HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1895-9-26, Page 6ate*,
„.nr, -Merritt,
Results .Ast
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!VI EN OF CkgNICE.
AVE
SarSa..
S
A MEDICINE
WITHOUT AN EQUAL.
seeesearem.
Statement a a Well Known Doctor
"Ayer' e Sarsaparilla is without an equal
as a, blood.puriiier and Spring medieine, and
cannot have praise enough. I have watched
its effects in chronic eases, where other
teeatment was of no avail, and have been
astonished at the results. No other blood
medicine that I have ever used,. and I have
tried them all, is so thorough in Its eaten,
and effects so many permanent cures as
Ayerae Sarsaparilla."—Dr. H. F, MEnnume
'Autimsta, Me.
Peozendete • o •"1
Ayer Saisapanda
Admitted at the World's Fair.
eitrer's Pella for liver and ,bowees.
OtS
CoN STI PATE 0 N,
6\ BILIOUSNESS,
,•• DVS PEPS IA,""a
SICK H EA DAC H
REG LI LATE THE LIVER,
ONE PILL AFTER EATING
INSURES GOOD DIGESTION.
PRI GE 25 CTS.TIEDODO To RoNTo.
M ED. CO. LTD
THEEXETER 'HUES.
isermlisced G veryThur:Icla mornui.,
TI MES STEAM PRINTING NOUSE
Main -street ,ues.rly opposite Fitton% Jewelery
aloi.e,Exater,Out.,hf:Johu White J Sons,Pro-
priators. •
nas.Ene oF di,tiVEATISING
elXstinsertion, perdue 10 cents
loch subseq ace ti nsertion ,per 'me eceuts,
To insure insertion, advertisemenc s should
et gentile ;rottener than Wednesday morning
oureOn FetreeTteIG DEP 1/4n1'arENT is one
tithe largest aud best ee roppea in sae coanty
celermon.all work entrustea to us willeasd.f
TO Or promptatteutioui
e es i ono Re gar (ling News-
papers.
Ayperson who tikes pupertegularlyeen a
thepostkiffice, whether directed in his name o:
another's, or waecher he has sa °scribe1 or n),7,
iEresponsible for nayment
If a person (idlers hie paper dieleontinued
benrinie pity ad arrears or the publisher may
Marine to send it until the aaymene is inalle,
ad then collect the whole amount, whether
e paper is takenfroiu the office or not.
s Insults for eubscriptions, the suit may be
nstituted in the place NY here too papee is pao
ished, although the subscriber may reside
hundreds of miles away.
I The courts have decided that refusing
aknowspapers oroerbii from raa
Me, pi-
ar removing mai tee, ems toe 1 L.,
teeritnaraote eviL.ij f iatara aa f: t
rig/0e/
,„..,!,,
,
r bring coughs and cola-
/ while
7'7NY .PECTORAL
',rings quick relief. Cures
ilarnmation of the bronc';
tul,es, throat or chest No T..
certainty. RolieveB, sootir
ITEM!, promptly.
A Largo Bottle for 25 Conte.
DAVIS & LIVIEVJE GI: LT,
TROVRIETORS.
MONTREAl.
THE PERFECT TEA
-HE
(NEST TEA
TK E WORLD
FROM THE TEA PLANT 1-0 THE TEA CUP
IN ITS NATIVE PURITY.
"Mnnsone"Tea is packed tinder the oupteolotOn
1.Lf the Tea growers, nod is advertieedandsold by them
a sample of the best qualitiesc.f radian anti Ceylon
retie. For that rem° they sac that none but the
:try fresh leaves go into Monsoen packages.
That iq why "Monsoon,' the perfect Tea, can be
eold at the samo price as inferior tea.,
li Is put up M sealed caddies of 14 lb., r lb. and
e lbs., and mid in three flavours at 400., soc, and Loc.
If voer grocer etice not keep It, tell him to write
40 oanse„ HAymER & CO,, u and la Front Ste
Agee Toronto
TEE tEWS in NUTSHEI)
TAB VERT LATEST FROM ALL GM
THE WORLD.
laterestintritents About our Own Country,
Oreee Cee Ca/10d tetate, and
Ail Pares or the Globe, condensed and
Assorted ter ittssy needn't*
OANAPAk
The new' eleotrio etreet railway at Lou.
on has been formally opened for traffic.
Capt. Smith was sentenced to one day in
jail at Hamilton for robbing a oorn field.
The wallpaper faotory of Watemi,Foster
& Co., 1\1ontrea1, was damaged to the
extent of 310,000 by tire.
A Loudon cider maker is oharged with
violating the liquor laws by having too
much alcohol in his eider.
Sir John Schultz will, it is reported,
be appointed a member of the Alaeke,
Boundary Comrnisaiou,
John Craig, formerly a prominent con-
tractor of Hanniton, tried to hang himself
in the police cells 01 that city.
Hamilton detectives have discovered a
plant operated by boys where lead pipe,
etc., supposed to be stolen, was melted
down for sale.
Five sailors of the men-of-war in Quebec
harbor were captured while attempting to
desert. They were placed on board the
Crescent, in irons.
By a vote of six to one the town of
Woodatock, N. B., has decided to reduce
the Town Council from ten to six, and
abolished elections by wards,
Mr. Thomas Young, aged 48, was killed
on Sunday morning by a Grand Trunk Draiu
a short distance south of the Desjardins
canal, near Hamilton.
The Quebec Government has taken action
to recover from the city of Monereal ehe
sum of $500,000 received in Recorder's
Court fees since Confederation.
A large party of Chiuese travellers,
including about 50 women, passed through
Ottawa. Most of them will attend the
cotton exposition iri Georgia.
The Hamilton Council has adopted its
Finance Committee's report recommending
no action on the applicatien of the T., H.
& B. for an additional bonus.
Mr. John Lowe, Deputy Minister of
Agriculture, has been superannuated and
Mr. H. H. Smith, Land Commissioner of
Winnipeg, succeeds to the position.
Prof. Saunders, of the Experimented
farm, has returned to Ottawa from his trip
to the West. He says the crop of Manitoba
is, if anything, under.estimated.
The Robin Hood smokeless powder mill
at Winnipeg was fired by an explosion and
John Morris was burned to death, Another
employee was seriously injured.
The weekly crop report issued by the
Northern Pacific railway states that thresh-
ing is nearly completed. In the Portage
Pains district harvesting was retarded by
heavy rains last week.
Frank Hilts,a lad about seventeen years
of teee,residing at 164Monro street, Toronto,
accidentally shot himself on Tuesday
afternoon whilse repairing a pistol, sup.
posed to be empty. He is not expected to
recover.
While testing the upper gates of the
new looks of the Sault Ste. Marie canal
by filling the pit with water, an upheaval
of the masonry of the mitre sill took place,
cauaing damage that will involve much
expense and delay.
Mr. Norman P.Macdonald who defended
the murderers Welter end Hendershott,
was found dead in his bed at St. Thomas
on Monday night. Death is attributed to
heart failure. The deceased was thirty-
four years of age.
Regarding the prospects of Canadian
trade in Australia, Commissioner Larke
writes to the Department of Trade and
Commerce that the saw mill machinery of
the colony is out of date'and must soon
be replaced. He also thinks there is a good
market for Canadian boots and shoes.,
GREAT BRITAIN.
The ex -Empress Frederick will visit the
Queen this month.
Sir Arthur Sullivan realized $50,000 by
his song, "The Lost Chord,”
Professor Huxley's widow has received a
civil list pension of $1,000.
One half the week Sir Isaac Holden is a
vegetarian. The other half he is carnivor-
ous.
When in the best of health Lord Rose-
bery seloom sleeps more than five hours
out of the twenty-four.
An order of the court has been issued
appointing a receiver for George A. Sala,
the well-known newapaper writer and
author.
There are two cases in the British
peerage of twin sena inheriting the heir-
ship. In such oases the younger twin is
heir presumptive to the title.
It Is reported that a British -German
steamsliiii syndicate is forming, end that
rates for all classes of transatlantic business
will be increased.
Ex.Prinie Minister Rosebery returned to
London on Thursday. Ile stays thee there
is not the slighest truth in the report that
he intends to visit America.
Among the articles which Nasrulla Khan
is taking home with him to Afghanistan
are eleven bicycles, a Punoh and Judy
show, and a number of nursing bottles.
The new English battleship Majestic
started on her trial trip on Tuesday morn.
ing, but ran aground on the sands at
Spithead. She was floated off at high
tide,
A portion of the pier at Morecambe an
English watering place, collapsed on iues-
day, throwing a ,arge crowd of people into
the water. Two were drowned, and a
number injured.
In private life Mr. Asquith is said to be
impartially disagreeable to everyone he
meets, while Mr. Chamberlain's manners
are charming, and he is the most pleasant
of haste.
.All hope of Church unity between the
Catholics and Episcopalians in England is
dashed by a recent speech of Cardinal
Vaughan, in which he stated them an es-
sential to unity was the admission of the
supremacy of the Pope.
The return of Lord Sallabury to power is
giving new life to the United Empire Trade
League. The league is issuing a manifeeto,
stating that the campaign is to he started
in favor of inter4roperialpreferentiat trade
as endorsed by the Ottawa Interoolonial
Conference,
An attempt is being made in England to
check Canadian competition in the chew
trade, The North British Agriculturist
elegem that a oonsiderable proportion of
I the ao-ealled full milk Owego from Cenad
l le really made from eeparatea milk fattened
iwith oleomargarine.
Dr. Baetleoker, the English prison pitil
, anthrepiet, le abOut to etart, at 73, on hi
third iniasion to the Siberiau iniuee Med
/convict settlements, lie has authority from
the Inspeetor.General of RUSSiaa Prisons
and will visit besides the Centralpeniten
Wive at Tomsk, firasuojarsk, Yakatels,
and Viljulak.
011 is no longer to be poured on troubled
water. It is to be fired like it shell from it
gun. As it wave epproaohes a shell filled
with oil bi to be prempitated in its direction.
The shell will be perforated witb small
holes, rio that the oil will run out slowly
and continue its work for a greater leng•th
of time than would otherwise be the
0a40.
a exieteAn improvement le reported in the
iron and hardware traolee.
osNeeltare,
•The Sultan of Moroceo le seriously ill.
The Proving° of Podolia', Rueeie• bas
, been officially declared infected by °haler&
' Russia and France are both reported to
I have accepted the Porte'e proposal's re.
peoting reform% in Armenia,
Foreign Commie in China report an in-
crease in the use of injeatione of morphine
as 4 ours of this opium. habit.
Dr, Buggramie'professor of medicine in
the University of Ghent, is 90, but feels
pretty well. Efe drinks and smokes.
Mr, Cecil Rhodes, the Premier of the
Cape Colony, although auffering with
influenza, is able to attend to his official
duties,
lVfore mountain -climbers have been
seriously or fatally injured in the Alps thie
fieasteu than ever before in an equal length
of time,
The Paris Eoleire puhliahes despatehes
from Madageeoar whittle assert that three
thousand French soldiers have died there
einoe the French expedition began opera.
tions against the liovas.
According to military experts, the army
manoeuvree in the vicinity of Stettin last
week were a great success, and demonstrat-
ed amply the excellent discipline of tlae
men and the Emperor's ability in moving
troops.
General Armstrong, when talkiugaboub
the business proeteconneoted with mission-
ary work, said ; "The first sign of grace
in a penitent savage ie a request for a
shirb."
UNITED STATE%
Mr, Henry M, Stanley has arrived at
Nev York.
There is talk of the restoration on the
Missouri Pacific of the wages of two years
ago,
•
They say tkie crop of peach brandy in
South-West Missouri will beat the record
this year.
It ia now claimed that the Conneetiout
pool law is thoroughly enforoed, and that
there is nob it pool.room doing btisiness in
the State.
Calvin Wileox, of Jewett City, COM), is
said to be the largest land -owner in Eastern
0onnectiont. His holdings aggregate 2,500
acmes.
Police Commissioner Jae, E. Curtiss, of
Buffalo, visited Toronto last week, and
brought back with him one million dollars
to be invested in loans.
Lord Sholto Douglas, who recently
married Loretta Mooney, concert hall
singer, has decided to locate in Los
Angeles, Cal., where he will engage in
business.
Col. John Warren'well known on both
sides of the Atlantio because of his promi.
nence in Irish politics and as it leader of
the Fenian movement, died in Boston on
Saturday.
Instead of 5,000,000 boxes of oranges,
whioh is Florid.e.'s usual crop, only 100,000
boatels will be shipped. These will come
chiefly from the Manatee region on the
Gulf of Mexico.
New Jersey has more miles of improved
roads than any other State in the Unton.
She is also noted for the strict justice with
which her laws are administered.
Senor de Lome the Spanish Minister at
Washington, delivered on Saturday to the
Acting United States Secretary of State
a draft for the equivalent of $1,449,000 in
settlement of the Mora claim.
It is estimated that the Carnegie Com-
pany has contracts on hand at present
aggregating ahnost 1,000,000 tons of struc-
tural material. No orders for delivery in
leas than three months can be accepted.
Dr. McClintock, of the University of
Michigan, has been making experiments
with hen's eggs, and finds the.t many of
them are infested with deadly bacteria.
The St. Alban's (Vt.) oreamery handles
the milk product of 20,000 cows, and the
daily output of butter during the summer
roonths runs from 12,000 to 20,000 pounds.
Several of the larger /elassaclausetts
cities have increased, according to the
recently published returns of the State
census, much more rapidly since 1890 than
either Minneapolis or St. 'Paul.
•
A Chinese lanadrymanwas in Brunswick,
Me„ looking for a stand. He received little
encouragement, and, as he would find it
rather lonesome, concluded not to settle.
Brunswick, so far, has not had a Chinete
resident.
Electricians say the safest place of refuge
during a thunderstorm is a trolley oar, and
them no instance is known of one having
been struck by lightning. The wires and
car pole are a far better protection than
any lightning rod.
Two Chinamen of Belfast, Me., have
paid the poll taxes assessed against them
as Chinaman No. 1 and Chinaman No. 2.
They refused to give their names to the
assessors, and the taxes were assessed as
above.
A man who owed his landlord in Calais,
Me., for eight weeks' board, is trying to
regain possession, by means of s writ of
replevin, of his two sets of false teeth,
which were seized by the landlord es a
security for the debt.
In California it has been found that
peach stones burn as well as the best coal,
and give out more heat in proportion to
weight. The stones taken out of the fruit
that is tinned or dried are collected and
sold at the rate of $3 per ton.
The city of Rochester, N. Y., is consid-
ering a proposition to purchase for the sum
of 833,000 seventy-five Myers ballot mach.
bees for use in loral elections. The company
gnarantees the machines, with all the
new improvements, for ten years.
The late Dr. Edward Beecher on one
occasion was dining with friends, and
inadvertently took a mouthful of exceed.
ingly hot coffee. Immediately he deposit-
ed it upon his plate, and, turning round,
remarked "A fool would have swallowed
it."
A ten foot "wind wheel" in Nebraska
raises 1,000 gallons of water daily to a
height of seventy-five feet. These wind.
wheels are coming more and more into use
in the West, and it is thougnt that they
will have a very important bearing on the
industries of the future.
It is well known that it steamer's smoke
dan be seen on a clear they a long distance
at sea, but bow far has always been a
matter of conjeeture. Recent observations
on the Pacific coast demonstrated that
smoke from forest firea in Puget Sound was
carried to San Francisco, more than it
thousand miles distant.
A New York mineralogist, William
Niven had rare luck recently in finding
sever:I thousand crystals of xenotime and
monazite, worth at least $1 apiece, in the
excavations for the Harlem speedway.
Hundreds of thousands more went into the
Harlem river with the blasting out of the
rook. Xenotime is it phosphate, and one
of the chief elements in monazite is thor-
ium. Both of the minerals are rare, and
iutereeting to the student.
Aocording to the commercial eummary
for the week the trade situation in the
United States does not show much tatertio
tion, as depression in one direobion is offset
by encouraging accounte from another
quarter. In the South and the South.West
there has been a pronounced improvement,
while in the central West a alackneee ba dry
goods and other seasonable lines si rather
permature, while low prices are reported as
generally prevailing. In the Sonth the
autumn trade is eaid to be opening up very1
and Atlanta bueinesa is generaimprov.
favorably, and in Jacksonville, AugusirA,
ing and it feeling of 1110141046a confidetice
A plot against the life of Prince Per'
dinand of Bulgaria has been disoovered ab
Rustchnole, and twenty pereons have been
arrested upon the charge of complioity in
the conspiracy.
It is said that the Japanese have no
swear words in their language. Their
severest epithet ia the word "fellow," and
the term of strongest condemnation is
found in the words "There, there!"
An avalanche from the Altels glaoier has
fallen upun the village of Spitalmatte.
About two aquere miles of land have been
covered, and it is feared that six persons
and three hundred head of cattle have
perished.
Twenty-one guns have been brought
from Cherbourg and placed in the naval
arsenal ab Itavre. They are intended, in
case of war, for the Transatlantic Com-
pany'a steamers Bourgonge, Champagne,
and. Normandie, which would serve as
auxiliary cruisers.
In the principal streets of Cantoa may
be noticed many shops where foreign
provisions are sold entirely tor Chinese
consumption. Foreign wines, especially
champagne, are seen on the shelves,
logether with "sweets," biscuits, salad
oil, and preserved milk.
The German Minister of Finance has
decided to immediately convert the out.
standing four per cent. loans into three per
cent. It is represented that the Govern-
ment would not be likely to undertake
such an operation unless diplomats were
looking forvvard to it period of unbroken
peace.
' TREE -CLIMBING RABBITS.
rarrots That Eat sheen, Sheep That Love
Snails 'and Insectivoroxis Birds That
Feed On Crain.
It seems almost a stretch of the imagines
ion to think of rabbits olimbing trees.
Yet in Australia many rabbits have some.
how acquired the tree -climbing habit,
having been forced, on account of the
persecutions of dogs and other animals, to
drop burrowing and imitate squirrels. An
Australian sent on to England recently
the two front feet of a rabbit that had been
killed on an acacia, three yards from the
ground, and he wrote in his letter tha
this was not at all a remarkable thing, and
he had often found them, or at least the
traces of their claws, on elm bark of trees
four, five and six yards high.
For a parrot to eat sheep is another
remarkable thing, and yet the kea of New
Zealand has become a sheep eater, having
changedito this article of food from apurely
vegetable diet. Thekeahasproved aserious
source of annoyance to the New Zealand
herdsmen, and methods have been taken
for the destruction of the species. These
gay colored little birds will at almost any
kind of meat, but it is sheep that they
pre fer.
They have been known to kill as many
as two hundred in, a single night, and have
done serious harm to the flocks. The
tradition of the island is that at one time
these parrots were unable to obtain their
usual. supply of vegetable food and that in
desperation they iriveded the "drying
rooms" and ate whatever came to hand,
finding sheep meat agreeable. In Iceland
almost all the horses are fish eaters, for
the reason that °Thin is amerce there and
fish is plentiful'''. 1/1 England sheep are
known who delight in metals. The obeerva-
tion of this fact is not new ; it dates baok
150 years.
It is well known that a large number of
insectivorous birds become grain eaters
whenever they find that they cannot pro-
cure their ordinary diet of insects.
Baggagemen's Bleyele Troubles.
Railway men have come to the conclusiou
that so great is the number of wheels
consigned to railways by passengers that
special cars will have to be provided,
separate and distinct from baggage cars,
for the transportation of the machines. An
idea of the number of wheels that are now
carried is conveyed in the report of the
baggage department of the Rio Grande
Railway, which shows that in the month of
July, 1664 wheels were checked by the
company over their line—an average of over
53 daily for the month. In many baggage
tura racks have alreadybeenfitted up tot the
reception of wheels, but the accommodation
is daily becoming more inadequate. This
rush of wheels has given it great deal of
anxiety to the baggagomen, who often find
themselves without the proper means of
providingifor their custody, The con-
sequence s that a compromise is effeoted,
and if the baggageman keeps a careful eye
on
it wheel a fee le in Wier, Some com-
panies are oonsidering the question of
cherging a small rate on an wheels carried
on their trains on the geound that they
iee
oral tot bo packed togeth r like thinks or
ordinary baggage; but ti Ore lb no dottist
that subh a eller& woii a be grudgingly
paid.
To Wend Mont Blame coots about $50,the
there must by 161V be tstSb guides and a
porter to each person,
Children Cry for Pitcher loastorial
0 AWFUL EARTHQUAKE!,
EIGHTEEN MIN D_RED PEOPLE KILL-
ED AT YETAI)AN, NONGURAS.
'lames in the sionntaius watch Shot VP
Several Hundred, Feet—The Previa
Ituatett Madly Through the streets
Poreszeivr and crying—neantrentling
5
A despatch from Tegucigalpa, Honduras,
Bays courier arrived fawn Yetapan,
and announced the. !neat terrible earth.
quake over kaown in that section. The
oils of life and taroperty is enormous.
Three hundretZ people are said to have per-
ished. On Sunday the shocks commenced,
lasting all day and night at intervals,
causing -much damage and the greatest fear
azhb
ngorthhoci.
the of the city and
n
By Monday the city contained 3500
people from the mountains and outlying
villages. Daring the night sheets of llama
morning shooks ceased, quiet was restored
immense heights. Tuesday
I
appeared at different points to the north.
west, rising to
and people left town for their homes. At
9 o'clock that night, however, heavy
rumbling noises were heard, shortly After
followed by a re -appearance of the flames
in the mountains, which shot up several
hundred feet.
• PANIO.STRIOREN.
Frightened people again fiooked to town,
and at midnight the ohuroh tower fell,
carrying with it the roofs of three houses.
Nine people were killed and 18 wounded.
Rombling which sounded like the heaviest
oannoned.ing commenced and lasted over an
hour and a half, the people rushing madly
through the streets, praying and orying.
Just before daylight another prolonged
shook ; whicb is variouely maculated to
have lasted from two and it quarter to three
minutesrocked the whole town as if it
ing
rooks.ereacradle. Many were killed. by fall.
yonder= ERUPTION.
Smoke from the mountains to the north-
west rose to an enormous height, followed
shortly after by the bursting of flames from
the mountain aides and the throwing out
of rooks and lava. Shortly after, streams
of molten lava set fire to a number of houses
on the mountain side.
Cattle grazing near by fled and were
killed, being engulfed in the lava whicb
continued flowing en immense streams.
FEARFUL DESTRUCTIOX OF PROPERTY.
It is reported at Yetapan that 71 houses
were destroyed, One hundred and fifty.
three dead bodies have been recovered
there, and many more persons are missing. !
At Oovajuance, S7 houses were destroyed,
and 95 bodies were recovered. At Guns -
oat, 29 housee were destroyed, and 1111
bodies were reoovered. It es impossible
yet to give a full report of the dieaster. f
Many small settlements are believed to
have been destroyed. Shocks extended
over the whole Yete.pan chain and flames
are seen also in the Pacayae Mountains.
The shocks have now ceased, but the
smoke is still discernible at different points
in the mountains. A company of soldiers
which left in pursuit of bandits from
Yetapan to the coast have not been heard
of and it is feared they were all killed.
The shocks were 'firtst from northeast to
outhwest and later in the opposite direc-
t
i
o
n
h.
OVER 1,800 Rieman.
•number killed in the towns and
T
mountains as far as ascertained, is two
hundred and eighty-seven. The property
loss is calculated at over $600,000, The
Government is doing everything posseble
for the victims.
Slight shocka contiuue causing damage
to property, but no loss cif life. The former
extinct volcanoes are now throwing out
lava in small quantities.
It is calculated that over 1,800 have been
killed. Troops are scouring the country
for fugitive victims, Of a company- of one
hundred and eight soldiers who were after
bandits, only 29 are known to have been
saved. Food and clothing have been sent
to the sufferers.
A Canadian GivirArrested for Shop -
A despatch from Buffalo says :—Detec-
tivea Quinn and Reagan on Friday after.
noon arrested a good-looking, well-dressed
young woman who was caught shoplifting
in a Main street dry-goode store. The
woman said she was Ada Ramey, 22 years
old and lived in Welland, Ontario, where
her father is a bailiff'. She oaine to Buffalo
on Friday to do some shopping, She was
detected stowing asvay a pieoe of race in a
hand.bag. In the bag were found a piece
of silk, several please of lace, and a pair of
slippers. Part of the goods are identified
as belonging to Barnes, Hengerer & Co. The
young woman affected to be near-sighted,
said the clerk who detected her, and held
a piece of lace close to her eyes with one
hand, apparently examining it, while with
the other she nipped a bit of lace. Miss
Ramey was convicted of petit larceny in
the Police Court yesterday morning, and
fined $30. Her case was aaid by Attorney
Stayton to be a sadone. She is almost
dead with consumption, and her mind has
been affected. She has a mania for purloin-
ing small things. Her family is said to be
a most estimable one. She did not have
money with which to pay the fine.
How to get a "Sunlight" Picture.
Send 25 "Sunlight" Soap wrapper,
(wrapper bearing the words "Why Dow it
oman Look Old Sooner Than a Man.") to
Lever Bros, Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto,
andyou will receive by poste pretty picture,
free from advertising, and well worth fram.
ing. This is an easy way to decorate your
home. The soap is the best itt the market,
and it will only cost lo. postage to send in
the wrappers, if you leave the ends open.
Write your address carefully.
aeleialleeeileiadete
e
••••••49...,
for infant and Children.
“Castosdais bewail adapted to chlicirentlist
t recommend, It as superior to any prer,oription
anown to me." let, A. Anomnt, M. D.,
lei So. Oxtord Sb., Brooldem, ale T.
"The use of (OaStoria SO Universal and
its merits so well known thea It seems it work
of supererogation to endorse it. Few aro the
lutailtgent famille,s who do not keep Castorie,
within easy reach,"
Cows Kumla D,D.,
New York City.
Late Neter BloOtaingdale Reformed Church,
Castorla cum °olio, Constipation,
Sour Stoinaoh, Diarrinna, Eructation,
=lie 'Worms, gives sleep, atta prorootes
gestion,
Witbout ineurionet medication,
'For several yettra I have recommendee.
your Castoria, ' and shall always continue tee
do so as it /ma invariably produced beneficial
results,"
Dewar r. romping, M. D„
"The Winthrop," lOth Street and eth Ave,
New York Cite?
4,
ran CENTAUR COMPANY, r MERRILY STP.RIST, MEW 120Ra.
• •,•:.
. .410.7.0
NEW CURE FOR CONSUMPTION,
An Itallaves Alleged Discovery—Ravages
or the Diseaseis France.
A new cure for consumption has been roe
ported by Consul Chancellor, at Havre.
He says the cure was first brought to the
attention of the world at it oongress of
physicians and soientiets at Bordeaux to
consider the question of combatting eon-
sumption by vaocination. Plof. Marigli-
ano, an Italian, read a paper whioh aurae -b.
ed muoh attentionr claiming to have
discovered an efficamious process for the
treatment of consumption by the injection
of tubercular serum, whioh he says renders
the subjects of disease immune. The
Consul recalls the comparative failure of
other attempts to treat conaumpeion suc-
cessfully, and says this particular process ia
still in the experimental stage. The paper
is open to several suggestions, for Prof.
Marigliano gives no precise information as
to his process for obtaining the serum,
whioh can be had only from himself ; hie
statistics are incomplete and lacking confir-
mation, and his infallible remedy can lot
be yet regarded as an accomplished faot.
Incidentally the Consul gives eome
startling figures of the ravages of consump-
tion in Paris, He shows that it causes
thirty-eight times more death than small-
pox and scarlet fever combined, sixteen
times more than typhoid fever and eight
times more than diphtheria, and is five
timee more fatal than those maladies
combined. In five years in all France
there were 409 deaths from consumption
per 100,000 people, a greater mortality
than that caused. by the most malignant
epidemic of cholera.
Did Things Up Brown.
The Brookline Recorder has a notice of
the marriage of Charles W. Brown and Ida
Brown, at the residence of the bride's
father, J. Brown, Brownsville, by the Rev.
George Brown; the best man was Fred
Brown and the brideemaids were Lettie
Brown and Edith Brown. The bride wore
a brown gown, and the happy touple will
live in a brown stone front.
One of the wedding presents was a vol.
ume of Browning, which will be placed in
the brown study, where the future little
Brownies can read it.
"So you took your family to the sea
shore 1' said the facetious man. " I did,"
was the melancholy reply. " "A here there
is suoh grandeur in the breaking ot the
waves—" "Yes and the breaking of the
engagements—" "Yes, and of the $20
bil le."
Pr••••••••••211m1MW
LOST OR FAKING MAKIN%
Omen! aritt Nsrvon
Weakness of Body and Mind, Effects of
Errors or Excesses in Old or Young. Robust
Noble Manhood fully Restored. How to
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failing Home Treatmett--13enefits in it day.
Men testify from 50 States and Foreign Coon
-
tries. Write them. Descriptive Book, eeo
planation and proofs mailed (sealed) free.
ERIE MEDICAL 01,IY
CARTESS
ITTLE
Iv
Pi U.S.
Sielt Headache and relieve all the troubles M t
dent to a bilious state of the system, shell k
Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress af i
eating, Fain in the Side, &o, While theinues
remarkable succese hag been shown in curb)
Headache, yet CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER Pitaa
are equally valuable in Constipation, ouring
and preventing this annoying complaint, while
they also correct all disorders of the stomacJ1,.
stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels.
Even if they only cured
Ache they would be almost priceless to thee*
who suffer from this distressing complaine
but fortunately their goodness does not e
here, and those who once try them will fl
these little pills valuable in so minty ways th
they will not be willing to do without them,
But after all sick head
is the bane of so many Hies that here is where
we make, our great boast. Our pills cure it
while others do not.
Carman's Lunn LtvEri Pius are very small
and very easy to take. One or two pills make
a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do
not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action
please all who use them. ln 'vials at 2.5 cents'
Bye for 81. Sold everywhere, or .sent by ma
s 0ABTZB ILBDICINB CO,, New York. •
7/411 t DWI taltM061
DON'T DESPAIR
WILL OURE YOU
We guarantee Dodd's Kidney Fills to cure any
case of Bright's Diease, Diabetes, Lumbago,
Dropsy, Rheumatism, Heart Disease, Female
Troubles, Impure Blood—or money refunded.
Sold by all dealers in medicine, or by snail on
receipt of price, pc. pericok, or Six boxes Seam
DR, L. A. SMITH & CO., Toronto.
CURES
YSIPEPSIAT
BAD Le6,01,
GONSTEPATiON,
MONEY THORIBLES0
AGNEp
BOLIGUSIIESS.
B:B,B. unlocks al; the secretions eadrerntbres
all impurities from the system froth a toroinon
pimple to the worst scrofulous sore.
BURDOCK Pna..ip act gaa_tiy-yat
thotoughly on the Stomach, Liver and towel&
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