HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1887-7-22, Page 22
THE HURON SIGNAL. FRIDAY, JULY 22, 1887.
ts' Bin's
Tbe�s�uda.
peesibly—yeti tare W tae expatiates 1'Went a week afore 1 henna hied bee flet.' Hitt's ►visht eyes roved la kis di-
et the met r and married Paella, Wien'''. She woe iodise•
Mis' Hitt removed her pipe. with • setae' /long. Psslioy was, aad she was "Roston Carter 'd got bark from
lase whop, uWWpiaiera• Her .yes terrible glad to gut hiss. lejiney " •he said. "Hid horsed his
slues in its d•rkeoed •ad wilitmvd ser
hiss wIb a eakimay wrawd bright -
sem.
"I've buried four karhande." she
said. Her expression was a samara of
solemnity aid namable pride.
"Ab r' the sobwrltaaster merwsur.d.
''The groat oenarlstion foe death,,' he
amassed, ''is the resasabvaeoe d the
felicitous hours parsed with the dosses -
Young married lite—lives--wemo
they not ?"
••Wal, 1 don't know," said Mai Hitt.
She crossed her knees and clasped her
koutty hands around them. "l didn't
have such powerful good luck Oulu'
husbaada,"
••Indeed "' said the sehoolromter.
"One might judge. from • cameal view,
that you had been highly successful"
Mis' Hitt's serwusew did act alter.
Apparently a joke was not in the line
of her oompreheouuo.
"Thar wa'n't now o' soy men what ye
might oall likely," she said, without
distsrbsoos teem the resoMgitiou of her
s•est. km'tt e sauteed Best sit "Thy was
• pretty ornery est, I eel! 'ser."
She poled away io silent rumination.
"Your first husband, for example ?"
the schoolmaster suggested."
"Wad, he wa'n't much—Ike Heyward
wa'n't," woman the old woan responded. Her
eyes were fixes unasemingly on the
blank stretch of sodden land ; her face
was intent with the absorption of remin-
iscence. "i was nigh on to .16 when
I married Ike, he was somewhar' roundhadn't20. I hadn't been ealculatin' to marry
Ike Heyward : wa'n't lookin' to a week
afcrehand. I'd bad it fixed up withlissomlisstCarter for • considerable spell ;
we'd gut the day sot, and 'Rastas he'd
spoke to the preacher. I don' know as
I recollect jest what spited it ; 'Basun,
he flared up at somethin' er 'notber ;
oonsid'able techy, 'Rastas was—mody-
topped, freckly folks 'meat gen'all be.
Wel, I didn't gat him," said Mis' Hitt,
brightening the bowl of her pipe with •
puff or twc. "And Ike Heyward be
stepped in, and we were lined.
"Lived with hi. folks, Ike did ; I
don' know as I should 'a had no trouble
with Ike et it hadn't been for that.
Had the wing, Ike and me, and the rest
o' the house was the ole folks ; but ole
Mid Heyward was into that wing
enough sight more'n she was to hum,u
f•ssin' and non' round. She'd come ta
in afore breakfast, and set wetchin' e
gettin' it, and tellin' u how I couldn't
ouok pork no moron • cat, and didn't
know no mere •font fryin' pancakes 'n I
did 'boat flyin', and as how I wa'n't
mein', and my wssltin's looked yeller
and my soft soap wa'n't half baled ; and
she'd go round cryin' 'bout lke gittin'
sect �as
wor shiftless piece. She ws
peek,de creetur."
Hitt spoke placidly. Het loyearsrs
ago grievances had developed with yea
into impeowl f.cta
"And Ike, he was jest as chicken-
hearted as I ever see ; he wa'n't no
sure 'count 'n a dishrag. He didn't
really know who to side with, all he
flag,tered on was to get out of the mows
He'd take his fishpole and go off and
stay all day ; oncet, when we'd ben
havin' it pretty tough, his ma and me.
he staid of • week long ; and spindlin',
Ike was, and sailer ; •loo snortin'
round with a cold, and wheezen' op
with asthmy, ailin' ; tw•n't no more'n
I was lookin' fer when be started in to
cough.
The schoolm•ater, listening with gra-
tifying interest, looked to vain for any
softening of the old woman's calmly nar-
retive tone. The tragedy of fifty years
boom.ago had beoe • casual memory, in-
teresting only for its harrowing detail..
"He was jest akin and bone when he
died ; hi. anus wa'n't no bigger round
'n • broomstick, and his checks was sunk
in so 't it fairly scairt ye : he was a dret-
ful-lookin' corpse." Mis' Hitt turned
her eyes upon her listener in pleasura-
ble antici,oation of the effect of these
items "He was buried up in the old
Borth burytn' lot --he was took up after-
ward. and pot in the new one a
—nd i
went hum again. I was powerful glad
to get abet o' ole Mis Heyward, now I
tell ye."
"Our most poignant sorrows have
their alleviating features,' the school-
master observed.
s yeses es0eoimeeter who padded
defies the eyries arm over the memo
tees h•rdeoted children of Didmist No.
10, Zest Centreville. Juheso• ealney,
411 not find W social elomest of the
tssi�h.chood oespenial
There was ao lack of society sad
modal gayeties. The schoolmaster had
stteeded a sarpriee party, • warm sugar
p arty and a "sociable' drrieg the Gest
meek of his residence is Dieing* No.
10 ; he had bees stared at by rd -heed -
e I, hair -oiled, tuogurtied youths ;dimmeddoed several Virginia reels to the tow
of "Pop Goes the Wassel," rendered on
a shrieking fiddle or • hoarse malodour';
kis
been s✓ by acorea of buxom girls in
aa
i•msesbls oao•latory woes ; and had
*Moe refrained from East Centreville
eternises with s et•rniswhich had
been looked upon as "stuck op," and
which may, indeed, hays been due is
some degree to that oompleosot self-
esteem in which young sn
choolm•,te
are not usually deficient
Hs was fond of est fteie
ever ; and being thea thrown bask sp.
co himsslf,its chases seemed eiitasll. The
comfortable old couple who boarded him
were meek, irdestrious, deserving and
eommonplscs, and he wee not hopeful
o f discovering anything more exciting
is District No. 10. He was roused to
• mild interest, therefore, when he
found the "satttn' mom," one morning,
in the possession of an odd and some
what startling old woman.
She was whitewashing the ceiling,
She stood on top of • stepladder, and
towered its cracked and yellowish sur-
face with long strokes of her stubby
brush. She wore • bright new calico
dress with • short skirt which exposed
her heavy masculine boots. Her hair,
which was gray and scanty, was drawn
b ick over frequent patches of bald -
sues and fastened in • candid knot of
the size of • hickory -out. Her face
was brown and wrinkled, with bright
• eyes, and she held • pipe between ber
lips.
The schoolmaster in.tutrd concerning
her as he sugared his lettuce at the
breakfast table ; sugar and vinegar were
the approved salad drawling at East
Centreville.
"That's Mu' Hitt," his hostess re-
j,ined. "She kind of jibe around—
lays carpets and whitewashes and papers
and helps heusecleanin' times. ilhe's
master hand, MS' Hitt is,"
"Miss Hitt- she is unmarried, then 1"
saiI the schoolmaster.
"Lw ' the old lady responded,
while a faint blush stole into her faded
cheeks : "she's been married four
times. Hitt," she added, scrupulously,
•'wa'n't her last husband ; but we didn't
neser pit into the way u'callin' her MO'
Doty. It don't mak• no odds, as I
know of—Doty, he's dead."
A week later the schoolmaster who
bad conceived a liking fur the outdoor
sopects of District No. 10, wandering in
the dusk of the evening through an
empty pasture lot which ccpious spring
rains had developed into s swamp, ante
suddenly upon a small red wooden
bidding set into the caner of the pas-
ture and backed by • piece of woods.
Ira unstable appearance, produced by
the piles of stones upon which it. four
corners rested, and its several props,
made it obvious that it had been moved
hither from its native spot, where it
eu;ht have been a corn or hen house.
is • chair in the open doorway, leaning
forward on her elbows and smoking, was
Mis' Hitt.
The school;narter went nearer
and raised his hat. The old woman
took her pipe from her mouth and eyed
him with a fleeting suspicion ; then she
g'k up and shoved her chair back hos-
pitably.
The schoolmaster stepped inside and
sat down on an anonymous object near
the door, while his entertainer lighted
her lamp.
Ito light showed • crimped interior
of one room. The walls were covered
with newspapers, tacked up : an un-
seasonable store retained its place, for
lack of other refuge. There were a few
attempts at adornment, which the hard -
end linters and belated tastes of the
inventor had not served to render
successful. The seho.,lmuter's seat
proved to be • nail -keg, whom hardness
was not helped by its frill of brown
cambric.
Mi.' Hitt, from the one chair of the
room, looked at her caller over her pipe
with no visible cariosity.
"Saw ye t'utber day," she obserr.d.
"T.•chin' here, aunt ye e" And, when
the schoolmaster wonted, relapsed into
intones with a nod.
"You are pleasantly situated," the
school master ventured, looking nut
• n eewhat doebtfully over the shadowy
pas' ure lot.
"i don't know se i be," mid Mis'
Hitt. apathetically. "i git dons."
The schoolmaster swede • *mond and
• holder attempt.
"i harp lately received the news d
the death of an sant," he remarked.
'it se *scowlingly sed to lose one's
trisods, is k art ? fleet, perhaps—vat
"A•1, I didn't lay oat to wait for ever
Is. sit another seas, levet I yew 1 wee
dean sot bask whoa Milts Wilder came
.1dgia' resod. Ole becelsr, siibu wee ;
matt 'a ba nigh onto 40. He'd ben
has' by himself ler • ling veil, over in
the holler. I hadn't neves ase him
anus's easel ur twigst• I dsebr 1 didn't
knew bet I was gottis' Iso, an' meta'
epsrrita,wlw he come aippia' is. Ne'a't
mesh higher s a yardetiek, Ellhs wi e't
--seemed to ben Mooted ; gad he was
so kind o' dried up, thar didn't lock to
be nothio'to him.
"Wal, ef I'd a -knew wtt•t'twee keepin'
home for a Mohler, I wouldn't never
aodertoek it. Filmiest, weoueest lit-
tle motor I ever Come witkia forty tails
of, Bliba Wilder was. Hid lived thar
by himself till he'd got as notion -
el as • witch ; he wa'n't no ways seed to
folks, and, oome to the pint, he didn't
coaly know how to ,tan' it haven' me
bar. I reeve he'd a give 000sidbk to git
u nhitched agia, and I woolda't 'a held
of nether.
"$ was a eight to behold, that ar
beans t i ss. Thar hadn't ben • Ga-
mer belted to it seam 'tons put up, and
o' all the tarsal ole holes. The front
steps was all rotted away. Thar wa'n't
a hall wider in the hoe.., and the
rut o' the keepin' mom leaked like a
sieve. Eiihe, he wouldn't hear to tixin'
it op—tight as the bark of a tree, Elihu
was. With all my noggin'. he wouldn't
do nothin' but put an old sawhorse by
the front door, place .' steps. and board
up some o' the winder. He'd ben
strung up souner'n git ahingis far that
raft Used to set tube in tear vain it
raised gad ketch water ter wadtid; said
'twee handy. 'Bout as cleat -listed as I
ever come acrost, Elihu Wilder was.
And what with his bein' so notional, I
don't know how I stood him as long as I
did. He was wusi n any cld woman I
ever see. Had the for.room all cram•
mod fell of • sight o' ole truck he'd ben
scruple' op and mein', the goodness
knows what fer—dried yerbr and ole tin
pans and pieces u' rope and waron
wheels and legs .f bedsteads ; wouldn't
have 'em teched. He was sot in his way.
as eyes • bein' was created—jest. Went
to bed at tt o'clock, year in and year out,
and got up at 4 to the tick, and 4:30 of $
Sunday, and all the saints couldn't 'a
made • minute's odds. Et tear was any-
body Char when the clock pinned to 8
be never made no bones o' startla' 'em
ter hum. Ef the heavens had a' fell
'twooldn't 'a stirred him one o' his
tracks. Et I'd 'a knew what 'twos linin'
with a bach'ler, I reckon 1'd a' steered fer six weeks, Doty did ; out of kis
clear o' Elihu Welder. head the hull time, and undergoin sick
"Wal," Mis' Hitt pursued, with •' saferia's as I never hurd the like of ;
greater tranquility of tone, "he didn't ye could hear him hollerin' and groaoin'
live but three years, Elihu didn't. He clean out to the big road. Made con -
was took off with dropsy, fer all he'd sid'able of • stir, bring sech a terrible
never looked to have • pint o' blood its bad casel had as big a funeral as I ever
him. Wouldn't git no doctor ner have was to, Doty did."
nothin' done fer him ; he jest steeper: up
Mis' Hitt's pipe was oat ; the pasture
them ole verba o' his'n,and set round the had grown quite dark, and the noise of
store atirrin' an' drinkin' o' 'em. the frogs was lessening. She got op
Wouldn't give up till the last minute : and put her chair against the wall and
cloned the one small window near the
ceiling by means of • broom -stick, The
schoolmaster, conscious that an ignoring
of these signs would not avail him, rose
from his n•ilkeg,
"I presume you do not consider it
probable that you wail marry again 7" he
lingered to remark,
Mis' Hitt put up • bony hand to re -
more the hairpin from her diminutive
knot, which was apparently to be re-
constructed for the night.
"I don't know but what I've had
'bout enough o' gittiu' married," she re-
sponded, with undimintehing gravity.
She waited, unimpressed, while her
visitor bowed, to shut the door behind
him.
The schoolmaster paid another visit
to the isolated little domicile toward the
close of h.. eojoern in District No. 10,
in consequence of • rumor which had
"Yea ; i took up with Hitt fir the comma to hitt ears. It was to the effect
next one. Hitt, he hadn't ben livin'
that 'Ruts. Carter had come back, and
,that he and Mia' Hitt had gone prompt•
round here •gnu while ;but 1 deelar I Fly to the justice and been made man
might 'a knew what he was by his Coot- I and wits
Mis' Hitt puffed at her pipe.
chirping of frogs filled the purse.
I "Yoe were isthmoid to repeat the
malrim .nisi experiment ?" said the
schoolm•,tsr, ' •You married again, 1
Tater I"
' "I was • wilder for six months," Mis'
Hutt responded ; "bot I meld ben mar -
'
rind afore that of I'd • min' to 'Ratter
Carter, be come round soon u Ike was
pat in under. He'd scraped op enough
to git • place- -pretty forehanded. 'Ras-
tas was - and he was ealeelatir' to hay
u p to the Conkers, else to the old tea -
eery. Wal, i told him of was gait' M
live roend that ar Memory i wa'n't, aad
all the powers coold'nt make tam ; the
smell was fit to keoak ye down, jet
about ; aad as to Bois' wltb it right so -
der my nose --it made not seek as a deg.
the idea on't. 'ilastaa, he wee mad as a
hoeeat ; be want ell a r ap•gia', end
lava site oat titer, sod he was lookii.'
round lar aaotk.r, sad whoa Hitt was
took s[ be Dame epssran' mead- Abram
Doty, he was steering .y way, sad
'Restos he shred up , jest as high tem-
pered as ever, 'Rastas was. He parted
out west seals, and I taint' serer
hatred no more en hie
"Wel, Td lived with a earl oas set o'
tees eaoash, the land knows ; but
Abeshoa Doty was jest about the
our'aseet. He was gittin' long towards
70 whoa I took him and he was broke
down ouneid'abie , I don't know as he
was jest right in his mind. He was so
terrible pious thar wa'n't no loin' with
him-"
Mai Hit's tone had no trace of ap-
ology. Piety, seemingly had laic with-
out the bounds of her experience, and
therefore of her understanding.
"It 'peered to 'a struck in ; be was
ohms possessed. Used to set round the
house readin' the Bible and meditate'
on his eius—that ar's what he give out
to be doin'—'asst the hull time. They
*es Imola' liasilMags down at the grove,
and Duty he .as thar reeler twieet a
day. Ht over pursued me to go 'long
000et, and I wouldn't 'a ben got thar
,gin fer no money. Sesta • set u' loons
I never see ; and Doty, ge was 'bout the
craziest on 'em. He got up thar and
pranced round and screeched out as how
ht was lost to the waye o' sin and give
over to the powers 1' darkness and jest
a-totterin' on the aidge of eternal jai -
1 tics ; sad then he bust out it-single.—
couldn't sing much more'n • crow,
Abram Dotty couldc't. I declar of
%•1't ridiculous ; seventy odd year be
wee, ,tad bald as • sgaash.
"e'ar'n ever after that, Doty was.
He couldn't bar to see me lookin' no
ways dissent ; he laid down that rtb•nds
and fields was instruments o' the devil ;
he chucked too u' my bunneta into the
stove and tore up an alpacy gowr-d.
He'd go without tastin • mouthful for •
day to • time---fastin', he give out that
he was—dear knows what fer ; he was
skinny as • rail to begin with. He got
an worked up 'cause I stirred up • mess
s' fried cakes ot • Sunday oncet, that be
went off to the woods and stayed thar
fer • 000sid'•ble .poli. fetched his
death thar, too ; hs came back clean
sick. Neoraky 'twos to the fest," said
Ms' Hitt, with an increase ..f interest
in her tone ; '•but a aretful lot m,' things
sot tn—pneumony and the jtnders and
blood-puisouin' and the awellin' o' the
jints ; the doctor give in 'ewes the west
case he'd ever come nigh. Laid than
Whew is the doorway.—louse A. Op- Swat eiersl.
per ie Freels Lee's.
Personal Appearance.
A Leslie atm * awSe
tsetse.
Girls, if year skis be dark, be satisfied
to be in the category of the net -brown
maidose, it for tam other remainthan that
" the leopard cannot change hie spots."
Lot the son kiss the dusky ghee said add
to it the ruddy glow that belongs to the
dark skiu, and which the rouge put mu -
not s.pply•
Of course you cannot change your fea-
tures. But you needn't trouble your-
self much on that more. Solos pens,n
has said that if our Mary could put Norge
of her beauty of feature iota real every.
day prettiness she would be loved where
she is now admired.
The toweriug•nussd maiden among the
proud daughters of the Nile was the
beauty of Solomon's day, se was the wo.
man with no hose at all iu the time of
Tamerlane. in the land of the free then
is no standard ot beauty on the rose
question. The American Ouse is a type
all to itself. But at all events your nose
r • isesquoe conclusion, and all the
shelties in clothespins to pinch down
the too prominent nostrils, or stroking
with • lead peoeil to subdue the obnox-
ious bump, is •o much labor thrown
away. But when it comes to the mouth,
the would•be beauty has • more pro-
mising *object to deal with. Although
the shape of the feature cannot be alter-
ed, if the lips be kept fresh and the
teeth in perfect condition, very much is
gained. If the .pot whete love seals its
vows be of an exaggerated size, don't
be constantly on the grin, as that keeps
the muscles on the stretch. CteklthN a
clossical repose of feature. Keep the
month shut when asleep for more re,sc:ns
than one. Dunt snore. Don't bite the
lips to maks them red. or for any other
reason. Rothe .hem .rxast .anally in
water, with a little dissolved alum . r
borax, and apply glycerine in tincture .d
benzine. Timis will keep the lips fresh
looking. The only harmless way to keep
them red is by contrast with the teeth,
which should be milk white.
A good tooth beautifier is powuered
sulphur, which is also an excellent tooth
'preserver. This limy be used daily. for
occasional use, my once a week, the fol-
lowing is good : Pomace stone,one ounce ;
bicarbonate of soda, one half ounce ; pow-
dered talc, one-half ounce. Fresh -look-
ing lips, clean, white teeth and • breath
like sweet frankincense, aloe and myrrh
will make up for many • deficiency in
feature.
If the ear be big and obtrusive, a
bore arrangement of the hair or a few
curled locks brushed carelessly back will
help the objectionahle organ wonder-
fully. Never comb the hair tight back
from an ugly ear.
As for the eye., better leave them
alone. Trimmed lashes often refuse to
grow again. Dark eyebr,as and lashes
are • great prom.otr of beauty, and if
1 yours happen to be lighter than your
ihair, especially if that is red, I think
you might lust tooeb them lightly with
( a sponge dipped in Mace walnut bark
boiled in water with a little alum, or
apply simple walnut once. The eye-
brow may be give,. a s:egiu arch aad the
fine line so much sought by simply
P inching the hairs together between the
fingers several times a day.
But it is through the complexion that
you have the greatest .cope iur beauti-
fying. if every pure in your skin is
stuffed full of "lily white," you most ex-
pect those dreadful pimples and horrid
black specks. T. the gal with the ugly
akia I my, you must take a two or three
male walk every day ; you must wear
shoes big enough for perfect comfort,
and. if the .kin 1.e thick and oily, you
must eschew fats and pastry.
In the spring i; would be well to try
the sulphur remedy, and at the same
time you rosy rub sulphur in a little
glycerine on the face at night, w•sniog
it off in warm water and a few drops of
ammonia in the morang.
A little camphor in the water will re
move all shine. Ard remember, rine,
all face powders are snare. and doles -
ions. —St. Luis Chrostele.
N the Tease
then he did give in to lettiti the doctor
tap hien. Thar was 'most a vallon took
o' him. He wa'n't a natural lookin'
corpse ; he swelled up so\you wouldn't •
know hits"
MTs' Hitt leaned over to drop the
ashes of her pipe r.n the ground outside.
Teen she got up and filled it from a
mune in the cupboard, lighted it by
means of • match and the lamp chimney,
and sat down, recrossing her knees.
"Did Mr Carter reappear 7" the school-
master Enquired.
" 'Restos Carter, he'd went west a
spell bask- Paoliny Wi.well, she'd died
o' the fever—'twa'n't no wonder, nether,
lirin' so clue up to that ar tannery—and
'Rastas, he'd picked up and went off to
Injiany. it come b•. -k that he'd got
married agin out than"
"And you foliowed his example r'said
the schoolmaster.
tin': he w•• hangin' round sich an ever -
The rosea a
lastin' time atop be come to the pint. i appeared to have sob-
•tantad foundation. There were two
reckoned I shouldn't never git shot of figures in the doorway—Mia Hitt's
him.
"Wal,' mil Mis' Hitt, musingly,
"thar wa'n't much to Hitt, cne way orleg, ber arms folded on her knees sod
The I 'nother. He was as lazy as ail git out : I her eyes resting ragoety on the near
orae to set out whar 'twee Danny, sort o' field Th. change in her condition, pos-
dosin' off for • hull day to • tisi ,and .ibly owing to its lack of roseate, did
that was pretty much all he did do." ' not appear to have affected her. Th.
Rhe smoked silently for a moment. little old man at her side, rale in cow.
The lapse of time and the feeWeee t of p•riern with her withered darkness.
Hitt's char•eteradicessernedle have well struck the schoolmaster with his raise -
sigh *Cooed him frost her weary. I Mance to • meDhroom beside • blscken-
•'Hilt," she added, without section-- id toadstool" He had a round, shining
"Hitt nose roe Mee os the railmnsd ; cruors, wf
. trwk M the injiw am"bi•gd 1ont, I mnantingith a f•adedtris,. pinok fan.white Iuhair placisur-
d
fork in the air ; wa'n't a hull hime left meekness might have led one to believe
that hie "teehines' and high tesober
were things of the put.
The schoolmaster, with • haunting
certainty of being relegated to the nail -
keg if he went ie, eootewted himself
with • bright isepres.ise of the small
red home with the weeds fer a base -
grouted sad the .vasa„ pedaal% Ilor ••
delimited front rod, axed with MW Hitt
and her kat Imam& *this is twwgwn
stock of chain having been added to by
one. The old woman sat quietly amok -
,r
in his body. Folks did say he was ton
pint lacy to Hit out the way when he
saw the injin. enmin'."
MTs' Hint's pips wee reinstated. The
bootitag of an owl ie the seer wood
w eeded .t slow intervals amid the drow-
sy clamor of the frogs. The sshoeima-
tsr wombed the oddly ..seer flsu e,
whoa .stamina west was set mesh
detreated trete by abs vivid affix dues.
" i good • greet deal .d deeter's msdi-
nue for kidway r• eulaiat *Meg the
years. wee *sense ...me all the time un-
til 1 tried 8 11. 8. 1 swot ekeernmsi ka,
geared is weight from 1*) to 110 Ib.
[ oto highly reormu.eod Berwick Blood
miter, to be • woad lotdiate." Thu.
testifies John Welton, .,f Spriest ie d,
N. B.
Teo 5.1.1 Fry.
to t:eee Repot.
Jame. McMurdoer, writing from Kin-
▪ e, says : "B B. B. as r remedy (or
diamises of the blood, liver and kidneys,
has an excellent reputation in this local.
ity. i have used it, and speak from ex
porton os, as sell as observation. it is
the only medicine i want, mod I advise
otheta afflicted to try it.' 2
aR6AM BA4pCAT" RH
Cleanses t h m
Head. Allays
Inflammation
Heel theeo
Restores t h E
8eneaaof T
Smell Saari
A quickReliefA positt nt Ours.
•.•.:ours Tamen iota each ■ •el Is
le mats at
a..,e. (tr..r..
"I me ynu fry your had tr.L. ' re-
marked the tralup, with his m.,uth full.
"Yes," said the w•.si,el, eh•.r• Iy ; •'h .w
would ynu have it coaled, t,...ted f'
''No, certaIuly not ; hr..rtw•l, m,.t 1,0.,
beevemd ; 1 ss, he a t ra,n,i," he aide I,
plaiuttvely, "but I'm u» o+lrach.' 1. car
e.sne of nssl•r.
The frequent assume ..1 deform .hoed.
Jog hovel c.mpl.entsd .rinY *he Ionian.
and fall is the- Habil'', to ch ik the
diarrh.rs t... .nddbnly 11 F •el,r'a
lklit
Extract of Wild Strawberry will nog d.,
this. Intamnieti.w ui .h,. t....et, 'iota
nicht f .flow its um, as 10 1.0, ..fee.1 the
CON with powerful ..protea and moving.
eats. it cures pr...uptlr at.d w s moor
al oantivr. Y
Nets Web ascot
Mr Goode, drowse!. i. 0.4 a 6.44
agent. out has the age..ry In ll••drrieb
for John.t»u'. Tonic Buterr, which he
can heartily rrsat.••wI,.l rot- .i•y ons -
plaint to which a t• •111.• iu.-.$menu, se sp.
plicable. The. .a oaote. ,.:,+Tani",' has
been with most est. ..ul.•l.it!Y -.d re-
sulu is (1110100 ••1 kr. • 1.1 ,Irl. tui, •eak-
neee, irrer.ilerttle* i.eruii.r t.. L oafs,
extreme l...leosss, lu.;r•.. n•A.•:r..r .,1 the
blood, stomach and 1.. .-m iu..yhlr. 1.e•
of appetite. an.i foe tn... mtou••r.l
out feeling that oe.rl" evrry ..as ie
troubled with at sooner tart of the veer.
Don't i.•riet the nano. J..hnat-a, . Tonle
Kitten *Q:. and tel pi" n•dtlr at 1;•.-Ir's
drug store, Mixon Woolf, lis"lar •4, •,.1.-
mKeot. a]
•
SCROFULA
Humor's,
Erysipelu,
Canker, and
Catarrh,
Can be
cured by
purifying
the blood
with
i do not believe that
Ayer's nara•psrUt• bas
se equal as • remedy
for Scrofulous l!w
mon. It to Mimeo
to take. gheesad elger to
Mr�e.itb
and Modems ewe
�y
re -
wk ibis
1 ever used. -1L
Rehm, No. I6dale, O.
BsII eahoovrea�uas,fieed Ayds
ily, for wtNi end
teas -
know, it R le takes
faithfully. alt will
fhb de
dredws. -
kate
W. F. Fewlsr, M. D..
Greenville, Tern
For
years #
hove esdised with rr-
dpelaa. I have tried
.1 sorts et remedies
tar my essmiskst.but
=dp until
istanced trig
tar's tarespr�a-
Mktg tea W-
ein' et ibie,.$dor 1
or�pleselp eared-
- Mari
C._
Rockport, dmsakor).
I bore sediered. ter
years, tress CM.rrh.
which wee es serene
ty
apppp�bte aad destroyed
d
myopias. Misr try -
lag sem remedies.
sad pit* so relief. I
begun M take Ayer**
Qorap iNe. and, hs s
tem sales, measured.
— flta.i•
L. Cook, tee
Allem? et., Restos
Htgbleada, Iter.
Ayres S•rap•rilh
iimerior
10that my
err
tried. i hone
taken ft for Scrofula.
a•ker, end Salt-
iest received
from N.
sec Mink
Beath
Ayer's Sarsaparilla,
Prepared by h..1 I. Aye. a G., Lewes. Yee..
, Pekes •I ; els boas«, es.
FOWLERS
STRAE1
C H O. E R A
CHOLERA INFANTUM
ALL SIJ AIIME% tr.UN1'r LI+ rJ
The People's Livery
a
JOHN KIOI, Preprietcr.
The eberriber is prepared to emus% Ibe Yea
no with
The Finest Rig.
AT RSA$OUAaI * PRIMA
CALL Alt p sea _ 6 -QNe w t?igr
1naiMs4 rah llth 1M
i