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The Exeter Advocate, 1895-1-3, Page 5St. George, New Brunswick. After the Grip o Strength, No Ambition od's Sarsaparilla Gave Perfect Health. The following letter is from a well-known merchant tailor of St. George, N. B. "C, I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.: "'Gentleihen-I am glad to say that Hood's Sarsaparilla and Hood's Pills have done mo a great deal of good. Z had a severe attack o: the grip in the winter, and after getting over the fever T did not seem to gather strength, and had no ambition. Hood's Sarsaparilla proved to be just what I needed. The results were very satisfactory, and I recommend ,this medicine tt all who are afflicted with rheumatism or othet afflictions caused by poison and poor blood. 1 always keep hood's Sarsaparilla in nay house and use it when I need a tonic. We also keep Hood's Pills on hand and thiuk highly of them." 4. W. DFJ EMA1, St. George, New Brunswick. Sciatic Rheumatism pt. Mccrartainan Tells How He Was Cured. "About a year ago I was taken with a severe attack of sciatic rheumatism and was laid of most of the summer. I went from here to St. John, N. B., in my packet schooner, and was so helpless and in such suffering that 3 could not got out of the cabin. The captain of another schooiaer came onboard to see one, and wanted me to get Hood's Sarsaparilla; he said it had t , Sarsapari cured liim when he was so bad that his wife ha to feed him. I sent to Boston for two bot - ties, which did forme all l had been told Hood's -Sarsaparilla would do. 1 gained rapidly and when• had taken the two bottles Iwas able to work. 'A great many people here have taken Hood's Sarsaparilla since' it cured me, and all speak highly of it" CArx. S. IvICGRANAaAN. NiargaretvlIle, Nova Scotia. cod's Sarsaparilla is sold by all druggists; Si, six for 85. Prepared only by C. I. Hood & C o.,Z owelk n!ass., U. S. A. 7 Hood's Pills are purely vegetable, and do not purge, pain or gripe. Sold by all druggists. Winnipeg had 2$ below zero ester - The Turkish garrisons in Armenia are being reinforced. The Bank of .England's rate of die count remains unchanged at 2 per cent. Common Sense. Should be used in attempting to cure than very disagreeable disease, catarrh As catarrn originates in impurities in the blood, local applications can do no permanent good. The common sense method of treatment is to purify the blood, and for this purpose there is no preparation superior to Hood's Sarsa- parilla. Hood's Pills cure constipation byrestor ing peristaltic action to the alimentary canal. Mrs. Ira Mallory, one of the olds( res! dents of the Brockville district, is dead aged 83.' Piso's Remedy for Catarrh Is the Best. Easiest to Use. and Cheapest. Sold by druggists bymail, r;8 or sent -50c. B. T. Hazeltine. warren, Pa. • the rioting in British Honduras, is at end. The capital is guarded by itish blue jackets. 1+'or Over Fifty Years. N OLD AND WELL -Tame REM 1t L. -Mrs Winslow's Soothing Syrup has been used for over fifty, ears by millions of mothers for their children while teething, with per- .feotsuccess. It soothes the:child, softens the giihi.s, allays all pain, (Sures wind colic and is the boat remedy for Diarrhoea, is pleasant to the taste. Sold by Druggists In every part of the World.. Twenty-five cent4.; a bottler Its value is incalo.elable. Be sure and. ask for Miiy. Winslow's Soothing Syrup and take no other kind an The cold snap appears to have ex- te'tided"'al1 over the continent, Toronto escaptng„with less frost and snow than most places: Mrs. Mills, relict of the late Hon. Sam- el Mills, died in Hamilton yesterday, ged 88, Our Clubbing Offer. The AnvocaTe is anxious that its sub- scribers should have the advantage ofthe Agents fees on city weeklies and with this enc, in view we have arranged with the fol- lowing papers to be clubbed .vith the An. voc.vra, We will furnish the AnvocA'ire and any of the following papers at the price '1 set opposite:- 7 re,e Prase, , ... . $1"75 dvertiser . , , 170 npire .. 1:75 • A .. 1 05 Witness (Montreal) 1.75 News (Toronto). . , ... " 1,75 Loancloan,. iI1tou aucl 3x1>,ce. '. TIMB PA 3W0. Genie Noit'ree- Passenger.. :London, depart 5.00 A M 4.30 r M Centralia 9.07 5.47 EXETER ..... ....., 9.22 ego i•lensall 9.137 615 Kipper! 944 0,20 Brucefeld 0.59 0.28 Clinton 1o.t2 6.55 Lo0desboro 10.2e 7.14 Blyth 10.38 7.23 Belgrave .. 10.52' 7 87 Wingham arrive il,to 8.00 Gloftw Sort 1rt- Winglrant, depart Belgrave Biyt1• Iiondoaboro Olin ton 8ruceiieltl ICippeu lIe nsali..,... .. . BLki'1'Bit Oentralia Passenger 5,86 A M. 3.25 1' M 8.00 2.47 7.03 4.01 7.10 4.08 7.30 4.28 7,47. 53 825 5.128 8.40 5.23 BORROWED MIRTH. Fortune Teller -Your husband will be rieh, ,handsome and clever. Brown. (to fiancee) -By Jove! wonderful! How did she guess it? -From Sketch. Debutante -Don't you ever gossip or talk scandal? Woman Hater -No, I never dis- cuss women,-N.Y, Journal, Mrs. Hale (just married) -Maria, we will have eels as a second course for dinner. Marla --How much ought I to get, ma'am? ••I think twelve yards will be sufficient."-' Vogue. Amateur Poet -It was at the time when my fiancee jilted me that I discovered my poetic vein and- Good Friend -Yes, yes; a misfortune nevercomes alone.- Fliegende Blaetter. Ada -Flo was just going down for the third time when Dr. Watson dived off a yacht and caught her. Grape -And saved her life 1 wasn't that wonderful? Ada- Yes, for a doctor, -Life. Mistress -Did you tell the lady I was out? Ward -Yes, ma'am. Mistress -Did she seem to have any doubts about. it? Ward -No, ma'am. Site said she knew yon wasn't.-Horletn Life.' "But what is this new story like?" "Like? Never was anything like%(, That's the reason it's so delightfully absurd, don't yon know. There isn't a natural charac- ter or probable situation in it. Oh, you must read it. "-Boston Trauseript. THE ORIGIN OF THINGS. The design of the American flag was pro- bably borrowed from the family arms of Gen. Washington, which consisted of three stars iu the tipper portion and three bars across the escutcheon. Watches originated at Nuremberg as early as 1477. They were at first called Nuremberg eggs, which they resembled both in shape and size. They were often fitted into the tops of walking -sticks. The first English book on stenography, so far as known, was written by Dr. Tim- othy Bright in 1588. Its earlier invention is attributed to the Latin poet Ennius, to Seneca, Cicero and several others. Guns are said to have been used by the. Chinese before the beginning of the Christ- ian era. The oldest dated piece of Euro- pean artillery'bears au Faso(i t tn de clar- ing that the gun was east in 1303. Marine insurance was practiced in Rome, B. C. 45. It was very general in Europe before the discovery of America, and it is altogether probable that the ships of Col- umbus were insured for their full' value. Coats of arms were first employed in England during the reign of Richard L. and became hereditary infamilies in the following century. They originated from the painted banners carried by knights and nobles. - pERSONAL POINTS. M. Emile Zola proposes to leave Paris very shortly for Spain, with a view of mak- ing studies for a new book. Baroness Bnrdett-Coutts possesses the and most carefully preserved finest y p se ved copy of the first folio of Shakespeare, 1623. Mrs. Alexander, the well-known novel- ist, who is really Mrs. Alexander Hector, is a grandmother, nearly seventy. The Dahoman King Behanzin is wast- ing away in his exile at lVIartinique. He is pining for , his African wilds and inci- dentally smoking stacks of Yankee cigarettes. Miss Sophia A. Nordhoff, a former stu- dent tndent of medicine at Washington, has been appointed a physician at the famous wo- man's clinic of Prof. von Winkel in Munich. Bret Harte's hair is silvery white, con- trasting vividlywith the ruddyglowof i g his healthful complexion. ' His face is clean-shaven except . for an ample mus- tache, and his smile most genial. The reason that Prince Bismarck drinks champagne out of the bottle is to get the benefit of the gas. It is by the .doctor's orders. They say you do get all the gas that way, but not much champagne. Andreas Zorn, the artist whose original style of portraiture was much admired during the world's fair, says that Mrs. Potter Palmer and Mrs. Grover Cleveland are two of the most lovely representatives of womanhood he has ever seen. CL '-T A,' I .ixa. t. EXETER ONTARI(1 Has xlow in Stock 11 FALL TOPICS OF A WEEK... lice Important Fiyeuts in N Few 'words For Busy !Leaders. Mr- Arthur Ellis, financial editor of The Loudon Times, 1s dead, Rev, Father Dawson died. at Ottawa op Saturday, aged 84 years. Thi'1i'auitoba Legislature has been offi- cially called together for January 24, The. Manitoba Government office in Lon- don, Eng., has been permanently closed, At Saratoga, N.Y on Saturday the temperature was 30 degrees below Zero. Mr. Gladstone celebrated his S5th birth- day on SaturdayHe was in great spirits, and spoke vigorously for fifteen . minutes. The London Chronicle announces the death of Christina Georgina Rosetti, the poetess. Mrs. Jacob Beatty of Hagorsvillo in the Bank' of Hamilton was .robbed of i:50 on Saturday, be. Smythe, Q, C., has consented to again oppose Ron. Wm. Harty in King - The Pedlar block in Oshawa took fire on Friday morning and considerable damage was done. A project is on foot to establish 'a direct• line of steamships between Montreal and St. John's, Newfoundland. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Hayes and family had a narrow escape from their burning • house at London on Friday. The reappearance of the Ku -Klux -Klan at Hazleton, Par, has caused great appre- hension on the part of citizens, Diphtheria is rapidly depopulating the village of Wesley, Minn., a place of. about 300 inhabitants, all Bohemians. The. Brazilian Government has ordered a million dollars' worth of war material from the Armstrongs, of England, The Delevan House at Albany, N.Y., was destroyed by fire on Sunday. One person killed and half a dozen injured. Mr. Donald Matheson of West Zorra was. killed OD. Saturday while tearing down an old barn on the farm adjoining his own, The writ for the re-election of the new Cabinet Minister, Hon. A. R. Dickey, has been issued. fixing nomination for Jan - nary 15. Col. Michael Frank, the founder of the free school system of Wisconsin, is dead. A few days ago he celebrated his 90th birthday. Henry Menier, who jumped with the aid of a parachute from the Poughkeepsie bridge on Christmas Day, • is suffering frown severe injuries. At New York on. Sunday Battalion Chief John Bresnan and Assistant' Foreman John J. Rooney were killed at a fire at 124 West 24th street. The jury eonpannelled to enquire into the cause of death, of the late James Crane at Raspier find that the cause of death was accidental drowning. Fourteen workmen were rescued from a burning mine at Olyphant, Pa., at 5 o'clock on Saturday, after having been imprisoned all night. . The body of Ruben Miles, who was shot in Washington last Monday, reached Brantfond:on Saturday. The funeral took place Sunday afternoon. Mr. G. A. Wicksteed, Q. C., of Ottawa, has just celebrated the ninety fifth . anni- versary of his birth, which occurred in the last year of the last century. The British bark Osseo was wrecked in: gale at Holyhead, and with a e her err g Y ,perished her entire crew of 26 risen. The Osseo was driven ashore back of the. Holyhead break- water. Wm. Oppertshaeuser, a young man who was injured some weeks ago by a fall from a second storey at the Berlin Hospital building, died on Friday at his home in Elmira. ' An illicit whiskey still has beenndiscov- ered near Deloraine alongside the interna- tional boundary line.. Officers : visited the spot and seized the plant, also arresting five persons. Citizens of Vancouver are terrorized by the visit of a gang of highwaymen, bur glars and firebugs, who have found their way to the city by way of the Sound. Peo- ple are robbed aafell hours of the night. Mr. W. W. Ogilve and Mr. W. A. Hast- ings of Montreal, who have recently re- turned from the Northwest, speak en- couragingly of better prices for wheat and improved prospects in, that part of the coun try. Ald. Prefoutaine, M.P., of Montreal, as suing Ald. Muff of Ottawa for $10,000 damages for slander on. account of some remarks that Ald. Mail isalleged to have n lea e. referring to contracts held by the plaintiff . lsc.a. John W. Foster,.' ex -Secretary of State of the United States, has been re- quested by the Chinese Government to go to Japan and assist in the peace negotia- tions. Mr. Foster will go byway of Van - Thomas L. Chappelle, ar Tlao PP , 48 years age,. for many years publisher of Chappelle's, almanac, dropped dead in Charlottetown, P.E.I., on Friday. IIe was a brother of Rev. R. Chappelle, now a missionary at Tokio, Japan. Edward R. Carter, transfer and' . fpon clerk of the National Bank of Commerce in New York, has been arrested charged with appropriating 830,000 of the bank's money, Carter is 44 years old, and has a wife and two children. •Wm. A. Lippert, who committed forger- ies at Capetown, South, Africa. to the amount of half a million dollars and iied to the 't sited States, has been arrested' at Cincinnati. Lippert was one of the bold- est speculators of the colony and lived like a prince. Mr. Beverley Rose, of the Niagara Falls electric railway, who was spending the holidays at Port Hope, was seeing a young lady friend off on a train there, when he tripped and felt in frontof the Pullman car which was (moving, : and had his left arm taken ofJ; below the elbow. The Governor-General conies in for some criticism in Ottawa by his letter stating, that he would keep his iiroinise to inaugu rate the 'Winter Carnival ot11y on condi- tion that it was postponed from January 21, until some time in, February because of the death of Sir John Thompson. The annual dinner given by the lady pa- tronesses of Notre Dame hospital, Mon - areal, to the sickpoor had several novel features,' His Grace ,the Archbishop, hay QQ ing tied an apron on, ladled outtthe soup with the dexterity of an experieticed chef, 1N THE l+'C)hJ,()WZti1 1,tN leae itndLady Aberdeen, assisted by the pa tronesses and thesi4ers, acted as wait - ... of Fnglarl ,"uitill,•e silt( t ra! rods. er age, George Wopd, of Toronto, aged 24, a guard at the Central Prison and' residing Scotch Twee 4'i' ititirigs 511(1 ' roue(r at 858 Sulnaoh-street, attempted to heard LA the front platform of an rash")ound car, near Queen and Peter -streets while the t.,.d f'tn ear was in motion. His foot slipped, but �lA st he clung to the rail and Was dragged a,. distance of 40 yards before,' the ear-conld be stopped, Ile sustailiedmany bad cats and bruises on the left side, and may be severely injured internally. DO T11011 LIKEWISE A LADY SAVES FIFTY DOLLARS BY WISELY INVESTING SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS A wise, careful and thrifty wife and mother living about five miles from t large and flourishing Ontario town, veli how she was enabled to save fifty dollars in a judicious investment of seventy five cents, Her story runs. as follows:- Las autumn I found it was neves- nary to provide new overcoats, suits and dresses for three boys and two The materials for these gar- ments and the making and trimmings would cost fifty dollar$., This was a sum to expend just at a time when we were making great efforts to build a new house. "Pox. two days ,I thought the matter Iyer, and aftercarefully examining my children's garments, the question itrongly presented itself to my mind, ,an I make use of the Diamond Dyes?". "I had used the Diamond Dyes be- orewith a great success in' a smaller way, and 80 I determined to see what •oulcl be done, with the view of saving so large a sum as fifty dollars. My •hildren's garments were not torn or very badly „worn: they were simply faded, dingy and old. looking; I com- menced with an overcoat to test tnv skill, and succeeded In dyeing it a lovely dark shade of brown. l• pressed uld finished it in such a way that it sulked like a new garment from the :and of a tailor. "Meeting with shch great success, I icd tuo other garments and achieved onderful results, and the total. cost of he work accomplished was only sev- nty''five cents. "My boys and girls were astonished, and were quite as well pleased with the renovated garments as they would have been with brand new ones. Very few people around me were aware of the fact that I bad used Diamond Dyes to renew my ,children's clothing, and it 'for another winter's wear. Of 'pure I told some of my friends how I ad saved fifty dollars, and they are 'flowing,' my example, and are freely ising•the Diamond Dyes. "You will clearly see how any in- ',illigent and handy mother can easily :ave quite a sum of money every year. .Marr and Dyes are certainly ; money a vers," ioadman's COMMERCIAL L9VERY. irst-class Rigs and Horses Orders left at Hawkshaws' Hotel, or at the Livery S tob1e,(Chri rte's old Stancl) will receive prompt . ..at- tention. . 1PBerma 1 oasonny',e Telephone Connection Toe Ducftess of Uxfora ‚�ges! THE MOST MODERN AND ATTRACTIVE RANGE, EVER PUT ON THE MARKET Our Patent Duplex Flue Insures an oven that works uniformly in all parts and is perfectly ventilated, The Fire Linings Proctecl by the draft from the Duplex k-'lu.e. Lasts double the usual time. A Perfect Stove Guaranteed in all respects, MANUFACTURED BY . The Gurney � Foundr Co., L't'd Toronto Ont. For sale by H. BISHOP & SON. Exeter. MURRAY & CO. Manufacturers and Dealers in. Grain Crushers, Straw Cutters Root Pulper-6-Kl i.fe spot cash 10y .50. Also general Eoun- dry work. Castings iniron and brass to order, . 1000 cords ofhard and soft wood o t for sale. JAS. MURRAY & CO. BRANTFORD STEAM LAUNDRY! A.HASTITGS, Agent If you want your linen to look whiter than snow, take it to . RL. e 0 EXETER'S Popular Tonsorial Arils Ladies' and Children' Haircutting, A. Specialty. HARMLESS liEIEA NE POWDERS owe ALLfI'h y HEADACHE: aavoi ' tisec8 to are ivory,- thin1,batsin ptsiteasi- achea. 3b -J *herr. 5 trill vest but i2 .masts fur a box and titcv harmless. They are note Cam Bicycles Sewing Machines, - Baby Carriages And. Musical .. Instruments. We are the only firm who make a specialty of the p y above named goods and therefore claim that we can give the people of Exeter and vicinity,- Greater arains Greater Choice !I Lowest . Prices. ! ! ., The latest and newest ai tachments for all our„ goo& can be had by calling at our ware -rooms, -One door north Dr. Lutz's drug store PERKIN & NET/ rtT !fir Efff sm-- 1�3 COMBitifiriOti f� , a JTo the Patrons of Our ®r au "77) a4 t1t14" V" a lg ar pfd_i:' - - iii nu - ,-uri ,- t lAll ,,;j; Pap r a We will give THE TORONTO DAILY T`� EWS and ourown weekly one year ear. for One Dollar , ' and Seventy-five Cents $4.00 FOR The regular pr of The News has until" recently been $3 a year, and you can, by accepting, this offer now, get THE BEST WEEKLY in the country and THE BEST DAILY in the province for $ 1.75 a year,. ". DA,ILY:, ; , . , .. 1.75 it1ga ar (Montreal) , .. ... 1,75 areiers' Advocate.. ... 175 rA71 it" ci4 armors' Shit (Patrons) With the exception of the Daily News the lance or x854 wiIl be given free, rd the money to our office--don'twait, jj1 as the offer will' not retrain open long a Won`t LaentLbng: P 4REPT DEFER ..a