The East Huron Gazette, 1892-12-01, Page 7tt....emllests
of to 5u0sets
ry.
ey West (Fla.)
near that place
a large tuck
:ing the anima`_
up and stooped
en, with an ex -
e and, with one
r. Similar inci-
s, as is generally
r.;dtocalls upa
the Indian Ter-
; or thirty years
so was never dia.
s ago, and has
e war a young
southern part
n as Devai x or
,upped in Fort
s. While there
hip for a kind -
who on account
was known as
had lost most
during the war,
'ything he had
from a locality
'ries connected
Polished man of
I,p between him
as odd, but as
ith but a few
ut of peop?e's
er, and some
earned from a
lad constructed
the foot of the
h barite of the
riles from Fort
r they went to
the third trip
t was noticed
tome moccasins
rifle. When
he first gave
said he had
having gone
returned. A
Lal, learning of
rep orations to
he could. put
ld fellow had
was dropped.
dropped out of
1 with the eir-
for the first
strange way.
whom "Skin -
own, separat-
he boys drift-
nd ultimately
ear there. A
Skinny" Jones
'oath Mc Ales -
regarded as
ave plenty of
or three tunes
hese supplies,
imself carried
t to be some-
nadian Rirer
Hills. Young
iysterious dir-
er of a century
ow "Skinny,
nystery.
eatest skill he
d man to his
, he came to
he knew it,
rrel of a gun
dsman at the
need two invi-
and explain
whole truth,
hat a•.tapicious
why he had
thfulness ap-
nd the latter,
i -of which they
ke them, beck
(started up the
they reached
were called,
large rock in
rift extending
n was shining
hd "Skinny "
d pointed with
ce showed two
ounted--one
' an. A closer
gry buck had,
shed upon his
narrow space
aving impaled
lied together.
an's left side,
tween two of
,aled as it had
alked down to
':d slowly, " I
I don't want
nae a murder-
's death before
1 by accident.
red the day he
e on it were
when he left
ong he might
me back sand
nd yours but
again. Take
till you coma
ie it up and
an find your
son into the
disappeared
man made a
and and told
't are known
e rest is or not
)ween?" He
Only what?"
ast night."
s'ness enter -
one's got to
off."
mother put
✓ trousers?'
an' th; hole
. o von tags
"The first.
French, burr
hat she is it
pa was angry
Isn't he, Jack
at all. He
actable young
arry your five
Lord A1van-
✓ the follow-
-threatens to
ie in society.
to the room?"
ianley.
kiting gess
ds expressed
worth upsstei,
gel**
}
]113! D S SIPPER SHIPS -
Swiftest Pa ages On Record.
A number a interesting particulars have
been given regarding the clipper ships,
which were better known years .ago than
they are now. It is to the China trade that
we must look for the names of many of the
most famous sailing ship; the world has ever
seen. The tea clippers, particularly be-
tween the years 1860 and 1870, just before
they were supplanted by steam, were a fleet
of which this maritime nation justly had
reason to be proud. Seldom rising to a
burthen of above one thousand tons, they
were the most beautiful and symmetrical
models that ever floated—keen ,as a knife
below th i waterline, yet swelling graceful-
ly into proportions good for stability ; rig-
ged to arloftiness that would stunt by com-
parison the four -masted leviathans of the
present day, and offering such a picture as
they burst through the surges under the
soaring heights of their flying kites as one
might now scour the oceans in vain search
for.
The first ship to beat the record between
Foo -shoo -foo and the Thames was the Lord
of the Isles, an Aberdeen clipper, command-
ed by Captain Maxton. She took part in
the celebrated race home of 1856, and al-
' hough two of the most notorious American
'ships of the period were running against
her, both of nearly double her tonnage, she
arrived in the Thames several days before
either of them, and discharged her cargo in
an almost spotless condition. This was
reckoned a great feat at the time, for the
American ships, which were always more
lightly, built- than our own, and of soft
wood for the most part, frequently leaked
owing to the working of their frames caused
by heavy " cracking on," and often came in
with tons upon tons of tea ruined by salt
water.
In 1865 there was launched from the yard
of d essrs. Steele, of Greenock, a little vessel
of 386 tons register, which proved to be the
fastest ship that down to this time hadever
sailed the seas. She was named the Sir
Lancelot, and so remarkable were her
achievements that a description of some
little fulness may prove interesting. Her
length was a trifle above 197ft, her breadth
33ft 7fo, and the depth of her hold 27ft.
She was what is called a composite -built
ship; that is to say, her framework was of
iron, and her sheathing of wood. The one
idea in the construction of this vessel was
speed—everything likely to result in the
attainment of this was aimed at. " Before
the copper was put on to her bottom, her
planks from the waterline downwards were
planed offhand, the hard teak rendered as
smooth as 'a ball -room floor. In order to
give the stability, and enable her to carry
her immensely long masts, nearly 100 tons
of iron pigs or "kentledge" was fitted into
the open spaces along the keelson between
her frames. That she needed some such
deadweight as this to keep her steady may
well be supposed when it is stated that, in
racing trim and under all sail, the Sir Lance-
lot spread upwards of 46,600 square feet of
canvas-perbaps the greatest area which
was ever shown by any full rigged ship. To
her belongs the honor of having accomplish-
ed the swiftest passage on record of any
sailing vessel between China and England.
There are no finer clipper ships afloat at
the present day than those running in the
wool trade between Australia and Great
Britain. Here, as in the China traffic, where
they first won their fame, the Aberdeen
clippers still maintain their reputation as
the swiftest sailing vessels on this passage.
The waters of Sydney Bay or Melbourne
Harbour have never, indeed, reflected forms
of more perfect grace and symmetry than
those of the green -hulled craft, with their
arc hing cut -waters, moulded elliptical sterns,
and white painted masts, yards, and bow -
emits, which ply under the familiar house
flag of the original " White Star" line. The
Patriarch in 1869 accomplished the quick-
est passage that has ever been made between
Sydney and London, namely, 6S days from
the Heads to the West India Docks.
One of the swiftest, though not by any
means one of the largest, of the modern
school of iron clippers is the four -masted
barque Loch Torridon, built on the Clyde in
' 1880. Four -masted ships were then compara-
tively few and far between, and anything
above 2000 tons register was looked upon as
quite exceptional for a sailing vessel. This
is exactly.the'tonnage of the Loch Tor ridon.
She is perhaps one of the most graceful and
elegant Models ever launched from the
Glasgow yards. The smartest passage of
the year 1890, from Liverpool to Calcutta,
was accomplished by the Simla, on that
ship's maiden voyage. She was towed out
of the Mersey on the llth of April, but
owing to the state of the weather she did not
get a fair start under canvas until the 14th.
On the two following days strong quarter-
ing breezes, rising at times to a moderate
gale, were experienced, and on the 16th the
ship ran 223 knots. She crossed the Line
on the 4th of May, 25 days out. This, so
far, was very good sailing. The greatest
day's work was made upon the 28th of the
same month, when, with the wind abaft the
beam and three te`tgallant sails and the
spanker set, she ran 292 nautical miles in 24
hours. On the 9th ofJuly theSandheads were
sighted, and the Simla entered the Hooghly
aer a passage of 88 days from Liverpao 1.
There is a great deal said from time to
time about the decli is of the sailing ship,
anti the near prospect of her total disap-
pearance on the seas. But in point of fact
there never were such a large number of
fine sailing vessels, both afloat and building
as the a'ritish merchant service boats to-
day. As the colonial thrive and increase
—for with them our chief ocean intercourse
lies—so must the demand for shipping nee•
essarily become greater, and there will
always exist many branches of commerce
in which sailing chips may be far more
profitably employed than steamers. New
Zealand annually gives work to a very large
fleet of clippers, nutside the regular liners
in carrying the frozen carcases of sheep to
the European mtltitets ; the wheat trade of
California employs every season many
thousand tons of shipeing ; the wool exports
from Australia, the jute traffic of India,
and the slowly expanding industries of the
South American seaboards, are all trades
which still give more work to sail than to
steam. The sailing ship will never again
carry passengers, but so Iong as coal at an
average of £I -per ton remains a condition
of the employment of the steamer, so long
is the clipper ship likely to go on flourish -
ng.
1Z of His Apparel. 9
An American landing at Liverpool was
asked 43, a Customs inspector -if he had any
tobaent, spirits, or of er dutiable article in
his trunk.
He assured the officer he had nothing ex-
cept his ova wearing apparel, but search
disclosed a doter pit bottles of brandy.
The officer said : "I thought you had
only rearing ring appere:--what do you call
these t'`
' Thi ?" sant the traveller : "these are
my nightcaps."
Decatur, Mich., toe rix peppermint dis -
�.illerit„t
•
•
PEARLS Or TRUTH.
Write it on your heart that every day is
the best day in the year. No man has learn-
ed anything rightly until he knows that
every day is doomsday,—[Emerson.
Conversation is the daughter of reasoning,
the mother of knowledge, the breath of the
soul, the commerce of hearts, the bond of
friendship and the nourishment of content.
Nothing is to be compared for value with
goodness ; riches, honor, power, pleasure,
learning, the whole world and all in it, are
not worth having in comparison with being
good.
When the ho
AN OLD rSOLDIER'S STORY.
Atter U S. Medical Men Fall Relief Comes
from Canada.
The following letter tells the. tale of one
released from suffering, and needs no com-
ment :—
Michigan Soldier's Home,
Hospital Ward A.,
GRAND RAPIDs, March 27, 1892.
Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.
GENTLEMEN,—I have your letter of the
24th, asking me what benefit Pink Pills for
Pale People, and it gives me unbounded
satisfaction to reply. Within ten days
ur of
comes to high and low alike—then it's na
Williams'death comes—that after 1 began taking Dr. Pink
Pills, these terribly ex ruciating pains I
what we hae dune for ourselves but what had experienced in my limbs, heart, stom-
we hae dune for others, that we think on
maist pleasantly.—[Sir Walter Scott.
A man who can give up dreaming and go
to his daily realities, who can smother
down his heart, its love or woe, and take to
the work of his hand and defy fate and, if
he must die, dies fighting to theltl9t—that
man is life's besthero.
We ought to have room for enthusiasts,
even if they violate every rule of grammer.
A grand, blundering, hammering, thunder-
ing, whole -hearted Boanerges is worth a
regiment of very prim, reverend gentlemen,
meek as milk -and water, and soft as boiled
parsnips..
Our boys and girls should be educated in
the history of our country, political science,
doctrines of good government, and the doc-
trine and spirit of the Constitution of the
United States Then when they reach man-
hood and womanhood they may meet those
principles in exalted citizensliip.—[Rev. Dr.
Lorimer.
Constant laughter is not cheerfulness ; it
is more likely to be the expression of folly.
Send us hence a thousand miles from a face
always parading itself in smiles and giggling.
Anybody can laugh ; but to -look bright,
with all the muscles at rest, betokens a glad
acceptance of lite and all its duties—a habit
of taking things at their best and making
the best of them.
None can have thought much without
noticing how soon we reach the limit of our
knowledge of each other ; the true history
of no human being is decipherable to his
neighbor ; even love, which is intnielien, can
not penetrate the strange reserve in which
we each walk wrapped. Is there not here
an argument for greater calmness, less
haste, less certainty in condemning one an-
other ?
Sorrow is not an accident, occurring now
and then, says Robertson. It is the woof
which is woven into the warp of life, and
he who has not discerned the divine sacred-
ness of sorrow, and the profound meaning
which is concealed in pain, has yet to learn
what life is. The cross, manifested as the
necessity of the highest life, alone inter-
prets it.
PIRATES DECAPITATED.
Justice Overtakes the Murderers Who
Poisoned a Techt's Crew.
News has been received by the China
steamer of the execution at Manila of the
Rodrigue brothers, the pirates who seized
the Tahiti King's yacht, and then poisoned
theseven met -fibers of the native crew and
fed their bodies to the sharks. Miss L. J.
Wyckoff, a medical missionary of Singa-
pore, brings the details.
The brothers left only Moloi, the native
cook, alive on the yacht. They had him put
strychnine in the crew's food, and then tell-
ing him he would be hanged if be be-
trayed them, they promised him a share of
the $20,000 which the yacht was worth. At
Manila the brothers went on a debauch,
but they refused money to Moloi, so in re-
venge he told his story to the Captain of a
Spanish gunboat in the harbor.
All three were tried and convicted, Moloi
sealing his own fate, by his desperate ef-
forts to secure theconviction of the pirates.
The three condemned men were taken
to the execution grounds, near Manila, and
their heads were chopped off by the sword.
The native cook begged for mercy until the
executioner grew angry and hit him in the
face, but the two brothers betrayed no con-
cern and made a full confession'during the
trial, and added some new details to the re-
markable story.
The Rodrigue brothers escaped from the
New Caledonia penal colony several years
ago, worked in the. Kimberley diamond
mines, and then went to Tahiti. It was
there that they planned and carried out the
theft of the King'syaeht. The cook assert-
ed that he was forced by the fear of death
to put strychnine in the food which he had
prepared for the crew. When he had dosed
the crew with poison the two brothers shot
the white Captain and supercargo. Then
they went on deck, and amused themselves
watching the dying agonies of the poison-
ed mien. When one victim in fearful suffer-
ing would turn over on his face the pirates
would turn him back with their feet, so
that they should not miss the agony in his
face. Then the cook was forced to help the
brothers throw the bodies to the sharks
that followed the vessel, as if they knew
by instinct that murder had been done, and
they would get a feast. One of the natives
was still writhing in convulsions when his
body was tossed to the sharks, and the two
brothers laughed loudly over the ghastly
spectacle of the sharks closing in and de-
vouring their wretched victim.
The men were both well educated, and
spoke many South Sea dialects. An effort
was made by the Tahitian King to recover
his yacht, but thus far it has been fruitless.
Berlin has an "Association of Married
Women for the Control of Husbands."
The native Australians have a weapon
which is called a "wumnera." It is a
straight stick, hollow at the end, in which
is placed the handle of a dart. The dart is
thrown, but the stick remains inthe throw-
er's hand.
Ladies' cloth and the.ribbed velours Russe
of a velvety pile will be in all probability
the fashionable materials for walking and
calling gowns.
Queer world ! Queer people ! Here are
men and women by thousands suffering from
all sorts of diseases, bearing all manners of
pain, spending their all on physicians and
"getting no better, but rather worse,"
when right at hand there's a remedy which
says it can help them because it'S helped
thousands like them. " Another' -patent-
medicine advertisement," you say. Yes—
but not of the ordinary sort. The medicine
is Dr: Pierce's Golden- Medical Discovery,
and it's different from the ordinary nostrums
in this :—
It does what it claims to do, or it costs
you nothing.!
The way is this : You pay your drug-
gist $1.00 for a bottle. You read the direc- Dr. Harvey's Southern t.ed Pine for
tions, and you follow them. Yon get bet- coughs and colds is the most reliable -and
ter, or you don't. 41 you do, you buy an- perfect cough medicine in the market. For
other bottle, and perhaps another. If : you sale everywhere.
don't get better, you get your money back. Marquis lace is a fine white "variety, and
And the ,queer.thing is that so many" people is rich .enough . to. adorn Handsome light
are willing to be sick when the remedy's so brocades and other evening silks for cere-
near at hand. monious wear,
ach, back and head, began to leave me, be-
coming Iess severe and less frequent and
before I had taken all of the second box
they were gone. At times since I have ex-
perienced acnes, but they are nothing_ com-
pared to ttie pains I had formerly
suffered. For months I could get no
sleep or rest, only from the use of mor-
phine, two, three and five times daily.
Soon after I began taking the Pink Pills I
discontinued the morphine and have taken
it but once since, and I am now only taking
my fourth box of the pills. Before I began
taking Pink Pills I had noepessage from my
bowels except from the ''use of cathartics.
Very soon after taking the pills my bowels
moved regularly and naturally,—constipa-
tion was entirely gone. Previous to com-
mencing the use of Pink Pills my urine was
milky in color and after standing resembled
a jolly substance. Now it is clear and per-
fectly natural, shows no sediment whatever.
I had lost the use of my legs and could not
bear the weight of my body on them. By the
use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and cold bat
and rubbing with a crash towel prescribe
with them, my limbs have steadily gained in
health and strength until I can now bear my
full weight upon them. I have been gaining
slowly, but surely, ever since I- began the
use of the Pink Pills and am perfectly con-
fident that I will be able to walk again and
be comfortable, and this after doctoring for
years with the best physicians and special-
ists who said my disease could not be cured
but only relieved temporarily by the use of
hypodermic injections of morphine. - I
would not do without Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills under any circumstance, even though
they cost ten times what they do, and I
strongly recommend them to persons afflict-
ed with locomotor ataxia, paralysis, kidney
troubles, nervous diseases and impurities
of the blood. I have recommended the
Pink Pills to a number of old comrades, and
in every instance they have proved benefi-
cial, can I therefore do less than warmly
recommend them to all who react this let.
ter ?
Breaking it':Gentlys.
Anxious Parent—"Julies" has been tak-
ing lessons a whole year now, professor,
and I should like to know bow he is pro-
ing, Do you think he has a good ear
for music"
Musical Instructor "Your son, madam,
has a very—er—Shap 1y ear -one of:. the
most shapely ears, n adam, I have ever
seen.' _
Seen in the Flesh.
HAMILTON, Oct. 15. --Our readers will no
doubt have read the article which has re-
cently appeared in ,the leading papers de-
scribing the case of SAM MURRAY, of Graven-
hurst, who was so i'tterly prostrated, that
not only physicians gave him up, but thor-
ough medical examination instigated by
beneficiary insurance companies passed all
claims for life disability. This week Mr. Mur-
ray was in town and called at our office and
personally fully substantiated every state-
ment made in regard to the surprising 're=
sults produced in his case by Dodd's Kidney
Pills. From a subject of frequent falling
sickness, blood poison ing, rheumatic pains,
extreme weakness, primarily caused by
kidney disorders, he is now astrong, hearty
and active man, with every appear-
ance of perfect health. This change., he
states, was brought about solely by a three
months' use of Dodd's Kidney Pills. It is a
remarkable case, but in this age of remark-
able progress and discoveries we must ex-
pect medical science to keep pace with the
times. —[H amilton Herald.
Charity begins at home, and with some
people it never gets further than the''begin-
ning.
hs GIBBONS' TOOTHACHE GUM acts as a
d temporary filling, and stops toothache instant-
ly: Sold by druggists.
The pirate considers himself a sea king ;
the detective is generally a seeking also.
Mrs. Rundell -Charles, author of the
"Schonberg -Cotta Family," lives in a pretty
cottage near Hampstead Heath, London.
She is very pleasant and cheerful in manner,
and is the possessor of a goodly fund of
shrewd humor. At present there is a pros-
pect that she may return to her_writing of
fiction. She has just finished compiling a
eries of sm all devotional works.
_ A.P. 632.
Yours very gratefully,
E. P. IIAWLEY.
Pir.k Pills are a perfect blood builder
and nerve restorer, curing such diseases as
rheumatism, neuralgia, partial paralysis,
locomotor ataxia, st. Vitus' dance, nervous
headache, nervous prostration and the tired
feeling therefrom, the after effects of la
grippe, diseases depending on humors of the
blood, such as scrofula, chronic erysipelas,
etc. Pink Pills give a healthy glow to pale
and sallow complexions, and are a specific
for the troubles peculiar to the female
system, and in the case of men they effect a
radical cur in all cases arising from mental
worry, overwork or excesses of any nature.
These Pills are manufactured by the Dr.
Williams' Medicine Company, Brockville,
Ont., and Schenectady, N. Y., and are sold
only in boxes bearing the firm's trade mark
and wrapper, at si0 as. a bcx, or six boxes
for $2.50. Bear in mind that Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills are never sold in bulk, or by the
dozen or hundred, and any dealer who offers
substitutes in this forte is trying to defraud
you, and should be avoided. Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills may be had of all druggists or
direct by mail from Dr. Williams' Medi-
cine Company from either address. The
price at which these pills are sold make a
course of treatment comparatively inex-
pensive as compared with other remedies or
medical treatment.
How to Deal With Cholera.
In the November number of The Nine-
teenth Century appears an article on the
present 1turop an cholera -from the pen of
Dr. Ernest Hart, chairman of the National
Health Society. It is an extremely inter.
esting paper to read, but it would have beep
more profitable from the public point 6f
view had it appeared a mouth or two ago
when people's minds were more or less ex-
cited by sensational statements. Dr. Hart's
views are briefly comprehensive. He de-
clares that "cholera is a filth disease, car-
ried by dirty people to dirty 'pieces." The
traces of all past choleras would prove this
even had Dr. Hart not., gone to the trouble
of proving it scientifically. All chcleras
derive their epidemic destructiveness from
filth and especially from excretal uncleanli-
ness. The sanitary safety of England is
now so well assured that the nation
can afford to dispense with the Turk-
ish barbarity of quarantine. " The in-
troduction of a person infected with cholera
into a town," says Dr. Hart, "is like bring-
ing a match into a powder magazine:
There will be no explosion unless powder is
there on the ground ready to explode."
The moral is "don't bring in the match, or
don't leave the powder strewn around."
The powder of cholera is filth, old rags,
contaminated milk, and so on. Intelligent
Governments like our own, and, -indeed,
all intelligent people, understand these
things. The lesson which Dr. Hart wishes'
to teach is not so easy. He advises the
British Government to follow the retreat-
ing disease back to its bed in India. They
may pursue it with a Royal Commission,
but adequate action would paean the purifi
cation of the Indian Empire, and- that is no.
a small contract.. "It certainly is not to b: _
undertaken in this century, which, with
all its.progres',west .be, content with ob-
serving the peripdicaf raids of Indian pot:
lution into the filthy communities of Europe
Africa, and even America.
His Feelings.
Sympathetic Housewife (to tramp) : "1
suppose -you often feelthe need of friends,
poor man ?"
Tramp : " Yes, mum ; but not half so
often as I do -the feet of foes."
Have Yon Asthma ?
DB. R. SCHIFFMANN, St. Paul, Minn.,
will mail a trial package of Schiffmann's
Asthma Cure free to any sufferer. Gives
instant relief in worst cases, and cures
where others fail. Name this paper and.
send address.
The recent excitement in corn circles bas
not brought any increased business to the
chiropodist. ' " --
Mr. Geo. TV. Turner
Imply Awfuf
Worst Case of Scrofula the
Doctors Ever Saw
Completely Cured by HOOD'S
SARSAPARILLA.
" When I was 4 or 5 years old I had a scrof-
ulous sore on the middle finger of my left hand;
which got so bad that the doctors cut the
finger otf, rnd later took off more than half my
hand. Then the sore broke out on my arm,
came out on my neck and face on both sides.
nearly destroying the sight of one eye, also
on my right arm. Doctors said it was the
Worst Case of Scrofula
they ever saw. It was simply awful! Five
years ago I began to take Hood's Sarsaparilla.
Gradually I found that the sores were begin-
ning to heal. I kept on till I had taken ten
bottles, ten dollars: Just think of what a
return I got for that investment! A thou-
sand per cent? Yes, many 'thousand. For
the past 4 years I have had no. sores. I
Work all the Time.
Before, I could do no work,` I know no,
what to say strong enough to express my grat-
itude to Hood's Sarsaparilla for my perfect
cure." GEORGE W. TURNER, Farmer, Gal-
way, Saratoga county, N. Y.
HOOD'S PILLS do not weaken, but,. ald
'iaestion and,tone the stomzch. Try them. 25c.
COLLEGE OF CCR -RESPONDENCE, To-
ronto, has excen.•.nt courses in short-
hand, Bookkeeping. Arithmetic, Penman•
ship, Typewriting, ate.. by mail. Write at
once for Circulars.
IMPROVED THE LAST 20 YEARS
NOTHING BETTER UNDER THE HUH
O
1
PTURE
SEND FOR QUESTION SHEET. ON RECEIPT OF ANSWERS,
LET ME SELECT WHAT I8 REQUIRED. WILL SEND YOU
PRICE. COODSARE SENT RY MAIL, REGISTERED
CORRECT AND CHEAP.
►
Send Stamp forlfustrated Book —�
=SCALES. 40XiCI9GMIEEM
SURGICAL MACHINIST, 134 KIN3 STREET W., TORONTO
Nfee"
Thank You."
"'Thank Who?"
"Why the inventor of
sco
ULS1ON
Which cured me of CONSUMPTION."
Give thanks for its discovery. That it
does not make you sick when you
take it.
Give thanks. That it is three times as
efficacious as the old-fashioned
cod liver oil. - ;1 ls
.Give thanks. That it is such a wonder-
ful
flesh producer.
Give thanks. Thatit is the best remedy
for Consume ii.en, rofula,
.'ronchitts, $Yn,.Stzng s' 1_ nEsfi
eases& Coughs and Colds.
Be sure yeti get the genuine in Salmon kif
color wrapper; sold by all Druggists, at 1 tiller;
roc. and$1-oo.
SCOTT & 13 1+11, Bell vi 14. G
A boy in Mich=•.gan has written 200 words f
per minute on a typewriter.
0=0 =wows
+Both the method and results when
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acts
gently yet promptly on the -Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys-
tem effectually, dispels colds, head-
aches and fevers and cures habitual.
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro-
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac-
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy k;Iown.
Syrup of Figs is for sale in 75c
bottles by all leading druggists.
Any reliable druggist who may not
have it on hand will procure it
promptly for any one who wishes
to try it. Manufactured only by the
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO,,
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
LOUISVILLE, HY. NEW YORK, N. Y
DRES-CUTTI\G. Send for Illustrated
111 11�� 1V Circular of our "New Tailor Sys•
tette.". Tho leading system. New SleeveChart
just out. J. at A. CARTER, Toronto. Prac-
tical Dressmakers.
SAIJSACE CASINOS, Importations
CASINOS of9nestEng-
li h, constantly on hand, also prime American
Hog's Casings. Full lines New Hams,Long
Clear Bacon, Rolls, Cheese, Lard, etc. PARK,
BLACKWELL & Co. Lan., Successors to JAS.
PA_RK S, SON, Toronto.
IF YOU WOULD SAVE TIME AND MONEY
BUY A
NEW IYILIAM SEWING MUCIIII'E
Agents everywhere.
The William; Ilfg Ct., Ltd., Montreal.
WRITE FOR PARTICI LklS
Of Complete Steam Launehesfrom 2.9x1 to 31x7
"Acme Coal -oil Boilers and Engines" from
1 to 8 H.P- Large sizes. Coal or wood fuel,
"The Marsh Steam Pump" the best boiler
feeder in the market. Returns exhaust into
feed water heating it from 40 to : 0 degrees.
For catalogue send 3c. stamp. JOHN
GELLIES aft CO. Carleton ('lace. Ont.
3' 3'ffiap i.3n420
.1°®?31E1,10630
MCAMITTF .1ELA.3..
DO YOU IMAGINE
That people would have been regularly using
our Toilet Soaps since 1845 (forty-seven long
years) if they had not been GOOD 1 The public
are not fools and do not continue to buy goods
unless they are satisfacto y.
KOFF NO
WATSONS' COUCH DROPS
1
WILL GIVE POSITIVE -AND MUST!
ANT RELIEF TO THOSE SUFFERING
FROM COLDS, HOARSENESS, BORE
THROAT, ETC., AND ARE INVALUABLE
TO ORATORS AND VOCALISTS. R. t -
Tr W. STAMPED.: ON EACH DROP. TRY Tiit hit-
MailL4BA
s the most nutritious food yet discovered.
Cue pound of2 lbs. Bread.
3 lbs. Lean Meat.
Rice equals 4 lbs. Potatoes.
Half the people- in the world subsist nearly
entirely on Rice.
Mount Royal Milling & M'f'g Gos
Moa.treal.
Your House
will look ten times better if it is painted with
the
UNICORN
And your dealer knows he can -get them from
the oldest paint house in Canada, and that is
A. RAMSAY 16 SON, - MONTREAL.
CANADA PERMANENT
LOAM AND SAVIt& COMPANY.
Invested Capital, $12,000,000
Head Office, Toronto St., Toronto.
The ample and increasing resources of this
Company enables its Directors to mako ad-
vances on REAL ESTATE securities to any
amount, without delay, at the Iowest carren6
rate of interest, and en the most favorable terms
Loans granted on unproved farms aid on
productive town and city properties.
Mortgages and Debentures purchased.
Application may be made through the local
Appraisers of the Company or to
J. Herbert Mason,
Managing Director, Toronto
RHEUMATISM AND NEURALGIA.
Arise from poor dim: -
tion, etc. Kidneys fail
to extract the uric acid
from the blood. Hearn
disease and other mala-
dies seize with such
ruinous force that break
down our strongest
youths in a few weeks
So says Popular Hygiene
and adds : " St. Leon
Water has the power ter
fight and destroy the
cause, is the most power-
tul antidote known, and
should be taken freely
toabsorb the deadly poi-
sons that aindernlne-the
sysetm."
Try it. It wiil prove
the truth of above:
St Leon MinOralWater Co. (Limited)
Head Office—TOel;lONTOK5n g,Street West,
R.
Branch Office—Crystal Hall, 449 Yonge Street,
Opposite College Avenue
Farmers and Stockmen
39E-ALII‘T.11Ti M'
Celebrafed EaglishlNilfshire Ois
A positive cure for Sprains, Bruises, Green or
old Wounds. Influenza, Weak Knees, Galled
Shoulders, Sore Backs, Capped Hocks, Swollen
Udders. For
R#-IEUMATISM
We guarantee an absolute cure in from ono
to three applications.
One Trial will Convince.
Pronounced by medical men the greatest
discovery of the Nineteenth Century.
PRICE 50e. PER BOTTLE.
J. CROSS, Proprietor, - OWEN SOUND
For sale by Druggists.
Confederation Life
3STABLISHED
i871. f
TORONTO.
Insurance at Risk, -
Cash Assets, -
JJ. K. MACDONALD,
i llanaging Directo!
- $22,000,000
Paid Policy -holders,
- $4,000,000
- - $2,250,000
1EW BUSINESS FOR 1892 is WELL IN ADVANCE
OF THAT FOR 1891 OR ANY PREVIOUS YEAR.
•: POLICIES FREE
Practically, FROM ALL CONDITIONS as to
Residence, Travel and Occupation.
AFTER TWO YEARS.
mss^
Then do it economically.
Chop your Grain with a
Waterous
Chopper
It elevates and screens the grain, grinds
20 to 40 bushels per hour e ad bads th
chop.
GRINDING' SURFACES: Best French
Buhr Stories, unequalled for durability'
YATEROUs, - Brantford, Canada