Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Canadian Post (Lindsay, ONT18610913), 3 May 1895, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

.flmu'r!‘w} “4,9, ,_ unenuman-I ~ ' . , , x \ l . r u ‘l r J .r. - , ., . t l i f. f m . f’ ‘ - , .. . i‘ h 4‘H , . . . : ~ v‘. V .t . . ‘. l » ,.-, v . . . a r ,4 «3. ' . I 1.. ' . «‘1. .l, . t r ~~ l : v . ~".~ . .I I. r 3: 'i.’ u. .r 1;; .. 1 - p i ‘ «......ny... ' ‘ “M .. - - “We”..- ). ”on“- . “No other blood medicine that I have ever used. and I have tried them 311,15 so thorough in its action, and eflects so many manent cures as Ayer's Marianna."â€" r. H. F. MERRILL, Augusta, Me. Ayer’sfi Salsaparilla c Admitted at the World’s Fair. river’s Pills!" liver and bowels. / E6111: Canadian Emt. ____________â€"â€"â€"- LINDSAY, FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1895. A FAIR CONFEDERATE. *â€" AN INTERESTING STORY OF THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR. (Continued from last week.) with the cavalry, at times he would dismount, and leaving his horse in the rear go forward with a. musket. On one occasion, catching the enthusiasm of battle, he was forgetting his mis- fortune when the officer of the regi- ment with which he fought recognized him. The two had been at enmity. “Leave these ranksi" )Iaynard turned, saw that he was addressed and who addressed him. Throwing down his gun, the hot tears bursting from his eyes, he turned away. Again he was tramping through a corn- field on the flank of a regiment when he saw a division general inspecting the men as they passed forward to an attack. He recognizel the general who had sent the spy to him. Their )Iaynar'd had by this time come to see through the device by which the other had lad him into his present position and regarded the ollicer steadily. The man turned his horse’s head and galloped away. There was one man in the army who did not care to look him in the eyes. The day passed with a succession of blows upon an armystiil too “strung But they were \Yherever a eyes met. out" for its own good. all successfully resisted. place was weak some brig-ado or division was sent to strengthen it, usually leav- ing a place where it had been. But all points were strengthened in time. All damage repaired, at least the damage on which hung defeat. The damage to the dead and thirsting wounded scattered along the line for miles could never be repaired. It could be counted and laid down accu- rately in the official reports, but who can count or repair the hearts broken with every charge, every defense! And so the sun went down over a field on which there was no victory, no defeat, only suffering and death. __â€"___â€"â€"â€" OKAY?“ XXIV COMING OF THE RESERVES. The night had come gain, The smoke had rolled away from the battle field of Chickamauga. There is neither sound of cannon nor musketry, except here and there an occasional picket firing. There is another sound within tne dark forest where Thomas’ men are resting â€"the sound of the woodchOppei-’s ax. The commander in chief of the Confederates hears it and knows, with a. general’s quick perception, that another chance of distreying ms enemy is pass- He cannot enter the forest at the stop that chopping, and he knows as he hears hundreds of axes replaci u g the more appalling sounds of the day with the clatter of their blades, and now and again some great tree crashing through its neighbors, that by morning his enemy will be intrenched behind breastworks. Maynard bivouacked on Thomas’ line. The two armies lay too near to each other to light telLtale campfires, and as all equipage had been sent to the rear and blankets were scarce the army spent the night shivering. The wood was too thick to see anything above the lower branches. The men needed sleep, but it would be as easy to sleep on the battlefield as in the continuous clatter of those axes. Besides, distrust had had come upon the whol was an anxious nig and the men partook of the solicitude of their commanders. It was known that the enemy had been re-enforced from Virginia, Knoxville and other points. It was rumored that Burnside was coming, but Burnside did not come. To a natural fatigue was added that 9 presence the certainty that when the soldier should rise in the morning the grim specter would rise with him to haunt him for another day. Thereisnstreukof greyinthccast. The commander in chief of the. men in ' the sound of guns in fl: hands of thocehe has ordorcdto begin the m1- st daylight, and which order-not general whowastoleadoflZbutinthat mistake was involved possible fitilure. With all the vaunted generalsbip on the field of battle what is it, after all, that turns the tide except the mistake '3 [Mark Maynard‘on that Sunday morn- ing was lying with his body in the dirt and his head on the root of a. tree. He dreamed that he had just come in from making a charge at the head of his tri- gade and was approachinghis comman- der, to report a glorious success ; that the general said to him after thankâ€" l ing him for his achievement, “Colonel, it will give me pleasure to recommend i you for promO‘ion to the rank of bri- qandier”-â€" ‘ General!” He awoke and saw J akey Slack look- ing down on him. It was he who had spoken the word “General!" “Genera ,” said J akey as he saw his friend's eyes opened, “it’s ban a dâ€"d hard fight. “For heaven’s sake, mv boy, where have you been, and what are you doing here? The battle will open soon again this morning. I wonder it hasn’t Open- ed already. You must get bac .” “I thort I war a sojer.” “Well, J akev, you are a soldier, that’s a fact, and I’m not.” “Raecdon I’ll git chashyered. I ben away ’thout any forlorrgh.” “Wherel’ - “Well, I thort I’d go ’n see Soon afore the fight cos I moughtn’t hev no chance after it. I mought git killed, ’n then I wouldn’t be no good nohow.” “Have you seen her?” “Yas; “Ana Laura?” he started up. u Yas.” “And you told her”â€" "Reckon.’ Maynard paused in his questions. He dreaded to know how his wife had received the news. Did she condemn him with the rest? J akey put his hand in the pocket of his coat and took out a card on which was a picture of Laura. holding her child. Maynard seized it, and in a moâ€" ment his eyes were riveted on it to the exclusion of all Other objects. His mind drank in thirstily all it suggested. “Mark,” he exclaimed suddenly, ‘for these you must win back your spurs." “Reckon she uns ud like (0’ ter hear y’ talk tlnt way,” put in Jakey sym- pathetically. “J akey, I’m a changed man. I feel that I am to have a chance to vindicate myself on the battlefield to day. For two days I have been fighting in the ranks. I have had only a private’s opportunity, and that is to furnish material for the sacrifice demanded by the god of war, while the god only smiles on those who lead the victim. To dayâ€"today"â€" “Some’n’ll turn up sho’, y’ bet.” “Come, we must get some breakfast. We’ll need it soon. This day will de- l cide the fate of the Army of the Cum- ‘ berland." , Going to a group of soldier near by from whose camp-lire emanated the pleasing odor of boiling coffee, the two ‘ asked and receiveda breakfast. A fog hung over the valley of the Chickamauga which screened the two armies from each other. Maynard and J akey were ignorant of their surround- ings a. hundred yards distant, so they munched their “hard tack" and swal- -especial advantage on come, and if I don’t tell my wifcto look out for this little One, and if nec- essary provide for her. I must go. There is hard fighting at the front.” J akey took the little girl by the hand and lead her away, while Maynard went over to the south slope of the ridge to see what was going on It the right, Standing on an eminence, he looked down on the cmtending lines toward the south. . The sun was now standing midway between the horizon and the meridian. The day had thus far gone without any either side. Finding the left strong, the Confeder ate commander was massing troops on the right of the line of blue. Maynard could see them marching into position for a gigantic effort. There was a momentary lull in the firing on the right, and Maynard thought that from a. distance he caught the faintest sound of achurch bell. It might have been fancy, for cOngregations would not be likely to meet near a battlefiel , and the continued root in the center and left would likely have prevented a bell being heard. At any rate, it suddenly occurred to him that it was Sunday morning. Sunday morning! What a contrast between that and other Sunday mom- ings he had passed. It was near 11 o'clock, the hour when people were as- sembling for worship, and he pictured the neatly dressed throngs moving to church while bells were ringing in the bellries. All over the broad land con- gregations were assembling, unmindful of the struggle that was going on at Chickamauga. The enemy were moving to the attack. As Maynard glanced toward the Union line to see if it was in condition he saw a division face to the left and begins march in rear of another division , leav- ing its place in the line a defenseless, yawning gap. “Great heavens! Some one has blun- dered.” “Halt! Go back! are you doing?” To be Continued.) â€"___’____4â€"â€" EDITORIAL NOTES. Great God, what Deficit, $5.000000; expenditure on the useless franchise act, $160,000. ____â€"‘ Globe : It is fitting that Mr. McGrecvy should return to parliament at the last session, and that the whole united aggre- gation should go out together. Globe : The Mail and Empire says that Sir Mackenzie Bowell resembles Sir Oliver Mowat. But our contemporary was never favorable to Ontario's premier. The Detroit Free Press says there were 240,051 native born Canadians in Michigan in 1891. Massachusetts has also nearly a. quarter of a. million Canadian residents. That N. P. exodus did much to depopulnrc Canada. ,_.___â€" Mail and Empire: For five bulky volumes and two thousand pages of findings on the question of prohibition the government has paid about 370.000. The country in this instance has got too much of a. good thing. __â€"_â€"â€"â€" Globe: How the patrons and conscr- vatives love one another! The Victoria lowed their coffee. quite willing to be { Warder declares that “the patron lenders" hidden from Confederate fire while they were doing so. Meanwhile J akey gave his friend an acc unt of his trip and how he had arrived on the field at noon the day before. "How did you find me Jakey.” asked the heater. “Waal, I est a good many sojers, ’n none cf ’em knew whar ’y war. ’Bout dark I heard one o’ th’cavalry of th’ old brigade, our brigade, thet knew y’. He was a-tellin how y’ went with ’em in a charge. They all liked ter hev yer do thet away. I ast him whar I mought find y’, ’n he reckoned he sor y’ oin up this way. So I kem ’n found 3". Thet’s all.” As he finished Maynard exclaimed: “Look!” The fog had suddenly lifted. They were on a ridge which had been forti- fied during the night, the works resem- bling a horseshoe. Their position was on the left side of the shoe and com mended a view up the Chattanooga road, which ran directly north from where they were. There,a short distance east of the road and overlapping the Union left, the lifting mist revealed a line of Confederate gray. As Maynard spoke, with a about they rushed forward and took possession of the prize they had been trying tograsp for two days. They were between the Union army and Chat- tanooga. LeaVing J akey where they were and instructing him to stay there till he should return, Maynard went down to take a hand in the fight. He found a dead soldier, whose musket and cart- ridge box he seized, and pushing on to the line of firing took position with an infantry regiment. The enemy, unsup~ ported. were driven from the Chattanoo- ga road to a ridge near by, where they halted and gave their pursuers a des. perate fight. Then the regiment to Which Maynard had allied himself was ordered to another part of the field, and he went with them. Passing through a thick fire of bullets, which were mingled with the larger missiles of cannon, he encountered a sight that has seldom been seen on the field of battle. Crouching under a log was a little girl about 8 years old, who, having got caught in among the disputants, was right in the midst of a battlefield. Maynard never forgot the contract between the terrified child and the unmerciful scenes surrounding her. Being a volunteer, he'wes under no man’s orders except as he chose to obey them. Falling out of. the nuke, he went to the child, took her up in his arms, and while bullets pmgod' about are “as ureat a set of panderers and political fakirs as can be found." What a. change, my countrymen, since June last 1 Hon. David Mills made a good point when, alluding to the hope of the govern- ment to obtain preferential trade with a number of colonies, he said that “two months‘ preferential trade with the United States would amount to as much as 24 with all of the colonies." Reports have been made to Mr. Gardner. president of the British board of agricul- ture, showing that 70 per cent. of the sheep imported into Great Britain from America are diseased. This makes it look as if a. scheduling order to slaughter all sheep from this side of the Atlantic might not be long in coming. Toronto Globe: The other day The Victoria Warder declared that “thus for, except for the wild utterances of Sir Charles Tupper and Hon. J. A. Ouimct, which, to say the least, are unwarranted (if reports are correct), the course of the conservative party is perfectly straight.” What does The Wnrder think of the speech of its leader in the senate i Ottawa Free Press: ‘ Both gentlemen have rendered themselves quite ridiculous before the intelligent thinking public of Canada during recent weeks." 50 says the Lindsay Warder, Brother Buuhes' paper. The “gentlemen" happen lb this case to be Sir Charles Topper and Mr. Ouimet. This is short and sweet. Lo Spectateur sold rccantly that the Ofangc‘ men were led by Mr. Lsurler. What has made°Mr Hughes 8 convert to the mks of those who condemn the government! The Woodstock-Sentinel Review onto to know of what use is the high-summed “high 00mmissloner to England.” 11 a Canadian minister has to Journey to the old country when it is necessary to dis- cuss a. matter of importance with the imperial authorities. In the house the other day Mr. Foster announced that nothing had been done with the Canadian copyright question since the death of Sir John Thompson, and that it was necessary that the government send over nmnn to endeavor to settle the matter. one Canadian commluhner should be cnougb in London at any one time. take hold of it in wow. over to the canteen and be done with It. If rich men wish to have n school for their son: when they can learn good manners and acqulrcnsocw polllh let them maln- tnln it It their own expense. not at the so of the country. With high Schools and collegiate Institutes dotting the towns and cities of Ontario. from which all who wish my go to the universities for higher education, Upper Consul coll . has no lpeclll reason for existence on fills no special place. Ithu had its day no tu- ” the general publlc is concerned. and to now on expcn-lvc encumbrance. maintained for nc'o s the . is well able to malntnln it for itself. f I believe withln two year: from the adoption of the National Policy-not n policy of hostility to the United Ewes, but one of following the system they had adopted to taster their industriesâ€"the! willglvcusnfrecml-rkctforcool in the United States. While adopting measures to meet the government of the United States by n tor-ll! somewhat annlouous to their own, and to protect the mlnlnr, manufacturing and agricultural intercom Thrs‘ is the new shaming cookmg' futwhichissofusttaldn thcplnccoflurd. Itisuncntircl new food product composed clarified cotton seed oil and re- fincdbccfsuct. Youcnnsccthat (éllelene Is clean, delicate. wholesome. appennn' ' g.andcconomicol-cs£ur superior to lard as the electric dip. Itcsks fair trial “C. Sold in 3 and 5 pound punt, by all grocer: “hm-gun and A:- It; mum ____________â€"â€"â€"â€"_=â€"_â€"â€"__â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€" New Advo nloemoo u. of Canada agalnat the unfair competition ____________â€"-â€"â€"â€"-â€"-â€"' | of our neighbors across the 11 honorable friend the finance minis proposes to insert to the bill the a that when the Americans shall the tux-ll! on these natural products we will reduce ours to the some extent, and that when they wipe out the duties altogether we will mlt their produrts free. At no distant day we shall enjoy the advantages which we pose on an the reciproclty treat .-â€"Slr Chas. Tuppcr in 1878. Montreal Witness : The-Bowen goveru- | meat speaks in one breath of the neces- sity of retrenchment and in the next of taking the preliminary steps for the building of the Hudson Bay railway, the construction of the Trent Valley canal. and the digging of a tunnel between the mainland and Prince Edward Island. each one of which will cost millfons upon millions of dollars., which will never yield a cent's return to the government. but will, on the contrary, necessitate further expenditure for maintenance. To cut down departmental expensesn few thou~ sands while undertaking the expenditure of scores of millions is surely the silliest possible exhibition of a penny~wisc and pound foolish policy. The fact of the matter is that the three gigantic schemes the government countenances are more general elrclion bribes. The government has no intention of seriously undertaking them. but by encouraging them and promising expenditure upon preliminary surveys. etc . it may commit the country without meaning to do so. The report of tho royal commission on prohibition was presented to parliament Wednesday. It was a voluminous docu- ment, comprising about 1 500 type-written pages in addition to much printed evi- dence. In brief the commissioners report that: “The enactment of n prohibllory .. law for the whole Dominion would, in .. the opinion of the undersigned, pre- “judicially affect the business, industrial ~ and cornmerical interests of the country. M . . A nrohibitory law pnrtukcs too much Us: the character of coercive legislation l-onnmattcr in regard to which u very .. Iarze portion of the people consider they “are qualified and entitled to judge for -- themselves, to be accepted .. they are cal‘ed upon to nnhesitatingly --obcy. and hrnce the lmpructlcabilily of u of etficientenforcement. . . Thccommis- ..sioners consider that the payment of u compensation could not justly be avoided .. in the case of those who. by such lc is .. lotion. would have their business. which ”they have ing on under the -« sanction of the state abruptly put an “end to. and their capital in many cases "almost swept away, and in all consider- d" ber of‘ Montreal Witness: Quebec is to be disgraced after all by being represented by Mr. McGreevy. Parliament in, after all. to be humiliated by his presence. The government is to be embarrassed, after all. by his triumphant election by the aid of all the party machinery and by his com- panionship in the parlimcntnry nuke of their party. The Irish of Quebec, who chose this man as their champion, are declared by their acknowledged organ to be wildly indignant that the constituency should not for that reason have un uco- tlonlngly accepted him. In it not pi In] I . McGreevy were a repentnnt sinner we should account his term in prison as hnvlng absolved him from his past trunn- lons. but no one has ever heard of . McGreevy acknowlcdz‘l his errors. Con Mr. McGrccvy, even tho reelected. enter the some parliament from which he was expelled! There seem to be grove doubts about it, although the section will not probably belong enough to solve them. It will be interesting at any rate to e who: will occur when he tries to take his seat. Will his right he question ed? Who will introduce him! Slr Adolphe Caron and Sir Elector Langevin, or Slr Adolphe and Mr. Kmart! ___,__. In the New York Sun Mr. Maxim, the gun inventor, says of England: ‘ There can be no question that England in not only the richest nation in the world to-dny, but also the richest that the world has ever seen. Never before in the history of the world has there been so much accumulated capital and wealth as we and in the city of London to-dnv." He says British manufacturing to suffering from trades unlon rectrlctloul on output. Ho uyc he saw at Budquand Mum's l l 08 SALE OR TO BEST. I h“. but placed Ir my bond-l a number (f Mable hon-u to low. to rent or cell. ‘ Opt. M not or p Inhale I'lll concultmc. G. CHITI’ICK. Lindny. April lTLh. ”(Muâ€"98. LLAN S. MACDOXKLL, sauna-x3. soTr‘Jxron no oom- MISSIOII‘ IN W. O. J. OFFIC‘E‘ .- North u‘m (‘nrnrr of Re 1! and York slrcru. LIN/PAY. Money to Loon. Money Invested. «mum to procure P r I uh n Iltnc 1 will be In an [bu l'lrln llld Town L-IM of 8.5 000 and upward- on Pr [3 "1} Whole ilw rn‘m- n uhqunutlunlblt‘, ll Ll’lr exceptionallv law nu of Fun [s-r cent, per nnnuur l'. «Ill be morn-n 1hr. interest lvc )lld half vol-l) and no privilo-Lc‘ of reply mom cm be allowed unhn. the period of The year- W 1.!) a fraction advance l‘.) the interest dc‘l-‘I‘bll‘ prlerg» v1 lll be gin-n. 7 we .037 SUCCESSFUL ”“507 FOR MAN 0! BEAST. Ora-um in m eflcctl Ind never Bondprooh spii'iu cunt. Co.m..reb.a.'u. l' _. wonderful rmsllcfnc. lam" hp."- and are botuu cured . hoop. conic , Your-m. CIA!» Powuu. KEIDALL’S SPIVII ONE. 3. '91. . .mm can)”: now AP"- Ms-lcby W Dr. B. J. KENDALL COXPAXI', INOOIUION VAL“. VT. ’â€" â€"__â€"â€"â€"â€" ook’sCottonlloot COMPOUND. physician. My“ monthly by thousand! of htboonlypafm m 1. '-'nm’ N sol DI'I'“ 'O. __A_gsm’ Tutti Fruttl. Our row improVod 21' steel Monitor Combined Drills, "notional header.â€" and Cultivators for 1895, are built upon tLe only correct principles. They are stronger and more durable than any in the market. They are the lightest that ever was constructed. They run lighter than any in the market They load all other Combined Drills in the latest essential improvsments. They have the best feed run. The best groin distributor. The best Cultivator in the world. They will il than any other ccmbined work better in all conditions of the so machine invented. Combined Drill, Sectional Seeder or Culri. Any farmer wanting a vator will make a mistake in buying any other than the Monitor. rv or through our Agents, D, We solicit your orders at the Facto _ M Houlihau. Downcvvmo; E. ht: atria, Lindsay ; Samuel Mogul. Invert; W. B. Robin-o . y, 01' GOO- Hannah, Locol General Agent. We shall be pleased to see you at our Otllce and Factory, where samples of all our machines can be inepected. SYLVESTEB BBflS. Ill. 80., llllllsal. vi. \ ~ .. ~ v"c.'\»x\\\\c\\\\\‘§‘x‘lw<§\‘\>“~‘* . ‘~ \ 4 / V . fl, > ,1 4 . I: . i v. i" l " ’ . v . .‘ul\\\‘\.\\\\\\\\\\ \\.\\\\\\\m\\m‘ 'mflc\\\\s\\s\\~ \\\~;-\\\ ~- *<\\:a\»~\\\-.\\\\‘ M N\\\\‘\\\\\s N s Cascorin is Dr. Samuel Pitcher-’8 prescription for Infants and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine no: other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute for Parcgoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil. Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years’ use by muons of‘ Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and alloys feverishncss. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd. cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves teething troubles, cures constipr-tion and fiatulcncy. Castoria assimilates the food, regulates the stomach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Cas- toria is the Children’s Panaceaâ€"tho Mother’s Friend. ' Castoria. “ Castor;- is so well ndnptcd to children an. I rt'-r:urr1rrrr‘rul ll. m: supermrtouny 9W known to me." Castoma. "cm: is an excellent mndlclrm for chi!- drtzn. Mothers have rflx'au‘llly told me of its good excel uponrhoirchlldren.“ . Dr». G. C. 0920M), II. A. Axons. if. 1)., Lowell, Mass 111 So. Oxford St... Brooklyn, N. Y. ' “f if p!~.:‘r:’~‘~.ns in the children‘s depart "Cnston'nis the bust n-mmiy for vhihlrcn : . I whichlnrn ncqtralnu-d. lhvr" ti: «1 .yr :01. l m' at l..:\4- spoken highly of their expert f;.r distant when mothers ml' - 1-1713. v-r~:.l : ".y ;r outside practice with Customs. hill-rest of their children. an. , 'h we only have among 0': stead of Lbcvarlousqunr‘.’ no... ll an: ru-dAz. r'plics what is known as regular d«-stmylng mun- lovcd ones, lvj‘ . . , . ' 1:: rmduczs. yr". we are free to 002"», «all. the morphine, soothing syrup and o" , mm; of Cmstorm has won as to look With agent: down their throats, Lin-rec; LoVul‘lfinn it.“ than to plenum graves." Cam Enema. up Dru-nan, DB. J. l". errrrnzmc. Boston, m Conway. hr Arum C. Sm. M. The Centaur Company, ‘77 Murray Street. New York City. W ..â€" :21:r.rlt:- ; .. PHIPPS BRIDGE. Merton, Surrey, January 818i. I895. MR. R. KYLIE, Lindsay . . . . “Bought 0f WM. HARLAND MON, . . Japan and Vomit/2 Manufacturers. . . (R. K.. Lindsey, via Bullionâ€"1 one 5 6 )l 5 Imperial Gallons eu- Oon-tace \‘nrnlsb..................-.. . b " Varnish. 2nd ohnde.. .. . :- OneCouWVu’nhh........-......i.” : m. nu Varnish .II ‘ Quick Bu ng Venn-11.. “ Gold Stu ... .... . '1 Block anon . ... Polo lodlum bumble Body Varnish .......... PIhDunbleBudyVLmllh............ . ...â€"- 2 . Tndo Discount. 10 per cent...... ....Wci 18 Shipped by I. I. In dun to lean. Pickford a Stock, Halifax, ’ The above is 3 copy of invoice of Varnish“ and Jo n ' ' l 1:. ylrc'o Carri-go Shop from the old ambushed English id‘dn’lh'ft\\§;ii“fliaflindlfi b -n, whoop Yum-hen m the bent in the world, and ore used only by Kylie. 50 other Carnage Manufacturer in the country can furnish Varnioheo equal to these. god n: F‘J’OOd'. finished 'lih Conndinn materiel can compare with this juuly 0016; rate d' n glitch wake. There can be no frond or deception about this Varnish 35 ll 2:31;" lmBur:: Ezglupg. and II the only bill of these goods that has come into thl' purchzo else ’wherc'. ou molten note of thll and see the work finished before the! - - - - City Carriage Wong; A, /_/ FARMERS. ATTENTION! .YW 10‘“ 5‘ “sited by stove draws M“ ”'- 31“ neft month enticing you”; buy 43““ m: ' on W toms. Questionâ€"- n 9“ [calm enough to pay $69 10,. a “to“WanMnIm supply 13““ “NW Oxford rename 33 m of mum-o for $49 7 We mu“m5’mmthor. Pcdlavsosa is M Minus. M are have WM ““323 mason-ow. W. a. Wood: pays that 8118804 Ramos. All I ask is I" all and We: our stock before bum, e-oa . . . W G. WOODS 9 “comment-0" " We Seat and all mot babies derii Scott's Em . tion serves gives vital and alsu Cn thus ”lulu b is a w motor: 11%"- tissue and E ful rcmmiy Debiiity, Thro. Coughs. Co ,1 Wasting Dav. '1 Salaam ; ' scam Bean». l.» KNOWN J.) ’0‘ Ell Dung m Terrors One One of Ru furry me lln lurr Tilt: Toma-r“ made four. .2' u linms l'.lll\ l the art.«:ln»- up; in these c- '. L. :. any that :z ceivcd timely :‘A- have llh \; imports: most 11%.. . hardly ‘. Berlin. . .' does :. issuer , * mercha ’. by Mr \ up in ‘ will. i..:. Oltl t... years .. done. (‘35-; la 1 wh'rh :. Fire “at: '..I ‘ eat ln'l‘ill'.. I. .. ll}‘ll‘.5r;'1l~l'lzl.m :sllCC Wm kept so: u r. when in 13» :a frail. a: tin :.. :1 llve: sin \\1. I Though unlbm 1: month: .5!” \\.-;.1 making' ln-r . .m “'hilc in ll;l.~ on ever seen in this a last resurz. pa and gin c Lin"). t daughter. lltv hours she fJLlllt: the “dance" w she was 1‘"er a gaining lli‘l’ it mon‘hs after :h was dleHlllrll‘..v of disease, l-.. a stoppu_ H. :n, f has be“; r r. ‘:- malady {rm u . Cll'CumsUuur cover. an: I pec‘ed. an \\ .‘l Worniu-r’xzi 71:.) favorite r«:.. y are an Lil‘Imill ntnxia, par ml sciatica. 1.12.: .l headache, ‘m‘ 1 palpitatiwr. . tion, hll tubulsc humors in 1w chronic l'l‘\‘> ,. specific in: 1: Suppreflsnm‘, of wunkrn s» l cnlcuro 12.41; .- Worry, nature. Those l’:lL~ Dr. \Vlllumg. Brockville. ' . l'. And sold in ll \ the dozen il‘ ll cautioned Mumlll all! Bllnpt' . n: it 2.50, Incl may direct by mud cine Co.. at out A\ \'l"\\ I! l-‘rnnkl Month-til. A]; to a friend in M. the rising your 006 that he lu wlth Wilson 1 .- myelod durln :. unluclmuy h "bluntlnl a theatrical man

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy