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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1893-09-01, Page 7893, mom, SEFTEMBEtt I 1893 , s INb- hoe th TEXT (S. st price, tvII and hand iS 'oraplete E,n's and 7 latest kis is no 6 Ricb. door to 1338 • prem- xem out ok like 5es and 1. We ▪ do 'it Lr place ars rner of residence, lent s.er Ts, .RIO. rk ; W. In Come uelph ; • ; few E.. sale at instal- klao:sheet OS. ky s he arris, and exits, Bain and eman con - Li .- 1 Ice trt- ai- lege SP- lmes bd. ryi still Idles or a • Bi. td ort de of :kept hing - *Mon. • man db. °NZ) ENS0`211 Path the method and results when Eyrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant -and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys- tem effectually, dispels colds, head- aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro. clued, pleasing to the taste and a& teptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial iLi its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances its tnanyexcellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 75a bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Manufactured only by the CALIFORNIA..FIG SYRUP CO, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE. NE. NEW YORK, N.Y r,=-4 BUILDERS' HARD C -el b1)7.-1 • FC:5 b0:71•1,..! ▪ Pl:1 CD • ta-t O o C.) tee ssf he =4, CI3 4C3 I:1 • ,.1-1 0 ;-1 cS) P.4 e-4 • ccr eas1 s•—i re, • lee — tn e -o 1) se= E „CI • C') bil) erd eCI • s.ei cfl Cea 0 0 0 E Cn It/ •••▪ 0 C.) W . P.g CD o 0 oo a • cn 0 EAST SIDE CIRCULAR SAW, IL 0 a I •"` ,te" ea as' Ese I. `• • • • RAWBER CUREIS /.4 COLIC HOLER CHOirERA-IvORSUS DIARRHOE AND YSEN TER SUNkER C 'AILS otila T CHILDREN°'/ADIJLTS PrI ce 35c r5 / BEWARE. 0 F in!TA7101.15 • •...,P1.; NEW BOOKS dust Arrived —AT— C. W. PAPST'S BOOKSTORE, By all the leading authors, at POPULAR PRICES. CALL ANDSEE THEM AT C. W. PAPST'S SEAFORTH, ONT. • . What Have You Done To Da 1 saw a-fariner when the day was done; The setting sun had sought Its crimson bed, And the mild stare came forward one by one; I saw the sturdy farmer, and I said.: "What have you done to -day? 0 farmer, say ?" Oh, I've 'sown the wheat In yonder field And pruned my orchard to increase the yield And turned the furrow for a patch of corn - This have I done since early morn." I saw the blacksmith in his smithy doer, When the day had vaniehed and the west grew red, And all the weary noise and strife were o'er; - I saw the kindly blacksmith and Lsaid : What liaise you done to -day? Oh blacksmith say?' "Oh, I have made two plowshares all complete And nailed. the shoes on many a horse's feet, And, oh, my friend. I cannot tell you half," The man of muscle responded with a laugh. I saw a miller when the day was gone. And all the sunlight from the hills had fled, And tender shadows had crept across the lawn, I eaw the dusty miller, and I said : What havelyou done to -day? Qh miler gray ?" "Oh, I have watched My mill from morn till night ; Did you ever see flour so snowy and white? And many are the mouths to -day I've fed," And the merry miller laughed as this he said. I saw another when the'night drew nigh, And turned each daily toileafrom his task ! When gold and crimson cloudlets decked the sky ; A drink seller -and of him I asked; What have you done -to -day? Drink seller'say ?" • But the drink seller turned with drooping head,. And not a single word in answer said, ° What had he done! His work he knew full well, Was plunging souls in deepest hell ! • -Exchange. Gaieties. —Musical Dun—" If you don't pay my little bill I'll sit down here and play this accordion all night and I only know ! Ta- ra-ra-boom-de-ay." —Judge—" Prisoner. do , you acknow- ledge your guilt?" Prisoner—" No, my lord. The speech for the defence has con- vinced even me of my innocence." —" Are these complexion powders war- ranted fast colors?' " Well, madam, 1 cannot say they will wash like the natural complexion; but they certainly will not come off on the coat sleeve." —The latest fad is to put the postage stamp on the flap at the back of the en- velope. If this eccentricity develope to any great extent the County Councils will need another lunatic asylum for post office clerks. - —Butcher---" Have you delivered Mr. Adamsribs and Miss Tanker's tongue ?" Assistant—" Yes, air." Butcher=" Then take Mr. Yorick's liver and brains and de- liver them at once `; he said he wanted them at twelve orolock." Minister—" Mr. Hardserise, I didn't see_ you put anything on the plate -this morning when I made an appeal to the congregation to think of the heathen in Central Africa." Mr. Hardsense—" Well,I thought of them." —Whisky ie your greeted enemy," said a clergyman to one of his flock. " But," said Mr. Jones, "doesn't the Bible say that we are to love our enemies?" " Oh, yes, Jones, but it does not say we are to swallow them." —Bismarck telegraphed to Carl Helmerde ing on his 70thAirthday as follows :— " Heartfelt good wishes but the first 70 years are the best." Perhaps so ; but the average man would take hie chances on the second 70, and even the third 70. —American humor and moral integrity are both exemplified in the following On arrival of the evening coach at a certain town it got noised abroad that a detective had come by it. Six of the leading citizens were seen to make for the woods in a canter. Mistress—" Bridget, I want you to un- derstand that I am not goiug to stand any more flirtations between,. you and) that policeman at the corner." 13ridget—•nhen, mum, I'll be after 'stain' yez. I can get a new place any day in the wake ; but a par- laceman that loves yer for yersel' is not picked up so May. • Bits of Fun. — Mamma (harriedly)=-Dot, I :wish you would mind the baby. Little Dot (mysti- fied)—I don't know what he says. - My Lord," said the foreman of an Irish jury when giving in his verdict; "we find the man who stole the mare not guilty." — You can be a Prince in Italy for $13,- 000, a Duke for $10,000, a Count for $5,- 000. No quotations are given for ffelVmade men. —" See here, waiter, this pie hasn't any .apples in it." Waiter—I know it sah ; it am made ob ewapowated apples. — Photographer—Now,then, Mr. Crosser, if you please, look pleasant for a moment —that's it—a moment longer—there ! You may now resume your natural ex- pression. —First` Weekly Citizen—Well, the secret" of my success, sir, was push, simply push, Second Wealthy Citizen—Ah, that's the difference, you see. The secret with me was pull. —A little girl, in order to prove that it is wrong to cut off the tails of horses and dogs, quoted the Scriptural injunction, " What God has joined togither let no man put asunder." — " He's a great editor, isn't he ?" said one reporter to another. "I should say so. Why, he gets so used to saying 'we' that he often pdte two fares in the street -car Ooket-box." "No, my ton, people do not areuo to get at the truth of the matter. They simply wish to prove that their position is the true one, even if t -hey have to lie Jo prove that they are telling the truth." • A Scotchman who wanted to sell some bees inserted the following advertisement in the local paper : "Extensive sale of live stock, comprising no less than 140,000 head, with an unlimited right of pasturage." As a pleasant faced woman passed the corner, Jones touched his hat to her and re- marked feelingly to his 'companion my boy, I owe a great deal to that woman." "Your mother ?" was the query. _ " No, my landlady." •• A Scotch minister had made great pro- gress in getting the families of a colliery dis-i trict to brighten, their homes withobirde of song and plumage. One of the poorer women saw she was being outdorA by her neighbors, and resolved to have a bird iu a cage. She bought a cage and put a crow in it. When the minister called, he asked if the bird was a good songster. "Na, na," she replied ; "it's nae stinger ava, but its a graund, graund thinker." Cures for Love. Absence is one of the means of curing love. Two thousand' years ago, Ovid advised his readers who wished to cure themselves of an unlucky attachment, to flee the capital, to travel, hunt, or till the soil. "Love," said Coleridge, "is a local an- guish. I am fifty miles away and not half somiserable." But other men have found that absence in- creases love. 1.49. Rochefoucauld probably hit upon the truth when he said that "Ab- sence destroys weak passions, but increases strong ones, as the wind extinguishes a candle but blows up a fire." If the love is all fancy and has little strength, it may be cured by personal contact with the object. But the safer plan, perhaps, is to keep out of the way. Hence travel is a good expedi- ent. Business, perhaps, is a better one. Ovid said : "If you desire to end your leve employ yourself, and you will conquer, for love flees business." Still another expedient is refleption upon the unhappiness of married life. A man in search of this view can find it everywhere. Addison eaid that "Beauty soon grows familiar to the lover, fades in his eye, and palls upon the sense; and Hazlitt, that Dick's ConditionPow0ers Fattens Horses and Cattle • • THF HURON EXPOSIT' THE WOMAN WHO WORKS, EllId LS tin:(1, will find a special lic;ip in Doctor Pierce's Favorite Pro- scription. Perfectly. harmless in any condi- tion of the female sys-. tem. It promotesall the natural functions, and builds up, strengthens, regulates,' and cures. For women approach- ing confinement, nurs- ing mothers, and every weak, run -down, deli. cate women, it is an In- vigorating; supporting peculiarly 'adapted to their tonic thas needs. But it's More than that, too. It's the only guaranteed remedy for all the functional distuebancos, painful disorders, and chronic weaknesses of womanhood. In "female complaints' of every kind, periodical pains, bearing -do in sensations, internal inflamma- tion, and kindred ailments, if it ever fails to bene4t aor cure, you have your money 'back. f; -Something; else that pays the dealer better, may be -Offitrecl as "just as good." Perhaps it is, for him., bet it can't be, for you. • "Though' amiliarity may not breed con- tempt, it ta, es the edge off admiration." Goethe s id : " With most marriages it does not ta e long for things to assume a very piteou look." But none of these men married ha • pily. Goldsmith said: "Many of the Engli h marry in order to have one happy mon h in their lives," And Colley Cibber : Oh how many torments lie in' the small circle .f a wedding -ring 1" But, und ubtedly, the best way to get rid of one love L to have another. " All love may be exp lied by love, as poisons are by other poison ," 'says Dryden. Heine says: "The most effective antidote to woman is woman. 1. such a case the medicine is often more noxious than the malady ; but it is, at any rate, a chauge, and in a disconsolate love affair a cha ge in the inamorata is unques- tionably this beet policy." The `1Business Faculty"— Bqys That Have It. Many boys have the natural aptitude for business. They like to be in the world and of the world, to sherpen their wits against the wits of there, to combat circumstances and prove superior to them. They are fond of saying they are "up to the times," that they" know a good thing when they see it." T ey take nothing for granted. Like charit , they prove all things. They are active, igilant, ingenious and self coati. dent. The are fluent in conversation, and they endea or to please. They have natur- ally an aler manner, and are quick but care- ful in maki g decisions. They are apt to discover qu ckly the more prominent traits of a man's haracter. Such qualitiescome naturally to many boys. The go to make up what is called "the bugin ss faculty." This term means these five ti ings : integrity, industry, good judgment, ush, and capacity for observa- tion. Thos who naturally possess thee° have every reason to congratulate them- selves ; for with the addition of one other requisite— ractical knowledge of details, to bp obtained when the oboicie of occupation is .nsade--the have the ammunition for the battlesof commercial life. It makes no great diffe erne how humble the start ie. Many Of the most successful business men—. men who h ve made their nanses known to half the 4nercantile world—began their cornmerciall career as cash boys, or at the cross-roads store, or on the farm. Those whlo do not naturally vossess the five qualities m ntioned, need not be discour- aged. The business faculty may be acquired to a large agree and it may also be culti- vated ands arpened. Ysputh is -the time for molding eh raoter, and nature is so kind to an ambitio s determined boy that there is no telling to what degree of success he may at- tain. An!Artist's Boyhood. "The S ory of Millet's. Early Life," as told by hi brother in the "Century Mag- azine," give a pleasant impression of the gurroundin g of the boyhood of the great painter. he Millet house was known as one at the coor of which one never knocked in vain, an what poor people most needed was always given them, whether it was food, a shelter, r clothes. When night came, some old pe son, perhaps two or more, would arrive, and ask for a night's shelter. "They jvere never refueed. Sometimes they would come when it was raining, and their clot es would be badly wet. My grandmoth r would have them sit down by the Wood fi e—soch as they have in those large fireplaces of Normandy—telling them to warm themselves, and to dry their clothes while waiting for supper.1 "As these beggars ohcupied tho beat places by the fire, it often' happened that we children grumbled , because,e, although we were cold, tosze could not get near the fire. Coniplainirigito our grandmother, she would say, Have patience ! these poor people are cdld and Wet Let them get dry, and after sipper they will go to bed. You have noth- ing to corlaplain of, for you have good clothes, and can wait without suffering till the Y go to reat. Then you will have the fire for Yourse yes.' '";Whenl supper was ready these guests were serveki &et, seated as they were by the fire, whil we went to the table. Our grandinotl er waited on herself last, and then wen to si with the unfortunates, "Joan rancois early showed the direc- ection his enius would take. On his way to sChool, f he met any one having some peculiarit of appearance,he would be struck by it, and reproduce his impressicin on the first obje t having an available surface. These dra Inge were made in a strikingly lifelike at le, and wore unmistakably the portraits pf those whom he thus repre- sented." The Great Heiress. ERCIas THE NEW YORK HERALD. Among all the many social debuts that are coming the one that will excite the most in- terest isl that of Helen M. Gould, only daughter of the great financier and his fay- orite among all his children. The enitrance into society -of this young woman ie likely to be accomplished by not a little stir ancl comment. Miss Gould has passed the age when young women are as a rule introdtfced to the social world in a, for- mal way 4 She is no longer a young girl in the strict sense of the Word, for in the mat- ter of years she is very fairly into the, twenotjes!and is grave and womanly beyond , her ,years. - She will represent 15 million dollars Or more of[ her own, all good hard eash, or, what is, as good, railroad securities whose tendency is ever upward, and property that is always steadily increasing in value. She owns the splendid Fifth avenue residence her father slo long occupied, and the great man- sion at 4vington on the Hudson, where the Gould fittnily spent the summer. These 1 ,great properties are the exclusive possession of Miss Gould, and they are gorgeously and contpletely furnished throughout. ' To gether fthey are w `rth quite $1,300,000. Miss' Helen Gem d is not strikingly hand - 1 some, Iput she is v ry sweet and womanly in her manner, and 'he has ten million dollars and rnbre in money that is absolutely her own, and that will compound as the years go by.So she ne'd not fear that she will become a languish ng wallflower in the ball and reception roo , s that she will figure in during, the social season now drawing near. Her recommendatgens to favor are too many and too weighty. ' Few young women ,who figure or are soon to figure in New York's social whirl. are so little, known as is Helen Gould. Even the leaders in the circles where she is to enter - Children Cry for do not know the young woman well. They know, to be sure, that she is the daughter of the late Jay dould, that she is said to be a good and °banning girl, and that she is enormously rich. Their fund of informa- tion runs out at this point, and -they are waiting with some curiosity to add to it by means of personal observation. The social debut of Miss Gould has been delayed considerably beyond the time that it would have been made by the deaths of her father and mother. There was never a daughter more devoted to her mother than was Helen Gould to herhi during the latter's declining years. , The two were very like in temperament, and their constant compen- ionship made the daughter the counterpart of her mother in disposition and manners— & result that was good for the young girl, for while the wife ot Jay Gould never figur- ed in society, but always shrank from so` doing, she was mine the less a superior wo- man in many was. The death of this mother threw the young girl upon her own resources. She could not enter into society, and, indeed, had no wish to do so. Iustead, she devoted herself to her father, who had become partly an in- valid, and up to the time of his death she was his mainstay and his solace in his hours . of suffering and sickness. And so it is that Mies Gould will enter into society a oemparative stranger to its members. Those who knew Helen Gould give evi- dence that she is attractive both in appear- ance and manners. Rather retiring and un - Resuming, she still has that power to charm that marks some young women of more than ordinarily quiet ,demeanor. She, is not what would be called a beautiful wo- man, but she is a handsome one taken either from a man's or a woman's point of view. 1 Of medium height, Miss Gould is a brun- ette, but not a very pronounced one: Her hair is dark, but not of the inky blackness that marked her father's hair and beard, and her eyes are; of the undefinable shade that is neither dark nor brown, but that seems to change and alternate. Her features are strong withodt the isard lines that were worn into her father's face, and they are further softened] by the sweeter and more amiable traits that came to her from her mother—not striptly beautiful, as has been said, but still ra women whose face would command more than a I passing glance, no matter where seen. She is of graceful fig'ure and the walk of ene used to pedestrian exer- cise. Such is the greatest heiress in Amer - as she is seen to -day. Work among the city poor was Miss Gould's hobby !before l her parents died, and since their death she has had more ample means to,continue the work. She is a famnue pedestrian and a good horse -woman. Her retired life has made of her somewhat ' of a etudent, and she is a skilful musician. If she ever had literary tendencies, as at one time her father had, she has carefully concealed the fact. She is practically mistressi of her vast fortune, but it is not likely tct suffer at her hands, for she is said to have! as keen a mind for business -as even her !brother George, now the head of the family' and chief conservator of the vast Gould interests. When not in Irvington, on the Hudson, Mies Gould litres in the mansion on Fifth avenue and FOrty-seventh street, in which her father in his life time resided. Her brother Edwin lives in the adjoining house just around the corner, and George Gould, with his &milr , still further up town. It is characterist c of this young woman that she likes to have sOme one to care for and in a 'lease look after. While she was budding into woinanhood she had an invalid mother and a father in the clutch of a dread disease to claim- her attention and care. Besidee she had her poor, whe? also entered into her daily thoughts and work. Now she still has the'poor, who are always with us, and she has besides her younger brother How- ard, who, thmigh developing into manhood, is still not beyond the care of his elder sister, who has in a I way always been his protector and adviser, and who in former days helped hun out of ,more than one small trouble. Thi ii brother has, however, de- veloped into ia bright, manly fellow, who is in more Ways than one a credit to the elder sister, Who was always his guide and. MisefrinSeomng aG.ould's 'comiog debut are somehow Some of the knowing ones in discussing i ex- pecting thato/ she will dazzle every one by the grandeur of ber costumes and by the magnificencelof her jewels and all that. She could, of -course, afford to command the best that Worth or any other famous maker of fine feather si for fine or indifferent birds could produpe. She could startle the wealthy dames of New York by a display of diamonds when she 1" comes out." But she is not that kind of a young woman. Those who will be present when she makes her formal entrance into society will see a hand- emne young woman, well balanced,, well dressed and well mannered. And it ifs odds in favor of the statement that the more they see of her t4e more j they will ike her, for as has been said, she is a modest, charming, womanly woman. ; And that Means a good , deal. 1 i • ..por IVlending Little Things. . "And I want a llsrge sheet of black court plaster, said a yo ng woman at a notion counter thelother iay, " which," she pro- ceeded to explain to a friend at her side, "is my chief inendin implement. I always mend glovewith pnart plaster, using bleak or the light tints, according to the shade of, the glove. I turn the glove inside out and fit the plaster over l the rent, first of coarse drawing the edges Itogether as the surgeon does a torn skin. 1 It is much neater than sewing and lasts longer. Sometimes I get an -ugly three cornered rent in a gown. My court.plaster case l Mends the rent, leaving practipaliy1 no indications of it. I mend fans, elippere, lace everything almost, with li Dishonesty at Church Fairs. i To charge from fifty cents to one dollar for a bon tonniere which represented only the cost of picking the flowers out of the fields, is robbery pure and simple, writes Edward W. Bok in the September Ladies' Home Journal. f[On two differeut occasions that I distinctly rememlier where I was asked fifty cents for not five cents actual worth of flowers, I ,was laughingly told by the youug lady to whom I t' ndered a banknote that, 3e "We neVer giv1change at this fair, and gentlemen, like ourself, won't insist upoh it, we know." " was not enough that II t was overcharge.t, but I must be twice robbed, a,nd this, in each instance, in !a church and in the name of cherity ! Is it any wonder, I ask, that it is so difficult to induce men to attend bazaars and faire? They know what is in store for them if they attend. ;They know that the innocent " 25 cents adthission" represents an exit costing all the way from,$10 to $25, in proportion to their good nature. I am calling this prac- tice by HS proper name, because I think it is time that the great and noble works cliine for honest charity in this country should not be asked to stiffer, as many Of 'them are un- doubted' gaffe ing to.day,' from this and other forms of a use practised in the name of charity. It is in no resect creditable to a charit- 'hie or religious institution that it allows its steeple or roof to rise above the ground, or widens its works and influence by the means and methods cornmonly practised at bazaars or faire. I Note n I see how any self-respect- ing woman can a ilfully place& price upon an article that ahe knows in her heart repre- sents at east't o or three times its holiest value. And ret christian women do these things, as both rou aed I know—womed in i all other respec s, upright in every motive. They de it be &use they believe that the PitOer's Castoriai , i 464' fit el 9,k 1.04.1rfor6 _ 1,pBY SPECIAL#ROYA APPOINTMENT There's Nothing Like : SOAP IT DOES AWAY WITH B OILINC HARD RUBBINC B ACKACHES SORE HANDt, LET 1 ANOTHER onWASH- DAY GO BY WITHOUT TRYING Sunlight REFUSE CHEAP IMITATIONS cause in which it is done excuses the action, forgetting the fact that charity, of all things, was never intended to be a tool for dishon- est practices. Nothing will bring fairs more quickly into disrepute, among men particu- larly, as the extortions allowed to be prac- tieed at them. The managers who resent lottery and gambling schemes at fairs quiet- ly blink at the practice of extortionate prices, as if the latter represented a less graver sin. News Notes. — Recently two well-known inhabitants of Moore township, near Sarnia, celebrated the 501h anniversary of their wedding. They were Mr. and Mrs. James Jarvis. The house was crowded with guests from all parts, even as far as California. Mr. Jarvis has reached the ripe age of 73, while his charming partner is 74. They were mar- ried in St. George's, Hanover 'Square, Lon- don, England, August 14th, 1843, and came to this country many years ago. —While the excureionists were waiting on Saturday morning at St. George, for the special train to cou-vey the -n ti the Palle, Mise Stella Franklin, a young woman who had hurried to roach the station, suddenly droppad on the platform. She was imme- diately carried into the station and a doctor summoned, but never recovered conscious-. neas, passing away in a few minutes. She was a daughter of Mr. James Franklin, of Brantford. Heart failure was the supposed cause of death. — James Watson, farmer, concession 4, Lobo, was found drowned one night lately. He had some empty barrels soaking in a creek near by, and early in the evening drove to thespot for them. Not returning, his hired man went to look for him,saw that the horses were standing by tire oreek, and, divining the accident, searched for and found the body in the water. There is a deep hole undo.. the bridge, into which it is supposed a barrel had fallen, and that Wat- son had attempted to recover it with fatid result. Deceased was a highly respected young farmer, and leaves a widow and two small children. He had but recently settled in Lobo, coming from his former home in East IWiliianis. A Queen Under Restraint. Queen Wilhelmina of Holland, though only twelve years old, already manifests the intractability of temper for which her farther was distinguished. It appears that Her Majesty has become wearied by the salutes with which her loyal subjects greet her when she drives abroad; and on a late occasion, when out with her English gover- ness, Miss Saxon -Winter, she positively re- fused to make any acknowledgment Of these demonstratione. For her disobedience she was ordered to bed immediately after the return to the palace, when she indignantly exelaimed, "What! Am I, the Queen of the Netherlands, to undress and go to bed at seven o'clock ?.' But Miss Saxon -Winter's authority, reinforced by that of the Queen Regent, nevertheless prevailed. e The Ladies Ladies Delighted. The pleasant effect and the perfect safety with which ladies may use the liquid fruit laxative, Syrup of Figs, under all conditions make it their tavorite remedy. It is pleas- ant to the eye and -to .the taste, gentle, yet effectual in acting oh -the kidneys, liver and bowels. That Hacking, Persistent, Distressing Cough can be quickly cured by using Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. _ - -eta • • Dyspepsia Cured. QENTLEMEN,-I was troubled with dyspepsia for about four years. I noticed an advertisement of Burdock 13lood Bitters, so I started to use it and soon found that there was nothing to eqnal it. It took just three bottles to effect a perfect cure in my C1130. . lima J. REID, Wingham, Ont. A Wounded Spirit who can heal. Victoria Carbolic Salve heals all other wounds, cuts, bruises or burns. Unbearable ,Agony. For three days I suffered sererely from summer coniplaint,nothing gave me rpef, end I kept getting worse until the pain was unbearable, but after I had taken the first dose of Dr. FoWler's Extract of Wild Strawberry I found great relief, and it did not fail to COCO MC, Wm. T. Gi6YNN, Wilfrid, Ontario. -.0.4 For Invalids and weak delicate women use Mil - burn's Beef, Iron and Wine ; no other, it is the best. vi• • 4111. . 'A Cure for Headache. Headache arises iron., constipation, bad, blood, dys- pepsia or liver complaint. As B B. B. cures all these complaints it is naturally the most successful headache cure existing. Once the cause is removed the headache vanishes. Pure Cod Liver Oil combined with Wild Cherry and Hypophosphites renders Hilburn's Emulsion the best on the market. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria. When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria. When she became Miss, she clung to Ca.storia, When she had Children, she gave them Castoria Oft in Peril. LIVES of children are often endangered by sudden and violent attacks of cholera, cholera rnorbus, diarrhoea, dysentery and bowel complaints. A rea- sonable and certain precaution is to keep Dr. Fow- ler's Extract of Wild Strawberry always at hand. -Itch, Mange and Scratchee of every kind, on hu man or animals, cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. This never fails. Warranted by Lumsden & Wilson. a ACT T C3-1 1E393. While we are yet in the middle of Summer, and the weather is very warm, it may seem quite out of place to make any mention of Fall and Winter Dry Goods. Many may not even be thinking of buying and preparing for the coming colder seasons, but we would remind all of the cooler season fast ap- proaching, and that we are making preparations for the demand that must be made for heavier 'wearing apparel. Already we are in receipt of a number of lines of NEW FALL AND WINTER GOODS, such as will be required for early Fall use. • r It may seem early to say very much about Millinery. In fact, we will not yet venture upon any statement as to styles, &c., for the coming season, but merely intimate to the ladies that our Millinery Department is being placed under new and very able management. We have secured the services of one of the best milliners in Canada. NEW GOODS TO HAND. Ladies' Mantles, several lines of Dress Goods, Grey and Fancy Flannels, Hosiery and Gloves, Ladies' and Men's Underwear, Fancy Skirtings, Linen Tablings, Grain Bags, Cottons, Shirtings, &c. DUNCAN & DUNCAN, THE PUSHERS AND PROVIDERS, RID i\T. CD's =JOCK, SEAFORTH. The Old, Old Story. . _23 BRANTFORD, August 28. -The old, old story crops up again here, and Frank Elliott is the narrator this time. He says he has for biX years been a victim of kidney disease and could get nothing to cure or re- lieve him. Dodd's-kidney pills did the business in quick time and now he is well and happy. Mr. El- liott learned of the efficacy of these pills from ac- counts published of Archie Rymal's case. This -gen- , Montan, it will be remembered, was cured of para- lysis, consequent of kidney disease, by Dodd's kid- ney pills. sea Rebecca; Wilkinson, of Brownsvalley, Indiana, says: "I had been in a distressed condition for three years from Nervousness, Weakness of the 'Stomach, Dyspepsia and Indigestion until my health was gone. I had been doctoring constantly with no relief. I bought one bottle of South American Nervine,which did me more good than any $60 worth of doctoring I ever did in my life. I would adyise every vveztkly person to use this valuable and h`vely remedy." A trial bottle will convince yoty. Warranted by Lumsden & Wilson, Druggists, Seaforth. • A wonderful new combination is R. Stark's Head- ache, Neuralgia and Liver Powders, nice to take ; perfectly harmless. Mr. Alexander Rumsey, of the Imperial Bank, Welland, writes: "1 have much pleasure in testifying to the excellence of R. Stark's Headache, Neuralgia and Liver Powders, and have no hesitation in recornmending, them to thnse who suffer from headache. They have been used in my family with the most satisfactory results, giving al- most immediate relief." Mr. John H. Glass, of the well-known firin of Glass Brothers & Co., London Pottery Works, writes: "1 have given your head- ache, Neuralgia and Liver Powders a thorough test, and find they never fail in giving almost instant- aneous relief. I have much pleasure in recommend- ing them as being superior to anything I have ever used." Price, 25 cents a box. Sold by all medicine dealers. —•0- •-e-- A New Made Man. LONDON EAST, Augnet 6th, 1889. I was afflicted with general debility and liver af- fection, and have recommended, and will continue to do so, Williams' Royal Crown Remedy, to all who are afflicted with the above complaints, and consider it has cured me -in fact made a new man of me. P. H. MCLAUGHLIN% 4•••• How to get a " Sunlight " Pieture. Send 26 "Sunlight" Soap wrappers (wrapper bearing the words "Why Does aWoman Look Old Sooner than a Man " ) to LEVER BROS., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto, and you will receive by post a pretty picture, free from advertising, and well worth framing. This is an easy way to decorate your home. The soap is•the best in the market, and it will .only cost le. postage to send in the wrappers, if you leave the ends open. Write your address carefully. The Four Cardinal Points. The four cardinal points of health are the stom- ach, liver, bowels and blood. Wrong action in any of these produces disease. Burdock Blood Bitters acts. upon the four cardinal points of health at one and the same thne, to regulate, strengthen and pu- rify, thus preserving health and removing disease. --e•-• -Englith Spavin Liniment removes all hard, soft or calloused Lumps and Blemishes from horses, Blood Spavin, Curbs, Splints, Ring Bone, Sweeney, Stifles, Sprains, Sore and Swollen Throat, Coughs, etc. Save $60 by use of one bottle. Warranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Warrant- ed by Luznsden & Wilson. A Letter from Emerson. "1 have used Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw- berry, and I think it is the best remedy for summer complaint. It has done a great deal of good to my- • self and children." Yours truly, Mns Ws. WHITELY, Elllerson, Manitoba. Coughing Leads to Consumption. Kemp's Balsam stops the cough at once. — • Spavined Horses. The buyers for foreign marketdo not want blemished horses at any price. Spavins, Curbs, Ringbones, etc., can be entirely cured by Dick's Blister. Price, 50 cents. Dick's 'Liniment is inval- uable for sprains and bruises. Priee, 25 cents. To be had at all Druggists. Full directions on the wrapper. BilliUMATISM CURED IN A DAY.- South American Rheumatic (Aire for Rheumatiem and Neuralgia radi- cally cures in 1 to 3 days. Its action upon the :.syfi tem is remarkable and mysterious. It removes at once the cause and the disease immediately disap pears. The flrst dose greatly benefits. 76 cents. Warranted by Lumsden & Wilson, druggists, Seaforths Avoid all Injurious Habits. • Tea drinking is an injurious habit, and nervous people should be carefin in the inc of it. It is not a food, it is not a tonic, and H drunk strong it may be as baneful in its effects as brandy would be. Any- - one who feels as if they were a bundle of nerves should give up both tea and tobacco, and use Mem- bray's Kidney and L;ver Cure, which will help them to exist in comfort without them. Lane's Medicine Medicine Move73 the Bowels Each Day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. 0* • My Life Saved—Nine Years .a Dys- peptic and Sufferer of Liver Complaint—Three Bottles Roy- . al Crown Remedy Effected a Complete Cure—Now. Twelve Yews and no Symptom of Re- turn Of the Disease—Read for Yourself. LONDON, August 301h, 1889, To Mr. Williams; It is nota pleasure, but a duty I owe to you and the suffering world that I add my testimony with the many you have already received. Royal Crown Remedy cannot be too highly praised ; it has saved my life. For nine years I suffered extremely with Dyspepsia and Liver Complaint and could not retain anything at all on my stomach without excessive vomiting. Erysipelas set in, which confined me to my bed. Doctors could do Inc no good. I also tried many other plans with no success. I was induced by Mr. I, Williams to try his medicine, vrhieh 1 did after much perauading. Three bottles completely cured nie, and for 12 years J have had no symptoms. Your medicine is worthy Of- praise. I advise all suf- fering humanity to try it, for it is the best. M. W. JAMES, 2.31 Wellington Street. - Indigestion, Dyspepsia and Sour Stomaeh are caused by the food fermenting. The result of fer- mentation on all organtic matter must be acid. This decomposes the food (which should be digested) and from decomposition evolves gases that produce pressure on the nerves, disorganizing the system, and produc- ing various symptoms sof disease. The "Curative Fluid" purifies the stomach, promotes digestion and assimilation of food, thereby creating a healthy current of blood. For sale by all Druggists, He, and $1. THIS PREPARATION Acts di recti y on the stomach And promotes the healthy action of the liver, WITHOUT PURGING. For Sale by All Druggists. And Wholesale by LONDON DRUG Company London, Ontario. WILLIS' SHOE STORE—ESTABLISHED 1881 The Changing Seasons. The Fall Season will soo, be upon us with its new duties, new pleasures, new scenes. The year with all its chaliges moves rapidly_ onward : there is no pause but many changes. One noticeable change in this store at present is that our shelves are being emptied of our stock of Summer Shoes, regardless of profit. This is the result of our closing -out sale, which has been the means of making August (generally a dull month), one of the brightest in the commercial calendar. There remains but two weeks for you to take advantage of our cheap prices. Are you with us 7 SEA FORTH. Preparing for Fall Good Brothers' New Cheap Stores. A clearance of Shelves and Coun- ters is now a necessity, to make room for Fall stock. Don't fail to see our price tickets in SHOE WINDOW next Saturday. GREAT BARGAINS in all, classes of Boots and Shoes, Trunks and Valises, Crockery, China and Glass- ware -97 piece Dinner Sets for 85.50. GREAT BARGAINS in Fresh Groceries, Hats and Caps, Tinware, etc. Highest Pr ices for Butter and Eggs. Good Brothers, NEW CHEAP STORES, SEA - FORTH AND BRUSSELS. Front Rooms to Let; suitable for High School students, Lawyers, Den- tists, Doctors and Dressmakers, &c. Rent very low. - irds 4.11 rTs•I esa e'ihs hese -