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The Exeter Times, 1890-1-23, Page 2"Like I( a R 10.E TELE effect produced byAyer'sCherry ATTRAGTiVE AT HOME. ROME W40 ram .5 nit tarougn ray growing IV- 1. OLD XAOS VIAT1S' THW YF�]W% WOMAN Q 1tkAI1 AND.1.t4,tli:1�, iMPORTANCE QF LOOKING NEAT AN Pectoral, Colds, Coughs, Croup, at are, in most CaSea, nu - miss, Cash's frami?iy VICUO1—A Wein mediately relieved by the use of this wonderful remedy. It strengthens tale vocal organs, allays irritationand pre - .arid Sore Thro "I have used in away family for always found it croup, to which c lave been sub-ee r lrlcn, N. Y. ,knew nothing et her value to me as a boy, recognized and compargtirely little of it as ..,.._ a young malt; but now I have reached now Thritrhsg Wlater'a Faze Anent tee Stom- p of maten'ity I realize how Mamie she gut to Scup Atlantic. tttako home attractive and my childhood fk It was during holiday week twenty-four Ferypleasantone." years ago that the ill-fated eteetotap At, atti And again, it was hub a little while ago a !antic waswrecked upon the reefs an "•Dev- ]ady was speabaug of the gentle outman. and We Cradle, within forty teat of the lofty unusual ability to entertaining shown by a rock-bound west coasb of Nova Scotia. It young gentleman Nolo bad recently eomenato • was one of the moat disastrous of ocean the eon -impiety, , horrors ou record. The oideet residenb of tt Oh, well,' said a friend, "" I'll tell you that vicinity is venerable, silver -haired int§ where he learned his. ease, and acquired such Jack Watts, who has jueb turned his and finished manners, He grew up with a lot of eigbty*econd year. Be is a stalwart, alistans, and theyatlways depend«' on 'lira io hardy, rough, weather*beaten taterman, help them when they had company, and they and has a brilliant record there$aonts far o theaulted him about thou fancy work and nota few deeds of life-riskieg end life- au- the arrangement of a room or tea table, just aiaving vele*. With mueoles like wire ropes Fat es if he was another girl," and sinews like steel his strength, too,has a Cournand us to those boys who have grown, - been famous. Roughhewn and hard worked upwith"a lot of sisters." We have often and tempeatriven as he is the veteran hue m• heard a gentlemen remark regretfully: ""1 under the rough shell of bis exterior .a heart he rrazv had dW a feel sisterfor that was something g I ` "'Do you remernbe then rtlght? Da Z f First they should havegenuine pit,}* You wouldn't task that question, my boy co she• missed soet much. t1ee - grris of the rarnily rgsit7,enranslightig, ►f you bad been here, for it you lived 0v 0 the great inttueaece they are exerting, or so many lives sort would nob forget that t m/ghtexert, over their brothers+!---Montreee awful night through all eternity,'' eel han$tar. _quivered he,andthe * oldm valise ni red turd a vol hittiefRoasekcel?eft. ashepaused to clear his throat, and his esegm with your own possessions, girls, 1 eyes glistened as thocgh they smarted Reformyour upper bureau drawer; relieve with the satlty woletare of a gathering and your closet pegs of their atleuinulation of 1 roar. *herein - at " ea. gaa'mentS otic of tree it urontbi or two a o, air, tea oontiaued, "yen remark- ttues g ed that thio was a atoraly night when yon � Institute a clear and careful order, rn the cauls �, 1,*ahawlit this is nothi*g, Sart§ Midst of whtelt you can daily move, and lasia Chore is a bit of ie sterut krewing, and a tokeep it so that it will be a part of your toilet to dress your room and Rearrangements. while you dregs yourself, leaving the dear paries you talk off as lightly and aartieticaliy bung, or as delic+itely folded rind placed as tiro I skirte you loop carefully to wear or the rib- bon and lace you put with a soft neatness about your throat, Cherish your instincta a i of taste and fitnem In every little thieg you uo#+lata a sena Uusband—A Sister'1► laftuence—Advice to Lltlle Hottsekeep ars—l'et'ters tor ' ttsittess Women. Every little i, hitt., ,.nc finds in femin arrack a peitaaeut weld to 'wives Tents the inroads of mothers re^ardfng i f b Consunlptfon; ie o "te :ng or oma eyes, every stage of that And wisely. One cannot afford to look lest dread disease, srellinones ehildleu'seyes than :how" t Ayex's Cherry Per-, Cha nest door neighbor or the verstran relieves cough, . gest, and ft .rtbur and Stephen'pro wvas worth dI'essing for when y war nig and induces sweethearts why not when the were bus refreshing rest, .builds 3 JBtttabout undrea3. A you tame Ayers Ohexry Pectoral 'ter David Copperfield's concern over th nest emed�v fpr. � E{etnc of Dor'a'ss curl papers 3 TFell, the mast amplaint my ehitdrasr . 9nobserving wan is quite as quielr to notice t."�-Capt. U. Carley, ' it not to rehnark the details of feminine at- tire. Because a rt�>'n ia' too good us=•tared to Boo "'Prom an experience of over thirty comment upon what he sees, do not take ib years in the sale of proprietary meds- ; far granted that he is blind. Sterling wort nines, I feel justified an recommending pin oboesteter osey be relied upon to secure a :A.yer's Cherry I'ectornl One of th 'rest recommendations of the Pectoral is 8v?od?)' zttuount of levo, but we are all agreed the enduring quality of its popularity, it , is at not eel—that personal appearance has being more salable now than it was a decided influence en our friendghine twenty -tate years ago, when its great t loves, Our friends and foes are, in A m success was consideree inert elnus, �. tote, what they loon to be. Inherited lea • S, Drapes I\L I)., Benet, leans. tare pretty ntuch, though not altogether "efy little sister, foul' ,Tears of age. ",Fond our power eo change, but ons is atter was so ill frons bronchitis that we ball all, largely the redaction other surroundu ss, Our fatuity physief:tn, 1 skilful man and e span mac upon arse. t# large experience, renounced it use.. ! t're'ncher of germente, one may bate almost given up hope of her recovery. and thecadepend h h iG S p less to give bee ales more medicine ; { Idn1t or cotton ones, but the agr'eeeble effects saying that he had douse all it was roe- , 01 ono or Ilia ether, hinge not upon shekels, sible to do, and we must prepare for the I but upon the tact with which the goods are worst. As a fast resort, we determined Arranged and net off. That is, one may be to try Ayer's Cherry Teetotal, and I can "" a picture'' in a priut draws, or a fright in tb truly eat, with tiro most happy results. �lauue diose, witilthe dlltorences of its ban .After takinga few doses site seemed to it breathe easer, and, within a week, was �"et loom liee1s"wellbeing worn with nn - of danger. We continued giving thetidy peeson, and so on, Tho average woman. Pectoral until satisfied she. was entirely : divested of the various accessions that buoy well. This bas given me unbounded faith bernp in dreg toilet, f* pretty apt to be un in the preparation, and I recommend it leewayto look upon, But how tow women confidently to zuy customers."—C. 0. think about ik linen are fastidious beyond their own avowal, wives, and one needs to think twice to think wisely before she makes Herself a nightly fright Curl papers, oil be- smeared Lace, 'rinds in untidy gloves, mad ',refired in ugly --and 1t must bo contested, not aiweystueat u eerclothin andwhaat t in the portrait to remin oTze O1 Den Manna ane nude authe mcrraw begat; parlor'/ /1„� ha w' ' auust be c4r_1�d, let it be by a, t curler that takes but 'WS or the momenta lin the mornings Only spinsters not afraid of ;their own shadows can afford to sleep in furl papers. .Appearing is them in public should be a capital ofrense. TSbateter cosmetics one cares or dares to rano sboald be aped and worn only when one is at liberty to ""seek the seclusion that tbe dungeon grants.' It would neem almost superguoua to say, however, that the fairest skin and most elaborate coiifnre do not re- quire that one shall sleep in tbe plight so many women appear to tWnkneecesary. The r A n T u p poi European eustoua that gives to eacb individe il tai U.1 ual a room if uo bigger than aclose--where "Lepper, Druggist. bort Wayne, Ind. Por Colds and Coughs, tans Ayer's Ch rrtrAltstl nr Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co.. Lowell, Mats. .d'tict $1; tea Cottee, et§. Worth $e a bottle. THE BEST I1IK1NO POV LER -+IS.i– !¢T.A&I('S GENIIIIE Coak'_Fiioiiii 1+ie Alun. Nothing Injurious. EMU F ERIEREt FACTORY SUPPLIES Valves, iron ad Pipe, Lcose Pulley Oliers15teala he or sba is solo monareb, is a wholesome, bappy arrangement, that may obtain some day in our land. While busbaud and wife have but one sleeping apartment, that must, Jet Pumps, Farm Pumps, In most cases do duty as a dressing room ars Wind will; Cream Sepia wef, ono surely cannot afford to make her Mors, Dalry and Laundry aleepuig toilette less becoming than her prat - Utensils. tiest day attire, to say nothing of the artistic 530 CRAIG STREET reason of wishing for one's own sake to be * fair and sweet, avt O iVTA £A L. And the means, supposing silken bed gowns are forbidden by the state of men purse— wet/ it, is forbidden to no one to brush her teeth entad hair before retiring, and to matte her face and hands clean, and very often to take a hot tub bath, avid to wear a fair, white alight dress, bo it over so simple. 11 high priced toiletperfumes are not to ba bad—and Ane odors are always high priced—one may, by hygienic living, bavo abreath its swoet as new mown hay, and sprigs of sweet smelling herbs laid innate= drawers lend tbelr fra- grauce to the contents: DInaah Sturgis. CHADW CK'S SPOOL COTTON For Sand and Machine Use. HAS NO SUPERIOR. ASK FOR IT. LEA TH THERM STEEL -LINED TRUNKS In Sample, Ladies' and all other hinds. ILIQ,itiSt and S1IougcSt Tr R V! irg IC ^"a3 Mrs, C-nuL.'s Venn,. Talk about tbo dangers of the aanateur stage, of cigarette -smoking --they areas noth- ing compared to the wickedness of the first class dressmaker. Yon are a nice looking In the World. little woman, with a pretty figure which J. E�IEI,EI $ 'o. Tara e vials 'haat ifanyaannyy woman doesed to see well un� dersfi essed nd M 0 NTR EA L. the art of gowning. it is you. All your life Sala Illrz. far the Deminioa long you have bought your materials at a — first class shop, taken them to a fairly good OTEL BAL ORA�e making, reasonable price for tfi, HOTEL making, suggested to the vlodiste a frill hero MONTREAL. a puff there, an artistic effect somewhere else, Siotre name St., ono of the most central end when you Score the frock, itwas with an and elegantly furnishodHotels intro City. ' conscience and a happy heart, y�llieh .Accommodationfor400guests. added to your good looks. Some day you 7tates: 0'l - 1%' 'WOODRUFF, enter the parlor of Serpent, Cash & Co.; i2 to $3 per day. , a Manager. suddenly your pretty gown has a second rate DOMINION look, Mrs. Serpent admires your figure; Mas. Cash moans how unfortunate it is that you LEATHER BOARD are not dressed properly, and the company sits behind the desk end grins, knowing what CO M PA N Y. f the outcome will be. You see a wondrous Manufacturers of i gown, just from Paris, which is certain to ASBESTOS M{LLBOARD suit you. Yon are induced to try it on, and Steam_Packing, then you hear the price. Yon shudder at it, I You say you cannot get it; but ohl you do FRICTION look so handsome in it You know Tom caaxot afford that money; you know that s sea PerjectFr,.ction but the style is so good and the voice of the charmer is listened to. You go out of that house, withthoknowledge that you are going to get that frock, foryou have been fitted for B lel E wit, and you are the most miserable slave in f rho world. Mrs. Cash has told you that you PErns' Sola Arts lar Canada, �.PALMER &SON Wholesale Imp'trs of neUGGlSTS'SUNDRIES, 1743 NOTBE DEE ST„ MONTREAL. ULLEY BOARD, nsuallyyou get three frocks for that amount +SONP. * RECKTT'S THE BEST FOR LAUNDRY USE. 1 can pay $25 or $50 ata time on your bill, and i get everything you want there. Well, you I begin by paying your $25 or $50; you get more and more new clothes; the bill does not come in for a year, and when it does you gasp with terror: Coats were sold to you that you were told would cost nothing, and noth ing, to Serpent, Cash & Co., means anything from $160 to $550. Still, you think that you ran raise a few hundred dollars, and that Tom may give yoo $little extra money without your telling him what it is for, and then you chirp up and remember that Mrs. Cash said you could pay a little ata time, and, after till, it was just the bill coming in. Poor little wretch! You have a feeling at your heart all the time now as if you were a thief, and within a week you get an insolent note from Mrs. Serpent suggesting that you re- mit at once.—San Francisco Argonaut. PAPERS Wrapping, daanra�ry4jr1f1\ta, ``, ALL #EWS, A7., �b AND O s'ae's CT WEIGHTS Lk' To ORDER A. 21 Deegan St. MILLS Peneentn, r.a. r�01 f 0 Hj�1S. 0 Ed.S rap �EEF HE GREAT STRENGTH GIVER iePERFECT FOOD OR The sicK ARMING at �iUTRlTIUUSBEVERAGE POWERFUL iNViGORATDR 2118 A Sisters influence. " I wonder," said Mrs. Eaton, ""what male Frank Sawyer so different' from Tom Blake and Bill Harris? They've got good hontee and good po ante, but Tom and Bill are as rough as young Indians, and never seem to know the difference between the inside of the house and outdoors." v Well, the fact was; that Frank Sawyer had sisters, and it wall impossible to feel that the "tinsido of the house" was the same am "out. ",�' - 'a P O D S a� , doors,e where' the pretence and influence of V either older or pommel* sisters were constant- lyfelt Asia'pleasant to take. Contain their own Bald a gentlainan in our hearing not longb ig'urgativo. Is a We, arm, and ettooter,f t, e duce; "Imp never tell what my oldoi Osten Tatra: aE wrrz�ssr ir. Q1uldrou or Adak* ak* rather atlff beaten but nothing worth arot- icidg. Look out a bit." And as he opened 1 the door a gust of wind extinguished the 4 rap on the table, leaving the room in t otsl dsrkueaa. We walked out toward the bluff'. The air wan murky, raw, and growing bitter gold. Eighty feet below the waveo have about you. This viii not make�t you PASSED AOAI$ST TUE ROVIOli the Pet itis the other ththg that Jaye 1101-. pounding like some coorntcua aledge•hatn- the trot knowing, except by fidgety expert mer, with a noise like distant thunder, and went, what is harmony and the intangible causing the ledge under oar feat to vibrate sicca of relation. with each blow. Take upon yourself gradually --for the oake of getting then' in hared iu like manner, It for no other rued—all the carpi that bele rrir�� to your own small territory of hornet they' your little wash cloths and sponges for bib of aiming, your furniture brush end leather duster, and your light little brooe,, and your spirits preeerve turpaltia— it, W and piece of=dinna� p li, er restore The g 6i i Isere dark wood grovrt dim or pre spotted, bind by soul" surely grog sense of thor- oughness end edemas, the best and readiest ways of keeping all freak aboutyou. Invent your own procesees r they will come to you. Tile* you eau wake yourself wholly mis- tress of what you can learn and do in your own apartment, so that it is easier and more natural for you to do it than to let,lt alone, then you have learned to keep a whole house, so far as Re cleanly order is eoneorneli.--Bx change. if ollsentaids ip 'filed. The custom of putting housemaids into livery, which is common enough in England, is beginning tabs adopted in Now York. The costume or funiform e.ansista of a skirt of dark livery cloth -.-blue, green or brown—with plain front and broad plaits et the back; a waistcoat of the same cloth, with line cross- wise lines of red braid, and coatcut sway iu front and covering the hips. Metal livery buttons are used, on the coat and waistcoat. A small white cap, stiff white collar and cuffs and a white cravat complete the attire. A good looking meld with a good eguremakes a natty appearanoo in such a livery, and is particularly' usefnlin ltouselaeld,s where only women servants are employed to attend the door and serve the meals. Where there is a butler, thole well equippedto take the place oft"second manse Asa small minority makes up the wealthy clews everywhere, the customs and fashions that obtain in that class, are an endless source of curiosity, speculation, nand interest. To a certain extent there is no good reason why this curiosity should not be gratified. The rich art collector lone -nothing of the jealously guarded privacy of his home life by some- times throwing opening; gallery to the public —that is, nothing which ought to cause him any pain or regret. No one need apologise for letting a little light in upon thedomestio life of thosewho arelinownessocietypeople. Let the doors of the closets where skeletons lurk remainlocked; leave the dust in the haunted ebamber unstirred; the rest may be revealed without offense. -- Letter in Nevr Orleans Picayune. - Bound Advice Torusiness women. An editorial writer in The Christian Union said lately in a talk with "Business Boys:" "`The boy who will succeed in the world is he, who is content for a time to do two dollars' worth of work for a dollar." Business girls need to bind this precept upon heart and hand. Determination to fulfil every obliga- tion thoroughly, in spirit and in letter, should outrank the thought of the money to be made by this particular undertaking. First, ex- cellence x cellence of workmanship; then, what price will it command/ The girl who studies book- keeping or stenography as a stop gap against the tide of impecuniosity, until she eanwed a bread and bonnet winner, enacts the trite role of the little Haarlem hero with his thumb in the dila leak. She is like one who watches for the morlt- ing, and, in proportion as her heart tails at the delay of dawn, interest in her occupation declines. Judging by her standard of values the business laid importunately to her band and the wedlock that may come, we may well remind her that faithfulness in that which is least is the earnest of faithfulness in that which is great. The steadfast industry, the discipline of speech and conduct, the concen- tration oven tration of thought and energy upon the mat- ter set before one for accomplishment, that are essential to business prosperity, aro the. best conceivable preparation, for the high and holy sphere of wife, housekeeper and mother. --Marion Harland in North American Re- view. Two hundred 'and thirty trains daily pass the little house at Medan where Emile Zola parents his Merely labors. To this rural retreat Zola fled in 1875 to e'oaps the annoyanoe of the host of tourists who filled Paris ab the time of the Exposition. The house he occupies was originally a peasant's cabin, and contained bat one room besides the kitohea, The latter M. Zola has con- verted into a reception -room, and has added to the cabin a °insulaur hall and a large study. It is a' sad and demoralizing feature of the influenza epidemic in Paris. that. ladies and `gentleman very partial.to alcohol es- caped, while those loading temperate lives yore the e ort' sufferers. Physioiana noting this iminedietoly advised the use of warm alcoholic drinks, with the result that 1,500 persons were arrested in the streets ; within three days for drunkenness. 01:tide num- er 1,200 declared that they were simply The phosphorescent foam on the create of the breakers enabled ma to dimly see the huge, angry billow* tamultucusty abasing Peet other ahore.waard and breakleg upon the projecting edges of the rocky reef. Par away in the distance there was now end then visible a tiny point of light-�of eeme tusk; Et for that :v would wholly cdleappaar tax awhile, and than spin nam* into view, * "That light le about sixty ralles away, and a steamer, likely one of the Englieh or French Burs," he 'aid. We hid reached near the very edge of the bluff—ea) far as it was safe to go—when ray companion pressed mit arm and paused. Stretching out his arm and pointing with his long, bony Sa- ger/4 he exclaimed: ""Down there, Inst be- yond ue---ib is only eighty feet from dry land—yon see that dark Arm* in the sea.' That is the " Davila Cradle,' and Is under water et very high tide. It is called that name bootee the reef is like a eat of big saws ; the aharg rooks hold a vessel teat rune on theta, and somotimee the sea has beaten and pounded and shook the wreaks, very much as a cradle ie rooked, tmTIL Turns ARE TOR.': TO MORS. Nine have been lob there during my time. Bub that was not the luck of the Atlantic, which was too firmly set in the rooko to be moved, and the wares pounded and broke berth, two, and after awhile tore her to piccete But that night satin hard. It was oold—bitter cold—and the son went down in a blinding snow-atorm, and the wind blew every way with a fcroo that wee awful ; 'hop. came slept and hall unit cut Tour very clothes and drew blood. wherever it atrnek your flaeh All the time tbo wind wan ralaing and the air was caning more bitterly cold, 11 was so oold that the air aeemed to sting you, and the whin would whirl you around almost off your feet ; it whistled and howled and seremated with a frightful noise. I says to my pinna old woman :'Mary .Ansi, it dose teem as though hall itself had been let loose tonight,' and says she to me. 'Jimmy, I be- lieve rb is--bub—Jimmy--bark 1' and I ram to the window and listened. • r • "Well, with all that unearthly apraar of tempest, you could nos hear much else, yet we did hear a 'boom,' like elle Round of a oanr•o: ; in a minute or two we saw a atreak of flee shooting up througb the snow and hail and then we knew 'bat the Devil's Cradle had, or would have, another wreak. 'God help the poor mule,' I cried, and Mary Alan went down on het knees and prayed for 'item and,the poor lad of ours—our boy Jamie whom we thought was on. an Eaab India merchantman. But—he—wasn't, though, —" and the old man's volce was choked into silence. "Well, sir," he resumed, "the wife put on a boiler of water and pub wood to the fire. We sewage do when we think we may have good use tor ib, if some are rescued. Then IRAN ouT IN' TES sronM. I was a good bib of a strong man then, sir, but I could hardly stand up in that gale; is blew with awful force, and one could not see ten feet away, yet I pushed on to just about where we are standing. Another rocket shot up, and its track of fire disclosed an awful eight. It was all in a minute, and I had to strain my eyes and look under the peak of my hat thrcngh the blinding storm. There was a great. big, splendid ocean steam• ship driven over the outer edge of the reef ; the waves looked as though the whole bot- tom of the ocean had violently heaved them up ; they were actually like mountains, and they lifted that huge steamer up and let ib dawn,lbumping over those jogged pointe of', flinty otic. "Then all was pitchy darkness again, and although I could not see anything I kept' my eyes in the same direction. In a few minutes another rookebshot up, and again I saw that noble vessel lifted up almost out of the water by a mighty wave; astern it aeemed naught and pivoted on one great point of rook; then, 11 was wheeled around, and as the waters receded the bare, rough rooks seemed LISE A 8174E JAW down into and upon which the steamer dropped with a crashing noise of broken iron, glace, tackling, and machinery, load above which I could hear the smothered bub unmistakable sound of women's shrieks and the shouts of men—one loud, hideously piercing pandemonium of anguish and dee- pair. ""Then all was inky darkness, and the winds seemed to vie with each other in Iran- eoen g their fiendish parts of the horrid ele Cal orgy. I had hard work to hold my balance—keep my feet—and get to our little home. "We were up soon after daybreak, and as the storm had somewhat abated I joined some neighbors and went down to the base of the cliffs. There we saw the noble steam -ship Atlantic hard fast on the rooks split in the oeuter and strained all over. The waves were yob furiously breaking over her, foe had formed on various parte of the deck, bulwarks, . and rigging; bodies ware frozen• Mark and stiff. All was as following treatment prescribed for infla- silent as bho grave—nob a living soul in eight on board. But few bodies were. washed . eza.• aebors anti!, next day, and one lead !them thrown up near where t bad stood, 'leaned, and reaobed forward and drew It in, It was the body of a man, his overcoat had been twisted over the face, and was stiff with amusing of ioe. We turned the corpse over, iooaened the gart*ent, and strew it down, disclosing the face. Mt • eljui God 1 it was our boy Jamie. As we We. -1 after- wards Informed by a ahip•mate et bis, he had planned it to come home and surprise ua New Year's day." the old man sobbed a moment or two, and then exeleimed: "Yee, our Jamie did come home, end he dice eurpr se us, but not as he had intended. • • " We untied him New Year's day in the little churchyardjast beyond a bit on the blot/ here. You will not wonder now that. I remembers well the night of the wrote of the Atlautic, when our Jamie (our only tltild) oamo home to be with ua New 'Yesr'e day 1" Aaiun in Sardinia. One mortally annoying peculiarity of Sardinia is the heartiest§ way in which you are left to hunger until the fasbionable feasting hour arrives. Though you reach yourho (st* lunette at 2 oQ f cain thefternoon, there will be nothing for you to eat until 0 or 10. Certainly, the wine will flow ; but not every one can dna comfort in wine. Hero at Ballao, for instance I spent aaveral famishing hours amid my hostias's various betake. They, the oats, the pigs, and the poultry ail found amusement about the floor of the room, end the I'malenbl" in the corner contribnt,d the 'amens et the mill to the other hubbub. Now and then a villager would look in, and having said in a breath: "How do you dot There's nothing mach the matter with me," would run off. Iby guide did all he could to got tho priest of the pariah to pall, but his reverenoo, with ezouaeia eent the key of the church instead. However, at length the' room was cleared, the children all put into one big bed, the donkey turned loose, and supper annonnoed. We sat four to table, my hostess and the eldest of her pretty, dark -eyed daughters jolaing us. It was a Pity the husband was from home, for in fire South the (softer cox are not expected t gd t dun iv 1 e a h. f sit ba I I rax o . ba and I fear were a nnlaanoe to the gooduls. We he soup of sour milk, mmcaroni, lamb oh moistened with lemon julaecold trout, en 0 V -o ad P44jjjj�w�r1�tN''ll" mANsimw CO* is Weak, Nervoue, Debilitated, Vow* Fol!y and ignorance Acs Trf� fled away 3sts Vigor az Body, Mind end Manhood, exbtpiting drains upon Il2okache,nDr sdtW br feom., 1A/oakneas ll Malars. Beehfulnosell to SAeieRy, jibinpleb upon the Fadi and all tbo Effects na to Early Decay, Coneumptloxr 1! l'oc'hs Will ling in our apoot0o 1`0, se a 'got restores Vital a l pow In old and lital cower ouert_etrengtbens end Invigorates the Brain nlrSd Norvee bu lgettp trie macerator sostens arouses into 'argon the Frbole pbrstca5 energyorthe human eraiue. With oat specldo No, a3 the most obstinate cave can be cured in three months, and noontime in loss than thin doss.. Eads package contains two week* treat- raent. I'd e9. nate. ilnareauteod. Our rpoo- lflo No. Elis iia info 11blo Curd for all Private Diseases no matter of how long stand - Ing. sold ander one written Cuprentoo to ;: Cor:;uct oroa a lure. .Ono Brine ate. Toronto btcdicine .. gtazzav LADIES ONLY. FRENCH RECULAT10111 P'llt a. Far superior to Ergot, Tansy. Pennyroyal or Oxide. Endorsed by the thousands of ladles who use them MONTHLY. Never fail. Rellee op'tln. 1118U112 REGULARITY, Mac"nt and Eflectuai. Price, $2, Toronto Modlalna Co, Toronto. Ont. i AT LAST E £'Wonderful vegetable Discovery legit Removes the Terrible Eteitaltl► of Overwork. A True invigorator* Weakness and prostration of the nerrvoua ttyetem surely follow that overwork and, worry which brings sorrow and suffixing to so many Canadian homes. The terrible' results of nervous weakness, are Seen on eneslt hand. Pains iu the back, poor and unrefreshing sleep, lack of appetite dyse pepsin, and lost energy and strength, are thea fust symptoms of more serious and danger.' ems trouble. This is the way that Paralysis,' Paresis and Insanity begin. Do not delay {moment Ionger, for some time it will be, Sao late to regain your lost health and. vitality. Use Paine's. Celery Coznpoundt now, and the dull eyes will regain their brilliancy,the cheeks will grow rosy, C �Y tlr brain become, clear, the nerves strong and steady, your sleep restful and refreshing', appetite good, and health and happiness will take the place of miser, and suffering. al, Sabiston, the well known lithographer. of Montreal, writes; ""In the summer of 1888 I had to work very bard .and was troubled considerably with insomnia (sleep, lessness). n resolved to try your l'aine's Celery Compound, and after taking the contents of two bottles, felt lake a new man. Ageed night's restgavemestren tlt. for the duties of the day,, and instead of starting out to business in the morning feeling as if I had completed a day's work instead of being about to com aeflce one 'I started out in good spiririts, feeling fresh. and strong. ''Aly wife and various friends, to whole 1 recomrtheilned the medicines ve been benefited greatly, and in fact ' nine's Celery Compound is a household. word in our family." so $beetle; end net loaner wee the meal ended than the lady Arose with a haw, offered Me the rnshllght which, had illuminated our feast, and unshed us *'Good repose.' Rub good repose, for me at least, was out of the question, In the drat place I bed to abate my heti with en ex.brlgattd, who stepped be. twecn the sheets unwashed and divested of nothing but hie boots ; and itt the second place our worthy hoeteaa, to Thaw her ap- preciation of our visit, bad collected all the olecke of the house and, I believe, bor• rowed those of her neighbors, and hung them span the ohamber wall, whence they ticked loudly aggainab each other, as if for a wager. Among times clocks, and near my head, was. one inhabited , by a ouokao, which every quarter carne out with a brief sang, and hourly sung for a minute or tie. Add to this the sourryirg of rats and mice, the efforts of the cafe outside to gob at these happy rodents, and the mysterious aofaes of certain hone, wheatprceanoe waseubaequent- ly declared by their eggs in the four corners o f f he room, and if you aro fastldiona you may understand that it was jay to see the dawn. Then, atter a welsh and a raw egg, I wee allowed to give a florin to the meld, (who kissed my hand in return for i6,; ordt r the horses, and so, with smiles) and !good wlshea from tbo lady, ride away into the cheerful outer air—[Corethiil Magazine. £z:tiish Msnneza According to Richard- son. According to Richardson, every one rape tore ably in those days, and were content wi b tt ,commonly little Bleep, They all ate ane crank a good deal, as we know before. Breakfabb was usually about 8.30, and bo• tween dinner and supper their pangs were assuaged by "afternooa tea," as Mrs. Har - lows expressly calla it. As I bawls said, the young ladiee spent immense sums on their clothes, and, of course, wore much richer materials than (until lately) were considered in our day good taste among unmarried girls. The hints about Clarieaa'e tonneau were doubtless fur- nished to Richardson by hie female coterie, his petticoaterie, and very =rime the desoription is. Her mother tells her that if she will matry Mr. Selmes. her father intends her six suite (three of them dressed suite) at hie own expense. "Fon have," she goes on to nay, "an entire new suit,•and one besides, which I think you never wore but twice. As the new gait la rich, If yon choose to snake that one of the six, your father will eresent you a hundred guineas in lieu of i6." "fiere's richness 1" as Mr. Sgneers exclaimed when he theta the boys' milk and water. But though these offer* were rejected by Clarissa, together with Mr• Soirees, her own supply of oro wary clothes must have been very handsome, for she not only lives on the sale of them (they were sent to her insultingly by her family) when she escaped from Lovelace's clutches, bub in her will left part of the remainder to her cousin, Mies Hervey. The bequest con. slated of her " beet Mechlin and Brussels lace headdresses, and a petticoat of flowered silver," Clarissa's own work. Young ladies of that date were always expeoted to be in in!' dress, and the habit was not with out its advantages. Even a Lovelace caned be impressed by it, and he observed to his friend Belford, when speaking of Clarissa, nnapproaohable even in her deepest misery, that " full dress orester dignity, augments ooneoionsuees, and corn pals distance." These words are nob with- out their significance during the present reign of teagowna. Stays play an immense part in female attire, and Richardson is never weary of calling our attention to them. Hoope were likewise so vase that Harrlet'a country cousins were forged " to toss theirs over their shoulders" bo make room for Sir Charles (Irandison to sib between them, and that avatar of propriety does nob appear shocked ab the revelation thus made. Had the Explanation. He was a victim of the holidays. He was palpably and' pathetically a • victim. His hat had that plaintive air of when -did -you - get itetotivenese that is acquired only by the concentrated exertions of a single night... "I've gob ib," said he. "A jag 1" inquired the policeman. "Nimble ;" he responded with wavering dignity. "I've gob the'ehplanatfon. Thia her earth bin glttln round an round for the lamb h year ab the rate of once a day. Just think of the marvlouah speed. An' I (hie) I 've, been goin' with ib—bhree hundred a& shity• five blench," "Well, 'pose you have." - '"Ieh'b any wanner ab I'm dizzhy f" x Separation from his wife is sought for by an Indiana man, and he backs his claim for it; by the statement that she danced for joy when he chopped hie fingers off: 908 T t§stt once natabliisla trade to all pato, by placing our uncial; 11 -and geode where the peep!' ria WI than, we s3111 land erre men* teerson in cull IorelttS,th, TO, brat %ening-machine made„ the world, wlilt all the atktelnnr We will also semi Preen tempt. line or our costly and txtun2leA.,i''r samples. 1n retwnne Ia . chat yea thaw what we send, t, 115)1i. ,Cha may tall straw home. oral nater Ra months all:hall heroine your owwa property. Ibis giend malh[ua 4 made otter the -Singer Intents, whlrll have run outs brfese petrels run ouiltaohl krGust mown* nnaattea atl*rhmentsst,, and 1mw aeli, for y Ma55 madded li. she world. Ls ■�les 3aCta Nl aO. 11 In the world, dll Ate - Ale. No capital requltod. nein, brief in tractions ,lien. Thoma who write to nese once canoe - cure tree the beat s^.wing-machine In the world. and the Sent line of,rork, othl h art ever shown togetherin America. Timm do CU., Box '730..&n2usta. Maine. Exeter Butcher Shop R. DA'PZS, Butcher & General Dealer --2N ALL XIMSDO ori— ustomerssupplied TUESDAYS, THURS. AYS AND SATURDAYS at their teaidenoe ORDERS LEFT AT THE SHOP WILL BE OEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION. ILL cure you of Inflammatory Rheum. neem, Neuralgia, Lumbago, Spinal Disease, Ear cad Toothaohe, Brnlan and Sprains. After S&any Years. A unique event was the reunion. ab Louis- ville ' recently of thaee, brobhera who were separated fifbyone years ago and had never met singe. They are Thomas G., W. H., and AB, E irl. 'hey: wore born et Newark, N. J., is 1830, 1832, and I836. Soon atter the birth of the youngest their parents died and they were divided, eaoh being sent to the home of a relative to be reared. Now Thomas, the oldest, is the owner of several thousand acne of fine land near Lytton on. the Canadian Pacific railroad in British Columbia and is extensively engaged in fruit - growing, A.13.,the second, • is a,welleto-do oontraator in Louisville. Both are married, whileW. H. is a bachelor, and lives near Paxton,I11. He has aoquired:a oompetenosr raising abook,aud has retired from bnienens. A large gathering of friends helped them celebrate their re -union at the•home of the Louisville brother.-[Pltbsburg Daspetoh.