HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1887-9-22, Page 6Sore Eyes
The reyea are alwaye sympatby with
tie body, and afford an excellent index
ot ,condition. When tile eyes become
Weak, and the lids Militated mid eere,t LI
an evidence that tbe system ban become
disercleren by Scrofula, for which Ayer's
-Sersaparilla is the beat known remedy. a
Scrofula, which produced a painful ins
flarnmatiou in my eves, caused me much
sufferiete for it number of years. By the
advice of a physiciati I commenced taking
Ayer's Sarsaparilla. After using tins
tuedielue a short time I was colnPletelY
Cured
My eyes are now in a splendid coudition,
and I am as well and strouns ita ever, —
Nirs• William Gage, Concord, N, H.
For a number of years I was trounled
with e Inunor in my eyes, and was unable
to dentin any relief until I connueneed
using Ayer's Sarsaparilla. This medicine
has effected a eoruplete cure, and I believe
It to be the best ot blood purifiers. —
C. E. Upton, Nashua, N. II.
From childhoed, and until within a few
months, I have been afflicted with Weak
and Sore Eyes, I have used for thee
eompleints, with beneficial results, Ayer's
/Sarsaparilla, and consider it a great bleed
purifier.—Me. C. Philips, Glover, Vt-
I suffered for m year with. Inflemma-
don in my left eye. Three unera formed
on the ball, depriviug me a sight, and
causing great pain. After trying many
other remedies., to no purpose, I was finally
Induced to use Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and,
By Taking
three bottles of this medicine, bave been
entirely cured. My sight has been re-
stored, and there is no sign a 110111nm:b..
don, sore, or ulcer in my eye. —Kendal
T. Bowen, Sugar Tree Ridge, Ohio.
My daughter, ten years old, was afflicted
with Scrofulous Sore Eyes. During the
last two years she never saw light a any
kind. Physicians of the highest standing
exerted their skill, but with no permanent
success. On the recommendation of a a a
friend I purchased a bottle of Ayer's Sar- b
saparilla, which my daughter ocanmeneed k
taking. Before she had used the third m
bottle hex- sight was restered, and she can t
now look steadily at a brilliant light with-
out pain. Her cure is complete.-- W. E. a
Sutherland, Evangelist, Shelby City, Ky.
Ayer's Sarsaparilla,
Prepared by Dr..T. C. Ayer Its 00, Lowell, Mass.
_Sold by all Druggists. Price $1; air bottles, en
HOUSEHOLD.
.-••••^1.1.
Homes -
"There are twiny so-ea/int how, and
east thousenale ot real honoY kOnKS. .A110 I
tkink that all my readers will agree with
ine that there exists a vast differenee be
tween the two. The 80.077110<i, tome may
abound in rielmese. It may possess velvet
eatpets, the costliest of furniture and fit-
tings, and yet exeept in name be nothing
like the pure geneine artiele, Who was it
that ouce eaid "Heine is where the,heart is."
Hew true the quotation i; for all the expen-
sive and elaborate furnishing in the world
catinot make up the true home, unless it is
matte bright, plea,sant and cheerful by its
inmates, Who bas not at some time return-
ed from a, call or visit with the thought
"how can people living together in the one
Muse be so disagreeable to one another."
In many homes the inmates mean to try to
be as enpleming poasible. We may won-
der at the cause, and yetif we look the mat-
ter squarely in the face in nine cases out of
ten, we will seen and that the fault com-
menced with the beads of the home, the
parents. W hen a young couple begins life
for themselves in their new hotne, it remains
w th them what kind of a house it
may be. The husband may be a good man
in every sem° of the 'word. He may pro-
vide well for his family. His home may be
a marvel of costly fittings, and yet if when
he comes home at night he neglects to smile,
kiss his wife as warmly as in their "court-
ing days," if he 'buries his nose in the news.
paper for the entire evening, voucihsafing
scarcely a word to the other members of the
fatnily, he is not doing his duty as the head
of a home. A smile' and a few pleas
words cost nothing, yet they may
very far towards the making up o
really -truly home. If the wife is so t
en up with her 'dresses, and her come
her costly simpere, or with her
charities that 'she has little time for
quiet tete•a•tete meal with her hub°,
or a quiet evening. spent solely with h
then she is not doing her duty, either
wife or the head of a home. The hous
e sure may be elegantly furnished,
ept in most perfect order. The dinu
ay be most elatcrate affairs, and served
he most skilful of waiters. Yet it is
home, it is simply a dwelling -place.
ed, tart applea, anti neat until smooth as
cream. Beet the whitea of three eggs until
very atiff, and then gently stir in three
tablespoonfuls of grenulated. er powdered
there sugar,, one 4 flour (eelf-raieieg, if you wiali),
and hve of the beaten apples. Bake in an
oven, or cook in a frying -pan and relied, or
again on the griddle like pancakes. The
additiou of a little brandy, wine Or chocolate
makes a new and delicious omelet. Instead
of applea, berries or any other fruit may be
used. Peaches pruuelles, or raspberries are
especially delightful,
LIFE IN VIENNA.
A Jerky Description or Socties in the inter*
easing Austrian Capital.
women bele carry hods and mix mortar.
Peculiar clean From the provinces. Wear
long boots to the knee. Short skirts
to the boots. Practical dress, But not
ornamental. Seven different costumes
seen daily oo streets. Laborms at
noon be down and sleep on the pavement,
Ditto in the parks on the grass. Both sexes
seen lying side by side. No " keep off the
grass' at every tinning. Polish Jew fre-
quent. In blaek (gowns reaching to the heel,
high nets, and long corkscrew curie. Look
like Mena. 131g dogs drawing hand carts.
Street cars won t stop for you. Only at cer-
tain places. Indicated by a signpost on traek.
The tub the universal vessel to (tarry things
in. Oval shape. One stave longer than the
rest. So it can be bound on the carrier's
back. Carries all the water up the SIX or
seven pairs of stone stairs in Vienna houses.
Clean clothes ditto for wash. Separate
ant shop for brandy, beer, and wine. Peasant
ao on a spree carries green twig stuck in his
en, hat -band to indicate to the Vienna public
an. his present nsental and moral condition.
xis, Hacks hung low on the wheels. Drivers in
Det uniform. Everything's in uniform here.
a Fares low. Ten cents carries you from
nd, Dombaoh to Leopolstadt. Suburban vil-
im' lages five or six miles distant. Emperor and
Empress are frequently seen driving on the
e to street, No fuss; all hats go off as they go
and by. Soldiers everywhere; sentries ditto,
ers in a chronic condition of saluting officers.
by Fleas abundant. Everybody eats at the
not restaurant. Vienna is all restaurant on the
ground floor. Little home cooking is done.
THE EXETER TIMES.
Is published every Thursday morning,iit h.
TI MES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE
train -street, nearly opposite Fitton's Jewelery
Store,Exeter, Ont., by John White & Son, Pro-
nrietors.
BATS OF ADVERTESING
Pirst insertion, per line.. ..... ....... .......10 cents.
Bach subseque.at insertion ,per line......3 cents.
To insure insertion, advertisements should,
be sent in notlater than ‘STednesday morning
OurJOB PRINTING DEPARTMENT is one
f the largest and best equippea in the County
f Huron, All work entrusted to us will receiv
ur prompt attention.
Decisions Regarding News-
papers.
Any person who takes a pap erregularly from
he post -o dice, whether directed in his name or
another's, or whether he has subscribed or not
is responsible for payment.
2 If aperson orders his paper Aiscontinued
he must pay all airears or the publisher may
continue to send it until tb e -payment is made,'
and then colleet the whole amount, whether
the paper is taken from the office or not.
3 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 miles away.
4 The courts have decided that refusing to
rake newspapers or peliodicals from the post -
office, or 1-en:loving and leaving them uncalled
for is prima facie evidence of intentionalfraud
GI send 10 cents postage
and we will send you
free a royal, valuable
sample box of goods ,,,,,
that will put you in the way of making more ,k.°°,'
7710716V at once, than anything &gain Anaerica. DI
Bothsexes ofall ages can live at home' and mo
work in spare tirne, or all the time. Capital yin
notreguirud. We will start you. Imraense
pay suief en those who start at once. STINSON
Et Oo .Portlavci Maine
A home is a place like none other pl
on earth. Where husband and wife ne
grew too old for a merry jest together,
to exchange a fond kiss at parting or retu
nag where each has the other's confide
in everything and are not afraid to best
praise or sympathy where they are need
and with words of loving help and ad
help each other along. The heads of su
tomes can not fail to make everyth
about them pleasant and cheerful. Th
children imitating their parents can not f
to do their own part towards making ho
the very dearest spot on earth. While it
wmT,E 01:IIEF OF THE ,AP.A.OHES.
..-
Itelicande ',noes° Thee She fled Indians
Whose Leader Ile Was.
" I noticed in a San Francisco paper a
day or two ego," said Michael Carden, who
bee made his fortune in Chihuahua diver
mines, "011 artiole about Al ntreeter, the
white (thief of the Apaches, Many taloa of his
cruelties have been published, but one—
that which I think the most horrible of ell,
his °Omen-- I Iwo never !wen in print.
About seven yems ago Jelin Mansfield came
to Arizona, from San Francisco with his
wife and little boy. They arrived at Ulf ton
safely and RS they were in a hurry to each
a little piece called Solornons, abut ninety
miles away, where Mansfield was to go
to work, they took the trait over the hills
from Clifton. A young prospector—his
name I hate Zorgotten—undertook to pilot
them over rim trail. Their lint day's travel
took them to the banks of Eagle Creek, a
small, though rapid stream, which flows into
the Gil, There they made (tamp, within a
few mites of the San Carla reservatien.
Though there were rumors that a band of
renegades had left the reservation, there was
no poaitive, news of the uprising, and the
little party had no fear. Aa they were pre-
paring supper there suddenly cattle into the
camp a white man on horseback in the
ordinary garb of a prospector. Mansfield
and his wife at 011C8 recognized the new
comer as Al Streeter, who had gone to
school with both of them in San Francisco,
They knew nothing of his career since lie
left the city, Streeter, though known to
every man on the frontier by reputation, has
been seen by few except when disguised with
war. paint, and the young mart who at:com-
muned the Mansfield's did not donneot the
renegade leader with their visitor, The new
comer ate supper with them, but declined to
stop itt the camp over night. Be did, how-
ever, stay and talk awhile about the old times.
At daylight Streeter made his appearance
again:and shared their breakfast. Suddenly
he walked a few yards out of camp and utter-
ed a ory—imitating a wild turkey. In a
moment the camp was in the possession of
a gang of Apaches. The two men tried to
use their Winchesters, but found that they
bad been tampered with and would not work.
The Indians finally secured the four persons
who composed the little party and earried
ver
ace 'Melange and rolls are the universal break- I
fast. Melauge is half coffee and. half hot' bluffs that at that point shut in the river.
em ound to the top ot one of the high
From the edge of the bluff to the river's
or milk, always brought you in a tall tumbler
, with a bigtable spoon. Living here is very
„e f you hire a room the chances are
ow you must pass through somebody's bedroom
ed, to get to A or have some one pass through
yours. Female help, indifferent or obliv-
ee Iola to gentlemen lodgers, corne right in at
ing
all hours, and without knocking, when on
eir duty.
an 1 Stoves are like monuments, nine feet high,
me covered with porcelain. The furnace holds
is about two quarts of coal. The rest is monu-
unreasonable to expect the children of sour-
ed or badifferent parents, to be anything but
sour and disagreeable thtinselees, it is
equally unreasonable to expect to find
nnagreeable children in a home where
there is nothing but sunshine, pleas-
ant words, kind, loving, helpful hearts, and
willing, helpful hands. The home may be
simply furnished. It may even be but poor
in its exterior and interior, yet if it be clean
and neat, if there be a bright fire upon the
hearth, chairs placed hospitably and invit-
ingly around the room, a bright welcom-
ing smile upon the face of its inmaters, it is
a thousand times more of a home to the one
returning to it, than is the mansion where
the windows are darkened to keep out the
sun. Where the inmates have no time or ,
inclination for pleasant, loving, welcoming I
words, or tender, kindly words of greeting,
where each member lives within him or her-,
self. No, the house itself sir the furnishings
therein do not make the home. JO is the
people who dwell in the house that tnake
the most sacred thing on earth—a Home.
ment. Handsome men, good shapes, fu
'chests, fine bass voices. A. pleasure to sit
railway stations and hear the officials
charge call the trains. Handsome wom
ditto. Everybody out on the street an
I shopping by 8 or 9 in the morning. Na
at noon. Garden full of families dining
open air at 5 P. M. They go it till
'Music, Anvers, statuary all about. Eatin
not done at a gulp. More happiness to th
square yard. Newspapers small. Outsid
world soon disposed of in about twenty line
Lots of small comic illustrated paper
" Trink /lanes " on every corner. Roun
pagodas. Girl inside. No room for mor
Sells lemonade, orangeade, soda water, an
other light foggy fluid. People here alway
swallowing something.
Elevator at hotel. Big fuss over it. Tw
men in uniform to run it. Pace, mile a
hour. Beds all single. Everybody seem
to sleep single here. One more bed on to
of bed quilt. Very light, full of featherii
In a green silk bane
Bari acks everywhere Six stories. Ful
of soldiers. Soldiers everywhere. Drill -
edge is a sharp descent of probably seventy
feet. There Streeter left the hapless victims
to the Apaches and walked away. Over
the precipice, in plain sight of the helpless
mother and father, the Indians threw the
little boy. The mother was the next victim.
and she was killed—before her husband—in
the horrible manner in which a band of
Apaches always slay the females who fall
alive into their hands. The next amusement
they determined on was the old cruelty of
running the gauntlet. The young prospect -
in or was the victim chosen. He, however,
in knowing that he had no chance to escape,
„ as soon as nisi bands were untied made a
d rush gnd sprang over the cliff following the
, little boy. Seeing him go over the frightful
place the Apaches gave him no further eon -
cern. But he was not killed outright. He
struck fairly in the water, and the shock
e was so much lessened that a broken leg was
e the only apparent damage. With his
8. crippled limb that poor fellow crawled fif-
e. teen miles to a ranch. There he died, after
d telling what I have just told you WIIM
e. one of the men to whom he told it. Sever-
,' al days later we went to where the :dsdians
• had stopped on top of the bluff and' sound
the bones of poor Mansfield and his wife
The forint r was lying face downward on an
antThill. His arms were extended, , the
0, wrists fastened to stakes driven in the
a ground. He had been tied down and left
P to be eaten alive by the rod ants. They
, had cleaned all of the flesh from his bones
in those few days."
1
Practical Recipes.
TOMATO Camera—One gallon tomato
rained), six tablespoonfuls salt, three
ack pepper, one of cloves, two of cinn
n, two of allspice, one an one-half pint
egar. ciown one -halt. One peck o
atoes will make one gallon strained.
TOMATO SOY.—One . peck tomatOes on
lar
mg everywhere. Drumming everywhere.
Tooting everywhere. Soldiers marching
past hotel at 5 in the morning, Always
ea, getting', ready to kill somebody., Same all
overEurope Never out of sight of a bay-
"' 'met. Nations .here are awfully afraid of
eicli other. Singular pumps. ' Very tall.
f
Exeter Butcher Shop.
R. DAVIS,
•
u c er - General Dealer
—111 Alai &INDS 05' -
MEAT
Customers supplied TUESDAYS, THURS-
DAYS AND SATUBDAYS at their residence
ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE
CHIVE PROMPT ATTENTION.
a
How Lost, How Restore
We have recently -published a new edition
of DR.CITILVEBWDLL'S OE4EBRATED &-
SAY onthe radiettlandpermattent, cure (with-
out medietinelof Nervous D ability ,Mental and
physical capacity. impediments to Marriage,
etc . esuiting from excesses,
Price,in sealed envelope ,only 6 cents,ortwo
postaee stataps.
The celebrated author of this admirable es
eftyclearly demonstrates, from thirty years
successful practice , that al /11122 in g consequert.
cea masrbe radically cured without the dang-
mous use of aMternalmedleinesor the use of
the knife; Pdint out a rnode of cure at once
tom
in s
qua
Bol
bot
Long, crooked, iron /am:Idle. Reads to the
ground Tobacco sbopii all - nun by the gov-
e eminent. Keep- stamps also' Invariable
t sign over door " liaKs ',(King and Kaiser).
ge pepper, cut fine; One lenge onion, au
d The EtriPeror does all the tobacco 'business. l
• Not xnuelt tobacco in their cigata, Washed.
• Dun. Prices 'Of groneriea and dry goods always
lices ; one tablespoonful each of groun
pice, black pepper and celery, seed, one
rter cup salt, one-half pint vinegar
d markednan articlelOihOp WindoW. 'Helps
The Man In The Box.
The convicts of West Australia devise
y ways escape from the hard life of
the Penal 'Colony, but rarely do they resort
to so hazardous and torturing a methcid as
on a certain occasion not long ago, an account
, of which is given in the QueenslandeA-
AP t Adelaidea o_ cer was a ly
, surprised le,st Thursday, and his•liaenves
, have been unsettled ever since. He was
enperinten mg/ e• an oa o t es eanier
South Australian, from West- AluStralia
when he noticed a box three feet 'six inches'
long, by two:feet. one inch widea by two
feetIt weaespo.,
peculiar looking padre e Tilting
it up on 0710 side, he found it unconscionably
heavy. He turned it over, arid it fell open,
and from it dropped not a gross of clothes -
pegs, but a manl—a live ma,u, too, six feet
long when standing, but literally doubled
up now.
The poor fellow gasped for breath, and
looked terribly emaciated. The good Catho-
lics standing around picusly crossed them-
selves. The man stretched himself, and
cried—emeatned--for water.
No one knew at first what to do with him,
but at last the happy idea struck somebody
that this man had not paid his passage
money, and could, therefore, be indicted for
something or other surely. .Anyhow, he
had no friends, and should go to the station.
Ile was given over to a policeman and
carried to the station, where he shrieked for
something to eat.
By-and-by he told his story. He was a
West Australian convict, and wanted to get
away. He couldn't book a passage, because
the agents and police knew him, so he engag-
ed a friend to put him into this box, with a
little water and a few biscuits; and in ad-
dition hehad with him a small saw, pannikin,
screw -driver, auger andbits chisel, matches,
tobacco, and a small bottle of oil. He ar-
ranged a number of strings to tne lid of the
box, so that he might keep it shut when he
wished to have it so.
The box was heaped up with the rest of
the luggage, and thrown end over end into
the hold, shaking the poor fellow in aterrible
manner. He was packed under a lot of
other packages+ Mad thus cramped, stifling,
starving, lay half -dying during seven days
and nights!
When he arrived at Port Adelaide, he
was almost a skeleton. Excruciating agony
had ploughed fearfully deep furtoWs upon
his face, However, he ha,d, at any rate, the
satisfaction of knowing that his arrival has
created a greater sensatioa than the in.
corning even of any Governor of late years.
The Customs officer is in a fix. Ile can
scarcely determine to what rate -list of tariff
the "man in the box '' belongs, It is
thought, however, that he will be included
in the "unenumerated" articlen and pay ten
per cent. ad valorem duty on himself.
Thia is the second instanee of a shipment
of this kind, the first being it servant girl,
who proved "an undesirable colonist,"
our est y altogether, cool en
tle for use.
TOMATO CATS17P,—One peek ripe tome.
toes; cut up, boil tendetaancl sieve throug
wire sieve; add one large tablespoonful all
spice, one large tablespoonful cinnamon, on
tablespoonful cayenne pepper, one -quarte
pound salt, one-quarter pound mustard, on
pint vinegar. Boil gently three hours ; bot
de and seal while warm.
COCOANUT Pa.—For A. M. One pint
milk, four eggs, one cup sugar, one teaspoon
fill extract lemon, cue and a half cupful
grated cocoanut, line well, greased pie plat
one quarter inch thick, take ball of paste
flour it well and proceed with palm of lef
hand pressed against edge to push the paste
from centre into a thick high rim on edg
of plate, fill while in oven, bake in moder
ate oven twenty minutes.
The above is a good recipe for plain cuat
ard pie by leaving out the .cocoanut.
WALNUT CATSUP.—Take green walnuts
before the shell is formed (usually in a prop-
er state early in August), grind them or
pound them in an earthen or marble mortar,
squeeze out the juice throughsa, coarse cloth
and add to every gallon of juice one pound
of anchovis, one pound salt, four ounces
cayenne pepper, two ounces black pepper,
one ounce eaeh of ginger, cloves and mace
the root of one horseradish. ' Boil all
ther until reduced to one -half -the quan-
Pour off and when cold bottle tight;
n three months.
one to learn the ,1 'i ' C` cl '
. translate as you walk -2' .
I
1 ,
h I Cultivated shade' trees lay over anything
- in America.- Six rays, fullrgroirn in some
e exults, with walks underneath. Fountains
e benches everywhere. Business streets all
e shaded, ncit like Broadway or Fiftb avenue. i
• Bath houses five stories high. Everybody
:here really washes by the bath and not by,
' the bearoom washbasin. Went to one. '
1 Girl cashier. Took my. money. Turned
8 me over to another girl. Black eyed.
e Good looking. Went in with me. Turned
- Ion water hot and cold. Both of us waited
t for the tub to fill up. Wondered if she'd
leave. Strange country. Novel customs.'
e Tub fills up. Girl leaves. Examine door.
No lock. Took off collar. Girl bursts in
- i again. Brought more towels, And then
. 'aprons. Wondered what they were for, :
;Found out. Inquired of the girl. What dol
I you suppose? To put on --one behind, the
lingother before, and sit still in while, after us -
customer in Viennese bath. Girl must the
the hot water, the girl came back to
turn on the cold. No handling of water by
, it all. No such place as Vienna known in
!Austria. Austrian name. Wien. From
ithe bit of river running through it. Danube
• Rive! in reach of city. Thnber rafts always,
, .
g: es au mules of cultivated pine
iForests m Austria,. Pass through them by
I rail. No underbrush. Trees tall and
straight, by tens of thousands.
and
simple certain and effectual, by means of
whioh every aufferer,no matter whathis con_ toge
ditionntay be,masy cure himself oh.laply,pri tity.
yeasty an d radically. iu3e i
I -Thi lecture shouldbeinthe ha,nds of ev- ....,
y you andevery man intheland. U
Address butt
THE CULVERWELL MEDICAL COMPANY, pint
el ANN ST, NDWYOnli.
OCOANITT CARE.—Three-quarters cup
er, two cups sugar, one and one-half
s lour, five eggs, one teaspoonful baking
der. Rub r an sugar to a
white light cream. Add the eggs two at
O time, beating five minutes between each
addition sift the flotir with the powder
which add to the butter, etc,, and the milk,
spread between the layers grated cocoanut
and pastry, cream in proportion of a cupful
of the former to two of the latter. Sift sugar
or cocoanut over the top, mix in rather thin
batter and bake in jelly cake tins, weft
greased, in a hot oven fifteen minutes,
BLACKSHRBY SPONGE.—Cover half a bOx
of geIarine with half a cup of cold water,
and soak for half an hour ; then pour over it
one pint of boiling water. Put half a pint -
cup of sugar to haAf a pint of blackberries,
and beat until thoroughly liquefied. Stir
this in the dissolved gelatiney turn into a
basin, and place on snow 41t, Cracked ice
until cold and thick. Next boat tb stiff
froth, stir in the welPbeatet whites of 'fouls
eggs; and turn into' fancy" ptulding mold"
to harden. Serve With&Vardlla same, made
With the yelks of the four eggs.
AP tat Oa/tam-a-8. eta aonie finely' fikver-
Post Oface Box 450
tattiestmeinessematiei—thairl
Ists-t,ret,
ADVERTISERS
can learn the exaot cost
of any proposed line of
advertising in Ainerican
papers by addressing
Geo. P. Rowell & Co.,
wspeper Advertising Bureau,
20 Spruce' St.* New York.
Send tOdts, tor 100-Ionge Piarnphiet,
Could Do Something For Rer.
"Tongue cannot tell how much I love you,1
Miss Cla,ra,0 he said. "1 would do any.
thin in the world for you."
"Would you ?" she asked, wearily.
"Try "
"Well, go and spend the evening with
Lily Brown."
"Lily Brown? What for ?" he asked,
astonished,
" I hate her
The Ruling Passion.
"My dear," said a husband, gently rous-
ing his wife—the lady was clangeroudy ill—
DeHobson called a little while ago
arid left her leve and sympathy for yeti.
She seemed deeply affected."
"John," said the sick lady, in a very weak
tone of voice, aa she slowly uncloaed her
•eY..O.J.,"whc.t did she hate,qn.?"
Dr. Jessup a of the Britieh Medical Asso.
elation, seys that the wearing of high -heeled
Sheet do alters theseettre of graVity to'
cause a re ,ur to the 'habit of " taillesa
apes, th to n " '
A tender-hearted and compassionate dis-
position which inelines men to pity and feet
the misfortunes of others, and which is even
for its own sake incapable of involving any
inan in rnin and misery, is of all tempers
of mind the most amiable, and, though it
never receives much honour, is worthy of the
highest.
Life at Windeor Cantle.
The celebration of Queen Victoria's jubi-
lee bretignt out many accounts of events in
her childhood and early life, but not mutt
theseguests is carefully itrranged in advance.
NO other eourt in .Europe has so regular a
libchylc)i!ol!tneCsgi!)ialrciecg‘111\eulltlaochtlnedeldt.olbl:eyo jhQpoeillr'ilore ngeeir 1'a:11:81 'eedv, fleyr1 ogovmlaei tfrees i 1Windou.
of the comieg and the hour of departing' ef
a continual "come and ; but the hour
always guests areiviug or dsparting. It is
nine in the inorniug uutil night. There are
four months each yeer—her life passea with
the most perfect regularity, everything
The invitation e to these guest -_o r rather
the "royal conamaads," for so they are called
—are sent by the Master of the Household or
the Lord of Chamberlin several days in
advance. Then aro Windaor is some distance
from Londoe, and diner is served very late
at the castle, the guests must remain until
the Nlioethzitncglaiy; left to chance. From the:Mas-
ter of the Household down to tinsuperb
powdered valet in yellow plush, white silk
stockings and 'suckled shoes, every' one
knows exactly what he has to do ad per-
forms his duties with the precision of well -
ordered machinery.
The rooms occupied by each of the invited
guests are a parlor and a bedschaniber.
Each one of these rooms is spacious, luxuri-
ously furnished, and ornamented with tapes-
tries, pictures and other objects of art. .Ad-
joining each bed -chamber is an elegantly ap-
pointed bath -room.
No one is allowed to smoke in these rooms.
It is absolutely forbidden, and with excellent
reason, But there are smdking-roonts in the
cantle where smokers can betake themselves. ,
Now and then, it is said, there have been'
courtiers who have broken through this
rule, but they have incurred very grave
displeasure wlaen the fact has been ascer-
taiahede.
Tguests, in full uniform, if they are :
offieers, or in court costume, with sword
and sash, if they are civilians, meet in the
great corrider, a vast hall where, among ,
other magnificent articles, is found the I
richest collection of Sevres porcelain in the
world. The guests converse in low tones',
and '
as nine o clock approaches, the hall be-
comes entirely silent. The Queen is com-
ing.
The doors open, and at nine o'clock the
Queen enters,iready for dinner. She ap-
pears short Ln stature; she has, indeed,
written in her published journals, "1 am of
short stature for a Queen."
Her face is ruddy and her hair silvered I
She is dressed in black, and wears the dec-
oration of the Order of the Garter A h d '
ea
dress of lace falls bank over her shoulders,
and there are very rich diamonds sparkling
in her eons.
The dining -table is dressed with great
magnificence, and the whole room presents ne,
O glittering appearance, with quantities of n
rich gold and silver dishes. The dinner is t
prepared as elaborately as at any grert hotel, E
and there is a separate 000k for each princi-
pal dish.
Wh
Day and Night
acate attack of Bronchitis, a
cettSelesa tickling tlfe throat, and an
exhausting, dry, hacking cough, afflict
the sufferer. Sleep is banished, and great
prostration follows. This disease is also
attended vitli hoarseness, and sometimes
Loss of Voice. It is liable to beeonte
chi involN e the lungs, and termiwite
%Melly. Ayer's (glory), Pectoral afibtale
speedy relief and cure in cases of Them -
entitle. It controls the disposition to
vaon (11)inducesct: niviasteftrweisilitrign ig.)1s1)1,ehci tl!li•zt for
tt \\I:eclItteY,-fh°11,11i1;e' 831ietketil'sn'd II; 11 t titC'11%1;
loifsult3trorenlenledatileo.s After exlasuatinn, all the
Without Reiief,
i tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. It helped
Me immediately and effected a speedy
cure. —G, Ste yeah, ti, D., Caeroll ton, Miss.
AiTr's Cherry Pectoral is deeidedlA , ' ,.
.-- M. A. liu.St, :M. I),, Spoilt Parts, Ale.
heSt' remedy, w il Idu Iny luie w ledge, for ,
chrollie 1101101 itis, and all lung diseaSe
1 Wes attacked, last, winter, with a severe
cssi,l, xylliell, front exposure, grew worse
sold Saidly settled on my Limo. By
slight sweats I was retinue(' alniost to it
skeleton, ',My Cough NVIIR incessent, anal
frequently spit blood. Illy physician told
me to give up business, or 1 woaki not
live a month. After taking various reme..
ales without relief, I was finally
Oured By Using ,
two bottles of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. I
am now in perfect health, a id able to
resume business, after having been ,ipro-
notmeed ineurahle with Consinuptiemn •
S, P. Hem:Imams Sittilsburgh, Penn. '
For years 1 van in a decline. I laid
. el; eo :ekcl1 lungs,ieto1Hilit:i1:111' : I': :.:1..I(1 If:vile Tbler°e izil eflol'r itst
and Catarrh. A s , r's Cherry Pectoral' al.
long fiino comparatively vigorous. III
ease of a sudden cold I always resort to
the Pectoral, tuni find speedy relief.—
Edward E. Curtis, Rutland, Vt.
Two years ago I suffered from it severe
Bronchitis. The physician attending me
beeeme fearful that the disease would- ten -
'Innate in Pneumonia. After trVill''' Vari-
ous medicines, without benefit, he finally
prescribed Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, Which
relieved me at mice. I continued to take
this medicine a short tune, and was cured
— Ei nest Colton, Logansport, Ind.
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral,
Prepared by Dr. 3.0. Aver &I Co., Lowell, Mass.
Bold by all Druggists. Price el; six bottles, 414.
The Great English Prescription,
.A successful Medicine used over
30 years in thousands of cases.
Cures Sperniatorrhea, Nervous
Weakness, Emissions, Impotency •
and all diseases caused by abuse,
marmot] indiscretion. or over-exertion. [Ansel
ir packages Guaranteed to Cure when all other
_s
rael.eriAspultonToutalr eDrnuoggslust stoti tru The e e. OunreeaspEacnkigatiest
Six $5, by mail. Write forPamphlet. Address
ureka Chemical Co., Detroit, Stich.
For sale by J. W. Browning, C. Lute,
Exeter, and all druggists,
a
at seems a singular circumstances to an
American is that at these royal dinners
there are printed bills of fare, and beneath
each dish upon this bill of fare, is printed
tne name of the cook who prepared it.
Dinner is over at half.past ten or eleven.
The Queen rises and retires, and all the
ladies follow her. A few minutes after the
gentlemen proceed to the great corrider,
where tin Queen speaks a few words to each
of the guests present. In a half-hour more
she leaves the hall; and as she passes
through the door she pauses and bows with
dignity to the guests.
The:dinner is over and the gueets retire as
soon as they please.
THE SEAL FISHERIES.
The Clever Dodge of—the British for ',Myth
the Seals Down to the Coast.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 18—The seal fiehery
question is again agitating the minds of the
State Department, although it appears to be
out of their power to do anything as regards
O settlement of the matter. The representa-
tives of the British Government are =kin
very vigorous complaints against the manne
in which the Canadian sealers are treate
in Alaskan waters. So far the -vessels seize
by the revenue cutters have all been released
because of the lack of evidence of their kill-
ing seal within the prescribed line from Cape
Prince of Wales to Afton Island, one of the
Blijnie group. It has been intimated that
the officers of the revenue cutters have been
overzealous on account of the prize money
they would receive should the captured
vessels be confiscated and sold. This dung
has not yet been made openly, but the cons
plaiuts against the Captain of the Rush ar
of such a nature that little else could be im
agined. The one America,u seal company
permitted to carry on business in _Alaskan
waters has been complaining of the ruthless
manner in which seal are deetroyed by the
Canadian sealers passing through waters
under United States control.
"St. George and St. PaulIslands areprob-
ably the greatest breeding grounds for seal
in the world," said Dr. Wharton, solicitor
of the State Department, an authority, to a
reporter, "but the slightest invasion of their
haunts is sufficient to drive them hundreds
of miles into the impenetrable Arctic regions.
C. & S. GIDLEY,
UNDERTAKERS -Tr
---AND-------
Furniture Manufaourell'
—A FULL STOCK OF—
Furniture, Coffins, Caskets,,
And everytbing in the above line, to meet
immediate WAD tS.
g •
•
We have.one of the very best
Hearses, in the County,'
And Funerals fartiali ed and conducted a
• extremely low- prices.
• t
..„,g4tt•
r EMBIMMS ALLTEE DrarzaniaT SonInTSEs
d
d ,PENNYROVAL WAFERS.
Preacripteon or a ,physiclan
has hada life long experience is
treating female diseases: IS use
monthly with perfect success by
over 10,000 ladies. Pleasant, eat%
effectual Ladies ask_your drug?,
gist for *Pennyroyal Wafers ant
' take no Substitute, or inclose poste
age for sealed,particulars. Soldist
e C. Lutz, and all druggists. '
TELE:ESITEEKAohL in CISErxemterte. AbLy C34°...iDrz211°.
a druggists, $i per box. Address
a --
P.' • !1^-1'741
LL'
ORGANS
Unapproached for
Tone and Quality
This the British sealers are endeavoring. to CATALOGUES FREE.
do only from the north side, so as to drive
they can be slaughtered at the pleasure of BELL
the seal south on to Canadian shores, where 8f
the hunters. To a certain extent the Cana-
dians have succeeded, and from some of the
smaller islands near the St. George and the I
St. Paul the seal have been driven off. The
poachers in killing seal in American waters
nee rifles, shooting them at a distance, often
fifty or sixty yards. In nine cases out of
ten after having sunk, the dead seal never
come to the surface, so that several times
the quantity secured are lost. American
sealers state that the beaches on the seal -
breeding islands are covered with carcases
washed up by the currents and surf froin the
deep sett, where they were shot by the
Canadians, The Americans and natives are
only permitted to use the harpoon at sea,
and only on shore can the gun be utilized,
and then only on rare occasions, the report
of the piece being sufaeient to scare away
the seal which, after having once departed
Under such circumstances, never return.
It is thought at the Department of State
that Congressman Thomas B. Reed of elide°,
who ha a just retarned to Portland from a,
prolonged trip in Alaska vvhere he studied
the question'will endeavor tosecure a settle-
ment of the diffieulty in the next Congress.
the Pueblo county jail, Col -
()redo, permitted one of the prisoners to play
the violin evenings. The other tight the
scraping began at at early hour, and was
kept up contintiously and vigorously until
late, when it come& In the morning the
jailer found that under cover df the a/taste
four prisoners had sawed off a portion of a
window casing, worked a big stone out of
place, and escaped.
C013 Guelph, Out,
TI1flLEBRTO Pr
CHASES
111$13 ERA Kr -1
-ONO E UDR
FOR LIVER AND KIDNEY DISUSES
When an intelligent man wants to pus,
chase, he bum fromparti es whose standing in
their several callings is a guarantee for ihe
aritzto4t.hizaTacccisi".72tioinststzminles°,9?1171
only t °Se mado y prim eel professional uteri.
ioDnr: CriASE is too well andfavorablY knewn
Ids receipt books to require any r000rinhenda-
Do. CHASE s Liver Cute has a receipt book
Wrapped around every bottle which ie wortb ita
weight in gold.
DR. OHASN's Liver Cure la guaranteed to Niro
all diseases arising front a torpid or inactive
liver such as Liver Comp:aim, inyaPentist,
indigestion, 11i7icagnc.,1, Jaundice, Dena.
ache, !Liver Scot% Sallow Coniplexion, etc..
THE KIDNEYS THE KlaNesen
Dn. MUSD'S Liver Cure is a certain cure for
all deran ,em nt f
o° kic,WOiYis
the back pain 1 lower poi , 8
constant ( esirc to pass urine* red ohd
sediments, shooting pains in passage, 'Bright's °
disease and ell urinary troll les ,ote
;rry it. take no other, it will aim $
all dealers at ee per bottle:
by an °
re',F•N3rAN.P2./nkt Cio*,
ttOl.r AGE:Nvs FON cAN OA. rintior'000
• 'Sold at 0. LUTZ'S, Agent Leader
• •