HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1893-10-12, Page 3Wr
Arel4tter known and more gener.
ally used than any other cathartic.
Sugar-coated, purely vegetable,
lid free from mercury or any other
Ajurions drug, this is the ideal
family medicine, Though prompt
and energetic in their action, the
f the pills is attended with
onl the best results. Their effect
is to strengthen and regulate the
organic functions beino• especially
benficial in the various derange-
ments of the stomach, liver, and
bowels.
yer's PUi
are recommended by all the leading
physicians, and druggists, as the
most promptp.nd effective remedy
for iliousness, nausea, costive.
estion, sluggishness of
jaundice, drowsiness,
e side, and sick headache;
elleve colds, fevers, neu-
and rheumatism. They
ken with great benefit in
d the diseases peculiar to
u h, For travekrs, whether
hy land or sea,
11
re the best, and should never be
omitted in the outfit. To preserve,
their medicinal integrity in all
climates, they are put' up in bottles
as well as boxes.
"1 have used Ayer's Pills in my
family for several years, and always
found them to be a mild and excel-
lent purgative, having a good
effect on the liver. It is the best
pill used,"—Frank Spillman, Sul-
.phur, Ky.
padby Dr. j. C. Am SI Co., Lowell, blues,
Oefie by ail Drugweste everywhere.
Every Dose kitechve
TIIIIEXETER TIIIE S.
lenuteisned every Thersdnv morcm, •vi
MES STEAM PliffITIN s HO USE
Ataiu-street neetey °matte Fittmee Jeweeny
tam e e ter, it ut. ,by mite Weito Sone era
primers.
!Van01'eanVORTRStS7
Firs ti n eortion, porlin „ .,10 cents
loch au iegtio a ti user tionuer liuo .... ,s eec tr.
To itiStire tusertiore telveratomente ehoall
pe gent Az tt our wacyl Weiluesattr =mute;
. -
OnrJO:l PRINTING »n] 5'i
!the largest ,tnit best Pr/W.1)1mi in tog. vountY
ot Hurou,All ,.ver.c ens rne ta.1 t44`0- )1411043 4 .14
norpromptsateution: „...., '
Doeskins -1-.67,..artlitig. .1k,iewS-
1Ayr,-,. • .) taketig
papers.
a peperroaalerly te t n idli
t be puit-o, weewhe thin (111.4%4 in nis n.va Y or
another -Tort xvaetlior ill 1*a,4 nste i sri toil or a,11
it retponeibio for airmen&
e We pereia °MOOS his pew titwoutanuel
be meet it eil errata: or the pitoilsher !nay
ontinue tesund it until. Ow p.tintent is in ale,
- lad then collect the whole amount, whether
e Paper et taken from the office or not.
s In suite or eubseriptione, the eta my be
netitutcd M 0.5 place where the palm is Pat)
hod, latiantile h. subierlhar may ride
es
tilt
hundreds of gi away.
i The cuur h 4.Ve donate that refit:Mg b
at:newspaper:I or periodicale trout the weit•
nit, or removing and leevIng them nee iliel
k tprima facie evidence of intentional trAn I
NEM; E
BEANS
NERVE DBANh ere a nese dm..
norm that earn the worst eaten ot
Wervetia DebilityLost Vigor and
PailhlgAlanhoi et ; restores the
weakness of body or mind cauted
by over -work, Or the wrote' Orei.
ceases of youth. This Remedy ab-
solutely cures the most obstinate cases Avian all other
TaLitSstENTs have relied even to TVIIOVO. .4014 bydrug.
tate at el per package, or six for t4.5, br sent by malt on
receipt of price by addressing TDB JAAtEd AILDIOING
co. Toronto, Ont. Tilrite for uonmhiet. Sold in. -
Sold at Browning's Drug Store, TfIcl'In
Vainetx....1.<11weanier•
IrtirMAL
HEAD -MAKER'S
Nr.71.41.1E$Te
HUB EAU -re EWE SATISMOTID
Fori• RALF- v
sat
tele
RE Vaal' MONTie
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Cures Lost Power, Nervous
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seases caused by Abuse, Over
"Work, Indiscretion, Tobacco,
Opium or Stimulants, Lack ot
cI
Btergy, Lost Aleatory, Head -
11
ache and Wakefulness.
Young, Middle-aged or old
Men suffering from the effects of follies and excesses,
restored to perfect health, manhood and vigor.
RELIEF TO Tao U SAN DS Ti /IS ivrAn.vzcouS REMEDV,.
A Cure is Guaranteed!
....rasosesp,....amtuvrA
To everyone ostrig this Remedy according to directions,
or money cheerfully and consetentiously refunded.
t 'sow PRiOE $1.00, 6 PACKAGES 65.00.
Sent by mail to any reintin U.S. or Canada, securely
sealed free from duty or inspection. •
Write for our Book "STARTLING FACTS" for men
only. Tees you how to get well and stay well. 4
Address 00 call on QUEEN MEDICINE Cu 4'
.
04 • NEW YORK LIPS' StlfLPING, Montreal. Can?
The Duke a Edinburgh can speak seven
modern lenguagee.
The sound of a strong brass band carmot
be heard at a greater distance and the report
of a musket is scarcely perceivable at a
dista,noe of over 20,000 feet. In the Arctic
regions, when the spirit thermometer inarks
40 degrees Or More below zero, Pahrenheit,
it cominott coleversetion may be cerriod on
by perzons operated from each other by
upward.' of 7,000 feet.,
A return has been presented to the British
Parliatrient of the men found inerlicialy un-
fit to proceed with their drafts to India
daring the present trooping season Of the
nine cavalry regimente the men left behind.
. were 33, of 1W,J1e0y ilk. and of thq, 50 line
egim eats 754
12111ACTIOAL FARMING
alnaning Cream,
cream needs ripening more than
summer °room, and the gredually eooliog
weather beads to melee the buttermaker
ripen lees. This ineene lose. The tab*
ininous portion rnust he Weakened by sour.
hag thet the viscidity nifty be more readily
"worn out" and the batter fete freed
from their entail elemene. .a. more thorotigh
ripening will indhease the yield of this ciao
m cream. If part of the creetn is from
fresh. cowa, a good Jlavor—not the "quick,"
bat the good.-ean be source, for the very
her flavor comes only from fresh coats.
Thorough ripening end the looreased yield
obtained by it, does not make ib 'new milk
cream it simply fevers more exhaustive
churning.
If the ripening is carried too far, or if
the cream is churned too warm, the com-
mission man may write back aeleing whet
new kind you are trying row, and suggest,
that if yo a expect to hold eastern you need
to make a unirorrn prodnea
These are /the two fires between whieh
gathered cram fectories inust steer, and
not get too close to either if they don't
want to be burnt. They must warm the
etripper crown higher te soften it, awl they
must not get it so high as to spoil the tea-
ture. If they fail in the first, the patron
roasts them ; if in the second, the commis-.
siren man hauls them over the coals. There
isia mono, and the theinghtful and
lutelit-
gont creameryinen are "in it," Look well
to the ripening; 53 534 vital riettter.
Working Butter.
Whether it is better to work butter ono
or twice will depend entirely epee. the con-
dition in which ie itomes from the churn.
The objeets of working aro to remove the
butter:1111k and eurplas water end to incor-
porate the sale It the butterntilk has been
entirely washed oat before the butter is
taken heel the churn, and the butter ie etill
in small gable when put on the worker,
and the sett sifted .over it evenly, then one
thoroureli working may remove all the sinr.
plus water and incorporate the salt. If,
however, the butter has been collected in
Inmpa, two workings will be eueseara, ono
immediately after taking from the chum,
and before salting; the other 12 or 24 hours
after salting.
The working of butter is often intimately
related to the streaks whittle are oftea seen
elren after tinuatud ore of the cream lute
been teken, The trouble arises from the
dissolving Balt, after the butter has been
printed and packed, ixnd may be by a gecond
working remedied, six cr eight bolus after
the salt has been introduced. To those
who have not tried it, the amount of water
(maenad front butter, that appeared per-
fectly dry at the first working, will be a
Surprise, and the butter will present. a uni-
form color and solid appearauee, not before
apparent. Salting with brine in the churn,
while the butter ie in the granular form
obviates the difficulty In sortie degree, bet
mot, PO*140 tla a% old the streaky Con-
dition Altogether by harried pecking and
dispensing with the moonlit weraitig,
Sheep Saab.
There arc three forme of Beebe in sheep,
viz : Mad aceb (sareoptio), Toot scab
(eymblotie) and comma serth (psoreptie).
Each form in which the disco° appears ie
caused by three different, slimes of in
oots.
A recent agricultural bulletin says that
when infected sheep are allowed to go at
large, they are continually spreading the
dieease by dropping tags of woe], rubbing
iagainse feneee, and so on. Thus healthy
oheangoing over the same ground become
infeoted, Tbe parasite can live alma the
fences or shed, for from two to three weeks
after they leave the sheep.
Treatment is of two kinds,—preventive
and curative. The first important step to
take ie to remove the dinned animals from
the healthy, the whole flock should be
quarantined, ego that they may not transmit
thediseao to healthy sheep.
Dip the tyliole gook, -whether diseased or
not, as the animal that has once been ex-
posed to the disease is unsafe until they
ha,vo been thoroughly eleettea and disin.
fected, by dipping or otherwise.
The sheds, yards, and. fences should be
thoroughly cleaned and disinfected with a
solution of boiling lye or carbolic acid, after
which give a coat of white wash to all the
woodwork. Keep the dieeesed flock in it
clea.0 uninfected enclosure for at least one
month and to be kept from other sheep 60
days) during which time they should be
repeatedly examined so that, if the first
dipping should not have destroyed ell the
parasites the dip should be reapplied.
Sheep that have dieti should be burned, or
in some other way disposed of so that the
parasites on the carcass may do no more
damage.
Of the many dips that are advertised we
have seen a few do good. work. The Thyme -
Cresol sheep dip has done good work on
webby sheep. A very effectual dip is a prep-
aration of arsenic one pound, carbonate of
potash, one pound to water twenty gellons.
The chief poisons used in sheep dip are
tobacco, arsenic and carbolic acid. Of these
tobacco is the favorite because its use has
riot been followed by the fatality that bets
in times past followed the uae of arsenic.
Carbolic tveicl is too expensive to be used in
large quantities.
'The Anstralian or Rutherford dip has
been very successful and is as follows:
Tobacco and flowers of sulphur oue pound
each, to every four gallons of water ; the
tobacco should be steeped in it portion of
the water two or three successive times so
as to extract the juice. The leaves or stems
may be used; of the latter three times the
weight is required as is needed of the former;
a press or wringer is convenient to squeeze
out all the liquor from them. The sulphur
should be mixed with some of the tobacoo
water and stirred until it is of creamy con-
sistency.
These ingredients should be addect to the
required °Mount, of water. During the dip-
ping -this inixthre should be constantly
stirred and a little fresh water added from
time to time to replace that lost by °Nampa.
&tam. This dip should never be used at it
higher temperature than 1100 Fah., nor
lower than 1000 Fah.'if used daring the
ertmtner weather anol 110 ° to 120 0 Fah.,
in winter. The sheep should remain im.
mersed in it from 60 to 90 seconds. -
P,oloppa dip, a mixture sufficient for 100
sheep, is : Take 20 pounds of tobacco, steep
it with 66 gallons of water for half an hour,
beet it to 95 5' Fah. and add two and one-
half pounde each of pure carbolic acid and
of potash.
Here is one of the cheapest dips and itt
generally effective, viz : Mix an infusion of
15 pounds tobacco with 2a pounds carbolic
acid and 13a- pounds of woocl tar, pour it
into 60 gallons water at 1250 Fah. in which
3 pounde soda has been dissolved. Use it
at a temperature of SO ° or 900 Fah. and
repeat in six or seven days,
In fact almost any of ethe ordinary sheep
dips will kill theta parasites, but dips to
r
be effective should be applied immediately 'with him. But the homes gorged and to
after shearing and reapplied in Aimee eight each neglect, and never even whineied for
days from ehe time of aria dipping. Thus the water urgling past them. --.[Col. T. A,
Dodge, tn arper's ef enfeeble,
the eggs will be batched end, the second dip.
ping wilt destroy all. the young (new comers).
It is eariv treatment, and eapecially treat.
raent of the preventive sort that is cheat),
easy aneproatable, but when this is ne-
glected yon are sere to be called auto take
a more expensive and unprofitable kind of
treatrneaa
•
Praotical Pointers.
Do nob °Lewd your. Bantams in yards
with large fowls.
The bats of the United States are all
strictly insectivorous.
Sourmilk will bring better returns in
eggs than in any other way it can be fed.
Potato growing has never hese as import.
ant an industry on aria side of the water as
it is in Europe.
To know the reason of things is the trtie
purpose of man's intellect. Leek is the
gambler's deity.
Iford's Deirynnen says thee poor cows
are rime worse then stringent money"
for fartnei
Do not fail to save and keep in proper
condition the best seed of grains of all kinds
foe pleating another year,
Every head of live stock or a fare:13110W
have slat coustantIy ; iit fact, arrangements
should be made so that it is altvays access-
ible,
Farmers aa 8 ride feed too much corn,
which is a great heat-produeing food !Attlee
good for egg production. A hen fed on cora
only will just become fat and lay noeggs.
There is good profit in taking out ehe acerb
sional big weed that has grown up among
potatoes. Burn them. One destroyed now
prevents hundrednexe season,
If man neglects his horses, underfeed-
ing and overworkiug them, the alumna ere
that be will not take proper care of it breod
mare and the oliancee are also good that he
will have "bad. luck" in raising colts.
Bram, ots and a mall propoetioa of oil
meal will ertake one of the best comblue.
tions of food for Iambs, both in winter aud
in eummer on crass, A mixture of four
pounds of bran; three pounds of °ate aud
one pound 041 meal is it good proportion,
When flesh ie the desirable object to be
attained in poultry feed the grains which
contain the elementa that make fat. In.
dean corn ventaine seven par cent, of fat.
producing ()temente while (tate contain only
six per cent.
Feeding boxes or troughs into whieh the
scalded mixed meat and cooked. vegetables
are placed for fowls should be kept sweet
and cleanly, If a quantity of soft food is
dispeused to the fowls greater than they
can eat up at a meal, the remains quickly
our and become unpalatable,
We need better agriculeural eilimetion for
our young men who aro to be the farmers
of the future, and. one place to procure this
m theagnealeurel colleges ; but for theft
who aro aitbarred this privilege WO would
tietaniel a seeteiiitatio.coaree of hgrioalturid
reeding Bud study at liutpe during the long
winter evenings.
Color is a, matter of oastiam, and there is
no hue or shade thee, is nee-, 00.toil with it
relish in some form, We head, blue, bleak
and red among berries, green itet pleklee,
peas, string beans, etc., purple fie grapes
it telplums; and as yellow is the deviant
co or of good Amy butter, it subeleance
wit obis so much better, as. the oleo:rear,
gart et people c litim their product to bee,
shou dheve a color by whicltt it coual be
knelt • The impudent inconsistency of the
makers of oleo is oatt of the wonders of the
century.
It is a feet that there 18 110 class of feria
anitnale so beneficial to a runaown farm as
sheep. They are great grubbers and will
utterly destroy all bushes end briars that
grow in fields where they have the run.
They are not heavy elunIgh to pack the soil
in n wet time and their droppings aro dis-
tributed evenly all over the Bedtime in sub
a meaner as to promote rather tha.0 retard
the growth of grass, They always seek the
highest point in the field to sleep, acid
this causes the deposit of more droppings
there than at any other place, and as the
high places are usually the poorest this is
an advantage.
For bumble foot which is simply the
corn or lump so frequently found in Coch-
ins, Dorkinga and other large earieties,
that are compelled to dente from tbe
percbes on to it herd board oor, apply
lunar caustic 1 pigment of anane applied
daily wilt also bebeneficial. If the corn ap,
pears to contain matter, it should be opened
and the .puss pressed otta after whieh it
should. be well washed. oet with warm
water; and after a day or two apply the
caustic, as directed. Compel the meld to
sleep on straw duriug treatment.
What is the use of saying or thinking
that it is only a little fine dust that gets
into the milk pail? Where did the dust
conie from, and of what is it compood? It
is simply the excrement of the cattle, dried
and pulverized by the constant action of
their feet.
The manager of ex -Vice President Mor-
ton's herd of Gnernseys onosaid: As far
as I have been able to judge it costs less to
produce it pound abutter fee from a cow
giving a moelerate quantity of rich milk
than it does from one giving more milk
poorer in fat. In other words, it, costs
money to prodeee casein, and if butter is
the object, the less there is in proportion
to the fat the lower will be the cost of pro-
duction.
What does it mean when "settlings" are
found at the bottom of every pen of milk;
when the etrainer of the streiner pail be.
comes continually clogged; when the milk
has frequently whet is erroneously styled it
"cow -y" odor? Without mincing matters
any, it means that there is manure in the
milk, and if it were actually known how
little milk is carried from the stables of the
land without having in it a greater or less
quantity of suit filth it would make a good
many people shudder, including some of the
butter makers themselves.
In feeding and waterlog the Ilona the
BetIonins seem to ne to be equally unreas.
oning, un lees it be agreed that a horse can
stand anything he is wed to, and that it is
well to get him used to irregular habits.
The fact that the, Arabian has often to go
an infinite time without food or drink
makes him hardy and less apt to suffer than
are °lir regularly treated animals. Ile goes
all &with the hot sun, and does not ask tor
water—impatiently at least—evea 111 even-
ing a brook. He ie fed and watereri ap-
parently regardless of the feet that he is
hot or tired, He is given his pail of water
ad his troughftul of dry or green food, or
i
whatever elsa availeble, so soon as lie
stops on a joerney, or is ridden off let-
tuce tritely after. Quite as often be gets
nothing at all. I have seen horses ridden
all day, and have camped at “noon with
them near by a stream, without anyone
tryitia to water them, because they had no
buckets and the banks were high. It would
never occur to Bedouin to carry a skin pail
NAPOLE0ii ON HIS WAY TO ST. EIBL-
BNA.
Who Greta, Emperor Wee% FlugerS In
stand of a rark—Ita Talks el' the Re
treat front Moscow—Watts el' it Preach
Navy.
The followhig 18 3131 extraet front the hit").
ertg unpublished diary of the eeoretary of
tibe Britieh admiral who conveyed Napoleon
Bonaparte to Se. Helena. It es priuted in
the October Century:
At 6 p. m. dinner was annouliced, when
we all sat down in apparent good spirits,
end our aetions deolared our appetite fully
equal to those spirits. General 13ortaparte
ate of every dish at table, using his fingers
instead of a fork, seeming to prefer lb e rich
dishes- to the plain dressed food, and not
even toetingvegetables. Claret was his
beverage, whieh he drank out of a tumbler,
keeping the bottle before him.
He conversated the whole of the dinner -
Ono, confinieg his conversation principally
to the admiral, with whom he talked over
the whole of the Russian campaign, Attri-
buted the failure of it in the first instance
to the learning ef Moscow, in the next to
the frost setting iu inuele sooner than was
expeeted. He eaie he meant only to have
refreshed, his troops for four or five days,
and then to have pushed on for St. Peters.
burg; but tindiug all his plans frustrated by
She burning of alonow, end his army like-
ly to perish, he hurried beck to Paris, setting
apt with as ehosen body -guard, one half 0
which 'SS as frozen to death the first night,
ile Bela nothing could be more horrible
than tbe retreat from Mottoow, and Maori
She whole of the Russian campaign; that
for tumoral clays together it appeared to
him as if he were merthiog through a sea
of fire, owing to the oonstant succession of
villagea in filmes, wbich arose ia every di-
rection as ler as the eye could reach. Ho
said the burning of thole villages, as well
as of _Moscow, was attributed to his troops,
bat that tt was inveriably done by the na-
tives.
After dinner he did not ariek wine, but
he took a giase of noyau after his coffee,
previous to ming from table, After dinner
be walked the deck, couveraing principally
with the Admiral, tO whom he said, dur-
ing this conversation, that previous to his
gobig to Llba, he had made preparations for
haviug a navy of a hundren sail of the line ;
than he had established a conscription for
the navy ; and that the Toulon ileet Watt
entirely inflamed and brought forward by
people of Ole description; that he had
ordered them positively to get under way
and Maramtver every day the weather would
permit, and to occasionally exchange long
ahota with our ships; that this had been
remonstrated againut by those About him,
and it had cost him much. money to repeir
the accidents which occurred from the want
of maritime knowledge, such as ships get-
ting foul of cult other, splitting their saila,
springing their masts, etc. ; but be fotuid
this tended to improve the crews, and he
determined to persevere in his plan.
Alter walking for some tune, he proposed
it rouud game at, cards, in compliance with
which the admire', Sir George Bingham,
Captain Roes, and myself assembled with
Geueral Bonaparte and his followers in tho
after cebize where we played at vingteun
Diet (which was the game chosen by the ex.
etnporor) till nearly eleven o'clock, when
we ultretired to our beds.
..f.,
.114YSTBRIOUS DBA.TH.
A taciturn) litaiirce aumecevee. an a .filleta
Train.
A Monirealspecial says :—Detective Car.
pouter, on behalf of the Government, is
investigating the mysterious wee of the
supposed poisoningof e 'women on a Cana-
diau Pecifie railway train, near Terrebonnoi
some days ago, aud the facts are being slow-
ly breught blight. The wortien'e name was
Georgina Mato, wife of it man earned
Hooper, who accompanied her at the time
of her (tootle Ten years ago she left her
home At St. Ambroae de Kildare to marry
Hooper, then in the employ of the Govern-
ment Dee:tern-neat at Ottawa. So long as
Hooper remained in the employ the couple
lived happily., but shortly attar the death
of Sir John Macdonald iu 1891, Hooper wee
discharged from his position,ata alowly but
surely' the little property which he had ac-
cumulated diseppeareti, until at last their
home and even their furniture were dispos-
ed of to meet pressing needs. The final sale
took place three weeks ago. These trials
weighed so heavily on Mrs. Hooper that her
reason failed her. On the 18th of Septet*.
ber Hooper left Ottawa with his wife, and
took ber to her parents' home at St. Am-
brose de Kildare near Lamoraie. Returning
on the following Monday he took her away
ender the plee that he was going to
piece her in an asylum. They took the
train for Montreal, Mrs. Hooper's brother
aceompitnying them as far as alascouche.
Just before his loving the train the brother
alleges that he saw Hooper give his wife
somethixig to drink out of bottle. S»ortly
afterwards she Was dead. The body was
taken off at Terrebonne'where it remained
in the station all itight. The following
morning Hooper brought the body to Mon-
treal, where it was lost tato of, although
it is supposed to have been taken on to To-
ronto. The day followiug the death Hooper
telegraphed tram :Reiterant to Tousaamt
Malontep-father of the deceased, notifying
him of Mrs. Hooper's death, and saying
that her clothes were at it certain house on
MoUill street, in this oity. The step -father
came to -Montreal, but could find no trace
of his stepdaughter's clothing. Mrs. Andce
Melo, who is an aunt of Mrs. Hooper, anri
who reeides in this city, also called tit the
house specified, but covad learn nothing.
Hooper,in his telegram to his wife's friends,
grad that she had jumped off the train, and
died from injuries received. The atovern.
meat detectives now at work on the case
say that they have positive proof that she
never jumped from the train, and they are
thoroughly convinced that there is memo -
thing wrong. '
ae.
S01130 one seeins to have told the Rattan
According to the eseimato of 1893-94
the German Navy numbers, inclusive of
midshipmen and cadets, 1,231 officers and
18,249 rnen, or a total of 19,480.
The stocking of Alaska with reindeer is a
pronouneee success, according. to Rev-. Dr.
Sheldon Jackson, United Stittes general
agent of eduction in Alaska. Of a 17
reindeer brought to Alaska, from Siberia
lest year but eleven died while eighty-eight
fawns were born, of which seventy-niue
were living three weeks ago. The revenue
steamier Bear made several trips across the
straits this sunneei• and transported thirty.
seven more reindeer to Alaska. The per -
pose of the scheme is to furnish a reliable
sapply of food for the natives and also to
establiela the use of the deer for work puw
poses.
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castaft
eetaterecee elietztate. iteeeetrenite,
„
•
for 1 nfants and Children.
"Castorlie is Bowen adaptedto ehildren that
Ireconuneuditassuperiortoenypreenription
tnown to me." Tf. A. .Artonostt, AL D.,
111 so. oxford St.,
"The use of ‘Castorlai is so universal and
its merits so vrell knowia that it seems a work
of supererogation to endorse it,. Few are the
ieteingent families Wbo do uot keep Castoria
within eosyreach."
• Cantos la.mtrot D.D..
New York City.
Lete Pastor Bloomingdale Deformed Church.
eastoria coxes Colic, Constipation,
Sour Steniaa, Di000lIC04.Difoetattent
IOW Worms, gives sleep, anti promotes tlf.
gestion,
Without LuPrIOUS roetlicatiOn*
"For severea years I have recoutroended
your Castoriaa and shall always continuo to
do so as it has invariably produeed beneficial
results."
Emma nearar. X, D.,
"The Wintbrop,"125th Street and Ith
New Wore City,
TITS CENTAttli C0?1P4.241, 77 Xtfunky Sminurt NAVI Tom.
..fm4., att.-5
Sco.'s Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil
and Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda will
take the contract to build you up to goodi
health if you have a chronic cough, if you are',
losing flesh or it you have simply lost your)
appetite.
Scott's Emulsion cures Coughs,
calcis, Consumption Scrofula,
and all Anaemic arid Wasting
Diseases. Prevents wasting in
children. Almost as palatable as
milk. Get only the genuine. Prepared
by Scott & Bowne, Belleville, Sold by all
Druwgiste 00 cerits end $1.00.
4 c ,,, , , ,, rl. : '''''' to,44 b S.04:c. ,p • 4:1% i 0. r."$ ' ..§1.
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Nii
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'1s
Nbr `i-
lInnnfaettired on1s by Themes Ifolloway, 7k Nov ON.ford street, 1
late 03, Oxford Street, Lenden.
.TPUrelistsors should look to the Label on the Ilexes and Pots.
If the address is not 5833 Oxford Street, London, they are spurious.
CIILLDBEN WEDDED,
--
Javauess Ceremony Performed at the
World's lair.
The Bride is Mlevett and the Greont Niue
Tears 0141.
On Thursday afternoon last there was an
interesting marriage ceremony performed
in the Java village at the World's Fair. A
boy owe years of age and it girl of eleven
were made one by a high priest of the Mo-
hammedan religion. The two principals
were no; consulted in the matter at all.
The parents on both eides decided, as the
father of the boy expressed it yesterday,
15353 111 was "good" that the two should be
united, and that settles the matter. A
week ago the fathers and mothers of the
children earne together and decided that
they would have the two young people
marry each other. They also arranged. for
the portions to be given on each aide.
That same day they told the ehildren
that they wave going to be married. The
father of the boy, who speaks a little
English and seems to have some idea
how strange their marriage customs appear
to Americans, said that the girl whose name
is Saewarti, manifested more curiosity over
the approaching nuptials than the boy,
whose name is Mon. She actually inquired
who she was going to marry. But Mon
merely remarked " all right," and asked. no
question, except to ask if some one was go.
ing to make him a present of a watch. Be
had set his heart on having An American
timepiece.
On the day of the wedding the Java vil-
lage was in gala dress. The oanopied and
rinate Carpeted platforms on which the chit -
&ea were borne in are still place. The plat-
forms, borne by six men, were carried to the
house of the bride and bridegroom. The lat-
ter wereliftedorefully on,atxdsat with their
legs crossed under them. The aaltaiquin
containing the groom was then taken to the
house of his bride. Here a procession was
formed. In front of the pele-nquins of the
bride and groom wore other richly ern-
broidered platforms, borne by met, laden
with fruit anil other presents sent to the
couple. The parents marohing abreast
followed the children. Then the other
near relatives, two and. two, and the re-
maining inhabies,ute of the villiage. All
Shia time the high pries% Wahuti, weis
istanding before the altar as 11 10 prayer.
He remained in thie attituee eatil the
ohildren were brought before him, and they
were lifted from thew rude palametults. As
they knelb with claimed handl betore hfin
he extended his handsover thelsn as if he wtrre
giving a benedictiou, and pronounced the
words that made them boy and wife. Tide
finieliedi they roe and stood hurrtlely befOre
him while he Teeth -red them upon the re.
sponsibilities they were asearning and ail.
jured them to remain trite to each other. Ho
told the busbend that he must never leave
hie home for Any length of time without
providing fool seffieient for his *Hee
needs during his absence,
CongretuMtions followed. The married
children were again lifted to then pelatte
gains, tend this 11015, led by the sway
priest, they went to the marriage. feast. In
one of the thatelied houses of the midway
village a native dinner evae prepared. All
manner of fruit and fowl was supplied. The
guests set around thie tab', the newly
married couple at one end, the priest et the
other. The bride sat on the right hand of
her husband and the parents sat uexe
them.
A TATAR FEAST.
They never use knives and forks, so after
the priest gave the signal by jar king off it
chicken leg, or pulling it heedful of meat
weed a roan pig the rot of the company
folIowef in the seme manner.
The Detente of the couple have ot yeb
decided whether to let the children li ve to -
gather or not •
Mon was having his face washel by his
mother when he WAS seen yesterday and
through an interpreter he stated that he
would jot a little rather wait, a ear or two
before he began living with his wife.
" mon," be was asked, "(10 you love Sr.e.
warbi 70','" he replied, "she give money to get
um."
ti What did you give for her?"
"I give nothing, my father he give some.
thlliittc
S: the idea of tutelage has been im.
pressed on his mind, Ins chief concern
seems to be as to her fitness as a playmate.
Ho said he Kea not liked her very well be-
fore in that capoity, bue owned that ha
did not know her very well, as they had
lived on (Hefei:tint sides of the. village, and
his mamma, made him stay aloe about
home. 'The two ohildren never met until
they were brought to the World's Fair.
Some prosperous burglars disclosed the
fact last week in Philadelphia that they no
longer consider it prudent to hide their
plunder in -rook piles, sewers and other
oue of the way places by breeking into a
safe manufacturer's store and attempting to
steal one of his small safes. The untimely
arrivel of a policeman who took a seat on
the store doorstep andineditated for an hour
upon his prospeetive a.dvencement to e rag.
temay, defeated the schema however, and
the burglars, who hadirolled the safe thea
desired before the door, departed by a reek
door without tho thoughtful policeman beteg
aware of the fact.
The queen's Seoeeh journeys cost heti
$25,000 a year for tee yeling oxpeases.