The Exeter Times, 1895-3-28, Page 6THE. NXETE,
TIMES
Result of a
Neglected Cold.
DISEASED LUNGS
Which Doctors Failed to Help,
CURED BY TAKING
AYER,s pcehcteorrry.i.
"I contracted a severe cold, which settled
on my lungs, and I did what is often done
in such cases, neglected it, thinking it would
go away as it came; but I found, after a
little while, that the slightest exertion
pained me. I then
Consulted a Doctor
who found, on examining my lungs, thatehe
temper part of the left one was badly affected.
„He gave rne some medicine which I t00% as
directed, but it did not seem to do any good.
Fortunately, I happened to read in Ayer's
-Almanac, of the effect that Ayer's Cherry
Pectoral had on others, and 1 determined to
give it a trial. .After taleing a few doses my
trouble was relieved, and before I had fin-
ished the bottle I was curede"-A.Ltenen,
watchmaker, Orangeville, Ont.
Ayers Cherry Pectoral
Highest Awards at World's Fair.
Ayer's Pills Cure Indigestion,
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THEEXETER TIAIES.
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DATES OP ADVERTISING
firstinsertion, per Li ue 10 °eats
ch subsequen tin sertion ,per line 3 cents
To insure insertion, advertisemen,,s should
In sent in nett Liter then Weduesday morning
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oi Huron.All work entrusted to ua wi1leaan.t3
nor promp t atten tion:
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THE NEWS IN A NUTSHELL
THE VERY LATEST FROM ALL OVER
THE WORLD.
Interesting Peale About OUT ONYR COIllntrY
Great menace, the elated States, and
All Parts of the Utobe, condensed mid
Aseerted for Elm' Heading
esteten.e.
Bishop Bond's state a health is again
causing his friends soeflo alarm -
The City Connell of Hamilton has fixed
the rate of taxation at 20 mills.
Senator Drummond has returned to
Montreal from Europe, much improved in
health.
Thieves ransacked the street letter -boxes
at Ottawa and scattered the contents on
the streets.
At Rat Portage the Sultana mine took
fire. Eight miner e were rescued and only
one life lost.
The governing body of Trinity College
School has decided to rebuild on the
present site.
A ten -year-old girl named Lyles Milieu
was fatally burned at London while
lighting a fire.
Mt, Thomas Lee, baker, of St. Cath-
arines, was probably fatally inured in a
runaway acme:lent.
The members of the Toronto Caledonian
Society propose erecting a monument to
the memory of Burns.
A Swede named Olave Christianson, one
of the first settlers of West Selkirk, com-
mitted suicide by hanging.
Mr. Hugh Wilson'of Valleyfield, who
was wounded three times by Shortie, is
now considered to be out of danger.
John W. Patterson, aetiug teller of the
Traders Bank at Strathroy, has disappear-
ed with $4,000 of the bank's money.
Three street -car drivers were found
guilty of cruelty to horses in the London
Police Court and fined $5 or live days ettch.
The London Board of Education are
asking a grant of $26,000 from the City
Council to relieve overcrowding in the
city school&
The Methodists of London are having
plans prepared for a $65,000 building, to
replace the church burned on Queen's
avenue recently.
A strike has been declared in the Spring-
field mines, the largest collieries in Nova
Scotia. A large number of men will be
thrown out of work.
Mr. Cornelius White a preacher in the
Society of Friends, fell dead on Sunday
while preaching in the Friends' meeting
houee at Bloomfield, Out.
The date for the opening of the Territor-
ial Exhibition at Regina, to which the
Dominion Parliament gave a liberal grant,
has been fixed for July 29th.
Active preparations are being made for
commencing construction on the continua-
tion of the Bale des Chaleurs railway at
the earliest possible moments
Immense fields of petroleutn have been
diecovered seventy miles north of Fort
Saskatohett an, and. the Dominion Govern.
*tient has promised to assist in their de-
velopment.
The sufferers by an accident on the
Intercolonial near Levis, Que.,
four years
ago have been grauted $12,000 by an order
in Council. Thirty-seven claimants will
divide the grant.
The machinery and stock of the Crescent
Chemical Works, Montreal, owned by
Harry P. Hyams, who is under arrest cu a
charge ot murder, were sold by the Sheriff
for $36.
Mr. O'Brien, junior member of the firm
of Meredith & O'Brien, Montreal, was ar-
rested on a charge of false pretences pre-
ferred by the Manager of the Quebec Bank.
Mr. O'Brien was bailed.
The Massey -Barris Manufacturing Com-
pany contemplates moving its lerantford
establishment to the °thee side of the line,
and is asking for special inducements from
Niagara. Falls,N. Y., to settle there.
Senator Warner Miller, of New York,
veho was in Montreal recently, was very
warm in his advocacy of a ship -canal con-
necting New York and the great lakes for
the cheap carriage of wheat to tide -water.
Mr Joseph H. Stiles, who is promoting
the holding of an International Exposition
in Montreal fleet year, has just returned
from Europe, and states that during his
visit he rnet with very encouraging
success.
The Rev. Robert Johnston, B. A., B.D.,
pastor of St. Andrew's aurae, Lindsay,
has accepted a call to a Presbyterian chureh
in London'Out., and will sever his connec-
tion with the Lindsay pastorship on the
10th of April.
It is Lieut. -Col. Otter's intention to go
to England in about e, fortnight with several
of his brother officers, with the purpose of
adding to their military knowledge by a
epecial course. Lieut., -Col. Otter will be
absent about five months.
The Princess Louise hae written a letter
of thanks to Mr. Henry J. Morgan, of
Ottawa, thankingehim for a copy of his In
Memoriam recollections of Father Dawson,
who was oftett et:welcome guest at Rideau
hall when her °Royal Highness was in
Canada.
Sergeant Redmond of the Quebec city
police force who was nearly killed some
time ago while distilling illicit whiskey,
has been condemned in the Police Court on
two different charges to $100 fine and one
month's imprisonment, or failing to pay the
fine, Mx months' imprisonment in each
ease.
The trade returns for February show that
the exports for the month were $3,653,401,
entered for consumption $7,709,237, and
duty collected $1,470,319. Compered with
the same month last year this shbws
decrease of $89,115 in expor be an inereaste of
$709,877 in goods entered for consumption,
ertei a decrease of $l8,948 in duty collected.
Friday afternoon a speciel meeting of the
Wentworth Cotinty ()pundit Wikeuei .i
Hamilton to take action on the report of
the auditors, who bad discovered that
County Treasurer Stock had applied $8,898
of the County's funds to his own use. Mr.
Stock's sureties have made good the amount
to the coupty. After hearing a statement
from Mi. Steck the Council decided to
retain hien in his position as treasurer.
GREAT BRITAIN.
Prof. Huxley, the scientist, is suffering
seriously f ran influenza.
Sir Henry Ponsonby, private secretary
to the Queen,who was stricken with
paralysis on January 7,is dying at Osborne.
Mr, Erastus Wiman has been granted
a new trial, the judgment of the lower
court being reversed by the Supreme
Court of Netv York.
h is rumoredin London that Sir William
Harcourt will wept the Speakershipif hie
election is unopposed, The leadership of
the House would, then go to gr. Campbell.
lissenermen.
The Bittish Incorporated Society of Au -
there will present a largely -signed petition
to the Marquis of Ripon praypag that the
Queen will withhold her assent to the Cana.
dian Copyright bill.
The Duke of Fife, son-in-law of the
Prince of Wades, is learniug bioyole riding,
and goes out practising in Brighton with a
footman on one side of the wheel and a
a page in buttons ou the other.
In the Oscar Wilde libel suit against the
Marquis of Queensberry, the two sons of the
Marquis espouse Mr. VVilde's cause. They
say their father is of unsound mind, but
that there is a good deal of vice in his mad -
110418.
Some of the Radical members of Parlia-
ment intend to urge on the British Govern-
ment that both the Welsh Diceestablishment
bill and the Irish Land hill shall be referred
to grand committees,in whigh the nationali-
ties concerned shall be granted special
representation.
UNITED STATES.
Harry T. Hayward, convicted of the
murder of Katharine.Ging, of Minneapolis,
Minn .ehas been sentenced to be hanged.
The New York Assembly has passed the
concurrent resoletion submitting to a vote
of the people the question of woman's tie&
frage.
Thomas Wilson, of Toronto, an expert
diamond cutter, committed suicide in
Chicago on Friday evening by taking car-
bon° acid.
The round•house of the Wabash Rail-
road at Toledo was burned. Three persons
were killed, nine injured, and the loss
amounts to $75,000.
The peak of Orizaba, the ancient volcano
in Corodoba, State of Vera Cruz, is in a
state of eruption, and the surrounding
country is threatened.
Gen. Harrison, ex -President of the Unit-
ed States, who has been ill, is entirely out
of danger, and the doctor says he will be
able to be out in a.tew days.
.At Norwalk, Conn., Mrs. Pete i MoClus-
key recently celebrated the 105 anniversary
of her birthday. With the exception of
sight, she possesses all her faculties.
The bill providing the whipping -post for
men criminally assaulting children under
sixteen has been defeated by a small major-
ity in the New York Assembly,
The dynamite factory of the Hancock
Chemical Co. atDellar Bay, Mich., blew up.
Telephone and telegraph wires were broken
by the explosion. A number of men are
missing.
The Sabbath Association of St. Louis,
Mo., has begun its crusade against trades-
men who keep open on Sunday, preceeding
under an old statute, which 1:1603 for a long
time been a dead letter.
The United States steamer Alliaocia,
while proceeding from Colon from New
York, was fired upon by a Spanish man-of-
war. The outrage has been reported, and
may lead to diplomatic troubles.
A Chicago dispatch says Thomas Wilson,
an expert diamond cutter from Toronto,
committee' suicide in a low drinking -place
by taking carbolic acid. He came of a well
connected family in Canada, and left a wife
and two children in Toronto.
As a result of the row which disgraced
the closing session of the Indiana Legisla-
ture Myron D. King,the Governor's private
secretary, is not expected to live. A rib
was broken and it is pressing upon the
heart. King was the centre of a rush made
by the Republicans to prevent him from
delivering a vetoed bill to the House.
A specia committee of the Illinois State
Assembly is investigating the treatment of
girls in the Chicago Home for Juvenile
Offenders. It appears that some of the cul-
prits who were confined in the dark room
were fastened face downwards on the floor
by a heavy chain round their waists pad-
locked to staples,with their hands strapped
behind their backs.
On Saturday last Mrs. Colinsky and
her daughter started to walk from Mam-
moth Miue, Pa., to Mt. Pleasant, where
they intended to purchase ticketa tor
Hungary. They had $500 in ti.eir pos-
session. The bodies of mother and daugh-
ter were found concealed in a brush heap
at the road side four days after. They had
been robbed and frightfully beaten.
Edward Gorman, a Canadian, was
fatally shot by Police Officer Mainefert at
Chicago on Sunday at 59th and Halsted
streets. The officer was so brutally
beaten that his condition is critical. He
interfered in a quarrel between four men,
who kicked him into inseneibility. Before
losing consciousuess Mainefert fired two
shots, one of which entered Gorman's
body.
A desperate attempt was made to mur-
der and rob the Greek Catholic priest,
Rev. Nalovich, at Freeland, Pa. His house-
keeper and her companion were beaten into
insensibility. The safe in the priest's house
was blown open with dynamite, but the
attacking party was frightened off. The
priest made a fight for his life. He escap-
ed with a few slight wound& Revolvers
were used freely, and the doors and walls
were perforated.
Advices front the'United States are some-
what more favourable with regard to the
general trade outlhok. Railway earnings
have slightly improved,and farm products
are higher,buteeshere is little improvement
in the industrial situation. The money
market is steady, and exports of gold have
ceased. Still trade is not by any means in
a satisfactory condition. There has been
an advance m cotton, on a rather doubtful
estimate. of decreased acreage. The dry
-goods trade continues depressed, and pro-
duction is much In excess of requirements;
cotton goods are only moving at conces-
sions. The totanbank clearings at 84 Main
of the United Sates showed an increase,
compared with last year, of over five per
cent., and outside of New York City the
increase was a shade over 8 per cent.
GENERA/.
emir Cantu, of Milan, the historian, i
dead.
Emperor William daily presides at the
seseions a the State Council.
The Queen arrived at Nice on Friday
and drove to the Hotel Cimiez.
Snow fell in Tangier, Morocco, on Sun.
clay night, for the fint time in many years,
A reciprocal trade treaty has been entered
into between South Australia and New
South Wales.
Sir Robert Duff, Governor of New South
Wales, died in Sydney on Friday. He was
sixty years of age.
There also an explosion of fire -damp in a
Silesian coal mine on Saturday by which
fifty lives have been lost.
The Chine*, end Japanese peace envoye
are to meet in Simemoseki, on the 'attains
hotithVillst coat of Japan,
PRACTICAL FARMING.
Good Roads Where the Land is L9vel-
The illestration represents an adertiro.ble
plan for constructing roads in level regions.
ct a shows the level of the ground before
working. a d are ditches on either side of
the road. if the road bed made of the
earth taken from both side ditches. t t
trench for placing tile which carry off the
surplus water. Wetei from roadbed na-
turally rune into the side ditch, and then
tattling down o the tile is carried off.
Very little fall is required for getting rid of
large quantities of water. The width of
the tile will of oourse depend upon the
amount of water to be disposed of, The
tile esti usually be made near home. Dur-
ing these hard times when so many men are
out of work, it seems: to me it would be
advisable to utilize cheap labor in the con-
struction of better highways.
Safety and Profit.
How many sores does it take to keep
cows a year and what is land worth per
acre? A correspondent says to his mind
this is the proper way to figure on the
profits of cows. He has been handling, on
an average, 55 cows on 170 aoree' of land fit
for pasture and oultivation. He calculates
he makes $18 per acre from his cows and
$2 per acre on the hogs. He grows very
little wheat. The farm beast° keep the
cows. Re buys nothing but bran and oil
cake meal and sells enough grain to pay
for them. He grows two acres of potatoes
yearly, but they are is separate item frotn
the cows. He keeps, on an average'20
head of young heifers, making 75 in all.
He could make 40 cows do the same
work, butahinks it would not pay better..
He feeds along the line of aafety, keeping
the cows comfortable. That is the watch-
word of success in dairying. No perishing
out in the cold and no feed wasted in the
stable. He has had a silo seven yearti.
His neighbors thought he was crazy, but
he was is 'little nearer the front of the
procession than most of them. He has
given a mortgage on the farm a hoist that
has made him feel happy these hard times.
There are no hard times he thinks where
the cow and pig are properly looked after.
Protection for Small Animals.
If largo and small cattle or hogs are fed
and housed together the smaller animals
will hardly thrive. They will be whipped
away from the trough and get less than
their share of the food ; and they will be
driveu around or from the shelter, and the
large animals will ecarcely profit frOm the
misfortunes of their emaller fellows, as
driving the others from feed and shelter
will " work off " a good -part of the flesh
from the extra feed. Sometimes the
the smaller animals are seriously injured;
and in the larger anitesals is developed a
Quarrelsome disposition that is not desir-
able, to say the least. Yet other consider-
ations make it a bad plan to confine small
and large animals in the same enclosure.
Much better results will be eecured by
putting only a few animals in the same
enclosureand those of the same size.
Oiling the Fellies.
A practical man says : "I have a wagon
of which six years ago the Jellies shrunk so
that the tires became loose. I gave it a
good coat of hot oil, and every year since
it has had a coat of oil or paint sometimes
both. The tires are tight yet and they
have not been set for eight or nine years.
Many farmers think that as wagon fellies
begin to shrink they must go at once to a
blacksmith shop and get the tire set In-
stead of doing that, which is often a darn.
ape to the wheels, causing them to dish, if
they will get some linseed oil and heat it
boiling hot and give the fellies all the oil
they can take, it will fill them up to their
usual size and tighten to 'keep them from
shrinking, and also to keep out the water.
If you do not wish to go to the trouble of
mixing paint, you can beat the oil and tie is
rag to a stick and swab them over as long
as they will take oil."
319 Pounds Per Cow.
A correspohdent says that from the first
of September, 1893, till September, 1894,
he made 319 pounds of butter per cow—by
"per cow" he means every cow that gave
milk, whether old or young, .fresh or far-
row, and for the entire year. The dairy
consisted of five two-year-old heifers, two
old cows 14 years old, past their prime but
kept for enteir. calves, and 10 cows from
three to 10 -years old. Needy the entire
herd arc descendents of these two old
cows. He gave them grain to the value of
$246.40 from the let of October till they
went to grass in May, none after that date.
Seed Germination.
It has been ascertained by an extended
series of experiments that rye and winter
wheat will germinate in soil the tempera-
ture of which is as low. as 32 degrees.
Barley, oat, flax, clover, and peas will
sprout at 35 degrees, The turnip is as
cold blooded as the rye 'and winter wheat,
but the carrot needs 38 degrees, and the
bean 40 degrees before they will make the
initial ant O. send the life -shoot in Fiore"'
of air and light.
--
Advantage of Warta Feed.
Giving warm feed to young animals not
disposed to be thrifty will very often have
a happy effect, These animate may suffer
from weak digeetion, which in turn pro-
duces a poor appetite. The animal does
not eat heartily, and what it does eat is
not well digested. A hot tnees some cold
morning sharpens the appetite and tones
up the digestion.
An Ocean Craft Dug Out of a Log.
In the smallest veseel which ever put to
see, for a long journey Capt. Gustave Bro.
man of Marshfield, Oregon, expecte to Bail
In a ebort time to San Draneisoo, and from
there make the veyage to Borgne, His
boat, which is made from a cedar leg,
only thirteen and a Ilea feet over all, ten.
foot keel, and two feet depth a hold. She
is deeked with manhole plates, by means
of which the navigator's legs will be pro.
toted. He will sail on Senday for 'San
Francisco, where he will put three masts
in his little craft. He wants to carry the
boat overland and then start for Europe
from New York, but as his plan consists
in putting the boat on wheels and using
the track it is probable the railroad com-
pany will object. In this ease Broman will
sail around the Horn, Broman is a Reiman
and an expert navigator,
AERIAL TRAMWAY OVER NIAGARA.
A Scheme to Cross the Cataract Thirty Feet
Above the Raging waters.
A Lockport, N. Y., special says :—
Attorney George W. Pound, one of the
directors of the Aerial Tramway Company
has aentto Albany a bill authorizing his corn.
pan3r to ereot is tower and landing place in
the State Reservation Park for the use of is
scheme whioh will be one of the engineer.
ing truinaphs of the age. A similiar one
has been obtained with reference to Queen
Victoria Park from the Canadian Govern-
ment. Leading Canadian politicians are
interested in the -enterprise.
The company proposes to carry tourists
across the Niagara River over the brink of
the cataract and thirty ,feet above the rag•
ing waters. A double set of oables will be
atretohed from the towers in the Canadian
and American Parke, with a supporting
tower on Goat Island. On these cables cage -
'Ike oars will be suspended by trolleys and
operated by eleotricity from the American
side. The aerial line will follow along the
brink of the American Falls to Goat Istaud,
and thence to the Canadian shore'forming
a cord to the bow of the Horse Shoe Falls.
The care will be of steel, and the cables the
best manufactured. The floors of the cars
will be perforated to allow visitors to look
below, and the aide views will also be un-
obstructed.
If the bill just sent, to the New Yerk
Legislature becomes a law, expert engineers
will be engaged to superintend the con-
struction. The projectors claim that the
aerial tramway line will be as safe as the
suspension bridgem themselves. Each cable
will be independent of the other, and suffie
cient to sustain ten times the weight of the
cars and passengers. The electrical engi-
neer will be able to stop and start the car
anywhere on the line. The bill has power-
ful friends in the Legislature, it is said,and
New York" will probably' follow Canada in
giving requisite grants.
DOGS FOR THE STAGE.
M. men:test Says That Mongrels Are the
Aptest Canine Pupils.
M. Richard is a Frenchman and perhaps
the most successful trainer of dogs in the
world. He has a troupe of dogs now with
which he is creating a sensation in the big
cities of Europe. One of his dogs gives a
capital imItation.of the serpentine dance.
Speaking of his doge the other day, Mr.
Richard said: "Only one of my dogs is
thoroughbred. He is the bulldog, who does
M. RICHARDS' DOG IS A CIGARETTE FIEND.
the sausage stealing trick. All the reet are
mongrels. They are French with one ex-
ception, an Irish dog. As a rule pure-bred
dogs are no use to me. The thoroughbred
is apt to be ontasided. By instinct and
heredity he is a pointer, a retriever, a run-
ner or somemther sort of specialist, and his
mind is not open to much other knowledge.
But the mongrel has not any special bent
by inheritance. A mongrel, if he be intel-
ligent, is likely to be an all-around dog,and
when I find one that is so I study his
character to find mit for what he is best
fitted and then give a special course of
instruction in that direction. One will learn
to play carde—as my Follett here Ilea done
—another will have ts dramatic taint and
shine iu a little pantomime, as my bulldog
Tambour does in 'The Saving of the Colors,'
a sketch in which I itnpersonate a wounded
soldier and Tambour succors me and saves
the flag. I prefer little dogs, for they are
easier to teach, and do not frighten the
ladies, who axe my best patrons.'
A Woman .Lynehed.
A despatch from Butte, Neb., says :
Mrs. W. E. Holton, of Keya Paha county,
was found dead in her home on IVIonslay
eight by neighbours. She had been lynched.
Her body was lying on the floor, with a piece
of rope, about ten feet long, and a hatchet
and hammer beside her. The coroner was
summoned, and the autcpsy showed that
she had died of strangulation, and had also
been assaulted. The woman was living
alone, as her husband had been sent to an
insane e.syltim. It is supposed the motive
of lynching was to prevent the woman from
giving teetimony against cettle "ruetiers,"
as she had beets summoned as a witnese
against a gaug of thieves in the county.
She had borne a good reputation. It was
evident that she had fought a hard battle
for her lite and honour, ea the bedding and
the clothing were torn and seattered around
the TOM.
Ask and Receive.
Sizzly-el know how to get stout.
Bizzly—How
Sizzly—Go into a saloon and buy it.
A Wise Precaution.
Lady (in gimcrack funiture store)—
Phew 1 It's freezing cold'here,
New Boy--Yes'm. That's to keep the
funiture from falling to pieces.
Rev. WM. Peer, formerly of Freelton, is
pastor of the Baptist church at Hespeler.
Children Cry for Pitcher' o Catcall!
BALTIC CANAL OP1NIM 1 "Commend
FETES LASTING A WEEK TO CELE-
BRATE THE EVENT.
Gpaperor Wilitanitit Person:My Superin-
tending Ilse Freparsttions-War Vessels
Will 15spresetit all the Great Navies
of the World.
A despatch from Berlin says :—The
preparations for the °poising of the North
Sea and Baltic Canal are Oil a grand scale,
The activity all along the line from Kiel to
the North Sea allows that the Emperor
intenda to celebrate the occasion with is
series of splendid fetes lasting a week.
The Emperor is superintending personally
most of the arrangements which are still
incomplete. On Saturday he telegraphed
orders to Kiel that the royal reception
rooms in the new Kiel statiou be decorated
and fitted out after the style of the state
rooms in the imperial oaoht Hohenzollern.
Before the haugration ceremonies he will
again traverse a part of the canal with
several war ships to inopect the looks,
harbors, and forts, and rehearse briefly the
whole programme as he desires to see it
carried out. Rumor has thrown some
doubt on the date of the opening. The
prolonged oold weather has hindered the
completion of the woe•k, is was said, and
the canal would not be in condition before
July for the passage of the large war ships.
All this is untrue. The Emperor visited
all the looks as far as lirunsbuettell
on Thursciay, and then conferred with
the chief engineers, tvho assured him that
there was no obstacle in tbe way of opening
the cane ton the original date. The Hamburg
banquet will beeheld on the evening of June
19. The climax of the celebration will be
the reception of tile Emperor with a squad-
ron at Kiel on the 20th. The welcoming
fleet will include war vessels representing
all the great naviee of the world, all the
excursion steamers of the nearby ports,
and a host of yachts from the whole North
German C00.8E. The Kiel authorities ere
planning anchorage for 150 large vessels.
The -north German Regatta Society will
open the boating week on June 22, The
Imperial Yacht Club will follow this with
O series of matches leeting from the 24th to
'the 27th. Racing will end on the 28t1i
with an ocean match over the course to
Travemuende.
Although the Chauvinist section of the
French press is ready with prophecies of a
hitch in the arrangements owing to inter-
national jealousy, the officials in charge of
Kiel fear nothing of the sort. The utmost
care has been taken to observe every
minute detail of etiquette and courtesy.
The intention is to make the naval parade
a harmonious and imposing spectacle,
creditable to every country taking part iu
it. The Emperor is now receiving daily
clippings from the Paris journals, which
are devoting space to the Kiel ceremonies.
His purpose is to get a good view of the
sensitive spots, and then to lay his plans
so as to spare them.
How to get a "Sunlight" Picture.
Send 25 "Sunlight" Soap wrapper,
(wrapper bearing the words "Why Does a
Woman Look Old Sooner Than a Man") to
Lever Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto,
entiyou will receive by poste pretty pictures
free from advertising, and well worth fram-
ing. This is an easy way to decorate your
home. The soap is the best in the market
and it will only cost lc. postage to send in
the wrappers'if you leave the ends open.
Write your acldress carefully.
Ja.
••••••-•
WHY DRUNKARDS SEE DOUBLE.
Two Distinct enticei Operations Due to
Dim oca Con of Ike Nerve Centres. " •
The reason that a man' sees double who
has gazed too long cn the wine when it is
red is that the nerve centres are changed
by the action of the alcoholic poision.
There is a want of harmony in the action
of the muscles which move the eyeballa.
Consequently, instead of both eyes being
focused simultaneously on an object, one
eye receives an impression independently
of the other. The two impressions are
communicated to the brain and the object
is therefore seen twice. The infietned
condition of and loss of energy in the
brain centres from over -doses of alcohol
also account for the staggering gait ot an
intoxicated man.
When Baby*NassIeb, we gave her Castors -
when she was a Chila, she mit. d for Castoria.
When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria.
When she had Children, she gavethem Castorbe
Her Gift.
so glad you like the cushion,
George, for I bought it for your birthday
present. You'd spoil it in your library, so
we'll keep it in my boudoir. I suppose
you'll get the hill to-morrow—it's awfully
expensive.
THE
' MOST SUCCESSFUL REMEDY
FOR MAN OR BEAST.
Certain In itS effects] and never blisters.
Read proofs O0101V
t KENDALL'S SPANN CURE.
]
BoxSi Carman , Henderson Co., 111., Feb. 21, '54.
Dr. 5, J. Estop, co,
Dear ai8 5011,1 mo ono 05 708! RorsO
Dooks and °Mire. I hove used a great deal of your
Kendall's] SpaVm Cure with good MOMS ; it is a
Wonderfal Medicine. I one]] bad a Mal% OM bad
an Occult Sparta and five bottles cured her. I
keep a bottle 08 hand all the time.
Yours hilly, OfrAe. POWia.L.
KENDALL'S SPANN CURE.
CANTOR, MO., Apr, 9, 02. (
D. �. KECDALT. C0.
, Dear Stra-I twee used several b4t1es of your it
"Kendall's Spavin Cure" with much .success. I
think it the beat Liniment I ever used. Hare re- f.
moved one 0011.11, OHO Bleed 8eneln and killed
tato Ilone SOnvIum, Have) recommended it to
60,01•81 of my friends wild .aed ranch pleasea with ;
and keep it. Reapeet.fhtURA
sAy,
I'. 0. Box 012,
For Sale to, all Druggists, or address
Dr, 15. KIETint)Aillt 110$71fP4IV17.,p
CNoete.MON PALLS, VT4
"
„
aLEMIiii111 14'
" sa,eise*.seilse
to Your
HonorableWife
• tip,
-Merchant of Pitofre.
and tell her that,I am composed.
of clarified cottonseed oil and re."
fined beef suet; that I am the
purest of all cooking fats; that
my name i$
it
that I atn better than lard, and
more -useful than butter; that I '
am equal in shortening to twice
the quantity of either, and make
food much easier of digestion.
I am to be found everywhere in
3 and 5 pound pails, but tun
Made only by
The N. K. Fan -bank
Com pa ny,
Wellington and Ann Stn..
ITONTREAL.
ook'sCottodloot
COMPOUND.
A recent discovery by an o/d
physician. Successfully used
nzonthly by thousands of
Ladies. Is the only perfectly
safe and reliable medicine dis-
covered. Beware of unprincipled druggists who
offer inferior medicines in place of this. Ask for
Cook's Cbtton Roo t Compo und, take no substt-
tute, or inclose Eland 0 cents in postage In letter
and NVO willsend, sealed, by return mail. Full sealed
particulars in plain envelope, to ladies only, as
stamps. Address The Cools Company,
Windsor, Ont., Canada,
For Sale in 'Exeter by I W Brownlee-,
OR MEN AND WOMEN.
:rade Marki DR. A. Ownx.
• THE
OWEN
ELECTRIC
BELT.
The only Scientific and Practic.al BleetrIfi'
NAG made for generel use, producing a Genuine
urrcnt of Electricity for the cure of Disease,
eat can be readily felt and regulated both la
.tantity and power, and applied to any part of
se body. It can be worn at any time during
:orking hours or sleep, and willpositively cure.
\\t Rheum:Alen),
k4eiatten,
General Debilit
b
UM ago.
lervous Diseases
Dyspepsia,
Varicoeele.
Sexual W eakness-
lira otency,
Kidney Diseases,
Lame Back,
Urinary Diseases
Electricity properly applied is fast taking the
dace of drugs for all Nervous, Rheumatic. Ma-
tey and Urinal Troubles, and will effect cures
,1 seemingly hopeless cases where every other
:nown means has failed.
Any sluggish, weak or diseased organ may
.y this means be roused to healthy activity
,efore it is too late.
Loading medical men use and reeommend
he Owen Belt in their practice.
OUR ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE
,iontains fullest information regarding the cure
of acute, chronic and nervous diseases, prices,
how to order, etc., mailed (sealed) EFS EE to
any address.
The Owen Electric Belt & *Appliance Co.
49 KING Se. W., TORONTO, ONT.,
201 to 211 State St., Chicago, Ill
THIS Y..&FER.
tiEAD-MAKER11
NEVEr FAILS TO OIVT SATISFA011011
'Pr`7.1 010 11i "IVA,
it
THE
OF AwarExETER
TIMES
-...,,
BRisTovs A
PILLS
Cure Biliousness, Sick Head.
ache, Dyspepsia, Sluggish Liver
and all Stomach Troubles.
musirows
PILLS
Are Purely Vegetable,
elegantly Sugar -Coated, and do
not gripe or sicken.
BRISTOL'S
PILLS
Act gently but promptly and
thoroughly. "The safest family
medicine All Druggists keep
BRISTOL'S -
PILLS