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The Exeter Advocate, 1895-1-17, Page 57 ' As Weil as Ever After Taking Hood's Sarsaparilla 14R,GEO.MERRETT • Toronto, Ontario. 1)( Cured of a Serious Disease. "I was suffering from what is known as Bright's disease for Ave years, and for days at a time I have been unable to straighten myself up. I was in bed for three weeks; during that time I had leeches applied and derived no bene- fit. Seeing Rood's Sarsaparilla, advertised in the papers I decided to try a bottle. I found relief before 1 had finished taking half of a hot- tle. 1 got so much help from taking the first bottle 'Wall decided to try another, and since taking the second bottle I feel as well as ever did in my life." Goo. MEnrarr, Toronto, Ont. In Dreadful Condition Almost a Complete Wreck After the Crip Can Hardly Express Sufficient C rat- htude to Hood's Sarsaparilla. "c. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.: "Dear Sirs -I feint my duty to let you know the good Hood's Sarsaparilla has done for me. I have been troubled with summer complaint for years, unable to do anything. 1 tried everything but seemed to get no relief. Then I became a victim of the grip and was left Ina dreadful state, so weak I could scarcely work and when I did I worked in misery. The doctor said Thad Bright's disease. My kidneys were in dreadful condition. I found one of your papers atmy door, aud on reading it decided to H Sarsaparilla give Rood's Sarsaparilla a trial, thinking at the time it was not much use as nothing helped me before. But, thank God, I got relief after the first bottle. I kept on taking it and used five bottles; am now a cured man; never felt better. I have loudly recommended Hood's Sarsapa- rilla, for I owe my life to it and nope this may be the means of leading others to give it a fair trial." JoStitta SALMI, Norwich Ave., Wood- stock, Ontario. Hood's Pills cure liver ills, constipation, jaundice, biliousness. sick headache, indigestion. The snow is seven feet deep in the suburbs of Vienna, Austria. Piso's Remedy for Catarrh is the Best. Easiest to Tise, and Cheapest. Sold by druggists or sent by mail, SOc. E. T. Razeltiae. Warren, Pa. - H M. S. Blenheim sailed yesterday from Halifax for Portsbura, For Over ;fitly Years. AN OED AND WEIJI,TEXED REMEDY. -Mrs Winslow's Soo thing Syrup has been used for over fifty years by. millions of mothers for their children while teething with per- fect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain cures wind colic and, is the best remedy 'for Dia.rrhoia, is pleasant to the taste. Sold by Druggists In. every part of the World. Twenty-five eents a bottle. Its value is incalculable. Be sure and ask for Mrs, Winslow's Soothing Syrup and take no other kind Great Britain is having severe win- ter weather. Beyond Comparison Are the good qualities possessed by Hood's Sareaparilla. Above all it purl. 'fies the blood, thus strengthening the nerves; in regulates the digestive or gans, invigorates the kidney and liver, tone and builds p the entire system,. cures Scrof uia. Dyspepsia, Catarrh and Rheumatism, Get Hood's and only Hood's. Hood's Pills cure all liver ills, bilious, ness, jaundice, 1i:digestion, sick head- ache. Venison is a common, every day dish in German cities, so the United States consul -general at Berlin informs his Governineet. London, Huron and Bruce. TI1a1TABLII. e0ING ITORTR- London depart e11 tralla VXETBIt Hensel)... 'Copan Brucef!eld Clinton............. Le ndesbWro... ....... ..... . ......... Be)gray.E1 . . ..... Wing am arrive GOING Si,urxr- W!nghaol, depart Passenger. 8.05.& at 4.30 PM 9.07 841.,9.22 oc 9.37 618 44 6,20 9.02 0.28 . 10.12 6,85 • 10,29 7.14 . 155 38 ase • 10.52 7 37 11,10 800 Passenger 8.35 A At 2.25 1' 11 . 651) 3.47 7.08 4.01 7 10 4.08 7.30 4 2 . .41) 4 46 .157 4,53 505 .4555 8.25 1115 . 8.40 5.28 Blyth Loncleshoro Clinton Brimefield Xippon. EXETER Rensall. .... .... Centralia. ...... • • 1 FOR TWENTY -FOE YE 'RI DU N'S B 1 C DER THE COOICS BEST FRIEND LARGEST SAL IN CANADA. I Mil HEN I am dyeing Edith dyeing, Tints of crimson, bright and fast; Shades, too, dark as Pluto's regions, And they cannot help but last, Let inc tell you how I do it, Let me Whisper in you ear. Diamond Dyes is all my secret; You can do the same, my dear. Though my clothes get worn andelingy And with stains are spotted o'er, Though they look as fit for nothing., I can make thein good once more. Though I have not many dollars To expend on garments new, I can dress as well as any, And I know that you mien too. Let not fashion's sevile minions Scorn the garments thus made o'er; 'Twas no dyer's hand that Made them, I have done the same before. I who took my last year's dresses. Waeli'd and dyed,and pressed & turned Made them o'er for this year's wearing Gowns for which the heart has yearned Yes, I'm dyeing, Edith, dyeing; No, you donot need to go; You've not hindered me a moment; 'Tis not hard to do, you, know, New, no more ane needs to wonder How to make their dresses do; When with such a little trouble, "Diamond" makes them good as new. The third trial of Wm. R. I aidlaw for $50,000 damages against Russell Sage of New York was begun in the Supreme Court before Judge Patterson Tuesday. Fullerton: A very serious if not fatal accident happened on the farm of Geo. Seebach, of the Huron road, tho other day. Mr. Seebach's soils, John and Peter, were ehgaged in bricking a well, the first named being at the bottom, when the rope attached to a bucket of bricks that were being low- ered parted, allowing the bucket and its contents to fall a distance of 32 feet In its descent it struck Mr, Seebach on the head, fracturing his skull and breaking bis collar bone in two places. The gash. in the unfortunate man's head extended down to his right eye, and from this wound the brains oozed freely. His back was injured, and the entire right side from head to foot is one mass of bruises. 8,011001. BOON. Financial Statement for 1894. The following is a summarized state meet and the receipts and disburse- ments for the year as per Auditors Re- port. RECEIPTS. nal, on hand, .Tan Interest kMolsons Bank) Non, Resident fees Government grant Municipal grant Other sources Appropriation for 1895 $2354.50 42.80 6.00 211.00 211.00 32.00 28.00 55057,50 DISBURSEMENTS. TEACHERS SALARIES. T. A. Brown 5600 Miss Vos per 850 Miss Grill 300 Miss Gregory 800 Miss Pringle Miss Ferguson Miss Reid Wm. Brooks 3fiss Waldron. Janitor Secretary Maps Wood Insurance Fence 166.18 3 -White &Son (3 yrs. ace.) t2.75 Other Px pens es 142 54 Bal, on hand , 2523,85 270 158.50 111,41 11.60, 270 52871.60 5250 20 12.20 118.21 .10.00 Exeter, .Ta n. 14,18151 $5057.30 3. GRIGG $06'37. Our Clubbing Offer. The AnvocarrE is anxious that its sub scribers should have the advantage of the Agents fees on city weeklies and with this end in view we have arranged with the fol- lowing papers to be clubbed with the AD- VOCATE. W a will furnish the ADVOCATE and any of the following papers at the price set opposite: - Free Press.... $1.70 Advertiser Empire 1,75 Globe, ...•• „ 1.05 Witness (Montreal) . 1.75 News (Torouto)....... 2,75 Mail Star (Montreal), .... 1.75 Farmers' Advocate 1.75 Farmer's Sun (Patron) .... .. 1.50 1.75 CLOT, ?I J. Sriell EXETER - ONTARIO Has now in stock ra arid WIRE CTOC)=SA., IN THE FOLLOWING LINES : West of England Suitings and Trot eringS, Scot& Tweed Suitings and Trouser Inge. Prench and English Worsted Olot All made up in the Latest Stst , at best _Rates. SNELL. PERSONALS OF ROYALTY, The queen of Euglaud always elerpa with her bedroom window open. Among, Iris -many. Aocomplishenents the alike of Edinbureb can speak Eleven differ- ent languages. , Sir Edwin Arnold said the other day that he endorsed a remark once made by Chauncey M. Depew: "Fame depends on being civil to interviewers." The duke of York has never conquered his tendenoy to seasickness, and although he does a great deal of yachting with his father it is not all plain sailing with him. Lord Aberdeen first met his wife on Guisaaban, her tether's estate, when, he was si lad, and. having lost himself 011 the hills, begged shelter at the lodge for hirin- self and his pony. Here is a good story which is told of Sir Arthur Sullivan: It was at dinner, and a young lady inquired of Sir Arthur whether Bach was composing anything at present. "No," he replied; "at present he is de- composing." The duke of York, who is an enthusi- astic stamp collector, recently applied to the agent general of the colonies for speci- mens of the issues of their oountries. In reply Esteems have been sent to him by the sheet, and in some cases issues with- drawn have been reprinted for hitn. WHY AND WHEREFORE. Clouds that move in the direction op- posite to that of the surface current indi- cate a change of weather, because.' they prove the existence' of two air currents, one warm aud the other cold, and the mingling of these often clauses rain. The strongest muscle is in the calf of the leg, beeause locomotion is one of the most necessary fanctiona. The greatmus- cle of the calf has been found by actual experiment, to be capable of sustaining seven times the weight of the body. Many persons lay a poker across the top of a grate to make the fire burn, because of a popular superstition, once credited, that a stubborn fire was due to the devil. Two pokers were used, and were laid across the firein the form of a cross. The human system can endure a heat of two hundred and twelve degrees, the boil- ing point of water, because the skin is af bad cenductor and because the perspire,' tion cauls the body. Men have withstood without injury a heat of three hundred degrees for several minutes. WORK AND WAGES. An engraver in Rio de Janeiro can make 812 per week. A blacksmith in Jerusalem can make $1.92 per week. The King of Bavaria has salary of 81,412,000 a year. A printer in Peru can make from $1.25 to 81.80a day. Shop girls in France receive an average of 8100 a year. In Mexico seamstresses are paid 37 cents a day; weavers, 50 cents. Bookkeepers in Germany receive from 3300 to $300 a year. Teachers in Hamburg receive from $11 to 828 per month. Fig packers in Asia Minor, if skillful, can make 20 cents a day. A camel owner and his beast in Palestiue are worth 81 a day. Railroad clerks in Germany are paid an average of 52 cents a day. Houses for svork.ing, people in Germany rent fur $25 to 845 a year. GOSPEL HYMNS. "Drooping souls, no longer mourn," was the work of Thomas Hastings, the au- thor of more than six hundred sacred lyrics, and even better known' as a com- poser of church music for use in popular religious assemblies. "Come, 0 Thou All Vietorioas Lord," is by Charles Wesley. It was written for the onarrymen of Portland, and contained several allusions to their busitiess, which were readily recognized and heartily ap- preciated, , ' • "0 Love divine that stooped to share," WS by Oliver Wendell Holmes, and first appeared iu one of the series of papers en- titled "The Professor at the Breakfast Table," published in the Atlantic Monthly for November, 1859. "I'll praise my Maker while I've breath" came from the pen of Watts. It was a favorite nymn with John Wesley. Tbe day, before he died he sang it through, and. the night of his death he vainly attempted. several times to repeat its words. MEN OF MONEY. William Waldorf Astor has an income of eight million nine hundred thousand dollars a year. Princess Tom is an Alaska Indian wo- man. S..e is the richest of her race in the far northwest. She is a shrewd trader aud wears upon her arm thirty bracelets made of twenty -dollar gold pieties, M. SChneider, the head of the great Creusot foundries, was married the other day in Paris. Orerisot has grown in "sixty years from a village of five hundred in- hatiitants to a town of thirty thousand people -larger than Krupp's town of Essen. Henry W. Cramp, Secretary of the great Cramp Ship -beading company, is au en• thusiastio botan'et, and is particularly terested in ferns and palms. His father, Chyles IT. Cramp, is said to be one of the best•posted ineu in the country on the commercial and utilitarian vale of the 'various woods of the Milted States, MISSING LINKS. A piano contains nearly a mile of wire. There are 147 Indian reservations in the Vallee States. A Bohemian monk, in 1754, invented the first lightning cOnatletrtr, DeCruits for the 0 nes Army will net be accepted unless tee,. vett leap a ditch Sig feet With,. Philadelphia makes its own gas at the 1112 of 17 cods12 thonsand feet, and it 14 1d to constimers at $1,26. England b AS fatty ships engaged in Seat h Moan traffic, Germany eight and the edted States only tWo., g woomus 11110 Moss of ogorg Rios! THE MOST MODERN for Gan be Vouched fby HD ATTRACTIVE RANGES Scores of Heckston EVER PUT ON THE MARKET fl Peole. The Fire Linings Proofed by the draft fro the Duplex Flue. Lastb Terrible Condition of Mr. John Irvine. FRIENDS EXPECTED HIM TO DIE. Medical Men did not Under- stand His Case. PAINEICFLERYCOMNOUND MAED A PERMANENT CURE. A wonderful story comes from Heck- stori, Ont. It is full of comfort, assur ance and glad, welcome news for the sick and those whom physicians can- not cure. Mr. John Irvine, of Heckston, Gren ville Co., Ont., writes as follows:-, "Three years ago I had a severe at- tack of "la grippe," which left me in a very weak and dehiliated condition. The next autumn I had another attack which left me in a very bad state. My health was nearly wrecked, I had no strength, and felt tired all the time. I was so weak that my legs would net support my body, and I have often fal len, until I could muster sufficient strength to rise. My appetite was all gone, and wheal I would try to eat, in order to gain strength, I would suffer untold misery for hours. It seemed to me that I was slowly starving to death. I tried different doetors, but did not derive any benefit from their treat meat, My friends thought I was go nig to die, and I verily thought I would have died, had I not tried your Paine's Celery Compound. I bought six bottlef, and can consciously say It received more benefit from, it than I ever dreamed of; it was worth more to me that one hundred dollars worth of medicines from the doctors. I began to improve in health before 1 bad iiu- ished the first bottle; and to -day I am completely restored to health. I can do as good a day's Work as lever could can now eat any kind of food without experiencing trouble afterward, and sleep as well as when I wasa boy. "I have not had to use any of the Compound for months, which eouvince. me that the euro is perma neut. I feel it my duly to let every sufferer know what Paine's Celery Compound has done for me, and it seems impossible for me to say all 1 should in its favors, 1y wife, who has beeu a sufferer for years with chronic rheumatism, was greatly benefitted by the use of your medicine. I send you this testimony unsolicited." FUNCTIONS OF A ,PRESI)ENT. The Various Things the Chief Executive of France Clay Do. M. Paul Deschane, deputy of the Eure-et-Loir in the French chamber, and an eminent constitutional lawyer; has sent a statement to the Figaro de- fining the duties of the president of the republic. The president, he says, chooses his ministers and presides over them. He participates in the framing of laws. He has the right of issuing a message to the people and. the right of veto, but this right is less absolute than that enjoyed by the President of the United Statps, who enforces it so fre- quently and with such success, because in the 'United States at the second de- liberation a majority of two-thirds is necessary, whereas in France et bare majority suffices. He can adjotirn the chambers for a month twice in one ses- sion. He can, with the approval of tho. senate, dissolve the chamber of depu- ties. This right becomes even a duty when a chamber without a majority is unable to impart life to a government. Bus this dissolution is of benefit only In such cases where the premier, as m England, calls on the country to vote for a more or less definite programme, and the electors can clearly distinguish between the partisans and opponents of the cabinet. This has never happened in France, where they vote in the dark, and where, by a strange paradox, the legume of the administration is often exerted in favor of the oppositiote a1137, the president has the right to con- clude treaties and effect political alli- awes independently of the chambers. 12 16, therefore, a constitutional heresy to consider the presidency of a republic as an inert wheel or to regard the presi- dent as resembling a constitutional monarch. An sleeted chief can never be, like ail hereditary prince, the ira- passive arbiter of parties. Stich an idea is contrary to the letter and spirit of the constitution.' BetWeen 1879 and 1898 12 16 easy to , understand how, while there existed 01 power2n1 motiarchical opposition to the chaxaber, the president op the re- public remained simply the personifica- tion of the republic. But today, dime the appearance on the scone of a social - 1st petty and gime the Weakeeing of the 'radical party and the practically total extinction of dynastic liarties, it le Clear that such le policy would be an ane aohronism, Our Patent Duplex Flue Insures an oven that works unifornily in all parts and is perfectly ventilated. A Perfect Stove Guaranteed in all respects double the usual time. MANUFACTURED BY . . The Gurney Foundry Co. L't'd Toronto Ont. For sale by H. BISHOP & SON. Exeter. Milking Cows in Prance. As has been said many times before, the operation of milking is one which cannot be too carefully or too cleanly performed. No violence should be of- fered to the cattle nor rough treatment shown them. Serenity in the animals is indispensable if they are to be Betide°. torily milked, and the person selected for the duty should be mild and good tem- pered, The cow caressed and kindly handled will freely give up her milk., Extreme cleanliness is also requisite for the best results. The cowman should wear cap or other covering to prevent hairs falling into the milk. Milk is a very uustaple liquid; even slight impur- ities tend to bring about change or to, impair its savor. The cowman or milk- raaid should carefully wash not only their hands, but also the cow's udder with a sponge and water, tepid in win- ter, cool, but not cold in summer, and then wipe it with a clean eioth. The milk pail, it need scarcely be added, shouldbe perfectly clean. The milking should continue until -thee last drop is drawn from the udder,, not only because the portion drawn' last is the richest, but because the secretion of milk is promoted by this exhaustion. It is well also to let the first few jets of milk fall upon the ground, as this por- tion is apt to be bitter and to contain a. large proportion of microbes.. There are persons observant enough to note the difference in the milk from different teats, and when the milk drawn from a, particular teat is of inferior quality, to keep it separate from that drawn from the others This precaution would cer- tainly prove useful ba dairies where high class cheeses are made. In the Allgan, in Bavaria, the milker tastes the milk from each teat when he begins milkina. Sometimes a cow will not let herself be milked. The. udder should, in such a case, be carefully examined to see whether there is any soreness, which should be looked to at once. The gene- ral practice is to,milk twice a day. Ex- perience, however, tends to show that three milking's per diem result in a con- siderably superior yield of milk. In a trial made with one cow during eleven days, it was found. that in that period the animal gave twenty-two litres in ex- cess of her usual yield, when milked only twice a day. Moreover, the milk obtained at three daily milkings proved, on analysis, to be nearly one per cent richer in butter. It may be added. that the Observations of Struokmann, Bce- daeker and Wicke show that the even- ing's milk is richer than the morning's, and the latter richer than that obtained in the middle of the day_ Greater fre- quency would not be advantageous, apart from the consitleration that the in- creased expense would not be covered by the result. The digestive and secret- ive functions of ruminants would be in- terfered with by such frequency of milking-. In effect, the milk secreted during the calm of the night is usually more copious than that elaborated dur- ing the day time.-L'Industrie Laitiere, France. The Planet Nays. According to the latest reports from London there is something going on in Mars just now which greatly mites astronomers. So far as laymen may penetrate these mysteries, it seems that some shining specks, quite unlike any- thing ever seen before, have been dis- covered, and that the stars are excep- tionally favorable to the hypothesis that Marsians are trying to signal to us. The only other conceivable theories are that these specks are the effects °can aurora, or of forest fires on a gigantic scale, but scientists appear actually to regard these as less probable than the first ex- planation. The mere suggestion of such, a thing sends a thrill of fascinated expectancy through the whole academic system of Eueope, and men of weight are already reviving the old schemes and propounding new ones by which an effort at sending back au answering signal through space may be made. So Should Wo Live. So should we live that every hour May fall its falls the natural '51:A7er...- A self -reviving thing of power; That every thought and every deed bitty hold Within itself the seed Of future good and Mare need. 'Esteeming sorrow, whose employ 1e to develop, not destroy, Vet better than a harem Joy. .1iloyorox Mit,sus (Lord lioughten). HoFF141,,Air'S HARMLESS HEADACHE POWDERS owe ALL HEADACHt: They are not aaver.• Used to cure weary/. thiny,hat simply head. ashes. Try thent, win cost but .9.1 cenft for tt bow and thew 44,443 harmless-. They are not a Cattatie Bicycles, . Sewing Machines, Baby Carriages And Musical . Instruments. We are the only firm who make a specialty of tbo above named goods and therefore claim that we can give the people of Exeter and vicinity,- . . - Greater Bargains! Greater Choicefl Lowest Prices.! ! The' latest and newest at- tachments for all our good:, can be had by calling at our ware -rooms, --One door north Dr. Lutz's dry store Pill)IS ARRAY & CO. TJ 1.10,1 Manufacturers and Dealers in Grain Cruslaers„Straw Cutters Root Ptilper-6-Knife spot cash $ Also general Ernie - 1 G. 5 0 • dry work. Castings in iron and brass to order. . 1000 cords ofharcl and soft wood for sale. 19000d by 11 obit, Mrs. CawIter -Don't you think it is very straege that Mrs. Stivetts hasn't returned yet? • Cawker-Not at nib, It is merely the result of force Of habit. Cawiter-How is that'? • Oawker.-She was a telephone girl beforeher marriage, JAS. MURRAY & CO. BRANTFORD STEAM LAUNDRY! A..HAS TING S, Agent If you want your linen ti look whiter than snow, take it to '. . • • • • EXETER'S Popular Tonsorial Artie Ladies' and Children' Haircutting, v. Specialty. loadman's,00- OPIUTERCIAL LIVERY. irst-olass Rigs and Horses Orders left at Hawksbawz Hotel, or at the 'Livery Stable,(Christe's old Stand) will receive prompt at- tention. Te&'2,=.1011 toescAtble