HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1894-10-11, Page 3,r.r.t17477r177.7,`777,5177,37. 77777 .77"77
,
A LRtk Daughter
Of a Church Of England minister
cured of a distrOssing rash, by
Ayer's Barliaintrillti. Mr, RUDA.=
HIRES, the Well=known Druggist, 201
st., MOntrcal, P. Q., sayS:
,1 have sold Ayeriti Family Medicinal
i'6r 40 years, and lieVe heard nothing but
2goo4 said of thom, r ktIOW of meny
Wonderful Cures
performed by Ayor'fi Satsaparilla, ono
in partioular beteg thrill of a 'little
danghter of a Chtiroll of England minis-
ter. The child. WWI literally covered
from head to foot with a red and ex-
ceedingly troublesome rash, from which
he had fingered foe tist. or three years,
hi eleite a the beet medical treatment
available. Ilet tether was in great
distress about the ease, and, at my
recommendation, at last began to ad-
minister Ayineti Sarsaparilla, two bot-
tles of which effected a. complete euro,
much to her tellef and her father's
delight. I ant Mire, were he here to -day,
he wieuld testify in the strongest terms
as to the metite of
Ayer's Sarsaparilla
Prepared by Dr. J. O. Ayer 8t CO., Lowell, Mos&
• CUrcs others, WM evIroycni
THEEUTER TIMES. .
. IspnblisnedeveryThursday mornas, tt
TIMES STEAM PRINTING NOUSE
fdain-street,nearly opposite Faton's Jawelery
btin ti,Elice ter,On t.,by John White & Sons,Pro-
pee tors.
RATER OF ADVBATESING
Fir stinsettion , peril:tie.. „,.........„.....,.10 cents
VriCh Be. b se qn ea tinsertiOn ,per iine.,....0 c eats,
To insure insertion, advertisement, s should
et sent ie non ater tli all Wedueoday morning
_
OurJOB PRINTING DEP VETHENT is ouR
Cabe largest and best equipped in the County
ot Huron,All work entrustea to tril willeeziet;
nor prom p ta ttentio n;
DeCSions He oardii
•tm News -
n
„elect papier S.
elAeon who takes a papereegularly fro n
thepodooffice, whether directed in his name or
anothoes, or whether he bas sabscribad or net
itresponsible for payment. '
"2 If a person orders his paper discontinued
heinusc pay a.11 arrears or the publisher may
opine to send it until the payment is made,
rat dtin collect the whole amouut, whether
„,ar is cakeafroin the office or not.
,EsJ suits for subscriptions, the sale may be
. Isr,,„: •
' although the subscriber may resides„..7 .ied in the place where the paper is pub
hundreds of miles away.
4 alte courts have decided that refusing to
ak spapers orperiodicals from *he poit.
die, or removing anl le tying tie )1:tut:Mist
towline facie eviclea.:.: et intaatiaati tl,' 4 l 1
fiat
,
WOR the removat
J• worms of all in
from children or aclult
use Da. S I T C
GERMAN WWI I
OEMNOEO. Aiwa.
prompt, reliable, safe and pleasant, requiring 1.
after medicine. Never failing. Leave no bad aim
Iffects' Price, 25 oonts•per /lax
'kee
TRE
OF A liTEXET ER
TIMES
this wonderful discovery is the hest known remedy fct
)3i1iousness and all Stomach and Liver Troubles, sucl
as Constipation, Headache, Dyspepsia, Indigestion
Impure Blood, etc. These Lozenges are pleased
and harmless, and though powerful to promote .
beallhy action of the bowels, do riot weaken likepillt
Ii yens* tongue is coated you need them.
AT ALL r/ll.l‹.z STORES.
5
Easily, Quickly, Permanently Bestow,
NVettic.neSS, Nervousness, Debliity:
ono all the trem Of OVIIR Ir0111 early errors os
later exceesee, the results of overwork,
ness, worry, etc. Full strength, development
and tone given to eveiy organ and portion of
the body. Simple, natural methods. Thu -rim
died improvement seen. Failure impossible.
'2,000 referee..ies, BOA, expItitittiote eled
proofs mailed (sealed) free
el
ER1F EBlkoAL DO§ Blatt I Y
.el to
•
T
tiotiesettold.
Bofllug Moftts,
This simple colipery process deem not
require quite ail muoh Ore and attention
sei roasting. When the pet is coming to a
boll/ there will alWaye, from the cleanest
Meet and cleaneet water, rise a scum to the
top of it. They mut be carefully talcen off
as soou as it rises. On this depends the
good appearance a all boiled ertioles, The
oftener the meat m adulated and the Meitn-
er the top of the water itt kept., the cleaner
will be the m: at. If let alone, it aeon boils
down and Sticks to ehe meat, making it
appear coarse and giving it an unsavory
flavor. Fut the meat into Gold water
the proportion of about a cmart ot vveter to
a pound of meat. It should be covered with
water during the whole of the prooees of
boiling, but not drowned in it, the less
Watenprovided the meat is eevered with it,
the more savory will be the meat, and the
better will be the broth in every respect.
The water should be heated gradually, ac-
cording to the thickness of the article boil.
ed ; for instance, a leg of inntton of ten
pounds' weight, should be placed over a
moderate lire, which will gradually make
the water hot, without °aiming it to boil,
tor about forty minutes, If the water cornea
to a boil sooner,tOe meat will become hard.
ened and shrink up as if it had been scor-
ched.
Six pounds of meat require from a quar-
ter to one hour and a half, fourteen limber'
from a good clear fire. Fresh killed beef
and other meat will take much longer time
boiling than that which has been kept till
it is, what the butchers call, ripe. If meat
be frozen,it must be thawed before boiling.
The size of the boiling pots should be ed.
apted to what they are to contain. Take
care that the covers of your boiling pots
At close, not only to prevent unnecessary
evaporation of the water, but that the
smoke may not insinuate itself under the
edge of the Iid and give the meat a bad
taste. If you let meat or poultry remain
in the water after it is done enough, it will
become sodden and lose its flavor.
The good housewife never boils a joint
without converting the broth into some
sort of soup. \Vetch stilted meat well be-
fore you put it into the boiler.
even tettleMileinl of selt, two beeping table.
01)904h -11e of [Meted her/440403ln Nice te
eat with Atari When green eueeenthere are
gone,
Seup Stooki—lhe water iu, Which 4 leg
ef Mutton, a terkey or fowl lie,e boon boiled,
may be cooled, freed from let, pile on the
ittOVe With a shoe or two of carrot, half an
onion,two bledes of celery, two cloves. and
if desired a little thyme, sevory end pera,
ley ; cook one hour, Streio a teaepoenful
of beef eetraet and Et very setiefactory soup
is the result, with very little tronble.
, . .
THE SURJECT OF SUICIDE,
It Is I/regarded as In Essential's, Coward
ey And Immoral tet.
Sinew Robert G. Ingersoll, some few
week e ago, Made some foolish and entirely
inconsequential remarks on the subject of
suicide, a multitude of opinions have been
offered through the public press as to the
right of the individual to take his pwn
All the right thinking and well-baleen:led
minds exercised in the discussion regarded
suicide as an essentially cowardly and im-
moral act. Many people grow up with the
ilea, that if personal life be not personally
' happy, it is consequently useless. Hence
it is that when they reach a period in their
lives when sorrow triumphsover joy, nature
over success, and suffering over pleasure,
life loses all mewling to them and they
foolishly hasten to shuffle off the mortal coil
This view of life is essentially untrue and
most injurious. While we may never know
how far it is responsible for actual suieide,
it is certain ti at if carried out to its logical
conclusions, it would largely tend in that
direction Happiness is amoral and right-
ful condition of human life, one which
should be sought for and appreciated. But
it is never the whole of life, only a part
and apart that cannot be exacted. Life
contains it, but it also contains a great deal
more—work, service, manhood, duty, re•
sponsibility, and if these receive a proper
consideration no suggestion of suicide can
find lodgment in the same breast.
It would be well if the true character of
this degrading theory of justifiable suicide
were rnore fully appreciated than it is. Our
pity dwells on the sufferings which ware so
great as to overcome the natural love of life
and our compassion for the afflicted ones
blinds us to the intrinsic selfishness and
cowardice of the deed. Take, for instance,
the frequent occurrence of loss of fortune,
bankruptcy and disgrace. Let the Conse-
quent agony be what it may, what is the
position of the man, who, in order to
escape it, throws away the life which
he holds in trust? He leaves his family
not only to all the hardships and sufferings
which he refuees to endure, but also to the
additional grief of his loss and to the life-
long bitter memory of his end. Ilis duties
as a father', a husband, a son, or a brother,
he casts to the winds. All the possibilities
of retrieving his losses, of buildum up
another business'of providing for those
who are rightly dependent upon him for
support, he deliberately throws away. His
obligations as a citizen, a friend, a inan
' among men, he ruthlessly ignored. All
' opportunities of atoning to those he may
have wronged he discards. There is no de-
serter from the battlefield half as disloyal,
as treacheroue or as cowardly as he. The
one runs away from a single duty ; the
other abandons them all and forever.
( HOW I Learned to Make Dumplings.
II have had long aud terrible struggles
with soups, cakes, pies, etc., but none of
them ever came ea near conquering me as
the dumpling, writes a correspondent. I
made them in every conceivable fathion,--
hard, soft, rich and plain. I made them
with baking powder and saleratus, but al-
ways with the same retult; they were as sol. -
Id and indigestible as lead. I read some-
where that the reason dumplings were
heavy was because they were not brought
to the boil soon enongh after they were
put into the kettle. I put the dumplings
quickly into vigorously boiling stock and
clapped the cover on in leas than no time.
.Ah me ! how heavy they were) Of course,
too,' I was very particular to cook the
dumplings just fifeeen minutes and never a
second longer. Finally I cooked them
twenty minutes, and blush to tell it,1 once
cooked them for twenty-five minutes. I
noticed when I cooked them twenty-five
minutes that there was not one light dump-
ling, whereas when I cooked them fifteen
minutes a few on top were light, so I con-
cluded to try another scheme. I cooked
the next for ten minutes and they were as
light and digestible as the latest joke in
Mud. I have since learned that the only
thing necessary for suecees with dumplings
is not to cook them too long. The length
of time depends upon the size of the dump-
lings, the heat and the number of dumplings
in the kettle. . We like them best made of
nice buttermilk, a little sour cream, soda
enough to sweeten the buttermilk and
flour enough to make a batter stift enough
to hold the spoon erect. I never hesitate
to remove the cover from the kettle aud
try them, for every minute they cook after
they are done goes toward spoiling them.
Verily, it takes common sense more than
anything to become a succeseful cook.
--
About Mending..
One day out of every week should be
set aside for mending in every well -
regulated household, and it will be sur-
prising how little time it will take to do
the work in this way, while if left over for
several weeks it will accumulate until the
busy housewife will find it quite an under-
taking. Torn places in dresses or woolen
goods should be carefully basted on piper
and held together, then darned neatly
with remelings orahread the same shade as
the goods. Articles that do not have to
be washed, may be neatly repaired by
rubbing a little mucilage on a piece Of
the goods and pressing it down with a hot
iron. W bile some women neglect this
very useful household art, othergo th the
other extreme and waste much time on
articles that are no worth the labor and
thread spent on thorn; but as much de-
pends on circumstances as to value of the
tame and the needs of the household, no
directions that will suit everycne can be
gieien, and the sensible housewife must de-
cide what to mend and what not to mend
for herself ; but that it is best to save time
by doing it in season goes without saying.
Recipes.
COCOANUT PUDDING.— One cupful of
milk, one. (muter of a pound of grated
cocoanut, three tablespoonfuls of bread
crumbs, three tablespoonfuls of powdered
sugar, two tehleepeoefuls of melted batter,
one cupful a storied raisins, the grated peel
of one lemon, well beaten whites of two
eggs. Beat all until well mixed. Butter
it cold pudding dish and pour the mixture
in. Bake elowly one hour, then turn mit on 1
a flat dish and shake pulverized sugar over I
it. Serve hot. -
SroNat Glienen Bonen. —This requires
no eggs, and for this reason is particularly
valuable on some occasions, Five cups of
flour, one heaping tablespoonful of butter,one
cup of molasms, one cup of euge.r, One cup
of emir milk-, two tablespoonfule of salera-
tus diseolved in hot water, two teaspoonfuls
exeract of ginger,orie teaspoonful of extract
of cinnamon ; beet very light and
bake in broad shallow pane. Half a round
of Seeded ratans mit tine added to this will
make a cielicietis tea breed. I
Cueumber etitolinp, —Take largo, par,
daily ripe ettentribere, pare, remove the
seede and,grate. Drain through a eitive ahd
to each pint Lula itt hit pin t, of cider vinegar, 1
a cmarter teaepoonful Of pure cayenne, an
AFTER THE KAISER.
counts Giovanni and Raffaele Quell!, of
Daly, Claim newel:ay to millions.
The Gennan Emperor has been cited to
appeal, before the oivil tribunal in Florence,
in virtue of article 142 of the civil code
procedure of the kingdom of Italy, there to
answer the complaint of Counts Giovanni
and Raffaele Guelfi. These gentlemen claim
be the male heads of the royal German
house of Guelph, and heirs to property
valued e.t many millions. They have net
yet entered into particulars concerning
their claim, .and it is doubtful if the case
neve! rl
will eevtearg eg.e t lehyeo endeu nt ht se gesseen tt pre be
litn
ver i -
y
magnanimous in not claiming the Guelphic
crown, which they say is clearly theirs.
.1 millions of which he is
They will be content if Kaiser Wilhelm
will disgorge the mi
unjustly in possession, and they hint that
they might be induced to listen to a com-
promise, if the terms were aufficeently
tempting. This is not surprising, for
these countare, to put it mildly, in fi-
nancial low water juet now, and the richest
man of the family, Count Guelfo, will not
help them in the suit against the Emperor.
Count Guelfo is gaining an honest, if a
plebeian, living as manager of a skating
rink, and he declines to risk any part of
hie modest income in what he considers
fool's chase after it phantom fortune.
ICan Idiots be Cured?
Idiots have beerlimproved, educated, and
even cured; not one in a thousand fias
been entirely refractory to treatment;
not one in a hundred who has not been
made more happy and healthy; more than
30 per cent. have been taught to conform to
social and moral law, and rendered capable
forder, of good feelipg, and of working like
the third of a man ; more than 40 per cent.
have become capable of the ordinary trans-
actions of life under friendly control, of
derstanding moral and social abstrac-
tions, of working like two-thirds of it man;
aud 25 to 80 per cent. come nearer and
nearer an o , tull some
of them will defy the scrutiny of good
judges when compared with ordinary young
men mei women. That this is no mere
rbotori." ' iloutish is proved by the statis-
tics of one of the largest English training
institutions for imbeciles. '
Good Reason for Sighing.
"Am I the first girl you evee kiseed?"
she asked, as she rearranged her rumpled
" YOu are," he replied, with emphasis.
Then be asked:
Were you ever kissed by a man be -
fors ),
" Never," she replied.
The measenger who flew up to heaventi
ohaticery with the foregeing dialogue gig.
gled as he gave it in, but the recording
angel, When helooked it overshook bis
head and sighed.
4, The True Philosophy.
To dream about the life co dome
re etupiel, terteoine, eioev 3
It's bettet far to make tnnags hum
in the liee thiet'is lin the go.
"
I I 1 I
r
•
I
DIED witit44 AT iir011$111r.
POO Thertim Aged Sueneitoned 0.4.'0410,
titiPlel woo-,
A despatch from Toronto eaye
worthippere at the )(tinge street Methodist
church received a great shock On StindoO
inerning. juet before service ecnennexwed,
Edible Martin the 16 -year-old daughter of
gdward Martin, builder and contraeter,
enoldeinly expired. Mr. 'Martin, is the
superintendent of the Sunday ethool, and a
very wellknowa man in North Toronto.
lie and hie two daughters, Maryand. Edith,
were eittieg in their pew, waiting for the
service to open, wheeJitli, without a ory
of warning, fell sideways into the lap of
her eister. Thinking that his daughter bad
fainted, Mr. Martin lifted het up and car-
ried her out of the eh.urch to the holm of
Mr. Hail, on the other side of the etreet.
ailIST RAVE DIED INSTANTLY:
The usual reatorietives were immediately
applied and Dr. Foster, who lives elose by,
was called in. Op the Arrival cif the physi.
elan, he at ones pronounced her dead, and
from the appearanee of the girl's Moe he
gave the opiniou that she must Mime died
the instant see fell over in the church.
The doctor ascribed the cause of death to
stoppage of the heart, but on enquiry he
could not elicit any information to prove
that the girl had been unduly excited, for
she had walked leisurely to church in the
company of her sister. It (mama that for
the past week Edith had been complaining
of dizzinese, but it was not considered sem
loos and no particular notice was taken of
1L The parents of the poor girl are pro-
strated with grief.
SAULT STE. MARIE CANAL.
The Canal Has Stood Admitrably the Let -
union or 'water.
Mr. John Haggart, Minister of Railways
and Canals, returned to Ottawa from Sault
Ste Marie on Thursday. The lock chamber
of the Canadian canal, and the approaches
east and west, have stood incise admirably
the teat of the letting in of water by
sluices on Tuesday last, through the dam
holding out Lake Superior from the western
entrance. The five pair of gates, three at
the west end of the lock and the two at
the east end, are now being placed in posi-
tion by means of the large pontoon which
has been constructed for that purpose. This
pontoon is to be a permanent adjunct of the
canal, to be used as occasion may require
in making repairs or doing other work. The.
moveable dam across the western entrance,
which will allow of not only the lock chamber
but the western channel of approach to it
being pumped dry, will be finished in a
short time. The valves by which the fill-
ing and en ptying culverts under the floor of
the lock chamber are operated are working
in perfect order. Mr. Haggart states that
the electrical machinery for working the
gates will be all ready in a fortnight or less.
The dams at each end of the canal will then
be broken clown and vessels will pass
through the canal next month. Although
the cenal will thus be complete before the
close ot this season's navigation, the formal
opening of the canal will not be until next
spring, upon the opening of the season of
navigation of 1895.
YOUNU WOMEN MURDERED.
Crimes of the Jaek-the-Ripper Class in the
Anstrlan Tyrol.
A terrible double tragedy of the "Jcick
the -Ripper" class is reported from Amras,
not far front lnnspruck, capital of the
Austrian Tyrol. On Friday last a young
and pretty waitress f Amras went away
from her employer's residence to witness a
religious procession near that phew. On
her return home the girl was murdered and
the only clue found up to the present of her
assassin is a razor-edged knife, which was
picked up near her body. The murder
caused a great sensation in the neighbor-
hood. Close to the spot where the waitress
was killed the body of another woman,
naked, and slashed with a knife in the regu-
lar " Jack- the- Ripper" fashion, was found
to -day. In addition, another womar be-
longing to the same neighborhood is miss-
ing. The whole of the Amras district is
in a state of the greatest excitement. A
strong detachment of gendarmes and two
companies of imperial rifdemep are scouring
the country around. Amrae, but so far all
efforts to arrese the murderer have proved
unsuccessful.
HE WAS BADLY HURT.
A. Haut Struck by a Horse at the Niagara
Fair And Alinost Killed.
&despatch from Nugara, Ont., says :—
Just at the close of the fair here on Friday
afternoon an accident occurred whieh some-
what marred what was otherwise a very
auccessful exhibition. During the trials of
speed John Hannah, a laborer, who Lives
near Homer, at the conclusion of a running
race stepped on the race track to get a
better view of the finieh, and was struck
by one of the horses, had his leg broken in
tvvo places and was otherwiseinjured. Dr.
Tremble, who was on the grounds examin-
ed his wounds and ordered his removal to
the hospital, where he was subsequently
taken. Chief of Police Reid tooic up, a
collection for the unfortunate man from ethe
vieltors and secured about, $50 for Hannah,
who is about 60 years old) and said to be in
poor circumstances.
SAVED MANY LIVES.
A cool -Deaden warm:taster Tarns Aside a
Runaway Train.
A despatch from Lafayette, Ind., says:
—On Thursday morning a Lake Erie and
Western freight train eastbound, broke in
two on a heavy grade near tovvn. The
detached portion rushed back into the city.
The Big Four pasetenger train from Chit:lege
stood in the *Union depot, and Yardmaster
Brightey, seeingthe danger threw a sevitoh,
saving scoree of lives by turning the wild
train on a side track, The detached care,
however, cradled into the Union depot,
entirely wrecking it and foreing thimigh
South street into the Fetterall company's
shoe feetory. A oteb driver named, Wesh-
burn is fatally injured, and it ip fe,ared other
victim are buried in the debri'
e as the
passenger depot was thronged withpeople
feW moments before the eecideet. Pro-
perty lees, $20,000.
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castork
ememematmemeneeteeteitemeauleteen'H Meet.,
'
People Who
Weigh and Compare
Know and get the best, Cottolene,
the new vegetable shortening, has
won a wide and wonderful popu-
larity. At its introduction it was
submitted to expert chemists, pronit-
nent physicians and famous cooks.
All of these pronounced
a natural, healthful and acceptable
food -product, better than lard for
every cooking purpose.
The success of Cottolene is now
a matter of history. Will you share
in the better food and better health
for which it stands, by using it in
your home?
Cotfolene is sold in 3 and 5
pound pails by all grocers.
Made only by
The N. K. Fairbank
Company,
Wellington and„Ann Steil
BILONTRRIAL.
IMAGINATION CURES.
—ag—.
Some m
e Rearkable existences of Cares by
the emination
According to Vaidy, the French army
cantoned in Bavaria, after the battle of
Austerlitz, had only 100 tuck in a division
of 8,000 rnen,being little more then one in
the hundred.. Whene on the other hand,
an twiny is subject to privations or is
discouraged by defeat or 'want of confilence
in its chiefs, the proportion of the sick is
often fearfully increased. So efficacious is
a cheerful state of mind, from the more
heelthful nervous influence which it dif-
fuses through the frame, that surprising
recoveries oecasionally happen which can
be ascribed to no other cause than this.
A singular but instructive instance fell
under the observation of Sir Humphrey
Davy, when, early in life, he was assist-
ing Dr. Beddoes in his experiments on
the inhalation of nitrous oxide. Dr, Bed-
doee having inferred that the oxide must
be a specific for palsy, a patient was select-
ed for trial and placed under the core of
Davy. Previously to administering the
gas, Davy inserted it small thermometer
under the tongue of the patient to ascertain
the temperature. The paralytic man,
wholly ignorarit of the process to which
he was to submit, but deeply lin-
pressed by Dr Beddoes with the certainty
of its success, no sooner felt thethermone-
eter behind his teeth than he concluded
the talisman was in operation, and in it
burstof enthusiasm declared that he already
experienced the effects of its benign in-
fluence throughout his whole body. The
opportunity was too tempting to be lost.
Davy did nothing more, but desired his
patient to return ou the folIovving day,
The same ceremony was repeated, the
satne result followed, and at the end or it
forenign t he was dismissed cured, no remedy
of any kind except the thermometer bay-
ing been used.
Another remarkable instance occurred
during the siege of Breda in 1625. When
the garrison was on the point of surrender-
ing "from the ravages of scurvy, a few
vials or sham medicine, introduced by the
Prince of Orange's orders as the most val-
uable and infallible specific, and given itt
drops as such produced astonishing effects.
Snell: as had not ineved their limbs for
months before were seen walking in the
streets sound, straight, and wbole, and
many who deolared they had beeu rendered
worse by all former remedies recovered in a
few days, to their inexpressible joys.
A Missing -Ring Story.
It would he difficult to find in the pages
of fiction anything to equal the following
prosaic fact, which has just happened in.
Scotland : A Capt. Heathcote rents a moor
from year to year. Last year while out
shooting he ico t it diamond ring. This year
he was reminded of it by the anniversay of
his lose, and sitting by the fire and taking
up a piece of peat to put on, he had scarce-
ly uttered the words, " It is a year to -day
since I lost my diamond ring," than his ccm-
panion WR.8 surprised to hear the worda
, quickly followed by "and here it is." The
I peat had. been cut from the very moor where
the loss had occurred, and hence its re..
covery. No other ['amount of extraordinary
recovery of diamonds could equal that,
uniese, perhaps, that of a lady who dropped
a diamond into a pond and found it some
mouths after on the leaf of a water -lily
which had borne it upward in its growth.
How to get a "Sunlight" Picture.
Send 25 "Sunlight" Soap wrapper,
(wrapper bearing the word e "Why Doee
Woman Look 01(1 Sooner Than a Man") to
Lever Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto,
and you will receive by poste pretty pictures
free from advertising, ancl well worth frazzl-
ing. This is an easy way to decorate your
home. The seep ie the best iu the merket
and it Will only coat lc. postage to send in
the wrappers, if you leave the ends open.
Write your address earefully.
When ruby -eras ofek, we gate her Castor&
shows a, Child, she dried for °Astoria.
When the became Mise, ehe Meng to Castotia.
When she katl Celleiren.skiegavatteen Castorm.
TOE TELAtmoiant
Xtr Atilteldottealter Iteeerds E444,411010e
the Writing Conn/Pe:4 lin Messages.
The wires betW0911 St. Margaret's and
the general post °Moe, Loudon, were, A OW
days ago, used for th,e pUrinnse of lieree
eyZeniiotePref, 0
rolmenf tFsrwit11trtY,f11
eteol1.1
4t:wYrIr.
gVai—th6Te.
Eheetrieel Eneineer, London, iiiaY0 The
experiment took pIttee between the general
post office, ',option, and Oeble lint, Stt.
aMergio)rraetit
'ss Bay,eie1
;107 eu gphownhe al tsh; dioun
nci,
struments were fixed at both elide, and as
thia env; the Arst time that long distance
exPelements in telautography have taken
plaee in this country, they were watched
with unusual interest, The results were
good, the messages transmitted being, in
every reopect, meet sueceesfal, and the in,
Moments working without the slightest
hitch over a distanee of $3 milea. Messages
were both sent from and received at SL
Margaret's Bey, It will be remembered
that the principle of the instrument is that
it automatically records a fitesurnle of the
writing contained in messages. rn the
experiments on Sunday the receiving
pencil recorded with ease and elearness
different handwritings, giving thick and
thin strokes, clotting ea and orosaing
correctly. In this oonnection Arrnytage
Bakewell writes : "It has been stated
that the rent experiments in the trans-
mission of autographic messages by electri.
city between Si. Margaret's Bay and Lon-
don were the first which eariee been made
in this country in long distance telauto-
graplay. Will you allow me to point out
that this is a rnisteke as more than 40
years ago the copying electric telegraph,
invented by the late Frederic Collier .Bake.
well, successfully transmitted autographie
messages between Brighton and London.
Invisible messages, which could be render.
ed legible by the recipiene, were also trans-
mitted by that system. Great interest was
taken by the late Prince Consort in my
father's baventien, and. the inventor had
the honor of exhibiting the instruments
and of explaining their mechanical and
electrioial details to Hie Royal Highness at
Buckingham Palace. The copying electric
telegraph was subsequently exhibited at the
great exhibition of 1851, and received the
highest award, viz., the council medal."
CANADIAN EMBEZZLER EMBEZZLER CAUGHT.
Campbell the Ex -Postmaster of MoOsOliaill,
Run Down in chmago.
A despatch from Chicago says :—Daniel
Campbell, an ex -Canadian postmaster and
egislator, was arrested here on Friday,
charged with embezzlement, and was found
working as a hostler. Cernpbell,it is alleged,
left Moosomin, N. W. T., where he was
postmaster, two years ago, taking with
him something over $600 of the Government
money. He sent his wife and daughter to
England and he came to Chicago, where he
has been living ever since, working at odd
jobs. A few days ago Campbell registered
a letter to his wife in England, giving his
correoe name and address. It was through
this thaa he was discovered. He came
down considerably from his high position,
and was found doing mi
menial work n a liv-
ery stable.
Chance to Prove Devotion:
Wife—" If you can't support me as I
ought to be supported, you might at least
go to the races."
Husband—"What ! Do you want me to
gamble on horse -races to encourage your ex-
travagance."
Wife—"Of course riot. You needn'e bet
at all. But society is always willing to
make allowances for a woman if they think
her husband is going to the dogs."
Rev. Mr. Kelly, of Owen Sound, is to
take the chair of mental philosophy na
L'Assumption College Sandwich.
It is the perfection of the well
matured plant properly cured
by expert growers. Mild
flavored, bright and of match. -
less quality; Mastiff Plug Cut
pleases the most fastidious.
TEE J. B. PACE ToDAOGO Co., Richmond
Va., and Montreal, Canada.
NERVE
BEANS
NERVE BEA.Nb IWO a new uis-
emery that cure the worst eases of
Nervous Debility, Lost 'Vigor and
Palling Manhood.; restores the
weakness of body or mind caused
by over -Work, or tho errors or ex.
ceases of youth. Eine Remedy air
solutely °tree tho most obstinate cases wbon all other
eneeeerners hare failed 0110 10 relieve. Zold by drug.
gists at 51 per package, or six for 0, or sent by mall on
roeeipt Of price by addressing THE JAhLES MEDICINE
CO.. Toronto. Ont. Write for pamphlet Sold in—
Sold cet 13rownineee Drug Store, Exeter.,
POWDERS
CUM SICK 1-40440A0141E and Neeralgie
in oo iweivuemo, also Coated Tongue, Diem -
tea, Bilieusiress, Pale in the Side, Coxietmatio,
Torpid Liver, Bad Breath. to stay cured also
regulate the btrweiS. VERYwoe, to TAKE.
Putoes 2 DENret ettOu0 Ormoos.
imemmameemeameemmememiee
to4tAiik'' ,„
Trade 1401,)i), A. 0WstI,
The Only SeidlitiOo tple, practicel Meade
Belt made forgemeral use, producing a Geunino
"larrent of Eleeteicity for the cure of Ielseeeet
:eat ean be readily telt and regulated both in ,-
inantity and power, anti itaillioti tOpellY pt 9x "
Ate body, it can be wort:kat any time nriug
workino bouts or sleep, altaliftliaoeitivelY Oro
Iralirmin
etile 'Del)1107
Lumbago.
Nevi/one Diseases
Dysperislet/ '
Vartmeeele,
Sexual lierealefieee
luenoteney,
leidneY lOseasere
Lama Buck,
urinary Dtseases
Biectricity properly Applied is fast taitioglIte
place of drugs for ail Igervous, Rheumatic. MeV
ney and Urinal Troubles, and will ell'etet enree
in seemingly hopeless casee where every other
known means has tailed.
Any sluggish, 'week or diseased organ m
by dile means he roused to :weather oath'
before It is too late.
Leading medical men nee ond reeemne d
the Owen Belt 'm their practiee.
OUR ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE!
Contains fullest information regarding the care
of acute, chronle and nervous diseases, price?,
low to order, oto., mai e eaPREE to
owi
ELECTIII
BELT,,
The Owen Electric Belt AL Appliance CO.
49 KING ST. W.:. TQRONTO, ONVA
201 to 211 State St., Chicago, 31/
CARTERS
ITTLE
IVER
PILLS.
.•'W•
_ U E
Sick Headache and rel'eve all the troubles incl.
dent to a bilious state of the system, antis as
Dizziness, Nausea. Drowsineas, Distress ante'
eating, Pain in the Side, &c. While their meet
remarkable success has been shown trt curing
S I K
,...„,,,-:
Headache, yet CARTER'S Ligria LIVER Mete
are equally valuable in Constipation, curing
and preventing this annoying complaint, while
they also correct all disordere of tile stomach,
stimulate the 'liver and regulate the bowele.
Even if they only Cured
E.„
Ache they would be almost pricelesi tO than
D
,.....
.i.„ ,.
wbo suffer from this distressing comp/ant;
but fortunately their goodness does not end
here, and those who once try them erill find
these little pillsvaluable iu so many ways that
they will not be willing to do without them
But after all sick head
A1C E
is the bane of so many lives that here la where
we make our great boast. Our pills cure it
while others do not.
Ciao's LITTILS LIVER Pius areverY small
and very easy to take. One or two pills make
a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do
not gripe or purge, but by their gertle action
please all who use them. ln vials at et cents;
five for 51. Sold erer391.-here, or sent by men .
0.A.3TE11 EED10.13E CO., New Yorl.
tViIII mt
POIS ‘191(‘I
READ -MAKER'S 0
-2.3a.A.Ervics.
HEVER FAILS Te UP SATISFIED:
wO1? set.s. BV %Li DEItt.lEREV
A
DELICATE
IVELTRILAT
LANNEAN'S
e.
RICH
RARE
PUNGENT
PURE
SWEET
LASTING
evmo
L
STILL HOLDS THE FIRST PLACE
IN POPULAR FAVOR. BEWARE OF
IMITATIONS.
CCXXIINEINC121M.
X_ .FRAGRANT
HAVE YOU
"Backache
means the likl-
neys are in
Nirouble. Dodd's
Kidney Pills give
prcon,ot relief."
"75 per cent,
of disease is
1st caused by
disordered kid-
neys,
"Might as well
try to have a
healthy city
without sewer-
age, as good
health when the
kidneys ',aro
clogged, they are
the scavenger's
of the system,
"Delay is
dangerous. Neg-
lected Atchley
troubles result
in Bad II/bed,
Dyspepsia, Liver
Complaint, and
the most dan-
gerous of all,
Prights Disease,
Diabetes. arid
Dropsy!!
"The above
diseases cannot
sxist where
Dodd'S Kidney
Pills are used,"
Sold by ell dealers or eent by ittanon receipt
iof mite se emits, per boa or aia for Se,,go,
Dr. 1... A. Smith & Co. Tvrottc-.., NYrito for
took caned nadrity Tan,. .
,
'
,