Ontario Community Newspapers

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 30 Oct 1885, p. 2

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THE CANADIAN STATES~U\H 18 PUBLISHED ... ·* !WI AMARVELOUS STORY] ·' TOLD lN TWO YOUNG FOLKS. Day-Dreams. There were yellow heAd~ ln the mountain, And yellow heads by the sea; And now they are in tha sohool·room, As busy as they can be. But the :vollow heads from tlte mountains Remember the dear old rooks ; And ltow they would climb and cls.mber About with their "alpeostooks." And the yellow heads from the seaside Sit drMming of s<>nda and cavos; Of bright Jrlue skies and of sunshine, Of loam on the "white-cap" waves. And its very hard to remember The ieasone they learned before, When folks1ue dre~ mlng of mountains, And sands, and the dear sei>ehore. ti:VER Y V?R IDAY MORNING , -BY- I.prims. ~:f · .A_. JAMES, ..\T THE OI< EICE o1UHlh:c Block, lUngSt. ,Bowman ville, Ont T E R M : S: 91.110 pel'annnm,or $1.00lf t>aldln advance r.>ayment strictly in advance required !rem "Gentlemen: My father resides at Glover, Vt. He has been a great snlferor from ScroIula, and the inclosed letter will tell you what Ccdar St., New York, Oct. 28, 1882. FROMT HE S O N: "ll8 a marvelous etfeot Ayer's Sarsaparilla hns hnd in his case. I tblnk his blood must subsor1bera outside or the county. Ordi;rs to dil()Ontinuo the paper mu~t be accompanied by the amount due.or th e paper will not be stopped. subaor!bers are responsibleuntllt'ullpayment is made. BATES OF A.DVEJlTISINGz l;;a~ Whole Column one year ....... .. ... . $60 00· ~ ::i 1!: One quarter ..... . ... 20 00 ~~ Bslf Column one year . ............ .. SG 00 - , " IIa.lf year ...... .. .. .... 20 00 ,, " One quarter .. .... ..... 12 60 l/l!la.rter Oolun.n one yeD.r ........... 20 00 " " Hal! year . .. . . .. .. .. 12 60 ·· One quarter. ... .. .. 8 00 Btx lines and under , first insertion .. $0 60Eaoh subsequent insertion...... 0 25 l'l'om six t o ten lines, firstinsertior., 0 75 ·Each enbseque1;1t ina~rtion ....... 0 35 =-10 l)Ver ten lines, first msertion,per lme 0 10 _ Eacluubsequentinsertion, " 0 03 _ 'rhe number or lines to be reckoned by Ile space occuv.ied,;measured bye. scale of 1olld Nonvare.il. " e* · -~-- - --u " Halfyear ... ..... . h. SG oo· ~~ have cont ained tho humor for at least ten years ; bnt it did not show, except In the form of a scrofulous sore on tho wrist, until abou$ five years ago. From a few spots which ap. pearcd at that t lmo, it gradually spread so aa to cover his entire body. I assure you he was terribly affiicted, and an objeot of pity, when be began using your medicine. No,v, tllere are few men of his age who enjoy M good health as he has. I could easily ntl.Ille fifty persoll!I who would testily to thE> facts in bis case. W. llL rmLLil's." ,Yours truly, What Be1tie and Lion round. " Where are you going, Bertie ?" said Mrs. Wilbur, as her little daughter ca.me into the kitchen one morning, with her hat on.-"Out into the woods," said Bertie. " Wha.t for?" asked her mother, unconcern· edly, for Bertie was in no danger of being lost, as she wa.s perfectly acqna.inted with every pa.rt of the ~wood.-"I am going to hunt for a fairy," &nswered Bertie. "Don't you think, mamma., that if I should go very easy and look very carefully, I might find one asleep under a fern 1"- "But ea.Id Mrs. W ilbur, "the fairies pl!!.y all night and go home in the morning. "- "Well," 11a.id Bertie, "you know.one little girl fairy might be very tired, and lie down a minute to rest and go to sleep, and not wake up until it waa noon."-"Very well, d.on't st a.y too long; and find a good fairy, for my little girl's playmates must be good." And Mrs. Wilbur went on with her work, soon forgetting all about B ertie and the wished.for fo.iry.-Bertha Wilbur was ten year s old. She wa.s the only child of educated a.n d well-to-do pa.re nts ; but although she lived very happily with pa.pa. and mamma., and had ma.ny advantages of hooks, pictures, music, etc., which a re denied to ro3ny couo· try children, she often felt very lonesome, and would wish for a little brot her or sis· ter to play with. The neighborhood in whioh Bertie lived was rather aristocratic and old, and t here being no children in it, with the exception of Bertie, the t wo adj oiuingschool districts had been uuited, so the nearest school was three miles away. On account of the distance, and because Mrs. Wilbu r was very strict in r egard to Bertie's choice of playma tes, the little girl had never been to school and h er parents had been her only teachers. B ut being an only child, she waa more advanced in many things than moat children of h er age. She was a. n ice lit tle reader, could w rit.e ver y well, and pl "yed the piano wit h soma grace. But B ertie's favorite occupation was r eading ; and as she was furnished with a plenty of books saited to her m ge, she was seldom in the house without 11. story book In her lrnnd. She was very fond of fairy stories, and had re"'d a. great many ta.Jes 0£ sylpbs'.and sprit es. She had a large dog, with whom she had roamed over the fields and woods of her father's farm until she was at home in ita i·e· motest part. W hen Bertie left the house she went to find Lion, her dog, and calling "Lion!" "Lion I" once or t wice, in a moment he came bounding v.long with h is pink tongue lolling out, of his r<reat mouth, and his grea.t ta.it w ...gging like the t op of a fir tree in a. storm. Bertie ga.ve him a pat on the h(lad. and away he went gamboling along ahead, now o.nd then stopping t o wait for his mistress, a.nd then r ushing on far a.head. The woods were about a qu!l.rter of a. mile from the house, and wera on rising ground; so Bertie did not hurry, for she wa,s not a. strong child, and climbing was rather tiresome to her. By the t ime she had reached the top of t he hill, Lion was nowhere to be seen, but as he made a point to hunt rabbits whenever hia mistrees went into the woods, she was µot a t all surpr ised. Wandering a.long, picking here and there a wild flower and occasi onally stopping to watch a squirrel or bird, Bertie had forgotten all about Lion, until far in the wooda 11he heard him ba.rklng vigorously. But enppoelng he had treed a. squirrel, or had found something else of interest, ehe paid no heed, until Lion came crashing through the underbrush, and made Bertie follow him by pulling at her dress, and then running a.long befor e her. "Why, Lion, what is the ma.tter ?" asked Bertie. "What have you found? W ell, you're a nice doggie, and we'll ~o right and find it,"- " Bow, wow, wow,' said Lion, and soon disappeared fr.pm Bertie's sight, but kept up his ca.11. .Bertie followed as quick a.a the tangled vines a.nd thick bushes would let her, and at last found herself In the middle of the wood beside au old wood-road, which had not be n used since the winter before. Lion was there and ce~eed to bark when he saw bis little mistress, and ran to her, frolicking around so gleefully, that Bertie was for a. minute quite bewildered. "Now, L ion, I've oome, why don't youehow me what you've found? Oh ! oh I oh I My sakes I You blessed little darling I" cried B ~rtie in delight-for what do you think L\on showed her ? A tiny bit of a baby in a muket basket. Of course Bertie did n ot stop to think of any thing else but to take the basket and hurry home as fast a.a she could. Her burden was quite heavy, and she could not carry it without some difficulty ; but she was too m uch d elighted and excited to rest. Lion trotted a.long bes ide her, and every min· ute or two he would put up hie nose to the basket to see lf its content s were safe. Ber· tie was very tired when she reached the house, but she scarcely realized it, being so wrought up with delight. She did not think but what ehe should keep the baby always, and forgot that t he wee · hing had a mot her, who waa per haps now seeking after it, and nearly fra.ntie with uor row at Its! loss. No, Bertie was only t en years old ~nd did not think of those things. Bang went t he sitting-room door , and in rushed Bertie with her.basket. "Oh! Ma.mma, see what I've got, See it's little hande; and oh, its g9ing to open its eyes, I guess I It was asleep, and I took it a.nd came h ome <1uick I Oh, my! and Lion barked first and l went, and oh, oh, oh-e I" and Bertie was aotually obliged to stop and take brea.th.- "Why Bertie! What have you done, where did you,find this baby?" and Mrs. "\Vil bur opened her eyes in g reat astonishment, After Bertie had sufficiently gain· ed her br eath she told her mother all abou t the finding of her "fairy," as she persisted in cil>lling the little thing. The baby was not over three weeks old, and we.a so small that it was almost a. fairy. It was a. little d ark· eyed girl, and even a.t that tender age evlnc· ed so much brigh tness and good humor, that the family fall in love with it at onoe. Bertie's father Immediately made inquiries a.bout the neighborhood in respect t o the parents of the child, and endeavored t o find out t he facts relating t o the aban don ment of s o emall a c hild, A fter some trouble Mr. Wilbu r l ea.med from a distant farmer, t h& t a ban d of gypsies h ad been camping in the woods near his farm, but h aving appropriat ed the poultry of s ome neighboring farmers they had been d riven awa y. Aociording t o t his ma.n's st ory, ther e were in the party t wo men, three women, and several children large enough to wa lk and run, F ROM THE FATHER: ;~~~r1:~~ a duty for mo to state to you tile beneftt I have derived from the use of · Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Six months ngo I wns completely covered with a terrible humor and scrofulous eores. Th<t humor ca1rned an incessant and int.olemble itching, alld the skin cracked so as to cause the bloocl to flow In many places whenever I moved. . M y sufferings were great, and my life a burden. I commenced the use of the SARSAPARILLA in April last, b a \'e used it regularly since that timo. l\fy condition begnn to improve at onoo. Tho sores havo alt healed, and I feel perfectly well In every respect-being now able to do a good day's work, although 73 years of age. Many inqulr& what has wrought such a cure in my case, and I t ell tllem, as I have here tried to tell you, AYER's SAnSAP.ARILLA. Glover, Vt., Oet. 21, 188:1. Yours gratefully, So no evidence as to there being a very sma.11 child in the party, was found. After ob· taining t his infor mation, Mr. Wilbur had the woods searched for miles around, but wi r.h no succees, and finally, the selll'oh was given up, and Mr. a nd Mrs. Wilbur decided t o keep t he child (to Bertie's unbounded delight), unt tl rnme one should claim it, or ita history should be cleared up, It need not be told how proud an d fond Bertie was of her little "fairy, " and when the baby grew old enough t o laugh a.ud chatter, and run a.bout, she watched it with patient care. As soon a.s the child was old enough, Bertie taught her to read and write, and do various little t hings becoming to childhood. For we must remember that as fast as baby grew, Bertie advanced in years, and was now quite a mtle la.dy. No other name than .Fairy had ever been given to the child, bec1mse Bertie declared that she was a little black-eyed sprite whom ahe ha.d found in the wood~. So Fairy grew as fa.st as a. daisy and when she wa.s a.bout five years old Bartie induced her po.rent.a to adopt her, o.nd she was christened with the name of Fairy Wilbur. }'airy was such a pretty, cheerful, and clever child, that she won the love of everybody, and from Bertie she was ineep11.ra.ble. Ber tie always said tha.t she had a good fairy, but that Lion must have the praise of finding lier, and when Bertie wonld auk Lion if he ever found a. fairy, he would run to l·'airy with a. loud "bow wow, " and a vigorous wag of his ta.ii, CATARRH. Caledonian Mills. on. TA!tllU.l'.N, ACCOUCilEUt<. and ville. P Olfice :-Silver Street, Bowman HYBlCIAN, SURGEON GRRAT ROBBERIES. Bow Royal Treasuries nave Gun RUled b1 Thieve·· '.l'he recent r obbery of the Turin Armory ca.uses the Lc mdon Sta.ndard to revJew the many similar crimes committed in the · past in England and other countries. The story of Colonel Blood, who a.11 but managed to make ofl with the English crown jewels from the Tower , !a, so well known that it need only be referred to. But there are several other instanct a less known, though scarcely less peculiar. Nearly 600 years ago the grea.t treasury in Westminster Abbey was cleared of some of the most valuable of its contents, t he ·acriebn and several of the monks aoting in compli.city with certain thieves outside the wall. Some of the ob· jects were never r ecovered; but the r ichness of the booty h ampered t he robbers so much that when t he chief of them was captured £2,000 worth was found in his possession. So c arefully w&a the r obbery planned that the rogues sowed the graveyard with hemp in order that four months later it might serve to conceal the proceeds of the burglary. This crop, it may be added, w as utilized for quite a. differen t purpose. In 1440 the R epublic of Venice narrowly escaped being plundered of its vast hoard of valuables by a man named Sta.mmato, who, after seoreti ng him~elf behind an alter in the cathedral, managed to gain a.ooeB B to the t reasury by means of false keys. Night after night he removed objecta of .v ..llle, and there seems little doubt that he might have escaped with h is booty had· he not been t empted to Bhow one of his count rymen the ducal cap of the Do>ge, which h e had just conveyed to bis lodgings. This m isplaoed confidencti led t o his appr ehm:i11ion with. more than :2,000,000 ducats in his posaeesion. Anne of Denmark, Queen of James VI. of Scotland, was rnbbed by her ma.id of pea.rls and other valuables under the plea t hat the·e j ewele were taken to dress dolh for the royal child1 en. On the death of Queen Charlotte a.n enor· moue q uo.ntity of precious atones, inol_u~ing diamonds to t he value of neatly a million, w~s missing. On I\ peevious occasion ~gold ewer and a. basin enriched with gems d isappeared from the royal chambers. The latter were subsequently found behind a bookshelf in the K ing's study. At a. later date it was officially a.nnonnced that the diamonds had, for the moat part, been recovered, with th.e exception of the late King's Star and Garter, valued at $7,000. It la believed that George III. had removed them during one of his fits of insanity, and ha.d forgotten where he ha d put them. The garter is, however, still missing, Daring the disorders follow!Dg the revolution t he French crown jewels were stolen by the robbers, who climbed the colonnades at the side of the palace of Louis XV, and thus gained en· trance to the Garde Meuble, where they h "d been placed by the Commnne of Paris. A portion of the treasure was recovered from a ditch in the Alee des Veuves, in the Champs Elysees, but though Napoleon made every effort to oolleot the st onea, which h !iod been dispersed throughout E urope, many have disappeared, it is believed forever. In this, as In almost all the cases ot r obberies of crown j ewels, all the guardians of ~e treasures were suspected of complicity, and to the end of his life Citizen Sargent bore the title of " Agate," owing to a. popular belief that, on the basis of the proverb which gives thieves credit for knowlngthelr own hiding places, he had no difficulty in finding the agate-ony:x chalice which formed part of the t reasure fished out of the ditch m t he Champs Elysees. Since that time several more of the crown jewels have van ished, and in 1848, during the transport of these valuables t o the treasury, two pendelcques of dia.'llonds and the button of a. hat in brilliants suddenly disappeared. In 1804 the celebrated "Cup of the Ptolemies" was stolen from the Paris Museum, and within the last three years the church of St. Denis was despoiled of some of the regal ornaments. In 1850 the P rincess of Orange was robbed of her jewels at Brus· eels, and in 1877 the t reasures of the Cathedral of Toledo were wlthdra.wn from public inspection, owing to the uumerous thefts to whioh they had been subjected for many years previously. Aa for the Duke of Brunswiok notwithstanding the elaborate precautions which he took t o keeep his dia.monds, be was plundered more t han once, and to the Jlcandal of legitimacy, some of Don Carlos' orders went a.stray in a. peculiar manner. Charles I. helped himself t o t he contents of the j ewelhouse when funds failed, and Charles II. immediately aft er his accession, issued a. procl amation commat1ding all persons in whose possession there were any of the crown jewels sold by the Commonwealth to restore t hem to their r ightful owners. But, though several person" were arrested for not doing so, the scattered va.lu . ables ca.me in so slowly that a new regalia became necesaary. Edward III. pledged his crown and jewels to the merchant of F landers, and Henry V. put h is di!!.dem in pawn to the Abbot of Westminster In order to raise funds to ca.rry on the war with France. Not to enumerate many similar transactions, G ustavus III. of S weden, pur chased t wo large diamonds, a. ruby and some pearls which the Young Pretender ha.d failed t o redeem frem the Lombardy Arms . It would thus seem that royal treasures a.re quite a1 apt to go a.stray a.a any others, 7 Dr. A. BEITH, f':1 RADUA'fE OF THE TORONTO UNIV~R U Sl'l'Y, Physician, Surgeon, &c. Office Kmg t reet. MORRIS' BLOCK. Bowmanvllle. J. '\V. lllcLnngblln, JU, B . , ICENTIATE OF THE ROYALCO!JLEGE of Physicians and m embei· or the Royal College of Surgeons, Edinburgh, Ofilce : MORRIS' BLOCK King-~t .. Bowman- anti L Ule. DR. J, C. ~DTCJHELL, M E MBER OF COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS and Surgeons, Ontario, Coroner, etc. Office and Residenoe,,Enniskillen. 74. John K eith Gal braith, l:IIRAJ\I PmLLIPS." AYER'S SA.RSA.PARILLA cures Scro!'ula and all Scrofulous Com11 t:.intn, Erysfp. AR IUS'.l'EB, SOLICITOR, NOTABY P UBLI C, &o. Ofilce- :Bounsall's Bloc,k Wng Street, Bowman ville. Monev to lend, B D, GUJtKE SJi'IU'SON, 1D ARRIS'l'E~. SOLICITOR, &o., MOP RIS 0 BLOCK , up stairs, King Street, Bowman wtlle, Solicitor for the Onta rio Bank. Prlvate IIJ.aneu loaned at the lowest rates, JtOB ERT AllilIOUJJt, .11.t&. o( Marriage Eczema, lUngwot·in., Blotches, Sores, Boils, Tumors, an(l Eru ptions ot: the Sldn. It cleru'S the blood of all impu· rities, aids digestion, stimulates the action of the bowels, and thus restores vitality lllld strengthens the whole system. elas, PREPARED DY Formerly Known as the" Soper Mills. ') CA1'AR1m.-.A. new treatment has been discovered whertlby a penuanent cure or this hitherto incurable disease. is a bsolutely a ffect· THIS MILL HAS BEEN THORed in from one t o three applications. no mat ter UGHLY renovated an cl put in order, under whether standing one year or forty years. Tllis our own s pecial s uper-vision, fo r the pu roose ot remedy is only applied once in ' twelve days, risting and manufacturing Oa t Meal i:;,...d P ot and does not interfere witl1 b1rniness. Descr ip· 8a.r ley, and wo a r e now prepar e d t o i·eceive tive pa mphlet sent free on receipt of st amp by orders from 1.111 our old ouat omera and other, A. R. Dixon &; Son, 305 King sh·~et, vV t;st , for work, a nd we gurantee to give t h em wh c:. Toronto, Canada. lntrust us with the sam e entire sat isfact ion W H A T IS CA~'aRRI!~ Oat s and other grains to.ken in exchange for Catarrh is a ila.ngerons disf\ase which thous· Flour Oa t Meal, &c. H . & J, 'f OW' NS, Bow a nds'are cousciuusly or unconsciously suft'e1·ing manville 221, from. It is a. m uco·vurulent discharge ca used · - - - -- · by the presence of a veget able parasite in the lining membrane of the nose. The predlspo~· ing causes ure a morbid state of the blood, the blighted corpuscle of tubercle. the germ poison of syrhilia, mer cury, t oxomce, frf\m t he retention of the effete matter of the skin, suppressed perspirations, badly ventilated s leeping apart· ments and the germination of other poisons in the blood. Irrita ted by these, the Jinillg mem· bra.ne of tlte nose is evor r eady for t he reception of the parasite, which r avidly spreads, up the nostrils and down the ranees. or ba ck oi' the throat, Mllsini;: ulceration of t he throat; up the uustachian tubes, causing d oafoees: bn J.. rowing in Lhe vocal cords, causing hoarseness· usurping the proper structure of t he bronchiai tubes. ending in pulmonary consumption and death. -:B'Y'· Many ingenious apeifics for for the cure of catarrh have been invented. but without success. until a ph ysician of long st1rndi ng discoV· ercd t 111· exact nature of th disease and the only uµp ii ..nce which will permanently destroy UT I am fully prepared to attend Funerals on he 11 n.rnoiie, no matter how a ggravated the the shortest notice, at the lowest possible rate~. L ca.K. .:iufferers should send sta mp at once Caskets and Buria!Caeos ready on short notice for dt!acriptive pamphlet on catarrh. to the First-class hearse on very m oderate terms business manal(era, A, II, Dixon &; Son, 305 Shrouds and Coffins const antly on. hand. Fun King street, west, Tor onto, Ca.nadoi. ral cards supphed at o'!ce. Furmture Shop&; What the Rev. E. B . S teven,·on ,B.A .. a (Jleru11· how R1_Joms-Bounsall s_New Block. . man of t he London Conference of the l'tietlw - 11 rurmture sold by me i s made by the U. C d iet Church of Canada, hcts to s a y i n r ega rd urnitur~ Co. of Bowmanvill~. I do not bny To A .H. Dixon & Son's N ew Treat men t f o» I slop fur niture a nd r epresen t it to have been Oatan·h. made by the U. C. F. Co. of thi s town. ~ Also agent for thel.I-QUOR '£E A (or this town . 0 a k Jans._ 0 nt., Ca nada, March 11, 1883. ancl v icinity. It is clteap and ao good as ca.n be MesM"s. , H . Dixon &: S on: · th e ma~k e t · A .-, · DEAII A Sms .- Y ours of the 13th inst. to han d. go t in r va Jua bl e PI)ze given It seemed almost too good to be true that I am wit h eve Y pound. cured or Catarrh, but I k now that I a m. I have had no re tllrn of t he d isease, and never relt better in my life. I have tried so man y things for Cllt a.rrh, sufl'ered so mnc h a lld for so many yoars, that i t is hard lo realize t hat I& Ill really better. T HE N E W I coneider that mine wits a very bad case; it was aggravated and cbronic, ·invclving the throat as well ' as the nasal passages, a nd I thonght it would requir e the three ;t1ea tments, but I feel fully cured by the two sent mo, and I a m thallkful tha t I w as ever ind uced to send ~ o you. Y cu are at liberty to use this Jett er stating /J~~o llltiil~!Jiljzj!flrfl!i"ii;JIJ!J;!!:Wlifilf:l o' , t hat I have be6n cured a t two treatments . and n~ o~ ~ ~ 'I shall gladly recommend your remedy to some ~u. [;ilr;;i:tijill T H E FAVO IRD T IE lii!.iil~~ ot my friends who aro s ufferers. Yours, with many thanks. Rm v. E , B. S'!'EvExsoN. A ".Id hund<ens of others ... UNDERTAKINCf L EV I MORRIS. ·~ ~ ~RAYMONB *o 1~1 1 To the Ladies I beg t o announce that I have a very fi ne ru . ~~~~~~~~g~~~~~~~~~~~m~m r.~-S EVV ING-MACH IN E tl Dr.J.C.Ayer&Co., Lowell, Mass. &id by all Dru_gglstll; $1, six bottles for ~I!. choice of In EGISTRAR, WEST DURH AM ISSUE R Mconsea, Barrister and A.ttor· o:v at Law and Solicitor in Chancery. Money Clt\ned on R eal E st ate, Ofiloe on King s treet, . ______, aowmanville. _________ ____ "1. Cheap Life Insurance. Insure in t he Confederation Life Asso· cia.tion. It is cheaper than the Canadian Mutual Aid , A, 0. U. W. or any pass around your hat institution, as the following e xampl es will prove: Thos. McCluog has been insured s ince 1872 for$2,000a.nd the last five years it only cost him $2.55 per annum on ea ch $1, 000 to insure. John McClung i nsure d a t the sa me t ime for the same amount and it only cost him $1. 74 per annum on e ach $ 1,000 to insure, he being a little younger. W e certify the a bove to be correct . Thoe. McClung , John McClung. THOS. BINGHAM, Agent . DANGS, S"WITCHES, nnd "WAVES. I tlo a ll m y own HAIR '1' 0Rli Ullll ....-u1 FOR FAMILY USE. lM?c> HIGH A P. M · HIGH F I N ISHG\ , ~ qp;~~ · aa&>~ ~ $iP erit. 5©lura8fe, T. r1iIL1.u·s wnrl'unt tt. ~~'*'"~ [,! All the " Raymond " Shuttle Ma.chines · a r e fitted wit h tho Patent L ICENSED AUUTIONEER for the County · of Du1 ·ham, Sales promptly attended. Addres11- Hamvton P.O. 59. I -:Iair Bleach., Hair Pins, Net s & Combs · . S TAM PIN G done promptly and n eatly . - - - - - - -- - - -- - -- - B. llli'.!'CHiSON. : CHAS. RAYMOND1 ; vt.ANUFACTURER L ICl'.:NSE D AUC'rIONEER, CONVEYAN , CEU und Cummissicner in B. R. Sales at illnded to proml'.itly 1md at reasonable rates. ·a A.ddress- Enniskillen P. o. OHN HUGH ES.--Licensed Auctioneer, V aluator and Arbitrs tor. Fire and Life , nsurauce, Notes and Accounts Collected, Mone y to Lend on reasonau1e terms, Address MRS. A. DAVIS, Over JI. ltfllyer's Ste1·c, - · Cowru1Uu·ille. GUELPH, ONTARIO; ~ ! -. 5e " J Cart w l'ight, Oi. t. 472 G OOD WIFE GUARANTEED TO evory man who buvs hie License from A H;JJ:NRY SYLVESTER, Enniskillen. W . W. IHCK"D<,Y, Fl LE RANK AND to the F ront and Defend your Country. 'l'l:lose who staya t1fome, oil up with »J~SS lMcT AVISH Has received her new stock"ll! TE'l'E RIN ARY SUllGEON, graduate of the Ontario "Veterinary College. Oillce and Residence, Ni;:wTONVILf,E, Ont. Will visit Orono every Tuesday. Office hours from 12 & . m. to 4- p. m .. at Coulter·s Hotel. Specia l attention paid t o Surgery. 32-ly* V GOODS., and invites the Ladies of Bowmanville and vicinity to call and see her Pattern and assortment oi McCOLL'S LARDINE, and keep things running till the absent ones return. MACHINE OILS. WOOL OILS. HARNESS OILS. AXLE GREASE. ONEY ! MONEY !-,-The subscriber receives money on deposit for theOntario M ILoa.n and Savings Company, and pays internet BONNETS, HATS at tlte rate of ( and per cent. No notice of withdrawn! required: Also loans money on mortgages at lowest rates. No commission charged. W. l<'. ALLEN, Bowmanvllle. 8·1y. 6 PRU}'. W. '\l'ILLSON. fl~ACHER OF PIANO, ORGAN AND STORE :- Secon tl Door West or Willla111s ..L SINGING. Terms : For beginners $6; for Butcher Sta lJ adv&nced pupils. $10 for quar~er or twelve l essons. Residence at Mr. Joseph Brittain's, < corner Liberty and Concession Street, Bow m an ville. 51-tf. TRIMMINGS McColl Bros. & Co., Toronto. Granite ·and Marble Works, BOWMANVILLE. - - - o--I beg to annou nce that my supply of Gr a nit e and Marble M onumen ts was ne ver eo larg e as at present. Pianos Tuned and ltepaired. 'l'HEIR Mns. HUMPHREY· HAS REMOVED RER to buildings form erly occupied by CODD & CO., n:rrns WISHING PIANOS PbyA Tuned or repaired can haTe them attended leaving word .at the DOMINION ORGAN HARNESS SHOP C o's Bowmanville. A first-clas m an 0 ·~ow "e in11 in their mvlo r. 0 FFIOE, In Variety of Pattern it is most modern. In F inish, far exceeding any you can see elsewhere. In Workmanship, first-clu.ss. And price as low as a t any experienced shop I have r eceived by S. S. " Indiana," a consignment of fMil Bo! Gentlemen of' Fash ien, u ot s o tast. a ve wl'itten these few lines And all I have to say_ lru>1.t you can find me still at home, [ a. m not gone away. So < \ll my J;Jnd old t riends may come, A·nd all the y oung ones, t oo, A.n il get their g arments nicely made rurashions that a r e new: VhO"re old and young, d ear friends, may meet .A w eloom e 1l'Metin11:. bv R . PRATE first D oor tast of RuebottomHouse, She has now in stock everything usually found in a well equipped HARNESS SHOP. SOC>TC::S: Q..::El...A.:NTJ:T:S Ano ther lot has a.nived by S. S. "Nebraska, " and others are following. I B UY DIRECT FROlfl 'l'D E lllANUF .~C'1.'lJRE RS in Aberdeen , Scotland, a n d from lon g experience (28 years) at t he besh advant ag e, I intend that the p ublic needing work in my line shall be liberally dealt with . I engage n o Age n ts. I keep for sale DE NTISTRY Call at the nevy premises. MRS. HUMPHREY M arble Mantles, Grates, &c., and fix them. Head Stones, Posts, and M etallic 'Bars for enclosing Lots, at Lowest Prices. A L L W 0 RK G U A RA N T E E D. C. BOUNSALL, Proprietor. N. B.- 1 have n o conne ction or in te r est in th e Cow position , P ottery, or Zin c Mo1iuments, so called ; I h ave enquired concern ing their m erits and cann o t r ecommend them to the p ublic at any price. Bowmsn ville, June 18 , 1885. 25-3m. ,.. ~.nra TEETH~ J. · m:. BR IMA COMBE, WITHOUT TEETH. The J eweller's, Is the best place in town to b uy Watches, Clock s and J ewellery of all the · newest designs. Before purchasing give me a. call a nd y ou will save money- we will not b e u n dersold by auy sm&l! firm. We carry a large stock of such goods as are usually kep t in 11 firs t -class jewellery store. HEALTH FOR .ALL! l'RA.C!TJ()AL DEN'.l'IST, 'JV1'R 1'WENTY YEARS E XPE R IENCE, lill tT<11J1><0x!1leGns Adm.tnlst e r e d ror l"aln l es Operations. '·>·l'1 }' l ·C E MC()J..UNG'S BJ.O«:K. THE PILLS Purify the Blood, conect all Disorders of the LIVER, STOlUACD, K IDNEYS A.ND BOWELS. They invigorate and restore to health Debilitated Constitutions, and are invaluabl e in all Complaints incidental to Females of all Ages. Children and the ag ed they are priceless. F or In Spectacles and E ye Gla sses we k eep the best in town , and ours is the only place in town wh ere a n O p to mct er is kept for fitting the s ight properly. You cannot be too careful about your eye sight. c. HARN DE N s L . D. S. 1 In Silverware our st ock is all new and of the la t est d es ign s, and will be sold a t low prices to suit the times. THE and U lcers. OINTMENT F or disordere o f the Is an infallible remedy for Bad L egs, Bad Breasts, Old Wounds, Sores It is famous for Gout and R heum atism. - C hest it has n o equ a l.- Graduate of the Royal College of Don ta! Surgeons, Ontario. OFFICE OVER DICKSON'S S'fORE, (()LD FILLING A SPECIALTY. a~s W ork Iri Repairing executed in the la test and most Watches, Clocks and J e weller y and all improved style of the Dental .A.rt. fin e w ork we give the very best sat isfacJH:iCTll E XTRACTED W ITHOU1' PAI N, t ion. W e do all our own work a nd d efy competition. title nse of Nitrous Oxide Gas, wlthoutiajnry to th o patient. Old Gold an d Silver taken i n ex change . E"i;,~tleular att ent ion p&,ld to t.bc regulation of MAYNARD, The J eweller CHILDREN ' & T E E TH . ~.A LL W ORK WARRANTED. ~ Morris' Block, Bowmanville "A Philadelphia chemist saye t hat the Manufactu red only a.t T HOMAS H oLLOWAY' s Esta.blishm ent, American ha.hit of kissing is what plays hob with the teeth,'· says a n exchi.lnge. Can't 78, NEW OXFORD STREET, (late 633, OXFORD STREET), L9.Ji1DON help it. We can get a new set of t eeth i f necessary, but we k now of no substitute for And are sol d a t ls. l ~d., 2s. 9d., 4s. 6d. , lls., 22s. , and 33s. e a ch B ox: or Pot, imd may be had from a ll M edicine V e ndors t hrough out tb.e World . kissing, Spain has 26,000,COO leas inh ahitente than WPurchaser s shonltl look a t t h e 11tbel on the Pots 11nd Box es. IC the nddr cs11::' ·. Germ · m y, but s he his fift y -t hree gun-boa.ts. ill n ot 533, Oxford Str eet, London, Urny are 11pa r lom1. .. ..... ... For Sore 'l 'hroats, Bronchitis, Coughs, Colds, Glitndular Swellings, and all Sk in Diseases it has no rival; and :for con tracted and stiff joint s it acts like a charm .

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