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The Exeter Advocate, 1894-8-2, Page 5NERVE tl NEItv'AIAEANs are • new dig, British Grain Trade, n covert' that owe the worst cases of Nervous Debility, Lost Vigor as d I�Ailin Manhood' restores the , BJ.:r.i11Vw7or mind0 weakness of body caused we r- the axons or oz• b orb work or rr Y C..,ea M�..�la-r>.�!.. ceases youth. This Remedy .b• solutely cures the most obstinate cases when ail other asATMF,NT8 have failed even to relieve, :,old by drug, te at bi por paokege, 0? six for $5 or sent by mail on receipt of price by addressing TEEJAMES. MEDICINE 00,, Toronto, Ont. Writ.- ,or nnanphlet. Sold lak Fee sale in Exeter by X, w. Browning Sir William Whiteway and Robert Bond, leaders of the late Newfoundland Government, have been disqualified by the Legislature for corrupt prat:ticees at the election. Dear Sirs.—I have been using Bur dock Bitters for Boils and skin diseases and I find it vel y good as a cure. As a dyspepsia. cure I have also found it unequalled. Mrs. Sarah. Hamilton, Montreal, Que. Theaekston, who claims to be a To- ronto man, was given six years in Kingston yesterday for getting mosey from a Detroit woman by fraud. Skin diseases are more or less occa- sioned by bad blood, B.B B cures the following Skin Diseases, Shingles, Ery- sipelas, Itching Rashes, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Eruptions, Pimples and Blothches, by removing all impurities from the blood from a common Pimple to the worst Scrofulous Sore. Mowbray, the English anarchist, is to be sent back to England. He gained entrance to the United under an as sumed named, Gentlemen I have used your Yellow Oil and have found it unequalled for burns, sprains, scalds, rheumatism, croup and colds. All who use it re. commend it. Mr. Hight, Montreal,Que, Rev. R. C. Horner, a methodist minis- ter, of Pembroke, has been suspended for not taking the station assigned to him by conference, 1 Dr. Low's Worm Syrup cures and removes worm of all kinds in children or adults. Price 25c. Sold by all deal- ers. The United States Cabinet think that re- public Minister Willis, ts recognition of the re Mrn public of Hawaii a little premature. TO DESTROY WORMS and expel them from children or adults use Dr. Low's Worm Syrup. Mr. J, H. Booth, of Ottawa, was sand- bagged yesterday morning in his store, and $1,600 taken from his pocket. For Over Fifty Tears. AN OLD AND WELL-TNIED I%EMEDT. MrS Winslow's Soothing Syrup, has been used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their ohiklren while teething, with per- fect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic and is the best remedy for Diarrheoa. is pleasant to the taste. Sold by Druggists In, every part of the World. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Its value is incalculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup and take no other kind The Standard Oil Company now has control of the Canadian gas wells in the Niagara peninsula. COUGHS, Colds Sore Throat, Asthma Bronchitis. and all Lung T,rouhles are quickly cured by Hagyards Pectorial Balsam. Three Forks and Watson, two British Columbia settlements, have been des troyed by forest fires. NORWAY PINE SYRUP cures Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Sore Throat Asthma, Bronchitis, e'c. Jaurdan and Rouvier, two French deputies, will meet in mortal combat this morning. BURDOCK PILLS do not gripe or sicken. They cure Constipation and Sick Headache. Mr. R. S., Manning, a well-known resident of Bomanyille, died yesterday ' morning. Dear Sirs.—I was suffering very much from Diarnccna, and could noth- ing to cure me. A fried told me of Dr Fowlers Extract of Wild Strawberry, and aafew doses completely cured me, Thos. L. Graham, Melita, Man. Belleville City Council passed its esti mates last night. The rate is 20 1-2 mills I WAS ATTACKED severely last winter with Dia rnccea, Cramps, and Col- ic and thought I was going to die, but fortunately I tried Dr.Fowler'sExtract of Wild Strawberry, and now I can thank this excellent remedy for saving my life. Mrs. S. Kellett, Minden, Ont. Five men and 200 horses lost their Byes in a Washington fire yesterday. HEART DISEASE RELIEVED IN 30 MINUTES.—All cases of organic or sym- pathetic heart disease relieved in 30 minutes and quickly cured, by pr. Agnew's Cure for the Hear;. One dose convinces. Sold by C. Lutz,. druggist Just as lively fighting as ever in Brazil. The usual amount of mortality. Beware of Green Fruit. -Now Ithat the heated term is approaching, people should pay particular attention to their diet, above all things avoiding unripe fruit and stale vegetables, which in- variably bring on Cramps, Cholera Morbus, or diarrhoea. Children are par• titularly subject to complaints of this kind, and no mother can feel safe with out having a bottle of Perry Davis' Pain Killer within easy reach. It is a safe, sure, and speedy cure for the dis orders named, and no family medicine chest is complete without it. Ask for a big 25c. bottle, Many deaths from sunstroke are re- ported from Berlin and Vienna. ltlaeanuitism Cured in a Day. South American Rheumatic Cure, for Rheumatism and Neuralgia, radically eures in 1 to B days, Its action upon the system is remarkable and myster- ious. Tt removes at once the cause and the disease immediately disap- pears. The first dose greatly benefits, 25e. Sold by 0. Lutz,Dr tig gist, HOFFMA 's. F1AtlViPO 4D uSCHE ears iS ALIHEA DACHt/. n tieedto ru,o nvory- t1a irtt,,btrt almply ]scall- aches. lr�rl/ tbc,n, it vitt c ,tt but 21; darn.+ -e fot4 ],sant a,ul they p, d atr>•nttoss. They are not a Cathadli. London,Jnlw3Oth.—T a Mark Lan Express in its eeklyreyiew e of the Brit- ish grain trade, says: English wheats have fallen six pence, influenced by the prospect of large suppliesof foreign wheats. Russian and Indian wheats are six pence lower, and American red winter has reclined a shilling. Cali- fornia wheats have been steady. Bar• ley dull, and corn and oats steady, Linseed has dropped six pence. To- day English wheats are quiet, foreign red wheat lost three pence, foreign flour six ponce. Grinding barley is firm. Corn, flat and round advanced six pence, and oats declined three pence. Manitoba's Fine Crops. Winnipeg, Man., July 81, -The farm. ers of Manitoba and the North-west are now assured of au abundant har- vest, It is expected that harvesting will be general in a week or ten days. Grain is all headed out, is a good length, and is filling up well, Farmers are hopeful that the price of wheat will advance, but even if it does not, with the yield now assured, they will still be in a good position, There is not much speculating yet as to the pro- bable average yield per acre, but good judges say the wheat crop will exceed last year's, and may run 25 bushels to the acre. Oats and barley are an ex- cellent crop. In the nothern parts of Manitoba many farmers report they will have 35 bushels of wheat to the acre, Hay is plentiful, and root crops promise well. Kinburn: Mr. J. A. Stewart has dis posed of his store property and business to Mr. Andrew, of Usborne. Mr. Stew- art has gone to reside in Egmodville. Kippen: T. 14Mellis has been among t'le unfortunate ont s lately, he having lost his best cow and two pigs in two weeks. Tom thinks it rather tough these,hard times, Seaforth: Mr D. D. Wilson has sold the oat meal mill to Mr. Walter Thomp son, the former 'proprietor. While he had it Mr. Wilson put about five thous- and dollars worth of improvements in the mill, and it is now one of the best iu the:province. Stanley: The new voters list for 1894, was posted up on the 17th fust. There are in all 708` names on the list. Of these 524 are qualified to vote at all elections; 89 to vote at municipal elections only; and 90 to vote at the Legislatiye Assembly only. Of this number 348 are eligible as jurors. Of the number qualified to vote only at municipal elections, 35 are women Chatham: Two men named Joseph Landry., aged sixty, and Benjatnin Snell, aged 25, employed by Jonn Lid- dy, Harwich township, quarrelled Sat - day evening. Snell knocked the old man down and kicked him in the ab- domen and side, inflicting injuries so serious that Landry is now at the point of death hi Chatham General Hospital. Snell, who has been arrested claims that he was ouly "fooling" with Lan- dry. Usborne: The list for 1894 of per- sonsinthis township who are qualified to exercise the franchise, was posted up by the township clerk on the lith of this month. The total number of persons on the list this 3 ear is 831; last year it was 822, so that there has been an increase of 9. There are 595 per- sons qualified to vote at both munici- pal and Legislative Assembly elect- ions; 152 persons, of whom 40 are wvo- men, at municipal electioLs only, and 81 manhood franchise voters. Seaforth: An incendiary attempt to burn Clark's bakery the other eight, and used coal oil and rags to hasten the destruction of the property. But the fire was discovered in good time. If the diabolical plans of the iticediary had succeeded, it would have undoubt- edly bean accompanied with the loss of two lives at least, as Mr Crawford and his wife were sleeping over the shop, and their only means of slaking their escape was through the back door oyer the bakery. As the tire was in the rear this would have been entirely cut off, and they would have undoubtedly perished. Popular Novelists in Scotland. The Librarian of the Public Library at, Edinburgh, Mr. Hew Morison, has been. giving statistics showing the number pf times the works of different authors had been perused in the Edinburgh Public Library since the date of its opening. The most popular of Scott's novels were "The Bride of Lammermoor," "Guy Manner. ing,'= "Redgauntlet," "The Betrothed," "The Pirate," and 'Ivanhoe." Of Hardy's works, "Tess of the D'Urbervilles" had been in constant demand since its publica- tion. Meredith's works suers also exten- sively patronized in Edinburgh ; and the difference between the highest and lowest of his works in popularity was very low indeed. Rider Haggerd's also stood high in point of mane, "She" was least in de- mand, and "King Solomon's Mines" and "Jess" most popular. Robert Louis Stev- enson's writings were in perpetual request, and the same might be said, though to a lees extent,' of William Black and George Macdonald, Of the lady writers "Ouida" and Mrs. Henry Wood took first place. fol- lowed by Annie Swan and Miss Yonge.-- Westminster Budget, / Iloiv to Tale Shoestrings. "Stop a minute. My shoestring is untied," "Oh, deari What a nuis- ance! uis-ancel Yout• shoes are always untying, and there's our car coming." Result, fuss and bad temper. Though a shoe- string is a very easy thing to tie, not one person out of a hundred knows how to do it., We all know how to tie a bow and of what a bow consists --two loops and a knot in the middle. Now sup- pose before you tighten your bow, and while you still have a loop in each hand, you take the loop in your right hand and pass it through the knot in the middle. Now go your usual, way and give good booth loops >l. ]lard tug to tightenthem, and there you are! 'No more untied shoestrings. No snore lost cars, When you want to nnfastsn it, take one of the tag ends in your hand, give a good pull, and the thing is done, or rather undone, `writes one of Good Housokeetiirlg''s correspondents; ,. NOT IN THE USUAL COURSE, A humming bird is said t have beet; io stungto death by a beeat Columbia,mb a Wis., recently. A young man of Patterson, N,J., re- oently sneezed lin hard that he jerked hie shoulder out of joint. Thoulae Edison, the inventor, has never carried a. watch in his life. He has never wantedto know the time,,, The wettest plaoe in the world is Cher- rapungi, in Assam, where the average rain- fall fur fifteen years has been 493 inches. In 1861 it was 905. A lady at Maple Valley, N.Y., is raising in a cage an albino robin which she found in the grass under a tree. Every feather is white and its eyes are pink. The length of time that footprints will remain fresh -looking in the soil on the coast of Greenland is remarkable. Tracks that appear but a few hours old have fre- quently been made for weeks. A human face clock ispn view in the window of a St. Petersburg watchmaker. The hands are pivoted on the nose, and' any message spokeu into its ear repeated by a phonograph through its mouth. Itis said to be the only olook of the kind at present in existence. A Grand Rapids (Mich„) dentist has the hypnotic power 150 strongly that he can persuade patients that they are swinging in hammocks and eating ice greats while he is at work on their molars. It may be superfluous to add that his pull is &iuoreas-. ing grandly and rapidly. INVENTION AND DISCOVERY. Porcelain is to be substituted for gold in filling teeth. An extension ladder for upper berths of sleeping oars has been devised. Witches were originally made in shapes to imitate pears, gourds, acorns and birds' skulls. French railroad companies are contem- plating the substitution of the telephone for the telegraph, 'From a gratin of sand, barely visible to the naked eye, one thousand miles of quartz thread may be spun, An Euglish curio collector has an old- time watch which is, shaped like a cow's horn. At the end of every hour it dis- charges a tiny pistol, A London chemist who analyzed a sam- ple of "hair restorer" selling at fifty cents for a two -ounce bottle, found it to contain common water with traces of salt and sage extract. The Scientific American has figured it out that the energy exerted by a railroad train traveling seventy-five miles an hour is nearly twice that of a two -thousand - pound shot fired from a one -hundred -ton Armstrong gun. A liliputiau electric light has been in- vented for the benefit of newspaper re- porters. It is fastened to the end of a pencil so the reporter may carry his own light with him and be able to make his notes even in the darkness, MODERN PROVERBS. Empty threat make lying children. The serpent of the still wears no rat- tles. Don't go to ,the wrong shop to get. shaved. There is many a knock -opt in ..a -whisky. punch. • A stinted wife can find a vest pooket in' the dark. He is always a slave wholives beyond his means. If we had eternal sunshine we would have no crops. The dangerous end of a rattlesnake makes no noise. The aggressive man always finds the hornet at home. There is a Lazarus for every crumb from the party table. If every man were to get rioh who believes he knows how, we would have no paupers. The worm iu the whisky distillery will do more damage to the farmer this summer than the cutworm. FUTURE PREMIERS. "Willie, do you and your brother ever fight?" "Yes, sir." "Who whips?" ' Pa.iItLtle tFauntleroy—.Mamum, why do you call my gray kitty a Maltese? Is it because I maul end tease it so? The Crop.—Teacher—'For they have sown the wind, and they shall reap'— what? Bright Pupil—Air plants. In a district school the pupils were asked to define a bee line. A small boy answered: "1 know! It's the line a feller makes fer home when a bee's stung him." Auntie --A penny for your thoughts. Little Nephew—I was thinking that, if I kept quiet and pretended to be thinking, you'd wonder what I was thinking about, and sav just what you did. Gimme the penny! THE SPONSOR. Stot was formerly a herd; hence the Stottards end Stoddards. Free end Freeman were once the names of manumitted slaves. Pear, Pearman, Perrier and Perryman once kept pear orchards. Belham represents the fuller and more euphonious BelIehomme. Black, Blocker and Brookman are the sons of men who fashioned hats. Bn. k, Barker and Barkley show the im- portance of tanbark in early English times. JUDGMENTS. A platonic friendship may be possible— between women, or between men. Originality is the ascendancy of the in- dividual over the Dreconcertod ideas of the masses. What the world gains in evenness of culture and smoothness of tone it is apt to lose iti individuality and force. It is well that kind seeks kind and finds beauty and enjoyment in it—well that the lowest oennat appreciate the refinement of the highest, else there would he many un- mated creatures on the earth,—Judge. 13AY OF FUNDY'S TIDES. There is a fall in the tide of twelve to fifteen feet at Grand Manon, At both Lubee and Eastport the tide boasts a better rec=•t'd, which is twenty feet. The tide at St, John varies all the way from twenty-four to thirty feet., e silt feet is what the tide Sv has as regrs• tered at Moncton, on the bend of the Peiicodiac, The difference between high and lows water mark on the Cobequid river is twelve miles, the river being twelve miles louses, M high than at lot►' Wt tees THE ORIGIN OF NAMES. Harper, Pipe, Piper, Danger, renter, .souther, Baird, Singer are all profession- al names. Thrower wasonce the, winder of silk threads: hence the Throwers and Throw - eters. Golightly, Lightfoot, Barefoot and Roe- foot were nicknames having allusions to speed, Crook, Crump, Cramp and Crimp are but changes rung on an old nickname for a cripple. Pelter, Peliper and Furrier recall the fur trade of the English with Norway and Sweden. Blond, a complexion adjective, was the progenitor of Blund, blunt, Blount and Blundell. Sanders, Saunders, Sanderson, are vari- ations of Alexander, a favorite name in Scotland. Hacker, Hecker, Hackman and Hackery ere derived from the name of a woodman who prepared timber for building. Ralph's sons spell their names Ralf, Ralpheon, Rawes, Rawson, Rawlings, Rol- lins, Rollinson. Rapkins ani] Rapson. Brailer and Bracer had progenitors who lived by making the leather braces that held the old fashioned breeks in place. White, Black, Brown, Gray, Green, Reed or Red, Ruddte and a few more originated in peculiarities of dress or complexion. Savage, Sharp, Smart, formerly Smert, Witty, Cute and Quick were once compli- mentary titles added to the first names. Wool, Wooler, Woolman, Terrier, Sack- er, Staples, Stapler, Carder, Comber, Pinner, Towzer and Tozer, Spindler, Weber Weaver, Webster, Listor, Taintor, Dyer, Wooder, Madderman, Tucker, Fuller, Walker, Beater, Bater and Bates, Sherman, Draper, Spinner, Whiter, Bleaker, Blakey and Blaokster are all names derived; from various operations connected with the manufacture of wool into cloth. HYMNS AND HYMN WRITERS, "Awake my soul to joyful lays" was written by Samuel Medley in 1787. "Come, thou Almighty King," was written by Charles Wesley in imitation of "God Save the King." "How pleasant, how Divinely fair," was originally inall entitled byWatts the "Pleasures of Public Worshi." "Come, Ye Disconsolate," was by the famous Irish Poet, Thomas Moore, and ap- peared in his sacred songs in 1816. "The Lord my pasture shall prepare" was by Joseph Addison, and was first printed in the Spectator iu 1712. "Joy to the World" was by Isaac Watts. It has been popularized by being set to a fragment of melody from Hander's Mes- siah. "There is a fountain filled with blood" is the most popular of Cowper's hymns. It is one of the classic lyrics of the Euglish language. "0 worship the. King" was the 'work of Robert Grant. It, with a large number of his other hymns, was found in his desk and printed after his death. "Lead, kindly light," was ,written by Cardinal Newman on June 16, 1833, while in• the Mediterranean sea, and was first published in the British Magazine in 1836. "Jesus, I my cross have taken," was :•fiom'a book of 'short poems by Henry Francis Lyte, printed in 1833. The mel- ody to which it is sung is from one of Mozart's opera. SOME HOME REMEDIES. For a bee sting, make a paste of earth and water. Cover the stung place with it, bind it on, and it will soon give relief. When a felon first begins to appear cut off the eud of a lemon, put the finger in it and keep it there as long as it can be borne. For a sore throat, try a frequent gargle of salt and water. If a little is swallowed it will allay the irritation, cleanse the throat and do no harm. For stains on the hands nothing, is better than salt moistened with lemon juice. Rub the spots well with the mixture, thea wash oil in clean water. It is said that a good remedy for strengthening and clearing, the voice is to beat the white of an egg with the juice of a lemon and sweeten it well with sugar and use as needed. To cure round shoulders, sleep perfectly horizontal—that is without any bolster or pillow. The habit can easily be acquired of sleeping thus, and the round shoulders will soon be straightened, For a cough, boil an ounce of whole flaxseed in a pint of water, strain and add a little honey, thejuiceof two lemons and an ounce of rock candy. Stir together and boil a few miuutee. Drink hot. FOR MOTHER AND THE REST. White spots upon tarnished furniture will disappear if a hot plate be held over them. You can take out spots from wash goods by rubbing them with the yolk of eggs before washing. The hair may be kept from falling out after illness by a frequent application of sage tea to the scalp. When the finger nails are dry and break easily, vaseline rubbed on after the hands are washed will dos world of good, When thin fl nnel undergarments irri- tate the skin of the baby in hot weather place between them and the skin a layer of soft linen or muslin. A strip of oilcloth placed at each side of a bed will cure any case of somnambulism. It is said that the cold surface of the oil- cloth will invariably awaken the sleeper. Rubber gloves are a great attiring of and timea' uu lnor over the hands, as they keep them free from any grease and dirt likely to be absorbed when doing house- work. FINANCINL AND INDUSTRIAL. The Egyptian cotton crop is healthy and forward everywhere. Louisville, Ky., has the largest tobacco warehouse itt the world. It eau store 7,000 hogsheads. During the last ten years the valtie of As- sessed Dirtriot of Colombia property was more than double, being now 8191,417,- 804. There are '15,000 salaries employes on the lisle of New York city, and the total espenclitnres of the city government were $89,000,000 for the year. The world's chief supply of platinum comes from the Unna in the Ural moun- tains, The urines are being worked to their fullest capacity with orders for two years ahead. The greatest handle factory, where ban- dies of axes, laamtners and all sorts of tools are ttiade of the best hickory, and areshili• bed by the millions to all pots of the world, id located at Louisville, Ky, DAVIS } 1---Niteiti-ii4-.....__ , _ inatit- „.... PA1H-XILLER?-1- nfl THEHQ-- �� flirt _ . m -p -'_� YOU KEEP _ N CANADIAN CkiOIERp, COMPW A AND pow'. MTS IPRANTE M S fie ITS EFFECT 15 MAGICAL. "THE TRIUMPH OF LOVE is Happy, Fruitful Marriage,” Every Man wlao Would Know the Grand Truths,- the Plain Facts ; the New Ditscoverres of Medical Sci- ence as Applied tel Married Life; Who Would store for Nast Errors., and Avoid Ii'nture Pitfalls, Should Secure the Wonderful, Little Book Called "Complete manhood and How to Obtain It." " Here at last is evidence from a high medical source that must work wonders with this generation of men, " The book fully describes a method by which to attain full vigor and man- ly power. A method by which to end all tun natural drains on the system. To cure nervousness, lack of self control, despondency, ecce To exchange a worn and jaded nat• ure for one of brightness, buoyancy and power. To cure forever effects of excesses, overwork, worry, etc. To give full strength, development and tone to every portion and organ of the body. Age no barrier. Failure impossible. 2,000 references. The book ispurely medical and sci- entific, useless to curiosity seekers, in valuable to men only that need it. A'desnairing man, who had applied to us. soon after wrote: " Weil, r ten you that first day one I'll never forget. I j everybody y ust babbledis with joy. I wanted to hum and tell them my old self had died yesterdaand my new self was born to -day. -Why didn't you tell me when I first wrote that I would find it this way ? " And another thus: " If you dumped a carload of gold at my feet it would not bring such glad. ness into my life as your method has done," Write to the ERIE MEDICAL COM- PANY, Buffalo, N.Y.. and ask for the little book called " COMPLETE MAN- HOOD." Refer to this paper, and the company promises to send the book, in sealed envelope, without any marks, and entirely free, until it is well intro- duced. ALL MLN Young, old or middle-aged, who find themselves nervous, weak and ex- dausted, who are broken down from excess or overwork, resulting in many of the following symptoms: Mental depression, premature old age, loss of vitality, loss of memory, bad dreams, himness of sight, palpitation of the heart, emissions, lack of enei.'gy, pain in the kidneys, headaches, pimples in the face and body, itching or peculiar sensation about the scrotum, wasting of the oagaus, dizziness, specks before the eyes, twitching of the muscles, ey-e- lids, and elsewhere, bashfulness, depos- its in the urine, loss of will -power, ten derness of the scalp and spine, weak and flabby muscles, desire to sleep, failure to be rested Us- sleep, constipa tion, dullness of hearing, loss of voice, desire for solitude. excitability of tem- per, sunken eyes, suirouided with LEADEN CIRCLES, oily looking skin, etc., are all symptoms of nervous debil- ity that lead to insanity unless cured. The spring of vital force having lost its tension every function wanes in conseq encs Those who through abuse, committed in ignorance, may be permanently cured. Send your ad dress for book on diseases peculiar to man, sent free, sealed, Address M. V. LUBON, 24 Macdonuel Ave., Toronto Oariant. Seaforth is now a port of entry. her The5 Debs case will be tried Septum Cholera is spreading in Eastern Aus , Montreal had a $110,000 blaze yes- terday. Jleliefin six Hours. Dish -matins" Kidney and Bladder di seases relieved in six hours by the "NEW GRISAT SOUTH AMERICAN KID- NEY CURE." This new remedy is a great surprise and delight to physic fans on account of its exceeding promptness ht relieving pain in the bladder, kidneys, back and every part of the urinary passages in male or fe male. It removes retention of water and pain in passing it almost immed. lately. If you want quiek relief and cure this is s'nur remedy, Sold by 0. Lutz, Druggist. HURRAY & CO. Manufacturers and ISealrrs Walking and Riding Plows, Cultivators, Iron Plows, Spade and Disk Harrows, Land Rollers. Castings of every descrip- tion, in Brass and Iron to order, _ Also dealers in Piping, Fillings, Brass G -cods, Shaftings, Pulleys and Hangers. Special prices to dealers in large quantities, R e p airing promptly done,' . . . JAS. MURRAY & CO. BRANTFORD FORD STEAM LAUNDRY! A. HASfl C S, Agent If you want your linen to. look whiter than snow, take it to �L. EXETER'S Popular Tonsorial Artist Ladies' and Children' Haircutting, A Specialty. A BOON TO HORsaniinN -- Oa a bottle of English Spavin Liniment completely removed a curb from my horse. I take pleasure in recommending the remedy, as it acts with mysterious promptness in the removal from horses of hard, soft or calloused lumps, blood spa yin, splints. curbs, sweet., stifles and Iprains George Robb, Farmer, Markham, Ont. Sold by C. Lutz, Druggist, Chenoa, III, was nearly destroyed by fire yesterday. A good appetite. Always accompanies good health. and an absense of appetite is an indica- • tion of something wrong. The univer- sal testimony given by those; who have used Hood's Sarsaparilla, as to its mer- its in restoring the appetite, and Ai; a purifier of the blood, constitutes the strongest recon mandation that can be urged for any medicit.e, Hood's Pills cure all liver ilk, bilious ness, jaundice, indigesa iota, sick head- ache. Now, Dr. Nanson is reported lost. -ata '119a342V, 'emrraznyr -,L rr '004 'num .5q pans ao 21si22n:fp Sq pros •gsadsagp pun •ass o; tsarina 'wag aqq sl rlaav♦sp aoj Spemex s,osld r EX T. OF virjL CURE jL CHOLE1" A - K ail aus D/ R Il° t DYSE AND ALL rt j 1.A � S11 N -r °-' 1LI CHILDRENoriOUITS price 3 ezWAR,w. F /1411:47-10A1 1 c s }tr.•4 cn0hl S.Set'' NIR SAFE •. H Z n h"1 I- THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER•;,. oiota ,,ti , , BUUSTOL'S S.ARSAPARILLA CURES ALL Taints of the ]decd.MEMO. I -j : , .. CERTAIN ll, 446 AME M E HNEEURALGIA,PLE,URISY,SCIATICA GU R ED EVERY TIMEAND RHEUMATISM ED.& L.MENTHOL P AST t U5 D.