HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1891-7-2, Page 6THE MAD. SPAN 1 ARIJ 1emarkao TiaIinisIt
, • •
A gosseaseaymares -enema:tone lintea—clatens
tun What the .4eo1et 'round in leis. row*"
siert Ives -Obtained by- Wove at eke
eetneteotoneerts' Cretteat leemassene,lieu
Of tlie Ore.
VeeseenreeneBe a, Juno eih—At the Olin -
tea Assizes the crown preferred: our hilis
for robbery and reeeivieg stolen property
againet Miertin Von Buren Rename4 fee the
etage robbeaer =July ee lest, aucl the grand
jury, • aftee an aleeeitee of ono hour, retarned
true bills. •The tall of the .prteoner VOW,
trimmed about 12 o'cleek. The ermeet bed a.
g,rt number of witnesses hot no dieetheee
,evidetece as to the identity of the prisoner as
to beteg the stage robber, anti the other evi-
deuce bemg.eiremosteatial, the robber's ds
g Mee being se completes it was impeasible
. to ialeaitify him. Oa the arrest of the pris-
oner to November last be made a written
statement to Mr. Harvey of Keniloops,
giv-
in a detailed account of the differeut plitees
he had Nisited mei prospectedat during the
past two years, ending With the Scotty Creek
plaint, the place where the prisotter -Claimed
be obtained thegold in laieneeeessiCen. Upon
this point the ero.wn directed its attocle.
Gold experts and miners from Cariboo gave
testimony that the- gold found ou the proem-
er was like the gold that came from -re.,ser
River, Cottooweed and other placeein
Oari-
boo! and unlike the gold that carne from
Scotty creek; that the priseneee -sluice
boxee were so rudely emistructed Viet it
would be impossible m save all the gold in a
I claim that the nrisotter :mid had paid him
ner day withont color in the tedium.
The tailinge heel Wen examined tenant/ color
meld be found in them, and several of the
Chiueee had, visited the delve on Scatty
Creek and tried to obtain color by waehiug
the dirt but without succees. The prisoner
had stated that he bad washed up three
'Ines and retorted or cooked his .g.ohl twice
or three amen but the gold found pews -
eine of prisoner contented from 50 to 75
Owe thee heft been retorted separately and
greiit neaten of it hed been unnecessarily
amaigameted and ‘Ioetorvil.
The coansel or the deform did not eall
any wtteessee, but argued that no evIdence
hal been given as te the identidantion of
the prisoner: as the ralthee.and thet it was
, impassible to identify ele goldio the court
se the geld in the iran eafe op the- 4I3y
the robbery.
t The jury retired and after aa absence of
half an hour reterned with a verdict of
• guilty on the earead eaten, : receiving
stolen property. The prisoner wee eentense-
.1..five yer Tire. I
againet him stead ever until the next
aeeieee.
The golii ben are euppaeed t b Model
in the Bertaparte River. ;ail he is expected
that in the cauree of aala.y or two the Iron
box will in 'covered estOiu. a short diet -
alter of nitere the robbery took plesre.
ilapauele iles'ouay.
A, correepondent who has lend long in
Japan,. and who bas but mently returned,
invitee our attention to some of the conda
tions—political and et:mita—prevailing M.
that interesting country.
Foreign residents. in Japen are still under
what is known as ,Comular jiwialietion, but
the Japaneee ere -Moving iteeven and earth
to get the powere to sign the revised treaties,
the ohject uf which is to melte all foreignere
• direetly amenable to the netive eerier:idea,
tier will they tolerate the proposal that, 'for
the -firet fow years; at least, a fareil.,R1 Judge
ellen occupy a seat in their higher courts.
Penult% a policy of gradual weeding out
of all foreigners employedunder oeivernm en t,
their latest step lras been the dismissal, of
seven well-known gentlemen empleyed re.
spectively in the telegraph and postal see-
' vices, each of whom has ben in tho country
a great member of years.
• Another matter which has evoked a greed
deal. of .comment is the _action -et the 'Yoko.
llama native merchants in refusing to take
delivery of goods for menths, .frequently
twelvemonth, should the markets be unfa-
vorable to them or they themselves be short.
During this time it is the foreign Merchant
who has Imported these goods to order, who
has to pay warehouse or goelown charges
and fire insurance, in _ashhtion to losing the
interest on his money.
•Dn. the .A.uthor of "Tun CoosS on GLENeaultIO.1'
ecotezver real
Witoo it becanie palpable eroagh that the.
beatified Spenislegiri was eoneno no inure.
ke aeeeweeed the unasked tame:to-it himselt'.
be disappeared without telling any one
Whither he was going. lie had beers eee».
about the toeks over -looking the little liar -
boor eue evening, and the note morning
was nowwliere to be found, Nor aia he turn
up agls $.eitre sail the peor young fellow
bad antewneal hianSeli in a fit of inelanelealy
Others:, that he Ind gene away anal when-
teeree into the reeks v,i'his former reed:mean
Most people believed the former; 'for, in-
deed. how could a. high-spirited yoang
eatiefatt to serve as a private where he
had were the gold epaulets ,of an ,oifleer
Many an anxious search was made—not by
• Loaf:late or any of his people; he never
Made the slightest enquiries after hire—dis-
owned in fact—bat by the dwellers: of
the isllend—aloug the shore for his body, in
C$? t7,e, Aras-es.shoidd wet it tap ; but they
srove7.a141. If the sea held his body,
it kept,
elesss ia its depths, mail dial netyield it
. up to the seercheree
By. And -by it beon to be rumoured tin
" tech" was appearing. People, belat-
ed at night talking the nezesoveriread the old
castle, dead:wed they heel seen him or soiree
enelikelahn. Of eoureseuehealyielievedthem.
Why simaild they? Siteli thinga are non-
sense, yea know ; but all the sante the
Lenders began se give a wide berth to the
reeks when the sliadewe connuene-
til to ; a1 the more hesenee strove
lights.. began to be eeest -oeeasioeelly over
the at tuttianely lama There was no
mieleting thew letter. Net one or two,
buit !eel -and twenty, had seen them from a
ilienette e. fer into the night—nay, at anal
pess 4'4444;441r 6W—tieing end eifiltilig,
'3%1Tie.1 0140 Avalhtug over, anti
erli, the tape and downs an' the cliffs.
Ae eseseauenee, Interline erioneit that
aetrese. of tee shore NVOS itot; and lese ire-
ease:eel thereafter • for, fortametely, the
:at- thnnr fer thedsLing-bat i by cm
eide, and theresees no essential
ovel te go there.
It 'rely ree readily imegieesI thet 'after the
h5 1 Mnleou th' yeang
;asses the Med Spersisel Ohl net grew in
awe devear with tine tuliahitante, But ,es
oo oree treeNleeltel WM, end as lie did not
linowe ee* if lze aliti„' ;aid mt.: qire for what
thee. l'eeeight, but eteeeee1i4O tineeasingly, it
calve le, pee tile:, by Niegreee people with-
drew tieeer otteat ion from leen c4n4,1 eeneen-
trate it on their own IttaSints9, He was
alwe'Sd lohised nreu as titivenoy, and it
teet!tee !Teats to Le 1Ceiteelit that the troubles
that iLVil oniv_Ceptain °formai might
ra-11.4' .t--ifite in other ways on those evho
itTO-Zg inkfttly Ineidled with hie affaire.
Wheal, ire. people les him quietly alone;
and a good deal of the inteteet 'atteelting
to him and his affeire when he first catne
bavioodiel out, it waelmt rarely, if indeed
at all„ any one went to that pertioe of the
ielaeae Mat stray, fiShertnen, sailing around
in thee eorreghs, brought word that he Was.
stU.4•., work ; for they could hear bins lmsi-
ly [(mattering with Ins C.Cte at the shies of
the old hulk, or tree lailta ecneping the sand
..fronz her interior and burrowIng et Out..
One oven in,f!, late in tho month 0etoher,
when the Atlentiestorms Inight he eeneeted
atany moment to begin on the coast, the
tall unste of a foreign -rigged Vt131501 appear-
-ea in the offing, and later on in the same
everaug, dropped anchor heed by the coast,
and nit far front the Mad Speniard.'s bar -
bouts It was a reekless thiug to do, for if a
storm came me nothing in the world could
save her ; and very suddenly they did come
on this wild coast. Of course we all wan-
dered what brought her there ; stild thanY
were the surmises concerniug her. Had she
come with a supply of winter provisions for
the lone worker e Or,again, haibelet brought
back .Charlie Ormond's lost love, the fair
Spanish Rose e The latter looked so very
likely, that we all jumped at Palen to the
conclusion that she had, that this was the
missien that brought her here.
Yen may depend curious footsteps were
Atrayiug early next day to the shore, for not
a few thought uiI hived, that the miesing
youth might have, by some •curious turn of
the wheel of chances, come back with the
Rose. Numerous lighte had been seen about
the place—on the cliffs, on the fiends, on the.
.sea.. -•-all night, as if eanne scenes of rejoieing
were going on. But behold ! when they ar-
rived there the vessel was gone ; stranger
still, the Vail Spaniard was gone. There
was not a soul about the place ; they had all.
departed with the morning dawn. Tho news
soon spread, and quite a erowd gathered,
who scattered themselves over the plate,
curiously searching and. investigating. And
then came estrange revealment ! The oikl
hulk, massive and magnificent even in her
ruin, had been quite eintavated, the sand
completely cleared away down to the lowest
timbers of her keel. Compartments hidden
away for generations —centuries—had been
laid bare aud broken up ; andscattered here
and there over the naked timbers were—
shining pieces of gold 1 Yes, shining pieces
of gold—broad Spanish doubloons, whichhad
fallen about, either unnoticed by the fin dere,
or perhaps considered by thetn, in the hurry
of their departure and in thelarger treasure
they had to deal 'with, • as not worth the
trouble of picking up. .
. Then we knew it all. The very name,
Sonctissima Trinidad, in huge bronze letters
on her uncovered side, half hidden by a
greenish coating of verdigris, was enough to
tell the tele. If we clid not understand' it at
once, Phadeig Coady, dominie eta philo-
math, was there to eeplain it—not a little,
be it said, to our mortification.
The Sanctissima Trinidad was one uf the
treasure -ships of the famous Armada. When
that great fleet had come aesailing- up the
English Meaniel iXL mighty crescent, her tall
masts stood high above -the others. Den
Vespa.sian Gonsaga, of the great house of
Menthe'sometime Viceroy in Spain,
oommancled her. She formed a mark
for. the attacks of the great naval
leaders, the bold sea - lords, whom
,
this crisis- in England's -fortunes celled
'forth. Drake had levelled his guns under
her . huge sides, and • poured shot and
shell ittto her almost solid wooden walls;
'Ilinvard of Effingham - had Mantled_ her in • a
haze of battle -smoke; Hawkins had riddled
her acres of sails With chain -shot; and
Sir Martin Frobisher had swept her bull -
Werke With grape until uot a living Spanish
face could, peer- aboVe them. With the defeat
and ecattering: of the Armada, the tattered
and. torn.pianos's& shook herself free from,
these dreadful watchdogs, mustered what
Sail she could, and, in despairing retreat,
here. moethwerds - around • the • shores 9
Seotlan (I, an cl horriewards by the western Irish
coast., 'The* the fierce Atlantic- gtorms 404
caught her; had rent her -torn- sails ;afresh;
had: Made her a helplessreek on the wild
waters; strid had .firselly 'keg her or: the
quieksentls of'Arran iseand, not a ,soul of her
cries or officersseemaining to tell her Stale
The wild weres completecl their work by
sweeping the driftiug sand around end ovee
her, mail nothing but the shattered timbers
of her prem- remained visible. There the
slater winds of MVO centuries autl a half had
monied over her ; the sans of twelve score
simmers had brighteued the sends above
her; but no one knew ot• dre,eint of the huge -
treasure tied lay eonsealed beneath.
L'atil the Mel Spaniard exuet ! Fito wen -
was haw ke learned it. Some Spanish
archie es, perhaps, preserved remembrance
ef the treeeels in width, the gola %twee:treed,
and some elsanee ineident had brought to
light where her ruined timbers fay.
.l.e'ow we tualeretood what the old foreign-
er's boat-bnitaling meant 1 now we knew hew
little of the foot or the madman there was
about him ! Ile had laboured zealously, un,
tiriegly, in his quest ; had taken cunning
steps enough to ke.ep our superstitious
islanders'. eyes front ins work ; and bad found
• last his reward. The straugely-rigged
barque was bearing, even now, ()ate Speoteh
soli solU geld and teeaeine.
Row we 'wondered. to be mare, end bow
welly of ne writhed under our sense of wrong
aud. disappointment! Por was it not our
gold he hard carried off ?—it was long en-
ough in our island to be our property. Oh,
if we only hed known it wasthere 1 Maledies
tions lona and deep followed in the wake of
(het treaelteroue Spanish barque, with that
audit; Speoleh ragrue on haard. However,
here was nothing for it but to pue up with
the loss, end piek up what gold bad been
ecettered and dropped by the thieves, and
look vainly for more.
We flaresay there was no one more dis-
appoluted and mmoyed when Ise heard of it
than Was Lord Clue. It was not eaough
that the villainone Spanierd and his deughter
hail bewitelled his eon tieetreyed his
prospects in life, but they should despoil his
estate of the treasure therein 1 And indeed
it did seein as if, in carrying off the gold,
the Mail Spaniard had 'periled or a good
deal of the old lord's luck toe, or, rather,
had left behind for him a epeelel series of ,
misfortunes. For one day Gereld, his eld
eet son, out sheeting: on the Mile, Ny :evi-
dent, praising a fence, leige4 the eseitente
et hie gins in his own Isreeet, ami was
a• tria home—deed 1 More thau that,
heavy reverses came to the Earle in eetite
nuntoz epeculatione be heel long, leen ea -
gaged in; the mortgegees ora hie property
fotiVelueed their mortgage; and the Weed,
welts of hie ancestors and every VIA and i
steno in Enniemore were wavertised for rale,
Of 'oare we islanders were all deeply
concerned in this. It was advert moment .
to 115 who obeuld be our next landlord. We
were SOI.Ty for the old lord, for be bad been
a geed and kindly teller Of hie tenantry. The
story of tlto Mad Spaniard his to: tem:,
%moldy left men's nunds in presence of this
new event, Whiall NVO beheld in the light ef
a grave calamity. We could only look on
and sorrow for him ; we were as powerless
to help him as we were to stay the stornt
that swept the coast.
The day Cattle when the sale was to be
effeeted, the mortgage foreclosed, and the
estates of Arrantnore to pais 'front the hands
of its ancient possessors, Of eourse the
teuantry all assembled to witness a pro.
°ceding that was of melt deep moment to
them; and of course, among the alma,
went we, the islanders. There was a largo
concourse assembled. There are few things
moremelancholv than tbo breaking up of an
ancient borne ; it means the sunderance of
so rimy ties, the ruin of so many
hopes, the coming of as many
changes. Wherefore an air of gloom
pervaded the place as we wandered Aimless-
ly about waiting for the sale to commence.
Carriages bearing many of the surrounding
gentry drove up ; eontaming, also, many
tondou gentlemen interested in the matter,
either us intending purchasers, as relatives,
or as mortgagees. We were watching the
various vehicles as they came, discharged
their freights, and went away, without in-
deed any motive more potential than vague
and idle curiosity, when suddenly a neigh-
bour touched me on the arm and said, in a
voice which at once caught my attention, so
fun of strange surprise it was : "Look !—
look 1"
I looked in the direction his outstretched
hand indicated, and there, in the act of de-
scending from an elegant carriage, the same
curious grin I remembered so well on his
tawny wrinkled fate, was—yes, by the im.
mortal ghost of Max Bryaul—was Spann,-
Oge, the Mad Spaniard himself?
I rubbed. my ayes quick and hard, for I
thought I was bewitched or dreaming. I
rubbed them harderstill, when the next mo-
ment there stepped down—like a sunbeam,
• summer flower, entrancing, radiant —
Donna Gracia, the Spanish Rose sinning,
delighted; with a halo of loveliness around
her which far outshone even her beauty on
the summer sands of Arran. 1 I think
I rubbed my eyes hardest of all when there
came from the carriage, third anti lastly,
Charlie Ormond—the future Lord Clare !—
looking juse as good-humoured and brave as
svhen he carried the colours of England on
the redoubts of the stormed Indian strong. -
held!
Is it necessary to tell how the sale was
stopped ; how the old baronial castle re-
mained undeepoiled ; how themortgage was
paid off; how such a wedding never yet was
seen in Norman tower as that which cele-
brated the union of the Hon. Captain
Charles Ormond and Donna Gracia, heiress
to I don't know how many Spanish quarter-
ings—for she was lineal descendant to the
powerful grandee whose bones whitened on
the unpitying Arran coast; bow, when the
old lord was gathered to his fathers, the
saceeecling lord and Lady Clerematle them-
selves so popular and beloved that I don't
think a single soul envied the possessors of
the treasures torn frcm the depths of the
Sanctissima, Trinidad ? 1 trow not.
(me mem)
CARIBOO STAGE ROBBERY,
A Homely Recipe.
A. wax finish for furniture woods can be
made by mixing about three ounces of wash-
ed tallow and three and one-fourth pounds
of wax with one pound of turpentine con-
stantly stirrings while boiling and until cold.
The paste is rubbed in, the superfluous welt
removed with a wooden scraper, and then
gone over with soft woolen cloths until it
shines. Some werkmen prefer to let ti e wax
dissolve lathe turpentine cold, as they fancy
the heat diminishes the polishing. effect. If
a cepa of French polish be afterward applied
it deepens the gloss.
IAncient horses are shippedfrom the U. S.
' ports as Cattle. They are killed on the
voyage and dressed to represent, beef.
1, There is one lucky thieg about spoiled
children—we never have them in our own
JOHN LA13ATT'S
indiarale Ate and XXX Brown Stout.
Efiglaest eVearae atm Medals for Purity mid Excels
lence at Centennial lexhildtion, Philadelphia,
1876; Canada, 1876; -Australia, 1S77; and
Paris, Frances 1878.
TESTIMONIALS SELMOTED
t oPbrele7f te; °Bfo%niTebol eiGtAa glizi5l'asut'ormr7tatr°itsitYri8 2o7"
ations,and ran strouglyrecommend it as Perfectly Puw aztu
every superior malt lie uere
4.ohn D Rdweros, Professor of Otteolistry,Uoutteed, says:
r"uIgudalittteanna atoubowenaarkably email ales, brewed freak.
Rev. 1'; r.Ed.Page ,Pro lessor of Chemistry,,Instal
Usivor-
sity, Quebec:, says .:—"Ilieve emelyzed tete Pat° MG
nuesufactured b v tentirs.eatts Lawton. Cat eria. and have
forandelt a liztittele. zeutieining but little aleoliel el a dele-
eionenaver, and of a, very aeereeable testa and eumerior
eueetty, awl compares with the best imeortel ales. 1 h lee
value ?ea: is.619yte eedz cot hueoPnotr qteur3lXity.; iSttiojant4,yoltilise vsearcat ,.ealbrre.,eewaberiey;,
tea tom° utereenergetie then the ab3ve ale, for 13 a
tile richer ha alcohol, and c ee s c)u3 ;Mal eivea: 4 1.3
sly wi th any tap 3rZa I V: viele.
ASK YOT,T11, GROuga 1.00,1t LT
1
The Read SurgeOu
01 the Luboo Medical Coinpatey ia now
at Toronto, Canada, ansi may be eon -
suited either in person or by letter on all
ehronic diseases peeuliar to man, Men,
young, old, or middle-aged, who fun/ theme
selveenervone, weak and eeleansted, who
ere broken down from eleeee or overwork,
resulting ju many of the following amp
tome ; ental depression, preineture old
e.ge, loss of Vitality, lose Of meutory, bad
dream, dimusesc ef eight, palpitation of the
heart, emieeione, leek of energy, pain in the
kidneys, heetloche, piroples on the face er
'oody, itaing or peculiar sensation about the
ecrotum, waetiug of the organs, dizzioeae,
specks before the eyes, to -.citing of the
muscles, ?ye lido 40 elsewhere, has efulnees,
deposite 1» ilir nrine, loss of iviil power,
tendernees of the etrelp and epine, weak and
fiebby muscles, desiro to /deep, feature to he
rested by sleep, couetipation, drlencio ef
hearing, love on ewe, desire forcolitude,
eitability et' • - sunkeu eyes eurroriud.
ed with aease atents, oily Ionizing seas*
etc., are all eymestoure ef nervone 40)1114
, that leaA to insanity and .lath uoleeeeured
Theepring or vital foree havion lost ita
tenelon every function wanes in cotteenueoce
Those who through abuse committed in
I ignore:um nia,y be permenently eured. Send
I four addreet tor Leak e:11 all theaeee peeatieh
to man. Aoiltese M. I. SD Front
, toromo, 1,0.•.*Ke ccittfreeetattel,
Heart ilieeestat itesymptenieof which arefeilit
parplo lips turarimess, pripitetiora,
skip beats, hee bleott to tie
heed, dull vein intim heart wit nevem soon:,
arid anti irregolar, tee elteend heart beet
(pucker thee the Om ;tun ohout the brexe
hone, eto., cenpositively ocurcl. No cur
pay. Sei.‘I for honk, Addrees s'
LiftiOZZ, brout Street Feat, Tororte,
There are people who ,eive themselves , to
he Lerd, hut t he.% lah3 alk the 100110y Olt
of their peskets beeire they do it.
, Be wiling -Wiese butter is not like Samson
—It tiers not lese its 1 reegth when robbed
of its helm
..,...“,,,,,,,,t014.4011..11101.....0.91.1.4.M
That
, Tired Feeling
AGreatftil Stork.
About the end of March last a pair of
storks took up their abode on the roof of a
schoolhouse in the village of Pappenhofen.
One of the birds appeered to be exhausted by
its long journey and the bed weather it had
gone through. On the morning atter its
arrival the bird was found by the school-
master lying on the schoolhouse door. The
mac, who, like all Germans, considered it a
piece of good luck to have the storks' nest
on. leis house, picked up the bird and took it
indoors. Ile nursed it earefully, and when
it was convalescent used every morning to
carry it to the fields a short distanee from
the house, where its mate appeared regularly
at the same hour to supply it with food. The
stork is now cured, hut is still faithful to its
preserver. Every evening it flies down frosn.
the roof, and gravely walks by the side of its
friend from the schoolhouse to the meadows,
accompanied by a wonderiug crowd of village
children. .
°mincing Him. .
Sho was a stylish ,young lady of about
eighteen, and, to accommodate a friend,
took the baby out for a walk. She was
wheeling the perambulator up and down the
path, when an oldish man, very deaf, came
along and inquired for a certain person sup-
posed to live in that street. She yelled her
head. off trying to answer him, and he looked
round, caught sight of I he baby, and said :
"1 suppose you feel proud of him ?"
"It isn't mine," she yelled at him.
"Boy, eh? Well, he looks like you."
"11 isn't mine," she cried again.
"Twins, eh? Where's the other one?"
Despairing of making herself understood
by word she pointed to the baby, at herself,
and thee shook her head.
"Ye. yes, I see, Vother twin at home.
Tbeir fatherisfond of them, of course ?"
,She turned the perambulator, and hurried
the other way; but he followed and asked:
"])o they kiels much at night?"
"1 toll you,
'taint mine,' she shouted,
getting red in the face.
"1 think you are wrong there," he an.
swered, "Children brought up by the hottle
are apt td pine and die," .
She started on a run for the gate, but be-
fore she had opened it he came up, and ask-
ed,
"Have to Spank sem once in a while, I
suppose ?"
She made about twenty gestures in half
a minute. Ass he helped to get the perambu:
later through the gate he said :
" Our children were all twins, and I'll
send my wife down to give you some advice.
You see—."
But she picked up a flower pot • and flung
it at him. '
He jumped back, and as sem entered the
house he called out, " I hope insanity won't
break out among the wine."
Is a dangerous condition directly due
to depletf ti or impure blood. It should
not be ellowed to continue, as in its
debility the system is especially liable
to serious attacks of illness. It is re-,
markable how beneficial Hood's Sem-
parilla is in this eeetvating state Poe-
sessing just those elements eAle.4.1 the
system needs and tradify e ,ino„ this
medicine purifies the hlteul, seri iat-
parts a feeling of strength ancl toed -con •
fidence. Hood's Sarsaparilla I; the beet
rerne3.y for that weaknece which
vails at hange of season, climate or life.
Hoods
Sarsaparilla
"1 believe it is to the use of Hood's
Sarsaparilla that I owe my present
health. In the spring, I got so com-
pletely run down I could not eat or
sleep, and all the dreaded diseases of
life seemed to have a mortgage on my
system. I was obliged to abandoe my
work, and after seeking medical treat-
ment and spending over $so for different
preparations, I found myself no better.
Then my wife persuaded me to try a
bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla. Before
the first bottle was gone I began to
amend. I have now used two bottles
and have gained 22 pounds. Can eat
anything without it hurting me; my
dyspepsia and biliousness have gone.
I never felt better in my life." W. V.
Em...OwS, Lincoln, Ill.
Makes the
Weak Strong
"Eatly last spring I was very much
run down, had nervous headache, felt
miserable and all that. I was very
much benefited by Hood's Sarsaparilla
and recommend it." MRS. J. M. TAY-
LOR, r 519 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, 0.
"I was very much rundown in health,
had no strength and no inclination to
do anything. I have been taking
Hood's Sarsaparilla and that tired feel-
ing has left me, my appetite has re-
turned, I am like a new man." CHAUN-
cEy, LATHAM, North Columbus, Ohio.
9
Sarsaparilla
Sold by druggists. ; six for $5. l'i;;Dared
only by C. I. IIOOD & 00., Lowell, M.
100 1:0 oses One Dollar
TLE-FX.BnIt
upubusaea every Thursday moot matt
TI MES STEAM PRINTING ROUSE
lfain-street.neerly opposite Fittou's Oewelery
Stote,Exoter.ent..by..lohn Winte:t SonaPro-
=afore.
Rasa on envnagamiti
Ettratinsortiomper 'hie - . . ....... ,„........10 coati
Ude bemeu ti u seal; ,per une
To iusure insertion, tolvextteemente should
he eentiu Initiator than Wednesday =endue
4111(.1* •••=r,
Ottr30:: PRINTING DEP-11RTMENT is one
al the largest and beet equitmea in the County
of 11un:IA.4U wore eatrastest to us wilt receive
oer prompt a tteet ion;
OeNC81011S Regarding lieWF.
papers.
Auy persa n wh 3 4 t vmereeelerlef rain
the imeteolliee„ whether direeted in his name or
pinveter e.tee 1N:1i:riper ito luta subseribsd ornot
Is ra'spOnsnale r. etymon.
2 lf a penton order,. hie 'ewer dieeontineed
li ittuet pey all arrears or the publieber may
continue tosend it until the payinent It melee
and then eelle:e the whole amount. whether
the paper le take:IA:oat theomee or not.
3 in snits foe :et:vv.:7446m.. rite mat atray be
Militate:I in thee:ace where the ismer 141,4
!HIM, zsttboII.ih t0 eubeeriter vs3F reiItto
hundreds of uu.es
This moirts lave Melded •flat refe date to
take peweet Neer., ,,r perloiliteVe irsus .110 /414t,
ogles. or renewing and /Ming theta anieseeed
r is prima faeie evidence of novae deed usual
thb
LE
3VER
PILLS
PUREST, SWINGE
ceetaine510 Mum,. Arimeate, Lki
Plieepeate.N,er any Inlutierlte
geW, CILLETTa Toronto, Ont.
,Flek lie:elect* anti relieve all the remiblee feel,
•eeit to a bilious state of the system, eueli 451
;Moines% Natesee. Droweinessonearese after
eating, Pain in the elle. iee While then:Meat
remargableseeeces has been shown Incuring
SIC
Ifeadaelie, yet Cearrretes e.rrries LIVCR rims
100 equally velambIe in Constipation, curing
aue preventing this annoying complaint, while
they also comet all d !confers *5 the
stimulate the liver 44ad me:vitae tbe bowels.
Even if they only cured
HEA
Adis tbo would be almost priceless to those
who suffer from this distresadug complaint:
but fortunately their goodness does not end
here, and tletso who once try them will find
tltese little pills valuable in so many ways that
they will not be wining to do without them,
But after all sick head
Is Mebane 01 80 mans- lives that hero is where
we make our great boast. Our pills cure It
while others do not.
Ceirrea's Lrrres Liven PILLS are very small
and very easy to take. One or two tells rnake
a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do
not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action
please all who use them. In viels at 25 cents;
live for $t. Sold everywhere, or sent by maiL
CASTES MEDICINE CO., New Toik.0
Iroall hill1 intll Dose. Small hico,
FREEMAN'S
WORM 3owDERS,1
Are pleasant to take. Contain their mit
Purgative. Ts a enfe, mire, end effectual
•
SENO 50a.in stamps sample es a
Sp guarantee of good faith]
to us, and we will send you by expressce.O.D.,
this elegant watch which you can examine, rind
if you do not find
it all andevenmore
than we claim for
it Ile NOT TAKE IT,
but if perfectly sat-
isfantory, payi the
Express Agent 01111
SPECIAL CUT PRICE
oF 85.35 anti take
the watch. Such a
chance to secure a
reliable timepiece
at such a ridictt
lously low price is
seldom, if ever be-
fore, offered. This
is a genuine COLD.
FILLED WATCHenade
of 2 plates of Scup
COLD over composi-
tion metal. It has
solid how, cap and
crown, hunting
hase,bertutfully en-
graved ruin is dust -
proof. The works
aro Waltham style
richly'tjewelled, with expansion balance, is
Miet.editnit'Ailvatroarigt ArgeereufatZn,',3i:
zi.itterrtar.A.,„„ wean. t41e, sent with ea&
W. vATT &
Watchmakers, Peterborough, OBI,
SEND Us oyin and a slipeof paper the
we will send yliUmsTptalisligiVel=iger' and
ELDORADO DIAMOND
SOLID COLD FILLED SING
These rings are now
worn by ladies and
gentlemen in the best
seemly, and have the
smile Appearance as a
ringeosteng$26.00. We
guarantee a pel1s:44 flt
and. satisfaction.
Address
fieL C Wyatt to Co.
ers
Weterbero ugh, Out.
Unlocks all the crgc..t ammo al Ike
icAvel,S1, Kithiys and Liver, earry4
id gradually ...without weakening the 53v.tom, all Dm Itnpuritiee end foul bent°
of the eceretions; at the came limo Co`
rooting Acidity of the Stomagli,
curing Biliousness, Dyspepsia,
lieaciachos, Dizziness, Heath',
Conni1,!,-.n, Dryness of the S
Drapzi, Dimness of Vision, Uinta/
dice, Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, Sot&
rata, Fluttering of the Heart, IR&
vousness, and General Debility ;
:Irma and really other similar Comparntt
yield to the happy Influenced BURDOCK
BLOOD BITTERS.
For lia?e 'INalt .DeaRrr.
0,BIJIIN CO.. i',113rillors, Tomb.
How Lost, How Restored
Just published, a new °ditto of Dr. Caper°
well's Celebrated Essay on he rolled our of
SPIISRATORRIMA or inespacity Induced by mats ot
early indisoretion.
The celebrated author, in A's admirable essay,
clearly demonstrates from a thirty years' etecessful
practice, that the alarming coneequences of self-
abuse maybe radically oured pointing out smods
of cure at once simple, certain and effedual, by
means of which every sufferer, no matter what his
condition may be, may cure himself cheaply, Ot
vately and radicelly.
IZI•Thisleoture should be in the hands of every
youth and every man in the land.
Sent under seal, in a plain envelope, to any ad
dress, post-paid, on receipt el four cents, or tw
postage tamps. Samples of Medicine free. &Ulm
THE CULVERWELL MEDICAL CO
41 Ann Street New York
et Offias 133Y 450 4E8a.)
nzessumAINY iArtozmoat.
0
who I. weak, Nervous, Debilitated,
whom his Folly Gild Ignorance has Tri-
fled °Aviv ,leis Vigor of Body, l'ilind and
taio Fountains et 1.1fe. Headache-,
1111anitood, causing exhausting drains upon
ilaokflohe, Dreadful Dreams, Weakness)
f Memory, Basshiulneete ID Boolety,
1qt:1db:till/as uEpaornlyther)Feraye,snefloalnt tsbuo
r Insanity, edit find in our ePeohlo Leo. 285
)oeittVe Cure. It inverts Youthful
Dung,i gAPr:t re 5014111:t ha °Tile C:Iljrianliv1PgoorwateesPthine
rrio pEffect t ohe
oBldraanind
ed l eeeeebuidsupthorusculszeyetrLaousesttoaotionthowholeithysii
energy of the humen fame, . With our specific
No. 28 the west obstinate case osn be cured in
three menthe, and recent ones in less than thirty
days. Each package contains two weeks that.
ing eio ael Iteo• a. 241:310:erinfaClultrbefeC+Cunarraginftoeredail °PurriffsaPte:
no matter of how long stand -
Ing. Sold under 0,1Ir written Cuara ntee to
oeflon..owt oraonOtou. rott. Prieo SO. Toronto Modeling
Am= LADIES ONLY. ,lone.
FRENCH REGULATION PILLS.
'Rae superior to Ergot, Tansy, Pennyroyal or
Oxide. Endorsed be tee thousands s'
elm nso them MONTHLY N8VOP fall, Relieve
etin, INSURE ' REGULARITY, Pleasant and .
:;"ectun.l. erine nt Toronto Medicine Co,
nruuto
THE
OF ANY EXETER
T:f NIES