HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1891-8-20, Page 3P�.
“Like Iagic,"
THE effect produced by Ayer'4 Cherry
Pectoral. Colds, Coughs, Croup,
end Soca Throat are, in most cases, im-
mediately relieved
by the use of this
wonderful remedy.
It strengthens the
vocal organs, allays.
irritation, and pre-
vents the inroads. of
Consumption; in
every stage of that
dread disease,
Ayer's Cherry Pee-
•toral relieves cough-
ing and induces
refreshing rest.
"I have used Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
in lily family for thirty years and have
always found it the best remedy for
irroup,to which complaint my children
leave been subject." --Capt. U. Carley,
'Brooklyn, N. Y.
"From aft -experience ofover thirty
years in the Sale ot proprietary ma-
mma,
nedr-
Ayer'sI Cherry Pectora recOnenof the
best recotstmettdations of the Pectoral is
tho enduring quality of its popularity, it
being more ,salable now than it was
twenty-ftva.,ears ago, when its great
success waS considered marvelous,"—
lt, S. Drake, A[. D., lleliot. Kans.
"My little sister, four year of age.
was ear illi from bronehatis that wo bad
almost given up hope of her recovery.
Clair fautillieihysielan, a a ilftil man and
of large a ierience, pronounced it use.
lea to give her any more medicine;
Sari= that lie bad done all it was nos-
sibleTeep, and we must prepare for the
;;grail AOra last resort, we determined.
to try 41Or i Cherry Pectoral, and I can.
truly as %vith the most happy results.
Atter taper a few doses elle aeened to
breathe easier, and, within a week, was
out of danger. We continued giving tho
Pectoral, until Satisfied ehe was eLtirel
well. Tllilhes given meunbounded faith
in the preparation, and I reeoitamend it
confidently to niy customers."—C. U.
Lepper, Druggist, Fort Wayne, Ind.
Vat. Colds and Coughs, take
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral,
rnEr.'ltEu Aid
Pr. J. C. Ayer Fa Co., Lowell, Mass.
:• fake 7tl : sit bottlers. V. Werth f5 a battle.
CENTRAL
Drug Store
u
A £Ill stook of all kinds of
Dye -stuffs and paokage
Dyes, constantly on
hand. Win an's
Condition
Fowl
1 erg,
the hest
in the mark-
ot and always
resh. Family recip-
ees carefully prepared at
Central Drug Store Exeter.
C. LUTZ.
TZ.
elle
otT8too
3ctE T AMEVelr
A pamphlet of information and ab-
stract of the laws, showing How to
Obtain Patents, Caveats, Trade
Marko, Copyrights, sent free.
Adan.,. MUNN & CO.
361 Broadway.
New York.
•
el
E MAN
; VIGOR and STRENGTH!
For LOST or FAILING MANHOOD,
General and NERVOUS DEBILITY,
Weakness of BODY AND MIND,
Effects of Errors or Excesses in Ohl
A 1 •or Young. Robust, Noble MAN-
HOOD fully Restored. How to en-
large and strengthen WEAK UN-
, DEVELOPED ORGANS and PARTS
Or BODY. Absolutely unfailing
> HONE TREATMENT— enefits i11
a' day. Nen testify from fifty States
and Foreign Countries. Write them,
Book, .explanation and proofs
l.d ailed (sealed) FREE. Address
gii1g MEDICAL CO.,
ou :FAI.O, N.Y.
2
FOR THE LADIES,
Best..
Mother. I see you with•our nursery light,
Leading your babies, all in white,
To their sweet rest;
Christ.the Good Shepherd, carries nine to
night, And that is best.
I cannot help tears when 1 see them twin
Their Angora in yours, and their bright curls
shine
On your warm breast
But the Saviours is purer than yours. or
mine—
Can love best.
You tremble each .tour because your arms
Are weak ; your heart is wrung with alarms,
And sore opprest;
Afy darlings are safe out of reach of iterate,
And that is hest.
You know over yours may hang even now
Pain and disease. whose fulfilling slow
Naught can arrest;
kliue in God's gardens run to and fro,
And that is best.
You know that of yours your feeblest one
And dearest may live long years alone,
aline are cherished ofdsants� around God's
throne.
And that is best.
You must dread for yours the crime that
Dark
Sears, unwashed by repentant team
And uneonfessed;
Mine entered spotless on eternal years.
Oh. how muck eh. best
But grief is selfish; 1 cannot see
Always why 1 -Would so stricken be
More then the Teat- ;
But 1 know that as wen as them, forme
God didthobest.
Iltti.ex lli: er ,l teases.
turnsthanks—the bride and her obief
bridesmaid, accompanied by her mother, re-
tire. The bridal robes are doffed, and a
plainer but dainty costume assented, Then
comes the most trying part of all—the going
away—where smiles and tears strive for the
mastery, and kisses and hand clasps abound.
All the party gather round the door to wish
the young couple " Good-bye" and "God-
speed." Blessings and .topes follow their
going, as pure and as thick as the grains of
rice which have been showered upon them
in token of good -luck. The carriage drives
away, the united pair within it smiling end
glad.
dd God bless my lass," says the bride's
mother, as she turas her face away to hide
the re -'y tears, and "God bless them both,
say we ail, as we watch the carriage grow-
ing leseand less in the distance.
The lhu*.tress of Germauv.
The Empress Augusta Victoria is one of
those happy women who have no history
outside of the domestic fireside, and, not-
withstanding her lofty position, it is unlike-
ly that she will ever shine as brilliantly as
the queens who have preceded her upon the
throne of Prussia during the past century,
because she is of an entirely different ebarac-
ter, To go back no further than the late
Empress Augusta tor our parallel, we may
say that she was neither wife nor mother,
having always hada nobly [;rand idea other
role as a sovereign, and seeing in her mar-
riage with the Crown -Prince of Prussia
simply an elevation to a poeition that
considered her due by right of birth and
education. If, contrary to her expectation
and desire, she was afterward. denied all
participation in state affairs by her iauperi.
ons consort, she uerertheless'had her
own tittle court awl was a commanding
figure. The En;press Victoria, more of
wife and mother, was less of a queen
than her mother-in-law ; but she exercised
by her strong, intellectual powers and
energetic character a great ascendancy over
the reit d of Frederick iii,, and had his reign
been longer she would undoubtedly have left
a deeper .nark as sovereign than the first ern -
press of Germany. Augusta Victoria, unlike
her two immediate predecessors, represents
the ideal type of a (tertian woman --that is
to say, the wife who volantarily remains in
the background, content to obey if not to
adore her husband, and to he a discreet and
timid counselor. Thera is another and im•{
portant difference between her and the two
sovereigns just mentioned, and one that will
make her more popular with the german
people than either Augusta or Victoria ; she
Pr the brat German sovereign since Queen
Louisa. folio has a German face and leave,
and who is thoroughly (lerinau in all Fier.
being. The father of the present empress
was the Duke Frederick Christian Augustus
ofchleswig-Holstein, who has all his. life
defended the rights of the horise of Angus-
tenhurg aau.at the pretensions of Den-
mark, Although sustaining the cause of
Austria after the subjugation of the Elbe
duchies by Prussia and Austria, he made his
peace with Prussia at out of
the Franco- Uer man war fabreaking
served on the
Crown-('rine° Frederick's stair. It was
itch tile Prussian
o this intimae ria
through t
Y
iv
fi
royal family that young -Prince W'illiam,
while a student at Bonn, first met the Prin-
cess Augusta Victoria. Prince Bismarck had
not yo( become the solitary exile of 1.cried-
richsralte: One of his ideas at that moment
was to rally to the empire all the enemies
who had formerly combated it, and he saw
in the union of a Hohenzollern prince and
the daughter of the duke who entitled him-
self Frederick VII. the moonset extinguish-
ing the question of the succession to the
Elbe duchies. Prince William, who was
then the C'hancellor's docile pupil consented)
to this marriage.
The princess was received at Berlin with
all the honors of a future empress, but the
royal family and the imperial court were not
so enthusiastic as the people. Although the
princess was on an equal footing of wealth
with many of the poor nobles who turned
up their nose at this timid and dowdy girl,
they considered that her titles of nobility
were greatly inferior to those of the proud
houso to winch she had become allied for
political reasons. The marriage was cel-
ebrated with great pomp inhebruary, 1831,
and four days later the young couple went
to live at Potsdam, where Prince William
was in garrison. From that moment until
the prince was called to succeed his father
as emperor the public heard little about the
Princess William except the yearly anounce-
ment that she had given another prince to
Germany, that she was a model wife and
mother, very devout under the guidance of
Pastor Stoeck, and active in charitable
works with the Countess of Waldersee who
acted as mentor to the young princess.
Since she came to the throne the Empress
Augusta Victoria continues to be the sensi-
ble and modest woman that she was when
only a princess. While her husband runs
about with a feverish activity, visiting
present and possible allies, she is content to
remain at home and perform the very limit-
ed duties that the constitution has marked
out for the wives of German sovereigns.
Having scarcely any other public duties to
perform than to appear at the head of her
regiment of cuirassiers during the rare
moments when the emperor is at home, the
empress devotes most of her time to her
household cares, and perhaps continues to
put up her own preserves, as she did when
she was the Princess William.
The Empress Augusta Victoria is now in
her 31st year and is three months older and
somewhat taller than the emperor, but her
hair and fresh complexion make her look
younger: than her age. An oval face, soft
bine eyes, beautiful teeth and abundance of
blonde hair give her a decidedly agreeable
if not positively pretty physiognomy, while
she passes for having smaller feet than those
that nature has generously bestowed upon
the sisters of her race. The empress has
already given five sons to her husband, but
her motherly care is not long bestowed on
each one, for as soon as possible their father
takes them away from the nurse and sends
them to the drill -master in Thuringia, where
they are uniformed, booted, spurred and
taught to train a saber in true German
fashion.
System in Housework.
At the bottom of all the heartache and
headache caused b • modern housework,
there usually lies only one trouble --want of
method. Only within the last hundred
yews has there been any effort made to train
woman. Site was regarded as a being to be
governed by iustinet of intuition, and all
her work was expected to be done by some
sweet haphazard method which should make
itself right in the end by some inle unknown
to every law of nature. The one who sug-
gested
uga~ested direct rides d doing homework i
Fdiah,hls.5 eroakaaa
delii1 nto derision n as eccentric. Catkin*,
was like a. game of chance, and success andel
failure were looked upon generally as met-
tere of luck. Tito ineadmakerwhotneasus'cd
the ingredients for her bread was looked
upon as little less than daft. The natural
result of want of method in breadmaking at
In me was the coining, in of the foreign baker
wh(ase loaves, thought inferior in every way
to a good home-made loaf, could always he
depended upon to be of midterm quality.
The .aker produced loaves which were,
always the same $1'O.nd quality while the
domestic loaf, though delieicns at times,
was often a failure, owing to the ,vans of
method. When home methods become sys.
tematio methods then the home baker may
come into active competition with the pro.
fesnional baker. Though there are thousands
of women who could bake better bread than
the tradesmen bake
rs and would gladly
earn the money for doing so, they have not
been able to gain any considerable
market because they cannot be depended
on for a positively uniform result. 11'laen-
ever a woman conducts the work of baking
by purely business methods, bakes her break
by strict uniform rule as a baker does, aid.
charges only the regular price for it, she
finds a remunerative trvo markot at once for her
work. From remote generations men havo
been taught to do their work by rule. No
man hires a laborer without engaging his
time for a certain number of hours. The
man. servant knows distinctly when and
whit! time lie must devote to psis work. The
female servant alone is expected, to do her
work in a happy -go -easy way. At ono time
alto is seriously reprimanded for what is
overlooked at other times. Tho trouble
with servants is largely duo to want of order
in laying out their work and making them
adhere rigidly to it. The average maid -of -
all -work has some reason in rebelling against
her position when her work depends, as it
often does, upon the whimsical fancies of a
mistress who drives her from one thing to
another without system or order.
Strange as it may seem, it is yet true that
there are no housekeepers who have so little
trouble with their help as those who exact
to the uttermost that which is required, but
who do not break into the routine of work
by ordering all manner of unexpected and
unnecessary drudgery. The secret of peace
in the household, of freedom from the thou-
sand and one petty worries induced by do-
mestic mismanagement, lies iu one brief
word—method. When women are trained
to do their household work as craftsmen do
theirs, when the Bead of a house manages her
help with the same exactness that the master
Workman manages his men, making sure
that every stroke of work tells toward the
end, then we shall begin to see a solution of
the problems of domestic service. These pro-
blems present themselves on every side and
have even ruched a point at which they
threaten to turn our homes into vast hostel-
ries, to be managed on the co-operative plan.
Getting Married.
In Scotland when a marriage is celebrated
in a church the first persons to arrive ought
to be the bridegroom and boatman. These
stand at the right of the altar and wait the
coming of the bride. The bride approaches
leaning on her father's arm, or that of her
nearest male relative, who " gives her away,"
as the phrase has it, and her maids follow,
two and two. The chief bridesmaid's place
is immediately behind the bride. At the
ceremony—the commencement of it—the
bride steads at the left-hand side of her
bridegroom, while the best man stands athis
right hand side, and the father of the bride
or her nearest male relative stands at her left
hand. Whoa the ceremony is concluded the
newly-madehusband takes his wife on his
arm, and leads her away to sign the register
followed by all the bridal party. The sig-
nature of two witnesses is quite sufficient ;
but, as a rule, the bridesmaids look upon it
as a privilege to sign the document. Then
follow kisses and • oongratulations. Poor
bride, she is well-nigh smothered 1 She
emerges, however, from the ordeal blushing
and triumphant, if somewhat embarrassed,
proud of her new responsibility and dignity,
and half ashamed to be addressed as Mrs.
So-and-so.
The health of the newlyanarried pair is
the first that should be proposed at the wed-
ding feast, the bridegroom responding. This
toast should be given by either the oldest
friend of the bride's family or the most
honoured guest present. It falls to the
bridegroom, too, or to some distinguished
guest, to propose that of the bridesmaids td
which the bestman replies. His is expected
to be the speech of the day. The ii'idegroom
is supposed to be—and generally is—some-
what dumb and dumfounded, but his friend
must rise to the occasion, and for once in
his life, if never after, prove himself a wit
and a wag.
After the health of the bride'sparents has
been proposed—for which the father re -
JOIN LABATT'S
India rale Aloud XXX Brown. Stout
Meant awaras and medals for Purity and Excel-
lence at. Centennial Exhibition, Philadelphia,
1870; Canada, 187E ; Australia. 1877 ; and.
Paris, France, 1878.
TESTIMONIALS SELECTED:
Prof,R II Croft, Puddle Analyst, Toronto,sa,ya: —"t and it
tobepriestly aonndcontainingno impurities or adulter-
atior s, e•ad cant a tronglyrecominend it as perfectly Burs and
a tory suppe�rior malt liquor:
John B.iidwarps, Professor of Chemist; . Mlontrerl, says:
"Ifindtheinto be remarkably souni ales, brewed from
puromalt and hops.
ltev. P; J. EU,Paae.Prolessar of Chemistry, Laval l34i1rer-
pity, uebeo, ys;='I htro analyzed the Fndian Palo Ale
0E2111 ,JohnLabett,London.Ontario. and have
found it a ale, containing but little alcohol of a delis
gcnalluatfya, vanrd, coanmdpareas wvaitrh tahbeastbliemptare d aalneis. sufehraivoe
also analyzed tbe Porter X%$ Stunt, of the same brewery,
which is of excellent quality its Savor is very agreeable;
DIM atonienioreenergetic than the above ale, for itis a
little richer in alcohol, and can be compared advantage-
°nal ywith any imported at tide.
ASK YOUtt GROU.E t VOX?, IT
TBI GERMAN EMFFBOB.
The First Three Years oS lits Reign.
William II, has been for three years em-
peror, and in this time has succeeded not
only in winning the respect of foreign cab.
Inets but in strengthening himself at home.
Ile auceeeded it father idolized by alt who
carnetwrithin the sphere of his gent le and gen-
erous nature ; his grandfather left behind a
warlike fame so great that only the age of
Fredrick II. can afford a parallel. The
present Emperor has bad, therefore, no easy
task before him for it has Been necessary
for him both to remove prejudice and to
give the country confidence 'Ishii intentions
as well as in his abilities.
The secret of the Emperor's power with
his own people adage mainly= front three
causes
First, if° liar courage.
Second. IIe is honest.
Third. He is a thorough Berman..
It the wihote country had to vote to-
morrow for a leader embodying the qualities
they most deeired, their choice would fall
unquestionably on their present ecnstttal- �
tional ruler. I'erltape the virtues I have
co lb
sec' d appear nnn►on eco and mil 0
p ifle pre r pl ,
',
1
f rgranted b• a s a readerbut an
ta]cen oit l e zea ;
emperor meat be compared. with °there in
the same trade.PUREST
His honesty has Wen the cause of nearly,
ail the malevolent criti.•iliithat outside pap-
era have aateorded him fur he has said. freely
what older or more puhli•• prone might lu►ve
placed in a different way. lie has made
ninny minor mistake' from acting on the
impale° of the moment, but these mistakes
have never betrayed to hie people a want of
sympathy With their development. Hebei
spade his share d4 minor blunders in hand-
ling large masses of troops at the grand
nnandenvers, but the army would be happy
to see him make a thousand times 0.9 many
rather than miss the active iatcreat he
takes in keepinge the military machine in
working order. -.Century.
Aphorisms.
It is not work that kills men ; it is worry.
Work is healthful ; you can hardly put more
upon a man then he can bear. Worry is
rust upon the blade.—[Henry Ward Beech-
er.
Aman who is not ashamed of himself
need not be ashamed of iris early condition.
[Daniel Webster.
To be selfish is to be iguoble.—[Haweis.
It is safer to be oilent than to reveal one's
secret to any one, and telling him not to
mention it. — [Saadi.
Behavior is a minim' in which everyone
splays -his image.—[Goetho.
It would seal, absurd for one to plead
that the vengeful things onehas said aboat
another were uttered in spite of one's self.
Even those who live higher° not out of
harm's reach
1
The nun who wants nothing could not
possibly wish for leas.
Lady Macdonald and Mass Macdonald
have gene to spend a few weeks at Banff,
N. W. T.
VINOWSNWSIMIAMMINNEMMO
Ten
Reasons
Forthe Wonderful Success
of Hood's Sarsaparilla,
the Most Popular and
Most Extensively Sold
Medicine in America.
I Hood's Sarsaparilla possesses great
medicinal merit, which it positively
demonstrates when fairly tried..
2 It is most economical, being the
only medicine of which " loo
Doses One Dollar" can truly be said.
3 It is prepared by a Combination,
Proportion and Process Peculiar to
Itself, unknown to other preparations,
and by which all the ]medicinal value of
the various ingredients is secured.
A It effects remarkable cures where
*F other medicines have utterly failed
to do any good whatever.
itis a modern medicine, originated
40 by experienced pharmacists, and
still carefully prepared under their per-
sonal supervision.
It is clean, clear and beautiful in
appearance, pleasant to take, and
always of equal strength.
7 It has proven itself to be positively
the best remedy for scrofula and all
blood disorders, and the best tonic for
that tired feeling, loss of appetite and
general debility.
p Itis unequalled for curing dyspepsia,
® sick headache, biliousness, catarrh,
rheumatism and all diseases of the kid.
neys and liver,
A It has a good name at linete, there
being more of Hood's Sarsaparilla
sold in Lowell, Mass., where it made,
than of all other sarsaparillas and blood
purifiers combined.
®Its advertising is unique, original,
honest, and thoroughly backed up
by the medicine itself.
A Point for You.
If you want a blood purifier or
strengthening medicine, you should get
the best. Ask for Hood's Sarsaparilla,
aid insist upon having it. Do not let
any argument or persuasion influence
you to buy what you do not want. Be
sure to get the ideal medicine,
{id's
S$Lr a4k rill
Sold byaildruggtsts. $1; stator SO. Prepared only
by 0.1 1300D .0 00., Apothecaries, Lowell, Masa
100 Doses One Dollar
TILE EXETER TIMES.
Ispublisnedevery Thursday morn ng.as
TI MES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE
blain-sireet,ueartyopposite Fitton'i Jeweler!
iitore,>J';eter.Qut.,by-John \Tintodk Sone,>'ro-
praetorF
RwTse el" auvsaTzstNa
Ftratlnsortion,perline...... ......•.......... .10 mitt.
patch aubsegttcatinsertton ,per tine .....3 cents.
To insure insertion, advertisements should
be sent le notlaterthan 'Wednesday morning
OprJOB PRINTING DEPARTMENT is one
elate largest and hest isgnipped in the County
otlluron.At( work entrusted to us Walt x0.8170
o rpromptattonttou:
Deesions Regarding News-
papers.
LAnypocsenwho takes a pap.1rro etlariyer oat
the post -office, whether directed in his namo or
another s,or whether he has subscribed or not
to responsible for payment.
2 If a person orders ids paper discontinued
he must pay all arrears or the publisher may
continue to send it until the payment is made..
and thea collect the whole amount, 'whether
the paper is takenfrom the otllce or not.
3 In sults for subscriptions. the suit may he
a!
' a e the paper i i
to stn cd in the lace where e a b
t t t p p
p
p
Belted, although the subscriber may reside
hundreds of wises away.
4 The courts bave derided. !bat refu-ink t
take newspapers erperiodtcals from *he pont.
otilce. or rcu¢ovin: and leaving theta uncalled
r is prima facie evidence of tntcutlonal fraud
cARTEKs1
IT y lE
IVER
P1 LL S.
Regulates the Stomach,
Liver andlifowcis, unlocks
the Sec ratio ns,'Purifiesthe
Blood and removes all Im-
purities from a 'Pimple to
theworst Scrofulous Sore.
CURES
DYSPEPS IA. BILIOUSNESS.
CONSTIPATION. HEADACHE
SALT RHEUM, SCROFULA.
HEART BURN. SOUR'STOMACH
DIZZINESS. DROPSY.
RHEUMATISM, SKIN DISEASES
How Lost, How Restored
Just published, a new editio of Dr. Culver°
well's Celebrated Essay on he radical cure of
SrtituAmitailaA or incapacity induced by excess or
early inexeetion.
The celelrated author, in this admirable essay,
clearly demonstrates from a thirty years' successful
practice, that the alarming consequences of self.
abuse may be radically eared; pointing out a mode
ot cure at once simple, certain and effectual, by
means of which every sufferer, no matter what his
condition may be, may cure himself cheaply, pr
vate1y and radioally.
tar Thlsleoturoshould be in the hands of every
youth and every man in Cleland.
Sent under seal, in a plain envelope, to any ad
dross, post-paid, on receipt of four cents, or tw
postage tamps. Samples of Malicia free. Addres
THE CULVERWELL MEDICAL CD
41 Ann Street New York
at O.11J3 E)t 453 46881
CURE
Sick Ile adaehe and relieve nU the troubles incl.
dent to a bilious state of the system, such as
Dizziness, Nausea. Drowsiness Distress atter
th
eating. Pain in eSidei,te. tt3hiietheir meat
renaul:able auceesa has been sbowa in curing
SICK
Headache, yet C'Aurina's /arum raven Pitta
are equally valuable in Constipation, curing
and preventing this annoying complaint. while
they also correct all disorders Of the stomach,
stimulate the liver sad regulate the bowels.
Even if they only cured
HEAD
Actio they would be almost pricolew.s to those
who suffer from this distressingcomplaint'
but fortunately their goodness oes not cult
here, and those who once try them will And
these little pills valuable In so many ways that
they will not be willing to do without them.
But after all sick head
ACHE
fs the bane of scatty lives that here is where
we make our great boast. Our pills cure it
while others do not.
CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS are very small
and very easy to take. One or two pills make
a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do
not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action
please all wbo use them. In vials at SS cents;
Ave for 51. Sold everywhere, or sent by matt
CA3TEi. itEDICINE CO., New ?orf.Q
Small it l Small k Small E11'01.
7.'/ZEMA "'S
WORM POWIDE ,Sc
Ase pioened to tato. Contain their and
Purgative. Is a safe, sero, and effectual
`•"Daal+cser o^• west¢ in Children ore' delhg.
SEND 5 ®w, Ignuastraanmtpo[mopoyfaith&
to us, and we will send you by express .C.O.D.,
this elegant watch which you can exaln111%m d
if you do not And
42270EAP1Y W€1A
eTho is difeek, Nervous, Debilitated,
who inhis Folly and Ignorance bas Tri-
fled away this Vi or of Body, T4llnd and
Manhood, causing exhausting drains upon
the Fountains . Idai
9a, Dreadfulof IOreameElio, Vtfeakneseadche, t}
t Idanoryokeohe, Bashfulness in Society,
Pimples upon the Face and all tho Bffeot$
Bailing to Early Deoay, Consumption
r inotinity, Fill laud in our specific No. ss s
sitive Cure. - Yi imparts Youthful
Nor restores the Vital Power in old and
Sting, etrarieheas and invigorates the Bi•a In
hfn d Nory0e, builds np the mnscnlar eysteta
A stops', tato action rho whole physics
eaorgy of the human frame. ' w:- 1 our epecitic
No. 23 the MOO obstinate case can be cured it
three months and recent ones in less than thirtydays. lilt package contain, two weeks tawmeet. o $ . attires Guaranteed. Our ape.
filo No. 2an infallible Cure for en Privatr
IDlee e s no maotter of how long e2ansi
ate��>!~ aGure i Po 5, Toorrontor M83ie t
Co.. Toros o. Ont.
• LADIES ONLY. '41.
FRENCH REGULATION PILLB
far superior to Ergot, Tansy, Peilnyr'oya'
deride. Endorsed•ttpp the •thousand's of lard
who use .them MONTHLY. Never fail. Reil.:.
ppalit, INSURE (REGULARITY, Pleasant ars
Rlreetnal. Price. $2. Toronto Mediate^
Toronto. Ont.
THE
y EXETER.
TIMES
it all and evenmore
11 D0 N0T TAKE IT,
but if perfectly sat -
Ea
isfactorypressAgent , pays. DURthe
SPE IAL CUT PRICE
OF ,35 t
the watch. Suckand a
chang5e to socureako a
reliable timepiece
at such a ridicia
lously low price is
seldom, 1f ever be.
foto, offered. TThi-
is a genuine COLD
FILLED WATCH mado
of 2 plates of Sous
ei%Lf r composi-
tion metalove. It has
solid bow, cap and
crown, hunting
case,beautifullyen.
graved and is dust -
proof. The works
are Waltham style,
richly jewelled, with expansion balance, is
regulated and we warrantit an accurate time.
keeper. Lt is eatable for either a iaay er
wagentlemantoh. .Address A gua,2Oaran. twee.WYAis sent�rwith eaCA,,
ch
T &
Watchmakers, Peterboreug , Ont,
fI I 1 fl $ ®® and a slip of paper the
Ie 611 t a size of your, finger, and
we will send you postpaid this oleganb
ELDORAfl DIAMOND
SOLID nOt.D FILLED RING
These rings are now
worn by ladies and
gentlemen in the best
society, anti havo the
same appearance as a
ring costing $25.00. We
guarantee aperfect fit
and satisfaction.
Address
his W Wyatt & Co.
Teweliers
PeterivIrough, Ont.