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The Exeter Times, 1890-1-30, Page 6
ellellareentMetanot anew. .nonsiantallanalesanansalareirnAlla Ilder o idl bealtir ing Ayer's Sere n Is that this Only the purest alteratives and early it proves ca Vie km Brockway Centre. ',made my lite a, burden. near ending my existence, on. I won reduced. almost to eleton, and. bardly had strength to moself about. All kinds a food reseed me anti only the moat deli - could. be; digested at all. Witbin time mentioned several pbysielate that I took seemed to do any per- ent goal lentil I began. the use ef Sareaparilla, which has pee- d wonclerfin results. Soon after gt see an Improvement in tray condition, my appetite began to return and with it carne the ability to digest al the food taken, my strength Unproved each day, and after a few etwontbe of faithful attention to your elireetions, 1 !aurad inyself air well woman,able to attend to all lseetse1ecltl ditties. Ile medicine has given nen re Oew ICU() w et lite, and I ennui* thank nett too Inueh." "We, the undersigned, eitiwetts cit Broetway Centre, Mels., hereby certify bat the above etateptent, made by Mfrs, Lake, is true iu every particular and entitled to full credeuee.' --0. P. Chamberlain, 4. W. wring, O. A. 'Wells, Druggist. "31v brother, in England, was, for a bug time, unable to attend to Itis c - u- rotiou. by rea,'t?It of sore:, on his fault .1 tient bite flyer's Almauaac and the tee.. tirnonials it contained indaeect Mita to try Ayer's Sarsaparilie. After using it a little while, lie was cured, and eS I:o:v A well man, working in at sugar rent at: Brisbane, Queensland, Alienate" -T- A. AtteweIl, bharbat Lat,o, Ontario. Ayer's S s D3', J. C. Ayer E; Co., Leytell, Masa. Pri3eel; six t¢tte:feet, Wenbtaa Main. THE BEST BAKING POWDER -*IS .t• - M LIIHEK'S GENUINE Eook'._Fri8Iid No Alum. frothing injurious. RETAILED E EHE'WHEHE, GARTH & CO., FACTORY SUPPLIES; Valves, Iran de lead Pen, Loose Palley Oiters,Ste*m Jet Pumps, Farm Pumps, Wind Mills, Cream Sepat- eterre Dalry and Laundry Uteri!!.. 538 CRAiG STREET, MONTREAL CHADWICK'S SPOOL COTTON For Hand and Machine Use. HAS do SUPERIOR. ASK FOR IT. LEATHERN] STEEL -LINED TRUNKS In Sample, Lathes' and all other kinds. LI1lltteit and Stronaast In the World. J. EVELEIGH & CO. MONTREAL, Solefifrs, far the Parkin HOTEL BALMORAL. MONTREAL. ttotre Dame St., one of the most central and elegantly famished Hotels la#ie City. Accommodation for 400 guests. Bates :O WOODRUFF, 1,2 to $3 per day. , , Manager. Sole Ws for Canada, PALMER &SON Wholesale Imy'tre of /DRUGGISTS' SUNDRIES, '1743 ERE DAME St, MONTREAL. DOMINION LEATHER BOARD COMPANY, Manufacturers of ASBESTOS MILLBOARD Steam Packing, FRICTION PULLEY BOARD, This is a Perfect Friction RECKITT'S BLUE. THE BEST FOR LAUNDRY USE. PAPERS Wrapping, Manilla, 1ElYU, • ALL �� SIZES Y AND 4„a„0 • WEIGHTS TO ORDER ,4 21 DeBresoles St. MILLS1 Punter, P.a. DHJ ST0N.S FLUIDDIEEE 'THE CREAT STRENGTH GIVER '1PERFECT F000 THE SICK "PI ARMING /t UTRITIOUSBEVERAGE �A POWERFUL INVIGORATOR t 7 WOR OWDZRS Are pleasant to truce. Contain their own ?urgative. Is a sate, sure, and eftegtual filigree -or oi worms la Qbildren or Anne* ELEALTR • .Rl ouRsz OF 489.444, • Modern phyiiologioal research proclaims) sleep to be the reEutt of a certain amount of blood beicg abstracted from the brain, to lie quieseent,if no dormant, in certain cbannels and vassals, which, during the waking period aro apparently empty, et at least very flabby and la, a condition, as it were, of negation. In proof of Chia view, it is a well known#act that good, healthly, restful skep rarely if ever take, place when the head fa fall of blood. Continaoue prevention or any interference with sleep is the moat far-reaching damage producer to the batman system. Comfort and contentment are obliterated. Their attendant substitutes are nervous irritabil Ity, mental anxiety, a Bich sooner or later, according to the reatbtance power of the in divideal, become idiccy, mania or death, preceded by a painful pbycieat collepae. At this moment just how n -any insomniacs there are in Toronto alone is unknown, Nee: half the fact eziets that at .sae,r 10 ger coot, ee our stock operators are wretched sleeps:m eind et per cent more are renounced victim, et iasulnnia, who never aleep except tinder exhauatien or from the benumbing infiuen:e of some hypnotic—it may to ehtorst, opium, alcohol, aulfcnel or bromides, Tireee used in ever increasing gaantitiea to produce artitciel sleep must end by the deetenetiou of iatelleotuality. Title to brought shout by A oousltanb eon• traotioa of the blood vaults .uppl Ing the brain etruetare, began** these hypnotic drug; primarily not upon the great nervous centres whence arise those nerves diutribut. ed to all the blood vesaela which ate known ass the vaao.p oto ' nerves, or governing nerve.. Under the lnfiaence of each drew then, nervee are either parols zed or over. exolte3, and they keep tip a oonstaut dloafuutlon of the calibre of the blood vol ruberetoro the whelesonra supply of nutrient aloud is kept from the brain. which temporarily pprcenoto sleep, but ultimately destroy it. What L the safe remedy for nteepleesneu? What oan be done to eerie insomnia?. le thee* two leading questions the entire subject 1. considered. Thouaende el fneomniaea can trace their troubles to carless raadUy remedfabte in the beginning. The ;ammo of correlation between the brain and the stotria'h must be known tea a' prime faotor In preventing sleep. The utut'ie•brawn laborer testa infinitely better when be seeks hie sleep with a atoneae b comparatively empty; with him sleep is that oblivion which iris slow acting brain Awards the woric•shsioed miscle,. The brain. worker proper atadent., professional meta and builders of fortune—rarely sleeps' soandly and regularly. To such inawmniace 1 sap, study your stomachs and keep them comparatively full or two purposes. Fist, to coax the blood current away from a flaccld lot of blood res- eals ramifying through every nook and car ner of your brain, whloa b too active and loaded with`met:Mural fatnese. Secondly, the stomach must contain fool in order to keep up a steady ;apply al that alwaye In demand pabulum neoeesary to healtb:ful nutrition, without whittle no organ can thor oughly do its allotted work. The brala. worker must always woo (leap with a full stomach, warm feat, coot head and quiet heart'! action. But what if there le a taud- euey to an epidemic of insomnia as the eolith of that higher education of our boyo and girls, offepringa of nervous parents. Inheritating their debilitated phyaloel con *Muttons, with co added attenuated higher Intelleotaality, readout tedlynow boivg mado manifeub as aur young people enter adult life? If we bib recall the beginning of the up. ward wave of Intelleotual life as it existed twenty years ago and =retreat it with the present oonobrb•pib3hed tones of ecuoational life, we may possibly check these sleepless nights and the early phyaioal decay evident ad by a thousen Nola inerouo in neuralgias, a va3t amount of ever -aggregating eye disoace, or rather a failure in eye accommo- dation, by urging the ciaca5ors to cease their so called pehyohioal efforts, not because oar youth cannot absorb every subject now ;aught, but simply because it ie done. This Intellectuality and psychical advancement o'. the age are dangerous beyond anticipation. The eoil le too tallow. It must be permitted to Ile idle ; els© the next two decades -will witness a state of affelra much more danger - one because mach more artificially cultivated —ntdoubted hothouse raised intellects of brilliant color bub feeble vitality. The time baa Dome to cry a batt, other wise this excessive mature will permeate the age and weaken auch resistance power as it yet abiding in our people. Just at tine moment a wave of disease, the grippe or in. fl tune is travelling round the world. We must study it to avoid it. If such phyeical results obtain through atmospheric influence we can readily comprehend, because we see the results, how a too fragile intellectuality breaks under a condition, as it were, of ster- eotyping, which should never show one sin- gle flaw under proper surroundings. The Domestic Doctor. To prevent lockjaw simply smoke the wound with burning wool or woolen cloth, and in twenty minutes the pain will be relieved, Coughs may be much alleviated and dry thioate be cured by glycerine and lemon juice taken at night. The glycerine should be diluted. Waris may be destroyed being rubbed with alum. Carry a lump in the pocket and rub on the wart frequently, wetting it as yon do so. For neuralgia, web a cloth with alcohol and apply to the parts and cover at once with a hot, dry flannel. Relief will be sure to follow, no matter what part of the body is affected. I'aactional diseases are on the increase. The remedy lies in the public iteelf. It should frown down the ton highly volted wires of brain life and bury them with a triple insulation, an insulation of safety, although they would never be subjected to any such absurd and faroioal explosions as Edison's dangers in the accumulation of hydrogen in chambers not at all airtight. Insomnia, as it prevails through the great centres of intellectual development, evident- ly b largely due to something based upon epidemic influencers. Just why enoh is the ease no one can explain, bub it is true beyond all posaibility of a doubt. This psyciohal epidemic removed, the frequency of insomnia will materially diminieb. The conditions of this age are the predisposing oauees to Insomnia ; its active elements are owing to the heedless high-preseure occupations of our people, particularly in cities. Were not the age and the times eo lacking in robust surroundings, the medioal man would see motet leas of deteriorated brain troubles, and insomnia would be but eeldom known, bapsuee the hardy physioal life of our fore- bears of two or three preceding generations would not be exhausted, as it is now. LR GYMBOTS. The Wrench Maleneartane Boat that Worps. A oorreepondent of the "' Temps " sends from Toulon an accounb of experiments made on Sunday bet by the submarine gunboat the Gymnote, from which, as it ref.rs to a eubj:ot which has attracted considerable at- tention in England, the paeaages may be quoted' " This small vessel has the form of a nate row spindle. It be 17 metres 20 centimetres long by 1 metre 80 centimotrea in diameter. just the height necessary to stand up in the interior. Ir weighs 30.000 kilogrammes, and motive power is an electric 55•horee powermaohine, made from the planed Capt. Krebs, and worked by accumulators, Tnis motor pate A screw In .movement. The Gymnote at the close of US$ underwent trlala which were quite successful from a luteal palet of view, but It was then ad- mitted that it was indespensable to modify the accumafator cases in order to avoid waste of electricity. After patient roteereh- es, fragile non conducting substances being set aside, eases were at length produced winch ha oRivRa entire 6a#i f l4a. + 0n, made of a special gatte. perch, prepared by one of our uiansefacturers. After havieg made (heat week) a preparatory trip to ascertain that all was working properly on board, and taken acme very aattefectory plunges, the tiymnote re-entered the harbor, and her teeeumulatora were charged, At noon of the iecoaad day she was Made ready by hermet. only oleaing the panel giving edtnlesion to ibo interior, when% was ace to be opened till four bourn letter, "The Gytnnote teas ecompanfed by a "teem launch which halluwtructiot s to keep out of the wey any baste which might owe up. Oa getting to the pl nae selected for the trine everything was put in order for the plunge. Then when all wee ready, on an order given by the commandant, Naval Lieu• tenant Baudry Ls. Cantinerio, the boat waa set in mntianby gently working the horn z natal rudder. The omen' bent down In front, desceudlag newly. Soon nothing could be seas but a paddle and A portion of the screw above water. Ther all disappeared. It had been arran¢ed beforehand that the boat should stop at about 2 metres 50 sentlmetret below the eutfacaof the water. It was found easy to remain there, with variations of about 50 eentiwetr@e. Aa regards direction, the gyroscope wive it with mathemeticel pre. chlor, The length of the course waa tstlmat' ed by the number of turns of the forme, and in this wey Ib was known when the limit of the deep water was reecho!. "The Gyninote next, returned to the surface, passed round a mark, and took a plunge is the opposite direction. At half pant 3 the Maritime leafed carne to be present at the trial, Tae Qya rent* awaited him on the surface of the water. As soon as she saw the A.dmirars steam Isunelt she plunged again under water and took three runs. prolonging her course as far as the depth of water in the roads would permit. She remelned more than ten minutes under' water, The Gymnate dee. not leave on the mutate any trace of her passage, and le quite iavitible when painted gray. Oa title occasion a coat of white paint bad beta given her, so lee to permit of her course he- Ing seen under the water, * " * A UP tie after 4 o'clock the Gymnote returned to the Vauban dook,and the air in the Interor was as easily breathed as at her depicters,. There waa still eleotrlctty enough an the acauamulatora to last for hours," Emli*ration of Colored People. There tea bill before the Linited States Senate providing for the emigration of col- ored people from the Southern States. It fe interesting to road what Senator Morgan, of Alabama, said in the Senate a couple of days ago an this eubjecb. He said lee " had reached the aonolualan that there waa a Eat. ural incongruity and au irrepressible millet between the raven which pothineg could cure except their final separation. The return of the negro race to Africa was the final and only solution to the problem. It wan un. deniable that the aversion between the two aces bed greatly tnoraaeed einem slavery waa abolished, and it would increase so long s a largo portion of the population was of permit the etatemanb that such feeling of aversion existed only in the south. It was not so !teem in the south as it was In the north. It was nob so /wrong between the negro and his former master a9 it was be- tween the negro and those who never owned /laves. Separation of the races was the only thing that would extinguish rase aver- sions." h a lQatt e �afrrace. Experience would not A Dreadful Voice from the Tomb. Otte of the treasures of the Edison phono- graph works at Orange is a cylinder that was impressed with the voice of the late John McCullough, the actor, who died in a madhouse. The impression was taken while he was in confinement. Rambling passages from the plays in which he anted were recited in avoice of wonderful power and pathos, but at the end of each passage the actor would stop and say, in a voice to chill the blood, "But now I'm mad—ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ah•h-h-h.'' The end of the laugh was all but indescribable, for i,e drew in his breath with a sound that was partly a shriek and partly a gasp. If there is ever a voice heard from the tomb, it is when this cylinder is put in the phono- raph, He Just .Analyzes! Tier. A negro man went into Mr. E --'s oflioe or the purpose of instituting a divorce suit gains] his wife. Mr. E — proceeded to uestion him as to his grounds for complaint. Noticing that the man's voice failed him, Mr. E— looked up from his papere and aw that big tears were running down over he cheeks of the applicant for divorce. "Why," said the lawyer, "you seem to are a great deal for your wife. Did you ove her P' "Love her, eh.? I jest analyzed her 1" This was more than professional dignity could withaband, and Mr. E--- laughed until the negro, offended, carried his case elsewhere, The Mother at Home. The mother is bhe heart of the home. She it is who determines he characteristics and diffuses through it that subtile atmosphere which every sensitive person can feel when introduced into the home circle, and from which can quickly be inferred the ruling spirit of the home. There can be no doubt that the most effective training for children is the training of example, and this truth the mother needs constantly to bear in mind. How can the impatient, querulous, fault- finding:mother beach patience and kindness. and good temper? Sow oan bhe vain mother each humility ? How oenthe mother great-. y absorbed in keeping up with the pompe nd vanities of life, eager for plane and how, teaole her children the true principles f a happy lite? How oan the selfish mother each generosity or kindness, or the disoon• tented mother teach contentment, The. Perapiratory system. Nature has expended much Taber on the persplratory system—has constructed for each of us many miles of tubing and millions of emoting glands, .each furnished with its tiny blood vessel regulated by its micro- soopio nerve. Not only does this system; perform an eseentilal aervlpein keepuig the bodily temperature down to the normal point of safety, ninety-eight degrees a• brenheib, by the evaporation of the per- eFired fiuide, but ib le also an organ of elimination like the kidneys and the lunge. An adult excretes a fall pound of sweat daily, and this may be increased to three or four pounds. .Froth this foot may be under- stoodboth the danger of suddenly checking the outflow of the poieenous material, and the advantage, when one has taken cold, of the Batatan bath. Tho quantity and charaoter of the Auld render a ircgnent change of clothing a matter of no email importanoe. Some diseases, as acute rheumatism, phehiaie, general debility, are accompanied by .excessive perepiratlon, which ie also sometimes purposely Induced by the use of certain drugs called din bar t' ...acs. An weall a h iar@ware to arnount of perepiratlon Ie abnormal in hob weather. The heat of a muggy day is aggravated and made Ines oppreas'ive by the slow evai�ooration from the surface' of the body. The atmosphere is too fully, charged with moisture to vapor'z n the sweat.. Excessive sweating is sometimes partial, beteg limited to the soles, palm,, or to ono hall of the face, head, or body, and that, tee, without any discoverable cause. The toacal,g of QUO Aide of the tougae wlth salt will.oua*tames cause a profuse perepiration upon the correspondiug side of the body. Periplratien may alas to deficient. Tkhie la generally the owe in diseases of the kid, aeya, in the early stages of fever, and in oortain skin diseases. When the rebeceoue:. or oil secretion is deficient, there le apt to. be a like defioie/myy in the perspiration, rendering the ekin dry end rough, Bemire - don new hope an offsesive odor, a;isaafaily' that which ie secreted. by the arm lather, feet end toe. Teta sweat sad the sebaceous secretion. undergo a *bastion change tato the fatty acids, ammo of which aro like those found is rancid batter. ',obis condition is sr metienee dun to lowered vitality of the a ate The rax, affected tf clad b *Wild• peatedly ehenged. The *oleo of thaaekhsga should be daily disinfected with a saturated *elution of Wreck, aald. Bork solo* abould be worn is the shoes, and be airnilarly die. infaeted. Eh^Iaud'e Big Surplus. The mind" of theE3gllsh politiciant and traders are Peet now occupied with gueseee as to what Mr. Goeabea trill do with the handset= surplus which the revival of trade ie putting ince the treasury. The anonntot *hie aiuplus may be anything between: £3 000,0G0 and £5 U00,000and varioue trades are already laying themselves out to get re. mission of taxes. There Is it noti)U that the tax will be taken cif from tea entirely, and that the income tax -payors will receive some relief, and that provielon may be made for free cdueation for the maa9os. Au Unappreoiated Partner. Bi.kins--"Row is tautness, Wilkins?" Wilkins—"Can't make it go. At this rate I'll be bankrupt to another month.. I don't seem to Bove any head for bud. nasi." Bilkius--"No, you haven't; but you have a good stand, and if you'll promise to keep bands offend let me run things, I'll go in with you as partner." Wifkine—"Dane. A friend in need is a friend indeo3 " Quest of Mr. Wilkins (ten genre atter)— "What a magnificent plane yam have !— everything that wealth could may or heart wish 1 You have been wonderfully prospor- our, Mr. Wilkins." Mr. Wilkfne (sadly)—True, bac after all I get only half the profits of my great eatab- linhment. I just tell you, my old friend, the miatako ot illy life wait in taking a pat tnor," Airing .Eer Prenall, Caller (to little girl on the front steps) — Is your pa at home, sissy ? Little 'alit—Yee, he's home, bub he hasn't got up yet. Caller—Not up at ten o'aloole 1 What on earth's the platter with your pa ? Little Girl (smiling)—Well, pa was out lash night on a petite alanette. Caller—A petite alouebte; what's that? Little Glri—That's French, and ib• means a little lark. Didn't Watt to Meet Two Mem Smiths. " Shay," stuttered an inebriated politician as he staggered into Police Headquarters the other night, " want to be arrested for poliga—hie—my." " How is this? Yon are no Mormon," said the officer in charge, " Yeah I be. 1—hic—les been up to th' —hio—front gatesaw two wives j ewin' me out o' th'—hio—hic—top window. Straight business, m' fren'—hie—look me up gaicir. Rather be in—hic—jail for polig'my'n go home and meet two Mrs. Smiths." Little Johnny's Composition on the Lion. ''Gars hisses, but ducks quacks, and wen Pranky, thats the baby, is painfle in his lap he hollers, but the lion roars like l;iesant thunder and makes the wells= wring 1 Uncle Ned, wick bas ben in Injy and every whore, he says one nite a lion come out of the wends and went to his correl for to eat his cattle. Uncle Ned he gob up and looked in thecrackthr rel o a c r u the lion shode his teeth, and Uncle Ned sed, 'The idiot thinks I am a dentist, but I haven't no time for to tend him. He aenb for the lion - tamer for to quell him with his I." 'Excuse for Opheiia. "Hamlet was kind of rough on Opbelia when he found fault with her for altering by art a faca bestowed upon her by hea- ven." "I don't think he was. Women should nob tamper with their complexions." "1 know that; bub Ophelia'e oaae was nob like all woman. She had to consider the effect of the footlights on her face." ' At the trial of a ease, a juryman being absent from his peat, all the others being 000upied, a dog, looking for his master, quietly took possession of the vacant ehair. " You ace, Mr. --," said the judge, turning to one of the .counsel, " that the jurymen's seats are all occupied. Are you ready to proceed 4 The attorney addressed raised his glasses to his eyes, and after a brief survey of the jury -box replied " Your Honor, that fellow might do for a judge, but I should hate to trust him for a juryman." IS TUIS. Or magas A Story Supposed to etave. Been Told by San" Weller.. [For reasons unknown, Charles Dlckena did not publish this oharacterletio story in 1'iokwiok Papers. To many admirers of Sam Weiler, this one of hie stories may bo new.j "I never knew," Bald Sam We, "' Ilier never knew but vun barber, but hs wale worth a deem. and was, indeed, devoted be his caliber Eaey aberin' woe his nater,' wadmann' and mulled was hie pride and glory. His whole delight woe In bre trade. He spent all hle money in beard, and run in debt for hen beside,, and there they wee a - growling away down in the front sellar all day long, and ineffectually gnashing their teeth, vile the grease o' their reiatisns and friends won being resented in gallipots in the atop above, and the first door under woe ornamented with their beside ; not to speak a' the dreadful aggravation Ie muss haus been to 'em to ase a man alvays a welkin up and down the pavement outside, with the pubs& lei , of a bear hie in r b ons Int.+ a and p a underneath to large letters ',Another fine animal woaaiaughtered yesterday at Jenkin - Wee 1' "eise'a'ever, ther they was, and there Jinkicson WAS till he woetook very lit with some fn'ard disorder, load the use of hio lege, and WOeonflned to his bed, vera he laid a very long tims, but nett, won his pride in hie profeaaiot even then, that whenever he woe worse than usual the doctor need to go down stairs, and nay l Jtukinaon'a wery low this nortain,' we nuab give the bears a star ;' and sure as over they stirred'eue tip a bit laud made 'em roar, Ttaktnseti epees his oyer, If he woo evereohad, ogle out . There's the bear(' l' and rewire* ,gin. ,"Van day the doctor happonin' to nay '.I "hall look in as usuat tomorrow ;pepsin); Jinkineon oatohee hold of hie band and ;aye a Teeter' he says, "will you grub roe at favor i' '1 will, Jinkinaan, nays the elector. 'Then, done r,' says Jlnkicson, 'will you come, ved and let me shave yea.*el will,' says the doter. 'God bless you ,"owe ,Tinnklueon. Next day the doctor came, and arter he'd been shaved all skillful and regular, be lays : , , 4 tTinkinson he sa lbs veryplc does you good. Now,' he , 'I've got a aoaohman as ,has got a beard, that ie'ud warn your heart to work on, and 4hmgh the footman,' he says, hean'e got usuah of a 'beard, edit he's a trying it on with a pair o'. viekere to that extern that more is Curls fain abarity. If they take ib In turns to tnindthe carriage moulted at waiitia' below,' aaot'a to hinder you from open -tin' en both of 'em ev'ryry dayaawell as open me? Yoa't'e got atx children,' be ,aye, 'wore to hinder you from *havfn' ail their heads and koepta' ern shaved? You've gob two auistaate ler the cutihop n ari=l art them soefhinder you like f D,, this,' he says, 'and yor+'re sa mal a;in. J;oktnson egaeedged the dcator'o hoed and begun than wery day ; be kept bis 6 tole upon the bed, and w'enever he felt hi.seif gestin' worse, be turned to at vano' the ahilrlren who woe a rennin' about the haulm vitt' heade like Olean Dutch cheeses, and eheved him again. oVun day, the lawyer come to make his will; all the time he wart a-takln' it down, Jerkin nen was aeoretly a•oltppin' away at hie hair with it large peer of saltsore. 'Wot's that 'ore clippie' noise ?' saga the lawyer, avers now and then; 'i'.'r like it men feavIn' hi*. hair out.' 'Ib is wery like a maw havin' hie hair cut,' says poor Jinkinton thanes sort: and lookin quiteiadoeent. By the thue the lawyer found it nub, he was wary nearly bald. Jinkineon was kept alive in this vay for a long time, but, at "set, von day he has in ail the children, von arter another, shave., eeoh on 'em wiry clean, and gives him ova kiss on the crown o' his head ; thea be has in the two asaietantut,°and arter cuttin' and our. lin' of 'am in the fiat atylo of elegance, tags he should like to hear the wake o' tho greasi- est hoer. Vitoh rekvest le immediately, (tomp'Ied with; then he says that he feela. wary happy in hie mind and wish to leo left alone ;and then he diet, previously cuttin' hie own hair and makin' one flay curl in the wary middle of hie forehead," Stitched with Auto' Jaws. Ants aro terrible fighters. They have very -powerful jive, considering the size of their bodies, and therefore their method of fighting is by bitissg. They will bite one another and hold on with awonderful grip of the jaws. even after all their lege have been bitten off by other ante. Sometimes six or eight ants will be clinging with a death grip to one another, making a peculiar spectacle, some with a leg gone and some with ball the body gone. Ono singular foot is that tho grip of an ant's jaw is retained even after the body has been bitten off and nothing but the head remains. This know- ledge is possessed by a certain tribe of In- dians in Brazil, South America, who put the ante to a very peculiar use. When an Indian gets a gash cut in his hand, instead of having the flesh sewed together as,the physicians do in this country, he procures five or sixlarge blank ante, and holding their heads near tho gash, they bring their jaws bogether' in biting the flesh and thus pull the .two sides of the gash together. then the Indian pinches off the bodies of the ants and leaves their heads clinging to the flash, which is held together until the gash le ,perfectly healed. • • Stay -At -Homes. A Chinese tea merchant in a small town in California name home from San Francisco one day with bid new wife, for whom, accord- ing to custom, he had paid a great amount. It soon appeared that she was as proud of the trade as he was. Ab Lso permitted the wife and daughter of his chief customer, Squire Hadley, to pay his young wife a visit of courtesy—an un- usual privilege. " How do yon like our little city, Mrs. Ah Lee ?" asked Mrs. Hadley ; " it must seem very quiet here after why San Francis- 00. "Me no -hear heap nolsee down Sa' F'an'- eoo," replied Mrs. Ah Lee, with dignity. "I suppose not," said Dora Hadley. "Your women and girls are not allowed to. go about in the way we do. I should, think' you'd just hunger and thirst to go shopping and buy things ; dont you ever ? . Yon no bayee, no ehoppee?' , There was a light of pride in the dark, al mond eyes, a haughty turn tothe queer. shaped hand, and Mrs, Ah Lee replied with feminine emphasis: "Meliaan lady walk, walk, walk bay head dresses ; spend heap dollars. China- man lady cost heap'dollara, for why China- man lady stay by she." Ibis very strange that among those who tet themselves up as great gene the ones of the smallest calibre are the biggest bores. i0 Where do you suppoaa the Sultan 'gets all the ladies for his harem? "Dano. Maybe he patronizes the Merchant ` of Venus t" CANADIANS _.... Work -! cwo Hard I The Result is. a3leepre.seeee. Nervous.. nes* mut* weoken-7Downsystem, often f ------ Ending in insanity, , Thousands or over. worked business men, wearied brain■ workers industrious i. mechanics, and tried women, in all parts ;of the Dominion us to -day hi a t ble position. Their tern.. nerves are weak, digestion poor, head aching, and they aatt not sleep, work orliveineomfort. Thisls what fiUs our Insane Asylums!) This is the ChM Rf .that terrible Paresis. re It is too late, use Pr: Phelps' w ufid dccov an 1 Fairless e Gee Gem , stn 'It pa removes the resulte of overwork, restores strength, renews vitality, regulates the whole system, awl tones up the overexcited brain and body. Do not despair, but use this wonderful remedy, and be restoredtte health and happiness, the same es wax pix, lobo L. lfxodie, of Montreal, whet wr'i'tes; " I have great pleasure in recommending your Pail's Celery Compound. bty eye' tem was run down anti 1 was not St haat business, could not sleep well at zilght suul narrow. 1 coaalnenced talorig Faille 1p Levy Covipaurad and improved immee diately. 1 aur now able to tranaiac basiaeaa and endure any amount of exa ltee meat without had effect," Pane's celery Compound .can be put. chased at any druast's for one dollar* bottle. 1f he should nbt bare it on ,bead, order direct from Wheats, ItteRAsusp# dt CA,. Montreal, MANY MAN-- Who fa Weak, Nervoue, Qeiatlitotett, whoinbia Folly and 11!<reararrceD haw Tral•- fled *my his Vigor ot i;ociy, Mind and ea+tea Fountains 01 Lie. Headache, ipftokacte, Preadlal]Jreaws, Weakness 1 Mealory, Ulsishfealneea Iv Society, Pimples ucton the Face stud ail trio Effects mow g to EarlyDosay, consumption • r Insanity, wt aha en our specite° e.o. ea a lotsitiva Cure. 10 iinearra Youthful Icor restores the Vital Power in out rt Dung. strenethena end invlaoruu s t'... Dr aid Norvee, belles up tete remount vans an n arouse into nett. n tale whole pbs:;icsl enemy of the Leman Urnitis, Seidl our emelt% No.2.Ithe most obstinate crave cnnlis enrol in. three motes, Ansi rc. I:tones it ?. se want/goy days. Inch F.tci;.:10 oortair.s tr.o "s.:.%6 heat, moat. 1 rico.j. Gres Guarautrcl, 4u. ,c. sae ere. 24 IA An infarii^to Cure for all .[3; Dfaoageezlomatteror how long et ing. Sold ueeder our written Conran ogees a Cure, Priem 85. Tcroeto At Co.. Toronto. Out. l LADIES ONLY., --300 FRENCH REGULATION It.tw'O. Par surer' m' to Ergot, Tansy. r ;Mai ler Oxide. Rn'inrs,' i by tea illoniat s n' smite. w110 ase tl n:n',tOYTIILY. Never tall. itel.ave ppain. INSURE REGULARITY. Pleasant a d EfFcetual. Price, $2, Tornntn Medicine Toronto. Ont. R-• Exeter Buto Sbo R. DA'F'T .37 Butcher it General Deals; -----18 AM, 8rltns or --- EATS eistomerssnpplied TUESDAYS, THURS. AYS sem SA,TUBDAYS at their :maidens* ORDEtiS LEFT AT TER SHOP WILL BE CEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION. WLLL cure YOU of Cnfl;lmma torygg edam N Earlgtoil Toot haoho. Bra and Sprains. Soli To at nce establish FRER To at once aetabliah trade in all part,, by placing our machines ,and goods where the people ran see them, we will cant, free to one p rsen in coo heat 'inside he world,wlib We w111 also se line of our costl locallty,the very nohine made in the ttnchment.. a romphste enblo a ,ampks. Inretnnil, ash youoe siliN show what we nand, to those who may call at your hd after A months all shall become your own proporsy. This grana machine is lenge Mtcr the Mincer patents, ,chieb have run out s before patents run out it sold coraa93. wish the attachments, and now ,Ulla for SCO. Bost, etronge,t, most use- ful machine In the world. All la re,. No capital required. Plain. Those who write to us at once cad ,e-• owing -machine in the world, and the h art evor shown,together In America, oft QQU, Augnuata. Maine.^ • FOIE FR_ brief instructions given. aura tree the best is Anent line of works of hig TRUE dt CO., iG The Phantom 'Train.. A story comes from Valoartier, on teet'_ine, of the. Lake Se. John Railway,; to the effect;" that a mysterious light resembling it loan' motive's head light was seen mooting and reoroesing the Jecgaea Oertler Bridge one night recently, though no locomotive was' there, and no sign' of any person could bei found on.the bridge or line near ib.T same, phenomenon, it le claimed, has bt frequently seen before, and the appariti knownin the locality 'under, the nae "The phantom train," .popular super' ascribing its running to the: ghost of dilator who met his death ou'the line years ago. That a strange' light Is 000 ally seen on the bridge seems to be u tionable,as so many roe pcetable paopi for its appearance. ',