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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1894-3-8, Page 3A Racking Cough Cured by Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, Mrs. P. D. HALL, 217 Geneseee St., Lockport, N. Y., says "Over thirty years ago, I remember hearing my tether describe the wonder. fill curative effects of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. During a recent attack of Le Grippe, which assumed the form of a Catarrh, soreness of the lungs, accent. panic by an aggravating cough, I used o d k�a us rercedies:aud prescriptions, While some of these medicines partially alleviated the coughing during the day, `��. none of them afforded me any relief from that spasmodic notion of the lungs which would seize me the moment I attempted ,, to lie down at night. After ten or twelve such nights, I was Nearly in Despair, and had about decided to sit up ail night in my easy chair, and, procure what sleep I could in that way. It then oc..' curxed to' one that I had 'a "bottle of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. I took a spoonful of this• preparation in, a little water, and was able to lie downwitho'ut coughing. In a 'few moments, I fell asleep, and awoke in ,the morning greatly refreshed and feeling much better. I took a teaspoonful of the Pew total everyy night for a week, then grad ually decreased the dose, and in two weeks my cough was eared," Ayer's Cherry sectoral Prepared by Dr. .T. 0. Acer & Co., Lowe11, Ma, . Prom pt to act, su re 'Q' cure CENTRAL Drug Store Z'9 I1 ANSON'S BLOCK. A fall stock of all kinds of:. Dye -stuffs and package les, constantly on .,... :hand, Winan's C Ondition ?owd-' erg, the best in the mark- et and always rash. Family recip- ees carefullyprepared at Central Drug Store Exete READ'MAKER'S. 0 '.411. ►' P " NEVER. FAILS tit Ctdn SAT,IFADi IJJI i Wl 'e .e. Qi f 4L.1. DEAit W.3 Solentifle American. Agency for CAi/RATH, TRADE MARKS, -DESIGN PATENTS, COPVRICHT$, etc. PD&on �dtot O86Inneenwasree r NEW Yir. Oldest bureau for seeming patents in Amerika. Beery patent taken out by us is brought before the public by anomie given free of candle In the • grigtafftAr Anteittritili tamest eireulation of any scientific paper in the word. Splendidly illustrated. Ne intelligent man simnel be without it. Weekly.. 113O a gear; 1.611efic months. Addres fUN t CO., gvnrs as art, 361 Broadway, Now York City, POWDERS Cure 8/CK FIZADACENE end Neuralgia In go whwurEE also Coaled Tongue, rhea ness;]3illousness, rain in the Side, Constipation, Torpid Liver, llad Ilreath. to stay cured also regulate the bowols. VERY NIOB t'o mere. PRICE 2$ CERT$ AI7' DRUQ$roR.E'S, it gum tree recently discovered in Aua. traria is said to be 415 feet high. The Portuguese say that no man can be a good husband who does not eat a •goof, broa k feet, The Kilrush correspondent a the Dahlin Independent says a bottle was washed ashore neer'Kilbaha, a small hamlet on the Atlantic seaboard, containing the follow. lug jotter addretsed to Mra, Captain Kiogh, Lilo of Wighbi--•"Friday evening. My zlear Louisa, -1 am in sight of land a.Viacketoi this evening. Lost our deck. rad of timber, at wed am thinking out gallant tierque will be "test too, FareWell, Beat teeisa and the otaleiree, till I meet your t hears e.'- toile lovin g hubby d liner iketigla ABOUT THE EUM AN FAQ WISDOM MAKI+iJR A iiTA [q'N 0401Q NANCE! TO`8Ilbl'N TM- illustrated by one whew life recently c kit, It is possible to overcome disadventag physiognomy was iu this country mfg after having served 'in the Preside Cabinet at Waahingtan. By acoido ver- fire in childhood his face had been. Go" piteously Scarred than any human v that I ever saw. By hard study he Phan from. being a; poor boy to the very he of the legal professiou; and when an a klyn needed heal foe enteredthe Unitel the 'reeideytials q n'rhe net, What a triumph over destr ante countenance I do not won ce,ae that when an opposing attorney t bins Philadelphia courtroom cruelly referre In' c his . personal disfigurement,;• Benjemi Nine Brewster replied in these words' "" Dr. Te1iiia:e'a Lost Sermon One or Dui sal Interests -In All. the 'Works of There is Nothinif llloro Wonderful ' the Countenance .or Neu. Buoolrnvtr, Feb, 25.—In the Broo Tabernacle this, forenoon, Rev.'Dr.Tal chose for the subject of hie sermon "" Humau'Face,"and held` his great audit fascinated with the charm of his eloquen he discoursed cin a subject of universe terest. The .teat was Boolesiastea 8, "A man's wisdom maketh his face to s and: the boldness of his: face shall be ch ed," or, as it may be rendered, the " so nese of his face shall be sweetened," Thus, a little change in our Eng' translation brings out the,better m ing of the tea~b, which"sets forth that oharacterof the fee is decided by character of the soul. The main tures of our countenance'were deoi by the Almighty, and we cannot chs them ; but under God we decide whet we shall have countenances benign or 'baleful, sour or - sweet, wrathful genial, benevolent or mean, honest scoundrelly, impudent or modest, o aromas or cowardly, frank or aneaki In all the works of God there is noth more wonderful' than the human ooum dance. Though the longest face is less twelve inches from the hair line of forehead to the bottom of the ohin, and broadest face is less than eight inches f cheek bone to cheek bone, yet in theta compass God bath wrought such differen that. the sixteen hundred million„ of human race may be•diatinguished from e other by their facial appearances. The f is ordinarily the; index :.of character. I' the throne of the emotions. It is'the bat field' of the passions, It is the eatalogu character. It is the map, of the mind. is the geography of the soul. And w the Lord decides before our birth whet we shall be handsome or homely, we are the character we form decking whet our countenance shall be pleasant or d agreeable. This is t o much so. that sore the most beautiful faces are unattraot because of their arrogance of their dee fulness, and some of the most rugged irregular filatures are attractive because the kindness that shines through the Accident, or sickness, or acarificat may veil the face so that it shall not press. the soul, but • in. the majority oases give me a deliberate: look at man's countenance and I will tell, y whether he is a cynic or an- optimi whether he is. a miser ` or a , philanth pint, whether he is noble or ignominio whether he is good or bad. Our fit impression of a man or woman is general the ac:urance impression. You at the fi glance make up. your mind that some m it unworthy of your friendship, but aft ward by circumstances being.put into in mate association with him you come to Ii him and trust;him, , Yet, stay with h long enough and you will be compelled return to your original estimate of his oh dcter,butit will be after he has cheated •y out of everything he could lay ' his hen. on. It is God's mercy that we have the outside indices of character. Phrenology one index, and while it may be carried an'absurb. extent, there is no boubt th you can judge somewhat of a man's chara ter by the shape of his head. ' Palmistry another index and while it may be eerie uto the fanciful and necromantie,thereis doubt that certain lines in the palmed- t, hand are indications of mental' and mot Lraits. Physiognomy is another index an Piddlecontourof the human face may som Mmes mislead us, we can generally aft ookieg into the eyeandnoticing the cur f the lip, and the spread of . the nostril. nd the,correliation of all the 'feature ome to a right estimate of a; man's cha. oter. If it were not so how would w now whom to trust and whom •to avoid W Nether tvewill or not,physiognomy decide. thousand` things in commercial and fi ancial and social and religious domain rom one lid of the Bible to the other ther. no science aoreoognized as that of physiog omy, and nothing, more thoroughly' take it granted than the power of the soul t, ansfigure the face. The Bible speaks o e " face of God," the " face of Jesus hrist,"'the "face. of Esau," the "face o rael," the "face of Job," the "face of the d•man,"the shining "face of Moses," the rathful "face of Pharaoh," the ashes on e face of humiliation, the resurree- onarystaff on the face of` the dead child, e hypocrites disfiguring' their , face, and my text the Bible declares, " A man's adorn maketh 'his face to shine, and - e sourness of hisface .shall be sweetened." the Bible has so much" to say about ysiognomy, we do not wonder that e world has made it a study. front the rly ages, In -vain the English .Parka - •at in the time of,George II. ordered blioly whipped and imprisoned those who died physiognomy. . Intelligent people ways have studied it-' ani always will dy it. The pens of Moses, and shwa, and: Job, and John, and Paul, as Il as of Homer, and Hippocrates, and lett, and Aristotle, and : Socrates and ate, and Lavater have been dipped into and whole libraries of wheat and claff vs been.garnered on this theme. 4E"E T ea of all the children ari;d gread•ohildreu, htily the command baa come :firth from lased heavens that that wonian'a face sh ntal made to correspond with her superb nb of Her entire face from ear to ear 'mottle more canvas on-whichall the best Artie isage heaven begin to put their Jinast etre retie and on the small compass of that face fight put pictures of aunriee over the sea, !tor. angels of mercy going up and down, lad was all a -flash, and mountains of transfigure abs- and noon day in heaven. Kindness I Dyed the most xnagnidoent sculptor that .der touched human countenance; No one c in a wonder at the unusual geniality of the d to of William'Windon, Secretary of the T' n h'• ury of the United States, •after seeing Vl`hen at'the N'ew York banquet just before b droppeddead, turning his Wine -glass dear Bide down, saying, "I may by, doing Dao Offend sathe, but by not doing it, i m lief,her damage, any." Be kind to your frie Be kindle) your enemies. Be kind to thus young. Be kind to the old. Be kind until your rulers Be kind to your servants, the kind to your superiors. Be kind to y my inferiors. Be kind to your horse. Be k Yin- to your dog. Be kind to your eat. alar ing, noon and night be kid, and the e pow. of it will be written in the language of y oto- face. That is the gospel of physiognom epee e tie A`Beyonne merchant was in the south of exan• 5 Europe for his health, and sitting on the and terrace one morning, in his invalidism, he sled saw a rider flung from hie horse into the sed river, and without thinking of his own and weakness the merchant flung off his invalid's titan gown and leaped into the stream and swam to the drowningman and clutchin hint,as the he wasat out tgo down the last aiime,bre and him in suety to 'the bank, when, glancing age , into the face of the rescued man, he cried,, So My God 1 I have saved my own son 1" ani• All kindness comes back tows in one way or another; Kindness t Show it to ome others, for the time may come when you ur- will need it yourself. People laughed at en the lion because he spared. the mouse that ua- ran over him, when by one motion of his e is paw the monster could have crushed the and insignificant disturber. But it was well that the lion had mercy on, the mouse, for t6 one day the lion was caught in a trap, os- and roared fearfully because he was. aid held fast by ropes. Then the mouse on, gnawed off the.ropes, and let'the lion tngmgg lion but you cannot o free. You yafford dto yourselfer espisa the mouse. When Abraham Lincoln pardoned ie- a.youngsoldier at -the request -of his mother, d- the nrother went down the -stairs of the the White House saying; "They have tied the about the President being homely ; 'he is the the handsomest man I ever saw." All over and that. President's race was written the kind- ness that he so - well illustrated when be are said: "Some of. our generals complain that en I impair discipline and subordination in the of army by my pardons and respites, but it the makes ire rested after a hard day's work if it, Ican find. some good excuse for' saving a rat Yuan a life, and I go to bed happier as I a think how4joyous the signing of my name. will make him' and his family."Kindness! It makes the face to shine while life lasts,. and after death puts a summer sunset be- tween the stili. lips and smoothed hair, that makes me say sometimes at obsequies, "She seems too beautiful' to bury." But here comes another.chisel, and its name is hypooriey. Christ, with one ter - riffle stroke in His Sermon on the Mount, described this character ,".When ye fast be not as the hypoorites of a sad counten- ance ; for they disfigure their faces that they may appear unto men to fast." Hy- pocrisy having taken possession of the soul, it immediately appears in the countenance. Hypocrites. are always ecie>»,n. They carry several country graveyards in their faces. They are tearful when there is nothing. to'ory about, and in their prayers they catch for their breath, and have such general dolefulness that they disgust young people with religion. We had one of them in one of my churches. When he exhorted he always deplored the low state of relig- ion in other people, and when he prayed it was an attack of hysteria, ,and he went into a paroxysm of ohs and aha that seemed to demand resuscitation. He went on in that way until we had to expel him from the church for stealing the property en- trusted to him as administrator, and for other vices. that I will not mention, and he wrote me several letters not at all conn plimentary from the West, saying that he was daily praying for my • everlasting destruction. A man cannot have hypogiyisy in his heart without somehow showing it in his face. All intelligent people 'who witness it know it is nothing hub a drama- tization. and the all be soul. s the to of kes, are and lad transfigure It is ever meld face. reaa- bitp' he up - this ight nds. the to Be our foci Morn- ffecte our y .1 was • a babe I was a beautiful gnu ; eyed child, I know this because my dead mother told me so. But X was lisle day playing with m sister, when eau. clothes took fire, and I ran to her re llie and saved` her ; but in doing so my CIO the took fire, and the fire was not put out fee. my face was as black as the heart of did scoundrel who has just now referred to e disfigurement," Heroism conquering ph her cal disabilities I That scholarly, reg features u a are not necessary for making cr erful impression, witness Paul,;. who ph or graphs himself as• in " bodily prey ou+ weak;" and George Whitfield, whose were struck with strabismus ;:'and Al ,","1 der H. Stephens, who sat with pale to sick face in invalid's chair while he thri t the`Atnerican Congress with his eloquen V1.1: and thousands of invalid 'preachers, the Sabbath School teachers, and. Chris rem workers. Aye, the'most glorious Being mall world ever saw was foreseen by Isaiah, eels described His face bruised and gashed,• the sscrifieed, and -said of Him "His vis soh was so marred more than any man." ace You see that the loveliest face in the.. t is verse was'a scarred face. tie. And now Ram going to tell you of a eof of the chisels that work for the disfi It ationor irradiation of the human count hie ance. (Meet the sharpest and most destr her live of those -chisels of the countenanc Cition Nei tthen sours the face. nicism, That urIts thpivese sa�sooate is_ tacos curl to the lip. It draws down e ocorners of the mouth and inflates the n trils as with a malodor. What David a ;,:'t t in haste they say in their deliberati of"All men are liars ;" everything is goin ruin. All men and women are bad, or go m to be. ' Society and the church :are on: fon. down grade. Tell them of an act of be ex� volence, and they say he gave that to a of yertise himself, They do' not like a present fashion of hats for women, or on coats for men. They. are oppoaei to at,, administration, municipal, and state, ronational. •Somehow, food does not taste Ue it used to, and they"wonder why there rat no -poets, no orators, or preachers as wh II„ they were:boys." Even Solomon, one rat the wisest, and at one time one of an worst, of men, falls into the peasim tic mood, and cries out in the twenty -fit chapter of Proverbs, " Who- can find virtuous woman-?'' If he had behaved him- self better an$•kept in. good associations, he would not have written that interro- gation point implying the scarcity of good womanhood. Cynioisin,,.if a habit, as it is with tens' of"thousands . of people, writes itself all over the features ; hence so many sour visages all up and down the street, all up and down the church and ,the World. • One good .way to make 'the •world worse" is to say it is worse. Let a depress- ed and foreboding opinion of everything take possessioneof you for twenty years, and you will be a sight to behold. Itis the chastisement of God that when a man - allows hie heart to be cursed'with cynicism his face becomes gloomed, and scowled, and laohrymosed, and blasted with the same midnight. But let Christian cheerfulness try its chisel upon a man's countenance. Feeling that all things are for his good, and that God rules, and that the Bible being true the world's floralization is rapidly approach- ing, and the day when beermug and demi- john, and distillery, and bomb -shell, and rifle -pit, . and seventy-four pounders, and roulette -tables, and corrupt book, ani sat- anic printing press willhave quit work, the brightness that comes from suoh anticipa- tion not only gives zest to his work, •but. shines in his eyes and glows in his cheek and kindles a morning in: his entire coun- tenance.. ' Those are the faces I look for in an audience. Those countenances are sec- tions of millennial glory. `They are Heaven. impersonated. They are the sculpturing of God's right hand.:They are hosannas in human flesh. They are hallelujahs a -lighted. They are Christ re -incarnated. I do, not care what your features are or whether you look like your father, or your mother, or look like no one under the Heavens -to God and man you are beautiful.' Michael Angelo, the sculptor, . visiting' Florence, some one showed him ina back yard apiece of marble that was so shapeless it seemed of no use, and Angelo was asked if ,he could make anything" out of it, and if so was told ho could own it. The artist took' the mar- ble, and for nines months shut'himself up to work, first trying to make of it a statue of David with his foot on Goliath; but the mar, ble was not quite long enough at the base to make the prostrate form of;the giant, and so the artist fashioned the' marble into an- other figure that is famous for all time. because of its expressiveness. A ctitin came nand was asked by Angelo for his criticism, and he said it was beautiful, but the nose of the statue was not of right shape. An- gelo picked up from the floor some sand and tossed it about the face of the statue, 'pre- tending he wad using his' chisel to make the improvement suggested• by the critic " What do you think of it now? said the artist. " Wonderfully improved,"said the critic. " Well," said the artist, ".I -have not changed it.at all." My friends, the grace of God comes to the heart of a manor 'woman and then attempts to change a for- bidding andprejudioiel face into attractive - nein. Perhaps the face is most unpromising for • the Divine Sculptor. • But' having changed' the heart, it begins to work on the countenance with celestial chisel, and into all the lineaments of the face pubs: a gladnsea and an expectation that changes it from glory to glory, and though earthly criticism may disapprove of this ea that in the appearance of the face, Christ says -of the newly created countenance that which Pilate said. of Him, " Behold the Ulan 1» Here it (mother 'mighty chisel for the countenance, and you may call it Revenge, of Bate, or Malevolence. This spirit llav:. tig taken possession of the heart it encamps even devils under the eyebrows. It puts cruelty, into the compression of the lips, You can tell from the man's looks that he s pursuing someone and trying to pet even with him. There are suggestinne of Nero, nd Robespierre, and 1"3iocletian, and thumb crews, and racks all up and down the fee Ores, Infernal artists with murderers' dee- res have been cutting away at that visage,. he revengeful heart has built its perdition n the revengeful oountenanoo. bisfigura. ion of diabolic passion! $tit here comes another chisel to ellape lie eouotenenoe, and itis Itinrinesa. There mise a Moving' day, and into her soul mooed fila whole family of Christian graces, with er- ti- ke fm to ar- on ds se' is to. at 0 - is ed no he. al d. e er. ve a a a a It is tr th Is el th ti th wi th If Ph th ea pu al eu Jo we Ga PI it, Now,winitprectictal religious anal eternal Mai would I mike of 'this subject ? I am going to show that while eye are not re- sponsible for our features, the Lord Al- mighty havina decided what they shall be prematally, as the Psalmist declares when he writes "In Thy book all my members were written, which in contitiamese were fashioned when as yet there were none of them," yet the character which under God we form will chisel the filen most mightily. Every Man would like to have been made in appeatauee an Alcibiades:, and. every woman would like to have been made a Josephine. We all want to be agreeable. Our usefulness depends so much upon it that coneider it important and Christian for possible. The slouch,. the sloven the man whodoes riot care how he looks, all such minister who baa to throw a quid of tobacco out of his moath before he begins to preach, or Christians with beard untrimtned, malt- ing them to look tate wild beasts come out of the lair, yea, unkempt, uncombed, un- washed, diaagreeable mob or women, are a hindrance to religion more then a recom- mendation. Now, my text suggests how we may, in, dependent of feataires, make ourselves agreeable : "A maii's wisdom makebh his face to shine and the gourness of his face shall be sweetened." What I say may come too late fey many. Their countenance mey by long years of hardness have been frozen inte, stolidity ; or by long years of cruel behavior they may have Herodized all the machinery of eapreesion; or by long years of avarice they may have been Shylocked until their limo are as bard ea the precious meta t ey are hoarding ; but ern. in time to help meltitudes if the Lord will, That t That Sunday on the Greek - When the rhogIn' o' the church belle comes a- floaein' through the air, An' the golden beams o' sunshine's a sparklin I think o' way back yonder,- but I dona much like t' speak 'Bout tbet Sandy dad each me au' Jim a- l:Mit:1'mi the creek. It us lest the palliest Sandy a teller over With the birds amakin' music. where the Seemed like the bung o' sweetness somehow had eprung a leak, That Sunday dad each me an' Jim aefishin" on the creek. Re said. it hurt him Ismael, t' see, us gone astray, see us bent on breakin' o' tbe nmod. Lord's holy day; e An' it hurt us, too, I'll mention—but I don't much like to speak 'Bout that Sundy dad coteh me an' Jim a- flshin' on the creek. Lovers EloPe and Die Together. • A Brussels correspondent telegraphs that a romantic tragedy has occurred at Italie- ear-Seale. A. young Irian named Lotze recently fell in love with the daughter of his master, a young lady °tali and induced her to elope with him. They took up their residence be anotheiapart of the town, but the girl's father traced teem and tried bo induce his daughter to return home. The young people, however, locked themselves id their room, and it is eupposed that the matt ahot his siveetheert and thee Commit- ted suicide, for when the door wee broken open both were dead, Lettere were die - fevered in which the eirl announced her Send 25 "Sunlight' Soap wrapperti (the large wrapper) to Lever Brag., Ltd. , 43 Scott St., Toronto, and you will receive by peat iepreety picture, free fromeadvertieleg and well worth fanning. This a; an easy way to decorate yoe r bouts, Tho seep ie he best in the awake a and it will only eosb le postage to sena in the Wrappers, if you wive the ends open, \Vrite mete eddress Kaite-e"Why (idea Mr. Litblebrain stetter o follow the edvicear ItIL AT WORK OF .1893 A considerable 1E'uIliu;c °w' iu. the f pan er oOzilea coiistrrtatesl-canlukai and the' :otiiltes lilave ISotht Siiown »Dceroased ilcttvlty, The past year, says the Winnipeg. Com- merciai, has been a quiet one in railway building all over the continent, In the United States there has been a great falling Off in the mileage of new railways built during the year,' and the same is true of Canada. In ltlaniteba and the territories the year past has also been a quiet one in railway work. The rule, however, dose not apply to the Pacific province of British Columbia, whore considerable accivity has prevailed during the year in building new roads. In Manitoba end the territor s thefalling off in railway building le not 'traceable to dull times, or to any connection with the decreased activity shown elsewhere in building railways. The reason why less railway building has, been done here,. is found in the fact that the settled portions of the country are now well supplied with railways. The rapidity with which the railway MILEAGE Of ATANITOBA and theterritories has increased during recent years has already supplied a large region with good railway facilities. There is of couree a large unsettled territory which is yet without railways, but no ad.. vantage is to be gained in opening up new regions so loug as there is abundance of vacant land to be had contiguous to the railways now in eximence. The opening up of new districts for settlement is not necessaryta,nd would only tend to scatter settlement over a wider area. This would not be an advantage to the cpuntry, the railways nor the settlers. The more settle- ment can be consolidated, the better it is for all concerned. We need not, therefore, expect any im- portant railway work in the line of opening up new districts, until the population of the country' hail been considerably increased and we begin to feel the need of throwing open more land to settlemena There are a few short railway lines needed, which would be a convenience to some settlements; but no lengthy colonization roads are at present required. What railway work that has been done the past year in our prairie country has not been of a colonization nature.. The most iniportant work done is the construction of a line of railway beginning at Pasqua sta- tion, on the main line of the Canadian Pacific, west of Regina, and running in a south-easterly direction to the boundary of the state of North Dakota, where it connects with tbe St. Paid and Minneapolis and Sault Ste. Marie railway. This line was built as a link in a through route from the cities of Ste Paul and Minneapolis, to the Pacific coast. From Pasqua to the coast; the mainline of the Canadian Pacific is used, and daily trains are run through from St. Peel and Minneapolis To TDB COAST, -via this route. Formerly the Canadian Pacihe handled considerable traffic via Winnipeg from points south for the coast, but this now goea via the more direct route just described, and enables the company to compete to good ad vantage in the two large Minnesota cities for coast traffic. This connecting line with the St. Paul, Minneapolis and Sault Ste. Marie Railway, is the only new railway built this year in our prairie country. Some important work swas done, however, in building over an old line. We refer to the widening of the gauge of the "Galt" railway between Dun- more and Lethbridge. This railway 109 miles in length, was originally buil: as a narrow gauge road, to reach the coal mines at Lethbridge. lb was taken over by the Canadian Pacific Company last year,and new track was laid, standard gauge. This almost amounted to a new line in the amount of work required to be done, as the dump had to be widened and enlarged, and new ties and Oilier used. The iron is almost entirely new. AN IMPORTANT FRAMS of the widening of the " Galt " road is, that it will become a link in a new line through the mountains, via the Crow's Nest Pass. For the present year we cannot say very much as to what is likely to be done, as it is a little early in the season to prophecy. The completion of the Duluth and Winni- peg road appears to be very probable. Changes have lately taken place in the management of this road, and it has been anetounced that the road will be completed through to Wmn' ipeg this year. Indications seem favorable to the carrying out of this programme. When completed this will make the third railway between Winnipeg and Lake Superior and will form a very important and direcl route. In the west there is understood to be some probability of the extension of the newly acquired Ca,uadicin Pacific line (form- erly the "Galt" road) west of Lethbridge, as far as Maoleoch and perimps beyond, as the intention is to ultimately carry this line through the Crow's Nest Pass of the Rocky Mountains to the famous Kootenay mining region of British Columbia. "Any further railway work in 1894 we will leave the future to develop. NAIL NEWS PROM CONGO IEEE STATE Confirms the Previous Advices or a lentos and Gouge's Death. A Brussels despatch same -The Cense mail to•day brings news that the Arab Chief Gongo Lutebe, was shot not at Kassongo, but at Nganda, between Lis:Limbo and Kassongo. It took place in the fall by order of a courtniertial, presided over by Lieutenant Sheerlinek. Captain Dhanis was then 120 miles off at it among°. Why traitor's death is not explained. Captain Ponthier joined Captain Dhanis Sop. 29 at Kassougo not at Ribeeriba, and they then marched eastward against Ruinaliza. 0420 they fought him on the banks of the Lua- He lived five days after being wounded hi the battle. A boneommissiened officer named Lange was weencled. Nothing is said of the result of the battle, or of the reported death of Captain Mattis. Egyptian children. are never weiehed ittil they are a year old. awing cottons can be. obtained in Great Arthur Pease, of the opium commiseion, will, actoraingato „present arrangements, eel from Bombay ior Loudon in, the Car. liege March 10. Sir Iteberte has liken passaee in the detbag, leaving larch 17, and Sir Janice Lyall ono ih the Ils,ngee, starting from India a fortnight UNLICHTSOAP COMFOITr -1041 Tr ent investigate it, y Writing to the Mayor's, Postmasters any Minister or Citizen of Hartford Citys in iana,. • • k. eta SO vaairitett*I isk HARTFORD Orr; Blackford County, or walk a step, and haa to be liftea Indiana, Jane 8th, 1893. like a child. " Part of the time I South American _Medicine Co. could read a little, and one day saw Gentlemen : I received a letter au advertisement of your medicine from you Hay 27th, stating that you and concluded to try one bottle. By had heard of my wonderful recov- the time I had taken one and. one- ery from a spell of sickness of six half bottles I could rise lip and take years duration, through the use of a step or two by being helped, and Bourn AhDRICAN 14.1navnin, and asking after I had taken Eve bottles in all I for my testimonial. I was near felt real well. The shaking went thirty-five yearia old when I took away gradually, sad I could eat anti down with nervous prostration. Our sleep good, and My friends could family physician treated me, but with- scarcely believe it was I. I am sure out benefiting me in the least: My this medicine is the best in the world. nervous system seemed to be entirely I belive it saved my life, I give my shattered, and I constantly had very name and address, so that if anyone Severe shaking spells. In addition doubts my statement they can write to this I would have vomiting spells. me, or our postmaster or any citizen, During the years I lay sick:, my folks as all. are acquainted yith my ease. had an eminent physician from Day- I am now forty-one years of age, ton, Ohio, and two from Colurnbus, and expect to live as long as the Ohio, to come and examine me. Lord has nse for me and do ali the They all said I could not live. I good I can in helping the suffering. got to having spells like spasms, and Miss Bttan Sronzz. would lie cold and stiff for a time Will a remedy which can effect after each. At last I lost the use of such a marvellous cute as the above, my body --could not rise from my bed ours you ? O. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter, Dn. MoDAmmin, Agent, Etensail. ctA so' cii..c)