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The Exeter Times, 1889-7-25, Page 7MP IIEART'S DE'LIG BY LOUISE STOC,ITON. CHAPTER L The newspaper which Reuben Hale and I own and edit is, I am aware, a " one horse;, affair, but we are satisfied with It. It is a small, eight 'Aged weekly, largely made up of advertiuemenbu and sotseorings, and the subscription price is one dollar a year. We have no reporters, we never print telegrams nor murders, and wo have a subeorilltion list of ,;1•; 23100 names -farmers, gardeners and peo ie raising fruit, , truck or flowers there 4yPeoPle, because wherever there are e goes the little Seed and Grafi; And we are old fogy enough to employ girls to fold and direct these newspapers, and these girls do their work oheerfully and seem to be happy. When one of them mar- ries we give her a' !awing machine and a dining -room table. One day I ague into the office after an absence of a couple of hour! and found Hale scissoring the Toronto dailies. "Dan;" said he, "there wail a young woman in here to see you." "Very nen," said I, getting a glass of water ; " you eaw her, I suppose ? It is as hot as ginger outride, Reuben," "I saw her," he replied, " bub she didn't want to see me. It was "one old gentleman" she was after." "Now come," said 1, sitting down, "I am not going to shirk the table, but you'll have to take shares en ib.: You can't be dieting- uished from me by it, my boy 1 I am gray, but you are bald, I am lean and you are stout and their isn't a six months' difference in our years or our looks, Reuben Hale." "Have ibas you ;please." said he, " but that is what she said. She wanted to see old Mr. Crawford. I think she thought me the'young one." Was she a blind young woman,' "Blind?" he repeated, "Just wait until you see her eyes. Oh, she is coming back 1 At two o'clock, Daniel. Even if she didn't want to see me T asked her to do that. I told her you'd be eure to be in then." " Well, I won't," I answered. I' am go- ing out to Melvin on the 1:45. I am" not going to stay in town this sweltering' after- noon." "Yee, you are. You'll`thank your happy stare if you do. If you miss her, Daniel, yon'Il break her heart, and after you have seen her she'll break yours." "I am going on the 1;45 train," .I repeat- ed. "Bet you a dollar' you don't," said Hale. "I told her to oome at two, but she said one , onelook would be more convenient, and she wn ld try to find you then, and, Daniel, you had better take your feet off the chair and. brash that hair of yours up a little, for here she comes. I hear the eoho of her voice and the patter of her heels in the out office, where she has just asked Morey if you are in." " What a dunoe you are 1 I really -think" -but, at that moment the door opened and Morey appeared. ai "Lady to 'see Mr, Crawford," acid he, stepping aside, and -there' entered a young woman dressed very plainly in dark blue, with a smoke colored veil prebtywell cover- ing her face. "You do not remember me, Mr. Craw- ford ?" she said. "I am Miss Margaret Wooletone. I see you very often in church, but, of course, you do not see me, but you have to''—and ehe nervously laughed—"you have to hear me, you know." " Mr. Crawford," said Reuben, getting up without the glimmer of a smile, and with great deliberation, "I am going to Melvin on the 1:45. I shall, have to leave at once. Will you kindly pay that dollar for me on account ?" So he put on his hat, took his cane, bowed to Mies Woolston, went out the door, and 1 heard him immediately tramping upstairs to the composing room, where, I knew, he had proof to read. There were times when Reuben Hale was sixteen years of age instead of aixty. CHAPTER IL Mies Wooletone looked more comfortable after we were alone, and she took o`` her veil, "holding it in her hands. " I almost feel tie if I knew you, Mr. Crawford," she said. " When I was a libble girl I used to sit with my uncle in his pew, east where I could see you as I koked`at the painted glass window, and now from the choir, of course we have you in full vIew." "And you do nob thinkme rude because you so often catch me watching you ?" The girl slightly colored. "You have the kindest fade in all the church. I could never think you rude." And with that she became scarlet. "I` will not say' what I think of youre," I said, gently, "or you might think me very rude, indeed ; bub can I do anything for you !" She crashed her veil tightly in her hands. "I do not want to bake up your time, Mr. Crawford, bub I do want, to talk to you a minute. I .have to support myself and I' want to get newspaper work, Mr. Craw- ford, and I' thought perhaps you would give me some. Ib le so' quiet here." I' looked at her. with eurpriae. "I thought you lived with your unole, Mr. Mason ?" "I did, but we do nob agree, and I have no money of my own, and as I have to leave there I must support myself."' "Bat surely your natural resource 'would be in mesio, Mise Wooletone. Your voice ought to be worth a good deal to you." "I could not sing in publin," ehe quiokly answered, " The oh'uroh I do not mind, be. cause I havegone teereetll my life, but the concert stage—ob, I could not do that ;1 And I would rather nob teaoh. It worrles ire to teaoh innate." "Yon 'Weald Make a atMcoese hi oouoerts.'t `"tt She shook her head, "And,"•Icontinued, "it would be far more lucrative than any work I could give' you. You wouldnot like a position here at all, The girls are good, reapeotable girls, but they would not suib you at all. And the wages are low." "`I have my salary hi the church," she said ; " that would help a little. And 'I do not want a eleuation with young girls, 'Mr. Crawford ; I want editerial work." "Ho, ho, ediborial work 1" I smiled at thin. But you know Mr. Hall and I do all that and have time to spare." ° "But 1 have helped you a little," she ex- claimed, with eagerness, "I have written you several things° and you have always published them. Leat week you made an editorial of one." "So, indeed! Then you are 'Mark Willie?'" and I nodded my head like a Ohlhoae mane dater!, I have since been informed. "Well, yell are not only a very beautiful young lady, but you are a clever one, too. I don't know that we ought to refuse' ' !lir. Mark Wil - Hs 1' 9'f ! " Oh, enemas do Hot," she cried ; " 1 shoiagie so glad to come herb, and 1 think I ootikrsOon learn to he useful. I could crit paragraphs foe you, tied thee nittst be Hush stupid work for you, and T could write on what subjects you thoughb beat, and if you or the other gentleman wanted to go away for a few days I am sure I could do different things for you. And," she added, "you might both want to go away together. Sup- pose tq-day you also would, have liked to have leis town on the one forty-five train. ? Wouldn't you have been more oomiortable to have known some one was here ready to receive masaRes orattend to your orders a ! t Ab this how could I help smiling ? And I told her that her reasoning almoeb oenvino- ed me. "Indeed," I added, "It would do so but for two reasons—ono, we do not need you in the slightest, and the other is that this !buffy little office is no place fora young lady. She stood up, and I could tee tried to look entirely indifferent, but her lips trembled and herface paled. "0f oonrae, then," she answered me, "there is nothing more to be said, and I can only beg your pardon, Mr. Crawford, for having troubled you." As I sat still looking at her it flashed up- on me that perhaps if 1 knew more of the history of this girl I should nob so hastily shut the door upon her. And I have a very strong feeling about disappointing women. When T married,, my wife and I had only a meagre salary upou which 'to live, and I had to work all night, and in.00nsequence slept nearly all day. I' thought I was de. prived of my share of sunlight and social life, and my wife tenderly .agreed with me. Afber she suddenly failed in health:' and died I dleoovered that ` she had worked , in our little house all day and sewed for the shops at night 1 It was thus she bought my little comforts 1 And now that she was dead and could not share the comfort and repose of my life, it seemed to me that because of her depriva- tions I oughb to be more bhoughbfut of other woman. Little enough did the girls guess how often they owed some little pleasure orindul- gence to the mute pleading of my wife's mem- ory. than I said :-- "Are —"Are you quite determined on newspaper work, Miss Woolsbone 2" " Quite. And perhaps. I should tell you that I have an offer which I can aooept from the Royal Express,albhough I have not written for them, but I have just come from ohere, and they seem desirous of trying me." "Do you want to go there:?" She flushed painfully. " No, I do nob, It is so public. There are so many men going and coming." I rubbed my hands nervously. "Sit down, Mies Woolston.. Whom.did you ethere—at e -the o office ! " Mr. Findley, the editor." " And you will go there ?" " I think I ought at least to try it, don't you ? It is one ofour best papers. CHAPTER III. I have not described Margaret Wooletone and 1 do net know how to do so. She was a Iovely: creatare—tall, slender, with a superb carriage of the head and the most charming coloring. Her eyes were dark and tender, but pride and obstinacy curved her pretty month, and I often thought that it could not be pleasant to Dross her will. But this far I have never had to do more then observe what has happened to others who bried to subdue and conquer her. Aa`ahe stood before me, so young and charming and innocent, I thought of my wife, who was also a Margaret, and.I knew. she would not have allowed the child to go into molt a orowd as frequented the "Royal. Express," and I said ; "Have you no mother ?'' " I have only my uncle," she answered "He is angry with me. My mother and father are dead." Very well," said I. ' Some one must take oare of you, and I am going to ask you to let me try for a little while ,until your uncle has-slept'his anger off. And although we do not actually need another editor, you can be of use to us, and I want you to come." Did she resent this half :trudging invitee. tion ? No. She looked at me with oont ent and. happiness in her eyes, and asked me if she should begin the next morning. When Hale oame down stairs Miss Wool - stone was gone. and I was in a little room hack of our office taking pepere out. of a desk. " How is this ?" he paid, with a fine affeo tation of wonder. " Didn't you get off? "Hale," said I, "we are going to have another editor, and this room will have to be made ready for her ab once. I think we'll put a matting on the floor and make It look clean and cool, and well hang a pink ourbain ab the window. This desk will do,. but we must ¢et) a better chair. 'I1 you will clear our belongings outl'll send Mersey for the scrubwoman and I'll go for the mat- ting." " By George 1" said he, "are. you daft ? What on earth are you talking about ?" When I told him he listened, and his only reply was an occasional ejaculation of "0 Lord 1" but hie intonation of than expression never varied. CHAPTER IV. Ib is very certain that had Miss Wooletone gone to the office of the "Royal Express'' she would nob have had the ohanoe for housekeeping that we afforded her. With a little white apron tied over her dark dress and an unobtrusive duster inher hand she very soon learned to keep ue in very good order indeed. But she had the root.; gloat angelic talent of making that order her owns Sho never pttt the inkstands In the middle of the tables. Mine stood as I liked it, elope to my hand; while Hale's was at arnle' Iength from his, and she never mixed a revise w1.1 the first proofs. If I put a book One a shelf 1 found ib there, dusted, no doubt, but where 1 laid it. Life in our eetabiiahmenb was very simple. There was no rush of reporters, no late hours, no excitement overt sewn, the flowere biomed in the spring and we bold how to care for these and what to to buy, and wo grafted, budded, ploughel and reaped without even aa,muoh as a har. vest dinner to look after. V'ainelorioua old farmers sent ud samples' of prodigious corn and pumpkins, and market gardeners did nob forget to let ue see their prize fruit and berries. Everything surest and pretty went t� Miles Marrareb ae'i her rfee, natural and ehe it was P who opened the boxes of flowers, the baakete of fruit, and she• it was who introduced the spirib lainp and teakettle and who made a corner in. her office where she served over little Araadfan ltlnchee ofbread and•better, fruit and coffee. 13ut it was Hale who bought the teaoups, an n d money enough must he helm ent on y g tlieni There were not two happier old boys than vett in the city that summer, sad we never tire, of telling each other what an -admirable peroon Mise Wooletone was %She wap very useful to ue. Her style; in writing was full of eparkle and her very notioes of giant ra- dishes or new harrowe had little graceful tune of expression that took them out of the amnion anti made them readable. She wrote cur business lettere, she sole - Gored, she read proof and filed it, ohs ported the mail, she kept the Mollie Codler in order, she opened the exchanges, she took the most couplet and unobsbrueive inberen; in everything, but with it all ehe kept her- self apart with a gentle reserve that made us great!y admire her.. As .I knew her better I eaw there was trouble in her life, and I euspeoted it arose from her quarrel with Tier nnole. He had been a father to her, and ehe had left him ands w a boarding in another part of the city. I knew that ib was impossible that he should not miss her, and she often spoke of her old home with a lingering tenderness that was pathetic, Of the odrew:Wetness of the quarrel I knew nothing, bob Hale and I agreed that Mr. Mason bad been to blame. CHAPTER V. And so the summer wore away, 0e H went back and forth from hie house by the sea, and I oame in every day from my farm at Melvin, but Mies Wooletone stayed in the city. We invited her to visit ns, we urged her to bake a holiday, but she replied that she was perfectly wall, and that work suited her better than play, " If we did that sort of thing,". said I one day, "we'd send �you 'to write up the Tiger Hill strike. You'd like tbab." " Why should I care to go there ?" she answered, oolorin , as she was apt to do when conversation becameersonal. " p You are so much :interested in mining affairs," I replied. " I have often noticed P b how you stop to read the ;' Hill Beacon,' no matter what you are doing. Let the mail bringthat and at once everything else is dropped. See 1 Your very eyes confess your guilt 1" She met my acousatlon with as brave a front aa ehe could command. Now come,Mr. Crawford," she relied en notice.. tat I read that paper because you are interested in it ourself and on the y how y k foritdo you notice loo out .l Pray,w u much also like to get the _"Orohard and. Meadow ?' " I am interested in the ' Hill Beacon,''' I said , "because my nephew, Jack Lewis, edits it. I am always anxious to see what fool thing he will do next. There never was a boy who so loved to stir up the wasp nest. I want to see what he will say when he is stung." "And I," she boldly asserted, "'am inter- ested in these poor miners whom he abuses so much." "' Abuses 1'" I repeated ; " they are a set of reseals,: every one of them 1 An insane law of defying crew 1' " They are a �, poor, ignorant' orowd of men, said she, and ib is .our, duty to edu- cate and civilfize'them, nob abuse them." "My dear," said I, 'Sthe United States offers refuge to the oppressed, but it does nob offer a free; fight territory for oublaws, and that is what these men ask of ns. It is the duty of their own governments to' edu- cate and civilize' them. We do not aspire to make our country a reformatory sohool 1" "All that is true, but their own govern- ments won't do it, you know, and they are here. We must do It." "That they are here is unfortunately true," said I. "And your nephew's' paper nays they ought not to have aohoole where their own language is used. I think that unkind. Theirmother tongue must be dear to them, and they naturally wish their children' to know it." " Them let them teaoh it to their children at home, but in the public schools of this country the language of this country is in plane. How else can we educate, civilize' and make good citizens of them ? If they are to be part of us, they should speak our language, read our books." "They will learn English. Ib is in the air, and they cannot help it, But it keeps child - ern and parents : together, if the ohildren's school life is that which the parents knew. Now, would you like your child taught in a French sohooi, a. language and la method of thought of which youwere perfectly ignor- ant?" "If I fled with my child to France, and expected him to be a French citizen,'I think I would enand it. Jack is in the right), Miss Margaret. He makes a mistake in nob conceding' more than he does, but in bhis he is right."' "You are fond of your nephew, and are blinded to his; mistakes," said she stoutly. "I hardly know him," I replied. "I never saw him but once, and that aa: fiveyears ago. He is good looking." (TO BE CONTINUED, Native Sheep of America. At the time the Spaniards first :visited South America there,were no animals in the country whioh exactly corresponded to the sheep of Europe; but they found in'Pern and in the regions of'the Andes .several species of animals to which they gave the -name sheep—carneros de lc ierra—but 'which the aborigines called the llama, the alpaca, the guanaco, and the vicuna..: _The two first. named varieties were even then nowhere to be teen in a wild state, but were domeetie animals in the service of the natives. While there is a generalsimilarity between these several olaesee, yet oxoll ono seems to form a dintiect genus. The llama and the alpaca ate of various colors, and sometimes speckled, Tho.guanaco and the vicuna are eenerallyof a single oolor—brown,approach' ing to red. That llama and the alpecaare said to be resignodito their !nate of domestioiby that tbey aro scarcely able to • take care of themselves or:live in a v,ild state, The guanaco and vicuna prefer: the wild abate. A Novel Undertaking, :,The Vienna corretpoudent of the London "Times" says :'-Anovel institution, which has not been tried in any country In Europe, is going to be introduced into Austria for the benefib of the travelling public of this country. To -morrow railway lending libra- rise will be opened at about forty stations of the Western State railway. The books are in six! languages -English, Frenoh, Ger- Man, Iia fan, f ungarian, and Bohen ian, and will he lent ab the rate of 2d, or 4d, per week, the volumes to be returned at any station where there is a bookstall. Within the next two months from 150 to 200 suoh libraries are to be opened on the various linos in Austria. The undertaking has been launched by an English company galled the at globus." An adverbiacment.—Wifee• Dont fail to insert ab advertisement about poor lost Fido, Husband—Fear not. (.Exit,) Wife (reade in paper following morning) : "$10 reward. Lest last Monday, a measly, hair.lipped, cross eyed old yellow pup answering to the name of Fide, He had nb tail is wild a i d with flaae, brat a gleed' eye. and his whines would niahe'a rh#noceroe shudder, I ,nowe howto bite, $50 reward if he is returned hi a hearse," (Wife faints,)' TROUT CAN RE'NEMBEN Proof'' Tbat .iflah Have - Iteasouin g 'Power and Exercise It. ' Some time before the death of Seth Green, the celebrated New York fish oui. twist and naturalist, " said a Philadelphian. who takes great interest in piecioult rai matters, "I paid a visit with him to the fish hatoherypf that State at. Caledonia, In ,one of the ponds, there, atthat time, there were 5,000 large brook trout, every one of which had been captured with the fly—tied 9R barblees hooks --in unfrequented brooks in the Adirondack region. These trout, Mr,. Green said, 'lied .convinced him that fish have reasoning P o er and memory. When thewere hooked, h vk ed, he said, and were tooled slowly in by the careful' fishermen who were capturing them for the State pond, they have time and opportunity to note the form and character of the tackle that made them prisoners. According to Mr. Green they never forgot that experience. " The trout had been in the pond a long time, the females never being allowed to. spawn there, and would follow Mr, Green as he walked along the edge of the water, teasing bits of liver into the pond. To show thab histheory aboub their memory. and reason was correct, he would parry a vane and a fish rod concealed behind his back. If he took the cane from he oatmeal - meat and held, ib over the water the fish paid no attention to it ; but the moment he produced the rod wibh its ,'reel and dine attached, away the trout scampered like a flash: to distant parts of the pond. Mr. Green told me that he would permit any- one nyone to cast a fly in that pond to his heart's content, as he wee satisfied that not one of the trout would come near ib, so vividly did they remember their enemy of five years ago." Stomach " Goneuess" The faintness or empty feeling of the stomach expperlenoeed by some in the evening or during the night, is oaueed by the two: wails of the sbomach coming in contact. When thab organ is empty, it collapses ; but in state of health we do nob feel this oonbacb any more than we do the shutting of the two eyelids if they are not inflamed. The mucous membrane becomes congested and Irritated, and causes this "goneneas." There are two remedies for this. One Is to eat some- thing, and fillthe stomach up wibh some sort of bland substance, when the . patient' will feel temporarily better. There are some people who always eat aomebhiug just before. going to bed; they think it is dangerous to have the stomach empty. A greatdeal of harm is done in this way, yet some physici- ans recommend eating, because it will give. this temporary relief. This eating for relief simply increases the cause of irritation. This is due' to congestion of the stomach, caused by over -work. The stomach is always tem- porarily congested during the act of diges- tion, and if it is kept constantly in use; the congestion will become permaneat. The. second and beat remedy for this oondibion is rest,and the worst of all'remediea is work. Food put into the stomaoh'inoreaaes the con- gestion because it makes the stomach work. You will notice that this trouble odours in the evening or in the night. Persons make no such complaint in the morning. The atomaoh has had a chance to rent; yet three hours after breakfast, they may experience the same all -gone feeling. The proper remedy is rest and careful attention to the diet, that the cause may be relieved. For temporary relief, nothing to so good as a drink of cold water, and itwill help to allay the congestion also.—[Good Health. Strange, Very Strange, Several years ago in the town of Beloit, San., a young man who was boarding atthe hotel sickened and died. While waiting for information from his friends in regard to the final disposition of the body it wad taken across the road and laid out In avacanb room belonging to Mrs. B. The body was afte r - ward interred in . the cemetery. In a few weeks Mrs. Laura C. moved to Beloit, and having rented the room belong to Mrs.B. set up housekeeping in them. One morning a couple of months afterward, when I called on her, she said bhab the night beforeahesew. a coffin standing in the middle of the "-room where she slept. It was moonlight, and she saw it very plainly. She turned her eyes from it for a moment, and was no little sur- prised to, find it had disappeared't whett she looked back. It stood east and west in the center of the room, and seemed to contain the body of a•man whom she had never seen in life. I seed "You mean youdreamedyou eaw a coffin." "No," was the answer, I was wide awake. I saw it as plainly as'I Bee you now." The description was thab of the body of the young man which had lainb here the summer before, and of whom Mrs, C, had` never heard. A Curious Number. %Here ie,asomething to scratch your head over. A very .curious number is 142,857, whiob, multiplied by 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6, gives the same figures in the same order, begin. nine at a different point, but if multiplied by 7 gives all nines : 142 857 multiplied by`1 oquala 142,857 142,857 multiplied' by 2 equals 285,714 142;8b7 multiplied by 3 egaels 428,571 142,857 multiplied by 4 equals 571,428 142,857 multiplied by 5 egaals 714,285 142,857 multiplied by 6squ;il c 857.142 142,857 multiplied by 7 equals 099,999 Multiply'' 142,857 by 8 and you have 1;142,856, Then add the first figure to the last, and you have 142,857, the original number, wibh figures exactly the same as at the start,—[The Universal Tinker. A Dust -Counting Machine. A singular device has boon submitted to the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Scotland. It oonsiete of a dust. counting apparatus. by which its inventor is able to count 88,346,000 dust partiolee in a cubiti inch of space near the ceiling of a room, and 489,000,000 in the same apace of the gas from a Bunsen flame, There are, therefore, as many duet particle! in a cubic inch of the airof if, room ab nigbt, when the gad is burning, as there are in- habitants in Great Britain, and in three oabile inches of the gases from a Bunsen flame there are as many perfecto; as there are inhabitants in the world.—Ex. Work, The one sovereign remedy for the ills of life is Work ---work from necessity, br from choice. The man oroman oo ell d. to w m a p work every day, either with hands or head, esoupes many of the isorbid worries and anxieties that beset the man or woman left free to follow out morbid tnuoings on the vatiby of human affeirs,or melancholy anal- ysis of phyeical'ailments which aro often the result o -t f abx stent or definite occupation, Into greater miefortune can befall either man er Woman than to `be borntinto this world Without' the pinmaaitlg; force of work,pushing him 011to steady endeavor. 9 nee' for Infanta and Children. ' recom�'�oatlq►laea adaitted to e1,lldienthet flaetoalar �N'>aW�ma.n�tooaYP+racrtPttoa 9t�a Qolio' Poa�iAa�. " B; , .Via, iki D.. gene �Bl =a=ttic dt- lil 60. °hoard Bt., Brooklyn, en Y. Witwa to jurioua medication. Tan Cialamdva Co7raalpr, 77 Murray Street, It. Y, When I say Conte I do not mean merely to gtop,them for anima and then have them re- CC1ulrrn agate. I )XIAN. A RADICAL CURE.. 1 have made the disease of ZITS, EPILEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS, blife long study. I weennANcr my remedy to >t the worst eases. Because others have, die no reason for oot nowroce ivina a cure. d at oneefor atreatise and aP'ltalnBOTTr.>Q, Dipolar/mammon lilsAlnDY. Give Express ast Office. It costs you nothing for e. b sad. it will Dore you. .Address Dr, II. G. ROOT. 87 Yonge St., Toronto, Ont, THE EXETEii TIMES. Is pnbltsaod every Thursday morn ng,at Ti MES STEAM PRINTING HOUSE Main-street,nearly opposite Fitton'e Jewelers Store, Exeter, O nt,,b y John White eh B o®a,Pro- Driotors. iwras co' AnvnnTisINO (first insertion, per line 10 cents. f aeh sulose queutlusertion,per line...,..Scents. To insure insertion, advertisements should to ' sent in notlater than Wednesday morning OurJOB PRINTING DEPARTMENT is one i the largest and best equipped in the County 1 Huron, All work entrusted to ue will recete e prompt attention: Decisions Regarding News- papers. Any person whotakesa paperregularlyfrom he ost-ofiioe whether ' wh th directed me name d I i6 am p in or another's o vbet r} herhehas subscribed ornot .. Is responsible for payment. 9 11 aperson orders his paper discontinued he mast pay all alreaes or the publisher may continue bo send it until the payor ent i s made, and then collect the whole amount, whether eta papery is taken from the office or not. 8 1.0 snits for subscriptions, the suit may be nabttutedin the place where the paper is .pub ished, although the subscriber may reside Dandreds of miles affray, 4 The aourte have decided that refusing to take newspapers or exiodica1a from the post - office, or removing and leaving them uncalled oris prima facie evidence ofintentionalfranr2 Exeter Butcher Shop. R. DAVIS, RTAR Buteher ALL,enera,1 Dea1ei —IN lnnsor'— 1 , A T S stomata supplied TUESDAYS, THURS- DAY arm SATUBDAYS at their iesedeaoe ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL RE OEI'yE PROMPT ATTENTION. PUREES`; f3 T gn:>,yNGESIre l LEST, CONTAINS NO ALUM, AMMONIA, LIME, PHOSPHATES, or any Injurious materials. E. W. G I LLETT, TORONTO, ONT. OHIOAO0, I... flaa'i'a diet CALTarterEA 80-2.L YEAST n agEa, PROVTDTimN'T LTB' Live Stook Association (Incorporated.) Home -R om D,rod Toronto. H me Offiea oArcade, e, In the life department this Association pro- vides indemnity.for sickness and accident, and substantial assistance to the relatives of do ceased members at terms available to all. In the live stook department two-thirds in- demnity for loss of Live Stook of its members. Applioations for Agencies invited. Send for os " ectases, claims paid, kc. 'WILLIAM JONES. Managing Director KENDAL'S SPAM CURE The Most Successful Remedy ever disco, orocl, as it is certain in its streets and does not blister. ` Read proof below. KENDALL'S SP1YII DUNE. Ostitis OW OfnAILSS A. smite, Baz nen ow )y CLevELAISD BAT Alto Taosmnta BrtED Boners. ) EtxwooD, ILL., Nov. 20, 1S88. ea. B. J ICetfnar,o 0o. Dear Sire: I have always }probated ourMat yell S avm Oore by the half dation ?lottiaa, 1 wo. Mico Talo in larger quantity.. I think it fo one the best liniments en oiit'th. 1 have Dass to en ray stables gotten)* yearn. ' Yeure troty, OnAs. A. Stevan. t RE. KEN9ALL S _SPAY1CU ihigcutTU, I.T. Y., llovesnber 2, 1123, , Dn, B. J ICnNlfAtt. Oo. �g ll gale stye I I del,ire to givo ot�i,wvcim nlal tax ova gai�iffoor I baa sees. ate Je `.I,,,1 s 1} C o - I ,have Sotlnt A siiro all• y' o anS. J. ally recommondit to allhorseinen staid. Yours trulykannsee Troy Laund��ttlblis. KENDAL'S SPAVINOUR. NAnp, Wane,! couwrr, Onto, bow 10a88S Dn,1). 3.1:ssngtt. ry d ,lents;Iftllbtltrbspdnty00sarwhat 1hoved0 e with "our IContitlPs Spavin 0tire. I have e 'that hild.. �,i to _ co Horses ,.- t ut f! wo y i tetod.wttic� i` �en ,lino p a Il,inti l?Ino. -. �61nae I hate one tt�ybttr' SalonOfa_,. i ow ..n bavtl nuttier cit rho dlrooCione I • otos napi� id . le nd lost tY oliT or;a *0 kind. AnnaEW Tolman., oiug'triily, IRMO actor: IS GUfi Prldo ei.bbe'r bottie,or sot btlttlea,far s5. All 1Dut, isbshdvolObr guettt1eryoilrok',Ib ill botati 1Sc b ho MO obi tt>r o fa D tf'ed o to a ..bid rasa, u oa ll y D t7 �i, 711 �r FAiS tors.., An,'r 1I. J. I3;atrlYaY;tY.Ca.s ++nesU,• .`$ et, . ZOLII ]§$i' ALL OittrOGISTS Cu ll 0 Everest's Cough Syrup CANNOT BE BEATEN. Try it and be oonvinoed of its - wonderfn curative properties, Pries 25 eta' (Trade Mark,) T ry Everest's LIVER REGULATOR E'ca Diseases of the Liver, Eiilnees &o, a purifying of the Blood . Price - 91. 'Six bottles, 85. For sale by all drug. gists. Manufactured only by M. llVF,Rlt nTclhomi,, -• -�, SOS Sewing-11;;aebiue - a, ,-,. To at once este bltsh x r It. macs b le tn¢ .,a trade 5 ;t in 0 u r: ro th Des goodsw Swill eat 5,c tins eo term, wo Drill send t'a•ee o ,u penes to sash loha11rya o In ' best ,wit 1 the ne mane to ts. ',Vhe will ll,wtth all eh eer. temp ;ln We will also send freer. tempt to line et our costly and Tantalite rt temples. In return we ok-test you show what we semi. r there who May rill nt your I unit nit niter 10 xmnth, all sh00 Intern. your 0 vu 'property. Thin mit 1113.1114. 03 made atter. the Sine t' tenet ts, w nhwn mith 1WYtesold a. ren 00 nt1nf'1t1d 1Y:1 tihn ho t0 i w,e nrmtllm„att And now sells for 01g1 0inint,.trongosgmo.tu b. fut nmctdnt it the world. All :. Otte. . NO capital required. Plain, brief tastractions glr n '!'`nota who write :o us at ones can e - cure free, the best sowing.nwchlno in' the world, and ho' Onegst Inco( worts of high art ever shown together in America 7CY11.101u efilh CO., Hoa 740, Augusta. let/ulnae. THE LIGHT TRUNNING I )'4$ t$ MACHINE H AS NOy. Q t. THE LADISIS° FAVORITE. ...e r�iMy V�a�p�®�f� W pll� Ti>1fm ONLYSEWING THAT ElIVES OA•�/f 6,r. .� Non G18-11(HINED:011ANC t'iFil(d ,< 4 9 2g CUNT N'a li U Cir + nett.N QUA fly$ w _.. l.. Hila uilts,'j,rr flit'' Agoats Ivan/Where,