The Exeter Times, 1887-11-3, Page 2Eyes
The eyes are always in sympathy with
'tike body, and afford an excellent judex
*t its condition, When the eyes become
weak, stud the lids inflamed and sore, it is
an evidence that the system has become
fdisordered by Scrofula, for which Ayer's
flarsaparilla is the best kuown remedy.
facrofula, which produeed a painful in-
flammation in my eyes, caused Me much
suffering fel. a number of years. By the
advice of a physician I conunenced taking
Ayeris Sarsaparilla. After using thia
xnellicine a short dine I was completely
• Cured
Myeyes are now in a splendid condition,
and I tun as well and strong as ever. —
Mrs. William Gage, Concord, N. IL
' Pot a number of years I was troubled
-with a humor in iny eyes, and was unable
to obtain any relief until I commeaced
using .A.yer's Sarseparilla. This medicine
ants effected a complete ettre, and believe
it to be the best of blood purifiers.—
C.E. Upton, Nashua, N. 11.
• From childhood, and until within a few
inionths, I have been afflieted with Weak
and Sore Eyes. I have used for these
feemplaiuts, with beneficial results, Ayer's
Sarsaparilla, and consider it a great blood
purifier. — Mrs. C. Phillips, Glover, Vt.
I suffered for a year with infiamma-
lion in my left eye. 'Three ulcers fornaed
on the ball, depriving ine of sight, and
enineing great pein. After trying many
ether remedies, to no purpose, I was finally
Induced to use Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and,
By Taking
Vitae bottles of this mediclue, have been
lentirely cured. My sight has been re-
stored, and there is no sign of inflamma-
tion, sore, or ulcer in my eye. —Kendal
T. Bowen, Sugar Tree Ridge, Ohio.
Ng daughter, ten years old, was afflicted
with Scrofulous Sore Eyes. During the
last two years she never saw light of any
kind. Physicians of the higbest standing
exerted their skill, but with no permanent
success. On the recommendation of a
friend I purchased a bottle of Ayer's Sar-
' saparilla which my daughter commenced
taking. 'Before she bad used the third
bottle her sight was restored, and she can
new look steadily at a brilliant Hat with-
out pain. Her cure is complete.— W. E.
Sutherlaud, Evangelist, Shelby City, Ky.
'Ayer's Sarsaparilla/
'Prepared by Dr. 3.0. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Sold by all Druggists. Price $1; six bottles, $5:
a
r:
HEALTH.
A Ceder. •
One ot our exchangea haa let* Irene one
of its anbeoribere m which states certain
plain things with regard to the " doctor-
iag" needed for common ailmente. For
etance he says :
Some years age the writer was laid up
by a very badly injured foot, He even got
so low that there was a alim chance of his
ever being any better. Pople would come
M and say, hy don't .you trythis or
that? The doctor isn't doing anything for
you." So I asked him one moriung if there
wasn't something knewn te Eieisuce that
would help my toot to heal up? He re-
plied, " I am sorry to say that there is not.
We can only keep it wet with dilute acid,
and let nature work." knew he told the
truth, and was satisfied. With some na-
tures, perhaps, a harmless aubstance, put on
with strong assurance that it would surely
Cure, would have been best, RO strong an in-
Etuence hes the mind on the body;, hence
our often wonderful iso-ealled " faithcum'
My doctor knew me, and knew that the
exact truth was what I wanted, althopgh it
was a sad admiesion for science to make, in
view of all the healing (?) salves land oint-
ments that our mothers used to haYee
I once had a very hard cold, and my
wife Bent for the same physician. Be came
and looked me over and !Aid, "Keep cover-
ed up warm in bed, so warm eat° be rather
uncomfortable, and you ill be all right in
a. day or two." Not inuch medicine for two
dollars eurely ; but it proved to be all I
needed. . In same places, I presume, he
would have given some bread pills or sweet-
ened, water, " a teaspoonful every other
hour." Now, thia man is thoroughly post.
ed, and up to the tines; and whet does he
do when he feels bilious ?" Take medi-
cine ! Yes, the very beet kind. He gets
out his horse and buggy and drives down to
my place. Tlaen he puts on an old suit of
clothes, and, with dog and gun takes a long;
rapid traanp through' the wog& and field,
until the sweat runs from every pore ot his
body. When tired out he comea back, puts
on his dry clothes, and after a, few chases of
this "medicine," goes home all right. This
• has been his practice for many years.
Bow foolish, then, for us to dose our-
selves with injurious things, which the most
intelligent physicians who know all that,
science has yet . taught, on this point,
wouldn't think of toucbing. And how much
more foolish, and. even wicked, to stuff the
same down the throats of ,the littlei inno-
cents, every time they cry or are fretitil1
There ian't 4 single drop of medicine in our
use of any kind. We have always let na-
e take care of all little ailments, doing
hat we could to assist her by good care,
d for larger ones called an intelligent
ysician. •
I know it is hard to sit idly by and see
ved ones suffer, hence we try to prevent
by giving them pure air, launshine, feed -
g them properly, and seeing that they
ke plenty of exercise. Sickness usually
mes as the result of violating the plain
ws of health. • It • ia nature's p.roteet
ainst ill-treatment, and nature is the
eatest physician OD earth, and seldom
sea a patient if given a fair chance.
Ili
TELE EXETER. TIMES. ti
• w
Is published every TIngsdaymorning,e,t the al
TIMES STEAM PRINTING ROUSE •P
liain-street, nearly oi posite Fitton's jewelery lc
3tore, Exeter, On t., b y John White & Son, Pro-• • •
vrietors. tt
RATES or ADVERTtsING : ix
'
First insertion, per line . . .. . . ....... .... ..,.. .1,0 cents. ti
Each subseeneatinsertion,per line......3 cents. Ol
To insure insertion, advertisements should n
be sentin not later than Wednesday morning
a,
----- g
OurJOB PRINTING DEP, ARTMENT is one 1,.
f the largest and best equipped in the County "
f Huron. All work entrusted toue will receiv
nr prompt attention: .
Decisions Regarding News-• n
papers. . h
Any personwhotakesa paperregularlyfrcnn d
he post -office, whether directed in his name or
another's. or whether he has subscribed or not
as responsible for payment. •, , • a
2 If &person orders his paper discontinued a
be must pay all tureen or the publisher may „
continue to send it until the paym era is made,
and then colleot the whole amount, whether II
the paper is taken from the office ornot. • a
3 In suits for subscriptions, tbe snit may be a
institutedin the place -where the paper is pub. ,
lisbed, although the subscriber may reside 1"
hundreds of miles away. p
4 The courts have decided that refusing to t
take newspapers or peliodloals from the post- 4.
office,or reinoaing and lee.ying them uncalled '
tor is prime, facie evidence of intention alfranq 0
A , G iF T saneirwleo evssenos.tyague a
free a royal, valuable a
sample box of goods 8
that will put you in the way of -making more „
'stoney at once, than anythinp -Nein America. -
Both sexes of all ages can lire at home and c
work iu sparetirae, or all ths zim6. Capital c
notrequirud. we win start you. Immense 8
pay sin e for those who start at once. STINSON
&CIo Portlane Maine
Exeter Butcb.er Shop. 1
' a
t
R. DAVIS, S
Butc- er 86 Generallealer i
11,
rums O—
-/N aim
M bAT I
i
Customers supplied TUESDAYS, THURS. ,
DAYS AND SATURDAYS at their residence
ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE
- CHIVE PROMPT ATTENTION.
•• • . •• 1
. ,. I
OOD
a -
ROW Lost Bow Retore
— t
9
--Wenner° recently published a new edition
of DR.CCLVERWELL'S CELEBRATED F S -
SAY onthe radicaland permanent cure (with-
out medicine) of liervou s Debility ,Mental and
physical capacity impediments to Marriage,
etc .,.r e main a from exc es se,s.
Price ,in sealed envelope ;only 6 cents,ortwo
postaPe stanips. . .
The celebrated author of this admirable es
. ,
say clearly demonstrates, from thirty years
enceessfulpractice, that alarm big consecm en .
ces May beradiaally cured withoUtthe dang-
erous use of internalmedlcinesor the use of
She knife; Point ont a mode of cure at once
simple certain and. effectual, by means of
which every suffere r, no matter -what his .con.
ditionmay be, may mire himself chiaply, pri
yately and radically. '
It& -Thi lecture shonldbeinthe hands of ev-
ery youth andevery man in tb eland.
Address
THE CIILVERWELL MEDICAL COMPANY,
11 AN ST., NSW YORE
PotOffice Box 450
ADVERTISERS
can learn the exaot cost
of any proposed line of
advertising in American
papers by addressing
Geo. P. Rowell & Co.,
late ateepaper Advertising laureate,
a.O Spruce St., Now York,
Send 10ote. for 100 -Page ParruAlat
in other words that it is quite possible so
trAiR the ;kin, that woutletful organ
will& is generally looked upon as the paPor
wrapper to our human loundle, as to rondo
it notesueceptible to midden changeo of tem-
Perature or atmospheric moisture, whenee
09140 come,
And as this is exactly the season to com-
mence sucha eystem ef Rellar education, as
it has prove d effective in many instances
within my own knowledge, and as it is with.
in easy reach of every oae to try, I write it
here, The theory is that no shia that has
been exposed freely for half an hour at the
beginning of a day to a temperature lower
than it will encounter through the day,
will note small changes or be affected there -
by.
A cold is simply a nervous shook, received
by the myriads of minute nerve terminals
that bristle over the surface of the human
body, transmitted to the centers and so
back again to mucoua membrane, the pecu-
liar seat of this special irritation. • Let us
then ao train thee sensitive fibres that they
will pass by, unnoticed, changes of atmo-
.spheric condition, and the matter is accom-
plished.
An "Emergency" Cabinet
In. every house, especially where the fans
• !CR SUNDAY CONTEMPLATION.
•There is some virtee in almost every vice
except hypocrisy, „
Simplicity of character is the natural
reault of profound thoughts, --
Politenese haa won more vilatoryS than
logick ,ever has. —Ash.
Every day should be distinguiehed by at
leaat oae particular act of love.--Lavater.
There never veas any heart' truly great
and generous that was not also tender and
compassionate.
' It is the moment when our resolution
seems about to become irrevocable that
tests our strength.
• Adviceis like snow ; the softer it falls the
longerit" dwells 'upon and the deeper it
•sinks into the mind. -a
Reason Sometimes inisleads ust
semetimes misleads us ; the wise man
corrects the °why the other.
' No man ever got rid ,of a lie by telling
it pit is stire.ta come home sooner or later
to hobnob witb..its author. • •
• Reason and kindness are the Arreat
promoters of that harmony and ,hilarity
which generate friendship and affection.
•y is large, there should be some prevision
r accidents, and: sudden attacks of painful
iseitse. A contemporary describes such an
emergency" cabinet, as a box 6r closet
qsiged to holcl a, vanetY of articles, such
wide and narrow bandages of muslin
eady relied and `ready for use, the former
r cuts or hurts on the body or limbs, and
e latter for wounded hands or fingers.
here should also be a packet of court pea-
r, a roll of diachylon or adhesive plaster,
ieces of old linen, lint, cotton, a small bot -
Le of collodion for cuts, old muSlin for mus -
d plasters pins, scissors, and other no -
ss that will suggest themselves, and
re known to good housekeepers .
Aiming useful things to be added to the
hove are such following simple remedies,
s essence of peppermint, spirits of camph-
r, some first-rate olive oil, aromatic spirits
f ammonia, water of ammenia, a little al-
ohol, common salt in fine powder, bicarbon-
te of soclaa and a box. of mustard.
The aromatic spirits of ammonia a,nd
amphor should also be kept in every
ouse where there are aged persons, as they
re subject to sudden attacks of faintness,
nd both these agents afford relief and hell)
restore impeded circulation of the blood.
Mustard is a valuable nauseant, in cases
f suspecte,1. or accidental poisoning. It
asThere be added that copioas draughts of
atid water taken until vomiting ensues,
nd thereafter repeatedly until the poison is
upposed to be thrown off, is a good remedy
o use until the help of a physician can be
rocured. If pains are felt in the bowels,
ive copious injections of tepid water also;
nd rid the system in both ways of the poi.
onas speedily as possible.
Gymnastie Training.
• There • • are • nettles everywhere, but
smooth green grasses are more common
still. The blue of heaven is larger than
the cloud.
No one ever had a glimmer of a will to
come, but that shining" whosoever"flashed
its world-wide splendor for his opening eyes.
—F. R. Havergab. • '
Great efforts from great motives is the
beat definition of a happy life. 'The easiest
labor is burden to him who has no motive
for performiag it.
More is felt than is perceived, and more
le:perceived than can be interpreted, and
lovedimbs higher with its lambent flame
than art can pile the faggots. ,
a 'Life has no -wretchedness equal to an ill-
assorted marriage—it is the sepulchre of the
heart, hatinted.by ghosts of past affections
and hopes gone forever.
NoTED FRENCH CRIMINALS.
wbere They Are and What They
Prison Litt's* aioilzuen.,
. .
Do—
MIEIANIOU
Ang
An interesting account of the present rounds
a
oirfettth:the
hoadnorlie4gtIcacrm4yranIptte.XiI
eMPTIV:in
gtio"o8ecl be
oiatny
atatus of notorious French criminals in New e
Caledonia has been furnished by an offieial
who has just returned from that, pew, -
colony. The most respectable, as well as
the senior of all the convicts, is Berezovski,
the Pole who fired at the Emperor Alex-
ander II. during tire Paris Exhibition of
1867. Prevent applications have been
made for the liberation of Berezovski, but
theylitive all been refused. He is now in
the island of Nou, where he occupies an
little room apart from
ALL THE BAD CHARACTERS,
and has even a small garden for himself.
He roams about the island, which is one -
bath of the size of Paris, at his own sweet
will, and his conduct has always been irre-
proachable. He receives a large quantity
of newpapers, hooka, and pamphlets from
different countrieslay every mail. 13erezovski
is now old and feeble to au extreme degree.
Of a different class are Gillee and Abadie,
the murderers of the Paris grocer Lecercle.
Thee worthies are employed as etreet scay-
engers'at Noumea, and their occupation is
looked upon by their companions in penal
servitude at a good one, for it is easy, and
also enables them•to pick up bits of toba004
and various odds and ends, including oc-
casional alms, Poi, who poisoned his eeryrt ab Montreuil,, and then burned her re-
mains in a stove, , died in the beginning of
the year, as well as MoyauX, who
• atuanainn His OWN DArtoirrRE.
Guiehard, who murdered a bank messenger
at Marseilles, is doing well as a stere clerk,
• and hopes one day, if not to get to Australia,
,at least to settle down in New Caledonia as
a, colonist. One of the most comfortable
and thriving of the convicts is Fenayrou,
the chemist of the Boulevard Maleaherhes,
who led the rover of his wife into an ambush
at Chatou, and then murdered him in a moat
atrocious manner. This criminal has passed
through the various categories until he ar-
rived among the first.olass convicts. He has
• a share in a farm which he and his wife sup.
erintencl, and he has under his orders some
of the lower ohm of criminals. His life
sentence has been commuted to one of twenty
•years. The doctor who was condemned last
year for having sent poisoned game to a col-
league is giving satisfaction in the colony
and hopes to be able to attain the privileges
accorded to Fenayrou. On the whole, the
educated eihninals, even those who are
undergoing sentences for serious crimes, are
highly Spoken of by the Governor of Noumea,
and the most unmitigated rascals are the
Paris gamins and the brutish peasants or
laborers, most of whom are murderers. Every
year a certain number of these has to be shot
down by the warders. The official who uses
his revolver against tae convicts is tried as
a formality by a couriamartial and acquitted.
The number of convicts is ten thousand or
more, said there are in addition 240 female
convicts who, however, were sent out to
•Noumea of their -own accord from the Mai -
son Centrale, of Parise for the purpose of
MARRYING FIRST-GLAS4 MISDBMBANANTS.
' These women are supervised by DIMS. There
Every'good deed will have its blessing.
e need have no fear of losing the reward
if only we make sure to merit it by the
virtue of our motive the judiciousness of
•otar effort. •
Let grace and goodness be the principal
headstone of thy affections. -Fier love which
.hath,endfs will have an end, Whereas that
which is founded on true virtue will always
continue.
There is no power of love so hard to get
and keep as a kind voice. A kind hand
is deaf a.nd'dumb. It may be rough in flesh
and blood, yet do the work of a fiat heart,
and do it with a soft touch. But there is
no one thing that love so much needs as a
sweet voice to tell what it means and feels;
and it is hard to get and keep it in the
right tone. One must start in youth and
be on the watch night and day, at work
and play, to get and keep a voice that
shall speak at all times the thihights of a
kind heart.
Dr. Hitchcock, of Amherst College, has
been carrying on for the last six years a
areful study into the physical measure-
ents of the students under his charge and
as obtained reaulte that differ matehally
from the popular impression regarding phy-
sical development. He has taken the
measurements of 1,258 studentm.including
oily -seven athletic men belonging to the
base -ball and foot ball teams, and men who
ave taken prizes at fabled° exhibitions.
Ho makes a separate group of these athletic
men, and finds that their average height is
greater than that of the average student by
only four -tenths of an inch! "01 the fif-
teen men," says Dr. Hitchcock, "who took
first prizes in 1886, four were above and
eleven belova the average height of the col-
lege; and of the nine first prize men at the
gymnastic exhibition three were above and
six below the average height." That which
is true respecting height is also true re-
specting all the bone measurement. The
bones of the athletic men are thnially but a
small fraction of one per cent. larger than
those of the [average risen. Even in the
muscular measurements • the difference in
favor of the, athletic man is only 3.3 per
cent. In the tests of strength the difference
is but 7.2 per cent. Dr. Plitehcock draws
.from these statistics the deduction that in
making athletes " physical gifts count for
less than the energy of will, which is put
upon the muscles. It is the intelligent
training, and not the big measuree, which
determine the standards of excellence in our
athletic feats and sports."
All this is certainly encouraging to entail
men, and accords with our own observation
of the development resulting from special
exercise of the muscles. It Shows ver clyear-
ly that the difference between the athletic
and the untrained man Bea more in the
fact that the athlete has learned how to
nee his tnuscles to the beat advantage
rather than in the possession of greater iaa-
tural strength.
No Need of Catching Cold.
Speaking of colds, nave a theory that
ne one need ever have One unless he ellooses;
VE.RY RICK FOLKS.
Claus Spreckels the sugar king, is 'said to
be worth over $30 000 000
The Duke of Buccleuch—she richest man
in Scotland!—has an income of $1,500,000
per annum.• •
The late IVIeredith Featheringil, a Spanish
soldier, leaves an estate of $1,000;,000 to
heirs in Kentucky.
Mrs. Hicks -Lord, Mrs. Parma Stevens
and Mrs. Mazahall a Roberts are the ,rich
widows par excellence of New York.
Mrs. Mark Hopkins is the richest, woman
jo Ainerica. She has a, fortune of at least
$40,000,000, and does not spend hal thein -
George Westinghouse, inventor of the air
brake, is worth $9,oco,000. This is believed
to be the largest fortune ever, made out of
wind.
• Isaac Jeana, a'Philadelphia, Quaker, who
has made a fortune of $3,000,000 as a fruit
*porton, began his busthess career 'by sell-
ing oranges and apples at retail. find a genera.' mvestagaton was at once
are on theleland 600 warders. Thenumber
of first-elass convicts amount to 1,600, and
some of them, like Fenayrou, have been al-
lowed -to send. for their wives. The State
furnishes them with agrimiltural implement.,
A gentleman hunting for land in Dakota
came across a boarded -up claim shanty with
half a dozen boards acroaa the door, upon
Which were the following teuching inscrip-
tions :—" Four milea from a nayber. Six-
ty iniles fiom a postofis. Twenty-five miles
from a raileroad. A hundred and .atey
born •timber. 250 feet from water. God
bless our honte. We have gon east to epencl
winter with my wife's folks."
A cable despatch from Lendon says "George Fordham, the jockey, who lately
died, is one of the popular heroes of the
hour. The papers continue to give many
anecdotes of him. He was one of the few
persons connected with the turf who sought
to dissua.de the reckless IVIarquis of Hastings
from the career of extravagance whieh ulti-
mately ended in his ruin, Fordham was a
MOtit honorable man in riding matches and
especially refused to take advantage Where
athneysbtaertst.was not equal. lie rarely made
The Roman Cathelic authorities of Boston
are planning to establishone great common
cemetery for all the cities in adjacent parts
of the state, to which the railroads are ex-
pected to run special funeral trains daily,
the care going directly into the grounds and
all expense of carriages done away with, the
tuidertaker carrying the body to the station,
•the city and the railroad landing it at the
grave. The Boston and Lowel Railroad
is said to be ready to run funeral trains
at reduced rates if such a cemetery is estals-
• lished. In Mexico they, have special film:w-
all cars over the horse -bar routes to the
cemeteries.
There is a law in the States prohibiting
the immigration of persons under contract
to perform labor" and it has recently been
given a very peculiar interpretation. A
clergyman was engaged to take a fashion-
able pulpit in New York at a liberal sti-
pend. Same individual has thought fit
• to "have the mw" on this innocent and.
• unoffending parson, and it appears that the
said individual clearly has right an his side,
and that the steamship company that
brought the clerical gentleman over the seas
is liable to a heavy fine for permitting him
to disembark. This is indeed a pretty state
of Minks, implying not only that there is no
free trade in religion, but that all steam-
boat companies should 'catechise each and
every one of their passengers to ascertain if
he or she were corning out to fulfil a pre-
viously made engagement. We have had
samples of loose legislation in Canada, but
• surely no law was ever more loosely framed
than thi ,s for it could never have been in-
tended to apply toprofessional nien. But a
case nearly analogous recently occurred
right here in Ontario. It appears that
Wong Chin Foo, the Heathen Chinee,
who lectured here last week on Heathen-
. For sale by J. W. Browning, C. Lutz,
igarman,13 worasextirleeatfreoclmasthaen jeoiredatiinalrycotimintinuri: Exeter, and all druggists.
and mulcted in fifty dollars before he was
allowed to enter. No wonder Mr. Wong C. & $. GIDL
Chin Foo was bitter in his denunciation' ot
so-called Christianity:- But it appears res.
1itution will be necessary, as the leaned
Chinaman is a naturalized resident of the
• United. States. It thus .seems that we, as
food, and,even a few herd of cattle, when well as our neighbors, have laws that re.
they are permitted to begin farming, and quire !systematic tinkering, and that as they
they generally contrive to do well. Another stand, reflect little credit upon their
plass, apart from alltlie others, is composed 'makers. •
of &Bled tratlesMeu and mechanics; mu- .A. New' York paper recently secured a
game, and even sztOrra These have a savd ,young lady to undertake, while !acting per -
lugs bankOf their own, a kind of club, an
' Sugar -Coated
AYER'S
colIneestitio‘cpl'idiv,°11; thel1e
L
. , c athartiC
bowels are constipated, or it the stemaela
fulls to perform its functions preperly, mit
Ayer's Pills. They are invaluable:
Vol. some years I was a victim, to Llver
Complaint, lit eonsequenee of winch 1;
euffered from General Debility aria Indi-
gestion. A feNV beXeS Of, Ayere Pills
Br eisitgoili‘teLy?tiel etIol d eilf.esrofne,e It y .1 1 evnalth. — W. T.,
For veers I have rolled mere upou
Ayer's Pills thaa auything else, to
• Regulate,
my bowels. These Pills are mild In action,
and do their work thoroughly. 1 have alsed
them wItlagood effect, in easee of Ithen-
malism, Kidney Trouble, end Dyspepsia.
—G. F. Miller, Attleborough, MaeL.
,Ayer'S Pills cured me of Stomach, and
!o,
Liver troubles, front which I had eu red
for years. I consider thern the bea , pills
made, and would not be without them. --
Mr wasattacked'4tnetst:teDke‘dy utst7litillie' Bilious iYol'is Fever,
which was followed by Jaundice? and was
so dangerously ill that my friends de-
spaired of my ,recovery. I commenced
taking Ayer's Pills and soon regained my
.iistontary strength end vigor; —JohnC..
Pattison, 'Lowell, Nebraska. '
Last spring 'I suffered greatly from a
troublesome Milner en my side. • Despite
of oveay effort to cure this eruption, it in-
creaseu until the, flesh became entirely
raw. 1 was trpubled. itt the same time,
with Indigestion; anddistressingpains In
The ,Bowels.'
By the advice of a friend I began taking
Ayer's Pills, In a short time I was free
from pain, my food digested properly, the
sores on mm body commenced healing.,
and, in less than one month, I Was mired.
---Samnel D. White, Atlanta, Ga. •
I have long used Ayer's Pills, in my
family, and believe them to be the best
pills made.— S. C. Darden, Darden, Xiss.
My wife and little girl were taken` With
Dysentery a few days ago, mid I at. ouce
began giving them small doses of Ayer's
Pills, thinking, I would call a doctor if the
disease became any worse. In a short
time the bloody dfscharges stopped, all
pain went away, and health was restored.
— Theodore Ealing, Richmond, Va.
• • '
Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lovell, Mass.
Ayer's Pi I IS, .
liold by all Dealers in Medicine.
The Great English Prescription.
A successful -Medicine used over
30 years in thousands of cases.
Cures Spermatorrhea, Iliervoue
Weakness, Emissions, impotency,
and all diseases caused by abuse.
isnomucl indiscretion, or over-exertion. ratmerg
Six packages Guaranteed to Cure when all others
Fail. . Ask your Druggist for 'rho Great Ruction
Prescription, take no substitute. One package
El. Six $5, bv Mail. Write forPamphlet. Address
"Eureka Chemical Co., Detroit, Mich.
are almosb too prosperous for convicts. The
bandenferitire said to be as good as many
regircie*IVerformers, and they play pro-
graunif6fafeelect mud° before the Govern -
or's mansion twice a week, besides
sensibly and was yet passed, and spent a
week in the asylum, only being released on
We have one of the very best
friends filing a bond guaranteeing that they
would take care • of her. That the young Hearses in the County'
lady was not only in her sound mind, but
has a particularly healthy and vigorous in-
tellect, is proved by the fact that she has And Funerals furnished and conducted a
extremely low paces.
written a long and succinct account of her
feotly, rationally, to go through the ordeal of
.examination by the medical experts
ef the asylum for lunatics on Black-
well'e Island to see if they would pass
her as a proper subject for incarceration.
occasional concerts. From this it will be
4117mg , She answered every clues -non put to her
seen that the life of many eonviets is far
betterthan that which is led by thousands
in the slums of Paris, and it is lie wonder
that such being the ca.senumerous transgres-
sors against the law of the land, including
those who commit the most terrible crimes,
should view with longing and delight their
despatch to New Caledonia.
Nihilists in Russian Schools.
While the Russian Government has
hitherto devoted its undivided attention
with very partial success to the suppression
of nihilistic tendencies among the students
of -the universities, • the gymnasia, the
polytechnic schools and private lyceums
have escaped the inquisitorial measures of
the Ministers of Police. Recently the
most alarming discoveries have been made
among the male and female students of
these scholastic institutions. At Eluater-
inoslay it was first discovered that the
elder boysand girls of the different gymnasia
met on certain evenings in private rooms
for the reading and discussion of socialistic
literature, and each member of the secret
society contributed a small sum toward the
clandestine purchase of the forbidden bro-
chures as fast as they. appeared. This
discovery resulted in the immediate arrest
of a large number of students of both sexes,
rYs
UNDERTAKERS!
Furniture M an ufacurersf
FIILL STO'CII OF --
Furniture, Coffins, Caskets,
e
And everything in the abovi i; to Meet
immediate wants.
expeaiepoes, and notsone of her statements
has been denied or refuted. The majority
ENBLE318 OE ALL THE DIEEERENT SOCIETIES
Of tile experts. Seven or eight in number,
PENNYROYAL WAFERS.
briurn upon the revelation that they were
Preacri don of a physician who
has hada life long experience lis
treating female diseases. kilned
monthly with perfect success by
over 10,000 ladies. Pleasant, Safe,
effectual. Ladies ask your drug-
gist for Pennyroyal Wafers and
take nO substitute, or inclose Fos&
have wisely bornethe coneequent oppro-
humbuga,in silence, but Dr. Dent, the Medi-
cal Superintenddnt, has thought fit to enter
upon a defence in which he justifies the in-
carceration by saying that 'There was no
reason to suspect that she was not insane."
He bases this conclusion upon the fact that
she refused to answer questions that every a e for sealedparticulars. So d by
rescrectable woman would consider insulting, a dru sts,$lper box. AddresS
. TM ELME& 0 CA.L CO.. Dsraorr, Ste*
40' Sold in Exeter by J. W. Browning,
an in one or two instances was a but astray. 1
. .
As the paper in question says, if people are C. Lutz, and all druggists.
to be confined in mad -houses because they
refuse to ansveer questions, because they
make erratic replies and because there is
no reason to suspect'they are not insane, it
is plain that it woulcl not be a, difficult mat- I
ter to get rid of a person whose presence in t
the outside world might be objectionable or ;
inconvenient, on trumped-up allegations of ;
inanity. Indeed were the test applied to .
people generally there would, we fear, be ;
found a necessity for a good•sized lunatic '
tituted in all the chief scholastic 'asylum in every hamlet and on almost every1
The eatate of the late ex Senator Cille9 centres. 'street.• - Unapproached for
of Nottingham, N. H, is valued att,$125,000, Tone and Quality
In Raratoff a similar but much better • The British Postinaster-General has, for
of which one forth is to be devotedto char -
organized secret society of male and female the last thirty-three yeatis, lamed an Aunu- CATALOGUES OREL
itable purposes. The deceased Senator was
students was discovered. Here they had al Boort. The last one appeared two or
a rower in New England polities a third
of a century ago. a complete secret library of nihilistic and three week a ago. It has a great deal of BELL & CO Guelph Oilt
socislistic literature in actiae cirouiation, curious and interesting reading. In May, e j I 1
The fortune of Prince Ferdinand of Bulges
with a President, Secretary and Treasurer. 1886, the rates for carrying parcels were re -
talk, is just $50,000 a year. The prince
authorities of the Raratoff discovery is the business has since wonderfully increas- TM e'ELEBRATED 7
will inherit a further fortune of $2,000,000 that the majority of the male members of ed, During the past postal year 32 millions
on the death of his mother, the Princess . •
ful estate of Eberthal, together with a fine more , than 24 per cent. on the previous
* . cal semmary. It was found, too, that n
these yotmg seminarists had from single r year. The parcel post is much tised for
palace at Vienna,
The Nizam of Hyderabad, who has offer. , copies lithographed an immense number of .
', the transmission of flowers and fruits. For
copies of Nihilist proclamations, which : instance, Primrose Day, the clay on which
ed the Indian Government, £200,000 to
strengthen the defense of the northwest were circulated almost broadcast. Similar b Lord I3eaconsfield died, is the 19th of April.
the. 1,./0. discoveries have been Made here in Odessa, 1 On • that and the preceding day 14,000
frontier of India, is the greatest of and at • Kid, Kasen, Moscow, Ananiev, parcels containing primroses reached
ha,mmedan princes. fie made a striking
. . Smolensk Tver lVfetniroff, and other , London to supply the Conservative fetich
‘ p aces. e t e wn o P wors ppers Nli
' in London. His manners are said to be
ria about which there has been so much,
The worst feature in the eyes of the duced and the consequence has been that
it:- Jr CHASES
'Clementi' 1 dl thb tiii NtIORA Kee
the society were students of the ecclealeati- of parcels have been carried, an increase of
imprefislon on the English during his 'stay 1 Th li tl to f Memiroff ap ears/ hi 'WI materials for duly.
to possess the most uniquely red character. I going on with their devotions, The parcel I
I the native Indian gentleman. Of course his
of I There, it is Stated on the authority of the ' post has been extanded to over fifty-five
!fascinating, and he is the highest bype e
!recent offer has added vastly to his popular. Ministerial investigating agents, the whole ‘ colonies and foreign countries, arriong the
of the students, male and female, in every i rest to Canada, but our "blessed N. P."
ity in London.
se. class, are concerned in the secret prop/gawk i mars the handiness of it cainsiderably: The
The Bev. M, Baxter has long dabbled fel and study of forbidden literature, postal order system has reached gigantic
dimensions,. upwards of thirteeti millions of
A Clever Thing. ,, pounds having in this way been transmitted,
. ; one-half of all this being ill small orders of
" I was getting measured for a snit of ; five) ten ana twe y
nt shillings. The vvhole
is as sure as ever, and now goes again into t h' tt a "
opal° lOtit
the interpretation of prophecy. He has
within the last thu+y years been "cock sure"
that the end of the world would have come
by this time. It has not, but Mr, Baxter
clothes this maWning," said young'Mr. i
• am` unt of money transmitted bY the Poab
particulars with a confidence that would be v canna and just for a
positively sublime were it not Somewhat jsoYke,°y'lltns know, fawsked Snipern if it weally
fnlly 35 millions of pounds. In the Postal
Office within," the United Kingdom was
ridiculous. Ha says England is soon to be ;ths o„,kang° tailors to make cynan. He said .
and her colonies. Lucien Bonaparte is to quite clevah:P
man of some people. I thought items Savings Bank deposits are reported to the
very large amount of C50,874,338. There
I separated legislatively from Ireland, India "a" "'"u take more than nine tailors to make
become king of Syria and later on Emperor „' were 3,.731,421 open 'at the end of 016.37441x
le curious that the average balance
. of France. Belgium ancl the Rhine pro -1 "Yes, it was eicver' CharleY'" aid
his rianneci iteach depositor was larger in Ireland
re ,good -, t6hoenpwroapsofrattiongroefatdeerpiensitRonrsg'ltaondthe tlptitilitii9.
heevsafrom a 1 , Beans are rid' i—n nitrogen and a
to aaccnd to about 9 years hence, 144000 Chrison tians are I than in either Etiglatid or Scotland, though
pretty cousin.
sincere are to be annexed to France. In 1806,
which apparently is not said, and the mil- food for any sort of animals. Hoge maYlle tells of an immense amount of thrift, Why,
lenium is to conamonoe sure on the lith of fattened on them. There is nothing bettor one in every eight of the population in Foil- •
Afpril, 1901. Well, what next 't The truth or s eep, an y a , g land hat an acco
FOR LIVER AND KIDNEY DISEASES
" When an intelligent mn' awants to pur-
phase, he bItys f'Oorn parties whose standing in
their several callings tis fauarnattea for t,t)44
g ' •• . 1 t s
doubly true in regard to patent medicines, btlY
only those made by' practical professional men.
Dr. CuAsu is too well and favorably known by
his receipt books to require any recommenda-
tion.
CriAsix s Liver Cure has a receipt book
wrapped around every bottle which is worth its
weight in gold.
Dix. Cnasn's Liver Cure is gitaranteed to cnre
all diseases arising from a torpid or inactive
liver sueh 'Ayer Complaint, llyspepein,
Indigestion, Biliousness .5aundicc4 0481(10ache, Liver spots, Soliolys Complexion, ete..
• E
THKIDNEYS THE KIDNEYS
Dn. CuAstes Liver Cureis a cortaiu cure for
ell dcrangemeath of the kidneys,such es pain 81
the back pain in lower pottion of the abdomen,
constant desire to poss -urine, red and white
Sediments, shooting pains in passage. Bright•ei
disease and all urinary tronbles, etc,
Try It, take no other, it will cure you. Sold
by all dealers at $1.00 por bottle.
n' 1.1.
'1`. E? 94S01% &
SOLE AGENTs ro • OA. • oriaorono
o all thiewilm !mon bo seem cows ha Milk. floe Sievinge Baopennit, C. LUTZ'S, Agent, Exeter.