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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1894-5-23, Page 5NERVE pEANS ITLRVEVEANS aro ft now dls• covery that caro the worst cages of Nervous Debility. Lost Vigor or and g Fading Manhood; restores the weakness of body or mind caused by ovor.worlt, or the errors ores ceases of youth. This Remedy ab- solutely euros tho most obstinate oases when all other g]rsa�rhu„tis have tailed evento relieve. Zold by drug, ists at $1. per package, o: six for or sent by mail on receipt of prlco by addr asing TIIR JAMES MEDICINE Q7O.. Toronto. Ont. 1Yrir,.'.,r, uu nehlot. Sold Ju— ror or Sale lin _Exeter by 3, W. Browning Carnot will not seek re election in the French Presidency. LOW'S WORM SYRUP is th e stan Bard of Excellence Mothers remora mend it. Children cry for it. Worms fly from it. A negro convict suspected of murder was lynched in Hamilton Countp. Fla I had a severe cold, for which I took Norway Pine Syrup. I find it an ex- 'weellent remedy, giving prompt relief • and pleasant to take. J. Paynter, Huntsville. Ont. The list of liquor licenses issued for the ensuing year appears in another column. BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS, cures Dyspepsia Burdock Blood Bitters, cures Consti- pation. Burdock Blood Bitters, cures Bilious- ness, Burdock Blood Bitters clues Head- ache. Burdock Blood Bitters unlock all the clogged secretions of the Bowels, thus puring Headaches and similiar com- claints. The Great Northern strike has 'been finally settled, the men getting all they asked. J'or Over Fifty Years. AN OLD AND WELL -TRIED REMEDY. -111•S Winslow's Soothing Syrup, has been used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teething, with per- fect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic and is the best remedy for Diarrhma. is pleasant to the taste. Sold by Druggists In. every part of the 'World. Twenty-five cents a bottle, Its value is incalculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup and take no other kind Fully $500,000 worth of counterfeit Government stamps are in circulation in Mexico. Sirs.—I had such a severe cough that my throat felt as if scraped with a rasp. On taking Norway Pine Syrup I found the first dose gave relief, and thcecond bottle completely cured me - Miss A. A. Downey, Eanotie, Ont. Broekyille Patrons ;decided yester- day not to nominate a candidate for the Legislature: WEAKNESS, DEBILITY, PALE- NESS ANAEMIA, etc., •are cured by Milburn's Beef Iron and wine. Dr. Rice won the Brooklyn Handicap yesterday, Henry of Nayarre 2nd, and Sir Walter 3rd. About two months ago I was nearly wild with headaches. I started taking Burcock Blood Bitters, took two bottles and my headaches have now altogether disappeared I think it is a grand medicine. Eva Finn, Massey Station, Ont. Itlis estimated that the impending strike of London cabmen will withdraw 7,000 cabs from service. Skin diseases are more or less direct- * • ly occasioned by bad blood. B. B. B. cures the folloing Skin Diseases: Shing les, Erysipelas, Itching Rashes, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Eruptions, Pimples, Blotches by removing all impurities from the blood from a common Pimple to the worst Scrofulous Sore. Mr. A. S. Bail, for Mr. Totten, bought the Woodstock Grand Oyera House at auction for $2,700. 4 HARMLESS HEADACHE POW DERS A� HEAaDACt CHE� tised to. ours every- thinj,tiutsimpiy head- aches. Try them, it will cost but 2.5 cents for a box and they a^e harmless. Ther are not a Cathartic. The gallery of the Society of Arts of Canada was thrown open to the public yesterday afternoon. CHAPPED HANDS AND LIPS, cracked skin, sores, cuts, wounds and bruises are promptly cured by Victoria Carbolic Salve. A by-law has been induced in the Woodstock Council to provide for the ringing of the curfew bell. Dyspepsia causes Dizziness, Head- ache, Constipation, variate Appetite, Rising and Souring of Food, Paipita- tion of the Heart, Distress after Eating. Burdock Blood Bitters are guaranteed to cure Dyspepsia, if faitnfully used according to directions. The heavy frost of Monday night al- most destroyed the early strawberry crop in the Niagara dietriet, and it is feared the apple and late peach crop will also be greatly lessened. HOAST is the old Scotch name for a cough. The English name for the best cure for coughs is Dr. Wood's Nor- /I/14y Pine Syrup. In the Court of General Sessions yes- terday, James Giles was sentenced to two months' imprisonment for keeping a betting house in the guise of a pool room. This wonderful discovery is the best known remedy for Biliousness and all Stomach and Liver Troubles, such lc es Constipation, Headache, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Impure Blood, etc. These Lozenges are pleasant and harmless, and though powerful to promotes healthy action of the bowels, do not weaken like pills. At' your tongue Is coated you need thein. 011 f it 1, NtilhikSe7CQD'On$ 3. Mr. Charles Moss, Q.C. was last night unalniouslt' nominated as the Relents eaedidate of South Toronto at the iii pending Provincial contest. MAY 24TH. Another bright day dawneth From out the eastern sky, To our groat satisfaction For Exeter will try To celebrate the birthday Of ollr beloved Queen The best and dearest monarch The word has ever seen. Oh farmer leave your field and faim And throw aside dull care, Come into town and view the sports And all our pleasures share,. You know the good old adage, All work and then no play Will do no good for you and me, So take a holiday . The Spring has been a glorious one, And truly God hath sent Both sun and rain to make things grow And fill us with content. The wheat and crops aro far ahead Of last year's odes I wean In fact the very earliest chat many men have seen. Then spend one clay in jollity, Don't trust to what hath been; But open well your lungs and shout God save our gracious Queen. In Memoir Of Vte.a Dolores Godbolt, who departed this life at Sunshine May 15th 18 4 Dear Vera, we miss thee, we cannot refrain From expressing our thoughts in a sorrow- ful strain. Tho summ or may pass,the winter come again But for your return we'll look all in Vain. Row sudden this change, wo can hardly con- ceive That the form we loved now is still in the grave. May this lend us in time, just now to receive, The words of that Saviour who only can save. You have gone, you leave us, so inuocent, so fair, While life's mourning sun was shining so bright; But while we thus mourn we will not despair For we kuo w you reside whore Christ is in light. flow little we thought as we watched by your side, And bade you farewell as we loft that sad. morn, That erelong the sun shed its beams far and wide, On the morrow our friend of this life should be shorn Oh, how this should teach us wo aro but of to -day To -morrow the sun we may never see rise; Now just at this moment trust in Jesus, the way To those glorious mansions where death never pries. While we cannot forget thee how sad 'tis to part, Never more in this life to meet, speak, or own, Let us think of the now as in glory thou art And strive there to meet thee where part- ing's unknown HELLEN SP'xcER. Killed at a Barn -Raising. Again we are called upon to record a sad event which occurred in connec- tion with the raising of the framework of a barn—a story which is too fre- quently told. Mr. John Cole, east part lot 40, con. 9, East Wawanosh, had a barn -raising on Saturday and all the young and able-bodied men of the countryside were in attendance. Sides, of course, were chosen, yet be it said the parties were not racing as is fre- quently done on occcasions of this kind. Things went together nicely until about six o'clock and the work was nearly done. Suddenly a chain broke which hold one end of a purline plate and the heavy timber, raised nearly to ts place turned on the pike poles and fell, striking John Taylor who was standing on the main plate, and caus- ing him to fall to the floor below, a dis- tance of twenty eight or thirty feet. The timber evidently struck him on the left side of the neck, bruising it terrible and falling head downward struck on the left side of his head, tearing the flesh off the scalp from about an inch above the bridge of his nose to the back of his ear; a great gash, about four inches in length on his cheek, was presumably caused by striking on a canthook which was laying on the floor. James Grashy, another young man, who was at the top of this fatal plate, was precipitated below, twisting around many times dining the fall. Concussion of the brain was the result, but it is confi. dently expected that he will recover in a few days. John Taylor was a fine specimen of humanity, standing six feet one inch in his stockings and weighing over two hundred pounds. He was taken home, lot 41, same con- cession, where lie lingered until his death, which occurred at 7 o'clock on Sunday week. only partially regaining consciousness a short time before. De- ceased was tax -collector of the town- ship last year; he leaves a wife and one child, a girl about a year old. His young wife was completely prostrated by the heavy affliction which so sud- denly befel her. It is unnecessary to say that the funeral, which took place on Tuesday to the Brandon cemetery, was an exceedingly large one, and that the relatiyes have ,the most heart- felt sympathy of all in their sad be. reayement. It might be incidentally mentioned here that two years ago deceased, while assisting at a barn raising, fell and re- ceived great injury, dislocating both a wrist and an ankle, and his recovery was a question. Such must have been the death which fate had in store for him. Clinton: Mr Jas, Steep recovered last week for shipments a two-year old pig from Mr. Shoales, of Hullett, whtch weighed 700 lbs St. Marys: On Friday Harry, the youngest son of Mr, Wal. Nieves. was severely bitten by a dol; belonging to Mn: Geo Spcarin Nater-st. The little fellow was going with other boys into the place where the dog was confined, when it sprang at him and fastened its teeth in his face tnking out a piece of the flesh above the nose The wound was promptly attended to and is doing well. The dog was shot the same day. FARMING 'IN FOREIGN LANDS.. A correspondent of the Farmers' Gazet- te, Dublin, writes recommending Jerusalem. artichokes (Helianthus tuberoses) for mak- ing silage. Russian Turkestan is suffering from a scarcity of food, caused, in part, by the ravages of locusts in certain districts, the unfavorable season last year, and still more by the "cotton fever” which led fanners to neglect other crops for cotton, The Japan dwarf peach is very highly commended by the Queenslander as little but good. The tree grows to a height of only three feet, but the fruits set so thick- ly that unless thinned they crowd one ano- ther, and the flavor is declared to be ' *situp- ly luscious." Among the varieties of English sheep, which have been taken toNew Zealand for crossing with Merinos, one of the favorite breeds is the Romney Marsh, of Kentish. The object of the cross is to obtain a car- cass suitable for the frozen mutton trade without sacrificing the fleece. New Zealand fruit growers are using cyanid of potassium as an insecticide. It is dissolved in water, at the rate of one ounce of oyanid to twenty gallons of water, and the solution is sprayed in the usual manner. It is found quite effective with- out injuring the most delicate foliage. It is a very dangerous poison. SHORT SCISSORINGS. The British mercantile navy has cost in building £133,670,000. The head of the rattlesnake has been. known to inflict a fatal wound after being severed from the body. Of 15,000 persons one arrives at the age of 100 years, of 500 one attains the age 90, and one in 100 lives to the age of 60. A box of earth hasbeen sent from the grave of Gen. Lafayette to the Daughters of the American Republio at San Fran- cisco, in which to plant a tree of liberty. The diamond is not among the earliest gems known to man. It has not been found in the ruins of Nineveh, in the Etruscan sepulchers nor in the tombs of Phoenicians. An old stage coach, that had been held up and robbed eighty-three times, now lies dismantled in the yard of a livery stable in Phoenix, A.T. Twenty years ago it began running between Prescott and Tombstone. The first lighthouse in America was built at the entrance to Boston harbor in 1715-16, at a cost of about 811,500. Erect- ed by the order of the general court of the province of Massachusetts bay, it was sup- ported by light dues of one penny per ton on all vessels except coasters. FROM MANY LANDS. The mortar and pestle still in use in most parts of Asia and all over A.£rica is the prototype of the modern flour mill. The finest tomb in Great Britain is un- doubtedly that of the Duke of Hamilton on the grounds of Hamilton palace. It cost £180,000 pounds. In the olden days pigs were considered a great delicacy in Rome, and those for the magnates were fattened on honey, figs and whey. . In the days of William the Conqueror it was more dangerous to kill a rabbit than a man. A murderer could escape with pay- ment of a fine, a rabbit slayer was put to death. A wonderful nug; et of tin has been dis- covered in the mines of North Dundee, ,Tasmania. It is estimated to weigh 5,400 pounds. The assay of a small piece shows that the large mass of ore contains 67 per cent. of metallic tin. ON THE ROLLING WAVE. Daniel Schwentou in 1636 described the diving bell, made a dress for divers and invented a model of a centrifugal pump, • Norway ranks second to England in the number of her sailing vessels of fifty tons and over. The United States is third. Jonathan Hulls in 1736 made a small steamboat. It failed to work, but had all the germs of Fulton's later invention. A whaling expedition is to be dispatched from Australia to the Antarctic ocean shortly to test the practicability of estab- lishing a whale -fishing industry in south- ern waters. The Engineering and Mining Journal says that lake shipbuilding has shared in the depresssion which has affected all other business, and on January 1 there were re- ported under construction in the lake yards only twenty-eight vessels of an aggregate tonnage of 26,100 tons, against forty-nine ships of 68,470 tons a year ago. FASHIONS IN JEWELRY. The new silver toast racks indicate that toast is in fashion. Mustard pots of red glass set in perforat- ed silver with a silver cover are new. There seems to be an increase in the use of different tinted gold for working out designs. Intaglios of card set in gold are used as double lurk sleeve buttons by people of artistic and quiet tastes. New tiaras are built like crowns. The centers are at least four inches high. Talk about American queens! A crescent brooch. fully four inches long from end to end, is of graduated smoky topazes set with small bril- liants. An ornament is a bursting sun of dia- monds around a cat's-eye, two inches in diameter. In and out of the tips of the sun rays is a green enameled snake. GATHERED IN ENGLAND. Liverpool has just extended its bounder• ies, taking in several suburban districts, and is now the second largest city in the British empire. The waiters employed in' the House of Commons have been forced to rise and op• pose a labor member, Mr. Cramer, in his endeavor to abolish the tip system in the House restaurant. An Edinburgh life insurance man says that the largest mortality rate in indoor occupations is found among liquor sellers. Among 1,000 sellers he found the average mortality to be 29.2. Forty-two dollars and fifty cents a pound was the price recently paid at auetion in London for a small eonsignmetit of tea from the Mount Vernon estate, Ceylon. The tea was pronounced to be absolutely the finest ever grown. ABOUT WOMEN - Miss Mary Happy was married recently to James Lucky, in Halifax, N.S. Viscountess Aoki, the wife of the newly appointed Japanese minister to England is T a German woman of noble birth Abbaziia, where the German empress is now with her six little princes and only princess, lies at the north end oaf the Adrf etre sea, on the gulf of Fame. Provincial Campaign, Seaforth. Ont., May 18.—The local Conservative paper here says that E, L. Dickinson has retired, and that the contest will be between Thos. Gibsou, the old member, and Wm, Milne, Reeye of the Township of Grey, Mr. Milne will enter the contest as an independ- ent Liberal. St. Marys, Ont,, May 18.—A very largely attended convention of Liberal- at Liberal- Conservatives of South Perth was held in the Town Hall here to day. Nearly all the old officers were re-elected, Spir- ited addresses were delivered by Dr. Nesbitt, of Toronto, and W. F. Camp- bell, M.P.P., for. Algoma. The question of nominating a candidate to contest the Riding for the Local Legislature was fully discussed, and it 'was decid- ed to adjourn to assemble at the call of the chair to finally deal with the ques tion. There are three candidates al- ready before the electors—Hon, T. Bal- lantyne, the Reform nominee, Mr. J. McNeill, the Patron candidate, and Mr. T. Race, an independent. Kirkton: Mr. Newton Boyd has pur- chased from Mr. Walter Robson his watch repairing business atleirkton. Half a dozen Harvard students who • were boating near Boston yesterday were drowned by the upsetting of the boat. Grand Bend: Messrs. John Baird and Win. Stubbs have taken the con- tract of a large drain down on the marsh and are busy at it this week. A Family Friend.—No family should be without Perry Davis' Vegetable Pain -Killer. It can be given to the infant for the colic, and to the adult for Rheumatism. There is scarce'y a disease to which it may not be benefic- ially applied. It contains no deleter- ious drug, but may be used for the various ailments of mankind. Get a Big 25e. Bottle. Blyth : Peter McIntosh, reported to have " skipped," returned on Monday Constable Davis made a seizure of a horse and rip; which Peter had left in charge of relatives near Bluevale, and repentant Peter returned to elucidate matters. He claims he is " chuck -full of honesty" and said he was advised to leave in the manner he did. We feel sorry for him. Clinton : Mr. 0, D. Finley, who so successfully conducted the Hicks Com- mercial Hotel at Mitchell for several years, has leased the Grand Union at Clinton for a period of five years. The house was open for business last Mon day and Mr. Finley will . have every- thing after his liking in a very short time. The opening is generally con- sidered a good one, Clinton: It is no small honor for a Clintonian, says the New Era, to hold second place among the shorthand writes, of the United States, and this is the distinction won by Mr. L. Hartt 'son of Mr. C. A. Hartt. of town) man- ager who is private secretary to the general manager of the Wabash Rail- way, St. Louis, and admitted to be the second fastest shorthazder in America. Goderich: Justice Armour has given the cafe of Andrews vs. Beechler, tried at the Spring Assizes here. P,ffs. sued for $1,000 damages for the taking of the cattle by Beechler, and $625 for fending. them, but the case is now dis- missed with costs against Offs. The action of Beechler vs. Andrews, in which the former sued for $1,000 dam- ages for breech of contract by which Andrews' were to repurchase the cattle is yet to be decided, Wingham: A couple of young men of the town had quite an experience the other day. Being at the place of business of a resident of the town, they found a bottle containing some spring medicine, which they helped themselves to quite freely. On the return of the business man, they told him what they had done. As a joke on the young men, he told them that the liguid was poisonous which startled them and they at once sought relief at a drug store and other places. One used his fingre instead of an accounts. The other young man sought his home, wher he was under the careful nursing of his mother, and the family physican was consulted, before it leaked out that' the liguid taken contained no poisonous iugreient. The friends of the young men make merry at their exspence just now. SCRAPS OF SCIENCE. It would take about twelve hundred globes as large as our earth to make one equal in size to Jupiter. A German officer has invented a motor in which a fine stream of goal dust is util- ized to drive a piston by explosions in the same manner as the gas in the gas engine. It has been estimated that at last one- half of the power expended in the opera- tion of the average manufacturing estab- lishment is wasted in overcoming the fric- tion of lubricated surfaces or shafting and other machinery. W. G. Bissett's Livery First Class Horses and Rigs. SPECIAL RATES WITH COMMERIAA MEN. Orders left at Bissett Bros.'Hardware Store, will receive prompt attention, TERMS - REASONABLE A TRIAL SOLICITED. W. G. BISSETT Piso, y a Iremed for Catarrh is the Desi, Easiest to Use ane, Cheapest. r . `t,+ A t RFCHY LS7 Sold by druggists or sent by mall, the. It ll. Hazeltine. Warren, Pa, • RHUFA,�y FFA` 1aETi NEURALGIA,MUSCULAR STIFFNESS, nn PAIN IN SIDE M WIJIJwL LI< � BACK �0 WHA "D.&L MENTHOL PLASTER AD PROF. DQENWEND, The Great Hair foods Manufacturer, is Coming, and will be at the Central Hotel, 'Wednesday, May 80 4 With a large stock of Ladies' and Gents' Wigs, Toupees, Waterwaves, Bangs, Switches, and other Hair G-oods Styles, �� s .y'� SOL• NENntS He will be here only one day. • � '► o�P EE. Everyone in want of his fine sty les should call on him early, These goods are so natural they are perfection when placed on the head. Don't miss the last visit to Exeter this season. . The annual meeting of the Y.M.C.A. was held last evening. A deficit of $3.000 was shown on the year's trans- actions, A Boos TO HoRsntin1.1.-0ne bottle of English Spavin Liniment completely removed a curb from my horse. I take pleasure in recommending the remedy, as it acts with mysterious promptness in the removal from horses of hard, soft or calloused 1umps,hlood spavin, splints curbs, sweeuy, stifles and sprains. George Robb, Farmer, Markham, Ont. Sold by C. Lutz, Druggist, East Lambton P.P.A. renominated P. D. McCallum, M.P.P,, for the Legisla- ture last evening. The conyention was held at Watford. Blreumatisnr Cured in a Day. South American Rheumatic Cure, for Rheumatism and Neuralgia, radically cures in 1 to 3 days. Its action upon the system is remarkable and myster- ious. It removes at once the cause and the disease immediately disap- pears. The first doss greatly benefits. 25c. Sold by C. Lutz,Dr uggist. The United States Bering Sea fleet consisting of three warships, one cruiser and two cutters, sailed yesterday from Port Townsend, Wash. Don't delay. It is your duty to yourself to get rid of the foul aecummulation in your blood this Spring. Hood's Sarsaparilla is just the medicine you need to purify, yitalize and enrich your blood. That tired feeling which affects nearly every one in the spring is driven off by Hood's Sarsaparilla, the great spring medicine and blood purifier. Hood's Pills become the favorite cathar- tic with every one who tries them. Chief Aitchison of the Hamilton Fire Department bought two horses at Georgetown yesterday, A. Neilson and R. Graham each supplying one. Relief in Six IItours. Distressing Kidney and Bladder di seases relieved in six hours by the "NEW GREAT SOUTH AttaRIOAN KID- NEY Cuun." This new remedy is a great surprise and delight to physic ians on account of its exceeding promptness in relieving pain in the bladder, kidneys, back and every part of the urinary passages in male or fe male. It removes retention of water and pain in passing it almost immed- iately. If you want quick relief and cure this is your remedy. Sold by C. Lutz, Druggist. An Albany, N.Y. yesterday, Eugene Brady, maniac, killed his mother, aged 65, in a fit of violence and attempted to kill four other persons, ALL MEN Young, old or middle-aged, who find themselves nervous, weak and ex - delisted, who are broken down from excess or overwork, resulting in many of the following symptoms: Mental depression. premature old age, loss of vitality, loss of memory, bad dreams, himness of sight, palpitation of the heart, emissions, lack of energy, vain in the ,Itiduoys, headaches, pimples in the face and body, itching or peculiar sensation about the scrotum, wasting of the oagans, dizziness, specks before the eyes, twitching of the monies, eye- lids,and elsewhere, bashfulness, depos- its in the urine, loss of will -power, ten- derness of the scalp and spine, weak and flabby muscles, desire to sleep, failure to be rested by sleep, constipa• tion, dullness of hearing, loss of voice, desire for solitude, excitability of tem- per, sunken eyes, surrounded with LEADEN CIRCLES, oily looking skin, etc., are all symptoms of nervous debil- ity that lead to insanity unless cured. The spring of vital force having lost its tension every function wanes in consequence. Those who through abuse, committed in ignorance, may be permanently cured, Send your ad- dress for book on diseases peculiar to man, sent free; sealed. Address M. V. LUBON, 24 Macdonnel Ave., Toronto. Ont. MURRAY &a G0, 1LalinfaetnrPra end! in.., alters 2:n Walking and Riding Plows, Cultivators, Iron Plows, Spade and Disk Harrows, Land Rollers. Castings of every descrip-- don in Brass and iron to order. Also dealers in Piping, Fillings, Brass Goods, Sh aftings, Pull eys -and Hangers. Special prices to dealers in large quantities. R e p a i r i n g promptly done. . . . . JAS. RI UFEAY gl CO. CAUSES BoHsr 'Navies, Maws, Ulcers, Sores, Scrofula re Skin t iseases. BRED. CARTER. DEAa Sxns.—I was covered with pimivlesaa small boils and after obtaining no relief 3sem a doctor tried different remedies without roe - cess until one Sunday I was given of abut*, of Burdock Blood Bitters, by the useofwhidh the sores were sent flying in about one vaelea time. I made up my mind never to bo without B.B.B. in the house, and I can highly secom- mend it to all. FR.ED. GARTER, Haney, B.C. I can answer for the truth of the above. T. C. CI RISTIAN, Haney, B.Q. DELICATE MURRAT & ANMAN'S *Asa RICH RARE PUNGENT PURE SWEET LASTING ti at L't?►S JI WATER r STILL HOLDS THE FIRST PLACE IN POPULAR FAVOR. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. FRAGRANT Mr.W. O. Caldwell, M.P.P. was ,re- nominated for the Legislature by the Liberals of North Lenack estcrday. LERA mORBUS ,ALWAYS PROMPTLY CURED BY PERRY DAVIS'PAi N-KIILLER