The Exeter Times, 1895-1-3, Page 7„ etrIneft estraide7r"ttte
Ptik
104
v9)
CLEAR
SKIN)
MENTAL
ENERGY
URE
OTHERS
WILle
CURE
VAN
r --
LONG
LI FE
STIIONQ
NERVES
AYER'S
pARSAPAR I LLA
S. P., SmiTil, of Towanda, Pa,,
Whose constitution was couipletely
broken down, is cured by Ayerta
Sarsaparilla. He writes:
"For eight years, I was, most of tne
time a great sufferer from constipae
eon, kidney trouble, and Indigos,.
tion, so that iny constitution seemed
to be completely broken down. I was
indueed to try Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and
took nearly seven bottles, with such
excellent results that. ray stomach,
bowels, and Itidneys are in perfect con-
dition, and, in, all their functions, as
• regular as elock-vvork. At the time
I began taking Ayer's Sarsaparilla, any
weight was only 129 pounds; I now can
brag of 159 pounds, and as never in so
good health. If you could see me be-
fore and after using, you would want
me for a traveling advertisement..
I believe this preparation of Sitesaparilla
to be the best in the market to -day.”
•Ayer's Sarsaparilla
Prepared by Dr. 3. C..Ayer treoenowen,1111130a
Cures ethers,will cure You
THEEXETEE TIME
etilai an ed °venal-air:laity reoenue,
Ti MES STEAM.PRINTpGfl/JIJ$E
Main-sereeteselsrly opposite Fitton's gewelory
btereateeter,onteby John White de 3nns,Pso.
Prietors.
Eirittinsertalis ioh,
tT„°-4ZT••0ttnteeuea Vet indScents,t4sarsaBe°Iivets°31Dashould
septic nls,tLiTWednesday monig
IITI
DupABTIj1jsonius
e laseriestana eestegnippectinehe County
0 triaou,All Werk 6ALr.8,4.44. ve, u a.' dillreael V
nor proraptatteutiore
Deesions _Regarding; News-
papers.
tiAynerson who takes a pap e cast; elatly fro -a
•theeest-ottice, whether dire° tea Mine name or
weedier's, or whether has eubsoribed or not
isrosponeible for payznent.
2 II a person orders his popper discoatinued
lieninet pay all arreare or thd 'publisher may
• entintfb to send it until the payment is made,
nd then collect the whole arriount, whether
e escipee Is takeetrom the office or not.
• a in suits for subsoriptions, the suit may be
Astituted in the place where the paper is pub
iehed,, although dee sulieeriber may reside
hundreds of miles away.
I The courts have decided that refusi.14 to
akneixfspripers or periloals from the
•the, or removing and lesArial thee] unctilel
seprima facie evideace •of intentional fraud
For
ociatieyJjI
NQUIetkigie
irmy 401.11•1".1114M3401110.1.p.113.M.41......
n r$6
ONE AFFIXATION rains
OF THE
sl•
I. wMENTH01,4:'
8Celka PIA sTBR
!TWILL DISPEL THE PAN LIKE MAGIC,
ABOUT THE HOUSE.
•Suggestions for Mending.
One et the meet distasteful of housekeep-
ing duties hi the weekly :needing, and still
worm, the monthly mendiug-for the inch
darn that would bade been allosuffioient
three weeks earlier new demands a full
half hour of steady work that raises strong
doubts aa to whether the garne ie worth
the candle, while teats and hocks have come
through stockings that needed only a few
atitohes when first noticed. t The Woman
who hesitates about xnendiug at the outset
nipping decay in the bud, as inveeke, is
assuredly lest BO far as any further ratio -
faction iu the neglected garment, le con-
cerned, and every time they ;are wathed
fresh gaps are sure to appear.
Darning thin places rather than mending
holes is true economy both of time and ma.
terial ; and whether thick or thin, cotton
or woolen, a •email loop of the thread
ahould always be left at each end. Many
workers treat only woolen material in this
way, to allow for the shrinking of the new
thread ; but all new material shrinka more
or less, and the fresh threads introduced
into the many times washed garment will
soon be Bo drawn as to pull it into fresh
dilapidation all around the original darn.
The extra trouble in this kind of darning
will more than pay for itself in the end,
and it is the invariable method of a gifted
expert with the needle who looks well to
the ways of her househOld, and has many
occupations besides that of mending,
near ae
Oa!, as
ut wear
ave the
ilk will
re thia
r mates
wrong
▪ Silk
L
always
in be
tear or
hereas
to end.
for the
or the
0011103
list of
reeesee,
feces;
'ready
len mit-
mane-
t will
, and
asted
a. A
they
Imes.
d and
eroie
rough
mpor-
where
thing
cry of
in in
Id be
m at
s to-
rtion
rk is
obeg
nt of
and
edle
ate,
the
the
era -
the
as a
eful
The mending thread should be as
possible in size to that of the mate
• the darn will not only look better b
better ; and it is desirable to h
needle as fine as the thread or s
carry. If the surrounding parts a
or the tear jagged, apiece of thinne
rial should be neatly basted on the
side, and hemmed down aftetiyard
answers very nicely on woolen good
With wash goods mending should
he'done before washing, as it can t
done more easily and tieatly,and the
thin place will,spread no further, w
one laundering may tear it frOm end
ni also well to put away clothing
station in perfect order,to be ready f
Budden emergency which so rarely
fly for it.
Mena flannels Meep-andnattletn the
articles that show very hide tionedre
in their sudden style of going to p
and the accompliehed neediewoman a
quoted heads them off, so to speak,
ting out the affected parts, cutting re
lessly down to sound material the
bear two rows of machine stitching
then sewing in new flannel carefully is
and -matching the run of the thread
new lease of life is this intuited, and
enter upon a fresh career of usefu
Sometimes an entire atm is amputate
a new one inserted; but whatever the 11
tneaeure happens to be, it is very rho
and works admirably. • Darns and te
arc repairs make little impression
reconstruation is needed, and "cat
torether" is the matt unsatisfacto
subterfuges.
•
Sheets which threaten to become th
the middle -not have become so-shou
summarily dealt with by splitting the
once and sewing the two outer edge
gather. This brings the stronger po
Where there is most wear, and the wo
finished with hemming the aides. By
this in time twice the ordinary amen
wear can be secured.
Some ingeniOus menders of woolen
Balbriggan articles use a crochet no
with good effect as soon as a moder
sized bole becomes visible, catching up
stitches that seem disposed to make
most of their liberty, and filling the ap
ture with fresh ones. This teethed has
advantage of not proclaiming itself
darn, and is very satisfactory to a car
Worker,
Making' Comforters.
Lightweight comforters now largely
take the place of pieeedand quilted guiles,
It's a pity that the old fashioned quilting
bees must pass away with the apple been
and the corn -husking bees. • Work and
pleasure combine so charmingly. But the
egime means less work for the bands
ore time for the mind, so we must
t gracefully to the loss and fill up the
We admire very much the fleecy
cloth paffe, but for common use a
rter covered with blueand white, or
black calico is the most practicable
s ou be tied with zephyr,
and the second with Ida*, Ready made
comforters are cheap, but they are also too
short and too narrow. Two rolls of cotton
may be stretched to make the first layer.
The second layer is laid in the opposite
direction from the first. For a fight weight
comfort, two ehicknesees of cotton are
enough ; for winter three thick/lessee are
better. The tying of the zephyr should be
in regular rows, just far enough apart to
give length enough for tying. All the
zephyr can be run for each rolling before
any is cat. This is a great economy of
time. • Many women tie each tuft as
they sew it, thereby using twice the tinut
required.
, NERVE ITSBV4 33E.Alle aro a o elk hew -1'
...
corny that cure the woretneaL of
, .• Nervous Debility, Lost Vigor and -- -
and m
BEANS Failing Railhead; restores the I submi
weakness of body' or mind caused ,
• •by overwork, or the errors or ex. I gap.
enamor youth. This Remedy ob. , Cheese
tamely curet the moot obstinate cases when all other ,
inDarttnuTS have toned evento relieve. Sold hydrae. : own&
gists eke). per Dockage, or six tor $5, or sent by mail an , red and
00,, Toronto. Ont. 'Write to *
neabst a price by addressing THE JAMES MEDICINU Th
e firsfrSold at Browping's Drug Store, Exeter,
•
EAMAKER'S 0
Nen MILS SATIVAOS011
tsg,p, .4tAtte tit v"/EHIARN
Waken cu ie mon severe asses
•
V! cant, Broncilhs, Agana, or chronic irriftuoe
lot Tbrbst or Loom'.
THUS aleeaaviwdaagcctosrs
much disomfort.
YOU•SAVE
•Tue. unknovvn Quantity.
The fast youth in the algebra Mass had
handed in his Palma to the professor and and stir
a gentleman had fouad Thati tsg
• hy be asked, ',that in all theta
problems you have e V to re re 6 tins time
unknown quantity V'
"I thought tliat wee about right, sir,"
replied the student boldly.
"But you know X always represents the
unknown iquntity."
Otdinardit, yeo," orpleined the student,
but not lo
"bet in illy 048n thought it was eceesiv. g"ooftt8h781'
A V is quite suffieiently tihkuouth call
forth an nty ebility to diecovet oo," and , totable
the profeeeor marked the stedentzero, f bort on
:vett .
rt ikeatiroated by engineers that the 01 foor og
• oak eri from the ges pipee of 14021716h equals a eound o
per emit. of the totel mantlfaetr. grated rin
Three Good Reeipes.
Baked Apple Pudding. --Take nine largo
tart apples; pare and core them whole.
Place them in the bottom of a large deep
dial and pour round • them a. very little
water, jest enough to keep them from
burning. Put them in the oven, and let
them bake half an hour. In the meantime
mix three tablespoonfuls of flour with one
quart of sWeet a quarter of a pound
of brown sugar, and one teaspoonful of
mixe apiece Beat seven eggs very light,
them gradually into the milk
out the diet of applee (whili by
should be half bakd) and nil "
ip
the holes from which you took the cores,
with brws.' sugar, preseing down into each
a 81ke of froth lemori. Pour the bottler
round the apples ; put the &h again into
the oven and Iet it bake another half h
eg isnough for- the applee to fall
as they should, when dne, be
glrout, but mine whole. • Sad it
warm.,
Cream, -..Jt well together one
thick, sweet create arid the steno
gs, Then giedualiy boot in half
1 povsdered loaf sogar and the
of three large lemons, Put the
TEEB Exwrort
^^, „,^y•- .1, el
TIMB 8
mixture into a poreelainlined 1Ikill, 404
fest it over hot (male till it comes to a boil;
then take it off mid stir ib till nearly cold,
Squeeze the juice of the lemons into a bewl
pour the cream upon it, and gentian° to
stir it till Trite cold, Serve tit in a glass
bowl or in jelly gleesee.
Cocoanut Oak,e-T,hree cups of white
sisgar; one cep better, creamed togeth er;
heli cup of :tweet milk, white of ten eggs
half teasp000ftil soda and one teaspoonful
°ream tartar (both sifted with flour); four
and a half cups of floui; flavor with essence
of bitter almonds; ice with whites of three
eggs and one pound of pulverieed sugar;
bake in layer tine and fin between with
grated cocoanut, sweetened. Sprinkle tap
thickly with the cocoanut,
ENGLAND AND RUSSIA.
Enamor or An .Alliance itetweeit the Two
countries-Softeaing of Prance's Dos
tatty to England.
• Since the death of the late Czar the rumor
of an allieuce betsveen England and Alleafe
bas beau permatent, though there seems no
better basis for it than the marked reaped
shown by the Ruesian court to the Prince
of Wales during the period of mourning,
and the conclusion of a agreement for the
delimitation of the R,ussealifghan frontier.
Indeed, it is improbable that any eubstan-
tial agreereene has been reached, the7great
national question e to be settled being many,
and including not only those which chiefly
affect the two powers themselves, such as
granting Russia access through Penns to
the sea, butthose requiring the assent of
WICAT UNCLE 8,4 I IS
ITEMS OF INTEREST ABO
BUSY YANKEE.
Neighborly interest tii IDA Do
airs of element ana Main
Front His DatlY Record,
New York suicides average se
..0%. profit of $142,2e0 was rea
the New York hem thole.
One firm in New Yoh pri
Biblesa day all the year round.
The raw elik hem Kansas ooeo
to be the beat in the world.
The total missionary gifts of Ch
are estimated at $14,713,627.
A New York dog whose eyesight is afs
fected is daily seen wearing a pair of spec -
p P 0
; three wheels tide by sidesend eech 35 feet
in diameter. The outer rim alone weigh
UT THS
• TORTURED AND ROBBED.
8
ougs_natt. gunners 0010 a lighted ttalutils to the Feet
vGent:°;;;;. orre:r.6:1:711:147:11:44:e f
flim Ite'vcal
the Sliding lattiee or Ms )11(otteye-$9.
lized from Six masked men tortured David $100lUna,
nes 7,000 a motley lender, of Washington township,
Erie county, Pao, on Saturday night, and
ons is said to* $9,600 of his e wirings from an old
trunk in which the money was hidden,
rietendom Slocum, who is 71 treara old, lives with his
wife op a road far out from the town,
Recently he called ite all biS oan on
account of a new State lave requiring
money lenders to report the remounts of
their loans so than they may be assessed,
At about 2 o'clock on Saturd-y night
Slocum and his wife were awaked by the
noble of a shattered window. Through this
aperture tsix masked men entered. • Before
the old matt could get out of the bed the
first man was at hie throat and warped him
not to move or he would be killed. • All
were armed with pistols and two carried
large clubs, One of the men lighted the
lamp, and then the leader, Writing to the
old man, said familiarily:
" Now, David, you haven't got any
children and no one to leave yOur money
to, so you might as well give it to us, for
we cam make good nae of ft."
• Mr. Slocum thinks he recognized the
voice, but he cannot identify his man, The
old man refused to tell where lis money
was concealed, Then the leader ordered
n sorted one of his men to hold Mr. Slocum and
another to hold bis wife, end a third to
holds lamp under the old man's bare feet.
Slocum yelled with pain, and wee about to
yield to the torture he one of the men
picked up a key whioh bad fallen from
under the pillow. The torture was stopped
for a moment until it could be ascertained
whether the key would unlock the big
trunk which stood a few feet away. It did
open the trunk, and the robbers were de-
lighted at the sight of about $9,500 in bills
and gold, wrapped in an old paper sack.
Mr. Slocum and his wife -were bound with
ropes and strips of muslin. They begged
so hard that they were not gagged.
The burglare covered tbem up in bed and de-
partedtoward the New York, Pennsylvania
and Ohio Itailroad, Mrs- Slocum got a
gun an hand loose first, and released herself and
husbend, and hastened to the first neigh-
abloaurrni,.half a mile distant, and gave the
There is posleively no clue to the bur-
glars. One of them took off his mask in
the house, and showed himself to be about
25 years of age, with smooth face, dark
hair, and of a very respectable appearance.
All of the burglar!, were well dressed.
The value of the lest tobacco exported by
the United Settee in 1890 was $20,640,000
The Chusego, I3urlington and Quincy
Railroad has deolared a quarterly dividend
of 1 cents,
In the United States in the two yeare
1889-90 no fewer than 13,000 new laws were
emoted
• A Shoshone !Milan baby born on Smoke
River reservation in September heti four
perfect ears.
A New York man killed fifty-three
rattlesnakes at one time recently in a den
that he discovered.
William Hill, an American in Hong
Kong, lute been fined $100 for sketching
military works there.
treaty powers, Buell as the opening of the 3
Dardanelles and Bosphorus to the ships ef t
At the sorting gap in Matinette, Wis.,
46,000,000 feet of lumber have bee
his season.
The skin of a rattlesnake exhihited at
effereon, Ga., 18179 Inches in lengtheaged
as 21 rattles attached,
Yale's library consists of 200,000 volume;
inward's, 380,000; Cornell's, 107,000,
nd Columbia's 135,000.
With the exception of New York, Penn-
edvania makes the most liberal appropria-
one for militia. purposes,
A four-year-old Nebraska boy was
urned to death recently by pulling a jar
f hot plum butter aver on himtielf.
A Savannab, Ga„ street railway corn -
any gives the cheapest railway ride known
two rides fo r one •gent -the result of a
ar.
all natione. Nevertheless, France arm
Austria are alarmed, while Germany is h
showing marked hostility to England, os-
tensibly over British interference with II
German colonial progress in Africa, bub a
really because of • her new amity with
Russia, and the fact that London has alway
held aloof from the Triple Alliance. That ti
a close understanding would be of advan-
tage to both England and Russia, no one e
Whounderstands Eastern politicscan doubt, o
for they are now the dominant powers in
Asia., and exiting together, could not only
maintain peace and order frora the Medi-
terranean to the Pacific, but greatly pro •
-
mote their own interests. No war would
be possible throughout Asia without their t„
consent; they could appropriate revenue i
producing territory enough to leave the 5
rain On their treasuries for the maintenance
of ifilmeeseeFastera possessions, and need eRano longer watereeesillions on the defence of Sio
their frchetiers. •Ilikethe bard fact is that
no concert of action "lastteeen the two in
powera is possible, because Ineeseennot be fro
guaranteed to last; the two eltesential
factor:I to it being the continued friends
of the Czar and he confidence of the British -64,
people in that friends -hip, the first ot which err
the second by 'a sudden access. ofriuspicion. 3.1
The real root of hostility between the two ems
powers is the desire of Russia to gain me Par
miss to the Sea and the determination of deP
England to keep, her back, due to belief M
that with the advance of Russia to the "C
south India). would be untenable and British livi
prestige, and with it British trade in the tory
Far Ease lost.. Russia eau march south A
only through the natIkans, Asia Minor, note
Persia, Manchuria and Korea, and as putt-
ters now stand England will join with any, mea
abol
other power, or fight alone, to prevent her a.
advance any one of these directions. •
is wholly improbable that, whatever agree- 17°°
ment might be reached. wben the Russian r
b. began to roll the British people would ° °
not be seized with a sudden access of sus. Ja
pioion that Russia's designs were not those Iow
expressed, against which treaties and al- and
fiances would cou'bt for nothing. Still out t
to the Buffalo market, where the legs are
Harvard University for two years past
enocepted Chinese as a subetitute for
Tiairty thousand frogs a week are brought
ven in that city on Sunday nights
ates, died at his homain Baltimore.
wesbigation of the alleged sacred concerts
sT.he Boston _Police Board has 11:Ir.,.
William, T. Walters, the owner of the
zen and distributed over the countri7.,
est private art collection in the 'United
Witten edmieeioatefrore etaptannee stud-
,
ayor Hopkin, of Chicago, has ifie
need his determination to create a non.
Mean commission to control the police
artuient.
re. Rose Hartwick Thorpe, who wrote
nrfew Shall Not Ring To -Night," is
ng in California, and is busy on a his.
of Oregon,
Iter January lst the days of grace on
a made in. New York State will be
hilted; and thirty days will lo
neer
n thirty-three .
altimore, with its half a million popula-
, has nearly $40,000,000 in the savings
lcs, the accumulated weekly hoardings
ver 120,000 people: •
mos Liddle, editor of the Preston.
a, Times, wrote up .his own 'suicide
then went and killed himself, carrying
he programme to the letter.
mes Perim awaiting -trial Peale -
hie. for kicking his aged mother to
h, hanged himself in his cell with a
made from hit coat -lining,
ouard and Jean De Reazka, the
rat have brought their bicycles with
from France, and they are using
on the boulevards of upper New York,
e universities of Oxford and Cambridge
xpected to confer honorary degrees
theHon. Thos. F. Bayard, the United
a Ambassador to England.
Pennsylvauia Supreme Court has
ed that franchises are a part of the
• of a railway company, and are
d as meth in assessing for State taxes.
there is n• o reason why, pending the time JD,
when the Russian people will burst their delp
bounds and push irresistibly toward the deet
warm south and open sea. for which they rope
crave, the two powers should dealt over Ed
trifles as they d, and it is deemed certain•
that, during the first part of •the young „Erg°
Czars reign at last, relations will be more tem
cordial than heretofore. This Conviction 'ern
is reflected in the softening of France's Th
almost open hostility to England, the are e
government understanding clearly that any upon.
excess of anti-British passion is not a pas. State
port to the favor of a Czar having personal Th
predilections for England, and whose wife, decid
is 'a granddaughter of the queen. Besets
value
• KILLED WIFE AND CHILD. r°
• A. Vancouver Illan's Awful Crime on Sat T°ffittceliae
nrday-Attempted Suicide. age,
A despatch from Vancouver, B. C., sap; Pre
ut clergymen and 26 bridesmaids
ted at the marriage of Miss! Elizabeth
eines of Warrenton, Va.g to Chief
e Sniith, of New Mexico, a few days
sident Cleveland is exceedingly pains -
about every detail of his public
He diatatesnotbingto stenograph
ut writes every word of his mos
new cities. Montpelier and Barre,
nt
te
g -
to
e
-The most horrible tragedy ever perpetra. taking
. • papers
ted in this city occurred here on Saturday eet
morning, resulting in the death of two? if sages.
not three, ' per:lona. laeorge Frederick Two
Ashford, a railroad laborer, has been a have j
resident here for the past two years, Legisl
with his wife andefive children in the east the ot
end of the city. For some time past he ton an
hite been drinking havily. He returned • Will
home late last night, and, going during
upstairs, he woke hie wife, telling over th
her that her end had come, and before Fhe drink,
was half awake he shot her in the head. connne
Then the 3 -year-old Violet was killed in a lifenr
similar manner; 9 -year-old Mildred, was eating
also shot. The two boys were awakened looked
by the shooting, and escaped, giving the bear a
alarm to the neighbors. The fiend made bagged
his escape in the direction of Westminster. lam
Seeing a car approashing, he threw himself cotton
in front of it ; but th e motormen pulled up vele race
in time to rescue him, handing him over to getieree
the polic, iugs to
ia
It Gaye HIM a Pain. •Mrs. Ole
4
Nationa
the Smit
est been created by the Vermo
ature, making five citiee in the Sat
ha*' three being 'Vergennes, Berlin
d Rutland.
Dun's horse, in IVIarble Hill, Mo
the drought, learned to jump o
e pasture fence go to the ereek
and jump back' again to voluntar
meat.
y Goodrich, of Shir/ey, Me., wit
dinner the other day when h
out of the window and SEW a sh
nd two cube. Re ;jumped up an
the mother and one cub.
Sarah Norcross, who worked in th
mills of Lowell, Massa for 52 yeses
ntly died, was distinguished for he
ity, giving freely of her small earn -
help the poor.
reported from Washington that
velaaid has suggested that Watts'
"Love and Life" be hung in the
I Are Gallry, which is anneeed to
tumble Instittiatm.
Baer maiden-" Well, P,oginld, What
rildRilIfetedasasyuli't'or 60006 to depart -"1t
caehot bee xpreesed in words, Ail that
cam tell you es that his anewee gave ine
a pain."
Children Cry for Plteh
• An Indian in Mad0ir,fJ8l, ,has establih-
ed a bad precedent by killing a doctor who
agreed to cute hie wife aud did not do so
bet who yet eollected his foe -..took the
Man's horse --for professional services.
Assistant dietriet Attorney It, L. Well-
ins.n,of Neve York, has resighecl because of
complaints inade that he teas devetieg too
much attention to private practice and not
enough to the duties of his eine°.
The mother of the Rv. HenrySmiPreeerved
th, the deposed professor in Lane Theo-
logical Seinary, died in Dayton, O., leeve
log an estate valued at $:300,000, to be
divided among her lour children, •
The deeth tate among little children in
New York city, Which had been eteadily
ha:remit:ea has ehown a deevettee el InOre
thee 10 edi' &Mt. , since the , ineuguretion
by Nathan Straue of los eternized milk
therity,
The largeet fly wheel in Peeneylvailie, if
uot in the United Settee hat iet b» put
Air
BEATEN TO DEATH.
That ls 'What the coroner's Jury Says In
Regard to Mrs. Robert niter.
A cltangstith from Lucknow says: -On
Tuesday MrsAte.ehertEldenwho lives in tbe
south-west part of the teettewn,died under sus-
picious circumstances. She was an elderly
widow, and lived with her braiketeeettlexan-
der Fraser, neither of whom bear very 'tee;
tharaoters. The house has also been the rue
resort of a number of ether fellows, who do '8.1
not carry a very good reputation, and for "°,'
some months past the house has been the an"
scene el some noisy quarrels at night, much te
noel
to the annoyance of the neighbors. Fraser
is said to have been in the habit of ill-treat- te",f
ing his sister in their drunken sprees by
beating her. Coroner Dr. Gordon was
notified of the death, and on visit-
ing the place, decided. to hold an
inquest, On Tuesday night a 'jury was
summoned, and sworn in, and, after view-
ing the rernaine, adjourned till 2 o'clock
• Thursday. On Wednesday Drs. Tennant
and Garnier made a postanortexn exam-
ination of the body, and found the right
• arm broken and terribly bruised from
the wrist to the shoulder, also some markt;
on the head. The inquest was continued
on Thursday afternoon, when a large
number of witnesses were examined. The
taking of evidence was finished at 10
o'clock, and the jury rendered a verdict
that . Elder's. death was caused by in m
Alexander Fraser. Fraser was broughe
before Magistrates Lyons and Lawrence (mita
horiz
on Friday aftetnoon, and committed for A lift
rial at Walkerton.
Nervous Prostration in Women.
Nervosa proetratien bas become so corn
mon a trouble that new 'memos of uure has
constantly steught. Au eminent nhrsielah
cures the "incurablee" by seolueion,reet and
diet. During the nate period of treatment
the patient sees only her nurse and phy-
sioian, is kept constantly in bed, no reading
is allowed, and. a oertain quaritity of milk
at reguler intervals its the onlytfoed. Tater,
she sits up a little, one letter from home a.
weele is allowed and alp a little addition to
the diet, Step by Eitel) the ordinary methods
of Me are returned, but always with these
three ideas uppermost -seclusion, res6 and
diet.
The PhYsittian of another woman, 'who
had been bedridden, saw that the luxurious
idleness of greet wealth was the source of
the trouble,
As a last result he advised a sea voyage
of several months in an aria:may sailing
'vessel. She oousented, not appreciating
even if the keesv, until too late to retreat,
the almost unbearable disoomforte of sleep-
ing in a hard bunk with the foul amen of
bilge -water filling the miserable little dun-
geon known as the cabin. • For a while she
thought that she would die, then she began
to plan to gee some comfort out of her
dreary :surroundings, She attempted to
execute her plans and she landed at the
Mose of the troyage a well woman.
Her wretchedtfood had oompelledabstins
ence juin as ver discomforts had necessitat-
ed exertion thus the two necessary ,
con-
ditions of her recovery had been found.
Absolute rest trieete the needs of the over -
wearied ones whose nerves had broken by
excessive strain, while abstinence and
exertion are the remedy for patients of the
latter class. First. In every case of
excessive nervousness, ascertain both its
mental and physical causes. Second. Con -
eider the mental and physical states that
are exactly opposite to those which have
operated as causes, as the remedies
called for by the ease in question.
If too rapid child-bearing and family
cares (excessive for one woman though
another might hear them with no special
wear .of nerve -life) have shattered her nor-
voes vigor, and she cannot leave home for
treatment, let there be hours set apart a,t
regular intervals every day to be known as
mother's rest hours, when, it is the sacred
• duty of all in the home to preserveher free
from all disturbance. No work of any kind
should be allowed, no anxious planning,
no sad retrospect, not even the indulgence
of a book or paper, nothing but rest -pure
simple infantile rest of body and mind
Afford it? It will cost less than years
invalidisra or a funeral. Her husband wi
not allow it ? Then he is a hardthearte
barbarian with a •penurious soul. Ther
should be from two to five rest hours be
tween daylight and dark.
The diet is none less important. It
is one of the absurdities cf a life-saerificin
stinginess to suppoes that digestiverormtas
robbed by the general depleted nervou
condition of the main natural stimulus t
ehealthful action, that is we've vitheit
y
wrark up into sustenance the .coars
of w'drateng healthy appetites. Deli
es are .a tewesity-not sweetmeats
The
Best
Food
For Children?
is worthy every parent's study;
not only what they can eat, but
what gives the mostnourishment.
No children are better, and most
are worse,
lard-cooklf, how
their
prepare
health -
vegetable
cI
for eating
ed food.
ever,
food is
with the
f ul new
hortening,
OLENE
instead of lard, they can eat free-
ly of the best food without danger
to the digestive organs. You can
easily verify this by a fair trial
• of Cottoiene. "44,3111,1082,vau.
Made only by
The
NAL Fairbank
Company,
Wellington
and
Ann Sts.,
METRICAL
FOR MEN
AND WOMEN.
rrade Mark] nu. A. Owzt.
THE
OWEN
ELECTRIC
BELT.
The only Scientific and Practical Eleetric
bet made for general use, producing a Genuine
eir-ent of Electricity for the care of Disease,
hat can be readily felt and re ated both 1
of mentity and power, and epplie to any peat of
et he body. It can be worn at any time durfeg
d vorking hours or sleep, andwillpoeitively etre
Rhennustlarn,
Sola,ttea
,Ineetett lestite
• le
Creneral 'Debility
Llunervlboangs6biseetss
Dyspepsia,
g
Saguia/ Weakness
Taricooele,
a
IMPOteikeY1'
o LeindneeB_yaDatnes,
• J Erinary Diseases
e Electricite properly applied. is feet talriug the
oIacaof drugs for all Nrvous, Beeumatio. den
:nay and Urinal Troubles, and will effect cures
in seemingly hopeless cases where eve*. other
known rinses has failed.
Any sluggish, weak or diseased organ 'MY
,))Yef otthie sittnisstaonoslabtee.roused to healthy activity
Leading medical men tise and recommend
practice.
starchy trash, tittet bovinine, game,
try, eggs, fruits, beef:pgodeoids, fish,
Itest of cream and butter, etc.
more simple the batter, but always'
at hand in sufficient variety to tempt
feeble appetite and enough to support re-
cuperating strength.
• A Rule of Health.
"If my daughter were going to Europe
to spend a year without her family, "said a
wise mother the other day, "and I were to
give her a briet rule as to a guide th health,
it would be this: Keep your chin in,"
This seemed unintelligible until she elabors
abed it and showed the effects of such an
observande. She said: To keep the chin
eons to keep it well drawn back
ontally. That causes what physical
riots call a lifteachest, or a live chest,
ed chest imams deep and full breath.
mg, end hence pure blood and perfeet
circulation. Perfect circulation is the
greetest safeguard against -contagion, and
it pre rents chilliness, the forerunner of
• colds. A lifted chest also throws the
whole body it- a graceful poise. The
abdomen recedes,the thumbs fall Into place
by the aide, the weight of the body falls
upon the ball of the foot instead of the heel,
itrid the shoulder blades flatten Th
eae
s are prodncei when standing or walk -
There are also effects in sitting. A
chest then insures a straight backbone
he end of the spine against the back
air, instead of a curved spine which
ni
women :meae while sitting. The
of retaining a lifted °hst is easily
dfr provided the clothing is reasonably
For that teason prefer that my
ter shall not wear corsets.. notate°
knew how to make boys, He cat -
knew how to make girls."
now to get a "Sunlight" Picture.
Send 25 "Sunlight" Soap wrapper,
(wrapper bearing the words "Why Dom a
Woman Look Old Sooner Than a Man.") to
Lever Bros, Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto,
endyou will receive by poste, pretty pictures
free from advertising, arid well worth &am-
' m is is an easy way to decorate your effect
home. The soap is the best in the market ing,
and it will only cost lc. postage to send in lifted
the wrappers,
if you leave the ends open. with t
Write your aeldress carefully. of a e
many
A Giant of intellect habit
The man who guides the ship of state loom
forme
and keeps it from the shoals, and keeps it daugh
from the treacherous sea where the wild if God
whirlpool rolls ,the man who writes an epic tainly
poem, or builds a stately ode, a man who
makes two grass spears grow where only
one spear "growed," the man who builds a
systein up of philosophic thought, the man
who conquers mighty hoots and brings their
force to naught; those men are great sup-
remely great, but greater far than these, ie
he who runs a furnace that will neither
melt nor freeze.
VThen Baby WM Of*, WO SAVO ber CANtOtti.
When the was a Child, she ark d for Castria.
When she became Ness, she clung 0 CaStoria,
When shenat atidree, alien/we them Casterie
European Gambling.
Thr is meoh mere of public gambling
in nuropO bllati is doirdrionly eupposed,
tesidee tlouto Catlo, wheat still does 8 big
butimess the following lea of gamblieg
places with •their wiehings last year is
given: Ozteud Kursael mid elubs, 8,000,,
000 frevas; Dust/sir Coin, 300,000 freece,
Boeloghe Casino, 800,000; Tynnvine„ 450,
noo in the Caeiee aoti at the Hotel Eden;
160,000; Dieppe, 200000; eseherge 380000;
Havre, Fraegate, 150000; La Trepot, 50,,
000: Biartite 4,060.00; Ain les Bitiee,
1,000,000; Bamboo's, I20,0t10; Vichy, 1,000.
000.
MOST $110DESFIll REMEDY
THE
FOR WAN .011 BEAST.
Certain halts tiro:its and never bustor.
need proofs below:
KESOALLIS SPAVIN CURE.
• lir, n.A. innal%0'.°'''' t.,1;'" au' '94
geinhono,...i bought a Splonend baehorse teisa,
thee egewith OthPavill. t get him forest) euted
Wrman, mate The SPaviii is goes now
• 4end r hoeoffered eto rot the saint bon. '
2°1243;a1.0411Vggilt 7ggiiiit!elfAd. °1" tot tlaing
Went trines W. a, litnsene.
KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE
• Snsnsr,ou,ne8 16, 1898.
Sir -r /lave teed ytitir It6zlaYsvoSoftoViitsaari
'tvIt aeodyluedeelft Ter Orb, en 1
ISIS the hCst thilitent 1 laaVe eve.
611V4rulY'4 ia..1140rughtsurs.,
Versate bytliEtt:glatrbrUddress
.1r4 dr. 1C.192i111.4.1176
Entom:nee YMAtt,
OITR TTrUSTATALOrE
Contains fullest information regarding be ”.45
of cute, chronic. and nervous diseases, prime,
how to order, eta, mailed (seale(1) FREE to
M) address.
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49 KI NG Sv. We TORONTO, Ohm
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11-.E1<TION THIS
CARTER'S
TTL
VER
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Ireadathe, ad CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS
are equally valuable in Costiption, curing
andpreventing this annoying complaint, while
tbey also correct all disorders of the stomach,
stimulate the liver and regulate tbe bowela
Even if they only cured
HEA
ache they would be ahneat pricelese to those
who suffer from this distressing comPlaitit:
bit fortunately their goodness does not CO
hre, and theee Who once tiy them wilt thid
these eta° telisvaltable in so many w'ays that
they will rick be willing to do without theta.,
Nut after all plek head
is the basteo � 4,11k lives that bare Where
we make oue 4e ± beset, Our pins cute
wield others. do not.
Manatee Lava. Lresit PILLS are very steWl
mid very easy to Mh. oe two tens Make
Ravoe(14:):01$1,417112;4:41.;?%(;:x:IiiitoI.r:f?414•1,13::::jlttlit:
f:10%•,:11 P11. 0M111 111(et.
tiotgripe Or pinta but h th ' ant actihejI
)eIStVeratIte rn mar; 1t ..*11 give relie, rytn
tu ea et it 1504, slantling where 'A cute teethe*
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