HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1889-11-14, Page 2A Fact
ARTORTII knowing is that blood dise
V V eases which all other remedies fail,
to cure, yield. to Ayers Sarsaparilla.
Fresh confirma-
tion a this state-
ment comes to
hand daily. Even
such deep-seated
and stubborn coin -
plaints asRhea-
mad='Itheuma.
u
tic Got, and the
like, are thorough-
ly eradicated by
the use of daimon-
derful alterative.
Mrs. R. Irving
Dodge, 110 West
%.,.. 125th street, New
York, certifies :.--
" About two years ago, after suffering
$or nearly two years front rheumatic
gout, being able to walk only with great
-discomfort, and havingtried various
remedies, including mineral waters,
Without relief, I saw by an advertise-
ment in a Chicago paper that a man had
been relieved of this distressing com-
plaint, after long suffering, by taking .
Ayer's Sarsaparilla. I then decided to
make a trial of this medicine, and took
it regularly for eight months. I arn
pleased to say that it effected a com-
plete cure, and that I have Sines had no
return of the disease."
Mrs. L. A. Stark, Nashua, N. H.,
writes: "One year ego I was taken ill
with rheumatism, being confined to my
louse six months. I came out of the
sickness very much debilitated, with no
appetite, and my system disordered in
every way-. r commenced to use Ayer's
Sarsaparalla and began to improve at
once, gaining in strength and soon re-
eovering my usual health. I cannot say
too much in praise of this well-known
medicine."
"I have taken a great deal of medi-
cine, but nothing has done me so
much good as Ayer's Sarsaparilla. I
felt its beneficial effects before I had
-quite finished one bottle, and I caa
freely testify that it is the best blood -
medicine I know of." —L. W. Ward, Sr.,
,roodland, Texas.
Ayer's_
arsa ari a,
PREPARED BY
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Price el; six bottles, $5. Worth $6 a bottle.
THE BEST
BAKING POWDER
ELIREN'S GEHINE
Coors Fmk
ate Ahem.
Nothing InJurious.
IL
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Jet Pumps, Farm Pumps,
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MONTREAL
MANUOJ34,0CigtiC.1:10iNI
'CHADWICK'S
SPOOL
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HAS PIO SUPERIOR.
ASK FOR T.
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In Sample, Ladies' and
all other kiwis.
Unita an szongest
TRUNKS
In the World.
L EVELEIGH & CO.
MONTREAL, t
gOle Mfra for the DOra1llf011
HOTEL BALMORAL.
MONTREAL.
fotre Dams St., one of the most central
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Accommodation for 400 guests.
Eason: a IT WOODRUFF,
to $3 per day. Ws if II VV Manager.
oastagaimommgmansmowsok
PEARS
SO% Afett or Canada, k
24:PALMER &SON
Wholesale ImpOrs of
iral HOISTS' SUNDRIES,
1713 NOTRE DM St,
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DOMISIoin
LEATHER BOARD
COMPANY,
Manufacturers of
ASBESTOS MILLBOARD
Steam Packing.,
FRICTION
PULLEY BOARD,
TA4 is a Perfect Fridges;
asiallealmatommaMINIMIIMMIll
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Q. AU.
S 4 SIZE
AND
C4 WEIGHT'S
ite
TO otIDEIS
21D8BIESOleESL
"ss, LI.8
relirstior, LA.
oRiaTioiHTATs
ItuloBwr
STRENSTH GI
PHT75-0
r The vim(
71 ARMING 5t
14UTRITIOUS ENRAGE
POWERFUL
f VIG AT R
.4t4
A sone. CURE
Poe 011.10USHERS, cONErri RATION,
, INOIGESTIoN, °MEINERS, WOK
IHEAsACHE, Asti risseAsee or *rue
STOMACH, LIVER ANC Sowzi.s.
IZOSEVAnt MILevrsiollowmi Arm reelsIPT
'kw. 1101.111, AN* 1 PosISL,A Viti-toutte Ant
ere Sus
stooett 01.000 mote IN 'ME
TeratMeNt AND Cunt or CHRONIC
IN r$ '',101"tbiliVrbl IN fat taa ea.,
PARKBRE3 OosiBizi4
re, noise the Price spr Wheat,
A (Nacional, Opeoiel ear st—Tbe whoa
grower* of the Mbeissippi Vatley timetable
in oonvention:here yesterday, Welter N
Allen, preeident ot the Farmers' Federetio
made a epeeoh. He said z--," It is the firs
meeting of the kind ever held on this eau
Mutat. Realizing our badlvidual feebleues
and the great importance of unity of ado
'
as a close we have boon celled together t
ooneider the proponition to delegate to
power of our own creation the exolusiv
right to markeb the products of our farm
and to take such, measure', as will tiller
present relief and future proteetion to th
agricultural intereete of the blissiesipp
Valley. The farmer is the only produce
Iwho sende an over supply of hie wares t market to be eold by some one else, an
like the.goode of the bankrupb et thine on
elee's price. If farmers would orgenize lilt
manufacturers to control production an
regulate the output in the publio market
they could in common with all offie
roducere set the price on their own pro
acts, irrespective of overproduction o
the power of the Liverpool markets, The un
&voidable tendenoy of the present cabal:Abbe
tin& eystern is to bring the price down to th
lowest limit at which a good dupply oan b
produeed tinder the most favourable condi
dons of aoil, season, and climate. Now in
order to avert impending ruin we must re
veree this order by eubstitating a new By
tem, fixing the price of farm products at the
cost of production on lands thee prodnoe
onlY thirtetfold. The power to establish the
value of one babel of American wheat and
one barrel of mess pork can control bhe
markets of the world. This power Is to be
found in the centralized agency of the Fed,
erated Farmers of the Miesuseippi Valley, a
company legally chartered with it capital
stook of $2,000,000."
Ex Governor Charles Robinson, of Kan.
Sass WaS made temporary chairman. Be
strongly urged the orgenizetum of the far-
mers throughout the grain -growing Staten.
Norman J. Coleman, of Missouri, ex-Seore•
grasses and conferences as we Canadians
etarbayirmoanf ,Agriculture, was made permanent
The English are shwa as fond of con-
'
Apple and Pears.
are of assooiations and societies and their
annual meetings. The Royal Horticultural
Society has last publiehed the report of a
Congress of experts on the important sub.
illicit of the culture of apples and pears. As
tar back as 1853 there was an apple Congress,
and, in 1885, a Pear Congress, and now, in
1889, we have more recent ninths of Elilish
experience on bobh apples and pears. uoh
of the discussion turned on the purely Eng.
lhh question of the relation of landlord and
tenant, and the proportion which each
should bear to the firat coat of planting fruit
trees, but, fortunately, bn thi8 09III:drV the
farmer and froth grower be ofteuest the owner
of the eon. However, it is interesting to
learn that sanguine fruit growers talk of a
50 per cent. profit on an investment in apple
and pear trees'but that would turn all our
farmers into fruit growers. One expert
spoke of "Apples for Profit," another of
"Fruit Culture for Profit in the Open Air ;"
a third of "Dessert Pears e. fourth on
"Prunhsg;" a fifth of "Canker in Fruit
Tree& ;" a sixeh on its "Cause and Cure ;" a
seventh on the "Enemies of the Apple and
Pear," and the poor sparrow was praised
and blamed by turns in the paper and the
discussion that followed It; and ao every
branch of the enbiect of when, where and
howno grow apples and pears was taken up.
One very interesting feature was a map to
thew the proportion whioh orchards and
vegetable gardens bear to population in
every county in England, with reference to
the influence of railroads on cultivation of
fruite and vegetables for the market.
•
•
•
Habits and Long Life.
The information whioh the blanks give on
1 the subjeet of habits coincides with the
opinion of most people, formed from °beer
vation, that longevity without) regularity of
habits is rare. These old people, men and
worn at alike, are put down as early risen
and renters. almost without exception, and
fully nineteen out of every twenty have ob.
servedthis enetom throughout life except per.
haps at some shorb period in youths bleats
have been eaten -regularly, three each day,
with dinner at noon,'the_ exceptions being
so rare este indicate nothing.. Exeraiee in
most cues has been hard work up to sixty.
five or seventy, and after that wind , has
oonaisted (when the regular occupation Juni
been given up) of walking,,. gardening, or
both. Except in oases of sioaness these old
people are as a rule as active and as fond of
constant) occupation of sozne oorb to.day as
most men and women are at thirty-five. ,
Oae of the most signifioent facts gathered
in this canvass is that regarding own.
potions. Oat of 1,000 men, throughout
life, 461 have been farmers; 92 have
been carpenters; 70, merchants . 61, mart
ars ; 49, laborers; 42, ahem:kers ; 41,
manufacturers ; 23, clergymen ; 23, masons ;
16, blaoksmiths; 16, bankers; 12, deb,
iron -workers, mill -hands, physichtne, and
lawyers; and the balance are divided among
nearly all the other trades and professions.
The list includes only one each of the
following: Hermit, hunter, chemist, pro-
fessor, soldier, broker, aucitioneer, jookey,
contractor. Nearly all, however, began life
upon the farm.
A novel hairpin top simulates a bunch
• of wheat in gold, tied with a ribbon of
• Pearl& t+
The bronze statue at Vienna of the com-
poser Schubert, who was a short, insignific-
ant man, with coarse features, represents a
gentleman of great elegance, tall and stately
form, mated on a heap of atones, with hie
elbow resting on a tree stump and a pewit
In his hand, 13,9 if writing in a large book open
upon his kneeta He gazes into the air with
a rapt Look.
There are no donbt some things not all
together right about club life, but that life
meets a felt want' in the breast) of the aver-
age man no amount of cold ream:tang can
explain eway. If it did not, there Would
not be the amount of popularity belonghtg
to it which is so remarkably the case. Len.
don has long been famous for its numerous
and wealthy Cit1118, whoao houses are amen
the most palatial in that great metropolie.
On this side of the Agenda Neve, York le the
city of clubs above and beyond all others
" Clubbable " men there are numbered by
the tens of thousands, and new clubs are
being formed every year, and splendid olub
housed furnished in the most luxuriant way
are being built. The number of dlotinet
°tuba In Now York and Brooklyn is now
close upon 300. Whey include 'loofa dubs
political clubs, literary aloha, religious clubs,
musical clubs, sporting clubs and many
oecial clubs. The menffiership runs up to
betWeen 50,000 and 100,000. The older
social clubs, whioh have been known more
distinctively as etch, are in a very presper.
ono condition. Appliaatiests for membertilip
aimed ItiVarittbly exceed, and theielimes
largely weeded the litnite of tnertherehlp
Allotted by Ole eonstittttion.
GRNBRAL NEW8.
The emptiness of all thipme from politics
to petioles, is never so abrikinlto ne ne When
we fail in them.
We love tharaters in proportion as they
are impulsive and spontaneous. The lees
a man thinke or knows about his vlrtuee, the
better we like him.
No medicine for Indigestion or dyspepsia,
Adam' Tutti Frutti Gum recommended by
R. Ogden Doremuz, X. D., L L D., and
Dr. Gyrus Edson. Sold by all Druggists
and Confeotionere, 5 mute.
Cooked in eilver vessels, emote dial of food
for the Sultan of Turkey ie *tamped and
sealed before it leaven the kitchen. Then
the Lord High Chamberlain breeke the seal
hi the presence of the Sultan, and tastes of
each dish before his sovereign attaeks it,
Wilkie Collins reeld that no great
artisb who had work to do could go into
society. He regarded the atmosphere of
society as deadly. He applied this, however,
rather to London then to Park, where the
conditions of society are favorable for liter-
ary and artistic work.
Amounts have been received of a so -call
snow flower
,
said to have been discover.
by Count Arithoskoff in the most norther
portion of Siberia, where the ground is oo
lineally covered with frost. The wended
objed shoots forth from the /resort soil oal
on the first day of eaoh suotheding year.
liVes for hut a tingle day, then resolves
ita original elements. The leaves are thin
in number, and eaoh about three indict% 1
diameter. They are developed °Wren tha
side of she stem toward the north, and ea
seems to be oovered with raloroecopic ory
Vale of snow.
• Regarding the proposed bridge arose bh
English Channel to conned England an
France, the Builder says We are told it wi
• be no danger to sailing ships, because ther
is plenty of room between the piers ! W
have no authority to speak for 8810710,13, bu
we oan fancy pretty well what would be th
feelings and opinions of the captain of
sailing ship ottught in a gale in the °bailee
on a dark night, with his ship only half un
der control and with the knowledge that
row of concrete reefs, extending all sore
the channel, were to leeward of him.' II
would with ab all events for the "melan
oholy satisfaction" of having the engineer
who built them on board with him.
At the eighth annual roeebleg of the
American Forestry Association, which was
held in Philadelphia the other day, and at
which sixteen States were represented, sev-
eral important resolutions were passed.
Among them was one in favour of the presen-
tation to Conroe of a petition melting that
body to provide for the wiehdrawal from
sale of all Government foreat lands until a
lommhalon, to be appointed by ithe Presi-
dent, should determine what regione ought
to be permanently preaerved from the rav-
ages of the lumbermen. Great Olathe forests
of the United States are in extent, our
neighbours have begun to'realize that they
are not only wasting this natutal wealth,
but allowing great injury to be done to
various interests by the woodman's axe.
ale theory bhat Leif Ericson, the Noree-
man, was the real discoverer of Americo,
finds favours with many who have invest!.
gated the subject, but there appears to be
sone° reason to believe that that honour may
belong to a still earlier voyager. There 12
a tradition that 65. Brandin, a renowned
abbot of the sixth century, crossed the ocean
to this continent over thirteen Meddled
years- ago. During a obit to France lase
summer Goiters! Batterfield, of New York,
took othasion to therch among the old paroh.
month in the B bliotheque Nationale for in.
formation on the subteen He found thin,
been different manusoripta of the eighth and
ninth centuries in an excellent state of pre-
servation, and hie shady of them sti fan haa
been sufficient to . convince him that Sb.
Brendin did rnake a voyage to sea, and that
he was led to do no through the cionfeseions
of one Barenae which told of a land beyond
the seas.
When %ohm decorations are given to
foreigners they usually take the form Of
medals, which at St. Petersburg are the re-
ward of the faithful domestics of the court.
Dumas pre received the medal of St. Anne
after he had written a story of Russian life;
but, hearing that such a decoration was of no
imolai value, be returned it to St. Petersburg,
whereupon a cross of the second class of that
Order WAS despatched to him, with an
apology for the mistake, as it Was termed.
A famous singer was enuoh ridiculed at St.
Petersburg when he walked about wearing
the medal of St. Andrew whichhe innocently
regarded as being very nearly (qua to the
light-blne ribbon, gold °pliant:than, and
eight -pointed star, with a blue eagle on in of
that femme Order, which ranks with the
Black Eagle of Prussia and with our Garter.
The medal, however, is an upper servant'
decoration, aand Runlets laugh/ in their
sleeves wheerthey see foreignets(to whom it
is given by dozene) wearing it as a mark of
high diatinetion.
The German delegates to the Marine
Conference at Washington have created no
Vitae surprise by asking for the reversal of
the rule that ships should slow down in
foggy weather, and that top speed should
be required under such circumstances.
Saab a propoeition et a lime when the speed
of the great ocean litters is beine rapidly
increased theme extraordinary, but it is
probable that the Germans are proceeding
upon, the theory that when collision* do
take place the ahip that be going the fastest
has the beat oheame of surviving. Whey may
also hold that the qtdoker a ship can get
out of a fog the better, and thab by reducing
its apeed its chances of collision with another
are 00 much Wrested. These arguments
are plausible, but it is not likely that they
will have muoh weight with the conference,
the other membere of whioh are opposed to
the suggested idittago.
Her& Ib tan, the Norwegian dratttatiat
and poet, hat a most retharkable phy-
siognomy, on depleted in the first nuraber of
the new Boston paper called Tile Transat.
lantic. BIS face leatirrounded by an aureole
of hair and et hiekere Which stand out ht all
directionHis mouth is firm and corn.
pressed, and hie speotaclee temind, one of
Horace tareeley'a. The whole effect is some-
thing like that of a " Jack in tho Bra."
rit a paper whioh he read the other day
_ _
before the An:voiced Politic Heath Maeda.
blob on the subjeee of "reedit ite Relation
to Health," Profeeitor Atwitter, Director of
the Agetoultera Experinient Station at
maintabied that the people a
the Vetted States net too much, theft eon-
etrailition of food bell far greater it, pro-
portion to population then an thet of European
nation% and that there Wes too mach over-
es,3/4Iag of moot and sweebtaeate, Although
to the by mind it may (teem 1)04(1mi:cal to
flay so, yet it in very probable that this ex -
0085 is largely the cense of the thintieee of
the typioal Anterior?. A mat May eat
and Oat and he a bag of boreal etill ; In ,fatit,
laillylike proportions are snore frequently
the rettult of ever -eating that of starvation,
IMPORTANT!
nomaritable atestoratiost to rfealth a
Well Known cootatitans whose Cases
were (Alma up as incurable.
From the few of the hundreds of letters
we have received from those who have
been restored to health and strength by
the use of that wonderful discovery,
Paine's Celery Compound, we make a
few extracts. We hope that the , thou.'
sands of Canadian men and women who
are suffering from nervous and wasting
diseases, will profit by these true and
plain statements of facts.
D. 5. Davidson, of Montreal, suffered
for years with nervous dyspepsia, pain in
his bacle, and sleeplessness. Ile tried doc-
tors without relief, was losing flesh rapidly,
acdhad
commenced the use of Pause's Celery
C
eo
m
p
o
uon
d
.aboutiv
wogien, uph
w,,he says,
awen.h
inhanew
e
Irian. I sleep well and my food does not
hurt me."
Me Jas. Johnson, 302 St. Charles Bor-
• romee Street, Montreal, was week and
nervous, had no, appetite, and could not
rest at night. His nerves were soothed
and strengthened by Paine's Celery Com-
pound, and he soon became well and
strong.
Annie Gourley, of River Beaudette,
P. Q., found the Compound a certain cure
for weakness, and now feels as well as she
ever did.
A customer of Harrison Bros., drug-
gist, Hamilton, Ont., told them that he
was entirely cured of nervous weakness by
the use of two bottles of the Compound,
after everything else lias failed.
The little child of Mrs. G. E Meredith,
D'Arcy St., Toronto, was cured of St.
Vitus' Dance by Paine's Celery Compound.
WII•04GED Ter EierEttrio
Art Extraordinary story or Woman's int+
vetiott.
"A strange and . peoutiarly intereating
roesTurnktgla
oeeame Dime midt noticee 'ir3ita fewtive daysro oenv, 7,"
r,
Thirteenyeare age a very attmetiVe
young maiden of 17 was a favorite member
of a troupe of Binger, and bell ringers which
was ;impend aimed entirely of menffiere
of the family to which the young woman
belonged. The troupe travelled thnoountry
from ocean to ocean, meeting with the most
flattering mimes wherever they offered
an entertainment. Our seventeen•year-old
heroine, by her beauty, her race of manner,
her amiability, and her acoomplishments as
a madden, won the admiration of many.
84Amrnoknegrohwears ma 'flosntde.apepveoatedringa,ndoultpuerresdismtet
of 45, who laid doge to the maiden's heart
with nett ardor and unremitting persever•
mace that finally phe oepitulated. He ,was a
man of ample fortune, had one child, a
young eon, and told his fiancee that he had
been a widower some five years or more.
At his earned entreaty the young woman
re/Aped her petition and married him.
Tillage moved on pleasantly and smoothly
for pis yeare, whin
HaB, itusnatin WAS STRICKEN
with paralysis, and to the care and comfort
of her strloken avulse this good wortrau
consecrated the root of her life. She Was
oonstantly bytter sick man's rade, oaring for
him as She Would a babe, Finally Word
came to her ears of the wonderful healing
patient of the Mt. Clemens mineral waters.
Straightway she journeyed to tiled) refuge
of the lame and halt, filled with the hope
that) the healing ntowere of the famed wafts
would relieve him if they did not restore
him to perfect health. .Arrived et Mk
Clemens, she might be seen day after day,
month after month, wheeling 'the paralyzed
m i
and emaciated forof her nvalid husband
from their boarding hottee to the bathhouse
end back agaiu. Every one ()commented on
the fidelity of this beautiful woman to her
helpless charge. •
"One afternoon she chanced to be looking
over tastes* of old lettere, and while *hue
engaged found one addressed to her stepson
and signed "Your effeetionate mother.'
Filled with wonder and amazement, she
MB 1,000,000 POSTAGE STAMP MYTIT weed) to the youth and asked hint what it
meant. He hesitated, stammered, and
Origin or au Idea That Has Bothered blushed, then faltered mit the , exiAssatiss
many Hundreds ot Good Petiole. that his mother was alive when his father
married the second time, but died six months
later. Not eatisfied with this, she Wont to
her huebtuid and demanded to know of him
whether hie first wifesmais deed. The paraly-
tic was forced, under a rigid questioning, to
admit that
WIPBNO I.W ALT
Now and then some one announces hem -
self as the victim of the one -million postage
damps hoax. It is firmly believed that if
1,000,000 stamps are collected and forwarded
to some one, a bed will be provided for an
invalid boy in some hospital, or a home for
an orphan. Christian churohee have been
the epecial vlotims, and there is hardly one
In England, the *United States, Australia,
India, or in any other couniny, that has not
jai several members begging, borrowing,
'and even stealing /swinge stamps in order
to make up the million that will go to
cloths and feed totne orphan.
This swindle originated in the fertile brain
of a postage stamp collector at Stettin, Ger-
many. He desired to get vast collections to
sorb out and sell again, and hie upon a Plan
to set the whole civilind world to go to work -
for him free of charge. He preyed on the
sympathies of people by announcing they an
orphan would be oared for in file Syrian
Orphan Home" for every 1,000,000 stamp
sent to him. This worked well ; and the next
dodge was thelstarting of a mythical mission
in China, the Holy Sisters of whioh agreed,
for every mulllon atampa sent to them, to
save from the jaws of the crocodiles of the
Yellow River at least one Camas baby, and
than educate and christianize in Ole stamps
and residing in Syraouse, N. Y. From her
hehad never been legally separated, never
had even quarrelled with her, but being
taken eaptive by the charms of the heroine
of this tale, had forgotten Ms wife and his
allegiance to her, and had wooed and won
her who had so tenderly watithed over him
•through. yeas of helplessness and pain.
"The deceived and horror-stricken woman,
who flamed herself to be no wife at all, made
no scene, but calmly accepted the alteration,
resolved to make the beat of a bad matter,
wrote to Syzaouse, ascertained the address of
the genuine wife, whose place she had Inno-
cently utiurped, informed her just how mate
tere stood, inshted that she come for her
long -lost husband, and, what is more, ewe
coaled in bringing about a reconciliation
between the parties. She made it clear to
them both that they owed 15 to their son as
well as to themselves to spend the remainder
of their lives together, and so, not long ago,
she set out with them for their Eastern home
were to be rent not to Jerusalem or China, athempenying them as far tut Rochester,
13ut to Murtioli or Stettin. The last claim on where there wao A most
the sympathy of the world that has been
made by this German is thab for 1,(00,000
stamps a home for an old lady or an old gen-
tleman will be provided in one of three
hcenes--one in London, another in New
York, and the third in Cincinnati. For 500,-
000 stamps a bed will be endowed bus hospi•
tea, and for 100,000 a home will be found for
one year. There are agencies in various cit-
ies to formate stamps to Stettin, It is estimat-
ed that this swindler has collected over 100,-
000,000 stamps in the TJnited States alone,
and that these were worth from 8500,000 to
three times that amount.—(Good House-
keeping.
• The Chinese Question.
Representative Thomas Brown of Indiena,
one of the ablest Republicans in the House,
was asked the other day:-'-." Do you think
the discussion of the Chinese Exclusion Act
will take any prominence in the next season
of Congress 1" Mr. Brown replied :--" I
have been a berate on the Chinese question.
I was one of the very few who voted against
the bill exoluding the Chinese as a violate)]
of the Burlingame treaty, but now I think
the Ultited States Government should ex
-
elude the Chineae, and the Chinese, on tlte
other hand, should exolude Americans from
their country, and out off all intercourse be-
tween the countries. The Chinese cannot
some here and be treated with any farnese.
The Chinese have been used infamously by
he American people, and the Government
h
Cas permitted such action to go on. The
hluaman is industrious, law -hiding, and a
ood citizen. He h never a pauper, never
'tikes nor violates his agreement, Is never
as anarchist, and never ongagna in a riot.
Is doers not become a politician and run
ard politics. He is a clever kind of fellow.
He smokes opium, but that is no worse than
drinking bad whisky. For all that he is nob
or this country?.
8
I
More Giant War Vessels,
The British are pushing the work on the
ships building and to be builb under the Ad-
miralty programme. At Pembroke the Re-
pulse and Renown, two immense battleships
of 14,000 tons burden, have their kee !plass
lad and the frarnee are betng put in petition.
Over fifty tons of steel are being worked in-
to each venal per week. At Portsmouth
the large amber, whioh is to be built on the
slip from which the Trafalgar, and leiter the
Vulcan, have been launched, is fully worked
out In bbe rough and the material b being
forged. This vessel will be the longest in
the British navy and will have engines of
22,000 hotel power. Little doubt is express.
ed that the whole eeventy ship& will be corn
plated within the next four year/3, —(N.Y.
Times.
A bust of she late Prince Consort of En.
land hatt been out healable by Ur .1Iniehite
eon of' the Royal Soottith Althclemy, Queen
Victoria having allowed, hirc acmes to bet
large eollectien of portrait! et Windsor
(lenge. Ib 12 for the Viotoria Art Gallery
In Dundee.
Germany in 1888 published 2,963 pa -
pais and periodic:ale, the number in 1887
having been 2,120. No other country publieh-
88 oo Many journalti &voted to speoial
fields and departinents. Educational mat -
tore have 190 of these, while 246 are thole.
gicrat and rellgioue in eiroritober from a Pro.
teetalit standpoint and 115 from a Catholic.
Alf 1TECTING GOOD BY SCENE.
enacted at the depot, the broken and miser.
able man sobbing and crying as if his heart
would burst as he gazed for the last time on
earth into the eyes of the one woman h
had loved.
Back to Michigian and Detroit came Shia
deeply -wronged woman, and with a courage
that nothing could daunt, began life anew,
relying on her own unaided efforts to secure
a livelihood. As a dressmaker she has
supported herself comfortably, and never at
any timel a she heard to murmur or cry out
a the cruelty of fate. A week ago the left
Detroit for Nova Scotia, where I understand
she has been ensured an excellent position.
If lovely and attractive at 17, she now
at 34 is regally beautiful, and prehans the
soft tinge of melancholy that cabs but the
suspioion of a shadow on her fair faoe helps to
render more striking a beauty that even age
cannot wither.
A New
The new King of Portugal, Carlos I.,
who a few weeks ago completed hh twenty.
sixth year, comes to the throne not unpre-
pared, the invalid condition of his father
having for some time caused more and more
official responsibilities to be placed on him.
The little kingdom, too; has now few mama
of disturbance or anxiety, abroad or at home.
Her chief colonial troubles are in South
Africa, and these are likely to be quickly
settled, the rivalry of her two strong neigh-
bors, Germany and England, furnish's&
perhaps, a guarantee thab she will find aid
in defending her rights. Yet the aooession
of a new monarch must came some spec:tile.
tion as to its effect. The twenty•efght
years' tranquility which Portugal had under
King Luis I. was largely due to his obser-
vance of constitutional principles, willingness
•
to favor reforms, and lack of dhposition to
seek personal prominence at the expense of
the peace of the kingdom. 85111, even
under him there were wine exciting political
crises, and for a long time a continuation of
the financial emberrasaments and disorders
whioh had been inherited from his predeces-
sors. The probabilities are that no great
changes in Portugal's domes& or foreign
affairs need immediately be expected.
aesenensio-s
Mr. J. J. Hill of St Paul has given to
tho public: library of that town "Tel el
Itebh," by tr. de Nettville ; "The Gate of
Juetice," by Wagner; "A Fiehity Lemon,"
by GuiLlon ; an Oriental scene by Parini
und a lanclaciape by Jaoonin.
Of the thousands of horses vehich have
been bred and trained for the race track,
only fifteen nave trotted in 2:15, or better.
There ore thirtynine otallions living that
have trotted in 2:20, Ot better, and Kentucky
raised seventeen of therm
Robertson of Irvine.Poet.Preaoher, in the
title of a new life of this distinguished
divine, to be hunted at the end of October by
Mr Arthew Guthrie, Ardrossan, who was
Jong on termS of close ntimacy with Die,
11413;rb;u.
Teitrpera ate said bo pay $500 a num-
ber fir a serial story in their Monthly. A
story is generally fimihed in twelve numbers
that means $6,000 for a novel. They are
eottairlytopay tii$05t0 hit8o nanEn
oveltilehohauthor fo
ntheyprlarthtaet
La the Ewer or Weekly, This difference is
to be amounted for by the tack of internation.
at copyright.
....„„m„,
Ny A !FE'
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11-1 Ayer's Pills. Travelers hy land or
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a supply of these Pills. Though prompt
and energetic in operation, Ayer's Pins
alebervoeno ill effecits . they are purely
lir
vegetable and sugar-coated; the safest
medicine for old and young, at home or
ad...
"For eight years I was afflicted ,with
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Pills, and soon the bowels recovered
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W. R. 'Woodson, Fort Worth, Texas,
"For several years I have relied more
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These Pills are not severe in their ac-
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"I have found Ayer's Cathartic Pills , i
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mon use than any other pills within my
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Perfumer, PhilacielPlia, Pa.
Ayer's Pills
PREPARED BY
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. Sold by nu Dealers in Medicines.
NASAL BALM.
A certain and speedy cure for
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Many so-called diseases are simply symptoms of
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have Catarrh, and should lose no time 3n pyocoFias
I bottle of NASAL BALM. Zie warned in lung,
neglected cold in head results in Catarrh, folhwed
by consumption. and, death. NASAL BA.Lat is soli by
ail druggists, or will be sent, post paid, on realm of
price (so cents and 8r.00) by addressing ‘i
FULFORD & GO., BROCKVILLE, Olfti
gzer. Beware of imitations similar in name.
S55 Solid Gold Watch,
Sold Qr 8100. until lately.
Bed (SFS watch In the world.
Perfect timekeeper. War.
ranted. Heavy and Gol4
!Uniting CLISOS. Both ladies' s'
and gents' afros, with wedge
and canoe of equal value. I
Ono Person In oath
malty can cloture one free.
tOgether with our_large anti red;
uablo lino of Browiehold
Samples. These samples, ne
well en tiro watch, we send
Free, and ar ter you Imre kept
gum In your home ib,, 2 mottin and 'thorns them to those
who may haws called, they become your own property.,_ Those
who write at once can is sure of receiving rho liVatch
end Samples. Wony an express, fretatt,sta, Address
Sthrelort at Co., 130z 812, Portland,
net& ink °notes td "Mita
ashcans paper at °nettling
Pen. PenhoMer
and inkstand
all in one.
04
POITET PE171.1- 410
_17seeastypen or kind °fink; filled by the automatic action of
110in-rubber reservoirs Lfeeds Itself by the pressure of writing;
Outlet' in the locket ettfeWl %VIII not leak finely made and fire.
Zadg/getra -Plotei_ superior a_82 8tylographia pens sale
5mPunsiMetPiedyaliceutet
5 Pens, Si hill. P.0. Stamps taken, but silver preferred,
A 100p Picture Rook sent FREE. Mention this paPieSt
ma\TNE-Z, Yarmouth, N. Si
He Wants to Settle.
The Rev. George Farmer hashad a flock
In Iowa for the last twentyeieven years, and
the said fleck has been summed to pay him
a salary of 5600 per year. The good man W-
ant:ea up his books the other day, and ha
found a deficit of ,000, and.now the con-
gregation has auddenly concluded that he ia
old-tathioned, lacks energy, and that they
bed better let hine go and take the debt with \
Detroit Free Press.
An Unkind Husband.
"1 think it's real mean of Jack to be so
good to me," said a good looking woman who
was a prominent, figure in amateur theat-
rical circles.
"Why, dear ?" named the lady who was
calling on her.
"Recoups Lpon't help loving him; and I
do want so much to divorced and, go rn th
doge—Merchant Traveler. "f,
Roland for Oliver.
"Extern me, mbar, " said it young m
to a lady who aff,00te juvenility isa120
dress, "but your hair is all down. " "Tba
you," was the reply; "possibly you ha
Observed the 88Me filet in connection wf
your mustache,"
The Progreso" hap just be
translated into the language of Abyeainto
a young Man of Florence. Vide is the eighll
korai distinot language iu whioh the 1
mortal Work to now read.
The inventoro who have boon try'
their hands at smokeless furoaoes have n
turned their attention to the coal ito
rho plan le to dip 15 into it coltition wh
conochtrates and hardene ite tionstittle
It is said that the experiment bee been s
central), made and that coal can be trett
50 thie way for stxpetut a ton.
:5