HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1890-10-2, Page 2For CRAMPS, COLIC, and
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felg aICINEt and k'QQD COP4 INED!
•
.E ULSIO _
CcAlrvtrt C11,;,sHrYa:;•_►rr"r.t:,S«9R,
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Price liOe. end $1.00 per' Bottle.
emaissomor
Ministers and Public Speakers use
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Price ii0e.
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To patients Buffering from nervous exbau,l•
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s
a utast aattst a Q I
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droilnldwi
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MONTREAL,
Proprietors or General Agents
ma:MST ar• TIM ro. cr.+aat
Proprietary or Pharmaceutical Melt'icin es,
Toilet Articles and Perfumery.
SUBROl7NpED BY "REDS."
The Store or a Murvellone *escape from
Blood Thirsty Indians.
Our fatuity., which consisted of fattier,
mother, myself, and sister, had been liviug
in Minnesota nearly two years when the Ins
diens initiated that murderous and -historic
uprising. I waa:1ii yeare old, and my sister
Mantle was 12, We were living on a, 100 -
acre farm, six miles front the uearest'iillage
and a toile from ray neighbor. We lead a
snag log hoose, barnls, sheds, tie„ and lead
about fifty acres iu cultivation,. Three days
before the outbreak my father lied marched
away with a company of recruits for the
army, and this sante company had takeu
almost every able-bodied nail out of our
neighborhood. The crops were to be left
for the hives and children to harvest, and
the idve of trouble never entered any one's
mind. While Inditus were more numerous
than white people, nobody had reason to
fear then. '*'hey were under eare of the
Government, and, so far as anybody knew,
were perfectly satisfied, and entertained
friendly feeling towards the settlers.
My father left: homethe day before the
out -break, and mother went along to see
hint off. This was the case with several
II other women in our settlement. They left
early isn the norning, intending to return
neat day. `inter stud I were left entirely
alone, but at about "J o'clock in the forenoon
an Indian named Long Walk made his ap-
pearance. He had often called at our
!rouse, sometimes staying all night, Ile had
la lead sore on his 1eg, caused by the bite of
a dog, and mother had made and given him
an ointment which was fast healing it ftp.
lather
leap zee:seEl) lUS GUN .
' for him, tnother had, mended his elothes,
and Long Walk was indebted to the family
for many other kindnesses. Ile was a man
of about forty, very
intelligent,
es
t and,
as near
as we could leans, had
never been married..
I was cutting hay about e quarter of a
mile 1)wk of rue hoose, and N1111110 was
spre-mlitze it to cure, when the Indian air
peered. He had been to the house anti
found father and tnotherone. When he
eante clown to us be queried:
""Where father:"
" Gone with the soldiers," 1 replied,
•° Where mother':"
"" :she has gone to see father off:
Re looked anxious and troubled, and when
1 asked if he would, !lave sontetlaing to eat
he replied in the negative. lie sat down in
tide shade of n tree and bad nothing to say
for a while. When 1 repeated my inquiry,
duel Mamie offered to cock hint come breal -
; £asst, he rose up and replied.:
"Come along to ratan,'
When we reached the !rouse he took a
on;; look up and dawn the road. It was
"Children ! Children 1 The Indians are
coming 1"
While I was dressing I heard the yells and
whoops of Indians. about the house. There
was a gang of about forty of them, and as
soon es I looked out through a loophole 1
saw a. great smoke from the direetion of Mrs.
Webster's house. Justas I was dressed there
cause a pounding on the door, and the voice
of an Iudiau called oat :,
"Rah i Somebody: in hero 1 Open door,
quick
" What tlo you want t" asked Mrs. Web -
stet;
"Indian hungry --want food. Indian good
friends with '_1lrs, Bliss."
I was watchiugthecrowd at the door, and
I saw that all were armed. Two or three
were Grouched ready to spring at the door
the instant it was unbarred.
"Go away --you can't come in," replied
Mrs: Webster,
" Iudiau want food."
4' beve none for you,"
"Indian want whiskey."
" There is no whiskey in the House."
" Theo Indian want to talk."
" Well, what do you want?"
They had expected to take us by surprise,
and the fact that they bad not upset their
calculations for a time. They retired a short
distance to talk it over, and during this in.
terval we made ready for what was erasing.
Making as
LITTLE 'SOISE 1S rossieLE,
six Intilans laid down their guns and picked
up a piece of 4 by 4 scantling, which father
iutended tel use as oue of the sills for a dairy
house over the spring, They were approach-
ing the door with tins battering ram when 1
fired from the left-hand window aid Mrs.
Webster from the right, both of us using
shotguns. I fired at the men's legs and she
at thew heads,
tetez hadbut 011e barrel, e
s
she bad two.
As art six went clown I thought at first we
had killed thein alt, Not ao, however, though
it was plain that all were kit. Two lay en
the ground under the scantling,'
while the
othets got .up to limp away, lee had opened
the battle, and got in the first knoah•down
blow, For a moment the Indians were stupe
lied. Then they uttered their war whoop,
and the fight was on.
I think I should have a good tight of it
without Ors. Webster, as I had been
brought t
upon the frontier, had
6 e ,and the
nerve of a man, battit was well that she wad-
there. While she was palc•faeed and arrk1otli<
her voice was steady, and she took thiug:,
ctstally. Sister Marcia was greatly frightened
at first, but after a few minutes she over-
came it and asked for a rifle, with which
she was a tolerably fair shot,
The:first move of the Indians was to take
possession of the log barn, which stood
sixteen utiles to the nilmad station from l about 200 feet away. There was little
which the soldiers would de :art. and Longor nothing in it alai if they fired it
FC,
the a 'o«
1 drSt nttan 4,,,,eat n
was O C, t t e e. ,
a l an u
Walk Feanitd to be wandering; if Ire should' the !rause. They opened fire on the two ride
advise us to Fat out for that F point. ':liter q windows, and we kept Wily from them,
a time he seemed to think it wouldn't do, ..
and turned and entered the house. Our
cabin nes a tat o•rnonted :Air, with ;a garret
above. There were two windows in each
room below, lint none above, Long 11 alk scare es with -- .cart noise. '1'h continued
e• g y
Now and then oue et their • bullets came
throagh a loophole, bet wo were out of range.
The Indians must have known that father
was gone, and they probably hoped to
'NM ^ HOBOS
,9 OtIrdsHj ■ . al i
E' /4 Buns Easy
NO iBACKM:UE i
) Vit... 474
ra
:.',t ONE MAN% \aritei•trdescriptive cataloguc
Conta,nln . teall:I omnis fain.'audr . s cr Pel.Pe n'ha
bye, oa
,.,. ,
a Ye d' A
+re f 1 ' o
ro n _ to J n1a
S s r
.0 5u Cesa•
usL r
3 a t . rP ea t
t the ha v.hr.ro acro is a
vuea c a :. P . ,
n Y 1Y 1 * *SIBS fort ,.rtj. )el a en body
with each ntarhlnr, by the u e or ialt,ael even Body
can Ale their own sows new anti Co ltbetterthan the
v
veil { t
tet .rt van without R P the at tr, ns acted Sz un'
cross-cut/sows. ,
Every y one whnat7nsf. R , should
have one. So duty to , nmentalist•
r t0 0 creta ends. AlAA
your E or write FOLDING SAWThies • MA.
CLINE CO.,Ca. U00 to 011 fi;. Count St., Chicago, 1,1
FR - ' 1b CCR"H0 LOVE STORIES °
a •tcka:e of ;"coda wcriL i a
tv.•0 d0 ra-s to manl;de.1-e, maid a large I
1C'+') Acture stook-, race --Al s:.rel5 I!12 yon
os 1 rrr4 to ;. 3 o.r f rrtune. Write
quiet:, ani sea/ e.:, elver, to:: Sly, pap pas -
I
xanined the windows, and then Rent out situating. for half an ]sour, and theft one en
to a pile of lumber in the yard and said : them stepped out from the barn and waved
"trot saw --get he"
amm— ret nails -•get a white rap and asked for a "talk." In
boards anti tis windows. 331a e everytlsfug reply Mrs, 11 ebster fired a charge of buck -
good to•da '.
" But w sy I naturally asked.
" ,
uppo4e had Indian come toanorro\a•Y'
he queried in reply.
"But the Indians won't hurt us."
""l )on't latma•. Indian heap mad. Indian
drink heap whiskey. Imlian may hill whiter
folks "
Isis manner, more than his words, made
nso feel that Clanger menaced ns and I got
elle teals he asked for and began work at
once. He measured for the windows, and I
cawed ofistnne pieces of plank. Ife then
netted for an auger, and before the pieces
were nailed up we cut loopholes in them,
two to each wnulow. We then removed the
sashes from the windows and nailed the
planks on the inside. Long Walk examined
the front door, which was the only one,
and by his direction I re -enforced it and
•added` a second bar. ' \Vhen this had been
done he asked :
rr r,l
gun un mtllchou e t
s
We had .a rifle and s h t together
n s o mn
with a revolver, which belonged to a oung
mall w ',
who htt<1 worked for usint the i e spring
and was then on a farm about ten miles
ittt ay. I got these arms together, and Long
Walk examined them with great care. We
had two pounds of powder, a lot of shot and
caps, and three or four bars of led. He
eemed to be satisfied, and then took me
out doors and said :
""Bad Trel:an no come to -day, but come
to -morrow. Get plenty of water in the house,
lake rain on the roof. If bad Iridian. dome,
tags. Aleutianthis parr.. I
•
hoot "
"
t Why
I eat understand,r, I ,said.
Ls• ::u we be afraid of the Indians?"
"Indian heap mad—look out l" he replied
and with that he stalked away, gild would
ot even turn his head. when called to him.
I don't believe I should have realized the
full significance of his warning had not an
older head eome to my assistance. Mrs.
rs Webster, our nearest neighbor, whose hus-
band had also gone to be a soldier, but who
had not gone with him to the station, came
over at noon to borrow sense flour. Wheel
told her what had happened slie was very
much alarmed. She had
HEARD WHISPERED FEARS
of an Indian outbreak, and she argued that
Long Walk would not have done as he had
if there was not imminent danger. She had
no children, and was only a few minutes in
deciding 1181to remain with 1181 until 1 mother re-
turned. I went to her house, and got her
clouble-barrelled shotgun and ammunition,
as well as a bundle of clothes, and when I
returned we bean carrying out the instruc-
tions of the Indian. The spring was only a
hundred feet from the house.. 1 got on the
roof and water was passed up to me, and I
flung it about until the slabs would soak in
no more. A bonfire on thereof would scarce-
ly have ignited. them. We hacl two tubs and
several ars. Thesewe
e filled and carried,
into the house.
It was four o'clock in the afternoon when
we were through. I had then moulded over
sa hundred bullets for rifle and TA -elver. and
we could think of nothing else to add to our
seeurity. What was a very usual thing, we
had seen no Indians that, day, except Long
Walk. This, 'as much as anything"else, sat-
isfied Mrs. Webster that something unusual
was onfoot. About five o'clock she deter-
mined to go to• her cabin to pack up and
bring away some small articles, and she re-
turned two hours later in a state of great
agitation.' She hacl caught sight of several
Indians skulking about, and on the road had
meta squaw, who had spoken to her in an
insulting manner, and tried to take the bun-
dle from her hand. It was not yet clack
when we shut the house up and made ready
for the awful tragedy which was to be
g Y played
on the morrow.
I don't think Mrs. Webster closed her
Iall. w. Rei{ i1 7.;1;trru3ni:yjy.S. a
PO
insect Stings
Sore Eyes
Eruptions
Sore Feet
Soreness
Chafin
Cita
3ru
Boi
Outs
Plles
Female
alb
a
IVlal pts
OS ti it
O t
Sunburn AND
n.
Inf
.Dan amatl
O
REFUSE' SUBSTITUTES
BESU
_RE,7HAT'BOTTLE
WITH
FF
dflR►4PP
ER
LOOKS LIttET 1
-HS
45MANUFACTURED ONLY Ere
,
PONDS EXTRACT COMPANY
16 FIFTHAVE,NEW_YORK.
eyes that night, although nothing occurred
to disturb us, and sister ansi 1 slept for many
hours. It had been daylight for an Hour
when we awoke, and we were then aroused
by the voice of Mrs. Webster saying :
shot which knocked bun over, and we saw
tris body ol dragged around the corner cr of the
barn.
Tho Li:liens now scattered and encircled
the house, and dropping down whenever
they could find cover they
ore's u :tSTEADY VIM.
By sitting on the floor we were safe from
any bullets which night entertbaloopIhales.
They situply wasted theirpowder, and after
an hour all but four of them started offdown
the , TI road. do Their impatience was too great
to permit these to tarry longer. There were
hundreds of other settlers who had received
no warning and )rade no preparation, and
were waiting, as it were, to be plundered and
murdered. The four who remained stood
just out of rifleshot to watch the door, and
wo did not see another Indinn until nearly,
sundown. i
tn
a band. f
about seventy-
five -
fve came along. Some were on stolen horses.
some on foot, and. about thirty of them were
packed into two wagons wldch they load
taken from white men.
From the yelling, shouting, and shooting
indulged in one would have thought our
chances very slim. A part of the force occn•
pied the burn, so as to command the rear
windows, while the rest made a sort of rifle
pit to command the front. The two who
bad been killed in the morning still lay where
they had fallen, and as darkness carne on we
nsafle ready to receive any one coming aftei
the bullies. - Ii Was a starlight slight, and
about 0 o'clock 1u hsight g t of two war.
+'
rif rs creeping up to the spot. I called Mrs.
Webster's attention, and by thetime they
were up we were ready for them. As they
were moving the scantling off the body we
fired upon tliem, andneither one moved" a
yard after being bit.
Now came a full hour during whi not a
shot was fired or a shout uttered. Then'
the Indians began firing blazijlg arrows al
the roof, and I have no doubt that twenty
or more alighted thereon. That danger baa
been provided for, however, and when they
found they could not burn vs out they fell
back on another plan. From one of the
back windows I saw them
CARRYING A LONG POLE
to the front of the house. There were sev-
eral of these tying near the barn, and it was
now plain that they weregoingto trythe
power of battering rams.
rams. saw one ade
ready at the back of the hough as well, and
when I told Mrs. Webstershe posted Mamie
and me at the back wirylows, while she
stood ttthe front. The Indianshad
a real attack from the rear, with only a feint
at the front. With five men at each pole,
they made a rush for both windows at once,
while the front of the house was only men-
aced. Mrs. Webster saw through the plan
in time, and came running back just in time
to secure a loophole. She•and Mamie had
the shotguns, while I had the revolver, and
the Indians did not get within five feet of
the. house. Our volley was ,, followed . by
screams and yells on their 'part, and those
Who had not been disabled 'beat a - hasty re-
treat.' From that time until morning we
• e left undisturbed, , but theysucceeded
in carrying off their dead. We could not
tell then what damage we• had . done, but
several weeks later, at the trial of the chief
conspirators and leaders,. it was stated by
au Indian that we killed seven and wound-
ed six redskins in our "defence.
When morning came not an Indian was in
sight, but before noon we had -half a dozen
inen and women with us who were fleeing for
their lives, and before night . we numbered"
twenty.` It, was a week before we were
relieved, and during that tine. 'betide of
Indians turned aside at intervals to attack
us and be beaten off, with loss only to them-
selves. It was one of the two farmhouse
forts in that great area of country which
made a successful resistance,, and but for out
success the number of murders would have
been added to by at least two dozen.
FOREIGN NOTES..
A remarkable story conies from Waleha,
New South Wales, A little girl was lost
in the bash, and although every effort was
made to trace her she was not found farfotur
:lays. At the end of that time size was found
alive, and apparently little the worse for
the exposure, The child, who lead only a
light print dress on, had no food during the
whole of the time, and 'tire weather wad bit-
terly cold, with Snow on the ground. A dog
and a goat had accompanied the child for
two days, but during the latter half of her
wanderings she was in utter loneliness.
Through his heroiodevotion to trusty a pas-
senger train driver stet with a shocking
death at W lhernistdorf Station, Germany,
on Saturday, His train collided with a num-
barfcot ma
0
g t s wagons, which bad been left on
the main tail, sinasli nes several of thein, and
causing the engine to leave the rails. The
driver, named Morabel, refused to quit his
post and was boiled by the escaping steam.
lie leave: a wife and two young children,
None of the passengers were hurt, but One
of the gunrds secefved severe injuries to his
spine, and two of the train hands were in-
capacitated.
A few evenings ago a troop of gipsies
reached the outskirts of the village of Eras. in Russia, and there erieausped, close
to a water -mill, belonging to a man named
Kuprijanoff. The midst-, who had heard
that the troop was coming, ordered his sten
to wait till the tents were pitched, the horses
tied to the caravans, lin/l the gipsies them•
selves were asleep, and then to turn the
course of the water (which was easily Moue
by a system of taps), so as to flood the field
on winch the wanderers were encamped,
They would all have
probably be
e
tdrownetl,for o field woe a1ovl in„ one,
egret the
water cavae with tremendous force, bad not
one of the young men awakened just in time
to rouse his comrades. The horses tore tilem•
delves loose from the earavana, and staved
their life by swimming to dry laud a but the
teats, carts, and all the other belongings of
the gipsies were washed, away into the neer
sueehaand destroyed, The Resits are suing
the miller for 11000 roubles (,1S00), the value'
>sf their loss.
When Mout Blanc was first sealed it was
thought a remarkable feat, and everyone
;mows if only thought Mark Twain's
Innocents Abroad,"that records and mem•
eutoesof the earliest of suceeding ascents
have beenearefullypreserved at(hasuonnda,
Au ascent now is hardly deemed worth a
paragraph, and there seems the near pos-
sibility of thaachievement taking rank with
tones up the Eiffel Tower. An American
engineer has planned a route for the ,ascent
in stages, with aceommodation for 210 pas.
Rangers at cult journey. Naturally= hotel
aeeosumodatiosswith every modern luxury at
the
top is part
ros i
oCeme
,
Lloyd's agent at St. Thomas cabled
recently that the British steamer Portuense
had foundered near Anegada ; 19 of eraty
waved, remainder missing, The missing are
:aptaain, first officer, third officer, chief' en-
„freer, two stowaeds, boatswain, carpenter,
fireman (Neer), seaman (Wileon), The
Portuense was an iron screw steamer of 1470
tons gross, owned in Liverpool by Messrs.
yinglettul'st tC Co. She left Baltimore on
21st August for Patera.
Intelligestce. from Tokio viaBritisli braColum.
hi
r. ves particulars the terrible
of cholera which has taken place in Japan,
by the ravagesofwinich upwards of 200deaths
were oceurr`usg daily; eholerabtalte out first
tet Nagtasaki, the southern metjrapolis of
rapan, and in twenfy dad's there were 020
:axes end 071 deaths. The disease quickly
.spread, and by the 20th July all the towns
from Satsuma: to Hake:late were attacked,
the deaths ptr day being estimated, at not
less than. 200. At Yokohama the outbreak
was not 'very serious, but the officers and.
crew of the Turkish warship Brtougral were
atte,eked, and the vessel was removed to the
quarantine grounds, where two seamen
ied.
The Standard Paris correspondent states
that Conteseune, the notorious burglar, who
was condemned in December, 1888, to bard
labour .forifs
i hastree 1 ede in making s e t 1 rug his
saga from the sit
,..
a ro Penitentiary Colony a
a t G d-
uo. Previous to his last condemnation he
had been sentenced to 10 years' imprison-
ment for the robbery of 700,000 francs from
the house of General Schramu. Contesenne
was transported to New Caledonia, whence
he made his escape. He was next heard of
in Belgium in 1887, where he was arrested
and condemned to 20 years' penal servitude.
Again managing to regain his liberty, he
dame to France in 1885, and commenced the
-cries of burglaries which led to his recap -
tare and transportation to Guiana.
The following telegram was received on
Monday b time Aborigines Protection So-
ciety, -London, from Dr. Yarpur, who is
administering the Famine Relief Fund out:
side Suakim s—" Digria now prevents peo-
ple froth entering export to 1hooro is sus-
pended.. The 'distress at Suakim is less, but
increasing in interior, where there are heavy_
rains. Cases iu hospital, 180 degths" tri
week, six. 'Forel es, being distributed to
2000. We have completed the huts,"
Otte Leubh, only 16 years ot age, was
banged in the Ohio Penitentiary at Columbus
for the murder of a girl, nine years old, 15
months ago. Brockley Smith, anothermur-
derer, was hanged at the same time.
Dr. Carver, the famous American marks-
man, broke a thousand balls at Hamburg in
24 minutes, being .4 minutes 20 seconds
quicker time than his previous record.
Chit thousand persons witnessed the
shooting.
The Population of France.
The population of France has been stead-
ily decreasing, or, at least, its rate of in-
crease has been steadily diminishing, and
the dwindling process has gone on continu-
ously over a longer period than is supposed.
The loss is double, tor it is both relative, and
actual. In the ten years from 1770 to 1780,
in apopulation of 1000' the number of child-
ren born was 38. In the following decade it
was 32, and then sank to 30; 28, 27, 26, till
in the decade of 1870 to 1880 it was only 24.
Ofrcourse, there were special 'causes of this
decline+ -e g., the Franco-Prussian war and
the' poverty, which followed the injury to
the national credit. But still for a century
the descent has been.coristant.. The details
of the annual increase of population 'are in
many ways surprising. England, which
might be expected to head the list; is second."
"Phe German population increases 'at the
rate of •14•to-.the 1000 ; the .English" at12,;.
.
next, but at a long interval, is Austria ;and
then follows Italy. -Hungary and Sweden
ar, e' the same ;. and last on the list is France.
Amuse not thyself about riddles of future
things. Study prophesies when they 'be-
come histories, and past hovering in their
eanses. Eye well things past and present,
and let competent sagacity suffice for things
to come. _
A true word is often spoken in 'est but
we always like it to be about some other
fellow:
for Infants and Children.
"`r4>ut4;lais$oweUadaptedtochildreathat Caisaoria cures Colic, Consttpatton,
Irecommenditassueperiortomnyprescription Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation,
kuotvn me " IL A, Aaclrsn. id,7L, g'ile worms, gives sleep, and promotes di
r. "on
11380.
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Ste
s I;.wo
N- F. wl
Yn, ou>a ' urIa
tit .. uu Medica '
mi taws.
THE Crunsun COMPANY, ser Murray Street, N, T.
DR.
W. II. GHJ
7
AI Ilnurs--9 sap to 8 p u.
198 King Street West',
Toronto, Ont.,
TREATS ORRONIG DISEASES—and. gives Specis,
attention to SKIN DISEASES, as I'imlpies, Ulcers, etc.
PRIVATE DISEASES—and Disraeea of of Private
Nature, as, Impotency, Sterility, Varicecele, Nervous De.
bflfty, etc„ (the result at youthful lolly and execss,) Greet
and Stricture of long standing,
DISEASES O1' IVO1iEN-•-F. ainful, Profuse or:Sup*
Pressed Mena:re:Won. Ulceration, Leneorrhtlea, ands",
Displacements of the Womb,
GOING TO CALIFORNIA.
VI.A, THE
Santa fe :acute.
Iso ea glee .. 1 eels. 11. Til. Sun lr)on 'rues 'wed i be ' as
Ar. Ranoas Olt. F 24 t+. la, mon 'Tues 1\'ed !Thar Fat Sun
Ar 11utehinson•.... e.,,,, 7:Sn p. m, lion lues' Wel Their "FS Sea
r" td....,•,41:14 tt T u
,!4 lrlu ;tart. Ia• tn. Tues ed h •Fri it+tl sloe
Ar.Wm..., . Spli m rues Wed :T u :F
Las r=4 .,. t , lu• c h rl ;Sat Soo
r1
'F'1
A , Albuquerque ,',1 12:aft Wedu k Sa
At.0 u ue - .. 2 •a n. xi b a s
At liars ew. :.......... •'R i i a. su. `Thur ;Fri. r '$at ',Sun hl, nn Weed
Ar. .Lea Angeles ..e.,,.,.,• 4' oa ea. ebur 1.,rI 'Sat ',Sun
Man wed
I,
I • j
h it ='1 •
A ball Die a ,• v ".au '1hue krl Sat ..un \
e , 1,.tau
I
\Fed
7
`ogetthe , o htou •1 without i
la u o Ouly line f t S r care chdngo Chicago to La
Angeles, lord you save 27 hours tin e.
OFFICE -74 G;1:u IvoLU-ST, DETROIT. NIIDH,
GEO. E. OILMAN, Passenger Agent)
RIiI11iE OIL J
'The Fanners Heavy Boctied Oil, made only by
fcCOLL BROS. & CO, TORONTO
1E1' IT ONCE AND YOU WILL USE NO UTTER,
McOoll's Famous G.. linger oIT•-
Is the finest in Canada for engine cylinders. • As kir
Lardine.
POR SALE BY BISSETT B1 OS.
•
lam. Manufactured only by Thomns Holloway, 78, Hutt, Oxford Street,
late b88, Oxford Str-et, London.
tar Purchasers should look to the Label on the Boxes And Pots;
If the address is not 533, Oxford Street, London, they are spurious.
1
Exeter Butcher Shop
R•DAVIS,.
Butcher & General Dealer
—I15 ALL E1NDs F ---
MEATS
nstomeresupplied TUESDAYS, PHTJRS
AYS Axe SA.TUBDAYS at their !esideno
ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE
OEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION.
NASAL iIA
A ccrtain.and speedy cure fo
Cold in the i-lead'anCatarrh
in all its stages..
SOOTHING, CLEANSING,
HEALING..
Instant Relief, Permanent Cure,
Failure Impossible,
Many so-called diseasos are simply symptoms of
atarrh, such as headache, partial deafness, losing
'anse of smell, foul breath, hawking and spitting,
,ausea, general feeling of debility, etc. If you are
;nttbled with any of these or kindred symptoms, you
.ave Catarrh, and should lose no time in procuring
bottle of NASAL BALM. h'4 40t1.'nedin tints,
n'lected cold in head results in Ca arrh, follower
y consumpfionand death. NASAL BALM is sold by
:1 druggists, or will be sent, post paid, on receipt of
sico,(5o cents and 61.00) by addressing
FOLFORD &'CO., OP.CCKVILLE,ONT„
iia. Beware of imitations sirni'ar in nacre,
SS5 Solid Gold watch.'{'iTlin
soldforiSTOO. until latelyJJffLL.. 11tJ[I L
Hest 886 watch in tW world t
Ported timok,cper wnr-
, routed. 11ea y told «Cod
Hunting Cases. 13011, iodic,
and gents' eizes,wfth works
and cases of equal value.
One Person In eaob 10•
cnitiy can secure one tree,
together with our targe and val..
[table line of Ifousehols8• -
Samples. These samples, as
well as the watch, we 000d
sr ham Free, at ,ho you oke e
Y P
there fa your came , they
y2 Montle nd shown them w those
who tory have celled, theyybecome your own proPcrtg. Those
who write et once can be sure :of receiving the watch,
end Samples. •two nay Il expense. [Soil le, nti Address
Stir,soc, " 'lo.« )lio.e .7. t -'rtifa,,:+L, Maine.
•
WEAK MEN quuic111eltre themW°no enti
•
salve ,f. Wasting
Vitality, Lost . manhood, L youthful
errors, etc., quietly at home" :poli oil all
•rivet° disease sent ire sealPerfectly
s e `
n
e i
reliable. Ovor 30 years' experience. Address --
GILDED PILL CO., TORONTO, Canada.
LADIES our."Relltframiomen"iesoreandelwaya
reitaltlo r better tban Ergot. 0=ede. Taney
or Pennyroyal. Pills. limns regularity.
Sand for particulars; Al'drma ,
GILDED i'ILL CO., s'O11tQNTO, Canada.
EARDS FORGED-onemoot oat4.coA;hair--
bn baldest heads. in auto se days. Magic. Latest and.
• greatest achievement of modern delenoo l Most won.
• cloth* discovery of the ago. Like no other preparation r
Magical; sure• almost• instantaneous in 0011001. 13oy3e.with
whist:erar Bald' heads "hvired l" :,Curious" spectaolos, but.
yoeitive truths. Onlay domino article in market.end certain:
to glue absolute satisfaction. annranteed.' Price 81 a bottle,
or threo bottles for 52. Such bottle taste ono month. Addrek.
A. DIXON, Box 905, TORONTO, CANADA.•
MADAME' CIAVAHHANi'S PREPARATIONS,-
,EtP,ELRFLuuut7 HAIR A propaneinoathatwar: • .
ere ancstly remove
superfluous hair without injury to the shin. Warranted.
Price 51.
PIMPLES MM BLACKHEADSP re"
hom to to 80days: Warranted. Paco for 80 days trntmeet, 51.
:MHTI-CSRPULEHDI: PILLS &waa.
h9ptban
point is a matter of solicitude whether bocanso it 1s `m
sortable or ontaabfonnblc 'FAT POLLS ming ' Ai. i!YM
Q, OrarUtl4NOL. PILLS" lose 16 ibs'a month. They 0000,.
u0 richness; contain no polders, and never fail. Price for one
W
,roodarrantedhes treatment, 52: or three months medicine, so.
.:
COMPLEXION WAFERS'
65E5i:
GIVIST AALe
•fleach the skim .develop Oho term. n:armlo•sa Pernfarlen8
1, • 'cot. warxanted, Prt,o it 1. 4 box. or Bis :loses dor; 56.
fksi'hoca ISZAIDAVOLZ C#YOVAlumannt,,
t1
290 Ming Street l5feet Toronto.. to