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The Exeter Times, 1890-8-14, Page 7
Sutferers FB01T Stomach and Liver deranges menu .Dysspepsia, Biliousness, Sick- Heatlaclxes and Constipation-fxnl a safe and certain relief is Ayer's Piths. In all cases where a ea. (hurtle is needed, these Pills arerecom. mended by leading physicians.. ' Dr. T. B. Hastings: of Daitimere, says. ",Ayer's Pills are the best cathartic and. aperient within the reach of ms1uofc . slop." Dr. John W. Brown, of Oceana, 'W. Va., 'writes . "I have prescribed Ay{r's • Pills in My practice, and And them ex. ceUent. I urge their general use in families." • "Eipika number oi'.rearsTTeasafflicted wi•h • ,nes wldehalmost•destroyed he In 'ed 1T �. x tried various {•p 'S n r (D1C , hut molt i 71 b 0 <r, afforded 1 me any relief Il.it-1 1 began to tape .dyer's ]Pills.' -G. S. "Wunderlich, Scranton, Pa. "I ,have weed area's Pills for the past thirty pees, and arra satisfied I sliteald not be alive to-rlay if it hod not been for theta. They eu'ted me of dyspepsia sia 'nen all other relnedie s failed. and their oecasional use leas d;,ept Ino in a healthy eontlitlen ever iiwee, -T.. P. Ifrown,• ('heater. Pa. "Having been subject. for years, to constipation,, without being able to tints much relict,1 at last tried Ayer's Pills, • and eleeto it both a duty and a pleasure to testify that I have derived great ben- efit from their use, ,For over two years "last I baro taken one td these ,frills every night before retiring. I would not willingly be without thend,"---O. 'Y. lion uaan, 24; East Main apt.,. Carlisle, Pa. "Ayers Pills have been user, in my fancily upw rd i et twenty Tears, and d CO o 1 rt.lr verified neve n 1 r rt it9.,1t 't1 that x t s , r ➢• .1n1ea1 for them. In :Meeks cf piles, trent wine tl 1 suffered many yearn they y afforded arae greater relief tlh.:nanti tt:a 4. ld hag• I ever ttierl.a"•-Tatotnai 1". Adores, Holly Springs, Texa. tm V . :i Pills, PlIDDAUDD IAF Dr. dl. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. field Uy all Druesesti eve taealrre is hte dielue. gating 4the a 4t curs astral two to sea peels, b. IRaslag oar ard,httdas 11 ed, eaate1li41Mr119 Cala dM W*,mn, WO Will►tn"A free 'onto 7�e,e,ea ie sick taas;ity:.*horwy wag ,main- ra,hics 'sands In rite - t lard silk oft the ataerkMe,k4 V* Milli alt, tervIrg ,o a osouN,tt e dif ear .Cigar ,ad Ta.d»h'ta. art ea. In Wren nips* dead for sr vibes we*,evd. rte r"es, uha, r,t11 stye a t elzr,Cnd atter V u>raeh1414 At no. •ao on, ow„ an� Coen+•. 7k 4 zur:'1 mud. no k *de reeve- tio 2elIODOP Ponca*. e[W vehie:e hose' t of 0.74l$ ', W0.740 el atmcna . tr ,2,*,'".Ii7• r Mott _ •T,�,� . ai eshareatN actri nuts Sc , r`,r t a .eY aua t P 1 e. ,at.r, 4 '$.e.H t e a' 1 } t'b :Ch1 it at faL ae11 n to w dd a �d t i \-t FE,,e _,gin ,ss. , t capital ,rat on , tiraf na3lr;ClGo Giron. lar is 4r:rntetatl tt l.i at dd. 0 t the Car.•. Shea w,x Naar 01hso sootor to the for .. cad the Atr,Thnao(tr.t;.sotat` haract-otohoert,.toSeth«ra4xrar,:a, sx!SLia1 . VO., llo* Td.>e sAuntiuSts.Aturaaio FR WILL' POSITIVELY CORE glIAMKI xS ll HE STONER Sowel Ga; :plaints, Elarnccen 3l SIMMER COPLAiliTS KEEP A BOTTLE IN TETE HOUSE. j' ,,'�= „ 17.4at` ''` IT.it- SOL1't MY ALL OEALi:RS FOR Sore Eyes Catarrh Lameness Female Complaints Sunburn Soreness Sprains Chafing ESIFi Bruises Scalds poNPiles WoundBurns EXTRACT s InsgSet AVOID ALL MITA. TIONS. THEY MAY BE DANGEROUS. FAC -SIMILE OF BOTTLE WITH BUFF WRAPPER. Sin g� Sore Feet INFLAMMATIONS MMRTloNs and HEMORRHAGES LL PAIN DEMAND POND'S EX- TRACT. ACCEPT NO SUBSTITUTE FOR IT THIS IS THE ONLY RIGHT KIND. DONOT TAKE ANY OTHER. $od 0- wt:n. S EESforSolid10. unttuiadBest Eis watch in tho worl•Y Perfect timekeeper.ranted. Betvyolid Oko - l— 1butting Coes. Bath ladles! and gents' sizes, with works and cases of equal salve. One Person Is each le. caltiy can Secure one Woo, together with our large ended. cable line of Household Samples. These samples, so well as the watch, we sena Free, and after you have kept Chest In 'your Lome for menthe and shown them to Qom who ;nay have called, they become your own pt art,.. ' These who write at once can be sure of receiving. the Kotcb and Samples, Wopoay all uprose, freight, eta Address Stinson,ris'I'r' .,,3e-. Man StrY,$"mrtlaudolldala0s SCENES IN NEW,tQUND:,AND A COUNTRY OF PROBLIMATIO PQS- SIBILITI..S, The Soetal Urgatntzatton of the ('olonl- 1e11'roenui)tuad ,,cine -The *lettermen And Their Relalttons til'tcla the Mer- chant s-lir1Y to Vet There.. The first thing that attracts the attention of a visitor to Newfoundland i$ the poor little beggar of e crossing -sweeper who stands directly int the way with his broom in one ,land ala, itis ,tat in the other, pictur. •esque and importunate. Tho second Is the _idly, red•clteeked barmaid, rather pretty Awl very pert, with her arms akimbo, and ter head. set upou one side, dealing out eat ➢ 1skey and ort wine, This strange interesting island ought to be of great service to Canadians, It cer- wilily would be if they knew more about it. if they ,;new how distinct! and individual are its charms, how unlike its people, its eltoa to its vegetation, t ' o ne its scenery and its nl,enners and customs to those of the Da. minion and what a perfect change of condi- tions eon be had by , journey of a thousand miles front the heat and dust and humidity and hurry and strife and vexation of Toronto or 1lolitive', to the bright, clear shies, the ,1av1►ing seas, the sublime eoasts and the tenaaated wildeluees of this •oiliest and new- est Western land, It is A change which puts brightness into nue a eyes .and energy into one's mueeles. Nature's fancy was.activelyat work when this island was erected. Its coast -flue is en expression of her nnost erratie humors, and: she -has surrounded it with • conditions of sea.and air which add immensely to Tian BTRsette sensate:me lit suggests. At nil times its general ap- pearance in wild and bleak, but this effe:t fe profoundly heightened when it is viewed ad -toss rt raging sea and through a dismal fn • Sights ts that may be grand 1 are then >iktetl awful. Cliffs thac a be noble tae on hideous slliles, and stand trembling :u the mist lilts: gouty speetays. In these ummee tnoltths the Winds are eat nal only _,s.itt•fnlly enotiug, the sea sells peacefully, and the fags are withdrawn. Lwin then the ;demo 19 charatteriaed by a sombre m 4 aahcatl ch¢•ln 's a -�impressive t l n t tray lei be - se l 1 4• 9 t. it as Sten tluvll>glr .a crystal atmo- sphere. Long stretchesot lofty granite tri. a,nstalttly engage the eve as 3 von glide wifely through the ocean. Their lease is ver fringeI With thv'trhite ermine of the Itaeasaing urea. Their sttlltmit, lifted into peaks of nature's noblest architecture, stands in defiant strength against the cern- lean sky. These grins effects are not to be found along our sandy coasts. They have all the int crest of novelty to a('ailad.ian, They are much (heightened hl, closer iuspeetion. One: toes ltr,t neer, a very ry noetic. temperi/tnent to nave his interest iasteate•t and his iamgina- :hens xd:lte d IT tete weird beauty of a New- teeuftell;ung lame and the seismal. grandeur ,f :a Newfoundland mountain. TI4O sten,' that - main, he rt bixtctl. It takes ,s tora•ibse ot••,>�i+aa Of the itltellert. ,kda stand upon one of theca" a'tat, -at puler of hoary reek and to look out upon the restless sea, with its fleets of tined malt and of d1AelNZFM'E.T id'NI1Rflta:; yard. The flags are of all kinds and colors, shapes and designs, as much liberty being given in these respects as in the, construction and arrangement of a coat -of -arms, Many people are content with the ordinary British ensign, but others go in for complicated pat- terns and gently colors. So much importance is, attaehetl to this matter that eases ere on record, where a man has built his flag -pole before he l Wit .his house. The merchants entertain with lavish hos- pitahty. They have the finest Ovines on earth' and the choicest cigars. Their favorite wine is port. It teems to mature in the cold, damp climate of Newfoundhumtl and gradually to acquire :4 Ila'for that is simply exquisite. If you are promptly and involuntarily impress- ed with this fact you acquire a, distinction which is of not a slight social advantage. It a eats to P justify P � the ,Newfoundlander 1 id giving you his ecnfidence and be grows im- mediately friendly, I would not imply that he lacks cordiality for its own sake. In his home he is as GR.t'`1( tt ANT; DELIGHTFUL as a man coup, be There is a quality of smoothness, if I may ca11 it so, which is ex- ceedingly restful in the household of the St. Joints merchant. The servants are servants: -not servile, fawning hang -heads, nor iatt- nertinent, noise- pests. They are of the hshing population, simple-minded but in- telligent. It they are gods they are apt to be very pretty and to possess red cheeks, odium. hair, blue eyes and fair, slender hands. It may not render tltenl the less in- teresting to arid, that their wages vary from a month to L The best of thele. how- ever, are rapidly. drift ing to Canada, where, it is said, they quickly come to know their rights as free and - independent Canadian CitiRenS,• Tile merchant cells everything from it shoe- string to a fishing sebooner, Ile generally 0-cllpiee two orthree building= oudcirti<m et4Otnull➢s stocks of goods. He deals in the "'out -ports," or fishing villages lying along the coast, thio all ""planter,." These con - White &fl^. l a o :d t f ni deet. 1 1 assnthe 1 1 SOeka re- oa a - aatattt of aon Thei •nand. does not describe them clearly to Canadian Missile. It does loot inlpl�• that they httvean agehmltnrzl function. In other lands they might be ea11etl brokers, or retailers, or factor~ They keep little stores in their various rt I villages 99:,1 they soppily the fisher- man z withl u everything. t gar procures He c ares l o e, I through u h a their apace his.. la,,t:, his Hackle, Ms salt, 1; his drynig hatttehh and st 1ges, end all that his family Ouse:mei tiny by day. AU this is' bots ht on malt and !mid for from. hi:a catch. If he doesn't ewe+ he 9regnently doesn't pay, ao that the ,satsr.hsatat is compelled to Urn ,3 S At.;.aTY t -r ItleWis, and, eoltsetllr<•;asl,', era (lingo exorbitant prices. The ti'he'men are kept in yarioas degrees of poverty, all leardeluag on theab- jeet.. and tht' merchant in various degrees of anxiety. all bordering on the intense. This credit system is.rt great injury to Ne4vfound- 1wd. It is limed tear these who give and those who tai:(, but the ne;'essitteo of the fiehernu a ave .i t, ",wider tble and the mercan- tile custom is -re roosting that nothing short 010 nten'cantiti' revolution would abolish it. It is often asked what Newsfomtalaild is food for. what are its resonrees and its fu- ture..lide hem its fisheries, of which I shall tell you presently, ite pessibilitiesare-proble- m,.tteal. No little is known of the interior that no one can say Iiow Large an area of agricultival Land, of merchantable timber or of valuable grazing land exists. Different aulswer•s ere given to all these questions. Seven -months of the year are cola and bleak. The climate then i"1 extremely trying lhar- ing the live umutlisbegirn.ng with.lune and ending in Oetober the weather is perfect, ex- hilarating, clear and tine. The skies are in- tensely Mee, the mean i,erenohuul beautiful, and the breeze deliciously cool. The soil along the court is very light and stony, but cortainly it is mueli better in the interior, and probably during these summer mouths a reasonable degree of farming could be suc- cessfully pursued.. But the staples of produce must always be imported. It is sufficiently demonstrated that along the Western coast there is a continuous extent from north to south of valuable mining property. to 100k down Where it rolls and daohes and 'weeks and. surges against the len, ieliiing via in -a cetttlict 1esnitless but unceasing to look back upon the laud,, strewn with glacial theft, now clipping into narrow r:slue, now stretching away iultrh gentle ntea'lmv, now Cisine, into 1Iftyhills, wrapped in their (lark Mantles of fir ; to loot; through ,ho narrow passes of the sea into still liar - here, arnui:d which cluster the little eot• Agee of the fishermen snugly ensconced unor:t; the rocks -to watch the strange and varied pit:tnre, touched as it is with n thou - ;:eel odors, bright, gloomy, dull and gay, is tin experience of infinite delight. Newfoundland, although it was{liecovered only three years after Columbus ,guides at Sial Salvador, although it was annually re. sorted to by the fishing fleets of four Euro• peau nations as soon as it was known to exist, although it was colonized by so early an adventurer, as Sir Humphrey Gilbert, al- though, it was the first scene of Lord Balti- more's colonial enterprise, and although it has had it permanent population for more than a century, is yet to -day an =known land. Only its coastline has been thorough- ly explored. Its interior remains a wilder- ness of mysteries. This seems, on the surface, to be a very extraordinary fact, for the island's area is somewhat leas than that of the Provinee of Ontario. It contains 42,000 square miles. But when you become ac- quainted with the people of Newfoundland you quiekly come to know why then have lacked the nmceutives which would have prompted exploration. The story is told in :t single sentence --they are a fishing people, and a fishiLg people will not be persuaded or forced into doing anything but fishing. But one man has actually crossed the island. He occupied three months in his journey, and the tolyl many remarkable stories when he got back, Reindeer, hears eel birds are the only inhabitants. Probably in no other part of America are caribou so numerous or so easilyhunted.Theyare to be found in lap c hands and are frequently encountered with- in a dozen miles of the coasts. But fisher- men do not hunt caribou. They are not in- terested in geographical research. They will not till the soil. • They are content to abide by their luck in the fishery. This state of affairs, and most naturally, has had unfortunate results upon the colony's material interests. h oeo le who depend upon a single interest for their livelihood can be sure of prosperity. There inevitably come seasons when the harvest is scant and the market profitless. Fishermen, when engaged in their business, have no end of work, WORRY AND DANGER pIt to endure and confront. They begin their operations two hours before the sun rises and continue them long after he sets. When they get back to land they have but one cle- mannd-relaxation and .rest. This invites a social system which contributes to their misery. Their merry-go-lueky, thriftless life places them, if they are honest, at the mercy of the merchants, and if they ore dis- honest it places the merchant at the mercy of them. A fishing outfit is an expensive affair. Even coastwise fishing requires good coats and costly tackle, and a voyage to the banks •is an event that requires vast prepara- tions. For all this the fisherman runs in debt -and for much more. He generally deals through a "planter" with a merchant. The merchants are all in St. John's. They are wealthy, aristocratic people and they live handsomely. Their homes are rarely pretentious in appearance, but theirsilver. is silver, and from the moment you enter their door you are impressed with the fact. that everything is substantial and genuine. There is neither show nor shoddy. Their one ostentation is a flag. No one seems to be entirely respectable unless he owns a flag. It is odd to- see a cityy in which everyperson of consequence uence flies his own insignia from aa mighty polo, in bis front MX) I . l'AYINt; p1-ANTITIES, copper, iron, coat and gypsum are ungees- tionably- deposited there, awaiting nothing lout enterprise, capital and the extinction of the Freneh Treaty rights. 'These will doubt- less conte in time. St. John's, with its 30,- 0(10 people, is a wealthy city, and so well organized in commercial activity that With half a chance it will complete the industrial conquest of the land. Newfou ndlaud is easily reached if only one knows how to do it. The great Allan Line, from Baltimore, Montreal and Hali- fax, touches at St. John's every • fortnight. Numerous trading steamers from Montreal and Quebec are constantly plying down the St. Lawrence and on the Newfoundland. A most delightful trip may be taken from Bos- ton to Annapolis and through the'" Evan- geline Country" to Halifax, or from Boston by nater to Halifax, and then through the Bras a' Or lakes to Sydney, C.B., where a line of steamers connects with St. John's. ,ENVELOPED IN AN ICY FOG" Ten Degrees Below Zero in Midsummer. The little town of Ransom's Ford Ill., is much alarmed and puzzled over a natural phenomenon which is lustnowbeing exhibit- ed there.. OnFriday last, a shortwhile after sunrise, a cloud coming from a northeaster- ly direction and descending front a great height,'movilg with rapidity, settled down upon the lac and has remained u n lis elle o e c l c d ever since. The atmosphere is so dense with the moisture from the cloud that objects are wholly lmdiscernable at a distance of less than two feet ; but the remarkable feature ofthefog is its intense cold,which is such as to render fires necessary toprevent the people , andfreezinganimals from to death while all vegetation in the town and 111e country about for a quarter of a mile around, and indeed wherever the fog rests, has been kill- ed. • Singular as it appears, the atmosphere about seems to be unaffected by the presence of the icy cloud, and remains very near its normal temperature, but to enter the dense area of the fog is to step at once into cold, in which the thermometer remains steadily at 10 cl0earoes below zero. The sun is so nearlyobscured byit as to appear onlyas a ball ohalf extinuished fire even at noon- clay,and seems totally unable to arm s y b w or dispel the fog. It is thought, however, that this will be done by the first strong wind, whiehis anxiously looked for by the inhabit- ants of the little town, who prefer a natural summer, no matter how sultry, to being thus cut off from the rest of the world by so unseasonable a winter. Wanted Proof. - Tommy (down in the street) -0, pa, put your ,lead out of the window a minute. Pa -(putting his head out the window) What is it, Tommy ? Tommy -Nothing, except I havegot abet with 'Jo ',Nanny' Jones that your bald lace is bigger than his pa's bald place,. P The Boy's Grattdulothex, AstitchisAlways dropping in the everlasting 1' knitting And the needles that I've threaded, no, you cluftlAna aented or hegas.es till I though my head was splitting. When there upon her forehead as calm a cloaks th-ylay. I've read to her tial I was hoarse, the psalms and the Epistles - When . When the, other boys wereburning tar barrels down thestreet ; And I've stayed and learned my verses when I saxidai heave t their willow whistles, stayed and said nay chapter with Ore inboth my feet. at. there1aher aipoeli1� a4sct • is a peppermint 01 a penny There never was a pocket that Was halt so big and deep ; And she lets the candle in my room burn to the very s ofke t a for Infants and Children. ° "Catstort;►issoWen adaptedtochttdrettMS% Cao>cgria e [recoaunca�ditasssu r ortouses Collo, a, Eructation, Pe ^t;nyPms.^.rz 4on Sour 6tom$ch, Diarrhoea, Erut;tatton, known to me.°= A, e. p AlI..[i$lt 1'Ltls Wa civet; e a 'aI. $ A sit Com tAi list , 9. .o tion 6i p 3+I..O.Osi 0 >w all s a - ... +'001:'. a 9•Qa . zX.t 0 t ^ u i_iurlous raodicatloa. Tee CENTAUR COMPANY, Pi atturay Street, N. Y, W hjle she stews and putters round about ti:l • T ani sound asleep. And when I've been in swimming afterfather's *•aid 1 shouldn't. And mother basher t -liner ofd' ao^.ording to the rade ; If remade ' 1 1 answeet an' silver, the voice '1 wouldn't The boy that won't go swimming' h would to a fool r thatsays,{ >.➢e14 a day I)' Sometimes there's something. in her voice as if i 'Nlesavea blessjng, .and 1 leok at her a ,moment and I keep still "; aW a mOnse .1nd who she to by this time there iv Winced of 6nc.,*int; For then*e nothing like a t rendruother to have about the hense Baiiroad.lfillltting in ;Im ica. $ince the first of the year things have • Changed considerably in and about ferns, Then work on the railroad hod not been lie. gun ; Poll' upward of a thousand-negroes are at work, anti in consequence anus, the stepletiele of food. have gone up invoices The flea section of two. end a halt Mules approaching completion, and work is under 4usy oa the newel section. A number of bridge and culvert abutments are up, = built entirely 1 of concrete, 1t would strike ke a per- son • son igt.or"ant of the country as rather strange. to see 440 many waterways stakes, Out in places, not only where there are no ;;treama, but where the work is itct gaily flelaye"1 for t lack of water to mix the roue rte The rain; i season 9 at is corning n 111 tell a 1stle rdat dory.'fhe minter d a n ' Wine; ere,and the bland and, 1ne adiia `. n ',nice- of reccivingthe driving. afford. a►striking con - Oast to railroad methods in the 1. Uiteml States; tis tides also the way in which wate.- ria, is handlead,• t Arts are dispensed with. Men fill square boxes. which women, for the greater part, carry ofd on their heads and empty. The carrying of things on the head is here reduced to a science. Everything from a sucking pig tied, on a hard to a eau of water, is so carried. The negro who ear. ries the transit instrument in the field at first, in the most matter-of-fact: way, lifted it to his head. The crater boy carries a 30 or 40 penult can of water t11:s over rocks, where others are often inclined to dual, .A. Girl's Beat Ohm. My dear girls, keep yourselves 10 akin; at; 'eat aua dainty a� x .c.bte Never meter. the! f i1 pt \4 p Mee charm G an agreeable t e a 1 teal'anee. Itis the most delightful letter of introduce tion that eau be given to a strauger :nut there is no reason in the world why every woman should not: be pleasaut to look upon. A famous woman once said, ; "' There are no ug y women ; there are only women who do not understiaud how to make themselves beautiful." This is absolutely true. So the right thing for yon to do is to sit down, think it over, and utak° yourselves the charming example that points the moral of this. The Latest Cheese Story. The stories which are told of the effect of til t odor of strong cheese upon, nostrils tut a.austome(1 to it are pretty numerous, but to the list perhaps one more may he added, since it is genuine. In the suburbs of Toronto lives a mer- chant who is something of an epicure, and not infrequently he brings home with him from the city, on his return from business, some tid-bit or other. Not long since he found some particularly choice• Roquefort cheese, and the day being Saturday he took a piece home with him for his Sunday din- ner. Arrived at the station he was met by his man with the buggy and in driving home he put the bundle on the bottom of the car- t rage, where it lay, forgotten till the next is At dinner he remembers thedelicacy day. aid cy and sending for Patrick he asked what had been done with the package of cheese which he left on the bottom of the buggy. Was that cheese, sort" responded Pat- rick, in evident surprise. "" Yes, of course it was cheese. What did yon (10 with it?" "Well, upon me soul, sor, 1t never inter - ed me comprehiusion that it was chase. It smelled that powerful, sor, that I thought sure it were dead, sor ; and I wilt an buri- ed it martin' 110 harm.' Almost an Insinuation. Two gentlemen are the sole occupants of an English railroad carriage. The train slows up as it approaches a station. First st- Gentleman -Will you please T r Gs tell me P what o'clock it is ? Second Gentleman -I don't know. But you looked at your watch just now, I know I did, but that was only to see if was still in mypossession. it Stub Ends of Thought. You can't tell about the milk by the color of the cow. Work isnot always honorable • if it was Y one ,night "" work" a man for a drink or a loan at any' time. "" There is no rose without a thorn," re- marked the young man, who had to get up at 6 o'clock in the morning when 11e wanted to sleep. till 9. • There is in gold just what its possessor gets out' of it. The rich man is never so happy as the hap py one is rich. In a dude's mustache the down side is up. The square man is. a good all 'round fel- low. ,. call a prettychick of a You can't safely doctress a quack, . Don't bend down so low to pick up a dol. lar that your honesty will drop out. Sleep is labor's holiday. A worn-out credit half patched is nearly as good as new. The apparel oft proclaims the man," re- marked Shakespeare as he saw a loud quit of clothes coaling up the Strand. The world is a .stay-at-home; it doesn't go• 'round any more now than it did when it was first created. The courageous politician has a heart of steal. Sunday is the white rose of the garden of the week. GOING TO CALIFORNIA �® THE Ma �1r {,$ '$ ata fo acute, ICD Ke: n riga _; RT w: jl. TA. 'bete..,,..,,3Ion ,... » .`Fpd ` thti Ar. knn,tta Cit. °:2 p. la. Mon 'Ta.. Their Fat leen Ar Ilute'lialson......... .,., Tent p. m. ,ton I;Tuea }Thur ES -Son altinkled At. .. .. os ,.w. Tue# pz►ed Fri;«4 ucr° An lots Ve,•gs..,... EPS n, ax- Too, WO iThn Fri Fat bion Ar.Al4ueovteno 12:seft. ip• Wed smear 1Pr1 Sat Sun Toes" Ar nar4tu,r.... 4,.,sei. ia. Thar ,Fra Si;Ifiva ;:dog Wed Ar, l es Aatr:eis# ., , 4,2O p. pa, Thur Fri ,Sat Sun Aon wen. As ..ata Viggo . •• •t.ip,m• Thur !Fri 'Sat Sun Mon West s. ssolagistShp tally line of thrill;l* cars without chompe Claim o ctugelt s, and you save 27 hours little. K to xro OFFIGIE-71 c=Ri~;a1VOL.D-ST,, D T1tOIT 141D fiI. GEC). I!. GIL L11N, Pas'erger Agent RrnNE OlLj The Farmers Heavy Bactied Oil, made only by & CO., TORONTOJLTl BROS� Its' IT ONCE AND YOU WILL USE N. D OTHER. MoCol 's Famous Cylinder �% e1 OIL Is. the finest in Canada for engine cylinders. As .for Lard lie. FOR SALE BY BISSETT B.a S THE EXETER TIMES. 1 KANSAS Is publisned awry Tilur :day morn nett 1 TEXAS S TI MES STEAM PRINTING l�Qii,� 1 wain•ctraot,nearl yoprosttorittoc's hen (eery sloto E rotor Ont. b John White Jc 80-�-•�tA y Sone, Pro. A ! uxiotora COLORADO (JIORiO naris ole AavlsnTrarxa Yrstinsertion,perliao .,. .. I0oentt t i 1ee1SUG.eCue.,1tusertn,ller ling Seenu a shot To insure insertion advertisements e sentiu nottaterthan lyeduesday morning ORr,TO11 PRINTING D1i14 TSXI31iTis one I CALIF ORNIA, t the isrgest and best equipped in the Coua4y i fiuro u, All wont entrusted to us will recede le- promtet etteati0n, Decisions Regarding Near,,,: papers. Any pfar ton whotake ea paporroaularlyfrom nu post• ines,whetherdireetedin his name or snother's,or whether he has subscribed or not M reopen sihle for payment. 9 If a person orders his paper disoontinuod 1001115* P1 1412 144101415 or the publisher may iontinuo to soudit until the payment is made, snd then collect the whole amount, whethse "lie taller is taken from toe office or not. N In suits for aubsoriiotic no, the putt may be nstitutotlin the place where the paper is pub- ished, although the subscriber mar reside undress of miles away. 4 The courts have decided that refusing to •ako newspapers orpeliodicalsfrom the pasts >ffice, or reams ing and lea'in g them uncalled or is prima facie evidence of intontionalira tt • NEWTAH, ,I-V E VV. ME C ARIZONA, O REGI^' Y �.L=.l�l"Vr_. 7 And all points wsst of the Missour Riva ria the Saiita JJl Route FROM CHICAGO. For particulars end tieke•: a'eyour earoat ticket agent, or address (iEO. E. GILMAIdi, Passe ager Arent, 74 Grstwold ea, Dst sii, .1fioh CiItO. T. Nt('13oLSO General Paan. aa 't ' t ; • • . 'ea t' • : •4 w ifolds Dila enough to wruc lishceta paper at one filling Pen.c:,e..-- bre and 11n4 st.^..-.01 all An. ono. PUREST, ST1iOi4.CES T, Be`t's CONTAINS NO ALUM, AMMONIA, LIME, PHOSPHATES, or any injurious materials. O0ONT. , E. W. G1 tt:E'i'T,- TCHICTcAGOO1f, ILL. Mery oftbsCZL !Tt5TEDROY.ALTEASTaltEL ° FR- EE•(r�"8Sd R s[SS5i GoldWatch Worth $100.U0. aeass watch in the world. Parted a anted heat timekeeper V re- 9, Both GOLD hunting gen' Cedes, Both wows and genessizes, withuivalue. 00 0 cases in f equal Cali, IoE PERSON 0 each locality oat saoure one roe, together with our largo and valuable lineof21ousoltold 6 Sasnp lee. Theao 000010,, n, woll '1RRRNTeo "�' •• as 1110 watoly aro free. An the warty you need do is to show what we send you to those who call -your friends and neighbors and those about you -that always results in valuable trade for u, which holds for years when once started, and thus we are repaid. We pay all express, freight, etc. After cyou know aul from $I0IC you would to SO01nn per we k and upwaro to work ds, s' Addreou ss Stimson dfi Co.. Hon M1Z. Portland. Maine. 04 •FOIINTAIIY 2114r. to. Meat an -pen or kind clinic; Ailed by Hie automatic action of India -rubber Maar/Dire ; goods itself ky themes/ince oitvn'Piny; tarries in the pocketoaietr; will not lleak; finely Lunde and fur idled in nickel-plato; superior to Stylogrephic pen: cutIS • with rush. 8amples,Eostioid,' eentss. 5 Pens, a I bill" P.O, Stimps taken, but silver preter^ed. A100pPictu-eBook sent FREE. suna this papr. A. W. IEENITR-17,rarnacut ,i Sp tlnlooku all the elosesso3 avenues of tick .tOweIse Kidneys 2d Liver, earrying off gradually without weai:enin the sys- tem, all the impuritien and foul humors of the seoretions; at the samo time Cor - meting Acidity of the Stomach, curing Biliousness, .Dyspepsia,1Iecr..i' �iehes, Dizziness, Heartburn, Constipation, ca t �-rT } �•©ixstN: i P the 9 b f Dropsy, Dimness of Vision, Jau11- dlce, 6r -At Rhaiuu, Ev c colas, Sero. Ma, Flatteringof the , art, ilei vous,ie•fs, and <e__ea' 1 Debility ; all ttsec•0 and rt,my other sirnllar Cozn ilo atra yield to the happy ie' tuoncoo. Biil?2CI IsLOOID B'>TT1J s. • I'o'r Flak, bp c;i .Jt .:Cc's. •• > llAirOl ' F� $.%•• ` I31 1 lite ncl rful Eo oes. Wonderful h In the Roman Campagna, at the sepulcher of iVletella, the wife of Sidle, there is an echo which repeats five times in five differ- ent keys. It will also repeat a hexameter line, or any other sentence which can be spoken in two anda half seconds. An echo which repeats seventeen times is to be found between Bingen and Coblentz, on the banks of the River Naha. A peculi- arity of this echo is that, although the speak- er's voice may be almost inaudible, Iyet the. volume of sound apparently increases in the echo. In the chapel el of the Abercorn family at Paisley, the shutting . of the door pro- duces an echo which sounds like distant thunder. The echo of the "Eagle's Nest," at Kil- 1 larney, is saidto repeat a bugle note at least. 100 times ; the effeet of firing a can- non is to give the impression of ithunders of g P artillery which die I in the -lista distance. n e. 1 Between the two wings of the castle of Simonetta, two miles out from Milan, the report of a pistol is repeated sixty times ; a, single musical instrument produces the ef- fect ffect of a full orchestra. Some Mistake. Returned Torist-"Mr. Hayseed, I Met your runaway Son in the 'West. He has become a very successful dreamier." Farmer Hayseed-"Must'a .been some other fellow, mister. My son had no ear fer lnusle, and couldn't keep time to a tune ter save his steak. He hadn't-nothin''cept. cheek an' impudence."