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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1895-4-17, Page 6Crtreti coneramotton, Oreoghse Croups Sorge hroat. Sold bg all Druggote on a Guarantee. It43; ,e'..Skaol 16a* or Oheet Shiloh's Poeotio *ter von gtve greet eatiefectien.—ee gents. $14111.014'6 VETNLIZEPto f3. wdn, Cleattartooga. Tenn., sari; "SitteohSs Vitalizer tReinn-enn MY conetarerittleebeztremedefor delentatecesusteee I' ever used,' rawspersla, enVer Or leidney trouble it =Cele. reetee, 75 ete. ILOH CATARRH •REMEDY. IInveyou Catarrh? Try thieRemedy. ltwill peettively relteve arta (lure you. Price 50 cts. tetele Ineeepor tens its sueceeeful treatment le • introtsleederee. X eneerneeroehnoireetemegliee e- eeed AT'', -rearm:Weatisfaction. LEGAL. , 11,DICKSON,Barrister; P',,L411 _re iire'revVyallePr,rei4temcniTsZliesir?taa .to Loan, Omeei u ausotos stook, Exeter, R FL COLLINS, ga,rrister, Solloitor, Uouveyemcer, Rte. lege:TER, - ONT. OFFICE] : Over O'Neirs Bank. LLIOT & ELLIOT, Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Public, Conveyancers &c, &e0. te--letteney to Loan at Lowest Rates of interest. OFFICE, - MAIN - STREET, EXETER. o. v. raazor. ralloKRIOK LTATOT aesewor•••••••••••rsrm MEDICAL • E E ETER TIMES TIE NEWS Ti NUTSHELL THE VERY LATEST imam ALL OVER VIE WORLD. bet ereetog getemenibout Our Own Countrrt Orme Agitate, (be United States. and 41dI rams et the Globe. Condensed and Aosorted for Easy Heading. CANADA, Canada's sealing fleet have reached. the Japanese coast, and have begun operations. Experts have reported large quantities ot Petroleum in the vicinity of Kingsville. Louis Bouchard, a Grand Trunk Railway clerk, committed. suieide at Hoohelaga on Thursday, Mr. Robert Blackwell has been appoint- ed public librarian in London at a salary of '.377-2h0.e Advisory Board. Comtnittee of Mani- " toba has adopted. an agricultural text -book for the schools. It is expeoted that Mr. William Smith, Deputy Minister of Marine, will return to Ottawa by the end of May. Working hours in the Grand Trunk locomotive shops au Stratford have been increased to 50 per week. Lieutenant•Governor Ohapleau of Quebec. has left for Florida on a trip whieh will last ecene weeks. Mr. J. H. Ross, of Moosejaw, has been sworn in as a member of the Executive of the North-West Assembly. The Canadian Pacific, Grand Trunk, and le tercolouial railways have reduced freights on all classes of merchandise. The receipts from the B:tursilton charity concert, amounting to over $400, were divided amongst the various benevolent eocieties interested. The Montreal Board of Trade is urging on the Government the necessity of filling the loeg-vagant Age Of cellector of customs at that port. There is trouble on the Hamilton market because the lessee, Mr.Jacques, is imposing what the occupants regard as excessive fees for privileges, Aseestant Chief Engineer Harv of the Public Works Depaeitaene at Ottawa, is under suspension for alleged shortage in his accoun cc . Francis Northey, opts of the engineers on the Hamilton Waterworks, died suddenly while stooping to turn on the water in front of the pumping -house. The result of a scandal at Calgary has been the arrest of the editors of the Calgary Tribune for criminal libel at the instance of lel essra Hooper and Botts. The canal regulations for the current year have been issued by the Dominion Government. There will be no discrimi- nation againse the citizens of the United States. Mrs. Nickerson has issued a writ against tthe widow of the late W. O. McLeod, ing $20,000 claf, ages for the alienation of Woodstock's wer-known millionaire claim - her husband's ,' tlections. From intern tion received by the Do- minion Depart. eat of Trade and Com- m eree, it appears that there are prespects for good stulepricee for export cattle dur- ing the coming season invitations have been issued by Lieut. Governor Mackintosh to the Governors of several Stites to be present at the opening of the Territorial Exhibition. at Regina as his guests. The Fisheries Department denies the report that Canada is objecting to the en. forcement of ) the Behring sea award. What it objects toeis the regulation provid. iug for the sealing of at nes. At the Winnipeg Trades and Labor •convention prohibition was rejected as , e. plank in the platform of the labor party, and a memorial was adopted opposing General Booth's colonization scheme. .Durink the coming season the completion of the Toronto Island breekwater, as far as covered by tbe contract of Cape Murray, ie to be vigorously pushed, and in all proba• bility accomplished this year. Reports from C. P.R. agents in Manitoba state that the farmers are generally prepare ing for spring work, but, only in a few cases has seeding been done. Tnere is a want of snow or rain throughout the province. Mr. Frank Skyner, a Dominion Govern- ment employee on the Blackfoot Indian reserve'Alberta, was shot and killen by a crazy Indian. The homicide resisted arrest, and was shot dead by the Mounted Police. The verdict of the Coroner's jury at Gleichen was that Frank Skinner came to his death from a gunshot wound inflicted by a Blackfoot Indian (Scraping laides),ancl acquitting Constable Rodgers, who shot the Indian while resisting arrest. John A. Patterson, the acting teller of the Trader's Bank at Strathroy, who absconded about three week ago with over 81,000 of the bank's funds, has been located by the Guarantee Compaq at Las Vegas, Neve Mexico. He will be broueht hack to stand his trial. Miss Pollington of Hamilton, had the unpleasant experience of rolling down the mountainside. She was walking a few feet away from the edge at the top, and, falling pn the slippery ground. • rolled over and went to the bottom. She escaped without serious injury, . W- BROWNING 1.11-. . P. 9, tie-mini:tee Viceoria Ouir ty: Office mud residence, Oominion Laho toly ,Exe ter . EIYNDMAN, coroner for tie Coimty a Huron. OlBee, opp ,site Carling Brae. store,Dzeter. DRS. ROLLINS Se AMOS. Sepa,rate Oakes. Residence setae as former. iy, Andrew at Offices: Spaokteann building. Mein set Dr Rollins' same as formerly, north door; Dr. Amos" same buitding, south. door, ROLLINS, M. D„ T. A. A MOS. M. D o Exeter, One AUCTIONEERS. T HA.RDY, LICENSED AtIO- 1 4. tioneer for the County of Unroll, Charges modera Le. Exeter P. O. 1.41 BOSSENBERRY, General Li- -1 '4, consed Anetioneer Sales condueted tn eaparts. Satisfaction guaranteed. Charges Moderate. Hansen!? 0, Out. ENBY EILBER Licari seti tioneer for the Counties of Harm and Miacilesex Sales conducted at mod. erate rates- . t• Post-oivao Ored. Maas= MONEY TO LOAN. ONE/ TO LOAN AT 6 AND percent, 5.25,000 Private a' nods. Best, Loaning Companiesrepreseuted • L. H. DICKSON, Barrister. Exeter. VETERINARY. Tennent& Tennent EXETER, ONT. reg.:ton ---- e'redttetepoithe Ontario Veteriat r 5, 0 II iefo. poen: (Inc 600r South orCown Hall. ar.1=601=ESZEIROMMI W.LTERLOO MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE00 . Established in 1.863. HEAD OFFICE WATERLOO, ONT. Thi t Company has been over twentv-eirit years in successful oper ttion in 1Vestern Ontetrio, and continues to insure eget net loss or domage by Fire, Buildings, Merceandise Ivianufactories and all other descriptions of Insurable property. Intending ineurere have the option of insuring on the ?rename Note or Cash System. • During the past ten years thig company bas esseede7age Policies, covering: property to the amount of 840,871088; and paRd in losses alone $709,752.00.. Assets. le 170,100.00, consisting of Oath in Bank Government Depositand the unasses- tea Premi Premium Notes on hand and n roma 3.W4Veeenet, M.D.. President; 0 M. Terecta Secretary; J. 13. Menge, thepector . oths.i NELL Agent for Exeter and vicinity - CA Ri,rE as ED. „. CUR Sick Headache and relieve all the troubles incl. dent to a bilious state of the system, such as Dizzleess, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after (teeing, Pain in the Side, &c. While their Most • remarkable sucoess hoe been ehown in curing • SIC I/each:wile, yet aknernes LET= Liven Plus ere °totally- -valuable in Constipatiori, curing and preventing this annoying complaint, even° t ey oleo corrodieorders of the stenamegt a ululate the liver end regulate the egoWe Even if y en y cured EA Aehe they would bo almost priceless to those Who tiler from this dtstreesing eomploint; but fortttoately their goodeese does not end here, and thoes who once try them will end %bete little pills valnahle fet 80 rnany ways that they will tot be willing to do Without there, Pit of tee all sick head le thebane of 00 teeny lines that beee le where we make our 000 beast. Our eine cure it While others do not.o ' •1.- • . CA wren.% Lteetet trenrg rimer are very s 1 Id and es re 1 0very ester to take. One ee t*O pli, a dose. They are etreetly• vegetelite eral net gripe or purge.. bue by their gettisle act I, please all who We teethtn,viele at 25 Ciente; five for $1. Soldbeeterwher' e or deet bef mail 6A9VS/1 uozzoolz CO, totk, 11 jtit 1211 Doe, • ;mall rstoi,,, The will of the late Col. Allan Gilmour of Ottewa, was probated on Saturday. The estate is valued at $1,452,000. Deceased was unmarried. The bulk ot his estate is left to Mr. John Manuel, a connection by marriage. There are several charitable and other bequests. Mr. Adam Cantelon, treaeurer of the township of Godericia, died at Clinton on Friday. He was seventy-five years of age, having been born the same day and the same year as the Qtieent The name of Mt. E. W, Summerekill, of Montreal, is mentioned in connection with the office of city passenger agent of the Grand Trunk railway at Toronto, rendered vacant by the death of Mr. P. J. Skitter, Mr. Dotiglari Stewart, Inspector of Penb tentiaries is at present engaged in making an official' inepeetion of St. Vitic,ent de Paul penitentiary, and is highly pleased with the condition of the institution under the management of Warden Celina, The, City Council of Kingston on Thurs. day night agreed to the germs ole dinripany of American eapiteliets, who will etect blast end steef furnace in that eity, to cost 6.60,906.•The tering e,re $250,000 of a iontie, a free site of 16 adeetes feed waters and exemptio'n from taxation for ten y eerie the money grant to be coneidered as a loan the eotripsity to give in exchange for the Sable drift Mortgage beetle of Omit trwrit in a like Ohm, bearing interest at five per cent. ' GREAT TOtTfAIN. Mrs. LeQoard Jgeancie, mether of Lady Renelolph Churchill, died at Tunbridge Welltt Oh Tuesday. Mr. Gladetone is writing a work on ex, tirtet farina of life, with the object ef reconciling Darwinism and the Bible. Mr, Stead is writing a novel dealing with social problems, tinder the title of "The Modern Maid of Modern Babylon." A special commiseiener hats been dea. patched from Leaden to enquire into re- poree ot severe diatreas in the south of Ireland. The engagement of the Dowager Duchees of Marlberough, formerly Mrs. Hammeraley of New York,and Lord William Beresford, is again atmouneed. The British War Office has not received any etiviees iu regard, to the alleged firieg upon the British steamer Ethelred pff Cape Mayen Cuba, by a Spanish gunboat. The British Board of Trade returns for March show that the imports inereaeed £653,558, and the exports increased £424,- 127, as compared with those for the corres- ponding month last year. For more than half a century a greenish glass has been used at the famous Kew gardens near London. A receat experiment with ordinary glass has shown a remerkable improvement in the plane affected. Mr. William Waldorf. Astor has allowed the Pall Mall Budget to cease to exist, not- withstanding that it was paying its way, out of respect to the memory of hie dead wife, with whom the paper was a favouifte. At St. Dunstan's church, Fleet street, London, on Friday, in the presence of a large crowd, a beautiful memorial window in memory of Isartk Walton, author of "The Compleat Angler," was unveiled. There recently died at elauchline, in the South of Scotland, Hugh Gibb, a shoemak- er, whose recollection extended so tar back as to include conversations with and des- criptions of people who had been intimately aosociated with the poet Burns. Some mischievous boys in a _Loudon sub- urb have been arrested, soundly lectured, and fined, for throwing short tacks on a highway frequented by bicycle riders, their object being toaee the wheelmet COMM to grief as the result of punctured tires. eiteae Britain will not tolerate any inter- ference by the United States in the bounds ary dispute with Venezuela. This is the reply of the British Foreign Office to to Ambassador Bayard's representation of the desire to bring about a settlement of the boundary dispute by arbitration. The British Minister of Foreign Affairs has informed United States Ambaesador Bayard that Great Britain will not seek, in her present controversy with Nicaragua,to, acquire any part of the latter's tervitory ; that all she desires is that Nicaragua shall pay a proper indemnity to British Consul Hatch and other British subjeots who were driven out of Bluefields during the troubles in the Mosquito reservation last autumn. UNITED ST &TES. According to Marie Tempest, the finest opera house in the world is at Duluth. The woman suffrage clause in the pro- posed State constitution of Utah has been passed. Five men were killed by a boiler explo- sion in Loring & Jones' factory at Woburn Highlands, Mass. A boat left Detroit for Cleveland on Thursday, which marks the opening of navigation on Lake Erie. A report is current in New York that Sir Charles Rivers Wilson has agreed to accept the Presidency of the Grand Trunk. A Baltimore & Chile passenger train went off a trestle fifty teet high at Bellaire, Ohio. Four persons were killed and seven injur- ed. ' The test of one of the big, 5,000 horse- power dynamos recently placed in position itt the power -house of the Niagara Falls Power Company proved satisfactory. Mrs. Paean Stevens'the well-known eociety leader of New York, died at her home en that city on Thursday from pneu- monia, uomplicated by heart trouble. In the Chicago rar nthipal elections, the complete returns for the Mayoralty give Ar. Swift, Republican'a plurality of teenty-eight thousand nye hundred and twenty votes. William Lake, who murdered and muti- lated Emma Hunt, a domestic living with a farmer near Carlton, N. Y., hot Oceeber, was electrocuted in Auburn prison on Wed- nesday. Henry N. Entwistle, who was sentenc- ed to fifteen years in prison in Lowell, Mass., in 1892, for shooting Maria Clegg with intent to kill, has been released through the eflorts of the young woman, and they o ill be married shortly. The directors of the Lick Obeervatory have received a telegram whitth announces that Mr. Edward Crossley, formerly a member of the British House of Commons, proposed to present to the Lick Observa- tory his great three -feet reflecting tele- scope, with its dome and all its parts. Miss Tesee, L. Kelso, librarian of the Public library in Los Angeles, California, has taken an action for slander against the Rev. J. 0. Campbell, for having prayed that the Lord might vouchsafe His saving grace to the librarian of the City library, and cleanse her of all sin, end make her a woman worthy of her office. At Pittsburg, Pa., John Brotia, Thos. Grogan, George Wolfe, John McManus and William Ford started to cross the river in a sane, and when Immo distance from the ehore the boat capsizeci and Grogan mid Brotia.were drowned. It is reported there, was a druteken row in the boat, and the three survivors were arrested. President Cleveland was informed by one of the Justices of the Supreme Court that the eourt stades five to three against the constitutionality of the income tax law,and that in all probability the decision will be handed dowp by the court, but that the decieion would not be Announced. in open court until the first Monday in May. l'he mutilated beak of a colored woman was found on the street in New York on Saturday night,. Superintendent Byrnes aays she was Murdered MI -Friday night by William • Caesar, who was taken into OuStody. On Saturday.night Caesar cut up the body, and at 9 o'clgeole took it on a Sitth avenue oat, which runs to Waverly Place. When the car etopped, finditig 11 did not go to the river, he left the Body where it was found. It is believed that Caesar made a cortfeesion. According to returns issued of the condi,. Mon of trade in the United States for Iamb Month, as cempared With 1Warch, 1894, a marked improvement is shown in many lineof bueinestp,though the general average ig belaiv thlt of ),§90. While the volume atent of trat Oile leoftien larger thee it yeear ago, lower priees havereeulted in 4 &allot Margin of profits oats lergervolturie of trade. The labor' eibuation ie more eatistactory, rie in menet recent initaneee Where trouble aeoneed linninent the: difference had beele Nettled Withette a Strike. teen and Wool mine are more ACtilfe,. end at increased de - Mend is felt for several kids •of roenufee- tured prodeets. Coke and ore are advanc- ing, copper ie firmer and tip end tin plates are strong. Seles of wool shoW more 094. fidence, bot a rise in prices is not probeble in sight oe heavy receipts of foreign wool. Altogether the busiuess outlook may be eonsidered much more hopeful. GENERAL. •A rupture between Norway and Sweden IS Said NO be imminent. Yellow fever has broken out amougat the Spanish troops tent to Cuba, The aeld of Waterloo is covered with a crop of crimeen poppies every year. Disquieting news has been received from Algiers iera regarding the health of the Czares wi Mrs. Mackay's daughter, the Princess Colmins, has been granted a separation from her husband by the Roman courts. With the olose of last month Sebastopol ceased to exist as &port for foreign shipping and will in future be used only as a naval eort and arsenal. The famouiJohannisberg vineyards have just reverted to the Emperor of .Austria, Prince Richard Metternich having died without leaving a BOIL The Czar and Czarina contemplate a long tour after the termination of their mourning period of six months. Among the capitals visited will be Berlin, Vienna, and Faris. The Matin and other Paris newspapers are insinuating that the collision on March :30, off Messina, between two British steamers, one of whioh was carrying French troops and munitions of war to the Island of Madagascar, was due to England's malice. In the French Senate M. lianotaux made a reply to Sir Edward Grey's statement regarding French encroachments in Africa. He aaid France would demand an explicit statement, of British claims in the Upper Nile, but made no reference to the expedi- tions now in that territory. The reply was dignified in tone, and not unfriendly. „ GRAINS OF GOLD. --- Every greab man is a unique. The Soi- pionism of Scipio is precisely that part which he could not borrow . —Emerson. , If happiness has not her seat and centre ire the beast, we may be wise, or rich, or great, but never can be ble-St,— Burns. The monuments of the melons are al protests against nothingness after death so are statues and inscriptions ; so is his tory.—Lew Wallace. It is no great part of a good man's lot to enjoy himself. To be good and to do good are his ends, and the glory ia to be revealed hereafter.—S. L. Prime-. Although men of eminent genius have been guilty of all other vices, none worthy of more than a secondary name has ever been a gamester.--Landor. Life ! I know not what thou art, but know that thou and I must part; and when or how, or where we met, I own to me's a secret yet —Mrs. Barbauld. The haunts of happiness are varied, but I have more often found her among little children, home fireeides and country houses than anywhere else.—Sydney Smith. We eau see through one pane of glass easily, but through ten placed together we can not see, yet each is transpezent. By living a day at a time we get along well.— Anon. ' There is no defence against reproach ex, cept obscurity; it is a kind of concomitant to greatness, as satires and invectives were an essential part of a Roman triumph.— Addison. The ordinary employment of artifice is the mark of a petty mind ; and it almost always happens that he who uses it to cover himself in one place uncovers- himself in • another. —Rochefoucauld. Japanese War Stories. The present war of the Japanese against the Chinese yields to the prolific and enter- prising newspapers of Tokio many inci- dents, thrilling and pathetic, such as war everywhere is likely to develop. The Miyako Shinbun relates that, when one of the last forts along the ridge of Port Arthur was taken by the Japanese troops, the victors found all at once that they were without a flag to hoist in sign of their triumphant possession of the place. A soldier helped them out of the diffi- culty. Tearing a white under -tunic from the body of a dead enemy, he dipped it into the blood of another fallen foe, and roughly painted on the cloth a huge red disk. . The flag of Japan is a red disk or airy. santhemum on a white ground. This tunic, therefore, served the purpose well enough. It was hoisted, and told. to friends and enemies alike that the Chinese fort had beceme a Japanese one. In the environs of Port Arth' ur another Japanese paper relates, a squad ofadvanc- ing Japanese soldiers heard a dog howling within a temple which appeared to be deserted. They went in and round a huge and wolfish.looking dog sitting by the dead body of it Chinese priest, who had evidently been murdered many days before by some of his own countrymen, who had afterward robbed the temple. The dog was starved almost to the point of death, but still kept watch faithfully over his master's body. Both body and dog were removed by the Japanese soldiers. The dog 'was fed and adopted by them, and given the name of Shin, or fidelity. • • At last accounts he was as faithfully following laje new masters on their campaign ot conquest. Mrs. Stowe's Mind; Is Gone. A despatch from Hereford, Conn., gays --Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe, author of "Uncle Tom's Cabin," who is appeoach- ing her eighty tseoond birthday, has been growing Weaker mentally every day, until now there is rarely a flicker of reason in her once bright mind. he it childish and happy arid sings over and over again hymns warbled in her ochoel days, seventy yeers ago. Mrs. Stowe's mind began tailing about; four Months ago, the ailittent incfeaeing gradually until now her Wily Iliad inter, teals ire very few. • Al witted.. The physician Was surprieed to find the head of the household at the door with a ihritgun. • Wey--Whates the Meteorl atammered the &toter. That there mediaine you give my wife, she sage is Makin' her feel like a new woman. 4rid 1 want yon to underetanii that none* woman hileiness goes in this bodge. First thing I know, she'll be out malein' speechee. Chilifiron Cry for Ptchers Castoria THE. DgATII MALTY. Capital Ismalsbinent is tete !Beet Saregotard to late Sacredness or Lore. Didentifii0n, of the wisdom of inilioting the deisth peealty for capital orime is revived by the introduction into aeme of the Statea of the American Union of bUl. for the abol- ition of death punishments. The arguments in favor of such option are familiar enetothe chief being fleet all punishments should be preventive or remedial, and that in infilieet ingretributive punishments the state rimply takes revenge on the criminals and seg not only demeans itself, but inoresees the rage of the Anarohist claim &pleat what they deem the injustice of society. As the ob., ject of the death penalty is to restrain cep- ital crime, the burden of proof rests tiptoe the advoce.tes of its abolition to show that any preventive punishment, say life impri- sonment, would accomplish the same pur- pose as effectually. Certainly, no one of the four states which have stricken the death penalty from their statutes, has ever presented evidence oonclusiVolY establish- ing the wiadom of the change. On the other hand, the experienoe of Michigan, which recently reatored the death penalty after long trial of life imprisonment, would seem proof conclusive in the negative. No doubt it life sentences were strictly carried out, they might prove both a sufficient deterrent and an adequate penalty in many oases, especially in those where the oriminel coarts the publicity and notoriety vehiteh Et public trial and execution give. It is true that with the rapid growth of recklessness within the last decade, there has developed an inoreaseng class of crimin- al* whieh the Nag of no feral ef Vunishment seems to deter from the gratification of hatred or revenge. But it would lee absurd to argue that capital punishment should be given up on this ground. For against the oriminal alike indifferent to the punishment of his own conscience and that of the law, society has no method of protection. The only security it has is the dread, of public infamy and its consequences and the con- demnation of conscience, and when these two deterrents fail, all se.feguarde disappear. Moreover, would the rage of the Anarchist class against society, which, it is urged, is only made more violent by capital punish- ments, be greatly diminished by a change to life imprisonment ? It might, of course, deter the small section wholly reckless of life, and which wants to be observed and important, but it would not lessen, their hatred of individuals and of society, or their sense of its injustice. Unquestionably, the infliction of the deaeh, penalty does excite the resentment of the bolder section of the criminal and Anarchist classes, but as unquestionably it does appall and deter the timid and the cowardly, an immensely greater class, far more than life imprison- ment would. To be logical, advocates of the abolition of the death penalty on the ground that it would diminish the hostility of audacious criminals to law, and so tend to reduce capital Crime, 'should go further and abolish all punishments. The fact is that what is needed is not a diminution of the hardahips of punishment for capital crime, but such an unyielding and inflexible infliction of it as shall express the intense displeasure and indignation of society for the crime, ana shall be justice and not revenge. Life imprisonment does not constitute such an expression, because it deprives the penalty of its retributive 'cliaracter,and as now carried otitis largely a coerce of hospital treatment for the moral infirm. It would be a demoralizing pro- speot for society if its adoption should become general. • Wherever there is a deliberate purpose to take life, there should be the most public and intense expression of the • impartial resentment of the community for the crime that can be formulated by the courts. And the importance of the death penalty is that it ts the severest punishment that can be inflicted, and so furnishes percisely this form of expression. Without it there can be no adequate se- curity for life, the leas in view of the immense increase of recklessness in the world, and the rapid disappearance of the restraining power of faith in divine judg- ments with the classes to which murders are mostly due. To take the retributive • • element out of punishment for caplet' crime, and to regard deliberate evildoers at, patienta of the state, to be treated witl, as little hardship as possible, will be it, the great majority of cases to remove the beat safeguard to the sacredness of life. :10• • for Infants and Children. 4"Casterlaissowelladaptedto ohildranthat t recommend it as superiorao any preseripteon Itmown to name H, A., Ananias, M. 111 So. Oxford St. Brook/re, lie T. "The use of 4 Caatoria is se universe! and its merits so eyelike:town that 11 seem° a work 05 supererogation te endorse it. Few ;teethe intelligent 54milies who do not keep Castoria tectay reach." - Ceaeos MaterveteD.D., New York Olty, Late Pastor Bloomingdale Reforraed Church. Osistorin ores Cone, Consti Stomach, Blatant:ea, Ertl tion, Worms, gives sleep, attd promote% di, gestiou, • Without injurious medication. " For severe 1, years I have recommended your Castor*, and elute. 0.1Vayd c5MASEM18 0 do so *sit hes inVafiablyPrOduCed bensOcial moults," glamor F. Peanuts. M. D., "The Winthrop," ieetti Street and 7th Ave., New York Dal Tan Cetera= Commune 77 3SITEMAX STREET, Nave YORE. ENININEROMMINNAaaffitinigalg .101111111110•1101KM•1011/111.11111.011111111•11•1 NERVOUS DESPONDENT DISEASED MEN T. E GLEttfeetN. T. E GLEASON G. 0 ROLLINS. G. O. ROLLINS. 11,11 1 Before Treatnaent, After Treatment. Before Treatment. After Treatment. Emissions, Varloocele, Seminal Weakness, Self -Abuse. Syphilis, Gieet, Stricture, Unnatural Dlsoharges, Loss of Vital Fluid ira Urine. Impotency. Sexual and Mental Weakness, Kidney and Bladder Diseases Positively CURED OR NO PAY. 16 Years lfi Detroit. • 200,000 Cured. Yelifig Or Middle Yon have led a gay life or indulged in the vices of early youth. Ton feel Aged Man. the symptoms Stealing over you. Set f abuse or later excesses have broken down your system. Mentally, physically and sexually you are not the man you used to be or should be. Lustful practices reap rich harvest. Think of the future. Will you heed the danger signals? Are you nervous audmeak; despondent and gloenty; specks before eyes; backweak and kidneys irritablei palpitation of heart; dreams and lessee at night; eedi- ' ment in urine; weakened manhood; pimples on face; eyes sunken and cheeks hollow;poor • memory; careworn expression. Varicocele; tired in mornin • lifeless; distrustful; lam e - ergy strength and ambition. bus New Method Treatment will positively cure you. It witi, make a man of you rmd life will open anew. We guarantee to cure you or refund ail money paid. ileirelo names used without written oonsent. $1,000 paid for any case we take and cannot cure.. SNATCHED FROM THE CRAVE—A Warning From the Living. e Emissions "At 15 I learned a bad habit. Had losses for seven years. Tried four doctors • Cured. and nerve tonics by the score, without benefit; I became a nervouvwreck. A friend who had been cured by Drs. Kennedy & Kergan of a similar disease, advised me .) 1 to try them. I did 80, and in two months was positively cured. This was eight years e ago. I am now married and have two healthy children." • • C. W. LEWIS, Saginaw, Mioh. Varicocele "Varicocele, the resale of early vice, made Rio miserable. I was weak and nen, ' -• Cured. vons, eyes sunken,bashful in society, hair thin, dreams and losses at night, no ' ,ambition. The "Golden Monitor" opened my eyes. The Now Method Treatment a Drs. , . Kennedy & Korean cared me in a few weeks.! e I. L. PETERSON, Ionia, Mich, n Syphilis "This terrible blood disease was in my system for eight years. Had taken mer- ' Cured. cury for two years, bat the disease returned. Eyes red, pimples and blotches on ' - the skin, ulcers in the mouth and on tongue, bone pains, falling out of hair. weeknese, etc. My brother, who had been cared of Gteet and Stricture by The. Kennedy do Horgan, recom- :` mended them. They cured me in a few weeks, and I thank God I committed them. No . return of the disease in six years." WP. M., Jackson, Mich. A Minister The Rev. W. E. Sparks, of Detroit, says: "I know of no disease so injurione to ,• • Speaks. thee -mind, body and soul of young men as that of Self Abuse. I have sent many victims of this lustful habit to Drs. Kennedy & Kergan for treatment. I ecu heartily en - e dorse their New Method Treatment which cured them when all else failed." et A Doctor "I know nothing in medical science so efficient for the cure of Syphilis and 1, ` Recommends Sexual Diseases as the New Ilfelhod Treatment of Drs. Kennedy &Horgan. Many •;- It. cases which had baffled scores of physicians were cured in a few weeks. I have seen this with my own eyes and know it to be a fact." T, E. ALLISON, M. D. ReadHave you been guilty? Hae your Blood been diseased? Are you weak? Do you er • . desire to be a man? Are you contemplating marriage? Our New Xethoct Treat- , mem will positively cure yon. Cures Guaranteed or No Pay. Conseltation Free. es I' No matter who has treated you, write for an honest opinion free of charge. Charges t 7 reasonable. Books Free.—"The Golden Monitor" (illustrated), on Diseases of Men, En- ,• close postage, two cents, Sealed. • agr No Names used without Written Consent. Private. No Medicine Sent C. 0. D. No Names on Boxes or Envelopes. Everything Confidential. Question List for Home Treatment and Cost of Treatment, Free. Drs. Kennedy & Kergan, 148 Shelby Street Detroit, Mich Telegraphie Mistakes. The telegraph has indulged in many wit. ticiems at the expense of the members of both 'houses of the British Parliament. It has trantformeo a classical allusion to "Cato and Brutus," into "Cats and Brutes" ; the celebrated phrase used by the late Mr. Wee E. Forster in a speech on his Irish policy. temauveis sujets and vil- lage ruffians" into "wandering savages and village ruffians" ; "tried in the balance and Sound wanting" Into "tried in the balance and found panting" ; "the cow was out into halves" "into the cow was cut into cal- ves," and "the militia is re great constitu- tional force" into "the nailer% is a great constutional farce." The British empire and lee dependencies aid colonies embrace 11;000,000 square mites, or about the size of all Africa. POWDERS Cure S/Cer HEADACHE and Netiftegea in zo MINUTES, also Coated Tongue, Dalt- ness,Biliousness, Pain in the Side, ConstipaliOn, Torpid Liver, Bad Breath. to stay cured AO regulate the bowels. VERY NIOE ro rAire. Pima 26 CENTS AT DRUG SY•SR e. NERVE BEANS NERVE BEA1t8 are a new dis- covery that cure the wont cases of Nervous Debility, Lost Vigor and Failing Manhood; restores the, weakness of body or mind caused by over -work, or the errors or ex- cesses Of youth. This Remedy ab- solutely cures the most obstinate cases when all other TREATMENTS have failed soon to relieve. old by drug, gists at gi per package, or six'for 55, or sent by mail on receipt of price by addressing TST7 ArES1FIEDICINE Cr). o• -•t. • • • Sold at Browning's Drug Store, Exeter joir:ssor tke iteumativn arld Muyular Paitn7801a_gcmaigek.? Why !lot Menthol Neer rny wiksot me one, ircurekd like mac, For a long time I suffered with Itheumatiamla the Back so severely that I could not even sit straight. My wile advised a D. & L. Menthol Plaster. I tried it and was soon going about aa right. S. 0. Hume, Sweet's Corners. Price 21a. FOR TWENTY-F1VE YEARS DUNNS AMC OWDER • THE COOK'S BEST FRIEND LARGEST SALE IN CANADA. The Best Spring Medicine Is 13.13.B., its powerful, cleansing, purifying, and regulating influence courses through the natural gates and alleys of the body arid re- moves Bad Blood and all impure morbid matter. BAB, tones the sluggish liver, restores lost appetite, gives regular action of the Bowels, and makes Rich, Red Blood Thus giving health and strength to resist the heat of summer' and ward off the attacks of disease. For childree its use is more thee valuable—it is neceseary in spring, and pleased parents testify that it gives life, health, strength and a Bright, Clear Skin to the little ones. In cases of Dyspepsia, Con. setticp.a, talfotne,rbyiliaerisiSonfeterei,t? ni lepl thtla tel. tatclIfisetlaienycS1 pc rooLikae, Irwiii is only necessary to say that Cures