HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe East Huron Gazette, 1892-10-06, Page 7xe
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for adventure in wild
rren Ground," whither Mr. Pike
pursuit of the musk-ox. will be
sufficiently indicated by saying that it lies
about the source of the Coppermine River
as shown on ordinary maps of North
America. About the middle of 1889 he left
Calgary, on the Canadian Pacific Railway,
and travelled by Edmonton, the Athabasca
River, and the. Slave River to. Fort Resolu-
tion on Great Slave Lake. This outpost of
the Hudson Bay Company was reached by
the third week in August, and for a year
was Mr. Pike's headquarters, but only in
.,the sense that from it his expeditions start-
ed northward. A fort even in the wild
North-west means comparative comfort,
varied by interludes of short commons
at times. Mr. Pike's life in these parts
was a very different thing from that of
well-equipped excursionists who have s
care to keep in constant touch with a base
of supplies. Indeed the most startling
feature in his travels is his utter disregard
of personal comfort. A half breed or twd
and such "Indians' as he could induce to
share bis fortunes, constituted his sole com-
panions in his principal musk-ox hunts. Fie
gun and fishing -net and a couple of Us/ \more westerly course, and from Lake Apl
were almost his only outfit, if we exc crossed -the portage to the Grea.. Fish River,
small supply of provisions and tobacco, which he managed to descend as far as Lake
flat 65i ° N.) This was reached
always make when travel-
was brok en into broad road$;
useless to try to estimate
t passed within a few miles
pment.
sage of the caribou is the most
thing that I have ever seen in
of many, expeditions among the
of America. Th e buffalo were for
part killed out before my time,
ithstanding al! the tall stories that
d of their numbers, t cannot believe
e herds on the prairie ever surpass-
size La Fogle of the caribou."
gain, on November 11, Mr. Pike, with
o half-hreeds and five Indians of the
flow Knives tribe, started for the " Bar -
en Ground." Whilst crossing Lake Mar-
key or the ice, there occurred a curious il-
lustration of the deceptive
— EFFECTS OF FOG.
" We saw an animal, apparently at some
distance, bounding along the_horizon at a
most remarkable pace ; all down the line
there were cries of Erjerer (musk-ox), Et -
then Le Leop'. Guns were snatched from the
sleighs, and even the dogs charged at a gal-
lop in pursuit of the strange animal. After
a rush of ten yards the quarry disappeared ;
the first uian had put his foot on it, and it
turned out to be one of the small mice so
common in the Barren Ground."
The northern limit of the previous ex-
pedition was passed without finding musk-
ox, and once more Mr. Pike and his men
were entirely without food, and the sleigh
dogs were with difficulty kept from eating
their harness. The thick weather had
made it impossible to see game if there were
any, but once more, at the � critical mo-
ment, the air cleared, and a large band of
musk-ox was discovered. This was ap-
proximately in Lat. 66 ° N., Long. 110 0 W.
Except for the value of its skin for robes, -
this remote-dwelling
obes,thisremote-dwelling an=maldoes not seem of
particular interest or worth, and, regarded
as sport, the killing of them, apart from the
difficulty of reaching their habitat, is mere
slaughter. After another perilous journey
Mr. Pike once more reached Fort Resolution
by the middle of December, and there spent
the winter and spring, making only short
hunting excursions, which we need.not
describe. On May 7, 1890, he again struck
out for the North, but this time took a
y SCI.
air, 4-a ies Sauals' Wonderflid Res -
„Oration ; to Health.
AftterTitree Years of Paralysis, Insetted,
bIlity;-and Uselessness. Ile Tells the
Tale of His Recovery and Renewed
Work In the World -His Story as Told
a Free Press Reporter.
OTTAWA FREE PRESS.
The town of Alexandria, some 55 miles
south of the city of Ottawa, on the Canada
Atlantic Railway, 1•ias been completely as-
tonished, recently, at the marvellous ex-
perience of a young man, who, after having
been bed -ridden for nearly twelve months,'
and hismcaee pronounced incurable by Mont-
real and Alexandria doctors, is now restor-
ed to complete health and strength.
Mr. James Sands is a young teamster,
well known and extremely popular through-
out the country side, and his illness and
wonderful recovery have been—indeed still
are -the chief topics in the town and neigh-
borhood. The story of his miraculous cure
having reached Ottawa, a member of The
Free Press staff journeyed to Alexandria and
sought out Mr. Sands for the purpose of
ascertaining the truth of the statements
made regarding his recovery. Mr, Sands is
a slimly built, but wiry -looking young man
of about 32 years of age, and when met by
the newspaper man the bloom of health
was on his cheek and his whole frame show-
ed signsef unimpaired vigor and vitality.
The newspaper man told Mr. Sands the
objeet of his visit, and the latter expressed
his perfect willingness to give all the fats
connected with his case. ” I was," said
Mr. Sands, " a complete wreck, given -up by
the -doctors, but now I am well and strong'
again, and gaining strength every day. I
wborn in Lancaster in 1860, and up to
three years ago I was always healthy and
strong, living in the open air and being well-
known throughout the whole county of
Glengarry. It was in the winter ot 1888.89
that I first felt signs of incipient paralysis.
I was then teamster for the sash and door
factory here, and had been exposed to all
kinds of weather. I then experienced vio:(ent
twisting cramps in my right hand. I was in
Cornwall that winter when the first stroke
fell, and remained there for three days be-
fore I knew anybody at all. A medical man
was called in but could do nothing for me.
After that I came home and appeared to
get all right for a time, but after a few days
the old trouble began again my hand con-
tinuing the twitching and cramping that
had preceded the stroke. Up to twelve
months ago these twitching fits were
the only symptoms I suffered from.
Then in August, 1891, when I was in -
Huntingdon village I sustained a second
stroke, and remained unconscious 'for about
seven hours. A doctor attended me and I
recovered sufficiently to be brought home.
After my return home the paralysis steadily
gained on me, and I lost the use of my
right arm and leg entirely ; my right eye
was distorted and my tongue partially par-
alyzed. I was prescribed for by an Alexan-
dria physician, whose treatment I carefully
followed, but it had no effect. I still got
steadily worse, and about a month before
Christmas last, 1 went to the English hos-
pital at Montreal. Prof. Stuart and all the
doctors came around me, as mine was a curi-
ous case, and the professor treated me. All
the doctors could give me no satisfaction,
and did not appear to understand my case.
I questioned some of them, but they told
me it was a hopeless case. I remained in the
hospital a mouth,without the least improve-
ment, and was then brought home, and re-
mained in my bed till May day. I had con-
stantmedieal advice, but continued to grow
worseand worse. My rightarm witheredand
I grew so weak and useless that I could not
turn myself in bed. Meantime I had tried
all sorts of patent medicines without the
least effect. In May I saw an advertisment
of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills in the papers,
and said I would try them as a last resort.
1 had heard of the wonderful cures worked
by Pink Pills, and told my folks to get me
some. I had not taken them long when I
found myself improving, and this deter-
mined me to continue their use. My strength
gradually returned, the muscles of my arm
and leg became invigorated and stronger,
and I was able to sit up. I still continued
taking the Pills and gaining strength, until
at last I was able to go about, and finally
to return to my old place at the sash and
door factory. I gave up the Pills for a
while, but did not feel so well, so I again
began their use. I now feel as well as ever,
though perhaps not quite so strong as
formerly. You can see my right arm, which
was withered, is now all right," and Mr.
Sands stretched out a muscular limb, which
would have done credit to ablacksmith. In
reply to the reporter Mr. Sands said he
thought his trouble had been brought on
through exposure to the weather. " I am
direct by mairfrom-Dr. Williams' Me vine:!
Company, from either address. -'fie price-
at which; these *leans sold. make•- s- course
of treatment comparatively inexpensive
as compared with other remedies or medi-
cal treatm en.. .
which bis companions took care should n _
last long. Sometimes a day passed with no
pretence of fond, and when the gun or net
at last brought meat there was nothing to
eat with it.
On August 19 Mr. Pike made his first
start—a preliminary expedition—and it
was the 5th of September before the canoe
voyage across Great Slave Lake was ac-
• eomplished. Provisions were exhausted, and
on the 7th he and nine others started from
Fend do Lac with only a dozen small fish
to stave off hunger duringa paddle of thirty
miles before quitting the lake for the
North. These, with three ducks, had to
suffice for the two days' voyage. The route
taken was along a chain of lakes divided
by short portages. It is needless to detail
the scanty supplies which the gun brought.
On the 13th of September they reached Lac
du Rocher; where the half-breeds had felt
re 6r finding caribou, an American species
reindeer, but did not. " We had now
.-..;en in a half -starving condition for several
days , - . and since leaving Fond du
Lac had subsisted almost entirely on tea
and tobacco." Fortunately, a caribou was
secured next day, and food troubles were
fairly oyer.
au-ecney
by the end of July, but as his men—Yellow
Knives—were in mortal dread of the
Esquimaux, and would not go further with
him into their territory, he could not push
on to sit the scene
of the tFrnlin disaster. he Arctic n By d tAugust 24 he
was back at. head -quarters.
We have yet to sketch the most perilous
of Mr. Pike's journeys. He determined to
return to civilisation by ascending the Peace
River to the Rocky Mountains, and, having
got through the gap in them, to still ascend
the river southward, until, in the reighbor-
hood of he could
the
div de to the Fraser River,s r and descend sthat
to Quesnelle, on the edge of the Cariboo
Gold Fields of British Columbia.
Starting on August 26, Hudson's Hope,
at the entrance of the gorge of the Rockies,
was attained on October 27. It was pressed
upon Mr. Pike not to risk being caught by
winter on a canoe journey in the wilds west
of the main range. But he determined to
push on, instead of waiting till frost and
snow should make a journey on snow -shoes
a comparatively easy matter of eight or ten
days. His companions were Murdo; from
Fort Resolution ; John, a reprobate English-
man, picked up in the.eourse of the journey
supplies the Indian with nearly all the up the Peace River ; Charlie, a half-breed ;
necessaries of life ; it gives him food, cloth- and Pat, a Siccanee. The last three profess-
ing, ho se • the equivalent of money to ed to know the route, and Charlie and Pat
pen, at the fort. "Me leaves the trading- had just made it and were returning. The
e After one of his yearly visits, with a three were blind guides --John really knew
mpply of ammunition, tea and tobacco a nothing, and the others had unobserv-
,lankea or two, and, if he had made a good antly boat canoed throughe with
trader
e
eason's hunt, is perhaps lucky enough to The a cotton -wood a con Above Hud
rbave taken one of the Company's duffel
oat ofson's Hope is a twelve mile portage to-
thatta1 ave ever
r s best form of great coat avoid a rapid. At the far end of it is the
fainI have ever aeon). He has somewherea wife and last habitation—a trader's cabin. A cold
the s y e of th fbi him heresh aree nipdelayed the start, and it was Novem-
the shore of the big lake where fish hr 26 before they fairly got away. Three.
plentiful, expecting a gaudy dress, a shawl,
-or a s finr - of beads from the fort, but rely- days later ice began to form- On Deeemrer
ing entirely on the caribou for maintainance 3 they just managed to reach the confluence
'urian the awful cold of the corning winter, of the k'indlapba d Parsnip,
treams blocked morn -
The
o in revealed
Tha junrney up till they fall in with the g
o
caribou is usually full of hardships, but.once reach Macleod Lake they had to ascend
ti alongside the Parsnip, and presently branch
found hgam reached the p hunting -ground nt in and to the west up a tributary. Fort Macleod
game a great improvement in affairs
takes pi ,ce ; the hunter is busy killing, mean-, safety for them, and Charlie and Pat
while the women dry meat and make grease, said five days at most would find them
-dress the skins for moccasins, mittens, and there. Leaving impedimenta including
gun -covers, and cut babiche, which takes the thirty pounds of flour and their guns, on
place of string for lacing snow -shoes and j a scaffold, the party started, each man
inany.other purposes. For the hair -coats, ! carrying a blanket and a small load of pro-
visions, kettles, See.. John was always lag-
;
duringery bthe Bold season,
the bests ins ging behind, so that progress was not as
; —wear the cold season, then July ns I fsas it might have been. After being
}
are those of young animals killed in July or four nights out, they reckoned on pushing
next day to Fort Macleod, and so left most
of the things they -were carrying to be
fetched presently by a sleigh. All food had
now been eaten. The fifth day passel and
the tributary stream had not been found.
The next day they found it as they
Sir Edwin on Manitoba
Sir Edwin Arnold, who spent a day or
two in Winipeg last week, is enthusiastic
a
regarding the C. P.R. transcontinental route, !
and- delighted with Manitoba and the
Canadian North-west. lie said to a corre-
spondendent: " I don't think the Govern-
ment is generous enough to this country.
They should be more liberal in their efforts_
to populate this land,prolific fn:possibilitfs;
aye, in certainties.: - - They should not send
out paupers, but every man should have 50
pounds in his pocket. Manitoba and the
North-west should have 20,000,000 of people
within the next 15 years. Yes, this is my
first trip through the west. I have never
been west of Toronto before. I have seen
your great wheat areas now and am Baton=
ished.
i'.�s
Fi r dlftiee,
"- xrea• .
h k. - . Pas
�aesdaV..
an fol' Saloon
tem rtage.Passen�gers
f� `o> asge,oatreal• 3a .Llvrrpo
iotiTt . 1 A Sordin to
�d'v.
Pilgrims to Mecca.
Some idea of the volume of those wbo go
the pilgrimage to Mecca is obtained from
the last report of the British Consul at Jed -
dab, from which it appears that during the
past year 46,953 pilgrims, bound for Mecca,
landed at that port. - Of these 11,035 were
British Indians, 10,817 were Javanese, .
6285 Egyptians, 355'1 Moors. and Algerians,
3285 Turks and Syrians, 2086 Arabs, 1887
from Yemen, 1717 Persians, 1643 Bokhar-
ians, while the nationalities of the remain-
der are not specified. The total number in
1890 was larger by a few hundreds.
It is w or th_two bite any day to sae both
nes slug -`tile umpire.
Dr. Harvey's Southern Red . Pine for
coughs and colds is the most reliable and
perfect cough medicine in the market. For
sale everywhere.
Too much cotton has a baleful influence
in the South.
TOof kE IE. When anffering with Tooth
ache use GIBBONS' TOOTHACHE
GUM.
There is in politics a deal more of trickery
han honesty. - A.P.624
it
Auvust, as the hair is short and does not
fall off so readily as in coats made from
et the skin of a full-grown caribou ; while the
strong sinews lying elong the bask -bone of
an. old bull make the very best thread for
sewing. Anything that is left over after
supplyirg the whole family finds a ready thought and followed it up bn
;ale at the fort, where there is always a de- reach fort.f The day after they dis-
nand fur dried meat, tongue -grease, dressed 1 covered the oit was the after
Stream-
$
skins, and babiche, e, so e thDog-Ribas There was nothing for it but to try and
.and �i eilow Knives, whose country pro-
duces little fur, with the exception of musk- • return. Happily in a deserted miner's
ox robes, are thus enabled to afford some but they picked up an enipty tin, and
few of the white man's luxuries, tea and they had with them a bit of dressed
tobacco being especially dear to the Indian's moose -skin for mending moccasins. " Lab-
„ rador Tea" was found growing in the woods.
The skin was their only possible food, so
each ate a stewed strip three inches by one.
A good fire. and a pipe heartened them a
little. It was now December 10. That
night they reached the Parsnip. Had they
had a map they wc.uid have known that
forty miles only separated them from Fort
Macleod. As it was life hung on theirget-
ting back to their bag of flour. On the
tenth day ( December 17), without food ex-
cept the scraps of moose -skin, they again
reached to their scaffold. The flour would
ordinarily have served five men for two
day. It and what a few cartridges might
provide must be made to last them four
days. With a good fortune they might
reach the trader's cabin in, three or' four
days. But they were really -too to sac-
eeed in such a feat. The snow. ved deep.
On the third days blizzard • • ; e travel -,m-
, , ., : a The"`daily .rata' < were ranted -
to two cupfuls cit# flour. tseeen the five
men. On _ December_ 2A another blizzard
stopped thea, and the meals consisted of a
spoonful of flour each is e.morning, and a
strip of moose s all Wight. It --was not
till the 27th tha ear the point of
death, they reached Tem plycaabi in
This terrible journey, the most
detail by Mr. Pipe, is amacgst thee. pit
thrilling episodes df modern
brook mast be read in order to realise what
an English gentleman -cam go through and
yet swine tewtite-hb story. OIIa htfon
he gives which mast jest- be mentioned.
sThe vaunted lands of the 'Peace River ate
heart.
Ordinary maps—indeed all existing maps,
so far as we know—are valueless for the dis-
trict to the north of Great Slave Lake, for
--ine country is nnsurveyed, but the atlases
mark Aylmer Lake. To the west of this
Mr. Pike, who had left a camp in the
caribou country, found a lake which is
probably a hundred milts long. He named
it Lake hiackay, and with a canoe and three
half-breeds eros ed it, leaving the pine
woods behind, to go in search of musk-ox.
North of Lake Mackay is the Lac de Gras,
...tthrough which the Coppermine floe
and
beyond this, on September 27,
first
mask -ox was killed. The whereabouts of
these animals having been thus ascertained,
emt winter rapidlyapproachiagMr. Pike re-
turned mid which was reached not
without so3ft .,
. L Fom.E : LA FOUL& i - -
" Scatteretcds of caribou were almost
always in sight from the top- of the ridge
behind the camp, and increased in numbers
till the morning of October 20th, when
little Baptiste, who had gone for firewood
woke us up before daylight with the cry of
La Foyle ' La 'odic ! and even in the lodge
we could hear the curious clatter made by
is hand of travellingearibou. I.ta Fouls had
really eome, and during its passage of six
days I was able to realize what an extra
ordinary number of these animals stillroam
ke the Barren Grounds. From the bridge
we had a splendid view ef° the one
all the South side of Mackaiv , e was -
with moving beasts, whilethe fie seem-, nob fit for emigrants.
be dotted ail over with bites islands,
ill away on the north alio s *We asad often
the glasses, we could seta tssm ' nusq>zt't�t hs 3 lawyer: see
:hie regiments Ileums themareh. �1evert ' nli tuglit s the bar."
we stmld > r the gran uaihe ._
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CCP LIVER CIS...
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SCOTT'BL
EMVLSI�
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1 Om' LITD SOOA.-
The patient suffering from
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BRONCHITOU
WASTING MDI EASES, takes
COLD,
the
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Take no other. Alt Druggists, 60e.,1.00.
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e ipake0thee BISCUIT
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used 07JG
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gsr.
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Syrup of Figs is for sale in 75e.
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u not
Any reliable druggistY
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OTUESDA, SEP
mpltelysatisfied," said be, "that it is aoa. >Focaendar address
entirely to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills that I' ,'9PRINCIPAL DYER, M.A., B.Sc-
owe my wonderful restoration. des thedicaltIhaicity EEL144 BItOSL 19bththslightest
external, nt wi ou - e ga Kntting Machines
After beginning Pink PillsI bean tomend,and they have made a new manof me."not
The newspaper man then , called on . be 0 the
Messis. Ostrom Bros. & Co., widely knowndruggists, and interviewed their representa-
tive, Mr. Smith, as to his knowledge of the
case. Mr.Smith wasfully conversantwith the
facts, and vouched for the story told by Mr.
Sand, and further said, that his hopelss
and remarkable recovery are known
throughout Glengarry County. In reply to
the query if many of Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills are sold, Mr. Smith replied that thesale was remarkable and that in his ex-
perience he had never handled a remedy
that sold so well, or gave such general satis-
faction to those -using them, as everywhere
glowing reports are heard of the excellent
results following their use. Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills are not a patent medicine in the
sense that word -is understood. They are
the result of years of experience and careful
investigation. -They are not a purgative
medicine, but act directly upon the blood
and nerves, supplying those constituents
required to enrich the former and stimu-
late and restore the latter.,For all diseases depending upon: a vitiated
condition of the blood, or shattered nerves,
;theya re anunfailingremedy. Suchdiseases
as these spee
Locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St.
Vitus' dance, neuralgia, rheumatism, scia-
tica, nervous prostration, nervous headache,
dyspepsia, chronic erysipelas, scrofula, etc.
They areac for the troubles peculiar
to females, correcting irregularities, and
restoring the functions, and in the cue ofmen effect a radical cure in all cases arising
from overwork, mental worry or excesses of
any $attire. In fact it may be said of them"They come asa boon and a blessing to men,
Restoring to health, life and vioragain."
These Pili>s are -manufactured by the i)r.
Rtlli oma' Medicine Company, &ockville
Ot., and Sohnnectady, N., and are sold
in boxes (never in loose formby the dozenor
hundred and the publicare cautioned
against numerous imitations sold inthis
shape) at 50 cents a box, or sixboxesfor
$2.50, and may be had of all druggisstsor
dilyyid to their treatment:
N>Tature'-s all-powerful
to:cdei. is-discoveredand
when - imbibed freely
radiates the arterial
network of ` the body,
absorbs and rashes off
all effete, deadly pois-
onous matter.. -Also it
contains all the sixteen
elements of ripe mole-
cular lite, builds up
every weak part, re-
stores nerve sand vital
power, is the sunshine
of life, the wonderful.
So say all that use St.
Leon Water. World,
Feb.13t1i, 1692. -
�C OOT A tif
SILVER MINES.
Canadians have invested in 9-10 of the real
esta of the new towns in Kootenay, whsle
the towns depends nothessuccessof thecess of
mia s.
The
K.00to nay ming Investment Co.
-represent four trey incorporated Silver Mia
fig Companies, owning twelve mines in Brit
.- b Columbiaand two in Montana on the saint
rioh belt, the richest in the world.
They afford the safest and Most praftabk
nvestmeIst in Canada. - The first issue °fetoeL
places investors on tThe around issue wiii be
nd it
nearly, all taken up.
25 per cent. to 50 per cent. higher. Then its
advancement wilt be rapid owing to greater
development work. Now is the opportunity,
Don't let it slip. It is not often investors have
suck a eliance as this. Call at office, Boa of
Trade Building, Toronto.
Trade
f
WRITE FOR PARTICULARS LotFeaiExpoiioi4
,,,,,,, GRAND PROVINCIAL
ITION
Of Complete Steam Launchesfrom 20x# to 34x7"Acme Coal -oil Boilers and Engines" from
1 to 8 H.P. Lerge sizes. Coal or wood fuel. _
"The Marsh Steam Pump" the best boiler -
feeder in the market. Returns exhaust itofeed water heating it from 40 to tOdegrees.
For catalogue send 3c. GILLIES .t CO., Carleton Pis a,Ont. OII.1
W#�AT LOVELY TINTS
That's just wht everybody says when they
see a wall tnted with -
CALSOMINE
made by that old reliaafirm which has stood
for 50 years.
Tell yobr dealer you just want to see those
tints
MAxUFACrURED BY
A_ M,AX & i3)-�•i ICBM RAL.
DNRINGTIE NOT WEATHER
You should use Rice as a light and
healthy food.
ThIsgoodfor2. Sendtous.
ThE FINST
DON'T NAVE .k DDG
ged objection to is beaase it Ls cheap. it is
de icions either asa dessert or as a vegetable,
if cooked as directed.SED FOR A CAT
and newFactory s where est in Canada is sthy turnust what the
out those
UNICORN
MIXED PAINTS
alognMtLLING & MF,oG.GO., Monhe Ttreal.YAL
FRES.
rmd StoekmeIl.
And it has to be to make enough, because
everybody wants them. Tell your dealer
to drop chestnut substitutes and get
them � quick, from 01 BB R
•
Ce1ehrted £nlIsh*1Ltshire Oils
A positive cure fox Sprains. Bruises. Green or
old Wounds, Influenza. Weak Knees, Galled
Shoulders, Sore BaekCapped Rooks, Swollen
Udders. For "
RHEUMATISM
EXHI
MC: 'EAL
15th to 23rd SEI, :i1BER, .1892.
SECOND ANNUAL FAIR!
Great Show of Live StocPa.
diagnilieent horticultural Display.
Fine Collection of Historical Iteiicw Y the
An-
tiquarian and Numismatic Society.
y
Exr-aordtnary Attractions.
BALLOON ASCENSION'Parachute descents
by STANLEY SPENCER. the renowned
English Aeronaut.
Ladies' Military Bard and Concert.
Magnificent Fireworks. Splendid Music.
Brilliant Electrical U uniinations.
Electric Street Gao� dates direct to the
OPEN DAT AND NIGHT-
All applications forspace should be made at
once.
For prize lists and all information, address
S. C. STEVENSON, Manager and Secretary,
76 St. Gabriel Street, Montreal.
We guarantee an absolute cur*: in from one
to three applications.
One Trial will Convince.
Pronounced by medical men; the greatest
discovery of the Nineteent feentnry.
PRICE 50e. PBS soma.
J. CROSS, Proprietor. - . OWEN SOUND.
For sale by'Druts.
THE BUFFALO
OT WATER BOILEit
(?atented in Canada and U.S.)
Beats the t eeord.1
l' SAVES FUEL,
INSURES COMFORT
What more do you want?
Bend for "Brownie" Catalogue and Price Llst
I'1.rt. WEIS&GO"
MANUFACTURERS,
oisrn ar L.
Then do it economically.
Chop your Grain with a,
WaterOUs
elevates and screens
bushels per holes wags the
utiou.tbsone Truss
KEW SS
THIS
hms:sea-
smaL•
- expiation . f body meant.
mo��of Viet:We Part t wtsi8ie on de coli.
eutawdefeestute the tartly. antemmiicanyiak menenus.,
Club les. ilEttnanentsr. nerir z°
igiastic Ha qtr. Seat by
entnnerstereadeferenneets.eteenee,ssweeeramese
CISETritaM
Surg[eailtaddin l$,
GET
- Best ren
€ b
u led for dih�4