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The Exeter Times, 1891-10-15, Page 7
fe�fle •der ] TN they find new rapidly health, ►t " is restocea by taking Ay eins Sere sapa.iil; ; The rea ort is that 'his pTeptretion contains only tire purest and most • powerful alteratives avert" Tontcs. Te thousand:, yearly it prove; a Veritable elixir oe lift!. Mrs, 3os. Lake, Brockway Centre. :Web., writes: "Liver complaint and inllhge>;tien made 'rely liio «, burden and tante hies, outlines my existence. For more than four yea:•s 1 angered tart- told agony, 1 was reduced almost to u esertetan, and bardly hart strength to dr R±tIsels about. AU Iriude of food 4 'd O 1 t110 )n delis dl tae c Me, and u os,. d a ss a eato coald be digester! at all. Within the time mentioned several pbysichaus ire:+ tedmowithout giving relief. Noth- ing that I took seemed to Slo any pu- rse ,ent arced until E began the use ci At 'S Sarsallmilla, which ben pio- u: wonderful results. Soon after eonhmeneing to take the ,Sarsaparilla» could see an Improvement 4a my eouditIon, my appetite began to return and with it calve the ability to digest all the food tenon umy strength; improved each day, amt after a few tnotnthe of faithfulttention to your direetimen I found inyse,i a Welt wemalt, able to attend to all household duties.. The medicine baa given reap a :nevi leeso of life, dud; I Cannot t':xc.nie ,ion toe niacin": "We, the Undersigned, citlzeizs et Breeltway Centre, Idles., hereby certify that the above Statement, made by ltirs. bake, is true its every ylartie•]zl:tr rand entitled to full rralcuee "—Q. #', Chanlbeelata, (f. 117, Waring, 0. ,➢'i.. Wells, Drenthe. "Xyf brotbcr, in Bnl land, was, for €t longtime, unable to attend to his eon-. ^,torr, by reason of t•,ores on his forst. ere; Idle .dyer's Almauao ant1. tho tess, timonials it contained induced b m to tree Aseers Sanaparilla. ,After ming t a 144o -while, be was. cured, azin to i o a well man, working In a sugar )nib at Brisbane, Queensland, Australia."-- A. ,littered, ,:"•.argot Lake, Qutarie, Ayer's Sarsaparilla RPxrt tAt;< v ' Or. 4. C. Ayer ea Co., Lowell, Maes. Trice els fix Unita ee. Werthtiateule., rn EXETEi Ianubi:acetlereryThnra lay morn meet TIMES STEAM PRINTINGHQUSE Uain.etreet;uaanyorpoaito 1'ittot>•a Jewelery $wtn,t,zetcr,(Jnt.,bySohn'\Fa:tett 5ene,l"re• nrietera 1 Ii1..a or ,aDVI n tstRa eirstincertiou ierthro .. 1aleentt Tach ent+sequeatineertion ,per nue scents. To insaro neer: ion. lie verttru uente Otentd be sentiu no stater thee \ti educelay morniu$ OarT() : Psi\Tient Is 1e ttnrhIl::rT le one at the lava a nit i:,autequirltcct in the t'ounty n' 1lnro.a,att work entrnete t w as wilt reecho u ;r prompt intent ion: FAR NORTHBY RAIL ; to show that there is h river ie.. the neighbor , hood. Its water is cold and green and swift, and it has become so clogged with sand hard b I i that for two years the auiiival trips to York i YOU GAN tIDF NOWT() TEE $A3KA'r ;Factory, on Hudson Bay, have beel een diseon- hat ()ED,'itA AI I N+LATITUDta 531-2 a • d reached this pthe oint sb t g4lompe}ledt tot ply - -. ! in deeper and quieterwaters eastward, !some suably sly eeierestwa, F,avta row. a re, c• The stream here is a quarter of a mile l ea.; Vonntry -A R.tattroact tt'tt)sont :4 • wide, but your shouts and the waving of �'aienr tpxl -t 1Prtest'.s Reiner einem the : your arms are hoard .and seen by the ferry- cree Rau;;ttc•ae -.tl Fs►eaertut !seri. i man on the farther shore, and his flat at 1 once conies toward you, A wire cable cross - 1 u you want to go to the North Pole you! es the river, and his boat is fastened to 1 eau get a lift on the Calgary and Edmonton this by rope runners that prevent it from !Railroad, just completed, that will takeyou ; •e zrrz�la novae sins e, to then",rt �s ofork of the 5askatelie,rau, int while tele only motive force is that of the latitude ,➢,3 . This is the top noteh of.s etirrent that seethes against its side, end i railroading on thiscoutii'ent 800 miles north : i, that '1]after f tt+ilsede.. initial 't n it Q.n nk Of` =dt 1 vta.v i a Toronto o alitat least 0 miles les iia ei u rt I3 0 s1? t .. s b } n shove. e. 11 h i l i against the When She float rate3 at in the world than the line ei railroad that northern beach yen hand a dine to the 1isnntProem ofconstruetionaeros3Newfound= , ferryman and ectambleup the zigzag path i land,} If the original survey for the Cana• ' that brings you to the fort, apile of buildings V I aee Ranlroa,l had been fallotvecd .it new:fied together for defence and warmth, would have passed through 1• dmontou awl ' with e nnusieal hell on o.ne of t he roofs to ,, 1 reached the sea i,y way of 1 cow Ileal - call ivy men. Edmonton is alis overed in the , Pass, but the discovery and use of hiekiug bush"on the bluff ball .. idle down the IL . se F alley, to the sontaaward, lett -1:'''e river, all the rode that you sec, and that. mouton nearly 2?00 miles orf the line, eo tomake figures of ft through the wood leading connect n with butter and lemons, and all ' to that settlement. It has ;WO people, is tett those things, the new braueh ww:On: t•, and . years old, aryl i s line most frontier tor,ue. trains'S . . in are running, twice \CCs.. It 1 ,n r .iirn ad a wL - �cw oral n#tile ho:s arc 1r;ettilyr fnrinishctl, 'interesting, but hardly en exhilarating trip ar. It has a little hit a: as news r er, ublfshed i up here. The roadbed is notwellballesteal, , in a log Lor,se, awl its editor as recently end the train, composed of one baggage ear i sent to 1'atli,•uhtent, It has a station �f the and one paesenk'er coach, crawls over it at 1'. orthwea 'chanted u,,, , lw , wooden C: s for the evil doers, four men fu red carpets and cad al►y tion- sers, to give variety to the laudseapr, It hes three places that tare Rolled hotels - - her, as'" S:dtng No, a ;" ant these turnouts but, oh, u y 1 It has four ehuh :hes—f.:atlto• here just been named so that on rcaclline life, I:lusea )al, Press •terien, and Methodist ltornmgei:ie, or Ponoha, or 15'cetaal.iwi,h, 1 -rhe latter with a detached bell tower over you fancy for an instant that,yott have not to the next yard. it has a echeelsurrouucled somewhere, but you haven't, for these 1 by a stockade, as if there were danger tint places teousist of a station snu a few all. ; the Indians might break iu and steal air idlers. !spelling books. It has ono brick house, (:algery^ is the kt wt ug noiut of the jolly- ilinnitwhenliriei swerowo,'th$244thousend, uey•. I.cav slag that town and crossing the !They bavo dropped since then to $18. It 1 cold Hood of l3aw ]fiver, hurry ing down • has some topers who are famous through. from the mountains whose frosty polls loomtheNorthwest `.Cerritorv, descendants et iintinedistance,you ride northward for fifty the cight.hottlo nienof eengland, who eau utiles acrossplains,-• t l e 1 ontdrink a tavernful o idlers .tied aro empty t 'blew min adry n# 1 f valley for an hour, and pay=ing but neat a ° proudly lut,e➢1 off to bed by the.two or dozen ca}•ine t"ndhouse& lludate Loneeand throe sermon of the bout. It has two trails sv •„ , I Chinamen --.new arrivals—who wash Aa d it ant! \allow are scorn in ei.hCr bane, .r itla>la 9dogs dogs.more nearly ai tI c . • s ,➢ are robes! n r ] i ttad runless zlarilt and faith ; a coyote troteeelkilyala jgthestouy' n hero in proportion to the papulaee, than llrt1 of z1 testi brook ; a foe rleetes from a; there are m t'oustant inople. +Lime of them clump of sago brush; au antelope loakaflaown are in the eetvieo of the Higdon Day Froin the crest of as earth wave : a bad;;er l f'ompany, hauling sledges, and most i.)ecsitius Iteg*u dI ug News- papers. 1Any p^h'.onw,r•hta:s4 anen ::r ',1, ' ytro`n 11" Mee,olitee. whether diurnal iihis u, m. or n l name sot i o:• whether ho has ;tb , rub:e. or rot leresponsible for payment. 11 If a per -on enters his paper dis.(twinned l:e must pray eli i 'rear: or the pt,hlisher may eanrhnue t"a.en.t it nut the payment is mule, nt:dtben eollta•t the whole amount. wiaethtr thepaper isttkcufrom the lull ve or not. a In .tits for voliRerip,Ion•', the .nit. mny be ioath utelE ht the place where the i:aper is pub Hebei), although the z•ubseelber in,ty reside hundreds aP➢itue wax, 4 The rourt • have dot slid that refusing to takenews•parers orperletliettis from the post- ntliet or removing rand leaving them uncalled or Is prima facie evidence of intention al .fraud PUREST, S T at,OIJf1ES7, BEST Ready for Ilse in any qquantity. For making Snap, Softening Water, l)ieinfe tin •. and a hundred Other noes. .t can equals 20 pounde dal Soda. Bold by All G'roccre and ]'rhymer.. =. NOT.- T•-.> " .z'. R'ox Devoe THE BEST COUGH @➢i MME. GOLD Br. D8JOt1IEITO RTEBSWIIZEB. ti l 'al• r %.:1g4'3%. SE�g xn stamps [simply as a, Y®® 59. guaranteeofgoodfaith) to ns, and we will send you by Depress, (3.0.D„ Otis elegant watch which you can examino, and if you do not find it aliandcvenmore than we claim for it DO NOT TAKE IT, but if perfectly sat- isfactory, y pay, the Express Agent OUR SPECIAL E CUT PRICE OF $5.35 and take the wateb. Such a chance to secure •a reilable tinepieoe at such 'a Adieu. bluely low price is seldom, if ever be. fore, offered.. '.� aerie is a genuine teen FILLED WATCH,made of 2 elates of ;owl COLE over conni3ei- ton metal. It has solid bow, cap and crown, hunting ease,bcantifullyen.- graved and is dust - proof. The works are Waltham style, *'ichly jen7etled, with expansion balance, is regulated and we warrant it an emirate time- keeper. �t is suitable 'for. either a lady or gentleman. A guarantee is sent with each watch. Address GE@. W. YATT & CO., Watchmakers, Peterborough, h On b. tg , G G. -- SEND + g IN �p q� an d a slip of paper the !REND 4' s lel, stcc of your flu er, and yo will send you postpaid this elegant 3 Vis: �; ELDORADO DIAMOND !i a tl, a� , SOLID COLD FILLED RING av 1. r.,. These rings are now worn by ladies and g e gentlemen in tho best society, and have the salne appearance as a ring costing $25;00. We guarantee aperfaei tit and satisfaction. Address Geo. W, W' i �alS6Cm. Setvellere Peterborough, Ont. and is gaining=uselessly--at Langevin. 1Mineral 't hs i lr e found, ' n 700 7;71 cs ort ser . n hw Gold Dear' ngravel t g has been worked at a profit at several points, the placers et White , baud Creek, 50 inilesabove Edmonton, being regarded as possible rivals to the old ones ' oath° Fraser. There is, however, no indi- 1 cation of a gold fever among the people. 1 They are disposed toward agriculture. Said • one of then!, "('fost of us carne in here on. foot, at the tail of a Red River carr, walks ing the whole thousand miles from Winnie i ped. Freight was $l:', a hundred pounds, so, yens see, we couldn't afford to' ride. liverythin, was high then, Yon paid ,0 cents t a lout] +. � d for sugar, a 1 l 1 n+ b , pound for tobacco, and everything oleo in proportion. `There wasn't much whiskey, i and the people have trot er !hale a ilraotice . ofs, ootin its n z tlolh ht Sgiitw hen L a g e h t nt Q v. i to bed,but att y the Hudson Bey posts they makea rind of beer that—well, iG seems mild enough, but three glasses will snake you reel as if you hail just lost a rich uncle. end they make it out of sugar." Thi i point is 2,200 feet above the sea and ,pretty well rot !h, yet crops are as good and Inc pleat;y.as in Ontario. Wheat and oats ' have been hewn to gain a height of Mx I feet, and they grow 31) to 70 bushels to the acv �;, c Lest t ••a .,r , t) bushels. o` C £ 'rotators ocs were .a r P taken ,. out � one acre, but u itwas ruts t common soil and had uncommon tending, 1 30() bushels being regaracd as a good yield. Fruits, ereepting berries, have rot succeed- ' ed, but if yen like cabbage E,lntantvit is your hold Q.,e man said he would give `41Q0 to any pereou who w inti put the Linz of a e xre wheel around any cabbage in hie geed( n. lie was bluffing, but spine of tbcnn Were fain - :Dail a half feet eerosc. Grazing is good. The air is cheer anti dry, and Waugh. the winters areebzrp, the mercnry crapping Wilt elegem Idols zero -.this is it0 degrees leas of cold thau the prairie dwel- lers hew to endure --and the woode and distant rises break the force of the ""zeph- yrs." Yet the thermometer has larked 0 ➢lei;reeein the shado on summer afternoons, Among the first people to ride over the new road were Swim Men coming down from a di;staut Hudson fray post, one or two of whom hail never seen a,. railroad, while the oldest was at lint n little bit afrai"1 of the ears, The futleman of the party dropper' 51,440 in balls; into the list of the astonished coat u to • and "" d c i naid. c '. �'h Te s eight of us. end we'to going to Calgary. If there's any time to pay we Can stand it." Ile was cin - prised at getting mast of the maneyr. back, and !:tial out part of it in whiskey to treat the train hands and passengers, besides giving a dohiltiota to the railroad men's hos- pital at os•pitalat Medicine Hat. A teamster in the employ of the Hudson Bay Company reached the train in early iuorniug, while the engine wire in iteshed, and observed : "1 don't sell • no'rangccmentfur Within' oxen on here, an' I don't see how'n thunder you 'apcet them iron rails its to pet .rias i 5 n a muskeg (marsh:1 k n ar h fi 1 t* e ''thous sinlltin'tn," He !carned a good deal that day. -^-•---- A. patent has recently been taken out for I. the manufieture of a good substitute for ivory. The ingredients used are mostly Otic o, aid .le natural ivory is composed, and the anditi,nu of diderent coloring nutters enables olajects of any tlesiralie shade to be pradueed. Au eler•trlo ineceet killer is the latest novelty in Chatline. Xtisformed by a rover arrive gauze,: which is platted over 0lightell candle. The gauze, ie in an eleetrit• rircuit, and when iuseets toaell it they are killed, rho rate et eigineeu r+piles en hear, .!:here " ' - with three or le a siding 0 11] h 1 ] , and three or ,AII,)t'i T'CI'r'v'rr.'i known until a month a o merely by nem- s over the grass vt• th ftawdutr put ; of thein have a strain of wolf in their 0010• hawks wheel to and fro waeshing forpran ie chic»ens and fee the nimble prairie doge that stern, likepnppiee, ((Legging" before their burnow,e; Inc:l'S bine life there is almost. no sign. The sun Fleece aud theyei- low desert flickers with heat, but as there is no humidity you con stand it twit'! .� o'eloek when It will grow col, and after sunset yon rill wonder where you put your overcoat. .Che rough Porins of the heckles, rose.grey:, glee, and white, melt from sight presently, though the view widens, for the track is climbing, and tl:c plain spreads, o-ean-like. It is noticed that thereto little alkali in the soil, and that the Sage brush, the pest of the Colorado and Sage plains, eeidom amounts to more than a shrub. Now there is a pond ; t hen the gran gets higher, and turns front yellow tooUvc and olive to green ; hushes anti trees appear, and by moon your are at Red Deer, the only city on the line •it hats fourteen houses --in what Westerners call a park country; in other w'orn&t, there are woods.. If there were farms and +ettleiueuts be- tween Red Deer and the Saskatchewan you eould easily i n.glie yotreclf in Ontario, but these will show themselves before ions. This promisee to be a part of Canada that will grow feat in the next eow years, as last yearovcr2,000 emigrants took up homestead eLaRed ups iu the Deer district, and there are others at their heels this year. It is rather surprising that a good many of these p >3 gg 3 settlers are from the Dakotas. They want wood and water and dislike blizzards, and contrary as it seems to geographical notions, they get the first and escape the lase by moving north into reaeh of the mild Paeitie winds. The toil is thinner and Icss rich than that of the prairie, and the plough often turns up gravel, many of the pebbles beingcoated with limo, butthe severe frosts break it up, and the long, warm dobe of a brief summer hurry. along vegetation with a rapieity unknown in the East. Small farms and small herds now appear, the latter usually gathering on the track and gallop. ing straight in front of the locomotive before the old bull is either collected or seared enough to lead his cows into the n eadows and away from the hissing clanging, f11RIEIC1\t: OIIJEc.r ahitll\D 11I'it ;. but time lost on this road is easily made up, and cattle aliasing is accounted as sport by most of the people on the train. A solitary horseman—more solitary than G. P. R. James's heroes could be, if theywished—be- comes an object of general attention' and comment, like a passing sail at sea, and an reaching Hobbenue every one jumps out to return the grave stares of the Crees, whose tepees and sod houses form a ;roup near by, and to look at the black -gowned, bearded missionary, who is trying to meditare on his breviary not far off, but who cannot resist peeping at the passengers over the top of it. One strange thing about this road is that it has no telegraph. If you wire to Cal- gary from Edmonton you must send the message down the Saskatchewan to Prince Albert, about 400 miles, arth i to Regina,7 200 more, thea to Calgary nearly 500 miles west, going around throe sides of n rough square, instead of taking a short cut. If your train. is wrecked nobody at either end of the line will know it for a day or two. But it is not likely to be wrecked with only one engine in service, and no obstacle worse than cows on the track, so you finish your ride just before sunset, and step from the train Into e clearing in the wood. •Tlhey are building a house, aiid there is a station., a cabin of In- dians, and a surveyor's tent, but n4 ro'Wn,110 deer in sight. Vie stireeyee tells you to follow the narrow road leading to the left, and this you clo, sleeting only a couple of half breeds whose faces are rimmed with beards, presmnably of hair, but apparently of wire, until, after a jog of a mile, you go down a steep descent and find yourself at the brink of the • Saskatchewan. The im- pression of the place is strangely northern, A donee but low forest of birch, poplar,. 'spruce,: and tamarack extends' in every direction and the silence of it is uncanny. There is not a bird -note, nor the chirp of a cireket, nor the rustle of a snake or a fox in the brush: The low sun throws a blinding thecanon of Mealong faredawn ' its river, b rushing current, and lights the white walls of the wooden fort of the Hudson ` Bay Company, Perebed attheedge e of4 he oPPo it e bluff, with two old-fashioned Dannon aimed into space outside of its stockade. The Saskatchewan does not 'flow, though a canon proper for the banks are of clay and gravel, not of rack but it has cut its way for 200 feet or more into the leve] countrys and the fall of these banks is so sudden and they are so masked with wood that from a little distance there is nothing position. If you go out fora drive you will 1 r attended by eightor ten of them, all yelping, If you go out for a walk in the evening you will fall over them and per- haps have your shine yippee. If the moan 'shine» they sit up and sing. In winter their work is hard, for this is the distributing point for supplies to the forts A thousand mules to the north but 1,c enmmer "they pas.9 the time iia war, love, robbery, and music." Though Edmonton village is new the trading past mold, and used to be trouped by thirty families and several hunters, but the half breeds tiring of systematic, work formed a village of their own nine miles back in the wood, with a priest as social and intellectual head, It is recorded of this priest that whenhe began his struggles with the Indian tongue be made acverat "had breaks." The use of possessive pre - nouns is so complex in the Coe huguage that one day when Le ineiret to tell Ills red .. frlcnclsthlttlteir pigs were in hie garden and he wanted them driven out he began by eryiug, "I aniapig 1Ia m pig 1" to their mining entertainment. t'nilntent. These trees have t hymn e' hook painted in syllabic sigun in- stead of Roman letters that resemble a nnixtere of cuneiform characters and short- hand. They aro learning English, however, and many of them wear theelothes of civili- zation. Their fringed jackets, their guns studded with brass nails, their collars of leather, their huge knives, e:tlicd dlge, in beaded ebeaths, amd their embroidered moo - eosins arealready becoming scarce awl aro sought for by curiosity hunters. About 2 $O of these Indians oemupy a reservation near Edmonton, receiving a small Shun per captu from the Canadian Government, and that now goes principally to support white and half-breed teachers and Catholic and Meth- odist misCionaries, for the hunting is still good and there is APreris u c or meets, geese, prairie chirkens,black-tailed deer, bear, otter, coyotes, timber wolves, and a few antelope. A white to bear who ltacl lost his bearings—no pun—was recently shot near here. A herd of seventy plains buf- falo is maintained near Red Deer, and the wood buffalo is found along the Mackenzie, but the "robes " of this animal are rougher and of less value than those of the nearly extinct plains Species. The young Crees learn English at their schools, but no attempt is made to instruct the bucks in that tongue. They are begin- ning to have a shrewder understanding of the use of money, and `to distinguish be- tWeen numbers on bilis, their inability to do that having cost them dear in former years, for once or twice, when the Government paid their allowance in .$5 bills—a $5 or $100 bill being the same to them as $i greenback sold the pieces of paper for two silver —they p dollars apiecto certain Punters and traders. " I didn't make no bones about it," said one of these !nen in confession, "cause the Injuns were satisfied, and I blew the money in with the Hudson Bay people, who were bound to get it, anyway." After this fraud was exposed the Indians received their stipends entirely in $1 bills. It al- leged that the Hudson Bay Company uses a little sharp practice now :and then, but none sntlered from it while game and skins were plenty. For example, the price of a gun was a pile of beaver skins, laid flat on each other and reaching from the ground to the muzzle of the Run when it was held upright. The gun bane grew long and longer uutil they reached about six feet, and the Indians had more and more of thorn to cut off with cold chisels, for they preferred a carbine length for buffalo hunting, for they fired at a yard range, and the absurdity of these long barrels was apparent. The hunter charged his musket with powder and hold it partly upright, keeping the bullet in Ifs mouth until the could well nigh touch this prey, when he dropped•the ball into the barrel, and, if possible, pressed the muzzle to the .buffalo's side as he pulled the trig- ger. Edmonton has a future. Tt is intended thatthe Saskatchewan ,hall be bridged some day and the railroad extended fifty miles beyond it. Though the volume of business clone by the Hudson Bay Company is shrink- ing rapidly, hrink- ing.spillv, its spplies must past through here for several years, end when that ram peaty winds up its affairs newer ones will ll andtrails, for it cannot e its forts keep on use i bu ing upits lesser rvals forever. As a,n agricultural and grazing country this will have "British Columbia for a market,. and great progress is promised there in the next fewyears. ears. Thirtymiles up the he river A 00AL SDRAM, 20 FEET TE[ OE, shows itself in the bank, and there indications of natural gas which has already been piped erJ- rup G. Gioger. Druggist, 'Watertown, Wis. This is the opinion of a man who keeps a drug store, sells all medicines, comes in direct contact with the patients and their families, and knows better tha>r anyone else how remedies sell, and what true merit they have. He hears of all the failures and successes, and can therefore judge : "I know of no medicine for Coughs, Sore Throat, or Hoarseness that had done such ef- ;, fective work in my Coughs family as Boschee's Sore Throat, Garman Syrup. Last winter a lady called Hoarseness, at my store, who was suffering front a very severe cold. She could hardly talk, and i told her about German Syrup and that a few doses would give re- lief; but yshe had no confidence in patent medicines. I told her to take a bottle, and if the results were not satisfactory I would make no charge for it. e A few days after she called and paid for it, saying Q that she would never be without it in future as a few doses had given her relief." CO 99 9 01102amm---=eJ n' ctorS BY USING Dr. Morse's Indian Root PHis At THEY are the Remedy that the o b unteous Hanoi of nature has provided for all diseases arising from IMPURE oe are a sore, cure for ]tEL;. O uSi0s BSl!t>a:, ALA CME arr]tMEBaa®x, PAVER Cush 'tIx'(, DYBIPEY. Ete., Etc. FOS SALE ev ALL DEALERS arse's Pills W. RQ COMSTO K, 1i5OCKV/LLE, TONT. Asa w rsrclvet N.1'.. k for Infants and Children* `uL',1etQreissoweiladeptedtoelliidrenthat Castort,&nrsiHOsille.tonstigatiort, t roc q'nmen diL �assnF superior to anYF rescril ? L o nso ur sto n ia ci> ils rrhees,Xils Wohns+ gives deep, Eaniud promotes; t roion. o 1esi dtrtowno7he. XL u, estaon6o.(Word ,1rooI1ya F Without irgthraot's medication. Tan C'a nevi. C7rotre;,ir, :'? k¥urray Street,r'. . EXETER LUMBER YARD Tho undersigned 'wishes to inform the Public tilt gentiral that he keeps ttrnstantil; ill stock all hinds oa BUILDINOr ARA: Dr0$4.04 A4 or iidi es d„ P'I N E AND HEMLOCK LUMBER. SHINGLES A SPECIALTY iTY 900,000 X �t and X Pine and Cedar ing in 7• �, :`�.. � Fra ti Shingles now stook. A call solicited and satisfaction auarauted, tz IZ �+ lrt3.Tc lit1 ,3'271 3ti7c,r.i�,Ai3a9Ji.Y,' re masnent • •H tions ounxaaateea. 8F.tary s:ud 1 XPenste >t'c 1d.. pet4. tit e1 . ,sitt2, vrntaarstgbe;aanti,••a. t'tackcaaP19 r t btt� 1 ins pee FIT l'It ft.s Wcquaronuau etieca4rettwr. Write WzoW 4'i Tit 1 A. Itiatr.eryinen.Toronto. Ont. Rids Loom 1srat:r,?,ltth' DO YOU KEEP IT IN THE HOUSE? ALLEN'S AL$AM, NO BETTER FEN;DYFOR COUGHS, COLAS, CROUP, CONSUMPTION, &C. MoGOLL BROS. ��p&t/gCOMPANY i OIOrk"f ,irt O. Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in the follovth»e specialties Laraine Cglxzi,d©r d Engine 1,r�,� i,YJ.e OIL Wool Bolt eattin. g TRY OUR LARDINE MACHINE OIL AND YOU WILL USE NO OTHER. For Sale By B1SSETT BROS, Exeter, Ont, Io used both internally and externally. It 'vete quickly, affording almost instant relief from the oeverest pain. LiiiuECTLY TO THC SPOT. 111STAiI TAN-BCIUS Ill ITS AG T its, j% For CRAMPS, CHILLS, COLIC, DIARRFL(EA, DYSENTERY, CHOLERA MORBUS, and all BOWEL COMPLAINTS, NO REMEDY EQUALS THE PAIN KILLER, In Canadian Cholera and bowel Complaints its effect is magical. 11; cures in a very short time. Tl?E BEST FAMILY R£MEDIi von BURNS, BRUISES, SPRAINS, RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA and TOOTHACHE. $OLO EYERYwetewzz "47 2EC. A SOTT➢.E. ,t-2 Beware t.0 eeunter:efts and Imitations - Manufactured only at Taouas HOLLOWAY'S EsyAnLlsnxa sl, '78, I )W OXFORD STRFI3T, LONDON''. �► -be • � 1 M�s,w•20ea��G°mal, o 0 1 • a 4 • 1, • a5 egu ). rvoi 1g �'. �1�0 ,°•qo y,iti.44 Q �+-�.' °`p g �b°s4 cfas t��qe .4'a, c� c `' • T1. ��gei Pogo �y���Cgogiq,1 4°e 4� tyPm� ,so i cae Etiy� y��ae�°t °'4�9g �?4 . 'S8 ra°t° 0- Purchasers ahonld look to the Label en the Bodes And Pots. If the address is not 583, Oxford Street, London, they are spuriose, h stnut. Culture of (}tl The supply of chestnut never opals the demand. in .this country, and many districts in which the trees are abundant derive a very r s i?ectal)1 n c income e from the sale of the e nuts. , This industry might be made far more productive and proetable than it now is by some • 1 e little effort toward cultivation. The chestnut cannot he grown successfully on heavy clays, wet soils or limestone lend. It prefers loose, sand soils, or such as has been derived from the decomposition of slates and shales. It is grown readily from the seed, but tho greatest care must taken not to let the nuite become dry. They should be planted as soon as gathered or kept in moist and until ready to plant. The nut should be planted where the tree is to stand, as the long tap roots makes trans- planting die -loot. The European chestnut isnot•only mach larger and liner than the American but has rod] 'ed under . b p to , culLiva- tion, a number of varieties, some of which are highly esteemed for the !lali quality of their knit, The trees do not grow so large as the American, but come into bearing; more quickly ; the latter does not generally fruit until 10 or 12 years cid. A Japanese variety has been lately introduced in the, United States which, though not very hardy , is quite a dwarf in habit, itRd while beginn- ing to ,fruit at four or five years, produces tlt se huger erenthan the i'.ureeeee.