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The Exeter Times, 1887-9-29, Page 6The First Sign Of failing health, whether in the form. of Night Sweats and Nervousness, or in a sense of General Weerinese fuel Loss of Appetite, should suggeet the use of Aye'te Sarseparilia. This preearetion ie most effective for giving tone and steength to the eneeebled system, promoting tho digestion antl assimilation of food, rest ote bag the nervous forces to their leoelnel conditioo, and for purifying, eurichiug, aud vitelizing the blood. Faihnce Health. , Ten years ago my health began to fail. I was troubled with a distress= Cough, Night Sweats, Weakness, and 'Nervous- ness. I tried various remediee preseri bed by different physician, but became so weak that I could not go upstairs with- out stopping to rest. My friends recent- meeded me to try Aye's Sarsaparilla, whieh I did, and I itin uow as healthy end strong as ever. —Mrs. U. L. Williams, Alexandria, Minn. I have used Ayer's Sarsaparilla, in my amily, for Scrofula, mid know, if it is taken faithfully, that it will thorollehlY eradicate this terrible disease. I have else preseribed it as a tome, as well as an alter- ative, and muet way that houestly believe It to be the best blood medicine ever oompounded. — W. F. Fowler, D. D. S., M. D., Greenville, Tenn. byspepsia Cured. It would ho impossible for me to de- scribe what I sufiered front Indigestion and Headaehe up to the time I beemi taking Ayer s Sarsaparilla. I was under the eare of various physicians and tried a great many kinds of medicines, but never obtained more than temporary -re- lief. After taking .Ayer's Sarsaparilla for a short time, my headache disappeared, and my stomach performed its duties more perfectly. To -day my health is com- pletely restored.— Mary Harley Sprites - field, Mass. I have been greatly benefited by the prompt use of -elyer's Sarsaparilla. It tones and invigorates the system, regulates the action of the digestive and assimilative organs, and vitalizes the blood. It is, without doubt, the most reliable blood purifier yet discovered—H. D. Johuson, &V Atlantic ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Ayers Sarsaparilla, Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co, Lowell, Mass. Price Si; six bottles, 85. 'THE EXETER TIMES. Is published every Thursday niorning,at the TIMES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE Me.in-stree t , nearly opposite Fitton's Jewel ery Store, Exeter, Ont., by JohmWhite & Son Pro- nrietors. DATER oF ADVERTCH/NG : First insertion, per line. ..... ..... ..,...... ae cents. Each subsequeet insertion,per line 5 cents. To insure insertion, advertisements should be sent in Dot lator than Wedneedrty morning OurX0B PRLNVING• DEPARTMENT is one f the largest and best equipped in the County I Huron, All work entrusted to us will receiv ur prompt attention. Decisions Reg ar din g. News- papers. Any person who takes a paperregularlyfroin he post-oflice, 'whether directed in bis name or another's. or Whether he has subscribed or not is responsible for payment. 2 Unperson orders his paper aiscontinued he must pa.y all airears or the publisher may continue to send ib until the payment N made, and then colleet the whole amount, whether he pa,por 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 Emily. 4 The courts have decided that refusing to take newspapers or peilodicale from the post - office, or remoying and leaving them uncalled for is prima facie evidence of intent tionallram/ GJ Sendle cents postage and we will send you free a royal, valuable sample box of go oda that will nu. you in the way of making more money at once,, than anything else in America . Both sexes of all ages can live tt home and work in spare time, or all thb Lillie. Capital notrequirud. We will start you, Immense pay sine for those who start ab once. SmnesoN its Co .Pcrrbl an c, Maine Exeter Butcher Shop. R. DAVIS, Butcher & General Dealer —IN ADD RINDS OF— MEAT Customers supplied TUESDAYS, THURS- DAYS AND $A.T UTD.A.YS at their residence ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL BE CEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION. HowLost, I -Tow Ilestcre Welanve recently p ublishod a new edition of DR .013LVERWELD'S OBL.EBRATED ES- SAY o nthe r /laical and p erre amen t cure (with- out medieine)of NervousDebility,Mentaland physical capacity impediments to Marz [age, etc., resulting from excesses. Price,in sealed envelope,only 6 cents,ortwo poster.° stamps. The celebrated author o f this admirable es sayelearly demonstrates from thirty years suecessfulprectice, theta:lam ing consequen- ces mayberadically cured without the dang- erous use of internal medicines or the use of the knife; Pointoet a mode of cure at once t simple certain and effectual , by means of _ which every sufferer, no matter what his eon- U clitionmay be ,may cure him tielt ch.mply, pri i vatelv and radically. 1 'Th.i lecture shouldbe in the hands of vv. ; ery youthandevery manin th eland. Addmis i t THE CULVERWELL MEDICAL COMPAH t Post °Mee Box 450 41 AX11 Sr, NEW 17°ItE- ElcsUSEHOLD. Counsel of a Nether to /ikithi3rs. Woo can tilarne 5 child for having little et for the mother who never attempts puoish, when punishment is due, but imply shake e her head dolefully over her ehildren's wrongdoing and threatens them by the words, "ell tell your father when he conies home, he'll puoi$1). e'en." Every mother sheltie have just as much authority over her children as their father has. She ehould exercise the right to re. prove or punish when. necessar, , just as much as she should exercise the right to give encouragement, and. praise, when need- ed or deserved. All children at some time during their lives, ueed punishment, I don't mean whipp- ino,, there are other modes of punishment, that meet all requirements, and are much less degrading to the child and mother. I find that a half hour of solitary confine- ment, goieg to bed. an hour earlier at night, or the loss of some hoped-for excursion, toy, will usunily work wonders with my little brood. Whipping is something sel- dom, very seldom resorted to with my little open, Great indeed must be the offence that merits such degradation. And. yet if ouch punishment must be adieliaistered, why my small men and women know that mamma will not shrink from the task. Al- though the children know that mamma suffers muoh more than does the offender, and I think that is the greatest punishment of alit° them. lean not help getting out of patience with the women who leave all such un- pkasani duties to the father. It is not fur to the ohildren, the father, or themselves, Children should be taught to look for- ward to papa's home -coming as one, if not the most, pleasant thing of the day. Not something to be looked forward to with dreakand fear, knowing that with papa's coming comes also the long deferredpunish- !tient. It must be to say the least decidedly un- pleasant and discouraging for the father of a family of little ones, to come home at night after a hard and busy day, and be met vrith a row of downcast, sulky, or tear- ful faces, and be told by mamma that John- nie was saucy; Daisy disobedient, or that Freddie played truant, intead of going to school. Instead of a quiet pleasant evening of games, and chats with papa, there is a hastily eaten supper, the culprits are dealt with as the parents think best, and the children sent to bed with bitter, wounded hearts, and the parents sit in gloomy silence below stairs. Papa cannot help thinking that his children think of him only with dread and perhaps dislike. .And the mother ought to feel that her children look upon her as a tale -bearer, and spy. All this might be avoided if puniahment, had been given when the offence took place. Let your children understand that mamma can be firm as well as gentle. And that an act of disobedience will be punished by her, just - as thoroughly, if not as readily, as for- giveness will be granted, when the repent- ant child asks for it. Never punish children without first being certain that they undeistand what they are being punished for. And after punishing them talk it all over with them, show them that you punish them not for revenge. but for their own, good. And theywill have much more respect for you than they would have were you to "sneak" out of the unpleasant duty by the threat "I'll tell your father." In reply to Aunt Marjorie's query, as tO whether my "Big "boya and ,girls dislike to go to church any more than those who began earlier 1 would, say,—They certainly do not dislike to go to church at all, on the con- . trary they like to go very mush indeed, and my eldest boy would gladly attend every service if it were possible for me to allow him to do so, but as the " Biggest " of my big boys is but a very small eoung man, who will probably wear lie, tiewsers for some years to come, I can not always per- mit him to go to church as much as he de- sires, as it is impossible for me to always go with him, and I do not like to have him go alone, especially in the:evening. After church we always " talk ever" the ser- vice, compare notes as to who remembered the most of the sermon, and who under- stood it the most perfectly. Then in the little home service, bits of the morning ser- mon are repeated and many of the same hymns are sung. In short I try to rnake Sunday the most pleass.nt day in the whole week, and at the same time strive to im- part to iny darlings.a tender, true reverence for God's Holy Day of rest, and the wonder- ful privilege they enjoy in the way of Sun- day School, and Church services. I think that many people have a wrong idea as to how children should be taught a reveren- tial feeling for the sabbath. They take away all the children's booksand toys, put on all of their best clothes, and then expect them to sit down and keep their clothes clean and rnake no noise. Poor little thing, it is not fair. How can they feel a rever- ence or pleasure in the Sabbath if it is made so distasteful to them. I believe the best way is to make it a day of pleasure. Not noisy everyday pleasure, but infin. itely more enjoyable even to them, give then plenty of Sunday books and Sunday games. (There I know that somebody is shaking their heads reprovingly). Well wait a moments What 1 mean by Sunday games, are " sliced" or "cut" maps of the Bible, for the little cams to put together and learn something in this pleasant harmless manner as to where Jesus lived when upon earth, the place over which he traveled, and. where, when a new born baby, he laid in the manger— and—the place where he died I for us, then there are the Sunday seeseee I mamma tells to the little ones, the pretty Sunday hymns they sing. The long pleas- ant Sunday evening talks just before bed- inc. I believe this is the way to make hildren reepect and love the Sabbath. Try , t mothers, try the home service, and all the other little Sunday pleaeures, and then see f when your little folks are Old enough to go to church, they will not look forward to he church -going with pleasure, becausb hey will understand and be interdsted in what is being said, and have been taught a true reverence for all thines holy. I What Salt is Good For. When you give your eellar its fall cleaning add a, little copperas water and salt to the whitewash. 1 INC‘!="12=91==allSEAMMIIVEMSNiEDI ADVERTISERS can team the exaot cost of any proposed line of advertising in American papers by addressing Geo. P. Rowell & Co., Newspaper Advertising Bureau, .tC) spruce St., New York, t Berta 3 00t0, for 1004'ago t Sprinkling salt on the tops and at the bot- toms of garden walls is said to keep shails from climbing up or clown. I For relief trout heartburn tn. dyspepsia, drink a little cold water hi Which has been I dissolved a teaspoonful of salt, Ink stains on linen can be taken outs if the stain is first weshecl inestreng Belt and water and then sponged with lemon juice. For weeds in the grass, put a pinch or two of ecittin the Middle of each, and, im- leett a ehower washes it off, it will kill the l weede. In a basin of water, salt, of course, fake to the bottoin so never beak salt fish with e skin aide down, ast the salt will fall to he skin mid remain here. Salt and mustard, a teaspoonful of each followed with sweet oil, melted butter, or Milk, is the antidote for Fowler's solution, white preoipitate of arsenic. For stains on the halide, nothing is better than a little salt, with enough Itanou juice to moisten it, rubbed on the spots and then washed {Alin clear water. For weeds in pavementa or gravel walks, make a strong lamas of ()verse eelt and boil- ing water '• put the brine in a spripkling oan and water the weeds thoroughly, being careful not to let any of the bripe get on the i grass, or it will kill t too. If a chimney or flue catches on fire, close all windows and cloorts firet, then hang a blanket in front of the grate to exelude all air. Water should never be poured down the chimney, as it spoils the cal pote. Coarse salt thrown down the flue is much better. Times are Changing. The past is continually reappearing and in nothing more noticeably than in the hor- ror which all uDjustly privileged classes al- ways have displayed and are always still displaying at the idea of its even being sug- gested that they should disgorge any of their ill-gotten gains or surrender peaceably or otherwise any of their unjust and unrea- sonable privileges. They have always clung to these with death -like tenacity; they have been willing to shed any amount of blood in order to retain them. They have been guilty of tho most monstrous cruelty. They have stopped at no crime. Tney have hesi- tated at the commission of no baisenees. They have always been ready to tell the most monstrous hes and to raise the moat misleading:and most unfounded outreies in order to secure their own selfielt interests and keep down their ill-used bread winners. When was it ever known that monopolists of any kind or of any eountry voluntarily gaye up even one of their oppressive and most unreasonable privileges? Instead of surrendering these, the more unjust and the more indefensible they were, ao much the more resolutely have they been clung to. What one right could be mentioned which the English people in the whole course of its history has received from the free gene- rous abnegation of their "ruling clones" ? There has not been one. It has been through battle and bloodshed, through tears and tur- moil that ev( ry inch has been gained. It is the same thing at the present day the world over, not excepting Canada, of which some people boast so much as if it were the very cradle of liberty and the abode of all the virtues and of all the saints. Canada is growing its privileged classes—its monopol- ists, just as other countries are doing, and ib will every day find the evil effects of such a system and Will have to acknowledge that it is easier to foster an unjustifiable iniquity than to eradicate it. When monopolists are openly called together on the eve of an elec- tion in order to contribute to a bribery fund on condition that their privileges shall be continued and extended. When professed- ly holy and conscientious men take credit to themselves for puttiug their fellow monopol- ists up for sale to be knocked down to the highest bidder, there is not much room for saying "God, we thank Thee that we are not as other men or as other nations are." But one thing is certain and encouraging. The supporters of unjust privileges have always, sooner or later, had to give way, and the change effected has only been the more radical and sweeping for their bitter and unreasoning resistance. The peasant revolt under Richard If., when the comraon toilers, the " Manes " in short, first came into notice was put down with merciless severity- All the promises given in the hour of difficulty and terror were cast to the winds and the " kingly " or " knight- ly " word was found to be as worthless as it has generally been in more recent days. In one short surnmer and autumn 7000 men perished on the gallows or on the field slaughtered in spite of all promises and all oaths. But what of that? The miserable king might cry in repudiatien of his" kingly word," --"Villeins you were, and villeins you are. In bondage you shall abide and that not your old bondage, but a worse." The leaf has but to be turned and there the his- torian tells: "Terrible as were the mea- sures of repression which followed the peas- ant revolt and violent as was the passion of reaction which raged among the proprietary classes at its close, the end of the rising was in fact secured. Cancel charters of manu- mission as the council might, serfage was henceforth a doomed and perishing thing. The read of another outbreak bung round the employer. The attempts to bring back obsolete services quietly did away, etc., etc. "But," it is significantly added, inevitable as such a process was every step of it was taken in the teeth of the wealthier classes." Their temper indeed at the close of the rising was that of men frenzied by panic and the taste of blood. ' They scouted all notion of concession. The idea of liberating their serfs was treated ' with perfect scorn. They said that their serfs were their "goods," just as the southern slave holders used to speak of their human "chattels." The king they said, could not take their goods from them but t by their own consent. "And this consent,"; ley declared, "we have never given and , never will gire, ' were we all to d!e.._ in one day." ,Between Edinburgh and GlatigoW. In 1760 the wholeintercourse between Edin- burg and Glasgow was carried on by means of 10 or 12 packhorses, going and returning twice a week. When Sir Sohn Sinclair sue- ceeded in 1776 there was not a road nor a ' single cart in Caithness, and he introduced the firet highway when only IS. Be on one occasion assembled 1,269 laborers and made in one day a road over the hill of Ben. eheilt. The first public coach between In- verness and Perth began to run in 1860, shot t - ening the journey by five days; it was not until 1811 that mail coaches were established I between Aberdeen and Inverness. (Cock burn assigns the later date of 1816 to thie innovation.) The south mail arrived in Elgin soinetimes with only two lettere, one to a banker, the other to a lawyer. In a country as superstitious as Scotlend, improvements made their way very slowly. Improved husbandry was received with disfavor; fences ' were thrown down; newly 'slanted trees pull. ed up. For some time the people of Skye re. fused to use the roads, because the hard sue- • face of the tnee wore out their shoee and bruised their feet. Steamers, it may be, won their way more easily, as they were taken at firet by the Highlancleis to be tra- veling disti1lries. Marguerite. Be J, 5. lx iittio late, my Marguerite, My daisydainty flower, Your moraine freshness shames en bloom That stings from SUR end shower, Withie the shining nosey nage Of hair, like primrose tinted, Coy Suabeams D.irk enmeshed, as rich As through spun silk they glinted. , A. dusky gold or couber cloud It g.leaineebout your sealing, ' Fele-baby face, whose ananning grace , Fields rarest arts beguiling. Like elokerme light in restless play On running wetere wimpled Flaeli eager smiles, chase merry gleams Aoroes your face all dimpled. For ohOteeet dimples ever wrought By fairy cilmpleenoulders Pion rendezvous about your cheeks, Neck, chubby hands and shoulder. At hide-ancl-seel about your throat Each dimple SCeks its follow, When, tilting like a flower, you toss Tour saucy head so yellow. And wondroue bits ot wondrous blue From euneelay skies o'er bending Show where the curling lashes fringe, Your eyes, soft shad,ws lending. But little lass ; bet witching elf, The charm is lost in telling, As web convey by rule and rote Elusive odors dwelling Within the rese, as mirror forth Tour megio linens in rhyrnieg, Vain effort as to catch and hold The musio of bells chiming. I only Nel thy childhood's grace— Thy wiles beyond all proving, I only know to look on thee Stirs every power of loving. Autumn Winds. NT J. IL, ,WI1,11.11010A. 0, winds 1,e by sound so mournful? "Tis the grand Autumnal timet The world is full of splendor, And all things are sublime. There's a ripeness in the valleys, Fraught with blessings doh and rare; Fine fruit e bedeck the uplands And hiusicles evelywheie. 0, winds 1 why Sigh so mournful Through the forest's golden hen?s Bore touchingly beautiful Than all the summer's green, "Tis' true the leeves are falling, The towers have ceased to bloom; The birds are fleeing southward, I hear their farewell song. 0, winds1 I,'too, am mournful O'er the things that cannot bo ; And thoughts that crowd my bosons, Sob like waves along the sect! 0, voices ! long, long silent, 0, faces I ieng hid away; Your presence breathes around me With the Autumn winds to -day. "Ye are Not Your Own." IT t. A. MORRISON, TORONTO. "Ye are not your own, Let your faith be known, Though you stand alone, Ome is your Master -1N Christ the Lord, Have no anxious thought For your love is sought, And your life is bought; Let each waking thought Be remut your duty to Christ, your Lord. "Ye are not your own ;" Not a penance sown Can for sin atone; One is your Master—'tis Christ the Lord, And He paid it all, And will tweak its thrall. (Not a sparrow's fall Is beyond Bis call) Be about your duty to Christ, your Lord. " Ye are not your own ,;" Neither grieve nor moan, Nor the wrong condone,— One is your Master— 'tie Christ the Lord; Be is pure and true And his servant, you -Must be like him too In the things you do, And about your duty to ()Mist, your Lord. "Ye are not your own" There's a Radiant Throne, And a new " White Stone," Frorn Him, your Mester—still Christ the Lord, When your race js run To its goal, and won, And before the SUN God shall say ;—"Well done, Come and dwell forever with Christ, your Lord. The Eleventh Trip Across Africa. 1 Lieut. Wissmann has arrived at Mozam- Ibique at the end of his second trip from sea to sea across equatorial .Africa. His journey is the eleventh that has been made across the dark continent in these letitucles. ' Wise- , mann is the man who after his first trip across Africa, brought home the most won- derful stories that had been heard from any reputable traveller. Many people could hardly believe that the population was so dense as he represeated in one region he had visited south of the Congo, or that the natives were so considerably advanced in agriculture and various arts and the methods of comfqrtable living. As soon as practic- able,agents of the Congo State were sent to this region on the upper Kassel and its branches where Wissmann had found these great tribes. There are HOW two white stations in this country, which has also been reached by one of Bishop Taylor's mission- aries. All these white men have testified to the accuracy of Wissmann's report, and. we now know that some of the most remark- able and promising natives of Africa live along these southern affluents of the Congo. The special significance of Wissmann's last trip lies in the fact that his route was directly across the country, south of the Congo, through a vast region that is still a white space on our maps. While Congo explorers in the last five years have been very active and have achieved great results, their labors have, in the main, been confined to the rivers they have explored, and we know compara- tively little of great stretches of country lying between the Congo waterways. We need now such researches as those in which Wissinann has justbeen engaged to complete our knowledge of the Congo basin. There is reason to believe that Wissmanit's recent labors have been unusually fruitful and interesting. Some ways south of Wissinann's route Dr. Wolff found along the Sankuru and Isomarni Rivers a densely peopled region, and some towns which he believed contained 15, 000 people. North of Wissmann'e route Gren- fell pushed up the Bussera, the TchOupa, the Lularin, and other rivers, all lined with hundreds of towns and alive with fleets of canoes darting hither and thither, and giV- ing the scene a far mare animated aspect than is found in many parts of the Congo itself. 11 is among the fertile plains and great forests betWeen the regitme where ‘Volff and Grenfell have labored that Wise - mann entered last fall upon his new ex- plorations. It is believed that this great region in density of population and in geographical interest,is fully equal to the countries north and south of it of which the explorere have given as entertaining glimpses. There is little doubt that "VVissinann is bringing home a very interesting story d teasel, end thee the labors he has just completed will do much to fill up one of the blanks that still remain on the map of Africa. The digeetibility of ensilage bees been do' ternhined in but few expetiments ; but the experiments made tend to show that the eneriage is slightly less digeetible than the , A Lovely Complexion. Young Mr, (10 miss Breezst)— What a soft, beautiful complexion your friend Miss Wabesh has, Miss Breezy Miee Breezy --Yes, and don't fyou think, Mr. W ' ialdo ,that it is even more so on ohe tide than its on the Other Should a, new plant make its appearance on your ferm this summer' find gent whether it ie a feiond or foe. If it is e, weed, °lean it out root and branch before it multielie and e 'becomes detablished raw material, RAILWAY BRAIN. The Atilleilon of itaiiiroad Employees Against -which. Employer* skonid provide. At a recent ineeting of theSoeiety of PhY. eiciane of the Choate Hospital in Berlin, Thomsen exhibited a patient whim ease he described as one of "railway brain," a neu- rosis reeembling in manyreepeets the con- . dttlen alreedy well kuosva wider the eame of "railway spine." A beelthy employee aged 30, without history of alcoholism, or of any predisposing neurotic condition, by the midden motion of hie traie was throivn violently against the side of a ear striking his head. He sustained no wound, and at the time of ip jury consciousness was preserv- ed, Some hours aftersverds, however, he was suddenly seized with syncope, with mental terror, lost all sense °Vocation, could not recognize the eimpleet frmiliar objeut, and described, what he sasv erroneously; his one objective syniptom is absolute emesthe. eie of the entire body. On the fourth clay after his injury he had violent headaches, a pulse rate of 44, and, in addition to the cut- aneous anesthesia, loss of olfactory and taste sensations, with difficult hearing. On thc fifth day the psychic symptoms suddenly ceased, he could remember nothing win, 1 hed happened, and had no explanation for him condition. The patient subsequently beeaine very melancholic' complaining of insomnia, head,, ache, spinalpain, o eanness, and failure of appetite; no eermationi3 of terror or disorder- ed dreams were present. The objective symptoms rematning were crewel and spsual laypermsthesia ; failure to dietingnishbetween white and colons ; loss if emell and taste, and impaired hearing; numbne,se, and at times paresis and spasms, of the region sup- plied by the facial nerve were also present. He was discharged from the hospital as im • proved, but two months afterwards his con- dition was unchanged; he was unable to work on account of headache and weakness. Thomsen's diagnosis was "railway brain" a condition of profound disturbance of cere- bral functions from shock. The increase in mechanical appliances, and the immense extension of railways, afford abundant opportunities for observation of nervous shook, both in its fatal and milder form. While post-mortem demonstration et! hemorrhage and structural lesions explains the course of these cases when fatal, it is evi- dent that w e must rely upon the continued observationof sur viving patients to determine the development of lesions which will illus- trate the pathology of this condition. The possibility of the production of degenerative changes in nervous matter, and cerebral conditions causing permauent mental im- pairrnent, is an Interesting question for neurologists, and, in its medico -legal aspects, for the corporation whose property may cause such injuries, to their patrons and em- ployees. Buffalo Bilk No wonder that Buffalo Bill has been taken aback by his enthusiastic reception by the 247e11s and aristobracy of England. It Seems he has a friend of the name of Roy. in California, and that his friend lately wrote to him. Bill is not so proud of his pheno- menal success in England as to forget his old friends. He accordingly replied in the following fashion :— My dear Colonel,—It was a genuine plea- sant surprise to receive your letter. I have often thought of you, and wondered what had become of you. So glad that you are still on the top of the earth. Well, ever since I got out of the mud -hole in New Or - learns, things having been coming my way pretty smooth, and 1 ha -re captured this country from the Queen down, and am doing them to the tune of 19,000 dollars a day. Talk about show business, there was never anything like it ever known, and never will be again, and, with my European reputa- tion, you can easily guess the business I will do when get back to my own country. It's pretty hard work with two and three performances a day, and the society racket, receptions, dinners, Ste. No man, not even Grant, was received getter than your hum- ble servant. I have dined with every one of the royalty, from Albert, Prince of Wales, down. I sometimes wonder if it is the same old Bill Cody, the bull -whacker. Well, colonel, I still wear the same sized hat, and when I make my pile I am coming back to visit all the old boys. If you meet any of them tell them I ain't got the big head worth a cent. I am over here for dust. Will be glad to hear from any of them. Write me again.—Your old-time friend BILL CODY. Bill is evidently no fool, but he is as little a cad. Whiskey's Killing Him. Beggar—" Will you please give me six- pence, sir? I'm on my way home to die." Gentleman (handing him money)—" I don't mind giving you sixpence for so worthy a B E L" purpose as that : but your breath smells horribly of whiskey." "1 know it does, sir. Whiskey's what's killing me." It is not the farmer who does the most work himself whe now succeeds best but the one who employs the best hand eto do his . heavy work while he has time to look after he details of the businees which no one but himself can attend to. nett' tOmerIvtititateretetaelle Sugar-COated r Cathartic .honieS telVd, lf the II 0 e the, 1,ivqr Pq- I bowple nre doestipatedeer i ula riiiirso:nilrliit,s,yr,auii.civ eioa,b s6uParoree.e. rlY? use ,For,sothe years 1 WaS asvictini to Liver Compliunt, 10 consequeoce ef which 1 gst;teittroepil. fr.00tinxeGwelibeoefxilooDeobitliAtyy,eain41 Jndl 'restored inc to Perfect' W. T. Brightasy, nefluerson, Wr. Va. Por years` I have 'welled more upon liyer's Pills than anything 'else, to Regulate, my bowels, These Pills are mild in action, and do their work thoroughly. have used them with good sirsa, in cases of Rheu- matism, Kidney Trouble, and Dyspepsia. —G; sPMi II el cu ae Ab°11.°Letf SI IS' tlonritiosse Afi In 1 Liver troubles, from which 1 liad suffer d for years. 1 consider them the best tis =Kiel mei would not be without thei — Morris pates, Doivneville, N. Y, I was attacked with Bilious Fever, which was followed by Jaundice, and was so dangerously' ill that my friends tte- spuiecr of my recovery. I commenced taking Ayerte Pills, and soon regained my customary strength and vigor. -7-johu C. Pattison, Lowell, Nebraska. Last rinsing I suffered greatly from troublesome humor on my side. Li spite of every eflbrt to cure this eruption, it in- „ creased until the flesh became entirely raw. I was troubled, at the same time, with Indigestion, and distressing pains in The Bowels. By the advice of ,a friend I began taking Ayers Pills. In a short time I was free from pain, my food digested properly. the sores on my body commenced healing, and, In less than one inonth, I was cured. —Samuel D. White, Atlanta, Ga. I have long used ,Ayer'e Pills, in my family, and believe them to be the best pills made. —S. C. Darden, Darden, Miss. My wife and little girl were taken with Dysentery a few days ago, and at once began giving them small doses of A.yer's Pills, thiulting I would call a doctor if the disease became any worse. In a short time the bloody discharges stopped, all pain went away, and health was restored. --- Theodore Ealing, Richmond, Va. Ayer's Pills,, Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer ec Co„Lowell I • Sold by all Dealers In Iledielne. The Great English Preseriptlo A successful Medicine used over 30 years in thousands ot cases. cures Spermatorrhea, Nervous; Weakness, Emission*, Impotency and all diseases caused by abuse. ineroarej indiscrezion, or over-exertion. [Armes Six packages Guaranteed to Cure when all other% Fail.PreserjAstskieey, quarDru k enoggsit o u8baftltrufek.. re tine"lpacialgrowil" SI. Six $5, by mail. verite for Pamphlet. Addles Eureka Chemical CO., Detroit. zilch. For sale by J. W. Browning, a ',tits> Exeter, and all druggists 0. de S. GIDLE ..UNDERTAK-ERS:! Furniture 41-pnvtaourers *FULL STOCK OF— Fiirniture, Coffins, Gaskets, And. everything in the above Iitse,eet immediate watits. We have one of the very best Hearses in the County, , Anil PiinOral immeshed and conducted a extremely low prices. Ella/AMR or _sen Tun DIFFERENT 8081ETES PENNYROYAL WAFER& Prescription of a physician di* has hada. life long experience la treating female diseases. Is wad monthly with perfect success over 10,000 ladies. Pleasant, effectuaL Ladles ask_ yourdru ,g1st for Pennyroyal Wafers take no substitute, or Inclose p age for sealed particulars. Sokl _ all druggists; $1 per box. Addreall TEE EUREKA. CHEMICAL c0.. Dornorr, Mosit • • 6,t,r Exeter - bi3 j'W Brownin C. Lulz, and all druggists: • The (1 P. R.syncticate manat;es to make itself the most unpopular corporation that country where it does business ad where it has any measure of power. Its members evidently think they beetride this poor Do- minion ae did the old Colossus of which all have heard, They sit as Wive and think that they shall never see sorrow. Any and every thing that is thought to be opposed to their interests ia remorselessly crushed and the cenvenience of the public is the last thing thought of if a rival is to be worried and hampered. An eloquent divine, not a hundred miles from Toronto said some time ago in the courac of a fine burst of eloquent , illustration : "The members of the C. P. ' R. Syndicate are not angels. Ale no, ; they are not angels 1" The regretfully pa- thetic tone in which the words were uttered thrilled through the audience like an elec- tric shock, though the fact was so evident, even to the meanest capacity, that there was little room for tears, and the sacredness of the place alone prevented something which would have eounded hugely like Laughter, but which died away in and was comer.). mised by a sardonic grin. Perhaps it is the best thing they ca,n do, Monopoliete they were wise and prudent might some- times have a long lease of power and pion - der, very seldom, howeverghave they been found gifted in any elicit way and their term of tyranny and plunder has thus been Made all the shorter. It is so far Well,at any rate, to have it settled on high clerical authority that Canada's "old men of the sea" are " not angels," though, to be sure, they have a guardian angel in the shape of the tweet little cherub that sitis tp aloft to take care not only of "poor Jack," but of "p008 George" and company aii well. ORGANS Unapproached for Tone and Quality CATALOGUES FREEr Canada has ever seen in any quarter of the BELL C .3 Guelph, Oil 0 IRE e'ELESRATED ==rf Dr, CHASE'S k ..iformAKe w viktie IRA FOR LIVER AND KIDNEY DISEASES " When an, intelligent man tvants to pyr- e/rase, he btlys front parti es whose standing in *heir seVerat callings 15 a guarantee eer the crisaAWn ty of their ares." "this sterling otto 11 tummy true in regarci to patent medicines, etiy Olgy trim made by practical proNssional men. De, Citaets is too svell and favorably known by tile receipt books to 'require any Peconinienda- WES. CHASES Liver Cure has a re'ceipt, book wrapped around every bottle which is worth its weegliain gold, n uAsE s Liver (..i,nre is guartanteet1 to ger° all diseases arising from a tone or neer:ye liver such as Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, ladlitiestien, o tA14.710b, .1si UR ft lee, 15034. helm, Liver Spots. Sallow Contplexion, edc., THE KIDNEYS 'THE KIDefFn'S Dn. CHASE'S Liver Cure is a"eortairt erne; for gil derangements of the kidneysesuch nt paiii in tile batk pain in lower portion attic abdoinete tonetant desire to ease 'urine, red and svhite (kictignsertatisia eahrith eyatinoe iNeasstige, trig]) t's a'ry it, take no otil:serr, chec'yott: : Sold by all dealare at $1.00 per bottle. T. EI111,4,1480N, & Co., Sete AGtNVI3 Fon aRADNOND scm,s.f, ri LUTZ'S, Agent; Exeter. 1 a a I st fr ti se ki in Y( 10 a,b an th 101 ph cc, of pe po do he wi Th tin sel ise 1 the -frit die pas coo Tf bro a ve,t tge a 1 hot T Fre In grad of 1 mot o ri men sed ities the j dent and —w char they The: vine pros mon dc TE who honn Pern of so noth