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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1887-5-5, Page 2Day and Night Varing ans aeete atteek of Bronelfitis, ! ceaseless tickling n the throat, and an exhaesting, dry, hacking. cough, atiliet the' sufferers Sleep is baaished, and greet wear:Won follows. This disease is also atteuded with Hoarseuess, mid somellines Loss of 'Voice, It is liable: to heemee aihrelfic, involve Via, letigS, mid termitnite fatally. Ayer's Cherry Peeteral alrerds speedy relief iind cure in ettees of Brou- ▪ It controls the disposition to vougli, and induces refreshieg sleep. , I luive been a practicing, physieitte for twenty-four years, and, fur the Pest - twelve, hoe suffered from ;imolai attitelts o f 13voncliitis. After exlmusting, the Usual remedies Without Relief X tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. It. helped me immediately, and effected speedy ure. • Ste veal], M. D., Carrollton, Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is decideilly the best remedy, within niy knowledge, for 4elarouic Beonehitls, tuiU all Meg diseases: --M. A. Rust, M. D., South Pads, Me. was attacked; last winter, with a severe Cold, which, from exposure, grew worse and finally settled on my Lungs, 13y n ight sweats I was reduced Minuet to ti /skeleton. My Cough was incessant, and 1 feequently spit blood. My physiehin told me to ;pee up business, or L wouldpot live a month. After taking various reme- dies without relief, I was loudly Cured By Using two. bottles of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. em now in perfect health, and able to resume business. after having been pro- nounced incurable with Consumption. — S. P. Henderson, Saulsburgh, Penn.. For years I was in ,a decline. I had weak lungs, and suffered from Bronchitis . and Catarrh. sks er's cherry Pectoral re- stored me to healtli, mid I have been for n long time comparatively vigorous. In ease of it suddeu cold I always resOrtao the Pectoral, and llucl speedy Edward E. Curtis, Rutland, Vt. Two veers ago I suffered from a'severe Bronchitis. The physician attending me became fearful that the disease would ter- minate in Pneumonia. After trying vari- ous medicines, without benefit, he gunny prescribed Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, whieh relieved me at once. I continued to take this medicine a short time, and Was Mired. , —Ernest Colton, Logansport, Ind. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & 0/34 Lowell, Mass. Sold by all Druggists. Price $1; six bottles, $5. TUB .EXETEB TIMES. Is published every Thursday m orning,at the TI MES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE Yfain-street, nearly oppoeite Pitton's Jewelery Store, Exeter, Ont., by John White dr Son, Pro- Prictors. B.,12,Bs O .DVEflT(8T2G: First insertion, per line.. .10 cents. Each sub segneat insertion,per line 8 cents. To insure insertion, advertisements should be sent in not later than Wednesday morning OurJOB PRINTING DEPARTMENT is one f the largest and beat equipped in the County f Enron, All work entrusted to us will receiv Ur prompt attention.. Decisions Regarding News- papers. • Any person who takes a paperreetilarlyfroin he post-officeswhether directed in his name or another's, or whether he has subscribed cm not as responsible for payment. 2 If a person orders his paper liscouilnued he must pay all airears or the publisher may eontinue to send it until the payment is made, arid then colleet, the whole amount, whether Lim paper is taken from the office or not. In suits for subscriptions, the suit may be Instituted in the place where the paper is pub- lished, although the subscriber may reside hundreds of wiles isway. 4 The courts have decided that refusing to *aim newspapers or petiodicals from the post - office , or removing and leaving them n.nes.11ed for is prima facie evidence of intim tionalfraud GE1FT ss el:paw] wcz ossvfeigugoritvaot you that will put you in the way of making more motley a,t once. than anything else in Amertca. Bothsexes of all ages can live at home and work in searetime, or all the time. Capital notrequirud. We will start yon. Immense 'ray am e for those who start at once. SmNsoit & Co .Portle.nti Maine Exeter _Butcher Shop. R. DAVIS, Butcher 86 General Dealer —IN nn Runcitor— M A T S Customers supplied TUESDAYS, THURS. DAYS elm SATURDAYS at their residence ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE OEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION. How Lost, Bow Restor e 17itehave recently uublished a new edition of DR.CTILVERWDLL'S CELEBRATED ES- SAYo n the radical an d perm alien t cure (with- out raedicine)of Nervou S Debility >Mental end physical capacity impediments to Marriage, ate., r asuiting from excesses. Price, in sealed envelope,otrly 6 cents,ortivo po4aceeeeletamn:s brat d authorofthis admirable es say alearly demonstrates, from thirtv years ,. successfulpractice St alarm Ing consegoen ces may be raclicallyqiiired without the clang- I snout use of internalmedicines or the use of , the knife ; Point wit a mode of cure atonce simple certain and effectual, by means of which eVOI'y sufferer, to matter whatiris con- ' ditioninay be,may (lure hlmsell chiaply, pri vatelv and rad lectuie'Slibuld be lathe hands of ev- ery youth and evervqdrin in th e land. Addrees ' ' HOUSEHOLD. The March winds he'take thO ipg deadleaves from the trees!, asid blown the light, loose rubbish inte heape in the hollows and valleys; and now the April show- ers have softened and washed, away what the winds could not remove, while the warm and purifying sunshine will help to carry forward the thorough renovating prooees which at tide sewn is going on throughout the entire domein a nature Indoors, the tidy housewife feels an impulse to fellow pit. tura' example, and cleanse her house of the dust and dirt, which, in spite of the weekly *fining, has eccumulatect during the long winter eeakion. To bring about this neces- sars, end without an undue taxation of phy. sical strength, should be the first thought in connection with this annual business of house.elea,ning. Do not ondertake to accomplish more in one day than can be done with ease and pleasere, It is far better to attempt only as much work as can be finished in the first half of the day, giving the. remainder of the day to other, less onerous duties, thus re- serving a fund of strength, which must be added to by adequate rest, for the work of the coming day. Do not make the mistake of upsetting many or all the rooms of it house et once; take only one room at it time, and arrange so that there shall be throughout the entire house-cleaning season, some cosy place where the family may live and test in com- fort. Get plenty of help for the heavy work. The f ishion many women have of themselves attempting to do all the extra work of house- cleaning in addition to the ordinary cares of the family, which are quite enough for them, is the poorest kind of economy; and overwork at this season of the year, ,vhen the system is naturally relai xed, s especially hazardous. Make thorough work of the cleaning pro- cess. Remember the closets, cupboards at- tic, and cellar. These are just the pfaces where dirt and germs are most apt to accu- mulate. Purify, and disinfect if necessary, every nook and corner of the house. Do not rest satisfied until the entire house and all that pertains to it, has been thorough- ly renovated ; but do not hurry through the work at the expense of health and strength; and, as it recent writer upon the subject aptly remarks : "No wornan should indulge the thought that what she is doing is drudg- ery, but that, like her great exampler, na- ture, she is performing a refining and elevat- ing process.' Praotical Recipes, NIAGARA CARL—Take one cupful of sugar, three cupfuls of flour, one and it half cupfuls of milk, half a cupful of butter, and two eggs; mix thoroughly, adding two tea- spoonfuls of baking powder. Bake in a hot oven. This is a really excellent cake. To Pagszuve OaArreEs.--,-Boil the oranges in clear water until you can pass a straw through their skins ; then clarify three-quar- ters of a pound of sugar to a pound of fruit, and pour over the oranges while hot. Let them stand one night, then boil them in the syrup until they are clear and the syrup thick. Take them from the syrup, and strain it clear over them. JAXINE MANGB.—Break up and boil an • ounce of isinglass of gelatine in rather more than a half pint of water, till it is melted; strain it, then add the juice of two large oranges, a gill of white wine, and the yelks of four eggs beaten and strained ; sweeten to taste and stir it over a gentle fire till it just boils up. Dip a mold incold water, and fill with the preparation. Do not allow any sediment to go in it. CRIBBER SALAD.—Minee the white meat of a chicken fine, then chop the white parts of celery, and prepare a dressing as follows: Rub the yelks of hard-boiled eggs smooth with a spoon; put to eaoh ylk one tea- spoonful of made mustard, half as much ritts:13114e:rpo?inengfiaanl aOtthe and & celery into a salad -bowl, le,y the chick- en on that, then pour over it the dressing. Lettuce cut small may be used m the place of celery, but the latter is much more de- licious. Cut the whites of the eggs in rings to garnish the salad. Lztrox Prz.—A delicious lemon pie can be made by following the receipt here given, namely: Take one cupful of bread crumbs, one of sugar, one of water, three well -beat- en eggs, the juice of three juicy lemons, the rind of two lemons grated fine, and mix to- gether thoroughly. Make paste, and a puff -paste crust to cover the pie, as follows I Rub half a pound of sweet butter into a pound of flour, and add half a teaspoonful tbind of baking powder; use just enough water to it, then roll it out, away from you, rather thin, and use for top and bottom crusts. If you like a puff -paste top, after you roll out this crust as advised, spread butter all over the surface, fold tbe crust together, and roll it out again, always away from you. Flour the pie -board well, also the rolling -pin; spread on more butter, fold, and roll as before. Do this three times In all, and you will have a, fine puff - paste crust. Or to make it less expensive and plainer, but very nice crust, mix with milk instead of water, and use one-half fresh sweet lard and one-half butter, instead of butter and water, THE CIILVERWELL MEDICAL COMPANY,: • 41 AN Si'., .NEW TOMS Post OffICe Box 460 delaartaillattriairanalMilt ADVERTISERS can learn the exact cost of a,ny proposed line of advertising in American paper,t, by addressing Geo. Po Rowell & Co., Newepniper Advcrtiaing 13UreaU, 10 Spruce St, New York. Send lOots, for 100-PAge Perlophlet Hints For House -Cleaning. ditchwater, 1,3oth teachers and scholaie are couutina the clays still to be put in before the whole thing is over, and the child- rea , especially are thial).itigthat tt> be away from, school will be patadiee, lewd), he the same with Kinderg rten 4 there is no wave of rejoicing, all-pervadieg love shed abroad 111 the hearts of thbse who organize and those who conduct such in- stitutions, Poets, it is said, are born, not made, KASo are teachers, and the supply of the genuine article, it is to be feared, is small compared with the Ileed. A thorough- ly•trained and perfeetly equipped teacher is a sight for sore eyes. Such persone are among the most blessed and most influentiel of the world's benefactors, when they have also the corresponding spirit. But when they want that, the mechanical and literary training and equipment vvill be comparative- ly of little worth. There may be plenty of water in the boiler, but if it is cold how is steam to be raised, or the engine to be started ? It is all right when the training and enthusiastn are both there, but if only one can be had, by all means let it be the enthueiasm, The man or the woman that loves the occupation and has heartfelt sym- pathy with and interest in the children, though greatly destitute of technical train- ing, will do Infinitely greater and better work than one who knows all about school, discipline and black -board demonstrations, but has no more sympathy than a stone and no more interest in the children, apart from the pay and the position, than if they belonged to another planet. Child -gardens will succeed and will bring any amount of blessiug on one condition only, that the true child -gardeners be secured and encouraged in their work of faith and labour of love. Nobody can teach effectually what he or she does not love, and the man or the woman that ceases to love soon ceases to know. The genuine teacher is among the greatest benefactors of the race. The shan't, mechan- ical article is the greatest fraud and the greatest curse. And how can people ex- pect anything but this sham al Hole to come to the front when the teacher's social posi- tion and recommendation continue to be what they too generally are? AN ANGRY FARMER. 4. Valuable Horse Stolen From Him and Sold to Him Again by the Brazen Thief. I can tell you of a trick that was played on an old farmer in Switzerland county, Indiana, that just takes the cake for un- adulterated cheek. The old farmer had a valuable saddle -horse that was his favorite animal, and he pleferred a ride on its back to is seat in the grandest buggy. But one morning the old fellow'on going to his stable, discovered that the lock had been pried off, the door opened and his prize horse gone. The way the maddened owner swore about the theft was terrific, and, after searching the neighborheod, for the missing animal and finding no trace, he got out posters advertising his loss, and offered $100 reward for the thief, and $50 reward, for the return of his horse, which was described as it light bay animal with two white feet, one in front, and one hind foot white almost to the knee, with it white spot in the forehead. WEEKS ROLLED BY and, notwithstanding the liberal reward and the efforts made to tind the stolen animal, its whereabouts remained unknown, and the old man mourned his favorite horse as lost A BAOICWOOD'S STORY. many years ago—where now the thriving tOWns amil villages ill the County of Grey are located—the laud was covered by forests with here and. there is small clearina made by the sturdy first settlers. Tales of thrill- ing adventures, »arrow escapes, encounters with wild. beasts, ete,, were much more conunon than they are now, Noble old pioneers, with hearts of oak and mueclee of Steel, many of you are now eluunbering Peacefully in our cemeteries! The grand examples of your perseverance, your unsel- fishness, and your unswerving devotion to the hard duties of life, have been, in mazy CaS08, forgotten. In after years, when a comfortable competeuce had reward- ed the Arduous toils of early life, how your dim old eyes flashed, SS reeollections ot long Past at uggles, adventures and triunsphs were vividly recalled to your memory by the chatty, friendly gossip of your eld corn- rades I liow often the writer bat) sat before the waning log fire of an old-fashioned hearth, listening with growing iuterest and keenest pleasure to the personal reminis- cences ot backwood life by gray•headed veterans, sometimes until the midnight hour was announced by the deep, measured strokes of the old-fashioned Connecticut clock. One of the adventures narrated pos- sessed a wonderful fasethation for me, who, boy -like, loved to hear thrilling bear stories and such like. One wild, stormy night in the eliring of the year, a famous hunter and trapper, who was svell.known to many of the older settlers now living in the Townships o Euphrasia and Collingwood, was returning home from a distant clearing. Part of the way the old hunter's course lay along the borders of a small stream of water fringed by dense swamps. The well beaten cows path led hither and thither, following the windings of the stream, and sometimes di- verted by fallen timber. Other footpaths crossed and re -crossed at irregular intervals, but the experienced woodsman and hunter did not once lose his way. Great masses of fleecy clouds ,floated swiftly across the sky, ever and anon revealieg the bright star -besprinkled canopy of heltven beyond. The wind rapidly increased to a gale, and the crash and roar of falling timber where the forest was thinnest was enough to appal the stoutest heart. At length the hunter crossed the stream by means of a fallen tree and soon was trudging along one of those old-fashioned corduroy roads, of which there are yet a few in this country. Thc wind was now blowing at it terrific rate— shrieking and howling amongst the lofty pines and cedars like something supernat- ural. Crack,—crash,—boom ! .A giant elm, torn from its mighty roots, fell with a roar across the rude roadway within a few feet of the sturdy traveller—so near that its branches scratched his face as it fell. , " Phew—w—w—w l" whistled the sturdy old hunter, " thet wuz a purty olost shave; sartin' my time haint come yit or I'd soon ben like John Brown's body a' molderin' in the grave. Well, hev tew be more car- cumspect til I git out onter the long cross- way." A few rods of smooth road ran through it small clearing made by a desultory squatter, who had long since vacateehis claim and; moved farther west. After this came what was called the "long" crossway, which was about as appropriate a designation as that forever. Several months after he had been given to the street which is called :Aram t robbed one day a stranger rode up to his in Holy Writ. Thus crossway w&si about house riding &beautiful brown horse that at forty rods in length, and was certainly one once attracted the attention of the plundered of the roughest, toughest specunens of the farmer. The stranger said he was buying old-fashioned "corduroy" to be found in the county at that tine. It was composed cattle, and spent some time looking at a couple of steers the farmer wanted to sell, but regarding the price asked as too high the visitor said he wouldn't purchase that day, but wouldn't mind selling the farmer his horse, as it was too fine an animal for his business. The old man consented to mount the horse to see how easily it could carry a rider. Delighted with the trial, and growth of cedars and balsams,with a pleLti- saying it rode as nicely as the animal he had ful sprinkling of trees of larger growth. I lost, and trailed in as fine style as his pe- Our old hunter had traversed about ten had, he believed he would make the pure or fifteen rods of the "long" crossway, when chase. After half an hour's dickering the a low, deep growl reached his quick ears., bargain was closed, and the brown horse be- Ha 1 what was that? Crash 1 It's not the carne the property ofthe old farmer for the storni, for here he is protected from its vio- price of $120 cash in hand. The stranger lence by the dense swamp. on either side of bid the new owner good-bye, hoping he him. He can hear the wind roaring behind would be better pleased with the horse the and in front of him—yes, and he can see the longer he owned him. A few days after- clouds rushing madly overhead. Crash! Then ward the old gentleman was returning homt the deep growl is repeated with an emphasis from a trip to town astride of .hia recent not to be mistaken. The branches crackle purchase, when he was beneath the weight of some heavy animal. avERTAIIIIN BY A HEAVY RAIN, Next instant the dark form of a huge ani- mal moves out on the crossing. Slowly the and both man and animal were thoroughly, drenched. Reaching leis stable, he directed. great brute raises itself on its hind legs and approaches the stout old hunter. Then the his hired man to -rub tlfis horse perfectly dry, latter realizes that he has to tackle a bear, so it would take no cold from the soaking ' I made unusually savage by his long winter had received, while he entered the house to fuss. He has neither gun ; nor pistol with it attire himself in a ''dry suit of clothes. 'Be' which to defend himself. fore he had fairly rested from his ride the ,g Might hey knowed enough to bring the hostler came rushing into the room, telling old gun," he muttered as he considered the of loge of all sizes and shapes, and, as can well be imagined, the noise made by heavy four wheeled vehicles in crossing it was not unlike the fierce roll and crash of heaven's artillery during a big storm. This erossway was hemmed in on both sides by a dense swamp, composed of a very thick under - him to come to the stable Unimediately and seriousness of his position and the RELIC$' OF THE` DAlit AGES. srtel:eauotifytlfiten aaefiesiilne raml/aVneshtop,Vviirigytoiniar insisting in the eoutee of a trial before the sapient magistrate that the moon had some- thing to do with the ebb and flow of tides. A little negro girl of Calhoun goes up into the mountable every day or two and talks, so she says, with an obliging angel who tells her a great many mysterious secrets. The black people place is greatdeal of confidence in her revelations, and await her eoniing and going with enxious interest. Her latest piece of infounation ie that the town will be vieited by is cyclone, following close on the heels of a disastrous earthquake, before the year 43 out, and will be totally destroyed. Frei* Winn, a precocious young colored boy of Dallas, Tex., has shown considerable inventive skill, and many of the more super- stitious of his race think that he is in league with the devil. Last week tiorne of the cred- ulous blacks tried to rout Satan out of the young inventor's dwelling by nailing up the door and suspending before it strands of hair tied around bits of broken glass. To clinch the argument with the black fiend they tacked a horseshoe on the lintel of the thekorannob. dattached precious rabbit's foot to h negro cook at, Athens, Ga., had a se- vere attack of rheumatism in the back not long ago and called in a voodoo doctor to treat him. The voudoo man said that his patient was under the malign influence of an enemy, and going out into the yard re- turned with apiece of red flannel tied in the middle with is blue string, which he de- clared to be the Callt30 of all the trouble. The offending cloth was burned in the sick- room to the accompaniment of weird incant- ations, the patient said he was much better and the doctor, having received his proper fee, departed. One of Mrs. McLane's hens, near Thomp- son, laid an unusually large egg a short time ago, on which, it IS declared, was written in startling capital letters the inscription. "Terrible Earthquake in March. The news of the omen fiew around among the negroes with great rapidity, and intense ex- citement prevailed. Prayer -meetings were held in cabins, people'confessed their sins to one another an an alarming state of mental depression and religious fervor ob- tained among many of the blacks. It is now supposed the mysterious inscription was the work of a young man employed on Mrs. McLane's farm. Canada and Her Neighbors. Commercial union between the United States and Canada is being discussed with renewed interest, and it must be said that never was so general a desire expressed for closer commercial dealings with our neigh- bours as now. Mr. Erastus Wiman sees in commercial union, or a complete system of reciprocity, a wise escape from the difficul- ties which surround the settlement of the dispute about the fisheries, and Mr. Gold - win Smith, in an address to tse Canadian Club in New York, expressed himself frank- ly in favour of close commercial relations between the people and the two countries. "Nor need any Canarlim. fear," said the professor, "that the political separation to which he clings will be compromised by commercial union • it poor and weak na- tionality that would be which depended on a, customs line." Further on he eaid, that "11 political union ever, takes place between Canada and the United States it will net be because the people of the United States are disposed to aggression upon Canadian inde- pendence, of which there is not a thought in any American breast, nor because the im pediments to commercial intercourse and to the free interchange of commercial service will have been removed, but because the two portions of the Anglo-Saxon race upon this continent, in blood and character, lang- uage, religion, institutions, laws and inter- ests are one people." To annexation, how- ever, our people will not listen. They have no desire to exchange the Union Jack for ths1 Stars and Stripes, and while it is no doubt the case that there is an undercur- rent of feeling in favour of more intiinate trade relations with the United States, even if the result should be annexation, the pre veiling sentiment of the community is in favour of retaining the political connection with the old land beyond the sea. If there is to be a change it will come in the direc- tion of Canadian independence, and in the opinion of many, Canadian inelependence would serve as a barrier to American an- nexation. It is a fact not without signifi- Oattee that while the air in the new world is charged with suggestions in favour of a set- tlement of the fishery dispute on the basis of complete reciprocity, a conference should be in session in England aiming at imperial federation. Two forces are pulling in op- posite directions. What will be the result? look at at the horse. Apprehensive that some • ed fierceness of his antagonist, which now no time in reaching the stable, but what was of lost 1 approached with a series of growls as a sort trouble 'had befallen the beast, he his amazement, instead of seeing, a dark- " musical" accompaniment. brown horse he beheld a light bay, with one one of his "i Suddenly the hunter thrust his hand into ar e pockets and the next in - white front foot and .one white hind foot, I stunt the ion:, keen, , the very image of his mourned and stolen ' sharp -pointed blade clasp knife flashed in the deepen - animal. An examination followed. The ' inof agllanrogme. white spot in the fdrehead was soon made Every muscle of the old trapper visible by a little rubbing, and a scar die_ 1 was braced for action, the compressed lips closed on the back that established the i iteind steady gaze denoted a determination to identity of his lost but new found favoriteci 1 s 1 life as dcarly as possible. Bruin hints It sE...eined instinctive!? to be- ' d , come aware of the fact that he had trained that he had bought back his own horse. The and his astonished owner became convince an powerful antagonist to contend with, To clean steel; apply with it flannel cloth white feet hidden &Rd the bo y changed ffor he moved cautiously though clumsily ammal had beenjcolored by someciprocess,the a paste of emery powder and sweet -oil. • Mirrors rea,y be cleaned with cold water the rain, a.nd made to disappear by the rub - and a sponge, or rubbed with a damp cloth ' ping given by the hostler, and its owner had ' Quick as a flash the blade of the knife clear - dipped into powdered bluing, and then been duped into paying a handsome price ed the air and was driven with terrific force polished, for hie own property. After his anger at heart. But bruin was not fatally injured, into the bear's body, in the region of the had vented Mali in and with a ow o rage ung Is glee 1 t'l the brave old hunter could from a light brown, which was disclosed bY nobnrwnasrtc,feun ih el is hot breath on hie face. the trick that had been practiced upon him • hit fl h' t For‘the destruction of moths, pursue the carpet, told it back, and wash the floor A SToitilf OF iiiPRECIATIoNS. 'erful fore•legs around his antagonist, following plan : Take the tacks from the po a underneath in strong suds in which a table- a5ainst the authors of the game he caution- drawing the hunter into such a close em - e his folks to keep the matter a secret es! brace OS threatened to squeeze him out of dry, sprinkle the carpet and floor with insect t e in a jiffy Stars danced. before bore. I3ut before the summer wa,s over all seemed howling aroond his ears. Treee and spoonful of borax has been dissolved. When he didn't want to be -laughed at by his neigh- Visiseeynees, and a roaring, thundering sound d d t k f anonymoue letter reached him, bearing the shrubs spun like tops or revolved themselves Persian insect powder, if carefully and postmark of Louisville Ky announcin • • • • g into huge hantoms, tin eatening every mo. persistently used, will generally be found that the writer had stolen the horee from merit to farl and crush him. Could this be efficacious for the extermination of roaches, him, and, seeing his offer of a reward for the death? 0, God ! let him but live until he coi An exchange says that if powdered borax recovery of the animal and tine arrest of the tld crawl to his Wife and little ones, is plentihilly sprinkled aroued their haunts thief, he (the writer) had concluded to re- Life I life I—ha 1 Now— • and occasionally renewed, it will prove an present the thief, deliver the horse and r ' • effectual exterminator. ceive the reward, which, be was pleased teo " Richard's himself again 1 Say , the old fentlemen had generously paid That d-eadlY hug has relaxed. The -bear Kindergarten Work. to him. but, rom the kind manner in svhich is becoming Weak from less of blood. Life— tic tivin life—quickl returns to he had been treated vvhen he turned the tehn:rogled tr'spper.° He draws a deep breeth, There is likely to be a boom in Kinder. gluten work. It ' is well that it should. horse over to its rightful owner, he WWI con- ! But in order to boom that work it is neces- vinced that after the 'old man had paid him bracea himself firmly on the " corduroy," eery to have the neceesdry spirit. The the reward end recovered hie horse end let arid up towards heaven goes that strong core, of thost of the teaching that le going him go so quietly that he did not want tile right arni, grasping firmly the bloody knife; thief ; but'he would remind him that there dthees% iticheetinneeatgrulemedisatrtoinfgdOeanthh: r Qp ur if cyk, is tha,t a iraet proportion of the teachers haVe • no love for the work, Theyi take to it for was stIll loalence due between the emcatnt at:1 lightning the blows ate repeated, utntil paid and the revserd offered, and he lursed vica point ie touched. Buti even hi the this reason or for that, but it is a drudgery and a nuisance te them. the seine. Th3 the eia man would remit ist an early date. the beak it a terrible an - The cloubly-enraged horse -owner destroyed tagoiliil°sigt°f dedathhe' fere E;ifc-eu b. b consequence is that life with such becomes ago , an ing, e Pl13. a miserable gin -horse round. of mepethianeicialli .18Weitieutteitritahned hsaaida hh,e7inwpedouldtenef‘vherunrge8bsoilmate- tereetitSchinesaitdrilmk!ungne(t)Iplegeihelitingteenr tatoolloolwwhteh v; fagging.. These people have tie interim! horse thief 1 their Work. They' have not ti 1' ht idea of making teaching,their life occupation.' ; Eruiset 04.1 b ang/th mac e ig est , Y"set‘,- way, where he lay , f'Sr nearly an hour. I h hey are a ss avs dreamt g f so etlangs ties, The German vernment has pure ;seed ed home, thank tit for is ne•rroW escape 'They put neslife or enthusiasm into school for $orio,oco an haventio-U for steering bal. hut lrlWardlY to go abroad' routine, The result is that all is as dull as loons, again 'without his treaty riae. A Sonoma .Eagle, A peculiar story is told of an eagle which had been watched for thirteen consecutive years by the residents of a quiet valley not many miles from Santa Rosa. The same eagle has for the above named period of years built her nest in ' a cave and there reared her young unmolested. She will rendarly in the spring come from sonie un known place, lay her eggs and hatch her young. After the young are old enough to take care of themselves she leaves them in the valley and flies away, and is not seen again in that neighborhood until the follow- ing spring has come. Where she goes to and where she comes from no one is able to tell. The young seldom follow her off, but stay in the valley and are shot or stray away. In the spring when she cornea to build her nest, she will fly directly over the cave for several days; the meaning of this nob3cly is able to tell, but the supposition is that it is,to find out whether she cave is occupied by varmints or birds of her own nature, Each day ehc can be noticed lower- ing down toward the ground, until at last Af she reaches the cave, ter this, perhaps, she is not again seen for it week, when she litnasuiltemeneear ROFULA Humors, Erysipelas, Canker, and Catarrh, Can be cured by purifying the blood with I do not believe that Ayer's Sarsaparilla has an equal as a remedy for Scrofuloue Hu- mors, It Is pleasant to take, gives strength and .vigor to the holly, end produces a more m peranent, lasting, re- sult than any medicine I ever used.—B, Haines, No. Li ndale, 0. I have used Ayer's Sarsaparilla, in my f am- ly, for Scrofula, and know, if it is taken faithfully, it will thoroughly eradicate this terrible 'disease. -- W. F. Fowler, M. D, Greem Ille, Tenn. For forty WATS I IIRVe puttered w b Ery- sipelas. I hue tried t11 sorts of r bodies for mbit, eompl , but found no relief until I commenced using A. ye r' s Sarsaparilla. After taking ten. bot- tles of this 'medicine I am completely cured. —Mary 0, Amesbury, Rockport, Me. I have suffered, for years, from Comb, 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'sSarsaparilla, and, in a few months, was cured. —Susan L. Cook, 909 Albany et., Boston Highlands, Mass. Ayer's Sarsaparilla Is superior to env blood purifier that r have ever tried. I have taken it for Scrofula, Can k e r, aud Salt - Rheum, and received much benefit from it. It is good, also, for it weak stomach. --Millie Jane Peirce, South Bradford, Mass, Ayer's Sarsaparilla Prepared by Dr. J. C.Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. ' prim *1; six bottles, ,1145. The Great English Prescription. A successful Medicine used over 30 years in thousands of eases. Cures Sperniatorrhea, Nervous Weakness, Emissions, Impotency and all diseases caused by abuse. Duman) indiscretion, or over-exertion. [Arran] Six pachages Quaranteed to Cure when all others Fail. Ask your Druggist'for The Great Enellsh Prescription, take no substitute. One package 81. Six $5, by mail. Write for Pamphlet. Address Eureka Chemical Co., Detroit, Mich. For sale by J. IN . Browning, C. utz, Exeter, and all druggists p. 8c S. GIDL UNDERTAKERS! ----7–AND------ Furniture Manufacurers —A FULL STOOK OF— Furniture, Cof6ns, C4skets, And everything iu the above to meet immediate wants. We have one of the very best Hearses in the County, And Funerals furnished and conducted it extremely low prices. EISTITLEMS OF ALL TITE 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 .ask_ your drug. gist for Pennyroyal Wafers and take no substitute, or inclose poste age for sealed particulars. Sold by all druggists, $1 per box. Address TH/BEUBEICa.Carmrcis.i. CO., DETcorr, luma Be ;sew in lexeter by J. W. Browning, C. Lutz, and all druggists. ELL" ORGANS Unapproached for Tone and Quality CATALOGUES FREE. BELL &CO., Guelph, Ont. THE ftELEBRATE111 mr? D 1.4 CHASE tt1441:441 will come out in search of food. FOR LIVER AND KIDNEY DISEASES Engliih Boots in Egypt. The supply of beetle boots carried to Egypt by one of the last drafts of our forces there dught not to result in fortune to the unecrupulone melee., as a similar piece of enterpriee did during the Crimean war. j On investigation being ?male, according to the correspondent of a contemporary, into the badly shod Condition of the men, it was diecovered that the boote were machine made, which is contrary to the contract for boots to be need on active service. But, be. yond this, they were composed of thin leaves 1 tohf pliti•eill,t3rueinwd ciaLihnga tshuebrnsi anbc:olsiodineley. useless for hard work, This is a ease in which the gtiilty party can be traced and exposed or punished without the aluthegt difficulty, and the pitch helots need not join the bayonets, the cartridge, the hay, arid all the other things which no official fellow cad understand.—Ptt 14fatipteette. 4 When an intelligent man wants to pur- chase, lte buys from parti es whose standing in gnolity of thetr wares. Th s sterling motto le doubly true in regard to patent medicines, buy Only those made by practical profeesioned men, Dr One st o Well and favorably known by • § .1 P . his receipt DOCKS to require any recommenda- their severa callings is a uarantee for the tion. DR. CMAS/4 $ Liver Cure has it receipt book wtaimed around every bottle which is worth its vveight in gold. Du. Cnssit's Liver Cure is guaranteed to (lure all diseases atisixig from a torpid or inactive liver such as liver tiontolnini, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Biliousness, Jaundice, Dead - ache, 'Jiver Spots, Sallow Complexion, ere.. THE KiDNE.Nos THE KIDNEvs Bit. CHASE'S Li -Ver Cure is a certain cure for all derangements of the kidneys,such as pain in the back pain lower portjoe of the abdomen, constant desire to pass urine, red and White sediments, shooting pains hi passnros Bright's discaSe and all urinary troubles,,etc. Try it. take no other, it will cure you, Sold b all dettic"s et $l,00 per bottli.., 3r/ Jr. 'Els aA.N7.30N & to., tett seeress Pea CAN, DA. • OciAbrOViO Sold at O. LUTZ'S, Agent, 14,xeter.