HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1891-7-2, Page 4I�. G.
CRE EM
C_.
RHEUMATISM,
itv .......
Toothache,
Neuralgia, a,, v6,Sciatica,Lusbago, Backache,::
Headaches,
Sore Throat,
Fr . s" BJteesp Sprains,
Br. 'ices, Burns, Etc.
Sold by r(ir i5!3 and Dealers esergwvliene.
Fitly Cettte leette. Directions in
it Langna•es.
SHE enellt3 "el A. VOCELEItCO..szltiacre,Ltd.
\H,:2i17°aei iK1.".`ht.a Oat.
- 9
S
CON UMPIION
CURE.
The success of this • Great Cough Cure is
Without a.parallel in the history of medicine,
All druggists are authorized to sell it on a pea.
hive guerantee, r•teet that leo other MIN ig-ai sere.
ce sfiitly stand. That it it!ay become, knoWn,
the Proprietors, at an enorhtoue expense, are
placing - Sample Bottle Fr
Into everyho
me
in the United S+rtes and Cauad•t If you have
a Cough, Sore Throat, or Drone4Litle, use it, for
it will cure yen. If your child Bits the Cro tp,
or Wheeling Ccugb, wee itpromply, end relief
is sure. If you dread, that insitlieue dt.ees .
Consuutptio.., use it. Arlt Fo• 'fr;si far
SHILOH'S CCE, Price leets„ 5+ cts. and
St.QD Ifseur n"3 are serem or 1 'n
.
.1aaef
use hiloh'
Pozen baster, lerice e ee s.
awe ,t refs^: r , ax •i'Oa , e.44
N , ! r r% t t m 1IF} e , ,,,
T sof 0: tl .e roe, Jc t ,
r,t a ens
- tea, p
'_a,+ t ittp
a f, cu e.c.IGt;s.ta„
h 1 :a (..:;'1,11:,, SV':.1L 13'436'$0
. ,.r, f , t,tt { ,.1 tr.tr.gr7,-,.$;:y term, f n. i¢to
"ta'.Ii.ei2E...-a coo x, . t;a
IIFm ,x ti.^.naF
,
,reit the iSsices...., 'WI. 1,1 .iii*
a rarse unt i .a., on,, ...- Area.
*N ENV rami c. nlerlwe• :-.. . a nr.f
decent
FLA»SEED
EMULSION
COMPOUND
BRONCHITIS
136 L^itington Ave.
New York Cate, Sept.a,1✓.
I have used the Flax -Seed Emulsion in several
cases of Chronic Bronchitis, end the carry stages of
lbthisis,uud have been welt pleased with the remits,
3AAIL'S K. CR001S, ei.D,
CONSUMPTION
Brook yn, N.Y., Feb.
I have used your Emulsion in a case of I'inhisis
{consumption) with beneficial results, where patient
could not use Cod Liver Oil in any form.
DROGE, M. D.
NERVOUS FROST TioN
Brooklyn, N. Y., Doc..t/tie ISM
I can strongly recommend Flys Seed Emulsion as
helpful to the relief and possibly the cure of nu Lung,
.Bronchial and Nervous Affections, send a good sen.
CraltonicinphysicJOHN 1 TALTMMAGE, M. D.
GENERAL 13 Eli'LITY
Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. loth,18SS.
I regard Flax Seed Emulsion as greatly superior to
the Cod Liver Oil Emulsions so generally in use.
D. A. GORTON, M. D.
WASTING
DISEASES
1371Vest34th St.
New York, Aug 6, St.,
New
I have used yrur Mae -Seed Emulsion Compound
in a severe case of Mal -nutrition and the result was
more than hoped for -it was marvelous, and con-
tinuous. t recommend it cheerfully to the.profession
and humanity at large. M. H. GILBERRT, M.D.
RHEU ATM
Sold b,' Druggists, Price $ 1.00.
FLAX -SEED EMULSION CO.
'a 35 Lib,..,.t y, St., New Bork.
1 W. F. Cocheneaur, Exeter.
y�
I°on
aF
Cod Liver 011
AND THE
Hypap asphites of Lime and Soda.
No other Emulsion is so
easy to take.
It does not separate nor
spoil.
It is always sweet as cream.
The most sensitive stomach
can retain. it.
CURES
Scrofulous and
IATasting Diseases.
Chronic Cough;
Loss of Appetite.
Mental and Nerlroua
Prostration.
General, Debility, &c.
Beware of all imitations. Asir for
eth.o D. et L." Etnulsien, and refuse
ail others..
?RF:yE RBOC. AND $1 PES* BOTTLE.
MIsOELLA,N1aOUS.
' et lady in Tarrytown, N. Y., has sued a
neighbor for ,•.100e because his dog howls and
prevents her wiitiug poetry. .A grateful
country doubtless wishes the dog will keep
on howling until the nivae is completely
seared off the premises.
The G' oe% Tamer makes the suggestions
that the Prince of Wales sign a written
promise in the presenceia thaArchbishop of
Canterbury and Lord Salisbury to give up
earl -playing. Had the Prince followed the
Archbishop s advice he would have been
spared the humiliation of the Tvauhy Croft
dieelosur'es. It is known that Dr. Denson,
alarmed by the increase of gambling in high
circles in leugland,iand appealed some time ago
to the Prince of Wales to throw :the weight
of his personal ingaenee and example against
the demoralizing practice.
The gossips of London are chattering gaily
in anticipation of as extraordinary event.
The German eutperor will visit the big
metropolis in :fitly. and there will be a lord
mayor's reception to do loin honor. That,
of euuree, will be a great thing, hut greater
still would be the joy of the people if the
reportshould receive confirmation that the
Queen will eseeirt the Hohenzollern to the
lord mayor's party. Her majesty probably
will not do so.
A bill has been intro;inee,l in the I:ritz h
House of Commons which .would empower
coroners to acid m nests on tires the seine
as on death, and "ret v (- ,s f :•ea+
�! 4irtt cr 1Tet. for 3
, The hill wilt ler evithdrawn, but will c-as*e
sup next oeS.1011, the of .eat of the mover
holm„ to give the meml=ere. end the public a
fsil.itunit c aD.tc In
Y tte
provisions.
,
The •je:t of the peoposed legislation
seems
to he a etr-e or.e. At the present time, the
coroner.: of Lnn.lon ewtiera,tse the dict, whia.h
tile nntho" 01 the bill beide should he ills•
charge t by all cc.rotiers. Formerly, indeed
en+lmry into the eaese of tire was a branch
of the t•ur,iuer's office, and it might be pro-
fitably ret ivo;l,at all events in larva cities.
eo reepondent et the ri•.?e1 telli the
matter .. of that eminently trustworthy jour-
nal an experietice vtitit trout, whicli, in the
mouth of aclisinterestetl party, astliie corm -
pendent doubtless is, might almost ba made
y �e .
tocou tY o a ti a ib' 'o
u t toll tin �e
one u 1!, re is
a pretty trout stream called the i:e weryn,
on file band; of which the R-eleh Whiskey
tyonapany, limited, have put up at distillery.
The Meal sportsmen were annoyed at first,
believing that the refuse of the distillery
would hill or eider' the s elided beauties,
I but they ate stow over oe-e..1 to find that not
only hove tate ilslt increased in size, hut the
wIa$4:ey and water'' eeente to have imbued
them with new life and vigor."
1
Some of the tmerlean n airs are drawing
uneemplitnentary campsri'�-e to between th
state of Eug iish'as iety at the present doe'.
as judged by the glivapses wltielt the public
leas been privileged to catch in Lord Cole -
gee ' ourt-reont of the ainusenients of
certain fashionable " sets," and that of the
'eiety of the time of George the Fourth
i a et it is to this very f„eiety that multitudes
of'rinterieans are ambitious of admission. A
number of the American papers aro frank
enough• to acknowledge this. " The draw -
mg -rooms ing-rooms of the Queen," says the Herald, of
"
Chicago
the numberhavoofc(.'unericand pf women years
sling, stewing, ell,, wing, tearingg, their own
elothes and outer women's, in the fight for
a chance to get into this grade of society."
The Ulsited States have become likely
. competitors with Eng land in the brewing
and drinking of beer. In the year ending
April 301h, 1891, there were sold in the
States and Territories 30,051,070 barrels,
>':b,tl:'t3,£153 for the year ended April 30,
1890, an increase of 3,200,126 barrels.. New
York leads in the sales for 1890-1, with a
total of 9,058,100 barrels, which is nearly'
three times the quantity sold in any other
State ; Pennsylvania, being second, with
3,113,248 barrels, and then follow in order:'
-Ohio, 2,030,008 barrels ; Illinois, 2,003,-
0113 barrels ; Wisconsin, 2403,040 barre.s
Missouri, 9,038,393 barrels, and Now Jer-
sey, 1,000, ,50 barrels. The consumption is
about half a barrel a year for every man,
woman and child in the Union.
Apropos of Canada's position among the
nations and of her pratiseworthy institutions
the New York Tribune in da lengthy editorial
reference to Sir Jalm Macdonald feels eon -
strained to say : "Canada to -day is a great
country. In its endicial system, its military
organization,itseuperioroeeanearryingtrade,
its excellent civil service, its municipal Houle
rule, its efficient post office, its admirable
election laws, and its beneficent system of
1 ublic charities Canada is second to no corn -
venally in the civilized world." Consider-
ing the nauifest reluctance of the American
press to accord to Canada her just need of
praise this tribute is certainly significant
and should tend not only to strengthen the
conviction of Canadians that they -have been
entrusted with a glorious heritage, but also
to increase their resolve to cherish those
principles of truth and righteousness without
which no nation can attain unto permanent
greatness.
A fish story reaches me from the French
province. It is to the effect that one of the
biggest catches on record was made recently
by Mr. J. L. Welch, of Quebec. On a bright
June morning, Mr. Welch was casting with
a small trout fly and au eight . ounce rod in
the waters of lake St, Charles. Suddenly he
sate his ily disappear, and then came a horse-
power tug that resulted in a struggle be-
tween malt and fish for an hour and a
half. At lest the fish gave up and w]ien
the casting net had received it, Mr. Welch
found hiinself struggling with an immense
grey trout.. On weighing it he found its
avoirdupois to be 17:, the, while its length
was 35 inches and its girth 20 inches. Tins
is believed to be the largest specimen ever
killed by a fly. Its capture was certainly a
triumphal skill end a carnival of sport, such
that the warm-blooded follower of Isaac
Walton feels his circulation going faster as
he thinks of it. Beat it, who can?
The editor of the New York Journal of
Commerce tells a good story 'apropos of the
ease with which signatures can be obtained
for petitions. He says he saw with his own
eyes a petition got up 40 years ago and.
largely sieved for hanging the bishop of the
Diocese of New York. A gentleman made
a wager that he could procure at least a
hundred well-known churchmen to sign such
a petition. He drew up the document, had
it copied in a fine, clerkly hand, and started
out to effect his purpose. Re did not ut-
ter any falsehood or misrepresent the,
character of the paper. It began with
"'41Thereas, the best•interest of the Protest
ant Episcopal Ch•nrch," etc., making 'a long
preamble, The request that the bishop
should be suspended by the, neck came be-
fore the conclusion. The canvasser repre-
sented it as a petition to the eeolesiastieal
authorities in a matter that would deeply
effect the welfare of the church. Having
obtained one or two leading names the rest
was easy, and he could have secured thou-
sands instead of hundreds if he bad cared to
persevere in the effort.
The question of the relations of the
Seventh Commandment and politics is
time yet, but will be dragged to the front
again with the reappearance of Sir Charles
Dilke in Parliament, who has finally decid-
ed, it is now announced, to accept the invi-
tation of the Forest of Dean Liberals tostand
for that borough at the next election. As
the nomination is tantamount to election,
Sir Charles Dilke, it is ourrently believed,
will reappear in the House of Commons next
year. The New York Tribune's London
correspondent says that it is not merely a
seat in Pat'liament that the disgraced
baronet wants, but that Ite means to resume
iris old place in the council of the party. He
will be strongly supported, it is added, and
strongly opposed, and the awkward question'
which willconfrontMr. Gladstone, of clecid-
ing,nanle':y,whether, having brokenwithMr.
Parnell, he can receive An even greater sin-
ner, will be a .disagreeable but an inevitable
one. Meauti& e. the Gladstonian organs
`observe for the most part the maxim that
silence is golden; the chief of ahem in Lon-
dou recording the fact of Sir Charles Dilke's
acceptauee itt two lines of its obscurest type
i Seaeeity of Wild Goalie.
s In spite of gone 1:awa and protective as-
soeiatious, and the abolition of spring shoot -
,I mg, Ontario sportsmen complain that wild
game continues to decrease. A cerrespou-
etent of that Menet excellent journal Forest
!ft,x? Stream furnishes a reason for the in-
cressingsearcity that while main to every-
' hotly when lie once hears it, I dare he sworn
few have previously thong .it of. The Iron-
• ble is that it is extremely dialenit to under-
: stein' how a remedy is to be foiled. It is a
problem that I shall have to leave to wiser
Bevels than mine to solve. In the meantime
I wil take the 11le tto quotet( whet the
correspondent referred to has t" sty ; " I
notice that there.iceeai to be Considerable
speculation among spertsn�en as to the cause
ofthe rapidly (.>. „ i-.
t1 t 11 late,$. i Wein of water
r uc, 1tr
fowl. They are, indeed, l;euoming very
scarce, apt compared to former yeah, and 1
1 feat that evert were the sltoeting of thief en -
i ti rely prohibiteil it would only elefer their ex-
tnn't:on for a time. I learn from different
half-breed4, who havo heeti is1 the far tiorth,
some to Slave Tike and beyond, that the
different tribes in that northern region, the
great breeding ground for waterfowl, now
depend a eu them itr'at
measure for their
subsistence. As soon as these birds arrive
/1141 the spring the natives resort to all sorts
of means to entrap them. They also gather
vast quantities of eras. When the moulting
ee .son coulee on and the young birds are
urarly reedy to fly, the great catch of the
season dike place. leach family titch
gathers de1s awl geese ity the Itu d: d
s
awl dries them for wiuter use ; and, indeed,
it in about the nilly food they have. iYhile
nnilec e1Ibn•l an the wood bison
were
still plenty, they had no ttse for water fowl,
of coal t: ; but nave that the tame has be-
`. consca ,r.t, they hate t+i he upon that, as
i many of the tribes receive little or no aid
from the Canadian Government. I am told
that in the summer of 1459 great fires de-
strayed the marsh grass where the water
i fowl breed, and its a result the Indium
got
few �them, te g
theensuofwinterfront starvation.
this it se:ins that in spite of all game laws
we may enact fer their preservation, the
water fewl will soon have gone the way of
the bnflltlo.
Ballwa.y Buillding in Russia,
To the numerous lines of railway which
alto has been constructing during recent
years throughout the western part of the
empire Russia is adding another to run
through Central and Eastern Siberia and to
comma the river Neva with the Nettie
ocean. It is expected that the road will be
completed in 1895, end that it will cost not
less than $175,000,000. Tho survey penes
through immense stretches of fine agricultur-
al ar,d pasture lands, taps thou important
gold mining regions in eastern Siberia and
runs not far from the Chinese border. It is
expected that when completed a great im •
peens will be given to gram raising, to stock
fanning, and to gold mining, to say nothing
of the possible and probable trade that will
spring up with China and Japan, espet iaIly
in articles of value that are not heavy or
bulky. Hew the food supply will be effect-
ed by the opening up of this road may be
inferred front the fact that there are 25,-
000,000 acres of first-rate land, with about
250,000,000 notes additional capable of
growing wheat. 1'i'heu this great area is
placed under cultivation -and it is said to
be the intention o. the Russian authorities
to induce peasants from European Russia to
settle there -the markets of leurnpe must
feel the change. For the sake of the poor in
these densely populated countries one feels
glad that such a prospect is at hand especial-
ly since according to the caleulatinns of C..
Wood Davis the United States will by that
time have ceased to be a grain exporting
nation requiring all herprothtce for her own
consumption. Thus whether the motive
which has prompted the great undertaking
be tear that China has designs on the Siberian
province of Ussuri, or ambition to control
the Asiatic trade, or a desire to attack
England on the Pacific should war break
out between Russia and Britain the com-
mercial advantages of the road are cer-
tain to be very great not only to Russia
herself but to all Europe as well.
Big Timber for a Beer Bar.
Col. D. Soper, member of a Chicago lumber
firm, was sent out to the Pacific coast about
four weeks ago by a, prominent brewing com-
pany to obtain, if possible, a stick of timber
over 100 feet long and four feet square.
After spending some little time in prospect-
ing, he finally found a tree in Snoqualmie
Valley, in Washington, whichfilled the bill.
The job of cutting down the tree and trim-
ming and loading it seethe cars was left to a
contractor, who successfully did the work.
A half mile of railroad track had to be laid
to the spot where the tree stood in order to
load it on the cars. The stick from this tree
is 111 feet long Ie is cut square, each side
being 4 feet. It was loaded =three 34 -foot
flat cars, its weight being 90,000 pounds.
The cost of getting out this stick of timber
has been so far $1,300. The cost of moving
it to the cars was $100, and the tarpaulin to
cover ib cost $100. At Tacoma yesterday
the stick was viewed by Sidney Dillon, S. I3
H. Clark, Edward Dickinson, and other
Union Pacific officials. It will be placed in
a big beer hall, in which it is to be used for
a counter.' it will be polished eip in the
highest style of the art. '
The Young Man is Growing.
7.he young King of Spain, who has just
completed his fifth year, is beginning to ride
on ponies. His activity, wilful disposition
and inquisitive curiosity make him a sharp
contrast to his more tranquil -minded sisters.
In two years his majesty will have a separ-
ate household, and already he has shaken off
the attendance of his Austrian nurse, show-
ing a preference for male attendants.
Mrs. Summerton (to her coachman) -"Den-
nis, get your things together. We start for:
Niagara to -morrow. Have you ever been
there?" Dennis-"Ivis, mum. Many years.
not likely to be alioWed to subside for a-, ago I had a hack at it,"
SUED ALIV'Z.
A rratrte incident.
A =ewes riding over the wild etretch of
prairie laud -riding a galloping mustang
whose fiery nostrils were distended with •
fear or excitement, and which swerved
neither to the right nor left as it ran. The
rider was young and active, and alert for
some danger that seemed to meuace him ;
R
Ol 11' saddle-
bow,
as her a his rifle swt n at is s ddle-
d1
bow, and the handle of a dirk -knife shone
at his 'belt. Ho was riding for life -not for
himself, but for his comrades, who were eu-
gaged in a deadly feud with hostile Indians,
with the Chance of being cruelly murdered,'
by excess of numbers.
The Ivan riding at fall speed was the
avenger of his people. IIe had vowed to
kill every red man he met on this enforced
jour eey, aitgi if outuunibered to sell his own
life dearly.
Su.lde'Tly his horse swerved from its long,
swing:lig lope, and had he not been it good
horseman he would have bitten the dust.
As it was, he swayed in his saddle, and as
the instinctive fear of the brute communi-
Bate(' itself to the rider, he reached for his
pistols and in a moment was ready for the
toe..
Ilut no foe was in sight. His eye swept
the horizon and sari nothing that looked
like Inman life. A small grove of scrub.
o tis was on his right, but lie could See the
horizon through the scattered trunks. A
• ..
1ne:lc-rabbit or a prairie dog Could not have
e,:eaped his vigiIattt eye.
But. it was at something nearer than the
trees that his wild Mexican 'mare was look-
ing with blood -shot eyes, while she stopped
sloe, still at the risk,
of throwing her rider
er
over her head, and treutliling as if site vents
cd danger in the air.
The main who bestrode her was nil coward
t 1 own
a will as tntanted as ice
and he 1Ttu1 i i 1
He struck leer over the head with the butt
end of bis riding whip reel she reared with
liitn and nearly lost her balance, but ad-
vanced riot nice inch beyond the point
where she bid. ewerve:l and then refused to
stir.
Her ti+ler raised hie whip again, but be.
fore lie could strilte a buezzr.l. sailed slowly
over his Bead. darkening the sun and c'tst
ing its baleful shallow on the ground.
,.
..--•a tie-.-. 1 • shallow
sv'$ to �, on
Thee he sew t
1
b b
lgrtva ais horse s feet the sage brush
spread
lightly over it, and packed with.
I sticks and earth, and flattened down to re•
l semblo nothing bet the prairie itself. Iliad
not the k5521'neti.e. of the Mexican snare
warned her of dang. • he would never lrtve
nntieed the slight abrti.•.ionof the earth, even
with • set
o dais ke5n t i.t i
What he did tie; see vv is O. pair of treach-
engn e4,,es full
of
a, am?,- re or,e
S
up at lulu from the clads of earth and the
thin covering of Inge brush. The mare saw
them and snorted In terror, the buzzard taw
them as it poised lazily overhead, but the
man who bent above theist sate• nothing but
a grave at his feet.
" Poor beggar 1" ho said as he flung him-
self from his horse; "another victim of the
cursed redskins, no doubt, for this is a,
white man's grave. heti rest your soul,
friend, and giver me strength to avenge
you."
Ilis head was bared, his eyes lifted to the
pure sky above him. They had looked their
last on the beautiful world and. au his fellow -
MA.
The buzzard had alighted at a little dis-
tanceand was waiting -waiting.
Hiatt 1 Irish 1 blah
It was the report of a Winchester ritla,
repeated to make sure of its deadly aim,
and the traveller fell proue on his face, the
bridle of his horse dropping away from Itis
broken arnl.
Audsitting up in hie grave where he had
been buried alive, the painted brave, still
grasping Itis smoking; rifle, sent another
shot after the galloping mustang, and thou
shaking himself clear of the grave ear' In
soucht the scalping knife at his belt.
And the buzzard that had been waiting
so long wag not deprived of its feast gained
for it by this ruse mid stratagem of wax
Bmin's Pall.
The true story of Emit Pasha's fall out of
the window has at last leaked out. The
houses at i3agamoyo are not renowned for
tlieaolidityofthelrstructnre,the .oinpo s'ition
of the walls being principally mud and
plaster, and not very thick. A window
in the room in which the Pasha and
Ms friends had been lunching had been
plastered recently a quarter of the way up.
To get a little air, the Pasha went to the
window and leaned against the newly -
plastered portion, which, being wet, gave
way, precipitating nine to the ground. There
were only two people in theroom at the time
besides Emin Pasha -namely, Mr. Stanley
and his negro servant.
Arrested for Kissing His Wife.
Much amusement and not a little indigua,
tion have been occasioned in Boston by•the
arrest of a prominent citizen and his wife for •
being guilty of violating the ordinance
against kissing in the street. The couple
have not long been =tried, and happeniug
to meet in the street after a few days separa-
tion, they could not help saluting each other
with a kiss. 13y this ant they brought them-
selves under oue of the old Puritan Blue
Laws, which has never been repealed, for
the promotion of chaste and becoming be-
haviour. There is a similar law in the sta-
tute book of Massachusetts against smoking
in the streets ; but that law is, of course
never put in force.
Though a member of a brass baud maybe
perfectly temperate, he takes his horn with
great regularity.
Breaking in
isn't needed with the Ball
corset. It's easy from. the
start. Coils of tiny wire
springs in the sides make it
so. Try it, and you'll like, it.
If you don't, after a few
weeks' wear, just return it
and get your money..
For Sale by 3. A. Stewart, Exeter.'
NORTHROP & LYMAN'S
A.:. Great Blood
--<o Purifier -
A • Sure Cure •: for
-Dyspepsias
A Medical Triumph 1
HOW THE HEALTH OF
ONE. QP l3ELLEVILLE'S CITIZENS
WAS RESTORED.
Remarkable Oure of Dropsy and
Dyspepsia.
Mit. SAalcnL T. Cosner, Belleville, writes :
"
Ia the spring of 16$4I began to be troubled
with Dyspepsia, which gradually became
r
more and more distressing, used various
domestic remedies, and applied to my phy-
sician, but received no benefit. By this time
my trouble asaumed the form of Dropsy. I
was unable to use any .. food whatever, except
pp�
boiled mill; and bread ;. niy limbs were sirot-
len to twiec their natural size; all hopes of
my recovery were given ftp, and I quite ex-
pected death Within a few weeks. Nor$Ttr.oi
eon Lnemeee VEareremas Discovl:rty having
been recommended to rue, I tried a bottle,
with but li!itle hope of relief ; and now, after
using eight bottles, myDyspepsia and Dropsy
are cured. Although now seventy-nine yearn
of age, I eau enjoy my nieals as well es over,
and my general Health is good. I am well
hareem in this section of Canada, having
lived here fifty-sevea years; and you Luc,
liberty to use my name In 1eeommendaticei
of your VEOA y1• LScoye. r_
x'
•
11,3S
done such wonders in my c se.>
A Very I3a,d Cage I
J
DYSPEPSIA VANQUISHED.
MB, James Jo*ilisTON, 4tlt con., 7th lot,
Amaranth, writes; "Two bottles of Nota
valor & LYMA,i'S S%EOETAiiLE DISC¢vi y
cured me of Dyspepsia. Mine was a bad ease.
and I had tried. a number of other prepare.
tions without getting arty benefit front thein.
Dyspepsia Had to Cro,
Me,. W. J. Dler13.t, Wingbam, carpenter
aA(1linllder,
writes '
Tiee yearsa I
was.
greatlykoubled with Dyspepsia; a gaits be-
tween ween my simuldcra was so bad that I then eht
I would have to quit work altogether. TO
medielee gave me ease until I:got it bottle of
NOUTAnOP S6 LY etAit :3 V7 OsTdBt.B DISCoy-
erxx,whieh gave nor relief. I continued usuig
the medicine until had taken threeiaottles,
when 1 was perfectly well, X considerxt
valuably es a care for Dyspepsia.I know of
several persons who have used it with the
saute benefit."
c-
NORTHROP 8i XIY�[AaN C
TORONTQ, PROPRIETORS.,
',seethes. nnesice
:else
DETER LUMBER YARD
The utiof '
ted wishes cS to inform Public tQ
to general al thak he
peeps Constantly iii stock all kinds of
BUILDIN - MATERIAL
T, reseed, or U .dies . ed.
PINE AND EIEMLOOK LUMBER.
SHINGLEIS A SPECIALTY
900,000 X X and XXX Piae and Cedar Shingles now in
stook. A. call solicited and satisfaction gul>,ra,uted,.
J.42iE WXLZ X ,
DO YOU LEEP IT IN THE HOUSE?
LUNG BALSAM,
NO SETTER REMEDY FOR
COUGHS, COLDS, CROUP, CONSUMPTION, &C.
MoGOLL BROS. & OO PAN -Y,
TomovvO.
Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in the following
specialties :
Lard3,e Wool
C71z .+; er0I - Bolt Cutting
Red EngineZuralte.
TRY OUR LARAINE MACHINE OIL
AND YOU WILL USE NO OTHER.
For Salo By B1SSETT BROS, Exeter, Ont.
Is need beth internaetz past rixternaily.
It acts quickly, effor Elie 41.4ge instant
relief from. Che smgereet pain..
..-"�•: •„.:.aa -tee, areeens seeteeetaeseses.w
DiRECTLY TO THE SPOT.
Ijt1STIIIITAa"1EOUS R1 ITS ACTIOit
For c.RAMPS, CHILLS, COLIC,
DIARRHCEA, DYSENTERY,
CI;.iLERA MORBUS,
and all BOWEL COMPLAINTS,
NO REMEDY EQUALS
THE PAIN -KILLER,
in Comedian Cholera and Bowel
Complaint* Jte efteact iS magical.
It vures in a trer Short time.
THE /EST g t(1Y REMEDY FOR
BU11NS, OB114, ti pRAINS,
R , A 1:SZ,
NEURALGIA and TOOTHACHE.
S0L.O aventewHERE AT 250, A Eorrco
40 Beware of Counterfeits and Imitations.
Manufactured only at THOMAS Uoe owaY's Es•cestesItnianr,
• 78, Z\TMleVe OX:FO R,7h t2'I T3 O]I DO l'•
t�
Q°w o4 iii '3
° q' .p'1e. le0''..
°o w,os �iF ti �1Z1p'b QSti°e
Ap 0 -1") '9 °tie to
w me'w'�,wa� �4,60
eye ti
or
e 9ceae
b.
8ib. oet
,5•1''
w 4 V' , ��
d
0 tiev).1' ,etiV' °4
a.
ebb �o L''1. ',` e�4°4G� , „•y� d . e,.4
s.
IF, t9• z,°t tyt ,. 19 is . e
i" .titib',e,o•0� ta•,e° 0,tyt° t p,�°o boa �Qb ,0
doe Purchasers should look to the Label on the Boxes and Teel
If the aidrers is not 533, Oxford Street, London, they are spurious,,