HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1887-4-14, Page 2or TUt
' A,Yer'a Hale Vigoe keepte tile hale 'Oft
and illepaeta to it the lustre and
fteoinos a yonieV, ettUtea it to VOW
eradleatel Dandruff,quees
scalp diSeasee,t.iU ie the most elemily
Of ell beinneePeratiena.
ANCRI.Q /tale 'Vigor has given me
4,14 IhOit perfeet satisfaction, I wee
11-narlv bag, for six. Year% during witielt
time 1. used many halr preparetione, bet
without Suceeee, Indeed., veliap
)141.1 but, wwi luowing th4illor>. ugtil
Wed. Ayelda Ham Vigor. I used two
bottles pf the Vigor, and ley head is now
well covered tvith a new growth a hair.
Juelson Chapel, Peaboay, Mass.
HA en that has become vveale, grey,
arale and feded, may have new life
and color estored to it by aim use of
Ayer's Hair Vigor. "My hair was thin,
faded, and dry, and fell out ire large
quantities, Ayerte Hair Vigor etopped
the falling, and restored iny hair to ite
origival color. .A.s a dressing for the
hair, this preperation has no equal, —
Mary N. Hammond, Stillwater, :Mien.
VIGORyoath, an beauty, in the
- appeal:a-ace of the hair, may
be preserved for tin indefinite period by
the use of Ayer's, Hair Vigor, a*A dis-
ease of the scalp caused my hale to be-
eorne hush and dry, and to fall out
freely.Nothing I triad seemed to do
any good until I commenced - esing
Ayer's Hair Vigor. Three bottles
this preparation restored my hair to
healthy condition, and it is now soft
and pliant. My scalp is cured, and it
is also free from dandetelf. — Mrs. E. R.
Fess, Milwaukee, Wis.
.Ayer's Hair Vigor,
Sold by Druggiste and Perfumers.
Pm:trier sAarsev, prompt action, and
wonderful curative properties, easily
place Ayer's Pills at tbe head of the list
ofpopular remedies for Sick and Nerv-
ous Headaches, Constipation, and all ail-
ments originating in a disordered Liver.
I have been a great sufferer from
Headache, and Ayer's Cathartic Pills
are the only medicine that has ever
given me relief. One dose of these Pills
will quickly move my bowels, and free
my head from pain.— William L. Page,
Riclimond Va.
Ayer's Pills,
ii'separed by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mase.
sold by all Dealers in Medicine.
THE
EXETER TIMES.
FARM'
ReteknY VIleateetlenne-
it one baa my means for forwarding his
vegetable 'plants, he ean do much to haste»
hiserops, Not many farm-gardenerstnake use
of hot.becls or cold frames, yet these, by
stagtiee their plants in whitlow boxes cox
gain some weeks in earliness over those who
sow their seeds in the epee, air Vegetable
008 ltre hardy and tender, Those of the
heady clasa may be sown this inoeth, while
the tender kinds cannot be sefely sown until
the time to plant Italian corn, The vege-
tables belouging to the hardy 6Iaas, usuelly
cultivated in family garaens, are: beet,
carrot, cabbage, lettuce, °Mona, parentp,
parsley, peas, redisli, turnip and spinach.
The seeds of any of these may be sown, in
the open gardeu as soon as the soil is dry
exough to be worked. Of course eome of
these, especially cabbage and lettuce, Areentd
much earlier by raising the plants under the
glass and eettieg out the young plants at
the tinie that seeds are sown in the open
ground. By the use of window boxes, (me
can raise all the plants usually needed in
the family garden. Such plants may be
purchased, but raising them is eheaper, One
who takes pride in his garden will avail him-
self of whatever means thae will allow him
to be a little ahead of his neighbors.
Is published every Thursday morning,at the
TIMES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE
•
mended by a correspondent. He says that
efaerastreet,nearly opposite Fittou's Jeweiery by washing the diseased parts thoroughly
LIVE' STOOK COMIIIENTS.
Wash the feet of your horses when they
are muddy, to prevent scratches.
It is false economy to put a spirited ani-
mal into flow drudgery. Mules and draft
horses are especially adapted for slow, heavy
work.
A farm ca,n be stocked up quicker, and
with less expense by purchasing and head-
ing sheep then any other way. The main
point is to start right.
.A farmer says: I know of no breed of
swine if properly hamiled that equals the
Chester whites for early maturity. I can
enumerate many instanoes where they have
been made to eveieh, dressed, at eight
months old, irom three to three hundred and
fifty pounds, mad at ten months even four
hundred pounds and over.
It is better to buy a good animal with a
poorpedigree than a poor animal with a
good pedigree.
Sheep that are no more than six years
old, will cut so closely with their teeth; that
kernels of gain can always be thoroughly
masticated. For this reasoe it will not pay
to grind grata for sheep.
A strip of sheepskin, with long wool,
tacked 'to the places where a horse sets its
teeth, mid dusted occasionally with cayenne,
will, it is said, have a restraining effect on
the worst "cribber."
Varnish for scratches in horses is recom-
Store,Exeter, Ont., by John White &Son, Pro-
, coach varnisla seedy cure is affected.
with warm suds, and applying • t f
nrietors.
a coat o
first insertion, per line—. ...... —......... ,10 cents. i A farmer'sn wpife says that three table-
It&TBS OF ADVEUTESING :
Each subsequeot insertion, per line.....,8 cents. spoonfuls of ground Java coffee given to a
To insure insertion, advertisements should
be entin not later than Wednesday
morning cow in a mess will cure the scours, and a
s
less quantity given to a calf or pig will neat r
OurJOB PRINTING DEPARTMENT is one fail to accomplish the desired result.
Ithe largest and hest equipped in the County i Professor Arnold_ statesthat it costs More
f Huron. All work entrusted to us will receiv i to make milk from old cows than it does
ur prompt attention.
Itegarding News- eePaoitY• As a rule the best effects do not
from youeg ones, having the same milk
Decisions
Papers. last beyond the eighth year of the cow's age.
I Ground oats two parts, bran one part, and
Any person vela o t akes a paper regularly from
he post-oftice, whether directed in his name or corn meal one pars, is an excellent mixture
another's, or whether he has subscribed or not for young growing stock of all kinds. It is
es responsible for payment. not necessary to keep young stock very fat,
2 If a person orders his paper aisconiinued
lie must pay all airears or the publisher may but they should be kept in growing condi-
sontinue to send ft until the uayrueut is made, tam at all times.
and then colleet the -whole ,u,niount, whether , .An Rlinois farmer gives his hogs red pep-
vhe paper is taken from tne oinoe or not. 1
b, per tea on their showing symptoms of chol-
a in suits for subscriptions, the suit may
instituted in. the place evn.ere the paper is pub • era, and claims that this has always proved
listed, although the subseriber may reside an effectual cure, and that he has never lost
hundreds of tuilee awal. a porker so treated, while his neighbors have
4, 'The courts have decided that refusing to
fake newspapers ST VOliOatettiS from the post. suffered seriously.
office, or rentoeing and leaving them uncalled Don't expect the young horses to stand as
for is prima facie evidence of intention elfraud
much hard work as the old ones, without in
reoonennmgda,. ya tnTohttehbeeeo nastbti Imiet ueto,tidobinsucotof vmietia• any-
andnricti
A G FT ss
fres st , ,ns dapwli wewillowe; sp.:, sos4 ,,nio g< tu goods
.0, duees
I
-I-:71 jury.
1
that will put you in the way of making more young hoe& that might have been valuable
money at once, than anything else in Ameeica. has been ruined in this way.
Both sexes of all ages ca,n live at home and.
work in spare time, or all the time. Capital
notrequirad. We will start You. reaniense
pay em e for those who start at once. STINSON
& CO 'Port! FLOC •Maine
Exeter _Butcher Shop.
R. DAvis,
Butcher 2f, General Dealer
—IN A.LL KINDS 08'—
Customers supplied TUESDAYS, THURS-
DAYS A.ND SATUBDAYS at their residence
ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE
. OEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION.
Bow Lost Bow Restor e
Wehave reeenteensublished a new edition
of DR.C1ILVERWrILL'S CELEBRATED ES-
SAY on the radical an d perm anent cure ( with-
out inedioine) of Nervou s Debility en tal and
physical capacity impedimeE
nts to ars lage,
etc.tresuiting from eXcessea.
Price sealed envelope ,only 6 cents,ortwo
postaPe stamps.
The celebrated authoroftbis admirable es
sayolearly demonetrates, from thirty years
fnicceest ul pr %aloe , that alarm Ing con sequen -
cea mayberadicany cured without the dang-
erous useof internee medicines or the use of
the knife ; Point out a, mode of ours! at once
simple certain end effectual , by meant' of
'winch evera sufferer, no matter wh at his con -
ditionnety be,may euxe himself elmaply,pri
vatelv d radically.
Thi lecture shonldbe in the hands of °V-
ery yolith and every man th land,
EEAddre s
CIIISEEWELL MEDICAL COMPANY
. 41 ANN ST.,1411W VOUS
TOSL 0fX105 Box 460
daseiffilgaileteMMUMSBOA=Bligellaileenteretidge&
HOW THE MALAKOFF WAS TAKEN.
Diplomatic Spying—The Story of a Despatch
that Brought $12,000.
Diplomatic espionage rendered a great
service to the second Empire in 1885 by en-
ablieg the French to get into Sebastopol.
The credit for the fall of that stronghold
was due, it has just transpired, to the late
M. de Moustier, who was in the year above
mentioned et the head of the French Embas-
sy at Berlin. At that time Col. Von Munster
was Military Attache of Prussia at St
Petersburg, and in high favor at Court. The
wife of the Czar Nicholas was a princess of
Prussia, and was fondly attached to her na-
tive land. All the representatives of her
brother were treeted by her with a kindness
verging on familiarity. The councils of war,
when the
SIEGE OF SEBASTOPOL
was going on, used to be held in her sitting -
room. 'Von Munster was given the minutes
of them. No detail of the campaign which
AIWERT.TS...ERS
• ,cati...learo.lh....e.x0,0 tost.
of any proposed line of
lerienVePaPeitia..AtiOrtisqllatf. .0-oe'n.an •
td pt'ttese St NoW
x' •
d
-'G Possotp1alet
• • •• ,•• ,...,•••• •-•1, •• •• • •: • •:. • • . • .•
To:40MM.
21 Jouti imus. TASOtirg.
' Liftes lemon') from the Peet we borrow,—
Teeny is sans, but eottommerow ;
Then. bingo to -day, lease cam wad sorrow
04i0 dui ahead—sae, "Yea toomerewei
Make Meade today tor twei to -morrow.
et:vea
lliostoreoroW
otorrow
To eloss eaell day end etQU each mermer.
Make lore toelay eameae more toeaorrovr 1
• Yee% have to spare when cithere borrew 1
'Twill be an ,antrdOte to sorrow
ehoeld pereeanee arise teenorrow.
Henry Ward Beecher.
AY VA. TOUNG,
Why eo rte weep He is not dead,
gar of ete ielsereet,
Diteth lee( .s tee "orm, toe soul is fled,
Aed COOS OV3,1 angels hate to bring
Feetweles,eleneest flowers to deck his nead.
For ouch all% for euoh a three
Why do we mom
That voice of joy that early rose
To theer men's seals shell still be borne
On winds of love from his repose.
Still where false pride and bigot zeal
. Hell's mitred warriors eon foe light,
The incense sprung from Beecher's grave
Shall gather eliempioas for the rie,ht.
Well might the feu, who bolo his worth
With fowers crown his homely hearth,
AO dress their city in the pall
Of death, deepair, remorse and all
The woes that ruortala know.
Suoh hia guiding star
When navy, ionowine Ar'rice's traek,
Usurped God's sew in human hearts
To paths of peace to turn their back.
A pathway marked by joy and love
Enolosea by strife around, above ;
Peace to his ashes, when in times' slow °muse
Cod's holy praise sounds from each home at eve,
And joy, not sadness marks the road to Heavea,
Then shall men praise his most exalted pia*
To leave on earth the impress of a man.
Bethesda,
BY L. A. lIOILIUSON.
Rea(iLT0101 IL 1. to 14.
Bethesda fountruu by the gate
In thought I view thy perched side,
And scan the helpless throng that wait
The moving of thy placid tide ;—
The Angers presence in the 'Pel,"
With hope, his coming may make whole.
How long, in weariness and pain.
These fettered ones have waited here 1
Bound by disease's galling chain,
With scarce a hope and many a fear,—
Waiting the " Movie.) oe the Pool,"
That one, perhaps, may be made whole.
And as Iran the weary'throng,
I eee a Stranger passing near,
Who moves with quiet grace along,
And drops a word of kindly cheer
To one—the weariest one of all—
Waiting, so long, to be made whole.
I see the eager upturned eye;
I hear him say I have no friend
To put WE in " A [swift reply
Comes from the Stranger and the end
Of weary waiting by the 'Pool
"Go silt no more, thou art made whole."
Oh, earthly remedies for sin 1
How impotent ye are to save 1
Ye are as feeble, life to win,
As ram Bethesda's troubled wave:
Ye seem to help the sin -sick soul,
Yet none but Jesus can make whole.
None but the Christ—strong. Son of God—
Can conquer death, or pardon sin,
011, sound His praises all abroad—
Invite the world to enter in
And wash in Israeas fount; .ch soul
That washes there, is eleameed and whole.
A rorest Dream
licY 3. R. VILA:NEON.
Bare and gaunt the forest standeth,
Reathing out so wide and high;
As if mutely supplicating
Mercy of an angry sky.
Oh ! such hollow, weirdly voices
Issue from its solemn aisles ;
As if lonely forest phantoms
Mourn the loss of summer's smiles.
I have sought the dim, old forest,
And its atilt familier ways;
Frozen streams, dark glens and bowers,
Dear to mein childhood's days,
Allis silent, and forsaken,
Leaf and flower lie cold and dead
ng m
;
IlutOppealito the emory,
Tgiling of a day that's fled 1
I have known when summer's mantle,
Pair, and sweet, as poet's dream,
Cover'd in a wild profusion
These old haunts with rustling green.
Then the forest aisles were merry
With melody the song birds made;
And its gentle echoes fellow'd
Every stream, and fragrant glade.
Then I sung with boyhood's rapture,
Leapt, and shouted in the dell;
Till the golden hush of sunset
With its silent shadows fth
O'er the hills, that wrapt in dreaming
Watch'd the moonnee on the sea;
Where the wavelets dane'd and murmured
Low voiced and mysteriously.
Life was one long dream of gladness,
All unlmown the future lay;
Ah 1 the years have brought deep sadness;
Sunnzer's merg'd wmter's gray,
And I wander, lone and weary,
Grieving e'er the faded past;
As the snowflakes flit around me
Borne upon the wintry blast.
gra QUM:Wan
The BOY, Doyee Starlteyo had, been a
reetetil in Ms now quartersthe parsonage of
the eburch, to which he had. letely been
called. The quertere were new to him, but
hall a deeen et his predecessors bad occupied
the house, which was pretty in itself, and.
prettily situated amid shrubbery and treee.
'.ha piaee was a amart towu in northern
Miehigan The pester end bis wife were
entertanung for a day three title, Starkeye's
ciaeemates at college, These gentlemea
°eine up frien Ohio for duck shootieg on the
Lake Huron shore, and 1104 stopped foe a
vieit to their old Behoonfellotv in Ina uew ke•
cation,
After dinner visitora aud hosts were sitting
la the cozy parlor while the shades of night
deepened. The talk was lively, and all
were in the best of spirits, when one of the
'visitors suddeoly exclaimed
"W Wei that ?"
Of everse everybody beeked at everybody
else, and the vieiters saw in Mrs. Starkeye'e
face an expreseion of annoyanae almoth
amounting to distress.
It was John Trennam who made the ex-
clamation. His eomrades, Jack Ducemien
and Henry Ketlow, demanded in one breath
"What is it, John?"
"What's the matter, old fellow ?"
Trennam exclaimed : "Why, that voice.
Didn't yon hear it, Sarkeye? A muffled
sound like the-- There it ia again Do
you hear that ?"
Every one hail heard it tisie time. A
muffled. voice, telly ; bet the words were
plainly head :
" Oh -h -h -h -h !—Don't 1"
A long dwell upon the first word, in a
sort of crescendoeweil ; then an instant's
pause, and the second word came, short and
iiharp but in a louder tone:
" 1—Don't !"
A woman's voice, evidently. So it seem-
ed to all the listeners.
won= a 'am INSECT
, nnettaelet
The Ceeeinelleeleet or lady birds, are Mnall
iiieeete living alma plant Hee, among which
they ravage like wolves in theep-fold.
People would stem be rid of pleat lice in
their conservatories if they would intreduce
tete them woe of theeebeetlea. It is Ce sefe
and certhen remedy for a y troeblesome
evil, &avenger beetles come aext in the
Scale of usefelness. Like the byenes apd
jackals among beasts, they live Altogether
upon decayed animal matter, and are of in-
calculable value to weekend. They conaiet
of many different races, bat foremoet among
tltem is a tribe celled the Neorophori, which
are literally Nature's undertakers, and
which carefully bury carcases left in the
40i1. As soon as a field -mouse, mole or fish
is eeented in a state of decomposition, they
troop to it in immentie numbers, gettiag un-
der the carcase, Ito/lowing out the ground
with their legs, and projecting the rubbish
in all directions. At the end of twenty-four
home it has generally disappeared in a hole
several inches deep, which is then filled and
She females lay their eggs in the tomb,
where the lame, upon being hatched, will
fled an abundance of food. The ancient
Egyptians were so convinced of the benefit
derived from these insects, that they regard-
ed them as sacred, and usually represented
them upon their temples, obelisks and stat-
ues,
The third and last class of Beetles, are
those which feed, both in their larval and
perfect form, upon vegetable aubstances,
aorne upon green wood, some upon fruits
and seeds, and others upon leaves,
As these iTi
nsects infringe mm the privi.
leged prerogatives of man—as they destroy
the wood destined for fences, houses and
furniture—as they devour our apples,
cherries, plums, pears and wheat, they are,
and always have been, considered enemies,
and treated accordingly. A universal war
is carried on against them, and our agricel-
tural and horticultural jourusla aro filled
with receipts for their destruction, just as
our newspapers with panaceas for rheuma-
tism, consumption, stomach ache, and" all
the ills which flesh is heir to." Of these
insects we shall have time to take but
one example to illustrate their destruc-
tive powers. The most formidable species
are the cockchafers, whose ravages have
been looked upon with horror and dis-
may in all aeintries and at all times. They
were at one time so abundant in England as
to stop many mills on the Severn, and in
Ireland their numbera were so great that
they darkened the sky for the distance of a
league. One will not be surprised, then, to
hear that the thunders of excommunication
were formerly launched against them as they
were also against locuata and caterpillars.
In 1479 the coelechafers were cited before an
ecclesiastical tribunal at Lausanne, where, as
the advocate for the defence could not find,
in the resources of his eloquence, arguments
sufficient to defend them, they were sen-
tenced to be banished from the territory.
But even within the last few years, 30,000
francs were subscribed for a cockchafer hunt
in France, in which nearly 300,000,000 were
captured. This is but one of the many,
many foes we have among the herbiverous
beetles; in fact every flower, tree, and shrub
seems to have its own particular foe. It
would, however, be unjuet to leave this im-
portant order, without mentioning one little
insect, that has been the means of saving
many human lives in Brazil, Guiana and
Mexico. I refer to the Cucujo or Fire Fly,
without which it would be impossible to
travel through the deep, dark forests cover-
ing these countries.
ORLD.
The night was not dark, but it was diffi-
cult to see much around the leafage sur-
rounding the parsonage. A soughing, west-
erly wind came htfutly through the trees.
The friends took their statione, and. half an
hour went by, while at intervals the wailing
voice was heard. Beyond all question it
was somewhere about the west end of the
house. But where? Now it sounded to
Ducem6 on the eaorch as if it were just
above his head ; but the next time it was
heard it seemed to be from the top of a
silver -leaf poplar that otood close to the
west end of the house. Duceman peered
around toward the poplar, and in his eager-
ness stepped off the porch among the shrub -
berry.
" Oh -h -h -h -h 1 Don't 1"
Almost directly above his hea,d, Duceman
thought. He was euro it was in the poplar
tree. He crept softly along until he stood
under the poplar, and then looking up in-
tently through the branches a dark form
outlined against the sky—a form upon the
peak of the roof and not in the tree. Duce -
man was both elated and indignant at his
discovery.
"I hate practical jokes and jokers—es-
pecially such stupid ones as this, " he mut-
tered as he stole quickly and quietlydoack to
the porch into the house.' gree -Stint
fellow a lesson he won't forget," said. Duce-,
man to himself as he secured his ducking
gun and then paid a hasty visit to Mrs.
Staikeye's kitchen.
In a minute more Woman gun in hanp
was stealing eoftly around the west end of
She house again. There sat the fellow on
the roof dimly seen'against the sky. Duce -
man raised his gun and fired. With a loud
shriek the figure on the roof plunged forward
into the poplar tree. But the branches were
small and brittle and the figure crashed
through them and alighted in the centre of
a great arboratitte. Out of this again it roll-
ed, spluttering, groaning and twisting iu
many contortious. Ducemitn dropped his
gun and sprang forward as the inmates of
She house came hurriedly out.
" Great heaven, Ketlow 1 w is it you?" ex-
claimed Duceman, as he reached the writh-
ing figure on the ground.
"0 po-oo ! OW -OW ! yes 1 You've killed
me 1 What did you shoot for? Oh -h -h !
my hip! my hip 1" answered the writhing
Ketlow.
But Ducema,n was getting bis breath
again.
"Oh, it's only a little charge of salt that
you've got," he said. "There was no shot
in it. It's only salt. Bat what were you
doing on the roof? Was it you making
Shat noise 1'
This did not stop Ketlow's smarting, but
the assurance that he had been hurt only
with salt relieved the others of apprehen-
sion. By degrees Ketlow explained. He
had gone to the second -floor room as ap-
pointed. There the wailing voice was so
distinctly heard that he expected to put his
hand upon the offender by reaching out of
She window. But when he carefully raised
the sash the wails seemed to come from the
roof above his head. Casting; about then he
found another window opening on to the
kitchen roof and fftim this the main roof
was easily reached. Ketlow resolved to
capture the wailing fellow while the others
were vainly evatclaing. Without difficulty
he got to tbe peak by the poplar tree.
The Enfsanohisement of Women,
A good many of our local legislators seem
to treat the proposal for the enfranchise -
burg ment of married women who have property
could give him was withheld. He sent con- in their own right as a good joke. In their "Yes, yes; but where was the wailing
fidential reports of the information so ob. small way they wax facetious on the eubject voice all the time you were sittine on the
tained to Berlin for the King's sole perusal. and think themselves justified in regarding peak there? I heard it right there just as I
Frederick William kept them a, secret from the proposal as either a weak or a inischiev- discovered you," naid Duceman impatiently.
every one but Gerlach—a kind of seer be. ous fad. In due course they will find them- "Why, I was cutting it off with my jack -
longing to the feudal party, who regarded selves undeceived. Only eighteen have knife when you fired your old cannon at
Manteuffel as an apostate because he advised voted for it this session,but it will come me," replied Ketlow with returning indig.
the King th keep on good terms with Nape. up again F nd again and in due time it will nation at a new twinge in his hip.
leon He , and who discovered, when Queen be carried perhaps by the votes of some who "Cutting what off?" they demanded
Victoria went on a visit to St. Cloud, that are now very strongly opposed. It is quite aghast
she was the 'Markt larlY of the Apocalypse. possible that there are some duties of citizen- "The voice," said Ketlow. "It was the
Manteuffel was furiously jealous of the royal ship which women cannot rightly be called limb of that poplar tree rubbing acmes the
favorin which Gerlach stood, and took means upon to discharge. It does not follow, how- edge of a shingle when the wind blew, I
to intercept the Munster correspondence so ever, from this that they should have no out it off to SbOW on how smooth it was
as to read it and have it copied. In one of voice in the management of public affairs. worn against the shingle."
these letters there was a despatch from Tod -Old men after a certain age are not expected
leben informing the Czar of the weakness of ' to
go soldiering, but they are not die -
the Malakoff, which could not hold out , franchised on that account. As to the
against a strong assault. Now, Mantetiffel's i danger of family quarrels nothing need be
copying clerk was in the pay of De IVIoustier, said. There are fifty things abont which
awl, when they were thinking at the Toiler- : husbands and wives may disagree, but they
. . . have to adjust themselves the best way they
M. Michelet says that he took them with
him and. fixed them onhis boots so that they
might show him the road end put to flight
the serpents, but when the sun rose he
placed them on a shrub and restored ;hem
to their usual occupations !
It, is a beautifal Indian proverb which
says, "restore the fire -fly to the place from
whence thou takest it." The Creole wo-
men make use of these fire -flies to in-
crease the beauties of their toilettes. Strange
jewels 1 which must be bathed twice a day
to prevent their dying. These living dia-
monds are placed in little bags of light tulle
and fastened with taste to the slurfs, but
the refinement of elegance consists in com-
bining the firelies with humming -birds and
real diamonds, which produce a dazzling
head-dress. Sometimes imprisoning these
animated flames in guaze, the graceful Mexi-
can women, .before going to a ball, twist
them into flaming necklaces or else roll them
round their waists in fiery girdles.
As before stated, wood -destroying insects
are directly very harmful to mankind, but
indirectly they are of the greatest import -
mice, especially in the tropics where many
hundred miles are often covered with im-
penetrable forests, which if left to themselves
would not de cay for years, but are soon re-
duced to dust by wood -eating insects and a
new and vigorous vegetation springs up
from the soil thue made fertile.
Though we are often tempted to think
that some of these insects are
" Borrowing the livery of Heaven
To serve the Devil in,"
the military authorities at St. Peters
les o or ermg siege o p,
CiSC raised, a copy of Todleben'e despatchwas can without going to Parliament to prevent
VVe ere lad to see the
sold to the French Embassy for 60,000 francs. lelat
P •
Orders were sent to Pelissier to attack the way things are shaping thernielves sheet
letelekoff. He, not wanting to be pestered this matter of women voting. It will de
by , is ineompetent Emperor and the gang good e Women no doubt may be deceived,
about him with military instructions, order- and a fine, frank young fellow may talk
ea the telegraphic wires to be cut, Marshal ' them over to vote for him sometimes ; but
with the secret paper irk his pooket. blackguards, as men frequently do, and they
will not vote keowingly for unhanged
Valliant was then packed off to the Crimea tkeY
I
It *As A new itnaenne will put the worst upon their good behaviour
tv
to Pelieeier, and all that reinaided was to jokers gtgeyhaveoggtgletvc:teelhe
t!'p.,eattapfeofar rather
lieeetnte
ele
get the English to attaek the Redan, while
the Feench were trying to stem. the Mahal- 1 reserve their wit for other °biotite, In 51115
eft The General wort a ducal title, a big slig8e6 ( . )ifhtybertlf:0Ye hba:f:retozlirtighhe pelna ,.t hierg 171 a,r 5 ,° VI
goat of money and a pension, and, became
out —Toronto Truth.
resS her beautiful
such an important pereoriage that the Dm -
P gave to hint the hand of
cousin, who' was presented by her Imperial
Majesty with a stiftablo dtCwry and a treas.
eciatt of regal magnificent:ie.'Pars .1;etter.
The tendency in novel writing nowaxlaYs
it tO introduce the supernatural in large
doses.
To More gmithu.
Jones—'t Have yon a family, Mr, Smith 7"
Stnith—“1, have tveo datightete."
" Have you no sous t"
Smith gh' g It '1 I hate no Nona
to perpetuate my name. It will die with
"Main" and Conspiduous."
The following interesting conversation oc-
curred between an attorney and a witness
in a ease in which a certain tree played a
prominent part :—Lawyer: Did you see
this tree near the roa,clesicle ? ' Witnets
"Yes sir; I saw it very !plainly. Law-
yer • IP
yet -ale was very consmenout, then ?
Witness "Well, I can't say that. I saw
the tree very plainly, though." Lawyer t
"Well, now, I would like to know why, if
it was plain, it waen't eonspicuous. What
it the difference between plain and conspie-
uous 7 Answer that, will you. ?" "Well,"
replied the Withett "15 is this—1 come into
dile court -room and gienee over the bar,
see you plainly among the other Iftwyere, al-
though you ain't a bit eonspictioes. '
Abnormal Weather.
Patient --Doctor, I've got a eon theoat
and e pait in hey eheett and thy head aches
ae
11 15 Weald split."
Doctor--" on rteecin't pay any attention
to those eymptoms, as they iediertte a nor-
mal condition. 11 during theptosent about.
Inpbbe Weitthefa marl feels pafeetly well be
is libt healthy-e,-Init I. tan euro
the deep inborn conviction is in us that
naught was ever made M vain," and one
Shing we know is that they are night and
day fulfilling that decree of God by whieh
all things are destined to return to the dust
from which they came, and as by His
infinite -wisdom they have been with us al-
most since the world began, they will doubt-
less continue
"Until the sun grows cold, and the stars are old
And the leaves of the judgment book unfoki."
Humors,
Erysipelas,
)FULA
I do Ilet boilers that
ATur's Sursapsrilla has
an equal 85 It remedy
for Scrofulous Etu.
mors: It is Tleassut
to take, gives strength
81115 Vigor be the body,
and produces e more
permanent, lasting, IT -
Kilt than Any amalgam
I ever used,—,E.
Heinen No. Lholitle, 0.
Canker, and
Catarrh,
Can be
cured by
purifying
the blood
with
bave toied Ayer's,i
Sarsaparilla, in toy. fettle
sly, for Serofula„,,,:sndi
know; if it istaken
faithf ally., it Will
thoroughly eradicate,
thie terrible disease,
W. F. Fowler, 3f, D.,
°molly i lie, Tenn. ,
For :forty yeali
b eve suffered with Er
sipelee, I neve tie
all sorts of reale
for my complaint, ut
found no relief unttit
nommeneed ,using
A y 1' s Selena) aril la.
Atter taking tee bot-
tles of this medicine I
ant completely cured.
—Mary 0, Amesbury,
Rockport, Me.
I have suffered, for
years, front Catarrh,
will& 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'
Sarsaparilla, and, in a
few 'months, was cured.
—Susan L. Cook, 909
Albany et Boston
Highlands, Mass.
Ayer's Sarsaparilla
Is superior to any blood
purifier that I havo.
ever tried. I have
taken it for Scrofule,
Canker, and Salt-
liheuma aud received
much benefit from it.
It is good, also, for a
weak stomach.— MI I lie
Jane Peirce, South
Bradford, Mass.
SarsaRarilia
C. Ayer ft Co., Lowell, Maes.
;
.lx bottles, S5.
Piv;Pered by Dr. .1,
Priee Si
Not Much of's Beconoilation.
The Israelites have a day of reconciliation
on which it is customary for those who
have hard feelings to shake hands over the
bloody chasm, Mose Schrumburg and Ike
Schwinclelineyer are rival merchant princes
on Queen Street and have said some pretty
hard things about each other, They hate
each other cordially, each one being very
much in the other's way.
On the day of reconciliation they hap-
pened to meet.
" To -day vash dot reconciliation clay," Bald
Mote, holding out his hand.
Isaac tot& the offered hand and raid:
" Mosee, 1 vishes you all dose dings vat
you vithes me."
"Yon vishes me dose dings vat 1 vishes
you, So you vants to start dot fuss again,
ehl Vy don't you shoost come out and say
dot you vithes me pad luck 7"
Drafting out the Paint.
The other day it horse in Irwin county,
Ga., wee bitten on the nose by a rattlesnake.
Ho VMS at once dosed with sweet milk and
alorn, mitt then three bottles of turpentine
were heated and the mouths of the bottles
plaid lil Secoesaion over the part bitten.
It is said that the green poion &mid he
pisinly eeets as it was being drawn trite th
bottle. This horse recovered.
^
The Great English Prescription,
successful Medicine used over
80 years in thousands of eases.
Cures Spermatorrhea, Nervous
Weakness, Ettl.f.38i0718, Impotency
and all diseases caused by abuse.
tweak] indiscretion, or over-exertion. Damn)
Ithe packages Guaranteed to Cure when all others
Fait. Ask your Druggist for The Great EnclIsh
Premeriptlen, take no substitute. One package
et. Six $5, by mail. Write for Pamphlet. Address
Eureka Chemical Co., Detroit, Mich.
For sale by J. W. Browning, C. Lutz,
Exeter, and all druggists.
'eeseeete_
0. & S. GIDLEAr,
UNDERTAKERS!
Furniture illanufacurers
—A FULL STOCK OF—
Furniture, Coffins, Oajs1its5
•
And everyt !ling in the above
immediate wants.
o meet
We have one of the very best
Hearses in the County,
And Fnucrals fureithed and conducted a
extremely low mices.
RUBLEISS OF ALX, DIFFEDI.:NT SC/MET:ES
PENNYROYAL, WAFERS.
Prescription of a physician who
has had a life long experience hi
treating female diseases. Is used
monthly with perfect success by
over 10,000 ladles. Pleasant, safe,
effectuaL Ladies ask your drug-
gist for Pennyroyal WaferS and
take no substitute, or inclose post-
age for sealed particulars. Sold by
all druggists, $1 per box. Address
THE EUREKA CHEMICAL CO., DExaorr, Alm"
rat Sold in Exeter by J. W. Biomming,
C. Lutz, anti all druggists.
" B E LL"
s
Unapproached for
Tone arid Quality
CATALOGUES FREEd
BELL &Guelph, Ont
TI�tYELEBRATED
CHASES
FOR LIVERAND' KIDNEY DISEASES
" When tin intetligaut man wants to war -
Mee, he buys front pctrti esultose standing in
tm
etr several ealiings i,s, a guarantee for th
Me
O le
of their are,Se This, sterling motto 18
, ibly true in rokard to patent medicines,, boa'
Dray those made by praetical professional men.
Dt. Olden istoo well andfavorahlyknown by
VS receipt boas to require anweecoirunende-
e. .
Dst. OriAsit s Liver Onre has a receipt book.,
. wrepped mound teenier bottle which ie worth lie'
veeight in gold, ,
Den Detest's Liver Cme is guaranteed to 'lento
'
all dieeeees aritting ,fienit a 'torpid ot bitteeiye
livet each he 1,110 er Cononlaint, tcygpeptila, '
Indigestion, 11111tonstess, +4stuna110c, ,IDOlid. '
netta,;Itivee SPotS,' SallOW Conipleition, pie..
T
I HS KIDNEYS ' THE KIDNEYS 7,
. .
DM Ciataa's Liver Cute fa a 'col:teem cure fos.
all derengere mite of tlio.kidueyseeecitae Pain in
, the beak ealti in lower portion of,the abdotrica, '
eenetarit &elite. to ,•pase ;Mitesthd' and - - ' '
watte
ffieenteertigpelri feece', Briguta
grgtota('grra7ini ' . .
le,k o e, it will o.old
,
biall eraters'at $1.00 pelebotele. ,
• . ir. isaltologs‹)14 lar co.,
, aemeseattare FoR call,. 5A. , 4- nesbrese
i' Sold at 0, ',LITZ'S, Agent, Exeter.