The Blyth Standard, 1893-09-28, Page 311
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BUSINESS DIRE t!til 1
MEDICAL.
4-- ---
VC J. MILNE, Mal CM,
•
•
CH.AI"TER III. CHAP MR IV.
lirsoAND AND wive.
not different:to of opinionetut difterence of tor - 'Better t hen etichwl": nu RY.1 it 11
< mum o • 5 tt epee mut.
"The painful element 111 companionship is
long, barren ellence, mutire with my desire."
peritnient."-Jo fix Sin V. Woitoew onto.
Mrs. Denison had lint been a happy wife,
hgt jibe p ppine, into The journey to Woodbury seemed endless
words. The facts of her history were very to Haber,
simple. A book.sellerei slaughter she had The Denison/ arrived at their dettination
about six °Week on a dull evening in Sep.
lived tho first twenty. two years of her life
tember. There was a long drive from the
in a large provincial town in the north ot
atation to the house in which they were to
England. Hero a young hank clerk had won
live. Father had to be admonished to keep
iter heart, anti jilted her for a woman in a
still, for the could not contain her excite -
higher send position. hlr. Denison thee
„oie jeo am; w,,„0,1 her. wite„,0 went, and jemped up end sloven on
her seat eit a tete were let with
kliewiug of her previous "disappointment."
She WU too shy, too reticent to il0 more elite*. "Oh, look, mother, , Oat beau-
tiful Irma! Mother, do you think
than hint to him that site had suffered ; anti
lie wee not a man to take a hint very quick- there will be a largo garden, and a room
ly,even when she told him that she thought f"r me to Mee ie 118 well fte drewintroom
011, I hope that there will be a eat 1"
she could "never love again." Not till aft•er
The grief of Esther's life at preeent was
the marriage did he discover that she had
Odell. had been forced to leave her favor
been actually engaged to another mats; and
he had never forgiven her for the minimal. ite tabby behind. The congregation oblig
med. He wee ot an intense' y ma. ingly provided yeti.
pennon, and jumped et onne to the conch,. The wit drew up et a tall, narrnw, red. -
sum Wit she still cherished an affection for brick house, wedged in between two larger
her old lover. Perham she slid. At sity ones in a side street, with windows looking
streight out on the pavenient. There were
rate it took her years to forget tho bitter
two narrow white steps to the narrow yel-
words' in which he reproaehed her teethe past.
low.brown door, on which a Mess knocker
Her growing affection for him died down to
the roots, if eon the roots were not utterly wits painfully prominent. There Wall no
need to knock, however ; the door was at
destroyed. Sometimes the felt a positive
once opened by e charwoman in the rusty
*version from his words anti ways.
She way a women of higher nature than Lemuel: peeuliar to the armies. Mrs.
her husband. He winced e little now and Niemen heaved a mini of relief at
a vition of lights in the background ;
then when thus superiority made iteelf felt.
she had known whet it wee to arrive at
He turned unconsciously to triumph
in the power that lee bitter ion ue
the new house and find that the onward e
brrught him ; for, from the moment wife had forgotten to order fires and food.
Mary Atm an importation painfully se.
when he reproached her with her love for
another man, he gained unlimited power ',wee and carried away from her "belong.
ings" in Gloucestershire, alighted first, and
over her actions, if not over her mind. He
could control her with a look. In deference began to help the edam' and charwoman
with tho luggege. The bulkier bona had
to him she put aside her oat ural tastes, re -
been sent betorehand, and were blocking up
strained an originelly sarcastic tongue and
the narrow hall. The charwoman bobbed a
: rather hasty temper. It seemed as if she
curtsey to the now minitter and held MA
felt that she had wronged him, and wanted
friend' hand. "e'rs. Sims," she and, at -
to mhke emends. She made him au mull.
ent wife. But at I eat she felt go.retinies
that she was dead.
As years went on and common interests
kenneled the husband and wife tried to
keep peace with one another. There was
Ife child to occupy her : his ministerial
work for him, But he never could induce
her to teach in the schools, to take classes,
Cm. pni„Nity " to lead in prayer," after the fashion of
• -"' other ministers' wivel. She visitee the
lealversity queene ellow of Treaty
*oiled College, and Member of Collegc of poor mmetimes, and worked for them in.
Physician,' and Surgeons of Ontario. defatigehly, But she could not epeak
even to her own child about re.
Physiolaft, Surgeoq & Aocouclieur
ligton. Naturally run ved, she felt
Ortocet-Queen Street. Ono Hoer Nort It of
as 0 a seal had been set upon her lips.
Commercial Hotel,
As long as her husband did not believe in
•-• her aineerity -and he still sometimes de-
clared thet he did not -she oould not say
J. N. PE
Voraarinary
. Graduate at Ontario
Zanotti, Registered Me
Wiry Medical Assoeiatio
Calls Promptly Awe
OFFICE -Over J. M.
DRUO
RDUEone word. She became a remarkably talent
1 woman, She wrote verses, manly on re.
Steelesnen. eubjects, now anti then, mid sent
them to denominetional linguine'', but she
Veterinary' l'ellege,
other Ont-trlo Voter- never talked abont these productions
n. of her pen.
lb 41 to ni Mum James Denieon felt it very hard tied she
should !sympathize with hur, so little, al.
HAMILTON'S though he had done his beat to prevent her
from doing so. They seltiom slimmed the
*Tana - ateelle.
question!' that were agitating his mind. As
•
far as he knew, she was orthodox in all her
beliefe. lid nobody really knew what
MISCELLANEOUS Margaret Denison felt. Ile was ready
— enough to imagine that she despised him
for his vacillation, his fear of risking ma.
& HAMILTON, Liceneed Aucte tend interests for eminence's sake. If
tably utroducing herself, "and a joined
member, sir, these fray years."
"Very glad to eee you, Mu. Mims," and
Mr. Denims); whereupon Mrs. &me shook
Mods with his wife end daughter, and
nodded from euperior height to Mary Ann.
"If you goes into the belt parlor, air,"
remarked Mrs. Sens confidentially, "you
will find Mrs. Fain/situ waiting. The
Circlet Steward's lady, you know, sir.
That's her carriage and pair a.walking up
and iown the street. And Miss Fairbairn's
with her. Ansi the Chapel Steward's in the
dinintroom"
Esther had already made a dive into the
kitaben, where ohs saw a bright fire end an
imperturbable cat on the hearth. Mr. Deni-
son looked at his wife.
"You had better go to Mrs. Fairliairn
while I speak to Mr. !leave," he said.
Mrs. Stins sniffed significantly. " Mrs.
Fairhairn's not a lady as like' to be kept
welting, mum," she murmured behind her
hand
Mrs. Denison eltrank a little from her
intrueivenest, which she heed not for the
life of her rebuke in a " joined member";
and was ever afterward called proud by
Mre. Sims. "Come into the drawinteroom
first, James," she said Almon entreatingly.
Well she knew that visits from Circuit
Stewards' wive. were not to he lightly
treated. Or, Denison taunted with a
sigh. " Why don't they let us have the
house to ourselves ?" he shoat groaned al
t ioneer, and 1 ablator, Land, Loan. and she would but remonstrate, he maid to him. he followed Ine wife into the little drawing -
Insurance Agent. Office, Queen Sttect, self, he would know what to do. In thR j room. "Not but what it is kind of them
Blyth. Orders left at Tile Seeemose way he paid. a reluctant homage to her to come I"
judgment, which he secretly achnowledged A very magnificentpersonage (in &thee'
Gibe will receive prompt attentiou. to be better than his own. eyes at least) awaitee them. Mrs. Fein
- He had not the least suapicion that she bairn the Wife of a wealthy contemn:liana
who held an official position in the chapel,
often longed to unfold her thoughts, to him,
but was afraid of a repulse. She had been had condescended to he present when the
N. H. YOUNG, repulsed, wounded, trampled upon go often, minister arrived. She wee a handsome
ON/ that ahe now ouly asked for calm. There woman, dressed In *dins anti velvets. Sh
la a stage of mental development in which
- emotion ie shunned like a diaries's+, and ex.
inner of Marriage Licenses1 2itementlooked upon ea torture. When the
egrien have been overatrung their owner
j _brinks as much from the vibration caused
No Witnessee by pil,essure as from that prodneed by tin.
_ _ n when her henbane showed that he
wo d now be glad of her sympathy or
LUCAS, TANNER & CO., her ove. tihe wanted to be let alone. If
Jen s would no longer tamt her "nth the
psis she could bear silence and solitude.
BANKERS Her heart lad never recovered from the
73LY blow,dealt to it one dreaded night, when,
in theeirst anger of his liscovery of her
DO • GISAERAI, DANKO, t 111-810188.
. first love, her husband had threetened to
Money remitted teeF payable at, any bank s nd Ler back to her parents' home do separ.
In Canada or United ettitea. America!, amt atelier from their neweborn child. Hebert
p elitetrt'or
c7ohltriliertieve=y!,"t1040,1:r told her that she had shamefully deeeived
e.
abort dates. Nitoe diseounted. Farmer. %lit Min. The acceptance of Me condemnation
require, eileaneee aro Invited. Notes collected had crushed her spirit. Some women will
at mineral/ charge.. Money to loan on rem die of a sin teener than of a sorrow. It
estate at frame to 7 per cent, Llbffral Inter -
0,1 allowed mow may bc, with seemed to her that she had been dying ever
drawn at Maude. effice.
The ode sweetening element in James
Reference- Tug MOLKONS BANK.
'1 ea Margaret Denison shrank k
s Denison'a life was his love for his little
ALEX. Ivt'CAS, 1 deughter. He might sometimes be harsh
C11,18, E. TA KNED 1 ProPriefore and onjust to her, ae indeed he was to
- everybody of hit acquatntaece, hut he loved
_ - her tenderly all the Onto If - liked to have
beside him in the study, to week with
, to teach her, and to read with her.
e wen almost more tender with her than
-.-- was her mother, and,as a ohild, ahe was less
ONEY tolenti, tn le rge or small emus, on
a, fraid of him than of her mother, though
tMoweet curreei two,
good mortgage or personal seen rit) , at
in later years an increasing lemma' of taste
MONEY TO LEND.
and temperament drew the woman and gfiirl
H. HALE.
eloaely together. It was anxiety for er
°lint°, rather than for his wife that led him to con.
Huron Street ceal hie true eentiments. He did not open-
ly try to convert his daughter to his own
belief ; but by the uncionseiou working of
ono mind upon another elether aselmilated
his idees without knowing it, and was
%tattled tn later days to find them labeled
"heterodox."
After the lettere of invitation had been re•
calved early in the summer, Mra Denison
began to pack. She always began this
operetion a couple of months before the
removal, which took place in August, so
that there should be no tremendous rush
and bustle at the end. These " flittiege"
every two or three years viere buniensome
to her, bet she bed grown up amongst pm
plc who were so proud of " the Itinerancy,"
Clinton, Aug 21, 1890
J. T. HUCKSTEP,
1r HAIR DRESSING
- -AND -
SHAVING PARLOR
Five doors North of Bank.
QUEEN ST., BLYTE,
Choice Tobamos and rigor, in Stock.
had prominent, fine dark eyes and dar
curls, fastened to her temples by little
combs ; her manner was graoiou and pro-
pitiatory. She had brought gifts with her
of poultry end eggs and butter, and evi•
dently deaired to he very ind ; but it
must bepoufessed that Mrs. unison wish
ed her altay just, then. In f ot, Mrs. Deni•
wan felt herself at • 0 lead van Ste. She wall
dusty and tired svIth her jou ney ; her old
gown, her Paieley Mewl, emed faded
and old•feshioned beelde Mrs. Fairbaun's
newer finery ; she knew that her bonnet,
with its border of pleated net itorl lovenb•
bon, in silk "curtain," and its large ribbon
bows tied under the chirewas somewhat limp
and shabby, and that it had a trick of
slipping ever so little to one aide. Her
long utile boa was a little torn, and her
gloves were visibly mended. Now Mrs.
Denison eat not a slovenly person, and she
was vexed to be leen in this plight; but
then she had been traveling all day, aud it
would have been unreasonable to expect,
her to travel in good teethes. Being also
very shy, she eat almost silent, wishing
that Bather would come in. Esther had
fee more aplomb than her mother.
Esther Caine at Ian, with her ugly mush-
room hat at the back of her head, showing
all the little curie then in these days would
have been cut !theta and foe ered into a
'fringe," but which were then only deemed
"untidy." The circuit cat had proved feu
phiegmetic than her appearance indica.' ed.
She had of late, moreover, chiefly inhabit
ed the aoal.hole. The (=sequence was
that Father's pudgy little paw were veii
black, and decorated by several brilliantle
red scratches. She abook hands unwilling.
ly with the visitors, whom she was not at
all glad to 000, and then huitg over the
back of her mother's chair, moving uneasily
from one foot te the other,
"How old aie you, my dear ?" asked
Mrs. Fairbairn, who had not found the
minister's wife very communicative.
"I'm eleven," ;laid Esther, fidgeting more
than ever.
"Eleven 1 What a big girl Me is, Mrs.
Denison, I'm sure. I hope oho is good and
useful to you."
"She is a good child," said Mrs. Denison
with a momentary smile: Esther feltawara
of a sudden glow of pleasure, and looked
shyly at Mrs, }emblem from under her
40 they named their eystem of periodio long eyelashoe to ore whether the Circuit
,. change, that she classed her private dislike Steward's wife were not very much Ril-
1
..
UNDEIITAKER & EIMALIIER. te it smonget her eine. As to Esther, Me Dressed by thie piece of information.
Wad delifolirtelerW,,itliti the rospeet oils re- ittilesiontst of dyinig ahortlyh and hsving her
J. H. CHELLEW
',7,7,71;nm....se awl aannxiettyeroef wmrndatwo‘liel yotinwg pteterenoatinfltitt oafOar0)1181:e°rmnaininill.Y good
' Mane before the new house could be in. Mrs. Feirbaine however, went onspeak-
FINS IIKAItHE AND 0001D. - spent ed. " 1 he minister's houee'' wen tale- ing without another glibness at Esther. "I
(Not in , he combine./ an and furnished by the "Circuit," aa each am sorry to see," she taid solemnly, "that
congeries of zongregations under one head Ma Nuys' haa brought his naughty little
X 0. 7 QueenStreet, Eolith, Blyth
was called, and tne minister's wife was in granddaughter with him this afternoon. I
no way reaponeible ffir the varying de- saw her as I came in, and I took the oppor.
green of comfort and convenience which her tunny of telling her that she was a very
family might enjoy. naughty girl. She mimicked 7ny daughter
OLYTHCARRIAGE WORKS Luckily for Moe Denison, her teathetic to her face at the nabbath school last week.
• (malty Ited not been largely developed. I told her that if I were her grandmamma
She had simple tastes, and was well eon. I should five her a good wippinir and she
tent to sestept what was given to her by the actually aughed and said how g s'd Me waa
E3LATE B. (Sc SIMS. wife of the chief official of the congregation that I WIWI not her grandmamma. Don't
-the " Circuit Steward " was his proper let your little girl make friends' with her,
GENEBAD BLACK SMITHS deeignation-npon whom it devolved to see please, Mrs. Denison. I just thought that
that the homehold linen was sufficient and I would putyou on your guard."
-Men- that the cups and gement would go round. "Oh, thank you," maid Mrs. Danko!),
Of course these mattere depended on the with rather a startled effort after gratitude.
CARRIA6E BUILDERS vim and the wealth of the congregation, And then the visitors took their leave.
AM arm iu a better position than evei to alien who paid expenses. Hence unto much "They seem nice, plain, quiet people,
loth. wants ttl their nunterous customers.
WAGGONS, ItUGGIES,CUTTERS Se eLRicoe renegue variety into the preachers' lives. those Denisone," Mrs. Fairbairn odd when
re, Denison had known what it We to she was in the carriege with her daughter.
00 every description kepi on hand lout maim- leave a really flne house, " well found " in "Bat law, Caroline, hoe shabby die it 1 I
la awed to order. Plow repairs, formerly 1420 everything, and take up her abode in a wonder 0 she'd be offended 0 I offered. 1 .:
Sy Wei,Camphell, constantly on hand,
badly•built cotter in the country -a veri- a piece of stuff out of your grandpe's
Horse -shoeing a Specialty. Sa"1"11" guar. table cottage with brick floors and damp shop f" -Mrs. Fairbeirn's father was a
steed,
walls, where Me csught a cold, the effects draper, "She really isn't fit to be nen.
SLATER 4 SIMS, • BIM H , ONT of which lasted for the reat of her life. She And so old•feshioned."
wee used to these changes now. But there " She may have better thinge for Sun-
. - Was still a little tremulous anxiety as to day," said Mies Fairbsirn. " But I don't
what the next house would be like and 1 k OW Wk f, it matte s mu h I d 't thi k
NERVE r.,,,InlaZ
BEANSP24* D.1(61h°°44t
*wands of bodr
11 ovw."..4
ofien-db.
OWINI mew
no fang mato
or sit for_fdy
THZJA
Vinte for ',Whitt Mold in- theirpastors than they did in those far-off acquaintanee of his other visitors,
Liungitd, . days. But in Bather's youth site and her Die, Neave was a tall, 'mare man, with
parental had hardships to bear which a long, white hair, deereset eyea with red.
label. generation would not think of putting rime, a pendulous chin, end en irresolute
' up with. SW had learned a little trite mouth. He wore ratty bleak clothes with
A cable Sreapatch from London 'tote' philosophy from her veriousexperiencest"to a loosely tied white °oust, and walked
then the crotteisettlements In the Canadian take things as they came," "to be with • ;tick. His manner was exceedingly
Nerthwest havie been condemned es a cum- thsakful for whet ehe had," "to think grim. But his bands, like Esther'a were
Seto failure by the Government, and that of persons who had neither food nor not so dein as they might have been. He
all farther aorta in thin direction will he home," and similar axioms of which none looked the typical Dissenting Weiner
abandoced. Sir George Trevelyan, :Wore- of us tske meek heed in later years. Mrs. much more then Mr. Denison ; but he was
tut for Seetlithd in the Hem* of Come Denieon was not a woman tyho made cont. a builder and joiner by trade and reputed
moos, on Saturday spoke molt strongly pleints. Mr. Denison's bead was always to he neatly as TPA ste Mr. iairbairn Min-
ot th• failure of the scheme end maid it in the needs and it his feet were naught self
world be many a long year before the Gov- in the briers', or tern bY fagged atones, he The teatsble wan already ppre-td in th
mmentsligh, mulertuek•StAtaceleuleetion. did not /teem t think it ne..vevary t.. diumprown. Here Mr. Denison stood
He deseribed the about the pain. rarely conversin with hie user until
ot been for that ra, Denison end Esther presently appear.
ppiness, and that ed upon the mete.
the future,Sehrek Either looked round with Infinite curios.
nisons' lives ity for " The naughty girl.' She had often
Won lost under this opium of coloni- wouid lave been tranquil eta content beardad the genus, but failed hitherto to
ut Another element in the helmet was %melte*? But with the lair vessel ere Love come &arose • specimen. What was it like,
that twee firepealible to got emigrants of wrecked on the one heed and Faith•going to he a really nsughty girl, a definitely
the right glassier whom Parliement intend. down upon the other, what was lett otethe wicked perm It anybody had spoken of
$20,00D voted. No mingle family gallant little fleet of hopes blid joy, wth 'Esther in the term' used by Mrs. Fairbairn,
to the invitations diatributed which this mon and this woman had lathe f It th 0 she w uld have ladl sunk
4foot atoolhoo6 110 "Voted dia. itertod forth he the seining of life ter tato the mirth. Bet Mr. Neave'a grand.
rhea. tether! 'deviate iestrease lye with laughing
D r . on n
are s mew db. patient resignation to unknown drawbacks, that a minister's wife ought to dress well.
1/0/e! CAM of which nobody had thought it worth while It doesn't look as though she were spirit.
eagle& to describe in letters to her beforehand. ually minded,"
ulna I write of nearly thirty years ago. The " Spiritedly minded or no& I like to eee
Votere standard of comfort and culture has now a woman in a good gown," sald Mre. Fair.
.e; • been raised all over the cauntry. Even bairn, whose heart wite kind in 'mite of her
grileCita ; more sherply after the temporal welfare of Meanwhile, Mr. I nison was making the
.„ • tiny village eongregmions, I ant told, look °cessions' pomposit .
at Saltcoata and Killarney, N. W. T., and Nevertheless, if it had
declared that thlb pedpie senteoutwere not ilttffiteespaly of ranted
naturelly the has* palled ernigrents. Any overhanging doubt
energy or self.rellatice they Might have had nobody ut into words.
"war
7
not at all ea though she were Impreeetal by A.GRICULTUR.A.L.
the teen of the situation,
P illis yett Was the name of the
naughty girl. Esther looked at her with
a mixture of repulsion and respect. In
five minutes she was in love with her
Phillish little bend lied stolen into hers
under the tablocloth as they set demurely
title by side at tea AIM Esther's heart.
could not realm thie invitation to frientili.
nest, although she heel not yet exchanged
half a dozen words wieh her visitor,
Phalle hail a delightful woodland air
abed her. Hor fair fine brown hair way.
0,1 about her bead innumerable short,
soft eerie, of whhnsival lightness and evaty•
attributes. Her eyes' were hazel, more re-
markable for brillience and power of ex-
pression than for actual Minty, They
were net in hollowa of purple tholow that
spoke of uncertain health, and the sherply
cut little fsee was very colorless, The
month was Phillites most perfect feature.
The lipa hnsl a bowlike carve and a charm-
ing upward curl at the curners, melting
imperceptibly into the delicate cheek. It
was this mouth, with all its hestuty, that
betrayed her. It waft naughty, manful,
unametble little mouth : a lurking defiance
seemed always ready to leen° from
those curving lips. Wm sat quietly
through the !neat of tea and bread
and butter, replying only in mono-
syllables to Mrs. Detainees kindly remarke.
She made her most memorable epeech when
tbe minister spoke to her in his officially
mieisterial way, asking her whether she
liked going to chapel.
" No " she said bluntly ; " I hate it. I
don't oken go."
Mr. Neave betrayed some unanimity. He
said that Phillin wrie in very poor health,
and was not often little to sit through the
whole service. "She had fainted last Sun.
day night in ohapel aud had to be carried
out-."
" I pretended to faint," soid PhIllis to
Esther quite auslibly. "I wae so tired of the
sennon." There was a shocked silenoe, and
Mrs. Daimon began to think that the
Fairbairus were right in their estimation of
Phillis,
The roguish eyes looked searchingly into
lesther't but meeting only a puzzled re•
sponse, were gravely dropped again.
Mr. Neaeo huirlosily interposed Boma
question about the next Suntley'a aerviees,
and the children were let alone. But after
that speech he seemed rather in • hurry to
get tway, and made an enema about the
girl's cough, and the diner of the nighEeir.
• She wanted t•o aeo your little girl," he
maid to Mrs, Denison, half smiling, and
blinktng his red eyes. Mrs. Denison did
not look chsrmed. As the children lied
withdrewn to a sofa at the farther end of
the room, he sank his voice and began to
o r Anus for hie granddaughter's be.
liffnevieer. " She'a an odd little fish, with a
queer temper," he said ; "but she's eo deli•
oats that we let her heed a good bit of her
own way. Sheet very weak ; I doubt if
she'll live to grow up.
" Yes, I shall," seta Phillis decidedly,
from the ads. She had the ears of a ferret
and the eyes of a lynx -Neu which her
grandiather was liable to forget. "I don't
mean to die until I have enjoyed tnyeelf a
little ; I don't enjoy myeelf now."
The old !mu looked fretted and theorised.
"We'd better go," he said riging from his
chair ratherabruptly. "You'll be wanting
to unpick your things, Mrs. Denison. say
good -by, Phil."
Phil offered her hand rather sulkily.
Father was going to kiu her, se young
areatures will kiss whenever they meet; but
the child turned her head away with such
an air of not deeiring the statute that Esther
desisted, abashed. Bet just as the visitors'
were going, Phil looketi back and smiled
so arohly that Bother forfave her. It
hardly needed the whisper, 'Come and see
me loon, and 111 show you my books'," to
make Esther radiantly severe thst she had
found a congeniel spirit of a trickily sort.
"A sad specimen of a Toiled child," said
Mr. Deuison, mot e for Esther's benefit than
because he thought am when Phillis wee
gone. As a matter of faot, he was greatly
take!' with Phil's bright eyes end nosy
tpeeches. So were all !nen. Miss
Phil wee a confirmed flirt at ten
years old. Mrs. Denison was witer,
• ehoula be sorry to hear Esther
talking in that silly way." site oda, calif
in the powerful engine oir quiet ridicule
her aid. " when the poor child is
she will know better,"
" May I gm to me her soon 1" asked Het
er, palpitsting with anxiety, awl unable
keep a prudent silence.
" I think not," said Mrs. Denison.
Either burst into sudden passionate taus,
the fruit of fatigue and excitement. " hes
all -all -because of whet Mrs. Fairltairn
said about her," she sobbed ; and then
shivered with tear of what would follow -a
severe reprimaml, perhaps. for neither fatt
er nor mother possessed a naturally trenquil
tem er
But Mr. Denison did not catch the worde,
and Mrs. Denison undeistood and sytnpa-
thized with the child's nervone excitement
more than she would have liked te
" You bed better go to ned; you are tired,"
she said. "eoent I -we ere ell tired. You
need not cry shout it, Esther. Come away ,•
with me end we will unbutton your box. 1
It was against principles to cause
the child a'ter an outbreak of what was, in-
deed, nothing but "naughty teenier"; hut
1 1 1 d h
very lovingly when she was in bed, And
when Esther was asleep the mother mime
in once or twice to look at the fleshed cheeka
on which the long lashes were still wet.
Once, during these violin, the child began
tits nrer ittet turn in her sleep; Mrs. Den-
. n"
emotional disposition gave her anxiety
mmetimee, Had she got into one of her
statee of nervous midnight terror ?
But Esther wits dreaming of very mun-
dane thing'. She opened her eyes for a
moment end saw the kindly feat at her
bedsitle, then fell off to sleep again, mur-
muring a eentence of her dream. "Oh,
mother," she said, "I wish the Circuit
' g' c ran ca ."
Moe Denison was reaseured.
ITO BR CONTINTED.)
Itydrohltabla and Its Treatment.
The official amount for the pest year of
the persona treated for hydrophobia in the
Pasteur Institute in Parie has just been
published, and considering that England
%tends emend on the list of foreign contri-
butors in point of numbers, the statistics
Mould be of especial interest to thie mew
try. Although popular feeling has not per-
mitted the establishment of an institute in
England for the treatment of rabies, such
institutions having been, however, founded
in Brazil, Mexico, Russia, Turkey, Sicily,
&a, no fewer that tewenty•ix of our coutp
trymen crossed the Channel lest year to
piece themselves in the hands of M. Pesteur,
It is satisfactory to learn that out Of a
grand total of 1700 persons bitten by rabid
animate trotted in Paris alone only four em.
combed to rabies, and if we remember that
the usual mortality in such oases when not
admitted to treatment le from 15 to 20 per
cent. tbis remit is the more gratifying and
reentering. Among the arrivals at the insti•
tate was a Sister of Mercy from Madeira,
levities having mede its appearanes. in the
island for the fitat time at the end -of the
previous year, a dog from Portugal having
bitten several dogs which subsequently
went mad, one of which bit the petient in
question. One point of particulsr interest
and importance is brought out in the report,
and that is the deeresse in Go number of
cases of hydrophobia sent to the inetitute
from those parts of France where froth
sanitary and police meaeures had been
framed and straitly enforced consequence
of the disesteem manner in whioh rabies
had previously asserted itself and Ulm
hold of the district.
Old Horses Ever (111
Did you ever see a horse cry asks a
writer. Many people believe that horn*
do not weep, but those who Mee had much
to do with these faithful ereatures know
that on mural occasions they will thed
tura, as well as minus sorrow in the most
heartbreaking manner. In the wed where
the hardineas of the ponies causes the riders
to almost overlook the necessity of provid.
ing for their needs, it is quite common
when the weather is extremely cole to leave
an unblanketed pony tied up for two or
three hours when the tompersture ie nearly
zero and while its owner is tomeacting
busineu. thin cue the suffering is evi•
danced by the diets, which are 'tiniest like
sobe, and unmistakable tears freeze on the
rho4 !IL 1,:;,1L,
When a horse falls in the 'street and gets
injured, the Mock generally numbs its sem
mu so much that it doe/ not atther cry or
groan, but under some conditions an injured
hone will mina sympathy in Gm most dile
tenet manner. I remember a avorLe hone
of my own trod on a nail long enough to
pierce its foot. The poor thing hobbled up
to me on three legs and ivied as newly like
a child in trouble u anything I Call describe.
The eight was a vety tomiong one, al was
alto the crippled twin -lee gratitude when
tbe nail was pulled out atid the wound
demised.
11•00.11
The Barnet Soon.
Over fields that are ripe with the sweetness
That hides in the full -tasseled corn,
Over v lacy ids reachidg completeness,
Dini purpling attint.k elm at more.
Milne down in thy ittiteeni oldelid
0 Moon of the year hi her prime:
Beam soft. mother -hearted end tender,
Earl It bath not ft 11111101. time.
For the nood that stool long in the reseeo
Hath wakened to lif e 1.11111 to death ;
From the grave that, was earentent and bur -
00W
Hot risen to passionate breath.
It hall laughed in the nufillglit and starlight,
!lath thrilled to tho breeze and I ho dew
And fallen, to elk. in moo far night,
And all the old glatitices
moon of the hove,' ',, rich glory,
no: banners (enflame in tho sky,
And under thee mon write the story
'chat mins to hu heavens for reply
The story of work anti endeavor,
Of burdeo and weakness 01111 al rength,
The story tea 1(0.1101101.0V0r,
Through eentative dragging Ile length.
And though, ever stately and golden,
Thou moon of dm latest year's prime,
What sight thou thine eyo hath beholden,
No grief to thy pathWay may climb,
AS over the 1101.11 that aro rumen
Al evening, find level tool shorn,
Thoa poured thy splendors the deepen
•1 he 0000 and the silver of morn.
Vegetarianism.
Om of the noises which have led people
to rejeot the doctrine of Vegetananism
the ides that it is inspired by pietism,
religious convictions and monastiontortiflom
time But Ilia is a grave en or, for the
rational Vegetarienism of to.day is entirely
ecientifie, and dictated by the sole donee
to follow a oyster], eonforming to the lime
of nature. It has ocience on its side, ami
only the force of habit is opposed to it.
The muscles become soft, the size diminish.
es, humanity degenerates, and is kept in
working order only by sedatives and took/.
The numerous maladies of the stomach
and the in teet ines from simple catarrh to the
most serious diseaees of the orgens, are often and the temper of the onewho has to wait thus
due to our appetite for meat end other e, nar‘,13, tired. The following from the
stlaiala"14. Mao is 001 Wended le eat Country Gentleman, gives ono woman's
meat. His jaw is msde to grind grains and fortunate experience : Am I more tortu•
fruit.. Hie hands are made to gather nate t,han the inejority of women, oris it be.
them. The arguments drawn tram piled
ology are entirely favorable to Vegetartan• um I stetted in right? Jack alway comes
to breakfast, dinner or supper just on time.
ism. He says it is put si easy whop work atone
Mono hae recovered from its error in time es at another, if a man will only tnake
teaohing that eir the human body to he up hie mind to the fret. It certainly makes
strong and healt ey many elbuminout sub. housework pleaunter to have meals eaten
stances, particulnly those under the form when ready. I insist on dinner and supper
of moat, were neeessary, for it has mince at twelve and at six, if you live on a farm
demonstrated that the producer of bodily es I do ; I* at the table at exactly those
strength, above all, of etrength to the hours, and see what a nice afternoon you
mules, is not albumen, nor any other have and what ie still better, you won't be
substance containing nitrogen, as meat, for wash'ing dishes at nine at night, as many
example : it is a substance containing car. farmers' wive. ere deal.
Iconic acid and deficient in nitrogen.
The most reasonable nourishment, that Wintering Onions
which 11 most favorable to the normal work I will repeat my plan of keeping onion.
of our muscles, as also to that of our brain through winter in as few words as pouible,
and nervous ayatem, is that which contains ea some of your readers mey have forgotten
little nitrogen but more of cerbohydrates or perhaps not have noticed it. We
end fat. On the other haud, the substances select a piece of dry ground end dig a
in which albuminoids preponderate, whet' trench from four to dig feet wide, and long
taken up by our bodies, figure as useless or enough to hold all we have to put in
even dangerous matter, for they have a it, We put them about six Imhof; deep in
great tendency toward deoomposition and the pit. They ere put upon the ground,
they thee disturb the equilibrium of our
°egoism and produce disorder and dim
nese. but about two inches of etraw over them,
and then a few inches of earth on the strew.
We wish them to get frozen sa soon as pos-
te addition to this there are numerous slide after they are plat into the pit. After
maladies engendered by meat as trichinoils, we are certain that they are all frozen, we
typhoid fever, &a. The wrest., however, haul some msnure and cover them, perhaps
form a perfect food : that is to say, they in. it foot deeper than at first. There are two
elude all the elements necessary to our or• reasone for this. One is that if they are
ganiam ; albumin, carbohydrate'', fat, ctc. allowed to thaw during the winter they
It is only n00000117 to use them in their will elinost certainly vet, and the entire lot
Pure state. Natural bread to the only hY' be lost. Upon the other hand, if they get
gienic and physiologioal bread ; come. frozen too herd, they will either rot when
quentiy it should replace white bread, for they thew out or °Reba dead and worthless
exercise& a salutary effect on the in teetsein for seta.
and, at the same time, conatituies the best In the spring, after the frost is all out of
remedy for such disorders as abdominal them, we take them out of the pit and put
plethora, thrums of the liver, etc. them back upon the 'helves again, re they
The dry vegetabiets, peas, lentils, beans were during the fall before. There they
otintaining a great deal of nitrogen, almost remain until they are needed to met out. I
25 per cent., AID very nutritive, for theY nave tried venom plans of preserving onion
comprise only 10 or 14 per cent. of miter, sets through the sonter, btit none of them
while meat onnteins 7a However, veto. have proved as satisfactory la the above.
terianiam is not too presumptuous with re- la feet, we oonsider it just about perfect. -
geed to its wonderful powers. Its doctrines W.M.Smith, in Ohio lymer.
Amend, at the same time, the constant and
niteltigent pradice of ell sorts of hygieda The Caolera,
tuletLoalis fts aid pure air, light, heat \ Vhile we in Cann& have enjoyed cm-
piete immunity 1 rom,oholera, front almost
cold water, exercise And, oononsoolag
e,:zery country of Europe, es well as from
4,01101, the condemnation of all stimuli& .
Egypt and Arable, come reports of the
I o these onditionsitis diffieult to say Whl
exiatence of e.h.se acourget It 'made its first
would prove more beneficial the renunot
appeal:fence in KOMI In the opting of 1 899,
eon of meat or the application of a well
and its ravages have continuei ever since,
uLderstood hygiene. It it, however, Wee
being 'wee more widespread now than they
potable that Vegetarianiem at its best,
were a year ago. Reports show the disease
comprises in its memories many things
to be decreasing in Italy and Hungary,
which make it worthy of generel sympathy.
where for several weeks its ravages were
severe, and advancing weetwani, has enter.
leaping Old Rubbish. ed Germany, Hotbed, Belgium, Franco and
A recent nutnber of the New England England, in which five countries there have
Fanner had an excellent article on "The been between two hundred and three bun.
Itubbish•Keeping habit." It related ohiefly dred cases, about one.third of them fatal.
to indoor scoumulatione of rubbieh, but the The only places in England in which the
legion is capable of an application to out• disease is reported to have eppeared are the
door accumulations also. The writer tell. porn of Grimsby and Hull, while in Hol•
how he or site (I think it must have been 1 land the place most seriously affected is
lady) had oension to go into the garret with Rotterdam ; in Belgium, 1 ie Antwerp , in
a member of a certain family, end there Fume, Nantes ; in Italy, Palermo (since
discovered an immense pile of rubbieh, oon• the mbsidence of the disease in Naples);
sistiog of broken old eludes, feames of and in Germany, perhaps Berlin, though
broken mirrors, dilepidated welsh -stands, the cues there have been few. So far as
ragged bed quilts, which had been care. reported teem 1.aw been but one enee ni
' fully washed and lahl away, and a rusty, Hamburg this ear, and that wee in July.
molests stove. A chest in one opener wee . The infected p lees in which people on this
filled with torn books whin' had neither side of the Atlantic are moat directly inter -
beginning nor end, photographs from which uteri are Antwerp, Retterclem, and Mar.
the heads had been tore, a broken-backed seines, Entigratioe mentally lingo this
and dog-eared album, half sheets of music, year from these ports. The Jewish Russians
and pasteboard boxes, some without covert who are debarred from Hemburg go to the
and other covers without boxes. The fe. Bel ian and Dutch rts; many Italianagote
lowing conversation took place:- the renchportont eMediterranean. Every
"For what in the world are you saving all meek immigrantecarrying ships arrive at
Oil rubbish!" I (muted. "Why do you not . New York from eta or other of these ports.
sell the ru3ty stove for old iron,and the bed The Russians aboard of them are from a
quilt to the ragtnan, and makes bonfire of . country M whioh cholera has been epidemic
the contents of this ohest for eighteen months ; the Italians may be
The lady lifted her hands ia protestation. from the infected regions in Italy. They
"0 you destructive creature 1" she cried.. are all, of course, inspected before they can
"All these thing* may come Mindy some procure passege tickets ; and it would
day, I always believe in savin every• . hardly be possible to keep a doer super -
thing. These puteboard boxeafor flounce., vision over them than is kept constantly
aro handy in ease you want to send away e at the port of New York, The unitary
photograph, and the old bed quilts would authorities of all the countries end cities
be just the thing to smother flame with in ' of western Europe are dig laying remark•
ease of fire. There is nothing like economy, able energy this year in ie enforcement
you know." . of measures againat the cholera. The re.
"But this is not econotny," I binned. cent ditooveriee in science are of great ger.
"Were you to sell the nibbieh to the ragmen viee to them, and the sylitem of senitery
snd the old iron tnati, it would bring you co-operation that Well provided for laat
gh to buy all the photograph year hal proved toles especielly advantage.
money (MOD
envelopes you desire, with ready-made 11111 thia SUMMer. Never before during all
pasteboard backs, and hand grenades with the ages of the ravages of the great Asiatic
withal to extinguish fire." plague has it met with such reeistanee west
.1 never heard of those things," she said. of elle Black and Baltic sette a.e in the you •
"No," I nine 1. "People who have a 1893. The results have certainly justified
mania for accumulating old truck never do the maintenance of this resistance. Thus
;Wive, nor do I sity for the exeraiee of the authority whioh
keTephiunpiswigt,,hotaheatiiidmessu, far there does not appear to be any neoes•
think tho miter is any too hard in saying President Cleveland possums, viz , to sus.
" the mind which is bent on saving lot of pond at his discretion all idereourse be.
useless and shabby old things becomes tween the United States and any or every -
shabby end useless itself." It boson's* in. foreign country in which tiny infectious -
capacitated from earning and procuring the disease is prevalent. There redly seems
new and useful." Vow many illustratione less danger of the disease invading either
of this readily occur to the thoughtful Canada or the United States titan there
mind. The first I think of is the old log was a year ago.
house which it kept stondiog on eo many
farms as an eyesore and an enciumbrance. The Overzealous - auffragls .
In some eases the old log house is not so
very unsightly, nor haa its usefulness quite Helen Waterson, a well-known and ex -
departed, although the firewood in it week' cee tingly clever female Americsn antfragist,
probably buy boards enough to build a recently gave expression to opinions that
shed that would be quite as useful and will be alowly accepted by her own sex and
much more ornamental. Farmers are sot may cost her some of the celebrity she has
generally very sentimental, so it is hardly honestly achieved, Muse Waterson ex.
likely the old log house is kept as a tender prestea herself substantially as tired to death
memento of the past. It is oftener an in. of having women'a work regarded as of in.
tercet bemire it is done by women. Slur
stance of the rubbish•keeping hebit.
How often you see broken and abandoned would hem women do what they can SAS
implements lett in Orefield where they gave well as they can and take the consequences,
out, the iron rusting and the wood deisay. competing with hutnau beings rather than
ing without doing the least bit of good to with men tend she emphatically rebukes the
anybody. Sometimes the barn•yeed is all sisterhood for conetantly crying out: " See
" cluttered up" with mob things. The tide was done by a woman; did you think
iron parts might be sold for old iron, the she could do it so well 1" All thia is geed
bolts carefully oiled and kept for an soci. es far es it goes and the learned lady is
dent or an emergency, and the woodwork standing on proper ground. The time et
put under cover for future uso, or convert. ',male awaY when meu shall ma'
ed into kindling, It ie very rately the lt a point to condescendingly acknowledge
ease that a fermyarti is characterized by the ability of die other sex. It re a
neatness. Old 'Ablates, old implements, square, honest and legitireete struggle be.
and no end of old trash lie here, there and tween the wro great force' of societ•y, but
everywhere. How much nicer and how far there is a alight difference M the eases which
mote homelike the educe would look wer• Miss Waterton in her enthusitism appears
every eign of runt and decay removed,and bp to have entirely overlooked. She apparent.
air of kb, freshnesa, vigor and utility made ly overlooked the all important factor in
to pervade every nook and corner ot the such an argument that thie is etteentially
ermines from time door -yard to the back. age of differentiation. Men have their
woods. peculiar pursuits slid interests. Women as
This is one of many ways by wheal' naturellyeire concerned with matter' that do
country hoine and farm life may be matlee. not appeal to the tastes or methods of the
attractive, There is a mental and mown great I Am. In objecting to that feature
influence exerted by neatness and heatitif ;ft current journalism whieh a
at. I, . u,;ht not 1,, be 0%, erlooked as proni. cosumn or page to women she resents the
inent •111011f4 the educating forces which are reolignition of her personality as if that die-
ormetantly operating, eepecially on the tinction set her outside of the pele of hu.
youthful inind. Along the line of thought manittyyf Mies Waterston stopped to think
the .Couetry Gentlemen," of September 7, 'le WO d find she was "gaged in an "'
has so article, from whieh I quote in cone temp to tinsel her sex. But we will not
iflorwmist,_ion of the foregoing remarks as fol. peridt it. Wotnan can never be regarded
spert from her sweet femininity no matter
" The firmer who mine large and fine inawhat work the is engaged. When she
crepe sees more beauty in the business ?rues to shine in that chertrateristio she
than the one who only witnesses fait. rf ens in her vocation, and is of no value to
aim. The owner, therefore, who would the world or society.
brin Isis sons up to a fondness for agnou
tura pursuits should make 3 a special Min Garner up pleasant thoughts in your
, with them to present the estooseeful side of end, for plement thonghte make plaamat
I he prefeweits which they ago &bat to On ea.
/14.
gage in. The repulsive parts of the bulb
0909 should be kept in the background.
liendimme fields, rich crops, fine animal',
smooth meadows, golden grain, and -by no
mesas omitted -a reasonable share ut pre
ouniery prat. The plauing thereof farm.
ing must be Ina& aonspicireus. Ps it Raid
that all fanners tint fur this silecell Tney
do in some degree, but they two frequently
ellow the repel/sive part to become too prom.
Meet. Weeds deface the beauty of tielde ;
poet taus allow the intrueion of unruly
auimals ; rubbielt takes the plam of neat
tiess,and getterel disorder prevails through.
'tut the Imre end buffilings. Seance! la a
hetet ; and the farmer who becomes 111;11118•
tinned to having everything itt order will
perform all the neceleare work With lees
care thee the owner who fide everythinit
in deluder and conflation.
"Make the farm a neat anti attractive
place if you would have boys and young
mon attracted by it. Remove the rubbish
and drain wet plume aud ponds, and then
)1)11 will perform the required labor at loot
expense thee when you ',ere annoyed by 11,
or when you were wading through mnil.
Stumps and bushes cleared from your fields
will make better and cheaper cultieatien.
A stony field will beuonre greatly improved
by converting the stones into stone walle,
and make easier ploughing. Everything on
the premises may be made to ammo a neat
appearance. The orchard and fruit garden
may be gradually planted in suceessive
seasons, with enough of them only to he
kept in perfect order. A few ornamental
trees wilt add beauty to the whole. The
premises, kept in neatneme, may be inede a
pleasing home. Interest may be eecured
to the young by giving them a portion of
the improvements with their profits."
Promptness at Neale
There are many homes where the delays
in coming to the toble are of daily occur.
rence, and the busy housewife after the
worry of preparing nice food hae too often
to wait for the assembling of her tardy
family until the food is nearly or quite cold
TRE Cr47,AT
VINE bit,
StornacheLiver
The Most Astonishing Medical Discovery ot
the Last One Hundred Years.
It is Pleasant to the Taste as tho Swootost Nectar.
It is Safo and Harmless as the Purest Milk.
Thin wonderful Nervine °ride luts been introduced
I t thj
ti.n —.8 meetly le, die prepreame ,„„,,,,ree.triseric of the Great
south American Non ine Tonic, and lot. its 'treat valne-tiii41 ell,rat've
1 1
11:1S 11/11g MA.11 1,111,Wn by it fetlf Of 1110 0104 kat'n(qt phylitintr!
who have not brought its merits 8,11d. lo 1 knowledge Ot
general public.
This inedietne completely soh, the problem of the cure of indi-
gestion, dyspepsia. and diseases of the general nervous systetn, It III
also of the greatest value in the cure of all forms of failing health from
whatever enuee. IL itolorin this hy the r eat nurvine tonic qualities
which it possesses, and by its great curative poivers upon the digestive
•irgittis, the stomach, the liver and the bowels. No remedy co/npares
with this wonderfully valuable Nervine Tonic ns a builder and strength -
mer of the life forces uf the human body, and as a great renewer of
broken-down constitution. It is also of more real permanent value in
die treatment iind cure of diseases of the lungs than any consumption
'newly ever meal on this continent. It is a marvelous eure for nen-
011Am:1s of temales of all ages. Ladies who are approaching the critiest
period known as change in life, should not fail to use this great Nervine
Ponie, lowest constantly, for the spaye of two or three years, It Wilt
..arry them safely ovei. 'the danger. This great strengthener and curs -
Ave ia of inestimalile value to the aged and infirm, because Its great
rintrgizing propeteret will give them a new bold on life. It will add ten
tr Heim year' to the Yee of many of those who will Untt halt dosea
)ottioi oi the remedy caulk ear,
IT IS A GREA1 REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF
Nervousness, Broken 1 'onst 11 ill ion
Nervous Prost rat ion,
Nervous
Sick Headache,
Female Weakness,
Nervous Chills,
Paralysis,
Nervous Paroxysms and
Nervous Choking,
lot le I ash es,
Palpitation of the Heart,
5lental Despondency,
Sleeplessness,
St. Vitus' Dance,
Nervousness of Females,
Nervousness of 010 Ago,
Neuralgia,
Pains in the Heart,
'ains in the Back,
Debility of Old Age,
Indigestion and Dyspepsia,
Heartburn and Sour Stomach,
Weight and Tenderness in Stomach,
Leas of A ppetite,
Frightful 1 )1111 8,
Dizziness and Ringing in the Ears
Weakness of Eetronities end
Fainting,
Impure and Impieerished Blood,
Boils and (..'arbuncles,
Scrofula,
Scrofulous Swellings and 'Meets,
Consumption of th,t Luteete
Catarrh of the Liings,
Bronchitis and Chronic Cough,
Liver C01111 d aint,
Chronic Diarylera
Failing Health, Delicate and Scrofulous Children,
Summer rompiaint of Infants.
All these and many other complaints cured by thia ivonderful
Nervine Tonic.
NERVOUS DISEASES.
As a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has been
able to compare with the Nervine Tonic, -which yery Oceania und
harmless in ail its effeets upon the youngest child of the oldest anil most
delicate individual. Nine tenths of all the ailments to n hich the human
family is heir tiro dependent cm nervous exhaustion and impaired diges-
tie2i. When there is au insufficient supply a nerve fOod the blood, s
neral state of debility of tho brain, spinal 11 I ITOW, and nerves is tho
result. Starved nerves, like etarved tnuselea, 'weenie strong when the
right kind of food supplied; and a thousand weaknesses and ailtnents
disappear as the nerves recover. As the nervoits system mast supply all
the power by vibich tho vital forces of the body aro carried on, it ia the
first to suffer for want of perfect nutrition, Ordinary food does not tom
tain a sufficient quantity of the kind of nutriment necessary to repair
the wear our present mode of living and labor imposes upon the nerves.
For this reason it becomes necessary that a nerve food bo supplied.
This South American Nervine has been found by analysis to contain the
eseential elements mit of which nerve tissue is formed. This, account*
ft* its universal adaptability ,to tJae cure of all forms of nervous de-
r tugement.
CnAwronnerthrk, Augertal, R11,111,0CA WM6110100, 01 111.0111•1'61111).
21, 0), Cm, .51."4 Ntwkot. Nays : I bad been In a dlatreneed condition tor
nua Ovcre:-.1 desire to may to y.itt that
three yearn from Nervouaness, 1Veakneei of the
have fluttered for many years with a very serieue
dmitAaksztediti,tor, ,lintidoihnft„.31 ,a,co.,11,nueinne.10.0111,0ffidellmeeveuriye st,,,,,Dy;openr. Ss; ahnadd lbeeediuse ditoeloton,ruthngtileoteryir:
any appreciable good until was advised to
Smith American Nonlife, which done ute more
swats', with 00 relief. I bought one bottle of
nyde rtt,, tit; a1,111,10:1,11 vt,/, It% n, I 11111; e.1 KZ, t
try your tireat !Multi A Income Norden Tonic
good than any ;10 worth of doctoring T ever
*wised flt wonderful ;maven ill core lite etAte- 1 fit
knew the value 01 this ntimoy us 011 001111.1
arh and mneritente ome e.,,ste"1, , 0 tom t use MI. valuable nud lovely remedy ;
11,1"0'11V,Y, Etti'''1‘'Irt'!,',":1g)111g0111,ry Cu. entunder It the t raudett medicine hi the world.".
A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITAS' OAHU: 01I CHOREA..
caAwFoilDerli.Lu, i I June 22, 1887.
My daughter, eleven years old, was severely nilliettel wit It Si. Vitus' Dance
or Chorea. We gave her three and one -hull 'bottles of 10 American Nee -
vine and elle voinpletely restored. 1 ItelieVe If will owe every ease of St,
Vito 1' Dance. I have kept it in my family ror Wo yD:11 V, and nut sure it Is
the greatest remedy in the world for Indigestion and Dyspepsia, and for all
forms of Nervous Disorders and lulling Health, from whatever cause.
JOHN T. MItia
State of ineliona,
Montgomery County,} 00 :
'Subscribed and sworn to before ele this June 22, 1887.
(accts. W. WEIGHT, Notary Publrot
INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIA,
The Great South American Mervin() Tonle
Which we now offer vou, is the only atiscititely untioling remedy ever
discovered for the cure of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, and the vast train of
symptoms and horrors which are the result. ef disease and debility of
the human stomach. No person can afford to pass lit' thin jeweler incal-
culable value who is affected by disease of' the stomach, because the ex-
perience and testimony of many go to prove that this is the owe and
ony owe great cure in the world for this universal destroyer. Theee
is no case of unmalignant disease of he stonntch which can reaist the
wonderful curative powers of the South American Nervine Tonic.
Manta? 10. HALL of Waynetown, Ind , Nays:
1 owe my life to tim Omit South' American
Nervitto, I had been in hed tor five mont hop Irmo
the effects of an exhatiatod etoniach, Indigestion,
Nervous ProntratIon, and a general Mattered
Moe. ELLA .0. ttstarrof,, New Itou, iodise'
tem "t cannot PX111.11111 how much owe to tht
Nervine Tonic. Itly 0..4, in 15.011 completely shat
Ivied, appetite gone, f. 4 I marking and spitting
condition of my 0,11010 eyebolt. Had given up up Mood; am NW I HIM In the Soot stases
all hopes of getting well. find tried Uttar doe- ol conmumpthm, an inheritunee handed dawn
took with no ndlef. The find bottle of the Nerv- through several generations. I began taking
lueTonle improved memo much that I woe ableto the NervItio Tonic, and continued Ito time f 05
Iodic about, and a few bottle. cured 111C entirely. about all menthe, end ant entirely cured. it
believe It is the best medicine In the world. 1 Is the grandeat remedy for uerven, stutuneh and
san not recommend it too highly." lungs I have ever nocu."
No 7117di.in '71nar" "It 144"710 AM ring' 1:11tTeN tgt ratf O;t:Z I87.1.1"1;erv"0. N7T.emegict°:
rutree Itt merienn er lie 11/1 11 U • 1 e too N Typify. a
compare with South American NervItie no a cure for all forma 01 failittg health. It never falls to
cure Indigestion and hytowneln. It never falls to cure Chorea or Vitus' Dance. ita power.
bum up the whole ...wain are wonderful In hr extreino, It cures the old, the young, find the mkt
dle aged. It le a great friend to the 'mut and Infirm. Do not neglect to use Ode prortuue boos;
If you do you may neglect the only remedy whteh Mil restore you to health. South American
Norville is perfectly tdo, and very phoftetut to the torte. Delicate Itollta, 110 not fall to air thli
Liredatotrizl,y11:ixtotv,t,Iwtuttyllyi.ein.t. t rut ,bc ant y upon yoer lips and In your cheeks,
Large 16 ounce Bottle, $1.00,
FVPPV BOTTLE. WARRANTED.
J M. 11 A M I INON, Wholesale and Retail Agent for Myth.
APPLICATIONS THOROUGHLY REMOVES ,
Ti.iDANDRUrr
......."'"?'"'"‘" Restores Fading hair tees
....
Ni
DANDRUFF
—
D. L. CAVIttf. original Woe
urcao. %reuse Pannonva Agent. e P R.
ea 8„4„; koa.0,,,,,,,,,,d,k wpww,uetwoverwfDaw• Stoes failing of ben
door -iu Retina ie tumariums-in ny own wawa Keeps the 80017 clean.
a few appltatione uat only thoroughly .11114:Med
.1tritte1.1) dowandf aouniulation hue mow Imes hale see see Plights
- I
GUARANTEED hong of the hen, ramie it eon and pliable mot
prometal a villWo growth. Promotes 09094in' ...'
-ilbeWeWeeehe*Stelaletialtalltellettelleetenehollelleeleettel
1
THE RTPANS TABULES regulate the stomach, liver and
I bowels, purify the blood, are pleasant to take, safe and
always effectual. A reliable remedy for Biliousness, Blotches
on the Face, Bright's Disease, Catarrh, Colic, Constipation,
Chronic Diarrhaia, Cluonie Liver Trouble, Diabetes, Disordered
Stomach, Dizziness, Dysentery, Dyspepsia, Eczema, Flatulence,
Female Complaints, Foul Breath, Heat:ache, Heartburn, Hives,
Jaundice, Kidney Complaints, Liver Troubles, Loss of Appetite,
Mental Dapression, Nausea, Nettle Rash,
Painful Digestion, Pim- ples, Rush of Blood to
the Head, Sallow Com- plexion, Salt Rheum,
Scald Head, Scrofula, Sick Headache, Skin
Diseases, Beer Skeer e.L., Died Feeling,
Torpid Liver, Ulcers, Water Brash and every
other symptom or dis- ease that results from
impure blood or a failure in the proper performance of their
functions by the stomach, liver and intestines. Persons given
to over -eating are benefited by taking one tabule after each
meal. A continued use of the Ripens Tabules is the surest
cure for eListinate constipation. They contain nothing that can
be injurious to the most delicate. gross $2, gross
g gross 75c., 1-24 gross 15 cents, Sent by mail postage paid.
Address THE RIPANS CHEMICAL COMPANY, New York.
ativsemehehteh4WO.W6V64eso
WI I
I I I