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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1895-9-13, Page 5Pearl. i1fok'ardand. Wallaceburg, Ont. Comfort and Relief Given to Rejoicing, Parents. A Child's Health and Strength Guilt Up by Hood's Sarsaparilla. The gratitude which is felt by pa- rents over the recovery of their children from distressing diseases it is hardly possible to express in words. Many „lathers and mothers have seen the good effects of Hood's Sarsaparilla in restore ing their children to health, and they ;have written gladly of their great joy ittnd thankfulness for the virtues of this !medicine. Following is such a case i "My little girl, aged 4, weighed but 3 pounds at her birth. During the first three years and a quarter she was not well ar single day. I was recommended to try st bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla. I bad little faith in the medicine, but as I had tried all other medicines, I thought I would give Hood's Sarsaparilla a fair trial, and I began giving it to the child according to directions, The result is that she Has Not Had a Sick Day since taking the first bottle, which was' seven months ago. You do, not know what a comfort and relief it is to my wife and myself to have her restored to health. She is now robust and weighs as much as any child of her age in town." GEORGE 1111cReaLANn, Wallaceburg, Ontario. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the Only True Blood Purifier Prominently in the public eye today. ROOM'S Pills easyto bur, easyto take, easy in edeet. 25o. Nor over Fifty Years. WELL -Tann AN OLD AND ,YELL -Tann REbrEDY.—Mrs Winslow's Soothing Syrnp has been used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teething, with per- fect sucoess. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic and is the best remedy for D:iarnccoa. is pleasant to the taste. sold by Druggists In. every part of the World. Twenty -live cents a bottle. Its value isincalculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup and take no other kind A. HASTINGS, THE CENT ProprietRALor oy BARBER SHOP. HAIRCUTTING, SHAMPOOING and HAIRCUTTING. Ladies' and Children's Haircutting a specialtg A. HAISTINGS, Fanson's Block, KNIGHT. EXETER NORTH STORE Mr. F. R. Knight has opened a Gen- bral Store in the stand lately occupied ey Brook's Harness Shop with a full stock of GENERAL GROCERIES BOOTS & SHOES, HARDWARE, STATIONARY, ETC. Xeli Produce taken in exchange for goods F. R. Knight. liirkton: A young son of Mr. Robt. iiavis near here fell off a box on Sat- rday last and broke his collar bone. 'The little sufferer is doing as well as could be expected. Parkhill: While Mr. John Foun tain was helping to unload a cutting box on Friday last he had his hand severely hurt. The cutting box fell, knocking his hand on top of the wheel inflicting a very severe wound. Wingham:. Four of the ehildren of Mr. .Patrick Brown, of toren, hay e been notified that they are joint heir s to an estate In Pavilion, Genesee conn- ty, 'New York. There are ninetee n heirs ill all, and Ma P,rowo has no idea of the amount that will bo coming, to the children. It is the estate of an' aunt of the children, a sister of Mr. Brown's first wife. Brussels: Lou Reid, met 'with a se• yore accident on Wednesday morning, He was out in (grey at Duncan Ta,ylor'o and was driving a load of manure out of the y aid when he fellfrom the wag- on. The front wheel passed over his' body alai the hied wheel was on h'im. when l�l'r, Taylor ran:' acct1s stopped tho horses in time to prevent the wheel front passingover tis head, Ho was brought into town itld medical aid rendered at once. TOPICS OF A WEEK The Inipvrtaut 1 verity i,lx a Eewv'words 1.1'o UMW Beadors, The village of Alexandria will, expend + . $28, 000 for water -works, Street c orii on a farm in Godorich town- k >l ship, Huron, grows to a height of i$ feet; as h- as. w e - be e of 11 CANADXAt•;, Typhoid fever prevails at Canfield, Strathroy is toiublecl with firebugs. Shoplifters trouble Barrio merchants. Oollingwood has a plethora of barbers, Building operations in Barrio aro brisk. Black ducks are plentiful on, the back lakes. Hepworth will soon have a Masonic lodge. Kingston has only two ' Chinese laun- dries. • Chatham wants an eleetrio all-night ser - 'vice. An elevator is being .built at the Becton station, Marl;.ot fees may be done away in Guelph, Windsor sends tramps to jail for three months. The Muskoka hay map is only an aver- age one. A labor union is to bo organized in Orangeville. Welland recently had a fine firemen's competition,- The Alvinston Masons have moved into their now hall. • In 7t, 'Thomas a thief steals potatoes from their. hills. There will be a good crop of oats and peas about Orillia, Barrio will vote on an Itulustrial Home by-law in January. A gold mina in Matlock has just yielded a Tory rich strike. An insane gypsy tried to drown himself in Cameron lake. The Barber Asphalt Company is doing the paving in London. Woodstock will have a new patent baby carriage factory. Room() is the, now post -office at Caradoo and Adelaide road. The water in Georgian bay is 18 inches rawer than it was last year. Berlin's newly found flowing well is at traoting great attention. Tho bones of an historic animal have been dug up at Ridgetown. The Barrio Council is asked to take charge of the public library. Godorioh is contemplating a comprehen- sive radial railway system. Wallaceburg's population, 2,608, makes it the largest Tillage in Canada. American capitalists propose to erect largo salt works at Mooretown. A number of Brantford merchants have beon swindled by the change game. A Sandwich than has a 855 -year old horse that can trot a mile in three minutes. An olcl squaw, Howacodoquah, died re- cently at Walpole Island, aged 100 years. Quebec and Ottawa are the only large Canadian cities that have no free libraries. A new lake barge, to carry 50,000 bush- els of grain, is being built at Kingston. There are about thirty cases of scarlet fever in the city of Winnipeg at present. On the recent pilgrimage to. Ste. Anne de Beaupre $000 was . stolen from a priest. A roan near Newbury has been com- mitted on charge of stealing 13 acres of wheat. An Italian employed on the electric rail- way at Seneca Halls accidentally received 1,700 volts. To -day he is at work as well as ever. A true bill has been returned against Napoleon Demers for wife murder atMon- treal. A committee been has n appointed a pp ed to raise $25,000 for the proposed monument to Mercier. C.P.A. authorities still continue to re- ceive applications from Manitoba farmers for men. Jesuit Fathers are considering a propos- al to establish an observatory in connec- tion with St. Mary's College. Action has been taken by John Pinder & Co. against the Dominion Government for the recovery of $1,400, alleged over- charges on sugar imported last May. The Lord's Day Alliance, of Hamilton, intend prosecuting the steamboat and rail- way companies, which have boon running in;or near the city on Sunday. Minnie and Alice Boug, daughters of Albert Boug, broom -maker, of London West, who were poisoned by eating canned salmon on Sunday last, are still in a pre. carious condition. The jury in the Warwick drowning case has recommended the cancellation of the license hold by .Hoteikeeper Ward at Springbank where the men had procured liquor, and that no license be granted in future for a hotel at that resort. Pte. Hayhurst, G, M., of the 18th Batt., Hamilton, winner of the Queen's prize, has received from Lord Dufferin a beauti- ful engraved silver medal, in recognition of his skill as a marksman. A letter of congratulation accompanied the medal. Apiece of sixteen -inch plank was found wedged across the Toronto Water Works conduit in one of the man -holes, and eighteen inches of sand worn discovered in the bottom. This is believed to account for the accident to the conduit on Thurs- day, Prof. N.P.Dupuis of Queen's University, Kingston, has written a letter protesting against street watering as being foolish and dangerous. He says the consequences are the deterioration of the streets and the tendency to unhealthiness, as dust is bet- ter than baotoria. Mr. William 'Taylor,iate of the Customs' department in London, Ont., died there Friday. Mr. Taylor was for many years municipal clerk of London township, and wielded a very great influence in that municipality. In politics he was an ardent Conservative, and in 1867 ran for the On- tario Legislature against the late, Janes Evans, but was defeated, The weather in Manitoba has been very favorable for harvesting, but Edmonton district has been visited by a, snowstorm. OnWednesciay nearly 50,000 bushels of new wheat were marketed at various stations teeing the Canadian Paeifio railway and Northern Pacific linos. Tho price paid for the best qualities is 42 and 43 dents per bushel, Win.I)oylo,.aged seventeen, an employe of the McCormick biscuit works in Lon- don; on- �, , t , h <l i ' ht in the elevator shaft 01, Ont., was Cati,� 4J on leriday by the hoist, It was necessary to saw oat the fret/Rework in order to re- leaw him, Two doctors were present dur- ing tho ordeal, and by the ruse of drugs allctvlatcd his sufferings. Although his b.wk is broken at tido hip bones, the e Ghettoes are that the boy will live The Rockwood asylum, Kingston, h 600 patients,and visiting days are abolle ed. .A. Lon an child, bitten by a do;, h been sent to the .Pasteur Institute, Ne York, A goologioa l survey of the country b twoen Kingston and Pembroke is to macre, London's Council has refused the issu of 04,000 in dobontnros for now soh° buildings, Aldborough post-offloo, in Aldboroug township, has been closed after an exis once of seventy-five years, The. Manitoba and North-Western rail- way weather report states that rain has fallen heavily in sonic districts, delaying the harvest and threshing. All the Cabinet Ministers have received: invitations to attend the annual Omryen- tion of the Deep Waterways Association at Cleveland, September 24-26, .A mass Ineetiegofthe citizens of Mon- treal will be palled at an early date to eon - sitter the question of °rooting a monument eo the memory of Honoro Mercier, Of the 1,000 samples of foocl, drugs, etc,, analyzed by the laboratory branch of the Inland Revenue 'Department during the past year, 150 wore found adulterated. A despatch from St. John's Nfld., says the Labrador shipping embroglio has been settled by the Canadian Government order- ing the release of ail the vessels which were seized. Mr. Wm, Kylo,of Toronto, the promot- er of the International. Belt Lino Railway Company of Niagara Falls, Oiit, was fir rested on Saturday on the charge of at- tempting to bribe a member of last year's Council. A series of very sensational incendiary oases will come before the Montreal courts at an early date. On Saturday warrants were sworn out for the arrest of tenpromi- neut businessmen of Montreal, who are charged with setting fire to their preniises. The fires extended from 1891 to 1895, and entailed considerable loss on the insurance Tho new ship canal atSault Ste. Marie, Ont., was informally opened on Saturday afternoon, the steamship Majestic, being the nowest Canadian built passenger boat, being the first one looked through the canal. The channels are well buoyed out, and a depth of 17 feet in both approaches is 'well assured, Tho canal will bo officially opened for traffic this morning. A telegram was received on Saturday at the Department of Customs, Ottawa, from Captain Howard, whose seizures of the Newfoundland :fishing vessels on the coast of Labrador have caused so much trouble. Ho asked that the Government cruiser Constance be sent to his assistance: He was informed that the release of the vessels had been ordered. UNITED STATES. Pennsylvania c0a1 miners are working on full time for the first tine° in a year. By the fire at the Boston docks property to the extent of $500,000 was destroyed. The reported engagement of Miss Van- derbilt, daughter of Cornelius Vanderbilt, to Moses Taylor, is denied. One glass of beer is reported to have.so swelled the tongue of Mrs. Joseph Long -- street at Patterson, N. J., that shemay die. The Treasury deficit for the fiscal year, or the excess of expenditures over receipts, is reported at Washington to be S13,113,- 854. After a very thorough test the experts declare that the United States battleship' Iowa will keep out the projectiles of the best 12 -inch gun afloat. Vandals broke into a tomb in the St. John's Catholic cemetery, Albany, N.Y., and scattered the bones and wrecked the coffin, and aro still at large. 11. H. Holmes, the alleged murderer of Pitezel and his three children, of Minnie Williams, and many others, since he has been in prison in Philadelphia has written a book, by the sato of which he hopes to realize enough money to pay counsel for his defence, FOREIGN. Cholera is causing 1,500 deaths daily at. Pekin. India's budget announces a smaller de- ficit than usual. Great damage has been done -by a hurri- cane and flood in the vicinity of Lisbon. Five new warships have been ordered by Japan to be built in the Clyde ship yards. Over 80,000 men and 15,000 horses will take part in the German army's autumn manoeuvres. Cholera is reported on board the British, French, Russian and Italian naval vessels at Japan. The Trades Congress at Cardiff adopted a resolution demanding the abolition of the House of Lords. Sir Arthur Elibank Havolotlk, Governor of Celyon, will' succeed Lord Wenlock as Governor of. Madras in December. The autonomist party in Cuba will peti- tion the Spanish Government for a consti- tution similar to that of Canada. Tho Duke of Devonshire and Lord Wol- seley are said to favor the introduction of conscription into the British army. Police fred upon a mob of Mohammed- an rioter, at' Dhulia, ' India who had, at- tacked n Hindoo procession. A number were ki-ied. Prince Von Hohenlohe, the German Chancellor, is expected at St. Petersburg to day and that the Czar will receive him at the Peterhof palace. Baron Moreneim, the Russian .Ambas- sador. to France, will shortly retire and will bo succeeded by M. Nelidoff at present Russian' Ambassador to Turkey. Herr Plund, editor of the Berlin Vor- waerts, has been arrested and two editions of Ms paper confiscated by order of the Government kr unpa,aiotio utterances. The Turkish Grand Vizier has dismissed a number of officials at Moosh who have been foetid guilty of extorting taxes and of treating the Armenians with ruthless severity. Tho American schooner; J. E. Macken, zio, at St. John's Nfld. from Greenland, reports hawing root the schoonerlito,with the Peary relief expedition, at Holstein - burg, on July 15, 'Upon tho retirement of rho Duke of Cambridge from the post of Commando- • in -Chief„ the British Government will es- tablish a council for naval defence to act c in conjunction with the Amyl Board. s A report has beeiiroceivod in Lyons that s at the bogin.ning of July the ;helot and Orphanage' at Vottney, Cninfa, wore citta°;;. d by natives and burned, and that in the nsiiingjriot several Christians wore killed: Viffifir y r 1 a fish ndc a caught 1 a i�iK TE n t.o lostr+ Hallett:: ,A, few days since wliiku ria - gaged in threshing, Moses Mann ,Wnt " the tit's! joint of one fingsrwheel, Fullarton: 4. serionii accLadent oa-' enrred to Mr. J. W. W'i'oodlev, car4*l, ling on him in his barn, iesultiag in the breaking -of n L �., one Of leis ie„9 below �e sill ��� ttiG knee,. Clinton: ` Complaint was laid agaiuit a young man for using profane 4nei abusive language; Ile ndtnitted the charge and a fine of $2 and costs ways imposed, Mitchell: Although it is said that the great corn consumer, the come is almost. instinct, there was seen a half dozen• making: their disappearance from ;a garden in the north ward. On being closely pursued by the night watchman they were seen taking'. refuge in ,,a, neighboring tailor shop, where the cern was prepared and eujoyed by the "tww.o legged coon." Ailsa Craig: Mrs, Graham, died on Wednesday morning 4th inst., aged i;8 , years. Mrs, Graham was one of the oldest residents of Ailsa Craig. and was very highly erespeeted, Her husband died nearly 40 years ago The sus. - riving children are Mrs. Bowman, of this place; Mrs Knapton, of Parldeili; Mrs. Youngg and Mis. Johnston. of Port Huron Mrs. Hardy, of (.rend Rapids.; John, of East S,Villiares, and Thos., who is in Manitoba. Sulf&ing! The Cure is a Wonderful ul One Wrought by Paine's Celery o r' pound., the Great Strength, and Health -Giver.' The memory of the great discoverer , has created a wonderful sensation in of Paine's Celery Compound will ever that special section. of the Eastern be sacred to. the thousands who have Townships, Professi0nai men, busi- been wonderfully; delivered from die- men, busines men, and farmers, have ease and suffering. .the united efforts ' discussed. the subject, and to -day Paiu- of this world's medical men will never I e's Celery compound has a reputation equal the work, the mighty life-saving j and a fame in the district that no other results, have come to sufferers through medicine over possessed. the virtues of Paine's Celery Compound.; Airs. Parsons writes very briefly, but The most difficult, most distressing, to the point: she says: and the seemingly hard and incurable " I am delighted to send my testi- eases are successfully cured by the many regarding your most valuable great medicine. There Is no reason medicine, Paine's Celery Compound. why any man or woman should despair "Some time ago I had Grippe, which and give up hope, while they can pro- left me so lathe and weak, that for six cure the medicine that drives away months I could not get up without disease, help. I told my husband that nothing Strong and incontrovertible proof— else but Paine's Celery Compound could testimony from one v,ho suffered for help ree, after other mediciaes and Drs, over fifty years—will give you hope, had failed, and inspiration to many of Canada's " After taking several- bottles of sufferers who, up to the present, have I Paine's Celery Compound, I feet that I been unsuccessful with physiciane and am cured; I can now walk and go up I the common advertised , medicines of and down stairs with ease, and do alt ' the day' I my housework. Under the blessing of The marvellous and speedy cure of God and your Paine's Celery Compouud, Mrs. A. R. Perseus, of Sutton, P. Q., I I am now well." Winnliam: On Wednesday labii riding home for his breakfast, Ar:igu Ii.erined' bad the misfortune to get1-.3 foot pretty badly bruised. He wa turning a corner when the horse slippe and. fell, falling on Angus' foot, injur ing it considerably, but breaking u bones: 7urich: One of the oldest pioneers we think, we may say the oldest in th township, was Mr. John Gellman, wh died .Monday Sept. 2nd, and was burie Wednesday. He came to Hay town ship some forty years ago, when al was a forest, His age was 90 years, 8 months. Hensall: The horse for which McDer grid traded the one he hired from T Murdoch and which belonged to Mr Stinson of Bayfield, hag been discover ed up'he Wawanosh, but the presen ownet'tefuses to give it up' . Mr. De mid is away with horse No. three for which he traded the horse he got from Stinson. Its a kind , of house' that Jack built business. Mitchell: Deep sorrow has been brought to the family of Rev. A. D. Dewdney. rector of St. James' church, St. Johns, N. B., through the accidental drowning of his little infant daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Dewdney, with other friends, were out boating' Saturday evening when a squall struck the sail, overturning the craft. All were res- cued, except the child. Mrs. Dewd- ney had a very narrow escape, but through the instrumentality of a com panion, Rev. Mr. Mathews, was kept above_ water until help arrived. Mr: . and Mrs. Dewdney have the deep sym- pathy of ym-pathy'of their many warm : friends in and about Mitchell Ailaa Craig: Dr, Anderson took poison last Sundae, in mistake and far some time it was thought it would re- sult fatal, but he is now out of danger. Downie: Tuesday of east week Dan- iel Clifford, of the Gore of Downie, as °ended a ladder in his barn to oversee the moving of some grain,'when he slipped and fell on the barn floor. He was picked up in an unconscious con- dition and never rallied or spoke after wards, death intervening on Sunday. The nature of his injury is supposed to have been concussion of the brain, The deceased was a native of the County of Kerry, Ireland, and had resided in Ox -e ford and Perth for upwards of half a century, he being in his 66th year. Goderich: , North St. church, Gode- rioh, was the scene of a happy on Wednesday , when Mr. J. K. Greig, one of the popular young business mien of Seaforth, was married to Miss Minnie Acheson, one of the favorites of the cir- cular town, and daughter of Mr, J. Acheson. The:bride was assisted by her sister and cousin, while Mr. Greig had the support of Mr. Cowan, of Sea - forth, and Mr. R. J. Macdonald, of Clin- ton. Among the guests present were Mr. and Mrs. J. W, Chidley, Mrs. Greig, Mr. T. Jackson, jr., and Misses Doherty and Gorrell, Clinton. The ceremouy was performed by Rev. Jos. Edge as- sisted by Rev. I, B. Walwin. O Clinton: Messrs. Plumsteel �C Gib S bings, who: baye conducted business s here for some years, announce their s intended retirement at the end of the ' year. This is simply due to the desire - I to take life a little easier than is pee- o , sible when engaged in'comnercial pur- Isuits. Mr. Plumsreel, we believe, will gtye his personal attention to the mau- 1 agement of his two farms in Tucker o smith, while Mr. Gibbings will take d , life easy, -1 Usborne: The following interesting 1 `statistics are taken from the assessment roll:—Ch4idren between 5 and 16, 569; 7 and 13•, 343; over 15 and under 21, - 194; No: of acres, 42,680; acres cleared, . 35,374;.Total real property, $1,845,550; . I personal property, $5,050; taxable in- -I come, 600'; total real and personal pro- t-perty $1,851,200; persons from 21 to 60 r•"h y ears, 538 T dogs; 265; bitches, 26; per- ; sons in families, 2,400; No. of cattle, • 5,671; sheep, 2,413; hogs, 2,719 horses 1,819; birtbs, 52 marriages,' 22; acres of woodland, 6,533; swamp, 1,068;orch- ard, 586'; fall wheat, 4,126; number of steam engines in township, 12. A Timely Reminder. Each season forces upon our consid- eration its own peculiar perils to health. The advent to fall finds many reduced in strength and vigor, poorly prepared to continue the business of life. The stomach and bowels; the grea'e highway of animal economy, is especially liable to disorder in the fall. The nervous system has also suffered in the struggle. Typhoid fever and malaria in particular find in the fall hat combination of earth, air and w:o.t- cr that mark this season as especially dangerous. The falling leaves, the de- aying vegetables contribute their hare of contamination, Hood's Su apairilla £uriiislies a meat valuable safeguard at these important pointS, a 15 + and should he used in the fall before erious siOttiess has laid you low. Weak and Nervous Describes the condition of thousands of people at this season, They have no appetite, canuot sleep, and complain of the prostrating effect of warmer weath- er. This condition may he remedied by Hood's Sarsaparilla, which creates au appetite and tones up all the organs, It gives good health by making the blood pure. Hood's Pills are the best after dinner pills, assist digestion, cure headache. WOMEN IN DOUBT SHOULD TAKE PENNYROYAL WAFERS To correct irregularity and weakness, keep the organs in'healthy condition. Tho Wafers are "Life Savers" toyouagwomea, aid graceful development, provide pain- 1ess,regular periods. Ask for The Detroit brand, All druggists sell them at el per box. Eobettorremedy forwomea gown, GIDLEY & SOI Are showing special line for the next two weeks in. PARLOR TABLES, CURTAIN POLES, AND PICTURE MOULDINGS, .. _ S. GIDLEY &SON, ODD FELLOW'S Block In the system, strains the lungs and prepares a way for pneumonia, often= timas consumption. 'MY -PECTORAL positively cures coughs and colds in 4s. surpiiiin-;ly short tune. It's ascien- tific certainty, tried anti true,.eooth- in; and healing, in its effects. LARGE BOTTLE, ONLY 25 CENTS. FI'EAPj'OF& G: SCfATICA,9HEUMATISM °°NEURALIA ° Al.NS IN BACKOftSIDE . 0P ANVMUSCUTARPAIN&. LIES IN.USING iN gaff Ais 1114 60![65 jotDEVERYWHEAC 250 • PI-ASZEil The Brantfo• 41 Bicc1e, ecie, IS HANDLED R! PERKINS AND MARTIN, AGENTS FOR BICYCLES, SEWING MACHIN, ORGANS, ETC. The Brantford won —239 first prizes, —143 second •i 88 third and holds nearly every Championship from the Atlantic to the PaeFdic. Perkins St Martin. EXETER PA O !INH HOUSE. HOGS WANTED FOR DELIVERY EVERYMONDAY' A.M. As we are killing' hogs regular we izre prepared to fill crocks or pails with. new lard, PRICE LIST: ---e Tender loin 9 conts leer . Spare ribs Roast pork 10 `i Lard 10 crocks 11 " Hams, smoked 12 " Beaks' " 11 B. Bacon " 12 '1 Clear Bacon 9 to 1.0 Spiced roll I0 " -' Pigs feet 15 " per doz. THE EXETER PACPNG HOWE Cr SHELL , g Prop. 2 e rt as 44 a 4, i; with a colicy baby of a colicy stomach isn't pleasant. �+,''ither can be avoided by keeping a bottle Of Perry Davis' PATI Xtr r,}R 011 the medicine shelf. It is invaluable III sudden attacks of Cramps, Cholera Morbus, Dysentery and Diarrhoea. fust as valuable for all e"eterual pains. bole-ene te£ spoont,d In a ball' glass of water er mill: (!warns tf teni enient)a