Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1889-11-28, Page 3I/i1TO QOLD liarlIBEN 6E44+ .,---- With a Pilot Ansard Who Piloted. The Ilear—ficestes on the Way Out—Grim Scandinavian node—An Adyenture Re- called. — itT Devil) tot% At loot we are off on our travele onoe tmore, a voyage which is to begin with the northeeat corner of Newfoundland and 0 end, efter o palming visit to New - York, with Borneo and other tropical Wands awey at that end ef the world, beyond the ponds- easternmoit corner of Asia. If all I hear be true, England's newly -acquired territory in North Borneo must be as well worth see - lug as any spoil on the feu of the earth, and we may fairly look forward to a very eej ay - able etay in a country which is 'witty enmesh to have , o news and no totals. A twe deys' run ought to carry U4 to St. //oho" the southeast corner of Newfound- land; 'where we ahall begin our ousting voyage up he eastern shore of the great blend, with much a pentode:tie before our eyes as I have net seen since I lost eight of the mountains of Abyseinta sixteen months ago. But our " furtheet north" on this entitle will probably be Paley's Island, for, with Java and Borneo waiting for us 20,000 utile* away, 1 fear we :shall have to wait bill next Summer to run forests. the Belle fele Straits and.. renew onr acquaintance with our dwarneh Mende, the Esquitnan. • But if we had time for ouch a trip just now we could net make it under better guidance than that et the eitipper who brought us here, brave [Apt Atli, who has written his name in the bisteryttnf Arabia voyages az ice pilot of the Bear during the Greet}, rescue expedition. It is enough to make any amateur voyager in THE NORTHERN SEAS feel very small indeed to hear the veteran talk so coolly and familiarly of that grim time when "we had only 26men left fit for duty out of 280, the rest being all down with snow -blindness," or how, 'when we w ge dodging through Smith Sound, yon knew, we had to pick our way through 700 miles of floating los before we got into what you might call a safe sea"—the "safe ime.'' being probably what most men would call very unsafe indeed. In truth, one may see by the hero's weather -worn face and the deep lines on his broad forehead that what he has done was no holiday work. Bat if anything could coneole a man for standing upon the threshold of each a region of wonders u the Arctic °clean without being able to enter it, it would be bhe treat of ouch weather and nob a series of views as we have had in our psesage of Lents Is- land Sound, the panorama of whioh, if less grand and romantio than that of the Hudson is nevertheless one of which America may well be proud. Certabily no great national highway upon earth, whether of the land or the water, could him a nobler oateway than the /moue inspension bridge, with its meg- sivensilivere standing up like two mighty • Gee 7 windore of some unfinished osithe- drat, upon which I lately heard two HOW= immigrants exhausting all the adjeotives In their language. • As after000n wanes Into evening. the panorama of the closet line on either side of Mils one then would gladden the eye of a sInter. The sombre background of dark seeding, flecked here and there with the r green cf the grass slopes—the broad o n es of yellow that show where the e bling away of the turf has left the bete—the narrow golden thread, shin - In ., THE SLANTING SUNLIGHT, which Marks the sandy beach that divides the green water from the darker land—the trny fishing boata dancing merrily ever the smooth bright sea, and the lustrous coning sky outspread over all—are won- derfully pittureFque. As the sun goes down into she sea, the fast falling shadovra of nnight give to the long, curving there of Con- necticut a weird, lonely, dreary aapect suggestive of that •far-off time when this pletuant region •,of reilways, hotels. and ." Summer resorts was still Qaong.Eh Ts, a Sun" the wild forest land of mystery and peril, echoing with the war whoops of moron a enrages, and red with the fell harvest f pad by scalping knife and tomahawk. d All this, however, is only the beginning of our cruise, and before, it ends we "hall e probably have seen MU012 that is well worth a seeing. The northern `seas have been the o home of marvele and mystery ever niece b good Bishop Pontuppdan, ages ago, saw o with the eye of imaghiation- his gigantic t " kraken," or outtlefbile—the undoubted an. a center of our modern lea-seepent—pnlling h down sailors out of the rigging like plums f off a tree and then dregging the ship itself to the brittom to be devoured at its leisure. fl Once within this strange region, any won- a dor nems pessible. In the brightness of li the midnight sunshine, you see avast oath.- h dral of glittering ices, higher than the spire a of Strasbarg, plunge downward into the o nese like a wounded whale, with a °doh d mightier than the lauded thunder, and f shook that dashers up the whele sea into e mountain waves, on the :meet of one of r which the largeet (mean steamer would rook I like a toy. • Scarcely has it disappeared h when another ice melee orowned with a w thousand shining pinnacle', comes fleshing w and sparkling up from the depths like tome ft nowly-orsatere world, and an eld sinew be- of side yoltexplaine the seeming naireole by a 'inert of innumerable preonnows, teevin up their gaunt outline againen the darken in sky, the endless eutheesion of Jew roe mountains overhung by cold dee whiteneth of the eternet meow, the sullen, ilfeless waters beneath, the gray leaden sky overhead, the tremendoud loneliness/ the dead, unearthly, awful silence, all com- bine to orush you with an overpowering settee of uttedand ghastly isolation, a weird nightmare feeling of being she only thiug lett living upon the fees of •a dispeopled earth& from ouch thenery as this thet one learns to underenthl the grim, mighty, gran. ite.hewe figures of Seendinavian mythology, whose very heaven Was no plaits of ease and softness and luxury, but a whirl of eternal beetle. Oae can fancy how mean and paltry would eppear, amid the eilenoe and loneliness of these tremendous thlitudee, the dainty divinitiea of pone sunny, sexemoue Greece—a ourlyebeerded Jove, a deek Apolle, a dapper Mercury, a round -limbed Venus. Par eife ftwent are the rite= deities of the atorrny North— Odin g THE ORARGS SIX HUBMIED : Some New POillti4 of a Different Nature, d Given by a Survivor, soarrartiNg TIES CLOUDS OF Relives before the rush of this giant) horse Thor dashiug tne In pieces ab i every stroke of his thunderbolt handiser, snaking the solid. rooks to their foundations with the shook of hie roaring waves, Heim. dell making earth and sky echo to the blast of his war horn, and Surtux's fiery sword "melting the mountabss in the day of his wrath." It was in one of the twentieth rooky islets of this ghostly sea (a mere dot in the bound. lees waste of waters) that I onoe nset with an adventure which, though I have already made 1101110 pessing mention of it. ie well worth telling over again. The island, which wail one vast precipice on all sides but the southwest, terminated to this north in a bold turret -shaped headland more than. one hundred feet in height, jnet beyond which towered an belated orag of equal height, evidently torn from the main aliff by Nome mighty convulsion ages ago. This 1 climbed at the risk of my neok one afternoon, only to find that the natural bridge of rook by whioh I had reached it had been covered by the rising tiOe, and that my retreat was out off. So there I wan fifty feet up danger. one preciploe, on a ledge jest wide enough for me to stand on, with a raging sea bstow, and a coming storm blackening the her'em, whioh, as I well knew, w Juld whirl me off my peroh like a feather into the reeving waves beneath. My sole reineining chance of life was one from the thought of which I instinctively 4111111111is ViZ, to leap apron the hideous chasm that separated me from the mein cliff and -alight upon the nearest ledge of the latter. Is was indeed a fearful tisk, whioh nothing short of the prospect of cer- tain. death could have nerved any man to faoe. The le .p was a wide one, she shelf OD whioh I stood barely largo enough to give me *pen for a spring, and the ledge on which I meant to alight was so narrow and elippery Si to make h an even chance whether I failed to reach it at all, or reached It only to fall back into THE DREADFUL GULF 'meow, But I knew that every moment of hesitation would only make matters worse, and that my only chance was to risk the leap before my nerves trove way altogether. 1 clinched my teeth and sprang out into the empty air, and the next moment I was safe en the opposite ledge. So far so .good ; but, evsn now my troubles were only just beginning. Far beiow me roared the chafing sea, and high above me towered a grim pre/Apnea, which I had always heard spoken of as absolutely unreel - able. To all appearance there was no going either up or down; yet up or down I must go, and that speedily, for if I staid where I was the approaching storm would hurl me from my perch and dash me to piecee. Just at this moment I espied a cleft, or rather crack, diming slantwiee up she face of the cliff above me the edges of whioh, frayed and roughened' by spray and storm, offered just footing enough for a cat or an Alpine climber. A perilous scramble enabled me to reaoh it, and up i went inch by inch like fly on a wall. Not witheut a long and hard struggle, nd 'more than one hair's breadth escape rom instant deetniction, did I at length rag myself wearily over the topmost ledge, pent, gapping. bruised, cut, and aching in very limb. As I did so, I caught sight of Mari seated close to the edge of the cliff nly e. few yards away from me, seemingly retied with a sketch of the sea view. So omplettly engrossed wan he with his work hat he never beard the ninepins* of my feet phut the dick as I scrambled up, tiller's e happened. to raise his 'eye' suddenly rem the paper, there I stood like a ghost n the very brink of the precipioe, a ghastly gure, right between him and the red, ngry glare of the stormy meet, which eut- ned me in all my tarred. My face and ands were black as ink, my clothes torn nd stained with blood, while my wet, die- rdered hair, standing wildly out in every ireoblon and intertwisteci with three or our Cray tufts of seaweed, powerfully nhanced the horror of my appearanoe. ur a moment he stood gszlitg as if sudden - y turned to MEMO, and then, flinging down is dretch and • implementa with a yell orthy of an Ojibbeway Indian, flew away nth such amazing speed that I could hardly e where he went to. 1 never had a chance finding out what amount he eaves of hie dventure, bub I 0311 pretty molly gimes it. saying i mply : "That 'ere hicebergn turned 'turtle," (i. e., upside down.) And tee further /meth you go, the more marvels spring up around you. No words can de jestioe to the weird attraction of this strange lite beyond the bounde of the living world, where there is no tannin and no num:, but one endless unchanging day; where time, spine, and established rules are alike unknown; where yeu breakfast at 4 in the morning, sup at midnight, dine whenever you please, and never g� to bed at all; where men are no bigger than ohil dren, and children no bigger than dolls; where„morcialtoes swarm , 'BEYOND THE ARCTIC CIRCLE; IN ig l ' you find cettle the "fee of sheep, eh the piss of doge, and dogs the size of rah Ate; where one turns from watchieg the ties foam into whirlpoole erellnd a hello some whale to roe an eagle weep from the brow of a perpendlouler precipice 6,000 feet high; who. phantom ships appear bang- ing upside down in mid-air, and instead ef one sno you see Ned or five ab once ; where dwarf' lith under the snow as in fairy take, and the day of the week or of the month IN a twitter of gloriette uncertainty from tho beginning of the voyage to the ad of it. , , But when you peel from the limib of vegestatIon into the; region of eternal etnpsi nose beyond, the Polar Ocean is seen le its [(rimmed and gloomiest seethe The bright - eat cud (newest day awn do little to soften the sternneno of the cold, ,grey rooks and lonely, Welts" ' elts" weters of the. land where all things aro forgotten"; but when non beneath the gloomy *Wow of a gathering storm the desolation of the whets let& scepe) becomes Absolutely overwhelming, Not a tree, net ith shrub, not even a blade of grass is to be Coen upet the bare, oraggY Polities in the United State. Last year the elected' of the neighboring Republic substituted a Republican president for a Dzmocrat, and the victorious party imagined they had Another long term ef offith before them *tinnier to that they en- joyed from 1864 to 1884, but thereat* of the state elections .held lad Tuesday is 'well reckoned to prove the delusive nature of any such oalculetiens. All along the line very nearly, the Osmocrata were viotorione, and where they did not aotually come oaten top, they at least made gains. In New York they elected the entire state ticket, in Ohio they won a signal victory by substituting Cempholl for Pontinr in the governorship, In Virginia General Mahone was over -thrown and the Democrats won by an over- wbelming majority, in New Jersey the latter enmity held their own, in Massathusetts they merle eine, but in Iowa they carried all the State cffioen , from their oppobenta. 01 course hill geld that the tariff had mucth to do with those results, but we believe that there ads other and ulterior forces at work, not the least of whieh is probably the proof furnithed by Petk. Egann appointtnent to be minieter at Peru of Mr. Blaine's intimate reletionship with the extreme Irieh faction. Local and penmen eauees undoebtedly had their share, but it le rather &Moult to be, lieve that the electorate at large would en Pronouncedly retire from their verdict of last Novembse oh et) /needy ron underatoun quention no the national tang, One of the purest of coniemlote, Mad Is simply del Mous. Moan's Tutti Frutti Gum Sold by all druggiets end tionftc blotters, 6 dente. A correspondent of the "London Stand. ard " writes to thet piper as followThe Charge of "Tho Lignt Brigade,' oellee "The Six Hundred," teolt pleoe Oct. 25, 1854, and is still a household memory who us, though thirty-five years have slipped by, and I have been malted by many to 'dace on record thie anuivereary some ocoutreneea other then more galloping, cutting, thrust. ing, and sarong lenentige, all of which are very eimilter en like temanons, and are often told In prose and vents. Short and to the point is bast :suited to what is required of me. So to begin my story. Itletude'a horse artillery, with me second in command, cpened fire at daylight and kept in action until its ammunition was ex 'melted, when it retired a few yards down hill and remained there for avthile, soreetten from the Russian shot and shell, with the hope of giving confidertoe to some wavering Turks, Maude was seriously wounded by a shell bursting in his horse, and there were also aeverel casuelties among the cilium, men, horses, and,gun wheel.. Seme of our field batteries soon arrived and continued the cannonade. In the couree'e: an hour or so our two brigade of cavalry and horse artillery form- ed columns near the heights of the plateau of Sebastopol, when SUDDENLY • LINE OF CAVALRY', with supports in column, probably five thou - nand, peered down the green slopes toward &ask lava, and were gloriontly . defeated by our heavy brigetle of cavalry, ander Gen. Scarlett. In the pause that followed I deemed it de. Nimble to learn what the Buseians were do- ing, and. an tee horse I had ridden WAS wounded by the splinter of a shell, I mount- ed a baggage pony and rode tip the gretesalepe to near the oreat of the now famed, yang, who al tethered h WA 11041. tellt pegand crop ton through the long grant. emelt my telesoope cautioned : Beware 1 The bruthwood on the hills opposite was full of guns and down tho valley were troops by thousands. Cap. Char- ted+, one of Lord Luoisn's aides decamp now rode by, but As be did not see me I hailed ,lalm with the inforntetion, when he replied: "The Light Brigade is orderer' to attack and while we were speaking it hove in sight, advanoin andineploying at the trot and cant- er. There as not time for warning, So Iran to my pony, and, getting back to the gene as fast as he could carry me, brought them up ab fulls/pied and placed them over the the ridge, where best to aid the remains of the Slx Hundred In their insvieable retreat. At this time Lord Cardigan reined up and told me what had happeneci, if.t the same time pointing to a long rent in his cherry overalls made by a Cossack Lancer, who had other- wise inived his aim. 0:here rode or ran up t 0 the guns. Among the leat was Capt. Goefrey Morgan, Seventeenth Lercere, now Lord Tredeger, WHOSE HORSE HAD BEEN KILLED and hin helmet lost. However, he came to me, wicord in hand, and, speakieg as cool as he would on parade, said: "Is not this an awful business Shalrespear I What than do ?" My reply was, " Quisk ; jump on a gun limber, and go to the rear with us, or to the front if we go into action, when yen may help fight a gun." We mast not forget the volley from the Ninety third Highlanders, which envied many Rambla *addled near the entrance to the village of Balaklava ; nor the attack on the Russian artillery in the brushwood by the French cavalry on white horses. I o on see them now, so conapioneue were they on the hill. Se keen is memory formed on the battlefield that even now I fauoy I see Nolan end hie horse lying dead, like many others whose names I did not know. Of my friend Charter's I have ad remark. able foreshadowing of fate to relate. On the previous evening he and I, while taking a quiet ride, eaw signs of a fight on the mon row, when ha peke very gmil looy of is being his last. M My saying, "Well we have been under fite together pretty often, and yet here we ere again," did not cheer him. "No ; it, would be hiS lest." A round shot killed hint directly we parted on the ridge before named. As tbe spot was debatable ground • my gunners buried Mrn then and there. I am, sir, your obedient servant:. • The Sultan's Closet Skeleton. If things were done in Purkeyns elsewhere the &to •aee of the Sultan's mad half brother, tiered V., would have been notifies' te the diplomatic body, and the Turkish Court would have gone into mouthing. Bat it is forbidden to "peak openly of the &titan's female relatives or of the Sultan's heir. The man who will succeed Abdul HAMM 111 wretched, lean, pale feud oreatetre of five - and -forty, named Mohammed Rethad. He is the Sultan's own brother, and is kept a alone prisoner in the palacegrounds, lest he should conspire for his majesty's downfall. He has certainly no such intention, but usage ts quires thee a Staten's heir apparent should be treated as a suspected and Abdul Hamid is much too nervous a creature to innovate in this pertioular. He hes a horrible fear lest his brother. Murad V., who became crazy from being raised to the throne too sudienly. should renewer his senses, but of this there is no chance' and now that Murad's mother is dead whowill there be to prevent the poor lunette from being hurried to hie end by "a pinch of somothinp" bn bits coffee? Mureel's mother, the Battens Nadine, superintended his household and never left him. It would have been imposeible to molest him while she was alive, but it would be only too much in keeping with Turkish traditions if the unhappy madman were now gnietly remelted in order thin: Abdril Ilemid might sleep more soundly. Art in the Pulpit. Lucy-- Did you know that our new young rooter is quite an artist? Eineereivell—Ah, indeed truly refreching to find a preacher that clan draw. Angel alsevee, or al the Pariaia.us cali thrm " mauehera la Juive," are worn with sleeve - lent jeoirent over skirts the some color as the elee vets The hone show at Chicago was a great suc- cess. The horses on exhibition were valued at $2 500 ooa The 1,500 entries included the $105000 trotter Alden and the fanned pi oer in the world, Johnston. One stable alone, thq of theneralinsI of Melo, Wee lettered for $4s0,0G0, Mr. Neville, the greet ba* ker of London, who dine reeently, like malty other men who ei, er %verde attained to wealth, made a false start i's life, for his first venture ended in benkrentcy: HO *tea again, and soon be. camel wealthy, tie thou invitee' each ef the 1 creditors Ise had been obliged to pe* bat 1pp riially to COM8 to a Abner, Bach gueet f frond tinder his cover a &none for the aai, IMY 0 e dos, with interest tip to date, Mr. Nev. Me la nein to have been offerce and to have refused £80 000 lot Ida besiness a short tithe I, benne are tit.taii JOHN LABATT'S Inclian Pale 41e ana' XXX Brown Stout Highest aWaras ana gelds for Purity and Excel- lence at Centennial Exhibition, 'Philadelphia, 1876; Canada, 1870; turtralia, 1877; and Paris, Prance, 1070. TESTIKONIALS SIllogOTED: Prof, xi. n Croft, Pulago Auitlyht, Toronto, says ;—"Tiflnd It to be perfectiy sound oontainto g no impurities or adulter. atiO LS, and cart strongly reoninMend it as perfectly purd and 0, very superior malt liquor,' John D i1was-u, Professor of Chemistry, Montreal, Fiala: 'I And them to be remarkably sounl ales. brewed from pure in mit and hope Bev. P: ,T. Ed. Pago , Prof essor of Chetzdatry, Laval Un:ver say, Quebee. Says have analyzed the Indian Pale,' Ale matautactured b yJohn Labatt „Loud on, Ontario, and FA,Te found it a light ale, containing but little alcohol, of a °eli- de:is flavor. and of a yet) agreeable taste and superior quality, and compares with the best imported ales, 1 h tye also analyzed the Porter XXX Stout, of the same breWorY• which is of excellent quality; its flavor is very agreeable; it is a tonic more energetic than the above ale, for it ig 1. little richer in alcohol, end can be compared advantage- ouely with any imported article. ASK YOUR GROCER FOR IT. mitz an MANUFACTURERS OF rand, Square Upright PIANOFORTES. The Oldest Manufacturers in the Dominion, Seven Thousand Pianos Now in Use. The Heintzman Pianos are noted for: Their Full, Rich, Pure Singing Tone, Their Finely Regulated Delicate Touch, Their i'erfectly Even Well Balanced Scale. The Whole Composed of the Choicest Material and of the Most Thorough Workmanship Send For Illustrated Catalogue. Factory: -West Toronto Junction Wareroonls and Office, 1 1 7 IUng-St. West r.1101R,C)1\1-"=0, OF ANY THE EXETER , PII/1/017/111Vssmi85.01,415Efivsystaxmigirma=1211,61=111131=f1X436111Z0 Prof. Loisette's DISCOVERY AND TRAINING METHOD In spite of adulterated imitations which miss the theory, and practical 'results of the Original, in spite of the grossest misrepresentations by envious would.be coMpetitors, and in spite of "base attempts to rob" hion of the fruit of his labors, (all of which demonstrate the undoubted superiority and popularity of his teaching), Prof. Loisetters Art of Never Forgetting is reoognized today in both Hemispheres as marking an Epoch in Memory Culture. His Prospectus (sent post free) gives opinions of people in 01 parts of the globe who have act. ually studied bis system by correspondence, showing that his Syetem is used only while being studied, not afterwards: that any book can be learned/7Z a single reaffirm, rand -wandering cured, &c. ForProspectus, Terms and Testimonials address Prof. A. LOISETTE, 237 Fifth Avenue, N.Y How LOA, How Restored Just published, a new edition nf Dr. Currey - well's Celebrated Etifiuy w i hi radical cure of SPRIIMATORnnol& or incapacity induced by eX0e88 or early indiscretion. The celebrated author, tn this admirable essay, clearly demonstrates from a thirty years' succeasful practice, that the alarrring consequenees of snit. abuse may be radically cured; pointing out a mode of cure at once simple, certain and effectual, by means of which every sufferer, no' matter what his condition may be, may cure himself cheaply, /A. vately and radically. This lecture should be in the hands of every youth and every man in the land. Sent under seal, in a plain envelope, to any ad dress, post-paid, on receipt of four cents, or two postage stamps. Samples of Me Aetna free. Addresa THE CULVERWELL MEDICAL CO 41 Ann Street New York Post Office Box 450 448n-ly EAK and WOVIIIIP7 can EN quickly cure them. eolves of Wasting Vitality, Loot lefianhood, from youthful errors, etc., quietly at home. Book on all private diseases Sect free (scaled). Perfectly reliable. Over 80 years' experience. Address-. 0174DHD 'PILL CO., 7110110IVI'0, Canada, I AMES ;1.1.71ellAi;Tri;'?,,Til!;0T,ttiAndi,t14 or Pennyroyal Pills. Insures regularity. Send for partlanlars. Address . GILDED 1.117..Z. OO, TORONTO, Canada. BEARDon baldest heads, in CV to Do days. Maine, Latest andl S FO RC E D smoottee fadas, bah. granted achievement of modern science 1 meet won.: &dui disbovery of tho ago. Lilco no other tiOparation I Magical, Wee, almest inntantoneoue in action I Doyo with whiskers! Bald Mode °haired!" Clarions oneetaelen, but positive teethe. Only genuine artiolo in market, and certain to give absolute eaticfactiorl. Guaranteed. Price $1 a bottle, or throe bottles for 52. UndhbottlA lasts ono menth. Address A. DIXON, Box 805, Talle,NTO, CANADA. ROME ORIOANNANI'S PREPARATIONS. SUPERFLUOUS HAIN A pteparation that wilt permancntlY 001170/1 ecorfloona hair without inju,rs, to the ['kin. Warreate• r.ride,01, PIMPLES AND BLACKHEADS P7=111,1 from JO to 82days. Waraiited. Pricer:tree clays treatment, 03. ANT1•003P8LENOE PILLS F°'"-ItT1.1! llrtt,blo,:ta• unfashionable—PAPter of iolibittik PoLPS 1111illg " Mot le a mater ‘kinathor hciatidee it le cAc oneutexcn pints n bees 10 ibg. a Month. They cane, 00 deloteed ; Contain no poiaon, sad never fail. Price for ono reee ire treattoont, 02; or three months medicine, 00. ‘Varrented. • • g VI PLEXION WAFERS l'all'hEirrt Mooch the thin, develop the forni. Hartnle4s. Verreenent 1, 6 net. War:ante* Mee I i bet, or six bo4de fat en. 0.4/rOf121 retieneAllite CtIOVAteNArees * 119r, It4n4 Street 'West Teeetinte, Onee Wee The Saoteh eporte at the P415 exhibition were a feilure, no fete of eny note being frru:c {.4 • te . Ce ed Po C , en e\N do gf, 1 .c., e din0 t 0- % id8".s. • •'°0 es 090 e, .<4 c'St? s°' 6' 46C ee 'ZS' eve Oo nen dee e° k°e, 0' nn'Zi • 4° K,0 'tc` -,c. 0;'?• t• ..,e, ,o, ,b,0 do. 4 .' sz,''' , z , ,§.' c,,c. KA ese;.° Ore e,' ieden61 0 ..t, rCs. se? bed-, .'° 6 01. ce 4,0 04.1 sl• ae'ce" "6" o•ce• rsc c• os s a • \ *$c" 2.• 41 .tiNe' "C5 4e> s.3•‘ If 4,5e) 4'3 vo4 t 4..4e.cp). .07 0 I;. •.„20^ VI' k, e‘c nne ene ne. eon .ce Cr- No 41, e.w. .c> .1" t‘ e 1.0' I, ' ‘?,.• --‘,'s° CP ,z,'° 4„•\ .. <,s, , ..0. 19'0 ' 09' . ' " 0 ' ' • '0" . ..,.... .0g, .,,,S> '4' 419 .1. • Manufactured only by Thomas Holloway, 78„ New Oxford Street, 14, late 598, Oxford Street, London. ene Purchasers should look to the Label on the Boxes and Pots the address is not 533, Oxford Street, London, they are spurious. Exeter Lumber Yard The Undersigned wishes to inform the public in general that:Ailed keeps —constantly in stock— All Kinds of BUILDING MATERIAL DRESSED OR UNDRESSED. A large stock of Hemlock always on liana at mil prices. Flooring, Siding5 dressed—inch, inch -and -a -quarter, inch -and -a half and two inch. Sash Doors, Blinds, Mouldings and all Finishing Material, Lath, Sze. SHINGLES A SPECIALTY. --Competition challenged. The best an d tin largest stock, and at lowest prices. Shingles A 1. All dressed lumber thoroughly seasoned and ready for use. No shrinkage - assured. 'A call will bear out the above, HE OLD ESTABLISHED Jas.'Willis, Manager Ninnonmem G. r r OLTI _I1 AGENT:• Hay Township Farmers' Mut- ual Fire Insurance Co. A FUEELY COMPANY. Live Stook also insured, when in the fields or on the reed in charge of owner, or servant alcomannf'soturer of the Imeroyed Surprise Washer and Wringer Machines. Agent for Tomb Stones and the Watsott ;Implementer Tudentakiag pronely attetidok to. G. HOLTZMAN. s &trio], 0 f Ain ins ftt'OIT i, 10,1 inten nte • ' ne 51009 guarantees. sautrz, and JaStoehees raid. illitANTE7D", PetlOanerittp ,tutestevatetegeste beeleners. Steele Complete, Wititifast•Selllng i4etialtie8 0 tretteene setereervoien, neoceetteri ei. erhis hoses is tenshro4 ttletioxr FAME. #itarrattee.:07tat advliffise: Write illtOthiN '