HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1889-4-18, Page 2EXETElle TIMES.
Zs publisned every Thursday morn ng,at
TIMES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE
Malaqdree,nearly opposite Fitton's Zewelery
'Store, Exeter, ent,,,by J'ohn White db Sons,Pro.
nmetors.
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Exeter Butcher Shop
It. DAVIS,
'Butcher & General Dealer
—IN ALL KINDS OP—
MEATS
Customers supplied TUESDAYS, THURS-
DAYS AND SATIJI3DAYS at their residence
ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE
CHIVE PROMPT ATTENTION.
Everest's Cough Syrup
CANNOT BE BEATEN.
Try it and be convinced of its wonderful
curative properties. Pries 25 as
-
(Trade Mark,)
Try Everest' LIVER REGLIWOR,
l'orDiseases of the Liver. Eidueys ttc., and
purifying of the Blood. Price $1. zx
bottles, $6. For sale by all drug-
gists. Manufactured only by
EVEBESTChemist.Forest..
IIISCELLANEOTTS.
The surest and the shortest way to make
enrself beloved and honored is to be in-
-deed the very man you wish to appear.
There are nienny people who not only
beleave that this world revolves on its
axis, but they beleave that they are the
axis.
Last year tbe wolves in Russia devoured
438 horses, 1517 foals, 313 mews, 1158 calves,
1510 pigs, 7674 sheep, and 3347 fowls, worth
altogether about 2003000 roubles.
Cereasa STRAws.—Roll pleorust thin, out
in long narrow strips spread with grated
cheese, fold over, in Lame like Ledy Ln
ger', pinch edges, rub over white of egg,
and bake.
Mr. Washburn, the newly appointed U.S.
minister to Switzerland, is six feet two
inches in height, has a well proportioned
body and a fine head and shoulders. He is
slightly bald, with gray side whiskers and
-features of a refined Roman cast.
The wife of a collier named Isaac Evan,
residing at Ca =reach, near Swansea, W ales,
recently gave birth to four children. Two
of the children are alive and doing well, but
the mother and the other two expired in a
few hours.
A curious method of obtaining work was
that recently employed by a Philadelphia
man. He hung a board over his book in-
scribed "Work Wanted'. and took a stand
in a business street. He got a job within
airtro beau.
B. P. Shillaher, better known as "Mrs.
Partington," lives at Chelsea, a suburb of
Boston. He is 74 years of age, and crippled
with rheumatism. He has not been in Boston
for seven years. He says he is "88 patient
as may be, but waiting for a better life."
The Paris Figaro says that the Leaning
Tower of Plea has actually been proposed as
the great prize of a lottery. The town has
become bankrupt, and the creditors want to
seize the Hotel de Ville. To avert this cede.
may a netinicipal councillor started the idea
of a lottery.
Thirteen miles from Cheyenne is what is
staid to be the largest horse farm in the
world. There are 120,000 stores of land,
where roam 5000 homes, whioh require the
-constant attention of sixty-five men. One
hundred mileseof wire fence keeps the ani -
make in bounds.
A way to prepare oft coal SO that there
-will be no accumulation of soot in the
chimney, and that the underaides of the
stove lid mill be kept olcian,Pis as follows:—
For a ton of coal buy a few pennyworths of
common mit, make a brine of it, and pour
over the coal.
Religion is the tie that connate man with
his Creator, and holds him to His throne.
If that tie is sundered or broken, he floats
away a worthlees atom in the univeree—its
proper attraotione all gone, its destiny
thwarted, and its whole future nothing but
darkness, desolation and death.
A recent alleged branded= of a popular
French novel ohanges "cold roast meat with
muatari" into "mustard twat," makes "a
pure Parisienne, in fact, the very Menem of
the gay Capital," read "ti, genuine and pure
Parisian, an easence," ahd mantel= similar
blundere on almost every page, although
;lasted by a leading firm in the publitaiing
business.
Dumas' two ohildren inherit the dramatic
and loamy talent of their parents. Jean.
tine, the youngest, is a violinist of talent.
Cotecto, the eldest detighter, is now lame.
'Lippmenti, wife of a Weelthy tnanufeaturer.
No lareneh girl has been brought up more
severely than Damara' datighterra until her
marriage only once had Colette aeon a ball,
and there erhe met her haribtend,
HEA.LTH.
The Illinaiale Body as a Nadine.
It has often been stated, flguratively,
that the human body is a machine. Pro-
bably it has never been olahned that the
human body, or that of an animal, or a
plena, is a machine based exclusively upon
scientific laws—a machine in a mechanical
sense; yet there is much evidence corrobor
ative of the fact that au= is undoubtedly the
meta
All matter is divided into three great
classes, called respectively the animaldniner
el and vegetable kingdoms ; this is an malt-
rary claserfloatione however, as the indivi-
duals conaprieing the animal and vegetable
kingdoms are compounds of substances be-
loheing to the mineral kingdom For
instance, a iiving oak tree is a vegetable ; yet
it is composed entirely, of oxygen, bydrogen,
carbon and other mineralo. The human body
is likewise composed entirely of elementary
mineral substances, such as iron, oxygen,
calcium, hydrogen and carbon. These elm.
ments are of the name kind as dune whiob,
singly or combined, compose eit012 and every
terrestrial object ; they are inanimate, insen-
Ade and inorgamo ; they are the simplea of
all substances. The human body, therefore,
consists of such substances as those which
compose ordinary ,anaelainary of any kind—.
the only difference lasing iq their selection,
proportio4 and clasification. Surely no-
body with intelligence will state that the
oxygen and, hydrogen winch are tlae prinon
pal ingredients of animal flesh are at all
different from the oxygen and hydrogen
which are found in the ocean, or trhich are
neceoliary in the boiler of %locomotive. The
iron axle of a clock wheel may be reamed to
palatable form, and introduced into the sea -
tem of sanan ; it will not there remain as a for-
eign an,bstance, but will be taken into the
blood and become part of the levingsman. So
also may a chemist take into his laboratory, a
few gills of healthy =man blood, and sep-
arate therefrom a bit of metallic, malleable,
commercial iron, capable of rendering eer-
vice as a working part of the clock The
body of a full grown man, animal or vege-
table is not the same body which was inher-
ited at the commencement] of life; changing
partiole by particle, in accordance with the
wonderful law of evolution, it has become
another phytical being. Its substance,
therefore, is interchangeable.
Hay Fever.
Dr. Morell Mackenzie, in his monograph
on this complaint and its treatment, sake
thaa, among races, the Eoglish and Amen
an ;among clams, the tamer and cultivated;
and of the sexes, the males are especially
susceptible to hay fever. In the north of
Eurepe it is almost utiltnown. It is rare in
France Germany, Italy and Spain; where
as in England it is frequent, and in America
prevalent. Again, 99 per oneof its mar
tsrs are of the upper class, while agricultural
laborers, who are most exposed to the cause
of the complaint, are less subject to its
attacks. Lestly, the male sex is more liable
to it than the female, in the ratio of three
to one. Ho gives its cause —"the entrance
into the eyee and air -channels of those pre
disposed to the ailment, of minute partiolee
of vegetable matter from grasses and planta
in flower"—and its oure, chiefly cocaine in
one form or another, or residence in certain
mountain or oeashore localities whioh are
free from the disease. -
Heads Upo
An erect bodily attitude is of vastly more I was engaged to be mare led, when he sudden
ly drew a note book and pencil 'from his
breast pocket and began to Cipher. The
young lady also began to sigh, for she knew
by sad experience that he was going to
swing some ot his, infernal statistics upon
item However, she asked:
"Are you writing a poem about me ?"
"How many meals a day do you get away
with ?" asked Statistioue.
"Three, of course. What do you mean ?''
"I'll tell you in a minute, dearest," he
replied, working vigorously with his lead.
penoiL After several other questions of a0
almost impertinent nature, placing his arm
Around her waist, he said tenderly :
"Don't you want to know, dearest Fanny.
how many beef steers, sheep, turkeys, as
well as barrels of flour, gallons of coffee
hundred dozens of eggs, etc., etc., have been
,elesooped by this lovely, pouting, little
mouth?"
"I don't want to know anything of the
kind." she retorted angrily.
"You would be surprised to learn that
duffing the last ten years alone, you have
s wallowed seventeen head of cattle, torty
eeven sheep," he replied, once more work-
tng his pencil. Then she got her dander up
and for five minutes there was a flow of in-
eignant eloquence that surptised him, for he
began a new calculation.
"At the rateyou were talking just now,
Miss Fenny," he said as soon as she paused
for breath, 'your lower jaw would in twenty
years travel a distance, equal to 1 423 678
miles, or twice as far fdli from the moon
But she she had fled, and when he called
again he was given the " only be a sister to
you" buunce.—{Texas Siftinga.
affiletea part a light pleoter of Pane, or
starch, chasing to =sere immobility, And
be assured that the euro in the moat game
will be very speedy ana remarkably meta
-
factory. The writer has triea this in teveral
=see, and he hag yet to have a single un-
eatitsfactory result.
A STRANGLE RESENTMENT.
Airathor who Old Not Sneak to his Delialliter
for nein 'r ears,
Fifty years ago James Martin, a well-to-do
farmer living near Bs Ilietville refused to
purchase his 15 -year-old daughter a dream
thee ohe very much coveted, on the plea
that he could not offend it. It was a few
days before Ste Valentinea Day. The
daughter was a quick tempered girl and
took her fathera redusal to purchase her the
dram math to heart. On St. Valentine's
Day Fanner Martin took from the village
Post office a valentine addressed to him in
his daughter's handwriting. It was a rough
caricature, representing a miser counting
and gloating over his money. There lived
in the neighborhood a man of that kind.
He had a metre whom he treated brutally.
When Farmer Martin looked at his valentine
he showed it to his wife' simply remarking
he had not expected sucha bitter and un-
oalled.foi insult from their child. Mr. Mar-
tin took the girl to task about it. The
daughter at once declared that she had not
sent the valentine to her father, but, on the
contrary, had mailed him a very compliment-
ary one, entitled " The Honest Farmer,"
it having been her custom since she was a
little child to send him a valentine every
year. The old miser's niece had obtained
the valentine Fanner Martin' eoeived to
send to her uncle. Farmer Martin' sdaugh-
ter was with her when she bought it. The
two girls had sealed their valentines at the
same time, and the Martin girl took them
both and addressed them. In doing so she
got them mixed, and sent the miser's valen-
tine to her father.
In spite of all explanation, Farmer Martin
could net be brought to believe his daugh-
ter's story. From that day be never spoke
to her. She married and lived on a farm
'
LATE CABLE NEWS.
Belgium too Hot for 13ou1anger—Death of
the Queen's Aunt—Emperor William's
Movements, ,
London society is getting ready for Boul-
anger in full confidence, begotten of the
belief that he is making Belgium too torrid
to hold him. They already have ex -Empress
Eugenie, Comte de Paris, and Prince Jerome
Napoleon, and there is room for Boulanger.
Although his blood be not blue, Boulangs r
has sat the world talking about him, and he
ie understood to be nice looking. Monsieur
Blowitz the Paris correspondent of the
"Times," says emphatically that Boulanger
is dead beyond hope of resurrection, but
13lowitz has said the same thing over and
over again, and has ben, in dealing with
French affairs,.eco notoriously and consistent-
ly wrong thaa thousands of Englishmen
believe in the vitality of Boulangiem, and
proclaim Boulanger to be a live lion, simply
because the "Times"seam he is a dead
a9Tnkla!3eYta.treeo heard of the death of her aunt,
the Detainee of Cambridge, while holing
oeunoil at Windsor Castle. She at once or-
dered .thi4 special train be ,LproVaied for
her, and as BOOR as State .buennese had
been completed she went to London. I saw
'her Majesty drive up to St. James's Palace,
Her eyes were red and swollen, as though
she h$been weeping.
Princess Beatrice is about to preset her
husband with another baby, the third in
three and a half years.
The death of the King of the Nether-
lands is expected almost mcmentarily. A
London newspaper thinke the moment op.
portune for the remark that he was the
moat gallant of men, the most constitutional
of rulers, and the worst of. husbands.
Early in the week young Emperor Williain
paid a visit to Posen, where the floods have
again risen and rendered thousands of people
adjoining her fathers. With her husband
kindest and most familiar terms but he never hognolvq. IA:11g aveounto 9f Ow Emperor a
and her children Farmer Mar& was on the
noticed his daughter. Last week he died. -visit there, whit= are published by the
gettoeie newspapers, omit the most in -
his aged widow he left $80 000. To his I wresting doings of thin. energetic young
lieelefb an estate valued at $4d.000. To
son- in law he bequeathed the remainder of ,ruler h.tiehhald to cross the' River Vistula,
ages had been carried Away
ibutltez
ye oo
the estate, provided he survived his wife, b th fi cis He therefore started over on
the farmer's daughter. If the son-in-law
died first then the $15 000 was to be divided
among -his three children. To his daughter,
Palmer Martin bequeathed " a petokage te
be found in his trunk tied with a green rib-
bon, and sealed with green wax.-" When
this wasppened ie was found to be the un-
fortunate valentine that had caused the ex-
traordinary estrangement of the farmer from
his daughter fifty years ago.
The Danger of Statistics,
He was of a statistical turn of mind. In
fact he was what might be called a statisti-
cal (wank. • He min tell you precisely hoe
long it would take a man to weak from the
earth to the moon, if he walked tWenty
miles a day. He can tell to an inch:the num
ber of miles that the average woman will ,
walk while looking for her scissors durine
an ordinary lifetime. • He knows, or pre
tends to know, the fleas and figutes about i
everything.
Well, one day this typical chararater,
whom we shall oall Statisteatts, was sitting
by the side of the young lady to whom he
impozteonce to health than most people gen
erally imagine. Crooked bodily positions,
maintained for any length of time, are al
ways injurious, whether in the sitting,
standing, or lying posture, whether sleepine
or waking. To sit with the body lemaine
forward on the otomeoh or to one side, with
the heels elevated on a level with the hands,
is not only in bad taste, but exceedingly de
trimental to health ; it cramps the stomach.
presses the vital organa'interrupts the free
motion of the attest, and enfeebles the funo
tiona of the abdominal and thoracic organs
and, in fact, unbalances the whole muscular
system. Many children become slightle
humpbacked or severely round-shouldered
by sleeping with their head raised on a hip
pillow. When any person finds it easier to
sit or stand or walk or sleep in a crooked
position than a straight one, such may be
Bute his macular system is deranged, and
the more careful he is to preserve an up
right position and get straight eg sin the
better.
Complexion and Consumption.
An idea has been started that fair-haired
people are more liable to consumption thee
mom of dark complexion. The explanation
probably is that consumption is COMMODHS'
in northern lands-- a feet that the severer
carnet° will eamount for—where the majority
of the inhabitants are fair, but phtisis does
not attack them in larger proportion to their
number than their darker neighbors. And,
in facie the dark skinned natives of the
south are apt to be attacked by consumption
when they come to our colder country.
Shortsightedness in Children.
Children should not, if it can be avoided,
be given spectaclee to wear. These do not
always sit straight on the retrousse nose of
youth. The patient looks over them or
under them or through OW glen only, all ot
which things tend to aggravate rather th an
relieve disease of the eye. Where it is at all
possible, attention should be given first: to
testing and tben strengthening tbe sight. A
certificate of visual defect should be enough
to give any ohild at school the right to eta
cape from any task involving special strain
on the eyes, and In such oases sohool-booka
printed in extra large type mighb be previa -
ed. Simultaneously with these preventive
measures attention should be given to
.strengthening the sight', by training the
ohild to look at and °Maroc things at a dis-
tance. The proverbially long sight of sail
ors be due to their constant exercise of the
utmost powers of vision.
• Skin Eruptions in Children.
An absurd idea once prevailed that if
these eruptione were interfered with Ate and
vaeious other terrible dangere were inevit-
ablm The plain answer' to all this is, that
so surely as they aro but the outward and
visible sign of some trifling internal de -
Their Ship Towed by a Leviathan.
The fishing schooner G. H. White return-
ed to Pore Townsend, W. T., from a halibut
cruise in the north Pacific' the other night.
Her master, Capt. Charles johnson, relates
• an exciting adventure with a whale one
Monday afternoon. The vessel was anchor-
ed on Flattery banks, seventy. miles from
shore, with all of the crew out m five dories
snitching halibut, when a school of five blaok
Whales came alongside. One of the school
got entangled in the vessel's cable, the an-
chor parted, and the vessel, in tow of the
monster, was taken at a rapid rate to the
westward, the only persons aboard being the
Captain and the cook, who 'sere unable to
atop his progress.
The whale became exhausted and brought
the sohooner around in a circle within fifty
miles from where they started. The wind,
leo was rigged and the vend hauled along -
aide of the whale, which measured over
eighty-four feet. With one turn the cable
became disentangled on the whalea flank,
and the whale disappeared beneath the
water.
The Captain and the cook heated eail
and returned for the boats, where the crews
a barge. The barge collided with ,a mass of
floating debris, and was in imminent danger
of sinking. The EPPeror and his suit were
therefore transferred to anotherbarge, but in
the act of transferring heslipped and narrowly
escaped falling into the water. When he
landed on the opposite bank he sighted a
passing military commissariat:wag.= and im-
mediately rode away to the thoroughly sur
prised garrison, whither the wagon was
bound. Daring the whole of his visit the
Emperor varied his visite to sufferers with
surprises to the garrisons at =earthly hours
of the night and morning, I learn to -day
by telegrams from Heflin that the Emperor
has subscribed '20,000 make toward the re-
lief of the sufferers 'by the inundation lea
Posen. On Wednesday he waited at the
Berlin railroad atation for his mother and
tier three daughters, and received them with.
greater show of cordiality than might have
been expected.
Eatiase.
• Lies are the ghosbe of truths, the mask
of faces. •
In order to deserve a pod friend you must
become one. -
That Capitol ceiling at Albany is not a
capital ceiling, although there was a great
deal of capital put ita it.
The avarishus man iz like the grave: he
lakes all that he kan lay hiz hands on, and
gives nothing back.
Astronomy has been deolared to be a sub-
ject of intellectual pleasure rather than an
conomic one.
There iz a great deal ov virtew in this
world that iz iike jewelry—more for awe
anent than use.
"Four peeve from the front, if you please,"
said a clerical looking gentlemen at the
ticket office of the opera the other evening.
One hundred and thirty out of 140 of
General Harrison's Indiana regiment have
-applied for offices. The other ten are two
feeble even to hold cilia,.
Oscar Wilde has reformed, and now acts
and dresses like a sensible man, Of course
he isn't making so much money as when he
was making a fool of himeelf.
At a recent beggars' ball in Vienna there
were 5,000 lease= profane, all in beggar'
costume. The more beggarly the costume
the greater the applause that greeted it, and
at the oleo a prize was awarded to the per -
eon who was adjudged to have made the
most successful hit in costume and manner.
A person who caricaturea a well-known
actress won it.
••
The Czar is said to wear always a ring in
which is embedded a piece of the true cross
hat was given to an ancestor of the Czar
by a Pope long ago. The Celia is said to be
auperstitions about the ring, and once, when
he had started upon a long journey and
had forgotten it, he had his train held
•while a messeneer went back upon a loco-
motive and fetched it.
Protective dutieo between the various
• Australian colonies make biteable for the wo-
men who have been acpustomed . to send to
Melbourne for their dressier. A Tasmanian
banker's wife tecently ordering a new gown
told the dressmaker to be =re and have one
of the girls wear it for half an hour or so,
and to pub some old wiling about the neck,
so that it should appear to be an old dress
land not liable to duty.
"John 1 John! Wake up I You've got
the nightmare! What were you dreaming
about ?" "Oh it was all a dream. I thought
I had a fortune sure, Marla." "You wore
puffin at a terrible rate. What were you
dreaming about?" "1 thought it was the
Fourth of Ally, and I had lossoed an iceberg,
pulled it into herbor, and was selling it at
the rate of ten cents a pound, and I was sell,
keg a ton a minute." "Oh, I wish I could
dream of such luck john I" "You oan,
Maria,—you can if yint will put your oold
feet against your own back jute aa you pub
ahem against mine.
Steel Barlow, once Amerioele minister to
ratigeinent will they disappear without a were safely found twenty-four hours later. France, died in the early part of this century
shadow of risk, if this condition be rectified; The experience was the most exciting thee at wee", polene, where he was buried ;
wiser, aurely, than leaning to dente Nature has ever occurred off Flattery banks. The i. ,and Senator Platt is now taking an interest,
what she is sometimes tardy he removing. e story is vouched for by all of Inc crew.
Treatment of Sprains.
Emile fl,oni pain is the first °metaled to be
produced in a Way which will further the
ptomais of cure. This may be done by
stimulating the oiroultetion of the part, thus
preventing blood, Stalls and engorgement
about the part. Tatham the injured joint
he hot water, or hot Salt and water, for
from twelve to eighteen hcliti if neossary.
As soon as the major portion of thia
awell-
ing and vain has abated, apply to the
I.......it
in a ineasure before the U. S. Senate which
- providers that his retnains be exlaumed and
In the Gaiety Concert Hall at Binning -
ham, England, a, few nights ago a dramatic
sketch was being presented in *hi= a, Sailer
was represented as being drug ed toict
marlered. »A. teal miler at tide point leap-
ed from the gallery upbri the kap exeleim-
beg that he wand not me a whande mo mho
esedeand. it took all the tage hands and
four replication to remove hirrie The funni-
est pert of it Was that in court the police
testified that the man was cold sober wheal
he did it
brought back to hie native land. Mr. Bar-
loW wee an ,Atnerictue patriot of the moat in-
tenee typo in tlie times that tried menai
Beale, In his young methood he faight itt
the revolutiou of 11.76, aed he proved him
valor at the betel° of White Plaine. Ho
Web enbeeqttetitly a clergyman, ttowspeper
eaditor, diplomatist, and the author of eevet-
al poetioal volurnee, the host knowe of whioh
are the "Columbiaci" and the " Visloo of
Columbus," Be was a man of malty bailOhtil
MEI a elevated enthusiasm.
Potatoes and Alcohol,
Pour million hectolitres of 'alcohol
(fully 88 000,)00 gallons) are produce
el annually in Germany. Potatoes
give three-fourths of that enorrncu a
quantity, which is largely exported for the
itianufaoture of whiskey, brandy, and other
Metabolic drinks. In consequence, the oul.
tivation of the potato has received the dos.
eat attention in Germany, There the tubers
from the alcoholic point of view, have reach,
ed the greatest perfection as regards both
quantity and quality, In France, on the
contrary, the potato hat been much neglect.
ed, tbe viaeyards, the i orchards, and the
beetroot crops having been the main sources
of the two million hectolitres of alcohol,
which is the annual average in that country.
Bet the failure of the vineyards is directing
attention tc potatoes. M. Airne Girard
reports to the Academie aes Sciences the
results of his extrensive experiments on the
cultivation of the potato in France. They
are pronouneod highly sada eotory,
Woman Suffragists.
The women suffragists have friends in the
New Brat:teed& Legislature ao well as in
that of Ontario. A few days ago one of the
members of the former body moved that the
following clause be added to the Franchise
bill now before it:
4, Every widow and spinster of the age of
21 years, beteg a British subject, not other.
wistelegelly incapacitated, 4111411 be qualified
to vote in any election of members for the
Houma of Amenably who shall or may have
either the qualifications insub.seotion(a) or
sub -aeration (b) of the preceding section."
, .
The Ant omalifieation mentioned Is the
ownership ot real estate to the value of $100,
or of personal property, or real and persona,'
property together, to the value of $400 ; the
second is an income of 4400 annually, with
residence. Women in New Brunswick al-
ready enjoy the muncipal suffrage.
A Bea -131111'a Bad Mistake.
picSaggiluiplimhuasvseele far owmelthekliest°rwanndiab
,lsoiatr soaring
alof t, and aropping them upon stones to
thetappen. Alfeed'Hollister, of Sea
bght,IsT. J., wears large patches of court
plaster on hie shiningbald head in cense
quence of the sagaoitsr of these birds. Mr.
Hollister, was walking along the beach mar
his home a day or two ago when he saw a
gull flutter upward from the sands. Sad -
denier his hat blew cff, and in the next in-
stant he felt a hard blow ott. the top of the
head that stunned him a moment Looking
upward, he maw the gull bearing down upon
him, and, dodging, the puzzled bird flew off.
It -had mistaken Mr, Iffollister's shining
eraitenn' for a atone and cut a large furrow
in it.—[Philadelphia Record.
SSG Solid Gold Watek.FilE
'Irese VG watch In the world.
Sold for $1.00: until .
Perfect timekeeper. War- '
. ranted. .Heary Solid Gold
lIunting Casealloth
and gents' (flees, with works
and vises of equal value.
One Person in each lo -
math, can secure one free,
together whit our large and
:eagle • line of Household
Samples. These samples, as
well as the Watch, we sand
ibed In icier home'for inl'olirtlgettualnedh4oftwear Yth°cutrth'to"thkell
.who may have called, they become your own propertyi._ Those
who write at once ran be sure of racelvInK the . wretch
and Samples. We pay all express, freighti'Ma Address ,
Stinson. ds Co., Men 812iPectiannilKaine. '
'
•It Makes •
You Hungry
have used Paine% Celery Compound and 1C
• has had a salutar/
effeet It invigerat-
eci the system and t
•feel like a new
mao. It improves
the appetite and
facilitates dips.
than." J. T. C'OPE•
• tbeslLd ten enr vyeesaarsz aftgeTalloeultv.111
Spring, medicine moans =tore now-a.days thanit
irtehreofneeSrilvasees entialiabetiehtte
LAND, Primus, a a
• strengthened, the blood purified, 11 and
and
bowels regulated. Paine's celery oomaipnd—
Met Spring medicine of to-eray—does outing,
as nothing else can. Prescribed by Physician',
_Recommended by Drugyiets, Endorsed by Minietert,
filetaranteed by the Manufacturers to be
,The Best
Spring Medicine.'
"Ill tile spring a 18871 was all run down. I
would get up in the morning with so tered a
feeling, and was so weak that I could hardlY get
around. Thought a bottle of Paine% celery Com.
pound, and adore I Dad taken it a Week I felt
very much better 1 can cheefully recommend.
It 80 011 who need, a building up and strengthen -
lug medicine." Mrs.-D.A.. Dow, Burlington, Vt,i
Paine's •
Celery Compound
IS a Unique tonic and appetizer.' Pleasant to
the taste, quick in its action, and without any
inpnions effect, it gives that rugged naalth
which makes everatbing taste good. It cures
dyspepsia and ldndred disorders. , Physicians
prescribe it. 81.00. • Six for 0.00.• Druggists.
• WELI,S. BICITARDSON it CO.,• • MONTREAL.
Df.
IA moND Ncocutoe; paanyatthinAg iwaanyy scotuTroer
LACTATED FOOD Antrlahesbd'imPerfecasi.
The Phyeictatts' favorite.
PliAitet,ELCous
DISCOVERY.
Only Genuine sestent ef Diemory Training.
Four Books Learned in one reading.
Aland wandering- cured.
Every- child and adult greatly benefitted.
Great inducements to Correspondence ClaSSear
Prospectus, With Opinions of Pr. Win. A. %ans.
mond, the worldtained SPeohiast in Mind Disease's
DrU2101 Greenleaf Tbompsou, the groat Psychol-
ogist, 11.X.1dvocgfe.8 uokl es, edttor of the Chnstiam
., Richard erector, the Mantis%
HOUR. Wo W. Astor, Judge Gibson, Judah' P.
senjatnin, and others,_ sont pout free by
Prof, A. LOISETTE, 2J7 Fifth Ave., N. Y.
A
•' THE -
OF ANYExErElt'
TIMES, 's
A SURE CURE
CONSTI PATION,
INDIGESTION, DIZZINESS,' SICK
HEADACHE, AND DISEASES OF THE
STOMACH, LIVER AND BOWELS.
THEY ARE MILD,THOROUGH AND PROMPT
IN ACTION, AND FORM A VALUABLE AID
TO BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS IN THE
TREATMENT AND CURE OF CHRONIC
AND OBSTINATE DISEASES.
PILIIRESTe ST fa PSC EST, EiESTi,
CONTAINS NO
ALUM, AMMONIA, LIME, PHOSPHATES,
or any injurious materials.
E. IA/GI LT°1iLTl'cN
.LETT, coec,
liar'Pr of Os OTIT.SE1W1'EDR0741",7nItarS Angt,
The Most Successful Remedy ever &scow
Bred, as it is certain kilts effects and does
not blister. Bead prOof below.
KENDALL'S SPAWN CURE.
• OFETas or CSARLES A. SNYDER,
CLETELAND BAY BANRDEETDEBORTronfro Mane HORSES.
ELNWOOD, Inc.,, Nov. 20, PM.
Dn. D. J. KENDALL Co.
Dear Sirs: I have always purchased your Kett -
dab's Spavin Cure by the half dozen bottles, I
would lake prices in larger quantity. I think it is
one of the best liniments on earth. I have used it
cnniy atables for three years.
Yours truly, CHAS. A. SNYDEA.
KENDALL'S SPAIIN •CURER.
• BROOELYS. N. It., -November 8; iggg.
Dn. B. .7. BENDALL CO.
Dear Sire :I desire to give you testimonial of my
good opinion of your KendalPsSpavin Cure. I have,
used it for Lameness. Stiff Joints and.
Sorrel n s, and I have found it a sure curei I cordi-
ally recommend it to all horsemen.
Tours truly. •A. H. GILIOMT,
Manager Troy Laundry Stables.
KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE.
• SANT, WINTOW COUNTY, OEUO,Dee..19, 1808.
• Int. B. J. KENDALL Co..
• Menta; I feel it my dilly to say what I have done
with your Kendall's Spavin Cure. I have cured.
twenty-Rve horses that had Spisvins, ten or
aim: Bone, nine afflicted with Bit Head and
seven of Big Jaw. Since I have had one of your.
• books and followed the directions, I have never
Jost a case of any kind. ,
YOUTH truly, • Anima, TuRNER,
Horse Doctor.
KENDALL'S SPAYIN 'CURE.
Price $1 per bottle, or sir bottles for $5. All Drug-
gists have itt or can get it for YOR, or it will be seat
Lox ypte.1 sTessit. receiptarf
c §rnigblZglIllifgRr
OLD BY ALL TISUGGISTS.
worommen...matormona.....e.
Reward for the Convicticna
F DEALERS WHO OFFERivnil jers 01 I' mFEAWRATTLuORFE OAT.
AND SELL •
MAGIIINE OIL.
Eureka Cylinder, Bolt I •••• I McColl Bros. &
Otittiog& Wood Oils For sale by all leadirg dealers. j Toronto.
BISSETT BROS.,Sole Agents, Exeter.
QUEEN CITY OIL WORKS
Torento. Every Bartel Guaranteed. Thin Oil WRS WW1 ou nil machinery dui thl, 1114
ithibitiOn. It has been awarded NINE GOLD 'MEDALS during the last three year
ItSt*See that yott get Peerless. It is only Suede by
0,16.1VIZTEL ItOCIZILS ad 00., TPIR.OZ1V0
FOB 8.A.LE »t JAS.