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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1890-4-17, Page 7I HIE Cou,a-I Airceita few doseso t:d`yar'a G`lxerry Pectoral will relieve you? Try it,. Keep it in the house. You are liable to have a cough at ane' time, and no other remedy is so effective as this world renowned prepares - Non. No household, with young children, should be without it. Scores of lives are saved every year by its timely nee. Amanda B. Januar, Northampton, Mass., writes: 5° Common gratitude ins pole me to acknowledge the great bone. Sts I have derived for my children from the use of Ayer's. most excellent Cherry Pectoral. I bad lost two dear children from croup and consumption, and bad the greatest fear of losing my only re, :mining daughter and son, as they were delicate. Happily, I find that by &riving them Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, on the first ammpt4 at throat oe lung trouble, they are re ,ad from danger, and are be. coning robust, healthy children." "In the winter of 1885 I took a bad cold which, in spite of every known remedy, grew worse so that the family sup-physio considered we incurable, ing me to be in =mum Aa a least resorts I tried Ayer Cherry recto• ral, and, in a abort time, the cure watt complete. Rance then l have never been without 'sill' me no. Ism Afty years of ago, weigh over 180 unds, and at. tribute my good health to the use of Ji.ye ' N. dry Pectose: 6}.W,Youlser, Sal"Last winter ]v contracted a severe Colds wgqhioh by repeated exposure, bee- camttrouubleduwithoboa peness and bronchial Irritation. Atter trying various medi. amen, without relief, I at last purchased a bottle of Ayer's Chem Pectoral. On taking this medicine, my cough ceased almost immediately, and 1 have been Sec evereinem.'R atoniSCon Thos. and Russ of the Greenville District, hi. B, C,, TToneaboro, Tenn, Ayer's Cher Pectorat, atatr mar 1sT Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mus. Sold by aU Dnl gtata. Price et; sixbottlaa,t)a. HIRST'S PAIN EXTERM INATQ /so 6REAT HOUSEHOLD REMEDY. flnnttlton, Ont. Dear p{Ir-r base used your Fain Exterminator to MY fatally r:o.• everything that a fancily Is at. 'luted NT;tls, sues' asLouglis,t'olds Rheumatism. Sprains and Burns. Toothache. and wherever there is nabs. 1 woodd not he without it in my house. I Gin recommend it to the world to bo a first-class artiere, not h latera al and external. lours, eta, JAEI. UUEiifY:fAN, Pres Prolethttton Society. f Sold by all druggists. F. , i1ALLEY & CO., Proprietors, Hamilton. FOR Sore Eyes Catarrh Lair ne SS Female Complaints Sunburn Soreness Sprains ppfi Chafing Bruises USE Scalds s Piles 4N Burns EXTRACT Wounds Insect Bites Stings Sore Feet INFLAMMATIONS and HEMORRHAGES ALL PAIN AVOID ALL MITA. TIONS. THEY MAY BE DANGEROUS. FAC -SIMILE OF BOTTLE W ITH BUFF WRAPPER. DEMAND POND'S EX- TRACT. ACCEPT NO SUBSTITUTE FOR IT THIS IS THE ONLY RIGHT KIND. DONOT TAKE ANY OTHER. Sewing-ieEacltirte'�Iy9 To d once It pats, shpt j F trade o all arts $0$Oii ttLLLLLLIIIIIIII p by sarin our massif rk P g a and goods whore the send can ace person we wall Bendit•eae one eathn to each loha ht ober Beet eervin _mn y, ry oh at .ma tle do In the world, with all the attachments. We will also send free a comps to lino of our costly and valuable art omplbe. 1n return wo ask that you show what wo serve, to Mesa who may call at your home. and after f4 months all shall hemmer r your owl* property. This grand Machine 1e ninth after the Sanger patents, rvhtcb havo run out: before pimento rein out it Bold for itl9'3, with the attachments. and now sells rot 000. Deet, strongest, moot use - nil machine In the world. All Is free. No eternal roqutrod. Plain. brief inetrueaoua given. hose who write to us at once can se- cure tree Oho boat sewing -machin, in tete world. and the duet line ofworl. of high art aaor churn together in America. T&CITE .4c CO., ltion 740, Ei„gtteta. Maine. M. Viel Cazal, a French painter who chose he his subjects from the slaughter houses, and PI rejoiced at painting blood, has died at the d age of 74 years, and, the story is told that the first picture that he had in the Salon was rejected at firsts and that the day after learning its fate the painter went to the jury room of the Salon, said he teas starving, and threatened. to shoot himself if the picture was not hung, whereupon the com- mittee reversed their decision. LATE FOREIGN NEWS than it has ever been before. Out of a ■ total number of 29,907 students, 1,930 are anon -Germans, 1,384 being Europeans and 546 having come to the seats of learning TILL SHAHS FAMILY ILL. Iran, other parts of the world. Of these .T--., A latter436 are from America, 90 from Asia (mostly Japanese) 11 from Africa, and 9 A Youthful Murderer, from Australia. Of the European for- eigners Russia sends 331, Austria-Hungary 293, Switzerland 255, Great Britain 117, Greece 49, Turkey 44, the Netherlands 42, France [37, Luxemburg 34, Roumania 33, Bulgaria 31, Scandinavia 29, Italy 27, Service 27, Belgium 26, Denmark 5, Spain 2, and Portugal and Lichtenstein each 1. At a ball at Pesti in aid of destitute ehild. The irtauenza has appeared at Teheran, ren there were two bands engaged, a gypsy one and the band of au infantry regiment. and several of the Persian royal family are Thelatter played without fee. The gypsies suffering froth, it. played national airs for a while, and when Krupp is shipping an ardor of twenty comet the soldiers struck up a, waltz, their ph4forse defence gusts to Spain. They weigh fifty , was surrounded by a lot of young men who tons each and have a bore of about twelve• declared that they would: leave no Bohemian inches. 0 and German fiddlers playing while they Stanley bas written to King Leopold that could hear the Hungarian airs. The excite- he will visit Brussels about the beginning of meat increased until finally some of the men April, and the authorities are preparing to climbed up on the platform and wrenched a give him a grand reception. ! violin from the hands of a soldier who insist - The -, . la Th military The mil bands there. The averagevelocity the windati Yu g e. of the p ry summit of the Eiffel Tower is three times upon left the hall, accompanied by the that recorded by the instruments at the tiolonel of the regiment and all the officers Mete the elarth, Station, which is sixty feetat pre Emperor.resentand the affair has beeen reported to W. D. Savi, an Indian Government oili: # "^'^ cial, captured forty-seven elephants in one I ,Died of fright. drive at Chl•rani i,• , on in the Gars Hi11sI g Feb. 4. They made his total catch for two ' wring the great epidemic of influenza in months nearly 150. , this country and Europe, it was remarked by many physicians that it was impossible to tell esesetly where the influenza left off and panic began, so many people were .ill with complaints which onl • their own nervous imagination connecter with the epidemic. This observation recalls an old story told con - It is reported from Paris that an ware- turies ago, perhaps, but apparently forgot. tus for furnishing electric light from primary ten since, batteries is in successful operation there, and that the new house of the Duke de le Tre- moille is lighted by it. A WAY SENSATIQNA.Ix DUAL. AaLon shin$ Case iu a Hospital. TIRE NEW pNEClIATIC RIFLE. Interviewinghas been got down to a science by a Parisian who advertises that he will furnish for the provincial press inter. views with distiuguished men, two a week, for $15 per mouth. A general suspension of payments for one year has been found necessary in the Argentine Republic to allow the com- mercial and financial men to get over the results of the wild speculation inwhich. they have been indulging of late. Russia is interested in the statistics of Tushkuroff, a traveller and ethnologist, who points out the fact that there are 400,000 heathens and 50,000 Mohammedans in the Russian may, the latter forming 75 per cent. of the Cossack regiments, and also declares that Christianity is dying out in southeastern Russia. At a recent duel between two young men at Warsaw, both fired and hit, but the bullet of one was flattened against the cigar case of the other and the bullet of the other was turned aside by the pocket knife of his opponent. The seconds decided that the young men were not born to kill each other, and declared the affair off: It is said in Paris that the recently dlis. covered alleged Rembrandt has been identi- fied as the picture of that master known as '•lltnelteite.' which belonged to M. foyer, a ir.•ret..t t - neer, Who died in IS02. The la air.• is., „ the gent of las gallery anti figured in the list of his effects after his ' death, but was then lost sight of. , sue!' an one. "1 winspare he " s said. which he describeslr how, after the haus YF .A. fourteen- •ear•old boy, confined in a 4them," she !y was won,the cavalry s o a air Games galloping in tt y o p 1 Paris prisons far attempted murder, being l And this went on until there was not shouting, with many oaths, "Pole --.loch put into a Ptralt jacket as a punishment for more than ten people in the village whom have not left ns a chance for a fight "' an violation of the rules, managed to free him the Plague had not agreed to spare. swept past in a cloud of dust litterin wit ' self by cutting off the fastenings against a 1 They arrived at the village. On the fol- lanee•oints. b S corner of his cell door frame, and then made lowing day arett many people were taken Tilo whole article, in its grim realism cut of his slather a rope with which he ill with the Plague, and within a day or pwith its oaths, its bloodshed, its brutalit strangled himself from the bars of his cell. j two thirty of the villagers were pictures a g1 Tho peasant ran to the Plague in great tis of tial such ase seldom o appears in our The Semi Russian papers state that slur- •indi rnation.pp' madelu'14yt'm th tat: R piaf n t> overnmentn lt to lift up be t wickedcob: ret here:" :"lie You don'ttkeep your are literature. the two 1atels1 steamers which stuck in the fres. Thirty people are dead already!" .A. Peculiar Kind of Warfare. B:ela:...v.- slay ter the time a: the Crimean - e` I have Icept m remise faithfully," war. 011 n:,r t.f these votes, the Prima, is 1P y pMaking war on Indians istmiskeantyother supposed t.. bk. a chest containing t40,000 said the old woman. "It is true thirtywar making in which armies engage. Finding are dead,butofi onlyten them died of the thethorn not fighting them,is the cliffs e with whi;:1. English. Government had Plab'ue. All the rest died of fright." blem to solve. I£ the reader will consiider intended their stealers should. be paid, I 1 The moral of this stogy itf hat, during an that the theatre of operations in any Indian .At Nails a marble statue fit the patriot epidemic, the people slloUU live and aotl campaign -whether in Wyoming, Dakota, Maio I:t,,nuo, executed by Achille d Orsi Prudently, but should not •, in a state of the Indian 'Territory and Texas, or Arizona for the (:eainntul•e of lirienza, was standing Tear, -is about as large as the New England really in the workshop, packed to bo sent to Brsense, when some boys in the shop Stateseswith Nev York added; that each of y kin -these possible theatres of war is an unin- dle.i some weal to make a fire to warm Mormonism in the North, habited wilderness; that they are without themselves. :they left the workshop with- In reference to the Mormon colony at roads, and often impenetrable for hundreds out extinguishing the fire, mud the flames Lee's creek, N. W. T., Deputy Minister of of miles because of arid deserts or impassable spread to the s•eswdust laid for the statue to the InteriorBurgess, says: Tt will be remem- mouutein ranges ; that while all parts of each. slide on when removed, and in a short time bered that when the delegation of intending territory are to the Indian as familiar as the the figure, all but the head was burned and Mormon settlers visited Ogawa in Decom- paths of the home orchard are to the farmer reduced toeh 1 s ail.. The statue weighed five her, 1888, they gave to the Government the and bis children, it is and of necessity must tons, and was valued at 15,000 francs. most positive assurance that in removing to be an unknown land to the best informed . The figures quotedGerman Canada the i gu es in the Ge an Budget theyunderstood that they were tom- white man ; that in these trackless wilds the for the coming year show the effective army ing to a country where the law forbade the Indian has no fixed habitation ; that upon as consisting of 19,737 officers, 468,406 non- practice of polygamy, and that they intend- being discovered by his enemy the direction commissioned officers and privates, 1,799 ed and desired in good faith to conform to of the trail he takes is a -matter of indiffer- military doctors, X22 chemists, 524 vetorin- this Iaw. During the past year, however, epee to him ; that where night finds him is urians 856 paymasters andbandmasters, representations p y rs reached the depa• tmentfrom his home, and that his subsistence and cloth - 17,382 officers' chargers, 88,302 horses for various sources in the North-west that the ing are always with him -if all these and privates, and 4,256 extra horses. The total Mormons of the Lee's creek colony wore collateral matters depending on them are cost is given at £18,967,643, in addition to a not adhering to the pledge given by their considered, an idea can be formed of how �. sum of £14,755,983e -trexpendituredelegates extra upon o ter ; and communication was had difficult it is to make successful war on the new barracks, storehouses, and the equip- with. Mr. Charles 0. Card, the leader of the Indian. ment of two. newarmy corps which are being settlement, calling his attention to these re- In war the Indian, thpugh partially civil - formed in Lorraine and upon the frontier of presentations, and stating that there was ized, reverts to his worst phase of savagery. Russia. . likely to bee strong public sentiment against Much has been written as to the false senti- At the Vienna General Hospital the medi- the Mormons unless it could be immediate- mentality which crops up in the discussion cal officers are at present watching a man ly and clearly proven that the statements of the Indian question by humanitarians and about 54 years of age, who was a navvy up were untrue. Replies were promptly re- lovers of fair play, which it is not intended till last year, when he hurt the forefinger of ceived from Mr. Card and other leading here to repeat. But it may properly be ob- his feft hand. Thefingerhad to beamputated. men of the colony, in which it was stated served that it is worse than nonsense to urge Since then the left hand has always been in that they had not lost sight of the agree- that the Indian regards the white intruders motion, and now the nervous affection has went which they had entered into with the as the descendants of those who, two cen- spread over the whole body, and the patient Dominion Government, denying the truth turies and . more ago, came to this country is obliged always to turn to the left side. of the charges made against the members and by might deprived the Indians of their When lying in bed he gives sudden jumps in- of the settlement, and inviting the fullest lands and hunting fields, and is through his tothe air like a fish when lyingondry ground. investigation nxto the doings of the com- children pursuing the "red man toward the A similar case attracted recently the atten- inanity, setting sun." The Indian's knowledge of tion f:of medical men at Paris, who called the history scarcely extends beyond one genera - disease clowniam. on account'of the move - A. Wonderful Light. tion. His white enemy is served in war as is ments of the patient. g any other enemy, and for the same reasons. Gustave Cresar Mary being arraigned in a W. J. Norton, an Englishman, has in- Be has no inherited animosities dating from ventedwhat ' Paris court for the forty-eighth time on a is alleged to be the cheapest the time of the Pilgrim fathers, nor does he light ever known,andyet "a light feel r ' cas in -gratitude for barge of drunkenness, and asked what ex -g kind usage shown to his case he had to offer, explained that he had tense and as accurate in its illumination of ancestors or to himself. The annuities paid taken to drink to console himself for his own colors as the sun at noonday." "It is claim- hint are looked upon as tributes exacted by death. When warned not to trifle with the ecl that a five -hundred candle-power light fear or some less worthy principle, and Court he pulled from his pocket a paper of the kind in question can be run at the kindnesses shown him are evidences to his nominal cost of a hapennyan ifhour. The mind that those sh winos bywhom o that he was recorded ashavingare shown g been they w Id in August, 1870, at a battle near light consists of a peculiar tape that is fed are weak aucl afraid of him. Forbaeh. He said that he thought it a pity by a simple clockwork. In point of listens- Fortunately for the whites, the Indians in It it is not surpassed ur. assed b electricity,'t their Warfare liceis fie are not in man who hadbeen it inthe habit of attack- s country could not take an extra drink light is much softer and far easier to the ing om so-called forts on the frontier, else a now and then, and begged the Court not to eyes. It feeds itself, requiresneither pipes, the horrors .of past wars would equal in any be hard upon a poor man who was dead. wires nor other connections, and in size may year thefearful ppicturesof the Indian mutiny He had to submit to a sentence of eight be proclneecl from three hundred to seven against the English. Our frontier forts have days' imprisonment, nevertheless, thousand candle-power. often been at the mercy of the Indians, but Two Gorman ;engineers propose rapid the capture, in any instance could not have • transit bymeans of three continuous plat- been made without great loss of life; and it is P Fining the Responsibility, Row we fought at Tel-el-Kebir. Of all the articles in the magazines this month, tbat which is the most picturesque and the host vividly interesting is the de- scription of the battle of Tel-el-Kebfr in the Nineteenth Century. It is written by Ser- geant A. Palmer of the Seventy-ninth High. lenders. There is no attempt at picturesque writing, but it Is a phonographic-photo- aphie account r what actuailyhappened, here are only a dozen pages, but each one of them is worth a special correspondent's letter. His. description abo:,nds withrealis- tic touches, such as that in which he de- scribes the march across the desert the da, before the battle: "The heat was dreadful, we laid bare our chests in the vain hope of catching a little air. Hands, faces and bodies were streaming with perspiration, and we were almost as wet as if we had been swimming in our clothes." At night they lay down at the canal, which was stiff with the dead bodies of horses and camels, and from this horrible compound they had to re- plenish their water -bottles. When paraded the night before the battle, the captains ad- dress to the men, acarcely any of whom had ever seen a battle, was terse and vigorous : You are to fight on so long as a man stands up, Rememberhe the country Pand the regiment you belong to, and fight as fought the Highlanders of old." As they marched through the darkness, while Rawson guided the enrols by the north star, chums gave messages to each other for home in case of beingkilled, His companion said to Palmer, "If I'm put out the mess, chum, you will and two sticks of tobacco in my pocket that you. may have." Here is a grim sncident fn that silent march whioh we confess seems difficult to believe. Beyond an occasional neighing of a horse, noseund was heard but the slow trampling of many feet on the sand, resembling the fluttering of a flock of birds, Once amen on whom the rum had taken According to the legend a peasant stzap Ira- effect, or whole the weird silence had made veling through a forest on horseback, bound t °° w fid byy©lls, Sir nervous'GarnetsuddenlImmediately broke t towards his village, when he was at peed by rode up anis ordered the offender to he bay all: old woman, "Give me a ride behind you," said the old` posed, and begged leea veno chltal o roform oform eon inters woman. „ Instead, This was granted ; the man was Who are you," asked the peasant. dragged ed to inseusibilityand left lying on 11 I am the Plague," she said. the sated," g The peasant said not a word, but put his' Surely Isle man could have been gagged, whip to his bores, which gave m big lump. orat least knocked on the head 1 At last "Stop l Stop 1" a(said the ol(l woman, the Egyptian line was reached and carried running after him ; " do you thins; T shall at the point of the bayonet, but just as they not get to your s illage just the same, wheth- were clearingthe trenches there were shouts er you give mea ride or not 9 I shall be raisedof "Retire; retire 1" eausin r a momen- there a little later on, noverfear 1 Be reason.: Lary and general check,which ertunatdil able, then, and give me a lift. In return, I was immediately stoppeby a staffoffieer. Y promise that I will net tench you nor any His description of the scene after the bat. on yours. tie is horrible. Some of the corpses were "Get on; said the peasant, bringing h1E'blown into fragments, and. "in some cases horse to a,.tandstiU, dead 1. Pians roasted slowly as they lay, The Plaine ete nioiwted behind him, and they their clothes wag i cited, and were rode on. Presently the peasant, growing' slowly smouldering." �Perha s the moat bold, stopped and said to the old woman : p 1411 you want to make me perfectly hap- burying of e the wo uwhich let. he lea is of tete Py, you will spare Johnny Smith at the When tiie order to fin hayonetswasgiven, vlfnge, and Billy Weaver, and Tom Joie' and they advanced with Tums sloped, against erai „ fe the storm of bullets flying overhead, the rat - Very well, mid the old woman. I tle of the bullets on the steel was like the. will spare thein." , 1 snood of hailstones striking against plass. '!he man whippets up his horse again, but;,$ergeant Pabner had to bayonet no fewer ha11 ant gone inerothan a c uartQer of a mile than five wounded Egyptians who had fired further before he begged the Plague to . at our soldiers Per - spare such :in one, and. such an one, andmostors after they.bad touch Pert hapsthe p eltaxacteristio touch. is that forms moving along the streets side by side. „ characteristic of the race that they are slow The lowest of these platforms is four inches You will guarantee that the dress will to, attack when certain death awaits any high and moves at a uniform speed of five fitrme ? great numbers. They are brave where sup Zat ees not erstitious beliefs t feet per second. Any ordinary pedestrian my affaire, Mees,"replied Ix s nalco the chances of safety an, they state, mount this platform from the famous dressmaker. I make ze dress, greatly in their favor, but will not take the e ground without difficulty, and from this you are ze one to see zat you fit it." risks that satisfy the civilized warrior. can with equal ease step on to a second Prince Bismarck, now that he has retired ase atform four inches higher ;than the first Why would it be impossible for horses to from the trade of governing, mayfind more. an moving twice as fast. The passenger vote on any measure? Because all the votes time g g' thus acquires a speed of ten feet per second, would be neighs. to prosecute his other businesses. and stepping onto the third platform in the.. same way, he is carried at a speed of fifteen feet per second, or ten miles hour, to his destination, where he steps, off by degrees as he got on. The number .of foreign students at Ger- man universities has been larger this winter C th tabsley-".If ever I marry I shall marry woman of education." Wickwire -"I used to talk that way myself. But, in fact, rnever had a thought of marrying the present Mrs. Wickwire until I got a letter from her announcing that her icicle had 'd.i-d-e' and left her sixty-five thousand Id•o1•e-r.s.' ' He is not only a suecessftil distiller, farmer, and paper manufacturer, but a brickmaker as well. His brickyard, near Lauenberg, is supplied with every modern improvement, including a railway ; and it is said that the, shrewd Chancellor expects these 'works to fulfil the dream of his life -a fortune, and a hereditary order of the highest nobility. for enfants and Children IioCastorlaiawe• ais$d tochiIdren thatrocotUmenditacse ortoanypr known Unman, 3r-D.,1tea IktSOEiya, XT. Coterie Bares Colic, f3oti*1patles, Sour Stomach, Dierrrhgta, EructeUms. Kill�ss Worrm�s,gives eletp, and 110"44:401 R . iu$ious asaillcatsoa,. Tmt Cz neva 00SMAlrr, Tr hflus8y Street. N Y. GOING TO CALIFORNIA VIA THP# Elleulta fe Zoete.. Ly Cbti,ge Ar. asses cit. AL /swum 1,r. tehinseq....r,,..%. .•.esoto.,,..-. Ar. Ygltag dr.l ptuonvzo .... .,... , Ar EterMew Aa tell sur... •.•.... As as 7Jlego, ... . 5:'As p. tn. $:L5 p. m. 7;5Op.M. 11:1$ a. M. to a:Qs p. in. I*:so a.m. 1010 4. m. /:a1 0 p. tn, 8:16 D. m. Sun Mon Moa Tues Tues Wed Thur Thar Thar bion Tues Tuve Wed Wed Tbur t �ri i Tire Fri Sat Sat Sat 14'Sd -Thur ,Thu . r Fri Pri bat .Sun Sun Run 'lthu Pat FS tett at San neon Wen 'Ir,.., at San rine Stat: Sian, Tote, wed Oise WA 1 You get the only line of thr.augh cars without change Chicago to Lo .Angel. and you save 27 hours t ne. OFFICE -74 G1tISWOLD..ST., DETROIT, biIPH. GEO, E, GILL N, Passenger .Ageuu PUREST, STRONGEST, BESTS CONTAINS NO ALUM, AMMONIA, LIME, PHOSPHATES, or any injurious materials. E. W. GI LLETT, o11on1IGA.xo, GO,oNT. dii11.1,. lfsa'l3 sten CELSSLAT8D84TALTEAtelleetaal. EX T>as TIMES. Is publisnedevery Thursday morn ng.at TIMES STEAM PRINTING NOPE stein-etreet,nearlyopposite Fitton's Jewelers BBtote, Bxeter,Qn t.,by John White R Sone,Pro.- prietors. RATES O1S AAV.ItTtetttra First Ina ertion,per liue.,..10 oansst Hach sub tegaeatiasertif,n,per line 3o/rona.- To insure insertion, advertisements oboe* e zeatin notlaterthan Wednesday me age OurJOU PRID'tVI;iG DEP {RTMENTleens t the largest end beat equipped in tate Cott f Enron, All work entrusted to us will roomy •1r prompt attentime Decisions Regarding• New-.. papery. Any person whotakeaa paperregnlarlyInek oe Post -o 11ce, whether directed in bis uttaae on another's. or whether be has subscribed orncu is responsible for payment. 2 If aperson ciders his paper discontinued be must pay all +tixeers or the publihber ina7 sontinue to Bandit until the payment is made,. and tbon collect the whole amount, whether rhe paper is taken from the office or not, 8 I suits for nubsoril'doca, the suit may be uatttutetl in the place where the paper is pub. iehed, alts,ough the eubccriber may reside I hundreds f runes awe. 4 The courts have decided that refusing to take newspapers or petiodisais front the post. office, orreuaolin; and leaving them uncalled or is prima facia evidence of !Tatou Mona) trawl FREE ens; bioltiWatch . • wok -n.110 est watch m the world. bs.v . timekeeper 0)110 1101 051. SOLID COLD bunting casts. (loth !Attlee' and tents elate, with work, and cases et equal value, osis rYAxowin. each totality can steam one free. together weal oar larger sad vatuabletine( Orionis ebold 411ee 11ANILo Sample's. Time ,smptte,aa will, as the watch alto free. e. All tie work you need do Is to show what we send!ou to those who rail soar Mends and neighbors and those *bloat you-tleatalways residua Invaluable tndeftrus which holdsfaryeanwhen once started. and. thus we are repaid. we ay all express, freight, etc After you know 1 would p to war or e. oil y n ws all. to h0 liketok a .v an cam from •!O�`lo 8001 per week and upwards. Addrass. Shawn ae Uo.,.Uox18. Portland. Maine. The Nest Sncceesfnl Remedy over Olsen", ere0, as it Is certain In its effects and Coes not blister. Readproot below. KENDALL'S SPAYIN CURE' Ormuz or C,unLss b. Ssrnaa, Dezzrnat or CLEYELANW Bar AND Monists Bunn Donau. IfmDn. B. J. ;LEND= Co.wooD, ILL Nov, 70, ]65a De aim rsx I have always n b ,C ya ed your Ben. P doll p tf 5Dnnvia Cath by the hall dozen bottles, I would like prices in larger quantity. I thine it is one of the best linlmenta on earth. I have used It cn my stables for three years. Yours truly, CULLA. Sh'YDER. KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE. BR0OILTN, ST Y., November 8, 1888. Dn. B. J. Essrn ALL Co. Dear Sirs :I desire to give you testimonial of my goad opinion of your nondaxl's spavin Cure. I have used it for Lamencse, Stiff Joints an Spavins, and 1 have found it a surd cure, Icord 5111' recommend it to auhorsemen. Yours truly, A. H. Gnntner, Manager Troy Laundry Stables. KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE. SANT, wnrror Couxrrr, Onto, Dec.19,1858. Dn. B. J. Kg,11DALL Co. Gents: I feel it ray duty to say whatI nage one with your Kendall% Spavin Cure. I Iva g twenty$vo horses that had Sptt.Vi , of 1(ttng Rape, nine a ctedwith JIM 1 and Beven of iStg J,aw.5111001 logyc had CA ytittr o s and fcUcwgg�dd to directions,/ halo 'sliver Oa a case of aSSy ,Sind. Yours truly, Arnnnw T.tlxtveu, Horse Doctor. KENDALL'S SPANN �UDEU Price 31 per bottle, or six bottles for $8.. `veg- etate will to any address on receipt of mice by the pro, entr tors. Dxt. B. 3. RENDALL Oo., Enosburgh Palls, V SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. USE Ask YOUR ORt R5 re0 "PEERLESS ARE ,, PEERLESS IN NAME QUALITY ANP FLAVOR 1 C.H.PEARSON & CO.*- ---:i czALTI M o R END KANSAS, TEXAS, OKLAHOMA COLORADO, UTAH, NEW MEXICO CALI-'O R NIA, ARIZONA., OREGON, And all points west of the Missour Rive via the Santa Fe Route FROM CHICAGO. For particulars and flake s s:e your earest ticket agent, or address GEO. E. GILMAN, Passenger Agent, 74 Grstwold et, Datrois, Mich GEO. T. NICHOLSON, General Pass. and Ticket Agent Topeka, Kansas. 9 Cords iN fa "uRS 111 Runs Easy NO BACKA(1311E. 0 t1 .e(tyUNE MAN. rice fo-desoriptive catalo▪ gue bate sarnralfrtestimonials ttos�dallyy. 25e000d now success. fully used. Agency can be had where there is a vacancy. A Nett' INTENTION for tiling saws sent tree With each makidnot by the pee of this tool everybody can file their own saws now utandit. fAdbetterpd to the greatest expert can without it. Adapted to all Cross -Cut saws�.,.,B�very one who owns :v caw should have rde Oott1'DNG°SyalerrwrieOLI LWNG 111ACIYirsCO., 808 to 811 5. canal Bt., e/hi¢ago, id. WHATIS 80180 0Ii FOR MANY MILES Y�11'' l'u ...enm_nn� One of the BEST S el- eacopea i n EEthe world. ,¢[�P�en tie cell. 10indrodueaa unequaled, and to introduce our superior goods we will undies= to ext rEaSON,tn each locality, 11 as above. Only th0ao who write to us at once.pn make sure of the chance: All you have to do in return is to chow our goods to those who call -your neighbors end those around yon. The be- ginning of this advertisement shows the ,malt end of the Solo. +•e, the appearance of it reduced to TO 14 AYE1.. loopm. The ..d.owd,ag cu about the fiftieth part of lie bulk: It Is a grand, double sin tole. mope, as largo al is easy to carry. W, will also show you how yes, cart make from S3 testes' day at least, from the etart,with- out experience. Better write at once. We pay ell express charges. Addroes, B. IIALLETT9 CO:, Bot 880, PoortAND, MAINE. FREE I 18 GRAND LOVE STORIES,, a package of goods worbit two dollars to manufacture, and a largo 100p Picture Book, that will surely put you on the road to a handsome fortune. Write quick, and send Se. Bilvor, to help pay pot- tage. Mention this paper. A. W. SINNEYe Ye rmoatia. N. O. •