The Brussels Post, 1893-9-15, Page 6(1`Ebc l' 1.i155d Vast
----ie r mx.osIroo---
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W. la.
Ratter and Proprietor.
Silas At The Fair.
(troll THE nalr's none )
Dunn Szai.000uy,—When I left Bracher
Javlune passuuidge, on akonnt ov its
bolcummin so crowded with his releshuns
and Brushtowu March members that I
had to sleep on a few lovers spread down
on the floor, and started oub to find we
anuther place to stay, my fast noshun
was that I wed go to a tavern and see
what kind ov a bargain I end strike to
put up with nm fur two or three weeks.
After welkin ez mutoh as two miles
without seein a tavern sign a ewingin
anywhere iu the street, I began to yule
my tang to inquire ov seoh peepul ez 1
end mannidge to stop long snuff frum
the del run in which eveybody peers to
travel here, where I cud find a house ov
intertainmont. Pintin to a bil0in rite
°lutist the street that was so big that it
endent hardly all be seen at wun look, a
man with blue spoke ou finally told me
that he ebodent weeder if I Went be
take keen ov there. So I went over and
marched in without nookin, after seein
frum ethers who was a kummin and goin
when I got there that seob peered to be
the fa,hen. The man who told me
about the tavern sed it had the name ov
bein a middlin good house, and he
reckoned I cud hav Woken far dinner
two or three times a week, if I insisted
on it, without no extra expense, and that
made me all the more anxious to be wun
ov their boardere, if they wuzzenb too
match orovded to giv me a room down
stairs handy to the pump.
I wawked in with my carpetsaok over
my shoulder ou the end ov my nmbrel,
and marched up to the counter, which
stood et the back end ov a barroom
which was big snuff fur a barn. Settin
down my things I leaned over the counter
and shake hands with the landlord, and
then begun a little chat with him about
the weather. Swalleriu wen lone ov a
peach, nitieh he had jest then broke in
two, he apolce up ruttier brisk, and am
be, "Well, what kin we do fur you ?" but
he dident ask me to tithe a queer, altbo I
bad gone into his house with the
expeoktasbnu ov apoudin munny.
I asked him if he cud make room fur
me, and lie sed he 001 I then told him
that 1 shed like to leave my things fur
safe keepin ontil I kern back to stay all
night. At this he handed me pen, and
whipped ar"nncl a big bake fur me to
write my name down in, and while I was
a doin it he finished up his peach. I
put on my specks, and after tryin the
pen on my them nail to mance sure that
it wudent splutter, I took plenty ov time
and role my name ez strata as I ever dun
in my life without leavin out a letter.
When he handed rhe Ole pen I rather got
the ides That he thawt I (indent write,
and I jest made up my mind that I wed
do my level best and show him how he
had missed it.
Bo I stratened up after I had crossed
my t and laid the pen down, the man
asked me how long I lowed to etay, and I
told him about two or three weelce, on -
less gob all the infurmashun I wanted
fur the Tuttle Reizers Klub quicker.
Ile then sed in a ,vay ez if he dident
°pose I had over two dollars with me,
that I end pay a weeks board in advance.
The way in which he sed it made me
load Meer thru to my bakbone, but
settin my teeth and tryin my best not to
let OD, I take out my pooket bike, and
glair holt ov the end ov the strap and
beginuin to onwind it ez tho I wed jest
ez soon buy the house and pay hint Dash
down fur it, I inquired ez lceerless as a
town feller buyie surly water fur his gal,
"IIo,v muton is it ?"
I think yule better stop here, old wo•
men, and take a long smell (ram the
kamfire bottle before I tell you hots that
man had it all fixed up in his mind how
the wed rob me. Spezia that I wed giv
him a ten dollar bill mud git five or six
dollars in cMange bade, you ]tin imagine
how I most felt the marry iu my bones
turn to ice when 11e sed, without clow a
so'itary bit ov figgerin with his pencil,
that my bill fur a week wed be thirty
five dollars. I grabbed up that pen Agin
and I tell yon I skretched out my name
too golok. Thirty.fivo dollars fur what
few pervishune I cud eat in a week, and
you only gettin fifteen cents a pound fur
butter at home 1 Only think ov it.
And no extra charge when theta was
chiokon fur dinner. Well,1 shad think
not. I dont think the man end a skairt
TDB any woes if hede a shot at me with a
pistil. Sech prices ez that charged in
broad daylight, and yib clown our way
we put men in jail fur etealin Inmate
I dident waste any time in tallith to
the men, but grabbed up my thinge and
got out in a hurry, I can tell you, fur I
Was afraid if I staid a minis longer hede
Marge me a dollar fur house rent.
Thirty-five dollars far a weeks satin and
sleepin i Why, evry time I think ov it
it pate my teeth on midge. Ide like to
late bow long Ido be it land owner if I
was fool anuff to ley seoh prices fur
vision ez that. Ida eat oraolters and
cheese all the days ov my life before Ids
do it. Theme more ways ov robbio a
man than knockii hire down to do it,
and frum whet I kin melte out thetas
miry libtle law in this town, Ez 1 went
out ov the tavern with a tight holt on any
umborel, a boy abort haft grown, kuni
up and wanted to carry me, earpetettak
fur nue, but I was ou my guard now, and
dident giv Kinn It chance to do it, the I
hue all he 500110ed was to git it in his
hands end then make oft with it, Its no
wonder they turn out seoh terrible mind
lege here, fur they begin trainin um
airly.
1 wewked the town outil my feet was
sore, a tryiu to lied a plane where they
wed be willin Io board me fur a short
spell and not want to skin ale alive fur
dein it, but wherever I went it peered ez
the they had mannidgecl to find net sum.
how ,about how match means I had
fetched along with tne, and had made up
their minds beforehand that they must
hay the whole ov it, I bell you, mother,
ez the crowds upset ire in the street and
stepped on my bran new oarpebsaolc, it
made the Mali more than a duzzin times
that the heft Reimers Klub ]indent a
uover take it into their heads to spud me
up here to be their delegate.
At last, along torde avenin, I limn to a
place where there was a sign out et the
elooe sayin that boarders wed be take,
and I Mum rap the stops and giv the bell
a jerk. An old wnlhloln with white hair,
who wore bangs in front and two keels
over mole shoulder, and had the top or
her head kivered over with sum kind ov a
blank lane am, line to the door and told
me her name was lllisszve Napp. She
sed I cud be akommodated with very
genteel board fur eight dollars a week,
It was a terrible price, to be euro, but
not kltowio what else to do, and not bein
able to jew the Womu,l down to seven
dollars I take it. I soon found out that
the plea° was so terrible genteel that I
kum party ny starvin to detll, It peered
that the boarders wore expookted to
satisfy theireelvos by loolcin at the silver•
,vara nvithont mn10h help from vittles.
I staid there three days, and got so
hungry I cud almost bite myself. Not
wunet while I was there did they hav any
pie on the table fur neither supper nor
breltfost. The bieltits was about the size
ov fifty•oent peace and not so very
match thicker. There was also general-
ly wun smolt perbator fur each boarder,
hill with the skin on in order to make it
look that match bigger. There was jest
about snuff meat to show that there was
a butcher shop dein a smolt bizneso in
that naberhood semwhere. yon wudent
a never bleeved bloat wun little thin beef -
stake and n ben cub into so many penes,
no that so many pankaltes and a ben
squeezed out ov about a teakup full ov
batter. 1 tet you what it is, old women,
I dont bleeve I ever knocle what hard
times was moil I sot down at that genteel
table. I was so hungry sum nites when
I went to bed that it was all I cud do to
keep frum eatin up my candle, and I
finally had to go to a store and git me a
dime's wuth ov oraelters and cheese to
keep frnm feelin ez tho I wed like to
nock down and rob sumbody.
My bedroom was a cramped up little
oubby hole in wun end 0v a nnrry hall,
with only wun winder in it, end so close
and hot at nits that there clident peer to
be any yuse in my trynn to git any Bleep,
There was a lane Icurtin on the winder
rho, that giv the room a terrible genteel
look. There was a dog close by that
must a had sumtUin terrible aggervatie
to bother him, fur be made it his biznies
to howl all note, and souther thing that
helped to make the rites seem dredful
long was OM anybody in that naberhood
peered to own ce oat. My bed was a
nnrry lounge that was ever so match too
short, and not ez wide as it slnud a ben
by about a foot. Whoeoer made the bed.
tiok bad ben ankebns to fill it, but not
Navin straw aunff on hand bad put in a
few cobs. To a body who hes always
ben in the habit ov eieepin on a faller
bed it foot thick, I tell you, Semanthy,
,yen or two nites on that mattress watt
anuff.
I dont kno tho but what mebbe I cud
a mannidged to got a little sleep along
tords mernin, but jest about the time I
was beginuin to doze, there ]cum 11154
mills °arts a gain it over the stones on
the gallnp, and Pram that on there was a
noise on the streets like bedlam broke.
By the time brekfust was reddy I tell
you lovas dredful homesick, and wed
hav ben most Tillie to giv 0 dollar to be
out in the country stoners where I cud
clime up on n warm fence wunst more
and watch pigs eat. I wudent be willin
to live in this town fur a whole year if I
Itnode I cud matte ez match mnnny by
dein it as I cud ordwd into a two•buehel
sack.
I did low to tell you snmthin about the
place where hue stayin now, but my last
amudle is about burnt out, and s0 Ile hav
to quit fur bonighb. So goodbye,
From your homesick parduer,
Smits GANDEOFooT.
A S1C4;'I'tiit 01; '1'lllf e,s,t GY Life
01? ReY. 1)11. PA'TON.
If Dr. John G. Paton talks as well as
he writes, Monti ealors may look forward
to a rioh treat. It is by sturdy sons of
his type that Scotland shows her great•
nese, Born on the 24tH of May, 1824, in
the pariah of Kirkenal,oe, near Dum-
fries, Dr. Paton is now 60 years of age.
What a grand viatica ho gives of the life
of the God•fearing Sootdb peasantry of
which he cornett, and how reverently he
speaks of his father and mother 1 'My
father, Jas. Paton," he says, "was a
stocking manufaotursr in a small way,
and he and his young wife, Janet Jar-
dene Rogerson, lived on terms of warm
friendship with a 'gentleman farmer,' of
the district, so they gave me hie name,
'John Gibson,' and the early haired child
of the cottage was soon nble to toddle
across to the mansion, and became a
great pet of the lady there, More than
once in my many jouroeyines have I met
with one and another in some 'nay con.
neotod with that family, and heard little
incidents, not needing to be repeated bete,
showing how beautiful and tender and
altogether human was the relationship in
those days between the landlord and the
cotter on his estate. On my last visit to
Sootland, sixty years after, I drove to
Brmhead iht oonipany with my youngest
brother James acid rey cousin David, and
we found no cottage nor trace of a cot.
tags. 01 ten thous,011 homes in Soot•
land cues sweet and beautiful, eaoh a
little possible Paradiee it1 its own well
cultivated plot, this is true today ; and
where are the healthy, happy peasant
boys and girls that such homes bred and
reared ? They are sweltering and strug-
gling for existence in our towns and
cities. Political economy may Mese me
1f it will, but I heard with grim satin.
fixation that We eystem of large farming,
which extinguishes our village hoose o
and sends our peasantry to rear their
THE BRUSSELS POST
children in lanes and alleys, in attics and
collars of populone towns was proving
ruinous at length to the landlords and
Motors, who heti in many emcee penally
forced ib ou unwilling people for more
selfish gain,"
Of his father he says 1 "The ,closet'
was the sanctuary of that cottage home,
Thither daily, and oftentimes a day,
generally after each meal, we maw our
father retire and shut the door, and we
ohilaren got to understand by a sort of
spiritgalfustinob,for the thing was too
snored to be tallied about, that prayers
wore being poured out there for intas of
old by the high privet within the veil in
the Most holy Place. Never in templeor cathedral, on mountain or in glen,
can ii lope to feel that tate Lord God is
more near, more visibly walking and
talking with mon, than under that
bumble oedema roof of thatch oaken
wattles. Though everything else in re. mites.ligion were by some unthinkable bas.
tropbe blotted from my understanding
my soul would wander bank to those
early seems, and shut itself rap mooagain in thab eanotuary olosot, and, hear-
ing still the eol,oes of those orioe to God,
would hurl book all ddubt with the vie-
torious appeal, "He walked with God,
why not I ?"
Of 1)r. Paton's early struggles after an
odnoatinn, refusing all help from hie
father, and instead helping his younger
brothers ; how he refused a epeeist teeth.ing in Woolwich at 111e Government's ex.
Nese, (for which be was wrathfully dis-
missed fromhis place in connection with
the Ordnanoo Survey of Scotland,) for
the reason that he would not need to
bind himself for seven years and so
could not Sit himself soon enough to be
a missionary of the Gospel ; and of his
subsequent work in Glasgow city mission
we have rat space here to spank.
The Great Ferris Wheel,
Chicago.
The great wheel is 250 feet in diam•
etsr, 825 feet in oironmferenoe, and
thirty feet in width. As it is elevated
fifteen feet above the ground a spectator
on the top of it will look out upon the
landscape at an elevation of 205 feet.
The wheel is composed of two wheels
of the same size connected and held bo.
gather with rods and struts, which, how-
ever, do not approach closer than twenty
feet to the petiphery. Bach wheel has for
its outline a curved, hollow, square iron
beans 251, by 10 inches. Ata distance of
forty feet within this circle is another
circle of a lighter beam. These beams
are called erowne and are oonnecbed and
held together by an elaborate trusswork.
Wituin this smaller oirale there are no
beams, and at a dietetic° there appears
to be nothing. But at the centre of the
great wheel is an immense iron axle 02
inches thick and 45 feet in length. Raab
of the twin wheels, where the axle passes
through it, is provided with is lag° iron
hub 10 feet in diameter. Betw°on these
hubs and the inner "crowns" there are
110 connections except spoke -rods 2}
inohes in diameter, arranged in pairs, 13
feet apart, at the crown connection. At
a distance they look like mere spider
webs, and the wheel seems to be danger.
ously devoid of substantial support.
HOW PASSENGERS ARE CARRIED.
The great wheel Inas tbirtysix car-
riages for paseongers lung on its peri-
phery at equal intervals. Bach ear ie
twenty-seven feet long, thirteen feet wide
and nine feet high. It has a heavy
frame of iron, but is covered externally
with wood. Ib has a door and five broad
plate glass windows on each side. It
contains fot•ty revolving chairs, made of
wire and screwed to the floor. It weighs
thirteen tons, and' with its forty paaeen.
gens will weigh three tons more. It is
suspended to the periphery of the wheel by
an iron axle six and one•half inohee in dia.
meter, wlli0h runs through the roof. It
is provided witb a conductor to open the
doors, preserve order, and give infer.
motion. All the oars together will •carry
1,400 people. To avoid accidents from
panics and to prevent people From jump•
ing out the windows will be aoveood with
an iron grating.
FOUNDATION OF CONCRETE AND STEEL.
The wheel, with its cars and patina,
gars, will weigh about 1,200 tons, and
therefore needs something substanbinl to
hold it up, Its axis are supported there-
fore on two skeleton iron towers, pyramid.
al in form, one at each end of it. They
are 40 by 50 feet at the bottom, and six
feet square at the top, and about 140 feet
high, the side next to the tvbeel being
psrpeedionlar, and the other sides slant.
ing. Bach tower hits four groat feet, mod
eaoh foot rests on an underground 0001.
erste foundation 20 by 20 by 20 feet.
Crossbars of steel are laid at the bottom
of the concrete, and the feet of the tower
are conneoted with and bolted to thorn
with iron rods.
As to passengers, I1.Ir. Rios says that
1,400 passengers will have no mere effect
of the movements of the speed than if
they were so many flies.
The wheel, however, is never left to
itself, but is always directly and con.
scantly controlled by a steam engine.
The wheel pointe eget and weal, end the
engine, which is 1,000 horse -power rover.
Bible, lsloumiug train engine, is located
under the east half of it, and sunk four
feat in the ground. The machinery is
very similar to that used in the power.
houses of the cable oar companies, and
rens with the same hoarse roar that they
do. It operate0 a norbb•nnd•south iron
shaft, twelve inohes in diameter, with
great oog•wheels at each end, by moans
of whichthe power is applied at emelt
aide of the wheel.
In the oonstruotion of this great wheel
every 00noeivable darner has been cal-
culated and provided for. Windage was
the thing of greatest itnportanae, for, al.
though the wheel itself is all open work,
the oars preeent an immense resisting
sodas°. lint Mr. Rice points to hie two
towers, with their bases fifty feet north
and south of the wheel, and bolted into
twenty feet of concrete, and says that a
gale of 100 miles an hoar would have no
effect. Re says that all the frost and
snow thab meld adhere to the Wheel in
winter would not affect it ; and that if
struck by lightning it would absorb acrd
dissipate the thnnder•bolt so that it
would not be felt,
now TO 0ET ox 010001),
1t is arranged to empty and refill six
ears with p0es0Dgere ata time, so that
there will be six skew in every revolu.
iron. Accomingly 0ix railed platforms
of varying Heights have bees provided on
e nertll side of the wheel acid tux more
orresponding with those, on the eoutlh
of it, 'When the wheel steps each of the
SFPT.. 15, 1898
six lowest oars will have a platform at
each of its doors. The passengers twill
etep out of the south doors and othere
passengers will step in at the north doere.
Then the next six dare will be served the
sane way, and the next and next ail clay
and perle 10 all night. It le expeotsd
tint the wheel will revolve only oboe in
twouty mintee. Pnsaengsre will remain
on board during two revoletione and pay
fifty conte for their trip.
"THE OLD MAN."
Duk 101X103' LecLu•cx n Petr Lines l0 Iltc
1500 Irresh Buy,
"Iohabod, my boy, methuught 1 heard
you speak of your sire this morning as
the "old man." You aro 18 years or age,
are you not ? Just so I That is the age
when callow youth has his first attack
of the big bead. 'You imagine at this
moment that you know it all. I observe
by the out of your trousers, and the
angle of your hat, and the lltivor of your
breath, and the style of your toobll.piok
shoes, end the swagger of your walk, that
you are badly gone on yourself, This is
an error of youth which your mole eau
overlook, but it pains him sorely to hear
you speak in terms of diere0peot of one
you should never mention save by the
sacred name of "father." He may not
be up to your style in the modern art of
making a fool of himself, but, ten to one,
he remote more in e. week than you will
ever know. IIs may not enjoy stroking
gutber.snips chopped flue and enolosed in
delicate tissue paper, bub he has borne a
good many hard knocks for your sake,
and is entitled to all the reverence your
Mellow brain can truster. By and by,
after you are through knowing ft all and
begin to learn something, you will be
ashamed to look in the glass, and will
wonder where the fool.killer Rept him-
self when you were ripe for the sacrifice.
And then, when the "old plan" grows
tired of the journey and stops to rest, and
you fold his hands across his bosom and
take a last look at a (ono that has grown
beautiful in death, you will feel a sting of
regret that you ever spoke of him in so
grossly a disrespectful manner, and when
you hear other sprouts of imbecility using
the language that so delighted you in the
germinal period of manhood, you will
feel like chasing them with a sled stake
and crushing their skulls to see if there
is any brain tissue on the inside."
BUSINESS APIUtltiSMS,
They always balk who never think.
Alai* your natural tendencies and ap-
ply them.
A husband at home is worth two in a
saloon.
Have a smile for all, a pleasanb word
for everybody. •
To 80c00ed worts hard, earnestly and
incessantly.
A laugh is worth a hundred groans in
any market.
Difficulties strengthen the mind as labor
does the body.
There are many 01110es in the world,
and but few voices.
Study people for the knowledge they
can impart to you.
Au investment in knowledge always
pays the best interest.
The luxury of doing good surpasses
every other enjoyment.
Strive to obtain every kernel of know,
ledge within your reach.
If you are governed by reason you will
govern many others.
Bd. Fisher, a prisoner in the peniteu.
fiery at Laramie City, Wyoming, has
been attacked with leprosy.
The Yaqui Indiana have murdered a
family of four persons named Mangos,
living near Suagna; Mexico.
The sllopmon of the Louisville and
Nashville railroad have struck ngainet a
10 per cent. red MOM in wages.
It has been clisoovered that habitual
drunkards are much more susceptible to
cholera than sober people.
Ton thousand miners in South Wales
have reburued to work et the old rate
after having struck for an advance of 20
per cent.
Hattie Stratton, an accomplished
young woman of Port Townsend, Wash„
was arrested on the steamer City of
Kingston, from Victoria, B.O., with nine
pounds of opium in her possession. She
gave bonds and was released.
MONEY TO LOAN,
Any Amount of Money to Loan
on Varna or Village Pro-
perty at
6 ci' 62 Per Ce?f•l., Yearly.
Straight Loans with privilege of
repaying W'laou required.
Apply to
A. Hunter,
Division Court Claris, Brussels.
Grand Trunk
TO BOITTO rA.
Single Faro, Sept. 5 to 15.
lt'S2.G0, Sept. 12tH and 11th.
All Tickets good to return until Sept, 18.
London'Western Fair.
Single Fare, Sept. 14 to 22.
$1.85, Sept. 18th and 20th.
All Tickets good to return until Sept. 25.
MOM -CALIDOntx- CAf�LSt
Single Fare, Sept. 511 & Gth.
Good to Return on Sept. 7th.
World's Fair, Chicago, $11.8O.
Sept. 1 t 2, return until Sept. 1.8.
�• N KENDALLI,
G. T. R. Agent, Brussels,
THOS. FATCRER,
:Practical rf atchmaltei'
artd Jeweler.
Thanking the public for past favors and
support and wishing still to secure
your patronage, We are opening
+ out Full Lines in
SOLD AND SILVER WATCHES.
Silver Plated Ware
from Established and Reliable Makers
fully warranted by us.
Clocks of the
Latest Designs
JEWELRY 1
WEDDING Ranee,
Lanus Gear Baas,
Bn000nes,
BAnnmosse, o.
r 'Also a Pull Line of Victims and
Violin Strings, c8c., fu stook.
N. IL—Osumi! of Mativ'iage Laccases.
T. Fletcher, - Brussels.
.®t s®rahr
White Star Line.
ROYAL MAIL STEAMSHIPS.
Between New York aid Liverpool, via
Queenstown, Avory Warineaday.
As the steamers of this lino carry only a
strictly limited number to the Flns'Y and
8000N0 MIEN 00005(110d0tl0us, tutondinp
POsseugersara lO,nin1Od that an early ap-
lineation for berths is usossene) at this eon.
SOIL ROI plane, l'ab00, ore„ apply 10
W. H. Kerr,
Agent, Brussels,
McL'EC)D'S
System Renovator
--AND 01111110• ---
TESTED REKEDIES
SPECIFIC AND ANTBANE
For Impure, Weak and Impoverished
Blood, Dyspepsia, Slcoplesenese, Palpita-
tion of the heart, Liver Complaint, Neur-
algia, Loss of Memory, Bronchitis, Con-
sumption, Gall Stones, Jaundice, Kidney
and 'Urinary Diseases, St. Viae' Dance,
Female Irregularities and General Do.
Unity,
LABORATORY RODERIC% ONT.
J. M. MoLROD,
Prop, and Mannfectur°r,
Sold by J. T. PEPPER,
Druggist, Brussels,
Confederation Life
Association.
Head Office : TORONTO,
Capital and Assets, $5,000,000
New Insurance, 1892, $3,670,000
Insurance at Risk, $22,565,000
Policies Non -Forfeitable and In-
disputable after two years.
Gains for 1892 over• 1891 in In-
surance, Written, $755,000,
Or over 25 per cent.
Insurance at Risk, $1,978,000
Or Nearly 10 per cent,
Assurance Income, $48,d78
In Assets, - $439,878
AGENT, BRUSSELS.
THROWS BEST FRIEND
...r. iGEST SAE lel CANADA.
F
r r,'r
"I never realised the good of a medicine
so much 05 1 have 00 the last few months,
during ,which duo I have suffered intensely
front pneumonia, followed by bronchitis.
After trying various remedies without
benefit, 1 began the use of Ayer's Cherry
Pectoral, and the effect has been ,"nrocloaa,
a single dose relieving. au' of choking,and
securing a good night's rest." A.
A.
I l igginbollnm, Gun. Store, Long Mountain,
Va.
L 1r p
"Last Spring I was taken down with la
grippe. At tines I was completely prostrat-
ed, and so difficult was my breathing that
sty breath scented as if confined in 00 iron
cage. I procured n battle of Ayer's Cherry
Pectoral, and no sooner had I began tutting
it than relief fallewed, I could not believe
that the effect would be so rapid." -1V. 1•h
Williams, Cook Ct0', S. Dalr.
Lung Trouble
" Por more than twenty-five years, I was
n sufferer from lung trouble, attended with
coughing so severe at times as to cause
hemorrhage, the paroxysms frequently Inst.
t`,hg three or four flours, I was induced to
ry Cherry Pectoral, and after taking
four throttles, was thoroughly cured. I can
confidently recent mend this medicine,'-Praaz
Iiofmann, Cloy Centre, Kana,
YEA'S
Cherry Pectoral
ft
Prepared by Dr. J. C. A, er R Co., Lovell, Alase,
Sold by ell Druggists. 'Price $t ; six bottles, $S,
Prorript to act, sure to core
SOLD
R CU
A PrearationofherbsaRoots.
the Medical Properties tiwhlch
are unluersal' known.
y,Trve tflPV5 p MRiF05i YING VALUABLE THE AEI ELY 6,1
BLOOD
005 q Casiiveness,ladigestron,byspepsta;SDur StomaEb
HEADACHE AND DINH1 55
BY J. T. PEPPER, DRRUGGIST, BRUSSELS.
vim.
Don't you want a Nice, Good Sty-
lish suit of Clothes ? We can give you one Cheap
either Readymade or got up in the latest style
by your own choice of' Tailor.
0
Do you wait a Pair of Boots,
A Hat or Necktie P We can. Fit
you out from heael to foot, Please you well and give
you extra value for your money.
Don't buy till you see what we
can, do for you.
A. Strachan.
BRUSSELS.
1