HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1889-11-7, Page 2Sufferers
rROal Stomach and Liver derange-
" ruentsa-Derspepsia, Bilimisnees, Sick -
Headache, and Constipation— find a sak
end certain relief in
Apses Pills, In all
cum Where A an
thartio is needed,
thew Pills are room -
mended by leading
physicians.
T. E. Hastings,
of Baltimore, says;
"Ayer's Pills are the
best eathartie Ana
aperient within the
reach of my profes-
sion."
Dr, John W. Brown. of °wane, W.
Va., writes "1 have prescribed Ayer's
Pills M my practice, and find them ex-
cellent. I urge their general use in
families."
"For a number of years I was afflicted
with biliousness which almost destroyed
my health. I tried various remedies.
but nothing afforded me any relief until
I began to take Ayer's Pills,"—G. S.
Wanderlich, Scranton, Fa.
"I have used Ayer's Pills for the past
thirty years, and am satisfied I should
not be alive to -day if it had not been
tor them. They cured me of dyspepsia
when all other remedies failed, and their
occasional use has kept me in a healthy
condition ever since."— T. P. Brown,
Chester, Pa.
"Having been subjeet, for years, to
constipation, without being able to find
mueli relief, I at last tried Ayer's Pills,
and deem it both a duty and a pleasure
to testify that I have derived great ben-
efit from their use. For over two years
past I have taken one of these Pills
every night berate retiring. I would, not
willingly be without thorn."—G. W.
Bowman, 26 East Main st., Carlisle, Pa.
"Ayer's Pills have been used in my
family upwards of twenty years, and
lave completely verified all that is
claimed for them In attacks of piles,
from which I suffered many years, they
afforded me greater relief than any med-
icine I ever tried."—Thomas F. Adams,
Holly Springs, Texas.
Ayer's Pills,
PBBPABED BY
Dr. J. 0. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Gad by all Druggists and Dealers in Medicine.
THE BEST
BLE I NG POWDER
-,.
It &HEYS &ENUINE
COOn Fri011il
.NoAlum.
e Nothing /nju
IETAILED EIERYWHERE.
GARTH & CO.,
FACTORY SUPPLIES.
Valves, iron di Lead Plea
Loose Pulley 0 ifereSteam
Jet Pump, Farm Pump
Wind Mills, Cream Sepal'.
aims, Dairy and laundry
Utensils.
636 CRAIG STREET,
MONTREAL.
CHADW C'S
SPOOL
COTTO14
.For "rand and
Machine tise.
HAS NO SUPERIOR,
ASK FOR iT.
LEATHERN)
STEEL -LINED TRUNKS
In Sample, Ladies' aad
all other kind%
Slanust
1- Dike
In the World.
J. BYBIABIE&CO.
MONTREAL, =
Millets. for tho
HOTEL BALMORAL
MONTREAL.
otre Dame St., one of the moat Matra
anal eiegautly furnished motels in the City.
Aocoramodatioa for 400 neaesta.
Bates: .
ee to 83 per day. WOODRUFF
Se Va V V Manager.
PES
Baliats fir Ciloik
a PALMER &SON
Wholesale leashes of
atIUGGISTS' SUNDRIES,
n43 ma ims ST.,
MONTREAL.
J. A
* SOAP•
0......0.011.4..S11011111MMIMOPYOMMW
DOMINION
LEATHER BOARD
COMPANY.
manufacturers of
ASBESTOS (BILLBOARD
Steam Pankinto
PRIcTION
PULLEY BOARD,
Thirt, Perfeee Priction
REcKifirs BLUE
THE sEsT FOR LAUNDRY US&
PAPERS
Wrapping,
YEWS.
AN 0
4.44. WEIGHTS
.A•
kr TO ORDER
21DeBresoliS St,
witees
PfilerNEUT,
a
o1.054/211.'S
rialpoggE
HE GREA
STRENGTH G I VE
.on THE s)0K
'..rx ARMING Et
Ifeeeeritia DiERAst
POWERFUL
Ilerie0Reereet
A SORE CURE
lase al LIOUSNCISS, CONSTIPATION,
INDIGESTION, DIZZINCOR, SlOK
HEADACHE, AND olotAlots OP THE
STOMACH, LIVER AND DoWEL111.
CVMt Mito,vagentenau apto OnoMPT
IN AMNON. Ann road A vALuAnLE AID
tiOnboOn SiL000 Siva -cos In Vim
tileArmtNT AND eOnt or emnoaNIC
AND MAIO ntqt.-1-
TOPICS c'T THE TIME.
0 has hew remerked Mutt the edvent of
amokeless powder elaould be the date ot the
advenb of a amokelese cigarette. The senti-
ment is very pretty incleeri bat the "reel in-
veation of the latter artielenenova, and Pro*
bably will be, a tank for future generatious.
Ia tae meantime, however, there's e remedy
In thereaoh of all who are addicted to the so
os1tdperrtioloue lablt ukeleea (tiger -
otters.
Sir, Ftanoin de Wintop, late Gavernor of
tae Congo State, sayer that in spite of the
mores of explorers, who More been trevers-
ing Akio?, in all direetione since Livingetope
began his travels., the larger pert of the
many millirem ot natives have never yet
eeen a white man. At, we trees the routes
of explorerMA the map we see that their
tracks make merely a network over Africa.,
and that there are e termous unvisited spec.
en between the lines. As yell we can only
infer what large regions and the people who
lwe in the. are like from the reporte of
perhaps te aingle traveller who has hurried-
ly paseed through the country.
Since the world mit about the exploration
of Africa in awned, however, acgaaintanoe
with. no part of the world has advanced so
rapidly ID so short A time. Tb,e coasts of
Africa were eutliaecl eenturies ago, but it
took three centurlea and a half to complete.
ly map the week of North america. More
than one-helf of this continent; was almost
wholly unknown a watury ago, and more
than three centuries elapsed before all ita
western border was discovered. It le a curi-
ous faot that white geogrephioal enterprise,
pure and simple, has revealed most of the
eecrets of inner Africa, the fur trade was
the chief Wiesner; in unfolding the nature
of our far Wed and the northern part of our
continent.
Ibis now over four months since the great
Conemaugh disaster book plaoe, and yet we
find it noted as a remarkaine fact irt a recent
despatch from Johnstown that two days
aad a half had teat elapsed without) a body
being found, Thediscovery of the remains
of the victims has continued daily, it would
seetn, ever since the date of the disester, and
there is no knowing how many corpses still
lie buried in the debris. Although the
streets have all been opened, many lots and
came have not yet been touched, and the
beds of the Ginemangh river mud Stony
creek are one hell cleared out. The exact
IONE of life, it is now certain, will never be
ascertained. Mine Olera Barton, the head
ot the Red °Mill Society, who has spent the
whole summer in ministering to the wants
of the needy, is jest about to close her work
in the valley, having from first to last at-
tended to over twenty theusand oases.
The news that missionaries on the shores
of Lakes Nyasa% and Tanganyika are alive
and in good spirits will be reoeived with
rejoicing by those throughout the world
interested iu those missions. Nearly a
year ago a lieutenant of the British army
who had almost, by weident, found his way
to miasion abation on Lake Nyaesa, and who
had conducted the desperate defence of the
missions against the Arabs who had attacked
the stations and the people among whom
the missionaries worked, returned to Eng-
land, leaving the missioneriess ht the midst
a the hoatile slavers, who outnumberedthem
ereatsly. Re promised to secure reinforce-
nents and return, but his urgent appeals
re the British public; have nob yet been sue-
gessful, thougk a great prejecb of establieht
log a British protectorate over all tlae
anoccapied take region and thoroughly rul-
ing it by means of meal military stations on
he healthy highlands near the lakes, has
men taken up and is being pushed,
There were over aixteen millions of &d-
eers' worth of minerals of all kinds mined in
Jeriada last year. The inerease in the out -
:Int of coal was about 250,000 tome making
he masa output about 2,758.000 tons. The
:slue of the goldproduced was over $1,100,-
x'30, arid 80,000 odd tons of iron ore were
:attributed to the wants of the nation. There
erere 22,500 tons of phosphate mined and
-0,000 tons of salt was found under the crust;
f Canada. rhe value of other leading pro-
luote for the year are as follows : Asbestos,
$255,007 ; bricks, $1,400,746; building stone,
$641,712 ; cemeut, $95 593; charcoal, $87,-
000 ; copper, 5667,543 ; fertilizers, 521,600;
glees and &some, $875,009 ; granite,
$147,305 ; graphite, $51,129 ,etrYnsltra. 5179,-
393 ; lead, $27,472 ; lime, $339,951 ; lime-
stone, $16 543; manganese ore, $47,044;
mica, $30,207 ; Mineral water, 510.456;
moulding sand, $755,571 ; pyrites, $85, 655;
sewer pipes and tiles, $66,320 slate, $90,-
689 steel, $172,611 ; sulphate acid, 5122,-
515; terra cobba, $49,800.
The game of cross purposes played by the
powers in Bulgaria is illustrated in a strik.
ing manner by three recent items in the
cable reports. A Ste Petersburg paper de-
mands that Austria shall atop intriguing in
Bulgaria'while an agent of the Coolies been
moving at Scfia for the expulsion of Prince
Ferdinand from the throne of that distracted
country. Then comes the announcement
Shat an Austrian bank hat lett Prince Ferdi-
nand twenter-five million francs. We are
thut enabled to fit the stormnentre of the
troublea that threaten Europe. Russian
objections to Austrian intrigues are rather
amusing in the face of constant irritation
kept up by Russian Government agents on
the same ground, But it appears that some-
thing like a child's bargain was proposed by
She Caw at his recent; visit to Berlin. He
will let Austria alone in Sarah, if Austria
will let; him alone in Bulgaria. It is a simple
progratnme on the surface. But, as Russia
is racing for Constantinople, and Autbria for
Selonioa, and neither wank to be outstripped
irt the eun by the other, a good deal of jockey-
ing is only to be expected.
•••••••••wmalm
An opportunity for a settlement of the
Behring sea .difficulty is approaching. The
lease of thheee.lirg grenade by the Atteake
°owl:derma company expires on the let of
lie,y next.. Bat already We see by,Americian
nervepapers a lobby has been formed to genre
a renewal Of the lease from °engrave Op.
position has MO formed, ad here is Where
She outlet:ea point comes in. Thio opposition
alleges that the Alaska Ootrimercial company
is in reality more Buglish than Areericen,
that its operatiOnge are carried on in the in-
tereste of British shareholders, and that
while the Ameriolen prose %Jed politirsians
have been whooping tip Atneriettn catilres
and den:landing the exelusion Of Canadian
poiteltere from Behring sea, certain very re
;Meet Able, quiet lingiieh gentlemen are enjoy.
nig the profite. TO make the situation etill
more oranical, 15 Is alleged that gunge
Canadian sealers are itt part, at least, Owned
by Ametleatie who Rost OM British flag to
Obtain a slate in the trade gobbled, by Eng.
liehtnen (melee the stars and atripeal A
rd0YO artinaing Mixture of ttadis aud national
quosttons could hardly; be imagined: . Bvi;;
oettly all the " ethatt " people in trade are
not located in the trifited States. '
THE SHAPED MU.
Why Pincod at (be Juncture et the Coat -
Collar with the Lapel
Did yoh ever wonder why that little V-
thsPed nick was Placed ell the j um:tura ofyour
wet cellar with the, lapel sap, a writer In
the St. Louie Republic. I euppose you have.
Otemaionally we ell have our little ruminat-
ing [retells and fall to wondering the whys of
the many odd things we see about us. Hold
your wet up before you and you will see at
a glance that; it will "BO' t aft an well with.
oat the utak an width, Therefore, bite matter
of fit cett not be gin -en as a proper eolution
of the fact that it is there. 'Without appar-
ent purpose this mink is °lipped from the
hipel of every f reek ooet Worn in the world.
Bat there was motive in the anthems of the
man who adopted the little insignie of dis
tinction, 1 will tell you about : When the
first Napoleon gave way to his ambition he
tried to implicate Gen. Moreau in Pichegra's
oonepiraey. Moreau had been Napoleon's
superior and was very popular, but tinier the
circumstances, as Napoleon wan on top, it
wasnotsafeto exprese publicly any sympathy
with. Moreau ; ao bie admirers meetly agreed
to nick their cope lapels to show who blaey
were. Carefully note the outlines of the
grist eoatefront you see that is well fitted and
buttoned and we if you can nob plainly de-
tect the initial letter M isa its vvinclinies. The
M will appear upside down, the little nicks
forming ite aides. M was the initial lettet
of Moron and hie champions were known
by the nicks in the Lepel e et theirwats.
FR A.Y.B118 AIA. LYNOBING.
'Religious Services Held by a 'Ito') at a
Ranging in South Carolina,
Comiarra, S. 0, Oat'. 29—Some very cu-
rious &tots in connection wibh the recent
lyticaing of young Robert Berrier for the
murder of his motber-halaw near Lexington
N. aehave just oome to light. A party who
witnessed she banging eays Barrier was
taken from the jail at 1.30 and immediately
curled to the outskirM of the town under a
largo oak tree. Here the snob stopped and
asked the priaoner if he was ready to die.
Berrier said he would be if he knew he would
meet hie wife and babe in heaven, The
mob then informed him that he would be
allowed time to prepare for death.
About this time a drummer who yeas in town
came upon the scene and asked to be allowed
to pray with the condeinned man, Hia re.
quest was granted and he knelt down by the
stde of Barrier and prayed very fervently
that God would save his soul. Daring the
the prayer many hearty "amens" and such
responsee as "Lord grant it," etc., went up
from the mob. For more than three hours
praying and regular religions services were
conducted. A few nfieutes before midnight
Barrier expressed his willingness to die. lie
was then placed upon a horse with a rope
about his neck, and then, as an appropriate
hymn was raised, the horse was led from
under him, and the body was left dargling
in the air.
Hints For Beading.
"Read wording to some plan or system."
Dan't wait for books to come to hand,
and don't read as many people are supped
to fall in love, simply as a matter of propin-
quity. It is a universal truth that the beat
way of living is to do the duty that lies next
one, but thia truth does nob apply to books,
Too many people read the books that Lie
next them, and read no others. These core
tigaous boobs are sometimes good and often
bad, but they are always miscellaneous.
The habit of reading is easily formed, and
once formed there te small danger that you
'will lose it. It is a habit which grows strong-
er as one yields to it, and its resources of
pleasure are so many and so unfailing that
no one cares to bleak away from its thrall.
No matt or woman, except during those
caeca which oceasionally interrupt the re-
gularity of life, ought to be willing to live
without consbant intercourse with hooka.
Beaks are the necessity of akin, rich, intelli-
gent life—unlese one happens to boa Steeley
opening up a continent, and even in that oase
books go with the arsenal and medicine
cheat.
It' is surprising how much time ravels out
and eseames us ; sliest through our fingers,
and leaves nothing but empty regrets behind.
Keep the book you are reading at hand, and
when you have five minutes invest Wow min.
sites in reading. A great many people think
apparently thab time is not worth saving un-
less they have it in a large cinantities. Give
them a day, and they fanoy they could do
wreathing ; but with fifteen minutes what
can bedone. Well, 15 minutes a day at the
end of a month aggregate ten hoarse and at
the enl of a year a good deal more than a
working week !Time is saved, like money, in
small amounts; the savinge banks represent
small, not large investments, and they Wand
for the wealth of the community. Save your
minutee as yon save your quarters, and you
vain have a considerable investment in good
season.
Ftili Speed in FOES.
Lt is safe to say that Dr. Blevking, who
represented Germany in the Marine Confer-
ence, has produced the surprise of the day,
upon thew who have became alarmed by
the steadily increasing speed Of ocean steam -
Wipe. The preeenb rule of the neutioal road
requires a ship to slow down in thick weather
but Dr. Sievking, a,nd all the German dele-
gates wibla hire, are in favor of reversing
this rule entirely, so that henceforth aIl
skippere, ia they would live up to the law,
must run through thick weather at top speed.
The argument for this is not given im full,
bub we imagine it to include Has theory that
if ships viral strike, the one which strikes
hardeab has the best chance,
Both the English and American reerabere
of the Conferenoe are against this change,
and of (soured,theoretically, they are right
The best rule which could be devised for see..
faring would be the Rniding priwiple of
that noted headsmen, Davy Lrookette "Be
aura yon're right; then go aimed." lf that
rule were required on She Matt, Oln ta foggy
night the entire commemeof the world would
have to heave to. We suppose that no kw
could possibly effect that. So great in
the expanse ,of water tint at the wont,
danger of .collision is but email, arid
excessive carillon hoe never beanie:an in the
miler. If it had, he would have rarely
Thin is not a'new idea auggerited by Dr.
Sleeking, but ita introduotiois at so Inver.
Saab a conference Eshowe that it prowling
gr eat weight evenareolag the highest expette.
It may perhaps afford a little ohoer for 601110
nerV011n pannengern, when they are being
hurried over the Agenda ole feggy night, to
know that their Captain Is driving ahead
Wthiothritty.he snPfevalef the very highest hu.
A greater predigy than little Josef Hoff
• Med, the plattlete Who vialted title country
two year ago is twee Ecczelski, a Polish
bey of ilve pears of age. It is announced that
he is about to phy in Berlin selectioee front
Mendelseolut and Chopin, and other 'dig -Malt
corapoeitione,
CANADIANS
Work Too Hard 1
who ;Besot lc. sieepieseuess, Narrows
nese and aDrolrett-Down syetem, often
Ending in Insanity,
Thousands of over-
worked business
ee, men, wearied brain.
worker " industrious
mechanics, and tried
a.
women, 111 all parts
of the Dominion
are to -day in a tern-
bie position. Their
nerves are weak,
digestion poor, head aching, and they can-
not sleep, work or live ia comfort. This is
what fliis our Insane Asylums.' This is
the cause of t1i terrible Paresis. Before
it is too late, use Dr. Phelps' wonderful
discovery, Paine's Celery Compound. It
removes the results of overwork, restores
strength, renews vitality, regulates the
whole system, and tones up the overworked
brak and body. De not despair, but use
this wonderful remedy, and be restored to
health and happiness, the same as was Mr.
John L Brodie, of Montreal, who writes :
"1 have great pleasure in recotnmeading
your Paine's Celery Compound. My sys-
tern was run down and I was not fit for
business, could not sleep well at night and
was nervous. I commenced taking Paine's
Celery Compound and improved imme-
diately. 1 am now able to transact any
business and endure any amotint of excite-
ment without bad effect."
Paine's Celery Compound can be pule
cbased at any druggist's for one dollar a
bottle. If he should not have it on hand,
order direct from WELLS, RICHARDSON
& Co., Montreal.
A TR AVELLI tia• SWALLOW
Gets a Free e on a Steeping Car frau
$t. Paul te Portland.
A well-known conductor ou the Norbhern
Paoli& told a queer story the other day
about the compulsory migration of a, hen
swallow, neat, eggs, and all, from St. Paul to
Portland, Ore. The swallow last spring,
evinced & particalar fondness for the eaves
of a sleeping car in the yards in Ste Patti,
and several neats were built by bhe busy little
worker before the repairs on the interior of
the oar were completed and it was returned
to the service. When the oar was pulled
out and attaohed to the west -bound train,
chore was a commotion among the feathered
communiby : but the train pulled out just
the same, and evety one aupposed that the
swallow had conoluded to build new homes
and dart new fernlike. When She firat stop
was madehowever there etnerged from one
of the meets a badly scared hen swallow,
whir& flew around and about the ear until
the train started, when rale darted into the
nest again, resuming her, exhibition of be-
wilderment ab each stopping place.
The bird travelled all the way to Portland
in the wane way, being kept watch on by
the sleeping oar porter, who when ordered to
do so by one if the road cfficials at Portland,
knocked down the nest and the bird mother,
bereft of the home and prospective progeny
she had zealously guarded, flaw widly about
for a Nene, and at last flew away to seek,
perhaps, a new mash and material for a new
'
&mos A3rtes Sportin; Castoms.
A correspondent writing from Bue-we
Ayres, where so many high clam thorough-
breds have been received from Euglaud and
Fri nos, says The methods of native
training are peculiar, and ao you must think
when I tell you the horses are out and at
work by 2 to 3 a.m. Indeed, the gallops
and trials nearly always take place by 3 30
to 4 a. m, and generally before tha early
hour of 3 a.m. Very rarely (het one see a
blood horse out afMr 5 a. m,, unlaces it be
occasionally in the afternoon, about 5 to 6,
for a walk. Oats being scow, and very
clear, the horses are fed on melte, except
thew owned by the Portlands and West
minsteas of Buenos Ayres, and these have
oats of course. The native Argentine ia &
fair devil at; betting, and is, taken all round,
a good sportsman in his way, and he likes
to eee hie dollars and those of his fellows
flying around. Ow great poiat I must not
forget to record in the favor of the native
eportsznan. At the races one never sees a
drunken man or woman, never hears bad
language, never sees horseplay of any sorb
or kind, and any man can walk about with
thousands of do lets in his hatband and he
will never have them even to neucth as look-
ed at. Certainly, they are the moat honest
lot of sportsmen, from the highest to the
lowest, in the way I have named I have
ever 001118 across though, mind you, the
native owners end trainers quite underaband
running the "bloods" to get weight off, and
put the backing public off the scent, so that
when the colt comes out and wine there are
fe er tickets on him and they are the holders.
In this way they can be taught nothing."
The British Minister Interviewed.
Sir Julian Pauncefote, the British minis-
ter at Washington, has taken up his per-
mareent residence at the United States mei-
tal wit* his family. He has, moreover,
allowed himself to be interviewed. Ib in
true he didn't say much, but the word
spinners have made a column out of what he
did Bay. ae, however, teolmowledged that
he Was tinder instructions to endeavor to
bring about a settlement of the fishery
question and the Behring sea diffioulty. Be
said it WAS a kind of a triangular duel in
which Great Britain, (lewd% and the
United States were engaged. Lord Saila
bury had not, he believed, conveyed any per-
emptory wishes to the Ottawa government,
and, in fact, the itome government was
• bound to revert the views of Canada in the
premieme Where was no truth in the
• report thet he was to meet Sir Charles
• nipper at Ottawa for a reaufereneet_or thee
he was to esoertaiti the views of the Herds:ion
adinielatration as to an extension of the
commercial relations between °wade, and
the United States. He was authorized to
deal vsith bhe question of extradition, knt
in all theme meters he was to keep hinieelf
in consultation with the Carnation govern-
ment. This Is as it should be, and 15 in to
be hoped that Canadawill never again be
sarailiced to the fended ;requirement/ Of
peace.
Ib is repotted that the Withbaen and
,
Pilltibury flour mills at Minneapolis will
rillortly pries into the Melds of en English
eandioata The ommideraticee 10 /laid US be
$5 200 000
XTEW.BLL E01713.
Precious ohmage are mounted Open geldri
butterflies with flexible wing, which may be
worn R8 ktr000408 or in the hair, as the
wearer ,may prefer.
A new woolen is a colored Plaid, in which
the predelrgintitlicellede is taroWn up Isa
quite a long nap, like the " listing" end of
broadoletit.
.1.91.0 heavy eoutesolie lace in A very lash,
ionable trimming far Huh bleak costumes,
mad adapts itself equally well on woollen and
eilken fabrics.
.A London dovetail says Lord Wolseley
ham accepted an invitation to be patient at
the unveiling of the statue to Gen. Lm at
Richreand, VA.
Klaiber, who attempted to aersassinate
Prince William of Wurternberg the other
day, has beea deolared sane. Re is a mem-
ber of an Anarchlet society, and the murder
I the Prince was soloed to him by lot.
According to tbe laab °noun of St. Peters.
berg, teken at the eud of July, the permit,
tion of bent city waa 720,318, composed of
424,000 males und 296,106 femalee. In
winter this total is increased by one quarter.
Mr. Charles Hallo* the widely known
writer, in a letter to "Fared and Streittn"
contradicts the idea that a man pen teach a
bear boxing, as bears are natural boxers and
up to all points in the art.
Black, dm* green, or gray oaehmere
house dresses will be worn with sashes of
ores' barred ribbons about fifteen bathes
wide, and heavily fringel on the ends.
they cost from $12 to $15, and thow most
beautiful groupings of tints and shades.
At the tirne of the Reformation the aver-
age life of man was 24. In the early part
of this century it was rather more than 404
and certainly has not lessened since. That
means that ars many people live 5o70 now as
lived to 40 300 years ago.
A Judge in a Chicago court is reported
as saying "Of all the boys in the reform
school at Pontiac and in various reforms.
toriee about the city, 95 per cent are the
children of parents who died through drink
or became criminals through blae same
armee."
The Maria Antoinette shape Is used with
a round back and knotted kerchief fronts
over the bust, or the en& are long enough to
tie at the back ef the weld. LW, round
necks are modestly veiled with a lace or
lime kerchief, edged with Empire lace and
knotted in front,
Capt. Alex. Cablaberte of Oobourg, le
banding a yacht that he declares will be
She tasted on the lakes. Her dimen.
alone will be: 45 feet keel, 46 feet load
water line, 53 feet ever all, 15 feet 4 inches
beam and 5 feet 6 inohes draught. She into
be aloap rigged, with lead What and best
American duck saihs.
.4.coonnts of a transparent watoh lite*
produced in one of the American factories
represent the oase and plates as of Brazilian
pebble, or rook crystal plates for the various
sorews and fittings. The pivot are set in
rubies and eappbiree, and the plates held
apart; by sapphire pillars ; the dial is a
keleton of gold ; diamonds mark the hours
and ruble' the minutes.
Nova Soothe is remarkable for the BUM-
ber of its old people. It has a larger num-
ber of cettenarlana than any other country,
here beiog one to every 19,000 inhabitants,
while England has one to every 200000.
They are chiefly of the farming olase, in
omfortable circumstances, accustomed to
awoke in the open air, plain food and
pienty of it, with good inherited! constitn-
tons.
The breed of Shetland ponks is almost ex.
inot in the Shetland Islands. Nene are
now bred there, and there are fewer sped.
raens in thew islands than in many other
places. Bred as they are antler widely
different; co '
nditions the old shaggy -coated
Shetland pony is athingof the pas.. The
mall smooth-ooated ponies now in fashion
are the improved Shetlands bred in milder
&states.
Saribner's Magazine for November has for
rontieptece an excellent engraving, of Emin
'
Pasha and a well written, entertaining arti-
le byColonel H. G. Wont (Beretta Bey) on
"WhereEmin Is," The article is illuatra tad -
J. Russell Paley dismisses "The Effect on
American Commerce of an Anglo -Continental
War." "A Student of Salamanca " is the
keine on which William Henry Bishop ex-
pends himself, Harold Frederio's story "In
TheValley " Dalai ita course through an ad-
ditional chapter or two. M. Allen Stark
rests of "Electricity in Relation to the
Human Body." There are a number of
other equally expellent artiolea in the num.
b ar.
Church maim may be making little pro
reas g but such cannot; be said of church
unity. rhe latter Idea is moving forward,
and clergymen of all determinations are re-
ognizing it. Iu New York the other day
Mao Church Unity Society of the Anglicen
Church held its meeting, There were pre.
ent, heaides the Anglican dignitaries,
prominent men in other communions, es,
or example, Dr. Schaff, of the Presbyterian
Church. Moat friendly experiencing were
exchanged. The Bishop of Pitteburg celled
upon the members nob to let the difference
among Christiana dismay them, adding :
"Steam on boards and some on pieces of the
ship; and so it came to part that they
escaped all to land." A rather apt quota.
fi°nTit. e delegates to the American Interns
Howl Congress are really enduring a sort of
matrydom. For instance, according to the
correspondent of the New York "Tribune,"
they retired at two o'olook the other merit-
ing after a banquet in Buffalo only to be
aroused at ear to take the train for Cleve.
land, and their appearance was decidedly
" aeedy," notwithstanding their tmenful
attempts to took otherwise. How they
looked after their banged at Manchester,
N. H., a fe w days before has not been sated,
but it has leaked out that they were forced
to drink sherry out of gingwale bottles,
New Hampshire being a prohibition State.
In Portland, Me,, no such attempt WAS made
at ostensible compliance with the law,
wines being openly served at the banquet.
It hi announced that the Imperial govern-
ment has refuted to consent to the hill
passed at the lad onion of the federal
parliament providing felt the titian of all
criminals from the United States who have
ought refuge its Canada. This is only he
accordance with the trtze Beibleh principle
that the meanest of human creatures hare
rights that they cermet be deprived of at a
momenta notke. Cattadie allotved thew
people antler itts laws to take up their habi-
tation in our midrib, and it would be emin-
ent* unfair to Wove theni Meth at a
sinomentn notice after perhaps years of
re/Owe*. Posoibly they are Undesirable
°ideate, but we should intact merle up our
naiads about that beferte they came among
ua. Having Ortee weght the shelter of roar
laws, With Mir remotion, freeing that there
was nothing on the astute hook et the time
forbidding them, we are bound to respect
ithe rigbte of liberty they thus claim
The, Safest
A" moat powerful• alterative le
' Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Young and
old aro alike benefited by its use. For
the eruptive
di-
eanos panther to
*-7 Children nothing
zaaa-- else la so effective
as tills medicine,
while its weals.
ble flavor snakes
it easy to admin.
ister.
"My tittle boy
lied large serofue
e• lens aloes on his
neck and throat
to om which, he
weltered torrilate.
-- Two paasiolias
attende& him, but he grow eontinualite.
'Worse wider their cure, and eveeybody
ex/looted isa would, die. I had heard of
the remaritable cures effected by Ayerea
aursaratilla, aud decided to have ray
bay try it, Shortly after he began to
take tale medicine the ulcers coma
men eed healing, anti:after using several
bottles, he was entirely eared. He is
nog* as beanie. and ettollg as any boy
oC his age." — William F. Dougherty,
laamptott, Va.
"In May last, any youngest child,
tonrtoon months old, began to have sores
ge,thor on its heacl mei body. 'We ap-
plied varions simple vernedies without
weal. The mires mereased it, number
and cliecalarged copiously. A physiciau
was called, bat the sores continued to
multiply until ha a ler months they
nearly covered the child's head arid body.
At last we began the use of Ayer's Sar-
saparilla. In is feler days a marked
change for the better was mattifest. Tho
soros assumed is more healthy condition,
the dischanges were gradual* dimin-
ished, and finally ceased altogether.
lase eland Inc livelier, its skin is fresher,
and its appetite batter than we have ob-
eerved ior inonths."—Frank M. Griffin,
Long Point, Texas.
"The formula of Ayer's Sarsaparille
presents, for chronic( diseases of alraost
every- kind, the best remedy known to
the medical world."—D. M. Wilson,
1,I. D., Wiggs, Arkansas,
Ayer's Sarsapariiia,
TIMPANI= PM
Dr. J. C. Ayer 8c Co., Lowell, Mass.
f'rice 51; six bottles,$5. Worth 553 bottle.
A certain and speedy Cure for
Cold in the Read and Catarrh
as al Its stages. •
SOOTHING; CLEANSING,
HEALING.
Instant Relief, Permanent CT,
Failure Impassible,
Many so-called diseases are simpldy symptoms of
Catarrh such as headache, partial saftess, lodes
sense of smell, foul breath, hawking and spirting,
nausea, general feeling of debility, etc. If you ars
troubled with any of these or kindred syeaptorns, eon
have Catarrh, and should lose no time in prommag
a bottle of NASAL BALM. Bo %carnal in tenor,
neglected cold in head results in Catarrh,. followed
by consumption and death. NASAL EALDf is sold by
all druggists, or will be sent, post paid, ort receipt of
price (so cents and St.00) by addressing
• FULFORD & Mb, Be00101111, 011T
im,,Bovvare of imitations similar Ill Darn&
S81; Rolle Cold Watch Ell
tied tor81.00.
Beet 580 watch In tho world.
• Perfect tieneltmapaa War -
tatted. Wavy olid Gold
Hooting Cases. Both Mahar
ant gents' shoe wl works
and cameo of equal value.
On e Person lama to.
caltly can secure ono fru,
together with our large and nil:
enable Ilse of Household
Samples. Than samples, na
wall as the watele, we send
Free, awl after you have kept
fri year Some far2 months ant shown them to Mono
Who easy have canal, they become yore owa propattr, Thaw/
who write at Maw eatt ho suss of mole the Watch
Ithosples. We_pay acerela ton* Addiveg
CO.4 Alm flA Poe nd, Maine.
Nelda Talc enonalatettrtte
%shoots paper aloes wee
pen, PenbkoldnIP
audit...bog/ma
align ono.
FOUNT
bletirtgere=ineiiitr alglielli'yYkapeut°rnstiOta 61°1
tea lathe Docket sate.yes will not teak nicely made aneat
le Woke -l-plate; soParlOr a.11 Stylographte puts,
rush• UW16919048% SaN, Mete* -
Li Pens, SI NM P.O. Stamps taken, but alleerpreferred.
A 100p Picture Book sent FREE. Mention this papa%
4. W. MENNITZ, Yeirraotith, N.
maarriaseica Ncominsamealacar
Etquimaux in Nova Scotia.
At a missionary meeting in Newark, N.J.,,
this week, an &pima= priest from Ne-'
Sootia, the Rev. Simon Gibbons, wallet"'
the speakers. He said that at Caw la
where he was etationed for many(
was in the habit of going on longt
anowshow, and woe oftencompela
out caves ht Meow banks, He dovii\
came, and deep at night in order
himself from the violence of the
He %leo said that there are but thr!
or atone churches in .Nova Sceatitt,),
mainder being wood structures.
thab his parish is thirty -miles loisk
comprises eleven mission stations, asiie
for the first time in his ministry he is 4
wows of a railway station. He Spoke of a,
devotion of the Christian &phew= to Hat
Church, and told how on one 0000.13iOn wherok.,
he eves compelled to make a joutney of fif-
teen miles through deep snow a body- of the
Esqulmaux tramped ahead of him on anew -
shoes breaking a path, and then Medved
beak, making a walk of thirty miles; with
ott even stopping for food.—[Rochester
Democrat.
When The Bing Was Lost,
dinAgihbetrraf a
ibt I In ° doeunptiehgrofmid
die ag
alwet
There was a grating just in front of the
altar mile, Which led down to the pipes
Mai& heated the bending. In hie agitation
of petting the ring upon the finger of hie
bride the unfortunate bridegroom let it go,
end it rolled down the grating. The prior
bride Weed copious tears, and the bridegroom
gallently etanched them as well as he could
with a large rod.and-green handkerchief,
murMuring hoothingly : "There, don' tied
cry—don't 'ee ory," in the endearing tone
whirl la eftea Used to a baby, WO are
Bute we isympathizied, bat our sympathy
was hardly seldom to control our titillate
pkopensities. A ring had to be totrowed
Wad one of the officiate, end the toitle'a
too were dried 55 AA.