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The Exeter Times, 1891-12-17, Page 6
e Safest =Lest powerful alterative is 's carsapar l:la t ronnp end :i5.o benefited by les use. For the ereptivo cases Iteeitliar to -- children nothing else ..- t' i3 so effective as this' reedieine, while its agreed.. �� $.a flavoril«..tC3 it easy to admin. Sete;. "'i'y little toy I:u i lezego scrota. hots ulcers on his 1.12elc and throat from ' hieh kie snarfered terribly. Two pays:tiers clef!. him, but I:e grew cons let eiy 4 Ser their care, mei ette.yeetlyt ".ca 1, w> ::lJ d-te. 1 tea heard of e.Earlintie err,ee effeeteai, by Ayer's seta:elk:, anis: decide:I to have my ite Shortiv after he beget to his re -,.n rt=e, the - ulcera' ecaa- he ling anti. >tternnsnngsever.d s, ::,. wee e -finely ex;e61. $o i$ stealthy end sttattna as cn1 tic' toy „- . Wiliietu . . Deeign4rt, - 'nfay lest, nay sCter kst i lailei!, t«ur erelisolti,neganttihavesere$ n its l.lead anti Testily. We ep• ?ss e e sae remedies ellies +wit+ ennt m_ 3i,u daft , Lt creased in•number =fat VOT,iO, n191,v. Ji, pbtysiw dao e:t„ l:et the se -es censtinneel to natil k a t:v,ruzonths they ant edthoebill'aheedanditreaty.. -e began the use ei Ay er's Ser- e:e a, Ina Yew days a...uteelted o tot' the better vas manifest. The. snored more Healthy eondttinn, wet© grads ally tlireine l, ewe tom:lite ceese'tf alto ;ether. chili! is Iiz c t r r, ire elan fs freeher, eetire keen? than We Lave ob., t€, In a ntl.a."-e-Wea ik X. Origin, 6 Wotan iorlpt la et A.yer's Stirsep.a;i:ta . for ei:zc tc tinea sec et$ abater ewe, r . the 4 r4 -etly l' O. w .ri ib rJ n"� :i '• " .t. il;i" .p. Areareae. no hit w. ,dyer d: C'o,, Lowell, Mese. eezet; tie tem;3,a5. Weene eleateeetce. CE a fe- ms's e pI st(�1{t'i of alli kI:tnds of l t;L:'i.s".tg,e Dyes, constantly on hand. Wiilan'8 Condition Powd- er:+,. the best in the mark - and always . 11'£tllly roc?p. ly prepared at rug Store Exeter C1 LUTZ. Apampbletof'niormation and/ab- stract of the laws, abowing How to Obtain Patents, Caveats, "lrade'; Starks, Ccoerlghts, scat free. /.,ii8, Addicts ?AUNNA !a 00./V 361 Broati tTew York. E ei 5 Sts. 'gum ee o good faiithj us, end we will send you by express, C.U.D. his elegant watch which you eau examine,and if you do not find it all andeven more than we claim for it DD NOT TAKE IT, but if perfectlysat- isfactory, pays the Express Agent OUR SPECIAL CUT PRICE OF $5.35 and take the watch. Such a chance to secure a reliable timepiece at such a ridiou. lowly lout price is seldom, if ever be- fore, offered. rii la is a genuine GOLD FILLED WATCH made of 2 plates Of SMID COLO over composi- tion notal. It bas solid bow, cap and crown, hunting easo,beautifull ., en. graved and is dust - proof. The works are Waltham style,. richly jewelled, with expansion balance, is regulated and we warrantit an accurate time- keeper. it is suitable for either a lady or gentleman. A guarantee is sent with each watch. Add res GEO.PeeerbW, Wh 'ATT & CO., Wach SENDB p �a r , and a slip of paper the M.itfs US Cftls�Usiseofyourfinger,and we will send yore postpaid this elegant ,,f*='; ELDORADO DIAMOND . a SOLID COLD FILLED RING These rine are now worn by ladles and, gentlemen irk the Wiest society, and have the same appearanee ae a ring costing $26.00. We and! satisfaction eet St Address Ceo, W, Wyatt Pea Co. Jewellers Peterborough,Ont. FaMIN; DANA. ictures sot enstres& Arnow; the Taassinu re sautry. Certainly the authenticated scenes of d1$tmes and death are autiieieutly dreadful I to warrant belief in anything tliat may bo told. At Ratchino, in Orenburg, a widow, having nothing to give her three children, went to beg at the next village, where they 4 gave ve hei somebr ad and cabbage. Hurry- ilea. urr . ilea. back, she found her little ones all dead. A poet-mortemexamination showed that i their stomachs contained nothing but rags asd earth. At E:cateiinburg a woman cop - lewd to her priest that she wished to kill' her four children to save then froin such a lingeriegeleath, The priest went with her, taking some bread, but it zeas too late. The Children devoured the food, -but all died shortly afterward. In ]?crni most of aE va* raters e.om I Est:I;TEn, t lint in a few houses the inhabitants still linger. " Why are you tarrying limn when all your neighbors lease gene :' a co: res - i pondent asked. •` 'We are waiting for our LI cl:iltlren to die. It will be soon. Then we, tee, will go," was the reply. In I iaznn ItearPy halt the peop a have flied, and the rest are hurrying away. The Government gives them free transportation on the rail- I, reads, packing them mato cattle•cars as l' closely as they eau stand. A graphic pteti re of alis;ress is given i4 the letter of au estate in Temloll' to his -e1u- ployee; " Of the 40 roult'Vs eou sent rue," he ssys, "I have already distributed more then ttt rotila es to the tweet nect'ssitons and etarving. On receipt of the money, T start- ed for the village of M—to visit two who had already been more than a week without bread, and l e(+nvinced myself per - tonally et ibis by searching their horses. I found uotbing but a mad piece of bread, made of millet bran. I Memel not have recit- nizee it as bread tied net 1 been told so. Int the tinct !mese were two sick persons who did not rise on my enternrg. On my asking €ram what they were sneering, the father answered : "' They arc dying from lanng,er." I bought hint one pood thirty pounds 0f i7 r flour, eiC. a anti.: wheaten .« t at 1 rouble .IU 1. .ria G n 1 verified the condition tf another is Wily. Here were twoper.•eus steal -ring from euu- s!ant vomiting : in a ean I found a little dour and in;a; trouelt earn:: millet frau, with whiehthey ztierel•:eetatrngz,00me "ettr•al'out are the Ball it- hind of easee preparedfrith a hot water. Tiie`e ,rutile 1 "nave one 1 rf fatalities : peivl twenty pattantics of flows`. Both .ataa,.cs rued very z'uwb, saying they must die of l tlen,,;cr, "taut 1 tried! uta cant them, saying flus enured not i e, that the Zereetvo will eon l;elle there, end that r.:Fn there will l:e fartieeme ali;gondtel,plewho\vi:l help them. I tlat n returl:l:tl to the t:gni. " Trio tient day, when they I:new that I I had given lore :,1 to the two f,a.eiliee, there gathcre l rorn/l leiy house a great erowrl of people, who a ret ,t:y i igi'o* ed me to help ti;eiaa, fa) that 1 wee again fu :•:l to go to vie it them in Order to C. prime snyeetf o their. need. I again suet eases of sieicnes frons starvation, and ph-hea out the poorest ST:tll the eel% zee of outsiders awl diet:•ibut- e one Iiaotl twenty pounds of flour. I ex- pleinetl to thein that this offering is from Se. Petersburg. At this all Leglan to prat* end erg, se that 1 nnye if involuntarily Et'Itee INTO Tn-u2.s. There then appeared a13o s::veral orphans, OM wanncn, anti people without kith or kin. They fell on their knees and begged Inc not to ai an'lnla them. All these beggars were from the vilingc of , and some vegrant9, but what could I da:' I took yet another one pood twenty-five pounds of wheat flour, which 1 di:arilauted among them by treughfuls, there were so many of thence I was advieed not togive money—it is all collected in taxes. etc ended my day's work. 1 rte tweed home. In the evening late of that day there came ('austantine S., frons the village of --•-. He fell at my feet, wept and cried, so that everyone in the house burst into tears, I netted him what it was ; he could not answer, Only after some nninutee he began to tell me his need aud hunger. . That lia with his wife and six children, were several days without bread ; they fed on graesmid any rub- bish they could swallow but they are :!ready without any strength, and must soon (lie of starvation. He beg- ged me to give him a piece of bread at once or he would faint. On inquiry from people who knew him we learned that he was eh- soluteiy poor, aud that he was without bread for several days. No one gives alms because all are in sore need. I gave him a pood of flour, null he hastened back to feed hie children, as he said. This complaint of the conduct of theZem- stvoa is only too well-founded. Another well-informed correspondent writes from Samara that the local authorities seem com- pletely to have lost their heads. The Gov- ernor himself is worn out with fatigue under the bombardment of questions, peti- tions and reports with which he is assailed. He himself admits his inability to see how the distress is to be met, The Zemstvos are all behind -band, and the daily demands are enormous. The director of Zemstvos is ill with overwork, and the members are travelling about to try to buy food, This correspondent blames the merchant classes and the koolaks, or village usurers, most severely ; He says : "It is impossible to imagine • we1AT.FIENDS TREY ARE. beginning from the millionaire -merchants of Samara, down to the village koolaks" One of the Samara local papers speaks thus : "Believe me, all the Jews in Poland taken together are a host of angels compared with the icoolahs, who, furthermore, labor under none of the who, which fetter the J ews, but are free to skin the people nutter the aegis of the law. T1u begin bytek ing the peasant's cattle and instrumentg and then seize his land, reducing him absolutely to the condition of a serf. Rich merchants from lioscoiv and Sc. Petersburg are busy, all through the suffer- ing provinces, trading 00 the needs of the starving people, buyirg their goods for a trifle, and temptiug them to spend the pal- try proceeds in strong drink. They buy a team or three good horses for ten dollars, and a sledge or cart for a dollar. • They even buy the clothes which the people are PURE POWDERED 100 1 FOREST, SSTE ORCEST, HEST. eWatr3Sia doheotoSof nindy gWor,1flatoctn� For making uses. Acan equate 2OpoundsSal Soda.. Sold by AUI Grocers end Druggists. ;$lbw -rXXaTa.E. r'S'w 'X'csroaaa-s,. {rearing. But per ,"s" the worst of ail isl A 5WIM IN SALT I+A.gi, their purchase of women's Bair. Under any circumstances, it would be hard for women to have to sell the hair from their heads to buy food, In Russia, however, it is peculi- arly degrading ; for here, for a {roman, especially a young one, to have her hair cropped, is a public announcement that she has sacrificed her virtue. Yet, under the dire necessity of starvation, thousands of young womenare accepting nng 'mos .LUUt oonse43IT, and thus subjeeting themselves to all the. insults already i snit that trail follow. zv, s alae d lean f lc �, intimated, the igen who are thus enriching themselves from the poverty of their fellows, go about with carts laden with strongdrink. %s soon as they have boughta man's cattle,' a•r-s' a r, ..a,' or f . « stair clot o woman's s !lane e hs w they entice their victims to come and spend' the money for drink, "i'odki is good,' they say ; "• it is made from grain, and is food arid, drink and fuel alliin one." The Government's action over the prohih. itiou of exports is altogether inexplicable. The prohibition is to: be extended to millet and buckwheat, it is said. Yet the total export of these is less than one -]calf per cent of the total export of toed stuffs, while wheat, oats, barley, and maize are allowed to go out of the country in enormous duan- titie.." " The Moscow Ga::ette" states that from January 1 to September 21, this year, 2t4,995,000 peods of breadstuttb, as against t_' 5,e11:3,Ofnl Foods for the same period of last year, have been exported. A report is also extant that the Goverumeut• will prohibit the export of oats, bailey at;tl Imoire, but no definite tieeisien Inas as yet been taken by the Ministry. In tile event of such prohibition Lein, put into tort.°, no notice well lie given. The twenty days' eventing given of the embargo placed on the rye exports in a great measure nuilitie(Ithe ohject of that mistake which it ltas very much regretted, - - Keening the Soil.Perti1e, ,A correepandeut of the . orl,•tn(tal and Frtrn;fr very pointedly writes on this sub - feet that sell eziiaustion takes plate after a few years of cultivation. To know the true cause may enable the agriculturist to apply elle true remedy. If it is found that the ruler who depletes soils by his work does not work according to rho methods of nature in producing natural growths it will Ise seen that the farmer and not nature is at feint. What are nature's re tteele itt the production of vast `:amber forests? The shade of the fares* .and the riots peuctrat• ing the earth peel: erre moisure and, mellow. t:CfS of the surfaee roil, tuft, the rains and melting snows are readily ant, arhed and carried deep dower foto the earth and there stored for Me use et growing forests when needed. With the moisture in stored plant foot!, which. is carried down with it, an frith moisture and font1ty are brought to the surface by the c;tpillry action of the earth. The mornre et the surusee coil re plates the flow of fertili"y a oat prevents its escape : ley ce apnration, holding both plant food and moisture at the snrfaee until taken up and used by growing plants. This Is the philosophy of nature's methods in the prodnetiou of vast winter forests: Does the cultivator premed ui tnis =win: Du the prevailing methods secure a mOiat and mellow condition of soil during the en- tire Crop reason of crop growth t Are the rains and the moisture of snows readily ab- sorbed into the earth and there stored for theme of plants,oris the greater part of the moisture of rains and snows Ion to the crop by evaporation before it has time to pass into the depths of the earth'? Does not the prevailing system of shallow plow- ing allow the soil soon to dry out, and in that condition will the moisture of rains and snows run into earth readily? Shallow plowing and depletion of soils go together, and is it not evident that •hallotr• culture of the sail fails to utilize the mois- ture that conies doom, and also fails to regulate the flow of moisture and fertility Wilicii is attracted to the surface from greater depths in the earth by capillary attraction? Deep plowing each mum and subsoil plowing once in every fourth or fifth season, to break up aud: loeeen the subsoil to the depth of 20 inches or two feet will enable the soil lo absorb the moisture of rains and snows before it has time to pass off by evaporation, The moisture carries with it the elements of plant food which are deposited deep down in the earth to be brought up for the use of plants, when needed, by capillary attraction, established for this very purpose. Another illustration of nature's methods of producing growth without depletion of soil is the production of grass crops. In fact grass crops are resorted to to restore lost fertility. While it may be true that some grasses do not of themselves restore fertility, yet the soil becomes fertile while growing grass because the soil at the surface is kept moist and mellow by the shade of tine grass, and fertility is brought from great depths in the earth by capillary attraction. A. moist and mellow condition of the surface soil economizes moisture and utilizes fertil- ity from all the sources of supply, both in the surface soil and that deposited deep down in the earth and diffused in that great reservoir of fertility—the air. The Affections: There is a passage in the writings of Rousseau which is as true to human nature as it is beautiful in expression. " Were I in a desert," he writes, " I would find out wherewith iu it to call forth my affections. If I could do no better, 1 wouldfasten them on some sweet myrtle, on some rnelancholy. cypress, winch I would court for their shade and greet kindly for their protection. I world write my name upon them, and de Blare that they were the sweetest trees throughout the desert. If their Ieaves withered, I would teach myself to mourn ; and,when the flourished, T would rejoice in teir increase." Such is the abslute necessity which exists lit the human heart of having something to love. Unless the affections have an object, life itself becomes joyless and. insipid. The affections have this peculiarity, that they are not so much the means of happiness as their exercise is happiness itself ; and, if they have no object, the happiness derived from our other powers is cut off. • • The manufacture of false teeth for horses is a new industry recently started in Pat is. Judging from what a set of pretty false teeth will do to a human being, we will stip- pose that they will make a horse .laugh. — Detroit Free Press. A good story is told of an English tourist who, accompanied by two ladies, visited a Parisian restaurant. He volunteered to choose the dishes. Taking the menu from the waiter, he held it longenougb to convey the impresiiou that he was a profound lin- guist and had readthe contents through ; then,to strengthen the deceAtion,he pointed, with the air of one who had made up his mind on two items far down the list, and, to begin with, ordered the. " garsong" to supply the party with them. His chagrin and the merry glances of his friends may be imagined when the waiter, with n nper• turbable gravity, placed on the table three finger bowls filled with rose-water and ,a' wine -glass containing toothpicks 1 while the Water Is `'erg i;7aoyaut, the lie'Ley Bath Ilan Its ntscowrorts. During a visit to Salt Lake I 'nenjoyed" a swim on a summer afternoon, making the trip from town to Lake Point, the Coney island of the region, on an excursion train in compmey with ainunber of Morgans, say s Magazine, a writer itt C*oldtltn•aite s .3acazino, Tho little railroad runs through a diversified track, in which garden, farm, rocky uplift, i.. and mud plain are oddly jnmb.e..l--the plain being spotted with tufts of pale and brist- ling sage brush that grows on the rocky mountain country where nothing' else will. 'Mere is a bathing pavilion at Lake Point, with fresh water tants, in which zo rime one's self after the bath, 'but I cicetcd to try a swim without speetetors ; so, walking southward al'ng the shore for a mile or so, I found a place where the raunded rocks that formed the semblance of a beach ere e not too numerous. It was a trifle difficult to keep a steedy footing in the water, and at first I attributed this to inequelaties on the to ttom, nut on getting where it was deeper I found thatnny legs had a dispOsitien to Doane to the top, and it was apparent• that the difficulty of wailing across arose from the buoyancy that the body has in so dense a medium as this brine. When I had waded out so far that the water canne up to my :leek I sealed a bowlder and diived. As it is my custom to open my eyes under water, I did so as soon as I was minty, immersed. In an instant it seemed its if vittiol had been poured into them. Springing to en upright position as soon as possible, 1 tried to get the salt out of them, but the more I rubbed the more it seemed toget in. Nature re- lieved tete smart after awhile lay pouring through the tear.ducts enough of a milder solution of salt to clear the irritated cornea, of the fluid, and I tool;; pains not to let the wateriuto my eyeeagein, After that the huh was more enjoyable, if only as a new experience. There was a sin alar and unaccustomed sense of li;ht- oe s. and it wee not difficult to float high out of water, either in a reclining or a sit- ting c swim- mer batherr\ posture, 4e, yet aIto is not a mer will fare as badly here as anywhere, for the head being heavier than the lower extremities, has a, tendency to tiitlz, unless one has the skill to ketp it abovetilc surface, To a swimmer there is no esp ial danger, milers be is cllotted. by the braze or blinded and confused by it. To float re.luires less exertion than in the sea, a slight motion of the hands being stn"accent to keep the bedy balance! eveuly ,for oue depends less for his buoyancy on breathiug titan in ocean water. On striking out to swine I was surpri"ed at a spineitiii ; noire behind flee and discovered that it. was matte by any "Ami feet, for I was to high out of water that they went into the air at every etrolie, This li&tt:neee at Olin end of the Ealy tenels as I have tali, to deprasn tl c other, but to no who is used to eveutuning this is a trifle. One emerging from the lake I found that every melt of my. shin {sus epark• hng with stilt erystals, and though I rubbed and scraped they were not so tasily to be got rid of. These crystals were elm rp enough to create dt.ertntfort and to suggest an un - dire intimaey with thistles. 31y hair was full of them, end they even adhered to my elotlning, eo that a very vigorous shaking of raiment and a fresh -water bath were in order on reaching my hotel. When. I told the people in town of my swim and the manner of it I was laughed at aud iuferrned that it was not the correct thing to sw'ini except at a bathing pavilion, where one has fresh water to shower away the salt that sticks to hint. Salt lake is by no means a saturated so- lution of salt, yet it is five or six times as rich in salts as the ocean, and nearly as strong as the Dead sea. In summer it con- tains between 20 and''i per cent. of salt, the saturation pont not being reached un- til the nen farms a little over a third of the aiquid. There aro all through the great basin numerous saline kites and ponds, but none of the size and importance of this in Utah. Not infrequently they are shallow and entirely disappear during the dryness and heats of summer, leaving to mark their sites only a stretehofsome acres—or it may be miles—of clay and mud, entirely covered with salt. Center of the Land Hemisphere . The city of London is put down by geo- graphers as the center of the land hemis- phere. In other words, a radius of about 0,000 miles on the curved surface of the earth, with London as as a center, would describe a circumference inolosing more land than any G,000 -mile circle that could be drawn from any other city in the world. lempoppeowelopp The Old Love. r Oh, act tate old love wake again, It only sleeping lies; Oh. let tht+ old light break again From out a our dusky eyes. Dear locant, l've wan(lerett lonely To many a haven fair, And found them sualees only .Because you were not there! Oh, let us haste to say again Out ple lges fond and low. . 4.nel let us feel love'+; dewy again Within ourbosomstow, Sweetheart, do you not !tiel it, The ten(lerneee of youth! Tom.v0 9your :;yes roved art • And tte, are (,ot'a own. truth! 011. . Qlr. let your dear head rest again Upon my heart at last, And {{!cell tbo rp.I'v a ti no T. i s\vi'3 t tlo k- iho s ets s ed aitin True l-t.>tr;rrcofnliashes Aiv wet. but not with pain. For from your eyes tit•, a Clashes Iotas sunlight through its rain! Oh. let the old love we a again, It nevee elto i"al iravt slept ; Come, let my 1,'d. arms t 7.o again The coy tact'' hou:d have kept. Fond Heart. no More of weeping, No more the past recap. For we aro in Loves keeping, and love is an in all! -,Chicago Herald. At To dare is great. To bear is greeter. Bravery we share with the brines ; fortitude with the saints. woe... sons ml; 14 la rot RENttlei 141 "aIAT 9 Ne w til ` a, Sciatica, t1-urnba m Backache � f 9 Headache, ache, Toothache, b .�l�,l�he, Sore Thi oat, Frost Bates, 8prci ?s, Bruises, El€,3P'l'9s. Etc. Sold lee Drueelete and !Dealers everywhere. petty teem, bettle. Directions in 11 l.attt ,gees. "a H� CHARt.Ee+ Fie KOGEt.Eil Gt>., tfattimore, fie Gaaadiari argi Tovonto, Oat,. For the Wonderful Success of Hold'^.7 Sarsaparilla! the Most Popular and Most Sot Extensively y � Medicine in America. Hood's Sarsaparilla possesses greet znCdicira,1 merit, which it pC°ith'?V dt monstrates when fairly- tried. It is most economical, being the It only medicine of which ""too Doses One Dollar" can truly be said. +rr, It is prepared by a Combination, Proportion and P s. a races I, ec,ll::ir to Itself, unknown to other preparations, and by which all the medicinal value of the various inegraients is secured. A It effects remarl; dile cures where c'i'" other medicines have utterly failed to .to any good whatever. It is a modern medicine, originated by experienced pharmacists, and still carefully prepared tinder their per- conal supervision. VIt is clean, clear „'end beautiful in appearance, pleasant to take, and 1 always al equal strength. ety It has proven itself to be positivel•" • the best remedy for scrofula and all blcod disorders, and the best tonic for that tired feeling, loss of appetite and general debility. • It is unequalled for curing dyspepsia, sick headache, biliousness, catarrh, rin:umalism arm all diseases of the kid - lays and liver. It has a good name at home, there being more of Hood's Sarsaparilla sold in Lowell, Mass., where it is made, than of all other sarsaparillas and blood purifiers combined. ft Its advertising is unique, original, ' J 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, end 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, d's " When a roan bends his energies to a task his aim is not necessarily a crook ed ogre."—[Yonkers Gazette. Whatever is unjust can never be in any true 'sense necessary, and the sacrifice of principles to circumstances will, in every. sense, and in all cases, be found as unwise as it is unworthy.—Sir Walter Scott. " Miss Mary is a long time coming down, ' said the youth to the servant, after waiting sometime for the young lady's appearance. " Perhaps," he added, with a laugh, " she is making up her mind whether to see me or not." ".No." said the servant, with an icy smile—" it isn't her mind she is making up. An anecdote which has been told of Mr. Parnell in his ericketing days well iilustrat. es some other sides of the man by showing his readiness to take an advantage, and the na- tive and self-will of his charac- ter.stubbornessw ac - ter. " Before Mr. Parnell entered politics he was pretty well known (wrote ' An Ulst- er Loyalist' some years ago) in the province of Leinster ht. the commendable character of a cricketer. He was captain of the Wick- low eleven, and in those days a very ardent cricketer. We considered him ill-tempered and a little hard in his conduct of that pastime. For example, when the next bat was not up to time, Mr. Parnell as captain of the fielders, used to claim a wicket. Of course he was within his right in doing so but his doing it was anything but relished in a country where the game is never played on the assumption that this rule will be enforced. In order to win. a victory he did not hesitate to take advantage of the strict letter of the law. On one occasion a match was arranged between the Wicklow team and an eleven of the Phcenix elub, to be played on the ground of the latter in the Phenix Park. Mr. Parnell's men, with great trouble andincouvenience, many of them having to take long drives early in the morning, assembled on the ground. A dis- pute occurred between:Mr Parnell and the captain of the Phenix team. The Wicklow men wished their own captain to give in and let the match proceed. Mr,' Parnell was stubborn and rather than give up his point marched his ' growling eleven back. This must have been a pleasant party so re-: amuse- ; their expected turning withoute p day's went ; but the captain didnot care." In latter years Mr. Parnell was to use the Irish party as he used the Wicklow eleven, SarsaDarilia INTERCOLONI. L1 RAIL V V AY OF CANADA, Thndtroetroll to tette; oenthe West and, ale peiutsou the Lower fit. enwreuee anal !curio des elution ',Provinee of tjuehec; also for New Ilruaisv i„h,Nova Scotia, Pr m^n Nil ward ('•ape',n; etouEulaudv,ancitiewfoundlandaud St. Pierre. I.xptesC trains leave 'goat realaudUUttlfax datl;r iStuntays extleutedl and run through withouteltan a between theca poiuttiu M9 louts aud .gin miuttrot:. Tete through exercise train ears of the In- tercol0uiel ti,tilway are brithin:iet.fhtst lavotoetli"•ity nndheatel by steam :rain the, locomotive, thus - r,t:w t'y increasing. the caul tart -u(t s•t(ety tit travolhrs. Now and t•le.gant tnefot .leeptng and day cars ere run onthri n :?i eaipreeatrsine. 1 dirt -Fri ld'9�et! , j, all. iL ti Cn tiz n d n � 1 Pt:sserier Route. PssSenr.,rsf„r'areateritaiuo, tato eonti- neat ant leaving aloa:t' cal au b':itlayn I•'hugs wall .:, a nty:aril anatltteemer at !halitus en lat.i Gl'iy. bteatto-pion ofr titt,.er-.isn1ireett".itotho cope-iorfaen! t tela:" r :l nn,:1b.'i mute for ti a transt'(a t of ndrt r e.:§1 t one a1 eaereba n- dfae n t;. udctl "art:cal' tlI li t PI ninr -t'— COe lerrfdexudint.ci al,sa rr &*;'.::e .t. t,:.;rain andurcduaef tt,',da'dit,rt.ea: tr,d,,.annaar, art. 1"ael.otsntaybe obt.'Wed and iuf,nci tt^:en about the route• a loo (rAdd anit n c:tear rant 000 a''lileertion to 1`i SVI:al.lfa li^rl.lh, 14eetertFreiNlit tCL"a.9enge Ieii'ntt osueeezerdourealocli: `goak at. i.'urautp 11 POTTI'r(ilv,l1, (.nice 40?crint eudent. Itailway tlsil e,tituu roue ;nail Jim 1st 91 L. I,,. , v r. ,.. to tt. rue Cho : ,�:5 to dtdntfP,.e rho, , cl .,,a,=", a 0,01 .t,,,7r..o 1 r t;,Lo-( cele 1411 "T.t 11 jun all 7,urtuq,t.,,,r., t.. nu. ere to nnar.11;. An 1.11r,,. l.r r,, it 01 (.;r wiry ma.hcr r r ,tn,t „ , r r 12110bongo, 6 A,9Y L )LO,, 1101111d.8it, MAIM. aR Cures Burns. Cuts, Piles in their wor4 form Swellings, Itlrysipelas, Intlammattou, From Bites, Chapped Hands and all Skin Diseases. @FIRSTS PAIN EXYESM] I1ATOR -CU2IES- Lumlage. Sciatica Rheumatism. Xeuralgi '1othaeho, Pains in everrform. By all dealers. Wholesale by F. F.Dally S: 'Emu] Sold by ail druggists. 51; sixior$5. Preparedoniy by O. i. noon & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Masa. 00 Doses One Dollar A r' Hypophosphit THE OF A YLX TER TIMES. rS BY USING ®�® Morse's indier Roof PP No other easy to tak It does not spoil. It is always sw The most sensit can retain it. CURES Scrofulous and Wasting Disea Chronic Coug Loss of A Mental and Nervous Prostration. • General DMi�ilit Beware of all imitations. As "the D. & I.." Emulsion, and ref all others. PRICE 500. AND $1- PEj BOTTLE. THEY are the Remedy ` the bounteous hand of nature ; provided for all diseases arising IMPURE BLOOD, ••••• oy,�,��y' g� 9 aro r sni- euro +los sncl,r- N' "e F' S ®U0rfl bs, i0E.9ID1Acltlwi, 1 INsslGEWgttoliT, JLAVbea't e COMPLAINT,1)IDYr k'izx . 1 liiS FOR SALE 8Y ALL DEALERS r W ?. iFE9' a R. �y , t� pp�� 1'r� .d9��®�t4ry eROCKVILLE, cu. Momeiaoowa, NJ, A SURE CONE L on OUJOUSNESep:, CONSTIPATION, DIGESTION, ZZINESS, 5101 EADACHE,, AIr4DISEASES OF THE TOSIAGH, LIVAND' BOWELS. HEY ARE MILD,THDROUGHAND PROMPT ACTION, AND FORM A VAIj AuLE AID DURDOCA 31.00D {SITTERS aN THE F,ATnuNr'AVD CUM-, or' GHNONIC �'!D 0Ot.Tt»A'CE DiS pi,,'l' ...,,t...,. ,....,,.-,,,��.,...s�.