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The Exeter Times, 1890-10-16, Page 3For CRAMPS, COLIC, and all Bowel Troubles, use FERRY DAPIS' Used both internally and externally. Rads quieldr, affording almost ins taut relief from the severest pain. RE SURE to GET THE GENUINa 25e per bottle, MEDICINE and FOOD COMBINED t EMULSION `pr CoelavER 0/;, cHrarELIMEma$w ) Increases WelErbt.Etrengthens Lungs. and Nerves. Price 50e.. and SLOG per Bottle. Ministry and Public Speakers use 1`SPENCER'S Chloramine Pastilles For Clearing and Strengthening the void. Cure hoarseness awl Soreness of Throat. P=roe 25c per bottle. Shingle free on applreatien act Druggist. TO MOTHERS PALMO-TAR SOAP Is I'udispent able for the Math, Toilet or Nursery,for elcanin, the Scalp or Skin. TflE BKST oilers SOAP KNOWN Prio° Roe, Pbyaiolome 5treesiy' recommend Wyeth's Malt Extract, (Liquid) To patients suffering from nervone ethane - tion; to improve the Appetite, to assist ln- gestioe, a valuable Topic - 4,0 Conte per bottle. The mast .atlefaetoryBLOOD PURIFIER is Channing's Sarsaparilla, Ilea Graudl'LEtSLTH RESTORER. 'Will cure the worst form of skin disease; will ours itheuatatiseu ; will cure Scat Rheum. Largo Bottles, Sr 00. ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM For CONSUMPTION, Coughs, neglected Colds Bronma. Bronchitis, Asth and an iiiscases of the J,unlrs. In three sized bottles 25c, 5Oc, and 51.00. FOR HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA, t.': NDN'0.1.PLAgift. Tor Lumhaae, Sciatica, "Cricks:- Tic, 'tstatcher,•' Wittman,: Vain and Quante rthcuntatl m. Each plaster in an atr,t31ht on box. 25c. PAVIS 4. LAWRENCE CO. Lim., • M9NTREAL, Proprietors or General Agents roe 310ST op7na POPULAR Proprietary or Pharmaceuticul.Medicinea, Toilet Articles and Perfumery. 9 Cords 1"10 hOURs Runs ?ass NO BACKACHE. .Mss '•rat' ONE 1NNAN. Write lin* . escrltntvocatalogue containing testimonials iron, hundreds or pimple who baro sawed from 4 to t)cords dally. 25,000 new success- fully used. Aseneq mut bo tiatt whore there is u vacancy. A NEmy INVENTION for thing saws sent tree with each machine; by tho use of this tool everybody :an ole their own saws now and do i.;be'.ter than the greatest expert can without it. Adapted to ail cross -cut Saws. Every one who owns t, saw should have one. No daty to pay; Iva manufacture le :nand. ADL pour dealer or write FOLDINc3 SAW :NO 311. CHINE Co., COS to 1)11 S. Vuuur St., Chicago, 1,1 FREE V 16 CSAl17 LOVE STtl• • Ix n package of release.. two dollars to manufaetnre. and a i.. i00p Picture Book, that will Burt, put on the road to a handsome fortune. N': quick, and send sc. silver, to help pay 1• tage. Mention this par ar. A. 'W. ii.SIV.,LS:: s, .-. ..ry . "t . FOR Insect Stings Sore Eyes Eruptions Sore Feet soreness Chaffin (ata ru B I'' •Cuts) Piles rna l e Com'plaa nts o§ej uito Bites Sunburn Amp), ALL Unf IaYnY1'1ati®n REFIT S E SU ESTITUTES IliSIIREIKBOTTLE ITH WWRAPPER . �U�F LI) 0W1IKETH15 1" +MANUFACTURED ONLY SY pCNO'S EXTRACT,COMPANY, 76 FiFTHAM.NEW_YOICIt.. CANADA'S NEW EXPLORER. Xr. Ogilvie's Twenty Month' Wanderings ill the Par North. iEis Setenttne.Explorations In !surge farts strum lemon on anti Atittekettzle River Ra - stns -Worn haat •Entitles Rhin to Rank Among the *test Explorers of the Centure- -2,004 Mitesin (canoes. Every energetic and intrepid explorer who penetrates Africa and does good work in the vast and little-known countries of the Dark Continent is certain to see his name heralded through the civilized world when he comes hornet Unfortunately there are few other parts of the world where equal merit, enter- prise, and self-sacrifice receive at the hands of theb' pu llc an equal measure of apprecia- tion. Tltis is particularly true of our own conti- nent, where much exploratory work still re- mains to be done. Row many of our readers have ever heard of Mr. William Ogilvie of the Canadian Land Survey ? Very likely not one in a hundred, and yet over a yearend a half elapsed since his return to Ottawa from the most noteworthy travels that have been made in a longtime in North America. This modesttraveller,whodescribeshisadveutures in the most unpretentious language, is really entitled to rank among the best explorers of the century, He was absent from civiliza- tion nearly two years, -luring which he made instrumental and track survey -s, +covering a distance of 1,700 miles, in a wild and almost unexplored country, some portions of which it is certain were never visited by a white man before. Landing from the Pacific steamer at Chilkoot, on the coast of Alask a, in May, 1887, his exploratory surveys wets pushed for Hundreds of miles down tie Lewes -bubo River, then up the Tat -ori -due, Porcupine, Bell, Trout, ant. Peel Rivers to the Maeken- zle Basin, along the great system of lakes and tributaries, until he reeehetl Ottawa again in January last year, The report of tits i,olto wittuelt1NCS has recently been published by the Canadian Department of the Interior, and from that report this brief aceount of them is taken. Most of our information, with re€'ardto the great regions through which Ogilvie wan. tiered was derived from the agents of the Hudson Bay Company, ` wa L C nasi h explored th rivers atter evened mountain regins, estab. fishing here and there nailing posts where they Wight buy the furs collected by In- dians. Some very interesting facts are cot. nested with the names wo secs upon the maps. In the Lewes River, for instance, tvhrrh with the Petty forms the head streams . of the Yukon, we sec an expansion of the stream whieh is called Lake Labarge. It nets named for Mike Labarge, who, in 1867, was sent by the Western Well 'Telegraph Company :tn explore a t• to out othrough t I l l rtt . t islt Columbia and Alaska for the p3urlxise of stringing a telegraph line over the coati neat and acros.'i Retiring Strait to Asia, and thence to Europe. He had nearly reached this lake when word, that bad' been sent hundreds of miles, came to Mien that the Atlantic eable had been successfully laid, tad the company bad therefore abandoned, is scheme The company ther:upon in great haste sent for Labarge and its ether agents torecall then; from their explorations, On the Pelly River Mr. Ogilvie found the chimneys still standing of tite station built by Campbell over forty years ago, when he tbscovered that the Polly River was identical with the Yukon, and built the post from which ho 1aas.linally driven by hostile In- dians. The Porcupine, Bell, and several other rivers near or north of the Arctic circle and explored by ()glitch) were named by Mr. Bell, another famous agent of the Hudson Bay Company ; but THESE DISCOVEtRIES made so long ago were notscientificexplora- tious, and it v'as the task of Ogilvie to make the maps as accurate as possible of all the regions between which he travelled. He as- 'ertained the altitudes of rivers and moun- tains, einem' the directions of hills and mountain ranges, offshoots of the Rockies, tnd made seine discoveries that have never appearedon any leap, He found, for instance, a pass leading front tidewater in Chilkoot Inlet tr) the navigable portion of the Lewes - Yukon 'River, along which it will be com- paratively easy to build a wagon road or a railway, thus connecting the upper waters if the great Yukon directly with the sea ,)n his journey to the Mackenzie River he liseovered a great stream, not marked ou my map, over 209 miles long, which has been named the Ogilvie River. This stream alis over 8,000 feet in a distance of 180 )Hiles tad the result is that the river is full of canons, falls, and rapids, and cannot be used for navigation. Itis said that logs enterirg parts of the channel emerge below almost shivered into s li ters by their con- flict with the rocks an raging torrents. One of the most interesting features of Ogil- vie's work is his determination of the place Where the Yukon River crosses the Interna- tional botndary. On oue side of the river he `,lazed the letter "A" on trees, and on the trees of the other side the letter "C," to de- note that they were respectively im the ter -1 ritories of Alaska and Canada. There is reason to believe that this boundary line is practically accurate, but it willbo interest- ing to learn if the American expedition, which is now surveying the boundary, will find that it crosses the river at the place where Ogil- vie blazed the trees. This discovery of Ogilvie places the boundary some distance further west than it appears on any map. The result is that he declares the gold miming territory along the Yukon to be on British soil, which WAS AOItEAT SURPRISE to the miners, as they supposed they were in Americafaterritory. They knew all about the mining laws of the'United States, but nothing of the regulations controlling raining in the Dominion, and they were therefore very anxious to learn from the explorer some- thing about the Canadian mining laws. ' The fact that this boundary has never be- fore been determined has led to a number of interesting blunders, among which may be mentioned Fort Yukon, the post which the Hudson Bay Company established on what they supposed to be Canadian soil. But when the United States Government discovered in '1869that the company was occupying their territory, the British trading enters prise, was _invited to evacuate the post.• The most of Ogilvie's explorations were carried out in two basswood canoes, built extra strong and weighing about 140 pounds each, so that. two -men could carry then without much difficulty. They carried Ogilvie and his heavy outfit over 2,600 miles, going 'through some terrible . rapids, whieh more thee. once threatened their destruction. Each canoe could hold two men and 1,400 pounds of goods.. When the explorer left then at Fort Chipewyan they were still in very good condition, and, with a little paint- ing, he says, they could have made the same journey over again. This speaks well for the value of bass wood in canoe building, for among the clangers the art encountered g p y rad. were ice jams. during the journeys of early spring, which several times nearly crushed theboats. Some of the whites and the Indians whore the explorer met were not inclined to give him a great deal of assistincc. It was very difficult to get oven approximately exact statements from the minersalong tate Yukon. Many of them Ogilvie found, to be inveterate jokers, who took great delight in hoaxing everybody, and they sometimes spent hours in giving him information that was wholly contradicted by the next petty he met. They were disposed to look upon every govern- ment agent like Ogilvie as a spy who had been sent into the country to see what they were doing, nand if he found the country desirable fur mining or other purposes they fully expected that he would make a report that would cause an RNDERI1tAtiLI:INFLUX' Olt ADVENTURERS. Many of thein were partcillarly axe= to telling biro anything about their mining aperatiens. They thought they had a very good thing and they wanted to keep it to themselves. So Ogilvie had to sift the real facts about mining and other matters in that region out ot a good many contradictory statements if he could not learn, the truth by personal observation.. The Indians he met were generally a curious lot to deal with. While crossing the mountains to the Lewes River lie found the Tagish tribe, who were in such mortal terror of the coast natives that he could hardly induce them to assist in packing his ;oohs to the region its which they ,night come in contact with their enemies. They aro itt fact, little snore than slaves of the coast tribes, and arei11 constant mead of offending then:. The natives a little inland would do nothing for white men unless they terosure of a large reward, They generally refused to answer questions about the country:, and he could get .little iitforrnattion from thein. Far in the interior Ogilvie was constantly doing something that excited the suspicions of the natives, and he sometimes Batt troll- ble in establishing friendly relations. On the ;dlacketizie River, when he picked up a telescope to look for is signal amen the river, the Indians immediately turned and fled. (anon, When they naked a shotgun lying .this feet, they retreated to a tlistauce,' and it nets some tithe before they cemented to be friendly. When he was getting alt observation once for azimuth, and was look- ing for a star in the early evening, the In. diens were very much awed as he pointed out the star. The sun had not yet set, and, going away the Indians said they dill not care to have anything to do with so rays. o ten ua a man. ar . Tht'arta t s unintelligent aa- tires he met were ou the Lewes. ukon, between the Tes-lin-tots and Stewart rivers. Mane of the Radians in his party could nuderstautl attyy'thing his people said. They could not speak any language but their OW11. He tried ay signs to get information afoul the river they were **slung on, but failed. lie also tried to learn if there were anter Indians in the neighborhood, but they did tot understand him. Their only au,ticty was to have the strangers depart as soon as possible, and as nothing was to be mane out of thea,, their wish was seely gratified. Near the Porcupine River Ogilvie met a tribe who were in 'tach fear of a people who are very likely mythical that they could not be induced to accompany the explorer. They had Hover seenanything to justify their fetors, and knew nothing about; their alleged enemies except THE TF.itittltrE TIIINf;S that some old men among than had heard when they were boys. They said their ene- mies were cannibals, who slept on the snot - during the Arctic winter and ate their food raw. Not the slightest knowledge iris been gained of any people, even remotely, answer- ing the deseriptton given by these timid Indians, and the probability is thatthey are simply the victims of false rumors originating manyyearsago. For agenoration or two they have been searing themselves with abuga- boo story. Of course, Ogilvie did not find any considerable population anywhere, though snail tribes or families were scatter- ed here and there throughout the entire scone of his wnuderiegs. In the ruining legion on the lrnlccrt River Ogilvie found only one firm doing business outside of gold raining. They are the Messrs. Harper MMcQuestion, and it is evident that there is some opportunity for profitable commerce in that bleak and al• most uninhabited region, from the fact that their business is said to amount in sales alone to a 00,000 a year. They buy all sorts of furs from the Indians, who conte long distances to their store. They supply the native with many barter goods, and import the large variety of articles used by the miners on the Yukon. eery valu- able furs are found all through this legion, and north of the Arctic circle Ogilvie found beaver, fox, lynx, ptarmigan, and other beasts of prey and birds. Numberless cari- bou wander over the mossy slopes, living un to moss which the fn under the snow. d ue Indians do not appear to have hunted in the region northeast of thel ukon for manyyears, and the country is therefore comparatively rich in game. O,ilvio's work was only a little more than half done when he reached the Mac- kenzie River. The Sun will reserve for another article a sketch of his interesting travels in that great river basin and a sum- mary of the geographical and otter imp/iv- :ant results of his wanderirgs for twenty months in the northern part of the con- tinent. In the Sad September Gloamiui . In the sad September gloaming, when the palid mists are drawn O'er the meadow and the river, like a web of ghostly lawn, • And dark •and still the moorland rolls for many a purple mile. 'Tis then, my love, I miss you most, who miss you all the while. Onr wedded days were sweet as swift, and Burse we've been apart Your mem'ry, like a twilight mist, clings ever round my heart, And ofttimes on a uight like this I rest be- side the stile, And lose the present in the past, to dream of you awhile. There's bonnie Kate and gentle Nell, and others too beside, But if 'twere but to ask,. to have a help- .. mate by my side, could ni atoh a broken heart w I t p where ancient longings brood, Or garnish for a second bride its haunted solitude. Through the years, with all their changing, . I have held that somewhere still, There's a white soul holds unbroken that old faith no change can kill, • And I'll. keep the troth an angel • trusts, though given a simple girl, And with clean lips 'shall meet her kiss within the gates of pearl. S. Ruin. WHAT A. PAvrii7 COSTS, Extract (rout 1st' Diary of a Practira Mita-Sltoes neat Everything, What does it cost to bring up a family? A gentleman, whose experience will be recog- nized a$ having points iniommon with other householders, has preserved an account of the expense to whieh he .lees been in rcaeing a family of four children. To -day he <sneered the following statement in his diary. It might be a valuable fact for the census takers: "To -day I close any diary. Twenty-six years ago to -day I undertook to keep an ac' curate statement of ell my earnings and ex- penses, so that I might know actually how much it costs to live an a married state. 'Then all was anticipation. I and my your t wife :counted our resources and our expectations. I received .15 a week, with the promise of more. I owned a house comfortable enough for frugal young people to begin life in, We werespe ed houserent,tltercfore, and our ex- penses have never included this item. Re- trospectively, I see that we have brought up four children in comparatively easy circum- stances. My health has been good, and any earnings have been constantly received. I now receive X3.{1 a week, and we still own the homestead, w ithout any great additions to its wealth except Irian in•.reased amount of fur- niture. I have little more money than I hail when first married, .Perhaps, all tolt., I have $3,5(lft now of assets, them I had peritaps, R. MO. We have never wanted for breat lu.netitnt'.s we have felt 'in tteefl of more money. `l'itrt:t: of the children sire now mak- ing their own way. Next week the fourth graduates at the high seltool,thaving received the saute schooling that the others have had, anti will begin to look out for himself. "1 sbatlnettecessarilylie at any shore ex - pease on account of my children, and the diary properly ends now, Would I be able to €;y through the same experience again of raising to family? I asked my companion, who bad borne the greater part, this ciues- tiott, :and I know that site spoke with a, heart full of love, but was compelled toga ' Not for all that money could buy would I, go through again! what has been necessary to rear a family. "Expressed in dollars tate totals are these: In twenty-six ears we have received from my wages and aueideutal moneys that canto through may ladle and the children, F.'10.100 —or, say $40,001,—.besides the amount of increase in the permanent, assets. (area a. plant of about $3,01J0 and two employees, a man and wife, it has taken, therefore, about $10,000 o each man produced. This, of course, included all employees' expenses. The plant is slightly enhanced in value. but the employees have seen their hest days. The quality of the goods is yet to be demon- strate'. Prospects happily point to cessa- tion of labor and art increase, of reset ts, but there is no eert,•dniy about this. The employees aro proud of their worst, but don't want another yob. "Some of thttitems of expense have been these : Doctors' hills (twentyeev,;ti years). kt:1,I00(andallp•tid,proixably tlteanly ion teat e on reca -il) ; groceries, average per week first tiveyears, t?'7 ; next three, $O ; remainder of the twenty •six years, $13 a week. For ten years it has taken on an average one pair of elms per week for the fancily, including my- acif and wife. The most annoying( thing I have ever known is the rapidity with which children wear out shoes. Only one thing approaches it—the high price of children's shoes. I never cottitl understand Itow, with all the civilization of the age and the de- mand for cheaper results, children's shoes baronet been reduced in price. The human shoe is a. failure. No man Prot rich can afford to buy shoes forafatnily, and if I had it to do I would go to Timbuctoo, where soither horses, mules, camels, nor men are itod." . O\\\,..;\?\,vee e\s `aesseeetesee:i. esei,'etees\\�.-\\cam .i` ,eess.'''.� "-• PICM=47Z . for Infante. and Children, ,44CasatorialeeawelladaptedteICKIdtentl>ar.L Cgasarfaycores Coli, Constipation, Ltecommenoret xuperoctoavp escrii4on Liar; &totaxh, D3arncre3, Find.. cceptttton, Imown to me," ILA. Arsease, KA, Lour... is 'i-orfns, gives sleep, proueotes .di - 31,t $o. O#P?4 Sa+.,A BrookIyn,'1' T. Wiehoee e''ttrtotel Tax Cea•Tdt:a tCosteesr,.'773tutray Street, N. T• )11 W. H. GRAHAM, • O lice linos-!la,m t a+uitdultt.1 t ru. t P.00. a pan, 198 _King Street Weste '_'oI'on,toa Ont.. TREATS CHRONIC: DISEASES-.4414 Riva' SpeoiIl attention to SEW I3ISEASEi, Re Pimples, Ctcera+, fate. PRIV.TI3 DISEASES -..nerd. Diseesses of :a Prbste Nature, as Impotency, Sterility, Y'arieot:eie. '-`;'ervoftw De- bility. etc., (the result of youthful folly and esee1ic,1 vfeet and Stricture of long staatdiug. DISEASES OF WO1I] fir= -Painful. Profuse or Sap- presFsd Menstruation. L'ireratipu, Leucotrbe ,, awl, alt Misplacements of tiro Warhb, •••ureas. -A GOING TO CALIFORNIA VIA, TIFF Seaxte, f? . a uo to. Teoiev 4'; Ce•>rk . ... .....i 4 "S p u1. S Irit t 3•u-% iiTtse, Wed 16R 7' at, An ancas Cit. ' Pgri i, At. 1e.a Tues .Wert Ther Fat SUR Ar, llgtchitlsan it ;:Sat p.w. Moa •Tues ltlssl ',lair F SAN o:u • t- 1t r'iri i II - e4 A nom 18 •a. rn• Tees e1 ' Thu Fr+ IIF'Men Oa las \eats•., tl:'3 P. An- l'ues steal ibs itt Sat Um Ar.Albeiri nice . 121'Z a. su. Wel Mine 'Ira eet Ston ,1;itlt Ar Itirsissw...• -.:OH- m, lhar -Fri -'tr Scan .akcnzwet ilt:Itee et{elee......... 4'11e ta. 1bar ri. gat Sen 51,-:. 'r;taagll 'r t :i Irdeg'i, to t, ,1.111. ', hent iht gat .uta ;,Ion ;Wed You get stat' only line of time eiia cr:ira asitia?+sat ohdRi a eitiuga to ip Angvle% nett yeti seve'1.7 hours Imo. OFFIci';•.74ORIS OLiy-ST, IILTRt)IT, ;UIRH. GEO. FL I.ILU A1, Passenger Agana Points in Sheep Feeding. Iat the first place, instead of feeding four ar live months, seventy-five days is su0i- cient. They will take on all the Resit in the latter time that it is possible for mature sheep to do. Feeding sheep four or five months is an a par with leading fowls a month to fatten them, when half the time is all that is necessary. Feeders get, into this rut because wethers can be bought cheaper in the fall; and then they have a crop ot wool in spring as well as a carcass of mntton. They forget that the wool is worth just as much on the sheep's back as it is oft", and good salesmen usually get the value of it, too. And then mutton will bring more in spring than any other time. This used to be the case more than it is now; but granting all these claims, just as much is gained by not commencing grain feeding until sixty or seventy-five days botore selling. There is a waste of nearly half the grain triton sheep are fed five months, as in the .case of fowls that are fed a month. It must be remem bercd that a ninety or one hundred -pound wether cannot be made to gain more than twelve to twenty pounds, no matter how long fed. Sheep feeders would do better to step out of this rut and feed younger animals. The following well -authenticated d'ta ought to be conviucing : Sheep of the age of seven to ten months for each 100 pounds of digestible material consiuned made a gain of fourteen pounds live weight ; those ten to thirteen months of age made a gain of twelve and one-half pounds ; those from thirteen to eighteen gained tenand seven -tenths pounds, and those from one and one-half to two years old made a gain of five and four -tenths pounds. It is seen that it is far more pro- fitable to feed sheep of from seven to twelve months of age than to fend those that are older. Lambs are of quicker sale any time of the year than older sheep, and always .bring better prices, weight for weight. Lambs can be fed profitably all winter and sheep nob. Wethers will be eliminated from the sheep trade ere long. There is more profit in ewes and lambs. If sheep feeders will try a bunch of lambs and a bunch of nature wethers next winter, keeping strict but separate accounts of all outgoes and in Domes, they will abandon wether feeding in the future and feed lambs instead. Giddings "That young' Smith who got married theother day is a mighty nice fel- low." -Peyton: "Don't know. Saw him treating his'wifetho other day as I wouldn't treat my dog."—Giddings (excitedly) : "Is it possible? And slie so lovely ! \1Vhat was ho doing to her?"—Peyton (calmly) ; "Kissing;. Not Much Hurt. The English •peepers do not seem to feel • half so hurt .over • the agreement as 'to: the McKinley bill as they were expected to do by its advocates. They recognize that it will be to a great degree damaging, to British, in- terests, but they limit this damage strictly, to the' loss of American trade and call atten• bion to the fact that while it tis possible. for England to seek new markets in Asia, Africa and portions of America not affected by. the measure, the United States has fenced itself in, while it hes forced others out, at'il can never be a competitor of the British fo' the trade of the world. There is some,' n n rry shrewd and significant•in the se n:ea ,f the London, Daily News, to the •• act at the clanger to British trade supreu.... ..es, not in extreme measures on the part of the United States, but in •a relaxation of the present policy, w'rieli might result in .the restoration of the ;American mere h vat marine and snake the United States again a formidable competitor in, the markets RDINE OIL! Tho Farmers Heavy Bodied Oil, reade only by McCOLL BROS. & 00,, 'LOrONTO TRY IT ONCE AND YOU WILL USE NQ OTHER. e Goll's Famous Cylinder Qfl Is the finest in Canada for engine cylinders. As fctr Lardine. her. I wouldn't kiss my dog." of the world. • FOR SALE BY BISSETT BROS. 1110101.111. - SYS t,�•�o • e`Cti tibe�flSee�b '�% �` c'�` �1 w° �+• , its ��' ��tfr o"e ti e�' 9 4 y�� o 1J +S vp 0 co Ott 1;v five anti°e ti� 4stc °c a\c;% . 4 •Zti vbi • dtc" `,6 ° tC eta Ace Ne l'tie1�� . m• koc..1 cc '''o t 3.0 °� \`' h'°�5 °,oar �`,�e . . • �`�c. t4 4.g tae ''`•••des OC 'tO `CP e9 e v e Q.a Sam C' s)s- 09 t9, -9 4S1 Cs „ss 0 t40 st9 Get rs' p,�, a'C). trot 4t4, v ' 4 i, •ry a �n Cs a y,G"~ ilcc. �aj, s . So e O a e eh , ¢, 1g e�• e 9. 4i'e ep I' �4w,`a�` . ' vSge' c° e. N1''" '4' ��'. S 4 Manuf.tctttred only by Thomas liollewsy, 73, New Oxford Street, late 533, Oxford Str or, London. BT Purchasers should look to the Label on the Boxes and Pots" If the address is not 533, Oxford Street, London, they are spurious. 1 Exeter Butcher Shop R•DAVIS, Butcher 8f, General Dealer —IN ALL RINDS V -- s astomeresttpplied TUESDAYS, THURS AYS AND SATURDAYS at their :esidene ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE GENE PROMPT ATTENTION. NASAL BALM. andspeedy cure for A certain sp y 1 re. f r Cold in the dead and Catarrh in all its stages. ` SOOTHIiiO, CLEANSING, IIEALIric. Instant Relie, Permanent Cure, 5,•, Failure Impossible, Many so-called diseases are simply symptoms of 'atarrh, such as headache. partial deafness, losing ens° of smell, foul breath, hawking and spitting, ausea, general feeling of debility, etc, If you are :oubled with'any of these or kindred symptoms, you .ave Catarrh, and should lose no time in procuring bottle of.and i3ALu. .13e warned in time eglected cold in head' results in Catarrh,- followed y consumption and death. NASAL BMX Ls sold b-: 1 druggists, or will be sent, post paid, on receipt of rice (so cents and Si.00) by addressing FULFORD & CO., B000KVILLE, ONT. t kat. Damara of imitat one similar in, name, SH3 Frond Gold watch.FREE old for 81.00. until lately. .fest S*S watch an the world. Perfect timekeeper. War- ranted. limey Solid (Mid !hinting Cases. Bath ladies' and gems' sizcs,with works and cases of equal value. One Peraonin each fo- caltiy can secure ono free, together with our largo and val. nnbla lino of Household Samples. These samples, as well as Um watch, we send Free, and after you have kept them in your home for 2 months and shown them to those who may have called, they become your own propert Those who write at once can be sure of receiving the Watch and Snrsples 10, nay all express, trait ht, etc. Address Stinson .As •Oo.,, Ilea 212. 'e:tlnens. ]:Baine. WEAK EENand VPOTr]IIPi can quickly cure them- selves of Wasting Vitality, Lost =unhand, from youthful errors, etc., quietly at home. Book on all private diseases sent tree (sealed). Perfectly reliable. Over 30 years' experience. Address-. GILDED PILL CO., `POEONTO, Canaa& ptiv° ons "Belief for women" is safe and always L D 2a seUoblo; hotter ,baa Ergot. oxide, Taney or Pennyroyal Pals. Insures regularity. Sand for nartlenlnra. Andreas 'P0, Canade.f O E ARD on moots S FO smoothest faces hair �- on baldest heads, inn 80 O UUOdays. Maps % Latest and greatest achievement of modern science I Most won• derfue discosery of the age. Like no other proparationt tdagtoat, sure, almost instantaneous in action 1 stove with whtsltersl Dntd heads "tssaredl" Curious apeetacte,, but positive truths. Only genuine artiolo in market, and certain to give absolute satisfaction, Guaranteed. Price Sr a bottle, ar three bottles for Ss, Each bottle lasts one month. Address A. DIXON, Dos 805, TORS NNTO, t)ANADA. MAMIEE giOVANNANI'S PREPARATIONS, SUPERFLUOUS NOIR A praparat1on that wilf pee aaenNw ramous aniceduous hair without in)uzy t0 the skin. iwarranted. Price Si. PIMPLES AND IlIi.ACKHEADS permanently me ee o Fr i removed 1. Prom ]0 to sodayo. Warranted. Prieetax 90 dayetr=atment,eL VITI. OHP111,EMCE PILLS F Nbb.9pb le paint is a matter of solicitude whether beams::it is 'man. sortable or unfashionable -PAT POLES using ' to,•°',, ,'OnPULENCII PILLS" lose 15 lbs, a month: Theysnut, bosickness; amuain no poison, and novo, foil: Price for ono Mon les treatment, $1t Os throe months medicine, 85. pw,arr'raainted. C� p� Vg �y�ay uuru a tji N tI se - sac;4 (kIOVANNANram' At, Permanent Meech the Warr, develop the form. I, ormlo•sa Permon5. h ^ net. wnrrantcd. Trico Si n box, or six bares for $5. 844;rors B3 11.33era ± Ca'IOV•, LATNn: Yid'S C 29e, tr.ing street ',Crest Porcat'., wa?tt.