The Huron Expositor, 1899-09-22, Page 6e
,e,,meeemereemeeesser
1111/1111•111.1M111.1.11111111.0111.1. -
THE HURON EXPOSITOR
VETERINARY
TORN GRIEVE, V. S., honor graduate of Ontario,
ej Veterinary' College. All diseases of Doineetie
animals tressed. Calle promptly attended to and
charges- moderate. Veterinary Dentetry epeoialey.'
Office and residence on Goderich street, one door'
East of Dr. Soott'e office, Seatorth. 1112-Gt •
le EU A.L.
'JAMES' L. KILLORAN,
Banister, Selicitor, Conveyancer and Notary
'Public. Mone -y to loan. Office over Piokard'e Store,
formerly Meghanicre Institute, Main Street, Seaforth.
15%1 1
T M. BEST, Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancter,
Notary Public. Offices up stairs, over C.
PAPA'S booketore, Main Strett, Seaforth, Ontario.
1827
sur G. CAMERON, formerly of Cameron, Holt &
Dia Cameron, Barrister and Solicitor, Goderioh,
Ontario. Office—Hamilton street, opposite Colborne
RoteL 1452
110 H. EATS, Barrtater, Solicitor, Conveyaneer and'
la Notary Public,. Solicitor tor the Dominion
Sank. Ofiloe—Cardoo's block, Street, eleatotie.'
%Toney to loan. 1255
Le.. BEST, Barrister, Soliolior, Notuy, &o.
Ofiloo—Rooras, five door' north 0100inineeela
ground floor, next door to 0. L. Pavel I
sweiry store, Main ittreet, Butorth. Goderich
sate—Cameron, Holt and Cisme:on. 1215
§COTT & McKENZIE, Barrieters, Solloitors, ate.,
Clinton and SaySeld. Clinton Office, Elliott
ask, halm street. Hayfield Offloe, open every
Thursday, Main street. first door west of poet office.
Money to loam. James Scott te E. H. McKenzie.
r 1698 1
tor ARROW & raouproar, 'RAMON", senetean,
isie &e., ao4lertell. Ontario. 4 2. Saslow: Q. O.;
Wm. Psevevuol. ede
ralifitRON, HOLT $ HoL108, Bserniteas Bo-
,
OANZION, Q. 0., PIIILIT la , DIIDLNY HOMO'
kj Ratters in Chancery, &o.;dertch, Ont M. 0:
it HOLMESTED, snooestrorkldto the late firm of
., MoCaugheY & Holmes . Barniter, Solicitor
—
Conveyancer, and Notaty iSolicitor for the Can
adieu Bank of Commerce. *may to lend. Fenn
for sale. Office in Soott's , Mock, Main Street
liettfortb.
DENTISTRY.
r‘R. BELDEN, Dental Surgeon ; Crown and Bridge,
J., Work ant' all kinds of Dental Work performel
wish care. Office over Johaeon's hardware store
Seaforth, Ontario. - lezo
i
Tali.. F. A. SELLERY, Dentist, graduate of the
J.,/ Royal College of Dental Surgeons, Toronto, alit)
honor graduate of Department of Dentistry, Toronto
University. Office in the Petty block, Hama
Will visit airfoil every Monday, commencing Mon-
day, Jane 1st. • 1687
R AGNEW, Dentist, Clinton, will visit Zurieh on
. the second Thursday of esoh n3onth. 1692
DR. R. R. ROSS, Dentist (tmocestor to F. W.
Tweddle), graduate of Royal College of Dental
Surgeons of Ontario ; Bret class honor graduate Of
Toronto Univers ty ; crown And bridge work, aleo
gold work in all in forme.1 All the meet modeen
methods for rainiest. filling ahd painless extraetion of
teeth. All operations carefully performed. 3ffio :
Tweddle's old stand, over Dilre grocery, Seater h:
1640
AN OUTSIDE VIEW.
13Y JOAN' GARDNER., IN THE HOME MONTHLY.
; That front breadth's got to be turned, an'
title side gores put to th' back,- so's th'
tear'll go into th' gather& Ydu can come
for it Thursday forenoon. What with paper
atterns an' hard times, dressreakin' in
locum's slaker'n ever.
So yon think that house, 'cross th' road,
ooks s'if it might have a history ? You
in't faraverong there, an' I've got more'n
alf a mind te tell you th' hull story.
Tain't 's if you was acquainted with 'em.
olks say you write for th ma azines. I d
dmire te see it printed ; you must
rentable to change all th' name , an' never
et on who told you. I'd a -don it myeelf,
nly—ain't it queer ? fond o' tal in' as I be,
hy, sooner'n keep still I d ta k to them
our walls—put a pen in my hand an' I
don't feel to have a thing to say ?
Her an' me lived neighbors fr m th' time
Jane wes born, but, sakes a ive ! there's
more happened to Jane Hewlet than to th'
hull o' Slocum put together.
"How old is she?" Well, not what I
call old, an' lately she's been, a folks say,
renewin' her youth. When Ja e was in th'
Itwenties there we'll% a prettie girl in th'
;State o' Maine, nor one setter her ways.
She jest ruled Squire Hewlett, an' he was
iwrapptd up in Jane. Her ma ent in haety
consumption when she was a baby. Jane
was engaged to be married o 'Liphalet
Truslaw. 'Liphalet was born good. The
worst I ever heard tell o" ipbalet was
that he made up poetry ; 'pear like a sinful
waste to spend time tryin' t tell about
sunsets,kan' stars, an' flowers, hen it don't
take nao e'n a minute to see th real thing
any day. Th' Truslows wa kind of a
mixed frilly. Mis' Truslow ome o"Pis.
copal ock ; she was one o' them Boston
Jarviees ; but Obadiah Truslo was Con-
gregati nal from 'way back ; a ' th' child-
ren, wh t with their bein' took to hear Par-
son Bro nlow one Sunday an' over to St.
Peter's h' next, couldn't ieel remember
vehich doctrines come out o' th' " Confession
o' Faith " an' which out o' th" Thirty-nine
Articles." A stranger hear n"Liphalet
eetiu' never
Dr. John McGinnis,
Hon. GraduatefLondon Western University, memher
of Ontario College of Phfelelane and Surgeons.
Moe and Reeidence—Formerly °coupled by Mr. Win.
Pickard, Viotoris Street, next to the Catholic) Chueph
1458x12
',Wight calls attended proMptly,
4
A ve. HOTHAlit, M. D., C. M. Honor Graduate
„ and Fellow of Trinity Medi'cal Gollege, Gta-
,,duate of Trinity University, Member of College of
Phyeiciansi and Surgeoue of Ontario, Constance, On-
terio. Office tormerty maul:lied by Dr.Ccoper. 1050
lAlt, ARMSTRONG, M. EL Toronto, M. D. 0. it.,
Viotoria, n. P. S., Ontario, imocessor to Dr.
Elliott, office lately occupied by Dr. Ellett, Brume,
eld,Ontario.
A LEX. BETHUNE, M. ]D., Fellow of the Biel
IL College :of Physidansand Surgeons, Kings n.
1110008101' to Dr. ilacesid., Otter lately ocou0ed
• ;Dr. Mackid, Mee- Street Seeforth: Residence
—Corner of Vietoria Square In bottle lately occupied
by Ie Z. Danoey. 1127
DR. F. J. BURROVVS.
-ate resident Phystolan an Surgeon, Toronto Gen-
eral Hospital. Honor gradOate Trinity Univers ty,
member of the College of tehysietans and Surgeons
of Onesrlo. Cornier for the County of Hution.
Office and Residerice—Oode Loh Street, Emt of the
elate:idiot Church. Teleph ne 46.
1315
DRS. SCOTT & MacKAY,
PHYSICIANS AN1D SURGE018,
Soderloh street, opposite Moihodist churoh,Seaforth
ria and Ann Arbor, nd
te of F'hisloiane snd
G. SCOTT, graduate Via
member Ontario Coll
iiirtrgeone. Coroner for aunty of uron.
a. MatiKAY, honor grad
gold modaliet Trinity
College of,Phyeloleine a
ata 'Trinity University,
ediortl College. Member
d Surgeons, Ontario.
1483
TAR. PHILLTPS, of Toro
if lately occupied by I
treats ooneumption meet all
ago3 by inhalation of meth
Mona! method of reaching
microbes end eradioating
just returned from Hot Sp
spent the winter Audi- ing t
to, has opened an- office
1r. Campbell, where he
tiliecases of the air pass-
ated vapore, the only 're -
he lungs, destroying the
he disease. The Dr. has
ngs, Arkansas, where he
e method there of treat-
itie all diseattes of the unit ry organs, an 1 all die-
easee of long t tending, Skill discaeos and diwattee of
women cured in a short Mite. Electricity usti -in
rheumatism, nervous debililty, dre. 1638- 1
AUOTIO/1EERS.
WM. IVVOLOYI
,
knotleeeer for the Ocamties of Hueon and Pe h,
.nd Agent at Hensall for be Maseey-13arrie nu -
&during Company. Sales promptly attended to,
shergee naoderate and eatlefaotion guaranteed,
Indere by mall addreeeedio Her:mall Poet Office, or
*ft at his rondonea, Lot 2, Concesaion 11, Tuck-
ersmith, will receive prompt etiolation. 1296-11
LUMBER
SHI D GLE S.
Being alway3 in eommuu
dealere, the unciereigned is
Lumber, Shingles,
at the very lowest pricee,
otherwise. Yards—in the
Seatorth
162_7t1
ieation with the lumber
in a peuition to supply
Cedar Posts, etc.,
either by the ear load or
reer of the Queen's Hotel,
P. KEA ING, S,eaforth.
TO THE PUBLIC..
Having a. Go plete line of
Builders'
H rdware,1
Stoves,
mware
Dairy Supplies,
ETC., IETO.
Prices 1Right.
We ask a share of your patronage.
S, MULLETT & Ca,
SEAFORTB.
make a prayer in conference
would have dreamed he was tudyin' the.
°logy °ear to Andover, it soun ed too much
like th' Prayer Book ; an' I a'n't a mite
surpris d when th' engagement was broke
off on a count o' his goin' into th"Piscopal
Church., I was th' first one in Slocum knew
about itl—livin' opposite, you see. It wa'n't
more'n three weeks to commencement, an'
th' wed 'in' was eet for th' next Wednesday
—'Liph let had bank stock hie Grandfather
Jarvis 1 ft him, so there wa'n't no occasion.
to wait fOr a call—when I sees him drive up
an' tie , is horse to that very post over
there. He looked someho* different. I
took m work into th' parlor an' bowed th'
shutter , so's they wouldn't think they was
Lib
watchei . In less'n hour out e conse, white
'a a she t, an' got into th' b ggy. 'Twat, a
wonder he wa'n't killed right before her
eyes ; t ere was that horse tied to the post
an' he -touchin' him up with th' whip. I
was sew& in th' sleeves ' her weddin'
dress ; hut, lands sakes ! I hung it up in
th' spare chamber closet an' went right at
Mie.' Bescom's black alpac Jane wa'n't
th' kind to flare up one minute an' be over
it th' next. Takes a lot t wear out th'
patience of a blue.eyed wo an, but when
it's gone, Ws gone. That dress hung o
them nails,, covered up with a sheet, ni
onto ten yeare. That's h w I knew te
hadn't got over it ; most fol a thought he
didn't care. I knew bete r. Didn'a(ehe
keep takin' in th' seams oi er waiste that
summer till she skewed em all out o'
shape. Jane hadia't a fa ulty for idress-
rnak in'. .
That fall Squire Hewlet was took, an'
she didn't have to make bel eve eheerful no
longer. The two sons took their thirds in
;money, bein' married out est, an' Jane
*eyed on in th' old place. 'Teats Pasy to
see she hadn't much to do a stroke o' work.
For a spell she kep' nobod but a bound
girl, an' when her time was up couldn't get
suited with another. Nobody but me could
a -told how th' work got done in that house.
There wa'n't neyer a apeckl d window nor a
linty carpet, but not a so 1 over ketched
her doin a thing but embroidery, an', what
become o' that vie only 8U8 icioned. Once
1;ip
a year she'd have th' miniet r to tea, are al-
ways somethin' to put on t ' plate Sundays.
Talk o' th' dap of martyrs bein' past an'
gone ! To my mind there'S plenty around
all th' time tryirs' to keep up appearances.
" Any other chances to marry ?" Well
none to speak of ; a widower, now an' then,
huntin' a housekeeper—she finished them
up short metre. Jane's grit never give out.
Wish you could a -seen her when the Con-
gregatiotials got to sayin' the Lord's Prayer
out loud., She kep' stanclin'—that wa n't
'Piscopal—but her lips would be so tight
shut seemed 's if she hadn't no mouth.
Eight years to a day from th' time her
engagement was broke off she got a letter
from Boston. Si Thompson saw her open
it ; he thought she'd faint tqght there in his
store, but she put it in her pocket an' made
out to get home. ,
That very night, when I waked up from
my first sleep, there was Jane's light burn -
I in', an' it goin) on 11 o'clock. The shades
hadn't been drawed down, an' she was eit-
tin' by th' table. Not bein' able rightly to
make out what elle was at, I got down
Uncle Obed's old spy -glass, There WW1 a
photograph, an' what must have been a
lock o' his hair, tied with blue ribbon, on
th' table. S;he'd look at 'em, then put her
head down on th' table, an' after 'a while
look ag'in ; an' I could see she was cryin' so
hard her shoulders shook. I couldn't stand
that ! Th' poor dear all alone there with
her heart a-breakin', an' her wecldin' dress
hangin' up in my closet ! I - jest put on' the
first things that come handy, an' Walked
straight across the street all' up to her
riftl*XtetiltnnrififtWVARRIM
v.
elicate ,,
hildreHtit il
, .
They do not complain' of I
anything in articular. They fig
eat enough, ut keep thin and X
if pale. Theya pealrfairlywell, ;
pi bu,t have no strength. You 4
Lir cannot say they are really a
B sick,' and s you call them 1
R , del;icate.
/ Whatcan Etc done forthem? i
se ur answer is the same that N
i th best physicians have been ;
giv ng for a quarter of a cen- X
X
tur . Give thetn
WS [111111SIOD 1
. , ‘
of
Ph°
ma
It g
bri
cle
(ler
heti
cat
fles
thr
od-Livtr Oil with Hypo -
plates. It has most re-
kable noUrishing power.
veil color to the blood. I t
gs strength to the illus-
. It' adds power to the
es. It means robust
th 'and vigor. Even deli -
infants rapidly gain in
if given a small amount
e or four times each day.
ecre. and $eoo ; all druggists.
sCOTT & SOWNE., Chemisui, Toronto.
CONSUMPTION,
The germs of consumption are every-
where. You may breathe them in with
the air, drink them with wftter, eat them
with your food, They are tiot dangerous
if you are in fier-
feet health but if
you have a slight
cold, or cough, or
f you have inher-
ited. 'weak lungs,
or if you are weak
and run-doivn gen-.
erally—look -out !
Once consump-
tion gets a strong
foothold it is al-
most impossible to
dialodge it. The time to cure it is at the
beginning or before it starts. If you are
run - down --build yourself up. Make
every tissue so strong and avell that con-
eutnption germs cannot find a foothold.
Fill your body with rich, red blood—
blind up strong, healthy flesh—put your
digestive system in perfect order. Don't
drag along half dead. You may be well
as well as not. The following letter from
Mrs. Jennie Dingman, of Van Buren,
Kalkaska Co., Mich., will tell you how
to do it. She says : " Before I took
•
Dr. Pierce s
Golden Medical
Discovery
I was hardly able to do my work at all;
had painin my left side and back, and
had headeche all the time. I tried your
medicine land it helped me. Last spring
I had a bad cough; got so bad I had to
be in bed all the time. My husband
thought ; I had consumption. We
thought we would try Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery and before I
had taken one bottle the cough stopped
and I have since had no signs of its
returning."
image o' th' picture in th'sbook. He'd
picked him up on th' street, out of his head
with a fever, an' when he got Well he'd for-
got who he was an' where he come from. I
felt to know then why she never seen 'Liph-
slot her. dreams. Wa'n't it an awful fix ?
More'n half his money spent I an' her in
black for him ! an' th' Hewlett pride that
couldn't be buried in nothin' but a grave 1
let alone the sermon about ministers not
gettin! married ! It's a wonder my hair
didn't turn white th' first night, not an
hour but I heard th' cocks crow 1 Theft
forenoon down X went to Dr. BroWn's. -
" Take him into my confidence ?" Nset
bit of it ! Maybe a stogie man might keep
a seceet ; Josiah 'Brown's married. He'd
been proliesyin' so long Jane Hewlett would
go just like her mother did, that heeeemed
right glad to hear she coughed some, an'
there Wa'n't no difficulty in gettin' him to
tell her, if she 'lotted to go into that sister-
hood, she'd better get to Southern Californy
before th' snow ketehed her. Between us
we got her started. l'd sent word to th'
milliliter to keep track' of th' man till we
COM.
Yes; I took notice Et' th' seenery—on th'
way home ; but goin', out I was that flus-
tered ehat I couldn't told whether we wail
a -foot or horseback. eTwas a mercy Jane
kep' ber wits aboue her, an' had travelled
some lor I dunno whae would a -become of
us. 'What to do when we got there worried
me every mile o' th' way ; an' after all,,
seein' couldn't fix it myself, I concluded
to leave it to th' Lord.
We stopped to a boardin' house Mis'
Grante--her that was Almiry Hopper—had
told ne about ; a nice enough place to look
at, but th' victuals was poor an' th' 'land-
lady awful slack. I hadn't been able to get
rid o' Jane long enough to call on , th' min-
ister. Tbere I was, settin' tbe piazza—
nothin' around me, mind you, an' it th'
twenty-ninth day o' November ! nigh onto
two year* since 'isiphalet_Truslow was Inst
off thet b1oat—when I see ,a man drivin' up
on a load:o' garden truck. What with tan,
an' farm Clothes, an' no flesh to speak of,
he'd gone off so in his looks I couldn't be
certato 'twas him ; so I jest slid into th'
parlor, an' he after me. My heart beat so 1
couldn't make a sound ; an' he ,standin'
there hie mouth workin', an' his eyes most
askin' 01 question hie tengue was &yin' to
speak. 'Miss Abby," says he ; " what's
my Elame?" ""Liphalet," sayr I ; "you
wait a minute, an' I'll tell you. ' Up I run
to Jape'si door ; " COme down to th' parlor,"
says I, "quick'e you kin !"
When beset eyes on her he gave a cry,
an' dropped down on' th' floor in a dead
faint.
No ; -a woman like Jane don't give out
till her work's done. • She helped ease him,
onto th' sofa ; an' when he come to, "
dear," says she; " you've been Ina, but
you're better now."
That livelong day he kep' hold her hand)
An' their faces ! Well, I don't calculate to
see th' like ag'in this side th' rescurrection
day !
Bet tunes like that don't come to stay.
Towards night he went to sleep, an' woke
ravin'-delirious with th' brain fever,
Her an' me, an' a man nurse, took care o'
him till his folks come. There wien't ne
women left in th' Truelow family, or I don't
knew 's JanerFOurage would a -held out;
Folks said he'd die ; but it didn't seem te,
me till' Lord would a -took all that trouble,
only to make Jane 'tend his funeral. Her'
weddin' dress, an' all th' pieces, had come
to Californy in th'- bottom o' my trunk .
,) eat 's soon as he could sten' up they watt
married ; an', if I do say it myself, that
dress done me credit, even if 'twas made
over.
Th' Lord nnly knows how he got to Cali-
forny, 'Liphalet don't. He's preachin' now
in that church Jane built him. Jest them
kinder gentle sermons that makes it Beetle
easier to let th' Lord save you than to eet
out to help Him do it. Talk about free-
will! It that marriage hadn't, been fore-
ordained it couldn't have come off
I'm free to say, I don't know a man livi
I could stand sittin' opposite to three I tim
a day ; but if th' Lord sent one, sooner'
go through what Jane did, I'd give in right
(THE END.)
away.
•.
Which Side Did He RepreSent
room—for 'she'd forgot to lock up—an' put
my arms around her, an' she laid her bead
on my shoelderi an' sobbed; an' sobbed, an'
sobbed, till she was kinder comforted. Then
she give me the lawyer's letter, an'—would
you believe it?—it said 'Liphalet was dead,
an' he'd made a will leavin' sell he had to
Jane, an' put in that he wanted she should
wear mournin' for him. If that wa'n't all
th' world like a Truslow ! Let 'em alone
for gettin',th' worth o' their money ! 'Liph.
alet had more original sin 'n I'd give him
credit for, It turned out he hadn't been
right an' bis church had give him a
vacation ; ,he was makin' " the tower of th'
lakes " One mornia' he couldn't be found,
an' all his lbaggage there in his stateroom.
It had been a terrible thunder -showery
night, he might a fell overboard a dozen
times without a soul'bein' any th' wier.
Well, I didn't live home ag'in, u6t fox
quite a spell. Seemed 's if she couldn't bear
me out of her sight. Next day a spry look -
in' chap iknoeked th' door. I'd come
over to get my things. He walked right in
and etigeged in talk same 's if he lived
'rotted Slocum. I suspieioned him, for he
stood by th' gate and drawed picture 0'
Jane's houie. Not a thing did he get out o'
me, not for quite• some time. He pumped,
an' pumped, an' at last tried passin' com-
pliments ; but; land's sakes ! that didn't
work. What with lookin'-glasses, an' (elks
older'n you be yourself, a body can't help
knowin' they're old an' scrawny. He
fetched me, though. Pretty Soon says he,
" I'm on th' Daily Exaggerater, an' if you
won't tell me th', truth, I'll have to make
up a pack o' lies." Just reach me that big
Bible off th' table. Here's what he put in.
'Liphalet'e picture ain't bad, but Jane never
had a low -neck dress in all her born days,
an' her nose won't grow to that size if she
lives as long as Methuselah did.
Yes, she put on black ; real good qualitY,
too, not a dyed ,thing, an' all the lining
new. I seen to that. 'Liphalet was well
off, you see, an' for a wonder th' True.
low's didn't make a mite o' trouble 'bout th'
.1wi'llwait a terrible anxious summer. Jane,
ehe shut herself up, wouldn't see a soul that
come to th' house, nor go nowhere, an' she
couldn't eat enough to keep a kitten alive.
Once I heard her pray out loud in th' mid-
dle o' th' night,: " Blest' 'Liphalet in heaven
an' let him know I loved him all th'
time." " Abby," she'd say, " God's angry,
or He'd let 'Liphalet come to me in my
gle'e‘PW'h' at did she mean ?" Well, it's plain
all 'your folks are alive ! Some day you'll
have a funeral, an' your heart'll be breakin'
for th' one that's gone, an' you'll cry youie
self to sleep—an' then you'll know ! Jane
never could adlived through that summer if
she hadret seen so much of her father in her
dreams, him an' her thought a sight of each
other.
Pr. Brown said he'd get to be roueed or
she'd go in hasty consumption jest like her
mother did. So th' next time she said it,
"Jane," says I, " don't you be accusie
God. Wa'n't it your own obstinacy begun
the trouble ? Jest you rouse up an' do some
o' th' things 'Liphalet would like for you to
do arl' ree come of it," Th' next
Sunday she got nee te go with her over to
th' Centre to th"Piscopal church. I'm a
leletho_dist, but since that summer I ain't
had a mite ,o' doubb but th' Lord meant
, acme folks to be 'Piscopals. Jane, she set
eight to work over there, an' vhen th'
Bishop come he confirmed her.
All 'Liphalet's books and papers come to,
Jane ; she'd spend hours lookin 'ern over —
seemed anost th' only things she took com-
fort in. One rainy day she got out a lot o'
his Bermons. " Abby,' says she, "I mean
to have some o' these printed' so that 'Liph-
alet can go on preachin'. Let's pick out
some," an' she give me a pile an' took ohe
hersielf. What do you guess moat th' first
one I opened was about? " The Celibacy
of the Clergy 1" Jane's eyee was so full of
tears she couldn't take notice ; that sermon
went, into my pocket, an' later on intO th'
kitchen stove. It'a th' only thing I ever
stole in my life, an' my conscience didn't
condemn me. He'd wrote it not oix months
from th' time th' engagement was broke.
Well, she made e, book o' them sermons,
had 500 o'em printed. Th' publisher
made her pay th' money right down ; he
aaid they we'n't the kind to sell, and Jane
said she didn't e re about makin' money,
she want
preachi n',
hospitals,
down po
sermons,
get to he
d that Liphalet should keep on
So she gave 'em to libraries, an'
an' poor —ministers out west an'
tb. They wa'n't like Methodist
ut I guess they'd help somelolks
ven—not by way of the "anxious
seat,'" bu them as are willin' to " be car-
ried to Of skies on flowery • beds O' ease."
Th' main p'int't to get there Aomehow, an'
what's th odds which way you travel? I
don't cal ulate we'll find heaven split up in.
to denom nations.
Long s :fore she got ,them sermons off her
hands sh 'd been to see th' Bishop an' told
him she anted to beild a churoh, in some
piece wh re there wien't none, in memory
o"Lipha et, an' put all his 'spoke there an'
help pay the minister's salary.
" Coul
thin' had
have last
o' them s
finished,
when th'
sent me
away.
mintster
who got
workin'
she afford it?". Well, if some.
't happened, th' money wouldn't
d long, for she meant to jine one
sterhoode. Th' church was , most
11 but th' last payment made;
man that published them sermons
letter that most took my breath
ne o' them books bad went to a
n Celiforny ; an' he wrote to ask
em printed, for there wee a male
n a farm nearby that was th' livin'
se's s
1,7
alternate leaders, was Charleil
now the dean of English war correspondenta
In those days Lord Salisbury as very fon
of beer. So was Charles Willie s. Instea
s own beer,
e one to the
hts to stand
alisbury, ha
Marquis and
on, Wham-
med, sew
of each man 'midi
they agreed to be
other, by taking
the beer. Porten
drifted into politics, beeame
Williams, usually far from Lon
ever the blood -flower war blo
nothing of the more fortunate `ournalist !or
years. Salisbury :ts a haughty and exclusive •
man, and Williains thought hie was gnite
forgotten. Happening to be in1the lobby cif
the House of Lords
Williams saw Lord Salisbury
his hand to the g izzly war co
Lord Salisbury it id : "13y th
og out for h
hospitable, t
alternate ni
came to
ne ,night,
olding Out
respondent,
waY,
Williams, whose turn is it to stand ehe
beer ?"
Then 9
Lady Randolph Churchill's eon has s y•
Saturday Evening Post, been standing for
Parliament as a Tory, and along with- his
Tory colleague was handaomely beat n,
Lady Randolph was, before her marria e,
Mist+ Jerome, of New York, so her so is*
half Amtrican. At one of the meetings,
when the cordial relations between Ame tea
and England came up, young Churchill t ld
his hearers how proud he was to be, i a
ay, an emblem of the union of the wo
greet English-speaking peoples, for he as
half.and.half. Next night he had a ew
weeds to say on international arbitrati n.
To be sure, he said all good of the eche e,
and instanced, as a beautiful example of he
bleisedness of arbitration, the Alabama
award. Suddenly a tell man, in work ng
clothes, arose and, in a plaintive vo ce,
chieped out : " Will the Speaker tell us
What half of hint is now speaking?"
The questioner evidently wanted to know
whether Mr. Churchill was thee talking for
the side that got the thirteen million, or for
the one that had to pay it.
•
Canada's Golden Heritage
Does not coneist in mines alone. Patna
Painless Corn Extractor is a boon. It
right to the root of the trouble and
quickly and painlessly. Beware of sub
tutes. -
•
When Salisbury was a Bohemi
It may not be generally known, E
'Saturdey Evening Post, that once up
time Lord Salisbury, Premier of Engl nd,
had little chance of coming to the possessions
and high estates of his present posit on.
Before certain deaths unexpectedly made
him heir to the then Marquis of Saheb
the present Prime Minister roughed i
the goldfielde of Auatralia, and not stri
it rich there, came back to London
worked as a newspaper rear. Oecupying,the
same editorial room with him, and willing
0438
ti-
n.
ays
n a
ry,
in
ing
nd
The
• •
HARM OP
BEAUTY
Not in the Features so much as in_
the Grace and Vitality of a Healthy
' Body—Dr. A. W. ChasesNerveand
Blood Pills make Women Beautiful.
There's a certain charm of beauty in the
graceful, elastic movement and clear cont.
plexion of a healthy .woman in which the fee -
tures do not play an important part,
The pale, sallow,complexion and dull leaden
edlor of the skin, dark circles under the eyes,
headaches, pains in theback and sides, dull
eyes, weakness, nervousness, despondency and
low spirits are symptoms of weak, watery
blood and improperly -nourished nerves.
No woman can be beautiful until the blood
is enriched and the nerves strengthened. Dr.
A- W. Chase's Nerve Food is a food for the
blood and nerves.
Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Food restores the
energy and strength to a run-down system.
Note your weight before using them, and the
inctease week by week as the brightness re-
turns to the eyes, the color to the cheeks and
the form rounds out with firm, healthy flesh.
the natural result of rich, pure blood and st
healthy nervous system.
Face cut and facsimile sig. nature of Dr. A.
W. Chase on every box of the genuine, sm.
a box, all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Ce.,
Teronte.
•••••••-........karger.••••••*•••••••+•••••11.
-===.4
A PIONEB_LR'S STCpRYJI
, ,
: L , I
William Hernstreet's Health, 'Re-
newed.; at Sevent. 1
i
He Was Afflicted With Ilness tor al Lieng
Period, and Thought His Days o Use-
fulnies were Pest He ie Agein as
Hearty and Robust a H as Tw nty
Years Ago. ,
From the Free Press, Act it, (_)4. '
No man is better known to the- peep
the counties of Halton an Weliingtoin
William Hemstreet, a pi neer slid mne
teemed resident ofl Aeto . Mr.' Hemet
is a native of this County, having been
in Trsfalgar township in 1817. In
younger days Mr.: Hems
tanning business. j He w
gaged in the droving and
e of
hate
es-
eet
orn
his
rest conduote a
subs4quently en -
butchering busi-
nese, and some twenty -fl e yea s—age, ow-
ing to his superior knowl dge 6 the value
of live stock, he teok out a license ' es an
auctioner. In this cal ing he beertine at
once popular, andhe w const ntly :on the
road, driving in all kind of we thee', hold-
ing auction sales several , sys week. Al-
though possessing a stro g, hea thy ponsti-
tution, the continued e posur and hard
work of selling Bottle day for lix or eight
hours at a stretch, he grad ally lost his
etrength and vigor, and about! three years
ago found himself a colts sed and worn -out-
man. In conversation ith a reporter of
the Free Press hel said : " I felt that my
days of usefulnese were ver. -My strength
had departed, my voice as gone, I was too
weak to do work of any Ind, ed I was un-
deniably useless to myse f or anyone else.
My symptoms were culla I and 'baffled
several of the b at loc 1 ph ictians, who
differed very muph in their iagnesis. I
took their medicines fai hfallyel but :no im-
provethent resulted. I id nop suffer much
pain, bet was a 'Tery si k Mips. Had no
appetite, no strength, c uld n t sleets, and
both myself and iny frie ds cencluded that
my days on earth were umber d, arid that
my worn-out system wo Id in a very short
time lie down in eternal rest. I hadito give
up all my businees inte eats." t When Mr.
Hemstreet's condition as moe serinus his
attention was attracte by t e published
testimonial of Rev. Mr. Freeni n, a I minis-
ter with whom he was erson ly acquaint.
ed, relatin to his resto ation health after
using Dr, Villiatns' P nk Pil s. He was
ilv
perticularly impressed ith t is teetimon-
ial, and concluded th t thee pine must
possess singulatsimerit and he ling :power,
or Rev. Mr. Fre man would ' ot lend his
name to their aPprobation. Mr. Heinstreet
then decided to!give them a ti ial ; be first
got one box, then three, then alf a dozen,
and took them regularly. Nol ery marked
effects, he says, were noticeabl , but with
characteristic persistence, he purchased. a
further supply.1 By the tint twelve or
thirteen boxes had been taken; he felt that
new blood was doureing throu qh his veins ;
that he possessed renewed _vig r, mid was
able to peat:nen all tbe dutiee his business
calls demanded.; " For a yeae I coneinued
to take the pills " he said. I It ew I was re-
gaining my ol , time strength and ' good
health, and I I was deteraq ed the cure
should be cotnplete and per anent, and I
give them the credit for makie me the new
man I feel myself to be to•dayi As eyidence
that my reedveny is complete have only
to state that this spring I haV conducted a
number of auctipn sales in thee pen air with
perfect ease and; with entire atiefaption to
my clients. 1
" I am as muPh adverse to I making per-
annal matters pablic as any o e could pos-
eibly be but mY long continu d illness was
.. ,
so widely known and my reco ery hes been
se marked and datisfactory th t I feel that I
owe a debt of griatitude to th simPle but
effective remedyl which cured e, and this is
why I thus ackeowledge it, e well as to
show to those Who are up ia ears and in
ill -health what Pr. Williams' ink Fills did
for me.-'-' ,
Dr. Williarne'l Pink Pills cue by going to
the -root of the idisease. The renew and
build up the blood, and s engthen the
nerVes, thus driVing disease om the sys-
tem. Avoid ienitations by i misting that
every box yeti purchase ire enclosed in a
wrapper bearing the full trade mails, Dr.
Williams' Pink ,Pills for Pale People.'
. ,„_____,....
How tb Probate 4 Will.
The papers required in order to , obtain
probate of a will in Ontario ere as
f°11°1)"PeTition for probate te be signed by
1 ,
executors named in will. 1
(2) Affidavit; of death and place of
abode. .
(3) Oath of iexecutor (one affidavit for
each executor Or executrix).
(4) Affidavit of execution of wilt to be
made by one 'of the witnesaes. N. B.—If
the testator making his mark to the the
fact that it was read over 'and eseplained
to him and that he appeared 'fully to, under.
stand the same must appear in this affi-
davit.
(5) Affidavit of plight.
(6) Inventory and valuation of personal
property left by testator.
(7) Inventory and valuation of real prop-
erty.
1(8) Affidaeit of value of all property
1
lefFt'orms of the petition and the various
affidavits can be procured of eny law station-
er. When cernpleted, the petition and
affidavits must , be filled in the office of the
Strtrogate Ceurt for the county in which the
teatator resided at the time of his, death.
The rules of thp Surrogate Coert, Which are
framed by the pupetior Cour`, Judgee, now
provide that the papers requ red to prove a
will must be prepared by the party applying
for a probate dr by his solicitor.
•
When Beauty 't•Ides.
In response to repeated inquirlei, from ladies wilth
whom Dr. Chase'S Ointment has become so Dopu.ar
for skin diseases, asking if face pOwdere aro injuri-
ous and can be nsed while using the ointment, we
etete that while the majerity of faee.powdere are
injurious we can, recommend the recipes ,given In
Dr. Chase's supplementary recipe ,book on .prtge 46,
which will be sent te any address On receipt of 5o in
stamps. Dr. Chsee's Ointment ie Ghe ladies' friend
for all ekin diseases. Address Dr. W. Criase Co.,
Toronto.
Girls 'Growing Taller.;
The equality.of the sexes; in the matter of
height at all events, appears to be gradually
coming to pass. It ie : not only common
knowledge by ebservation, itjis borne out by
medical inquiries, that the girls of tleis, gen-
eration are, sap a rule, taller than their
mothers, and the greilter physical freedom
and exercise now enjoyed by girbi has been
supposed to be ,the cattle. Biat boys play as
much now as lever their fathers did—the
fathers say the boys play mo0, but that has
been the way of fathers from time imme-
morial—and yet it seeins that mestere shor-
ter than the last genetation. The Great
[1
SEPTEMBER 22, 1899
The "Slater Shoe" is closely watched dur-
ing the process of manufacture. Every shoe
undergoes al careful examination after leav-
ing the hands of each operator.
The slightest flaw in the leather or work-
manship—a stitch missed—a slip of the knife,
only discernible to an expert condemns the
shoe that started toward the " Slater " goal
to the ordinary,
nameless, unwarranted army of footwear
sold to whoever will buy them.
The "Slater Shoe" is ma4e in tWelve
shapes, all leathers, colors,ThWidths, sizes
and styles. Every pair Goodyear Welt-
es1 , name and price stamped on the soles.
$3.50 AND $5.00.
Traek and
and Lin
les randy -mi
r Thorold
hitig an4
HARD
R. WILLIS, SOLE LOCAL AGENT FOR -SEAFORTH.
Northern Railwey Company directors have
had to issue a circular reducing the standard
ot height fnr passenger porters to 5 feet 6:
inches, and for good! porters to 5 feet 4 in-'
°hes, these redictions being an inch 'and
half and two ineherrespectively. Their ex-
planation is that "at one time railways
experiedeed little or no difficulty in olleaitt-
hog men upwards of 5 feet 7 inches heigh
bat now there are evident signs (of tall men
becoming scarce."
•
LIVER TROUB ES, biliousness, sallow complex-
ion, yellow eyes, • undiee, etc , yield to the cura
tive powers of LA. ALIVER PILLS. They are attr
to OUre.
My Country Girl.
Ify brave -eyed, grave -eyed oountry girl,
To -day I brought her to the fair,
In all that Mighty human whirl
No sweeter, fairer lass was there.
Her dress was nest from head to feet,
Her face wai flushed, and bright and evreet.
And a• we owed a -through the stir
The passera turned to look on her.
My blue-eyed, ttue-eyed country girl,
Who would have tht eight thon small bro
hands
Had made the churn dash burm and swirl,
Had helped to tie the wh3sten bands ?
Who would have thought those lingers smell
Had done the belting, pies and all?
Fut in that mighty human burr
The well -pleased people looked on her.
My brown-eheeked, roundoTheeked
girl
To -night I brought her to the fair,
The rockete in a maddening swirl
Were lashing all the upper air,
She gave a cry thiough the sky
A booming metear rushed on high ;
And even in the evening blur
The watchful people gazed on her.
My brave-ey ei, grave -eyed country girl,
I think thst I can ree her now ;
For in ths eruth a little curl
Trailed dqwn upon her snooty brow.
And in alarm ebe clasped my arm
With tender lingers, brown and warm.
I'll keep her safe thro' life's wild stir,
And journey through the world with her 1
countri
FOR internal Of external use HAGYARD'S YEtfe,
LOW OIL oaonot be excelled as a pain relieving a d
soothing remedy Gor all psoin.
Wit and ViTisclom.
A city should always be called " she," Lir
Mattie declares that the average manl's
they all have bustles.
ideal woman is one who believes everything
helleatYellt: says that a woman isn't always
1
backward in her speech if she does get the
lasNt ewvoerrd j,
udge ai man by the woman he has
married. It may be his misfortune, not
hiiswfahuelat.
a man is working for the greatest
good of the grea.test number, he does not
regard himself as mesa the minority. :
Many a poor woman thinks she can do
nothing without et husbend, and when she
gets one flnds-she can do nothing with him.
Aunt Stutplice—"-How peacefully still
and solemn it 'always is on Sunday."
Little Nephew—," Yes, auntie. That's be -
Cita() so many children's papas is at home."
Anindifferent 'singer engaged in singing
at a concert had not finished the first verse
of his song when he was violently hissed by
the audience. " Hiss away," be quietly, re-
marked, " I am tmed to it.
Chollie—"Are you fond of water?"
Elsie—" Exceedingly. At the mere
thought of sailing over the bounding waves
I can hardly contain myself." eChollie—
" Yes, test's the way it affects me, too."
Mrs. Stevenson:--" Ye haven't the spirit
o' a mociee. i My I'Ye'd never even propoeed
i
tae me i I hadnai Made ye deat't." Steven
son—" n' ye're ; eicht theree That's the
wan thi graboot the hail affair; that I've ony
reason t e be itarciod o'."
Minister (to beadle, who hal been helping
himself t.0 the ecillection)—" Now, Tammis,
are you 'not sorry for what you've dome?"
Tammas---J"Deedii no, sir, I'm nane sorry
for what I've dune • but I'm michty sorry
at bein' fund 'met ?"
Jimmy was seen counting the company
carefully before they went in to supper.
Hit uncle—" Weel, Jimmy, whit are ,ye
coonting for ?" Jimmy, with a troubled air
—e0 They're nine a'thegither, an' ma's cuttit
the twa veal pies into quarters.''
The other dayrae two friends were talking
together in the ,etreet a donkey began to
bray and. wheeze and cough in a distressing
me.nner. "What a cold that donkey has 1'
said one of the teen. " And, by the way,
that puts `me in mind—how is your
Cough ?'
At a bowling match the other afterneon
the pariah minister was called upon to
measure a disputed shot. After using the
tape he. gave his clecieion in favour of the
home rink. "Man, Tarn," cried the opposi-
tion skipper, a.ngirly, "yer minister Wad
cheat the deevil." "Pod, Jock," quietly
responded Tam, " we just keep him for tbat
purpose."
1774
The minister
perish, 1, making
o the eke of hit
•
•
Was He 9
of a Dumfriesshire
some farewell vieits
• translation to a more
St '01
IBICEYS
And if they,
are diseased
use the
world's
greatest
kidney cure
91AsEs ,
idney-Liver Pilts
Dr. A. W. K
1 not your kidneys are deranged_
il bashciek,csra:ntlipie ma, tter to test the Itidn'T-', NI'
,' First : ", Have:you bacliache, or wmk; lame
need not consult a doeter. Ily asking yotu eel -
three queetions you can determine whether ;or
” 1)0 ;ou have difficulty in urinatibg
,
i
'
or a trio fieetnent desire to urinate r ,
"'lied " Are there deposite like bile!: dlist
in the urine: after it hae stood for te.eney-folur
• houlsr ,
In its earlier stage,, kidney disertv.: is readily
cured bv a few boxes of Dr. Chase's Kidney -
Liver Pills, a preparation which We made Pr.
Chase famous throughout the world for his
wond&ful cures of diseases of the Lidnevs. -
If you have kidney disease you can ta-ke Dr.
, Chase s leidney-l.iver Pais with perfect confid-
ence tiliat what has proved an abst,lete cure' in
so many thousand of ease-, will not fail you. •
So long as the cells 'of the kidneys are not
of Bri du s disease, Dr. r '1).14 i Kidney-LiVer
t
comp! ,t..ly Wasted away, as in the last singles
Pills evill give Them new v'gt,r and btrength and
make them strong, hwitliy and active. one
pill a dose, 231c. a box, at all dcaiets, of
EArnansoir,. Uateis & Co„ Toronto.
— —
important charge, was somewhat taken.
aback by the replies one old woman made to
his protestations of regret at leaving. 44/
cannot tell you " he said, "how deeply
feel to part wit'h the people among whom I
have lived and laboured for so many part"'
" Bat yell be gann awa' for mair
remarked the ancient dame. " Yes, yes.
The stipend is better. Still, in spite et
that, it is a wrench to' go away. must
obey the call of duty, but it is a serious,
matter indeed to leave you all." Ay, it's.
sure to gey hard on yer furniture," wee tee,
unsympathetic response.
A Mandarin's Wife on American.
Marriages.
Saturday evening Post : Ilaritherita
Arline Hamm, the well-known traveller aild
author, called when in China upon the wife,
or, rather, the wives, of a great Mandarhe
Her visit partook of the nature of &festival,
so novel Was the experience to the Chinese'
women, whcsa lives are passed, almost en-
tirely within the walls of their pules.
They examined her clothing, and were
ly pleased and partly astonished eta. ey
were shocked by her shoes, and especially
by the fact that her feet were not confined
by bindings.
Finally one of them said, through an in-
terpreter • " You- can walk and run just
as well as a man ?"
" Why, certainly."
" Can you ride a pony as well as a man?'
" Of course."
" Then, you must be as strong as most
men."
" Yes, I think I am."
" Yon wouldn't let a man beat yon, not
even your husband, would you ?"
64' Not at all."
The Chinese woman paused, laughed, and
then said : " Now, I understand why
foreigners never take more than one wife.
They are afraid to."
•
The Good Work is Quickly and.
Surely Begun.
PAINE'S CELERY COMPOUND
is AlwaY' s Victorious Overthe
Most Stubborn Diseases.
Son; medicines require weeks of use be-
fore sufferers can realize any promising re-
sults, and the great majority of patents are.
worthless, and in many eases positively
dangerous to use.
When weak, broken dowv, sick and die.
eased men and women have used Paine's
Celery Compound •for a single day their
doubts vanish, hope fills the heart, and they
are added to the tens of thomands that
gratefully sound the praises of a medicine
that truly posseeses life-giving virtues.
If your life is in peril from such stable:ins,
and desperate diseases as rheumatism, neut.
algia , liver copplaint, Bright's disease, dia-
betes, nervous prostration, or ailments re -
milting from impure blood, and have not yet
tried the medicine that has cured others, do.
not hesitate another hour. Paine's Celery
Compond will assuredly do for you what it
has done so well for your friends and neigh -
bore. It will eleanse the blood, drive out
lingering rheumatism and neuralgia, banish
kidney trouble and liver complaint, build
up the exhausted nervous -system, clear the
complexion, give good digestion, healthy
sleep and perfeet vitality. One bottle -
promptly begins the good work.
The Boy Who *Got up to Pray.
Arthur was only six. His -parents were
dead, and he was staying with an uncle,
who taught him to love and serve God.
One winter's night there was a fearful
storm in that part of Enliland. The wind
waik.blowing terribly whe Arthur's nurse
undressed him. It was so cold that be got -
into -bed at once, intending to say his poi-
ers there instead of kneeling to pray. lie
said them, but somehow did not feel satis-
fied.
He lay tossing in bed for seme time,
listening to the howling wind, which would
'not let him go to eleep.
• Then he began to think how good Goa
had been to him in taking ca,re of him all
day. It seems a very peter way of giving,'
thanks, to be unwilling to kneel in the cold
for a few minutes.
So at last he decided -to get out of bed
again, anti to kneel down end really pray es
he, was in the habit of doing every night and
morning.
He did so, and while he Was kneeling there
came a violent gust of wind, which blew
down part of a wall above his room.
With a loud noise a great stone came crash-
ing through the ceiling of his room and fell
heavily on his pillow, itzet where his head
would have been lying if he had not got tip -
to pray. -
Hearing the crash Arthur's uncle tiame
rushing in, and, snatching the little felloir
up, carried him over to' his aunt'e room.
But they found he was not hurt in the
least:
" auntie," he said, " I am so glad Goa
helped me not to be afraid of the darknes
and cold, beeause if I had not got up to mg
Inpyrahyneadrs tahnadt kbiignesdtomnea.vivuld have fallen
mony
Warships Pito and Roll.
evAen wyrtiltihklir mnoaddeTaitreid grle atter!! 411604
armor -plated crosier if going against thee
wind, will find berself in Conditions
to those of a storm—at least, the &sew wilt
have that impression. The movement: of
the stern of the ship are violent and very
addisznr:ienagblper. oviTsh, efj weweapvtetio,nt ipnitussbueyd bY the
sphoirpt hforlems nab °II t°berl °Ted atidi aiwrirnert olvilesvierilattrbee
lower decks, where the Nat inereesees ein•
bewaitrhablyth,eonelxycethprteiounghoali ter&prry.
tected command bridge, all the uneov
pcaitennhoitiegbeanddeircorlilbeindg. which are of a kiud th0
ornsfilutishrte bacerisoors I °Valuable ; that
7athnortwti :hue eno ff ce rtr nhe weo
able, and when there is a ;storm, in which*
dweceksil ." tislY
In such a ship no one On feel tionikert'
sailing vessel would feel oomparatively
ease, the crew of au armor -plated
agines itself to be in _se heavy tin
which threatens destruction, every
The long, narrow forepart of the
which is not borne lightlyiey the wettere
is rendered extremely hea y by the ram
the armored deck and the 'cannon arid tor
pedoes—forces the ship in a high see
EAT()
adke
tors of the 'Red
tad the Improv
placed there the
machinery, mad
kinds ot
mg, Gristin
of Custom
First-class Flour fr
0,
I% first -el
steetters will
attention.
GA.DICE & C
Ial Attention
orseshoeing an A
(lateral Jobbing.
ell stile t,
GODEF
am Bolle
razzAmrsitai
ORR
auticeesor to eery
afeoturere of ail k
Marine, Upright
0 I 1—.4 I
ni,mo •Staalta.
eto., at -4
jekedealeze .et rpri•glet awl
, Automatic Cut -',11
-pipe and pipe -Mang
iftlea•See furnishod ma short
- Worke--Onnoulso -O. T. R.
4litreete.tr yesr we have esd
Mirth% order sus f
'451,-115010r Beetired asdFortj
wastaiisic
MEM
4MOte
.R....timit.coonyr.foi
,..,..1. • • •
DISSISSITIfiessa „amis.:kW. rVirawi lisi Igo yl
eMetecantied. by_ past alms
e-_, _site to ahrunken ors/
nimegaligAirivelf"senelsefidie4ii"thitlavegt.:1-DWrila_5etant1:
.'4°-t
,iborimigitaisakait strifkit,I:071):::Opm, youlefot,
ereextil *end it prepelde
411,111149 female, prem.:lit vt.s.,1.
R ja
& SO
Vaaor Istromeas or
-Jules Robin & Co'is
Frsnee; Jeto de Ke
land Gin, Botta,
Booth's 'Tem Gin, I
Bulloch & Co.'s Soot
Ws Scotland ;
Milky, Dublin, 1./
and Sherry Wine
Splint Agents for
-Ontario ; Royal Die
Ale and Porter, Tor
THE PUBLIC
We have opened,
neetion with ou
hnsinests in the rear'
Mimen Bank, <
where we will sell t
the market at botto
delivered to any
free,
PliONE 11.
rderillop
Insurance Oo
FARM AND ISOLA
PROPERTY orit-Yd
imemoraboms.
Olnetertes, ",
1 Preiddent, III
mit. Bruce&
Bea -forth .
r 'of Lessee.
tt- *. : Iroattiese, s:apet:esclvf
?eerge Ade, Beafoi
- 3...4rones Eraus. P
; -,e_nostras Fraser; Bra
- ; Aarees Connoll
samara
%mock : Robt
it reemondv
tioyenlock
dedrotsi to effect '
will be pro
li of the Above ,
** 0014171104;
Cotte:1
eeSSf:11 y
die&
g4at
the:: ns al,'
, anfp.r(04,-;
uogrerv ro.
g.on reeely,t
1 1."."1: CtAll'i.
Ulld 2 sorri
teDruggista
2 *Old In Seafc