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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1891-10-29, Page 3A.ss••?fa The Qafest .Vir# most powerful alterative is dyer's Sarsaparilla. Young and old 3 r alike benefited by its use. For the eruptive die - cases peculiar to ►_^ ^'�--• children nothing else is so effective. as this medicine, - while its agreea- ble flavor makes it easy to aduuu- ister. "My little boy had large scrota foils nlecrs on his meek; and throat - from 'tvhiclt he _ suffered terribly. Two piaysicians attended Sum, but he, grew couttnnally gorse under their care, and everybody expected he would die. I had heard of ti o renr..rliebre cures effected by Ayer's 5ns.parilla, and decided to have ray boy try it. SIx'rtly after he began to talar this medicine, the ulcers come aneneed beetling, and, after using scrota bottles, he was entirely cured. Ile is 310W ns healthy and strong as any boy of Ms age." —.William F. Dougherty. Hampton, V a. "Itt May last, my youngest child, f.ntrteon menthe old, lateen tohavesores gather on its heed autt body. 'We ap- plied envious siniele remedies without avail. The sores increased in number and (ltseharged copiously. A physician was called, but the sores continued to multiply until in a fern menthe they nearly coveree1 tete child's Stead andb ldy. pit itavt We began the use of A} en's Sar- ttaperitla. In a few days a marked change for the Letter was ,r-aorifeet. The Pores assume:1 a more healthy condition, the discharges were gradually dimin- salted, tinct dually Ceased- altogether. The child is livelier, its sidle is fresher, and les appetite better than we have ob• serve a for ii nths." Frault 11f, Griilln, Long relet, .l.ezatl. 4T10 formula of Ayer's Sarsaparilln prescnty, for chronic sii:leasrs oI oniricet Avery kind, the best reinedv known to the medical world." --1). 2d. Wilion,l i(.1.).,'Wiwi Arkansas, Ayer's Sarsaparifla9 r,LrA F z tit; ax Dr. J, G. Ayer & CO., ;-owdll, Maswc. ,r4ce$1;nix•atticr,=ry, Werth a3ahatch LATE BRITISIINEWS, CENTRAL Drug S o 1 .A.NSO " BLOCK. Seven Men 'Killed at a Fire. A SOLDIER COMMITS SUICIDE. Remaraabbe I sarinee Cases. The damage done by the mill fire at Ty1- deeley on Saturday ie estimated at £10,000. Seven or eight men were injured by the fall- ing debris. ,Mr. Samuel Taylor, innkeeper, of Bewdley, died on Saturday from injuries received at Bewdley Railway Station in trying to save a friend who was in Clanger of failing under the train. A young woman named Murphy has died at the South Infirmary, Cork, from the ef- Teets of a fall on Friday, when a large dag- ger hairpin entered her brain. At Clerkenweli, on Saturday, William (. errerd, 75,'a Holloway tradesman, waft re- ulanded charged with shooting his son, Thomas, 43, during a quarrel. The sou is In a precarious condition. At the Spalding Police Court on Tuesday, Robert Welbourne, living near Spalding, was sent to prison for ten days, for robbing his wife. The prisoner stole some fowls be- longing to his wife with whom he had not been living for some years. Three men were drowned on the Humber, WHIM on Tuesday by the ca eizint; of a sand -heat. Five men were conveying a chain cable ashore from a Hull and Barnsley (hedger, at the mouth of Alexandra alien the imat upset. Two then ivereros- cued, but the remainder were lost. e A fall stook of all kinds of Dye -stuffs and package Dyes, constantly on hand. Willan's Condition P'owd-' t31 r, the host in the mark- et and always rerh. Penally recip- e • s carefully prepared at 0:114 ra l Drug 14117711Z, Store Exeter ` C, . 4 '1eT .CS. ZI t TSB TROUBLES OE AN INVENTOR, Slow the First i*anufarturer- of irloltnit Was Cheated Out of His Wort, At the close of the year 1850 it was an- nounced in French newspapers that a new explosive had been invented, compared to which dynamite and nitroglycerine were as playthings. The name of •this new arta ole was mehnite, and the inventor was a M. Turpin, a French chemist. Army engineers tested it and found it "altogether satisfactory, A shell which was fired into an old condemned fort near Paris blew the whole structure to atoms; not a stone or a handful of earth was left in its place. In exploding, the melinite re- solved itself into such powerful gases that nothing could withstand its destructive force. The invention meant e, revolution in warfare ; eren the hest modern works of de- fense were now rendered quite useless. The inventor received the due amount of praise. His explosive was coiled boulangite, in honor of the then popular Minister of War, and the French Government promised to buy his invention, But Boulanger fell, and his successor, 31. Campenon, seemed to bare forgotten both Turpin and the rnelinite, as it again was called. Patriotism is a very noble quality but the best patriot trust have money, end M. Tar. pin eoneluded to sell leis invention to some other government, or to some gun manufac- turer. He tbought of the Armstrongs, in En ;lend, who are the most exteusive manufacturers in their line, next to Erupp, in I ssen, and he atltlreseed himself to M. Triponnot, their anent in fails Tri annet advised hien to A singulttr suicide was reported to the Chatham Coroner on Monday, Corporal Mnedonald, of the Garrison Police, wallet into the military bathhouses, laid hiuraalf in ab tib, pieced a revolver muzzle in hie month and shat himself dead. It is alleged that Me sweetheart had jilted him. There died in Ladywood Alms I{ousel, Firminglratn, on Wednesday, .firs. Starling, who fres believed to be the oldest white woman in the world. She was aged 105 years. When Napoleon returned to France from Elba, Mre. St-srliug w.ss ninon the refugees to lc,nglaud, being a lady's and in Fiance at the time. A. whale was caught at the mouth of the Rifer Welland, at. Fostlkye, Lincoln. anti broitgiat to Spalding. It was +a good spelt. seen of a yo:u.g erect whale, It r' 13 feet long, and weighs half atoll. 1�*pen being sighte(1 near to Fos Rise, an .attempt WAS made to eeeure it with ropes, but it broke arway, And was aftemeards shot. ymallpos iu Leeds elrows no sigh of de• creasing --in feet, appearances point in the opprtsite direction. There baro been many now eases lately, and three were admitted to the hospital on 1lentiay." One of these came Itonr 1lea:lingley, a fashionable snb;rrb, hitherto free from the infection. The new sauitariun' is approaching completion. Alvtrnphiot of infOrmatton and ab- �' ,tract of the tarts, showing How to l±ri� Obtain Patents, Caveats. 'rrad / '\\Maris, Cnpyr1Fhts, seat fret./ l•.,;,"', addr,u I8)UNN et 00. 1 361 Broadway, ( ,-te • �orl E EA THE SECRET OF YOUTH. Why inertaln `'Yontsn are Always Fresh ni;tti neantlrul. People are apt to attribute haggard looks to mental activity, and to counsel repose and tranquility as a cosmetic. To the thoughtful traveller the falsity of this theory is obvious. It is in the country village where the church meetii.g is the t mai the days theatre, hem l the e�coitonraut weeks, nd ono can hear the cows breathe in the deathly stillness, that the greatest' number of sunken cheeks, wrinkle=] brows, leaden complexions and lifeless expressions are to be seen among thewomeu yet in their thirties. In the seething metropolis, living three lives and enjoying two, are to be fouud scores of women—mothers or perhaps grand mothers—possessing all the vitality, fresh- ness and much of the bloom of early youth. The fact ia, it is not activity, but drowsi- rsss. the presences, of sleeping or deaf] thought in the son], that isaging. l;;nv aried scenes, the repetition to -morrow of to -day to -day of yesterelay, thin week of the preceding one, the ability to calculate exactly what each neighbor is doing at each hour of each day—the inevitable cloc;s-like routine of conception, the monotony of existence, the utter weariness of .eu empty think-tank, that amps the vernal springsand creates decay is the face. Past grief, old angers, revang. 9, even pant pleasures constantly dwelt upon—all dead, decaying or decayed thong.�ht, make a sepul- chre of the soul, a cemetery of the body and a weather-beaten mown :wet of the face. This is age. The women who never grow old are the student woaueu—•these who Bail drink in o to their works at Newcastle, which Mole new ehy to through memorising, tileeeta hly analyzing, and perfectly aasamitating snit. sieur Turpin dfd, cera a art Team tG reserves, Stu(t is His astonishment may be imagined when • p y evelopment---iseternalyonth. The student he upon his arrival found that hia'invention was already known in England. The Arm, woman wlio makes wise use of her r=rise stronga a a complete e Ups, has no timet corrugate h relative quantity of the core neat arta of with dread drought of the beauty.destro •er I y p the mehntte as well as of all othersecrets I:mum:tett with its manufacture, and the firm had cacti him only to obtain his per. Canal csliirutation of the cerrectne is of the process, and the genuineness of the article, for wheat they offered him 50,000 francs. This proposition M. Turpin rejected and went back to Paris in a rage. here he very soon learned how the Eug- lisls Gini had come into possession of his secret; Their agent in Paris had pimply bad h'a father-in-law ateat the ncceeeery document from the archives of the war department. ,fit#. Turpin now made formal couspldnt to the g avcrnmcnt, and a committee of invests• gation ivas appuintett. The chairman wasan SILO hat portion of the 'do^la is water? army officer who lied assisted Triponnel Abantportso +Tal t�e" Sometimes es they fathcr•in.lew in the theft, and the investi- add a littft�.,iu anti nutmeg to ft, gation ended in smoke, of course. d,o t tle nown After four years of weitine and fatileagi• 1A 19wn is a C.erosidera It' eultectfon o 7' i f' ll taken rile hail1 t knowledge of the ' leapin g fast behind her. :Not eonsideret or invited, Old Age keeps his distance. Brain culture hasetl. on uubia motive means sympathy. heart gentleuess, charity, g?rraelousaess, enlargement of sense. feeling, power. Such a being cannot berome a fossil. She has found the elixir of life, the feuutain of eternal youth. Geography of Tiiese Moderil D Iva• of what is the surface of the earth composed ? Of comedies, mighty pior roasts, reamed tracks, baseltall grounds and agricultural A startling incident o,•curretl in St. Tim- othy'o Church, Liverpool, of . Sunday night. Daring service, Miss Ellen Sall, a member of the eongreg�atiou, was seized wtthsudden faintness. The service wasatopped autithe lady removed to the vestry, and a doctor sent for, who pronounced life extinct. The shocking event caused a great sensation among the congregation. A murderous attack was made on Con- stable Wylie, of Birkenhead �solice, on Saturday night, byawomanaramestEtizabeth Farmstone, who rusbed at him with a large knife and inflicted a severe wound in the breast. Farmstone was liberated front gaol only a few days ago after serving a terns of imprisonment for attacking the same officer with a shovel. Two remarkable claims bave just been paid by the Royal Liver Friendly Society. One was that of Mrs. Donkin, i'onritb, aged 102 years, who had been insured for 30 years and the other that of Robert Owen, Tyn Goole Menai Bridge, who died at the age of 00 having been IS years insured. Both ages have been thoroughly authenticated. Mrs. 1)oukin has been a widow for 72 years, and leaves a daughter aged 72. 11 Borth Carolina Parricide Hauled Dawn ox Rift itcigebora. Reeercfr, N. 0., Oct.—News reached here today of a terrible crime in Wilkes County. Sherman Orem-and his two crippled brothers lived with the Rev. William Greer, their father, an aged preacher. Sherman and a friend went home drunk and. began shooting. His father ordered him to leave the house. ands Ho swore dnot leave, a his o e h@ woad fatherapproached shothirn, thebulletpassing near the heart, Sherman's friend, a young rough named Francis Watson, caught the old man and Sherman again fired, the bullet this time ranging through hie stomach and lodging against the spine. Sherman and Watson left the former say- ing to his crippled brothers fleethe was gee iug after cartridges and as soon as he pro. cured them he would return and kill them. He told them he had killed" the preacher." as he termed hisfiether. The crippled lads gave the alarm and a pursuit began, The.desperadoes took the horse of a man named Church and defied the posse. Many shots were fired anal Fayette Walsh, one of the posse was dangerously* wounded in the thigh. Sherman and t'4 at• san escaped. Church organized a pease and pursued them through Watauga County into Tennessee. Act one point. therm was a battle, during which forty sbots were ex- changed. The Tennessee authorities pursued the fugitives, and they returned to Watauga, their intention being es get into Virginia ; but within two miles of the line a posse teeeleup of people from l;oonecapturetl them. They are tessera at Willlsesboro. Feeling against them is very bitter. r. Ishan Lola Young Itardheati---" I don't see why I'm not invited to parties oftener. 1 am sure 1 always believe like a gentleman." Young Lrghthead--"That's the trouble 1 ou are so very gentlemanly that the girl thiole you stupid." Catton, :. urian has not, iva y n houses and inbaltitants, with four er five 1 hull by the hares and published a pamphlet men who " rut: the party" ausl lend merle).in which he sires a . omplete aecatrnt of the on fiitc�n pr rent interest. vase and the treatment be hassufTarct . to «hat is a Cit publication of several of the document's and A cit)' is an soorprratcd town, vcilli a LrelSennt(rined iu this pamphlet was very Mayor wbohelieves the whole world ehabes annoying to the gavernment, and the uas'ild nil he happens to fail fiat on a cross balance of the edition was recently clans• ,- bated by order of the 11Var Department. At 11►at in, Commerce T the same time Triponuet and Turpin were ,,,What e z far a da or two and dad'• both arrested. Triponuet's father•in•lawl ng the lender for a car or two. �' the actual thief, had already tt esaporateii• Name the different t races, Horse race, beat race, bicycle rare and racing around to find a ut in to indorse your note. Into how many classes is mankind divid- ed? Five being enlightened, oivili::ed,halteivil• ized, savage, too utter, anti dudes. What nations are called enlightened? Those which have the moat ware, the worat laws and produce the most criminals. How many motions has the earth? That's according to how you mix your drinks and which way you go home. What causes daynnd night? 1)ay is caused by night gettiug tired out. Night is caused by everybody going borne to :upper. 'What is a mariner's compass? A jug holding four gallons. 1 The & . The police on 'Wednesday sold the goods of four anti -vaccinators, one being a local councillor, who had not paid certain fines inflicted. A hostile crowd collected, and the furniture was bought in by the Anti - Vaccination Society. No Coventry auc- tioneer would sell the furniture, and a Leamington auctioneer who cottdueted the sale was afterwards hooted through the streets. At Liverpool, on Monday,• the two lads Samuel Crawford, and Robert Shearon, were Charged on remand with having caused the death of David Dawson Eccles, by pushing him into the water. The prisoners did not realise the gravity of their position, though both of them now and again cried. The evidence given before the coroner craving been repeated, the lads were committed for trial, both remarking that they had nothing to say. Shearon's head was barely visible I above the dock. " A Sheffield cyclistnamedWingfield diedat i.74.,,,� - Doncaster, on Saturday night, from the I effects of excessive riding. On the afternoon the deceased and a number offellow-members of the Hallam Club took part in a twenty- five miles club race from Doncaster. Iin- mediately after finishing Wingfield became unconscious, and was carried by his friends to the Reindeer Hotel, where he remained unconscious until his death, which it is supposed was due to the bursting of a blood vessel in the head. VIGOR and STREN TH! For LST or FAILING IMI `.tfI1OOD, General acid NERVOUS DEBILITY, Weakness of BODY AND MIND, Effects of Errors or Excesses in OId or Young. Robust, Noble MAN- HOOD fully Restored. blow to en- large nlarge and strengthen WEAK UN- DEVELOPED ORGANS and PARTS W BODY. Absolutely 'unfailing HOME TREATMENT—Benefits in s day. Men testify from fifty States 'and Foreign Countries. Write then, 21ookl, explanation and , proofs wgales (sealed)- FREE. Address ERIE MEDICAL 00. BUFFALO, N.Y. Misinformed. She (severely) —"1 have been informed that you intend to give a bachelor dinner to your friends on the day before we are to be married.. Now, as I understandet a bache- lor dinner is for the purpose of taking leave of a gang of fellows whom no gentleman would'ntroduce to his wife, and I should just like to know why a gentleman should have such--" ale—" My dear you have been misinform- ed. 1 haven't the least intentionof giving a bachelor `dinner or taking leave of any body." " You haven't?" " Of course not. I shall meet them every night at -the club just the same as before." Ratural Teeth. Tangle—" I want a set of false teeth, Dr Stumps." Dr. Stumps (the dentist)—" well, sir, this is the plaae to get them. I'm making the best teeth in the town." Tangle—" will you guarantee that they will locknatural?" Dr. Stumps—" Certainly I will. My false teeth are so natural that they actually ache." The Last British Wolff. The wolf is a very Bard animal to exter- minate. It is practically absent from the Eastern United States but stray individuals are still found in the mountains even there, and probably will bo founts for centuries to conte. There are wolves in every great country of the continent of Europe, after many centuries a£ civilization. In France several hundred are killed every year. In 1 Great Britain, however, there ere no wolves. Traditiou records that the last otto was , killed in the year 1700, and the story of bow it was done has been told by many a fireside. It was in Sutherlandshire, Scotl.vrd, that the scene of the little story is laid. .d. shepherd, named Polson, had discovered in the rocks near FienLoch the den of a wolf which had been ravaghttg the country. Polson heel with him his son and another young shepherd -boy. The month of the den was very narrow. Discovering from certain signs that the old wolf was notathome, and being himself too large to enter the den, Polson sent the two boys in to see if there were any young wolves. The boys crept in, and presently discovered e. bed in which five lusty young wolves were lying. They called out : "Father :Father :We've foundthe little wolves!" "Then choke 'em, quick!" Poison shouted into the hole. The bays began to beat the young wolves with their sticks, whereupon the little animals set up a terrible yelping, which could be heard outside the den. Suddenly the she -wolf jumped out of a bush close by and rushed past the shepherd • and into the narrow hole that led to her nest. She leaped so quickly that Polson could not stop her until she had gotpartly into the bole ; but he managed to seize her by the tail. "Father ! Father 1" the boy called ont from within; "what is it that stops the light?" " Vou'11 find out," exclaimed Poison, " if the tail breaks!" He held manfully to the she -wolf's till, his feet brace(] against the entranc e to the cave. The youua wolves yelped, the she - wolf struggled. It was a terrific struggle, with the elle-wolf's mother-Iove pitted against the man's father -love. Presently the shepherd, bracing himself anew, managed to whip out his hunting - knife, and stabbed the wolf repeatedly in the haunches and sides. She could not turn about, and the man had the advantage as long as he could cling to her tail She sankdown dead at last, and as the boys had' already succeeded in killing the little wolves, she was the last she -wolf on British soil. Sending Eggs to Enr'lan d. Mr. John Sanders, of LCemptville, who was sent by the Government to England to report upon the feasibility of shipping Cana= than eggs to England, and whose report upon the subject was so generally admired for its thorough dealing with the subject has given praoticai evidence of his belief in thepossi- bilities of this trade, He has sent one of his most trustworthy foreman, a man who thoroughly understands the business, to Liverpool, where he has opened an agency for the handling of Canadian eggs. On Ivion- day night Mr. Sanders. arrived in Ottawa from Montreal where he had concluded and signed a contract with bile Beaver Line Steamship Company 'for the transport of 60 carloads of eggs to England. Mr. Sanders will make the experiment on a scale suffi- ciently large to test it thoroughly, and he has no doubt of a successful result. Formation of an Ocean Liner's Orew. The average AtIautio steamer is matured by about 150 men, as follows :—.53 deck hands, 4offieers, 0 petty officers, :firemen, &c., 8 engineers, 03 stewards. The master and chief officials—that is, mates and en. gineers—are chosen by the owners or mans• gers, white the remainder of the crew are chosen by the captain. First-class ships muster from 12 to 15 men in each watch, and all of these are shipped AS seamen. Of course the majority are so only in name, though there is always a definite number of sailors among them. Indeed, to fly the blue flag, at least ten of the crow, in addition to the captain, trust be enrolled in the Naval Reserve, and to be an A.13., ono musthand, reef, and steer deftly. These are thepeople who in port stand by the ship ; that is, those who take, as required by law, their discharges in Liverpool on the return voy- age and continue to work on board at fixed wages per day while the ship refits and loads. All hands, from the skipper to the scull -roe's mate, mast ship at the beginning of each run —must sign articles, as it is called, before a Board of Trade shipping master. As the law has always regarded Jack as especially in need of its protection, because he is particularly exposed to the wiles of sharpers, great stress is laid in these articles upon his treatment, and therefore they exhibit in detail the character of the voyage, the wages, the quantity and quality of the food, and a dozen other particulars which. evidence the safeguards thrown around them by the Government. Terrible Privations at Sea. The barq ue Prince Eugene, fro in Greenock, rescued in a most timely manner six men belonging to the vessel Latona. The poor fellows were in a small dory, and had under- gone great hardships, not having had any food or water for three days and nights. The Latona is a fishing vessel, and was off the banks of Nowfoundland when the men left the dory to attend to their nets. A fog suddenly coming on their vessel was lost sight_of, and the men slid not afterwards regain her. For three days and nights the poor fellows suffered keenly, indeed their sufferings were such that they could not have endured them much longer. They were kindly treated on board the Prince Eugene. To show the timely nature of the rescue, a heavy gale sprang up the day after the men were picked up, and the captain of the Prince Eugene said it would have been impossible for the little emit to have out- lived it, end alt of the men must have per- ished.. The Prince Eugene landed tho men at Quebec little the worse for their trying adventure. Nothing; to .Peas. Lady—" Little boy, isu't that your mother calling you Little Boy - " Yes'm." " 1�'hy tion t you answer her, then?' " Pop's away." im o ria Facts Please Read Them We respectfully ask your careful attention to this statement, brief i•ut imunrlant, and which we will divide into three parts, viz.: 1, THE SITUATION; 2, THE NECES- MTl' l j THE 1IESMEDY. 1st. The Situation Health depends upon the state of the blood. The blood conveys every element which goes to make up all the organs of the body. and it carries away all waste or dissolved and useless material. Every hone, muscle. nerve and tissue lives upon what the blood feeds to it. Moreover, every beating of the heart, every drawing of the breath, every thought flashing through tine brain, needs a supply of pure blood, to be done rightly and well. 2d, The Necessity The human race as a whole is in gteat need of a good blood purifier. There are about zeco disorders incident to the human frame, the large majority arising from the impure or poisonous condition of tiie blood. Very few in- dividuals enjoy perfect health, and fewer still have perfectly pure blood. Scrofula, a disease as old as antiquity has been inherited by generation after generation, and manifests itself today virulent and virtually unchanged front its ancient forms. If we are so fortu- nate as to escape hereditary impurities in the blood, we may contract disease from germs in the air we breathe, the food we eat, or the water we drink. 3d. The Remedy Ia Hood's Sarsaparilla is found the medicine for all blood diseases. Its remarkable cures are its loudest praise. No remedy has ever bad so great suc- cess, no medicine was ever accorded so great public patronage. Scrofula in its severeet forms has yielded to its potent powers, blood poisoning and salt rheum and many other diseases have been permanently cured by it. If you want statements of cures, write to us. If you need a good blood purifier, take 0 Sarsaparilla Bold by druggists. g; six for 55. Prepared only by C. I. 1100D Sr. CO., Lowell, Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar 1,0 smolt HIS OL» FATHER.rt LFWAfWEMENY x". a.i.NTs -05) ae S RHEUMATISM, `E RC1 3o g Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Headaches Toothache, Sore Throat, Frost Bites, Sprains, Bruises, Burns, Etc. Sold by Druggists end Dealers everywhere. Fray CCnt3 a bottle. Directions 11 1.ongtta;es. THE CHARLES A. VOGELElt CO,.Ba!tbaort, lid Qana4 ail Zerot. Toronto, Ont. INTEROOLON IAI., RAILWAY Q OT.Y JIAf The d ireet route botweee tlio Wee: a.'id all eeinta Qn the leaver St, tawronce seri Date tics Chaleur,Previ.ee of Quebec; al+.o for New ltrunpwtck.::ovp r.cotaa, Prince Eduard CtrlniiretanIstands.nunnewluuutliantian(i St. Pierre, lexprees traiusleavesi lcitrealand Halifax daily t:iunuays excepted) and run tllraui;ti witheatchanso, ben -veva these po,Ltein 55 home and t:s minute*. Tile train ears of the In- tercolonistl liail:viay aro hiilitd•ntly 1 fllit4'1 byelactrieit;• and heated .by >iteatu froth tile Ioconaettvo.taus greatly Inc*casing taw data fort and safety or travel/cr.•s. New and elegant 4utlt 410014na and day care areruuoz:tterouctt eelnetstraius. Canadian -European Mail and Pasnen,ger Route. passengerstort;reatitriteinnr the conti- nent by leaving Mont'eat an ieriday meninx will loin outward riailsteamo: at Haitian onSaturday. Tito attou•ian ofaslttppert; is eke(' tee tense sultE.iorfacrlit res ottcrttl n.y this route ler the transport of r a in:Naomi marebau- itIbb yteuitoil ualoti risofai+eafurdlanl eaehlqueProvinces Lula aroduceinte•.dodfor tee E''irfepeauurare flet. tebetemay sa obtaintlsand intone attelt obouttuer.+ute; sin feeiglitand passenger rakt s ou at•plieatrorr to WeeterrIreigbt d;PastonCe Agent ealizsaiu13ouset:looit-York rttelotonte D POTZINGT.T., Chief Superiutoutiont. Taitway t)Alce,Stouoteu, r,11. Jon let 91 Cures Burns. Outs, Piles in their worst form 3lvoilfnt;+, Erysipelas, Intlammatton. Fres Sites, ChaPeed Bails and all Skin Diseases. hIRSTS PAIN EXTERMINATOR —ccrtss— Lundlage. Sciatica Bbeumatislft, 15ttur1gice Dy all deal rs � Pains Wh o:e a10 Cly F F,Dally &Co RRt�RS OP YOUTH. Nervous De- bility, Seminal Losses and Premature, Decay. promptly and permanently cured by Does not iter,oro' With Eliot oroctal occupation and fully restores lost vigor and insures perfect manhood. Price. $1 per boa. Solo Proprietor, H. SCfOf'IBLD. 5016 - acid's Drug Store, Enar Srnsusr, TORONTO, It is a .certain and speedy core for Cold in he Bond andCatarrhin of i rt 'Stages. SOOTHING, C'LEAN8INd, HEALING. Instant Relief, Permanent Cure, Failure impossible. Many so-called diseases aro simply symptoms of Catarrh, such as head. ache partial deafness, losing souse of smell, font breath, hawking and epic• tins, nausea, general. feeling of de- bility, oto. If you are troubled with any of these or kindred symptoms, your have Catarrh, and should lose no time In procuring a bottle of NASAL BALM. Be warned in time, neglected cold in herd results in Catarrh,fol, leered by consumption and dath. NASAL BALM i8 sold by all drnggiata or will be smut, post paid, on receipt of prise (60 cent* and $i,00) by addressing FULFORD & CO, Brockville, Ont. Alii WE of CodLi erOil AND T(4a Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda. No other Emulsion is so easy to take. It does not separate nor spoil. Itis always sweet as cream. The most sensitive stomach can retain it. CURES Scrofulous and Wasting Diseases. Chronic Cough. Loss of Appetite. Mental and Nervous Prostration. General Debility, &&c. Beware of all imitations. Ask for "the D. & L." Emulsion, and refuse all others. PRIDE SOC. AND $t PER BOTTLE- ,1 1 CURS HTS! When I say I cure I do not mean merely to stop them fora time and then have them return again. I mean a radical mare. I hive made the disease of FITS, EPILEP. SY or FALIntG SICKNESS a lifelong study. I warrant my remedy to Duro the worst cases. Iteeause others have failed is no rosson for not now 05001 ore a aura Send at once for a• treatise } and a Free nerd, of my Infallible remedy. e,vtl,ExP%ESS and Post-CFFIcr. H. G. ROOT, l'd. C., 188 ADELAIDE ST. WEST, TORONTO, ONT. rnp•.Cor„^Gat 4b, NEb' tins ofwotk, iely and honorably, by th0,o of 04150r 001, .1.00.115 or old, and in their own l,falittro,wl.arerar they lire. Any one eon do the work. Bogy to 1em•n. Wo furnish everything. We start you. No risk. You .00 devote your spore 1100101101, or all your time to tY, work. rote la en entirely n.v lend And brings wonderful &,feces, to every worker. Beginners n It emoting from 825 to 55, Pere eek and upwards, and more after n little experience. We s'.a (Lml011 you the em- ployment al d teach yen 1.11101, No specs to e.it•oolni0 sero. rt Information s-aES. Tit W M ,L5 1 4) ., 1'574, remit`