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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1906-10-25, Page 3' ANcLEa Pen -Angle Under- wear is form -knit. so0 it can't help eete ratting yourfhgure, --it's made of long - fibred wool , so it won't shrink —and it's guaran- teed besides, The whole idea is to make it so good you can't afford not to buy by the ads hilt la a variety of styles. inbrics and prices, for women, men and. children. Form -fitted. Dealers arc authorized ^o replace instantly and it our cost any Pen - Angle garment faulty trademark (in rn material or making, red). 205 C:Xastael=ltuatv=111:CCICY :000.44192110 NDE WE fruit Growers, Attention Having no oomntiselon to pa , and selling for lash, The Eastern, Pownahipa 4nrsaries are thus able to otter you Standard App a Trees 4 to 0 feet iigh grown pore, hardy and thrifty stock for Fall a;n4 Spring delivery, foramen per hundred. LOUIS GERVAIS Prop., i,aurenceville,Que 416.700= i 1 'Be our Agent in your locality, earn -;money in your spare.; time selling our. !Perfumes, Soaps, Toilet Requisites and !Flavoring 'Extracts, articles that are =used every day in every home; 50 per ,cent. profit in this for you. Write us. The J. B. Eager Company, Toronto. ASN. SNAP IN A WlIfAT fM I� NEAR WINNIPEG. 1,066 acres of clean unbroken prairie, the finest wheat land on earth, on the banks of the fled River, 45 miles from ;Winnipeg, four miles from two railway stations. $15 an acre takes it, $5,000 ,cash, balance easy. No better farm, no +better investment. WAUGH & BEATTIE, 12 Merchants Bank Building, "" Winnipeg, Alan. i' FOR LAMP OIL ECONOMY Sarnia use Prime OIL White No real need to buy the more expensive oils if GOOD BURNER is used and . KEPT CLEAN. 1 If you want a BIG LIGHT—Txltas oil SOUR GAS JETS IN ONS— Queen TRY A OilCity Lamp For Sale by Dealers BEAUTIFUL LICHT THC: QUEEN CITY OIL C. Toro t!0. Engraved Calling Cards q Your name engraved in grace- ful Ryric Script on a Copper Plate will be furnished by our Stationery Department for $1.00. The supply- ing and plate -printing of ode hundred Catling Cards will be done for an additional $1.00. g The card stock used is made specially to our order and is of the thin "snappy " sort, that denotes quality -elegance._ tg Our Catalogue contains speci- mens of engraved Wedding invita- tions, Society Stationery, Etc. Drab us a e osta1 card and we ,a71 sendyoufres of charge our large' into. 'rated catalogue ofe¢oelry, Silverware, LeaTerGoods, etc. Rya .36-ioTita,Ont. avrteleNOM Why go limping and whining about your core when a 25 cent bottle of Holloway's Corn. Cure will remove therm? Give it a trial and you will not regret it. Young Wife (looking Over a house) e-hWell, how about the situation? .Landlord—"Perfectly healthy, madam. I°tl guarantee that." Young Wife --"Oh, that will never do; my husband's a doe - ter." LONDON EAST END IDYLL LOVE IN LOW LIFE OF TUE WORLD'S 1111) TJ%OPOLIS, belly Ilad a Temper and Handl to Part with the "Goods"—Amus. fag Courtship. Ilow they make love and unmake It iu the Inysterious East EndWas ex- plained before Judge Smyly in the Shoreditch County Court, says London Daily Mirror. William Harty Strong, who had serve ed his country in South Africa, suc- cumbed to the bright eyes of Miss Dolly Manning, whose mission in life is to make ostrich feathers .lustrous and cur- ly, Tho course of true love runs no more smoothly in. the East than in the West. There was a lover's quarrel, and the match was broken off, Now Strong sued for £12, which he alleged that he had paid for articles for the home which was fated not to be. According to the solicitor's statement the courtship—or, as they prefer to say in the East End, the "keeping company" —lasted three and a half years. All the arrangements for t.te wedding were made whezi STRONG BROKE -OFF TIIE MATCH IIe •had purchased from time to time. articles for the future household, and deposited them with his future mother in-lawe Miss Manning new refused to give them up. Sarong was called, and told how he used to work from morn till dewy eve in Order to save money. • Strong's counsel: All with the idea of .marriage?—I thought. I should be happier married, as I was leading a lonely life. Asked about the two small brackets, 2 . Gd„ Strong said lie bought thew in ,Petticoat lane one Sunday mont0.1g. Mr. O'Connor (for defendant): Did you buy the rest of the home there?—No, but you might do worse. There are lois of *useful things to be .picked up there. I never took particular notice of what 'things cost. • Continuing, plaintiff said that he gave alI his money to the defendant to blank for him as she was a nice girl, and he trusted her. She only earned 15s a week, so he disputed that site could have saved £10. He earned es .much ens 2£ a week. He gave her a gold watch and other presents, but did not ask for those back. DOLLY NO DAY -DREAMER. But why, if she was such a nice lov- able girl, did you refuse to marry her? Because of her temper. I said to her: 1'Look here, Dolly, we shall have to part, as if we marry we shall be row- ing and fighting every night.". For the defence Miss Dolly Manning, who smiled broedly to her lady friends in the court, said that all she had from the plaintiff was £3 or £4, the other money she aved by working overtime. She was quite willing to marryplain- tiff, but he never mentioned marriage when he gave her the keeper ring, She supposed it was intended as an engage- ment ring. "That is the way we gen- ei'allyr take these things," she added in parenthesis. "Isn't it really your mother who is tlae cause of this quarrel," asked the solicitor, "and that no furniture was given up?" • "No," was the reply; "my mother only said, as any right-minded mother would that she would crush him if she could." (Laughter:) "The plaintiff had threat- ened to hit me," site added. "Well," remarked the Judge, "it looks as though it is all for the best that these two loving hearts have been. parted. 1f one was going to be crushed and the other bit, besides rowing and fighting, it does not look like being much of x happy home." The case was adjourned. UNLUCKY SIIIP ENDS. EXISTTNCE. The Officers Were lolled by the Mutin- ous Negroes. What ' thelast la. t of a bad luck ship, the history of which is propably i:neevn! to every English-speaking sailorinen in the world, lies on the beach of the Isle of Pines a total wreck, and her captain, Louis II. Davidson, of Boston, with eight men, arrived the other day at IHavana to tell the story. The vessel is the Har- ry A. Berwind, of Philadelphia, aboard which seen 'after she was launched three ncgrecs murdered the captain and the rest of the crew because their coffee had not been served het. The B � vii 1 e eii x never. had from the hourh f t � t she slid down the ways at Miilbridge, Me., in December, 1905. She was a beautiful boat in lines and finish. But there was a curse across laer bow. . In her first trip to Philadelphia she ren into a steamship and was badly damiigccl. There was al- ways somelhing wrong with the crew. Less then a year old, the Berwind. had more trouble than any other vessel in the way of collisions. and finally, two months after her christening, there oc- curred on board the tragedy for which one man Was hanged. That was ori Oct. 12, of last year. On that date, in the dark of night, the schooner Blanche II. King, Capt. J. \V.' Taylor, with lumber from Mobile, sight. ed distress signals on hoard the Fier- wind off Southport. N. C. Capt Tay - lo:' sent his mate end half a dozen wee to the Berwind. They -found three no- grecs, Robert Sawyer, henry Scott, and Jahn Aclarns. The three men declared that there had been a tight on board, and that Cnplain IiumiTl', the engineer of the hoisting apparatus, the steward, and the mate had been killec1. The mate a. the King left the negroee until morn- ing. On the following morning the King's crew took charge"of the tier - wind and made prisoners of the three negroes. After landing the Rerwin:d in South= port it developed that there had been mutiny aboard the ship boonuse cold coffee hncl been Served to the three no. groes. Che roe, cif the crew paid the penalty of death for the Book's nils., take, For the crime Seott was hinged and the other two Salters sent, to prison int 1011g Orme. , MAKES NEW BLOOD, That is How Dr, Williams' Pink Pills Cure. the Conuuon'Aihnents of Lite Making new blood, That is just what Dr. WHAMS' Pink Pills are always do- ing—actually mating new blood. This new blood strengthens . every organ in the body, and strikes straight at the root of anaemia, and the common ail- ments of life which have their origin in .poor, weak, watery blood. Mrs. A. 11. Seeley, of Stirling, Ont., tells . what Dr. Williams' Pink Pills did for her fourteen year old sister, Miss Annie Sager, after Other treatment bad failed. She says: "Foe some years Annie had not been well. She would take spells of dizziness and headaches that would last for several days, and her whole body would become dry and hotas. though she was burning up with fever. tier lips would swell until near the bursting point, and then when the fev- er would leave her the outer skin of the lips would peel off. ,She doctored with two, different doctors, but they did not succeed in During her, and the trouble Seemed gradually to be growing worse. Then we began giving her Dr. Willi- ams' Pink Pills and under this treat- ment she has recovered her health. The headaches and dizziness have gone; her color is improved; her appetite bet- ter, and she has had no further attacks of the fever which baffled the doctors. We are greatly pleased with what Dr. Williams' • Pink Pills have done tor her, and recommend them to other suffer- ers." It was the rich red blood Dr. Willi- ams' Pink Pills actually make which cured Miss' • Sager. That is why :these pills cure all common ailments like anaemia and debility, headaches and backaches, indigestion, rheumatism, neuralgia, St. Vitus dance and the specie al ailments that prey on the health and happiness of girls and women of all ages. Get the genuine Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People, with the full name on' the wrapper around each box. Sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medi- cine Co., Brockville, Ont, BANK ROBBED THROUGH SEVER. Adventurous. Thieves Affect a Bold Robbery. The Bavarian Mint Ofllce in _Munich, Germany, has been entered by bur- glars, who succeeded in decamping with over 110 pounds avoirdupois in gold coins. • The robbery was planned and exe- cuted Mill remarkable daring by some person or persons as yet unknown, who had obtained , exact information as to lee habits of the servants and the keep- ers of the mint. • Underneath the mint.' building flows the arm of the River Isar, but some days ago the, course of this tiny stream had been diverted in order to permit of its being cleansed by the city 'scavengers. . The thieves appear to have worked their way along this stream bed to a point adjacent' to a water wheel where an iron `gate affords means of ingress to the ground floor of the .mint offices. Forcing the `lock of the gate, they skilfully applied their jemmies to the two wooden doors which bar the pas- sage leading to the interior of the build- ing, and finally reached the room in which was stored a large chest of newly -coined ten -Mark pieces, bearing the stamp "D," and dated 1906. These coins, amounting in value to £6,500 sterling, together with £250 sterling worth of spoiled gold pieces, which were to have been reminted, the burglars succeeded in safely carrying off. The robbery was not discovered until an advanced hour by the house mas- ter, who had slept peacefully through the night in a cellar beneath the room in which the burglars carried on their opera lions. The responsibility for the. occurrence is said to rest with the keeper of the gold, who . deposited the coins in the wooden chest, instead of in the bomb- proof safe, where they properly be- longed. • Formerly two sentinels were perman- ently on dutytn.ihe mint :office., but they were abolished as useless two years ago, and no steps have since been taken to replace then. THOUGHT MAI IIONEST. Deceived Australian Girl Rescued from. Criminal Husband. An Australian girl named Bessie Smith, who had married a Frenchman and afterwards found him to be an Apache, or thief, has been rescued by the police under dramatic circumstances. The police were searching for stolen' property at a. house frequented by. "Apaches" when they heard a woman shriek.. They burst open a door and found a young woman lying on the floor with a severe wound in her shoulder. "The hvindow was open, and on, looking out they saw an Apache" named Pol- iter, escaping by the water pipe. Ile was "wanted for several crimes, but got clear away over the roofs. When the police returned to the wo- man they were astonished to find that she spoke nothing but English. She said that she first met Peltier when she was employed at a shop in Melbourne. Ile was always smartly dressed and ap- parently respectable, andhe won her aifections. Some time atter their marriage Pal- lier decided to come to Paris, using this wife's savings for the passage money. When they arrived here she found out, that her husband Was a criminal and her lite has beena misery to her ever since. When she heard the police in the lodging -house she thought she saw a way out of her tortures. She shrieked for help and her husband stabbed her before he decamped through the win - dew. She is being befriended by an English Protestant family named .Stone, who live at Passy. 4 1`a:hsley-Neil, What's the latest in the racing- line? MudgeThe horse 'f bet on, Usually. A PRISON MYSTERY., Puzzles Poiieo and Excites Public in Tyrolese Town. Twp heavily veiled women, whose identity has not been established are wanted on a charge of having poisoned a wealthy old woman at Scbwarzaohi a smell town near the Swiss -Austrian frontier. The old woman, who kept a large number of servants, had lived in the Crouse for two years, and a few days; ago wasfelled dead in bort, A post- mortem examination of the body was made and arsenic was found in the stomach. As there was at the time no evidence to arouse suspicion of foul play, the jury returned a verdict of sui- cide. The other day, when the funeral was tq have taken place,' the police gave orders' that the body was not to be re- moved, and it appears that they had received information that on the night of tine old woman's death, two unknown, heavily veiled women were seen leaving the house. An inspection of the house showed that a window had been forced open from the outside. The police now be- lieve that the old woman was poisoned and are looking for her mysterious visitors, FISHES 1VEAT.IIERWISE. They Foretell Storms and Frosty Wea- ther, Says the Old Fisherman, "In their' way," said 'the old fisherman, "fishes are good weather prophets. "If a storm is approaching the fish stop' biting and they won't bite •again until the storm is well over. They ap- pear to know when a storm is conning and when it has finally passed. "And to fishermen, and farmers living along shore, fish foretell the near ''ap- proach of cold weather. Hours before it comes fishes leave the shallow waters in shore and seek deeper water, which in its depths will stay warm and keep an equable temperature after the shal- lower and surface waters have turnd cold. "Oh, yes, fishes know a thing or two about the weather." "Yes, my dear, my mother always trimmed her own hats." "Is this her photograph?" "Yes." "Then I suppose that's• the reason the photogher took her bareheaded." "FERRO VIM" IS A. GENTLE; STLSULA NT to the stomach. thereby aiding digestion. As a tonic for patients recovering from fevers and all diseases lowering the vitality, it is without a rival. At all drug and gen- eral stores. Old Gent—"'Pon my word, madam, I should hardly have known you, you have altered so much!" Lady (archly)— "For the better.or for the Worse?" Old Gent="Ah, madam, you could only change for the better." They Drive Pimples • Away. A face en'ered With pimples is unsightly. 1t tells of internal irregularities which should long since have been corrected The liver and the kidneys are not per- forming their functions in the healthy way they should, and these pimples are to let you know that the blood protests. Parmclee's Vegetable Pills will drive them all away, and will leave the skin clear and clean. Try them, and there will bo another witness to their excel- lence. Crabbe—"You needn't call any more; I'm going to try another laundry." Laundryman—"Why, whal's the matter? Weren't your .collars and shirts well dente?" Crabbe—"Yes, too well done. I don't like them so brown." rLdeAsE ItF,AIt IN MIND that what is called a skin disease may be but a symptom of bad blood. In that rase, Weaver's Cerate, externally applied, should be supplemented with weaver's Syrup, taken daily. "Women are not what they used to be." "No, in:deeti; but, why not, un- cle?" "Because they used to be girls!" "13y Medicine Life May be Prolonged." —So wrote Shakespeare nearly three hundred years ago. it is so to -day. Medicine will -prolong life, but be sure - of the qualities of the medicine. Life to prolonged by keeping the body free from 'disease. Dr. Thomas' Electric Oit used' internally will cure coughs and colds, eradicate asthma, overcome croup and give strength to the respiratory or- gans. Give it a trial. PAYING HIM OUT. An ironworker having had the worst at an argument with a friend decided to get even with him. Waiting, therefore, until his enemy had retired to rest one night, he ap- proached his street door, and knocked loudly to' awaken him. Opening the bedroom Window, the other hurriedly inquired what the noise was all about. "Why," replied ,the outside man, "ono of your windows is wide open," "•Which one?" "Why, -the one you have your heed through," chuckled the other, as he wont away, satisfied with the plot. Made in. Canada and Sold by all Druggists This coueoa is good for one ton cent t(lOc.) Trial Bottle of th0 ode - heated Dr. Leonhardt's Ana -Pill a sure cure for Indlgeatioa BilloWl- nese, - Dyspepela, Constipation and all ailments arising therefrom.' Mailed free, iu a plain, eackaao.:on receipt of name and address._ Fill 1n your mama and peat office address. on dotted linea and send to THE WILSON -OW CO., Limited.' NI*ra tins, Oat` e The highest tnedlcttllaio wledge inthe worlci has produced COLTSFOOTE EXPECTORANT Thousands of sufferers have been per*nantelstly eared by this wonder• fel retnedy and thankfully write to tell us so, Keep Win the: house and use it for Colds, Coughs, Croup, Whooplag Cough, Asthma and all Threea1 and Lung troubles. Your draggle* not only keeps it but recommends ft. Prlee,25 cents. "OSHAWA' Steel Shingles,. Wind, Water, Stem and Fire Proof Made from Painted or Galvanized Steel, at prices varying from $2.85 to $5,16 per hundred square feet covering measure. This is the .afiost durable cov erint, on the market, and Is an ideal covering for Houses, Barns, Stores, Ele- vators, Churches, etc. Any handy man can lay the "OSHAWA" shingles. A hammer and snips are the only tools required. We are the largest and oldest ceompany of the kind under the British flag, and have covered thousands of the best buildings. throughout Canada. making them FIRE; WATER AND LIGHTNING-PRQOF. We also manufacture Corrugated iron In long sheets, Conductor Pipe and EAVESTROUGII, Etc. METAL SIDING, in imitation of brick or stone. METAL CEILINGS, in 2,000 designs. Write for Catalogue No. 14R and free samples of "OSHAWA." Shingles. Write to -day. moalreal, on. 011awa, Oat.ten oa, Tomato, Oaf. OM.l�!Iaalpeg, mall. Yaacolver,R.e 321.3 W Craig tit. 425 Sussex at. �11 Colborne at l69 Dundas at. 70 Lombard at. .015 Ponder at. Write your Nearest Office..—HJ;AD OFFICE AND WORKS—OSHAWA, Ont Looked on All Four Sides 640 ACRES PRAIRIE LAWD�NEAT :Cb• Rear Neudorf, Saskatchewan. A great bargain. $12 :per tore. Close to two railroads. Branch line of Grand Trunk Pacific surveyed almost through the property. SOX 21, 73 WEST ADELAIDE STREET, TORONTO. "Your wife," said the physician, "will not be able to speak above a whis- pet for a week or more." "Say, doctor," quelled the eager husband, "is there any hope of her disease becoming chronic?" For Inflammmation of the Eyes. -- Among the many good qualities which Parmelee's Vegetable Pills possess, be- sides regulating the digestive organs, is their eilicacy in reducing inflammation of the eyes. It has called forth litany letters of recommendation from those who were afflicted with this complaint and found a cure in the pills. They affect the nerve centres and the blood in a surprisingly active way, and the result is almost immediately seen. Merchant (to new boy)—"Ilas the bookkeeper told year what you are to do in the afternoon?" Youth—"Yes, sir; I ant to wake him when I see you coming." • wL ' ADM ALL FAMILIAR with the deep, hoarse .•hark, grimly called a grave -yard cough." :Cake Allen's Lung Balsam. a remedy, • for pulmonary trou- ble Bighty rr,•omended even w the earltn earlier stages of Consumption. Little Tommy \Wbacken was taken by his mother to choose a pair of knicker- bc.ckers, and his choice fell on a pair to =which n. card was attached stating, "These can't be beaten." Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator is pleasant to take; sure and effectual in destroying worms. Many have tried it with best results. • SAVINGS BANKS FOR SAILORS. Plan to Encourage Jack Tar to Save His Money. Elaborate pains aretaken by the Bri- tish Government to encourage thrift among the bluejackets and other men in the naval service.. Savings batiks were established on ships aiid at shore stations as long ago as 1SGG, and an order of the King in Council, published recently in the,Lotz- don Gazette, revises the regulations and enlarges the facilities for Jack Tar's money saving. The ingenuity shown by the authori- ties in arranging a plan by which financial stability and approachability may be combined for tIhe benefit of a man whose occupation is likely to take him all over the world, is considerable. The plan is neeessarily dompfex, but its working is so smooth that a sailor who is on a station in a distant part of the world, may yet draw on an account which he began in the Channel. This is attained by 'a system of ac- cotints supplemented by frequent de- tailed reports to the Admiralty. Depositors in naval banks at sea may have their accounts transferred not only with themselves, from ship to ship, but from ship to shore station, ,or from ship to post -office savings banks. MisS Elder --"Yes, Tack asked the to be his partner for life, and 1 tceept- ed." )Miss Younger ---"glow lovely! And yell will be the senior partnere won't An Irish officer addressing his men, who had just returned from a somewhat fruitless expedition, said: "You • were no doubt disappointed because this cam- paign gave you no opportunity to fight; but if there had been any fighting there would have been many absent faces here to-dayl" Cholera and all summer complaints are so quick in their action that the cold hand of death is upon the victims before they aro aware that danger is near. If attacked do not delay in get- ting the proper medicine. Try a dose of Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Dysentery Cordi- al, and you will get immediate relief. It acts with 'wonderful rapidity and never fails to effect a cure. The father had gone away, and left. his only son in charge of the shop. "Are you the head of the firm?" asked a man with a sample -case, entering the establishment. `No, sir," remarked the young man, with great urbanity. I'm only the heir of the Mead!'' One Pact Is Setter thin Ten ilearsays.— Ask Dr. Burgess, Snpt. Hos�itai for Insane, lion- treal, for his opinion of Tho D ch L" bfeuthol Plaster. Yard rolls $l, also ear. Mao. Teacher : "Now,. children, who can tell me the meaning of 'latitude'?" \Villie : "I think I know, teacher." Teacher : "Well, \Villie ?" : • Willie "It's something pa says m"a won't allow hila Iiizonner—"You are charged with breaking a chain over your wife's head." Prisoner—"It was an accident, your hon- er." Hizonner—"What! Didn't you in- tend. to hit her?"" Prisoner—"Yes; but I didnt intend to break the chair." amcsimmEmsnmmg Your Doctor Can cure your Cough or Cold, no question about that, but— why go to all the trouble and inconvenience of looking him up, and then of havinghisprescription filled, when you can step into any drug store in Canada and obtain a bottle of SHILOH'S CURE for a quarter. Why pay two to five dollars when a twenty-five cent bottle of SHILOH will cure you aaguickly? Why not do as hundreds of thousands of Canadians have done for the past thirty-four years : let SHILOH be your doc- tor whenever a Cough or Cold appears. JILOS will cure you, and all druggists back up this statement with a positive guarantee. " The next time you have a Cough or Cold cure It with you, dear?" * 1` N 111 !SAW; W; NO, r5--0 .