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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1886-11-4, Page 2• *Ws A V IC 00 S Segar•Coateel L-- Cathartic the collies torpid, if PILLS 8 1 t the Liver be - bowels are coustipated, or if tile stonmeb ts to perform its funetions properly, ust. ,Aver's Pills. They aie invaluable. For some years I was a victim to Liver Complaint, In cons:equenee of which. 1 Suffered from, General Debility and hull. gestion. .A few boxes of Ayer's Pills restored me to perfect betilth. — W. T. 13rightney, ifetelersoe, ye, For years I have robed more upen Ayer's Pills than anything else, to Regulate my bowels. These Pills are mild in action, and do tilt* work thoroughly. 1 have used • them withgooti seat, in cases of 'Rheu- matism, Kulney Trouble, and Dyspepsia. —Gad iUfller, Attleborongh, Mass. .Ayer's Pills eared tile of Stomach and liver troubles, from which fled suffered for years, I consider them the best pills made. and would not be without them. — Morris Gates, Downsville,N, Y. was attacked with Bilious Fever, which was followed by Jaundice, and was .so dangerously ill that my friends des ,spaired of my recovery. I commenced taking Ayer's Pills, and soon regained My customary strength and vigor. —John 0, Pattison,. Lowell, Nebraska. Last spring I suffered greatly from a troublesome humor on my side. In spite of every effort to cure this eruption, it in- creased until the flesh became entirely raw. I was troubled. at the same time, with Indigestion, and distressing pains in The Bowels. By the advice of a friend I began taking .Ayer's Pills. In a short time[ was free from pain, my food digested properly, the sores on my body commenced healing, lind, in less than one month, I was Cured. —Samuel D. White, Atlanta, Ga. I have long used Ayer's Pills, in my family, and believe them to be the best pills made. —S. C. Darden, Darden, Miss. My wife and little girl were taken with Dysenterya few days ago, and I at once began giving them small doses of Ayer's Pills, thinking I would call a doctor if the disease became any worse. In a short time the bloody discharges stopped, all pain went away, and health was restored. —Theodore Esling, Richmond,Ya. Ayer's Pills, Prepared by Dr. J. C. .Ayer lb Co., Lowell,Mass. Sold by all Dealers in Medicine. EtOUSEHOLD. 011041e Ropes. PARIS CA,Kk:.—Eight eggs beaten separate- ly, orte.half pound each of butter and sugar, a tumbler of milk, the juice and rind of a lemon, a small teaspoonful of mama tartar, Ione-balf teaspoonful Of bicarbonate of soda, ; and thins enougb to stiffen. Bake well, 1 PovnnrY Pus—One large cup a mills, yolk of one egg, two tablespoonfuls each of sugar andflour, and a little salt. Cook by I setting the dias hi a sence-pan of boiling ` water, stir until scalded, remove and let it ' cool, flavor with lemon, have your crust Iready baked, pour in the mixture, and frost with tbf white of the egg and one table- spoonful of white sugar. Si et in a hot oven and brown slightly. I Jnusv Pus.—One tumbler each of jelly . and water, three tablespoonfuls of corn. : starch, yolk a one egg, a 'small tablespoon- ful of butter. Boil Jelly, butter, and ssater together, then thicken with the egg and , corn-ststreh wet in water. Pour into a pie Itin lined with nice crust, bake till the 'crust is done, then beat the white of the egg to a j stiff froth, adding a tablespoonful, of powder - 1 ed sugar, spread over the pie and set in j the oven till a delicate brown. 1 PUMPE.IN-Pa.—As no thanksgiving table 1 is complete without the golden pumpkin,. pie, the following method may be new to many readers : Pare and cut the pumpkin in pieces convenient for steaming, instead i of cutting in sniall slices and stewing in i water. k'ut it in a steamer and steam it , till soft, mash fine and prepare in the usual manlier. Separate the eggs used, putting I in the yolks with the pumpkin. When done, I have reedy the whites whippedto a froth with a little white sugar, and spread this over the pies, leaving them in the oven with the door open for a few minutes. THE EXETER TIMES. Is published every Thursday naorning,at the TIMES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE main -streets nearly opposite Fitton's Jewelery Store, Exeter, Ont., by John 'White 4k. Son, Pro- • misters. RATES OF ADVERTIS/NO First insertion, per line.. ..... ....... .10 cents. Each subseque.A insertion,per line 3 cents. To insure insertion, advertisements should b.e sent in not later than Wednesday morning OurJOB PRINTING DEPARTMENT is one f the largest and best equippea in the County I Huron. All work entrusted to us will receiv -ur prompt attention. Decisions Regarding News- papers. Any person who takes a paperreguiarly from he post-oftice, whether directed in his name or another's, or whether he has subscribed or not 2 If &person orders his paper aiscontinned I is responsible for payment. he mustpay all arrears or the publisher may sontinue to send it until the payment is made, d then 11 .t the whole amount whether sbe paper is taken from tire office or not. • 3 In suits for subscriptions, the suit may be inetitutedin the place where the paper is pa • lished, although the subscriber may • reside hundreds of miles away. 4 The courts hove decided that refusing to `a.ke newspapers or peliodicals from the post - office, or removing and leaving them uncalled for is prima facie evidence of inten tion al fraud that GIF Beadle cents postage and we will send you free a. royal, valuable sample box of goods _hat willput-yon in the way of tusking more money at once, than anything else in America. Bothsexes of all ages can live at home and work in spare time, or all the time. Capital notreguirud. We wilt start you. Immense pay sus e forthose who start at once. STINSON & Co . Portl an e Maine Exeter _Butcher Shop. R. DAVIS, Butcher 2. i1 Dealer Household Hints. A feather duster is a delusion and a snare —it is simply a "flirter." A piece of lemon is excellent for cleaning the hands. It is a mistake to put spoons in the holder handles down. Buttermilk and lemon juice are harmless cosmetics for removing sunburn and freckles. Lazy people are abominations—dead weights to be carried upon some one's over- burdened shoulders. To stone raisins easily, pour boiling water over them and drain it off. This loosens theni and they come out with ease. A very thin coat of what is known as French picture varnish will restore chromes and oil paintings to their original bright- ness. After killing the chickens, while they are yet warm, drench them in a pail of cold water, and they will pick nicely, and it is so nitibh quicker than waiting to heat watei to Wald them. If applied immediately, powdered starch is said to take out many kinds of fruit stains on table linen. It must be left on the stained spot for a few hours until it absorbs the stain. The Scientific American states that plush goods and all goods dyed with aniline colors good grip on her little one's clothing with taded from exposure to light will look bright her teeth, climbed out again aided by the as ever after being sponged withchloroformstone curbing and the rope, restored the The corninercial chloroform will anewer the child to consciousness, and then fainted dead away. Put down your book when your husband enters the room and interest youtenif , whatever pleases hint, seeking also to 'bring him over to your tastes. Try for ?mutuat concession, else you may travel different roads. Never bother your husband about the lemmas. Cast aside disagreeable topics when he returns from business. °dye your orders to your servants kindly bat fflttilYt exacting obedience, yet showing them the orloolTraOeinent of considerationwitea it is in your power. If more mothers gave ene-tenth good ads vice to nine -tenths wedding outfit there'd be fewer thorightlesa marriages. And better yet, if every mother made it a point to follow these rules as closely herself as she would like to see her daughter do, girls would look longer for good men like their fathers and try harder to be good women Like their mothers. LATE AXEBRAR NEM. A. young man fout—ul ts handbag in a car- riage at Tuscola, 111. It contained $35, and belonged to a young widow in Atwood, and when the young man returned it to her, she rewarded him by marrying him the next day. A six-year-old girl in Florida dropped her kitten down a well over fifty feet deep, and at her earnest entreaty her father lowered her down by the well rope. She got the kitten out all right and was pulled up again damp, but happy. Maxwelldthe condemned mursletr, who is awaiting execution in St. Louis,is said to have become completely unnerved, and to show in every movement his distress. He rolls and teases all night, talks and starts in his sleep, and is said to be haunted by a vi- sion of the murdered Preller. A calf was killed in Ziouville, Pa., one morning, the skin was at the tannery by noon, was teamed and turned over to a shoe- maker that evening, and by the next morn- ing was made into a pair of boots which were worn by the man who owned the calf that had worn the skin the day before. A citizen of Newton, N. J., noticed his hens standing around a tree on which a grapevine grew gazing up intently. He looked further, and saw another ben up in the tree picking the grapes from the vine and dropping them down for the fowls on the ground. The citizen is said to be truth- ful. A Paterson Justice after repeating the formula of an oath to a young woman ended as usual by saying, "Kiss the Book." " will not," was the unexpected reply; "The last witness that was sworn was chewing tobacco, and the one before him had fever blisters on his lips. She was perfflitted to affirm. According to a gentleman who has lived in London many years, and has seen Queen Victoria often, there is a lady in Hartford who resembles her greatly. He says that the general resemblance is almost startling and when this Hartford lady smiles her ex- pression is absolutely indentical with the Queen. A child two years old fell into a twenty - foot well at Mount Sterling, Ill., and was drowning in four feet of water. Its mother let herself down by the well rope, got a purpose very well and is less expensive than the purified. Crocks of butter to be kept for several months, says the Dairyman:, should never be placed upon the cellar bottom. This causes Sordid speculation and the business of barter has not squeezed all the prgetry out of the souls of the citizens of Minneapolis. This is the way a market report in one of 2 degrees of temperature hi thecrock, which the newspapers reads: "Corn, the friend will be at the expense of the qualit of the alike of poet, peasant, and speculator, ho- - lovingly a moment at 43c., and then alighted with pink-doved feet on 44c. bench and a thick woolen cloth thrown over after long standing it has a slight mold foot from from the cellar bottom, upon a Y this sum is raised to 800 roubles (POO) by Smell, it has passed through marshy land the expense attached to the maintenance of HEALTH, Prescriptions. flaw potatoes have cured dyspepsia. A good digestion is more to he &Sired than great name. Of the adult men living in the °Meg one halt are estimated to be bald, Teach the girls, that the corset and tight dretssing' are the enemies,of life. With sorue MOD. beautiful face and a fine dress go further than good health and coin - mon sense. Vet is the best lung food, and, among all worst. cream is about the best and. salt pork the fat-containing substances, fresh sWeet The human organism is a savings bank for the elements of vital strength, and in form of fresh air it accepts the loneliest de- posits. Merely warns the back by the fire, and never continue keeping the 'back exist:tiled to the heat after it has become comfortably warm. To do otherwise is debilitating. Convulsions may frequently be cut shorts like magic, by turning the pa,tient on his left side. The nausea as an after effect of coloroform or either narcosis may generally be controlled in the same manner. Iodine Ix has been used with good success in membranous croup by Dr. C. 8. Putnam of Ada, Minnesota. He is of the opinion that "Iodine Ix is as near a specific for membranous croup as we have. Cease to feed the lungs on natio gases, and Dr. Koch's ttnimalcula will starve and disappear as surely as maw -worms will starve and disappear if we change a pork and sauerkraut diet for bread and apples, Inebriety cannot beprevented by throwing the responsibility on the inebriate, and punishing him for this, as if for crime. He is a sick man, and must be taken out of his surroundings and fully quarantined until he can recbver. The Union Meclicale suggests the follow- ing simple remedy for nettle rash: Dissolve O small quantity of menthol in alcohol, and apply to the parts as a lotion. This prepar- ation is said th be equally soothing in the case of insect stings. Seven grains of chrysophanic acid in an ounce of chloroform provides a very success - hi" application for the treatment of ring- worm. It should be very cautiously applied to the part affected two or three times daily with la camel's-hair brush, care being taken not to inhale the vapor, CHARCOAL AND CAMPHOR IN CHRONIC ULCER.—A mixture of equal parts of cam- phor and animal charcoal is recommended by Carbocci as an application to prevent the offensive odor and remove the pain of old excavated ulcers. The camphor acts as a disinfectant, and the charcoal absorbs and destroys the offensive odors. A white tongue is said to denote a febrile disturbance; a brown, moist tongue -'--indi- gestion; a brown, dry tongue—depression, blood poisoning, typhoid fever; a red, moist tongue—inflammatory fever • a red, glazed tongue, general fever, loss Of digestion; a tremulous, moist flabby tongue—feebleness, nervousness; a glazed tongue with blue ap- pearance—tertiary syphilis. In hemorthidel tumors five drops of a ten 'per cent solution of phenidacid injected:bate the swelled veins almost immediately withers it up. Dr. Eenire employs the fol- lowing formula, which he esteems superior th the simple solution, as the pain, which otherwise is often severe, is greatly lessened; glycerine, two drachms and a half ; phenie acid, twenty drops ; morphia, five grains. Good water should be tasteless and odor- less when either fresh or stale. After long place of destination ammmt to about 300 standing it should show no sediment. If, roubles ($225), a sum which would be suf- HORRORS OF SIBERIA. Lim Lan hv Russissts Kxtt,Ess4uottvga., • Husstdo Isms, WILD BEASTS. . A graphie pieture df, the condition' of those unfortunates who are fitly (1(480044 RS. " lost $049." dF9W11• the WOrk Oft Siberia by the Russian Writer Jadtinieff, Gorman edition of whieh lias just been 'publiehed by the Prof. E. Petri, of Bern- stletofenWefa.at(lhoelxiitilee:"°17;v4lititeristo itnlei (lour t-1,. miserable hut. Most Of theta are in reality the bondsmen of the Siberian peasants, by whom they are hired ; that is to my, they rernaiwin their debt as long as they live, and are eatisfied-when they eau get - inoney Lor aritildlig oil holidays front thew masters, 'But as the majority of•the exiles are • rogues. and vagabondsby profession, who are afraid' of work, the number of fugitives is con- stantly increasing, Who steal, rob and plunder wherever a chance offers, and thus intensify the natural antipathy of the settlers against the class of the deported, 'The peasants have every cause to be mons. ed against them, for, besides suffering ham the malpractices of the convict class, they have to bear the cost of the erection and preservation of prisons for the exiles, or- 'ganize hunts for the capture of the . run- aways, provide guards for them, pma find the taxes which cannot be raised from among. the deported class. But the great- est gaps in the ranks of the exiles are caus- ed by the almost systematic escape of the latter from forced labour and from the con- vict settlements. No less than 15 per cent. 011ie deported escape during transport. Many Of them are shot down like wild beasts by the peasants and natives, and an ob- server of Siberian life made a very true re- mark when he said thet Siberia would scarcely have been able to overpower the runaway exiles if the peasants had not an- nihilated them. THE MOST EXTREME MEASURES to check the system of escape are the hunts by the natives, organized by the Russian Government. The native receives 3 roubles if he delivers the prisoner., " dead or alive," to the authorities. The people are provided withgood armsamtammunition, sons tomake hunting the escaped prisoner a perfect suc- cess. One of these few who managed th escape was seized in his native village, and when brought before the court he said :— "For yearsI have wandered about, have cross- ed Siberian forests, passed through steppes and mountains, and no one has touched me, neither man nor beast ; but here, in my native village, I have been seized and cast into chains.1' The escape from forced labor had become so common that the administra- tors of convict establishments were in the habit of calling out when receiving prisoners: —" Whoever wishes to stay, let him take clothes ; he who wants to run away will not need them." It should be observed that the clothes left behind by escaped convicts, so as to guard against capture, are the peruisites of the prison authorities. WHILE THESTATISTICS snow an incredible increase in the number ot crimes committed by' exiles, proving the efficiency of the system of deportation as a corrective delusion, they are equally con- demnatory of its much -vaunted cheapness to the State. The cost of transport of a Siberi- an deptorte is estimated at 50 roubles (37,50). But in this estimate are not included the cost of transport th the main route (steamers on the Volga'and Kama), and thence to the place of destination, the maintenance of Ids family if accompanied by it, the maintenance in prison till the spring, as transports in winter have been abolished,' as well as the cost of the minted), guards, so that the ex- penses of transport for each consibt to his b • • • i their contents far better if placed at least a when boiled it turns white, it contains lime; dearest prison of European Russia. But utter at the top. The crocks will keep ficient to keep him at least four years in the Nashville has a citizen who in dress and brown, iron, clay or vegetable matter. If general conduct appears to be perfectly sane, but each morning he gets up early, fills a small bag with food, a little tobacco, and some stones, goes to the river and throws it in. Asked why he does this, he it and contains germs and organic substances. etappe routes, escorts, prisons along the IBoiled eggs which adhere to the shell are route, and etappe houses, not to reckon the fresh. A good egg will sink in water. All such water should be carefully avoided. TREATMENT OE OZERNA.—Dr. Malacrida, burdens imposed upon the population, who • Stale eggs are glassy and smooth of shell. after cleansing the nostrils with a solution have to provide vehicles and hospitals, and Ishell. After an egg has been laid a day or under the water." One of his brothers was sodium and drying the mue- their losses through theft and crimes of all i A fresh egg has a lime -like surface to its Says: "Brother can't get anything th eat of chloride of so I more the shell comes off easily when boiled. drowned, ous membra,ne with dredgets of absorbent descriptions. A boiled efig which is done will dry quickly Seventeen years ago, when Pat :McCoy of 1 cotton introduces a bit of cotton moistened A simple calculation, consequently, ought with a few drops of the essential oil of tur- to be in favor of those in Russia who raise fresh. , Eggs . which have been packed m make a fortune, he was a very spare man. th' tl d was the 1 for a long time eggs are apt to acqule *.a. pounds, Mrs. McCoy refused to recognize than a month. on the she when taken from the kettle if Wilkesbarre lefthis wife and went West to pentine. In a munber of places in which their voices against de sradins Siberia into a is me noemployed,disagreeable receptacle or os soula" at mse says: lime look stained and Show the attion of The other day, when he returned with a odor was almost immediately destroyed, —" The system of deportation has converted the Hine on the surface. If packed in bran few thousand dollars and a weight of 250 ana a permanent cure was affected in less Siberia into a sewer ; deportation has been Ithe cause of much injustice and harm done musty smell and taste. him as her lean husband. She had not th the country. By mixing the deported A French journal gives the followil heard from him during all his absense. Mc- says that for bruises there is nothing to com- The St. Louis Medical and Surgical Journal with the population crime was accorded a method of preservimt grapes, aosorido Coy takes her refusal to recognise him much pare with the tincture or a strong infusion I wider scope. The exiles are at present in an extremely miserable and objectionable con - by the inventor of t e process : At the end t° heart* of capsicum annuum .mixed With an eesnal dition and Siberia receives, illSteRC1 of use - 1 with of October eut the bunches with a portion 1 An Indianapolis lady sends her small boy bulk of mucilage of gum arabic, ant w • —IN ALL RIND S OF— I of wood attached Trim the base of this to school in the forenoon only. She thought the addition of a few drops of glycerinful workers, a numerous, homeless and lazye. nflct with s, camel's- air pencil and allowed to sass proletariat. By. the present deplorable con - This should be ?anted all over the sur dition of the banished thepunishmentii M1—'1J .L'61 T i last to a point and stick it into a potato. she would go to the school and see him at Afterward spread the grapes upon straw, work, and observe the surroundings. So or very dry hay, and as much as possible w one afternoon she dressed carefully, kissed s— that the do not touch each other. Thus her boy at the gate, told him th be good prepared, these grapes keep as well as if and went to the school, when she carefully dustometssupplied TUESDAYS, THURS. i the stems were placed in bottles of water. scanned the array of faces in a ram search pA:rs AND SATURDAYS at their residence 1 An American plan of keeping grapes—and for her offspring, before she remembered ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE perfectly—through the winter is to pack in that he was home: CEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION. layers between an -dried sand and sift the A Boston clergyman deeply interested in , — whole full between the interstices. If kept getting money for a Charitable institution, as near the freezing point on possible they has offered a newspaper man $500 if he will will remain good until spring. . be married on the stage at a coming enter- •, tainm.ent in aid of the institution. The news a er man said that he'd do it 'What ed. does not lead to reform, but yields a re - dry on, a second or a third coating 'being • sult quite the reverse, consisting in the de- . applied as soon as the first is clry. If done moralization of the exiles and an increase in inunediately *after the injury is inflicted this vagabondism and crime," ItolAr Lost How Restore We have recently published a new edition of DR CTILITERWELL'S CELEBRAT1tD ES- SAY on the radical an d p erns anent cure ( with- out m edieine) of Nervous Debility, Mental and physical capacity impediments to Marriage, etc., r °suiting from excesses. Price, in sealed envelope ,only 0 0911bs,0111,0 POStatte s tamps. The celebrated author of this admirable es say clearly demonstrates, from thirty years SUCCOP gni practice, that alarming consequ en . ces may he radically cured svithout tbe dang- erous nee of internolinedicities or the use of the knife; Point ont a mode of cure at once simple certain and effectual , by means of whieh every sufferer,no matter what his con. dition may be.may cure himself eh Japly, , pri vateiv and radically. lecture should be in the hands of ev- ery youthand every man in th eland. Address THE CULVERWELL MEDICAL COMPANY, 41 INN Sr., NEW YORK Post Office Box 450 asolsallSEMBIZIESBESIBMIL. p p . A Few Words to Wives. the young woman said has not been made Encourage strict confidence with your public; and why the minister doesn't give husband; withhold nothing from him, and the POO to the charitable institution out - be patient in hearing all he would confide right is also an unanswerable question. to you, that he may Always fly to you as his counsellor and best friend. on an east -bound D. "'L. & W. train from Be purietual to a second in all engane- Binghamton, saw a buck on the tack ahead ments nsith year -husband, and Ile Will Ise of him. On one side was a steep mountain, the sante with you, and in thus doing you on the other a thirty-foot embankment. will avoid much that is unpleasant ' Practice economy in taking care of what made after the buck at 'hill speed. The you have 'seeping a strict account of svt spen i buying nothing but what you pay. closed on the frightened deer, FIald at length , The other day Engineer Menit Turner, Turner pulled the throttle wide en and you chase was short. The locomotive -gradually you scipen'cl, buying nothing but what for hnmediately, and making yeur 'account caught it, and as it happened, held it en - of each month's expenses show you have tangled on the cowcatcher, where the fire - Imore than you have spent. This is a groat man killed it. way to. win a man's respect, to make hiin A y,oung woman picking her way across the , think he hoe a little savings bank upon railroad tracks in Indianapolis sasv a brake - l1 h , w c i e can rely in time of siokness and ' h' man tvave his hand to her from the top of a financial difficulty, departing freight tram. She smiled sweetly . Rule only to love. Strive to call out the and waxed back. Then the . brakeman 1 t f lin f 1 b dt tt ith ses ee gs o your ins an na ire w 11.2101 centinual loving attentions which, thouth ADVERTISERS can learn the exao.t cost of any proposed line of advertising in American papers by addressing Geo. P. Rowell & Co., Newspaper AdvertiSing Bureau, 10 Spruce St,, New York. d 10cta for 10O -Pae Pamphlet they may be smali in theinielves, -e such a strong chain around his heart intime • that he cannot turn carelessly aside from you. Go out olwa s with our husband but manage to make home 80 attractive that he finds no place so. dear. , Dress better for your husband' than for arty one else. Take a pride in his ap- pearance that he may judge your heart by his own. Never alio* him to see you sla,tternly attired. Even be tasty in a kitchen dress Or looking prdtty over a 1 y y kitchen hoard. Be strong in your determination never to in much despise RS Tssip nothina makes gossip, to harshly criticise, Nothing inert a woman rise so nine in a good inman's es- timation as to see her charitable, particular- ly with her own sex. "For, Ith.ge eharity does never soil, but only Whitens soft white hands," treatment will almost invariably prevent the blackening of the brusied tissue. The ......e... ../ .....• • II. 0* IIIIIMN... same remedy has no equal in rheumatic, Uncle Josiah's Proverbs. sore or stiff neck. If you would not water a tence,post to Guards Against Earthquakes. avert a drought, or fly a kite to turn aside a whirlwind—if you would do no such fool - If earthquakes should become common on ish thing,—look above human nature for the Atlantic coast, the construction of build - help to mire its evils. . ings would doubtless be improved in cense- Inexperience is inclined to be confident ; quence. The character of the buildings in San Francisco has been in a great degree but kittens catch crickets before they catch mice. determined by such a cause. Brick and Many who have the least honor make the stone buildings are more massively con - most noise in defending it. structed, iron tie -rods and chains built into Those who have no dignity are constant - the walls are more used, and the fire -limits ly putting it on. are more restricted than they would be, and A man is strong who knows his own the city is built th a greater extent of wood. weakness. The immense Palace Hotel makes a, con - He bears a shield who knows how to use stint boast of being "earthquake proof"—a his strength. claim Which is ridiculed by some old resi- His step is firm whose purpose is well dents who have . ,seen the effects of great earthquakes in Central America, and even fixed difficult for is man to forgive one in California, where in Inyo county, traces whom he has, injured ; he will make him a are yet to be seen of an opening in the earth sinner in self-defence. extending many miles, which closed, lefty - An &teemed offender often affects anger to ing fences, trees and buildings diet:Aimed to conceal conscious guilt. an extent of several feet. In providing He who seedily breaks With a real friend against earthquakes, the city has perhaps is unworthy of ono. incurred a still more serious risk of a greet Jupiter never goes out of the way to hit a fire Many frame buildings are carried th a sinutsilileersisintaiiss never jealous of smaller li lits wat-ed. more violently, and the girl smiled height of five or six stories, and bay win - more sweetly and stopped and tried to get dows and heavy cornices abound eVery- out her handkerchief, to fittingly carry on Where to sech Sat extent that the city looks the flirtation. The next thing she knew she ahnost as if especially designed for a bonfire. was yanked 'off the track liss a flagman, Besides this, it is built on hills, and is jtst in time to 'escape a booking train, which . subject to high winds daily throudsh the the brakeman had seeii and had tried in 'vain greater pert of the year. It is to be hoped b .warn her of, that good luck and an excellent fite depart. If all the incidents of the Charleston/tent will save it from clestrnction, but the • ' Is By attacking ti otte a big dog stows himself up to be small. Do not stay too long—birds of passage ate hailed on their return. , Tf you would please, give your friend also also a chance to speak. Better to be happy on a rock than gloomy in the valley of Esehol. Nervous exeitement and dehberate earthquakes should be celle,ctedand printed chief ate two things ; the one may find an mis- they would make interesting reading. One of the latest published relates to a , young , Two swindlers are making money out of excuse the other never. the farmers at Fulton, 111., by driving The brute never did nor can sink so low ; &Attila who were courting when the shock came. It extinguished the lights, filled the around selling barrels of sugar at about half as the man who bla,sphemes his Maker's air with d qt and ',Immo(' the deem the market price, In a little time the farm- moo. that they would not open. The yonng•rimn ' er's wife strikes the bed of ordinary salt 011 i e -r 11. you wish+11 destroytlour influence, rushed to a window leading to the piazza, which a few pounds of sugar have been re- make the impression that you are a chronic but in the dark plung,ed both hands into a Posing. feult•flntler, large plant urn full of water. Starting back I Many seem to think it " a hard thing to ,d, Make tlie best of everything, [Double to the young lady, he threw life arum around ' pull up promising plants and throw them meaning 7] her,and said ; "Darling, a tidal wave is away." But if we would have good cab- 1 The way to make the worst of unavoid- corning l It is already up to the windoiv ! bages, cauliflowers, lettuce and roots, we able evils is to talk of them unnecessarily. Let us die together IL" in Which position they mtist give plenty of room, and, above all, 1 Iternetnber that it is not birth nor inherit - were found soon afterward by the family. keep the land clean, ' ea fortune that secures success in life. Sore Eyes The eyes are always in sympathy with the body, and afford an excellent index of its condition. 'When the eyes become weak, and the lids inflamed and sore, Itis an evidence that the system haa become disordered by Scrofula, for which Ayer's Sarsaparilla 1$ the best known remedy, Serofnia, which produced a painful in- flannuation in my eyes, caused me much suffering for a number of. years. By the advice of 0 phYsician,I commenced taking Ayer's Sarsaparilla, After using this medicine short time I was completely; Cured MY eyes are now in a splendid condition: and I am ns well and strOng as ever. ••-• Mrs. William Gage, Concord,N, For a number of years I was troubled with a humor in my: eyes waa wus unable to obtain tiny • relief unt I con -mowed using Ayer's Sarsaparilla. iS medicine has effected a eompleto cure, believe it to be the best of bloo purifiers. — C. E. 'Upton, Nashua, N. Front childhood, and until within a few months, I have been afflicted with Weak and Sore Eyes. have used for these complaints, with beneficial results, Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and consider it a great blood purifier. —Mrs. C. Phillips, Glover, Vt. I suffered for a year with inflamma- tion in my left eye. Three ulcers formed on the Vail, depriving me fof sight, and causing great pain. After trying many other remedies, to no purpose,I was finally Induced to use A.yer's Sarsaparilla, aud, By Taking three bottles of this medicine, have been 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 highest staudiug exerted their skill, but with no permanent success. On the recommendation of a friend I purchased a bottle of Ayer's Sar- saparilla, which my daughter commenced taking. Before she had used the third bottle her sight was restored, and she can now look steadily at a brilliant light with- out pain. ger cure is complete.— W. E. Sutherland, Evangelist, Shelby City, Ky. Ayer's -Sarsaparilla, Prepared by Dr. J. 0. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. field by all Druggists. Price $1; six bottles, $5. THE GREAT ENGLISH PRESCRIPTION Asuccessfulmedicine tested over SO years in thousands of cases. Promptly cures Nervous Pros- tration,WeaknessofBrain, nal Cord., and GenerativeOrgans of either sex, Ent iSSi0218 and all ills c mused by in clis. oretion orover-exertion. Six packages is paaran- teed to effect a curewhen all othermedicines fail. One package $1, six packages $5, by mail. Sold bydruggists. Write for Pamphlet. Address EU/MU CHEMICAL CO, DETROIT, MICH. For sale by J. W. Browning, Exeter, and all druggists. C. 8c S. GID-10.EY, UNDERTAKERS! --AND---- Furniture Manufacurers —A FTJLL STOCK OF— Furniture, Coffins, Caskets, And everything in the above immediate wan ine, to roeet We have one of the very best Hearses in the County, And Funerals furnished and conducted a extremely low pikes. EMBLEMS OF ALL THE 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 ladies. Pleasant, safe, effectual. Ladies aslc your drug- gist for Pennyroyal Wafers and take no substitute, or inclose post- • age for sealed particulars. Sold by eL, '\' \ all druggists, 51 per box. Address THE EUREKA osEnimr.. CO., ThernotT, . gar Sold in Exeter by J. W. Browning and all druggists. C BELL" BEANS - Unapproached for s-rdss---•d' Tone and Quality CATALOGUES FREE. BELLSECOa Guelph, Out. if.ktillt THE et LEER/1TE D -sd IP CHAS oE'S vaVjli8lW '- FOR LIVER AND KIDNEY D SEASES Tv/ pent man. wants to 7)7.1r - Mcrae, he balm fro 11 paf•ti rs 'aldose standing in their several callings Is a a larra nice for the qataity of their wares." This sterliug (,tto15 doubly true in regard. to patent niedieineF.. 1,ny only those made by practical professional MM. Dr. CHASE 113 too Well and favorably known 1,y htiosn.receipt books to require any recommesda- DR. CHASES Liver Cure has a receipt brolt wrapped around every bottle Which it Nvorili its weight in geld. Dn. CHASE's Liver (lure it guaranteed to ciire all diseases arising from it terpld or inntvo liver such as Liver Compile i Byspep.cia# Indigestion, Biliousness, .5, nuttier, Bends ache, Liver Spots, Soler., Complexion, etc.. THE KIDNEYS THE KIDNEYS DR CHASE'S Liver Cure is it certain cure for all derangements of dia Isidneys.slich es pain in the back pain in lower portion of the abdomen, constant desire to pass nrine, red told white sediments, shooting liable in passage, Bright'S disease and all nrinary trinibleer, etc. Trv it, take no other, it will cure yOLIE Sold by all dealers at SLOO per bottle.. , n. EuNt A tig014 & COE •OLC AGENTS FOR CAN.,DA. " g;iltbrOBO Sold at C. LUTZ'S, Agent, Exeter.