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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1886-10-28, Page 2Humors, Erysipelas, Canker, and Catarrh, Can be cured by purifying the blood with FULA Ida net believe that Ayer's $nrattintilt la Iles 60 equal as a remedy for SerofttiOna flu - mors. It is pious:um to take, gives Strength and vigor to .the and Prodneea 4 MON permanent, lasting, re, snit than 6.0$ unalieine 1 ever used, ---.E. Haines, No. Lintiale, O. I have used Ayer's Sarsaparithi, in iny fain. ikltn•o, roSeitt.ofiisilit.taiii(1411 faithfuily, it will thoroughly era dieat e this terrible disease. — W. F. Fowl, M. IL, Greenville, Tenn. Por forty years I bare suffered with L'ry- sipelas. have tried all sorts of remedies for my complaint, lint found no relief until I co inmene ed using A y e r" s Sarsaparilla. After taking ten bot- tles of this medicine I inn completely mired. --Mary C. Amesbury, Rockport, Me. I have suffered, for years, front Catarrh, which was so severe that it destroyed my appetite and weakened my system. After try- ing other remedies, and getting no relief, I began to take Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and, in a few months, was curkl. —Susan L. Cook, 909 Albany st.. Boston Highlands, Muss, Ayer's SILFSIIIRIFilla is superior to anv blood purifier that r have ever tried. I have taken it for Scrofula, Canker, and Salt - Rheum, and received much benefit from it. It is good, also, for a weak stomach., -Millie Jane Peirce, South Bradford, Mass. Ayer's Sarsaparilla, Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer 3: Co., Lowell, Mass. Price 101 ; six bottles, *5. THE EXETER TIMES. Is published every Thursday morning,at the TI MES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE main -street, nearly opposite Fitton's Jewelery Store, Exeter, Ont., by John White lt Son, Pro. Prietors. RATES oF ADVERTtsING : First insertion, per line.. . ..10 cents. Each subsequeat insertion, per line......3 cents. To insure insertion, advertisements should be sent in notlater than NVednesday morning OurJOB PRINTING DEPARTMENT is one 1 the largest and best equippea in the County 1 Huron. All work entrusted to us will reoeiv tar prompt attention. Decisions Regarding News- papers. Any person who takes a paperregularly from tie post -office, whether directed in his name or another's. or -whether he has subscribed or not P81 ment. 2 If &person orders his paper discontinued he must pay all &mars or the publisher may aontinue to send it until the payment is made, and then collect the whole amount, whether the paper is taken from the offioe or not. 3 In suits for subscriptions, the suit inay be instituted in the place where the paper is pub• lished, although she subscriber 'nay reside hundreds of utiles away. 4 The courts have decided that refusing to 'ale newspapers or periodicals from the post. office, or removing and leaving them uncalled For is prima fa ole evidence of intentional A GI Send 10 cents postage and we will send you free a royal, valuable i sample box of goods that will put you in the way of making more money at ones, than anything else in America. Moth sexes of all ages can live at home and work in sparetime, or all the time. Capital not requirud. We will start you. Immense lit4.414T15. Pate Iuthgestou, The fellovving wise renaarks are nueted from ifert4,4, an English monthly devoted to minutiae hygiene t eause of imperfect digestion is fa- tigue. When we start on a walk it does not, matter Match whether the roed Ati rnugh or not ; any little obstacle is aveided with eaae and we thread our way over rough stones, through tangled he.ath, or OWL' a quaking bog, without ifticulty. Our nervous sys- tem is in full vigor, and preserves perfect co-ordination among the 'movements of the different parts the body; so that ono helps the other, and all difficulties are surmount ed. But when we are tired a little rough - class in the road, will cause us to stumble, and an unexpected stone may give us a sud- den fall. The wearied nervous system no longer co-ordinates the movements of the various parte of the body, that they may work together for a common end. "The same thing occurs with the various parts of the intestinal canal. If the nervous syatem is exhausted by previous fatigue, or debilitated by illness, the requisite co-ordin- ations may not take place, and biliousness or indigestion may be the result, How oft- en do we find the meal taken by person immediately after a long railway journey disagrees with him, and either causes sick- ness or diarrhea, or a bilious headache? Forty winks atter dinner is not always a bad hing ; but forty winks before dinner is cer- tainly much better. "Hew often do men who have worked hard all day, with their mental faculties constantly onthe stretch, go home and have dinner forthwith ! Exhausted as they are, how can they eat? They ought to make a point of having a little rest at home before dinner. "There is grave truth in these remarks, and they should be well laid to heart by those who are compelled to work at high pressure, and thus fail in that repair of the bodily waste which lies at the foundation of health. But mental emotions and the play of mind may in their turn produce disturb- ances of the body's duties in the way of food digestion. Here, again, the views ex- I pressed teem with a common sense and philosophy which commend them to the thorough appreciation of those who find di- gestion to fail from the nervous influences that chase one another and career over the surface of the mental atmosphere. • "Effects, somewhat similar to those of fatigue, may be produced by depressing or disturbing mental emotion or bodily condi- tions. We know how readily excitement of almost any kind will destroy the appetite of some people, and depressing emotions will diot WOKEN'S DOTX00. •1Q1seent Victosia's ehiek en house is% palatial eemi-gothiehnilding, MM. Cleveland, it is remarked, has tut ex, cellent memory of :owe. Xis. Win. 11. Vanderbilt is said to receive about 100 begging letters daily . Was Belva Lockwood has developed into a pugilist of no Mean pretensions. She threw a troublesome client out of the window of her law office in Washington the other day. Miss Ellen Terry is reported toshasse a won derful dog. She beide in her hands two bis- cuits, and calls one Ciao and the other Faust. The lxiw-wow eats the Faust and leaves the The widow of John B. Gough has re- ceived at her home in Boylston a letter of condolence from the Grand Lodge of the In- dependent Order of Good Templet's in New South Wales. Ronning stage routes is a favorite occupa- tion with women in the free and boundless West. A maiden of 15 owns the stage (and drives the horses herself) that connects Hem- line and Mihior, Dalt. 40#13,1IMPf%119)Laii. "oiltrhoto fav4terof IIVilumpertAdieli eat rIseir Ow* Welt, ; Tim NOrthern SiotiX Indians have under headway an enterprtae Whielt is at Once neve' and impertant, haa been determii. ed by the councilmen of the Sioux Nation, as well as by 4/eBeral assent among the people, to essMblisit and transportation routes throughout the fsontier regzon which shall be condueted exclusively by Indians and as an Indian enterprise. The principal part of the work will be done by the young men of the nation, while the older ones wUl supervise, counsel, plan, end manage. All the labei connected sVith the 'transportation of mail, passengers, and freignt, will be per- formed on foot, and the athletic youn Indians are nowin training for their part o the enterprise, The mail carriers will tray by twos and the freight and passenge carriers by fours. It is intended to hav the routes embrace every place that is con sidered a frontier town. Several hundre Indians •will be employed and all must b men of sobriety and honesty, The loads for mail teams will be limite Princess Ana Murat, now Duchess of to 200 pounds, and those for frieght and Mouchy, is by birth an Anzerica,n, her native passenger teams to 1,000 pound ir The mail place being Bordentown, N. J. She wa,s born carriers will travel at the rate of eight in 1841, and is still regarded as one of the miles per hour, net, the passenger carriers at the rate of five miles. The men will be harnessed to strong but light velaielea, made especialy for the work. Boarding stations will be established every 25 miles, and, this el liVinTlE WOMEN IN AlFRICA, ilunonxAtt IsSislES Wo APS l'uSggio INT° win Diusrus Dana Oelirttintir. Quite a number of white men who f,Lre now in Central Africa have follewed the ad, yice of the celebrated explorer, Dts Parth, who many years ago expseased the ()pinion that the traveller in Africa should take his wife with him. He said the natives did not understand how a man could live with- out a partner, mid that they would hold him in greater respect if he was accompanied by his wife. Dr, Barth added that the people Ile met south of the Sahara had nothing against him except that he was a bachelor. Dr. Livingstone's wife shared the priva- tions and•dangera of aome of his travels, and it was wnile they were making a long lour - hey together that she died and was baried on the banks of the Zambesi. It is only eently, however, that white women itwe begun to aCeonipany their hitsbands into the d depths of Central Africa. e if the young wife of Dr. Holub, the Aus- triantraveller, survives their great andel). d taking she will have made a longer journey in Africa than most explorers. Nearly two years ago this brave young couple started from South Africa, intending to explore the upper Zambesi and Congo valleys, ,and to go home, if possible, by way. of the great laltes and the Nile. After Dr. Holub returned to Austria,: a few. years ,ago, having earned a place in the first rank of African travellers by his seven years of work in the Zambesi ergion, he married the attractive and gifted young lady who is now wandering with him among savage tribes. The entreaties of her friends could not turn her from her purpose to accompany her husband in his new explorations. About $30,000 was rids. ed to buy their equipment, and when last heard from, two months ago, they and their band of porters were plunging into almost wholly unknown regions of the upper,Zam- besi. Mrs. Holub was in excellent health, but her husband had suffered to some ex- te t from fever. Last spring Lieutenant talche returned to Europe for a vacation, after serving for three years on the upper Congo. Soon after . his return he married a fair Belgian, and e two months ago he and his bride started for - the Con„„ao, where he has re-enlisted in the e service of the Free State. At last accounts e they were at Stanley Pool in good health, e and were about to start for Stanley Falls, d 1,200 miles from the sea, where they will reside. t One of the most extensive travellers on the Congo is the wife of the missionary Grenfell, who, with her child, accompanied Mr. Grenfell on some of his long journeys, during which he pushed his little steamer e over 3,000 miles of the navigable waters of handsomest women in France. The fortune of the late Comtesse de Cham- bord exceeded fifteen million dollars, the eater part of which came to her from the distance is to constitute travel for each Duke of Modena. The mother of Don Car- los inherited one-half of ' the duke's fortune. team. Every runner will be required to make three trips per week. A term of 90 Mrs. George E, Cooke, of Louisville, Ky., days is to be the limit of a year's work for is spending her spare time embroidering a one individual. At the expiration of each superb altar -cloth for Calvary church, Louis- term the Indians who haste been in service ville, the pastor of which is Mr. Minnigerode are to return to their reservations and their son of the noted Doctor Minnigerode, , places will be filled by a fresh lot. The Richmond, a cousin of Prince Bismarck. whole business is to be conducted on the co - An African Princess is living in Hanover operative principle, Every member of the county, Virginia. She is fourteen years old, Sioux Nation will receive a percentage of the and lives in the family of an Episcopal clergy- earnings after the men who perform the man, who was a missionary in Western ! work have been paid their salaries and all Africa some years ago. She is soon to return other necessary expenses have been settled. Ito her native land to marry the King, and, with her American education, she is expect- ed to prove a useful Queen. De Lesseps and His Canal. Mrs. Custer, whose first book, "Boots and M. De Lesseps is the Napoleon of this co Saddles," has met with sach universal favor losstd enterprise, and, it is to be feared, h both at home and abroad, is arranging ma- carries out the parallel in a certain indif terials for a work on frontier life in Kansas ference to the sacrifice of human life. H just after the civil war. She and her bus- looks beyond to the object, and he sees th and lived in that locality five years at that route to San Francisco shortened by fir time, and between the Indians and the four- thousand miles the route to Canton an footed wild beasts the days and nights were Shanghai by ten thousand, and. the route to alike filled with danger and perilous escapes. Calcutta by thirteen thousand, as agains I the old, passage by the Horn. A whole am Jenny June has long been known as one of labor perished to make the Panama rai of the cleverest of women newspaper writ, vi* al:4 another army, it seems, must follow ers, and that she has not made money will it t� the shades to cut this trench, Most o be a surprise to many. To an interviewer his stain do not count the cost either fo the recently said: " had not owned mristheniselves or others, and his example seem house in New York I fear I should have had , have proved infectious with his subordi many hard times. I have never received. ; natel. The chief engineer of the company high prices for my work, nor do I receive l,who imprudently took out his family wit them now. Allow me to telt you, my young ,Iiiin, has seen every member of it die aroma( friend, that high prices paid for journalistic • him, and now remains a lonely old man to worth are a myth. Such prices are never finish his task. The scheine has survive paid. If one is a magazine writer things are ' every discouragement, even that of the re different, but I have always worked for ' port of the distinguishedengineer lately sen newspapers and received newspaper prices. I out by ,the French government to enlighten I have been enabled to get a living and to t public opinion. M. Rousseau's misgivings educate my children. That is about all. I , it was thought, would check that tranqui am not a money -Maker by any means. I flow of millions omwhich :the scheme ha never had any faculty that way." From this it would seem to be equally probable that various emotions affect special nests of the digestive system. A strong im- pression of disgust may excite vomiting; compassion is said to produce movements of gas in the small intestine •, worry is know to affect the liver ; and Dr. Ironton gives some countenance to the popular notion that jaundice may be brought on through a men- tal came, illustrated for example, by anxi- ety. The old adage respecting the wisdom of maintaining an easy mind if we would grow fat, has therefore a physical basis. It is e sures o inferences that the mind and nervous system which aie allowed to remain placid and unruffled, are most likely to be found presiding over a body and processes which respectfully live and act in a healthy and normal fashion. If care really kills us, it see= probable that its method of slaught- er is largely that of destroying the harmony of those functions on which the ,proper nu - We of bad' depend." 11..Wet Sheet Pack This valuable process in water treatment may be briefly- described as follows: Have ready two or three comfortable -9 or thick blankets, one woolen blanket and a large linen or cotton sheet. It is important to be certain that the sheet is sufficiently large to extend twice around the .patient's body. More blankets are required in cool weather than in warm, although the pack should be taken in a room at temperate heat. Spread upon a bed or straight, broad lounge the pa,y sine for those who start at once. srixson comfortable's. one by one, making theni even tts co .Portlatic Maine t thetop. , Over them I et. c ie woolen e blanket, allowing its upper edge to fall an t Exeter Butcher Shop. inch or two below that of the last comfort- 1 able. Wet the sheet in water of the proper s temperature, wring out so that it will not f drip, then gather the ends so that it can be quickly spreadont. Now place it upper upper Butcher a General Dealer end even with the woolen blanket, and a s the Congo and Its affluents. . ! On an island in Lake Tanganyika, not far , from Ujiji, where Stanley found Living - h stone sick and almost destitute, live Mr. 1 and Mrs. Hore, who are among the pioneer missionaries of the lake region. The un - d healthfulness of the mainland has driven - them to this island, where they have a pret- t ty mission station, and whereLieut. Gleerup, on his trip across the continent this year, , enjoyed the hospitalities of a white lady in 1 Central Africa. • • s A carpenter named Burgslag, who is stationed at Luluaburg, far up.the Kassai affluent of the Congo, where he has very successfully opened .6 plantation on which he has raised big crop of rice, corn, sugar cane, manioc, and European vegetables, has expressed the wish, at the end of his term of service, to bring his wife and children, now in Germany, to Lulua,burg, and devote himself to his plantation and cattle raising. Two other employees of the Congo State, Von der Felsen, the captain of one of the steamers, and Schneidet, a gunmaker, whose terms of service have expired, have petition- ed the Government for permission to settle on the Sauturn River to open plantations and raise cattle. Dr. Wolf, to whom their petition was referred, has advised that it be granted, and has expressed the opinion that, within certain limits, selected emigrants from Europe may safely be allowed and even encouraged to settle in the same region. hitherto pursiied, its' 'easy course. It did not. M. De; Lesseps called for another loan Whistling and Whistlers. to fill his almost eihaustecl coffers, and the money Mine in from every city and hamlet in Prance. The Frenchknow no measure of confidence ; they give all or none. It has to become the possessor of a drum, and if pa- ,pleased; them in the inscrutable workings of ternal firmness be added, he can belrepi sa- their minds, to believe that nothing is im- I is e withoutone un e ge s be possible, to the Projector of the Suez . . years old, when he will strike the cornet canal. If they were obliged to recognise an exception they would still be prepared te period. hihe' , ',say . with T,ertullian that the Tony, imppasi_ Shakspeare was well acquainted (.1. it art. e ma es Othello say concerning es- . . , bility is but certainty's cronsnin proof. demona : "If I do but prove her false, Ill because, m eplace, e len_ „ p o-. • the firstthe F . ch . C prey to fortune, e'en though her very cries ple believe in M. De Lesseps, and, in the se - were my dead heart -strings." cond, because M. De Lesseps can not suffer Negroes are the best whistlers . e .I himself to die with this giant labor unachiev- world. • Frequently one hears a colored im- ed. It is the only ocean canal of the first provisatore whistling the quaintest aucl ' magnitude still left to the enterprise of sweetest melodies, and. with the colored males mankind ; and M. De Lesseps and his coun- in general whistlingcomes as natural as grunt- , trymen can not leave it to another individu- in,g does to a hog. . al and another race. Suez and Panama ex - 111 n whistle when the are ha e w . and ' haust the great possibilities of the planet in Y PPY, they whistle when they are sad. When you this particular line. M. De Lesseps has ac- hey a carpenter or a house•ps, uter i hi I' 1 1 S • , I, • a conquinate artist he plane or slapping on the paint anctliThisiltg- in ambition, he owes Panama to the rounded ing a lively air at the same time, set him cbm-pleteness of his fame. lawn as a man who pays his debts, is cheer- ul at home and never whips his children. When a mans sad he whistles in a doleful tone. Nine times out of ten he won't choose " One night often destroys a whole life. dismal air, but he will whistle a lively tune, : The leak -age of the night' keeps the day hornpipe or a negrominstrel end sows. .And-•„foreVer empty. Night is sin's harvest time. If a boy is allowed to whistle it will turn his attention in a great degree from the desire R. DAVIS, —IN 6LL EINDS OF— MEAT Customers supplied TUESDAYS, THURS- DAYS AND SA.TUBDAYS at their residence ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE CEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION. :MAN HQOD Now Lost How Restor e wehave recently nublishod a new edition of DR.OTILVER WELL'S CELEBRATED ES- SAY on the radicalandpermanent cure (with- out medicine)of Nervous DebilityMental end physical capacity -impedimenta to Marx Lege, ete.,resuiting Isere excesses. Price,in sealed enveione,only 6 con ts,ortwo Postaae stamps. The celebrated author of this admirable es say clearly demonstrates, from thirty years successfulpractiee, thata.isam consequen. ces m tty be radical] y cured without the dang- erous use ef intetnal medicines or the use of the knife; Point out a mode of cute itt once simple certain and effectual, by means of whichevery sufferer, no matter whathis con. ditionmay be,ratty cure himself chJaply, pri irately and radically. S"...Thi lecture should be i n the hand o f ev- ery youth and every man in th e d. Address THE CHINERWELL MEDICAL COMPANY, 41 ANN ST., NEW YORE PostOffice Box 450 111111111XIMIlatelet scatter; -ADVERTISERS can learn. the exaot cost of any proposed line of advertising in American papers by addressing Geo. P. Rowell & Co., .rtewspsoar Advertising Eureau, 10 ,Sprude St., t.tevti York, Send lbote., for 1,00*-Elego Night Life and Character, spread it out on each side of the middle suf- a ficientl to allow tl patient t 1 on his back, which he should quickly do, let- ting his ears come just above the upper bor- e der of the shees, and extending his limbs s near together. Wrap the patient snugly, t carefully first with the sheet ami afterward with the blanket, taking care to exclude air d from the neck to the toes. After the bath m give the patient a cool or tepid sponge bath, 1 or a wet sheet rub, and he will probably feel greatly refreshed and invigorated. This form of bath is particularly useful in dis- ceases of a ferbrile type. le will draw the melody in and out ctetween More sin and crime are committed. in one As lips in a way to draw tears from all -listen- night than instil the days of the week. This rs. Sometimes a man accomplishes the., ie more emphatically true in the city than ame result when he is cheerful and tryine• the country.' /The street letupslike a fite of o whistle real good. soldiers with torch in hand, stretch away Girls in general whistle in a sort of jerky, hi long lines on either sidewalk ; the gay isconnected, jim-jam sort of way, and groan colored transparencies are ablaze with at- ildly between the tones. They'd better tractions the saloon and billiard halls are t whistlin 1 Salt and Digestion. If a piece of salt is taken into the mouth, the flow of saliva is temporarily increased, though it is not certain that the amount se- creted in any given time is any greater than it would have been had no stimulanta been used. It has been argued, also, that the effect of salt on the gastric juice in the sto- mach is the stune, and that its use promotes digestion. Some recent experiments, how- ever, on a man who had an artifical opening into his stomach to supply food, which he could not take through the mouth, seems to negative this assumption, and that salt hinders the secretion of gastric juice and di, gestion- rather than promotes them. If the amount of salt is considerable, digestion almost ceases. Experiments -like these have reat value for theyh t 1 • Y v brilliantly illuminated ; music sends forth its enchantment; the gay company begins Woman. to gather to the haunts and houses of plea- sure ; the gambling dens are aflame with Great indeed is the task assigned to wo- palatial splendor • the theaters are wide man. Who 0811 elevate itsdignity ? Not to open ; the mills of destruetion are grind - make laws, not .to lead armies, not to gov- ing health, honor, happiness and hope out of ern enterprises, but to form those by whom a thousand lives. The city under the gas laws are made, armieS are led, empires are light is not the same as under God's sunlight: governed ; to guard against the slightest Night life in our cities is it dark problem taint of bodily infirmity the frail yet spotlese whose depths and abysses and Whirlpools creature whose moral no less than physical make us start, back with horror. night - being must be derived from her ; to inspire long tears are falling, WOW, is streaming. those principles, to inculcate thosedoctrines Yotmg men, tell me how and where you to animate those sentimente, which genera. spend your evenings, and I will write you a tions yet unborn and nations yet uncivilised chart of your character and final destiny, shall learn to bless; to soften firmness into with blanks to insert your names. It seems mercy and chasten honor into refinement ; to me an appropriate text would. be : to exalt generosity into virtue and by, sooth- " Watohrean, what of the night ?" Police- ing care to allay the anguish of the mind ; man, pacin g thy beat, what of the night ? by her tenderness to disarm passion; by her What are the young men of the city doing purity to triumph Over sense; to cheer the at night? Who are their associates? What scholar sinking under his toil; to be eompen- are their habits? Where do they go in and sation for friends that are perfidious, for when do they come out ? Policeman, would happiness that has passed away—such is her the night life of young Men counnend them ocatton. The couch of the tortured suffer- to the confidence of their employers? Would superstitions of past ages, which seem to be held by the educated and the ignorant alike. Diphtheria. M. Delthil, of Paris, has become famous for his suceeas hi the cure of this disease. Large flat dishes, filled with spirits of tur- pentine, are placed in different parts of the room ; sponges wet with it areplaced at each side of the pestient'shead, audit is even used tl ge. said :, "Do you know that it mate nothing hid but shall be revealed on the three eases where it was instituted and n canned Mit from the beginning Of the al - mass. , h er, the prison of the deserted frioncl, the it be to their credit? Make a record of the cross of the rejected Saviour—these are the nights of one week. Put in the morning theatres in which her greatest triumphs have papers the namea of all young. men, their been achieved.-- Blarbaood. habits and haunts, that are on the Streets for sinful pleasuie. Would there not be shame and confusiOn ? Some Wrauld not dare Vthat it Costs to Keep a Man for Seventy- to go to theis places of busiiteis; some would five Years. not dare to come home at ni ht ; some I *net one of our old citizens on the street catkins, Would leave the city ; some {YOB d commit le other day, who is in the 76th year of his Remember, young men, that in the retina of the All,Seeing Eye there is a . . . td'aswal) the throat, M. Delthil elaims for a this treatment sixty tecoreries tait of sixty- b etsveen $0,000 a,nd $7,000 to raise a man of lass day. iy age s" I answered 30. He continued : i ' iVell, sir, in the Past seventy-five years I I ' ' " aye plu.sakett of 82,125 Meeks consumed 2,595 Poilads of solid food'. drank 51,10 hal." itn,setwpatstsiedaYetibedcIttibanalto"nttillorri6e;ollieeeel?”.1.1: lips of tett and 18,250 mipa of eoffee. I have not lived extravagantly, mid my meals' sectien "rand is now (1°Y 1-i°11,e(ri f°2 hire ih have cost me on en average elght aehta efte.h. the streets. ,T.,he ttewsvolnele is comfortable l'her,eftre, the 82,125 meals have 5o8t 1 tufa roorriy1 ismies' ures8es cannot get spoiled jle by coining in contact with the tnntitiv wheel, $0,5/0. Where 18 there alt 17octogenitinan 1 1 si i 1) ol, a s d iti ' iyho can figtiro diosor than tine an( t 10 ( t ver can 0 e nintinic te sy i Without disloeation of the neck. All that 1 "' ' '''"'"'"''' ': '''''''' needed "for its sticeess isy it is wild, that pits- ' " Cat -tails boiled foe ten minutes uroti,t sengers should be satisfied that, wlth i s odd. drop off," says a florist, but Won't the cate looking single wheel in ftont, it is by no object to waiting While theY are being llolied. Indalt4 dangerothh' ' ' " And shall you try to break his will 1" e the caller wanted to knon,, after the widow hid told her how the recently deceased had fixed the property and rather left her out. "Try ?" the widow edhoed assthe smoothed out her dress eomplacently, " I don't think there will he nunsh try about it. I didn't have any trouble baettking hie will when he , was alive and I don't think it is going to trouble me any this time," Casting Bells. There is always risk of failure in casting large bells ; uncertainty whether the bell will be sound when cast, liability to eventu- al fracture. The transportation of such heavy weights as bells of large dimensions to their destination,:and the hanging of them when there, are always matters for serious consideration. Itwillberememberedwhatpre- parationswere inaileand precautions taken for the transport of the great bell to St. Paul's, and the difficulty of its hoisting and hanging; and now, being hung, it would be dangerous to swing its enormous weight—sonic eighteen tons. It is of interest to note, therefore, that in England a bell has been invented which is laimed to obviate all these difficult- ies. This bell as we find it described, is not cast, but made .of metal, beat or spun to shape. A bell may be made of several pieces and hard soldered together. The peculiarity of the result, is that the bells give an aston- ishing volume of sound. A bell weighing three and one-half pounds gives quite as much sound as a cast bell of ten times the weight, and the tone is Very pure and true. Tke vibrations last twenty-five seconds, and the overtones or harmonies are quite percept- ible. The inventor guarantees to produce a bell weighing one ton which shall be as musi- cal and efficient as an ordinary bell of twenty tons. Various attempts have been made to use sheet metal for bells, but they have all failed hitherto ; and the reason why the in- ventor has attained an unprecedented suc- cess seems to be that he has hit on a pecul in r alloy, which appears to possess sonte remark- able properties. It is well known that or- dinary bell metal is hard and brittle. In the .present case, however, a method has been :discovered by which a bell metal is produced which will be resonant in a very high degree, but admits of being bent. It bears, that is to say, about the same relation to ordinary bell metal that malleable cast iron bears to ordinary cast iron. Although the inventor, Mr. Hoffman, of London, is eonfidcnt that he can produce a very large bell M this ways he has net made any, mid it remains to be seen how far he will be auccessful t but ho has donectiengh already to excite tlte mter7 est and chtim the attention of every casint7 Day and. ht During an acute attaek Of Btalaaakia, it eeaseless tiekling in the throat, and an 0:thanking, dry, baelting cou&b, afflict the sufferer. Sleep is banished, and great prostration fellows. This disease is also attended with Ifoarseness, and sometiMes LOSS Of Volee, It is Hanle to necome chronic, involve the lungs, and terminate fatally. Ayer'a Cherry Peethrid etforda Speedy relief and cure In cases of Bron- chitis, It controls the , disposition to cough, and Induces refreshing sleep, I nave been a practicims PhtSislatt or twenty-foor years, and, f0 the past twelVe, have suffered from annual attacka of Bronchitis. After exhausting all the usual remedies Without Relief, -.. 1 tried Ayer's Cherry Peet° 1, It helped .Ayer's Cherty Peetaral i decidedly the I," me immediately, and effect 1 a speedy cure, --G. Stove:4,31.D., Car ollton, Miss, best remedy, withhf ,my 'knowledge, ler cbronie Bronchitis* and all 1ttie4 doiteses. —31. A. Rust, 31. D., South Paris, Ile, X was attacked, last winter, w itti a severe Cold, which, from exposure, grew worse and filially settled on my ungs. By night sweats 1 was reduced almost to a skeleton. My Cough was incessant, and 1 frequently spit blood. My physician told me to give up business.- or 1 would not live a month. After taking VariOns reme- (lies without relief, I wits nuttily ' Cured' By Using, two bottles of Ayer's Clierry Pectoral. I am now in perfect health, and able to resume business. after having been pro- noimeed ineueable with Consumption. — S. 1'. Henderson, Saulsburgh, Penn, For years I was in a decline. I Lad weak lungs, and suffered front Bronchitis and Catarrh. Ayr's Cherry Pectoral re- stored me to heath). and I have been for a long time comparatively vigorous. In case of a sudden cold 1 always resort to the Pectoral, and find speedy relief. — Edward E. Curtis, Rutland, Vt. Two years ago I suffered front a severe Bronchitis. The physician attending. me became fearful that the disease would tez•- minate in Pneumonia. After trying vari- ous menicines, without benefit, he finally prescribed Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, whieh relieved me at once. I continued to take this medicine a short thne, and was cured. —Ernest Colton, Logansport, Ind. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Masa. Saki by all Illtruggists. Price $1; six bottles, $S. THE GREAT ENGLISH PRESCRIPTION Asuccessfulmedicinetestedover 30 years in thousands of cases. Promptly cures Nervous Pros. tration,Weakness of Brain, Spi- nal Cord, and Cienerative0iyans of either sex, Emissionsand all illseausedbyindis- OretionOrOver-exection. Six packagesis guaran- teed to effect a cure whenall othermedicures fail. One package $1. six packages $5, by mail. Sold bydruggists. Write for .Pamphtet. Address EIIRIELLOREIlicAL CO., Dummy, Mum For sale by J. W. Browning, Exeter, and all druggists. A C. 8c S. drDLEY, UNDERTAKERS! --AND----- Furniture Manufacurers —A FULL STOOK OF— Furniture, COns, Caskets And everything iia ttillibove line, to meet immediate wants. We have one .of the very best Hearses in the County, And Funerals furnished and conducted a extremely low pikes. EMBLEMS OF ALL TILE DIFFERENT SOCIETIES PENNYROYAL WAFERS. Prescription of a physician who has had a life long experience in treating female diseases. Is used monthly with perfect success by over 10,000 lathes. Pleasant, safe, effectual. Ladies ask your drug- gist for Pennyroyal wafers and take no substitute, or inclose post- age for sealed particulars. Sad by au druggists, v. per box. Address THE EUREKA CHEMICAL CO., DETROIT, DI/C11. Sold in Exeter by W. Browning and rill druggists. "BELL" ORGANS Unapproached for Tone and Quality CATALOGUES FREE. BELL & 1ph Out CO,111 _ THE. re, ELESFIATED •:1:-Y/, • CHASES ' tADRAtte tikHDELIO FOR LIVER AND KIDNEY DISEASES arise, he bays front parti,es ,w1t6Se nt y In their,. several ettitintAS -is (Moran, er jor the : anologist guaiIty of their wares." Thai sterliug mot to is only 111080 made by prat:tic/11 151.0fOSSiOnid Iran. fi Dr. Cuasa 18 too well and faverably k 1101% n ly his receipt books to require atiy recommenda- tion. Dn. CHASE s Liver Cure 1ms a receipt, book wrapped around every bottle which is worth its weight in gold, CitAsn's Liver tAre is guaranteed to wire _ What are We? Every man is worth precisely what lie will brin The only just measure of hia ability Its Ins performance. If he drinks whisky his intemperance is a part of him. If he is indolent his indolence is as nuteh his as his hand or his head is. ftc is entitled to esedit only for the net result, whatever it may happen to be. Possibly he might be a great num if he were not a drunkard ; but he is a dtunkard ; and hence it is quite as absurd to talk abont the possi bilities of this Sort ati it weak' be to say of an idiot that he might be a distinguished writer if he only had the necessary hxto- ledt, It is a poor sort of reputatien that hangs on an (Xf.I NO tnini ie entatled to it, and to very many of its possessors it " 011 unmixed evil, oubI tvue in regard to patent medic:lees. Loy all diseases liaising from,- ' taapid- ea mat tvcif: liCaO5,a4VOr omballa# ?HE KIDNEYS tHt„KfbNV Cittat's'Llver entOta ti'certain ettre for 'all deSangem ems of the k1thiysuh ns pai min the back loWer portion of tho.a,hdeviinii, , eosstattt derto 'P'ss Tsy it. take othoe, it will cure you, . Seld hooting . pat its possaise; 134 diseent and all urinary fisoubleas etc. , by,tol dealessat $L00 per bottle. uni atNte row oats tr*18,driSnaiOroth, ! ' git Sold at C. IXT728, Agent leteter