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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1895-1-31, Page 3"Only the Scars Remain/9 Says R•z.Nu,Y H1rD$QN, of the James Sinith Woolen Machinery Co, Ilii GF: 'lined elphia•, (j� 1 Pa„ wlio eerti-. I, ties e s• f olio w. Among the many testimoni- als which Isee k in regard to cera tain medicines performing cures, cleansing the blood, etc., none impress me more than my own case. Twenty years , " the age of 18 years, I had swellings come on my, legs, which. broke and became run- ning sores,. Our family phy- sician could do me no good, and it was feared that the bones would be affected. At last, my good old Mother Urges! Me to try Ayer's Sarsaparilla. I took three bottles, the sores healed, and I have not been troubled since. Only the scars remain, and the memory of the past, to remind me of the good Ayer's Sarsaparilla has done me. Y now weigh two hundred and twenty pounds, and am in the best of health. I have boon on the road for the past twelve years, have noticed Ayer's Sar- saparilla advertised in all parts of the United States, and always take pleas- ure in tolling what good it did for me." Ayer's Sarsaparilla • Prepared by Dr. J. t7. Ayer & Oo., Lowell, Maas. Cures others,will cure you THE OF erEXETER TIMES POWDERS Cure SiCK HEADACHE and Neuralgia in 20 ,w,ivurzs, also Coated Tongue, Dizzi- ness, Biliousness, Pain in the Side, Constipation, Torpid Liver,.Bad Breath. to stay cured also regulate the bowels. VERY NICE TO TAKE. PRICE 25 CENTS AT DRU$2 STORES. CENTRAL 'Drug Store 'a FANSON'S BLOCK. A full stook of all kinds of Dye -stuffs and package Dyes, constantly on hand. Winan's Condition Powd- erN the best in the mark- et and always resh. Family reaip- ees carefully prepared at Central Drug Store Zoete Cly LUTZas. HAVE -YOU "Baohaohe. means the kid- neys are in 'trouble, Dodd's Kidney Mlle glue prompt ro/lef.' "76 per cent of disease is firrst 'Caused by disordered kid- neys. "Might as weli try to have a healthy city without sewer- age as good health when the kidneys are clogged, they are :the acauengers of the system. "Delay is dangerous. Neg- /toted kidney troubles result in Bad Blood, Dyspepsia, Liver Complaint, and the moat dan- gerous of all, Brrghts Disease, Diabetes and Dropsy." The above diseasescannot exist Where bodd's Kidney Pills .are used." Sold by all dealers or sent by mail on receipt of pride so Cents. pe box or six for Use. Dr. L. A. Smith & Co. Toronto, Write for book called Ibidaey Talk. ' tesseseseesseeesseasesessversseetesserseaseasesseessere The Army Appropriation Bill, carrying $23,006,OOCa,, has passed the V,S. Senate, TITEW MK'S NgW OAis4DA. Winnipeg is to have ooppera for change. Gas is down to $1 per thousand in Lon- don, Ont. The present population of Ottawa is play- ed lay e at d 47,775. The radial railway fever has now atrupk St. Thomas. TheManiteba, Legislature will meet on February sixth. The police barraoks at Banff have been destroyed by fire. There are new 11 vaoanoies in the Do- minion Senate. Chief of Pollee McKinnon, of Hamilton, has been dismissed. The late Lieut. -Col. Skinner left an es- tate valued at $45,000. On February 1, free postal delivery will ne'-il' atigneat€fl^at Yenac.t er. A second cow affected with tuberculosis has been found in Winnipeg. The Fraser river, B. C., floods are sub- siding, and there is no further danger. Gen,Booth expressed himself at Winnipeg as most favorably impressed with.Mani- toba. The Brookville Carriage • Company has just made large shipments to England and Bermuda. Hon. L. 0. Taillon, Premier of Quebec, is not improving in health, according to the latest reports. The total amount ,eoeived by the Min- ister of Finance for the Lady Thompson fund is fifteen thousand dollars. New Denver, B. 0., is clamoring for a bank. The miners are paid by cheques and have no place to get them Dashed. By decision of the Supreme Court at Ottawa the Provincial Government has power to pass a loyal option law. Naval authorities at Halifax have received word that H. M. S. Crescent would succeed the Blake as flagship at that station. The Sant and Countess of Aberdeen at- tended the higher courts in Montreal on Saturday and listened to the proceedings. Louis Victor, an Indian, was banged at New Westminster, B. C., on Thurday, for the murder of another Indian last Septem- ber. _ The Imperial law officers have decided that the Parliament of Canada has power to pass a law to appoint a Deputy Speaker for the Senate. The unemployed workingmen of Mont- real made a riotous demonstration in front of the Oity hall on Friday. The police made several arrests. The Norwegian colony in Bella Cools, B. C., is prospering. The people are steady and industrious, and are well satisfied with the country and climate. The Provincial Board of Health on Fri- day endorsed the establishment of a home for consumptives, to be situated in some inland and elevated tract The Halifax Board of Tiede have passed resolutions favoring the idea of conduoting all Canadian commerce by way of the Canadian railwayand steamship lines. Because Drs. Crawford and Latimer have Accepted work from fraternal societies, the other' physicians of Winnipeg have pro- claimed a boycott against them. At the annual meeting of the Montreal Transportation Company, all the . reports presented showed that the business trans- acted was much lees than that of the pre- vious year. . It is reported in Ottawa that the Gover- nor-General has offered to defray the ex- penses of educating the two sons of Sir John Thompson, who are studying law in Toronto. .A student of the Ontario Agricultural -College, at Guelph, has been attacked by smallpox in a mild form. The case has been isolated, and every precaution used to pre- vent the spread of the disease. Within a few days:it is probable that ex - Detective John Fahey, the noted Grand Trunk burglar, who was sentenced to fourteen years in the penitentiary, and who is dying of consumption, will be released. Canadian wood pulp has succeeded in gaining a foothold in England, and some thirty thousand tone have already been sold in the British market. To retain its good name, the pulp must be made entirely of virgin wood. The operatives of Peck, Benny & Co., nail manufacturers of Montreal, who have been on strike, are prepared to return to work, as the Knights of Labor decided that the present isnot an opportune time for labor to run counter to capital. It is understood that the Governor- General, in lieu of a subscription to the Thompson memorial fund, has offered to defray the cost of the further education of Sir John Thompson's two sons until they have both been admitted to the bar. Mr. A. L. De Martigny, manager .of the Banque Jacques Cartier, Montreal, was presented on Saturday by the staff of the bank with a magnificent onyx vase, valued at $2,500. on the occasion of his departure for Europe. In view of the many dismissals from the C.P.R. in Winnipeg the men are holding meetings, and trying to devise some soheme whey: by they can establish a colony and take to farming, as they cannot make a living at their present employment. William H. Durand, of Toronto. died on Thursday from the effeots of a dose of morphine, administered with suicidal in- tent. A arrant had been issued for his arrest on a charge of having embezzled funds of his employers, the Massey -Harris Company. The body of Alfred B. Fitzgerald, who has a faros ten miles north of Grenfoll, Amt., as found on Sunday,in his s a. wstable, t s and cats around with pig it. . The' flesh of the head and face was oaten away. It is generally supposed he was kinked while harnessing his team. Theta is a serious blockade on the Can. adian Pacific railway line in the mountains near Revelstoke. -A report reached Winui-. peg that a bridge had been washed away, butit has not been confirmed. The officials have not been able to get a train through for a week. e GREAT iSFLIxAIx. The Bank of England's rate of discount remains unchanged at 2 pet cent. Fears are exp eased in+,ngland that the Nanson Arctic rexpedition has Met with disaster., Lord Bussey has acocpted the Governor -- ship of V'ictorie, in succession to the Earl of Hopetoun. Tho competition of oleoniargarfne has oaused a eonsirlorable decrease in the price of butter on the London market. The Duke of Argyle, who fainted while addressing. a Meeting in Glasgow Tuesday THE EXETER TIMES evening is now prouonuoed to be out of danger. Vioseadmiral James Elphinetone'll rekine is tosuoceed Sir John O nmanney Hopkins, whose eommand of the British North American station soon expires: Ed ward Solomon, the composer, formerly the husband of Miss Lillian B,t ssoll, the operatic star,, is critically ill in London, Eng., from t`gphoid fever. The. Harland Shipbuilding Company. of Belfast, are in negotiation with a Liverpool shipbuilding company for the construction of two Atlantic line steamers, each to be one thousand feet long. The British cruiser Blenheim has arrived at Portsmouth from Halifax. She encoup- tered a heavy gale in crossing the Atlantic, but sustained no damage. Lord Dunraven, whose, name has been principally connected with yacht raoing, has decided to take an : motive part in British' politics, identifying himself with the Conservative cause. UNITED STATES.. The latest est,imxt"e a`s"thlit GO persons were killed in the powder explosions at 13utte, Montana. Mies Stevenson, daughter of Vice•Presi- dentStevenson,-died on Friday ab Ashe- ville, N.C. There was serious rioting in connection with the Brooklyn street oar strike on Saturday night. Granite Creek, in Arizona, swollen by 72 hours' rain, overflowed its banks and caused much damage to property. Mr. Abbott, cashier of the Dover, N. H, National Bank, having been found short in his amounts, shot and killed himself. Harley Davidson, of Toronto, won the quarter and mile national amateur skating championships at Newburgh, N. •Y., on Saturday, defeating Johnson and Donohue. John Burke, song and dance actor, im- agines that he is very wealthy and has been sent to Bellevue hospital, New York; in order that his mental condition may be looked into. . Edmund O. Quigley, of Quigley & Tuttle, dealers in municipal bonds, Wall street, New York, has been arrested, charged with forgery. He confessed. The Mer- cantile National Bank will, it is said, lose $50,000. The New York World says William K. Vanderbilt sailed on the Teutonio for Liverpool. Before he left an amicable ar- rangement had been made by which Mrs. Vanderbilt will secure adivorce without contest. The suit is now pending. A despatch from Detroit says that Eliza Courts, the woman who was brought into so much prominence in connection with "Prince Michael," of the Flying Rollers, has skipped out to avoid arrest for having illegally performed the marriage ceremony. A cyclone visited San Miguel, Cal., Wednesdaynight doing considerable dans- age. Robert Peck's buggy was overturned, breaking two of his ribs, and a flying tree pierced his lungs. The Parkville stage was overturnad,but the passengers escaped injury. Telegraph poles were thrown to the ground and wires prostrated. It was announced on Saturday at the Cleveland Chamber of Commerce that a project is now on foot by .which the pro- posed canal from Lake Erie to tide water will be built by private capital. It was stated that a charter has already been secured from . the Canadian Government, and Congress will be asked for rights as far as American property is concerned: There is nothing of an especially definite or encouraging nature in the report of the two principal commercial agencies on this continent. There are fluctuations in most lines of trade, but the conditions are waiting conditions, and there Is no material improvement in demand, employment, or wages, though in various directions some observers are able to discover hopeful signs. Speculation everywhere is stagnant. The iron and steel trade is quiet, but prices are fairly steady. The wool market is in a tentative condition. Prices of cotton goods are depressed. GENERAL. The Chinese have again been defeated by the Japanese. Archduke Albrecht, an uncle of Emperor Franois Joseph, is dying. M. Bourgeoise has undertaken the forma- tion of a Cabinet for France. - M. Raoul Touche, the French dramatic author, committed suicide on Friday in Paris. Heavy snows and landslides have stop- ped traffic in many places on the Swiss railroads. • Chinese prisoners at Yokohama report that 400 mines have bean laid at Ying- Kow. Owing to the snow and landslides the railroads in northern Italy are blocked in several planes. A proposal baa been submitted to the Russian Council of the Empire to establish a legation to the Vatican. Emperor William has ordered from the Germania shipyard a twenty -rate racing yacht for the coming season. TheRothschilds' banking house in London has received a despatch stating that a rev- olution evolution has broken out in Greece. The imports of France tor the year 1894 amounted to 4,119, 465,000 francs, and the exports footed up 3,275,047,000. Avalanches in the Canton of Ticino, Switzerland, have caused great destruction of property and loss of Life. A despatch to The London Times from Pekin says that, General Wei, accused of cowardice, was beheaded on Thursday. The British warship Hyacinthe has left Honolulu to take some presents from the Queen to her •subjects in the Squthern islands. y _ Sir Ambrose Shea,Governor of t S rBa• llamas, has retired, and Sir William Smith, of the Leeward Islands, will succeed him. The Riforma of Rome announces that negotiations for a treaty of commerce between Italy and Canada will be opened immediately. It is expeoted in Berlin that Count Her- bert Bismarck will be appointed Ambassa- dor to England in succession to Count von Ilatzfeld- Wildonburg, Tho French transatlantic line of steam- ships is about to build two r shipocean g eyhounds to be named the Alsace and the Lorraine. They will cost $4,000,000 each, Public Prosecutor Celli was murdered on Thursday in hisprivate office in Milan by a visitor, who stabbed him in the throat. The murderer, who is believed to be an Anarohist, was arrested. There was a bomb explosion in Paris. on Sunday night. Nobody was killed, and the adjacent property was not badly wrecked. It is believed the explosion was mere in the nature of • a dangerous joke than an Anarchist outrage, ABOUT TEE HOUSE. Comfort For Housekeepers. The accompanying floor plan shows a convenient way to arrange kitohon and dining room and those essential adluncte to a kitohon and dining room,—the 'sink and china a closet. The plan really explains itself, and d mus commendnd itself to the housekeeper r who knows what it means to .have the sink and china oleset removed from each other 1;0 klI'eieK Chiller Close Sieh • Priziing. ?toonx A CONVENIENT tnEANt1EMENT. and both removed from convenient access from the dining•room. The broad shelves of the china closet are acoessible from both the kitchen=iiiiel"'ditrinp,"^^�, ^ i "ny arahe• shelves are drawers that pull out into the kitchen and also out into the dining room. The shelf end of the sink is next the closet, making dish -washing an easy matter. The (lithos are put into the closet on the kitchep side, while it is but a step from the dining - room table to the sink. Builders of new houses would do well to bear this plan in mind, while it is sometimes possible to rearrange an old house in accordance with it. To Keep Baby Comfortable. Are some of the mothers troubled with their babieskicking or pulling off their shoes ? Our baby girl kept hers constantly .kicked off until 1 knit her a pair, writes a correspoudent. I ribbed them at the top by knitting two stitches plain and purling one, until the ribbing is about an inch wide. I then knit a few rounds plain and finished the same as a etooking foot. They fit snug, not tight, around the ankles, and she does not get them off as easily as she theher crocheted ones, not withstanding ',-ocheted ones were tied on. I think that \.s :bier should not be put in stiff leather shoes until.after they can walk. I will tell you how I dressed my baby. I made her flannel shirts about twenty-seven inches long with high neck and long sleeves. I also made a box pleat in the middle of the back and oneon eaoh side of the front, to be let out after the flannel shrinks or she grows. For the first few weeks I put shirts made of soft muslin on her, and, she wore a band only a few weeks, I then put an- other flannel skirt on her, made the same as the under. one, and took off the muslin shirt. I make her dresses the same length. as the skirts. For nightdresses I use two widths of cot- ton flannel and cut a strip off one side for sleeves. I make them large and gather them about half an inch from the bottom after they are faced with muslin. I cut the top of the nightdress by a dress pattern, only l make it very wide between the armholes and very large in the neck. Lgather it at the neck and two or three times across the back between the shoulders, and triin them with narrow embroidery. After the baby grows and the sleeves become; too short, or the dress is too narrow across the shoulders, the gathers in the back may be let out and the nightdress will be large enough until it is worn out. Be Systematic. How well one recognizes the uncomfort- able difference between a well -kept, pleas- ant home and an abode where the furniture may be expensive and the table spread with every luxury, but where the atmos- phere is distinctly charged with- a current of indefinite disorder, a sort of moral and mental hotchpot; that destroys the feelings of pleasant perfection that one becomes cognizant of the minute the threshold of the other home is. crossed. Now, the sec- ret of this vast and pereeptible difference lies in the fact that in one home system and good management are the keynotes that sound the chord of domestic perfection, while in the other things are run in slip- shod fashion that permits no plan to be definitely carried out as was first scheduled. Even though hese pleasant and profitable qualities are not the housekeeper's by nature, sheshould make up her mind, once she under- takes to stand at the head of a home, that in order to make one duty fit into the groove of another waiting one an accumu- lation of unfinished labor will stare her appallingly in the face. On the other hand, if she becomes possessed of a systematic spirit, the allotted tasks of the day will finish one by one, leaving hours for pleas- ant mental and physical relaxation the while her distracted sister over the way wonders how in the world she manages to accomplish so much while she is bewildered by so little. "System, system," should be the warcry of the housekeeper. System among the servants, systemwith the child- ren, system as far as possible for that unruly member, the husband and father, and system for her personal ,guidance. It sounds like prison regulations, but without it life looses its pleasant • roundness and continually presents those ugly edges that are a bane to the woman who wants her home just as it should be. Some Favorite Reeipes. Cider Cake. -Pick, wash and dry one pound of currants, and sprinkle them well with flour one pound of raisins, cut i n two and seeded ; one grated nutmeg, and a teaspoonful of powdered cinnamon. Sift. half a pound of flour ; stir together till very light nix ounces of butter and a half g pound of powdered white sugar i add F gradually the spice. Beat four eggs very light, and stir them into the mixture Alternately with the flourAdd by de- grees half a pint of brisk cider ; and then stir in the raisins and oerrants, a fewat a time. Lastly, a small teaspoonful of soda dissolved in a little warm water. Having Stirred the whole very hard, put it into a buttered tin pan, and let it stand by the. fire half an hour before baking. Bake it in a brisk oven an hour or more, according to its thickness, -Or you may bake it as little cakes, putting it into small tins. Cocoanut Drops.—Ono pound of powder. ed white sugar, half a pound of fresh grat- ed cocoanut the whites of Ave eggs, t addingthe • at gradually until . til it will g g y stand algae then beat in the cocoanut ;. form with the hands into small round, Sat .cakes ; put on a buttered paper in a large pan, apart, so that they do .not touch each other; bake in a_ moderate oven until a very light browse just a shade of polar, When taken from the oven let them cool before removing bhem from the paper; when quite cold, put them in a glass dish, or on a fanoy china plate, They will look very pretty on the table; Carrots and Bents. --Scrape oarrots,wash and out into dice togetherwith an pion n i deo tog ilia onion, put into a sauoepau in boiling water and nook until tender ; drain and set back, Have a pint of boiling milk in a small saucepan, season with salt and pepper; rub together one tablespoonful of flour and one of butter, and stir into• the boiling milk. When it boils' up, pour over the carrots. Wash beets carefully so as not to break the akin, cook until tender, pare and out into dice. Season with salt and pepper and. a generous bit of butter, atir together until very hot, then serve, Pickled Pork—Five gallons of water ; fb .pounds of salt.; is pounds of sugar ; one quart of inoTisses ; one` teacup of salt- petre. Mix these ingredi� ts, and after sprinkling the fleshy side of th eat with salt, pack in a tight barrel. H e'"nroc. g , then shoulders, then middlings. Pour brine over the meat and leave the meat in it about six weeks. When it Is taken out of the brine rub it thoroughly with powdered borax while it is still soft and damp, and a layer of black pepper would also be advan- tageous. Then after letting it dry out a few days bag the hams and shoulders in stout cotton and hang them in a dark, 000l plane. If your smokehouse has windows, put shutters, dark shades or curtains to them, to secure the meat being kept in a dark place. A FASHION LEADER. 1—Miss Museum : Well, I guess I'll go o„ n- 2—I'lI put on my boa- 3—place the black parrot on my head,— Yy;ees 4—end use Fido for a muff'. Close Guessing, Magistrate- it Have you ever been ar rested before, Rastue 7" Rastus—" Ye'es yo' Honah," Magistrate—" How many times?" Raatus--" I doan zactiy disre- member, yo' Honah." Magistrate—"Once?" Rastus--" Ye'es, I'se been 'rested mo'n wunce." Magistrate*." Five hundred times? " /tastus (indignantly)-" No, salt," Magistrate—" A hundred times?" Rastus—" lfr--yuso gettin' hot, Jedge, yuse gettin hot. Baby Ruth, as a Christmas surprise for her mamma, recited, it is said, " distinctly and with seemly a falter the Twenty hird Psalm." Mr. Cleveland's gift to his Wife was apairof side combs, with fourteen diamonds in each. l Children Cry for Pitcher/0 i aetariw CW' R WORK TRY SuNLIcIffsoAr COM FORT DAY ak Mothers and all women who e" u sing babies, derive almost incon- ceivable benefits from the non%sem properties of Sc.tt's ErnuLs This is the most nourishing food known rto science. It en- riches the mother's milk and gives her strengths. It also makes babies fat and gives more nourishment to growing children than all the rest of the food they eat. Scott's Emulsion has been prescribed by physicians for twenty years for Rickets, Marasmus, Wasting Diseases of Children, Coughs, Colds, Weak Lungs, Emaciation and Consumption. Sendfor pamphlet on Scott's Emulsion. FREE. Scott & Bown®, 13elievflle. All ®ruggiets. 50c. and S 1. 1 AN EMINENT MINISTER REV. . S. BARkCE or P TERBOROS • Mr. WW. S. Barker isa young minister of Peterboro who has by his great earnestness and able exposition of the doctrines of the Bible earned . for himself a place amongst the foremost ministers of Canada. He, with his most estimable wife, believe in looking after the temporal as well as the spiritual welfare of mankind, hence the following statement for publication: " I have much pleasure in re- commending the Great South Ameri- e,an Nervine Tonic to all who are •ffiietod as I have been with nervous prostration and indigestion. I found very great relief from the very first bottle, which was strongly reeom- mended to me by my druggist.. I also induced nay wife to use it. who, I must say, was completely run down and was suffering very much from general debility. She found great relief from South American Nervine and also cheerfully recommends it to her fellow -sufferers. " Bnv, W. S. BARIMR," It is now a seientifio fact that cer- tain nerve Centres located near the babe of the brain have entire control over the stomach, liver, heart, lungs and indeed all internal organs ; that ie, they furnish these organs with the necessary nerve force to enable them to perform their respective work. When the mem centres are weakened or deranged the nerve force is diminished, and as a result the stomach will not digest the food, the liver becomes torpid, the kidneys will not act properly, the heart and lungs suffer, and in fact the whole system becomes weakened and sinks on account of the lack of nerve force, South American Nervine is based on the foregoing soientifie discovery and is so prepared that it acts directly on the nerve centres. It immediately increases the nervous energy of the whole system, thereby enabling the different organs of the body to perform their work perfectly, when disease at once disappears. It greatly benefits in ono day. Mr. Solomon Bond, a member of the Society of Friends, of Darlington, Ind., writes: "I have used sit bottles of South American Norville and I consider that every bottle did for me one hundred dollars worth of good, because I have not had ag cod night's sleep for twenty years on account of irritation, pain, horribly dreams, and general nervous pros ,ration, which has been caused by ellh'nnnin ;”;140,-4:—.,r7 avenensia c the stomach, anti by a broken dowel condition of my nervous system. But now I can lie down and sleep all night as sweetly a as baby,and iL feel like a sound man. x do rot think there has ever been a medicine e introduced into this country, which will at all compare with this at a ours+ ft.' the dtoncaoh and nerves," C. DIJTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter. Dlt. iti ODAIllellte Agent, I�'.eiisttil