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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1893-7-20, Page 3ON xmlro-sre Both the method, and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and. acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys- tem edectually, dispels colds, head- aches aq,Severs ancl cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro- duced, pleasing to the taste and ac-, ceptable to the stomach, prompt 111 its action and truly benedcial in its effects, prepared only frona the most healthy and agreeable substances, its raanyexcellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most vopular remedy known. Syrup of Figs 'is for sale in no hottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it prompt1y for any one who wishes to try it. Manufactured only by the °RAINED IN A DUNGEON. staatiing: Tale of Crueltiee Fractised in. an American Bteformetory, 'what a nOntn Suffered. A Buffalo deapetch Bays ;—On the 20th of last October Frank L. Wallace, 21 years of age, eta(' before Jactge Seaver in the Court of Seseions and pleaded guilty to the charge of grand lereeney. He had stolen some property from one of the cheap hotels in Buffalo, and bad been errested in the Cen- tral statiell as he was about to Imre. When taken iuto the Police Court on the morning after his arrest he raised the window near the prthonerebox and jumped to the ground. Although he was considarabla injured by his daring leap, be succeeded in getting as far as the oe.nal before he was caught. As soon as he had sufficiently recovered from his injuries he was taken before Judge Seaver and sentenced to the Elmira refer. rnatory under the usual " indeterminate" 'sentence until he should be disebarged ac- cording to IBM. Since that day, according to his own statements and other evidences, he has suffered what few men have suffered in the civil prisons of America. If what be states in the following letter to Judge Saver, dna what he toll the writer yeater- day, ie true, there le a burning need a ref- ormation in the Eirairaireformatory, ev'nieh shall reale not only the inmates, but the man who is at the head of the institution. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. say leneiallOIS00, kams"97,101.2,1= NEW -701tIa, zr,./ Vor Sale at C. Lutz's Drug Store Admirals 'Who Have Been Drowned. Sir George Tryon is the fourth British admiral who has lost hie life by shipwreck or disaster unconnected with warfare since the beginning of the last century, says The World, In October, 1707, Sir Cloudesley Shovel shared the fate of the crew of the Association ; and on. August 29, 1782, Ad. miral Kempenfoldt was drowned by the "heeling over e of the Royal George. The great lose of life by the sinking of the Vie. toria is escribed to her suddenly heeling over as in the case of the Royal George; but the present catastrophe is, by compari- son, not nearly as appeelineg as the ship- wreck of the Se. George, the Defeuce and the Hero, on the coast of Jutland in 1811, wben Admiral Reynolds and two thousand sailers perished. How Amiable of Him This pretty story is told of a distinguish- ed lawyer. , He and his wife were at a so- cial gatherina, where the question was (he- mmed, " ITO would you rather be if not yourself ?" His wife asked him for his reply to the question. He answered, promptly, "Your aecond husband, dear.' ICE tTAZ-TTED TO SPAItil HIS TIMMER. When seatenced by Judge Seaver, Wal- lace refused to give the names and address. es of his relatives, saying that he did so to squire hie mother the path of anowing ide diserace, O theu hoped to get out in eta menthe or a year at the moat, and return home. He admitted that the name he gave was fietibious. He was sent to Elmira on Oct 21, and when questioned by Keeper Brockway as to his relatives, still refused to give any informetiou, aud for the same reasons, For this refusal Wallace was punished. He told the following story Offet to the world a large, generous, true, sympathlic nature and, rich or poor, you will neAr be friendleas, no matter what estastrophiee may overtake you. .Au electric alarm bell for use on trains, to supercede the unsatisfactory cord com- munication has been successfully tried in Scotland. In addition to serving as 'an alarm it can. be used for starting trains front the guard's van, instead of the pres. ent method of, whistling and waving of flags. atonsiderable discontent has lately been aroused in the Spanish province of Corunna because of propaed military measures. Shops have been (stead, balconies draped in black, auci a defence association, with a 4ollsiderab1e fund, formed. Pamphlets have been eiroulated advocating a British pro- tectorate over the province. Civic guards and troops have been concentrated in readi- ness to suppress an unlawful outbreak. oft. .... : 1 ...... "1 will tell you the tenth and nothing more," he said, in a way that showed be meant a. "On my arrival at the reformatory I was taken before Supt. Brockway and asked a great rawly dixestions, I answered everything to the best of my ability until he came to t/ee question about my home and my parents. I reread to give any lateral• ation on these points. Please exam we sir,' I from answering these questions. I will tail you anything else in my power, bat I can't tell you these things." He asked me why, and I told him. I explained to him that my mother wait in poor health, that I thought a great deal of her, and that I believed it would kill her if she knew what end I hencome to. Be kept pressing me, but I would not tell. Then he became sarcastic, and asked me if 1 didn'b know that hotould loosen. my tongue in iust five minutes if be wanted to. I oaly replied that I was willing to obey all rules If he woula only not press moon these queations. Then he became angry and ordered. a guard to take me to the dungeon. What I suffer. ed there that first night 1 can, never forget. It is a email cell without a ray of light, end so far below ground that all noose is ehut off. The guard took me there, and leading me to a corner made me get down on my knees and. then he snapped shackles on both my wrists. I could lewdly realize tvhat had taken place until the door hatl been locked and I at- tempted to straighten up. Then I found that 1 Isad been chained to the floor in a dark, suffocating cell, and that the obains were so ehort that I could not get on ney feet. 1 wee forced either to lie on my stomach or partly on one side. I could not turn over on my busk on account of the shortness of the chains. it was at a time of year when the cold weather was just be- ginning to tome on and the steam. pines that ran through an, cell were kept so hot that I nearly suffocated. I tried to work my coat ad clothing off during the night, but was shackled so tight that I could only remove my clothes from the front peat of my body. Toward the moreiug the air be- came so stifling that I thought I should suffocate before anyone would come to me. "On the day betore, when I had refused to answer questions, Mr. Brockway had said to me I have a mind to nog you within an inch of your life'you littlethief,' and as 'lay there roasting through the long night I wished that he had done that in- stead of putting me in the, dungeon. until at lest I was seat here in Mereti, "So ehere retaieed week after week I QUEEN'S OHA1VIPION. when it was found I would die beforei 1 Alltenttuder or th o to or eadvaIre That would answer their questions. This place ts Stin ext necaiten e t 10 I The death of Franois Dymoke, the Queen It is jutt what I imagined a great prison to t of England's Champion, which ocourred at be. There is herd work and the strictest Horneststle recently, has remindedthe world discipline, bat no °realties., so far tT that even in the midst of the present Aro. • e ag mud, is palace compered •to the reformatory. thoaaistehe414 oSthhelcre pIrlioanveerbseehnavheerheadI vhaave: I sale and utilitarian age one knightly o ce, gaaa a , at least, is in exietenee, to contradiet the mlich tha "'Ile ex'iwieu(le at 143411ira`in here ) e.ssertion of Edmund Burke, that "tbe age had, There are hundreds ot men of obivalry is gone The late holder of the who say that their health was broken down i offiee was 4 Li00011181) Ira magistrate, end an there ort account of the terrible floggings I t efficer in the lima militia ; the two previous and headships they reesived. Outane of ones were clergymen. dealt of 50 eent here from there I am told The office is not, as it has often been that 35 died within a year. A grab deal stated, hereditary to the Dymoke family, ot this is due to weakened bads aud kid- I but is attached to the Lord of the manor of neys mused by the terrible floggings that i Scrivelsby, which is held by the anaiene are given at the reformatory.two I tenure known aa grand eergeantry—i. e., "The men are stripped mini he'd by I where one holds lands of the sovereign by etrong guards while Brookway flogs them ' service whia he has to perform in pawn. across the small of the back with a piece of i The service by which Serivelsby is held is rubber hose fillecl with water. That is what " that the lord thereof shall be the King's is principally used." "Were yoa ever flogged there ?" twee. - Lommp. PUREST, STRONGEST, BEST, Cortt3ins no Alum, Ammonia, Lime, Phosnhetes, or any Injurlant, • It a certain end speedy cure for ,Cold in the Bead and Catarrh in units $00Tlene0, CLEANSINO i Wet Relief Permanen Ore, Failure Impossible. Ifany Socailod diapason are ,imply nyhytorne of Catarrh, such an he,ed• *rho, partial deafriess,losing aeon° of ' smell, foul breath, hawking aria spit - ling, nausea, rat). feeling Of de. Nifty, etc. 'If ou aro treublad with say of these kindred sPattenui, your have Catarrh, ona should fete ho time In procuring a bottle of linsat, 25aur. Ile warned in time, neglected •01cl in hood tegglitilln Catarrh, fol. lowed by dem= en end death. Roar. 134.51 is nal by druggiatel,' ' Or will be sent, pontnaid, on receipt a 'ea op cents and 81,0e) by aclarepring FOLFORD A 00,, Brockville eat'. i Champion." ,sc The championship has no salary attached the cries "1 to it f though th Dymoke family hold "No, but 1 have daily heard , or,o men who 'were being flogged, and have seen Scrivelsby on the feudal tenure of perform - thein come up the atairs crying like little! ing this duty, they have been owners of boys, and with scarcely- sbrength enough that manor tor upward of five hundred left to atand. It is it aroma jest there yews, and they obtained ie, not by royal that Brocieway always flogs two or three grant or out of the public puree, but by men at noon time juat to get up an appetite 1 marriage with an heireaa, the last of the for dinner." "And, now, Wallace, tell me as a friend ,t',..o,ileitli.ln.e,,o4faranllaiornmilon, granddaughter of a name which royals why it was that you refused to give the in- ' """n." e" 1 memories of ehivaery arid of the poetry of formation about your parents ?" I Shakespeare and. Sir Walter Scott. "I tell youa seriously, it WaS because 1 i i There is no record of the office under the think so much of my dear old. mother, She Saxon kings, but, aecording to the late air has always been so kited to me and thinks Bernard Berke, its duties were appended so mach of me that I knew it would kill by William T. as an honor to theold bar- ber. I hoped to get oub in six menthe, and ousel house of '-elartnyon, or efarmion, the go beck to her without her 'tamale that .f , aueient owners of the manor of Serivelsby. had been in prison." , I nisi minion together with the castle of It is likely that Wallace's revelations . Tainworth, had been conferred, soon efter will lead to a thoa thorough investigatainto , the Norman conquest, on one 'Robert de the. marmoreal of the Elmira reforms, i elartnyon, Lord of Fontenoy, inNormandyt tor on °condition of performing the office or OA. Champion at the King's eorouation. mans ON T11.6 0 "Oa the second de.y, toward night, I was taken out and taken even before Mr.Erook. way. He told me to sit down, and asked me how I fat. " "He took a seat directly opposite and very close to me. There were several others in the room who can testify to what took place at that time. He again asked me the questions about my home and my parents, and I again refused. Then he flew into a terrible rage and kicked me on the right side of the face as I set with my head in- clined like this. Without anything farther he mimed me back to the dungeon, where I was chained for six days and nights with little to eanand no light or air and no sleep. 1 ineve pretty good nerves,but several times I prayed that I might clie to end my suffer- ings. The whole matter was such a shock to me that I became almost insane, and be- gan to think that Brockway himself was in- sane and might intend to keepine there for- ever. .A day and a night seemed like a year, for 1 could not tell when it was day and when it was night except by the arrival of the guard to bring my bread and water, Ivry wrists, arms, and back ached so that it seemed to ine that I could not endure it. SOLITARY CONTrirgbigNT. wangle DESCrliT. The name of Dymoke is Welsh. The Different Ways of Taking fare ot Them -mokes or Dyrneeks—for the name is areten Titer are-. spelled both ways—claim a traditional de - «1 don't think we can realize just how agent from Tudor Trevor, Lord of Hereford muoh noIse an infant can make," said a and Whittington, and founder of the tribe traveller, " until we hear one crying in a of the Marches, The chief himself had realros.r1 oar, and there is no sound that is three sons, the second of whom, meantime so exasperating to the great majority of daughter of the Prince of North Wales, passengers. Same of them, iudeea, seem half a century before tile Norman outlast, to regard it as a personal injury to bring a became the ancestor of one David ap Mader:, crying infant into the car. They 'wonder who, in the Welsh tongue, was styled collo. how anybody could think of taking so quially Hai :tia lee, the word Dal being the young a etuld away front home. They slim% form of David. Ifie eon and heir was wonder if there la% a pin sticking in it David ap Dal :nada, or David Dai Made°, somewhere, and why its parents don't try , and by the usual abridgement Dal .fadoc and do something for it. I came, ut the course of time, to be pronoun. "On the seventh day he had me brought before him again, and asked me it I was ready to answer his questions. I replied that I would do anything else, but that I would not go. I would die &rat. , ' All nigh ta hereplied, cIalput you whereyou won't last long, and then what do you Want done With your bones?' This be said with that hateful smile that he has. I answered that I would at soon my body should go to the dietecting table as anywhere else, if they wanted it. " So then I was put into tolite.ry coo- finement, • where I was kept for four months. This place, did not bring the pain that the dungeon and chains did, but it was terrible to bear. "It was a small screen cell with every. Shing removed from it, and nothing to read, and no one to speak to. Twee kept on half rations, and not allowed to see anyone. How I prayed for Own ething to read. I amid have devoured anything. I am not particularly religious, but 1 begged for a Bible; I. sent to Brockway, and he replied in quite a long note. I committed that to memory, and ever can forget it." Then Wallace repeated the words of the note, which was to the effect that it remain. ed wholly with himself whether he on feted equal freedom and privileges with the °slier prisoners. When he would submit to Brookway's request he could have what he desired to read. ; but until then he would remain where he was and an he was. GOLD WOBIKESS, elettee Imecetpte win, be zurerestiep, to the IlnIattlated. There is a papyres which gives receipts ler various alloys used in the manufacture of onps and vases; for. raking gold and silver ink; for gilding and silvering, and for testing the purity of precious metals. Other receipts teaeb. the method of .falsifying them by adding baser metals—en operation Yelled the diplosie, or doubling, for the masa of the gold and silver was doubled, while their color remained unchanged; and, as the ampiler of the manual remarks, skilled workmen would find it difficult, or even impossible, to detect the fraud. The receipts whieh recur most fregeently describe vereousmodee of prepreriug team a - word which originally meant a nature, Alloy of gold and silver, keens to the Greeks as electrum. It wee at first looked upon As a distinct, metal, was considered sacred to Jupiter, and was designated by the sign of thelplattet ;but et a later period. thename was applied to all alloys, and M. Berthelotremarks that be this feet seems to lie the explanation of the origin of alchemy. 13oth gold and silver could be extreeted from getraine mem, and it seemed as though it could be obanged at the will of the op- erator into enter one or the other ,• could also be made artifleially by mingling gold aud eilver, or eloaly imiteted by (some ot the numerous alloys, 11 or 12 varieties of which are describea in the myrtle of Ley- den, It would eeem, therefore, that front thie fact there arose some vague notiou that perhaps the imitation of the preolous metals and. the reproduction of their essential qualities could be brought to such perfee. tion that the counterfeit might become ideaticel with the reality. The °leer and simple language of these receipts is very different from the obsoure and mystical jargon of the alchemists. The following, for inetance, occurs three times, with slight variations "To make aserri— Tin, la drachma; mercury, 4 drachmae; Chian earth, drachmas. .1t. lett the tin, add the earth in powder, then the mercury; stir with a piece of iron." With regard to enother reocupt neatly similiar, Bathe. lot remarks that the iesults would be cue avaelgsan of tin for thepurpoee of whitening copper. Another runs t 'Take four parts of tin four theme refined, three parts of white copper, and ono part of mem. Melt them and refine them several times; the,n inake whatever you wish; it will be asem of the first quality, which will deceive even the workman.' The white copper just mentioned is prepared as another receipt Shows, by mixeng it, with a sulphide of arsenic. Dry 'Weather Cultivation. " There are different ways of taking care eed as Daiwa or Damoo, the trentation of children when they cry. Here, for in. from which to Dimon or Deena, and again 1 It is frequently the case that in the earl steno, was a young couple with a crying frori that to Dimes or Dymoke, is easy and. spring a dry spelt of weather ate in, and if infaut which was held by the father, while obvious. This certainly is the origin el the I the soil is plowedthellow it will only take the mother sat doing notaiug. The father name of the Dymocks of Penley Hall, Flint- a few days to dry it out to mach an extent tossed the child up and down with the shire, and, most probehly, the Dy.r okes of kindest intention, but in the clumsy way Lincolnshire were of the same original perooliarto men. Be talked to it and otook, laughed at. it and held it up to the window i The first, then, of the Dymckc family to soo another train go by. Ile seemed. who fulfilled hie office 48 Champion was Sir surprised When he saw that the little child, 1 John Dymoke, knight, who married Mar. inateed of being amused, was frightened ' garet Ludlow in the reign of Edward III., halt out of ita senses by the rushing, roar- ! and was present at the coronation of Rich. ing train. It screamed louder than ever, ' ard II. His elaim was disputed by Baldwin and nothing that the young father could do.de Freville, the Lord of Tamworth Castle, to quiet it seemed to have any effect. At I but after deliberation it was found that the last the father settled down and let the , right belonged to the manor of Serivelsby, infant scram I as the caput baronie, or head of the barony "On another fain was a young couple ' of the Marmion family; and, as it appearea with an infant which was held in the arms that the late King Edward III, sena his son, of its mother. The infant began to ory ; the Edward, Prince of Wale a knowa as the mother was on her feet in an instant. Her Black Prince, had often been heard to say Isabella handed to her the child's cloak, that the office was belt], by Sir John Dyraoke, which elle wrapped carefally about it. Then the question was settled in his favor. she began to walk the car. The Gentlemen's Magazine for 1821 "The train had not started, but the ear contains a picture of the Royal Champicre, was full. She walked. steedily up and down Henry Dymoke, in the act of riding on his the aisle. She was by no means careless of white charger into Weeentineter Hall, and the presence of the passengers, but she was throwing down the glove or gauntlet of apparently quite unmindful of them. The defiance, saported on either dile by. the passengers stopped reading and. stopaed Duke of Wellington and. the Marguss of talking, and regarded with interest the -.Anglesey, altio on horseback, while two struggle between the young mother and the heralds stood by on foot with taberde and forth she swayed the infant very gently on this occasion is thus described by Sir plumes. The performance of the Champion screaming infant. AS she walked back and. from aide to aide watt that awefiging, nn- Walter Scott in a, letter to one of his dulatory motion vehicb mothers seem able frame% to keep up indefinitely, but which tires out "The champion's daty was performed, as a man in two minutes. And pasha walked of right, by young Dymoke, a fine-looking she kept repeating in a low and measured youth, but bearing, perhaps, a little too there -there -there, Therythere-thereethere,' much of the appearance of a maiden knight tone: t lhere-there-there-there, There- to be the challenger of the world in the over and over smile king's behalf. He threw down his gauntlet, "Fora time it.'seemed as though the in- however, with becoming manhood, and fant screamed louder and loudee, but it was howed as much horsemanship as the not proof against the mother's persistent, ' crowd of knights and squires around loving care, and at last it ceased screaming aim would permit to be exbibited. His and cried just a little. gently; then it armor was in good. taste; but his atopped altogether, and presently it was shield wes out of propriety, being a fast asleep. • 1rouna rondache, or Highland target, "Bat the mother walked two or three a defensive weapon, which it would be im- times more up and down the aisle to make possible to' use on horseback, instead of certain, andethen she took her seas and sat being a three -cornered or leather shield, there holding the baby upon her lap and which in the time of the tilt was saspeuded trotting it very gently, with a steady and i round the neck. Pardon this antiquarian constant trotting. •I scruple, which you may believe occurred to "Next all the passengers seemed to heave , few bat myeelf. On the whole, this etriking onaeye.”ombined sigh of thanks; and then be- 1 part of the exbibition somewhat disappoint- forebb going on with their newspapers, they! ed me, for I would have had the champion ell seemea to hold their breaths for a mo- , less embarraseed by his assistants end at ment, for fear that they might wake the liberty to put his horse on the grand pas, and yet the young Lord of Serivelsby look- ed and behaved. extremely well." Metallic) Lathe. The last time the ceremony of the chal- lenge was carried out was at the coronation The introduction of metallic laths has of George IV., when Henry Dymoke, the become an growing a feature of building deputy of his father, a clergyman, threw operations as to lead to the mechanical per- down gee gauntlet in Westminster Hall. faction of the article and its production °a , This Henry Dymoke soon after Queen Via - the most extensive scale, with, iscavever, , toria's accession was created a k -night, as a the greatest degree of simplicity. It is recompense, it was said, for waiving his formed from a slightly corrugated steel claims to discharge the duties of his o 'thee at sheet, making in this two parallel cuts at the Queen'a coronation. Sir Henry was retailer distances apart the entire letith, 1 succeeded by his brobheie the Rev. John writch is forced outward by pressure apptied Dymoke, and he by his son, Henry Lionel on one side, thus forming over the turface i Dyinoke, whom Francis Seaman Dymoke, of the sheet a series ot loops ; the mitting just deceased succeeded in 1875. The pres- and,expancling areslone instantaneously by i mt. champion is ins only'son, ins° gamed specially designed machinery. The finished Francis Seaman Dymoke. lath is eery easily handled and rapidly placed ; the mortar can be applied to either eide, as may'be convenient, and, the loops Row to Gab a "Sunlight" Pintare• upon the sheet serve as a thorough key to Send 25 "Sunlight" Soap wrappers (the the plaster, holding it stronglyin place, and large wrapper) to Lever Bros., Ltd., 43 with the minimum amouno of =Aerial. It Scott St. Toronto, and you will receive by is claimed for this subetitute that it is fire post a pretty picture, free from advertising and vermin proofi- ti. workman earl pub on end well worth framing. This is- an easy about three times as much of this lath in a way to decorate 'your home. The soap is day ae of wood lath ; that it foram a strong. 1 tho beet iu the market, and it will only cost er wall than of wood, and ont less -liable to I lo postage to send hp the wrappers, if you crack from the settling of walls . that the leave the ends opeu Write your •ealchess plasteris numb less liable to fall from this earefully, 1 lath than from wood, leeoeuse it is so thor- oughly keyed by loops ; that a given amount The greatest hypocrites are the greatest of plaster will cover nearly twice as lemon dupes. This is either beeamee they think surface on this lath as on the wood, because only of deceiving others, and aro of their the surface of the steel lath to be covered guard, or because they really know little is even and unyieldieg, and .the opening about the feelings or characters of others uniform and sufficient to guarantee a from their want of sympathy and collet). stronger key, will not let wane mortar quent sagiKity. fall off from the back of the hale that it se &Malt for vegetation to get a start. The best remedy to be employed is deep breaking, making narrow furrows so ea to break up anti mellow the soil as muck as possible, following almost immediatel with the barrow to tully fine the soil an giving it a good degree of compaetneaa The general practice is to plow three t four inches deep with wide furrows, nearly turning the soil vere and having it lyin fiat to be compaoted by the aims toes grea a degree as before plowed, In this condi non it, is soon driedh out awl becomes s hard that the air does not not upon it. If the plow runs deep cutting narro furrows, the furrow is broken up and th ail is mellowed ; and if thet harrowing i done immediately and continued until th soil is made very flue, a good degree o compactness will be secured, which wil prevent drying out. A mellow, moist so must be secured tie every case to obtain th best results. Growth cannot proceed in dry, hard soil, and the reasone are ver plain t First, the moisture below in th earth rises and breaks through the eart and escapes into the air before the roots plants take it up, and the fertility that i brought up with the moisture will map. in the same manner neither can the al enter is. hard drysod, and. the moisture i contains together with the elements of plan food are also lost to the crop. It mus ever be borne in mind that in order to pro mote growth tbe 'audition's of the soil mus be such as to favor the action of the air o the soil. Mellowness and moisture must b found in the anin order to favor the actio of the air. A combined free and uninte rupted action of the air and earth must b secured in order to promote the growth o the plants. The plant food that exists in the earth and thet which is foundin the air, is not condstisn to be used by plants; but the ai acting on the earth changes these element of plant food into forms available for plan growth. The philosophy of plant growt is.very simple, bat the conditions muat b supplied by the cultivator. Mellowness o the surface soil is the single condition t be eupplieti by cultivation. afoiature i induced and the action of the air and eart is secured. The cultivator is to "tilt the ground" t such a depth and to such a manner as t preserve the mellowness and moisture du ing the period of crop growth. If this done, great yields and favourable result will neoessarily follow, both in a wet and i a dry season. Thorough eultivation mu be given to meet the demands of riatar laws. Ilistery Review, Teacher—"Whatmtn you remember about Ponce De Leon ?" Bright Bay---" He was searcbing for the soda fountem oi youth, And he discovered tla Mississippi end—and was saved by Pokerhontas and—and—I forget the rest. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castot. Yleen Baby was Wk. eve mews bee Cerstonts. When she Was a CIaild, she cried for Castoria. When she been= Miss, ribs clung to Clastorin. When shellatigiiii- 4roa,5ite45vetheraCastorite A fdexiean Love Tragedy. A gruesome tragedy is reported fro Penar del Rio,Maxico, Vincente Bocalra do, a young matt of good education but poor encumatances, fell in love wi Senorita Mercedes Centaya, the delight of one of the wealthiest men in 'Aerie ller father aisapproved of the young ma attentions to las daughter, and forbade h the house. The latter paid Senor Cants a visit, and promised that he would n marry the young lady until be had ma his fortune, and. that he hoped she would willing to wait. This enraged the elder m who told Vinoente that no marriage of t kind would ever take plaee, Vincente th stepped inside, and, drawing a revolv fired at Miss Mercedes, killing her on t spot. He then blew out bis own brains, Bonaire Would be 'Wasted. "Say, mister, denItyou want your Inc gate fixed ?" ' " eVliatse the matter with it ?" asked Georgetown MAIL "15 saga like everything," " lt does sag a little loin But Sher ,no use of fixing ie now." "Because," and he looked thoughtfu up at the big shade tree, I have th detighters all over seventeets years old the engagement season is just opening." The secret of many a meas's suet:lees the world resides in his insight into modes of men, and his tact in dealing w hem. rorThroat and Lungs I have been ill for Hemorrhage "about free years, "have had the best Five Years"medical advice, • "and I took the first "dose in some doubt. This result - "ed itt afevvlaouraeasy sleep. There "was no further hemorrhage till next "day, when I had a slight attack which stopped almost immediate- "Iy. By the third day all trace of "blood had disappeared and I had "recovered much strength. The "fourth. day I sat up in bed and ate my dinner, tbe first solid food for " two months. Since that time I "tiave gradually gotten better and " am now able to move about the "house. My death was daily ex- "pected and my recovery has been a great surprise to my friends and "the doctor.. 'There can beno doubt "about the effect of GermanSyrup, "as I had au attack just previous to "its use, The only relief was after " the first dose." J.R. LottGliIIIMI), A.delaide. Au stra — ,.... I ... 51 Regulates the Stomseh, 1 -;ver anc(Bowels, unlooks theSecretions,Purlfiesthe Blood end removes ail fro-. purities Frorri a Pirrtple to the tarors1; So rofu lo us Sore. BQsD ,-:-..• CuRE.s •,...- DYSPEPSIA. BILIOUSNESS, CONSTIPATION, HEADACIle SALT RHEUM, SCROFULA, HEARTBURN, SOUR STOMAC ' DIZZINESS, DROPSY' RHEUMATISM. SBIITKIM 01SEASEi — , . , 1. .,„ --_--..... Every *weer ot a Wanted htoorsarwco Le:n:0s , „, ii. keep hls animal in '. good health while in the stable on dre9 redder. ' DICK'S BLOOD PURIFIER Is now recoanieed. ' as the best Condition Powders, It gives 4 good appetite and strengthens the digestion so that all the food is assimilated and forms flesh, thus satiogrnore r that it 00115. It regulates the Bowels and li.hineys and turns a rough coatiaio a sznoothend glossy One. s Sound Horses are al- , a woes in demand andat 5 ; this se-sson when they n ; are so liable to slips and Ott d : strains DICK'S BIAS- +. TER will be found a H stable necessity; it win orses 1. remove a tulle spelt; r splint or thoroughpiu ornny swelling. Didestini, 5 ment tures a strata er lameness mid removes intlant. 3 mationrroin cuts and bruises. ForSale by au Drug - f gists. Dick's Blood Puriaer elle. Dick's Blister 50O. Dick's Liniment 250. Diek's Ohninenteee. s Send a t,5r Fat Cattle postal wed fur full par- ticulars. A t a book of valuable bousehold and farm recipes W.al b he sent free. r - DICK St CO., P.O. En % 4S2, MONTREAL t x e eeee. lassil L.- -r . , 2 f PURE i POWDERED 100# 1--/Z----Le r s t ..-, . , 1 3.-‘7.= @ ;41' f -eat D 'atiftEST, STRONCEST, . needy for use In SU y quantity, roe ;making . leitentne Water, lli,inteeting,and &hundred 1 Ices. A can equals ::* pouzitla nal Soda. seta by All (tracers ,1111 Del:nests. a Ti. -wen. iresoca- - -----exe. .1.11=',=.22t4", , ... - . „ .4, . . BEST., temp °tette ' : i m a. At sr „ e• ,'s ak ea ot ie be n, h, ' en m, ho ale he e . de, a :.'" i d ' ila ;he ith . CARTER'S .., f 1TTLE R', .- 1 VER , fix PILLS. of been ... in distressing goodness once lives boast. Doo, all the &c. Urns Conatipetien, regulato try in so to . Pitts Ono by their In CO., .„...4 ...,....., the troubles sygtem, leis While shown of the pricelese them many do without . . that Our are or two vegetable vials or Now 110,1 , . , incl. such as -tress after their most in curitin Livia Pune curing while stinnoc ,h the bowels. to those cemplaint: does not end will find ways that them. e. here iS Wheei pills cure st , 1,517 smai pins male and dr geerie attics at ie 00145 seut by mall ?Dee. x hot. - , Sick Headache and relieve dent to a bilious state Deafness, Nausea. Drowsiness, eating. Pain in the SIde, remarkable success nee a 1 t4e>se Headache yet a twren's are equal& valuable and preventingt1 is aunoyingeompiaint, they also Correct all disorders stimulate the liver and Even if they only ured IQ Ache they would be almost wise starer from this 'but fortunately their here, and those who these little pins valeable they will not be willing But after all siek head is the bane of so many we malte our great while others do not. Oereteires Lieree Liven. and very easy to take, n dose. ahoy are strictly not gripe Or purge, but please all who use them. five for 51. Sold everywhere, ny, CADTBIt MBPIOIglii 1 1 artla P111. !ma,