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The Exeter Times, 1884-8-21, Page 6""Bri,►ysie.iIleas h, sills Stam!"IntlmgeS.t 1 Lorrelievingpaiu,bothinteru;land: external Tis ourespatnintheSid ,b k b eli,soll+throat P? Rheumatism, Tooth chis,"T, 14ge ads iy kind - of apain orashet, "" • will or wifely quicken the bleed and heal, as its acting power is wonder• M fol. "Brown's Rousahold. Panacea' beingaek- nowledged as the great Pain Believer ,and of don blethestreugth of any other elixir orLinintent e inth 7sox2ak . dbgiuevesy f ilyhaady for n in, S ort �,`,eait'ir ag fly eatrem y. in, t ori • tlrazzip zua+a"h.and t Pains and Aches of all altpruggi tsat25gentsabottle.ud istorsaieby OR Young America. in Vedette gid When you see a boy coming down the street with s, It of cord i his b and sb • o is iie+ylo . ` worn! ..;,,. tum of•: tian father standing in the arena wait- ing for the nein' lion to he called to din- ner, it is a sign that if you ,just east your eyes upward you can see that oy's kite daueiug nimbly in the air to the lascivious pleasing of a whole col- ony of telegraph wires. ' " When you see a boy going slong in the merry, merry sunshine with bis hat in his hand, shaking his hair with a pine stick to get it dry. noir anal theta leaning .his bead on one side, poundans the other side with itis hand and practi- cally hickiug hie feet le the air, in des- perate efforts to get the water out of his ears; or wheu you see him holding a warm stone to his ear for the same pur- pose, it is a true sign that you tray think of that boy, by and by, standing speeehhers schen hos mother asks him boa.- his .sliirt came to be wrong side out. You must not run clown the street in t ,, direction of hishonleunder the iuzpr, ,,.on that the boy is being murdered 1i.0 can't bill a boy with a skate stra ) And in hoe signoes you will know:net boy has been in swim- ming when, he should have been zit school, learning,that twe ,ty six prepo- sitioes are followed } . the acousetivo, all the way from ad to ]tinsel. When you atve & boy about ri,i,5 p. m. with ins: on his nose end the grime of chalk on his bonds, his hair disheveled and the two upper buttons of bias tae gone, his toiler rumpled and his A :•.._,. tie twisted awry, autt ;i suspicious loot. ing (tush on his face. you will kreaw that he was "k.ep' in" utter school, axil was taunted for the sumo by another boy ousts he wine out; su4 if you want to know the rest of it, it will not he neceeseryy to go into partiaulers, but just ask him '"which whipped?" Ifjoyous loos. of triumph dances in the exultant, eyesyuu will know that just around the corneryou can find as boy with, as bleeding nose and a generally demoralized facade. But if the lad you question Gooks downcast, mulcts num laehrv"zuls begin: his oration. like Di- vatleus, by saying: ','Well. he was great deal bigger'u me." you may know that Sour boy got "llo3;ed." "Wheu;•ou see a boa with the packets of his pantaloonaabuiging out until be looks lake *great bumble -bee laden for the hive, while he waii:s along, trying to look as thin as s split lath and Wear- ing a profound expressiou of aupernat. ural innocence, you know without re- ferring to this code of signals that boy has been lingering in somebody's or- chard and doesn't care to have undue publicity given to facts that only eon - cern hizu persouelly. When you see+ a boy on the distant hillside suddenly leap up into the soft summer :dr. holding one bare foot tend- erly but tirmiv in the wadded fingers of both hauls wiz le he hop, around-lu ir- regular but excited orbits, at the same time voicing his grief with wailing shrieks, mellowed bytbesunny distance, then, without going to the telephone, you may know that barefooted boy has trod upon the busy bee that nestled in the perfumed clover. And whenever and whenever you see him, itt mischief or out of it—that is just coming out of it or just ready to get into soma more; awfully bad, or with many -tearful failures and disgrace- ful stumbles trying to be good; forget- ting your commandments which thunder upon him by the hundred, well nigh as readily and repeatedly as you forget the ten that infinite wisdom has laid upon you; in all his noise, his poor little struggles, temptations, triumphs and failures, his piteous little troubles and his tearful, honest penitence, in all the lightness of a boy's life, your heart must grow mellow .and tender for the little germ of manhood, so fall of wonderful possibilities, so rich with seeds of strength that will ripen bye and bye, for good or evil, as you walk and live before the boy; even as you look at him, remember what you were thirty or forty years a'o, and say, "God bless the boy. "—Burlington Hatukeye. "My dear," exclaimed a loving hus- band to his wife, "I have just had my life insured for your benefit." "Well, I declare," said the wife, looking around upon her family and friends with an expression of injured inno- cence, "just to think of the selfishness of men, and particularly of husbands! There, you've been and had your life insured, while your poor wife must go without an insurance on hers. It's just what I should expect of you." "An Alabama woman, claiming to be a centenarian, recently walked from her home to the village, a distance of five miles, then returned and milked six cows, churned and did the washing for her family, all in one day." As she was suffering from an attack of malaria she was oblighed to defer un- til next day the digging of an acre of garden, cutting a cora of wood, and making a bed -quilt, containing 16,789 pieces. • "I can imagine," said the poet, dreamily, as he toyed with a charlotte russe, "that Aphrodite originally rose from one of these at some love feast of the immortal gods on. high Olympus. I always think so when. I see one of them. ' "Well, I do not, said his com- panion; ""whenever I see one of .ahem I feel like dipping a lather brush' into it and having a close shave. It would make a shampoo, because the foam: —" But the bard had fainted.—The Judge. Pope Leo XIII.,: seeks relaxation in the composition of Latin poems, all of which are printed under his careful.su- pervision. After a few' copies have been.: taken the type is distributed.' "]3ersfond of displaying his mastery of the Lenin tongue -in the presence of scholars, to. whom he occasionally presents elegant- Iy-hound copies of his poems as ';a par- i•icular mark of favor. TreAworthinese of Early Tradition . BEST AND COMBO= TOTHESU TZRINO" is ttltiriiorr .tssiaitblo -of preserving through suecessiv �enerstlions the facte et history, or w ha' a yea"else peoples .a �ntinuously interested in knowing At first 'one is apt to say ""No'' re= memberin -how seldotit teat peepie ea agree in their reobilaetlon of even the briof'e t saying or' commonest occur renee.. But look into tho tttatter Net how the power of memory differs i different people, and how it may be %titivated, and especially how i strengthens when systemat?call y de- pended on, while, when little is left to sit', it weakens, It is a small feet, but not without signii'icance, Oat among the first things whigli children are set to liar in their memories. apart from any Idea of saeredness,arti long series of historical names, dates and events ---English kings. American colonists and presi dents—far exceeding in difficulty those lsraelitish histories which ICnenen think. cannot be trusted b,:.ratise only preserv- ed by memory. This shows that it is less a question of the power of memory than t u how far memory is looked on its sacred, and guarded -se as to hand an its eonteuts unimpaired. As for evi- deuce of the power of memory, what 'letter can we desire than the well- known fact of the transmission of the Iliad, with its 15,677 lsties,. for goner&, tions, perhaps for centuries„ before it was even written ? Yet even that is a mere trifle compared with the transmis- sion of the Vedas. The Rig -Vada, with its 1018 hymns, is about four times the length of the ]lied, 'That is only apart of the ancient Vedic literature, and the whole was ecmposed, and fixed, and handed down by memory -only. vi Max Moeller says, biv ""memory kept under the strictest discipline." There is still a class of priests in Iudia who have to know by heart the whole of the Big -Veda. And there is this curious oorroboration of the fidelity with winch this memorizing has been carried on and handed down:that they have kept en transmitting in the ancient lateral form Irma prohibiting praeticee that have nevertheless become established. Suttee is now found to be eenderaned by the Vedas themselves. This was Brett inted out by their European students, ut loss since been admitted by the Aa- ive Sanskrit scholars. Nothinng,, ooubd show more clearly the faithfulness of the traditional memory and transmis- sion. It has, too, thisfurtherbearing on the date of se -called Mosale legisla- tion ; it shows that the fact of euatoms existing in a country for *goo unchal- lenged does not prove that laws con. demising such customs must necessarily be of later origin. But there is more that is instructive in the traanemisslon of this Vedic literature. There has boon writing in India for twenty-tivo hundred years now, yet the custodiaus of the Vedic traditions have never trusted to it. They trust, for the perfect perpetu- ation and transmission of the seered books, to disciplined memory. They have manuscripts, they have even a printed text, but, says Max Mueller, "'they do not learn their sacred lore from them. They learn it, as their an- cestors learnt it thousands of years ago, from the lips of a teacher. so that the Vedic succession should never be brok- en." For eight years in their youth they are entirely occupied in learning this. ""Tiley learn a few lines every day, repeat them for hours, so that the whole house resoumds with the noise; and they thus strengthen their memory to that degree that, when their appren- ticeship is finished, you can open them like a book, and find any passage you like, any word, any accent. " And Max Mueller shows, from rule: given in the Vedas themselves, that this oral teaoli- ing of them was carried on, exactly as now, at least as early as 500 B. C. $1t. QOO Forfeit. flavins the utmost oonftdenec in it superi- ority over all ethos, and after thonsands of tests of the Most Complicatedand severest eases we could find, we feel justified in offering to forfeit One Thousand Dolars for any ease f h *olds,throat, influenza, li 4 GQI,DE Tbebestpreparationknown,toselenoeforbeau� . COMPLEXION ONE SINGLE APPLICATION is warranted to Beautify the face and give to the fadedor Sallow Com- Flexion. Pcrfeotty •ealthv°. Natural,_and t Nee ul A It Conceals '.tt ialcleeckles Fact, an�tite'Ev tete of'" Age; leatring the Skirft, Sm �k and'hike stamps taken, cents. salttletterany address, Postage CREME D' 95, Drawer 2,678,, Toro* P.Q, Ask your druggist for it, Wholesale by all whole- sale dtkuustista. o Doug s, c sore ea ,io uinati, early U11t11 nogg; bronchitis, consumption in its early TIMES • stages, whopping cough, and all diseases of the throat and lunge, exceptAsthnia,for wlzieii s we only claim relief, that we can't cure with West's Oeugit Syrup, when taken according to directions. Sample bottles 25 and 50 cents; large bottles one dollar. Genuine wrappers only in blue, Sold by all druggists. or sent by ]nail on receipt of price. 3O1iN t.l, WE8 *Co., 81,t 8$ Eiug St. Eaat, ferento,Ont. li'ouu8 lady, do not despair, D r, E. C. West's Nerve and Brain Treatment mall cure Hysteria and i n all nervous troubles. Soldat 3. W, Browning's, Drug Store. 5 What every person sboulditnow Ile viola othe outlets of d►aaAgQ from ay are the stere p� bowels anti the l;adneyi. dobuRton'a SaraARs• rills is the most sate, pleasant and offeoplal purifier of thesyeteuz kuowu. Try one bottle sod he convinced. For sale at the Gaiden Afortar, 3. W. Browning, prop. jy 26, Ont. The Cattle Interests of Texas, A boundary line, starting at Denison, .texas, thence running south to Waco, *hence west to the Pecos river, thence north to the northwest corner of the state, thence with the north and east boundary lines of Texas to place of be- ginning, would embrace the stock belt to which this communication will be devoted—comprising 62,850,000 acres of choice grazing lands, well supplied with water, covered with excellent grasses, and blessed with a mild cli- mate. It is susceptible of furnishing abundant range for more than 8,000,- 000 cattle, although now there is less than one-third of that number occupy- ing it. This is the great reservoir from which the great grazing fields of Color- ado, Wyoming, Dakota, Kansas, and Nebraska draw their young cattle. It is also a greatsource of beef supply to the markets of St. Louis, Chicago, and Kansas City, and able to meet the de- mands of the eatming companies, thus furnishing meatto the markets of Eu- rope. All this is accomplished without utilizing more than one third of her great grazing field. So exhaustless are her resources, that all capital invested in cattle raising has i 1 yielded most handsome returns. It has been asserted by those who are thor- oughly . conversant with the business,, that "no capital has, been invested in eattle raising in this region"since'ran- nary, 1880, but has returned a clear profit of more than 50 per cent per an- num; t and'I fully believe the state- ment, since the advance in prices, the increase in numbers, and the 'reduction in expenses of running ° stocks "; com- bined,, could have picefeced `no les`s fa- vorable a result,—National Live Stock Journal.: The condition of, the market: . "An, good morning, McGouge, you're just the man I Want to see," said old put -in, how's the market going to be? ' "I tell you as a friend, ,everything is going' to boom. This little furry will be over in a few dafyA' tend AWL' are going up.Iteil you, old fellow, now is the time to put in." "But Snide, your partner says the bottom is dropping out of everything."' "Snide! Ah, Snide is the bear member of the firn." THE ONLY VEGETABLE CURE FOR IS Loss of Appetite, IU :ii;estian, Sour Stoma:'l, Habituai Costiveness, Sick Headache and Biliousness. Pilcc a ries trortle 2i14 l,x sit 2hexaisis, .st Jan'y,' 85, 40 as. 'Blit douk BLOOD BITTE.FIS Cures Di: ziness, Loss of Appetite, ZIldi jcstzoli, .7?iliousnsss, Dyspc'isfa, Jaundice, Afections of the L4eer and liwlxteys, Pimples, .Blotches, Boils, flulnors, ,Sall _Rheum, Scrofula, Erysipelas, and all diseases arising front impure .;Blood,, .Deranged Ylonuich, or irregular action of the Rowels, BISSETT Bios. HEADQUARTERS 7 ard,ware, Spades, Hoes% Forks/ Soy rhes, Barb wire and steel strip fenoings Sp.0444 144o ot tops CHEAP 8T BISSETT BROS. MANHOOD How Lost, How Restore& Weber* recently published a naw edition a 2111. CTII,1'Itnw ;LL'6 CF,LEBBATBD ES88X on the radical and orznaaaz entcure (without o dicinolof itervousDobility,Atental aid phystaal', Incapacity impediments to Marriage, oto„ re. suiting irons excesses. Price, in sealed envelope, only 6 cents, or two nostase stamps- Thecelebrated author otthis adna lrableessay ctearlydemonstrates,from thirty years' success - tut practice, that sierra iagaoasequvucoamavbe radically cured without the dangerous wield in tonal mediotnes or the use of the knife ; Point. out amok of cure at onoe simple certain and ot- faotual,by moansetwhteh every sufforer,lnomat• ter whObis condition may bean ar ourehimselt eh.tapty,privately and radically. P—Thi lecture should be in the handsel every youth and every man in tho land. Address THE CULVERWELL IIEDIOAL' Co 41 ANN r.,NBW TORE Post Chico Box Cm FIVE DOLLAR E WINCx MACHINE THE PARRY SEWING MACHINE. Although this Sewing Afschine is offered at the unheard of and ridiculous low price of 05, it must not bo supposed that it is a toy. It will do the work of any nlrry nob IAN MACHINE, and do it as well itis constructed upon new and scientifieprinoi- plea and is simple in construction, easier worked and less liable to get out of order than any ma- chine in the world 13 realms the same stitch as the leading maaiinoeinthe United States Tbo principle of construction is entirely new, and covered by br,.ad patents Having secured this machine, we have decided to put the pries wont, DOWN TO HAND PAN for a short time only, well knowing that eyerylady will want one Full di- rections with each machine Agents Wanted ANGELO ART CO., DETROIT, MIOHIGAN. REMOVAL'- REMOVAL THE GENERAL QUESTION Agitating the Public mind at present is where can they get the best Bread, but this matter can be settled to the entire satisfaction of, the people of Exeter and surrounding country, by calling on JOHN BIDLL, the old established and reliable bakery, where they will find just what they want. A Superior quality of Bread always on Hand Also a first-class stook of Brsoexrs, Bows, CAKES & CONrxorxoNABY, which will 'be sold cheap. While opponents have started busi- ness, and sold out, andleft the place, Mr. Bell has been found at his post, 'during the past eight years, ready to attend to the wants of the Public. C;ROOERImS. Owing to increasing business, Mr. Bell ha found it necessary to remove to more Com: modious premises, and has added largely to his Stook of'Groceries,,and will keep on hand Sugars, Teas, Coffee, ;Syrup, and everything usually found in; a first -plass Grocery Store, All kinds of. 'aril) Produce tak- en. in. exchange for Goods. REMEMBER THE STAND—SouthCOtt'S Block, Pour doors North Post:. offices ' + .: JOEN BELL, proprietor • . utu o rickAno GENERAL DEALERS \ —=N-- s�r.A.PZE---- ==FANCY DRY- — GOODS REA7YY-- ==•MASE— —CLOTH2NG Mats, Caps, Boots & Shoes GENTS' FURNISHINGS, MIEEIIIJI SND CANTLES a *CS310$0 MOO) CZNASS v, \ii\i GARDEN and FiELD SEEDS, ETC., ETC., Full Lines in all Departments. Do not fail to examine our stock before purchasing ; else- where, as you will find prices correct said Goods fiirst. class. Inspection Invitee 1V1wELL: PIO