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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1891-10-8, Page 7rle Safest A ND most powerful alterative is 11 Ayer'3 Sarsaparilla. Young and old, :re aliko•beneited by its use. Icor the eruptive dis- eases peculiar to. children nothing - else is SQ effective _. as this medicine, while its as ena- ble flavor males. it easy to admin- ' inter. "My little boy had large seronn. Ious ulcers on bis neck and throat from which be suffered terribly. Two physicieus ttsnded him, but lte grew continually orse under their care, and everybody Ypected he would die. I ball heard of he remarkable cures effected by Ayer's arsalt[,jRh, and decided to have my oy try it. Shortly after he began to lie this medicine, the ulcers com- eneed healing, and, after using several tittles, he was entirely cured. xIe is ow as healthy and strong as anyboy f his age,- SSilliatu -ki', liougertpo ampton, "In shay last, my youngest child, ourteen mouths old, began to have sores ether on its head and body. We op, lied various simple remedies without ail, The sores increased in number 1discharged copiously. A Phy s ir tau as called, but the sores continued to ultipiy unlit in a few nnontlta they earlycovered the child's bead: sod body, At last we began the use of Ayer's Sar- aparilia, In a few days a marked change for the better was manifest. The *Ores assumed a more healthy coutlitiou,. Olio discharges as w f e fir a dtiy d imiu ,fished, and finally ceased altogether. Tile child is livelier, its skin is fresher" and iia appetite better than we have ob- oerved for mouths." --Prank i'`T. griffin, bong Point, Texas. rt The formula of A er's Sarsaparilla e3etit8, for Chronic diseases of almost every kind, the best remedy known to the medical world."—D. Di, Wilson, at. D., Wiggs, Arkausas. ars Sarsaparilla, sitar%rev nz • J. C. Ayer & Co,, Lowell, Mass. Ytan t; ttisl'ottlfg•$5. Worth f5 abettla. Captain doe and Jamie, A STORE. OF THP TANTRAMAR • TIDES.. IST COARLO4 G. D. ROBE1tTS. How the wind roared in from the sea over the Tautramar dyke! It was about sunset, and a fierce orange- red gleam thrusting itself through a rift in the clouds that blackened the sky, east a. strangoglowover the wide, desolate marshes. A mile back rose the dark line of the up- lands, with small, white farm -houses al- ready hidden in shadow. Captain Joe Boultbee had just left his wagon standing in the dyke -road, with his four-year-old boy on the seat. Ho was on the point of crossing the dyke, to visit the little landing -place where he kept his boat,. when above the rush and whistle o£ the gale he heard Jamie's voice. lie hurried back a few paces before he could make out what the little fellow was saying. "Pap," cried the child, "1 want to get out of the wagon. 'Fraid Bill goin' to run away 1„ " Olt, nonsense I" answered Captain Joe. "Bill won't run away. 7Ie doesn't know how,. Yon stay there and dont be fright- ened, and 1'11 be right back." But, pap, the wind blows me too hard," piped the small voice pleadingly. "Oh, all right," said the father, and r..- turning to the wagon he lifted the ohild gently down and set hila on his feet. r r (for "Now,"wind ' od xis top he epntlnu , thedyke. y�. You you out on the other side of yk run over and sit on that big stick, where the wind ean't getat you, and wait for me..And be sure you don't let Bill run away," As he spoke the Oaptain noticed that the horse; ordinarily ono of the mast stolid of Was u nail un , t ht ec1 e dto n yl c rrsaeme. P y react e , K with his head up in the air he was suifdng nervously, and &,lancing from side to aide. As Jamie was trudging through the long grass to the seat which his fatherliad shown hint, the Captain said, " Why, Bill does seem scary, after all ; who'd have thought this wind would scare him r apprehension. Leaving the boat to dash itself to pieces it it liked, ho clambered in breathless haste out on to the top of the dyke, shouting to Jamie as he did so. Tbere was no answer, Where he had left the lit- tle one hut a half•hour back, the tide was seething three or four feet deep over the. grasses, stances, a few things are absolutely nesse- ! Dark as the night had grown, it grew ear , Ona nutlet stave a vessel large enough bleaker before thegfather's eyes, For an to hold the milk, It may be any glean tub, instant his heart stood still *loos horror, boiler or kettle, ,t wooden tub is best, be - then he sprang down into lie fl cause it will lose the least heat while stand. water boiled IMO early to his arm. its, With . ETEit TIBMS. a!a:ieae teveryTftnra.Iay morn moot S STEAM PRINTING HOUSE iron.,nearly oimeflite I'ittou'a Jewelery tuto,liootel )ot..bo John Waite $t Sona,t'ro' uncross. ro.rEs 0I ADVERTISING Virst,neertion,lrerline..,,...,.... .lU cents v. sub sub lequo.stinserttnn ,per /iuu..,..,9oentS. To insure iusertton, advortlaomonas should be smote imitator than Wednesday morutnti OarJ03 PRINTLNtr DEPAltTytflNTIs ono t the largost au"i best equipped iu the County ttiuron,"131 warkoutruetod can us will receive promptattention: Dees 0111 Rag ttr Iti fo, NOWs- low ers. tarty pavan wbo r tico+a na;tarra;ul+srly teem ' e nost.oMee, whether directed in his name or hers, or whether ho bas saibscribed or not 'tensible for payment. person orders his paper discontinued tet pay all arrears or the publisher may u0 tosend It until the payment is made, on collect the whole amount, whether homier 1% takonfrom the Oleo or not. Sfnouitq. for subscriptions, the suit may be patitutad:itTtheplaoe where the paper is pub hod, although 5 away. subscriber may reside hdr4 The courts have deckled that refusing to 'atm newspapers orperlodlcals front the post. S1ce, or removing .and leaving them uncalled or is prima facie evidence of intentional fraud 1LLETT PURE POWDERED/100 PUREST, STRONGEST, BEST. Realty for use In any quantity. For matting Soap, oftemr.: Water, Disinfecting. and ahuudred oti.er uses. Aeauequals!epounds Sal Soda. Sold by A11 Grocers ani lDrnttgtst.. no. OCOoro=st-.r,: Making Cheese at Koine. In reply tothe inquiries of a correspon- dent with reference to making cheese at home, we do not know that we can do bet- ter than copy the following extract from Arnold's American Dairying For making cheese under any circum- his feet he felt thereat timber, fastened in the dyke, on which his boy had. been sitting. He peered througbt the dark, with strain- ing eyes grown preternaturally keen. He could see nothing on the wide, swirling sur- face save two or three dark objects, far out in the marsh. These he recognized at once as his fish -tubs gone afloat. Then he tiro up the dyke toward the Point. " Surely," he groaned .in his heart, "Jamie has climbed up the dyke when he saw thewatercoming,. and 1'11 find bun along the top here, some- where, looking and crying forme?" Then, running like a madman along tits narrow stunmit, with a band of iron tighten- ing about his heart, the Captain reached the Point, where the dyke took its begin- ning. Suddenly he checked his speed with a violent effort, and threw himself upon his face, clutching the short grasses of the dyke.' He had just saved himself from falling into the sea. Had he bad time to think, he might not have tried to save himself, believ- ing as he did that the child who WAS lila very life had perished, But the Maim -it of self•presorvaticiliad asserted, itself blindly, and just in time, Before his feet the dyke waswashedaway,andthrough theohasnithe waves were breaking :furiously. ieanwhile, what had become of Janne l The wind had made him drowsy, and be. fore he hadbeen many minutes curled up in t thea wasasleep, tub,,1 so sound tt t When the dyke gave way, some distance from Jamie's queer retreat, there came earl. deftly a great rush of water among the tubs, and some were straight way floated off. Then others allose heavier followed, one by one; and, last of ali, the heaviest, that oon- raining Jamie and his fortuuos. The water rose rapidly, but back here there came no WOWS, and the child slept as peacofullyas if at home in his erib, Little the Captain the his eyes wandered over . thought,Svhon w der hostingtubs, that the one nearest to him was freighted with his heart's treasure', And well it was that Janda did not Itearhia shoats and wake ; Had he done ao, he would have Mame sprwig to nit feet, turd been tipped putt into the flood. By this time the great tide had reached its height. Soon it began to recede, but slowly, for the atornt kept the watery gado areal, as it were, into a heap at the head of the tray. All night the wind raged on, wrecking the smacks and schooners along the coast, breaking down the dykes in a hundred places, flooding all the mambos, and drowning many cattle in the salt pas. tures. Ail night the captain, hopeless and unite in his agony of grief, lay clutching the grasses on the dyko•top, not noticing when. at length the waves ceased to drench him with their spray. All night, too, slept Jamie in his tub. Right across the marsh the strange craft driftedbofore the wind, never getting Into the region where the waves were violent. Such motion as there was --and at times it was somewhat lively --seemed only to lilt the child to asounder slumber. Toward daybreak tho tub grounded at the foot of tho uplands, not far :from the edge of the road. The waters gradually slunk: away, as if ashamed of their wild vagaries. And still the child slept on. As the light broke over the bay, coldly pink and desolately gleaming, Captain Joe got up and lookedround about hint. His oyea wore tearless, but his face was gray and hard, and deep lines had statupedthemselves across it during the night. Seeing that the marshes were again un- covered, save for great shallow pools left hero and there, lie set out to find the body of his boy. After wandering aimlessly for perhaps an hour, the Captain began to study i wind had been ion in *fuel the v the direct blowing. This was ahnost exactly with the road which led to his home on the uplands. As he noticed this, a wave of pity crossed his heart, at thought of the terrible au;tiety his father and mother had all that night been enduring. Then in an ins'ant there seemed to unroll before him the long, slow years of the desolation of that home without Jamie. All this time he was moving along the soaking road, scanning the marsh in every direction. When he had covered about half the distance, he was aware of his father, hastening with feeble eagerness to meet him. Tho night of watching had made the old man haggard, but his face lit up at sight of his son. As he drew near, however, and saw no sign of Jamie, and marked the look "Bill don't like it," replied Jamie ; "it blows him too hard," And, glad to be out of the gale, which took his breath away, the little follow seated hiretelf co t eatedIy in the shelter of the dyke. Just then there was a clatter of wheels and it crash. Bill had whirled sharply about in the narrow road, upsetting and sntashing the light', wagon. Now, utterly heedless of his mater's angry shouts, he was alloping in mad baste book toward the uplands, with the frag- ments of the wagon at his heals. The Cap- tain andJamicwatched him flying boforathc Ivied, a red spectra in the lurid light. Thou, turning away once more to see to his boat, the Captalu.remarkod, "Well, laddio, I guess we'l have to foot it back when wo get through here. But Bill's going to have a licking for this 1" IE BEST COLLIN MEDICINE. ,'.OLD BY DRI MM' IIYB!:Y n7 • Left to himself, Jamie crouched down behind the dyke, it strange, solitary little figure in the wide wastes of the marshes. Though the full force of the gale could not reach him, his long fair curls wore blown across his face, and he clung determinedly to his small round hot. For it while he watohed the beam of rod light, till tho jag. ged fringe of clouds closed over it, and It was gone. Then, in the dusk, he began to feel a -little frightened; but he knew his father would soon be back, and he didn't- like idn'tlike to call him again. He listened to the waves washing, sur iug, heating, roaring, on the shoals beyond the dyke. Presently he heard them, every- now and. then, thunder in against the very dyke itself ; upon thishe i grew more frightened, and called to his father several times ; but delouse the small voice was dr.rwned in the tumult of wind and wave, an' the father, working eagerly on the other side of the dyke, heardno sound of it. Close by the shelter in which Jamie was crouching there were several great tubs, made by sawing molasses hogsheads into halves. These tubs, in fishing season, were carried bythe fishermen in theireir boats, to hold the shad as they were taken from the net, Now they stood empty and dry, but highly flavored with memories of their office. Into the nearest tub Jainie crawled, after having shouted in vain to his father. To the child s loneliness and fear the tub looked"cosey," as he called it. He curled up in the bottom, and felt a little comfort- ed. Jamie was the only child of Captain Joe Toultbee. When Jamie was about two years old, the Captain had taken the child and his mother on a voyage to Brazil. While calling at Barbadoes the young mother had caught the yellow fever. There she had died, and was buried. After that voyage Captain Joe had given up his ship, and re- tired to his father's farm at Tantramar. There he devoted himself to Jamie and the farm, but to Jamie especially ; ,and in the summer, pa•tly for amusement, partly for profit, he was accustomed to spend a few weeks in drifting for shad on the wild tides of Chignecto Bay. Wherever he went, Jamie went. If the weather was too rough for Jamie, Captain Joe stayed at home, As for the child, petted without being spoiled, he was growing a tough and manly little soul, and daily more and more the delight of his father's heart. Why should he leave him curled up in his tub on the edge of the marshes, on a night so wild11 In truth, though the wind was tre- mendous, and now growing to a veritable hurricane, there was no apparent danger or great hardship on the marshes. It was not cold, and there was no rain. Captain Joe, foreseeing a heavy gale, together with a tide higher than usual, had driven over to tine dyke to make his little craft more secure. He found the boat already in confusion ; and the wind, when -once he had crossed out of the dyke's shelter, vas so much more violent than be expected, that it took him some time to get things "suugged up." He felt that Jamiewas.allrigl1t, aslong as he ryas out of the wind. He was only a stone's throw distant, though hiddenby the great rampart of the dyke. But the Captaiii be- an to wish that ho had left the little fellow at home,. is be knew the long walk over the rough road, in the dark and the furious gale, little le tire the sturdys. would sorelyg Every now and then, as vigorously and cheerfully he worked lathe ichin smack, the Captain sent a shout of greeting over the dyke to keep the little lad from getting. lonely. But the storm,blew his voice far up into the clouds, and Jamie, in his tub, never heard it. By the tinie,Captain Joe had put every thing shipshape; doe noticed that his plung- ing boat was drifted Close to the dyke. He had never before seen the tide reach such a height. The waves that were. rocking the little craft so violeut]y, wore a mere back- wash from the great seas which, as he now observed with apang; were thundering in a little further .lip the coast.- jest, et this spot the dyke Was protected from the full force of the •storm by Snowdon'! Point. "What if the dyke sliouldbreakupyonder, and this fetirfnl tide get iu on lite -marshes?" thoughtthe Ciaptain,;in a sudden anguish of WORTH THEIR WEIGHT INC�LD r, Morse's India Root Pills. ing. There roust be means for warming, Ads can be supplied by a cook stove.:.. r•+fors Indian Rennet for coagulating the milk most be "r provided and soaked beforehand. A strong f Rr + '1' ►�y hoopor pressingthe curd with a ca acit u F 1 of at leas6 cubiinches. for everywart a f 3 milk used,anal ower .for pressing equal to 1 ! • thepo loot weght of a. to. Thsbeing re l.. ors the"ll. venient < • rennet enough to have it begin to curdle in way without wining, o a , and add Indian, provided, . warm nit` in any con . ... b to S4a t Root Pills 15 minutes and cover the milk to keep it ' l t. from cooling. The quantity of rennet to � Dr. torsos Indi use roust be found by trial. A good rennet " well soaked and rubbed, in time will curdle Root about `r OJO warts of milk but there is so' , o 4 P ls. q , SEM f In stamps [simply as a. "� L" ,#�06,T4uarantceotgoodfait1i1 to us, and we will send yon by express .C.O.D., this elegant watch which you cau examine, and if you do not find. it all and even more tNI,DO we TAT but if perfectly sat- isfactory, pay' the Express Agent OUR SPECIAL CUT PRICE OF $5.35 and take the watch. Such a chance to secure a reliable timepiece at such a ridicu- lously low price is seldom, if ever be- fore, offered. TOO'is a genuine COLD FILLED WATCli,made of 2 plates of SOLID Coto over composi- tion metal. It has solid bow, cap and Drown, hunting oase,beautifully on, graved and is Oust - proof. The works are Waltham style, richly jewelled, with expansion balance, is regulated and we warrantit an accurate time- keeper. '[t is suitable for either • a lady or gentleman.' A guarantee .is sent with each . 00 ooh. Address CEO., W. W'Y,4'FT & •9 'atchmakers, Peterborough, Ont. SENDUS SI ®®andastipofpaperthe aSP.l5L8 8 . sizeofyournngenand vV9 will send you postpaid this elegant ELDORADO DIAMOND SOLID COLD FILLED RIND These rings, are- now Wore , by'..Iadles•' and' gentlemen in the beat society, 'and have the some appearance as a , ring costing $25.00. We guarantee overfed fit and satistachon. Address Geo. W. Wyatt & Co, Jeweers "eterboirough,Ont.. much variation in their strength that only i can he made, When the curd hot, 'Weenie so 'j'�r, Mo Indian "�,n ,i�.I .LTJ. s hard as to cleave before the finger relish pass - an approximation to the quantity oequired r Root ed through it, it should be Gut with a blade that :Yitireachto thebottotnofthevessel,into columns an inch or so sgaare, and then covered a. air too let the whey separate. -' e anilines, the 'To save Peelers' Ellis use After it has stood 15 r r0 ani_ n , whey which canbeconretttentlyrerncvadmay UnAMorsels India Root Pills. he dipped, off, and the curd carefully broken with the hands into pieces of the else ofe;itest•, THE BEST FAMILY l?#f»L. 1N USE unto, or even finer. When this is done, the whey *Melo has been dipped oil', or what is l better, an equal hulk of water heated to I se • 15O', may be turned into the cuviand stirred enough to make all parts of the curd warns up alike, Tle curd should'e again t n covered to prevent cooling,aad left statdin 15 o r O minutes, or as long as it on be without sticking firmly - together, wino the whey iva be Nati di ed off, the mita broken tip film again, sudpi more hot whey or water turned onand mixed evenly with the curd by gently stirring. so ao not to rite the whey and waste the richness of the curd. Cover the curd again, and repeat the operation all the mass is raised to blood beat, The stir- ring should be repeated often enough to pre. ventthe pieces of curdf sena adhering, and the whole covered and left standing for the curd to harden, When it has atomism long as to becomohard enough to squeak between the teeth, or spring apart readily when pressed itt the hands, or whet is better, to respond to the hot -iron test, the whey utas be at once dipped off, and the Burd drained on a strainer•cloth laid over something which will` allow the whey to run away steadily, like a large sieve or a basket. S hen the cord FOR SALE' Br ALL !MILERS Keep fate Works in poo$ o:'tI Noax4N, Ont ija4uat'y' i5, Niro W. H, Cousrocrt, BrociniUe,Ont. Des Sts,—YouroDr,Iforse'S Indi root Ville are the best regulator for the system t t butrionity can use, Life ,s asthetime-piece: frit Indira are many of its works, A tiny particle of forefoot substance adheres Mille .smallest wheel ie the worsts, and whatistberesult-+•akftrsi,oelYaeirghtditferer ce isperceptiblein its time -keeping, butw& pout as the obstractlon grows, the irregularity becomes. greater, until at last, what could have been rectltted with little trouble, in the beginntng,winnew require much care is thoroughly cleansing the entire worts*. So it is in human life—a slight derangement Isneg- lected, it grows and increases, imperceptibly et fret, then. rapidly, until what could ru the boomning, * have been cured with little trouble, becomes 21064 fatal. To prevent this, I advise all to purify the system frequently, by the use of Morse's fills, ani so preserve vigor and vitality. ti 'Vows fatibfuily, 11, F. ltrwsr.n. Tim .'Travellers' ,Safe -+Guard, AieaoAnncs Pomp, N.S., Jon. so.9s• W. H. Cossroca, Brockville, Ont. P845 Sat,--ibr many � years,1 have beeaa Grua believer in Your"" Dr. itiorse'S Indian ItootPals." Not with a blind faith, but a confderce wrouoitt by au actual personal experieaee of their value arid. merit. My busruess is such that I spend mocha. my time away from home, and I would not Got*, eider my travelling aatft complete wit/meta box of Morse's Pills. Your Gro. SL It.esclssts. valuable otrOele setts arem'2, Heroes= Hog sag. N.S., Jany. r3, '90. W. u. t altasrocr, Broerivine Qat. Dean stn: this is to s •rtify that 1dealitt P era 5tedicines, including nanous lauds of Pils. I mom et the Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills span at all the d. Their sales I Owl are toll eteaiiaig< )crsrc<&eH tit N. T, tlitctionsctt, has linen stirred till it is freed from whey and becomes a little cool, and the largo lumps broken up fine so it will all receive stilt about alike salt at the rate of one ounce for each banquetteofmilk. Mix the saltthorough. ly through the curd, and thou put to press. As soon as the curd is well stuck together, so it can be handled safely, remove it from tee press, put on a new press cloth, turn the under site up, fold the cloth evenly over it, and press again till the press is wanted for the next day's cheese. Upon taking it frost the press, let it stand as hour or two until it becomes dry t then rub it over with some soft grease, and turn and rub it daily till it is cured, which will be in from 30 to 06 days. On small cheese for home use, no bandage will be required. Tina surface trust bo greased often enough to keep it from drying and checking. In making small cheese for home use, tliepress, though desirable, is not an absolute neces• sity. If a curd is properly made it will EXETER LUMBER YARD The undersigned wishes to inform the Public 111 general that he keeps constantly in stock all kinds of L BUILDING MATEBIJ� _ Dressed or 'V'szdrels tett R.. PINE AND HEMLOCK LI1'A�BE SHINGLES A SPECIALTY iTY 900,000XX and XXX Pine and Cedar Shingles now ill! stook, A call solicited and satisfaction guaranted. Jaw= Inn:Limns, form itself into a cheese of good texture by its own weight. In moldinga eheese with- out pressing, the hoop shoulbe made of per foratedtin, so the whey can readily escape, andshould have a cover of the same material for its top and bottom, shutting over and outside of the tin lisle the cover of a pill box and should be only just about large enough to hold the curd to be molded, A Dover is placed upon the lower end of the hoop, the warm curd filledd in, and the cover put on'. the upper end, andset on any level founds- tion. After standing it few minutes, the hoop is turned quickly upon the other end, the curdtslides down and makes a smooth surface on what was at first the upper end. By turning the hoop a few times While warm, both ends get an even surface, and then, by standing still, the curd will permanentlyad- here and remain fain when taken from the ]coop. To succeed well in molding cheese without pressing, the curd should be taken from thowhey a little sooner than otherwise and be quickly drained and salted and put into the hoop c1uito warm. Cold curd will not adhere wit rout pressing. Crimes in .Franc' Some very ugly crimes are reported from upon the Captain's face, the gladness died r the provinces. At Limoux, near Narbonne, out as quickly as it had come. When the I and between Bordeaux. and Cette, a woman two men met, the olderput out his hand in i named i'ongtiet, having a hot dispute with silence, and the younger clasped it. There her husband, took her baby out of the was no room for words. Side by side the cradle and dashers it on the floor. Madame two men walked slowly homeward. With Contluet had on several occasions since her restless eyes, ever dreading lest they should find that which they sought, the father and son looked everywhere—except in a certain old fish -tub which they passed. The tub stood a little to one side of the road. , Just at this moment a sparrow lit on the tub's edge, and uttered a loud and startled chirp at sight of the sleeping child. As the bird flew off precipitately, Jamie opened his eyes, and gazed up in astonishment at the blue sky over his head. He stretched out his hand and felt the rough : sides of the tub., Then, in complete' bewilderment, lie chin - hared to his feet., Why, there was his father, walking away somewhere without him ! And gramlpapa, too ! Jamie felt ug - grieved. !" he cried, in a louts but fearful voice, "where you goin' to, ? A great wave of light seemed to break across thelandscape, as the two men turned and saw the little golden head shining; ,dis- hevelled, over the edge of the tub. The Captain caught his breath with a sort of sob, and rushed to snatch the little one in his arms ; while the grandfather fell on his knees in the road, and hie trembling lips moved silently.—wScribner's Magazine: Great souls have wills; others only feeble wishes. The total number of Buddhists in tate world is estimated to be 75,000,000. The moccasins worn by many of the Western triton of Indians ore now Made' in chine. It would be interesting to know what percentage of profit the simple red mall snakes in selling their " relies" to tourists. A Parisian workman, tired of life, resolved to put an end to himself. He jumped out of the window anis fell a distance of twentya two.teet Unfortunately his wife was sweep- ing the yard inunedi,w l} 1 , I if the wiudow, and'instead of puetitg u c +.+i a r his own ex- istence he endangered t!.., of his' wife by breaking her ribs an,1 cite of her legs while marriage given proofs of bad temper. • She was constantly in the habit of quarreling on the slightest r retext with her spouse, who is a fanner itt comfortable circum- stances. The other day M. Conquet.waspre. paring to go -out to a local fete, when his wife upbraided hint with wanting to leave her in order to enjoy himself, The farmer suggested ro his wife that instead of en- deavoring to annoy him 'she should look after her child. Hardly had he uttered the words then Madam Contluet rushed, to the cradle, seized the baby, and flume it with force on the floor. The childe skull was broken bi the concussion,and the unnatural mother teok up the infant immediately in order to put it out of its :pain by strangling it. M. Conduct snatched it from the woman's hands, and found that it was quite dead. The oitother, in the meantime ran out of the place and tried to poison herself lin the cellar with sulphate of copper. She was restored afterwards to health by an emetic, and is now in the Limoux prison. — A double infanticide, followed by the self- inflicted death of the mother of the two children murdered, who herself had deprived her offspring of life, is recorded from Bean- vais in the Department of the Oise. Ma- dame Dupont, a younx married woman, discovered that her husband, a: grocer and i publican, had improper relations, with 'a 1 female, who, althfitigh much older than him- self, had succeededin making him prove faithless to his wife. The grocer, who is only 30; and his elderly friend who is said to be 60, ' were found. flitting in a. back parlor by Madam. Dupont. The husband ran away on the approach of his wife, but the sexegena. rian V e tasrcruained on the spot, Oner was t itnl, t + rl turd abused by the angry wife befo + crn;v,l of customers and neighbors. Alto. ,he scene Madame Dupont took her two children with her up to the -garret of herliouse; and hanged the'yonng.ones from beam.' She them "noosed" herself near them, and the husband, on retaining home, fountthe three corpses dauglinig, before his DO YOU KEEP IT iN THE HOUSE? ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM. . NO BETTER REMEDY FOR COUGHS, COLDS, CROUP, CONSUMPTION, &C: MECO LL BROS. & COMPANY, TORONTO. Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in the following specialties Y,ardine Woo] C 4 load er OILS Beit Cutting Red Zss,giue Eureke. TRY OUR LA.RDINE MACHINE OIL AND YOU WILL USE 110 OTHER. For Sale By BISSETT BROS. 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