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The Exeter Times, 1891-4-16, Page 7NOTHING LIKE IT. R. JOAB SCALES, of Toronto, writes ; "A short tines ago JeVie I was suffering from Kidney Complaint and }aysPePsla, Sour Stgznaeh and Lame Back.; in facet, I Was completely prostrated and suffering intense pain. While in thisstate a. friend bottleNorthrop L 1[>tralnt S YGe too lit tli. o & g tryaf #Ly man's melP table Discovery. I used one bottle, and the permanent manner in which it has cured and evade a new man out of' nate le such that I cannot withhold from the proprietors this expression of my' gratitude." WONDERFUL CURES OR THIRTY YEARS.-- leis. L. Squire, Ontario Steara Dye Worlls, Toronto, says; "For about thirty years I have doctored for Liver Complaint and Dyspepsia without getting any' ettre. I then tried Northrop & Lyraallt's Vegetable Discovery, and the benefits I have received from, this: medtaiue are such that I cannot 'withhold this expression or my gratitude. It acts Immo-. -. diately upon the Liver, :and its good effects are noticed at once. As a Dyspepsia remedy I don't think, it can be equalled." INDISPUTABLE BLE EVIDENCE. RDENED AND'ENLARGED LIVER. — Airs. PI, Idakls 1T'avarino, N.Y., -writes; "For years I have been troubled with Liyap Complaint. The .doctors said my Liver was sed azsd enlarged. I was troubled with Dizziness, Pain in Right Shoulder, Constipation, and gradually losing flesh all rho itme. An food Soured on my stomach: even with the closest d not I attention to diet'. 1 was under the care of three physicians, but di.any relief, A friend sent nee .a bottle of Northrop et .f gatLyman's an's Vegetable Discovery, .and it affords ante ranch pleatedre to inform you that the benefit I have received from It is far beyond ation. I feel hatter now than 1 have clone for years.*' (TJACU, CREA-t I•iE 7P,ms+ RHEUMATISM Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Headache, Toothache, Sore Throat, Frost Bites, Sprains,. Bruises, Burns, Etc. fold br In ns, , naett li:eetexa everywhere- Fafty Cents a a le, l:rccttons. in .t E e- sees. 1� lal.� a ``° n Cif„ Baltheree, Rd. SHI'f ....:. S CONSUMPTION CURMian The suds of this Great Cough Quo is without a parallel in the history of mediicine. All druggists are authorized to sell it on A pos. Itiva guaruate; a teat thatuo rather eure e,in sue• silly stand, That it May become known, Peopptictors, at an enannous experse, see ing a Semple Bottle Free into every home United States and Ciro iia If youbave gh, Sete Thrive, or Ile nrhhi 7, use it, for 1 cure you. If lot ,chard has the Coup. tiktaoping CwxixTit, u:eitpromt 11, and relief if you doe d that ineieious tltsease mptien, us it. ,.sk your Deuggiet for I UDI :'S CURE, Pdra ze etre, co sts, and a, If yam. Lungs =sore or slack lame, Shiloh's Parous Plaster, Kee n et8, *a,a nut. Vonotst•„s trraO l's! ft;r -. t o dr,s. 16e Aceto, ;r7,1$, +ur:+t 4:o. i? era It r 1 .r cah'a eT00111to lir.,wr.I•Wby NT:lce um Our innara n,...,-. S 4 aclrhvwokani E.a t' 4. s Vane ne a era tem t:e. a:.nmas aro calx c.n:daz fun to shoeday • A cr:' 1t.sb u.4,i:'a" a r 111 . „tufa. tl m e �rs .t, cos R -S' �nun�rsmo ora a¢ae•an. i.w. es.l .rn,aie(.7.isn¢,c,aa.hro. ( i,,,it,, rosusPoetio t, teino _�. n y__....., .. —owns 4,0 go. Interesting skctcbee or a distiaguishctd - Line of Financiers. The name of the Baroness Burdett-Coutte has kept before the world the great financial house of which she is to -day the head, All through the seventeenth century the Couttses were famous people in the Scotch town of Montrose, One of the family, Pat. to gain 'cthe first 1 a re u• rick byeine was h iname, g that ie country piece. e "a outside t a ut t nt a tattn q YP .- eawors d anto eels to buy.ser andto C ie Le �, stufl'sfor shipment to, Sweden, His eldest son, John, started lit businessat Edinburgh, His business was " dealing in corn, and ne- gotiating bills; of a rehange on Loudon, Rol- land, France, Italy, Spain and PortugaL" Sas sons because the largestandmeet adven- turous corn dealers in Scotland. They com- bi d b k' its ral smer e Ern V l OF CodLivorOi1 AND THE ypophosphltes of Lime and Soho, No other Emulsion is so easy to take. It 'does not separate nor spoil. Xt is always sweet as cream.. The most sensitive stomach can retain it. CURES Scrofulous and Wasting Diseases. Chronic Cough. Loss of Appetite. Mental and Nervous Prostration. General Debility, &c. Beware of all imitations. Ask for tithe D. & L." Emulsion, and refuse all others. PRICE 60C. AND $1 PER BOTTLE. that she gave a dinuer party this road was suddenly filled with sheets, shirts and pillow cases and all the appendages of a washing day, hwig out to dry: and insuoh abundant. Mi Attempt ora the Czar's Lice Frasarated,— quauttties.as surprised the ueighbers and .t ituarriuge $usnttou.. made Brine of them suppose the honorable member took in washing. Thereto was added, of course, a clique of noisy household damsels and charwoman, whose business it wits to talk as louin and ascoarsery as they could ; their work being best done when they oftenest and most effectively repeated' the scaniis talked t ed oftto leder whom theY were eke fired to noeilk, Thatat was a precau- tion tio that no one could patiently- submit to. .fire. Coutts complained of it, but obtained' no answer. She offered to buy, up her enemy's house ..lid carriage road for a high cum, but still no notice wvas taken of her communications. Then she resorted to a fresh expedient. me an ing with mens con She ltad a high wall, more than a hundred After its transfer itrom Edinburgh to Lois- £eet long, builtall along; hergrounds, and in don, the house of Thomas and James (:ousts front of her neighbor's property, and in that steadily advanced in wealth and influence. way entirely cut off from him all view of James Coutts, never a very happy or agree- • the Righgate hills. That cost her 41.000,' able man, become 'linie morose and u.aat- but it effected its purpose. The stubborn tractive as he grew older. His chief reason declared .hinseit u llitig to sell the fort a 'his brother Thomas into partner- t _kin br er p firound in question ; kite wail was pulled ship in 170 appears to have been the need , dowu again, and Hoife sod o with extended of seine trustworthy assistant int managing ,snerounedings,beeame apleasanter spot than the business. Seen after that he probabl ever. gave up all active share in CISdireetion. He nes. Coutts was not Mrs. Coutts very entereelparliamentae member for Edinburgh, long: Icer venerable husband died in Fele hilt he took no prominent part in its de maty, lb': , at 91 cars of age. Re left her bates tin Rear #heyear 1i7 e, when symptans ill unrestrained possession of all hia personal of the fau►ily insanity that had alreatdy Selz- and lauded property. stated to be under ed hia .eldest brother showed themselves in f,600,t100 in value. tri Middlesett, besides a 0 o gam sumh f3o made a slhcdaell iu theh ust� f c wety largo shard in the immense annual mobs sal rambling; m l preposterous that IPS cristal of the i.autaug house. fn dim time te. (.'onus betaine 11nebees of St. Albans ; she took Care to seet►re her vast fortune er own hands; and when she rued she acoor lauce, it was supppose& with her former husband's wiehes, to hie favorite granddaughter --the lady now famous all the world over for her charities and wise use of her fortune for the beueflt of her fellow e. By the will of the duchess she was bound to assume the name mus arms of Cootie. Slie was therefore Iituown as Alis Bartlett- *. Ins n ing; er, to People who are not thorougldy u.-aluaint- N In that year, or shortly after, sae married' ee with London have generail ° the idea Heat the Paris correspondent of toizdr nt say i :— :llurdeis in of late brother's servants, the daughter y' 1 ees the envimne of Paris are becoming almost g lvratminuter is as alistriec of ila 1i.4 and , a $mall Lancashire farmer, Elizabeth ,nanslons. The • have read of the venerelde daily events, The latus. victim is ra widowin ; rkey by name, in whom, with a hand- ;'lblaew',.of the i once of Parliament, of tile' na nets lir,ugnet, w'ho livc,l in the main . > 1 . 'countenance and great good humor, new governtneut o Ueae. 1'er°naps, in the stT4et pf Pe_unerr, at Lr to vilhago ittthe toiled many rustic.' virt uea, Bat even (emcee of a laurrierl visit to town, the = lrxve wtBalt of Mentniorene;,•, The old etc ire. y Starkey mild he .=;tucy now and then. 1, zeen these 5 iend.ia, rdificee. The Lia clone, who was fie year, of age iced canted ber ww *Iay� 4>efore her marriage— a rainy, pi livr lihom talc ng in washing;. eecupiee knows that: around ono behind *lime. not 1 ay—ehe was at her week when one many yards atvw.Ike +weft the tfOstwretcle two rooms and a ➢:lichen on the gamut !tone , infester.s clerke run into the house ed, sdghlo.li.l. min poverty-:�triehon lxartione o «a one -storey Ir wkmo, ew upper floor being M and wvae�aroeeetling to hurry upstairs, there of the 11101:o ►lis, �� lc.° to two other willows, Ian tri have been to get riot of his wet clothes. i..ettystoppe,l , In this miserable It ezdiay Misq Buraeft- aheetxt for Ole East month in Paris. the S.:a- him and bade him take oli' his shoes, so as' Coutts, as she was then airless. ban her"tairdaay escntng Madame 1',•muquet's neigh - to avoid dirtying the newlywasiwd stairs. -teat work of chant sheeliasey it for her Orators, mwprisetlatnot !ictvin seen her all But the Battu man, resenting what he �' i , baa cue of her slay, looked in at her bedroom window. and !, thought aniimpertinence, only liaused #u aerp ion coahrn t olR tl�i this borough. they'saw Iter lying on the floor. rIie Mayor ar g mal seat for, anal the deny, ivbich was in 1S.:iO she err! ted.in ItTtt haste, Row the Church of 4t. ;Revlon, the martyr.. a gnu double -looked, opened. The widow's body specimen 4f Gothic architecture. She :alter• wafound lying`e b rlose n the bed,a a stad b ih 1 lnd to D e rh t 1 i was f by weed hebuilt , parsrown how and threet the throat. after the murderer hail appau- school somas, and crowned her auuuiiieeut gift by amply endowing the whole The `; cntly failed to °scent' hit: pilixi a by (Duke of Wellington presentedan altarpiece Bouqueta! nd on tappears op c rsartaltet011.4510118 o a to thei°plchurch. few a s previous to the murder been the Q 1 This is only one c the least of Lady slate victim of obtaery, her home being elitered 3 time outts'a henclierut deeds During the daring beraliselhee. On the second o.casion 1 time when the church of nd wStephen's was she was so much frightened that she slept i building; her bountiful hand was providing for a night or two at the house of her niece. i Por the religious wants of more than one a Raving got over her fright, she retnrueil bthe colonies. In 11317 she endowedev. file home,and weaved to have met her death Grey lrio of deeps Town, the appointed i o the. the sme night at about ten o'clock. Tho Grey was canseorated and achpoe cted to t11e iuquiries of the pollee led to the arrest of see, and in thefoliawin iyearito a earnerd he Madame Bouque 's grandson, a young man endowed the bisrs in hopric of Adelaide In South of IS, named Charles Grosset. 'Tho arrest Australia, had Dr. Short was appointed to was almost immediately justified by a full the see. :since than (1$33} she luta cenlei confession on the part of the prisoner. Gros - lotted the funds necessary not only to endow set admits that hoeing a fortnight ago cm - a bishopric in British Columbia, but also to bezzled a sum of money in order to bet on provide for the clergy of the diocese. The horse racing, and being unable to make good sum she devoted to the church in Columbia his losses In any other way be killed his mnounted to £25,000. grandmother, in the hope of finding; the • :Emigration is a subject in which the money 110 needed. Ile explains that after baroness has taken a deep interest, Puss she he had strangled the poor old woman he has often ai(dee. destitute families by trans- ransacked every drawer and cupboard in planting them to suitable distriets in the the place, but could only find 13 francs. colonies. At a time of great distress in the Grosset,•who was a eabinotmaker by, trade, country she effected an arrangement with lived in a lodging -house in the Rue Timeline, the Cunard company by which many families Paris, .kept by the Freres de St Nicolas. from all parts of t'herem try 'eweenabled to After the crime he spent the evening at a emigrate. (inc Irishmen will readily remem- . cafe chuntent. her how she came forward to the rescue of the inhabitants of the islands of Cape Clear, Shirkin, etc., close to Skibbereen, ut a time when starvation was staring them in the face. The peerage of England is recruited from many sources. Some of these are not, or at least in tinges past were not, of the put est. nese we pass over. Some have won. their way to a coronet by the sword, some by the tongue, some by the pen. But the roll of British nobles contains no name more hon- ored, or more worthy of honor and love, than that of Angela Georgina, Baroness Burdett -Coutts. To that roll her name was added in 1871. leer marriage to Ashmead Bartlett, many years her junior, created an international sensation. She needed a partner to admin- ister her charities, and the conduct of Ash- inead Bartlett since she married him has proved that her selection was in every way wise. They stand high to -day in the esteem of London society. BUSS1A Bug was. Mende persuaded hint to take no further ' - sliare in the debates. Soon Iter tbsx he 1 west to Italy with his daughter, an roily; child, who there fauntl as husband. At Turin he went raving mad, and, while on his way home for suitable treatneut, he died at Gibraltar, early in 1778. Even Thomas shamed occasional eecen- tricitiee during; his long slits busyy life. tie had come to Louden to be et uior partner ill the mercantile establishment of St. Mary Axe. in 17;x1, when he was about el years Qld. and he quitted that ba 1700, to enter 1 brother's ba k' house- t Strand Sr. PLTEitsevito, April 10.—Itis stated here that an attemptwas made on the Czar's life on Alonday, but the attempt wasclever- ly frustrated. It was a Russian holiday, anal the Gear and Czarina went to review the Imperial (guard at their quarters op- posite the palace of the Grand Duke Nicholas. Invitations to there oihad beensent to its extremely select end limited number of persona. A Well with a sallow complexion and of a Southern type was among those admitted by ticket. He took a place five paces distance from the place where the Czar was to .stand. As the man continued to wear his overcoat he was re- quested to remove it, but declined, on the ground that he was afraid of draughts, His refusal excited suspicion, and he was again requested to take his coat off. This time be consented, and retired, and to an ante- room. lie was immediately arrested and d y taken to prison, when a revolver anal a globule supposed to contain poison were found is bis pockets. His name is Shamei- 1 kin, Re tieclures the .globule simply con- tains reediciee. on-tainsmediciee. The police effect to have know.. of a plot connected with isnshera' s .ofonpau aa 'ai,nin- say they were watching : A great sensation bre been caused by the u .wunouncenneni that the Greed Duke dliebael 'wliel,aetov-iseh, a eaueiu of the (`lar, sae )A been privately married to the (oalnt°mss of' :xerenba:rg, daughter of the Duke of Nassau. at San Remo. The Duke of Nasssu noel the young couple left Cannes a. few days ago ostensibly for avisit to Genoa, The Russian Government. will take iso diplomatic steps to prevent the reappoint- ment of Prince ferrlinaue to the viceroyalty of Eastern Rotunelis on the exiratiott nt his present term of *Mee, hut will •lecline to reseesiiee him tit rahty cine- eity, Gaalhler`e Crim. LAX-SE,0 EM_LKLL5 COOED B Reile 11 N' s 126 Lexington Ave., New York' City, Sept. 19, 1888. I have used the Flax -Seed Emulsion in several cases of Chronic Bronchitis, and the early stages of Pfithisis, and have beenwellpleased with the results. JAMES K. CROOK, M.D. C SLI 1PTION Brooklyn, N.Y., Feb. 14th 1889. Ihave used your Emulsion in a case of Phthisis (consumption) with beneficial results, where patient could lit use Cod Liver Oil in any form. J. H. DROGE, M. D. NERVOUS PROUD, ' 4 Brooklyn, N. Y., Dec. 29th, 1888. I can. strongly recommend Flax Seed Emulsion as helpful to the relief and possibly the cure of all Lung, Bronchial and Nervous Affections, and a good gen- eral tonic in physical debility. 4e JOHN F. TALMAGE, M. D. GENERAL Brooldyn, N. Y., Oct. Nth,1888. I regard Flax Seed Emulsion as greatly superior to the Cod Liver Oil Emulsions so generally in use. D. A. GORTON, M. D, WASTWASTING DISEASES 187 West 84th St. New York,Aug 0,1888. I have used your Flax-Seed=Emulsion Compound in a severe Base of Mal -nutrition and the result was more than hoped for—it was marvelous, and con- tinuous. I recommend it cheerfully to toe profession and humanity at;large. M.'11. GILBERT, M.D. R MAT! ><. ' Sold by stggists, Price $1.00. FLAX -SEED EMULSION 'CO. 47) :% I,allsa;•ty St., Newtork. E stamp and scrape on each stop as he as- cended, in order Herat lie mnight anis them all as much a8 lie could. "Before long.. Betty shouted after him, " Ill maks you pull off your shoes, and your stockings, too, whenever I elhooee it." But the threat seems never to hive been put in force. The young man, when he heard of the approaching marcher, thought? ho would surely be dismissed, or made to sutler in sone way Inc his indiscretion Ins stead of tint the Young Mrs. Coutts showed herself especially friendly 'award him. In the earlier stage oilier connection with her husband her mind way necessarily un- cultivated and her manners far front re- fined, But she certainly educated her three daughters so well that they were thought fit, with the help of the dowries their father was able to give them, to outer tho most aristoeratie sircles.Sophia, the eldest, was married to Sir Francis Osudett in 1793 ; Susan, the second, became the Countess of Guildford. tleanwhile, Tlhoinas Coutts went on Ivan, nine his bank. Thomas Coutts was a charitable man, though vary strict in all business relation- ships, and, in old age, very miserly looking its his own bearing and apparel. He was, according to tr not very friendly critic, "a pallid, sickly, thin old gentleman, who wore a shabby coat and a brown serateli wig." One day a good-natured person, fresh from the country, stopped him in the street, and offered him a guinea. Coutts thanked slim, but declined the gift saying that be was in no " immediate want.' The banker was by no means stingy, however, in any case 111 which stinginess was really blameworthy. His purse was always open for the relief of distress. He was alvatys fatuous for the good dinners he gave and the crowd of wits those dinners tempted into the circle of his acquaintance. Especially was he fond of theatrical society. Playwrights and actors always found him a good patron ; and, either in idle compliment or because his opinions were worth heeding, often consulted Min on even the intricate details of stage management and playwrit- 1 rug. One of his theatrical friendships was par. f titularly memorable in its consequences. Of ' Thomas Coutts's first wife, the exemplary servant whom he married somewhere near 1760, we hoar nothing after 1785 or 1786, save that soon after that symptoms of:mad. mess or inhocility—a kind of trouble that pressed with singular force and frequency Warding; Off Disease. on the banker's kindred and belongings— The part played by the acids of the appeared in her conduct ;. and that having stomach inwarding off diseases duetomicro. lo•,g been (lead to society, she actually died organisms, as typhoid and Asiatic cholera, in 1815. Tlxoinas Coutts was four or five and is a subject at present engaging the atten- 70 years old at that time. But within three tion of European doctors. The opinion is months of his first wife's death he married expressed that the liquid acids of the a second—the famous Harriet Mellon. stomach form an obstacle to the develop- Wi th her, indeed, ,ho bald been very inti. ment of these germs. One authority affitms: mate for some years previously; thereby " A healthy stomach can be considered as providiug the world with plenty of topic one of the most important agents among for scandal, although there had been ro real those which have the power of checking ground, though plenty of excuse for it. intestinal fermentation of iniorobian origin, • Miss Mellon," says Leigh Hent, "was as well as the development of microbes in arch and agreeable on the stage. She had the intestines." This opinion harmonizes a e b then she had lune eyes and a no genius, but y with the conclusion drawn from certain ex- good-humored mouth." Iii 1795, while yet periments made afew years ago upon guinea quite young, having herself and her mother pigs with the choleras bacilli. When the to provide for, she lnado her first appear. infection was sought to be conveyed with ince at Drury .Lane, as Lydxa Languish. the food only uncertain results were secured, She made touch stir during the neat twenty but when means were taken to avoid the -years, albeit Mrs. Siddons wits then alive,passage of the stomach and to introduce the. and given expression to her wonderful tel- cholera bacilli by injection directly into the ents"on the same Old Drury boards. Her intestine, the most fatal results were ob- last appearance on the stage was as Audrey tained. Out of eleven guinea pigs treated near the beginning of 1825. At that time in this way, one died soon after the opera- because of the insults to which she was sub- tion, nine.died in from two to six days, and jetted, in consequence of his long -continued one,which had received "about one fiftieth attentions to her, old Contta persuaded her of drop" recovered after a short illness. to abandon the theater, and he gives her It is now believed that what is true of the very liberal opportunities for so doing. For cholera germ is also true of the typhoid ba- •twenty-five thousand pounds he bought cilli an<;i:that the acids of the stomach serve Holly Lodge, at the foot of Highgate hill, to limit, and possibly to arrest, the process from Sir W. Vane -Tempest, and, slaving of germ multiplication. This knowledge stocked it with horses and carriages, an may be turned to practical account. While every sort of requisite furniture, placed at it is not possible, perhaps, to avoid taking her disposal. Before the year was out he into the system the typhoid germs, the non - married her ; and she seems. to have been a .clitions of their propagation may be render - good wife to him during , his few remaining ed less favorable. By a careful observance years of life. She knew how to hold her of the laws of health, by avoiding all ex - own against the opposition of other people, ''ceases, by' keeping the stomach in a healthy � shown in all sorts of curious and vulgar condition, much may be done in the way of i Lion was her next-door neighbor. at High- 1 ways. Specially prominent in his oigh- fortifying the system against the' attack of i gate, °i a late membri for Middlesex."His this wasting and fatal disease. carriage ea rriageroadpasseddirectlyinfronto'f Mrs.' An owner of a but+ing pro?uerly—tills outt's dining -room window, and every time tuburban resident who keeps a gods DO YOIJ KEEP 1T IN THE HOUSE? LUNG BALSAM NO BETTER REMEDY FOR , CROUP, CONSUMPTION, 4i e 'Is a Husband Worth Raving ?" ' Fronithe IeinrlonStanalard, Marsh Our spirited contemporary, Woman, has been asking its readers, as a "prize" eon- undrum, "Is a husband wvorth having?" Sineethe question has arisen it is satisfactory to note that the three winning correspond- ents all answer in the affirmative. Being married, also, they speak with ronnaissance de cause. In fact, the great majority of an swers quoted more or less confidently pro- nounce that—taking one thing with another, subject to except ions, remembering also how society is organized—it is, upon the whole, rather better to have a husband than not. To tell the truth, the issue is not encourag- ing. As the first prize winner says. "This momentous question would have been laugh- ed to scorn fifty years ago." We might put it more strongly all round. Fifty years ago it would hardly have been safe for a respect- able journal to propound the query, unless in joke. Twenty years since no one would have replied seriously. At the point we have reached nobody is much surprised; the answers are many and grave, and their purport is by no means decided. Remember- ing that women are by mature conservative, very slow to adopt new ideas iu others, this hesitating tone seems siguitieaant. It is rather alarming to speculate how the ques- tion willbe treated ten years hence. Ladies who reply fail to grasp the abstract view, as might be expected. They all declare that a good husband is worth having, and a bad one decidedly 'not. These, however, were not worth a question—they speak for . n will be more themselves. Probablywomen logical in the years twmcome ; but goodness only knows to what conclusion more accu- rate reasoning will bring them. Father of 34 Children. J. C. Kissinger of Toby township, Pennsyl- vania, was married in 1819, at the age of 19. When he was 30 years okl he was the father of 11 children, without a twin among them. When his eleventh child was a few weeks old he and his wife went on 'a visit over into Butler County, leaving the nine oldest children in charge of the house, the next one to the baby being left in care of Mrs. Kissinger's brother's wife. While the father and mother were absent the house caught on fire, and the nine children were burned up with it. During the next ten years Kissinger's wife presented him with eight more children, and died soon after bearing her nineteenth child, being less than 40 years old. Kissingermarriedagain, and, his second wife borehiml5children in 26 years. At the age of 61 Kissinger had been the father of 34 children. He made a fortune at farming, and added a second one to it by turning banker. A resident of Toby township says Kissinger is halo and hearty at the age of 91. He counts his descendants by the score. ETER LUMBER YARD Tits ut.dtisigned wishes to inform the Public in general that he .ef31)5 c;onstant;y in stock all hinds of BUILIDThTC MATERIAL Dees, eci or Trasdros PINE AND HEMLOCK LUMBER. SHINGLES A SPECIALTY 600,000 XX and XXX Pie and Cedar Shingles now in stock. A call solicited and satisfaction guarauted. %MUMS 1:777147.tg, Is used both internally and externally. I5 sots quickly-, raording almost instant relio£Tram tho eoverost pain. DIRECTLY TO THE SPOT. Ij1STOTI 1EOLUS I 1 ITS IIC11O i. For CRAMPS,. CHILLS, COLIC, DIARRHOEA, DYSENTERY, CHOLERA MORBUS, and all BOWEL COMPLAINTS, NO REMEDY EQUALS THE PAIN -KILLER. In Canadian Cholera and Bowes Complaints its effect Is magical. It cures in a very short. time. THE BEST FAMILY nestEDY FOR BURNS, BRUISES, SPRAINS, RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA and TOOTHACHE. SOLD EVERYWHERE AT 2S0. A SOTTLQ, B'?' Dewar() of Counterfeits and Imitations Fanners and Threshers —SHOULD USE McCall B oV La,rdine OH, CYLINDER, WOOL, BOILER, AND PURGER OILS SEE VIA I' THE BARRELS ARE BRA/WED LA-BDINE MoCALL BROS. R FOB, SALE BY RISS +'TT BROS., EXETER, _',._. t _.. - -.... _......._ ,. --Awn* - . x..,.. v toastssaz tie 1 rasa etc as Z13 (Itio�SO 'Ng pp � 3I Seta 17BlFL,.iz'I o aTzesa ozu sada pan sena eta uo leallsq WO OZ flood pen q q d Jo is Od .1 . 0 �a + oa,eeeee,se �Cy 0 ,�1)'S 6s'� d0 vt q; SF) !<1>$ oar O 00 1 '$ /. t .e",\. ,,\,), ee .\* , \- -Q_ s .,,. ,e- etz\\‘: J ao �O �;i` Oro 0 � � a� o. a �'Q 6 �• 0 2 05 s. ��� 'Q .w�0 �O ��� CSC co „‘.. .c.s. cg ,o- isG a ''8\ 0' O pis ®+. cs telt 0 e` cAs '9 0, 06