HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1889-11-21, Page 2Tis Sa?est
13-4) /DOA pOW011/11 alterative le
A-yer'e Sarsaparilla. Yotteig end
sit/ ate alike benefited by its use. For
en the emeptiyo (Eo-
cene sealer to
—"Cif— children nothiug
else is so offeettve
ete thes medicine,
whUelts agreat-
ble fiavoe makes
It eay to admire.
ister.
"My littlo boy
had largo scram.
loue ulcers oil his
neck and throat
from whiob he
euffered tenthly.
Two physicians
attendedhien, but he grew C011tiallally
WOLEO wider their care, and everybody
expected he WOUld die. 1 bad heard of
the remeekable cures effected by Ayer's
totarsaparhia, and decided to live my
'Inv try it Sbortly after he began to
take this medicine, the ulcers cora-
eteencod liceebeg, and, after using tieveral
lottles, he wee entirely cured. Be is
Mow as healthy and strong as any boy
ef his age." --William F. Dougberty,
Ilampton,
"In May last, ray youngest child,
dourteet months old, began to have sores
gather on its head. and. body. We ape
t plied 111-6011S simple eernedics without
avail. The sores increased in number
and diecharged copiously. A physiciart
as willed, but the sores continued to
ennitiply until in a few months they
mearly eoverod the child's head and body.
At last we began the use or Ayer's Sar-
saparilla. In a few days a marked
teliange for the better was manifest. The
sores e.ssamed a more healthy. condition,
'the dischaeges were gradually dinain-
ishedt and fatally ceased altogether.
The cnild is livelier, its skin is fresher,
and. its appetite better than we have ob-
served ,?or months."—Frank M. Griffin,
Long Point, Texas.
"The formula of Ayer's Sarsaparilla
enwsents, for chronic diseases of almost
*very kind, the best remedy known to
-the medical world."—D, X. Wilson,
1.1. D., Wiggs, Arkansan.
yers Sarsapariiia,
PREPARED BE
.iDr. J. 0. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
JYrice $liirds bottles, $5. Worth $5 a bottle.
\
A isiTBABOB OlaitBFBkBAROB. Tag RIESE Or Bali',
rinkat pecome or Ileulauttet Saelutret?•-4 incideuo ittounod bx ailLxlelyttues,,
Major•General Webber D, Harris, late
10411 Bengal Fedlime la the Illustrated
Naval and military Magazine, gives another
lustelment of his reoolleotione ot the siege of
Delhi. The exeoetions of captured mueineers,
he saya, were ot almoat daily occurrence." /
rernember on one ocoesion, heving direoted
an ()facet to do his duty, I wene to the guard
to rice how things Were going on. There
were about 24 men to suffer, and se I came
op a volley was fired at a row of them ;stand-
ing with their baolte towarde the firing party.
Alt fell in a heap bot one, and he sprante in
the air end then fell backwarde. Oa the next
parity loeing putt up, it was found that, with
the exception of tlaie one man, all the others
were untouoiled, hnt had fallen and,
LAY PERYBOTLY STILL.
"
Illeatertette fedi= OYCCLV5t.
There is a geed deal of orient' infortnetton
le the etories of " lEetosioei Oldities and
Stroege Events" which Mr, Baring 0oul4
hae jun brought outs Among other Mee,
'bertha he i'ie e no ()leer up itz WO 4loappindr
41140 a B nj amin Eethurut, in the early part
of the century, the men who was 'supported
to have been secretly murdered by order of
the Aret Napoleon. Bathurst was a relative
of Deed Betheret, and was Sent on a eettret
miseleu to. the Austrien Court at Vienna.
After the Auetrien Weeps crossed the
frootier in depril, MO, Bathurst learned
that Napoleon suspected hint of having
tried to bring about the deolaration of war l
end ott being ordered to return to Ragland
shortly afterwards,
SE GATED IX DISGUISE,
On the ileble November, 1809, ithowb mid
day, be arrived at 'Porleberg, with peat
hOPEICI, OE the route frorn Bsrlin to Ramberg
ludttri at the post•huuse for refreshments,
and ordered fresb horses to be harnessed to
the carriage for the journey to Lemon,
vehich WEB the next stetion. llecj train
Berthust want to the Swan and ordered an
early dinner a the horses werenot to be pot
in WI he heal' dined. He wore a peir of grey
trousers, a grey frogged short con, and over
it a handsome sable greetoost lined With
violet velvet. 0 a his head was a fur oap to
match. In his scarf was a diamond pin of
some value. As Been as he had finished his
meal, Bathurst inquired who was in cone
-
mama of the aoldiere quartered in the town,
and where he lodged. he was told that a
Equadron of the Efrandenburg cuirassiers
woo there under Captain Klitzing, who was
melding in a house behind the Town
Hall. Mr. 13ethurst then crossed the
market -p laoe and called on the offioer,
who was at the time indisposed with a
swollen neck. To Captain Ktitzleg he said
thab he was a traveller on his way to Ham
burg, that he,had strong and
NYELL SROVAIDED Wetenoions
that his person was endangered, and he
requested that he might be given a guard la
the inn where he was staying. A lady who
was panne noticed that he seemed pro-
foundly agitated, thee he trembled as though
Iegnewtricken, and was unable to raise a oup
of tea tbab was offered him to his Ups with-
out spitting la The Captain leughed at hie
1 fears, but consented to let him have a couple
of soldiers, and gave the rogue:be orders for
Ibheir despatch; than Mr. Bathurat rose,
resumed his sable overcoat, and, to anomie
for his nervous difficalty in getting into his
furs again, explained that he was much
shaken by something thee had alarmed him.
Not long after the arrival of Mr. Bathurst
at the Swan, two jevelsh merchants arrived
from Lunn vrith pon.horses and left before
nightfall. On Mr, Bathurat's return to the
inn he countermanded the horses ; he said he
would not start till nights. He considered
that it
warm> nn SAFER FOR IIIK
to apin along the dangerous portion of the
route by nigh, whenNapoloon's spies would
be leas likely to be oa the alert. He remain-
ed in the inn writing and burning papers.
At seven o'clock he dismiesed the soldiers on
guard and ordered the horses to be ready by
nine. He stood outside the inn watohitg
his portmanteau, whieh bad been taken
within, being replaced on the carriage,
stepped round to the heads of the harne—
ssed was never seen again. The English
Government offered El 000 reward and his
family another £1,000; Prince Frederick
of Prussia. who took a lively interest in the
matter, offered in addition 103 Friedrichs
cr or for the discovery of the body or for
information which might lead to the solution
of the mystery : but no ivlormaion to be
depended upon ever transpired.
THE EST
BAKING POWDER
4.-
thatilliEti'S GENUINE
Cots MO
No Alum.
. Nothing Injurious.
1111MLE-11 V1ERYWH
GARTH &CD
•I
FACTORY SUPPLIES,
Valves, Iron & Lead Pipe,
Loose Pulley Oilers,Steam
Jet Pumps, Farm Pumps
Wind Milo, Cream Separ-
ators, Dalry and Laundry
Utensils.
536 CRAM STREET,
NIOPITREAL.
1.0......1....*,,reasenc,*•earatlwammamarearanomPor.leetr*IIMMie
11/11.1.1!"1.2*,,M1.1.3.0*.aigt semiat.r.l....MS.M.M.M
CHADWICK S LETHER�W
'SPOOL In Sample, Ladies' and
STEElaiLINED TRUNKS
all other kinds.
COTTOr4
Lamest and Strongest
T RU NHCS
For Hand and in the World.
lifaeleine Use. J. EYELEIGH&CO.
OAS NO SUPERIOR. MONTREAL, •
ASK FO 41 IT. Solti1irs,10T the 11011111OR
SPBOTAOLB UTTINU
Hew Thee' itra Vat Out or ethaets °minas
wine littemend Sparks.
a
tiny fiagment of diatom , known In the
The work of (totting is all gerformed With
trade as a spark, It le not eeery eltaelet
however, ehee will out loot, says the
AtrtellOall Seweler,'The eparks are
mounted. in the following meaner A pieces
ot brate wire le seleoted, eay tbree-eittteeathe
of an loch diemeter, a hole is drilled in
the end large enough to admit the ttpark,
and it le set in the hole with the point up.
The outet edge or alma of the wire is beeiten
inward, anti holds the aerie firmly in place.
The wire is then placed in the lathe ancient
Off just beak of the spark, turning the end
hemispherical, uaing the point of the epark
that titian through the bates as a canter, A
PIeoe efeteel +eke, is eeciecte& of the same
diameter as the /SIM Wire, ap,d ond ice
turned in, forming te °up. The mounted
spark is then stf arzoldered into this oup and
It le reedy for the machine, whittle works
automattcally from a pattern and ean be set
to out larger or entailer than the pattern.
Before the unmated spark is piaoeti in the
rnachineehowover, it is tested by holding the
hendle upright. If lb does not cut In an up.
right position, the point is unsoldered by
means of a blowpipe and the handle re
soldered, leaving the cutting point at the re-
quired angle, while the handle itself is up.
rigb.t. Witten the spark is found to cut well
In an upright petition it is,then placed in
the machine for trial. The glass is platted
upon a pad under the spark, the glass vary-
ing in form according tie the kind of lens
being out. If the lens is fi9.1) the pad is also,
and if the lens is esonvex the pad is 00110SVO
and muse be a perfect ab; for the better the
fit the more moesurate will be the work. The
pattern and giallo travel around while the
diaraond remains stationary. The life of a
spark is short, some being only one day,
while once in awhile they oan be worked for
a year. The workmen average fifty dorm
parrs of lenses per day. A good dianzond will
out on an average 1,500 dozen pairs. The
eserage lens measures four inohes around and
a &ease pairs would be efght feet. In cutting
1,500 emirs the spark would, travel over a
=dace equal to a piece of glass 120,000 feet
lcug. There are exceptional sparks that cue
for months. I now have one whioh has been
In operation for fifteen months and has out
8 200 deem pairs, traveling about 57.600 feet.
We use two kinds of sparks, the Brazilian
and the African, and they cod from 13 to 85
each.
A
BBINKINci. WATER,
....,oneltistons ea to the Value et Water, el Sor
S the " ideal" Hair -dressing. It re-
- eterea the color to gray hair ; promotes
a freali, and vigoreue growth ; preventa
the eormation et
dandruff; makes the
leanaide sioniftp:rntist sailidteeT
cote but lastieg per,
thine.
"Several mouths
ago my hair corn-
meneed falling out,
and in a few weeks
v head Was almost
34'I tried '
bald.many
remedies, but they did no good. 1 final-
]. bought a bottle ot Aymea Hair Vtemfii
and, atter using only a part of theneone
tents, my head was covered with,. a
heavy growth of hair. I renter:Alen
your preparation. as the best in the
world,"—T. Menday, Sharon Grove, Ky.
nr;n1bielillo.el yuetterds,A4Z8tilint4s tall tYvaigy°Irglionrien
me satisfaction. It is an excellent dress-
ing, prevents the hair from turning
gray, illSOPOS its vigorous growth, and
hope the scalp white and clean." —
Mary A. Jackson, Salem, Mass.
"I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor for
proraoting the growth of the hair, and.
think it unequaled. For restoring the
hair to its (Anginal color, and for a dress -
thee it cannot be surpassed."—Mrs. Geo.
Le, Fever, Eaton Bapicle, Mich.
"Ayer's Hair Vigor is a most excel -
lout preparation for the heir. I speak
of it from ley otvn expos:thrice. Its use
promotes the growth of new hair and
mates it glossy and soft. The 'Vigor ia
also a cure for dandruff."—j. W. Bowen,
Editor "Enquirer," McArthur, Ohio.
«1 have used Ayer's Hair Vigor for
the past two years, and. found it all it is
represented to be. It restores the natu-
ral color to gray hair, causes the hair
to grow freely, and keeps it soft and
pliant."—Mrs. M. V. Day, Cans, N. IS.
"My father,. at about the age of fifty,
lost all tile haw from the top of his head.
After one month's trial of .Ayer's Hair
Vigor the hair began coming, and, in
three mouths, he bad a fine uowth of
hair of the natural color."—P. J. Cullen,
Saratoga Springs, N. Y.
Ayer's o it
air Vigor,
_
7 I;
Pure drinking water, says dreaiea1 Cass
ieit is one of the enentiele of healthy exist.
tease. The renews for this propouitioa
multiply wieh every advance ot our know -
edge of beidth, of disease, end of morbitio
Agents, Our recent knowledge of germs has
green a neW impetus to tete study of driult•
ing.water.
In many communities water is filbered be-
cause of its cloudy appearance, in others to
gee rid of some suppused unhealthful iA
trethents. The efficiency of ordinary filters
has been frequently q‘antioued, and as emt
ployed t remeine an open gnestion whether
en the whole they do more good or harm.
Dr. Charles T. Curries gives us the r�.
sults of some extended studies. of water
bacteriologically. AA thie 'Were nnele the
value of filtere, We quote his remits,
Bolling sterilized water within thirty min-
utes kills thermful batiteria. No chernioal
agents sterilize water whale send in amounts
that are safe.
The process of diatilling watet deetroye
all germs.
Ordinary filters, even if 'satisfactory as
strainere, fall- to remove ea bacteria from
drinking -weber. It may, indeed, allow a
more rapid multiplication of the mino.
organisms in the filteriug material itself.
The finer the substence 'through which the
water passes, and the lower the pressure,
the more period is the anion ot the
filter In holding back bacteria.
Porous rebaked poroelain, carefully se -
lotted, is the bes% of all substances for
domestic filters. If thick and abrong enough
to allow the use of a large surface'and the
substance remains perteate this Inv yield
a fair Slow ot clear water free from all bac-
teria. To insure the permauency of this
anion the filter should be onassionally
steriliz .d throughout by steaming or other
means. .
Where filtering le reelly necessary it le in
general, best for the commtwity that iti be
done carefully, on a large nide, through sand
beds, upon whiz& a fine layer of organic) and
inorganic matter is expressly prodund by
sedimenbation, because of the valuable
aotion of the latter in holding back the great
majority of bacteria. A bad water filter is
less desirable than pure water in ite na.tural
state. When, therefore, filtration is em-
ployed because of real danger of infection
the filtered water should as a rule be boiled,
as the entire absence of sediment and cloudi-
ness does not insure thins the baoteria of dis-
ease have not made their way through the
filter.
The habitual drinking of boiled water
would insure escape from skinless and death
to thousands' of the human raoe yearly.
The officer had ordered his MOD to fire at
their heads, whit% was too small a mark to
bib with certainty with our old muskets
even at ten paces, and the men were, 1 ur,
pee, nervous, so we put them up (+gam, or.
deveng the men to aim at the centre of their
beaks. They fell. On anotther occasion we
had directions to hang some men, owing, I
believe, to a fear of our ammunition running
short. There was no rope to be had for the
purpose, so the men undid the ropes of their
-ante, and featened them to branohea of
then being afraid that if they gave the cal.
prilet a "drop," the ropes would nob be
strong enough. Oae man hoisted while are,
other on the breech put the rope round the
man's neck, and he was then allowed to
swing off. The bodies were after a short
li,ted out of the noose (to make way
for the next, as there were not many ropes)
and laid in a row, directione being given to
bury them. While at dinner we heard a
shot fired, but as this was a common
occurrence no one remarked ite Presently
another, then a third, when the orderly
offioer went off to eete vehat ib was, It
proved to be the act ' of one of the
sergeants, who 'etas said to have been
the first man up the breach at Delhi. He
was deliberately firing into the heads of the
lately hanged men. On being arrested, and
asked why he as wasting hie ammunitition,
he declared that the men were only half -
hanged ; that he had watched and seen some
of them move, and knowing that if left they
would be buried alive, he bad
NEROIFULTA FIS/SECED THENIOFP.
A very wealthy nattve was caught and
brought into oamp. It was knosvn that he
had largely assisted the King with money
and provisione, so his doom 'eras sealed ; but
it was also known that he had concealed a
number ot rebels, and declined to tell where
they were. Torture would not have done;
but a rope was put round his neck with a
fixed knot so aa nob to strangle him. The
other and was tied to the saddle of one of
Hodson'a wild horsemen, who was directed
to take him to the guard. This he did at a
gallop. The man, •who was very stout,
caught the rope and followed with tremen-
dous strides, bub losing his feet, turned over,
and was dragged some distance. He was
half -hanged, and so frightened that he told
the hidingplaae of his 'friends, who were
captured the next day."
HOTEL BALMORAL
litilaNTREAtie
Fare Dame St., one of the most central
and elegantly furnIshodHotelsinthe City.
Accommodation for 400 guests.
Bates: TT WOODRUFF'
ee to $3 per day. Os Vs VT Manager.
111.0.00.•012=21•11..c......A.I.WirarleMMISOCIOrarmlerOWEIMAM•01.11.••110
LIG ,W DOMINION
LEATHER BOARD
Solo AgIS kr Culla, co m PA NY,
4. PALMER & SON Manufacturers of
'Wholesale Tann'trs of ASBESTOS MILLBOARD
/RUGOISTS' SUNDRIES, steam. racking,
1743 NOTRE Mg ST,,
etiONTREAL. FRICTION
PULLEY SOAR%
known and had tenet been for the ter mutat
WILL THERE BE A CORNER IN TEM
Very likely.
The position of the tea trade at the pre.
sent is uniqae, or nearly so. China teas
have for several yeara been deteriorating in
quality, most of the really choice tea pro
tined being iminedineiy 'bought at the
opining of the Hankow season tor Rustle, at
prime which are prohibitive to English ilea
era. The Chinese, in allowing this deterior-
ation of their crops, pe =teeing their tea to
be represented in our markets by thin and
indifferent qualities, have till now loftily
ignored the weighty competition whioh has
arisen from India and Ceylon. '
The visible stook of Caine. tea, including
that announced by telegraph to be afloat, te
about 16,000,000 pounds short of the seethe.
ate. From India we have received about
2,000,000 pounds len than la.st year, instea.d
of about 5,000,000 pounds more, as was
estimated, and of Ceylon tea the deliveriea
were lint month abaolutely double the im-
ports, while very amall further shiptnente
ere coming forward.
Lest year it WAS calculated that 7,000,000
pounds less tea of all kinds was imported
iuto thistionntry than was aottially consum-
ed, and if no alteration takes plece—and it
seems hardly likely there will be any—in the
outputs from China, it is probeble that this
year the importe of tea willbe some 25,000,-
000 pounds short of the quantity actually
required for consumption. In spite of Nets
shortness of suppliesgeommon China Congott
is almon W3 low in price as it has ever been
He Was Misunderstood.
A Manhattanville lady was feeding a
huugry tramp, the other day, when she
disoovered that he was pocketing her
silverware. Seising a re rolver, she exclaim.
ed
"Drop those spoons, you scoundrel, and
leave the house; leave it instanely 1"
"Brit, madam—"
"Leave the house, I say ; leave the house,"
soresaned the infuriated woman.
"I go, madam," said the tramp, "never
to return, but before I do, I would like to
say that r did nob intend to take your
home,"
The Telephone as a Cause of Bar
Troubles.
As olvilizetion advances new diseases are
not only disoovered, hue are actually pro-
duced by the novel agenoies whioh are
brought to bear on man's body and mind.
The increase of insanity throughout the
world ia =questionably due to the "storm
and stress" of our crowded modern life, and
tamed every addition which science makes
to the conVenience of the majority seems to
bring with it some new form of auffering to
the few. Railway travelling has its %marls.
aligald' in the shape of slight, but possibly
not unimportant, jolting of the nervous on -
tree; the eleotrie light has already created
a special form of op.hthalmitt. ; and now we
have the telephone =dieted as a cause ot ear
troubles, which read on the spirits, and in-
directly on the general healeh.
M. Gelle has observed, nob in women only,
but in strong-minded and abltabodirad men,
symptoms of what we may call "aural over-
preseure " caused by the condition of almost
constantistrain of the andieory apparatus, in
which persons who use the telephone much
have to spend a considerable portion of each
working day. In some cans also the ear
seemed to be irritated by the constantly re -
cutting shoo tinkle of the bell, or by the
nearness of the sounds conveyed through the
tube, into estate of over -sensitiveness which
made it intolerant of sound, as the eve,
whon inflamed or irritable, becomes unable
to bear the light. The patients suffered
from nervous excitability, with buzzing
noises in the ear, giddiness, and neuralgic
pains.
In addition to these subjeotive symptoms,
M. Gelle in some metes found objective les-
sons, such as a sub inflammatory condition
of the membrane tympani. A Wenner con
-
did= ot things is often eeen in persons who
tmend a large portion of their lives amid the
jar and oraeb. of machinery. All the trouble
speedily vanishes if the oar hi allowed a
enffieient measure of physiological reat ; this
It can only obtain by the cause being with.
drawn.
A Billet Deux-
While Brown is calling on Mrs. Bright, a
letter be handed in to her which she hatatily
opens. "Ah I see," said Brown, "a love
letter." " it is only from my butoher,"
was the answer. "1 have received many a
sender line from him."
Some people fell to realize the extreme
sensitiveness upon religious subjeots which
exists in the ordinary indivicluel. In Prance
an instance of this has arisen. A dramatic
writer of Paris wented to produne a play
having for its centred figure Mehemet, the
founder of Islamism. Is was accepted by
the Tneatre Francais, and was to be per-
formed We season. The Turkish ambaesa-
dor has, however, protested against it, as
being offensive to all Moslems, and the
French authorities are in a quandary. At
first they. reminded the Turkish ambassador
that ministers of religion were often broui3,ht
upon the stage, bat he replied that Christ-
iana might treat their religion as disreap eet-
fully as they liked, it was otherwise with
the pious followers of Mehemet.
*SOFt Thie i8 a Polect Friction 1 market: valties, would probelly have fallen
1
further.
This deficiency In the supply of common
9 tea, at all evens for some months to come,
ti 1 has lately attracted attention, and prices
are steettily tending upward. The who e.
sale trade, the grocers and the packet firms,
have long been montotned to replenish
their docks whenever they needed, and to
find plenty of any kind of tea jun for the
askth but now that the shortcoming of
THE BEST FOR LAUNDRY USE.
PAPERS
'Wrapping,
Entine,
NEWS
gf. ALL
SIZES
AN
'ea' ilk/EIGHTS
To ORDER
21 DetiregoleS St.
tO2Tieltelet, let
owisuas
Itulobiqr
THE REAT
STRENGTH GIVER
PEle FE& Fo 0 1:1
_iv FOR THE SICK,
vi WARMING &pOTRITIOUS 5VERAGE
A POWERFUL
ietinecietAToR
A SUP.t CURE
tori fit Ort00eleiteniti CONSTIPATION,
st4rtiutaTtopi, Dizzliqrss, siox
itA6Aci-W, AN* OiStA6g6 tut
SVOMAOr4, LIVER AND ElOWV.Z.
chielf MILDANOtt011414 ANS pecoeret
anTinse, 'innate A VALUAISLE AID
SUADDell 01.beb BiTT7..1l6 THC
ISEATMENT AND CORE eV'
n tialt ito,.; ,t
g ;
common tea is apparent (the grades they
mostly depend, on to enable them to keep
the low quotations they are aeoustorned to
advertise), they must ley in a stook, even at
the adoemee.
We are under the impreseion, from all
that can be gathered, that some people who
ate always on the lookout for opportunities
of Ithis sort have already oommencted opera,
tions in tea. Thee% if tho signs of the tiniest
are to be depended *epee, may shortly place
this moakee in a similar condition to that of
the cotton matket in Liverpool, only the
operation will be based. on mueh nounder
grounds, Bad will be jusitifirld by the exist,
Ing conditions of supply.
MITEDBBS BY P0AORBt1S.
Gamekeepers in the Environs of Antwerp
Attacked.
An Antwerp dispatoh to the Lendon
"Standard" says "Mr. Louis Lemma, who
is a British subject, and until a few years
ago was a banker at Antwerp, has offered a
reward of £400 to any person or persona
who will give information which will lead to
the discovery of the murderer or murderers
of the unfortunate English gamekeeper who
was shot last week by poachers at Brass.
ohne Up to the present, however, the
offer of this munificent reward has brought
with it no results, and the assassins are still
at large. The well-known poachers who
were arrested by order of the Prcoureur du
R.oi have been set at liberty, as sufficient
evidence could kot be brought against therm
In consequence of thia a most uncomfortable
feeling of insecurity exists in the neighbor-
hood where the murder took place. and it ia
feared that unless the criminals are shortly
discovered they will escape punishment alto-
gether.
"Another murder of s similar nature has
since occurred at a plan celled Pulderboscb,
which is also situated in the environs of
Antwerp: A gamekeeper named Joseph
Jacobs, us the employ of a M. Anthony,
while going his rounds, was shot in the heed
and otherwise brutally raaltreated by poach.
era. In this case it seems that a desperate
struggle took place, as the victim was youeg
and of a powerful build. Some arrests have
been made, which are said to be of an int-
porbant nature, and it is hoped thab in this
instance the polios authorities will be more
sitocessfal bringing home the deed to those
who coutonitted its than they have been in
the case of the unforbunate Englishman
Shore."
It is understood the Vatioen has with.
drawn its threat of publishing diplomatic
documents relating to the Italian Government
:schemes to infringe the rights of the Papal
see under pressare of counter threats that
the Government would reveal the intrigues
of the Vatican.
Charlobte Onstiman, who saw more of
:society, and that of the best kin d, through a
long series of years than ahnost anybody of
her time, used to limits heraelf to three
dressesi—a comfortable gray woolen dress
for every day, a good bleck dress, and a
light ailk for occasions." This lefb her a
margin of money for doing many noble
thbaga.
PREPARED RE
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., howeia MasS.
Sold by Druggists and Perfumers.
A Cure for Diphtheria.
R. Match, proprietor of a drug establish.
mane in Leipsio, Saxony, publiahes in the
*.Phavamoist, a medical paper, a remedy
for diphtheria whiash has had surpriaing
summits. Be urgently presses all physicians
to try it for the benefit of all patients suffer-
ing from the diseane and ciao requeats the
press bo publish it. He says :--" My little
daughter, seven years of age, has hed
diphtheria. twice within some weeks, with
severe fever, aboub 105f. We gave with
great success rectified oil of turpentine
(oleum terebinth nos rectificatuta.) Dose,
one teaspoonful in the merning and the
some at evening.
Adults should take one tableepoonful.
Aftervvead drink tt little lukewarm mtlk to
allay the burning in the throat.
For children the seoond dose coat be
mixed with milk, which will render it easier
to take
The resale id really marvellous. The
inflammation of the abnormal diphtheritic
spots In the throat grows lighter at the
Ira Tripp, a millionaire cos" operator, of
Scranton, Pennsylvania, has for the past
twenty years or more, done all his smoking
be, proxy. As a young MEM he was an in..
voterate smoker, and contreoted an illness
from thin habit which only denylog himself
tobacco could cure. He could not, however,
bring himseit bo do without the luxury. of
smeflhig artleke,SCI he hired a colored man
to whore he paid a good salary and whom
he provided with the beat cigars, that he
might smoke theni and hie ve the amoke in
his employer's beard. For ben yearfl the
darky followed the eh:mutat oecupation of
smoker for another hum. Then he died,
and DOW a *kite man bus etteceeded to the
position, Mr. 'Papp aeons to be in the best
of health, but his smoker le thin and riallow.
It will he neatter for general regret that
the health of the Prince of Wales is under-
stood to be so eiteettrions that grave doubts
ale entertained whether he will ever See OAS
year out. It ie Odd that the dooixtre have
alreeely offioially annouttetd that tile Prince
is hopelessly ill and that the Queen has also
been notified. All tide is very sad, for the
Prinee is undoubtedly a geniel " good fellove,"
immensely popular and likely to do well
when the time dome for his wearing, tbat
perple. Ana now all these\ anticipations
are likely td be disapnoleted„ and Albers
tdward is hot likely over Leila the thymic
8togoe0 the World, all that grandeur and ell
those brilliant ptetipeote eartnot keep in
little life.
Ver Y Big Beer Barrels
The vats et the eseebliehroont of Meteret.
Bereley & Perkin at Bankside ate nearly
200 la number, the smallest oontaining 500
barrels of beer and the largest 3,200 batting,
measuring 26 feet in diaireatet cte titie itep, 40
'feet at ttie bottom 125 feet In oillentmferenee
and 10 feet heiglet. Alteikher they must
hold more thati 150,000 barrels.
The college ettitiont of the gentler sex is
now taking great pride itt 0 beaboti box of
out gine with flutdd gold etteera. The
ditnitutive made ia earried tti a silk -lined
box 'with undeemeed leather coverieg.
Ocean Flyers.
The attention of ehe public has from time
to time been directed, during the past sea-
son, to the flying trips of the ocean grey-
hounds which zun from New York to
Liverpool. It is now the Parisian ot the
Allan Line of steamships vrhich dernerida
our nraiee. Her last voyage, completed on
the 25th tilt., was among the bast on reoord.
Letters and j mune% of the 17 th reached their
destituttion in Montreal in 8 days, a rate of
speed which has been equalled only once in
the case of mails via Now York. Then to
the fact of speed, another feature, unshered
by her English rivede, must be added, re
with the exception of about four days, tat:
route is inland, a oirounestanee which
insures greater safety, and provides the
voyager with a constantly-ehanglitg and
picturecque landsoape, which cannot fail to
afford the most unbounded pleasure. TRUTH
commends this, line to the patronage of the
Canadian pablio on many ground's: the cam.
fore and elegem:se ef Ito prinicipal vessels—
the relhablity and courtesy of ha officers and
orawri—the quickness of its voyages—
and the exaeptionel beauty of the menery
Which bounds so large a portion of the
route,
A Monster Chimney.
BNEVER FAIS TO NU SHISFAOTI011
FOR SALE DV .ent. OSALARSi
READ -MAKER'S
1r7M.ALIFIVIV
edges, and in thie way they gradually shrink
until be 24 hours they disappear entirely,
leaving no sign.
To quiet, the infiemed tonsils, the throat
was rrarglcid every two hoarse and then
every three hours'with the following
gargle :—One ounce of ehlorate of potash to
forty ounces distilled water.
Thin remedy has been utied with perfect
'lathier:Abu both by adtilts and children, not
one oase eliding fatally. The Milwaukee
" Volkablatb" quoted this remedy from the
German paper, and afterward received a
letter front a subsoriber in Mitchell county,
Iowa, titling that 4 child in the writer's
family was attaolted by diphtheria, treated
by local phyaloitenth and died t then four
members of the same family were similarly
attacked, treated by this rottenly, and, 1
happy to tell you, all recovered,
OLD MI THE HEP.
NASAL BAIA
A certain and speedy cure for
Cold in tho Bead and. Catarrh
in all its stages. ,
SOOTHING, CLEANSING,
HEALING.
A hided Relief, Permanent Cure,
Failure impossible,
• o'
Maw: ro-calls4 diseases are simply symptoms of
Catarrh, such as headache, partial deafness, losing
,..:nse of Grnt:11, foul breath, hawking and spitting,
t;enrral feelincr, of debility, etc. If you are .„
ironhle.l with any of thoqo or kindred symptoms, you
tiavo Crizart h, nnti should lose no time in imeuring
a 16210 of N &Sat BAf.m. Be warned in time,
neglected crid in Loacl results in Catarrh,followed
.vrnpcitfl dos,h. NASSI, BMX is sold by
.a1 st% or v•I1 ho sq.nt, post paid, on receipt of
and °Lod) by addressing
FULFORB B. GO., r3ROCKVILLE, ONT.
The monster chimney of the new Pall
River (Alas%) Iron Works mill, "the 'largest
in America and the fifth largest in the
world," will be completed to -day. It is 854
feet above the ground. The base is square
for a distaste° of about thirteen feet from the
ground, then everts up gradually, for about,
eight feet, and from that up thci chimney itt
eylindrical ita form. The diameter &Ix the bete
is thirty feet ; at the narrowest pert it ia
aftesie feet, The flue hats a Uniform diameter
of elevet feet. The Wails at the bobeone are
thirtyitwo beohes thick and in the thinnest
part tWelve inched. The disinaney la `built of
brick above the foundatiore the numbet used
being 1,700,000.— SPhiladelphie Ledger.
e /Charters Dickens writes of his father as
an editor 'that it wes impeoplbla for him to
be anything but thorough, Or to engage in
any Work, --Or/, for the trietterti than ni &fly
play either—to whiele he did not devote Lie
whole heart end SOUL !I0 enliab prornieing
Beware of imitations similar in name.
ff435 Solid Gold Watch, RIR
SOldfOr$100. until lately.
rOJit $85 watch In the world.
Perfect timekeeper. War-
ranted. Ileavy OHO Gold
flouting Ca/mm.110th ladies.
and gents' atm, with works
and elutes of equal value.
(Were/month each lo.
allay can secure one free,
together vtltb our large and val.
noble lino of Household
Samples. Then samples, a*
Well as the watch, wo send
Free, one after you have kept
thorn is your home for Nl months and shown them to tho»
who may have called, they become 'nue own propert'Phose
who wr/to at once Cat) bo Imo of receiving the Watch
and Samples. Wserty all /apron, freight, oto. Address
StinflOat tat Va.. Box 8100PertlandJ,Baine.
"X am steadying on A device tor a tole
phone," Bait' Mr. Edition to a reporter, "so
that you win see the Ill.R13 you are talking to.
ain alinarit mare an make it a scientific
success lint I doubt if it Will ever 16 a
eommerctaI
Tito t4 Irish Thrum," Dublin, soya 11r."Par.
[(ell ha a had 0 mitiference with tko gpeaker
Of the Rouse of Oomiteene relative to the
best triode of execreting late ititention next
tienion of trybeg tO establish the omnplicity
tke Gavertunent in the+ attettke blade leY
the Loudon Tittles on tite Parnoilite party.
AC�Q K
FREE
By mall to any tady sending es ner oost office
d'idressI Wells. filches:to & Co., Montreal.
USE, ess
E
ASK
YOUR
GROCER
THEM
RANO
FRESH
A1,1140tIE
RS
tecirttibe ; to help forward rising neer , bo;
further the development of latent ability,
Mid, above all, to give every possible assist.
atioe to young writers Who ethewed steadfeet
petheiterasice end any Of his own oapecity
for taltieg paine in email thine, tie well as
in great ; these obisots were always fore, ;
M
0100f1 hill edibOrial
C.HAEARSONIc
BALT! NA 0 END,
liolde Ink enough tO Write
alectspiiiiei! at one filling
vorzyp ildst
treceeny tee or 'Wilda Inlit filled by the automatic action og
s'ofdriNSItti 4 f35d0 itself by
t..thowtesSum
ntgiAtlTrVk4gllerogf wrrin1ilfaitnatterI,12tYleitZriet60g11;
Satritil0/4o14041401,14jia ettitittmk
6 Pens, $1 till. hut elivet lied:trait
it 1 00p.Platere Beak sent riltt. Mennen this papen
it.: VTe rtz$0,471 Xoomoutla, X. Al
010