HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1890-1-16, Page 3Ayer's Hair Vigor
S the "ideal" Hair dress n .
i g It re-
stores the calor to gray hair ; promotes
a fresh and vigorous growth,; prevents
the formation of'
dandruff; makes the
hair soft and silken;
and imparts a deli,
eate but lasting per,
fume,
" "Several mouths
ago. my hair com-
menced tatting out,
and in a few weeka
my head was almost
bald, I tried many
remedies, but they dM no good. I finale
ly bought a bottle of Ayer'e Hair Vigor,
and, after using only a part of the con-
tents, my head was covered with a
Leavy growth of hair. I recommend
your preparation as the best in the
world. ' r. Munday, Sharon Grove, Ky.
"I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor for a
number of years, and it has always given
tare satisfaction-, Itis an excellent axes -s-
ing, Prevents the hair front turning
ay, insures its rigorous growth, and
spa the scalp wite, and clean."
Lary A. Jnekson, Salem, Moss,
"T have used Ayer's Hair Vigor for
promoting the growth of the hair, and
tbink it unequaled. For restoring the
bairto its original color, and for arlress-
ing. it cannot be surpassed, Mrs, Geo.
La Fever, Taloa Rapids, :molt.
".'dyer's Hair Vigor is .a most excel-
lent Preparation for ,the, hair, 1 speak
of it from my own experience. Ita alae
proauotea the growth of new hair and
makes it glesee and soft. The Vigo to
alae a cure for t antlrullf,"..-a!'. W. Bniwe>a•,
Editor "Enquirer," McArthur, Ohio.
"1 have used flyer's Hair Vigor for
. the past two years, and found it all it is
xapresented to be, It restores the oath,
rat color to,ray baba causes the hair
to grow freely, and keeps it gift and
pitmen' —Mrs. At, V. Day, G, eheeea, bT. Y.
"MN' ktiters at Meat the Age of fifty,
lost -all the hair from the top of his head.
.A.ft :atr one aloati. s trial of Agar a Hair
Vigor the hair began coating, and, la
three months, he bad as fine growth et
Lair of the natural color." -,-1;. Qii1191?,
Saratoga Springs, N. Y.
Ayci"s Ilair Vigor,
TAIP,klts0 AY
Dr. d, G. Ayer &, Coe Lowell, Mast.
@aldby*Dretegitteend Perfumer,.
THE BEST
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es, Inv & Lead .Pipe
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i i " UFfriaii
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HOTEL BALMORAL.
MONTREAL.
tiotreDame St.. ono of the most central'
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Accommodation for 400 guests.
hates:�y T�QODRUFF,
j,Rto$3 or day. Sr Y r TV Manager.
Bole A2'tS lar Canada,
PALMER&SON
Wholesale Imp'trsof
paUGGISTS' SUNDRIES,
1743 NOTRE DAME ST.,
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LEATHER BOARD
COMPANY,
Manufacturers of
ASBESTOS MILLBOARD
Steam Packing,
FRICTION
PULLEY BOARD,
Thie is a Perfect Friction
RECKITT'S BLUE
s
THE BEST FOR LAUNDRY USE.
P' 'ERS
r
btaniila, e
Q. ALL
I1EWI , �, SIZES
AD WEIGHTS
kr TO ORDER
21 De /soles St.
!MILLSt
Po8TN1SUP, P -B.
fi
mist oN
HE GREAT
STRENGTH GIVE
OR THE SICK'
ARMING It
UTRITICUSOVERAGE
A POWERFUL
UiVIGORATOR
lr
are pleascnt to take. Oenta in tholr oven
ifurgative. Is a sato, surd, alid effectual
TIata;r erott it, ChiltironorA.dutt
LINGERIE,.
Fancy moire array either match the bonnet
or cloak nowadays, the latterrobably
befog the asoresensible plan,. 1?
No. 1 el Figure" 07 102 represents a 12114ff
of velvet made like w short big, with e, frill
en top and openings for the hands on the
sided The Uafag is of satin, end the brim
nlug of doeble•faoed satin ribbon* and a
bird..
No. 2 is nus of a satchel shape, in ash.
lireal with satin, edged with brood rib•
bon, with to bow of the manse, and three
sherbostrlolr tip; on top,
No. 313 of seal plosb, satin llnhig, fee
edging and a bullion cord with leseeia, ti
shape now be copied from the Musts/Woo.
Au fnterllnlog of wadding sprinkled with
sachet powder, and matin or torah outer
liaiog aro necessary, and a layer of crinoline
is used when a 2 at shape, like Nos. 2 or 3,
la preferred.
No, 4 illunirates a finish ter a law caraags
fa bertha style. Ib could* of a frill of Ism
wide,four incite' Abet on the
ending n a j
right side, and :headed by a melee of narrow
abort loops. A ribbon bow I' pleoed at
the back of the left 'boulder, and one ab tba
tied of the jtbob, mingled with flowers.
No. 6 reproeonte a pretty apron of open.
work striped arias, edged with a frill of
Torchon hoe, shirred at the top, tied with a
rlbbea on the lefb sido, and the spaces
between the open stripes are worked with
washing embroidery silk, or oobton in crow•
stitch designs.
Bell gown sleeves are trimmed with
ribbon epaulets that are often composod of
loops of one oolonr. lined with another,
"meetly clustered and set up on the top of
the arm. d ribbon brought from under the
arm to the top, tied is a bow, and the loops
fastened down by a fancy br000h on one
elinear onthe'(the is an''
Ido, and a goal Q wr,
other favorite sleeve, Two little loops often
turn downward and rest on the bare arm,
while two more stand upright la the centre.
Two drape of about two inches wide in the
material of the gown, one over the ahoul•
der and one across the top of the arm,
with a spray of real flowers filling in the
spaoe, fsatenod to the lower. band, is a
fashion that bas been adopted ab recent
country balls. It is a pretty fashion and
looks wall. The lett arm le the one decor
aced.
We could hardly dispense wlth ribbons
nowadays, as they are still worn in the nook.
and sleeves of nice woolen and silly dresser,
as are folds of scrim and Bilk muslin. High
and French rolling linen Dollars and cuffs are
worn with storm dresses. Wide falling lace
collars and deep cede are worn with indoor
toilettes.
The large veils that came over the hate
and cover the faoe without Doming in contact
with it will be preferred to the small veils ;
and all the old -fashions veils of by -gone
times are being looked np for the purpose,
also for Reath Ana ohemisebtes. Scarfs of
lace or figured net are draped around low-
necked bodioee and crossed in front, then
tie on one side. The veils are crossed in the
back and bowed in front.
Silk muslin fichus, the shade of the low-
necked Empire evening dress, aro edged
with lane draped over the shoulders and
tied in front, with long slender ends. Some
bridal toilettes have a regular Marie Antoin-
ette fiohu of lace or silk muslin and lace
over the high or V -necked bodice,
The Valley of Silence.
the hu eh of the valley of Silence
I dream all the songs that I sing,
And the must( floats down the dim valley
Till eaoh finds a word for a wing,
That to hearts, like the dove of one Deluge,
A message of peace they may bring.
But far on the deep there are billows
That never shall break on the beach ;
And I have heard songs in the silence
That never shall flow into epoch ;
And I have heard dreams in the va11ee
Too lofty for language to teach.
And I have seen thoughts in the valley—
Ale me I how my spirit was stirred 1'
And they wore holy veils over their faces—
Their footstep can scarcely be heard ;
They pate through the valley like virgins,
Too pure for the touch of a word.
Do you ask me the plaoe of the valley,
Ye hearts that are harrowed by oar e b
lb lieth afar between mountaine,
And God and his angels are there ;
One is the dark mountain of Sorrow,
And one the bright mountain of Prayer,
Garter clasps in buckle fashion crossed on
either side by tiny silver daggers, are very
much admired.
A Sunday school teacher was giving a
lesson in Ruth. She wanted to bring out
the kindness of Boaz in commanding the
reapers to drop large handfuls of wheat.
• 'Now, children,"she said,"Boaz did another
nice thing for Ruth, oan you bell me what
11 was ?" '" Married her," said one of the
boys. and bonnets. destinies with the great republic.
The Bird ellger$omlet.
"All praise t due to the. SelborneSocleby
i
NNW OF INTBREOT.. A BATTLE IN THE DARK.
for undertaking a orneade against the Berlin, liar 38 Modem',
faahlon of wearing blyde and portions of The railroads employ 750.000 voters,
An electric railway: said tobe bhe longest
in the world, is being laid at Buda Pesth,
The "Country Week "Committee of 110g.
ton gave vacetlone to. 3,100 poor children this
year,
lb ie a curious fact that there are. 200.000
people is the Calked Status who have oath
fight legs or head'.
Buropeen railroads are feneed ia, have re)
grade crossings, the engiinee have neither bell
iron headlight, and the engineer main steal
Oaeblfthsome morn she blithely donned The French taxes produced 3,000,000
Her choicest garb, a dainty gown, francs hue tut Augu;band 4.009,000 bales
And mantle like a web of mieb,, lees lash September OAR Ia the sarespaad-
And bonnet like a fairy's crown ing months of lest year,
It re##ed on her3an bright hair-- Philadelphia le said to be the greatest novel
The d o nl. gloin fitly be hal reading city in the couatry. The favorites
And its foils of Dreamy taco are Dickenr, George Eliot, E. P. Rae, 13taek
A In 11* olds was sweetly net -= And Quids, in the order named, There it
little call for either Thackeray or Howells,
A tiny bird, with half spread wings.
birds, lb *hoped that the earnest Wen.
tion of the !gauge vox' will be drawn to
this subject."
My lady was a gentle lass,
And fair and tender as a flower;,
She sighed to eee a belpless moth
Imprisoned in a spider's bower..
It pained her heart to cuff the cat
That winked upon a Lllckie's Fame
Her pity stayed the hangman"' hand,
Her tears bedewed the Laureate's pegs
'the debt of the city of Paris Amounts to
And poised Upon the bonne. rim, i90 franca for every man, women, and child
As skelerk by hi:1160M dawn within the city llwitr, In Frankfort the
L'reparing fight" matin hymn. debt is cgnlvelent to 317 frame per head, in
Milan to 218, in Rolla to l04, In the Hague
Bub veirolese is the tuneful throat, to 136, In Brnsaek, the meee heavily Indebt-
The wing. will never flutter now ed of ail European cider, to 1.6)5,
Nor
Save other s4iWhich sshall a BeatRty'e brow ow The Beak of California hen a Marge force
of
MOD work aovetructr4g igat
eU irrion
A mile was nil.ny lsclg'e lig, etanai fourteen aloes Ion , to irrigate a trylep
The love light eparklod In her (yeas, 150.000 acres theft the bank own* le Foam
While either heart wee lifted up Gouty. The meal with he sixty took wide
With dreams et Love's own Paradise. And 44 feat doer. Thie tweak of land wilt
betub un uptwenty sore farms and placed
Levee Pated#e i' thronged, they say, Oa
With tender.voioed, gay-ptunnagcd The oast of running street railway, with
th
ing•. home _power and with oleetrieity halt been
Wlra warble a4athlee also thee love, carefelly eethrsated and for the pursues of
And wear Love°a owe iwnrartiil ivies', comparison aline running fifty oar. la takaa.
Such a liras, Operated with horses, oasts
Amid toy lady's dream, no roam $300 75 per day, wad with sleet-deity,
For alleged vieloaa=sy, of tbieIts 40, The di ereuee In favor of electrl.
A teat within al, rose.bedge laid, city is 6231 25 or #k 62 per day saved o n
A asst that roatebude oared to him; each oar.
Weimar ,). Richardson, of the Attaarloan
A nest where brooding ruother eat aigrloultural department, asye that the ever.
W tp. wings moss tenderly rus:pread, a e amount of water contained by genre of
Above her hopes outdated In skeli. ebb Eastern Sates which heaxamined was
Sab w nos t'4ande
l 91l peroe bile Illw o . DakOt
,
Deux; only contained 5 9£ per cent, FROM
tIlelaa 7croi he deduced that "" other thing"
betegast, ,ebexrel of weetern Dear woad
makeOre brand then A barrel cf +Altera
larrr,
Urn anothat's—deed Axa
d xryi# lm
ut
He heel gone forts on Ifghtecme wing,
Hie sang had cheorad her many a dear
"11011 come and teed neo soon," site
thought,
And preyed. Why not .1 A bird on
Her trate cssseu not, for he had falba
Within the, subtle fowler'■ same,
BBresuoo ray laity *ought a pleuro
To act above hor golden heir,
ad so the mother, waitlag, died—
Aad died the hope withia that neat;
Then rosobadi opening, shod their lean
To bide ib from a schoolboy's queste
bf'y'lady moved to meet her love,
tier spirit light es sammar sir ;
The murdered minneaieger poised
All motionless above her hair,
My lady moved to meet her love—
lier love had died that vary day I
,
From head that grovelled in the dnat
She tore the fairy crown away.
And in her ggrelef titled ant to God,
"Oh, hapless doom of groab .and small,
To love, and lose, and die 1" And yob
God marks when even the sparrows
fall.
.agate M.1:,. Sully, fa, Christmas
.
Cherries,
" The young lime . teak their meat
from God .. who provideth for the raven
hie food, when his young ones cry unto
God 1''-Pealme.
Is He Dead,
A Tribute to the Memory of Raid Bambridg
"Isbedead 1"
They say he is dead,
The one we loved so well :
Whose holy life such a halo shed •
Over all. And yea, who may tell
Or moa: ori life by the tranaodent breath?
Or nay, wlen the pulse.throbe ctmse:—"Ib
is death,"
"Ie he dead?"
Can we call hitt clad d
Hie words and deeds survive,
Tho blameless life that for years ho led.
Will his memory keep alive ;
Some lips can be harsh and unrefined,
Bab his were tender and always kind.
" Is he dead?"
No I He is nob dead 1
The righteous never die l
To Dover the clay in the narrow bed
Brings the day of redemption nigh ;
And the soul in free, and unleashed for aye,
Io the sentient realms of eternal day.
" Is he dead ?"
Who rune may read :
Each deed, well and truly done,
Whenever it covers a human need,
Is a star in a crown well won
Mid the din and moil of the earthly strife
Every Chrietly deed hath eternal life.
"Does he live?"
Yea I Forevermore I
From Time's mutations free,
His soul hath life on the deathless shore
01 Eternity's Halcyon sea,
And the simple record we place on his
breast
Is the Christian's hope.etar of life
" At Rest,"
LLEWELLYN A. MORRISON.
" The Elms," Toronto.
Mice Liberated by Rate.
• A citizen of Greensboro, Ga,.who wasin the
habit of setting a trap in his dining -room to
patch rate, hearing a queer noisethere a few
nightie ago, went down to investigate. He
reports the state of things thus "About a
dozen small mioe had been caught in the
trap. This was surrounded by four or five
big rate, which had dragged it to one corner
and were holding a consultation, As I look•
ed in, alarmed by the light, they hurried
their preparations to a close. One of the
big fellows setzed the door of the trap be-
tween his teeth'; another rat seizad him by;
the tail, another and another quickly took
hold ; a sudden pull was then given, and
quicker than I can relate the door flaw back,
the mioe scampered out, and before T could
walk across the room old rats, young rats,
old mioe and young mice had disappeared,
leaving the trap in the corner, with the door
shut and every vestige of the bait gone."
Parisian made butterflies are seen mount-
ed high up on top of the Dewed French hats
The Great Stake ut.dfrica,
The great stake for which England and
Portugal are playing iu fleetly. Best,A.frlsaia
le More, ter more, even thus trace as big,
ea fertile and as doh in gold and ail minarets
ala Oslifornta. The reel tune is the ultimate
outonbrolthe ca
of ail Interior Abbe, from the Nile
po.
With Ragland at Egypt no ono can doubt
that the sovereignty of the Nilo le bars, gad
with the Nile some day the Equatorial pro.
'lacca will par to her with the great group
of lakes of which. Victoria Nyanza is
the greatest: Tho Nilo will oammaad
these lakes u theMIuisalppl would our WA
if by rod leek it ended in ono of them
fusteed of =Heath the West. Tho high,
healthy, Eultra. approach to these lakes
from. oho Indian Olean Fagland has in
Modem, and all of Afrlaa worth having,
from the Valley of the Nile South to the
lakes and then East bo Mombasa, lei outran
some day to pars ander Lei sglish dominion.
Stanley has (nand that Lake Victoria
Nyyatx g rang to 150 tulles of Lake Tangaan-
ylke and the spurt between le ready for a
road, with Eoglt*h a.i'sionary stations at
molt end. The long, :arrow, deep ohannel
of Like Tana ik s stretch South for
hundreds of miles to more missionary ate
bions a:ad a sphere of long continued Eolith
intermit. . Th se tong roehes stretch aloe
g
the Suborn boundary of the Congo Free
Smote. Prom bake Tangen? 2'M to the long,
narrow Lake Nyaasa le agate 250 miles ready
for road with Bogiish mlesionary staeions,
which have already begun the work of cam•
munioation. Once on this long, narrow lake,
clear waterways open down the Shire to the
Zsmbeat. A11 told,from Alexandria to the
mouth of the Zsbnal, there ate linked
waterways, all of Eegltah disoovery most of
them under English IL ffiuenoe, with not 500
miles of land travel in the entire distance.
If Eastland, which now has 13eohnana Lsnd
to the Zambrzl, oan stretch beyond ib up to
Inks Ryazan, this great chain of lakes is se.
cure for all the future of trade and naviga-
tion, they will sea in another century. For
two centuries, Portugal has held the keys to
tan ince-ior of Africa and let them rest,
I: has reached the poinb now where
tr ...t power can enforce the old inter
netsonel rule that dhoovery without nee
gives no title, and the field once wrested
from Portugal the coast can be left to others.
England will hold the great tableland of the
oentrefrom the Cape to the Dalta.—[Phila
delphia Press.
Not Much Left.
""I have married three wives, and each
for money. We never do marry for love,
but for cash," observed Mr. Joseph Isaacs
in defending a case In the Portsmouth, Eng.,
court, recently. Thie reminds the London
News of a Wiltshire farmer who was raffled
on the occasion of his third nuptials by his
rector on the judicious selection he had
made of well -dowered brides. He admit-
ted the fact, but protested the advantages
had been exaggerated, " What with bring-
ing on 'em in" (i e., the wedding outlay),
he said," and carrying on 'em out (the funer-
al expense), I do assure you there is very
little left on the right side of the ledger."
•
Bonnets are small and made of much richer
and more expensive materials than have
heretofore been used.
Reuben—Yes, it is perfectly proper to
apeak of the prooeeds of a walking match as
gait reoeipte.
The problem of the future of the large and
rapidly increasing colored papulation of the
United States is evidently causing no little
anxiety among our neighbors. A new phase
of the question is the advooaoy by some of
the Southern senators of steps to remedy the
local pressure by a transference of large'
numbers of the colored people to the West
ern States on the plea that their labor,
though superabundant in the south, is want-
ed in the west. This expedient might improve
temporarily the situation in some states,
where the rapid increase :of the • colored
population is most fele, but it could only de-
lay, not prevent, the inevitable result. As to
the general question, in its effects upon the
whole country, the predicted outnumbering
of the white by the colored population of the
United States would hardly be retarded by
the formotion of these fresh contras, from
which the race may spread. Our neighbors
have a grave problem in this question, which
with others before the people Of the United
Sbatea dose not tem b Canada to lin,'
a s , p is
A. Marvelous Exploit of itrassfana intsrttry
�1!Gilst Figlsteng'a ruskornan Horde.
The Russian soldier dies at his post. I
have seen hire In Winter on gentry duty on
the heights of Shipka die standing, surround-
ed with "now, and transformed literally
into a atatue of Ice; I have Been hire die on
the march, striding over the gaudy desert,
and yielding up her last breath with the
last step; i have seen hire die of hie wcunde
on the bettlefiel-i er in the hospital, at a
distamoe of SUVA a i ea from, Ma native vii.
lege--and in thee eaprome moments l have
always frond the Rushee soldier gabbro.
In the Kbive campaign, oar the.night of
a sly 15, oar troop broke Damp at 2 a1 50.
Hardly had the trot rquedrons, with Zino
Fageno de L.iuehtenberg at their head,
started along the road, than suddenly the
sir trembled with clamor, howls and savage
war oriea from a crowd of several thousand
men, and seven "Turkoman tribea, men and
women together, fell upon oar troop. Our
eouadrone were !long back ewe: the reat of
the cavalry by force of the shook upon the
let.ntry. The contne on wast terrible. We,
mold not sue the cord: nion for le was• too
dark, but we felt It, No mere could we
dletinguish friend* from enclnfks. At th e
moment I wee crowded in the enlist of
a group of Coesscks, and my horse waa.
gashed gently and slow) as it by waves,
first one way, then the other. Atfiret, out
e mingle shot wall heard het cagy tbo thud
of sabres striking Kamen bodies gad the
Iaxneatable (ries: of the woua:?cd. Suddenly
there wee a flesh and a glare in treat et uas,
and a violent explosion, then a *timid cel
a third, The rocket battery, being amongget
the first egeadreee, bad aaacceecloll, tbsnke
to the tlatkuese, in placing its etaoderight is
the middle of the teensy. Lie for�.nraately,'
the rockets buret without r3"lalr. Peobabiy
they bad got web end the heat had split
thea,,. However, the explosiene frielitened
the Turkomans, end ilei the rift et
formlag for a utorleet a RIO opoaicg
the rases of the ccmbetaute.
Then I heard behind me .ea cner etic
g
voice. "sUako way 1" and two coaupaniee Of
the ascond battalion of Turkistan riflemen
paused through the melee of the Ctwaebs,.
and. dashed to the *pet athersa the lwa,ttery
had token int laud, 'jellied the riglab Allam
of tate dive company, ' Fire l' re.:3h the
word Of conmaaud, and a dili:hargo was
beard ito nnBerra that it "ended like aE
vingle shot, "Fire I' heard i ear-die:tie,
alsanield% and another almilar die.h:ate
Mowed. "Pita I' a little further, and yob
far tiler, and then further milt], to the right
of where I wain, one Volley atter another and
not
bet, la the distance neer the gardens. we
heard the roliing et the wince, E'ghe
enc ive rounds were fired by the camiaae,
lee near which I was, :and is peace tune,
daring reviews, I have Often heard wore
tiring. Between the second reed third rouny?a
* group of Tarkonraas dashed through the
drab eolapuzy and killed four suidiers, tut
this did riot prevent the regularity of the
tiring. Toe company was there, staadit g
firmly as if it had net even remarked thta
little epasado, wafting all attention for an
otter oommaud to fire.
When the son, with the sapidity meal in
the oast, rose an the her ;lett, our troop was
found to be drawn up in a .emlctrole, one
cotapaly by the aide of the other, in an or.
der as exa,at as 1f the mar :aura had been ex
canted In breed daylight and by speslal word
of aamm%ud. Ib was the regular volley the
lag whish had shown the battalions their
nieces. df the aring )rad bceta coaft:ted enol
irregalas, the troops would not have bean
able to diteaver their whereabouts is the arra
era) chests. Ia the camp lay tlo dead sae
the wounded Taakomantl and Rete ei, Togo
chief et the detect in G'neral Gelowa`a,
elicit and the chief of Me aitaii', were both
wean:ied with sabre cuts. :n trout of out
companies were piled up a ecrnpaob maul of
fallen anemic",and in the distarce the horl
sen was literaly oavered by the tali caps Of
Ruing Turkomaui.— [13arpar s ialegrz.ne.
THE .ARIES !'
d New anal Distinct Venn of Dismal
witteit to am1oting Canadian Worsen.
Haw some of Ibem Tta�,ifined
Complexion, Portent Health ander
Superb physical Denary,
A grout foadoa
Physician, says ghee.
he notes a ne,,v and
distinct forst Of
nersous disease ,+
duced in Caedieht
women by worrj'
about enemata alma,
overwork in. caxil
for the home. This
fs only tog true. It is why we see 40 n
ladies pale, weak, 'engulf), and =Faring
from headaches and innumerable wake
Atones. They sanest stand the str+� up:*
their uezvous system. Many of them neve
found the means to srstaiei their Cabe
strength, to give eater to the cheeks, sled•
new life and vigor to the holy, in Paine*
Celery Compels d. Th:s p:zre aerasc enti5a
remedy its esspee.aliy ed eted to •itis needs•
of weman, and es daily alar -t-; 7 the ;004
rerra;rkatie clares. Mee. W. V, Coopearr
6ca St. 1iygtolite St., Ma.,ueal, was for a
long time treztb?ed nftb alenr a ea: .
loss of appetite, law spirits, etc Oar
tlsiag the Cemgeand, her hocieehe dilly
eppeared, appetite nus goad, and her spirits•
revived,
Annie Goatrlcy, of Liver Beeaudettee
Pig., found the Campounll a certain mica
for weakness, and rauw lee1S ae we'd ,as al*
•av+x did.
Malty a Caaatdian lady has the estate
roman thin_ grateful,
Pane's !celery` Con: a d eau be pntx.
cO.aatcd at any dnlg ist for one d.Oliar a
bottle. • If he stzoarld nut have It on haat!,.
order direct from Mew, RzcnAausow &
MOO T,REALL,
AANY' A. .
lkloo
ie Weak, Not'voura, Palaiiitateefe
wkainb s Foily o .d ignorance t,c.s Tate
fieri ewer b4 Vig :r c: Body, i'llaa:t#
r Fouunt inn Life. }3'e el:m ee os.
Salol;ache, IV-+"+dSal94)rcau m, We:ti:reeaw
f ]lerlrnri. Stiehfulneae is Society,
time 100 mere the Faces;d ori tb.a Efee ctm
sett ;ey; w Early. Decay, Oonetuts'aPtlont
xEr»eatasty.w.:lL netoara;<s:..tl :.:3s.
aoteltives tamp. It hearer.* Yattthf
fearrcatcree the Vital Power;r4
L:, p strengthens ens Anda eteie..s tee mitre
ei tr ::.,i :':smile:. a al=e o.c i .. Jcai
enema tt.a l..rren frame. r+Attie cur
No. fes tbo west olistiaiate case cr:a l e ci,vesl in
tbr, tL �a,ateweep-.Geessltsl. at ..,AMete
days. 1,c;ii i 3.. a carton s two we. all t.tAt.
Gtea.'. *!z;:ott t.aar. san;rur.e.. 1 t,r,t; i•tt(,[,
Lu' o U. Is inantal.itleCutrpfero b ta•"oYtlR�l
ell rtes le tameret 110W lane Cl ldo
tttg. eta, Under our `sratteu. QctOry :ee to
etftloG a t urn Pelee $S. 2:tlr:MG Mei.;:,,ne
>3o..Tcrn.a.lO r.
An= LADIES ONLY.
FRa:lnOtt .RECULATIOPI PILLS
Far cue r:or to Ergo!, Tauter. Peh iy r'v:ti:-:t�
tla:)d0. ld"eior,el l,v Vac tta�trs�t losc+' Ai:cu
who use them ?sosr:my. Never'a i. R;�'ieve
1asin, 11ta 1tE LECTULAR1TY. f Ise . sat and
F`4'etas tl Pe:oa, 2. Tomato :did ,; ,tom Co.
TOeea'o Ont.
rT tTanit e—iiriteatra ,
nettaw, oarablitat ,
rue .n Cl ,pitTO.ret, t; . 1
]IA:gig our me -biota
'4i Tilton Min Teca,:a V tt aver
tMt ticn,.*coeitt.rudt1' nom
Tran to melt r^ t 4 th.*try
lir r,ttlng:ttIs5 r.91411 1St
,le vitd,lit:bantlt,,, tmint*,
lytic e.tkttnrtt,d fret, r , ttl.
.e,Al(rar if Mit o id t ,la.aft
Lir,r5, Innu.t.tNoatk t,atyou.
ioty a bat ttr 14...9. t, the,. vat.
oy*, lrtr,.t,t3te,c t,dneer3s
;:,h,all.knai T,rrmir vv it ntra
Arra'. 'alar grand nia.l,+na is.
mat:, t art the *On gee r,itrnn.
nhit heA.sri:oCIOSii5:..aunt.
Tan Mail tc,M r„ L+.dt til.ndthtAa
.narhtatral,..03 unit at:l, tar
�" ���irrt l 330. r,tu.tartarrr:, zn,:,dnit.
FRE , c '.Yg
a1tuthnr au th* Natio. AU r,
■■ �iiiii 4.ore Ne c,gdlrl. rt1sirt 1. nein,
ons :.ea obi w ate in tint cora rani.,
r etre the Lar Aane as o n rin.andthe
t s b t era ,town tenon. r � n A,nerita..
tool.: ILI,a•oAZ CO.,�Lr n 4t
'ltiCJR AZ e1.Riot "140. B►pt*s: 6:s. ]littioe.
The !Stay of a Vioias:tudiuous darner
At Saint -Gal%, Sal 'zsriand,auold Colonel
named Matignon! has east died at the age
of eighty. He had abundant opportnotey
for Acquiring a practical knowledge of men
and manners. No romance writer would
dare to give to his hero a career so varied as
that of old Martivnonl, He began life as a
lawyer, Then he turned soldier, and fought
in the war of the Sanderbund. At the dote
of that strugule, he rose to the bench and
served as a Judge. Then fortune dceerted
him and he went down hill until he b:cam(
a street sweeper in New York, and afterward
a waiter in a coffee and sake saloon. Soon.
afterward he managed to got to California,
where ha became a miner. Having been
cured of the gold fever, ho went to Engl.tnd,'.
joined the army. and served under the .6.7,g -
fish colors in the Crimean war. At the end
of that difficulty he went to the Argentine',
Republic. There again fortune deserted
him, and in a few yearn he returned to En- -
ope. He labored as a railroad conductor, a
policeman, and a town clerk, and at last set•
fled down to a quiet life in his native conn
try. His final request was original and east
ly granted. It was that nobody, except the
undertaker and his assistants, should attend
his funeral.
Strikes•
I have seen a very remarkable and vol-
uminous report made by the Permanent
Commission appointed some time ago to
enquire into the working of strikes and look-
outs in the United Syates. The whole sub -
j Sot of these as between capital and labour
has been gone into, mainly from the period
of 1881 86. The result is that the combined
loss to masters and men of the thousand or
more strikers of that period could not have
been less than twenty millions sterling. The
conclusion come to by the oommisioners is
that in time strikes will not be permitted.
A practical outcome iu the case of Massachu-
setts is the eabablishmenb of a Government
Bureau of Arbitration for the settlement of
all disputes between masters and men.
Exeter Butcher Shop.
11.DAYI
rSa
Butcher & General Dearer
--IN XVI, KINDS or--
MN;ATS
nstomerssnpplied TUESDAYS, THURS..
AYS.aN» SATURDAYS at their :esidenee
ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE.
°EINE PROMPT ATTENTION. •
,THE LIGHT RUNNING0
SEWING MACHINE
TItR ,
LADIES'
FAVORITE.
t1THE DNIY SEWING -
THAT CIV
ILL cure you of Inflammatory Rheum-
atism,, Neuralgia, Lumbago, Spinal
Disease, Ear and Toothache, Bruises
and Sprains.
Sold Evcrywheroa.