HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1894-6-28, Page 7'ERE .XETE11,krIES
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Forest
'elaial-trouble
and stubborn
4octor
rdinery
- h tO
I did so
A
-Or the
.."ed this
eat
,.•
'
and I
W41'0 keep
net considering
out eeer
"„ I have
rectoral
the most
eteeefullyrecommend
cially adapted
Plaints.
PihnonarY
qudy, and
that A yer
eite--ition
Ines of
Dover,
4yees
wand
,
fr
,introtript
„fr
..• ..i
1$ ,, ,....
• ,.'"'s. •1
d • "1 -
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,
f -
I
en • was a Boy, "
9
I'estmaster J. O. WOODSON,
Hill, W. Va., "I had a brOn-
of such a persistent
character,, that the
0
pronounced it incurable with
medicines, and advised
try; .4,yek't3 Cherry Pectoral.
, and one 'bottle cured me.
last fifteen years, I have
preparation with good
whenever I take
A Bad Cold il
know of numbers of people
it in the house all the time.
it safe to be with-
•
'been using Ayes -'s .Cherry
in my family for 30 years, with
satisfactory results, and can
it as being espe-
to all pulmonary corn-
I have, for many years, made
and other medicines especial
I have come to the conclusion
' s Cherry Pectoral occupies a
pre-ensinent over other medi-
the class." -Chas. Davenport,
N. j.
Cherry Pectoral
by Dr. J. 0, Ayer & Oo., Loweleefaes.
to eat, sureto cure
.
BENEFITS. OF IIIII.GATION. r
. • ,
THE STORY OF A SUCCESSFUL COL-
_SUNLIGHT
ONY IN AUSTRALIA...
. . ,,
Seven Tear» Ago the place Was Tenanted
ity Rabbits-eleow one or t!ie Best Col.
onio or Itsnow inthe Irmo. .
The colony of IVIiidura, On the Victoria
side of the. Murray River, is situated 3. 40
miles, northwest of Mellmeree, Anstratie,
Seven years ago it was a sheep ranch, 'over.
grown with the drawl etnialYptae,inalee,and
blue bush, and tenanted chiefly by rabbits.knowledge
To -day it is one of the best colonies of its
kind in the world, with a thriving populae
tion Of 4,000. In 1885 Alfred Deekin,
Chief Secretary of Victoria, went to, the
United States and invited the Messrs.
OhaffeY, two Canadian e of southern Oehler!
nia, to come to Australia and lay the
foundations250
for such a colony as they had
founded in the. United States. They ac-
cepted, and after two years of searching
Mildura was decided upon as the location-
n act was passe ier theLegis.
A d 1Victoria
.-lature whereby 250,000 acres of land were
set apart for irrigation enterpriee, Active
operations were commenced on Oct.', 1887.
since which date the growth. of the settle-
merit has been remarkable. Several public
.
buildings have been erected, including a
Court House, bospieseineceenics, institute,
post and telegraph offices, Custom House,
and a State school accommodating 400
children.Last year Mildura was created
a separate shire, and the settlers now enjoy
local government. One of the most im-
portant conditions in connection with the
concession is the agreement of the Messrs.
' Chaffey to build and endow an agricultural
'college the endowment to consist of oneetnw
fifteenth of the whole, area of land,
,capital
A large and handsome ternperatuie
hotel has been erected, and . it has
already been found necessary to enlarge
the building. No less than
EIGHTY -Two STOnES
and places of beefless are being successfully
• carried on.
About forty hours from the time . one
loaves Swa.nhill, the , end of the railroad,
the steamer stops right under a hufabout
tree, whose branches sweep the deck house, huge gum
Mildura lies before you. From the river,
which is here '300 yards wide and thirty
feet deep, the plain stretches upward and
to h at distance of five miles at the
back here it is broken by
a ,. • p' • • •
_ me ridge. The seemingly level plain
has a gradual fall in two directions one to
'
the northwest, parallel with the course of
the Murray, and another to the westward
Long
from the river bank.. Lon avenues lined
with trees stretch away from the township
toward the country, crossed at right angles
by streets numbered in the modern fashion
The horizon is fringed with mallee scrub;
250,000 acres are all enclosed in a rabbit-
proof wired netting fence.
Mildura would still be sheep, rabbits,
and scrub were it not for the advent -of the
.
The' b24ec "el ') Inelachannel have al'
ready been constructed ton total aggregate
length Of 149 miles' and there are connected
with them 300 miles of distributing chines
pals. '
The following le the t°tel "Pen441m'e
with regard to land actually in .beertog at
the end of 1893 ; 1888, 80,435 ; 1889, 144,-
380; 1890, $248,710 ; pronortionete share a
an 5353,750. .
total ofwhet we Tmeetyal,te.r5m743x,e2p7r5e.aueTtihy:
capital to date, therefore' i4 $740275 out of
the grand total of $1,349,590 actually spent
in cultural operations, and,.
as the result of
tine, the following table will show the re-
turns for the season. The products of the
vines which are not yet hiervested; are based
on the estimates of the fruit asaocaations,
merchants, and' others whose
and sources of information are the most
•
reliable available. Of raisins, s ultanas.
currants the yield ie variously estimat-
and curran Y . . y ,
eel, at from 500 to 750 tons; wine at from
30 0 0
, 0 to 40,000 gallons. The. yield of var.
ions Products for the season of 1893-94 was:
Raisins sultanas, and currants, 6C0 tons at
'2 00 • detc
$200, 81 0, 0 , canned goods, jams, , et
tons at $175, $43,750 ; dried sapricots
and peaches, 25 tons at 8435, $10,874 ; Ws-
cellaneous fruits, 10 tons at $125, $1,250 ;
wines, 35,000 gallons at 36 cents, 812,600 ;
brandy, 4,000 gallons at $1.20, 81,800 r
oranges, 8,000 cases at $1.20, $9,600 ; letn-
Ons, 10,000 oases at $2.16, $21,600. Total,
8224,475.
This is the actual return on a capital in-
vestment of f $748,275,andrepresents a rate
of n a
.,,,,
sreGHTLY oven et; PER CERT.
But it Will be observed that of the total
amount of land now in bearing, viz.:, 4,195
acres, there are 2,282 acres of vines which
are bearing for the fleet time this season,
and for th.e bearing area the yield next
year will be approximately doubled. The
total area planted, however, i s 9,323 acres
so that 5,218 acme are yet to come int,
bearing, and the vrhole of thin cannot be no
i
bearing eill 1898. By that time we
fullpromotion
.mheayefigaihrtlytaimsseuemewthat the total yield Will
hat it is this year, or
about $1,812,000 per annum, The inter-
vening four years will have added $120 an
acre for cultivation mid water rates to the
invested on the land, or $1,118,810
together with $13.68 an acre per annum as
installments for five years amounting to
$661,265, or' a total of $1,783,075, which
must be added to the $1,349,590 given in
the tabulated summary above.
Thus the whole capital invested up to
that date will have reached 83,134,665, and
the annual expenses for cultivation, etc.,
will be' $28.80 per acre on 9,323 acres, or
$268,502,40. This deducted from the an-
- f $1
tempated yieldo ,812,000, will leave a
net annual income of $1,543,498, or at the
rate o o
$16d an acre per annum. The
cost per acre at the end of 1898 will have
amounted to an average of 833m
1F-4"Ae IRM
THE _ _____,,
•
Orearnertes,
Ii0W mm7 discouraged farmers there are
,
in olio t today, d th cause f It
e°u° ry* an 6 ' °
may be attributed in part to the general
releuvlobeluelnof wthheioelleitlieitaray;41ekeetti,laprIgaecley it: toblee
• • •
realm of farming within a. few years, 'mites'
. . . invention
a correspondent. The genius of
hs come and opened to the farmer a new
world, Look back a quarter of a century
over the marvel° that have come from eh"
servation, experience, and intelligence, and
all ef them devised for the benefit of the
farmer; the improved sub -soil plow, con-
centric herrow, seed -drill, mowers reapers,
0 '
harvesters and threshers ' All these are
. ,
not, a,s some have counted them, invaelons
which will one day destroy. the farmer's
occupation, but rether have preyed to be
,
the needful facilities to enlarge the farmer's
possibilities and to keep him in pace with
the rapid progress in the other watlea of
pr., , - • . .
``,7_ .
Just now there is rising into notice the
last encl./greatest benefactor to the farmer.
the oreamery For a long time the
- '
ity looked upon it as an ominous invasion
of that inner realm which the farmer hae
.
always guarded with. tealous care ; the
which brings forth the "golden egg ;f1
shrine w
the rewarding product of his toil. Many
denounced it as the enemy that would
eventually "kill, the goose." Though re.
1 t tl the f ' ' t e in
uc an y, e armee Is coming o se
this masterpiece. of invention in. the dairy-
ing world great blessings to himself by its
of all his interests.
Let us look reasonably at the points of
benefit every farmer will enjoy because of
the crearnery,provided he will avail himself
of them. For convenience sake, lotus look
. •
across the lines, at the State of Vermont,
•
which has the largest creamery in the world,
located at St.Albans. The institution has,:
,
fifty-nine branches and last year handled.
the product of fifteen thousand cows, and
• .
during the summer distributed over severity
thousand dollars a month to its patrons.
In the past three years it has sent over five
. .
and one-half million pounds of butter into
_ P
theaterkets of the -world. Now -an institution
of such magnitude must mean great benefit
or injury to the dairying interests. '
Though at once the individual farmer
may not see how such an institution can be
of benefit to hien, he will see it after
thought and experience, In the first place,
,
it affords him free an expert test of the
• •
milk -producing quality of ea.ch cow, by
which he may improve his dairy by choice
selection. It furnishes to him an analy-
sis of the best milk-producheg grains,
as/turs, e and fodder ; thereby he is in-
P g .
formed as to what to sow and plant. When
one considers that each dairy is awarded
aseseceorisileinwgeteo4stiecireeaumchtieesto,
f emit, tiison plainlyist
relieves the farmer of all the care of the'
r.
dairyhouse an . e exp me,.labor
emir h d the expanse of time,
and repair contingent upon butter -making
facilities.; moreover the great influence and
reputation of the institution is behind the
.
in rvi. ua armer, pushing him o ie
d' •d 1 fh• t the front
with the other great business movements of
•suggested
B b f't'
the world. But est o all, 1 grants liberty
the farmer in the realm in which he
t.° - . being. ..
Ives, moves and has his All the
time he has heretofore spent in the endless
duties of preparing the product of his dairy
for the market and in finding a market for
the product, is saved to him. Now with his
mind free from anxiety of the churning-
room and market -place, he turns to those
interests of his farm which before have had
little or none of his attention and have'
suffered seriously from the careless indiffer.
..
once of the hatel labeler. Now he can
study the nature of his lands and know
what portions of his farm he can sow and
plant to the best advantage, that it may
yield him the richest returns for his labor.
lie has time now to read. Time _ and in-
of he age.
telligence are the both
h nto every depart.Invention. brings bo iAmerican
•
ment of life. As soon as the farmer begins
Ito read and study all the details of his
farm the soil its elements the rocks their
farm,
'climaticeffects, • the . '
° grains, grasses, stratification, e nature
f - asses, herbs and trees • and the
sheep,' • d
or horses, cattle, swine an
nature,..dd es even cats -there will come in-
"°.e
tentgenyce ' and with intelligence success,
and with 'success riches.
e. I f ffeelsthat
If the eye o any farmer 'whonewspaper
the future holds naught in store for his
interest, falls upon these lines with suffici-
ent interest to read them through, let me
say, never were
, there days of grander pos.
sibilities for the farmer than those of now,tstake.Th
Chirk up a bit,. Remember the chief ob-
; _ , , _
he pursuit of happiness. Do
ject cu hie is t ..
not bury your gaze too much in the dust
of the corn -hill. Look out across the mil-
ing face of God into the intertissuecl
' f the t d t the t
glories o e sunse an up a e s ens.
Read every spare moment you have and let
it be something useful and helpful in your
noble calling. Put yourself in touch with
the great movements of the times. Have a
definite• Shoot t something tangible,journalism.
aim a
•
Filling the air with random shot from
grandfather's blunderbuss will not bring
Good, h ly sense is
down much game. homely
the first consideration in the make-up of
the man who is to be a wealthy farmer.
the
Industry is a prime quality and can not be
left out of account, but many farmers are
mg too hard. They put
kept oor b working '.0
3' In
work into us e ess places or do their work
the hardest way.
, the world of
One closing word. Yonrs is . ,,
df invention as there
nature an the genius. o
to uplift you, not to discourage you...
Walk
h ,
where, 16 leads ; to the apiary ; e vine-
d the orchard ; elle cool breok waters
beneathItat
the willows • the rolling fields . the
% droves - and ' •
upland pasture where the herds
- • u to the hills covered with
a ' ' '
and flocks feed , p , .
many kinds of wood ; up to the shelving
rooks full of glittering secrets ; up to Cled.
-'''''-'
Cow or Care,
Quite a good many people have a belief
that foods, cleanliness, intelligence in eten-
'pounding rations and in feeding them, pure
a k•H i d • 0 f
water, an a t oxen se in le Mann nO
.
lure of but*, have more to do with it all
than hail the cow, since there are compere-
• •
all breeds, 4, ,
tively worthless cows in a .it is
said that Jersey butter will "stand, ape
b '
otter than any other. That all depends.
There' aro Jerseys and Jerseys. ad
some of their butter will "stead le end
, ,..------m.
some will " sie doWii" or run away
, give it a obrence. .
Nimitys ,nine of every 100 pounds,
drawn from healthy pro erly fed
Vered for owe, Will make utter that
"stand up and possess good bode',
and texture" if the conductor of the
IS an artist. If he in a "daub" alkagimy
them are, he'll spoil it. TbeNit Shout
atbatgyerniseoefeiftitahniedeteheeetar.ytt,e0optthetowtatikde,
'Helve that all this depends on the
that no other eon' than the Jersey
it, Will fail.
if
of
flavor
CQW
can
Tech
opener
stAnd•
used
inter.,
leaving
II
1
d...
open
puller
positive'
a
CASE.
Cana-
Cana-
British
means
British
them
protec-
cattle
contag-
Thar
not
would
so
• a
of
care-
charge
sat
there
while
to
reason
a
actions,
a paper
much
how
read
to their
modern
impoa-
that
stop
e
to
other
to
clean,
thinksper
what
ine
to
I"
mese',
every
L
.
yeti
'
Milk
and
Will
train
of
all
tbhee.
and
do
to
jaws
in
.
It is
with 1
23d
dur-
done
to
pre-
who
been
-t
.
tm-
just
they
-
been
very
th e
of
cer-
this
of
is
the
the
or
cer-
one
that
hon.
the
h
it
top
The
mea-
en-
in-
a
it.
it
'
give
But
be
,
is
or
are
the
to,t••W'
let
•
get
'
...,
'
I
i
' ItIe
, 1p.:NN , ,
le"' Air'
"Or 1
ess sir
.
`,..
/sok ..,,,,..wr.,.,...
....,... .
I ;
• ,
• d .
-nafeED
-
.
-
- • • m )
. d
I! I ,
,
,
The best
he Corisumer
' of any soap
Millions of
WOrld can
they who
,
value. It
labor, greater
- -
' egbnYAOS;IIItSpr011:Ted .
sale that it is
.
Value for '
.
'
in the market, s , .,
women throughout the
v0Uch for this, as it,
have proved its --
brings them les*.
comfort:
NEW NAIL puLLEa.
it rilit Tachie Anething (iota a
a Spike.
'Anew etyle nail puller and box
is shown herewith. The handle and
ard are made of malleableiron and the
nis
are of steel. There are no Springs
its construction, and all parts are
changeable. it Dulls nails straight
- '
-, se
11117 *6e; ..
-
:
r- l, 2 *
, "t4
o
0
. -
. s. • Net -
' me asesseees____„.„.:
........-.---__:. ----_----....,,,
';4"--------
' '''''',
""------ei
RAZ PPLLER.
them at good is new, and the 'awe
d -positively,' cl. • 3.
an close an in use the
will not bruise or smash the fingers,
stated that by the strength and
leverage of the tool it . will pull nals
ease, giving it a range from a tack to
nail. ,
,
,
Is
‘.1
.
fellow
immediate
the
.
EX-MEIYIBER 0
.
REuBEN
le del 15.7.
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I,edee.';`,...d . ie. -es -et -tee
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e -
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,'"-2-F-A=v•-"..--...1:.
••=-"./..,-..:,0.,,, -
.
. PARLIAMEN
, ,
E TRuAx ..
II
.
'
. .
•';'•.d.. ,
,etedee..-- seets"red-d• .
eeed... deessede„
,.,
. .
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, = '"?4'.•c"'',. • •
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•
tres are in any way deranged the
supply of nerve force is a oat)
diminished, and as a result the food
taken into the stomach is only
•
Chronic Indi
partially digested, and C
gestion and Dyspepsia soon make
their appearance.
South American Nervine is
prepared that it acts directly on the
nerves. It will absolutely cure every
ease of Indigestion and Dyspepsia,
and is an absolute specific for
nervous diseases and ailments.
It usually gives relief in one day.
Its powers to build up the whole
system are wonderful in the extreme.
It cures the old, the young, and the
middle-aged, It is a great friend
the aged and infirm. D t
Do no iaeglect
to use this precious boon; if you do,
you may neglect the only remedy
which will restore you to health.
South American Nervine is perfectly
safe, and very pleasent to the taste.
Delicate ladies, do not fail to use thin
great cure, because it will put the
bloom of freshness and beauty upon
your lips and in your cheeke , an
quickly drive away your disabilities
and weaknesses. ,
Dr. W. Washburn, - of New
Richmond, Indiana, writes : "I have
used South American Nervine in
my faenily and prescribed it in
my practice. It is a most excelle0
remedy." ....
Retail Agent for Exeter.
DR. MODAIRMID, Agent, Ronson
.„
„
-
,
,
,
.
ow .
al.
.
1
to
d
.
THAT PLEURO-PNEIIMONIEL
---
Enoueh to Shake the Confidence of
e
dians in British Statesmanship.
nothing that has happened
ing the past quarter of a century has
more to shake the confidence of loyal
dians in the honorable character of
statesmanship than the low, truckling
by which the government has sought
prevent the unrestricted sale of undoubted-
P
ly healthy Canadian cattle. If competition
_ ., •
with Canadian cattle is injurious to
lowering let
stock -raisers by g prices,
be excluded. straightforwardly by a
, ,
ti•
'ye duty, without having resort to false
t cl.slandering
ences an not only the
out the whole people of the
.Dominion,
have been asserting that a case of
ious pleuro -pneumonia, has never
known in the country outside of the
entitle at Quebec, whence it was certainly
not allowed to spread, They dare
pose such a duty, for they well know
about how long the English people
stand a tax on their roast beef, and
." '
to the scaring process. As has
b the Lancet, -it was
y
easy thing to prove beyond question
true nature of the disease, symptoms
which had been found in the lungs
•inasmuch
Canadianb inoculatinghealthy
tam cattle, y
cattlewith the deaeased matter, but
simple and easy mode of detection was
fully avoided. by the British veterinarians,
who yet do not hesitate to, in effect,
the Canadian people with being a
liars and swindlersby denying that
any pleuro -pneumonia in Canada
seeking to infect British herds with
fatal malady.many
„DR.. FOW
,
. LER s
*.EXT: OF •I'`.1
-Perhaps
,°W1 LD q •T'
.
TRMBERRY
CURES
1-10LERA
0 L.: I C.V.31-"".
Atisei IDS
,.
IARRIREA
YSERTEFIY
ER COlVIPLAMTS
-
OF THE BOWELS
AND RELIABLE FOR
OR ADIP.TS.„
•
.
e ..,
,,, ,
. .
4
•
•
d'de '
- ,,
.N...'i,V.,..
-•
e "d. ee
e....
.
, s e
.
• ‘ •
, .
.-- - e s det,
dd , .
e._, ee s eeeteeded it ''' I, '
-0
, • i , „mew f !.,,._ •
Hon. Reuben E.' Truax, one of
Canada's ablest thinkers and states-
men, a man so highly esteemed by
the people of his district that he was
honored with a seat in Parliament,
-
•
kindly furnishes us for publication
the following statement, which will
be most- welcome to the public,
-
as it is one in which all
will place implicit confidence. Mr.
m
Truax says:
"I have been for about ten years
very much'
troubled with Indigestion
and Dyspepsia, have tried a great
different kinds of patent
medicines, and have been treated by
a number of physicians and found
no benefit from them. I was recom-
mended to try the Great South
Nervine Tonic. I obtained
a bottle, and I must say I found -very
great relief, and have since taken two
more bottles, and now feel that I am
entirely free from Indigestion, and
would strongly recommend all my
-sufferers from the disease to
give South Arny Nervine an
trial. It will cure you.
"REUBEN E. TRUAX,
" Walkerton, Ont."
It has lately been discovered that
ceetain Nerve Centres, located. near
' ,
base of the Drain, control and
supply the stomach with the neces-
sary nerve force to properly digest
the food. When these Nerve Can-
__. ... . --
O. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and
PETROLEUM IN ATHABASCA.
The Government W -AI -1 ;alio Steps to As-
. certain_the Facts.
..-.,
A despatch from Ottawa says :-..ene
.
Government have decided to take steps to-
. . •
wards ascertaining the extent of the petro
leum deposits of the Athabasca district.
Three or four years ago, on two separate
me& Surveyor c onne
occaaions, Geolo • I NI C I
visited. the country adjacent to Athabasca
Landing and Pelican Lake, and observed
thousands of acres of petroleum lands, i.e.,
land saturated with petroleum. Where the
mineral exists and to what extent is a pro-
blem which the Government will endeavor
to fled out. Mr. A. W.. Fraser, of 'Toronto,
,
and formerly of Petrolea, one of the most
experienced oil men in Ontario has beenresort
• • '
placed in charge of the exploring party,
and borings will be made in the vicinity of
either of the two points named. Athabasca
Landing is 150 mi .
les north of Edmonton
'
,
i' ,licolera.Morbuz
...,,R
- - ,
, .
,
1D ALL SU1'44
ID FLUXES
IS SAFE
- ' LOREN
.
CENTRAL
,
.'rug'
FANSON'S
t. full stock
Dye -stuffs
Dyes,
hand.
Condition
in
et
resh.
ees carefully
Fven4ral Drug
I. c 1
r
•
Store
BLOCK.
-771
kte-
lin
eeee
Chaffey brothers. Natives of Canada, they
emigrated to Southern California and
started , with groat success the irrigation
colonies of Riverside and Ontario. They
would have been there now if Deakin had
notwhispered the glories 'of the Murray in
their ears. It has been urged by enemies
of the Chaffeys that they came here only to
exploit the land and clear out as soon as
possible with what they could make. The
proof to the contrary is that they have put
all their fortunes, not only into the corn-
pany, but into private blocks in Mildura.
The Chaffeys have the largest vineyards and
-orchards of the settlers here. Rio Piste,
the magnificentresidence of W. B. Chaffee',
is an outward and visible sign of its owner's
intention to stay.
WATER IS SUPPLIED,.'
.
to the settlers from a system of open earth.
work channels, fed from the Murray. by
pumps, the raising of the water to the high.
or level being in three separate lifts. The
station for the first lift is at a point on the
river knotvnaa Psyche bend, about five miles
, by road above the township. Here the water
is thrown into the head of the lagoon which,
being separated from the river by a sub-
stantial embankment, forms a Convenient
reservoir. At the Psyche bend pumping
.statiou the engine is over 1,000 horae power.
There are four pumps, size forty inches
with a capacity of 30,000 gallons a minute.'
The pumps at the other stations have a
capacity of only 10,000 gallons a minute.
The lift from the summer level of the Mur-
ray to the top water level of the lagoon is
twenty-four feet, but although the water
sur face frequently falls below summer level,
and so remains for several months duringshall
•
KILLED BY A TOMBSTONE,
---
Bustache Itobillard Meets With a Horrible
Death at Ottawa.
An Ottawa despatch seyse-Eustache
Robillard aged 20 years who lived with
,
his mother and brother at Janeville, met
7 ith a horrible death about 10 o'clock on
Friday morning. For seven years he had
been a carter for les. Brown, proprietor of
the marble works in George street. On that
day he had. to take a heavy tombstone toAction
Bearbrook. Near Blackburn a traveler
found his horses standing still on the road
and Robillard dead, his head sticking from
between' two spokes of one of the wheels and
his body' caught in the wagon. His neck
was broken, and from the appearance of
the road it was deducted that the horses
had gone some yards without the wheel, in
'which the deceased's heathhad caught, turn -doesn't
ing, and had then stopped, owing to the
heavy strain on them. Deceased was sub
ject to fits.
"STOP MY PAPER."
--
A Certain Responsibility Attached
of Stopplug".a Paper.
E h right t • take
, very man as a tee o a paper
to stop it, for any reason or for no
-
at all. But at the same time there is
' .
tam responsibility attaching to all
even to so trivial a one as stopping
b • the editor s
because esaysomething
agree with. There is complaint
editors lack fearlessness and
esty that newspapers are t,00 generally
.,...,efican
mere partisan organs that disregard
iitruth and justice when political
•
interests are a ere is too
' t
truth in the charge 1' but let us ask
is possible fore. fearless, honest, outspoken
.
journa o ive i every man is o cry
my paper I" whenever he reads something
which does not accord with his views?
men who insist that the paper they
never say anything contrary
. views are the ones who are in a large
sure responsible for the craven cowardliness
and weathercock propensities of
In a community composed
tirely of the "Stop my papers I" true
dependent journalism would be an
silnitty. When you are convinced
, ,
Paper is dishonest and deceitful, stop
When convinced that it is unclean
. , . , . . '
When it lacks enterprise and fails
you thenews, stop it, When some
Y
aper Ives you more value, stop it.
Rg Y
0.0 t stop a paper that you believe
honest, courageous, enterprising and
simply e an" its '
b oeditor has writtenh
,..-
own sincere views instead of yours
somebody's else ; for, if you do, 'you
putting a premium on insincere journalism
. _ ,
an serving notice on an editor that
aAt"
. way to succeed is to write what he
will best please his readers instead of
,
he hoilestly believes to be the truth,
' .
of all kinds of
and package
constantly ou
Winan's
.
Powd-
er,
the best
the mark-
and always
.
Family ramp-
prepared at
Store Exete
Li 'UTZ N
HAVEclaims
CHICAGO TO A SUNDAY.
• '
No Stores or Shope to be Kent . open on
that Day After lil 0' clock ;ten,
The Chicago City Council on Monday
night voted to stop merchandising on Sun-
- -
day. Only the signature of Mayor- Hopkins
"
and the enforcement of the measure by the
Police Department are necessary to secure
Sunday Rest Association and for
f the Sunda
cic • - . • •
thetlie bodies organized labor in Chicago
l ' fwhichh
essentut points or they ave
been contending. In substance the crdin.
provides that.
ance P . • •
"No person, firm, company, or corporation,
e`ther as prineipal agent officer, employee
1 ' k ' s li k employee,
clerk, servant,. pewee man, seal . keep else/
for business within the city of Chicago any
ore or place for the purpose of selling orp..
store -
any clothes dry
exposing for sale or selling a ,
goods
goods, hats, ng , jewelry,
'bshoes hardware, furniture, meats,
acts, * .•
or groceries, or any one or more of said
articles, on the first day of the week, corn-
mealy called Sunday; also that no barber
shop shall be allowed to remain open and
do business after 10 o'clock Sunday morn.e
ME:" . .
The Ordifiance allow the sale of meats
and groceries up to 10 o'clock on Sunday
moriiinga during the menthe of June, tTuly,
August,and September. .
SPOTS
AND ,1
BLEMISHES s
'
CAUSED BY.
; BAD BLOOD 9
, I CURED BYPsyche,bend.'
,
BBB
'
thankful to .BB,
strong and, well
blood cleansing
with Scrofulous
all over my body
try Burdock Blood
bottle, with greet
positively say theb
half of the aeowl
OILMIIEDa
to be strong and
4
use of B.B.B. and
it to every.
PiTLISTON
Sydney lVines.O.B.
,
the dry seasons, the actual lift will rarely be
so great beeeeise the water surface in the
lagoon will not, as a rule, be mainteined at
its full height. In fact the pumps at the
next station are designed to lift 'from as
low *8 fifteen feet above summer level,
that is nine feet below the surface of the
' • •
-lagoon. Pumping station No. 3 . is on the
' lagoon, and about two Miles nearer town
Th'
than e plant is a very
perfect and powerful one. It consists of
four twenty -inch centrifugal pumps, driven
by a triple•expansion, four -cylinder engine
Of 1,000 indicated horse power, and supplied
with steam by two pairs of multitublarcaps,furnishing
steel boilers, each three face six inches by
fourteen feet. The rising main that deity;
ers the water from the lagoon into the fifty,
foot- channel -that is, ' the channel whose
water surface is fifty feet above tIA sum-
mer -level of the river -is forty-eight inches
in diameter, eonstruated of wrought and
riveted boiler.plate. ' Time next umping
station is at Nithol's Point, about a mile
Above the toWnithip. . Here the water is
raised from the fifty.foot into the seventy.
foot and eighty-five foot channels, the latter
being probably the highest level main that
will be constructed on the settle t
!ma ' .
. ran etimetelet reeeneetee•
• t this station consists of two twenty -inch
n - ,
Allen's oentriftigal pumps, driven y a triple
C• e )
. ' "4*''
'''. ' ' ''''
. .: .
I&
i ,..„,
' 4.
'N
„
' ,
e,6y , P y ‘ A
DOBENEO rosasTox.IIII
•
DEAu Sins -I am
amuse I am to -day
lirough ite wonderful
?ewers, I was troubled
pots' and blemishes
ed. was advised to
ittets,, I took one
enefib, and can
efore X haa taken
ttle I Wan
ERFECTLY
I am so .pleased
ealthy again by the
,Can strongly reoommend
cly. LOlinnZO
e „ .
1
'
'
-
- .., .... ,
I \‘‘ CC\ tO,I
•tdc
VP se.,Ce'
-c.0 ie s ,eeS ere p e ,
i , 4 ..-
c:,
C,r .alb it.'S
. 2.s tz,-a e, A - • p -0,, , k
''.6 • .ee •e es te sgbe e• 0 i',0
..i•eit e• "X 't ,e‘'••" ' '' . ?* *i\
fe, cp.q'' ‘lb ea--•
es,$$Z '
ee ee, ,
ati$''
'
'R., ,.,,, „q •
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,;)*W' 0
A!k. VP. %,.•
) 's •t'''° 0 i•°
) .g.:, . - , XNC) 4,s.`e) CP ..C' \,%
,k ••• "L '' • 1.,'+ , 0 0
' '• 0., ‘Seeeb • 40 • S 0 49
, 1.2*. ..N...• -.N. .ci,‘ i• SP
v`'
• ' ,
fr, ttgo Rareltasete shooa leek t� the tabei et the now mut rots,
r" w ,
xt ID* 0 . '
,' If the aadre$11 tenet gig, 0 0 T.41.0100110 tlx y 00 ottitiMilt
• .... ..
.
.
•
,
,
. eta.-
1 Llk
An 'Early Re ease ely
Little Dick-" Mamma wanted.
take piano ,
' lessons but I ooaxecl her
me have a 'fiddle."•.\
Little Dot-" Do you like a fiddle
Little Dick- " No, but I think she'll
tired of that quicker than Et piano,"
----
A JOyless World.
Little Suburb--" Ns just tdo
- -
for anything„" , ,
Mr. Suburb-" What is, pet'? '
tittle miss 8,h,the.„00 It's rained
. '
day since 1 gob my new watertng,pot."
.,.. CrP hs• l- / fi.
litillA
imure0 vy tor riteuer$ vasorial
.. ..„... . ... ..._ , ,
. ----------
Sold. 0
' ,
As a °list was riding through Belfast
ey
at e rapid roast he was stopped by a police.
man, who asked for his name and address.
The cyclist presented his card a,nd rode
on,
l'chuckled
The vigilant po iceman at theMiss
thought Of the ()atoll he had. made, but his
, b imagined, when 'o looking..-
n
dismay may e '4,
at the card, he read:
“i1.- 140, Requested
, t,,,, „ ,„,
' '''''' ma Your Own
13isnesl."
Sure to Agree.
New Girl (timidly) -"I s'pote you are
ie cook, tom 2" ..
Young Mistress -"Bless irte,no ; I don't
Hew a thing about it." .
' 1 '`,' ' “a
New Gm .e.elieved)- Then we'll get on
measly, viare. I don't either,"
tot/M/181ot engine of 450 indicated It orse pow-
- • • . . ' •
er supplied with steam from a pair of taut.
a tituliule.r steam boilers of the Same. pattern
as those at the station on the lagoon,
Basins lined with cement, concrete, and
fitted with es,et-iron sluice gates are eon.
dated on the channels at the inlets
ix ,,
end
Outlets of the suction and delivety pipes.
tedeeeseeseeesidadee.daesseet 0sedigeilLe ee:saitsseeeseeeidetesse
ein'eSeile
•