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The Exeter Times, 1888-6-7, Page 2Want of Sleep sending thouSanda annually to the Itaiane asylum). ; the dootors say thie *0-ablatriiig1yen the inaraaaa- The usual, eemedieS, while they taaar give temporary relief, are likely to do more harm than good. 1-)rhat is needed hi an Alterative and Blood -purifier. Ayetas Sarsaparilla is incomparably tLe best. It corrects those disturbanees in the circulation which coatse sleepleee- altos, gives there:teed vitality; and re- atores the nervous system to a healthful aondition. esq.kesee- Rev, T. G. A., Cota, agent of the Mass. Moine larissionary Soeiety, writes that kis stomach was oat of order, his sleep veryoften disturbed, ana some im- purity of the blood manifest ; but that •a perfect cure was obtained by the ase • of Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Frederick. W. Pratt, 424 Washington Berea, Boston, writes: "Mjr daughter was prostrated with nervous debility, Ayer's Sarsaparilla • restored her to kealth." William v. Bowker, Erie, Pa., was faired of nervousness and sleeplessness by taking Ayer's Sarsaparilla for about two months, during which time his weight increased over twenty pounds, Ayers Sarsaparilla, PREPARED BY Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Bold by all Druggists. Price $1; six bottles, $5, THE EXETER TIME S. publisced every Thursday morning, at 'eh Ti IMES STEAM PRiNTING IOUSE Main-streetenearl y oppositet ton's Jewelery Store, Exeter, Our.,by ,iohu Nirlaite & Son, Pro- onetors. neves or anynaecemze irstanseresou, per line.. . .' .10 cents. eh u b eequeatin sertion , per line 3 cents. To insure insertion, advertisementshould be sentin not later than Wednesday morning OnrJOB PRIN'TING DEPARTMENT is one 1the largest and best equippoct in the County f Huron, All work entrusted. to us will receiv ur prompt attention. „Decisions Regarding News- papers. Any person wh o takes a paper r ul a rlyfrom posteofece, whether clireoted in bis name or Jenether'e, Or 'whether h e hap slab scribecl or not IB xesponsib1e foi payment. 2 If e,peeson. orders hie paper elieeeniinued lte roust pey all saeoaas or the publisher may sontinue tio senclit until the payment is made, and then collect the whole amount, whether eljeepaper ie taken from rhe °Elea Or not, 8 In eui be foe ebb scrip tices s, the suit may be institutedin the place where the napes is pub. -listed, although the subseriber may reside hundreds of miles away. 4 The courts have decided that refusing to bake newspapers or piniedielels from the post- offiee,or removing and leaving them uncalled or is prima facie 'eVideuce of intentional fraud • HEALTH, The DOIlleatiO DoOten For ehildeen who are entomb to group, make a little bib out of chamois akin, out the neck easd sew on tapes to tie it on, then wielt together seine tallow and pine tar, rub some of this in the chamois and let the child wear it all the time. Renew with the tar ocomionelle, Nearly one.hoef the population are more or less silleited with neuralgic pains. In- stead of sendingfor the doctor, who willpro- bably prescribe a plaster and a dose of me- dicine, we advise the sufferer to heat a flat- iron, put a double fold of flannel on the painful part, then move the iron to and fro on the flannel. The pain will cease almost immediately. We have seen the most pain- ful eases of neuralgia relieved in less than ten minutes. ' Dr. Harris, of Simla calls attention to • the value of the fruit ofthe Einbelia ribes for tapeworm. The close of the pulverized fruit is from 1 to 4 drachms, given in milk. It has an aromatics taste, and is _about the Wee of a pepper seed, According to Die Drymock, it has recently been exported in large quantities to Germany, and is gold to be used as the chief ingredient ef several patent tapeworm "species." The following is a good drink for a level patient who is convaleming : Soak a table spoonfulful of gelatine in a cap of water after it has stood for an hour, pour a 0U o belling water on it; As it dissolves add a tablespoonful of currant jelly, the MIMS quantity of sugar, a tiny pinch of salt and a little cinnamon. After it is cool stir in a cup of thin cream and a very small wine glass g eherry. In cases of bowel troublee a little brandy Eubstituted for the wine. Five ways to stop a cold :- 1. Bathe the feet in hot water, and drink a pint of hot lemonade. Then sponge with salt water and remain in a warm room, 2. Bathe the face in very hot water every five minutes for an hour. 3. Snuff up the nostrils ho salt water i every three hours. 4. Inhale ammonia or menthol. 5. Take four hours' active exercise in the open air. Summer colds are the worst of all colds oftentimes, as it is then very diffieult to • protect one's self properly. A ten grain dose of quinine will usually break up att cold in the beginning.. Anything that will set the blood actively m circulation will do it, whether it be drugs or the use of a buck- saw. Professor Crudeli has devoted years to the scientific study of malaria, and is without doubt the hig,heat living authority on the subject His conclusions are therefore en- titled to great weight. He repudiates utter- ly the paludal theory. of malatio.-that is, that malaria is exclusively produced by the putrid emanations of eavamps and naarehes. On the toutrary, he fields thet 14 IS produced in soils of the most varied composition, with- out the presence of any putrefaction what- ever, and is due to the presence of a specific living yeeetable germ. This germ may ex- ist in soili without poisoning the atmosphere, iremainnginert for years, even for centuries, retaining its vitality, however, and becom- ing active only when certain necessary con- ditions are present. These conditions, the concurrence of which is indispensable for the Exeter Butcher Shop proauctiou of malaria, are three in number, ' viz: A temperature which does not fall below 675 degrees Fahrenheit, a very mod- erate degree of permanent humidity of the soil, and the direct action of the oxygen of Butcher &Veneral Dealer the malarial ferment the air upon the strata of earth coneaining R. DAVIS, —IN ant; MINDS OF— :A/1'E A.r.f L. • Moderate Drinking and Health. - The disastrous effeats of habitual intoxica- tion on the health are universally admitted -not only the immediate injury to the ! drunkard but the remoter effects on his Customers supplied TUESDAYS, THUM. posterity. Alcohol has thus been proved a DAYS AND SITUBDAYS at their residence . river of death, deeper, broader and more irresistible than flows from any other source. ORDERS LEFT AT THE SPIOP WILL RE OEM PROMPT ATTENTION. But all good men,. in a not very remote past, and not a few m our day, have accept. ed, and do accept, moderate deinking as in itself safe and helpful. The argument used is that we are born into conditions which everywhere impose the necessity of moder- ated indulgence in all our gratifications and all our aripirations ; that God is training us to self-control as one of the ends of our pro- bations,' life. • But in the first place, moderate drinking tends so strongly and, in most 05808, 80 irre- sistibly to excess that it never could have entered into the providential arrangements of a wise and benevolent being. In the second place, -and this is what we wish mainly to insist on now, --moderate drinking, in itself and wholly apart from its dangerous tandeacies, itjares the health, shortens life, and transmits to children phy- sical and moral degeneration. This is not mere theory. It is aaserted as a fact by the highest medical experts. Said William B. Carpenter, M. D., F, R, S., of the University of Linden in his celebrated prize essa,y, "The habitual use of smaller PENNYROYAL WAFERS. Prescription of a physician who has had a life long experience in treating female diseases. Is need • monthler with perfect success by over 10,000 ladies. Pleasant, safe, effectual. Ladies ask your drug. gist for Pennyroyal Wafers and taken° substitute, or inclose post- age for sealed particulars. Sold by au druggists, 81 per box. Address VIE BUENA CIREEDLCIaTa CO.. DETROIT, EV Sold in Exeter by J. W. Browning, C. Lutz, ancl all druggists. A • Sens110 cents postage and. we will send you free a royal, valuable sample box of goods that evillput you in the way of making more money at once, than anything elee in America, Botb.sexes of all ages can live at home and workin spare time, or all the time, Capital noteequirud. We will start you. Immense pay sun for those who start at once. STINEMN &C� ,Por bland Blaine How Lost How Restored Just published, a new edition of Dr. Culver - well's Celebrated Easay on the radical cute of • reesteroloseare or incapacity induced by excess or early indiscretion. The celebrated author, in this! admirable essay, dearly demonstrates from a thirty years' seccesefile practice, that the alarming comequencee of mei. abuse may be radically cured.; pointing out a mode el ;sure at once sitnple, certain and effectual, by means of which every sufferer, no matter what hit conditioa may be, may cure himeelf cheaply, pri- vately, and radically. Aer This lecture should be in the hands of every '• youth and every num in the land, iient under seal, in a plain envelope to any ad dross, post-paid, on receipt of four oents, or two ?Map stamps. Addrese THE CULVERWELL MEDICAL 00. 41 Arm Street, New York. Post Office Box 450 4586-1y tererereeMeffiffeereeeffeed • ADVERTISERS can learn the exaot cost • of any proposed line of • advertising in American papers by addressing Geo. P. Rowell & Co., aste wepaper Advortieing Bureau, 10 Senetedo Si., New Vorle. d /Octal. for 100-1enge Pesinsianlois Imethers make =ening children," so every mother, or, indeed, every girl or woman to consider the ore of her health a peered whomiey one day become a mother, might duty. As it is impossible for o, WOXIMM to Allfil the obligatione of marriage 'without health, it follows that every girl who is a cautlidate for matrimony eheuld take care of her heelth, and for the sake of others neg- lect nothing that will make herphyaically strong and active. Some married women suffer terribly because, when Married, they were ignorant of oatural laws which they should have learned to obey. If the home - mother, as the Germans call her, is worried and irritable, the children become dull, de- pressed, and also irritable ; • the husband grows ditoontented, and either adds to the general worry or seeks his pleasures out of doors; and the servants, getting oily °rose Woks and words, become ineubordinate. A bad temper in the mistress of a house is a curse to all around her; but ib often proceeds from wrong habits cf life, which would be altered if proper attention were paid to health. • Many women look upon devotion to their household, constant self-saorifice in little things, and neglect of themselves, as heroic, and glory in sufferiegs endured, as they think, for the benefit of their husbands and familiee ; but if they injure their health by retch eelf-imposed in- juries the loss to their families is very ser - bus. It is the duty of a wife to retain her good looks and usefulness as long ab she can, for her husband's sake, and this can only be done by obeying the laws of health. The best and cheapest physicians are Dr. Quiet, Dr. Diet, and. Dr. Merryman, but they are not consulted by some women as much as they ought to be. Often a woman will go on laboring at whatever she may have In hand, when aching head and limbs and tired eyes have long ago indicated that rest was need- ful. She says that she does not care what she eats, and that anything will do for her. She hurries through her meals and either runs about or begins to work directly after eating. "This is not the way," sus Dr. Diet, " to keep a good digestion." Dr. Merryman prescribes exercise in the open air, and, as much change of scene and amuse- ment as is compatible with honest work. Women ought to be the preservers of the health of °theme but this they cannot be if they neglect their own health. "Get health," writes Emerson ; "no labor, pains temper- ance, poverty, nor exercise that cau gain it must be grudged. For sickness is a cannibal which eats up all the life and youth' it can lay hold of, and absorbs its own sons and daughters. • I figure it as a pale, wailing, distracted phantom absolutely selfish, heed- less of what is good and great, attentive to its sensations, losing its soul, and afflicting ther souls with meanness and mopisgn, and with ministration to its voracity." • 0 Abnormal Bleep. Familiar as is normal sleep, no one can fully explain Lit. It is, nevertheless, a bless- ed fact. Though it seems to take oneithird from our life, it really prolongs it by the daily renewing vigor. e Some of the abnormal. forms of aleep ex- hibit strange phenonaena. We need not dwell on sleep induced by opiates.; the leth- argy of apoplexy and, what is doubtless akin to it, the sleep of the drunkard; the coma of Bright's disease and diabetes, and the al- most irresistible sleep caused by freezing The sleep of somnambulism 18 a very in-. teresting form. The person will get up and go abroad in the darkness and. into, the web dangerous situation wholly without fear. The power of sight is often greatly exalted, and seems sometimes wholly independent of ordinary vision. Another form is that of catalepsy. In this there is an entire loss of sensibility and or- dinary consciousness. The limbs may be planed in any position, the most grotesque and uncomfortable, and they remain so, as if theydvere made of wax. Still another form is that of hypnotism, or mesmerism, induced on susceptible sub. jects by skilled manipulators. The person becomes insensible to pain, and esis will' is entirely subject ts that of the experimenter. The barest suggestion through any sense is sufficient to put the person tinder the domi- nance of the idea suggested. Akin to artificial hypnotism is a morbid condition into which persons of a nervous organization sometimes fall. The celebrat- ed. Soho Sleeper" would, for many years, fall asleep for a fortnight or more at a time, meanwhile exhibiting more or leas of the peculiar characteristics of hypnotism. Many similar cases might be cited, for hardly a inonth passes when the newspapers do not tell the wonderful storyof some "sleeping girlliving ," who has been unconscious for weeks; but some of the cases are not only interesting scientifically, but pathetic. In 1145 the wife of anEnglish colonel ap- parently died. • The husband persistently refused to have her buried, and watched over her cold and motionless body for eight days. Suddenly, on the bells of a church ringing, she started up, saying, "It is the quantities of these liquors," -that is, the I moderate use,-" if sufficiently prolonged, will ultimately be attended, in a large pro- portion of cases, with consequences prejudi- cial to the system." His position was sup- ported by over two thousand of his profes- Bet hardly any testimony could be more conclusive than the facts developed by a Landon Life ,Assurance Company. This as- sociation, having originally insured only to- tal abstainers, in 1860 accepted moderate &hikers, who never drank to intoxication, bnt kept the accounts of each class distinct in separate books, During the period 1866.1881, of every one hundred in the section of total abstainers, thirty survived 'beyond the line of calculated " expectatiot," while only one survived in the other section. Colonel j. L. Greene, President of the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Com- pany, whose duty it is to :make enquiry into the last illness and death of many thousands of all claesee, says: " The degree to which many diseases com- monly referred to as malaria, overwork and • other vague causes, are actually grounded in what would almost invariably be called a teimperate use of drink by persons of reput, ed temperate habite, would be incredible to the mass of people." The diseasee montioned by him are congealed brable, insanity, paralyaia, diseases of the kidneys, liaer and otornaoh, pneumonia and rheurrat• tient. Health/ Metherei. "No poinein the warfare against disease," 'writes Dr. Richardson, "18 eo important as that of getting the women of the hotaiehold to work heart and soul altar good health in the houdehold. 'We always look to W011101 for the cleanliness and tidirtese of home, We say a home is miperable if a good wife and mother be not at the head of it to direct the internal arrangernenta. A. slovenly wo- man le a :nark few diearedit ; but there earl be no doubt that tilt excellences of tidy women in Vespeet td order and cleanlitees have., without any distinet system. or triode of limanitific educe,tien, Saved as from tenter° and fOhal outbreaks of dieeaties," "Ailing ast rayer-bell ; it is time to go." A lady patient was requesting to have a hot water bottle put, to her feet, saying, "1 feel" -when she passed into a cataleptic state, and remained in it three hours. On opening her eyes, she ended ,her sentence,-- " a great cold over my whole body." • Animal Intelligence, A New York paper speake of a couple of orioles that have built a nest in a tree at Central" Patk. In order that no animal able to climb a tree might reach their nest, they built their habitation at the extreme end of a light branch, and when the work weal half done they saw that the little house was bending the branch so far towards the earth that when the house was full of yoting ones it would be so near the groued that dogs andcabs might reach it. Here is where the reasoning power showed hoe% The birds sat on the branch studying their house for a time, and then flew off in (march of a string. They found atnne twine in the Park, and with it they united the two elastic boualis to a sturdy branch overhead, reaming their nest -building after the string had been firmly woven. The branch can Sag only to the lirrata of this cleverly con- traved stay, and will not bend far enough towards the earth to expeee their young to danger from °ate or ether predatory animals. There are brains in that engineering oper- ation. An, Brening Out. lacibinsort (who hale had gm evening out)- " Well, goo' night, boob, Had (hic) aplen' time. Goo' night." Brown-" Do you thiak ,you'll be able to find the keyhole when you got home, Robin. son 1" RObitison (thoughtfully) -"Vin' keyhole? I shay (hic), Brown, be luoky 'f T fin' housh 1" eilatema-" Johnnie, did you throw that oat into the vl1 ? " johlanit-" Indeed I didn't, I was just holdilig it over by the tail, and it waggled loose and fell " YOUNG FOLKS, BILARGING VOA CHEM ay vengenie Kennet. Nobody teachee Canadian boys how to breathe. City boys, and many from the country too, have finer cheats before they go to school shan they ev'er do afterward. Sitting in. a soitool-room, or shop, or factory, or :my other room five or Aix hours a day, and then sitting most of the rest of the day besides does much to weaken the chest; for when you sit still, you do not breathe your lungs half fell. Take one large full breath now, and see how your chest rises and ex- pands, and how differently from a minute ago, when breathing only as you generally do, Many boys actually do not breathe their lungs full once in a whole week. Is it any wonder they have weak chests, and that they easily catch cold? How are you to have strong lungs if you do not use them? Which has the strong arms -the invalid leaving the sick -bed, or the blacksmith? he who mes his anne, or he who does not ? When walking at the rate of four miles an hour, you breathe nearly five times as -much air as when you are sitting still. Now the fuller breaths you take, and the more of them in a day, the stronger and fuller (sheet you are going to have. If every boy in the Dominion would take a thousand slow, very deep breaths every day from now on throughout his life, it would almost double our vigor and effectiveness es a nation. For deep breathing not only enlarges the chest itself, and makes it shapely and strong, but it gives power and vigor to the lungs and heart, and makes them do their work far better. And it does the same to the stomaoh and bowels, the liver and kidneys; indeed, to all the vital organs. It makes the blood richer. It adds directly to the vigor of the brain as vvell, and ao enables it to do more work. In short, ib is about the best known way of getting and keeling health. And who would care to hire a sick man to work for him ? Or who can do much hard work when he is sick? Not that we can always avoid sicknest, but it is less likely to oome, and has harder work to enter, when we are robust and in good training than when we are weak and run down. And how shall we get a good cheat? In two ways :' by building both inside and out- side. The deep, thorough breathing does the inside work, inflates the chest as you. do a foot -ball when you blow it up; and using certain of the muscles vigorously builds up the outside. And first for the breathing. Do three things. Always hold your neck well back; this straightens your backbone, and se ;straightens almost the whole of you. Next, breethe not through your mouth, but your nose. "God breathed into man's nostrils the breath of life," not into his mouth. Indians think a man who goes around with his mouth open a coward. Thirdly, get every inch of air into your lungs that you can, and as many times each day as you can. At your age you can train your chest and lungs in this way to an extent that will surprise and delight you in your later years. Easy running and plenty of it, breathing just as slowly and deeply as you can all the way, will give your lungs grand work, and right out in the pure, invigorating ant -door air. Daniel Boone would never ride when he could walk. Gladstone and Lowell have for many years followed the same rule, and see how fresh they keep in a green and use- ful dta age I Do plenty of walking, and always when walking do the deepest, slow- est of breathing you oan, Try every now and then and see how many breaths you take in blowing up a foot.ball. It may not be many months till one breath will fill it, and there will be nothing very small or weak about your lungs then. Stand ten feet from a lighted candle and see if you can blow it out. Practise whispering as loudly as you can, and do as much singing as your neigh- bors can tolerate, and when singing, as a famous tenor once said, "breathe from away down." Swim as far as you can in one breath each day during the hot season. Run a hundred yards in one breath, as the swiftest sprinters do. I ou are educating your throat and lungs in a most valuable way now; vet how aim le 1 For the outside of the chest, arm work does far raore than foot•avork. A man nie.y have large legs and no great chest. But large -armed men generally have fine eheste, and always have large muscles on their chefs* both front and lank. Slap the backs of your hands together high rip over your head a hundred, times without stopping. Have you not found a good ohest exercise now? How large and high your chest end- denly feels 1 Of course breathe it ae full as you can while at this or any other exer- cise. • With straight knees and elbows, and chin up, hold your hands out in front of you, palm to palm. Now throw your hands aharply back on a horizonal line, never betid- ing your elbows till they are as far back far as yeu can get them. De fifty of these movements, or even twenty •five, at a time, and see how full your chest has suddenly be. come. This is grand Wo1.2 for round shout. ders, and round shoulders are a deformity, for which you are the one chiefly to blame. For now you know how to straighten them out. With your neck back, your back flat, shoulders low, and knees straight; you could not be crooked if you tried to. d Push your dumb -bells high above your head and hold them there; now lean your head far beak, and hold it there; then lower the duminbells till they are far out at your sides, as if your hands Were on a cross, your elbows never onoe bending. Raise the belle again, and do this six times morning and evening this week, ten drams next week, and increase atter that as you find you can, You are now stretching and enlarging the zmusolee moron the front of your chest and shoulders, and expanding the whole chest as well. Do not forget to breathe in great breatioa all the time. Curling dumb bells will also build up these museles on the front of your chest; so will the dipping between obtain. "Dipping," or lowering and then raleing yourself on the parallel bars, ia great work for theee muaeles, and so ire alt bent.arna work on the parallels. Lying on your back on the floor, with a dumb.bell ih each hand, and your arms etraight out at your sides, and then raleieg them till high lip above your °halt, and then loweringebhem, is also good. Atd •you ean hardly do enough of thede exert:ion if you try to. Tertible Disease, O'Toole -ii Well, well, etre, MOCasithy An' how have been Memo before the long Winter we had, I dunne /" Mrs. McOarilay-‘f Oh, it poorly, Ware 1 The &other Ifield I had an ulster on me tan. Inds and not to go out In the cold, so he am, When a men ham a conviotion that the world owes him a living the beet thing he can do ie to go to work and colleot tho debb and there is no surer way than by work. 11. Restr St 1.1100 irrusairm White ie it 1 Thotert ever erasing Peen radicles soul of mine, To soothe thy feverish dreaming; 0 aching snarls divine. I have dipt the geralet queen, fleekieg sc nie kindred say ! That would in the human. boom, Shed tints of poifeet eay. I have sought mid terms aud foe, The beauty and the erace Thet would (harm the various phaed, Witte's! infinite space, - I've sought peace mid eweetest mud°, Weere raperous concords clad; Each yearning oneing hysteric„ But yet their dreamwere sad. I have eought mid peled and tropleid, That rare that priceless theig, That ceuld, o'er the soul's vast °red, Supreme contentment fling. I have eought mid niind and limiter, Some syetem to control The ceaseless turmoil and clatter, ' That tears the human soul. I have sought some golden sunset, Whose °lauds with downy ereet, Would embark my. soul and float it, To pearly realms of rest. Deep Into the mazy fared, I sought for peace rublime ; But there my soul fretted eadded, And wept 1 wept all the time. lhave climbed where rushing torrents Admen the mountain pour, But still in heroic aooenta Ily soul demanded more. I've wander'd where fruits and flowers, In endless summer spring ; But in vain earth's loyelled beWere Entitled her soarieg wing. Then 1 gazed frorr the castle towee In the still watch of night, At the twinkling, sparkeing shower Of Heaveneetranseendent light. Wild soul 1 will this brilliant array, This beauteous, dazzleng sight; Eat arrest thine impetuous way, Nor day thy lofty flight / What marsellouss orb appeareth, Of purest light, the gem? 'Wean ! for my soul approatheth, The Star of Bethlehem, The British ATMS. JUIN Mani, eolterve. Old England's flag floats o'er the f The Cross, Red, White and Bios; The British Arms, by land or sea, Defends the brave and true; Then let us sing her plaids well, The lead we love eo dear, And of her many conquests tell, Won by a British cheer 1 Cams : Hurrah I hurrah I the British Arms 1 All tyrant threats defy ; We fear no foe, nor ware; alarms, Our motto--"WIn or die I" Old Enelerulis steel has% deed the tad Oa any It forest Bold, ". Her suns, the nomad anu the beet, They know not how to yield ; Her colonies, like predous genes, • Bespangle every sea, 'Vedette's well.worn diadems Shine o'er the brave end free Csolue Hurrah I hurrah 1 the British Anna 1 All tyrant.threate defy; We fear no foe, tor war's alums, Otir motto -"Win or die I" Kerreoted, When Mary Ann Dellinger got the skule down this 1 was•golnadInJuefer igrise ter see,. gal roakin' her honed I heerd some telk in the villageabout her elyin' high, Tew high ler buoy farmer folks with chores ter dew ter But I Ipaid no sorter attention ter all the talk ontell She eame Mbar reg'iar boardin' raound ter visit with ue a spell, , My Jake an' her had been cronies ever sena' they ceuld walk, An' it tuk me aback ter hear her kerreotin' him in hie Salk aka ain't no hand at grammar, though be hetet his • beat for work : But I lee ter myself. "Look emit, my gal, yer atool- in' with a Turk I" .rake bore wonderful patient an' said in a ineurnful He p's umeBdahy,ewee behindhand with the dOhlqi jun le, reMerunhebrunosn,ce he was askin: fur tome o' my In - An' theehaeidhieshoenulodaele.ius say, "them air'" stid 'lms"th Wal, MinarlyonAue kap' at him diddy, anomie' an' eyen- Tllle dhiegyucliaInsolini Ono ent open his mouth ter fear o' talkin' Ataretiain' curranto daown by the old When Iehr narry eeird.ramkee'?e, voice a•sayin' "Be ye f An' Mery Ann kerradtin'-" Air ye willin' yeou sh'd Our JaTeY' ehe put his foot down in a plum decided way, eeldo wimmen-folis is aloft': ter rearranglif uTe Etfrlfrrlsili;tl13lcitusIanlel e oedorlike my w h at my But I ain't a goin' ter take no mese from folks from I ask ylenifut:e13aanninal, 'Be ye goin' ter marry me?" Au' Mary Ann sez tremblina yet anxious -like "I be I' "Do you believe that man is continually growing mailer in stature ?" "Certainly I do." What are your reasons for it ?" I have no reasons, but I know that I was six feet high before marriage, and now I feel as hough.I ought to walk on stilts." Don't Wait Until your hair becomes dry, thin, and gray before giving the attention needed to preserve its beauty and vitality. Keep on your toilet -table a bottle of Xsor's Hair Vigor -the only dressing you require for the hair -and nee a little, daily, to proaerve the natural coloe and prevent baldneso. Thomas Muuday, Sliardie Grove, Ky., writee : "Several months ago ma hair commeneea falling out, and in a few, weeks my head was almost bald. I tried many remedies, but they did no good. I finally bought a bottle of Ayer's Hair Vigor, and, after using only a part ef the contents, my head was oovered with a heavy growth ef hair. I, recora. mend your preparation as the bast •restorer in the world." • , "My hair was faded and dry," avtitea Mabel C, Hardy, of Delavan, Ill.; but after using a bottle of Ayer's Hair Vigor It became black and glossy." Ayer's Hair Vigor, Sold by Druggists and Perfumers. Pimples and Blotches, So disfiguring to the face, forehead, and . neck, may be entirely removed by the use of A.yees Sarsaparilla, the best and tafest Alterative and 131ood-Purider ever discovered. '1 Or. O. Ayer 8c, Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by Druggists; $1; elx bottles for $5. "BELL" ORGANS - tinapproached for . Tone and Quality (DATA LO IS ES FREE. BELL & CO., Guelph, Ont, The Great English Prescription. A successful Medicine used over 30 years in thousands of cases. Cures Spermatorrhea, Nervous Weakness, Emissions, Impotency end all diseases caused by abuse. fmerorate indiscretion, or over-exertion. egreal Six packages Guaranteed to Cure wha: others Fail. Ask your Druggist for The area nclish PronarlptIonj take no substitute. One p ckage Si. Six $5, by mail. Write forPamphlet. ddress Eureka Chemical. Co., Detroit,' Mich. For sale by J. W. Browning, C. Lutz, Exeter, and all druggists. Ftunily Troub'es. Stern father -Here you have been wiAing all sorts of nonsense to that.. girl over thr way about•the fire that burns In your bosom. I'll take a stick and lay it on you. That's what do." ' Spoony son -That will only make it worse." "How's that 5" "That's not the way to taut out the fire, If you put a stick on the fire it will make it burn hotter than ever." "I'll hit you with the stick." " Dm% don't pa; I'm smitten enough al- ready. They Were not Friends, Bagley: I've heard that See.kom is very sick this morning. Wagley Polite way of saying he'll drunk, of course. ' Bagley: ; 'pon honor, he's dober-per- feotly. Wagley : No wonder he feels queer, then. He Was Feeling Badly Himself. Mr, Simple-" You tell me doctor; idiat I eball get well, but I am afraid I shan't." Doctor--" What makes you afraid, Mr. Simple 5" " 'Cause great men are dying all over the world this year" •'Unworthy of Trust. Wife -"John, the new maid told me that you tried to kiss her this morning." Husband-" What 1 And I paid her a dollar to say nothing to you about it. Dis- charge her a. once. Such a person is not to be trusted." et. The man wno -would bry to stab a ghost would stick at nothing. . tet..0.4.4416Z*0r..Arhr- EtheATED ELECTRIC ortegamMELTNINgloom Medicated for all dieeases of the blood and 1101.- vous system. Ladies, Belt $2 for female cern- plaints it has no equal. Mena' Belt $8, conthined Belt and Suspensory $5. N'N., omissions, Etc, only p n es ET h eSrt. ii:Opfa ;rot leuRtili e giving a direct current of Eiectmoity tinionlois on file fixan those eured of feraday wiatlheodfutsienocsoepnivpeaninionsCefeann.ba Hit fiwdo erne on Jag hot f or ek and hips, head and. to the parts. limes. nervous debility, general debility, iltmbago, rhollInatISM, imralyais, eueleralgmesoiatiee disease of the kidneys, spinal disease, torpid. liver, gout, leticorthcea, catarrh of the bladder sexual exhaustion, sonunal omissions, asthnutheart disoase, dyspepsia, constipation erysip- eias, indigestion, Impoteney„ piles, epilepsy, dunab ague and diabetes. Send stam Per bandsoniely Musteated hoofs and health j out:nal. Correspondence strictly confidential, situation and electrical treatment free. Agents wanted everywhere. Pat,,Fele. 26th, 18137/ • Cures Cuero nteed , Need lc a ted Electric Sett Co.. 15g lit11, ueen St. West Toronto, Canada. eetve lee ewer. emeeseeeeneeeeeeerzeleeeineereele Wee * THIS SILVER-PLATED INSTRUMENT .0 E 2 a - .rel "es f. 2 The Oiatiest Diegovety of the Age, 1:01100 " • $3. CATARRH IMPOSSIBLE UNDER ITS INFLUENCE The Only °Dearth remedy over offered to the public on 15 disys1 trial: b. written grteratitee given with eath inserument, W. T. BAlein ot 165 Queeti abreet Weet, Toronto, Ont. •GT • THE GREAT EYE AND LUNG RESTORER Acilea le note Medicine or a digesting lotion or powder ball, beta 80121010ra,- ting Vapdri badly and pleasatitly applied at all home, timed end plaeoe. Air No. 2.-Qiiielay reliewee mid thoteugbly cures tall Throat and Lub Aet na No. 3.-VositiVoly ellede all diNettees Of the Eye, oato,raot cyan tye-iids, inflamed Tilyes„ near and far sightedadaS Mioll Eta trittlerranavattan otostin, aaaa. Tint AteleterA ne sent, Vegeta oun wittemeat cam:mann ors 15 DAVes' Enclose stamp fser handsomely Illustrated book and health!' sic co., 100 Qneen Streee Wed, TOrOntdo 0At