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The Exeter Times, 1893-11-23, Page 3
{i' 1sV Tea rraltiiess, color, and beauty of the hair, the greatest care is necessary, much harm being done by the use of worthless dressings. To be sure of baying a first-class article, ask your druggist or perfume.' for Ayers .Nair Vigor. It is absolutely superior to any ether preparation of the kind. It -estoros the original eolor and fullness :o hair which has become thin, faded, or gray. It keeps thecalp cool, moist, and tree from dandruti: It heals itching humors, prevents baldness, and imparts kgs. THE HI a silken texture and 'fisting fragrance. No toilet can be • considered complete without this .most popular and elegant of all hair -dressings. P "�My hair began turning gray and failing out when 1 was about ad years of age. I have lately been using Ayer's Hair Vi;•or, and it is causing a new growth of hair of the natural color." -- R. J. Lowry, Jones Prairie, Texas. "Cher a year ago T had a sever fever;, and when 1 recovered, my hair begr, a to fall out, and what little remain ed turned gray. I tried various remedies, bnt without success, till at last 1 began to USE CAI Ayer's Hair Vigor, and now my hair is growing rapidly and is restored to its original color."— Ides. Annie Collins, Dighton, Mass. "I have used Ayer's Ilair Vigor fol nearly five years, and my hair is moist` glossy, and in an excellent state of preservation. I am forty years old, and have ridden the prole t for twenty-five years."—•Wm. Henry Ott, alias "haus, tang Dill,"Newcastle, Wyo. y res Flair V5 _ or 'Prepared by Dr. T. C. Ayrr e Co., Lowell, ;;last, Sold by Drugais s Everywhere. THEEXETER TIMES, IttiubUsnod every Times ley moron;, a TI MES STEAM PRINTING {U HUUSE Main-street,noarlyopposite Fittou'a Amatory bune,Lsoter,UntebyJohn Waite da Sons,i'rr RATi:9 OR ADvcrarstve Firatinsertiou, perdna ....... ......10 eclat T:echsubacgaoatinsortion,sei .ine......Scoats. To insure iueertiou, adrortisomout a should of sontru notiator than Wednesday morning nuvJon P1tINTNHG Di•1P tR1"kf INTI9 037 t ithe largest and best equip the Oounty o tRuronl:';liwork taitrunte.t 33:rr faor.roml*t alto ation: Deetieus Itog trt>< %so, imp 0 ,s. 'IASDorseu wile tai ei a Densrrg- thepost-otlicc who diireoted in his ne not let 8,orwho .-. haseubsori1-c or ax-, esponsibfe f , 2 If a pere o • sis©r discontinue,; he must, pa o publisher may ontlnua : . payment Is rondo, ill the ;ltd it, whether asap'., t to obi. not. . riptions, the Butt rely b3 ea where the paper is pub the subscriber may reside 135 away. have decided that refusing b ors orperiodtoals from the post. moving and leaving thoniuncello.L re 't.., a facie ovid6 ecu of intontioual frets./ �S. THE Q'.VEXETER TIMES BEANS NERVI, LEANS aro a new Ws- covery that cure the worst oases of Nervous Debility, host Vigor and weak ass of body' orrra dccaussed by over -work, or the errors or ex. ecse of youth. This Remedy ab- solutely cures the most obstinate cases when all other. 4r1rEATMMENT8 have failed even to relieve. Sold by drug Eis at $r per package, or six for $.i or sent by motion eceipt of price by addressing TE J'AMEB ernmenoi Toronto, O.at. Write far pamphlet. Sold in— Sold at Brownine's Drug Store, Exeter, )•IAST MONTH ABSOLUTELY Lost Power, Nervous Night Losses, Pi - caused byAbnse, Over k, Indiscretion, Tobacco, Ira or Stimulants, Lackot ergy, Lost Rfem"ory,, Head-' 1•e and Wakefulness. THAW MONTH Noun,, middle-aged or old inen)uffertng from the effects of follies and excesses, restored to perfect health, manhood and vigor. BELLEF TO rnoUSANDS BY TIES. MARVELOUS Rluusov. SECOND MONTH 165 tame Ps Guaranteed! Tc eve ryone..us ns *his Remedy according:todiractions, . or money cheerfully and conscientiously refunded. PRICE 61.0e,,.6 PACKAGES $5,00. Sent by mail to any point to U.S. or Canaria, securely -anted free -from duty or Inspection. Write for our Book " STARTLING FACTS" for men nly. Tells you how to get well and stay well. • 1ddress or can on QUEEN! MEDICINE co., 4,, NEW YORK LIFE BUILDING, Montreal PA CARTERS9 fins IVER PO LS. S, tea.,;. j Sick Headache and rel eve all the troubles incl. dent to A bilious state of the system such -as Dizziness, Nausea. Drowsiness, Distress after eating, lain inth 'Sia 6 e o, &c. While theirmost rourarlrable success has been shown in curing Headache, yet 0Rarsa'e Lierte Liver% P1its ere equally-rateableen constipation, curing and.preventingthig annoyfngComplaint, while they also correct alI disorders of tit stornttclr, stimulate the°liver •an regulate ,.$ho bowels, VIE TROUBLE IN SOUTH' AFRICA, Mfr. Rider flifa gnarl Holds Very Decided Views,, considers That the War Sias neon Forced Upon the tlonfapany-•-As It'ghteent a lei as Ever Was Undertaken in Africa. In an interview r'eoentiy a representati of the London Central News asked Ni Rider Haggard his opinion as to the cans of the present difficulty in South Africa. " The causes," Me. Haggard considered, "are obvious enough. This trouble was bound to come so soon as'these savages came into contact with a civilized Power." " Or as soon as a civilized Power came into contact with these savages." " Well, you may put in that way if you like. As to the immediate causes, they are the slaughtering of the Nl'ashonas in the territory of the Chartered Company of Ma- tabele impis. This war has beenforeedupon the Company, It was quite impossible for the Company to ignore the massacre of its dependents. Hadthey done so the lives of the white settlers would no longer have been ea e, Acquiescence in these deeds of blood would have been taken as a proof of cower. dice, and of inability to defend their terri- tory and servants. Moreover, the natural feelings of humauity,as we understand thein by education and example, would have for- bidden them taking such a course. People in Ragland don't comprehend what these massacres really are. They, or some of teem, seem' to lack sufficient imagination to appreciate the massacres and the agonies that are suffered by these unofi'endera and gentle people when they And their kraals Surrounded by the impi of a. king, who, without warning and heedless of any pray- ers for mercy, YROODED TO ]lm'CIg5R WIT.tt TILE smut old d meta, women,and awry living Bain except the young girls and the children between ten and fifteen years of age, dashe out the brains of the infants before the eye of the mothers. Look atthe matter from irturanitarien or so-called Christian poen of view, was it to be expected that the rep resentatives°,of a great and civilized Powe would allow Such things to be done withou lifting a hand to °heck them? We hear great deal as to the protection of the abor genes, but 1 are not the Mashonas as much the aborigines of this country as the Matabele? Are they not more so? Were not their fathers in possession of this land before ever a Zulu warrior set his foot upon it ? The war against Lobengula is as righteous a war as was ever undertaken in Th Africa."' e interviewer then called Mr. I -rag gard's attention to the fact that Mr. Hag- gard had boon accused of indulging in in- citement to vengeance. " Oh," said Mr. Haggard, "I disclaim any incitement to vengeance, but I shall nob grieve if retribution overtakes a man whom T look upon as a murderer of my friends. People talk about native rights. As far as Lobongula is coucerned he certainly has no real rights over Mashonaland. Ile :was aid rent for mining royalties in Mashonne d has, believe, in his own country, tempted to exercise thou THE EXETER adequate method of expressionin this noun - try but thatopiatoii has got to be reckoned with, and rich and powerful as we fanny oorsolvos to be, we :cannotnowadays afford" to despise it, Colonial opinion --or at least that great section of it which desires the maintenance of a tie between the Colonies and the Empire—is strongly in favor of the cause of the Mashon gland settlers, a cause that it knows to be absolutely just. once 14,we flew in the face of colonial opinion, and lost America. Do not let us fly in the face of It again and lose S outh Africa, which vs ria become as wealthy and magnifeent as r. are the United States." es l A CLOSE CALL "I had been spending a week with some friends in a quaint old village a few miles outside of Moscow. • On the morning of my departure my host, looking exceedingly grave, besought me to take a drosky from the village, and not ride the journey back. laughed and sail', the ride was nothing. "Oh, it is not the ride I mind," said he; "but your being alone, There has been a mutiny lately among the soldiers at M�--, numbers have deserted, and it is said that 20 aro in the forest of Kelp, living by robbery, Be that as it may, two travellers have been waylaid on the road there with- in the last week." I remember that in coming to my friend's house the road had. passed through the wood for about a mild. This must have been Kalga. I started at a pretty four pans, but, the road being bad, I had to slacken a little. It was still daylight as 1 entered the forest, but the great pine trunks, with their enor- mous branches radiatittg out from the top,' soon shot out much of the light. After going, as I judged, about two miles, I could scarcely see anything beyond the edges ofj the road on either hand, I-Iolding my head stooped, looking to avoid stoues on my path I suddenly became cansoious of a flash. A ball whizzed past, and, looking up, I saw a g dark figure bound cut on to the road a few of yards higher up. d My resolution was soon taken; 1 turned s the machine and dashed back in the dire°. a tiou of the village; but another flash from t that quarter and the hot sting of a bullet • as it grazed my shoulder told me I was sur• ✓ rounded. But even in that moment, the t flash showed me au opening in the trees on a my right, where asmall by -road joined in. . I turned the bicycle sharp, and, though al- most thrown off by the jerk, I was speedinm Haggard r est doubt teat it begin with. If the Mate example of their forefathors,the Zu disdaining cover, attack iu the open in masses and in daylight, they will be easily disposed of. They can never stand before the fire of machine guns and breeoh-loaders. Ie was by virtue of these weapons, combin- ed with British tactics and formation, y ou remember, that the Zulu power was broken at Ulundi. They threw themtelves on the British squares which were prepared to receive them, and were wiped out by the fire. There is, of course, a possibility, and more than a possibility, that they will fol- low -the old methods since all the people of the Zulu race are 'very conservative in their ideas, and donotreadilyadoptne w methods of fighting or profit from experience. They may, however, have learned wisdom from what occurred in Zululand, or they may have been inetrncted by white advisers since it seems that there is a certain party in South Africa which sympathize with the Matabele. This is not to be wondered ab, seeing that a great corporation like the Chartered Company is sure to have many enemies. If they have profited by expe- rience or been fustruoted,they will not risk battles in the open, but will take shelter in koppien or other stony ground where horses could not operate, or in forests, and there await attack. In this case the war would become one of great diffioulty,since it would be necessary to dislodge the impis one by one and to cow them sufficiently to prevent them taking refuge in other such positions, whence, they would have to be again dig. lodged." TRE NEED 0V streo TS.. In estimating the chances of the war iiir. Haggard went on: "It must be remembered that very few white hien are engaged in proportion to the magnitude of the task be- fore them. I am not a soldier, but I have been a South African volunteer, and know the conditions of " something of savage wars, and speaking with all diffi- dence, it seems to me that there ought to be some supportsto the columns which are now advancing, upon which they could fall back in the unhappy chance of a reverse. A study of recent South African wars will show that in each; ease we hau+e begun by underrating the enemy. It was so. in the Zulu war and it was so in the Boer war. , lir the case of the Zulu war a terrible disaster overtook our troops which left us paralyzed for months, and in my view it was owing only to, the clemency and half-heartedness of Cetewayo that all the outlying districts of Natal were not swept by his impis, In the Boer war the same thing happened, it being madly entered on by Sir George Col- ley, in spite of the entreaties of all who were acquainted with the Boers and with their powers of shooting, with a -force' of little more than a thousand men. This mere handful 'was expected to storm almost unassailable position's. " The smallness of the force of the Chartered Company," pro. ceeded Mr. Haggard, "is a geriotis consid- eration. At any rate it must be remem- bered; that the war is beingconducted by men who individually are well suited 'to the task. Most of them are colonists or have colonial experience, which means that TIay CAN siTOOT : AND RIDE AND IdNDURE IIARDSnIPs. Moreover, they have a most lively interest in the success of the operations, for most of. them are settlers in the country, and should disaster overtake them they inight lose. their homes and prospects, They are com- manded by men of ability and experience, whom they trust. Their general move- ments aregoverned by such men as . my friend ivIr. Selene, whose experience at such a juncture will be worth a - regiment:, I wet Id repos t 1, �. u-� v-�t�'iloissue,�n Along at a rapid pace, and was cafe from pursuit. By an unaccountable oversight, my would-be murderers had left me ane avenue of escape, which the shot that was meant to kill me had revealed. Iconchtded that this track must lead up to some farm house, and rode on steadily. After riding a long time I heard a sligh t sound as of "plc," ",yak" I stopped and dismounted in order to listen. ,After a while I heard it agaifi plainly. I conclud- ed that it must be a dog barking in some farm yard near:. Mounting again 1 rode on at a redoubled rate. The only thing that perplexed me was that the sound came from behind, but this I attributed to some curious echo. Soon the sound grew louder, and it was plain that whatever it was it came f •t.a,, . than ora. It was like a oi'ii ting. In a momen upon me. Th they were following g up on me. They were not doge. They ere wolves. For a moment I felt as if there ere no power in my limbs. Only by a trong effort I managed to work the hloyele at all. Even in those few aaconds of terror the brutes had measurably approach - Id. Regaining courage, I raced for my life, certainly forged ahead a little, but I'could not keep up the speed. Closer and closer, uudoubtedly,they were coming. And now, as the brutes were gain- ing on me, they ceased to yelp. But this was even less endurable. To think of heath (and a death so horrible) coming thns,silent' and iuevitable,in the darkness of the night, in the midst of a Russian pine -forest 1 I could now hear the scurrying, pattering sound they made as they sped over the ground. Sometimes a solitary yelp would break the stillness, and once or twice, as if disconcerted, the whole pack burst into a fearful chorus. The moon was now up, and I could see as I looked back the pack a hun- dred yards behind ; all but one lean, fem. ished brute, who, with red tongue lolling out, was, I saw to my horror, within 10 yards of me. Just then the noise of a torrent burst on my ears ; a wide, open spaoe in the centre of the forest lay before me. Running through the centre of it shone in the moon- light the foaming waters of a mountain stream. It lay down in a low but steep ravine, its rocky bank rising straight to the height 6f 10 feet or thereabouts. On the opposite bank I could see the white road still continuing. Further on a light beamed out. I shouted loud, but it only seemed to set the wolves behind me yelping more fiercely thttn ever. TIMES POETRY. A Little LearnlnM•. - Theyy are strolling un a,. hill together. In the fairest kind of summer weather ; She was a sweet girl graduate, He a geologist and late Of Harvard, and still fairly Yearning 10 share with all the world his learning. So much he knew And tonged to utter, That a strange sort of mental stutter confused Itis mind and bushed his face Her face was maddeeingly cool, Commonplace which hid. beenlace chool p•:y Sh owledgis excellento when etorod, But when too much of itis flying It r n roe grows tared very steep. Tho footing d!A]cnittokcep. And lo. when stamping mice or twice. He said urbanely, "` l hie is gneiss 1 . And throw him a bewitching frown : "Nice I" (tooth she, "both my shoos' are Sh tornec,ur)odher pretty lip with scorn, And 'twill be worse still, going down !" —Margaret Vandorgrift, in Quips. In the Valley. Today, when the sun was iii,irting myhouso on the pine-olnd hill, The breast of a bird was ruffed as it perched' ou my windowsill. And a feat was chased by the kitten on We broese•swept,golden walk, And thgdeenty head Was stirred on its slop der stalk: Oh ! happy the bird at the rose tree, unheed- ing the threatening storm ! And happy the blithe leaf chaser, rejoicing in sunt"fline warm 1 They take no thought for the morrow—they know no (arca to -day It nd the thousand things: That futurebringsa blank osupi ah But I, by the household Ingle, can interpret the looming clouds, For the wind • soodioes" thrusgh the key- hole, and a shadow the house enshrouds; And I know I mast quit my ineuntafn, and go down to the vale below,.:'_ For my house is chill "• When the Autumn tai t pelts blow. P dy mind is forever drawing an instructive parallel. 'Twixt temporal things that perish and eter- nal things that dwell— When billowy and waves surround me, and waters my soul O'erflow, I descend iu hope From the mountain top To lite sheltering vale below. I go down to the Valley of Silence, where the worldly are never mot; I know there is "balm and healing" there for eyes that with tears aro wet And I find !n its nu -conclusion, gentle: solace for ahmv caro For that valley pure. Wsth its shelter sure, Is the beautiful Vale of Prayer. Light Bound. In broken walls And eaverted halls Where shattered "ArtenesiaS' falls, Till at her feet I he !Livers grout-- TltorilI•born "Moyne" and "Beaver" meet; On mossyglado In fragrant shat'le, Fat: up, where sun•ra s scarce invade, hv'nwhen their floods whore Beauty broods— Roll over all the billowy woods. But, looking' ahead, I perceived that the bridge (if ever a bridge had been there) no longer existed. It `had probably been swept away by some flood in the rivgtr, Despairingly I looked at the light that lay only a few hundred yards away from me— that light that promised shelter and human companionship to me, could I only reach it. 1 shouted and shouted, again and again. I was now within 10 yards of the river, 1 was hesitating -whether to end my life at once by ridiug over the precipice and into the torrent, or to dismount and die stand- ing at bay. Just as I was about to adopt the latter course. I perceived that the bridge was not entirely gone ; one solitary pine trunk spanned the torrent from cliff to cliff. In a moment I had decided on my course. I grasped the handles tightly, and put on the highest speed I could, for I knew the faster the: pace the more ac- curately I could steer. I murmured a prayer, I was on the beam. Fortunately,it was some. what planed on the top. Steadily 1 kept my eyes on that narrow track, every little un-. evenness, every knot in the timber I had to steer clear of. The slightest jolt would have oast me intothe swirling, waters be- neath. I' may say, with truth, that the teit- tureand the outline of every inch of that beam' is imprinted on my memory to this day. I remember even how the rough, jagged edges of the bark that stili clung to the trunk stool out against the background,or rather; "underground," of white, rushing foam. So intent was,I on it that I forgot thewolves that had'forced me on so Mazar. dons a ride. Bub twice a thrill of terror ran through me as the trunk tilted over to one side and threatened ta pitch me down. Yet it trust be remembered that all this took place in, at the most, three seconds. Now I was not a foot from. the other bank when the beam gave a third tilt over. T leaned again to the other side. This time in vaib. Before I well knew it I was fall- ing„ But I made a wild spring town etc bank. D'ortune favored ole. I 1 my face into a °luster of bra I seized hold of them, and'tI' hung ovoz( bhe' resxipioe, r .And down the aisles -- Their witching smiles The wearied spirit's pain beguiles— The Wood -nymphs bear, Like answered prayer, Their solace for sny human care. 'With bated breath I hoar, beneath, Like olrarala from the realms of death, A. virgin spring Its pearl -bells ring, And every tuneful ripple sing:— "0 ing: .,O Sunlight and Beauty- a vagrant appear Long lashed in tdugeosf Dares and Night, Their bond -stones have burnished my crystal- line spheres Till they mirror and matoh all your jewels and light." "I come at His bidding who sent me afar: My lite has been ransomed, my glory rost r- ed; I have learned in the shadows and silences there Te hear and to followtho Voice of the Lord.' and corning,and still evermore, I (erre n ama ora,. From Nature's alembin distilling I come: I have gleaned from the granite -bars music and lore : When I touched them of yore Iwas silent and'iemb. " And /to I Front out this hill -way Just below me, alma -end bright, Comes the ringing, springing, Sparkling fountain to the light. And the L'ght-beams kiss its pureness And on swift, imperial wings Bear the love'thrills of its splendour To a million million things. And. the Sound -Waves waft the glories Of its melody and song ; And tho Echoes tell them over And the symphonies prolong; And the leaf -tips• touch and whisper To the zephyrs parsing by, Or the ringing. singingfountain Peeping past them, at the sky. LLILwSLLYN A. MORroaow "The Elms," Toronto. Why? • - - MARY MORRISON.. Oh, beautiful autumn woodland! Musical, murmuring breeze! Beautiful golaen glory, Drifting from all the trees. Wonderful blending of tinfings, Ruby and amber, and gold, Traced by more wonderful pencil Than any frail mortal could hold. Seo the dark green or the pine trees, Lovingly blend with the gold, Twined with the rich crimson ivy, Beauty unfathomed, untold. Why must ye fade before us 1 Why must ye pale and die 1 Fain would I keep yo forever Under this sunset sky. illousekooper. BRITISH RULE 1N INDIA, Nnalve Population. rtecorndng Restive—A snnaLt Spark Would IStout!e a neva- union. _ A Calcutta despatch says -It is the opin- ion of certain of the foreign residents of India that the native population is growing more than ordinarily restive under British rule. It can be said that close students of. the Indian character profess to believe that it would take only a small spark to kindle a fire of revolution that would be far-reach- ing in its conaequenoes. There recently occurred in Peshawur, capital of the district of the same name in the Punjaub, a series of alleged incendiary fires that resulted in a great loss of military stores, Poshawur is on the Afghan frontier and is an impor- tant strategic point, being,' aside from its military importance, the north-west terminus of the Indian railway system. Rumors are current that atterirpts were male at Raweulpindo, another important 'point, to sot fire to the Government stores.. 'he Civil and Military gazette, of I ''horn, iiientie upon thete"f WILY WAYS OP SMOGtilar. . 'reelec% Stones LTldden in all sorts of I'iaem-yyoulma Sarni to Play the crest ArtfuP-fitodges of AU, $s Diamonds acrd rubies, being so email, are easily smuggled," said a government customs inspector recently to a reporter for the New York Recorder. "I don't be- lieve the government gets the duty on one- quarter of them that are sold in the min - try, after all the expense it goes to trying So suppress the business- We have agents all over Europe, and pay employes in the brokers' oflicet, who give information of all sales to people they do not know and those strugglers whom they do know. Some of the ship's officers on every ateasner coming to New York are constantly on the watch, and all that. But what's the use if yen can't find the goods on them when they are searched. Many'sthe time I've been dead sure of my man and eoald swear he bad the sparklers somewhere about him when I s,.arched him, but I've gone through every- thing, but it was no use. Then other offi- cers take him up and keep their eyeson him as long as he stays in port, and they really have a better chance of finding sotno. thing, but they seldom do, \ventt i' AEI: oestERALLY' Tice welter and moat dexterous smugglers of stones on account of having so .much upholstering, but there are not many women in the busi- ness now. I don't know why, but they Seem to be leaving it. Diamonds have been found all over women -sewed up in seams, in heirs and tucks and corsets, waists, wraps, and muffs, and secreted in their stair which is a favorite place. We found diem in parasols and on the baby, in hats and bonnets, tied up in the corners of hand- kerchiefa and veils, and even woven in their garters, besides in everything you can think of in their trunks, some of which have false •bottoms. You may be sure that when we once are satisfied we have caught a smug- gler we do not stop at anything in the way of searching. Wo men search the men and there are women to search the females. "Why, we've found diamonds in urmbreIla sticks and in the heels of shoes, in covers of books and behind coats and pants buttons, in hollow rings and in pewter cups with false buttons. The round handle of a rainy leaf fan was the favorite hiding place forpreoious stones for SWIM years, and it was a long time before we caught one old smuggler with a hollow crutch. One old soldier of the Crimean war had an artificial leg, and he couldn't get enough diamonds to fill the in- terior of it so he filled theremafuiag empty space with fine lace to keep the stoma frons rattling and giving the snap away. One old codger used to work the sweat leather 7f hie hat with great success and another always carried a revolver of home manufacture loaded with cartridges frill of diamonds. Another follow had the biggest hollow tooth you oversew and there was always a diamond in it niooly tucked away and covered with wax wheuhe got on shore. Toe and finger; nails grown very long have hidden preoictts stones fastened in with fine silk throtid, and sleeve buttone. stave been brought into requisition success' fully in the smuggling of diamonds. Y'ou wouldn't think of it, hub little terriers have been loaded down with diamonds. You've hoard of the four and twenty blackbirds baked in probabl or 'maul drops. Y wit dra ofmatch" with false bottoms full of then. I have. I've found precious atones secreted in shawls and steamer rugs and once in the holiowod- out legs of a steaner chair. Once I found the silk cord that goes around the waist,• of a, dressing -gown filled with them and only discovered it by a mere accident as nearly all our discoveries are made. One follow had removed the works of his watch and thrown them overboard after he bad filled the ease with valuable rubies, and once a lady's bracelet contained $40,000 worth of sparklers on one voyage, and we didn't find out about it until too late. for infant an "Cestorisissow rdaptedtoafidreat14t•'. Irecommend itassuperiortoanypr eei on blown to me." If. A. Anmeze,1!. 111 So. Oxford St„ Brookiya,ll T. °The use of'easterla'Is souniversalsaid its merits so wellknownthat it seems a work of supererogation toendorseit. Few arethe intelligent famines who do not keep Castaria within easyreach." (iawaaa Alaaisit. D. D.. TetePastorBloomingdale owrme4Moron. Tim. Cerrrivit eo It ts r .s Everybody knows Liver Oil are disagr taste. Almost every (of Pure Norwegian C of Lime and Soda) wonderful curative a cough, heals and stye .wasting disease and soott's Emulsion cures Colds, Consumption Scrof all Anaemic and'Wasting i'revcn a wasting in chfldr most as palatable as Milk. the genuine. Prepared b Bowne, Belleville. Sold by al 60 cents and 6+1.00. Severe PAL Cured My wire was afflicted for two year lion; after using many remedieswithou =darling to this cure hundreds of theca p Sold E The Geography of Orime• The most notorious' crooks at the present writing are produced by the Balkan States, and the police of all civilized countries, es. pecially Germany and Austria, watch with terror the influx of thieves, burglars and crooks of all kinds that are wending their way westward from Servia, Bulgaria and Bohemia. Bucharest is known to -day as the greatest den of swindlers in the world. Even the great American crime centres cannot hold a candle to Bucharest. It is the exit, so to speak, the initiative station for the crooks of the. Balkan states, from where they travel westward to Vienna, Berlin, Paris, London; Rome and New York The international criminal profession is re. merited through a large contingent of the uncivilized element of the Balkan penin- sula,which is still furtherincreased by what comes from Russia and Galicia. The inter national pickpocket art is, in Europe as least, almost entirely carried on by Ron -1 manians, Servians, Bulgarians, Russiant and Galician. They outrank in cleverness by far the once world-famous English and American professionals in that line. The increase in all civilized lands of crimes against morality, religion, public peace and. the Government is mostly due to the social- istic wave which permeates all classes. While crime and criminals will always exist as loner as the world lasts, the next few centuries in their onward march of educa- tion and civilization will bring about a narked decrease, and the criminal statistics and annals of the present time will read like fables to the people of that remote future. Dein?' Penal Servitude- Father (who had caught Tommy steal- ing)---" 1 thought you knew better than to commit a theft ; you know how the law pun- ishes people for small offenses." Tommy—" How about you, father, when you stole mother's heart ? You never go t punished for that." Father—"I got a very severe punish- ment, my son ; I gob penal servitude for life, and I'am doing it now." " it trust have been settled very sod- denly that he should study for the ministry." "It was. He pu t up three stove pipes :in one day without swearing." A precious booty' is a foretaste of immor: tality. 10 4 1- Z vi.. s. 4S011,r Cj s° cod' O�e ,;des e C0 ° 3 dc,o iFr S ,? o 1 " "a iQr 1, .4: 0,, Sita •��ec'� ,r �•o �\0oa' e9 � 4 sr egg g Manufactured only bynames late,tSS, Oaf« es -Purchaser. should look -to the dd- •" If the address is net.-Gp,. Oxford Str THOMAS MINCHIN. Before Treatment. Lftor T Nervous Debility and Ca Thomas Minchin saps: " a nervous tivreek--•only w The result' of early mu had the following s mentally andpix sfeo oneness,' wetrknette, s dizzy, poor memo heart, flushing, col back, dreams an tho morning, pi ambition, barna etc. Doctor' Kg • -.dr & ant, ow