HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1896-2-6, Page 9•
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HAVE ANTS A LANGUAGE?
Because incomprehensible to us, there
is no reason to believe that animals
have no direct means of communicating
with one another. Even in the in-
• sect world investigation has practical-
ly proved the fallacy of this supposition.
Sir James Boyle, the great Irish noe-
• nraiist, always contended that ants
• had a language of their own, by which
/ they made known their wants and fears
to others of their kind. One day he
encountered a colony that were evident-
ly moving to new quarters. All appear-
ed in the very best of spirits, and when-
ever two met, the natjeralist noted
that they put their heads together as
thotigh chatting very earnestly. To
settle the matt= in his own mind as to,
whether they were really talking or
ot, he killed one f theta to observe
1 e effect it would have on the others.
The eye witnesses to the murder hast-
ened to the rear and halted every one
a •of the advanoing column by laying their
• antennae together, The column in-
•stutly separated to the right and the
•iat,. none of the marchers afterward
• paeseng within less than six feet of
• their dead compertion, though the re-
mains of the insect were directly in the
beaten path.
•
THE NEti
mensnamersoriniminr
INA NOISHEII.
THE VERY LATEST FROM ALL TEE
WORLD OVER.
letectesting Items About Our Own Country,
Great Britain, the United States, and
All Parts of the Globe, Condensed and
Assorted for Easy Reading.
CANADA,
The Board. of Trade of Winnipeg is
opposed to granting exclusive rights to
the Hudson's Bay Canal and Naviga-
tion Company. •
It is now rumored that Sir Donald
Smith is likely to succeed. Sir Charles
Tupper as Canadian High Commission-
er in England.
The Italian colony in. Montreal have
appointed a committee to raise funds to
assist their countrymen who are fight-
ing in Abyseinia.
Mrs. M. C. A:” Hinman of Hamilton
and two young ladies from Toronto,
who were visiting her were nearly
asphyxiated with coal gas.
Mrs. Cynthia Bell was committed
for trial at Ottawa on the charge of
horrible cruelties committed on her
grandchildren narreed Short.
An Act respecting bakeshops, intro-
duced in the Ontario Legislature by -Mr.
Dryden, proposes to place all bakeries
under Government supervision.
The Royal Viotoria, Hospital at Mon-
treal has received gifts from Lord
Mountstephen and Sir Donald Smith of
$10,000 each to cover the expenses of
the hospital last year.
The budget speech of Provincial
Treasurer alcMillan showed that Mani-
toba's finances were never in. a more
prosperous condition than at preeent.
The surplus is $800,000,
Lieut. Barret, Royal Naval Reserve,
late commander of the SS. Mongolian,
has been appointed to the ' Parisian,
with the position of Commodore of the
Allan fleet, to succeed Captain Ritchie,
retiring Commedore.
The returns of the traffic earnings
of the Grand Trunk railway for the
week ended February 29, 1890, were
$32O,827, while for the same week in.
1895 they were $310,523, showing an
increase fon February this year of
$4,304.
At. the last meeting of the Town Coun-
oil of Brockville, it. was discovered that
$10,000 which had been voted to the Can-
ada Carriage Company had been illeg-
ally diverted. Three thousand dollars
have already been paid twits ovemand
the remaining $7,000 will also have to
be repaid.
While dames Newham, aged 18, was at
work in a saw mill at Woodlawn, Ont„
on Thursday night, he came in contact
in some way with the circular saw,
which cut his foot off. He then fell
against the saw, which struck his hip,
cutting nearly half way through his
body. He died shortly afterwards.
The report of Mr. James Mansergh,
C.I.., of London, England, on the water
supply. of Toronto, has been deceived at
that city, and oreated much interest in
local and civic circles. Mr. Mansergh
gives an exhaustive review of previous
schemes for improving the water sup-
ply, and. after a careful examination of
the Lake Simcoe scheme, rejects it in
favour of a continuance ot :Qsowing
from Lake Ontario, the present source
of the water service. Incidentally the
report demolishes the aqueduct "pow-
er" scheme, and recommends atten-
tion to the sewerage system.
GREAT BRITAIN..
A resolution of sympathy with the
Armenians was passeil in the British
'louse of Commons.
The Prince of Wales started for the
Riviera on Saturday, and will enjoy a
Mediterranean cruise on his cutter Brit-
annia.
There is said to be a serious split in
the English Liberal party, arising from
a revolt of the Radical wing against
Lord Rosebery as leader.
The marriage of Princess Maud of
Wales is expected to take place at the
end of July, and thus prolong the Lon-
don season a month longer than usual.
The Glasgow Herald is authority for
the statement that Sir George Newnes,
the millionaire publisher, is havinga
yacht built to compete for the America
cup.
Mr. Campbell -Bannerman made • a
motion in the Imperial Parliament to
strike out of the estimates the 41,800
special pension to the Duke of Cam-
bridge.
The period of mourning for Prince
Henry of Battenberg having expired,the
first drawing -room will be held by the
Princess of Wales on Wednesday. There
will be about two hundred presenta-
tions.
Mr. Webb, the chief locomotive engin-
eer of the London and North-Western
railwey,predicts that a few years hence
electric trains will be run to all the
great centres at a speed we can hard-
ly now realize.
A cable despatch 'states that the Brit-
ish cheese importers desire that the Do-
minion Parliament should /lass legisla-
tion requiring the branding of the
month of the make on all cheeses for
export to Great. Britain.
Lord Lansdowne, Secretary of State
for War, has attached a memorandum
to the army estimates, stating that in
view of recent events it will be impos-
sible to reduce the strength of the
Egyptian garrison in 1896.
Dr. Leyds, the Secretary of State for
the Transvaal, who sailed from England
on Saturday for South Africa, asserts
that the relations between Germany and
the Transvaal are exactly the same as
prior to Dr. Jameson's raid.
A despatch has been received in Lon-
don from Bombay, saying that Zaim
Singh, Maharajah of jha,alaw, who was
preparing to begin a small war on his
own account against the Indian Govern-
ment was deposed on Tuesday.
It is reported, that the British Coloni-
al Office has called for further details
relative to the assumption by the Unit-
ed States of three thillion acres of ter-
ritory, alleged to be British, on tlae Pa-
cific coast, opposite Prince .of Wales Is-
land,
The Venezuelan Consul in London
thinks that the communications being
exchanged between Sir Julian Paunce-
fete, the British Ambassador at Wash-
ington, and Senor Andrade, the Venez-
uelan Minister at the capital, will lead
to a modus vivendi.
The Prince of Wales has been reach
depressed since Henry of Battenberg's
death. It seems that Albert Edward
and Henry had their fortunes told by a
gypsy some years ago. The,.Prince of
Wales was informed that he wonlii
never be King of England, and Henry
that he would die seeking glory under
a tropic: sky: •
UNITED STATES.
•
Rear Admiral .Henry Walker. 11. S.
THE EXETEB,
BNr"oodkileydn.un Sunday at his hums in
The mills and factories established in
the United States by the Salvation Army
give employment to 10,700 persons.
• A woman in Simpson county,Kyestill
spins and weaves all the oloth for the
clothing worn by her husband and
children.
President Cleveland and. his Cabinet
are strongly opposed to the present re-
cognition of the belligerency of the Cub-
an insurgents.
Armour & Co., of Chieago, have con-
tracted to furnish meat supplies to the
British North American squadron for
three years,
The tallest standpipe in New Eng-
land has completed at lahnnebunk, Me.,
last week. It is 105 feet high, and
Es3turniusetlio
3 ja,500 rivets were u =
sed in its -
Lady Henry Somerset has sued Mr,
William Waldorf Astor for $25,000
damages caused to her reputation by a
remark in the Pall Mall Gazette not
long ago.
Alice B. Lane, the Detroit woman in
whose lying-in hospital Emily Hall died
after an operation, was sentenced on
Saturday to ten years in the peniten-
tiary.
James W. Sheridan, a wealthy brew-
er, was held up and robbed. a few
nights ago on one of the most fash-
ionable streets in Chicago, in the full
light of an electric lamp,
A "smart" Chicago reporter mailed an
imitation bomb to Mr, Philip D. Ar-
mour, and. then wrote a sensational
story on the subjeet, which he was able
to dispose of as news.
Coyotes have killed all the cats in
the town of Valley, Wash., and in the
neighbourhood. They come boldly into
the town at night,. and pick up every
oat they come across.
A new order, to be known as the
Knights of the Nineteenth Century,
was started in Laneaster, Pa.) on Fri,
clay. The object of the order is to pro,
teat women and ohildren.
Agents of the Cuban revolutionists,
working from at. Louis as a common
centre, are sending from fifty to sixty
men a week to join the forces of Gen.
Gomez on the island.
Sir Julian Pauncefote,the British Am-
bassador at Washington, and the Vene-
zuelan Minister in that city, have en-
tered into direct communication for a
settlement of the Yuruan incident.
Andrew Werten, a gypsy horse -deal-
er, 33 years old, and a native of Canada-,
murdered his wife Louise on Thursday
night in her room in a Broadway lodg-
ing houee, St, Louis. He cut her throat
with a razor,
A telephone has been placed on the
preacher's desk in the Congregational
church at Norfolk, Conn., in order that
members of the church who are unable
to attend the services may hear the ser-
mons as they sit at home.
Promise of an early spring is noticed
in Connecticut in the appearance last
week, near Hartford, of a large flock
of wild geese, flying northward. As a
rule the geese are not seen. in that re-
gion until about the middle of March.
A reforzxs wave has struck the city
government of Woodstock, Vt., An anti -
tobacco league has been formed among
the members of the government, and
already twelve ot the town officials have
joined. it, and given up tobacco in every
form.
A trapper of Morristown,. Vt., has
just received from a fur dealer in Mont-
real an order for 1,000 live skunks, the
second order of the kind he has had.
Ho filled. the first order with compara-
tive ease, and thinks it will be almost
as easy to fill this one.
In all the world there is but one an
that can read the translation of the
Bible into the language of the abori-
gines which was made be a Mr. Eliot
in what is now Paxton, in 1649. That
man is the well-known antiquarian and
scholar. Trumbull, of Hartford, Conn.
Hiram Lester, who died at the poor
farm in Henry county, Gee a week ago
last Friday, was said to be one hundred
and twenty-nine years old. A son of
his, living in the setae poor -house, is
ninety years old, and a daughter, who
lives in Heard county, is ninety-five
years old.
Brewers in Germany have contracted
Lor 2,500,000 bushels of barley from Mon-
tana next season. This barley will come
from the famous Gallatin valley, which
lies along the Northern Pacific Rail-
way, eighty miles east of Helena., where
enormous =tips of finest quality are
raised by irrigation.
The harbette for the 'United States
battleship Iowa was completed last
week. It is the largest ever manufac-
tured in America, and has been more
than a year under construction. It
consists of nine plates, each weighing
95,000 pounds, in addition to a large tur-
ret. '1 ho plates are fifteen inches thick
and no inches wide. The barbette is
to be shipped to Philadelphia,.where the
Iowa is building, on a tram of cars built
for the purpose.
There will be a great decrease in the
production of hops in Oregon and Wash-
ington this year. The hop industry m
previous years has been one of the
largest in these states, but overprodur,
tion has brought the price down to an
unprofitable figure, and in the last year
or two insect pests have caused great
loss to the growers. A great many hop
fields in various parts of the two States
have been ploughed up, and it is re-
ported that this spring more will be
turned under.
Commercial telegrams from New York
as to the business situation in the Unit -1
ed States are not at all of a satisfactory
rature, and this is particularly notice-
able in what they leave unsaid. Ex-
cept in the steel and iron industries
prices are usually again lower ; at pre-
sent there is a light demand for all
kinds of iron, but we Are told that
"large structural business is expected
in the spring," while there is "hope-
fulness" as to extensive railway orders,
as railroad, earnings continue to im-
prove. These small mercies are appar-
ently the best In sight. The boot and
shoe trade is not up to a reasonable
average ; prices of wool have declined,
and sales are small, while some mills are
closing or laying. off their hands. Con-
cessions in price m various lines do not
appear to have produced a proportionate
added demand.
• • GENERAL.
Germany is said to be supporting
Italy's overtures to England for assist-
ance in the present crisis.
• The President of the Republic of
Ecuador has asked the Queen Regent
of Spain to grant the independence of
Cuba,.
The Cuban Amazons have been play-
ing quite a prominent pert recently m
the fights between the insurgents and
the Spanish troops.
Dentists in. Vienna are forming a so-
ciety which has for its object a course
of mutual instruction in light anecdotes
and pleasing conversation for profes-
sional hours.
The Archduchess Maria Theresa of
Austria is said to be the strongest wo-
• man in the world outside of a circus.
She can lift an ordinary man with one
hand.
Vicomtesse Houssaye, whose salon Le
•
TIMES
one of the most highly esteemed in Paris
by men of intellectual distinction, wait
ofotromarifloyrnania,America,n girl, Miss Ritter,
A Coal mine in Prussian .Silesia,
caught fire and only eighty of the iroe
prisoned miners were rescued. Twenty-
seven dead bodies were taken out and
thirty-three more are missing.
The Emperor of Rttssia has invited
the Prins and Princess of Wales to visit
St. Petersburg in May for the Inaperial
coronationwhich is to take place at
Moscow towards the end of that month,
It is regarded as significant that a
party of sailors belonging to the Freneh
cruiser Dromet were allowed to march
through the streets of Malaga, cheering
for Spam, Franco, and the Spanish
army.
A special despatch to the London
Times frora Madrid says that France
will support Spain on the Cuban ques-
tion and negotiate a large loan for her
in returri for certain commercial and
other coucessions.
Portugal, it is rumored, will back tlie
Spain in her attitude on the Cuban:
question. The Comettercio, of 'Lisbon,
urges that all the nations of Europe
should join Spain in resisting the pre-
tentions of the United States.
The Rail= Government has instruct-
ed the Military Advocate General to
examine iuto the'conduot of the Abys-
sinian campaign by Gen. Baratieri and
determine whether or not the latter
shall be arranged before a council of
war.
The correspondent of the London
Times at Caracas, Venezuela, reports
that a private despatch has been re-
ceived iroro. Curaooa, saying that the
authorities there are advised, that a
British. squadron of five ships will short-
ly arrive at that port.
Gen, Baldissera, the new corn' mender
of the Italian forces in Abyssinia, says
the situation is not so desperate as gen-
erally believed. He says he has
eigbteen thousand troops at his dispos-
al, without counting the garrisons at
the forts.
Mr. Gladstone, in an interview at
Nice, said he wait grieved because of
the Italian reverses in Abyssinia, and
feared that if Italy's present, adven-
turous policy was continued it might
cosi. her the loss of her constitutional
unity..
ft es probable that, as a result of her
defeat in Abyssinia and her bankrupt.
condition. Italy will drop out, of the
triple ellianee, and that. a, new combina-
tion will become necessary. Austria is
very anxious to have Great Britain form
a European alliance.
The Czar has delighted all classes of
Russians bycommanding that for the
future all petitions shall be presented
to him personally. The aide-de-canm
on duty will accept them from the peti-
tioners and place them before the limn-
er= without delay.
Mahmood Bey, who has been arrested
for has affiliation with the Young Turk-
ish party, is about thirty years old. As
a boy he was extraordinarily nimble.
He used then to chase a half-tramed
pony about the paddock of his father's
house, mount it with it leap, and gallop
about without a semblance of fear.
Herr Liebknecht, the veteran Socaliet
of the Reichstag, will have to serve four
motitas' imprisonment for insulting the
Emperor, alter the Reichstag adiourna.
He cannot be imprisoned while the SES -
for a visit to England before the body
adjourns he will not be placed behind
bars for some time.
The general opinion. In Spain, as ex-
pressed by the press and the public, is
one of indignation at the resolutions
passed by the United. State Congress
granting the rights of belligerency to
the Cuban insurgents, and a general de-
sire to resist such meddlesome inter-
ference to the uttermost.
A despot= to the New York Herald
from Caracas, Venezuela, says: -Vene-
zuela has refused the demand of Great
Britain that the Yuruan incident be re-
garded as a distinct issue, and that re-
paration be made and an indetnnity
paid. The Government declares that to
grant England's demand would be a
virtual recognition of British rights in
the territory in dispute between the
two nations, It also declares that the
whole issue must avail: the result of
arbitration. Officials again express fear
that England will try to enforce pay-
ment of dainages.
QUEEN VICTORIA'S PAYMASTER.
George Rerislet Is an Old Servant or the
English Crown and Haw Wellington's
Punerai.
The position of Paymaster of Her
Majesty Victoria's Household is held by
Mr. George Hertslet, whose family, or-
iginally from Switzerland, has served
the English erown in various posts of
confidence for quite a century.
The dingy offices belongingto the
Household are near the historic stable
yard. There was a time when the
Lord Chamberlain, the Lord Steward
and the Master of the Horse all had
their own particular paymasters, but
their functions are now merged in
those of the Paymaster of Iler Majesty's
Household. Tha paymaster is also one
of the eight Sergeants -at -Arms. Mr.
Hertslet has been present at about a
dozen openings and closings of Parlia-
ment byHer Majesty in person. He
was specially delegated to "receive" il-
lustrious visitors at the jubilee, and has
never misseda royal marriage or royal
funeral and very few royal christen-
ings since 1838.
By far the finest and most imposing
ceremonial he ever saw was the public
funeral of the Duke of Wellington. It
has certainly never been surpassed
since. In all probability nothing grand-
er has ever been attempted in England.
The pageant cost more than £80009‘
of which £10,000 was expended on the
car alone.
In private life George Hertslet re-
joices in the possession of troops of
friends. His nomination late in life to
the responsible position he now fills was
hailed with satisfaction.
ALL GENTLEMEN WARRIORS.
Recent events have again agitated the
old question in England of forming a
regiment of gestletpen who have been
disappointed in their efforts to "secure
commissions in the regular army. This
band would be a cavalry regiment and
composed of young men who have been
accustomed to the saddle from their
youth. The horses would be the finest
that could be procured and the gentle
blood of the men woud,
ed, it is expect,:
ed, warm to combat as did that of their
ancestral sires,
THEORY AND PRACTICE.
Doctor (to brother physician)-Yeg.
sir, the sogereign remedy for all ills is
fresh air and extIty of it. People
don't let enough MN mto their. houses.
Well, I must hurry off; on an er-
rand. •-
Brother Physician -Going far
No, only down to the hard ware si ore
to get half a mile of weather-strip-
r '
the
idneys Talk
They have a Language
of their own.
Rindeye can't talk, but if you don't treat
them rightly you will hear from them
They have aaanguage of their owu, and this
is how they speak to you; You stoop or
straw, ride too far, walk too much, work too
hard and rest 'too little; then your back.
maleler,
hoesv,and your head =hes, and you ache
0111 yon say, it's because I'm tired out,
Now, this isn't true. It's because your
kidneys are tired.
They can only do just so muck and the
lifting, etooping, straining or exciting has
retarded their action.
The heart has pumped the blood into
them faster than they, could filter it. The
filter is overtaxed and becomes clogged.
They cry for assiatance in the many symp-
toms that follow.
There is dull headache, baclutelie, pains
itevarioue parts of the body, scalding of the
urine, high colored urine, puffiness under
the eyes, swelling of the legs and all the
other conditions that go with kiduey dis-
ertiers.
Why do the kidneys time tell you their
lroubles in language se plain as to be =-
mistakable?
So that ehhi, may bo warned in time. Will
you heed the 'warnings?
If so, you will use Doan's Rainey Pills.
Railing starts the kidneys working so
quickly. Remember "Doan's. It is the
origlual kidney pill, the most reliable
kianey pill, and the pill you roan place
full confidence in to cure you. For sale by
Thomas 4. Xohne.
A Common
Affliction
Permanently Cured by Tiothig
A OAB-DRIVER'S STORY.
I was afflicted for eight years with 'Salt
Rheum. Inning that thne, 1 ti 't is gleat
many medicines which were higiev mat
°wended, but none gave Inc iallei. I
was at last advised to try nver's Sarsa-
patina, by a friend who told me that I
must pllrellaSe SIX bottles, and use them
according to directions. I yie1.7ed to his
.persuasion, bought the six botees, aud
took the contents of three of these bot-
tles without noticing any direct benefit.
Before I had finished the fourth bottle,
ray hands were as
Free from Eruptions
as ever they were. My bu.iness, 'which
is that of a cab -driver. requires me to
be out in cold and wet weather, often
without gloves, and the trouble has
ne
s.ti\c
,a-tire
f.ordt,itnoitited.”-TflostAs A.. Joins,
Ayers only daissuarilla
/Admitted at the Worl.e.'s
.si.yer,s Pills Cleanse the Bowels.
taxmarewevasna.40
INEQUALITY IN EYES.
You are either left eyed or rright eyed
unless you are the one person out of
every fifteen who has eyes of equai
strength. You also belong to the small
minority of one out of every ten per-
sons if your left eye is stronger than
your right. As a rule, just as people are
right handed, they are right eyed. This
is probably due to the generally great-
er use of the oragns of the right side
of the body,as, for example, a gunner,
using his right arm and sholder, uses
his right eye, thereby strengthening it
with exercise. Old sea captains, atter
long use of the telescope, find their
right eye much stronger than the
left. This law is confirmed by the ex-
perience of aurists. 1.1 a person who
has ears of equal hearing power has
cause to use one ear mare than the oth-
er for a long period, the ear brought
into requisition is found to be much
strengthened, and the ear which is hot
used loses its hearing in a correspond-
ing degree.- '
In the South of Caine. silk worms have
been reared and -silk menuiactured for
over 3000 years.
Down to the sixth century the man-
ufacture of silk seems to have been. con-
fined to China,, a few. districts in In-
dia, and one or two in Persia. The
Chinese GoVernment forbade, on pain of
death, the exportation of worries, co-
mmas or eggs.
Children Cry for Pitchers Castor'
-11Proro l'0#« , 1 . ' ^ •
20
WEAK MEN CURED!
/STARTLING FACTS FOR DISEASED VICTIMS,
CURE'Sr_.t..111/TEIED OR NO PAY I
. ,
Aweak bastidirrtLz=RE ?,, itgm.e;:iiait
0:53 centeen, ea Lfl urea;
trraples on face; &Nuns axiet aIgb
lasses; reatio5s;. 1..mfur4 .*.in; 71.11,-; ;Mirk; 1.,mnyaittr: law loose; steers; Iwo throat
aaricocale: &peat in diet Gild &nine et stooa au -trustful; want, of cent:alnico; /sok on
emerge mud. etre:iota - IIVE" 0Alif OfJE YOU
RESTORED 70 MANHOOD BY oRs,,, Kia K.
j011at A . 11,1LNLIN. JOHN A. I.1.1.NLI31. CII.Xt, powERS„ ono, povejte,
BEFORE zsnz, 31155 TREAT:RENT. Bli.runE TREAtillENT. A:eirgit ilittEAT.ALLET.
NO NAME'S OR TESTIMONiALS USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT.
John A. MauBu sassi-"I was of the count:tee eta,
thusa.naly 131,,raneq cominecced ta W sear* of eft.
tried seven nettiedi, term and opeetati5 witheetiwal
!„trre rap us 4„-.Atf,-,!e. Th o glraitm on m 1y8.m wet
wr.a.aming nay lusell2et as well as rii tiptirCe
1.,fy brt.toralivii.mino3 as si last retort to ronsstjt
P13. Ithinecie dKerwin. icoialuomed dear Notr
Trt:issi'rut and In a fey weeits was a now rum, with mew
life- eel cenbiticat. Tele was font. years can, mid Yew
pintrteLt and. .hUPPY. 1 1-..cottaaattu thew it-41aLl
pocialists to an ley aliadea f QuwraoL"
CORES CVARANThED OR NO PAY,- CONP1OENTAL.
VARICOCELE,
EMISSIONS AM
POTENCY
CURED,
"The Ora of earlr bosband laid the formeation of my
rain.- cm a "pay Jib)" a'11 eArn711rf, biovd di.
senses cowpkteil the wn'nlc. I had al tko arra; of
Wervon Deetiite-etnikenitemeerriksicus. drain in urine,
nervousne.s% weak back. tee• 5hi.7aal rnv Bair to
fall out. bone rror...s elvers mord: and <It tongue
& Iterean. They restored mo to laoith, v.nor mid happiness." CHAS. POWERS.
arj- pve treat and evre ravielvele, Bo:ha:has, Nehroae Sonenal
TV'eaknost, Sera -ear; ,Seeahalis, Vanahvras" Disckarges., Self Abuse.,
Kid.nsy and Biadder
17 YEARS IN DETROIT. 200,000 CURED. NO RISK.
blotct,c'sonbodx, ete„ tieee tied 1 trait hrs. ithiteeti
Syphilis, Emmons
Varicoaele, Cured.
READER ! ,A,.,,....4.,,,,,,,,i3t,i;.I.,...'11:1„:1..i,Tto.:45,!ii:set,itli10.71,0?1,A.t.,7 p.t111, tteti/.:iiirw,‘,7,:iiir:Itr.ti i sell gr elt:tilti;.
.1‘a'c 11:t1'71:;" :::'T-'11' '''7"1' '1':.:nj''..s1 • '''' t't ilt.'iree.:::`,„Irli'itri'..t`tb,Z,'Iiin'pee'Ll!telaotilef:n Ireect
,i....,n,.1,..,11,-„t::,t,...1''.4,.:::.$. Of.,....147 %ilea trolde.i Monitor' tiilmtratt..1), on
opettil5IIISmati,:l..:IT:),Ai 11"1:(4):,iir.I.,,i;,......:1. 7...I.,: i ., .,‘,,, t;„ ,,,, ,,, , !., , ,.. i., ., s.‘ ,,,
r"..ITT EN CONSENT, PRI-
- -1 .Pviiryth(int, c.:-. init,..41., r.l. Ou titian list and cost of Treat-
]
eh: vg,",--;;''''''at,,..fietarea'aelg...h" N,„,:..c.. iee -.nniva on boxes or envet.
la 72:::Y‘eil iliiir;r:im. a,:i 7177 tr...,1 ri...%.' 7:tII.: ttl 1.100.ErTi-7,5,8irT!!litilVe 4.T.
... 2.z...,i.t.:.....e.:.1
The Old Reliable Specialists.
88 Years neeperieence
in the treatment of the Throat and Lung
Troubles, Catarrh, Asthma, Wanehitas,
Nervous, Chronic and bpeciai
eases of ;nen and women.
Lost Manhood ,elirtore:14,--Ii.idttey alp] Mad.
tr bles perm:mewl,:
cured -Gleet, Gonorrhoea, Varicoeeieana.
stricture cured withezt pain. No rutting.
Syphilis and all Diced Diseases cured
without mercury.
young filen .;:t.t.iffeiting .frorn nifeet
,Attleui folheq indiscretions.
or any troubled with Weakrees.
Debility. Lot of Atemre, pondor,-., it,
AvtorMirm to
any disease of the Genital-Vein:ix . • C -it.
pans, can hen: find '..afe and spiel-- 111,
CI:urges re:1,-11..1+44 eereei.,...y to die
poor. ClUAIZAN'ITED.
tions of the bladder. often accompanied by slight smarting. or burning_sene.cti. • .
weaken the eyste it in a manner the fintient cannot nocnt for. Ther,.
.; men whO die of this il;:rierant of the cause. 'fhe cloctor will gunra,••i • ,
fert cure isi all such rases, au.] healthy restoratloa, of the gcnito.urinary .'
sultation free. Thi.:,' urnble to call. can •''rho' inn plrtienlars of their ea,
rne,Ileine sent by e;:pre.s, with full instructions for use. Mention this r,tizer when
writing. Office hours: From 9 a. M. in S rn., Sundays, to 11 a, M.
SO Wel0Dwiltri AVENUE.
b .L�SP.I1111FAV OL COA
. (Side Ig.etramee Eiti. 12 E. .Enzabeth St)
DETROIT, MICH.
etee..-eteghaa....terateaaa-aamaaaataaa7-...hateite. atteettefalatehMTe'M halathesteettataaj.:
GALLONS IN THE OCIlAa
The mathematicians figure cm every-
thing nowadays, from the number or
leaves in a given extent of forest te,
the probable number of molecules of
matter thet it takes to maim up -the
universe. One of the most curious .cal-
eulations which we bave met with re-
cently is one in which a German pro-
fessor gives figures to show the num-
ber of gallons of water in the Pacific
ocean. He first considers the average
depth and then the average length and
breadth, and then throws the whole in-
to a square and the square into a
globe. He finds that this aqueous globe
would be exactly 726 miles in diameter.
Next he considers ocean water as weigh-
ing 10 pounds to the gallons, and fincis
that his immense sphere, were it hal-
low metal globe, would hold 200,000,-
000,000,000 )two hundred trillions( of
gallons 1 Those figures represent the
number of gallons of water now in the
largest division of the. earth's seas. It
would take that amount of water more
than a million years to pour over the
precipice at Niagara!
KNEW HERSELF.
Stranger (at the door) -I am trying
to find a laay whose married name I
have forgotten, but I know she lives in
this neighborhood. She is a woman
easily desoribed, and perhaps you know
her -a, singularly beautiful creature,
With pink and white complexion, sea-
shell, ears, lovely eyes, aiad hair such as
a goddess might envy.
Servant -Really, sir, I don't know -
Voice (from head of stairs) -Jane, tell
the gentleman I'll be down in .a min-
ute.
The silk from cocoons containing male
insects is said to be stronger and bet-
ter than that from cocoons made fe-
males.
Laid Low by Indigestion.
1 was so run clown 1 had to give up
work.
Scott's Sarsapseilla the kind that
clei res.
Indigestion or dyspepsia is the bane of
thousands, and is one 01 the most de-
pressing of afflictions. It arises from an
impute or impoverished condition of the
blood, which weakens the digestive and
assimilative organs, rendering them in-
capable of performing their natural func-
tions, and it nealected, the sufferer loses
flesh, complains of exhaustion atterslight
exertion and becomes rapidly debilitated.
Mr. Wm, W. Thompson, a prominent
resident of Zephyr, Oeit., in aletter dated
Aug lath, 185, says It gives me great
pleasure to testify to the fact that Scott's
Sarsaparilla has caused a most remark-
able change in my condition, I was so
much run down I had to give up work
and felt as if life were not wotth living. -
Mr. Defoe induced me to try Scott's Sar-
saparilla, and after tatting four bottles I
am nOw feeling as I formerly did years
ago, and I want to say for the benefit a
those suffering from indigestion and feel-
ing, to use slang phrase, completely
knocked but,' don't despair until you give
• Scott's Sarsaparilla a fair trial."
Scott's Sarsaparilla is a blood food, it
stimulates all vital organs to healthy
•normal action, enabling them to throw
off all poisonous and debilitatinghunibrs.
Sold by druggistseat $i, but there is only
one Scott's. The kind that cures.
Sold, by 0, LUTZ Exeter, Ont.
THEIR EDUCATION.
These college men are very Slow,
They seem to take their ease.
For even when they graduate,
They do so ,by degree&
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