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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1883-02-16, Page 2THE HURON SIGNAL. FR,IAY, FEB. i6, 1883. FIRE AND SWORD: A Tall.. dl.t h. MuNau(•ru of (Hones O.AAP?LR \ I. turn at ouce to the " Well f" Pawing irresolute for a mainent, a sudden peal of thunder overhead, fullowed imam- ' datoly by • precipitate downpour of l Irain, decided his instant astern. All at once a thick (tartness had blot- ted oat the groy of the gloaming, and the Serra while' an hour before had arisen out of the western ocean waa now fast descend* like a great black pall un the xrsylrNre kills, and already the lofty peaks of Corry Van sad Chosusil were wrapped from view is • heavy nest tef rain. Further south the " Peak of the Feb, with "'t'iugal s Hills," and the looik, tufty, corrugated track called the " Path of Degrees were each momen- tarily lapsing .nut of view• Maleolus started. He knew well what a storm aaisng the bills meant. The thought of Helen Cameron left alone in Glenaehaolais at such a time roused a fueling of alarm in his mind, and with a quick step he hurried tack in the dirccuen of the "Well." The intervening distanee eau riot great, but he bad hardly traversed the half 41 it whet a flash of lightning— vivel and startling --followed by a sharp crash of thunder, lit up the thick dark- ness of the sky. Light of foot, Malcolm sprang over the slippery boulders, and brushed aside the wet masses of brake end fern which thickly stowed his path. Reaching the declivity, at the foot of which half an hour before he had left Helen Cameron by the betrothal -Well," he was both surprised and alarmed to find that she had gone. He looked everywhere about but saw no trace of her. He called on her ty name, but she answered him nut. Ile " helloed " at the top of his voice, but she responded not to the summons. Al- ready the blackness of the storm had descended un hill and %alley with more than the blackness of night ; the wind was rushing by with a inaniae fury; and the rain was pouring relentlessly down. An endless rumble of thunder was heard clseging and reverberating among the echoing hills, and the thin, keen jets of lightning were gleaming and quivering incessantly in the inky sky. Anxious at first as to Helen Cameroun safety, he now became truly alarmed. True, she was a Highland maid, and se- customed to exposure and mountain climbing ; but she was a comparative stranger to Glencoe; a thunder storm had descended on the hills ; she was un- aided and alone ; and the spot where he had left her was fully two miles from the main road leading to the Crags. Her absence from the spot, he c.on- cluded, could only be accdtinted for in one way. She had doubtless attempted to follow him, on finding his return unduly prolonged, and in the descending darkness they had obviously missed each other as he made the return jour- ney. Convinced of this, he immediately hastened back in the direction whence he had just come, "helloing" and shout- ing at the top of his voice, as he sprang eager -footed over the wet. and spongy ground ; but the Liss and pour of the wind and rain completely drowned the sound of his voice. Once more reaching the brow of the rising ground whence shortly before he had plunged intu the ravine below in hot pursuit mf the unknown fugitive, he paused and strained his gaze in every direction but could discern no sign of the missing maiden. Even were she about, the darkness was so thick that it would have been .a matter of difficulty and chance to have espied her. Agaiu'he shouted her name, but the winds flung back his voice, and there was no answering response. His summons, indeed, was every moment boeoming less likely to be heard ; for 'already the hill $tremulete were swollen into foaming vol- ume with the deluge- ref rain which had suddenly drenched billeted valley, and were falling in muses of brown foam from every precipitous crag and cliff wherever a channel could furan. Geeing intently forward through the blackness of the storm, he thought he descried a shadow moving acres% the plain where Ire new etotel. Hurrying up towards it, the shadow resolved itself into a titin column ..f driving rain -mist. Tho discovery was disheartening ; but a inement afterwards hu noticed, with a slight cry 4,1 joy. a e•eritabte figure me.v- ini toward hire. Ap, machin, it with quic',.eued step, he was disappointed to tied Oust it was only a blackfaced sheep, which had been overtaken by the storm high up on the hills, and was no .v re- turning to the shelter of the " ten. • Irresolute how to further act, a har- 1ow iso( fear of the maiden's safety began to agitate hm breast. What if, in the dir:,ness and confusion ..1 the uwtuent. Rha had missed her foutina and fallen eversome cliff 1 or into memo yaw ung chasm 1 ur bad fatally stumbled into a ole beg marsh , or, likelier still, tel. er- come with excitement and fatigue had become unconscious and fallen ivy the way t lmeginings •d that kind -- each el which were individually pussibie—wits supooltiinie of a still more improbable type, took pmssus.ion of him in turn, and agitated his breast with s th.>usenJ . nanieless fearand misgieiigs There was e•ortatnly a :,nes 1 ser (rut Tit a 11 i Las. The peraued.rt „ had the apart of Mal- colm by about a minute, but that brief 'snatch of time be had ea,nomised to the art roost advantage A deep and tortuous glen, full of dt- vergiug gullies and great m,asaes of ob- structing rock lay, about a ,leaner of a • mile ahead, ane juin as Malcolm gained the extreme brow of ,the cliff overhang- ing the •' Well' lie saw, fur a second, the figure of a man disappearing within the cover of the deep glen ahead. Boundiug across theentervening apace at a prodigious rate of epcesi, he gained the entrance to the glen in an almost momentary space cf time, and disap- pearing within its shadow, was present- ly fighting his way through its intricate and tortuous depths the rustling o1 the gorse and heather as he Rweptxhem aside alone disturbing the deep solitude of the place. Pausing for a moment within the shadow ,.f the gorge wherein he now found himself, he loe,ked about to dim - cover, if passible, a sight of the moving man ; Lut not a relitary trace of him was to be found. A flight of disturbed birds angrily overhead, and returning as often as they diverged from sight, was the on- ly evidence Malcolm had of the escaped roan's recent passage through the ravine, who had disappeared from sight and hearing like magic. Malcolm listened intently for a ele- ment but not the echo of a single foot- fall, nor the tingle of a solitary leaf, nor the motion ..1 an ut.delating wind dis- turbed the deep and impressive quietude of the spot. The pursued man, whoever he might turn out to brio was unquestionably a . mountaineer, and a man of agility and strength. Had he been aught less his escape would have been uncertain. But it was obviously Highlander to High- lander, and the advantage lay with the unknown fugitive, who had got the start, and had evidently made tho most of it. The gorge, ur ravine, in which he found himself, was nut an extensive one, but, short ss it was, he judged that the escaped than could not pssmbly have reached and passed through the upper end of it. He must, therefore, still be in hiding somewhere at hand, ur have ' dived frim sight into one of the many gullies which diverged from either suio cf it. , Convinced ,.f this, :11alcoltn cast a searching gaze around, and presently thought he descried through the descend- ing dual a movement amongst the thick • c revering of brake and fern which cloth- ed from top to b)ttom the alunst pre- cipitous si,les of an opening to the right. A tni,ritent after the movement was supplemented by a crashing noise and a general disturbance of the motherless silence of the glen, which was explained by the sight of a large displaced stone rolling down the brae -face into tine hol- low wherein lie stood. Looking up in the direction of the dis- turbance he saw for a moment the figure of a man on all fours scramblinu in haste away up on the far side of the gully. Imrnediately afterwards the while e'en resounded irom end to encu with the .'raahing flight of a startled herd of deer, whose deep repose the presence of the pursued Must, along with the falling mass of rack he had loosened by his re treating f+otsteps, had thus suddenly diaturbc 1.1 t Standing right in the track of their flight, lfalcoll.. found himself in danger of being run down and evcrthr,ewn bt. the flying herd. Quick as thought he sheltered himself le.hind a large boulder, and Batt- the frightened deet sweep furiously past hint like a rushing blast of wind. In the twinkling of an eye they were gone from sight, and a silence seemingly profounder than before. 'succeeded en their flight. Gutting t., ills feet :main. lie hastened towards the head cf the gully whence be bad unties 1 She fugitive esenpe. lance then, he strained hl% f`ycs )m all directions, but was unable to discry a mingle human object. . Darkness was fast settling down. and Le was aaeonishml and somewhat alarm- ed -t1 find that a stone of wind and rain was driving finie,ualy towards hien, and that already it wax lar waning and J•rk- ening around him. Pursuit nim.! fu.th, r sear.•li after tiro fugitive he now concluded was useless. The amplitude and variety of a hill amid crag and dale which everywhere Ity around afforded abundant opportunities of safe hiding, and 1f.rlcohn concluded that the fugitive had fres,. r► that hie true safety lay in obscurity and not in ttiiht, and was already very probably safely " dennet " in 'enure el.e.ltering ears in rho vicinity, er end finely hid from sight in soils fern -clad h•olluw of k.be hilt Weald ke prolleente the seat eh 4 res tnrsras. Thrthunder storm was increas- ing in intensity, and the hulls wore so' flooded with rain that the "t.-sekt" ware already lost, and in some parts all but loopiest file. Pur himself, who knew every detour of the bills, tied who was strong of body and agile cf limb beyond the common, the altuatiea was of comparatively tall ing moment ; but the bare thought of Helen U.weroa, res odeiag oa tine het Moro, tend exposed, it might be, gar hears to the fangy and' dan1er of • thus• derdorms, tottered his a1lei with coo - licking emotions of regret and alarm. At a loss to know how to further act ter the best. To lose time by remaining any longer where he was seemed useless, as Helen had either met with an accident or had left the locality : and to prosecute unaid- ed a further search into the glens and corrins of the storm darkened hills doomed to augur anything but a success- ful issue. Reveltiug the situation in his mind, he feared that some untoward accident had befallen the maiden, and he finally resolved on going back fur assistance to the nearest shepherd's mountain hut, that a search might the more effectually be undertaken. If, on the other hand, no mishap had happened her, and she had gone for sltol- ter in the direction of the main road, he would, perhaps, overtake her on the way. It was a choice whether lie would di- rect his steps to the farm-ateading lying 'west of lnvercoe or strike westward in the direction of Balachulish., The dis- tance wan about equal. To gain either point he had several miles to cover ; but the advantage per- haps lay in the choice of Balachulish, the more so that it was a less hilly and broken road thereto, and in consequence of that advantage could be touch more easily and speedily gut over. Once resolved, he prepared for a speedy descent. There was, indeed, not • moment to lose. Every succeeding crash of thunder seemed more terrible than its immediate predecessor, and the landmarks of the hill—nay, even the mighty hills themeglves were obscured from the sight in the inky blackness of the atmosphere. The lofty " Peak of the Pnn" and tho adjoining hills of the i'ath of Distress " were now complete- ly blotted out of view, and the cloven shoulders of the more adjacent Corry - Van and Chonuail were obscured from sight in dark masses of driving cloud and rain -mist. His mind finally made up, lie drew his knitted wonted bonnet well down on his brows, and swift of foot set off in the direction of Balachulis for help. [To BE CONTINUED.] Gretna. women. The condition of woman during the• Homeric period was comparatively ele- vated. But after the change to demo- cracy we almost lost sight of them, until we are ready to believe the Greeks had some other method of continuing their race, and that the Greek nation were the real Phoenix which they claimed to be, springing from the ground, ready- made. Women were kept in the utmost seclusion. " The best woman," says Thucydides, is she of whom least is said, either in the way of good or harm." Tragic theatre prise/aimed silence to he the greatest ornament of woman. "The wife abroad," cried the comic theatre, "a death and furies i What d.rest she from home !" The owl, a muzzle and a pair of reins were the fittest emblems on sepulchre of the accempliahed housewife. Owl. emblem of her watclifuluess ; muz- zle, of her silence ; and reins, of the skill with which she managed her ser- vants. lirasirg the Lead. The Fanny was coming down the Mississippi, loaded with pig -lead. -\s she was going over a shoal place the Obit gave the signal to Leave the lead. The only man forward at the time was a green Irishman. "Why don't ye12 heave the lead , "Is it to heave the least, your honor? Where to 1" "1)v-erboard, you blockhead: The irishman •watched up one 01 the pigs of lead and threw it overboard ; the mate, in endeavoring to prevent him, lest his balance and fell into the river. The Captain, running to the edge •ef the deck, asked :. "IVhy dont you heave the lead and sing out how mach water :hero is. ''The lead is heaved, your honor, and the mato hugone d .tett to see h•,w much wiser there is,'re-p,nded Pat. A LIME Pay lima Primes'. Mr. M. E. Allison, Hutchins. n, Kan.. eared bis life by a aiBliein Trial nettle of 1)r. KinTs New Dise•nery, for ('on- anrmmpti..n, which caused him to procure a large bottle, thatcontpletely cured Ann, 1 when Doctors, change of climate and everything else hail failed. Asthma, firorchnti+, H..arseneas. Severe Coughs, and all Threat and Lung diseases, K is enerantecd to cnre. Trial Bottles at .1. Wits•n • dreg at. re. Large sire 81 '1` LW road ate teals. Cu1J is simply the abeam* of heat and a negative, however hard, it iray be to to believe It in the presence of a "Bliz- zard." Tho natural causes of cold are the abacnce of the sun, CI! diminution Jam t'lanket of the atmosphere as we rise to high latitudes, and radiation thronstm a clear air. Fur every mile we mooed in the air the mercury is the thermometer WIG about 20". It has beau mihested that the absolute sero— the point where there would be no gase- ous telaion--ia Oat! Fahrenheit. The lowest temperaturoyet recorded is 920 F. The normal temperature of the body, which is in adults of the Caucasian rase 98.G', is maintained in defiance of exter- nal cold by the combustion within the Leidy u( heat -producing fund. if the combustible materials are not furnished, or if oxygen be uot.suppliod in sufficient quantity, the temperature will tor depress- ed. Hence the vital importance of hat tug pure air in addition t.. wholesome food. Persons habitually exposed to ould weather suffer far less from it than those who only cecasiunally leave their louses. Mail -carriers, physicians and others whose business takes them out of doors and keeps them there most of the time, rarely suffoe fr mum cold or coldr. They snake a point of haring requisite clothing and suitable food, and u the open air keeps the blood pure, quickens the appetite and promotes digestion their internal heating apparatus is kept in good condition. The more persons "coddle" themselves the more susceptible tocold they become, and slighter exciting causes induce colds. A cold bath every morning followed by vigur,usrubbing lessens one's suscep- tibility t, cold and diminishes the chances of indisposition from its effects. This bath may be very brief, and taken in a waren room if the person taking it is debilitated. The habit once foamed during warm weather is easily kept up throughout the year, and with great ad- vantage-`' Colds result from unequal exposure of the body to cold. Datnp clothes, caus- ing greater evaporation from one part of the body than another, are a fruitful cause of colds. If vigorous exercise is kept up, so that the internal production of heat keeps the body up to the normal point of temperature, no harm follows. One can work all day in the rain or anew without inconvenience, but a half hour sitting with damp feet has brought mauy a person ti, 'his grave. Drafts are prolific sources of colds. A current of air from the window, a draft through a keyhole or the crack of a door, are dan- gerousthings. One may go out into the snow or cold with impunity, yet fall be- fore a broken window -pane to rise no more. When one is conscious of having taken cold, measures should be taken as soon •s possible to equalize the temperature of the body and to throw off the effete matters which, in consequence of the inflammation caused by the cold, have settled on some rine or more parts of the body—always the weakest part. A hot foot -bath accompanied by hot drinks and a warm, even temperature, will, if taken in season, often avert moat serious con- sequence/, Sub -acid fruit& eaten ; in connective' with this anode of treatment are very useful. The aim should be to opeh all the natural cxeresoriea of the body, that of its own motion it may re- mmve the foreign natters that clog its membranes and tissues. Hot lemcnadc- hot sage -tea, and any drigks that promote perspiration, are geed. Cefld in the head is an infltmination of the lining mem. brane of the region, and is likely unless checked to extend down till it reaches the throat and brynchiai tubes, inducing conal' and lung trouble. The quickest way of checking this trouble is to keep in an unvarying temperature until na- ture cures itself, meantime 'abstaining from food or eating only acid fruits. When the lunge become affected, hot foot -baths. and mustard plasters applied over the lungs, either en the' chest or between the shoulder[, will draw the blond 10 the extremities and surface and give immediate relief. Mustard ala.•: ars applied to the :,ales of the feet or to the ankles and wrists have the same effect. Cloths wrung from hot soda ..r ■alcratus water anal fastened about the chest, covered with flannel to exclude the air and retain the mr•lsture, give relief. One can sleep in these all night with ad- vantage. A11 these devices are within the reach of every housekeeper, and if resorted to in season will often prevent the necessity of calling in a physician. And then, when it can be done, it is better to apply remedies to the outside of the t)uely than to the inside, and leave the wondrous interior mechanism to re- gulate Itself without any aid teem poison - ons druj.. We reefed to remember that •neuntmuia, brva,cLiti%, pleurisy, quiet consumption, all begin with sNakt coots; wilds so slight that the patients thick they are "not worth minding;'; ••they'll weer tff in a few days..' One ..1 our I brightest and mow' promising •.•mentals ied s test days since of a neglected cold. if we take care of the beginnings of disease we shall find the task easy. If we ',Nike: them ntedeeal skill may be peworlea• 1. awl 'se A i awake- Of one dr leu TEAZLE- %" to any one sending the best four lime rhyme on "Tma]aasty. ' tow tomerkable little gem for the Teeth sad Rveath Arlt roar dreggst 0r !Adroit.. tames tae sayer. A sclero repartee is roc. r led . 1 Foote the comedian, who, traveling fr the west of England, difted one day at an inn. When lime cloth was removed the land- lord asked him how he lilted his fare havedined as Weil at sing 'stall ;A En ud." cept tie Mayor," exclaimed the Landlord. "I dos trloept enybewly, whate%er,' said he. "But you must !' 'I won't.' "You alert'" At length the strife ended by the land- lord (who was a petty magistrate) taking Fu tv before the mayor, who observed it had been customary in that town fo: a great number "f years always to "except the mayor," and accordingly fined hint • shilhme for not conforming to theaueiout custom. ''pun this deeision Foote pail the shalli ng, at the saute time ebsen•ing that he thought the landlord the great- est feel iu Chriateaulone except the ruay...% Promises Vanillee. Yesterday I purchased a box of Pr. Smith's Great German Worm Remedy, and, after giving one dose, add my testi- monial to the many others in its favor, and endorse it as a safe and sure re- medy. J. W. SA1ZMAN, Bakery, Syracuse Street. Rendout, N.Y. Sold by James Wilson, Guderich, Ilnt. The Agery of A remelt. Let any person with a fresh cough im- agine it gaining on him day after day and year after year. Let him couple with it the dread (if consumption, the lone years of weakness, the months of acute suffer- ing, the agonies of death • He will then not hesitate to obtain the best cough remedies et the first apt earance of this evidence of disease. Mr. H. 0. Mann of Kiugaly, 1' says, "I have been for several years alarmed by an affection of the lungs. After a time 1 obtained and used several bottles of Dr. Wilson's Pulmonary Cherry Balsam. Before the first was finished I raised a number of hard gluey globulus and sty troubles left me entirely." The must frightful scourge of human- ity is Bright,' Disease of the Kidneys. C .mmencing with a little pain in the back it hurries tho sufferer to a premature grave. DR. VAN BUREN'S KIDNEY CURL is the only known remedy that prevents the fatal result. Take it in time. A steed Walter. ors, E when Daniel Webster was dining table d'hote at the Astor House in the days when it was conducted on what we call the American plan, a servant carve to him and said a man was waiting for him in the office to collect a bill. "Ia he a good waiter!" asked Webster. "I don't knew," answered the servant. "Neither do I," aaid the orator, "so :ve will have to ascertain. Tell hint I'm of dinner—Ica him wait And Mr. Webster finished his dinner leisurely, the man having lost patience and departed prior to the conclusion. , Emigrants and travellers will find in Ayer's Sarsaparilla an effectual cure fel- the orthe eruptions, boils, pimples, eczema, etc. that break out on the skin—the effects of disorder in the blood caused sea -diet} (1, n Life en hoard ship. it is the heat inedi- cine fur everyone in the spring. Tray Oa May Tem& T..o much cannot he said of the ever faithful wife and mother, constantly watclime and cariug for hos dual ones i never behalf.11eWethey areg a le dutassiileyi! by dis- ease, Nod the system should have a t►oruegh oleaoiiug, the stomach and bowels regulated, blood puribel. and •talariat es.raun extermfnatud, she roust kis •e that. Electric Bitters are the only sums remedy. They are the best and purest ilk's, in Nue world and only goat flft Dori• Sold by J. Wilson � 4 C.ute•r+ Little Liv er Pills must not bt omit melded with cntunas ru Cathartic or Purgative Pills as shay are entirely unlike them in every respect One tnal will prove their superiority "Why should autau whets(: blm.Nl is warm within Sit like his grandsire cut in alabaster !' Or let his hairgn,w rusty, scant and thin. When "CINUALLSLRENxwER" will Make it grow the faster. For sale by J. Wil ,..ti. lm Ttits REMAiHKA13LE ht STAIN- inK ewer so noticeable iu Wheeler's Fixer of Phosphates and ('allsaya Is of decid- ed adramta,re when 1t becomes eapedien• to ins intent the nervous system at eoneert pitch for prolonged periods during any great men- tal or muscular exertion, bring hetterand tater tot create force than alcoholto• stimulants. The increased energy bring derived from the food elements in the preparation that arc the source of nerve )ewer, it prevents the excessive waste and exlattation that result from orcr work. AYER'S :fair Vigor r -t•n u;:h the gloss and freshness ret yonth, t<.i •1 "r gray hair to a natural, rick brown color, ,,•.•i, Lla.•k, :unsay be desired. Ily its use light ' h..ir may be durkciied, thin hair thkksaed, ..i.au oftre, t! gh not ataxy., cured. 1. c .,. fatihng of the bait, awl stimulates a . ... ..•.,ly gr. IN lhto vigor. Itprevent&aaw t rid .L mIrimIl, and brain nearly ererf .•.,!..,.. ,., aro•,.•a11.. .ls a Ladles' HAM 1•. t 1, .et is unequalled; it '..arias , r•...drrs the ha; r soft, glossy. a„cr, a1,1 tut '.tl t .lel{eate. •,., ,lur• rya ;'erfmn,•. •.:.i w-ii,••'nvn Kirke, Q, .11* 1.lily 1443 c.awuemeeI1�i time 1 be.vtue Dearly Bald. a� :: t..+t1r of Aran's Ii4t5 VmOoLs,, ai_ .., - ..,,. ,i the 11d1115 art the lair, sadetarted A i. • , _�.,..t:;. I 113V.m ar« ow a fell heed ei Mtr erect x''1 ..gore our ., :ural um 'mistimed shwa bat fon to t.Crel .aur preietrution l should hate bees :r.i.tsh1." Ite.wi-v. pr.prirtnr. of the .l k.arther(Dais► .'.•..in•r,uys: •-tvrtisHAIR t•1005isaWei excel:eat pr: itm mumu for the ha'''. I speak at at from, toy own experience. lar ins fir tr "'Ll...1 tea hair, 'maker It The yt. 'It is ala.. a •ore elle for within my lams le.lg« has the preparation g er faire 1 to ;:.r• entire satisfaction.' ]IR, .t yea's Fuwwanev leader of the cele- brated" F.irlix;rn rustily "of :rottish Vocalists, writes from 1t,., .. Maus.. 14b. � 1100: •'Ever slue• nn Lalr I-.- sit t..gglveddlvery eridenee of the elating- esprit a^cti ugtltree pr enreth, 1 leave 'teed AYER'. HAIR Vtooi. Sued en have been able to maintain a0 appearance rel youlhf ulaess — a Mat- ter •.1 r meblerahl. ..nseyuenee to ministers, nr,Uoe., :,r-y.rtia,rl intact every one who lives In the etre "t'e.k. pub:k_" 3.'II •'. .t. t 1:►+roTr, writing from is Fins Si.. f*•m'./Ides, .110ss .1 ori, 14. 11.e„ says : "'Igo 1. -Rn a�.d R'.,nt tvre.t�tlnl+ of my hair came o� 11 uloid»•.I r.•.y rap�dlyy,� auA 1 w•ae tut grow bald. 111, wining ABS'r 144112 V1.105 the falling it.>rpett Riad a new growth rommeseed, and In abort a month mr Lenon /Vas .. ntplrtely cove with 'Mort hair, it has rola limed to grow, d grit as at. .t ae M•f.r.• it 5,4 1. I regularly but ubr bottle of the ''woe. but now use It occasion- ally 0- a dressing." W« have hundreds of similar teatimvuials to the .•lt cagy .5 AVER.' AAIB 1t needs but a ileo1 to rorir{uee the most skeptical of its value. PBCPAR1:n wt• Dr..1. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. sold by all Druggists. tackle.'. tralea Meuse. The greatest medical wonder of the ' world. Warranted to speedily cure i Burns, Bruises,Cuts,Clcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Cancers, files, Chilblains. Corns, Tetter, Chapped Hands. and all Skin Eruptions, guaranteed to cure in every instance, or in. ney refunded _'arc. per box. Fur sale by J. 1Vilsen, ly. �yy amens Giver Away. .1fi11ieru of Bottles of Dr. King s New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, havd been given away as Trial Bottles of the large size. This enormous outlay would be disastrous te the pre- prietort, were it not for the rare merits possesacd by this wonderful medicine. • Call at Wilson s drew store, and get a i Trial Bottle free, and try for yours. If. It Lever fails to cure- a) Perfect, Positive and Pleamam•i.t .toe the cureseetfected by Dr. Van Bnren's Kidney Cure. Relief in nil cases of Kid- ney Disease is obtained af:era few doses. See that your Lruggi•t glee* you Dr. Van luren's Kidney Cure. Sold hp .T. unfit'son Coderich. stn serer trate we 1f y•• m .,re suffering with hie and' de- pressed spirits, loos of appetite, genemel debilitj, disotnerel blood, weak consti- tution, headache, er ally disease of a bilious nature, by all means pr,eure a battle of Electric Bitters. You will 1><: am -primed to see the rapid itnprnvemet t that will follow; you will le inapired with gew life; 'strength and activity will return; putin and misery will cease, and henceforth toe will rejoice in the praise ..f Electric Bitters, Sold at fifty cent& a b ttte, by Jas. Wilson. (+,� �n Extraordinary Offer ! TO &G Tt3- GOODS UNSOLD RETURNED. 11 y..0 see out of employment and want le start 02 a business you can make fr oro uta to !10 a .lay clear, and take no risk of loss, we w ill Send ren on receipt ..f 811, ¢..eels that will sell readily in s few day. for 8.25. if tl is Agents fails to eel, shear four days, they can return all uncold to u% tend we will re- turn thou their money, Call anything be fairer 2 We take all tisk of lose, and the Agent gets started in a business that will lou perutaueut, and pay from 81,000 to !$3,0011 :I year Ladies em dons well as nlem t\'0 w ant an Agent in every county. Mol particular,' free. Address, i'. S. Man lifacturi tie Co., N. I] t; Smith field Street. Pittsburgh, Pa, CURE Rick tlnMmrhe sed relieve all the lroab4N inci- !-.,t to a b.li,.ns rate of the system, such as Dis � r'•" ... Nsne4 iset sDrowss, DIshves after "atm' Ts n in the aids, de. While their most rcur.rk- able income has been shown In curing SICK heads is yet('evict'sl.itareLlrerFit)sarerinally vwt5la (onstipatlon,'men' and preventingroRftwhite also correct SS of stelRlethe liver,e the bowels. 1C, es It they only Cara HEAD A• . t ,- y "'mild beataestpttseieas M lWile ileworlds ACHE i ii thsbi�eew� 'f al se many Iiyee at Wee .. *Mee we WWetsneiettbt nat bawd.bu. Oar p aim n wails Casser' I/W Geer 1!w �y sera M►ra�Yla Oaa awe atDs�iWtsi New IA�rto. eta Ib* aM as eM ase inns..• r..m. ii, 1 guar a. h9 dna l . � stoat by CARTIria liUrinCtilig 00., rind{{sly .eirlcnl,nu is ail I can sayyy .41 the effect ..f I),. Ven Harem's Kiduoy!effect Cure in my cuee. An elderly lady I writes this from Antignnish, N. S„ who, had suffered from ipains in the hack f, r twenty year* Sold by .1 tt Owes Gryle- rich 201 He Net tee m1« ranged. I:t three trams of quack medicine ad- vertisements everywhere, it is truly gratifying t , ::red tone lemedy that is w"rthy of pewee met which rrsily dolts as tec•,,niueu.lr I. Electric lounger we east %t.ud, f..r as being w trite said ridea- ble a+d, avid at ali dr.,- c'un,0re0ns,lyeel They invsrmiaMojj as gigue tit m:a, h and Liver Complaints, Ihsertes of the Kidneys and Urinary difficulties. We know whereof we speak. end Mn readily say, give them a trial Until at !i4 .onus s h..ttle by Jae'Wilson (31 Dent tb4 away thsIc abeam lry Wale as asi Wide w'ebt %eau apa os rest► York Ofty.