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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1892-3-10, Page 3-------•211""nuzselsoeselsiessessassioasersienutatesww— STRONC EST, BEST, 0.140.1...1•010 ses ros liq Down. to a. fine point —that's where the making of corsets has been brought to. Kabo for the "bones"—it can't break or kink. The B. & C. Corset is boned with Kabo. The Ball Corset for tase and comfort; the B.& C. Cor- set for unyielding strength. Each is the best of it's kind. If you don't think so, after wearing for two or three weeks, return it and get your money back, ror sale by J. A. Stewart, Exeter. 1 GORE FITS! When say I cure lo not mean meroly to atop them for a LIMO mul thee ha them return again, I Melia a sore. I have made tho disease of ries, EPILEE. o EALLENG SICKNESS a nesiong atudy. I warrant ir remedy 1.0 cure elm 'Worst casco. because okbore have fatledls no reiuion for not now receiving a cure. Send at once for a treatise and a Eree Bottle of my Infallible stonily. Obre EXPRESS and POST.OEFICE, Roar, M. C., Me ADELAIDE Sir• a8T TQOroO.wr. cientiiin American Agency tor CAVEATS. TRADE MARKS. DESIGN PATENTS COPYRIGHTS. etc. For information and free handbook write to MUNN & CO., sal BROADWA.T, NEW Your. Oldest bureau for.seimr1ng patents in America. Rvery patent taken out by Bs is brought before the public by a notice given free of charge in the rttutifir ittevican Largest circulation of any scieutieo paper in ttte world, Splendidly illustrated. No intelligent man should be without it. Weekly, S3.00 a year; $1,60 sir months. Address MUNN 6; 1'om1suerts,311 Broadway, Now YOrk. g „ '0 THE OF.MYEXETER • TIMES $3,500 IN REWARDS The Canadian Agriculturist's Great Winte: , Literary Competition. • The Fifth half Yearly Literary Competition for the winter of 1892, of Tux CalenDIAN AGNICULTIMIST, 4merlea's old and tellable Illustrated, Family Magazine, a now open. The following splendid prize, will be given reo to persons minding in the greatest nuinber of words made out of letters contained the words. "Taw ILLUSTRA.T.ED AONNULTTINUT,' teEVCITODO send. ng in a list of not 15/0 than 100 words will receive a Mixable present Of Illverware, 101. Grand Reward 0500 in Gold 2nd " " ..... Grand Plano, valued at $500 3rd " 250 h If .1 5th " " .th 0 th a th er a Organ veined at $30.1 0300 in Gold .Gent'a Gold Watch full Jelvelled Ladlea' Gold Watch full .7111rellen 050 MCfold $25 in t;old 10 Rewords of $10 each $100 Next 20 prins,-20 Silver Tea Sets, quadruple plate, war , ranted. . 'Next 50 prizes, -50 Silver Dessert Sets, warranted heav 5 plate 'ext 100 prizes,. -100 Silver Butter Dishes, dm., warranted • heavy plate. Next 500 prima consists of Beery Plated Silver Nettles, Butter Mama, Fruit Baskets, Biscuit Jars, Sop Shells, Butter Nuires, 5/0„ Ho., all fully warranted. making a total tern splendid rewards, the value la - which will aggregate$3500 Thia grand Literary Com'petition ia open to overybod., ;everywhere. The following are the conditions: • 1. The words umst be constructed only from letter. • in the worda, "THE 'LLCM:BAUM AOICIOULTUDIBT,' and must be only snob no are found In Webster's Una, bridged Dictionary, in the body of the book, none thth , e supplement to be used. • 2. The words must be written in rotation and number ,en,er2s,. 3 and ao on, for facilitating In deciding tin Lotterrinnotbe used oftener tben they appear le the words Vag ILFSTpATED AORICVLITAIST." instaAtethe word 'egg ' Cannot be used as there is MI one g' In the three words. 4.-31,e list containing the largest number of words he awarded first prize, arida° on Ir order of inerte Baal. dist al i1.1s received will be numbered, and if twO or men tie, the first received will be awarded firat prize,and 0 on, therefore the benefit of sending in early will readily be ken. Baoh list moat be accompanied by $1 for aix month • aubscription to Tux Atiltionraninug, • Tire following gentlemen have kindly conaented to ac as judges; 3 O. MACDONALD, City Clerk, Poterbbrough Canada and Coarai.ohonx CALeuxx, re; erborougb. Olin; Tts.ax (mar Exxxiox.—"Gut WOO prize all 00 ,prize." --ch. W. Cunningham, Donald, 13. C M Brandon, Vancouver, B.O. "Tklanka fru • 'Prize recelved 0, D. Bantle, West Superior, • Wia„ '1300 prize received, Thanint.' —G. V. Robert son, Toronto; and 300 others, in United states and Tata is NO LOTTERY --men t only will count. Tin leautation for burnesa gained by 'BHA A.Glitonextrrosi in the past is ample gnarantee that thia Competition wit -• be conducted in like manner, $end 30 sump for ton partleulatato Tltti 40IgctLIANZAI8T, nateberough. eared* • • OR THE LATWES.. Love's Pleasure Rouse. Love built ter himself a Pleasure Itouse— .A. Pleasnre House fair to See— no roof was gold, and .the walls thereof 'Wore delicate iverr. Violet crystal the windews were, All gleaming and fair to see— Pillars of roscestainee marble upbere The house where men longed. to be,. ' Violet, gold, and white and rose, , The .measure. House fair to see— Did show to all, and they'ga,ve Love thanka For work of such mastery. Love turned away from his Pleasure House Anti stood by the ettlt, deep sea, - Be looked therein, and he thing therein Of his treasure the only key. No sY never a man till time be done That PleaSure House fair to see Shall fill with music and mesrimant Or melee it oritleadeil iffiee. • P1_111,10....Botaucu MAUSTON. Bternal Vigilance in Mending - I once new a large family of roMping girls and boys who always looked neat and tidy, although, as I hatmened te know, they did not have half as many new clothes as a neighboring family who were in rags half the time. I asked the mother of the tidy children's garments always neatly meraled. She replied, that aside from her regular weekly mending she went every eight after her children were in bed and looked their clothing over, and if there were any torn places in any garment it was mended than; if a button was off, it was replaced by an- other; if a stocking had begun to be holy," it was immediately treated. It made me tired (I don't mean to be slangy) when I thought of that mother's eigittly round among her children. Their clothes were common, sometimes almost mean, and with- out any frills or furbelows ; for this sensible hoesewire preferred thee they ahould be plain and mended rather than ruffled and ragged. The policy of tide wiae mother is appli- cable in other ways. How soon a building becomes dilapidated if one is not constantly on the lookout to make the needed repairs —a broken hinge here, a broken pane of glass there, door -knobs working low), a petal) of falling plaster, paint worn off or grown gray, leaks started which will spoil the plester and paper unless qniekly attended to. Neglect of all these little things soon gives a house a gone -to - ruin look. A few nails, hinges and screws, a lump of putty, a few cane of paint, some varnish and brushes kept on band and used on the principle of "a stitch in tine" will keep the new look on buildings and their surreetuclings. If the housewife is supplied with paper, paint, varnish, white- wash and brushes, and has the strength to use them, she can keep the inside of the house fresh and new looking. Even if she has but little strength, she can paste scene paper over a torn place on the wall, or a bit of cloth on the back of a torn curtain, tack the dropping fringe upon a chair or lounge, put a patch over a torn place in the =pet, and do a thoumand otherlittle things toward mending the interior of the house. Our body, too, may be kept in repair by attention to little things—needed rest, re- creation, pure air and pteasant surroundings. Avoid overwork, stitnulants and worry. No doubt many ot us might mend our ways with proffe to ourselves and others ; but on this point 1 do not feel competent, to give advice. You may all go to the Divine blelper for strength and every other aid necessary to improve your hearts and lives. He will never refuse Ins assistance ; He will never pith wrongly. Mosey sertnentee Many a farmer's wife is always telling what her husband has and how she has -to get along. Because the doesn't have all the modern couveniences, what is the use of dwelling upon it ? Are not the women of to -day much better off than their grand- mothers were? Let alone the latest fad, isn't our latest eerniture all lighter than sixty years ago ? Our tubs may not be set with hot and cold water, but they are not the clumsy affairs I can remember seeing years aerro neither do we use the heavy iron tli pots or e brass kettles that needed con- stant polishing if in use. Our salt and spices are all ground and brought to us before we use them. We knovi, nothing of the mortar and pestles or the coffee mill, which served to reduce the spice so it could be used. How our heads would fall, if not our spirits, if much of our needed clothing lay in a field of flax, to be pulled, pounded, hetchled, spun, woven and then whitened,before itwas rawly to be tnadc into garments. Whatif your wool - garments were still on the sheep's hack with pulling, picking, carding, spinning and weaving still to be gone through, and then clothing to be made without the aid of a sewing machine. And to -day arrest of the good man's "clothes come eto us ready made. Then how many more things. The tallow had to be melted and eandles run or dipped, while a snuffer had to be kept go- ing all the evening to -keep the candle bright, How would one ever get a meal of victuals by a fireplace ? Then the work of heating the oven, the long wood to be brought in and burned, the coals to be taken oat and the oven swept with the oven broom, then the big baking to be put in. How much work we should find it compared rtith the present arrangements of the farmhouse. "Count the mercies." I find it a -very good rule always to think of those who are not as well off and have not our comforts when I am inclined to murmur, rather than grain - hie because fortune has not placed me in a better place. A. contented mind is a con, tinual feast—[C. T. D. H. In The Drawing -Room. It has come te be more and more a maxim of good manners, not to mention good morals, that scandal is never to be talked in the drawing -room. So thoroughly is this recognized that if a woman is heard in good society talking of unpleasant personalities, she is at once set down as an accident of the place, and not as one either to the man- ner born or who has been knig enough with people of good breeding to acquire their repose and taste. Very likely many of these high -bred people in question, who are to the manner born, hear nossip and scandal, and perhaps, lend to them a too willing car; but it is in privacy, in the depths of boudoir or chamber, vice paying its well-known tribute there to virtue in the hypocrisy that whispers it it the dark, as it were, and will not listen to It more publiely. And it is to be confessed that of the two evils, the indiscriminate encourage- ment of evil -speaking is the greater, for the hypocrisy injures one's self, but the opposite courseinjures one's self and many others be- sides. The forbidding of the enjoyment of scan- dal in public is, at any rate, an acknowledge ment of its vulgarity if not of its wicked- ness. It proclaims, too, the fact that society thinks well of itself and its intentions, and has a standard of some loftiness up to which it endeavours to live, and that, ib recognizes an interest in the possible ill -doings of fallen mortals as something intrinsically low and coarse arid calculated to hurt its own struc- ture, an iaterest in such feeth anyway as in- dicative of an order of taste not to be desir- ed, and its poesessor a person not to be nese- elated with. It may be simply 88 41 sybari- tic precaution, ease and pleasure beieg so much surer when no uneomforteble Sugges- tion thrusts in an ugly head, that unpleasant topics of an unwholesome nature are taboo ed in the conversation of the finest drawing. rooms. liut whether this is so or not, it is plain thatgood society would like to be op- timistic, it Would believe in no evil and would speak no evil ; it has found that the esseoce of good manners is also the essence of the golden rule, and ite the voice of scan- dal violates all its notions, it has laid upon such utterance within its borclets the penal- ty of ostraoism. 'Why not a Provident Dress Society? To gir/s with slender allowances any au& den emergency in dress ocourring just when they have supplied themselves with a stock of garments for the corning season is often extremely embarrassing, and I wonder that no one starts a prise hien t dress society, to which members would, sebscribe a small sum annually, and which would make grant's out of its funds on such occasions as hoeing to go into mourning; to go unexpectedly into a, climate requiring quite different sort af clothing, ; to act as bridemaid ; and some cases of marriage, when the relations are uuable to provide any oetfit; lso in the event of a member being suddenly called to enter any new position requiring- an know - diets outlay on dreas. Such a society, well and honorably conducted, would be a help to numbers of people and would encourage thrift in girls and °leen Lerma them begett- ing the dangerous habit of running into debt. Utilize the Waste. Not every one realizes the value of kitchen waste in fertilizing the garden. Eastern Connecticut, where farmers w once compelled to raise crops on a ha stony soil, and it was necessary•to utiI every species of fertilizer, every leaf of t garden, all the kitchen garbage, were ma into a vast compost heap, covered up wi a few incites of soil at a time, and allOw to become thoroughly decayed. It is ea enough to dispose of the kitehen garbage burying it when the ground is soft, allowit it to remain for a number of menthe, wh it may be dug up, mixed with soil and us as a fertiliser; it will be found far less dis agreeable than most fertilizers, having bee purified by the besb of all purifiers, t earth itself. If one part of cerbonate soda—the simple sal -soda of the drug to —be noised with one part of quicklime au five parts of old bones, horn, old loathe woollens or any material of an animal aatur and sufficient water be poured on to cove the whole, in a few hours' boiling it wi become a valuable fertilizer. Ther is a voter Slight odor to the boiling nothing in comparison to that of heroin leather. This fertilizer would be altogethe too stroug used es it is, and should be mixe with five parts earth when used, " An material that gives out the odor of burn feuthers," says an authority on this subject "contains nitrogen, the most costly of al menural agencies, aud should be given to th fields rather than the fire." Dishwater, an above all the soapsuds of tile laundry, i applied around the roots of flowers in tit garden will produee miracles of bloom. The suds must be put on cold. In a, great many houses the first soapsuds of the washing is always used for this pttrpose, It shoula of course be applied after sundown or early in the morning at the proper hourfor watering artivelecto /Odell 00 leaves or green parts of the plant. This may seem to be an unpleasant sub- ject to discuss, but a method of dispensing of the kitchen waste and the laundry audio in such a manner as will create beauty and fragrance in the garden is certainly worthy of every" good housewife's consideration. There is no real waste in nature, nothing to be destroyed, which will not, if put to its proper use, serve some good and wholesome purpose. The very materials whiter, if left neglected, are sources of foul disease and death, when put to their proper use become sources of health and beauty: One of the worst cases of black diphtheria was traced by a physician to a pool where the suds from the household wash and dishwater were regularly thrown, keeping a spot moist with this foul water till the microbes of disease were fostered. The family had no idea that they were disposing of this water in an un- wholesome manner. Had it been scattered over thegarden and mixed with the earth no danger could have arisen. ---- - • Domestic Hints. the In ere rd, ize he (le th ed sy by 015 ed 51 he of es r, 11 Cloths dipped in hot potato water and applied to rheumatic joints will ease the pain. The best way to polish eyeelasses is to moisten them, and dry them with a bit of tissue or newspaper. Bent whalebones can be restored and used again by soaking them for a few hours in water, and then drying them. The kitchen table should be high enough that no back aches or stooping shoulders will result from work done there. It should Imre a drawer for keeping the cooking knives and forks and spoons. Since the propagation of influenza is known to be promoted by the assemblage of large numbers of persons. in a confined at- mosphere, it is advisable that ,when an epidemic threatens or is present unnecessary assemblies should be studiouily avoided. The fashion of seating dinner parties at small tables, introduced. in Paris one or two seasons ago, is finding favor in Britain. Hostesses who entertain from 20 to 30 guests at a dinner have discovered that muth better social results are secured by this ar- rInngi.ement, and a prettier effect given to the The Years. The years are all alike. With childlikelanghter They follow butterflies with endless wings; Theypeep into the birds' nests; they look after White lambs and other pretty little things. Then, in the first. flush: of their youth, they bring us Shy gifts of violets in a gallant way; And ah ! What chaeming love songs they sing us From leaf green shadows where the wild. doves stay. But, sotnewhat later they show boarded faces, And sway the scythe ansi boar the sheaves about In the hot fields, and quite forget the graces They had of old—as others do, no doubt. Still later they go out for us and gather The scarlet fruit in and the yellow corn, Or walkabout the withering woods with rather A faded look, and sigh and EOM forlorn. Then they sit very still 6,nd watch the embers. Behind the curtains in some pictured room, While each one somewhere in his heart re. members Thedew, thesummer moon -rise, and the bloom Then comes the lastnight-wateh, the lonesome • tapers, The few tears of themany prayers oniek said, The black -lined collie:main the morning papers, And, yes—the many virtues of tho dead. • --(S. At B. Platt. LATEF011EIGNNEwsirractieal,DillOoltiee of lie'eat Train Speed. M. Carnet's term a$ President of France will expire in December, 1894, and the rumor is alreay going about that he deo not wish to be re-elected. A. new diamond is being cut in Antwerp Paid to be the lergese ever fonnd in Africa. It weighs 400 carats, and when it is finished it will be reduced one half. There are to -day 1%947 Jesuits. In the -Malted States there are 56e in Maryland, 403 in Missouri, and 195 le Now Orleane• There will probably be another Bowdoin Colleae expedition to Labrador next earner, when more extensive explorations will be made than on the first trip. The excavations at Troy which were being prosecuted with such vigor by Prof. Schlie- mann at the time of his death are being car- ried on by Mme. Schliernann. The importance of the nitrate beds of Chile is shown from theft that the output last year was valued at $30,000,000.. The first, electric raiisvay in Russia. is to be constructed in Kiel, a city of about 130,- 000 inhabitants, on the River Dnieper. There is a bill before the French Legis- lature to enlarge the, e resent divorce Jaw. 11 propoaes to turn Separation decrees" into ohligatory divorees, instead of optional divorces, three years after an application Lor such conversion. Since the fire at the Benedictine monas- tery it has been revealed that almost 30 per cent, of all the benedictiae brewed is con- sumed in Finland by about 100,000 people. It is the national think, It is drank in tumblers, three or four young melt not thinking anything of consuming a °couple of of bottles. .A company has been formed in Rio Jan- eiro, with a capital of $50,000,000, to explore a.nd develop the :lateral resources of the Amazon. Colonies ere to be established and means provided for reaching a market for a region heretofore practically unexplor- ed. It is said that a syndicate of Swats and 'English capitalists has beenformed to utilize a part of the falls of the Rhine at Leuffen- burg for the generation of eleatrie energy. The water will be led to terbine wheels and 7,000 horse power will be developed, The discovery of gold has been a great thing for the Boni uegroes on the Maroni River in French Guiana. They were terribly poor before the placer mines werediscovered In 1888. Since then they have been getting rieh in the transportaervice, They carry all 'freight around the rapids to the placer dig. gings at the enormous charge of 90 francs a barrel. Owing to their CHAGOS method of computing barrel e they ,greatly increase their earnings. Bath box Ise barrel, Been man is a barrel. Demijohns and hand bags are barrels. Thu a they get about $200 ton for (=tibia' frieght a distance of 180 miles, which is much higher then the rates on the Congo. The miners say that 860,000 has been distributed in the past two years in the shape of 5 franc pieces or netive gold among the Boni. . Slovo of Kiev reports some curious in- stances of popular doctoring in south Rus- sia. The rural dentist places his patient upon re little stool and examines him. ff an upper tooth is to be pulled he performs the operation with a simple pair of tongs like that uted by cobbler. But if a bower tooth is to be extracted the operation is more complicated. The tooth Is tied very skilful, ly wait a violin string. The other end of th.oi isiminer isfantnnoa to hnnic in thn from boreath the paetent, mem fans, me tooth remaining on the striug, sometimes with the flesh around it. Intermittent fever is cured either by live frogs or by fright. When the sickness' breaks out the patient is made to carry about him as many live frogs B8 can be put in Ins clothes. If that treat- ment does not helpthe patient his fellow villag.ers try to frighten him. The most pop ni er method of doing that 18known by the name of Likeniye. A crowd of roeo and women come into the house and raise aquae - rel with the petient. They treat him to the loudest and most offensive terms of re- proach. That naturally irritates him, and he answers in similar terms. The crowd takes offence at his rude expressions and re- solves to lynch him. A rope is put around Isis neck and he is dragged about until he is nsensible on account of fright. 0111 The Read Surgeon Of the Lubon Medical Company is now at Toronto, Canada, and may bo consulted either in person or by letter on all chronic diseases peculiar to man. iirs n, young, old, or middle-aged, who find themselves nerv- ous, weak and exhettsted, who are broken down from excess or overwork, resulting in many of the following syrnptonts :Mental depression, premature old age, loss of vital- ity, loss ofinemory, bad dreams, dimness of sight, palpitation of the heart, emissions, lack of energy, pain in the kindeys, heed- athe, pitnples on the face or body, itching or peculiar sensation about the scrotum, wasting of the organs, dizziness., specks before the eyes, twitching of the muscles, eye lids and elsewhere,bashfulness, deposits in the urine, loss of willpower, tenderness of the scalp and spine,weak and flabby muscles, desire to sleep, Whore to be rested by sleep, constipation, dullness efhearing, lossof voice, desire for solitude, excitability of temper, sun keneyes surrounded with Leer/eat CIRCLE, oily looking skin, etc., are all symptoms of nervous debility that lead to insanity and death unless cured. The spring or vital force having lost its tension every function wanes m consequence. Those who through abuse committed in ignorance may be per- manently , cured. Send your address for book on all diseases peculiar to men. Books sent free sealed. Heardisease, the symptoms of whith are faintspells, purple lips, numbness, palpitation, skip heats, hot flushes, rush of blood to the head, dull pain in the heart with beats strong, rapid and irregular, the soond heart beat faster than the first, pain about the breest bone, etc., can positively be cured. No cure no pay. Send for book. Address, M. V LIMON, 24 IVIacdonell Ave. Toronto, Ont The ethics of forgery are bard to recon- cile. When a man forges a hand it is a crime, but when he forges ahead it is a credit. The Diamond cutting businesa is mainly concentrated in Amsterdam and Antwerp, but diamond mounting is very 'sagely clone in London, which is the centre of the dia- mond trade both in the rough andthe finish- ed brilliants. The Swedish Government is employing a novel thre for drunkenness. It consists in confining the patients and giving them no- thing but bread and wine to subsiat upon. The result is that the patient soon becomes nauseated and abbore any intoxicating 11 quor. No water is allowed during the t reatment . • • Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. Pint of aal, we must know how soon after receiving warning of dangev, a train of 350 tons, running a mile in 36 eeconds, can be stopped. .Itis estimated that if runuing et 00 miles per hour, with the fell braking weight of the train utilized, and the rails In tee most favorable condition, this traits could be brought to a full stop in 900 hot ; at 80 miles per hour, in 1,000 feet ,• at 90 miles per hour, in 2,025 feet ; and, finally, at 100 miles per hour, in 2,500 feet, These figures at Once establish the feet that ander • the beet possible conditions the trek must be kept clear of all obstruetion for at lease 2,500 feet in advance of a train running the highest limit • but WO /DOA estimate the Wearance for the worst condition, auth as slippery rails, foggy weather, an un- favorable grades; the personal equation of the engineman must also be enesidered in, a train covering 145 feet each second. • Would it be too much to ask that the en- giaeman receive his warning three-quarters of a mile before he must halt? The difficultiea of arranging for the pas- sage of trains of this character are manifest; we are not speaking of epecial trains, but rather of regular trains, running as frequent- ly as may be desired. 11 should be rernetra bered that, in a two-hour run, the fastest trains of to -day would require a leeway of an hour, and slower ones would have to etart proportionately earlier, or be passed on the way. The moat improved forms of signalling and interleeking, be they mechanical, puma matie, electric, automatic, or otherwise, which arose uecessary to the safe movement of passenger trains, may be introduced, but cannot be placed nearer together than three quarters of it mile. The very presence of these sigeele, while &sing the maximum Safety, has in prectice made prompt move- ment more dlificult. This state of affaira IvoOld pelt t to the neoessity for an increase in the lumber of tracks, so that passenger trams could be grouped on the baeis of speed just as it has been found already no. eessary, on crowded lines, to separate the freight traffic from the passenger. ---(From "Speed in Locomotives." Hungarian WonieL The bluugarian women are among the moat beautiful in the world. They are not lain mashing, diaphanous ereatures, composed of eobwebs and the odor of musk, with asickly pallor or a hectic flush in their Chenkfi. -1.N0 erect and straight as a candle hearty and vigorous to the core, they are pictures of pod health and abounding. vitality. They are gifted with small feet, full arms, plump handa with tapering fingers nod wear long braids. The sun has spread a rbddish-gold- en tint or a darker tone ever the complexion, The Huegarian woman is nota beauty of classical contour, nor does he, perhaps, xre- quently present a riddle to the psycholo- gist, and ethereal poets will scarcely hod a theme in her for hypersentimental reveries. She ie rather the vigorous embodiment of primeval womanhood. Aa her eaterior, so her whole character is enchantingly fresh and positive. She likes to cet well, is fond of a drop of wine, takes naturally to swim- ming, dancing, gymnastics, and has not the least objection to being admired. Grace and beauty know no difference between high and law, and often bestow- upon a poor, barefooted, short -skirted peasant -girl, (with her face framed in a kerciolef tied under the ohlu) the same enehanting form, the same graceful walk the same magically attractive glance, as upon her more favored sister. -- [Home Journal, MRS. 'WINSLOW'S SO0THING SEMIr ling been used by minima of mothers for tbeir obildren white teething. If disturbed at night and broken of your rest by a sick child suffering and etyms with pale of euttitig_teeth send at once and aot a bottle of ears. Winslow's Soothing Syrup" for ehildren teething, It will relieve th e poor litho sufferer nun ediate ly, Depend upon it, mothers. there is no mistake about it. It mires Diarhoes, rpgulates the t °roach and Bowels, ewes Wind Colic, eoftens the gums, reduces Inflammation, and ,Fives tone gad energy to the whole system, airs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup" for ob ildren teeth- ing is pleasant to the taste and is the presarie- tion of one of the eldest and best female physioians and nurses in tho Baited States Price, SS cents a bottle. Sold by all druggists. throughout the world Be eau ttAd ask for MU. WINSLOY Z. SOOTHING SYK0g. The Hottest Region OA -Earth. Careful observation and comparisons made by scientific Americans prove that the hot. teat region on earth is on tho south-western coast of Persia, where thets country borders the gulf of the same name. The thermome- ter never falls below 100 degrees at night and frequently runs up to 128 degrees in the afternoon. CONSUMPTION CURED. An old physician retired from practice, hav- ing lutd placed in his hands by an East India m.ssionary the formula of a simple 'vegetable remedy for the speedy and permanent cure for Consumption, Bronchitis, Catarrh, Asthmalind all throat and lung affections, also it positive and radical cure for nervous debility and all nervous complaints, after having tested its wonderful curative powers in thousands of cases. has felt it his duty- to make it known to his suffering fellows. Actuated by this motive and a desire to relieve human suffering, I will send free of charge, to all who desire it, the recipe in German, French or English with fell directions for preparing- and using. Sent by mail by addressing with stamp, naming this paper, W. A. NOYES, 820 Power's Block Rochester, N.Y. 4 -- If nuts are eaten by a sufferer from dys- pepsia, let him salt them, and the evil effects disappear. The Safest A l'ivp 131125t powerful Alterative is rt. Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Young and ad are alike benefited by its use. For the eruptive diss sae eases peculiar to clalrezt nothing else is BO effective • silla Ise tins eada ri ibtl eeasyl ia vtoor ear na ne 4 ister. "My HI tle boy , vs14.1bad. large scrofus bus 010018 031 his v fnreockm awndhielbrobaot sliffered terriblY, --- Two p ysimalis b " attended him, but hegrew continually worse under their care, and everybody expected he would die. I had heard of the remarkable cures effected by Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and decided to have my boy try it, Shortly afto be began to take this medicine, the ulcers conn, rimmed bealiug, and, after using several bottles, be was entirely cured, He is now as healthy- and strong as any boy of his age."— William P. Dougherty* Hampton, Va. "In May last, my youngest ebild, fourteen months old, began to have sores gather on its bead and body, We ate. plied varions Simple remedies without avail. The sores Increased in number' ansi discharged copiously. physician was milled, but the sores continued to multiply until, in a few raonths they nearly eovered tile child's head and body. At last we began the use of leyer's Sar- eaparilla, In a few day e a marked change for the better was manifest. The sores assumed Amore healthy condition, the disolierges Were gradually dirain. isbed, aed finally ceased altogether. The child is livelier, it$ skirt Is freshq ,r and its appetite better than we have 013-. served ior rnontbs,"eerrank M. Griffin, Long Point, Texas, "The forrau/a of ,Ayer's Sarsaparilla presents, fer chronic diseases of alnicst every kind, the best remedy known to tlie medical world."—D. 11.1. Wl1snn, M. D., Wiggs, Arkansas. Ayers Sarsaparilla, raerAarn Dr. J. Q. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Price $1; six hottIes,aS, Worth V a bottles . TUB EXETER TIMM Dieu/aliened every Tbursday 115014 ne,et TI MES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE Nale-streetmearlyopposite Fitton's 3ewe2er9 tittne,Rteter,Ont.,by John White .0 Sone,Pro- nrieters. Walla Or eoveaetsnee Pirstinsertion, per tine— . .... ...... 10 <tents, nach subeeeneatinsertion emit% To lesure insertion, advertisement ft shoals ee sentin apt/ ater than Wednesday niarniag 1)ur3O5 PilitsPriNG DEB ‘ItTUFT is ono ottb,o largest ami best equippeu in the County fforon,AU work entrnste.t 30 05 will reeeive 0 ir swore t at to attest; Deeslons Regard I u g News. papers. 1A.nynersonw1,'u t tire; a. '0 E:590r,sautirty to ou the postoirke, tyhether direeted In his name as another's, or whether ho has subscribed or nob is responeible for payment. 2 1f a person orders his paper discontinued he !mist pay all arrears or the pablieber may 3 In suits for subscriptions, the suit may be instituted in the place -where the paper is pub lished, although the subscriber may reside hundseds of nines away. The courts have decided that refusing to takenewspapers or periodicals from the post - office, or removing and leaving them uncalled orls prima facie evidence of Intentional fraud ammosagatmonionom01. ZNTERCOLONI RAILWAY OF CANADA, The direct route betvreen the West and all pointecon the Lower St. Lawrence aiscrAtie des Chaleur,Provinee of Quebec; also for NewBrunswick ,Nova Scotia,Prinee Edward CapetiretonIslauds ,andNewfoundlandand St. Pierre, Express trains 'leave Atontrealand Halifax daffy (Sundays excepted) and run through withoutehanne between those pointein 05 hours and 05 minutes. The through oxprees train ears of the In- tereolonial Railway are brilliantly Lghted by electricity and heated by steam from the locomotive, thus greatly increasing the corn fort and safety et travellers. New and elegant buffetsleeping and day cars &rerun on through oxprosslraina. Canadian -European Mail and Passenger Route. PASSODgerstor Great Britain r the onti- nent by leaving Montt eal on leriday morniug will join ontward mail steamer at Halifax on Saturday: The a tten lion ofashippers is directed tothe superior facilit ies ofrered by thia renteior the traneport °Moe r and generoi merchan- dise intended for thellasteirn Provinces and Newfoundland; also nu: stmenents of grain fie d prod tic:elate tided f or the Enrop ean mar key. Tickets may be obtained and I &orate tion about the route ; also freight and, paseauger All,t88 on applicatiom to E. WE a THERSTON, Weeternrreight ZePaesertge Agent 931tossinheitseR1ook :York $t 'Tacna POTTINGElt. ChiefSup erintendent. Jan Ittataelliway Office,Proneton, 30(,B. see e,--e'eselear. seserese etaaeieseseaaae eeiaosser. LAWRNCR, KANS. U. S.:A ., Aug. 9, 1888. George Patterson fell from a second -story window, striking a fence. I found him using SIT. ..11-48..0013S OIL. ,..)He used it freely all over his bruises. I saw him next morning at work. All the blue spots rapidly disappeared, leaving neither pain, scar nor swelling. C. K. NEUMANN, M. D. "ALL RIGHTI ST:JACOBS OIL DID IT." 300,1,03 .001,11,1alala APPLICATIONS THOROUGHLY REMOVES \DANDRUFF fUARANTEED .13. L. CAVRN. Toronto, Travelling Passenger Agent, 0 I, R.. Says: Anthbandruffis aperfeet Whoever ofDari- druff-its action is rearrollous—in my 000 01500 a few applications not only thoroughly removed excessive dandruff accumulation bat stopped falling of the haironade it soft and pliable and promoted a visible growth. Restores Fading hair to its original color. Stops fei.ig el hair. Keeps the Stialp clean, , Mattes hair 4t atiti Pliable Promotes Grata!,