Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1888-10-25, Page 5It is Absurd Tor people to expect a eitre for Indigoes Von, unless they xefrain from eating 'what is unwholesome ; but if anything riU eharpen tne appetite and give tone lo tlso digestive organs, it is Ayer's San- slit:wine. Thousands all eirer the laud testify to the merits of this inedieine. htIrs. Sarah Burroughs, of 248 Eighth street, Soutle Poston, write : "My bus., band has taken Ayer's Sarsaparille, for Dyspepsia, ond torpid ll•ver, and he's 'been greatly benefited," A Confirmed Dyspeptic. O. Canterbury, of 141. Franklin st., Boston, Mass., writes, that, suffering tor years rone Indigestion, he was at lost induced to try Ayer's Sarsaparilla And, by its use, was entirely cured. , Mrs. Jopple Anbin, of High street, liolyoke, Mass., suffered for over a year trom Dyspepsia, so that she could not vat substantial food, became very weak, need was unable to ore for her family, Neither the medicines prescribed by physicians, nor any of the remedies advertised for the euro of Dyspepsia, 'helped her, until the commenced the else of Ayer's Sarsaparilla. "Three bottles of this medicine," she writes, 4' cured me." Ayer's Sarsaparilla/ neon/mon Ito Dr, J. 0, Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. ethe $1; six bottles, $5. Worth $5 a bottle. THE EXETE.R TIMES. publisne d every Thursday tuorning,at Ili TI MES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE Illain-street, nearly opposite Pitton'a Jewelery Stored:late ter, Ont., by John White cis on, Pro- prietors. NAPES 00 ADVEUTESING First insertion, per line ....... ... .. cents. Bach subsequent in sertion , per ... e o ants . To insure insertion, advertisements elsould be sentin notiater Veen weenesdo,y morning Ourj013 PRINTING DEPARTMENT is one ▪ the largest and best equipped in the County Ruron, All work entrusted to us will reeeiv o r pron:ipt attention: DeeiSiOne Regarding NOW S- papere. Any person who takes a pap erresula rly from post-ottioe, whether direoted in his name or another's, or whether be has subscribed or not is responsible for payment. 2 If avers= orders his paper discontinued beraust pay all 41T8111.8 or the publisher may continue to sendit until the payment is made, -ancl then collect the whole amount, ethether she paper is taken from tae office or not. 3 In suits for subscriptions, the suit may be metituted in the place where the paper is pith. lish.ed, although the subscriber may reside laturdreds of miles away. 4 The courts have decided that refusing to take newspapers or pei.imlioals from the post - office, or removing and leaving them uncalled oris prima facie evidence of intentionalfraud xeter 71:311.totter Shop. DAvis, 13utclier 8f, General Dealer —IN ALL RINDS OF— E A T thestornerssupplied TUESDAYS, THURS- DAYS ANT, SATUBDAYS at their nesidence DBDEBS LEFT AT VTR SHOP WILL RE • OEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION. PENNYROYAL WAFERS. Prescription of a physician who hashed a life long :experience in treating female diseases. Is used monthly with perfect succesS by over 10,000 lathes. Pleasant, safe. effectual Ladies ask_your drug. gist for Pennyroyal Waterg asd. take no substitute, or inclose post- age for sealed particulars. Sold by an druemsts, $1 per box. .AddresS SeEfE EUREKA CHEMICAL 00. DILTROIT, Meg dV Sold in Exeter by J. W. Browning, Lietz, and all druggiste, A sample box or goods Send 10 cents postage free a royal , valuable end we loin send you. that will put you in the way of making more money at once, than anything eleein America. I3othsexes of all ages can Dv* at home and 'work in epare tine e, or all thE, time. Capital xtotrequired. We will start you. Immense Tay slue f or tbose -who start at once. Stamm , Co ,Portland Maine How Lost, How Restored Just published, a new edition of Dr. ativer- weirs Celebrated Essay on the radical cure of SEMOUTOIOUREA. or incapaoity induced by excess or -.early indiscretion. The celebrated. author, in this admirable essay, clearly demonstrates from a thirty years' successful practice, that the alarming consequences of self. abuse may -be radically cured; pointing out a mode of cure at once simple, certain and effectual, by means of which every sufferer, no matter what hie eondition may be, may cure himself oheaply, pri. rately and radically. SD* This leoture should be in the hands of every _youth and every- man in the lane. 'Sent under seal, in a plain envelope, to any ad dress, postpaid, on receipt of four oents, or two postage stamps. Address THE CULVERWELL MEDICAL CO. 41 Ann Street, New York test Office 13ox 450 - •4586-Iy alitlealintieninettellreetlennenemeneerenneee ADVERTISERS Tan learn the exaot cost of any proposed line of advertising in American papers by addressing Geo. P. Rowell igz Co., Newspaper, AdvertinInd tate/eau, Z 0 Spruce St., New Work. Mend lOote. for 100-Petele Poem:allots F4ALTH. The Milliety Of Little Things in the Sick Room. One of the luxuries of invalid life Is a flannel washcloth, To a sensitive person who dreads and ,brinks from the touch of a wee lioen or cotton cloth, the substitutiQn a a wasboloth of soft baleydiennel will often- times three eo render the bath agreeable •if net poeitively enjoyable, It 'should be made of two or three thicknesses of the dennel lightly tenited tegether, and should not be larger than the oureeet hand can hold. Another desirable article for one who is ion n confiued to the bed, ie a light priot wrapper, to be worn through the day nstead of a iaight-dreee. One who has tried tt say's that the first of Many reasons for eppreelatitg it le that it enables her to put her terms outside the bed-olotbes or step from the bed to the chair, whin out having any of that undressed feelin g she is always conecieue of when olad in a nightedrese. To lour° it0 being comfier - table and in no way burdeusorne, it ebould be out by the nightdress pattern. he cold wether it may be worn over the night-dress. .A little thing that haa long roade a bright epot in one nokroom is a tiny bunch a flowers, in a arnall vial, featerted to an invisible tack in the head -board of the bed- stead,jut over the invelid's pillow. The i vial s suspended from the tack by means of ea thread tied round ite neck. The Bowenconceal the' thread and the tack and not geld= hide the vial also, The little bouquet is so very email that even in winter it meet be renewed, day by (ley, from the Window plant% A window -box outside the window of a sioktroem is auother little thing that gives much pleasure to an invalid. Even if unable to leave her bed, she 113037, if strong euough, have the bed rolled close to the open window and with her own hande gather the blossoms for her pillow bouquet. If too feeble for this, she will yet find • pleasure in watching the plants as they grow and bloom. • An invalid who is so fortunate as to be able to write while in a recumbent position will lied a home-made writing -board a great oonvenieece. Take a board about eight inches wide and eighteen inches long and cover it with wfiite cotton flannel. This can be propped at any desired angle, and, lying on her left side, with the paper on the upper end of the writing -board, she will find its lower end --the lower half of its length— a. restful support for her arm and hand. To the inmate of a sick -room frequent changes in the position of the furniture are clamor always pleasant. Change the pic- tures, too. Bring pictures from the other rooms and hang them on her walls in place of those she has looked at so long. Dear friends, let us not wait for uncom- mon things, Let us remember in how great measure it is the common things, the dear common things of life, from whioh these sufferers are so Badly shut in. Carry your friend a sod of violets; placed in a shallow bowl where they can be freely watered, they, will grow and blossom in her window for days and days. Carry one of your blew- sorning house -plants and leave it there a week. Carry your canary, and let him sing there. Send her your photograph album, your Berap.book, your box of stereographs, some dreary winter day. Carry your pre- cious silk quilt or your new afghan, and let it lie a while on her bed or lounge. Even though she has one equally pretty, yours Will be different,---aometbing new to look at. If you have a sick friend at a distance, write to her. Write oftee. Never, until you have yourself known the loneliness of long illness, can you understated how much comfort there is, to an invalid, in a cheer - :'°Y, chatty letter. Working -Dresses. 11 women would onty consent to attire themselves in healthful dresses while at work, the misery resulting from improper dressing would be much diminished, since a great share of the mischief arising from this cause is produced by the attempt to use, in work or vigorous exercise, modes which are so trammeled by the weight of heavy skirts or the pressure of a corset, that they are either rendered helpless, or obliged to work at a great disadvantage. If women would wear healthful dresses while at work, th y wouid soon pna thgnveives ea lincom- c r tle unhealthy garments, whoa they "areas up," as to lead them to be glad to mate the more healthful styles habitual, We are glad to see that sertaible remarks like the following from a contemporary, are more and more fregnently to be met in the columns of popular newspapers and matzt, Ines 1— "The uniform insisted upon for women Ly those who direct gymnastic exercises is the only one appropriate for house -work so far as the under -garments are concerned. No oeraets, looe bands, and the weight of the MA suspended from the shoulders, is the only formula for a comfortable eeorking- dress forwomen, thateverwasorcanbegiven. We hear, in fancy, the exclamation, uttered by art overwhelming chorus of feminine voicee, "No corsets? Give up supporters ?" end we make no reply, save, Try it. Ex. perience is the best teacher." Leaving the wetter of underclothing, the outer.garments should certainly be male be one pew, and should be both well fitted and iminfortable. For stout women, a wrapper made in gab rielle: or princesee fashion is the most be - coining ; while for slender forms, the plain, full skirl), etttached tea. spenceror yoke waist, is more desirable. For material, cotton goods --gingham seersuekeror calico—aretheonly suitablefebricsfor working -dresses. Theo can be worn the year round by lining with heavy, unbleached muslin for winter, and, if necessary, adding an extra under.garment. In these, one can always feel and look tidy, and the increased Eselfweepeet arising from such' a condition of things will prove both restful and stimulating. Woolen materials have such an affinity for ashes, dust and and grease, that ff worn, one must either spend much valuable time and strength brushing and cleansing, or pass for a sloven, Gingham and seersucker ate preferable to calico." Microbes. It watt a great disoovery which revealed the fact that most epidemic disetteers are due to microscopic organism% now known as microbe, or bacteria. Thus fanhowever, our knowledge ie con- fined to this fact, Researches in this line have been prosecuted with immense zeal by ex,perts the world over. But as harmleee nizerehes are vastly inore numerous than the harmful, and itbound in the body, both in disease and in health, it hari been difficult to establish the connection betweett a particular kind of diaeose and its oWn microbe. No expert has been able to gain an acknow, lodgment of his discovery until he had separated his microbe from all others, oulti, voted it by iteelf, and then, by inoeuletien in solne aniroal, obtained tho oharacteristic synaptointa Even the the general verdict has hati to await the results of similar tots by ether °Opens in different nations. inlikengis eeVerel infecticue disemos have thus been trued to their beeteriel origin, and the partienler microbes described and nestled, yet thus far the chid bertede hare been io general hygiene, and in ettin rid 4 g of reactibel bretdingllaccs outside Of the body, .alipest nothiog has bees done to make our knowledge available for the pure of disease. edeey problems rentain to be solved. Ao., ording to the "Medical Record," we knee"' little of the way in which mierobee exert their morbid infthence ; why they disappear from the blood and organe of borne annuals ; why similar groups of diseases ca n be molted by different microbes; whence the difierereee in the results of inoculating with mall, and with large, quantitio of microbic materiel ; why individuality pia, s so important a part iu the manifeetetien of dithase, and vvhy the results are so different lo healthy animale end th those alightly diaeaged, It says "When all the foregoing, and many like, probleme are eolved, then it will beanne more eery to employ bacteriology in prao- tiol medicine, and then we shall learn to estimate rightly the great value of this new ducly." Quite recently a German experb has greatly helped to eettle the first pro'blem, referred to above. He has preyed that microbes, by their own neturel action, de. velop varioue poisons et a moat deadly char- acter. Three cf theee, which he had obtain- ed and tested, he exhibited at the late Sur- giol Congrees in Germany. A correspondent from Berlin writes, "It is believed we shall soon be able to limier - stand more about the dead'y infections cava ed by these organiams." An English Clergyman en Tight-Isaeing. The Reverneel H. R. Haweis, of Englande must have Atartled some of his fashionable hearers by the following denunciation of unwholesome fashions in dress ;— " When the door," he exclaimed, "010808 on the light and splendor of the revel, the veil is drawn quickly across—the public are shub out; but the true playsinian, of souls as well 08 0. bodies, will invite you to enter that gloomier apartment, and hear the stern ver- dict upon another which to -morrow may be pronounced on you,—" Death from natural causes 1" Lay no such flattering unction to your soul. "Death from rut in the liver and corn on the heart, produced by tight- laoing 1" These are the very words of a leading physician of the day, to me. I plead for nothing impossible—for nothing which cannot be, and which is not accom- plished every day by sensible women in the best circles. Many plead for the initigation of a public eye sore, against which our present fashion of following the natural lines of the body, instead of creating false ono, protests as loudly as do the doctors them. selves. I want you to be reasonable,, and, knowing the terrors of the violated law of nature, I pray th be persuasive; and tide is the spirit in which I plead with you this morning against the evils of excessive com- pression in tighbdoing,—that systematie outrage upon the human skeleton, that fatal attack upon the sacred organs of oiroulediion, respiration, and nutrition." Look out for TpFoid Fever, • The preeent is the season ot the year. in which the fatal typhoid germ is most to be dreaded. The evaporation of water from the soil occasions a concentration of the poi- son, and water supplies are consequently more liable to contain the • typhoid peiven in deadly tomietitiee. "M. Dujardin Beaumetz, in a recent com- munication to the Paris Acetderoy, gives the caee of a family who took a house for the season, at refaehionable resort. They were warned not to drink the well -water as it was opposed to be impure. They 'drank mineral water exclusively until the last day of their stay, when, in the hurry of packing, they negleoted to send for mineral water, and concluded to try the well•water. Ten drank of it, sin of whom have since died; the remaining four, who had previonely had typhoid fever, were made sick, but reoaver- ed. .A. microscopic examination ef the well - water revealed the preeenoe of the beacillus supposed to be the cauee of typhoid fever." • If the family refered to above, had taken pains to boil the water iron the suspected well before drinking it, they mighb to -day be alive and well. Heat is one of the best dis- infectants. Suspicious water ahould always be boiled before drinking, as by this meant' She typhcid germs may be destroyed. Remedy for Smallpox. Edward Hines, a Traveling correspondent of the Liverpool Mercury, sends the follow- ing to that paper. "No disease 15 80 repul- sive as smallpox, and so generally dreaded. I am willing to risk my reputation es a public Ill&/1 if the worst case of smallpox cannot be effectually cured in three days, simply by cream of tartar. This is the sure and never -failing remedy. Ooe ounce of cream of tartar, diseolved in a pint of boiling water, to be drank when cold, mb ahort in- tetvals, 15 oan be taken at any time, and ie a preventive as well as a curative, It is known to have cured in a hundred thousend cases, without a failure. 1 hare myself restored hundreds by this means. It never leaves a mark, never causes blindness and always prevents tedious lingerings. 'It is so effectual that if properly used, would dis- pense with the unnatural new of vaccination and the costly staff of vaccinator's, for smallpox never appears without a need, and then ought to 4e purifying and healthful to the ,system, and when capable of being so quickly removed need neverte feared above a cold or an overflow of bile. Third -Class Travelling, There is a raying abroad that only Amer, kens and pririces ride " firstolass" en foreign, railway. A few statistics ahow how large is the proportion of the unprincely and non- Amneco,ns among English travellera : The ascendency of the third-class rumen - ger every year becomes more marked. Ac. cording to the statement of the chairman of She Great Northern Railway, in the June half of 1887 the percentages of their passen- ger traffics as to numbers, were as tailors : First chime, 3i per dent.; sesond eIns, 5.2. per cent., and third class, 91 per cent. ; whereas kr the hall yeer under review the pereantagee had been, respectively, 3, 5, and 91i per cent. In 1887 the receipts from the firet clone were 14 per cent., and nOW they were 13 per cenr. ; the second class gave them 71. per cent. he 1887, and now °illy 7 per ceet. ; and from the third class they derived. 78i per mit, of their receipte in 1887, as against 701, per cent, last half year, The average of the fares during the halt year has been 3e, 4a. in the firet class, ng in the Beeond, and 81 in the third. This tendetcy is likely to immerse. When roilvva,ys carry all classes at the same speed, , the third,olass carriage is clean arid comfortable, the purohase of a firet.elass ticket is eeldom sny thing but wanton hot- el*. YOVNG FOLKS, CUR COORINO OLTIR, alb an only dog, a pnre.bleed d St. paripard, and I belong to ap only girl; be. *idea us two onliee there'e an only boy, Jim, ao only horse, and an only spiteful. oat ; yes, therett an only mother end a fether, and an only eek;pand we all live in the only henna 04 our road; Dna beoanHe there was so meal "only' 0o:u5ile the mother Raid it was too lonely for liarjorle,rso she let her get up the • first and only "coating clue" In our place. That la how the miserable thing got evert. i; and tie other day I heard the only father say that he " hoped all little gide would have cooking clubs, itt wen mob A good idea," But, you see, he doesn't! be- long to it; aim doesn't either, and he' e mad *tow heti kept out. That made him the more willing to write this for me -0' from iliotetion," he ewe 1 do the dictation, and he does the ether port; and it must hurt him, for he make e aw- ful face*, e,nd keeps hie tongue rolling around outside his mouth fearful, and hie fingers are Meeker them noad. it's the ink, I enema's, and I'm thaubfol Marjorie didn't' teach me to write. She has nearly everything else, from "dying dead" to carrying her books to oohed. There are four in t/ae club besides me. Fre an "honorary," and "don't count," norriet amy ; but I've decided that ie a mis- take—since our last ineeting, as D. Pep. • : sun e, The Dedor was away that de,y, and there isn't any mother at his house, and the kitchen woman didn't approve of the "club," so she took an "afternoon out," and Itift the giels to ":dean up their own messes," The rule is to make four new things at every meeting, one for each girl. Mar3orle read off the list : breaded outlets, stewed potatoes, atpeeragns on toast, and " pop - avers" for timed. They're always as kappy as birds, but this time they were heppier. There WASII't n soul in the house to bother them, and they meant to have such a nioe supper ready when the Doctor emcee home. Marjorie had the cutlets to proper e, Helen Gray the asparagus, Inure Rod the potatooe, and Harriet the "pop - 14 oven." arjorie prepared her outlets" exactly like directions," lent they didreb not like Bridget,'" ; they stuck to the pan, and burnt °mid smoked korridly. Laura thought there should hove been some grease in the pan first to fry them with, but the mother at our house had motioned them not to get things is* rioh, se they didn't use any. Well, they fussed and puckered around, and the more they worked the more the things went crooked, till they were all fat •dad and scorcheelt and Harriet Raid they weight as well give that dish up, for she knew her father never would touch it, he was so • vorefal about hie food. Marjorie called, "Dan 1 Dan 1" and I growled from under the great table and followed her ont-of-doors. She put the hot pan down on the grass, and afber it had coaled somewhat 1 ate the stuff. It wax eard work, much as I love meat; but then I had to help them out. ,31m calls me a "travelling waste barrel," and Gaya I'm only admitted to the dub for practical purposes. ' !Aura ran out to eee me eat nd then we • e lead a tumble on the greys; I 'hawker she ought to be in the kitchen, but I wail glad, all the sterna, to romp with her, the's such e. jolly one, and tells me so often that I'm a, eplendid fellow 3 We were having a good tithe when the other 000ke began shrieking, " Laura I Laura1 come quick your pota- toes heve boiled over and are all burning elt We just flew back te that kitchen, and, sure enough, the milk had run out of the pan upon the dove, and the contents had "stuck" worn than the cutlets did. "Oh, whet shall I do 3 they are so bit. ter and spoiled 1 it won't be any kind of a supper withott them 1 Fin so sorry I" She began to ory ; but Helen just lifted the smokieg dish and carried it out, then asked •Hark* for a cloth and basin to wash off the above. That girl always goes about as opeietely as a mouse, and I've heard the °there say, "Hurry up, Bolen ; don't be so slow 1" but she never rpolls anything, and is generally ready to help them. Oh, foolish 'aura girl, crying for pota- toes 1" she laid, in the drollest way. We ell laughed, and Harrier joined in making her happy again. "1.5 doesn't matter a bit, now the cub - lets are gone. Who'd want potatoea alone? There'a plenty of bread and butter down - stains, and 1'11 open a box of sardines. With the asparagus and lovely ' popovers,' we shall do nioely." So they stood about to watch Helen dish up her ,asparagus, which was one thing "jut right," they declared ; and after it was put in the tin oven to keep warm, they ell went out for some fun while the dessert was baking,. By-and-by Harriet's father came to the kitchen door and found me, and I 'appose 1 mast have looked as forlorn as I felt. He set down 04 the step and talked to me, "Poor fellow I have they set you to mai. low that dose 1 Well, you needn't." He took up the pan, and saw the two round places which had been burned in hie Orr- WheW ' said he; ;ix met teach those midgets better than *hat. Now run to the children, Dan, and I'll take care of this rant' I was glad enough to go. Soon we went in to set blue table, and ii all looked very nice. The dessert had been taken out of the oven, and seemed a sweetie; but "the proof of the pudding is in the eat. ing," Jim says. It was that time, I know, The little round yellow things looked very fat at first; but by the time the folks were ready to eat them they had all solemned down Ito "look pretty glum," the Doctor re- marked. He won't going to take any, till Ise glanced at his child's fame and soineibing in it made him say,"Yea," but, luckily for him just at that minute he was called, and hadbo leave the table. I noticed a good many queer faces were node when the girls had helped themselves, and they didn't elit much longer at the table; attd whale they cleared away, they brought Me a diehful of their " pop.overs." • I looked et my little mistress as pitifully as / could, but she wouldn't understood, " Bat it, good dog," she commanded, atid-- did 1 If I had not, this tele veetild never hove been told. I quite liked the taste of the mixture, for it was sweet, and I love sugar; but it had wretohed way of sbaying in my mouth, and sticking to my teeth, teed feeling queer in ray threat but by using my paves to poke it arouad, and my tongue es Jinn does when he writes, I got through at last,:land joined the dub on the lawn. We were hevifig a lovely gams of tag, when all at once I felt something strange in my inside. Sometimes I have swalloWed )ns without (tracking, but it OPAtin4; that kind of a feel; it 'wag heavier, and glimniy- like, end More aching; and it made me lie down quick, I rolled -over, and the more I tried to get away front the queerness, the &vet In nits it wont, till finally ran oN p the etreet ; but I didn't get akar Sir Charlo and Lad4Di1ke are [riding d through India. u of it eveis there. By,end-by my head began to ,,rWs aroupd tat like Jimes rep, and it sounded itself a dozen "sting.beeri" Were inside my ors. I ley doyen by the church steps, but X. couldn'b endure keeping still ; so 1 got up :met turned to meet the ohildren, who were °owing after me. By that/ Ohne the trouble bad gone dowo into my legs too, and they wobbled arouod AO thatt I couldn't do au - thing with them. A lot of men and boys near the Post- e:am boon to laugh at me, and ene cried out °' Mad dog 1" Then oreebody dee said. ' Rim for your live' I—need dog 1 mid dog V' I didn't see any stteh animal about, hut I 'didn't went to meet hln1 Any more Shan they, so Dtried to tun too, bus 1 tmegoely could, on account of my feel; acting so odd. ly, and my heed grew wove) and worse. After a vthile I found it was X they were shouting &horn and that omit men were °hosing me with atones. Chasing til 6, Dan Dogging, who cot seven hundred dollars when I was bought for lie,rjorie I They made such a noise: it scared me nearly to death, and when I tried to get to the mat of She club they were frightened too, and scampered away from me as fast es- they eaglet The four little white caps bobbed up and down, rushing ahead, and I staggered on, growing more blind every step; but I finelly reached the lawn, and dropped doyen on the goo. ctillragiYh e' heardbPir6Pl °waka es: att orth:slaal ik, i n gth°11° payira 'tsah any gun; shoot him quick before he bites somebody," I tried to get up and allow them I was all right, but I couldn't, and I thought I should be killed. Just then a horse ancl gig came tearing into the yard, and Dr. Pepsin jumped cut. "What does all this mean V* he poked. "Why that dog of the Judge's has gone mad. We've coenered him here, and are going to shoot him, He hasn't hart any one yet." • "No, nor ever will. He's nob half as mad as you are. Clear out the lot of you 1' But: they muttered and hung around, while the Doctor cense and stood over me. "Poor fellow, what has happened to you ?" 7I opened my eyes and looked at him grate. fully ; 15 was all I had strength to do. Then he stood up end told the people to go home. "The noble fellow is 'sick, but I'll answer for it he is not dangerous. , Be is my patient now. Harriet? Merjorie 1 come here." As 8000 03 they heard hie voice they knew they were sate, and came out of the house. "Now I want to hnow what you've given this poor creature? Quick." "Why, nothing, paps, only what we had fordiener." "Did yots eat that concoction you had for desert? end did you give it to him'?" " We tried, and I suppose—" "It was only, pop.overs." "Well, it's nearly popped him over for good; what between that man's gun and your generosity, if he doesn't die its lucky." Poor little mixtt,ass was down on the ground by that tiai e crying over me and ch begging my pean,but her grief Waa out short. "No time for noneense now I The Doo - tor put her away, / and poured some nasty stuff down my throat, and for a while I thought he had *liaised me, after all. It fa was horrible. A ward I got better, and I Vrag so thankin it° him 1 When I cour,it dragmyself a few step he millZte a. bed i me n the carriage -house, and told Merjelie q t 0 stay there 5111 1. was well. I was vro re which he couldn't say of all his ationesee "Ansi now," said 13 when rhad *rie act a little naural, andshow the ohne I bore no ilhwill, "there is me thing you roust remember." His voice was stern, and not a bit like itself. . "Don't you ever eat t thing mannfectur- ed in this society untl some woman hes seen and pronommed i good ; and don't -- union you want to lee him—ever again treat your ' honorary ' ember so dishonor- ably as to nee bim for s marvel th science th a winter's oempelgo w alive; but its was a snow shave, to let there be no tooth of it. There never has be wade -berth!. • 1.5 15 he has gone through you and oome out * NOTE VT TEE Ottb " on the &et pag the benefit of other a his task, mon,— Jine "gave this MS., but for s I have completed • If the extracts pa shed from the late Emperor Ineciericlen 1 ry are nob apocry- phal, they mutt hay he effect of consider- ably modifying the tdrld's opinion of Bis- marck. It had aline been suppood that to the German Chtcellor belongee the credit of promoting te idea of the unifice- Won of the Empire, hereau it appears sio cording to the late Eperor's diary thin he was reluctantly fora, into giving up hie hostility to the prosed change. It is no wonder that so muchise was made by the German party in pow about the posses- sion of the diary, astey had no doubt a shrewd suspicion as :the nature of home - tents. The First Sympitims 01 all Lung diseases are much the same ; feverishness, bee of appetite/ sore throat, palms in the ohest end back, •need:to/1e, etc. In a few days you may be well, or, on dm other hand, you may be down tvith Pnasuntonia or "galloping Cousumption." Run no retire, but begin immediately to take Ayer's Cherry Pee toral. Several years ago, James Birchard, of Darien, Conn., was severely 111. The doctors said he was in Consumption, mad that they could do nothing for hint, but advised him, as a last resort, to try Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. • After taking Shia mediciee, two or three months, he was pi -01101=00d a well ince, His noalth remaine good to the 'nonfat day. J. 8, Bradley, efalden, Mass„ writes t "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 conghed inoessantly. I consulted several doctors, but they were power - leas, and all agreed that I was in Cen- sumption. At last, a friend brought me O bottle of Ayer's • Cherry Pectoral. From the first dose, 1 found relief. Two bottles cured rae, and my healish has sinoe been perfect." Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, EIMPARED Or. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Maas, Sold by all Druggiets. Price el ; Dix bottles, 45. 6 6 BE L" ORGANS Unanproached for Tone and Quality CATALOGUES FREE., BELL & CO., Guelph, Ont, The Great English Prescription. A. successful Medicine used over 30 years in thousands of cases. Cures Spermatorrhea, Nervous and all diseases caused by se. Weakness, Emissions, finpqcy PG u g o girrcisairsytosar eazutir'eCung:ei t over -Teriotziene :at lrforjt. Prescription, take no substitute. One package $1. Six $5, by mail. Write for Pamphlet. Address Eureka Chemical Co., Detroit, Bitch. For sale by J. W. Browning, C. Lutz, Exeter, and all druggists. The Undiscovered Countiy.1; A truth which is worth remembering, in this pushing age of invention, is that the ninteenth century has not pulled aside, even ever so little, the curtain that hides from us the invisille world. In all speh, attempts it is just as much baffled as kest and most stupid cautury of the have never pushed the Middle Agee. e " paw; bier," except in a novel, a. . only a novelist who has attempted to go "beyond the Fetes," or " zhe gates be. tween," or to fling the gate of the future • wide open.' "Spiritualism. is a fraud and a vulgar fraud at that" Every second some ono enters the world of saiadows, but since the etchns was rolled away from Joseph's new tomb, no one has cense beck to us from the world of ehadowa Ingersoll min ;see no further into the twilight than Cfc• ere bo -h are hone/ese and helpless at the graves of their 1.ved ones. No Edison, even in these busy, inventive days, has found a tdephone which oan stretch its wire eoroes a grave. No Ericsson has builb a monitor which can path its way into the unknovrn seas of eternity Why is the fu- ture so jesleuely guarded? Why are not the prying eyes of today allowed to peer into to -morrow? Perhaps. to keep man humble and reverent, waiting and watch- ing, expectant and hopeful, bat unsatisfied with the present. For these reasons we can understand in part, at least, why, in Geodni infinite wisdom, "it doth not yet appear what we ;shall be," Coincidence. Fond Mother—My dear, are you feeling, any better? Dolly—I dunno ; am the jell al/ gone? Fond Mother—Yee, my dear. Daily—Well, I guess I am well enough to gett up. now. deo hese. eete ,n .elhatilan 1 14 I si ELT leeseeene ta'.:Ate !MEDICATED ELECTRIC amatzaBBELTimatiss Medioated for all diseases of the blood and 110t. • plaints it b as n� equal. Mena' Belt$8, combined vous system. Ladies' Belt $2 for female Belt and Suspensory $5, CURES 0TrO I ftemibi:legt weeks:tests, youth, los e manhood, nightl tnt emissions, nte. The only app giving a direct current of Electricity ar day timoniala on f. from those aired of female diseases, ansi • tweitthhouetipooaornivevortauu. lesuCothr bsabouekntraidrrnealcinvisgsluo:ef Ii1111)S. 11(31:VOliS debY, general debility, lumbago, rhoumietsommrhpceirleyastiastv, then:tattoos, bscisialatildeeer sdeismeeoxif itsbuositdioclunpii, apninmanicliissseittosg3,,tabsrtphidmlahiveerar, tgoduiste, sae, dyspepsia, covatipation erygp. elas. indigestion, potency,. piles, epilepsy, dtimb ague ana diabetes. Send stamp for handsomely illustsd book and health jotirnal. Correspondence strictly confidential. Con. sultation and ()lee -h1 treatment free. Agents Wanted everywhere. Pet. Feb. 265h, 1567.0 Cures Cuarahteed filledicated ictric Igen Co., 55 Queen St. West, Toronto, Canada. • 041, 414 ..t,1 ' THIS SILVER.PLATI INSTRUMENT atetterAgit*I Mo. • CATARRH IMPOSSIBLE UNDER ITS INFLUENCE Tito only catarrh remedy ever offered to the publio en 15 days trial; a Written gtza.rantee given with each instrument, W. T. Bona & Ode 155 Qteemi treet West, Toronto, Ont. T I A tHE t• iftEAT Mte AND LUNG RESTOilreg I kilns h mite Medicine tit a digesting lotion or powder bat, beta Selthetteree titittVenor, osSily and bidasantly abblied at all iicitirs, thims and %Itasca.« Abilna No. 2.--Qttioldy relletes and thoro•ughly MIMS all Whreat and rettAis"CtsliVENnee,4841164treitittelly Ottresoittll.udIsessat iitiesa of the nyo, Cabo:mast draft 111 tad ye, di, nifialtioil Ey far aightecitego Sto 0E15 W —sem EntlOSl Tat Aetna itlitOtai tattle, Otrit Watriorati Ortkttattielitt Ott 15 OATS *Mitt for bandierriauattaly bobtk health W )144.11-itt(X) Otte* T �tQ