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The Exeter Times, 1892-4-7, Page 6asioseac••"""'"-"4 3.03SE110::.1). ly Marriage Custrees, The trst attempt of the Isiebarien to establish souse form of legal re ;',.tion in lien of the free love of earlier thele, was the marriage by capture, says ave oler in Frank Leslie's Weekly. In .is et -t :swag men, having seen some girl of his 17*".ie who pleas- ed hot fancy. celled tog...flier baud of his brother bravo, and, catchn his vietim ttt some defenceless moment, be, :mu and gagged her, and dragged her away to his home, henceferth to be his wife. Two effective scenes are those repreatintirg, firet, the maiden happily sleeping_ in 'her rude hut, while the lave.maddened brave, stealthily miters, and quietly, but firmly, tangles his jagged spearhead itt her heavy hair without minium her; and, second, the poor girl 1m -eke, and being dragged away by the hair of her he d, her hands and feet tied, by her ruthless captor. This was a very common method, and is even now premised in the wilds of A ust ralia. A ino:litication of this cestom was found ageing the Egyptians. There, the female it-pa:a:ion met at the public bath, and the eThartne ot this and that young girl were deser.bc d to the youth who wished to wed, by his tenia‘e relatives. When he decided upon itie that salted, his fancy, an arreanse- ment esete made with the girl's father. The prospiseive bridegroom, at the head of a gorgeen4 proceriou of his friends, accowe pained hy musicians and. dancing -girls, then went et the girl's home in the evening, and made a show of tearing his resisting bride from her father's proteeting arms, There- upon he placed her, entirely covered by au embroidered a.nd jewel -studded veil, under magnitieent canopy borne by four sieves, and, in eompany with torch bearers, siugers, with all the display possible, bore her away to his home. Once there, the singers sing anti the dancers danee, while the bride, still carefully veiled, walks up and down before the groom to display her grace and charm. The entertainment finally over, and. the guests departed, the husband unveils her, mei tor the first time feasts his eyes upon her tie:stales. These are two espeeially et- feei ive scenes. Next in importanee we have the marriage b" pteehase. Strictly speaking, this cus- tent vsries among the dillerent nationalities as to the actual wedding ceremonies, almost ril of vehicle were, however, wild and picturesque ; but a view of it slave market alwaye elves a tine opportunity for pictorial larity reepeethag the time of meals. The 1 human system seems to forin habits, and. to be in a degree dependent upon the perform- auce of its functions in accordance with the habits formed.. In respect of digestion that is especially observable. Another cold meat dish. Out into thin unbroken slices some cold roast beef ; sea- son with salt and pepper, and, spread each with a thin layer of veal stuffing. Roll up, secure with string or narrow tape, put into a stewpan and cover with brown gravy. Stew for about twenty zniuntee, thicken the gravy with floor and butter, aaid serve on slices of toast. The practice of "trotting' a child on the kuee of the nurse or the 'nether, though it has the sanction of longpractice. has not the Benetton of common-seese, ond should never be indulged ha, especially with infante. i Treating the adult n the ratio of corres- ponding strength, the exercise would. be about equivalent to bcin,,eourselves churned up and down on the welkin beam of it good- sized steam engine. SPRING SMILES. It is probably after be has given himself away that it man feels cheap. Telephones are a great convenienee, auti vet people are all the time talking against them, A postal card is it good deal like a man's watelt. When he getsliard up he tries to get all he can on it, "You kick the bucket, we do the rest," is the unique aign over a coffin shop in one of our Western cities. The quality of userey may not be ;train- ed, but it frequently managers somehow to get exceedingly thin. (iood Old Lady to tramp at the door)— Are you a. pious mom?" aramp—"I thiuk so, mum ; I love pie." Boston Mother—" Why does Priscilla blush ?" Annette—" Please, mum, she's studying improper fractions." " Patti has a pensive air about her, don't you think so ?" Not a, bit, of it. On the contrary, it is ex -pensive." " Is it true that Chollie lost all hie clothes in it hotel fire 2" " It 18, When Chollie was fired they kept his trunk." Sunday -school Tetecher—"N'ow, can any little boy tell me what Rester is celebrated for?" Good Little Boy (eagerly)—" Eggs." What Does it Matter? BY nee. WITEBEilat wrecox. Wealth and glory. place and Power, What are they worth to me or you? For the lease of elite rens out in an hour. .a.nd Death stands ready to claim his due;' Sonnding honors or heaps of gold. What are they all when all is told./ A pain or it pleaSure, a smile or it teor — What does it matter what we claim / For we step from the cradle ont the bier, And. a careless world goes an the same. Hours fat gladness or hours or sorrow, What does it matter to us to•rnorrow Truth of love or vow of friend, Tender caresses or cruel sneers, What do they :natter to us in the end/ For the brie day dies and the long night nears, Passionate kisses or tears of gall, The grave will open and cover them all, Morneless vagrant or honored guest, Poor and humble or rich and great— All are racked with the world's unrest; All must meet with the cOnimen fate. Life from childhood till we are old. What is it when all is told I Teacher--" Mary? And what is your last etfeet. Here we have the girls yet to be mese g" Young peemt—" I can't tell just sold postured in the foreground, while their yet, the chanees are it will be Smith." unfortunate comrade is standing on exhibi- 1 «i'ii „e yOu later,. said the slangy Lion before the group of buyers, a prof 05. yoeng tnen. " No, George," she mitrueured, sional exhibitor, 11'"elf it Nubian .slave, i don't yoe say that. It's pearly twelve calling attention to the good pants of the o'clock now." present "lot," At the extreme left a alave is just covering his master's reeent purchase, while the auctioneer in his box cries his "Oeing, going, gone" over the freedotn and happiness of a defenceless WOIDAU. The prospective buyers, with radiant facee. Alt, soon the season will be here Of which swains often dream, When it's ',most too warm for oysters And 'most too cold for cream. Bertha's mother saw tit to punish her for eaeh e.othed in brilliantly bedecked gaie some little naughtiness. After a enunte the ments, and bearing a millet of jewels in his child sobbed out, " VeU, mamma, that hurt, ; you whipped inc right where there weren't eny bones." hand to win loving gianstes from inthiTerent eyes, form an appropriate background to the white robes and sad or stony faces of the girls in front. Pm' the Woman Who Loves flowers, The woman who loves flowers yet who cannot at this season efford to indulge her taste should go afield as the buds begin to swell. f.st her gather lilac and sprays of young birele branehes of beech, wild plum, pussy willow, cherry, forsythia, and wis- teria. Then, if she have a, sunny window, let her set the. here branches in it vase of warm (not hot, not tepid) water on the whitlow ledge and pstiently await develop- ments. Her pains will soon be rewarded by abun- dance of blossoms, small it is true, but per- fect in form and color. As the water ovals - orates care must betaken to fill up the vase every second day, nsiug, of course, warm water. As far as possible keep an even temperature and avoid draughts. The writer recalls a ease where a bunch of prom- ising buds Was completely spoiled through the carelessness of it servant who left them in frie:t of an open window for half an hour. To Stop Nail Biting. The suggestion is made concerningh the nail-biting habit that an efficient remedy is to dip the finger tips after every hand- waehing into a strong solution of quinine and glycerine. Any druggist will prepare it of requisite strength ; the bitter taste will -top children from further biting, and will remind an adult as well. Persons afflicted with hangnails can cure plaintiff, seem carried away with excite - them with persistent treatment. They come mentment 2" "Nein : he vos carried away usually from an abnormally dry condition on two piece pear& mid his headt split of the skin, The fingers should. be soaked & I open all down his pack." "That will do. Von may stand deem." The Daily Graphic contains the third letter of their special commissioner describ- ing his visit to Russia.He writes of a workroom having been established by Prince Viasinisky's steward and his wife and adds -e-The steward's wife told me an amusing though touching anecdote of what had oc- curred two days before. The news of the sewing -room had spread to a village some miles off, and two sisters determined to nake the attempt to get to the workroom, although they had sold every article ot clothing they possessed for food. They bor- rowed a neighbour's horse, harnessed him to their sledge, wrapped their father's sheep- skin coat round them, and drove off to the workroom. Arrived there, they jumped out and ran into the room, when the steward's wife sa-vr that one girl was stark naked, while the other had nothing on but the rem- nants of a shirt. They had driven the eigut or ten miles evith only tl.eir father'e tatter- ed sheepskin coat over them, and the ther- mometer was standing at somethiug like 10 degrees below zero (Fahrenheit). These two determined young girls were pointed out to me. They were now clothed in garmente made in the workroom, and looked clean and industrious lasses. Bards often write. " 01, onward flew, Thong] ver stream the meadows thr agli," Suppose they told it not to go -- W hat do you th ink the stream would de? Does your pastor permit himself to make jokes in the pulpit ?" eaid oae lady to An- other. " Oh, yes," was the answer in an apologetic tone ; "but theyare never very erred. once and no one laughs., "It's my terrible mouth they say, that makes My enemies all clecame," Ile grimly said. and then with his mouth Be licke1 a poor lit tl e s. amp ! Professor*" All statistice prove that the blonde women are more difficult to get on with than the brunettes." Astonished Auditor*" Are you certain of that 2" Pro- fessor*" It's a fact." Astonished Auditor —" Then l'm positive my wife dyes her hair !" Ile must have been a very bright hey, a very bright little boy, who said to his mother : " I wish it lion would. eat me up." " Why?" the mother asked. " Because it would be such a joke on the lion. He would think I was inside of him and I should be up in heaven." Young Sprightly—" I have come, sir, to ask your daughter's hand. The erection is returned, and I ani in a 'condition to keep her." Father (spreading his hands over his face)—" I have only one daughter." Y. S. Well, I only want one wife; I am not a Mormon." "Now then," said Judge Sweetzer in a loud voice, Mr. Baumgartner, you were present at thia fray. Did Murphy, the Coming, but not Sudden, Oh, the good time is a-cenain', you must hope to eee it start, When the sermon and doxology won't. be so °. far apart; An the man with the collection won't strike OfleuiCCOo'tin, ein' tbewli geta men to glory without whippin' of /aim in! It will be with ne same daY, Per we kinder hoar it liummini; But it's mighty far away. An' it's in :edgy long oecom Oh, the good time is aecomine you must meet it if you can, When the aloe with it lantere evIll go looking for the man ; And the man when caught, mid taken by it whirlwind of surprise, Will not 800 his friends forsaken, and resign before he dies( It will be with us some day For we kinder hear it hummln'tm But it's mighty far away. An' it's mighty long a.condie1 few minuteevery night Dead the dried end leosened skin carefully cut away. Then osaline or nail salve, procurable at any drug store or toilet counter, may be a,pplied and left over night. The salve performs a double office of healing and nourishing the sore Dead impoverished skin. In caring for the nails a jeweler's file, so called, will befound very much better to use than the coarse ones usually provided in manicure sets. In any event, eschew these—the sets —buying separately and of the best quality, scissors, polisher, nail brush and file. Hints for the Household. Salt and vinegar will clean the mica in stove doors. If salt is put into whitewash it will stick much better. Eighty-five per centof the people who are lame are affected in the left side. If you want boiled rice to be white add a tittle lemon juice to the water in which it is boiled, Ladies will be glad to hear that the crocus is to be the favorite flower for bonnet trim- ming this spring. Cod-liver oil, taken in small dozes in the form *of an emulsion after meals, is recom- mended as a preventive of influenza. Cases of deafness have often been cured byalie use of glycerine applied by dropping it into the ear and a plug of cotton wool or 1Mt being placed. in afterwards, so as to 'keep the ear moist, , Persoas suffering from cold in the head will secure some relief by using glycerine. They should obtain a camel's heir larnsh, • medium size, of druggist, and with this paint the nostrils with glycerine as far back in the passage as possible. For the baby the bath should be just a few degrees above blood-heateand when it is over a gentle rubbing with a soft towel will not only absorb any moisture left on the *kin, but will tend to prorecte the circula- tion, and to maintain the he of. the body. Children should be taught early—even daring the first set of teeth—to clean their teeth at least one,: a day. This will prevent the teeth decapng, and thus injure the h,Ccond set. By being careful of the first set they are laying a good fountleetou for the second set. A common cause of indigesefon is irregu- Terrible Plight of Two Ladies. (1 -olden Thoughts:for Every Day. Moll day -- For all wo love, the poor, the sad, The sinful, unto Limo wo call ; 0 lot tby mercy make us glad ; Thou arton e Jams, and our all. Through lifo's long day and death's dark night, 0 gentle jesus, be our ligbt• Swe.ot Seviour, blessing ; night is come ; Through night, and dark nee4 near us bo Good angels watch about our Mime. And we aro one day nearer thee, Through life's long day and death's dark night, 0 gentle Jesus, be our light. --(F. W. Faber. Tuesday—Religion is so far, in my opin- ion, from being out of the province or the duty of a Christian magistrate that it is, and it ought to be, not only his care, but the principal thing in his care ; because it is one of the great, bonds of human society,and its objeet the supreme good, the ultimate end and object of man himself. The magis- trate, wbi o s a man, and charged with the concerns of men, ml to whom very special- ly nothing human is remote and indifferent, has a right and a duty to watch over it with au unceasing vigilance, to prefect, to j pro- mote, to forward it by every rational, ust, and prudent means. It is principally his duty to prevent the abuses which grow out out of every strong and efficient principle that actuates the human mind. As religion is one of the bonds of society, he ought not to suffer it to be made the pretext of destroy- ing its peace, order, liberty, and its security. --(Edmund Bloke, Wednesday. Through the day Thy lovo has spared us; Now wo lay us down to rest ; Through the silent watches guard ne, Let no foe our peace molest; Jesus. Thou our guardian be; Sweet it is to trust in Theo. Pilnems here on earth, and strangers Dwelling in the midst of foes; Us and 0111'spreuerro fron_ita. eknhogneyriSnion In Thine arms Inv woronm; And, when life's short day is past Best wita Theo in heaven at last. B. Thursday—Like flakes of snow, that fall unperceived upon the earth, the seemingly unimportant events of life sucgeed one another. As the snow gathers together, so are our habits formed. No single flake that is added to tho pile produces it sensible change. No Single action creates, however it may exhibit, a man's obaracter I but as the tempest hurle the avalanche down the mountant and overwhelms the inhabitant and hia habitation, so passion, acting.upon the elements of mischief which pernicious habits have brought together by imper- ceptible aecunmlation, may overthrow the edifice of truth and virtue.—J. Bentham. Friday. OttU not know why suddenly the etorm Should mix° so fiercely round xne in its wrath; But this i know—God watches all my path, And I ean trust. I mitV not draw aside the mYstio veil That hides the unknown futurefrommy sight; Nor knew if tor me waits the dark or light; But I can trust, nave no power to look moose the tide. To see while here the land beyond the river, But this I know, I shall be God's forever: So I can trust. --(Anonymous. Saturday—I truse everything under God to habit, upon which, in all ages, the law- giver, as well as the schoolmaster, has main- ly placed his reliance; habit, whiatt makes everything easy, and casts all difficulties upon the deviation from it wonted course. Make sobriety a habit and intemperance will be hateful; make prudence a habit and reckless profligacy will be as contrary to nature of the child, grown or adult, as the most atrrocious °mos are to any of us.— (Lord Brougham. Some Russian. Sketches. A. correspondent of the London Daily Graphie, investigating the famine -stricken districts of Russia, came to describe some of the native's customs as follows; "There are scarcely any forests in the province of Tambof, the ground is simply bare steppes, with scarcely a tree or shrub en them. Yon can take it sledge and drive for miles aver the undulatingclams without coming across any forest laud. Here and there you see a recently planted wood, con- sisting of young trees vehtth have been set by some enterprising landed proprietor. The result of this want of wood is that the inhabitants are obliged to use straw for fuel. A bundle of straw ispushed into the oven and a, light is applied. When the straw has burneti out,, leavino nothing but the glowing embers, the oven is Blest up so that the heat may be retained for as long a period. as pos- sible, As there was a failure of the crops last autunite there has been very little atraw Available for fuel this winter. In fact, in some of the poorer villages there are cottages where the warmth of it tire has for several months been unknown, In such cases two or three families have crowded into one bat, and heve tried to keep some beat in their bodies by peeking themselves like sardines on the top of the stove, and on the shelf which extends thence to the opposite well, on a level with the top of the oven. This shelf is generally six feet wide and eight feeti.ong, so that abouteightpeople can find sleeping,accommodation on it. In many of the larger huts a wide benchs %lee the place of the shelf, but the bench is not a. very warns sleeping place if there is no heat in the stove, hence thepre- ference for it shelf close to the ceiling where It is warm. While passing through St. Petersburg the other day I saw some clothes which some indnstrious and philanthropie ladies were making for the distressed peasantry. Tlieso ladies were, in my opinion, wasting their labor, for in the first place the =teensl used was too good, costing about four or fivetimes the price ot the cloth of which the moujik and his wife make their clothes ; and in the second place the garments were not such as the people ordinarily wear. The peasant woman Wean a Wit, it petticoat, and a Bid For a Spring,. Hat. They were about going out, and slie sat down while' her husband got into his over- coat. "1 don% believe yon love me any more," she said with a sigh. "I'm convinced of it," and her voice trembled a little. "Not love you, my dear? Why, how absurd I Must I tell you every moment that f love you—love you with ell my soul ?" " oh, that will do to say, but I know you care for me no longer. How can you love me in this old hat?" Irascible Diner—" See here, sir, don't you see I am waiting here." Complaisant Waiter--" Very well, sir, very well, sir, then I will go and wait somewhere elm" uninver xnenneata : 'AM.—, LAT, saji•TI,J1,111.0.,..•••=". BilEAD-MAKERIi '190 r ..•-m.i.t..ss? . NEVER ITA:te 10 (RE Skfantielm FC,74' 34.I.EZ BY ALL ')E11R1 FREEMAN'S WORM POWDERS Are pleasant to take. Contain thdr own Purgative. Is a safe, sure and effectual destroyer °twangs in Children or Adults. aanaanansa SPARE MOMENTS. The average size of an American farm is 610 acres. Some insects are in a state of maturity thirty minutes after birth. A squad of policeman in Philadelphia now rush over their beats on bicycles. Four pounds of gold have been collected from the soot of the olaimney of the Royal Mint, in Berlin. There are nearly 10,000 steamships in the world, and their aggregate burden amounts to about 10,000,003 tons. The owl is unable to move the eyeball, sheepskin coat. Her legs are wrapped tip in which is immovable fixed in the socket by while the richer women wear long felt boots a strong, elastic'1 " cart agmous ease. • rags, and bark shoes are tied to her feet ; shirt, trousers, and bark shoes. or long felt cannot breathe with the mouth open, andif boots, and a sheepskin coat. ior head -gear it wese forcibly kept open, the creature the women tie a, scarf or handkerchief over would die of suffocation. the head the men wear a sheepskin cap. The entire coast -line of the globe is about Obviously these people don't want jackets made orilannelette, or vests of hygienic wool, or pettinoats of pink flannel, with cur- ious designs in sestbetic colors. A woman was offered a petticoat which had been sent from Moscow and she refused it, saying she would be afraid to appear in that in the vil- le.„04. Such are the inexorable decrees of fashion even in humble life. It would, therefore, be better if the ladies of St. Pet- ersburg and Moscow were to buy common material and send that to the villages with stocks of needles and cotton, and let the villagers make their own clothes. As it is, some of the people honestly say they can not wear the clothes, and refuse to take them, while others take the clothes—ancl sell them. The money thus obtained goes to time drama -shop. reaching to the knee. The man wears a The frog, owing to its peculiar structure, A Hotel in the Desert. It is said that 6,000 foreigners in quest of health are spending the present winter in Cairo. Among them are a few who prefer quiet to gayety, and the air of the desert to that of the city. A while ago a, hotel was built in the desert near the pyramids. Several hundred acres of tee desert land were bought in 1884 by e wealthy Englishman, who was a sufferer from consumption. He believed thatethe desert air would be a specific. For two years he lived with his wife in a little house erected on the sand waste be had bought, and regained most of the strength he had lost. Believing that the desert air would be most beneficial to invalids afflicted as be was was he erected a sanitarium on his property leaChe dieu just before its completion. The building he put up now forms a pert of the hotel, 'which is reached easily from Cairo, and has a good many guests, not only in- valids, but those who -wish to spend a night in the desert end have more time for inspec- ting the pyramids than they enjoyed former- ly, when they were compelled to hurry away after a blew hours in order to return to Cairo the same evening. .A Question of Time. A story is going the rounds about a local juryman, an Irishman, who cleverly elle- witted a judge, and that without lying: Be came breathlessly into court saying : "01, my lord, if you can excuse me, pray do. I do not know which will die first, my wife or my daughter." "Dear me, that's sad," said the innocent' judge, "certainly yon are excused." The next day the juryman was met by a friend, who, iu a sympathetic voice, asked: " How's your wife 2" "She's all right, thankyou." "And your daughter 1" "She's all right, too. Why do you ask?' " Wby, yesterday you said You did not know which woulti die first 1" ' "Nor do I. That's a problem which time alone can wive." 130,000 miles. All the correspondence from the Vatican, concerning church matters is carried on in Latin. No fewer than twenty-nine peers died daring the past year, or at the -rate of more than two a. month. is derived from the Italian mas• tino, or the French mastin, both of which signify large -limbed. The terrier takes its name from its habit ef following game into burrows in the earth, which latter in Latin is termed terra. Swiss authorities are arraeging for ex- periments with carrier pigeons in connection with the postal service. During the persecution of the Christians by Nero, men and women were covered with tar, or some other combustible material, and set.fire to, to serve as torches for the char- iot -races. James Whitcomb Riley's income from his readings and recitations a/Rale it bank presi- dent's salary, while Bi 11 N ye itt 1801 cleared $40,000 from h is mm pncaranens an the rostrn m. 'fax O'Relf and Will Carleton get AX) it might front their managers, en a ticoege \V. Cable receives $100 ever time he reads. RLWARDS FOR BIBLE READERS. cErtRAL Drug Store .ANSON'S BLOCIt. A full stock of all kinds ot Dye -stuffs and package Dyes, eonstantly 022 hand. Win an's Condition Powd- the best in the mark- et and always resh. Fsmily recip- e( s carefully prepared at Colin]. Drug Store Emote Ca LUIrZit NERVE BEANS root Winter Competition of The Ladies Home Magazine. quesrrows.--Whore does the following words first PPenr 'tithe Old Testament; ulf...110wi,nniig," "Wfyg," lid 'Dove:" Where does the following words aria ppear In the New Testament: "Junr..4,," "Poisu." tut " KING 1" Wsnxi,v nxxxs,—Every week throughout this great 0:Intention prizes will be distributed as follows; The Tat correct answer received (the postmark date on each .'Iter to be taken as tho date reeeircd) at tbe °dire of the DIES 11,0ME INIAGAEINE (each anti every weeto will got OM: the second. correct answer, $100; the tblid 5o0; mirth, a beautiful silver service; fifth. five o'clock silver ervige. met the sleet SO correet answers will got prizes. -.84111g !real $25 down to $I EveryShit correet an. ,vsr, irrespective of whether a prize winner or net. will ..ot a medal prize. Competitors residing in tha southern totes, as well as other distant points, have art equal hanee with those nearer home, ea the postmark will bo .ur authority in every case. Itia.ns.-13aoh list of answers must be accompanied Y 1 to pay for six rurintlis subseription to one of the oat Boxes 1%1.4,4"Am:reit in America. rtErnameens.—"Tnit Lseies area/awe is alt able to Garry out itapromisee —Peterborough Wan: WO Times, "A. splendid paper, and financially strong. -Hastings (Onneda) Star. 'Every prizo winner will be ure to recelee just what he is cc:titled to."—Norwood %was) Register. Moues, ehmild be sent by post Odes dcr or registered letter, Address, Tut LADIES.HONS k AMA-ZINN Peterborough, Canada. NBIt'VZ BNAN's aro a pew die- covery that cure the worst casco ei Nervous Los; Vigor and railing Ideal:owl; restores tho weakness of body or mind caused by OVOI,WOrk, Or the CITOni or ex._ ceases of 7outh. 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Foreign Countries. Write them. Book, explanation and proofs mailed (sealed) free. Address ERIE MEDIOAL CO., . BUFFALO, N.Y. The need erves 01 the Lubon Medical Company is now ati S !Toronto, Canada, and may be consulted {either in person or by letter on all °bionic) diseases peculiar to man. Mrn, young, old, or middle-aged, who find themselves nerv- ous, weak and exhausted, who are broken down from excess or overwork, resulting in many of the following symptoms: Mental depression, premature old age, loss of vital- ity, loss of memory, bad dreams, dimness of 'eight, palpitation of the heart, emissions, lack of energy, pain in the kindeses, head ache, piinples on the face or body, itching er peculiar sensation about the scrotum, wasting of the organs, dizziness, specks before the eyes, twitching of the muscles, eye lids and elsewhere,bashfulness, deposits In the urine, loss of willpower, tenderness of the scalp and spin e,weak andflabby muscles, desire to edeep, failure to be rested by sleep, eonstipation,dullnessofhearing,loseof voice, desire for solitude, excitability of temper, sunken eyes surroundedwith LEADBIZ bily looking akin, etc., are all symptoms of nervous debility that lead to insanity and death unless cured. The spring or vital force having lost its tension e very function wanes in consequence. Those who through abuse committed in ignorance may be per- enanently cured. Sena you, address for book on all diseases peculiar to man. Books sent free sealed. Heardiseuee, the symptoms of which are faint spells, purple lips numbh' eis palpitation, skip beets, 'hot 'flushes, rushof blood to the head, dull pain in the heart with beats strong, rapid and irregalar, the scond heart best quicker than thefirst, pain about the breast' bona, etc.'cen positively be cured. No cure; no pay. Send for book. Address /A. V.I LUBON, 24 Maclonell Ave. Toronto, Ont ' r. • Children Cr' for Pitcher s vastortai MoCOLL BROS. & COMPANY TOZLONTO. Manufacturers and. Wholesale Dealers in the following specialties Cylnuter Reel Engine ILS 'Wool Bolt Cutting Eurelce. TRY OUR 'JARDINE MACHINE OIL AND YOU WILL USE NO OTHER. For Sale By B1SSETT BROS, ETeter, C4it. Dr. Morse Indian Root Pills. Dr. Mozse's IndiaD. Root Pills, Dr. More Indian Root Pills, Dr. Mort. -,'!z) ,t.adittn Root Pills. Jr. Morso's Indian Root Pills. save Doctors' Bills use Ificrs:a'o Indiaq PIs, PHE ..41F.rr FAMILY PILL / IA USE , VAT SALZ 111 Ad L DgALERS Keep the Worhs en good order. W. I NORMAN, Ont., January rs, x8go.1. Cumsmocg, Brockville, Ont. Duna Si.,—Your " Dr. Morse's Indian Root Rills' are the best regulator for the system that ImUninlit3. can use. Life is as the timepiece: frail and delicate are many of its works. 4 tiny ptuticle of foreigc substance adheres to the sMallest wheel in the works and what is theresult?—at first, only a slight difference is perceptible in its time -keeping, 'but wait you; a: the obstruction grows, the irregularity becomet greater, until attest, what cotild have been recti5e4 with little trouble, in the beginning, will now require much care it- thoroughly cleansing the entire works So it is in human life—a slight derangement is neg. lected, it grows and increases, imp.erceptibly at first then rapodly, until what could, In the begifeeing, have been cured with little trouble, becomes almost fatal. To prevent this, I advise all to purify the system frequently, by the use of Morse's Pills, and so preserve vigor and vitality. Yours faitlifilly, H. F. ATwats... : sgroere Safe -Guard. AMAEAUDIJE PONDi N.S. Jan. 27„`3)o. W. 1.1 COMSToCK, Brockville, Ont. DEAR SIR,--FOr many years, 1 have beennfkm believer in your ." Dr. Morse's Indian Roes Pate." Not with a blind faith, but a confidence wrought hi an actual personal experience of their value en merit. My business is such that I spend much Om: my time away from home, and I would not con- sider my travelling outfit complete without a box ef Morse's Pills. Yours, titc. M. R. 'Manx:a. vantage Artflole sells tve13. BORAcHOIR HARBoR, N.S., Jan. 13, ht.., W. H. CoStarocis, Brookville, Ont. -,- DEAR Srur-Thrs is to certify that I deal in Pati Medic:hies, including various . kinds of Pills. I a, m:mlnleyour, comb ore of the Dr. Morso's Indian. Root Pills than of , thr-•?", I find are still list, c &c, N. sales N. L. lememox.soe.