Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts e ntly yet Igomptly on the Kidneys, g iver and owels, cleanses the sys- tem effectually, dispels colds, head- aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the .‘ 7 ‘I#:M .1 Awnu “un_ R. R. ELLIOT. EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR In accordance with the custom among country papers it is our inten- tion next week to take our holidays, so that our readers will not receive their copies of THE REPORTER next wuuv- w- â€" _-‘ only remedy of its kind ever pro- duced, pleasing to the taste and ac- ceptable to the stomach1 rompt in its action and tguly: bene cial in its LL _ ..- -..J. week, publication being suspended for that period. Printers are human and must rest like other people, and we in tend to yield to the common law in that respect. manj THAT part of the Canadian press which a few months ago was booming the great sixty million market which lies to the south of the internationl boundary is taking a. vacation, while banks, business houses and manufact- uring industries by the thousand are closing their doors in that so called land of promise. AW .vâ€"â€"... P“ J .‘NSyrup of Figs is for sale in 7 50 bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist Who may not have it on hand will rocure it promptly for any one w o wishes to try i . Manufactured only by the MWEWLLE: 9,31“.- hundred thousand unemployed "men of New York are arranging for a parade. By the wholesale closing down of mills, factories and other industrial establishments all over the United States thousands of men are thrown out of work and the charitable institutions in many of the cities are taxed to their utmost to provide food for the hungry ones. From the west an army of tramps is reported to be coming to join the unemployed of the New England states. The picture is indeed anything but inviting. Neuralgia. is one of the most common and distressing complaints incidental to this climate. It is not conï¬ned to any parti- cular season, for whilst most eneral in the winter seasons, yet many su er its exemâ€" ciating agony in the heat of summer. In late years this form of disease has become better known, and consequently the means of relief have become greatly increased in numbers, as well as in eï¬cacy. Among the most powerful and penetrating combinations, placed within the reach of the public for the relief of neuralgia, we can mention no remed equal-to or more certain than Pol- son’s erviline. Its power over pain is something wonderful, and we advise a trial‘ Peterboro’Review There was a. fair market Saturday with prices good. Butter was selling at 25¢ per lb for roll and 20c for crock goods. Eggs were sold at 120. Poultry, chickens and ducks was in good subply, but the quality was poor. Ducks sold at from 50c to 80¢ per par and chickens from 400 to 600. Small fruit is out of the market almost: Vigit: fér neuri'lgia, or aily other glamts. a ing for the plum and gauge season. sold at 50 to 7c and lamb at from 100 to 12c. Apples were selling at 20c per peck and potatoes at 75c to 80¢ per bag. Vegetables of all kinds were in good suppy. A Fair Market and Same of the Pricesâ€" Graln Rather Quiet. T-Iwï¬-graigvthiï¬gs v:ere stfli'rather quiet, with some oats and wheat offering. Oats were down, selling from 32c to 35c, with wheat at 58c for spring and 60c for fall. the millbrook 1keporter. BAUFDBNIA FIG smuv 00., THURSDAY. AUGUST 24. 1893. ONE ENSOYS A Sure Remedy for Neuralgia. TH E SATURDAY MARKET. 0 U R HOLIDA Y WEEK. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. NEW YORK. TI. 2 75c Na'rrow Escape of 'an amen-wan nun. from Destruction ‘1‘ the South Atlantic; A juggler of Cashmere, all in white, with a lizard crawling in his head-dress. after 25 years wandering in tropic and Arctic seas, lies in many fathoms in the South Atlantic, about 500 miles north- east of the Falkland Islands. He was the ï¬gurehead of the British bark Cashmere, one of the ï¬rst of iron sailing craft. ‘ ‘ ' ‘ m,__2_1_-,;| “Lt. The immaculate juggler who vanished under the sea had seen enough to supply him with yarns Elma}; weuld have made ï¬ ______ L-.‘J~ All“ vvnvn. Ju.â€"- _â€"â€".V- the adventures of all other ï¬gureheads seem unimpressive in comparison. The story that the ï¬gurehead cannot tell to its shipmates was related yesterday by Capt. Thompson. the skipper of the bark Cashmere. ' ‘ ‘ ‘ (V,,L_1A VHJIAALJVL ‘10 Capt. Thompson is a grizzled Scotch- man whose face has been burnt to a chocolate hue by the fervent suns of southern latitudes for the last 40 years. He has been 20 times around the Horn, and he has seen lots of ice in both the \V’estern and Southern oceans, but he says he never saw in so brief a period so much ice ashe saw after rounding the Horn, bound from Pisagua, Chili, to this port, deep laden with nitrate of soda. It was not seeing the ice that bothered him, however; it was hitting it and being thumped and pounded by immeasurable tons of it. And that is why the Cash- merian juggler didn't come proudly into port under the steel bowsprit of the Cashmere. That is also the reason why . the steel bowsprit was brought in on the l bark’s deck. The Cashmere warped into. Erie Basin last evening, battered and rusty above the water line, with a. green slime clinging to her immersed surface as thick as the hair on a Cashmere goat. Her nose was twisted, and a jury bow- sprit at an ungraceful tilt, supplied the place of the heavy steel spar. She had been more than six months making hex way from Pisagua. The skipper says he remembers the Antarctic ice in the Southern Ocean, just north of the Horn, away back in 1854, when he was master of the British clipper Eagle. That was the greatest year before this one for ice in that neigh- borhood. The clipper Indian Queen, plying between England and Australia, the Captain says, ran into a big berg in 1854, knocked out her masts and smashed in her cutwatcr. 1 an no»- v u “-v_- The Indian Queen’s skipper, mate and ï¬ve or six men launched the lifeboat and abandoned the ship. The second mate turned to, pumped her out, stopped the leak, rigged jury masts, and took the vessel into Valparaiso. The skipper and his boat’s crew were never heard of. On being reminded that the yarn oi the Indian Queen was another story. Capt. Thompson told how he lost his ï¬gurehead, and how close he came to losing the Cashmere, too. The bark was about. 300 miles east of the Falkland Islands on February 28th, when the cap- tain noticed on glancing over the star- board quarter, a white square in the water. v- â€"vv-v He looked closer and made out that the square was ice. The air was clear, and no bergs were visible on any hori- zon. The captain. remembering the fate of the Royal Alfred, an iron bark owned by the owners of the Cashmere, which is supposed to have been lost by collision with an iceberg about. 11 months ago, ordered a double lookout on duty, and kept his own eyes peeled for bergs. The wind was aft, and the bark sailed serene- ly along until February 28th. At dawna towering berg was seen away oï¬ to the westward. There were no other glacial apparitions on that or the following day. But the captain feared the approach .of night, which doesn’t begin down oï¬ the Horn until about 9 p._m. ' J nu-.___1 It was the mate’s watch, and Thxrd Mate Pontet, with a pair of the skipper’s ï¬eld glasses, was stretched on the fore- castle head, peering forward. The wind had shifted, and the bark was on the or; tack under easy canvas. Third Mate ontet suddenly saw a green- ish white vision apparently rise out of the water dead ahead. He said it. look- ed as if it were four times as tall as the bark’s main truck. It was of curious form for an iceberg. A gigantic cornice extended several hundred feet from one side. It looked as if it had been originally an ice arch, and had been divided at the keystone. Pontet didn’t wait to make a_ note _of his shipmaies now call his Albert Kopf. Every other‘aoaman went ï¬rm a. hurry, but not on ice cakes. rail He elled as he dashed by the pgbip,_ “0 , main K09??? 9nd {hat i§_wh_y The wooden jibboom of the bark speared the side of the berg and broke off like a. toothpick. Then the steel bow- sprit, a» thick tube two feet in diameter, smashed into the ice. The mighty tube broke in two, the upper half telescoping the lower, which was driven through the forecastle head clear through two holds, twisting and breaking the deck timbers and making itself so fast that it stuck 'where the impact‘with the ice put it until it was hauled out by a crane at Rio J aneiro. The headway of the bark was only slightly checked by the break- ing the bowsprit. The cutwater was crushed in and the white juggler was torn ofl". He was held abdve the sea. by a tangle of steel wire stays and rigging. Just as a huge cake tore along the starboard scuppors, a German aeaman. who was known only as Albert, came out of the forward house with his rub- ber boots in ‘lgis hapdg. - The pake scooped him u and took him along the captaiggz cabingll th_e wqy ‘to _ _9 tag- Ehese thâ€"iï¬Ã©a. He ran aft, and, as he gassed the forecastle, which is in a. deck- ouse on the Cashmere, he shouted: “Ice dead ahead !†When the stem of the bark hit the berg an avalanche of ice crashed on the forward deck. The ï¬rst several hun- dred tons were crushed to snowy ï¬neness by the ice boulders that followed, and all the forwan‘i deck was, as the skipper 531d, a turtle back of ice. The big chunks, some eight feet square. slid from the crystal turtle back into the sea and along the deck aft. INTO TONS OF ICE. of'an American Bar]: Of Other Medicines Failed But 4 Bottles of Hood’s Sarsapartua Cured. “It is with pleasure thatI tell of." the great beneï¬t I derived from Hood’s Sarsaparilja. For 6 years I have been badly afflicted wmh breaking out with running sores during hot summer xamonths. I have sometimes not been able to use drug limbs for two months at at Iime. Being induce to t_ry Hood’s SarsaparillaJ t5? one bottle last spring, commenced using in elt so much better. got two bottles more;t them during the summer, was able to do0 my There is One Green Spot Anyway. There is one place in this disnrict where drought, greedy grasshoppers and thin‘ pastures are unknown, and that land of‘ Canaan is M inden neighbourhood. A gentle- man of Minden inclosing a. cheque to a bus- iness man in Peterboro, closes his letter as follows: “We have had a. ï¬ne season; pastures havebeen simply all our farmers could wish. The road sides for miles and miles are covered with white clover in bloom and timothy headed out; it was simply impossible for our cattle to keep the road-sides cat-en down, and we have the heaviest crop of hay that has ever been cut in this country. Wheat, oats and peas are also good and potatoes splendid, and with Gilmour and Rathbun lumbering this winter our farmers have a ï¬ne prospect be- ‘ fore them. housework, and which I had not done for six years. Think I am cured of erysipelas, and recommend any person so atflicted to use â€""v_ < Four bottles has done more for: me than $200 worth of other medicine. I think it. the best lgoodpu‘riï¬gr â€knownâ€. 15912. H. D. WEST, _._.. “u. 1.5 Eggrchw street. éB-ï¬Wallis, N. S. Hooo's PILLS cure tion, bmonaneu. jaundice, flow to get a “Sunlight†Picture. Send ‘25 “ Sunlight†Soap wrappers (wrap- pers bearing the words “ Why Does a \Voman Look Old Sooner Than a M an â€) to Lever Bros. Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto, and you will receive by post a. pretty picture, free from advertising, and Well worth fram- ing. This is an easy way to decorate your home. The soap is the best in the market and it will only cost 1c. postage to send in the wrappers, if you leave the end open. \Vrite your address carefully. J.‘ i Strayed to the premises of the undersigned on or about, the middle of June last. a yearling heifer, light red in color. The owner willpleqse prove property, pay charges and remove 1 r. GEO. ARMSTRONG, 32-3 Lot; 4, 1st Con. Gavan. that I will nOFbe res- t contractcé in my name rson than myself. or by my Merchants and others please GEORGE NESBITT. Notxcc is hereby onsible for any y any other writtc 0rd . Gavan, Kugust 21. 1893. Municipality of the Township oi flanvers, in in the County of Durham, one of the United Counties of Northumberland and Durham. OTICE is hereby given that I have trans- mitted or delivered to the persons men- tioned in the ï¬fth and sixth sections of the “Voters’ List Act.†the copies re uired by said sections to be so transmitted or de ivercd of the list made pursuant to the saidnct, of all per: sons appearing by the last rewsed Assessment Roll 0 the said Municmahty to be entitled to vote in the said 'Municipality at elections for Members of the Legislative Assembly and at Municipal Elections; and that said list was ï¬rst posted up at my ofï¬ce at Bethanv. in the said townshi of Manvers, on the EIGHTH DAY OF A GUST. 1893. and remains there for inspection. Electors are called upon to exam- ine the said list. and if any omissions or any other errors arerfound therein, to take imme diategroceedmgs to have the said errors cor- recte according to lair: _ MARBLE AND GRANITE W DBKS ï¬ated at: Bethany, this 7th day of August, A.1)., 1893 ALFRED RYLEY, Clerk of the said Municipality. Newest Designs. “568’s Sarsaparï¬illg STRAY HEIFER. mm: MAYGï¬UK, “51131315: mm, BAILLIEBOBO. ONT. $200 Worth VOTER_§_’ LIST. 1 89 8. Mrs. H. D. West of Cornwallis, Nova. Scotla. R. CHAMBERS, Preprietor. Walk Two Miles AGENT FOR THIS DISTRIC! Erysipelas LINDSAY, ONT. NOTI‘ Lowest Prices. cure liver 1113, constipa- iice, sick headache. 25¢. 24-3 wear tWiGe as long' as at; The ï¬nest High Grade Engine Oils are Manufactured by FORCING THE SEASON We can’t Change the Weather but we gar: Change our Prices. We start off this week with a double head of steam to make things boom in Clothing. Our prices are simply irresistible. They will make you buy in spite of yourseif‘. We carry on our series of Bargain Day sales, and we make so that our Country Customers can have the beneï¬t of the Every Wednesday Bargain Day We urge all buyers of‘ Clothing to come in and see what w offer on Bargain Day. We quote below a few of the prices that tell the tale of how well we will sell on Bargain Day .100 pairs Bovs’ Knicker Pants, lined .......... 500 Blouses for boys, washable .............. 89‘Blouse Suits, blue ....................... 3S Bovs’ Pleated Suits ...................... 125 Halifax Suits, all sizes ............ . ..... LARDIN E ?’I."‘8E‘.N.E. The Wonderful Cheap Men, Lindsay and Peterborough. McCall’s Oils Champion Gold Medal Oiiflf the Dominion. ..°.. v-w_ McOOiI'EROS. OO., TORONTO McCOLL‘S GOUGH BROS. Is selling Groceries, Crockery, Glassware, Fancy China, Silverware, and other lines of goodsâ€"for cashâ€"20 to 30 per cent. cheaper tan any one else in town. Reason whyâ€"reiring from business as advertised. Don’t you forget it. Give us a call and see for yourself. Eggs and goofl butter taken in exchange for goods. SPECIAL REDUCTIONS. twice as long as any other make. .g 1 _ R an + ‘Lg f HernsaRoors ’ §t the Medical Pranerhes nfwmm g 7 areumsverail knownâ€. ID "I“..MSVLUREMEDVFUR . _ . .yï¬ge); . PURJFYIN‘GTJ‘IEBLOOD - -~- opportunity on Market Day. CYLINDER OIL ARE THE BEST. 800 Suits from $3.50 down, for .............. 100 dozen Flannelette Shirts ................ 200 dozen Four-in~hand Ties, Silk, 5 for ...... 500 dozen Knock-about Hats, for ............ WITH Crockery, Glassware, vare, and other lines :70 to 30 per cent. pleain town. Reason PURIFYING THE BLOOD" - ~ Custiveness lndsgestmnflyspensia Suur Smmem HEADAEHE AND mzzmiï¬ E325 For sale by all leading dealers in the country R. DEYELL. 390. r ~00. 70c. WILL [U 613 Iï¬iancï¬and. Chat :« name Princiuals. SPECIAL! â€"-â€"Mr. \V. Tur: onto for a few he? â€"Mr. \V. J. G boro on Monday ‘ â€"Miss Annie 1 Toronto for a shq â€"-Miss Jennie is the guest of M â€"Mi.~s Jennie 113.8 been visiting â€"â€"Mr. J. W. C ronbo is spending “Friday Sept.1 â€"-J.. H. H. J u will be at A. T. I â€"-If you are tinct vision consu vâ€"lï¬es “vallac guest; of Miss Den â€"Mi5s Troupe i112 Mrs. H. Avg! â€"Mi55 Addie visiting at, 3113. â€"â€"Mr.<.. Scott < her daughter, 31} â€"Mr. \Vm. L friends from Pet FR: DA SEP1 8th. â€"â€"Mrs. Hillie‘, boro, are spendh Needler’s. Miss Burton visit with her 93 Kingsville. â€"â€"Miss May Peberbom, the McKee. Misses Ann returned from â€" Miss Elem from a pleasant. Peta-bore. : â€"-Mr. A. Fe! brook, has been days on county _3[l'5. G130 daughter of To B. E. Stanton â€"-‘\Ir. Oscat formerlv of th x isiting.r friend: â€"Mr. \V. S to Jfail is spell Mr. M. Henry -â€"Rev. \V. . preached in th last Sunday. .._.Misses A1 ton are spendi their uncle in '1 â€"Mrs. W. week after a. p in Lindsay, OI â€"At the council the difl'erent m1 4 8-10 mills business of i morough Raine 10!. Camp at" 1011 Medals. pThe 70 TO‘V) THE M! £3 COL