HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1895-7-5, Page 5t
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Ware, Mass.
He Had Hip Disease
Seven Running Sores—Three
A, Months in the Hospital
Took Hood's Sarsaparilla—Cave Up
His Crutches -Perfectly Well.
is C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.:
"'Dear Sirs : -I gladly state what Hood's
Bamaparilla has done for our boy.About
six years ago he fell down the cellar
stairs. He did not seem to be much hurt
at the time, but two or three weeks after,
he began to have pains in his right knee
so badly that we called a doctor and he
Termed the Trouble Rheumatism,
but his treatment did not seem to do the
boy any good. He kept complaining more
and we had several doctors treat him, but
they did him no good, and his trouble
continued to grow worse. He became so
lame that he could not walk. Aprominent
physician in Boston was consulted and he
termed the aiiiction contraction of the
muscles. His treatment also failed. As
his leg began to cramp up besides paining
him severely in his knee, we took the boy
to New York where he was examined by
two physicians, and they pronounced it
A •Case of Hip Disease.
We had a brace made to keep the leg from
cramping, and upon the doctor's advice
we again took him to Boston, this time to
the Children's Hospital. He was there
three months during which- time they
trade an operation on his leg and did all
they could for him but they did not effect
a cure. When we brought him home bad
seven running sores on his leg. He could
not put his foot on the ground. At last
1-lood's Sarsa-
parilla
we were advised to
;ive Hood's Sarsapa-
rilla a trial. This was ' elseerelesitele
about a year ago. The boy seemed to gain
after the first bottle and today he can
walk, run and play as lively as any boy, the
sores having all healed up, and he is
The Picture of Health.
ures
He goes to school daily without the aid of
crutches. I hope Hood's Sarsaparilla may
be of as much benefit to others." Joan
C. Bo LI5, 45 Water St., Ware, Mass. r
Hood's pm.. act harmoniously with
Hood's sarsaparilla. 233.
' JH'or .Over It'ifty )rears.
AN OLD AND WNLL-TRIED RimEDY.—MrS
Winslow s Soothing Syrup has been used
for over fifty,years by millions of mothers
for the- chldren while teething, with per-
fect success It soothes the chiid, softens
the guns, allays all pain, cures wind colic
and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea. is
pleasant to the taste. Sold by Druggists In.
every part of the World. Twenty-ive cents
a bottle. Its value is incalculable. Be sure
and ask for Mrs. Wiuslow's Soothing Syrup
and take no other kind
"THE TRIUMPH OF LOVE•
IS HAPPY if RUITPUL MARRIAGE."
Every lagan Whn WVouitt Ainoty the
Grand 'Era tits; the ('Iain Facts; the
New sDsseoveries of ?Yettieul'cieace
a_v Applied to Harried Life; Wito
03'0t01d =Atone for Past Errors nod
Avoid Mature Pitfalls, Sl,ott'111 i,e•
cure tate Wonderful Little Rook call-
ed. "C0011eiLETE ItrAZ'eIlilD®ID and
How to Attain It " ,
"Here at last is information from a high
medical source that must work wonders
with this generatioa of men."
The book fully describe a method by which
to attain full vigor and manly power.
A method. by which to end all ,unnatural
drains on the system.
To cure nervousness, lack of self control,
despondency, etc
c y,
To exchange a jarlecland worn nature for
one of brightness, buoyancy and power. •
To cure forever effaces of success, overwork
worry, etc.
To give fall strength, clovelopement and
tone to every portion and organ of the body
Ago no harrier. Failure impossible. 2,000
references.
Thebook is purely
medical and scientific,
useless to curiosity. seekers, invaluable to
men only who need it.
A despairing man, who applied to us, soon
after wrote,
'Well, T tell you that first day is one I'll
never forget. I ,just hubblod with joy. 1
wanted to hug everybody anti toll them my
old self had died yesterday and my now self
was born to clay, 'V'h,y didn't you folk the
when .r first wrote that I would find it this
way
And another ±bus:
"Term dumped cartlottd of gold at my
feet it would not bring such gladness into
roe life as your method has clone.
Write to the ERIN elenrCAT. COD,i'ANY,
Buf et°, N Y rtnrl ask for the little book
ceded"COytrmere Arminbee" refer to this
paper, and the conlliany protnises to send
the hook; in seated envelope. withoat any
mares, and entirely free, until it is wall in-
trojluced.
wo
E',: i COURT
SHOULD TAKE
PENNYROYAL WAFERS
To correct !Tomah rlty ane 'tveeknnss,
kuoptl,o'omens tnlionithyuundltlon. Tho
%i•aieornrn' 1,11'0 SeVe11"toyoeng women,
OM 011,00 ttlovalnt,mnnt, prnvtdn pain,
b) ontl�l rA11rtii nrtellsrs sell til mrho
atSl per
box. No bettor i caicdy for Women Immo,
TOPICS OF A WEEK,
The enl3,ortant T' vertte, ,in a Jrew words
lt'ur inter 'tenders.
CANADIAN,
Brockville has 15 barbers
Trenton has passed -the curfew by-law.
Brighton is to have an electric plant.
It has cost $215,000 to survey Georgian
Bay.�
The Windsor Bicycle Club has 30 mem-
bers, t
Port Colborne harbour is being deep-
ened.
A cold storaNe factory is to be built in;
Galt,
The Fort William curfew rings nightly
at 8.45.
South Leeds has a new post -office called
Bowen.
Berlin has 6,CO3 volumes in its. public
•library.
Oxford county constables ask for many
reforms
In Sarnia the wheelmen register their
bicycles.
Conneaut mon and boys go fishing on
Sundays.
Tho I. 0.. F., Brockville, are building
a new hall.
Winnipeg has voted $65,000 for school
buildings.
A Methodist college is to be built near
'Vancouver.
Last year Essex county schools cost
$22,927,S5,
County Treasurer Stock, Wentworth,
has resigned.
Crop reports from Manitoba continue
encouraging.
Floods aro doing great damage in
North Simcoe.
Stratford has not a single case of con -
tag ous disease.
Peter Stuart, Ingersoll, has a broom
plant in blossom.
The new Baptist church at Port Elgin
has boon opened.
Welland will have a firemen's demon-
-stration August 6th.
There are 1,600 men working on the
Parry Sound railway.
Digby, N. S., is supplying itself with
water by gravitation.
The Maganetawan locks are closed
while being repaired.
A number of Danish families have set-
tled in Ottawa this spring.
Guelph's electric street railway will be
in operation by August lst.
The G. T. R. intends to build a fine
up -town station in Hamilton.
Ten thousand members of the I. 0. F.
will be in Guelph August 26th.
Tho C. P. le. station at MacLeod, N.
W. T., has been robbed of $1,000.
Dr. David Robertson has been ap-
pointed coroner for Halton county.
A Blenheim man is under arrest for
selling cancerous beef in Chatham.
There are nearly 200 members connect-
ed with the Woodstock Bicycle Club.
One day last week 53,300 feet of lum-
ber were cut at the Huntsville mills.
There is talk of establishing a Col-
legiate Institute at Portage la Prairie.
Windsor merchants want the compul-
sory six o'clock closing by-law quashed..
There are three companies of Indians
in the Haldinand battalion of volunteers
The bill in the Manitoba Legislature
an a e sla re
against Sunday street cars has become
law.•
A new Masonic lodge, called .'Algon-
quin
iAlltonquin Lodge," has been instituted at Eine,
dale.
t i
Hu tiger s shingle le mill S rucedale
recently destroyed by fire, p
is to be re-
built.
The Canada Southern Railway has
declared a semi-annual dividend of 11-4
`per cont.
Kingston wants the G. T. R. shops
that are now located at Belleville and
Brockville.
Tho coloured people of London have
formed an "Independent Order of Good
Samaritans."
Lew S. Bradshaw, of Buffalo, saved H.
Byckman of Jordan, from drowning at
Grimsby Park.
Lord and Lady Aberdeen attended the
jubilee convocation of Bishop's College at
Lennoxville, Que. •
Root beer is proscribed by the Simcoe
County W. C. T. U. as containing more
than 2 per cent of alcohol:
The Hamilton Women's Art Associa-
tion are arranging to hold an exhibition
or paiutings in February.
Seven years' disqualification, a fine of
$e83, and $2 003 costs. This is the
penalty imposed upon the Mayor of Hull
for boodling.
The total number of wrecks in Cana-
dian waters during the last fiscal year
was 83, representing the loss of ten lives
and $62J,L0.1.
A Solomon, of Port Lambton, . was ar-
rested last week for fishing on thoAmeri-
can side. He was taken to Port Huron
and it cost him $100 to settle.
Mr. Holland has resigned the position
of General Manager of the Ontario Bank,
and C. McGill Manager of the Peterboro'
branch of the bank for fifteen years, has
been appointed to the position.
nearly 700,030
There are horses in On-
tario.
tario. The number of hogs is 1,120,000.
Of horned cattle there
.hoes
and
sheep about the same. And there are in
the farm yards 7,500,000, head of poultry.
The Dominion Customs Department
has decided to permit tourists to bring
their bicycles free into Canad'a,requiring
them to give an affidavit that they are
their personal property and not for sale.
With hay at $15 to $17 per ton, and
fairly cood horses selling at $0 to $50
apiece, the establishments created for
the purpose of making a specialtyof
packing horse meat enould find no diffi-
culty in securing an ample supply of
raw material.
The oldest clergymen. in Canada in
the active ministry is probably Rev. Mr.
Crossman, _Lutheran • minister of Lunen-
berg, N. S. He was born in 18061 or-
daiued in 183=4, 61 years. ago; arrived in
7aunenberg 1885; lras baptized 8,966 ',
married 992 couples; buried 1,041 ; has
preached 11,000 sermons, and travelled
200,000 miles.
Mr. Erases, M. P., for Guysboro, an-.
nounced that he will oppose any legisla-
tion' 'favorable to the Toronto, Hamilton
et Buffalo railroltd, until e provision is
inserted' obliging the company to pay
$60,003 duo to labor • re and others on con-
struction. The original contractors were
Americans, who assigned, and returned
to the States,.
ly
A Niagara Valls deseeetels ear that a
T01'Onttb az&'* American. eitiee .hoes ac-
quirocl'i 000, acres adjoining Niagera
Palls Park, for factory purposes. The
company controls power from the Fane
under a charter,
The'rroronto City Council, have passed
an order for the abolition of market fees
to take effect on the sante day on which
tollgates are abolished. On that day
probably August 1st, according to the
agreement between city and county, toll-
gates will disappear in York County and
market fees in Toronto.
The Post boasts that all bait $114 of
the last.Sarniahas
year's tax rate in
been eollected. The showing is, as the
Post says, a creditable one to the col-
lector. But it is even more creditable
to the town. There is both prosperity
and honesty in thecommunity which
comes so near meeting the full demands
of the tax gatherer as Sarnia has done.
Be careful where electricity is in use,
J. B. Phibin, confectioner, of Rat Port-
age. grasped a flexible cord leading from
the rosette to a lamp in his shop on
Friday night. He fell at the shock with
the cord under him, and died in the pos-
ition described. His clothes were burned
to a cinder and weresmouldering when
the body was discovered.
ayndiel to eeele izrsing financiers from
UNITED STATES.
A wealthy woman ,living near Utica
'was bound, gagged and robbed by burg-
lars.
A bill for paying women like men for
teaching was killed in the Pennsylvania
legislature.
Mrs. Willard Parker and MisseTherese
Damon were appointed school trustees in
New York.
Pieces of shell have been found forty'
feet below the level of the ground in some
western states.
Miss Irene Hoyt has sued Mrs. Hetty
Green for $100,000 for insinuating that
she was insane.
The Empire State Republican Club in
New York is disintegrating, even before
it is incorporated.'
The. New York Women's Political
League resolved to form a kindergarten
for children of the rich.
New Jersey has come to the admission
of women to its bar, in the case of Miss
Philbrook, just examined.
The Cleveland, 0., breadmaker's'strike
is at an end. Forty-three master bakers
have signed the union scale.
ii 3Senator Teller of Colorado, predicted
the displacement of tarriff in the next
campaign by the money issue.
Texas porterhouse steaks cost more in
Chicago, New York and Boston than they
do in London, Paris and Berlin.
It cost Kentucky $114 to secure the
extradition from Ohio of Napoleon Bona-
parte Shackleford, who stole a $2 hog.
Comrrissioner Grant had a policeman
before him ontrial for flirting with a
man's wife in his presence in the street.
A young girl died at Reading, Pa., on
the first application of chloroform, which
• she insisted upon before a slight optical
operation.
A cyclone struck Keysville, Georgia,
yesterday. The place is small and all
the houses were either demolished `or
badly wrecked.
'Carrie R. ' Scott, of Denver, Cal-, has
obtained judgment for $10,000 from Henry
Edson Sims, a Colorado legedator, for
breach ofp romise. -
thousand Tammany mne 'are
Over ten
on the pay roll of New York City still,
and Mayor Stronghas but a month
more
to remove them.
A Yale student visited the. Pasteur in-
stitute in New York for treatment for
a bite received while rescuing a small
dog from a large one.
The Canadian element forms two-thirds
of the Foreign population of Maine and
New Hamdshire, one-half of that of Ver-
mont, and one-third of that of Massachu-
setts.
Professor Frank Parsons asserts that
in New York it costs a man from $80
to $100 a year for the same amount of
transportation he gets in Berlin for
$4.50.
Mayor Ranki i,ofElizabeth,N.J.,istry-
ing to extort evidence from Rev. George
Buckle for charges made by the latter'
that the police corruptly winked at open
bars on Sunday.
One of the fireplaces that is to be put
into Cornelius Vanderbilt's new house in
Newport will be made of terra cotta
taken from the ruins of en old Italian
villa at Pompeii.
Miss Mary Cary Thomas has been
nomieated for one of the alumni trustees
of Cornell University. She is the first
wom=an to be so honoured in any of the
great Uhiversities.
The West Virginia Legislature has
passed a law imposing a license of $500
per annum on. retail dealers of cigarettes.
Not a retail dealer in the state has yet
token out a license.
Tho biggest contract for stone work
ever awarded was probably that reported
to have been made for the stone for the
Hudson river bridge. The sum named
is above ;:,000,C00.
An American actress, interviewed on
her return from Paris expresses the
opinion that there are no new French
plays that would not; have to be ' "wash-
ed'' for American use.
The re,rains of Gen. Winfield Scott Han-
cock will. not be removed from the Mont-
gomery Jemetery at Norristown. The
effort to have them removed to Arlington,
Va,, has been abandoned.
A woman in Newark,Mrs. W.T. Harris,
lost an eye by the explosion of a pistol
i
hand, a boyof nine, in her son's ha , nn , sad an
actor in Hoboken met the same fate from
a soap pellet fired in the play.
A Brooklyn, N.Y,, man who was con-
victed of burglary some time ago, and
liberated after two years' service in
prison on proof of his innocence, is suing
the state for $101.888.28 damages.
Since Senator Stanford's death not one
dollar has come from his estate to the
university he founded. To keep it run-
ning Mrs. Stanford has given on an aver-
age of $1,000 a day, half her private
tlleens.
Daring it thunderstorm, a panic was
aa)rsod by the lightning in West. Park,
Milwaukee,. where 4000 children and 1000
aclulte gathered at the annual school
Menke Eight trees were felled lly light-
tang, but no one was killed.
:exports have estimated that the gold
pro action of the Blaelt Hilis for 1895
Will bo $ 10',00),000, distributed as fol-
lows i Bald Mountain district,
Mead Torravillee and Central $0,000,030;
Southern ilius, $1,000,000 i all the other
districts $1:000,000.
RSERSON
Of teal an Fear
forTftousands of
People.
II you Would Banish the
Blues and all Your
Other Distresses
Use Paine's Celery Com-.
Polled,
Yes, this is just the season when we
hear men and women lamenting about
their half dead condition, They find
that physical and mental energy has
deserted them, and they are sinking
deeply into the pit of despondency.
The hot weather invariably produces
thousands of miserable feeling mor-
tals, They lack nerve force, strength
and vitality. They are usually tor-
mented by dyspepsia. flatuence, bil-
iousness, heart trouble, constipation,
nervousness and sleeplessness, they
cannot rest day or night, and life be.
comes a burden heavy and iu.tolerable.
The great recuperator, strength and
health -giver for such weary, worn-out
and suffering people is Paine's Celery
Compound, now so universally approv-
ed of by medical rode,
Paine's Celery Compoudd in its pe-
culiar composition. combines the best
producers of healthy and pure blood,
the first essential to perfect health,
strength and activity. When the great
medium is used in summer, languor,
irritability, nervousness and sleepless
'less are permanently banished, and
men and women go about their dutiet
with a vim, will and energy that indi-
cares health and robustness. Use
Paine's Celery Compound at once, if
you would enjoy life in the hot weath-
er.
FINANCE AND COMMERCE
Toronto, June 29.—Wheat—There is
very little change in condition of mark
et, but holders are more confident
owing to advance in Chicago yester-
day. ._White and red are quoted out-
side et 55 to 90c. and Manitoba No. 1
hard at 31, Toronto freights
Pena Tradeis
quiet, with demand
u
re
q
limited. Cars are quoted at 61c, west
Barley—Trade dull and prices nom-
inal at 52 to 55c for feeding qualities.
Cate—The market is quiet, with
prices unchanged. Car lots of white
are quoted at 36c, west, and 40e on
track.
The facts concerning the Independ-
ent Order of Foresters will bo read with
interest:—"During the month of May
the number of applications for mem
bersbin received by the Medical Board.
was 4,022 of whom 3,611 were accepted
s1)Uwing an advance of over 500 on the
highest number of applications ever
received in any one month. The surp-
lus fund of the Order on the 1st of June
showed the high total of $1,317,000.
On the 30th of May the corner stone of
the Forester's Temple was laid by his
Excellency the Earl of Aberdeen, Gove-
nor-General of Canada, in the presence
of an immense concourse of Foresters
and their friends. The Temple will be
eight stories high and will lie the finest -
Fraternal headquarters ou the ,contin-
ent. The Forestrie year closes on the
50th June and was in every particular
one of the most prosperous years in the
history of the Order. The increase in
the surplus has beeh $360,000,000, and
in the membership about •18,000. For
the month of June it is expected that
it least 5,000 applications will be re-
e'ived., During the year new courts
haye averaged 35 per month. The Su-
preme Court will meet at St. Martin's
Town Hall, Trafalgar Square, London,
England, on the est day of August.
The High Court of Ontario will meet at
London, Ontario, on the 8th of October.
In the
DOMINION OP CANADA
DIAMOND DYES
London, Huron and 13rucc,,
TIME TA13L1.41.
(*01210Noa'r11-- Irsyssetlger.
L071dt>n,depart 8,05 r.pI 9,80
( eutrelia 0.0 5,47
RXETL^J± a )2 0.00
1{e sell
0,37 O 15
JQsppen !114 0,x0
:Rcuoefi,elci: 0 52 13.2$
Clinton .,.. 10.11,' e.55
Iiondesbero 10.28 7,74
li'lvt1L 10.88 7413
7 7
B'el ra e,.. O.4• 8
Wingheni arrive.,., 11.10 1.00
(*012.0 $0UT8I- Passeeger
'Winglia7li, depart 11,85 4 Ill 8.25 z' 14
Iielgravo r, 50 3.47
B1yt1' 7,03 4.01
Loznlo born 7.10 408
Clinton 7,8) 4,28
is. vfielil IAO 445
Ifippen ..,.. 7,57 4,53
Henson ,..,.: 8.00 4.58
X>;1k1... 8.25 5.12
Centralia 3.40 5.23
110
�e Pco�le's
CUTTER & FITTER.
A.J. SNELL
MERCHANT TAILOR,
Main St., - - - Exete
Tweeds and Worsteds.
I have a complete line
of samples of all the latest
designs and patterns in
English, Scotch, Canad-
ian and American Tweeds.
Trouserings, Suitings, .Coatings.
A. IT SNELL
o l�
Chrastess,tiger
CORIERCIAL LIVERY
First-class Rigs and Horses
Orders left at Hawkshaw's
Hotel, or at the Livery
Stable,(Chl iste'sold Stand)
will receive prompt at-
tention. . . . .
ho
Terms Reasonable TeCorlepinscnetion
WOOD'S PI OSPHQD1 INE.
The Great English Remedy.
Six Packages Guaranteed to
promptly, and permanently
cure all forms of Nervous
'Weakness, Emissions,Sperrn
atorrhea, Impotency and ail
elects 41' Abase or Excesses,
Mental Worry, excessive use
Before and 6f ter. ofTobacco., Opium or Mims:-
Zonis, which soon lead to Zn-
,titmityt Insanity, Consumption and an early grave,
Has been prescribed over 35 years in thousands of
cases; is the only Iieliable and Honest Medicine
known, AskdruggistforWood's Phosphodlne; it
he offers some worthless medicine In place of this,
inclose price In letter, and we will send by, return
mall .Trice, one package, $1; six, $5. One to=il
Dunn, six will cure. Pamphletsfree to any address:
• The Wood Company, •.
Windsor. Oat„ Canada.
arc the great favorites with the ladies for home
dyeing.
Why they are Popular.
They are the easiest to use; they give the
brightest colors; they make colors that last
till the goads are worn out ; the colors never
crock or fad°, and will stand soap and washing.
Ask,'our dolor for the DIAA4oNn , re-
fuse ilpitati0ns.
Sola ovety'whore, trfDireetion Book and forty
saenplcs of colored cloth 4ree.
Wtutxs its 111021A110$0ST Co., biontrt at,
v re frost Notwithstandingthe se f e t In
a and
w the subsequent. dry
spring h q
weather, the grain crops in this section
have seldom promised better, Fall
wheat is nicely headed out. and al-'
though it is not so heavy on the ground
as in some formet years, it is healthy
looking and very even. If it fills pro
perly it will be above an ayerage crop.
Barley is also out in head and, is a nice
even crop, and promises a good yield.
Oats, although as yet not very far ad-
vanced; are a good healthy color, and
are growing well. The pea crop. also,
looks well. The only appearance of a
short crop, so far, is in hay and fruit.
In many places, the new meadows are
almost a failure, while the older fields
will not give mneh over half the yield
of last year, and of fruit there will be
a great scarcity. In many orchards
there are no apples of any kind. Corn
where it has been sown, is coming on
nicely-, and since the late rains the roots
are coming forward well. There is a
good deal of fear entertained from' the
grasshoppers, especially on account of
the roots and oats. These little .pests
are said to be very numerous, and there
seems to be no way of exterminating
them. On the whole, however, the out-
look for a fairly good crop is encourag-
ing, and if the present scale of prices
are maintained until marketing time
comes, our farmers may fairly look for-
ward to a more profitable year than
has been vouchsafed them for some
time.
KWIOHTI
EXETER NORTH STORE
Mr. F. R. Knight has opened a Gen-
bral Store in the stand lately occupied
ey Brook's I3arness Shop with a full
stock of
GENERAL GROCERIES
BOOTS & SHOES,
HARDWARE,
STATIONARY, ETC
Produce taken in exchange
Eliot:II/ford
Ia. HANDLED :64 .
PERKINS
AND,' -- ......... .
MARTIN,
AGENTS FOR
BICYCLES, SEWING. MACHINES
ORGANS, ETC,
The .Brantford won
—239 first prises,
—143 second 't
88 third
and holds nearly every
Championship from the
Atlantic to the Pacific. .
for goods
Perkins & martin..
A. 1 ASatNi:'`CS,
e ----Proprietor oy
THE CENTRAL.
BARBER SHOP„
HAIRCUTTING,
SHAMPOOING
and
HAIRCUTTING.
Ladies' and Children's Haircutting a specialt
A, HAISTINGS, Fanson's Block.
Exeter
Packing House..
Parties wishing' fresh tenderloin
fresh pork, spare ribs, shanks
and pig's feet, can get there
Wednesday mornings.
A good supply of hams, Rolls,
backs, Bellies, Shoulders and salt
bacon on hand at lowest cash
prices.
LIVE HOGS WANTED l'
Every Monday morning for de-
tiyery.
C. SNELL, - Prop
b."t
(
Wshr
peve
but don't try to patch up nliogering
cough or cold by trying;espentnental
remedies. Talcs
PYNY-PECTORA.
and relief is certain to. follow. 'Cures
the most obstinate coughs, colds, sora,
throats, in fact every fotni of throat,
lung or bronchial inflammation in-
duced by cold.
Large Dottie, 25 Vents.
THIS 13 A PICTURE
OF THE FTM0135 GUAe
FOR SCIATIC P)4558(..
TRY
IT
FOR
BACKACHE
RHEUMATISM
LUMDAGO
NEURALGIA
use,
IT
FOR
MuseutMt.
PAINS
AND
ACHES
EACH 1N Ala TIGHT TIN BOX 2 4
WE WANT A MAN AT ONCE'
in this community to sell specialties
in our line. Trees that bear seedless Pears.
Apple 'trees hardy as oaks, "Excelsior'
Crab as large as an Apple. Cherry treas
proof against black -knot. Plum trees not
off
• rculio.
Tree Currants.
e
by Curculio. d
Gooseberries -width
do not mildew.
Blackberry Bushes
without thorns.
Space
Will
not.
allow
ustofurthertnumerate, Tree Roses, etc.
BUT our stock talks for
itself. Prices right.TiiiNG
Handsomebook •oo
k of
plates and complete
outfit furnished free of charge. Write :fox
terms and particulars.
CHASE BROTHERS' COMPANY,
Colborne Ont.
F. R. Knight=,
THE "OLD RELIABLE" NURSiiRY �'71tN,. '
with a coliey baby or a colicy stotnaelii
isn't pleasant. Blither can be a'voidec
byr keeping a bottle of Perry Davis'
PAIN' Rtr,11$p. oil the medicine shelf. It
P is invnit:sblc hi sudden. attacks of Clamps,sie,
Clralcra itlorb:4, Dysentery and Diarrhoea. 0•
..�
iNi'�r1Zar+i
'e l ii
'yu c u9 vtlinlle for eel external tales.
l0 SL1lC'l�taJl�"Tu_O21n1A`£�teaseti1nit41 eill At� glass (aarLi&ti�
tonve ':sn
t)
.
.