HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1895-4-25, Page 7ea.
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•&s. May Johnson.
Ayer's Pills
"I would like to add mytesttmony to
that of others who have ed Ayer's
's
Pins, andtaken then
for t have
say
thaI
!or many years, oars, and always derived the
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For Stomach
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Taken in season they will break up a
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regulate the digestive organs, They are
easy to take, and
Are the best
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known."—Mrs.yy
368 Rider
MAY JOHNSON, a ,
.
New York City.
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AYER
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and *strorted for Eaey needing.
QANADA.
The American Government will establish
a Consular agency at Brantford.
A ehiptnoub of fresh fish from Britis•
Columbia to England has met with a ready
ale.
Mr Patriok MoAudrews of Hamilton is
dead from a dose of muriatic acid taken
in mistake.
Mr. George Betts -of Chatham blew his
brains out with a gun while temporarily
insane.
The Finance Committee of the City Coun-
ail of Kingston, Out,, has fixed the rate of
taxation for this year at 17i mills.
The Montreal Building Inspector is de-
molishing the new St. John's French Pres-
byterian Churoh,as it is regarded as unsafe.
The weather throughout Manitoba con-
tinues to be very favourable for seeding,
and the majority of the farmers now have
their crops in.
In the Dominion Government Savings
in
s
Bank, the balance on deposit on March 31
was $17,097,755, while a month ago it was
$17,112,739.
The International Radial Railway Co.
gives notice in the Canada Gazette of an
applibation to the Dominion Parliament for
a charter.
The steamer Numiiian, which arrived
at Halifax on Sunday from Liverpool,
brought 70 orphan boys, destined for
Western Canada.
The boot and shoe manufacturers of
Montreal have decided, owing to the ad-
vance in the of price of leather, to increase
the price of footwear.
The unemployed Canadian Pacific work-
men have selected Lacombe, Alberta, as a
• far
suitable locality for then proposed farmiug
colony.
y
During the past winter a very important
trade has been opened up between Southern
Manitoba and the Northern United States
in fat cattle.
The citizens of Chatham intend to cele-
brate its incorporation as a oily on Do-
minion day. They will invite the Governor-
General to be present.
Mr. Matthew Miller was overpo,vered by
gas in the King street sewer at London
and suffocated. Two other men working
with him had narrow escapes.
Twelve of the most dangerous convicts
in the Westerrninster, B. 0., Penitentiary
have been transferred to the Stony
Mountain Penitentiary in Manitoba.
Newspaper slot machines are being tried
in the Hamilton street cars. The machine
contains a bundle of papers, and as a cent
is dropped in a paper Domes out.
Mrs. H. A. Davies obtained a verdict at
Hamilton for $5,000 damages against Bra-
cey Bros., & Co., for the loss of her husband
who was killed while thawing out dynamite.
Three Canadians, in Fort Erie, Ont., are
hard at work digging up the ruins of the
fort searching for a chest of gold said to
have been buried by Major Buck during
the war of 1812,
Mr. Joseph Bourgue, contraotor,of Hull,
Que., has been served with notice of an
action, charging him with giving bribes to
officials of the Hull corporation for the
purpose of obtaining civic contracts.
Mrs. Mack, a lady from New York,
employed as clerk by Morrison, the alleged
stamp counterfeiter, at Hamilton, has
been taken into custody at the instance of
United States secret service officers.
The trade and navigation returns will
shots that during the last three mouths of
1894 the exports of Ontario and Quebec to
the United States amounted to $934,000
more than for the same period in 1893.
Mr. Denis Duvernay, of Mnntreal, assist-
ant clerk of the Private Bills Coinmittee of
the House of Commons, is dead. He was
fifty-eight years of age. He was the last
member of the famous Duvernay family.
The local papers in Kingston, Ont., are
calling attention to the fact that for some
months the city has been deluged with
books, pamphlets, and prints of a most
immoral nature, which are sold by the
newsboys.
George Keefer, consulting engineer of
the company which is reclaiming lands on
the Kootenay River, between Kootenay
Lake and the international boundary line,
has arrived at Nelson, B. C., and reports
that the Kootenay Indians have driven off
all of the company's men by force of arms.
A Halifax despatch says the warships
Pelican, Buzzard and Cleopatra are ex..
peoted from Bermuda next week. After
remaining a few days they go to Newfound-
land on fishery protection service. The
Tourmaline, now at St. John's will be
relieved by the Pelican.
The Board of Trade of British Columbia
has forwarded to the Dominion Government
a resolution asking that the sum of $425,-
Q00, the amount of damages claimed by the
British Columbia sealers from the United
States, be placed in the estimates, should
the Imperial Government nut advance that
amount.
Mr. Hayter Reed,Deputy Superintendent
of Indian Affairs, reports that tranquility
and prosperity have characterized the lot of
the Indians of Canada during the past year.
He is disappointed, however, to observe a
want of that energy and progress in the
Indians of the older provinces which are
such striking features of Indian life in the
West.
Mr. Justice Killam gave judgment at
Winnipeg in the matter of a byelaw passed
by the municipality of Louise prohibiting
the sale off intoptea ting liquors. The
Judge held that the by1aw•was illegal, an
order was made that it be quashed without
costa. This it in accordance with a resent
decision of the Supreme Court, and some
ten municipalities in Manitoba are affected.
GRRAT BRITAIN.
Great Britain has recognized the Re.
publio of Hawaii.
Sir Thomas Powell Buxton has been
appointed Governor of South Ausbrelia, to
succeed the Earl of Kintore,
Recently telephonic comnunicati
ou was
held between the coast of Scotland and the
Isle of Mufl without the use of wires.
It is announced that the marriage of
Lord William Beresford to the widowed
Duchess of Marlborough will take place
shortly.
The Princess of Wales him abandoned her
contemplated journey to Denmark, and
inetoad she has a family party at Sandring.
ham.
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Black Evening Waist..
A black mousseline de soie evening waist,
to be worn with a black satin or moire
skirt, is a full blouse, shirred with a head.
ng aorosa the front and back, with a group
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Journal.
The Britiah Museum has withdrawn
from public use in the library the works
in its collection of which Oscar Wilde is
the author.
A despatch from Glasgow says that
William Heuderson, the last survivor of the
founders of the Anchor line of steamships,
m dead.
Lord Rosebery is stilt, suffering from
intermittent attacks of insomnia, and hie
physicians continue to advise him to go
abroad.
A wealthy English woman has married
a colored m
an, who,
previous to this
union,
had made his living as a olog dancer in.
variety halls.
A great deal is being said in London in
favour of selling eggs by weight. Shop-
keepers donot look on the proposal with
any great favour.
What is known as the nursery tricycle is
becoming common in London. It has two
seats—one for the mistress and one for the
maid and the baby. There are two sets of
pedals.
There promises to be a good market for
Canadian horses in England. On Thursday
sixteen Canadian horses sold from one
hundred and twenty to two hundred dollars
each.
The London Speaker, which is reputed to
be an inspired Government organ, declares
that the French evacuation of Tunis must
precede or accompany the English evacua-
tion of Egypt.
Answer to the British ultimatum to
Nicaragua has been received at the Foreign
Office. It is understood that the reply is
so satisfactory that the action which the
Government threatened to take will not
now be taken.
Sir Henry James has introduced in the
House of Commons a bill imposing a penalty
for the utterance of any false statement
regarding the character or conduot of any
candidate for election to Parliament.
The Welsh national eisteddfod has been
fixed for the firet week in July at Llan-
dudno. The chief choral prize will be
$1,000, the second $350, and $250 is offered
for the best cantata. A choir of 300
voices is being organized for the event.
The Canadian Gazette says that Lord
Rosebery intends to signalize his return to
Parliament after his illness by the intro-
duction of a bill to enable colonial judges
to sit with the Judicial Committee of the
Privy Council.
'UNITED STATE.
• James W. Scott of The Chicago Times -
Herald, died of apoplexy at the Holland
House, New York.
President Cleveland has filled his income
tax paper for fifty thousand dollahs, the
full amount of his salary.
The New York Senate passed the hill
extending the time for the completion
of the New York Canadian Pacific Rail-
way.
The Rev. Father Paradis, the Canadian
missionary, and head of the repatriation
scheme, is seriously ill at Lak Linden,
Mich.
Seventy years ago Manuel Garcia sang in
opera in New York. London paper note
the fact that he is still teaching music
there.
The Delaware Canal at Easton, Pa., has
been badly damaged by high water and
will probably' be olosed to traffic for two
months.
John Huffman, arrested at Buffalo on
charges of theft preferred from St. (lather
ines, will return to Canada without formal
extradition proceedings.
The Protestant Episcopal Diocese of
Maryland will inherit between $200,000
and $300,000 from the late Mr. Eversfield
Frazier if hie will is sustained by the court.
Mr. Charles Baxter has arrived in San
Francisco from Samoa on his way to Eng-
land, having with him for publication the
manuscripts of Robert Louis Stevenson,s
last works.
In the case of Daniel Werling, of Pitts.
burg, Pa., who murdered his wife last
April, a pardon is to be asked, on the
ground that the• man was rendered insane
by the Keeley treatment.
James Duffy,an ex -steward on the White
Star Line, jumped from the Brooklyn
bridge. He turned over several times as
ho went down, and struck the water on his
side. He never rose.
New York furriers claim that the smug.
ling of valuable furs by the agents of a
( uebeo furrier across the Canadian border
has Dost the United States Government
$50,000 a year for the last three years.
Prof. Jaen E. Keeler, of the Alleghany
observatory, announces that the ring of
a bodies, and b
Saturn is made up of small bodies, nd that
the satellites of the inner edge of the ring
move more rapidly than those of the outer
edge.
Capt. Mahan, of the U.S, service, whose
Chicago, n out of commis.
ship, the Cag , is going g
sion, has been offered spooial duties in
connection with the Naval War College in
Washington which he will accept,
The jury in the suit of Chaa. W. Mo -
Keever to recover damages for the less of
his daughter's life from the Atlantic Avenue
Railway Com�,pany brought in a verdict in
Brooklyn, N. !., on Saturday for four
'thousand dollars,
Germany has led to a rapid rise of the
Rivers Elbe and Oder end their tributary
streams, reeultiag In the inundation of
large districts,
The Spanish Government has purchased
the oruieer built at Kiel for China but not
delivered because the Chinese Government
failed to pay for it. The cruiser will be
seat to Cuba.
Cholera has broken out in the lazaretto
on the Island of Kamaran, off the west
coast of Arabia, in a bay of the Bed Sea.
Thirty persona have been attacked, and
there are aeveral deaths daily.
Professor Behring, of Halle, who discov-
ered the antitoxine remedy, about which so
much has been written, has resigned his
professorship. Various scientific attaoka
were made on his remedy, and Behring
replied with much heat, finally leaving the
university.
The French Academy has just assumed
rather a novel function. It has accepted a
legacy that provides two annual prizes of
$100 each to be awarded to such meritorious
domestic servants as may show the most
satisfactory proofs of devotion and fidelity
to their employers.
Perry, the noted train robber, with five
other inmates of the Mattewan State
Asylum, escaped from that institution at a
late hour last night. They assaulted a
keeper, and escaped through the scuttle.
The names of the men are McGuire,
O'Donnell, Quigley and Davis. All ware
dressed alike.
Chief Justice Fuller, in the United
States Supreme Court, read the final de-
cision in the income tax case. It was held
that the tax on rents or landed investments
or on the income from State, county, or
municipal bounds was unconstitutional.
.Justice Field read the opinioninion of the min-
ority,
declaring that the whole law of
1894 is null and void.
Rev. I J. Lansing accused President
Cleveland of immoderate drinking in an
address at the New England Conference at
Salem, Mass.,recently. Mr. Cleveland took
the matter up and pitched into the clergy.
man as a scandalmonger, and several of the
President's political opponents repudiate
the rev. gentleman's statements. Mr.
Lansing bas withdrawn his offensive
charges with apologies and regrets.
San Francisco is shocked at the second
murder of a young woman in the Emmanuel
Baptist Church. On Friday the mutilated
remains of Minnie Williams were found in
the minister's room, and yesterday morning
the body of Blanche Lamont was found in a
small room in the steeple. The two girls had
been friends. Dr. George Gibson, pastor of
the church, was taken into custody, and a
young medical student, Theodore Durant,
who was last seen with Miss Lamont near
the church, is suspected, but the police are
unable to find him.
Our commercial advices from the United
States report a slaw but advancing better
movement in general trade. There is more
speculation and an increasing demand for
goods, while greater activity prevails in
the money markets. In some establishments
wages are increasing, but in other direc-
tions strikes are reported as having a retro.
grade effect,. Retail trade has improved
this month. Prices of many commodities
evince a tendency to advance, and advices
to the same effect are received from Britain.
The chief activity is in cotton, meats and
petroleum, crude oil having advanced to
the highest price in seventeen years. Shoe
manufacturers are putting up prices, and
orders are more liberal. The sales of wool
are large, but prices show no improvement,
and this causes vigorous competition with
foreign goods; the cheap grades are in the
largest demand.
AN ORIENTAL FUNERAL.
The Processiost tasted an flour, and 800
Widows Were Absent.
Funeral pageants and the stately etiquette
of European court mourning are entire -
!y foreign to the spirit of Islam, but Cairo
has long been accustomed to compromises
which. are lamented only by .the strictest
Mohammedans now remaining. No funeral
however, has hitherto been surrounded
with so much pomp and circumstance
At an early hour the funeral procession,
which must have numbered some 10,000
people, began to muster near the railway
station, where Ismail's remains had been
lying in etate since their arrival iroin Alex•
andria,and the Egyptian and British troops
lined the streets past Shepheard's and the
Opera up the Boulevard Mehemet Ali to:
the Rifai mosque under the citadel. Along
the whole route, a distance of nearly three
miles, the pavement, windows,
balconies
and house tops were thronged with speots.
tore, blending the bright colors of the East
with the more somber raiment of the West.
But,exoept for a few flags draped with crepe
and the shrill lamentations here and there
of native women, it was difficult to realize
that this chattering, laughing, indifferent
crowd was gathered- together to witness
A PAGEANT OF DEATH.
The procession itself, which defiled for
almost an hour in one unbroken column,
presented the same strange contrasts,' the
same curious jumble of Eastern and West-
ern life. Its very composition reflected
all the anomalies of modern Egypt. Be-
hind detachments of mounted police and
Egyptian cavalry came the Sirdar and staff
of the Egyptian army, unmistakably Eng-
lish in spite of their Egyptian uniforms.
Immediately behind them walked readers
of the Koran, reciting the sacred verses in
a high nasal chant, deputations from the
native guilds and corporations bearing flags
and banners embroidered with sacred de-
vices, descendants of the Prophet in green
turbans and flowing robes, mollaha and
ens dervishes in tall
ulama in long kaft r
felt oaps, students from El-azhar—in faot,
slam in
d uncompromising I
the militant an
all its old world picturesqueness. Then,in
sharp contrast to the mediaeval scholasti-
cism of the great DI ohommeden University,
came hundreds of black -coated boys and
youths from the modern schools and col.
leges, with their European masters. Be.
bind them, again, in curious alternabion,
native and European notables, Judges
from the native and mixed tribunals, gold.
laced pashas and beys, English Govern-
ment officials in plain Stambouline, the Eu-
ropean commissioners of the national debt,
appropriately couspiouous on such an oc-
casion as the representatives of the body
which can more dire:stly than any other
Egyptian institution trace its existence
to the ex -Khedive, the long -robed clergy
of the different Christian denominations
and rabbis of the Jewish community.
icor Twenty ars_
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GENERAL. RED COATED OFFICERS
The Russian Government is enforcing i of the British army of occupation, headed
the edict of 1893 against the Jews. I by Gen. Sir. F. Forestier Walker, the
diplomatic corps in full uniform, with Lord.
The unemployed of Melbourne recently Cramer as its doyen, the Ministers and
held a mass meeting, and called upon the 1 English advisers for Finance, Justide and
Government to provide them with work.
affiicted with a cholera epidemic this !the interior, and, with Ghazi Mukhtar, the
There is great fear that Japan will be r ImpiOttemCommissioner, hie
aide, ert heal Khedive,an followed by all theat male
year. l members of hie family. Behind the chief
The volcano Ruapepa, near Auckland, , mourners and the household of the dances.
New Zealand, has recently exhibited great ' ed Khedive a double row of youths aprink-
, led perfumes and burned incense in front of
activity, 'the coffin. Covered with an embroidered
The Czar of Russia has decided that his' pall, on which were displayed the uniform
coronation shall take place in Moscow next and decorations of the deceased, the mortal
Auguste i remains of Ismail were borne on the slioul-
The appeal of Mme. Joniaux, the Bel- • dere of twenty men from the Khedivil body
glen poisoner, for a new trial, has been guard, bard pressed by a weird crowd of
rejected. 1 hired female mourners, who rent the air
1 with their shrieks of woe. Another body
There are disquieting rumors in Chris- i of troops, with arms reversed, closed the
tiania of impending war between Norway strange pageant.
and Sweden. I The ladies of the ex -Khedive's harem,
It is reported that all is confusion in the who, to the number of some 800, have been
city of Pekin, and the trouble threatens to , holding funeral wakes for the last took at
culminate in a panto. , the Kau-el.Nil Palace, had expressed their
THungarian village of To Litz a well• intention of following barefooted the re -
he
g P mains of their former lord and master, but
known health resort, has been almost orders from the palace ultimately forbade
totally destroyed by fire. I such a public manifestation of their grief.
A despatch from Simla says it is believed ; Near the opera house the Khedive, to
that Unita Khan is negotiating with the whom walking is a serious physioal effort,
British force for terms of surrender, ' quitted the cortege to return straight to
Floods have done great damage in ' Abdeen—an example which many others
Southern Hungary, followed—while the bulk of the procession
Elizabeth Viererbo has died at wind• 1 wended its way slowly on, first to the
barge, Germany, aged 93 years. She had mosque of the Sultan Hasson, where the
been housemaid in one family for 79 usual prayers were recited, and then to the
Rifai mosque, au ambitious but unfinished
years, ' pile, the construction of which was begun
M. Zeidenhurst, a Dutch pianist, is onus- by the deceased Khedive on his wonted
lug a sensation in Paris, where he is being scale of reckless magnificence, and was in -
compared to Rubinstein, He will shortly tempted by the financial disasters of his
appear in America, reign. There, beside the tombs of his
Col. Beattye and three men of the Chitral mother and two of his daughters, he was
expedition were killed and two officers and finally laid to restin the mausoleum which
seventeen men wounded in an attack on he. had designed for himself, but which
some hill villagee. will probably never be eomp'eted; for the
The St. Petersburg police have discover- founder ons are already abating signs of
ed a plot to assassinate Governor-General subsidence—a monument perhaps not alto.
von lchouvalnfl, who was lately Russian gether inappropriate to the prince whose
Ambassador to Germany, life, after a brief period of artificial splen-
Li•Hung.Chang, while regretting the dor, ebbed drearily away amid the ruibe.
t rli
tions.
defeat of China, thinks that the cause of of his shattered ambitions.
civilization will he advanced by it in the
East, and is therefore nob altogether regret- Equal to the Emergency.
table.
Charles Sh
ervingtoa, an English soldierier
of fortune, has resigned the commander-in-
chiefship of the Malagasy forces, and will
An old admiral, well known for his power
of exaggeration, was describing a voyage at
supper one night,
While la eruising in the
Pacific, he said, we passed au island which
was positively red with lobster., But,said
leave 'Madagascar at once for England. one of the guests, smilfuq incredulously,
A. new diamond bearing-distriothas been lobsters are not red until. boiled. Of course
discovered on the west coast of Tasmania, not, replied the uudauoted admiral; but this
The geological features of the ground re- was a volcanic island with boiling springs,
amble those of the Kimberley fields in
South Africa.
The sudden advent of tern weabher
rear nothing so ranch as sin anti your
moral heroism is eomplcto.-0, Simmons.
' Udreil Cry for Pitcher's Postoria
"1 TELL ALL MY FRIENDS:"
1!
Lady of Shelburne, Ont., Permanently
Cured of Indigestion After Using Two
Bottles of South American Nervine
—Glad to Let Everyone Know It,
.fi
tl
�3 lP
YF; f'
(J1
"ttZ.,tt:
'Jr !wir4 11,44.4
•
` 1 tp
MRS. A. V. GALBRAITH.
With indigestion it is not only that
one suffers all imaginable torments,
physical and mental, but morel per-
haps, than anything else, an impaired
digestion is the forerunner of count-
less ailments that in their course lead
to the most serious consequences. Let
the stomach get out of order and it
may be said the whole system is dis-
eased. When the digestive organs
fail in their in`ciortant functional
duties, head and heart, mind and body
are sick. These were the feelings of
Mrs. Galbraith, wife of Mr. A. V.
Galbraith, the well-known jeweller of
Shelburne, Ont., before she had learn-
ed of the beneficent results to be gain-
ed by the use of South American
Nervine Tonic. In so many words
she said : " Life was becoming un-
bearable. I was so cranky I was
really ashamed of myself. Nothing
that I ate would agree with me; now
it does not matter what I eat. I take
enjoyment out of all my meals." Isere
are Mrs. Galbraith's words of testi-
mony to South American Nervine,
given over her own signature :
" Shelburne, Ont., March 27, 1894,
" I was for considerable time a suf-
ferer from indigestion, experiencing
common to this complaint. South
American Nervine was recommended
to me as a safe and effective remedy
for all such cases. I used only two
bottles, and ani pleased to testify that
these fully cured me, and I have had
no indication of a return of the trouble
since. I never fail to recommend the
Nervine to all my friends troubled
with indigestion or nervousness.
" MRS. A. V. GALBRAITH."
The testimony of this lady, given
freely and voluntarily out of a full
heart because of the benefits she ex-
perienced in her own person, have an
echo in thousands of hearts all over
the country. South American Nerv-
ine must cure, because it operates at
once on the nerve centres. These
nerve centres are the source from
which emanates the life fluid that
keeps all organs of the body in proper
repair. Keep these nerve centres
soul,d and disease is unknown. There
is nn trick in the business. Every-
thing
'verything is very simple and common
sense like. "South A merican Nervine
strengthens the digestive organs,tones
up the liver, enriches the blood,
is peculiarly eff.caci u s in building up '
shattered and nervous constittitions.
all. the misery and annoyance so 1 It never fails to give relief in one day.
C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Rata., Agent tt r Exec.u.
`111:tos. Wunteer, Crediton Drug Store, ....gent.
c As ntatiy good things are lit Cly
to. •hut you sire Safe in running
the risk if you keep a bottle of
Davis' •
rrr
P4U.KaLLER
at hand. It's 'a never -failing
antidote for pains df all sorts.
Sold by all Druggists,
mem tin a halt glass of water or milk : m If sonvcillent,l,