HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1896-6-18, Page 3est
THE EXETER
TIMES
it appearts, had always been conveyed
AYE
i � S Tt�r with, aloafof beaad asa witness of. Y y n! n[�I t WORIn od faith Wh I J h d yea!,�+ t!i(, (
,�7
rt
t�
!
7s
f'f ei
tine bottle
hair
oonper
occ?isional
the hair
H. P.
Growth
eneenaineessenen
"Eight
laid,
ously
l Variety
iwar
out beneficial
tear
About
h�',,ou
Y[ Lir
use
began
every
of hair
Mre.
Orleans,
AYER'S
all..,
yr
inane'.
'3
vers-
�" w,4.
s
-21Z
•.sse
y � •.*
4.._,:..'
,..
of Ayers
was restored
and ceased
application
in good
Fnno,VIcv,
tiara
and lost my
was quite
a r
y f ��11
result,
1 should be
six months
ght home
Vi or, and
it. gIn a short
to appear,
prospect
as before
A.1Viant
La.
rxnrin>,n
& CO„
0, AYER & CO„
R
color
and
it
II.
Digby,
than
Digby,
ago,
ab
brat
e 4
P
a
I
of
R,
H4
air'
14`
Restores
to the
also
falling out.,
W. Isenwick,
N.
"A little
taro years
v �i;�t,
0
Hair 'T
to its
falling
has since
condition.
N.
of Hair.
seeneette
1 had
hair, which.
I ` Y1t.
u Yds
.
1 I$
o ,
tillI
permanently
ago, My
bottle
began at
time,
and there
as thick
my illness."
Polymnia
ARVs
nr
LOWELL, MASS.,
I
OR
saturea
hair,
,
prevents)
]lire.
of
9,, says :
more
ago
my hair
began
to >urni
gray
tied fall
out,.Af-
ter the
ruse of
iger.my
original
out. An
kept
--Mrs,
S,
the varix-
prove
tried
�, t 1t•
�i •1 ii-
but t
began to
bald.
husband
of Ayer's
once to
new hair
is now
a growth.
--..
St,, Nov"
•
U.S. A
W11l
Old
S
bill
wo
Eag
ov
I
naa
th
1r'
su
w
ra
fo
of
rel
Vg
an
fol
I
al!
OOl
an
we
m1
wt
afv
d
w'
T
m
pi
Ve
L
fc
Ii
to
n
ie
T
a
T
o'
ie
t
0
b
I
f'
t
I,
44Pr,s Pins cure Sick H'eadaene,
PALE GIRLS
suffer-
nes-
or
Indian
in
with
to the
try
It's
Weak, languid and listless,
ing from heart palpitation,
vousuess, stomach troubles
constipation, should use
Woman's Balm. It cures.
WEA WOMEN
Run down, easily tired, pain
back or limbs, troubled
dizziness, rush of blood
bead, faint feeling, nausea,
Indian Woman's Balm.
nature's remedy for women..
_ THE
OF EbETER
TIMES
1
t
t
t
i
iBAKINc
FOR TWD uENTY-SIX YEARS.,
LJNN'S
ow D E
THECOOK'S BEST FRIEND
LARGEST SALE IN CANADA.
'
we
BREAD-MAKER'S0
HEVER FAILS TO OWE SATISF OTlOb
FOR lt?4i.G rxa .4f.:. nein
S
iKootKootenay
Contains the new ingredient, and
is made by an electrical process
that will revolutionize medical '
science throughout the world.
Kootenay cures all kinds of
Kidney troubles, and is a positive
cure for Rheumatism.ee
Spring
N
IT CURES
DYSPEPSIA,
HEADACHE,
BILIOUSNESS,
And every form of bad
blood, from a pimple to the
worst scrofulous sore,
and we challenge Canaela
to produce a case of
Eczema that Kootenay
will not cure.
i icine
S. 3. RYDKMAN MEDICINE CO., HAMILTDN, ONT.
kinamensemerms
STRONGLY REMINDED.
Father, she said.
Yes, daughter.
You say' you Can not buy me a biey-
ole -just at present? That you cannot
spare ; tine money now?
Yes, dear. He spoke sadly, He had
disowned the matter with her that
m, rnin .
4 Bathe the r saysthat
But, father, paper
wheels may' be much lower next year,
and so long as you are going to save
SO much on my next year's wheel, don't
you think that you Can afford' to get
me one nowt
Ile looked up at her thoughtfully.
Child, he said, now and. then you re-
p:end me strongly' of your sainted 'mo-
ther.
Who makes quick use of the moment,
is a genius of prudence.
go en .n'g o n ma e o
the papers, to the original Soar,he sent
_ the traditional loaf along with tite
`writings," and the deed and the loaf
AT IS GOING ON IN THE FOUR are both kept to this day as sacred
relics,
CORNERS OF TI -IE ULOBE.
and New World Events of interest Citrons
• ariefly—Interesting Happenings of
Recent Date.
beaker Gully, is said to be the best.
Lard player in: the House of Com-
n•
There is not- a reigning sovereign in.
rope whose family is of the nation
er which he rules.
t is said. that Justin McCarthy has
de $100,000 from the sales of Ins
istory of Our Own 7" devoted
es," and thatt
WHAT THEY DRINK.
The Drink of the British Chancellors
During the Budget Speech.
The budget speeoh is one of the longe
est addresses of a session of the British
Parliament, and there is always a
crowded House to listen to it.. It
never occupies less than two hours in
delivery. Mr. Gladstone ordinarily re-
quired, three hours, and on one occa-
sion he exceeded four hours. The de -
THE CROWNING OF RINGS,
FROW IT IS DONE IN DIFI~`EEENT.
COUNTRIES OV THE WORLD,
In Europe They Crown. a King With' a
Crown, lu Inspeelli►ict With an Old
Silk flat—Widespread Religious Charac-
ter or crowning.
Last week hundreds of .the clever-
est and rieheet and most important
men in the world. were gathered in
M.osoow, thousands of Cannon volleyed,
hundreds of thousands of lights blazed,
over $40,000,000 was squandered, all to
Celebrate the coronation of the Czar.
Nicholas II. was crowned absolute ruler
of 3,600,000 square miles of territory
and anointed the holy head of the.
e entire sum has been evo a to ® livery of this annual speeoh invariably i Greek ohuroh, vicar of Gad to 118,000;
hili
cause. overtaxes a chancellor's resources • o! 000 people who had nothing to say about
A Glasgow publishingithouse has is- it. All this in aecordanee with a care-
ed a midget edition of the New Tes- voice and physical endurance.
agent, It is three-quarters of an Ono of the traditions of the House of mony which sprang up when our bar -
ch long by half an inch wide, andCommons is that a chancellor on this barian forefathers first began to creep
ighs but 26 grains: across the threshold into historic time,
Railroad. construction. is being pushed supreme occasion needs to have a sup-
pidly in India, the examine of miles ply of fluid of some kind close at hand and undertalee the organization of so -
new track built last year or planned in order to moisten his throat and to 1 ciety. If that ceremony still survives
r this year being 4,573 or one-fourth clarify the tones of his voice. For sev- to be celebrated with such pomp to -
the length of existing lines. eral generations this custom has won day, no wonder the divine character
Mr. A. J. Balfour is one of the few o£ kings has played so important a
lly good rnusicians in the House of
nmons. He follows the movements of
minimal world with keen interest
1 is no mean performer on the piano -
ten
?f the 4,000,000 Armeniana now in
the world, Turkey contains 2,500 -
)• Russia 1,200,000; Persia 160,000,
I ! I 1
followed, but every speaker has been part in the world's Yistory.
left at liberty to select liis own med- Three ideas or attributes were orig-
ioinal agent for keeping the throat pally united in the king. As the bead
clear and flexillie, of the family or tribe, he was judge.
v was
As the strongest and bravest, he
Mr. Gladstone never appeared at the the leader in war. Again, as the pa -
table on a budget day without his well- triaroh of his people, he was the priest
t a e ao iia-
up"' whom .t devolved o In k s r
o fain
Wbat oma um- ot. Wh
t1
P P ees and appease the spin of the tribe
P
d the rest are scattered over the . ed was always more or less of a myst- forefathers
id Th character f the1 is
t admirable rat er o people
ery. Having carefully arranged his pa- This conception of a king seems to
pars on the table before the front goy have existed among almost every pee-
ri iit`[•.s F'[enriette's, of Belgium, pie, and it still colors nearly every
dding presents and clothing, sent ernment bench, and having uncorked modern coronation ceremony,
ter bar from Brussels, .to Neuilly, the pomatum -pot and Critically tested One of the first kin makings we
AAnnumpreminisminniftenarroromatii
INFANTICIDE HANGED.
Mrs. Dyer 'Pays the Penalty on the Scaffold
—,,►n Immense Crowd outside Newgate
Prison Cheer the Death Flag — The
WonaiUL'a Terrible tomes.
A despatch from London says t ---Mrs.
Annie Dyer, the baby farmer, of
Beading, who was arrested. on April
9, on a charge of murdering a .number
of infants entrusted to her care, was
hanged iu Newgate prison at 9 o'clock
on. Wednesday morning. Mrs. Dyer
was one of the most extraordinary orira-
lnals of the age—a }wholesale, Cold,
blooded murderess of the type of H'.
H. Holmes, the man recently executed
in Philadelphia. Thexe was little dif-
ference in the methods they employed..
Holmes killed men, women and chit-
dren indiscriminately, but Mrs. Dyer
contented herself with slaying helpless
infants entrusted to her tare.
The police first became suspicious of
Th's. Dyer and her son-in-law, Arthur
E. Palmer, early in April, when the
bodies of a number of children, ap-
parently strangled to death, were re-
covered from the River Thayaes, where
they had been thrown, weighted down
with bricks, etc. An investigation
was followed by the arrest of Mrs.
Dyer and Palmer, and letters were
found at the house showing that many
of the parents with whom she and her
accomplice had dealings were aware
is
theinfants
for
of the fate intended
consigned to the wonean's oars The
weather was rainy in the morning, but
the orowds in the vicinity of the pri-
son were as large as the available
space would accommodate. When the
bore her husband,, the Due de Ven- ets contents, Mr. Gladstone would 1x, have any record of is the Basle story black flag was hoisted, indicating that
ome, has Ins villa, filled 170 boxes and ready to start in for a speeoh of three of how the Prophet Samuel anointed the Reading ogress had laid the er d
p ally of her cringes, the •crowd cheered
sighed eleven tons. or four hours. David the first king of the Hebrews. loud and long. Since she was sen-
tenced has 630,000 office 'Disraeli had neither the mind nor With the Jaws the idea of the religious tented to death Mrs Dyer attempted
Fra• ns in 18532 000 had only oholders.000 the voice for a long speech, and he had "character of the king completely over- twice to commit suicide in Newgate
TI population is now ha-ct 38,000,000 as cam- no special talent tor finance. A bud- shadowed his other attributes, and
red pulp 30,000,00D Lnothan, About one get speech was a great trial for him, hence he was only anointed. The clay c and Latelynighshe
d had
as a depriweciho f
E
and he did not disguise tho nature of crown represented temporal power, everything except her most necessary
an in every ten must hold some place the refreshment which he provided for and was not essential.
under the government. the ewer envy. It was a tumbler of This idea of oil symbolic of clothing ' Evan her hairpins were taken
John Burns proposes to have a law, brandy and water, and it was supPos- divine sanction seems beingearly aspreva- frons. Boman was completely
sled by parbaenont making it Coin- ed to carry him through what was for lent as the conception of the threefold
ilsory tor employers to give domestic , him a burdensome labor. Chancellors character of the icing. The Greeks con-
rvants "a character" on dismissal, ' before his day had used old port or sidered it the peculiar gilt of the gods,
iws to that effect have long been in champagne, or even Scotch whiskey: designed, so to speak, specially to lub-
ree in France anil Germany. 'J.1.r, 11 ax'd hunt introduced soda-wat- rioate the wheels of fife. The olive
S' Fi x Irvin `' son henry B er as a safe and ready lubrieator of a was their sacred tree, and all the races
The etel. dazed
when she was led to the scaffold. and
had to be supported by the wardresses.
who have had her in charge since she
was sentenced to die.
Although 1lrs. Dyer was clearly
proved to have committed numerous
;est Reeneee
4'or infante and Children.
"OesterleisSoweliadaptedtochildreat.hat
t recommend has superior to any prescriptiof
blew* to Me." IL It.,.�:i, If. De
11185 Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. T.
"The use of'Castorla' is so universal and
its merits so Well knewu that it eeema a work
of supererogation to endorse it Few are the
Inteligentfamilies who do not keep Oratorio
within easy reach." Nansre. D.P.
New York City.
%Ate Paster Bloomingdale Reformed Qhurch.
Oastoria ca Collar t�•on5 ip oo,
Sour Stomach, Piarnceea, Eructation,
rials Worms, gives sleep, and Aronooten dI•
Wit o 4 i�njutl4US medicai i's&
*For several years I have recommended
your' Castoria,' and shall always continuetq
do so as it bas invariably produced benefioial
results."
Bowor F. Panes*, H. 1.,
"The Winthrop," 125th, Street rad 7th Ave„
New York (Mtn
•1'u Clemons Company, 11 Mcaate eraser, Nen Yoe=
TEN YEARS TROUBLED
and D s e. iia--�Su erea:
���h Liver Complaint � �? �
Found. No Relief in the Scores
Greatly and
Medicines Prescribed,
of
uc . en y • g y dr throat. One of his successors at of anticluity• shared in the Hebrew idea
wing, is said to resemble his illus -
the murders of enfants, she was tried o n
ions father greatly, both in voice and the exchequer, Mr. Goschen, began by that oil, which caused the face of man a selected case, that of killing a little
inner, in his present Loudon perform- emptying seeeral tumblers of water in to shine, was a divine blessing, And irl, the Child of a barmaid, which
ace of the role of hamlet, Be bas : succession, and ended by failing back in nineteenth century klosCow the ;g
so appeared as Romeo and Jacques. upon claret, In which the per cent. of anointing of Nicholas LI. with the sa- she had adopted for the sum of nit%
alcohol is almost nil. cred oil was the most solemn, if not The child was strangled with a. piece
Dominican nuns at King William's
When the present Chancellor of the the most gorgeous, part of the elalno- of tape, and its body sunk in the i
own in Cape Colony, where they have Exchequer recently areae to rate ritual. Thames at Reading. The bodies of
farm, do their own outdoor work. P.ERSIAN CORONATIONS, seven other children, who had been f
hay ploLigia and hoe, have built their appointment and distrust m similarly strangled, were found in the
Cyrus the Great of Persia was an- river at the time that the body of
tvn buildings, do the carpentry and
11 the blacksmith work, besides teaeh-
g the boys and girls in their school,
Germany's new census returns
wenty-eight cities with a population
f over 100,000. The City of Ha.mbutrgl
as 632,7155 inhabitants. lelunich and
ipsic are running a olose race, the
ormer having reached 400,002 and lead-
ng Loipsic by 1,554.
Tobacco smoking has been tabooed for
he priests in his diocese biy the Bishop
f Rurfih in Russia as a 'disgustingly
rad habit, which is unbefitting for those
who serve the altar, and a great tempt -
tion to the laity." He forbids it even
o the wives of priests.
Balmoral is the home of Queen Vie -
aria each year from the middle of May
o that of June and again from August
o the last of November. It es situated
n the very centre of the Dee side
3ighlands.wailod around by the frown -
ng Grampian mountains.
Sawdust is turned into transportable
Fuel in Germany by a very simple pro-
cess. It is heated under high steam
ppressure till the resinous ingredients
iaecome sticky, when it is pressed into
ricks. One man with a two -horse
aowerr machine Can turn out 9,000 bricks
daA French engineer has conceived the
idea of reproducing the house in which
Napoleon lived at St. Helena as an at-
traction during the Paris exposition of
1900. Tina house will be an exact copy
o1 the original, with panoramic can-
vases representing the natural sur-
roundings.
In being shown thrgu,gh the Bishop
of London's palace at Lambeth recently
a London Methodist was pained to no-
tice that it contained no portrait of
John Wesley. He at once bought an en-
graving of him, had it framed, and
sent it. to the bishop, who accepted it
with thanks.
Archduchess Maria Theresa, of Aus-
tria, is emulating Sandow. She prae-
d b els and
tfces with large um bells, n can
g'
manwith one hand. She is said
Iift a n
on one ocna_sion, when a heavy iron
column fell on a. man, to have lifted
it high enough to enable him to be
drawn from under. She is a delicate -
looking woman of 34, wife of the Arch -
lake Karl.. Stephan, and mother of five
children.
The crater of a volcano in Hawaii
vas filled from. 600 to 1,000 feet deep
with molten lava, which finally forced
its way through a subi"erranean pas-
sage. It was forty miles from there
to the sea, yet this avalanche of mol-
ten rocks reached the waters in less
than two days, destroying everything
in its'track. It continued flowing for
three weeks, heating the sea water
twenty miles out from shore.
,' • . _ deliver bis
budget speech; there was an air of dis.
' the Cora -
mons. The table was piled high with
books and manuscript notes, but there
was no provision for assuaging the or-
ator's thirst. There was neither bottle
nor pomatum -pot nor tumbler in sight.
A veteran an the gallery shock his
head ominously, and offered to wager
half a crown with a companion that
the chancellor would break down with-
out the traditional budget drinks. "It
is in violation of all precedents!" ex-
claimed
sclaimed this observer of Constitutional
usage.
But Sir Michael Hicks -Beach did not
break down. He made a• two hours'
speeoh without the aid of even a glass
of water, and his voice was as fresh
and strong at the end as at the -begin-
ning.
beginning. So it is gratifying to know that
an objectionable timehonored alcohol-
ic precedent has been undermines.
A fashionable London dressmaker re-
cently brought suit against a (gentle-
man for payment of his wife's bill, and
in the case the question arose as to
what is a reasonable amount to be
spent on dress by the wife of amean
whose income is $5,000 a year. The
dressmaker testified that in her opin-
ion the wite was entitled to $500 a year
for olothes. One hundred dollars for a
velvet dress was not considered ex -
theme. The question whether the
is
wife of a man with only $5,000 a year
ought to have a velvet gown. The or-
dinary jury is incapable of dealing with'
such far-reaching questions.
Madame Patti has for many .years
been the possessor of a fan upon which)
nearly all the sovereigns of Europe
have written. The following are the
inscriptions: The Czar, "Nothing is so
calming as your voice." The German
Emperor, "To the nightingale of all
time. Queer Christina, ' To a Span-
iard, from a queen who is proud to
count her among her subjects.""Queen
Victoria, "If King Lear was right in
saltin�gg that a sweet voice is a precious
• iii a woman, you, my dear,Adelina,
are, of all women, the richest." In the
middle of the fern are these words:
Queen of Song, I offer you ray salu-
tations. --A. biers, President of the.
French republic.'".. ti; . es
The Soar family of Ambeston, Derby-
shire, England, have a, curious heir-
loom in the shape of a loaf of bread
which is now over 600 years old. The
founders of th'e family,it appears, . were
great friends of Ding Jahn. When that
manareh died he made several land
fermate 10 the Soars. One of these tracts, are ester?'
THE DISCOVERY OF QUININE.
ll'roduetion of the Present Day and
Methods of Use.
In a company of prominent physi-
cians
hysi
oians each was asked to write the six
remedies that he would take an board
ship for a voyage around the world if
his life were to depend on the number
who should return alive.
The first entry was " opium" anent,
mously indorsed. At the second entry
the vote was tie between " mercury "
and " quinine.," and now that the bi-
chloride
i
chloride of mercury has been found to
be the most efficient of microbe kill-
ers probably that would have second
place unanimously and the thirdwould
be unhesitatingly given to the various
extracts of the bark of the 'several vari-
eties of the cinchona, of which the most
familiar is quinine, a name derived
f that used bythe Peruvian In-
dians,
n
dians, who called the trees kina. The
old-fashioned method of administration
was by macerating the " quills" of
bark fn wine and the great tonic in
the early part of this century Was
" bark and wine," and as in these later
days it has been demonstrated to be
directly fatal to the bacillus malaria
we can easily understand what a boon
it was to the "settlers" in the un-
drained and " fever -arid -ague" regions
of this country when new. :At last, by
the advance of chemical skills, the sec-
ret of extracting its alkaloids was found,
andf these no less than thirteen are
o hes
known and used, and some of them pro-
duce a valuable medicine at a less cost
thea quinine itself.
In 1854 the Dutch government un-
dertook to raise the trees in the island
of Java and now they have most pros-
perous plantations but the most ex-
tensive and successful of what may be
called intelligently conducted planta-
tions are to be found on the slopes of
the Himalayas and he British Burmah,
In South America the bark is obtained
by first stripping the trunk, then fell-
ing the trees, but under English botan-
ists in India a way is found of partial-
ly•tbe trunk and then sur-
rounding it with moss, causing fresh
bark to be produced. The botanists
hive even found a way of making the
bark fuller of the desirable alkaloids.
ointed and presented the tiara of his
predecessor b the priests. Then
clothed in golden ,jewel, -studded robes
he was led to a raised throne under a
canopy of sapphire blue supported_ by this number only four aro now hying.
columns of gold set with precious In addition, prior to Christmas, many
stones. The ancient historians tell as other children who had been placed in i
the splendor of the scene rivalled the the woman's charge were unaccounted
glory of the ods. They neglect to for, and are admitted
the barmaid's infant was recovered.
It was proved that since Christmas
at least twenty children had been en-
trusted to Alis. Dyer's keeping, and of
South American Nervine Was Recommended, and Befori
Half a Bottle Was Taken Relief Came,
it a to have been more
dered, A conservative estianate places?
the number of children killed at 40, but ti
estimates have it that as many as 700
infants were either strangled or drown-
ed by Mrs. Dyer.
say, however, that the Persian people
pard the bill, as they also paid for the
`,temple of Pallas, which Cyrus built for
the coronation of his successors, nor did
they get any credit for it.
In early Rome the divine character
of the king was strongly brought out
in the coronation ceremonies. From
the meagre reoords that come down to
us it appears that Numa Pompilius, al-
though invited to be king by the peo-
ple, put himself entirely in the hands
of the augurs, who were supposed to
interpret the wishes of Pupeter. It
must be said, however, that the pious
Numa Is supposed to have "fixed" the
College of Augurs, and was crowned by
them with great solemnity.
CARRIED ON A SHIELD.
LETTERS IN SMOKE.
Ameroian lovers of the weed who Can
"make rings" pride themselves on be-
ing "artistic :smokers, but they are hot
to be compared with the Japanese jug -
,
and their Emmons .smoke tricks.
Jayax�ese artists in that line link rings
together, make crosses and. spoked
wheels, and some are even said to be
able to make a succession of readable
letters!'
A NICE PLACE.
First Girl (in an intelligence .office)
-'1):lre think that teddy will be aisy
to git along wid I ,
Second Girl Yis, she's a reg'lar fool.
"Conductor!" "Yes, sir." "Wouldn't
it -be great if these car heaters would
stay as cool in summer as they always
in w'
The divine idea had less force in early
France and Germany than among
more civilized peoples. To the barbar-
mns who made Clovis I. their king he
was mare warrior than priest, and
ruled more because he dealt hard knocks
ttionhan,
because he enjoyed divine sane -
Accordingly his coronation was sim-
ple and warlike. Clovis was swung
upon the shoulders of his soldiers on
a buckler, and carried three times
around the camp, with the sceptre and
"the hand of justice" borne before him,
and the wild mob yelliug long life to
the king.
Like Clovis I. so Pharamund was
crowned, but soon after Charlemagne
the effects of the Christian doctrine and
the Church's ritual began to be ap-
paront.
The king was enacted by the minis-
ters and from that time
t Church, n
to
rs of he
on might oppress his people le with a
p
clear conscience and the sanction of
Providence. One of the first French
kings to receive marked attention
from the Church at his coronation was
Louis I., called "Louis le Debonnair. '
Pope Stephen V. came all the way
from Rome to Paris to crown him
and brought two crowns with hien to do
it with. One richly studded with jew-
els for the Ring, one of plain gold for
the Queen. Later the French kings
were crowned with the great crown
of Charlemagne.
THE PAPAL MITRE.
The coronation of the Popes has al-
ways been an immensly impressive
and gorgeous ceremony. Though, of
course, primarily of a religious nature,
the old Popes were the most powerful
temporal ,princess of Europe, and wore
their insignia on their mitres.
The two points of the mitre stand
for the two testamehts, the strings for
the letter and the spirit. In 558 the
first crowned Pope, Nicholas I., added
a gold circlet to the Cap as a symbol of
civil power. A second circlet was add-
ed in the next .century by Boniface
VIII., to signify spiritual authority,
over the sovereigns of the earth. At
third was assumed in 1632 by Urban V.
merely as an ornament.
With' the exception of the present
Czar's coronation that of Queen Vic-
toria was . attended with more pomp
and enthusiasm than any other of re-
cent days. A new crown wasmade for
her, the old one being too heavy, and
the 600 kisses on the left cheek from
the lords spiritual and temporal were
wisely dispensed with, inasmuch as the
young lady was but nineteen. With
great pomp she was anointed and
crowned by the Archbishop of Canter-
bury. She sat in King Edward's chair,
and under a canopy of cloth of gold,
held' by four Knights of the Garter.
THE PEACOCK THRONE.
In striking Contrast to the simplicity
of the English coronation throne 1s the
famous peacock throne of the Shahs of
Persia, which Ls a blaze of jewels.
The regalia common to most kings
are the crown, sceptre, or& sword and
usually some ob jettt�.symbolic of divine
.authority. The ailk hat, however, is
not among them►.
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castori.'
'Save Since Improved Rapidly, and Am Now Completely dur'ed-+"
So Says Air, David Reid, of ()Watley, Ont.
CANNOT FISH IN OUR WATERS.
Consequently Many American Tugs Have.
to lie Idle.
According to reports received at the
Fisheries Department at Ottawa, the
two Dominion cruisers on the great
lakes axe doing effective work in pre-
venting poaching by United States fish-
ery boats. It is ascertained that the
United. States fishermen on Lake Erie
are this year adopting new methods of
buoying their gangs of nets by using
invisible buoys or floats rendering it
necessary for the cruiser Petrel, which
is patrolling that lake, to use grappling
gear. For two or three weeks past
the Petrel's men have been laboriously
grappling for nets which it is alleged
have been illegally placed in the Cana-
dian waters of Lake Erie, but the Unit-
ed States poachers have taken warning.
Early in ]fay, before the Petrel arriv-
ed on the fishing grounds, some poach-
ing appears to have been done an our
waters, a tug from Erie City, Penn.,
taking from the Canadian side seven
or eight tons of herring. For some
weeks past the United States tugs have
been laid up, doing nothing, as when
their operations are confined to the Am-
tches
their catches
the lake h
eI'iCan
portions of
are so small that it does not pay. Unit-
ed States fishermen openly state that
unless they can take fish on the Cana-
dian side it is no use fishing, as they
lose money. The Fisheries Department
with its cruisers is thus rendering good
service to our fisbermen in thus ef-
fectually preventing the depletion of
fish in Canadian waters by United
States poachers.
FLOCKING TO THE EL DORADO..
Tides of Quickly 'Made Portuues Send
Thousands to South Africa.
The influx of immigrants into South
Africa is continuing at such a rapid
rate that the Cape Times fears that be-
fore many months have passed they will
once more be faoe to face with the un-
employed difficult. Not even the unex-
ampled progress of Johannesburg can
possibly keep pace with the weekly ar-
rivals. Sooner or later there will be a
serious glut in the labor market and
a heavy fall in the remuneration of
labor.
tendency of
it ems the - end
Already,.seY
wages, outside the class of artisans, is
in the downward direction. First-class
men will, of course, always command
raodsarboesvtheir
nkey meh ans y re-
cruited from the flood of new arrivals.
But the outlook for third-rate men is
by no means favorable. Our contem-
porary hears, for 'instance; of tolerably
efficient clerks of the mechanical order
who are scrapping along on the 'nneer-
able pittance of 5 shillings a day,
which is a good deal less than one
would call "a living wage" at the Cape.
A SCOTCH FARM.
A family in Seetland has just ,been
forced out of the tenancy of a farm
which it had occupied since 1680 by
record, with traditions running back to
1457.
The clove is the dried bud. of the clove-
tree. It is a little flower, gathered
while it is green, smoked over awood
fire, and dried in the sun,
What ilia nonce to humanity frons a
disordered liver! Henry Ward Beecher
has said that 1t was impossible for a
man to hold correct spiritual views if
his liver was out of order. The liver
ie so important a. part of the mechan-
ism of man that when it ceases to work
with ease the whole man is unable to
do his work aright. Can we not appeal
to thousands, nay, tens of thousands,
for
a verification
of
this is f
att
?
Cer-
tainlyit 1s that Mr. David 'Reid, of
Cheeley, Ont., felt ,that the enjoyment
,of: life had been taken from him,
through the unhealthy condition of his
liver. For ten years he says he was
troubled with liver complaint and dys-
pepsia. I3mploying his own language:
"At times my liver was to tender I
Could not bear it pressed or touched
from the outside. Had tried a great
many remedies without any benefit.
Was compelled to drop my work, and
being worse than usual, I decided as
a final resort to try South American
Nervine, which had been reoommended
to me by friends who had been cured
by it. I got a bottle from A. S. Good -
eve, local druggist, and commenced
taking according to directions. Before
I had taken half a bottle I was able
to go to work again, and I have Im-
e owed steadily since. I can considers -
tiously recommend South American
Nervine to any suffering from dyspep-
ids. or liver complaint." This Is Mr.
Raid's story as he tells It in hie own
words. Were it theugb.t necessary it
oould be corroborated by a hoet`of -wit-
nesses. her. Reid has lived a. long unlet
in OhesleY, and his case was known tb`
be a very bad one. But that makes nix
difference to Nervine. This great dis-
covery rises equal to the most trYitV
the
Let it be indigestion,
occasions.
most chronic liver trouble, as with l+dr.
Reid, nervous prostration, that makes
life miserable with so many, Oak
headaches, that sap all the effort out
of man or woman, Nervine measures to
the necessities of the ease. Tit is w
great medicine and thousands to -day to
Canada are ha.ppler and healthier men
and women, becauee of its discover?,
There is no great secret about 111, and
Yet there is an important secret It
operates on the nerve centers of the
system from which emanate all lite and
healthfulness or if disordered, sickness,
even death. lervine strikes promptly at
the nerve centers, hence, tut with Mk
Reid, where ten yeas' use of other ms•
Moines had done no good, lees than
bottle of Nervife brought about ane
couraging results, and a few battlers
oared.
C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter.
THOS. Wioneer, Oreditou Drug; Store, Agent:
Before Taking.
Wood's Pl1OSpIlotifl ,—me Great ,Englislh Remedy.
Is the result of over 85 years treating thousands of cases with: all known
drugs, until at last we have discovered the true remedy and treatment—a'
combination that will effect a prompt and permanent cure in all stages of
Sexual DebtTity, Abase or .Excesses, Nervone Weakness, Emissions, Minted
Worry, Excessive. Use of Opium, 'Tobacco, or Alcoholic Stimulants, all of
which soon lead to Insanity, Consumption and an early grave.. Wood's
Phosphodine has been used successfully by hundreds of cases that seemed
almost hopeless -cases that had been, treated by the most talented physi-
efans—cases that were on the verge of despair and insanity—cases that were
tottering over the grave -but with the continued' and persevering use of
Wood's Phosphodine, these cases that had been given up to die, were
restored to manly vigor and health—Roader you need not despair—no mat-
ter who has given you up as incurable—tile remedy is now within your
reach, by'.its use you can be restored to a Iife of usefulness and happiness:
Price, one package, Si; atxpackages, SI; layman free of postage.
One will 'lease, sixnaranteett to cure. Pamphlet free to any address.
The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont., Canada.
Wood's Phosphodineis sold by responeibte wholesale and retail druggists la the Dm:Onion,