HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1893-09-21, Page 3e'er -
BL Una,
1101111E1 : Entire A.M. TO EfORT, P.
MAILe AllitITIC 1
reOM North- 7:1 et :ant. and 4t18 p.m
„ bOnth-10:23 Ran. antrf :12 bell
MelLe eletelt.
G North- I 0 a.m. and 6:45 pen
South natl. arid 3:50 p.m.
s -
WIENei OF TUB SIN.
KERSHAM MANOR, and found both intereating. A young, freak
fether's study. She had no children's books,
but she lutd plenty of poetry and divinity,
......-
The /Mystery surrounding the Spots Which
mind discover' nourishment in the Meet
Periedienely Appear.
alt,120 eel opfhlai 11,7 ewtiiiirie,f eeevdenoiin zrinitpo:i7t,dej I,: e Ina;
Stece every folio of life on the earth is so
netts. Both footle are perhaps equelly de eitirietiirewloyudheipeeonndmensth,_•:unldthteheirui,ub, ewitt
wisteria
In the afternoons alio was expeoted te ! change tn our relation to the ac.1111;
great molar
sew, eenerally in silence, Why Hite Wall melee:, It len, on en smell a matter ail a
not %Rowed to talk st these times Me otten eitatige of u row legrees in the slant tif the
wond•-red in after years ; perhaps became solar rays kluge the champs of the moons,
her mother wanted to think quietly to her. with a varying temperature of 100 degree.,
e ele Ot what del she thiuk whwie she drew what reight he expected front a eonsiderable A i iltithe Vitird Asilt eth 1 in,
her needle so tranquilly in and out of the ! niter cept len or ditniitution of the solar eel. Mr. Socratee 4. eidereedes, 0, Greek iner•
white work in her hands? A glance at her Mc ? Anything then that pertains to the ehard front Smyrna, Aeiti Minor, registered
face would Mow that her mind was not plienomelie ,if the sun must he of the intente elt,t,enti),Iieg, ille°8:line lel`liee', LeiTet::eethredeuetell;',re
very tranquil in those ellent home, if her red moment to the creaturee of the meth,
There was a committee of ministers elm
she keep freeli within us • multitutte of
fingers were. But of what she was ponder. and is it then not eurprieing that the present speaks Englieh fluently. Hie eomplexion
trifling details -the pattern of a hanging, ' provided every preacher with a cure o
ear -keeled appearences on ilia solar face are ie ite dark ae an Arales but he mousses
mule, which he held for one, two, or & ing Mrs. Denison never epoke.
the color of a gown, the strange aspect of ather of course had her own reeourues exciting general intereat among the tlisciples all the cheracteristie beautiee of face, head
a most three years Every August, there( f'
sOrne unismiliar etreet that we traverse. she lied an Bedlam romance in her heatLal of science? It wee in October, 1010, that and phyreque of his rave. He has t raveled
fore, a lerge proportion of the ministers
ones, and once only, in our yeah. Out of
as embraced in Chrint.
the golden mists of childhood, how earls changed place.; indeed they were shuttled about boys and girls with highwounding the oojoo, jgo worm,
endow, first became familiar edit the spots all over the esrth and has done business
with ;nen of all nations. He spent a month
dowdy lontna the pest ! Shall we sigh, in like rt peak of earele; but an invitstion .01adtpli ewer, i,watheed psi" vdeed.earate h jeol.thnedrser, ol ire aeue ,h iweveeriei on tip, on 11 .
The first diecovery must be at the %Todd's Fair for the purpose of me
front a congregetion to a miniater elwae a
ItOMe future state of being, over the same
inmptoity to chow. whet we would rem,. had weight with the committee, and might, great glory io t he &hi. of morosore and credited to the honored name of Galileo. In je°ting nut6jutrY to l'end t° 8°1'114'
art. She twed to think that elle would be December following Fabricius discovered Though well versed in the mechanics' arts
be provisionally excepted, with a fair pros -
Many s time did the woman of whom I Peet that the eppointeneut would be retifled
March a tile year following hoheiner'a es. he did not trust to hie ielignient alone,
low and what forget ? an artist when she grew tip, and live in a flocks on the great himinious dim and in
write strive to recall the circumstances by the adjusting powers. garret. Or she would learn all that could
oeVery wft8 added to the list, Each of the's° hut employed meehauteel celeste to make
which mutithave lecl up to that childieh pee.
Mit the Reverend Junes Denison had
It woe with respect to these invitatione be learned, and be as famoue am Madame
nun worked in entire ignorance of the die- Deaden en ine to be secured, The experts
tests and give opinion. se to the best
@ion of tears which played,as Me afterward of the :subject" that she wished to study, covery of the other, Ind Enriches, being
Daces or Mrs, Somerville. She made a list
devoted a !nth to the work of teatieg all
linguist- ideas. sun en Ines et the World's Fair and o
learned, so important a part, in the Watery
of one dear to her ; but the accelent 11- lemper, not trouble, makes Die misery choosing wine and re jecting others, accord• wthedefilirelt,etdokiiiiinlefilii.t,heloflala,t. at:
h etehreriew(rtihie
self was all that her memory had retained. of moot men's Hem- Jemee Denim* ing to the sound of their names, without i
honors, to which this trinity of names should tiaturilag last informed the merchant Giant
in their). opinion the engine lent to the
temper was irritable, in spite of hie re. always knoweig what they meant. Tne
Fair by Mr. John Abell, Toronto, was the
She wail six years old. child wes anthitioue by nature, and, having be equally entitled.
She set up in her little white bed, looking 'Agin% aeueibility; perhaps we ought
The Chinese hoe records of mob vete
at the great shield of a harvestmoon re. to lay because of it. 1 Vith conscience and no healthy rivalry with companion -1 of her
that long antedate those of tho Canestan beat in the world. The Greek, who la of
the same opinion himself,
veateig itself above the oheeney.tops of eelf.interest perpetually at war, teligious own age, ahe fell to figuring situations for
race, and, tut the larger sun spots are visible STARTED AT oNck 0110 eotioseo
the houses warm the street. She had never seneihilitY 1 herself in whin her remarkable tabient
t id little but exasperate his
before leen the moon so large, Ito ree. elhe temPee i and his family bore the num. were mandated to the world. When her
sated &weevers long prior to the invention the first machines to go to Aria Minor. Ile
to thenaked eye,they could be seen by inter. and will vieit the Abell worke and *ilea
had been put to bed, es muse at seven euenome reptuched her gently for her earelesenese, of tho telescope, Kepler an.1 other scholar. treys that many merchants Will follow his
father W0.I4 angry with her, or lier mother
o'clock, in the golden light of the autunin Mrs. Denison sat at the breakfast -table,
of Europe saw them with the unaided eye, example and send for Canadian machinery
evening, and she had gone placidly to sleep, pouring out tea. She had a frail look ; elm she would come down from her castle in the
but, se 1 hey could not go iuto any detail, of ell kinds.
u was her wont : but now she was weir+ was very thin, and the tees of her ann.
girl. At men times she meth) violent the bere announcement evoked but little kir, Soferiadem had no idea until he YOU.
air, anJ feel herself a very hisigniticeint little
awake, and everything awned very dark plexiore originally bright, had been dead.
efforts to be religione-to " pray without intereet. ed the Chicago Fair that Canada could
and still. Was it the middle of the night ? nod by ilehealth. Her features were
An to the area of these epote, 0 is no mr. make such a good showing. He found that
She could not bear the silence, the touch of good, though too long; they had a re fleetly° ceasing" in literal earnest, and to weave no
eggeration to say that they sometimes cover in farm produce she itood first with no
inyetery In the room. Strange thoughts out, the &Teeter which was heightened by more stories in her head as site sitt at her
needlework. many millions, and even billions, of square olose mond. In in:winery he thinks she
crowded into her mind. Weird fancies, marked lines around thu patient mold h end
grim impositions which she was not old deepoet brilliant gray eyee. The refine- Children are apt to put exceedingly literal
to their match.. when they enter on s farming iniplements. Ifer timber and
miles, Frem tninute points they progress. • iamb first in many iinea, including all
enough to understand. She buret into ter. ment of her (ace fleet struck you : then its interpretation" on what they hear and see.
period or comparative stability which mey minutiae saton•hed him, an did her live
rifled eries and lobe that resounded through expression of endurance. She looked as Their world of fancy is kept for themselves
e a few days or leveret months, when they atock ane menufactured goods.
the little house in which ehe lived. They though "he were always thinking &mut the alone. In all that relate" to the real wothl b
disappear, That there are Asia Minor lias ill the just sent her our -
brought up her tether from his study, put, as though the remembrance kept her they are strikingly prosaic. It wee no greeeeity
directly beneath her room, to ask what wee otill enrolee of the imagination that mede
Motive to fall within telemope vision, te ducts to England and the United States,
myriada of these object" that are too dim. plus of figs, opium, rugs and other pro.
11WM.P.I.Pmaiii. Her eusband wee nervoun, haggard, sal- Esther as a chile at lex, dread the commg
wrong. of the Judgment Day : it wail simple accept- • altogether probable, but Mr. Seferiaties is of the opinion that
" I am frightened," Esther sobbed, need- Intsefaced, clerk.eyed, and &wirehaired ; As regards location, they are rather con. when the Asiatic traders teem of the won.
ing into her father's ready arms. restless in hie movements, eager in his talk, snoe of what had been tohl her tis a fact,
And when she tried to lead a precociously fined to that region of the solar surface that detful inducement" Canada has to offer they
"Frightened of what, my child?" with intervals of abstraction, in which hie saintly life, she put aside her dream. and . torreseonde to our torrid zone, and, while will exchange their products for maohinery,
She pointed with one linger to the brazen wife knew better than to disturb him. lie. obeyed as literally as possible the precepts not on, are on both "ides of the solar clothing and menufactured goods of ruins
face of the harvestmoon. tween the two sat Esther ; roly-cheeked for . 0( tee gem, H„ beeet w„ to be eke 0„ equator. When these note have attained kinds.
all her midnight terror", grayoyed like her . their largest size they my approaoh to
mother, but with homething of her father's 3f those peewee whose obituariee she read
within 10 degrees and extend 30 degrees
nervousness of gesture end readiness of eine,.
from time to time In the religiou maga.
north and south of the sun'. equatorial line. " Alia Minor is rich, very rich, ia the
hiCif IN RESOURCES,
curly, se her mother's had once been; it Out of lessondime Esther was left a good
of hypotheses from which observers en. mil. There is no limit to her resources.
speech. Her black hair was rough and They are the subject of e. great number
waa out short, anti settled into the curves
-- deal to her own devices. On this partici.
dune to account for them. The nonionic tective tariff to enable us to build up menu.
We have no beggar., but we have no pro.
of her neck in clue (Jerk rings. She was ular afternoon, however, her mother
of ecientific judgment seema to regard them
not a pretty child ; her features were too gave her some errands to do, and, as
Is immense solar cavities which are dark at reaming industria for ourselves, We pro.
strong for beauty, but her longelashed she loitered a little on the Ivey, she Wm not
the bottom, with glowing penumdral edges duoe many things which Canadians have
now to purchase seeond.hand through the
WV home again until thremquarters of an hour
a nkoxreteg,dai nnglootrizill: 0.sfe ruiloil eisciitity
eyes looked out from a bright, viveeieue
little countenance, which carried in its after the anal teasime. She came in soft.
e 'cl dienPtthe United States or England. We are amine
broad forehead and aeneitive lip the prom. It
lv, es?eoting to be molded, and Wood in
incluse end decrease of the spots, involv• se no doubt Canedians are, to deal directly.
ise of a keen emetionse and intelleetuid t e hell for a few minutes, half afraid to go
ing a round of Meat 11 ye trs in their rote. Y nu heve meny things we want. Let us
life in days to come. But it hi hard to prep into the parlor, Voices came from t e
tem. But on the great question Eta to what hope that mem, months will not ease before
thousands of machines will go weetward to
diet a girlei future character when ehe is .
studyetowever, of which the door wee ajar.
these wow reelly Me, why they are and the far east from your country, and that
only a chubby creature ten years old ; I
am- "I'll listen one moment before I go in."
Aro visitore there !" thought Esther.
what they indicate, there im stile and for a in return Asiatic produce will be common
anything that might have seemed remark• She wart a very iunment hetener. She considerable time to come necessarily meet in all the shops in Candle"
able in Bather Wa8 subdued and quieted by heard her tether's voice and then her be, & great diversity of opinion. 01111 0CLTAN AND Titit C1101,888.
motion, and she was reassured. No verit• It is yet a little early in the intellectual When asked if the inhabitant. of Smyrna
ore were present atter all. She laid her life of the earth dwellers to euceeeefully were eatiefied with Turkish rule, he said
hand on the dooreind nearly palled It open, grapple with eroblems pertaining to the that they.were in every way. The present
when she heare her father's voice again. solar constitution. Our globe, whin is! Sultan was 0 great and 90011 man, much
She paused, irresolute,
" I will do am my conscience dictates," neon& on which philosophera have gazed iug tireeka and Europeans. Cholera had
most eliminative by comparison, hal plie- respected and beloved by all clamesenclud•
subject 'teemed to warrant, "Ever mince are still el oomplete as when fire [surveyed The Sultan was not satisfied with mending
said her father in an angrier tone than the without hindrance foe centuries, and which been ruing in Smyrna for two:mightiest.
my ministry I have adopted the same plan; by paleolithio man. Drift andi stratum, hundreds of medical men accompanied by
I hese taken tho invitation that came as volcano and earthemake, dry land and sea, nurses and furnisliel medicines to the
indioative of God's will. The invitation to are pages that lie open and mill await 111. mom of the people, but had gone so far as
Woodbury came first. I shall go to Wood• terpretation. to aend his own medical adviser" to auper-
bury." Whether or not we tread a shell that intend the stamping out of the plague. The
" The invitations came together," Mrs. covert a. molten sea 1 whether or not grave reeult was that the dreadful disease had
Denison urged. tation hecinnee nugatory as we approach been almost stamped out, only 20 deaths
"Rut I opened, the Woodbury letter the earth's centre, are subjecte on
fleet. Besides, I shrink from the charge of the sages attli utter dusgreetnent. which heving oceurred last mouth.
a large congregation in a large town. My The moon and Mars that, lie 10
difficulties of belief would mon be known that the ghee' lineates their surf
there."
" De you mean to °oncost them still ?"
" Do you want me to ruin myeelf?" ....-
" Oh, James, Jamee !"
" Yoe never sympathieed with me -
never loved me ; what business hue'
to criticise my actions r ea& the -
num. "All that you aro really con
about is food and clothing and mat
the hoot. You wish me to go to
chester because we should be rioher th
Well, I refuse. Igo to Woodbury. If ou
do not like Woodbury -if you en not
make up your mind to obey me and to help
me -you had better etay away."
Esther heerd her mother sob, nd say
something which was indistinguishable.
She drew her WO book aom the door and
crept away. She did not know what it all
meant. She could only feel, vaguely and
childishly, that tragic possibilition over.
' bedewed her parents' lives,
(to Ite cONTINtiltD)
_
CHAlerItIt I.
VATIIER AND ell D.
Some of Esther Denison's earliest impres.
eine dete front an evening in September
when she was six yeara
Memory plays odd Dicke with us some.
times. She does not leave tie our Most
precioue things ; she filchea from us the pie.
tures of menu and fame that we loved, of
the friend. that we cherished most fondly,
TXX end the deer home where we grew up ; but
Published every Tliu retie N'ini a -ping
ait the (Alice, Queen -St., Mitchell Block
tiLYTII, •
W. 11. IRWIN, • Peoenteroe
Tsar St s :
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No paper discontinued until all
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Advertisements muet be received
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.essoh week tu insure insertion and
propor
All advertisements continued unti
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been given.
BUSINESS DIRECT CR
years, To this place they had mune from a
lat.ge inanfacturing town in the north et
Engleed, liming previously mojeurnmi for
an equal length of time in l'enzanue. Theee
changes from place to plaee, at remote dis.
latices sometimes front one :mother, were
accordence with the set rule of Meth.
odiet preacher's life ; but James Denison
fared worse thaa moat of Isla brethren be.
cause lie had a private au pet ntition about
the choice of a place of residence. He might
have managed (hinge better if he had liked.
' t"
HE IS HERE FROM TURKEY. TEE eTTAT Buffil A.17,111210Ali
A Greet Morchant Wants Our fdaolduery,
- -
Ole, Novelties Meterlades, of "'Hyrum Thinks
Canadian Engines Are the liesi In the
World-Asin Moor Her 1100. *Plum
Num and tither l'ammodliles to Ns
change for 1he Hanuferieres of This
fountry.
MSDICAL.
W. J. MILNE, M.D., OM.
11-1e, CM. University Mtetteel College: M.
htste1.71evelity ; Fellow iif Trinity
lann and Surge°. of Ontario.
ittal College, and Member of College of
Physician, Surgeon & Aconuoneur.
orrnst:.-osson Street, One Door North of
Commercial Rotel.
J. N. PERDUE,
Vortfulnftry Surgeon.
Oreduate of Ontario V merinery renege,
Tosoneg, Registered Member onterlo Teter. She could not tell why her father sudden.
teary medical Association. ly stamped his foot on the ground and
Calls PromMly Anted, ft to at all flours, muttered something between bis teeth ;
but she felt the eomfort of hie pity when tle
OFFICE -Over J. S. HASILTOKS put his arms around her and solemnly
Daum suing. . eLywie. inured her Mutt God -hie God -loved her the atmosphere of decorate which prevatled
and would not gond her to hell ; that he in her father's house.
loved her far too much- She and her mother turned their eyes et.
_
" But he does send naughty people to tentively from time to time on Mr. Dent.
MISCELLANEOUS. hell. I heard Mary my so. Does he not son. They ware accustomed to take their
ese, - love them, too ?" said Esther anxiously. mooch from him. He had come down with
n 8, HAMILTON, Licensed Amt. And then he cried out wildly that hedid the settled frown upon hie forehead whin
.
not believe it ; that a God of love could not warned them to be careful in their speech,
Vt lamer, and eeiluator, Land, Loan. and
torture his creaturea, and that they might It wee Monday morning, and he was always
. hemline° Agree Office, Queen Street,
say what they liked, but he knew that " tired and nervous,"-alies for iletemper.
blyth. °Mere lef t at Tini Seeeneen there was no hell. . ml in many households -on a Monday. Two
Mee Will receive prompt ettention. It was his vehemence that impressed the letters ley Weide ide plete. He hei half
finished his breakfast, In complete ellen°,
scene upon her mind, Me voice grew before Ile opened them. After reading
" hoarse ; he pulled at his shirt.00llar as If
N. H. YOUNG, etmomon, The mom had mounted above to hie wife. l'iPot,a''' he /mid rather curtly,
ids threw- were veritably swelling with the,,m7,twtvoicittnivihte..
he himneymots, and sent her silver li h
BLl'TH - ONT straight into the mean little room. It mild! " Woodbury ?" she asked timidly. She
knew that he had meson to expect an Mei-
Issuer of Marriage Licenses ?pet rine:: Si' gtemhoionktog11:11.12 paled; it threw tation to this place, of
heard a favourable teport.
which she had already
leather let herself be leffortehm. . Her
No Wttnestes Required. ,. father stayed dee wheorkeuantailin shed ahlept. " Yee. And one from Mancheeter al
-
Once in the night sih
!, 1 voice, broken with sobs, gtallAinng, se idt well."
He handed her the lihters. She read
'' seemed to her, at her bedside, pleading them, and her hand trembled as she laid
thein down.
etwith some one whom she could not see. _It ,,w,„„dbury sweets to li,be the plensanter
LUCAS, 'LIMNER a. Ico.tr.aithhteiraifttheermzgthl;lientreazersi,n gery. I g for place," ehe said vistfullee. "but in Man.
cheater the house and the Atipened are much
1 -She forgot the little Beene for many years, larger. Woodbury is a pretty place, but
BANKERS
or rather put it aside, as something that Manchester would give you a much better
bil X..,"2" ONT. sho would understand better by and by. position, James."
She had uot, is a child, an unhappy life, in "I shall not go to Manchester."
Do A OnlaiLit itASKU 1 Dusts:88K
. a spite of the clerk doctrine which now and leether listened, looking from one to the
ed the sunshine of her days. other of her parents in silence, as she us.
o y retnitted net' payable al anybank then Amur
ill
nide or United "debut Atomic. and The great fear of a terrible hereafter was ually did when they talked together. She
g Ovaftecashed. Advances Made on en- forced upon her attention from time to time noticei that her mother's thiu face thole&
paper or collateral security, for long or
by the sermons which she heard preached at the. reply, and that Ole hastily lifted her
menaces. Notes diecounted. Farmers who
Muir° advanoua are invited. Notes collected or the books ehe read. She then went cup to her quivering lips. There had been
al Moderate charges, Money to loan on rea. through paroxysms of doubt and fear ; but
edam ett from ti to 7 pot cent, Liberal Inter. „„ something hard, almost cruel, in Junes
est allowed on deposit*. Money May be with wowing older, fell into the habit ot orying Derrisee's One.
. drawn at plemure. herself to sleep quietly, or cowering "What sort of a plea. is Woodbury,
Reference -Trot Mountie Dom. silently under the bei.clothes when she father ?" she asked.
awoke at midnight from a dream of me Denison's feu lost a little of Re
ALEX. LATAII, y everlasting fire. IMeginstiVe children, gloom as he looked at his daughter.
Cues. E. TANNItti i PrePrteter% brought up thirty years ego in .It le an old.fashioned country town,"
the creed of Evangelical Dissent, generallY he mid. "I hear that the Church is quite
went through these egonies, which were in the eseendent, and that Pimayite pen
Alliterpreted by ermine and affeationate Wet have of late been introduced. There
'MONEY TO LEND. ' tenes as signs (het " the Spii it was striv•
ing with the child." is only a small congregation of our people,
though a reedy wesithy one. The chief
- She seemly knew when first it dawned person in le is a Mr. Fairbairn, notoriously
ONEY to lend, In large or nall fittms, on that her (ether did not believe
tlitCotvest current rittes, He a ke with a sort or stern extiltation
mem her difficult to get on with,"
good mortising° or personal security,
at the sterner doctrines of the church in which
" Well, my dear, you ere not afraid of
the moon, ere you?"
"It is all red," sobbed Esther, "and I
heard Mary say that it would be turned
into blood when the Judgment Day came,
and I thought that it was ooming now."
" And if it were?" said Mr. Denison
curiously.
" Then," said the child with a ehiver, "I
should go to hell, became I am always
naughty. And I should burn for ever,
end ever, and ever." The tears broke out
again.
be ministered. That scene at her bedside in the rsadvantagee of the plane.
II. HALE. might have let her into the secret, but its "What ie the house like ?" Esther &eked
meaning was not olear to her for mine in some dismay.
Huron Street - Clinton' years. James Denison belonged, in one .settall me emend..
Clinton, Aug. 21, 1890 seise, to the straiteet met of the Pharisee.; Bather hesitated. "Is Manchester a nice
his parents and grandparent. had been de. place?" she said doubtingly.
wed, and oven distinguished, Nonconform• "Manchester," said her tether, with a
ism ; and though he had in early life re. gleam of eomethinglike triumph in hie oyes,
II. T. HUCKSTEP, minced their Calviniatic toneta, he clung els, of mune, a large and important place,
, to the mild Armin:seism of which WeeleY where Nonconformity has a great hold on
-HAIR DRESSING was 80 vigorous en exponent. How and the people. The ministers' bowers are large,
where his faith in the doctrine of eternal core„slioes, eire ;hely eitear0e. A.
--.1,__
Puniehment end e " eMeelnua Mem' ministers' position leaves nothing to be de.
SHAVING PARLOR ment" fled *Arad shook, it were ,ired.ii
ihard indeed to tell. Men brought up "Oh, then, let tut go to Manchester I"
Five doors North of Bank. n the close eorrretion of a seot breathe cried leather, clapping her handa.
formula, hoping by such means to avoid the the child, not for the first time, that there
Choice Tobaccos and cern: In Stock. microbe of doubt. James Denison had a was some antagonism between her narents.
fency for 'commoner atmosphere, tainted The tears were wet on Mrs. Denison's pale
ihnigh it might be, but open to all the, cheek" and she did pot try to hide them or
. wmds of heaven- f fe reed StenleY ao° wipe them away, She sat with her eyea
Maurice and Robertson with the eagerness fixed steadily on her plate. Mr. Denison
J. H. OHELLEW of a peculiarly receptive mind ; be read
QUEEN ST., BLYTH. sir filtrated t rough the cotton.wool of Her father glanced at his wife. It struck
Herbert .
__ UNDERTAKER & ENDALIER. iScr;:ter'sanddJ(ZrElintir'dite ,,.. no ..w. go tb woodb„,y_
My mind la made up," lie said shortly ;
if we go anywhere.
metetielist. Hit religions filth in °eosin You need not fret Mout it, Margaret. It is
FINN Mo.; AND Gimps. direetions wee stronger than it ever had been week and foolish to give way. Let me hoar
IN. in i he combined when, through the influence chiefly of books no more about it..."
Ne. 1 Queudetreet, to 0 1 1 , Illytt and privete refieceion, he made up,his minnd ,
'But mother his not said anything," said
At that he did not believe in everlasting pu
quick-witted bather, looking et her father
. sliment for sinners/dim' death. with wide open, innooent eyes Even as a
Thirty years ago, disbelief in hell was not child she had a sense of justice which not
eo common as it is now, and it Was a helm all the Puritan diecipline of Ol'e household
BLYTHCARRIAGE WORKS ous offense in the " body " to which Mr. could destroy. Her father turned upon her
. Denison belonged. Still, 1 e tried to con• sharply, the prominent veins swelling upon
- vinea himself that hie heresy was too small his forehesel, his eyes gleaming with anger.
...
0 LA.TE B. 23c SIMS. to be worth mentioning. Who can flx the ,,110 out of the room," he said. " Go out
lunits or belief ? he said to himself. No of the room this moment. Let me have at
skeptic believes ao little, no religious least no inaolenee from a ohild like you,"
man so much, u he would have us Esther crept out of the room reluctantly.
thiuk. The &at heukere after an estsb. She wee afraid orher father when he spoke
Milted creed ; the second after • heresy. in that tone. And her mother's tears, ahe
Definitioas of faith are always vague, aLter maw, were breaking out afresh. She did
the first two or three eentences. Mr. no quit, know what she haa sew that was
Denison made a point of the fact that wrong, but she wits sure that she must have
In no church creed could ha find the been very wicked, and was miserable !re-
word*, "I believe in the devil end ell hie eordingly. She went out into the garden,
angels," or even "in eternal fire." end hid hermit' among the raspberry bushes.
Unfortunately for theme arguments,he be- She thought of Adam end Eve in Eden,and
longed to • body of sectarians whose article" looked up into the sky, half expecting to
of faith were anything but vague, and who hear a volt* out of the blue, saying, "Est.
had fixed the limits of their belief very de. her, where art thou?" She was always
finitely indeed. The elightest flavor of expecting mirecles to happen. Ae they
heresy was enough to draw down official never did, ehe concluded that her faith was
condemnation on his head. Yet, what WU week. At preeent ahe took her Bible very
he to do ? To proelahn his diebelief on this iterrelig.
ono point was to make himself an outcast, A cail did come to her by-and-by, but it
from " the Connection " ea one and t* was in her father's voice, She anewered it
court poverty anti shame: ile had in frightened tones. Rut she saw from the
nothing in the world beetle his ate look in hie face, as he etrolled along the
peed as a minister. He had never even garden path, that he wee no longer angry
learned a trade. He had " begun to with her. He put hie arm round her and
atudy for the ministry" -that wee the caressed her when elle came up to him.
phrue-when he wae eighteeu, had gone to "Is my little girl good now!" he asked
a theological college for three years, end solemnly.
workei m a janior minister for tour years " Yee," said Esther faintly. She wonder.
more. At tha erM of that time he passed ed how she hail transgressed, and felt guilt.
through the titan of ordinetion and mar- tier than ever because she (meld not see her
Wage. The two functions generally went fault. She held up her teareitained Nee to
frowned.
GENOA 1, BLACKSMITHS
-A ND -
CARRIAGE 13UILDERS
are now in a bete position than evet (neaten
to the waids 111 Oleic numerous customers.
WAGGONS, DOGGIES, CUTTERS h SLEIGHS
every desetiMiiiii kept luthit and menu -
Pictured to order. How repairs, formerly k
Ma, Camp coestanily on hand,
Horee-aboeins a epeetalty. SalistactIon guar.
nowt.
OLATHE 81 MN, - BLY'l ONT
f 'N'11TERVE 1
BRA ,......atal',„=r4a.
cr.,,,b, ,„,..._ ,,,,,,i4....e. of
wratva mare are • new M-
enem MMUS, Lola Via. OM
00:1:7i youih°.? ki,T.,-...vb.
- ....41,...-nit="2,1,1, LI
1,
p,... slirnisti:MINIttuttskeN1
M pa
Immo. . Motor vemlidet. la -
J. M. 1 In 1Ikr, Ft npgint, Myth
lacy‘t Harelips Is Ilysere.
The Maharajah of Mysore has just caused
'to be issued II regulation, I be hereafter
considered bv his Government, the object
of which is to "prevent infant marriage. in
the territories of Mysore." l'he regulation
whiah is to come into force within eix
months, will fix the minimum age at which
411 girl may merry at eight years and • boy
mt 14. Any person who twinge about the
marriage of children ender I his ace will he
punished with Imprisonment for "ix
month., 6 fine, or both, A mem over the
-age of 18 may not marry a girl of eight
iota similar penalty. A men over 50
rift et sge it not allowed to marry a girl
*oder 14 years of age, under pain of Ira -
t, which may extend to two years.
r 1=8 or abettor or suoh ail offence is
Made le imprisonment for six months.
Discipline al name.
ar us
con.
',ranee and Germany.
volutions, still farm the subject o much The review at Metz of a large portion of
hiloophic perplexity. Our polar points, the Carmen army by Emperor William IL,
whieb seem brit a few days' journed from attended by the heir to the throne of Italy,
the none where man hal made all him record, will have, awl was meent to have, a pro.
ore still envelopedl in Impenetrable` mys. TfoiLnd.peeeigt.noitiocayanemebofloirzeileteheenorhesoeibyeeedriveirbe.
tery.
ill equipped, then, are we pie German people to grasp ftrialy ell the 1.11
with the solution of the solar physic aaa. Mall soil recovered from the foreigner, an
ing that we have not well learned lee. such Ettleterminetion may be seen to imply a
sons from the page. that even our 06he pre. menace of regaining other lands,whieh were
gents, for sturdy a knowledge of the alpha. One0 Gorman, but which are now held by
bet must precede the intelligent reading of France. The preaence, too, of ths Prince of
the printed page, and in the studying of Naples le equivalent to a declaration that
the heavens the elementary lensone must be no Dense of gratitude for tbe former ger.
learned from a correct solution of the prob. vice! of Frenchmen can break the tie of to-
tems of the earth. tercet that now hinds the house et Savoy
It is this that inspires the babel of con. to the Huhensollerns, and that with re.
Ninon when a problem of nature challenges gard to Lorraine no lees than to the Rhine.
solution. land the defiant war song of the Germans,
Cholera Is Europe. " Km sollen Air Meld Wen,' " No you shall
kneinvgedr ohmue itmeo' itizndsh:201 oebheomiin mthielehltmaloierne
From nearly every country of Europe
and aleo from Egypt end Arabia, we have
hea reports of the existence of cholera thoroughly Ciermanized eine 1871 than
• within the past month. Its ravages in Strasburg, although it lind been in French
Rues, where it first appeared in the sprin hands for a much Ion er period It was
The etatistice printed of the inereaaing of last year, have continued over since that
R not until elm to them& of the seventeenth
• . • • century that the free city of Strasburg Wall
seized by LOUIS XI% ., while it wee in the
time of Henry 11., almost e century anti a
half before, that the Three Bishoprics, of
better. It may be that these influence" have for weeks been severe in Austria -Hun. wInhchL, Metz was one, were incorporated
have not been aa potential as had been gary, eapecially in the Hungarian part of wit. r rench territory. The ex treme import -
hoped, but it is probable that more t han the empire ; they have decreued es the dia. anee ol the latter place from a s trategie point
ease advanced westward, entering German of view wits from the first ale:ire:Wed, and
reasonable has been expected of teem end
that POMO of the training and eiscipline Holland, Belgium, Fraece, and Great BriYt! not even their disastrous rout at et. Quen•
which was once acquired at home have in ein, in which five marina there have tin could lame the hold or Frenchmen on
reoent year" been delegated to the secular been between two hundred and three hun their prize. It was the poseeesion of Metz
that rendered erosible the subsequent con.
anti leligious teachers. High priced educe,
tion and preaching have been allowed to
take the place of the old.faehioned training
that was formerly given at home. If there
hes been any extensive lack of hot. de -
°Wine In a nation it is certain to manireat
itaelf at moh times as these, when some of
the old foundations tieein to breaking up
and society ix oompelled to find for heed a
new level. These sturdy, aolid qualitiem of
men and women show themselves then or
their lack becomes *dully evident, And
it is only in the home that these quell.
ties can be planted and fostered.
If the right training has been given
to the boy and the girl they have
been prepared for the temptations end
trials they will have to meet in life
and made ready to turn bad fortune as well
as good fortune to their own and others'
advantage. They may step momentarily
from the etraight path, but the general cur-
rent of their lives will be found right and
helpful. Speaking on this point the Phila-
delphia press says There are no such
influences in life as thou that go out from
the home. Englond la governed by its homes.
It is the discipline genii in &IOU homes
that has enabled a little Wend to control
the politico or Europe, and plant colonies on
every continent on the earth. The homes
of England conquered at Waterloo, they
hold in cheek the fanatical millione of India,
and they calmly tempt fate even when they
know that it comes from the avoidable mil.
take of others as in the charge of the Mix
Hundred at Balaklava and the sinking of the
Victoria. It hu been said of Goethe that
ho would haVe done more for the ele-
vation and refinement of mankind by estah.
lishing home than he did through his
litetary labors, fruitful as them have been.
His genius was great and its reeulta marvel.
Ina but it hes been les. than the influence
that would have gone out from one reflood
home,
percentage of cnme, mice e an yuveni e time, and are even more widespread now
dolinqueney in Ole United States are often than they were in the summer of 1892 ; they
quoted as proofs of the failing influents of were distressing in hely during the past
the churcheiele.•ediestion to make society month, but they are now lemming • they
Heredity Crime.
Mr. William M. F. Rounds, secretary of
the National Prison Association, says in
paper in the September Forum that hered-
ity has been given altogether too important
a place in accenting for the growth of the
criminal classes ; that moral traits are only
rierely inherited and that it le training and
environment that makes the criminal in
the very great majority of cases, Ile says :
"I wish to put myself on record, after a
study of the criminal, and contrary to any
previous utterances, as going enuarely beak
to the doctrine of free will as laid down b
our fathers, and I wish to be enders
distinctly and 'queenly to hold to the doe.
trine of moral responsibility as applying
to every ao.ne Millen-1ml • • • Of the
700 criminate I have examined, I have
found that more than 300 had a clear mot -
deed emu, about one-thtrd of them fatal.
In England, the piece moat seriounly affect.
eel is the port of Grimsby ; in Holland, it
is Rotterdam ; in Belgium, Antwerp ; in
France, Nantes ; in Italy, Palermo (sine
the subsidence of the diseam in Nettles) ;
and in Germany, perhaps Balite though
the easel there have been few. We have
not heard of inore than one ease at Ham•
burg this year, and that was in July. The
infected places in which we are moat di-
rectly interested ire, of %purse, thou' st
which emigrants take ship for this contin.
cm, and these at (hi. time are, Autwerp,
Rotterdam, and Marseilles. There is never
any emigration from Russian ports ; there
ie not any now from Italian ports ; thero is
not any from the amall Enlist, port of
Grimeby. But it ie unusually large thie
year from Antwerp, Rottendam, aud Mar.
seilles. The Jewielt Russians who are de-
barred from Hamburg go to the Belgian
and Dutch ports ; many italiana go to the
French port on the Mediterrauen. Every
week inunigrant-carrying ships arrive in
New York from one or other of them parte.
The Russians aboard of them are from a
country in which cholera has been epidemic
for eighteen months ; the Italians may be
from the infected regione of Italy. They
are all, of course, inspected before they oan
procure patine tickets ; and it is aaid that
it would hardly be peeeible to keep a
Moser and more rigid supervision over
them than is kept conetenly at the port of
New York. The sanitary authorities of all
the countriel and cities of western Europe
ere displaying rotnarkable energy this year
in the enforcement of measures against the
cholera. Tss recent discoveries in science
are of great service to them ; and the aye
tem of sanitary comperetion that wee prc.
vided tor lest year, has proved to be espeois
ally adventagenue this summer. Never be.
fore during all the agm of the ravages of
the great Asiatic plague 11 met with
such resistance weet of die Black end Baltic
quest of erenc Indere on the north, and
the still later sheorption of the Duchy of
Lorraine upon the south. Metz ses the
keystone of the whole wall of provinces,
gradually reared upon the French frontier,
end etretching from the towne upon the
Somme in Picardy to the louthern ef
Franche•Cointe. The surrender of Metz
to the Germane, after the lapse of some
three hundred years, :tient not only a
grave actual Ion, hut a portentous pro-
spective danrger. Unquestionably, the re.
tendon of Metz was, al Von Moltke les.
milted it, an indispeneable condition or the
security of Germany, and, so long as the
Gerinens keep it, they may look upon the
Rhine as safe. All the resources of modern
engineering have been tared to make the
fortress impregnable, and, no doubt, as
Kaiser William II. reviewed hie legion
under its walla, Mouthed in the belief that
Metz would never become French again.
Yet if there is one lesson that history is
never weary of repeating, it is that a pre.
ponderance of numbers no guarantee of
success in war, and that no country, how-
ever superior in repute is its military
system, can hope to retain a monopoly of
military genies.
roe.. • .0110, • ••
The New teloulst f`errY.
Whatever name may be given to the
new political organizetion nut formed in
England for the furtherance et colonial in-
terests in the imperial parliament there is
undoubtedly a wide fleld of useful wort
before it. In far distant Australia and
New Zealand, as well as in the British
House of Commune, beneficial movements
may be pushed forward. At. the prelimin-
ary ineoling mention was made of the Deco.
eity for improved cable commune -At -ion with
the Colonies, the abolition of tee postal
anomalies, the °metier -rot the tremporta.
tin of French convicts to New Caledonia,
and relent; in the appouttment of Ceionial
seas as in the year 1893. The results thus govern.", Many other matters might be
far have etertetinly justified the maintenance readily euggested as tending towards the
of this resistance. It calls for the utmost renlizetion ot the great idea of Imperiel
vigil:mos on the part of the Canadian Federation towards which Lord Reeebery
authorities along the border, to prevent the looks forward. Near at hand, awl with a
entrance of immigrants from the infected promise of immediate benefiteles the Oceen
European porta until after the most care. Penny Post, which Mr. Henniker Heaton
supports so energetically from the fee
ful inspection.
. nese of his knowledge of Australian
Payment of Members. life. Sir John Goret owes much of
Now that the IMperial Parliament has his all-round knowletige of men and
ar zotl he to dn g ubpeoanr i tnlgi e uppaoyRm tehn,f earn be; in mt ei sm 0b emir . aflairs of state to the diversified Colonial
experiences that he passed through. In
sidered interesting over there. A paella-
Mtorialle kl"oef eyfMalpki:trehy"WaitPhAlitile.
amount" paid to legislators in the different party and not to any wantof
mentery paper just Weed given the various 0t hi ,,,i an cwoutdruye
ability. If Mir
colonies, In Newfoundland membera re. 1
ceive an allowance of 912 i a session, but to Paris to take part in the Paining Sea
i idin Thompson could journey from Ottawa
have neither travelling expenses nor free ettiitretion, why may not a Canadian Min.
pence on railwaye. In Australia and the infer of the future travel to London to sit
ive and a sane mottve, though a perfectly Cape, where railways are controlled by the with the rulers of the Empire in the British
pretty aloes together in the seat to which be kiaaed, and wondered " little at the deep
he belonged. sigh with whioh he bade her run into the me,
understool dishonest one and a criminal eolony,membere haveinalleaseafreerailwaY Parliament! Let the door be opened, and
" 0 0 I do not Lahore that one- puns, and in some oases it ie made a con. we have the exempla of Sir 'leery Parkes
Since thet day he had worked On peace. houe and help her mother. The reason
fifth of this number were ever in a condi. dition in the contract for the mails that die and Sir John Macdonald to prove that men
fully, never staying in one place Ringer why grown up people were melanehoy w 1
" I tion when they could not hue turned mail coaches shall carry mem hers flee. In er atrong charmter will not be lacking.
than wee permitted by the rules of this re. often very puzzling to Esther, who tr ed to . wound, had they determined to do so, and Natal an allowance of It a day is paid dur. This, however, is looking into the future.
ligious organizetion-rulea inflexible as be melancholy too, but could not achieve I lived virtuous and upright lives." The log the session, Members of the cap.- For the present, we sre glad to eee that the
those of the Medes anti Persians, complex the desired result. 1 plain interpretation of thie ie that the Parliament receive one guinea a day, and new party proposes to begin quietly. It
as those of the Jesuit fraternity. What She found her mother doing household , great majority of these prisonere were not to those living at a distance from the Par. will cmhracc 011 lomnho 0 ‘f thc 11m, ,
could he do should he be thrown out of work far beyond her strength, though of
, subjected to the rivilt trainine. set woro :, Aro Ot II'• " ..il lit i''''"il ''..1:"Vi"" 'A Comment' who happen to be connected with
the groove in wheel he had traVollod oolirSe 01P ,hil.1,11,1 On. le-ogni , this ifti i., not placed under pure and ennobling in• 15e a day for personal expenses is paid, self•goertling colonieti. hawed of inter -
smoothly tor nearly twenty years ! He was Mrs. Daimon's eyelids were ilightly reAden. flueneea when their charactets were being Members of the Legislative Council of Now feriog with, it will help on any work of the
• man of forty, he remembered, and he ed, but she was not leas business like than
formed. In other words, they lacked the Zealand receive 150/. a year, and of the official rersentatives of Colonial govern
•
had & wife and child. -, muslin bidding Esther sit down to her books
right kind of home influences. When we Hallke of Representatives 240/. a year, with meets in mien. Had etteh a party been
in the par lor and do het lessons. Esther's
consider the great harm done to aociety by reasonable travelling expenses, but &duo- in existence a year no her Merles Tupper
CHAPTER I ‘ lewons were generally set and noun by her- the criminel and the drain upon the pro. tine are made for nomattendanee. la Would not haye had to struggle almost Mane
NH{ but she spent a certain time upon them duet -fee industriee neeeesary to police cities Queensland, New South Wales, and Vic. &pima the Iinperiel Board of Agriculture,
DISCORD • every day, and her mother taught her a lit- and run courts and imprison the den erous toria, saleries of .300t. a year are pane. which condemn to forbid the importetion
Masse. and the misdirected forue o even in Ottawa tne rate is a ut #10 a day desr- of Canadian live cattle. A compact group
the well-intentioned, the need of atrength. ing the session ; in Ontario it average" dii a of Colonial member', acting together for the
ening the home influences which form the day ; Quebec, WM the aakaian. raymett.1 common good, should be able to render real
character becomes stellifeRlY apparent. in Nova Scotia is $500 a Regain. This rate ,etui lasting service to the State.
is also paid to members of the Legislative e
-
The amateur photographer has a habit of Aessmbly of the North W.eet Territories \ n these &ye of bank stringency it takes
Johageohrlisen, Butler, am well as theori-
sed books of reference ln her Inking almoit anything eIoept • hint. , with travelling all owaucea an snot to drew money.
1
A
" The woo of men are the work of thett, see, tle mule and drawing and French of the
hands.' kind that she had leer ned when she was a
girl. Esther's education progressed more
rapidly out of school hours ' than
in them. She read everything that
wow in her way -Shakespeare, Byrom,
Bather wag ten years old before any
0. %vb. le that unfortunate man with the of discord in the household became clear
wistsl amp so his bark 1" '114re.sh I He her.
100,ualartnriate. That's MeZim the famous The Heinous were living in a Gloutteeter-
hotdisies bkyellat." , Ma villa" where they had spent three
ik
t118881111111ell I I
ERVI
....--AND-sommalansm
StorrlachleLiver Cure
The g.ost Actenishing Medical Discovery of
. the Last One Hundred Years.
It N Plca:Lot to the TaSle as tin Stiaotest Nectar.
It Is Salo and ilarml.069 as the PUref.4, Milk.
This wo 101 e rfi: I rvine Tonle has only vccvntly betelietemlneed
into this country le the proprietors and I0111111thel 1110.1.8 ilt1 the
South Anwrical! Ncn 41111 .yct (14 great, ‘0101, IN a cured
%gent 11 itill•r1 1. 11 is DOW:1 lit It fed 1,11,1 110 Cit physicians,
who liav(- net brought its 111Ztt 0111 ilu the kuowledge of the
generel public
This 1st-die:no hes eonipletely solo the problem of the cure of indi-
gestion, dytpepsia, mei diseases of the gi.1101111 nervolie neetem. It tit
tits° of the greatest value in the cure of ell fo:111,4 tif failing health from
whatever cause. It perIhrinv this by the rent nt vine tonic qualities
which it possesses, ;eel by its rent curative tome 1 tenet the digestive
organs, the stoeincli, the liver and the buwels. No remedy compares
with this won( leriolly valuable Nervine Tunic 118 11 10.11 and strength-
vner of the life neves of I he human body, and as a great renewer of a
broken tloovn «institution lt is also et more real permanent value In
treatmcat and ( me a diseases of the lungs than any consumptioe
onaesly ever used en thit continent. It it a marvelous cure for nen,
ollS11'.13 liii»3103 Of tin eget. Ludiet who nre approaching the critical
intriol known as change. ie lite, thould not fail to use this great Nervias
siss,st constantly, for the twice of two or (MSS?. years, It will
curry thow Rarely over he danger. This great ttrengthoner and cura-
tive J .111 111°1011 11101,1d 1 ithid to the aged and bairn], If mffinfrn its great
ettecgistag prolwres will give them a new 1(01(1 on life. It will add ten
01 Mem, yimN tf f I he liv of limey uf ',hese ov ill use a half dezell
.1" the remedy each ycrin
'IT IS A GREA1 REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF
Nervousness,
Nervous Prostration,
Nervous Ileadayhe,
Siek Beall:odes
Female Weakness,
Nervous Chills,
Paralysis,
Nervous Paroxysms and
Nervous Choking,
Hot Flashes,
Palpitation of the Heart,
Mental Despondency-,
Sleeplessness,
St Vitus' Dance,
Nervousness of Feinnies,
Nervousness of Old Ago,
Neuralgia,
Pains in the Heart,
Pains in the Back
Broken Const 'tut ion,
Debility of 01(1 J\ ge,
Indigestion 101'1 Dyspepsia,
Heartburn and Sour Stomach,
Weight anti Tenderness in Stomach,
Iross of Appetite,
Frightful Dreams,
Dizziness and 11 i mei ng in the Ears
Weakliest of Extremities uud
Fainting,
Impure and Impoverithed Illood,
Boils and Carbuie les,
Berofula,
Scrofulous Swellings and Ulcers,
Consumption of the faines,
Catarrh of the Lungs,
Bronchitis and Chronic Cough,
Liver Complaint,
Chronic Diarrhea)
Failing Health, Delicate and Scrofulous Children,
All these and niSaininr otyirreCr°ernomPitililanitntosf CUT:till 81)y this wonderful
Nervine Tonic.
NERVOUS DISEASES.
As a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy 111113 been
able to compare with the Nervine Tonle, which it very pleasant and
harmless in all its effects Nein tile youngest child or the oldest and mos:
delicate individual. Nine tentlit of all the ailment)) to whiell the human
family is heir are dependent on nervous exhaustion and impaired dips -
ti' :1. When there is 1111 insufficient supply cf nerve 11)0(1 in the blood, a
general stitte of debility of the brain, spinal marrow, and nerves is the
result. Starved nerves, like starved muscles, become strong when the
right kind of !hod is supplied; and a thousand weaknesses rind ailtnents
disappear as the DerCCS recover. As the nervous system must supply all
the power by which the vital forces of the body are carried on, it is the
first to stiffer for want of perfect nutrition. Ordinary food does not eon-
tain a sufficient quantity of the kind of nutriment necessary to repair
the wear our present mode of living and labor imposes upon the nerves.
For this reason it becomes necessary that a nerve food be supplied.
This South American Neririne hag been found by analysis to contain the
essential elements out on livhich nerve tissue 01 formed. 'rhis accounts
for its universal adaptability to tho cure of all forms ot' nervotts de(
rangement. •
CRIWPoRDIIVILLit, Ana. 20, IS.
To Mr Great Soma American Medicine
Data GENTO:-1 &etre to Nay to you that 1
have suffered for many years e-ith a very seethe.;
diamise of the stomach and ftertee. !tried every
medic!. I hiuld hear of, but nothing done me
any appreciable good until I Wag advised to
try your Great South Ann.°. Nervine Tonle
and litomath end LIver cure, and shire twine
several bottles of It I must say that I am eur-
orbital at Ito wonderfid views b, mire the 01,1111.
eel, and general nor, iota system If es eryone
knew the value of tills remedy I do you mould
hut D• able to supply the demand,
J. A. 11 01100E, ks.'rrea.. Montgomery Cti.
IIPACCOA WILIZINRON, of Drownevalley,
say.: o I hail been In a dhiteetsed condition for
three yeara froin Nervoueness, weakness of the
Stomach, Dyspepkia, and ludIgeetIon, until my
health wee gone. had been doctoring tom.
otaally, with 00 met. I bought one bottle or
South American NerVitle, Whitt% done me more
good than any ;le worth id doctoring I ever
did la my Me. 1 would advise every weakly pees
WM to use this valuable and lovely reniedy ;
few bottleo id it hill clireil me completely. I
consider it the ,..eaudit.t medicine ba the world.",
A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITAS' DANIA CHOREA..
CRAWFORDSVILLE, I N D., June t2, 1887,,
My daughter, eleven years old, was severely tellicted with St. Vitus' Dance
sr Chorea. We gave her three and otte-litilf boll lee of Smith American Nees
vine and she is completely rettOred. 1 believe it will sure every case of St.
Vitus' Danee. 1 have kept it in my family for two yea re, 1110I um sure it
the greatest remedv in the world for Indigestion and Dyseepsia, and for ou,
forms of Nervous Disorders and nailing Health, from no hatever eaute.
JOHN '1'. MUHL
Stale of Indiana,
Montgomery CounN, 08
Subscribed and sworn to before 111c this June 22, 1597.
Cuss, W. \Viewer, Notary Public%
INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIA
The Great Smith American Mervin° Tonic
Which we now offer you, is the only abs. I otely entailing remedy (Ter
dideOVOred for th.: cure of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, reel the east train of
rymptoms and horrors which are the result of disease and debility ef
the human stomach. No person can afford to pass by this jewel of incal-
culable Valli 2 who is affected by disease of the stomach, 'Reroute the ex-
perience and testimony of many go to prove that this is the ONE aud
osix ors great cure in the world for this universal tiestroyer. These
is no ease of unmalignant disease of 1he stomach which can resist HA
wonderful curative powers of the South American Nero ine Tunic.
110110100 It. HALL, Waynetown, Ind., my.: Hes, Eil.1,• A Demos, of New Ross, Indiana
•• I owe nty life to 010 Great South American 1 roo„„t how uon.0 ow, to so,
Nervine. 1 had in 1.1 for five mont. from
the effects of an exhausted st °Mach, Indigerition, 111""1" T"11111' I'1"11 enn1r111411)1 111"dr
pr.rost 0tiraytiwohn,(10fte.19%111,11o0:11,1•70i10iighlavt,tic,ri,11, tte.L.P.
Mil 1‘inl,'
fat h01.6 01 getting well. Hod tried three dor. Ot consumption, an Inherit/thee handed doW11
torw, with no relief. The Mat bottle of the Nerv• through eeveral generations. I hen. tektite
Tutileiosproved menn notch that I W. able to the Nem!. Tonle, mid isintinued Ile eie
Walk ahout, and a few hot the cured me entirely. about six end 0111 entirely cured. 14
1 believe it hi the best Inenictne in the world. 1! le thy artindeet remedy foi nerves, tituniath aud
kan not MN -Moral' It too highly." lungs I have ever emu"
No remedy commove with Move A InettleA N NERVINK a owe tor the Nervep No remedy eomi
panne with Month AMerielln Nervier womb 0118 cure tor the Mond., No remedy will at ull
commit° with South Anierlean an a Mire for all forms of falling health. It iiever fails to
cure Indigestion and Dyiipepela. It never fails t 'mire Chorea or Si. 1 it.' [lance tie powers t
build up the whole system are wonderful lu tin. extreme. It carom the old, the e ming, and the
die Sled. It Is a greet mend to the aired and Infirm. Do hid negteet to MO. ON ;m.o. boon:
11 you do, you may neglect the ontv remedy which ell! roitore yoll to health. South Amerleae
Nervins is perDelly • ide, and verv pleasant. to the Mote Delleitte ladies, do not fell to use this
great cum bisauxe It will pot the bloom lit freehlires and beauty upon (nen' 11110 and Ill your cheese,
and Quickly Mile 11 way your illiothilltleu lied winkle...
Large 16 ounce Bottle, $1.00,
F‘iPPY BOTTLE WARRANTED.
J M. AN1 1 LTON, Wholesale and Retail Agent for Jaya.
APPLICATIONS THOROUGHLY REMOVES
skil FF.
DANDRUFF
1.04"1)
Restores easing haltilk
stiosti taw
moss lasing el ink.
Keeps the Scalp dun
Makes hair 5011 sad habil
PrometeS Growth. •
se
•
GUARANTEED
D. L. CAVIEN.
•Ierente, irmvonlint ensenzer Agent, 0 r R.
Says: Antl.landrollIs •erirtoict innossr of Dm.
Ova -as Setten is rear•elliiiiii--11i my oell CMS
a row applleotlou oot ouly thoroughly romOW
excessive dondrull enciiinuistion bet stopte.l
folllog of tlio bah% outdo It soft mid pliable liald
promakd a 0151148 porta
THE R TANS TABULES regulate the stomach, liver and
bowels, purify the blood, are pleasant to take, safe and
always effeetual. A reliable remedy for Biliousness, Blotches
on the Face, Bright's Disease, Catarrh, Celie, Constipation,
Chronic Diarrhcca, Chronic Liver Trouble, Diabetes, Disordered
Stomach, Dizziness, Dysentery, Dyspepsia, Eczema, Flatulence,
Female Complaints, Foul Breath, Heac)ache, Heartbern,
Jaundice, Kidney Complaints, Liver Troubles, Loss of Appetite,
Mental Depression, ,
Painful Digestion, Pim-
the Head, Sallow Com -
Scald Head, Scrofula,
Diseases, flour Stem -
'Torpid Liver, Ulcers,
other symptom or dis-
impure blood or a failure in the proper perforinance of their
functions by the stomach, liver and intestines. Persons given
to over -eating are benefited by taking one tabule after each
meal. A continued use of the Ripens Tabules is the surest
cure for oLstinate constipation. They contain nothing that eau
be injurious to the most delicate. gross fp, 54 gross .1.25,
g gross 75c., 1-24 gross 15 cents. Sent by mail postage paid.
Address THE R1PANS CHEMICAL COMPANY, New York.
Nausca, Nettle Rash,
ples, Rush of Blood to
plexion, Salt Rheum,
Sick Headache, Skin
TirP,1 ! r. g,
Water Brash and every
ease that results froM
I II
1
8V%fiffey