HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1893-1-12, Page 6(The One Yovenriltlien Who Danced.
TherOwas a dearth of revelry at Denda4.by-
t110-844,,
tale ()Mies fro ra a boarder there who wide-
. pered torn°.
A throng of bettutiftil ygung girls swarmed
over the oue hotel/
There was Nate. and WM, Maud and Kan
Corinna. Blanehe and Belle.
They were tasemating creatures, to ; all siaes
and all styles,
Without au eligible man for fully seven miles.
There was ono old orusty baohelor, WO Yokels
and a
Bat none of them were dancers, anti the girls
went nearly inad,
Ono 'slay a change came o'er the scene, for
GeorgePeedetmis 13rown
Oarne riding oil a bleYele directly in froin
town,
Re was single, lee was ruddy, he was gallant,
he Was gay, .
AnaLee airted.wien the ladies in a most de-
lightful way.
Lawn tennis, boating, crieket, oh ! he gladly
went the rounds,
He stood, they tell me, six feet high, au(l.
weighed two hundred pounds.
They vowed him simply perfect, quite a crea-
ture without faults,
Then, one unlucky evening, they discovered he
_ could. waltz!
So he hal to wah i with Cora, and he had to
waltz with May,
And he kept it up with Bella in a most fatigu-
iug way.
When utterly exhausted by the exercise and
He was seized upon by Isabel, who whirled him
off his Met.
And they kept it up till midnight, did. these
Pitiless Young scamps,
Till:the landlord with a protest Carn0 and blew
out all the lamps.
• Then they watzed our hero through the hall
and waltzed him up the stair,
• Then waltzed him to his bedreem door and
sadly left hira there.
At breakfast all his limbs were sore, his back
was full of pain •
But when the morning meal was o'er they
started in again,
Far down the wide veranda, till the walta
became a hop,
And he staggered with the exercise, but didn't
• dare to stop.
Begging, praying and protesting, they wore
Till hRoll9sanaklilaideleil.ss'paper, and he couldn't
eat his meal,.
He danoed upon the windows and beneath the
lilacsbloom,
Then he (lanced with. iadignation when alone
ithin his room.
They kept it up a week or more with wild and
thoughtless glee,
Till Mr. George Pendennis Brown became a
sight to see;
His ruddy cheeks had disappeared ; his face
• Was gaunt and. pale •,
His nobby coats and waistcoats hung upon him
like a reit,
And when he did collapse at last, he uttered
awful screams,
And the doctors carne and told them he was
danciag in his dreams.
He came there on a bicycle, but,' ah—so runs
the tale--
He:left there in hn ambulance that went to
Bloomingdale !
The Childhood of the Heart.
Oh. the rosy days of childhood,
How blissfully they sped.
When not a charm had vanished,
Ani not a wonder fled!
The year was full ot promise then,
The tongue was full of praise—
Bat I think the cup is sweeter now
Than in the childish days.
Oh, the laughing world of childhood,
Of ignoranne and ease
The lightest touch could. quicken,
And the least pleasure please;
Yet the upward paths are dearer,
With all the thorns they bear,
Than a garden of a hundred flowers
When Ignorance is there
Oh, the beating heart, of childhood—
That little hear° ot enoW,
That doubt has never entered,
Nor sorrew 11,,s brought low !
Trust me, not all the rapture
Its eager life can span
Can shadow forth the perfect love
'Phat warms the breast of man.
—Dora Read Goodale in Harper's Week iv
• Jay Gould.]
To what base uses may we not returnallo-
ratio.--Efamlet.
Jay Gould is dead—it's little odds,
. p was but little worth,
His shekels were his household gods,
They did no good on earth;
He may have lived with good intent,
• But all his life has been misspent.
No widow's thanks or orphan's prayers
• Will help him up the "golden stairs."
His tombstone cannot truly say,
A worthy mantas passed away.
Millions he owned. tohelp mankind,
But all! his gold was not refined.
Ye who are wealthy try to be
A blessing to posterity-,
Then when your earthly course is run
The Lord above Will say .' Well done."
• A.H.W.
GRANNY'S UNBOLTED DOOR,
A Story of Christmas
Eve,.
TIEN Little Ethel
Benson was invited to
spend Christmas with
her grandparents and
her two mairlen aunts
at the old horneetead it
the Canadian city where
Grandpapa Field had
spent most of his life,
her mother hesitated
before she accepte4 the
inviton for little
"Golden Looks," as
Ethel Was nioknamed•
The horneetead was a
large, lonely house. Grandpa and Grandma
Field were " up in years," while Aunt
Kate and Anat Esther were quite unused to
children,. After due cowideration, how-
ever, Ethel was sent, as requested, to :spend
the holidays, and al ter a long, tiresome
journey arrived safely, to be welcomed
warmly by the dearest old grandpape, and
granny in the world, as Ethel wrote and
told her mother, after muoh labor with pen
and ink, and. many blots and scratchee.
4 47.Z.`41,W1.!
Wasn't Too Sudden.
One winter day, at eventide,
Tont sat, with Julia at his side,
And begged her, o'er and o'er, to say
How soon should be the wedding day.
The maiden coyly hung her head.
And so her suitor softly said.
• As to his own she raised her eyes,
Why, Tom? yon,take me by surprise 1"
"'Tis February now, my dear,
The stormy March is very near;
• Don't keep a fellow waiting, pray I
• Say, Julia, shan't it be in—May ?''
• Miss Julia deeply blushed., of course,
And down the lovely eyelids fell,
"Why, Tom)." she said, that's nine weeks off?
And—wouldn't April do as well 1"
The St. Nicholas (Revised).
Dear old St. Nicholas,
Lean your ear this way,
• Please do tell to every soul
What I'm going to say.
• Christmas eve is coming soon,
Now, you dear old mon,
I'll tell you what to bring to me,
Tall you if lean.
Li the times of yesterday.
So many years ago,
• You must well remember it,
• All had more friend than foe.
Each one owned his cozy nest
• And tilled the soil around,
Nor wasted time; the precious gem,
• Which lost can ne'er be found.
Saints lived. and flourished in the land
And many a wonder wrought.
• There was less sorrow on the earth,
The air with jay was fraught.
Chooee for me, dear Santa Claus,
Which ones you think are right,
• Hoping you a joyous time
I'll wish you a glad good night.
At a Rink.
Round and round, and to and fro
• At arink,
Pretty girls, with cheeks that glow
Rosy pink,
Graceful, gleeful, gliding, go,
• While they link
Arms together. like the flow
Past its brink
Ota• river's eddy --so
Duffers think
They eau glide. See one start slow,
• Shyly shrink,
Fearful lest his end be woe.
Sheepish slink,
Skates on unaccustomed toe
Strangely clink,
Hat and thirsty he will grow,
Long for drink'
.A.11 around amusement sla'ovv,
Laugh end wink,
But they look as black as crow,
Or ati ink,
If he falba against theta. Oh,
In a twink,
On the floor, riot soft but lovr,
See him sink I
While he murmurs gently, "Blow
This (Ad rink I" —Punc74.
"Mother, I think we had better bolt the
hall door to -night. There are so many burg -
lam about. It is not safe to leave it merely
latched," said Aunt Kate. They were all
sitting around a bright fire in the library.
Granny, Aunt Kate, Aunt Esther and
Golden Locks.' It was Christmas Eve.
Little Ethel looked up quickly froat the
haseook where she was pitting at Granny's
feet.
" Burglars, Auntie Kate --what are burg-
lars ?"
"Why bad mon, dearies who wear black
masks, and have revolvers in their pockets,
and steal everybody's money and silver."
• " Oh 1 Kate 1" exclaimed Aunt Esther ;
"You will frighten the child. Why you
make her nervous, even."
• "No hard matter to alarm you, Esther,
but really it is not safe to leave the door un-
bolted."
Granny arose slowly from the great arm
chair by the fireside. Granny was thin and
spare ; her face—such a dear patient fele—
wore a look of sadness that Ethel had not
seen in it before; so she laid a trembling
hand on Aunt Kate's shoulder, and said, in
her soft, gentle voice:
"Kato, do not ask me to bol the door
to -night. What if my boy should come
home? What if he should find the door
closed to hirn? We might not hear him
knock, Kate."
"But it is ten years to -night, mother,
since Arthur went away."
" Aye ; and oan I forget it ? I have
counted the days'the months, the years.
Do not ask me to bolt the door, dear; he
might—yes, might—oome back to -night."
So granny went to rest and left the great
hall door unbolted—only the latch, to which
her long -absent boy had the key, protecting
the inmates from a raid by the burglars who
were said to be busy in the neighborhood.
" Aunt Esther," said Ethel, as she :slowly
undressed for bed, taking a long time in the
process ; "why does granny always leave
the door unbolted?"
"Little girls should not ask too many
questions, 'Golden Locks."
"Please Aunt Esther tell me. Did
granny have a little boy who went away?"
"Well yes; long ago. He went away to
be a sailor in a great ship, and we think—
all but your granny—that he was drowned
at sea ; but granny thinks he will come back
some day."
"Do you think he will come back
auntie ?"
"No dear; but do not talk about your
Uncle Arthur—that was his name—talk of
something cheerful—that makes me feel
sad."
"Well let's see—do you think if the burg-
lar comes he will steal the things that
Santa Claus puts in my stocking? You
know I hung it up in liberry—the liberry is
very near the hall door, auutie—had I
better go and get the stocking and hang it
in a sate place??
"Dear me child ! What ideas come into
your silly little head," replied Aunt
Esther kissing Ethel good -night, as she
• tucked her into bed, •
" Please auntie, tell me what you would
do if the burglar got into the house—if you
saw him ?"
"Well," said Aunt Esther, who was very
timid and easily alarmed, "1 think I
would rush down stairs, open the hall win-
dow wide, and sound the great gong—that
would bring the neighbors.'
"Would you really do that ?"
"Most certainly," replied Esther, with a
brave voice. "It would be the very best
thing to do."
"11 would be a very brave thing to do,
auntie,but someways I think it would be a
very 'frightening ' thing to do, 'spec:Lally if
it was very dark."
" Golden Locke" fell fast asleep to
dream of Santa. Claus and his gifts—
dreamed as we old folks used te dream long
ago when our stocking hong awaiting the
generosity of some dear Santa Claus, who
bas long ago gone to the land where kind
deeds to the little onee are net forgotten,
where love and kindness shown on earth
add jewels to the brinhtest crown. Then
"Golden Looks" awoke. Bright moon-
light illuminated the room. • At first the
child thought it was morning.She sprang
hastily out of bed. Morn'ing indeed! Why
the moon laughed at her with his great
round face. Then a :sudden thought
siezed " Golden Looks," she would take a
peep—just one peep, at her stocking. But
what if a burglar came ! Ethel hesitated;
then she crept back into bed again. She
lay there and thought very hard. She
wondered if Aunt Esther would go down
stairs if she heard a burglar? Aunt Esther
who seemed afraid if a tramp came begging
at the door. But really she, Ethel, must
have a peep at the stocking. "Who's
afraid t" she said aloud as she slipped out
of bed again and stole out of the door,
into the hall.' When half -way down the
Stains ehe paused. How very strange? There
was' a light in the library 1 "What a
joke 1" whitspered the child to herself. "1
guess •it's Santa Claus. I'll peep in, and
run away again before he see e me."
There he sat—a man who was not Santa
Claus 1 Ethel's heart sank '• he must be thie
burglar 1 It was strangethat he had no
mask on, Pie wail very nicely dressed,
quite as well as grandpa. Could he
possibly be a burglar Ethel stood
spell -bound at the door, gazing at the in-
truder, her roiled filled with wild conjec-
tures, Then, horror of horrors, he turned
and looked al: her I Now for the revolver!
Bub he only said:
"Well, litble Mier? 'Golden leeks,' who
are you ?"
What a very impertinent burglar. Only
Mr, Smith, who cane° twiee it week to see
Aunt Esther, ever called her Mile "Golden
Looks,"
"My name is Ethel, Ethel Esther Ran-
son—thatae my real name."
4g What you? You little "
The burglar advanced towards her with
outstretched arnit, Wild with fright, Ethel
flew towards the stairoatki. Then she re -
meneheted What Aunt gather Baldish° WoeId
do i the berglar came. Poor "GoIdee
Locks " wrong ner hande in deepair Voli she
looned at the greet high windows, She
()Quid never reach np to open, them. At
lesset she could sound the gong, She beet
freetioally oa it with ali her etrength,
Step 1 Could this ins granny coming
down the stair:Arse ? GralnlYs with her
gray heir flying in dieorner--her whele face
lighted up With joy ? "Golden Looks"
CeaSed the wild alarm. Was granny mad
wiytlhaf
g,ri
g
h
It
t :ota
h° h"lbru:}11:dr raitghat111.utoItthise
burglar's: arms.
"You silly little ' Golden LOCIKS,' stop
er
your dear ITnole Arehur oome home Bele and
sounn from over the sea." Se spoke .Aunt
Kate, who found poor Ethel crouched under
the hall table sobbing as if her heart would
lueakh
"lTen Granny isn't killed, and he really
isn't a burglar, and do you think the thinge
Santa Claus brought are all eafe?"
It woe with a. trembling voice that
Grandpa Field proposed a new toast at din-
ner on Christmas day "To Granny's Un-
bolted door." Ethel did not understand
what ib meant, but she tried hard •to look
very wise, and whispered to Aunt Esther
that granny looked so queer, smiling with
her eyes full. of tears, and the burglar—
that is Uncle Arthur—has tears in his eyes
too; why do they cry on Chrietmas day,
auntie?"
Dear little "Golden Looks," some day
she would know that there are such things
as happy tears.
Hail:to the Sam
Shoo men, coal man, clothing man together,
What are your Seamarks on the state or the
. weather t
Why should not the spitib of mortal be proud,
When t� keep !fern ,your elutches we're sone°,
timee alloWed
.The'weether is pleasant, the hole in our shoo
Dent teed to be patched by Ono that is hew.
• The afternoon slin 'saves a bucket of deal,
And eat mulles and uletere are still in their hole
Warning to ratent Medicine Advertisers.
Patent medicine companies which adver-
tise to cure the ordinary ailments of man-
kind, or forfeit a certain sum which they
never expect to pay, should take warning
from a recent decision of the English Court
of Appeal confirming a judgment of Mr.
Justice Lindley ageinst the Carbolic Smoke
Ball Company. The defendants inserted
an advertisement in the newspapers offering
£100 to any person "who contracts the
increasing epidemic influenza, colds, or any
disease caueee by taking oold, after having
used the ball three times daily for two
weeks according to the printed directions
supplied with each ball. The plaintiff
bought a ball, and carried out the metruc-
tions. Three times it day for two weeks did
she use it, but she caught the iofluenza,
nevertheless, and thereupon sued the com-
pany for $500. • The company fought the
case on various pleas, Suck as the abeence of
it regular contract, and so forth, but the
judge held that a published promiee of the
kind in the advertisement was it pledge,
and decided that it must pay. An appeal
was taken, but the higher court has now
come to the same concluoion as the lower
one, and the Carbolic Smoke Company will
have to surrender the money. As this
decision would undoubtedly be followed by
the Canadian courts patent uedicine adver-
tisers in this country should take warning.
—Halifax Herald.
11 Wears a Cid Fish.
A gentleman who was given up to die
with consumption happened to receive a
visit from a friend who recommended
"Miller's Emublion of Cod Liver Oil." • Al-
though hs.ving little faith he bought a
bottle, and before he was through taking
it, found that he was gaining flesh. He
continued taking the Emulsion until he
regained nearly fifty pounds. He is the
heartiest man in town to -day. To com-
memorate his restoration to health he has
had it beautiful golden codfish manufactured,
which he wears as a charm upon his watch
chain. That is pretty good testimony for
"Miller's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil."
Everybody is sounding its praises. In big
bottles, 50c. and $1, at all drug stores.
He lost Nis Dollar.
There is a very mean girl at Owensboro',
Ky. She bet a kiss against a dollar with a
young man that Harrison would be elected.
The young man put his dollar into the
hands of a homely old maid to hold until
after the eleobion, and when he went around
to oollect, the mean girl told him she had
delivered the kiss to the stakeholder, .who
would oheerfully pay it on demand.—Menn
phis Commercial.
ON vu44
That's it good way
to. ?as ' a mediohlas
%/nit We a Pretey
hard sionclition
tinder which to 304_
it Perliapa YoutTO
noticed tbot the Ors
diearo, hit or mint
mediome doesn't at.
•se tempt it. L
`xj The only remedy
of its kind so re•
markable in its effects that it cap be sold on
this plan is Dr. Pierces.; Golden Medical
covery. As a blood -Cleanser, strength -rep
storm, and fiesli-builder, there's nothing like fe,
known to medical science. In everY disesee
where the fault is in the liver or the blood, as
Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Biliousness, and tho
meet stubborn Skin, Scalp, and ncrofulous
affeetions, it is guryrante,ed in every teet to
loonefit or cure, or you baye your money bat*
•
The Fools Not All Dead Vet.
Even a blind man can see that more
clearly than daylight, or else why should
so inany continue to use ill -smelling, oily
and often useless preparations for the
relief of pain, when a preparation just as
cheap, elegant, more powerful, and pene-
trating as Nerviline is can be purchased
from any dealer in medicine? Nerviline
cures instantly aches and pains. Nerviline
is the most efficacious remedy for internal
pains. Nerviline applied externally subdues
the most intense pain almost at once.
• Salem Days Come Again.
To every. sufferer from Catarrh, ne matter
how bad the case or of how long stand-
ing, the proprietors of Dr. Sago's Catarrh
Remedy say this: "If WO can't owe 11,
perfectly and permanently, we'll .pay nos
$500 in cash." Sold by all druggists.
Sad Over -Production of echelare in Ger-
• many.
Germany suffers from an intellectanal over-
produobion. All professions as over-
crowded. It was fondly believed up to our
days that the State had no more important
task than to render the acquirhig of known
edge as easy as possible, and for that pur-
pose to establish many higher schools. But
it was not asked whether there was room
enough for employing men when their ado-
cateon was finished. • Taking, for instance,
the career of Lew in Prussia, we find that
there are 1,851 men who have nob only
peseed through the gymnasium and the uni-
versity, but have alreedy serven the State
gratis for about five years, while the lennual
average demand is one hundred. There are
more than 7,000 examined architects with-
out a fixed employmenb ; ib is the same
with engineers teachers in awake, mate-
matics, eto. 'Ilene unemployed forces are
particularly attracted to the great
capitals, because everyone hopes
that with the many chanties they
offer he will find a gapinto which he
may jump. Men of university training
are, almost without exception, capable only
of intellectual work. If they do not em-
ceed ie their branch they cannot become
tailors or carpenters ; they must take to
pettifogging, giving lessons, copyieg,
writing fax inferior papers, elm There are
lawyers physioians, doctors of philosophy,
among Lose who are regularly relieved by
the Berlin Poor Board. All these men are,
of course, discontented with the present
state of things, and ready to join with those
forces which hold out hOpe of overthrowing
it. Nor are female candidates wanting in
this proletariat ; alt those who give cheap
lemons, write medioore novels for low -class
journals, or work for shops a,t starvation
wages, are swelling the army oi social
revolution.—Dr. Gefibken, in the January
Forum.
It is stated in a despatch from Delaware
that several women have been arrested for
witchcrafb, the p.unishment for which in
I
that State is fine, mprisonment and pillory.
McCollom's Rheumatic Repellant.
If you have suffered with rheumatic
pains in body or limbs for years do not
expect a care by applying liminents or oils.
These have been tried for centuries past
and found useless, Rheumatic Repellant is
the only remedy known that thoroughly
removes the disease and benefits the system.
• Getting Square.
-• Miss Bell (warningly)—Sally, they used
to tell me, when Twits it little girl, that if
I did not leave coffee alone it would make
me foolish.
Sally (who owes her one)—Well, why
didn't you?
Sunday sohool tea.ohers and ministers
wanted as agents for Palestine models.
Invaluable to Bible students. Agents mak-
ing money. Send to Palestine Model Co.,
St. Thomas, Ont., for circulars and terms.
Quite Suitable.
Trustee—Can you assure me that your
plan does violence to all traditions respect-
ing church architecture?
Builder—Most certainly.
Trustee—Then I haven't a doubt it will
be accepted.
The Hour of Need
Is at hand, for with aching corns a prompt,
safe and painless reinedy Is required. Put-
naanns Painless Corn Exbractor exactly fills
the bill. Sure, safe and painless.
Could Have Beaten Him All Hollow.
Every man has an idea that if he hadheen
in Adam's place the earth would itillebe
Garden of Eden.—LondonTil-Bite.
Wife—How do you know that large hats
Were populist as Imig ago as the yeer 1752.
Husband --Because that was the year that
the first theatre was opened in America.
The Public Schools of New Torii City.
The typical New York City primary
school is a hard, unsympathetie, mechanical
drudgery school, it school into which the
light of science has not yet entered. Its
characteristic feature lies in the severity
of its discipline, it discipline of enforced
silence, motionlessness and mental passivity.
The difference found in going from room to
room and from school to school—I have
seen many of them—is a difference in
degree only and not in kind. One teacher
will allow her pupils to move their heads
a little more freely than the standard,
another will allow a little more freedom
to the • shoulder -joints, but • leas free-
dom in moving the head, and the third re-
quires the children to keep bheir hands in
their laps, instead of behind their backs.
The character of the instruction is identical
with that found wherever this false system
of discipline prevails, being of that form
which appeals to the memory alone. The
aim of the teacher is *simply to secure re-
sults by drilling the pupils in the facts pre-
scribed for the grade. The public school
system of New York city affords, therefore,
another example of how, under unwise
management, a trained teacher may be re-
duced to the level of one who has had no
training. —Dr. J. M. Rice, in the .Tanuary
Forum. •
Sunday School t•eaohetee and ministers
wanted as agents for Paleetine Models.
Invaluable tO Bible :decimate. Agents
making money. Send to Palestine Model
Co., St. Thomas, for circulars and terms.
New York Manager—Well, I've got to go
to London again, Agenb—Whab or?
Manager—Got to hunt up SOMO Ame on
senora for out new piece.
TAM 11)01011 Or GIACtnialin
They one to len End by melting voter
mot They ItIOW•
Glaciers: plunge into the sea ia many cold
Qountriee and perish hy drowning, their die -
membered remains iieetieg away ae beep.
But their end ie by diesolution where tee
aunual mean temperature risee considerably
above the freeeiag point. Ab seme certain
level they melt faster than they can flow,
and so terminate. The level, Indeed, is a
fluetueting one, Icelandic glaciers are now
ateadily advenoing ; Sense gladers, Decree-
ing to M. Forel, have undergone during
the preeent century five alternating periods
of diminution and growth. The raeteoro-
logical change:: occasioning and emphasised
by these • Oscillations are NW
slight. Their character, however, ia
unmistakable, and :such as might have
been antioipeted. That is to say,
glacial decrease accompanies it warm and
dry oycle ; glacial increase, one then is
damp and cold. Without oue additional
degree of cold, it is conceivable that a per-
sistently augmented deposit of snow upon
the Gernetenhoraer and the Sehneestock,
although otherwise scarcely perceptible,
might eneble the Rhone glacier to over-
whelm Brie& But this would .be an
exceedingly small step towards the restore -
don of a former state of things, when an ice
stream close upon 250 • miles in length,
starting from the same :source, crossed the
frozen or non-existent Delo of Geneva, and
debouched by Culoz upon Lyons. Without
severe cold as well as heavy precipitation
ice could not possibly have gained so great
;n:rilaotsetncrirenuindoTann is; yi.t wao:suedirntuhitiasnewoausaynopricovea.41
lent over widely separated treats of the
earth'e eurfece —Edinburgh, Review.
vommuvray1FraTzwauslys1.1.3pextuagguturossoortumneno
. • .
C,14.12SES2G9
Wasn't as Represented.
A stubby little man with chin whiskers
bought a ticket at the Academy of Masio
last night and went in to see The For-
esters." ‚At the end of the drab act he
rushed out to the box-office and said to the
treasurer: "I want my money back."
" What's the matter? Isn't the show
satisfactory?"
"Not by it dinged sight it ain'b. I seen
pictur's of Tennyson up all around the
town an' kem over to see him act. Feller
inside tells me Ile ain'e with the show at
all."
Didn't Mention Her Name.
That Oregon girl who the other night
saved a whole train from destruction, and
then went on her way home, not even tell-
ing her name, is a genuine heroine. • The
report says: "510 was on her way home
from a party when she discovered that a rail
hed been removed on a high trestle, and
thereupon she procured a lantern and sig-
nalled the approaching train just in time.
Having done it heroic deed and saved many
travelers from a horrible death, she modestly
went on her way without waiting for
thanke or reward and without mentioning
her name."—Chicago Inter.Ocean.
WHEN suffering from toothache me
Gibbons' Toothache Gum. Sold by all
druggists.
25r 50Qi",;$11-
if
14.
-ARO'
cures Consumption, Coughs, Croup, Sore
Throat. Sold by all Druggists on a Guarantee.
For a Lairs Side, Back or Chest Shiloh's Porous
Planter will give great satisfaction,—za Dents.
•
ill DLO CATAR ri
E M Erf
Have youCatarriof This Remedy will relieve
ViiVafklatO
and Cure you. Price 50cts. This Injector for
its successful treatment, free. Remember,
Shiloh's Remedies ere sold on a guarantee. al
• Langtry is exhibited in wax at a London
museum.
The late Annie Rose was on the stage
when she was three weeks old.
This is the season when little boys mani-
fest a startling ingenuity is finding airholem
in the ponds and skating into them.
Cleveland is to have a $400,000 theatre.
menemesseue
D. R. DEWEY
PUBLISHER OF
FIRST SIDES
FOR
CANADIAN :.WEEKLY
• NEWSPAPERS,
HAMILTON, ONT.
Prices with Oat of delivery in any part
of Cemadl furnished on application,
ALMA COLLEGE;
St. Thomas, Ont.
THREADING CANADIAN COLLEGENHYOUNGWONIEN.
Five Courses to Graduation; 200 Students.
The finest buildings, highest record and largest
attendance of all the Ladies' Colleges.
'Literary Courses, Languages, Music, Fine
Art, Commercial, Science, Eloontion. Sixtye
page Illustrated Catalogue. Address,
PRINGIPAI, MAHN, B. A.
DETEC
alYE166.11,R°A11,0ET,F„... stroaxi:3„ tnik st"Im4
*1. rk aolaVir.En1.4f;?.ic*NNI
4 pa g ade Worth 0.004:
itirge 160-0:4pia.q--ro°kB6061k012,-tvir_ entiereilYseitonudt
D,N,L., YArtatoUr N
A
FtRST-
OLASS
BUSINESS
ISak)47 NO 2 144.9a.„
110T0
Xis replylug to any of these navertisthavolvi
pletkee oleatton ithals ernes,
College in a progressive
city is the Hammon
Business College and
Shorthand. In si but c
James Street South.
Hamilton, Ont. Write
for circular to
SPENCER ds McCUL.
LOUGH, Principals.
indeed is he whose blood is poen
who has lost his appetite and •fils'
flesh and 'seems to be in a rapid de.
cline ; but
A neat stock of BOOTS, SHOES and GENTS
FURNISHING G 0 ()DS, also CUSTOM BOOT
AND StiOtil SHOP. The only CUSTOM
SHOP in the place.
Address, 3011ll W. CURTIS
Whittemore, Mich.
'MOWER SEED AND ROOTED SLIPS
.1: exchanged for old used stamps. 17. S.
Stamp Co., Kalamazoo Mich.
,„
OIEDI
E -Z
We send the ma=i7=1
1
Remedy CALTH OS free, aud a
legal guarantee that CALTlios will
STOP Discharges & E1111004101140.
CUBE Spermetorrhea.Thricocele
and RESTORE Lost Vigor.
Arid.d3 sal inodtiAalVI" Voir
Selo American Agents, Cincinnati, Ohio
tirevseor, fUaSilEs. DiriCeLtiA RR El( s'SoCAATTAARRRRHII HICTUHRCEH.
EAID
THROAT AND NOSE, COLD IN THE HEAD, HAY
FEVER, INFLAMED PALATE ASO TONSILS re-
stores the sense of smell, and drives away the
DULL neHEADACHEsoottieesepArliwenocrekawboynaelelrws.lt.pr
oaivc:
50c. at Druggists. Sent by mail on receipt of
price by addressing
CLARK CHEMICAL 00..1.18 AMAIN ST ,WEST, MOTO,
SIOWRSEWINGMACHINEA
FOR IT- OR SENDA 3 CENA\”
STAMP FOR PARTICULAR
PRICE LIST, SAMPLES,
, COTTON YARN Sec OF OUR
ITTINVMACHINES
REELMAMBRMNMS.
D L jan, 93 Gt ORGE'TOWN. ORD,
Of Pure o iegial CO Liver MI urt
Ilypophosphites
can mako it rich again by restoring appetife,
flesh and rich blood, and so giving him energy
and perfect physical life, euros CoughS, Colds,
Consumption, Scrofula and Bronchitis. IT 15
ALMOST AS PALATABLE AS MILK.
Prepared only by Scott t l3owne, Belleville,
...7444,0•444.4mexteserelopm.
, P r0° ,,..,,
..ttzr ,
A 4.-
„.... ....ma.
•
--,--------0 ea, - - ---,mgr.
, ,4P
Why
RbF;42L210d AryltpTILEEsE$::EZ_
TERNAL OR INVEFiNAL, FISSURES, ULCER:-
ATION, ITCHING on BLEEDING OF met
RE,QTLIall OFL. A 141/G Whoa Or. CLARavs
perfectly invaluable. It Never Fails even ire
PI,., 0INTimItIT givesz: 1.00 n:t'on, iti,bter:Igii:sief:
In the hands of THOLISACIDS it has provede
(lasso of long, standing. .P11105
Sent by mail on receipt of prize by addressing
CLARK IiiIENRCAL 00., 186 ADELAIDE ST .litsgr, BROM,
12.000 Acres of good Farm
MICHIGAN Vohifil6g18,04ntigal,Pbtglit
AlPens & LoonLake Rellroade
• LANDS ab prices, ranging from ga
$5 per acre. These laside are
close to enterprising new towns
FOR ?3'rsrollte,';;Tilta°111!,,00taal,t,n,V,311,
Apply to R. M, PIBEOE, 'Wei
SALE itT35aganiigor6:,11:4.ria
thie paper when writing
CENTIIAL BUSINESS
COLLEGE
Tottowiro, Ont., and STRATFelth,
I.X.TgCSt and best business colleges in Canada.
• Catalogues fie('
SHAW & BLLIOTT, PRINCIPALS.
YOUR DRUGGIST FO
WHITE W. G. TILGHMAN, PALATKA
Da., and learn to have your stock come
the sex desired.
A $15 Watch
for $6.75.
Less than half price.
snii. is positively aux
First Genuine AI! Amer..
'can watch ever offered ag,
such a low figure. Them
are many chem.
watches off5.
represented aa
being Americus
Style.eeware
oanno.steea
are *nig
cheap Swisa
andnot gen.,
nine Amer'''.
canwatche5.
such ma we,
fret Tows
both ease;
and move-
ment being
m da ine
this Calm,
try. ()sad
smade by the
Deb or Watch
assOo.ozsoncr
SliverIne, eada.
C100 having their
guarantee and tradn
mark It
S,
'CA
ca
10. is 11Ioz.
eavy, dust proof, and
0
has extra heavy, cleat
FArmeneerhicerayns,tfauli:lips:cljeLaneledat,hvoastmpoinireoadu.rreabl:etehant finigirdlve:
asongdwillestalviaziseuretatihn,ttusahea.inrfisilovvoermeolenort,tehig.
Gtheenligrai
train, stem wind and stem set, and warranted accurate time,
k
Our Guarantee. If yon become dItt
sa'teisPertiedf owir5with your you. ran reborn it to no,in good
lOurndra,itryymtrtimineoLitbin. soennatyoar, and we will elmerfeltyre,.
haertiOesAp, lily expe.ss, subiecttoo
Your examination, all c a d b us whence&
ien.treitutdell yourmonegny
isel a:be:fly:dm:a the order we send watch bymaileni.
no.wariattiteynasaregrepmentat.ementtm•
the ad.agaM, Address:
iafT yid at rtoehelnanba°t
order to•day. This paper may 5 ^-„t and yon will motel*
,rene R, B. Mowry A Co. Toronto, Cam. ,
°I 1 .
ROOT, Id. C.,158 West Adelaide Street, Toronto.. Gat
Sufferer. Give Express and P050 Ofike addro.ss. Gs.
Valuable treatise and bottle of medicine. sera Free to arrv
VVOUNG LADIES AND GIIINTLEHMN-
1. success is achieved by making a moves
in the right direction. Drop a pasta,
card • to College of CorreSPornlextee.
Toronto. for cire,lar giving full information
regardina reliable mail courses in Shorthand
Bookkeeping, Typewritiog, Penmanship, Com.
mercial Arithmetic. etc.
—DR. TAFT'S—
MAY AT,ENE
Gives a Night's
SweetSleepand
Aso that yo I need um
situpallnightgaspinn
for breath for fear or
sntrocation,Onreoeipb
of name and P.O. address F REE
win rnailTRIAL BOTTLE
Dr. TAFT BROS. MEDt-
orNECo.,11,ochester,N.Y.
Canadian Office, AAal tt ic itc 3 lt ‘170,3
Toronto.
'
AGENTS WANTED
eson•
For oar faeteselling Subscription Beeko
Bibles and Albaxne. Send for (iirocuare
dress Was. Mamas, Publisher, Toroursi.
DOMINION SILVER COMPANY
"IlITE HAVE BEEN INFORMED THAT
• certain pardes, without proper author:,
ity are using our name and. reputation.
rkocure orders for gocl+ of an inferior quality'
Itae i'uibitc are notified that all our good,.
aro stamped with our name so the,t_the Ifl
position can be derected at once.
We wattt several more pushing men to:act
• agents. .
• DOIIIINI0N SILVER COMPANT.
• Toronto, Cast.
CONSUMPTIOEL
COME TO GLADWIN COUNTY, MICHIGAN
..and buy a farm while land is cheap. Goad
soil, well watered, excelienb crape, markein.
near at hand, schools plentiful and good soniet,
Great (importunities for people with 1+,uH,
Land sold on small peritenti dOwn
long time. Ten thousand acne to seleet Irons
For partloplars address
Etsgalsils Melt.
8ta ACRE FARM. 45 ACRES CLEA/itEli
SI house and barn, 34 miles from ret
road, for $1,400.
it,r• ,
WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS,
nest Cough Syrup. 'Pastel; (ROA. use
in ttme Sold by druggists
Valuable t .
144:47:ill
at* 'Sufferer. Giire 'Express end Pest Mee address, T. A, 00#000,Sti);
SLOCUM & CO., 186 Wig Adelaide Street, 'Wade, Ont.
reatise and two bottles of medicine sera Vree
,
4:3011,1039 GALL% OlOten SilitODLIHM59 SoRATOIHRos tot inns?
TirotrivoS 058 latottwmsar 0.24..,,t1440 otitgokly neaddle
Speedy Cure GDARANTESED le' yen else)114.23/I-09A-11845.,.
Sent by Mall oh SeeeliA of Pride 25 apoittot, By V0sitestVdsits ,
TottoSTO. 0,414, Atagits *waited. Everamtlieeek titaTreteWtatti,