The Exeter Times, 1884-7-3, Page 6The New Salt Fields of New York,'
A press dispatch, fromR'arsaw, N,Y'., ! i
states that the representative of a syn-
dicate of English ca pitaalistshadseleeted "Mw sear!" ezetalnled gr. Sptlolae►; •
that iaew i;alt geld as a alto for large :dyke, bouncing bite his wiife's room :zed
works for the )manufacture of caustig interrupting that lady in the purely
soda, to be used in sosp•making, bleach feminine o1 4 vnieti; of unpacking for
ing, dying and ()tiler purposes. For the santnilrr. "..MV .!::tt, there.: no. use
A
SHUT O1UISE.
ttY STANLEY lii"NTLEY.
this commodity this Country now relies
solely upon Europe, one company in
,New York selling $4,000,000 worth the.
past year. Itivestigatien of the brine
underlying Warsaw proved it to be of
the exact strength and the salt of the
desired purity for manufaetnriug this
article. i thing shaped like, a bo it. "Are you go -
Land has been purchased at Warsaw, lug to sail it on the 'wind?"
and the expectation is that the English it first I do -tight I'd still it down
evntpany will sows begin the erection of cellar," growled Mr. ~,'poupendyke,
extensive soda works, to give employ- "but the landlord wv:is afraid it might
went to perlutps1,000 men, and to have upset the milk; then I thought I'd try
a capacity to decompose 100,000 tons of the garret, but there's tea much wind
salt a week. tilt there- so I believe I'i1 stick to the
Experieneeelsslt manufaeturers assert riti•l.r. slurry up now, and 1`11 ,hole
that the Warsaw district is certain to vote the biggest boat in thirteen e'oa10s
become thefuture salt debt of the l nited ; beg', -
States. A general salt fever seems to
pervade western New fork. In towns
of any size eompaaies are being formed
to investigate. Pitforti, on the Roches-
ter, New York. and Philadelphia; Cas-
tile, on the Erie: and Pike, on the
Rochester and Pittsburg, will sink
'wells, In1a'1' d G 'lie
trying to get along is the country whit-
out ;t sail bolt, :tu•1 1 hare hought
nice one. Cenne along ;int iI1 show
you bow it works:
""Alli t that Inst•:"-uvelt'iL Mrs.
Spoopendviu tin.,' U,•i in tn.,t•t:tl teer-
ror o; the w stet and was of►•:tial of any-
"If it L. as big- as that it Inuit leave
cost a gond deal. ' nntrmurt'a1 Mrs.
Spoor •n[!yke. somewhat reassured by
the size of the boat. "•1 ant very •,i:od
you got a l ogee boat. though. of courser,
the tre;pe•nse--"
••11'b:at tt'te think I've been buying?"
. Wyoming and Isere. i dere tn.h tl '$r•Spuopi yid' ke. wIth a Pn. R 0.\yrs'r's :snow. i's. BRAIN TREAT-
WINK.;
RE:A -
salt has already been fe"nada l,er.,y has Aaslaetl face- ^got ;tns kind of a tin- int: er, a guava ttec.t a cries tar Flvcterial. D°s
'. i:,
pp s v ens , caxnl
tv o. .1►t -ere R
win •P Cot 1s
P u i
i _tit •1produce b •in f �r
t ,
two yt.il hit 1 ► e 3 titan that I've int•e-ted my wealth' in a
•trengtlt Warsaw;veins to 11aTe 1 Readache,'sereousPre tintioucaused bp the
t 1 with 1 h 'fir �S utni
p@yen t in a tUa4A dun t 1ntauitS au, left:u:R uI[soiy, eeayL
after a very short examination. Preis.
PARiB
GIiiEEN
IS � CREEI'T
<!�►. TIS i'
DOWN ION LABOFATQR?
EXETER,
T, W4 BRQ" `1UW, Frost.
Health is Weath,.
r^ Bat lase 1, stili to te;.•rapat,.e. t uses"t a co t or o•a trig. u e u sea,. 4
fll the advanta•res desirable, anel ex- yes1.1"Ile rePn;letl,BottenlUt;nf t4ct.ratu,ro4uititiil In
r -red men oc:itc their wells here ` •. ,
r tit -• h ►1. n k t t.• au (-.11
1' 1 1 1' tot and
at oti Inuttc',y s•ee. leatb,l'rii,tateL 01,1.1ge. '•urrennert. om
1'4'? 11�c11, I haw.ell't, anal I haven,' tAf Pnwcrineithet ccz,Involu: tart' Lossesatia
pel:tors, contractors. derrick budder;, been buying a rural district with a end.
speenl sines and capitalists are cutuine�^ der to !t. It's a boat, 1 tell ye—a sail -
to town daily from all over the Unitett boat—and it won't seine up here tv
States. utnke a formal wilt mie If yotere going
to see it, you want to go where it is•
V11111IiC Uoflhos' .ARn::'r or Werikflt'L. Contin?" and Mr. Spouptcntl~ ke I,eg.re.l
"How do you make the slots?" " eat' with lois hat pulled down over hit
."Have you neverread how 1did?" ears and the expression of a veteran tar
"YeS, often; that you started at the oU his visage. .
rear end of your sten: and write to the "Yes. dear," replied Mrs. Spuupeu-
firSt!" dyke,. fluttering after hint. "Say. 4enr.
'"Now, don't you see stow absurd that. I'll -stand on the shore and watch you
mist lie? How eould'I write a story of sail tittj thing~"
make :a plot b:aekwards? It is •imply
holo •;''le'. Now I take the thence upas
which T ant going to hang thee story :and
I think it ever well, study it ear'efuliy
and I o.t myself upon the feet, that ap-
ply to it.In the ease of the •1'k ontar
White' hite' 1 had her for my plain idea
nothing more when I began than the
aha plant of the mistaken identity of
women. In Man and Wife' it was the
Seattle marriage. l:tw- and the bad prat-
tier! of over a \cerci -r. the new 11a.da-
len, the social rejection of a repentant
woven.. and s•i n. Having established
myself in the tn:iin idea from which J
never depart, I began at the first of my
;tory-- n..t at the first of the main sat,
but It the introductory lines. From
This beginning I go, forward with the
plot until 1 reach the =hi etaPen'
Then 1 jump over that and writeluu
the end. )..,w I have f..".r parts —the ,ve yon gt t In and I 11 111aka: snti,
intro.lactien to the story, which is writ- and Mr.:apooltenel-yke handed his wife
ten and finished; the Imo parts of the into theeuek-pdit wild began totug away
'
at the halliar,
"Why didn`t you have a sail matte
when the boat. was bat?" inquired
Spoopenu ke. by way of eueunr. -
agiug her husband's labors with pleasant ,
eunversation.
"•I3..'eanse the man vviis sick," snarled
Mr. Sp :mendyke, glancing Itt the head
of the mast to see what was wrong.
"Come np here, will ye?" he grunted,
as he 'grabbed the halliareli :train.
and fill in the stories, and if you. pub."There. deed ;est yet I knew I'd fetch
Usti it you will be the first to get It ex I yt!'' and be walked aft to examine the
wet." ` 1 tried of iiia mainsail. "How doe, (1)01
"How long does it take you to write a set?"
story?" "It seems tel be :a little full in the
"Frons the time I begin work, back breadth, commented Mrs. Slump
about six months. I am not a rapid sly ke..hoi.ling on to the co:spring with
`writer, by any means. - If I write three . bode hands. "If you'd cut, ft gore neat
of toy large pages of 1n;aanusettpt, which that top stied: it would be straighter."
makes about nine pidg•.- of ono in my "I supposes so." muttered Mr.Spoup•
"You won't do peudyn, of 1e ought i
retorted ;ilr, Slwopeudyl;e. "1 bought
hporinaterrha•a,enused by over-exertion oftbo
brain. self nbtese and eve r•1u.lnlgence, One
box will Cure recent eases Each box contains
ou, tttoutlt'styeatment One dollar a box, or
his:bt. t' f a Ave doh utr; Rent bytuniipropaid,
nu tt•eeipt of Klee. We Guarantee six boxes tn •
curnany CaPo. Wl'Mth Inch order rccl•ivcal for
bixt,oxt+tt.aarcomtiwttiPdwith ;IVO doliara, vee
wiilh.•nd the purchaser our written guarantee"-�' yipSxT �nE
to refund the auw;ly if the treatment does not s cr Y i�
effect
shite. Guarantees is..uedonly by J.W.
IIRtflyNiels.i+nleA"cut for I:xeter.Gntnrio t
rdocI
hviiff.TERS..
Cures Di::,nes , ,Low ofApiift tt, Tndiyestion, Bilen,tanc5,
Dyspepsia, Jaundice, .aire•ctions of theIit'er and 11.kiner,
.I" ;niple., .3totrIes, Foils, 'tumors, Salt Rheum, Sercfola,
Erysipelas., «tits, all dieeaSe'S tithing front Impure Blood.
Deranged Sreerntacft, or irregular ae ti nt fef the Bowels..
BISSSTT BROS.
HEADQUARTERS
POE
Spades,
OE TEAL Hoes,
Fa'
that boat for your pleasure as lour. h
mine and you're going to s:tit in 1t.
When I want you to stand on the shore
and watch anything, I'll hire a mut tc
drown himself. Now look at that boat.
Isn't she a daisy? See how she sets on
the water."
"What are all of these elothet line,? i
hanging down from that stick for?"
asked Mrs. Spoopendvke, surveying the
yacht critically.
"To play Cupenhttg�un witb." roared
Mr. Spoupendyke, wtto was not, ;at all
anxious to be examined on tate tedini- 1paiit;nds of
cal (Ants of his now acquisition....y'ou A full stock of 111E
take holed of those ropes, and I slap
vour hands, and then we kiss. Seo in. D;y"e-St11f'S tllitli, package
t
now Roes the art of navigation •
in to appear to your uudt'r'tanditl f 16OS, constantly 021
plots that are separated ley the pivotal
point of title tale, and the pivot of itself.
Ibegin at the first part of the plot and
harry its incidents together, leftvifg
myself ample room for any new ideas
I may get In the writing 'inti bring the
fabric of my story together. Then 1
start at the beg ling again, and. when
I have got through it this title I have
my novel complete. nw you have the
exact method in which I write ni ,plots
books—say fourteen hundred, words inn enmlyke, ;giving* another haul at his peak
hand. AVivants
COI'tditioll
Powd-
ers
the best •
itt the mark-
et and always
fresh. Family recip-
es carefully prepared at
the Central 1)1'i g Store Exeter
ks,
Scythes,
Barb wire and steel strip fencings.
o of $' ; *oISpocial
i. CHEAP AT
C. LUTZ.
slay—I do v ry well, But I can't al- halliards. "If -1 put :t :bustle on it, 3
ways do that. 1:ani a very slots and imagine it wou1 take the Actinides out.
painful writer, and the manual 1:ttor Now, I'll get t that jib, and mind, R' S
telly upon me." yluout r .
don't •tt •1 am -thine" �����`
"Do you ever dictate?"
"Not unless I can help it."—Corres-
potadertce Philadelphia Times.
Mistakes Eminent Men Made'.
Old men give too mush advie ..for it
SI to late sound. Washington, it is said,
once decided that the Erie Canal was
not practicable. Soni Houston thought
one-half the money Congress voted to
gorse to build the first telegraph line.
ought to be devoted to encourage mes-
merism. Cave Johnson, Postmaster-
Ueneral, declined to buy the telegraph
patents for thegovernmeut for $100,000
on the ground that it could not earn ex-
penses. Ezra Cornell spent two-thirds
oii Morse's appropodatvons laying the
poor, starveling telegtraaph underground
instead of stretching l - .,_ -e a clothes-
line. Timothy Howe sure a fifty-:
c nt tax on whisky sou .� v , collect as
much as 'a ti2 tax. S and thought been for me, he would have . been
75,000 men would put down the rebel- drowned, like the dogs in August. An.
lion. The old Baltimore merchant, to August.
whom Poe's poems were submitted, in- thote boatr Its toe we go n, an we'll ben
P the our room, aiit�' rap the jib
dossed them: "Here is a man fit for sheet around us; unless it is too hot,and
nothing whatever." Franklin rather in that case, we'll sell the boat and buy
thought the. Stamp act a smart recent- funs.,,
mencdatiipu. Commodore Vanderbilt And Mrs.-Spoopendyke toiled up the
told hissgil ro buy no railroads "outside -steps of the porch to tell the ladies what
of New York State. Old age is for a deligutful sail she had enjoyed, and
counsel, bat it ought to some from the
a how much Mr. S' a ' ehct`y`lie knew
"Amen" benees. All the wisdom in
Spain and Portugal Colum-
bus, but a pretty woman said to the
sailors
"As well to die and go,
As di
Mr: Spoopendyke set his jib and
rushed all: As hip sail filled the boat
meted over, to the manifest constertu
tion of Mrs. Spoopendyke. cures Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Rheumatic
"±That's it!" yelled Mr. Spoopendy ke, goat, General "Debility, Catarrh, aha all
agl' g outfrom under the canvas. us 1 b a titin sud int every tied
Sarsaparilla.
strut 1n„ t disorders ea o 3 1 ,
""That's navigation! Yon struck it from or corrupted, condition of the blood; expelting
the shoulder first clip! All yon want tlto blood -poisons from the system, enriching
now is a quid of tobacco and :a bitch to and renewing the blood, and restoring its vititl-
your breeches to be a:Cunard steamer! ixingpower.
Got t1r01101? A,nythi�na• else you Want During a long period of uuparalleled'usefui-
to do to this measly boat! If you had a . nese, AYER'S SA1CSArAR1LLA has proven itr
compass in your ear and a' deck load of perfect adaptation to the caro of n11 diseases
idiots, you'd. only need Custom House originating in poor blood and a weakened vitality.
Inspector and a H811 Gate pilot to be s
it a highly concentrated extract of Sarsa-
Soating lunatic asylum!" and Mr. Spoop- patina and other blood -purifying roots,
a combined. with Iodide of rotaindum wad
end •ke hailed apassing row -boat and
S Iron, and is the safest, most reliable, and mi nt
was towed ashore > gnaff iliously, economical blood -purpler and blood -food Ibnt
• ""I don't care," muttered Mrs.Spoop- se„,„ be used.
endyke, as she scrambled `up,the dock
Inflammatory Rheumatism Cured.
and followed her lord to the hotel ."I
"AVElt'S SARSAPAIUI.LA has cured ins of the
don't care." I may not know as: much Inflammatory Rheumatism, with which 1 have
about a boat as he does. but if it• hac nst sutfered for manyy years. W. 1i.. Mootu "
Durham, lei., IL arch 2, 1882.
"Eight years ago fbad an attack of Rheuma-
tism so severe tltatI could not move from the lard,
ordrees, without help. "I tried several remedies
withoutmuch if any relief, until 1 took At iaPs
SAIiSAi'ABILLA, ;by the use of two bottles of
which I was completely "sti eta c aqt been
troubled with the liken, silt shieek 4it�ivu sold
large quantities of you ltakrAIe1I A. -tut it
still retains its wonderfuttpopularity. The many
notable cures it has eftitcted in this vicinity con-
vince me that it is tyre-bestblood medicine eve]•
ottered to the polyps • E.1''. ri t a uis '"
River St., Bucklitnd, glass, May 13, 1 i '
about mabaging his Heti illi-Drdke'1 "Last Marsh. I was so w ak from general de-
bility
r' a Dilitythat I could not t vithouL help. 1 ol-
Travelers Magazine. totvingthe advlce_of a fir n commenced t il.11�
• • �-' AYEn's SABaAYAnILf.:A before 1 had est d
• thi•eobettles•Ifeltasv eveitlitbinut�life:
It nae been forid by experiment• that I have been Rt Work' •fAr two did inmonths,goad
e and stay. a crevice under. a door lame enough to think your SARSAPARILLA the (;realest hla e d
• —New York 1'i'i medicine in the world. JAMES ArAYSA n: t.."
cold air Into atoms, to require four ' • - '
A New York doctor,aroused too early hundred extra pond; of •t_a1 per r . AYER'S SAOSAPAttu.L A cares Scrofnla nt.d
. by the 'crowing of his neighbor's roostr month,• all Scrofulous Oomplaiuts, Erysipelas, Er -
,
went out, captured them, cut theil ,e,na 3riugesorin, Blotches,. Soree tii,t:r,
vocal chords, restored them to theit Milkman (to small boy) "Tell your Tumors, mid Irruptions of the Skin 11 eh i ra
mother she'll • havet0 pay ready money, she blood of all impurities, aids digestion,. 1: c,• u-
roosts find event back to bed' conscious for milk• after. ;tills: 1 ain't , ooi to laces the action of the bowels,: and tilos r. =tc.i•t„
b Small o vitality and strengtlwus the whole system.
buaae• push a penny through wig' let enough
a ✓i20 west 42d St., NeW York, July 1e, 10.2.
that he would not again. be. distur a chalk up any more." 3
that'or any other morn He now en-
joys himself wateltjUsr,nei hbor'e What are you going to use instead of
g -r. chalk, Mt. Grange?"
astenishment at theenter earful mita-
Mona of the crowing''`onst without l'
making a sound.
PREPARED RY
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Massa
1• Sold by all Druggists; prior 51. six boltats, r,'r
BISSETT BROS.
FARMERS' ATTENTION
WR.ITE'S IMPROVED
0,
v
n
N
SLIDING UTE,
A DRIVE
AND FIELD GATE
admired by every Pan
Hier. Desired by all who
use Gates.
Highly spo-
ken of by all
who sco it.
Its chief merits are
CCNYENIENCE,
DURABILITY
SIMPLICITY.
ANDCHEAPNESS.
•
It takes up no room on ,the reader' sidewalk. It opens down the fence. It locks open
;wand when closed, locks shut. A ohild six years old can open and close it from a wagon
or horseback, or afoot. Itis not liable to get out of order.
•
So simple in construction that any farmer can make it, It can be ,wade of lumber, iron
ar wire -netting. All who see it admire it. Can be opened with one finger from Wagons,
Buggies, ate. It backs out of the way down the fence, taking up no room, Has no lever-
age on posts. Can be opened and closed 30 times a minute. Makes a seoure lock with-
out a latch or pin. A downward pull opens or closes a gafe of any length or weight, as
the handles have a double action anel always up out of the way. The cost above the or-
dinary gate is from IR to $3. I can furnish GATE LIONS, no hinges to buy. - -
Price of FARM RIGHTS from $5 to $10.
Call and see the Gate at Centralia and Exeter, and secure a
Farm Right.
TO AGENTS !
I own the Bight of this Patent for HURON COUNTY, and as I ala otherwise
gaged and cannot canvas each Township in the County, I will sell Township Rights
at prices that will enable the purchaser to make money at the business.
From $SO to $20 per LAY can be. MADE
By a good canvasser in selling out a Township Births in Farm Rights. Can you make
more at anything else with a Small Capital Invested. I mean to sell so
you can make MONEY..
A Rare Chance—Speculation.
. The selling qualities of this gate eanuot be questioned, The Inventor• has sold:
----OVER $60,000• WORTH ALREADY.
Secure a Township Right, and make money easily and rapidly. If you do not, some
one witty and you wilf'lsse the chance.
Call and see me, or write for -terms,
"Q.' SOBYSR, Centralia:
For County Rights iu CanaiI writo for terms tYo
C. W 0 , Loudon,
0