The Exeter Times, 1894-4-26, Page 34
itorily the Scars
Sy e Mame' II0DSON, Of the ItterteS
$111.1t1 Woolen
aYlatiliinOryCee.
Phil ad lp le la,
Pa., W110 eertie
fiOS aS'follOWS:
"Among the
many testimetni-;
als which 1 see
in regard to core •
t ain medicines
performing
cures, cleansing
the bleed, etc.,
none impressine
itiore than my
own ease.
Twenty yoars
ago, at the ago
of 1 eyears,
swellings come
eny legs,
vehicle broke and
became run-
ning sores.
Our family phy-
sician could do
it was feared that ehe
affected. At last, my
Me no good, and
bones vrould be
Mother Urged Me
to try Ayer's Sarsaparilla. I took three
bottles, the sores nealed, and I have not
been troubled since. Only the scars
remain, and the memory of the
past, to remind me of the good
.Ayetos Sarsaparilla has dome me.
I now weigh two hundred and twenty
pounds, and am ire the best of health.
I have beenonthe road or the past
twelve years, have noticed Aye's Sar-
saperilla advertised' in all parts of thee
United States, and always take pleas-
ure itt telling what good it did for me."
"Ayer's Sarsaparilla
Prepered by Dr. J. O. Ayer k Oce, Bowel!, lease.
Curesothers,willcureyOU
CENTRAL
Drug Store
t ANSON'S BLOCK.
full stoct of all,kinds of
Dye -stuffs and package
Dyes, constantly on
hand. Winan's
Condition
Powd-
the best
in the m.ark-i ,
et and always
resh. Family recip.
08s carefully prepared at
entral Drug Store Exete
latT
NERVE
BEANS
Smarm BEANS are a new dlie.
covery that cure the worst cases of
Nervous Debility, Lost Vigor and
Failing Manhood; restores the
weakness of body or mind caused
by over work, or the wrote or ex.
cesses of yelp. This Remedy ab.
utely cures the most obstinate cases when all,other
MematENTS have failed even to relieveoId hydras.
ts at $1 per package, or six for $S, or sent by mall
ipt of price by addressing THE JAMES MEDIOINE
/0.. Terence. Ont. Write for pamphlet. Sold in—
Sold at Browning's Drug Store Exeter
CAUSES
Doilsp Pimples, Blotches,
Illicers„ Sores',
Scrofula A3D Sitio Diseases.
v ere Marren,
Brea Sras.—I wan oovered with pimples and
eaten. boils n4a., attoe• obtaining no relief front
deeter tried diffeeent xemedies without suet
cost: until eat) 8unday I was given a of a bottle
of nuedook Bleedettitters,.by the use of wbioli
the sores wore tient flying nt °hotel one woolen
time. I made up my tiled eover to be wleboat
'4,T3 fl in this house, and I can higbly reeont.
need it to ;Ill.
Vittla (MUTER, Vaney, B•0.
on answer :or the t.reth atric, eneee,
fg.Q CanISTLI.Netlaucy, B, 0,
'INSFORD ON THE 11111.
He Was 4 lelitatn" Crank, and
Joined the Canadian Voyageurs.
• ,
-Bunsford was the only voyageur that
blacked his boobs during the Goedon relief
expedition. That was only one of his many
claims to distinotion. I have never quite
=de up my mind who excited the most
integest, or was the best known on the
Nile, Bamford or Col, Denison, Col. Deal.
km had the advantage of position, bee
Bunsford had the natural gifts. I never
met a man with fitter feelings ehan, liana -
ford, a gentleman to his finger tips; but
there was something that meet have been
forgotten in hie general make.up, for the
moment he got beyond theory it wasn't
safe for Buneford or any one within miles
of htrn. He was not practical, eiflhe preen
Meal part of human neture had been omitted
in his mute. Bute he lied brains—lots of
brains Led Buusford. Give him a string,
a tape line and a couple of weighbs and he
would calculate to the ane -fourth of a
socoud the velocity of a rapid in 4 manner
that made our best boatsmen's eyes bulge
out. But there was nob one of Mem would
let him eteer their boats down a rapid for
Bunsfordee weight in gold. With the best
intentions in the world he weuld have
drowned them and they knew it. He knew
as muoli about the political conclitiou in
Egypt end the Soudan as Major Kitehen-
er, and aboub military tactics as Sir Red -
vers. Butler, but I never knew of any more
...i)
prominent position he was placed in, than
under arrest. His knowledge of political
thanhe aulsrinileY.2v5earnohndeabbridi:lopf:iioltinasTaf.jawdnaehElatviPmirif:: nneu 1 nno rdye
as
life. He
reepkrneawenntlairievea.boltej°hittuld Stuart been bMill,orn
about 40 ylehaersWb eefloLitlionf lai °England,nPa:: ewcthi when
and free trade than even Col. Denison, M
. for West Toronto, but I never heard of
any.constituency that yearned for Bunsford
he was about, 'Ave years old his family broke
up. People blamed it onRunsford. They
say he developed his peculiarities early in
life. He was educated at a military college
in France, and had received a magnificent
teining ineeengineering' and all sorts of
; lugs, and :maid speak French and Ger-
r
an as fluently as English. Bunsford Was
such a tttiker than he required the three
languages. He could not nave got rid of
his ideas on less. Jim Burney said he was
a military crank, because, whet no soldier
on the trip did, he
neaciato ms BOOTS AND SHAVED
every day. I have.seen Bunsford shave b
the light of a camp fire two weeks steady
He was the luckiest as well as the tinker*
lest of men, and could get into more hole
and out of them in a given pace of thn
than any human being I evermet. Jim But
ney was right. I was an intimate niend o
Bunsford and knew him well. He was
military crank. He couldn't hear of an
war in any part of the globe without pack
ing up his kit, and no matter how Inorativ
his position might be, going off and mixin
hitriself up in business that was no ooncer
of his. He had been an officer in the Foreig
Legion in the Franco-Prussian war, althoug
whet interest Bansford had in the Spanis
succession he never explained. He wa
wounded and takenprisoner at his firs
battle, Gravelotte, by the Germans. Darin
the first pert of the Turco-Rusetian war h
had been anxiously awaiting' a revolutio
in a South American republic which hun
fire, but Banstord became disgusted at th
delay and sailed for Constantinople. He
landed in tirno to read the announcement o
peace. He pottered around Algiers for
while, but every rebel tribe seemed
to lay down its arms and sue fo
peace the moment Bunsford weal
loom up. Then he went on an ord
name survey in India for about a year, bu
everything was peadeful during his sojourn
and be finally drifted, still hunting for
trouble, to America. He was with an
engineering party in the Rockies for alma
three menthe during the construction of the
Canadian Pacific railway, and did such
good work, and displayed such oonsunamate
knowledge of his craft, that the engineer
in charge obtained a reputation which he is
travelling on yet. One day Bunsford's
chief left him in charge of the party tor
about a week while he went to ley before
the riding bowers of the railway a plan
for getting over a mounbain or through a
Mountain, or something like that, with all
bhe calculations worked out and its feasi-
bility plainly shown. It was one of Buns -
forties ideas, and would save the company
about $250,000. During the chief engineer's
absence, Bunsford heving the run of the
instruments, got -in the throes of an astron-
omical oalaulation for three days about the
t,ransitofVenus or Mars, or it may have been
Jupiter and the parby surmended work a,nd
sojourned with a whisky trader until
Bunsford should settle the transie question.
Buneford's plan was accepted, but
a
TIUNSFOBD WAS FIRED.
He happened to be in Winnipeg at the Utile
of the enlistment of the Manitoba conting-
ent. Chains wouldn't have held him, He
enlisted. No person Would. have supposed
that one of his varied experiences in rough-
ing it could be anything else then a good
boatman, whiela if it had not been for his
curious luck, 'WOlild virtually have been
suicide on his part. I met him for the first
ante when the train containing the Mani-
toba voyageurs pulled put from Winnipeg.
He endeavored with the aid of a map of
Afri'
ca a sheet of paper and a stub of a lead
pencil to ohm a short and easy method of
relieving Khartoum with a ballot& and
seven dynamite bombs. He had Khartoum
demolished, the Egyptian soldiers in the
arms of their families, and Gordon receiving
anvote of thanks from both Houses of Par.
hament itt London before we arrived at Rai
Portage. He soared above cataraoes and
WD.8 profoundly unconscious of such very
tactical things as rooks until , he would
'nook a hole in his boat large' enough to
'pub his head throughand thea he
would spend a day and a half wonder,
.ierg whether it was a sandstone �r gran.
ite rock. Col. Denison and Bunsford
were the only two members of the Canadian
contingent thab were actually engaged in
the battle of Kerbekett, The others were
not permitted. Bamford got into a sick
eoldier's uniform and fought in the ranks
nf the Sussex regiment. Bunsford is under
the impreesion !that he palmed himself off
as the sick soldier, The popular belief,
oWever, throughout the brigade wag that he
was allowed to go into ettiori in the hope
that some Arab spear might possibly be
the motens of getting rid of him deocettly
ancl respeotebly. They eouldn't hang him
as he hadn't done mum* herrn as yet, having
only drowned thregeKroornen and ono
Dongolese Arab, Ind there woe no telling
What he might do if he tame tunied hireeelf
loose, With hie peculiaritiett he Was cap.
able oi ermihilating, a couple of regiment
some fine day when least expected. When
Bunsford Was Arraigned by some antell
Offioer for hall an hour for dreventng the
niggere he ealnted and meld he regretted
that the unfortunate ecoldent had compelled
him to appear before a general officer with
hie face uneheven. Buoeford didn't like
niggere, mid he 114 a greae ide0; about
reditery ethics. Tont Wbite,
weseann ICANBE5i nrventuale
from the Missiseippi, had no idea about
military ethice, but he had a sere thumb
when we were at Abu Fetnieh. Wounds,
meta or sores cannot be trifled with in the
Soudan. Whether it was the climate, the
sand or our work I know note but they took
0, terrible long time to heal if they ever did.
knew a splendid young fellow in the
Gordon Highlanders, a otedet of a noble bnt
impoverished Scottish family, who, unable
to aupporb a commission, had enlisted in
the ranks for the campaign. His hands,
unetoustonted to the continual toil at the
oars, which he etuele et with indornitalele
pluck, became badly blietereck In two
weeks both arms had to be amputated near
the elbows. Aeoordingly tt bruise or out,
whit:lig:a the Canadian woods was hardly
noticed, had to be looked after. Tom
White wanted to knave when we were at
Abu Fatmeh on the third cataract where
-the best doctor (multi be found. Bamford
said there was a hospttal near the fort, but
that the P,M.O. was inspecting it that day.
What's a P. M.O.? asked Tom. The prin-
cipal medical officer of the forces,' said
Bunsford. "He holds the rank of major -
general." "110 does, eh rapid Tom, who was
a free and raoy conversationaliet. "Then
he's the head doctor. Waal, he's the son
of a sett cook I'm after for this thumb.
Bunsford volunteered to show him where
the hospital was. I had a bruised foot and
wanted some lint, so I went along. Before
the door Of the hospital the P. Ma O. , arn
rayed in full uniform, with sword, cocked
hat arid plume—for he was on duty—was
giving some orders to a number of °flame
of his staff. Unkind people are apt to say
that even civilian doctors are prone to have
no little sense of their own importance. I
don't say so, but I have often wished that I
was only half as wise as the ordinary med-
ical man looked. Well, then, combine the
consequentlality of the civilian doctor with
the military swagger ole general officer and
you have the P. M. 0. "There be is,"
whispered Bunsfcad, with a certain amount
of awe in his voice as we approached. "Is
it the pot-bellied old bluejay with the os-
trich feather in his hatt ' "All right,"
said White. "Remember and give the se -
lute, " said Bunsford, "and we'll pass right
into the hospibaL " "Different here; no
'prentice doctor foolin' round this huckle-
berry," said Tom, as with the easy rolling
walk of the life-long river driver he advanc-
ed within about five feet of the dignified
P. M. 0. Tom was perfectly at his ease.
•NE NEVER PUT ON ANT BRIMS.
He wasn't a bit stuck up. He trealled
the medical 'Major -general just like any
other man. "Excuse me, Doo," he said,
as he proceede4 to unroll a rag that had
been overlooked in the last consignment to
the wash, "bub I heard that you were the
beat doctor round these parts, and I thought
I'd like you to take a look- at this thumb of
mine," and Tom held up a hand of the
diinensions of a small ham before the eyes
of the astonished officer. "Tub, tut, man,"
said the P. M. 0., drawing himself up,
" what do you mean ?" Then noticing that
we were Canadians and not soldiers, he said
more graciously. " You should get it at-
tended to in the hospital here. Bub let me
look at it." The pompous but kindly old
fellow looked at the hand for about a min-
ute and dogmatically said, his professional
desire to carve people asserting itself "It
will have to be anmutated. G,o into the
hospital and will attend to you.
It Mind be taken off at once." "Out it off,
eh,Doc?" said White, as be proceeded slow-
ly to reroIl the rag. "Well, Doo, you may
be the head medicine man of this outfit, but
considerin' that I'm 21 years old and the
thumb belongs to me, I guess I'll hold on
to it." He then carelessly strolled away,
politely saying as he went: "Thanks all the
same, Doc: ; no offence, you know, but I
guess" a tobacco poultice will- fix it
all right." And, strange to say, it did."
Bunsford fumed at the ignorant insolence,
as he called it, of White and nearly quar-
relled with me because I asked him if he
had noticed the P. M. O's face when he was
called "Doc" and laughed at the scene.
All this time my foot was being dressed.
But Bunsforcl had no sense of humor and
was an Englishman, and when an English-
man has no sense of humor, he hasn't. Now,
for instance,13unsford never could see any-
thing humorous in one particular incident
that I remember. Every other Canadian
did, and the classic banks of the Nile echo-
ed in December, 1884, from Dongola to
Wadi Haifa with the good natured laughter
of the 400 Canadians who were then
scattered along the 500 miles of river.
—[The Empire.
The Wheat Trade of Canada.
The Customs Deparement at Ottawa has
compiled a statement of the imports and
exports of wheat and flour'for the twelve
months ending September 30, 1893. This
gotiveys a niore accurate report of the
movement for the crop year than that
which appears he the Trade and Neviga.
tion returns for the fiscal year ending June
30. Deducting from the gross exports of
wheat and flour from the Dotniniou the
iniports frorn the United Sbates, the net
exports for the above period for the last
two years, putting flour into its equivalent
in bushels of wheat, compare as tollows :
1892-93, 14,796,370 bushels ; 1891-92, 12,-
343,426 bushels.
The wheat crop in Manitoba in 1891 eve§
estimated at 23,191,599 bushels ; in 1892,
14,453,835 bushels.; in Ontario, per Canada
Year Book, iu 1891, 32, 584,026 bushels; in
1892, 33,143,606 bushels. 'Assuming that
the crop in the ether provinces was the
same in both years, the wheat crop of the
Dominion in 1891 was about eighb million
bushels more than in 1892, Fuld yet the net
experts in 1892-93 were nearly 2,500,000
bushels more than itt thettlItteeding year of
much larger crop. This discrepaney is
accounted for : (1) bythe fact that the
crop of Manitoba in 1891 was largely over-
estimated ; (2) that a very large proportion
of the IVIenitobe, crop was reined. by rains
and was rendered unfit for market
Youthful ltaurfferers.
'Two youngm
men, named Meyer and Wey•
grind, while in prison at Zweibrueken, itt
Crermeny, in April last year broke out of
jail, killing a prieon warder vvho resisted
thorn. They Were appeehended and brought
to trial, In consequence of the youth of
Meyer, who was ouly 17, tho judge son,
tebeed him to fifteen yea& imprisonment;
and Weygancl was senteneed to death.
leach in the dook acoused the other of
cautang the death of tbe Warder ; but now
Meyer whims he Was the murderer, and
deolares that he 610110 Shotad euffer. The
cage will eortie before the Coarb for final
Children,.. Crt for Pitcher's, Onto&
ROUSEATIOLD.
When Duty Calls.
Hard is hie lot indeed, and sad his ufe,
Who needs Must leave his happy home, his
wife,
, His babes, his friends—all that the heart on
Merano—
And go to banishment in foretell land%
Or go to ever and stetn with blood his hands,
When duty cells.
And he of diffeeent mould is wretched too.
Who Ittes ambitions, longs for something now,
Who craves adventures, whom no hap ap
palls ;
Yet whom 'each day brines but the wonted
choret
The weary task et onto. bank or'tore,
Where duty calls.
Unhappy both! Ieub wretched more -aver
wiglit 1
Is he when: fashion OA elle world polite
Drag out tone:041y di. -tem routs and bells.
There, be bis inoteds meat tenses what they
Theremare' est smirk and mile, be perk and
Y,
Tattlegaand talk, and deuce the night away.
Not thea is done, for he has still to nay
'Ms (1"11*.li
-21aLa4alea' Home Nournal,
1
' Household Renovation.
In spite of the eterootyped and satirical
thrusts of men, the women who look upon
spring housecleaning as anything but a
present ohtestening for a futuee good, are
indeed few. That the majority of house.
wives undertake it with so m uoh enthusiasm
and courage, is bemuse of their good sense
and consoientiousness; for she is anything
bub a philosopher who does unpleasant i
work n a half-hearted way, and surely,
only a coward shirks duty, because it is
disagreeable or laborious.
There are good, better and best ways of
doing all kinds of household renovation,
and a description of some of the latter
methods will doabtless be more than ordi-
narily helpful just now, for in trimming her
domestic sails to weather the financial
storm, many a tidy, thrifty housewife will
economize by doing work that she has here-
tofore hired done.
Nothing does more to make a room cheer-
ful, wholesome and attractive than fresh
paintond wall paper, and neither are ex-
pensive when the work of applying can be
done by home talent. Painting woodwork
is not difficult work, and very little if any
harder than scouring the same. Ready
mixed paints especially prepared for indoor
work come in, a wide range of colors and
shades and in difFerent sized cans. Get a
color and shade before ohoosing your wall
paper'for judgment end good taste, and
nota lavish expenditure of money, are
indispensable to success in home furnishing
and decoration. In other words, restful,
attractive roorrat are invariably the result
of proper color combinatious.
Generally speaking, the side wall decora-
tions should be lighter in tone than the
wood -work, and plain, ingrain paper, or an
all-over small design in self -tones, or con-
trasting harmonious ()lies of subdued color,
are most satfsfactory. Too much cannot
be said in praise of plain ingrain papers as
a background for pictures, and the many
colored furnishings which she majority of
our rooms possess. Never before was itso
true that pretty, attractive wall papers
cost no more than poor ones, for even fif-
teen cent papers come' in combination of
side wall, frieze and ceiling, and in all the
new, soft colorings and artistic designs.
In applying plain ingrains, both edges
should be carefully trimmed (e Eberle knife
is better for this work than shears), as
they are merely brought together, not lap:
ped. To lessen the expense, or to secure
proper color combinations,
figured roll
paper may be utilized for a frieze with plait
ingrain, or vice versa. All cracks in the
wall should be filled with a paste made of
plaster of Paris and oold water; which
should be well worked in and smoothed
over with an uld case knife. Old wallpaper
must be thoroughly removed before apply-
ing plain'ingrain paper, as any unevenness
of the wall surfaceshows much more plain-
ly than on figured paper.
Of course cleanliness is a more important
consideration than beauty, but when, as
in the treatment of ceilings, the house-
wife can as easily use kalso mine in some
soft harmonious tint as cold, staring white-
wash, it is certainly win to do so. An ex-
cellent mixture of the latter is made by
soaking threefourths of is pound of white
glue in cold water for twelve hours, then
dissolve by stirring in boiling water. Stre.in,
add twenty pounds of zinc -white, and stir
until smooth; when ready for Tee add cold
water until the mixture is the consistency
of cream.
Kalsomine may' be given any tint desired
by using byrnt umber, raw umber, yellow
ochre, chrome yellow, indigo,Spanish brown,
or vermillion. Squeeze the color through
a bag into the water, and stir until the
desired glade is obtained, always remember.
ing that the tints will appear brighter on
the wall than in the kalsomine pot. Kal-
somine can be applied to a paper wall sur-
face with excellent effect. Indeed, when
paper is intact but.dingg or iacongruous in
coloring ansi ugly in design, this is at once
the quickest and cheapest method out of the
dilemma, and if a handsome paper frieze is
added it is iu every way satisfactory.
Decorative Duster Bag.
It is no new idea, that of concealing the
useful but very practical dusting cloth in a
decorative bag, but the duster bag deacribe
ed. by The Modem Priscilla preeente neve
polate in the manner Of its decoration. The
bag refereed to is made of blue Satin and
trimmed with a border of ohareole. The
border is cut in treallope ab the top and dec-
orated with disk° and crescents, painted itt
1)1.c:flee ettiore. The bottom of the chamois
is peitited in horizontal lines with the
bronze colors ant out in ebripe to form frbaget
The duster is provided with is large metal
•
riog for hanging.--[Torouto Ladies' Jou
flat,
now To Serve Bananas,
Generally speaking, bananas aro lookesi
upon as a fruit to boned as is luxury.
• 130 it is claimecl byensinoalt authoritt:
that bananas contain all the essential
elements of nutrition and that life Oaid be
sustained for an itieleflnite time ote an ex*
olualve dieb of thie fruit.
The ancient Mahatmas, or wise men, of
India are said to have subsisted entirely on
bananas', and the eavage of the South Sea
islands, says the Medical Brief, owes bo
them hie wonderful physical power.
• Harnboldt says that ninety pouads of
potatoes will grow on land that will raise
thirtyethree pounds of wheat, bet that the
same ground would produce 4,000 pounde
of bananae. •
Six years ago the United States commis
stoner of agriculture said :
" If it should prove possible by special
culture, vvith a view to the production, of
hardier varieties, to adapt or acclimate
the banana within the territorial limits of
the United States, even thongh it should
ebe small in area, it would be a triumph
worthy of all reationable effort. *
I know of no sacrifice too great, if it ehould
only give the hope of sumo, for us as a
people to make in order to adapt Mile meg-
nificent fruit to culture in odious of oe
country."•
The effort to adapt it has eucceeded well
in the more tropical parte of Florida, a,nd
it has been grown successfully in portions
of Texas by protecting it front frost during
the winter. It has also been fruited as a
curiosity in greenhouses in the northern
states.
A few years ago a carload of bananas
would have supplied the markets in any
ono of out; large cities for an indefinite
time. Now the demand is for tons daily at
almost all seasons of the year. •
In 1887 nearly 6,000,000 buncheswere
imported into the United States and Cana-
da from Central America. In 1890 the ina
porbation had more than doabled.
Probably the largest part of those now
used in Canada are eaten raw; but year by
year they enter more and more largely itmo
our cooking, and there are many appetizing
methods of preparing them for the table.
The following are among the best and
should be made generally known: •
To Fry Bananas. --Peel and slit the fruit
lengthwise; dip it in beaten egg, roll its in
our or sifted cracker crumbs and drop it
in boiling fat and cook au et it is a delicate
brown. Duli on a sieve btttege serving. .
Breakfast Fritters. —Make a Natter as for
apple fritters, but eomewhat thietter ; peel
and slice the fruit in slices one -halt an inch
thick; dip in the batter and fry in h et but-
ter; drain the fritters on a sieve or et eget-
ting paper dreige with white( nrar
serve. ••
Baked Bananas. --Peel and split length,
wise; lay them in a plate or platter. For
each half dozen use one tablLpoonful of
butter and three ta,blespoonfula of hot water
and the juice of one letnon ; melt the butter
in the water, add the juice of the lemon and
pour it over the fruit; dredge over them six
tablespoonfuls of white sugar arid bake until
brown in a quick oven.
Banana Shortcake,—Make a crust as for
strawberry shortcake; when bakedsplit and
butter and fill with a mixture of two-thirde
sliced banana, to one-third sliced orange;
sprinkle liberally with sugar and spread
over the fruit a little sweet cream beaten
until very stiff ; serve the short cake while
hot.
Banana Cake.—Use any preferred receipb
for light layer cake. 1Vhen baked frosb
each layer and While the frosting is still
fresh spread—neoh, except the top, with
banana, peeled and mashed. Whipped
cream is sometimes used between the layers
instead of the frosting. It makes a moister
cake
Banana Compote.—One cup of white sug-
ar, one pine of water; boil for ten minutes;
peel and slice red and white bananas and
place them in alternate layers ia a dish ;
pour the syrup over them and when cold
serve with whipped cream.
A Dainty Dessert. --Make a jelly with
gelatine and sugar it to taste; when it is
cool line the bottom of 8, glass dish or jelly
mold with slicea of bananas and oranges and
pour a little of the jelly over them ; 'as soon
as ib is set put in another layer of the fruit
and more jelly until the dish is full ; set it
on ioe until ready to serve. You oan use
strawberries instead of oranges.
Bananas and Cream.—Place bananas and
strawberries on ioe : whip well sugared
cream until very stiff, and when ready to
serve peel and slice the bananas and place
them in layers with the strewberries and
cream; keep on ice until served.
The Russian Minister of Justice is con-
sidering is syetern of providing State -paid
People's Attorneys for the gratuitous de-
fence of the poor in criminal and civil came.
The argument is that wherever the State
provides a prosecutor it ought also to pro-
vide an advocate for the accused. This
practice already exiets in Austro-Hungary
in the form of ex -officio counsel; but this
is for criminal cases only. An association
exists in Vienna, to provide counsel for the
poor itt civil oases.
In consequence of an order that amounts
to a slight put upon all of the reporters of
Parliarneneary proceedings at Buda, Pesti',
as a punishment for a few indiscreet report-
ers, the Hungarian Sooiety of Jourattliets,
backed by all the newspaper editors and
proprietors, resolved to record only the
action of the House, omitting the names
of all Depaties. A similar strike in
Vienna some years ago WU at once success-
ful,
A Chicago paper gives an aneodote,whtch
illustrates tbe old saying that a true joke is
nojoke at all. At an evening party a group
of college students Were invited to sing,
and chose that popular old song. "The
King ot the Cannibal Isleede," Everyone
seemed seamed Mil they eeme to ehe line,
" They dined On clergymen, cold and
raw," when a young woman sittidenly rate
and left the roam, suffused in tears.It
appeared later that her father had been
tt missionary aed was eaten by oannibals.
Shocking Story Of Cannibalism,
A Frenoh Viper publiehos a letter from
Monsignor Augouard ttt Cardinal Ledo -
°bowlike the superintendent of the Roman
Catholic propaganda, giving extracts from
a tonere of a priest tamed Aflame, who
lately visitesi some of the villages on the
right bank of the river trhange itt Africa.
According to the father's letter eamnibalism
prevails to a frightful exteat among these
people, it oven being a mitten to bring
slaves to =riot in order that they mighb
be sold like butt:hoes meat. People who
are linable to purchase a whole slave
bought en arm, or a leg, OP a, head, as the
case :nigh b be, and merked ib off with a
pleee of white chalk, aed where the wholo
of the uefortuttete vietim had been tolocted
he
was killed, awl the portiene AS 01108611
di:At ilat led ateong the dealer's, otiatomore.
;
oNT NOTHER WASH -DA
GO By WITHOUT IfilIVO
OU will find
that it will do
what no other
soap can do, and
will please you every
Way.
It is Easy, Clean
and
Economical to wash with
this soap.
EIVIIN'ENT-MINISTEIV
REV.
S. BARKER
Or PETERBORM.
-
Vfx. W. S. .Barker is a young
/adder of Peterboro who has by his
treat earnestness and able exposition
•(if the doetrines of the Bible earned
fel: himself a place amongst the
foremost ministers of Canada. He,
4,titla his most estimable wife, believe
in looking after the tenaporal as well
as the spiritual welfare of mankind,
Inenee the following statement for
publication I
“1 have much pleasure in re-
commending the Great South Ameri-
can Nervine Tonic to all who are
afflicted as I have been with nervous
prostration and indigestion. I found
very great relief from the very first
bottle, which was strongly reoom-
mended to me by my druggist. I
also induced my wife to use it. who,
I must say, was completely run down
and was suffering very much from
general debility. She found great
relief from South American Nervine
end also cheerfully recommends it
to her fellow -sufferers.
"BEV. W. S. Banana."
It is now a scientific fact that cer-
tain nerve centres located near the
base of the brain have entire control
over the stomach, live; heartalmags
and indeed all internal organs; that
is, they furnish these organs with
the necessary nerve forte to enable
them to perform their respective
work. When the nerve' centres are
weakened or deranged the nerve
force is diminished, and as a resat'
the stomach will not digest the foodat
the liver beoomes torpid, the kidney&
will not net properly, the heart andi
lungs •suffer, and in fact the whole
system becomes weakened and /Alnico
on account of the lack of nerve force.
South Amerioan Nervine is •base
on the foregoing soientific disoovery
and is so prepared that it aote,
directly on the nerve centres.
immediately increases the nervonef
energy of the whole system, therell
• enabling the different organs of the
body to perform their work perfectly,
when disease at once disappear.'
It greatly benefits in one day.
Mr. Solomon Bond, a member of
the Society of Friends, of Darlington
Ind., writes: "Ihave need six bottles
of South American Nervine and
consider that every bottle did for ras
one hundred dollars worth of good,1
becauz 1 have not had a good !
night's sleep for twenty years on
account of irritation, pain, horrible
dreams, *and general nervous pros.:
trillion, which has been caused by
chronic indigestion ansi dyspepsia of
the stomach, 9,nd by aa",:eken down
condition of my neritous system.
But now 1 can lie down and Sleep all.
night as sweetly as a baby, and I
feel like a sound man. I do not
think there has ever been a medicine
introduced into this country, which
will at all compare with this au o'
cure for the stomach and nervea.&'
C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Ageot for Exeter,
Dn, MoDatronn, Agent, Hensall.
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