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The Exeter Times, 1890-8-7, Page 7r's Hair Vigor 3 the "ideal" Hair -dressing, It re, , stores the color to gray hair ; promote t fresh tuid vigorou.s growth; prevents the formation ct dandruff; makes the hair soft and silken; and imparts a deli. cate but lasting per. tune. "Several menthe ago my hair com. menced falling out, aud in a few weeks my head was almost bald. I tried oany remedies, but they did no good. I finals ly bought a bottle of Ayer's Hair Vigor, and, after using only a part of the eon - teats. my bead was covered with. a beavy growth of hairs I recommend your preparasion as the best in the world."—T. Muuday, Sharon Grove, Ky. Ss used Ayer's Hair Vigor for a num u -yeers, and it has always Oren, $ faction. It i$ an excellent drees, preventthe hair frona taming gray, mutes its vigorous growth, and keep the ecalti white and cleans"—, Mary A. Jackson, Salem. Mass, "I have used Aye r% Hair Vigor for promoting the growth of the hair, and think, it utimialed. Far restoring tho heir to its original color, and for adress. ing.it cannot be surpaseed,"—Xmasfb, La Fever, Eaten Rapids, Mich. "Ayers Hair Vigor is A MOM excel- lent preparatiou for the hair. I speak Of it from tesv own experience. Its use promotes the grawth of new hair aud Makes it glessy and soft. The Vigor is else a mire for dandruff."—J, W. Bowen, Editor "Enquirer," IttArthur, Ohio, "I have used sayer's Heir Vier for the past two year, and fouud it all it IS represented to be. It restores the oatue red color to gray hair, causes the hair to grow freely, and keeps it eoft aud pliant." --7Ars. M. V. Day. Colioes, N. Y. "My father,at about the age of Any, lost all the hair from the tenet his heed, .After one menth% trial of Ayer's Hair "Vigor the liair began coming, and. in three months, lie had 4 A310 growth of hair of the natural color."—P, J. Cullen, Saratoga Springs, N. Y. iyui kit Virpt MAREP BY Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., LowelI, Mass. am by "haggis** mod Perfumer". THE n7 A gypaz z R WA' lb "I"" Exeter .13u.tott.er Shop R•DAVIS, 13uto1ler & General Dealer. MX WNW' V* VIE AT historaersiOrplied TURSDAYS. TRUES ,AYS,n SA.TUBDAYS at their reside= °limns LRFT AT THB SEIOP WILL RR CEIVZ PILOMPT ATTENTION. Hew Last, How Restored Just pubilsbed, a'new edition of br. Calvet - well's Celebrated Emil *LI /a') rodiOal 0010 0' srmeetaratnateei or incapacity induced by excees ot early indiscretion. The eelebrated author, Hi this admirable essay dearly demonstrates from * thirty years' succeedu practice, that the alai -wing -consequences of self abuseiney be radically cured ; potaffbg out a mod/ S f cure at once simple, certain mad effeMual, means of which every sufferer, no matter what hii condition may be, may cure himself cheaply, pd. *lately and radtecallii Cr This lecture should be in the hands of ever ytfillia and every man iti theland. Bent under peal, in a plain envelope, to any ke *tees, post-paid, on reoelpir of four rents, or twi postage stamps. Samples of lieJiciee free, Addrew THE CULVERWELL MEDICAL CO 41 Ann Street New York Post One Box 450 418E WEAKNIEN‘„Tak7;111Titt:ran selves of Wasting Vitality, 'Lost St anhood, from youthful errors, etc., quietly at Imam, Boolt on all private disease* sent ires (sealed). Perfectly reliable. Over 20 years' experience. Address- • *MIMI* XI bo.,WORON'TO, Canada. LADIES mAlitzntr;igovg:74,v1; L' itn • y al Pills. Insures regularity. had for particulars. Address 22LL 00.5 TORONTO, Canada. EARDS FORGED an stnoothost faces. hair nn baldest haute. in DO to 15 days. Matia. Lateet and greater,: ashieventent of modern selonce Most woo. aortal- dlaeorery of the ago. Like no otbor preparationi =11 rt:SladThresadMaereirriP'OTriNg°83,:came,,vg pecans troths. Only genuine article in market, and certain to give absolute tsatiefsegon. Guaranteed. Prim 31 a battle, or three bottlee for SS. Iloshbottle tarts ono month. Addresi A. DIXON, Box 20d, TORONTO, CANADA. MIRE SIOVAREINI'S PREPABATIONS. $upPERFLS 16 prrtaraionathratULUO11117a:,iRttA7,'volo serfluocthar without n, 1:tL:. rrantedn. Erma Sl. FI..,MPLES AND SI.ACKNEADJPerrfral,!.7,71, tft; .... BO days. Warrant d. Prieefor SO d.g.c. tr,a .a.on.,61. ASTI-CO SPNLEVE PILLS point la a matter el _ s, whether beam& It In ,.. se, m., fortable or b io....T.A.T. FOLKS using__ VORPULE11 , " loso la lbs. m Month. They eau,. no sinknese ; oontain no pohon, and nom tail . Price for ono ttrilat's trootmmat, ass et woe :months medlahm‘ ea. COMP 11 N WAFERreiciTitimat.-. V Bleach the r., ,, evelop the foram arotloos. ?ano:MI lo Otlact, arum ed. Pris• el a box, or six boxes for $S. dulifiress riUkil.a31211 otowirrararrr,_ 0. aoe sing street west Tairooto, ll'fl*• A certain arid speedy cure for Cold in.the Dead and Catarrh in all its stages. SOOTHING, CLEANSING, HEALING. Instant Relief, Permanent Cure, Fsiture impossible, • Many so-called diseases are simply symptoms of Catarrh, such as headache, partial deafness, losing sense of smell, foul breath, hawking and spitting, nansea, general feeling of debility, etc. If you are troubled with any of those or kindred syraptoms, you have Catarrh, and should lose no timi e n ;Timmins ti bottle of Nasaz; BALM. 11,9 warned eta time, neglected cold ift bead result, in Catarrh, followed by consumption and death. NASAL BALM is sold by ell druggists, or will be sent, postpaid, on receipt of ;nice (so cents and er,00) by addressin‘g FOLFOSO & B000kvii.LE, QN THE NEVSKI 1110213En. with the city Russien, A streamer who comes to if Petersburg or Moscow in the winter can stand the cold better than a, Studies ea Russian hire From a St. Peters- resident. He eau stand it out doors with burg Cafe 11 'thinner elothes on, and is altogether less St Psaisere, July 5.—I sat for an sensitive to the nose -nipping Russian frost. eao hour yesterday in the window of a cafe oni Tn. winter the isvoshelne bundles himself up the famous NevskiProspekt, St. Petereburg. It was 4 o'clock in the afternoon, and a, fine, sunny day. AU the Russian world awl his wife seemed to be driving, walking, hurrying, idling past the window on this principal street of the Russian -capital, itt sheepskuisaustil you eau see nothing but 4 pair of human eyes peering out of .a ridicu- lous bundle of wool and fur garments. The Russian becomes a polar bear in winter, not because he can stand the cold, but because he caunot. Rut why they wear overcoats s , he most nuniereuspassers-by, aud to the all summer, even on daywhen you or I new comer the most Russian aed interestdwculd don linen jacket, I have not yet are the drosky-firivere, the isvoshelfies fiiteca'ered, though 1 may before Tear iug and their "fares. ' St. Petersbure is a city B of magnificent distances. Everybody rides ; fares are -cheap; and there are twenty-five thousand public; drosky-drivers in the city The ievosliellic and hicostume are peeul- f • trappings, These are young students, svho a All the people in military uniforms who pass by, however, are pot soldiers, You see little shavers of ten or twelve years old 1 ." P 6 • • tiedging along in military overcoat end arly Russian. The latter has not changed for ages, aud apart from youth and age, vilajetters and na whiskers, there is not the eplittieg of a hair between any of the five - end -twenty theueand publie "Kebbies" in the Czar's capital. There are iseoshchies at fourteen, ye= g in fee but old in iniquity; and isvosha (0 of seventy-tive, bearded like perils autl supremely artful in bargain - are required to wear untforins, conspicu- ous colors and trimmings for the different schools for purposes of identification. The newsboys also wear millennia A troop of Cossacks pass by, all big, fine fellows, belonging to one of the era& reel - meats, all riding splendid black stallions sixteen hands high, spirited and glossy. A private carriage, an English -built ing with the foreigner about the price of a br"fillam, with a magnificent team, 44d drive. , gohialaced Lackeys on the box dashes by. It The t3ununer costume of the isvoshelde is oolooas to elle of the legations, and lolling in the seat, in a studiedly negligent attitude, an ideal garb for Winter from the point of vim cc anybody but a Russian. ue is ia Madame, the Ambassador% wife, Alone in euveitioa ut an euca.mou4 °moat a her glory, en route to the Islands for her heavy dark -blue cloth that descends to hie regular evening drive, heele aud is gathered about Ina waist by a gay-eolored baud. Top b00% heavy aud prodigal of leather, incase hia feet awl legs; and oven on this 'warm ,June day a disar. . ngement of the big him; over-germent reveals a sheepskin coat of similar (limn - sloes underneath. But the crowning glory of the (husky- lriver is his hat imagine a stove -pipe hat ix hides tall with a very rakish brim and a very expansive erowe, like the hats of 1 the aueient and honorable Beef-Eatere et the Tower of London, only a great deal morn eo, and you seetitiy 0J1C of the 30,000 en:inhumes hats of $t. Petersburg. I say :mown because there are beside the publie l isvoshchies About Ave thousand private It:oat:Mee similarly dressed. The only differellee between the public 4and private isvositchics 14 that the latter louk about time times larger than the for- ner. .Ml the private isvoshehies are sion of Faletuffian girth. Some are of a truly start- ling eiretouterenee, their stomaelis bulging out like barrels; and the breadth of their figure more than fills the seat of the 'husky. The thinness of the face often contrasts ha diemusly with the vast proportions of the body, for the amplitude of the letter is not flesh, but pedding. The impression that the private coachmeu desires to make upon the world at large is that he is the " well- fed servant of a, generous man." To this end huge pails, like pillowit, are faltenell ;Jena trie botli,•, and over them is wrapped, the all- coneealing overcoat e tent lened above. To complete the deception the eulered waist - bawl putehen into the padding, as if the elnez tenavern of the one es of this vast wealth to ous city by placing A bowl an the top, up., af fat were to reduce his girth, if stleh all side down, and *lipping around it impoesible thing wire possible, Nursesnuildsfrom Finland, or frem Little 'While every private iavoshelne in Russia Russia, ride by in the family carriage with is time a liviug lie in his figure, every public their charges. They wear a wonderful dress oue la likewise a perambulating Amu= in of gorgeous colors and gold embroidery, and a way that more directly eonceens the pock- sort of a beaded brass, silver or gold emu ets a the public. Every drive nou take in on the lima St. Petersintrg has to be bargained for in Young lady students go past in little culvance. The rates are eheayer than in troops or alone, carrying portfolios bearing any other European capital, being only fifty the word "Musique." Music is the fad of eopeeks, or about thirty cents, an hour, the day in St. Petersburg, All the young Ihe St. Petersburg isvoshehie is known as ladies rave over "Musique," Next season the most reasonable of the fraternity in the craze will be—who eau say ? I am told Russia, While the MoSeOW driver always that one of the latest fads with them was the study of midwifery. Everything in the student life, especially the girl student life, is faddy and eccentric. It is the spasmodic attempt of the intellectual Russian youth to find some employment, some scope for their energy and ambition, in a field where there tient about finding an address. He is po- is next to no intellectual employment ht all, lite—of the Orient, Oriental. He rarely A small crowd is gathering on the street gives you a decided negative if he doesn't corner, as I. leave my window in the cafe. wish to drive where you desire to go, but The Czer is coming in from Peterhof and takes refuge in his horse, telling you that will drive this way. I do not wait, for 1 it is weary, lazy or oiling, and does not have seen him and the Empress before. When the Czitr and the visiting Italian hew -apparent drove down the Nevsky, the other day, it was down a lane through the assembled and applauding populace, in which scarcely a soldier or a policeman was to be seen. The people were "under less A strum of twelve droskies file past, each one containing a big Russian greyleaund and a keeper in a red shirt. They belong to some sporting nobleman and are bound for the railway station to he telten somewhere out in the comitry to an estate or a day's ours - hie for ham. A marl le a suit of white coarse eauvas and with a brand on the back tramps along between two policemen with drawn swords. He is e prisoner. His face is pale, showing that he has been in confinement some time. Otherwise he looks no different from his keepers, with whom he chute freely a.s they walk] ast An aged couple try to halt a tram, which, like the street ear of Lamina, carries passim- gere bath inside end ou the roof. The con- ductor shakes them a oegative. His ear is carrying the number permitted by law, and RIO contusion and overcrowding are allowed. Another one collies along. The -old couple try it again and are again refused. Finally they hut a pasting isvoshehic, and, bargaining with him awlnle, drive oft. An economical party of four from the coon - try drive past, all Riled in one small drosky, two women sitting131 WO men's laps. Work- men stroll along, mue out of ten in top boots and red shirts. 'The ted shirts ETC outside the puts. A waistcoat is warn, butno'eoitt, and the pants areekniehily tucked inside the boots. Mingled 'with the throng are mon- jiks from the country, visiting "Pater- haorg, ' perhaps, for the first time in their lives, They wear dirty sheepskin coats, shockingly bad naps, home-made feet -gear of the rudest pat tern and material. and their shock heads have been trimmed fax the visit asks four or live tunes what he really sada to take, the St. Petersbueg driver rarely 'demands more than three times his proper fare, and as a general thing not even' twice as Mink as he is willing to aecept. He is gootbnaturea and remarkably pa - want to work. The isvoshellic is superstitious and fear- ful. , Every little way as he drives you along he passes an icon or shrine, at each of which he removes bus abbreviated cylinder and crosses himself at the forehead, month tine breast. The fear is centered. on Gen. restraint than any other crowd is at any popular gathering. was close to the Czar, the Czarina and. the Court circle at the launching of the new imperial yacht, the Polar Star. The Czar and the Grend Duke Alexis look as much alike as if they were twins. The Empress Gresser, Chief of Police of St. Petersburg. The isvoshchie is rarely obstreperous, but if he is, "Ill tell Gresser, ' brings matters to a speedy conclusion by immediately reducing him to an humble and apprehensive frame -of mind His horse is small and Ms vehicle little has a pretty face, but like her sister, the larger than the old-fashioned invalid chair Princess of Wales, it is sweet and. winning one sometimes meets with gouty old gentle- rather than beautiful. The Russians Call it men in them in the parks at honie. the "nose celestial" in worshipful deference A peculiarity of the " fares," if a lady and gentleman, is that the latter always has his arm about his emimattion's waist.' The Russian explanation is that withoat this precaution the lady might tumble out. The levity and penetration of the American mind, however, refuses to accept this,prae. tical view of the matter in all cases. And there certainly passed by my cafe win- dow many ft, cotple who, oblivious to the public eye, betrayed a decidedly sen- timental interpretation of the relation be- tween waist and arm. So prevalent is this custom that an exception excites atten- tion. One day in was driving along the Nevski with a lady, and our sense of propriety, which makes the placingof a gentleman's arm about a lady's waist in broad daylight in a public thoroughfare an outrageous thing, positieely attracted coin- ment. About 5 per cent. of the ladies, old or young, who passed by the cafe window to- day were victims of the toothaChe and had a swollen and bandaged jaw. Toothache is the connuonest malady of the St. Peters- burg fair sex.' The St. Petersburg girl of the period stays up late, lies abedtill noon, takes no exercise and livee on sweets and pickles. Her punishment is the toothache, dentist's bills, a toothless old age and a very bad complexion. Gold teeth ere rare with Russian ladies, and a fresh complexion is seldom seen on the streets. th Apart from ese'defects there was some- thing about the young ladies on the streets that arrested my attention and set me to speculating. "What . is it ?" Why, to be sure they resemble the girls of Western cities more thee. the girls of any other country. • Take a flock of me :leen girls, put some of them in knee-high boots, destroy their fine teeth and peachy complexions, tie up the jaw of one in twenty with a white ker- chief, then mix them up with an equal num- ber of St. Petersburg young ladies, and I defy any one, to sort them out one from the other. Half the men who pass are in unifortn, and, warm as itis, like the isvosbehicS, wear big overcoats. The wearing of overcoats in summer is a ,,Russian peculiarity. One of our popular 'impressions of the Russian is that he can stand More cold than a polar ta. Beware of Imitations similar 311 ARM% bear, Such is not the case, at all events, to its skyward trend. Both Emperor end Empress are loved and respected by the upper circles and wor- shipped by the common people. ' At the launching the Emperor singled out the Wife of the French representative for marked attention, a political tableau, probably, that had something to do with the 'presence of the Italian prince. The Prince of Naples, it is rumored, will probably marry the Czar's eldest daughter. THOMAS STEVENS. A Wonderful New Barometer. At th'e last conversazione of the Royal society, London, England, a new barometer was entered, which will, on one slip :of paper, note .the beginning, variations in i.ntensity, and termination of rain and hail, the instant of each lightning flash, and the beginning and duration of , a thunder clap. The instrument can be read for periods of time down to the fifteenth,part of a second. An arrangement was also exhibited to show, either by projection or photography, the oscillatory nature of an electric spark. Resemblance from Companionship. • The photographic society of Geneva has been testing the theory that the long coins panionship of man and wife tends to make them look more and more like each other. Photographs of seventy-eight old couples, and of an equal number of adult brothers and sisters showed that the married couples were more like each other than the brothers and sisters of the sarne blood. A Vain Search for Love. "What did your first husband die of, Ma- tilda ?" her second venture asked suspi- ciously, weighing one of her cakes in both hands. •A crimson flush mantled her fair brow. Great Scott'" exclaimed the agitated man, as the ceke fell ;to the floor and shook the building. "Must I go to Chicago again ? Three wives, and out of all nothing but the dyspepsia. Is thei,e no such thing as real love in this wicked world ?" John a Fiske, a lawyer and opera house manager, was shot and killed Saturdaylaight by ,Joseph T. Stillman at Fresno, Cal. The Brook. You may say to the babbling brook that runs by ; What's the use of a streamlet so narrow? Why not let your white pebbles and mosses godry, And give your dry banks to the harrow? But the brook, with a ripple and wave, would reply, 11 18 many a mile that I travel, Beneath the' wood's shadow, beneath the blue sky, O'er my long, winding bed of white gravel. I'm a, narrow and shallow young brooklet, I know, But I'm merry in sunlight and shadow, And you kuow that I widen and deepen be- low, And. I moisten the valley and meadow. You may say'I do naught as I hurry along. But 1 leap over stones in light splashes, rid I catch, while I'm singing the merriest song, The sunlight in quick little Ilasises. rho maidenhair ferns that dip in my edge I enfold with mast tender caresses, And On my fair bosom the low -bending sedge I entangle with sweet watereresses, In my hurry and flurry, OA onward I flow, I see the bird% awing on the rushee And catch little snatches of song, as 11 go, From skylarks and linnets and thrushes. So you see Pp a merry and most busy brook, And I love my white pebbles and mosses; I love every shadow and vtne-bowered nook, The gleams and the whirls and the tosses, If I hurry on down I shall reatili the broad plain Where the river in majesty iloweth ; Perhaps I may reach the great rolling main, .A.na mingle with ocean, who knoweth ? Frame and EegieGd. The French have takee, or attempted to take-, deep offence at. the assumption by the British of the protectorete of Zanzibar under the Auglodiernitan Treaty, became in 16%2 a joint deeleration was awed, by the Erma)* and Euglish Governments reciprocally gum- anteeing the indepeudenee of the Sultan. Moreover, the final -ea of the Berlin Wafer - mice in ltififi obliged every European nation which meant to establish a protectorate over any portion of the African coast, to give indica to all the other POWOTS. When M. Brisson brought the matter Sp in the French Climbers, the Minister of us, Affairs fenced off the question by declaring, that he felt quite sure Great Britain would Adhere to her Agreement, and that no notice had been received of her inclination to do any- thing elm But notice has by this time been reamed, and though the French are very angry, no trouble is anticipated in Englund, for the simple reason that there exists be - tweet) England and France a precisely simis lat• agreement to respect the independence of Maslagasear, and this has not prevented the Frekli from establishing a protectorate, and indeed one might say, a sort of sow:- a:Agility over half the island. What, islikeit, is that the Zanzibar protectorate undertaken by agreement with Connally alone will irri- tate the Freneh into increased captiousnese about Newfoundland and other outstand- ing causes of dispute, especially Egypt. M. Ribot's speech =mit Egypt has in fact sawed on the provocative, and Improbably furnished. Lord Salisbury with his best de- fence of the Anglo -German Treaty, as it has shown the need of an ally in case France completely lost patience. Insurance and Murder. Children aro now insured in Great Britain, before they are born, and at the payment of one penny a week. This insures a sum Which far more than covers the funeral expenses, and the stone child is often insured in more than one office. Under such a system the father or mother may make a profit of three or four pounds on the death of a baby, to mist nothing of what would be spent on food and clothes. The Bishop of Peter- borough repeated a shocking phrase, which explains itself, and whichwould be only weakened by comment. They talk in a, town which he did not and we will not mention of "having a little funeral and a big drink." Now, of course, it does not follow that, be- cause these thmgs may be done, they are done, and some optimists argue that they cannot be done. There is, they say, the fear of tilo gallows—"S'ilrey a pas mi Dieu, ily it tonjours le gendarme" ---and there is the doctor's eertificete. 'l'o cut an infant's throat or give it prussic acid would not only be desperately wicked, but incredibly foolish. Insufficient food, and judiciously improper treatment in one or two small particulars, and the flickering light is effectually quenched. "Would any ofyour lordships," asked the Bishop, "be willing to intrust a child of yours to a sick nurse who had. a pecuniary interest in its death?" A medical mam wrote to the Bishop of Peterborough to say that he had for some time insisted on an inquest when- ever =insured child died. What happened? He appeared as a witness, and. was asked if he could swear that the child would have lived if it had been properly fed. He could not, and the verdict was "Death from natural causes," avoiding at least the awful, blas- phemy of "Died by the visitation of God." A Glimpse Of the Sultan. The Sultan looks like many =ether man, •vvith black hair and short black mustache and beard, neither veryold nor very yotum. I have not enough admiration for him to eall him handsome. Ho was in uniform and wore a red tarbush or.fei hat, which, by theway, is the distinguishing head dress Of every Mohammedan from thochief rider to the tinest lad that repeats. the Koran. Later in the day, when we Were in the magnifi- cent mosque of St. Sophia, in the Stamboul quarter, I asked the guide if the Sultan never came to that mosque. He said, "No, he is afraid" The fact is the Snit= is- a prisener in his palaoe, afraid to venture' in she public throim lest he meet the fate of tome of his predeeeesors., How pleasant it must be to be it Sultan ! Is Well Runs Gold And Silver. There is a wonderful well down near Del Norte. It is aa artesian well with an abundant flow of pure water, sufficient to irrigate a considerable amount of land. That would be enough for any one but a San Luis man. But this is mineral water. It is effervescent, Very palatable, and ex- tremely healthful. Nor is this all ; the force of the water brings up from the depths an occasional lump of native silver or a gold 'nugget. The frugal farmer has placed a sack of wire netting over the month of the well to catch the metal and prevent it from choking the cows. Local scientists claim that at a great depth and under enormous pressure, the water is washing away a ledge of rock, whose softer parts go into solution, and give the water its mineral qualities, but whose gold and silver, not being dissolved, arebrought to the surface in a metallic state IIIMIOnsimmemismmummiiminimmummill.1111111111111111$111111 et‘‘ for Infants and Children. utlastalrlais so wolladepeedtoebildreathat Canaria auras Colic, Constipation, rosornmeasi it ail ti,anypresereesee Soar Stotnacb, Diarrlacett, Brumation, known to Mo." A, Aymara, 3f. Di, Mils Worms, givea aleep, and Promoted in 30. 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McColl's Famous Cylinder OIL Is the finest in. Canada for engine cylinders. As for Lardine. FOR SALE BY BISSETT BROS. • T EXETER MIES. KANSAS Is pabliseed every Thursday morn mat 11 MES STEAM PRINTING NOUS 4 aba.street,ttearly opposite Pittou's jeweler:* etote, 15 xeter, On t., by John Whit* di Sene,Pro. urietors. /UTILE OP AD11111TI1ENG ; first Insertion, per lino , „JO con a lath subsequeatiusertiiin ,per line,....,2 con To insure insertion, advertisements sLo • sent in notlater than Wednesday mortal)* OnitIOS PRINTING DePARTSIENT is one f the largest and best equipped in the Ltounte f Huron, All worlr entrusted to us will reedy 'ir prom p t attention. tieetslons Itegard Itt Is1 g 0 IV ii, papers. Any person whotakesa poperregularlyfroin be post -office, whether direct -tea in b is mune ot Another's. or whetherhelms subscribed helmsubscribed or nc4 ta responaible for payment. 2 If a person orders his paper discontinued searoust pay all liras rs or the publisher may soutinue to send it until the payment is made, and than collect tho whole amount, whothee she paper is taken from ,this office or not. 8 In units for aubsuriptic ill, the suit may be nstatutedin the place where tin paper is pub. ished, ulthough the subscriber may retitle anudreds of voiles away. 4 The courts have decided that refusing to .ake newspapers or pmiodicials frond the post 'Mc*, or removing end leaving them unegled or Is prima facie evidence of intontionalfrau" TEXAS, OKLAHOMA COLORADO UTAH, NEW MEXICO CALIFO R NIA, ARIZONA, OREGON, And all points west of the Missour Rive via the Santa Fe Route FROM CHICAGO. For particulars and ticke.s s e ytur tsarist ticket agent, or address .GEO. E. GILMAN, Passe leer Avow, 74 Grstwold ci, Dtt,oi=, Mutt GEO. T. NIOROLSO Geneal Ns., ant ri,kot Ann Zeoake, atta nosa,rna enangb to write lialiodepaper a: otiofilling Iran, r'crIt.'-'rere and Inlastaudi .r. o Nto all In One. N II .,,.. .. n ...\--,,,,T4:$411E 22 ;e rec TARTAR IN '44_ w rPOUNTAD7i l'SN. -1/4, •• el it Uses :tappet: or kind:Wink.; elled by fhe-automatteaciisp of Psdia-rubberresorreas; feeds itself icy the pressure ofontang; yozi Vesta Ste nockatist 'sell:Lot leak; finely snaileund Blev nbod in ulokal-plate I sugarior to o.:01 Styloarmoltio pezz,zellii mhh a rus.e. Sarapisc,vostoidi„Z6 cents. 5 Fess, '1 Nil P. 0, Stamte eaken, buf' srver pretend. A 100p Matra Beek seet SEE, ;iiell3r. Usk p2p.4'. A. W. ICIBIBTE 2 7.7.; uric/011kb. ii. At PUREST, STRONCEST, ISEST, , • CONTAINS NO ALUM, AMMONIA, LIME, PHOSPHATES, or any injurioles materials. E. W. GILLETT,CHICAGO, 1LL. paler Ogaliati!RD 202ALIZA22 e the. CO 0 FREE °8NUSV5oR„Si%ElV lildIRS 0 .Eira s 1 IL Gtillee dkepla Perfect Warranted hoary, watch In the world , gOGID COLD bunting cases. Both ladies' and goes else., With works and cages of ertnal value. Oita PE15O510 each locality cansecure one free, together with our large !AorldrIZ411: to shot' what we send you to them who call—your sod valuable line ofiltinochtold' Samplee. Theo samples, as well , a the watch, are free. All the work you friends and neightfors and those about you—that always results in raluabletrade torus, which holde forycars when once started, and thus we aro repaid. We pay all express, freight, etc, After you know all, if you would 1130 to go to work for usyou ran earo from 820 to $60 ,per week and upwards. Address, Stinson di 0... Box 619. Portiond. Maine. WILL CURE OR RELIEVE BILIOUSNESS', DIZZINESS, DYSPEPSIA, DROPSY, INDIGESTION, FLUTTERING JAUNDICE. OF THE MEAN"; ERYSIPELAS, ACIDITY OF SALT RHEUM, THE STOMACH; HEARTBURN, DRYIVESS HEADACHE, OF THE SKIN And every species o' disease arising fror disordered LIVER, KIDNEYS, STOSAAOK, 130WELS OR BLOOD, miBRN oproprietors,u&g. TOROMTA, Bitted His Sphere All Right, Yallerby—Well ef clet ant- der onneriest long-legged rooster dat ebber I did see 1 An yo' keepin.' himfo' yo' Chrismus diunth ? Johnsing—Dat's what I'se &fin', Yeller - by. When yo' hab three chillun all yellin' fo' drumsticks it takes an extryor'nary bird to supply the demand FOrCO of Habit. She (to dude dry goods clerk at summer resort)—"A penny for your thoughts, Mr. Faraway.", He—"AW, we are just out of thoughts, aw, Miss Fluffy, but aw, we expect some in it few days. Anything else this afternoon?" A Duke's Vast Domain. The Duke of Northumberland is one of the largest lended proprietors in Great Britain. To say nothing of his owniegs itt London, his possessions hi Surrey, Middle- sex and Northumberland aggregate 200,00a acres, with a rent -roll of $875,000 per annum. In Northumberland alone he owns five castles, but it is said that the larger part of his enormous income is derived from his proprietary interest hi Drumnaond's bank. The Marcitus of Salisbury, Premier at present, owns 20,000 acres and as much. of his real estate lies M London he is very, very rich. Baron Wissmann has been placed on the retired list, owing to his poor health; Rhe reatism has now attacked him,