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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1894-10-18, Page 7.MISCELLANEOUS READING CRAVE AND OTHERWISE.. eLeisare Moments Cau Bo Profitable Eni- ployed In claroi'IUly Reading These Interesting Selections. hiss Her Every Thy. 'Reader, have yeti got a wife? Hiss her every .day. y T1s the duty of your life To Kiss her every day. 'Tell her 'hat the world is graced By such as she—the true, the chaste- -Then haste—" Then put your arm around her waist Anti kiss her every day. 'Tell her that she growing prettier Every dawning day, Dearer, nearer, wiser, wittier. Kiss her evtry day. Many lives are Rraveward carried, Wounded. bruised and hurt and harried, "They stopped their sparking when they mar. ried. Often that's the way. Tellour wife how mueh you'd miss her If she went away; 'Take her in your arms and kiss her Forty times a day. Tell her she's your hie and crown ; :Never leave her with a frown ; Keep your ugly temper down And kiss her every day. Winter, summer, rain or shine Never sulk and blame ; -Spring or autumn, never whine For your own good name. :Somet,rrzes she'll bo cross and cold, .Never mind—she's good es gold; Lot her have her little scold, And kiss her just the same. When there's something wrong with baby, Kiss her every day, 'Twill help to soothe her worry, maybe, Kiss her every day. Kiss her when her soul Is cad, Kiss her when her heart is glad, 13e ymir fortune good or bad, Kiss her every day. Horse and Horse. Lady, have you got a hubby? Hiss him every day; Even if his chin be stubby, Kiss him every day. K, -member he bas got a bum Of self-eonceit you mustn't thump; .And even if he is a chump, Itls+idm every day. 'Make the gi•ly think he's wise, Kiss him every day; Could lick a man of twice his size, Kiss him every day. Make him thinly he's pretty. too ; Never raise a hullaa-ba•luo .But my dear white er you do Dias him every day. Make your cuckoo think he's smart, Kiss him every day ; The idol of your wifely heart, Kiss him every day. Toll him he's a perfect bute, Make him think he's mighty cute ; And tho' he's but a big galoot Hies him every day. 'Tell hint that you pray for him, Kiss him every day ; .; .ndsomething always say for him, Kiss him every day. 1Praise ids nose, his ears, his feet; Tell him that he's quite complete ; Mod forgive you—say he's sweet— Kiss him every. day. Try and be his guiding star, Kiss hire every day; 'Toa know not what his troubles are, :Kiss him every day. kOnee in every little while "£He'll meet with trouble --spare his pile— Always meet him with a smile And kiss him every clay. A Chiomgo Episode. ['Chicago is not a village, nor are its !people remarkable for rustic simplicity. (On the contrary, men and matrons, youths and maidens, they are all "real smart people," thoroughly up to date in everything. Particularly the women, •'who are educated in ever so many col - lieges of ever so many kinds of culture, rfrom colleges of beauty to medical col - lieges. Consequently Chicago socjety is in closer touch with the aristocratic European matrimonial market than so- .ciety anywhere else in the United States. The Chicago girl knows everything ; in ;feet, she is esteemed as a prize beyond 'her money or her price by the young noblemen of the old world. Yet it ap- pears that the Chicago society girl may -know too much. A Mi+s Belle White, who suffered death on Sunday last in the operating chair of a Chicago "complexion doctor," was a college gredaate and in :almost every respect a sensible girl. She ;had, it appears. but one fault. It was a .freckle. And she wished it removed from 'her face. She went with her married moister to the complexion doctor's for treat- ment. The doctors—they were a &m— had diplomas from seine Chicago institu- tion, and it took three of them working -steadily for an hour to remove the freckle, 'They used cocaine and electricity, which Miss White, as a college graduate, of .course knew all about. But when the freckle was gone so was the young lady's life. We make no cominent. This being .an age of science and learning, it is naturally difficult to know what the next .doctor let loose upon the community may scall himself or herself. But there should 'be some hesitation in , accepting what 'their professional cards state in their be - 'half. It ie said that the woman of the •period, will accept any doctrine unfolded -to her in the name of science, Ball Bearings on:Street liars. Inventive genas has not stopped with the pneumatic tire on the sulky and -bieycle, but has been busy with the work .of perfecting ball bearings with such sec Wcess that a few days since a street car, which was equipped with the latest in- ventions on hall bearings, that would do away almost entirely with friction, was drawn a distance of several hundred feet by a singla man tugging gently at throe strands of ordinary sewing thread at- 'tached to the car. Perhaps a more inter- esting experiment was that of a carriage manufacturer, who put another style of ball bearings upon the wheels of a large ,coach, to which four horses were ordi- narily hitched. Then he took a trained .dog, and harnessed and hitched him to the pole, when the dog drove the huge 'coach easily around the yard. This -sounds like fancy, but it is fact. Do Your Kissing at Home. A travelling man who was also at the 'head of a prosperous firm promised his newly -wedded wife that he woilld give her a dollar every time ho kissed her, and inthat way she could save plenty of money. Things went on in this way for several years, and as he made plenty of •money he faithfully kept hie promise. Finally reverses came, and the once prosperous travelling man found he He home virtually a pauper. wentome and told his wife and told her all, She, 'however, did not seem to feel -worried, and he was somewhat surprised when she .asked him to take a ride with her that afternoon, but he aseopted her invitation. Passing a large bleak en a well known street, she [said, eeThate e mine." Soon she -came to a handsome fist and raid, "That's mine." Well, she showed him several places with the mama remark until he be. .gan. to be suspicious and inquired, "litoW in the deem did you psonuaalatq GO retell wealth?" "Do you remember the can traet you made when we were first uinr- ried?" she said, "Yes," lie replied, "I do." "Well, I invested it, end it has made us rich," The travelling man hung his head and said. nothing. This was kept up for thirty minutes, until his wife became alarmed, and she asked; "What in the world is the Matter, and what are you thinking about?" He said : "I was thinking of how rich we would be if 1: had done all my kissing at home." Decaying Walking Rieke. "The cultivation of material for walk- ing-sticks is carried on in quite an. exten- sive scale in some parts of Europe," said T. L. Van Cleve, of New York, "ancl special .attention is often paid to malting the roots grow into shapely forms for. bandies. While in Loudon last year I went into a manufacturing establishment, the floor space of which covers nearly an acre. This concern has storehouses filled with native and foreign sticks from which stock is drawnas wanted for the shops, The sticks as they grow are .often very °rooked, and have tobe straightened. A heap of sand is piled on the top of a hot stove, into which the sticks are plunged until they become pliable. The workman takes the crooked stick while % is yet hot, and inserts it in a notch cut in a stout board placed at an angle inclined from, hire, where he bends and strains it. When it has become perfectly straight it is thrown down to 000l, after which it be- comes rigid and permanent in its lines. The same power which makes a crooked stick straight is applied to make a straight one crooked. A,11 the various kinds of sticks that aro required to be curled or twisted are, by the application of heat, made to assume almost any shape or forma' Wisdom, hi a Few Words, Moving music—the Italian's organ. Many big guns do nothing but roar. One bank note may dry many tears. Short lessons have longest memories. The more you think the less you will say. Intuition is inspiration's feminine gen- der. The hat brim is often harder than the man. There is always strength in a willing hand. The rich want and the poor need every- thing. Unless kings become subjects peace can- not reign. Their word is the only thingsome folks cannot keep. Baggagemasters checkmate many run- away travelers. It's all np with a fellow when his credit breaks down. The offceseekez' will indorse most everything but your note. Paradoxical as it may seem, some peo- ale go to the bad for good. Increase in population increases a na- tions perils and perplexities. The man who talks behind one's baek will never come to the front. There are times when the haughtiest head welcomes a thatched roof. One beauty can make a bigger fool of $100,000,000 than 100,000 sharpers. The best husband is the one who real - lees that his wife is an individual. The best wife is she who has spirit and common sense, as well as affection. The best religion is that of a good man, no matter by what name you call it. The bone of contention between the housewife and butcher is one of tender- ness. When women get into politics dead- locks eadlocks will characterize their conventions. "Tis well for the stock exchange broker to bear in mind that bulls are often made. It is not true that like always begets like. Selfish parents often raise the best children. The best mother-in-law is the other fel- low's. At least the jokers say so, but it isn't true. The man who calls out in the morning that he is getting up when he left's, sim- ply lies in bed, The best home is that one where love is not crowded out either by poverty, riches or selfishness. There are two places where it requires an effort to keep one's balance -on the ice and at the bank. As the cooler weather comes on the subject of free wool becomes more and more pleasant to contemplate. The best child feels for its parents neither fear nor awe, and is able to re- spect them without trying to do so. The political candidate mast probate the will of the voter before he becomes heir apparent to his suffrage. The newest style shoes are distinguish- ed, by toes which turn up into the air. Yet women are not more anxious than men to " turn up their toes and be daisies." in the undertaker's jocular way of putting it. If on Want to Bo Loved. Don't find fault. Don't believe all the evil yon hear. Don't jeer at everybody's religions be- liefs. Don't be rude to your inferiors in social position. Don't repeat gossip, even if does inter- est a crowd. Don't underrate anything because you don't possess it. Don't go untidy on the plea that every- body knows you. Don't contradict people even if you are sure you are right. Don't conclude that you have neve had any opportunities in life. Don't believe that everyone else in the world is happier than you. Don't be inquisitive about the affairs of even your most intimate friends. Don't get in the habit of vulgarizing life by making light of the sentiment of it, Don't express a positive opinion unless you perfectly understand 'what you are talking about. The h anon. elie "In looking out of doors do you notice how bright is the green of the grass and the leaves?" asked an elderly gentleman of a little girl whose home he was visit- ing. "Yee, sir." "Why dots it appear so mush brighter at this time?" he next asked looking down npon the bright, sweet awe with tender interest. teBemuse ma has °leaned the windage, and you can sea out better,'] shesaid. T1fIE: ROBBERY OF XR, DiTliTkliY.. HIM Silas Damply hoard that some forlorn tracts of land inYlinnesota, from which he never expected to realize a dollar, had been purchased by as New York syndicate for $50,000 he nearly suffered a mental collapse, It was net that be needed the money so much, for he had enough to live cons- fortably upon, but j use as soon as he knew that money was coming to him he want- ed everything within reach. So did. Mrs. Damply, who wished to show her neigh - bore how folks with money could make a stir in the World. She had about ex- hausted the resources of their native vil- lage within twenty-four hours after the receipt of the lawyer's letter telling them of their good fortune.. The money paid for the land was in the largest bank in the city nearest them, an 'there Mr. Damply decided to go and bring it home in person. "Will you get it in gold or silver 9" asked his wife, r •b'eauss of you do you'll need a, wheelbarrow to bring it home ha" " I guess not," said Mr. Duniply as he considered the matber; "I've been cal- culating a carpet -bag will be about as handy as anything to carry it in. I've got the same one I bought when we were married thirty-five years ago—it'll come handy again." So the old carpet bag was brought out and the moths shaken out of it, and Mr Dumply's best coat and vest, a few clean collars, and a package of Mrs. Damply's doughnuts put into it carefully. When it was padlocked securely, Mrs, Damply reminded her husband that the city was ND of people, mostly thieves. "Lorindy," said Mr. Damply, "do I look like a man that could be robbed?" " Looks don't hinder," remarked Mrs. Damply. "Don't I read the papers and know all about the young man who asks if you're from Pumpkinsville, and says he knew you when he was a boy, and calls you by name, and wants you to advance him $50 on a cheque. for $900? You can't teach your husband anything, Lorindy," When Mr. Damply stood at the window of the Grand National Bank he had his carpet -bag -with him for the reception of his $50,000. He had already been identi- fied, and now the money Ivan to be count- ed out to him. er What denomination would you pre- fer, Mr. Damply ?" asked the cashier. c c Presbyterian," said Mr. Dumply, who was a little hard of hearing, and thought the cashier was asking him what church he attended. " I will count them out in packages of $5,000 each," said the cashier, and Mr. Damply held open the mouth of his car- pet -bag and counted the bills as they were pushed throngh the wire grating. A number of. people were crowding about the window, and Mr. Damply felt very nervous. He sew two men watehing him, and gripped the handles of his carpet -bag with vicious determination. In moving back suddenly his feet became entangled in a woman's dress. Rip -rip - rip. He had torn the skirt. "Beg pardon, ma'am, but if I've done any damage I'm wiling to pay for it," he said clumsily. "Don't mention it," was the answer in a sweet, gentle voice, and looking at her penitently, he saw a tall, fair woman in black, who fixed her oyes on his face a moment in recognition of his apology. He had received his money, and had no excuse to stay any longer at the win- dow, and he was ashamed of his awk- wardness, and turning away he hurried to the depot and bought his ticket home. Not once did he lose his hold on his an- cient grip, and when he was seated in the car his arm was passed through tho handles as it reposed on the seat. He wanted to look into it and feast his old eyes on his wealth, but.jast as he was thinking of doing so two men passed through the car, and she knew them for the two he had, seen in the bank. "Ha!" he said to himself, "the plot thickens. Those men are robbers, and they are after xny money,. I'd like to see them get it, that's all." Silas Damply knew the dangers of pro- pinquity, and he managed to fill the seat himself until the two robbers. as he called them, had settled themselves several seats ahead of him. Then he made room for a belated passenger, a lady, who flung her- self down quite out of breath. "Oh," she said, "I was sure I had lost my train. It is such a relief to get it, even at the last moment." That voice ! It was the woman whose dress he had torn by stepping on it in the bank. She recognized him, and smiled at his embarrassment. "Don't mind a little thing like that," she said sweetly, "a city man would think nothing of it." "Unconsciously she had wounded where she had meant to heal. Silas Damply said to himself : • c 'Some of that money goes to make me look like a city man. I wonder what the difference is; and I'll find out. She won't twit zee then on my appearance." "Do you know those horrid men ?" she asked, as the two turned their heads to stare at her. "I don't, ma'am,' but I guess"—here he lowered his voice to a whisper—"that they are thieves." "They make me uncomfortable," she said, "I wish they would sit somewhere eke." Birt they did not, and at times all through the journey they would look back and, greatly to Mr. Dampley's re- lief, would stare at the young woman sit- ting beside him. He argued to himself that she had been the attraction for them at the bank, and wondered if they thought she was his daughter—no, his young wife ! Then he would scowl fierce- ly at the mon, who, however, took no notice of him, In order to forget rho rudeness of the men the young woman drifted into a des- ultory conversation with her seatmate, and he soon found himself highly enter- tained by her bright comments on the other passengers, and he kept up in his own mind the little fiction of the young wife and thought that with the fair stranger and $50.000 an elopement might be possible, such as were read about in the papers almost every day. It did not sthoughts came !teem as if these into hie mind by any volition of his own, and he feared they were sent by the old adversary himself, espe- cially as the very proper young woman had given him no assistance in his vas garies. $o just listened to her silvery - sweet Voice and thought ht whet a difference there wee between those ,over and the brisk gutterala of lint. Damply, "Pitmpkinaville !" willed the brake- men, and Mr, Damply, still holding on to hid preatotis oa#petr'bag, bade a bender good-bye to his new friend, glared de - flame at the two robber, and walked, off the train ince the arms of bis wife, who had come down to meet him. When they melted home he opened the oarpeg-bag and plunged his hand in to bring out to his wife's admiring gaze the packages of money. Instead he fish- ed out en article of his ownwearing ap- parel. " Wh--wh—where is it?" he screamed, as he emptied the whole contents of the bag on the floor. 'I haven't hadthe bag out of my band one moment, Where's the money?" Where, indeed! Frantically he ran- sacked the old bag, tearing its cheap cot, ton lining out, going through and through the ancient institution only to bo confirmed in his wild statement that the money was stolen. He told his wife, and the neighbors, and the village officials who had been hastily summoned, the samestory, that the bag had not been opened since he left the bank, that the money could not have been taken out of it without his know], edge, and that his band was nob once withdrawn from the handles of the bag, which he had held all the way in a firm grasp. He told them everything --the two men who he behoved had followed him forpur- poses of robbery—the woman on whose dress he had stepped, and who had sat with him on the train, and when. he saw a smile pass from one to another he went into convulsions of anger and disappoint- ment, and was carried off to bed where he lay and raved, It soemedthat leis rea- son would not survive the loss of that .money, of whose possession he had never dreamed until a few weeks previous. Then a queer thing happened. The robbery was of enough importance to reach the city newspapers and be exploit- ed as criminal news. The cashier of the Grand National Bank was it and was very much astonished. He sat down at once and wrote this note to kir. Damply z Dear sir, --I have read an account of the robbery which you suffered on youx return from this place, after transacting your business with this bank, You may be glad to know that you were greatly mistaken in supposing you had taken the entire sum of $50,000 placed here to your credit. You had only received one package of $5,000 when you suddenly went away, and I returned the balance of the money to the vaults, where it is at the present moment, payable to your order. " Yours very respectfully, t.. SINCLAIR IATTON. Talk about bombshells, they are non - explosives compared to such a missive as this. It did not kill, but it cared. Silas Damply took a new lease of life. There was still the mystery of the robbery to perplex him, and the loss of the $5.000, but with $45,000 left he did not feel like complaining. The bitter pill was the in- credulity of his neighbors, who did not believe one word of the story. "Likely,. wasn't it," they said, "that he would lose the money in sueh a way. He had been fleeced, but did not want them to know." A few weeks later another startling de- nouement followed. Mr. Du.mpley's money had been paid to his home bank by a draft, as it should have been in the forst place, and he was busy investing it, when he was sammoned ay the °flieials of the Grand National Bank to cone to their city and see if he could identifytwo men who were supposed to be mixed up in the robbery. He went and recognized them at once, when they were bronrl'+ into court, as the men who had followed him into the car and accompanied him on the journey home. There was another person, he was told—a woman, but he disclaimed all knowledge of her, when, to his utter surprise, the tall, fair woman of the torn dress, and his companion on that fateful journey, was placed in the witness -box. "Do you recognize this woman?" asked the court. "Y -y -es," stammered Mr. Damply, bat she had nothing to—" "That will do. Now, witness, do you recognize this man as the one you helped to rob on the train that day?" "I do, sir." "State the circumstances." "I cannot, as I acted under the hypno- tic inflame!) of those men." "I was, hypnotized." "Do you mean to tell the court that you were compelled to commit the rob- bery ?" "I obeyed the commands that were given to me in hypnosis. They suggest- ed a course of action to me without speaking a word, and I conveyed the same subject to the yuan sitting beside me. He believed he was holding his valise or carpet -bag in his hand when I bad it in mine. I gave him several glassosof wine to drink and he fell asleep." "Sir!" eried the distracted Dumpley, jumping to his feet, "it is not true, She never gave me—" "Silence in the court,"'cried the judge. "Now, madam, as a matter of fact, very important in this case, did you give this man a glass of wine?" "0f hypnotic wine -yes, sir. There was really no glass and no wine, but he believed there was. and at my suggestion drank it and fell asleep. Then, still act- ing under the influence of the men who employed me, I took the money from the carpet -bag; and after he left the car, gave it to them. The spell they laid upon me is now broken, or I should not b.. here." It was the most remarkable case ever brought before a court at that time, al- though hypnotic crimes aro frequent enough now. It came out later that the hypnotists had used their power on Mr. Dumbly, through their agent, the wo- man, a little too soon, so that he had eilosdd his transaction with the Grand National Bank before the money was transferred, and in this way the robbers had overreached themselves, and the bulk of the money was saved. The woman was not prosecuted, she beim able to prove that it was her first co1lnivance at a crime, and that she was not a free agent, but the men were con- vieted and sent to the penitentiary for a term of years. The money was never re- covered, but the loss of it furnished an interesting chapter in the history of erimanal therapeutics. /letter Than Alarm Clocks. Bright Boy --You don't have to wake up the girl any more, do you ? Mother—No, for a wonder;, she has awakened herself every morning for s week. I thought she would. Why so? All the flies I caught in that flytrap T took upstairs and let out in her room. The passenger steamer London was wreaked on a reef near Cape Arid on Saturday, Four passengers are missing. Yaricocele, Emissions, Nervous Debillty, Serninal Weakness, Gleet, Stricture, Syphilis, Unnatural Discharges, Self Abuse, Kidney and Bladder Diseases Positively :Cured by Tfc l(cw M1ko Trtmeflt$ eieri Discovetg p*You can Deposit the Money In Your Bank sr with Your Postzoaeter to be pall ue after you are CUBED under a written Guarantee! Set !Abase, ,I xcesces and Brood Ddseasee lose 'wreaked the lives of thousands of young men and middle aged men. The farm, the workshop the Sunday school, the otltoe the profes.. Bions—all have its victims. You�•g pian, if, you beve been. indiscreet, beware of the future. Middle aged men, you are growing prematurely weak and old, both sexually end Physically., Consult us before too late. NO NAMES U$ED WiTHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT, Confidential. YAIZICOCEL,U', EMISSIONS AND SYPHILIS CURED. W. 5. COLLINS. W. S. Collins, of Saginaw, Speaks. W. s. COLLINS. "I am 29. At 15 I learned. a bad habit whieli I oontin- nad till 19. I then became "ons of the boys" and leda' gay life. Exposure produced Syphttir. I became nerv- ous, and despondent; no ambition; memory poor; eyes rod, sunken aad blur; pimples on face; hair loose, bone pains; weak back; varicocele;dreams and losses at night; weak parts; deposit in urine etc. I spent hun- dreds of dollars without help, and was contemplating suicide when it friend recommended Drs. Kennedy & Korggaan's New Method 'Treatment. Thank God I tried ft. in two months I was cured. This was six Tears ago, and never had a return. Was married two years ago and all happy. Boys, try Drs. Kennedy & Her- - . - Bxroz;E TaicmTnt r gan before giving up hope." Arra mazessn'T B. A. TONTON. Seminal Weakness, impotency and 8. A. TONTON. Varicocele Cured, "When I consulted Drs. Kennedy do Herman, I had little hope. Twos surprised, Their new Method Treat- ment improved me the fust week. 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