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The Exeter Times, 1891-2-12, Page 7I/ TRE HONEZ, [it was changed into velvet ;others laid silver 'to follow out the directions, and 2have half • cord on the quilting of the petticoat, and 'washed it, as I would a hit of porcelain, with decked the old danie out in all manner and the softest, finest flannel l could buy, 1 think Bur Girls. 1variety o£ flowers. The house is covered with ; the worstof all was when I didn't wash it marvelous tapestries, and the old dame se at all for a while, because some one said the IVY ANNIE'. JAM. i transformed with her fairy attire that Aunt hard water herein New York would cause It loes'nt matter, 1 can wear Harry's Joan gets frightened and bobbles eff, but on wrinkles, so I wiped it off with one thing hat just as well," and Harriet (called Harry glaasiceing « back with her unanointed eye saes and another as long me I could bear it, when for short as well ashes cousins took from a m Chenanee in her ordinary clothes sow- my husband suggested that I try just keep peg in the hall a brown felt derby Ilse, and ing ; but on looking with the anointed eye I ing plain °lean for a while, and do you know the fairy scene Is again revealed, ( haven't had a particle of trouble since." ran out doors. ,. That's just it," said Aunt suAnotherhe zy relatesfinhow anion the bushes! York Letter. a tiny figure asleep. He was no bigerthan I ow Weln.,aa Nay Walk Well, a eat and dressed its a green coat, sky-blue i If a woman (loesn't walk well let her breeches and diaxuond-buckledshoes. laincle'take a aomthern prescription for abed walk, separate wardrobe. They eseasmuch slang Billy takes hint home to bis children, who p P their. brothers, and have as mueh liberty. fnaire greivt frielide with him, and gall him °re about evenin7fifteen minutes herhee maruui,? and „ „ Bobby (xr__iggtaus (griglaxls is old Cornish for g puthands behind I think they are degenerating fast Not heath). Ile is a gay little creature, who.hfr, clasping then, and ley a fight, fiatbook a bit of it," I answered, "at least not from sings and dances for hours to ether, with a on her head and then promenade her room these causes. They are as modest and great abhorrence of dirt or dust. He only ft hr a determination not to drop that book; sincere as ever, and twice- as energetic. drinks milk and eats blackberries rs hips waterweek 4 init n take basal with a little and haws, They keep him a few .Jays, but ica the place of the book, The world .has °banged since it was the among the furze one day Bobby and the and, as the head lields its plaee better, the fasi>l on for our Arabella to bo a semi -invalid children meet a little man and woman, the step is less jerky and Ilio body doesn't wrig- with drooping locks, and adiirs, and pale man dressed just as Bobby, only wearing 1 , ibe b sin with ibefitandnot t ill a student Sentimental sentiments, Now -a -days our riding boots with silver spurs. The lUGtie.spill chop. girl puts her hair on top of her head if she woman wore a green gown spangled all over • with silver stars. Her little steeple -crown. i Hints for Making and Buying, likes and wears a common cease boot—has ed bat wasgwzeathe:l with heather, per shed t A beautiful feu. bag may be made of plush room to breathe in her elothes, and mind on her olden curls, and the prettysoul enough to choose for herself what the de,�andgrender Sker ilywiddds a en,gwhere e ever be done °olid y in s Ik, thefloweis and leaves future shall be. She is not sold into slavery, eaust .a be gene to, my oi►1y joy r' " Now being padded and outlined with gohi thread. nor does she elope down the ladder of ropes gds back," said Bobby to the ehildren ; po make a beg, takefour straight pieces of as material .tial two .. inches 1 ger than 1 but she takes fate into her own, heads and in aero' and mem are came. Here I am, on h the tan and, work out bar awn salvation. So it need matieml," Ily the time he Eaid "here I am" two inches wide, after alfowing far a seam, not be considered a breach of etiquette #a the little ruin and woman and Skillywiddeii ole °the natlh side. vanished and were never more seen. The g together ofa o t .ton c n as ' color • u her co ir tin r turn down us n t oreither, i# 'da w the s ha Goat the itg 1?children of as ,r a doll t fr gg iratth n ° fife tier well." 8killywftlden go, for if they had kept hart top aed run in a double shirr; string of a ashieit ass. a queer thing, and wows to- he woelld have shown their daddy where I n o ri tassel. Finish the bottom with a crocks of gold are buried, and they would ali. lerated by itis mandidate is supposed to be of them have been rich. i Have your bedspread and shams platin all right, but what it condemns, even if ever This allusion to the crock of gold must not y eliow linen, with wide hemstitched bar - Deli, is now-a-daysgirls wears boys' hats, stand-up collars, neckties, and shirt fronts, till it doesn't seem necessary to make a so innocent, moat be tabooed. I remember ,family of pretty young girls who spent their summer at a village river side. They were very respeetable people, but the girls were full of pranka and mischief, they went out bathing, and walked home through the village with bare feet and hair hanging down. This would peas on the sands at the amide, but did not answer in this striet tiillage itoeiety. So the girls soon found themselves outlawed, and wondered why their more sedate cousins and friends did not invite them to any entertainment or reek them society. No harm attached to their many pranks, but they were, all the carne, condemned for indulging iu them, as it wart out of time and place for praetiesl jokes, or the freedom of the eceau spray. All the same our girls today are atrong and helpful in every good cone, they are not dreamer° but worker*, and the Ring's Daughters, and member,, of every Temper- ' ance society, and Christian endeavour, aro the flower of aur young women, eager for nervi co in the Master's h as ens vinyarti, to labor for the good of ()there. There are some butterflies we know, but they are not our girls, each mothers' own, and the world has many thoughtful helpful daughters, T serve to confound the fairies with the dere and monograma ar initials in coarse "Knackers," whoaro in 147,40"314:;;;;51011 gnomes and white lineal! WS I melte the bureau coverslive undergrounil, and of and splaaliers of smooth yellow linen, with gold and warns. \Zauv a man in Cornwall hemeititehed borders and traeery in linen at the present day will tell you witlofear and lie"'fates of the resent are:not tremblingtbat hehae hear,, the Knackers at soup ppreseut in the mines,and he knows misfortune soup piates; and different kinds of soup awaits him. This class of being has no am- (lomat d a different style of bowl. For uity with the fairiesof Celtic fancy, but be-. bouillon a cup•shaped bowl and the usual longs to the demon and gnomes traditions of -spoon, or a lar •e cup with handles. For Teutonic nations. imam coupe or biegee a low 1•:quare shape, now 'Olive pats away; even aur ehildreit•tb�i. bowl of the epoch being also sgnare- n si will scarcely deign to own belief in one, a 1`laituseful article is described in tit of the purest lemma that ever entered hu. man imaginations, and which in former diva Home -wife. Evom au old gossamer we cut eat Poeta deigned to treat asa bynomeaua ri rectangle, sir ht iuehes by twelve, lining *cable belief. Fairies are wholesomer.it with the same. On each corner sew a diet for our babies' minds than aneedotea of -*tout tape long enough to tie about tate )ter. re;:,t men and diluted history of human en -,sort of an adult, and when, colic, or eaveva and failures, Let the children keep neuralgia, or cramp, or rheumatism, or their fairiestallow.; as possible, for fairy re -+f praiva,, or inflammation nflam m atiantiof anind this verence means simple faith in goo(lneia, poultices, awl ie does ma harm for a child to see fairies little waterproof garment, snugly tied in the cups of the flowers , even if be after about the patient, over the pack of wet ward hes to learn all that can be learnt cloths on bowels, or stomach, or back, pro. about vegetable tissuee and coloring matter tecta the clothing and bedding from damp - solution. iiess. It is a fanny of the hour for ladies to buy buekeback and damask towelliug by the Underlying the family life, iii a sense thoyaril, and hemstitch their own towels at beta° A verybeautiful unlit o ftoY towelling of n lain bare soil from1 i Y g tv i ch riD i Ilowex�a plain,s is p s linen abe i eu m g yyti the yard at . ti and fruits, is the family finance, sa s an ox- rents. Towelof the same quality, a ard change. Though so fundamental, it is a and a quarter long, and hardily as wide, matter that is surprisingly often neglected. would cost at least $15 a dozen, so that con - the poverty stricken old world a caieulat- siderable eating is effected by such a fashion- ing economy is felt to be vital to existence. able time. In case the worker wishes But in our melt young land are homes ofboth to mak a fmiciful elaborate towel malt s The Belief in Taitiee,, high and low degree whose one financial' hungg over the others on the rank, all. atmos to is practically, "Spend. asyet►-the stitches of Mexican drawn work can bo blood yet remains pure and untainted with make, ' a principle which has an alarming , brought into play, and very beautiful artis- Teutonic or Scandinavian a lingering 'belief propensity tostreteh out into "Spend before do icceg of workproduced. ou rnako xn antics ,tion of our ma ki• n " p .Aud so another cause of fret and stain and For a Whole house white muslin with break down is added. to our Americanliving. polka dots make pretty draperies. There The pity of it t It is so easy, lot one but ;aro any number of beautiful stamped stuffs think so, to plan intelligently for the home • for thin curtains nowadays, which are very of our love. It is so delightful to unite tempting, but theft deligato freakiness is aystematieaily, now in a wise outlay, now in soon gent' and as they cannot be washed a glorious extravagance, now in sturdy self- they aro not aneconomical purchase. Itis denial. The delight of it gilds poverty and bettor to get good material that can bo put adds s new luster even to wealth. into the tub. Systematically, we say. .And certainly, Family Finances. In countries where a good deal of (Jaltio in fatriesmay ritillho traccd in remote parts.I A few years ago an old men in the Isle of Man solemnly assured a traveler there that he hizr If bad one night beheld the fairies at them revels in such multitudes "that there was quite a thiekness tremcujous of them," and no amount of eitepticaluestion- ing could shake the old plan in his belief, At the present day, in the wilder parts of Cornwall, aquite genuine belief in being t pisky-led"prevails. " Piskio " (pixie in Devonian) is the common Cornish name for fairies and certain mischievous sprites among them are supposed to derive great pleasure in enticing unwary travelers across the wild moors and bills from the right paths and leading n the mgrievously astray. Afterland- ing some unlucky igltru a bog a burst of merry laughter in the air generally informs the traveler who his guide has been. The only way to circumvent these airy sprites is to turn the coat inside out before venturing across a desolate expanse. That they have a certain command over the powers of nature is shown by their baying aha power to blind and bewilder the traveler by tt rowhig a log ground him, so that he if system is ever needed in our workaday How Water Snakes Feed. -- world, itis when the heads of the family, Having repeatedly been interested in meet in council upon a peak of time to coil- watching how water snakes feed, I was eider the family finances. careful in noting how one particular snake In the ideal system our first carpis the set- maneuvered to get a meal in Crum brook, fling of the scale of expenditure. Too often one of the trout streams preserved by the this asset lightly, afer the scale of our child-uas eake tllub of Rockland count N.Y., hood's home, or that of our social circle, or o which i ani warden. The snake our next door neighbor; or it is even set from under the bank and seized a chub unwittingly, by an accident, a friend's gift,'abont three inches long, half ofiaf body or an unwary purchase of our own. We being in the mouth of the snake. I -struck now set it deliberately, recognizing it as the the reptile smartly with my cane, when it vital point of our system. We set it dartedaway, and the fish wriggled offslowly solemnly, realizing that, sooner or later, 'for a few feet and then lost all power of everthing is east in heart and brain and {motion, although it did not seem to be even soul as well as in current coin. We have no'slightly bruised. Upon taking it out of the vulgar shame of simplicity. Unhappil we water I observed a thick slime of mucus cannot ay. not.tTace llowin account of their ersona knclrthitt.'ere" plain hying andbig hthink-'coverinaVie whole body, which I scraped appearance is preserved In a tale tofu by old "' t o a sue snore wines' among our re -1 'off, and reiurned the gen to the water. At pu�llican homes, there would be many a first it was very active, swimming around winged spirit set free for lofty fight that lively, but in a few moments seemed once shall now be cribbed, cabined and confined 'more to lose the power of motion. •,I again for baser uses through all its mortal life, :took it • out of the, water, -and found the Next we make a schedule' of the family coating of slime thicker-• upon its body than needs. It is to be a complete one, with the before. i scraped it off again, with the same completeness of well rounded livine. • Andi tlsiilt, but finally the fish turned on its side our items shall be charmingly promiscuous 'dead, and in about five minutes, spent in fnel, schooling, furniture, books, benevo- !perfect quietude on my part, the snake came lentos, millinery, music and so on. We from under a submerged sttunp, seized the linger over this part of our work, determined fish and disappeared. The incident led fishy turesr were tossing up their s the, launch- to more subtle wantsrevent the tding out of which ew apt to be d ere-'coaof those to tinfgvit withthat he snake a thick secretion theoisoned doub f their feathered caps and fans as they launch -g ed up and down on she merest bits of sticks arded in our busy days and careless snoods, • upon its body. haunted by some old, old woads, Is not or green twigs. Numbers of them were i swinging in the cobwebs that hung from the the life more than meat and the body than' Physical Aspects of ,Australia. rafters, or riding the mice in and out through aunent 1' wives in the neighborhood of Lemma beyond Penzance : An old woman called "Aunt Joan," when on a visit to a neighbor popularly supposed to be a white witch; rubs a little ointmentshe finds hidden under some fern upon one of her eyes, and the re- sult is that when she opens her eyes " the place was full of sprites and spriggans. In all the folds of the nets and sails hanging from the beams troops of small people were tutting all sorts of capers, the little crea- aeon. "I noted that all the little men were tressed in green, pinked out with red, andtad craft—the• just apportionment of our re- mountain regions. 'Vett() these regions the boos, with silveered r pureonthonir their heels e isgh - riding sources among our need items. One practi- stranger gives, doubtless, too much import- , spurs t innethe gels; theird cal suggestion ere we begin it. Over and once. Outside of the mountains the well ladies were all decked out rand old gg g fa 'ion, their gowns were of omen velvet, above our apportionments let us be as eare- settled portions of Australia are simple, ful tos leave a margin"iu as were ever the charmbig andcomparatively unimpressive. 1 'the vast interior desert indeed, unfortunate young financiers in great ex- There s , pectations." Only our margin must be co region, whose desolation is said to be im- real one, kept for unexpected emergencies. preemive enough. But the traveller of or- " It is the unexpected which counts." �Unaryinclination sees little of that. What When we have stood aside to watch the lie sees near the coast, in the cultivated parts drama of life we have seen strange sighs—; of Victoria and New South Wales, is a fair parents starving the minds of children in; and generally fruitful land sleeping under order to pamper their bodies, women devot' 1 kindly skies, amid conditions. of climate, ing wealth to the one coarse purpose of dis. • which remind him of. California. Far off men hardening themselves against the blue hills, seen against the horizon,: remind play, ) . suffering and sorrow of'their fellows into m that there are wilder regions not far brutal callousness, to go their own ways un -away. Bub all about him vineyards and disturbed. And now as we ourselves are �pastures andicateprosperity ; and the optima called upon .' to judge of the varied values of istic settlers, men plainly not asreckless nor life needs, how shall we be just Y How shall as restless as our California population, but we keep our domineering wants from play- active and hopeful, assure him, with all the big the part of the lean kine of King well-known to alt andvehemence ofEnglish isp And now, with our scale of expenditure In Australia of the present, what attracts set and our budget of needs completed, we the stranger most in the physical aspect of are ready for the great work of family state- the continent is the weird. novelty of the ,ng trains, some looped up with silver nd bells o aa r t ssels others Ila,d their weeping behind them the y walked In grand state up and down. They seemed to think there was nobody in the house but themselves, prancing about in their high - heeled shoes, sparkling with diamond buck- les. The little women all wore high -crown- ed steeple hats like mine, with wreaths of the most beautiful flowers of all colors aarottnd them, sprigs and garlands on all the other parts, of their dress and in their hands is well, flirting their fans in the faces of the vier.: ' They were the sauciest little mortals [ ever did gee. 'What puzzled me most was co see so many sweet flowers with them at it that time ofthe year. * -' * I : spied lome ugly spriggans seated fn the Clark corner , colonists that this remote re ion is the best ooking very gloomy, because they are doom- Pharaohs dream 1 Oh, for a scale in our x , g id to guard the treasures and do irksome weighing that . shall weigh for us the ixn- on earth for comfortable homes. palpable things. An Anoient Couple. es etch from jeer ui arse in Min- nesota, states that the oldest married couple, in the world is to be found at that place. Mr. Daniel Salisbury completed his 103rd year on December 14, and his wife is seven years older. They were married in January 1811. Until recently this venerable pair lived by themselves in a log -house on the Yellow Bank river, and both are described as being still in good health. On his 100th good birthday Mr. Salisbury walked to Belling- ham and back: a distance of seven miles each things the merry stnallpeople are free from. * A,:troop of the small people enter - ad, playing such sweet strains on the pipes, lutes and other instruments they had made A pretty little woman said with a sigh, with green reeds of the brook and shells of as she laid down a fresh list of axioms for the sho):e." beautifying the person : "Itis just enough Then follows an account of how the fairy to wear anyone all out to follow half the band` approached the old dame Chenance directions ritten now to make you beau - (the whit witch) and cast bunches 'of the ti f ul.' I've tried them all. I've usd vaseline herbs into her apron, with which she made and glycerine, acid, cocoanut oil and almond the healiog slaves and lotions. As soon as paste and lemon juice. I have p , rosewaterj these fables retired others cane forward, bathed in boiling water and doe water and in bearing in their hands tmopened flowers ofi milk and water. • I have washed my face in a the £o glove from which they poured magic towel of the roughest crash I could buy and `a'ita s, watch no,looner tou.31ed her dress than' rubbed my very cuticle eff in ray struggles Just Plain Clean. way, JOHN LABATT'S haat** and XXX Bron Stout. Highest swans ane Seattle for Purityand Bice • levee at centennial laxhibition, Philadelphia 1876; Canada.1876 ; Australia, 1871 ; and Paris, France, 1878, TE$1IMONIAb$ SELECTBD Prof.lf H Croft, PubiioAnalyst, Toronto, sayai— t Lind it toboperfectly sound containing no impurities or adulter- atiot a, aid eau strouelyzecommen. dit as perfectly puts mad a Tory im edermaltLiquor," John B«dwares, Rrofeasor of Chemistry,Afontreal, says: " Ifindthem to be remarkably Norma sies. bre!vee from puremait auditops. Itev.P: J. i~d,Page,Professor of Chemistry, Laval Culver - pity, Quebec. says :—"I have analyzed the Indian Pole Ale manes'actnredt,yJobnLabatt, Loudon, Ontario, and have found it a ligbtele, containing bat little alcohol of a deli., Mous flavor, and of a very agreeable taste and sunerlor quality, and compares wits the best imported ales, 1' h ire afsn analyzed the porter ..XXX Stout of the 411340 brewery, which is of excellent 'pretty; its dayor is very agreeabto; it is a tomo store energetic than the above ate,for it 13 ittle richer in alcohol, and eau be compare.advantage- onelywiith any imported article. ASK YOUR. GROuElll 1 Oji, LT. A Great Pair of Antlers. 1,-fewfoundland is thegratest caribou coun- try within reach of American ggminers. and yet it is rarely visited. More hunters from p,ngland crows the Atlantic in search of the noble game than go from any part of Ameri- ca,yet thevieitor s sure re f a ee provided i i u a u cess vide d p he lies a strong pair of legs and is not afraid of a long and hard tramp through a mamba- plain, arsby .lain and can put upwith cam life in l? ' p wiiehtl ought.� 1 .sero tobe elements of plea sure to the true hunter, .ds the caribou weighs over four hundred pounds, el manimal is all. that a sportsman will. ask. In the fall the caribou travel a good deal and come out on the marshes to feed, and in November iltoy begin to migrate from one part of the country to another. That arca- son fshtime t. eiefore the best tit ae to go out for thorn. Usually a stag will be seen out on the marsh in company with three or four cows, end it then becomes a matter of creep- ing up on them in the same manner that a deer IS stalked. Of const only the stag is shot at, and the cotta are allowed to depart in peace, a method of preeedure they usual- lyare not slow to avail themselves of. Only the stag. =rive the antler*, the cows bay. beg merely a spike on the forehead or in rare instances a bit of light, thin, branching horn. The atag sheds his horns in Decem- ber, and grows a nos' set every spring. Their growth is rapid, and by September the beautiful, branching crown of horn is hard and strap':, weighing with the skin about thirty- or thirty-five pounds. The color varies from light grayish -white to a dark reddislo color This fs awing to the habit of rubbing the borne against the trees. A sort of larch, or juniper, as they call it in Newfoundland, stains the borne to a maroon or dull reel, The stag himself has a grayislr-white color and seems to take an the color of the white, nosey grass, just as the ptarmigan in the 'North changes to a white in the winter, while his summer plumage is brown. The cow is darker in color and. keeps the mark. lugs all through the year. Another peculiar feet is that the female does not shed the spike except once iii two years, probably re- i taining it throughout the year in order tot protect the young. The whitish appearance of the stag makes it often difficult to dietin- g u hint at a distance, and a big white rook is sometimes taken for a stag. When the stags and their followin: come down on the plains they pass along through regular trails into the marshes. The guide, there- fore, mounts a tree, and when he sees a stag coming out signs to the hunter the direction and the manner to proceed in working up to him against the wind so that the beast may not smell the hunter as he e.preacher. The ftnribon have a keen sense of smell and aro constantly sniffing. As large a drove as forty were seen in Newfoundland last fall and many were shot by settlers, who trust to the caribou for their winter supply of meat. Habits of the Hare, A -writer on hares gives some interestil g factsabout the life ledby " puss "in weather such as the present, when snow is thick. During the fall they will often lie until they ata completely buried, and spend two or three days In a semi -torpid state, their warm breath keeping a tiny hole open. They make what the Eskimos call an "igloo.” like the female polar bear. If only a few inches fall, they are exceedingly wide awake, knowing how clearly they show on the it bite surface. Then one can see what long distances they travel at night, and also how close they come to villages. Even when not pressed by hunger they will frequently visit the laborers' cabbages, and if -snow is deep they come regularly if not disturbed, and sometimes pay the penalty by being snared in their passage through the hedge. Their pace, of course, is something tremend- ous, and is divided into three rates—walk- ing, running and "sprinting." The first is the ordinary graceful hop with the back arched, when the times at which the feet (' are placed on the ground can be counted ; the second is a small gallop, and the third tip-top speed made at that most precarious moment in the life of a hare when the im- minent danger is before, or rather behind it of being jugged or of otherwise falling ingloriously into the cook's pot and having no more quiet nibbles at the cabbage. Itis a certain and speedy oure for Cold in the Head end°sterrhiry all its atige8, SOOTHIIV, O CLEANSING HEALING. Instant, Relief, Permanent Cure,. Failure Impossible. Many smelled diseases are simply. symptoms of Catarrh, such as head- ache, partial deafness, losing sense of smel, foul breath, hawking and spit• ting, nausea, general feeling of de. betty, eto. If you are troubled with any. of, these or kindred .i5 rnptome, your have Catarrh, and ehmttd'lose uo' time.la procuring a bottle of Mut, Dinar. Be warned in timo, neglected toldin head results in Catarrh, fol. 10wed.. by consumption and.. death. Muth B,-,", i, sold by all druggists, or will be sent, post paid, on receipt of price (60 cents and $1,00) by addreeeing FULFORD & CO,, Brockville, Ont. 30 A 'TEAM. l : !undertake to briefly tench any fairly intelligent person of either sex, who can rend and Write, and who, after Instruction, will work industriously, how to earn : Three Thousand Dollars a Tear in their own localitie,,whoreverthey llwe.rwill also furnish the situation or employment,at width you enn earn that amount.. No money for me unless successful as above. Easily and qulclrlyy learned. l desire but one worker from each district or county, i have already taught and provided with employment a lars; number, who aro malting over $8000 aear each. It's NIE:N' Lad UI,LIP. runt er euloeo IE' EE. Address nt onco, Ms V. .4.1, M, Sl n 4A0, Affkuritts, Maine., f111-6 EX—ETR T1, ES. tenabUsnee every Tbarsday morn neat TIMES STEAM PRINTING NOUS i - l e a n ptxeat,netirlpoppoaito Fittaii rl Jeva . ry btore,Eseter,Qut„by John wtatte it Sons,Prii* nrietors. a R 8 ii t,T& O! anvii Tiai 4 F'u etineirti n.Fer line....... cents a anilaoeuoatlnaostion,perline 9caats. To llisnre inert ion, advertisements rent Iia sentte notlaterthan Wednesday morning ourJoll PRINTING DF.PtItTAIENTia one o the largostanetbestegtitppettlu the Quunty o' Buren, All workeut.rueted to ue witlresety Q ;r prompt attention: Decisions ICegarding News. papers. Any personwhotakesa pa orregularlyfrom teepoat•omce, wttetherdirectedin Lia name or mother'::,or whether he baa subecribed or net :e responsible for payrcent. 2 If a person. order, hie paper ,liscontlnued semuetpay all atreare or ttie publisher may coutuiue to send it until the payment i; made, arai. Hien °chest the whole amount, whether ale taper is taken from the office or not. $ In snits tor subserirtions tl;esuiteasybe natrtuted to the place wuere the paper is pub• ished, although ;lis Gubscriber way reatde fiuudreds tat Uides away. The courts have decided that refusing to 'eke newspapers orpetiedicalalrene the post. oftice,orremot1ngaudleaving treat uncoiled or ie rrinstl !aeio eridetlea of inte;4. -i 1 t7::tl ; REAM � � e ' °. t TARTAR PUREST, STRCNCEST„ BEST, CONTAItisii t40 ALUM, AMMONIA, LIME, PHOSPHATES, �+ �±or. any Nudes; materiels. E. ��f . Gi l.1.E F f , TQAOATO O2 . CIIIO4.00,1r.r itsa'Vr oftbe CTL; E?.: IIVAL3're:. rsi81. .—'.t �•;_ ,;';ice CR.EPIIEMECY RHELLNIATISINI Neuralgia Sciatica,9 I.; -mbago, Backache, Weaclache, Toothache, Sore Throat, Frost Bites, Sprains, Bruises, Burns, Etc. Sold by Druggists and Dealers everywhere. Fifty Cents a bottle. Directions in 11 Languages. THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO., Baltimore, did Canadian DepotToronto, Qztt. BREAD -MAKER'S ll'm' .a nv KrFan is t ro c:>`i $ASI„c FkOfi6ra FOR SALE BY ALL 1,1EALtlR8>i ■ .....,_'.. �r rr rr,, art! ■ iia i C11REs_RHE MA M- 'EREEMAITS WORM POWDE1$c firs pleasant to tole. Contain their vent recreative. Is a safe, marc, and ettectaaf 'R:Qhryer of ,corms is Children or .4 dolts CARTER'S ITTLE 1VER PILLS. How Lost, How Restored Just published, a new editio of Dr. Culver, vreli'ri'Celebrated , easily en he radical cure of SearlytnvsnuA•rannniiu dleeretionor. incapacity induced by excess of The celebrated author, in this admirable °say clearly demonstrates tram a thirty yens auecearra pabracticeuse,rosy thatbareThedlesfy alsruing°areas; conseqpotntiag uencesout a ofmwta sell at cure at once simple, certain and effectual, b means of whieh every sufferer, no matter what hi condition max' be, may eure himlgt cheaply, pis vately and raadirally. £S Thislcctureahould he in the hands of every youth and every manin theland Sent under seal, in a plain envelope, to any .ltd dress, post•patd, on receipt et four cente, or tw postage stamps, famples of Mesion° tree. Addrss THE CULVERWELL MEDICAL CO 41 Ann Street New York Post Office Box 450 08817 Regulates the Stomachs Liver end Bowels, unlocks theSecretions,'Purifiesthe Blood and removes all im- pucitiea from a 'Pimple to the worst Scrofulous Sore. �• CURE.S DYSPEPSIA. BILIOUSNESS CONSTIPATION. HEADACHE SALT RHEUM. SCROFULA. HEARTBURN. SOURSTOMAC DIZZINESS. DROPSY RHEUMATISM. SKIN DISEASES r iii Y CURE Sick Headache and relieve all the troubles inci- dent to a bilious state of the system, such as Dizziness, fiausea. Drowsiness, Distress after eating Pain in the Side, &c. While their most remarkable success has been shown in curing S C Headache, yet CARTER'S LnTrtm LIVER PILI, are equally valuable in Constipation, curing and preventing this annoying complaint, while they also correct all disorders of the stomach, stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels. Even if they only cured Ache they would be almost priceless to those who suffer from this .distressing'compiainte but fortunately their goodness does not end . - here, and those whoonce try them will find these little pills valuable in so many ways that they will not be willing to do without them. But after all sick head ASH is the bane of so many lives that here is where we make our great boast. Our pills cure. it while others do not. CARTER'S Limas Leona frits are very small and very easy to take. One or two pills make a dose. They aro strictly vegetable and do not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action please all who use them. In vials at 25 cents; five for $1. ` Sold everywhere, or sent by mail CASTES IISDiCII1Z 00., New York. sal Pills Small Dover Sma11 !ricer gfiAnsescat. Who it weak, Nervous, Debiiltatet5 who in his and Ignorance has Tri a Folly l Y Mawa his of Body,afilnd and adn}t Od, c nnngrexhaustidrain, upon the Fountains •ot Trite. ldeadaoh� �flOkaohO, Dreadful Dreams, �i/eaknest 1 Memory, Bashfulness ID Society, Minutes upon the F aCe and all tbo EffeOte wading to Early Decay, Consumption Insanity will and in our" specific o. 28 • , 1ositivo cure. It imparts Youthful rthe Viine sungbigot. etrengthestoresons and invigorate,talPovwer the Braioldandn I d veIldeup.thte mm no' arousedNers i!itothuaction the wholeuscular physiceystezl energy of the human frame. With our specilla No. 22 the moat obstinate case can be cured 4e three months, and recent once iu less than days. Each package contains two weeks trea t, Price 52, G, ruee itloanenNo, 8410 an lnfaiOuresltbie Caro foruaranteedall Our Privapte. Dtaoases no matter of how long stand- ing. tan -ing. Sold under our written Cuarantoe to Oeffe0.. ctToren a Co.tiiOnt•9.' Pride Ss. Toronto; Medicine LADIES ONLY. r c a FR�RlOi�l FBEC;ItLATItJ r Il.Li3. Far superior to 'Ergot, Tansy "erenyroyyal Oxide. Endorsed by the thhula.ndsof ladle •,r r.!v a `OY7 1. _ nr `ail.. RelieV� who ase them tta 1_ Y pain, INSURE REGULARITY Pleasant and Effectual. Price, 52, Toronto Medicine Co. Toronto. Ont. THE ei R ETER TIKES