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The Exeter Times, 1894-10-25, Page 7s HLisc Onree VOIntiertiptiOn, Vongantataronet, Sore rents Said ny a Animate one Gearaeree. VOX' Leine Side, Reek or Cara Inflows Porcine rilliter Will give great setWeotiee.—se cents. SHILOH'S VIITAL,IZER. !,...4irgigMrqbeitirAngregari utopescreitwvforetelAttOtamistent ever wed.' For ttouble excele. Deseepete, lever or Xideer Velee 70 Min LO H'S 4CTARRH! REMEDY. Have youCatarr ? Try this Remedy. It will •rsitively relieve and Cure you.Price 50 cts. hip InSector acir its euccoesful treatment is urnialaentree, CemeMber,Shilairs.nemedies are aa„'d 'marinates t. e ale eatisfaction. LEGAL. , DIOKSON,Berrister, Soli- !' • (liter of Supreme Court, Notary abbe, Conveyancer. Oonarnissiouer, 850 anGY to Goan, ineln anson'ailloak, Exeter. -BU. 00.1.1LINS, Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer, ac. niSEETDR, ONT, OFFICE: Over O'Neil's Bank. ELLIOT & Ebr_doir, Barristers, Solicitors, 'Notaries hblic OODVeya/300rS &o, &o. *a -Money AO Loan at Lowed Rates of Intereet. OFFICIO, - MAIN - STREET, EXETER. n. v. vietroe. eennektorr eT.T0TOT. OillevaManinea OMNI MEDICAL WOMAN'S STORY. layag.pginn Ig.„„,canaaallauta 00.008 and the maids were engaged, 'and when I might creep out if the homes with - 1 eau understend what aim felt now and olit being seen. 1 believe I sheuld have how in her grief oho wa luLi1iy conscious really started on thie journey but for the of my existence, and that ahe did not really tt"tval in- 1311°1° Ambmseo WhC) Cal" uponame euthlenlv on the day After I had care whether I went or stayed. I can beard of my motgato inueo, and who found eympathize with her now. She has told me sitting crying alone on the sands, me how oho hardly missed me in those dap His Was the first voice that brought Me comfort ; it was upon his breast that I of agony—only Awakening sometimes ae if aoltbed oat my grief, until the burden out of a dream to wonder that ray Plane , seemed lightened OoMehow, He told me was empty. We had been leo much to. that my mother we out of danger now, gether, 1 running after her everywhere and that Oat would soon get well, or at least well enoUgh for me to go home and like a lap -dog, she never tired of nie, or be with her again, and he said I must try impatient with me ; and yet in that ()Ver.. and be a comfort and a consolation to her whelming sorrow she almost forgot that the day to come. I told him I was afraid my mother bad left off loving me eince father's death, She had not seemed to mind my going away, while I was heart -broken at leaving her. And then he tried to make me understand how in a great grief like my mother's all things seemed blotted out, except that one overwhelming lose. He told me that a dark curtain had fallen over my mothee's naind, and that I should have her changed from the happy woman I had known in the happy days that were gone. "But the curtain will be lifted by and by, Daisy," he said, "and yeti will ace your mother's joyous natore return to her. No griefs last forever. A year is a long time even for a great sorrow, and in a year your mother will begin to forget.", JW. BROWNING M. D „ M. 0 • P, 0 , Graduate Viototia -Culver ty; Moo and reitidence, Po inion Laho tory .Exe ter T1R. B.YNDMAN, coroner for tae 1.-"" County of Huron. Wilco, opp..,s Ito Carling Bros. stoto,Exoter. jiftS. ROLLINS & AMOS. 'Separate Offices, Residence sante aq former. ly. Andrew et. Offices: Spackinam's building. Main st ; Dr Rollins' same aa formerly, north door; D. Amos" same building, south door, J. A. ROLLINS, M. D., T. A. AMOS, M. D Exeter. Ont else had a daugater. She has owned as much to me ; and I have ueyer felt wound. ed or angry that it should have been so with her, since I have been able to under- stand the nature of suoh a grief as hers. But at the time I was heart -broken by her coldness. Aunt Emily took me to London and gave me over to the nurses anti governesees in her house in Harley Street. It was a very large house, the largest in the street, I believe, and it was built for a rich noble. man when Harley Street was new, and there was nothing but fields and country villages to the north—no Regent's Park, 1 He meant this for consolation, but my no squares and terraces, and never-ending tears broke out afresh at the thought that father would be forgotten. ,, streets as there are now. It was a fine old my I shall never forget him," I said. house, with paneled walls and decorated "No, my darling, he will live in your ceilinge, and large rooms at the back ; but memory and your mother's, but your mem- AUCTIONEERS. IU down With Mother, an When We were sight of tile gardOn bVought 1)44 th° itojrn Tlfr, YiBLE 11011 nrientoi7 of thet evening when welked up heti so gay mid happy, talking of father, aild of what he would eV aud how Ile would, WHAT is GOING ON iN Tftg FOUR look when we eaw his face at the earriage window. I have but to shut my °yogi, even now, after °oven Yeare hare elmeged me from a child to almost a woman, and I can inie het atation lying all arooteg the reeadewe by the river -aide, and I eau ace my fether's face, as X expected to see it, smiling at us as the train came in—sdear, well -remembered face which 1 wee never to see again upon this earth. The e wasa carriage at the station to take us home, but another wasn't in the carriage. When he saw my dieappoiate inent, Until° Ambrose told me that eine was PAW an invalid, and had not gone befeond the garden sinee her illness, a 't You will have to comfort and cheer/Ur with your loving little ways, Daisy; he said; "but you will have to be very quiet and very gentle. It is not long eince she could hardly bear the sound of any one's voice. You will find her sadly changed." " More °banged than you are ?" wilted. "Much more. Think how muoh more trouble she has gone through than I have had to bear." "But you look as if you couldn't have been more sorry," I said, for indeed I had never seen eucili eadnese in any face as I had seen in his that day. * * e Mother was lying on a sofa by the draw- • ing.room fire --the evenings were beginning to be chilly, and she was tut invalid — it seemed, oh 1 such a dreary houtie to me or3r of him will be sed and sweet instead of natural place in the past, and. his shadow bright, gay rooms. will not darken the present as it does "Father is dead, and mother doesn'tlove now." me any more,' I said to myself again and "Lot me go home soon," I said, clinging to him when he was leaving Westgate later again,as I sobbed myself to sleep in the i tl nternoon. "Pray, pray, pray let strange bedroom, where the very curtains ittbalesottof " of the bed wf3re an agony to me because of "As soon as ever your mother is well bitter and cruel. He will have taken his after our garden by the river, and our their strangeness. I had never been enough to see you, darliug," he promised. I had always been fond of him. He had parted from my mother before. Wherever' always bad the nest place in my laeart after she and my father went they had taken my father and mother, but he seemed nearer me with them. to me than over after that day, and he has My cousins are all older than I, and they neve p , r lost the lace that he took then or the influence that he had over me then in my desolation. I spent three more weary weeks at West- gate after this. Aunt' Talbot was with a fashionable party in the Highlands, Uncle Talbot was part of his time in Harley Street and part of his time in rushing about Eng- land and Scotland by express trains to see his most distinguished patients. I used to hear my cousins taik of the places he went to and the people he went to see --great peo- ple, all of them. He had the life and sanity of cabinet ministers and bishops hi his epeoial custody, and he made them obey his most severe order in fear and. trembling. I used to sit and listen idly in my wretched, low-spirited state while my cousins and the goyernesseschatteted about aunt's gowns aud uncle's patients, and I remembered" as children remember, things in which they take no interest. ' At last the happy day came for ray going home, and here came Uncle Ambrose to fetch me. "How good it is of you to come so far 1" I told him. "You must have other things to do besides coming to fetch me." , "There is no other thing in thia world that comes before my duty to my little pupil and her mother," he answered, in his low sympathetic voice. We went oil to the station in an open fly together. I'm sure my lively cousins must nave been very glad to get rid of a crying child that used to mope in corners and sit at meals with a melancholy face; but they couldn't be gladder to part with me than I was to e go away. I had tried to take an interest in their lessons when the German governess urged me to employ my mind, but -their lessons seemed so dull and difficult compared with Uncle Am- brose's way of teaching me. The Mullein was always grinding at grammar—while, except so far as learning my French verbs, I hardly knew what grammar meant; but, without vanity it is only fair to Uncle Ambrose to say that at ten years old I knew a great deal more about the history of the world and the people who had lived in it than my cousin Dora, who eighteen. And. even in those days I knew something about the great poets of the world, of whom Dora and her sisters knew nothing; for Unele Ambrose had told me all about Dante and his wonderful history of hell and heaven; and about Goethe and his Faust; and he had read Milton's story of Adam and Eve and the Wien angel who tempted thein, and Shake- speare's Tempest," and "As You Like It," and "Midsummer Night's Dream," aloud to me, to familiarize my ear and my mind with poetry, while I was still a child, he said. I had to thank his kindness tor all I knew, and for being a better compan- ion to my mother than I could have been if I had had a fraulein and a mademoiselle to teaeh me. When we were sitting in the railway carriage, and thasun was shining full upon Uncle Ambrose's face, I noticed for the first time that there was a great change in him since the summer. I had been too excited and busy to take notice of ib before; but I saw now that he had grown thinner and paler, and that he looked older and very ill. I put my arms round him, and kissed him as I used to do in the dear old days. "Poor Uncle Ambrose," I said, "how sorry you must have been! I love you better than ever, dear, becanse you are so sorry for us." His head was leaning forward on his, breast, and he gave one great sob. That was his only answer. How distinctly 1 remember that journey through the clear September light, by great yellow corn -fields, and the blue bright sea, had to work very hard under a French and a German governess. Fraulein taughe them music and painting, and mademoiselle taught them French, attended to their wardrobes, with a useful maid under her, superintended their calisthenic exercises and dancing lessons, and was "responsible for there figures." I cannot help putting that phrase in my book,for I heard my aunt use it very often. Her great desire was that her daughters should be accomplished and elegant in all their atti- tudes and movements. "I expect them to be statuesque in repose and graceful in motion," she said; and it gave her almost a nervous attack when she saw Clementine sitting with her toes turned in, or her feet and ankles twisted into a knot under her chair. There is no malice in saying, Aunt Emily's iden of education was the very opposite to that of Uncle Ambrose. He taught and trained me to be happy in soli- tude, as he was, to be good company for my- self, and to find new interests every day in books. Aunt Emily wished her daugh- ters to shine in society, to talk French and German, and to play and sing better than any other girls in her circle, and above all, to make the very most of their personal advantages. She is very candid in the expression of her ideas, and makes no secret of her views upon education so there is no harm in my recording them La this journal, which nobody is ever to read, so I might be as malevolent as I like without injuring anybody. Mother says that 1 am very uncharitable sometimes in my. ideas and judgments, and that a large -hearted charity is a virtue of age rather than of youth. I know that I am quick to see the weak points in the char- actere of my friends and acquaintances, and I dare say I am just as blind to my own defeots. • It is a lucky thing for Aunt Emily that her five daughters are all good looking, and two of them decidedly handsome. A plain daughter would have been an actual afflia- don to her. All the ugliness of the family. has concentrated itself in her only son, my cousin Horace, a very plain boy. But fortunately he is scientific, and promises to be a shining light in the medical profession ; at least that is what his father and mother say of him. Ire has made a profound study of sanitation,and he can hardly talk to any one five minutes without mentioning sew- er gas. He is always altering the lighting or the drainage or the ventilation in Harley Street, and his father complains that his experimente double the rent. Horace was eighteen when my father died, and while I was at Westgate with my cousins and the two governesses he used to come down on a Saturday and stop till Monday, and I must own to my d f 1- HARDY, LICENSED ALIO— • tioneer for the County of lia Charges moderate. Exeter P, 0 rm. BOSSENBERRY, General Li' k 'A • ceased Auctioneer Sales couducted in anpRIAS: Batisfactiouguaranteed, Charges mederate. lIensallP 0, Oat: • BrEaYerEfIorliBthEe RooLmiitcie esnsoefd 11. oc; andAlicialesex Sales ooudizeted at mocl. orate rates. Ofilce, Post-onice °rod - top On MONEY TO LOAN. TONE Y TO LOAN AT 6 AND -a. per cent, $25.000 Private Funds. Best Loaning Companieszepresented. L. H. DICKSON, Barrister. Exeter. STJECVEYING, RED W. FARNCOA1B, Provincial Laud Surveyor, all Civil El INT G-I1NT MTC - Office, Upstairs, Barnwell's Block, Exeter.Ont VETERINARY. Tennent& Teniient EXETER, ONT. nereseatesofthe Ontario Veterinary oat /ert., Orynm ; one ithor snn ofPown ROI , rpin WATERLOO MUTUAL • ...I. FIRE INSITRANO SOO . Established in 1863. HEAD OFFICE - WATERLOO, ONT. This Company hit's been over Twentv-eieh • years in successful oper ltion in 1Vestern Ontario, and continaes to insure against loss or • damage by Fire, llitildbigs, Merchandise Manufactories and all other deseriptioas of , insurable property. Intending insurers have the option of insuring on the Premium Note or • Cailh System. • During the east ten years this company has issued 57 AS Policies, covering property to the amount of $100372,028; and paid in losses alone t709,752.00. •Jaaaiers. , consisting of Oasis • in Rank Cove:lancet Deposita.nd the una,sees- • nal Premium Notes on hand and in fame 3.W.Waiona, M.]„ President; 0 M. Tlyr,ort • Secretary : J. 13. liuctirws, Inspeator • OlIAS SNELL, .Agent for Exeter and violin tY diary, which is a kin o lion's mouth in - The • Mollsons Bank to which I can drop any accusatione I like, • that he gave himself great airs to his sis- (CHARTERED BY PARLIAMENT, 1855) ters and the governesses, and was alto- gether very disagreeable. . Paid up Capital $2,000,000 Those summer weeks' at Westgate were R°s"'"a — l'fIIMMU the unhappiest peripd of my life. I look • Head Office, Montreal. back at them, now I am grown up, and • T. WOLFERSTAN THOMAS Esq. I wonder that I ever lived through them. GENRRAL Mewannis aly cousins were kind to me in a condos. Moimy advanced to good farmers on their cending way, as was natural from big girls own note With one or more endorser at 7 per to a little girl, and the governesses were cent. poi annum. •very sorry for me, and tried to comfort nie; Beater Branch. but there was no comfort for me on the face open every lawful day, from 10 a.m. to Sp. m of the earth without my mother; and night SATURDAYS, 10 min, to 1 p. m after night I dreamed of My dead father, and then hop -gardens, and orchards full of Ourreht ratee of interest allowed. on 'deposit and woke to the agony of knowing that II fruit, and then houses, and houses, and s should never see his beloved face or hear ; houses and then at last the air grew dull E. E. WARD, his dear voice again, except in dreams. I and thick, and the sun seemed dead, and Hub-Mane,gee, I think grown-up people for -1 this was London 1 CORNERS OF THE GLOBE,. ld and New Worm EvettO iotevest ovhertn7g4sliker4111:e1:11111Y114-Ntlire4it" 111111v axle() has war material on hand YO3tled, 00,000,000.f. ". Paper indestrnetible• ire bite been invented in Paris. A ecimotific exploring expedition to Nladit. caner will soon leave London. A belt of lightning recently killed, all the fish in a pond, near Dijon, France. Dried peat or turf, eat from bogs is large- ly Used for fuel throughout Europe. farmers ?lire° abbe eist inivaontisf ultaerdi nbeiyu gnu gbeh. thIronuGghreialtlI3hereitiathinieth&yoeoaor,loyoolopsseeinedws.age$ ROBB. I3onheur was a clressumker'eappren tice when a girl of 15 years. The amount of money held by the varieue London banks is not far short of 230,000,- 000 pounds, The number of persons taking out brew- ing licenses in England has fallen to 10,508 in a dozen years. An ingenious Sootohman has devised a thread -spinning apparatus that it operated by two trained mice. The deepest gold mime in Australia are wrapped iri a large white Chinitorape shawl the IVIagdala. at 'lowell, 2,400 feet, and Lan, one of father's gifts, which I remembered tell's at Landhuret, 2,640. , ever since I could remember anything. I An albino baboon, declared to be theonly There was a middle-aged woman in the one ever heard of, has arrived in Bedford, room, neatly dressed in black,with a white England, from South Africa. sun and apron, whom I afterwards knew asI There is wood growing inMexico which is one 'of mother's nurses. She had had two nurses all through her illness, one for the purple in color, and is now being cut and shipped. to European markets. day and the other for the night; for there had bean one dreadful time when it wa, ' Professor Dewar, of the Royal .Institute , thought that she might try to kill herself if London, in a recent lecture astomehed, his she were left alone. Yes, she was changed, audience by freezing soap bubbles. more changed than Uncle Ambrose. She 'Count Tolstoi lead the foundation of his was wasted to a shadow, and there *as no literary reputation by writing news color in her face. Even her lips were white. letters from Sebastapol during the Crimean Her beautiful hair, which father had been war. BO proud tat, had all been out off, and She : London milk is dyed cream color to suit wore a little lace cap, which covered her popular fancy by mixing •one teaspoontul close -cropped head, and was tied under her of liquid annatto with tight quarts of chin. Her poor hands were almost trails- milk. parent. A Christian church in some parts of She gathered me up in her arms, and she Japan cannot be established without the kissed and cried over me, and I thought consent of the property owners in that even then that it did her good to have her neighborhood. little daughter back again. She told. me London pays 42 per cent. of the income years afterward that those tears were the tax of England and Wales, and its govern - first that had. brought any sense of relief ment and management cost '£l4000,000 a with them. She lifted me into a corner of year. her sofa, weak as she was, and she kept m there till my bed -time. She had my supper Miss Fawcett, the English woman whose laid upon a little table by the sofa, and shebrilliant success as a teathematioian made fed me and cared for me with her own a sensation several years ago, has begun feeble hands, in spii,e of all the nurse could work as a civil engineer. say, and from that night, I was with her New Zealand has set apart two islands always. for the preservation of its remarkable wild "You don't know what it is to me to birds and other animals ; thereon all hunt - have my little girl again," she said to the ing and trapping are forbidden. nurse; 'you don't know what it is to feel Over five hundred tourists ascended Ben this frozen heart beginning to melt, and to Nevis in one week recently, there being on know that there is something left in this the summit one day a gentleman of eighty - world that I can love." one years and a child of three zeniths. POWDERS Cure SIOK HEADACHE and Neuralgia in mituutkei also Coated Tongue, Dizzi- ness, Bilidusaess, Pain intim Side, Constipation, Torpid Liver, 'V Dad breath, to stay oared else regulate the boWois. , SPY Nicit v�rAtect. 01060 ettPwrs tow* Stottkajlt , get hoW keenly they grieved and suffered Uncle Ambroge was silent and thought. when they were children, and that they ful all through the journey, which seemed never (pito understand a child's grief. Iso long—oh, so long, as if it would never know that whert either of the governeeees COMO to an end and bring me to mother and Uteri to console me she alwa.ye made me , home 1 I bare been to the Highlande since just a little more miserable than 1 Wag be- then, and to the Riviera,but those journeys fore she took me on her lap arid talked to' wore with mother, and -they did not aeon me about Heaven and my father, half so long as the journey from Westgate I heard by accident, at I was nob intend- • to London, and atiross London to Padding, ed to hear it, that my mother was very ill, ton, and from Paddington to the little sta. dangerously ill; and I Was so onhappy about tion 'at Laneford, where we waited for her that after entreating again and again father that evening—for tether who wag with passionate team to be taken to her, I never', never, never coming home to us made up my mind tei walk to London, mid again. from London to niVer 1-110#11. I had fooked At the sight of the station, and the eta. et the map of Bnglaud sometimes when my tion entater'e gardee—which was all of a eousitis had their ablates out, aud I knew blaze with dahliaa arid hollyheeks now, that to reach Larnford 1 must go through where the meet peas had been blooming -- London. I lay awake all night thinkiug I burst into woo, They Were the &at 1 of how I was to get away w.ien the govern. had shed obiee 1 left. Westgate ; but the She said almost the same words to Uncle Ambrose the next day when he came over The new rifle used by the Italian army tb River Lawn soon after breakfast, to give sends a bullet with such fore that it pene- me my morning lessons, and I thought he trates a log of solid ash to a depth of five looked more and more sorry as he stood inches at a distanee of tbree-ouarters of a listening to her, with his hand upon the mile. littlepile of books which he had brought At the lunch given by the municipality over from the cottage., He answered of Rome to the physicians who attended mother with a smile a minute afterward. the recent international congress, six thou - "Yes, it is a blessed thing to know we sand bottles and three hundred and sixty. flasks of wine were consumed. can love and be beloved," he said. • Mother told me afterward that there was , Sir Arthur Sullivan at Slis portrayed as a reason for his sympathizing with her -in a short -necked; thick -set, beetle-browed her sorrow more than any other friend. man, with curly black hair, moustache and He, too, had lost his nearest and dearest, whiskers. He is somewhat atilted in man - his good and devoted young wife, after a ner and. has been composing for thirty-five brief illness, almost as suddenly as her loss years. had come upon her, He, too, was alone in the world, but for an only child, his son, Herbert Gladstone laas undertaken the task of raising money for a stiitute of mother added, there were times when she .he succeeds in this there of whom he was doubtless very fond. But, will be no certainty that the statue will be fancied that he was fonder of rne than ot - permitted to find a resting place in West - his own son. mins ter Abbey. H. M. S. Hyacinthe fired a rocket and two blank shots to attract the American steamer Mariposa, off Honolulu. A story grew out of this that the former had fired shots across the latter's bow. The Hya- cinthe wanted to transfer mail. Pasranini would never let anyone hear him tune violin, and it is believed that many of the extremely peculiar effects he produc- ed were obtained by his tuning his instru- ment half a tone lower or higher.than the nrdinery pitch. Queen Victoria's walking stick once be- longed to Charles II., and is made of a branch of the historic oak tree in which he hid. In the plain gold top the Queen has fastened a little Indian idol, which was part of the boot of Seringanatam. Dr.Franz Neumann, who gives lectures in physics and mineralogy in the University of Koenigsberg, is 96 years old and has lec- tured at the university since he was 30. He was born near Berlin and was a soldier in the German war of Liberation. A school of prantical agriculture has been eetablished in the Province of Buenos Ayres, under direction of the Argentine for ilia nte and Children. "Casioria sovrell adaPtedtn nbildronanit 1 recomuseud it an evertor to Alta. prescription Imewn to me." H. Altman; E. nt So. Oxford St., Max:4m 17. "The use of 'Castor% '1,s So uaiversal and its merits; so well knownthat it seerao a work of supererogation to endorse it. Few arethe intelligent fanxilies who de not keep Oasterla within easarreaels." CARLO Hawn% D. D.. New York 037. Late Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed Church. 80009.1. cum, colic, a....fftiotto,,, frIkeb, Olarrhota, Ennttation, .4.-greeitlormo, gives sleep, ann promtoo wnaoutUrious weacAtiou. trio Wend years I have reigwomendect your Casterira ' stall always coattail° tat do so asp lute niveriatey produzed beriefteial result& Ersvini la Panama, X, 1)., oThewirithrop,"1Wsthetreet aud 7in Ave., New York citi, Tau OctrrAma comr.kin,,r xtuArwr nnizaier, Naas Tons. .reininnfitinglIMSCIMEMEMISIM211212165211231111111111111.111111111111$111011101111 Ourdives went on vary quietly after that day, and from that day I was mother's only companion. We have never been parted since my desolate days at Westgate, and we have lived almott out of the world. Mother says that next year, when I shall be eighteen, she will have to go into society for my sake, and that she will not be able always to go on refusing invitations to garden and tennis parties all along the river banks from Marlow to Reading. It will be pnlv eight for me to see a little more of the world, nother says, and to mix with girls of my own age. I suppose I shall like it when the time comes, but I have no longing for parties or dances, or fine clothes, and my cousins in Harley Street say I am the oddest girl they ever met with, but that itis no wonder I am odd, considering the eccentric manner in which I have been aducitted.' I have been so happy, so happy with mother in all these years, so fond of our pretty house, which grows prettier every year under mother's care, and our gardens, which ate looked linen as model gardens by all the neighborhood. People come and ask to see them, as a great favor ; which is rather hard upon Mother and me, who love Government. Thit is the first institution seciusion. For seiren years Uncle Ambrose has gone of the kind in that country, and great steadily oo w ;A my education, never mist; hopes are entertained of its elevating in. sing sxcept when some slight illnes fluoride ou agriculture in Argentina. has matzo Patter ann ar me unfit for work. Editors ofnewspapers throughout As punctually' at sns cloak strikes ten he England have been appealed to through a appears at the uttn. garden gate nearest circular signed by 105 members of the his cottage. If the ,Yeather is warm we House of Commons, asking them to cease sit in the sumrner-tiouse,or under the great to demoralise the peopleby reporting sen - willow, which grows and grows and grows, sational oases of immorality or brutality, tie if it were a magic tree. 1± 1± is not sum- and in othei.vaays appealing to the sensual mery enough for sitting out-of-doors, We nature of man, work in the morning -room upstairs. I Buskin's habits of life are as regular as Yes we have been happy together, moth- I were those of Oliver Wendell Holmes• er and I, but we have never forgotten Be told an interviewer recently that in two father.; we have never come to think less years'his time of going to bed and getting of our great loss. Saddest thoughts have lip had not varied fifteen mintitca, and he mixed with our happiest hours. We have has regular hours for writing, study, -walk- never forgotten him; we can never forget , ing and eating. He is 74, with a °leer eye him. Many women as beautiful and as and complexion and thick white hair and young looking as my mother would beard. have married again Within two or three I Considerable comment has been made years of a drat husband's death; bat she ,itt England on the Lord Mayor of Liver' has never given a thought to any other man pool's calling on a Unitarian minister to than him, and she never Will. Once 1 ' say graeo at tbe banquet given to the ventuted to ask her if father was her Duke and. Dueliess of Vork,when a Bishop drat love; if she had neer oared ever so of the Established Church was preeent. little for any other lover; and she told me I The Lord Mayor io a iThitaria,n,and elaims that he was the firet who had even spoken , that his own private ehaplain was the per - to her of love. She was °lily eighteen son who officially should perform the when she married; rihe was only nineteen 'molly. when I was born, She and my father fell its love with each other at first sight—like a prince and princess of a fairy tale. (To ire aorrneuen.) tuo ti may be avoided. It comes from a germ that takes root and grows only when the System is Weak and Lungs are affected. • Sc tt's Emulsion Aunsige.,...osaNgemsgaszr dammeammescrssosiollimollw of Cod-liver Oil, with hypophosphites of lime and soda, overcomes all the conditions which make con. sumption possible. _Physicians, the world over, en endorse it. Coughs, Colds, Weak Lungs and. Emaciation pave the way for Consumption. SCOTT'S EMULSION cures them and makes the system strong. Prepared by Scott St Bowne, Belleville. All Druggists, 50 cents and Si. 1111•11111M=.011•IMINIP - The Hon. Hugh Gough, who hat pat been appointed Secretary to the British Lega- tion ab Washington is the eldest SOU of Viseount Gough, and grandson of the first Viscoent, the congeerer of the Mahrattas Telling Too mueh. and Sikhs. He is 45 years old, was edu- cated at Eton and Oxford, and entered the NOW ist i— Does your father go to diplomatic service in) 874; he has served at °bur& regelarly ?" Rio Janeiro, Madrid, Athena, The Hague, Little Girl—" Yes, indeed, Mamma Berliu, Rome, St. 'Petersburg, arid reeently Would give hitn fits if he didn't." at Stockholm. Ile is married. Children Cry for Pitcher',% Castoriiki gt^ 74-407k.C., -19f' Varicocele, Enoissions, Nervous Debility, Seminal Weakness, °lea. Stricture, Syphilis, Unnatural Discharges, Self Abuse, Kidney and Bladder Diseases Positively Cured by • la T40 gOW intilitOrfreatilteliti501104garillIBISGOVOIll ,.: arYou can Deposit the Money in Your Bank or with Your Postmaster to he paid us after you are cuu.so under a written Guarantee! Sel f Abuse, .M:certes ana Blood Dissases have wreaked the lives of thousands of young men and. middle aged men. The farm, the workshop, the Sunday school, the Wilco, the profes- sions—all. have its victims. ire , g man, it you laity° been indiscreet, beware a the future. Middle aged men, you are growin' g prematurely weak and old, both sexually and physically. Consult ns before tee late. NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. Confidential. VARICOCELE, EMISSIONS AND SYPHILIS CURED. W. 8. COLLINS. W. S. coiling, of Saginaw, Speaks. W. S. COIALINIL ,--4... ...„...._ "I am 29. At 15 Ilearned a bad habit which I contin- it-- ‘ ued 01119. I then became "one of the boys" and led a gay life. Exposure produced Syphat. I became nerv- ous and despondent; no ambition; memory Poor; ease..,, red, sunken and blur; pimples on face; hair loose, bone I-7,* ,tft pains; weak back; vancocele;dreams ancl losses at i" night; weak parts; deposit in urine, etc. I spent him- - A dreds of dollars without help, and was contemplating , snichle when a friend recommended Drs. Kennedy& Korean's ::.ew Method Treatment. Thank God I 1 tried it. In two months I was cured. This was six a tv \ years ago and all happy. Boys, try Drs. Kennedy &Ker- __ . years ago, and never had a return. Was married. two o _ BEFORE TREA.T1fT gen before giving up hope.' irtra avaraveT S. A. TONTON. S. A. TONTON. Seminal Weakness, Impotency and Varicocele Cured. P` 4. s "When I consulted Drs. Kennedy es Kagan, I had. t'a, little hope. I was surprised. Their new Method o i Treat- zt) ment improved me the first week. Emissions ceased, nerves became song,paine disappeared, hair grew in --, .7 1 again, eyes became bright, cheerful la company and strong sermally. Having tried many Quacks. I can . heartily recommend. Drs. Kennedy & Kergan as reliable Tokonuol,,,m,i, Specialists. They treated me honorably and skillfully." Llteen T, P. P. EMERS0/1. A Nervous Wreck—A Happy Life. T. P. EMERSON. T. P. Emerson Das a Narrow Escape. "I live on the farm. At school I learned an early habit, which weakened me playsically, sexually and mentally. Family Doctors said I was going into "decline" (Consumption\ Finally "Tho Golden Monitor," edited by Drs. Kennedy &Kergen. fell in- to my hands. I learned. the Truth nud Cause. Self — abuse had sapped my vitality. I took the Now Nethod larratazent and was cured. My friends think I , .0. .. was oared of Consumption. I have sent them many patients, all of whom wero cured. Their New /1All u11; Method Treatment supplies vigor, vitality and man- a a )3FaTORICI TRELVer. hood." Arran TRELTIVOTVT. 4 " READER I Are you a victim? Have yon lost hope? Are yoa contemplating mar- . rit.40? Eas your l3lood been diseased? Have you any weakness? Our New Method Treatment will cure you. What it has done for others it will do for you. crTs astm50 cSE.zoc:03pr 16 Years in Detroit, 060,000 Cured, No Risk. Consiiitation Free. No matter who has treated you, write for an honest opinion rtte of charge. Charges reasonable. Books Free —"The Golden Monitor" (illus- trated), on Diseases of men. Inclose postage, 2 cents. Sealed. VF*NO N AIVI SS USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRi. VATE. No medicine sent C. 0. D. No names on boxes or envel- opes. Everything confidential. Question Het and cost Of Treat - ment. FREE. OPAS3 KENNEDY 811 KERGAN9Ng.ISR SHELBY ST. 01T, MICH. '''''saalaaalf"elalta) - V'e.tillvin<7.C.A.4. oprorawanosouvo*in ••••••ao•noisnonaverawsemrseemitematmeon, 41 Ile---" Do you think your father weuld object to my marrying you?" . She—" I don't know, If he's anything like me, he 'would." He who ORLI suppress a morrienee anger may prevetit a day of eorrow,—Ation. The capitol at Washington, it is said4 has goat the country $30,000,000 to bull 00Umiollibgrienlitautfinonodreittofv;:broile.isllen pap and keep in repair. • Montreal Shylocks. According to the Montreal Herald the Shylocks of the commercial metropolis make enormous profits. It says that there ate about a dozen men who make a living by lending money at uourions rates. The regular charge is eight per emit. per month, or ninety-six per cent. per annum. Very often ten per cent. per month is exaeted, and sometimes a green victim pays at high as 1210 per centper annum. The borrowers are chiefly young men with small ealaries„ who give as eeetirity their note, endorsed by two others. Them is a great (kinky agaitet the lenders, and no doubt it is nt large measure justified. But the real offend' ors are the youag men who allow extra vat gances to lead them into borrowing, Time or Forbearance, Dalighter-,-,4 .g0.41t,, 1 want you to ;Stet bossing paieuntil after 1 get =tried,* Mother --`1 Why, 1should like tO knOWtit DatIghter—" Just asquick ea I get a little bit intimate -with a young mart, they begin to aek if I take after yea.* a