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The Exeter Times, 1889-7-18, Page 5HOUSEHOLD. A Model Kitchen, Here is a unique kitehen which the New York Mail thinks worthy of description : It is not large, having been builh to fit •e very little woman. The pantry hi to the rear of it, the dining room to the right, the hall le front, and ell out doers' to the left, though it etands on a narrow city lot. There are windows according to circum- steno:use, eomeloigh, seine low, some big, some little, some in the upper panels a the doors. The temple of the household gods is finish- ed entirely in wood, for a) ithetio reasons quite as much as utilitarian, Wood apish means that not an inch of plaster appeere, Ceiling, walls and floor are all of delight- fully polished yellow pine. The easing of doers tnd windows are fl it for ease of ;wash- ing, d all the joints are as tight as tight can be. The work woe done slowly and carefully under the supervision of the pre- siding genius. The wood work, perfectly plain as befits a. kitchen, make a really beautiful apartment, the veining; of the wood, the rich coloring typ'fy the home re- finement ot the lady who joyfully gives bread to her house, rather than the drud- gery of mental toil so often put forward in its place. The laundry tubs and oink are of said white porcelain. But the wonderful sconce mies of space and numerous step saving devioes are thefeatures of the place. There are slides from the pantry to the dining roona sideboard. There are shelves in the tri- angular specie over he cellar stairs. There is a table whioh pulls out of nowhere, just opposite the range, and, vanishes into thin air when the cooking is done. There are flour bins which swing out into the room when wanted, and push in flash with the wall again. When the mistress of the establishment wiehes to put anything "down cellar , " 'she doesn't go down herself; thigh the staire roofegentle slope and easy of access. She touches a mysterious lever with her hand or foot, and up comes a section of the kitchen floor, bringing with it a. series of shelves. Disposing the various articles thereon, she reverses the lever, and down goes the whole thing. The floor is as solid as ever, and the shelves are hanging in the dry, cool air of the cellar, Eoonomy and oonVenienee were the prime considerations. The holm was built by an artist, who pleained first the kitchen—his wife's werkehop—then the studio—big ovvii —and le b the rest of the house group Deaf round these two. The kitohen cost no more in moneir than the most dingy type of city basement, and Ile owners call it worth all that it cost of ingenuity. A Oheeolate Eohool. A New York manufacturer of chocolate hen wisely opened aschool wherein is taught thetystery of making a good oup of cocoa or 000late. _ TO make breakfast cocoa the instructor places two open porcelain vessels upon a stove, and in one three cups of old milk are poured, one for each oup of Dona to be made. In the other a. little water is boiled, and when at boiling point three spoonfuls of cocoa, a apoonful to the cup, is dissolved in kit. Only suffident water is required to A.7 -thoroughly dissolve the cocoa. Next, the .* dissolved cocoa is thrown into the heating milk, which is then stirred with a wooden ladle and allowed to boil for a minute or thereabouts,. the whole operation consuming about five =name The result is a delicate beverage. REVENGE WAG ,SINEET. A Tonne Trapper Slowly sineved to Dente; ny the Partner whose confidenee fle'And Betrayed. — then propesed to his partner that instead ofigoing down the Missouri river with the hot%te, they kend the furs down, While theY would cross Om mountains, visit the trap• pep on the Platte, buy their furs, take them down the Platte, and meet their own flea of I: hove often Withed somebody would write hotets with another at Plattemouth, on the the romantic incidents (animated With the Missouri. Gain was, of course, the areu. early history ot Nebraska before they pass meat used, and it did not require any urging out of the minds of men now living and are to get the partner to agree. He did not want forgotten forever. Perhape the beet way to to return to S. louts, and the longer ho brine about So clearable a result woteld be could defer his visit, there he reasoned, the for me to contribute my share, and, thus foot better it woeld be for hint, he brother also the example to others, said they would establish a brenoh trading- • Just above Julesburg, on the Platte river, post on the Platte somewhere near old Fort is a rook, at the fob of which was entice:eel a Leramle, and thus iocrease their future tragedy many years ago, the nnere recital of profits. To all this the planer readily aa. which makes the blood run old. The story slanted, and after seeing their boo.te safely Was *id me in Wotan% by a trapper over aterted down the Missouri they set out fifteen years ago, who vouched, for the truth across the country for letremie. Tau of what he stated. The place I tweak of, fluidly struck the old overland trail and near old Julesburg, is e lonely spot in a can followed it down the Platte to Jules Bern - yen, surrounded by high bluffs, where the isrd's. Here they stopped for several days, frowningrooks render the loneliness and Si- and under some pretext or other the brother lenoe oppressive, and came the visitors to induoed his partner to acoompeny hint to hasten their departure from the gloomy the lonely pass described in the opening dell to a more oheerfel landscape on the lines of this story. Here he disarmed him, open prairie, and the banks of the boautifui tied him securely, and informnd hie victim Platte river. he was going to kill him, At first the part- 1Vlany years ago two young men came from ner thought it wan only a joke, but when the ease, and, ascending the 1Vlissouei from theinother produced •from lois pocket the Council Bluffs far into Montana, engaged in letter from his mother and read it the business of trapping and buying furs. to him, the guilty man knew but They were bosom friends and prospered too well that his time had come. in all their undertakings. Money flowed He begged to be shot at once, but the into their hands from the sale of furs, and brother only tied his victim securely to the they soon beoarrie quite wealthy. S.,ill they rook and then informed him that he must staid on in the west that had been o goner atarve to death. Hastening back to Bo- ons to them, and, loving their wild and free nude oabin, who was away, he left a note life, continued to trap, hunt, and buy furs. sqing they had gone eau, mid then taking At last they became so enamoured of their some chains and a hammer which he found mountain home they determined to make it in a ste.bk near, the cabin, returned to the their permanent abiding place. One of the rook. Be forged a collar out of the chain Yining men had a fair sister who lived in St. and fastened it about his victim's neck. Then • Louis where one of thepartners went every he drove a staple into the rook and fastened year to sell their furs. The girl, infatuated the chain to ib. This done he calmly est by the tales of adventure told by her broth- down to see his enemy starve. The third er, longed to visit the west and begged so, day the partner signed the deed with some hard to be altowed to acmompeny him to his mountain home he finally oneented and promised that the very next year she should, go back with him. She did so, and for a whole year lived in a cabin in the Bear Paw mountains; in Montana. When it came time for the furs to be marketed the girl, who had become somewhat tired of moun- tain life, asked' her brother to go down to St. Louis with the furs mud return when they were sold. Bobh Fathers were to go with her! but just as they were on the eve of starting information of a large take of buffalo robes by the Indians on the Yellowseone in- duced the brother to go there, and intrueting his darling sister to the oare of his partner and friend he set out for the Yellowstone, promising to join them later in St. Louie wibh a Cirgo of furs and thus add to their yearly profits a snug sum. The girl was loath to leave her brother, and wiahed to accompany him to the Yellowstone, but he urged her to go dire.otly down the Missouri with his partner, and not undertake so peril. ous and fatiguing a journey an that by the Yellowstone route. •He said their mother, who also lived in St. Louis, would be anx- ious, and he promised he would not be long in joining them, when they would all Imre a happy time. The Mackinaw boats were well manned with frlendly Indians and provided with every comfort the country afforded. When the little fleet sailed the brother struck out across the country for the Yel- lowstone, where he arrived in due time, but a very eick man. He was compelled to re- main so long at the Crow Indian camp that the river froze up beton he gob well, and so he oould not go down at all. In the spring he grow better and made his way to Ben- ton, where he awaited the return of his part- ner aud sister. A.e lase the partner came but did not bring the girl with him. iZe' said the mother Was not well, and the dater had reluctantly remained with her. He ac- counted for thy nolo of the fura and returned very large profits to the brother as hia share, Although disappointed in nob having the company of his sister in his lonely home during the riUMnler, he consoled himself with the thought that he should ese her in the early winter, and said she had done quite right to remain at home to care for their dear old mother. In the fall the catch of furs had been so poor thab the partner easily persuaded the brother to deter his twin east until epring and devote the whole winter to hunting and trapping. The Crows were reported again to have taken a great meny robes and the brother went to the Yellowstone to buy their furs': • While there he meb Jim Beck - worth, James Bridger, and Boauvaise, all of whom had been to So, Louis but heard nothing of the trappsr's sister, they had called at his mother's house and said the old lady Was well and hearty when they left her. , These conflicting reports, says a writer in the Omaha Bee, greatly worried the brother, and he became extremely anxious to hear from home. James •Bridger was going do the Platte and thence to S b. Lents, and the broth- er charged him over and over again to hasten to his mother, learn aboub his sister, and then communicate with him at any cost. It was past midwinter when a Snake Indian suddenly appeared on the Yellowstone with two letters for the brother. One was from Bridger, and explained that he had been greably delayed in getting the other letter to• him because he had no one but Cney- manes and Sioux with him and no In dian of either of these tribes could pen - Orate the Crow lands without certain death. At last he had met a Snake and these Indians being at pewit) with the Crows he had hired him to carry the letter to hitn. The other letter was from the trapper's mother and nearly °rand him, It gave a long and circumstantial accounb of the ruin �f his sister, and wound up by saying that the girl unable to bear her shame, had gone insane and would soon become a mother. Wild with grief, the &et impulse of the brother was to return to hiii camp on the Missouri seek his partner and kill him. He started at once, but the more he brooded over the matterthe worse he became possessed of a desire to torture his sister's destroyer. What good, he reagents& would ib do him to merely shoot the man? He would not suf The marriage of the Duke and Dao- i fer Much, esnd might not even be able to hese of Portland presented several in know for what he was shot. No. he would tereseing features. The short sermon torture hun and gloat over his sufferings. by the Bighop of Lincoln oonbained No Indian could devise a more cruel death this passage: "y Lord Duke, bap than the trapper did for his victim. As he pineal is not to be found in wealth, in the neared the camp on the Missouri his thiret noble rank you bear, nor in art , oolleotione for vengeance increased and it Was a whole —the heart of man canna be filled with day before he could trust himself to enter them. One thing—and one alone—will the camp, iso great was his fear that as the Satisfy the heart of a true man, and that sight of hie partner his feelings would over is love. Love is that for vvhiali the heart come him and he would kill the scoundrel yearns, and i here lies our happiness." The on the spot. But, controlling himself by a presentswere saidtohave exceeded in number 'mighty effort, he calmly entered the camp and gab° anything over before given to any and greeted his foriner friend, who pretend, but a royal couple. They were about five ed tie be very glad to see hint. lie Wel not thousand in number and laid out in firer or a %%Vera about the letter lie had received, end five rooms. The Duke's finest preeent was a by neithet act nor Word showed anything dressing ease, in which ersoli article was was wrong. When spring came the ekies Mounted in gold with the briele'e monogratn were peeked and menb to Benton, where the i and mond in ditiriecniffii. He wanted to partners soon followed them. The boats have the monogrent on the backs of the heir Were loaded and everythtng prepared for ben:1110g and olotheebrush done in diamonds going down the river. The beets were leaa. too, but MieeDallas Yorke wotildnot let hirn, led and everything peepared for going down He grace Wore at the ceremony 0, gray hook the river. The brothet had a Will made, coat with ts, Carnation in the 'buttonhole, i lea•ving the tante of the pereOn blank, He LITTLE THINGS TO REMEMBER, Find out before punishing a child if some physioo.1 trouble is the came of bad behavior. Children should also be early taught to put no flowers, roots, leaves or berries into their months unless they know them to be harmless. Children are sometimes poisoned by eating thin pieces of nutmeg which are lef t after grating and which acoidentally fall within their reach. The syinptoms resemble these of opium poisoning. Among those dishes which must be for- bidden, children are lobsters, cialbs, liver, Sausages, chicken and obher salads. Pies and pastry, plum and Stiet puddings, are also unfit for them ; rice and milk, corn starch, or some other equally light pudding, is all that may be %flowed for dessert. Every etage of life has its peculiar trials, and just as surely its own joys. 'Let us not then so recklessly risk our reputation tor wisdom as to point to children and say, "Now, my dear child, is your hey.clay. Eojoy 11 to the full, for the years that are pressing on you are full to the brine of ore and trial." Say rather,, "11 future has great work and responsibilities, so has it proporbioniete reward" The truest, greateab happiness of life should come with the full development of mind and heart. ' Choice Reoipeie CODFISH IN WHITE SAIICE, —Select a thick piece of salt codfish, soak in cold water twelve hours or over night. One or two hours before dinner plate in a pan of cold water and put on back of the range. Bring to boiling pellet slowly, then add cold water after draining well, and bring again to boil- ing point. Remove to hob platter and pour over fish the following: • Wetrra Senn,— One pint of boiling milk, stir into it two tablespoonfuls of flour stirred until smooth in half teacup of sweet milk, two tablespoonfuls of butter, salb and pepper to season, a ;sprig ef chopped persley. Bring to boiling point, remove from fire, add one teacup of sweet cream. Just 'before pouring over fish add one snail pickle chopped fine; serve hot. Canner Sour.—Fry two ohopped onions In two tablespoonfuls of butter, or dripping, until a light yellow; add to tine quart boil- ing water, add also, one quarb hot mashed carrot, one teempoontul of pepper. Boil twenty minute's, then add one teacup of •I thick, sweet cream, one-half teacup of but, ter; serve hot. , powdered ink which the blether had. It bequeathed all his property to the injured girl. The brother witrieseed it and also at - melted an old trapper's name as a witness. The brother then wrote lettere for the man to sign, saying he had fallen very ill while crossing che plains and was about to die. These letters were dated on the Platte, but did not eay at what point. All these &men runts the brother compelled his partner to sign. The sixth day the man grew delir • ions and begged to be shot, and day by day he became weaker, until the tenth day, when he died. I1 is said the brother often ate in the presence of his victim and brought water from the spring near by, and would not give the sufferer any food end only a Very little water. Often he would read over to him the letter from the mother to her son informing him of his sister's ruin. The poor manbegged hard to be killed at once or to be released, and he would marry the girl and make every restorabion in his power for the wrong he had done, bub the brother' was deaf to all his entreaties. So it went on until the end came. After his victim was dead the drother went to St. Louis and found his sister well and in sound mind. The will of the dead partner wee proved. and the girl and his child became the possessors of all his property. The brother tried to settle down, but could not ; the remembrance of that awful rook haunted him day and night:, and after a year of vain endeavor to find surcease of sorrow he made a will, giving everything to his mother and sister, and once more fled to the wild mountains. There he lived for. ten years, never once again coining east, and was finelly wounded by Indians while out hunting and died from the Effac5s of his wounds. It was on hie death -bed he related thie story of his life to Muggins Taylor, who told it to me on the Yellowstone by a camp e— woo.. Ciewaa-- massacred. By those who knew him Muggins Taylor's word would not be doubted. He was then a scout for Gen. Mlles and was afterward himself killed at Billings, Mont. Whether the story be true or not I can not say, but is ib not more strange than many other incidents of the border which we know to be true. It is said some years afterward some hunters visited the spot and found the skeleton of a man chained by the nenk to a rock, and they marked the spot with si cairn of stones. THE BEDS 01' RH ALI curious Fancies of Must/ Ione ;Personages About Theis' Siee ping A parillieflts. Clarence. Howie is one of the most comfort- able 'Immo in London, and is famous for good beds, for the only daughter of Alex ander II , of Aussie, is, like maue, Muscovite ladies, very particular about her beds, and will tolerate in her hose none but the very best Even when a mere child, and long before her marriage, she was se particular about this very important item in domestic comfort: that, to ineure the sheet being tight ly stretched over the mattress, the used to have them sewn, for evsn theslightestorease or wrinkle would entirely destroy the re pose of this imperial spoilt child for the night. ller royal highness used to be greatly chaffed about thus weakness by members; of the royel family when fi.ab she wane to E kg - land, but the queen, who is also very rartiou lar about her beds, stuck up for her, and ai. though the sheets are no longer own down to the mettrees they are composed of the most Exquisitely fine linen that can be immured, ana stretohed like a tight rope over the moo perfect intressee that 011 be manufactured in Perla, in whioh capital the making of mat. tresses has been brought up to the level of a as art. A curious end amusing chapter might in- deed be written about the beds of illustrious personages. The ex•Ernpress Eugenie is quite as particular About her 'beds as the Duchess of E linburgh or Qaeen, Victoria, and quite agrees with she first named lady as to the fineness of the linen and the tight - nese of the drawing of sheets, but her imperial majesty has an odd fancy to have her bed so low as to give a visitor to the imperial bedchamber the impression that the widow of Cotter is almost sleeping on the floor. It is indeed hardly elevated more than a, foot from the floor, as all who have visited the private apartments! at Sb. Cloud, Compeiegne and, the Tuileriee will remember. Another curious bed is that of Sara Bern. hardb. It is nearly fifteen feet broad, and when the great comedienne is indieposed and receives her intimate friends reposing on her couch, she looks like a little golden - haired bird lost in a nab sea of white satin. TIGERS 01' Ta.B BBL Strange Libel Suit. was entered against; James Gotd =not some time ago, but seine diffigigety was experienoed in serving himwith the pars. One day, however, when he was on his yacht in New York harbour,a tug ran alongside and a detective threw a copy of the summone at Mr. Bennett. The document struok the latter, fell to the deck at his feet and was thrown overboard by a servant. Judgment by default was subscquently en. tered, and Mr. Bennebt's counsel moved to have it set aside on the ground ;that there had been no service. The court refused the application andthe Court of Appeale has`l Just confirmed its Judgment. This leads the Buffalo Courier to euggesb that some day an officer of the law will serve papers by using them in a gun as wadding and tiring them • against the defendant who endeaveurs to evade service. By thus going gunning for slippery defendants the sheriff's offioer of the future may be able to combine sporb with the performance of his duties, and also quali- fy himself for promotion by the display of his abilities as a marksman. ava -..ese.t.Mei,..t.n.t,*„.e.neessegeetsenee .••••• '.k.`5,'..0" • for Infants and Children. "0astorta is so well adapted to children that COstorlo cares Colin, Constipation, I recommend it as superior to any prescription Sour Stomach, Diarrheas, Erectaticat, =Is worms, gine sleep, and promoter di - known to me." H. A. Axone; M. D., 111 So. Ozford b.,Broold„ps, N. Y. WitgOttlitjuriOtili InoctioatiOn. Ton orarrion COMPANY!, 77 Mulvey Street, N. Y.' !CURE FITS! '-When I say Omer 1 do not mean merely to Step them tor a time, and then have them re- turn again. MaAN A RADICAL OUR& I have made the disease et FITS, EPILEPSY or PALLING SICKNESS) A. life long study. I WAHBANT my remedy to, CUES the worst cases. Because others have failedis no reason for not now receiving a cure. Bend at on,ce for a treatise and a FRE m Bore= td my Irtratrasnes nemnax. Give Express and l'Osb Onlee. It costs you nothing zor a trial, and it will cure you. Address Dr. H. G. ROOT. 37 'Yong° St, Toronto, Ont. • ^at :11.4,,,,,x,-,4"1744:4.,..,priT/144.?.. '414 Evidence of the Ravenous Nature of the Various Species of Sharks. It wee reported the other week that a. sail- or engaged in scraping the sides of a troop ship in the harbor of Sierra Leone was drawn into the water and promptly devoured by a shark. This is nob an uncommon experience, and a boatman has been bitten in the short dine ill took him to dip up a pitcher of water while his craft was under full sail. We are assured that itis nothing uncommon for the ravenous fish to spring a foot oub of the sea in order to secure their prey. For miles they will follow a vessel, on the lookout for any stray unfortunate who may tumble or be bhrown overboard, and so deep do they switn under the surface that it requires the practis- ed eyes of the native to detect their presence. Many of the Wein fndiaharborslare so haunt- ed by the white and hammereheaded sharks —the least amiable of the 150 different kinds known to zoologists—that it is dangerous to bathe even a few yards from the shore with• out an outlook. Yet she West African negro has been known to face the brute, nob only with im- punity, but even to come off as viotor in the end. All but amphibious, the swimmer cautiously approaohes his enemy, and then just at the moment when the great fish turns over to seize him—his mouth being so plaoed that that is necessary—the daring Ha* plunges his knife into its white belly. The pearl drivers are also somethno successful In their athaoks on tharks which try to Wee them, though, it is needles's to add, guoh mode of combat is possible only when the monsters do not Come in numbers, and under the most favorable circumstances requires a coolness, a dexterity, and a courage which are not to be acquired except by long experi- ence in such perilous encounters. As a rule, hovvever, it is seldom that a man who is so limitless' as to drop among sharks ever Op pears agistn. There is a shriek, a white out. look is seen under the surface and a fin above it, a reddened crest tops the next swell which breaks against the ship's aide, and the hor- rorstricken seamen know that their mess mate will be aeon no more. TI ie & well-anerbained fad that the skele- tons of sheep, pip, doge and cattle which have fallen or been thrown overboard have been thoovered many daye subeequera to their being Swallowed : and 11 18 on record that in the stomach of a shark killed in the Indian Oman a lady's work box was found, while in another the incriminatory papers which had been thrown away by a hotly °healed alaVer Were recovered from the maw of an involuntary witness thus curious- ly brought bete (mutt on the berb of a pork. baited hook. Pavia, one of the most trustworthy of the old naturalists, affirms that a manin mad—homo loneatus, he calls Ifina--verse found in the Wino!' 6f a white quarter of a century, resigning the &tee in sherk ; and 11 18 recorded by Blumenbaoh 1 1871, when advancing age had made him that in one ease a whole horse was found. Missions for rest. THE EXETEII TIMES. ze publisned every Thursday morn ng, at TI MES STEAM PRINTING ROUSE dain-street,nearlioppoeite Fitton's jewelery e tot e, Exeter, Ont„by John White de Sons,Pro- Printers. DATES or enveninistito eir stineertion, per line ..... . ..... ...10 e en te. teat subseonectinsertion ,per line s emote. To insure insertion, advertisements Should le mut in not later than Wednesday morning OurJOB PRINTING DEPARTMENT is oil& f the/ largest and best equipped. in the 0 euntg t Huron, All work entrusted to us will receit" er prompt attention: Decisions Regarding News- papers. Any person whotakesa paperregularlyfrom b.e post-oftice, whether directed in hie name or 'mother's, or whether he has subscribed or not Is responsible for payment. If a person orders hie paper discontinued ne mustp ay all arrears or the publisher may oontinue to send it until the payment is made, end then colleet the whole amount, whether the paper is taken from the office or not. In suits for subscriptions, the suit may be noituted in the piece where tbe paper is pub. ished, although the subscriber may reside hundreds of miles away. 4 The courts have decided that refusing to 'eke newspapers or poliodicels from the post- e/floe, or removing and leaving them uncalled or is prima facie evidence of intentional frattrIL Exeter 13- utoiler Shop. R. DAVIS, TARTAR Butcher 84 General Dealer Quadruple Murder During a Heavy Thunderstorm. Heavy storms continue to be reported from different parts of France.' In some parts of the Departnient of the Charente the noszeitu, leas been flooded and the fall of hail. none. Or tnnatotaa otarars. nubs remarked. Toulouse and the neigh. looming districts have also been visited by a series of heavy storms, accompanied by vent table kintricanes. At Villenouvelle, while one of these storms was ab its height a horri- ble drema was enacted. A fa.rm.servant who had vainly asked for the hand. of his master'tidaughter and had been, dismissed, returned to the house in the midst' of a ter- rific tempest and murdered the farmer, his wife, and daughter, and a servant one after the other. ' Gone to Bleep. PUREST, STRONGEST, BSST, • ' CONTAINS. NO • ALUM, AMMONIA, LIME, PHOSPHATES, or any injurious materials. E. W., GI LLErr, T°Bgrana. Weft of the OBLEBRATED ROYAL AEE1 Like human beings, cities have their time to live and time to die. The following, from the Bainbridge Democrat, shows that the rule holds good in America as ib did in Egypt and ancient Assyria. The Democrat says :—Somewhere in the thirties, SI. Joseph, Fla., won a thriving city of several thousand people. There v; as also a railroad running from Iola, on the Apalachicola River, to St. Joseph. To -day there is note, vestige of theeiby remaining, nor of the rail- road. William Samuels an old coloured. mao who lives near Baihblidge, told us the other day that many years ago he lived in Ste Joseph and travelled thence by the rail. road from Iola, also stating that ib was the first and the last time in his life he ever rode on the oars. He was astonished when we told him that both city and railroad had been in the grave for over forty years. • A Business Young Woman. "Hurry to the door, Mary, and let Mr. Smith in. He has rung twice. "That irin'a Mr. Smith ; it is the other gentleman." "Well, waits minute, then. I must change the photographs on the mantel." A Pottstown, Pa., milkman served a well -to do family whose regular supply was a cent's worth of milk a day, the cent being left outside in a oup. He lost on the measure, but filled the cup daily to oblige them. But when on a recent morning he found three cups set out with a oent in each, instead of a larger vesgel veldt three cents, he thought it time to drop the con- tract and drive away. Theodore Dwight' Woolsey, D. D., LL. D., former President of Yale University, who died in New Haven reoentry, aged 88 years, was born Oot. 31. 1801. His father was William W. Woolsey, a well-known merchant, and his mother, Elizabeth Dwight,lt sister of President Timothy D Wight of Yale Col- lege. Young Woolsey graduated from Yale in 1820, and after a year's study of law in Philadelphia turned toward theology, and spent two years following that attitly at Ptinaeton. He was a tutor at Yale for the next two yeers, and in 1826 Was licensed to preach. Soon afterward he went abroed, and for three years devoted himself to the study of the Greek language, travelling for the purpose in Germany, Prance'and Italy. Upon his return to this country he was chosen Professor of the Greek language and literature at Yale, He held that chair for fifteen years,from 1831 to 1846, and only retired from it when his ripening fame made hint the conspicuous candidata for the Preel- dency of the college. Appointed President 111 1846, he remained ab the head of the stitution, in font as Well as in riame, fora stovx or mavm Live Stock Association (Incorporated-) Home Office -Room D, Aroads, Toronto. In the life department this Association pro- vides indemnity for sickness and &olden t, an 1 subotatitial assistance to the relatives of de- ceased members at terms available to all. Fn the live stock department two-thirds in - demnity for loss of Live, Stook of its members. Applicidions for Agenotes invited. Send fur os eetuses, claime paid, &e. WILLIAM JONES. Managing Director The Most Successful Remedy ever disco, and, a8 it is certain in itS effects and does not blister. Read proof below, KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURL Oman or °rums's A. BNYDEtt, Mannino% or CLEVELAND BAY AND Taorrom BR= BONSIII. 5 ESAIWOOD, Iu., Nov, 8), UM Dn. B. 3. EsettuAL Co. Dear Sirs: I have always pnrchmed your Kok doll's BITIPVill CM* by the half dozen bottlej s would lAs prices in larger quantity. I Shia it fo one 01 80* best liniment* On earth. I hare tog( X an my 'Giblet for three years. Yours truly, QUA. A. Strireal. KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE. littoomtrO, N. Y., Norentber 3, XS. DR. 0,3. ElitiDAYA. CO. Dear Sirs: I dean° to glee yon testimonial of my good oplidOn of your Rendall's Sparta Cure, I biiot gisic:IwilltWer,on.NRittqlgitidltialurtitaete ally recommend it tohorsemen. Yeats r' A. H. Grtnake, Manager Ttoy Beintidry'etab.W.• KENDALL'S. SPAVIN CURL Witirett Count*, Onto, Deo. 19, 1888. Dm D. J. HarmAtt, Co. „ Genie: I feel it rny duty to Say ,What 8 have dealt Ditwitelitit$;?alivrolt hen() 112 thSAltvbbal de usritea. HI e tveritt r 01 fid 11itur 110ue, nine aiiiittee with -Big fiend an8. NOViCill Of 111x .Iatv. Wheel hare had one of your beeke and folietred the directions, I here never 1051 5. ease et any kind. • Tomei truly, Moment Tintweet, IMMO Meter. K IDALL S SPAVIN DUDE. ptic,6 $I ber bottle, et sit bottlee tor es, eat Wu - gists hero it Or on get it for Yon, Or it will be saa,0 to any addrinst Oh toc4313)t tit price brthefir V110.- 1055. brt. 13, 3, lIttelistr,00.,'Eneebeterlira vt. SOL» BY ALL DituGGIATs. =IN ALL HINDS 0E— VII-41,ATS Ousiomer s su pplied TUESDAYS, THURS- DA,.YS AND SATUBDAYS at their eesidenee ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE OEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION. Everest's Cough Syrup CANNOT BE BEATEN. rliry it and be convinced of its wonderfit curative properties. Pries 25 etre • (Trade Mark,) T ry Everest's LIVER REGULATOI? B01 Diseases of the Lirer,Kidneys dro, 5, purifying of the Blood. Price $1. die bottles, SS. For sale by all drug- gists. Manufactured only by M. EVERESTOb.emis, 293 Sevr1ng.1t5CaelkIne To at once este b I lab trade in nil porta, by placing nt r machines Auld goods where the people, ,'an sea them, WC Will Send rree to ono peroon in each locality,the veryr best sewing-nu:chine made in the world, with all the attachment:a. We will also rend Cree a completer line of our costly end valuable ark sampici. In. return wo ask that. you ollow whet wc send, t, those wink may end at your home. andatter months all shall become your own. property*. This pnnti machine is motio after the 2.4 in Der pattnitto, which have run out: betore patents run ouch sold facet/3. with the attachments, and now sells for 850. Best, strongest, roost use— ful machine in the world. Ali ta free. No capital required. Plain, brief instructions given. Those who write to 00 00 ogee can se.. cure free the best sewing -machine in the world. and then finest lineafworks of high art over shown togetherin A111111103. WRITE dc CO., Box 740, .A.uausta. Magner LIGHIRUNNINGg3 /SEINING MACHINE • H AS' _TH01 (EQUAL.. THE LADI FAVOR ITE.. ip)THE ONLY SEWING !guild Ite—e TI -IAT QWES NE0W11101SyliapttilliuAEveEi:ORR,t1Cpt q NY. w Ex _tL g,..04:Lejask.„.411=1624._LLA "lan ANTen'tn.e g itt attAA R y Agents Everywhere.