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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1890-5-8, Page 8"Like I ion rrTm effectprotheedby Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, Colds, Coughs, Croup, and Sore Throat are, in most cases. im- mediately relieved by the use of this wonderful remedy. It strengthens the vocal organs, allays irritation, and pre- vents the inroads of Consumption; in every stage of that dread• disease, flyer's Cherry Pee. toral relieves cough- ing and induces refreshing rest. "I have used flyer's Cherry Pectoral in my. ',for thirty years and have always (d it the best reined for croup, t Ktcomplaint mychildren Carley, t --Capt. . Ga liar e b b c«, n su ey Brooklyn, N. "From an experience of over thirty Tears in the sate of proprietary medic cines. I feel justified m recommending Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. One of the beat recommendations of the Pectoral is the enduring quality of its popularity, it being more salable now than it was twenty -ave yearsago, when its great •Success was considered marvelous. -+ R. S. Dralte, M.1).,13eliot, loans. "My little sister, four years of age. was so ill from bronchitis that we had almost given up; hope of bar recovery. Our family physician, a skilful man and ca'large experience, pronouncedit use- less to give her any mare medicine ; :saying that be had done all it was pos. sible to do, and we must prepare for tilt worst. As a last resort, we determined to try Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and I eau truly say, with the most happy results. After tilting a few doses she seethed to 'breathe easier. and, within a week, was out of danger. We continued giving the Pectoral until satisfied she was entirely well. This has given me unbounded faith in the preparation, and I recommend it confidently to my customers," --C. 0. Lepper, Druggist, Fort Wayne, Ind, For Colds and Coughs, take Pectoral,er8 Cherry PRZP'.IRED BY Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mas; Price V ; six bottle.. $5. Worth g5 a bottle. TgS cRL42t HOUSEHOLD REMEDY. Ualniltols, Out. Dear Sir—I have erred your rata Exterminator to lny Dually for everything that a fatuity is af- flicted wins, each as con;ho.l'olde Rheumatism, Sprains and areas, 'l'cothaehe. and wherever there is pain. 1 would not be without 3t la n l Insure. I Can. recommendit t(y. the world to be a first-c1nrls art Ie,bothinter nal andexternal ?Years. etc.. 3.45. HEORTMAN, Pres. Prohibition Society. Y .,t Sold by all rnru„-„Ists. F. F. PALLEY & CO., Proprietors, Hamilton. A.OB U I 0111 1‘.&,. The Punishment Meted to. Criminal Celestials. Suspension of the victim by the thumbs,. with the arms bent behind the back and the toes only touching the ground, is a common practice. There is used also in the case of great criminals, and especially in the south- ern provinces, a male of torture called "kneeling on chains." The victim may be made to kneel on a coil of sharp chain, with his arms extended, and a lictor standing ready to flog him if he lowers them; or he may be suspended from the eeilliug, face downward, by a cord atiached to his thumbs and great toes, and lowered till the weight of the body rests on the knees on the chain. Quite recently, according to a Chinesenews- paper, two men charged with belonging to A SECRET ASSOCIATION in Hupeh were made to kneel on sharp chains and received 1,000 blows with the light bamboo to elicit confession. There bad been, apparently, some iudications of a local disturbauce, and these glen were arrest -ed as ringleaders, Suspension, too, by one wrist and ankle ; suspension by apolepassed under the armpit, with the hands tied under the knees, and various other cruelties are said to be practiced occasionally in southern, yaniens. Yet there are, in the Penal Cade, stringent provisions against the infliction of illegtal punishment : and the penalty, if death ensue, is severe. A randarrn has quite re- cently, for instance, came to serious grief for cleeapitating a man whers the law called for strangulation ; the point being that dis. nlemberment of the body is a disgrace, and was in excess, therefore, of the legal sen- tence. But it may easily be conceived that in the matter •of torture, and in all ordinary eases, the following provision in Section 413 of the Chinese law is sullieiently elastic to !shield a multitude of delinquencies: "When itso happens that, immediately SPRING SN/nrLES1 A two -foot rule—"Stand on your own pins." Dolly—"Have you ever seen the mistletoe bow ?" Cumso—"No ; but I've seen a pea- nut stand." 9N IMPORTANT DI.MCWERY. The Original Spanish, Edition orcolarpbus Letter of 1495. Until 1852 it was unknown that theaSpan- ish text of Columbus' letters had ever been printed—all the old edition of the "Epistola Christophori Colour chi etas Rostra lnultum Fifteen inmates have just been admitted debet" having been published from a Latin to the deaf and dumb asylum, and "still" translation of the original made in April, 1493. In 1852 there was added, by bequest, "You can't eat your dinner and have it, to the Ambrosias library in Milan, a small too," said the sympathetic steward to the quarto of four leaves, which containled t11e seasick passenger. lost ±a`pallish text, printed probably in 1493 or 1494, no date or place being given. Not, however, till 1863 was the discovery made known, and from that time tills short while ago the Anlbrosian small quarto has enjoyed the reputz••tion of being unique. It could not be shown to have been printed in Spain, for, although it had undoubtedly been given to the press by a Spanish editor, the .composi. tor's work was plainly not that of a Spaniard.. Moreover, the shall quarto pamphlet size seemed to bring it into nearer relation with "We won't worruk for 'cm av they Put the small quarto translationswhiehappeared 1n 1493.1483, 01 014 side of Spain— in Italy, France, and Germany. At last, a few menthe ago, the true Spau- She—"Butwhy isMiss 0, wearing black?' ish edition was discovered in Spain. It is a He --"She is mourning for her husband." targe pamphlet of two leaves or four pages,, She—"Why, she never had a husband„ He ilia quadrate shall folio shape. The text ---"No ; that is why she mourns." is plainly that from which the Aulbrosian "I feel sick at heart," said the rejected shall quarks tv printed, but there are here lover as he leaned upon the railing of the and theta in the folio certain tokens of a steamer. "7'#n with yyou," remarried a fel- Catalan workshop, such as nnaaes at, vent, 1ow-passouger, "only mute is further down." qualis, tensporala, whirl# the Spanish editor 1v ex the small quarto corrected(nungcstad, s Although still brown's the aril, venid, quales, temporales), and we are tutus And itolvers are still asleep ; enabled to conclude that the foliowas print. The hens are working bard ed in Barcelona, where the court awes resid- And eggs again are cheap. fug; when Culumbue sent his letter from Ata C7turch Fair (man to neighbor)-- Palos on the lith of lath of Mayall, 1493. "Look here, I've fouud a spoiled oyster." 'lie waited for permission to follow it before Neighbor—"Don't say anything about it. he quitted Palos, and it was probably ;theist They ,night come round and take it away the Riding April when }wrenched Barcelona, from you. 'leo that slate, or to sometime before the they .come,. In the matrimonialmarket it doesn't snake so 1uneli differ=ence about a girl's eolnpl_exion if her income is only fair. "It is wonderful," said Spriggs. "What that ?" t4The number of ]roles a porous plaster lac - tory can use up in a year." "So the plumber's wife is getting a di- vorce from her husband?" "Yes." "What's the platter?" "She's going to marry the iceman." down English sidewalks." 41, ire will, Moike, Peat better chance havewe to walk an the British flag, Oi'd loike to know';" after the infliction of punishment on the up- "Ah," he said as thepast#nan handed 1#int close of the month, we may assign the print - per part of the back of the thighs, and in a a .letter, "tin epistle 1" "No," said his wife as lug of the folio. The .Matin translation, s lawful manner, the culprit commits suicide she opened the envelope and a tailor's bill . which has so often been printed, was finished 1 or dies in any manner in consequence of the fluttered to the floor. "Not an epistle ; a on the 28th of April and carried abroad for , punishment lie had undergone, no p018011 callect." publication ; and it may be supposed that ' shall be held responsible for the same." First Club :flan - 4GI see by the 11apers theArnbrOsian reprint belongs to the same L ii,esa it ts#se had.been so glaring as to ac- that firs, Langtry iris really silted Freddy period—that is, to the time lar the month of cite the whole neig hhorhaod- -and the 1xe111#ax lit." SacA10I (15lb iia#t ' "1'# ob tllly lay or June. Chinese are not easily n#aved gleans nnssld slue discovered that, somehow or other, ho A 1 u isian dealer was the first purchaser (Iii 1t to 11a tip t* • .. -n away Ma lief # 1 h It 1p x explain � } load got it into his head that she ii#tcuded to of the unique Baecelona origaialal, whirl# is Proprieties. The paver and venalit of of. mart 1#ins " now in possession of a bookseller in l.on- ileiinl lunderlings, the ge#feral 1n evaylence of Two gentlemen cabin at the house of ono 1011. Stirs ry, the cifflleuities sift ndmg; appeals, who bore the Itaune of Fish, and observing , , and the absence of that publicity which the portraits of the children of the family Gen. Midtlletona Career.. y render illegality practically impossible in en the wails, one of them remarked to itis i En land, make It very diDlicnit to secure the ie , n Maim General Sir Frederick D. ;tliddle- colnpauian, sardines. Yes,,, replu d the atm („ M• (x., (7. B., is n son of the 14101 CORRECTION OF I:..lt'STOcE other, "little fishes done in ail.,' Major'Gencher Charles Middleton, whose in China. Cases do, however, occasionally "I tell you what it is, ;1lehitahle," he mime will be well remembered in connection " happen ; and one snob was recorded in the said, as he handed her half a dozen of flea.. with many birave deeds in British India and Pelting (.a.+ rpt last September. A draper at nuts out of the bag from which he hall been Afghanistan. He was educated at the Royal a small town in Central China found in the launching during; the first act, „ when a min Mititlry College at Sandhurst and obtained l morning that his Shap had been plundered. is a lnob he will show lu�mselfahog." "That . his commission in 1!].42. He served in the tieing out vi prospect, Ito found some bits of the truth, Lige," she replied. Fiftyeighth Regiment in New South Wales , at most Noth on a ju#11:latriver ivahor.nk and a little He then seems to#rther1 have . "Doctar to (filbert(aged, fo1#r)—"lent (tits#e fightingd New lin' and the lrti ila Maori 111 1518 stretched a poi it, declared that he had found our feebly oprotruue ded theut y" Siek i'11 endsMac tang net' Iw a �•I.l pr0n#)ted to a lieutenancy in the the OlOtil 0#t the julIk, and so procured the. Doctor-�-" No, 110; put it right crit," °I'1lo Ninety -meth Regiment end served in India arrest of e.)1 on board. The magistrate Earth- little fellow shook his head weakly and the t1 util l i.>l,'st'Itel1 h0 passed a very successful with employed ed torture -=tortured the eresv teas gathered ill I#is a ca. °` I c an't d0ator ('atu11i1uati(n and was promoted met tin in into admittingthemselves accessories, and a J 18,1 He served as avolunteer in the su tortured to death the two 111315, father and it's fastenedton to me." preasi.nr of the Indian rebellion in 1855 in son, who had chartered the boat. When the budget Ant how do yes lolls bon# on aanl;nand of a troop of the Na#vaUb of Moor - ease came before thechiefpprovincialautllori- tn' jury, Patrick?" Patriek--" It's s0mo'at si#edabad's cavalry. He served in Burmah. ties on report, they considered it so unsatis- factory that they sentenced the draper to be strangled for giving malicious false evidence resulting in the death of the accused, and the magistrate to be oaslliere(1 and banished for carelessness and illegal torture. Sore Eyes Catarrh Lameness Female Complaints Sunburn Soreness Sprains Chang OSE Bruises Scalds Piles POND'S Burns Wounds EXTRACT Aeo10 ALL iMITA- TIONS. THEY MAY BE DANGEROUS. FAC -SIMILE OF BOTTLE W ITH BUFF WRAPPER. Insect Bites Stings Sore Feet INFLAMMATIONS an d HEMORRHAGES ALL / A N DEMAND POND'S EX- TRACT. ACCEPT NO SUBSTITUTE FOR IT THIS IS THE ONLY RiGHT KIND. DONOT TAKE ANY OTHER. Dying Man's Vision, An impressive incident occurred years.ago in Hartford. The man who related itwasso profoundly impressed with the reality of a supramortal meeting and recognition that he never forgot it. He is still living in a West- ern State. On this occasion he wash watch- er at the bedside of a dying man—a printer. He is a.very "practical,” hard-headed man and one of the last to be given to fancies. For half an hour, he said, the dying man had been sinking. The breathing, growing more labored, became slower and fainter. The watcher thought the man was dead, when suddenly his eyes opened with a glad look of wonder and joyful recognition ; he threw up his arms as m an embrace and his whole face was "illuminated as he rapturously exclaimed " Why, mother 1" The same instant he fell back dead. "Nothing will: ever convince me," said the wat.:her, relating the occur renceyears afterwards, ."that that man didn' actually see his mother then and there." The habitual drinking of boiled wate would insure escape from sickness and death to thousands of the human race yearly. It requires a deal of log -rolling': to make saw -mill business pay. r e "AnLEis Willis Our Peace." 0 restless soul of man, unsatisfied With the world's empty noise and feverish glare, Sick with its hopes of happiness denied, The dust and ashes of its promise fair, Baffled and buffeted, thy days preploxed, Thy cherished treasures profitless and vain, What comfort haat thou, captive, thwarted, vexed, Mocked by mirage of joys that merge in pain ? Though love be sweet, yet death is strong, and still Inexorable change will follow thee ; Yea, though thou vanquish every mortal ill, Thou shalt not conquer mutability ! The human tid goes rushing down to death ; Turn thou a .moment from its current broad e And list. what is this the silence saith coshing,' Bridget." Bridget—" An' is it harrud worrick ?" Patrick—" Wull, it's easy enough • decidin' phich soitl is roight pllin only wan is Oirish; but it's harrud worrick deoidin' phin both soids is Oirish." with the Twenty-ninth Regiment. He then served during the Indian mutiny in General Frank's column on the march to the siege of Lueknow and was present as aid-de-camp at all the fights that took place on that march. He was aid-de•eamp to General Sir E. Lu• England. in Africa. Bgaard, K. C. B., at the siege and capture of Sir Samuel Baker is second only to Stan- Lueknow, in pursuit of Roor Singh and in Stan- ley as an authority upon all questions for e Victoria Cuent battle. Hrosa for e was recommended actsofrelated to Central Africa; possibly, he is a bravery, but being on the personal staff was higher authority than $tanlcy u on such. not considered eligible by ora Clyde. He African questions as bear upon Burgeon served as brigade major to the field force in Ondc, employed in attacking the forts of the rebel chiefs. He was romoted major politics and trade. The alliance of kinin Pasha with Major Wissmaln its military agents pp of the German Empire is justified by Baker, in 1858 and served a coupla of years in and by him almost alone of Englialnnen ; his England. He then went as aid-de-camp to reasons we hold to be well grounded. Africa General Franklyn in Gibraltar, and was is to be the fighting and exploring ground of brigade major and police magistrate in that Europe in the nineteenth and twentieth fortress, Subso uently he was appointed centuries, just as India was in the eighteenth ehiof of staff of GelIeral Sir Henry Bates, and earlier part of the nineteenth, or as commanding the British troops in Malta. America was m the fifteenth, sixteenth, and On returning to England in 1862 he passed much of the seventeenth centuries; and brilliant examinations at the Hythe School Germany, now forced by circumstances into of Musketry and Imperial Staff College. the number of colonizing nations, cannot be He was promoted a lieutenant colonel and kept out of African action. To the shrewd joined the Twenty-ninth in Canada in 1868. eye of Sir Samuel Baker it seems best that In 1870 he became superintending officer of Germany should direct its efforts toward the garrison of instruction to the forces in acquiring possession of the equatorialregions England. From 1874 until 1884 he was while England should persevere on its olego vernor and commandant of the Royal time policy of making settlements upon the Military Collage., Sandhurst. He was then seaboard. England neverhas been successto - ful in her projects for the occupation of imported command of the Canadithe Canadian government nlom lit militia. Central Africa, nor ever unsuccessful was then Colonel Middleton. For his And n, m sea -colonization. Germany, which is services in commanding the Northwest O soul ? "Be still, and know that I am as distinctly a military as England is field force in the suppression of the rebellion God !" a naval power, is likely to accomplish in 1885 he was promoted to a generalship, quicklThe mighty God ! Here shalt thou find thy d won d and profitably at slowly 1C1hnd nags was created at K. C. M. G. and received. rest, a cost far beyond the measure of profit. a 'grant of,�o0,000 from Canada. Gen- 0 weary one ! There is naught else to But it is a mark of the fierce energy of eral Middleton has the New Zealand latter -da progress that Belgium, Italy,ClaClasps, the India Minting Mf thehl ash Germany France, and England have, iand the, the NorCrosthwest of MeCodal. Hisder of salary Bath little more than a decade, apportioned be- 4d $4,000per annum,awith house, grounds, is tween them a continent which yesterday, as dlight, nd perquisites, which fire „ and light, etc., and which bring it were, was called the dark, but which Ms total income to about $10,000 a year. now is better known to travelers than are The general lives atRideau cottage, situated many parts of Australia or even of Southern at the back door of Rideau Hall, the govern- America. A very few years hence there oreneral's residence. He is a member of will be no more lands to explore ; the rest- the United Service Club of PaliMall, London, less pioneer of colonization will have set his England, and the Rideau Club of Ottawa. stakes in every corner of barbarism. He is a short, thick set man, with a jolly red countenance, white hair and a bristling white mustache. He has a jaunty walk, and in appearance is the beau ideal of a soldier. The only thing that spoils this latter descrip- tion is his height, which is not more than five feet four inches. The general. looks far better on horseback, attired in a brilliant uniform of scarlet and gold, than he does when walking in plain citizen's clothes. When riding, an aid-de-camp gallops after him wherever he may go. One very amus- ing feature of the general is his voice, which is a shrill treble. When he pipes out his orders on parade or review many a bystander and soldier can scarcely refrain from a gentle "snicker," the effect. is so comical. The. general is a married man. His wife, Lady Middleton, was formerly a Miss Doucet,. daughter of a wealthy French-Canadian merchant of. Montreal. She is a devout Catholic,while the general occasionally at- tends the church of England. They have several children. The eldest boy is now a cadet at the Royal Military College in Kings- ton, Ont. He is going to follow in his father's footsteps and earn his name and fame. for infants and Chiidfen. ,..cpitoristssowellodapttedtcpchildre4that Caiterla enter. Belle, t'1aa.t3pakiea, lrecommenditaasuperiortoany prescription Hour Steins , mairemi, Bructat oa„ banal ea me." H. A. Aaenza, alt. D Kills �wWtatorrnsr s ,I . and woman" dr,.. 11180.Oaititri St, Brown, N- T. Without ialuliollir aaii!orli.t� Tal CESIUM Dtollrealer, rr Murray Street, N -11.. 1S, . . know, Naught else to seek—here thou mayest cease thy quest, Give thyself up. He leads where thou shalt go. The changeless God 1 Into my troubled life Steals strange sweet peace; the pride that drove thee on, The hot ambition and the selfish strife That made thy misery, like mist are gone; And in their place a bliss beyond all speech; The present resignation of the will That lifts thee out of bondage, out of reach Of death, of change, of every earthly ill: Polo. While polo is particularly adapted for play on prairie land and on the ranches of the North-West, it is strange that there is not a single club in Canada. In fact it is from the ranches that all the ponies are got A Strange Marriage Law. with which the game is played in America. And polo is without exception the most an - The Times of India publishes the rules cient of all the forms of equestrian sport now which the Bombay Government, with the as- in vogue. Its origin is shrouded in mystery. sent of the Governor-General, has drawn up Over a thousand years ago the Princes of the for regulating 'the marriage expenses of the Mikado's family were accustomed to play it Kadva Kanbn caste in the district of Ahmed- in the vast grounds of the Imperial Palace abed and Kaira. Power to make these rules at Kioto. At a less remote epoch the British is given under the act for the prevention of conquerors of India found that polo was the female infanticide. Some of them are curs- favorite pastime of the Rajahs, who wagered rious. The chentlo, or present given at the their finest jewels on the results of the game. bethrothal by the bride's father to the bride- It soon found favor in the eyes of the English groom's father, is not to exceed one rupee officers. Inter-regunental matches were play- ancl seven suparis and betel -nuts. The mar- ed, and the game became more and more pop- riage chentlo payable to the bridegroom's ular. Moreover, it was regarded with the ut- father may be one rupee and shall not exceed most approval by the Government, which re - 100 rupees. The value of the cocoanuts dis- alized that a game of polo, stiffly contested, tributed at the marriage procession is not did mere to improve the horsemanship of its to exceed 10 rupees, and the same limit is cavalry officers than months of work in the fixed on the value of the mosalu, or present riding -school. About twenty years ago polo by the bride's maternal relation. The pay- 'eves imported into England, the first . match ment at the ceremony when the bridegroom beingplayed atShorncliffe, by cavalry officers touches with his finger his mother-in-law's jest home from India. It quickly became ex - dress must not go beyond two rupees. The • ceedingly popular, and its fame soon spread number of dinner parties given by the bride's to the Continent, where it is now played by family is not to be more than five, and the Frenchmen, Germans, Russians and Italians. number of guests at each not niore than 1 It was introduced into America in 1873 by twenty-five. The marriage party going to , Mr. James Gordon Bennett, and took root; the bride's village are not to spend more than' at once. The game, which we herewith take 30 rupees, and when the bridegroom is snit -'pleasure in commending, would prove of ed to a social evening at his father-in-law's great benefit to the North-West Mounted house, he is not to be paid more than two police and to all to whom a good seat in the rupees nor to take with him more than five saddle, with perfect command of a horse, is men. i' a necessity. Consoling Mrs. Avnoo="Bridget,; the parlor win- dows are so dirty I can't see through them:" Bridget—"Wu1ll' mum, I only jilt came from the front door, and beyant the faces of Miss Fashion and her young man in the bay -windy opposite,' thur's nothin' acros the way wort lukin' at. " A Rare Young Man. Bloodeood—"Prettyboy is a rare young man, isn't he?" Blobson-"Yes, about as under -done a chap as 1; ever saw." GOING TO CALIFORNIA. VIA THE Santa, fe Route. -lv Civergr! ...... -. 1,r. Maness Olt, Ar. Iiutoiltneen .......... ir.Trinidad . ir. LasVenae. ►r. Albuquerque ,r Barstow... ... .... Ir. bus Angelee4:20p- #c San Diego., ... _ ..-. • ..., . 5:25 p. ui,.. k25 p, lu, 7:30e. la. 11:18 a. W. 6:04 P. n]., 12:30 a, la. 1e;4.5a, In, so, 4.20 p.re.' Sun ,.. fun Won Tues Tnee wed Thur. ). its Atop ._ Ture Tuea )red Wed Thur Fri 11'4 l; ri Thu peri Sat Sat at Sat ilted limy ',Thr 121',:tW' Fri sat !Sirs 'Sun Sun she Pat 'a scat 1Kun Bien iii ort Nen ,. e 'et lea am% ilea stele Tase Wed Wed Wed You get the ony line of tbr7ugh oars without change Chicago to Iara An g , and you save 27 hours tin e, OFFICE -44 GRISWOIID.,ST, DETROIT, 341IPII, GEO. E. GILMAN. Passenger Agent, CREAM -.TARTAR PUREST, STRO CESTT BEST* CONTAINS NQ ALUM, AMMONIA, .LIME, PHOSPHATES, or any injurious materials. E. W. GI LLETT, xO CI icA'GO,,!ThL. itlaa'3'rdeo CE'.EB9AT3DIIOFALYZAO' iliEd THE EXETER TIMES. Its publiened every Thursday mora ,mat Ti MES STEAM PRINTING HONE slain->:tree5.uearly'epporito ir#tt• ,.'5 Jewel's? Stolo,Exeter, Q.nt.,byJelin %Volta 4 bun ,Pro.. priet..re. TUTU Or AltvnnrNuiie ; eirettnsertion.perline .... ....... .„„.....10 ronin Null]. subla uoetiusertdon,pes line 3nein*, TO Insure insertion, advertlkement,talion i is sent in notlater than Iveuuesday reaming oarJOII PitI.WTINS DEP aRTIIENTilt.WM t the largest end best equipped In the Ceunty 1 Huron. All work entrusted to um will reset* • rpromptattention, Decisions itegardiug papers. Aly person wllotakesa liallerreauifrlyfsant no poat.oILce,whether directed In biotite—nut or +nother'a, or wbother he has eubaoribsd or not to responsible for payment. it if aporson orders his paper .lisconlinued: he must pay all atrears or the publisher may aoutinue to send it until the payment is made. and then collect the whole amount, whether: I o pastor is taken from offs o not. the in amts for subscriptions, tha snit way bit netttuted in the place wn0re the repel la pub. !shod, nithough the subscriber may reside' hundreds of miles away, 4 The courts have decided that refusing to take newspapers or petiodlcalafrotn the post. offieo,or removing sari leaving thous uncalled oris prima facie evidence of int outlawed lrau : Ne,. The Most Successfulinflamed,. erer dlaoor area, knot buster.. ].toad proof below]. does KENDALL'S SPAVIN CORE. orrice or Cuanwce A. SSynsa, Bgluntut or F€LSVYLAND BAY AND TROTTING Barn Holism. ELMWOOn, Iu., Nov. 26,1&33. Da. B.J. I;E.•WALL Co Dear Sirs: I have always purchased your Ken - dell's Spavin Cure by the half dozen bottles, I would like prices in larger quantity. I think 1t Is one of the best liniment^ On earth. I have need it ,at my stables forthree years. Yours truly, Casa A. S.•rrnsa.. KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE. IlaooRvsw, N. Y., November 8, 1888. Da B. J. Ir a =CO. Dear Sura :I desire tt2give you teettmonlal et my good opladbnofyour Kendan'Sspavin Cure.Ihave used ft for Lame11os4. SOW Joints and. *nimbus, and I have found it a sure cure, l coral. any recommend It to all horsemen. Years truly. A. H. Grunt: r. Manager Troy Laundry Stables. KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE. SANT, Wn,TON COUNT; Olno, DOC. 18,1868. Da. 11..T. KENDALL Co. Gents: I reel It my duty to se.y whatrl have done with your Kendeil'e Spavin Cure. stave cure twenty -Are horses that had t±ipnvine. ten o7 Mon Bow ,able :aM eted'Mtfi MIRHeail, pod lam%ot Biu .Taw. Since I have had ono or yoUr books and folio's/ 8110 directions, I Inlve never lost 8 case of any.Stad. Yours trulISy ANDREW Turtvan. Horse Doctor. KENDALL'S SPAVIN Pride its per bottle, or six bottles for E...? 'rug - gists bare it or can got it for ypt of ou, or it will o, nut to any tors Da, address Y.satnsiL Co, Bno bnrr'gby h Fanla, �er BOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. old Witch wortb 81100. watch. In the world. Twists' Umekaeper Wormwood howl. 10110 001.11 huathaT Yale. Both Iodic.' awd pan slam with works and <taawoat a• actual value. ONA rawa0alq eachlocalky cos carom lar free, toltather wlrh our hefty E •.. -. ma•aluablaarmor lleataoatli l ARRAalt• HVats eaa sample., as walk at the wattlt, ars fie. A0 the warityoot need do 13 to show what we and you to thole who val4-7oat• Mend: and netahbon and thou about you—that alw,nreaw8A in vat uablo t tido for u,, which bolds Peyton wawaowa atatrad,. sod that wit are repaid, We pay all Ospreaa, fr.faht,ats.Aeatr you know all, It you would like to go to work for 1.. as wet lam from 8180 to 60 per week and upwards. Addreea,a tltlneota d Co.. ox silo. PoMIM1ud.liatuo., KANSAS, TEXAS, OKLAHOMA COLORADO-,_ UTAH, NEW MEXICO CALIFO RNIA, ARIZONA, OREGON, And all pointe west of the :iliesour Riva, via the Santa Fe Route FROM CHICAGO. For particulars and t ieke s s e your earest ticket agent, or address (GEO. E. GILMAN, Passeeger Agent, 74 Grstwold at, Detroit, Mich. GEO. T. NICHOLSON, General Pae1. ani Ticket Agenic Topeka, Kansa,: 9 Oords9 RunsEasy NO BACKACHE. ^r•g ONE •MEAN. Write fa. deeoriptiveeitatoa(1n nM containing' testlynonialm •froou. l,,r,o or people who. Bawl lava* BeF:4 40 9 cards dolly. ';11.) now tseaeeea. fully used. 11011 con be hat• whore there. law.. Cadency. A #`W 1s1j6.•,,rr103 for Ging saws se8Cf,em- wlth each ma lot. by the ilea of tuir tell everybody! can Glc their.givn move now and do ithotterthamtho. greatest e1 sad Without .it. Aesuoced. to• all orotic-dut Saws very Man who owns a, saw should• have one. No to pay; .5. x , ,tastnro to Glr'- d.. Asia ppWoen�RLaO.,o8r08w1r.ie11Fa4aNGt,A5.Oo.1 : HOURS 0.- WHITS COM 18 FOR NAM' SAM' 0 et(. One of thepes -- BEBT Tel -1e escapes lin Our .re•. the world. r unequaled, turd t,.ill .s400nrc toott1 paeodenee sae& masa to.bo above. Onlyy in *hone who w wile 4,...o. ss & a. to un at oneo.rtn maks sato• $ .the chnneo. Alt you havata4ota: return in to show oar geohit 4., these who coil—your netfahon ;P,. _,�,: and these, around you, , eis AYE ht ginning of thio ndvokfaentenr. .howl thn ,moll ono of the: w.l,<. apps.. The .'cl SV l &' en'[ t''c, the spp m,c. of lt.raduewl :,ti ^^014/14 y, A/� ry�� ��++ �1 pp��,� CAA .PEARSON 6iC L'0.3: I M C) Fit ', MD. tate about the .40,48 part of lo bulk. It ie n Fn. d dowbipdfbtahe•-. scope, as krill as 111 easy to carry. we will Ono can makefom DS (0810 0 day atten.t, from rho ,tact wich,. nut uxperiauoe. Better write at ones. we pay ill! -erpres.oh.o' rs,. Address. a.: HALLETT.& CO„ Dos SSC), 1'i, a'rraxv«8•at1z: FREE Y. IS CRAP ID iQVE ST813[liffjr e. package o; goods ~000th. two dollars to manufacture, and a larger 100p Picture Book, that will surely put.. you. on the road to a hanrleotno fortune. Writa quick, and Bend Se. sllv)r, to help par pore, tags. Mention this poi' cr. A. W. $1Nl'i , tranontfe, N. 3f...