HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1892-9-29, Page 4LEGAL,
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KSON, B arristerilSoli-
oh e ."1 a a veJ. la nijilr',"'81.1%:iem°1usrtill.); herr ag
Money to Loan,
Oftloel n mason's Bleak. Exeter,
R
H. CaliLINS,
Barrister, Solicitor, Canveyancer, Etc.
DKETER, ONT,
OFFICE: Over O'Neil's Bank.
ELLIOT & ELLIOT,
Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries ?Alio,
Conveyancers &.-43,
ita'Afoney to Loan at Lowest Batea of
Interest.
DAUB, STREBT, EXETER.
L v. icaercer. T
10/101MISIt
NTAL
DR. 0. H. INGRAlf, DENTIST,
Succe•sor to H. L. Billings.
Me mber of ihn Royal College of Dental
Sm aeons.) Teeth inaerten with or without
piei-e, in Gold or Rulkor. A safe An (esthetic
gain° for the pai Mesa is:KO:action of teeth.
Fine Gold Fillings as Required.
Office over the Post 0Mce.
TTKINSMAN ,DENTIST.L.D.
• S.
Famon's Exeter..
Extracts Teeth without
pain, Away tit Raxsant on
firstFridav .• reale, second
awl fourth 'Plumley: aud
Banton on the last Tillers -
Oa nf one], month.
MEMINVOICIS
. • •
MEDICAL
T W. BAO WNING M. D., IA. 0
oif • P. S• Gra.duate Victoria Univer tr.
011ce, and Y131(148)100, 001.11.1ii Olt Lahr. a
tory . 'Exeter.
11R. ElYNDMAN, coroner for ae
Oonnty of Huron. °Ince, Opp Atte
Carling Bros. s tore,Exet er.
D IL J.A.ROLLINS,M.C.P, S.
0. Office, Mail) St, Exeter, Oat.
Residence, beetle recently occupied by r.
McPhillips
'FIR. T. P. Mc 14411GFILIN, rnM-
LJ ber of the college of Physicians and
Surgeons, Ontario. Physieitin. Surgeon and
Acconclieur. cc ,DASILW 001.1 ON r.
IAT A. THOMSON, M. D., C.
V V • M.. Member of College of PhYsialans
oat Surgeons. Oatioio.
DiancE HODGINS' BLOOK. HENSALL.
1111110111111•1111111
A U01:10Nbliend.
I" , HARDY, LICENSED AU0-•
1.-A• tioneer for the County of Iluron.
:barges moderate. Exeter P. 0.
BOSSENBERRY, General Li-
• censed Auctioneer Sales conducted
b alloarts. Satisfaction guaranteed, Charges
moderate. Heiman P 0, Oat.
TTEiNEY EILBER-Lioan sea Luc -
LL ii °neer for the Counties of Huron
and Mitallesex tietes conducted at mod-
erate rates. Onloo • at Post-ottloe. °rod.
'Out,
D. Alictloneerand Land Valuator. orders
H. PORTER, GENERAL
sent by =tail to my ad tress, Hayti eld P. 0.
willretferve prompt attention. Terms moiler
ate. D. Tr. PORTER, Auctinneer,
earmesauccmzeammumm4
VETERINARY.
Tennent&Tennefft
E.X.uTE:It. ONT.
`L-7.4es.
Graduateeof tbe Ontario Vetorivary Ool
lege.
Orricu ; One aoor eolith otTowu Hall,
__-
MONEY TO LOAN,
IV/TONEY TO LOAN AT 6 AND
ILL percent, $25.000 Private Funds. Best
Loaning Companies represented.
L. Ef DICKSON
Barrister. . Exeter.
v-ert-rt-eve_.
SURVEYING.
TIRED W. FARNOOkB,
Provincial Land Surveyor and Civil En-
G-IXsTMM1.6,102'0. ,
Office, rpstairs.Sam weirs Blook. Exeter, Out
solissomwsme•mo•wwwwwww.••••••
INSURANCE .
'T'HE LONDON MUTUAL
-1. FERE INSURANCE COmPANY OP
CAN ADA . Head °Cie. London, Ont.
After 23 years of successful business, still
continues to offer the owners of farm property
and private residences, either on buildings or
eon ten tit„the most fayerahl e protection in etl,se
of loss ordamageby fireorlightning, at rates
upon such Liberal terms. that no °that respect,
ablecompany eanalford to write. 8SX0 poli-
cies in force lst.Tan ,1B02. Assets 1:167.200.00
in cash in bank. Amount at risk, $14,913,032.
Government denostriebentnres and Pre-
mium Notes. CAPT. THOS. E. 11013SON, Pre-
sident ; D. C. MoCmNLn,Manager. DAVID
Janina, Agen t for E x eter end vicinity,
glum WATERLOO MUTUAL
1 FIRE INSUBANO EC 0 .
Established in 1863.
1-1E413. OFFICE • WATERLOO, ONT.
"Tliis Company has been over Twenly-eigh
years in successful °per ttion in Western
Ontario, and continues to insure against loss or
damage by. FirBui !dings, inerehandise
Manufactories and all other descriptioas of
insurable property.. Intending insurers have
the option of insuring on the Premium Note or
Cash System.
Daring the past ten years this company has
issae(157,005 Policies, covering property to the
amount of $40,872 038; and paid in losses alone
3709,752 00.
A.ssets. 81.16.100-00, consisting of Cash
in Bank Government Deposit and the unasses-
sed. Premium. Notes on hand and in force
a.vir-wAtss14, M.D.. President; 0 M. Teyeact
Secretary ; .1. B. Hermes, Inspector , 011AS
BELL, Agent for Exeter and vicinity
ITEPIS OF INTEREST.
••••••••••••
About a quarter of the people in Paris
live in apartments.
The forts aroma' Paris have sufficient food
to lest three years.
There &resold to be 1,000 so called haunt-
ed hoeses in Lontion.
Since footballbecame popular in this
country there has been it 'narked increase in
the sale of arnica and sticking -plaster.
Five copies it minute of the Bible, or part
of it, aro sent out by the 'British and Foreigu
Bible Sooiety every week -day throughout
the year.
Japanese dootors never present bills to
their patients. They- await the patient's
inclinetion to pay, end then thauktully
ao-
oopt whatever sum ie offered.
• Musk in its natural state is said to be the
national perfume of many tribes, who annual-
ly slaughter thousands of the rats for their
musk pouches and their skins.
• It is slid that there are 2,403 disorders
to which the human frame is subject, and
when it man has got the influenza, he im-
agines he has got all the other '2,399.
The London Rowing Club,founded in 1856,
has between 550 and. 600 mernbers. Their
boathoase cet Patney cost nearly 83,000.
Colours, blue and white vertical stripes.
The Rothschilds smoke Henry Clay's
"Sopranos," which cost five or six shillings
each. They are wrapped in gold leaf and
packed in little inlaid cedar -wood cabinets.
The organist at a Cardiff church found
several of the notes soundless. An examine -
tion revealed the fact that no fewer than
six birds, including a robin, had built their
nests in the pipes.
In 1891 a minket match for a stake of 500
guineas was played by the ladies of Hamp-
shire against the ladies of Surrey. After it
close contest which lasted three days, the
fornaer team proved victorious.
Alcohol was invented 750 years ago, by
the son of a strange womau, Hagar, in
Arabia. Ladies used it with a powder to
paint themselves that they might appear
more beautiful, and this powder was called
alcohol.
The only soprano in the world who makes
higher tones them. Patti is said to be Miss
Sibyl Sandersou,daughter of Judge Sander-
son, of San Francisco. In addition to her
musical powers, she is said to possess charms
of person and to be very clever.
In 1632 it is recorded that a man named
Claudins,a, uative of Lorraine, a very short,
thin individual, used frequently to swallow
with impunity pieces of glass, stones, pieces
of .wood, hay, straw, hares' feet, pieces of
linen, cloth, and small living animals, in-
cluding, on one occasion, a couple of mice.
The steel trusses that support the manu-
facturers' building at the World's Fair,
Chicago, will be the largest in the world.
Each truss will cover aspen of 30 feet, and
from the centre of the roof inside to the
ground there will be a ffistance of 206 feet.
Each truss weighs 200 tons, and 6,000 tons
of steel will be used in the roof of the build-
ing.
Mademoiselle Sermisa Bileesco, the first
1V0111:th admitted to the Bar in France, is
said to have taken the highest rank in it
class of five hundred men et the Boole du
Droit, Paris, where she studied after remise-
ing the degree of bachelor of letters and
science in Bucharest. She has begun to
practice law in the latter city, where her
father is a beaker.
Many well-dressed London dandies have
contracts with West -end florists for the sup-
ply of buttonholes. As a rule the charge is
about LI is week, and this includes two
buttonholes daily, one for wear during the
day and the other for the evenings. The
cast-off buttonholes beecome the perquisites
of the valet, and it is usually supposed this
gentleman returns them to the florist, and
adds to hispocket-money considerably there-
by.
eURE
POWDEilE0
T
•/PUREST, STRONGEST, BEST,.
Y'or use in enletutritityler making Soap.,
•801nIng Water. Dismiecting. and a hundred ocher
Wet%• A ca: equale ;te pounds Sal Soda,
avid, b tfl Orocera nad Druggists.
Wetarfaxwegas.
It Had a Big Root!
A pig -beaded sort of it Scotehman, suffer-
ing from the toothache, entered a dentist's
shop the other day and wanted that gentle-
man to give him some relief,
"Well, sir, what can I do for you ?"
asked the dentist.
"1 want ye tae talc' oot this confounded
tooth o' mine.,"
a All right, sir ; take a eeet. I'll be at
your service immediately," sadd the dentist,
bustling about and getting his instruments
ready.
The man sat down, and in a short time
the dentist had his instruments applied to
the offending tooth. But just as he was
about to pull it the patient shut his mouth
thus preventing the dentist fa om proceeding
with his work. Again and again did he
apply his instruments to the tooth; and
again and again did the man shut his mouth,
until the patience of the dentist was quite
exhausted.
Calling his assistant, he whispered to him
to get a long brass pin, and told him, when
he had the instruments on the tooth, he was
to go quietly behind the chair and push the
pin right into the calf of the man's leg.
The boy promised to obey, and once agein
the worthy dentist essayed to extract the
tooth.
The instruments were once more applied,
and the stupid man was about to shut his
mouth again, when the boy, with a riget
good will, shoved the pin into his leg. Ut-
tering it loud yell of pain, which resounded
through the room, the man opened his
mouth widely. Taking advantage of the
opportunity, which was too good to be lost,
the dentist gave one pull and out flew the
tooth.
After the pain had somewhat subsided,
the man, not in the least suspecting the
trick which had been played on bim, said,
rubbing the calf of his leg where it had been
pierced by the pin at the same time, "Man,
doctor, that tooth of mine had an awfu'
long root 1"
•SEA POWLLN A STORM -
They Dread the Fury or the Ocean Worse
Than the Sailorman Does. •
Far out a,t sea the birds utter wild cries
of alarm when the ocean begins to derken
and the wind to mcatu across the expan-
sive waste of waters„ and with all the
speed possible they fly towards some point
of land to eseepe the danger. The few
which are caught in the storm, far from
the land, make the wild screaming of the
storm more horrible by their piteous cries
and excited calls. Washed hither and
thither by the relentless storm, they fly
around in hopeless search for some harbor
of retreat. Should the light of :some pass-
ing vessel or the flesh light of a warning
lighthouse attract their attention'they are
lured on to danger fur greater than that
experienced from the waves and • winds.
Storms do not always warn the birds in
time to permit them to reach the shore.
The tense, petrels, gulls, ducks, and other
sea fowl may be far from shore ekimming
over the water in graceful sweeps when a
coast storm suddenly conies out of the north-
west. At the first sign of suck a change in
the weather the birds invariablg seek some
harbor of safety, but if the storm shuts them
out from he coast they are forced to fly
around in flocks until accident leads them
to it retreat. Sea fowl at such times flock
together, and lost company may number
thousands, representing. it heterogenous
collection of all the species of sea birds,
Stich motley zolleotions frequently dash
against the lighthouse of some exposed
point, where hundreds are killed by the col-
lision. Ocean steamers serve as an allure-
ment, for them, and they follow the light, of
the vessel as a moth does the candle lighe.
If not attrected by auy light, the birds fly
around until exhausted by their exertions
or until the atorrn abates. During pro-
longed storms thousands of lost sea fowl
are destroyed upon the °maxi through their
inability to reach land or to outride the
furiona gales. While a largo proportion of
the flock would eventually succumb to the
fury of the wind and wastes there are many
others that would show their marvellous
powers in outriding the storm.
To fly against it gale that is blowing at
the rate of forty of rfty miles an hour would
require bones of iron and musulee of steel,
and the lost birds very rarely succeed in
holding their own in such a storm. They
buffet with the gale bravely, circling around
and around to make heativetty againatit, but
in time they are swept far out to sea. The
waves offer no resting place for them, and
• they are forced to trust entirely to their
wings for satety. After heavy storms of
several days the terns and petrels have
Leen found a thousand miles from the
shore, week and almost dead from their ex-
ertions.
Others have been discovered floating on
the water dead, the black and blue patches
on their bodies telling the terrible story of
strain and hopeless exertion. They fought
bravely against tile adverse elements, and
only succumb° 1 after a long betel°. In-
coming vessels have brought solitary sea
fowl that would light upon the masts of the
ships when completely exhausted after fight-
ing against the storms. This welcome place
of rest is secured despite all danger frona
the passengers.
Floating spars and wrecks have been the
means of saving the lives of each lost lairds.
They would float on them for hours or days
until they became thoroughly rested from
their labors, and then they would begin
their long journey toward some shore at the
first fievorable opportunity. Their instinct
at such times is unerring, and they gener-
ally make for the nearest point of land, al-
though it may be hundreds of miles away,
and they are completely turned around, It
may be, however, that they take their bear-
inge from the sun while they are floating
upon their temporary restless buoys.
Nearly all of the sea birds like to keep
out to sea, and in the north of Ireland. there
is en old rhythe current which indicates that
the gulls only approach the shore when
driven in by a storm or by the warnings of
it heavy gale. the couplet reads;
Sae gall, sea gull. it cm, the sand.:
It's never lino weather when you conio to
land.
When the storm approaches the long,
sharp whistling of the curlews, the wild
cries of the seagulls, cool the sharp, piercing
screams of the terns announce that danger
is at hand. The sea grows restless and chop-
py. An occasional puff of wind will moan
across the water and force whitecaps iuto
motion. The birds then assemble along the
shore, some seeking for their food. among
the rocks half a mile out, while others will
ran along the beach or go to the inland
marshes.
As the fury of the storm inoreesee all of
them will get in beyond the reach of the
wild waves. The heavy wind makes flying it
difficult art, and most of them trust to their
legs. They run along the sand or hide in the
rocks. The terns and gulls will occasionally
venture out over the waves to fish for food,
but they soon find that the work is unprolit.
able.
When the storm has subsided the coasts
are great objects of interest to the sports.
men. Every speeiesof searfovel is to be fouud
somewhere along all the beaches or inland
marshes. They do not return to the wide
sea for a day or two after the storrn has
abated, end then they are driven there by
the hunter's gun.
Bow to Drill it Ohild Whose Shoulders
Stoop -
1. Stand, feet together, weight over the
center of each foot, hands at side. Raise
arms sidewise to level with shoulders,
taking a deep breath at the same tune;
lower arms slowly, exhaling.
2. Raise arms sidewise overlea,a, inhaling;
lower arms, exhaling. See that neither the
head nor tho abdomen be pushed forward.
3. Bond arms at elbows, hands in front of
shoulders, brought as far sidewise as pos-
sible, elbows close to side ; extend upward,
palms in, arms carried back and stretching
up as far as possible. Avoid tendency
mentioned in second exercise.
4. Same as 1n3. Extend hands straight
out at side, fingers leading.
5. Same as in 3. Extend hands down-
ward and back of the hips,
6. Bend arms at elbows, lift sidewise to
horizontal, elbows drawn well backward,
palms down, forearm and hand on it straight
line ; fling forearms out and back till on a
line with upper arm. Keep chest well ex-
panded. This throws the chest out,
presses the shoulder blades down, and
corrects the tendency to round shoulders.
These exercises educate, strengthen and
develop the muscles .desigted by nature to
hold the body in an ereetposieion. Repeat
each exercise several times.
--ea--
William's Answer Floored Him.
It was a capital little spread. The land-
lord of the hotel had done his best, and the
diners, half -a -dozen friends who met to
celebrate the fourtieth birthday of one of
their number, were mightily satisfied with
the good things set before them.
Soup, fish, a,nd entree had been succiis-
sively discussed, and then oarne a pair of
birds reasted to a turn with a salad de
cressons, dressed a rhuile-a very truimph
of the cook's art. Bat, alas! that salad was
destined to cause a commotion. As the
giver of the feast was helping himself to
a plentiful portion thereof, he disoovered
among the clerk green leaves a shirt button.
"William," he shouted.
" Yessir," said William, gliding noitieless-
ly to the chair of the speaker.
• "Look at that, sir. Do you know what
Shat is ?" was the angry inquiry.
• "Yessir, certainly, sir. A shirt button,
sir," relpied William, calmly. •
"Yes, and I found it in the salad-iit the
sled 1" was the irate explanation.
"Dear me sir? In the salad, air? Ah,
part of the dressing, perhaps, sir 1"
Then the feast giver fainted away.
QUEEN VICTORIA'S DOGS.
--
Ant Ariatocratie Trui.ortten,r/ery Comfortable
4
Dogs were first admitted to the court of
England in the reign of Henry VIII, Under
She present reign three dogs have been ole
vated to the highest canine dignities on
account of their aristocrotic families and
their own peculiar merits. The nemes of
She aristocratic trio are Maroo, Roy, and
Spot. Memo is the Queen's favorite, and
he used to be eery jealous of John Brown
His ancestry can be traced back to the
crusaders. He is what they call in England
a Pomeranian, and at one Of the recent dog
shows he won the first prize, the mug et
honor. The other favorite, Roy, is it collie
and Spot is a fox terrier with a reeord of
twenty-two rats in a quarter of an hour.
These canine lords have their residences
w:tb their special names, Her Majesty's
tin pace is divided into three parts, the
Queen's veranda, collie court, and umbrella.
court. The veranda is the principal one.
It is a covered gallery around the kennel,
and the Queen likes to walk there.
Each kennel has it dining room and a bed-
room. The floor of the dining room is separ-
ated from the veranda by an iron grating.
It is paved with red anti bine bricks, and
the furniture consists of a trough, always
full of fresh water. The bedrooms have two
large windows, generally kept open for the
i
purpose of ventilation, and n a sung corner
iu eaoh room there is it very low bed with a
mat:mass of fresh straw.
Umbrella court gets its mini from the
big umbrella in the middle of it, under which
the dogs can shelter themselves from the
sun and ria. A host of servants wait upon
the canine nobility, and the Queen is very
severe with the officials who do not pay
proper attention to her dogs. A chef is
provided for them, and his instructions are
to vary the menu of the dinners of her
Majesty's pets and to consulttheir tastes.
Tho Paper 4e.
The world has seen its iron age and its
brazeu age, but this is the age of paper,
says the -Paper Record. We are making so
many things of paper that it will soon be
true that without paper there is nothing
Made, We live in peper houses, wear paper
clothing, and sit on paper cuehions in paper
cars rolling on paper wheels. If we lived
in Bergen we could go on Sunday to a, paper
church, We do it paper business over paper
counters, buying paper goods, peying for
them with paper money, and deal in paper
stoelce on paper margins. We row races in
paper boats for paper prizes. We go to
raper theatres where paper actors play to
paper audiences.
As the age develops the corning men will
become more deeply enmeshed in the paper
net. Ho will a.wahe in the morning, and
creep from under the paper clothing of his
paper bed, and put on his paper dressing
gown and his peperslippers. He will walk
over paper cerpete, down paper stairs, and,
seating himself 10 it paper chair, will road
the paper news in the morning paper. .A
paper bell will call him to itis breakfast,
cooked in it paper oven, served on paper
dishes, laid on paper cloth on a paper table,
He will wipe his Iliss on a paper napkin,
and, having put on his paper shoes, paper
hat, and parer coat, and then taking his
paper stick (he has the choice of two de-
scriptions already), he will walk on a paper
paYeMent or ride in it paper carriage to his
paper office. He will organize paper enter-
prises tend make paper profits. He will sail
the ocean on paper steamships and navigate
the air in paper laalloons. Ile will smoke a
paper Cigar or paper tobacco iu it paper
pipe, lighted with a paper match. He will
write with it paper pencil, whittle paper
sticks with is paper knife, go fishing with a
paper fishing rod and a paper hook, and put
his catch in a paper basket. He will go
shooting with a paper gun, loaded with
paper cartridges, anti will defend his coun-
try 10 paper forts with paper canyon and
paper bombs.
Having lived his paper life and achieved.
his paper fame and paper wealth, he will
retire to paper leiaure and die in paper
peace. There will be a paper funeral,
at which the mourners, dressed in paper
crape will wipe their oyes in a paper hand.
kerchief, and the preacher will preach in a
paper pulpy. He will lie in a .paper coffin;
elsewhere bn this paper it will be seen that
he has a chance of doing so already if he is
a paper -we mean pauper. He will be
wrapped in it paper shroud, his nante will
be engraved on a paper plate, and a paper
hearse adorned. with paper plumes, will
carry lint to a paper -lined grave, over
whichwill be raised a paper monument.
A Naval Sham Eight.
Capt. Blair, the master of the Glasgow
steamer "Mastiff," which arrived at the
Prince's Landing -stage, Liverpool, on Wed-
nesday, reports thathe wituessed a great
naval action off the Isle of Man, between a
fleet of warships. The action commenced.
at half past eleven o'clouk on Tuesday night,
mud continued with but slight intermission
midi 1.30 on Wednesday morning. Alto.
gether twenty-three ironclads were engaged,
thirteen of which were ranged in line of bat-
tle, and cannonaded the enemy, which was
evidently defending the Irish coast. The
electric smell lights were brought into fre-
quent requisttion, though the scene was lit
up by the brilliant beams of the moon. The
contending ships kept blazing away at each
other, and for some time the conflict seemed
to rage with equal. success on either side.
But at length the attacking force sheered off
to the north, leaving the defenders uncon-
quered and unchecked. The captain adds
that this combat at, sea by moonlight was
one of the grandest und most impressive
spectacles he ever saw. -[English Paper.
How it Ended.
FonclFather : "Well, Ardelia, how did
you come out in that game of chess with
young Fitzwilliam last evening ?"
Ardelia. (blushingly) : "Qh, it ended ha a
draw, pa." •
• Fond lather : 'Ah!a draw ?"
Arden°, " Yet, sir. Charles drew me
upon his lap and asked me to be his wife.'
• Venus.
The planet Venus continues to puzzle the
astronomers. It is a world so closely re-
seinbling the earth in size that one might
naturally enough expect to find many other
reserriblanceS between them
-
But there is some peculiarity in. Venus's
atmosphere whieh render a the telescopic
study of the planet's surface exceedingly
difficult. In fact, its atmosphere seems to
be so extraordinarily cloudy that only the
merest glimpses of the globe beneath can
occasionally be caught.
A recent review of the results of twenty
years' observation ef Venus by Trouvelot,
the French astronomer, indicates that the
surface'of Shat planet is no less extraordin-
ary than the atmosphere which covers it.
Trouvelot thinks thet certain white spots .
seen on Venus are the tops of vast moun-
tains which protrude above the cloud -laden
atmosphere. Ceriously enough, these moun-
tains are nearly all in the neighborhood of
the poles.
Observations by J. 3. Lauderer on the
polarization of light reflected from Venus
appear to bear out Trouvelot's conclusions.
Landerer believes that the phenomena ob.
served by him indicate that the whole ours
face of the planet must be covered by a thick
layer ef clouds, except in the polar regiona,
where parts of the surface extend above the
clouds.
CO.NSIMPTION CURED.
An old physician retired from praetice,haY
mg had placeti in his hands by an East India
missionary the formult of it simple vegetable
remedy for the speedy and permanent cure for
Consumption. Bronchitis, Catarrii.Astinna and
all throat and lung affection:4, also it positive
and radical cure tor 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 follows. Actuated by this motive
and is desire to relieve human suffering, I will
send (meat charge, to all who desire it, the
recipe in German; Froneh or English withful
directions for preparing and using. Sent by
mail by addressing with sunup, naming_ thia
Paper. W. 4, NOYES, 321 Power's Ielocle
rectiester, N. Y.
The famous handwriting expert, David N.
Carvallo>, asserts that "no man does Or can
tt rite his signature twice exactly alike."
He therefore Advances the startling proposi-
tion that "when two signatures purporting
to have *aeon written by the samepersonare
pireeisely. alike 15 18 safe to e0nolude that One
of them is a forgery."
?Then Baby was sick, we nave ber Casterba
When shelves a Child, she cried for Castol'ia,
When she became Miss, she clung to Castarla,
When she had Children, shogavethem Casuals.
People Wonder'
WHEN they Arid how rapidly health
V V is restored by taking Ayer's Bare
saparilla. The reason is that this
preparation contains only the purest
and most powerful alteratives and
tonics. To thousands yearly it proves a
veritable Jos.leeL(!,
elixir allife
Mrs,
Brockway- Centre.
Mich., writes "Liver complaint and
indigestion made inY life a bittelc.i
and came near ending my existence.
For More than four years I suffered un-
told agony. I was reduced almost to
es skeleton, and hardly had strength to
drag myself about. All kinds of food,
distressed 1110, and only the most deli-
cate could be digested at all. Within
the time mentioned several physicians
treated me without giving relief. .Nothe
ing that I took seemed to do any per -
=anent good until I began the use of
Ayer's Sarsaparilla, which has pro-
duced wonderful results. Soon after
commencing to take the Sarsaparilla
could see ara
Improvement
in any condition, my appetite began US
return and witlt it came the ability to
digest all the food taken, my strength
improved each day, and after a few
ezionths of faithful attention to your
directions, I found myself a Well.
\Milian, able to attend to all lionsAold
calties. The medicine has given me %
nAur lease of life, aud I cannot thank
yan too much."
We the undersigned, citizens of
B.Mckway Centre, Niel., hereby certify
thot the above statement, made by
rs. Lake, is, true in every particular
at'd entitledeto full credence."- O. P.
ChunberlaimG. W. Waring, 0. A.
'Wells, Druggist.
ttlay brother, in England, was, for a
long tirao, unable to attend to his occu-
pation, by reason .of sores on hie foot.
I sent him Ayer's Alinanac and the tes-
timonials it contained induced him to
try Ayer's Sarsaparilla. After using it
a little while, he was cured, and is now
a well man, working in a sugar mill
at Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.tt...
Attewell, Sharbot Lake, Ontario,
Aye's Sarsaparilla,
rusrAnnia
Dr. J. 0. Ayer & 00., Lowell, NlaSa's
Price el; rixbottles,e5. Worth vault:de.
• THE
ANyEXETER,
v TIMES
....••••••••••••
INE KEY It riaLYIL,
It la a certain sad spoetis cure fa
CI old la the gond givtarrh taRlItto
ltages.
SOOTHIN, CLEANSINO.
fl EALING.
Instant Relief, Permanen
Cure, FaillIPS Impossible.
litany malted amen are eirnply
symptoms of Catarrh, such as head.
aebe, partial deatners, loin; sense of
smell.foul breath, hawking and Bolt.
Vag, nausea. genetitt feeling a do-
bilay, ate. II you are troubled with
any of these or Winked s,vmptouts,
yourhave Catarrh, and should lose no
time in traceries bottla ot Nana.
DkrAr. Be maned lo time, inmate
cola in head results in Catarrh. fe1.
lowed by conaniptim and death.
NALLY. T'LW le solti by all Muggists,
or will be sent. post mitt, on receipt a
pricet60 cents andS1.00)by addresseig
FULFORD & 00,,
Brockville, Ont.
Scientific American
Agency for;
CAVEATS.
TRADE MARKS,
DEsiCN PATENTS
C0PYR1CHTS, etc.
For information and free liandbook write to
MUNN & 00., 361 BROADWAY, NEW TORR.
Oldest bureau for securing patents in America.
Elven, patent taken out by us is bronght before
I be public by a notice given free of charge in the
fziontifizinifl
Largest circulation of any scientific paper in the
world. Splendidly illustrated. No Intelligent
man ebould be without it. Weekly, 83.00 a
year; 81.50 siX months. Address MUNN & CO.,
Y13.111.1SDBRS, all Broadway, New YOrk.
New Wrinkles for Engineers.
In writing on graphite, an engineer recom
mends the use of that very valuable article
in same unfamilar way. He says he has
used handhole and manhole gaskets eight or
ten times by carefully smearing the surface
next the boiler shell with graphite. In
packing water glasses, by putting a little
graphite or oil on the gasket they would
vulcanize as soft as a lamp wick, and retain
their elasticity until the glass changed,
when the old rubbee could be ,. eemoved
without trouble.
In -the old way the rubber would be leek-
edas herd as vulcanite, and take much
time to dig gat. Another use of graphite
is in putting back the handholle plate of
plags in the hack connection. All the soot
and ashes should be carefully brushed
away, and with a small brush, a good coat
of graphite should be laid over the flange,
stud and nuts, After running the boiler
from three to six months, even using coke
for fuel, with forced draft, the ants can be
removed without trouble, as the heat has
not been great enough to burn the lead.
Sinking a Cork.
• If a cork is sunk 200 feet deep in water
it will not riseagain to the surface, the
weight of the water . being sufficient to
keep it under:
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria?
EH HALF -YEARLY COMPETITE
UnIodkt ol1 the el! aVentteff of the
Bowels, Kidneys and Li.ver, carrying
off gradually without weal ming the sys-
tem, all tho impurities or I foul humors
of the secretions; at the same time Cor-
reeting Acidity of the Stomach,
curing Biliousness, Dyspepsia,
Headaches, Dizziness, Heartburn,
Constipation, Dryness of' the Skin,
Dropsy, Dimness of Vision, Jaun-
dice, Salt Rheum, Erysip_elas, Sero-
fala, Fluttering of the Heart, Ner-
vousness, and General Debility ;all
'Iwo and many other similar Complaints
1 to the happy inflixence of BURDOCK
BITTERS.
For Salo by all Zealot,.
NriTABH&O.,Proprictors,Toront/.
The most Interesting Contest ever °fierce
by The Canadian Agriculturist. "
Ono Thousand Dollars in Cash, a Pair of Tfatulsor.
Shetland Ponies, Can Inge and Harness, nnd et er to •
thousand other valuable pr.zes for the Agrieultinict
brightest readers!, 1V110 will have thent? Aceording
the usual custom for some years pat the puhlishers o.
TUB AanlOW.TORTST nnw offer their Sixtli Balf-yinth
Literary Competition. Tide grand competition 10111, 0
doubt, be the most gigantic and successful one ever 51
anted to the people of the United States and Canada
One Thousand Dollars in cash will be paid to the
son sending in the largest list of English words c
seturiutuetrisedcfrm letters in the words "The Canadian ALr.
Five Hundred Dollars in cash win be given to tht
second largest list
A. Handsome Pair of Shetland Ponies, Carriage am'
'Harness, will be givrn for the third largest list
. Over one thousand additional pizes awarded in orda
nf nierit: One Grand Piano; 5200 Organ; 5400 Piano
Dinner Sets; Ladies' Gold Watches': Silk Dress Patterns,
Portiere Curtains, Silver Tea Services; Tennyson'sreeint.
bound in elothfruckens' in 12 volunat, bound in cloth, ete
Amthan s there e Snore an 10011 prizes, any Ono 1010 takt
the trouble to prepare an ordinary. good list trill not In,
• 0 receive a valuable prize This is the biggest thing it
the competition line that we have ever placed before 0.
public, and all who do nob take pelt will miss au oppta
ttinity of a life Mine.
Euras-1, A letter cannot be used oftner than i
Ausgrce tp.tist utrhi bob;
ThFitTrcianrstainacetht bee 71•°/rdds "'egTgl'''acoljualdnindio tanb
is but one "g" In the three words. 2. Words having mni
Lhnn one moaning but spelled the same can he need 1.1
once. 3. Nantes of places and persons barred. 4. Erre;
will not invalidate a list -the wrong words will
not be counted.
Each list mat contain one dollar to pay torsi: montbs.
tubseription to THE AnitioULTITIVIV, if two or Mt
tie, the largest list which bale the earliest postmark wi.
take the th a prize, and the others will receive prizes it
order of merit. United States money anti stamps take.;
at. par.
Theobjeet In offering these magnificent prizes is b
,ntroduce our popular magazine into new homes, in ever,
pat of the American continent ••
Every eonmetiter erioloshig 30 cents in -stamps extra
will receive freti; by mail, postpaid, one to Tun AGIVIOUL.
Tow sr's BleEnnt SOuvonir Spoons of Canada.
Prizes awarded 10 50180215 residing In the 'United stew
will be shipped from our New York office free of duty
All money letters should be registered.
Oun FOnlinn COMVETITZON-Wo have giVen awny
P.5 ,000 in prizes during the last two years, and hay,
thousands of letters from prize -sinners in every etate in
lie Anion and every part of Canada and NOWtounalant).
Lord Rileoursie A.D.C. te the Governor General ot
Canada, writes: '"I shalt rycemmend my friends to ate)
,otar annpotitIonil," 31. IL Braden, Yaneouva, B. C.,
'received 51000 in geld" and we hold his recemtfor same.
k few of the prize winners: 111Iss J. Bobicaon, • Toronto,
3500; J. J. Brandon, renelan Falls, Ont., WO; David
,71;firria 6yrneUN
se, . Y., $335; Beavis' fit. Louis
020; Jas. Baptie, West Duluth, Minn.,4500 ; MRS
leorgina Robertson, Oak St, Brooklyn, 51000; Fred 11.
Pus, 359 State St, 13ridgeport, Coml., and thousands of
lArtras all communications to Tun Acnticuif`rAt T.
veterborough, Ontario.
THEEKETER TIMES.
Ispublisae d every Thursday Metall* *at
TIMES STEAM PRINTING ROUSE
liain-street,nearly opposite littou's Jewelory
fitoze,Exoter,Out,by.John Waitu & Sons, Prot
nrustors.
mans or ADVERTISI:63
Eirstinsortion, per line 10 cents
%Bch subsequeatinsertion ,per line.. _3 cents
To insure insertioa, ativertisenumits shout
es Benzin notlater teen Weduesday morning
Dur3OR PRINTING DElP NBTMENP is eas
oftbe largest and best equipped in the County
o• nuromall work entruste.i co 113 Will res4tva
or prompt attention:
Decsions itegarding News-
papers.
lAnypersonwho takes a paper regularly from
the post-oftice, whether directed in his name or
anothees, or whether he has subscribil or not
is responsible for payment.
2 If a person orders his paper discontinued
he must pay all arrears or the publisher may
ontinue to send It until the payment Is made,
nd then collect the whole amount, whether
epaper is takonfrom the °Mee or not
3 In suits for subscriptions, the snit may be
nstitutcd in the place where the paper is pub
ished, although tho subscriber may reside
hundreds 01 201108 away.
t The courts have doeided that refusing to
takonewspapers orporiodicals front the post.
office. or removing and leaving them uncalled
er ' facie evidence of intentioned fraud!
INTERCOLON IAL
RAILWAY
OF CANADA,
The direct route between the West and all
points on the Lower St. Lawrence and Otte
des Chalon r,Provinee of Quebec; ale° for
New Brunswick ,Nova Scotia ,Pr Ince Edward
CanellretonIslimds ,an d Newfoandlan dand
St. Pierre.
Express 'trains leave Mout realan d Halifax
daily (Sundays excepted) and run through
without °bang° between these points in 23
hours and 55 minutes.
The through express train ears of the In-
tercolonial Beltway are brillien tly I.gb tad
by electricity and heated by Moam frOlO the
locomotive, thus greatly increasing the oo.n
fort and safety 01 travellers,
Now and elegant buffets leaping and day
cars are run o n broil gh spresstralant.
Canadian -European Mail and
Passer.ger 'Route. •
PIssengerefer Gr oat Britainer the Irma -
Dont by leaving Montleal on Wriday morning
will jnin outward .mail steamer t Halifax
03113aturde.y.
• The attention ofash topers is directed tothe
superior facillt los offered by thii anutefor
the transport offlo0 r and generoi merchan-
dise intended for theEasteirn Provinces r. -id
Newfoundland ; also for shoo:mute of grain
andproduceintended for 51.10 Europ seminar
ket. •
Tickets may be obtained andi n forma tion
about the route; aiso freight and peesenger
rates on au pliention to
•N WE A THERSTON ,
WesternEreight &Passenge aseent
931.1essin31on0e Block ;York 255 :Secant
D POTTINGEB,
Chief Superintendent.
Railway Oftlee,Moucton,
Jan lst91 •