HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1895-9-6, Page 5r', r
!Saved My Arm
A Severe Case of Blood
Poisoning
Perfect Cure by Hood's Sarsaparilla,
Poisoned Blood causes great
buffering. It cannot be otherwise,
because the blood is the vital fluid, the
-current of life. The following case
illustrates the terrible effects of
poisoned blood and the wonderful
power of Hood's Sarsaparilla in curing
this trouble:
"My blood became poisoned by getting
dye into my blood by a little soratch on
my arm. • I called in the doctor and he
told me to eouitice it, but he did not give
me any medicine for my blood. Finally
the poison broke out on my other arm. I
then told the physician that I wanted
something for my blood. He told mo to
get Hood's Sarsaparilla. I did so and began
taking it. After using four bottles, my
arm is entirely well and Ihave never since
been troubled with blood poisoning. I
firmly believe that Hood's Sarsaparilla
prevented me losing my arm." MRs. R.
WrLsorr, 243 Manning Ave., Toronto, Ont.
Blood impure.
"For more than a year I was troubled
with a distressing pain in my side. Some
of the time it was very severe. I was also
afflicted with severe headaches. My blood
was out of order and, in fact, my consti-
tution was generally run down. Having
read how others had' been benefited by
Hood's Sarsaparilla, I thought I would try
It, and before the second bottle was all
gone I was entirely cured." Miss MAY
FLANNIGAN, Manning Ave., Toronto,
Ontario. Remember
Flood's Sarsaparilia
Is the Only
True Blood Purifier
And standard Building -up Medicine. It
kf"tj creates an appetite and overcomes that
tired feeling. Be sure to get Hood's.
,1 i f the after.dinner pill and
' Hood S Pills family cathartic. 25e.
For Over Fifty -Nears.
A. OLD AND WELL -TRIED REMEDY.—Mrs
Winslow's Soothing Syrup has been used
for over fifty years by millions of mothers
for their children while teething, with per-'
feat success. It soothes the child, softens
the gums, allays all pain, cures -wind colic
and is the best remedy for Diarrhma. 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
A. HASTINGS,
Proprietor oy
THE CENTRAL
BARBER SLOP.
HAIRCUTTING,
SHAMPOOING
and
HAIRCUTTING.
Ladies' and Children's Haircutting a specialty
A. HAISTINGS, Fanson's Block.
Tic People's
CUTTER & FITTER.
_A.J.SNELL
MERCHANT TAILOR,
Main St., - - - Exeter.
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.
J. SN'ELL
° KNIGHT.
Olt
EXETER NORTH STORE
•
a Gen -
Mr. F. R, Knight has opened
br 1 lately iy occupied
a Store in the stand a
A
ey Brook's Harness Shop with a full
stock of
GENERAL GROCERIES
BOOTS & SHOES,
HARDWARE,
STATIONARY, ETC.
Produce taken in exchange for goods
•
F. R Knight.
TOPICS OFA WEEK.
eche Important ICvonts in a Few Words Roe
'Busy Reader's,
CAerArriete7.
Masked burglars aro operating in Que-
bec.
Seariet foyer is becoming prevalent in
Winnipeg..
A crisis in Montreal's financial affairs is
threatened,
C.P. R. of]loials' wages are being restored
to the former rate.
The Quebec Legislature will probably
be called for the and of October.
The now Sydenham glass works at I'Iam.-
ilton will be opened September 3.
Governor Hastings, of Pennsylvania,
states that Holmes should bo tried in Can-
ada.
Brantford has denied the usual grants
to the Horticultural and Agricultural So-
cieties,
Windsor will erect buildings at a cost of
$100, 000 if it is made the capital of Essex
county.
Tho deadlock in the London West Coun-
cil on the question of fixing the tax rate
continues.
Tho warships Canada and Magioienne,
now at Haliiax,will visit Montreal during
the Exhibition.,
Michael Benoit, late manager of the
Banque Nationale, will likely be appoint-
ed City Accountant,
The losers by the mail robbery at King-
ston last November are to receive pro rata
the amount recovered,
A canal scheme from Lake Winnipeg
along the water courses to the Hudson
Bay is being promoted.
Judge Ellett, of London, has reserved
judgment on the charge of extortion
against Constable Jeffries.
The Canadian Sault Ste. Mario canal
is to bo opened on September 9th. There
will be nu public ceremony.
The report of the experts appointed to
examine into the affairs of the Banque du
Peuple will be presented September 7.
It is reported at Charlottetown, P.E.I.,
that a party of seven, five men and two
women, are missing from Cape Bauld.
An order has been granted for the wind-
ing -up of the Canadian Trading and Ship-
ping Company, and appeal has been enter-
ed.
Shareholders of the Commercial Bank
of Newfoundland have been called upon
to pay tho reserve liability of $200 per
share.
Summonses are being served on the wit-
nesses in the Smythe-Uar'ty protested elect.
tion oase, to be tried at Kingston, Septem-
ber 1(i.
Government Engineer Schreiber reports
satisfactory progress on both the Peter-
boro' and Balsam Lake suctions of the
Trent Valley canal.
General Gascoigne, the new command-
er-in-chief of the Canadian militia, will
sail for this country by the steamship Par-
isian on the 19th September.
Harrison .Watson, curate of the Canadian
section of theImperial Institute, London,
has arrived in Montreal to secure better
exhibits of Canadian products.
Waliaoeburg now numbers among her
industries a glass blowing establishment.
It promises to be a large addition to the
town, employing, as it does 250.
Counsel for Geuther, who murdered the
young girl Consigny, has presented a peti-
tion to the Attorney -General for Gauther's
examination as an alleged lunatic.
John Glenn, of Aurora, was arrested
and brought to Toronto, charged with
arson. Accused is suspected of having set
fire to the freight shed of the G. T.R. at
Aurora.
The steamer Bawnmore, belonging to
W.R. Grano and Company, New York, has
been wrecked near Bandon, Oregon. One
of the grow of thirty was killed and an-
other fatally injured.
Charles Molson and Morris Moles were
yesterday arrested by Provincial Detective
Greer at Duck's Lake, Parry Sound dis-
trict, charged with murdering James Bar-
rett, one of their neighbors.
At a meeting held yesterday In Hamil-
ton of the Investigation Governors of the
Royal Canadian Humane Association,
medals and parchment certificates were
awarded for heroic action.
Mrs. Charles Graham, of Buffalo, who
several weeks ago fell over the bank at
Niagara Falls into the gorge, owing to a
defective guard, has entered suit against
the Queen Victoria Park Commissioners
for $20, 000 damages.
Mr. R. W. Shepherd, proprietor of the
Ottawa River Navigation Company, vice-
president of the Maisons Bank. died at his
summer residence at Collo Friday, at the
age of seventy-six. He had not been long
and death is attributed to general de-
bility.
The laborers employed in the construc-
tion of the Central Counties railway, to
the number of one hundred and forty-
seven, have struck work until thyc are
paid their arrears in wages. It is stated
that they aro live or six months behind in
their wages.
At Thursday's session of the High Court
of the Ancient Order of Foresters, hold at
Guelph, Mr. A. O. Jeffrey, of London, Ont.,
was elected High Chief Ranger. It was
decided by a large majority to hold the
next biennial meeting at Owen Sound, and
the demonstration next year at Stratford.
During Wednesday night's storm near
Corunna, Ont., a row -boat containing five
persons was upset, and four drowned. The
names of the drowned are:—Frank De-
rush, of Froomfleld, Ont., and Mrs. De-
ursh, Miss Ella Comber, and Miss Della
Shynsky, Marysville, Mich. Miss Minnie
Shamrock, of Marysville, was saved.
While at Kingston, Sir Charles Rivers
Wilson, president of the Grand Trunk
Railway Company, was waited on bya
civig deputation, who asked for a concen-
tration of the workshops at Belleville and
Brockville at that place, and assured the
officials that tho Councils and city would
deal most favorably with the company.
At Friday's session of the Canadian
Medical Association at Kingston, a com-
mittee appointed at the last meeting of in-
terprovincial registration reported that it
was considered most dosixa
ble that
a uni-
form standard
of eatr c lotion,
educa-
tion and examination for the whole Do -
Minion bo established, in order that medi-
cal practitioners in Canada be placed on
British register.
While a gang of nion were digging for
terra Datta clay on Wednesday on the farad
of the Rathbun Company at Napalm
Mills, they discovered under a foot of earth
the skeleton of a lean or woman, with a
largo knife sticking in the . breast. The
knife was dagger -shaped, about fourteen
inches long, and much eaten by rust. The
skeleton and knife were placed away, but
disappeared during Wodeeeday night.
Lucan: A young anon named 0,
Dwyer had a narrow escape one morn
i.ng last week, as he was about
to board the 7.30 a. m. train for ,St.
Marys. Be was thrown a number of
yards lighting on his head and was
picked up iu a dazed state.
Clinton: After being in mercbantile
life continuously for about 40 years,
Mr, John Jackson retires from the boot
and shoe business, and is succeeded by
the firm of Jackson & Jackson, coin-
posed of Mr, Will Jackson, of town and
Mr. Fred Jackson late of Omaha.
Clinton: The Bell Telephone Corn -
pithy has always :appealed against the
assessment of its plant in town, and
when the appeal Game upfor hearing
before the late Judge Tom, he decidtd
on each occasion against the Company,
This year anappeal was again entered
against the assessment, and the result
was looked for with great interest, sim-
ply because the opinion of Judge:Dovle
was nnkuown. However, the platter
was argued before him, Mr. James
Seott representing the town, and the
townspeople will be glad to know that
the Judge's decision is in favor of the
nsall;
own,
FiaOn Monday of hist weak a
painter named Neil McDermid hired
a rig from Mr. Thos, Mur'doek stating
that he intended going to see an uncal;
of bis who lived near Bayfield. After a
reasonable time' had elapsed, Mr. Mur-
dock naturally became anxious and
went out in quest of his rig. On roach
hog Bayfield be found that the horse
bad been traded to a man named Stin-
son for another, Stinson giving $12 to
boot. The fellow then haft wish Shin
SOWS horse and Murdock's rig and Stin-
son is now looking for him with fire in
his eve. If iiIcDermid is caught he will
likely find employment for his artistic
taste in emhelishing one of her Majes
ties' boarding houses.—Observer.
Longmans, of London, are starting a
now magazine for spotrs, to be called
the Badminton Magazine, which will
also contain "fiption which possesses a
more or less pronounced savor of sport."
The editor will bo Mr. Alfred Watson,
who assisted the duke of Beaufort in edit-
ing the Badminton Library.
PROGRESS OF SCIENCE.
A lady in Atchison has a poodle dog
which has just been fitted with a glass
eyo.
Upon the meeting of the 54th Congress
each member will find on his desk a but-
ton, a pressure upon which will be
promptly answered by a page.
Billiard balls of case steel have been
made and used successfully as Stock-
holm. They are hollow and weigh about
as much as the ordinary ivory balls.
A lathe is used to turn them to perfect
smoothness.
The advance of natural •history within
the last 100 years has been so great that
the science is practically a product of
the century. Even as groat a naturalist
as Linnaeus thought that swallows pass
the winter under the ice, and held oth o
beliefs which may now seem oqualls
absurd.
Been ties and protective tariffs appear
alike powerless to sustain the ship -build-
ing industry of France against the com-
petition of England. Out of ninety-six
sea -going vessele registered at Bordeaux
only twenty-two are of French construc-
tion.
London has called the roll of deaths by
starvation in 1892 and they number fifty-
one, from which it would appear that
London charity is is too much occupied
with the heathen.
NATIONAL FINANCES.
Horodotus says that Croesus was the
first ruler to order gold coins made.
With a population of hardly 2,500,000
Greece has a debt of $164,000,000, or about
$75 per capita.
The silver dollars issued in 1804 are
worth $1,000 each. There were only 18,570
coined in that year.
In the Bank of England sixty folio
volumes or ledgers are filled daily with
writing in keeping the accounts.
Two hundred years ago last July the
Bank of England started on a basis of a
government debt to it of .$5,000,000. The
debt the government now owes the bank
is $55,000,000.
MISSING LINKS.
Tho great secret in fancy butter -making,
says a dairy writer, is a studied purpose
to keep all foreign substances out of the
milk, cream and butter, • and have only
original material from start to finish and
fancy butter results.
The New York Experiment Station has
been making some practical tests witb
cows, as to the amount of water they
drank. It was found that during lacca.
tion, or the milk -giving period, the aver-
age per month was 1,660 pounds.
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
The keeleton alone of an average whale
weighs twenty-five tons.
The newest thing out in London's world
of sweldom is a hand -painted shirt front.
' A Dundee. Scotland, man is working on
a flying machine that is built on the
bicycle pian.
Five cent telegrams will be tried in
Italy. Tho government is also trying to
have the tariff with other European coun-
tries reduced.
Hero is a curious state of facts revealed
in a New York court record; A man
who testifies in court that he made a for-
tune from the manufacture of religious
and other tracts is suing another in court
for diverting a portion of it, with which
they wore to speculate in whisky on
joint account.
,WORTH FINDING.
Two men recently found in a Missis-
sippi river sandbar a hulk of a wrecked
steamer containing 100 barrel h
s of whisky,
It had boon ripening since bete'wah,
w h
pe g
de
and was in fano fettle.
Two boys in Muskegon, Mieh., recently
found Wile in gold under an old pine
stump and the town is in high hopes of
becoming stumploss.
Years ago a queer old follow In
Powderly. Texas, borrowed aro iron kettle
of a neighbor. Soon after, he died in his
house. There were many eoarches for the
kettle, which was at last found, with $3,.,
000 in it.
In Some old buildings at Jay Bridge,.
Me., was found $2,500 in governritent'
bonds but a little t.l#no ago
y tea:
Gyri:
OHOICE EXTRACTS.
By graoo alone we are saved, but it is
ail-suiiiciont g'raeo. —Unitod Presbyterian,
The happiness of our lives depends upon
the character of our thoughts. Marcus
Antoninus,
Why art thou .cast down, 0 my soul?"
God rem lus the steno. Nis promise is
unchanged. His help is still almighty.
It is not enough for the disciple of
Christ to do no harm to bis fellowmen;
he must do thole good,—United Presby-
terian.
• Tho elan who does not honor his
mother can not bo trusted to honor the
mother of his ohiidron,—Young Men's
Era.
"It is better to do well than to say
well," says the epigram; but it is better
still both to do and say well.—Standard.
God doesn't toll the unconverted lean
that he is a sinner, but turns on the light
and shows hire that ho is one.—Ram't'
Horn.
Assert your own freedom if you will,
but assert it modestly and quietly, re-
specting others as you wish to be respect-
ed youtsolf.-.•Fronde,
The Gospel is more than a call; it is an
announce:nont that. Gad has made peace
by the. Wood of Christ in the atonement.
Will .you accept it at His hand?—
Standard.
Tho man who is always talking about
the great things he has done for the
ohurol could be slipped out of this world
and a peacock slipped in his place with-
out anybody noticing the difference.
Young Men's Era,
TEMPERANCE TOPICS.
The man who loves whisky always hates
Christ. —Ram's Horn. •
Dr. Parker calls the saloon the"street-
corner god of London."
The animal drink bill of Cleveland, 0.,.
is said to be $10,000,000.
The liquor traffic must be ended, be-
cause it can not be mended.—Rev. Jos.
Cook.
If the road to the pit didn't begin in
respectability itcouldn't end in ruin.—
Ram's Horn.
Tho influence of alcohol is never to
stimulate life -growth, but always to hin-
der and depress it.—J. J. Ridge, M.D.
What a young pian earns in the day
time goes into his pocket, but what he
spends in the evening goes into his char-
acter.—Dr. T. L. Cuyler.
The Brewers' Journal states that Eng-
lish syndicates have $91,000,000 invested
in American breweries, the dividend on
which, at nine per cent. last year, was
$8,190,000, and was paid in gold.
The board of excise of Ithaca, ',the seat
of Cornell university, has refused all ap-
plications for renewal of licenses to sell
liquor in that town. Licenses were given
to the drug stores.
FOREIGN CLIPPINGS.
The river Rhine flows et three times
the rate of the Thames.
The crown worn by Queen Victoria
weighs forty ounces.
The population of the German empire
is increasing at the rate of 500,000 a year.
The heaviest of the foreign woods are
the pomegranate and the lignum vitae,
and the lightest. is cork.
Up to the present time- the Necropolis
komptiny, the hlggest undertakers in Eng-
land, have buried 126,000 bodies.
The long-distance -telephone between
Paris and London has over two hundred
calls a• day. ' At the rate of two dollars for
each call it pays.
In all, It has been estimated that :over
two million acres are devoted to the main-
tenance of deer in Scotland, and that
about five thousand stags are annually
killed.
In 1861 the cold was so -,severe in eastern
Europe that packs of starvingswolves 'en-
tered Vienna,'and all the canals of Ven-
, ice we eefrozen, and the principal mouth
of the Nile was blocked with floating ice
for a week.
THE ARMY AND NAVY.
All officers in the Austro-Hungarian
cavalry must hereafter learn telegraphy.
In;time of war France puts 370 out of
every 1,000 of her population in the field;
Germany, 81; Russia, 21.
Some of the ocean steamers are so con-
structed that they can be converted into
armed cruisers in thirty hours.
The Russian War Office has decided to
use henceforth exclusively grey horses for
artillery purposesthe reason given for
the innovation being that animals of this
color have been found by 'experience to be
stronger and more enduringthan the
brown ones now used.
The terror inspired by the Japanese
armies in the east is greatly enhanced by
the fact that they make no noise. They
march with no bands, no drums beat re-
veille or tattoo, and in action the Japan-
ese utterno cheers. The officers have a
code of signals by whistling that serves to
direct the movements of the troops.
0ESE RVAT IONS.
i
If the world were a whispering gallery,
It is hard to say whether ono would ex-
perience the more concern about the
things he spoke or the things he heard.
The man of tact and courtesy will not
talk above the head of his less gifted
friend. It is easier for the ono to come
down than for the other to climb.
The robes of humility often deceive;
and the shoe -maker's downcast look may
indicate simply a wish to And out how
long"the 'wayfarer can go without order-
ing a new pair of shoes.
Conscience flourishes best on continuous
bard service, and should not be allowed
to take a holiday for a single afternoon.
Since a man's thoughts must be his
lifelong.;,,companions, ho should strive to
keep them bright and agreeable.
It is bettor to represent the big and of a
short pedigree than the flue point of a
long one.
WORLD PROVERBS.
Where money makes the man it uses
pot -metal.
It Is next to impossible to wound a
bore.
How often we pay a ruinous price for
tla :regretful retful r o ilea ion of a fleeting
pleasure.
Had Napoleon acted wisely before Mos-
cow he need not have sought consolation
In talking wisdom after Waterloo.
Debt is the devil's deputy.
It always seers easy for others to do
right.
Difference of opinion is the motive
,power of progress.
Few have the time to both do and say
much,
The average after-dinner speech will
etplain to you the meaning of the
phrase, "Too full for utterance."
'le Grand fiend
I've heard so much lately about the Grand
Band,
I thought I'd eo see it, somyself and a
friend,
Set out on the journey, the day it was fine,
The drive was delightful we went the town
line..•
The. day it being warm we thought it was
beat
To stop at. Frank i•iol beines' and there take
a rest;
But early next morning we went to Port
Blake
Were we enjoyed a good time on the banks
of the lake.
From Port Blake we journeyed down to the
Grand Bend,
Where we met Tommy Murdock a school.
mate and friend;
But before I go roving perinit me my
man,
To describe the Grand. Mend here as well as
I can,
The Grand Bend you must know as I told
you before,
Is a bend in the banks of old Lake Huron
shore
Where therive,rAux Sauble, its blue waters
blend,
And the curie in the river is called the Grand
Bend
While describing the Bend,let me also des-
cribe,
'Twas the battlefield once of the Chippewa
tribes;
Where they fought for their freedom and
struggled for rights,
And they died in the struggle, as well as
some whites.
And manythe brave left his bones for to
bleach,
And they're here to this day in the sand on
the beach
But on such a sad subject, I'ye no time to
spend
For there's lots more amusement back at
the Grand Bend,
Here hundreds of people from country and
town
They come here to camp at this place of re-
nown,
For to give you their names, now I do not
intend
For there's so many camping back at the
Grand Bend.
It's delightful they say to enjoy the lake
breeze,
While flirting beneath the ever -green trees,
That grow in abundance upon the lake
shore
Or listen, enchanted, to the loud billows
roar.
They haye sermous and lectures and music
galore .
And have dancing upon the lake
shore
If you want recreation and have time to
spend
You need not go further than to the Grand
Bend.
And now to conclude I will finish my song,
And you need not read it if you think it's
too long,
For the half isnot toldyou as I did intend,
About what they're doing back at the Grand
Bend. ADARE.
•
Did You Ever Think
That you cannot be will unless you
have pure, rich blood 2 If you are
weak, tired. languid and all run down,
it is because your blood is impoverer-
ished and lacks vitality, These trou-
bles may overcome by Hood's Sar-
saparilla because Hood's Sarsaparilla
makes pure, rich blood. It is, in truth
the great blood purifier.
Hood's Pills cure liver Ills, constipa-
tion, biliousness, jaundice, sick head
ache, indigestion.
Clinton: One day last week Mr,
Coltman, of town, and Miss Dulmage,
of St. Marys, were enjoying a row on
the lake, off the shore where the camp-
ers were; the water was pretty rough,
and in attempting to come to shore, a
huge wave struck the boat broadside
and swamped it, when about 150 yards
from shore. Fortunately both managed
to secure a hold upon the boat, and
hung on until the boat was carried by
the waves to shore.
WOMEN IN DOUBT
SHOULD TAKE
PENNYROYAL WAFERS
To correct irregularity and weakness,
keep the organs in healthy condition. Tho
waters are -We Savers" to young women.
aid graceful development. provide pain-
less,regular periods. Asti Thr The Detroit
brand. All animists sell them at 51 per
box. No better remedy for women known.
GIBLEY
&SON_
Are showing special line
for the next two weeks in
PARLOR TABLES,
CURTAIN POLES,
AND
PICTURE MOULDINGS,
S. GIDLEY & SON,
ODD FELLOW'S
Mock
London, TJuron and i i<uete»..
TIME, TABLE.
Goma Nonrat— ,Passenger..
London, depart......... Bea As1 4,00:9W
Centralia Oat 5,r7
EXETER 5 22 IS NO
Hensall.._. 5.97 41+
Kippen
s 'rueell teGeti
Clinton in.i1 0.55
Lan(tesborc 100 7.is.
Blyth......... ......... ....10 "8 a 7.05
,.
Beigrave • 14.62 707
Wialgham arrive 11,10 'ell)
p•o8NG SOUTH— Passenger
Wingham, depart,0.36 A at 2.55 xea
Belgrayo 0 60 s.47
Blyth 7.03 4.OL
Londc,xboro, 7.10 dal
Charon 7.00 4.28
„eru.,etield 7.49 445
Ifippeu 7.57 4,53
.E1 11 606 ,4.58.
EXETER 8.4 6,12
Centralia__ ....... ..- 840 t'i.23.
You IcARIr Go To SLEEP
IN CHURSH
I F YOU'VE GOT
A BAD COUGH:.
A quick
PleAsekre
1J Cure
.k for 411
obsrinee
COUgh,Coli
`�=HoA1'senes*;
of
$roncl'ji*s
g i tl seine zss
TRY '9
tr 1;
FOR .
BACKACHE
416EUMATISM
LUMBAGO
f eURAWA
HIS ISA PICTURE
OF THE FAMOUS CURS,
FOR SCIATIC PAINS.,
list
iT
FOR
MU5CUt58-
PAINS
MD
AUHES•.
EACH IN AIR TIGHT TIN BOX 2S
} OENTMOL PLASTER 4
U d
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Sim Packages Guarantecea:ta
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cure alt forms of 11"e,acca
Weakness,Emissions, eren-
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Mental Worry, cxoe38-1,vs11444e
Before ter. oaf:01m oo, OpivaorStisrs-
✓ore anAfter. Zants, which soon Iead'2o:;ra-
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he offers some worthless medicine in place ed this,
inclose price in letter, and we will send by"rO a
mail Price, one package, :1; six, 55. Owes
please, Mae will cure Pamphlets free toany 5dueig
The Wood Company,
'Windsor. Ont., eamods.
The
Branff rd
BIGtEcle
IS HANDLED RI
PERKINS
AND-
MARTIN,
AGENTS PO4
BICYCLES, SEWING 'MACHINES
ORGANS, ETC.
The Brantford won
—289 first prizes,
—143 second n
88 third ,r
and holds nearly e'go
Championship fret:Jibs
Atlantic to the Pattiz.
Perkins & Martin.
EXETER
PA CKINI-H
ROUSE.
HOGS WANTED
FOR DELIVERY
EVERY MONDAY A. SII.
As we are killing hogs regular we ;are
prepared to fill crocks or pails wide
new lard.
PRICE LIST:—
Tender loin 9 cents per', ,
Spare ribs 2 ."" "T°
Roast pork 10 " "
Lard in crocits 11 " 'tx
Hams, smoked 12 "
Backs " 11 "'
13. Bacon " 12 "
tt
Clear Bacon 9 to 10 "
Spiced roll 10 " yf
Pigs feet 15 a perreltrx.
THE EXETER PACKING HOUSE
C. SNELLI. Prop.
ce(1SCALDS
)).C' Perry Davis'
PAIN KILLER.
It takes out the fire, reduces the inflate,
motion, and prevents blistering. It
the quickest and most effectual remedy tO
pain that is known. Keep it by your
rr:
y,.
and Burns are soothed at once witik