HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1888-9-6, Page 6It is Absurd
'or people to expect a cure for Indigeso
ton, ainlesa they refratn ,froM eating
what is unwholesome ; but •if anothing
Will sharpen the appetite and give tote
•10 the digestioe organs, it ls Ayer's
SaDarilla. Thousands all over the lando-
teetify to the merits of this medicine,
Mrs, Sarah Borroughs, of 248 Eighth
• 'Street, South 'Boston, Writes : "My luta;
baud has taken Ayer's Sarsaparilla, for
Dyspepsia and torpid liver, and Into
been greatly benefited," ,
A • Confirmed D yspeptio.
C. Canterhury, of 141. Franklin st.,
Boston, Mass., writes, that, suffering
for years from Indigestion, he was at
last induced to try Ayer's Sarsapaxiila
and, bo its useo was entirely cured.'
Mrs. Joseph ,A,obin, of High street,
Rolyoke, Mass„ suffered for over a year
from Dyspepsia, so that she could riot
eat substantial food, became very weak,
and was unable to care for her. <family.
Neither the medicines prescribed •by
physicians, nor any of • the remedies
advertised for the cure of ' Dyspepsia,
belped her, until she commenced the
fuse of A.yer's Sarsaparilla. "Three
bottles of this medicine," she writes,
" cured me."
Ayer's Sarsaparilla,
lelITIPARED BY
Dr. J. 0. AVer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Price $1; six bottles. $6. Worth 005 a bottle.
RE EXETER TIMES.
Xe publiened every Thursday In orning,e.t th
TIMES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE
Main-street,nearly opposite Pitton's jewelery
Store, Exeter, Ont,, by johu White & Bon, Pro-
prietors.
nT.Ps od. ADVERTISING :
EiR&
TBS insertion, per line... . . .. . . ..............,10 cents.
Ea oh eubsequea t insertion ,per line cents.
To insure insertion, advertisements should
be Sent in notlater than Wednesday morning
,
ofirJOB PRINTIbTeT DEPARTMENT is one
1 the largest anclbest equippeo in the 0 ounty
1 Plurbn., All•work entrusted to nit Will receiv
„ur prompt attention.
Decisions Regarding New.
papers.
Any person who takeett, paperregularlyfrom
he post-otlice,wEether directed in his name or
another's, or whether he has subscribed or not
is responsible for payment,
2 If aperson orders his paper discontinued
Ile must pay all airears or the publisher may
encatinue to sendit until the payment is made,
and then coneet 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
take newspapers dr periodicals from the post -
office, or removing and leaVing ;them uncalled
or is prima facie evidence of intentional frau.
Exeter 3:Intel:Ler Shop.
•11,. DAVIS,
Butcher It General Dealer
m.
—flTSM. EINDSOY—
EAT
Castome r s supplied TUE SDAYS , THURS.
DAYS oon SATURDAYS at their residence
ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE
CHIVE PROMPT ATTENTION.
PENNYROYAL WAFERS.
Preooription of a physic:Ian who,
lashed a life king experisnes
treating female diseases. Is m -M
naonth.Wwith_perfeet success by'
?over,113,0001adies, Pleaaant, safe,
effeettutr, Ladies ask_yourdmik
gift for Pennyroyal Wafers *ad
take no sqbatibute, or Inplosepoil.
age for sealed Maulers. EloId kr
sI] druggfst5, 43ecier box. Address
23EIE EURBEZI. OSEMCOOLOSIO DETROIT. MP.
ire Sold in Exeter by J. W. Browning
0. Lutz, and all dtogoste.
AGI
Serthlo cents po stab
and We*Will sena you
free a royal, valuabib
sample box of goods.
that will put you in the way of making more
money at once, than anything PI se in America.
Bothsexes of all ages can live at .home and
work in sparetime, OT an the time. Capita
xiotrequirud. We will start you. Imxuens
pay sui e for those whci atart at once. ST1NSO
fe 00 Portland Maine
How Lost, How Restored
Just published, a new edition of Dr. Culver.
well's Celebrated Essay on the radical curb of
•fireaseroaanata.or incapaeity induced by excess or
early indiscretion.
The celebrated author, in this admirable essay,
clearly demonstrates from a •thirty years' enocesetto
praetice, that the alaneing consequesicos Of Eli*.
abuse may be radically cured; pointing out a mode
of cure at once simple, certain and effectual, by,
Meatfit of which every sufferer, no matter What his
condition may be, may cure himself cheaply, pd.
vately and nytieally.
Aar Title lecture should be in the hands of evir;
youth and every man in the land.
Bent under Seal, in a plain envelope, to any ad,
tireso post.paid, on tecelpt of four cents, or twe
pottage stamps. Address
THE CULVERWELL MEDICAL 00.
41 Ann Street, New York.
ost Office Box 450 411864y
ADVERTISERS
an learn the exaot cost
• of any proposed line of
advertising in American
f,papers by addressing
Geo. P. Rowell & Co.,
Now/paper Adsiortiiing Noreen,
Sprome St., New
•Sone& 1100M, for 103494ssigo0 Porre.Ohlea ,
REALM.
What is Dime?
In a generaense, disease fa the lei.
tiMate and necessaryoesults of the vielatioos
• of the laws of our ptlyeical being—the con.
Wens of health. It as reasonable to infer
that there is no pain, eiokoems, ad but few
deaths which do not reeult from infringe.
ment of these laws—health being in a cer-
Min sense natural, and diseaee aocidental,
inflicted in the line ef penalty, We MaY
• oollotude that the great and good Father is
}et pleased with Kis children when they
regard all o Us lawa, including, ' most
certainly, the laws ef the body, estab-
lished for the regulation of tbat body,
by a pOoper ol3servanee of which a na-
tural condition of ;good health ma be
secured. -our health being as certainly
• Under our contrel,„ and to as great an
extent 08 any branch ol our businese or
employs:most, or our -edination—mbile dis-
obedience, and consequent physical suffer,
ing and disease, not only are not in accord.
mace with hie Rleasure and deeign, but mph
violationof}i4 lair's will constitute ein, as
• certainly as a violation of a moral law, both
having the same divine origin.
The true condition of the advanced man
is that in which his whole being is harmoni.
ously developed, the body so oared for and
fed that it wit' have some of the vigor and
endurance of ita original state, as be came
from thehand of the Creator, when, as one of,
the best thinkers of the age in which he
lived, Horace Mann, eisid of man before he
fell, physidally; by , goose violations of or.
pate laws, He was -so perfect io his bodi-
ly organa, so defiant of cold and heat, or
drought and humidity, so surcharged with
vital force, that it took more than two
thousand years of the combined abomina-
tions of appetite and ignorance; it took
successive ages of outrageotis excess ad de-
bauchery to drain off his eleotric energies
and make him even acceasible to disease;
•then it took ages moteto breed all ofthesevile
distemPere which now nestle, like vermin,
in every fiber of the body 1" Althotio4
sufferings tortures, and disease follow in
the ditecelineOUpenalty for dieobedience,
a disregard of necessary laws of our being,
these penalties are adminietered in mercy,
what we call diteasel3eing, • generally, only
efforts of nature to avert the worst results
of our wrong doings,' and to improve the
general condition of the system.
• We- may have a cough, yet that is not
the real •difficulty, bat the result of a
struggle of the recuperative powers, the
vital energies, to dispose of certain accu-
mulations which would otherwise prove
harmful, if not fatal. The duty of the
nurse, physician, etc., is to . co-operate
with nature M. this friendly effort for im.
provernent- and purific'ation, " looms the
cough" and promoting expectoration. Yet
Berne young practitioners, who suppose that
they are saturated with science, do the best
(or worst) that they can to antagonize na-
ture, crippling her in es ery respect, by the
administration of opiates, retaining nth
foul accumulations, to serve as irritants in
future. Yet, it is well known that, in the
advanced stage of lung affections, when ex.
pectoration is impossible, when the system
is measurably contaminated, death soon
foliows."•'
.Again, when more food is eaten than
can be digested, the remainder ferments,
decays, putrifies in the stomach, threat.
ening harm to the whole system. A nausea
is instituted, followed by convulsive efforts
of nature to expel the putrid and poisonous
accumulation in mercy, which we call the
disease—vomiting— which should always
be encouraged, "rinsing" out the stonneh
with wefin water till cleanliness is secured,
Yet, opiates are often given to foil' nettle in
her merciful efforts for purification, and
these effoots of the young practitioner to
antagonize the recuperative powers too
often pro oing a partial success. The result
ant disease, so -celled, may be a flux;
astute, foiled in her •attempt to rid
the stomach of its poisonoue burden, by
vomiting, hustles the mass into the bowels,
where another effort at expulsion is Institut-
Nature is generally prompt in such
asures, doing the beat that can be done,
der the circumstances, at least, unaided.
the use of opiatee, this merciful effort
nature may be suspended, the inspurities
tained in the body, yet nature is not so
ly pacified, not easily conquered. The
xt effort to purify may be fp Prod uce
taneous diseases, throwing the visceral
purities to the surface, as ,the next
at available means ot avoiding worse
eases. Jiist to the extent that these
charges are effected, health may be
ored, the system purified. If astringents
applied, thedischarges checked, in con-
uence of the foolish fear of "running the
away," when nothing but impurities,
sone, are discharged—the more the bet.
.--Loutraged nature may still attempt a
6. a purification, by instituting a fever,
eh the meddlesome young practitioner
not so easily control. If the causes are
removed, the fever will be quite* sure to
e its own course, taking Its time for
renovation and cure. The vital ener-
quicken the circulation, sending the
d to the lunges for purification,
e two acts energizing the whole aye -
• Whit . nature failed to expel, an
sequence of the astringents, as the
t resortis actually burned by feverish
on, the combustion producing the heat
e fever. Such a fever, if not troubled
ntruders, consumes vast quantities of
e matters, purifying and restoring
th. ••
our Heavenly Father punishes us
our phyeical sins, our teckless disre-
of the physical laws which he in -
ted for , the • protection of our health
the promotion of our physical welfare
supplemented such penalties with re.
tructive instrinnentalities, recupera.
measures, conducive to our real
. If we suffer, it is because we are
ng; we outrage our phypioad being.
ould be blailthemons to charge the
Father with creating idiots, mon-
, the physically dwarfed and diso
d, surcharge& with the overflowing
n2tess of licentiousness, the gan-
ons and the deformed, the blind and
halt, the thousands of the victims
degraded and vicious parents, in
m the foul emanations, in the form of
gnant diseases, are oonetatitly out -crop.
from week to week, rendering mortal
ut series of fearful plagues and epi•
es, the diseased bodies, scarcely being
tole of containing the oonstant stream of
ea Which ilettirally flows from a viciotis
licentious lik down to a sin,oureed
eny. No, if we suffer, it is because we
ore sufferings, create our own diseases' Ji
r. R. lianaford.
'ed
me
un
!,3to
re
ne
im
mo
dis
dis
See
are
eeq
life
tool
ter
car
Ovhi
can
not
bay
the
gies
bloo
thes
tem
COD
tleX
acti
of th
by i •
effet
heal
if
for
gent
atitn
•and
he
• cons
tive
good
WTO
W
good
stars
ease
rota
gren
the
of
who
mall
ping
life tt
deini
oapa
fonln
and
prog
proo
Am
comf
there
Mid w
praot
negle
of the
net?,
• Why 'we Should Bathe,
ong all the appliances for health and,'
ort to niankind we may satol'i "0
ill §1
nothing so Well known, so Ukit Tui,
I
ithal so comforting, and yet so lortie
iced* so earelemly mid' thentglitlessay .
cited, cos judicioue bathing. The skid t
sok of vireo, Which Ouglat alsrays te be IS
' .
hinscan body, from head M foot, is a o
. more than one echele at a time,
kept free and clear of obstructions.
Ilititme and Mmotsionol isomers:ion in
are exceedingly deekable, and usua
dispensable to health arid comfort ;
,goently, every family should have a c
tent both—and a full bath too—o
kind, not only for generalrmetness of
so desirable to every individual of ta
eulture, bot is a means of preserving
and io many cases, eippecially und
advice of a good phyezeian, as the
pleasantest and. one of the most po
arid efficient MUM Of COlehatiDg d
Directed by good judgment and
counsel, a bath is valuoble auxin
other term d ie s, and it can be used
internal remedies cannot. In the
cotalegue of disesees to which flesh is
'scarcely one can be named in the trea
o whieh a bath is useless. In an miser
which ofteti nappone when least exo
sta in cholera, cholera infantum, c
pores are the openings into minute tub
channe/a, Which lead through unseen
derintle into the sanctum of life within
• To those blessed with good heAlth, a
as a common sense appliance, gives
and. growth. to healthy functions, a b
nem and delightful serenity, a olearne
mind and buoyancy of spirit. It hi ce
ly a blessing to both mind and body.
the mental worker, it is a nerve tonic
thorough homer:non in water of proper
peratnre will calm and give strength
tone to his 'whole syatem. The indoo
borer who gets but a scanty supply of
air, needs a bath to obtain Moats bivig
Mg elements so common in the open air
The outdoor loborer—espeoially the f
er—who works with heroic energy all
long, unavoidably gathers on the entire
filo° of his body a complete prison-wa
duet ond thickening, gummy perspirat
and when his day's work is done he n
• then, more than any other thing, not
a wash, but a good, luscious full bath
him for a clean bed and a refreshing slee
The,glutinous mass of perspiration,
and filth, which gathers on the Burka
the body naturally covers and clogs
pores and often enters them and poisons
system, To remove that filth, frequent
morbus, cramps, fits, etc., a pliable, port
bath, which requires but little water, re
Nat at the right time, may save a
precious life.
Finally, everyone needs a bath at ti
and every human habitation should con
something for a complete immersion
wafer, and since convenient and effici
portable baths at comparatively low figu
are now extensively advertised for s
there is little excuse for anyone to be w
out this priceless benefit
water' ,
These FOREIGN Nous.,
Il o in- Theoe will be an international home
copse. allow in Paris next year, where 8'15,000 will
fonsvoniene. beTelittureibwerteifideinreporei:tels; adopted for the Brit -
person, ish army has been withdrawn. It was com-
ae and demned by "ell practical men.'
hea?th, A club of seciety women in London is
er the
safeet, going histart a large ponitry farm uear Loti-
on. Bee culture is also included in the
werful sobome.
16"4,,?' The teleplione- charge for five minutes
•ary 0
w'''a oonversation between Paris and Marseilles
t- is three franca. ; between Parte and Lyons
when s ...
two stance. •
long . .
oefe, itt e girl, aged 8, died from seasickneee
during a voyage from Time to the Clyde.
gtemn ec yn ,t
The eickoess was very severe, ond ended in
ected - a eauvalatve at- •" •
holera
es or
mean -
bath
thrift
right.
es of
rtain.
For
• A
tem.
and
r la -
bulb
swat.
•
arm -
day
sur.
11 of
ion;
eeds
only
to fit
p.
dust
e of
the
the
abs
able
ady
ome
mes,
tain
ID
ent
res
ale,
ith.
The Breath.
In the night of June 20, 1759, the Indian
nabob; ShrataliDowlali, having captured the
garrison of the English port of Calcutta, con.
fined all his prisoners, one hundred and
forty.eix in number, in a cell scarcely twenty
feet square, with. but two small windows,
and these partially obstructed, .
Only twenty-three survived' the horrors of
the "Black Hole" until morningt and even
these soon came down with a malignant dis•
ease, characterised by violent eruptions on
the surface of the body.
Doubtless many of the imprisoned garrison
.
perished in the fearful struggle to get a
breath of air it the openirtge. Most of those
who have written on the subject have inferr-
ed that the carbonic acid expired from the
lungs was the chief cause of their deaths;
but the condition in which the survivors
were left led some eminent experts, at a la
ter period, to believe that the deadly poison
ID the case was contained in the exhalations
from the skin.
• Recently two distinguished French physi.
Brown-Sequar& and D'Arsonval, have
been experimenting, and have obtained ro.
sults wbkh are thought to prove that expir.
ed air contains another poison, additional M
hose of carbonic acid and ammonia, to whicb
mainly the dangerous natureof expired air
mist be referred.• The exact nature of this
poison has not yet been amertained, but tM
experiments cannot be due either to carbonic
acid or to ammonia.
By paasing expired air, whether of human
beings, or of animals, through water., a solo.
tion was obtained which, iojeoted onto the
veins of animals, invariably gave rise to the
same syraptoms—a slower breath, a rapid
lowering of the temperature, a considerable
paralytic weakness, especially of the hinder
limbs, and, after three or four days, a mor-
bid activity of the heart.
Larger injections induced exceislive con.
traction of the pupils, increased paralysis,
and a diarrlicess, something like that of oho
lera. The eminent surgeons who conducted
these experiments are disposed to regard
Pulmonary consumption as largely due to
thie poison. If future experiments should
establish this view, it must greatly empha.
size the supreme importance of thorough ven-
tilation in our homes and churches and all
places for public gatherings.
Of course, persons differ in susceptibility
to all morbid influences. The vigorous, who
comply with the laws a life May eliminate
them when taken into the system ; but those
of low vitality, whether hereditary or aequir.
ed, may readilybecome victims:.
For Cramps in the Leg.
Many persons of both sexes are greatly
troubled with, cramps in one or both their
legs. It comes on suddenly and is very
severe. Most people jump out of bed (it
nearly alwaye domes on either just after
going to bed or while undressing) and ask
some one to rul3 the leg. I have known it
to last for hours, till in deepair they would
send for the family physician, and even
then it would be holm before the spasm
would let up., There is nothing easier than
M make the spasm let go its hold, and it
oan be accomplished without sending for a
dootor, who may be tired and in need of
a good night's rest. When I have a patient
wh,o is subject to cramp 1 a/waye advise
bins to provide himself with a strong cord.
A long garter will do if nothing else is
handy. When the aramp comes on take
the cord, wind it around the place that is
cramped, and take an end in each hand and
give it a sharp puil, one that will hurt a
little. Instantly the cramp will let up,
and the sufferer can go to bed aseured it
will not collie on again that night Vox. the
permanent cure, give about six or eight
cells d toilvanie battery, with the negative
pole applied over the spot that orataps and!
the poeitive polo corer the thigh. Give it
for ten Minutes, and repeat every week for I
a month. / have saved myself many a good ;
night's rest simply by posting my pationte
stibjeot to spasm of the legs how to use
the cord as alsove. totOe never know ii it
to fail, and I hey° tried. it after they had
worked half the night, and the oatient was in
the most totemic agony. Elam in snob oases,
at -the first jerk of the cord all pain left,
The German Government has paki 300,
IVO mark e to an Austrian engineer named
'Mannlioher fork patent oylinder stopper for
quick leading rifles.
A soldier who was seen M take off his cap
while using the telephone, informed a ques-
tioner that he clidl so because he was, talking
to his suPerfs; officer, o
A "lifeasaviogisaloon" is among the latest
inventions. It is arranged SQ that the wicole
saloon is allowed to slide overboard, and it
practically becomes a small ship.
The English cotirt of APPeal has decided
that' relatives of a dead person'imve no right
to place flowers or other tokens on tile grave
except:with the pernlithicon of tie cemetery
authorities.
It is imposed in England to provide
judges at race tropics with an instantateous
photographing apparatus by Which,to telI
beyond possibility of mistake what horse
has won iiia clime finish.
The wife of a Breton Peasant, for whom
the doctor had preaoribed leeches, fried the
leeohesand gave them to her injurei husband
to eat He was taken fatally ill and it was
attributed to the leeches.
Two fisherchen in the Dee, in England,
have caught a sturgeon, weighing 200 pounds,
over five feet long, aud as 'thick as a man's
• body. The best preiious record Was a 156 -
pound sturgeon two years ago.
.The International Hygienics Society of
London is starting street stands in different
parts of that city where ladies may send
their parcels ,leave their cloaks and arrange
their toilet when on shopping tours.
Duke Charles Theodore of Bavaria has
for some time practised auctoessfully &ran
°pullet, giving advice and treatment gratis.
Young Prince Louis Ferdinand has just
finished hiaknedical studies, and will begin
to practice oleo.
While the Episcopal Bishops were in con-
ference, there was presented to them on
addresa, signed by about 400 lay and elerieal
members of the Church of Englancl, de.
ploring " the departure, unauthorized by law
which has been adciptedly many individuals'
ID the Church of "England toward the doct-
rines and teachings of the Church of Rome."
A11i0Di the.signers were'several members of
the House of Lords and of the House of
Commons. .
Aman was tried(in Leeds for manslaught.
er of his wife, for her fault. The Crown
Prosecutor,declar,ed to the jury that " speak-
ing not as a counsel for the Crown, but as
a met, he should have acted as the prisoner
at the bar had done," so far at least
as "making straight" for the partner in
his wife's guilt. The presiding Judge ex
pressed his: opinionothat the prisoner had
done "that which was proper" in kicking
the man. down stairs; and went on to Bug.
omit that in a pe.roxyom of rage the prison-
er had turned upon his wife and inflieMd
upon her the injuries front which she died.
The man was aenknced to one day's im.
prisonment.
• It is told that• when Frederick In. of
Germany was in London last Sir Morrell
Mackenzie introduced him to a celebrated
American physician'who examined his
throat carefully. "I suppose," said the
Emperer, "an Imperial throat is very much
like that of other throats ?" " Well," an-
swered the Amerioan quickly, "we will try
and make it so at any rate." Frederick
appreciated the answer, and smiting his
mighty cheat, said: "But this is all right is
it not ?" The doctor lookedhim over grave
ly and replied : "Yea. As for the rest,
you would make a good American." The
Emperor enjoyed it all, but the German
doctors were simply dumfounded at the
levity of the Yankee,
So.
Rooms in Training..
The number of horses now on the turf that
run in cowardly fashion is very large, in all
likelihood comparatively much larger than
formerly, says the London Sporting and .Dra.
made News. I was asking Torn Canon the
other day for his experience of the matter,
and also for an explanation, and he suggest-
ed a very simple and probable cause. There
is much more racing than there was former.
ly, horses run oftener, they consequently
try oftener, and the result is that they get
sick of racing. They know, in most cases,
what a finish means—very likely15 dig with
the spur if it is a close thing, at the lightest
two or three smart cuts with the whip—the
old butcher boy flogging jockey is not com-
mon in England, though he is nearly the
rule in France—and almost invariably a
more or less desperate and distressing effort.
Who can doubt many of them know also
that if they do not get too near to the head
of affairs, but take it quietly and stay with
the ruck, the finish will be much easier:
very likely the jockey will only ride them
with his hands, at any rate if he takes up
his whip and there is no response in many
oases he will give it up as a bad job ?'
Horses, as a rule, know so much about roc.'
ing that they are apt to decline to race.
An Arab Woman's Dress.
Of whatever rank or station an Arab wo-
man may be, her dress consists only of a,
akirt reaching down to the ankles, trousers
(not drawers) and a kerchief for the head.
The material varies, of oourse. Rich people
have gold boocadee of many patterne, vet.
vets and silks richly trimmed. During the
hot season plain white calicoes: or muslin
are worn, skirt and trousere are never of
the same pattern. The skirt nmst not be
too long, that it may not hide the rich em-
broidery of the trousera or the two anklets ;
a number of little golden bells aro suspended
from one of these, which make a pretty
tinkling sound at every ;step. Two long
tasseled ribbons hang loots:sly over the back
Or on both aides of the head, from the bond
that is worn round the fcorehead. The silk
kerchief reaches down to the ankles.
In her walks an Atab lady puts' on the
"achele " which is shaerl waterprOof and
cloak, all in one. The Bohol° is a large
Shawl or mantilla of thlaelt Sil
k, mere or
..... ,
' lees richly trim/bed with goin ar silvet
1 beidere, according to the Wealth and taste
When We are laboring under a phosioal of its owner. This is the orily- wrapper an
Malady we See everything through a distop- Arab lady uses until it is completely worn
ed mediurn. We are no longer mestere Of Out, its faehion never obraging ; even the
unit:Ives* but the ,victlins of a distemper. 0.6'AM:A and richest late a do not pOSSOSS
dlimagination,
Lost Articles on Railways.
rail- To Save Life
„
•
The lost artiele dePattments of the
roads are oliriodity shopa. They contain
the aconmlotions of years, au fully a t
ef the articles lob on Maine are never 43
for.. ,A dozen or more attielee e.te nide
in the New Haven coaches every day.
are kept for a time at the Grand Oe
Depot &Wafting owners' calls. The core
has a bushel or more of pursesas onc
which are five or six years old. They
taint very little money as a usual thing,
pictures, newspaper clippings, poetry,
Samples of dress.goods in abundance. '
pickpocket bee been through most of t
purses, no doubt, and after hastily extr
g bilis, e throws the puree on a seat
or on the floor. Once or twice, however,
pocketbooks. containing large sums of money
and bonds worth thousands have been pick-
ed up by the train men. Conductor Curran,
when a boggage man several t ears ago,
Oohed • up a. Vocketbook on the plat.'
krito just as, the train was entering Boa.'
ton, containing 849,000 in securities and
8500 in bills. He Mad just handed it; toi
ID breathleasly 'and said that he wai,rni
e,eapenntendent when the owner rus
,
if he couldn't'find it of the things ABU&
e in the oars, umbrellas and purses pre.
ponderatea The reeord last Saturday on
the Igew Haven road Was: Five umbrellas,
one parasol, two mune, shawl, box of pow-
der, duster and package of collars. Yester-
day two sicklee were left by some fanner.
Boxes of cigars and shoes are quite common.;
Violoneelloa, ;mare drums and oats in boxes
have been 'taken out by the conductorp.'
All that the Grand Central wants to cion.
plete Its collection is a real live baby. Two
years ago a man etopped at New Haven
long enough to hand an expressman a travel -
Hog bag, directing the tatter M take it to a
certain ad4"reen ,where he said he lived. ,
The address waa fictitious, and the express-
man was wondering what: M do with the
bag when he discovered that it contained o
live infant. The supposed father had taken
another train, so the satchel's contents went
to an asylum.
Frequently requires prompt, aotioa. An
VitZ beur's delay waiting for the doter may
&ND ettondodovith serious consequences,
They espeoially in' caSeti 'of Croup, Po:minimise,
ntral and other throat and lung tioubles.
PailY Rena°, no family :should be withent a
e of 1. A
FP440 .,Ypr's Cherry Pectoral"
°°°- Whteh has prooea, itselt' in thousands of
but
eza eaa9a., i.beat. lihnsficsiiSY ,i4oine
Th ; star idlecOl'rere,(1.. It ffivOil lvenapt relief
haceste. cua4rde, Th11041773 *olltterit' alviri"t'elpbre aefIte7trekCighgril
its continued use; o • •
la. H. Latimer; M. D., Mt ;Vernon,
GO., says: " have found Ayer's Camay
,Peetoral a perfect cure for Croup In all
CaBeS. have known the worst cases
relicved,in a Very short time by its use;
and I advise all familiesto uee it M. Mad-
• den emerge octet:, for cenghe,/ creaP, &o."
'. J: Eidson, :M. D., Middletown,
; ;soya; ;; , bay° used, , Aoer's
harry Peetoral with alai best effeet in
noo. ; my .ptactice. This' Wonderful 'prepare.
ta dim once sa*ed ittialife. I had. a con-
Ily
The King of Greece.
• Alexander A. Rangabe wriMs M the Chi-
cago Inter. Ocean from Athens as follovis :—
It is a_ common saying in Athens that there
is no king happier than the King of Greece.
I don't know how far this is true, but cer-
tainly _ no king is freer in his movements than
King George. Strangers, especially Rua.
dens arid Germans, who imagine that
lets and Sociabsts3 are everywhere, a
amazed when they come to the oonalusio
that the gentleman and lady, walking quiet1
ID front of them, ono and erns, dressed lik
everybody else, must be the King and Quee
because all the people bow to them, whil
the officers salute and the soldiers presen
arrosas theypitasby. Theycannotunderstand
how a king lakres to walk among his'eubjects
ID thuofree and easy way, without any escort
and without taking the slightest precautio
for his',safety. Yet this is an every -da
_occurrence in Athens.
One often meets the King walking wit
the Queen or the Princess Alexandra, gene*
ally followed by a splendid Danish dog; a
another time it is the Queen with her tWO
SODS or the King with an aidecle-aansp, both
dressed in civilian's clothes. Sometimes
• ant cough, night ;sweats, was greatly
reduced in flesh,. ,aud given up by, my
physiOlan., One bottle and a half of the
Pectoral cured me."
"EI cannot, eat- enough in praise of
Ayor's Cherry Pectoral," writes E.
Bragden, of Palestine, Texas, "
Ing sts I do that, butfor its use, I Should
long since have died."
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
PREPARED BY
,
Dr. J. C. Ayer 84` Co., LoWell Mass -
Bold by all Druggiths. Price ttl.; eix OS.
Unopprottched for
Tone and Quality
re CA7A1-9C1U ES FREE,
; BELL&C�, Guelph' it.
e, 9
, Tho Great English Preseriptlail,
Pi A. successful Medicine used over
30 . years in thousands of eases.
cures Spermtsterritea Nervous
ea ness, inhasstotts, mpotsnost
• and all diseases.caused by abuse. •
o• (Bromic indiecretion, or over-exertiom [yew
.0, 13_1x packages Guaranteed toollislantermastfl_ Mere
• ,raff. , Ask your osouggat f, r Toe welt soma/obis
• Presculptt•n, take no Bubstitute. One oeseisamo
n by.inall. Write for Pamphiot. Addrah
-•'Eureka Chemical Co.,, Detroit. Ale&
t 'For sale' by J. W. Browning, C. Lutz,
Exeter, and. all druggists.
they go oh horseback, in which case they are
followed by two servants livery; but the
Queen prefers driving to ridingoalthongh she
is an excellent luirsew,ornan.
• They have so much confident:* in the affec-
tion of -their subjects and are so sure of their
own penional &dery that our Royal family
rather, enjoys -mixing with the crowd on the
occasion domino illumination or other public;
amniement, when they walk about among
the. people like any ordinary family. On
Holy Friday, for instance, I met them mov-
ing about in this -way among the crowds
standing in Constitution Place and along
Hermes street, waiting to see the procession
pai'e-loy, one of the most beautiful sightsin
Athens, . •
Betlethe King and Qifeeti; Although be-
longing to different religions, are very pious,
andio oegularly to all the church services. ;
The -Royal P:slace Oontainattio chapels, one 'I
-Protestant, for the, King, mid' the; other i
Cirei
haler the Queens served' by a Greek
'priest end a'ohoir composed' of, Greek men
•antl boy% whcraing the 1,;;;•reek hymns accord-
ing to European. music., The Ronicee have
also been taught to 13i6Oe great respect for
the Church 1
Not Necessarily for Publication.
And are you certaiti that you love me,
Arthur ?" said the pretty editress, as her
lover hung over her in the bay window of
the mountain. hotel. "You are certain?"
"1 am," replied the lover with an em-
phasis on the "am."
" Will von say it again," she asked,
"not necessarily for publication, but as a
guarantee ot good faith ?"
say it again,i' he said, " risme you 1"
' "Then," said she, "1 am satisfied and
we may now go to press."
Mother—Daughter, didn't I hear Mr.
Jenkins kiss you last night when he went
away? Doughter—Yes, mammal but it was
against my will. Mother—What as?
Daughtero—Your hearing it mamma
Some Friends of the Farmers.
In eongluding a recent bulletin q�m the
i New Jersey Agricultural Experithent sta-
tion, Rev. George D. Hulot, entornOlogist,
' s "It ay also be an aduantage to
' paint Out eome of the friends of the fernier,
whiah, donsequently, no farmer shOutd de-
stroy' dr 'allOwed to be deetroyed. Among
the are "the'. toads, wttich • are, under tot,
circumstances, the farmera friend ; mores
and teid mice probably do a vast deal more
good than harm ; all -birds, especially robins,
wrens, ; thrushes, orioles, cuckeos, phebes,
bluebirds, wood peckers, swallows and cat-
. birds.. The deatruction -of all these and
many othere,; except for' scientific purposes,
stiould,be made under vory heavy peaalties,
iliegal in'everY State. The house -sparrow,
known better as the 'English sparrow, is to
be rated an eciception. This bird is now
iegarded as a nuisance—first,
beelmeeia it* ' grain and tegeteble.destroy•
ing 13ropcin.; i ass : secondly,. it drives away
ineact 'de:Alto 1.L.E, birds, ".
Some Enormous Salariei.
Smile vitas -resting figures in regard to all-
,
aries 'haver been elhated in a suit brought
in Brociklyn against a powder baking com-
pany. It Wad ehown that the president
of the company draws a salary of $50,000
a year, the vice-president $30,000, and the
treasurer $5,000. The president of a var-
nish company, who was introduced as an
expert 'in regard to salaries, stated that
the superinteadent of his company teceiv-
ed $50,000 a year while the yearly buai-
nese did not exceed $3,00 t000.
Another witness stated that in compan-
ies in whir& he was acquainted the chief
executive officers receive from $5 000 to $50,-
003 a year, while a representative of a
kerosene oil company said that he knew
one Officer of a large corporation who receiv-
ed a salary of $30,000 a year and two
others who received $20 000 each,
zemadddladygetalle
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•ammo crtmeriman
Medicated for an diseaese of the blood sad nor-
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