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The Exeter Times, 1893-2-2, Page 6s•- AMT3"0147.6 .Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken;. it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, .Liver and Bowels,, cleanses the sys- tem effectually, dispels colds, head- aches hes and fevers ers andcures habiu habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro- duced, pleasing to the taste and ae- etab tofh e le pe stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most lealthyandagreeable substances its nanvexcellent qualities co Tanmen�d it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 75c bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not Lave it on hand will procure it prompt' for any one who wishes to try it. Manufactured only by the CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP((t� CU. SAN PRA;ItToIsoo, OB.L, 4.,')UisviLI.E, EZ iusw 2 O1e)X, t+ 'or Salo at Q. Lutz's .Drug; Store .l4iargiu of Silence. The oily man who goes to the country flecks a certaial; remoteness from villagers and people • }lo \v arite P u,d P , s a margin ' r 1 n of repose g and si}enco aliotit him. He is sag away from the lidtsonsciou b mer to t;at ` toil rti, urt< o s but very Ical ,fd dense e a u, theh l'tt u i 8 p n It to escape the , none mad tumult tt t milt and tenement presence of new mi,bs and crowds. There: is a deep instinct 1 cost: ii. Itis soul which prompts hint to seek ' V A .t.ct„ inter said solitude in order that he may recruit . wor Ids depleted spiritual force. He has it ties as a sense of being submerged and lost; I)e acme ties opportunity of returning to himself selfnsec . f slid re- ! c1r lettering 14 pl 11\ UsetaCx It ut'e ty t ti • P n sl l=oco and repose ' �' 1 draft , is the constant ueces• site of my mind out every •r f 1 must be in the world, but can never be of 111 1 anth he must keep it at a distatl.e, and resist approach "te l asi ' PPfttvv were a deadly spent~. . draw one's springs thewni,:h7feed�soul tiou din silence n those a hidden 'date s and then to give thio ins ii ation to then through all the powers of la tivity and self-expression, is to live a who sound life; to attempt to draw siren t)t one frac •, n the world ' rl. s 1 rt to bee- tie a in tt run dry, a tl �, arid e:hai:,ici Instead of living stream. Many active, earnest me and women, in their eagerness to serer• an „ 1 PROk• ROBERTSON ABRQAD. How It reels to be Buried Alive. r 0 Dotty eotnurietstotter Totes About Canada. "The Food .Producing Resources Canada" is the subject upon which P hisser Robertson, Dairy Commissioner the Dominion of Canada, a _dressed a la assembly interested iu the provision tr at the Home and Foreign Exeha Loudon, England, reeently, The lecturer dealt with the work of Dominion experimental di/try farms, foul ed with a view to increasing the output bacon, and improving the quality of but eheese, eta, also with packages, shippi and other matters. Mr. J. D. Copenta chairman of the Exchange, presided, N1 Robertson was warmly received. His ni eion to England, he said, was perhaps mo to learn than to teach ; still, he was wills and desirous to communicate to them formation concerning the vast resources Canada , and to show how they could be d veloped to furnish food for the millions their industrial centres. The object all farming was to create wealth in food a clothing. Wheat, cheese, bacon, butte fruits, tea, cotton, wool, and n even silk K•ere all products of some farmer's toil an skill. If these could be multiplied in quan ity and increased in value, every hand ler of the satue, every business man, wont have better thence to enlarge e h ' tions and to increase his profits. Camel transom was large, and it lead vast areas of arable an pasture land, which were not yet, oceupied 1yand-.by, when England sent more of he good men to them, they will fill up the grey. expanse of fertile soil, and semi food ave in vastly greater quantities, receiving cloth jugend other goods inreturn. He spoke of th experimental farms. The primary object these farms was to investigate the varieties of grain which were best adapted todilTeren soils, climatic conditions, and methods of cultivation. When information had been obtained from these experiments, bulletins and exports were distributed widely. for the guidance of the individnel tarmers in their own practice. The work of these a cperi• mental farms wasalso intended to stimulate farmers to a more careful study of the prin. eiples which underlie successful manage- ment of their own business. In brief, their object was to help in the education of grown men and women who lived on farms and upon whom all the cares and responsibilities of mature life had come. Last year over I�,,Or3 sample hags of new and rn ' rafts! p uGvarietles ofgrnin\verodistriit• free. From the cowing of the contents hese sample bags upon well-prepared , many farmers were able to obtain rat crop as much as two bushels of from and valuable variety of grain, at no to themselves. u immediate result of thisexperimenta1 k was to induce the farriers to be much o economical. Then the different varie• of fruits and vegetables where teeted and l ted upon. Besides the work on the ritnenta ''t l i, rlr.experimental a o r el. P P y stations hail been e•tt::olis]]ed in each fi provinces which. lie east of Manitoba. ot•` .. were I •-t/ e a. ,nt'1l 1 centres n" sexact ast and oritative informetiou on the best meth. I am just thirty-four years old. I was born in 1858, t grew old in a day. I have of ordeal tow Lich e;'mort l was ever subjected, ed through the most terrible rte.ofor I woe once buried alive and lay in the i of the O Te grave, with six feet of earth on top of me, the title of a lnost interesting pa for nearly three hears. That wad in 1idin- other night before the Canadian a e burgh, nearly nine years ago. '1 oronto, by 1tlr. J. C. Hatuilt rage At the age of twenty-four I married p, M. Hamilton showed from at girl Who hard been my playmate in child- nrshed by the Indian Departmen the hood, A year later I was taken sick, and number of Indians in Ontario td- after an illness of but two. days, wapro- was in 1891 about 26,000, and pounced dead, and preparations were made have increased by 25 Per cent- i ter for my burial. ceding `.35 years. The d.borigi ng I was as conscious as at this moment . but Georgian Bay district are of n, unable to speak or move a muscle. A great tribes, Ojibewas, Ottawas, \1essi r weight seemed to lie on my chest and eye- Pottawatamies. This po ulatE is lids. All that night and until ten o'clock northern Ontario superiuttende re next day floes with a cloth over my face, 184�i 3,143. They Held 3,t:�U a ng listening to the preparations for my inter'- cultivation. Their crops were 4,2 in• meat. At that hour lwas placed in a. coffin. of grain and 1,300 tons of hay. °l Three .days later the funeral services were taken by them were valued at $1 r- read and I was consigned to the grave. furs at $5,205, and their revenue There was no stifling sensation, for 1 had sources was $5,850. The chart °f ceased to breathe, but the black loneliness - Which the Canadian Indians sl an of those hours haunts me day and night. I rights is the royal proclamation r, felt that I would come out of the trance George III. in 1843, after the ,' before death hen ensued, u Paris,Their lands d to death, and the thought addedlhorror hto public meetingsot t e only ded oro t- my situation. ed at governor or Iris depty Care an I had read of graves being opened where over them is exercised by the d people had been buried alive, Rud l -ow they Government. The Algouquhns of t - had torn their flesh with their nails and and Georgian bay are divided into a turned over in their coffins in a mad strug settled on as many reserved en the d gle for air. I wondered if there was any lake and bay. ,Most of them • way by which I could quickly destroy my, Christians , but a remnant of the of r self wizen nature asserted its sway.. etition is often found among them t Every hour seemed to meas days. meet yearly on a chosen place to d r it was Tuesday when I was buried, and soot Matti ilanito the evil spirit, • I fancied I could hear the Sunday chimes Ttisv Lire ix Tams, e of the ,:hush which stood a few yards dis- the regulation of their affairs beiu of tont•. I woudered who pry neighbour was hands of councils chosen by the on the right and who on the left, and if the oldest system of government on t thee too, were buried alive. I wondered tinent is in operation in their if there really was such a thing as death, houses, Their code of rules, when or if I was dimmed to lie conscious in that and approved by the Governor prison for over. forms an excellent quasi-ntunicipal Suddenly 1 felt a muscle twitch. It is including the management of road coming now, I thought. A minute more schools and pounds. .Choy exhibit and I will be straggling for breath. I felt interest in edfeatlon and have man a faint fleeter at the hes schools, heart. 1 ave a look. and also g littlesend mast e f g , and the air seemed freighted with y the tis to the Itclrtan (;'athalEe schools dud.. lead. I tried to breathe, but it was like at '" ikmentikong, on Manitoulin drawing fetid water into my lungs. I hag and to the Protestant Shingwald a resolved not to move a muscle, to die with monash Homes at the Sault Ste Ma my hands folded on my breast, no that if 1 llatnilter. then gave an interesting my body was ever taken up my friends of several famous Indians of this reg would not suspect the awful truth, but I Ctiingalacose, the Small Pine tli ,o , (17,1•001111 u ld not e mill. ! struggle i1 The n Chippewa. • atr t �. l, + ,�tt+ b.gan, l P loaf who aided Capt. Ito and I fought in my narrow prison home as taking Fort Macinao in 1812, and wa u man only tights for life. wards for many years a leader of th Rorril,}e as'rt was, 1 seemed to hear ni in their wars with the Binux it wife's voice ringing Y, but tt pin inv mym , rtld c ato •. Eaears.(zt •' . It1st r i - 'WAS ani.. 7t under r the n cr agony,t o f YI . t .ret. I to answer it, but could tion of Ileo, Dr. 31ollurralr when not. dry at welt t+tea Marhe. Ilia son , A A successive of thunder peals shook rat . me bungwauk, gave his name and prison house y std to P It was the heavy blew „di the holy hero established for thecdr lea ' axes breaking open the box which contain. i of Indian Children. A iltinale wast short ed the eotlin. A moment itttmr I was lying g a noted Ottawa chief, and under the name of on the elmr:hyard sward in ni wife's arms. "Black Bird," figure runs Y figured at the tat•' ,hit el .Afterf myhum g tela ens I''n � .� el •+: •, it heat cnhr con t >rn ' tt \ to 't ,ld 11 the .. and ' @ lul ' � th notion that• 1 had been buried alive patinae frntn A o e1 .fence of and, to meriaannttucltin lbl•(. Iiis. quiet her fears, the grave w is opt+ued. I son Frames was, in 18.10 when wa lad, t into, nn the grave a young man and carne. brought. to Upper Canada College, where he t a ed. developed good scholarly powers, and at- tained high places in his classes, He be. 26,000 I,,.DIANS in Ontario and (iuetcec—:ea Interesttug Paper Read by J. C. iva]nttto,t- "The Algonquin of the Georgian Bay, Assiklnaek, a Warrior dahwas," per read the Institute, on, 0. 0, B. atistics fur• t that the and Quebec that they n the pre - nes of the Algonquin esagas and an of the ry was in Cres sealer 69 bushels The .fislr 3,500 and from other or under aim their of King treaty a of Y o alienate or by the d control Dominion he Huron 15 bands, shore of are now d sper. They auee and ginthe =elves; the con - commit adopted General, system, s, fences, laudable y public children convent Island, rad Wa. Mat Mr. account ion ; of o note .1 llerts in oafter- tribe 'as eon. ini. stra- nu4 sion- lt na f •1 , Inar Stu every to fruitful aaghttttl m+l i 1 q • tli t,t career. An active creative • 11 Tues it; ! ods or manufleturtn 1 is • . S cheese gnat butter, Lapin Indian interpreter to the deportment, Tc l lin products from them were 'hipped to i O11CO SUVV8ll1111tCe it1 i{119aia• and in 78:�y noel y"4 P en these markets, mainly through liver ,o,tl 1 " read tm ] 1 ] - i to gain - tr nnfo l rm t'a a1 n front eon- .. f ill `lri' an close market, ctnt• r• E ta•'r how to meet then preferences and c• 1 prejudices of British merchants anti con- su ' me , Through r•t. 1h 111 t brie, , � tee 2e e; they were trying 1 to help fanners by showing them how to e's' seek the market, how to•et,it it anti how to n r ..h- ...t e, vmate this fundamental l•Lwofdee living, and surrender to the world th which is not theirs to give. A margin. silence, repose, and solitude must protee every life that :steadfastly grow and e, panda; to livt• without it is to violate one u the sell:eitles of our nature. Out of th rush and tumult of the world one must alte retie into the ` N tie pct. where God got is salt 'with that still, email voice P. the uproar of profs and lcit es,PiAn hourltnf quiet, silence, an.l »nlitndeevery day wool sa,tt tnanv a man faint intellectual bank rnp-,.y, an•1 In'In' t woman from nervon wreck. The fhys.,•al need of repose is a t•re tr as the mteiieetual rind spiritual need. The belly »meta its quiet hour no less than the mite! and. ! oul ; if the eonse are always on the , ert. dud the tension is never broken the nerves succumb, and the harmony of a noble instrument is turned into a discord ull of misery. The greater one's work and rawer the dearer ones need of privacy, Man Eating Shark. A smell shark was lately caught at a well-ke,own watering place off the south coast, and . was exhibited in a small tent, outside which wits a placard with a rough tketch of the marine monster, inscribed, "Mau eating sharp. Admission 2d." Two yokels paid their money, and stood gazing at the mass of docayig fish. Crowds came and went, but still the yokels stood and waited patiently. Presently they went up to the exhibitor ., . and said, When will the man begin ?" " What man ? Begie what ?" queried the ancient mariner. "Why, when will the man begin to oat the shark?" said one yokel. g "No man ain't•. going g „cin to eat , b any shark. They ain't fit to eat," replied the old sail- or. " Well, I'm bowed! Then what do you mean by putting up a notice that you show A man eating shark?' Comet on, Bill; I thought it was a blooming swindle." vet's Carlhet Between St. Petersburg azul Kovno I popera before the Canadian Institute as to stop 'd for,, tams with , f t •ineln,n i rad Airt l.nnn•s ! /dowry and csbunles. He unfar• the a evio•ts Methods of Itnsiatt +ivernn],•nt ! tunately died in 1 til. The es pretty well. 1 Is,id hint my tatie, anal askedegsier thd I dhscuswe<? the "lltalabayli's''' legends and hon what he mule of it. :showed thatthese, - i testi various forms n , r ' , •, 13 t r i �r 1,11 s' t •. i s,t t, a .r I 1 • „ -. .Iia nig U .l our lr Aimee/Ides, tt.. I 1 � r], ' ie. uta I o a l t] t are e tsubstance h@ u pulite.~ retial. -tell to diseep:d front • of the "Song of lfl1'vatha," whit , keep It tot• their own goods. 'Ilse British Russia. atr h latter farmers had, least. cause to fear the coin- the shortest passi ie noti m: I pante is the Onondaga or drat uoie name for Fou have been watched from be •' the seine demigod c • 1 oat products a uuu to demigod ,r national herd el ' A 6 Z, i petition of Canadianf t p 1 I and n li faney t-anetli:ul cheese, which, pomrl for • 11 ' 3 n may he v waited elled at this in at pound, was equal to the finest English Gled• n s e on might hive vu l,1 a meet. mouth e of ± dor, tended to create a moregeneial and , t l nt 'I W rgbut you wow, ilcvcr have t-:tetrve dentauci for good cheese. It waa the' got an But," to your rat if I h inferiorenalitiesofperishablefoonlprothots•withouts.tr3aid1,�•hnttt 1 had gone an . ;which tonde•I to plat and depress too mar. „ 1 c rtnl4si, n ?" o\v lays e i diet, as well as to bring prices to a ruiteetelfeted1 on w,ntlr never know what hail inter. the swath shore f 1 ()net : low point. Y with you. You would have l,ren or. C h+pPew1 t, laws Ottan a1 and n+a10015ars of the rested cte.I at the f rl (gat n, • trot convenient place, tUans na t w u , atm oat xe ,• the rc i a c natural , i Hitt •tl it e customs nm T n o e of and t ms tt and l .i el t relate(mite l and raoM�r climate it � examination. 1 (tate as much to the ��i ..,t.ver- al places along tine unrtli Omni the name of • u still retain lranabnyho or NavEboyber, among these an island its Nichipicoten bay, which is his i:enn.rn milt u. rt.Aer. Mr. T ongfell l the plot of his song on n alae Suparior, when td s cattle. kept a week elf ,P or% Withl pendingIli fertileu c• t l soil � � ib P S e 1 What s •, tl most r 041 however Ilk ' a\ch t vigorous 11ov 0 ourevs g s hcalt, i h toslit 8da i 1 domestic t, and freedom from all serious diseasesofd infectious or contagious nature. British - consumers micbt depend upon the health. s fol, wholesome anti nutritious diameter of i all food products which were sent from 1Canada. Of the £13,000,Odaworth of cattle anti beef which were imported into England from outside countries, Canada expected to { send it much larger share in coming years ; and when consumers acquired the habit of asking for Canadian beef and seeing that they got it, trade might, be ;flora profitable 1 to pro.lucera, importers and hoteliers alike. He spoke of their experiment in feeding n hundred miles away from �t 1'etel takefrom our Lord's 1 swine, and how they could obtain a quality and, what is mo 1 sl,.trg, lhps "1essed they ow I of ]can and nutritious flesh, mucin sn eriorthat A dull season—Tasteless pepper. some dark nighthave been smashed to your ootjwould havo vmtfi : your stores, papers, and valuables would hove been taen away, and yourselves turned adrift in a swamp. "Bat," said I," you don't mean to say that a great government wonl,l permit such a thing ?" "Oh, of coarse not! Onr great Govern ment would express the most profound re- gret at the accident; it would only insist that the damage was done not by p.ilice agents, but by common thieve%. In any event, you would be stopped bef ire you got come °four north share. The essayist i on- elnded by giving abstracts of afeu•interest- iug myth?, or legends, related by young Assikuiatk when in Toronto, and which he had le.trned front his father and other learn- ed men of this nation on tit. Great Mani- toulin 3slancl, where the brave old warrior and his talented son lie now side by side in their last resting place at \Viekhnoutikon;. The Beatitude of the Unsuccessful. There may be uo I3ble beatitude saying expressly, ' Messed ate the unsuccessul", but there are beatitatles which are e,lujva- lent to this. Ire 1 to the lardy barons sfwhich P to prove that come from those sort persecuted" ,Blessed foreign countries where Indian you won d never be ab!o ,t Blessed be ye poor'', "Blessed arc they tt the government had stopped i wliieh are " n corn was the I "In Russia we are far ahead of western staple and almost only food. On the ex- I Europe. We have copied lynch -law from 1 perimental farm at Ottawa they had an ex -America, only here the government does i tensive poultry department. their trade 1 the lynching. When a man is obnoxious, i with England in the e'portation of eggs and , reads or writes or talks too much, we do poultry was a growing one, and it should • not bother about courts and sheriffs. be capable of great extension, as he found ssHe 'that then imported disappears—that is all, When rted these twoitemshen his f P ideals 1 tos the to c -I cin value ofet3,1791,301 last year. In concha.' a to inquire thou him, the govern - value , ion, Professor Robertson dwelt in detail mens. shrugsoits shoulders, and knows t upon the food -producing resources of Can- robbers,obbeabout it. He had been killed h ori 1 erlla s orY I a hhe has roviih,1't committed Ps r. 0 5' a,h P and t les i mitt , resumed his seated sn' amidst prolonged cheers. Professor Robertson.alao delivered an ad• dress on the same sttb'ea • Y before ] the mem- here of the Liverpool Produce Exchange. At. t s, the close of the lecture, in proposing a las roams aro always broken into and ra n - a, vote of thanks, Mr. 8. (u. Sinclair, one of sacked. Not by the government—oh dear the members, said the professor seemed to no I That would be shocking ! It is atwa •s think that the rich merchants of Liverpool done by burglars. But old to say, these had been makings, tremendous profit out of Russian bulb chde : The government cannot be held re- sponsible for every traveller in Russia, of course, "When a military attache is suspect ed of knowing too much about Russian ail'a' the poor Canadian farmer. They had in reality been working hard to make the Can- adian farmer, and in some years had trot nothing for then]seves in doing it. He hop ed that in the future they would he able' to fordo themselver es thanh for e theyadian done cr in the past. bl r. tV. hlarkles in supporting the resolu- tion remarked that the Canadian cheese did not very much commend itself in the dis- tricts d. Althought heyrdiid aool i larger trade now in Canadian cheese, they might do more if Canada would adopt a class of soft cheese l y1, ie y; more suitable to their requirement. He GRIM � — , ; �� Tartar � also made suggestions in regard to the pack pegee Canadian butter imported into Eng - i •glars_always care particularly for papers and letters. i°Tie German military attache has had his rooms broken into- be ice in this manner, eto fcevent a police third htvasion a assured thatthere was ot doing it any more, that he reallynever kept any important papers there. Since then he has not been troubled by official burglars." —[Pouitney Bigelow, in HaipeesMaw:inc. PUREST, STRONDEST, BEST, Contains no Alum, Ammonia, Lime, Phosphates, or any injurianit E. W, CYLiL ;TTI Toronto. Cnf. land, • Mr B. Gritnahan remarked that if the Canadian Government would only 'allow English manufactured articles to go into Canada free, then they (night, .as English. men, guarantee to form a league to sell nothing but Canadian produce. . Professor Robertson; au reply, said that he thought that they in Canada would be able to meet the demands of the English consumers, retailers and wholesale im- porters in the kind of cheese they wanted. They would also try to meet their views in the way of packing butter. In certain parts of India eeeoll,iiiil trees, onee almost lifeless in appearance. have been made to yield abundantly by placing salt at he roots. Sunset. A iter a day of tempest, Just when th eglooiage' l was thickest, Tile sun sit one forth again; Lit tvitil a blaze of glory Tho track of the seething waves; Pell like an angers blessing On the destitute churchyard grayoc; Gave heart of hope to the Esher Wearily faring home ; Brightened tho brow' of the good wife Watching till he should comp. And the words of tho Holy Scripture Were borne to my soul again As 1 thought of the wonderful gladness 0f sunshine after rain; • And thought that ever the Maxtor, As once in Galilee, Is ready to calm the tumult 0f storm on land or sea. And yet when the gloom is thickest. And the day is almost done, He sends the eheer and courage In the glean of the setting sun. —f ITarpor•'s Bazar, Children Cry for Pitcher's Castorla when men shall revileyou"," ode ye Blessed are ye when men shall hate you," Then many other Scripture passages have like teaching. Evidently not all blessings lie in the stat - shine ; many of theta hide in the shadows. We do not read far in the Bible, especially in the New Testament, without finding that earthly prosperity is not the highest good that at God has for men. Our Lord speaks very plainly about the perils of worldly success. The Bible is indeed a book for the unsuc- cessful. Its sweetest messages are to those who have fallen. 'I ' tisabook of love and sympathy. It is like a mother's bosom to lay ono's head upon in time of distress or pain. Its pages teem with cheer for those -who are discouraged. It sets its lantris of hope to shine in darkened chine - hers. It reaches out its hands of help to the fainting and to those who have fallen. It is full of comfort for those who are in sorrow. It has its special promises for the needy, the poor, the bereft. It is a book for those who have failed, for, the disap- pointed, the defeated, the discouraged. It is this quality in the Bible that makes it so clear to the heart of humanity. If it were a book only for the strong, the suc- cessful, the victorious, the unfallen, diose who have no sorrow, who never fail—the whole, the happy—it would not find such a welcome wherever it goes in this world. So long as there are tears and sorrows and broken hearts, and crushed hopes and human failures, and lives burdened and hewed down and spiritssad and despairing, so long will the•Bible be a hook believed in as of God—an inspired book, and fall of in- spiration, light, help and strength for earth's weary ones.—[J. R. Hiker, 1). D. The Serpents Tooth. '"Didn't 1 send 'int to Heton an' Hoxford ? Didn't 1 send 'int into the harmer, along o' some o' the biggest nobs in all FTengland, with an allowance fit for, a young heart? And what's the hupshot of it all? Why, he gives dinners to looks and royal'ighnesses, and don't even hrsk 'is p002' old father to meet 'em. 'Ighnesses, indeed 1 I could buy up the ole blessed lot. And, what's more I wouldn't hnind:tellin' 'em so to their faces fort wo'pins—ay Ties b as soon as look at 'em —and 'e knows it," All the cltappies are now trying to learn Baccarat, and (tope they will be summoned into courtlike the Prince of Wales. tirimmt Are you all run down? ,Scott's .EruL s7on2 of Pure Norwegian d ian Co'Liver Q�1 and Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda will buildou u andput p put flesh on you and give you a good appetite. Seatt's Emulsion cures Coughs, s, Colds, Consumption, Scrofula, and all A na e mioa n dlfi/astin Diseases. Prevents wasting in ahlldr. Alitoats. bas nellk, Get enonly ttate gonuinea.palataPrepareled by Scott & Bowne, Belleville. Sold by all Druggists, 's ts, 5D Dents and $1.00. 9 Solemn, Thought. A year ago this mop of hair was uniform• ly brown ; there wasn't browner hair them mine in all theblooming town, To -day I held the mirror up and started in affright; this hair of mine, this mop of stair, is being tinged with white. And then I fiat tee down and thought my heart grew dull and cold; the mournful truth came home to me that I am growls) old• It surely, surely cannot bel It scarcely seems a day, since I was but a little chap with littio I Scott's ulsioff The Ioisons Bank (0I1ARTEB11ABY PA RLTAMENT, 7868) Paid up 0epltal .... Beat Fund „ - .•. °�l,100,010 Head0Mae,Afentreat, 1'100,oc F. WOLFER8TAN TTT(t \l A P.TTNry., ('GE;te:neLMai .tern, g Ai'anay advanced to good farmerson their own 11015 with one or more endorser at 7 per cent, Per annum.. eha satrlay. Since when 1 carved in lettere large my name upon the trees, and chased the yel low butterflies and watched the droning bees; It scarcely seems a day, and yet my stair is growing white; and now I think of it my step's no Icnger firm and light; I gimes about the biggest aback man's called upon to bear, is when he finds that white has crept into his atop of hair, CONSUMPTION CURET), An old ph}•Arian retired from pra r, i•`], Mee mg h:t t 1lacrr i P in li i hands by an 14.1 India 111 ez,ionary the formula of a /4141110vegetable remedy for the speedy and permanent, cure for ('onsunlption. Bronchitis, t. ;tterrh,asthma and all throat and Ianet,a fectiono, also a positive and radical cure for nervous debility and all nervou, eamplaints, after having tested RA wonderful eurati-e power., in thousands of enacts, has felt it his duty to make it known to /its sulleeing fellow,:. Aetuated by this motive and n ddesire rn relieve send freeof charge, to ahuman suffering, `1. thie 'wipe in tierman, French or English with ful dine n 011% fo ) - inetnhy addtc .sit,g nith st imp, ua ninat,OO)1y 4 P.tpor, \Y. d. NOYES. S:) Power' 131oek rteltester, N. Y. Justice is like a girl ellibra•:ed behind the shutter—blind •faicled, Monthly Prizes for Boys and Girls• The",unhgi t"Soon Co,. of'rernnto, offer thefelhtwu,g prizes every month till further notice, to boys Inti girls rls undo ti •v' ' r 1 , negIe i the i'ruvinee n(t),ttario,,.•lim send the s;rcaert number of •?unlight wrarpors:let$I0:--rad, 11 t.•.- � ni 83 4th./ 5th 1 to t if1t it handsome beedittla prettyIic�nrotn those who se dnntic . then wrappers. tl , tri+, . is wrappers to. "Sunbelt' Soap tifllt n, 43 Scutstreet. reroute not later than -lth of each mouth, and marked eu. nnpe'itienalso give full mune address, ,rate and number of wrerpers. \Vinnera' names will be puhlis:.a5 is Toronto Mail on first Saturday in each month Love may be blind, but he know. 9 when the parlor lamp is too high. When &by wag sick, wo rave flee t'astor?8. When she was a Cbild,sho cried for Castorla. 'tv!!rn elle became }Mss, sho Went to Castoria. nen enshehadChildren,shegavethentCaaturia A colony of about 1,000 Japanese is to be established in Sinaloa, Meaiuo. Por two years I suffered terribly with stomach trouble, and was for all that time under treatment by a physician. He finally, after trying everything, said stomach was about worn out, and that I would have to cease eating solid food for a thne at least. I was so weak that I could D not work. Finally the on reco - m IA mendation of a friend who had used ' th your preparations A worn-out with beneficial re- sults, I procured a Stomach. bottle of August Flower, and com- menced using it. It seemed to do iah the good at once. I gained in hon strength and � 4 . Exeter Open every luwfulda,,ffront 0a.m.to8pa . SfTURDa.YS,It1 a.m. to1p.m, Cu mitt rates of interest allowed on depo d N. D'YBR HURDUN, Sub-Vanager. OOIC'S COTTC y ROOT COMPOUND. A recent discovers by an old physician. Siircess;i4;,1 ils- LApn :9 tIsf theonly perfect:- Iysafoandretie b clnedicine discovered Beware of un- principled (+r'egain s who offer inferior medicines in aloes of Val: Ask for Coox'e Corms ,tIhCoue 1080,t:it 110 'Wise itut,,; or inclose Mand three -cent Canada Postage stamps In letter, and we will se•id, sealed by return mail Pull sealedt ' rttc p ulars in henvelope. Iain 1 i . n0 ladies lid on$,,,stamo%..lddross t'ouct Ll,yCoutpanq No,'s Fitlher Block, 131 \Voodward .ive.,i)etroit at io Sold in �Yt L. o or b C r LUf h. Central Drug Stora and all dealers everywhere. �1r the dV] its its tk fu nr ar g, Young, middle-aged or old men Wino item the health, of and vigolesee,•t@slored to perfect SID A W t RRyy}� YitY 11 ItEEEY dmrx CREATES New Nerve Force and Powerful Manhood. i71 anll 00 d. Cures Lost Power, Nervous Debility, Night LosreS, Diseases caused by Abuse, Over Ivorlt, Indiscretion, Tobacco, bacco, Opium ium or StIntuiants.t:,,. ' t Ener y, Loci �, Memory, Headache, Wakefuin s Glee h 1 - .cocelc. 1 t ane to A Cure is Guaranteed i To every one rising this Remedy according to dime. lions,or refuelled. money .O0 Py 5100. ded . PF1.G� $I,DD, 6 PACKAGES wo6.Oo, conscientiously Sant by utait to any point in U.S. or cnnada, securelysealed,freefrom duty or inspection. Write today for our n . ST4PTLIN8 C rr TE•LLs You How To G'F_TELLcyt.aSaAYlELL't, Address er watt on QUEEN fr9Et1lCII E NEW YORK 'LIFE gwLDING, Montreal, ian. TH•EEYETER 'TIMES. Isoubllsnedevery Thursday tuornu at TI MES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE titin ,ESetoY Qnt, bm-street oioariy alJ'ohn Vuitte 21 Souk Cr- orietors. naTE9 op ADVIi1TtetVa Eirttinsertion,periine,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, , ,10 Ceuta, ben subsequent tin sertion mei' 19ne......Seent% To insure insertion, advertisemeu,s should oesentin uotlaterthan Wednesday morning Ouro the tai gest MINTING best equipped n tae County o-iIurou,,tllwork entrusto,t to a9 w1itrazatv.i otr prom»tattentton. ecsions - News- papers. nyperson who taloa a Paporrogularly from e ost-office, whether dtreoted in his name ar snot.tler "s, or whether the hits subscribed or nab is responsible for payment. 2 If a person orders his paper diseontimted he nhust pay all arrears or the publisher may iid�then collect the evh the amount lweether o paper is taken from the oflico or not• 3 In suits for subscriptions, the suit may be ns- in the place where the paper is nub e0, although tiro subscriber may reside dyads of miles away. e courts have decided that refusing to takonewspapers orperiodicttls from rho post - office, or removing and leaving them uncalled oris prima facie evidence of intentional fraud g flesh rapidly , my ap- petite became good, and I suffered no bad effects from what I ate. I feel now like a new than, and con- sider that August Flower has en- tirely cured me of Dyspepsia in its worst form. JAb31as E. DEDBRICK, Saugerties, New York. W. - Il. Utsey, St. George's, S. C., writes : I have used your August Flower for Dyspepsia and find it an excellent remedy. �v;� 1013 .a� PURE POWDERED Ready for use in any quantity. For making Soap, 3ortening Water, Disinfecting, and a hmidred other us0S. can equals 20 pounEs Sod aoda• Sold 'by All Gi.00,0?^B cud Druggists, Scientific American Agency fort' DESION PATENTS. r," COPYFUCHTS, eta:, For information and free Handbook write to Oldest bureau Tor securing patents in America. Every patent taken out by us is brought before. 1 he pUblic by a notice given free of charge ha the ' krttuttfte alutritnit zamist circulation of any scientific paper in the. World. Splendally Mustrated. No intelligent man should be without it. Weekly, 83.00 a ;Lear; $1.00 sir months. AcIthosti MUNN d; .rtersiiinits, 301 Broadway. New York. A bridegroom et Hammond, Ind., thought it prudent to begin married life economical- ly. He gave filty cents to the clergyman who performs(' the ceremony, and then had. the audacity to denaand a receipt. Sorrows are meiters that come withoutir invitation ; but complaining minds send a wagon to brieg their troubles home im