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The Exeter Times, 1887-9-15, Page 2Day and Night During an acate Attack of Bronchitis, a teaseless tickling in the throat, aud exhausting, dry, 'Inciting eouela, the etifferer. Sleep is laauished, and great prosteatien fellows. This disease is also sitteuded with Hoarseness, And sometimes laese oa 'Voiee. It is liable to become thrones, luvelve the limp, and termiseste aatally. Ayers Cherry Pectoral afferdS 46Pee1Y relief anal cure in ceses of Broil - abatis. It controls the disposition to *pug' h , and induces eefreshiug sleep. I have been 3 prsetieing physician aor tweuty-four years, mil, the past twelvealutve suffered from aimeel attaelcs of Bronchitis. After eashautting, all the usual remedies Without Relief, tried, Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. It helped ace immediately, end effeeted a tPeedY acure, —Ga S to v eel , ;51. D., Carrollton, 31 iss. Ayer's Cherry Peetoral Ps decidedly the best remedy, within my knowledge, for chronic Bronchitis, and ea lung aiseases. — M. A. Rust, M. JD., South Paris, Me. I was attacked, last winter, w ith a sevens Cold, which, from exposure grew worse fina snd lly settled on my' Lungs. By might sweats I was reduced almost to n Skeleton. My Cough was Incessant; and I frequently spit bleod. My pbysician told me to give up business, or 1 wouid siot live a mouth. Atter taking various reme- dies without relief, I Was finally - Cured By Using two bottles of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. I am now in perleet betals, and able to resume businessafter having been pros flounced ineurable with Cousumptiou.- - S. P. Henderson, Saulsburga, Penn. Fee years I sees in a decline. I had -Weak lungs, and suffered from Bronchitis and Catarrh. Ayer's Cherry Peeeeral re- -stored lase to health, and I have peen for a long time comparatively vigorous. In lease ot a sudden cold I always resort to the Pectoral, and and speedy relief.— Edward E. Curtis, Rutland, Vt. Two years ago I suffered from a severe Bronchitis. Tlae physician attending me became fearful that the disease would ter- minate in Pneumonia. After trying, vari- ous medicines, without benefit, he tinnily prescribed Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, which relieved me at once. I continued to take this medicine a short time, and was cured. —Ernest Colton, Logansport, Ind. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Prepared by Dr. J. 0. Ayer Es Co., Lowell, Blass. Bold by all Druggists. Price in; six bottles, $4. IHEAL'Ilii. Medloine Par Wealy Brabe• Many pet wise seek relief iroin 'Mroarinee I and lassitude, in thinga whiplo!stimulate isp excite them. 'Patties who do this are siMpl buruing the candle of life at both ends, Whipping a tired horse may make hiin go, gat it does not make him strong, nor length- en his life. THE EXETER TIMES. Is published every Thursday morning,at the TIMES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE A judicious writer says : "The best pos- Bible thing for a man to do when he feels too weak to earry anything through, is to go to becl and sleep as long as he oan. Tide is the only actual recuperation of brain force the only reouperation of braiu power ; be- cause during sleep the brain is in a state of reat, in a condition to receive appropriate partielea of nutriment trom the blood, whoh take the place of those that have been con- sumed by previous labor •' for the very act of thinking burns up sendparticles, as every turn of the wheels or screw a the steamer is the result of consumption by fire of the fuel in the furnace. The supply of conaum- ed brain substance could only have been derived from nutritive particles in the blood, which were obtained from the food eaten previously, and the brain is so conatitnted that it can beat receive and appropriate to itself those nntritive particles during the state of sleep. Mere stimulants supplys no- thing in themselves; they gorge the brain, and foroe it to a greater consumption of its embetance until it is so exhausted that there is not power enoughleft to receive a supply." The weary man, by the aid of any stim• ulant, drives away sleep, drives away the best friend he has, and may find, when too late, that the friend has gone beyond recall. Sleep is a priceless gift, restoring and re- freshing the weary. Let us see to it that we do not abuse this gift, and so prepare ourselves for sleeplessness, trouble, and death at the end. Blain -street , nearly opposite Fitton's lastetery Store, Exeter, Ont.,by John White a eon, Pro- prietors. mans or dinvEratarita : eirst insertion, per line. ..... .. .. ao cents. Pia ob. subsegam, t insertion ,per cents. To insure insertion, advertisements should be sent in notlater than Wednesday morning oura0P, PR/NTING DEPARTMENT is' one the largest and beat ermippect in the County f Huron. All work entrusted to us will reoeiv nr eromet attention: , Decisions Re‘rardin g N ew \ • papers. a Any peason,who takes a paperregasarly !resat beporit-oflace, whether direoted in We name a; another's. or whether b e has subscribed or not ts responsible for payment. If a person orders his paper :Reconfirmed be must pay all airears or the publisher may continue to send it until the payment is made, And then collect the whole azuount, whether ahe paper is token fromlne offioe Or not. 3 In suits forenbscriptions, the suit may be itustitutedin the place wherathe paper is pub Relied, although the subscriber niay reside hundreds of miles away. • 4 The courts have decided that refusing to take newspapers or peliodiceas from the post - office, or retooling and leaving 'them uncalled feria prima facie evidence of intentional trona Sandie cents postage and, weWill send you f ree a royal, valuable sample box of goods that will put you in the way of making eters money at once, than anything eisein Arnerioa. Bothsexes of all ages can live at home and work in, spare time; or all the time. Capital notrequired. We will start you.. Immense pay suie for those who start at once. STINSON & 00 .Porble,no Maine Exeter Butcher Shop, R. DAVI$, Butcher & General Dealer XL7., 'KINDS 07r— MrAT Dansser in Bad Water, Many of those who know that the use of hail water is dangerous are not aware of the extent or gravity of the risk incurred 'in the use of water which is contaminated with sewerage,. • The following account of poisoning from the water of an ordinary well, resulting in typhoid fever, shows that this grave disease may be contracted by the use of even Lavery small amount of contaminated water. We quote frail the Annals of Hygiene :— "M. Dujaxdin-Beaumetz has forwarded to the Paris Aoademy of Sciences a. com- munication on, the Pierrefonds typhoid oases of last summer. M. Fernet, who oc- cupies a high post at the Ministry of Public hustruction, hired a house for his wife and family, at Pierrefonds, a fashionable resort 'sear Compiegne, contiguous to two others. After they had rented it for a season, they were told to beware of the water in the well. On this account they drank mineral water exclusively until the last day, when the stock was out, and the servants,. preparing to return to Paris, were too busy to fetch wine bottles from, the chemist. Madam Pernet said, "For once surely there can be no harm in drinking the well -water." They drank it. Six out of , nine persons, have since died, includingone of the. servants: The cook, two of the four children, ,and Madam Fernet had had typhoid lever. be- fore; and though attacked, again hy it after their return from Pierrefoodsa have, got through the illnes a • 'This would be much the same waif half the The; vrellama lacenAahniaedaand`lEfre- working, men *Deers, mecemnicse and so to °outlays he baCilli 'are forth, of Ontario, had either ,ilfed re gone - 'eyed to be associated with tyPhoid out of the country, and the price of every fever. This is a common danger, to which thing in the shape of food, clothing and so visitors to so-called health resorts are fre- forth had gone up.to double or three times quently subjected. The facility with which the former prices, and then that the law well -water is infected is hidden from the had enacted that every man out of employ - has not observed. • Mr. George Wilham population by the impunity with which .ment should be forced, under the penalty of filthy well water may often be drank by fine or bnprisonment to work for the first Curtis, who supported him on this under- standing, has publicly stated that he ,has resident families, who have become acclim- who offered him a job, at the " old prices,' sorrowfully to acknowledge that the Presi- atized, especially when that water is for which in the changed state of things would dent has not even begun to respect his pledge the moment infected only by non-poisonous not supply food for the laborer himself, to fecal matter ; and this fancied immunity, say nothing of his wife and ,children, and ed word. Of fifty-eight thousand federal often leads to habits of "carelessiesie, for would notafford him any surplus for any offichas, about forty-eight thousand have which not themselves only, but also their rezewal of clothes. The employers had the been rernoved, and inefficient, inexperienc- ed. men put in their place. In fact, Cleve - visitors, have to suffer." land has acted on the principle of "to the victors belong the spoils." He climbed into I the -supply a all taeir servants, harlots and kicked it away as soon as it served his turn. Health Notes. office on the ladder of false promises and Food that a, person cannot endure will not what not? Not only this. The laborer.was It is of no use his trying that dodge a see- ms. bound to remain in the parish where he CAPITAL AND LATCH he, struggle between capita amk laher bas „ been a bitter and protracted ot For geoepatione it has been goiug on, an thinigli Sillalliere is anything but peace yet the 'weak 'is not going to the wall as they wete forced to do in bye -gene times. The work: ing elassea may be badly off today. In a great many cases they are. But their con- dition generally is bainitely better than it was in those times, upon which some even yet look regretfully back as if then the got - den age had Peen fully realized and Eng- land was then =wed° England indeed. The cry ot the ruling class has been continually for cheap labor and Use demands of the workers have always been denounced s,t1 extravagant and unreasonable. They have been the live stook on the property. It was as unreasonablei, it wee thought, for them to „ have any any n arrangemeut of what they were to receive for their labor as it aerial have been for cattle or horses to strike for higher wages or for sense improve. ment of provender. If so much were spent Customers supplied TUESDAYS, THURS- DAYS AND SATURDAYS at their residence ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE CEP7E PROMPT ATTENTION.' How Lost, How Restore We have recently published EL new edition of DR.CTILVERWELL'S CELEBRATED ES- SAY on the radical and perm anent cure (with- out mediaine)of NerrousDebility,Mentaland physical capacity. impediments to ararriage, etc. ,r esuiting from excesses. Price ,in sealed envelope,oray 6 cents, ortwo postage stamps. The celebrated author of this admirable es say elearly demonstrate s , from thirty years auccessfulPractice , that elan:I:Ting aonsequen- cos mayberadically cured without tbe dang- erous use of internal reecticines oe the nee of She knife; Point out a mode of cure atonce simple certain and effectual, by means of which every suftereram matter whethis con- ditionmay be,may cure himself oh4aply,pri vutelv and radically. 11 -.Thi lecture shonld be inthe hands of ev- ery youthandevery Marlin th eland. Address 11.1glOBLI,ANBOUS, ce Chieese Government ie about to me 00 dozeu,hright young men as reporters of eivilizatieha .1Isey will be chosen by oom- pqfittve exemputtiati and will be sent abroad'for two years, to stndy foreign ooun- tries:, Each Will take a specialty, and will send a monthly report to Pekin. After two years the Gaeverament will use the services of each in the department in which he is desie beat, and the more promising young men will be ennobled, Here are three persone 910. as to de , mend attention: Nicholas Babe, born ix - Lorraine, in 1792, a member of the grain army of Napoleon now living near Bello ville. 111, and to vigorous that he want the streete without a cane, reads without glassea and shaves himself; Stephen With ington of Hudson, Mass., nearly 101 years old, blind, and fast losing his mind • and Mrs. Margaret .Arnold of New Holland, Ohio., who on July 4 was 110 years old, and who while bodily quite well is failing mentally. in wages how could the lords of ths Tenor A San Francisco newstaper says that it et keep up their style, iust as it is often siaid chipinuek in that city int its foot so that present by the lords of the soil and. by those who claim to be capteins of industiy. For long the laborer was so far down and eo , utterly in the power of ,Ins lord that there tne flesh dropped off and left the bones ex posed. Thereupon the little fellow bit off or amputated the foot at what would cor• respond. to the wrist joint. In the couple wee not evea the appearance of struggle. of it few days the bone still remained un - Garth was Cedrio'a loond thrall" and had covered because no provision had been made to do as he was bidden, had to wear for a flap of the flesh to cover it. The chip - his master's cellars, do his master's munk then, with his nose, turned back the work on his master's terms. But by and by flesh and bit off a pieoe of the bone above in England'a etery there cejile a time when the sad of the flesh so that it projected the toiler thought that he had a °Basica In beyond the bone. In two weeks it bad 1848 the Black Death swept over gurope healed up and the result is a perfect stump. Railway Moz t Whitikey, 4 Of all the people in the world those eon- nected csaa Way With tile working of rail, ways oughtatfa leave ihmaiesaing ligeore severely alOne• ,Th e "Railway Age " puts the whole, (meg( year neatly and very deariy in the follelyiag$4,01fia—% It is time td go faithin. than mere Tem- er lift° 0 dTe rhaatti,ontoe—ta aauYe dangerous e"drink- ingooinpro_mime especially for for railwaymen. if an engineer or conductor or dispatcher, or any other worker, feels that he must drink ma- sionally when he is off duty he is the vietim of powerful habit tvhich may tele() him when he is most in need of a clear bead, and at any rate his officers cannot feel the implicit confidence that they would have if they knew he was a total abstainer. Mod- erate drinking is a compromise with danger- ous appetite. And where shall the line oe drawn between moderate and immoderate drinking? And by whem, the drinker or his ernployer ? How shall the latter know that the Invisible line has not been crossed some day, when the engineer or conductor Comes out to take his train? How can the fermer be trusted to decide when he is feed- ing an appetite in himself which nay bo daily growing stronger while Ids self-re- straint and power of discernment are daily growing weaker. . • The gist of the argument seems to us aboat this : Drinking is a useless habit, it does no good, it wastes money needed for useful purposes, it often produces crime, dis- aster and misery. Railway awn cannot af- foid to take the risk which the habit in- volves, and if they think they oan their masters cannot afford to allow it. Hence and laid England deeolate. Of her four or The number of criminal assaulte nen tilt) 4°Q a" 4a.th'fa°t9r9 ooaro° for both sides, without a single couaterbalanoing dia' five millions of inhabitants, fall)", the hall women seems to be greatly on the increase. is total abstinence. Why !should the whole organization of labour was thrown What is to be done to puS a stop to suoh advantage, disappeared. The consequence Was, that not railway officers supplement voluntary atrocious conduct? One way or another it abstinence on the part of some by coercive out of gear. The service due for the hinds will have to be put down. Flogging if well abstinence on the part of the rest, by estab- could not be performed, just as the cheap- and honestly applied will go a good way, Heating the inflexible rule that they will not nese of produce at the present day makes but already the operation as performed at English farnaers unable to pay their rents. the Central Prison seems to be degenerating employ any man lanown to be a habitual user of intoxicating drinks ? The land °smote had to give up half their into a sham. A good, hearty flogging, such We are aware that some will pronounce rents to prevent the farmers on their demesnes as the law intended would not leave a whole this intolerance; but we fully believe that giving ep their farms and leaving them de- 1 piece of akin on the wretches' backs. In- solate. Tale scarcity of labour induced an 1 stead of that during the last performance will be generally enforoed on our railways, the time is rapidly coaling when such a rule enormous rise of wages, and though the of the kind the skin was not broken. Some and that those who are the subjects of its re- price of food rose proportionally the ruling I have suggested that in every case the ofiend. classes thought it awful to be forced to pay ' er should be rendered physically incapable so much to their workmen. They woula not , of again committing the offence. This plan conform to the new order of things. ,Labour has very much to recommend it and ought was soarce but they insisted on paying for it to be tried in the first place in a peculiarly merely as they did when it was abundant. flagrant case such as the recent one near There were consequent strikes. Harvests Brantford. rotted on the ground andfields were left Miss Middie Morgan, the live -stock report - unfilled, not merely . or even chiefly from er of the New York Times andlYerald, is a scarcity of , hands, ' bat because the familiar figure in Printing -House Square, strife between labour and oaaital had where her height her thinness, and the are for the first time made its, appearance, parent eccentricity of her drese never fail to and capital thought it had so muck power attract attention. Those who know her that it could force labor to do its Work in apart from her business speak of her as bril- :a-- -01. liant, charming, and feminine to a degree, the old way and at the old rates. - And f the time it had, and usea it mercilessly. In 1349, the famous, or rather infamous, "statute , of laborers" was passeas And what did it enact? That "every man or woman of whatsoever condition, free or Staten Island foathca last five years, and it bond, able in body, and within th,e age of is still unfinished. Nothing could be more three score years, and not having of his own eccentric than this brick structure. There whereof he may live, nor land of tits own are iron bars at all the first -story windows a,bout the tillage of which he mayasecouty and the largest room in the hotisels given himself, and not serving any othereshall e over to a plunge bath. If the place is ever bound to serve the employer who Asti re- finished, Miss Morgan expects to live there quire him to do so, and shall take only the with her sister 'Jane, who is an artist. . wages which were accustomed to be taken When President Cleveland was a candi- in the neighborhood where he as bound to date in 1884 he received the support of thou - serve," two years before the plague began. sands of Republicans who did not like to give their vote for Blaine, simply because they believed hie promises in reference to civil aervice reform. Hee pledged himself not to remove civil servants except for good and suffic ent reasons. There was to be no turning good and efficient men out simply on account of politics. This pledge Cleveland and in, her vocation—the most „difficult in many particulars for a woman to undertake —she exacts admiration as well as respect. Miss Morgan helebeen building a house on • power and they used it. It they paid the wages asked what would be left for keep- ing up their own grand establishments and ond time. If again nominated as candi- Purity of surroundings kills many con. was born and was thus prevented from eo- ing basea'rch of better paid work. If go - date' it must simply be as a pure Democrat tagions elements, on the principle of starve, all which that implies. 0 tion. • disobeyed he became in the eye of the law with "a fugitive" and could be sent to prison by There are continual complaints made It is asserted in the Medical World, that, any justice of the peace. Is this not the about the systematic gambling carried on in if you desire as speedy action of drugs swal- same battle that is still going on? The ocean-going steamers. It is said that most lowed, as if yotl gave them hypodermical lar, labourer has still a pretty hard straggle of these ve la els are infested by profeseional administer them in hot water. One-half the sometimes, but the law, at any rate, le not gamblers, and that these spend their lives dose will suffice if given hot, as it is quickly so terribly against him as it was In those making continued trips across the Atlantic. absorbed from the stomach, and the force of old world tit:ries.Perhaps. a good . It is further said that the officers of the Yes. the drug thrown upon the system at once. A novel method of treating aahente suffer ing from phthisis is described in the current number of The Ilfedwal Record. It was de- vised by a French physician, Dr. Borgeon rage", or pam of going to prison or being put that no one needs to gamble unless he of Lyons, who has been applying it for two m the stocks as a vagrant. "18 was," !aye pleases, but that is no reason why every the historian Green, ' to the selfish pane of years to cases of chronic pulmonary and traveller who needs, for business or plea - throat disease, The results ate said to be the landowners that . England owed the sure to cross the Atlantic should be obliged remarkable. The treatment consists of statute of laborers, and its terrible heritage of a to spend a week or more in a gambling hell pauperism. It was to the selfish daily injections by enema oa medicated Panic °I where he has to rub shoulders with well - both landowner. and merchant that she! gases. Carbonic acid gas when introduceddressed blackguards whose proper place is into the system by this method is found to owed the despotism of. the monarchy." The , the penitentiary, and whose proper occupa- employers and proprietors ,were ready to be harmless and painless. Sulphurated cams is on the tread mill. In too many surrender anything, even liberty itself, in i cases it is said this miserable class of people many employers of labour still sigh for sels know what these blacklegs are and take the good old times, when wages were • no steps to have them oleared out. Surely fixed by law, and when every laboring men there ought to be some remedy for such a had to work for the first that offered him state of things. Of course it may be urged nycirogen 18 nnngieu' 81111 CUIU11 order to keep down " the lower orders and structure of the lungs is permeated by the, rule the roost. A man who does not play secure for themselves "cheap labor" and ' with them would have a poor time if heset mp medicated gas and remarkable curative ef- all the advantages which that implied. hots are observed. i his face Into the smoking room. They think What are those about to -day who ase m- they have a right to pluck pigeons all over There is a general idea that- disease is porting the pauper labor of Europe in order the ship, and perhaps they have. They carried by germs, and that the air is filled to keep down wages and at the same time may her purchasedthe right by feeing the with, these, and 18 18 a wonder to most peo- are putting on enormous taxes oil im- the officers, but surely there are some meens tile that every one is not so afflicted, the iorted goods in order to keep otit the cheap1 which. by such a crying nuisance may be put cpnrements will be its most cordtal and grateful supporters. .A single glass may just give the necessary excitement to cause an accident and destroy any amount of life and property. It 'is a risky business for any one to employ a very moderate tippler, but for any manager of a railway to have any such persons around, as engineers, conductors, pointsmen or what not, is simply moonlight madness. laity conclude that the germ theory is an products of other lands? Very much what down. absurdity and a contradiction. They do those aimed at who passed theiStetute of • not consider the elements of a fertle soil. Labourers evicted sinallfarmers, turned the In the preaching of John Bale England The germ is the same as a seed. We must country into pasture farms, and as described , first listened to the declaration of mama plant seed in a soil suitable for it, and the by a great writer in 1515, "got rid, often- al equality and rights of men. " Good surroundings—heat and moisture—must be ants either by force or fraud, or by turning people," cried.the preacher, "things will adapted to it if Itis to grow. This fertile them out by repeated. wrongs into parting' gl d I d soil, so to speak, is found as a rule, in a with their property, so that it neocapass be not in common, and SO long as f•here be person whose constitution ia run down from that these poor wretches, men women hus- villains and gentlemen. By what right are Take No .liewardi Is it a good and wise plan to give re- wards of more or less value for the recovery of lost cash or valuables ? Is it the right and proper thing to have it understood that honesty in melt oases will always be reward- ed in solid. eash ? A great many people aot and s ealf, as 11 18 were. lsrow. TRUTH takes the li erty to say that it is not. It encOur- ages meanness and meremariness. It simply degrades and dishonors, and more and more encourages the idea that the world and mor- alty in general ,should all be managed by A. " gentleman" or a "lady" would feel grievously insulted if offered a dollar when..they returned a purse or its con. tents which had been accidentally dropped. No possible inducementcould lead such to take a reward for being simply honest. Yet if a persop heppefis to mewl „la a humbler sphere, and,have less cash at his disposal it is thought quite the right thing to "reward his honesty "byhonoretrium. Itis taken for granted that he will not be honest unless ,he is tio'paicl, nay,it is impliea elaathdould be quite justified hi keeping the s" next, fid" to himself if not bribed into surtender., Now is all this not essentially wrong and degrading? A gentleman dropped his purse which was picked up by a well:dress- ed woman and restored to its owner. He was profuse in his thanks, but was soon made to understand thet.something more was required. In perfectly. good, faith, he was immediately as profuse m his apologies ending with the perfectly appropriate "1 thought you were a lady," while he handed the coveted reward. He was neither sal - castle nor intentionally insulting. No nne would in the circumstances have dreamed. of paying "a lady" for the little piece of timely honesty, for, in short, not being a thief. Why not treat every woman as if she were a "lady" and every man or boy as if a " gentleman ? Are there not things which the poorest can do for the richest which cannot be acknowledged in hard cash without insult and injury? , Are there no services which the humblest can do to the highest, which can be rewarded only by thanks. In this mercenary, mean, money - worshipping age it would seem not. The mor,, the pity. th h 11 1 d reater folk th r 8 an over lack of rest, poor living or disease. It bands, widows,orphaassii parents with little eY w em. we ea ° , g may be introduced directly into the blood children, house olds greater in number than we ? On what grounds have they deserved 1" Why do they hold us in serfage? If through an open wound, or it may be intro- c in wealth (for arable farming requires many aimed indirectly through the alimentaxy hands, while one shepherd and herdsman we all came of the same father and mother, ; those of Acls,mand Eve, how can they say or prove will suffice for a pasture farm), all that they are better than we, if it be not , . knowing where to go. Not a bad descrip. Waiting for His Wife's Train. THE OULVERWELL MEDICAL COMPANY system. 41 ANN Sr, NEW TORII Post °Mae Box 450 smwsrmtf=xxernassintAgaut, ADVERTISERS can learn the exaot cost of any propokd line of advertising in American papers by addressing Geo. P. Rowell & Co., Newspaper Advertieing Esuroau, 10 Spruce St., New York. Send 8Cfote, tor 100 -Page Parraphlet For Toilet Use. folaurf1 cAix:stlYitelireiai ihriaep's4usit54:il iyilos a,e: :eel Ys'ir:VQ:511rd4i agti iteel :air' odtliellegissa5eo. ells the hair aeit end Pliant' imParts to i:titpshteiaollszlaileu:i oiti, uglsiti isitvotele°01,glai larnrmeneiw:: . AYER'. perfeet eatasfaetion. I was S 1141P nearly bald for six years, during which time L tisela many hair preperatious, last withesat %Suceess: 'Indeed, what little hair, I aad, WILi growingthinner'until I triea Ayer's Hair yigor. 1 useil two betties of the Viola an isle heed 18 HOW , well covered with a new growth of hair. —Judson 13. Chapel, Peabody, Muse. , UAID that has become weak,' gray, I srtills and faded, may have new life and color restored to it by the use of Ayer's Hair Vigor. ,i'aary hair was thin, 'aided, and dry, and fell oat tie large quantities, Ayer's Hair Vigor sae ed y Use falling, and restored myhair t its original color. As a dressing for the hair, this preparation has no cm, al. -T Mary N. Hammond, Stillwater, Minn. youth, and beauty, in the Vbeli9psolirves cl for au indefinite period by _ y appearance of the hair, may the use of Ayer's Hair Vigor. **A. dis- ease of the scalp caused my hair to be- come harsh and slut and to fall out freely. Nothing I tried seemed to do any good until I commenced using Ayer's Hair Vigor. Three bottles of this preparation restored my heap to a healthy condition, and. it is now soft and. pliant. My scalp is cured, and it is also free from dandruff. —1V1rs. E. R. Foss, Milwaukee Wis, ' Ayee.s_ Flair Vigor, Sold by ioreggists and Perfumers. riRSECT SAFETY, prompt action, and wonderfal cuiative properties, eesily place Ayer's Pills at the head of the list of popular remedies for Sick and Nerv- ous Headaches, Constipation, and all ail- ments originating in a disordered Liver. I ha se been a great sufferer from Hendee e, and Ayer's Catbartio Pilis are the only medicine that bas ever given me relief. One dose of these Pills will quickly move my bowel, aud free my head from pain.— William L. Page, Richmona Va. Ayer's Pit's, Prepared by Dr. 3.0. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mali. Sold by all Dealers in Medicine. ' The Great English rrescriptle i successtutAledicine tied aver , and an diseases Cures .Seermatorrhea, Nervous 80 years in thousands of cum. Weakness, Emissions, Impotency caused by abuse. ransonal indiscretion,- or overexertion. rat Six packages Guaranteed to orgeolohl when otkir_a Peas; .ritgiconyoZekliggailftcgut: One Parall 81. AIX $$, by ma.it. Write for Pamphlet ad Eureka Chemical. Co., Detroit,' Mau. For sale by J. W. Browniog, C. Luba. Exeter, ancl all druggists emigrate from their native fields without that they make us gain for them by our toil what the spend in their ride ? They are 01(1 eentlernan in refreshment roorti, near Depot. Looks at watch and soliloquizes, " Here's six glasses of whiekey I've had al- ready, and my wife's train's not due for an- other hour. That's six more. And it'S sure to be ten minutes late, That's two more—one to be booked to agitation and suspense. Really, what with the expense end wear and tear of the constitution, that woman will be the death of me yet." Knew What He Was About. Scetie—Jacob Levi's clothing store, " Customer (who wishes a plum -colored .soat, but Who ie shown green one)—" That is not phim,00loted coat. Why, 18 18 green." Jacob (not to be disconcerted)—" sny good friencla don't you know dot blums are green before they're ripe." tion of evictions as taking place today in Ireland, or of the condition of Scotch Crof- teas in the merciless clutches of Scotch land-, lords and their heartless agents.—Toronto Truth. The Wages of in. " Grae,pee said a little boy, looking ua from his Sunday school lesson, "what are the wages of sin ?" . • "The wages of sin in thee° days," replied the old man earnestly, " depend upon cir- cumstancee and man's, opportunities and businese capacity. 13diathey run op into the thousands, nay boy—they run up into the thousands." Why is four cent sugar like a man that never surrenders? 13ecause it is clear Frit, and nothing else. y p clothed in:velvet, and warm in their furs and their ermines while we are covered with raga They have 'wine and spice and fine bread; and we oat cake and straw, and water to drink. They have leisure and fine houses, we have pain and labour, the rain end the windan the fickle. And yet it is of us and of outstoil that these men hold their state." , Well may the historian add in words as applicelole to the world of to- day as ever they were of by gone times: It was the tyranny of property that then, as ever, roused the defiance of Socialism. The misery of the poor end the selfishness and corruption of the rich, have been sung and eesid of by prophets mid poets fot hung dreds of years, and man's inhumanity to man has not yet gone out of fashion, even though it is nearly nineteen hundred years since Jesus Christ said, "Whatsoever ye would that men ehould do to you do ye even Bo to them." Aloohol in Hot and ooia Latitudes. General Greeley says that alcohol is al- ways injurious when used in very cold lati- tudes and Henry Stanley testifies that it is a most deadly thing when used in a tropical country like the Congo. Is it then a safe and healthful beverage when used in tem- perate zones. Those who are most entitled to speak with authority on the subject say thevery reverse. Dr. Cyrus Edson. Chief In- spector ot Food in the SanitaryBureau of the New York health department, says "The first effect of alcoholic drinks is to cause a rise in temperature. The blood veSsels of the brain are congested, the heart is athnuleted. The secondary effece is to lower the temperature slightly. Bat you never find alcohol used in ntoderation. Peo- ple who use it invariably use it to excess. When taken to excess, nothing could be used that would produce sunstroke or heat - exhaustion quicker. Lager beer and ale open the pores and cause perspiration. These drinks are not as bad as whisky, be- cause alcohol is the deleMrious ingredient; and of course substances that contain more of Tithaisreism:trireedi;lestterroinoguse.n"ough. Dr. Wil- lard Parker, one of the most distinguished ,physicians of New York city, says:— " I do not believe in the use of alcohol to any great extent. The first effect is ap- parently cooling, but then comes the reac- tion, and one becomes warmer mad thirstier than ever, Those who indulge freely in al- coholic drinks in extremely hot weather are tempting Providence, and are likely to be among the victims of sunstroke," Taken as a beverage alcohol is always in, jurious. When taken as a medicine let it be only under a physician's prescription and not always even then A fellow who is considered soft, speaking , the other clay of the many inventione which , have been made by the present generation. exultingly wound up with, "For my part, I believe evera generation grows wiser; for there'e my father, he know'cl rhore'n iny grandfather; ancl I believe I know more than my father did." "My dear sir" remarked bystander, "What a fool your grandfather mast heve been," , UNPEIITAKERS ! Furniture Matlufacurersf —A FULL. STOCK OF— Furniture, Coffiiis; Caskets, And everything in the abisve lie, to meet , irnrncdiatewai We have.one of the very best Hearses in the County, 4314 liunerala furnished and conducted a extremely low prices: EMBLEMS OF ALL THE DIFFERENT SOCIETIES ,PENNYROVAL WAFERS. theaoription of a physician sea* has had a life long experience in treattnE Londe diseases. Is used monmw with 'perfect success by over 10,000 ladies. Plettaant, safe, effectual. Ladies ask your gist for 'Pennyroyal Wafers take no substitute, or inclose poeh. a e for sealed articular& Sold br druggists, $i per box.AtZt THE EUREKA CHEMICAL CO.. Damorr, icor 6oid in Exeter by J. W. Browning, C. Lutz, and all druggists. .s I; 5 3 t-4a.ae- NS - Unapproached for Tone and Quality CATALOGUES FREE. ELL CO. Guelph, Ont. THE RELEBRATCla :1:YDr,t CHASES DPORP,E FOR LIVER AND KIDNEY DISEASES " When an inteltioent man wants to par- ihase, he buys from part*, es whose sta7u27,ng 7n 4/Lair several eautnysis a yuarantee for the, , otality of their mares." This sterling motto is liotiblY true in regard to patent medicines, huY only those made by practicial aitofessional meta Dr. Cam is too well and fevorably known by his receipt. books to regaire any recommenda- a tan. Dn. CHASE a I,iver Cure has a receipt book wrapped: eromad every bottle which is worth ita weight in gold. t Da, CHASE'S Liver Cure is guaranteed to euro all diSeases arising, frem it torpid or inactive liver such au Myer, complaint, .ftysposriat. 111114ll1snes84 isiondier, stead - glebe, Liver Spot8, Sallow. Coartplextou, Cl. THE KIDNEYS THE KIDNEYS Dn. Oman's Liver Cure is a certain cure for ell derangements ottbe kidneys,secli US pain in the back pain in brwer portion of the abdomen, constant desire to pass, urine red and white aiedeeimon Bright's an1 all Try it. no Other,'itiwill cure you. Solcl by all dealerS at $1.00 per bottle. T. ED AANSON .1,k Co., Jig $ots samara FOVI CANADA. eetansone Soldttt 0. LUTZ'S, Agent, leaeter.