The Exeter Advocate, 1893-6-29, Page 7tOSSIP OF ROYALTIES.
yo,k, as e peincees' of the blood, le to be
Mintier te thet of the Principe° of Walea,
.., .
namely, a eirele of gold borieered Wine
ermine, and heightened up with fleurgledyea
A MONTREAL /dIRACLE.
'won., Pink Piga for rigo People, and
refule all imitations mad oulsetitnteli.
Dx. William*" Ph* Pills may be had. of
RARE AND VALUABLE COINS
. . „. , .
r„. ,,,, ,,,,,,
164h P Xil" raid for the v* 9. i PuVer
' Lollar Of 1804.
.. ..._.....,..
onotimas Sne filteSnAMING.
nen-
moonier Errore. at heat peosne Cormletnelllac,
Names. COrreetedo
041rldrkaobrp5)Sa41?buNyret3tatilltlewl. :Frio rl Q.sall Dill 1:tree °do t sbidyn at blhall
that QUM:I) Deitber do they commemorata
sayReavmeneeteltalithheerobriecatotr.y. They
_____
k french Parr Starts a Rumor About
. . I I .
.Queon Victoria s A141E44011.
,
ororseca,, pottee and strawberry leavegt olter,
nabely, The coronet of the Prinoo of Wale::
resembioa that of the Queen except that it
0, - a
its dossed ,with one arch only, adorned with
1 ..
peer e.
' rOlut (AN semen .naorasn.
-
Facts Proved to be Stranger
Than Fiction.
___-..-
atIrdlltilidriesill:t.tall'bil.049olre.°1141.'citeier,eoblmahtP,yaollrinYsaixtll4''ofbCes.itplifoe,CC
$2,50.. The roe ab which these pills are
, ,
Reid, Makes a (mune of treatment otompara.
. ..
tively inexpensive es compared with ether
relined* et medical Meetnient.
°°InlIEMITERS Man* 8PEC/IMEWS.'
1 IrBOP06 of ouriotos
_.220 Ak ' coins, ear a )3oriten eiC.
ofi,7-,;:yip,„„‘, ohmage, one pi . the
1 oe>.' "laka,"---/„...., giaa, rerest colee, if net the
. 11,105# eiee, most rare, of theUnited
-.0 s *74 va Statee mintage is the
, •,
e Penn 4 '
^ , , silver dollar of 1804.
P ; e Now end then, one is
sold to a collector for a
o„ :I • big sum, and only a few
:q. days ago there was aa
• 1'' .
ace/motion of this nature
in 13opton, '
Not long ago W. E.
Skinner, a Washington
abreet dealer in coine, heard that ;Me of
these rare doller wao held by John F
• • B1 ' - • ' • F.
,Whitley, the regletry clerk in the Taunton
'pook.ottioe. Mr. Whitley found the coin
serneneda.a7ry ameonga hisr Biatheras posseseninons
ft th I Me ' death.Ski er
opened correspondence with Whitley and
ofered $1,000 for the curiosity, but even
this offer failed to tempt the who
were set' eir
Tlie Jerusalem el -davit° has no Oennee•
Hen whatever with the holy coy oat the
few.e. It le a species of sunflower, and gets
ite. name from girasole, erns' of the peientific
48tPee Of that iga411k4 of PlaatO•
The word "pen " mews a feother, and is
from the Latin perma a wipg. Surely the
6$ ' 0 ' '
expremion a Meet an 'meld be improved
mama
Galvanized iron is not galvanized at, all,
but ie looted with zhic by being plunged
into a bath 0 that metal ond =Yeti° acid.
Pomp eye; pillem at A lexandria was
neither erected by Pompey nor to hie
memory. .
Cotnnaon table salt is 'nob a salt and hag
long eince been excinded frota the elms oi
bodies denominated ‘ seats "
- ' * '
Rice paper Is not made from either rim
or rice etraw, hut from a -pithy plant called
tungteua, fonnd in China, Coreapand Japan,
Brazil gram neither cameo from nor growe
in Brazil.. It is drips from a epodes oi
Cuban palm.
-----
•
IIIIITISEEES WINK THE OTIIER EYE
, . ,
On the few °melons thus far offered to
the Duke 0 York to epeole in publie, ono
feature hos been unaninicusly noticed with
town, , that hie accent is thoroughly
.
_ .eglieli. All , Who here beard ' hie father
reading alou,d his carefullyprepared 'speech°,
-for Wake etymon to soy, rarely, if e er
- • - • • e • • ; e .
emote himself to extempore 'oratory and
. • • -- -
. certainly . never on ' Pubh° "aaalmtl-hava
been /struck with the specially Germain roll
'given to the " rha" though, apart from this
pectilierity, nothing ' could be clearer or
More pleaeant than the delivery of the
Plinee. Bub, istrauge to say, while hie
'English accent eltoSve a strong German
tram, hiereastery of the Teutonic tongue le
by no mane Ese Perfoot as might be Imagined
by a public) who are far boo frequently being
told of the "Garman" preferenoes 61 the
English royal family. As a matter of fact,
the Prince's German is most English, we
far prefers French, in which he is a pro-
tides:it, though the purist might discover in
hie pronverniatienof the °helmet Boulevard
''' slang " that H. R. H. is not above using
when in oongeeial • company a strong
soupcon of Teutonic Intonation.
winAx o• EIS GERNAN AND emulate ,
, Th Duk f York on the other hand, is
hJohneB 11 e e h t York,
;certain diode- In
Ileelg the
for anything like e affeeta len ef ePeahliele
foreign tongues too correctly. He was left
at Heidelberg last year for Boma time to
give him a greatter mastery than he possemed
of the German language. As for his French
it is juin' pitesable. But what he mosb needs
is.his father's perfect self-possession, which
it le poslible he will soon acquire. With
Wales' many years' experience it would be
renearkable if he had not the neoessary oalm
to go throngh an official coMemony.with the
dignity demanded from his exalted position.
•
. A DIME'S HEAD IN A BOX.
One of the vary oldest churches in the'
city of London, thab f St. Maryi the
md • 32 ' .e
iabout t be I'
menu, a o e c coed for worship
p
and turned intoI 1, hall.T
a m es on he churoh
contains the moat bit ti g 11 t' f
relics. N bleres n - co ee ion 0
ota e among these is the head of
the Duke of Norfolk, hi h i kept i
In a
bl k b d 1 w e a 1 ao ox nnder a g ass cover in the yeah. Y•
mmediabely after hie execution on Tower
H'Il h D k ' -
i t e a e a friends obtained posseseion
of the head and se t d 't in the h 1
ore en i . e c ape
o
attached t his fam y • mansion. Thte
family mansion really comprised the build-
ings of the ancient Priory of Holy Trinity,
as founded by Matilda, Queen of Henry...,we
in 1108, and which, with the precincts, had
been given at the dissolution of the monass
teriesbyHenryVIIL toThomaandleY,Lord
ChancellorofEngland,who,afterpullingdoWn
'the ishurch, 'wide the.place hisresidence un-
til bis death, in the ye r r l554. Thereupon
.•
in virtue of his marriage With the Lord
Chancellor's daughter, the property passed
into the possession of Thomas Howard, Earl
of Norfolk, whom: unhappy lot it was
twenty-two years afterwards to lay down
his life on the block. Afber his execution
his son, the Earl of Suffolk, disposed of the
priory precinct and hio mother's =mien
ie nernarke'bliaa OHM 0? n Leng'Time
%;s'
b1strierer-lelieurriarlern of Ten fear
Seanding Perimenielatil Vured-A gtorY
man or interest to Au Other Sufferer&
(Sunday Morning Nowa, Montreal.)
,
empress,
. . 6drawaaitth "tth:ni°h13ienrga I 8 atecTu n two i tohi_
w"i"b the
"''rre effected through the agencY of
Dr, .WIlliarnali Tink Fills for Par Canada
Il ahvitnit u, the ToMelloPerl ° .
ed 'ale United Eltates..., a reporteadfar
' ' " 'SuultlY Morning 418'81 tt° isu°131Y
lumelf ' generally Of tb,Le 'awns rtenesso
ei theee ou'res, determined to ievesti ate
gtl
e °"•"0 for hiaaaelft whiah* had 'ell .7
hmen brought . to his notice, where the
a , , .
,iirt, ,.,raii, claimed to • be due entirely ' to
to oneaey of this medicine. Aware that
,Idr, Williams' Pink Pills had been tried in
id' b N 709
''ne ecber3oeisekteeabgreeentelrenetuhereceityelogfaMoneireal,
i'l'o bed Mr years been afflicted periodioallY
' ,11 lhognuaton, the re orter Set out on a
* ' ' •
., anney of inquiry to asoPertain what the re-
me: tied been. Arriviag at tho home of
ai o Granville, the gentleman referred to,
ee Proved him °named)! 04°3'114 PsTfeeb
l'"'"lbh• .0
. You don't look aa though you had been
tileallately, M G Ul
•'- ffaring a grea r. ranv e,
s•;• the toren:ter, accenting the 111'1'
...lion of him host to .
be seated.•
" Well, no; you would scarcely auppon
from ray present appearanoe and activity
reset I had just reoovered froni amulet acute-
'whioh kept
week *U.:Anent° rheumatism,a
roe in bed for over two weeks,. You see,
oontinued Mr. Granville, 4' I am an habi-
Seel sufferer from rheumatism, or sas least I
slave boon for ten yessis past, and .although
1 have tried aimed - every remedy it has
.
only been since recently that I have bona
enything to do me good. , It is now aboub
ten years sines I first boo _
ame afflicted with
when it began to
tole painfuldisease, andd
g , boxing never experienced it be.
'''' lie en-
t re, I was stet a oemplete lose to under -get
a tand what it was. It wes in Ohicago that
i had my 'first attack, and I. remember
„
*be circumstances very wen* Wh"e
1
' valkIng on the street I was, sudden y
, ain in m lefb knee
nized with a violent p , y , t
, s hide continued to grow worse until I coma
.-4k no longer, and was compelled to call a
• ab and be driven home. Ones there Ishrouded
,•ook to my bed and did not leave it fer tom
nem being totally, unable to move' my leg
at thont'expezienoing the mot excruciating
?Ain, whit% nothing I could get seemed to
relieve;
"Did you not have a doctor r &eked the
reporter.
" Ohayea ; but he didn't aeemed to do
...a, much good. He wrapped the limb in
ulnas and gave me come ,,elecootion of
lalioylla acid to swallow. • ' But it Waa of
ao avail. EaCh year aa winter paeses intoo
epring I have been seized with this restful
msease and laid out for some weeks,
eor have I been able until lately
aa obtain anything which would even
. . ----a.
klavatais'aveAketeGdP. '
A Men Wile:Was*.Overivh. eltu_ed li ith Atka tea,
Nuptial Wisdom.
A Beton Ammo/ man, at present num-
.
withllandeecialearnedyeou Iuenuggs ern. vtaehrx reniribi na eel eibdaeenh:retilohir eewtit:11 be trothenI 1341 gie4h:t.
periences during his engagement;
tt Do you know," said the young men,
"that jut' about three, months primate my
marriage. / began to set dint. sted with
everybody. 1. eenldn't turn My head but
mine one wanted to give me advice like
ee
tikie.:e
• "'Oh 1 John you're Molten to got married
gem. wej (leme you wait deo os gen
N'o mati ought to marry until he
itastrh:oldenreeeee. Why, it is absolutely
oo ar y. . •
'
am".eNir„,,giwuecwatb:4244tmeefeehunreawgieig ?mayBheet
baring you, but I have kept nay wrath bet-
bled up eo long that it's get to a bailing'
point and hao got to be ventilated. Stop
up 3'eur ears if you want to; bub 1 am going
to keep.right on talking.
"01 manse I knew that m fi e
y au" was
a very economical girl . and thoroughly
understood my'finanolal condition. So you
can imagine how' I felt when a maiden aunt
approached me to talk over the matter and
began like this :
.. 'John, this its downright focilishness,yards.
you ought not to . marry and I .prataat
against iD. mem one 1;owadays think. of
nothing but spending money • they never
know how to save a cent. '
" 'Now, don't you be foolish. In she
loves you and I don't think much of
&la' love' nowadays, she .will. wait for
you a .r g
11 1 ht.' This made mabsolutely
8
agga .
!'""''`' . •
" (Mien again when my relatives and
' ' • '
friends began offering advice about 'my
course after marriage I began to internally
• ' •
eau= with rage. • 'Going honeekeeping?
Don't you do it. Grace ie yomeg and not
. .Emmen
nsea to howsehold duties and it would jute)
tire her out. Take my advice. I'm older
than you and have been through the mill
and just board for a year or two 4 .
'
" Then another friend would say : ' Well,
I hone you won't beard with year . wife's
g ik alter you're ... .
o. a married, tonere never
a a couple that got salon well when they
g a
d • h t ' '
live with . he wife s mother. She'll want
to run eve thin end you must remember
that ' rYmother till thi h ' h 1
b.. every a t t bn at her fir a are
Omen If _ycu, wan o e a solevely rea
- --
g• o to housekeeping. Then you oan have
things jut as you want them. Now, I
know all about it for I have been there
.., . ,
myna.
" There. I won't talk an more on this
tt Tie f y . - .
ma er. ese are a ew .
samples. nna I
bore you? I feel better, at any rate. I
ight add th '
at I have boarded ' with my
In.r , i and we
i e B fo ka &month an we get a, eng like, -
wwell, 1 seyou'd mil ' b t
euTPP. e •e- u „fact -we
get along witnout any clash at all.
-
'mews marring° nun preparatmen menthe
Wedding Innoction-Miars New Coronet-
Moony Daemon Amonget British noyamses
. •
-gobastay ladle of a mollies:el execution.
1RTHDAYS
. 0
-;),,
s. e
•
- .
ere
'would
ntainly
n old
dna
D.co
1 her
he team.,
BF pmition
kr
ad She
Id no
do
a berself
iSevenbYfour
izetlsh
°viand
•eorge
H.,
Dbh,
iigned
eased,
as a
°coasted
oeterity
Mather
,eges
minim
idifferenee
3 inade
D any
istjesty
fe.
all the
ge a
emne
Empatition.
ER
Queen
risme
amiable
eassorted
as.
ved
ith
ledge
atil
anorkable
leas
eases
ber
' e
'aehable
i bnaineas
1 the
Ice
ES liberty
tartly
y brethren,
eted
teas
doved
1 the
Sid the
A French
. amongst
le manner
ie very
netemplated
rime
norreation
eats
n:ate
Maim,
on
mown
milt
rivate
loon.
leas
wagons
Marto
"%Win.
Ter
is been,
thal
ry raenyof
oupamt
Inge
s very
eeng
id women
tture
d to
Leger
O Trinees
daily
mime
aeotred
r tbe
mu,
1174survivblig
emble
DATE
Mee
here
the
Mpel
adergo
giacity.
e ..15tat
Ian
eval
onto
already
eproached
Sanany,requests
ett
id 'daughters
tato-what
self.
EitZSENT
The
le ohildren
re four
Mama
yei•r
tiversigu's
xitb
the
? live
lies.i
Mei
ob them
nel
'
.1
At
,nretros
.
mealier
be more
more
lady of.
of power
Victoria,
own Son
might
were
nes.jestyas
loge along
power
that a,ctivity
and
VICTORIA
monarch.
ever
II., who
who reached
of June,
56 yearn
so to
model of
'anabolic'
as
abstention
be attributable
to an
or
clearly
bodily
never
She la hide
women
good etesrt
where
EIATESIT'S
Victoria's
Charles
man,
match,
The kind-hearted
for two
Her Majesty'ss
of f$3
she was
as
at a time
were frantically
side.
moan trained
in
habits.
toast of
mid, "1
all
to all
only for
are the
brother,
members
name
A CANARD
newepaper
the
by
best
of 'Wales.
it
have oreated
and some
weer°
of Her
than elsewhere.
as muoh
Moue
'Nevertheless
into men's
which
been
AS
many years
and
leader
of the
when he
best.
dude curroanded
who
to give
push
" Clear
met
sobered
:British
from
sudden
is now happy
of women.
mum
Duke of
about' July
place at
has been
extensive
The
. of squeezing
400. , His
uniform,
made.
under
i32
for grants
this
'
ALLOWANCE
allowance
is
to
of Fife
eaoh---once.
granddaughter,
the D118813/313
end Doolittle
on the
enoyel
out the
Deems
for item
etent piiettire,
,
' (men
te be
lore.
a haek
a neVer
1
eired
dome a nd
birthdays go, but that of
0 Her MoStG. racieus Majesty
Queen Victoria seems to
-go on forever. No one
• grudgee the 'old lady the
happy recurrence of her
-natal day, but the poor
bankruptiritish traders"' an-
. nob but help thinking that
numerals, to be commemorated
in the fitness of things and
to his peroonal advantage.
seventy-four who holds the
so tightly in her grasp as
and who moreover is so chary
even having a outer with
get plenby of fun. out of
she so disposed. But no;
steeds are of the funerseltype
at her own solemn we,
on earth will galvanize her
which would be beneficial
to the nation at large.
AS A RECORD MOANER.
years is a long spell for a
Only two Sovereigns of
exceeded this age, namely,,
lived to be 77. and George
the age of 82. On the
Queen Victoria will have
30 of which have been
say, in sackcloth and ashes.
devotion to the memory. of a
Victoria will go down to
the champion record breaker.
from the society of her
to a misenthropic
inexplicable selfishness, to an
what -nob, will perhaps never
known, It is certainly not
infirmity or ill-health,for Her
enjoyed better health in her
and hearty, arid would give
of her kingdom of half , her
and a beating over any
the health stakes were in
FATHER a SENSIBLE MAN.
mother's first husband,
Louis, of Leiningen, was nob
and the marriage was an
productive of no happi-
Duke of Kent only
short years after his marriage
mother, and he died at
; but Victoria's mother liend
75- The Duke of ICent was
a Prince with &moorage
when the court and society
enthusiastic on. the
He was a tall, wen -beim, hand.
to military service, fries.
private life, and exact in all
At a banquet, in reply
" The Royal Family," he
am a friend of civil and rang-
the world over, 1 am an
religious teats. All men are
andl hold that power is (we.
the benefit of the people.
principles of myeem and my
the Duke of Sussex; but
of the Royal family do nob
'principles."
OF ABDIOATION.
has just started a
•
pigeons in a mosb remarka-
solemnly a ounclug upon
nn
authority that Queen Victoria
abdicating in favor of the
Where or how it gob its
does not say, bub its state.
some stir in contioental
slighternerriments in Great
the 'firnuiess and deMrmina-
Inajesty aro perhaps better
Queen Victoria has
intention of retiring inbo
she has of skipping over the
. the canard has put
munla and given rise to
if ever they existed. have
dormant.
A VROSPECTIVE RIMER.
now the Prince of Wales
naturally, regarded as the
or society .; he has fulfilled
the duties wnich attach to the
throne and he •has attained
must be considered to be at
He is no longer a larky
by a fesb cot of men
took advantage of his good
themselves inbolemble airs
better people aside with a:
the track 1 You're not in
1" H. R. H. has very de-
down 'and become - the
pere de female who, having
the awful shoe'lr caused him
snatching away Pof his firab•'1
in the 'thought of his
son's marriage with the most
,
Ir011 TORE B MARRIAGE.
York will be; married sorne-
eth, and the function will
Ste James' Pelage,. where the
closed to the public to
'alteratione bathe seating
chapel is a small place, and
will not hold more
Hord Highness will wear a
and . May's frock will .be
The delicate subject of money
discueelon and is being
the usual diplomotic manner.
have been made to Palle.
to Queen Victorie's sons
that a feeling of impatience
one is to be is manifesting
.
POR WALES' COMORE:14'.
to the Prince.of Wales for
$180,000 a year, and there
share ib somehow, sli the
and her eiders eake $25,000
the ' usual intoinei for a
and the earns
of Teak now receivese-the
of Yokes ought to be Ala
$105,000 a year , left over.
Highnessett ',may, 'perhaps,
general arcounti ' differently,
enottgli for dem tall, and an
more would be injueicioile al
but it depends on the
'Victoria, who is not 10 be put
. .
o change of tapping John
The Prince of Wales has
in thie reaped, bile Quleen
heell nerVtitte When a
bo had for the making, and
,
all that could be obbeihed
dants:
AY'S °outman.
minuet Mr the thiebent of
pooseesor,
e'etelently had some idea of its worth.
Finally the dealer, had an order for
a specimen of this mintage from mine one
in New York, raised his offer to $1,200, and
at • thia figure the silver piece changed
hand. • ,
' Dealers and collectors differ in theirstate•
merits as to how many of time dollars are
known ee be extant.' Some say four, others
eight, while Mr. Skinner says he can locate
twelve. ' Four of these„, he says; are held in
New Englend, one being owned by Copt
b .
Nathan Appleton', of Boston; one yo
aLohing G. Pormelee also of Boston * one by
William Brown, of Salem, and one other,
' 1 • h d remember
the owner of_wh,ch he Gee nob .
A writer _on!'thiseiniesjechheyrein an article
linelemProof ledronim No Novelty. .
Bullet-proof uniforme, it appears, were
known long ago to the Chinese. They were
made of leather and wool in the nerbh and
paper and cotton in the south of Ohina. It
seems ridiculous to coil such combinatione
armor, and yet they me -lie an armor euperior
in many inetanoes to steel. Thirty thiok•
nem' s of albernate 'calico and paper will re•
islet a pistol bullet, or one from a rifle at a
distance .of 100 A speareman whc
thrusts his weapon into a man clad in this
kind f b ith d hi
garmen tem ne er . wound E
enemy nor eatract his weapon, and if the
enemy is an archer; or is armed with a long
sword or javelin he is likely to lose his life
.. , . .
for his mischance.
lintlieenheedAdrintenteo.i.mefeniivr, set;e0ehnressfeear,Nt.hHat.,Chonl;
a epee:tram Mr:which-he paid 8500. Another
,. .
waa Ppurchased in 1.8891St Dr. Walther, of
St. Paul aith bee old Norwegian
' • Minn.,' • ' "
eettler, who had Ion treasure it in a
• 'nightsd
• oaf ' Th D t g ' d thi ecinein
7 1151g..• . '9c" etre t t13.4;aP 'a
or $ d S. I,: littlePrevbwahto 8 a 'm n
name b in Cohen oug rams!
0 The
"Tew ere Tennessee for $1L _ _ _
British Museum..kolds one or p
w icla it. aid
$800, and•there irs one on exhibition in , the
Philadelphia Mint. This aoconnts for eight
„ r v s iblv ni of th dollars.. .
-. - °,8 - 111) • • ese this in _
The whole history of oo age • is
in myetery. According to the
p • • s
Mint records, 19,570 silver &tiara were
coined in 1804. This its the last authentic
, . .
An Actress' Bouquets.
' A pretty story is being told of Mies Eller
,Terry, who not only receives innumerable
bouquets and baskets. of flowers on great
occasions such as the nrob an asi
I
i ht f 'Ll cm es but c trives te
n P1 e e Yeeti" Btu f " ' " f these
enjoyment .ou. o every one io
eouvenirs • the enjoyment.of know ng that
11 th I; t'f 1 flo e ivin leasurc
a me eau 1 al wee! amg gp
to those who sad need it Ver often &Stet
y . y
a first night Mies Terry will get together all
her bouquets fill her carriage with them (11
eve.n ey
th do'not overflo into a'" neighbor.
d then, 'w it ' f h
Ing call), an en, in op e o her owe
fatigue, .drive to a hospital and leave at lb
doors these messengers of &dome.
•
d ,
racer of the Mintage; and .11 is not known
whether they were held in the Treasury and
enbeequently struok over into a later date
• • h th they
or w e er were sent to .A.frica to pay
off our 'sailors as one story rune.
' ' if
. 11 18 that all, of the United States
Secret Service .111 the West, • who ,was
accidentally•shoe in 1887, was at the time
f h•
o es death investigating the counterfeiting
f •
antiquated coins for collections of nurills-
. • . . • .
.
Greatest Library In the World.
The greate.ob library in . the world is the
Bibliotheque National, in Paris, founded
by LOMB XIV. It contains 1,400,00(
volumes 30 .000pamphlets,175 000
, 0, , , manu•
scripts, 300,000 maps and charts, and 150,-
000 coins and medals. The collection el
engravings exceeds 1,300,000, contained ir
some 10,000 volumes. The portraits
number 100,000.
matl"'
is attention was rs drawn o s au -
H'fi b di t thl b
jeot by the sale. of en 1804 ' dollar at in
auction saleof a collection in Philadelphia,.
The oaptitin examined the coin and at once
•
questioned its .genuineness, and, on taking
it to the Mint, it was found to be a counter-
felt. ' •
Tinder the action of acids which were
applied slight trieces.of a:lighter. metal' were
discovered, marking .a complete. square at
the ' base of the figure " 4 " of the
"1804,'' and a further expert, analysis
disolosed the fact of its being a
Modified defier of 1805, of which issue
there are may; the 5 had been drilled
-
out and the; Opening plugged with a " 4 "
taken from.some ether issue. The coin had
then been treatedtocorrosive acid 10givet
it the old and worn look. ' • •
..
It la further abated by. PerPons well
021 the subject that the dies for this
Jones and his wife were wandering among
i n 1 . ti
the cages in a mensger e. say, ones,
dearewhat on earth has that rattleemake
bied.himeelf up into such an involyed. knot
for 9" " Can't say, darling ' unlese theme
• • f .
eomething on hie inked that .
he 'wants te
remember."
"Did I talk any in my sleep last night?'
he asked.
"A little," .replied his 'wife.
"What did I say ?" .
. "Yon used the , interjection 'oh e several
timers."
"Humph 1 That wasn't any interjeo•
tion."
"What Was it ?"
"It was a verb."
A sneeze is said to be the sign . of good
ihee1th andluck. Sick personsnever ;mem
b is said.
therein to the city. In the year 1622 the
inhabitants of Duke's -Place, that had been.
built on part of the site of the old prior Y,
having come to an open .quarrel with the
parishionem of so °ethane/a Cremobtained
leave of Charles I. to rebuild the priory
church, with the assistance of Lord Mayor
Barkhann The church was amordiegly re-
built remains to this day. The parish
books contain many curious facts relativeto
the religious conflicts which culminated in
the refer/nation while the communion plate
is worth not less than $10,000.
.,elp me e little. Yoh would not believe it
• i I were to recount the various patent
reinedies whioh I have taken both externell Y
ems internally during all that time in an
endeavor to °Mahe relief. I must have a
hundred Bo -called cures, and never ea-
perienced any beneficial results until I came
Lerma Dr, willioroe, Pink Pills. I mum
frankly confess that at the outset I had ea
great faith lathe Oho '1 hadbried so many
medicine., all to no purpose, but I woe
vrilling to give them a tried anyway, sol
sent out to the 'drug. store on the oor-
He Wouldn't Bo it Again.
That there le very little that is new under
'
the sun is shown perhaps more frequently
in the jokes that are told than in anything
else. A story has been. going the rounds
of late concerning . the trepidation of a
small boy, nmho upon being asked rather
gruffly by his echoonteacher who discovered
America, begin to whimper, and instinct.
ively blurted out, Is plgease; sir, io wasn't
sale is '
This has its counterpart in an amusing
mrs. Giadstene's Men Parise
Mrs. Gladstone once gave a dance, and
the guests wondered as the evening wore on
why there were no men. This was men-
tioned to the hostess by a member of the
family. "Oh, dear 1" she exclaimed, "1
quite forgot to send out the men's inviets-
1
t One ; they are all in that bag under the
moo
ner and got a supply. I followed the
directions carefully and, soon experience..?
relief, and before 1 had been taking the
pink Mille long I was able to get out of bed,
end although I was still a little miff the
pain had almost commletely disappeared. 1
em eiall taking the pine, and shall keep on
taking them for some time, and furthermore
1 don't Intend to be without them in
future.
schOol-boy tale bold many years ago by an
Englieh teacher who believed in the poeveri
clf the birch to restore fading memory.
Having asked one of his scholars; the gees.
tion, "Who made this glorious universe se
the boy replied, "1-1 don't know, sir."
"Come," said the teacher, taking up his
'switch, "you must know. Tell me, or I'
shall whip you 1" •
The boy looked at the whip a moment) '
'
posted
mintage' were out cif the pound= of the
Mint for over a year and a half before they
were destroyed, and iti is believed that
many of the specimene. now held in collee-
Nona were made 'at thin time. This was in
e
CARTERS
1828, it is said. Such a . procedure ie, Of
Mauve, a penal offence, and the story may
be entirely without foundation, although 1 t
ie credited by many students of murals.
'
''''6'.4' IrIFTLE
a-
"so ivER
s`A"
, PI LL S.
•e ...,
•
• • ••
. .. •
., ..
':'
.:
..
A Thoughtless Hostess.
Elderly Spinster (returning from a lato
supper)m-Mrs. X is nob muoh of a hostess,.
at any rate. Though it is the middle of the
" Then you ascribe your relief entirely
to the efficacy of Dr. Willianne Pink Pills,'
au ested the reporter.
, ggI most certainly do, and Mr. bertha
'street,
and then with a characteno snivel 'con.
boned. -
" Please, teacher, I did, but I won% do
it again."
minter, she took good oare to provide . her
guesta with young vegetables, but she quite
forgot to provide me vvith a yeuaff „mg..,
,
um druggist, on }Maury will verile
Whab I have maid."
Th ter b visited Mr. H. R.
e vapor next .
d ' ' hbid
Curtis, the druggist referred to, w oes
A Game for Children.
Write ou your slates the name of some
1 1 h • t • then '
well-known or ca c arao er , en pass
motion.
When the collection of H. R. Linderman,
at one time director of the. Mint, was sold
., v. •
by auction in New York in '1888, a fine,
f f th 1804 d II r brou ht $470. The
Pro° 0 o 0 a . g . .
market value of the coin varies.. One cede-
o ue fixes it at $200 while another offers
l g ,
POO fodent
r spectmene. Collectors value their
i 'B„ e t from $1,000 to $2,000.
ePeeve an 0 a h a ft I 1 ith thirteen
The 0 -12Th. as 9 ng If elv _ _ ears
stars upon t e reverse, wh e the faceit
the date and a headof the of L erty
_ .. , . . •
with Bowing hair.
Sick Headacheand
to a bilious state
'
Dizziness, Nausea.
eating, Pain in the
remarkable success
2't•
• !
UR
reheve
'A
Dirowsintss,
Side,
has
all•tbe
of the.
ere.
been
rci
' - 43 I-
syst• .. tt. .1. .
pig ...,ft .1:
'Whits
shifttii atoi.g
The Prince's Plume.
-
The pluine.of the Prince of Wales, worn
on state ocCatiOnS is said to be worbh
$50.000. The feathers, an English writer
says, are pulled from the tail of thaferiwah,
one of the eared and most beautiful birds of
India. Great expense and trouble are
necessary to capture the bird, whioh 'is
found only in the wildest jungles. The
feathers are taken from the live cock.
ne"ereenneareeeneenesse
place pf lewdness is ab 291 Bleury ;streets
end interrogated him with reference to
the cam. -M• r. Curtis 'stated that he
mow of Bin Granville's. ;ailment and that
no had suffered for years and he had no
doubt pi,* pins gid all dr, Granville eat&
He further said that Pink:Pills had a very
lerge eale, and gave univereal satinfootion:
The reporter then withdrew, quite • sestisfied
with the result of his investigation.
The Dr. Willie•ms' Pink Pills for Pale
slates to the right.
letter of the name
with that letter, and
elates again to the
treated in this faehion
completed, each having
good and bad. For
of the names be
prove to be:
Noble
Affable,
'
Then
write a
elm%
right.
until
a
example,
"Napoleon.
against the first
virtue beginning
fault. Then peas
Each. letter is
the names .are
list of attributes,
suppose one
a He will
Negligent,
Arrogant,
,
. Inoculating Against Cholera.
. ,
The Pioneer -Brag, Allahabad, states that
up to the 4th ult. over 730 inoculations
with cholera virus had been performed at
Agra without any unpleasant ' symptoms,
except the local discomforts and slight rise
of temperature which follow the operations.
The results of .the 'inoculations of the ex-
alted virus •are much the ' same as follow
the first inoculatione. In a few CASES the
reaction was stronger, bub not more lasting.
inoculated menplaced tee d
All inoculated men are on o aye,
light duty after each inoculation. Melba-
kine is bursa engaged all day, assisted by
me ca e cent o e gam. Ben, n pre nr-
di 1 ffiy --f the . i ' i p
Kt in " d i I ti I t
' • cc es an noou o ng app icon s
ir g "vaccines"
,o a ages an cas es.
f 11 d t He • daily receives
v one o v a o o era ma ma n
in heti t 1 it h I 1 111 i dif-
ferent parts of India, and feels highly grate ..•
fled at the confidence reposed in him. It is
'stated thee' be haa fixed on .Agra as the seat
of his central laboratoryfor the preparation
1 . .
of his cholera -cu tures.
Headache, yet CAnTiin's LITTLE 1.,‘ -1.:.
are equally. valuable. in Conatipati..., on n
and preyentingthis annoyingtem . . • ii 0
niey also corr, ect all disorders of tub ...tik .
atiniulate the liver and reeteitte tire ;.n .. .
Even if they orily cured
.HEAD
Ache they would be almost pilsgless Oao
who sumer fresh thie digFasiing ... .
ne
but fortunately tlitr gabd d
and tiro who 'Liam ri d
' tP a
hqe, ,,,., , ....... lk ... ,
these little pills vamah e in SO Y
will not he .iiilliil td do wi out . +
Mit after all sick head
C 1,,,,E
of ii thl. isAsoro
is the bane somany , lige h
k , IF eat boot 0
we ma e ca.
while othersedo not.
, .. .
Limit:a ',Ivan PILlee ' • &Teti
and very way to tate. oe or dar . e
a dose. They are skintly v.i ., ni.,, 1, . 56
not gripe or pow, hut hy Ali , - mt.
ereas,e all oleo use mem. • Tis k ow .
',five for $1. Sold eeenembeee, : • •t• I.
...., - . • - vo-fewegetle,
...-vkat'L.VVei,-titrit ', ' . '
. "lepenicnot out of weak surmises, e k
but from proof.''
People. are. manufactured by. the Dr.
Williams' Medloizie Co., of Brookville
'
.0att, and Schenectady, N. Y., a firm oi
unquestioned reliability. Pink Pills are
' "
not looked upon ao a patent medicine,
Polite,
Orderly,
. *
Loving,
Energetic,
. Obliging,
.Nice,
•
.
and
Petulant,
Obstinate,
Lazy,
Extravagant,
Officious,
Noisy, .
'‘e
ie . .
ere •
ER
il'i
, ;
sD since COTTOLENE
le take its place..
li'? With Which the
A '' I
IA ,./.! . ,.
UST
C 0
has come to
The satisfaction.m
have hailed
,
,.., •
ra
hat rather ars a preeoription. An analysis
of their properties shove Ithat the.as
pad are an 'unfailing aped& for all
dieemett arising from an impoveriehod eon-
. .
dition of the b ood, or from an impairment
of the nerimus system, Buda se lemma of
empetite,, depreasion of 'miring, . anasinie,
ohiorosis or Veen sickness, gement' rriPAcq"
me Iota of motor
tar wealcnese, climbs , Y'
a • 6,
milpitation ot the.he rie nervous headech ,
locernetor ataxia, paralysis, sciatica, rho a
matism,13b.. Vitue" dance, the after effects
..
W'th H' h P .'
yawn . i ig rices l'On
. .
Electric Belts. .
f r e '
$1.55, $2.65, $3.70 ;. o m r pm° ,
es $5 sg
nea, Qualty remains the sanae-16 dii•
fer t styles* dry batterrand acid beltsthey
en '
-mild or strong current. Less than half
the priceof any other company.andmore
•
home testimonials than all. the rest t (1'
• .
gether. Full list free. Mention. this'
. , ,
a er W. T BAER atCO.W dsor Ont.
V P • • , s
1 theedvent of the
!167
1 '
,
''. e
!" ' I
,
evidenced by the
ing enormous
e; POSITIVE net
l' Value as a new
peopre
New
1
e, "
rapid
sales is
only of
article
Shortening
,
y increaS-
PROOF
its
e
'
great
of diet
one, grippe, all diseaaes depending upon 9
vitieted condition 'of the blood, much as
T1 re
uorofala, chronic erysipelas, etc. , ley a
•Iso a opaline° for the troulelee peoultar to
' • '
the feinale oystem, correcting irreguntrinee,
suppressione all forma of feniale weekreee,
hl bd and reeboring the
building anew the o ,
glow of health to pale . and Pal-
low cheeks. In • the cam of oitn
ff t . it, radical cure hi all
they e co . .
cesee arising from mental worry, overwork,
, .CARTnea
Shipping in Scotland.
During May Scotch' shipbuilders launched
.
i 30 116 t f hich
27 vessele, aggregat ng , ens, o w
17 representing 20 008 tons were steamers
, . , , . ,
and 10, measuring 10,103 to, sailing
vessels To the total the Clyde contributed
• .
15 steamers of 19,198 tons, and 7 sailing
vessels of 5,921 tone; the Forth 2 steamers
of 810 bus, and 2 Bailing vemels of 3,900
. ,
tone,
. Jelly and Germs.
Beware of jelly unless; you hirer all about
the of ite making. Here is a
, CASTES SIEDIedita 00., Ibis %H.
•
I 11, hall Dom hall Ea,
' ' •
process plus'
; e 11;
man se...ng us that the amber -tinted wine
A euu.v.k.a......4*.AAAAAAAA"..."^A,AelanivietAAAraorno.mt
1
jelly, so prettily moulded, is a vehic e for
the conveyance of .germs.. Jelly is largely
composed of gelatine. . When physicians
as ins out of the Arno here they ;m-
want g r p
1
_ .,,,,,,,v,,
osa, a ga . a.
e e
.0.4,1.0 ;,:.4!::.,t':;.. ' ... , , ,. 1.k.2
, but is
a general
' gestible,
.., tieing lard,
•eel lard promotes.
, e.
also sufficient
desire
unwh
and
• '
to be
I
o esome,
of all
Try
proof of the
,
nth of indi-
unappe-
the ills that
i,
•
or exceeses of any nature. These . pine aro
,
not a purgative roedicine. Thoy contitin
oray life giving properties and nothine Mott
eould imure the most .delicate artern.
They Ad directly on the blood, But:pleats
he lifo.giving gee-I:ales, by aesieiing ir i.
, • .. "
heorb oxygen thee great sukporter of 4
tt. ,
blor..7,,
No Wonder.
. ,
et- ou seem to look at thin s in a
Fath Y „ g
very different light Once your marioge.
His newly Married daughter -Wen, 1
"teen lamps and
ought to after receiving four
Mee candelabra for wedding presents.
"
Where a current blows and
pose gelatine . , .,
minute organisms .. are captured by it.
in ' the same way to a
Cooks ex Es `e '
po e ; Mee. . y
cool it * but the germ
current of air -to ,
• h lat tt' h- h he cure
is t o es nump ua.p armacy for t
of an the syraptome indicating lawatre ..a. -o_
a
LIVER Corm:balite It you ara.trolibical it w
costiveness, nrssinees, Sour stomach,
, .
often geta there just the Mime. If a woe
of • Ili' a 1 e of glass or even 0, plato la
mita f p Etc , ...
er e coo ng jolly, e 'germ w
put ov the II, ' ethe ' .. ill
papa an, .
.,,
,
, • O., ..:,,n.ti,..;:...,
4
„
A
oS
'
.
•
k 1
at orld0
discovering
others
m t,
%
t
0 1 '7
, N.
Wellitqgto
.
that
• '
FO
K.
'
and
like
you
1 • ooti
•
j
'
' tii,
Made
PAIPCANK
NIONTIFStALa
.
a ;
was
s
4,
,
mi • •
. ii,
only
and
. ,
.,
te
a
thousands
have
sr '
. .
E
LA.
a
,
by
es
'emcee
no'
now
g
,
&
nn
t me
1
'
'
CO.,
Sts:
'
nee
in 11
aa
7'
of '
.
,„
I
e•e
t'
,
•
cowed° life, In tide ' way the ,,,
'',.,' is "1 OW n " d V ••
n wino k . 0
''' )1' l'" ' D'bitn mit " n ome
wine eta mooing clops e es, eo a
iieh mid red, nouriehes . the various
organs, stimulating , them to isotivity in
_ e per ormanoe e
Oh- ' 1 01 th ir ft/motions and
time eliminate Pante trona the saratern.
Dr. NVilliatru, Pink Pitts are Nolci only in
• a I d mem, end
boxes beaming the mei a tett e
mapper" (orbited iii red inh). Boer fremind
b. 'w ... • pill 0 old
that. r., Wimps' Pink te are n von, s ,0
In bulk, or by the domen es hundred, and
any dealer who Offeraanbabltutes in this form
ti trying to :defraud yen and ihmild be
Oradea. The public are 61,00 cautioned
' ',' . '
agalnet all Other 00.0abied weal builders
end torte' tdoitia, pet ufa An owls,* tom
hateudea to deceive. TheY . ate . all
larittations whotse maikeni hope . to
,
Reap li Mink*, advantage 'frent tele
tkondoefil. reputatioli achieved to De, Wits
14.1-.....i •iii-PIL +Iiii., i ,..t. ..“.. ..tAat.,.. 1.. Ilea.
, Student -I don't see how any ore' can
ve n ,. a m sera e town.
live i thi 1 bl to ./sTo mattet
where I turn I always, knock against it
creditor. '
d a a 'a t
pia on ergra ue, e xe one who a rara-
pled to jelly in e iootball tuale
• melee ou , no . Aan g ne ,
A ' ' h Id t 1.' a I be utt a irl
f 16 lau hs at hid solos that he to a great
0,, . g
ib 't 1 f 10 1' -'11 b..' ' 16
w va g r o , aug s °douse the is .
Sir Edwin Arnold. onto said that P if
. ,..
he were at liberty te choose. hie sex and
coentry he would be an American woman.
Annie Howe -Just look Ot my new Park
gown 1 1 gots it aspecially be *eat nett
Sunday, when X am golegth he confirmed.
Urns Litoycl--Xt le a perfect dreaine ,dear,
m 4. e 4
.0111y1 don't gee how you can offerd. a 1"tatie
drools. Annie gotver.:84.11,h 1 r,Ooh t. Bay
8 Word. My dresemoker anniggled it fot Inc. ,
.
The proper function's of, a government is
. .. ,
f ble le to do ' good,
be Inalce It easy or e poopla _ _g ,
an d diffioult for them to do Meil-Odadstone.
'
. .
Headache. Indigestion. PCoit Arratrra,
T a. ei. eme emineeno PAINS; agep109
11'. Nights, anis/ lahohoi
,. .0 00 Feeling', Bom Atm,
h , et•dY y a d Liter Cure
13.1lom. raY a 1 ne a .,
- ' ' ""
- - • . ,
" C. n../."The nickel is legal tender to
- . P • .
the Amount of ,25 meta. Silver coine-
band d al liar unlimited • trade dollar
. ar o . , , ,
..0 legal tender , halvee and qtartero to
o t,, . ,
$10 1 M) -cent *cot to $5 ; 10.-oent pieces
to ,$10 ., 6 and 3.0out pima to $5, ,
.k . embrac a an
Central Park, Now Yor , , , e,,
4e 1 WkiteDe NDAtonal
;Mee of 8o2 acres; Y 1 o . ,
will give immediate relief and Manor A Cure.
sold at all Drag.storea.
Poterbovoi Medicine Co., Liinitcd.
, , . ,
0 PETERSORO" ONT 0
Patk .,288,000 ; Hyde Park, Tendon, 400 ;
Plicenair Peek, DeWitt, e,760 ; Bole au
13milogine Petits, 2,100 ; Prater, ,..Vieonee
2,300 1..Pairiiihunt Park, Philedelplua, 2,830
.
., i
acres.,
'IM
31
40
1.1
11,1
1/11
40
11
11
•