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The Exeter Times, 1888-9-20, Page 2Want of Steep sending thousands annually to to insane asylum ; and the doctors sint this ermine is alarmingly on the inoresea The usual remedies, while tney may give temporary elief, ere likely to do more Mune than good. What is ueeded is an Alterative and Mood -purifier. Ayer's Sarsaparilla is incomparably the best. It correots those disturbance% In the circulation which cause sleepless. nem, gives increased vItality, aud. le. stores the nervous system to a healthfal condition. Rev. T, G. A. Cote, agent of the Maas. Home Missionary- Society, writes that Uhl stomach was out of order, his sleep very often disturbed, and some in. purity of the blood manifest; but that a perfect cure was obtained, by the 1z130 Of Ayer's Sarseparilla. Frederick W. Itrazie, 4t14. Waabingtott street, Boston,. writes: is !Ty daughter was prostrated withne.rvorts debility. Ayer's Sarsapatidia reetored her to health." William P Bowker, Erie, Pa., Wee cured of nervoueness and sleeplessness by taling Aver' e- ,Sarsaparilla for about two months, during which time his weight increased over twenty pounds. Ayer's Sarsaparilla, PREPARED BE Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mese. Vold by all Druggists. Price $1; six bottles, $6. TEE EXETEE TIMES. republished every Thursday morning,at th TIMES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE Main-street,nearly opposite Fitton's jewelery Store, Ex eter, Ont., by John White dr Bon, Fro- • rorietors. Rama AnvnumtsrSe : First insertion, per ... . .. . .. .......10 cents. Ea ch subsequeo tin sertion ,per line Scents. To insure insertion, advertisements should be sentin not later than Wednesday morning OurJOB PRINTING DEPARTMENT is one f the largest and best equipped in the County f Enron, AU work entrusted to us will receiV ur prompt attention:. Decisions Regarding Newe- Papers. Any person who takes e, paperregularlyfrora he post -office, wh ether directed in his name or another's. or .whether he has subsoribed or not us responsible for payment. 2 If a person ordera his paper discontinued he must pay all tureen or the publisher may continue to send it until the payment is made, and then collect the whole aniount, whether the paper is Laken from the offioe or not. 3 In suits for subscriptions, the snit may be n.strtutedinthe place vrhere the paper is pub- lished, although the subscriber the.y reside hundreds of miles away. The courts have decided that refusing to take newspapers or peliodicals from the pout - °Moe, or removing and leaving them uncalled or is prima facie evidence of intentionalfratel Exeter Butcher Shop. R. DAVIS, Butcher & General Dealer aLL KINDS MEAT Castomerssupplied TUESDAYS, THURS- DAYS laiD SIT UBDAYS at their mildews. ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE CEitel PROMPT ATTENTION. PENNYROYAL WAFERS. has had a life long experienee Preocription of a phytdolan treating female diseases. Is monthly with perfect sixteen by over 10,0001011es. Emmet, safe, effectuaL Ladies oak your area gist for Pennyroyal Wafers sae take no substitute, or inolose pea age for sealed particulars. Sold by au dte.ists, el ver box. A.cidreas THEORICA C itefe OAL 00e Drumm, MO Car Sold in Exeter by J. W. Browning, C. Lutz, and all druggists. AGI Send 10 cents.po atage and we will send you free a royal, valuable sample box of goods that will put you in the way of making more money at once, than anything else in Amerioa. Bothsexes of all ages can live, at home and work in spare tim e, or all the time. Capita notrequirud. We will start you. Iranians pay sine for those who start at once. STINSO co •Pornanci name How Lost, How Restored entisay on the r steam Just published, a new edition of 11:ti. wes celebraed issclaw. eetiteemsemee. or incapacity induced Y items or early indiscretion. The celebrated author, in tis admirable may, olearly demonstrates from a thirty Yeast' sdesielal preottce, that tha elan:tine oorneenenees of elin Mime may be radically cured; pointing eta a • of ours at once simple, certain and eeHua4tee means of which evert sufferer, no matter ais condition may be. may mire himself cheap , Pre veiny and radically. ter This lecture should be in the hands of seam youth and every man in the land. Sent under seal, in a plain envelope, to asy pet dress, post-paid, on receipt of four cents, sr twe postage statnps. Addreini THE OULVERWELL MEDICAL CO. 41 Anti Street, New Tor*. oat Office 130x 450 443864 etzsmateti ADVERTISER an learn the exaot cost of any proposed line of advertising in American papers by addressing Geo. P. Rowell & Co., Newepaper Advertising 'Bureau, 20 Sprue e Si, New York. Send liaote, for 100ePatas Ptizentilert HEALTH. Bab 's Teeth. At birth the rudimentary teeth eXif3t es et* rtipy amasses. To change thie soft masa to the herd, pearly substance called & tooth greet changes are necessary it is aanaluPlished in two ways. Without going into details, it will suffice co say Iline must be deposited in considerablie quantities. While the embryo tooth is thus hardening it is puehed forward, exerting a moderate preastere in the soft parts before it which are really absorbed away as the tooth ativancea, leaving only a small amount of cuttieg to be done. To insure harmonious *Action three things are necessary: Nature must have sufficient lime phosphate furnish- ed her; she intuit be capable of assimilating it and using it where needed ; lastly, the soft pees, or gums, meat not offer unusual resiatance to the progress of the tooth. When them three elements of moms join hands no further evidence of teething ie given than the appearance of the sharp, tiny point baby SO delights to test, having pos- sibly an increased flow of saliva whioh loner - mal and the desire to bite the gums on iminit hard substance, though in Many oases there is not enough uneasiness to oall forth this list symptom. Unfortunately, failure in any one faotor entirely ohanges the line of the story. It requires technical knowledge and diagnostic skill to at once determine the real trouble. However, if the child is inclined to be ftershY, if the fontanelles in the head remain open and large, long past the usual period for partial closure, if the flash is fiabby, the back part of the head wet with sweat, wi- pe:nail y when sleeping, saturating the pillow., rest assured there is faulty assim- ilation, and probably amo lack of sufficient quantity. To remedy, if the baby is being brought up on the bottle, add to the milk one tea- spoonful of lime water three times in twenty- four houre. If the chilli is at the breast, give three grains of phoephate of lime or oar- bonate twioe a day. Don't make the mis- take of thinking if a little is beneficial more will be better. Nature will appropriate only so much and the surplus is eliminated as a foreign substance and, if in too great quantities, induces bowel troubles, the very evil we wish to avoid. If on the other hand, the child's bony system seems well formed, but the gums are swollen, hot and tender; if, moreover, there is a whitish gristle -like looking line along the central portion of the caveolus orgam, the infant is feverish, fretful, constantly rubbing its mouth' and little head, probably the third eletnent of success is wanting, the gums offer too muchzesistance and the pain from the imprisoned tooth is terrible, as all can testify who have had the misfortune to struggle o'er the advent of their so-called wisdom teeth, though they seem perfect " folly teeth." Poisons. When ammonia water has been drank, vinegar and water should be given freely and on the instant. This may be followed bycopious acid drinks,—lemonade, orange juice, etc. A generous dose of sweet oil will also be useful; ice freely employed will somewhat control the inflammation and opium will be needed to subdue the pain, 'Arnica is sometimes drank by mistake for something else. To empty the stem ach thoroughly with an °mak then follow with a generous dose of castor oil, if it can be borne, at the first important steps in treatment. Paregoric will subdue the pain and if the headache persists, employ a hot foot bath, put a mustard paste to the back of the neck, and give one-half teaspoonful of the bromide of potassium dissolved in water. When children drink kerosene oil, or mothers administer too much of it to them carelessly, the symptoms are great pallor of the face, blueness of the lips, drovramess, feeble pulse coldness ot the extremities and great prostration. Give mustard and water to empty the stomach and if vomiting does not occur at once, the fingers should be thrust into the throat. Brandy and water is injected to restore heart action. Poisoning by opium or ary of its prepare, ns (morphine, laudanum'paregoric, eto.) emedied by fifteen grains of sulphate ot o in a little water. If this cannot be ob- ed at once, use mustard and wannevater, alit and warm water, and after vomiting e plenty rf strong coffee, put mustard ter around the calf of each leg and if the ient is chilled and sinking give freely of its, and water. Dash cold water over face and shoulders and walk the person eep him from going to sleep, for that ns death when the drug is yet active in stomach. or treatment of poisoning by sulphuric , oil of vitriol, =Hoek acid, and similar eral adds, giveinstantly either -magnesia, lk, whiting, lime water, soda, saleratus ed in water, or, what is better, in milk water. If neither of these substances ithin easy reach, karmic a piece of.plaster he wall, pound it and give that in milk ater. Whatever solution is used give a e glass full every. two or three minutes. m water and mucilaginous drinks, such nseed tea, barley water, milk, gruels, should be freely^ given for sometime r a sufficiency of the antidote has been n. A common poisoning is by oxalic , which is taken by suicides and is else aken for einem salts; the latter how- , are bitter and the acid is sour. The dies are the same as for oil of vitriol tio is r zin tain or s giv pies pat spir the to k mea the %cid min elm, mix and is w off t or w win War as ll etc., afte take acid mist ever reme pois How to Cure Fickleness. A correspondent in in trouble, --trouble of a serious but not uncommon sort. Res writes : "No matter what I take in band, I soon tire of it. I am an experienced mechanic; ria,ve worked many years at my present trade; but a wandering inclination, a con- stant hankering for chanee,--makes it im- possible for me to concentrate my energies upon my work. The result is that I have never acquired first-rate skill, and oontre- quently earinot oath first-rate wages. My teatime capacity ig good enough, but this ficklenese of mina, much as I fight against at, seems likely to be my lifelong curse. "Can you tell me, as well as thousands of other readers, how to empire the ability to stick to one thing? If eo, you will do us an incalculable favor." Evidently our correspondent needs no homily upon the Mischievous effects of fieklenerts and indecision/ So far he is better oft than some of his companions in misery. Now if he will really be free from the slavery into which he has fallen, lot him begin at the beginning, and eet about acquiring, tilde by little, the habit of kiting according to reason indeed of listening to eery idle breath of iinpulee and passion. Thom is no jumping into such St habit. The very word implied something to Which a Man must habituate himself. The will, like the memory or any other biotite', is to be strengthened by exercise. Let him bogie thee to eternise hie will, in other words to act deraidedly, both as to matters in general, end, especially, as to the matter of lain daily employment, He has settled it that tie present ocoup,s- don is one for which he is well fitted. Very well. Now let him sot accordingly, treating all impulses to change as 80 many textptan ions to foolishness. Whet if he has forty such impulses every day? He may still keep a.t his work, determined to excel in it. The gymnast may feel never so lazy as he strips for his hour of exercise; but if he keeps at the pulleyweights and the dumb -hells, hie muscles will be etrengthned, his lazy feeling to the contrary notwithstanding; and the probability is that he will not work very long before his listless mood will have passed away and been forgotten. Let our friend who wiahas to etrengthen his will, follow the sem course. What he has to fear is not so much idle impulses as idle aotiens. His impulses, it may be, he cannot help; his actions, like the gymnast's, are within his own power. Whether it be a ram's arms or his will that is under disipline, the result is a queetion only of time and patience. The Last Buffalo Robes. I3uffalo robes are almost out of fashion. Many other skins have been forced into use for the purposes onoe supplied by the buffalo, Unlike most faehions, it was the failure of the supply, not the Whim in demand, that makes the buffalo robe out of fashion, Seventeen hundred bales of them arrived in Chicago recently. Several years ago these robes were for eale at several Eastern and Western points, and were brought up for Canadian UN. The Canadians did not want them, and they were Sent from Toronto to a Chicago dealer who has owned a large number ot them. The invoice is a remark- able one, as ib is known to be the only commercial collection of what was at one time a apeoial American product, and one the,b can never again be obtained. Within ten years the buffalo will be swept from the face of the United*States, and almost out of existence. All 110 remains of these animals are the few small herds owned by the Government and straggling specimens in the Southwest. Cemmerce is not senti- mental, and the thrilling feats of the hunter and his banquet of buffalo hump on the wide, grassy table of the West, count little in tke matter of supply and demand. In lees than the past tea years the hunt has yelded over 100,000 bales, containing a dozen skins each. Skins that were skill- fully dressed by the red men were sold from $15 down to $4. Che remnant now here is quoted at from $14 to $25. A Queen's Popularity. The Queen Regent of Spam has met given . another proof that she knows the way to win the hearts of her people. On Thursday last, as she was being driven about 7 p.m. down the Puerta del Sol with her two little girls, a priest bearing the host chanced to come out of a house close to the Cafe du Levant, a restaurant which visitors to Madrid cannot fail to remember. No sooner did the Queen Regent see the sacred procession than, stop. ping her carriage, she alighted, and signed to the priest to take her place in the vehicle. Her daughters had also been lifted down from their seats and taking one by either hand, she followed withethera on foot. walking behind the carriage. An immense crowd collected forthwith as the news spread, and, touched by the Queen Re- gent's pious humility, followed after her and her children to the Carmen church. It was to this church that the priest and the host belonged, and her majesty, entering the sacred edifice with her little ones, prayed for some minutes before one of the altars. On again regaining the street and entering her carriage, the Queen Regent was applauded most vociferously by the enormous crowd that had gathered, and which was so dense round thteroyal Carriage that ib was only with great difficulty that a start could at length be made. No wonder the Spanish Republicans are beginning to despair. Such a queen as Donna Christiana is worth more to the monarchy in Spain thaz a whole army corps of soldiers.—[Lon. don Figaro. The Days of Railroading. When we picture the surroundings of the traveller upon railways during the first ten or fifteen years of their existence we find his journey was not one to be envied. Re was jammed into a narrow seat with a stiff back, the deck of the car was low and fiat, and ventilation in winter impos• sible. . . . The springe of the oar were hard, the jolting intolerable, the windows rattled like those of the modern omnibus, and conversation was a luxury that could be indulged in only by those of recognized superiority in lung power. The brakes were clumsy and ot little service. The ends of the fiat bartrails were cut diagonally, so that when laid clewin they would lap and form a smoother joint. Occasionally they became sprang; the spikes would not hold, and the end of the rail with its sharp point rose high enough for tne wheel to run under it, rip it loose and send the pointed end through the floor of the car. This was called a "snake's head," and the unluckly being sitting over it was likely to be impaled against the roof. So that the traveller of that day, in addition to his other miseries, was in momentary appro. hension of being spitted like a Christmas turkey. From a Counter to a Throne. Some years ago, the " crack" linendrap- er's shop in the Grande Rue of Pere was kept by Tomkins and Marengo. Mrs. Tom - kits was a Swiss, and sat behind the count- er dispensing gloves and cosmetics to Turks, Greeks, Jews, Armenians, and other na- tionalities. By her side Sat a pretty, light haired SWilie girl, who had picked up :a smattering of Turkish, by means of which and by her good looks she attracted many Turkish Pashas to the shop in quest of gloves and znild flirtation, Among them was the present Sultan. He Saw ahri loved the fair Swiss girl. One afternoon she an- nounced to her aunt that she was about to marry a Paha, In vain the aunt explained to her that she wad disgraoing herself by such an alliance and endeavoured to lure her back to recollections of her native land by telling her how happy her lot would be as the bride of a tradesman in Berne or Lucerne. The niece remained true to her Pasha, and ItIrs. Tomkins, With many mis- givings, ooteented to the wedding. The Pasha is now the Sultan, and. the Swiss girl Sultana. She has taught him European languages, and her influence is unbounded over him. Wiggles— Arabella, darling, may 1 him you? Arabella—Yes, sweetest; but lasts ine on the left cheek, phased, Wiggles (doing so)—And may 1 mat, dearest, Why the loft cheek? Little brothel, (poking his head through the door)—Ileoetrob jai* Waggles hat beeh kiming her right oho& all the afternoon, and it's tired, The entgagetnent r le not yet announced. British Crops, According to the statement of a well in- formed English grain etatistitrian, whose con- clusions have been published.in the London ,•Timee," the English wheat crop this season is net likely to be much over 50,000,000 bushels ; that ia the smelled grain crop that the farmers of Great Britain have gathered during the present eteetury, or some 110,• 000,000 beehele less than the orop of lasb year, The Enalieh consumption is, in round numbers. over 200,000,000 bushels per annum. The quality of other agri- culture' products in the United King- dom, with the exoeption, perhaps'of pota- toes, will, it is thought, be equal to that of the average of several yearn past, but the qualiby will be decidedly inferior, The pc. - tato orop,' partioulerly in Ireland, bas been very much of a failure. The excessive amount of wet weather during the months of July and August has had the effect of ir- retrivebly spoiling the crop in many parte of the country, and of greatly injuring ib in other sections. On the whole, the outlook for the farmers all over the United King- dom, and imperially in Ireland, is any- thing but encouraging. This is like- ly to have its effect en the economic queations of land holding, not only in Ire- land, where it will intensify the disagree. meets between tenants and landlords, but in England, where the subject has for sem- time passed mourned a phase which, if less aggravated, has none the less occasioned serious concern. A well informed authority on the subject et land values throughout England has recently made the statement that the decline in the value Of landed estates in the last ten years has been not less than 30 per cent., and that farther reduc- tions would lead to the bankruptcy of a large number of those who have for several gene- rations represented the upper nodal and political dam ot Great Britain. Pretty Girls mad Politeness. While middle aged and elderly persons ought certainly to encourage young people in having plenty of innocent fun, the latter should also remember that the earth does not belong wholly to them, and cught to show consideration to the elders, and be patient with the children, who are so apt to abound in places' of Summer resort. The quiet and quaintly dressed maiden ladies may seem very tiresome to the pretty girls who are staying beneath the same roof; nevertheless, the latter should remember that conquerors show to the best advantage when they are meet magnanimous, and a beautiful and much admired women is oer. tainly, for a brief space, a conqueror of the earth. Let her, therefore, give precedent)°, in entering a oarriege, in passing through a doorway,- er in going up or down stairs, to the spinster whose youth has . long since flown'and our young beauty will not only obey the laws of politeness in this way, but may win for herself a firm friend and protectress in the older woman, who may still have a fresh, warm heart, even though her face be plowed with wrinkles. Impatience with children is a common fault with young people, but surely a most illogical one. According to their own the- ory, they should yield gracefully to the die mends of the little folks, since they claim that age must yield to youth; add it is a poor rule that does not work both ways. The Lizard Lost His Tail. Many observers have noticed that some of the pretty house lizards of tropical countries have parte.d with a, whole or ar t of their tails, which appendage is, however, said to grow again. The following incident is cited by Colonel Cookson, and is suggested as an explanation of this lose : As I sat reading at a little table in front of one of the windows of my bungalow in India, my attention was attracted to a vice lent fight taking place between two house lbw& upon the curtain. These creatures are about the size of newts. They live upon the walls and windows of licuses. They find shelter in cracks and crevices, feeding upon flies, which they stealthily approach, and then suddenly pounce upon. The two lizards took up their positions about a yard apart. They then suddenly scampered forward at the name moment, like knights in a tournament of old, had a severe tussle when they met, and then seta arated to the same distance apart as before, usually changing sides after each round. Again and again they rushed forward and closed, when at last in the struggle one !Wiz ed the other by the tail, snapped a piece off, and scampered back in triumph to his con ner, with the portion of his mutilated adver- sary in his mouth. I think I shall never forget how dismal the defeated lizard looked with his stump from which the tail had been broken, as he sat looking on, while hes cannibal of an op- ponent positively ate the fragment up before his eyes I A Very Mild Campaign. Taking the preeent campaign there has been less blood and language shed than in any previous Presidential conteet since the era of good feeling. In only one Slate in the Union—Tennessee—has politics been keyed up to the liar, poltroon and ecoundrel stage,. and even in Tennessee it has not been found necessary to call out the militiei or read the Riot Act. After all, it is not the easiest thing in the world to bubble over with patriotic enthusiatim upon a question of poli- tical economy, or to get mad enough to be willing to light, bleed and die for free wool or free whiskey, as the case might be, As it is, the watchword of both parties seeing to be decency, decorum, and dullnese, and we are all going in for the lilies and languors of virtue and the platitudes of our very best company behavior,—iChioago News. Chinese I/rugs, The Assietant Examiner of the Chinetze Customs Service has emit to the Unit- ed States Treasury Departmenb a printed list of Chinese mediehies exported from Yangtse ports. Among the remedies are tigers' bones, ground blood, bears' gall, asses' glee, tree limp, elephants' gall, foetal crabs, fossil teeth, fowls' gitzerds, "insects of nine smells," Job's tears, cow hair, glees, rhinoceros horns, clown knee, puff balls, dragons' teeth, straw, hedgehog skins, dried silkworms, intake siting, rarebit' eyes, home tails, and ?Antipodes. Old man—lf I give my daughter to you, young man where Will you take her? Young men—Well, er—I thought perhaps we might stay here with you until t ogee got thhige straightened out a bit. Old men -41-M, yes, I had lathe overlooked that tansy solution of the diffieulty, but my house is very small. Young man—Ye,es, I thoaght of that, too but the idea occurrsdto nie that possibly the hointe ootild be enlarged, It in estimated that there are 10,000 fierielfe In the United States, with 1,000 toren entire., i fy covered with glass, in the shape of green 1 houses, devoted to flowers. I PAWING NOTES. I The lilted lace machines are 200 inohe0 wide instead of 150. The output is 25 oent greater and the quality much be than with the old machine*. A genius has invented a flatiron; and per leer has utilized the prinaiale of expansion of metals by heat so that 4 little bell ring* when the iron is hot enough to iron clothes with. When the non -intercourse is proolaimed and the binding arrangement is abrogat- ing, ()medians will not forget that Halifax, Si. Johns and the Intercolonial are in eXIS• tenoe, and Oen be used. Robert Harding, a young English Sooial. ist, when he wants to make a speech on the streets or publio equares, padlocks himt self with a chain to an iron fence or some similar fixture. Then when the police come to take him in they have to spend a long time in getting him unfastened, and he OEM make a pretty long apeeoh before he is car- ried off. The k much national debt is said to be the Isrgetsb in the world -45,000,400,000 ; an- nual interest, $264,000,000. Thus the inter- est alone is nearly $00,000,000 more than the total wants a the United States Gov- einment, The per capita, tax of the Front& people is $15, perhaps the largest of any geople. The President' reoelvea a salary of 153,000a year. The Russian Government) recently ism a very enlightened ukase for vvhioh it is e tiled to high praise. The want ot res money has too frequently made the po Retardate farmer the prey of wily speculate who took ad -ventage of his neceseities force the price of wheat below the level th would have been reached by the legitima operation of the law of supply and d mend. To remedy this evil the Ru sitin government has authorized the roi way companies to make oath advanc on the lesoUrity of wheat entrusted them for transportation and sale. Th advances are not th exceed sixty per oen of the value of the wheat, and the rate of tenet is to be fixed by the State Bank, wh the value of the wheat will be estimated a cording to the rulingtprioes at the neare oommereial centre. This certainly is a mea tire which does credit to the parental care the Russia autocrat, and if all his measur were equally well designed to meet the wan of his children, no great fault could be foun with his autocracy. It is said that the Ra aian press is unanimous in expressions satisfaction, and hopes that it will be ben floially instrumental in ensuring the be results from this year's splendid orop pro pease The newspapers of the United States ar at present very funny. Jefferson Brick abound and wild oratorical flights of irnagin ation and abuse are the order of the day There is no need for much search in order to find ouch tidbits. These are everywhere and while some are more absurd than others yet the general air of tremendousness and effort is simply sublime. Every one is try ing to work himself up into a fever of ex oitement and patriotism, and the roarin and the stamping and the spitting and th swearing are simply indescribable. Th nation seems to have gone delirious, bu after all it is not the nation it is only th typical editor and reporter that are work ing the machine for ad they are worth. By all marine let them go on. They will feel better after they have got such loads of nasty stuff off their stomachs and if every one of the poor wretches thinks that he is wielding the rod that rules the universe and elects presidents, by all means let him. If it please him it does the rest of the world no harm. His brother lunatics in mtny an asylum have often exactly the same idea, but the world after all wheels along much as usual. The grass grows and the sun shines just as if a Presidential election were not forward and Jefferson Briok were dead. ed dy or re to at te e- s - 11. es to t. in - Ile 0- 8 - of es ts s. of e - et s - The First Symptoms Of all Lung diseases are much the ane: feverishness, loss of appetite, sore throat, paina in the chest and beak, headache, etc. In a few days you may be well, or, on the other hand, you may be clime with Pneumonia or "galloping Consumption." Run no risks, but begin immediately to take Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. Several years ago, James Birchard, of Darien, Conn., was severely 111 The doctors said he was in Consumption, and that they could do nothingfor but advised him, as a last resdrt,,to irry Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, After Uking this medicine, two or three inonlbs, he was pronounced a well man, His health remains good to the present day. 3. S. Bradley, Malden, Mass., writes: Three winters ago I took a severe cold, which rapidly developed into Bronchitis and Consumption. I was so weak that I could not sit up, was much emaciated, and coughed incessantly. I consulted several doctors, but they were power. lees, and all agreed that I was in Con. eumption. At last, a friend brought ma • a bottle of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. From the first dose, I found relief. Two bottles cured me, and intr. health has since been perfect." Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, PREPAItED Br Dr. J. O. Ayer & Co., Lowell, MAN. Sold by all Druggists. Prim $1 alz bottles, $5. "BELL" ORGANS Unapproached for easn'et- Tone and Quality CATALOGUES FREE. BELL & CO Guelphs Out. 3 The Great English Preserfp4oft. A successful Medicine used Oyer 30 years in thousands of eases. Cures Spermatorrhea, Nervous ea ness, Emissions, Impotency and all diseases caused by abuse. issaromij indiscretion, or over-exertion. [kirsenel nix packages Guaranteed to Oure when another. ge PrarasiLerititlficenY,otuarkeDrunoggsiusbtsftiotruf:. OGnr"s e prAngaeitatreell.b Six $5, by mail. Write for Pamphlet. Adores': - Eureka. Chemical Co., Detroit, Dicik. o For sale by J. W. Brownieg, C. Leitz, Exeter, and all druggists. • I What is to be the end of all this pother between Canada and the States? Some of the roarers look as if they were in eatnest, but with tae great majority it is evidently tin thunder and bluff. When the 6th of November has come and gone things will quiet down and second and sober thoughts will come even to the most hot-headed. In the meantime what can Canada do but main- tain her dignity and, if necessary, suffer and be calm. Let her do what is right and fair In the circumstances and if that involves trouble why, of course, then trouble must be Noaintercourse is war at a certain stage. If the President of the United States choose to force that upon Canada in order to increase his chances of re-election, that is his lookout and with him rests the grave responsibility. Meantime he may just as well understand sooner as later that Canada is not to be bullied out of her rights and while she is ready to say anything and everything to egeity and right yet nothing to mere rant and fustian. 11 is a pity to see such on goings. which could so easily have beenobviated by a little quiet thought and Christian principle.—In the meantime, hands off, Canada is not going doom on her mar- row bones at the first talk of unscrupulous electioneering wire pullers. If it ni all a mere make-believe it is a piece of the most consummate mischievous folly, If it is all in earnest it is simply madness and a great political crime. IOur neighbours cannot be said to be ex- , cessively ahetemiours. Laab year they cau- 1, sinned 1.19 gallons of spin la, 0:54 gallons 1 of wine, and 11.98 gallons of malt liquonarena per head. The per capita coneumetion in Canada on tie ether hand was 1 225 gallons ot spirits. 148 gellens of wino end 2 574 gallons of beer. We drink four gallons of beer per head to Cab tsen plates consumed by the Americans and yet we are not too temperate. The Germans, it is said, take the recent success of Boulanger very quietly. They are satisfied that any Government should rule in Fiance which will he acceptable to the great mass of the French people and which will be reasonably inclined to live at peace with their neighbors and especially with their neighbors on their eastern frontier. They don't believe that Boulanger if he gets more power, if indeed he get all the power he , oould wish, would necessarily rush into war with Germany, They think he is too wise and prudent a man to ruu such an enormous riak for so comparatively smell an advan- tage. In thort the people of the Fathex - land are prepared to welcome any kind of rulo which the French people may please to adopt and to live on terms of amity with it if possible, and if not possible they permado themselves they can take care of themselves when the time comes. Ail this is common er nse and good policy. EV= the enemies of the young German Emperor aokno wledge that he is not a fool, and that interest has he in pro - yoking a war of :Aggression either with France nr with any other country ? 111 short, while it is a pity that a comparative handful of men ebould have so much power to &teeth the peace of the world and to ruin the lives and happiness of thousands at the same time it is a matter for thank- fulness that the interests of that handful and even their ambitions seem to point at the present time in the direction of peace. EDICATED ELECTRIC anamsEELTanassaam Media/led for all diseases of the blood said neas‘ veils syatera. Ladies' Belt ali tor feentalse.eglinay plapite it lase no equal. Moos' Belt 1111,, oeinnteed leCt and Sueponsory eg. C 113 ES :'-`41nalci,34:4Ei _,...,„ Witt° thOirke ini3CaOrtn'Peen. iOnUatAritnribtje Warn IPl* 8cr %. giving a direct wirront of II gOirk) c0811801085, lite. The only ayllonos .6/ ES. 1 ti noon la le on file teora those armed of female diseases, palms in batik i times. nervous debility, general debility, lumbago, rhoumansm, }?aralyeis, zes disease of Sbe ltidnoya, spinal disease, tid liver, geld, Ieueorrhcea, eaten& Sexual exhaustion, seminal enairreione, asihmaheert disease, animate, oonsittiatinn handsomely illustrated book and health Journal. Correspondence stain wooden etas, italigestion, impotency„ piles, epilepsy, dumb ague ana di-abettimid :ivsaltation and eloetsiera treatraent tree. Agente wanted everywhere. Pat. b. Min, 6 Ctiree eLlaranteed filled ireated lectric olt Co. 155 Queen StWest, Toronto, Canada. ' stretettrea Whinammat 4%. 0 ORIENTA IMPOSSISLE SNOW ITS INFIXES0S aritaara ainajoy ever eltereilt=r0.IttlitlIM.: icrturormid, oat. 'OS SAT ITE MD LIINO 114"1"4' l(Mar140io Mtn : . :1* or Aim*? Mite 14,6 liette,i,416., 4004 o• =,liiftw..a.7zoom an mat I18, and Mr vWkIis' 114 A • 'Nv""0"sp...k germ *010te4 Wesi, WOOL*, Oa