HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1889-10-31, Page 6The Safest
AND
Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Yotaig and
rnost powerful alterative is
geld are alike benefited by its mei. Fez
tit() crilvtivo dL
easea peculiar to
children nothing
-manna- a else b so efaectit e
'tea as this medicine,
while its agrotha
bis flavor er.a..es
it eaey ta admin.
ieter.
" :Vet little toy
bad largo scrota -
bons uleers on his
took and tlizeat
a freen which he
it' *ONe/ te.. suffered terribly.
rrTo physicians
attended him, but he grew continually
"Worse 'ander their earee au d everybody
apemeeted he would die. I had heard of
lbe remarkable cures effected by Ayer's
4Earsaparilla, and decided tea have my
"boy try it. Sliortly after he began to
take this ' medicine, the lacers com-
menced beating, and, after using several
'bottles, he was entirely cured. He is
mow as healthy and stroug as any boy
ef his age." -- William F. Dougherty,
:Hampton, Va.
"In 1Vfay last,• in youngest child,
f ourteen months old, began to hare sores
gather on its 'lead and body. We ap-
plied various • simple vernedies without
avail, The sores increased in number
and diseharged copiously. A physician
was called, but the sores continued to
multiply until in a few months they
nearly covered the child's head and body.
At last we began the use of Ayer's Sar-
saparilla. ' In a few days a marked
chasm for the better was manifest. Tao
sorestsassumea a more healthy condition,
the discharges were gradually dimin-
ished, and finally ceased altogether.
The obild is livelier, its skirl is fresher,
and ito appetite better than we have ob-
eaerved /or illOnthb.".—Eriltlic N. Griffin.,
Long Point, Texas.
"The formula of Ayer's Sarsaparilla
iiresents, for chronic diseases of almost
treaer hipa, the best remedy known to
he "pileateg werldtri i, --P. , M. Wi.'went
44, -Pe VVgs! 4x4P.s8;
• )
Ayer' 9argaparilla
PREPARY.1) BY
tr. J. C. layer & Co, Lowell, Mas.
Brice $1; six bottles; $5t Worth $5 a bottle.
THE BES
BAKINGPOWDER
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CHADWICK'S
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For Hand and
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}IAS NO SUPERIOR.
ASK FOR IT.
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LEATHEROID
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In Sample) Ladies' and
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HOTEL BALMORAL,
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Fotre Dante St., one of the most central
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Aecommodadon for 400 guests.
12 to $3 per day. St VirTt 1' V Manager.
Bates: -ATOODRUFF.
PE/413S'
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.(3. PALMER &SON
Wholesale Imp'trs of
flUGGISTS' SUNDRIES,
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LEATHER BOARD
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manufacturers of
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RECKITT'S BLUE
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PAPERS
WraPPiner
1EWS,
q.
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CI SIZES
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oteletie
21Dtlinho1es St,
PAILLS3
postaor, P.a.
OHNSI9NB
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STRENGTH GIVER
l3ERFEdT FO 0 ri
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A POWERFUL
„Ii4Vto0RAToR
atiat cUitZ
*on 011.10uSN1,1111, CONSti PATI ON,
INDiDESTioal, biZzttaisfilli, SICK
kitArrACHt, AN* oliscAlian oF
VOMADH, l.Irtfl AND, 116Wgi.S.
C.l'Intit Ant ailloartoilduaN Apo ruompt
we ACTON. AND
rO..al A VALUABLE AID
TO SOmodog Ilirkdo Desloge in 'nit
ItilitATurn? AND Otent or ONFIONIO
AND 1.1FiAl1
freM the Ends of the Earth,
"Poin the cads el the earth would 1 ory
unteerbee, when my seal le over-wbeinted".
Out orate traoklese desert,
Oat of the immutable steep,
Ous of the tnorny, pathwey,
Out of the oaverne deep,
oot f my every trial,
G would I cry unto Thee,
Oat ef bhe midmott ocean,
Out of the tempest's roar,
Out of the angry billows,
Far from the shalt' ring bhore ; ,
Out of the regingtwatera.
CI Goa. would I ory unto Thee
Out of the depths of nay heart,
Oat of niy grief and my woe,
Out. of theeorrow that none
But Thou and myself may know;
Out of my inmost soul,
o God, would I cry utatoghee.
EPd5TA SOHIT.LINO
T.••••••••••••
The Message of the V RI n.
I know the hush of misty morning woods,
The dim green aisles, the nightadamp on
the grass, ,
All dew-inapearied the epiderai viscous lure
Set to entoil where Summer idlers pain.
Across the path are writ in shadow -runes
The lore of leaves, the tales of waving
tram,
The aeorets told by errant, goesip winds,
The whispered wisdom brought acmes the
It seemau.
sethta time half way 'haat wake and
/
Bleep ;
The glamor of the night clings to the day.
And o'er the wood broods yet the chowse of
dreams,
As mene'ry clings to lovo that's passed
away.
Not yet is woke the wood to me and pain,
And slumber still gaunt grief and oruel
strife
01 orphaned nestlings and of nests bereft,
And tiny tregedies of insect life.
&b! would rev beast that thou oonidet
lean tO geed
The message told iht this deep, silent peace,
The stately oalm of this sweet Summer morn
Prom vain regreb, might yield thee, then,
surcease.
EDWARD RUTLEDGE QUARLES.
Her Beautiful Eyes.
Bright, bright are the stars in the blue of
the skies,
As they beam on the world from above;
All golden and bright—but: I love not their
light
Like the light ia the eyes of me love.
The beautiful eyes aieath the tresses of gold
Where the blueet of heavens enhanced I
behold.
Ind not for the light of the stars of the
night,
If forever they shone in the skies
With never a cloud for a shadow or shroud;
Would I barter these beautiful eyes.
Wheat musical meanings their glances ilea
part
They were made for a mirror to show me
her heart.
A faithful, fair mirror. Bat some day I
know,
A shadow above them will creep
And darken their glow, while the lids will
droop low
At the kiss of the Argel of sleep.
But my kisses will close them—my kisses
and sighs—
Till she wakes with God's light in her beau.
tiful eyes.
F. L. STANTON.
The Husking of the Corn.
The golden days of Summertime have swiftly
glided by,
And Autumnal subtle witchery is ohanging
earth and sky.
The leaves have lost the emerald green they
wore in vernal days,
The frost is kissing foreet boughs into a sov-
iet blez
The grapes are purpling in the sun upon the
woodland vine,
The air's invigoretIng as a draught of rich,
red wine.
The earth is fair as olover-fields bedecked
with dew at morn,
And Autumn welcomes with a emile the
husking of the corn.
My mind goes back to other days, and better,
if you please,
When boys and girle were wont to meet at
jolly husking bees—
Girls who it really seems to me were hand.
somer by far
Than all the artifioial ones the tailors make
tie are.
Those were dellghtfal evenirtge when we mix-
ed our toil with bliss,
For every red ear which we found secured the
cherished kies.
It isn't strange that now I feel so lonesome
and forlorn
Since all my friends are absent at the husk-
ing of the corn.
Ye College Graduate.
He can give the laws of Solon,
He can draw the flag of Colon,
He can write a Bebylonion 1 017
He can make a writ in German,
He oan draft a Turkish finnan
But the English common law he never knew,
He oan write his thoughts in Sps,niah,
He can make a speech tre Danish,
And reoite such Sanscrib as would turn your
brain;
The Muallakat Arabic
He can scan in feet syllabic;
But he couldn't tell old Shakespeare from
Mark Twain.
He can fathom all the menttery
Of old Ethiopia history,
He can name one thousand Norse kings—
more or lees,
He can naark the Roman bound'riee.
Ane describe the Aztec foundriee
But has never seen the Statutes of TJ. S,"
He can trace the radius vector,
Will a geometria eecter,
And am give the moon's diameter in feet,
Be can analyze the aruta,
Clue* bhe Coptio auntie :
But he cannot tell a cabbage from a beet.
—W. A. Brtxmoet.
The Situation Was Favorable.
"Are we Alone I" coked the impecunious
Man as he entered the bat:tree:1 private
office,
" We are," add the banker.
" Very well ; 1 wish to borrow a V, end
one of your cloaca itnforrned nee that if I
would call On you and negotiate adclan, tit
would be ell right,"
Cleanse
the System
With that most reliable
medicine—Value's celery
Com pouna, It purifies the
blood, three constipation,
and regulates the liverand
kiatieys,eirectaany cleans,
I1.t system of all waste
and "Ikea matter.
DO
IT
NO
Paine's
Celery Co pAcuind
oombines true nerve tonic and strengthening
qualities, revivthg. tao energies and spnets.
"I have been troubled for some years with a
eemplicationor ditneulties. After trseng
va-
rlous remedies, and not finding relief, 1 tried
Paine's Celery Oompoued, Before taking one
tun bottle the long troublesome symptoms be-
gan to subside, ana1 cue truly say now, that I
reel like a new man. Ingestion has improved,
and I have gained ten pounds in -weight since
have commenced taking the Compound."
• Hoesseus enemas. Vt.
ewe six tor s:s.oa. At Druggists.
WELLS, RIONARDSCN t Co., Plosmned.L.
ANY
C
seettetateiee •
A Dress, or a Coat 1 Any Color
Ribbons, Feathers, •FOR
Yarns, Rags, etc. J TEN CIE TS
and in many other wavs SAVE Money, and make
things look like NEW, by using DIAMOND
DYES. The work is easy, simple, quick'
colors
colors the BEST and FASTEST known. Ask for
DIAMOND DYES and take no other, '
FM Gilding or Bronzing Fancy Articles USE
DXAMOND PAINTS.
chia, Silver, Bronze, Copper. Only to Cents.
A CO4 K K
F E E
By mail to aur lady sending US
her post office address.
Wells. Richardson & Co., Montreal,
MIS UE LLANEOUS.
All the new table china in Lendott is
fluted with very extravagant: decorations.
The divided skirb is becoming more popi
ular in Landon every day. Of course, it s
oely worn 'beneath the ordinary skirt
Mine. Patti.Nloolini sails for New York,
Nov, 23. Meantime she is to sing in eight
concerts in England, for which she will
receive nearly $30.000
Touriste in Switzerland thie season com-
plain that some of the finest scenery, notably
along the SS. Gothard route, has been detac-
ed by staring advertisements of oontinentel
hotels.
Mr. E. H. Williams of Pailadelphia, has
jusb given to the new observatory of
Carleton College under the directorship of
Professor Paine, the sum of $10,000 toward
the purchase of is great telescope.
It is not generally known that there are in
existence some very spirited ballads by Lord
Macaulay, which, in accordance with the
author's wish, have never been published.
The best of them relates the story of Besworth
field,
The natives of the Feejee Islands have
taken up cricket, through the efforts of an
enthusiast, Mr. Wallington. They like the
game much, although they do not like to
confine themselves to the orthodox eleven
on each side. They play their matohes with
forty or May a side, or is tribegainst tribe
The first tenall-bore rifles tor the German
army were issued two weeks ago to is siogle
battalion of guards'and the result of their
being practically tested was regarded as
satisfactory. It is said that Germany has
already suffisient smokeless powder in stock
to last for the first few months of is general
war.
Baron Hirsch, one of the richest of the
French bankers, who was bleakballed a few
months ago by the Paris Jookey Club, is
about to take his household to England. He
bhinks of buying Houghton Hall, one of the
most magnificent of English places near
Sandringham, for £300,000, The Baron is
reputed to bo worth ten millions sterling.
Dr. Eatly Kempen, who is an LL.D. by
gracteeof the University of Zurich, is about
to open a law school for women in New York.
Not being naturalized Dr. Kempen oan not
herselt practice in the courts of that city,
but he has law-cffizers there and prepares
cases that are presented by her young -man
assistant.
Ellen Terry is said to suffer agonies of
anxiety whenever ahe undertakes is new
pert, and she oan scarcely bear any one to
speak to her on the days preoeding the
first performance, It is her habit to spend
the greater part of the time in driving far
out into the country, so that she feels secure
against the intrusion of visitors. The only
person whose company is welcome to her on
these occasions is her daugbter, Ailea Craig.
Miss Eastwood acoomplished a very re-
markable feat at Arne% Roashire, Sootland,
when fishing with e ninatootetrout rod. She
had on only two flies. With one she hooked
e salmon, and at the same time a sea trout
with the other, and after a severe struggle
landed both flab. The salmon weighed
eleven and a half pounds, and the trout one
pound.
A man, Mr. john Leversha, appeared Etti
plaintive in a breaoh of promise suit in Sand
hurst, Australia, during the lard month, He
claimed is thousand pounds from Miaa Sarah
Virrangham. He wart 41 years of age. The
defendant pleaded that she was an infant
when the promise wag made, but the cury
found for the plaintiff, and awarded him is
shilling damages.
The Pope hea commissioned the Right Rev.
Mgr. Satolli, President of the Academy of
Noble Ecclesiastics and Thotnistic Lecture at
at Propaganda, to preside in November at
the inauguration of the Washington Una,
versity. It is underetood that the Holy
Father win commemorate the occasion by
creating Ave new dioceses in the United
States,
Fagging Neale still to be carried on to a
barbarous: extent at some of the Ettglish
Public Sohoolslb ie not long since a more-
ing paper reported the oath of a boy who
Was held before the fire till he was actually
scorched and blistered, because) he would
not perform tome menial work, and at one
of the great aohoole it is is tule that the
youngest boy In is dormitor eleall wake the
older boys at 630 o'clock
Speaking of Qtteen V iotorisas litetar
fatetes:
is recent writer says: "Site dill finds
pleasure in Trollopeal novele, Tent:plot Is
her Bairns idol. Vtialtet Beeant Is another
writer Whose works etir the eged mohatoh,
And Mre,Huraphrey Ward's'Rebeiti Eletnere
was read nob 6n00 bet twice by the (eaten
of England. She hart treet many Astericau
writer'', in het day, MO la not aecittainted to
atlY extent with their workiL"
aleS77,7"
A Dean on Burial,
The Dean of York is a very strong advo-
oate for earth to -earth burial, livbab it
Meant by this is that no St roP g substance
snoh as ooffios are usually in ktle of, should
come between tlao dead body and the sur-
rounding OSI`th. If ocffins are used 0 :all
the Dean holds ,thab they ought to be of
quite perishable material, which would soon
crumble awry and allow mother earth to do
speedily ana effectively her kindly and
salutary work of diseolution. If this were
done, the Don contends that burials could
take place in light, porous eon without any
of the disagreeable surroundings which na-
turallyand necessarily result from cremation.
Suoh perishable ocffins, made by corn press
ed pulp or any similar material, could easily
be had, and with such arrangements, a oorpee
thus surrounded and covered with a eatable
quantity of earth could be resolved into air
or ashes in from three to seven years
without the least irjury to the neighborhood
of the livirg. The rubric of the Anglican
Church, the Dean further holds, permits the
interment of meth unoc ffiaed or fragilely.
ocffiaed ecrpses. He also contends thab, to
prevent the sprawl of dinette, burials should
take place as SOOn as there are indubitable
proofs of dissolution, and that all palls,
brieked-up graves vaulta, oto,, ought to be
abandoned, and :leo thab the !turbots of
graves ought not to be covered with slabs or
monuments, or anything which will prevent
thegeroair.
growth of plants or the free oiroulation
of th
All this seems reaeonable and full of wise
philos, phy. The kindly effect of earth in
counteracting impurities is well known, and
the more directly it is applied to all decay
ing and offensive substances the more effeetive
and the more beneficent its influence. How
any one could imagine that it is showing
restrot to the loved dead to have their de.
caeang bodies kept entirely isolated from
earbh in stately mansoletune and in strongly.
formed ooffias, so that for as long is time as
possible they may and forth offensive smells
and be is oentre of menaes and disease to the
living, is beyond all ordinary reitOon to orty.
The whims of fashion are mysterious, and
the follies of tradition are proverbial. If
ashes were always committed direotly to
ashes, as nature and reason would have them,
one half of the arguments for cremation
would have no place,
Would I Were A Widow.
Young maids, you know, are voted slow,
And set aside completely,
While sprightly dames assert their claims
And smile on men too sweetly.
Who oares for youth and beauty blended ?
This is the married woman's day;
The "bade'" bright reign, alas, la ended,
And only matrons hold full sway.
The married belle is versed quite well
In what we term flirtation ;
Her honeyed smiles and artless wiles
Delve girls to desperation 1
No wall flower is she, nowadays,
Nor treads the sober Lancers,
But joins the waltzer's giddy maze,
The merrteat of the &tamers 1
A maid may be moab fair to see,
And robed in daintiest dresses,
Know how to talk and dance the York,
Yet failure she confesses.
She murmurs :—"Would I were a widow,
How delightful it would be :
In widow's weede there's many a bidder
Would surely bid on me."
She sighs in vain, and it is plain,
Car ne'er have her desire,
For how can she, 'less wedded be,
To widowhood aspire
Her chances now are very small,
Qaite slim the prop of hope beneath her,
For wives and widows have it all,
And she, poor thing, oannot ba either.
KATE A. CARRINGTON,
An Ingenious Devioe.
An iugenious plan to straighten walls that
have gone out of plumb was practised in
Paris. The weight of the roof of the large
gallery to the Conservative des Arts preased
she side outward so as to endanger the
building; and it was tequisite to find means
by which the wall should be propped so as
to sustain the roof. A merles of strong iron
bars were carried across the building from
wall to wall, passing through holes in the
walls, and were secured by nuts on the out,
side. In this state they would have been
sufficient to prevent the further separation
of the walls by the weight of the roof, but it
we,s desirable to restore the walls to an exact
perpendicular by drawing them together.
This was effected in the following manner:
Alternate bars were heated by lamps fixed
beneath them. They expanded, and oonse-
cevently the nuts, which were previously in
contact!) with the walls, were no longer so.
Thoee nuts were then screwed up so as to be
again in close contact with the walls. The
lamps were withdrawn and the bars allowed:
to 000l. In 000ling they gradually contract;
ed and resumed their former dimensions,
consequently the nuts, preseing against the
walla, drew them together through a apace
equal to that through whioh they had been
screwed up. Meanwhile the intermediate
bars were heated and expanded and the nuts
sorewed up as before. The lamps being
again wibhdrawn they contraoted in cooling
and the walls were further dtavrn together.
The proems was continually repeated until
at length the walls were restored to their
perpendicular position. The gallery may
still be seen with the bare extending woes
it and binding together its wall&
How it Seems at "the Hub."
October is like ap opal —a gem that is
nothing is itself, but has the property,
through its delicate tracings, of catching and
throwing back an indescribable play of
color, a rainbow in atone. From eanrise to
enneet this month as what the light makes it
A dull,: aloudy day is lifeless and forlorn ;
bub lab the olouds part, and through some
medium that is clear and oft a glory falls
upon the earth. leas not the summer bunted
away all the dross and lefb only the purity
of an atmosphere Chat comes with healing in
its teach ?— [Boston Trani:04r.
Getting along Swimmingly,
Brown—How's Jack Versatile getting on
now?
Da Punt stirr--Swinuninaly,
Bronw—Is he ?What ie he doing?
Da Punnstirr—Running a natatorium,
Couldn't Stand Everything.
Marketenan—"Sell you a cabbage, Gibe
GIVI-,—"Neo. Up to our house the gas pipe
lake and the sewer'a burst and father spilt
ti bootie of asesdetida on the carpet and we
tun's goad everything."
A Thug some time ago made hie confeartion
at 'English officer. Ile had cornmitted 700
murdere, bat he plaintively Bad: "Ah, site
111 km1 not been in lateen ttvelve °ere the
ntunher wOttla have been a that:cam 6" 1b
*
The ' linver Ants.
The meet formidable of the insect Rests
hat affect the dwellers on tbe West African
OCTS0b is the " driver " ants. Thetie insems
move in vast armiee of several milliens
marohing in a dense win= twe feet in
width, at a uniform paw, and in is straight
sane.
lf a native hut lies in their path, and the
inmates fail to prevent the antr from gain.
leg the threshold, the hut must be vacir+ed
bi the long line has passed through and con
Oulu, , . ything eatable within the build
Ing. 7
The author of " Glimpses of reverland
says tuaethe only thing which will atop tht
" drivers" is is large fire directly their
Line of maroh. A native when he discovers
hr time that the ants are marching towards
hialhut,kindles a fire Ir front of the advanc-
ing column. It turns neither to the right
nor to the left, but plunges into the flames,
for every ant seems impelled to go forward,
no matter at what cost.
After the "drivers .1 have walked into the
fire for an hour or two, and several hundred
thousand have been consumed, their sturdy
stoicism weakens. They deflect their line
to the extent of a few feet and, passing the
fire, set sub on a fresh. path of destruction,
which leads them &ear of the hut they had
threatened,
Going Baok to Their own Styles.
The Ostesiatische Lloyd says that the Em-
press and members of the aristocracy of Japan
have given up the idea of adopting the Wept.
ern styles of dress for women. The Parisian
models did not please the people in general,
and the histoth costumes will again be worn
exclusively. The great " Lady tailoring
establishment" in Tokio, which has been
under the .charge of a Parisian, has closed its
doors for lack of work to do. The Lloyd
greets the failure of the pretended reform,
deolaring that a more complete oarioature
was never seen than a Japanese woman in a
bonnet and drone of the boulevards.
A Similar Accident
A curious accident whioh happened reoent-
ly in Paris points out a potable danger in
the wearing of combs and. braoaeta cf
celluloid. A little girl sat down before the
fire to prepare her lemon% Her hair was
kept back by a semioirole comb of celluloid.
As her head was bent forward to the fire
this become warm, and suddenly burab into
&mese The child's hair was partly burned
off, and bhe skin of the head was so injured
that eaveral months after, though the burn
was healed, the cioatrix formed is white
patch on which no hair would grow. The
burning point of celluloid ie about 180 0,
and the comb worn by tho girl had atta1nes1
that heat as it was held before the fire.
Inebriety Among iteteeialla-
A Russian Archbiehop has been apeaking
his mind very plainly concernmg his country-
men. "You never see," he said, "an intoxi-
cated Jew or German, while Russians will
fall over the gin cask rather than nob drain
Ib to its dregs. They are strong in times 01
war and great excitement], but in peace
they sink into helplessness and instability of
mind and morale, and inatead of being at
the head they are at the tail—instead of be-
ing above they are below the other people of
Europe." These remarks have been receiv-
ed with much disfavor in influential quarters.
No Difference.
Deotor—"Not so well to -day, eh ? Have
you kept him quiet and given him his wed!.
cane regularly ?" Mrs. Richard Bevylin
Buckner—"Day 'ain't been nobody in de
room wid him 'oept mean' de children,so heat:
been nice an' quiet ; an' I give him de mod'.
eina like you tole me—three spoonfuls every
tour." Doctor—" Great heavens, woman,
We a wonder he's alive 1 I Bald one spoonful
every three hours."' Mrs. Buckner— ' Well,
now, Motel, day ain'e no diffirenee between
one three an' three ones. Count 'era fo' yo'•
self an' see.".—[Harper's Bazar.
Hs ad or Tail,
" What is that man doing over there?'
said one tramp to another.
"He'd putting up is aoareorow."
"Ill match pennies with you to see which
of no gets the clothes."—[Washington
Capital.
Offset Opinions.
"Isn'b it gloxions weather ?" he said to
the man on his lefb on the street our plat.
form. "1 will look into the matter and see,"
was the quiet reply. "Say, your liver is out
of order,' continued the other." "Take
some blue mass at once." "That was rather
'
queer conversation " observed a passenger
who had overheardit, after the liver.alling
man had got off. "Ob, I had to hedge, re-
plied the other. "After I had spolcen of the
weather Irecogniz ad him as le.vvyer. He
was going to write an opinion and sent me a.
bill. Pm a doctor, and so I gave him medi-
cal advice as an offseb."—(Datroib Free
Prase.
At a First class Restaurant.
Detrow—Can you giv3 me oyetere on the
half shell to night ?
Waiter—Yea sir; but you will have to wait
a few minutes. All our half ehalls is in use
at preemie sir.
°A. Good Recipe.
Briggs—"I have been hunting all the
morning for is friend of mine, Boggs, but; I
can't find him. I wish he wapn't so much
trouble to gib hold of when I want him."
Boggs --"r11 tell you what to do. The next
time you see him, Briggs, borrow $10 or $15,
After that you can't walk the streets without
running over him."
A Troublesome Boy.
"By the way, Mrs. Shiftlees, your 'reek is
one of the most troubleeome boys in the
street. I thought I would speak to you
about it" "Then he has thrashed your Jo,
has he, finally? I heard hitt slay he would
if he didn't atop stealing all his marbles.
Yes, my Jack is ‘troableranne' youngster
for any of yours to get away with,"
A correspondent of the Landon Sport-e.man wiriteti that he has been rearing dogs
for over $fi 'years, and hail Miner had aoinglo
Case of die:temp:Oa The preventive treat-
ment Is by inethlatien Whale elk Weeke old.
It is further evetreci that a dog tYlifoh hnO
never Buffered from illittemper 10 never liable
to rabies aties feral in after '
The hete: of. vigour and, energy, of geed
eteltits, Of is cheetaill anti happy tone of Mind
data not end a Mete personal' ions. It
aireete everything thall 0.0 think. or say at
doe it itifituinthe ell With Whom they mingle
and labour, Mid it operaths taitatturabiy
Upon, the 'very WOO; Whith "they hope to
Mee& by their Mori "
Sufferers
pROAI Stomach and Liver derange.menta—Dyepopsia, Biliousness, Sick -
Headache, and Constipation—Mel sato
and certain relief in
Ayees rills. In, all
eases where a ca.
thartio is needed,
these Pills are recom-
naenaed by leadieg
physicians.
Dr. T. E, Hastings,,
of Baltimore, says:
"Ayer's Pills arfillphe
best cathartic eta
aperient within thw
,reach of my profes-
sion."
Dr. John W. Brown, of Oceana, W.
Va., writes: "1 have prescribed Ayer's
Pills in my practice, and find them ex-
cellent. I urge their general use in
families."
"For a neznber ofyears levee afflicted
with biliousness which almost destroyed
my health. I tried various remedies.
but nothing afforded me any relief until
I began to take Ayer's Pil]s."—G. S.
Wanderlich, Scranton, Pa.
"I have used Ayer's Pills for the past
thirty years, and am satisfied I should
not be alive to -day it it had not been
for them. They cured me of dyspepsia
when all other renaeaies failed, and their
occasional use has kept mo in a healthy
ccohnecslitteiro:ira.
ever since. '— T. I', Brown,
"Having been subject, for years, to
constipation without being able to find,
much relief, at last tried Ayer's Pills,
and deem it both a duty and a pleasure
to testify that I have derived great ben-
efit from their use. For over two years
past I have taken one of these Pills
every night before retiring. I would not
willingly be without them."—G-, W.
Bowman, 26 East Main at., Carlisle, Pa.
"Ayer's Pills have been used in my
family upwards of twenty years, and
have completely verified all that is.
claimed for them. In attacks of pilese
from which I suffered many years, they
afforded me greater relief than any mede
icine I ever tried." --Thomas F. Adams,
Holly Springs, Texas.
Ayer's Pills,
PREPARED By
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Sold by all Druggists and Dealers in Medicine.
C
The Most Delightful
SWVIM ER TOUR
Dalace Steamers. Dow Bates.
Dear Trips per Week Between.
DETROIT AND MACKINAC
Amt Beery Week Day Between.
DETROIT AND CLEVELAND
Write for our
"PicturesqueMackinac," illustrated.
Ventairm Dartioulare. Mailed Free.
eirsii &, C1evolmid Steam Nan. Co,
0. w le ea a a, axes. AUT.,
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A certain and speedy cure for
Cold in the Head and Catarrh
in all its stages.
SOOTHINO, DLEANSINC,
HEALING.
Instant Relief, Permanent Cure,
Failure Impossible.
Many so-cr,Iled diseases are simply symptoms of
Catarrh such as headache, partial deafness, losing
tense a smell, foul breath, hawking and spitting,
nausea, general feeling of debility, etc. If you are
troubled with any of these or kindred symptoms, zee
have Catarrh, and should lose no time in procuring
a bottle of NAsAr. Ekt.'o, .13o warned sn tiiac
neglected cold in head results in Catarrh followed
by consumplion and death. NA sm. BALI: is sold by
all druggists, or will he sent, post paid, on receipt of
price (5o cents and $1.00) by addressing
FULFORD & 00„ BfleateeLLE, ONT.
..'2Beware of imitations similar in name,
SSG Solid Gold Watch.
Sold for 8100. until tinily.
Beet 886 watch IA Summit!.
Perfect timekeeper. War- B
ranted. newsy Solid Gold
Bunting Caw. Both ladles.
and gents' alses,w1 th works
and cases of equal value.
One Penton lo each lo.
codify can encore one tree.
together with our large and val-
tiahle line or Household
siallelOs. Those samploo, am
well as the watch, we send
Free, and after you have kept
them le your bone Air 2 months and illoym them to those
wee may hire called, they beams your AA% propertyThose
who writs at Orlii0 CAA be aura of receiving the watch
end Siansplek. Wept, An IMAM, (nicht, at Address
Stinson .& Co., Mos S12.Feerland, Maine.
Molds Ink cnough to Write
Sisheetd paper at manning
Pea, Penholder
ead Inkeitend
saki one.
POUNT• PUN.
Mee any pen or kind ortnk filled by the automata:tenon of
Indle.tabbor eeservoirs;;.feeds Itself by ttie ereseiet of writing&
iti the peeket &WSW& will not leak finely Made and itn•
iehod In tdokel-pletet siiperlotte ker2 titylligraphlti vent eat
With& riish. enteplee,, postpaid, 2OCentbst
5 Pens, St till. P.O. Stamps taken. but silver preferred,
11 100p Picture Book sent FREE. Mention thla_pagess.
A. W, Mall\TEI, Yarmouth, N.
Mrs, Christine Lady Trench's, who was.
foade a fellow of johnit Hopkins nnivereity
Int her ariathematiaal achievements, takesa
deep intermit in the plau of the collegien
Matinee to Maintain, pull year at lea014 One
young wottati, already a graduate of an
American college belonging to the associa-
tion and who gives 'sterilise of foiloWing isa
the fodteteps Of Darwin and Huxley, et is
foreign university. The toilette is, isa part,
Mrs. Franklin's own, and ite object is to lend:
tome meastanoci in the eettlettent of the vex,
ed question: Will Women Over addan isss
portant discovery to the world's dock of
knovviedge by establishing a fellowship for
the eupport of young women likely to beeorao.
capable of original research while they obtain
the beat preparation poisible for workinfti,
elongeide of the world's wholes%