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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1870-09-02, Page 458i011 Biih Y* MARE, * bt front: white strip - da spa -vie aa to their Ned by tbe - .5taffe P. O. . 1394_ in, • the public Stable in iea can be )rse$ * and - 917-tf perty in the per cent, IER, oderich. 25 acres, 21 d log house, L. and a first orner of lot Co. Iluron. 5 miles from farm is well l either with therparticu- anises ifORTct N. 'air. • es. e subscrib: et the 25th on the back, mare with a ng grey colt. aa will leaa liberally -re- NOR, ierepter P.G. 135-tf. ETT ng in every •axstwice by Boot( Store, De, Seefatthe a being well RICES 80-tf. ;National PIlla new discovery keilicine. They coeeposed of Dly vegetable -act prepared newly diner - process, end : sugar coated. or are the great xI and stomach ifier.They- act ithe liver with gical effect, are d;" scares • thorou: • & have equal as a first farnily Pill- cirealars with box . HICKSON •s generally. & Co., Brougham, Ont BER at their Mills, age of lain - DRY PINE et kindle- viz t inch, clear.. A a quarter, and. sea and under. 'on boards :and oard and $rk Id at reduced ass plannin ry, and intend inds- constantly able toproestre umber at their sed. ill can have it Iowestpossible 114.-tf DURUM, ounting-liopee or 1810, Books—and a booksin splend- Christmas and ooks I and Envelopes etc.. eats, I. L. ViolinStrin s. Lpes, and Fa and Boys, g and Boo -kW -60r SEPTEMBER 2, 100. THE RURON EXPOSITOR: The Battle ofTresohwiller. The battle of Treschwiller, called by the Prussians the battle of Wcerth, in'which Gen. McMaho'a was defeated, is thus des cribed by M. Amedee rchard in the Ilioni tear. It took pface Aust 6th. 'c On the morning O the day of the bat-. tle, the Marshal occupied in person, wit portion of his troops, a straight line before Richshofen, in front of the enemy. The remainder -Of his divisionst-were divided in - o two corps of equal, strength, one on the , -left, occupyingWcerth, the other on th e right, 1 . the village of Eberbach. ' The line of battle represented a triangle, the point of which - was turned toward the frontier. About 10 o'clock a Prussian corps d'armee, Sixty thousand strong, appeared to threaten the pesition occupied by the Marshal, _and to - endeavor to pass between Reichshofen and Wcelth. It artived_by the road from Nei- derbronn. After the first engagenient of the tiraillenrs, speedily followed by a sec- ond attack, the Marshal called up the corps Placed at Ederbach, and placed it in battle 'order in front of the .eneray, whont_he 'checked, and soon after obliged to execute a backward movementhereupon a fresh corps &armee, also sixty thousand strong, issued from the forest of Wcerth, which had concealed its march, and threw dense col - mans upon the regiments place in 'front of the village of Wcerth. Twoty-three thous- and men thus found ther*lves in the-pres- enee of one hundred and twenty thousand, provided with an immense amount of artil- leryr The battle had already lasted sever- al hours without the positions occupied by the Marshal having been forced, wh,en in the afternoon, about 5 o'clock, a third corps &armee, this time seventy-four thousand strong, arrived, and passing behind Eber- bach, which had been atatndoned, sought to swamp the Marshal's decimated divisions and to cnt off the line of retreat upon. Ha- gisenau and Saverne. The. Frst French Coipa was taken between three fires. The Marshal decided upon giving up the battle- field, covered with dead, where numbers had triumphed; but, in order to be able to bring together the remains of his divisions, which were in part nbw not,more numerous than brigades, he threw.a regimeht. of cuir- assiera against , the enemy's avant gnarcle. These ' men of iron knew that they were doomed to death. It was the first time that they had ever fought. Men of their brancli of the army had never been seen on a field of battle since Waterloo, bilt they recollected what their fathers had done, and from the first blow they renewed the legendary charges of the hollow road‘of Honain. In spite of the batteriesrin spite, of the mitrailleea, notwithstanding tle ems - fusion occasioned by the men and horses • falling around them, the cuirassiers /eached the front of the Prussian regitnents, oroke them, crushed them, charged on and on, till the a-vant garde, shaken, through its entire thickness; went backward. Bu5 other and More numerous battalions brought the as- sistance of their weght,to the Prussians, who could no long,-er advance, and what re- -nsainecl of our cuirassieas disappeared in a whirlwind :of enemies The first Corps had had its route open..during an hour, another hour Was necessary to acomplish its retreat. The" Marshal had. at hand a regiment of 'ehasseurs. The safety of an army was at stake, he made a sign, the regiment start- ed off; and the prodigies of valor achieved by the: cuirassiers • were renewed by the chassenrs. In their turn they made a fright- ful onslaught; and ,he French_ Army thus enabled to join the but ,k of the forces, was saved. The chasseurs were all killed. One terrible detail. In the thickest part of the battle the Marsh -al sent -a dispatch to •Gen. de Failly, Ordering him to send two diVis- ions to Lamback, to attack the Prussian army inthe rear. The telegraph wrote Has4ba,eh, which is in an opposite directidn, and Gen. ---de Failly's division, full. of ardor, of course found no one on arriving at the latter place: The Ottawa Lumber Trade. Perhaps in no way .can we arrive at a just conception of the magnitude of our lumber operations better than by institut- ing, a comparison with some other enter- prise. For instance, it has been thought a difficult and costly thing for the Dominion to arm and equip a force of 1,250 men to go a -s- an expedition to the Red River territory And so it is. But compared with the lar- ger operations of the lumbermen- of Ottawa valley, the expedition is dwarfed into insig- nificant proportions. Why our lumber ge- nerals are - accustomed to Fend into the Woods annually a . force of 5,000 men, thoroughly armed, provision.ecl an equip- ped for the forest campaign. _ The Red Ri- ver expedition has no cavalry, and- it will go intaavinter quarters when the cold wea- ther •comes on, Not so the lumber army, it has whole squadrons of horses, three or fourthousand in all, and its campaign is perpetual. The cold of winter does not check for a, day its -active duties.. The cutting, and hauling of logs is followed by the driving and sawing, and. subsequent shipping of the lumbei A detachment of voyageurs unequalled in adventurous cour- age and dexterity, attend to the first duty. It takes a force of two thousand • raen aided by the most perfect appliances of modern science to do the sawing. But the great lumber force consists nc. alone of e land army. There is a fleet as well, a formida- ble navy of twenty steamers, and 200 barg- es, manned bytwo thousand men engaged in transporting the lumber to market.' Op- erations so vast, by land and water, cannot be conducted withou'.; an ininiense caftlay, And we are scarcely surprised to learn that the annual expenditure for wages and sup- -irdiels is 0,812,425. This sum is in excess tof t e entire annual revenue of New Bruns- wick,d Nova Scotia. Scarcelv less im- 1 presiiy.e is the fact that the fixed capital in- vested in the manufacturing and carrying of lumber amounts to $3,675,000, a sum more than twice hi great as was paid by the Dorninior. for the North-WestTerritory ! Thus a few firms of the,enterprising men of Ottawa Valley have invested in their busi- ness twice the aniount 'of,tbefi!eirchase of of half a continent, - and annually expend more than the revenue of two Provinces to carry it on. If the reader, alarmed at the magnitude of these figures, questions their correctness, we have only to add that they are taken from an official report presented at the late session of Parliament. .0 • sa - Old Folks Items. Read, not to contra.diet and confute, nor to believe awl take for granted, not to talk and discourse, but to weigh and consider. Honor with some is a sort, of paper credit with which men are obliged to trade, who are deficient in the sterling cash of morality and religion. False happiness renders men stern end proud, and that happiness is never commu- nicated. True happiness renders them -kind and sensible, and that happiness is'always shared. , Learn the value of a man's words and ex- pressions and you know him. Eaoh man has a measure of his own for everything; this he offers youin advertently in his words: He who has a superlative for everything wants ai measure for the great ter small. Truth will ever be unpalatable to those who are determined not to relinquish error, but can never give offence to the honest and well-meaning, for the plain dealing re- monstrances of a friend differ from the ran- cour of an enemy, as the friendly probe of a physician from the dagger of an assassin. Truth is always consistent with itself, and wants nothing to help it out.. It is always near at, hand, and sits upcin our lips, and is ready to drop out before we are aware ; whereas a lie is troublesonae, and sets a man's invention upon the rack; and one trick needs a great many more to make it good. There can be no frienship where there is no freedom. Friendship loves e free air, and will not, be penned in straight and narrow disclosures. It will speak freely, and acts so too, and take no ill where no ill is meant, nay, where it is, it will easily fdr- give, and forget, too, upon small acknow- ledgements. Thete is am -virtue which is more pleas- ing.tban gratitude. To see that kindness is not -thrown away, that some return, how- ever small is made by the‘reeipient, renders us more ready to. do a person a service at another time ; While ingratitude is one of the most frequent originators of hardheart- edness and selfishness. The love of the beautiful calls man to fresh exertions, and awakens hiin to a more noble life, and the glory of .it is, that as painters imitate, poets sing, and statuaries carve, axchitects rear up the gorgeous tro- phies of their skill—as everything becomes beautiful,orderly and magnificent—the ac- tivity of the mind rises to still higher and better objects. The Battle of Wissembourg. Wissembourg is a little town of 6,000 inhabitants, situated upon the Lamer, at the, edge of the French frontier. It is a station upon.the railway from Strasbourg to Mannheim. It is generally marked up- on maps as a fortified town, but this ,is an error. The -Wissembourg lines still exist, but are -unarmed-, and are in a state of ruin. These lines were constructed by Marshal `Villars- in 17-05, during the Spanish war of succession. The best proof that they are nut at present armed is, that, although the Prussians have taken the town,the only gun they have captured is a sinall field- piece. Had there been many guns in posi- tion, they must, of course have fallen into, their hands. Between course, and the Rhine, the country is nearly a dead, flat ; to its left, however, it is broken up into hills, among which the Lauter, which above Wissembourg is a 'Bavarian stream, has its source. The hilt immediately to the left of V; issemboureappeare to be .called Geisberg,- though it is not marked' by that name in the maps I have by me. Between one and two o'clock yesterday, a French division, estimated at 25,000 men, advanced from Wissembourg, crossed the Lauter, and attacked the Fifth and Elev- enth corps d'armee of the Prussians, which were stationed in or near Bergzabern in the Landau road. /Jere the fight raged with the greatest fury. Every orchard, every dwelling was contested with the most ex- treme obstinacy. The French Ohassepet committed the greatest destruction among the Prussian ranks at short distances, but nave hot been able to hear whether the mitrailleuse was brought into action, or, if so, with whet effect The contest was a most obstinate one, the French claim that they were gaining ground, while the Prus- sian a admit that the French fought with -extreme and elespertite bravery. " At this time the CrownPrince moved the Second &Icarian corpsl'armee down the hill of Geisberge probebly as far as the village, marked on the map as Lemb, Which is about two miles distant nom, and a mile to the south of Wissemb_ourg: Following the Lemb-Wissembourg road they crossed over Geisbe-rg, and fell upon the rear of Wissem- boar& cepturine some 500 prieoners. the French tents and stores, and then attacked the French in the rear, these being, there- fore, taken between. two fires. Although taken by surprise, the French appear to have defended • themselves with extreme gallantry, land. contrived to retire from the field of action with the loss only of one four pounder gun, of which the horses were killed. .The Prussian officers speak in terms of high -Eidmiration of the gallantry of their enemies, and these return the compliment, 11 speaking with special laudation of, the Ba- varians. 'How far this account is true I know not, but it -*rti, strong marks of likelihood or' its faoe., and. if -es. r.ton..e vero, is at least ben trovato. Tt .is, at least the connected story which I make eut from a variety of statements. I adinit that there is a Weak point, It is difficult to see how the French, caught in so complete a trap, extricated themselves with the loss of so comparatively few prisoners, and, of one gun only. Driven off the road to their right, they would have no road crossirig the Laiiter until they , reached :Lauterburg, close to the Rhine, a, distance of -seven. or eight miles from Bereetbern, and which a beaten slaty could hardly accomplish in the face of a greatly more numerous. enemy without the loss of many guns' and prison- ers. The more probable explanation ap- pears to me that the Pru ' ssians . coming, clown from Geisberg, kept to the left of Wissembourg, and that the French remain- ing in Wissembourg kept thsne\ett bay un- til the French general was able to thr`Ow- ,baelc his left wing to cover the line of re- treat for his right and centre, in Which case Wissembourg itself would not have fallen into the hands of the Bavarians until the French had passed through it. ,• This, sup - losing the othei porton of the narrative to itaveloeen -correctly: etated, would appear to have been the most. probe ble course of events. In respect to the, number of. troops en- gaged, except as to the broad fact that the French were greatly outnumbered, it would be difficult to form en opinion. The French force was stated at 25,000, but I have no means of judging of the accuracy of this Statement. Upon the Prussianside, ec-. cording to their owe telegrams, three corps d'artnee were engeged. The peace footing of each corps d'arnaee may be put roughly at 25,000 men, the -,war footing at 50,000, or, with the addition of the Landwher, at nearly 100,000 men. At present it may be assumed thatehe strength; of each corps is 50,000 man, but at the same time it is not probable that., the whole force of, each corps was engaged. If only half the strength of each corps was 'erougpt into action we should have a total of 75,000 men, in addi- tion to which we know that a portion . of the Guard was engaged, as the telegram mentioned the First Regiment of the Guard as haying specially suffered. Making, therefore, every possible deduction, it is evident that the Prussians must have had a force engaged at least double that at which the French division is estimated. The ac- tion, therefore, although an uadoubted French defeat, cannot be considered as any- tning but creditablteto French valor. All this is of course dependent upon the accur- acy of the repoits upon which °my account of the battle is founded. At any rate, the strategy of the Crown 1Prince appears to have been brilliant, and it appears prob- able that the Fr,ich will find themselves out-generalledl-ihronghout the campaign. • -sees. • ,Boys and Girls. ' Boys and girls.are not the same. They are born different. and show it -while .they are jam*. • T4P,1:00y-,beby is restless, .and uneasy in his .mother's, arms. .He is never still except when asleep, and even, then tum- bles . from Side to side la lie crib with, sud- den flings of his arms and legs. When he grows beyond balsylmod he plays differently. Without ever beingi,ld 'of it he instinct- ively turns aWay from dolis, lays them aside in indifference, :and freely douaues 1 them to whateverlittle,. girl will have • . them. He dernarids ',balls and bats and drums he turns ' dovsla chairs for horses k 1 .1 I lays hold of all the t2itrings in the house for lines; wants all the sticks made into whips, mounte, lounges and drives four in hand; he asks fur! guns, and weave; you to tell him stories of bears, and lion.s, and tigers, and is amused beyond measure at.their leaping upon and eating up ,cows and oxen. The girl -baby is gentle, even from the first, and leoles quietly out ofthe• blue eyes, or lati"gh- ingly out of the dark ones. She takes na- turally to her dolls, and never wearies of dressing them sand' arranging the - baby - house.' She is gentle in . her plays, and would be frightened with what would fill her brother with a paroxysm of delight; she loves fairy tales and will not laugh . and ask Some absurd qstion about the Babes in the Wood, but rather cries over their sorrows The Sister will smooth pus- sy and hold 'hef tovieglyi,in her lap, while the brother, :wants to see' if the eat can jump, and When s'ie tries' to ga Out of his unde sirable coni'eany will detain her By the leg or tail. Akkd 'these same divergencies of disposition itnd character perpetuate them- selves as the boy or girl grows' older.— There are exceptions, it is true, some boys have all the tastes and gentleness of a femi- nine nature, and some girls have much that is masculine. I do not regret seeing it in either. The gentle boy will not make any the less noble man because there was so much that wes girl -like in. his childhood,. nor will the girl that wasinher ' rudeness, often called a boy, be any the less, but, perhaps, all the more a true and lovely woman.—Dr. Ailcynain's Life at 'Home. --•-• To REMbvE. CHAFF FROM AS" ANIMAL'S EYE.—Mrs. Peter Peck, .Queensbury,. N. Y., writes se --s" All that is needful isf co roll apiece of paper around a little stick any length or size desired, and put into a quill some white coffee crushed sugarand blow it into the eye. Hold the cow by. the horns andtake by surprise. Generally two applica- lions are. sufficient if the film is -completely over the .eye, the sugarr scours, cleanses and heals all at the same time. I tried it _twice , in the winter of 1864 on, the same cow -with complete success. Both thnes it was from oat Oleg, and both times the white. film_ had covered the eyes. Pulverized leaf sugar is eqmally good to reinove • the film from the human eye." _A Agents! Read This! E will pay'agentS a salary of $30 per -week and expenses, or -allow alarge commission, to sell our new wonderfu inventions. Address, M. WAGNER & Co., Marshall, Mich. GOOD NEWS! —FOR THE— People of Seaforth HOGS FOR SALE. LIVE,HOGS, averaging about 300 lbs., for 7-it.1 sale at GRAY'S CHEESE FACTURY, GORRIE. Price at Gorrie, Qats. HOUSE — HOUSE AND LOT FOR SALE! ----0-- TpOR SALE. CHEAP, A DESIRABLE OVAL- FohnLSIt4trCeetil,°Sijea,SfEorthP.leasantly _situated, on St. For further particulars apply to JOHN SEATTER, .Druggist, . i. AND BAKF • SEAFonTill July 14, 1870 &c, Main St 136 tf.— • CONFECTIONERY STORE. _ _ OA.AGI, .,, (LATE OF SYRATFORD,) BEGS to inform the inhabita,nts of Seaforth that he has opened a Bakery and Confection- ery Store, in the premises lately occupied as CarmichaePs Hotel, one door South of Mr. F. Veal's Grocery Store, where he will have on hand at all times a choice assortment of Bread, 'Fancy Cakes, Weddipg CakesCocti ioEoR, EAmn,faendaollnkie.nrdy,& c Also s. f SUMMERDRINKS,such as Soda Water, Lemonad•3, c. Customers supplied daily with Bread at their Residences. 9-IVE ME TRIAL. 3 °AV SE'etFoRTH, June 30, 1870. -4NA Gil ' Plies for TEA promptly attended to. DINC CAKES and Sup - N. B. Orders for PARTIWESED Victoria Organs AND MELODEON'S MANUFACTURED BY - S. WILLIAMS, TORONTO ON. •-••••••-•--1 LIST OF PRIZES TAKEN BY R. S- Williams' Instruments UNION EXHIBITION, TORONTO., 1861. FIRST PRIZE AND DIPLOMA! —..-.-...—.....• 0 • - 1 Provincial Exhibition, Toronto, 1862. • . FIRST PRIZE AND DEPLOMA1 Provincial Exhibition, Kingston, 1863. FIRST PRIZE AND HIGHLY COMMENDED Provincial Exhibition, Hamilton, 1864. Vansrr Proviucial Exhibition, London; 1865. First Prize and Highly Recommended, Provincial Ex- hibition, Lower Canada, Mon- treal, 1865. FIRST PRIZE, Provincial Ekhibition, Toronto, 1866. 'FIRST PRIZE & SPECIALLY RECOMMEN- DED, Provincial Exhibition, Kingston, 1867. We have kept no record of County Exhibition at which our Instruments have always taken FIRST PRIZES, whenever exhibited in colnpetition with others. PIANO FORTE • Our stock will be found large and well select- ed, and comprises first and. second-class approved makes, and the new Union Piano Company's Piano. A n inspection is solicited before buying., Address, R. S. WILLIAMS, Toronto, Ont. ELLIOTT & ARMSTRONG, Agents, Seafortb. Toronto, Ja&y. 28, 1870. 12 - ly. tHE SION OF THE GOLDEN HE subscriber begat° inform the -public that he has just received a great variety of Sad- dles and TR UNKS, Which he is prepared to sell At Prices Almost Unparelleled. ; : 0 COLLARS of every description, warrant.. ed not to hurt the horse's neck. In sthe way of Ilarness OF ALL R1NDS, He is, • as heretofore, in a position to give his customers as good. value for their money as " Fothetestablishment in Ontario. . . , gualityof work and material, enlployed, putabla BilOP OPPOSITE KI1W & - JOHN CAMPBELL. Seaforth, Jan. 31. 1870. 52-tf. MONEY TO LEND. ON Farm or desirable village property at 64 per cent Payments made to suit the bor- rower. Apply to A. G.1•1cDOUGA-LL, tnsurance Agent and Commissioner, Seaforth, or to JOHN SEATTER, Exchange Broker,Seaorth. March 25th, 187E/.ly GRAIN STORE -HOUSE FOR SALE OR TO RENT. TnLAE RG E NEW GRAIN STORE -HOUSE,— Subscriber offers for -Sale, or to Let, a Capacity about 40,000 bushelS, with horse grain Elevator. The building is situated on the Grand Trunk Switch, on the South side of the railway at Seaforth. J ULIUS DUNCAN; SEAYORTH, August 5th, 1870. 139— DY.SPEPSIA TAYSPEPSIA can be effectually cur:* 1.1 ed by using DR. CALDWELL'S pc:$ DYSPEPSIA REMEDY. See circul- ar and. eertifitates aceomintnying each 0. bottle. Sold by R. LUMSDEN and. E. HICKSON & CO, Seaforth, and medicine dealers generally. WOODRU FF, BENTLY Sr CO. 117-25ins. 13roughe ne Opt. - DANIEL,MoPHAIL, LICENSED AUCTIONEER FOR THE COUNTIES •OF PERTH AND HURON BEGS to return his sincere thaailasi to the in. 'habitants lof Perth.for their liberil.patrona.ge during the past six years. He would. respectfully announce that he will attend to all orders. in. PERT/1 or HURON' for 18`i0: 10raers left' at the "EXPOSITOR" Office, in. &aforth, the Beacon - Office, Stratford, or the _Advocate, in -Mitchell, will be promptly attended to. Conveyancing, and Real Estate Agency attend ed. to, and loans negotiated. OFFICE—East side of the market: Mitchell, Ont. - Mitchell, Feb. 25, 1870. - 11641. REAP THIS! THE PAIN KILLER, COURT OF 'CHAN- . CERY, &C., &O., &O. Perry Davis. and Radway have played out in the United States, and now they come to this country, and are trying, with the aid of the Court of Chancery to compel the Canadian pub- lic to use their nostrums, but they find it up- hill Work,asthe public has become alive to the danger of using such nostrums. Radviay has to bladder the corks of his to keep it from eating - them up, and where is the man who would- like to plat such trash ihto his stomach' And the London "Star," of the 30t1 September, 1867, tells the qualities of Perry Davis' Pain -Killer, as it not only killecl the pain of G. A. Hill, but it killed him, and Davis warns the purchasers to lie careful to get the genuine Pain Killer,—so_ judge that G. A. Hill must have-got.the genuine, as they admit that his wife gave him a tea- spoonful of the Pain Killer at midnight, and before the light of day he was dead. Perry Davis is dead and so is his Pain Killer, as was shown by them on oath, in Court last May, in the City of Hamilton. They swore that I reduced their sales in Canada, in 1865, •6Ver $10,000, and in three years $27,304, as -they could not compete; with ine, .they asked the Court of. Chancery to drive inc out ef the market. From the disrepute brought on the word Pain Killer by the present parties, T have changed name of my Pain Killer formerly, to PAINICU- IRER. The Pain Kurer has cured eases of the the most obstinate character of'Epileptic Fits. ExPerience has fully demonstrated that no remedy has proved so universally prompt and efficient in relieving Cholera, Cholic, Pains, Coughs and in fact every pain and ache that the human family is subject to, as the PAIN KURER ; it is besides a safe remedy. KENNEDY'S LINIMENT Has been the means of curing diseases of various kinds that had baffled all other remedies, besides the skill of our most practical doctors, Victoiia Hanlon, Sister of Ohazity, cured of Erysipelas, after a test and suffering of two yeaisby four of our leading dc*tors, and bit as a hopeless case. Mr. White, of Peterborough,—his son made to walk after being for years without the use of his limbs and: after all the medie.al 'faculty had failed even the no torious Dr. Potts tried his skill to the amount of fifteendollara. Joseph Clarkson, Town of Barrie, his son was restoredto his sight, after being nine months blind, • Catharine Crawford, Hamilton, cured of para- lytic stroke, having lost the use of her arm and hand. for six inontlia,,and four of our leading doc- tors tried to cure her, 'elle tried the Electric Bat- tery six tunes, all to no purpose, but two bottles of Kennedy'r Linimentcosting only 75 cents, awed her as well as ever she was. Those cases Ibove are only a few of many thousands ain pos- aession of the proprietor from all parts of the -world. Yeu will only hear one sentiment, and that is that a bottle of Kennedy's Liniment is worth a hundred of any other preparation for eu- ring everything. KENNEDY'S HAIR RESTORATIVE Contains no sulphery sediment norany niihealthy drug. It will return any head of flair after be- coming grey, to its`natural colour, iand niake it more beautiful than at the age of No lady Or gentleman will ever beeoine bald or grey who uses Kennedy's Hair Restorative according to di- rections with each. bottle. For immediate dress- ing and. beautifying the hair .as well as a 'way of promoting its continued and luxuriant growth, the Restorative has no equal, Use Kennedy's Liquid Blueing, for Wathing urposes or Writing Tele an :article that klrary Washerwoman -should_ use -to know J.te =hie as it will not strea,d or spot theirelothea, almeanse,any sediment in the water. Use Kennedy's Dead Shottat and MiceExter- minater. 139-33a- 0