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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1891-7-23, Page 3ust Flo er" " inherit some tendency to Dye- pepa from, my mother.I suffered two years in this way; consulted a umber of doctors. They did me no good I then used loved in your August Flower and it was just two viten I felt great relief. 1 soon so that' could sleep and eat, and elt that 1 was well. That was ee years ago, and I am still first- class. I am never we Days. without a bottle, and if I feel constipated the least particle a dose or two of ,ugust Plower does the work. The auty of the medicine is, that you can stopthe use of it witliout any bad effects on tb.e system. Constipation While I was sick fe 1 t everything it seemed to me a man could feel, 1 was of all meu most miserable. I can say, in conclusion, that 1 believe August Flower will cure anyone of indig?stidn, if taken Life of M iserywith judgment. 0 A. M. Weed, 229 Belle- fivitqiiip St.. IndinuaDialis, Ind." LATE BRITISIINEWS, A Singular Suicide. Bathing Fatalities in With the idea of preserving the Gaelic language, the Duke of Athote's daughter is preparing for the instruction of the Gaels of Perthshire in reeding, writing, and speak ing their native tongue. A man pained .Edward Mann, living at Regent's Rill, Brighton, was discovered b the landlady lying on his beck in bed with his left arm hanging over the edge, and e. basin of blood on the floor, The arm had been out with a, razor in the fleshy part above the elbow. His child slept by his side. The matt died shortly after the discovery, Through the death a her un.ale ill Bel- fast, Ireland, Mrs. Ann Jane Thomas, sixtyt two years old, Who,daughter, with her was a sinner for mauy tt,ars hi the Barbour Flax Thread Works at Paterson, New Jersey, inherits a million dollars, Mr. John Crane, a pioneer settler in Gippsland, died recently, at the age of 81. He had seen the Queen's coronation, and had heard Mr. Gladstone make his maiden speech in the House of Commons. On Saturday evening a youth named Jamed Thomas Lord,. in charge of a shoot- ing booth at Oldham, had just loaded a. pistol, when the hammer fell, and the bullet lodged in the faee of Jamea Walker, aged nine years, who died in the Infirmary the same evening, Thediveet amide les New :lap St. Express daily withoutenange hours The Woolen:11ml by oleetricity locomotive, fort New ears Clanadian-European Passengers neat will on Saturday. The auperior the dise Newfoundland; am a het. Tiolietainey about rates Jan ...-....r. DITEROOLONIAL R AILW AY OF CANADA. all Date for said US In. the a om day tho or and mar. route between the West and on the Lower St. Lawrence and Ohaleur,Province of Quebec; also Brunswick ,Nova Soo tia, Peng a E award ellratenIalan de ,an d Ne wfoundium d Pierre. trains. leave Moutrealand Halifax (Su adays excepted) and run through between these peinteiti and r,5 Minutes. through express train cars of the Itsdivray are brilliantly. l.stitacl and heated by steam from thus greatly baereasing tho and safety of traveller*. and elegant linfretaleeping and arernu on through expresatratua. --- Mail and Passenger Route. tor (treat et ritain nr the cent!. by leavi Po Monti sal on Friday morning join outward. mail Steamer at Exalter n tufty ion ofashipp ors Is directed to tacilit Nattered by thin route transport onnoti r allege:mot merchan- intended for theDast earn Provinces also for almmonte Of grain n roclua e !atoll de et far tuo E e rop e a n be obtaine d and information tho route ; also froight and pa usenger on application to N . WE 4 TFIERST0N, VireaternFreight &Passenee d.gont ea ninth:Mouse Bleak Otork tit avorouto D POTT/NGDR, °Wet Superintendent. Railway °Mee. /4°110014 NB, int 91 --., macatca tine h telnrroade by John% ••.• * dodo, luMoy,N.Y„at um* for us. Ittador, eit, you way not makoso mach. but we on '!,f -i. MIA= ',4`,7.,',X1.71,7,1,,t";11A . ..,v,*.-11;,:ir,yytwarlti liti r.;hykuflitilia::.,12.4,C11,1,0::61141:11i1.11. eta uirt, le, ,:ner...eallefoirt tn,:itrtyr:thi,,notYinlii, l'i.;,:tirtr ii .•a 1•AltrICIMARS PRR1L Addross at once: _ d 4* A S JENSON k CO., l'OUTLANO, RAINS. ..4 •L� Cures Swellings, Bites, HIRSTS Lumbago. By P. frilly - F• . i form Frost &Co, Burns. Cuts, Piles in their worst Erysipelas, Inflammation, Chapped Rands and all Skin Diseases. PAIN EXTERMINATOR. —cwass— Sciatica. Rheumatism, Neuralgia To tha eh e. Pains in everyforrn. all dealers. Wholesale by P. F.Dally Drug Atoll Dye c• ees Central CEN TRAL Store , "c-• r, o t..... of stook of all kinds -stuffs and package Dyes, constantly on hand.. Win an's Condition Powd- er, the best in the mark- et and always resh. Family recip- carefully prepared at Drug Store Exeter, C. LUTZI gnq o F VOtJTH.1ervotio De. Platy, Seminal Losses and Premature Decay, promptly and permanently cured by 000s•not interfere with chet or usna oequpatio•n and fully restores lost vigor and iiisureenerteet !°14°g,ieVi.°p....e'tt?1,g)erlap...10Roient-t- h- •,.eld's Drug Store, $TaRRT, TORONT....u114 On Monday morning a young num nanied Clapsori committed amide by drowning hitn. self in a vat of hewer, his place of employ - meat, Itlestrs. Isherwood & Co.'s Brewery, Maidstone. A tragic suicide occurred at the Curragh alilitary Camp in Ireland Ott Tuesday, when e. private of the 1st, Wiltshire (Duke of Edinburgh's) Regiment named Watt com- mitted suicide in the rifle ramps. He plao. ed the antic of his rifle into his mouth, pulled a cord attached to it, and shattered his akuti. At Weston-onarent, near Derby, on Saturdayafternoon, two mouldera, brothers, unwed Rodger*, of Derby, who lead visited the village with their wives,went bathing in the Trent. Onewas immdiately sem to be in distress. His brother jumped into his assistance, bet both sank and were drawn - ed. .A. fall of roof occurred. on Tuesday night in Great Row Pit, Longton Hall, Stafford• shire, whereby three men, named Seabiidge Smith, and ttlaebin, were buried. The two former were reamed after three hours' dig- ging, but Seabright was not reached until ten o'clock yesterday morning, whenhe was found to bo deed. Dr. Hardwick, surgeon of the hospital at Sheffield, after twenty yeara' experience, concludes that hoc= care cancer and lupus without the knife. His system appears to have been announced simultaneously to the physicians of Vienna by Prof. Von. ltloretz Dr. Hardwick has not .yetpubliely explained his treatment, but be Invites his medical brothers to examine it. The Guards, who were sent to Bermuda more than a year ago as a punishment for insubordination, are, it is said, to be brought home in six or eight weeks. The military authorities think that they have been autli. ciently punished, and in a few weeks they will bo once more in England. There station is first to be at Pirbright, and at after that they will occupy the barracks at the Tower. On Monday afternoon a woman named Oxley, of Malden Road, Haverstook Hill, with her little girl, entered the Camden Baths, King Street, Camden Town, intend- ing, as she had been travelling about all day, to have a bath. She apparently faint- ed, however, and was afterwards found to be dead, and her body was removed to the mortuary, This is the second death in the same baths within three weeks, the other case being that of a young inan. The bathing season in Trained has opened most disastrously to bathers. Since Sunday no fewer than ten fatalities have been re- ported, including four deaths announced on Tuesday, being those of two lads, a militia- man, and a married man who tried to save a 'friend. Of the other persons drowned, one was a soldier and another a bank cashier. William George Armstrong, a farmer's son, was drowned while bathing on Monday near Newry. A convict in Chatham Prison, Arthur Isidore Glyka was on Monday served with notice of a receiving order by the registrar of the Rochester Bankruptcy Court, . the petitioning creditors being Messrs Vaughan; of London, and the amount of their claim. £80,000. Glyka was a confidential clerk in Messrs. Vaughan's Service; and took advan- tage of that position to tiegotiate fraudulent acceptances to an aggregate amount of'nearly 280,000. Messrs. Vaughan disputed their liability successfully in the law courts, but the Bank of England finally established it on appeal to the Hous d of Lords. The liquidators of the Staffordshire Joint Stock Bank has just issued his final report, which shows that the liquidation has been completed and the bahkingbusiness transfer- red to the Metropolitan anti Birmingham Bunking Company. It now transpires that in the realisation there was a loss of 2170,000 through depreciation of securities, and after deducting £74,000 allowed by purchasing the bank for the goodwill the shareholders lose £100,000. The £20 shares, formerly at a premium., have only realised £14. The directors have paid £17,000 on their guaran- tee. A thrilling incident was witnessed at the Great Western Station, Dorchester, on Sun- day night, a little child having got on the line as a luggage train was entering the station, unheedingthe cries of standers-by, ran on to what inevitably seemed instant death. Despairing efforts were made to pull the child on to the platform, but without avail, and the little thine fell backwards under the engine amid iatease excitement, and a long line of trucks passed over the prostrate child, who was picked up, marve- lous to state, unhurt, the child hayinr lain terror stricken and immovable between the metals as the train passed. A most unusual occurrence took place at St. Amos -on -the -Sea a day or two ago. A wedding party drove up to the Parish Church, the full complement being present —bride, bridegroom, bridesmaid, and best man. The clergyman was in attendance, and everythingreadyfor the ceremony, when the bride's father, most unexpectedly, nut in an appearance, and forbade the marriage on the ground that -his daughter was not of age, being only 18. Of course there was a scene, but the parent was etalurate, and ,there was nothing for it but to retire with as good a grace as possible under the air. cumstenaes, and the wedding spy consoled themselves as well as they wer able by driv- ing off to Blackpool to spend the day, • , The earth is gradually growing larger from the fall of meteoric Matter. An astro- nomer estimates that the globe is annttally pelted with 146,000,000 projectiles. , • • MING, THE LION SLAYER, Adventures in Africa of the Most • Famous of the Gorden cituanangs. HE WAS UNOLB OF SIR WILLIAM. Inlet and Perilous Adventures In the Heart or Arrica—taiotured as a SPY and Almost *Rd to Death. It is singular that in all that has been brought out regarding. Sb William, Gordon Clamming rcaently little mention has been made of the most famous member of the family, Gordon. Cumming, the lion -slayer. About thirty years ago. the civilized world rung with the exploits of Roualeyn George Gordon Cumming, who, with his rifle and Sepoy servant, penetrated far into the Dark Continent and had many a wild and perilous adveuture, That was before Euro- pean sportsmen began to seek excitement 10 African jungles. Gordon Cumming, was. the pioneer in that field, and his adventures Soo never been surpassed in courage and danger by any of his succesors, hile sery bag in the Madras Cavalry Gor- don, Cumming met and eonottered the mane - lees lion of Asia, and he desired to encount- er the genuine Barbary monarch of Africa. Obtaining a long leave of ohaellees, he took "assage for the Red Sea, and landed in Mos- sowab. For many months he traveled in Akio, among men and brutes about equah ly savage. His life was sometimes depend- ent upon the caprice of potentates who then knew little or nothing of Englishmen. But. he never forgot the Cummingmotto, " Cour- age," and his coolness in face of danger was WS safeguard, Was in Dab Poor that Gordon Cum. mipg.nlet what atterly proved, the enuclud, lug Incident of his career. The sultan of Deb Foor was a Uohninmedan, and lie con- ceived the idea that Cumming was an ends. eery from Egypt to spy out the laud for Arturo conquest. Cumming was Seized the moment that Itis arrival in Kobbe, the capital, lied been reported to the sultau. His pleas to be brought- before that ruler were unheeded. He was an infidel, which was enough, and a suspected epy, which was more than enough, to instifY his death, savtains itt:AitY wre. Cumming was being hurried to the bazaar to be executed, when, fortunately for him, was heard, the muezzin's call to prolyer, Cumming, who was a man of great strength and stature, suddenly dropped on his knees, dragging his captors with, him, and began an earnest invocation in the best Arabic. The story was carried to the Sulten, who had condemned, ltiia unheard. The despot ordered Cumming brought before him, and ' liked him so well that he wished to detain him in lila capital, The traveler tore him- self away as quickly as possible, and plunged again into the forest. of a Nimrod. and -displays a tiger akin, which represents a creditable piece of hunt- ing in Luton It was in Hyderabad that the Prince spotted his tiger. He was mounted on a huge elepliant, which made tiger hunt- ing pleasant enough, except for the elephant. The beaters unintentionally drove the tiger too near the Priuce's mount, Witt, a sudden leap the fierce animal planted, its clews is the flank of the elephaot, which trumpeted loudly he agony and fear, The Prince, with admirable coolnesa, shot the tiger through the brang It dropped dea.cl, a magindcent specimen of the royal Bengal. Africa isbecoming more and more popular with sportsmen, so much so that both Ger. mans and British have decided to issue stringent regulations in regard to the kill. ing of game. Theae regulations, if observed, may save the elephant, lion, and other large game, from being exterminated. But in the unexplored regions of theSoudan andalong the northern skirt of the Sahara there is till maple sport for another GoreloreCurn ming. Gordon.Cumning killed, during his Afri- can adventures, altogether about thirty bons, and he brought home with Itun the the skins of a dozen. He once rescued from the jaws of a huge lion a native whom it was carrying off. Afraid to use his rifle at any distance for fear of killing the man, Cumming dashed boldly in the face of the brute and tried to 'fire, almost touchiug its skin. The lion dropped the man and leaped for Cumming just as his rifle was discharged. The bullet missed the eye, .far which it was aimed, and struck the lion in the etttlder, slightly laming but not disabling him. With a blow of his paw the lion dashed the rifle to earth. Cumming, by n dexter. oue spring, escaped the force of the leap, and before the lion could recover sufficiently to seize him, he grasped. its mane with his • lett hand, and with his right drew his hunting knife. The lion tried to shake him off. Over and over they rolled together, the lion tearing at him, while Cumming plunged the knife at every opportunity into the animal's body. At last he struck a vital part, and the struggles of the lion rose weaker. Cumming atose from the ground immersed in blood, both his own and the lion's, but not fatally injured. From that day the natives thought that Gordon Cum- ming bore a charmed life. He was the only moat ever known to them to come out alive from a close encounter with a lion. TIIELTON is t'OrRAOSOUS. Gordon Cumming had a high respett for the animal which he selected for his chief antagonist. He says that the lion is rarely a coward, andthat the fact that it sometimes retires at the presence of man is not owing to fear, but indifference. The safety of the hunter depends on his ability to hold the eye of the lion until ready to shoot. Then the shot must be unerring, or all is lost. Cumming always aimed for between the eyes. His rifle carried a heavy bullet, sufficient to crush into thelion's skull at 200 yards. Cam - ming, however, always fired ata much short- er distance. Another bold hunter of more recent date is Lord Arthur Kinnaird, noted for his adventures in the mountains of Algeria. Lord Kinnaird there eacountered the Numi- dian lion, accustomed to prey upon men and. not, like his brother of the forest, regarding mankiad as rare and, from a victualing standpoint, .a cidubtf el curiosity. The Numidian lion is almost always a maneater in preference ,to: anything else, and he gathers in 'eamighte sustain himself from the waifs wads -trays of the Aralegillagest • Sometimes he has been known to attack a shave caravan on its way to Frezor Me- quinez, scatter the escort, and carry off one of the' captives. Lord, Kinnaird stationed himself in the mountains at Arita, between the Little Desert awl 'the Great -Sahara. The -place was thoroughly infested with lions. The Aralis did not dare to leave .the village • after nightfall, and the fierce brutes would sometimes enter the .1:411.itga itself in search of human victiniat When. Lord Kinnaird • took up his abode.. athong the' Arabs they related to him piffliil stories of the straits to which they had been driven by the man- eaters. He said he would do his best to clean the neighborhood of the scourge. He kept his word. • • TRACED TO HIS LAIR. Lord Kiunaird didnob accomplish the task unaided. The whole village was drilled. to ' obey him, and they , assisted not only with willingness, but also with a courage that Kinnaird had not 'expected,' Vitheo a lion was believd to be about, a goat, a calf, or a worthless horse was tied, as a sort of bait, nearthe • path that the lion was likely to pursue. The lion, if it came, wasn o ithen in- terfered with: Its visit was matte at night andno matter how pitifully the victim cried, the marauder was allowed totwalk off with it. Early on the following morning everybody turned out for the chase. The lion was trac- ed to his lair, gorged and torpid with the feast of the previous night. Lord Kinnaird then made short work of the brute. In this way he nearly exterminated the lion's career in that part of Algeria. The Prince of Wales himself is something Sorge Goad Beceipts. at this season a new or unfamiliar method la welcome, simply for the value of the change that tempts thefailing appetite, says Grange Homes. Light cakes and muffins are especially favored in hot weather, and a few rules are appended. Long Cattrs.—One cup milk, four mins flour, two tablespoonfuls butter, half cup sugar,two eggs,two tablespoonfuls currants, Otto teaspoonful baking -powder. Cream the butter and sugar, and stir them into the beaten eggs and milk. Add the floer and baking powder, and last of all the currant', walled, dried, end dredged with flour. Roll out the dough, cut into roam% and bake in a moderate oven. Split, butter, and eat while hot. Mueetxs,-000 quart of flour, one out' of sugar, one pint inilk, a rotmding tablespoon- ful of butter, two heaping teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Bake either humus oroem zif 1543Tottst,., t —Three cups of flour one cup ef krewn eaganane-thirdcupbutter tent the_ butter up in the flour, then add the sugar and mix well with the hands ; then add one cup of New Orleans molasses, oue cup of boiling water and a teaspoonful al soda die. solved in a l'itle vinegar. Stir until per. fectly smooth tu,rl then bake in a square, shallow p.ui flor threeeptarters of an hour ut a moderate Oven. (*INOUE', COttiti Its.—Ptit ane teaspoonful of ginger into &cup, one oven teaspoonful af soda and oue-half of salt, fill op the eup with syrup. Rave ren l,v in the mixing bowl one egg, ane -half Cup of sugar and one large spoonful of butter well beaten together, add the contenta of the cup anal rinse the eup with oue.balf -cup of sweet milk, Add flour enough to make a doueli at soft as you can handle take* It at a time roll thiu upon ;the board, sprinkle with granialatel ge sugar, roll lightly, cut out and bake in 0 • --To save Doctors' Dills use moderate oven LITTLE, CIO 3033.ATE 1'C3Vglill.3.•,-4IX four •Dr. Morse's IndiaRoot Pills. = tableafmnitus of corn starelt with a little THE BEST FAMILY PILL IN USE cold milk, add n large pinch of salt and stir 1.0•0•••••1111 into a quart cf milk which has teen heated, STO anatettattettntagt-tatat. "'"'" • Tor Infants and Children. "Tastorbels sowelladepted tochildren that InrecoMmo endtaouperharto 6E7, PrescriptSour Wma4Pias-rhea, .Coerieewes Cone, Consiation, known A.mnIXorms,giyesser: geigreOtt seation, 11180. Oxford Eta Brooklyn, WY, Wtthout **dans medication. TIAN (*.WART; , COMPANY, '77 Murray Street, tr. 1 vein .e P. V ICNVENS ertatieteaa *Now Vous 812ssanteca. firaltars MIA Balm:Woe raid& 'Ur advazetsgestobeglungri. StOokOMPUOVIrkhISOrientli auTriT maim. wit entircuttee itrhab we fulearteft, osaf )3R0TRIVAC8. Tioraorrnsen. Toren Oulu Min WORTH T11.EIRWEIGHT INCoLg Di'.Morse's Indian Root Pills, Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills. Dr. Morse's Ind.ian Root Pills. Dr, Morse'sTuthan Root Pills. Dr. Morse's Indian. oo s• More'a Pala, Yours &.r. Rs, 17es Works fee yowl order. Noemax, Oat, January t,h, ISae. W. H. Ceusrocr, Orockville.gtta,, Pa* S, --Y "Dr. 2010Cle'i A13414,11Rogg Pale Rxe the beat regeletor for the sYsleas that humanity cam ute, Life sant the dace -piece; frail sad delicate are lowly of us winks. A day particle of fore! subnanceadheres to the smallest whoelindiewar s, and what is therefelt I --at first, sully a slighttliffereano is perceptible ha its time -keeping, he t wait you; as the obstruction grows, the irregcdarity becomes greater. mud at Iasi, what could bavo bean rertined with little trouble, in the begineing. willnewxcauite rauch cam in theroughly cleaafiag the entire wake. • So it lain lannvo life --a slight derangement isms. lected. it awe awl !accesses, imperceptibly at Ors;then rapfdly, until what cailitik in the beginainUt have been cured with little trealole, becomes almost fatal. To prevent this, I advise all ta purify the system frequently, hy the use of Alcr*,,'s Pill, and so proservevtger and vitality. 0 Toms faillafall_y, U. r. nrwer.r.. The Trove/fere rtere-Owertf. .131.1.W.I. PIA Poach N.S., Jan. s', NY. II. Cooxixtr, Brookville, Q.nt Dasa . ArS:,--tar many_ 5tsro. 1 lene been a firm believer i.33 your "Dr. Alcrael Tr dint Rocs Pi:NV' Nct with a blind faith, but a cand.ler.re wirca.liit by an natual peramal expari=ce cf their ‘ahis and merit. My business is such that I ante.' tomb of my circa away frare hame, and I wzaid not con. eider my traveirms outfit a:Mr:Ca without a hex of . 1.11.115, - „- - - - - gr- — - 41.1 FOR SALE ar ALL OgALERS to the boiling oint ; let it took, stirringl constantly mai it is thick. Then tad, it on! the back of the Stein) Mk add two or three tablespoonfuls of grated chocolate, stir this well and flavor alightly with vanilla. %Vet some small Cups In cold water, pnur the mixture into them and let it get cold; just before serving turn out carefully into tan - cors. Servo with sugar and. milk or sweet. cued cream. TA l'10V.t PVDDINU.—Wash a cupful of, tapioca and soak it over night in two cup-' fele of cold water; in the lamming pour off the water and put the tapioca into it double boiler. Add a generous quart of milk and one teaspoonful of salt, Cook for an hour and serve with sugar and cream. Two -.Rowed Barley, Mr. H. Stopes, of London, England, au., thor of Malt and Malting, and chairman of: the committee of judges appointed last Ot•tober to judate of and report on the (pal./ ity of Canadian barley,was seen by a Toron- to Emma reporter on Monday eveuing. Speaking upon the barley question, he mid; " Canadians have the power to grow the finest two -row barley that van be produced anywhere. In Canada you have the neces- sary soil and climate, and all that is required to make tbe barley everything that a British brewer requires is a little more attention on the part of the Canadian farmer. He must be more skilful in the preparation of the ground for the seed bed. A proper manure of right character must be used, and. strict attention given to the garnering of the bar- ley. After gathering, it must be put in stack or barn in order to give it an oppor- tunity to sweat. If proper attention were given to these two importantpoints it wordd insure to brewers all over the world the very finest barley which could be produced anywhere. "A Canadian farmer, to manure his land properly, must be thoroughly acquainted with the constituents of his soil. To pro- duce barley successfully he must—or any other farmer must—add to his soil just a hat is necessary to insure a healthy trowth of the barley plant. With the enormous know- ledge I have of the subject, being thorough- ly acquainted with all the barley -producing countries of the globe, I say unhesitatingly that Canada can produce barley absolutely faultless ie every particular. When this fact becomes generally known your barley will commend a ready sale in every impor- tant grain centre in the world. "It is impossible or Canada to compete in the English market with Russia and India for wheat, it cannot eOnten.ct with the north of Europe for oats, nor with the United States in corn, therefore the mainstay of agriculture in Canada, apart fm cheese, butter and eggs, must be barley. Nature has singularly favored Canada as a barley - growing country, favored her to such an ex- tent that if the -barleyis properly grown she can easily beat all rivals and control the market." Fear of assassination is said to be one rea- son why the Czar of Russia wears a full beard and never permits himself to be shaved. The barber to the imperial family of Romanoff is, nevertheless, the grandson of Michael Guelabovaki, who declined, althoug offered a princely consideration, to cut the throat of the Czar Paul. This display of devotion obtained for the Guelabovski family tonsorial distinction at court, although it has never won the entire confidence of the present Czar. The Czar has probably not heard what Napoleon said of the man who shaved himself. At dreadful accident is reported from Benares. It seems that a large Hindu bridal party had gone out on the river, as is the , custom, to worship the Ganges," when the bottom of the boat gave way and the occu- pants were thrown into the water. Nineteen bodies were recovered, and it is feared that this does not complete the tale of fatalities • In making omelets break the eggs separs,e tely and beat until the last inoment befor putting into the pan. 4 salvable Article 'sells even. Bnorectroie itannoa. Jen. • W. 11. Cestsraer, Brockville, Ont. DCA* Sine-MI*3 1512 certify that I deal in Patent 'Medicines, including *Arians kinds of Pills. 1 sell; niece of the Dr. alarre's Indian Root Matinee clall the oshers combined. Their saki I /ma are Willa* C.ICAS3331. TSUrS, N. 1.. N:cuouns. Apampliletof intormation and ab- stractof the lota,ehowing Hoer to Obtain Patents, Caveats, 13 Marks. Copyrights, sins /dam. MUNN & 301 Broadway. Now Tork. Listen to plain facts about theB. & C. corset. You can't break the bones—for one thing. if you do, within a year, you'll have your money back. It fits like a glove, And hear how it's sold : if you're not satisfied, after a few weeks' wear, you can return it and get your money. Exeter .aaton.er Shop MAVIS, Bz tam & General DE11e —15 llak KINDS — ME ATS astomers supplied TUESDAYS, TRUE DAYS AND SATURDAY'S af, their raid enc ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WI . RE CHIVE PROMPT ATTENTION BREAD -MAKER'S 7z:Ek.a..E05", Nitta FAILS TO 5151 SATISFACTION FON .aALE BY ALL ,DEALIBREN Plso'a Remedy for Catarrh Is the Rest, Easiest to ITSo and Cheapest. A1OT a Pur- gabive Medi- cine. They are a BLOOD BumnEE, Teruo and Rnami- sTancron, as they supply in a condensed forni the substances actually needed to en- rich the Blood, curing all diseases coming rom POOR and VAT - DRY BRoOD, or from VITLATED HONORS in the BLOOD, and also nvigorate and Bram, the BLOOD and SYSTEM, when broken down by overwork, mental worry, disease, excesses and indiscre- Mons. They have a Simorsro ACTION 011 the SEXUAL SYSTDM of both men and women, restoring LOST 4/6031 and correcting all IRRZGLILARITLES and STIPPBEI3E31011S, EVERY MAN "witsiVih!)1111:131ggl or his physical powers nagging, should take mese Firms. They will restore his lost energies, both physical and mental. EVERYWOMAN 1211°41del:ibl,oall pressions and irregularities, which inevitably entail sickness when neglected. YOURR MEN aogawteoctuhrzr.,les: thful bad,habits, ang strengthen the snits of you nyourtap inIza,1 should take them. O..id MN EA] These Piens will maks Meta regular. For sale byall druggists, or will be sent upon receipt of irice 00c. or beat by addressing JIB D R. wzr...tz,d.ars MED. Co. Sold by dru,gaints or sent by raall, 5.3c. E. T. Thrzoltiac, warren, Pa, S, A. RICORD'S SPECIFIC Cram= mama: cuslaoTicanuroro)nrietw, E. tVROFIELD, nenonelcrs Drug Storc;, FLA:: Sr., Tonosro. The ..mly Remedy which w,,11 per- manently cure Gouorrliont, Gloat, arid allprivato diseases, no matterhowlon sta.nding. Be as long and successfully used in roach and English. hospitals. Two bottles guaranteed So cure the 11:111Steehee 11%jetairi: w h o have Those tried o- ther remedies without avail will not be ilium. polotodin Menlion Ithus b;aper worst case. PCI bottlo, Little hai' nature on bel. None genuine. tti,,-O4ttettr"•••.-ttas", tiaat Rie F5E1e51i-,.7,ns 1:3F NOME casivEvt TrOalUOitrnrn —.at -gnat F.011 A LIMITEETIMEEREE 'totem tall 05C' VISOR ss.Diub EiTritrattGlirlif. For I5S7 or FAILING- MANHOOD, General and 1114; Youa DEBILITY, Weakters of Body and hind, Eitoots of Errors or Examen is Old or Young. Botuot. hohlo • ROOD fully Bedard. How to enlargo and otrongthonWEd& 2IIIIDEVELOPED ORGANS 5 PASTS °MOM. AsolntolYtin. failing ROME TEBATEMIT—lionefito In a day. Mon testify hem 60 States and rondo% Onntrios. Writo eon. Book eroluation and proofs monad (oesiod) hoe. Adeierse BRIE IVIEDIOAI, 00,, BUFFALO, el,