The Exeter Times, 1892-9-15, Page 3rea0TRIO&I, NOTES.
A detiee has just been patentecl intended
to be use hi eignalling along a length of
fire tam Wires are carried in the hose
aud insulated therefrom so that by making
battery connections a fireman from one end
of a line case send sigitele to the other with,-
oub leaviast his post.
A new socket for incancleacent lamps has
. been brought Mit winch is flexible and will
admit of the lamp globe being. turned in
as, one direction or another, A spring coil
forms OM of the connections to the lamp
base, anti takes the place of the thread on
• the regular socket. Another novelty about
. the spring% a sharp point on the end which
prevents unauthorized persons from remov-
ing the lamp by pressing open the spring
and allows oily as person carrying a cover
for this point to tamper with the socket.
, Thirty miles of underground electric rail-
- similar to the City ana South London
salute been proposed for Berlin at an es.
thneted expense of $10,000,000. The plans
describe two central power stations, sap -
plying current at 500 vats to forty-eight
trains, welt with its own locomotive,car-
ping in all 144 carriages at one time. It
is proposed to ran these trains at three-
minute intervals, a little over half a mile
apart, and ata fare of two and a half cents
it is estimated that the traffic will be about
five persons per car mile.
A Ira building in Deliver, intended to
acepaa: 'ttte twenty light manufacturing
tat nes been wired and equipped
4:nat.:but for the distribution of power
taWlie-different tenant!: by means of elec-
tricity.
The automatio telephone exchange, of
which mention was made some time ago, is
to receive its initial trial at La Porte, Ind.,
wbere it is to be put in for six months free
of charge and connectedao seventy.five fn.
trutnents.
In a recent address before the Chicago
Electric Club it was stated that within a
year there will be in operation in the States
five electric locomotives of from 700 to 1,-
200 horse -power, and weighing from forty-
five to eighty tons. Such machinee will
haul trains of 450 tons at thirty miles per
hour up a grade of twenty-six feet to the
mile. and when operated at a voltage about
double that XIOW used on trolley roads, will
develop high-speed service.
Telephotography is at present interesting
Parisian experimenterand causes the
Figaro to predict that '4 soon may be seen
in Paris the linage of a man smoking in St.
Petersburg."
An electric railway is proposed between
.A.titweap end Brussels, and a demand for a
concession to construct the line is now be-
fore the neigian Government. Theaverage
time °coupled in making the journey by rail
at present is one hour, and it is expected
this could be reduced by the insttalation of
an electric system to twenty-five minntes.
Telephony is making rapia advances in
France, and Paris will shortly be in bele-
phonic communication with all the princi-
pal towns in that country. There axe al-
ready systema between Paris, Bordeaux,
Lille, Lyons, and Marseilles, and these in-
at:illations are continually being extended.
Designeis of aro lamps are uow striving
for better looking brackets and fixtures to
be Rod sitnilarly to the decorative effects
notioed on interior incandescent lamp fix.
tures. The uneightly appearance of are
lights often prohibits their use in intericr
work and consequently an enterprising man-
ufacturing concern is bringing out new
styles of hangers for use on low tension arc
lamps, which are intended to suit the pop.
ulartesthetio taste on the subject.
A Brave Deed,
Lieutenant W. B. Huddleston, Royal In.
PIA lieu Marine, has just boon presented by
' Captain Hex, C.I.F.., Bombay, in the pros -
I once of all the marine officers in port, with
the Stanhope medal for the most meritori-
ous act in saving life in the oregi.ous year.
The circumstances under wean teas not took
place were as follows : In December, 1890,
nal' the Marino Nervey steam investigator was
I engaged in trawling in 1,800 fathoms, in
the Bay 1.4 'Bengal. The officers and most
of the ship's company happened at the time
to be at ItIeakfast, and Mr. Huddleston and
the gunaer of the shit', Mr. Peterson, along
' with e few lascars of the watch, were look-
ing after the trawl.
As the ship drifted with the trawl 'down
three largo sharks appeared, swimming
roand the ship an the lookout for anything
that might be thrown overboard. In these
' circumstances it is the custom (not t xclus-
• ively, perhaps, for the benefit of the natur-
alist'e department) to put out the shark
1 a line, and accordingly the gunner baited the
nashark hook and thot it overbeard, -It was
nnalmost immediately gorged, and one of the
Meath:Irks. was hooked fast. . it is no easy mat-
urenlnar ti haul on board a strugglina- shark
'tent)
veigh lag several hundredweight, and so the
e gamier, in aecordance wall tradition,
brought forward a loaded rifle to shoot the
unmanageable beast withal But in the ex-
citement of the moment, and in his anxiety
to get as close as possible, the eager marks.
man fell overboard.
By virtue of that curious paradox so com-
monly illustrated by sailors and fishermen,
the man could not swim, but what was
worse was that there were the other sharks
close by attracted by the splashing of their
captured mate. Without waiting to pull
off- his coat or kick off his shoes, Mr. littd-
dleston at once jumped overboard to the
rescue, and it was not until he had got hold
of tbe gunner and had seen him safely
hauled on board that he began to think of
himself escaping from imminent danger, for
onesof the sharks was already smelling at
Cut brave young officer's cap which had
fakba off and was drifting slowly away.
This a,ct of devotion was brought to the
notice of the authorities by the commander
of the Investigator, the lamented Captain
liosIcyn, and was by them reported to
Royal Humane Society, andalr. Hruidleston
in May last year, received the silver medal
of the society, pro cive serva.tor. The act
'• has now been singled out from the several
hundred'acts of bravery recognized by the
• society for the highest honor that the
Society can confer, and Mr, • Huddleston is
now decorated with the Stanhope gold
'medal, the first to be won by an officer of
the Indian merino. , •
The fastest bicycle rider in the world to-
day is George F. .Taylor, of Iptwich, Masa
Whose mile „record reoently made on the
Springfield track is full four seconds faster
than Windle's famous performance made
last October on the same track. Taylor is
23 years old, a graduate of Harvard Univer-
sity, very powerfully put together, and
has been on the track for a period of three
years. 'He'first became known to cyclists
by breaking the inter -collegiate 2 -mile rec-
ord, and thus encouraged he tried for the
worlds record and nailed ib in 4:48 4-5. He
now holds the half -mile World's record with
Zimmerman at L05'the three-quarter mile
world's: record at 1.30 4-5, the mile world's
recora at 2.11, and the world's two mile
accord at 4.48 4-5. And yet be is as modest
aboet it all as though he had earned net
frattg but a rigat to JUN overlooked, He is
, .
the firet champion cycled that ever came
out of the university save and except a
couple of Cambridge men awl one axamaa
who rocle high wheels in the days of long
ago.
The Streets of Pekin.
The town is always most animated. At
certain hours of the day the streets are as
crowded with foot -passengers, riders on
horseback, and carriages as those of London
or of Paris. There is plenty to interest and
amuse the. spectator Tartar carts and
Chinese chaises, blue or green sedan 'shake,
the color vara ;fig according to rank and im-
portance of e owner; grooms of the palace
xn yellow teary, couriera of the Emperor in
yellow and, black uniforms, long strings of
cemels belonging to Mongol caravans, con-
demned prisoners wearing or carrying their
oangues, eta, etc..; and on either side of
the carriageway, under shelters or in the
open air, musicians and jugglers, mounte-
banks and necromancers, public scribes,
second-hand booksellers, old -clothes -men,
furniture brokers, cobblers, and harness -
makers, barbers and chiropodists, cooks and
pastry -cooks, sellers of fruit and tea mer-
chants; in a word every variety of itinerant
dealer, resulting in an infinite variety of
bright and picturesque scenes. Or a wed
ding procession marches down the street
with its band, its lanterns, its bannere, its
parasols, the attendant servants in gala cos-
tumes, and the bride carried beneath a red
canopy. Or perhaps a funeral cortege of
apparently endless length, with its flute -
players and gong -beaters, its incense -burners
its Buddhist priests chanting litanies, its
mounters making grimacs and howling, ono -
'needed by a long string of vehicles laden
with all the things supposed to be Imes -
eery to the defunct in the life beyond the
tomb ; behind whit* -come the relations
and friends of the deceased, clad in white
hatrailoth ; and, last of all, borne on the
shoulders of siateen, twenty, or thirty hired
assistants, the huge catafalque itself loaded,
with gilded sculpture, and hung with beau-
tifully embroidered blue silk hangings.
The filth of the streets is yet another ele-
ment of the picturesque. No description
could possibly give an idea of it Dustawo
feet deep, or lakes of mud, and at every
turn heaps of refuse, for which lialanaked
beggars are fighting with mangy doge; ev-
ery cozweivable smell, and every conceivable
variety of rubbish, no police, and no drain-
age I
Photographing Bullets.
It is no news that cannon balls and bullets
ca.n be photographed as they dart through
the airasut Professor C. V. Boys has recently
made some experiments in photographing
flying bullets that oast new light upon their
motion,and their effect upor. the air through
which they pass,
Professor Boys fires the bullet through a
box lined with black cloth, and so arranged
that the .passing bullet itself completes an
eleotrio °Inuit and causes a flash of light in
the box, which, though lasting only one -
millionth of a seeond suffices to imprint a
photograph of the bulleb on a sensitized
plate eontained in the box,
Not only are the bullets themselves photo-
graphed, but also the etmosphoric waves
created by their 'passage. In front of the
bullets are seen the waves of condensation,
and behind them the waves of rarefaction,
and interesting observations have been
made on the peculiar forms of these waves.
As emelt bullet dashes through the box it
touches the terminals of two wires in the
electric circuit, and the little cloud of dust
into which the end of the wires is pulveriz-
ed also has its image imprintedon the photo
graphic plate.
Professor Boys has experimented with
the photographing of charges of amen shot
fired from shot -gnus and the final result of
these experiments is waited with much in-
terest, because it promises to throw light
upon the manner 311 which guns of different
patterns scatter the shot,
Brigandage in. Italy.
Canes of brigandage, the Daily News Rom a
correspondent says, aro again becoming
rather frequent in Sicily and in the province
of Rome, where an absoluze stop has never
been put to this form of crime. A few days
ago a landed proprietor, name Biliotti, was
caught by the brigands, who asked for X20,-
000. The family only sent £2000, and it is
now alleged thaathe outlaws burned their
prisoner alive. At Tropina, also in Sicily,
eight brigands have captured another pro-
prietor, and no tram can be found of them.
At Viterbo, in the Province of Rome, the
brigands stopped a mail -coach, They car-
ried off everything of value, but committed
no personal violence on the passengers. Of
late, and particularly under the Rudini
Ministry, the traditional system of brigand
catching has fallen into disuse, being deem
ed immeral, although it was undoubtedly
effective.• It consisted in causing the chief
brigands to be murdered by their own men.
Indeed it needs a brigand to catch a
brigand, and the: police and soldiers are
constantly baffled, people who could give
information being too much overawed by
the revengeful cruelty of the brigands to
venture to do so.
It is only a little over forty years ago
that a Russian farmer began the cultiva-
tion of the sunflower in order to extract oil
from the seeds. New 700,000 acres in
Rnssia are hi sunflowers, and the original
founder of the industry is a millionaire.
A side rod broke a few days ego upon an
eugine on the Sussex railroad between
Branchville and Newton. Engineer Quack-
enbush was not on his seat at the moment,
or he might have been killed, as the rod
sliced oft a portion of the cab in its first
revolution. Then it struck the ground and
rebounding knocked the air pump off and
opened a seam in the boiler from which a
cloud of steam escaped. Brakes were put
on by the derangement of the air pump and
the train came to a stop so quickly as to
throw passengers out of their seats. The
engineer and fireman wore both slightly
scalded by the escaping steam.
A Philadelphia physician who has juin
retutned from a trip tu England says e--"
stopped with a gentleman in Liverpool who
is making a fortune out of one of the most
curious applications of the drop -a -penny -in -
the -slot idea that I have ever seen. In Eng-
land, by the way, they use it for a dozen
things that we know nothing . of in this
country. The use for it to which I allude,
however, is the furnishing of illuminating
gas to small consumersA small device is
fastened t� any ordinary gas meter, said
aeon time a copper pdarty is dropped in the
slot a certain amount of gas is let into the
meter, and thence into the pipe leading to
the burner A little dial shows how much
gas is admitted to the meter, and a dozen
or more pennies can be dropped in in suc-
cession it the purchaser so desires. Over
4,000 of these are now in use in Liverpool,
and the demand for them in that and other
big cities is so great that the company- own -
Mg the patent cannot at present begin to
make them fast enough to supply it.
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoriii
BEM IN BRIER
The deaths from cholera in Persia Bo far
number 35,00".
Thunderstorms have caused irreparable
clatnege to crops in Bulgaria..
The trooporthe Sultan of Mere= had
an encounter the other day with the Augher-
as, and after some sharp fighting the rebels
fled.
The proportion of marriages in Franco,
whichat me time was eight out of every
thonsaud of the population, ba e now fallen
to seven.
•
•
Duringe tbonderstorm In Vienna Tues-
day evening, the musical extibitiod build-
ing was five lamas struck by lightning. The
damage was not serious.
Owing•to the dangers lurking in water in
coonection with cholera, the people of Ban -
burg have taken to beer and wine, lime
juiee and lemonade.
The British steamer Aogelia, from. Cal-
cutta for England, was capsized the other
day in the Hoogly Rivet Fitteen of the
crew are missing,
Two French generals and one colonel who
forced troops to go through manoeuvres
during the intense heat have been placed
on the retired lists
Cable advices from Liverpool say there is
&vat demand for Amerieau belt itt Eng -
The Queen left Osberne house last atm.
day for Balmoral, where Her Majesty will
remain three months.
Eighty-five bodies have been recovered
from the inine at Bridge End, Wales, the
scene of the recent explosion.
Several Welsh tin-plate manufacturera
have closed their work% Sixty establish.
memo are now closed, and 10,000 hands are
idl
Dr, Keely, of drink mire fame, is suing
tl:e London lancet for damages for libel.
Medical men watch the trial with excited
interest,
Thomas Neil, indieted for the murder of
Matilda Clover, was committed for trial for
dnryelriaaert,aud blackmail ha London on Satur-
An inane woman confined in the Asylum
for Idiots at Orillia jumped from a third
storey wiudow in tbe building on Tneeday,
and received injuries from -whit* she died
twelve hours afterwards.
Mr. la ilfred Laurier, leader of the Do-
minion Opposition, will deliver a lecture in
Montreal on Lincoln on October 5th. Tim
lecture is to be purely literary and exempt
from polities.
Mr. Ronald McDonald, Lady Catheart's
agent, who placed the crofters in Alanitoba,
in 1872 is on his way to Winnipeg, having
arrived tbe Parisien, to visit the erofter
aottlements and ascertain what success has
attended them in their new Wanes.
Mrs. Edward McManaman, of Salt
Springs, Cumberland, N, S., has given
birth to triplets, two boys and a girl. This
is the third time in succession that this ledy
has thus dietinguished herself.
Some 50 eannon balls and a lot of rifle
barrele have been taken from the bottom of
thd Detroit river by the Dominion Govern-
ment dredge Ontario. They are supposed to
lutve lain there since 1637.
Henry Storms a patient of the insane
asylum at Kingston, belonging to Napartee,
strayed from the institution last Wednes-
day, and on Friday his body was found in
the lake in rear of the asylum.
Reports from Alberta., N. W. T., state
that the potato bug has reached that dis-
trict, and there is considerable consterna-
tion among the farmers in consequence, who
heretofore have been free of this and other
vegetable pests. Prince Edward Island
also reports the arrival of the Colorado bee-
tle this year.
The tug George N. Brady, owned by the
Howard Transportation Company, cu Port
Huron was burned m the midale of lake
St. Clair the other morning. Sim was
valued at $12,000 and was insured.
John Doran, aged twenty, was run over
and killed on the Detriot bolt line Tuesday
night He had been working in Rochester,
and his father is a retired merchant in
Guelph.
Robbers, supposed to be members of the
Dalton gaug, held up Agent atones 8, Wil-
son of the Kansas and Arkausas Valley
Railroad and two others on Monday night
and secured $41,000 in cash. The robbery
took place at Nowata, Indian Territory.
An attempt was made to wreck the east
bound Chicago and New York limited ex-
press near Enou, Pa., on Saturday morning.
Several ties and pieces of hon were found by
a farmer tied to the track, and while engage&
in removing them he was twice shot.
The Roman Catholic church three miles
from Wyandotte, Mich., took fire during
the service on Sunday morning, and was
burned to the ground. Miss Lillie Gustin
WS burned to death, and Mr. Wm. Grant
and Mrs. Jane Armstrong received serious
injuries.
Do You Know.
Do you know that one cup of butter,
solid, weighs half a pound?
That two cups of granulated sugar or two
and one half cups of powdered sugar weigh
a pound?
That four cups of flour weigh a pound?
• That three cups of cornmeal weigh a
pound?
That the favorite German polish for hard
wood is made as follows; Melt belle pound
of white beeswax, also two cakes of castile
soap, then mix together, adding a pint of
turpentine. Shake thoroughly before using.
That eggs covered, when frying, will cook
much more evenly?
That after water is drained off from po-
tatoes and they are left in the kettle to keep
warm, the cover should be removed and a
cloth laid on the potatoes?
. That a large slioe of raw potato in- the
fat when frying doughnuts will prevent the
black specks from appearing on the surface
of them? ..
That a little flour dredged over the top
of a eakewill keep tne icing from runoing ?
Taat if you heat your knife you can cut
hot bread or cake as smoothly as cold?
That the "fishy" smell may be removed
from a skillet by boiling suds in it for ten
minutes a-
••••••••4
Alphabets of the World.
The Sandwich Islands alphabet has twelve
letters, the Burmese nineteen, Italian
twenty, Bengalese twenty-one, Hebrew,
Syrian, Chaldee and Samaritan twenty-two
each, French twenty-three, Greek twenty.
four, Latin twenty-five, German, Dutch
and English twenty-six each, Spanish and
Slavonic twenty-seven each, Arabic twenty-
eight, Persian and Coptic thirty -ho, Geor-
gian thirty-five, Arm:Wein thirty-eight,
Russian torty-one, Muscovite forty-three,
Sanskrit and Japanese fifty; Ethiopic and
Tartatian have two hundred and two each.
,About Berries.
Presuming that you are going to plan
that etrawberry bed this fall, instead of
delaying it until next spring, when it prob-
ably wonld not get done on account of
the Pressare of other work, we wish to of-
fer you a few brief suggestions. Do not
try too mealy kinds ; . select two or three
varieties, at the most, from the list of a
trustworthy grower choosing such as seem
best adapted to your purpose of growing
for home use or for shipping. Some that are
excellent for the first purpose are almost
valueless for the last on account of their
poor carrying qualities. The Sharpless is
a berry that serves both uses well, but it
is not produetive anleas given high _culture.
With this we think it the best and most
proatable of the very large berries. Aim to
have your ground ready when the plants
arrive, so that you may set thena out at
once. If not ready, then unpack and loosen
the bunches and place the roots in the
ground in some moist and shady place, or
else puddle the roots in mud and lay them
away in the cellar sprinklingthe plants o0 -
occasionally to keep them moist. For
planting, select a moist sod, but not
it spot that is shaded at all by trees or
tuildings, Good fruit and pleuty of it is
produced only by the free action of the
sun. Have the ground thoroughly amour -
ed and then plowed deeply.. A coating of
rich stable manure, four to six inelies deep,
is not too much to turn under. Than run
a sub -soil plow in the furrow:, loose's-
ing the ground to a depth of 10 inches.
This will give good feeding ground for the
roots, and soil will be in conditiou to retain
moisture—an absolute eeeential to profin
able strawberry culture, In plauting,
prevent the roots from being exposed at all
to the sun or the wind, Put them in the
earth while fresh and moist Plant iit the
evening if you con, and then protect for two
or three days by shading them with heesy
leaves, say of cabbage or rhubarb, or paper
twisted into the shape of &funnel or cornu-
copia does very well, but is more apt to
blow ttway, For either field or garden
culture we think the best method, is to
plant in rows three feet apart, the plants
QUO foot apart in the row, and then let the
seekers root until a continuous water row -
is formed. Keep this trimmed to a width
ot one foot, give clean cultivation in the
open spaces until winter comes, and thee
„lnulob well with coarse mauve In this
way you will get it profitable bed well
started.
Red raspberriea, for field culture, should
be planted in rows six feet apart, with the
planta three feat apart in the row. This
will require about 2,400 plants to an acre,
Week -cops require more room, as they have
a more vigorous hobit ot growth. Make
these rOWS WW1 feet apart, with the plants
three feet distant. Thus an acre will re.
quire 1,775 plants. Autumn planting of
back -caps is notrecommended, as 14 15 haul
to make them live if the weather turns dry.
Oddities of Color Blindness,
While the number of color-blind persons
is not very large, only about five in every.
hundred suffering from any defect iti this re.
!pea, and most of those being effectedonly
it minor degree, yet the phenomenon
sometimes itS811111011 very remarkable phases.
Captain Abney recently stated. that he
bad found twopersons who possessed mon-
ochromatic vision, that is to any, all colors
appeared to theni to be simply different
sbades of gray.
If the reader will look at it photograph of
a landscape, or better, of it garden tilled
with brilliant flowers, he will be able to
form an idea. of the appearance which na-
ture mat present to one who suffers from
the infliction called monochromatic vision.
One can sometimes imitate the effects of
color -blindness through over -fatigue of the
eye. Tints Mr. Brett, the English painter,
told the members of the Royal Astronomical
Society not long ago that in painting a scar-
let geranium, After workin g at it for a guar.
ter of an hour, the artist will not know that
ibis scarlet at all, but will go on painting
it as if it were black or colorless "Red,"
he explained, " is a very irritant color to
the retina, and he added that "you eau
look at green until all is blue."
Minerals Alone the North Shore.
That there is gold in abundence along the
north shore of Lake Superior is being con-
stautly proven, says a Duluth paper. The
latest find of the metal is just reported from
a mine owned by Duluth capitalists on the
snore of Black Bay, a few miles from the
location of the now famous Silver Islet
mine. Here a prospeoting crew, at work
since 'Mara looking for lead or silver, bits
Lound gold, reliable assays of which null -
cats that it will yield from $100 a ton up-
ward.
M. Marie, bf Paris, is known as the "Aog
barber." He daily clips from ten to thirty
dogs. The price of it clip is four francs.
The Knights of Labor at Anita, Pa., have
recently built it hall of their own, costing
$10,000.
BAEAD-MAKER'S.
NEVER FAILS IC DIVE SAPSFAOTIOH
FOR SALE SY U.nEALERei
s gatsna 1143'
(HE BEST BEST COUGH' MEDICINE.
GOLD BY DlitiCGISTS EVERYWELBS.
,
PUREST, STROKEST, BEM
Coatains no Alum, Ammonia, Limel,
• Phosphates, or any Inluriant
E. W. GILLETT. Toronto. Ont.
e a' •
;est- tasestasserreraa .. • as a
•
aanaat'
,
tni
A tt<k
sot Vann*
tatatagatt. .-sat'sat'S;,;as.taa
for Infants and Children:
otaastortaisecarelladaptedtocbildrenthat
t recoramene, itaa superioraoanyprescriptien
known to roe." B. Altman, /i.f. D.,
11150. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. "Z;
"The use of Castorfa ' is so traversal and
its merits so well known that it seems a work
of supererootion to endorse it. Few arethe
intelligent fanailleawho do notkeep Oastoria
within easyreach:,
Oarmos MArcrvir, D.D.
New York City,
Late Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed Church,
Castor* cures Colic, Constipatton,
Sour Stomach, Diarrhosa, Xructatlart,
Worins, gives sleep, mut artnnaittt di-
gestion.
Without a:Serious medication.
"For several years bave recommended
yaw Castoria, and shall always continue to
do so as it Jana inveulably produced Beneficial
results."
Eow»F, PARDEN. M. at,
nate Winthrop," I2,5th. Street and 7.118 Ave.,
New Torlt City.
Tax CLIME -UR COWPANY, 17 MI/RELAX STEMITT, Nztv TORS.
sat -a' :la
, CURED IN "'u'sBYADACHEPaWalerS
011•MONRY REFUNDED. Purely Vegetable, Perfectly Harmless
and Pleasant to Take. ForSale by all Druggists. PRICE 25 Cts
MoCOLL BROS% Sc COMPANY
Ton,OZTTON
Manufacturers ail& Wholesale Dealers in the following
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laardinet
Cylmder
I:tea:Engirt°
Wool
0/LS Solt Cluttizte,
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CTR1C .I3EL
a MO TRUNDSA. SIODA DATTLAICS. stscrrafc try WILL. TOO Ana atm. row let HEALTH.
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POLL PARTICULARS. SITOTRIO GOA. WCIAINCITON *TM:CT ILAIrta TORONTO. CANADA..
EXETER LUMBER YARD
The undersigned wishes -to inform the Public in general that It
keeps constantly in stock all kinds of
BUILDING MATERIAL
Dres4ed or trzi.dres;sed.
PINE AND HEMLOCK LUMBER.
SHINGLES A SPECIALTY
900,000 XX and XXX Pine and Cedar Shingles now in
stock. A. call solicited and satisfaction guaranted.
..711.VIEZ WILL=.
Or. LaROE'S COTTON ROOT PILLS2
Safe and absolutely pure. Most isowerful Female Regulator
known. The only safe, sure and reliable pill for sale. LatheS
ask druggists for LaBoe's Star and Crescent Brand. Take no
otherkin.d. Beware of cheap imitations. as they are dangere
ours. Sold by all reliable druggists. Postpaid onreeeipt of price+
AMERICAN PILL CO., Detroit,
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Manufactured only by Thomas Ifolloway, 78, Now Oxford Street,
late 588, Oxford. Street, London,
MT ParChasers should look to the Label on the Boxes and Pots
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3 APITCATiONSTHOROUGHLY REMOVES
DANDRUFF
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Toronto, Travelting 'Passenger amt. C. P.R.,
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draft—ita action is nuirv011otto—in ray own taco
A Cow applications not mlly thorodglayroniowed
exceeslyo dandrult aCcurnulatian but stooppod
GUARANTEED tautgrlY4 ryri;1113!8°Ct "41)11
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Restores Fading hair to Rs
• Original color
Stool Wing of hat
Keeps the Scalp clean, '
Makes hair soil :And PROM
PromoteGrowth, "