HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1886-10-14, Page 2etite
INIay, 'be inereizsed,' ths BigesOY'z''Crgaus
Streagtheneti,`Mul the Bowels regUlated,
tkidoz Ayer's PP, Viese Pills ere
purely vegetable their composition,
., They contain. neither calomel ner any other
(langeroui drug, and, imiy be taken with
erfeet safety by pathos of all ages,
WaS, tt great sufferer front Dyspepsia
411(1. COuriOpation. I had APPethei
heettme greatly debilitated, mid was eon -
staidly afflicted with Ileadaelie mid Dizzp
twee, 1 onsulted our family doctor, who
Prescribed for ABC, IAD Dittleti,,
affordiug more t luta temporary relief.
I finally commenced taking Ayerb;iIts
Iu a hbort. time thy digestiOo aud appetite
ImpRoveo
• •
my bowels were regulated, 'and.. by the
Mee I finished two Mixes of these ltifis.iuv
tendeoey to, tleAt1411elleS7 butt thsa,ppo.thqt,
4hd 1 be,gone etrong, and welh—Lnirius
X. Logan, IViliningtou,
I wits Orittiled, for over 11 vear, with
Los of Appetite, and 4ilenertil
I eommene.ed taking Aster's Mlle. fuld, be-
fore finishilig half igifox of lids ttiedielim,
UV appetite and. strength gvero restored,
— C. 0, Clark, Daubury,..Con.
Ayerts• rms are the bestmedie!ee
t() Ane for TeglIlhitill; the
1Alld for all, diseaseseffused by a disordered
.Stornaeli and Elver," I suffered for ovir.
three yearsWitli Ileadaehe,
slid Cinistipation. 1 hed.no appetite', aud
Itervoita most o t lie
U N
three boxes ef, Ayer's''Fills,, and, at the
same time dieting myself, was coins
pletely eured. My 'digestive organs are
now in good order, Sind I nn in perfect
ip Lockwood, Topeka, Kans.
Ayer's rills have benefited me t'i'onder-
fully. For months 1suffered from Judi-.
gestion atal Headaelle, was restless at
night, and had 'a bad taste in. my mouth
every morning. After taking one box of
Ayer's rills,: all these troubles disap-
peared, my fond digested \Veil, and my
sleep St:VaS refreshing, -- Henry C. Ile:II-
1.10ekpOrt,
was cured of the riles by the use of
Ayer's Pills. They not only relieved me
of that painful disorder, but gave me In.
creased slizor, and restored my health. --
John Lazalus St John N. B
Ayer's Pills,
Prepared by Dr..T. 0, Ayer S: Co.. Lowell.'Nfass.
Bold by all Druggists Ulla DeUivl ti itt'Medicine.
rfu BXETER TIMES.
--aP"publislied every thursday inorning,at the
TIMES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE
Main -street, nearly opposite Fitton's Jewelery
Store, Exeter, Ont., by. John White &Son, Pro -
'Praetors.
RAMS or greynngisrse
First insertion, per line 10 cents.
Ench subsequent insertion ,per line,..8 cents.
To insure insertion, advertisements should
be sent in notIater than Wednesday morning
OnrSOB PRINTING DEPARTMENT is one
f the largest and best equipped in the County
f Huron. All work entrusted to us will receiv
ur prompt attention.
Decisions 'Regarding News-
papers.
Any person wh o takes a paperregularly from
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another's, or whether he has subscribed or not
is responsible for p rtym ant. •
2 11 aperson ordershis paper tliscontinued
he mast pa.y aJi samara or the publisher may
continue to send it until the nasal, t is made,
and then collect the whole amount, whether
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8 In suits for subscriptions, the suitvaav be
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lished, although the subscriber may reside
hundreds of miles away.
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"eke newspapers or pea iodicals from the post -
office, or removing and leaving them uncalled
For is prim a facie evidence of intentional Iran 7
Send 10 cents postage
and vse will send you
free a royal, valuable
sample box of goods
that will put you in the way of making more
money at once, than anything else in America.
Rothsexes of au ages can live at home arid
work ill spare time, orthe time, Capital
notrequirud. We wilt start You. Iniblense
pay Bute for those wile ktart at Once. STINSON
et co .Porticati, Maine
Exeter Butcher Shop.
GI
11. DAVIS,
Butcher & General Dealer
••••••••••Ili ALL RINDS OF—
A
Customers supplied T UESDAYS, THURS-
DAYS AND SATUBDAYS at their residence
ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE
CEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION.
How -Lostow Restored
We have recently -published a new edition
of DR,CTJLVERWriLL'S CELP,I3RATED ES-
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out medicine)of Nervous Debility,Mental and
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etc„resuitingirom excesses.
Price,lia sealed envelope,only 6 cents,ortwo
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The celebrated author of this admirable es
say clee.rly demonstrates, from thirty years
successfalpractice, that alarming conacquen.
c e s m aybe radically eu re a without the clang-
erone use of internalmedicines or the use of
the knife; Point otit a mode of cure at onco
simple certain and effectual, by means of
whichevery sufferer, no matter whathis con.
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vatelv a.isdradlcnlly.
10i-T1i1 lecture should he ill the hands of ev-
ery youth and every man in th e land. .
Address
THE CIIIIVERWELL MEDICAL COMPANY
41 ANN Sr., NEW YOItH
Post Office tex 450
vasTie
, ,
ADVERTISERS
can f aniekaT, prit ot he 06 s'e:caa:otitnceoostt
advorti8itig in. Americaii
papers by acicitessing
Geo, P, Rowell ,& Co.;
14etkosipapeili Advertistrig txriatii
,ioprice 8t,, Nola, Yor.ir.
Send tOct. for loo=iptqlet. p4triphiet
1Ceep#* 704 AOORAIllitf,,
JOHN At. MAX,.
fs.: %rum!, old hare " kept hOok,s'.
ftr
many yeartf,': NO other Werk .WiWproVe
More satiefiketerYand •
not too:diflieultIfer any honer, Of'• Winery
'ability.. The SyStein„ 9490 ,:,)**hh:;,, 44'011'
wonder how he evet got itiong •witheut
tend find that it Makeemeney ler hilla every
day. 'Get it rather. natroW " oash book,"
opPosite pages for debit and credit. It is,
best to keep this book where you will see it
•every evening.
Dr," and " Cr." bother you, head the
one side, Money Paid Oat," Mid the other
Money Taken In." Saturday night tran-
scribe the week's items in the cash book
on to the proper accounts in what I shall call
the Ledger. This sheuld be a long, thick,
but narrow book, as yea will had it easier
to have the tWQ sides of aceounte on epposite.
pages. In the ledger, you will waht th keep
namber of account, but the two of most int-
pertance are to be headed "Farm" and
•"Family." Let Farm Recounts be first of
all, and thirty or teak pages: further along
begin the faniily accounts, °utile •farm-ne-
connt credit the farm with everything it
brings ; on the opposite page- debit it
with everything paid out for it.
• Ilus aceount will have many items not,on
flte ecslx ccoolustreh'.a,s labOr in the Olds,
.1 •
repairs. to, macogneit ,,fencee,
buildings et., credits of .poultry, egged
butter, Zto., exchaimed for groceries, of ,
wheat exchanged for flour, of produce eon.
sinned by the family, 'ete. You ask. Why
not put the items in the cash account, or
on a merehandise account in the cash book?
At first sight it appears, that this would be:
the proper thing to do; but experience has
shown me otherwise. First, it is not neces-
sary, and unnecessary work is always to be
avoided. Paying out or receiving money is
SO SiMple a transaction that it is necessary
tst put down the items at the close of each
day, else soirie will be forgotten. But labor
on the Lugo, or expended -3.n repairs, may be
Safely left till Saturday night, for you can
remember easily enough the work of each
day during the week.
.Also, if you go to mill and exchange ten
Of wheat for flour, you will not for-
get' the transaction till Saturday night ;
yourgrocer's book, or bills, etc., will show
each item Cr. and Dr., of the week's trad-
ing at the store. Hence, it is not necessary
to;put these items down each night, and by
net doing so you will save considerable Work.
Another thing while your accounts must
he complete so. far as they go, the shorter
and simpler they are the better. The more
there are of them, the more difficult they
will he to keep, and the less satisfactory for
reference. You do not want to load your
cash account down with merchandise items,
pQNMION l!TZWS,
A horse at Port Cylde, 8,, ,an over
the Wharf into the river Alna was tiBOWned.
Your inches 'of Snow fell oo Surgloy-, Sep
teMber 5, at the Dback Mud, near hkhnon,
Riehard •Crowe, of Guelph, is the
owner of a livequotrths.oldchicken which
lays eggs regularly.
Dogs attacked a flock of sheep 'near St.
Thomas, fatally worried seventeen, and
drove thirteen into Phiafore Lake, where
they were drowned,
The last issue of The Prince Albert Times
states that about forty of the Mounted
Police and it number of citizens of that place
are ill of malarial fever.
Frauk Finnie, who was murdered by one I
of his employees at Jamestown. Dakota, a
few days ago, was it former resident of the
township of bast Whitby.
Mr. S. H. Newman, of Owen Sound, has a
pluni of the Pond Seedling vaxietyh' h 1
girths seven inches one way and seven and
a half inches the other, and weighs over a
quarter of a pound.
A number of ladies while trading in a
Belleville store left 0, paraeol in the hands of
a child who accompanied thern, It was I
•takeu from the ehild by soine unknown per-
son and has riot been recovered.
The medals for the members of Steele'a
Semite, have arrived at Edmonton and have,
been distributed. The mune of each man
has been engraved on the rim of his medals
at Gen. Strange's expense,
Mrs, Emma Jane poison, of Essex Centre,
whose husband, George Dolson, was killed
while -attempting to drive across the Michi-
gan Central Railway track in July last
'hae entered an action against the company
for 810,000 damages.
A few nights ago a mob assembled at
Glen Cross, about five miles from Orange-
ville on the Hockley -road, and wrecked a
house owned and occupied by Charles Coul-
ter. Warrants have been issued against
several parties suspected of participating in
the out -rage.
At a meeting at Woodstock, N. B., called
to discuss the action of the Council in regard
to the introduction of the electric light, a
prominent citizen is reported to have tiaid :
—" They want the streets lighted at night !
Why? To tramp around. Let them go
home and go to bed,"
John Danaher it gardener and grave-
digger, of Cornwall, has pastured his horse
in the lacrosse grounds during the summer,
and oneenight recently some person entered
the grounds and cut off the horse's mane and
inflicted a knife wound in the animal's thigh.
Mr. Danaher is a quiet, inoffensive man,
and the outrage has excited the liveliest in-
dignation in the community.
At Lower Village, in Richibucto, N. B.,
a boy twelve years of age, named Marcel
Arseneau, was leading a horse to pasture,
and had fastened the tope around his body.
The horse become frightened by a dog, ran
away, and dragged the boy after him for a
distance of two iundred yards. His Ileac
and body were frightfully mutilated, and
his sufferings were intense during the two
hours that he survived his injuries.
Indian Agent Donelly, of Port Arthur,
has just received a consignment of produce
from the Indians .of Nepigon. This is the
-first year of the settlement, and the Indians
already have over seven acres of garden in
cultivation. The samples were shipped
from the Church of England Mission on
Lake.Nepigon, some seventy miles north of
the station by that name, which is over
sixty miles east of Port Arthur, on the
Canadian Pacific Railway.
The city of Montreal has taken an action
for 55,000 against Mr. L. J. Lamontagne,
contractor. A child named Sullivan was
killed by a wheel of one of two fire -reels
which came into collision. some months ago.
The father claims damages from the city,
and the city now seeks to throw the re-
sponsibility upon Mr. Lamontagne, alleging
that the accident was caused by building
material placed by him in the street in front
of a building he was erecting%
Some young men of St. Thomas, under
the influence of liquor, went to the room of
a young lady about midnight lately, and
ordered her to get out of bed, robe, and
open the door, stating that they had a
warrant for her and would force the door if
she did not comply with their wishes.
When she emerged in the hall they .stated
she was not the party they were looking
for. A young man in the same house who
was awakened by the noise and .eanie out
into the hall and remonstrated with the dis-
orderly visitors for their unfeeling conduct,
was struck over the head with &lantern.
On Thursday last an attempt was made
to blow up the Northern & Western rail-
way bridge at Doaktown, N. It The ex-
plosion occurred between twelve and' one
o'clock in the morning and rowed the whole
neighborhood. The bridge has three spans,
only one of which is fully completed. Near
the middle of the two bottom cords which
support the completed span, auger holes had
been boredin which the dynamite had 'been
placed;' But the explosion, strhile it elattter
ed the, chords, fortunately did not mit them
apart. . itis presumed that the intention
of theglynannters was to burst the chords
astinder 4 the middle; and thus ,pradipitate
the whole span, into the Flyer.: The. com-
munity,is•inuch excited , over the,.oetrage,
and it is fonnd linpOseible to, fix upon any
motivelOr the .act. The 'railway Company
.haS offered,a.reWard of '$500 for infetimition
that Will leattth the''',,apprehensiori of the
authors of the mischief."' • -
A young man named J.. C. Landon, of
Blenheim, quarrelled with his wife and
became so enraged that he .ttempted to
shoot her. The pair have only oeen married
a year, butare said to have ,quarrelled fre-
quently. In the course of: the quarrel
the wife alleged' that the husband did not
.provide for her, He said ; she always had
enough to, eat. She said yes, when she
went to her father's and got it. He said if
she said that again he would shoot her.
Site said it, and -he polled a:revolver out of
Itis pocket, put it about a foot fromhey
breast and pulled the trigger, but it .did riot
go off; he tried again, and this time
the ball Went throngh not clothe s dose , to
her side', bat did not" touch her. She then
escaped, from the house, Landon has Mali
one eye, •and Wears glasSea, and it is pro-
bably °Wing to this fact that his Wife Was
mit.settouily bijared. Ile,has been commit-
ted to gaol at Chathaatt to stand his trial at-
. the :ilekt.tieeizes,
'Thte vdS f011tO*4 itt o,l'kt10.' VV1414''
pegthe other day an ;old: roan .0,411p(1, An -
'drew Winnipeg gfroin
?Australia, and it is supposed Was On :hiiway
ItheMto Treland, Ditringthe itair „naniths
Of his residence in 'Witinipe isolived in it
iijOstraiserly manner; &laying' ' of
the .fiecesSaries of 'Wei and, ,Seldeirt -leaving
his teeth.: Pat On:bavtlerien wae , feint& •tb
stun Of fili51nlitL,43 sovereigns, some
:Change' in silver, • Mid • it. &Posit receipt fr�iii
! the .Banit of ViCteriaai::•,eit• :Hatuiltett; Atop,
for that would destroy its character and '
niake it too voluminous for ready refer-, I
ence ; and a merchandise account proper is I
, difficult and perplexing.
'While all the items in the farm account •1
must be properly specified, to get in the
figures it will be necessary to reduce thein
to a cash basis. Here is the thing, above all
others, which deters farmers horn keeping
accounts. They fancy it is impossible to
reduce the items to a cash basis. This is
simply because they have never tried it. It
is easy enough. Suppose you have taken1
ten bushels of wheat to mill and exchanged
it for flour. Ask the miller what he will
give you cash for that wheat, or find its
market value in cash by some other means.
You now know just the cash value of that
wheat at the time of the transaction, which
is jusgthe amount you are, tocredit the farm
With, at the same time charging it with the
time of yourself and team, etc., expended in
' b I tl • H to I
marketing the wheat.
Ti .
o g ,
reduce labor of man and beast, and wear of
implements to a cash basis. Suppose you
have plowed for a day. The farm is to be
charged with the labor of yourself and team
and the wear of the plow. To estimate the
wear of the plow, for instance, would be
hupossible. But if you were to go and plow
for some neighbor with your own team and
plow, or were th hire some man to plow for
1 you with his teain and plow, you would re-
in the one case, or give in the other, it 1
1 certain auto ; and it ie this slim that the !
g
1 farm is to be charged with: For itis always
Ito be supposed that the price paid is the
value of the article, since that is its market
value ; and that this is the proper amount
with which to charge the farm you will be
1 further convinced when you consider that if
you had expended the labor elsewhere yod
I
would have received this amount.
In the family account are th be put down
all items for family expense, and on the
credit Side a fair equivalent for the labor of
the family. By crediting the family with
what their labor would bring elsewhere, the
account Will be greatly simplified. Farm ,
labor in the house and fields is usually com- I
puted by so much with board. Hence the fam-
ily is to be credited v ith this, and everything
used on the table. It will be sten that I
keep the•family account differently from. the
way usuallyrecommended, crediting it, not
charging it with the table supplies. But it
is charged With all family expenses other them
board and lodging. "Board" in the country
usually includes lodging, and therefore these
items will -include rent of and repairs on
house, greatly simplifying the account again.
A. little thought will show you that this ;
-family account, in connection with the farm
account, puts you in command of the situa-
tion. First, it shows your living expenses.
These you can add up at the end. of each
month and set the amount down on another
1 page, or you can keep each item in another'
account. Second., it shows whether or not
yonr farm brings it good retern, for from it
you get the items of household labor for ,
1 which the farm is th be ultimately charged, I
' and the items of articles produced by that
household labor, which the farm is to be
ultimately redited. But you will find it
.
the better plan o keep t le aim account m
the way I have pointed out; and to:bring in
these items, expressed in totals, as a supple-
ment to the farm account at the end of the '
year, . I
From these two accounts you can makeup
several others which 'you will want to koep,
and which Will. undoubtedly occer t ) you,
If. yott wish to keep accounts with each held.
crop, class and lot of fermi 'stock, &c,, you
cam do , So ; bat perhaPs You won d better
defer this tilt the tieciond year, for t e first
'year Confining yetirself .th:th.e,wdrk I have
marked out ; and theta. so Soon as you have
Mastered this, work, begin to„ keep these
other smaller,bat searcely*Simportant ad-
Cotinte; ;reit Will be stirpriSed,at the ease
of tha Wo.rk, 'and ';etmh" dayyea,. will Mere,
and'inere 'apPreCiate the ;Vehitis; ,Of it, until,
When yotrhave kept' hooks: of locbunt for ,
twoyeate, you 4/111110 Mere 'filek of: iarm-
ing Without them ,'khan:.of filtrining.' Without'.
''. ',I, ' ' , , ' • I '
. : I', '''''-*--jawa", ' ''.' ;',-..*•44,'''. .00-• '' - - ' ''''
Duatttti±1 Puriefatet.TWO eelie of ehopped
bread,, scant orit4talf cup Of molasses, ,one
egg, one cup of 'raising), ,Olie ,,ents of sWeet
Milk; tote-haff thasppoiffnlOf Soda; One -hal
teaspoonful of cloveS,,,one thaepoonful Of cirg'
hamon. 'Dissolve the eitde. in the milk and
mix With the other higredientS. Bell 'tWo
I '0 * n it en iittddhig b 1 '
for ;f:707--orol a Valuablee vateh cod
obala, attire cod gerxercl :appearance,
Ito.WeVeri, indicated extrettle pOrOity, and
it is belicirctl that despite his appOrent
wealth he O'os not onxiotos to proleng his
life,
•X411111. ktimENTs
" I've been: digging Over my •gardea,",
said Prown, and Pui wota oat, Ah I"
remarked Fogg ; " anew Variety of earthen
wear, eli ?"
When a map was bragging about bis tor-
toise shell eat that could do so many triekS,
another inquired who tortoise shell cat to
perform in.that way.
There is a girl in this town who has only
been in this country three months and she
can speak the English language fluently, it
coming to her naturally, •,frein wearing
bustles made of ' English ' Speaking news.
papers.
The general belief that home is a lonely
place without a mother we reckon is why so
many newly -married young mothers aspire
;to be mothers. If there's ; anything killing
to a woman it's being alone and dot having'
anything to talk to., ; •
Mrs. B. is one of those energetic, quick,
motioned Women who carry their work•by
assault. One day she had started aeroas.
the room on some errand, .but,midway for-
get TWA A1mi " WhS±1 Was1 gollitZ f91'
she nalte<1 aloud. Two yearS 1d,Naiad oh
the floor and always liable to be Wept up in
one of her mother's hurricane , passagee,
asked zneekly : " Was—UO-0-6111' for inc?"
Moses and Isaac Rabbenstein were sitting.
in the back part of Isaac's store talking,
when there came a jar to the building.
" Mein Kat, Izig," exclaimed Moses, ris-
ing in terror, "led ue,, ged oud." " Pe
kvied Moses ; vats der madder wid you ?"
said Isaac, angrily, " Vy, Izig, dat var an
erdkvinteg." " Eidkvuaeg, nuddings ! Dat
ves only Shakey ub stairsh dropping
der brices on Summer clodiug."
Growing Old
Growing old ! The pulse's measure
Keeps its eveu tenor. still ;
Eye and hand not fail nor falter,
.1%nd the brain obeys the will ;
Only by the whitening, tresses,
And the deepening wrinkles told,
Youth has passed away like vapor ;
Prime is gone and I grow old.
Laughter hushes at my presence,
Gay young voices whisper lower,
If I dare to linger by it,
All the streams of life run slower.
Though I love the mirth of children,
Though I prize youth's Virgin gold,
What have I to do with either?
Time is telling -1 grow old.
Not so dread the gloomy river
That 1 shrank from so of yore ;
All my first of love and friendship
Gather on the further shore.
Wer it not the best to join them
Ere I feel the.blood run cold;
Ere 1 hear it said too harshly,
" Stand back from usvou are old!'
:Maw
Past, Present and Future.
Those who have but little to do or to care
about, who have no great end toaccomplish
nor hopes to fulfil beyond the search of
pleasure for its own sake, find that, while
present time seems to move slowly and the
future looks (hear, time which is past seems,
on the other hand, short and unsatisfactory.
Looking forward, theytite appallectby the
length of time they 'know not he* to use ;
looking backward, they can call up but few
vivid memories of good work accomplished
or strong purposes fulfilled, and ;but little
therefore to mark the years that are gone.
On the contrary, those whose life is a
worthy and useful one, who labour energet-
ically and heartily, with geood success, look
backward upon a long -defined past, while
the future seems all too short for the aims
they have in view. A year full of activity,
resolution, and enterprise will offer a long
and pleasant page for memory to dwell
upon, while a year of bodily inaction, men- self.
tal vacuity, and generalsnpineness will melt 1
idaP FOREIGN 2W8,
thousand publie schools mein.
Anoneicl support AVM the goVernojent Of
MC*0,
r, Mr, qosolterr conteMplotes going to Iodht
for few mouths oext Wioter, oo a visit to
'Lord Dufferin.
Spain has 000 geoctals„ .1,300 . colonels
2,000 mojors, ',04001{a., 4,0 19,006
lioute440.5,
Archer has caught Wood in the number
of winning monute, and the pair now stand
at the OP of the list with. 116 successes
each,
Prince Bismarck's literary tastes are an-
tranunelled by conventionalities. He is
said to be equally fond of reading the Bible
and the latest bad French novel.
A moo crescent moon, of a most bril-
liant yet-deliatte had, was seen: recently
in New, , Zealand. The phenomenon .Wais
visible for only a quartet of an hour.
Several, East Kent ;sportsmen report. the
losing of their doge through the great heat
While partridge. ehooting lately. In etteh
instance apoplexy is described as the cause
of death.
Esca,ped prisoners from Khartoum state
that the city is not destroyed. All the good
houses are left standing. Tim Catholic
Church and gardens ,and • General Gordon's
Palace are strongly. fortified.
The Jewish population of Jerusalem 10,
constantly increasing, and now numbers
18,000, This is the largest number that
has lived M the sacred city at one time
since the destruction by Titus in 70 A. B.
From the accounts recently published it
appears that it cost £5,757 to make. Prinee
Albert Vidor freeman of the city of Lon-
don. The breakfast bill was 1:920, and the
expenses of the committee 4105. The re-
freshments of the Guards of Honor cost
Thomas Baily Aldrich, who has just re
turned from is three months' trip through
the interior of Russia, says that the civiliza-
tion of MOSCOW reminded himoof some wild
Indian Chief who in his old age lints on a
pair of epaulettes or a high, hat. " 11
simply emphasizes savagery."
A correspondent in Rome says that it par-
ticularly graceful Carrara marble statuette
of an infant Bacchus has been found near
ancient &tiara. The legs are gone, and one
hand and one ann. A goatskin hangs froin
the shoulders, and the head is crowned
with an ivy wreath, tied with long ribbons.
The yacht propelled by electricity which
crossed the English channel and returned, a
distance of fifty miles, in eight hours, the
other day, made the passage so noiselessly
that a sea gull asleep on the water was
caught before it awoke, by people on the
yacht.
. The execution of the public executioner is
the rare spectacle which will soon be wit-
nessed in Greece, where Bekiaris, the execu-
tioner of the Empire, murdered his mistress.
An inmate of the prison of Corfu has been
appointed th succeed Bekiaris, and will
probably begin Inc public career by the
execution of his predecessor.
A great fire lately broke out at Stanley
Pool on the Congo, by which the whole of
the Arthington Baptist Mission Station was
destroyed, and a loss of property to the ex-
tent of $15,000 incurred. Large shipments!
are already made of stores and supplies,
and an appeal for help to sustain the Mis-
sion has been made and is being liberally
responded to.
IThere is one place in the world where
the tenants have proved more than it match
for their landlords. A Paris landlord re-
cently committed suicide because his tenants
refused to pay their rents. He said .:—" I
screwed a little money out of them by re-
moving their doors and windows, but when
the abnormally hot weather began even
, that proved useless." He asphyxiated him
from the remembrance 'like a tale that is
told. Fickleness.
Wherever there is fickleness you may say
with truth to him who is characterized by it,
" Thou shalt not excel." The man who is
continually changing his occupation, or con-
stantly moving from one situation to an-
other, fails to better himself in anything,
and lives only to illustrate the proverb about
the " rolling -stone." The ancients had it
saying, " Beware of the man of one book ?"
by which. they marked. their appreeiation of
the quality of pergistence, and affirmed that
he who has mastered one subject thoroughly,
is always a more formidable antagonist thgn
your scholar who so overloads his brain with
the production of others that it is impossible
for him to exercise the power of original
thinking. Daily we seethat he who has
" focussed" himself upon some one subject
is pushed into the front, while those who
spread themselves over many, or give them-
selves now to one thing and now 10 another,
are rarely heard of among men. He who is
always changing from object to• object fin-
ishes nothing, and his life at last resembles
a heap of detached atones, whin, if he had
but kept to one plan, might have been built
into a stately ancl commodious abode.
Let Me Rest,
.A.AmES G. maid:
Let me rest on Thy bosom,
I'm weary and lotrely,
the stars are all hirI from my sight ;
Let me rest on Thy bosom,
1 ding to Thee only -
In the darkness and storm of the night.
My last joy is taken,
My last hope is shaken,
The wild waters over me roll ;
My spirit forsaken
Now leans on Thee only,
The day -star and dawn of my soul.
Let me rest,
Let Inc rest.
Let me rest on Thy bosom,
The world may bereave me,
My faith is my light and my stay ;
Let Inc rest on Thy bosom,
That never will leave me,
Though brother and friend turn away
In silence unbroken
In language •unspoken,
bring all my trials and woes ;
• Thy word is a token
That will not deceive nie,
Or leave me alone with my foes.
Let me rest,
Let me rest.
Be Modest.
One of the mostimportant rules in the sei-
ence of manners is that you preserve an al --
most absolute silence concerning yourself.
Play the comedy, some day, of sraking of
your own interests to ordinary Acquaint-
ances and you will see feigned attention
Swiftly followed by indifference and thea by
weariness, until everyone haS found a pre-
text for leaving : you. Blit if you wish to
group about you the . sympathies of all and
to be considered a charming and, agreeable
fellow, talk to them of themselves, seek
some way of bringing each of theminto ac-
tion hi turn ; then they will smile at you,
think Well of You and praise you when you
are gone.
AotionS and Words.
We should judge men by their actions
rather than by their theories. A man's
actions are the best interpreters of
thoughts and feelings. Comparatively few
men are able to express in words fully and
justly the state of their hearts ; but every
mom can act in harmony with his: feelings if
he will. Men frequently act hypocritically,
it is true. They find it easiet nowever to
bend their speeeli into decep ive orms than
to bend their actioas time. Hence, when
there is a disposition to deceive, a man's
aetions are not so apt to be fully at variance
with his real feelings as his words are.
When lie Knew Fter.
Pa," said Johnnie de Blankn
to efather
the othr evening after simper, "dict you
know ma long before you wove Married ?"
"No," said Dell, glazieing askance at
the lady sitting oppoeite, "1 didn't know
her till long after we Were marriaL"
Te enjey today, stop Worrying abtnit
redrew. Nekt week will be just tie capable
Thought.
Thought engenders thought. Place one
idea upon paper—another will follow it, and
still another, until you have written a page.
You cannot fathom your, mind. There is a
well of thought there which has no bottom.
The mere you draw from it the more clear
and plentiful it will be, if yon neglect to
think yourself, and use,. other people's
tin -nights, giving them utterance: only, you
will never know of what you are capable.
:At first your ideas may come 'in lumps—
homely and shapeless ; but no matter—time
and. perseverance will arrange and reline
them.: Learn th think, and you will learn to
Write.; ,the more you think the better you
.will-eXPress your ideas.
Home.
Home is sometimes thought flat and dull,
and too often made so, just for the want of
recognising what it stands for. The relations
of life that go to form the household are the
source not only Of life's richest joys and moat
sacral memories, bub also of some of the fin-
est and noblest characteristics of man. The
love, the fidelity, the forbearance, the self-
sacrifice that are nourished by family life are
among the richest possessions of humanity.
Such life can neva. becothe wearisome or
commelaplace, sate to those who fail to coug
prehend its meaning or refuse to at in harm-
ony with it.
Professsr Tyndall has , been exploring a
Swiss glacier with his wife. The two lost
their way, and Were reacted after boultider-
able anxiety to themselves and their friends,
A fashion writer says ' that dresees are to
be hill thie year, We' prefer them full.
The idea of it (trees empty is ridiculous in
the extreme, We should like to linont what
eatisfaction it would be to a young man to
of taking care of itself as this One hold einpty dress on his lap.
• Sore Eyes
The eyes are always in SyMpathy with
the body, and afford an expellent :hide*
of its condition. When the eyea. :Wove
weak, and the lids halanted.and sore, it is
on evidence that the system has become
disordered by Serofula, for which .Ayer's
Sarsaparilla is the best known. remedy.
Scrofola, whieh produced it painful
flanonation in my oyes, eaused inc lunch
sutler* fer 4 lumber of years. ' the
!civic° of it physician 1 eoromenccd taking
Ayer's Sarsaparilla, Alter using this
inedieine 4 short time 1 Wee pahogely
Cured
My eyes Inc now in a spleadld condition,
and 1 am as Well and strong as ever. —
2tirs. William Ging°, Concord,.15.
For a number of years I Wafi troubled
With a Winer in l'Ay eyes,. and Was unable
to Obtain any relief tintd I commenced
using Ayer's Sarsaparilla, This. met 'eine
has effected a complete cure, and I beiiise
it to be tne best of blood purifiers
C. E. "Upton, Nashua, N.11.
• ,
Front childhood, and until within a few
months, I have been afilieted with Week
and Sore Eyes: *I have :used for these,„
eomplaints, with beneficitil results, Agetoe'''
Sarsaparilla, and Consider 1±1 11 great mood •
purifier. —Mrs, 0, Clever, ,
suffered for is 'rear with inflamma-
tion in my left eye. "Three ultlets formed
on the ball, depriving nie of sight, and
causing great pain. After trying many
other remedies, to no purpose, I was finally
inalleeti In llse Ayer's Sarsaparilla, aud,
By Taking
three bottles of this medicine, have bech
entirely cured. 'My sight has been, re-
stored, and there is no sign of inflamma-
tion, sore, or ulcer in my eye. —Kendal
T. Bowen, Sugar Tree Ridge, Ohio.
My daughter, ten years old, was afflicted
with Scrofulous Sore Eyes. During the
last two years she never saw light of any
kind. Physicians of the higlieststanding
exerted their skill, but with no permanent
success. On the recommendation of a
friend 1 purchased a bottle of Ayer's Sar-
saparilla, which my daughter commenced
taking,. Before she had Lused the third
bottle her sight was restored, and she ant
now look steadily at IL brilliant light with-
out pain. Her cure is eomplete.— W. E.
Sutherland, Evangelist, Shelby City, Ky.
'
Ayer's Sarsaparilla,
Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer Ai Co., Lowell, Masa.
Sold by all Drnggiste. Price $1; six bottles, $5.
THE GREAT ENGLISH PRESCRIPTIOX
Asuccessfulmedicine tested over
80 years in thousands of cases -
Promptly' cures Xervous Pros-
tration, Weakness 0/Brain, spi-
net Cord, and Generative07:gans
ofeitherser,.Etnissionsand all ills causedby
indis-
cretiou orover-exertion. Six packages is guaran-
teed to effect a cure when all other medicines fail.
One package $1, six packages $5, by snail. Sold
bydruggists. Write for Pamphlet. Address
EUREE.A CHEMICAL CO., DETROIT, MICR.
For sale by J. W. Browning, Exeter, and
all druggists.
C. & S. GIDLE:54d
UNDERTAKERS!
Furniture Manufaeurers
—A FULL STOCK OF—
Furniture, Coffins, Caskets,
And everything in the above hine,1ceet.
immediate wauts.
We have one of the very best
Hearses in the County,
And Funerals furnished and conducted a
extremely low . prices.
EMBLEMS OF ALL TATE DIFFEREM. SOCIETIES,
PENNYROYAL WAFERS.
,,,. Prescription of a physician who
r
has had a life long -experience in
i '''':-
r' treating female diseases. Isuseck
l4"d monthly with perfect success by
Ar4 over 10,0001adies. Pleasant, safe,
sitlo - effectual. Ladies ask your drug-
gist for Pennyroyal Wafers and
,
,s, take no substitute, or inclose post-
"
G \s age for sealedparticulars. Sold by
•,'..,` ,,,,,,.0,
, 'IP an druggists, SI per box. Address
TPIE EUREKA CHEMICAL CO., DETROIT, MICH.
agy- som in Exeter by J.. V". Browning
and all druggists.
"BELL"
ORGANS
- Unapproached for
Tcfne arid Quality
CA+ALOGUES FREE.
BELL &CO. Guelph, Out,
TUE C'ELEBRATED F-7
*'DCHASE'S
CHASES k
144°4 17t a C
iFORIIVER ASO .1IONEY111SEASES
"VFW:en an; intelligeht Irian -wants to pnr-
Chase, he bays from. parties whose stand ing 111
their .severat callings is Si guarantee 101' the
ddalliy. of their wares." This sterling a Lotto is
'doubly true in regard to patent' In edicines, buy
'only those Made by practical professional men.
' Dr, angst is too well and favorably known gy
his receipt books to require any recommenclal
tioti.
Dn. CHAn s Liver Cure has d rcaeipt book
wrappei around evory bottle which is Worth its
weight in gold,
.Dit. CHASE'S LiVbr Cilre it gnaranteett to (Aire
all diseases.itrising from it. torpid or inactive
liver ,aneg ea laver !Ileum Iti ti 1, Dyspepsia.
intittieing Weir Spots, ItisiD.OW Conlpteti on, ate..
gestlen,, lititionsness, Jannettcr, Arad:,
THE KIDNEYS tHE KIDNEYS
Drt CuAen's lAver Carols a 'eertain caroler
all derangements of the kidneyagatelt as pain in
the hack pain in lower portion of the abdomen5
coastaat desire. to Jaws .utine, red, and white
sediments, shooting pains in passage, lltight'S
disease and all primary troubles, etc. '
'Pryit take no other, it will ogre you. Sold
by ail dealers at $1.0a per bottle,
; EtlilirANSCN 84 Go.,
*OLP Ant!Alts Felt CAN bA. ' eannrono
Sold at C. LUTZ'S, Agent, JilAitcr.