Loading...
The Exeter Times, 1895-11-21, Page 6TIB. BTUT 'Tames E. Nioliaiaan. Almost Passes Belief Xr.as. E. Niehoison, Plorenceville, N. B., Struggles or Seven Long Years with CANCER ON THE UP, AND IS CURED BY AVE Sarsa- parilla Mr. Nicholson says: "I consulted doc- tors who prescribed I or me, but to no purpose; the cancer began tO Eat into the Flesh, spread to 'my chin, arid I suffered in agony for seven long years. Elually, 1 began taking Ayer's Sarsaparilla. In a week or twol noticed a Decided Improvement Encouraged by this result, I perse- Tered, until in a. month ,or so the sore 'ander tuy chin began to heal. In three months my lip began to heal, and, after using the Sarsaparilla for six months, the last trace of Me cancer disappeared." Ayer'sSarseparilla Admitted at the World's Hair. AYER'S l'ILLE 21e9tacete the Bowel's( R.e. CoN STI PAT I 0 N, T\IiilLIOUSNESS, try's pmras 1A.rz ICK H EAD,AC H E,GULTE.T1I LIVgR, O LL FTER ATJG. INSURES GOOD DIGEATlosN, PRICE2 TSrliiaDOD THEEX MEE MRS. Itpublisned•everyThuradity Morcing, TI MES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE gde,1n-q3reet,uettrly opposite Fittou'S Jewetery htote Azeter,On b.,bygoll a White .te Sone.Pto• nrietors. nxrns O DVIL' ItTCarifff stiuser Lion, p er line 10 cents subseque.a tin sertion ,per I ine......3 cents. 5.'n insure insertion, advertisemeni, s shonid I( sentin nett ater than Wednesday morning OurJOR PRINTING DEP ARTNIENT is one &the largest and best equipped in the County of Hurou,All work e u trusted to us winr0031/3 11 or wort* t attou Dion: Decsions Regarding News- papers. ilaypersonvem ta.kes a pa.perreguierly tee tbeposeonice, whether directed in his name 02 another's.or whether he hits su.bscribad. or no; responsible for payment. 2 If a person orders his paper discontinued J3emus5 pay all arrears or the publisher May ontinue tosend it until the payment is made, rid then collect the whole amount, whether e paper is takenfrom the oillee or not. 3 In suits for subscriptions, the suit may be instituted in the place where the paper is pub felted, although the subscriber may reside hundreds of antes away. Ville courts have decided that refusing to aknewspapers or periodicals from the pea - file, or removing and lea,ving them (Iacono 1 reprima facie evidence of inteatiaa fran 1//1 'often bring toughs and oolda / while PYNY — PECTORAL Seep (mak relief. Cures all M. nomination of the brenehial tIllI5t3, throat or chest. No no. certainty. Relieves, soothes, heals promptly. A Large Bottle for 25 Cents. EAlt15 !IRENE RI LTL PROPRISTORE, MONT REAL- . THE PERFECT TEA Ts 0 Faster TEA Trie W0s2.o floM TME: TEA PLANT TO THt "rta CUP 04 ITS 1,4All'%M PURITY, "MotliOon" Tea Is packed %%der the dliPer1181011 .011170 Ted. growors, and is advertised and sold by them AS a sailiple of the best qtuditre3of Indian and Ceylon Teat, l'Of that teesort they sea that none but the eery fresh levee go into Monsoon peel:eget. Thatieeey "affonocone the perfect:fee, cart be sold at the teee,- price a! inferior tea. It 7,3' pia 1115 an sealed =damn of 34 lb., 7 lb. and The soap is the best in the market, . . , ,g tbs., and Ef Old in thr.:0 flavours at 40o,, soc. and doe, count tor the difference by t e ae hmilr' rf your grocer riort not keep lt, fenhim to writtitht deep herrwirtmg a oleti a good and It vtage ill Only cost le- posto send in ao to ST 31L, IfidiNTBR gy CO,, zx and 13 rront st. roiling gave the little roots a. better the wraPPersi if you leave the ends opeu. Lost, Torone chance to get, in the soil, end also that Write your address carefully. Cern and RIMS as Profit NakerSt To derive the roost profit from the c"r1 °ma, lt moat be converted into cattle and hogs, writes A. A, Berry. Catti 0, hogs and eorn go well together. —4` 84" wool" 114, 4)^ "Inttie asellitat. Tblarger farmers, with plenty of A seusational case, whieb is causing e graziug. land, can profitably leandle cat- extensive excitement throughout Eng- tle, but for the majority, corn convert- laud, is the effort of Miss Edith Lau - ed into pork gives the best return. For cheater, a new and quiet pretty setool successful eOrit-raiSillg a rotation oftachea, the d,aughter a pareats in the e middle class, to live openly with a crops must be followed. The bog -raiser needs clover pastare, wed as elover is! Young laborer without a previous cere- the very best pleat to alternate with mony of marriage. They are Seelal- corn, the two lines of farming go well ists, and like Grant Allen's beroine, together, One of the greatest ideal- he Womaa Who Did," mean the Ad T tha grind weuld absorb and hold water better.—a w. )vi .ADOIVIRSTIO DRANIA, roues Seho011 Teacher Who Ilvillaato the Allerelne or "Tee Woman Wee Pan' rances to successful hog-rdising, is the to be an open protest, against legal excessive feeding of corn. Many will give their animals all the corn they can eat from the lime they are pigs until they are ready for market. Corn rs very heating, and if fed in excess will so affeet the animal's system as to make it easily susceptibte to disease K erma. Several generations of such treatment will so dwindle and dwarf ftitteamas to make. hog -raising =pro ble.- Breed good hogs—those which mature early and have large frames. Keep old sows mostly for breeding purposes. Slop the spring pigs from the time they begin to eat until new corx is hard enough to feed, when they can be fin- ished on core. For slop, I found a chop made of equal parts wheat, corn, and oats the best, although bran instead of oats does well. Shorts and corn or shorts and. wheat ean also be used, de- pending upon evhich is cheapest. By all means let them have the run of a good pasture. Do not feed. the sows any grain after the pigs are a month old, When two months old wean the pigs and breed the sows for a fall lit- ter. Let them run on a good pasture for three months with nothing to eat but grass. It will cool their systems, braze up their coaetitutions and pat them in good condition for raising thew fall pigs. Clover makes the best hog pasture. Rye and bluegrass is good Lor early and late. I have found a mix- ture of peas, barley, oats and wheat, sowed early in the spring, a splendid forage crop, It can be pastured or harvested and threshed, the mixed gxains, after adding a little corn, mak- ing a first-class chop. Fall pigs will have to be slopped all winter if they are to be grown success- fully. It cost more in time and labor, also better buildings are needed to suc- cessfully raise fall pigs than those far- rowed in spring. Feed slops warm but not cooked. Turn shoats out early on rye or bluegrass pasture and give all the soaked. corn they will eat up clean. They will then soon be ready for mar- ket. By the time hogs thus treated are eigat or nine months old. they will weigh 250 to 300 lbs. This is not a great or fancy weight, but all good hog - raisers can accomplish this =Iola and corn crop. to a semi -private lunatic ascrum. Then Sullivan, who is engage not to be married to her, applied for a writ of habeas corpus. The papers made a sensational row, and the Lunacy Com- missioners paid. a personal visit to the asylum and, released the girl. It is not su.rprisieg that the outburst of public 'mdignation over the facility which the law affords for the iuoarceration of al- most anybody in a. mad -house is some- thing tremendous. a good profit can be realized. e t matrimony. There have been various publio pro- ceedings hl the affair, and the young woman has received very influential aid and sympathy from the best jour- nals of Lend= and the provinces, and from other notable civartegs, This feat 15 symptonietie of the recent great change in English public sentiment touching matters of this sort. The outrageous publicj promenades in the music halls, which everyone knows to be simply and only places of .meeting, are defended by half the London press. Oa the other hand, the Established Church is setting its face rigidly against the religious marriage of a person divorced - because of unfaith- fulness. The open protest of Church digidiariea supported by the Duke of Newcastle, against such a marriage in a fashionable London chard: last sum- mer, is to be soon repeated at the forthcoming similar notable 'wedding ceremony of a Guardsman to the daughter of a peer. The couple have been duly warned of the intention of members of the Social Purity League to denounce them at the very altar. The famous London specialist, Dr. Blandford, who signed. the certificate pt Miss Laachester's insgnity, defends his action by quoting her admission that she knew she would have no legal claim on her lover for the support of their children, and bysaying that as i he would be justified n pronatmoing her insane if she declared to him her intention to commit physical suicide, so he was justified in forming the same opinion on her declared intention to commit moral suioide Itt is important to note the point that Dr. Blandford is the same authority whom the present government employ- ed. to examine Dr. Gallagher and the other Irish political prisoners, in re- sponse to the publie agitation regarding their mental oonditioia. The doctor favored the father of Miss Lanohester with a certificate that she was of un- sound mind, and accommodated the British Government with a guarantee of the sanity of its prisoners. The present drama began by the ac- tion of the girl's father and brothers, who got Dr. Blandford's certificate of insanity, and foretbly dragged her off Potatoes for Cows. "As feed for dairy cows the potatoes pay well, but they must be fed pro- perly, and not fed indiscriminately," says a writer in American Cultivator. "The owner of a few dairy eows this winter need not worry about his surplus potato crop. Where winter dairYnThg Ls carried. on the potatoes will suply the need for root crops very satisfactorily, or when fed. with pumpkins or turnips or beets they will increase the flow of milk most decidedly. Irr-many ways they are as valuable as grain for this purpose. They keep the system of the caws in excellent condition, and prevent them from drying up, which they are so apt to do in winter. The way to feed them is to give a peck of potatoes about, once a day in place of the grain diet or feed them potatoes two or three days in succession and then skip several days. The animal will show a keener relish for the corn or grain after the potato feed than before, and her whole system will be stimulated by the change. Young calves love potatoes and do well on them. Pigs are very fond of boiled potatoes. Boil the pota- toes thoroughly in a big kettle, adding a little cornmeal and. a few apples if they are handy. Mix together thor- oughly, and feed to the pigs either warm or cold. Ther will relish such a. diet,and thrive nicely off it during the winter Paiontas. "Horses likewise eat the potatoes greedily.. Now as to the question of doing injury to the farm animals, it can be said that any watery food will produce evil results if piled into the ani- mals day after day as fast as they will eat it. Potatoes, like wheat, must be fed judiciously a,nd intelligently. If given tle proper quantities, and the animal watched, no Ilene will follow, but good. results will be obtained in a year when potatoes are destined to be low." Humane Dehorning. Not only humanity but good financial policy demands that dehorning be done with as little pain to the animals as possible. The evidence is conclusive that if the work is properly done and proper attention is given to the ani- mals afterward, that they experience little pain or inconvenience, not miss- ing a feed, nor does the milk flow of cows perceptibly diminish. On the other hand, quite a number of cattle die from the effects of cruel methods and after neglect. No one should at- tempt to dehorn animals until he has assisted some one that does the work properly, and he should be careful to provide himself with the proper tools and appliances. Undoubtedly the best plan is to use a ebeneical clehorner on calves, or to remove the "button" as soon as it appears. Thorough Harrowing Pays. One of the men, thinking that I set t the lever of tbo spring -tooth barrow so that it pulled too hard for the team, !,,set it up so that it clid not harrow so deep by two inches- About half of foe oat piece was harrowed this way be- fore I notieed it, when the teeth were set back. with injunctions to let the lever alone. After the oaes were up about la imams 1 eaticed a decided dif- ference in the two halves, much in fev- er of the part that was harrowed the deepest, 'Me shallow half was not so big by three or four inches, and the Plants were of a yellow color, while the others were a healthy green. I itc- BRITAIN'S BUTCHER BILL. The Annual Consumption of Meat Is Solite thing, En ormons. The consumption of meat in the 'Unit- ed -Kingdom is 2,140,000 tons, or 4,793,- 600,000 lbs. This means that each man, woman and child eats on the average somewhere about 130 lbs., or 21-4 lbs. per week. This is twice as much per head as is consumed by any other na- tion. If we take it that each pound is retailed at 8d. on the average, we find that 16s. 8d. per head of the population is 'spent on meat; and that Britain's butcher bill comes to Z160,- 000,000 per annum nearly. Naturally one asks, "'Where does all this meat come from?" If we believe the but- cher every part of it is home -fed. The dyspeptic householder, on the other hand, is certain that all the Scotch mutton comes from New Zealand, and all the English beef from America. Of course, both are wrong. Fully two- thirds of the two million and oad tons which pass through the meat markets of Great Britain are home -fed. Last year 100,000 tons of frozen beef, exclu- sive of tinned meat, were imported from the 'United States. Again, no fewer than 26,000,000 frozen sheep and lambs have reached English markets from the Southern Hemisphere since 1880. Of these, New Zealand supplied 13,003,000 ; Australia, 3,000,000 ; the River Plate 9,000,000; and the Falkland Is- lands, 150,000. So enormous has this traffic become that the shipping com- panies have reduced their freight charges from 2 1-2d. per lb. to ld. per Ib. Australian mutton fetches, witele- sale, 3 3-4d.. per lb. (or just one half that of the home-grown artiele), and the balance, 2 3-4d., leaves room for a fair profit. Another question which suggests itself is, "How is all this for - feign meat brought to the English mar- kets?" Nearly 100 vessels, possessing a carrying capacity of 2 1-2 millions of carcases, are engaged in the meat -carry- ing trade. • England's Drunkards' Retreat. Drunkards' retreats have now been in existence in England for fifteen years. The principle oil which they are conducted is to make the patients stop drinking at once and to make them abstain entirely for a long period, twelve months when possible, keeping them busy during that time. The patients always come in an advanced stage of alcoholism. It has been found, as tbe Laric.et reports, that no harm, but good, is done by the sudden and coraplete disuse of alcohol in such cases; that a largo riumber of the ceses are permanently eared, and that habitual drutdrenriese in women is by no means a hopeless disease. HoW to get a "Sunlight" Pictuie. Send 25 "Sualight" Soap wrapper (wrapper bearing the words "Why Does a Women Look Old Sooner Theca a Maul to Lever Bros, Ltd, 43 acott Se, Toronto, entiyou will receive by posts, pretty picture, iree from advertising, and well wrath fram. ing. This ie an easy way to decorate your Winter Sleet, A good deal is being said just now in rlatinl°kels esuein l; paper's SheaebtrThe pres ttheuSeen°d1 a eons are argueu exhaustively, it would seem, but, when ell's said and done wbnt oisweitp:fts: eal 11)1 rbefLietreanctiell—ees,thi°entlieef map likes better to have one's WA and nese rasped by blankets, or to feel the smooth, soft sheets instead? What else does the questien mean ? Well then does it not bave a hygienic mean,* ing ? Blaukets are surely the warmest and lightest and prettiest of ceveringe, but their use as sheets has decided draw- backs from a physiological point of view. Unless they are washed quite as frequently as the linen or cotton sheets, they cannot be beautiful in that capa- city. No matter how Glean they may look or how carefully we may protect them from coated with the floor, they are no cleaner than their cotton Pre- decessors were after an equally long service, and, who would think of using cotton sheets more than two weeks at the vary most, without washing- them? We should hold up our hands in holy horror and call 4uch an one " shiPless"— that. awfulest of scornful names! If then, the blankets must be washed so often to keep them sweet and health- ful, there comes in at once, another trouble, for washing blankets in mid- winter is no small task, as all house mothers know. They must be washed in borax water, with careful manipula- tion, and by no means allowed to freeze, as that would full them, sadly and sac- rifice their fleecy texture and beauty. But the days when they will not freeze are exceptional in northern winters, and. the usual plan must be to dry them 'ni the house, up in some chamber, per- haps, where 'tis not too cold, or out in the laandry or in the kitchen. The latter place is incoevenient euough, but surely safer. Then there follows the airing process, which cannot possibly be slighted except at the greatest of risk, as there are few waysof getting cold more easily than sleeping ea half -aired becielothing. So the whole process would seem to be a tedious orte from be inning to end. onee good people tell us the washing is not needful if we protect the upper parts of blankets and corafortables with shams—strips of cotton basted across the tops, to be removed, now and then, and replaced by fresh ones. That's all well enough for clean looks, but it avails little—nothing—in keep- ing the clothes really, bodily clean. Ex- halations are rising all night long from sleeping bodies and hiding in the tiny meslies of the covers, and. only water and rubbing can coax them out. Frequent and thorough airing ouly half does the good work. In these latter times, when bedrooms are either warmed or the beds them- selves easily protected from any real chill, there is not the old-fashioned objection to cotton sheets that had its excuse in our grandmaher's day when the members of the fondly crept shiver- ing and shaking into bed, with the atmosphere about them too mercilessly cold to think about without shivering in sympathy. Our houses nowadays are luxuriously warm utt comparison, and the old warming -pain has so many descenda.nts that cost so little and do so' much better exeoution, too. A substitute for woolen sheets that does away with mueh of their trouble- someness, may be found in the cotton blankets that are so common just now and can be obtained at such ridiculous- ly low prices. They are very pretty and soft and warm, but can be washed with impunity, as there is no bona fide wool in their constitutions! They may be -dried out of doors in frosty, freezy weather with little danger to their good looks, and being so much lighter they can be aired much quicker. They come uncut at the bottom, but it will be found much' more convenient to handle them in the wash, when they are separated. Some Good Recipes. Plain Veal Stew.—Cut the meat from a knuckle of •veal into moderate sized pieces; put them into a pot with a few pieces of salt pork and season well with pepper and salt. Pour over enough hot water to cover it well, and let it boil until the meat is thoroughly done; then while the water is still boiling, drop in, by the spoonful, a better made with the following ingredients: Two eggs well beaten, two and a half or three cups of butter, milk, one even teaspoon- ful of soda flour enough to make a thick batter, cover the kettle and as soon as the batter is cooked, serve it, as by standing the dumplings become heavy. • Cream Cake or Pie.—Three eggs, one cup each of sugar and flour and one teaspoonful of baking powder. Beat the whites and the yolks separately; mix the cake cmickia and bake in one good sized tin allowing the batter to be three-quarters of an inch thick. When cold split the cake and put in a filling made from two and a half cups of sweet milk, four even tablespoonfuls of sugar, two tablespoonfuls of flour and one egg. Cook until it thickens and flavor with lemon. or vanilla. Tea Cake.—Three cups of sifted flour, one and a half caps of milk, one -hall cup of sugar, one egg, two rounding teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Mix the sugar -and egg together, add milk, then flour with baking powder sifted in it. Bake quick and serve warm. Lemon Pie.— Moisten a heaping tablespoonful of cornstarch with a tle eold water, then add a oup of boil- ing water; stir this over the fire for two or three minutes allowing it to boil and cook the starch. Add a tea- spoonful of butter arid a cup of sugar. Take the mixture from the fire and waen slightly cooled add an egg well beaten, and the axial and grated rind of a fresh lemon. 'Mist makes one pie and sbould be baked with two crusts putting the mixture in before balcitig, Soft Gingerbread.—One eup 01 molas- ses, a rounding tablespoonful of butter, two-thirds cup of milk, two cups of flour, ona teaspoonful of soda dissolved in one-third cup of boiling water. Feather Cake..—On e etip of sugar, one-half cap of butter, ono -half cue of cornstarch, One cup of flour, the whites of three eggs, one teaspoonful of lemon flavoring, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder and one -ball oup of sweee milk. You may find two witty men, ten clever men, and twenty keofish Mon, before you will find one prudent roan , Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoris, TRE FIELD OF COIIIIIEROE Some Items of Interest far the HOY Business :Wan. The stook of wheat at Port Artbar is 1,940,981 busbels, as compared with 1,- 421,580 buebels a year ago. Foreign money marleets show a bar- denieg teeclermy, owing to inereased timidity in finaneial affairs, Supplies of idle money are very large. Orders for leather from Europe have materially deoreased of late in the American market, and the home de - mend is small, tamegh in buff it trifle larger. Priees have slightly receded, The exports of sheep from. Canada ie 1895 are the largest in the history of the export trade, the total being- 171,- 263 head. Export of cattle 83,480 head as compared with 79,390 in, 1894. The earnings oi the Canadian Pa- oific Railway for the month of October show an ham -ease of $111,000 as conmar- ed with same mouth of last year. They were larger than any previous month. The offerings of Ontaxio wheat are said to have increased and the feeling isect little weaker. Prices are relative ly higher than elsewhere, and hoiders should be williug to sell at least a part of their stook. The direetors of the Chicago Board of Trade leave adopted a resolution protesting against an advance in grain freiglies to the seaboard during the closed season of lake navigation. They regard 20c. on grain to New York as sufficiently high in view of the low priees prevailing for grain throughout ,he west. The Bureau. of Amerioaa Republics has received information that the cat- tle raisers of the Argentine Republic are makiug arrangements to import Large rauxtbers of high-grade cattle to emprove the herds, in order to compete in the European markets with the live stook shippers from the United States and Australia. While there is a hopeful feeling pre- vailing among merchants of Toronto, the trade of the week has been some- what unsatisfactory. Orders in most es have been for very small parcels. as 'stocks in the country have not yet been broken to any extent. The slow movement of gram accounts for the backwardness of remittances. Some merchants, however, report these as satisfactory, but renewals are still very numerous. Peaces of general reerchan- dise as a rule are unchanged this week. Metals, hardware, cottons, woollens and sugars are firm. White and red wheat are held firmly by farmers throughout the province, but there are indications of a little freer maveraent. The deliveries of barley axe small, while there is an lmproved demand for malting qualities, and prices are higher. . . . British consols aave declined 1-2 to 5-8 this week owing to the un- settled finaneial situation abroad, and rates for money haveaharderied for the sa,me reason. Canadian bank stocks. are higher, there being presumably a better demand from small investors. The speculative securities are irregular, with Cable and C.P.R. lower, and Street Railway stooks higher. Loan company issues show few changes, but there is a limited demand for most of them. The trade situation at Montreal is not greatly altered since a week ago. In groceries ther is a moderate distri- bution, principally in small orders; there bees been a dearth of currants and raisins, which are advanced in price, but new supplies are just at hand. Oetober has been a quiet month in the metal trade, and improve- ment is hardly calculated on this fall, but values show no tendency towards a weakening. Hides are dull and easy at last week's decline, anda fur- ther reduction in prices is not consid- ered improbable in the near future. A few important transactions are re- ported m sole leather, splits, buif and pebble, but it is understood at prices showing some shading on current quo- tations, and general business in this line is dull. Quotations for the fall catch of raw furs are hardly estab- lished yet, but the outlook for ship- ' ping furs is not censidered very prom- ising, and prices are not likely to rule very high. Oils and paints are mo- mentarily quiet ; seal oil has been com- ing in somewhat freely by Gaspe schoon- ers, and has been offered very low -on wharf; cod oil is notably dearer. Wool shows a steady market at late edvance. Butter and cheese are shade easier than a week ago, but the marked advance is on the whole fairly held. Remittaaces do not improve as they sbould, and col- lections from city retailers who depend more or less on the laboring Made are poor. Killed by a Sparrow. A vicious attack by an English spar- row upon a small child, resulting in the death of the latter, is a singular occur- rence which recently happened. at Stem- mer's Itun, in Maryland. At that place two sons of Charles Moore caught a small sparrow' when out in the woods one day, and they brought it home so that Ida, their eighteen -months -old sister, could play with it. The little child was clehghted with the present. When alone with it one day she let the sparrow out of its cage. The bird flew savagely at the child and fiercely seized her lower lip. The screams of the baby brought, her mother to the rescue, and she endeavored to get the sparrow away. Before this could be done the bird had to be killed and its beak pried open with a pair of pincers. Ida, at once began to show symptoms of blood 'poisoning, She was attended by Dr. W. Veres Mace, of Steramer's Ran, but in spite of his efforts she died. An Experienced Husband, Mr Blinks—I wish to get some hair pins for my wife. . Great Mercbant—This is it wholesale house, sir. Mr. Blinks -0f course. You don't planation and proofs mailed (sealed) free. suppose I'm fool enough to go on buy- 0 bag hear -pins at retail, do you. I want Elio: wrio a barrel. fcor Infants and Children. plawammocalwaaa.mosumaceop.W7.1.42123.44.46611MIVEMPassamaxabasiguip oceststericsiatewelis,daptedtechildrenthat reooramend it as superior to anyprescription lamina to Xne," H. A. Anornat, E.D., 111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. T. one use of 'Clastorta 'is so universal aed its merits so well knewa that it seems a work of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the intelligent families wile do not keep Co.storia within easy resell." ()Amos MArerzs,_D. Now York City. Late Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed church. •,•• eateries curest Colic, Constipation, our Stomach, piarraccia, gradation, KiU Worms, gives Bleep, and proniotes di• gestion, Without injmious medication. °Per severet years I Dove recommended' your .Cestoria, aud shall always continue to do so as it has invariably produced beneficial, results,", • Enwrs F'. Peruntsx, M. 0., .iTho Win1hr0p,"125t1i Street and Ittt Ave., Nor York City rwt Oswa&ua COIISP.&" 77 Meatus STUITSIC, NIVir Told; k ;jIt.rv'ejt% r. FATAL EXPLOSION, Tho Boller of a Locomotive Mows ilp—Four nen Killed, Adespatch from Warwiek, N.Y., says: Four men were killed by the blowing up of engine No, 13 of the Lehigh and Hudson railroad on Sunday morning, eight miles from this place. Two of the men were instantly killed, and the others died. later from their injuries. Engine 13 was drawing a train between Maybrook and Phillipsburg. The train of three cap had reaohedathe top of the grade near the stone bridge, and as the train started down cold water was doubtless run into the boiler. Brakes - roam Morris Heil saw the explosion that followed, The heavy boiler went fifty feet 18 the air and fell 25 feet from tae tracks, leaving the engine trucks uninjured. He threw himself at full length on a ear and clung there. He recovered himself, and be and, Flagman Adams began settmg brakes. The train ran it mile and a half adore it could be stopped. Heil ran six miles to Warwick and gave the alarm, and Adams -went back to flag tlae Easton express. Supt. Bailey, with a gang of men, wera ni an en- gine to the scene. A terrible' sight met the rescuers. Conductor Martin O'Neil was crushed and mutilated al- most beyond recognition. Brake,sman James Sloan hung unconscious on a barbed wire fence, and Engineer liam Cooper lay dead under the boil- er. All were nearly naked, paris of their clothing hanging m the trees near by. A little later Fireman Her- bert Beether was seen walking along th etracks, his trousers being his wily apparel. He was dazed, and said he remembered going through the air, a,nd found himself in a field. 50 feet from the tracks. He soon relapsed into linc,onsciousness. He was taken to Easton, and died at 4.30 in the after- noon. Brakesman Sloan died at 9.45 in the morning. Romance and Reality. all:aeon—The saddest part of city life is the fact that you frequently see faces that you long to know, yet nev- er see again. Billson—That's true, and the sad- dest thing about country life is the fact that you easily make the acquain- tance of the owners of such faces, and then are bored half to death, Ore or the Other. Stranger (1 a. m.)—I saw a man with a bottle of whisky under his arm rush out of a drugstore he had broken into down the street, and a policeman ran after him. What will he get if the policeman catches him? Citizen—Jugged. Stranger—And if he doesn't catch him? Citizen—Jagged. fig.i.DC:Catiliffi.111=16=1.120cast21.• 1011111111111160077111110 LOST Oil FAILING Opera! anti Rerun Debility, THETRIPRIIM 'Weakness of Body and. Mind, Effects oi Errors or Excesses in Old orYoung. Robust, Noble Manhood fully Restored. How te Enlarge and Streegthen Weak, Undeveloped Organs and Parts of Bora,. Absolutely un failing Home Treatracnt—Beneats in it day Men testify from 50 States and Foreign Coun- tries... Write them, Descriptive Book, ex - Strong rEvidence. Father—You may as well give thinking about •that young man, Dasht ing. He does not love you. Daughter—How do you Imo*, papal Father—I met hine at the club last night aed he refused to lend me $10. CARTER'S I VER PILLS. Sick Headache and rel eve all the troubles dent to a bilious state of the system, suet/ Dizziness, Nausea. Drowsiness, Distress after eating, Fain in the Side, ,lto, While thelmrioat remarkable success has been shown in outing Headache, yet CARTEIC'S LIMA Myatt P44# are equally valuable in Constipation, curl. ng and preventing this annoying complaint, wnile they also correct all disorders of the stomach, stimulate the 'liver and regulate the bowels, Even if they only cured • Ache they would be almost prmeless to those who suffer from this distressing complaint' but fortunately their goodness does notdi here, and thom se who once try thewill fin these little pille valuable la so many ways that they will not be willing to do without theat. But after all sick head Is thebano of so many lives 513at here is where we make our great boast. Our pills cure 'it while others do not, Conrert's LIMA erne/Pats are very small and very easy to take. One or two pills Make a dose. They are strictly vegetable and de not gripe or purge, but by their gentip action please all who use them. In vials at 58 cents: five for $1. Sold everywhere,. or sent by 9 CART= niSionts cp., iti)VIiin:-.64: .titge „ DWT DESPAIR WLL.GLIRE YOU We guarantee Dorld's Kidney Pills to clue any case of Bright's Disease, Diabetes, lumbago, Dropgy, Rhetamatism, Heart Disease, Female Troubles, Impure Blood—or money refunded. Sold by all dealers in medieine,or by mail on receipt of mice, 50c. per box, or thx boxes $2.5o DR. L. A. SMITH & CO, Toronto, Kt.40%P.—-5g Just spend his Fot.11 • Quarters Tor a bottle of Burdock Blood Bitters, as all sensible people do; be- cause it cures Dyspepsia, Con- stipation, Biliousness, Sick it Headache, Bad Blood, and all Diseases of the Stomach, Liver, Kidneys, Dowels and Blood from 0. a common Pimple to the yrorst Scrofulous Sore.