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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1889-10-17, Page 3AOOMMIONOIONSOOOIOMPOIORMIR SIR EDWaT ARNOLD AT HARVARD. The Famous aeholar Talks About the Poe- try of the Brahman Sieges. Sir lEdwin Arnold delivered an address Upon the " Upanisolarid" an Sanders theater, Harvard °allege, at 13osiou, Mem, re - curtly, which, :while ib deeply intermit - ed a large aud cultivated audience, added not inooneiderably to the reputation of the Author of the "Light of Asia." "The `Upanischad,' '' Mr. Arnold explehaed, "are the poetical teachings of the philoso- phers of Ifindoostan— the Brehmen sages Who, when Alexander the Great enceuneered them 2,000 years age, placed in oppoeition to his Macedonian phaloex a °elm phileao- phy so superior to all earuhly bribes and threats that the great °emperor retired +embed.° Sir Edwin evidensly knew sheet heob even the soholars before him had any comprehension of thegentleteachings a these "word sages," as he called them, and he quoted from their writings more fully and literally than easy other Caucasian can do. The similarity of their doctrines and in"several notable inatanoes of the language in which they were clothed to the sompturee was pointed out. Said the lecturer The Hindoo theology is not dark, hopeless, des. pairing. Their pesaimiem oprings not from despair but from disdain. It is wrong to oall Judie. idolatrous; it is inonotheiatio." In another place he said that while India with its200,n00,000 people never knew anaarriage based on inolination, there were more happy marriages there than anywhere else, and more domestio love. "Better," he exclaim- ed, "to live in transcendental sunshine than in Calvinistic gloom, and while I would not give one verge of the sermon on the mount for 1.000 Upanischads I do love sun- shine better then gloom, and I feel grateful to these old sages 1 or wbat they hav3 left to us." Sir Edwin will speak at Harvard again to -morrow night. Thursday he will start on his journey to japan. The Mystery of the Bun. The number of estronomioal parbies that; are preparing to go to convenient: pointa in the track of the total solar eolipse in De- cember, and the opmpleteneas of the 'equip menu they propose to take with them for observation, make the prospeoba for good results unusually hopeful, says the Provi- dence "Journain The comparatively infre- quent opportunities for studying this species of solar phenomena, and the brief time that is available under me mosb favorable circum- stances for observotion, make each event of greatehnportame to astronomical science, particularly as at no other time Dein so muoh evidence be obtained for determining the real character of the sun and its appendages. Long as the science of astronomy has flour- ished and great as haa been its advance it is only within a few years that, by the aid of ithe speotroaeope and photography, the -"mature of the sun and its surroundings has been established with anything like certain- ty, and even now the most widely different theories are held as to bhe character of the sun's activity. It has long been known that around the black disk of the moon in total solar eclipse a halo of light is seen, bright next to the sun, but fading away more or lees gradually into the blaokness •around it. This was supposed by the gener- ality of astronomers as late as 1870 to be due either to the effects prodnoed by our own atmosphere or by the moon's istrocun phere. Ib was not till later that astrono- mers were convinced Mat this Indoor corona wan a part of the sun itself, and that from it musb be derived the most important clews for settling the mysteries of the sun's heat and light. Mom the observations of eolipses meths recently it is now well known that the sun as ordinarily visible) to us, hounded by the photosphere, is only a peat of the sun. Just outside the photosphere is a comparatively thin layer of gas, mainly hydrogen, called the chromosphere ; around this is the corona, thousands of !Mica thick, and ,around the corona especially along the equator, there is cone ' iderable extension Of matterabout • which little is known. The general theory which has been built up from a knowledge • of these facts and from the observations of such phenomena aa sun spots and promin ewes is that the chemical elements are being continuously tossed about in the enormous atmosphere of the El111 and never getting out of it. The outer layers of the netmoa- phere are recognlzed as much cooler than the inner. Coot or comparatively cool mass- es of matter are produced by condensation in the upper regions from the hot amending vapors of the lower atmosphere. Theae menses of matter, having gathered weight, come under the influence of gravitation over twenty.five times as great as out% and fall with almost tncredible rapidity to the center. It is supposed then these terrifio ream of cooled matter upon the sun produce .whab are known as sun spots. We know how small meteorites in our own cold mines- pher a are heated to incandescence by friction. Their kinetic) energy is tran.sformed into heat It is difficult; to imagine, therefore, that these masses of matter, darting down from a great height above the photosphere of the sun, create great disturbances near the rhotosphere, such as sun spots indicate, and that the ma,asee falling into the inner nnd greatly heated Atmosphere should bocome broken up in the heat generated by their own kinetics energy into hob vapors, produc- ing such expension that the down rash is traneformed into an up -rush, which would. carry the chemical elements back to the colder air, where they would gradually condense again and repeat the operation of falling into the chromosphere. The effeob of su3h an up -rush is suppened to be indicated by the promiaences observed. The matter is supposed to be thrown up like the water of a fountain, and like it fall back, only to be Marled up again, but on so great, so terriffio a scale that the imagination is unable to form a picture of it. If this is the correot theory of bins sun's eniatence it is impossible to conceive of any limit to •Elements which we can only heat into a glowing mass are their reduoed to a vapor and by expansion thrown 100,000 / miles or more away, only to cool and pelt back again toward the center of atbraotion, there to be thrown off again. Bat effective as the theory is in explaining solar phe- nomena it Is by no means generally held, and among those holding it there are great differencee of opinion. The evidence is Mlle better then circumstantial, and it he •only by the incluetrious work of astronomers, with improved appliances'that the mystery an approach solution. The study of the •sun is to Pfi the most iinportant study in ,aebronorny. It affects us directly. To .better understand the centre of life and heat is to better underatond our eurround, singe, and it is f rom the obsetvabione of those sent out to view the oceasionatgotal eclipsee ,of the stus that light must omen. Prominent Public Men ire net ahrig to give expromien to their opin ion whores genuine inetit 19 Mt:corned. la Derloyehird, ptesiacht of the Ontario Create). ery As9eoiatiofl, Says "%Sal Balth hdatS the the World for Oatarrh and Mid 'in the head. In my own cone it effected rolicf from the gnat Oppliontion," JEWELS OF THOUGHTi How herd it Is to hide the eperke of na- ture. In() lutoWe nothing base fears nothing known, The feeling of distrust is always the last which a greet mind acquire& Sere as nieht follows day, deobla treacle in pleesureh) footeteps round the world, Leber disgrseee nr nee" unfortunately you ocoasionelly finu men who diegrace labor. ' Illre the laughter whit* opens the lips and the hearb,---tlaat showe at the same time pearls and the soul. It is a terrible moment in yonng Jives when the closeness of love's bond has turned to the power of galling. The innocence which knows no risk and is taught no caution, ie more vulnerable than guilt, and oftener assailed. Women detest a jealeue man whom they do not love, but it angers them whoa a man they do love'is not jealous. We judge ouraelves by what we feel aapoble of doing, while others judge us by whet we have already done, The 'man who for party forsakes right- eousness goes down, and the armed bettel. ions of God march over him. We like the flee extravagance of that philosopher who declared that no man was as rieh as all men ought to be. Knowledge is an excellent drug;.but no drug has virtne enough to preserve it from corruption and demy if the venal be taint- ed and impure in which it is put to keep. Has a Crater on. the Moon Changed? The members of the Baltimore Sooiety of Amateur Astronomers have received a des- patch from Professor Ritchie, at the Harvard Observatory, announcing a change in the crater Pliny of the moon, This renutanb of a voice's° is one of the many crags and peaks distinguishable through an opera glass, field glees or teleecope. The entire surface of the moon is broken up by walled plains, in the centre of eaoh cf whioh rises a straight; ,mound. Crater Pliny is one of the best known of these, and is in the nortlemeestern quadrant of the moon. A Baltimore astrono- mer said yesterday that he thought that a mistake had been made in regard to the dis- covery, as the satellite is believed to be dead, and no change can take place on ha surface. He said that is is poesible that the professor'who thought he had made a dis- covery, isad leen misled by the different prominences on the surface being illuminated at different angles, and thus presenting a. different appearance. By the most powerted telescopes the moon can be brought within IN to 200 miles of the earth, and " every- thing," said the astronomer, "appears dead. Nothiog but the wildest desolation prevails. Circular caverns and pits have their floors strewn with huge blooke and sides atretching upward a thomand feeb. Some of the mourn tams inclose areas of fortyrto 120 miles in diameter, while the peaks themselves rise often to 7,000 feet, and in one instance 16,- 000 feet in altitude."—[Baltimore San. • Don't Punish a Miserable Woman. The action of the Chicago judge on Friday by which Mrs. Mary McDonald, who had shot her huaband, was released, merits a word of commendation. The unfortunate woman was afflicted by a drunken husband who took away hor money to buy liquor and whipped her when she resisted. During leloDeneld's last drunk he became involved in a quarrel with the poor little woman, seized the last of her °arrange in epite of her struggles, and staggered towards the door to buy more liquor. Then, in sheer desper- ation, the miserable woman who had been abused and tormented beyond all endurance, seized a revolver and demanded the return of the money. Instead of yielding the big brute ruahed upon the excited and almost crazy women. She lost cone:doneness, and when she regained it found that she had shot and killed her husband. Was the judge wrong in saying that no jury could emend her? If he was wren in that opinion he was certainly justified in setting ' her free to eave her from the juty. The case is cited bemuse there are a good many like it, and the WoRLD•HEBALD wants the upportunity to say that justice should never be so misapplied as to punish a woman, who, after a long period of misery and abuse, ab last turns on her tyrant and tormentor and in an insane moment ends all.--(Chicage Time. An Unknown Fiend. TonoNTO, 034. 17 th . —Between two and three o'clock the other afternoon an unknown man enticed a three year•old ohild named Alice Bridget MeCurry, of 9 Simooe terrace, into the basement of the new Academy of Music, where he criminally assaulted her. The fiend met the child on the street with her little brother, and gave the latter a couple of cents to buy candy, saying ha would wait till he returned. The little fellow went home and showed the money to his mother. She at once beetime suspioiout and intstitated a march for the little girl, but wihout finding her. Some women in the neighborhood saw the man putting the child out of a basement window. She was crying and her clothes svere torn. There were several workmen in the basement at the time who could have captured the scoundrel had they known what he was doing. • A Rural Opinion, The city ged's a queer consarn, There'd a lot of things she has to larn, Tho' she may claim with angry heat • Her eddycation'a quite coinplete. She don't know yarbs from piens weede, Nor nebhin' much about the feeds Thaths properest to give the stock, Nor how on earth to tend a flock. Mos' gin'rally she's skeert of bugs, And hollera if you neentiou dug& And as far cows and goats that's mild She's kinder s'ploious that they're wild, She can't climb fenoes good, nor trees, And rehe's no use at bauskin' bees— But then jet' take her all in all, She's purty nifie—the city gal I --Snare M. lisisT, Buffaloes. in Australia. "Comparatively few Anti bralians," remarke a 'Melbourne journal, "are aware that a part of their Own conntry—the Northern Terrl. boty—has vest herder :if Wild buffalo roaming °Vet it plaint and wallowing in its shady pools. The enimais are realleiVe and heasey, with splendid home, and .efford Sport of snigelently clorgerents t. nature to tecieness oherntie or the most diming huntet. The eirpt buffaloos were tended at Port Eteington in 1826, isy otdor of the Inaperirsi Govetteinent, ,and niter ;sixty yearstininterrhpteci their nutribeee ore now astonlishing,". TrAtE.a iCORIOB, Navatem, the scene of the negro riots and murders, is a small island about A third of the clietence from the weetermostn point ef the Wend. of 'Eteyti to jarnaices. It beiorets, apparently, te the Republic of Hayti, and she disturbances aro probeibly due to the ex, oitement of the negroes over the civil war which has just ended in their country. American oustoin B are spreading in E irope. A gigantic corner on gotten has collapeed in England and a German Gavern meet treasurer ha a abaconded, leaving a deficit of many thousand dollars. Trusta aro being organiz- ed in all elirectione and Emperor WiUiarn hae deolared in favor of execueione ay electricity. Evidently the people of the " effete monar- castes " are iearning lessons irons western oivilia•t At the risk of being looked upon as pro - Russian the people of Belgrade have shown their contempt for their late king by giving his irjured wife a most exalted ovation, It is not probabie that except among the cffi classes, who are always bribed by Ruusia, pro-Ruesia,n sentiment is very strong in Servits—lemb of all in Belgrade, which, as a capital, has much to lose by annexation to a great power. King Milan says he is not going to Bel- grade, becenee he has the fullest confine:me in the Regents. This agrees exectly, with the viewsentertained' by the Regents re, gerding Milan, whom they will nob allow to Vittill Belgrade because they have no confid- enoe wheetever in him. It will be thought, however, that a man who confessed that a baby wonld make a better king than himself °rennet be very dangeroua to anybody or anything wherever he may be. It is rumored that the British Govern - malt has seized the opportunity ef the death of the Prince of Monaco to reopen the queen bion of the suppression of the gamnlino ee establishment in the principality. The present Peinoe has expremeni himself as willing to suppress the gambling at Monte Carlo if he can be assured ot an annual income of 2,000,0001franees, and if the great powers win guarantee the neutrality of his principality. The disaster to Johnstown seem to have been benehcial in one sense at least. While it unfortunately Loused the lose of a number of lives, namoriptions have poured in from all quarters and the town will soon be a new .Tohnstown, and on a much more solid foundation, both financially and practically, than ever before, Yet all the money that charitable people the world over could send will nob serve to alleviate the grief of a wife Lor her loab husband or that of orphan child- ren for the parents so suddenly and unexpec- tedly taken from them. After the recent defeat of the Mandist forces on the Nile an Italian woman named Marlette Caracole was found among the prisoner.% She was one of six nuns who years ago went to the Egyptian Soudan to labor in the Roman Catholic missions there. All of them since the fall of Khartoum have been captives in the hands of the Mandist& and though they have undergone many hard- ohips, there is as yet no newa that greater evils have 13efalleu them. Their skill in nursing the slok, and their self -consecration to works of oharity and mercy seem to have won for them the rempeesb and protection of the fierce fanatics. The rescued woman thought it a bitter fate when she was taken from her Dieters across the deserb sands to Dimple, but the solitary jeurney happily ended he captivity and resocred her to her friends, London Hotels Beat American Houses. Blakely Hall in New York $un says :— Americans here had reason to suppose that our hotels are the beat in the worid—as they were until a little time ago—but to -day they are entirely eolipeed by the big oaravan- series of Loudon. There are no such hotels in New York as the Victoria, Grand, Metropole, and Savoy, the new hotels cantered around Charing Cross, and built on bhe grand avenues that have been opened up where either slums or palace grounds used to be maintained. They are, first cf all, very solid and substantial; • they rise seven or eight stories above the ground, and their lobbies and parlors are walled with the most exquisite marbles, onyx, and metal work. They are cheaper than our hotels at home. Each floor has its own rates, and them who take the elevators to the topmost floor° are able to get rooms for as little as five shillings and sixpence a day, which is 81 37 In our money. The beds, the ordinary appointments, and the Conveniences common to all the guesbs are quite as good as the best we are able toobtain at home. Abele are charged for separately, tud the rate of one shilling and sixpence tor a plain break- fast, and five shillings (or a dollar and a evertor) for dinner. The mein entrances gleam with electric lights and polished hard woods and precious stones. A cloud of men in gold lace and uniforms oluster at the doorways, suggesting endless tips but • also perfect service. A new era in hotel keeping has been introduced in this way. The old rangham & Morley's and the Golden Cross are now neglected and forgotten. You aro ordered to write or telegraph for rooms at these now and grand homes, and if you are nob well known you oan nob get rooms with- out doing so, but the ordinary °Wesel of the world takes his chances, and is reasonably euro of finding somebody already in the hotel to introduce him and get him a room. The American clerk is unknown. The different departments of hotel management ore scattered all over the buildings, and that common center, the clerk's desk of America, Isla London a mere depot for room keys and and letters in the care cf what they call " Buttons " or b sem in uniform. The cashier has another room, the manager still another, the porter another, and so on. Precious Stones of the Months, If eaoh Inver, have in the lore that has come down to US, a significenwe, eo hag Owl of the ptisoloas stones, whiela not only Is ueed to syrnholiza mental and Moral Oharacteris- tiots, but the month of the year, evlsich in old Pagan day& and oven yet amonget the Ignor- ant in some countrien had a aupposed bear— ing on personal history and traits, The fol. lotting are the Stone* epecheity connedted wiabh the menthe of the year; janutery-eA jacinth, or preset, which denoted constancy and Ade* in every engagement. February --Atnethwit, insuring peace of mind. March —A bloodatone, denotingoo.urage and secreey In dangerritle enterprieel. April—Sappllire or diamond, eignifying rermotanee and in- nocence. May—The green emerald, typical of love June—An agate, meaning long life ancl health. July—Ruby or eornelitem *Mob in:Aires the forgetfulness or Mire Of evill springing from friendship ter leVe. Auglist-4 Sardonyxa happy Mended life. September —Chrysolite, w hit& preserved from f oily Ootober--Aquameriens or opal, vehiola &not es both neisforttine and hope. Novemher The tepee, bringing the owner fidelity an friendship. DeOember—Tureltictieve or Molo hitny signifying the niest Militant etleoeti and happiness. PEARLS 0 k' TRITTIL. Religion is not a theory in the mind, but an emotion in the aunt; not a lselief about God but a feeling tovvard God. 'Tenth is as impoesible to be oiled by any outward touch ae the Mabee:me. Men du not believe in immorbality because it has ever been proved ; but they are:forever trying to prove it beeline° they oannob help believing it. in religion, 4E1 well as in ootry, the rude mon, it has been said, re quires only to see something going on ; the men of more refinement wishea to feel ; the truly refined man wishes to rcileot. Christelikeness is the living reproduction of Chriethe spirit—the attempt to follow he method& to Mare his hope, to fill our daily orbits of duty which lighe and love; nob to say' long prayers, or bow at the mention of hie name, op deem sectarian warfare a "'standing up" for him. There are multitudes who are saint e in the (thumb, open handed in every public benevo- lence, who are petty tyrants in the kitohen to their , help; who do not think thab their servants have desires for other assoolatione than with their pobs teed pens. Unceasing Oa'nmities. The triesaengers of most pulasant death are indeed many., as the Grecian satirist long since taught us LT the mouth of the Stygian boatman, and it woul i seem as if during the oarrent year muse of the mightier of them were especially ruthless. The round of greab oalarnitiea has been almost unceas Ing. Flood and famine, volcano and earth quake, gunpowder explosion, and railwoy disaster, have followed one another in rapid muccesaion, sparing neither Chinaman in the Etat nor American in the West. Just now the land - elide in Qaebeo has brought the series of disasters tio our own Jan 1, though happily the deatruotion of life h not been on a scale of such magnitude as in some of the other oases referred to. Has the year been, indeed, exoeptional in regard to the number and greatness of destructive out- breaks of the great forme of nature, or is it only that modern newspaper enterprise now brings to as news of suoh events from all orbs of the World. whereas haif a century ago the half pf them would nearer have been heeled of beyond the country in which . they took place? There • is ,mtech truth of course in the latter view,yet ;,t is hard to rid one- self of the impreesion that this has been in such respects a phenomenal year. Lani in the United States. Who owns the land in the United Slates ? Why, the citizens do, or should, would be the natural reply. Zan unforennatelY, ib is not altogether so. Some of the best land in the United States is said by the "American Clam an" to be owned by .alien landlords. Nearly 22000,000 acres of land are owned by men who owe allegiance to other govern- ments. To be exact, there are 2l241,900 acres of laud under the direct oonirol and managment of thirty foreign individuals or companies. There are 2 720,283 acres of land in Messaohusetts, so that the mon living in other countries and. owing allegiance to other power' own land enough to make about ten States like Massachusetts, more than the whole of New E agland, more land than some governments own to support a king. The largesb amount of land owned by any one man or corporation is owned by a foreign corporation called the Holland Laud Comp- any. Talk about alien 14nd holders in inland! There is twice as mach land owned by aliens in the Uaited States as there ia owned by Englishmen in Ireland. Think of it! More than 22 000.000 acres of land owned by men in Europe. After Eighteen Hundred Years. The theatrical business in Pompeii, which has been at a standstill since the eruption of Vesuvius, in 79 A. D appears to be looking up, judging f com the following announcement ot Signor Laignit—After a lapse of more than 1800 years, the theatre cf this city will be opened witn 'Le Figlia, del Reggimento.' I solicit a conrinuance of the favours bestowed on my prede'cessor, Marcus Q intas Martins, and beg to assure the paint° that I shall make every effort to quol the rare qualities displayed during his miensgement." Strange. ly enough Manager Luigni fails to add that the theatre has been "entirely redeoorated since it was last opened to the public, and has been fitted throughout with new roomy and comfortable seats, eto.".--(Lobbylst, r in the Stage. What a Bustle Contained. Maria Vinoenz Cheari Cerracheni. who arrived in New York on the steamer Neuss- trio the other day, wore a very large bustle, and on landing was invited into he searching room. The battle was found to contain fire gold chains, thirty -Mies pair of kid gloves, two gold mounted ameffling bottles, two silver watch chain& nine gold rings, fine gold pendants, and five pair of gold earrings. The goods were confisoated, and Maria was held to answer a charge ot smuggling. His Obesity Troubles Him. The Sultan says London "Truth," is tnuoh alarmed his inareasino obesity, and he hate just summoned Dn Sohwennenger to Constantinople from Berlin, for whose ac commodation a palace on the 13oephorus, at Therapia, has been prepared, where he is to stay for a week, Dr. Sohevennenger's treat- ment has immensely benefitted Prince Bien marck, and the Cz r wan much the better for it, but he soon gave ib up, lati he ie an inveterate gormaniizer, and careful and very plain feeding was as impossible to him as the prescription of one tumbler of weak whiskey and Apollitaria at each meal, instead of the magnum of champagne which he usually conatunee. The Candy Fiend Again. Mre. Melte& wife of the eminent Presby- terian clergyman at St, John, N. B,, bast been poisoned by stryohnine pub into candy sent her husband by mail. Two other So. John ministers received poitioned manly in the same way t The oatos, which is roost mysterious, is similar to the one at Galt, wben litde Meta Cherry Wee murdered, and poisoned candy was sent to the family of Ron, John Ridley. An investigetion Is in progress. • Within the last three years the bedlam have seen the folly of applying 13 irties a rod or SO king to their ohildren. aid in place of reaming a youog "pap" "He-thetedoes-not- look - behind • him • distil • he - has - oresfied the ‘• prairie," they altnply call him Joe, Tom Or Bill. Drop pears into cold water before canting after they are peeled. This hardens theni at well as oleanaea them from a slimy out) etattee that eauses them to work, besfflea it Prot:ernes the color. • p: so 7. • • -natret. nnetnnSneaeaetin Ntnt‘entets‘)N..%the, .Inceln‘ttn.NiiintstniSierdettehhitn,hveNV• I • ain" ten asen ore; 7t: • — e' • , Itertastaamattrait'iveaarta for Infants and Children. • "Castoris le so well adapted to c,bildren that Cantwell% cures Colic, Constipatioh, (recommend it as superior to auprescriplloa • Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation, _ , Icntoval to me," IL A,. Ationoit, M. D, Kills Worms, gives aleep, and proraote.a di... gestion, 11180, Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. T. Without injurious medication. Trio CENTAUR Co:ap, 77 Murray Street, re. T.: 11•=1=1. !CA - :F" 63[5.f:Zrat.f441,ile -Al',0,3'3.,e7si.1-4.4es.,:, • • eie, rghs ;nen. • When I say Ovum I do not mean merely to step them for a time. and then have them re- turn again, 1 mule A. RADICAL CUBE., I have made the disease of =TS, EPILEPSY r FALLING SICKNESS, Me long study. I wArtnanirr my remedy to VVBE the worst cases. Because others have ailed s no reason for not u ow receiving a cure. Send at once for a treatise And alenisoBOITLII of my Ilararanung, Enerienx, Give Express and Post Office. 18 costs you nothing zor trial, and it will mire you. .Address Dr. H. G ROOT. 37 Yong° St., Toronto, Ont. %,•%4 net:deers sertnansincerni , PiUIREST,.STRONCESTe BEST, CONTA I NS NO ALUM, AMMONIA, LIME, PHOSPHATES, • or any injurious materials. T. E. W. GiLLETT, T°Rgio?t'ocr, !Alen piths CDLEBIATED 307AL YIlAr fl A15. PRO-CTIMMS.TT 2,11-M —AND— Live Stock Association (Incorporated.) Home Office -Room D, Arcade, Toronto, In the life department this Association pro- vides indemnity for sickness and am °Mont, and substantial assistance to the relatives of de- ceased members at terms available to all. In the live stock department twcethirds in- demnity for loss of Live Stook of i ts members. Applications for Agencies invite d. Send for p r oer, eel uses, claims paid, &c. W11,11IA M. JONES. Managing Director HE EXETER TIMES. 18 pulnisned every Thursday morn ng,rit TINS STEAM PRINTING HOUSE • .Is.in-street,nearly opposite Fitton's Jewelery Sults, xe ter, Ont., by John White & Sone,Pro- unetors. a am s OF ADVLIETCSIIIE Fire t insertion, per line_ .. . .. ...............10 cents sla oh aubsequentinsertion ,per meets. To insure insertion, advertisements should, m sent in no tinter than Wednesday morning OurJOB PRINTING DEPARTMENT is one f Huron. All work entrusted to us will rocas t4e largest and beasteeiu.sip.pect in the ounty sr prompt °Mention: Decisions Regarding News • pp .. Any person whotakesa paperregularlyfrom he post -office, whether directed in Ms name or another's, or whether he has subscribed or not is responsible for payment. If a person orders his paper iliSeOutintzed. • he must pay all airears or the publisher may sontinue to send it -until the payment is made0 and then collect the whole amount, 'whether the paper is taken front the office or not. • 3 In suits for subscriptions, the suit maybe naituted in the place where the paper Is pub- Ished, although the subscriber may reside hundreds of miles away. 4 The courts have decided that refusing to • take newspapers or peliedicals from the post -- office, or removing and leaving them uncalled, or is prima facie evidence of Intentionalfraut • Exeter Butcher Shop. R. DAVIS, Butob.er it General Dealer a.LL RINDS OF— M EATS Customers supplied TUESDAYS, THURS- DAYS Awn SATUBDAYS at their .Cesidence ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE • OEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION. Everest's Cough Syrup CANNOT BE BEATEN. Try it and be convinced of its wonder -fie curative properties. Trice 25 atm • (Trade Mark,) :Try Everest's LIVER REGULATO For Divans of the Liver, Iiiclasys and also fcm• piLifyine of of the Blo d. Price 51.00. Six bottles. 55. For sale by all drug. gis. P. Aranufastured only by M. EVEREST, Chemist. •$03 Sewing -Machine k 'WO' . '...lit 1 'fo at once e s t ab 1 is h trndc in ail parts, by - Tit', t1; ' placing 00 r machine. ,and goods where the people ran seep .........__-1 _ . - person in each locelity,the very- __ them, rye Ivill send free to one ir' ' ----.,----- . best sawing-in:wham mule in the worldoviet all, the ettnehments. \W's v,ill also sentl free a corn 'Mae line of Olir costly nnd valtuibfl art temples. In return 00 ask Unit you show what we send. i 1 those who may call at your hew, and after Z - months all ,hob become vont. own property. This grand m'echine is made after the Sielffer patents, which have run mit : 1,00000 (1010000 run Inuit sold for SEE, with the l' rlin7n's ''n'r'biisro!iliFR.tdestsi1tges,msttucEw'...41,zzlttF,.vc.xe:ain briof instructions given. Theta who write to '10 01 once can se - care free the best scwing-mechine in the world. and the finest line of works of high 018 000! shown together In America. 'fflaVIE .51z too., 70o4 74Lof tv-Taulfstfa.11414f9a • THE LIGHT„RUNNIING The Most Successful Itemedy ever dis- tailored, 0.4 it its certain in its effects and does not blister.Read proof belOw. SranwrSrrun, P. Q., Nay 8, 180. Da. D. 3. Koemets, Co., Enosburgh Fails, Vt. Gentlemen .—I have used Ken- dall's Spavin Curo for Spavine and also hi a case of lameness and /Entine mists and found Ito, sure cure In every respect. I cordially recommend It to all horsemen. Very respectfully yours, de Cizintns BLAOKAII. KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE. en Semmes, 1'.Q., April 25, 1339. Dn. B. J. KannAti. Co., Eii0Sburgli Tells, Vt. , a few: bottlea of your Ken. mann spanks Clui'd on my colt, *Molt 'was eieffethig. from Influ-, • ,417:4' chtsia VOili bad fotm, and can eaS, that our Kendall's 13patili ' .Qttre Medd 'Opitiplete and rapid third. loan redainiriend 88 88 tha 1)1110 .0. beet and Meat effeetito liniment I have ever handled. Kindly send moone yoUr.Valitable hooka entitled :" A Trea- tise On ilia Herm," Touts Ietipeetfully, I. F. WirautOolf. KENDALL!S:SPAVIN CORE. Eaten; kat, May 10 tea. The. B. J. IcluluAtt 00, Endatiergh Falm,_va aliveye keep, Yet& Kendall% pavIn Otitti and Bilater On hand And theMVO lieVei, Med in What 'you' .atato tiioY :db. haVo eared &bail chaffer Spalflii and also tiVe.eiiSel or nifigbelhe of years titandlife",01 m area whloh, bought tObrbedfrain, MidliaVO net seen anysterie 'Of &tease in 4,, their. Offs/ging. YoUrd trt11, • tr, 0,Knersal, l'ortee St. Per 'bottle, Or Mt nettles for dttiggiSts lia*0 it or tan got it for yen, or it will ' ablit tt anY address on receipt, of price, he the trillittsitEND,ALL CO., linOsititrgif SOLO DV' ALL ilnittiGGISTSt. SEWING MACHINE HAS .— / NOT EQUAL. THE LADIES' FAVORITE. ill ONLY SEWING MiCHINE THAT GIVES MA SEWING MACH1115 MRANCENE, St LOUIS MO. , 'eingIOANcisa,csi. "'" GA TIE • g/3' UNION ATLANTA' 8MIARE,N4 Ditl-Lxika ece e attn.*. ' By AgODIS