fall Wheat,—From June lst, the date of our previous reports, to July tat, the general condition of the tall wheat crop materially improved in most parts of Ontario. As stated before, at least one-quarter had been plowed up. In many places fields or por- tions of fields were loft that should have been plowed up and these at present appear thin and weak, The total produce will probably fall below the average :owing to the reduced acreage, and the present pros- pect of the production per acre being a little less than the average. Many farmers report excellent prospects but the lnaj arity indicate only fair prospects at the present time. Spring Wheat.—Owing to the poor crop of 1892 and the lateness of the spring, the acreage of spring wheat is less this year than last year. Very little is reported from the western half of the province and the condition is below the average, In the Geogian bay . ounties the high land looks well, the low land wheat is thin and late. The lake Ontario counties reports are variable, some excellent, some poor—on the whole the crop is only fair, but ahead of 1802. In the St. Lawrence and Ottawa group spring wheat is late, reduced in acreage and of fair prospects. In the Fast Midland group the condition is fair. Taking the province as a whole the spring wheat crop is not altogether satisfactory, but the production will probably be in slight excess of 1892. Barley.—Our previous bulletin reported sowing in progress on June 1st. Tho back- wardress and variahle nature of the Pres* ent saason may be understood when we state that even as late as July 1st a few fields were just being sown. Moat of the Crop, however, was beginning to head out at that time. The crop is very uneven, being reported as very good on high, well drained soils that wore early sown, thin and poor on low lying soils, The straw is pretty generally reported as short, but the grain appears to be filling very well. The most unfavorable reports cense from the districts that were formerly known as the leading Ontario barley dist lets, principally along the front of lake Ontario and in the bay of Quints regions. The crop will be a little' late, it will be quite a bit under the aver- age in quantity, but unless unfavorable weather occurs during July, it will be fully np to or above the average in quality. Oats.—The crop continues to be, as was reported on June 1st, the most promising of the grain crops. Through the western and eastern sections the condition is excel- lent ; along lake Ontario it is quite up to the average. The yield on high and well' drained lands will be good, on low-lying land only fair. In many sections the growth of straw is almost too rank. The reports as to this crop are far more uui- foran than as to the other grain crops, and we may expeot a yield somewhat above the average if the proper maturing of the grain is permitted by favorable weather. Rye.—Only about one correspondent out of five reports to us as to rye, but the limited quantityrown appears to be in good condition. On July 1st it was about headed out. Corn.—In the south-western part of the province, especially in Essex, Kent and Elgin, where corn is grown from the grain, an increased acreage is reported, and the condition on July 1st was from very good to excellent. Elsewhere corn is being grown principally for soiling and the silo. In lake Huron and Georgian bay districts the acreage was limited, the growth backward but improving rapidly. In the West Mid- land district the prospects were improv- ing at the beginning of the month. In the lake Ontario countries the condition was fair to good ; in the eastern and north- ern counties the crop was quite late and just beginning to make good growth. On the whole the crop was backward in start- ing but rapidly going ahead, and the pros. pects were exceedingly good on July 1st. There are many complaints from the western half of the province of poor seed. Peas.—The pea crop of Ontario will prob. ably be quite up to the average this year, On low-lying lands the rains drowned out the young peas, but on high and well - drained lands the crop has done very well, there has been a vigorous growth and pros- pects are very good. In the southwestern part of the province the acreage sown was less than formerly. Elsewhere it was larger, butso much has been destroyed in low lands that probably the average will be no greater than usual. The unanimous report of cor- respondents is " Good in high lands, poor in low lands." If the " bug" does not do much damage the total pea crop of the prov- ince will be satisfactory. Buckwheat.—At this date buckwheat is still being sown, and owing to a failure of some of the earlier crops a Iarger area than usual will likely be put in, more especially in eastern Ontario. Where sown, the crop is reported to be coming along nicely. Beans.—This crop is said to be doing well where grown, but the acreage as a field crop is confined chiefly tc Kent and a few other counties. The area does not seem to be smaller than usual in those sections. Hay and Clover.—Farmers were nicely into haying when returns came in. Fine weather—and the prospects for it were good —was the only thing required to ensure a first-class crop. There is an immense yield of clover on new fields, and old fields are well up to their average. Timothy, al- though not equal to clover, has also one well. The midge was mentioned by a Waterloo correspondent, but no one else complained of injury by insect enemies. It is too early to compute the average yield, but it will be unusually high. Potatoes.—The only thing apparently in the way of a splendid crop of potatoes is the presence of the Colorado beetle in im- mense numbers.. The bugs are so thick this year as to excite great apprehension, but otherwise the tubers are making grand growth above and below ground, more par- ticularly thoseP Y lanted early. . Roots. -It was rather early when corre- spondents wrote to say much about roots. The references to mangles were.mostly re- assuring ; they were coming up nicely, al- though one report from Brant reported some plowed np. .But little was said about carrots, which are not so general as. a field crop. Turnips were comm into leaf rom- isingly, ,and here the fly was named t was chiefly to note its absence lip to the time of writing. Other Crops.-Sorghun' and tobacco in the south A est ate reported fair ;•alsike and white clover in all parts' of Ontario, very fine ; millet, good ; hops, very promising ;.', flavin the West Midland district, very good - pasture in all sections, exceptionally good. Apples, especially winter apples, . will be very limited as blossoming was ensatisfac- tory and young fruit has been dropping heavily. Pears and cherries will bo light, peaches and plums only a fair crop, Small fruits are better than large fruits; straw- berries were reported abundant in all sec- tions, Grapes se far promise a good orop. 'Wild fruits appear' to be abundant. On the whole the indications are that in fruit the present year will be a little below the aver- age. Crops in General,—The present year has shown the great controlling influence of the weather ; it has also proved the great ad- vantage and necessity of more thorough drainage in Ontario. With few- exceptions the general report is in regard to nearly all crops : "Crops good on high and well -drain- ed fields, poor or total failure ou'1ow and undrained fields." Clover and timothy hay and pasture stand ahead of all crops so far. Grain crops are fair ; fruit crops poor. The staple grain crops may be arranged about thus in order of prospective yield : oats, corn, peas, fall wheat, barley, spring wheat. All crops will be a little late in being harv- ested. SAILED AWAY IN A RUFF Rear Admiral Lamorens Departs. Without Ceremony. The 'Teeple of St. .olid: Bail Arranged Receptions and a lsauttuct in ills honor, but He Llrted Anchor Wltltoitt 0 good -by, A St. Johns, N. F,, apeoial says:—Rear Admiral Lamoronx of the French war ship Naiade,the flagship of the French squadron on the Newfoundland fishery protection service, was guilty of a discourtesy here last night which may end iu serious conse- quences. He insulted the Governor of this colony and the officers of the English war ship Cleopatra. The trouble is another out- growth of the French shore question and arose out of same lobster cans. A month ago the steamer Herlaw brought from Halifax to Bonne Bey a large freight of empty cans for canning lobsters for Trench packers, and they refused to pay customs duties on them, declaring that the French treaty rights permitted them to take in all merchandise free. The customs authorities contended on the contrary thatgoodscoming from one Bridal port to another in a British ship should pay, and, the French still re. fusing, seized the goods es contraband. The matter was relegated here for settlement by our Government and the French Admiral anti he agreed to conte here and celebrate the fete day of the 'French republic and also ar• range this dillieulty. Ho arrived on Sunday, and Commodore Curzon Howe, in command of the English squadron, was here in the Cleopatrato receive him appropriately, Mon- day the French Admiral met tho Govern- or, the Exeeutive Council, and the Com- modore on the subject, and imperiously demanded the return of the goods or their value. Though willing to treat reasonably with him, they declined to be forced and in- dignantly refused to permit him to twist tihe British lion's tail, and when he became stormy and made threats, a comparison of stroogth between his ship, an old wooden one, and the Cleopatra, a modern British cruiser, convinced him lie could not bluff the Ingglist,, and he retired wrathy from the conference, went on board ship, and left the harbor. A dinner in his honor was to have been given by the Governor, Sir Terence O'Brien. last night and a ball on \Veduesday. There were to be receptions by the citizens on Tuesday and by the Cleopatra on Thursday, and the Cleopatra was to take part in the fete 6n .July 14. The Rear Admiral spurn- ed all these invitations and sailed silently away. The Governor and the Cleopatra's officers are indignant, and a strong feeling prevails. The Naiad e, it issaid, has gone to the French shore to make things troublesome, and the Cleopatra willgoafter her when the Commo. dare receives instructions from London, for which he has telegraphed. It is feared there will be serious trouble on that coast shortly. Extraordinary Occurrence. The African Co.'s steamer Oil Rivers, Capt. F. W. Clarke, with mills and pas- sengers from the West and South-West shores of Africa, arrivecdein the Mersey on Monday. The Oil Rivers brings dates from Lagos to the lst ult., at which time the details of a most extraordinary occurrence at the French colony of Gaboon had reached Lagos. According to these a French trader at Baboon had some transaction with four natives inland of the place. The natives had got into the trader's debt and the went up the river to the place where the natives were settled and demanded payment. An alter- cation ensued, during which it is alleged the Frenchman drew his revolver and allot one of then dead. The other three then disarmed the man and thrashed him. The trader returned and complained to the authorities of the outrage. A force of police was sent np the river, and the three natives being arrested were brought ,to Gaboon for trial. At the trial the Frenchman com- plained of the flogging he had received, but admitted having shot one of the four men. The court decided against the natives, and the three poor fellows were sentenced t- be shot. The execution took place on the fol- lowing day, and was witnessed, it is said, by some passengers from one of the English mail steamers, who had heard of the extra- ordinary affair, and landed especially to see if the sentence would be carried out. The despatch states that the three 'nen were carried from their prison and tied to trees, when a posse of 12 soldiers were told to carry out the order The affair is so singu- lar that it can scarcely be .credited, but the report received from Liverpool says thatthe account given to the Lagos•authorities was by an eye -witness of the occurrence. Bells as a Protection Against Wolves. For some time we have had an op- portunity of observing a flock of nearly fifty sheep and lambs that are running " at large in a district where wolves are un- usally numerous. There is no doubt of the presence of old and young wolves as they can be heard howling every night and often appear on the prairie in the evenings some- times near the house. Daring some nights sleep has been disturbed by the continual warfare carried on between the dogs and the beasts that have been attracted by the presence of some fowls that for a time roosted in an exposed place. So far wolves have done, no dama8e. The sheep are placed in an enclosure at night and have their liberty during the day and gen- erally seek the shelter of the shed during the midday hours. About a dozen of the sheep are provided with small but well - toned bells,and as any unusual object or sound excites the fears of ravenous beasts, it may be that, the tinkling of so many good bells serve as a protection. Whether the wolves' will become accustomed to the music remains to be seen. Tho "bells certainly frighten the wolves now and it would; be an easy matter to add some new ones of a different tette. We believe that the danger to sheep from prairie wolves has been altogether over estimated, and that when losses have occurred the evil has been caused by carelessness in leavingsheep out at night.—[Pilot Moend Sentinel. A PRAIRIE FIRE, 11n Incident of Western Life, now the Fiery Monster Fanned Into Enry by a Strong, Wind, `Licks Up Everything in Its ''nth. The, morning dawned bright and clear. The sun rose and lighted a ,landscape not yet touched with faiutest shade of green, but here and there a lark warbled her znerry song, betokening the speedy coming of the springtime. .As thesun ascended, each little group of dwellings that marked the habitation of some Western pioneer be- came a scene of activity, and soon the teams were wending their way to fields of labor, some near at hand and some remote, where farriers, one and all, were busy put- ting in the seed for the coming harvest. Not a breath of air stirred; note, discordant sound broke open the ear ; all was, still save the rattling waggons, the prairie chickens serenading on a distant slope and the my- riads of twittering birds, But soon a dint haze became visible in the western horizon the tall, dead bunch grass began to sway in the breeze ; fitful little gusts of wind caught up the dry corn husks and sent them. whirling high into the air. An hour passed; the dim haze had developed into a well-de- fined column of smoke away to the west. ward, and TUE WIND WAS BLOWING STEADILY, The busy farmer in the field, and the busy wife at home cast anxious giauces now and then toward the increasing smoky expanse, wondering if it could by any chance en- danger their little possessions. But, no, the wind is bearing it southward. Tars much -dreaded fire -fiend will pass down the canyons to the river and its devastations will cease. Someone's property is in danger, someone is fighting fire, but each man must look to his own interest, and the farmer works away, fast leveling the dry corn stalks as the wheat is covered in tit° fields that will soon be mass of living green. But, look 1 The wind is changing, veering to the north, and the result is soon mark- ed. The dense volume ot smoke is leaving the canyon and backing up- the draws to- wards the divide. Fiercer the wind blows and faster the fire approaches. Self now must be protected and team after team leaves the field. llere and there a man on horse bank is seen galloping towards the stroke. Ploughs are brought into requisition and furrows are thrown up in the short, crisp' buffalo grass of the open prairie, think°ng to check tho devastatingfire, but it is too late; the smoke grows dnser, the fire comes roaring up out of the draws. How it crackles, and Tilit THICK, BLACK SMOKE ASCENDS es the dry bunch grass is hungrily devour- ed. Now it has reached the divide, and the flames leap high into this air, visible fdr miles around. The wind lulls and the fire creeps along, slowly but surely, in the thick, short grass. Then men attempt to whip it out as it reaches the plowed furrow. For a time they succeed, but a fierce gnat of wind thwarts all their labor, the fire jumps the guard and rushes on, Pastures and hay land must burn. Each man to Itis home. Stacks, cribs, stock and bnildings must be saved. A race begins between fire and horsemen. One man with a team from the plough is directly in its course. He dons all that the can do, wheels his horses roan dand dashes through the fin nes. Only an instant, and the panting animals with sinned legs and half stifled by the smoke, have borne their master safely to the al- ready blackened prairie. Women are in- tently watching the dreaded fire bearing down upon them, anxious for both home and husband, but here he comes some dis- tance ahead of the fire, and with willing hands every one upon the place that can carry a bunch of burning grass or a wet rag TO EXTINGUISH THE NAMES that go amiss lends ready help in back fir - ng, the last resort to save the buildings. In an incredibly short space of time a strip is burned between home and fire. The tired workers pause to smile at the little bunch of quails and the frightened jack rabbit that, in company, came hopping up the road ahead of the fire, then turn and stand awe- stricken by the grandeur of the scene es the fire itself comes roaring, crackling, rushing on. It strikes the burned strip, divides, encircles the little group of build- ings and passes on, to repeat the scene at other homes until the wind dies and the fire can be controlled. The day is nearly done, no one has thought of dinner; betnow that the excitement is over much needed rest and refreshment are sought: The sun sets, but upon a different scene from that on which it rose. The monotonous brownness of the morning las disappeared. Bare blackened prairie, corn and stubble fields are alone visible, forming a monotonous blackness, dreary and gloomy. The wind has gone down with the sun and darkness reveals in the distance a still burning stack, and here and there a Drawling serpent of flame, re- minders that the dreaded prairie fire -fiend has breathed his scorching breath once more upon the land. Yankee's Ideal of Labor. The Yankee's antipathy to work has neveryetbean adequately appreciated. H e is in a state of perpetual insurrection against the primal curse. He feels that he was born to sit on the fence and whittle inthe sunshine, and he is against every apparent necessity that would compel him to forego the serenepleasures of a purely contempla- tive existence. Ile recognizes, to be sure, that work has got to be done. No one has a more vivid realization of that. But the consciousness of the need of gettiug things done does not impel him to take his coat off and do them, so much as to contrive some way of accomplishing endswithontworking. The crudest, simplest way ofdoing that is° fo get rich enough to hire labor. Accord- ingly, the Yankee does try to get rich, and does not try in vain. Itis not that he loves money so much, and desires to possess it, as that he loves labor so little. But to get rich is only an indirect way of beating the tyrant, The Yankee would rather abol- ish work than elude it. If he can get it done without human intervention: at all, he likes that best ; and if he cannot wholly eliminate human intervention, he wants to reduce it to its lewest possible limit.When he gets matters fixed so thatthe work is done with very little intermeddling he is willing to sit by and supervise the process. He will pull a lever and turn a cock now and then without much complaint, if so be that he can ruminate and whittle. His name is a synonym for energy and perse- verance. But to make things work to- gether for the automatic accomplishment of labor, and to sit by and see that they work right—that is the Yankee idea of the mis- sion of man, -Scribner. There are 6,000post offices in the United Statesin charge of women. Perfornancei at the-itres of ancient Greece sometimes lasted twelve hours Seven o'clock in the morning was the time for the raising of the curtain, so to speak, counters. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria} FALLER SILVER. Fier,' Orators of Colorado Talk of an Appeal to Arms.' The Governor of the State Greeted with Thunders of Appitntve as •Ile ;ilwalt$ of 'Wading Through Mood. A Denver special says :—Antony's address to the Roman mobwas not a circumstance to the intense excitement that raged for two hours the other day at the State Silver Convention. The leaders against the "gold conspiracy of the Fast" rolled forth invec- tives, covert threats, and open rebellious and seditious 'sentences, When a calmer - minded man attempted to counsel caution and cool deliberation he was promptiy bowled down amid throats of expulsion. When Gov. Waite, the white-haired Popu- list Executive, read it carefully worded ad- dress as nearly revolutionary as it would be possible to make it, the euthusiasin of the mob Convention knew no bounds. This was followed by a speech of like tenor by W.J. Kerr of Peeble. The excitement reached its height when Jay Cook, Jr., of Denver, ascended the platform and sought to counsel moderation in the official expression of the mass Con- vention. The crowd would not have it,and for an hour the Chairman battled with the hooting, jeering hundreds to maintain the floor for Cook until he had finished his speeoh, For a time a crowd clustered about the stage, threatening to throw the speaker from the room, At length he retired, and (Gov. W;aite's speech was endorsed by a mighty shout, and with the accompaniment of three rousing cheers. E. Holden, the fiery, impetuous miner who luta openly dealared for a Western ori- pire, threw the firat fire brand into the meeting in the morning when he declared that some monometallists were in the hall and he wanted them excluded. He was. choked off, but the misehief had been done and the temper of the Convention was such as not to brook any difference of views. Chairman Thomas said that this Conven- tion recognizes no party or creed, but has met to face a crisis that has fewparallels in the history of thenation » to face a conspir- acy against the liberty and freedom ,of the citizens. The nation has a dishonest dollar, and it is the gold dollar of Lombard and Wall streets. There is we outstanding obligation of tha Government that cannot be lawfully paid in silver, and the officials refusing to do so violate their obligations. While the Committee on Resolutions were out the incendiary speechmaking began. E. Holden hinted darkly that he was through with talk. He now proposes to.aet, and he shook his fist in a manner to evoke shouts of applause. "If this crisis continues," he said, "all institutions west of the Mississippi River will fall, and when men become hungry they became insensible to reason. Then I am ready to act." Gov. Waite opened his speech with the words : "The demonetization act of 1878 was secret and fraudulent. The conduct of the masses will be open and violent." After talking in that strain for some time, he used these words : "If it is true that the Unitech States is unable to carry out its economic and mental policy under our own Constitution and laws without the direction or eon - sent of foreign powers,if we aro only a prov- ince of European monarchies, then we need another revolution, another appeal to arms and to the God of hosts ; and when we have won that battle, as we will if tear is forced upon us, we will send to Halifax a far greater army of British Tories, according to our population, -than our fathers sent there after the Revolutionary war. " Who is Grover Cleveland ? and who is Benjamin Harrison? and who are their sup- porters in Wall street or in Denver, that in this nineteenth century they dare to assume to drive into poverty and exile a half, million of American freemen? No banker, no broker, no usurer, and, least of all, no peddling politician has it in his power to compromise this tremendous is- sue. " The war has begun. It is the same war which must always be raised against oppression to preserve the liberties of the man. Our weapons are argument and the ballot, a free ballot and a fair count, and if the money power shall attempt to sustain its insurpation by the ' strong hand,' we will meet that issue when it is forced upon us. For it is better that blood should flow to the horses' bridles rather than our na- tional liberties should be destroyed." Col. Platt tried to calm the spirit of the mob. He even told them that Senator Sherman had said he ought to be hanged. He asked if the Sherman act is repealed, what will be the consequence ? Somebody shouted: " We will wring their damned necks." Another speaker said: " We want Paul Revere to preach liberty throughout the land, and there is always one recourse open to freemen." This is Sound Sense. A country exchange says to farmers t "Don't make poor butter. If you can't make a good article, sell your cream to someone who can, or take lessons from those who know how. Poor butter is a drug on the market, it is the abomination of the store- keeper and a loss to those who make it. . Good butter is in demand and is eagerly sought after. There is not enough ' gilt edge,' butter brought to town to supply the local trade, but the amount of 'grease' that is thrown noon the market is appall- ing. First-class butter sells from eight to ten Cents a pound above the price two or three years ago. Why not make it ? $ow to Gat a "Sunlight" Picture. Send 25 "Sunlight" Soap'wrappera (the large wrapper) to Lever Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott St. Toronto, and you will receive by post a pretty picture, free from advertising and well worth framing. This is an easy way to decorate your home. The soap is the best in the market, and it will only cost lc postage to send in the wrappers, if you leave the ends open. Write your 'address. carefully. Mayor Granger, of Fort Dod% o, Iowa, re- cently ordered that all drinking saloons should have their windows free from cur- tains and screens on Sundays. It had this effect; not a glass of liquor was sold on the first Sabbath the order went into effect. When' Baby was sick, we Pave her Castor . When she was a Child; she cried for Castoria. When she became Bliss she clung to Castoria; When she had Children; she gave them Castoria An iron railway lasts sixteen years ; steel ono lasts forty. s o f lunchThe world's fair has two m ilea Thew is a gently. Dyspepsia. roan at Malden -on - the -Hudson, N. Y';, named Captain A. G. Pareis, who has written us a letter in which it is evident that he has made up his mind concerning some things, and this is what he says: I have used your preparatiog called August Flower in niy family for seven or eight years. It is con- stantly in my house, and we consider it the best remedy for �Tndigestion, aucc.L,C, pstipation we Indigestion, have", ever used ot knoivti. My wife is troubled with Dyspepsia, and at times suffers very much after eating. The August Flower, however, re lieves the difficulty, My wife fre quently says to me when I am going to town, 'We are out Constipation of August Flower, and I think you had better get another bottle.' I am also troubledwith Indigestion, and whew' ever I am, I take one or two tea,. Spoonfuls before eating, for a day or two, and all trouble is removed." SURVEYING. FRED W. FARNCO MB, Provincial Land Surveyor and Civil En- Ci-21V;F. o , i71'C„ Office, Vnstairs,Samwell's Meek, I:xeter.OUt Every owner erWa a horsecrrowwants i.L tfe to knaty lox to y keep hisnnimaliu good health while in the stable on dry+fedder, DICK'S BLOOD PURIFIER is now recognized as the best Condition Powders, it given a good appetite and strengthens the digestion satbatalt the food is assimilated and farms 'lest,, thus saving more than it costs. It regulates the Bowels and Kidneys and turns a rough coat into a smooth and glossy one. Sound Horses are al- ways in demand afloat this season when they O� a nd aro boilable toslips and 4 / was strains DICK'S MIS - TEP. will be found a � � stable necessity; it will remove a curb, spavin, splint or thoroughpia or any swelling. Dick's Lint inert cures a strain or tameuessand removes Wilma - motion from cuts and bruises. For Sale by all Drug- gists. Dick's Blood Purifier Sec. Disk's Blister 511e, Dick's Liniment. 21e. Dick's Ointment 25c, - Send a Fat Cattlepostal card furiutipar. tennis, & nbock of valuable householland farm recipes will tin sent free, P DICK R CO., P.O. Box 482, MONTREAL It la a certain and speedy cure for Cs1111n tho Head mud Catarrh in all its stages. c0OTHIN0,CLlSEANNO, fl EAL. Instant Relief, Permanent Cure, Failure Impossible. Many so-called airmen are simply symptoms of Catarrh, such no heart- ache, ear ache partial deatnets,losiag sense f smell, fonl breath, Larking and spit. ting, nausea, general feeling Of de- bility, eta. 11 you aro troubled with any of these or kindred syniotoins, ,Our Hare Catarrh, and should a no Limo in procuring a bottle of onia Diaz:. De warned in time, re mete t cold in head results in Caton fol. lowed by consumption and death. Esau. nntu Is sold by all druggists or *militia sent, poet paid en rcoelpt of price (se cents and WO by addressing FULI O Brockville, D&C0,,Ont. Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry is a reliable remedy that can always be depended on to cure cholera, cholera infantum, colic, cramps, diarrhoea, dysentery, and all looseness of the bowels. It is a pure Extract containing all the virtuegof \Pill Straves berry, one of the safestrek'd;surest cures for all summer complaints, combined. with other harmless yet -prompt curative agents, well known to medical science. The leaves of Wild Strawberry were ltnown by the Ldtirinrf to be ail excellent remedy for diarrhoea, dysentery .and looseness of the bowels; but medical science has placed before the public in Dr. Fowler's Ext. of Wild,. Strawberry a complete and effectual cure` for all those distressing and often dangerous Complaints so common in this change- able climate. It has stood the test for 40 years; and hundreds of lives have been saved by its prompt use. No other remedy always Cures summer complaints EO promptly, quiets 'the pain so effectually and allays irrita- tion so successfully .as this unrivalled prescription of Dr. Fowler. If you are going to travel this ITI 11.19, Il er be sure and take a •bottle with 'Yon. It overcomes safely and quickly the dis tressing summer complaint so often caused by change of air and water, and is also a specific against sea -sickness, and all bowel plait a Coni Pric° 35e. Be v7 tto of lin'.' ober' and substitutes soid by iinscrup clans dealers for the sake of greater pro, :,i.