The Exeter Advocate, 1891-4-9, Page 3Itememmeieww
NW lilleelLISH HORSESHOE.
env Irk etet be "taken Off Vetelly and
Reeds lqe
ven n Einshind
v. horeeehoo, one of the advanteges
whieb Ilea in elle fact that it preetudee it ny
prieltiog M ehe shoeing, Nor'
es it is
aline -el, is the grewth of the boo kindred
by this aloe. In the piece of nails the
leen dandemed to the hoof liy meanie ot
olamee. he ehoe le provided with a
hiege, onse nen be epreed smart to allow it
ine he dated to the hoof. The °lamps ruerk
little holm atound the hoof -bone ieto
ailltioh they am burned with the hot iron.
Tbie done, the lower iron is easily adeisted
tend lightened by meana of a aerew.
Throngh the growing ef the hoof the iron
hestromeo newt) firm all the time. Am the
eorew is Indy tig,htened against the lower
aron, the hoof is eubjected to no pressure
wbotever. In order to do away with Atm
iteavy some a layer of rubber or
bather is put between the shoe and
be lterVer iron, and this gives st
very denten) gait to the hexed. The weight
frheithots mu be leeeened by using aluoai-
num with the ion. For the lower iron
toed eubber mut else be sued, and this is of
partioular advantage where horses have a
vest deal of asphalt pavement to travel.
The CObotraotion and manipulation of the
mew ehoe ors SO Bimpe tbvit every ouch.
no driver, hostler, etc., can replace an
iron witbout the slightest Milloelty.
Lanoline kionee derive greet benefit from
nevirig the hone taken off at night and re.
sejosted in the mornine, which osn be
dem Williont tumble or ross of !lime, the
shoe remaining in good condition or many
F5 an, Ate lesser cott is no amell factor to
he token into consideratioo.
:flew eociai Queens Dress.
MM. William 0. Whitney haa a fondness
lor fawn color.
Mrs. Berijarnin Harrison prefers rich
aimless of imam and orinasoes.
elm. Levi P. ildorton, who is called one
soif the best dressed women in Washington,
refere Mao and yellow.
Mrs. 1William any Schieffelin, nee Louise
'Showed, loolines to dark crimson when a
sanitation a color ootaes up.
Mr& Grover Cleveland's dark beauty is
well net off by certein shades of red,
although she prefers blues and pinks.
Mean do Banjos, who is the posseasor of
•nntoltlione, manychildren and price-
Use•game, • buts a passion for all shades of
weliow.
Mr. Alexander Van Reneselaer, who
deemed teethe immoral centennial quad.
tone, itotee upon pansy velvet and all shades
def manve.
Mrs. Leland Stanford is it woman of
grime ouratrion MEM, and she believes in
droning Moldy but gelidly. All shades of
mauve ere favorites with her.
Mrs. Viellierri Astor has a fondness for
phib N9110721) flowers and table decorations
ore conostreed. In dress her taste incliner/
to omelette sbades of dark red.
Mrs. William R. Vanderbilt, a graceful
woman, with a somewhat haughty though
neetrerrizig tatectuer, prefers to all other
shades a dark pink color, which now goes
by the name of bengal°.
Mrs. Beery Villarcl, wife of the ex king
at Well waned is petite, with abundant
gray lair and dark eyes. The oolor whioh
ehe rntrat affeots and which most bettomes
her is tit dark shade of heliotrope.
Rim. Wiliam D Sloane is a handsome
women, derider and graceful in figure, with
feat and delicate complexion anti a profne-
ion of. light golden heir. A oeetain shade
of green melted lintiee is =rola worn by
Mro. Blame.
Mre. Theerselle B. Vdanamaker, tlae Post-
talatitor-Gonerads daughter-in.lew, is a
thomegh petriciare Her taste in color is
Ins eight rose pink, to which the name
listener is applied.
Mre. William Waldorf Astor is slender,
tall and voiceful, and her taste in dress
lataltiges. Her !smite colors are rose pink,
lavendu eau'. a nth, rare shade of yellow.
Mar beautiful ooraplexion is smooth and
palely clear.
At the Stationer%
Yellow seems to be the prevailing color
foe lotto goods decoration.
A miresettere but of Gladstone, carved of
beery Foliated oak, is a handsome paper.weight.,
Toilet bottles with •a delicate silver vine
encircling them are both ornamental and
neer&
A Melo bronze trunk, eamewhattheworse
Sur weer, epperentiy, mervea as a receptade
lor mat ohm
A reaiistio watering trough with an old
fence -rail bid acmes it is a new design for
•unagb-reosivar.
The most f ashionable writing paper tints
Sae OU the Nue sapphire, yaohting blue, and
a delidate eurquoiee tint.
A smell pocket penoil that when the lead
is enifted ell the butt may be used as a
Intel1ny fills two wants handily.
The most eleganely designed Easter
esomitenir•ts give prominence among hand -
/minted Bowen to the posy and violet.
A Javietheen celluloid pen is a novel fratne
for elteemorneter. The fluid in the lettlb
iberr.notxtoter is at •the pen point,
emu gives is the appearance of having just
-bum dipped in colored ink.—The Stationer.
.Not the Right Word.
"No," SAM• Bertkta sadly, " ' pain'
apemen express what I suffer at these
diroste-nie to eimply 'anguish 1' I know
1 ;eaglet to commit a physicdan, but I
timed it non I can't bring myself to do it.
Them too, *female dieeases alwaye seemed
an indedirsate to me, I oan't bear to have
Any one know or speak of rnine."
" dem dear," yammered Editla, "bot don't
yon know. you can be oared without going
to o phentelan Send to any druggist for
bai$010 of Dr Pierceet •Favorite Prescrip-
tion,
sand take it, and I warrant you'll feel
hatter in a very few days."
The •manufacture -s warrant the medicine,
stemebey guarantee it to do exectly what
it elitime, viz: to oure leticorrhest, painfril
iTTSPILSTIVISil, excessive flowing, prolapeus,
inflammation or ulceration of the uterus,
and the lestramerable other "female weak-
zediSes." It to strengthens and builds up
ehe neerinsi system, and nerves, that worn-
out, ratz.down wives end rnothers feel re-
.4juVonalirel after takiog it, and they ere
stoma tho painful embarrassment and
eopeetie on' et surgical examination and a
ted I one, tireeiorne treatment.
et Robber Government.
ht Meltable Record Raw material is
the mother of labor, and labor is the
mother of wages. A Government that
toner; traw nieterial robs tho laborer of
epportonitiee.
le its the widowee with the widest
'rnormeing hand op his hadvaltonsarrieri No.
n Were NO 1 hoe had to chance to get
morlefortably oettied isa her grieve.
The population of London osn be best
Itstimatel by the not generally known fact
'thaii it is greater than that of Norway and
awed= ,conthined.
THE LEGISLAT1()N FETICH,
The illodera Idel-Worship that Imperils
Ifidividual Liberty,
LAWS W111011 OUTRAGE NATURE.
he Neu -Interference outrine-otonnery
By ilaw--Vhe leloral Aspect— lturdens
for the Weak—l'he nepeeterehip
Craze—The lug et to Vote end. ray.
The prevailing and most dangerous
heresy of modern' society is legislative
fetiohism—the exaltation of the statute
book over the lave of mono); the Omega.
tion of individual funotion for the mo
implicit true% in lemeleterie omnis.
deuce and legielaleve omnipotence.
Probitlely never before tia the eistory of the
wade heves the executive tanotions of tbe
State beea so exteneed, or corpoiete intee.
femme with individual treetiorn of action
been se frequently exercised and tolerated
—nay, eveu aolicited. Men affect a horror
of elm very name of " Soaielieru," y et busy
themselves in multiplying pate/nee laws ;
they \mute their love ot freedom, yat petit -
tion for ite limitetion ; they •revere the
memory of tbosse who tiled their
blood to secure for thetri liberty toad a welt,
in the comma of the ffairs of the estate,
yet, sio inospable are they of perceiving the
great lees ,eutantrag through nature, they
pay am work and vote to rivet upon them-
selves the theoisles of a mew slavery 1
Verily, eaten a MaX1 not denude hinnielf of
hia rights! if he will? Surely; but if in so
doing he Ideprives others, of their rights,
against their wee he wronge hie fellow.
man. We hear much of patriotism" in
these days, but, uniorturiately, the precti.
cal dementiretions a the noisy counterfeit
have been given in the dupes of ignorantee
and bigotey toiling in the harness while
callous eelfeehness handled the lines and
plied the whip.
The multitude does not reason closely.
It incliada to seek short cuts to its goel.
An apparent immediate good, although
fraught winh all the objeotions ettetoktiug to
expediency, as a policy, is °hen more
alluring to it zhau the certain bat more
dietetic rsalization thereof by conforming
to the greathetwa of nature. And is is to
this domination of desire over judgment,
this itioepecity of the !multitude Le see that
COMPENSATION MUST BE MADE PCB EVERY
• WRONG,
whatever the motive prompting it, that sel-
fish men owe their power to sway xt to their
own profit. A promise or material benefit
—whet matter though it be obtained by
moral wrong.doieg ?—a gooa catoh-ory—
what tbough it partake of the nature of the
street corner prayer ut the Pharisee ?—
and of how litthe avail is the Golden R1110
or the " Thou Mittle not steal" of the Greet
Lswgiver 1 Bien who would bubble over
with indigestion were aaie stightest question
raised as to their probity imitate not 00
seek for privileges for themselves and their
friends \teeth ot necessity carry with them
the oppression of others. Every advent.
age given by law to one man or oleos °per -
sites to the disadvantage of some other man
or close. Nothing is added, -nothing de-
ducted frotu the total; but when one gets
more another gets lees. What is added °lithe
one scale 115 taken from the other. The
aggreudizeineot of wealth and the pinch of
poverty are tointempuaneous ; they bear
to each other the relation of cause and
effect. Yet wealthy men who clothe them•
selves in the mantle of Cbristiemity and
profess a belief in the Brotherhood of
&enmity stern to sae no incouistenoy an
utilizing ihe power wealth and position
give them to secure the message of laws
whose tendenoy is to set nation against
nation, Mass against clue, man against
man, in order that tinder cover of law they
may profit by the unnatural industrial
strife consequent thereupon. The desired
law is passed; the selfisbehrewd heap up
Hobos; the selfish duped wonder that they
fatten not, bat tail num their menthes) for
the law. The law!, Whet a word thistles
betionie to conjure with I And how the
ooejurers work it todheir profit 1
Law is eoly ; but not your law, ye who keep the
tablets wine°
While ye dash the law to pieta OS, shatter Rile life
said soul ;
Bearing up the Ark is lightsonie, golden epis hid
within,
While we Levities share the offerings, richer by
tlie people's sin.
And to some people ib never seems to
have occurred that tbere can be a confliot
between Legislation and Right, thee there
are limed, already ter overstepped, to she
wiadom, justice or usefulnees of statutory
enactment& To others the credulity of
the multitude opens en easy avenue to
personal gain and preferment, of whioh
moral obliquity emblem them readily to
take advantage. They have probably for
the moment lost sight of the all-pervading
law of compensation which sooner or later
must be reckoned with; or Fautei ke
present gratification blinds them to the
wrong they do their fellows and the debt
they ttre accumulating
CET WEALTH, IIONESTLY IP WIT CAN,
buts get it at whatever cost of sacrifice of
principle, of friend'
s of future; at what.
ever auandonment of honor ; at whatever
demoralization of society; pay the prioe,
but get wealth, seems to be the motto of
too many men today. And these men are
not denizens of the bug alleys and squalid
dens of vice; they are leaders in church
and society, prominent in business, eminent
as philanthropists. • And becanse of this the
• danger DJ the greater. The lack of under-
standing or lin disregard of principle is
more to be deplored. The villeiny that lurks
in dark platets indicates a healthy goodness
in the eociety from which it hides; the
ignorance Lb t is timid and inquiring is
fit
already ha nlightened. tut when
moral wrong GC013100 a political principle
and fin& a place of honor in our atetute
books; when the highest honors and
emoluments fall to the advocetes of laws
whittle vielatetlae fine principles of liberty
and deny the divine paternity; the thinkers
of the nation tnay well antioipate the inevi-
table consequence.
For the laws of economies aim as invardd
ble ms the laws of piddles. Were they as
Well understood, the denial ef iniirvidnal
liberty would be unlettered no lots abird
than the denial of the fact of gravitation
Yet people daily, by Voice, by vote, by
act, deoy the fotmee proposition, They do
not,
of course, gay in to many wends,
" Liberty is en Eft," but they employ
themeelves lopping off brandied and sever.
ing roots, Until the tree once so freely
watered with heroic blood promisee to
become ti gnarled and stunted Borah in.
capable of sheltering us from the acorolaing
sun of cotpotate tyrannyletnersou
greeped, the situation when he Dahl 1
The built of political economy is ton -inter-
ference The only Wardle it found in the self-
adjestifig meta of demand and supply. Do not
legislate. Meddle and yeti Seep the sinews with
your eutoptuary laws. Give to bounties; make
equal laws; secure bit and tronorty, and you
need not give alms, Open the doors a °Peed
omits, to telent and virtue, ana they will do
themselVeri justice, and property will not be itt
baa hands. In free and just commonwealth,
property eushee from the idle and imbecile to
the eadustrioue, brave end pereevering
'A free end just eorinnonWeakin 1" Are
we striving to ruerit that designation 2 Are
our Uwe " knit "f Do We Practice 10301
" non-interference "? nave we opened the
natural opportuoines to 04 talent and
virtue "? Who would make euoh a olaira
The very gifts of nature which no man
oould oreete are appropriettoe iste individual
n'property," and those who by virtue of man;
made laws exercise '‘ rigote of csweership '
over the Eerth aseutne that mom/recent ar-
rivals on the acme have no right to a mon
ism place upon it, save on condition of por,
°heathen their permission The stored,up
beat el the coal beds anti the rninertil
wealth of the world are "private property,"
and can only be used jat tho pleasure of,
and on paying the prioe asked by, those
who by virtue of legialation "own" theile
natured storms of human necessaried And
far from feeling that for this undisputed
possession of those deposits they owe some,.
thing to sooicity, thee° " owners " of
areatien's bounties use their prerogative to
extort the last cent from those dependent
upon those stores for heat; and when
those who own not, but who must live and
pay with their labor for permiesion to be
upon the Earth, seek for wages that will
enable them to be anything more then
animals of burden and perpetuators of a
race of camera for others, the lords of the
headings) close the works, fret zs the public
and starve the workers into dooility. These
men are not sieves; oh, no I They are
ofree and independent," If they (loud like
the wagee, there's no compulsion ; they
needn't teke them ; the streets are
free to them—if they keep reeving 1
They out oheer for politioel heelers, glorhy
the old flag, tramp in processions, vote
and pay taxes. Wray caret they be Bathe
lied, velten all that ie asked of them is that
onir seem PAY THEIR StrAPLIIS EARNINGS,
over a bare subsiatence, IU 'support of those
who peewee the " privileges " who " give
them employment, and who gracious/y
permit them ta stay upon their plenet ?
Men own the earth, and charge their fel-
lows for permission to live upon it and
make it productive It has a queer sounde
hasn't it ? Yet, turn over Mae proposition
as you will, give it expression in whatever
form of words you may. there ramming the
ugly fact. Is this a conformity to natural
law or is it not
The condition is longseetablished 1 Of
course it is; but Evil differs from Good in
that age giVOS to it no reverence in the eyes
ot intelligence With a good man to recog-
nize evil le to abhor it, to Beek means of
escape from it. Evil has its (stronghold in
ignorance and solfiehnees. This condition
is one that oppresses the masses ; majori-
ties rule, and once dispel the illusion,
created by long reverence for laws which
deny mental rights, and tbe wrong will
soon be righted.
Su with regard to freedom of sale and
purebase. It is not enough that the Great
Disinherited should pay for permission to
live upon this planet ; they tenet be metde
to pay the taxes of its owners. Every dol.
lar of federal taxation by EX01130 and one -
toms cornea out of the products of labor
and is a deduotion from the earnings of
those least able to bear the burden of gov-
ernment. The owners of the Earth, as
snob, pay not a cent. And thet the taxes
may be raised in this way an army of offices.
holders, eeleoted generally from the ranks
of political bunomsteerere, are supported at
the public expense, paid fat salaries and
comfortably pensioned off when age, india-
position to exertion or the political
exigency whioh requires the posi-
tion as a reward for another
heeler mailere saoh retirement / ex
pedient. Nor is this the only or woe
runt; of the indirect system of rniaing
revenue. It opens vast opportunities fo
official peculation and fraud, and Govern
ment extravagance. The duly on import
enables; capiteliste in certein lines to ge
higher prices for their product beoause o
the restriction on the liberty of choice t
which the oonaumer is subjected. Ti
increase in price caused by the extlusion o
foreign goods and internal oombinatio
does not go into the public coffer& but into
the purse of the protected manufaoturer ;
hence we have the speotaole of a legalized
sobeme of plunder—the law prostituted to
the robbery of one class to enrich another
elan. And while the roan who sells his
labor is compelled to submit to the
eenest competition in a free labor market,
this same law enables the favored ones to
make a profit by combination on short
time and 'fruited proanetion—at once
lessening the earners' period of employ-
ment and squeezing a higher prioe out of
the consumer. Combines of labor 1 Oh,
yes; they have sometimes held their own;
oftener they have failed; but whether they
succeeded or failed they always did so at
greet oast, for in • the end labor pays it all.
What is the OSUSO 2 Interferenoes with
natural laws; meddlesome legislation,
prompted by cupidity and selfishness
wbioh regard not Truth or Right, but
prostitute all principle for gain; sup-
ported by the suffering and deluded as a
short out to a better condition, because
they think they see good to be obtained by
the expedient, forgetful of the eternal fiat
that will as surely send putiiehment as
Coneequence is ibdiseoluoly linked to
Cause. And how crafty leaders
DAWN AT THE OULLIBILITP
of the dooile donkeys who harness them-
selves to their carriages and shout them-
Relves hoarse in applause of the men and
ineesuree that take from them their
liberty, rob them of their earnings and
depress still lower their condition of servi.
tude IHumbug is fetid to pay, but it
doesn't often pay the humbugged; and
when he gets able to see that he is hum-
bugged the game is up. Ignoranoe is the
mother of superstition, it itt said ; it is the
vitt' air of Legislative Fetioh Worship
And what of the plotters? You of the
broadcloth and silk tile, up there in the
best pew near themulpit ; are you able to
secure the exposition of a comfortable
gospel? Are your subscriptions to Church
•eohernes end charities such a considereble
proportion of the gains wrung from the
toilers by unjust laws that unpleasant
troths jar not on your delioately attuned
ear Wee your beautiful veneer defy the
eyes of the Watchman on the walls of Zion,
or does he cry aloud and spare not? • Do
the tariff -stolen 'Shekels in your pocket
jingle out a " Don't be personal" refrain
when he resets " Thou shalt not steal " ?
Dor,e it sound anoanny to hear him aseure
the people that "the robbery of the wicked
k hill destroy thern "? Do you take °enc.
fort from the decletred certahity thet
o though hand join in hand the Wicked
Shall not go unpuidehed " Has it ever
ocentred to you that the moral difference
between a man untrue to principle for the
privilege of plundering bis fellows bylaw,
kind the loafer who eel's his franchise for a
few dollars or a glass of whiskey can only
be One of degree ? And if it has arreated
your attentior, what wore the relative
positicord you assigned the partiee ?
And in how nattny other ways are we
" meddling,'" "interfering,' Look at the
annual pilgrimages to urge upon
went the 1)60880 of lewd viithotit Mine -
hero moat of which are, itt the netute of
einoreachtrients on the domein of perking'
liberty 1 Our rolianoo upon legislation is
rapidly degenerating into a vire feteohism.
We havo IegslIy conotiluted oorabineein
law, medicine, pharmacy, dentistrY, und
probably othero, and some guildo are
Jae etermally oomplaining betmuse their in.
corporation does not give thera the power
they wiohed to obtain.
sourtn moires !
The terra haft of late been so ridiculously
travestied that it has loot owe. Dot
equal rights, in the course we are now pur-
suing, would eventuate in every trade,
Profeseion and calitog becoming a pro.
tooted body corporate. Imagine the
40 Boy al College of Dashweebers," or the
44 Imperial Corporation of Suitvengere,” or
the" I.Qrnpire Guild of Noble Bootblack
Artiste,' with all the " whereesos,"
" eevertheleseee " and pains and ponaltiest
with which these legal interferences with
personal- liberty fortify the corporate corn -
bine I
Strange, too, that the men on whom the
burden falle most heavy should be the
loudest in their demands for further legis -
native interferenee. f he " inepeotion '1
cry is mostly an industrial one, even when
" engineered " by the phice-seeking pole
ticien. We hive had iespeotore of one
kind and another until the faros hoe
become tiresome. What matter whether
they know a canal heat a race track, or a
oolonizetion company from a piotdo 1 They
get their comectiession, salaries and
perquisites ; the people pity. It makea
patronage for politicians; patronage makes
votes; and here lies the secret of the rude -
nese to acude to the cry for more officials.
We must live by legislative rule, work by
legislative rule, be deprived of our earnings
by the MUGU rule, be doctored, die and be
buried by it. And every way we turn, at
all hours, we need a Governmeet disputer
or other tateeetine omnipotent to see that
we suffer not from indulging in what
liberty remains to us. It coats money, of
exparee ; but we are a patient, paying
peddle. If we like it, why should
we not have it, and foot the
hills? Most of us share in these benefits (2)
We xnay be shut out from enjoyment of the
natural opportannees, kept on short time
toad low wages by a combine, have our
pinhole picked by the tariff thieves and our
personal liberty restricted by statute laws,
but we can't he denied the right to worsbip
theeLegielation Fetich and oujoy govern-
ment officers galore as long as we can earn
enough to pay them.
But there ts a cloud on the horizon. The
schoolmaster is abroad in the land. The
doctoro say they find trouble in persuading
their patients not to be drugged ; a cease of
people are to -day actually berating the
popular childlike trust in legislation. It
remains to be seen how tenacious of stades
tune is the Modernidolatry.
Meseuzem
' Not Anticipated
" There was an old ohap from away back
in Vermont," relates der. Hillierd, et tea
salesman et Boston, "who came to town
one day to make some pun/tams, chief
among whioh was a big bill of goods from
rny house. Wide) the goods were being
put up, I undertook to show him through
the houee, snd in the coarse of our wan-
derings we came to a speaking -tribe. This
was a marvel to Mr. Vermonter, and I had
to explain to him how it was we could
• speak from the sixth floor. on which we
were at the time, to a raan on the first
floor. To illustrate any words, I called up
our abipping clerk and asked him, Have
you put up those goods forMr.Vermorster 2'
--and with this I slipped from the tiabeand
put it to the ear ot my onstonaer. The
result was not what I hed anticipated.
Much obliged, sir ; you can canoe' my
,orekeee, said Mr. Vermonter tome. 'What's
st Cigibitten ?' Said I. • Oh, within' l' said
a be; and cff he startesi for the elevator.
r 'What did you say joetztow ?' I asked the
. ehipping clerk in haste. I said, I am
s waiting for an answer from Bradstreet's
t about him; I understand he is a alippery
old cuss and needs watching 1 "—Demerara
o Ar908Y.
Her Royal Sweetness.
e, To be called Her Royal Highness is
the destiny of every woman born to wear a
orown, but it remains for one woman
among all the royal fanailies to have the
endearing title of Her Royal Sweetness
given to her, and that honor belongs to
Alexandra, Princess of Wales. She has
that marvelous art of making goodness
seem attraotive; of msking the right aot
the pleasant one and of impressing upon
all who know her that the kiaowledge that
to do good is to have a pleasant time, and
not to do it is to miss some of the pleasure
of life. Many prinoesses have been written
about as having been beautiful, as having
caused great wars, as having done great
deeds of valor, of having made men die for
them, and kingdortmg gunnel over them, but
of none of them oan ts i
be eaid, as it s of
this gracione lady, that the whole world
bows down before sweetness and goodnees,
that peace has been the watchword of her
life; and not Only does she value peace, but
those loving sisters, Faith, Hope and
Charity, abide with her —Lady Elizabeth
Hilary in Ladies' HorneJournal.
thee .
Keep the City Olean.
Philadelphia Record: In disoussing the
!street cleaning problem in *he " Popular
Science Monthly" General Emmons Clark
insists, with great force and truth, tbat no
system can succeed if there be not effioient
oo.operation on the part of the public. So
long as householders and housekeepers
shall sweep or throw their dust, dirt, ashes,
garbage or refuse, or any part of such mat-
ter, into the streets, or allow anything to
escape from thear garbage receptacles upon
the sidewelks or upon the streets, or so
long ail cartel conveying dirt and refuse
shall be allowed to drop any part of their
contents on the streets, there will be con-
tinuing and irremediable uncleanness!.
Cleanliness, like godlinese, mat permeate
all the parts of es city, and statuette all the
inhabitants, before proper physic's' and
moral sanitary conditions can prevail.
Lost Their Deposite.
Among the candidates who forfeited their
deposits at the recent Dominion election
were: Messrs. Hamilton, Conservative, in
North Brant; Weiemiller, Independent, in
South Efuroe ; Johnson and Ronthier, Con.
aervative, and Bertrand, Independent, in
Preeoott ; White, Independent liberal, in
West Ontario; Valin, Conservative, in
Montmorency; Honda, Conservetive
Nicolet ; Magnum Conservative in Mont.
calm ;Cochran, Ijiberal, Montreal West ;
George, Liheral, in Westmoreland, N. B, ;
MoLarty, Independent Coneetvative, in
Bothwell; LOWiLi and Nagle, Independents,
in Ottawa City ; Led, Liberal, in Compton ;
Leferriere, Conservative, isa Bonaventhro ;
Reilly, Censervative, in Alberta ; Rare,
Coneervanve, in North Oxford; Major
Edwards, Independent, in Kingston.
—Mary E. Dewey, of Goshen, Indiana,
wante a pension. She diegaited herself as
a man and served through the war as a
privet() in the 261h Ohio volunteer& She
was shot in the leg.
---doeumb Mechem, one of the Italians
killed in New Orleans, Wag a largo ship.
owner and his estate is estimated at
42,000,000.
Nominations will take place in Algoma
on April 18 and polling on Illay 10.
Cali.ameamilummmasamossammimmilINNIN
d\
•,'V‘\s%,**.
for Infants and Children.
1 recommend it as superior th any prescription doz mach, Diardicen., „ ,
"Castoria is so welladapted to children that 9aatuet cum 03110.1 Ccag.C4Stitea
I
known to me," IL A.. Ateterea, IL D., , -ea -
ems, gives sleep, tand pro
111 80. Oxford St., Broolayn, N. Y. Vilthout inturious medication.
Tim CzYrduit COnpANY, 77 Murray Street, N. 'I .
etiees•eis Littlinetittiseteletteitet e otettetieSeestetteedi t
or
A Weil Known Lady Tolls
of Croat Benefit
Derived Frorn
Hood's Sarsaparmila
For Debility, Neuralgia and
Catarrh
"TORONTO, Dec. 28, 1890.
'C. I. Hoop & Co., Lowell, Mass.
" GENTLEMEN : For many years I have
been suffering from catarrh, neuralgia
• and general debility. d failed to obtain
any permanent relief from medical ad-
vice, and my friends feared I would
never find anything to cure me. A
short time ago II' was induced to try
Hood's Sarsaparilla. At that time I
was unable to walk even a short dis-
tance without feeling a
• Death -Like Weakness
overtake me. And I had intense pains
from neuralgia, in my head, back and
Ihnbs, which were very exhausting.
But I am glad to say that soon after I
began taking Hood's Sarsaparilla I saw
that it was doing me good. I have
now taken three bottles and am entirely
Cured of Neuralgia.
I am gaining in strength rapidly, and
can take a two-mile walk without feel-
ing tired. I do not suffer nearly so
much from catarrh, and find that as my
strength increases the catarrh decreases.
I am indeed a changed woman, and
shall always feel grateful to Hood's Sar-
saparilla for what it has done for me.
is My Wish
that this my testimonial shall be pub-
lished in order that others suffering as I
was may learn how to be benefited.
"Yours ever gratefully,
"MRs. M. E. MERRICK,
"36 Wilton Avenue,
"Toronto, Canada."
This is Only One
Of many thousands of people who
gladly testify to the excellence of and
benefit obtained from Hood's Sarsapa-
rilla. If you suffer from any disease ord
affection caused by impure blood or low
state of the system, you should cer-
tainly take
Sold by druggists. 11; six fOr $5. Prepared
only by C. 1. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass.
100 oses One Dollar
JAPANZSB IHIINRER
Takes the Fledge at the 'Urgent golleita-
tlo n °fairs. at ado,Pertellidelcida and Mrs.
Sasaki.
Sho Nouletto, in a recent letter from
Japan, queintly sets the door ajar and
gives a glimpse of family life and infinenoe
under the rising sun. As elsewhere,
women seem readiest to receive the temper.
• ance gospel, and with the faithfulness af
their sex and enterprise of their race, they
at once apply the nate truth. Last year a
Mr. Ando lectured in the M. E. Church at
Tokio ,giving a glowing account of the work
of American women.
"Alt the oloee of tha meeting," says Eh°
Nemoto, °' Mrs. Igo Tad° left • the church
in a manner so unusual that her friends,
Mee. Sasaki and Mrs. Usbioda, at once
tailed upon her at her home. There they
found Mrs. Tado kindly advising her
husband to stop drinking. But her words
!teemed almost in vain, teed her advice was
leading to vigorous if not angry discussion.
At this juncture Mrs. Sasaki and Mrs.
Ushioda opportunely joined in, and
helped Mrs. Tado in tbe good work of den -
outing her laueband. Mr. Tado, a strong
drinker, finally accepted the advice given
by his wife and her frieride. It was mid-
night when they offered prayer, thanking
the Lord for the great blessing. The next
morning the family went to the church end
all signed the pledge. Siece then they
have been very hippy and are doing good
work, standing by the principles of tem-
perance,"
The Queen Fawned Mar Jewels,
Queen Iatibollsis of Spain, pawned her
jewels to raise money to fit out the ex -
edition that discovered the new world.
Her sacrifice was net greater than is made
by many women of America, wbb deny
therneelves many things in order to have
money to buy Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical
Discovery for their sick huebande or
ohildren. Tide " Dion ery " is more ita.
portant to them then the ome made in 1492,
For all diseases of the Lungs, Iliver, Throat,
or Stump:not/le " Discoed*, '1 is a bOversign
remedy. A trial convincest, ite continued
tem cures. It parifien the blood, invigorates
the liver and strengthens mad builds op the
whale System. Guaranteed to benefit or
ewe in every ease, or money paid for it re.
turned.
THE NI41 " r_RdiNCE ALBERT."
How Pall nail " Bruton-J.0s " Will Swell
et round, Vials ermine.
From this time on says the New York
Son, tin, dandies of Pall Mall and Picca-
dilly will war a slightly modified form of
the existiog garment by which the name of
Prince Albert lel perpetuated in the grate-
ful memory of civilized nations. The new
mat is ehorter in the waist than the depart.
ing style, and is longer in tele ekirt It may
be either blank or gray, and the edges may
be corded or etithed, as the wearer'e fancy
dietates, bah it raest be of rough cloth if he
desires to retain the respect of polite
society.
natuittem in waren.
Because a thing is small in size,
Think not 'twill pay to scorn it;
Setae insects have a larger waist,
Bat hft less than the hornet.
Some /stoma may, perhaps, BOOLE, OU
aneCinnt et their diminutivenees, Dr.
Pierce's Piessant Pellets But a trial of
them °maybe:we the most scornful skeptic,
that they will entre constipation, dyspepsia,
sick and billiotis headembe, ,quicker and
surer than their large waisted competitors,
the aide:dyne pill.
A, Orapaneao Canal.
A canal has recently been completed in
Japan to cement Lake Biwa with the
Kamagawa Rieer end the city of Riot°.
Thin cane' ie 6.88 nailPs long altogether,
and has on its comae some important
works. It has to pats through several
ranges of mottettaine, and this is effected by
meana of three tunnels, the lerigtha of which
are 8 040 fees, 411 feet and 2,802 feet re-
epectively. These tunnels have a brt a ith
of 16 feet arid a height of 14 feet. e.hey
are lined throughout with mesonry. One
of the tunnels, 8,340 feet long, is the
second lamest in Japan. At a dietetics
of about 5e miles from Lake Biwa
the caul is tuvidee into two portions, one
joining the River Icarne.gawa and the other
leading nortb wised to Rename, ths northern
extremity of tbe city of Moto. Theseoond
portion cf the teepee al.er passing through
a tunnel 460 feet long, orofsee the Valley
of the Imperial Tornt s by a handsome
• am:tee:into 800 feet Ioxig, aria oonsistirg of
fousteto aohea of rnaeortry.• The entrance
to the o,naZ the extremity of Lake Biwa
wail forrriva by redeeming about 1,000 feet
of the netts, end forming a breakwater to
proteot it end insure still water. The
canal s.Tves a double purpose, furnishing a
line of hevigettidn, and' bringing down the
water from Lake Biwa for use in irrigating
the Janda about Riot°.
Swearing Oil.
Miro Leiden —What has become of our
friend Mr. Clay?
Mr. Rend—He has taken eroployment isa
a powder -mill for six menthe.
Mies Laflin—How strange 1
Mr. Rend—Not at all He wished ter
break hiniteelf of smoking
—A little 3 -year-old girl was taken tee
ohurch for the first time, after promising
Ulu ebe woulsi sit still and not talk. For
aortae time the was as quiet end prim as
possible, wlaen saddenly etre turned to her
mother arid said aloud: "Mamma, isn't I
a good girl not to talk?"
CARTER'S
E
Siek Readaehe and reNeve all the inatibles lee&
cIviito a bilious state of the anion. R*It Mess, Nausea. Drowsitaess. Etitike
ms af
earl
eat g, rein in the Stele. !le. White ilketeett
remarkable success has been allOink in
Headache, yet Cereemes Lierzet Urn Pa
are equally valuable in Conatipation,
and preventing this annoying complaint,
they also correct all disorders et the
stanuilate the liver and regulate the 1*
Even if they only cured
Ache they would he almost prieelem to those
who suffer from tots diaressing ueneptsf
but fortunately their goodness deee n
here, and those who onto try them wiU
thee little pills valuable in SO many ways
tey
afwteill• lnat warel g t° do W"k°116 *"a -
E
is the bane of so many lives that here is whette
we make our great boast. Oar pills ergo it
while ethers do not.
Menges teener LIVEM rues_ are v small
hertsig
and very eatty to take, One or Owe make
a dose. They are strictly v e Awl do
;Ft gripe or pume, but by t r .• a& Meets.
ease all who rise them. re etlaM et rib ten*
Ve for V. Sold everyvrhere, or gent by Meet.
anzan zeugma oo., Vett 21elt.
bell Eli hESam11 Tit
'11;:RICIVA
AGENOYS6r
7)rtrobl5t of lefeeratien_eteil tee
;erect et the J1V5.4, allowing Hor,, to
°atom Patents, Caveats, "rradt
\Mark& COMI'lgi3ts4hitt fres.
Addions
)s, 861. Ifirowdwasi
`'• New Tarte
tee eteet"
re.