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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1890-2-20, Page 3J "Like iagjo 3 39 THE effect produced by Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. Colds, Coughs, Croup, and Sore Throat are, in most cases, hie - mediately relieved by the use of this wonderful remedy. It strengthens the vocel organs, allays irritation, and pre- vents the inroads of COnsulnption; in every stage of that dread disease, Ayer's Cherry Pec- m.toral relieves teeing olid induces few,. llr. ' lrefresbir. rest. "I have used Ayer's Cherry Pectoral in nay family for thirty yea::, and have always found it the best muerte, for croup, to which eomplaint my children have been siib•eet.'---Capt. U. Carley, Llrooklyn, N. Y. "Tion: en experience of over thirty years in t1 . sale of proprietary medi- cines, 1 fre jnstffletl in remerime•neing Ayer's 47ier1y Pectoral. C)lle of the best recommendations et the Pel: toga! is the enduring rtaal:ty of its popularrity, it being more ealabla now than it was twenty-five yearn ego, when its great success was consider,ell marvelous."-- . R. S. Drake, M.D., Ite•1iot, Ieaus. roe ."?1fy little sister, le -or years of age. was swill from bri:011 ti that we bad almost given itt hope of !ter recovery. Our family T by seeiau, ast:i lea lean null et e. experience, ronounce:1 it use- less to give her any more I:midtt+ino ; Baying that lie had done ail it was pees- sible to do, and we must prepare for the worst. A:: a last resort, we determined to try Ayer', telie•rry 1'et•tor:11, rind 1 can truly say, with the most Impp'y results. After taint:; a ewe stones sh++ seemed to breathe easier, and, a week. was 'oaq, out of chimer. er. We ctintimie•d giving the 1'eetteral until satisfied set• wwtte *entries! well. 7,i:. liar;levee tete mil,atte.L'1 ith in the preparation, ;and 1 r, , • ,erne ntl it eontidentey to my eitetintees. "--t:. 0. Lipaper, leenteist, Fort \V,t.t . Ind. • Per Colds and et melee tree, Aye's Cher 1 d, ,e tioral r r.,rarris rr Dr. 4. C. Ayer & Co., Le..e?I, Maas Price $l ; ettt.a, firs. Werth atileaveiletitteM,IOZ,S73. 47, t:51qua eat1ttat Fit M€:ISUPPLIES Ventre n etre Lett& Pelee t e:15siit.': tv lilt Puree Free Pure e beet I t le C ere Se,::ar- t.ra, Dalry and Lateeity Uttnet_a 533 CRAIG STREET. 1' al0r3id:.h?.. ppQCKtJ t+ tLe C'TO , JTattd and -tcliine Use. NO SUPERIOR ASK FOR iT. LEATHERN STEEL-LINED'RU 1 1 t S x In Sample, Ladies' and all other Ierud5. L1g}stest alio Strongest "Tr ft LIN S In the World. J. EYELEIGI & CO. MONTREAL, Sole Mfrs. for the Dominion tIOTEL BALMORAL. MONTREAL. ,eotre Dame St., ono of the most central and elegantly furnished Hotels laths City. Accommodation for 400 guests. t to $3 per day.day.cV Ire Y t Mer. DOMINION Rates 'WOODRUFF, Sole Ag'ts for Canada, . PALMER & SON Wholesale 'miters of anU6GISTS' SUNDRIES, '1W NOTRE DAI1E ST., MONTREAL. *SOAP. LEATHER BDA, II COMPANY, Manufacturers of ASBESTOS IYIILLBOARD *steam 1Packirtg, FRICTION PULLEY BOARD, This •is a Perfect Friction RECKITT'S BLUE, THE HEST FOR LAUNDRY USE. PAP Wrappin Manilla, XEWS Ate ALL .Zs SIZES e AND SOD" WEIGHT' 4r re ORDER 21 DoBresolesSt MILI.6t METNEten P.Q. oHJVs olv.s rwiorsEEE OC • HE GREAT STRENGTH GIVER PERFECT FOOD FOR THE SICK ARMING & UTRITIOUSAVERAGE POWERFUL IN VIGO RATtOR IPREMILIAN WORM .gypRM pPOWDRL a q IUte pleaeatat to take. Contain theirs owl! pl!nrgative. Is' a safe, euro, and etreati,at Fltroier of woa'nw lits Qhiidren or Adult* AMID VIAYBS 4BD ICEBERGS. A Stennis Terrible Experience Owing The Stormy Atlantic. Tho Cutlet (Muer Carried, Overboard art when »'asVed Bath Again by the Next Sen. The ateauter Washington City, from Hem - berg for Philadelphia, whfoh put in to Halifax the other afternoon shore of coal, had frightful experierces on her range. She mailed from Hamburg on Jan ,, . _d from Portland, England, on Jan 8. See en- countered heavy gales and high seas, up to the 17th, at tithes rolling, badly and ship ping mnoh water. On the 17th ib commenced glowing froth. S.S. W. At 10 o'olo.k that r.dlihb iv had increased to a hurricane, and ea 2 o'clock the next morning it New with fearful violence, accompanied, by snow and ball and vividlight:Jog. The sea was run- ning mountains high and dashing oxer the deck. At about 11 o'clock a tremendous sea mane aborad on the port side, lifting Chief. Ofiiaer Lengelow, who wan standing near the engine rc om, i ff ht's feet and carried him over tee Bide. He tiAvlt masseur We AS LOST, lout another sea, which cause melting along, threw him back en deek. He was dashed egefuat un iron raid, and his riba sad sides were badly ivjured. 1Ie algia received seri Qua !eternal lejeriee. He wee unable to Jeeves his e:bin tor eleven dais after, and le 11uW berely able to walk alrouh. AC ween on the 19.h the hellion moiler - aa ras heavy pie, boo with a 1 env sea, the the obip going oleer ender water, and the deek being cleared fore and alt Of everything. Tt:o hurriczeo dole forward, all the boets, and a number of dcadlight, on the emcee' die were toy in, Find the vett( Mora and tee alter and binnattpo compeatee were carded away. The roar of the wired anae the futiaue da*Bing of the sea at this tittle were Setae T, Oug frightfai.The cabin doors were stove ttert Stoke ;tote e and ei ginerosin were 111cd• er1 tm:.ti the bees wore nimbi; extiz:u:s'1ed. The vessel w::a then l}lag i:1 tee trcir;b 9€' the sea, reed rolling ao dreadfully that those on boarel thou, s=tales would turn over. Site re:naiued ft: this deem arena petition for .over two try -fear beers, time her;lead wee pageitt br nghb to t.le,t^::i>:. 01 cue rn;rule.', of the 21st tho vied mod erl :1 alight!;, but these* war still ru ening m ee lira Eich. era the steamer wee lalaar• I ere f Betty cold taltit:. water ail over. Oa €t eti"n.l,ih,taiete. -47''41'nortialerf.- I rade •1' ; e :vee., heavy field lee wee run intee anal thee arca:: r heti bbe tureeti to Fad', eaulec.'t. Sim remetr el IN TUE ICE ALL :.IIAT ;,v1tuAT, tacithe riexS9 r,3 rr,i:Il; is beaaaatr meek teem ter keel tits veteol lead to #lo tlra.l elate th o, u a it. When daylight hr,:ke earilfte belt sae wee to ha erre, tee elesterenetnt s xteadizie, orr all ei:.ce 115 f.tree the eye owed ret, li werneneene k.less wean lir aitilt ;thee: net mica tutees. I^appee cal to 1-a tie itt ti`tO feet !!lull a•.el _gelarter of ca ratlt+ to ewe hue! a loge pee:: width IUettedlikc a , %t le. Theta w. -aa tl lee.,vy swell en tit ,1 i' time, eel lt,rge celtea of Geo were t•urg ere about toe r `...t8Cett oleo 119 a i?ar,;,t.1'bt", m•: her end, tilretateiast:g ;It titncts t(4 :;real err. Ily eventre the flit) tilt r0 clear teeter, ha*, ' eine to the p t :chatty of the ice, the enlse;ee we re oIoppr..', ane toe sap lets to till daylight, On the snort ir;; of the 27 h the e •warsIcga wind atel vs mere uiot:.o note; dc ; slur t nothing coupe b s teen on ell sides het ice ane t :celterl;a. The chip's head teas turner: wow, anti it wine nut tilt noon ti' •Z oho got inte ail a' water again. The wind then ;teem blowing from the northwest agtiltl, and Iargc twain of leo were testing and craehiiij- danberonrly near the ship. At 6 F. M. very heavy ice was again encountered, and the vessel oontutued almost untnterm telly etowning slowly through it all night, only cccasionally being stopped by it. Several of the bow platen wore atartlod and the ship commenced to make water. At 4 o'clock on the morning of the 28:h the wind changed to east. It commenced snowing heavily and the spa began rising,• By 6 :30 the ice began to get thinner, and heli an hour later clear water was reached. On the morning of the 29,11 tho wind and sea increased with thick snow, and by 10 o'clock the gale was at its height, with a tremendous sea, which swept over tbe deck from stem to stern, several of the orow being knocked down and badly injured. Tarpaulins were torn from the hatches, and it is thought the cargo is badly damaged. Ab 1 o'clock tho ship was obliged to lay to. At this time a regular blizz red prevailed, it being impos- sible to nee tho length of the ship for the dry, blinding snow. Oa the afternoon of the 31st heavy held ice was again met, extending front Sable Island to the Nova Scotian coast. She steamed through it all night and the next day, only leaving it when twelve miles off Bawer Light. Oil was used for Wants -four hours during the hurricanes of the 17th and 18 b, hat the wind was so strong that it had no effect. TALE OF THE OBIP.kSW ,S Some eld•7tme Stertes 0ilndtan Life. The Chippewa. Indian who stalksthrough the streets of Winnipeg no tvadaysis not te very attractive -looking personage, Perhaps the Indian may think that the average settler in the Canadian Northweat in not a prepos- sessing character either -may even hold the paleface to he an Interloper, making a livehood by a prodigious fuss, whereas he (tbe red man) gets en withonb any fuse, at all, securing a living in the mesh natural and least laborione way. Theas wo see him In B1:auitr.b-s to• day ie, Unmet be ac.ml rrted, a stolid, slouchy, degenerate being, Wily he is so need nos be explained. The purpose ot this article Leto direct attention to the fact that he comes of good stook -than his ancestor* were decent people -and that the keepers of the red man's records point with. pride to a long line of chiefa and brenea--,wine, cour- ageous, apiendiel men. This Indian, so little to our Irking, is a man with a long pedigree --ono which has been traced back' for centuries, until all clues vanish In the mists of antiquity. Els people were bore before no, centeriea before even the bollest navigator ventured to bait "she undiseov' eyed sem" separating the New World from the Old. A bistery of tho Ojibway ranes, (orChippe-; wan,) showing us their life and anrroundinge !real the earlaeat ages at which wo can get a glimpse of than, has special interest and value; end much a blistery as contained in seine curious and evefent rtcorde which have just come Into the possession of the Winnipeg Me:orient and Selenti. a. !soda l c et . he war e >. o rtsut o y ed t t y p he at:dieter by Mr. Warren, whose axocet• ora were distinguished ebiefa of the Ojibway tribe. He states that tileso records have keen in the posaeoaion of bis familyfor more than a century. Tbruuph the courtesy of the (moiety the writer 1: as been enabled to tusks liberal gleanings therefrom, which are subjoined. Tattle eeer-es feral the etitp'-e of the seI. etionv, but the aketebea slyest are vivid and of untested interest owing to the varied ccuree of action, to the aicgular,nes dente which marked scene cf them straggles the courage and dariug of the leaders, and ail the aarreandinngd of the cambatzrtte. The eketci:ee lore here published for the Brat titre: A NAVAL liNGAGESIENT.. Oa Qua rte. asfon a Party of 400 Fox warriors gated down the Ontonagon River' in their small bark canons, stn 1, co)t:tirIeI mere the lake, 'hay larded in the night/ at T.0 I'tii:e, c,r1,1 sat dawn captured four young Oj leery w en en who had gores free the vrba„ a to cut wood, Satisfied- with this stigma, tea l;i, r•s Hastily retreated to their car.zea, end ender coot r of a deese foe relent - l. ptodt;lei 1:r•rrc+rttrd. C,i t de:ut in their, I u:1:1: re met Intl of ex:t1.,.*Ion at having 1 rrf`,c:C t?.:r crevaiimi In ti•.cir sal nd home, f.eli x '.'co ccteoreof tec:apto i,l the foci, whets stili ti;rpeyoitihkidn Jiceuak a..l; :fir tho (a'rjbwh.:a. vvnlIta:griod :3efiarcear,ii b:gan eleglog a otir.ieg rcadpi cert;, 'et:a term of edit ('j'twaye became i1 ;tart ly a teem of ccmtnetft.n, and tin came' t ar tor:'; armies' thcnio•Ivea, ticctipy em a oei rg.) tette cat:,ton iraitigkntly pu,l;tted ti., .: c:i?'iii:a ut.1:: cover tf qv) demos fed. The laltu WM per tt ly eehn, iat•rd they seine beer the lout! i . ie g and ,nuphar; .f the Fi wee from a Ut If t., flee^c (Tattled lty the noise thus lap: -up 1 y their a werets anti er.utident nc xr,.'r la, the 01bw: yfi„iilently :ltraiainp; on hely paieh a, ereetwely neared them. Be A Fortune in Oat's -Byes. A correspondent of a Ceylon paper writee: I was talking to a woll•kuown gemmer who hail, from the other side of Gaile, and ho trays that ha has seen the largest oat•s•eye, the finding of which is recently recorded, Ib is the finest atone he has ever seen, he says, and he doubts if a bettor one has been dieoovered anywhere. It weigh, 6 pounds ani 6 rupees, and is of about bhe size of a 7 -pound weight. The finder, he gave me vo understand, is a Moorman, who for a long time found his digging vary unprofitable, but at length hia perseverance was rewarded by the find of a eat's eye, whish realiz3d over £1,000 pounds sterling. Shortly after this he Dame on another which broughbhim in over £2.000, and then he fished up the gigantic stone about which so much balk has been n.ade. Ho has been offered £ 19,000 for it by a syndicate of Moor• men, bub he declined to part with it at that figure, saying that if he liked he could cut it up into about forty small piece:: and sell each piece for £1,000. A little time ago he found a larger oab's•eye than this one, bub the ray was not so good, so that it is noth ing like so valuable. Re Bought Everything. "I pay yon dog cold gash for your store, and now Moses Grapenheimer say he hafe a ahabbel mortgage on ib." "Veli, you pay ebsrybings on dose shelves an counters, don't it?' "Yaw, dog vas so." "Yelp, dot ahabtel mortgage vas on doss shelves un counters dot fife years." Ohanged His Views, "Do you think that all these jokes they make about plumbers are fanny?" said Mrs. Takair to her husband. " I used to,' was the reply, bub I don't any more, Nob ;ince She water pipe. burst." the w.:13adv;co of their leaders they deferred the attsak until the Fenn bad arrived epi.w..ito the rock beu::d meet twenty-two miles from Let Pointe, where the s`c:ep and slippery bank would prevent the Freese from eteapirg by land. hero the Cj .bwraya begets the cnelaught with great fury, and, erten} upsetting the small canna of their foes, they di:patobcd the surprised and now fear stricken Foxes as they struggled in the water, so that the whole of tbeir large war party was killed to a man. This is the only naval cneneerecut of whish the record telia, and the' Ojibway success was attributed to their enparrer numbers and their largo canoes, (capable of holding from live to twenty men. each,) which gave them a great aivantago over the frail, cranky little canoes of the Foxes. now TO WARM YODEL IINOLE, The ware between the 0jtbways and Foxes are described as fierce and bloody in the ex treme, marked with every cruelty attendant on savage warfare. The Axes tortured their prisoners in various ways, principally with fire. This umbel r -s add to have originated aa follows : A noted Ojibway warrior was taken pris- oner by his nephew, a young warier of the Foxes, non of his own sister, who had been captured when young and adopted and married into the tribe. To evince his utter contempt for any tie of blood existing bet wean him and his Ojibway uncle, this young man planted two stakes strongly in the ground, and taking his uncle by the arm remarked that he wished to warm him be fore a good fire. Deliberately tying his uncle's arms and legs, as widely a9 they could be wretched, to tho stakes, this un- natural nephew built a huge fire in front of Ms captive, and when his naked body was burned to a blister on one side, turned him around until his back was also cruelly burn- ed. He was then untied and turned loose by the nephew and told to go home and tell bhe Ojibways how the Fuxea treated their ancien. • The uncle recovered from his fire wounds, and in a subsequent war excursion captured his cruel nepbew, took him to the Ojibway village, tied him to a stake, and taking a freak elk skin, on which a layer of fat had been purposely left, placed it over a fire until it because ablaz l and, then throwing it over the naked shoulders of his nephew, remarked "Nephew, when you took me to visit the village of your people you warmed me before a good fire. I now in return give you a warm mantle for your back." The elk skin oovered with thick fat, burned furiously, and puckering, it tightened round the naked body of the victim -a dreadful mantle which soon consumed hint. Tho act was retaliated by the Foxes, and death by fire in various horrible ways beoamo the fate of all oap hives. nI•AIIS-WAH DIES TO SAVE IIIS SON. A cit cnmetance happening soon after the one described above is worth relating. A few lodges ofOjibway bunters under the guidance of Bf-ana-web, a leading man, were evoamp- ed in the Spring on a lake shore near .La Pointe. Early one morning the camp wan attacked by a large war party of Foxes, and the men, women, and children all murdered, exoepb an old man and a lad, who ran into a swamp. They were oeptured there and taken in triumph to bhe Fox village to suffer a barbarous death. Bi•aus-wah ab bhe ti ne of the attack was away on a hunt and did nob return till to- ward evening. His feelings at finding his wig. wams in aehea and the lifeless, scalping remains of hie beloved family and relatives strewed about on the blood-stained ground can be imagined. Perfectly reckless, he followed the -return trail of the Fetter, deter mined to die it necessary in revenging the ,Rrievoae wrong they had inflicted on hit:.* He Arrived at the village of his enemies day after their euc<eseful war party had re turned, and heard men, women, rind and ren screaming and pillow with delight as they danced around the tc.tpa their worriers had taken. Secreting hit- off on the out skirts of the village, the Oj bway Chieftain waited for any enemy whomighb come whll roach of hie tomahawk. Ho had nob remain ed bug in his ambush when. the Fexse col- lected a .*hors distance front the village for the purpose of torturing and burning their captives. The old man was first produced, and his body being wrapped in the feide of the oombusttble birch bark the Faros set fire to ib and caused hiin to run bho gsun let, amid their whQeps End mem*. .Oev.r.d with a blaze of fire, andreoelviag withal a shower of blows, the old man soon expired. Theyoung and tender lad was then brought out and doomed to ran backward ana fortes rd on a long pile of burning faggots till consumed bo death. None but a parent can realize fully the feelings which wrung the hears of the ambushed chieftain as he recognized his only surviving son in the young captive aboub to undergo these torments. Ilia single arm could net roams bite, but the brava father determined to die. for or with his only tort, and Ea the cruel Foxes were on the point ot eettiug fire is the sap of dry faggsta on which the lad hada been placed they were surprlaed to see the Oj it ey chief stepproudly and boldly into their midst and a drnae thein as follows: "My little tion wheat yen are about to burn with fire hutment but a few Winters; its tender feet have never trodden en he w ar• - a nth h lies nave injured p - r -esu, .But the hairs of r. y bead are oboe with slany Wietera, and over the graves of my relatives 1 kava hung many scalps, which I have taken from the heads of the Frxae. My death is worth something to you. Lst me, therefore, take the place of my gene that he may return to his people.. Taken totally by muerte*, the Foxes silently listened to his proposal, :and, having long coveted his death and fearing the eonscquenees of hie deep:.iring efferta, they accepted his offer, and, releasing the see, they bade hire depart) and burned the brave father in his stead, The record goo on to relate that the eon safely returned to his people, and the tale of his murdered kindred, ardfather's death spread like wild $0 among thewide.acattered beads et the tijihweya, A war party gt,therod -corn- Peking warriors twee from the distant Smelt Ste. Marie --to join in reveres* the death of their chief, They marched on their enemies and did not return Immo until they had destroyed ale villages of the Foxes, tomo of waiica %vera eampesed of eerthers wigwams which now form the mount's spread en prcftgsel , over tlhissection of wren - cry, They reaped a rich hcirveab of reales and mads oueh an efi'ectiva strike that the Faxes evacuated the cenutry about the Sr. Croix and Cielppeway Rivera and:ether: oeutil to tine t%limeade, DIME 01' CA`4BBBIDi B TO RETIRE. iteport that the t'onruiauder-Inteit.let o the British ,Array `Fitt itesfgu. - R Ib is reparteetataC hia royal btPncas the 1'uko of Cambridge will resign ism position as commauder treahlcf cf the British *army ie. 0otober next, are th;it he will ha me COCOA by the duke cf Conuaugh!', the queered third son. The cluio of Cem- re:Igo fa 71, and has been in the army Ley three yenta and cointmander in oh-ef thirty. four yeara. Fist succeeded Viaeount Hares ingc, iso had a !torso shob under him at Iklierrrau. Ho is first cosign to tho gnat and agrandoou of George 111. The duke t f Connaught is 40 yeara old and a brigadier goncral, His princewl servfen has been at', Aldershot. Ho went with the guards to' Egypt at tho time of the alleged war against Arabi Pasha, A Japanese Advertisement, The Jap:anose drserve tho tido of the Yenkeca of the L1ah. Hero is a specimen of their businesametho Tokio A'lokso bookeellor, advertising hia wares, seta forth bis claims to patronage. in this convincing way. The advantaged of our establishment -1, prices as cheap as a lottery ; 2, books elegant as a singing girl ; 3, prints clear as orystal; 4, paper tough as elephant's hide ; 5, cns- tomer3 treated as politely as by the Heal stoamahip companies ; G articles as plentiful as in a library; 7, geode dispatched as exped tiously as a cannon ball; 8, parcels done up with as mnoh caro as that bestowed on her hutband by a loving wife ; 9, all dcfeote, such as dissipation and idleness, will be cured in young people paying us frequent' visits, and they will become solid men ; 10, bho other advantages wo cffar are too many for language to express. On the Bosom of Infinitude. Men can understand of God only so ranch as He discloses. "Hie thoughts aro nob as our thoughts nor His ways as our ways." What does the babe comprehend of the dear mother on whose breast it hangs ? Nothing, save that the breast ire the fountain of sub aistenoe and love. This world is God's baba, He holds us all upon tbe beam of infinitude. He reveals so much of Hie nature as we need to know -His oomp:aesion, His tenderness, His self•sacrifioe. For the rest we must wait, ]isle the babe, for larger growth and wider environment in order to fuller oompre• hensions. But what more do we need at present ? Ie it not enough to be mitred that God loves ns and cares for us and means to train us to be kings and priests? This knowledge is well fitted to wipe the tours from our eyes in orrow and to make our joy more joyous. A Ohild gilled By Rats. The infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel Reeves, living in a basement in Kansas City, died the other day from wounds inflicted upon it by rats. About 3 o'clock in the morning Mrs. Reeves, awakened by the infant's Dries, discovered the child's con- dition and took it to a neighbor's house. The nose was bitten off and horrible wounds appeared on both cheekbones. The scalp had been torn away from the top of the head down to the ears, and the skull had been gnawed in one place so that the brains were exposed. The child• lived only a few hours after it reoeived its injuries, Where He Was Weak. Susie -You mush be awfully weak, Mr. Collier, Mr. Collier (who prides himself on his musole)-Nob ao very, I guess ; what makes yon think so ? Susie -I was just reading that knowledge is power, and I knew --Bub he had fled,- The Pursuit of Pleasure. Mamma -Why, Bobby, your nose is all blue and your teeth are ohabbering 1 What's the matter 2 Bobby -I've b -been having e•s'some big fun with the b -boys, westing 1 00EAN VESSELS ON THE; LASE, A .scheme Which Would string Coaster. flatten to Weide SAW. Henry K. Wioketeed, a civil .engineer of Brantford, has a scheme. He proposes that the Dominion Government enter/ea the Can. action son14 system at a cote of $70,000,0e0, so as to give ocean-going vessels aeons to the great lakes.. The obj:ob of tbe solltme, Wiokateed saye, is to hent At the great Werth sveet and aeouro cheaper transportation of, produce. Rellwaya, he eaye, cannot afford to haul freighbat mnoh lees than one half to 000 third of a cent a ton par mile, acid they carry it at an average rase of fifteen miles an hour. Oman steamers moving at about' r,•o tbiras that rate could carry frefght,pro- h ebly eb oge twveilti_eth of a sent a ton. 10 r a little more. He maintains th,t i :F ocean steamerscould reach Cbfcaga,. 1a1 t- «•.akve, Duluth, and Port Arthur, they onld parry nine-tenthe cf the grain uow shipped by rail. They would also, he t binke, ger most of the nettle that now gees by American router,. Besides all tide, Mr. Wickeecen aces ea - other advantage in his scheme. He does not wish nor expect, he nye, a qua -rel with the United States, buteome Carle. Bane are rip• parentlyalways afraid meth a collisie= ra••g take puce. Te such the passibility of half a rlr z:n ear ships turutng their gens epee Chicago three cr fors Jaya after a declare' tion of war weld be reaaturing. Rules for Dyspeptics. Eattwo meals a day. EWitten, l ,c m .lino a r t the ^ F teed t Fr o9t. hi y : OV OC a O it sea bI.o , than i3 required in health. Avoid dr'niting at meale; at moat tato a few elite of warm, tenstirnuiated drink At t;at One of the meet, if the food is very dry in ebarecter.. Iu goners;!, tiyi?peptiostomashe tueragec! y food batter than tbet of ataioing much dale ; ;crewed light soups, Bat neither very hob nor very cold feed. Tile beet tenmeratare is about that of the hotly. Avoid^exparuro to cold noon after" eating, t . AT LAST! A W4ndektul Vegetable Discovery Thali ifleraovee the Terrible Results of Overwork. A True Invigorator. Weakness and prostration of the nervous: system surely follow that overwork and, worry which brings sorrow and suffering to so many Canadian homes. The terrible results of nervous weakcest, are seen ori every hand. Pains in the back, poor and unrefreshing deep, lack of appetite d p P dye. pepsin, and lost energy and strength, are the, first symptoms of more serious and danger_. ons trouble. This is the way thud Paralysis, Paresis and Insanity begin. Do not delay amoment longer, for some time it will be too late to regain 1•oer lost health and vitality. Use 1'. ine's Celery Compound now, and the dull eyes will regain their briniancs, the cheeks will g ow rosy, the brain become clear, the nerves strong and. steady, your sleep restfutl and refreshing, appetite good, and health and happiness l take the place of : of nziwry anal suffering: A. Sebiston, the well known lithographer Of autreai, writes a "In the summer of InsI had t work :very hard, and was troubled considerably with insomnia (sleep- lessness). •' e ' r soh•. ed to try r your Fa yuses Celery Compound, and after taking the contents of two bottles, felt litre a new ratan. A geed night's rest gave mestrength for the duties u. the day, anti inm:cad of starting out to business in the morning feeling as if 1 bad completed a u .y's work instead of being al.nat to entr,:erce 000 I started out in gosatl sf:rtts, feeiiag fresh and strong. • Tay wife and various friends, to whom I reeenneer+•ted the medicine, have been benentea {greatly, and in fact t Paine's Celery Compound is a household word in our family." Be. careful to avoid excess is eating Fat DA more than tho waute of the system rc tl quire. Strength dept'Ada not on what le eaters, but on what is t;laesded•qk 3e Never take violent exercise of any Bort, esthee mensal or physical, either fait: hetero9 er after a meal. It is :nos Gesa to elecp ins mediately after eating. If It is thought neceaary to eat three times'. a day stake the het r te:.l very light, For moat dyee-pntie3 two reeds are better tear. mors, Never cat a morsel of any tort between ramie, Never eat when very tired, whether az equated Emits meatal or pt1yasoai inner. Never ere wtiea the rice to wort el P. the temper retinal, if it is po;eible tat tweet doiut; e0. OV F,l-E T E,3i1 T1 iEa. A COOK BOOK ° FREE By %an tc env is a were :s ^ter oast ace wetness: Welke ewer:t;ar &C, ,, Montreal, tl:G' Solid Cold noel -b, `^tad vd;jji,l.0 tic--Aaq,.•'- Tia- „w.. t.atMax r:q. `•err-, t.,.-. ., «,ro,t.,. sSSrPeWasr yos.,,tr Civ,1; ri c lirafi'l of equal race. R5 1.•ersaniu:sta. a" .t?o: P' cx : slur c ;a eh !Yr^, „ t "- '•, :9t, our lupe tt:.ttrnCw t. o l.ao c.r Ut:tutehaloI Rae only foci that i5 city of d'a;;it:t sn. ", lea"1"1.'" Trhe rgtac.mtr. as ,. et x. .l :;w ell notch, wa sed. avoiding .trim .ieated and ineigestsb;. •'e• Y 'rcr nn3s^cr cahavrohc e t' r+ them to ar hotr•a re- fel Trt,^.l a ti t t ,cat .5re to thein tli-.l:.n, wad •al:ttsg bat two or flares kiu::c ,t::aA,.y qh vgest:rtt,9kayt:ctc:acg:.crow:;rrct;itt . 'rhpw x5 £. Inc..I via tarda at ones a'n t s cede cr rr.^ci,, r the YYV t . i solei a:3 9 m es. 1 wa .. , w ts, 5 r SStCnas:ndL- Vo., Iiox lin r 1stid,441 date. bloat prrceuaswiel bo bon' fist. 1-y tea not ef reetriwil, tellke meal. or reehenw :ft sir -- - -- cr-:cl:ea es-heett 0!.:t rattler „'sole•gr:,eta r'! ,,•'r,`r A , a.-, preparstmeutt, theat;h many will n o a, .t a t 1ia w` ' '0 '. ore ilrcesaas•yalu :"void wt,uctabler, espt.c:.' ya'iiots\ JePt;,. 6?- ^.•e, Debilitated', when fruitstaretaken. . _.tteotaliia nettle u twee lee, Tete Scent kintwa :fl•^d'`: : fit. v.. rt, a. .. Pc"1 •..e-1 riE.. r c fruit, ripe, fre l+, or in stir !]riwn aoo l r.::•; • :japes : e -,u cf sete.wed or cant,* d thould le oho trGZ*r:t "ere; t ` g ' e t r` eetee ""e ea'.en atbrcaLfaat, as fruit plcmotca diges- tion. gne?tsof.0 - :,r ! ce_.teeet t, tsau. Theusooffrnitabviatcatheneaeseisy t a:emcry.'c,: ,esti`•c, \: 'sO s 'T..v3 .1.. ,F''i'' ffecew r :nee wity,'tee . , our ,;zampg9,11 tCSiti'JO `...t A, at ll.: ....3 i'OC,tt,: :3 ti fgor. rentor..'s v.. '/ :,,'t t=t37d@P in old%ell. ' 051031, atror 'i:er v i tl , .vi ,or,atrs tl,o IYraprr 1 d scrum, t,a:, u , tiro n,n ,colors t;tanr nd nronora sato nt: tl tie lri,olo p 3„rel energy of t.ie 1 rant :.:a. I to our art vino 00. tl:s rho mcr;t c.',: • •t ta race can 3 t, Curt•c, in t.lr t thirty G437n ,r U7 .d 2 .1 1 rUbt t r a rr' Mrs t lla n y Mach : ,, ;;, t.- tri - i-ro wwerkq t.reni- moat Prlt•c t, 3:0 c i t r :.at ..ii Qnr a;tec• itisNo.:lian:Irnf.•.:i;:•le fate'sfor i11 pe'svr-t0 i /noas,11: ,ri.i1. tt.1 ror tt;t;rJ l,:n ntnnd. Iraq, 1;o1,1 under t ur t:r • ,l, m ri'armtra to eiicot n Clore, Pio .".5. 'T;,rt:: to ,\lei taloa Co.. Toronto. Ont. of drir king while eating, and for these wile have b.cn habituated to drinking, a dish GS stewed apples or prunes will serve ae well, The Contasiousness of Pneumonia. From a long article by Netter on "The Contagiononesn of rneumonsa" these con- clusion are draw : 1. Pueumonia is a contagious diaeaee of parasltia origin, and is transmissible tither directly or by tho intervention of a third person, or by inanimate objects, audit as wearing apparel, etc. 2. The pneumococci are not destroyed by desiccation, and are diffaeible through the air bub not to great distances, at most the interval between three hospital bede. They maintain there virulence for a period which has not been definitely determined, bat pro bably never more than three yeara. 3 Contagion is poaeible through the en- tire course of the diocese, and even after ra cove ry. 4. The period of incubation average from five to seven daya, but may vary be• tween one and twenty. 5. Patients who bave passed through, pneumonia are dangerous both to them- selves and their neighbors, as living mincer:mci may be found in their saliva many years after. Thence, in part, the epidemic appearance of the diocese in cer- tain families during long periods, and al- so its frequent recurrence in certain indi victuals who have once survived it. 6 Rigid quarantine seems hardly nec- essary, but other persons should avoid too intimate relations with them. The sink -room should be ventilated and disinfected as thoroughly as possible, and every precaution bak•;n to prevent rho spread of the disease as in other contagions. Aft Not too Late to Escape. Brown -Why, w,hab's the matter, Jones? Jones (the lady homely but riob) -I startl- ed her with a proposal of marriage. Brown- Dld she accept ? Jones -No, she fainted. Brown -Can't you escape before she cornea to ? Breaking Rules. Irate Parent -Bin hreakin' de rules of de skttle agin, is you, you bleak raakal ? Student -De teacher's de one what broke de rule -ober my head. Boohoo 1 • Ib is said that Canadfana are stealing billions of feet of American lumber from the great pine timber belt in Northern Mime - sots. The lumbermen of tee region center- ing about the little B it,eh post i,f Hungry Hall a number of veers ago discovered a way of piling up immense fortunes. The United Stares government exacts 10 to 20 per cent tariff tax from the censerher on each 1,000 feet of lumber cut or manufactured in Canada, while it allows the Canadian lum- bermen of that aeebion of the Dominion bordering on the Lake of the Woods to out and carry off from bhe uneurveyed timber lands of Northern Minnesota millions upon millions of feet of pine timber eaoh year pratioally unmolested. From 150,.000,000 to 200,000,000 feet of timber and loge, every foot of whish it is absurdly declared has been ant in Minnesota, go past this poet and down the Lake of the Woods eaoh year. LAD1 S ONLY. FRENCH RECULATI'J'.i Fa• ide p E z' ti E r-ot ^Trus.. Fa t•ivr;+val who nsetMmO .iJ'ii•.1. Y haver `'31. ,,riieve rain. I iSti tF i:rbtlLARIT:' P;eaca-,t Ind Effectual. Price. S2. Toronto mind:nine Co. Toronto. Ont. Exeter Butcb.er Shop R. DAVIS, Butcher & General Dealer --IN ALL KINDS OF - VT HATS astomerssupplied TUESDAYS, THURS- AYSAND SATURDAYS at their residence ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE C3IIVE PROMPT ATTENTION. T1LL onreyon 51511 atiam: Near Dieeme. lea • • . , nd3,, a Toothache, e eh easing -AT To at once Itestablish ij Ij trade in of parts, es anpied goo o u r mre the had goods where rho ld fp e eta ore them, , 3, will hood llty,p a one best in each !shin . he vets beet ,with all sewing -machine , o chme is Ota world, ialso s all r eat,,me1ut0 Wo will also send andel uable art lane le our ,costly and valuable ore show w. In return send, 10ak that pho mad what yrs ,oe, and of who map call all your bomo,nnd your own menthet ale shall bosoms your amt rotor rt This grand )l.* i te. made after the 0,Singer b patent., which have rim out: before patents ret out it cold .ort} non, wlththe nitgqO. Eo t roc hoer 10115 fol. b . no ,t, (ho o o snort µno- Nl machine In the wand. A11 fs see. No capital required. P41n. owho write to us at once sense. tng.pmgehhew hi the world, rood the Eh nee 51st Shown togethertn genian: Htai 14. , At.gesta. 3Lstt5lf. .Fitt Yroe. euro tree the here 5e TIME • Hue Eof works di V U.Ili .