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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1901-9-5, Page 5if El4in. G, 1901 BUSINESS CARDS, ONEY TO LOAN AT PER J- Omit, 0.8. SCOTT, Brueoele, o H. 1YraO1.ACiiI7N— Y 1 . Isaner of Iltrringo bleennoo, Of - nee at Gr000ry, 9. ar11b01'0y At1'oet,, Brussels, 'f4N. BAEBETT— A-• 1'onoot•In3 Artist, Shop -Next, door North o of the Stand Bank, Standard fat k, Radios and Children's lurk' Dotting q tpeolalEY. M. MORRISON, 'Oiler of Marriage Licenses Marriage ) W ALT ON. ONT. MISS JEAN WLAIICHLIN, -TE.AOHElt 011 - PIANO. - AND - ORGAN, amm-crzsaamm, over. ROBERT CUNNINGHAM: rN90100000 FIRE AND MARINE., 4UELPH. MISS SARAH LOUISE MOORE, L.. O. M., Academie graduate of London Conserva- tory of Muelo, also Plowboy of the Aeeooiated Mueioiaue of Ontario, le prepared to receive a limited number of unpile for inatructlon on tho piano. Qualified to prepare pupil 8 for the Principal's Form iu the Conservatory of Music. Brussels, Ontario. A LEX. HUN TER— Clerk of the Fourth Division Court, Co. Huron; Conveyancer, Notary Pubho, Laud, Loan.t and Insurance Agent ; Auction, Dor. Funds invested and to;lonn. Collec- tions made. Office in Grabam'siBlook,Brus- oo1s. AUCTIONEERS. 1:11 S. SCOTT AS AN `AUCTION- • ERR, will sell for. better' Prices, to better and toe char es than any of in lase once at s a ' veer in East Enron or than any other Auctioneer he won't charge anything, Dotes and orders cav always lie arrangeded at this ulnae or by 00000001 application. • VETERINARY. J • D. WARWICK— t the Ontario Vet- erinary , Is re o h 0rinary dolleIs domesticated prepared to 10treat co dis- of Partic animate lin a mold commit, - not manner, Particular attention void to Veterinary Dentistry, Calle promptly at- tended to, Office and Infirmary -Four doors North of bridge, Tornberry et„ Brothels, LEGAL AND CONVEYANCING. -`� M. SINCLAIR— Barrietor, Solicitor, 1Oonveyancer, Notary Public, &o. Dolce -8 thwart's Block 1 door North of Central Hotel;• Solicitor for the Standard 13 auk. GF. BLAIR, BARRISTER, • Solicitor, &o. Office over Stand- ard Bank. Solicitor for Village of Brussels. Money to Loan at lowest rates. IT G. CAMERON— ,(Formorly of Cameron, Holt & Cameron) Barrister and Solicitor, Goelerleh Ont. Office -Hamilton street, opposite Col- borne Hotel. MEDICAL CARDS. J. A. M'NAUGHTON, 0I. D., C. M., Trinity University, Fellow Trinity Medical College, Member Collage of Phyelalans and. Surgeons, Ont. Licentiate of the Royal 0o1 - loge of Physicians and Licentiate of Mid- wifery, Edinburgh. r1'Tolepbooe No.14, Roaidenoe-11111 street, Brussels. DENTISTRY DR. R. P. FE/LD, DENTIST Graduate of the Royal Gallego of Dental Burgeons of Ontario and Firet•olass Honor Graduate of Toronto University, Office next to Brewer's Photograph Gallery, BRUSSELS, McLEOD'S 6ystem. renovator —AND OTHER— TESTED REMEDIES SPECIFIC AND ANTIDOTE For Impure, Weak and Impoverished Blood, Dyspepsia, Sleeplessness, Palpita. Mon of the Heart, Liver Complaint, Neur- algia, Looe of Memory, Brouohitis, Con. gumption, Gall Stones, Jaundice, Kidney and Urinary Diseases, St, Vitae' Dance, Female Irregularities and General De. bility. LABORATORY, GOIIERICH, ONT. J. M. McLEOD, Prop. and Manufacturer. sem by Jae,110x, Druggist, brussels SHINGLES British Columbia Red Cedar Shingles North. Shore Pine and Cedar FOR SALE AT THE Brussels Planing Mills Moo Doors and Sash of all Pat terns on hand or made to order at Short Notice, Estimates Furnished for all kinde of Bufldinge. Workman. ship and Material Guaranteed. P. Fall ens Term �' �'luO p Sept, ENTRALm t �, -rt J .� 5� m M.,Q fit. Never before in the history of out' doU go Ila Ye our graduatesbeen e0 reularkat111' no. e0AANNI le ermine exoellol t situations im, mediately on leaving College es during the 110000101 year, A. business ,oduoation Ruch ae eau be obtained 1n our school is tbo aubetua- tial foundation of a auooeoeful life. May Iva vend you a catalogue ? W, S, ELLIOTT, Principal, i txz.ct )TebYL, Gonias, Mrs. Robt, Match has left for Cleve. land, Ohio, where she will visit friends for a couple of weeks. Rev, R, J. Garbutt has returned from San Francisco where he the been at. tending the Great Epworth League Con- vention. Henry Perkins has decided to offer for stale by public auction on Saturday, Sept, 71b, hie entire stook of harneee, Dollars, truoke, valises, eta, Dr. Montgomery is again on the streets after hie confinement with the smallpox patient for 19 days. The patient is im• proving nicely but will not be allowed out yet. The Police trueteee Have passed a By- law allowing oowe to eau on the etreete during the day but they must be kept in froth 8 o'olook in the evening until 7 o'olook in the morning. Any person al. lowing oowe to ran at night between the hours mentioned is liable to a fine from $1 to $10. The new Beate have been put in the eehool. A. Tipling shipped a oar of flax to Weir & Weir, St. Marys. Wee. Allenby attended the High Court A. O. F. in Hamilton last week. Tha orth- astern N W Fair will be held at Wingham on the 26th and 27th of Sept. Mayor Clegg attended the meeting of Municipal representatives in Toronto last week. The Epworth League have agreed to pay $75 on the new pipe organ. The organ will oast about $1,500, T. and Mre. Hall, of the Advance, with n son and daughter, were vieiting theie. eldest son at De Pere, Wieaonein, A ease of assault was brought before Squire MoIlenzie on Tuesday of last week and the offender fined $5 and coats, $8,45 in all. T. G. Campbell, of Winnipeg, ie the guest of Mr, Bosman in town vieiting his two little daughters. • He is on hie way home from the Old Country. LicdtoIvy el. On September 22nd Reads. Geo. Turk and Geo. Kerby, the pastor evangelists, open revival eervioee in the Methodist ohuroh in town. Rev. Mr. Saunders has returned to town after enjoying a few weeks' boli. days, and resumed hie donee in the Bap- tist church on Sunday, Mise Jennie Norton, of town, has been engaged to teach the 3rd line, Wallace, school. Mr. Hofferd, the present leacher, intends resuming his studies, A. J. McPhee, who has been salesman in thie vicinity for the Frost & Wood Agrionllural Worth, leaves for Lindsay, which plane he has been transferred by the Company. Mies Lucas, of Stratford, has assumed charge of the school on the boundary, East of the town, formerly taught by Tboe, Norton. Mr. Norton intends tak- ing a graduating tuuree at Toronto Uui• varsity, Mies Jennie Green, milliner, of Bran• don, who has been spending a few weeks in town with her mother, Mre. MoBeth Green, left last week for Toronto and New York, where she will attend the Openings. The Baptist church has recently under. gone considerable improvement, chiefly in the interior, the walla of whioh have been tastefully papered with ingrain, with oeilinge and borders harmonizing and adding greatly to the appearance of the edifice, W w1 told. (Intended for last week.) Mre. Wm. Knight spent a few days at Jonathan Moore's. Mre. P. Dill, of Seafortb, spent a few dnye at L. MoDonaid'e last - week. Mise Maggie Oempbell, of Varna, was visiting friends in Walton this week. A load of young people from Brussels spent an enjoyable evening at R. H. Ferguson's on Friday eveniug. Mioeee Kelly and Ainlay have removed their Dressmaking eetabliehment to the ground floor of the A. O. II. W. Hall, Rev. A. 0. Tiffin and family paid Wal. ton a flying visit while returning home from a short holiday among friends up North. Rev. G. J. Abey conducted a Harvest Home service in St. George's ()berth last Sabbath. The ohuroh was beantifully decorated with flowers, fruit and the pro. duct of the fields. Over the pulpit, whioh was itself a mires of flowers, was a triple arch of grain and ivy, making n moat beautiful Warn. Rev. Mr. Ahey preached an appropriate eormon from Hosea 2nd chap. 8 and 9. A special thank -offering was taken. Seorament was administer- ed at the close of the service. 131.'tle. Mre. Carder wee in Toronto noting as judge in the ladies' and fine arta' depart - menta of the Toronto Fair, Wm.Phillipe, of Chicago, an old Blyth boy, was spending a few days with his friend, Albert Robinson. Mies Grace Bawden has left for Toren. to where she hart secured a good poeition in the wholesale millinery house of D. IrfoOall & Co. Walter ItioLean, B. A., and Miss Kate McLean, who spent the Summer vacation very pleasantly at the home of their parents here, have left for their reapoo. tive homes in Vankteek Hill and Montreal, Wm. F. Shane, who has been a reef. dont of Blyth for the past 37 years, has lift for Port Huron whore he will visit With frionde for a time. Prom Port Ston 1 e e o 4I 1 Montreal pee t M n r whorehe will make his home with hie daughter, Mre. Belfry, DN 'gu ax' ti, tt Ertl A W D a opo, -- Wm, Drummond, aformer t tnot of Blyth, died h' 40d 11 to reed I U in ' t i s le . 4 logon o CU P Thlersd1y, Aug, 22nd, heart failure, One to the excessive beat 7e *given as the n uof death. Mr, Drummond rtlmm a wa s7a yoaro ti age, Boil for the .past 13 years has been in the employ of the Ontario Government, 000 i11 Spy g t he position of auaountlmt and olatietiolttn in the Pro. viuoird Secretary's department. Daring hie roaidenee in Blyth he oonducted a general attire beelueee. The funeral took place Monday afternoon from hie late reeidenoe, interment tatting place in Mount Pleaeant cemetery, Toronto. The funeral aerviee was conducted by Rev, Alex. Gilroy, of the College etreet Proebyterian ohuroh, Toronto, Among those present at the funeral were a num• of hie fellow employees, the members of the Bone of England lodge to which Mr. Drummond belonged, and a deta0hment from the lodge in London of which he was formerly a member, He leaves a widow and three children—Robert, Mre. Van Egmond, of Seaforeh, and Harriet D. Drummond. A TRIP TO MUSKOKA, Interesting Letter From Bev. a, 1101nics• DEAR Mn. Hann, -Thinking a few lines from these high waters of Muskoka might be Interesting to some at levet of your numer000 readers I send you the follow. ing :—Leaving Toronto at 10.45 a. m. by the first section of the mitt Muskoka ex- prese sod deflecting a little Weetward we soon reach the watershed where the streams run toward Lake Heron instead of toward Lake Ontario, Emerging from the hills the train eweepe through the pleaeant valley of Aurora, paeeing the thriving town of Newmarket. A little further on we oaloh a glimpse of the historic Holland river, once the pathway of Indiana and voyageurs after having made the portage from Toronto. By this river oleo came in earlier times the bloody Iroquois to slaughter the Hurons along Ibe shores of Lake Simooe and Georgian Bay. At Lefroy we got the first view of Lake Simooe, a eplendid sheet of water 30 miles in length by 16 broad. After a run of 60 miles without a stop the train tomes to a standstill at Allandale, the janotion whence three lines radiate—the Muskoka, brauoh, the Penetang branch and the Oolllogwood line. At Allandale the road makes a beautiful curve around the head of the lake and Boon reaohee the 000nty town of Barrie, picturesquely sitting on the hill- side and eloping down to the water. Still skirting Lake Simooe and deflecting Eastward in half au hour's ride we pasta the pretty town of Orillia, famed as a Summer reeort 20 years ago, and atilt popular on account of ire beautiful eoeuery, olear, pore air and splendid sport in fishing. Soon we pass from the pale limeetone formations that Dome to the ourfaoe in Simooe and oaunties Weet, to the region of red granite and emerge upon the Highlands of Muskoka and are landed at Graveuburet wharf, 112 miles from Toronto, io the quick running time of about two hours and a half. At the wharf we find three eteamere of the Muskoka Navigation Company wait• ing to convey touriete to all the principal pointe on the lakes. A few minutes on the water and we come in full view of the Muskoka Sanitorium composed of a somewhat stately reeidenoe, earrouoded by a number of pleasant looking oottagee, all Bet in a beautiful background of living green. Rounding a bold headland and paeeing tiarough a narrow channel we are fairly upon the far famed Lake Muskoka and at once get a grand view of ite irregu- lar ehoree, whose deep bays and inlets stretch outward on either band, exposing a view of unusual loveliness of grey and eombre rooks, varied foliage of forest and stripe of pasture laud and of islands of many forme, size and color nestling re. poeefully in the bosom of the placid waters. The beauty of the natural eoene is greatly inhanoed by the great number of pretty oottagee, more pretentious villas and large hotele to be seen along the route. Sixteen miles 0)p the lake and near the mouth of the Indian river we come to our destination, Keewaydin Island, one of a group of islands called the Seven efetere. Thie island, like all the rest and the country around, ie oom• posed of gigantio rooks with a thin de• posit of earth covering most of the ear. face and is wooded from its tone like summit down to the water edge with a young growth of almost all kinds of Canadian trees. Oblong in ehape and dotted down either eide with a row of neatly painted cottages all decorated with bright fiage, the island especially in the evening when all the windows are aglow with the Betting euo, presents a picture hard to be equalled. The island register ehowe a population at present of some• thing over a hundred, meetly from Inger- eoll and Brantford. With a daily mail, a oall from most of the passenger boats of which eoene half dozen ply up and down the lakes daily, regular ular visite g from three eopply boats there is but little inconvenience or sense of isolation ex- perienced by the Wanders. At an ex. pence of $400 a pretty little pavilion has been erected in which a Sunday eehool and a public service ars held every Son• day and an occasional entertainment too having been hold this season. An ex• oellent program was presented at each, showing some flue talent among the young people of the ieland. The collet• None amounted to the nice sum of $35. Lawn gamin, fishing, boating and bath• ing form the principal amusements of the tourist and are freely indulged in by al - moat all. Pleasant aide tripe may he taken to Braoebrid o on the Eaet and to Bala on the Weet, but the longest and most desirable trip is that to the head of Lake Joeeph, a diatomic of about 30 miles and whioh may be taken every other day by the regular steamer. But this Muekoka pleasure resort is no poor man's parodies. Eligible sites are becoming rare and are held at high prices and living ie very high. Americana are in large evidence on these shores ae seen by the Stars and Stripes that stream from almost every other yacht that peep est and Coate from numerous private reeidenoee end mammoth bottle and the Yankee Recent that greets your ears from almost every group of tourists. What is the great charm of this Mae- koka oountry 7 Its boautifal eoeuery, the opportunity it altar'de for Summer recreation and partioulurly its health giving climate. For those purposes it ie undoubtedly the most wonderful natural pork on the continent, if indeed ire equal ALYBS.LL POST an be globe. To tl o s o found p the I l and it marine more than own be oxpkeesed being rich with aeeogiations of purer happinees, renewed health and 01000 lernie of e radiant n er es v I' hf0. 7 h a an4 a d 1se1 s iu e 1 a rte 8 at a seg excelled, s of N pr isdole ex a ed. I would be Impossible for anyone to Bao lair Sunday evening upon the gloriee o h aven a mi the ba a e mirrored in the lake whit 0 the petting sun bathed the whole sone i one mantle of crimson and gold and opo upon the waters bare of amber, eheathin fire, without feeling that Nature was tiro and there exhibiting some of her mol wouderfal chorine, In few planes clock the 8110) present a disc of white or the moon such a eliverysh0eh or the attire snob brilliancy. By day the ekies are a blue as Italy and the night a0 bleak a the tropine. To anyone with a geoiogtoa turn' of mind muoh will be found here of interest. The brown rook formations of Muskoka aro' believed to be the oldeet tp the world and have been thrown aloft by voloanio force, The ridge passing through this region begins in Nova Scotia, crosses the New England States and extende Weetward beyond the Great Lakes forming the backbone of the con- tinent. The water of the lokee is of a dart color, caused by an iron solation and is said to be au excellent health tonin for those who drink it freely. It ie used for all domestic; purposes. Earlier and later to the season eplendid fishing of base, pickerel and other varieties ie to be had but during the hot weather the marsh is rather limited muoh to the disgust of many a disciple of Walt. Whitman. Poseibly more anon. J. H. Port Keewaydin, Aug. 15tb, 1901. A Trip to North Dakota. DEAR EDITOR, As you seemed to think a little sketch of our trip from Ethel to the Northwest might prove interesting, here it is and if you think it worth in- serting all right, and if not just put it in the waste basket, We took the regular train at home and found it full to begirt with. I succeeded in getting 11 of a seat and as every the bad a valiee and lanai basket we were pretty welt crowded. One young mac I saw had a purifier barge in hie pocket and mast have eat down rather heavily upon it and as a coneequeeoe very soon we saw the liquid running on the floor. The Beat was also 000upied by a stylishly dreeaed young lady and as he rose to put the broken flask out of the window the liquor dripped through kis coat and over her skirts and the look of disgust npoo her face as well ae the sold look upon his, was to say the e I est rather amusingto the rest of ns. But every man did not eft upon the bottle. One had emptied his and while dead to what was going on wax relieved of $122 in oath and othere while under its inspiration did some very silly things. "All aboard for Manitoba and the Northwest 1" When we heard the above from the mac in blue snit and braes buttons at the Union etatiou, Toronto, we were glad for we were anxious to get started ort our journey. Very soon we were sorry we bad been in such a hurry for we were piled into the train designat- ed by the official, made up of 17 aoaahee, and found 4 perspiring, highly irritated people 000npying every doable Beat. The crash was tremendous and the scene in- describable and it was a oaee of the our. vival of the fittest. Some planed their "turkey and grub box" in the aiele and utilized them ae seats. A shrill whistle from the locomotive and a hearty other and we were off on our 15 hundred mile trip to the Prairie Province. Ae the advance guard of thousands of harveatere leaving Ontario for the North- west we excited the keenest cariosity of the good people of Toronto. Hundreds of opeotatore paoked the platform of the Union depot to see 0e depart or to say Goodbye to friends. This was the oaee all along the route. We were curiosities at every station and they turned out ea meeee to have a look at us. The interest augmented by the foot that nearly every little plane contributed one more young man to our already large crowd. Car after oar was added until they number. ed 25 and headed by two of the oompany'e most powerful engines they carried a living freight numbering 1,460 persons. The occupants were nearly all young men, babbling over with high spirits ; friendly to an extent that was at times embarrassing ; fa foot were out for a time and seemed to consider that they were $7 per M. privileged to do anything. they liked and Shingles and Lath always on hand. helped themselves without any qualms of conscience to anything they wanted that came in their way. At one plane a eoore of young men went into a reetanr• ant at the station and asked if they had any good oigare. A box was set before them, each took one and when asked "Who was to pay for them ? " one after another replied "I'm not 11'm not 1" and book they ran in high glee to the train. This was the kind of thing many of them ooneidered Iota of fun. The passengers s' In regard to e0Buery we Naw mock nudge a horn'•, Nolte of all shades, t hires, riv ry and swamps, buodref e aoreeofIu •1�abekxf00aswellaebaud 0 en n' , f mil t 0 lar n f 1 and p knee pr P It There were some very pretty homes Base in the millet of thie barren Oountry. t cannot help but wonder what all e Dun a tr was created Yfor and yet it In be for soma nee. The time may t when those rooks and bills will be r n valuable lthingthanthattdid pot odd tooloua E joyment wee the knowledge that t a bad not been a regular elution ma the road at work for nearly 2 mo e and the Conductor told some that e were running un elow time on that e count. I u t was only after Rainy r I was passed that we began to the cult! ed land, As the produce of Mani was entered and hundreds of acres golden grain were passed through olamatione of delight were heard on aides. They wondered how it could be harvested and how the farmer in little shook had planted it and what year's profits would be. We reached Winnipeg in the morn at about 8 o'olook, after travelling 3 d and 3 nights, thoroughly tired but thankful that we were that near jonrney'e end in eafety. If there wa crowd in Toronto, it was much w, here. I am not a "whale" myself have been in some pretty large orae on various 000aeions but this eurpse anything I had ever experienced. I, with the friends I had started R from Ethel, had breakfast and rested io the afternoon saw same of the sig of the city, and theta was certainly great deal worth geeing. We enjoyed afternoon very math. Next morning found Mre. R. Dilwo and myself again on the train. At ev station there would be be from 6 to farmers standing waiting to hire m The supply wail not equal to the dema I heard $90 offered for 2 months, but 1 boye thought that the country look good for $50 per month anyway. The invasion of the visitors from f East will, in my humble opinion, be 1 beet advertisement the country Dor possibly get. Most of them have ape their lives in Ontario on the farm, a when the glorious poteibilitiee of t limitless agricultural lands of Manito and the Northwest are unfolded to the. they will not be Blow to inform th, friends in the Emit of the wonders ooantry'with he advantages and dies vantages that ie lying between Raii River and the Rookies. Well I reached my destination in BRI ty and after this letter was nearly finieb we received a telegram to meet my hr band the next day. We had not expect him for a month so we were a little et prised, so this letter was laid aside. E trip was muoh the'tbe same ae my ow bat there had been an accident on 1 road 2 days before, at a plaoe call Ingolf, 102 miles from Winnipeg. The were 3 persona killed, 8 badly iojared, of whom have since died. He with mai othere saw the wrecked engine and oat They bad gone down over an embankme 30 ft. deep. We are visiting old frient and enjoying our holiday. The hares ie well etarted. My brother•io•1aw h got 100 aoree of grand wheat ant a1 stocked and hes seventy acres more, wi flax, barley and oate to make 800 vers while many of the farmers have 41 acres of good crop and if they get it ha vested and threshed safely moat mea immense profit thio year, but they ha' some drawb,ake we know nothing abon Still think that there are opportonitii here for young menthat cannot be hs in the East. Yours very truly, MRS. S. B. Oor,n. Ethel Saw Mills. I have a good supply of Hemloak logs o hand. Can out out to gait customers Dreeeed Maple, euitable for granaries at $10 per M. All kinde of Dressed Lumber kept m hand from $10 per M up. A large stook of, called Eire and Ash a were not all farmers ae I was informed there was a score of college boys on the train, although you could not have told it by their dress. Then there was a sprinkling of clerks, book keepers and mechanics who weregoingoutWeet to try and better their proaGleoEe and it nothing turned np were quite contented to roll up their eleevee and tackle "any old thing" on the farm. The eoene on the train permitted very little chance for refleotion ae lunch baek- ete and boxes were in aonetant requisition and when they were robbed of their oen- teote desperate rushes were made to the hotels near the station to replenish them ; bread, canned goods and sometimes a hot pie, provided no end of entertain. ment. The scene ohauged and with the ehadowe of night the crowd settled down and the occupants of the crowded seats tried vainly to etretoh their tired, cramp. ed limbs and that looked at each other as muoh ax to say "I wieh you could drop out of eight and give me a ohaoce to get 40 winks." Bot no one made such a move. That was not in the program and very few slept muoh hot we had many a laugh. We had one jovial fellow in our oar say that he bad been invited to a garden party in the next oar and that they hod not much to sat but plenty to drink so they made the best of it and now "he could not sleep himself nor could he let the rest of no sleep for then he would be lonesome" and of one thing we were certain that the reef of us were in no danger of being loneoome. At another time another mac asked how he was making out 7 He promptly anewered "all right ; one foot is asleep, t'other's go. ing, and when that half of me le rested I will put my head where my feet are Bo I shall be all right" Some of no found no difficulty in gettinr a foot aeteep but did not get muoh reel out of it, fa A goad form on 13th con. of Grey fo, Bale. A contract of 20 acres of logging to let For particulars apply to A number of 'good ewes to let out a shares about Oat. let. S. S. COLE, PROPRIETOR, ETHEL. Important to Breedersland Horsemen, Eureka Caustic Balsam. Veterinary 1 A reliable •.: and speed ee d y remedy for S< d Curbs., Spavins, Sweeney ole., eto„iu Horses and �” r ; Lump Jaw pyx -c' ��,,.�,}�. ,,,� •+ iu Cattle. TRADEMAitir "Seepamph- 1et which a000mpauiex every bottle, giving scientific treatment In the venom diseases.. It can be used in every ease of veterinary practice where stimulating applioatione and blisters aro prescribed, It tae 0)0 UWWERron. Every bottle sold is guaranteed to give satis- faction. Price 'Mc peeyr bottle. Bold by all ppparedie druggists and EUREKA eVEeTERINARY MEDICINE COMPANY, London, Out. Spectacles -09 ALL KINDS - Fitted to Correct all Failures of Eyesight, and your Eyes tested FREE by Meet Optical methods at Division Court Office, BRussET4s, • very lima Is of rods o Sub. eve n Ona thie nue t - 4,845::: = SCg= (44- • p * e-,.-- -eC'"'$".--sr 9- y, 9 sC ASH L�: ]VLc sr�RE _J(L iL 17 , v :_.... some nok" .0., here n on eche ,hey 0)e. iver vat. lobe of ex• all all the the ling aye try our t a lrse end bee sed 'ith rod hte 3_ _ __ _.. .. A RecordBreaker . . . I lii 41 Thie week will be a record breaker in our Mammoth Cosh Store, when we will offer everything in Summer goods and several Woe in Fall p) geode at ridiouloael low rine ] Y prices. No goads given on approval daring this to a great Sale. Thie Bale will lute only one week at the following terrific re, ill dnotione : `, Ladies' fast black Hose, worth Ba for So, [ Ladies' fine Hermedorf blank Cotton Ifoee, regular 20o for 16e, or 2 pair for 255, M n a e Wool Sox, regular price 200 for 160, 2 pair for 250, 'Polite Linen, 66 inohee wide, regular 25o for 20o. 11 Table Linen, half bleeohed, regular 00a for 40o, ' Crash Towelling, regular 5o, reduced to 4o. 1 Pure Linen Towelling, 17 inohee wide, worth Bo for 50. Fancy Drees Goode, 40 inches wide, worth 20o for 10o. Ginghame, in blue and white cheeks and fanny plaids, fast colors, to 3 worth 8o, reduoed to 5o. Scotch Ginghame and Chambray's, worth 90o for 10o, Ladies' Shirt Waiete, worth 50o, reduoed to 25o. Ladies' Fanoy Shirt Waiete, trimmed with wide insertion, regular prioe $1.85, reduoed to 75o. New Blaok Santana Shirt Waists, tucked back and front, worth $1.75, for $1.45. Men's Tweed Saila, Storey's make, in fancy cheeks and mixtnree, worth $6 for $4.50, -c't�Gc:C2i- til 57aG3_ , Gni_•• the rth ore 12 an. d. ;be :ed CHILDREN' S WAG -ONS. the Cf) Ire Od 0)t 0)d® he ba A..? m, /le? 1-4 y MM ed Is. a� ed FA ir rn 17,:l rebral -.1 e 3y 'a. Cn E -i Li POST BIJOKSTOHE: 0 0 01'Il1_4l M H Fi-i p �d i� tli CD of et IS 1d )11 )0 Dolls' Carriages, CRADLES, pec. I r - m Wilton 38 urn all •d Have Just Received a Ton of... i.t 1 L , From the Factory. Customers can be sup- plied while it lasts. • Wilton & Turnbull BUGGIES BUCCIES g IAI hl I CTVI CO • EWAN & CO., BRUSSELS CARRIAGE WORKS, Are ready to supply the demand of the public for any kind of wheeled rig as they have a FINE, LARGE Steak from the BEST Manufacturers iu Canada, in addition to their own make, all Bold at CLOSE PRIDES, Rubber Tyred Wheels. We make a specialty of the Hard Dunlop Rubber Tyred Wheels, the tyre being put o0 your own buggy wheele while you wait, or we can supply both wheels and tyre at very low prime. Every owner of a good boggy should have the Dunlop put on by Ewan & 0o. Work guaranteed all right ae we keep nothing but firet.alase workmen. D. Ewan will devote a good share of his time in attending to the Bale roomelae the Go. has secured a iiret•olaee Horse Sheer for the blacksmith shops All wood work in our line and general bleokemithing done on our promisee and at As low figures as can be obtained anywhere, Oar own make of Buggies this year are all 37 iuobee longer in the body than other Baggies and for STYLE and COMPORT oaunot be beaten. We use the long distance, 1,000 mile axle, one or two pilings in a season ie all they require. It will pay anybody who wants a firet•olaee rig to come 25 miles to gee our Show Rooms thio season before baying as our aaeortment le large and good and we are always well pleased to have people call and examine our stook which is the largest ever shown in Brussels. 1'We mean bueinese. EWANl.al Co., i3ruaeale. Makers, &o,, .Buggies. Wagons, Carte and Wheelbarrows always on hRnd,