HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1890-2-20, Page 6, DRAIA TBE EL Ej N S. within reach of our telereopes all night long ;
then evening star care Jam. After corium).
tion with the sun Saturn will be again visible,
but in the morning sky, during October, No•
vember and December.
Uremia and Neptune are nearly at op•
poste etatione ite the heavens, the former
being claw to" Spies,' and hoEoe a Summer
plane`" ; while the outermoat member of our
eyetam knot far from the brilliant " Aide.
harem," ane of the brightest twinklers in the
winter skies..
F.PATUI ES POR, STAR fir>A7i 'RS DUR
Il!iQ THE PREBB1T YAR,
Meme*nterea;tlagroints in Celestial Stride
ter the Benoit of Amateur Astronomers,
Oue of the moat striking things about the
work of the astronomers it, to the layman,
the accuracy with which all the celestial
iheacmena may be foretold. This has only
been reached by centuries of observation.
Theories are found to account for the obeerv-
eid conditions, tables are eonstrroted from
these theories improved by comparison of
eabaegnent observations with these pre..
elicted places. .Uy this process of evolution
a'tete of accuracy liaa been reached which,
be many paetionlarm it wane difficult to
iisn,prove.
gine most involved study of all is proba-
bly the explanation of the moon's motion.
It is complicated by the effect of the earth's
Mien and movement, the sun's varying
.intrrction, etc", so that the almost infinite
member of minute corrections which meet
lie computed render a prediction of the
minuets apparent position. exceedingly cried -
mat to snake. As Professor Young eaye,
the anl-ject "can be dealt with only by the
'bleat and 'neat akiIfnl analyst!,"
The exna2eur zstrencrf+er working in hitt
oteervatory ie never witheut A eepy of tbis
'ephemeris for the et3rreut Fear, And ,imply
lima to lei pagan fee all hie infermetion.
lease experienced etuderlte of t•.stt:onotrly,bow.
einem leave to depind nem tw i'methene ol.
'axarttin' Car au aceatiogG, ttewipaper notice
for their informetfo 1, nerd eomctitnes are at
wloss for just the neeeeQarydata. Therefore
we beg to present; cur readers a brief review
of gimme of teas aitntsria0 predictions for 1890,
belfevin that some of tine information ay
foo foandm
useful anti boping that it all may
not prove uniAteresting,
.As an cellpso year 140 ie exceedingly ur
pro uisia, especially to the inhabitante of
teltat tda. The sligbteet perceptible darkening
of the rnven's limb on the morning of Nov-
ember `ee is the only event of this mature
which will, to vieable en the continent due-
fug the yearand that only in the vieiuity of
Sart Franeleee. l; allowing is the mi ce:nary of
the eelipaee given iu the calendar
June 2. fl :,'Cep. m, ---A e'.Qee a 1prcaeh of
the =Pen to the earth.'' ehedow. Prebably
,iomerceptib}le, altheuuh the ma a'li limb will
be within the '"enumbra." Sueh oe.
an
omen:ice ie termed a Inner apeputce.
Jure 1617 --An annular eclipse of the1,
gun, viribte as each le portions c Northern'
Attica, 'Turkey, Penia, Il:iudeesten and,
Slrtnrtearedvielbloas a partial eclipsethrougtz.
out Balm°, Aeia and Africa t eeeraloy,
Neveml:er :G--Cemtnencing tit 515 n. re,
a, partial ccteg a cf the moor., leetiug for
€eveuteen minutes. The wbolo tlmcnnt of
theotr:erratien will only be .CCC5 of the
=conic diameter.
December 11—'1. neutral ee,lip.o of the cull,
thepath be ^; cor,:it:ed ala+ire. .a
the
and S uta <tr mCi. aceari� Oa0 £ the; i v
muaire Minnie ',car New !, aiard, is zee
only pint cef land *cut s let.h the centre:
eeiip o tray be el imrvatr. There it will In
total for about fifteen oecoude.
I'Oieen tlx TUG PLANETS..
Mercury la z ccrstewinat diffirait planet to
pick up with the ataIit:tl eye, eine it is seely
visible he the evening fora fere days nets
"eamtern elcngatten," and foe a eimil;r
period before sauc ire l',eenet-tem tin! ino
•weal en einematiore°
Venus was quite cine to the sun at the
opening of the Sear 1599, and in eat -junction
with that body on February 17. Then for
the greatest part of the year Venus will be
t
the evening it r,reaching her tea gtent
,elongation east of the aun on September 23,
and befog at thegreeteet brilliancy Ootober
518. After this time she will commence to
rapidly Reproach the tun, and on December
3 will be in "inferior corjnnotion." Dnr-
ingrbhe fall of 1800 the planet may be easily
neer with the naked eye in full daylight if
one knows exaotly where tit look for her.
The chief interest in 1890 centers about the
minuet Mare. In the firat place the planet
will be in good position for observation dur-
ing the whole of the coming year. Our
neighbor will be visible after 3 a,m. on Jar -
nary 1, after 1 am., February 1, end so on.
Daring May and Jane Mars will be visible
throughout the night, and during the
evening hours for the remainder of the year.
On May 27 oceans the "opposition of
Man." At this time the earth, planet and
inn are all in the same straight line, and con-
licquently we are nearer to the Mnrtiane than
at any time during the year. But the din
tame between Mars and the earth ab differ -
+eat oppositions vsries very greatly. The
oppositions come about every twenty-aix
menthe, and every fifteen years they occur
when the two planets are nearest to each
Other.
THE STUDY OF MARS.
Almost every one will remember the in -
menet attaching to the lash favorable opposi-
tion (1877) when Professor Hall at Washing.
ton discovered the two satellites of Mars.
At that time the earth and planet were only
36,000,000 miles apart (about one-third of
the earth's distance from the sun) Up to
3834 the distance at eaoh successive opposi-
tion kept gradually increasing. In that
year it was over 60,000,000 miles. Since
1854 the successive oppositions have been
more and more favorable. The one occurr-
ing April, 1888, with a diatance of over
X0,000 000 miles, enabled the Lion observers
to make precise measurements of the min.
ute satellites for nearly two months after
the date of opposition, and Professor Keeler
leas declared that the giant retractor at Me.
Hamilton will show the satellites easily at
the most unfavorable oppositions. Smaller
instruments, however, have to await the
'Moser approaches. Probably ab the op-
position of 1890, and certainly at the closer
isopproaoh of 1892, will such instruments as
'the twelve inch on Mt. Hamilton and the
wine inch of the Chabot Observatory be
teiaabled to detect these tiny satellites.
Professor Young believes that the work
of the Lick telescope will in 1890 and 1892
throw ranch light on the vexed questions
'which at present are unsolved ; such as the
""reanals,'' filet seen and so persistently
ialefended beeTrofessor Sohiafarelli at Milan.
Joi!STER AND SATELLITES,
;Jupiter will be visible in the morning
lions during April, ,May and June ; July
and August during the whole night, and in
-the evening for the remainder of the year.
The observer ie never at a loss for an objeot
"when Jupiter is above the horizon. The
planet's southern declination will decrease a
little during the year, thus bringing it into
A slightly more favorable position. The four
satellites are oontlnuallyaffording interest-
ing phenomena for study by the amateur,
and this year theafourth satellite—Calypao-
which aerially escapes eclipse by the
planet and shadow, will figure quite promi-
meantlyin the list of those events.
,Saturn is still well up among the winter
'constellations. During the first three months
of the new year this beautiful planet will be
TILE DANGER of CHOLERA.
yaeltittes vitae)* the Caravan Trallte
Alford an Inv sewn
The Trebtz and correspondent of the Lev-
ant Herald mentions the anxious concern of
the population of that city regarding the
facilities which the oarsman trefdio with
Persia affirds for the invaeion of obolera.
Every week,' he writes, "we have from
three hundred to /Our hundred camels arrive
inghere from Persia, and the drivers, who
are from ft' ret•t places, may come from
infected lcealitfea;' "We cannot judge of
the extent of the risk pointed one by our
correspondent, ' says the "Herald,' "but we
give ie publicity In order that the competent
authorities niey he advised that an apapre-
Hendon exists wbi. h may or may not be
well founded. It is, of course, undesirable
that sanitary precautions should imp:do
nacre thea is i:eaeasary the course of trade,
grid probably the sanitary authorittea have
taken due rem:mere of the rink, if wry,
ebargeeble to the caravans arriving at
Trobizend.frem rerele.. The presence of
epidemire,, even so little formidable as
lefluerze, wHvh has laid its uncam1ertable`
hand on she population of Trebfz)ud, f
exercises a dcl?re'alug teatime, and ander i
each ciritvettaeere nothing tends to much
to rails the public morale ae the knewledge
filet the au:bezitles are employing ail the
means at their command for preserving the
most bealthEnl conditions for the &suints
under their protection.
"A letter t,ir,ned ' Paterfamilias' which
was received lately betrays the anxious mit-
giviega that at tele moment beset tbo minds
of fathers of families who have their homes
In this city, and the more the authorities can
do to set there misgivings at neat tile better
they will he fulfilling their important mitt
sicn. There is u :doubted cause for Chia anx-
iety, bet ie eimuld net be exaggerated.
The itsfluerna is ne t a very terrible fee
gimlet foyer and diphtheria me unfortunate
ly with us, but not with very alarming free,
7ueney or caverity. These two iota wilt.
probably disappear as suddenly au timed
eaten
"The read dread is the menace of cholera,.
leas bemuse of ite imminence, which is hap.
pily pre,.L4c-nietical, than because of the wheel -
lir unx,repared Mate et the city to reoteteuch
an ia,vr.eien. It veculd have the beat effect
upor. alio nee mind were the mueicfpel
aped atite to ret to work in a wall imagiled,
reticl 1, rand buniuceelibe manner to remove,
all c things whieli involve peril to the
pant ateaitb shy the feel hold they afford to
epi ]...,lig disease, There is not et flier t i
grout el for panic, ba there is ample rcaaou
way tee crie ::,ttte of uh ie heelt;x should
bier tines tMee to allay oil:duties which
are t ti« v,'itla ret justifc;,.tien, and to pet the
city to n Mete ,e of par- tits dofen to tvhigh
wen' ; rears, ' ecusan:in of liven if the evil
'Maui come to pace, end wh'eh if Gad for.
bid rr peroaclx,ale, not only bo in itself
u pc :meatle:refit, tut would censolo and
enema a thine many minds whoea
who t,t r t x.ee,gerated or nor, aro a real tor.
meat to them,"
Alcohol in Diphtheria.
Tice followu,;, from the " Journal of
Dime des" is well worth knowing.—Alcohol,
we make bold to say, is the prince of
nntzecpt?es, and the moot perfeot and re
liable medicine, 01 et hien we have any
knowledge, in diphtheria. Diluted with
equal parts of water, and given in small
and repeateddoses. the malignant symi. tome
of thin' most fatal malady disappear, and
oonvalesoence becomes assured, It is inter.
eating to note with what facility the alcohol
dissolves the diphtheretie exudation in the
throat, lowers the temparature, and calms
the pules, showing its deetruotive action
upon the germs of the disease, which have
been absorbed by the glands, and gained
access to the blood. This remedy has been
used by us in the treatment of diphtheria
dace 1873, during which time no case of the
disease has slipped through our hand except
in one solitary instance, and that case was
in c" articnlo mortis" before the remedy was
given. The remedy is also prophylactic to
the disease, as we have found in many in•
stances, where it has not been expedient to
quarantine the patient.
His Brother Didn't Snow Him.
Thera is a newsboy in St. Louis who bas
suddenly been made happy. He is Richard
Eagan and is 15 years old. He was lost from
East Si. Louis when he was three years old.
He has no recollection of his parents, his
mother having died when he was a baby.
He has been in Sb. Louis as far back as his
memory goes. His first recollection is of
being with the Sisters of Si. Joseph's, where
he got a good,eehooling. Recently he left
there and began selling papers. Lest Sun-
day his picture was published, with 15 other
newsboys, in a local paper. The picture
was recognized by his unole, Peter Matthews,
of Belleville, I11., who travelled to St. Louis
and took him home. He has an estate of
$3000 comin' to him. He is a irighb boy
and has for the last six months sold papers
to his elder brother, who is a clerk in a St.
Louis store, but who did not recognize him.
British bhipbzilding Last Year.
Daring the past year vessels have been
lauaohed in Great Britain and Ireland
amounting to nearly 1,280;000 tons. The
Clyde heads the list with 335,200 tons, being
an increase of 55 000 ton over the produc-
tion of 18S8. The Tyne is second with 281,
710 tons being increase of 68,000; then oomea
the Wear, with 217,336 tons, an increase of
74,000; then the Tees, with 110 436 tone,
an increase of 50,000 tons ; the Hartlepool..
risen 10,000 tons, to 84 100; but themost
remarkable rico has been atBelfasb,from,34,
000 tone in 1888 to 80 000 during 1889. The
prospect for 1890, is everwhere satistacbory,
there being a very large amount of work on
hand. It may be added that as the Clyde
yards 97 per cent. of the new vessels are
built of steel
How Ice Cutters Rescue Horses.
The danger of nutting ice before it has at
Mined a thickness of eight inches or more is
great, and numbers of horses have been lost
by their breaking through the ice while work-
ing the ploughs. Old icemen say, however,
that by putting a slipnooae around the ani-
mal's neck before it goes under the foe, the
work of getting it out is not great. The
aotion of the noose stops bheanimal's breath-
ing, and soon causes the body to become in -
Setae with wind so that it will float on the
surface, when it is easily hauled out upon
the lose
Night.
T if, ANTIlUR YOUA{ANS.
The, sun has sunk in yonder sky,
The earth casts shadows all around,
The warbling birds all homeward fly,
And fill the air with joyful gonad..
Homeward the toiler plods hie way,
With lightened heart and steady stride,
The ehlWren leave the romping play,
All gathering home at eventide,
How grand and beautiful the sight,
A, dewy freshneee fills the air,
As wrapt in the stillness of the night
The full-orbed moon -beams faintly glare,
Across the sky the stars beam out,
And throw their radiance o'er the earth,
Dotted like diamonds all about,
They gluten full of jay and mirth,
The meanest flower lifts up its song, :l
And sires its melody of praise,
The aimpleet note that swells along,
Sends forth its music through the maze.
Tired nature rests from works of love,
The mid -night sfleneo reigns alone,
Luliabys float down from above,
Sweet Anthems from the heavenly throng,
The Tryst.
Out of the darks end deeps of space,
Where worlds in awful shadow swim,
I came to meet the ancient gun,
QMeying all my hoed with him,
Wrapped in the glimmer of my scarf,.
My wefts of silver brede and lace,
Woven of atara and winds, I pressed,
And felt his glory an my face,
When, la, 11305 my hurrying way
A abiniag jewel he bad last,
Or, saoth, another sphere, a afar
That into being he had Lost,
A bell of swirling Are, arae waves
Of molten jewels leaping fast,
And shattering crests cf flame and jets.
Of kindling spume, I naw and palmed..
....Vane of ages, and again
On my parabolas Iswept
Where, lapped in opaleacent films,
The fireball rolled and, dreaming, slept.
And yet new ages, and 1 taw
In green of mete. format ehade
That sphere enfolded, and in sear
Where name:mea monetere plunged and
played.
Once more from darks' and deeps of space
To meet my mighty' lova I sprang ;
Lo. the blue sky, the fleecy cloud;
Mooned with eoit light the planet swung.
And there were templet' an the baighte,
Aue homes bencleth the fruited Mee,
Aad never bed I seen before
lieingaso beautiful as these.
They blushed, they emi:ed, they Laughed,
they loved ;
Fein emelt] d Ipae before ro
I pal?'.
Whet sones they eerie 1 Bet then what tears
They wept 1 And there were graves, alas 1
Bora of that whorl of fire Wet, now
A little lees than Bade, they sought
In vain the secret of the stare,.
The mystery of their own thought.
Away, away 1 Tremendous whiles
Shall lapse ; but one day, teamed and
charred,
I fled thin cede and gleaming world
A shrunken ball, a lifeless shard.
And when at Iasi, perchance, I come,
The elemental force withdrawn
Of light, of heat, of motion, life,
In that place Nothingness shall yawn.
Away 1 My master and my lord,
Still drawn by thy almighty will,
Though worlds be born in purple depths,
Though worlds shall fall, I neo thee still
What shudder sways me ? ab, what chill
Shakes all my splendor as I flee?
Can lots like that be ours ? Oh, love,
Can that fate fall on anon as we ?
—[Harper'' Magazine.
A Valentine.
By the mose•grown wicket gate,
Which she swings with timid hands,
And bub half inclined to wait,
A pretty maiden stands ;
For who firat shall oroas her way,
When the early sunbeams shine
On this February day,
She may choose as Valentine.
So she lingers in the mist,
While swift blushes come and go,
Till the sun's warm lips have kissed
Into living gold the snow.
It is one of Cupid's laws,
Or some sweet degree of Fate,
That a manly step should pause
Every morning by that gate ?
No 1 his duties in the town
Call the lad who loves her well,
Through the pastures bare and brown,
From his homestead on the fell.
You may shako wise heads and smile—
Yet the narrow path leads straight
Fro n the fields beyond the stile
To the mess -grown wicket gate.
Hush! She hears his rapid strides;
But the holly boughs droop high,
And today she shyly hides
Till the feet pause and —pass by.
Ah !the thrush that nests above
Sees how soft blue eyes can shine,
When a maiden's own true love
Is her chosen Valentine.
Well, a lover need not know
That a pretty maid would wait
In the February snow
By a moss -grown wicket irate.
And the secret of the bush
Where the scarlet berries shine
Will be safe between the thrush ,
And good St, Valentine.
—fChambers'a Journal.
Ceylon's Pearl Fisheries.
The Ceylon pearl fisheries were peonliar-
ly'unfortnnate last year. In the Spring
they were brought to an untimely end by
the outbreak of cholera among he crowds
that assemble ab them, and the Winter
fisheries have collapsed on account of one
of the divers having been carried off by a
shark, and all the obhers refusing in conse-
quence to carry on the work. SSpeoial pre.
cautions had been taken this time to pre.
vent an outbreak of cholera the Tntloorin
and Mannar divers were prohibibod from
attending the fisheries, those from Colombo
alone being employed, ',Eche number of
pearl oysters collected will barely cover the
Dost, whereas in successful years the Gov-
ernment neb a very large profit. An official
notification has been issued that the next
fishing will take place on Feb. 20, 1890,
JOHN LABATT'S
Indian Pale .4/e and XXX Brown Stout.
Highest aearas and Medals for Parity and Excel
/once at 'Centennial Exhibition, Phil adelphia,
1876; ..anada,18.70; Australia, 1877; and
Paris, I+'rance, 1878,
TESTImomoS SELECTED
Prof. H 1I C'oft, Pnbiio Analyst, Toronto, sags. --"X AAnd it
to be perfeotl' sound eoatainingno impurities or adulter-
atioi.s,and cal strongly -recommend it as perfectly pure.and,a very su ericr malt liquor,"
J""1findti dyer i be remarkably aounlsalee brewed says,
pure malt aadhops,
Bev. P. J. RI, Page ,Professor of Chemistry Laval Un- ver
site', Quebec, ays tmeI neve analyzed the Indian Pale,,Ale
manufactured byJohn Labatt, London, Ontaxi o, and Bayo
found it a ilgttale, containing but little alcohol, of a deli-
cious flavor, ern of a very agreeable taste and superior
quality, and e.-rnpares with the boat imported ales- I have
also analyaedale Porter XXX Stout, of the same brewery,
which is of excellent quality; its flavor is very agreeable ;
it is a tonic xuare cnergetio than the above ale, for it is a
little rieber intioohol, and eau De compared advantage-
ously with and imported artiol-e.
ASK YOUR Vele0t,IEJEI. FOict LT.
eintzman
MANUFACTURERS OF
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Grand, Square Upright
0
PIANOFORTES.
The Oldest Manufacturers in the Dominion.
Seven Thousand Pianos Now in Ilse.
The $eintzman Pianos ars noted for
`Meir Full, Rich, Pure Singing Tone,
Their Finely ;Regulated Delicate Touch,
Their Perfectly Even We» Balanced Soda
ole Composed of the Choicest Material and of the Most Thorough Workmanship
Send For !U1ustrated Catalogue.,
Factory: -West Toronto
�i �$ a� J
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How Lost, How Restores
Just published, a new edition of lir. Cnlver-
rre]l's Celebrated Essay ori hs radical cure of
Sl'RRdiATORr1nn1Y,A or incapacity induced byexcess or
early indiseretion. p
The celebrated author, in this admirable essay,
clearly demonstrates from a thirty years' sueesastul
practice, that the alarning consequences of eelf-
abuao maybe radically cured; pointing out a mode
of cure at onee simple, certain and effectual, by
means of which every sufferer, no matter what his
conditisn may be, :nay cure Himself cheaply, pri-
rately and radically.
ter TIM lecture should be in the bands of every
ybtlth and every man in the land.
Sent under seal, in a plain envelope, to any ad
Wes, post-paid, on receipt of four cents, or two
postage stamps. Samples of Medicine free. Address
THE CULVERWELL MEDICAL CO
41 Ann Street New York
Post Office Box 450 4686-Iy
WEAK MEN qi �o �N om
quickly euro th-
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(mLDED 8'ZLL CO., TORONTO, Canada.
our "Relief for women " is safe and always
reliable; hotter than Ergot, Oxide, Taney
or Pennyroyal Pala. Insures regularity.
Send for particulars. Address
GILDED PILL CO., TORONTO, Canada.
LAMES
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MADAME CIOVINNANI'S PNEPA ATIONS,
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Prlco luous hair without injury t0 the akin. warranted.
Price 01.
PIMPLES AND BLACKHEADS P= mo,tsin
from to to 80days.warranted. Price far 80daye tr^atment, $1.
ARTI•CORPiENCEPILLSPow,n.p•••e,eboptae
point a mutter of a Cuda, whether it isto•tabto or nntaaLAmoDla—FAT OLKS using
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ICX��ci
114
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LO ...JP •.
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,Nti,• Yoh'
•
y,fsnufeotured only by Thomas Holloway, 78, New Oxford Street, 'L
F ' late 583, Oxford Str.:ct, London.
r ane Purchasers should look to the Label on the Boxes and Pots' j
If the address is not 588, Oxford Street, London, they are spurious.
Exeter Lumber Yard
The Undersigned wisheseto informhe public in general that she keeps
—constantly in stock—
All Kinds of BUILDING MATERIAL
DRESSED” ORUNDRES SED.
A. large stock of Hemlock always on hand at mill prices. Flooring, Sidii ng
dressed—inch, inch -and -a -quarter, inch -and -a half and two inch. Sash Doors,
Blinds, Mouldings and all Finishing Material, Lath, &c.
SHINGLES A SPECIALTY. --Competition challenged. The best and the
largest stock, and at lowest prices. Shingles A 1.
Alldressedlumber thoroughly seasoned and ready for use. Nee shrink a
assured. A call will bear out the above,
•
THE OLD ESTABLISHED J as.Willis, Mdin,agger
A certain and speedy euro ibr
Cold in the Head and Catarrh
in all its stages,
800THIHEALING.NC, CLEANSING,
Instant Relief, Permanent Cure,
Failure impossible.
Many so-called diseases are simply symptoms of
Catarrh such as headache, partial deepen, losing
tense of smell, foul breath hawking and spitting,
nausea, general feeling of debility, etc. If you are
troubled with any of those or kindred symptoms, you
have Catarrh and shonld lose no time in procuring
a bottle of 'BASAL BALL!. Be warned an lima
neglected cold in head results in Catarrh, followed I conaamption end death. NASAL BAI At is sold by
d
ruegiste, or will be sent, poet paid, on receipt of
price (go gents imd;x.00) by addressing
FULFORO & 00., BROOKVILLE, OWN
/tai, Beware of imitations similar in name.
G. $111iTpliii
e AGENT-:
Hay Township Farriers' Mut-
ual Fire Insurance. Co.
A PURELY FARMERS` COMPANY.
Live ,Stook also insured, whoa in the fields.
or on the road in oharge of owner, or servants
alsomenafaotmrer of the Improved Surpries
Wash.r and Wringer Machines. Agent for
Tomb Stones and the Watson Iraplenlants.
Uaderbaking promply attendee to.
G. IIOLTZMAlee
"WANTED ATO e�gu= arraERIdE. N10aN q1 0 n;IBS0xp' eYnPePanPeouf=
liar advanua es to beinners. Stook complete, with fast -selling specialties
o"i ITPEI' 78.811. lire guarantee what we advert/Jae. ti,e. write BROWN
BROIL. urge i en. Rochester, N. V. ,(This house is reliable.).