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The Exeter Times, 1887-1-20, Page 2For Toilet Use. Ayer's Hair 'Vigor lseepe the hair soft stria pliant, inipart, to it the lustre and freshness of youth, ceuses it Lo grow luxuriently, eradicates Dandruff, cures eeelp diseeses, and is the most cleanly of all Lair preparations. AYER'S 114ir VIP?' has. givel ima peafect matisfacalon. 1 was nearly bald for tax years,during whieh time 1 venni many hair preparations, but witliont suceese. Indeed, whet livtI hair1 had, WAS gFowing thinuer, uutil tried Ayer's lIair Vigor. I used two bottles of the Vigor, and my lieaa is now well covered with a new growth of hair. —Judson 13. Chapel, Peabody, Mass. HAIR atv pared, emery ChalN.N7 and color restored te it by the use of Ayer's Bair Vigor. r My hair was thin, laded, and dry, and fell out in large quantities., Ayer's Hair Vigor stopped the falling, and restored my hair to its original poior• As a dressing for the hair, this preparation has no equal. — Mary N. Hain mond, Stillwater, Mann.. ifiGoRyouth, and' beauty, in the a appearance of the bah, may be preserved for an indefinite period by the use of Ayer's Raiz Vigor. A. Ws- -lease of the scalp Caused my hair to be- come harsh and dry, and to fall out freely, Nothing 1 tried seemed to do any good. until I coinmenced using Ayer's Flair Vigor. Three bottles of This preparation restored my hair to a • healthy condition, and it is now soft and pliant. My scalp is cured, and it also free from dandruff. —Mrs. E. R. Foss, Milwaukee, Wis. Ayer's Hair Vigor! Sold by Druggists and Perfumers. PERFECT SAFETY, prompt action, and wonderful curative properties, easily place Ayer's Pills at the head of, the list of popular remedies for Sick and 'Nerv- ous Headaches, Constipation, and all ail- ments originating in a disordered Liver. I have been a great sufferer from 'Headache, and Ayer's Cathartic Pills are the only medicine that has ever given Me relief. One dose of these Pills will quickly move my bowels, and free my head from pain.— William L. Page, Richmond Va. Ayer's Pills, 2repared•by Dr. J. C. Ayer .94 Co., Lowell, Maas, Sold by all Dealers in Medicine. THE EXETER TIMES. Is published every Thursday morning,at the TIMES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE Wain •stre et , nearly opposite Fitton's Jewel ery Store, Exeter, Ont., b y John -White as Son, Pro- •prietors. FATES OF ADVERTESFSG : I first insertion, per line 10 cents Each subseguact insertinn,per line.. -3 cents. To insure insertion, advertisements should be sentin notlatertham NVednesday morning frarjOR PRINTING DEPARTMENT is one Ithe largest and best equipped in ths County 1 Enron. All -work entrnsted to us will 14308iY HOUSEHOLD. Economising The Xorning Rona, A, raw young housekeeper is frequently overwheltuedby domestic (lel:ails, with whicl. an older housekeeper of nastuee judgmeet tuid lesge experience eau readily cope, ac- 001110.81AWS ill() same =must of work in One-halg the time, and with less than half the tronble and frestion. This does not arise merely from the feet that the older house- keeperbas acquired greater meehenical eltill and awiftness, but, whet is still more im- portant, she has acquired the habit of fore. thought and the faculty ot org,anizing, She hoe learned to easefully and pulieieusly lay her plans and make her roles and arrange- ments, OR doretml•ag the various details qf her household work thet one task will not eouflict with Another. ]'or iustance, before the fire dies out in the stove, she will cue. fully reflect over everything that has to be coked or heated before the next meal, whereas, the' hiexperienced youpg house- keeper will perhaps only remember after the tnorniag fire is all out that she wanted an extra kettle of hot water, or she wanted to make a dish of blanc mange, or some other dessert for dinner, early enough to avoid interaering with the cook when the latter sets about getting dinner.. I will. take this occasion to advise all young house. keepers to make an especial point of keeping on hand a perpetual supply of hot water. a am addressing myself, now to country housekeepers who have not a range supply- ing them with this &Aide.) Make it a rule that your cook shall always have at 1east one kettle of hot water on the stove, end that she shall always replenish this( imreedi ately after pouring out its contents. It is so little trouble to do this, and it will in- calculably facilitate yOur domestic routine. It is very dishable to keep two kettles, so you need never interfere with the kettle of hot water intended for making tea of coffee. If you will insiston always having a kettle of hot water on the stove, you will so often have a sudden and unexpected need for it that you will be glad you have established this rule. For instance, you will sometimes want to draw m hasty cup of tea for an ail - in friend, or some sudden illness might arise in which every moment of time gained was an object, and. then you might find a kettle of water already heated of invaluable service, I have known a housekeeper thrown back an hour by having to wait for hot water after the fire had died out, when, by a little forethought, and by making the rule I have above advised, she would not have had to wait a moment. A housekeeper should, early in the morn- ing, arrange all her plans for the day and let the cook 'know the programtne. Let her think carefully over everything • that needs to be done that day, and try to order and time the various details so that there shall be no hitch nor conflict about them. For instance, if coffee is to be roasted, the , best time to have this done is inunediately 'after the cook has taken up dinner. The stove is then nicely heated and just in the right condition for roasting coffee. By set- ting the cook to do it then, both time and fuel will be saved, and the task probab- ly be completed by the time you have dined and are ready to give the cook her dinner. This is also' ,good time for Making yeast. ur arena pt a,tt en ti o n. *DeeiSiens RegardinNews- g I . rtohen. Hints. papers. • . I PUMPKIN BREAD.—One .quart stewed Any person who takes a paperrehlarlyfrom :pumpkin run through a fine sieve, one quart ' ,g he post•oillce,whether directed in his name or buttermilk, one teaspoonful salt, one ellP another's, or -whether he has subscribed or not New Orleana molasses, corn -meal encaukh • is responsible for payment. to make a thick batter. Bake in a Dutch 2 If &person larders his paper ,lisconiinued . • . ' oven slowly all night. In the morning it he naustpsy all starears or the publisher may smarms to send it until the nevi! ent is made, will he baked thoroughly, and ready for And then collect the whole amount, whether brea.kla at paper ' hfrom the office or not . 3 . In suits for subscriptions, the suit may be A great deal is thrown away, even by the instituted in the place where the paper is pub • "tithed, although -the subscriber may reside poor, that in Europe assists to make good ood. The skin and bones of fish, for ex - "hundreds of miles away. 4 The courts have decided that refusing to ample, put again into the liquid in which a take newspapers or petiodicals from the post- fish has been boiled, simmered and strained ' - office, or Fein crying and leaving them uncalled off, will be as good to use as is much of that for is nri,,,,, fmoi P.ecid encl. of inten tionel frnwq •PAU for gelatine. This may be used as a Send 10 cents AGIFTsample box of goods or, and we -will semi Y121 i. free a rOya), valuable rice and flavored with onion and pepper; tin le broth It may be thickened with with the addition of a little fiat fish and th_.: t will put you in tne way of making more suitable spices, it will form a fair fish soup, money at once, than anything else in America. Taken in any of the ways mentioned, it Bothsexes of all ages can live at home and work in spare time or all the time. .Capital makes a nourishing. meal, while, with a zotrequirud. We will. start you. Immense third of mak added, and warmed, it is pay sule for these who start at. once. STIPsox a very comforting and restoting drink for an • ...e Oo .Portleace 'melee invalid. There is much virtue in despised Exeter Butcher Shop. fishbones. . I A dish formerly, despised, but which is ibegumnig to be better known, is Toronto R. DAVIS, ;scrapple, a compound of fresh pork boiled I to a jelly, seasoned, and thickened with Butcller & General Dealer prepared Indian -meal and wheat•flour. This food is considered very healthful, and is bread and meat in one. It is usually fried. —INALL 2.-INDS OF— a light brown, and may be e&ten. cold. It is m excellent for en to carry who have to take mE A T. s th edirmdaiynnbeer stoptpleemir %oil i;51ifieal dpsploer-psiiieo,posi,7 apples and "old-fashioned" To these hints we add a few old-fashioned" recipes, which Customers supplied TUESDAYS TEURS- a ) otuid • • . g. . 'DAYS atm SATURDAYS at their residence ' Pm CALY..z.—One quart of sour milk,one ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE teaspoonful salt, fresh butter (a lunm size of CEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION. ..........— an egg), stewed pumpkin, mashed very fine, ; one pimt, ' four tablespoonfuls of molasses. Stir n flour—usually coarse, unbolted flour . —mild the batter is thick. Beat an bour to insure lightness (asno soda is used), finally mix stiff roll out into a fiat cake, and bake in theskillet, before the open fireplace, upon a bed of coals. ,.. A BIT OF THRT1rD.—When apples are SAY on theradicalandpermanent cure (with- frozen, many housekeepers consider them out medicine) of Nervous Debility ,ss elite) raid good for nothing. When thawed, press physical capacity impediments to Manistee, ont the juice of the soft and seemingly eteeresuitiugireru excesses. • Price,in sealed. envelope,only 6 eents,orttre spoiled apple. For apple marmalade boil poster:re stamps. down a quantity of the frozen liquid and ?lie celebrated author c f this s•din irabl e es thielten with fresh apples, pared and quart - say clearly demonstrates, from thirty years f nlpr actice , that &LEM,: ing comet -men- ered. Stir until thick and. smooth, season success cos may be radically Mired withoutthe clang. With bruised cloves allspice, and kick erons use of internal meclicineSor the use of cinnamon. Marmalade made in this way the knife; Point 0,31, a mode of cure et ouce is finer flavored than that made from sound eiropie certain and effectual, by meant of _ ,_ evhich every. sufferer, no matter en:m.6MB con- apples. ditionmay be,may etti•e hitaseltennsanly, pri A delicate, clear jelly is made from the vathlv endSadisallt. ' iuice of frozen apples and two-thirds the t. -..Thi. IeOttire A &mild be i nthe hands of ev- ery - cry ponthandevety 'tannin tb e laud. quantity of white sugar. Boil until it aatiress THE CNISERWELL MEDICAL COMPANY wimmt, Terows AND Poreeo.--Turnips in t • any form are sitpposed to be the appropriate 41 AN Sr., eatSe-VOStis vegetable to serve with boiled mutton. laact Office Box 450 , 48,s&:aMtrigilk4a2:5=4205,1112/0222,2E-2/at2171.1:-Xli; How LostBow Rostov e 5 We have recently published a new edition tit DR. aux,vnEWET,L'S CELEBRATED ES - jellies then pour into glasses. ADVERTISERS can learn the exaot cost of any proposed line of advertising in American paperrA by addressing Geo. P. Rowell & Co., N',....i.wspriper Advertising Bureau, 10 Spruce Si., 14'evi/ "Yerk. Send lOete. fr..n" 100 -Pave Saanaphlet To many, however, the turnip is somewhat indigestible, and by others its flavor is ob. jeeted te. It is therefore necess.ary to mix it with other things to tone fi clown, and potato is the best for this purpose. Mash the boiled turnip, and also an equal quan- tity of boiled potatoes ; mix thoroughly. season with salt and pepper,and for each portion of the mixtere add a piece of but. ter of the size of a walnut, and milk enough to make it quite soft. Put it bite a baking - tin, add a, email piece of better, and bake to a delicate brown. This mixture, COM- , bined with egg and bread crumbs, rolled into shapes, and then fried, is acceptable as croquettes. To IsfAlett Domes D1712PLifiVS.—You intuit take half a poinicl of btead-trumbe grated, half a smell cup of sugar, quater of a pound of cliepped and sifted 81105, '5110 j50,00 and grated rind of OD C largo or two small lemons, a saltspoonfel of salt, the yolk ef obe egg, and encaigli of milk to meisten c the ingredients but not reduce them to a batter,. PRA%) is the usual quantity. Mix, end divide int° six parts, and tie.111 34 different small cloths Whieh ' have been,' iiret dipped in boiling water. Tie lightly, leevieg room for the dumpling.to swell, end put into water which bi1i 140. the •thunp- tinge boil gently one hour and a half, then make a lemon sauce for them of ii teaspoon- ful ef lions one teblespooeful of butter, half a cup Of sugar, juice and voted rind of 0, lemon, and 'urge cep ;Q boiling water Boil all up once, and serve hot in a sance- boat, with duniplings. Thrift and Economy, , Economy is not parsimony, although it is eftenfelsely so called, itud; by many con- sidered disreputable. it IS aln0St commend- able virtue, and should be most sedulously eultivated. It is not always it gift, and is as often acquired DES inherited.. it is the re- sult of care, thouglat, industry, and unceas- ing watchfulness, end is, indeed, one of our highest duties. It is not only it " gathering up of fragments, that nothing be last," but it is also a seeing that there are few frags ments to be thus taken care of—the opposite of wastefulness and extravaganbe and it is only the mentally weak who eflato despise and ridicule so excellent a quality. A thrifty, economical person can make one dollar go twice as far as a heedless, un- thoughtful person will. Poverty need not go hand in hand with careless waste and shiftlessness, though it generallydoes. If everthrift and good mi anagement s needed, it is where money is scathe. Never "put your best foot forward" at the exe of self-respedt. It may take a great' ' al cif pet courage to say "1 cannot afford. it,- ut it is nobler far than to hide behind subterfuges, or go to 'unwarrantable expensea to cosier up undesirable poverty, whose most galling sting is the fanciednecessity of " kl-eping up appearances"—of sailing under %lee col- ors, and aping the expenditures of more af- fluent neighbors. Many whose good, sense in other matters is indisputable, wear out body and brain in the insane struggle to keep up a istyle in household expense! and dress villa. is utterly beyond. their means, and which:blinds nobody tothetrueatate of affairs; or; if it indeed blind a laW, it 15 80 transparent to others as to result milt dis- astrously, to themselves. • ... It is not the thrifty, economical class who,, to -day, are paralyzing all branches of busi- ness with their insane demands upon "cap- ital." The men and women who "gather up the fragments" are not of the hfsvaling mob who fight under the red flag, and de- vastate end .destroy legitimate avenles of labor by their brutal' onslaughts uaRn the very hands that feed them. It is not in their homes that discontent and anent, are bred.. The power which employs idlabands finds In their ranks no material 'ts,build upon. They have no time nor incliddtien to "flyto evils they knew not of." With them the "gush" of the so-called "laboring man's friend" is pegarded as so much " twiCadle, or the wily cant of the vote -seeking politi- cian, and, sooner or later, it proves to be the truth. , I , • Winter Spearing. , Spearing through the Ace in winter af- fords considerable sport at a time' when other methods, are stopped by the severe cold. It may be practiced with comparative comfort, and on the hundreds of small lakes to the mirth of ue, with certainty of suc- cess. ,. To begin then ionstruct &small shan- ty Of common siding, about five feet square, and with a small door for exit/Agee.. It should be made without other opes:Mg and without crevices, which would admat • the light. This is floored having a hole a little larger than a fiour bnrrel. 11 so inclined you may provide a luxury in the shape of a small stove of sheet iron with stove pipe of about two inches in diameter. Being now ready aor,operations, convey the shanty out open a frozen lake or river where the water beneath is from five to fifteen feet deep. Out a hole through the ice to correspond ; with the hole in the floor of your shanty. Place the latter over this. hole. If light • enters between the bottom of the shanty and the ice, bbock up with snow. 11 the lake is covered with snow scrape off a space around the shanty to ailmit daylight into the water. On entering this shanty the eye ca,n dis- tinguish nothing, in the almost total dark- ness, but the glaring hole and bright water. beneath. In a few moments the outlines of objests are distinguishable, and on Woking downward into the water, the 'weeds and bottom appear with almost startling clear- ness. No matter how cold without, Or how wildly blows the wind, your May here take your ceinfort as thoroughtly satin yon own snug hoitte.s • • • '" • Miring provided evtociden minnow, load- ed at the bottom with lead, gaudilyspotted with red and blueand basing a bright tin tin on each side and. a tin tail fasten it by a line from these to six feet long (depending on the depth of the water) to a stick about eight inches in length. This is held in the left hand, the minnow is dropped into the water, and by bending the fins and tail a little, it is made to "rove" over a. circuit of several feet by a slight continuoas jerking of the little stick. .A little practice will en- able the nonce to "get the hang of it," and a day or two will make himan adept. The minnow is thus made to dart hither and thither across the hole, end three feet cr six feet below the surface. A pike perhapi discovers the minnow and makes a dash for it, but the eccentric move- ments of the latter deceive him, and he misses the prize. Again and again he re- turns to the attack each time- more slowly until a convenient opportunity is offered to strike him. Very often be comes to a dead stand -still below the minnow, following it slowly to the surface, if it is gradually raised and kept roving. The spear used neccessarily has a short handle. It is kept with its point resting on the edge'of the ice -hole ree,c1Y for instant use. A dont cord is attached to the handle haleellent ,sport can be obtained in this in venter all through the winter months, and large fine fish taken, which being thrones' outside the shamty soon freeze and are brought to the table in better &Ivor than at any. other season of the yeaa It is as- tonishing that this plan is not idore gen- erally known and practiced, being wholly Inc from the objectiens to netting as it is no butchery awl aloes not unduly thin out the game. There ere'several lakes ewer McMinn), in the State of Illinois, which are dotted with scores of these shanties from the time the ice becomes fairly solid Until spring warns ttlitoen,irOWDerS to remove to a better foenda. "Wealthy Merchant—s'What 1 Yon here ap,tin 1 Why I kicked you down stairs • and. out into the street this morelifg, yoa impu- dent fellow." Peddleran" Ish dot so ? Vet, e eplenclid ' memory 1 I had forgotten all epotit it. Dont you vant to puy a fodder duster paten you kick me out some more." HERE ANI) YEIERE. Glatlstolte celebrated his tionseinsaieveuth birthday en Weduesday laSt, A nutnber of Eastern taxidermiste are en- camped among the r.lain Thousaud, Islands, racer Ponce de Leon Pay, Fla., slaying the now nesting feathery tribe by the whole - Utica firm has just made a rope thirty • feet long with which Mrs. Druse, the niur. dorm, will be hanged if she hangs at it is five-eighths .of an Molt thiels, Made Of 015 strands, of shoe thread, and is altneet as etrong it wire rope of that size. The Bishop of Moesonee in his animal circular letter, speaks of the reappearance of disease amongst the little community et Moose Factory, ou Hudson's Bey,resulting in twenty-four deaths, seventeen males and seven females. ,c A carload of furs recently shipped from Winnipeg to New York, consisted of 437 bean, 65 silver foxes, 5,137 beavers, 800 foxes, 4,255 lynxes, 8,178 mertens, 291 wolveriaes, 210 wolves, 65 grey fexes, and a host of small animals. It was valued at $71,00a% Amin Wisconsin was out hunting and a shower came up. He put his hand over the mum's) of hie gun to keep thepowder dry, When a, heavy clap of thunder coming he in- voluntarily jumped, his knee struck the ham- pmieeic'eos.fthe gun, and his hand was blown to Jeremiah Bawdier, of Hamburg, Pa., was awakened the other night by his watch dog, which had set up a barking and howling un- derhis Window. Getting up and following the animel he arrived at his .warehouse, same distance away, in time to frighten off two burglars. He wasn't a journalist, only a common reporter, that wrote this :—Love is the precious loom. whose enchanting shuttle weaves all the tangled threads oflifeinto that exquisite lace of witchery which makes perfect and complete the glorious fabric Of rapture and delight. Winnipeg advices say that with the new year the Dominion Government will make a number of postal extensions throughout Southern Manitoba where railroad construc- tion has taken place this year, extending the postal car service and giving a snail twice a week at all available pmts. The Railway Age says that in the year just closing 8,010 miles of new main line railway track have. been built in the United States, Kansas leads the Country with the surprising amount of 1,520 miles, the great- er part laid . within the last six months. Assuming- the average cost' throughout the country to have been but $20,000 per mile, the -expenditure fair roadway ,akine was $160,000,000. Present indications show even greater activity. Alsace-Lorraine must be a true paradise for sportsmen. Last year there were shot in the forests of the Reichlande 37 wolves, 1,199 wild boars, 152 wild cats, and 2,680 Loxes, f course, an abundance dinarygame. Lorraine has long .been en- deavoring to rid herself of predatory ani- mals, butte) far to littlepurpose, for French huntsmen are not so zealous in exterminat- ing the wolf as they might be. • Twa ROM of John Haslam, of Waltham, Me., while driving through the woods the other day carne upon two deer—one alive, one dead—locked together by the horns. The greund was all torn up around them so that thc lead buck was nearly buried. The boy shot the live deer, and then found that the ()thee had been dead several days. Its neck bad been broken. They had to get stout stakes in order to pry the deers' ant- lers apart. A serious difference exists between the Cabinets of•Vienna and Berlin. It is claim- ed Prince Bismarck is Serving Russian de- signs. without regard to the interests of Austria. Herr Von Tisza, the Hungarian Premier, it is stated, will soon hold a con- ference with Count Kalnoky, and will insist that the situation be cleared up, and that Prince Bismarck be askedto declare whether Germany is an ally of Russia or Austria- Hungary. • Ida Newman, of 9tahi, Tex., was bitten One of the severest snow storms that ever by a snake, and died, and Major Henry visited the country passed over England re - Brown writes thus to the Pearsall News: cently. The snowstorm appears to have ." I read in your last of the death from snake , doue an amount of damage to the telegraph bite of little Ida Newman, of Quihi, and my wires which is unprecedented. The tele - heart almost bled for her parents, under the graph wires in London were snapping with belief that if they had immediately applied - alarming rapidity, and in Fleet street the a warm, wet poultice of tobacco the litt e in- policemeu curled the broken ends round the nocent would. have survived. Two just such lamp posts.. • A train on the Midland line bites were overcome in just that way near I was .delayed over an hour by the falling of Me at Belton in 1858." telegraph wires across the track. There, . At the Walker ranch, on the John Day was very seversi weather at Reading on River, in Oregon, it hunter named Marsh is Tuesday. The snow that -fell in The after - resting up after a hard tussle with a black noon was heavier than has been experienced bear, which he smoked out of a hollow tree. for years, whilst thewincl blew a. hurricane, He went in for a hand-to-hand encounter, causing considerable datnage to the roofs of Englishman named Rudd; stopping at the spring's. Tito time was fixed for the marl - nage and all, ite preparations wore made, when the mind and refused te marry him. The libiglislunitu applied to Spiro Alley and Fred for it warrant to er. rot thesgirl. Thq issued it, and the girl was brought before them to anewer the chargee preferred, whetever they were. Rudd insisted that the marriage teke place theta She refused te comply, but the jue- tices Waisted that she must keep her pro. miae or go to prison. The frightened gfei filially consented, and the cerenmay was quickly performed. There is no aoubt what- ever of the eurreetnesa Of tho alarm state. Mont, and hatense exeitement gists in the neighborhood since the facts leaked out A despatch from St. john'a, N,B., on Thursday last, says :—The small steamer, Sir John, left this port last night ebout 11 o'clock for Shulee, N. S_,.. with a general cargo. When near Black Point, a short time after leaving port, fire broke out in the galleY of the 'steamer, said rapidly spread ever the vessel. The may boat was soon launched, but it upset and drifted away. As their only chance, Capt. Purdy then took the helm and steered for the shore'two miles 'distant. After much suffering from smoke and fire they ran the vessel on the rocks, When the captain jumped overboard and reached the land. The next man to jump, John Sinclair, failed to reaoh the shore and was drowned. The remainder of the crew, four men,' then got ashore by a rope secured by the captain from the vessel. All of the survivors ere more or less burnt. They had to remain on the beach in the cold till daylight. The captain reached hero this afternoon. The steamer was built last sum- mer, was valued at $10,000 and was insured for $5,000. She was owned by Captain Purdy and his brother, of Sackville, N. 13. SONE OF DOSE SAYINGS. DANZ D171;1)7.21. I vhas better to do a big peesness in a shmall shtore dan to do a shmall poesuess in a big shtore. Some folks visas sooch kickers dot dey cam. plains of der shmall size of apple -cores. Many a coon dot ishkildt oep a tree could haf got avhay all right on der groundt. I haf took notis dot dose peoples who bor- row der moss' tea und coffee und sugar from deir neighbors, borrow der least troubles for Der family who dean' provide for a rainy day will sooner dr later see sooch a dry time as nefer vhus. Sometimes Truth goes out to take a walk and meets Gossip, but de pair nefer comae home together. I:belief dot if I vhas vhort $10,000,000 I could feel sorry for der troubles of der whole Good Luck vhas somepody who vhill help a fool ash queek as a wise man. Success vhas der reward of hardtvhork undperseverance. Der leedle shildren dot we see aroundt us vhas de rain -drops dot keep der hearts of men from becoming parched und dusty. One haf der peoples goes up a ladder th look for a prize vhich Thu under der house ell der time.' • Maype it was petter for us dot we haf some troubles. If not, tings happen vhe become so happy dot vhe melt avhay und der side. vhalk vhas all grease. Kind vhords cost nothings; dot's yhy so many of us carry such a sthock of 'em. Der working man who has good credit mit der grocer und butcher vhill always be a poor man. People vhill look for oranges hi a cabbage field, und pecanse no oranges rhea foun t, dot same peoples are determined not to ap- preciate cabbage. Truth vhas a big thing, but dere vhas sometimes when a big lie vhas vhort two of him to make der family all right. Dot vhas mine oxPerience mit philosophy. • Heavy Snowstorm in England. and the.bear not only broke his knife but cut .houses. Trees were also badly damaged. and scratched him up most fearfully and one cuttin on the Great Western ' - ti • Humors, Erysipelas, Canker, and Catarrh, Can be cured by purifying the blood with et1qout:tol tiwbettlieivvel 'Ituizrt Ayer's Sersaparilla bee iw thr Scroftilone mors, It Is pleaSant tlalo:11C11 vpigilinicoestlwa briiodiY•e' take, gives strength permanent, instiog, re- sult then any medicine Q. 1 hare used Aye' r,; gamma villa, in my, him - for Scrofula, and ktittioitivh,fitfl lly ,isittaNlvtellut thoroughly eradicate this F. rlipa,b,N1 edrir, itte Greenville, Tenn. . For forty years I have sutiered with gry, 81 014,s. I have tried al so s Of remedies for in Complaint, but found ethliet until I 000e c e d. using .A.y e r' s Sarsaparilla. After taking ten bot- RoIeittpitovret , sfitliteib. _ammenorytupd.otAeWlecsbutrierdy: ties of this ineitiledi,ne10: NYVe141111' NfV11.1Sorn SOC' aStflaVrOrril4 that it destroyed my appetite and weakened my system. After try- ing other reniedies, and gettbag no relief, I began to take Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and, in a few months, was cured. —RiSusan asLt.arCaosso.k, 909 Albany sI., Boston Ayer's Sarsaparilla Is superior to ally blood purifier that have ever tried. I have taken it for Scrofula, Canker, and Salt - Rheum, and received much benefit from it. It is good, also, for a weak stomach.—Millie Jane Peirce, South Bradford, Mass. Ayer's Sarsaparilla; Prepared by Dr.S. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. Price 81; six lbottles, 85. The Great Enm_.-lish Prescription. A successful medicine used over 80 years in thousands of cases. Cures Spermatorrhea, NervOles Wealmess, Emissions, Impotency and all diseases caused by abuse. (racrons] indiscretion, or over-exertion. terrsa) Six packages Guaranteed to Cure when all others IF.arel.eriAptisk.rtriceDrnuoggeltiebt sfuotruTtel7 OGnreeaSpzaclaugst. $1. Six $5, by mail. Write forParnphiet. Address Eureka atemical Co., Detroit, Mich. For sale by J. W. Browning, C, Lutz, Exeter, and all druggists. C. 8c S., \9-„IDLEY, UNDERTAKERS! --AND-7-- Furniture Manufaeureiki —A FULL STOCK OF— Furniture, Coffins, Cashets, And everythine in e above line, to meet in ea ate waists. We have one of the very best Hearses in the County, And Funerals furnithed and condueted it extremely low pi ices. EMBLEMS OF ALI. TED DIFFEURNT SOciET:F.S PENNYROYAL WAFERS. Prescription of it physician who has had a life long experience in treating_ female diseases. Is used monthly with perfeck success by over 10,000 ladies. Masant, safe, effectual. Ladies ask your drug- gist for Pennyroyal Wafers and take no substitute, or inclose pest - age for sealedparticulars..Sold by all druggists, 81_per box. Address VIE EtIBEXA. OH CAL CO.. Dirraorr, Mari ere Sold in Ill.a.nter by J. W. Browning, C. Lutz, and all druggists. after sitting down on him quite a little while, way the trains were delaygcl by snowdrifts. went off to find new quarters for the Winter. On line from Paddiegton to Reading • The hunter dragged himself th Walker's, and from Bath to Bristolall.the telegraph where he will have to "bele up" for some poles ere it perfect wreck, most . of the time. poles being splintered like matchwood and Lora Dufferin's health is hi a very nu- Vim; in all directions. The railway satisfactory state. He has been more or idlodwanr,e ts ihgen ( o trains a less unwell for a long time past, and it is c"iebnist)itellec;all)illy3esdell:yhg eit1 a clear thitt his constitution avill not stand the line by flags. It' seems probable that ig are i. the Indian climate. There are grave' fears the wires between Bristol and London will thathe will be unable to complete his not be restored for two or three clays. The . ' teAn deface as Viceroy', .but he is sure to atop iirinditemitil he is literally Cenepelled: to rettrin honie. Lerd'Dielhousie ail Lord. Canning and Lord Elgin all died premature- ly because they insisted on working on at Calcutta long after they had been warned A woman's e life should be written in her that they must leave India. home, her past with its warmth of suulight, At a meeting the other' day of all the its shadows of 'memory, her present with its leading citizens of, 'Halifax the follOwing strength of service, itstrace of sympathy, I resolution was unanimously adopted :— and her future with its calmness of coming "That in order to secure the permanent twilight, its restfulness of hope beyond the unity of :the Etnpire some f orm of federation night. No woman's life ints full, visible tax- is essential That for the impose of influ- prossion without a home. Homeless svomen telegraphs in other directions have suffered equally as far ascan be ascertained. • ,Woman in the Nome. 3 UnapstroacIsed for .;211 'Tone and Quality cip.-rfo.oexes FFi BELL 81:(10,3 Guelph ort, 'ending publio opinion in purpose Scotia by are denied their natural language, and speak showing the iMportance and advantages of with conscious effort, with sense of loss, a maintaining British connection by the language less vital and human, like deaf adoption of such a system of organization, mutes by sign and gesture. Bet emotion is a society be formedto advocate and support more than utterance, life more than utter- theprinciplea of federation. That this soci. mice, life more than its utmosts expression. etY ba`now Rimed, to he • called the Nova We may miss the rightful insignw. of our Scotian Branch of the. Imperial Federation home; but we cannot be disinherited, Those League." whose spirits are at home in the truth, the A. shocking and fatal accident occurred on faith, the love which are immortal, have an up freight special on the eestern division Wilt for thetnselves, not tabernacles on the of the C. P. IL oti Monday night, two miles Mount of Tramsfigeratiors but etertiallionies. east of Nepigots A carpenter named Gor- , don, from Port Arthur, was riclingon engine 269, together with brakesman -Frederick, A Discussion of Gelder. Pirenia'si liarry Brunel]. and Engineer Ram- "Why do you call a vessel she ?" said say, when, the crown sheet burst. The Ilonry to Fred, the other day, .frightful rush of etcam blew the three first "Perhaps because she wears a bow iri named:Mtn out 4 the engine on to the track front," (mowers Fred, where they had to lie in the cold, with the "That teignt be one reason, but another temperature 40 below zero. All were ter- is that she is not ready fax business until ribly scalded and frozen. Gordon died tsvo she Ls peoperly manned," lieurs alter with it broken back. The fire. ' it Von ; and it tikes a good many yaws man had one leg broken, and was badly to lig hor cut." frozen 011 the face, hands and feat The ":hen I hear old sailors speak about her brakeman was badly scalded. ancl sthashed going in stens,. about the face, bet was eble to walk. The "Conclusive 1 But ynn nms t admit n. engineer escaped ininry. ' ship is not alWays feminine." A. yonng girl named Taylor, fifteen years 1 " Well?" • ' of age, living near Grayson sulphur springs, "When she is it trian.of.wa ."--[Chioago (IraySon county, was engaged to' many an Ledger. TIN e'ELESRATED Fa7 D7 CHASES pasovtAKE. * TAHOE LOOR FOR LIVER AND KIDNEY DISEASES " When an, intelligent man pants to pur, chase, he balls from parties whose stalutimy in. ' their several eattings is a guarantee /or the quality of their wares." 'This sterling snot to is • doubly true in regard to patent medicines, buy only those Triad(' by practical 'professional ,,un. Dr. CAASE is trio well and favorably Ishowli 1.y his reteipt books to require any reconime»des Mon. Dn. Clines s Livee Cure has a receipt brok Wr0pped around every bottle which is worth its weight in gold. DR, Onesn's Liver Cure is gueranteed to sire all diseases arising from it torpid or insulin) 11100 such 8.8 laver conipictiat, Das/alight. '•• dieciagescion. gilionnsness, ache, 5,1vor Spots, Sallow Complexion, rile. THE KIDNEYS THE KIDNEYS CuAsn's Liver Curets n certain cnro for' all derangements of tlie itidnoys,F0101105 pain in the .bItek pain in lower portion an. abdomen, 002'810111 desire to p090 urine, red and white eedinionts,, shooting pains in passegcs oright's dithose circa ell urhattry lronhhu. ate. , Try it. take no °taloa it will cure you. IV all cicalorit st etas) per beide. netre axes "asses% ass 'co, test Advert see dAr4* DA. Ilexes Sold at C. LU",17./S, Agent, Exeter,