HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1892-4-21, Page 6MIN
paWDER
) 1
PUREST
STRONCEST1
BEST.
It 001)67'S the pound
—the B. & C. corset. It is
perfect in shape and fit, is
boned with Kabo, which will
not break nor roll up, and if
you are not satisfied,,after
wearing it two or three weeks,
return it and get your money.
For sale by J. A. Stewart, Exeter.
104
PURE
POWDERED WOAIO
oUREST, STRONCEST, BEST.
Ready:or nee in any quantity. FOr making Soar
toning 'Water. Dif.tutecting. and a hundred Otlit.:
A. can equate:le petted& Sal Soda.
Gold by All Groeere laid Druggists.
1-31::E.t3Ca.litPX"X`, tecarcoaatcm
WHAT HE REXEMBERS,
Interesting Inoidents in the Life of a
Pioneer in the IL B. Go's Beryl=
An Indian's Terrible lite.venge-A Woman
Prays Porn Looking -glass in Rechange
for lIer Child.
Going up in the train to Goldstream, re-
cently, I sat in the seat behind a very old
man, who svas watching the scenery, as the
carriagellew aleng, with evident enjoyments
There being veryfew other people in the
i
car, we soon got nto conversation, that is
to say my fellow traveller slid, for I sat the
whole time in delight and. listened. to him
speak about old adventures and early days
in Canada. We had isot been speaking
above a couple of minutes when I found out
that be was a pioneer of pioneers, and that,
though physically old and feeble, his mental
capabilities were as
BRIGHT AND ACTIVE
as ever. So I sat still and let him go ahead,
switching him off occasionally by a judi-
cial's word or two into the subjects I more
particularly wished hint to speak of. It
would be impossible to crowd into such a
abort sketch, as this is intended to be, half
Iof what my companion said, nor could 1,
howevermuch 'tried, give an idea of the
manner in which each anecdote fell from
his lips nor of the animated gestures and
I '
powerful word pictures with which he gar-
nished his remarks.
"I was a raw Scotch lad in them days,
he said, "when we broke up home in Wick
and I tumbled off to Lon bon with the old
man, who was going to see use safe aboard
the Hudson Bay company's ship Prince of
Wales. I was apprenticed for the usual
number of years, and on the 2nd of March,
1851, we sailed away, down past the docks,.
out into the Channel, and off to sea, I won't
speak of the voya_ge now, beyond saying
that, as in all the H. B. Co.'s ships at that
time, the apprentioes were treated with the
greatest kindness, and the vessels balong.
ing to the corporation were always splen-
didly manned, on account of their reputa-
tion. Our chief officer was the father -h -law
ofSenator Macdonald, and ourcaptain oneof
the beat known skippers sailing oat of .Eng -
laud. We arrived In Hudson's Straits in
the latter end of the year, and sailed up
them before entering the Bay, staying at
several small native trading posts on the
way. At one of these, as our ship sailed up
through the
SMOOTH ICE.00LD WATER,
1 GU E HTS!
When I isy I cure I de not mean tamely to stop thcin
for a thae aul th in have Gem return atria. I swan a
radical cure. I haw trade the &wage ofhl'1S, EMU:P.
SY or SALL** SICHNES.S a Mean:a study. I warrant
myin
nedy to nue tbe worst caws. Beciute othcrs have
faded is no mason for not nowreciting a cam Send
treatise at
care for a eatise and a Erre Hrttle of lay infallible
remedy. Give zarnmes ana POSZOVVICE.
H. G. RO.OT, M. 0,186 ADELAIDE ST.
WEST, TORONTO, ONT.
DARING NIACrARA. S WRATH,
Seine or the Remarkable Effeapeg at the
Great Waterfall.
There were daring men before Capt. Webb
and of course they found their way to Nia-
gara. One jumped from the bridge 192 feet
to the swirling current. For fifty feet he
fell like a plummet. Then lie turned over
twice, At last he struck the water with an
awful slap. This man died. But such ac-
cidents only stionskte the reels -less. Another
jumper soon appeared. He wore harness
ever his shoulders, to it was attached a
wire running over a cylinder on the bridge
This kept his feet straight toward Davy
Jones' locker, and he survived the leap to
hisco nsiderable personal profit. From the
baidge to the water hement in four seconds
'the only tune on record. '
Of accidents some very strange ones are
recorded. One lady stooped far a cup of
water, lost her balance,. and was out of reach
and over the falls almost before her ainazed
husband knew what had happened.
Another lady stooped to pick a flower on
the brink of the 'rable rock. She was taken
up dead from the rocks below.
In 187'a' an accident equally sad and fool-
ish occurred.An engaged couple went
behind the falls into the CaVe of the Winds
without a guide. The lady sought to bathe
in a pool whiah even the guides never visit-
ed. .For her folly she perished, and her
lover lost his life in trying to save hers.
Perhaps the most dramatic accident was
the following: .A playful young man
naught up a charming child who was watch-
ing the tumbling waves. "Now, Lizzie, I
am )going to throw you into the water," he
said, and swung her back and forth. She
screamed, struggled, anti slipped from his
hands. He gazed after her, realized what
he had done, and leaped. Rescue was
hopeless, Perhaps "he did not deserve
death, and at least ceasure may die with
him.
Of escapes there are one or two narrow
ones almost beyond belief, and which in-
volve stories of skill and bravery well
worth telling. Not manyyears ago a painter
was at work oti Second Sister's island, when
he fell into the water. He was old and
weak, and while his position IVES not very
dangerous at first, he soon floated down and
toward mid-strearn, when, . lost as he seem-
ed hovering on the brink and exactly forty
feet from it, if contemporary records are to
be believed, he caught on a rock.
How long would his =tides endure the
strain? And who would rescue him, and
how? The crowd was helpless until a guide
appeared with a coil a rope. One end he
left in trusty hands, and with the other he
plunged into the boiling tide. When he
reached the poor painter the old man still
held in his hand the putty knife with which
he was working. fie shifted the knife to
his pockets tied the painter to the rope,
and they reached the shore safely.
In another case a boat:Ilan was crossing
the river above the fella when a fag sudden-
ly came on. He lost his bearings and knew
he was drifting to death. His cries alarmed
the village and bells were rung for him to
row toward them. Then an oar broke. His
only hope then lay in a paltry little anchor
and a common rope, which was very thin
and, moreover, much worn.
I happened to be busy in the lee chains,
and when we swung round on our anchor
chains a long skin canoe hauled in right
alongside me, and hooked on to the chains
on which I was standing. Itt the bow of the
Icauoe was a young woman, with a child in
her arms, and, as they got underneath me.
I -pulled out from my pocket it mall, craek-
ed, piece of looking glass that I had bought
for it penny before I left Wick, and held it
right ever her face. She looked into it,
rereamed with delight, and then offered me
her baby for the precious treasure. She
cried and screamed alternately until I gave
her the glass, and when she lianded use the
child in return I put it back in her arms
and. waved her away. She could not believe
that she was to have possession of both for
several minntes, and when siur . interpreter
explained it to her she passed. up, out. of the
boat, four ivory tusks, which I took, and
afterwards sold us alontreal for six hundred
dollars. So out of my penny investment I
made thirty thousand per cont. That would
have satisfied Jay tSould, wouldn't it, ?"
asked the old man, as he plunged into his
second tale.
"When the 'Prince of Wake' reached
the upper waters of Hudson's Bay, I was
told by the old hands aboard, who had been
in these parts before, that they would show
me some,
wommtnnn zsermtrx SHOOTING
Scientifio American
Agency for;
144/ • ' ,
sacti4seijsisislfs Ta'asesaa'ass
a •
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For Information and free Ilandborik write to
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Every patent taken out by us Is brought before
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473,500 IN REWARDS
The Caiaadian Agriculturist's GreatWintez
fa Literary Competition.
The Fifth Half Yearly Literary Competition for the
Winter of 1092, of Tilt CA.VADIAll AGRICULTUaLST,
America's old and reliable Illustrated Family Magazine,
is now epon. The following. splendid prizes will be gloat
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words made mit of lettere coniaine$1 in the words, 'Tat
ILLUSTRATED ACiaterLTURIET.' IreliveryOne send-
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voluable present of silverware.
let Grand Reward
2nd
43,1 0 0
4th
I
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7th" " Ladies' Gold Watch thll Jewelled
sth 0501n Gold
9th " $25 in bold
10 Rewards 02 050 each 0100
• Next 20 prizes, -20 Silver Tea Sets, quadruple plate, war
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Next 50 prizes, -50 Silver Dessert Sets, warranted heavy
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Next 100 prizes, -100 Silver Butter Dishes, Ste., warranted
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Next 500 prizes consists of Heavy Plated Siker Kettles,
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making a total of f189 splendid rewards, the value of
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This grand Literary Competition is open to everybody
everywhere. The following are the conditions:
1. The words must be constructed only from letters
in the words, "THE ILLLISTBATED A01110111aTIUST,',
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2. The words must be written in rotation and number-
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3. Letter,s cannotbe used oftener than they amar in
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one "g" in the three words.
4. The list containing the largest number of words will
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0. Each list Must be accompanied by $1 for six months
subscription to Tux A.GRICULTrItIST.
The foilosing gentlemen have kindly consented to act
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$500 in Gold
Grand Plano, valued at 0500
.9250 in Gold
Organ valued at 0300
$10000 Gold
before we got up much further. They then
proceeded to attach to seine fine string mune
bis; ship's biscuits, and tied them, with about
a hang of three feet, to the extremity of every
yard of the vessel. When we reached jamas
Bay, which was our next point of call, the
water was rather rough, and, as we let go
the anchor, the Old Prince was shaking and
tumbling about not a little. This, however,
did not deter the natives from crowding
around us in their skin boats, and a about
went up as they recognized. the biscuits,
for they knew svhat they ineant. .And in a
minute a man fantastically clothed got up
in the bow of the largest canoe with a bow
and arrow in his hands, and, as he was
steered round the ship, fired upwards. Out
of sixshotshe cut four strings, clean in two,
and caught in his hands three out of the
four biscuits, 'have never sineeseen or heard
of such accurate shootir.g, even when men
were armed tvith the latest invented rifles.
" When I left the "Prince of Wales,' and
after a series of adventures,reached the
Fraser River, still in the service of the 11B.
Co., I was sent up to posts on the river, and
for some time was engaged in salting and
pickling salmon. When the fish -were
brought up from the river we used to pre-
pare the salt in the barrels and stand them
outside round about the fort. One day, late
in the season'we had about ten barrels out-
side, full of the clear, strong pickle, all
ready for their fish, when about twenty
ugly -looking Indiums came down to the fort,
with weapons xeversed and all signs of ab-
ject submission on their facies. Mr. James
Murray Yale happened to be in the fort at
the time, and it was soon ascertained that
they were all suffering from the worst sort
of ephthabnia, their eyes being distended
and bloodshot and in a verY bad condition.
The tribes about us, whose members were
our sfshermerr, were hostile to those who
had come down and souse �f the local chiefs
determined, as they dared not fight at the
fort, to wreak their vengeance upon them
in some other manner. Accordingly, thiee
of their women, prompted by the chiefs,
approached the afflicted warriors and
told them that some medicine had
been just made for bed eyes, but it was
to be distributed among the river Indians,
and that none would be given them because
they were hostile. " However," they went
on, "if you are quick and. will go to -night
when the white men. are asleep,a,ad dip your
beads in those barrels for two minutes your
eyes will be bright and good ()nee more."
That same evening everybody in the fort
was aroused by a terrible screaming and
yelling, aud rushing out, headed by Mr.
Yale, we found the 20 visitors in a terrible
condition, their eyes and faces saturated
with the strongest 'brine pickle ever made.
They were at once ordered to plunge in the
river, and for several hours behaved like
madmen. Our doctor succeeded in allaying
the torture of several of them, but it was
soon ascertained that eight were blinded for
life. Three years later, sometime after our
post had been removed from that point, I
heard Incidentally that' the Indians who
had practiced the joke bad been wiped out
of existence by the tribe t� which theblind-
ed men belonged. So that justice sornethnes
gets evened up ameng the Indiana as well as
White men. "-Victoria (13. '0.) 'Colonist. •
r , itt itffi
'411811,4 •-•e:tr r rizix%r .1
Ho examined every foot, nay, every inch
of it ; ite tugged at the knots at each end.
Time was precious, but he could not afford
to make it mistake. Then he throw it over.
It bumped along the stones, and his heart
heat eaeli time it, failed to catch a grip. At
last it caught and brought theism:A, tip stand-
ing, labile the tense string throbbed like
the bass gut of it harp as the water rushed
by it.
For the moment it held. How soon would
it part? He shrank from feeling along the
strands. He was more afraid not to,
lest
he should read his fate in the twine, tense
and twanging under the current. Inch by
inch his fingers traveled to his arms length.
So long as he held there he was safe. Time
and time agda, through the lens night he
did this, but never he said, withont heart
like lead and hand quivering like a leaf.
when morniag dawned, as at last it did, he
was easily saved.
In another case the clanger to life, though
considerable, was not imminent. A tug was
towing three scows, wheu one wont adrift.
With admirable promptness and address,
the captain of the tug =those the rest of his
tow and seamed ahead of the drifting barge.
There he held it by steam power, and
when the others came along a line was pass-
ed, the throttle was thrown wide open, and
it was thought to make way up stream.
But they had drifted fairly within the grasp
of the spirit of the -waters and for it time it
seemed he would not let go his own. Final-
ly, a foot was gained, andin a few seconds
another, and then the tug of war was vir.
tually over.
An escape of another sort was Ilsat of a
murderer. The sheriff was behind him, the
river in front, and only the wires of the old
bridge at Lewiston to help him across.
Hand over hand he began the passage. His
hands quickly blistered, and thers they bled
Again and again he rested his arms by
hanging by his legs. At last he reached the
opposite bank, and lay panting for an hour
before he noatinued his flight. The feat
was certainly a remarkable one for an ama-
teur.
EARIR'S AWFUL (*DNS.
They Nur' Rock Projectiles of 100 Coble
Yards 16 Mlles High,
In 1738 Cotopaxi ejected its blazing rock-
ets more thrill 3,000 feet above its crater,
whqe in 1757 the flaming mass, struggling
for au outlet, roared so that its awful voice
was heard for more than 600 miles. In 1797
the crater of Tunguragua, one of the great
peaks of the Andes, discharged torrents of
mud and lava'which dammed the river,
opened new lakes and made it deposit 600
feet deep and 20 miles long in a valley aver-
aging over 1,000 feet wide.
The molten stream from Vesuvius, which
passed through Terre del Greco in 1737, con-
tained 33,000,000 cubic yardsof solid matter.
The year 1793 witnessed the deist) uction of
Terre del Greco the second time from the
eruptive. action of Vesuvius, when the mass
of lava amounted to 45,000,000 cubic yards.
In 1760 Etnapoured out a blazing river that
covered 84 square miles of surface with boil-
ing lava from 10 to 40 feet deep. It was on
this occasion that the sand, ashes and scoriae
formed'Mount Rosini'near Nicholisa,
cone-shaped structure, two miles in circum-
ference and over 4,000 feet high. A stream
of lava thrown out Is lEtna iu 1810 was in
motiou at the average of one yard per day
for nearly ten months after the eruption,
Vesevius in A. D. 79 v.nnited, forth an
amount of matter whose bulk far exceeded
that of the mountain itself. In 1760, Etna
disgorged more than 20 times its own mass.
Syria, Egypt and Turkey have received
contributions of ashes from Vesuvius. From
this crater were hurled stones of 800 pounds
weight to Pompeii, a distance of Mx miles,
pumag an eruption in 79 A. 1). Cotopaxi
has east a rook containing 100 cubic yards
a distance of nine miles, and which,cahula-
ting from the angle of aseension, must have
reached an altitude of 16 tones. Ora more
than one occasion thirs volcano has shot up
a solid stream to the height a over 6,000
feet. In 1815 it volcanic eruption in Java.
covered 400 square miles with ashes and
lava, and out,of a population of 15,000 ouly
20 persons escaped with their lives.
During the terrible earthquake of 1883,
not less than 20 largo and small Javanese
volcanoes were vomiting at the same time.
Fifty square miles of laud and two villages
entirely disappeared and it section of a
mountain chain 65 miles long 20 miles
broad, was wholly swallowed up, leaving a
lake instead. It was the vapor from this
eruption that caused the remarkable after -
sunset glows over the greater part of the
earth, during the fall of 1883. The same
country had another destructive outbreak
and a series of earthquake shocks in 1891.
The Hawaiian group of islands in the
South Ps.cific Ocean is wholly volcanic.
They appear where the ocean is from 16,000
to 18,000 feet deep, have bases that are con-
fluent, and have diameters ranging from 10
to 60 miles. The peak of Mauna Loa, on
one of these islands, is 13,000 feet above the
sea, thus indicating a mass of uplifted mat-
ter 31,000 feet above the ocean floor.
These illustrationa will suffice to convey
an idea, of how permanent matter is belched
onto the surface from the interior of the
earth, but the volatile substance, the gase-
ous matter, cannot be easily estimated; yet
this is the vehicle, the motor, the active
agent in all these processes. Here we have
a clear and altogether logically physical ex-
planation of the causes that underlie the
formation of mountains.
The primary cause of volcanic outpourings
is the pressure of the cooled shell of the
earth on the gaseous and molten interior.
As these interior substances come forth the
shell generally settles, and, as it has to (ac-
commodate itself to a slowly decreasing in-
terior, a wrinkle, or a. number of writ:Nies
on the shell, is the inevitable consequence.
These wrinkles we denominate mountains.
We can ' readily account for the "chain"
system in mounta,iu formation and can also
understand why they are so generally par-
allel to coast liues, and also why they occa,-
.sionally disregard the chain formation and
display themselves conspicuously.
lint whence comes this incandescent in-
terior? This is still primeval heat -the
fiery, glowing condition which is the incipi-
ent stage cf nearly all bodies in space.
If we inquire into the relationship be-
tween volcanic action and earthquakes, we
shall find such relationship to be very in-
timate. The earth's crust is too thick and
the rock stratification affords too much
resistance for an outbreak to occur whore -
ever there chances to be a more than ordin-
arily heavy pressure. This overpressure,
then, may exhibit itself in various ways on
the surface, depending on its internal en-
vironment. This greater pressure of a. cer-
tain area, in obedience to the law that
impels force to follow the lines of least re-
sistance, may extend laterally into a region
of lesser pressure, with or without a per-
ceptible rumbling or jarring of the surface.
The variation in the phenomena, however,
will be due to the manyvarying factors,
which can only be determined by a careful
analysis of the action and referring A back
synthetically to such causes as would neces-
se rily produce such action. Au earthquake
then is only the .premonitary disturbance
that indicates an increasing or a. readjust-
ing pressure and which, in the fullness of
its time, will expend. itself in an emission
to the surface. This may sometimes involve
centuries and large areas that are jarred
may never realize more than such jarring,
as weaker localities, or localities having
rents, may experience the result of the
final action.
Earthquake and volcanic action are then
a necessary consequence from the physical
constitution of the globe a,nd such manifes-
tation may be expected long after the sphere
is at all habitable. The uaiverse knows of
no such thing as absolute unending terra
firma.
A warm heart requires a cool head.
A Remarkable Clock.
Japan possesses a remarkable time -piece.
It is contained in a frame three feet wide and
five feet long, representing a noonday land-
scape of great beauty. In the foreground,
plum and Cherry trees and rich plants ap-
pear in full bloom; in the rear is seen a hill,
gradual in ascent, from which apparently
flows a cascade, admirably imitated in crys-
tal. From this point a threadliue stream
meanders, encircling rocks and islands in
its windings, and finally losing itself in a
far offsstretch of woodland. In a miniature
sky a golden min turns on a silver wire,
strikiog the hours on silver gongs as it pass-
es. Each hour is marked on the frame by
a creeping tortoise, which serves the ,place
of a hand. ,A bird of exquisite plumage
warbles at the close of each hour, and, as
the song ceases, a moue sallies forth from
&neighboring grotto, and, scampering over
the hill to the garden, is soon lost to view.
Severe.
The Texas prohibitionist is a prohibi-
tionist indeed. A little son of a Waco pro-
hibitionist said to his father:
"Pa, I read in a book that a long time
ago Circe turned men into swine ; do such
things happen nowadays ?"
"No, my son, it is no longer necessary.
Men turn themselves into swine nowadays."
Whirl It was.
Scene -A fashionable Shop. Enter a so.
ciety lady, addressing a shop assistant :
wish to exchange something I bought
yesterday."
"Yes, madam. Do you remember wheth-
er you were attended by the gentleman with
the dark mustache or the gentleman with
the light beard ?"•
"Oh neither 1 It was the noble -looking
man with the bald head." -
The 110811 Surgeons
.flf the Lubon Medical Company is now n,t
Toronto, Canada, and may be consulted
either in person or by letter on all chronio
diseases peouliar to man. M n, young, old,
or middle-aged, who, find j thetnselves nerv-
ous, weak and exhausted„ who are broken
down from excess or overulcork, resulting in
many of the following symptoms: Mental
depression, pretnature old ada, loss of vital -
loss of memory, bad dreaks, dimness of
tight, palpitation of the hearty emissions,
lack of -energy, pain itt the kinqeys, head-
6che, pimples on the face or bogy, itching
or peculiar sensation about thc scrotum,
wasting of the organs, dizziness, spectre
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,tveak andflabby muscles,
desire to sleep, failure to be rested by sleep,
constipation, dullaess of hearing, lossof voice,
desire for solitude, excitability of temper,
sunken eyes surroundedwith LEADEN 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 in consequence. Those who through
Abuse conamitted m ignorance may be per.
lmanently cured. Send your address for
book on all diseases peculiar to men.
ft3ooks sent free sealed. Ileardisease, the
symptoms of which are faintspells, purple
lips, numbness, palpitation, skip Lents,
not flushes, rush of blood to the head, dull
Rain in the heart with beats strong, rapid
arta irregular, the scond heart beat
!faster than the first, pain about the braast
'bone, etc., can positively be cured. No cure,
no nay. Send for book. Address, •M. V.
.X...UBON. 24 Macdonell Ave. Toronto, Ont,
For Over Fifty. Years.
MRS. .WINSLOw'S SOOTHING SYnilP luta boon -
used by millions of mothers for their children
while teething. If disturbed at night and
broken of your rest by a sick child suffering '
and crying with pain of cutting_teeth send at
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will relieve th o poor litilesufferer iremediatelY,
Depend upon it, mothee1, there is no mistake
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Stomach and Bonilla, cures Wind Colic. softens
the gams, reduces Inflammation, and gives
tone and energy to the whole system. 'Mrs,
Winslow's Soothing Syrtkp" for children teeth-
ing is pleasant to the taste and is the prescrip-
tion of ono of the oldest and best female
phYsielana and nurses in the United States
Pelee, 25 cents a bottle. Sold by all druggists.
throughout the world Be sure and ask for
Mao. Wisstov Seeeinse SVIDTP."
In Front ofthe Morton House.
First Star. -When I played in San Frans
cisco the people took the horses out of my
carriage, and -
Seconal Star-Htunpli 1 That's nothing;
when I appeared on thastage in Chicago
the people kissed all the leather off the car-
riage.
CONSUMPTION ounr.n.
An old physician retired from practice, hav
hog had placed in Iris hands by an East India
rmssionary the formula of a simple vneetiable
remedy for the speedy and permanent cure for
Consumption. Bronchitis, Catarrh,Astlima and
all throat and lung affections, also a, positive
and radieal mire for nervous debility and all
nervous complaints, after having tested he
wonderful curative powers in thousands of
eases. 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
fiend freed charge. to all. who desire it, the
recipe in Uerumn, French or English with full
directions for preparing and using. Sent by
mail by addressing with stamp, naming this
rtaopotro, tWor., AN..yNO YES, 820 Power's Bk
loc
Just as' God 1.0133.
"Suat as God loads rn s I wm'cl go
I do not ask to choose my wa,y ;
Content with what He doth bestow,
I know He will not lot noe stray,
So as He leads I onward move -
.A. child, confiding in His love.
Suet a3 Gad leads me I would go,
Though oft 'mid thorns and briers keen,
Ile does not yet His guidance show,
But in the end. it will be seen
How, by a loving Father's will,
Faleent and true he leads me still."
Mothers -in -km Are Awful Tough.
A feeble -looking Harlem lady called on
Dr. Perkins Soonover.
" How are you coming on, Mrs. Fuller?"
"I'm not coming on well at all, doctor."
"What is tho matter ? "
"1 don't seem tollave any life in me. I
feel that 1 ani not long for this werld."
"I'll tell you what to do. Marry off that
daughter of yours. Then you will be a
mother -m -law, and mothers-in-law are awf
toug,h. All the doctors in the world can't,
kill em. I've got ono and I know what I
am talking about."
• Of all the earthly music that which reaches
farthest into Heaven is the beating of a
truly loving heart.-[H.W. Beecher.
Twenty men who believe what they pro-
fess, and live as they believe, are worth
more than five hundred hypocrites to any
good cause.
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castorjal
r LAKSEELf
EMULSION
COMPOUND
BRONCHITIS
186 Lexington Ave,,
New York City, Sept. 19, 1::'.
I have used the Flax -Seed Emulsion in several
cases of Chronic Bronchitis, and the early stages of
Phthisis, and have been welt pleased with the results.
JAMES E. CROOK, M.D.
ONSUMRTION
'Brooklyn,N. Y., eel/. 14th, 1880,
I have used your Emulsion in a case of Phthiste
(consumption) with beneficial results, wheee patient
could not use Cod Liver Oi JI.inHa.nDy fRoromds,
M. D.
NE _BUS FROST 11014
Brooklyn, N. Y., Dec. Seth. 18E8.
can strongly, recommend Flax Seed Emulsion as
helpful to the relief and possibly the cure of all Lung,
Bronchial and Nervous Affections, and a geed gen-
eral tome in physical debility.
JOHN F. TALMAGE, M. D.
GENERAL MUT
Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 10(1x, 1888.
/ regard Flax Seed Emulsion as greatly superior to
theCod Liver Oil Emulsions so generally in use.
' D. A. GORTON, 11. D.
WASTING DISEASES
WHY COUGIL
‘AilitElsT ale -iv' doses of Ayer's Cherry
V V Pectoral will relieve you? Try it,
Keep it in the house. You are liable to
have a cough at any
time, and no other
remedy is oo effective
as this world -
r e no vrne d prepares.
tion. No household,
with young children,
should be without it,
Scores of lives are
saVed every year by
its timelyuse.
V
Amanda B. Jenner, Northampton,
Mass., writes: "Common gratitude
pels me to acknowledge the great bene-
fits I have derived for my children from
the use of .Ayer's most excellent Cherry,
Pectoral. I had lost two dear children
from croup and consumption, and hadi
thegreatest fear of losing my only re •
-
maining daughter and son, as they were
delicate. Happily, I find that by giving
them Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, on the first
symptoms of throat or hunarouble, they
are relieved from clangc are be.
coming robust, healthy c,„
l'In the winter of 1885 r ttiok it bad
cold which, in spite of every known
remedy, grew worse, so that the family
physician considered me incurable, sup-
posing me to be in consumption. As a
het resort tried Ayer's Cherry Peet°.
aal, and, in a short time, the cure was
complete, Since then I have never been
without this medicine. I am fifty years
of age, weigh over 180 pounds, and ista
tr:lb:to: N.
mya..good health to the use of
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral."-G.W.Youker,
o •
"Last winter I contracted a severe
Cold, which by repeated exposure, be-
came quite obstinate. I was Inneh...„
troubled with hoarseness and bronchial '
. imitation. After trying varialts Mogi.
eines,ivithut relief, 1 at last purchased
a bottle of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. 'On
taking this medicine, my cough ceased
almost immediately, and I have been
well ever since."-Itev.Thos. B. Russell,
Secretary Holston Conference and P. E.
of the Greenville District, H. E. 04
jonesboro, Tenn.
(
Ayer's Cherry PectorOm
ti
PERVADED DE
Dr. J. D. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Boldly all Druggists, Brien SI; ate bott1es,11,
THE EXETER TIMES.
Isuublieued every Thursday morn matt
TI MES STEAM PRINTINS HOUSE
Rain -street ;nearly opposite Fitton'a Jewelery
tinne,Exater,Ont.,bygohn Width Si4Hons,Pro.
Pr:eters,
BATES or AnvianTlema
Firstinsertiou, per line. ........... coati,
e eh subseeneatinsortion cent%
To insure insertion, advertisements shoula
es south) notle.ter than Wednesday mornini
187 West 8itl. St.,
New YorktAug. 6,1 .
I 'have tisel your Flax -Seed Emulsion Compound
In a severe ca.o of Mal -nutrition and the result was
mote than hoped for—it was marvelous, and con-
tinuous. I recommend it cheerfully to the profession*
and humanity at large. M. IL GILBERT, M.D.
t.
Sold by Druggists, Price $ hoe.
FLAX -SEED EMULSION Ctt)e
filbiert7 St-.
OurJ03 FRUITING DEP 41ITALDNIT Is one
tthe largest and beat equipped in the County
of Harm:LAB work entruateil to as writ resolve
o or prompt attention:
Deesions Regarding News-
papers.
1...t.nroorAonwho Wee; d nalierre..Itlirlv from
the post -office, whether directed mills name el
another's, or whether Ito has subscribed or not
Is responsible for payment.
2 If it person orders his paper discontinued
he must pay all arrears or the publisher mg
continue to send It until the payment is made
and thou collect the whole amount, whetho
htmapor is takenfrom the office or not.
3 In suits for subscriptions, the suit may 13(
instituted in the place
Balled, although the subscribe , may resids
where tits:pub
paper is
hundreds of miles away.
4 The courts have decided that refusing to
takenewspapers orperlodicals from the post,
office, or reinoving a.nd leaving them uncalMd
or is prima facie evidence of intentional fraud
INTERCOLOI•IIAL
AILW AY
OF CANADA,
Thnaireotronto between the West a -id
points on the Lower St. Lawrence ear d tare
des Chaleur,Frovinee of Quebec: also fte
New Brunswick ,Nova Scotia, princo-Wil war
Cap e BrotonIslan ds , an d New! oundlan cia
St. Pierre.
Express trains leave Montreal an d Xenia :
daily (Sent:aye excepted) and run thvou
withoutelnange between these points In
houre and 55 Minutes,
The through express train cars of the l• •
tercolonial Railway are brilliantly g
by electricity and heated by steam from th
locomotive. thus greatly increasing the a) —
fort and safety ot travellers.
New and elegant buffetsleoping Jana all.'
cars arernu o nehron nh e sprees trains.
Canadian -European Mail and
Passenger Route.
Passengers or Gr eat .8 ritaino r the eon ti -
neat by leaving Xont. eal on leridttyartorning
will join outward noail steamer at Halifax
on Saturday.
The slteuliou ofssh inners is directed totals
superior faoilit ics•offered by this 'enterer
the transport °Mu r and genera( merchan-
dise intended for theFlasteirn Vrovinces ant
Newfoundland; nlao for shponints of grain
sudnroduceintended 1 or the Ibirepeau ma:
ket.
Tiblicts may be obtained and i nfor 111 tion
about the route ; mum freight and *ascuser
rates on n,pplication to
N • WE THERSTON •
WesternFreight ifsPassenge Agent
esItnasinHens °Block ;Rork rit .Tocont' •
D ROTTINGER,
Chief u perintendeut.
Railway Oltice,Ifendon, N,I3.
Jan 1st JO
IZZ
LANYRNCE, KAS., U. S. A., Aug. 9,
George Patterson fell from a second-st ry
window, striking a fence. I found him us• i
ST.. A.coms
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 HIGHT! Si . JACOBS OlL DID IT."
wormare,Ara,4c4,4=yezra.44.--ecc—ar—,mirompo...
APPLICATIONSTTNOROUGHLY REMOVES
DANDRUFF
D. L. CIAVEN,
• Toronto, Travailing Passenger Agent, 0 P It„
Ws: and-Bandraffie aperfectromover °Man.
druff-itin action is marvellous -in my dwn case
, a tog applications not only thoroughly reroOved
excessive dandruff accumulation hut stopped
filAilfi,TEED. promoted a visible grow M.
falling of tbe hair, made it soft and pliable and
N
A, A
Restores Fading hair to Its
• original color. ,
Stops falling of hair. r
Keeps the Scalp clean.
Makes hair soft and Pliable 2
Promotes GreeTh.
s
4
11,
MD'
,•!*
,
4