The Exeter Times, 1890-2-6, Page 3o o Ire Oen, :Rees; e ,
A Fact
111/011111 knowing is that blood diet.
I VI' eases which all other remedies fail
to cure, yield to Ayer's Sarsaparilla.
Fresh confirma-
tion of this state-
ment comes to
hand daily. Even
such deep -mated
and stubborn com-
plaints as alma.
mensal, Rheum°,
tio Gout, and the
like, are therongit-
ly eradicated by
the use of this won. -
dealt' alterative.
Airs. Ib. Irving
Dodge, 110 West
. • t's 125th street, New'
York, certifies :-
" About two years esio, after suffering
for nearly two years from rheumatic
put, being able to walk only with mat
dbeet
,43,3
ort, and baying. tried various
remedi , including mineral waters.
With= s relief. I saw by au adverthie-
men. tit a Chicago paper foe a man had
been relieved of this distressing cone,
plaint, after long sufferieee, by taking
Ayer's Sarsaparilla, I then decided to
ma= a trial of this medicine, and took
it regularly for eight months. I ant
plemed to SAT that it effected a com-
plete cure, and that I have slues) had no
return of the eiseases"
Mrs. IS. ,A. Stark, Naeltua, N. H.,
writes: "One year ago I was taken ill
with rheumatiom, being confined to my
house six months. I came out of the
sickness very much nebilitated, with no
appetite, and my system disordered in
every Way. I commenced to use Ayer's
Sarsaparilla, and began to improve at
owe. gaining in strength and soon ie-
▪ ing my usual health. I cannot say
too lunch In praise of tilts well-known
ratelivine."
"I have taken a great deal of rotedio
d ue, but nothing has done me so
nowt* geed al Ayer's Sarsaparilla. I
telt its beneficial effects before I had
quite finished one bottle, and I can
freelytestify that it is tite best blood.,
medicine I know of." -le W. Ward, Sr.,
Woodland, Tea.
Ayer's Sarsapanlia
PAZPAMPEA eor
Dr, 4, C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Prite*II 11111C battlea.$3. Worth et, bouts.
4.11111•110•1,..111•••••m••••111.11MICW,ME,
BREAD ''srm.a.osav
-MAKER'S
SEVER Fetles re OM SMARM
FOR SALE BY ALL DEAteeilliti
4'
WWWW•WWMP
A certain and speedy cure for
Cold in the }lead and Catarrh
in all its stages.
SOOTHING, CLEANSING,
HEALING.
Infant Roller, Pormanont Curs,
Failure Impossible.
?deny eecalled diseases aro simply symptoms of
Catarrh, such as headache, partial deafness, toeing
sense of smell, foul breath, hawking and spitting,
ramoa, geaeral feeling of debility, ctc. If you are
ire:Oiler \tony of them or kindred symptoms, you
have Cal gind should lose no time in procuring
a ItOltle a etaSAT., BALM. Ito warned in time,
neglectedeold in bead results in Catarrh, followed
by sonstimption and death. NASAL BALM is sold by
all druggists, or will be sent, post paid, on receipt of
pica (5.3 cents and $x.00) by addressing
FULFORD & CO., BROOKVILLE, ONT.
m, Beware of imitations similar in name.
V' 21.,
.....je. 5 et851df$oroll
liidOC0.ouliltilVflaatt•cIhr
IlTRH
Best 585 watch In the world.
Perfcet Ihnekseper. War -
„4,...... . ranted. /leey” rclic' hil
4,e ,.:-...,IitlIttIng Mu...Both ladies'
,..„. j 0„
N's • mis and cents' ala is,wIth works
"t..41..,;:., . ,ih, and cased of equal salsa,
One Person in each low
tovt/Cirklierllhnostrlieularrtgeasoludatialt
,..":„.. '-•—•-__"-.411))‘, staple lino of Motssehols1
V...,:.,;lrfli " . ..'.. _]Js Samples. These samples. as
'TT well as the watch, we send
' vr•.ce re st....4,. c.. -
Free, and niter you hairs kept
nem In your borne Sr 2 toontha and shown them to thous
who may have called, they bac emu your own property,_ 'nose
who write at once cart be sure of receiving, the Watch
and Samples. We pay an expreas, freIcht,et Address
Stineon alt Co., Boa sig.. l'ortiand, Mallsie.
A COOK BOOK
FREE
Sy mall to any lady sending ts:-.er nest office
edrass: Wells, Richardson & Co.. Montreal.
ASVURK
FRESH
IORE
tRs
ARE --
1315ERLES,.
IN sealer
QUALITY 11
FL AV 0 R
.ARSON & C2.*—
m 0 E.Mo.
tfoifis rule enough to write
shoots paper at oneillling,
Pews
and Inkstand
all in one,
zoom rem • Ott
4714=4:WrITIFIgir:a eoulg
irtasuglitr,
kgrtglrroraletar toieS4e 1114
with a Les. IiirespTeD3o404,' atingegrP Pe':4
5, pens, S biti. P. laStaimps taken bieheverpreared.
A 100p Mire Book eent FREE. "notion this' mpse.
EIN11111, Ifitinaloitfeb, Wes
•
kiHE IS A PRODIG
'Inc Strongest woman on xerth is. per.
forming 1u Xontion,
The strongest woman on Math has not
bean long in making her appserance at the
music bails, and, according to aeconntie if
site had vielted. the Aquarium some few
weeks ago she might almost have entered the
lige with Gyolope, for she seems to think
nothing of lif -ing 250 pounds. If such a
Delilah had been found for Samson, strategy
would scarcely have been neoessary to sheer
his looks. She might have gained her object
by main force. Mme. Vietorine, as, I believe,
this mutoular lady is called, le a Swiss, and
for many years was ignorant of her extraord-
inary strength, or, zie any rats, of its re
makable value. It was only by theme she
discovered it.
One day, when out walking, she saw two
men vainly endeavoring to lift; a huge
fender from a cart. Smiling at their tt-
succeesful effort*, she volunteered her aid,
and, to their extreme etirprise,aottompliehed
the feat unassisted. The story reaching
the ear of an eager exhibitor, overtures for
introduchigher to an admiring publio were
instantly niede, and after a few weeks of
severe training she made her fitet appear-
anoe. She is indeed a prodigy, for, in
addition to her really mervelotie etrengble,
elle knot, like so many wonders, unpletwant
to look upon, bat is extremely fair of form
and fem. Title makes the third exhibition
of =meal mugole In Isendou, for Bannon
still has a number of admirers and sVtaPa-
thizers, while Studow le drawing crowds at
the Alhambra.-fLondon Letter.
el.
SURFING TB,E SUITE TRADE.
measures waken by the Congo State to rat
a Stop 10 the Internal Titanic*
A long reporb lies been reoeived in
B.ussels from Cept. V= Oslo, who has j »et
established two etetiona of the Congo Seat°
Inc up the Moline A fEteerte of the Congo.
The etatlon mann the great river is shone
509 mike dietanb from it. The slave trade
is particularly lively along tbe Mobengi,
and Capt. VetGene le following out the
policy which the Congo State b now pursue
log at all Ito steam'of patting estop to the
traffio,
$itne of the Idonclange tribe echo at.
tempted to pan oats of Van Galet's stations
with a big canoe load of sieves whiolt they
intended to sell further down the river
were stopped, and the Slaves were taken
from them and set at liberty. Five canoe
loads of staves were also 'brought up the
river, the poor creatures having been bought
with ivory. Van Gale genre these and
captured two of the pirogues, but the othere
esoaped. He gave the slaves their freedom
turd a while after released the =eta,
threatening their owners with dire penalties
if they wore again mug= with slave* in
their poseession.
The Congo state is oonebautly inereesing
fits facilities for suppressing the murderous
!Worn,. A large proportion of the eleven
•i are bought or captured for purpose* of
I eating or for human laminas, and the
atone ;he State has taken bids fair in time
Ito prevent an enormous amount of suff:ring
mad waste of life.
Ball -Baiting in England.
Little more than =if a century ago bull-
haltiog was a popular :moth in the 'villages
of Eat Luniashire. Each township had its
"town Sala," a common open to ell house.
holders in the neighbourhood, in which was
placed the "ball -atone," generally a huge
stone sunk in the ground, with &swivel ring
in the centre, to which the bull WAD tied by
a rope. Bull -baiting usually took pima on
a holiday or !withal. A bull, the moat
ferocious that could be found, having been
purchased, he was nomad in a Maine over-
night, and on the following morning ho was
paraded to the kull.stone, decked with rib-
bons, attended by a crowd of all torte and
conditionsof men anxious to see the sport.
IOa arriving at the bull -stone. the
fabull was
etened to the ring with a stout rope about
20 yards in length. To rouse his temper he
tvaa prodded with sharp pointed stickle and
as a last indignity, his tail was twiated by
i the most adventurous of the apeatators.
When the poor animal wag judged milli -
doubly infuriated, the first dog was let loose.
i Then came the moat exciting moment of
. the sport. The dog made straight ab the
bulVe nose, and often reosived a pitoh from
the horns that sent hurt filing over the heads
of the onlookers. The dog, in orier to be
declared the winner, had to. pin and hold
the hull by the nose, while, at the same
time, his owner held him by the foreleg. If
the owner could succeed in doing this for
five _minutes his dog was proclaimed the
co r q neror.
-war-
An American publisher has offered Glad-
stone $25,000 a year for the exclusive use of
all Le writes,.
The Q mon R gent of Spain has caused
advertisements to be pabliehed in all the
leading newspapers of her dominions offering
two Prizas, $5,790 and $2,895, for the beat
two esoays on the life of Christopher Colum-
bus.
Dr. Frederick Bra.nann, who performed
tracheotomy on Emperor Frederick in 1888
has now become Extraordinary Professor of
Surgery in the University of Berlin. He
was graduated in medicine and surgery
barely ten yeare ago.
Henry M, S tanley Is now almost fifty
years old. Ho was born in Wales and his
name was originally Joh a Rowlande. It
was changed on his being adopted by a
Now Orleens merchant who found him at
the ago of fifteen a cabin bay in a sailing
vessel and took a fanoy to him.
Professor Murray, who has recently been
chosen to succeed the famous Professor Jebb
in the chair of Greek at the Glasgow Uai-
versity, is but twenty five years old. He has
also written a novel, something after the
Rider Haggard style, and has gone into poli
ties, espousing the home.rule cause.
MO or Serpa Pinto, whose conduct of
Portngueee Wars in Africa, has roused the
ire of the British lion, ia a native of Pertugal
and forty-four years old. He j3ined the
Portuguese Rimy in 1863, and has made him.
self espeoially valuable to his country in the
general Baropean scramble for dominion fn
Africa.
One of the survivors of the famous charge
at Belttklava lives in Hartford, Connectiout
He to J oreph Howe,an ornamental plasterer,
and carries the marks of the battle on hie
f ,ce and nook, which were badly eat by pima
of shell. Although Howe went to the
United States twenty-five years ago, he has
never been made an American citizen.
Amelia B. Edward, the keened English
woman who is traveling itround the country
lecturing upon Egypt, is 47 years old, is
portrayed as having an intellectual rather
than a handeomo face. Her hair is gray end
worn combed back without a crimp, giving
her face a somewhat severe exprevaion. She
is tall, graceful and slender for an Eaglish
woman. Oa the lecture platform shedresses
in black 'silk, speaks' clearly, making each
word heard throughout the largest halls.
FOBEIGN BEWB.
tiorentme millionaire, the Marquis
Carlo Galgueonl, has j esti purchased the far-
lemed island of Monte Crate. au bas start-
ed to build a castle there, with a viiia on the
sea shore and a hermitage leen° of the most
retired mots.
There are Site manniaotoriee of keitatIon
butter in Gameny. A factory In Minuheira
produces daily 0,000 pounds from a prepate.
tion of cocoanuts.
The entire Vino:toll cavalry is to be armed
with a new helmet It is of nickelled col. -
per, with a cockade worn for the first time
by the Panel edam's ripen the top.
The prices of camphor and gum p.romisee
to rite. The Garman Governmenb re mak.
ing gigantic purcheme or them articles for
the manufacture of smokeless powder.
The North German Lloyd ship Seale took
a party of rpeotatore to the English review
at Spithead lest Augnat, and as the review
was poetponed and the Seale WAR due tonal*
for America on ea certain date, her Captain
took the whole party back to Germany, after
afruitlese little cruise of tnree days. They
brought an action against the line, but have
just lost ib.
PhePapal roidiers have given up their
former headdress, and wear helmets after
the ptttere in tile in the German army.
The rot of their uniform reMatila lumber-
ed.
The post, c f organist of Truro Cathedral
recuntly breams vectent, and there were up
ward of one hundred and fifty candidates.
The salary, of oouree, in such e pima Is tery
The Beek of France has *t the present
$250,000 000 in gold in Ite cellars.
The crowning of the Caw as King of Po-
land is talked of in St. Petersburg.
Gan. Clustree has introduced a bill in the
Feench chamber to atop duelling.
The dynamite and the power mina of Ger-
meny have jest formed a trusti. The agree-
ment will be Melding to all parties till 1925
Any mill owner wh violates it will be liable
to heavy fines: In aggravated came as high
as $3 0.000. Ali thereinto of all mordent
of the truth wilt be peeled. S'Ioy per slut
of them will go to the dynamite manufacture
ere. the rest to the powder mu,
The Swiss Nationalratle have granted the
aum of 3000.060 frame toward fartiking
the Si'. Gutter:1 passes, and 6.000.000 will
bo spent ht all on this project'.
The letab sesesn of the pearl filling
Csylou was exoeptionelly succeesful. In
twenty-two claw fifty diverebrought 11 C00 -
000 opiate to them:face. The divers mane
about $32.00(), and the Government $100„
003.
Thirty German tete:rears are working on
thirty now monuments to Emperor William
There are 686 periodical public:alone in
Russia. Seventy-eight of them are political
and now dailies, 100 are mientiflo, 88 re -
Vona, 15 artietio, 33 agricultural, 82 00 -
lancet and bibliographioal, 15 pedagogic. 13
for children, and the rest misoollaneous.
Three wee= ago the Berlin cabmen
celebrated the 150th anniversary of the first
introduction of cabs in Berlin. The first
schedule of fares preaorthed by the City
Connell provided that a cabman caught
overcherging should be placed in stooks be.
fore the City Hall.
The Frenoh Civil Swam coats more now
than it did twenty years age. lathe Budget
of 1871 the amount demanded under this
head was £1.20 300 In the Budget of 1890
the same intimate fieuree for within a trifle
of £17,000.000. And there is said to be
nothing whatever to @how for the increased
expenditure.
A dressed beef question has arisen between
Frame and Germany. The leachers employ-
ed in slaughtering sheep ab the great sham-
bles of Itt Villette have held an indignation
meeting to protest against the importation
of alaughbored sheep from Germany to their
detriment. They favor the importation of
live animals but are against imputed drese.
ed beef.
In a sensational pamphlet entitled " The
Bomb," a Sefiriall railway Clfi till has just
tend the Servian people how M. Benton:
secured the ooneession for the construction
and operation of the Sarvian railway.
According to the pamphlet Bon tone bought
the favor of King Milan with 2,000,000
francea. He also gave the Minister Presi-
dent, Piretachenets, 800,000 frauces ; the
leader of the Progressive perty, Garaschanin,
30000; tho S srvian Ambassador then in
Constantinople, 200 000. and the Minister
of Public Works 220,000. These astound-
ing disclosures have turned Belgrade tansy
tarvy. All of them, save the one concern.
Ing Milan, are thought to be substantially
accurate.
There are 7,0:0 diamond cutters out of
work in Amsterdam alone. At a meeting
of more than a thousand of them rec-ntly
held there, M. Van Praag attributed the
want of work chiefly to the high prices of
raw diamonde, and next to the tendency of
the jewellers to trade in raw diamonds in-
stead of devoting themselves to their re
paration for the market. The speaker
counselled either the es5ablishment of a
workingman's company, with 500 grinding
stones and a capital of 500,000 florins, or the
transfer of the trade to London, where the
dealers in raw diamonds and the owners of
he diamond Beide were living.
The Russian Minister of Transportation
has asked the Cz sr to add an attache of
technical education bo every Russian legation
abroad. An innovation similar to the one
thus suggested, has already been introduce
ed by. the German Government, which some
time ago sent teohnioal experts to its London,
Paris, and Vienna embassies.
Rome newspapers describe a duel between
two peaaente near Ventimiglia. They were
neighbors and had quarreled concerning the
boundary lige between their little farina.
One challenged the other to fieht with weap-
ons of hie own choosing. Muskets were
selected. Ealy in the morning the men
went to the village wood, took their places
at a distance of fifty feet, and, at a signet
from the challenger, fired simultaneously.
Etch was mortally wounded and died on the
field within a few minutes.
Hadn't Done Anything to It.
Jeweler (examining it) -"What on earth
have yon been doing to this watch ? '
Owner of Watoh-"Nothing, sir. Noth•
ing ab all. I wound it up a while ago, good
and tight, and it stopped. I shook it for
half an hour ancreouldn't start it and then I
openedlb and poked the balances wheel with
a toothpick, and still it wouldn't go. 1
want to know what'a the matter with the
blamed thing."
oss
Those who say that woman has no "lenge
or humor have evidently failed to notice how
a moustache tiokles her.
CHOLERA.
moors,
140 Frentl Alagoas paging in Asiatic Tor*
key—Will it That this Continent the
Coming Summer
The epidemic of Adeno cholera in 'reform-
potamia, which had caused about t .000
deaths up to Ost. 1, appears to be rasing
now with unabated force, and recent dia.
patches report heavy mortality. In October
striot quarantine was enforoed by the An-
olan authorities at Reshot, a port on the
Caspian Sea, from which this disease was
brought into Europe by way of Baku many
years ago, and the restrictions sprier to have
preverited the admisaion of the plague into
Runk. Bat if it be true, as reporbed,„thet
the disease Iles broken out in flokhara and
Is spreading in AtliatiO Tarktria ib may find
its way into Europe in the corning Spring
by way of the porta on the Caplets See or
the Blaok Sea, or through Syria.
The first cum were found, lb le stated, in
Matra, a city near the head of the
Persian Gatf and about midway between
liessorah and Bagdad, on July 27, and
the disease
RAGED SO VIOLENTLY
only four (bye later in the neighboring
village of Negri° thin, the authorities wore
led to hunt all the dwellings in that place,
hopiug thereby to prevent further Wee -
tion. At about the same time cases were
observed in the city of Remorab, math
of Uhatra, and not far tram the point
where the united waters of the Tigris
and the Euphrates pour into the Pereian
Gulf. Poising up tbe valley, the Moan
attacked Bagdad on Aug. 14. and In that
city during the bat two weeks of that
month the deity mortality ranged &nos 100
to 200. Three quarters of the inhabitente
fled from the town, and 20,000 of them
went lute camp at a epat a few =lea away,
where many of thein cliffsred great priva.
Own.
Refugees front Bassoratt carried the die.
ease into Persia by three routes before the
end of September, and in the early days of
October caeea were found in Hamadan, and
the plague had already
CAUSED A BANJO
in Esrmanclus, Both of these citiee aro oe
the route to Teheran. EorlyInNovemtr
cholera prevelled througliout the =bite
region bowmen the T.gria and the Euphrates,
eppearing In the oity of Alessoul on the 10th.
The traveller landing at the boa of the
Paden Gall, and going northward thrcugh
Mesopotamin, puns through Bassorah,
Chatra, Bagdad, and Moseconl itt aucceetion,
and ab Moesoul he had covered more than
=If the distmace from the Persian Gulf to
Trott z or %town oto the Black See. At
hat amounts the climate Appeared to be
ap:eadbm northward in the direction of
Etzuoum and Trabizend, and eastward
through the region lying dirootly south of
the (kepi= Sea.
Pilgrims from India, the home of cholera,
land at Bessorah on their way to the holy
°Wee of Nadia and Kerbels, which lie
south oillogetad. Ab B unorab there aro alao
landed the wakens that contain the bodice
of rich liffutsulmans, many of which are
brought from India and burled every year
near the holy dame The local cookery
(Mims are of the opinion OW the germs of
cholera were brought into the valley with
theta caskets or by the agency of those who
acoompenied the
BODIES or THE DEAD.
8elylug neon a statement that the first cues
were found In Ohetra, certain percent who
appear to desire, above all thing', to die -
credit the theory of infection by microbes
or bacilli, argno that this epidemic had he
origin in no imported germs, but was born
in the place whore it first appeared. It is
admitted, hoe ever, that there wore mutes in
Basaorala A few days later, and ono cannot
exposit to find accurate observations end re-
ports in that region.
The transmiseion of the disease from India
to the groat valley oan be amounted for in
several ways, and tine is nob the first time
that this scourge haebeen carried westward
from India tbrough the same region. The
dirty 'pilgrim' whose journeys endanger the
health 14 the olviliz3d world should be =h-
i 'oted to rigid quarantine whenever they
come into a country where qaarantine van
bo enforced, and the transfrr of the bodies of
the dead to Mesopotamia from the country
where cholera always prevails should be
forbidden by the Turkish Government
AMONG SOUTH P &MEE; S 1VAGE 3
The Identity of the White Man Who Aided
In the Resent of a Shipwrecked Crew.
Some time ago a paper published par-
ticulars of the experience of the crew of the
bark Tewkebury, L Sweat, as related by
Capt. William Gooding. The story told of the
shipwreck and miraculous escape of the
orew, their thrilling adventures among the
savages of Potzsat Island in the South Paoifie
Ocean, the assistance rendered by a white
man whom they found living among the
natives, their voyage of over one thousand
ranee in canoes and a boat belonging, to the
American Board of Missions stationed at
Rnk, and their return to eivilizetien on the
missionary ship Morning Star.
The story was copied by papers in Liver-
pool and Lsndon, and has resulted in eeer-
ing up a mystery which concerns a well-
connected family in Lendon. Two letters
were received in New York receetly from
London containing inquiries relative to the
white man among the savages, whose name
was given as Charles Ines. One of these
letters is to the ship-ownrrs, and is from
Lancelot C. Irons who says ne has reasons
for believing that the Charles mentioned is
his brother, who was lest heard of in 1878.
when he was reported care nred and murder.
ed by Nen Guinea savages, near a bay in
the neigborhood of Jones Straits. He nye
his brother was acquainted with the ways of
the natives, and that his full name was
Charles Frederick Trona. Cap. Gooding
received the other letter and the description
k more minute. Mr. Gooding is oonvinoed
that the man in question is indeed the long
losb brother. Capt. G mding will write the
anxious relatives at once. He says he is
convinced that Irons will willingly return to
eivilizetion if meano are afforded. Capt.
Gooding feels very grateful to Irmo for
services in preserving the lives of himself
andScrew, and will do all in his power to aid
n the reunion.
A Hungarian count nye the morel, of the
Emperor of Austria's great popularity is his
capital horsenranship Hungarians are prao
tised riders and therefore good judges. It
is said that on one state °nation, when the
emperor had to ride in gala trappings from
Bads to Pesth and return, his horse was
brought, rearing wildly, although held by
two grooms. The emperor shouted to the
attendants to let him go, and jut ab the
right moment, although hampered by his
robes of state, he vaulted gracefully into
the saddle. The assembled multitude roam.
ed its delight, and to this day the relennt
ing of this =Mont arouses enthumisem
among the people.
,
ioeesess -ezeese '..e.es.s.ss'essseesone*seseeeese'es..esee.seseeess, ees - •
for Infants and Children.
Iteastorlaisso well adochildren that Came* cures Celle. Constimssoln
t recommend it as superior to any preecription Sour Stomach, Diarrama. RmetatteM
}raw worm. OM det1P, and PrOM
kilOWII /Lamm; lit D.,
11180. Oxford St., Ikooldiu, N. Y. eMImiens medicetion.
Nintfra'
Tel Craw= Comeice ?tabu:ray Street, X. Y.
seaummimmamilimmamimamminimmumil
GOING TO CALIFORNIA
VIA THE
Santa 'rep acute.
e.v Severn5:25 p. ill. Sun Melt VII e!Wed jThu ittO
ea.Uwe Cit 6:23p. la, Hon Toes W Thur Tat Rua
Ar. Hutchinson... .. .. 70 p.m, atOo Teen W Tkur ips saa
Ar.terinided . ........ 11:18 a.m. Tues Wed The ilzri ItiW Ion
Are Los V8881•••••• ! RIUS p, m. 'Ones Wed Thu ,,Frl Sat Mon
Ar, Albuquerque 012:30a. ro. Wed Thur Fri Sat Ilion Tuts
Ar Berstein-. 10:43 0.• M. Thur Fri Sat iSan !Mon Wed
Ar. lee Angeles I 4:20 p- in. l'h Fri Sat 'Sue If= wad
Ai San Diego.......t 9:45 n. in- Thar Fri Sat +San Mort jWed
—
Von get the only line of through oars without -change Chicago to Los
Angeles, and you *lave 27 houre time,
OFFICE -44 GRISWOLD.ST„ DETROIT, 1,11011,
GEO. E. GILMAN, Passenger Aeric
PUREST, STRONGEST" DEE;
CONTAINS NO
ALUM, AMMONIA, LIME, PHOSPHATES,
or any injurious materials.
E. W. GILLETT, ° 71Tc. 'G
ilan'h of its CILEDIATED BOTALITAUT ilEH. t
EMORY
Mind wandering cured. Books learned
in tmo reaaing. Testimonials from n11
parte of the sloho. Prospoctus POST
rorg ent 00 applivation to Prof.
Loitatte, 267 bath Ave, New York.
The Moat Successful Remedy ever d.iscov
ered, as It la certain In Its effects and does
not blister. Read proof below.
KENDALL'S _SPAWN CURE.
Onion of Cgarays A. Samxls,
lifintakaan or
CLgtrataltb BAT Atm mornso BRED Hosses,
ELMWOOD, ILL., Nov. 20, 1858.
Da. B. J. KmmAy.r. Co.
Door Sir,: I have always purchased your. Ken -
14110 Cure by the half dozen banes, I
would I Me prices in larger quantity. I think It is
one of the best liniment. on earth. I have used It
en my stables for three years.
Yours truly, Cmta. Stryian.
KENDALL'S SPAM CURE.
Boom:axis, N. Y., November 3, 1338.
Drt.. 33. J. KENDALL CO.
Dear Sirs :I desire to give you testimonial of my
good oMnIon of your RendalreSpnvin Cure. I have
sed ft for Lameness, Stiff Joints road
sunyine, and I have found it a sure cure, I cordi,
ally recommend it to allhortemen.
Yours truly, A. H. GILDEET,
Manager Troy Laundry Stables.
KENDALL'S SPAWN CURE
eer
SANT, WINTON Cousgr, Orno, Dec. 19, 1618.
Dn. 13. J. iganna.sm. Co.
Gents: I feel it my duty to my what I hoe done
with your Kendalls Spavin Cure. I have mitred
twenty-five horses that had Smvisten oi
Ring Hone, nine aRleted ‘rith btial +end aud
,even of Bic ;raw. Wince Is
VO° /4 fiel Shin'
books and 6a50the dirattions, have never
lost a case of altY hand.
Yours Only, AtIDREW TriEtt.
Horse Doctor.
KENDALL'S SPAM RUM
Prloo SI per bottle, or six battles tor ....
gists have 1 t or can get it for you, or it will
to any address an receipt of pique by the proolb,
tors. DR. B. .7, "E.ratnat..t. Co., Enosburgh
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
ONNOMEMMIPONIMOMMIIMIIM101.0- 401=011111.
Might as Well Give it Un.
Get out your muslin dresses, girls,
And boys, get ont your blazers •,
Your busineosa men with winter beards
Get out your little razors.
The spring Is here and soon the birds
Will come in countless legions -
Jack Frost has °night " la grippe "and dare
Not leave the Arctic regions.
Something in This.
L'fo Inseranee Agent-Oae of the consid-
erations with us in issuing a policy is the
moral Mate of the insured.
Applicant -That is all nonsense. If it waa
firs ineuranoe you put on i man you'd be
right in looking up his record, but for more
life insurance it's an impertinence.
She Kuew the Grip.
By a quick shot he had just reamed her
from the olutohoe of a bear. " What wery
your thought e when bruin oommeneed to
squeeze 1" was his inquiry.
"Oh Charlie, I thought of yeu.''
THE EXETER TIMES.
Is publisned every Thursday morn ng,at
ti MES STEAM PRJNTJNU HOUSE
•lain.street.nearly opposite Fitton% Jeweler/
Score,lizettueBut.,by John White * Sons.Pra-
nrietors,
ItfaZil or ereeme.xecare
eiretinsertion, per line 20 oente
tech eubseemetinsertiou.per line 3 mint,.
To insure insertion, advertisements, about&
ei gentle notiater than Wednesday morning
.WWWw4smm.
OurJOB PRINTING DEP IRTMENT 14 one
t the largest and best equipped in the County
6 Huron, All work Old truste4 to as will reeelv
ur prompt attention.
Decisions Regarding News-
papers.
Any person who takes* paperreguiarlyfroza
poseomea, weather directed in lib name�r
another's.or whether he has eubscribed or not
15 XOSIO011sible tor payment.
9 11 apemen. Orders hie paper disoontinued n
ue must pay all arrears or the publisher may
*walnut, to send it until tho payment le made,
tad than collect the whole amount, whether
paper is token from tise office or not.
3 Itt sults for substriptions.tho snit May be
natituted In the place where the paper is pub.
hilted, although the aubearibor may resido.
Mandreds of miles away.
4 The courts have decided that refusing to
'aka newspapers or pealoalicals from the post-
ffi ce , or relaol ing and leaving them uncalled
or is prima facie evidence of intentionalfraul
E01° FREE (i)i st LI a, FREE.
;1i'l l'401
1;..A;"'"..."':.:':11:'1-:
reCil locality can seam* ono
timekeeper Warranted heavy.
equal calor, ONE P.SIMON La
'w‘callt%1‘8:5111'1°hte°4111crit'il.'W•Perfiect
with works and ease. sr
001.10 GOLn bunting cu..
Both ladies' and gem e Ilialel,
(.
It ,
a, 11181,aWiniliCi'briestaN'frTehe".° Aulml tPlh:sW. nett well
need do Is to show whet we ientlycas to those 'who rait--rote •
friends and neighbors and tholle about 'on-tbst always results
in vs inabte trsde for us, ttitich holds foryears when once starteg.
awl I h III 40 15 repaid, 15e pay all express, thighs, eta. AMC
you know ai!, If you would like to go to work for uu you eso.
UM from ii40 to $GO per week and upwards. Addrear„
Stinson ...t Co., llo x *12. Portland. Maine.
KANSAS,
TEXAS,
OKLAHOMA
COLORADO
UTAH
NEW MEXICO ,
CALIFORNIA
ARIZONA.,
OREGON
1
And 11,11 points west of the Missour Rive
via the
Salta Fe Route
FROM CHICAGO.
For particulars and ticks s co your
earest ticket agent, or address
GEO. E. GILMAN, Pease ager Agent,
74 Grstwold at, D3Voi1, Mich
GTO. T. NICHOLSON',
General PO.31. ani Ticket A gen5
Topsks, Sense'',
hr
1t
'V.NO BACKAOaE. • 'I s."9;"' 4 -4,
Runs Easy
4 ,.... tr•
t& ',.. .4.1,-4L. I 0
Ct. li URS
,.
OpP--,-- • F•.4.:-...-- '
_ - ..g • ,-...„ ,E. g•
Irk uNK /lE.A.N. Write fo,: descriptive cataloauar
hc,?,neta.iwnoinagfrotztesiltm000nialsasfrdo.F.,17.1.LunAd.rowede
n0orw•Ptruic'ee'vss.b°
fully used. Aaeney COU be bac where there to re
valiancy. A NNW iNvliklION for Ming saws sent from
with each alesigtee; V the uso of this tool everybody
oan tile their own sae/slimy end 10 15 batter than the.
greatest °gooey= witput it. Adapted to all.
oroes-out akar very otte trim owns a saw 'should'
have one. No y to pay; Wejaannhssitnro,ln Cans.slas Ask
Noor dealer or write 'FOLDING SAWING MA,-
caiSS 00., BOB to 811 iii. Canal et, Chicago, Ufa-
STATIS 5058109
MIIES
y 1/4'
AL5T(
,
T0 .
'1,4t1
One oftI,e
F E E
eseopes 1 n
1141, the world. Our readiness/sr
unequaled, and to introductions.
'Linear goods we will seodrscia
"..taoss ransos In each tonality.,
arabove. Only those who Mita
so US at once can make runs et
the chance. All you have to do bei
return is to ahoW our goods, to
those who call—your neIghbone
- • and those around you, Violas --
ginning of Ode adverneemeatt.
shows the amen end of the Wo-
oly • •••••es the appearance of it reduced to
scope. Tire
Aaron, It HALLETT 8 00,., Boa 880. re artAN v, Mg:kW.
scope,se large ae is ea sy to early. We will also show you how Too
can make from sa to Sao a day *5meet, from the etartmak-
oat eiperlenee, Better wine at onee. We pay au express charges,-
about the fiftieth part of Its bulk. It is a grAnd, double eke tele.-
.
FREE! 16 GRAND LOVE ST111111116.
1
a package of goods worth . ,
two dollars to manufaeture, and a lama
,
100p Picture Book, that will surely put yet
on the road to ii, handsome fortune. Walt,. /,
quicstz. and aend fiesilvor, to help pay th)t-•.-
.t.,•E;t3. Iclillon tbls parer.
',.. 11V. US' rtr,mor, T -t•ntneuth, 12.111. ... ,